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@@ -1,38 +1,4 @@
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mystery Girl, by Carolyn Wells
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-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
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-Title: The Mystery Girl
-
-Author: Carolyn Wells
-
-Release Date: March 19, 2014 [EBook #44984]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MYSTERY GIRL ***
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-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Mardi Desjardins and the
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44984 ***
THE MYSTERY
GIRL
@@ -8820,362 +8786,4 @@ Detective, displays his remarkable ingenuity for unravelling mysteries_
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mystery Girl, by Carolyn Wells
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MYSTERY GIRL ***
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44984 ***
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mystery Girl, by Carolyn Wells
-
-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 Mystery Girl
-
-Author: Carolyn Wells
-
-Release Date: March 19, 2014 [EBook #44984]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MYSTERY GIRL ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Mardi Desjardins and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-(This book was produced from scanned images of public
-domain material from the Google Print project.)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- THE MYSTERY
- GIRL
-
-
- BY
- CAROLYN WELLS
- _Author of "Vicky Van," "Raspberry Jam," &c._
-
-
- PHILADELPHIA AND LONDON
- J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
- 1922
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
- PRINTED BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
- AT THE WASHINGTON SQUARE PRESS
- PHILADELPHIA, U. S. A.
-
-
- TO
- HUBER GRAY BUEHLER
- A GRAVE AND REVEREND SEIGNEUR WHO
- POSSESSES THE ADDED GRACE OF A RARE
- TASTE IN MYSTERY STORIES
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- I. A President-elect 9
- II. Miss Mystery Arrives 28
- III. Thirteen Buttons 47
- IV. A Broken Teacup 65
- V. The Tragedy 84
- VI. An Incredible Case 103
- VII. The Volume of Martial 121
- VIII. Where is Nogi? 140
- IX. A Love Letter 158
- X. Who is Miss Mystery? 176
- XI. The Spinster's Evidence 193
- XII. Maurice Trask, Heir 212
- XIII. The Truesdell Eyebrows 231
- XIV. A Proposal 250
- XV. Fleming Stone Comes 269
- XVI. Miss Mystery's Testimony 287
- XVII. Planning an Elopement 305
- XVIII. Miss Mystery no Longer 322
-
-
-
-
- THE MYSTERY GIRL
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
- A PRESIDENT-ELECT
-
-
-Quite aside from its natural characteristics, there is an atmosphere
-about a college town, especially a New England college town, that is
-unmistakable. It is not so much actively intellectual as passively aware
-of and satisfied with its own intellectuality.
-
-The beautiful little town of Corinth was no exception; from its
-tree-shaded village green to the white-columned homes on its outskirts it
-fairly radiated a satisfied sense of its own superiority.
-
-Not that the people were smug or self-conceited. They merely accepted the
-fact that the University of Corinth was among the best in the country and
-that all true Corinthians were both proud and worthy of it.
-
-The village itself was a gem of well-kept streets, roads and houses, and
-all New England could scarce show a better groomed settlement.
-
-In a way, the students, of course, owned the place, yet there were many
-families whose claim to prominence lay in another direction.
-
-However, Corinth was by all counts, a college town, and gloried in it.
-
-The University had just passed through the throes and thrills of one of
-its own presidential elections.
-
-The contest of the candidates had been long, and at last the strife had
-become bitter. Two factions strove for supremacy, one, the conservative
-side, adhering to old traditions, the other, the modern spirit,
-preferring new conditions and progressive enterprise.
-
-Hard waged and hard won, the battle had resulted at last in the election
-of John Waring, the candidate of the followers of the old school.
-
-Waring was not an old fogy, nor yet a hide-bound or narrow-minded back
-number. But he did put mental attainment ahead of physical prowess, and
-he did hold by certain old-fashioned principles and methods, which he and
-his constituents felt to be the backbone of the old and honored
-institution.
-
-Wherefore, though his election was an accomplished fact, John Waring had
-made enemies that seemed likely never to be placated.
-
-But Waring's innate serenity and acquired poise were not disturbed by
-adverse criticism, he was a man with an eye single to his duty as he saw
-it. And he accepted the position of responsibility and trust, simply and
-sincerely with a determination to make his name honored among the list of
-presidents.
-
-Inauguration, however, would not take place until June, and the months
-from February on would give him time to accustom himself to his new
-duties, and to learn much from the retiring president.
-
-Yet it must not be thought that John Waring was unpopular. On the
-contrary, he was respected and liked by everybody in Corinth. Even the
-rival faction conceded his ability, his sterling character and his
-personal charm. And their chagrin and disappointment at his election was
-far more because of their desire for the other candidate's innovations
-than of any dislike for John Waring as a man.
-
-Of course, there were some who candidly expressed their disapproval of
-the new president, but, so far, no real opposition was made, and it was
-hoped there would be none.
-
-Now, whether because of the exigencies of his new position, or merely
-because of the irresistible charms of Mrs. Bates, Waring expected to make
-the lady his wife before his inauguration.
-
-"And a good thing," his neighbor, Mrs. Adams, observed. "John Waring
-ought to've been somebody's good-looking husband long ago, but a bachelor
-president of Corinth is out of all reason! Who'd stand by his side at the
-receptions, I'd like to know?"
-
-For certain public receptions were dearly loved by the citizens of
-Corinth, and Mrs. Adams was one of the most reception-loving of all.
-
-As in all college towns, there were various and sundry boarding houses,
-inns and hotels of all grades, but the boarding house of Mrs. Adams was,
-without a dissenting voice, acclaimed the most desirable and most
-homelike.
-
-The good lady's husband, though known as "Old Salt," was by no means a
-seafaring man, nor had he ever been. Instead, he was a leaf on a branch
-of the Saltonstall family tree, and the irreverent abbreviation had been
-given him long ago, and had stuck.
-
-"Yes, indeed," Mrs. Adams asserted, "we've never had a bachelor president
-of Corinth and I hope we never will. Mrs. Bates is a nice sweet-spoken
-lady, a widow of four years standing, and I do say she's just the one for
-Doctor Waring's wife. She has dignity, and yet she's mighty human."
-
-Emily Bates was human. Not very tall, a little inclined to plumpness,
-with fair hair and laughing blue eyes, she was of a cozy, home-loving
-sort, and her innate good nature and ready tact were unfailing.
-
-At first she had resisted John Waring's appeal, but he persisted, until
-she found she really liked the big, wholesome man, and without much
-difficulty learned to love him.
-
-Waring was distinguished-looking rather than handsome. Tall and
-well-made, he had a decided air of reserve which he rarely broke through,
-but which, Emily Bates discovered, could give way to confidences showing
-depths of sweetness and charm.
-
-The two were happily matched. Waring was forty-two and Mrs. Bates half a
-dozen years younger. But both seemed younger than their years, and
-retained their earlier tastes and enthusiasms.
-
-Also both were bound up, heart and soul, in the welfare of the
-University. Mrs. Bates' first husband had been one of its prominent
-professors and its history and traditions were known and loved by the
-cheery little lady.
-
-Perhaps the only person in Corinth who was not pleased at the approaching
-nuptials of John Waring and Emily Bates was Mrs. Peyton, Waring's present
-housekeeper. For it meant the loss of her position, which she had
-faithfully filled for ten years or more. And this meant the loss of a
-good and satisfactory home, not only for herself, but for her daughter
-Helen, a girl of eighteen, who lived there also.
-
-Not yet had Waring told his housekeeper that she was to be dethroned but
-she knew the notice would come,--knew, too, that it was delayed only
-because of John Waring's disinclination to say or do anything unwelcome
-to another. And Mrs. Peyton had been his sister's school friend and had
-served him well and faithfully. Yet she must go, for the incoming
-mistress needed no other housekeeper for the establishment than her own
-efficient, capable self.
-
-It was a very cold February afternoon, and Mrs. Peyton was serving tea in
-the cheerful living-room. Emily Bates was present; an indulgence she
-seldom allowed herself, for she was punctilious regarding conventions,
-and Corinth people, after all, were critical. Though, to be sure, there
-was no harm in her taking tea in the home so soon to be her own.
-
-The two women were outwardly most courteous, and if there was an
-underlying hostility it was not observable on the part of either.
-
-"I came today," Emily Bates said, as she took her tea cup from the
-Japanese butler who offered it, "because I want to tell you, John, of
-some rumors I heard in the town. They say there is trouble brewing for
-you."
-
-"Trouble brewing is such a picturesque phrase," Waring said, smiling
-idly, as he stirred his tea. "One immediately visions Macbeth's witches,
-and their trouble brew."
-
-"You needn't laugh," Emily flashed an affectionate smile toward him,
-"when the phrase is used it often means something."
-
-"Something vague and indefinite," suggested Gordon Lockwood, who was
-Waring's secretary, and was as one of the family.
-
-"Not necessarily," Mrs. Bates returned; "more likely something definite,
-though perhaps not very alarming."
-
-"Such as what?" asked Waring, "and from what direction? Will the freshmen
-make me an apple-pie bed, or will the seniors haze me, do you think?"
-
-"Be serious, John," Mrs. Bates begged. "I tell you there is a movement on
-foot to stir up dissension. I heard they would contest the election."
-
-"Oh, they can't do that," Lockwood stated; "nor would anybody try. Don't
-be alarmed, Mrs. Bates. I'm sure we know all that's going on,--and I
-can't think there's any 'trouble brewing' for Doctor Waring."
-
-"I've heard it, too," vouchsafed Mrs. Peyton. "It's not anything
-definite, but there are rumors and hints, and where there's smoke,
-there's bound to be fire. I wish you'd at least look into it, Doctor."
-
-"Yes," agreed Emily Bates, "do look into it, John."
-
-"But how can I?" Waring smiled. "I can't go from door to door, saying
-'I've come to investigate a rumor,' can I?"
-
-"Oh, don't be absurd!" Mrs. Bates' plump little hands fluttered in
-protest and then fell quietly to rest in her lap. "You men are so
-tactless! Now, Mrs. Peyton or I could find out all about it, without any
-one knowing we were making inquiry."
-
-"Why don't you, then?" asked Waring, and Mrs. Peyton gave a pleased smile
-as the guest bracketed their names.
-
-"I will, if you say so." Emily spoke gravely. "That is what I wanted to
-ask you. I didn't like to take up the matter with any one unless you
-directly approved."
-
-"Oh, go ahead,--I see no harm in it."
-
-"But, Doctor Waring," put in Lockwood, "is it wise? I fear that if Mrs.
-Bates takes up this matter she may get in deeper than she means or
-expects to, and--well, you can't tell what might turn up."
-
-"That's so, Emily. As matters stand, you'd best be careful."
-
-"Oh, John, how vacillating you are! First, you say go ahead, and then you
-say stop! I don't mind your changing your opinions, but I do resent your
-paying so little attention to the matter. You toss it aside without
-thought."
-
-"Doctor Waring thinks very quickly," said Mrs. Peyton, and Emily gave her
-a slight stare.
-
-It was hard for the housekeeper to realize that she must inevitably lose
-her place in his household, and the thought made her a little assertive
-while she still had opportunity.
-
-"Yes, I know it," was the reply Emily gave, and went on, addressing
-herself to the two men.
-
-"Persuade him, Mr. Lockwood. Not of his duty, he never misapprehends
-that, but of the necessity of looking on this matter as a duty."
-
-"What a pleader you are, Emily," and Waring gave her an admiring bow; "I
-am almost persuaded that my very life is in danger!"
-
-"Oh, you won't be good!" The blue eyes twinkled but the rosy little mouth
-took on a mutinous pout. "Well, I warn you, if you don't look out for
-yourself, I'm going to look out for you! And that, as Mr. Lockwood hints,
-may get you into trouble!"
-
-"What a contradictory little person it is! In an effort to get me out of
-trouble, you admit you will probably get me into trouble. Well, well, if
-this is during our betrothal days, what will you do after we are
-married?"
-
-"Oh, then you'll obey me implicitly," and the expressive hands indicated
-with a wide sweep, total subjection.
-
-"You'll find him not absolutely easy to manage," Mrs. Peyton declared,
-and though Emily Bates said no word, she gave a look of superior managing
-power that brought the housekeeper's thin lips together in a resentful
-straight line.
-
-This byplay was unnoticed by large-minded John Waring, but it amused
-Lockwood, who was an observer of human nature.
-
-Unostentatiously, he watched Mrs. Peyton, as she turned her attention to
-the tea tray, and noted the air of importance with which she continued
-her duties as hostess.
-
-"Bring hot toast, Ito," she said to the well-trained and deferential
-Japanese. "And a few more lemon slices,--I see another guest coming."
-
-She smiled out through the window, and a moment later a breezy young chap
-came into the room.
-
-"Hello, folkses," he cried; "Hello, Aunt Emily."
-
-He gave Mrs. Bates an audible kiss on her pretty cheek and bowed with
-boyish good humor to Mrs. Peyton.
-
-"How do you do, Uncle Doctor?" and "How goes it, Lock?" he went on, as he
-threw himself, a little sprawlingly into an easy chair. "And here's the
-fair Helen of Troy."
-
-He jumped up as Helen Peyton came into the room. "Why, Pinky," she said,
-"when did you come?"
-
-"Just now, my girl, as you noted from your oriel lattice,--and came
-running down to bask in the sunshine of my smiles."
-
-"Behave yourself, Pinky," admonished his aunt, as she noted Helen's quick
-blush and realized the saucy boy had told the truth.
-
-Pinckney Payne, college freshman, and nephew of Emily Bates, was very
-fond of Doctor Waring, his English teacher, and as also fond, in his
-boyish way, of his aunt. But he was no respecter of authority, and, now
-that his aunt was to be the wife of his favorite professor, also the
-President-elect of the college, he assumed an absolute familiarity with
-the whole household.
-
-His nickname was not only an abbreviation, but was descriptive of his
-exuberant health and invariably red cheeks. For the rest, he was just a
-rollicking, care-free boy, ring leader in college fun, often punished,
-but bobbing up serenely again, ready for more mischief.
-
-Helen Peyton adored the irrepressible Pinky, and though he liked her, it
-was no more than he felt for many others and not so much as he had for a
-few.
-
-"Tea, Mrs. Peyton? Oh, yes, indeed, thank you. Yes, two lemon and three
-sugar. And toasts,--and cakies,--oh, what good ones! What a tuck! Alma
-Mater doesn't feed us like this! I say, Aunt Emily, after you are
-married, may I come to tea every day? And bring the fellows?"
-
-"I'll answer that,--you may," said John Waring.
-
-"And I'll revise the answer,--you may, with reservations," Mrs. Bates
-supplemented. "Now, Pinky, you're a dear and a sweet, but you can't annex
-this house and all its affairs, just because it's going to be my home."
-
-"Don't want to, Auntie. I only want you to annex me. You'll keep the same
-cook we have at present, won't you?"
-
-He looked solicitously at her, over a large slice of toast and jam he was
-devouring.
-
-"Maybe and maybe not," Mrs. Peyton spoke up. "Cooks are not always
-anxious to be kept."
-
-"At any rate, we'll have a cook, Pinky, of some sort," his aunt assured
-him, and the boy turned to tease Helen Peyton, who was quite willing to
-be teased.
-
-"I saw your beau today, Helen," he said.
-
-"Which one?" she asked placidly.
-
-"Is there a crowd? Well, I mean the Tyler person. Him as hangs out at Old
-Salt's. And, by the way, Uncle President,--yes, I am a bit previous on
-both counts, but you'll soon have the honor of being both President and
-my uncle,--by the way, I say, Bob Tyler says there's something in the
-wind."
-
-"A straw to show which way it blows, perhaps," Waring said.
-
-"Perhaps, sir. But it's blowing. Tyler says there's a movement on foot to
-make things hot for you if you take the Presidential chair with your
-present intentions."
-
-"My intentions?"
-
-"Yes, sir; about athletics, and sports in general."
-
-"And what are my so-called intentions?"
-
-"They say, you mean to cut out sport--"
-
-"Oh, Pinckney, you know better than that!"
-
-"Well, Doctor Waring, some seem to think that's what you have in mind. If
-you'd declare your intentions now,--"
-
-"Look here, Pinky, don't you think I've enough on my mind in the matter
-of marrying your aunt, without bringing in other matters till that's
-settled."
-
-"Going to be married soon, Uncle Doc?"
-
-"We are. As soon as your aunt will select a pleasant day for the
-ceremony. Then, that attended to, I can devote my mind and energies to
-this other subject. And meanwhile, my boy, if you hear talk about it,
-don't make any assertions,--rather, try to hush up the subject."
-
-"I see,--I see,--and I will, Doctor Waring. You don't want to bother with
-those things till you're a settled down married man! I know just how you
-feel about it. Important business, this getting married,--I daresay,
-sir."
-
-"It is,--and so much so, that I'm going to take the bride-elect off right
-now, for a little private confab. You must understand that we have much
-to arrange."
-
-"Run along,--bless you, my children!" Pinky waved a teacup and a sandwich
-beneficently toward the pair, as they left the room and went off in the
-direction of the Doctor's study.
-
-The house was a large one, with a fine front portico upheld by six
-enormous fluted columns.
-
-One of the most beautiful of New England doorways led into a wide hall.
-To the right of this was the drawing-room, not so often used and not so
-well liked as the more cozy living-room, to the left as one entered, and
-where the tea-drinking group now sat.
-
-Behind these two rooms and hall, ran a cross hall, with an outer door at
-the end back of the living-room and a deep and wide window seat at the
-other end, behind the drawing-room.
-
-Further back, beyond the cross hall, on the living-room side, was the
-dining-room, and beside it, back of the drawing-room was the Doctor's
-study. This was the gem of the whole house. The floor had been sunken to
-give greater ceiling height, for the room was very large, and of fine
-proportions. It opened on to the cross hall with wide double doors, and a
-flight of six or seven steps descended to its rug covered floor.
-
-Opposite the double doors was the great fireplace with high over-mantel
-of carved stone. Each side of the mantel were windows, high and not
-large. The main daylight came through a great window on the right of the
-entrance and also from a long French window that opened like doors on the
-same side.
-
-This French window, giving on a small porch, and the door that opened
-into the cross hall of the house were the only doors in the great room,
-save those on cupboards and bookcases.
-
-On the other side of the room, opposite the French window was a row of
-four small windows looking into the dining-room. But these were high, and
-could not be seen through by people on the sunken floor of the study.
-
-The whole room was done in Circassian walnut, and represented the ideal
-abode of a man of letters. The fireside was flanked with two facing
-davenports, the wide window seat was piled with cushions. The French
-window-doors were suitably curtained and the high windows were of truly
-beautiful stained glass.
-
-The spacious table desk was in the middle of the room, and bookcases,
-both portable and built in, lined the walls. There were a few good busts
-and valuable pictures, and the whole effect was one of dignity and repose
-rather than of elaborate grandeur.
-
-The room was renowned, and all Corinth spoke of it with pride. The
-students felt it a great occasion that brought them within its walls and
-the faculty loved nothing better than a session therein.
-
-Casual guests were rarely entertained in the study. Only especial
-visitors or those worthy of its classic atmosphere found welcome there.
-Mrs. Peyton or Helen were not expected to use it, and Mrs. Bates had
-already declared she should respect it as the sanctum of Doctor Waring
-alone.
-
-The two made their way to the window seat, and as he arranged the soft
-cushions for her, Waring said, "Don't, Emily, ever feel shut out of this
-room. As I live now, I've not welcomed the Peytons in here, but my wife
-is a different proposition."
-
-"I still feel an awe of the place, John, but I may get used to it.
-Anyway, I'll try, and I do appreciate your willingness to have me in
-here. Then if you want to be alone, you must put me out."
-
-"I'll probably do that, sometimes, dear, for I have to spend many hours
-alone. You know, I'm not taking the presidency lightly."
-
-"I know it, you conscientious dear. But, on the other hand, don't be too
-serious about it. You're just the man for the place, just the character
-for a College President, and if you try too hard to improve or
-reconstruct yourself, you'll probably spoil your present perfection."
-
-"Well nothing would spoil _your_ present perfection, my Emily. I am too
-greatly blest,--to have the great honor from the college,--and you, too!"
-
-"Are you happy, John? All happy?"
-
-Waring's deep blue eyes fastened themselves on her face. His brown hair
-showed only a little gray at the temples, his fine face was not touched
-deeply by Time's lines, and his clear, wholesome skin glowed with health.
-
-If there was an instant's hesitation before his reply came, it was none
-the less hearty and sincere. "Yes, my darling, all happy. And you?"
-
-"I am happy, if you are," she returned. "But I can never be happy if
-there is a shadow of any sort on your heart. Is there, John? Tell me,
-truly."
-
-"You mean regarding this trouble that I hear is brewing for me?"
-
-"Not only that; I mean in any direction."
-
-"Trouble, Emily! With you in my arms! No,--a thousand times no! Trouble
-and I are strangers,--so long as I have you!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
- MISS MYSTERY ARRIVES
-
-
-Anyone who has arrived at the railroad station of a New England village,
-after dark on a very cold winter night, the train late, no one to meet
-him, and no place engaged for board and lodging, will know the desolation
-of such a situation.
-
-New England's small railroad stations are much alike, the crowds that
-alight from the trains are much alike, the people waiting on the platform
-for the arriving travelers are much alike, but there came into Corinth
-one night a passenger who was not at all like the fellow passengers on
-that belated train. It was a train from New York, due in Corinth at
-five-forty, but owing to the extreme cold weather, and various untoward
-freezings occasioned thereby, the delays were many and long and the train
-drew into the station shortly after seven o'clock.
-
-Tired, hungry and impatient, the travelers crowded out of the train and
-stamped through the snow to the vehicles awaiting them, or footed it to
-their nearby homes.
-
-The passenger who was unlike the others stepped down from the car
-platform, and holding her small suitcase firmly, crossed the track and
-entered the station waiting room. She went to the ticket window but found
-there no attendant. Impatiently she tapped her little foot on the old
-board floor but no one appeared.
-
-"Agent," she called out, rapping with her knuckles on the window shelf,
-"Agent,--where are you?"
-
-"Who's there? What d'y' want?" growled a surly voice, and a head appeared
-at the ticket window.
-
-"I want somebody to look after me! I'm alone, and I want a porter, and I
-want a conveyance and I want some information."
-
-"Oh, you do! Well, I can't supply porters nor yet conveyances; but
-information I may be able to give you."
-
-"Very well then," and a pair of big, dark eyes seemed to pierce his very
-brain. "Then tell me where I can find the best accommodations in
-Corinth."
-
-The now roused agent looked more interestedly at the inquirer.
-
-He saw a mere slip of a girl, young, slender, and very alert of manner.
-Her dark, grave little face was oval, and her eyes had a strange uncanny
-way of roving quickly about, and coming suddenly back, greatly
-disconcerting the stolid ticket agent.
-
-This agent was not unused to girls,--a college town is often invaded by
-hordes of smart young women, pretty girls and gay hoydens. Many Junes he
-had sold tickets or given information to hundreds of feminine inquirers
-but none had ever seemed quite like this one.
-
-"Best accommodations?" he repeated stupidly.
-
-"You heard me, then! About when do you propose to reply?"
-
-Still he gazed at her in silence, running over in his mind the various
-boarding houses, and finding none he thought she'd like.
-
-"There's a rule of the Railroad Company that questions must be answered
-the same day they're asked," she said, witheringly, and picking up her
-suitcase she started for the door, feeling that any one she might find
-would know more than this dummy.
-
-"Wait,--oh, I say, miss, wait a minute."
-
-"I did," she said coolly, proceeding to the door.
-
-"But,--oh, hold on,--try Old Salt Adams,--you couldn't do better."
-
-"Where is it?" she deigned to pause a moment, and he replied quickly:
-
-"He's right outside,--hurry up out,--you can catch him!"
-
-Here was something she could understand, and she hurried up out, just in
-time to see an old man with long white beard jump into his sleigh and
-begin to tuck fur robes about him.
-
-"He sprang to his sleigh,--to his team gave a whistle,--" she quoted to
-herself, and then cried out, "Hey, there, Santa Claus, give me a lift?"
-
-"You engaged for our house?" the man called back, and as she shook her
-head, he gathered up his reins.
-
-"Can't take any one not engaged," he called back, "Giddap!"
-
-"Wait,--wait! I command you!" The sharp, clear young voice rang out
-through the cold winter air, and Old Saltonstall Adams paused to listen.
-
-"Ho, ho," he chuckled, "you command me, do you? Now, I haven't been
-commanded for something like fifty years."
-
-"Oh, don't stop to fuss," the girl exclaimed, angrily. "Don't you see I'm
-cold, hungry and very uncomfortable? You have a boarding house,--I want
-board,--now, you take me in. Do you hear?"
-
-"Sure I hear, but, miss, we've only so many rooms and they're all
-occupied or engaged."
-
-"Some are engaged, but as yet unoccupied?" The dark eyes challenged him,
-and Adams mumbled,--"Well, that's about it."
-
-"Very well, I will occupy one until the engager comes along. Let me get
-in. No, I can manage my suitcase myself. You get my trunk,--here's the
-check. Or will you send for that tomorrow?"
-
-"Why wait? Might's well get it now--if so be you're bound to bide. 'Fraid
-to wait in the sleigh alone?"
-
-"I'm afraid of nothing," was the disdainful answer, and the girl pulled
-the fur robes up around her as she sat in the middle of the back seat.
-
-Shortly, old Salt returned with the trunk on his shoulder, and put it in
-the front with himself, and they started.
-
-"Don't try to talk," he called back to her, as the horses began a rapid
-trot. "I can't hear you against this wind."
-
-"I've no intention of talking," the girl replied, but the man couldn't
-hear her. The wind blew fiercely. It was snowing a little, and the drifts
-sent feathery clouds through the air. The trees, coated with ice from a
-recent sleet storm, broke off crackling bits of ice as they passed. The
-girl looked about, at first curiously, and then timidly, as if frightened
-by what she saw.
-
-It was not a long ride, and they stopped before a large house, showing
-comfortably lighted windows and a broad front door that swung open even
-as the girl was getting down from the sleigh.
-
-"For the land sake!" exclaimed a brisk feminine voice, "this ain't Letty!
-Who in the earth have you got here?"
-
-"I don't know," Old Salt Adams replied, truthfully. "Take her along,
-mother, and give her a night's lodging."
-
-"But where is Letty? Didn't she come?"
-
-"Now can't you see she didn't come? Do you s'pose I left her at the
-station? Or dumped her out along the road? No--since you will have it,
-she didn't come. She _didn't_ come!"
-
-Old Salt drove on toward the barns, and Mrs. Adams bade the girl go into
-the house.
-
-The landlady followed, and as she saw the strange guest she gazed at her
-in frank curiosity.
-
-"You want a room, I s'pose," she began. "But, I'm sorry to say we haven't
-one vacant--"
-
-"Oh, I'll take Letty's. She didn't come, you see, so I can take her room
-for tonight."
-
-"Letty wouldn't like that."
-
-"But I would. And I'm here and Letty isn't. Shall we go right up?"
-
-Picking up her small suitcase, the girl started and then stepped back for
-the woman to lead the way.
-
-"Not quite so fast--_if_ you please. What is your name?"
-
-As the landlady's tone changed to a sterner inflection, the girl likewise
-grew dignified.
-
-"My name is Anita Austin," she said, coldly. "I came here because I was
-told it was the best house in Corinth."
-
-"Where are you from?"
-
-"New York City."
-
-"What address?"
-
-"Plaza Hotel."
-
-By this time the strange dark eyes had done their work. A steady glance
-from Anita Austin seemed to compel all the world to do her bidding. At
-any rate, Mrs. Adams took the suitcase, and without a further word
-conducted the stranger upstairs.
-
-She took her into an attractive bedroom, presumably made ready for the
-absent Letty.
-
-"This will do," Miss Austin said, calmly. "Will you send me up a tray of
-supper? I don't want much, and I prefer not to come down to dinner."
-
-"Land sake, dinner's over long ago. You want some tea, 'n' bread, 'n'
-butter, 'n' preserves, 'n' cake?"
-
-"Yes, thank you, that sounds good. Send it in half an hour."
-
-To her guest Mrs. Adams showed merely a face of acquiescence, but once
-outside the door, and released from the spell of those eerie eyes, she
-remarked to herself, "For the land sake!" with great emphasis.
-
-"Well, what do you know about that!" Old Salt Adams cried, when, after
-she had started him on his supper, his wife related the episode.
-
-"I can't make her out," Mrs. Adams said, thoughtfully. "But I don't like
-her. And I won't keep her. Tomorrow, you take her over to Belton's."
-
-"Just as you say. But I thought her kinda interesting looking. You can't
-say she isn't that."
-
-"Maybe so, to some folks. Not to me. And Letty'll come tomorrow, so that
-girl'll have to get out of the room."
-
-Meanwhile "that girl" was eagerly peering out of her window.
-
-She tried to discern which were the lights of the college buildings, but
-through the still lightly falling snow, she could see but little, and
-after a time, she gave up the effort. She drew her head back into the
-room just as a tap at the door announced her supper.
-
-"Thank you," she said to the maid who brought it. "Set it on that stand,
-please. It looks very nice."
-
-And then, sitting comfortably in an easy chair, robed in warm dressing
-gown and slippers, Miss Anita Austin devoted a pleasant half hour to the
-simple but thoroughly satisfactory meal.
-
-This finished, she wrote some letters. Not many, indeed, but few as they
-were, the midnight hour struck before she sealed the last envelope and
-wrote the last address.
-
-Then, prepared for bed, she again looked from the window, and gazed long
-into the night.
-
-"Corinth," she whispered, "Oh, Corinth, what do you hold for me? What
-fortune or misfortune will you bring me? What fortune or misfortune shall
-I bring to others? Oh, Justice, Justice, what crimes are committed in thy
-name!"
-
-The next morning Anita appeared in the dining-room at the breakfast hour.
-
-Mrs. Adams scanned her sharply, and looked a little disapprovingly at the
-short, scant skirt and slim, silken legs of her new boarder.
-
-Anita, her dark eyes scanning her hostess with equal sharpness, seemed to
-express an equal disapproval of the country-cut gingham and huge white
-apron.
-
-Not at all obtuse, Mrs. Adams sensed this, and her tone was a little more
-deferential than she had at first intended to make it.
-
-"Will you sit here, please, Miss Austin?" she indicated a chair next
-herself.
-
-"No, thank you, I'll sit by my friend," and the girl slipped into a
-vacant chair next Saltonstall Adams.
-
-Old Salt gave a furtive glance at his wife, and suppressed a chuckle at
-her surprise.
-
-"This is Mr. Tyler's place," he said to the usurper, "but I expect he'll
-let you have it this once."
-
-"I mean to have it all the time," and Anita nodded gravely at her host.
-
-"All the time is this one meal only," crisply put in Mrs. Adams. "I'm
-sorry, Miss Austin, but we can't keep you here. I have no vacant room."
-
-The entrance of some other people gave Anita a chance to speak in an
-undertone to Mr. Adams, and she said;
-
-"You'll let me stay till Letty comes, won't you? I suppose you are boss
-in your own house."
-
-As a matter of fact almost any phrase would have described the man better
-than "boss in his own house," but the idea tickled his sense of irony,
-and he chuckled as he replied, "You bet I am! Here you stay--as long as
-you want to."
-
-"You're my friend, then?" and an appealing glance was shot at him from
-beneath long, curling lashes, that proved the complete undoing of
-Saltonstall Adams.
-
-"To the death!" he whispered, in mock dramatic manner.
-
-Anita gave a shiver. "What a way to put it!" she cried. "I mean to live
-forever, sir!"
-
-"Doubtless," Old Salt returned, placidly. "You're a freak--aren't you?"
-
-"That isn't a very pretty way of expressing it, but I suppose I am," and
-a mutinous look passed over the strange little face.
-
-In repose, the face was oval, serene, and regular of feature. But when
-the girl smiled or spoke or frowned, changes took place, and the mobile
-countenance grew soft with laughter or hard with scorn.
-
-And scorn was plainly visible when, a moment later, Adams introduced
-Robert Tyler, a fellow boarder, to Miss Austin.
-
-She gave him first a conventional glance, then, as he dropped into the
-chair next hers, and said,
-
-"Only too glad to give up my place to a peach," she turned on him a
-flashing glance, that, as he expressed it afterward, "wiped him off the
-face of the earth."
-
-Nor could he reinstate himself in her good graces. He tried a penitent
-attitude, bravado, jocularity and indifference, but one and all failed to
-engage her interest or even attention. She answered his remarks with
-calm, curt speeches that left him baffled and uncertain whether he wanted
-to bow down and worship her, or wring her neck.
-
-Old Salt Adams took this all in, his amusement giving way to curiosity
-and then to wonder. Who was this person, who looked like a young, very
-young girl, yet who had all the mental powers of an experienced woman?
-What was she and what her calling?
-
-The other boarders appeared, those nearest Anita were introduced, and
-most of them considered her merely a pretty, new guest. Her manners were
-irreproachable, her demeanor quiet and graceful, yet as Adams covertly
-watched her, he felt as if he were watching an inactive volcano.
-
-The meal over, he detained her a moment in the dining-room.
-
-"Why are you here, Miss Austin?" he said, courteously; "what is your
-errand in Corinth?"
-
-"I am an artist," she said, looking at him with her mysterious intent
-gaze. "Or, perhaps I should say an art student. I've been told that there
-are beautiful bits of winter scenery available for subjects here, and I
-want to sketch. Please, Mr. Adams, let me stay here until Letty comes."
-
-A sudden twinkle in her eye startled the old man, and he said quickly,
-"How do you know she isn't coming?"
-
-That, in turn, surprised Anita, but she only smiled, and replied, "I saw
-a telegram handed to Mrs. Adams at breakfast--and then she looked
-thoughtfully at me, and--oh, well, I just sort of knew it was to say
-Letty couldn't come."
-
-"You witch! You uncanny thing! If I should take you over to Salem, they'd
-burn you!"
-
-"I'll ride over on a broomstick some day, and see if they will," she
-returned, gleefully.
-
-And then along came Nemesis, in the person of the landlady.
-
-"I'm sorry, Miss Austin," she began, but the girl interrupted her.
-
-"Please, Mrs. Adams," she said, pleadingly, "don't say any thing to make
-me sorry, too! Now, you want to say you haven't any room for me--but that
-isn't true; so you don't know what to say to get rid of me. But--why do
-you want to get rid of me?"
-
-Esther Adams looked at the girl and that look was her undoing.
-
-Such a pathetic face, such pleading eyes, such a wistful curved mouth,
-the landlady couldn't resist, and against her will, against her better
-judgment, she said, "Well, then, stay, you poor little thing. But you
-must tell me more about yourself. I don't know who you are."
-
-"I don't know, myself," the strange girl returned. "Do we, any of us know
-who we are? We go through this world, strangers to each other--don't we?
-And also, strangers to ourselves." Her eyes took on a faraway, mystical
-look. "If I find out who I am, I'll let you know."
-
-Then a dazzling smile broke over her face, they heard a musical ripple of
-laughter, and she was gone.
-
-They heard her steps, as she ran upstairs to her room, and the two
-Adamses looked at each other.
-
-"Daffy," said Mrs. Adams. "A little touched, poor child. I believe she
-has run away from home or from her keepers. We'll hear the truth soon.
-They'll be looking for her."
-
-"Perhaps," said her husband, doubtfully. "But that isn't the way I size
-her up. She's nobody's fool, that girl. Wish you'd seen her give Bob
-Tyler his comeuppance!"
-
-"What'd she say?"
-
-"'Twasn't what she said, so much as the look she gave him! He almost went
-through the floor. Well, she says she's a painter of scenery and
-landscapes. Let her stay a few days, till I size her up."
-
-"You size her up!" returned his wife, with good-natured contempt. "If she
-smiles on you or gives you a bit of taffy-talk, you'll size her up for an
-angel! I'm not so sure she isn't quite the opposite!"
-
-Meanwhile the subject of their discussion was arraying herself for a
-walk. Equipped with storm boots and fur coat, she set out to inspect
-Corinth. A jaunty fur cap, with one long, red quill feather gave her
-still more the appearance of an elf or gnome, and many of the Adams house
-boarders watched the little figure as she set forth to brave the icy
-streets.
-
-Apparently she had no fixed plan of procedure, for at each corner, she
-looked about, and chose her course at random. The snow had ceased during
-the night, and it was very cold, with a clear sunshiny frostiness in the
-air that made the olive cheeks red and glowing.
-
-Reaching a bridge, she paused and stood looking over the slight railing
-into the frozen ravine below.
-
-Long she stood, until passers-by began to stare at her. She was unaware
-of this, absorbed in her thoughts and oblivious to all about her.
-
-Pinckney Payne, coming along, saw her, and, as he would have expressed
-it, fell for her at once.
-
-"Don't do it, sister!" he said, pausing beside her. "Don't end your young
-life on this glorious day! Suicide is a mess, at best. Take my advice and
-cut it out!"
-
-She turned, ready to freeze him with a glance more icy even than the
-landscape, but his frank, roguish smile disarmed her.
-
-"Freshman?" she said, patronizingly, but it didn't abash him.
-
-"Yep. Pinckney Payne, if you must know. Commonly called Pinky."
-
-"I don't wonder," and she noticed his red cheeks. "Well, now that you're
-properly introduced, tell me some of the buildings. What's that one?"
-
-"Dormitories. And that," pointing, "is the church."
-
-"Really! And that beautiful colonnade one?"
-
-"That's Doctor Waring's home. Him as is going to be next Prexy."
-
-"And that? And that?"
-
-He replied to all her questions, and kept his eyes fastened on her
-bewitching face. Never had Pinky seen a girl just like this. She looked
-so young, so merry, and yet her restless, roving eyes seemed full of
-hidden fire and tempestuous excitement.
-
-"Where you from?" he said, abruptly. "Where you staying?"
-
-"At Mrs. Adams," she returned, "is it a good house?"
-
-"Best in town. Awful hard to get into. Always full up. Relative of hers?"
-
-"No, just a boarder. I chanced to get a room some one else engaged and
-couldn't use."
-
-"You're lucky. Met Bob Tyler?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"You don't like him! I see that. Met Gordon Lockwood?"
-
-"No; who's he?"
-
-"He's Doctor Waring's secretary, but he's mighty worthwhile on his own
-account. I say, may I come to see you?"
-
-"Thank you, no. I'm not receiving callers--yet."
-
-"Well, you will be soon--because I'm coming. I say my aunt lives next
-door to Adams'. May I bring her to call on you?"
-
-"Not yet, please. I'm not settled."
-
-"Soon's you say the word, then. My aunt is Mrs. Bates, and she's a love.
-She's going to marry Doctor Waring--so you see we're the right sort of
-people."
-
-"There are no right sort of people," said the girl, and, turning, she
-walked away.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
- THIRTEEN BUTTONS
-
-
-Apparently Miss Austin's statement that there were no right sort of
-people was her own belief, for she made no friends at the Adams house.
-Nor was this the fault of her fellow-boarders. They were more than
-willing to be friendly, but their overtures were invariably ignored.
-
-Not rudely, for Miss Austin seemed to be a girl of culture and her
-manners were correct, but, as one persistent matron expressed it, "you
-can't get anywhere with her."
-
-She talked to no one at the table, merely answering a direct question if
-put to her. She retained the seat next Old Salt, seeming to rely on him
-to protect her from the advances of the others. Not that she needed
-protection, exactly, for Miss Anita Austin was evidently quite able to
-take care of herself.
-
-But she was a mystery--and mysteries provoke inquiry.
-
-The house was not a large one, and the two-score boarders, though they
-would have denied an imputation of curiosity, were exceedingly interested
-in learning the facts about Miss Mystery, as they had come to call her.
-
-Mrs. Adams was one of the most eager of all to know the truth, but, as he
-did on rare occasions, Old Salt Adams had set down his foot that the girl
-was not to be annoyed.
-
-"I don't know who she is or where she hails from," he told his wife, "but
-as long as she stays here, she's not to be pestered by a lot of gossiping
-old hens. When she does anything you don't like, send her away; but so
-long's she's under my roof, she's got to be let alone."
-
-And let alone she was--not so much because of Adams' dictum as because
-"pestering" did little good.
-
-The girl had a disconcerting way of looking an inquisitor straight in the
-eyes, and then, with a monosyllabic reply, turning and walking off as if
-the other did not exist.
-
-"Why," said Miss Bascom, aggrievedly relating her experience, "I just
-said, politely, 'Are you from New York or where, Miss Austin?' and she
-turned those big, black eyes on me, and said, 'Where.' Then she turned
-her back and looked out of the window, as if she had wiped me off the
-face of the earth!"
-
-"She's too young to act like that," opined Mrs. Welby.
-
-"Oh, she isn't so terribly young," Miss Bascom returned. "She's too
-experienced to be so very young."
-
-"How do you know she's experienced? What makes you say that?"
-
-"Why," Miss Bascom hesitated for words, "she's--sort of
-sophisticated--you can see that from her looks. I mean when anything is
-discussed at the table, she doesn't say a word, but you can tell from her
-face that she knows all about it--I mean a matter of general interest,
-don't you know. I don't mean local matters."
-
-"She's an intelligent girl, I know, but that doesn't make her out old. I
-don't believe she's twenty."
-
-"Oh, she is! Why, she's twenty-five or twenty-seven!"
-
-"Never in the world! I'm going to ask her."
-
-"Ask her!" Miss Bascom laughed. "You'll get well snubbed if you do."
-
-But this prophecy only served to egg Mrs. Welby on, and she took the
-first occasion to carry out her promise.
-
-She met Anita in the hall, as the girl was about to go out, and smilingly
-detained her.
-
-"Why so aloof, my dear," she said, playfully. "You rarely give us a
-chance to entertain you."
-
-As Mrs. Welby was between Anita and the door, the girl was forced to
-pause. She looked the older woman over, with an appraising glance that
-was not rude, but merely disinterested.
-
-"No?" she said, with a curious rising inflection, that somehow seemed
-meant to close the incident.
-
-But Mrs. Welby was not so easily baffled.
-
-"No," she repeated, smilingly. "And we want to know you better. You're
-too young and too pretty not to be a general favorite amongst us. How old
-are you, my dear child?"
-
-"Just a hundred," and Miss Austin's dark eyes were so grave, and seemed
-to hold such a world of wisdom and experience that Mrs. Welby almost
-jumped.
-
-Too amazed to reply, she even let the girl get past her, and out of the
-street door, before she recovered her poise.
-
-"She's uncanny," Mrs. Welby declared, when telling Miss Bascom of the
-interview. "I give you my word, when she said that, she looked a
-hundred!"
-
-"Looked a hundred! What do you mean?"
-
-"Just that. Her eyes seemed to hold all there is of knowledge, yes--and
-of evil--"
-
-"Evil! My goodness!" Miss Bascom rolled this suggestion like a sweet
-morsel under her tongue.
-
-"Oh--I don't say there's anything wrong about the girl--"
-
-"Well! If her eyes showed depths of evil, I should say there _was_
-something wrong!"
-
-The episode was repeated from one to another of the exclusive _clientele_
-of the Adams house, until, by exaggeration and imagination it grew into
-quite a respectable arraignment of Miss Mystery, and branded her as a
-doubtful character if not a dangerous one.
-
-Before Miss Austin had been in the house a week, she had definitely
-settled her status from her own point of view.
-
-Uniformly correct and courteous of manner, she rarely spoke, save when
-necessary. It was as if she had declared, "I will not talk. If this be
-mystery, make the most of it."
-
-Old Salt, apparently, backed her up in this determination, and allowed
-her to sit next him at table, without addressing her at all.
-
-More, he often took it upon himself to answer a remark or question meant
-for her and for this he sometimes received a fleeting glance, or a ghost
-of a smile of approval and appreciation.
-
-But all this was superficial. The Adamses, between themselves, decided
-that Miss Austin was more deeply mysterious than was shown by her
-disinclination to make friends. They concluded she was transacting
-important business of some sort, and that her sketching of the winter
-scenery, which she did every clear day, was merely a blind.
-
-Though Mrs. Adams resented this, and urged her husband to send the girl
-packing, Old Salt demurred.
-
-"She's done no harm as yet," he said. "She's a mystery, but not a wrong
-one, 's far's I can make out. Let her alone, mother. I've got my eye on
-her."
-
-"I've got my two eyes on her, and I can see more'n you can. Why, Salt,
-that girl don't hardly sleep at all. Night after night, she sits up
-looking out of the window, over toward the college buildings--"
-
-"How do you know?"
-
-"I go and listen at her door," Mrs. Adams admitted, without
-embarrassment. "I want to know what she's up to."
-
-"You can't see her."
-
-"No, but I hear her moving around restlessly, and putting the window up
-and down--and Miss Bascom--her room's cornerways on the ell, she says she
-sees her looking out the window late at night 'most every night."
-
-"Miss Bascom's a meddling old maid, and I'd put her out of this house
-before I would the little girl."
-
-"Of course _you_ would! You're all set up because she makes so much of
-you--"
-
-"Oh, come now, Esther, you can't say that child makes much of me! I wish
-she would. I've taken a fancy to her."
-
-"Yes, because she's pretty--in a gipsy, witch-like fashion. What men see
-in a pair of big black eyes, and a dark, sallow face, I don't know!"
-
-"Not sallow," Old Salt said, reflectively; "olive, rather--but not
-sallow."
-
-"Oh you!" exclaimed Mrs. Adams, and with that cryptic remark the subject
-was dropped.
-
-Gordon Lockwood, secretary of John Waring, had a room at the Adams house.
-But as he took no meals there save his breakfasts, and as he ate those
-early, he had not yet met Anita Austin.
-
-But one Saturday morning, he chanced to be late, and the two sat at table
-together.
-
-An astute reader of humanity, Lockwood at once became interested in the
-girl, and realized that to win her attention he must not be eager or
-insistent.
-
-He spoke only one or two of the merest commonplaces, until almost at the
-close of the meal, he said:
-
-"Can I do anything for you, Miss Austin? If you would care to hear any of
-the College lectures, I can arrange it."
-
-"Who are the speakers?"
-
-She turned her eyes fully upon him, and Gordon Lockwood marveled at their
-depth and beauty.
-
-"Tonight," he replied, "Doctor Waring is to lecture on Egyptian
-Archaeology. Are you interested in that?"
-
-"Yes," she said, "very much so. I'd like to go."
-
-"You certainly may, then. Just use this card."
-
-He took a card from his pocket, scribbled a line across it, and gave it
-to her. Without another word, he finished his breakfast, and with a mere
-courteous bow, he left the room.
-
-Miss Austin's face took on a more scrutable look than ever.
-
-The card still in her hand, she went up to her room. Unheeding the maid,
-who was at her duties there, the girl threw herself into a big chair and
-sat staring at the card.
-
-"The Egyptian Temples," she said to herself, "Doctor John Waring."
-
-The maid looked at her curiously as she murmured the words half aloud,
-but Miss Austin paid no heed.
-
-"Go on with your work, Nora, don't mind me," she said, at last, as the
-chambermaid paused inquiringly in front of her. "I don't mind your being
-here until you finish what you have to do. And I wish you'd bring me a
-Corinth paper, please?' There is one, isn't there?"
-
-"Oh, yes, ma'am. Twice a week."
-
-Nora disappeared and returned with a paper.
-
-"Mr. Adams says you may have this to keep. It's the newest one."
-
-The girl took it and turned to find the College announcements. The
-Egyptian Lecture was mentioned, and in another column was a short article
-regarding Doctor Waring and a picture of him.
-
-Long the girl looked at the picture, and when the maid, her tasks
-completed, left the room, she noticed Miss Austin still staring at the
-fine face of the President-elect of the University of Corinth.
-
-After a time, she reached for a pair of scissors, and cut out the
-portrait and the article which it illustrated.
-
-She put the clipping in a portfolio, which she then locked in her trunk,
-and the picture she placed on her dresser.
-
-That night she went to the lecture. She went alone, for Gordon Lockwood
-did not reappear and no one else knew of her going.
-
-"Shall I have a key, or will you be up?" she asked of Mrs. Adams, as she
-left the house.
-
-"Oh, we'll be up." The round, shrewd eyes looked at her kindly. "You're
-lucky to get a ticket. Doctor Waring's lectures are crowded."
-
-"Good night," said Miss Austin, and went away.
-
-The lecture room was partly filled when she arrived, and her ticket
-entitled her to a seat near the front.
-
-Being seated, she fell into a brown study, or, at least, sat motionless
-and apparently in deep thought.
-
-Gordon Lockwood, already there, saw her come in, and after she was in her
-place, he quietly arose and went across the room, taking a seat directly
-behind her.
-
-Of this she was quite unaware, and the student of human nature gave
-himself up to a scrutiny of the stranger.
-
-He saw a little head, its mass of dark, almost black hair surmounted by a
-small turban shaped hat, of taupe colored velvet, with a curly ostrich
-tip nestling over one ear.
-
-Not that her ears were visible, for Miss Austin was smartly groomed and
-her whole effect modish.
-
-She had removed her coat, which she held in her lap. Her frock was taupe
-colored, of a soft woolen material, ornamented with many small buttons.
-These tiny buttons formed two rows down her back, from either shoulder to
-the waist line, and they also formed a border round the sailor collar.
-
-They were, perhaps, Lockwood decided, little balls, rather than buttons,
-and he idly counted them as he sat watching her.
-
-He hoped she would turn her head a trifle, but she sat as motionless as a
-human being may.
-
-He marveled at her stillness, and impatiently waited for the lecture to
-begin that he might note her interest.
-
-At last Doctor Waring appeared on the platform, and as the applause
-resounded all over the room, Lockwood was almost startled to observe Miss
-Austin's actions.
-
-She clasped her hands together as if she had received a sudden shock.
-She--if it hadn't seemed too absurd,--he would have said that she
-trembled. At any rate she was a little agitated, and it was with an
-effort that she preserved her calm. No one else noticed her, and Lockwood
-would not have done so, save for his close watching.
-
-Throughout the lecture, Miss Austin's gaze seemed never to leave the face
-of the speaker, and Lockwood marveled that Waring himself was not drawn
-to notice her.
-
-But Waring's calm gaze, though it traveled over the audience, never
-rested definitely on any one face, and Lockwood concluded he recognized
-nobody.
-
-"Miss Mystery!" Gordon Lockwood said to himself. "I wonder who and what
-you are. Probably a complex nature, psychic and imaginative. You think it
-interesting to come up here and pretend to be a mystery. But you're too
-young and too innocent to be--I'm not so sure of the innocent,
-though,--and as to youth,--well, I don't believe you're much older than
-you look any way. And you're confoundedly pretty--beautiful, rather.
-You've too much in your face to call it merely pretty. I've never seen
-such possibilities of character. You're either a deep one or your looks
-belie you."
-
-Lockwood heard no word of the lecture, nor did he wish to; he had helped
-in the writing of it, and almost knew it by heart anyway. But he was
-really intrigued by this mysterious girl, and he determined to get to
-know her.
-
-He had been told, of course, of the futile attempts of the other boarders
-to make friends with her, but he had faith in his own attractiveness and
-in his methods of procedure.
-
-Pinky Payne, too, had told of the interview he had on the bridge. His
-account of the girl's beauty and charm had first roused Lockwood's
-interest, and now he was making a study of the whole situation.
-
-Idly he counted the buttons again. There were thirteen across the collar.
-The vertical rows he could not be sure of as the back of the seat cut off
-their view.
-
-"Thirteen," he mused; "an unlucky number. And the poor child looks
-unlucky. There's a sadness in her eyes that must mean something. Yet
-there's more than sadness,--there's a hint of cruelty,--a possibility of
-desperate deeds."
-
-And then Lockwood laughed at himself. To romance thus about a girl to
-whom he had not said half a dozen sentences in his life! Yet he knew he
-was not mistaken. All that he had read in Anita Austin's face, he was
-sure was there. He knew physiognomy, and rarely, if ever, was mistaken in
-his reading thereof.
-
-After the lecture was over, Miss Austin went home as quickly as possible.
-
-Lockwood would have liked to escort her, but he had to remain to report
-to Doctor Waring, who might have some orders for him.
-
-There were none, however, and after a short interview with his employer,
-Gordon Lockwood went home.
-
-As he went softly upstairs to his room in the Adams house, he passed the
-door of what he knew to be Miss Austin's room. He fancied he heard a
-stifled sob come from behind that closed door, and instinctively paused
-to listen a moment.
-
-Yes, he was not mistaken. Another sob followed, quickly suppressed, but
-he could have no doubt the girl was crying.
-
-For a moment Lockwood was tempted to go back and ask Mrs. Adams to come
-and tap at the girl's door.
-
-Then he realized that it was not his affair. If the girl was in sorrow or
-if she wanted to cry for any reason, it was not his place to send someone
-to intrude upon her. He went on to his own room, but he sat up for a long
-time thinking over the strange young woman in the house.
-
-He remembered that she had paid undeviating attention to the lecture,
-quite evidently following the speaker with attention and interest. He
-remembered every detail of her appearance, her pretty dark hair showing
-beneath her little velvet toque,--the absurd buttons on the back of her
-frock.
-
-"That will do, Gordon, old man," he told himself at last. Better let her
-alone. She's a siren all right, but you know nothing about her, and
-you've no reason to try to learn more.
-
-And then he heard voices in the hall. Low of tone, but angry of
-inflection.
-
-"She threw it away!" Miss Austin was saying; "I tell you she threw it
-away!"
-
-"There, there," came Mrs. Adams' placating voice, "what if she did? It
-was only a newspaper scrap. She didn't know it was of any value."
-
-"But I want it! Nora has no business to throw away my things! She had no
-reason to touch it; it was on the dresser--standing up against the mirror
-frame. What do you suppose she did with it?"
-
-"Never mind it tonight. Tomorrow we will ask her. She's gone to bed."
-
-"But I'm afraid she destroyed it!"
-
-"Probably she did. Don't take on so. What paper was it?"
-
-"The Corinth Gazette."
-
-"The new one?"
-
-"I don't know. The one she brought me this afternoon."
-
-"Well, if she has thrown it away, you can get another copy. What was in
-it that you want so much?"
-
-"Oh,--nothing special."
-
-"Yes, it was." Mrs. Adams' curiosity was aroused now. "Come, tell me what
-it was."
-
-"Well, it was only a picture of Doctor Waring, the man who lectured
-tonight."
-
-"Such a fuss about that! My goodness! Why, you can get a picture of him
-anywhere."
-
-"But I want it now."
-
-An obstinate note rang in the young voice. Perhaps Miss Austin spoke
-louder than she meant to, but at any rate, Lockwood heard most of the
-conversation, and he now opened his door, and said:
-
-"May I offer a photograph? Would you care to have this, Miss Austin?"
-
-The girl looked at him with a white, angry face.
-
-"How dare you!" she cried; "how dare you eavesdrop and listen to a
-conversation not meant for your ears? Don't speak to me!"
-
-She drew up her slender figure and looked like a wrathful pixie defying a
-giant. For Lockwood was a big man, and loomed far above the slight,
-dainty figure of Miss Mystery.
-
-He smiled good-naturedly as he said, "Now don't get wrathy. I don't mean
-any harm. But you wanted a picture of Doctor Waring, and I've several of
-them. You see, I'm his secretary."
-
-"Oh,--are you! His private secretary?"
-
-"Yes--his confidential one,--though he has few confidences. He's a public
-man and his life is an open book."
-
-"Oh, it is!" The girl had recovered her poise, and with it her ability to
-be sarcastic. "Known to all men, I suppose?"
-
-"Known to all men," repeated Lockwood, thinking far more of the girl he
-was speaking to than of what he was saying.
-
-For, again he had fallen under the spell of her strange personality. He
-watched her, fascinated, as she reached out for the picture and almost
-snatched at it in her eagerness.
-
-Mrs. Adams yawned behind her plump hand.
-
-"Now you've got your picture, go to bed, child," she said with a kind,
-motherly smile. "I'll come in and unhook you, shall I?"
-
-Obediently, and without a word of good night to Lockwood, Anita turned
-and went into her room, followed by Mrs. Adams. The good lady offered no
-disinterested service. She wanted to know why Miss Austin wanted that
-picture so much. But she didn't find out. After being of such help as she
-could, the landlady found herself pleasantly but definitely dismissed.
-Outside the door, however, she turned and reopened it. Miss Mystery,
-unnoticing the intruder, was covering the photograph with many and
-passionate kisses.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
- A BROKEN TEACUP
-
-
-"I'll tell her you're here, but I'm noways sure she'll see you."
-
-Mrs. Adams stood, her hand on the doorknob, as she looked doubtfully at
-Emily Bates and her nephew.
-
-"Why not?" asked Mrs. Bates, in astonishment, and Pinky echoed, "Why not,
-Mrs. Adams?"
-
-"She's queer." Mrs. Adams came back into the room, closed the door, and
-spoke softly. "That's what she is, Mrs. Bates, queer. I can't make her
-out. She's been here more'n a week now, and I do say she gets queerer
-every day. Won't make friends with anybody,--won't speak at all at the
-table,--never comes and sits with us of an afternoon or evening,--just
-keeps to herself. Now, that ain't natural for a young girl."
-
-"How old is she?"
-
-"Nobody knows. She looks like nineteen or twenty, but she has the ways of
-a woman of forty,--as far's having her own way's concerned. Then again,
-she'll pet the cat or smile up at Mr. Adams like a child. I can't make
-her out at all. The boarders are all fearfully curious--that's one reason
-I take her part. They're a snoopy lot, and I make them let her alone."
-
-"You like her, then?"
-
-"You can't help liking her,--yet she is exasperating. You ask her a
-question, and she stares at you and walks off. Not really rude,--but just
-as if you weren't there! Well, I'll tell her you're here, anyway."
-
-It was only by his extraordinary powers of persuasion that Pinky Payne
-had won his aunt's consent to make this call, and, being Sunday
-afternoon, the recognized at-home day in Corinth, they had gone to the
-Adams house unannounced, and asked for Miss Austin.
-
-Upstairs, Mrs. Adams tapped at the girl's door.
-
-It was opened slowly,--it would seem, grudgingly,--and Anita looked out
-inquiringly.
-
-"Callers for you, Miss Austin," the landlady said, cheerily.
-
-"For me? I know no one."
-
-"Oh, now, you come on down. It's Mrs. Bates, and her nephew, Pinky Payne.
-They're our best people--"
-
-"What makes you think I want to see your best people?"
-
-"I don't say you do, but they want to see you,--and--oh, pshaw, now, be a
-little sociable. It won't hurt you."
-
-"Please say to Mrs. Bates that I have no desire to form new
-acquaintances, and I beg to be excused from appearing."
-
-"But do you know who she is? She's the lady that's going to marry Doctor
-Waring, the new President. And Pinckney Payne, her cousin, is a mighty
-nice boy."
-
-Mrs. Adams thought she detected an expression of wavering on the girl's
-face, and she followed up her advantage.
-
-"Yes, he's an awfully nice chap and just about your age, I should judge."
-
-"I'll go down," said Miss Austin, briefly, and Mrs. Adams indulged in a
-sly smile of satisfaction.
-
-"It's Pinky that fetched her," she thought to herself. "Young folks are
-young folks, the world over."
-
-Triumphantly, Mrs. Adams ushered Anita into the small parlor.
-
-"Mrs. Bates," she said, "and Mr. Payne,--Miss Austin."
-
-Then she left them, for Esther Adams had strict notions of her duties as
-a boarding-house landlady.
-
-"Mrs. Bates?" Anita said, going to her and taking her hand.
-
-"Yes, Miss Austin,--I am very glad to know you."
-
-But the words ceased suddenly as Emily Bates looked into the girl's eyes.
-Such a depth of sorrow was there, such unmistakable tragedy and a hint of
-fear. What could it all mean? Surely this was a strange girl.
-
-"We have never met before, have we?" Mrs. Bates said,--almost
-involuntarily, for the girl's gaze was too intent to be given to a
-stranger.
-
-"No," Anita said, recovering her poise steadily but slowly,--"not that I
-remember."
-
-"We have," burst forth the irrepressible Pinky. "I say, Miss Austin,
-please realize that I'm here as well as my more celebrated aunt! Don't
-you remember the morning I met you on the bridge,--and you were just
-about to throw yourself over the parapet?"
-
-"Oh, no, I wasn't," and a delightful smile lighted the dark little face.
-The lips were very scarlet, but it was unmistakably Nature's own red, and
-as they parted over even and pearly teeth, the smile transformed Miss
-Austin into a real beauty.
-
-It disappeared quickly, however, and Pinky Payne thenceforward made it
-his earnest endeavor to bring it back as often as possible.
-
-"Of course you weren't," agreed Mrs. Bates, "don't pay any attention to
-that foolish boy."
-
-"I'm a very nice boy, if I am foolish," Pinky declared, but Miss Austin
-vaguely ignored him, and kept her intent gaze fixed on Emily Bates.
-
-"We thought perhaps you would go with us over to Doctor Waring's for
-tea," Mrs. Bates said, after an interval of aimless chat. "It would, I am
-sure be a pleasant experience for you. Wouldn't you like it?"
-
-"Doctor Waring's?" repeated Anita, her voice low and tense, as if the
-idea was of more importance than it seemed.
-
-"Yes; I may take you, for the Doctor is my fiance,--we are to be married
-next month."
-
-"No!" cried the girl, with such a sharp intonation that Mrs. Bates was
-startled.
-
-"Sure they are," put in Pinky, anxious to cover up any eccentricity on
-the part of this girl in whom he took an increasing interest. "They're as
-blissful as two young turtle-doves. Come on, Miss Austin, let's go over
-there. It's a duck of a house to go to, and jolly good people there. The
-view from the study window is worth going miles to see. You're an
-artist,--yes?"
-
-"I sketch some," was the brief reply.
-
-"All right; if you can find a prettier spot to sketch on this terrestrial
-globe than the picture by the Waring study window, I'll buy it for you!
-Toddle up and get your hat."
-
-His gay good nature was infectious and Anita smiled again as she went for
-her hat and coat.
-
-The walk was but a short one, and when they entered the Waring home they
-found a cheery group having tea in the pleasant living room.
-
-Doctor Waring was not present and Mrs. Peyton was pouring tea, while
-Helen and Robert Tyler served it. The capable Ito had always Sunday
-afternoon for his holiday, and while Nogi, the Japanese second man, was
-willing enough, his training was incomplete, and his blunders frequent.
-He was a new servant, and though old Ito had hopes of educating him, Mrs.
-Peyton was doubtful about it. However, she thought, soon the
-responsibilities of the Waring menage would be hers no longer, and she
-resolved to get along with the inexperienced Nogi while she remained.
-
-Mrs. Peyton was very regretful at the coming change of affairs.
-
-She had looked upon John Waring as a confirmed bachelor, and had not
-expected he would ever marry. Now, she declared, he was marrying only
-because he thought it wiser for a College President to have a wife as a
-part of his domestic outfit.
-
-Helen disagreed with her mother about this. She said Doctor Waring had
-begun to take a personal interest in the attractive Mrs. Bates before he
-had any idea of becoming President of the University.
-
-But it didn't matter. The wedding was imminent, and Mrs. Peyton had
-received due notice that her services would be no longer needed.
-
-It was a blow to her, and it had made her depressed and disconsolate.
-Also, a little resentful, even spiteful toward Emily Bates.
-
-The housekeeper greeted Miss Austin with a cold smile, and then
-disregarded her utterly.
-
-Helen was frankly curious, and met the newcomer with full intention of
-finding out all about her.
-
-For Helen Peyton had heard of Miss Mystery from her friend and admirer,
-Robert Tyler, who, however, did not report that the girl had snubbed him
-more than once.
-
-One or two other guests were present and, having been told of Mrs. Bates'
-arrival Doctor Waring and his secretary came from the study and joined
-the others at tea.
-
-With a welcoming smile, John Waring greeted his fiancee, and then Mrs.
-Bates turned to the girl she had brought.
-
-"Miss Austin," she said, "let me present Doctor Waring. John,--Miss Anita
-Austin."
-
-At that very moment Helen Peyton offered Waring a cup of tea, and he was
-in the act of taking it from her hand when Mrs. Bates made the
-introduction.
-
-The cup and saucer fell to the floor with a crash, and those nearest saw
-the Doctor's face blanch suddenly white, and his hand clench on a nearby
-chair.
-
-But with a sudden, desperate effort he pulled himself together, and gave
-a little laugh, as he directed Nogi to remove the wrecked teacup.
-
-"Pick up the four corners, and carry it all off at once," he ordered,
-pointing to the small rug on which the cup had fallen, and Nogi, a little
-clumsily, obeyed.
-
-"Pardon the awkwardness, Miss Austin," he said, turning to smile at the
-girl, but even as he did so, his voice trembled, and he turned hastily
-away.
-
-"What is it, John?" asked Emily Bates, going to his side. "Are you ill?"
-
-"No,--no, dear; it's--it's all right. That foolish teacup upset my
-nerves. I'll go off by myself for a few moments."
-
-Somewhat abruptly, he left the room and went back to his study.
-
-Listening intently, Mrs. Bates heard him lock the door on the inside.
-
-"I'm sorry," she said, turning to Anita, "but I know you'll forgive
-Doctor Waring. He is under so much strain at present, and a foolish
-accident, like the broken teacup, is enough to give him a nervous shock."
-
-"I know," said the girl, sympathetically. "He must be very busy and
-absorbed."
-
-She spoke, as she often did, in a perfunctory way, as if not interested
-in what she was saying. Her glance wandered and she bit her red lower
-lip, as if nervous herself. Yet she was exceedingly quiet and calm of
-demeanor, and her graceful attitudes betokened only a courteous if
-disinterested guest.
-
-Gordon Lockwood immediately followed his chief and tapped at the locked
-study door.
-
-"All right, Lockwood," Waring recognized the knock. "I don't want you
-now. I'll reappear shortly. Go back to the tea room."
-
-Willingly, Lockwood went back, hoping to have a chance for conversation
-with Miss Mystery.
-
-She was chatting gayly with Helen Peyton, Pinky and Mrs. Tyler.
-
-To Lockwood's surprise, Miss Austin was really gay and merry and quite
-held her own in the chaff and repartee.
-
-Yet as Lockwood noted her more closely, his quick perception told him her
-gayety was forced.
-
-The secretary's ability to read human nature was almost uncanny, and he
-truly believed the girl was making merry only by reason of her firm
-determination to do so.
-
-Why? He wondered.
-
-Gordon Lockwood was a rare type of man. He was possessed of the most
-impassive face, the most immobile countenance imaginable. He never
-allowed himself to show the slightest excitement or even interest. This
-habit, acquired purposely at first, had grown upon him until it was
-second nature. He would not admit anything could move him, could stir his
-poise or disturb his equanimity. He heard the most gratifying or the most
-exasperating news with equal attention and equal lack of surprise or
-enthusiasm.
-
-Yet, though this may sound unattractive, so great was Lockwood's
-personality, so responsive and receptive his real nature beneath his
-outer calm, that all who really knew him liked him and trusted him.
-
-Waring depended on him in every respect. He was more than a secretary to
-his employer. He was counselor and friend as well.
-
-And Waring appreciated this, and rated Lockwood high in his esteem and
-affection.
-
-Of course, with his insight, Gordon Lockwood could not be blind to the
-fact that both Mrs. Peyton and her daughter would be pleased if he could
-fall a victim to the charms of the fair Helen. Nor could he evade the
-conviction that Mrs. Peyton herself had entertained hopes of becoming
-mistress of the Waring home, until the advent of Emily Bates had spoiled
-her chances.
-
-But these things were merely self-evident facts, and affected in no way
-the two men concerned.
-
-The Peytons were treated with pleasant regard for both, and that ended
-the matter so far as they were concerned.
-
-The subject had never been alluded to by Waring or Lockwood, but each
-understood, and when the Doctor's marriage took place, that would
-automatically end the Peytons' incumbency.
-
-And now, Gordon Lockwood smiled patronizingly at himself, as he was
-forced to admit an unreasonable, inexplicable interest in a slip of a
-girl with a dark, eerie little face and a manner grave and gay to
-extremes.
-
-For Anita was positively laughing at some foolishness of Pinky Payne's.
-Still, Lockwood concluded, watching her narrowly, yet unobserved, she was
-laughing immoderately. She was laughing for some reason other than
-merriment. It verged on hysterical, he decided, and wondered why.
-
-He joined the group of young people, and in his quiet but effective way,
-he said:
-
-"You've had enough foolery for the moment, Miss Austin,--come and talk to
-me."
-
-And to the girl's amazement, he took her hand and led her to a davenport
-on the other side of the room.
-
-"There," he said, as he arranged a pillow or two, "is that right?"
-
-"Yes," she said, and lapsed into silence.
-
-She sat, looking off into vacancy, and Lockwood studied her. Then he
-said, softly:
-
-"It's too bad, isn't it?"
-
-"Yes," Anita sighed, and then suddenly; "what do you mean? What's too
-bad?"
-
-"Whatever it is that troubles you." The deep blue eyes met her own, but
-there was no sign of response or acquiescence on the girl's face.
-
-"Good-by," she said, rising quickly, "I must go."
-
-"Oh, no,--don't go," cried Pinky, overhearing. "Why, you've only just
-come."
-
-"Yes, I must go," said Miss Mystery, decidedly. "Good afternoon, Mrs.
-Bates, and thank you for bringing me. Good afternoon, Mrs. Peyton."
-
-Including all the others in a general bow of farewell, the strange girl
-went to the front door, and paused for the attendant Nogi to open it.
-
-Door-tending the assistant butler understood, and he punctiliously waited
-until Miss Austin had buttoned her gloves and had given an adjusting pat
-to her veil, after a fleeting glance in the hall mirror.
-
-Then he opened the door with an obsequious air, and closed it behind her
-departing figure.
-
-But it was immediately flung open again by Pinky Payne, who ran through
-it and after the girl.
-
-"Wait a minute, Miss Austin. How fast you walk! I'm going home with you."
-
-"Please not," she said, indifferently, scarcely glancing at him.
-
-"Yep. Gotto. Getting near dusk, and you might be kidnapped. Needn't talk
-if you don't want to."
-
-"I never want to talk!" was the surprising and crisply spoken retort.
-
-"Well, didn't I say you needn't! Don't get wrathy--don't 'ee, don't
-'ee--now,--as my old Scotch nurse used to say."
-
-But Miss Mystery gave him no look, although she allowed him to fall into
-step beside her, and the two walked rapidly along.
-
-"How'd you like the looks of the Doctor?" Pinky asked, hoping to induce
-conversation.
-
-"I scarcely saw him."
-
-"Oh, you saw him,--though you had small chance to get to know him.
-Perfect old brick, but a little on edge of late. Approaching matrimony, I
-suppose. Did you notice his ruby stickpin?"
-
-"Yes; it didn't seem to suit him at all."
-
-"No; he's a conservative dresser. But that pin,--it's a famous gem,--was
-given him by his own class,--I mean his graduating class, but long after
-they graduated, and he had to promise to wear it once a week, so he
-usually gets into it on Sundays. It's a corking stone!"
-
-"Yes," said Miss Austin.
-
-On reaching the Adams house, the girl said a quick good-by, and Pinky
-Payne found himself at liberty to go in and see the other members of the
-household, or to go home, for Miss Austin disappeared into the hall and
-up the staircase with the rapidity of a dissolving view.
-
-Young Payne turned away and strolled slowly back to the Waring home,
-wondering what it was about the disagreeable young woman that made him
-pay any attention to her at all.
-
-He found her the topic of discussion when he arrived.
-
-"Of all rude people," Mrs. Peyton declared, "she was certainly the
-worst!"
-
-"She was!" Helen agreed. "I couldn't make her out at all. And I don't
-call her pretty, either."
-
-"I do," observed Emily Bates. "I call her very pretty,--and possessed of
-great charm."
-
-"Charm!" scoffed Helen; "I can't see it."
-
-"She isn't rude," Pinky defended the absent. "I'm sure, Mrs. Peyton, she
-made her adieux most politely. Why should she have stayed longer? She
-didn't know any of us,--and, perhaps she doesn't like any of us."
-
-"That's it," Gordon Lockwood stated. "She doesn't like us,--I'm sure of
-that. Well, why should she, if she doesn't want to?"
-
-"Why shouldn't she?" countered Tyler. "She's so terribly superior,--I
-can't bear her. She acts as if she owned the earth, yet nobody knows who
-she is, or anything about her."
-
-"Are we entitled to?" asked Lockwood. "Why should we inquire into her
-identity or history further than she chooses to enlighten us?"
-
-"Where is Miss Austin?" asked Doctor Waring, returning, quite composed
-and calm.
-
-"She went home," informed Mrs. Bates. "Are you all right, John?"
-
-"Oh, yes, dear. I wasn't ill, or anything like that. The awkward accident
-touched my nerves, and I wanted to run away and hide."
-
-He smiled whimsically, looking like a naughty schoolboy, and Emily Bates
-took his hand and drew him down to a seat beside her.
-
-"What made you drop it, John?" she said, with a direct look into his
-eyes.
-
-He hesitated a moment, and his own glance wandered, then he said, "I
-don't know, Emily; I suppose it was a sudden physical contraction of the
-muscles of my hand--and I couldn't control it."
-
-Mrs. Bates didn't look satisfied, but she did not pursue the subject.
-Then the discussion of Anita was resumed.
-
-"How did you like her looks, Doctor Waring?" Helen Peyton asked.
-
-"I scarcely saw her," was the quiet reply. "Did you all admire her?"
-
-"Some of us did." Mrs. Bates answered; "I do, for one. Did you ever see
-her before, John?"
-
-Doctor Waring stared at the question.
-
-"Never," he declared. "How could I have done so?"
-
-"I don't know, I'm sure," Mrs. Bates laughed. "I just had a sort of an
-impression--"
-
-"No, dear, I never saw the girl before in my life," Waring reasserted.
-
-"And you need never want to see her again," Robert Tyler informed him.
-"She's sulky, silly and supercilious. She's a mystery, they say, but I
-say she merely wants to be thought a mystery to make a little sensation.
-I can't abide that sort."
-
-Helen Peyton heard this with undisguised satisfaction, for she had quite
-enough girls in her life to be jealous and envious of, without adding
-another to the list. Also, she especially wanted to retain the admiration
-of Robert Tyler, and was glad to know it was not newly endangered.
-
-"Miss Austin is very beautiful," Gordon Lockwood declared, in his usual
-way of summing up a discussion and announcing his own opinion as final.
-"Also, she is a mystery. I live in the same boarding house--"
-
-"So do I," put in Tyler, "and she snubs us both."
-
-"She hasn't snubbed me," said Lockwood, simply.
-
-"Never mind, Oscar, she will!" returned Tyler, and then laughed
-immoderately at his own would-be wit.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
- THE TRAGEDY
-
-
-That same Sunday evening the Waring household dined alone. Oftener than
-not there were guests, but tonight there were only the two Peytons,
-Lockwood and John Waring himself.
-
-Ito, the butler, had holiday Sunday afternoon and evening, and Nogi, the
-second and less experienced man, was trying his best to satisfy the
-exactions of Mrs. Peyton as to his service at table.
-
-Helen Peyton was in a talkative mood and commented volubly on the caller
-of the afternoon, Miss Austin.
-
-She met little response, for her mother was absorbed in the training of
-the Japanese, and the two men seemed indisposed to pursue the subject.
-
-"Don't you think she's odd looking?" Helen asked, of Doctor Waring.
-
-"Odd looking," he repeated; "I don't know. I didn't notice her
-especially. She seemed to me a rather distinguished type."
-
-"Distinguished is the word," agreed Lockwood. "What about the lecture
-tomorrow night, Doctor? Will Fessenden take care of it?"
-
-"No; I must lecture myself tomorrow night. I'm sorry, for I'm busy with
-that book revision. However, I'll look up some data this evening, and I
-shall be ready for it."
-
-"Of course you will," laughed Mrs. Peyton. "You were never caught unready
-for anything!"
-
-"But it means some work," Waring added, as he rose from the table.
-
-He went into the study, followed by Lockwood, whose experience made him
-aware of what books his chief would need, and he began at once to take
-them from the shelves.
-
-"Right," Waring said, looking over the armful of volumes Lockwood placed
-on the desk and seating himself in the swivel chair.
-
-"Bring me Marcus Aurelius, too, please, and Martial."
-
-"The classic touch," Lockwood smiled.
-
-"Yes, it adds dignity, if one is a bit shy of material," Waring admitted,
-good-naturedly. "That's all, Lockwood. You may go, if you like."
-
-"No, sir. I'll stay until eleven or so. I'm pretty busy with the reports,
-and, too, some one may call whom I can take care of."
-
-"Good chap you are, Lockwood. I appreciate it. Very well, then, don't
-bother me unless absolutely necessary."
-
-The secretary left the room and closed the study door behind him.
-
-This door gave on to the end of the cross hall, and the hall ended then,
-in a roomy window seat, and also held a book rack and table; altogether a
-comfortable and useful nook, frequently occupied by Gordon Lockwood. The
-window looked out on the beautiful lake view, as did the great study
-window, and it also commanded a view of the highroad on which stood, not
-far away, the Adams boarding-house.
-
-Lockwood lodged there, as being more convenient, but most of his waking
-hours were spent in his employer's home. A perfect secretary he had
-proved himself to be, for his prescience amounted almost to clairvoyance,
-and his imperturbability was exceedingly useful in keeping troublesome
-people or things away from John Waring.
-
-So, he determined to stay on guard, lest a chance caller should come to
-disturb the Doctor at his work.
-
-But Lockwood's own work was somewhat neglected. Try as he would to
-concentrate upon it, he could not entirely dismiss from his mind a
-certain mysterious little face, whose meaning eluded him. For once,
-Gordon Lockwood, reader of faces, was baffled. He couldn't classify the
-girl who was both rude and charming, both cruel and pathetic.
-
-For cruelty was what this expert read in the knowing eyes and firm little
-mouth of Miss Mystery. And because of this indubitable element in her
-nature, he deemed her pathetic. Which shows how much she interested him.
-
-At any rate he thought about her while his work waited. And, then, he
-thought of other things--for he had troubles of his own, had this
-supercilious young man. And troubles which galled him the more, that they
-were sordid--money troubles, in fact. His whole nature revolted at the
-mere thought of mercenary considerations, but if one is short of funds
-one must recognize the condition, distasteful though it be.
-
-At nine-thirty, Nogi came with a tray bearing water and glasses. Under
-the watchful eye of Mrs. Peyton the Japanese tapped at the study door
-and, in response to the master's bidding, went in with his tray. He left
-it punctiliously on the table directed, and with his characteristic bow,
-departed again.
-
-At ten-thirty, Mrs. Peyton and Helen went upstairs to their rooms, the
-housekeeper having given Nogi strict and definite instructions, which
-included his remaining on duty until the master should also retire.
-
-And the night wore on.
-
-A clear, cold night, with a late-rising moon, past the full, but still
-with its great yellow disk nearly round.
-
-It shone down on what seemed like fairyland, for the sleet storm that had
-covered the trees with a coating of ice, and had fringed eaves and fences
-with icicles, had ceased, and left the glittering landscape frozen and
-sparkling in the still, cold air.
-
-And when, some hours later, the sun rose on the same chill scene its rays
-made no perceptible impression on the cold and the mercury stayed down at
-its lowest winter record.
-
-And so even the stolid Japanese Ito, shivered, and his yellow teeth
-chattered as he knocked at Mrs. Peyton's door in the early dawn of Monday
-morning.
-
-"What is it?" she cried, springing from her bed to unbolt her door.
-
-"Grave news, madam," and the Oriental bowed before her.
-
-"What has happened? Tell me, Ito."
-
-"I am not sure, madam--but, the master--"
-
-"Yes, what about Doctor Waring?"
-
-"He is--he is asleep in his study."
-
-"Asleep in his study! Ito, what do you mean?"
-
-"That, madam. His bed is unslept in. His room door ajar. I looked in the
-study--through from the dining-room--he is there by his desk--"
-
-"Asleep, Ito--you said asleep!"
-
-"Yes--madam--but--I do not know. And Nogi--he is gone."
-
-"Gone! Where to?"
-
-"That also, I do not know. Will madam come and look?"
-
-"No; I will not! I know something has happened! I knew something would
-happen! Ito, he is not asleep--he is--"
-
-"Don't say it, madam. We do not know."
-
-"Find out! Go in and speak to him."
-
-"But the door is locked. I tried it."
-
-"Locked! The study door locked, and Doctor Waring still in there? How do
-you know?"
-
-"I peeped from the dining-room window--and I could see him, leaning down
-on his desk."
-
-"From the dining-room window! What do you mean?"
-
-"The small little inside windows. Madam knows?"
-
-The study had been added to the Waring house after the house had been
-built for some years. Wherefore, the dining-room, previously with a lake
-view from its windows, was cut off from that view. But, the windows,
-three small, square ones, remained, and so, looked into the new study.
-
-However, the study, a higher ceiling being desired, had its floor sunken
-six feet or more, which brought the windows far too high to see through
-from the study side, but one could look through them from the
-dining-room. The original sashes had been replaced by beautiful stained
-glass, opaque save for a few tiny transparent bits through which a
-persistent and curious-minded person might discern some parts of the
-study.
-
-The stained glass sashes were immovable, and were there more as a
-decoration than for utility's sake.
-
-And it was through these peepholes that Ito had discovered the presence
-of Doctor Waring in his study at the unusual hour of seven o'clock in the
-morning.
-
-The Japanese, true to his tribal instinct, showed no agitation, and his
-calm demeanor helped to soothe Mrs. Peyton. But as she hastily dressed
-herself, she decided upon her course of action.
-
-Her first impulse was to call her daughter, but she concluded not to
-disturb the girl. Instead, she telephoned to Gordon Lockwood, and asked
-him to come over as soon as he possibly could.
-
-Old Salt took the message, and transmitted it to the secretary.
-
-"What's the matter over there?" asked Lockwood.
-
-"Don't know. Mrs. Peyton seemed all on edge, 's far's I could judge from
-her voice--but she only said for you to come over."
-
-"All right, I'll go as soon as I can get dressed."
-
-Once out of doors, Lockwood couldn't fail to be impressed with the beauty
-of the morning landscape. One of the most beautiful bits of New England
-scenery, it was newly lovely in its sheath of ice.
-
-Lockwood's hasty steps crunched through the crusted snow, and he hurried
-over to the Waring house.
-
-Ito opened the door for him and Mrs. Peyton met him in the hall.
-
-"Something has happened to Doctor Waring," she said at once; "he stayed
-in the study all night."
-
-"Why? What do you mean?" asked the secretary.
-
-"Just that. His room door is still open, and his bed hasn't been slept
-in. Also, Ito says he can see him in the study, through the dining-room
-window. I--I haven't looked--"
-
-"Why don't you go in?"
-
-"The study door is locked."
-
-"Locked! And Doctor Waring still in there?"
-
-"Yes; I think he must have had a stroke--or, something--"
-
-"Nonsense! He's just asleep. He's overworked of late, anyway."
-
-"Well, I'm glad you're here." And Mrs. Peyton looked relieved. "You see
-about it, Mr. Lockwood, won't you?"
-
-The secretary went first to the study door. He rapped, and then he tried
-the door, and then rapped again, very loudly. But no response came, and
-Lockwood returned to the dining-room.
-
-"Can you see through that glass?" he asked in surprise, noting the thick,
-leaded mosaic of pieces.
-
-"Yes, sir, through this corner," Ito directed him, and, peering through,
-Lockwood discerned the figure of John Waring. He sat at his desk, his
-body fallen slightly forward, and his head drooped on his breast.
-
-"Sound asleep," said Lockwood, but his tone carried no conviction.
-
-Mrs. Peyton well knew the man's disinclination to show any emotion, and
-in spite of his calm, she was almost certain he shared her own belief
-that John Waring was not merely asleep.
-
-"We must get to him," Lockwood said, after a moment's pause. "Can you get
-through one of these windows, Ito, and unbolt the door?"
-
-"No, sir; these windows do not open at all."
-
-"Not open? Why not?"
-
-Save to remark the beauty of their color and design, Lockwood had never
-before noticed the windows, especially, and was genuinely surprised to
-discover that they could not be opened at all.
-
-"Of what use are they?" he mused, aloud; "They give very little light."
-
-"They were outside windows before the study was built," Mrs. Peyton told
-him, "and when the stained glass was put in, it was merely for decoration
-and the panes were not made movable."
-
-"Well, we must get in," said Lockwood, almost impatiently. "How shall we
-do it? You, Ito, must know how."
-
-"No, sir, there is no way. Unless, the long window is unfastened."
-
-The long French window--really a double door--was on the other side of
-the study, exactly opposite the useless high windows that gave into the
-dining-room.
-
-To reach it one must go out and around the house.
-
-"It is very bad snow--" Ito shrugged.
-
-"You heathen!" Lockwood exclaimed, scornfully, and himself dashed out at
-the front door and around to the side of the house.
-
-Mrs. Peyton started to follow, but the secretary bade her go back lest
-she take cold.
-
-He reached the French window only to find it locked on the inside. He
-could not see in through its curtained panes, and impulsively he raised
-his foot and kicked through the glass at a point high enough to allow of
-his putting in a hand and turning back the latch.
-
-He went into the room, and after the briefest glance at the man by the
-desk he went on and unbolted the door to the hall.
-
-Helen had joined her mother and Ito, and the three stood cowering on the
-threshold.
-
-"He is dead," Gordon Lockwood said, in a calm, unemotional way. "But not
-by a stroke--he has killed himself."
-
-"How do you know?" Mrs. Peyton cried, her eyes staring and her face
-white.
-
-"Go away, Helen," Lockwood said; "go back into the living-room, and stay
-away."
-
-And willingly the girl obeyed.
-
-"Come in, Mrs. Peyton," Lockwood went on. "You must see him, though it
-will shock you. See, the flow of blood is dreadful. He stabbed or shot
-himself."
-
-Conquering her aversion to the sight, Mrs. Peyton, from a sense of duty,
-drew nearer, and as Lockwood had said, the condition of the body was
-terrible indeed.
-
-Wounded, apparently in the side of the head, Waring had fallen forward in
-such a way that the actual wound was concealed, but the fact was only too
-apparent that he had bled to death. The blotter on the desk and many of
-the furnishings were crimsoned and there was a large and dark stain on
-the rug.
-
-"He is positively dead," said Lockwood, in cool, even tone, "so I advise
-that we do not touch the body but send at once for Doctor Greenfield. He
-will know best what to do."
-
-"Oh, you cold-blooded wretch!" Mrs. Peyton burst forth, uncontrollably.
-"Have you no feelings whatever? You stand there like a wooden image, when
-the best man in the world lies dead before you! And you, Ito!" She turned
-on the awe-struck butler. "You're another of those impassive, unnatural
-creatures! Oh, I hate you both!"
-
-The housekeeper ran from the room, and was soon closeted with her
-daughter, who, at least showed agitation and grief at the tragedy that
-had occurred.
-
-The two she had called impassive, stood regarding one another.
-
-"Who did it, Master?" inquired the Japanese, calmly.
-
-"Who did it!" Lockwood stared at him. "Why, he did it himself, Ito."
-
-Otherwise immovable, the Oriental shook his head in dissension, but
-Lockwood was already at the telephone, and heeded him not.
-
-Doctor Greenfield consented to come over at once, and Lockwood going to
-the living room, advised the Peytons to have breakfast, as there was a
-terrible ordeal ahead of them.
-
-"I'll have some coffee with you, if I may," he went on. "Brace up, Helen,
-it's pretty awful for you, but you must try to be a brave girl."
-
-A grateful glance thanked him for the kindness, and Lockwood returned
-quickly to the study.
-
-"What are you doing?" he said sternly, as he saw Ito bending over the
-dead man.
-
-"Nothing, sir," and the butler straightened up quickly and stood at
-attention.
-
-"Leave the room, and do not return here without permission. Serve
-breakfast to the ladies. Where is Nogi?"
-
-"He is gone, sir."
-
-"Gone where?"
-
-"That I do not know. Last night he was here. Now he is gone. I know no
-more."
-
-"You don't know anything. Get out."
-
-"Yes, sir."
-
-Left to himself, Gordon Lockwood gazed thoughtfully about the room. He
-did not confine his attention to the bent figure of his late employer,
-nor even to the desk or its nearby surroundings. He wandered about
-looking at the windows, the floor, the furniture.
-
-One chair, standing rather near the desk, he looked at intently. An
-expression of bewilderment came into his face, followed by a look of
-dismay.
-
-Then, after a cautious almost furtive glance about him, he passed his
-hand quickly over the plush back of the chair, rubbing it hard, with a
-scrubbing motion.
-
-Then he looked about the room even more eagerly and carefully, and
-finally sat down in the same plush chair, to await the Doctor's arrival.
-
-Helen Peyton came timidly to the door to ask him to come to breakfast.
-
-"No, Helen," he answered. "My place is here until the Doctor comes. Eat
-your breakfast, child, and try to throw off your distress. It will do you
-no good to brood over it. You can be of real help if you keep brave and
-calm, but it will be quite otherwise if you get hysterical."
-
-He did not see the adoring glance she gave him, nor did he realize how
-much effect his words had on her subsequent behavior. For Helen Peyton
-was suffering from shocked nerves, and only Lockwood's advice would have
-been heeded by her.
-
-She returned to the dining room, saying, quietly, "Gordon will come after
-a while. Let us eat our breakfast, mother, and try to be brave and
-strong."
-
-It was not more than fifteen minutes later that Lockwood joined them.
-
-He took his seat at the table and as he shook out his breakfast napkin he
-said,
-
-"Doctor Greenfield is there now. He says Doctor Waring was stabbed not
-shot. He says the instrument was round and pointed--not flat, like a
-knife."
-
-"Who did it?" asked Helen, wide-eyed.
-
-"It must have been suicide, Helen, for, as you know, the room was locked.
-How could any one get in or out?"
-
-"But how absurd to think of Doctor Waring killing himself!" The girl
-looked more amazed than ever.
-
-"He never killed himself," stated Mrs. Peyton. "Why, you know that man
-had everything to live for! Just about to be married, just about to be
-President of the College--full of life and enthusiasm--suicide!
-Nonsense!"
-
-"I'm only telling you what the doctor said. And you know yourselves, the
-room was all locked up."
-
-"Yes, that's so. Ito, leave the room!"
-
-Mrs. Peyton spoke sharply to the butler, who was quite evidently drinking
-in the conversation.
-
-"He must not hear all we say," she observed after the butler had
-disappeared.
-
-"What's this about Nogi being gone?" asked Lockwood, suddenly.
-
-"Yes, he's gone," Mrs. Peyton said, "and I can't understand it. I didn't
-think he'd stay, he didn't like the duties at all--you know he's just
-learning to be a butler--but queer he went off like that. His wages are
-due for three weeks."
-
-"He'll be back, then," surmised Lockwood. "Now, what shall we do first?
-The faculty must be notified of this tragedy and also, Mrs. Bates must be
-told. Which of you two will go and tell Mrs. Bates about it?"
-
-"You go, Helen," said her mother after a moment's thought. "I ought to be
-here to look after the house, and anyway, dear, you can do it wisely and
-gently. Mrs. Bates likes you, and after all, it can be soon told."
-
-"Oh, I can't!" cried Helen, dismayed at the thought of the awful errand.
-
-"Yes, you can," and Lockwood looked at her with a firm kindliness. "You
-want to be of help, don't you Helen? Well, here's one thing you can do
-that will be of great assistance to your mother and to me. For on us two
-must fall most of the sad duties of this day."
-
-"But what can I say? What can I tell her?"
-
-"Just tell her the facts as far as you know them yourself. She will guess
-from your own agitation that something has happened. And then you will
-tell her, as gently as you can. Be a true woman, Helen, and remember that
-though your news must break her heart, yet she'd far rather hear it from
-you than from some less sympathetic messenger."
-
-"I'll do it," said Helen, struggling bravely to keep her tears back.
-
-"That's a good girl. Run right along, now, for ill news flies fast, and
-rumors may get to her before you reach there."
-
-"Now about that Nogi," Lockwood said, thoughtfully. "Call Ito back,
-please, Mrs. Peyton."
-
-"When did you see Nogi last?" the secretary asked of the butler.
-
-"When I came home last night, sir. Sunday is my holiday. I returned about
-ten, and as I found Nogi with his duties all properly done, and at his
-post, I went to bed. I found this morning that he had not been in his bed
-at all. His clothes are gone, and all his belongings. I think he will not
-come back."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
- AN INCREDIBLE CASE
-
-
-When Lockwood returned to the study, he found the Medical Examiner and
-Doctor Greenfield in consultation.
-
-The Examiner was a large, pompous-looking man, with an air of authority.
-He looked at Gordon Lockwood from beneath his heavy brows, and demanded,
-"What do you know of this?"
-
-The younger man resented the tone but he knew the question was justified,
-and so he replied, respectfully:
-
-"Nothing more than you can see for yourself, sir. I broke in at that
-glass door, being unable to get in any other way, and I found Doctor
-Waring--as you see him now."
-
-"There was some other way, though, to get in and out," Examiner Marsh
-stated.
-
-"Positively not," Lockwood repeated.
-
-"Don't contradict me! I tell you there must have been--for this man was
-murdered."
-
-"Impossible, sir," and Lockwood's eyes met the Examiner's with a gaze
-fully as calm and insistent as his own.
-
-"Very well, then, how came he by his death?"
-
-"I am not the Examiner," the Secretary said, and he folded his arms and
-leaned against the corner of the great mantelpiece; "but since you ask
-me, I will repeat that there was no way of ingress into this room last
-night, and that necessarily, the case is a suicide."
-
-"Just so; and, granting that, will you suggest what may have become of
-the weapon that was used?"
-
-"What was the weapon?" Lockwood asked, not so disturbed by the question
-as the Examiner had expected him to be.
-
-"That is what puzzles me," returned Doctor Marsh. "As you can clearly see
-the wound was inflicted with a sharp instrument. The man was stabbed just
-below his right ear. The jugular vein was pierced, and he bled to death.
-A plexus of nerves was pierced also, and this fact doubtless rendered the
-victim unconscious at once--I mean as soon as the stab wound was made,
-though he may have been alive for a few minutes thereafter."
-
-Gordon Lockwood gazed imperturbably at the speaker. He had always prided
-himself on his unshakable calm, and now he exhibited its full
-possibilities. It annoyed Doctor Marsh, who was accustomed to having his
-statements accepted without question. He took a sudden dislike to this
-calm young man, who presumed to differ from his deductions.
-
-"I must say," observed the mild-mannered Doctor Greenfield, "I knew
-Doctor Waring very well, and he was surely the last person I would expect
-to kill himself. Especially at the present time--when he was looking
-forward to high honors in the College and also expected to marry a
-charming lady."
-
-"That isn't the point," exclaimed Doctor Marsh, impatiently. "The point
-is, if he killed himself, where is the weapon?"
-
-"I admit it isn't in view--and I admit that seems strange," Lockwood
-agreed, "but it may yet be discovered, while a way of getting into a
-locked room cannot be found."
-
-"All of which is out of your jurisdiction, young man," and Marsh looked
-at him severely. "The police will be here soon, and I've no doubt they
-will learn the truth, whatever it may be. What instrument do you deduce,
-Doctor Greenfield?"
-
-"That's hard to say," replied Greenfield, slowly. "You see the aperture
-it made is a perfectly round hole. Now, most daggers or poniards are
-flat-bladed. I'm not sure a real weapon is ever round. The hole is much
-too large to have been made by a hatpin--it is as big as a--a--"
-
-"Slate pencil," suggested the Examiner.
-
-"Yes, or a trifle larger--but not so large as a lead-pencil."
-
-"A lead-pencil could hardly accomplish the deed," Marsh mused. "A
-slate-pencil might have--but that is a most unusual weapon."
-
-"How about a bill-file?" asked Doctor Greenfield. "I knew of a man killed
-with one."
-
-"Yes, but where is the bill-file?" asked Marsh. "There's one on the desk,
-to be sure, but it is full of papers, and shows no sign of having been
-used for a criminal purpose. If, as Mr. Lockwood insists, this is a
-suicide case, the victim positively could not have cleaned that file and
-restored the papers after stabbing himself!"
-
-"He most certainly could not have done that!" declared Doctor Greenfield.
-
-Marsh examined the file carefully. It was an ordinary affair consisting
-of a steel spike on a bronze standard. It would without doubt make an
-efficacious implement of murder, but it was difficult to believe it had
-been used in that way. For the bills and memoranda it contained were, to
-all appearance, just as they had been thrust on the sharp point--and
-surely, had they been removed and replaced, they would have shown traces
-of such moving.
-
-"Anyway," Doctor Greenfield said, after another examination, "the hole in
-the side of Waring's neck seems to me to have been made with an
-instrument slightly larger than that file. Surely, there are round
-stilettos, are there not?"
-
-"Yes, there are," said Lockwood, "I have seen them."
-
-"Where?" demanded the Examiner, suddenly turning on him.
-
-"Why--I don't know." For once, the Secretary's calm was a trifle shaken.
-"I should say in museums--or in private collections, perhaps."
-
-"Are you familiar with so many private collections of strange weapons
-that you can't remember where you have seen a round-shaped blade?"
-
-Examiner Marsh stared hard at him and Lockwood became taciturn again.
-
-"Exactly that," he conceded. "I have sometime, somewhere, seen a
-round-bladed stiletto--but I cannot remember where."
-
-"Better brush up your memory," Marsh told him, and then the police
-arrived.
-
-The local police of Corinth were rather proud of themselves as a whole,
-and they had reason to be. Under a worthwhile chief the men had been well
-trained, and were alert, energetic and capable.
-
-Detective Morton, who took this matter in charge, went straight to work
-in a most business-like way.
-
-He examined the body of John Waring, not as the medical men had done, but
-merely to find possible clues to the manner of his death.
-
-"What's this ring on his forehead?" he asked, looking at the dead man's
-face.
-
-"I don't know--that struck me as queer," said Greenfield. "What is it,
-Doctor Marsh?"
-
-The Examiner peered through his glasses.
-
-"I can't make that out, myself," he confessed, frankly.
-
-Morton looked more closely.
-
-There was a red circle on Waring's forehead, that looked as if it had
-been put there of some purpose.
-
-A perfect circle it was, about two inches in diameter, and it was red and
-sunken into the flesh, as if it might have been done with a branding
-iron.
-
-"Not a very hot one, though," Morton remarked, after suggesting this,
-"but surely somebody did it. I'll say it's the sign or seal of the
-murderer himself. For a dead man couldn't do it, and there's no sense in
-assuming that Doctor Waring branded himself before committing suicide.
-Was it done before or after death?" he asked of the two doctors present.
-
-"Before, I should say," Doctor Greenfield opined.
-
-"Yes," concurred Marsh, "but not long before. I'm not sure it is a
-brand--such a mark could have been made with, say, a small cup or
-tumbler."
-
-"But what reason is there in that?" exclaimed Morton. "Even a lunatic
-murderer wouldn't mark his victim by means of a tumbler rim."
-
-Absorbedly, he picked up a tumbler from the water tray, and fitted it to
-the red mark on Waring's forehead.
-
-"It doesn't fit exactly," he said, "but it does almost."
-
-"Rubbish!" said Gordon Lockwood, in his superior way. "Why would any one
-mark Doctor Waring's face with a tumbler?"
-
-"Yet it has been marked," Morton looked at the secretary sharply. "Can
-you suggest any explanation--however difficult of belief?"
-
-"No," Lockwood said. "Unless he fell over on some round thing as he
-died."
-
-"There's nothing here," said Morton, scanning the furnishings of the desk
-"The inkstand is closed--and it's a smaller round, anyway. There's no one
-of these desk fittings that could possibly have made that mark.
-Therefore, since it was made before death, it must have been done by the
-murderer."
-
-"Or by the suicide," Lockwood insisted firmly.
-
-Morton, looking at the secretary, decided to keep an eye on this cool
-chap, who must have some reason for repeating his opinion of suicide.
-
-"Now," the detective said, briskly, "to get to business, I must make
-inquiries of the family--the household. Suppose I see them in some other
-room--"
-
-"Yes," agreed Lockwood, with what seemed to Morton suspicious eagerness.
-Why should the secretary be so obviously pleased to leave the
-study--though, to be sure, it was a grewsome place just now.
-
-"Wait a minute," Morton said, "how about robbery? Has anything been
-missed?"
-
-Lockwood looked surprised.
-
-"I never thought to look," he said; "assuming suicide, of course robbery
-didn't occur to me." He looked round the room. "Nothing seems to be
-missing."
-
-"Stay on guard, Higby," the detective said to a policeman, and then asked
-the secretary where he could interview the housekeeper and the servants.
-
-Lockwood took Morton to the living-room, and there they found Mrs. Bates
-as well as the two Peytons.
-
-Though her eyes showed traces of tears, Emily Bates was composed and met
-the detective with an appealing face.
-
-"Do find the murderer!" she cried; "I don't care how much that room was
-locked up, I know John Waring never killed himself! Why would he do it?
-Did ever a man have so much to live for? He couldn't have taken his
-life!"
-
-"I'm inclined to agree with you, Mrs. Bates," Morton told her, "yet you
-must see the difficulties in the way of a murder theory. I'm told the
-room was inaccessible. Is not that right, Mrs. Peyton?"
-
-Flustered at the sudden question the housekeeper wrung her hands and
-burst into tears. "Oh, don't ask me," she wailed, "I don't know anything
-about it!"
-
-"Nothing indicative, perhaps," and Morton spoke more gently, "but at
-least, tell me all you do know. When did you see Doctor Waring last?"
-
-"At the supper table, last evening."
-
-"Not after supper at all?"
-
-"No; that is, I didn't _see_ him. I am training a new servant, and I
-watched him as he took a tray of water pitcher and glasses into the
-study, but I didn't look in, nor did I see the doctor."
-
-"Did you hear him?"
-
-"I don't think I heard him speak. I heard a paper rustle, and I knew he
-was there."
-
-"The servant came right out again?"
-
-"Yes; my attention was all on him. I told him exactly what to do during
-the evening."
-
-"What were those instructions?"
-
-"To attend to his dining-room duties, putting away the supper dishes and
-that, and then to stay about, on duty, until Doctor Waring left his study
-and went to bed."
-
-"This servant had done these things before?"
-
-"Not these things. He arrived but a few days ago, and Ito the butler,
-attended to the Doctor. But Sunday afternoon and evening Ito has off, so
-I began to train Nogi."
-
-"And this Nogi has disappeared?"
-
-"Yes; he is not to be found this morning. Nor has his bed been
-disturbed."
-
-"Then we may take it he left in the night or early morning. Now the
-doctors judge that Doctor Waring died about midnight. We must therefore
-admit the possibility of a connection between the Jap's disappearance and
-the Doctor's death."
-
-At this suggestion, Gordon Lockwood looked interested. Whereas he had
-preserved a stony calm, his face now showed deep attention to the
-detective's words and he nodded his head in agreement.
-
-"You think so, too, Mr. Lockwood?" Morton asked, in that sudden and often
-disconcerting way of his.
-
-"I don't say I think so," the secretary returned, quietly, "but I do
-admit a possibility."
-
-"It would seem so," Mrs. Peyton put in, "if Nogi could have got into the
-study. But he couldn't. You know it was locked--impossible, Mr.
-Lockwood?"
-
-"Yes," Gordon returned. "I heard Doctor Waring lock his door."
-
-"When was that?" asked the detective, sharply.
-
-"I should say about ten o'clock."
-
-"Where were you, then?"
-
-"Sitting in the window nook outside the study door."
-
-"Could you not, then, hear anything that went on in the study?"
-
-"Probably not. The walls and door are thick--they were made so for the
-doctor's sake--he desired absolute privacy, and freedom from interruption
-or overhearing. No, I could not know what was taking place in that
-room--if anything was, at that time."
-
-"At what time did you last see the doctor?"
-
-"After supper I went with him to the study. I looked after his wants,
-getting him a number of books from the shelves, and selecting from his
-files such notes or manuscript as he asked for. Those are my duties as
-secretary."
-
-"And then?"
-
-"Then he practically dismissed me, saying I might leave for the night.
-But I remained in the hall window until eleven o'clock."
-
-"Why did you do this?"
-
-"Out of consideration for my employer. He was exceedingly busy and if a
-caller came, I could probably attend to his wants and spare the doctor an
-interruption."
-
-"Did any one call?"
-
-"No one."
-
-"Yet you remained until eleven?"
-
-"Yes; I was doing some work of my own, and it was later than I thought,
-when I decided to go home."
-
-"And you spoke to the Doctor before leaving?"
-
-"As is my custom, I tapped lightly at the door and said good-night. This
-is my rule, when he is busy, and if he makes no response, or merely
-murmurs good-night, I know there are no further orders till morning, and
-I go home."
-
-"Did he respond to your rap last night?"
-
-"I--I cannot say. I heard him murmur a good-night but if he did, it was
-so low as to be almost inaudible. I thought nothing of it. Since he did
-not call out. 'Come in, Lockwood,' as he does when he wants me, I paid
-little attention to the matter."
-
-"And you reached home--when?"
-
-"Something after eleven. It's but a few steps over to the Adams house,
-where I live."
-
-"Now," summed up the detective, "here's the case. You, Mr. Lockwood, are
-not sure Doctor Waring responded to your good-night. You did not see or
-hear him when Nogi took in the water tray?"
-
-"No; I did not."
-
-"Mrs. Peyton did not see him then, either--though she imagined she heard
-a paper rustle. Nogi is gone--he cannot be questioned. So, Mr. Lockwood,
-the last person whom we know definitely to have seen John Waring alive,
-is yourself when, as you say, you left him at about--er--what time?"
-
-"About half-past eight or nine," said Lockwood, carelessly.
-
-"Yes; you left him and sat in the hall window. Now, we have no positive
-evidence that he was alive after that."
-
-"What!" Lockwood stared at him.
-
-"No positive evidence, I say. Nogi went in, but no one knows what Nogi
-saw in there."
-
-"Come now, Detective Morton," Lockwood said, coldly, "you're romancing.
-Do you suppose for a minute, that if there had been anything wrong with
-Doctor Waring when Nogi went in with the water, that he would not have
-raised an alarm?"
-
-"I suppose that might have easily have been the case. The Japanese are
-afraid of death. Their one idea is to flee from it. If that Japanese
-servant had seen his master dead, he would have decamped, just as he did
-do."
-
-"But Nogi was here when I went home. He handed me my overcoat and hat,
-quite with his usual calm demeanor."
-
-"You must remember, Mr. Lockwood, we have only your word for that."
-
-Gordon Lockwood looked at the detective.
-
-"I will not pretend to misunderstand your meaning," he said, slowly and
-with hauteur. "Nor shall I say a word, at present, in self defence. Your
-implication is so absurd, so really ridiculous, there is nothing to be
-said."
-
-"That's right," and Morton nodded. "Don't say anything until you get
-counsel. Now, Mrs. Bates--I'm mighty sorry to bother you--but I must ask
-you a few questions. And if I size you up right, you'll be glad to tell
-anything you can to help discover the truth. That so?"
-
-"Yes," she returned, "yes--of course, Mr. Morton. But I can't let you
-seem to suspect Mr. Lockwood of wrong-doing without a protest! Doctor
-Waring's secretary is most loyal and devoted--of that I am sure."
-
-"Never mind that side of it just now. Tell me this, Mrs. Bates. Who will
-benefit financially by Doctor Waring's death? To whom is his fortune
-willed? I take it you must know, as you expected soon to marry him."
-
-"But I don't know," Emily Bates said, a little indignantly. "Nor do I see
-how it can help you to solve the mystery to get such information as that.
-You don't suppose anybody killed him for his money, do you?"
-
-"What other motive could there be, Mrs. Bates? Had he enemies?"
-
-"No; well, that is, I suppose he had some acquaintances who were
-disappointed at his election to the College Presidency. But I'd hardly
-call them enemies."
-
-"Why not? Why wouldn't they be enemies? It's my impression that election
-was hotly contested."
-
-"It was," Mrs. Peyton broke in. "It was, Mr. Morton, and if Doctor Waring
-was murdered--which I can't see how he was--some of that other faction
-did it."
-
-"But that's absurd," Gordon Lockwood protested; "there was disappointment
-among the other faction at the result of the election, but it's
-incredible that they should kill Doctor Waring for that reason!"
-
-"The whole case is incredible," Morton returned. "What is it, Higby, what
-have you found?"
-
-"The doctor," Higby said, coming into the living room, "they have just
-noticed that although there is a pinhole in Doctor Waring's tie, there is
-no stickpin there. Did he wear one?"
-
-"Of course he did," Mrs. Bates cried. "He had on his ruby pin yesterday."
-
-"He did so," echoed Mrs. Peyton. "That ruby pin was worth an immense sum
-of money! That's why he was killed, then, robbery!"
-
-"He certainly wore that pin last night," said Lockwood. "Are you sure
-it's missing? Hasn't it dropped to the floor?"
-
-"Can't find it," returned Higby, and then all the men went back to the
-study.
-
-"Anything else missing?" asked Morton, who was deeply chagrined that he
-hadn't noticed the pin was gone himself.
-
-"How about money, Mr. Lockwood?" said Doctor Marsh. "Any gone, that you
-can notice?"
-
-With an uncertain motion, Gordon Lockwood pulled open a small drawer of
-the desk.
-
-"Yes," he said, "there was five hundred dollars in cash here last
-night--and now it is not here."
-
-"Better dismiss the suicide theory," said Detective Morton, with a quick
-look at the secretary.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
- THE VOLUME OF MARTIAL
-
-
-The Medical Examiner, Doctor Marsh, the Detective Morton, and the
-Secretary of the late John Waring, Gordon Lockwood, looked at one
-another.
-
-Without any words having been spoken that might indicate a lack of
-harmony, there yet was a hint of discord in their attitudes.
-
-Doctor Marsh was sure the case was a suicide.
-
-"You'll find the stiletto somewhere," he shrugged, when held upon that
-point. "To find the weapon is not my business--but when a man is dead in
-a locked room, and dead from a wound that could have been
-self-administered, I can't see a murder situation."
-
-"Nor I," said Lockwood. "Has the waste-basket been searched for the thing
-that killed him?"
-
-Acting quickly on his own suggestion, Gordon Lockwood dived beneath the
-great desk.
-
-Like a flash, Morton was after him, and though the detective was not
-sure, he thought he saw the secretary grasp a bit of crumpled paper and
-stuff it in his pocket.
-
-"Now, look here, I'll make that search," Morton exclaimed, and almost
-snatched the waste-basket from the other's grasp.
-
-"Very well," and Lockwood put his hands in his pockets and stood looking
-on, as Morton fumbled with the scraps.
-
-He emptied the basket on the floor, but there were only a few torn
-envelopes and memoranda, which were soon proved to be of no indicative
-value to the searchers.
-
-"I'll save the stuff, anyway," Morton declared, getting a newspaper and
-wrapping in it the few bits of waste paper.
-
-"Did you take a paper from this basket and put it in your pocket?" the
-detective suddenly demanded.
-
-Lockwood, without moving, gave Morton a cold stare that was more negative
-than any words could be, and was, moreover, exceedingly disconcerting.
-
-"Look here, Mr. Morton," he said, "if you suspect me of killing my
-employer, come out and say so. I know, in story-books, the first one to
-be suspected is the confidential secretary. So, accuse me, and get it
-over with."
-
-The very impassivity of Lockwood's face seemed to put him far beyond and
-above suspicion, and the detective, hastily mumbled,
-
-"Not at all, Mr. Lockwood, not at all. But you don't seem real frank,
-now, and you must know how important it is that we get all the first hand
-information we can."
-
-"Of course, and I'm ready to tell all I know. Go on and ask questions."
-
-"Well, then, what do you surmise has become of that five hundred dollars
-and that ruby stickpin? Doesn't their disappearance rather argue against
-suicide?"
-
-Lockwood meditated. "Not necessarily. If they have been stolen--"
-
-"Stolen! Of course they've been stolen, since they aren't here! I don't
-see any safe."
-
-"No, Doctor Waring had no safe. There has been little or no robbery in
-Corinth, and Doctor Waring rarely kept much money about."
-
-"Five hundred dollars is quite a sum."
-
-"That was for housekeeping purposes. Whenever necessary, I drew for him
-from the bank that amount, and he kept it in that drawer until it was
-used up. He always gave Mrs. Peyton cash to pay the servants and some
-other matters as well as her own salary. His tradesman's bills were paid
-by check."
-
-"Was the money in bills?"
-
-"I invariably brought it to him in the same denominations. Two hundred in
-five dollar bills, two hundred in ones, and a hundred in silver coins."
-
-"In paper rolls?"
-
-"Yes; it may have been injudicious to keep so large a sum in his desk
-drawer, but he always did. Though, to be sure, he often paid out a great
-deal of it at once. Sometimes he would cash checks for some one or give
-some to the poor."
-
-"Drawer never locked?"
-
-"Always locked. But both the Doctor and I carried a key. He was not so
-suspicious of me as you are, Mr. Morton." The speaker gave his cold
-smile.
-
-"And as to the ruby pin, Mr. Lockwood?" Morton went on. "Are you willing
-we should search your effects?"
-
-Lockwood started and for a moment he almost lost his equipoise.
-
-"I am not willing," he said, after an instant's pause, "but if you say it
-is necessary, I suppose I shall have to submit."
-
-Morton looked at him uneasily. He had no appearance of a criminal, he
-looked too proud and haughty to be a culprit, yet might that not be sheer
-bravado?
-
-Discontinuing the conversation, Morton turned his attention to the table
-in the window in the hall where the secretary so often sat.
-
-He examined the appurtenances, for the table was furnished almost like a
-desk, and he picked up a silver penholder.
-
-It was round and smooth and without chasing or marking of any sort, save
-for the initials G. L.
-
-"This yours?" he asked, and Lockwood nodded assent.
-
-"I ask you, Doctor Marsh," Morton turned to the Examiner, "whether that
-wound which is in Doctor Waring's neck could have been made with this
-penholder."
-
-Startled, Marsh took the implement and carefully scrutinized it. Of usual
-length, it was tapering and ended in a point. The circumference at the
-larger end was just about the circumference of the wound in question.
-
-"I must say it could be possible," Marsh replied, his eyes alternately on
-the penholder and on the dead man. "Yes, it is exactly the size."
-
-"And it is strong enough and sharp enough, and it is round," summed up
-Morton. "Now, Mr. Lockwood, I make no accusation. I'm no novice, and I
-know there's a possibility that this might have been the weapon used, and
-yet it might not have been used by you. But I will say, that I have much
-to say to you yet, and I advise you not to try to leave town."
-
-"I've no intention of leaving town or of trying to do so," Lockwood
-asserted, "but," he went on, "would you mind telling me, if I killed the
-man I was devoted to, how I left the room locked behind me?"
-
-"Those locked rooms bore me," said Morton, "I've read lots of detective
-stories founded on that plot. Invariably the locked room proves to be
-vulnerable at some point. I haven't finished examining the doors and
-windows myself as yet."
-
-"Proceed with your examinations, then," said Lockwood; "if you can find a
-secret or concealed entrance, it's more than I can do."
-
-"More than you will do, perhaps, but not necessarily more than you can
-do."
-
-"Don't forget that vanished Japanese," prompted Marsh. "I've small faith
-in Orientals, and if there is a way to get in and out secretly, I'd
-question the Jap before I would Mr. Lockwood here."
-
-"So should I," declared the impassive secretary himself. "And another
-thing don't forget, Morton, after the Private Secretary, the next person
-to be suspected is the butler--that is in fiction, which I gather you
-take as your manual of procedure."
-
-Lockwood's sarcasm drove Morton frantic, but he was too wise to show his
-annoyance.
-
-"I shall neglect no possible suspect," he said, with dignity.
-
-And then two men came from the police, who said they were photographers
-and desired to take some pictures, at the Chief's orders.
-
-Lockwood left them, and went to the living-room where the household and a
-few neighbors were assembled.
-
-"I'm glad to get out of that detective atmosphere," he said, relaxing in
-an easy chair. "It's bad enough to have the man dead, without seeing and
-hearing those cold-blooded police bungling over their 'clues' and
-'evidences.'"
-
-"Tell me a little of the circumstances," asked Mrs. Bates, who was
-present. "I can bear it from you, Gordon, and I must know."
-
-"Apparently, Doctor Waring was sitting at his desk, reading," Lockwood
-began, with a faraway look, as if trying to reconstruct the scene. "He
-must have been reading Martial--for the volume was open on the desk--and
-the pages were blood-stained."
-
-Mrs. Bates gave a little cry, and shuddered, but Lockwood went unmovably
-on.
-
-"There were other books about, some open, some closed, but Martial was
-nearest his hand--quite as if he were reading up to the last moment."
-
-"When the murderer came!" Mrs. Bates breathed softly, her eyes wide with
-horror.
-
-"It couldn't have been murder," Lockwood said, in a positive way, "you
-see, Mrs. Bates, it just couldn't have been. That Morton detective is
-trying to trump up a way the assassin could have entered that locked
-room--but he can't find any way. I know he can't. So it must have been
-suicide. Much as we dislike to admit it, it is the only possible theory."
-
-"But they say there was robbery," Mrs. Peyton put in. "The ruby pin is
-gone and the money from the drawer."
-
-"But, perhaps," Gordon said, "they were taken by a robber who did not
-also murder his victim. Nogi, now--"
-
-"Of course!" cried Helen Peyton, quickly; "I see it! I never could abide
-Nogi, with his stealthy ways. He stole the things, and then he ran away,
-and later, Doctor Waring killed himself!"
-
-"Because of the robbery!" exclaimed Emily Bates.
-
-"Oh, no!" Lockwood returned. "Certainly not for that. Indeed, the motive
-is the greatest mystery of all. We could perhaps imagine a motive for
-murder--whether it was robbery, or some brute of 'the other faction' or
-some old enemy of whom we know nothing. But for suicide, though I am sure
-it was that, I can think of no motive whatever."
-
-"Nor I," said Mrs. Bates. "I knew him better than any of you, and I
-know--I know for a certainty, that he was a happy man. That he looked
-forward eagerly to his marriage with me, that he was happy in the thought
-of his Presidency--that he hadn't a real trouble in the world."
-
-"The other faction," began Mrs. Peyton.
-
-"No," said Mrs. Bates, firmly. "He knew he was doing his duty, upholding
-the principles and tradition of his College, and the other faction did
-not worry him. He was too big-minded, too broad-visioned to allow that to
-trouble him."
-
-"I think you're quite right, Mrs. Bates," Lockwood agreed; "but granting
-it was suicide, what do you think was the cause?"
-
-"That's just it," she declared; "I don't think it was suicide, I know it
-couldn't have been. He was too happy, too good, too fine, to do such a
-thing, even if he had had a reason. And then, what did he do it with?"
-
-"Morton imagines a secret entrance of some sort," said Lockwood. "If
-there is one, the robber could have come in afterward, and could have
-carried off the weapon--"
-
-"Hush, Gordon," said Mrs. Bates, sternly. "That's too absurd! If it had
-been suicide--which it wasn't--why under heaven would a burglar coming in
-later, take away the weapon?"
-
-"To save himself," said Lockwood, shortly. "So he wouldn't be suspected
-of the greater crime."
-
-"Nonsense!" said Mrs. Peyton, irately; "I never heard such rubbish! And,
-in the first place, there's no secret entrance to the study. I haven't
-swept and dusted and vacuum-cleaned that place all these years without
-knowing that! Yes, and had the room redecorated and refloored, and--Oh, I
-know every inch of it! There's no possible chance of a secret entrance.
-Who built it and when and why? Not Doctor Waring. His life's always been
-an open book. Never has he had any secret errands, any callers whom I
-didn't know, any matters on which he was silent or uncommunicative. Until
-his engagement to Mrs. Bates, he hadn't a ripple in his quiet life, and
-that he told me about as soon as it occurred."
-
-Mrs. Peyton looked squarely at Doctor Waring's fiancee, as if to imply a
-complete knowledge of the courtship, as well as an intimate knowledge of
-the Doctor's life.
-
-"That's true," Lockwood said. "He was a man without secrets. He was
-always willing I should open his mail, and there was never a letter that
-I did not know about."
-
-Yet even as he spoke, the man remembered the crumpled paper he had taken
-from the waste basket, and he felt it in his pocket, though he made no
-sign.
-
-"Oh, people, is my aunt here?"
-
-It was Pinky Payne, who, all excitement, came running in.
-
-"I've just heard, and I want to see Aunt Emily."
-
-"Here I am, dear. Come here, my boy," and she drew him down beside her on
-the sofa.
-
-"What do they say, Pinky? What's the talk in town?" Lockwood asked.
-
-"Oh, the place is in a turmoil. There are the wildest reports. Some say
-it's a--a--that he killed himself, you know, and some say--he didn't.
-Which was it?"
-
-The boy's lip quivered as he looked about at the silent people.
-
-"Tell him, Gordon," begged Mrs. Bates, and Lockwood told the principal
-details of the mystery.
-
-"Never a suicide! never!" Pinckney Payne declared. "I know Doc Waring too
-well for that. Suicide means a coward--and he was never that! No, Aunt
-Emily, it was murder. Oh, how terrible," and the boy almost lost control
-of himself. "You were at the bottom of it, Auntie. I'm sure it was either
-one of those men you refused when you took up with Doc Waring."
-
-"Why, Pinckney! How dreadful of you! Don't say such a thing!"
-
-"But I know it. If you'd heard Jim Haskell and Philip Leonard talk--I
-felt sure they meant to kill Doctor Waring."
-
-"Pinky, I forbid you--"
-
-"But it's true, Auntie. And if it's true, you want them shown up, don't
-you, whichever one it was?"
-
-"Hush, Pinky--hush!"
-
-"Yes, shut up, Pink," Lockwood spoke sternly. "What you suggest is highly
-improbable, but even if there's suspicion of such a thing, don't babble
-about it. That's the detective's work."
-
-"Yes--and who's your detective? Old blind-as-a-bat Morton, I'll bet, who
-can't see a hole through a ladder! I'll show him now--"
-
-"Pinky, I beg of you, hush," said his Aunt, losing her self-control.
-
-"There, Auntie, dear, don't cry. I didn't mean to worry you, but
-something must be done--"
-
-"Something will be done, Pinky," Lockwood assured him. "But I tell you
-right now, if you try to stick your inexperienced finger in this pie,
-you'll make trouble for us all--from your aunt down. Now, behave
-yourself. Try to be a man, not a foolish boy."
-
-"That's what I'm doing! And I don't propose to lie down on the job,
-either. I tell you, Gordon. I know a lot about detective work--"
-
-"Cut it out, Pink," said Helen, and her words seemed to have an effect on
-the irrepressible youth. "To read detective stories is one thing--to
-solve a real, live mystery is quite another."
-
-"That's right, Helen," and Lockwood nodded approval. "Many a person
-thinks he has a bit of detective instinct, when all he has is curiosity
-and imagination."
-
-Helen, pleased at this appreciation went on to lay down the law for
-Pinckney Payne.
-
-She was interrupted by the entrance of Morton who wanted to learn more of
-the departed Japanese, Nogi.
-
-"What other servants are there?" he asked Mrs. Peyton.
-
-"Only the two Japanese," she replied. "They do all the cooking and
-serving at table; all the cleaning of the house; and the rest, my
-daughter and myself attend to."
-
-"There is a chauffeur?"
-
-"Yes, but the garage is a few blocks away, and the chauffeur lives at
-home."
-
-"You had Nogi but a short time?"
-
-"Only a few days."
-
-"He came well recommended?"
-
-"He had very fine written recommendations, but from people I did not
-know, and too far away to inquire of. I took him on trial."
-
-"He seemed honest and faithful?"
-
-"He seemed so--but he was silent and moody--a man one could scarcely
-understand."
-
-"Can you imagine his killing his master--granting the opportunity?"
-
-Mrs. Peyton considered. "I can imagine it," she said, "but I shouldn't
-like to say I would suspect him of it. He was soft-footed, and went about
-with a sort of stealthy manner, but I'm not prepared to say he was wrong
-in any way."
-
-"Call in Ito, the other one."
-
-Ito came, and stood stolidly by. His impassive demeanor was not unlike
-that of Gordon Lockwood. Waring had sometimes remarked this in a chaffing
-way to his secretary.
-
-"You knew this Nogi?" asked Morton.
-
-"Only since he came here," answered the butler, in perfect English.
-
-"You liked him?"
-
-"Neither yes nor no. He knew little of his duties, but he was willing to
-learn. He was respectful to me, and friendly enough. I had no reason to
-dislike him."
-
-Morton didn't seem to get anywhere with this man.
-
-"Well, what do you think of his character?" he said. "Would you say he
-was capable of killing his employer?"
-
-"All men are capable of crime," said the Jap, in a low, even voice, "but
-he could not kill Doctor Waring and go away leaving the study locked on
-the inside."
-
-"Why did he go away, then?"
-
-"That I do not know. It may be he tired of the place here."
-
-"But there was money due him."
-
-"Yes; that makes it hard to understand."
-
-Morton had an uncomfortable feeling that the Japanese was scornful of
-him, and, worse still, that the other listeners were also.
-
-"You may go," he told Ito, and then, turning to Lockwood, he said, a
-little belligerently, "Who is in charge here? To whom do I make my
-report?"
-
-The question was like a bombshell. All were silent, until Mrs. Bates
-said, "I suppose I am what might be called in charge. You may report to
-me."
-
-"To you, ma'am?" Morton was, clearly, surprised.
-
-"Yes; as Doctor Waring's affianced wife, and as his heir, I feel I am in
-authority. And also, I wish all reports made to me, as I am the one most
-deeply interested in learning the identity of the murderer."
-
-"If he was murdered," supplemented Mrs. Bates.
-
-And Mrs. Peyton broke in, "You needn't think, Mr. Morton, that there's
-such a thing as a secret entrance or secret passage in this house, for I
-know there is not."
-
-"Yet there are other theories, other possibilities," the detective said,
-his air a little less important than it had been. "Suppose, now, that
-Nogi had robbed and murdered his master, when he carried in the water
-tray. Just suppose that, and suppose that, with his Japanese cunning he
-had devised a way to lock the door behind him--or, say, he had gone out
-by the glass door, and had locked that behind him."
-
-"How?" cried Pinckney, his eyes wide with excitement.
-
-"Say he had previously removed a pane of glass--they are not large panes.
-Say, he reached through, locked the door inside--the French window, I
-mean--and then had put in the pane, reputtied it, and gone away."
-
-"Gee!" cried the boy. "That could be!"
-
-"Of course it could. And there are other ways it might have been
-accomplished. Now, we don't say that did happen, but what I want to know
-is, who is at the head of this investigation?"
-
-"I can't feel that Mrs. Bates is," Mrs. Peyton said, a little sullenly.
-"She was not married yet, and therefore, as resident housekeeper, I feel
-rather in authority myself."
-
-"But you say you are the heir, Mrs. Bates?" the detective inquired.
-
-"Perhaps I ought not to have told that," Emily Bates spoke regretfully.
-"But Doctor Waring's lawyer will tell you, it is true I am the principal
-heir. It is so designated in his will, which you will find in a secret
-drawer in his desk."
-
-"You know where this drawer is?"
-
-"I do."
-
-"Later on, I will ask you to show us. If you are the heir, there is no
-further question of your authority here."
-
-And Detective Morton left the room.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
- WHERE IS NOGI?
-
-
-Twenty-four hours later Cray, the District Prosecuting Attorney, stood in
-the Waring study.
-
-The body of the master had been removed, and to Cray's regret he had not
-seen it before the embalmer's work had removed the red ring on the
-forehead.
-
-"It was a sign," he said to Morton, who was moodily listening. "A sign
-like that, left by the murderer, always means revenge."
-
-"You agree to murder, then?" Morton spoke eagerly, glad to have his
-theory corroborated.
-
-"What else? Look here, Morton; it's got to be either murder or suicide,
-hasn't it? Yes? Well, then, to which of the two do the greater number of
-clues point? Sum up. For suicide we have only the locked room argument. I
-admit I don't know how any one could get in or out of this study, but, as
-I say, that's the only sign of suicide. Now, for murder we have the
-absence of the weapon, the robbery of the money and the ruby, and sign of
-a circle on the dead man's forehead. Wish I'd seen that. It wasn't burnt
-on, for it disappeared after the embalmers took care of it."
-
-"Oh, no, it wasn't as deep as a burn. More like an impression left by a
-ring of cold metal or the edge of a glass tumbler."
-
-"Very strange, and decidedly an important clue. For, here's the queer
-part. The doctors declare the mark must have been made while the man was
-alive--now, how can that be explained?"
-
-"Give it up. It's too much for me. But it was too small a circle to have
-been made by the tumbler on the water tray. I measured it."
-
-"I know; that's why I think it was a sign of revenge. Suppose the motive
-was revenge and the reason for revenge had something to do with a quarrel
-in which a small glass or cup figured. That's the idea, though, of
-course, it needn't have been a glass or cup at all, but something with a
-ring-like edge. Thus, there was a reason for the sign on the dead man's
-face."
-
-"I see; though I never could have doped it out like that."
-
-"Oh, I don't say it's exactly what happened, but there must have been
-something of the sort, for what other hypothesis fits the case at all? We
-can't imagine Doctor Waring branding his own forehead, and then killing
-himself, can we?"
-
-"No; and if he had, where's the branding iron--to call it that--and
-where's the dagger?"
-
-"That's right. Now, I propose to treat the matter as a murder case, and
-look for the criminal first, and then find out how he entered the locked
-room afterward."
-
-"Pooh! those locked rooms--"
-
-"You're 'way off, Morton, when you sneer at a 'locked room.'"
-
-"It was locked--I mean impenetrably locked. There is no secret
-passage--of that I'm sure. Your ingenious idea of removing and replacing
-a whole pane of glass was clever, I grant, but we've seen that not a pane
-has been lately reputtied. They're all framed in old, dried, hard, and
-even painted putty."
-
-"I know it. But some other such way might have been devised."
-
-"Can't think of any. We've examined all the window sashes and door
-frame--oh, well, so far as I can see the room was absolutely unenterable.
-But, notwithstanding, I'm going to work on a murder basis. Because
-inexplicable as that seems, there are even more insurmountable
-difficulties in the way of the suicide theory. Now, I suppose you've had
-the finger print expert in?"
-
-"No--I haven't--not yet."
-
-"Good Lord! What kind of a detective are you? Well, get him, and put him
-to work. What about footprints?"
-
-"Inside the room?"
-
-"Or outside, either. But inside, I suppose has been trampled by a score
-of people!"
-
-"You can't get footprints on a thick rug," the discomfited Morton
-grumbled.
-
-"Sometimes you can. And a polished floor will often show marks. What have
-you done, anyway?"
-
-"There was enough to do, Mr. Cray," Morton flared back at him. "I have
-been busy every minute since I began, except for a few hours sleep."
-
-"Over twenty-four hours since the alarm was given. You've put in at least
-twelve, then. What have you done?"
-
-"A lot. I've found out, to my own satisfaction, that--if it is a
-murder--Gordon Lockwood knows all about it."
-
-"You suspect him?"
-
-"Either of the deed, or of guilty knowledge."
-
-"And his motive?"
-
-"Money. That young man is over head and ears in debt."
-
-"To whom?"
-
-"To shops--jewelers, florists, restaurants. All the debts a gay young
-blade would incur."
-
-"You amaze me, Morton. Lockwood isn't that sort."
-
-"Isn't he? You're deceived, like every one else, by that icy calm of his.
-He stares haughtily, and appears above and beyond ordinary mortals, but
-he's deep. That's what he is, deep."
-
-"Well, how did he do it?"
-
-"With his penholder. A smooth, sharp silver penholder. And he took the
-money and the ruby."
-
-"And how did he leave the room?"
-
-"Don't ask me that! That's his secret. But, I've a notion he was in
-cahoots with that new Jap, the one that vamoosed. I theorize," Morton
-waxed important as he noted the Prosecutor's attention, "that the Jap had
-some grudge against Waring, and it was he who branded his forehead, and
-who contrived a way to leave the room locked behind him. Why, I read a
-story the other day, where a key was turned from the other side of a door
-by means of a slender steel bar through the key handle, and a string from
-the bar, leading down and under the door. Once outside, the murderer
-pulled the string, the bar turned the key in the lock, the bar fell to
-the floor and he dragged it under the door by means of the string."
-
-"Ingenious! but it implies a door raised from the floor."
-
-"I know. And this one isn't. But it all goes to prove that there can be
-some way--some diabolically clever way to do the trick. And the Japanese
-are diabolically clever. And so is Lockwood. And if the two worked
-together they could accomplish wonders. Then Lockwood with his wooden
-face, could disarm suspicion. The Jap, let us say, couldn't, so Lockwood
-packed him off."
-
-"Interesting--but all theory."
-
-"To be proved or disproved, then."
-
-"Yes, but meantime, you are losing time on more practical investigation.
-Let's look outside for footprints--I mean for any one coming or going
-from this side entrance."
-
-"The French window? Nobody comes or goes that way in this weather; the
-path isn't even shoveled. That's used mostly in summer time."
-
-"Nevertheless," Cray opened the window door, "somebody has been here."
-
-Morton looked out and stared hard. How had he come to neglect a matter of
-such importance. There were two plainly visible lines of footprints in
-the snow, one quite obviously coming toward the house and one going away
-from it.
-
-"There's your murderer," said Cray, quietly.
-
-"Oh, no," but Morton wriggled uneasily. "It couldn't be. No murderer is
-going to walk through crusted snow, to and from the scene of his crime,
-leaving definite footprints like those!"
-
-"That's no argument. He might have come here with no intent of crime, and
-afterward, might have been so beside himself he couldn't plan safely."
-
-"Oh, well, get what you can from them," said Morton, pettishly. "I
-suppose you deduce a tall man, with blue eyes and two teeth missing."
-
-"Don't be cheap, Morton. And, on the contrary, I deduce a small man. They
-are small footprints, and close together. The Japanese are small men,
-Morton."
-
-"Well, these prints are more than twenty-four hours old, and they're not
-clear enough to incriminate anybody."
-
-"They haven't changed an iota from the moment they were made. This cold
-snap has kept everything frozen solid. Look at the frost still on the
-panes, the icicles still on the window sashes, the ice coating still on
-all the trees and branches. In fact it has grown steadily colder since
-night before last, and until it begins to thaw we have these footprints
-as intact evidence. I will have them photographed."
-
-"They are small," Morton agreed after further examination. "And as you
-say, too close together for an ordinary sized man. It looks like the
-Jap."
-
-"Beginning to wake up, are you? You've sure been asleep at the switch,
-Morton."
-
-"Nothing of the sort, Mr. Cray. But I ought to have help. I've had all I
-could tackle, making the necessary first inquiries, and getting the facts
-straightened out."
-
-"That business could have waited better than these other things. Now,
-there's Crimmins, the lawyer arriving. Let's interview him. But not in
-the study. Keep that clear."
-
-They met Crimmins in the hall, and took him to the living room.
-
-The matter of the will was immediately taken up, and Mrs. Bates was asked
-to tell which desk drawer it was in.
-
-Accompanied by the lawyer and the secretary, Mrs. Bates indicated the
-drawer, and Lockwood opened it with his key.
-
-There were a few papers in it but no will.
-
-Nor could further search disclose any such document.
-
-"Who took it?" said Mrs. Bates, blankly.
-
-But no one could answer her. The others came thronging in, Cray's urgent
-requests to keep out of the study being entirely ignored.
-
-"I knew it," declared Mrs. Peyton, triumphantly. "Now, I guess you won't
-be so cocky, Emily Bates--you or your 'authority!'"
-
-Mrs. Bates looked at her. "I am the heir," she said haughtily. "I assert
-that--but I cannot prove it until the will is found. It isn't in your
-possession, Mr. Crimmins?"
-
-"No; Doctor Waring preferred to keep it himself. I cannot understand its
-disappearance."
-
-"A lot of paper has been burned in this fireplace," said Helen Peyton who
-was poking the ashes around.
-
-Morton hastened to look, for it seemed to him as if everybody was
-stealing his thunder.
-
-"Nothing that can be identified," he said, carelessly.
-
-"No?" demurred Cray. "At any rate, it looks as if some legal papers were
-destroyed. This bit of ash is quite evidently the remainder of several
-sheets folded together."
-
-But no definite knowledge could be gained outside the fact that much
-paper had been burned there. As no fire had been made since the discovery
-of the tragedy, it stood to reason the papers were burned by Doctor
-Waring himself or by his midnight intruder, if there were such a one.
-
-"Well," Cray demanded of the lawyer, "if no will can be found, then who
-inherits the property of Doctor Waring? And is it considerable?"
-
-"Yes; Doctor Waring had quite a fortune," Crimmins told them. "As to an
-heir, he has a distant cousin--a second cousin, who, I suppose would be
-the legal inheritor, in the absence of any will. But, I know he made a
-will in Mrs. Bates' favor, and it included a few minor legacies to the
-members of this household and some neighbors."
-
-"I know it," Mrs. Bates said. "I'm perfectly familiar with all the
-bequests. But where is the will? It must be found! It can't have been
-burnt!"
-
-"We've no right to assume that those paper ashes are the will, but I
-confess I fear it," Crimmins announced, his face drawn with anxiety. "I
-should be deeply sorry, if it is so, for the cousin I speak of is a ne'er
-do well young man, and not at all a favorite of his late relative. His
-name is Maurice Trask and he lives in St. Louis. I suppose he must be
-notified in any case."
-
-"Yes," said Cray, "that must be done. But, please, all go out of this
-room, for the finger print experts and the photographers are coming soon,
-and every moment you people stay here, you help to cloud or destroy
-possible clues."
-
-Impressed by his sternness, they filed out and gathered in the
-living-room.
-
-There they found a neighbor, Saltonstall Adams, awaiting them.
-
-"I came over," he said, with scant preliminary greetings, "because I have
-something to tell. You in charge, Mr. Cray?"
-
-"Yes, Salt, what do you know?"
-
-"This. I was awake late, night before last--the night Doc Waring died,
-and I was looking out my window, and it was pretty light, with the snow
-and the moonlight and all, and I saw a man--a small man, creeping along
-sly like. And I watched him, he went along past my house down toward the
-railroad tracks. He had a bag with him, and a bundle beside. I wouldn't
-have noticed him probably, but he skulked along so and seemed so fearful
-that somebody'd see him."
-
-"Nogi?" said Gordon Lockwood, calmly, looking at the speaker.
-
-"Don't say it was, and don't say it wasn't. But I went down to the
-station and the station master told me that that Jap of Waring's went off
-on the milk train."
-
-"He did!" cried Morton, "what time does that train go through?"
-
-"'Bout half past four. The fellow passed my house 'long about half past
-twelve, I should say--though I didn't look, and he must have waited
-around the station all that time till the milk train came along."
-
-"Is the station master sure it was Nogi?" asked Mrs. Peyton, greatly
-excited.
-
-"Said he was, and there's mighty few Japs in Corinth, all told."
-
-"Of course it was Nogi," said Lockwood, and Morton snapped him up with,
-"Why are you so sure?"
-
-Lockwood treated the detective to one of his most disconcerting stares,
-and said,
-
-"You, a detective, and ask such a simple question! Why, since there are
-but a very few Japanese in this town, and since one of them left on that
-milk train, and since all the rest are accounted for, and only Nogi is
-missing--it doesn't seem to me to require superhuman intelligence to
-infer that it was Nogi who took his departure."
-
-"And who was mixed up in the murder of Doctor John Waring?" cried Morton,
-exasperated beyond all caution by the ironic tone of Lockwood. "And,
-unless you can explain some matters, sir, you may be considered mixed in
-the same despicable deed!"
-
-"What matters?" Gordon Lockwood asked, but his already pale face turned a
-shade whiter.
-
-"First, sir, you have a large number of unpaid bills in your possession."
-
-The secretary's face was no longer white. The angry blood flew to it, and
-he fairly clenched his hands in an effort to preserve his usual calm, nor
-even then, could he entirely succeed.
-
-"What if I have?" he cried, "and how do you know? You've searched my
-rooms!"
-
-"Certainly," said Morton, "I warned you I should do so."
-
-"But, in my absence!"
-
-"The law is not always over ceremonious."
-
-"Now, Mr. Lockwood," Cray began, "don't get excited."
-
-Gordon Lockwood almost laughed. For him to be told not to get excited!
-He, who never allowed himself to be even slightly ruffled or perturbed!
-This would never do!
-
-"I'm not excited, Mr. Cray," he said, and he wasn't, now, "but I am
-annoyed that my private papers should be searched without my knowledge.
-Surely I might--"
-
-"Never mind the amenities of life, Mr. Lockwood," Cray went on; "your
-effects were searched on the authority of a police warrant. Now,
-regarding these bills--"
-
-"I have nothing to say. A man has a right to his unpaid bills."
-
-"But he has not a right to steal five hundred dollars in cash and a ruby
-pin, in order to be able to pay them!" This from Morton, and instead of
-replying to the detective in any way, Lockwood ignored the speech
-utterly, quite as if he had not heard it, and addressed Cray.
-
-"Was anything further found to incriminate me?" he asked.
-
-"Was there anything else to be found?" said Cray, catching at the implied
-suggestion.
-
-"That's for your sleuths to say. I know of nothing."
-
-"Well, there's your round, sharp penholder. And the fact that you had
-keys to all desk drawers. Also the fact that only you and the Jap are
-known to have been in that part of the house that night. These things
-were not learned from the search of your rooms; but your pecuniary
-embarrassment, which was discovered, all go together to make a web of
-circumstances that call for investigation."
-
-"Don't beat about the bush!" exclaimed Lockwood, his lips set, and his
-eyes staring coldly at the District Attorney. "I'd far rather be accused
-definitely than have it hinted that I am responsible for this crime."
-
-"But we haven't sufficient evidence, Mr. Lockwood, to accuse you
-definitely, that's why we must question you."
-
-"Sufficient! You haven't any evidence at all!"
-
-"Oh, we have some." With a turn of his head, Cray summoned a man who
-stood at the hall door.
-
-The man came in, and handed Cray a report.
-
-"H'm," the attorney scanned the paper. "We find, Mr. Lockwood, fresh
-finger prints on the chair which stood near Doctor Waring's desk. Facing
-the Doctor's chair, in fact, as if some one had sat there talking to him.
-Did you?"
-
-"No; I never sat down and talked to him. I was always waiting on him in
-the matter of bringing books or taking letters for transcription, and in
-any case, I either stood, or sat at my desk, never in that chair you
-speak of."
-
-"This man will take the finger prints of all present," the Attorney
-directed, and one and all submitted to the process.
-
-Old Salt Adams was greatly interested.
-
-"But you can't get the prints of Friend Jap," he said. "Like's not, he'd
-be of more importance than all of us put together. Me, now, I can't see
-where I come in."
-
-Yet, after time enough had passed to complete the processes, it was
-learned that the finger prints on the shiny black wood of the chair under
-discussion were indubitably those of Gordon Lockwood. Also, there were
-other prints there, slightly smaller, that Cray immediately assumed to be
-those of the missing Japanese.
-
-Lockwood looked more supercilious than usual, if that were possible.
-
-"How can you identify the prints of a man not here?" he asked with an
-incredulous look.
-
-"Supposition not identification," said Cray, gravely. "But we're
-narrowing these things down, and we may yet get identification."
-
-"Get the Jap back," advised Old Salt Adams. "That's your next move, Cray.
-Get him, check up his finger prints and all that, and best of all get his
-confession. There's your work cut out for you."
-
-"Find Doctor Waring's will," Mrs. Bates lamented. "There's your work cut
-out for you. I am not unduly mercenary, but when I know how anxious
-Doctor Waring was that I should inherit his estate, when I realize what
-it meant that he drew this will before our marriage, so urgent was his
-desire that all should be mine, you must understand that I do not
-willingly forego it all in favor of a distant relative, whom, Mr.
-Crimmins tells us, Doctor Waring did not care for at all."
-
-"I should say not!" and Crimmins looked positive. "It will be an outrage
-if Mr. Trask inherits the estate already willed to Mrs. Bates. I stand
-ready to do all I can to see justice done in this matter."
-
-"But justice, as you see it, can only result from finding the will," said
-Cray.
-
-"Yes," agreed Crimmins, "and the whole matter opens up a new train of
-thought. May not the distant cousin, this man Trask be in some way
-responsible for the destruction of the will and the death of the
-decedent?"
-
-"It is a new way to look," Cray agreed, with a thoughtful air; "and we
-will look that way, you rest assured. We will at once get in touch with
-this cousin, you will give us his address, and learn where he was and how
-employed on the night of Doctor Waring's death. We still have to face the
-problem of an outsider's exit from a locked room, and though it seems
-more explicable in the case of a member of the household, yet a new
-suspect brings fresh conditions, and perhaps fresh evidence, which may
-show us where to look. At any rate, we must speedily find Mr. Maurice
-Trask."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
- A LOVE LETTER
-
-
-"Look here, Esther," said old Salt to his wife, "that's a mighty curious
-case over at Waring's."
-
-"How you do talk! I should think that to you and me, knowing and loving
-John Waring as we did, you'd have no doings with the curious part of it!
-As for me, I don't care who killed him. He's dead, isn't he? It can't
-bring him back to life to hang his murderer. And to my mind it's
-heathenish--all this detectiving and evidencing--or whatever they call
-it. Whom do they suspect now? You?"
-
-Adams looked at his wife with a mild reproach. "Woman all over! No sense
-of justice, no righteous indignation. Don't you know the murderer must be
-found and punished? That is if it was a murder."
-
-"Of course it was! That blessed man never killed himself! And he about to
-marry Emily Bates--a lady, if ever there was one!"
-
-"Well, now you listen to me, Esther, and whatever you do, don't go
-babbling about this. They say the Jap, who vamoosed from the Waring
-house, made a line of foot tracks in the snow. The snow's crusted over,
-you know, and those footprints are about as clear now as when they were
-made."
-
-"Huh! footprints! Corinth is full of footprints."
-
-"Yes, but these--listen, Esther--these lead straight from the Waring
-house, over to this house. And back again."
-
-"How can they?" Mrs. Adams looked mystified. "That Japanese didn't come
-over here."
-
-"You can't say that he didn't. And, look here, Esther, where's Miss
-Austin? What's she doing?"
-
-"Miss Austin? She's in her room. She hasn't been quite up to the mark for
-a day or two, and she's had her meals upstairs."
-
-"What's the matter with her?"
-
-"A slight cold, she says. I can't make her out, Salt. What's she doing
-here, anyway?"
-
-"Don't pester her, my dear. How you and Bascom do love to pick at that
-girl! Why does she have to do anything?"
-
-"It's queer, though. And I hate a mystery."
-
-"Well, she is one--I grant you that. Have you told her about Doctor
-Waring? Though I daresay it wouldn't interest her."
-
-"And I daresay it would! Why, that girl cut his picture out of the paper,
-and she did have one stuck up on her dresser, till I looked at it sort of
-sharp like, and she put it away."
-
-"Poor child! Can't even have a newspaper cutting, if she wants it! You're
-a tyrant, Esther! Don't you ever try to boss me like that!"
-
-The good-natured smile that passed between them, proved the unlikelihood
-of this, and Old Salt went on. "I wish you'd tell her, wife, about the
-tragedy. Seems like she ought to know."
-
-Mrs. Adams stared at him. "I'll tell her, as a matter of course, but I
-don't know why you're so anxious about it."
-
-"Good morning, Miss Austin," the good lady said, soon after, "better this
-morning?"
-
-"Yes, thank you. My cold is almost entirely well."
-
-The girl was sitting by the window, in an easy chair. She had on a
-Japanese dressing gown of quilted silk, embroidered with chrysanthemums,
-and was listlessly gazing out across the snow covered field opposite.
-
-The Adams house was on the outskirts of the little town, and separated by
-a wide field from the Waring place.
-
-"Heard the news about Doctor Waring?" Mrs. Adams said, in a casual tone,
-but watching the girl closely.
-
-"No; what is it?"
-
-The words were simple, and the voice steady, but Miss Austin's hands
-clutched the arms of the chair, and her face turned perfectly white.
-
-"Why, what ails you? You don't know the man, do you?"
-
-"I--I heard him lecture, you know. Tell me--what is the--the news?"
-
-"He's dead." Mrs. Adams spoke bluntly on purpose. She had felt in a vague
-way, that this strange person, this Miss Mystery, had more interest in
-Doctor Waring than she admitted, and the landlady was determined to find
-out.
-
-To her own satisfaction she did find out, for the girl almost fainted.
-She didn't quite lose consciousness, indeed it was not so much a faint as
-such a desperate effort to regain her poise, that it unnerved her.
-
-"Now, now, Miss Austin, why do you take it so hard? He was a stranger to
-you, wasn't he?"
-
-"Yes--yes, of course he was."
-
-"Why are you so disturbed then?"
-
-"He was such a--such a fine man--" the girl's stifled sobs impeded her
-speech.
-
-"Well, somebody killed him."
-
-At that, Miss Austin seemed turned to stone. "Killed him!" she whispered,
-in accent of terror.
-
-"Yes--or else he killed himself--they don't feel sure." Mrs. Adams, once
-embarked on the narrative, told all she knew of the circumstances, and in
-the exciting recital, almost forgot to watch the effect of the tale on
-her listener.
-
-But this effect was not entirely unnoted. At the partly open door, Old
-Salt Adams, stood, eavesdropping, but with a kindly, anxious look on his
-face, that boded no ill to any one.
-
-And he noticed that the girl's attention was wandering. She was pitifully
-white, her face drawn and scared, and soon she exclaimed, with a burst of
-nervous fury, "Stop! please stop! Leave the room, won't you?"
-
-It was not a command but an agonized entreaty. Mrs. Adams fairly jumped,
-and alarmed as well as offended, she rose and started for the door, only
-to meet her husband entering.
-
-"Go downstairs, Esther," he said, gravely, "I want to speak to Miss
-Austin myself."
-
-Staring at one then at the other, and utterly routed by this unbelievable
-turn of affairs, Mrs. Adams went.
-
-Old Salt closed the room door, and turned to the trembling girl.
-
-"Miss Austin," he said kindly, "I like you, I want to help you--but I
-must ask you to explain yourself a little. The people in my house call
-you Miss Mystery. Why are you here? Why are you in Corinth at all?"
-
-For a moment the girl seemed about to respond to his kindly, gentle
-attitude and address. Then, something stayed her, and she let her lovely
-face harden to a stony blankness, as she replied, "It is a bit intrusive,
-but I've no reason not to tell. I am an art student, and I came here to
-paint New England winter scenery."
-
-"Have you done much?"
-
-"I haven't been here quite a week yet--and I've been picking out
-available bits--and for two days I've had a cold."
-
-"How did you get cold?" The voice was kind but it had a definite note, as
-if desirous of an accurate answer.
-
-Miss Mystery looked at him.
-
-"How does any one get cold?" she said, trying to smile; "perhaps sitting
-in a draught--perhaps by means of a germ. It is almost well now."
-
-"Perhaps by walking in the snow, and getting one's feet wet," Mr. Adams
-suggested, and the girl turned frightened eyes on him.
-
-"Don't," she breathed; "Mr. Adams, don't!" Her voice was piteous her eyes
-implored him to stop torturing her.
-
-"Why, what's the harm in my saying that?" he went on, inexorably. "You
-wouldn't go anywhere that you wouldn't want known--would you--Miss
-Mystery?"
-
-He spoke the last two words in a meaning way, and the great dark eyes
-faced him with the look of a stag at bay.
-
-Then again, by a desperate effort the girl recovered herself, and said,
-coldly,
-
-"Please speak plainly, Mr. Adams. Is there a special meaning in your
-words?"
-
-"There is, Miss Austin. Perhaps I have no right to ask you why--but I do
-ask you if you went over to Doctor Waring's house, late in the
-evening--night before last?"
-
-"Sunday night, do you mean?"
-
-Miss Mystery controlled her voice, but her hands were clenched and her
-foot tapped the floor in her stifled excitement.
-
-"Yes, Sunday night."
-
-"No; of course I did not go over there at night. I was there in the
-afternoon, with Mrs. Bates and Mr. Payne."
-
-"I know that. And you then met Doctor Waring for the first time?"
-
-"For the first time," she spoke with downcast face.
-
-"The first time in your life?"
-
-"The first time in my life," but if ever a statement carried its own
-denial that one seemed to. The long dark lashes fell on the white cheeks.
-The pale lips quivered, and if Anita Austin had been uttering deepest
-perjury she could have shown no more convincing evidence of falsehood.
-
-Yet old Salt looked at her benevolently. She was so young, so small, so
-alone--and so mysterious.
-
-"I can't make you out," he shook his head. "But I'm for you, Miss Austin.
-That is," he hedged, "unless I find out something definite against you. I
-feel I ought to tell you, that you've enemies--yes," as the girl looked
-up surprised, "you've made enemies in this house. Small wonder--the way
-you've acted! Now, why can't you be chummy and sociable like?"
-
-"Chummy? Sociable? With whom?"
-
-"With all the boarders. There's young Lockwood now--and there's young
-Tyler--"
-
-"Yes, yes, I know. I will--Mr. Adams--I will try to be more sociable.
-Now--as to--to Doctor Waring--why did he kill himself?"
-
-Old Salt eyed her narrowly. "We don't know that he did," he began.
-
-"But Mrs. Adams told me all the details"--she shuddered, "and if that
-room he was in was so securely locked that they had to break in, how
-could it be the work of--of another?"
-
-"Well, Miss Austin, as they found a bad wound in the man's neck, just
-under his right ear, a wound that produced instant unconsciousness and
-almost instant death, and as no weapon of any sort could be found in the
-room, how could it have been suicide?"
-
-"Which would you rather think it?" the strange girl asked, looking
-gravely at him.
-
-"Well, to me--I'm an old-fashioned chap--suicide always suggests
-cowardice, and Doc Waring was no coward, that I'll swear!"
-
-"No, he was not--"
-
-"How do you know?"
-
-Miss Mystery started at the sudden question.
-
-"I heard him lecture, you know," she returned; "and, too, I saw him in
-his home--Sunday afternoon--and he seemed a fine man--a fine man."
-
-"Well, Miss Austin," Old Salt rose to go, "I'm free to confess you're a
-mystery to me. I consider myself a fair judge of men--yes, and of women,
-but when a slip of a girl like you acts so strange, I can't make it out.
-Now, I happen to know--"
-
-He paused at the panic-stricken look on her face, and lamely concluded;
-
-"Never mind--I won't tell."
-
-With which cryptic remark he went away.
-
-"Well, what you been saying to her?" demanded his aggrieved spouse, as
-the Adamses met in their own little sitting-room.
-
-"Why, nothing," Old Salt replied, and his troubled eyes looked at her
-pleadingly. "I don't think she's wrong, Esther."
-
-"Well, I do. And maybe a whole lot wrong. Why, Saltonstall, Miss Bascom
-says she _saw_ Miss Austin traipsing across the field late Sunday night."
-
-"She didn't! I don't believe a word of it! She's a meddling old maid--a
-snooping busybody!"
-
-"There, now, you carry on like that because you're afraid we will
-discover something wrong about Miss Mystery."
-
-"Look here, Esther," Adams spoke sternly; "you remember she's a young
-girl, without anybody to stand up for her, hereabouts. Now, you know what
-a bobbery a few words can kick up. And we don't want that poor child's
-name touched by a breath of idle gossip that isn't true. I don't believe
-Liza Bascom saw her out on Sunday night! I don't even believe she thought
-she did!"
-
-"Well, I believe it. Liza Bascom's no fool--"
-
-"She's worse, she's a knave! And she hates little Austin, and she'd say
-anything, true or false, to harm the girl."
-
-"But, Salt, she says she saw Miss Austin, all in her fur coat and cap
-going cross lots to the Waring house Sunday evening--late."
-
-"Can she prove it?"
-
-"I don't know about that. But she saw her."
-
-"How does she know it was Miss Austin? It might have been somebody who
-looked like her."
-
-"You know those footprints."
-
-"The Jap's?"
-
-"You can't say they're the Jap's. Miss Bascom says they're the Austin
-girl's."
-
-"Esther!" Old Saltonstall Adams rose in his wrath, "you ought to be
-ashamed of yourself to let that girl's name get into the Waring matter at
-all. Even if she did go out Sunday night, if Miss Bascom did see her, you
-keep still about it. If that girl's wrong, it'll be discovered without
-our help. If she isn't, we must not be the ones to bring her into
-notice."
-
-"She couldn't be--be implicated--could she, Salt?"
-
-"No!" he thundered. "Esther, you astound me. That Bascom woman has turned
-your brain. She's a viper, that's what _she_ is!"
-
-He stormed out of the room, and getting into his great coat, tramped down
-to the village.
-
-Gordon Lockwood was in his room. This was much to the annoyance of
-Callie, the impatient chambermaid, who wanted to get her work done.
-
-Lockwood was himself impatient to get over to the Waring house, for he
-had much to do with the mass of incoming mail and the necessary
-interviews with reporters and other callers.
-
-Yet he tarried, in his pleasant bedroom at Mrs. Adams', his door securely
-locked, and his own attitude one of stupefaction.
-
-For the hundredth time he reread the crumpled paper that he had taken
-from the study waste-basket under the very nose of Detective Morton.
-
-Had that sleuth been a little more worthy of his profession he never
-would have allowed the bare-faced theft.
-
-And now that Lockwood had it he scarce knew what to do with it.
-
-And truly it was an astonishing missive.
-
-For it read thus:
-
-My darling Anita:
-
-At the first glance of your brown eyes this afternoon, love was born in
-my heart. Life is worth living--with you in the world! And yet--
-
-That was all. The unfinished letter had been crumpled into a ball and
-thrown in the basket. Had another been started--and completed? Had Anita
-Austin received it--and was that why she kept to her room for two days?
-Was she a--he hated the word! a vamp? Had she secretly become acquainted
-with John Waring during her presence in Corinth, and had so charmed him
-that he wrote to her thus? Or, had they known each other before? What a
-mystery!
-
-There was not the slightest doubt of the writing. Lockwood knew it as
-well as he knew his own. And on top of all the other scraps in the
-waste-basket it must have been the last missive the dead man wrote--or,
-rather the last he threw away.
-
-This meant he had been writing it on the Sunday evening. Then, Lockwood
-reasoned, knowing the routine, if he had written another, which he
-completed and addressed, it would, in natural course, have been put with
-the letters for the mail, and would have been posted by Ito that next
-morning.
-
-What an oversight, never to have asked Ito about that matter.
-
-It was an inviolable custom for the butler to take all letters laid on a
-certain small table, and put them in the pillar box, early in the
-morning.
-
-Had Ito done this? It must be inquired into.
-
-But far more absorbing was the actual letter before him. How could it be
-possible that John Waring, the dignified scholar, the confirmed bachelor,
-should have loved this mystery girl?
-
-Yet, even as he formulated the question, Gordon Lockwood knew the answer.
-He knew that from his own point of view it would not be impossible or
-even difficult for any man with two eyes in his head to love that
-fascinating, enchanting personality.
-
-And as he pondered, he knew that he loved her himself. Yes, had loved her
-almost from the moment he first saw her. Certainly from the time he sat
-behind her at the lecture, and counted the queer little ball fringes in
-the back of her dainty gown.
-
-Those fringes! Lockwood gave a groan as a sudden thought came to him.
-
-He jumped up, and with a determined air, set about burning the
-inexplicable letter that John Waring had written and thrown away.
-
-In the empty fireplace of the old-fashioned room, Lockwood touched a
-match to the sheet and burned it to an ash.
-
-Then he went over to the Waring house.
-
-It was an hour or so later that Callie reported to Miss Bascom.
-
-"Queer goin's on," the girl said, rolling her eyes at her eager listener,
-"Mr. Lockwood, now, he burnt some papers, and Miss Austin, too, she burnt
-some papers."
-
-"What's queer about that?" snapped Miss Bascom, who had hoped for
-something more sensational.
-
-"Well, it's sorta strange they're both burnin' paper at the same time.
-And both so sly about it. Mr. Lockwood he kep' lookin' back at the
-fireplace as he went outa the door, and Miss Austin, she jumped like she
-was shot, when I come in suddenly an' found her stoopin' over the
-fireplace. An' too, Miss Bascom, whatever else she burnt, she burnt that
-picture she had of Doctor Waring."
-
-"Did she have his picture?"
-
-"Yep, one Mr. Lockwood guv her, after Nora carried off the one she cut
-out of a paper."
-
-"What in the world did that girl want of Doctor Waring's picture?"
-
-"I dunno, ma'am. What they call hero-worship, I guess. Just like I've got
-some several pictures of Harold Massinger, that man who plays Caveman in
-the Movies! My, but he's handsome!"
-
-"And so Miss Austin burned a photograph of John Waring?"
-
-"Yes, ma'am. And you know they're kinda hard to burn. Anyways, she was a
-kneelin' by the fireplace an' the picture was smokin' like everything."
-
-"'Lemme help you miss,' I says, as polite as could be--"and watcha think,
-she snatched back, and says, 'You lemme lone. Get outahere!' or somethin'
-like that. Oh, she was mad all right."
-
-"She has a high temper, hasn't she?"
-
-"Yes'm, there's no denyin' she has. Then again, she's sweet as pie, and
-nice an' gentle. She's a queer makeup, I will say."
-
-"There, Callie, that will do; don't gossip," and Miss Bascom, sure she
-had learned all the maid had to tell, went downstairs to tell it to Mrs.
-Adams.
-
-The landlady seemed less receptive than usual, being still mindful of her
-husband's admonitions. But Miss Bascom's story of the burnt photograph
-roused her curiosity to highest pitch.
-
-"There's something queer about that girl," Mrs. Adams opined, and the
-other more than agreed.
-
-"Let's go up and talk to her," Miss Bascom suggested, and after a
-moment's hesitation, Mrs. Adams went.
-
-The landlady tapped lightly at the door, but there was no response.
-
-"Go right in," the other whispered, and go in they did.
-
-Miss Mystery lay on the couch, her eyes closed, her cheeks still wet with
-tears. She did not move, and after a moment's glance to assure herself
-the girl was sound asleep, Miss Bascom audaciously opened one of the
-small top drawers of the dresser.
-
-Mrs. Adams gasped, and frantically made motions of remonstrance, but
-swiftly fingering among the veils and handkerchiefs, Miss Bascom drew out
-a large roll of bills, held by an elastic band.
-
-Anita Austin's eyes flew open, and after one staring glance at the
-intrusive woman, she jumped from the couch and flew at her like a small
-but very active tiger.
-
-"How dare you!" she cried, snatching the money from Miss Bascom's hand,
-even as that elated person was unrolling it.
-
-And from inside the roll, down on the painted floor, fell a ruby
-stickpin.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
- WHO IS MISS MYSTERY?
-
-
-Mrs. Adams fell limply into a chair, her round eyes staring in horror.
-
-Miss Bascom had taken upon herself the rôle of dictator and with an
-accusing finger pointed at Miss Mystery she said:
-
-"What have you to say for yourself?"
-
-"Nothing," replied Anita Austin, coolly, "except to insist that you leave
-my room."
-
-"Leave your room, indeed! I am only too glad to! And I know where to go,
-too."
-
-Miss Bascom's determined air as she strode out of the door gave a hint of
-her desperate intention and within five minutes she was out on the road
-toward the village.
-
-Mrs. Adams, still almost speechless with surprise and dismay, looked
-sorrowfully at Anita. Something in the girl's face stayed the kindly
-words the woman meant to say, and, instead, she broke out:
-
-"You must leave this house! What are you anyway? A thief--and a
-murderer?"
-
-"Oh! Don't!" Anita put up her hand as if to ward off a physical blow.
-
-Then, as if the cruel words had stung her to a quickened sense of her own
-danger, she cried, piteously:
-
-"Oh, Mrs. Adams, help me--protect me--won't you? I don't know what to
-do--I'm all alone--so alone--"
-
-She sank into a chair and buried her face in her hands.
-
-Esther Adams was uncertain what course to pursue. Should she protect this
-guilty girl, of whom she really knew nothing, or should she dismiss her
-at once from her house, in the interests of her other boarders, who must
-be considered?
-
-Surely, her first duty was to the others--the people she had known so
-long, and who looked upon her house as a home and a safeguard.
-
-"You must go," she said, though her voice wavered as she saw the pathetic
-face Anita raised to look at her.
-
-"Oh, no! Don't send me away! Where could I go? Even the Inn people
-wouldn't take me!"
-
-"Of course they wouldn't! Go home! Haven't you a home? Who are you,
-anyway? But I don't care who you are--you must get out of this house
-today--this morning. Do you hear?"
-
-Meantime Miss Bascom, on her virtuous errand had trotted quickly to the
-office of the Prosecuting District Attorney.
-
-There, however, she was told that Mr. Cray was over at the Waring house,
-and she concluded to go there. Nor did this displease her. She longed to
-be in the limelight, and the tale she had to tell would surely give her
-the right to be there.
-
-Mrs. Peyton received her coldly, for the two were not friends.
-
-"I came to see Mr. Cray," Miss Bascom announced, "on important business."
-
-"Oh, very well," the housekeeper returned, "take a seat and I'll ask him
-to see you."
-
-Miss Bascom waited in the living-room, secure in her knowledge of the
-importance of her news.
-
-The attorney welcomed her cordially for he saw at once that she brought
-news of value.
-
-And, expressed in emphatic language, and interspersed with many and
-unfavorable personal opinions, Liza Bascom told of the incident of
-finding the money and the ruby in Miss Austin's bureau drawer.
-
-"Astonishing!" commented Cray. "Who is she?"
-
-"Nobody knows, that's the queer part. We call her Miss Mystery."
-
-"Where did she come from?"
-
-"Nobody knows. She just appeared."
-
-"Don't the Adamses know?"
-
-"No, they don't."
-
-"A young girl, you say?"
-
-"She appears to be very young--but you never can tell with those sly
-things. I daresay she makes herself look several years younger than she
-really is."
-
-"Did she know Doctor Waring?"
-
-"How do I know? She came over to this house late Sunday night--for I saw
-her--"
-
-"Good heavens! Are you sure?"
-
-"Well, it was fairly light, with the moon, and the snow all over the
-ground, you know, and I saw her, all wrapped up in her fur coat, sneaking
-away from the house--"
-
-"How late?"
-
-"Oh--after everybody had gone upstairs and the lights were all out at the
-Adamses."
-
-"You saw her come back?"
-
-"No; I didn't think much about it at the time--she's a crazy piece
-anyway--and--"
-
-"What do you mean by a crazy piece?"
-
-"Why, she's queer--not like other folks. She won't have anything to do
-with any of us over there--"
-
-"That doesn't make her out crazy."
-
-Miss Bascom shrugged impatiently. "I don't mean insane or demented. I
-only mean sly and secretive. She never speaks to anybody at the
-table--and though she makes eyes at Gordon Lockwood, she snubs Mr. Tyler,
-who is just as good a young man. They both admire her--anybody can see
-that, but she treats them like the dust under her feet."
-
-"Not an adventuress, then?"
-
-"I don't know. But I do know she's a thief--or how did she get that money
-and the ruby?"
-
-"Perhaps Doctor Waring gave them to her?"
-
-"Then she is a wrong one! Why should he give a strange girl such things?"
-
-"If he was in love with her--"
-
-"Now, look here, Mr. Cray, do try to show ordinary common sense! Doctor
-Waring was about to marry Mrs. Bates, a sweet, dear woman, of suitable
-age. Is he going to have a little flibbertigibbet coming to see him late
-at night, for any romantic reasons?"
-
-Cray hesitated to speak his mind, but he ruminated that he had heard of
-such things, in the course of his life. Miss Bascom, he thought was an
-unsophisticated old maid, but there was certainly a new condition to be
-investigated, and the case of Miss Anita Austin must be carefully
-considered.
-
-"Now, Miss Bascom," he said, diplomatically, "I'll have to ask you to
-keep this whole matter quiet for a time. You must see that we can't work
-successfully if we take the whole town into our confidence. Or even this
-entire household."
-
-"Don't you try to bamboozle me, Stephen Cray! I know your sort. You want
-to keep this matter quiet because you want to get that girl off scotfree!
-I know you men! Just because she has a pair of big, dark eyes and a slim
-little shape you are ready to hide her guilt and let her off easy. I
-won't have it! That girl stole those things, or else she got them from
-poor John Waring in a way no decent woman would--"
-
-"What are you talking about, Liza Bascom?"
-
-Mrs. Peyton appeared in the doorway, and though she asked the question,
-it was fairly evident that she knew the answer, and had been listening.
-
-"Yes," she went on, "I've been listening at the door, and I'm glad I did.
-First of all, I won't have Doctor Waring's name traduced, and next, if
-there's a girl implicated in the matter, the whole truth about her has
-got to come out! I know the girl, she was here Sunday afternoon, and a
-more brazen-faced, bold-mannered chit, I never want to see!"
-
-"She was here?" asked the bewildered Cray. "You know her?"
-
-"I know all I want to know of her," Mrs. Peyton declared. "Yes, she was
-here--came over with Emily Bates and Pinky. Wouldn't condescend to be
-really one of us, but just acted offish and seemed to me about
-half-witted."
-
-"Don't be silly," put in Miss Bascom. "That's the last thing to say of
-her! Whatever that girl may be she's got all her wits about her! I can
-see that for myself."
-
-"Was Doctor Waring present when Miss Austin was here?" asked Cray,
-thinking hard.
-
-"Yes," replied Mrs. Peyton, "and that's a strange thing. When he first
-saw her--unexpectedly, you know--he dropped his teacup."
-
-"Because of the meeting?" asked Cray.
-
-"I don't know," Mrs. Peyton said. "He declared afterward he had never
-seen the girl before--but--oh--I can't believe she came back here that
-night!"
-
-"Of course she didn't," Cray said. "How could she get in, unless someone
-admitted her."
-
-"There's the French window in the study," Mrs. Peyton suggested,
-uncertainly. "Doctor Waring could have let her in that way--"
-
-"Well, he didn't!" Miss Bascom declared. "Land! I've known John Waring
-all my life, and he's not the kind of man that had anything to do with
-flirtatious young women."
-
-Of a truth, Liza Bascom had known Waring for many years and had spent a
-number of them in desperate efforts to persuade him to renounce
-bachelorhood in her favor.
-
-Yet her words carried little weight with Attorney Cray, who fancied that
-he knew men better than the insistent spinster possibly could.
-
-"Miss Bascom," he said, after further thought, "and Mrs. Peyton, too, I'm
-going to ask you--I'm going to instruct you to keep this matter quiet
-until after the funeral of Doctor Waring. That occurs tomorrow, and I
-want a day or so to look into this thing quietly. We would gain nothing
-by rushing matters. I will see Miss Austin, of course, and rest assured,
-if she is guilty of any wrong doing, she shall not escape. But it is a
-serious matter to accuse a suspect without giving any chance for
-explanation--"
-
-"There's no explanation of that ruby pin and all that money, that is not
-incriminating to that girl!" Miss Bascom exclaimed.
-
-"Nevertheless, I am in authority, and I forbid you to discuss the
-connection of Miss Austin with the case at all."
-
-Cray knew how to impress belligerent women, and he even added a hint of
-their making trouble for themselves unless they obeyed his explicit
-command.
-
-He returned to the study, where Gordon Lockwood was going over the
-morning's mail.
-
-The secretary was a busy man, for his late employer had had a number of
-diversified interests and every mail brought letters, catalogues,
-circulars and newspapers that required careful attention. John Waring had
-been a collector of rare books, and other curios, and was interested in
-several literary enterprises.
-
-To many of these correspondents Lockwood could merely send a statement of
-the Doctor's death. But others involved careful and wise judgment, and
-Lockwood conscientiously discharged his duties.
-
-The study had been put in order, and all traces of the tragedy had been
-removed. The books that had been on the desk, including the blood-stained
-copy of Martial, Lockwood had, after consideration, restored to their
-places on the shelves.
-
-Although it gave him a thrill of horror, Lockwood had nerved himself to
-appropriate Waring's desk, for it meant far greater convenience in his
-work.
-
-He sat there as Cray entered, and raised his impassive face to note the
-attorney's excitement.
-
-"By Jove, Lockwood," Cray, exclaimed, as he closed the door behind him,
-"there's a new way to look, which seems to promise to straighten out a
-lot of things. Do you know that little piece over at your boarding house,
-named Austin?"
-
-"I know her slightly. What about her?"
-
-From Lockwood's voice no one would suspect that his heart was pounding
-desperately.
-
-"Well, she was here late Sunday night! What do you know about that?"
-
-"I don't know anything about it," returned Lockwood, coldly, "and I don't
-believe it. For if she had been here I should have known about it. I was
-here myself, just outside the study door, until eleven. You don't mean
-later than that, do you?"
-
-"Dunno. The Bascom spinster tells the story--"
-
-"Then don't bank on it. With all due deference to Miss Bascom, I know she
-is not always a reliable source of information."
-
-"But she says she saw the girl coming over here late that night--"
-
-"She didn't! It's not true! What under the heavens would she have come
-for?"
-
-"What does any girl visit a man for?" Cray gave an unpleasant wink, and
-Lockwood with difficulty controlled an insane desire to spring at his
-throat. "And, beside, she is even now in possession of the missing five
-hundred dollars and the ruby pin."
-
-"I don't believe it!"
-
-"See here, Mr. Lockwood, it doesn't matter to anybody whether you believe
-these things or not. Miss Austin has the valuables, and I'm going over
-there now to inquire how she got them. Also, it just occurs to me that
-those small footprints leading across the field, are directed toward the
-Adams house, and may have been made by a woman as likely as by our
-hypothetical small-footed man."
-
-"Those are Nogi's footprints."
-
-"How do you know?"
-
-"Common sense. Even if Miss Austin did come over here for any reason she
-would have come by the street, not across the snowy field."
-
-"Apparently she chose the field. So I'm going to ask her why."
-
-"All right, Cray, but you must admit you're illogical, inconsequent and
-inconsistent. You think I killed Doctor Waring, because I have a sharp,
-round penholder, and owe some large bills. Then, because a gossiping old
-maid comes over here and babbles, you fly off at a tangent and accuse an
-unprotected girl of absurd and unbelievable crime."
-
-"Oho! Interested in the siren yourself, eh?"
-
-"No; I'm not--if you mean Miss Austin. That is, not personally."
-
-Few men could have told this lie with such a convincing manner but
-Lockwood's phlegmatic calm stood him now in good stead, and his air of
-obvious indifference carried conviction.
-
-"But," he went on, "I am sorry for her. It's nobody's business who or
-what she is, yet those women over at the Adams house are one and all
-possessed to find out something against her. I only want to advise you,
-Cray, if you talk to anybody over there, get Old Salt himself. He's more
-fair minded than his wife or the other women."
-
-"Men are apt to be--where a pretty girl is concerned," said Cray, drily,
-and Lockwood ground his teeth in rage, as the Attorney went away.
-
-His demand to see Miss Austin was listened to by Old Salt Adams, who had
-seen him coming and opened the door for him.
-
-"Well, Cray," said the old man, as he ushered him into the sitting room
-and shut the door. "I know what you're after--and I just want to say, go
-slow. That's all--go slow."
-
-"All right, Salt. Will you send Miss Austin down here--also, I must
-interview her alone."
-
-"Yes--I understand. But don't be led away now, by circumstantial
-evidence. You know yourself, it isn't always dependable."
-
-"Go along, Salt, don't try to teach me my business. Have you talked to
-the girl?"
-
-"Not a word. My wife has, but she didn't learn much."
-
-Adams went away, and in a few moments Anita Austin came into the room.
-
-A first glance showed Cray's experienced eye that the girl was what he
-called a siren.
-
-Her oval, olive face was sad and sweet. The pale cheeks were not touched
-up with artificial color, and the scarlet lips were, even to his close
-scrutiny, also devoid of applied art. She wore a smart little gown of
-black taffeta, with crisp, chic frills of finely plaited white organdie.
-
-Whether this was meant as mourning wear or not, Cray could not determine.
-
-The frock was fashionably short, showing thin silk stockings and black
-suede ties.
-
-But Miss Mystery seemed wholly unconscious of her clothes, and her great
-dark eyes were full of wondering inquiry as she looked at the attorney,
-and then a little diffidently offered a greeting hand.
-
-The little brown paw touched Cray's with a pathetic, hopeful clasp, and
-he looked up quickly to find himself looking into a pair of hopeful eyes,
-that, without a word, expressed confidence and trust.
-
-He shrugged his shoulders a trifle and secretly admonished himself to
-keep a tight rein on his sympathy.
-
-Then relinquishing the lingering hand, he sat down opposite the chair she
-had chosen to occupy.
-
-"Miss Austin," he began, and paused, for the first time in his life
-uncertain what tack to take.
-
-"Yes," she said, as the pause grew longer, and her soft, cultured voice
-helped him not at all.
-
-How could he say to this lovely small person that he suspected her of
-wrong doing?
-
-"Go on, Mr. Cray," she directed him, meantime looking at him with eyes
-full of a haunting fear, "what is it?"
-
-Cray had a sudden, insane feeling that he would give all he was worth for
-the pleasure of removing that look of fear, then commanding himself to
-behave, he said,
-
-"I am sorry, Miss Austin, but I must ask you some unpleasant questions."
-
-"That's what I'm here for," she said, with the ghost of a smile on her
-curved red lips, and, smoothing down her taffeta lap, she demurely
-clasped her sensitive little hands and waited.
-
-Those hands bothered Cray. Though they lay quietly, he felt that at his
-speech they would flutter in anxiety--even in fear, and he was loath to
-disturb them.
-
-Because of this hesitancy, he plunged in more abruptly than he meant to
-do.
-
-"Where do you come from, Miss Austin?"
-
-"New York City," she said, a brighter look coming to her face, as if she
-thought the ordeal would not be so terrible after all.
-
-"What address there?"
-
-"One West Sixty-seventh Street."
-
-"You told some one else the Hotel Plaza."
-
-"Yes; I have lived at both addresses. Why?"
-
-The "why" was disconcerting. After all, Cray thought, he was not a census
-taker.
-
-He gave up getting past history, and said, briefly,
-
-"Were you at Doctor Waring's house Sunday evening?"
-
-"Not evening," she returned, looking thoughtful. "I was there Sunday
-afternoon."
-
-"And went back again, late in the evening--to see Doctor Waring, in his
-study."
-
-"Why do you say that?" she asked quietly, but a small red spot showed on
-either olive cheek.
-
-"Because I must. How well do you--did you know the Doctor?"
-
-"Know Doctor Waring? Not at all. I never saw him in my life until I came
-here to Corinth."
-
-"You are sure of that?"
-
-"Almost sure--oh, why, yes--that is, I am quite sure."
-
-"Yet you went over there Sunday evening, and came back to this house in
-possession of Doctor Waring's valuable pin, and a large sum of money."
-
-"Oh, no, Mr. Cray, I didn't do any such thing!"
-
-"Then can you explain your possession of those articles?"
-
-"You mean, I suppose the roll of bills that Miss Bascom put into my top
-bureau drawer?"
-
-"Miss Bascom put in the drawer!"
-
-"Yes--that is, she must have done so, or--how else could they have been
-found there? You know yourself, now, don't you, Mr. Cray, that I'm not a
-burglar--or a bandit or a sneak thief? You know I never went in to Doctor
-Waring's study and took those things! So, as I say, isn't it the only
-plausible theory, that Miss Bascom, who found the valuables so readily,
-first put them there herself?"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
- THE SPINSTER'S EVIDENCE
-
-
-"That matter can easily be settled," Cray said, and going to the door he
-asked Mrs. Adams to send Miss Bascom to them.
-
-With an important air the spinster entered the room.
-
-Holding herself very erect and even drawing aside her skirts as she
-passed Miss Austin, she took a seat on the other side of the room.
-
-"Now, Miss Bascom," Cray began at once, "what made you think of looking
-in this lady's bureau drawer for that money?"
-
-"I didn't look for it, Mr. Cray. I merely felt that she had done wrong
-and I thought perhaps some evidence would be hidden away in her room. And
-a top drawer is the place a woman oftenest hides things."
-
-Cray gave a short laugh. "Rather clever of you, I admit. But Miss Austin
-says she did not put that money there, herself--that it was a plant."
-
-"A plant?" Miss Bascom looked puzzled at the word.
-
-"Yes; she thinks some in-disposed person put it there to implicate her,
-falsely."
-
-"Oh, I see. Well, Mr. Cray, let her say who did it, and who could have
-got that money to do it with."
-
-The hard old face took on a look that was almost malignant in its
-accusation, and little Anita Austin gave a low cry as she saw it, and hid
-her face in her hands.
-
-"Take her away," she moaned, "oh, take that woman away."
-
-"You hear her," Miss Bascom went on, unrelentingly. "Now, Mr. Cray, I'm a
-bit of a detective myself, and while you've been down here talking to
-Miss Mystery, I've been searching her room more carefully, and I've found
-a few more things, of which I should like to tell you."
-
-Cray was nonplused. His sympathies were all with the poor little girl,
-who, clinging to the arms of her chair, seemed about to go to pieces,
-nervously, but was bravely holding on to herself. Yet, if the Bascom
-woman was telling the truth, he must beware of the "poor little girl."
-
-"I'm not sure you're within your rights, Miss Bascom," he began, but he
-was interrupted with:
-
-"Rights! Indeed, the rights of this matter are above your jurisdiction!
-The blood of John Waring calls from the ground! I am the instrument of
-justice that has been chosen by an over-ruling Providence to discover the
-criminal. She sits before you! That girl--that mysterious wicked girl is
-both thief and murderess!"
-
-"Oh, no!" Anita cried, putting up her arm as if to ward off a physical
-blow.
-
-Then she suddenly became quiet--almost rigid in her composure.
-
-"That is a grave accusation, Miss Bascom," she said, "you must prove it
-or retract it."
-
-Cray stared at the girl in astonishment. Her agonized cry had been human,
-feminine, natural--but this sudden change to stony calm, to icy hauteur
-was amazing--and, to his mind, incriminating.
-
-Miss Bascom, however, was in no way daunted.
-
-"Prove it I will!" she said, sternly. "In another drawer, Mr. Cray, I
-found the rolls of silver coin--exactly one hundred dollars worth--that
-we have been told were in the desk with the roll of bills. The ruby pin,
-you know about. And so, these thefts are proved. Now, as to the murder--I
-admit, it seems impossible that a girl should commit the awful crime--but
-I do say that I have found the weapon, with which it was done, hidden in
-Miss Austin's room."
-
-Again that short, low cry--more like a hurt animal than a human being.
-And then, Anita Austin, the girl of mystery fell back into the depths of
-her chair, and closed her eyes.
-
-"You needn't faint--or pretend to," admonished Miss Bascom, brutally;
-"you're caught red-handed, and you know it, and you may as well give up."
-
-"I didn't--I didn't--" came in low moans, but the girl's bravery had
-deserted her. Limp and despairing, she turned her great eyes toward Cray
-for help.
-
-With an effort, he looked away from her pleading face, and said:
-
-"What is the weapon? Where did you find it?"
-
-"It is a stiletto--an embroidery stiletto--and I found it tucked down in
-the crevice between the back and seat of a stuffed chair in Miss Austin's
-room. Did you put it there?"
-
-She turned on the girl and fired the question at her with intentional
-suddenness, and though Anita uttered a scared, "No," it was a palpable
-untruth.
-
-"She did," Miss Bascom went on. "You can see for yourself, Mr. Cray, she
-is lying."
-
-"But even if she is, Miss Bascom, I must ask you to cease torturing her!
-I can't stand for such cruelty!"
-
-Cray's manhood revolted at the methods of the older woman who was causing
-such anguish to the poor child she accused.
-
-"You are not a legal inquisitor, Miss Bascom," he went on; "it is for me
-to establish the truth or falsity of your suspicions."
-
-"Yes, you! You're like all the other men! If a girl is pretty and
-alluring, you would believe her statement that white is black!"
-
-"I believe no statements that cannot be proved to my satisfaction. Miss
-Austin, do you own an embroidery stiletto?"
-
-"Yes," was the hesitating answer, and the dark eyes swept him a
-beseeching glance that made Miss Bascom fairly snort with scorn.
-
-"Where is it?"
-
-"I--I fear I must admit that it is just where Miss Bascom says it
-is--unless she has removed it. Tell me, Mr. Cray," and Miss Mystery
-suddenly resumed her most independent air, "must I submit to this? I
-thought accused people were entitled to a--oh, you know, counsel--a
-lawyer, or somebody to take care of them."
-
-"Wait, Miss Austin. You're not accused yet--that is, not by legal
-authority."
-
-"Oh, am I not? Then--" and she gave Miss Bascom a glance of unutterable
-scorn, "I have nothing to say."
-
-"Nothing to say!" the spinster almost shrieked. "Nothing to say! Of
-course she hasn't! She kills a man, takes his valuables, and then
-declares she has nothing to say."
-
-"Now, now, Miss Bascom, be careful! Why did you put your stiletto in such
-a place, Miss Austin?"
-
-"I don't know."
-
-The dark eyes gave him a gaze of childlike innocence, and Cray couldn't
-decide whether he was looking at a deep-dyed criminal or a helpless
-victim of unjust suspicion.
-
-"And where did you get the money and the ruby pin?"
-
-"I don't know--I mean I don't know how they got in my room. This lady
-says she found them there--that's all I know about them."
-
-An indifferent shrug of the slim shoulders seemed to imply that was all
-Miss Mystery cared, either, and Cray asked:
-
-"Then, if the valuables--the pin and the money are not yours, you are, of
-course, ready to relinquish possession of them."
-
-"Of course I am not! Since I am accused of stealing them, I propose to
-retain possession until that accusation is proved or disproved! Perhaps
-Miss Bascom wishes to take them herself."
-
-"You know, Miss Austin," Mr. Cray spoke very gravely, "you are making a
-mistake in treating this matter flippantly. You are in danger--real
-danger, and you must be careful what you say. Do you want a lawyer?"
-
-"I don't know," the girl suddenly looked helpless. "Do you think I ought
-to have one?"
-
-"Have you funds?"
-
-"Yes. I am not a rich girl--but, neither am I poor. However, I think I
-shall ask advice of some one before I decide upon any course."
-
-"Of whom? Perhaps no one can advise you better than I can."
-
-"What is your advice, Mr. Cray?"
-
-The sweet face looked at him hopefully, the curved red lips quivered a
-little as the speaker added, "I am very alone."
-
-Again Miss Bascom sniffed. Unattractive, herself, she resented with a
-sort of angry jealousy the appealing effect this girl had on men. She
-knew intuitively that Cray would sympathize with and pity the lonely
-girl.
-
-"My advice is, Miss Austin, first, that you dispel this mystery that
-seems to surround you. Tell frankly who you are, what is your errand in
-Corinth, how you came into possession of Doctor Waring's ruby, and why
-you hid your stiletto, if it is merely one of your sewing implements."
-
-Miss Mystery hesitated a moment, and then said, quietly:
-
-"Your advice is good, Mr. Cray. But, unfortunately, I cannot follow it.
-However, I am willing to state, upon oath, that I did not kill Doctor
-Waring with that stiletto."
-
-"I'm afraid your oath will be doubted," Miss Bascom intervened sharply.
-"And, too, Mr. Cray, even if this girl did not strike the fatal blow, she
-well knows who did! She is in league with the Japanese, Nogi. That I am
-sure of!"
-
-"Nogi!" exclaimed Anita.
-
-"Yes, Nogi," Miss Bascom went on, positively. "You came here only a day
-or two after he did. You have a Japanese kimono, and several Japanese
-ornaments adorn your room. You went to the Waring house that night, Nogi
-let you in and out, and though the Japanese doubtless committed the
-murder, you stole the money and the ruby, and then, your partner in crime
-departed for parts unknown."
-
-Miss Bascom sat back in her chair with a look of triumph on her plain,
-gaunt face.
-
-Clearly, she was rejoiced at her denunciation of the girl before her, and
-pleased at the irrefutable theory she had promulgated.
-
-"And how did Miss Austin or the Jap, either, leave the room locked on the
-inside?" propounded Cray, his own opinions already swayed by the
-arraignment.
-
-"That," said Miss Bascom, with an air of finality, "I can't explain
-definitely, but I am sure it was an example of Japanese jugglery. When
-you remember the tales of how the Japanese can do seemingly impossible
-tricks, can swallow swords and get out of locked handcuffs, it is quite
-within the realm of possibility that one could lock a door behind him,
-and give it the appearance of having been locked from the inside."
-
-Now, Cray had already concluded that the door had been cleverly locked by
-some one, but he hadn't before thought of the cleverness of the Japanese.
-
-He rose almost abruptly, and said, "I must look into some of these
-matters. Miss Austin, you need not attempt to leave town, for you will
-not be able to do so."
-
-"I most certainly shall not attempt to leave--as you express it--if I am
-asked not to. But, I may say, that when I am entirely at liberty to do
-so, I propose to go away from Corinth."
-
-Her dignity gave no effect of a person afraid or alarmed for her own
-safety, merely a courteous recognition of Cray's attitude and a frank
-statement of her own intentions.
-
-Miss Bascom sniffed and said:
-
-"Don't worry, Mr. Cray. I'll see to it, that this young woman does not
-succeed in evading justice, if she tries to do so."
-
-At which Miss Mystery gave her a smile that was so patronizing, even
-amused, that the spinster was more irate than ever.
-
-"And, now, Miss Austin," the attorney said, "I'll take your finger
-prints, please, as they may be useful in proving what you did not do."
-
-He smiled a little as the girl readily enough gave her consent to the
-procedure.
-
-"And," he went on, more gravely, "I will ask you for one of your
-shoes--one that you wore on Sunday."
-
-Surprised into a glance of dismay, Miss Mystery rose without a word and
-went upstairs for the shoe.
-
-She returned with the dainty, pretty thing, and merely observed, "I'd
-like to have it back, when you are through with it."
-
-Putting the shoe in his overcoat pocket, Cray went away.
-
-"Miss Bascom," Anita said, turning to her enemy, "may you never want a
-friend as much as I do now."
-
-"The nerve of her!" Liza Bascom muttered to herself, as Miss Mystery went
-upstairs to her own room.
-
-"There's a very deep mystery here!" Cray soliloquized, as he returned to
-the Waring house. "But I'm getting light on it."
-
-Cray was far from lacking in ingenuity, and he proceeded at once to
-compare the finger prints he had of Anita Austin with the prints on the
-small black-framed chair that had been found drawn up to the desk chair
-of John Waring.
-
-They were identical and Cray mused over the fact.
-
-"That girl was here that night," he decided; "there's no gainsaying
-that." He called the butler to him.
-
-"Ito," he began, "did you let in any one late Sunday night--after you
-came home?"
-
-"No, sir," the imperturbable Jap declared, thinking the question foolish,
-as all the inquirers knew the details of his Sunday evening movements.
-
-"Do you remember seeing this chair, Monday morning?"
-
-"Distinctly. I saw Mr. Lockwood smoothing its back."
-
-"Smoothing its back! What do you mean?"
-
-"I looked through from the dining-room window, to see if Mr. Lockwood was
-coming to breakfast, and I perceived him carefully smoothing the plush of
-the little chair, sir."
-
-Cray meditated. Here was a point of evidence. Lockwood was not the sort
-to absent-mindedly paw over a chair back. He was doing it on purpose. For
-what reason? What reason could be, save to erase some evidence?
-
-Cray examined the chair. It had a frame of shiny black wood, while seat
-and back were covered with a dark plush of a fine soft quality.
-
-Cray drew his fingers across the back. They left a distinct trail of
-furrows in the fabric.
-
-Ito, watching, nodded his head, gravely.
-
-"Not finger-prints," Cray said to himself--"but, maybe finger-marks.
-Whose?"
-
-"You surely saw this, Ito?"
-
-"Yes, sir; and Miss Peyton also saw. She was then in the doorway, asking
-Mr. Lockwood to come to breakfast."
-
-Cray went in search of Helen and put the question to her suddenly.
-
-"What was Gordon Lockwood doing, when you went to call him to breakfast,
-Monday morning?"
-
-"He was--I don't remember."
-
-"Speak the truth--or it may be mean trouble for you and him, too."
-
-"He was--he seemed to be dusting off a chair."
-
-"With a duster?"
-
-"No; just passing over it with his hand."
-
-"That isn't dusting it."
-
-"Well, I don't know what you call it! Perhaps he was merely pushing the
-chair into place."
-
-"It isn't his custom to push the study furniture into place. He was
-erasing indicative marks on that plush chair back--that's what he was
-doing."
-
-"Absurd!" Helen cried; "what marks could there be?"
-
-"I don't know. Come and let us see."
-
-Cray took Helen to the study, and asked her to sit in the chair.
-
-"Lean back," he directed. "Now, get up."
-
-The girl obeyed, and there was plainly seen on the plush the faint but
-unmistakable imprint of the beaded design that adorned the back of the
-frock she wore.
-
-"I told you so!" Cray said, in triumph. "That plush registers every
-impress, and when Lockwood rubbed it smooth it was to erase a damaging
-bit of testimony."
-
-"Rather far-fetched, Mr. Cray," said Gordon Lockwood himself, who had
-come in and had heard and seen the latter part of the detective's
-investigation.
-
-"Not so very, Mr. Lockwood, when you learn that the finger prints on the
-chair frame are your own and those of a certain young person who is
-already under suspicion."
-
-Gordon Lockwood, as always under a sudden stress, became even more
-impassive, and his eyes glittered as he faced the attorney.
-
-"Don't be too absurd, Mr. Cray," he advised, coldly. "I suppose you mean
-Miss Austin--I prefer to have no veiled allusions. But the finding of her
-finger prints on a chair in this room, and mine also, does not seem to me
-to be in any way evidence of crime."
-
-"No?" Cray gave him scorn for scorn. "Perhaps then, you can explain Miss
-Austin's presence here that night."
-
-"I don't know that she was here--and I most certainly could not explain
-any of her movements. But I do deny your right to assume her guilty from
-her presence."
-
-"Ah, you tacitly admit her presence, then. Indeed, one can scarcely doubt
-it, when it is shown that this little shoe of hers," he took it from his
-pocket, "exactly fits the prints that cross the field of snow between
-here and the Adams house."
-
-"To measure footprints--after all this time!" and Lockwood's lip curled.
-
-"The prints are exactly as they were made, Mr. Lockwood. The unchanging
-cold weather has kept them intact. I tried this shoe, and the prints are
-unmistakable. Moreover, the short stride is just the measure of the
-natural steps of Miss Austin. The footprints lead from the Adams house
-over here and back again. The returning prints occasionally overlap the
-ones that came this way, showing that the trip away from this house was
-made latest. Miss Austin was seen to come over in this direction--well,
-none but a half-wit would be blind to the inevitable conclusions!"
-
-"None but a half-wit would read into this evidence what you pretend to
-see," retorted Lockwood, almost losing his calm.
-
-"That's my business," Cray said, sharply: "now, Mr. Lockwood, why did you
-smooth off that chair back? Careful, now, two witnesses saw you do it."
-
-"I'm not denying it"--Lockwood smiled in a bored, superior way, "but if I
-did it, I was--and am unconscious of it. One often touches a piece of
-furniture in passing with no thought of doing so."
-
-"That won't go down. Both the butler and Miss Peyton saw you definitely
-and deliberately rub over the back of that chair. Why did you do it?"
-
-Cray was inexorable.
-
-But the impassive secretary merely shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"I can't answer you, Mr. Cray. I can only repeat it must have been an
-unconscious act on my part, and it has no sinister significance. I may
-have been merely pushing the chair out of my way, you know."
-
-"Look here, Mr. Lockwood, you are a man of honor. Do you, upon oath,
-declare that you did not purposely smooth that chairback, for the reason
-that it showed some incriminating impress?"
-
-"I am not under oath. I have stated that I did not do what you accuse me
-of, and I have nothing further to say on the subject."
-
-Lockwood drew himself up and leaned with folded arms against the
-mantelpiece.
-
-Cray dropped the subject, but his snapping eyes and compressed lips
-seemed to show he had not finally dismissed it.
-
-"At what time," he said, abruptly, "did Doctor Waring lock his study
-door?"
-
-"About ten o'clock," the secretary replied.
-
-"And you heard nothing from the room after that? No sound of voices?
-Nobody coming in at the French window?"
-
-"No," replied Lockwood.
-
-"Then we are forced to the conclusion that whoever entered did so very
-quietly, that it was with the knowledge and permission of Doctor Waring
-himself, that the visitor was the person whose footprints lead straight
-to the door, and whose finger prints are on the chair that stood near the
-Doctor's own chair. We are borne out in this view by the fact that the
-same person now possesses the money and the ruby pin which we know Doctor
-Waring had in his room with him, and we know that the person is here in
-Corinth for unexplained reasons, and is, in fact, so peculiar that she is
-known as--Miss Mystery. Just why, Mr. Lockwood, are you arguing against
-these obvious inferences, and why do you undertake to free from suspicion
-one against whom everything is so definitely black?"
-
-"Because," Lockwood spoke very quietly, but his jaw was set in a stubborn
-way, "the lady you call Miss Mystery, is a young and defenseless girl,
-without, so far as I know, a friend in this town. It is unfair to accuse
-her on the strength of this fantastic story and it is unfair to condemn
-her unheard."
-
-"Not unheard," said the attorney, "but what she says only incriminates
-her more deeply."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
- MAURICE TRASK, HEIR
-
-
-The funeral services of John Waring were solemn and impressive. No
-reference was made to the manner of his taking-off, save to call it
-mysterious, and the encomiums heaped upon him by the clergy and the
-college faculty were as sincere as they were well-deserved.
-
-There were two members of the great audience who were looked at with
-curiosity by many.
-
-One of these was Miss Mystery, the girl who, it was vaguely rumored was
-in some way connected with the tragedy.
-
-To look at her, this seemed impossible, for a sweeter face or a gentler
-manner could scarce be imagined.
-
-Anita Austin sat near the front, on one of the side aisles. She wore a
-gown of taupe-colored duvetyn, and a velvet toque of the same color. Her
-olive face was pale, and now and then her small white teeth bit into her
-scarlet lower lip, as if she were keeping her self-control only by
-determined effort.
-
-A close observer might note that she paid no heed to the utterance of the
-able men who gave tribute to John Waring's character, but her troubled
-eyes rested on the flower-covered casket, and the rising tears overflowed
-as she stifled an occasional sob.
-
-And then, fairly clenching her hands in a determination to show no
-emotion, this strange girl would straighten up, and stare blankly ahead
-of her as if in utter oblivion of the scene.
-
-Directly behind her was Helen Peyton, who had chosen that place with the
-intention of watching Miss Mystery. Mrs. Peyton was by her daughter's
-side, but her whole attention was on the funeral services, and she
-thought of little else.
-
-Not far off was Gordon Lockwood, and with him were Mrs. Bates and her
-nephew, Pinckney Payne. Of this trio only the secretary let his gaze
-wander now and then to the sad little face that was rapidly becoming the
-dearest thing in life to him. As the church filled, and the
-flower-scented atmosphere grew oppressive, Miss Austin let her coat fall
-from her shoulders, and Lockwood noted with a start that she wore the
-same gown she had worn to the lecture at which he first saw her. Again he
-counted the queer little buttons that edged the sailor collar. He shook
-his head, and a great feeling of compassion filled his heart.
-
-"Poor child," he said to himself, "what does it all mean?"
-
-The other magnet for strangers' eyes was Maurice Trask, the relative of
-John Waring, who had come from his home in St. Louis, to take possession
-of his inheritance.
-
-For, in the absence of any will, he had proved himself the next of kin,
-and had gladly, even eagerly, taken the reins of government of the
-affairs and home of the dead man.
-
-He was the son of John Waring's cousin, and though the two men had never
-met, the credentials and records brought by Maurice Trask left no
-possible doubt as to his heirship.
-
-Trask was not prepossessing of appearance, though he was well-mannered
-and moderately well-dressed. His lack was that of sophistication, and he
-seemed ignorant of the finer conventions of life. He was what is known as
-a self-made man, and men of home manufacture require some sterling
-qualities to start with if they are to turn out a satisfactory product.
-
-These qualities Trask didn't have, and a first glance at the
-sharp-featured face gave an impression of greed and shrewdness.
-
-There was also a slight air of bravado, which was quite evidently caused
-by an uneasy feeling of inferiority. He seemed to say, "I am as good as
-you are," because his conviction of that fact needed some such assertion
-to bolster it up.
-
-In his seat as chief mourner, he was decorum itself. His black garb was
-very black, and if it betrayed a provincial cut or fit, such an effect
-was more in keeping with the man than correct apparel would have been.
-
-His grief might have seemed a trifle ostentatious to one who remembered
-he had never seen his cousin, but on the whole Maurice Trask was accepted
-by those whose curiosity led to criticism, as a satisfactory heir to the
-Waring estate.
-
-Nor was this an inconsiderable matter, for John Waring, beside his
-profession, had written several successful books, and possessed in all a
-goodly fortune.
-
-Moreover, there was no mystery about Trask. His life was an open book,
-the lawyers had said; his family tree was of correct record and his claim
-to the estate clear and true.
-
-While as to that minx, Miss Mystery, nobody knew or could find out where
-she came from, what she was doing in Corinth, or who she was, anyway.
-Clearly she was mixed up with Doctor Waring in some unconventional
-way--that is, if the reports were true that she visited him in his study
-without the knowledge of his household. No shadow of blame was attached
-to John Waring for this--although it would seem that the man was old and
-wise enough to ward off an attack from such a small vampire.
-
-"That's what she is," Helen Peyton concluded, to herself, as she mused on
-the girl who sat in front of her. "She just plain vamped poor Doctor
-Waring--and she got into the study--and, now, I can prove it!"
-
-After the funeral, the chief mourners went back to the Waring home to
-discuss matters. Mrs. Peyton had tea served in the living-room, for all
-who came, and many neighbors, drawn by curiosity, accepted her
-hospitality.
-
-Trask, rubbing his hands involuntarily, slipped easily into his new rôle
-of host, and rather overdid his part.
-
-"Yes," he would say, "yes, yes. I learned from the addresses how fine a
-man my cousin was--yes, yes, a noble character. Now, I can't expect to
-take his place in your community all at once--but I'll get there! I'll
-get there! And you'll all help me, won't you?" he beamed on them. "Yes,
-yes, you'll all help me to become one of the first citizens of
-Corinth--one of the first citizens of your lovely, tree-decked town. Yes,
-yes."
-
-Plate and cup in hand, he moved around among his guests, a little
-awkwardly but full of amiability and good cheer. His sentiment was quite
-evidently, "the king is dead; long live the king," and he wanted to get
-settled on his throne at once.
-
-But the cousin of John Waring had another side to him.
-
-This was shown when, later on, he met a few people in the study.
-
-Cray was there, by invitation, and Morton also. Lockwood and the two
-Peytons.
-
-"Just a few words at the outset," Trask began, and he was noticeably more
-at ease in this executive session than he had been in the social
-atmosphere.
-
-"I want to maintain this household, for a time at least, as I find it. I
-shall be glad, Mrs. Peyton, if you will continue to keep house for me,
-and I should like you, Mr. Lockwood, to remain as secretary, if you are
-willing. There is, of course, much to be done in settling the estate, and
-your knowledge would be invaluable. Also, if you will, Mrs. Peyton, I'd
-like you to engage servants--or keep the ones you have. In fact, please
-look after the house matters entirely. For, here is what I want to do
-first. Find the man who killed my cousin. I never shall feel right in
-taking and using his home and his money unless I do everything in my
-power to discover his murderer."
-
-"It may be a case of suicide," suggested Attorney Cray, who was narrowly
-watching the speaker.
-
-"No-sir-ee! First place, as near as I can figure it out, my cousin was
-not the man to take his own life. Also, he was on the eve of taking a
-fine position as College President--also he was about to marry a
-beautiful lady. Why worry? And too--and this is to me the strongest
-argument against the suicide theory--I've read lots of detective
-stories--you needn't sniff, Mr. Cray, those stories are often founded on
-fact--and many of them hinge on the mystery of a sealed room. Often a
-book starts out with a situation just like this; man found dead. Room
-locked up. No weapon about. Murder or suicide? And, listen here;
-invariably the solution is murder. Yes, sir--invariably! Why? 'Cause
-suicide is a mighty scarce article. You don't find Human Nature putting
-an end to itself very often. That is, not worthwhile Human Nature. Your
-suicides are weak men, down and outers, ignorant, half-baked chaps. Not
-fine, upstanding men such as John Waring was. You know that, Mr. Cray?"
-
-"Yes," the attorney nodded. "That's certainly so, Mr. Trask. And, anyway,
-if you're going to make investigations, you have to start on the theory
-of murder."
-
-"Just that exactly," Trask agreed. "Then if we run up against
-proof--actual proof of suicide, why then, we know where we're at."
-
-Lockwood looked at Trask and listened to him with interest. He was a new
-type to the secretary, who with all his knowledge of characterization
-couldn't quite place him.
-
-At first, Lockwood had felt an instinctive dislike, the newcomer had been
-so patently pleased with his inheritance, and so evidently insincere in
-his mourning. But this sensible, straightforward insistence on avenging
-his cousin's murder--if it were murder--raised Trask in Lockwood's
-estimation, and he concluded to remain as secretary, for a time, at
-least.
-
-"You have the case in charge, Mr. Cray," Trask went on, "and I want you
-to push it--push it, sir. Get help if you want--get some hifalutin
-detective, if that's the proper caper--but, get results. Results, that's
-what I'm after! Here's my idea. Get busy, and do all you can as quick as
-you can. Don't dawdle. Put things through. And then--if you can't find
-the criminal, after due effort, then, we'll give up the hunt. That's my
-idea. Do all you can--and then quit."
-
-"Very well, Mr. Trask," Cray replied; "I understand, and I'll do as you
-say. When you have the time to devote to it, I'll give you a history of
-the case."
-
-"The time is now, Mr. Cray. And your history must be put in a nutshell.
-The circumstances of John Waring's death, I know. Also, I know whom I
-suspect as the murderer. So tell me your decisions to date."
-
-"I fear we have made no decision, Mr. Trask. As a matter of fact the
-evidence to date points in a most painful direction."
-
-"What! You're deterred from justice because evidence points in a painful
-direction! My stars, Cray! is that the way you detect in New England!"
-
-"But evidence may be false, and it is unwise to accuse without
-certainty--"
-
-"I have some certain evidence," said Helen Peyton, and all turned to look
-at the girl, who spoke hesitatingly and in a low tone.
-
-"Yes, I wouldn't tell it--but--I think I ought to. I just found it out
-today."
-
-"Of course you must tell it, Miss Peyton," Trask said, dictatorially.
-"Out with it!"
-
-"Well," Helen spoke to Cray, "you know Mr. Lockwood rubbed off some marks
-from this chair the morning after--after we found Doctor Waring."
-
-"Yes, they were without doubt indicative marks. What do you know about
-them?" Cray looked at her earnestly, for he had great interest in that
-act of the secretary's.
-
-"They were the marks made by the buttons on the back of the dress Miss
-Austin wore today."
-
-For a moment Gordon Lockwood's calm almost deserted him. It was but a
-fleeting instant, yet Cray's sharp eyes caught the look of utter dismay
-that crossed the impassive face of the secretary. Immediately the usual
-hauteur returned and the grave eyes met Cray's without a tremor.
-
-"How do you know?" Cray was all alertness.
-
-"I sat behind her at the funeral. She took off her coat and I couldn't
-help noticing a certain arrangement of buttons. It struck me, because I
-noticed the marks on the chair back, and they were just the same design."
-
-"Absurd," Lockwood said, quietly, but with a deep scorn in his tone. "As
-if you could identify the trimming on a lady's gown!"
-
-"But I did," Helen persisted, spurred by Lockwood's manner. "I noticed it
-on the chair, a clear pattern of the trimming of the collar, and two rows
-down the back. And then I saw Mr. Lockwood rub it off of the chairback
-with utmost care. And today, when I saw Miss Austin's dress, I recognized
-it at once. She was here that night--Mr. Lockwood knew it--and he erased
-the marks--"
-
-"Helen, don't be too ridiculous!" Lockwood spoke now in a soft drawl,
-that made Helen flush with anger.
-
-"I'm not ridiculous! Am I, Mr. Cray? It's evidence, isn't it? It proves
-that girl was here--doesn't it? And Gordon did rub it off--Ito saw him
-too, and I saw him. He was rubbing the chair when I came to call him to
-breakfast--he can't deny it!"
-
-"I do deny it," Lockwood said, quietly. "Miss Peyton is excited and
-doesn't remember accurately."
-
-"Nothing of the sort!" blazed Helen. "It's all true. Gordon won't admit
-it because--"
-
-"Helen, hush!" Gordon's look stopped her at once. "Don't say things
-you'll regret."
-
-"But I don't regret them," put in Cray. "All this is important. Mr.
-Lockwood, do you deny obliterating these marks in question?"
-
-"Of course I do," Lockwood smiled slightly. "If I was moving the chair or
-touching it, when Miss Peyton came to call me to breakfast I don't
-remember it. At any rate, it was with no intention of removing evidence."
-
-Gordon Lockwood told these falsehoods with as calm an air as he would
-have shown in making truthful statements. He was not only deeply in love
-with Anita Austin, but he did not and would not believe her guilty of
-crime, or of any connection with a crime. Wherefore, he was ready and
-willing to tell any number of lies to save or shield her.
-
-And from his manner none could guess he was saying other than absolute
-truth.
-
-"But look here," spoke up Maurice Trask. "This won't do, you know. Are
-you people accusing a girl of Doctor Waring's murder? A _girl_!"
-
-"Not accusation yet," Cray told him, "but we want to know more about the
-young lady in question. In fact, she's been dubbed Miss Mystery, because
-so little is known about her."
-
-"Miss Mystery, eh? And she came here to see the Doctor the night he
-died?"
-
-"She did not!" Lockwood asserted, calmly. "Had she done so, I should have
-known it."
-
-"Of course you would," Trask looked at him shrewdly. "Of course. But the
-impress of her clothing was left on the chairback? Is that it?"
-
-"That's it," said Helen, sharply. "And when forty-leven other things
-prove her presence here that evening, I don't know why Mr. Lockwood so
-positively denies it. He must have a deep interest in the young lady!"
-
-Helen's spitefulness was undisguised, and her mother looked pained and
-regretful. Both these women had hoped that Gordon Lockwood's affections
-might turn toward Helen, and the older one realized that such speeches as
-this would in no way further their plans.
-
-But Helen was thoroughly jealous of Miss Mystery, for more reasons than
-one, and she let her unbridled tongue expose her feelings.
-
-Cray knew all this, and therefore took Helen's statements with a grain of
-salt. And yet, he soliloquized, she would scarcely make up that rigmarole
-of the dress trimming. He fancied it was true. And why shouldn't it be?
-The evidence of Anita Austin's presence in John Waring's study that fatal
-night was far too strong to be ignored. Moreover, the girl's possession
-of the money and the ruby pin had yet to be satisfactorily explained. It
-was unthinkable that anyone should have stolen these things and "planted"
-them in Miss Austin's bureau drawer!
-
-"I'd like to see this young woman," said Trask, suddenly.
-
-"I'm going over to see her now, come along," invited Cray, who was a
-little impressed by the perspicuity of this stranger.
-
-"I'm going, too," declared Helen Peyton, and as Lockwood couldn't keep
-away, they all went over to the Adams house.
-
-In the cosy sitting-room they congregated, and Mrs. Adams went upstairs
-to summon Anita.
-
-She found the room locked. When, in response to a repeated summons, the
-door was opened, Mrs. Adams faced a tearful, sad-faced girl, who asked
-indifferently what was wanted.
-
-"You'll have to come down stairs," the landlady said; "Mr. Cray is there,
-and--and some others. They want to see you."
-
-"I won't go down. I don't want to see anybody."
-
-"I guess you'll have to." Mrs. Adams spoke a little crisply. "It's a--a
-summons. You've got to come."
-
-"Oh." Miss Austin's manner changed. "Well, I will, then. Wait till I
-bathe my face."
-
-Mrs. Adams came in, closed the door and waited. She felt sorry for Miss
-Mystery, but she also felt suspicious of her. Perhaps the mystery would
-now be cleared up.
-
-The good woman was about to speak kindly to her strange boarder but as
-she watched, she lost the desire to help her.
-
-For, to Mrs. Adams' primitive notions, the girl was doing dreadful
-things.
-
-Having bathed her tear-stained face, Miss Mystery proceeded to powder it
-lightly, and, horror of horrors, she added the merest flick of rouge to
-her pale cheeks. And not content with such baseness she stooped to
-further degradation and touched her pale lips with some heathenish
-contraption that made them just a little redder!
-
-No, Mrs. Adams had no sympathy for a girl who would do such awful things,
-and she waited in a grim and stony silence.
-
-Then Miss Mystery fluffed out her pretty dark hair a little more over her
-ears, settled her sailor collar, with its row of tiny buttons for
-trimming, and with a critical glance at her shoes, signified her
-readiness to go down stairs.
-
-Still in disapproving silence, Mrs. Adams marched by her side, and they
-went together to face the visitors.
-
-The attitude of the girl as she entered the room was a triumph of
-perfection.
-
-Her beauty, which usually needed no artificial aid, was striking, and her
-large dark eyes rested on each in turn with an air of innocent wonder,
-quickly followed by a pathetic, beseeching little smile that touched the
-heart of several auditors, even though they deemed it disingenuous.
-
-Maurice Trask, shrewd and calculating, sized her up, as he would have
-expressed it.
-
-And his sizing up was decidedly complimentary. So much so, in fact, that
-he almost concluded to take her part against all comers.
-
-"I'm for her," he said to himself, "and yet," he added, to the same
-confidant, "she's nobody's fool! That girl knows what she's about--and by
-jingo, if she wanted to kill a man, she could kill him! I'll say she
-could!"
-
-It was Miss Austin's dress that caught every one's eye. Not a person
-present, among the visitors, but wanted to say, "turn around--oh, do!"
-
-But the girl sank into a low chair beside Saltonstall Adams and quietly
-awaited developments.
-
-"May I present Mr. Trask," Cray said, a little awkwardly, for it was not
-easy to be casual under the glance of those pathetic eyes.
-
-Anita bowed courteously if coldly, and then there was an embarrassing
-silence.
-
-"Well," Trask remarked, at last, "you people are not very talkative,
-guess I'll take the helm myself. Miss Austin, will you be good enough to
-get up and turn around?"
-
-The request was so simply made, that, almost without thinking of its
-strangeness, Anita did exactly as she was asked.
-
-Sure enough, there were two rows of buttons down the back of her bodice,
-and another row across the sailor collar.
-
-At a nod from Trask she sat down again, and then the storm broke.
-
-"I told you so!" cried Helen Peyton. "That's the very dress that made the
-marks on that chair back! Dare you deny, Miss Austin, that you were in
-Doctor Waring's study that night he died?"
-
-The dark eyes of Miss Mystery opened wide in horror. She seemed fairly
-paralyzed with fright, and glanced wildly from one face to another.
-
-Maurice Trask's showed only frank admiration. He looked at the girl as if
-he had never before seen any one so attractive.
-
-Gordon Lockwood's face betrayed no emotion of any sort. Had he been
-indifferent to Miss Mystery instead of loving her, as he did, he could
-have shown no less expressive countenance.
-
-And all the others present showed definite and decided suspicion, scorn
-and hatred.
-
-Except one. Old Salt looked kindly at the agitated girl. He even held out
-a protective hand, and with a gentle inflection, said:
-
-"Tell the truth, dear child. _Did_ you know Doctor Waring?"
-
-Slowly Miss Mystery's eyes traveled round the room. Looking at each face
-in turn, her own expression became more and more hard and stubborn. Then,
-seeing the kindness on the face of Old Salt, she broke down utterly and
-sobbed out. "Oh, he's dead--he's dead! what shall I do?"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
- THE TRUESDELL EYEBROWS
-
-
-Maurice Trask looked at Miss Mystery with rapidly growing interest and
-curiosity. She seemed so young and helpless and she was so pretty and so
-pathetic that he immediately decided she could not be mixed up in any
-wrong-doing. He also decided, for he was a man of quick conclusions, that
-this was the girl for him. Having his new fortune, he wanted a wife to
-help him enjoy it, and where could he find a more utterly desirable girl
-than Miss Austin?
-
-Straightforwardly he asked:
-
-"Did Doctor Waring make love to you? Did you love him?"
-
-The others looked aghast at these suggestions, and then Mrs. Adams said,
-
-"Yes, she did! I saw her one night, kissing Doctor Waring's picture."
-
-Cray turned on Anita.
-
-"Did you love that man?" he asked, sternly. "If you did, you surely
-didn't kill him."
-
-"Of course she didn't kill him," Old Salt put in. "Impossible to imagine
-such a thing! Speak up, little girl. Why did you kiss the picture of a
-man you had never seen?"
-
-Several of those listening waited breathlessly for a response.
-
-Gordon Lockwood, for one, could scarce control his impatience to hear the
-answer. For, only too well he remembered the letter he had found in the
-Doctor's waste-basket. The words were graven in his brain.
-
-Darling Anita: At the first glance of your brown eyes love was born in my
-heart. Life is worth living--with you in the world.
-
-If love at first sight had been born in the man's heart, must it not have
-found response in the girl's? Or, even if not, could she have killed a
-man who felt thus toward her? Truly she was a mystery. For, the very fact
-that Waring had fallen in love with her, made possible, even plausible,
-her clandestine visit to him, and her possession of the money and jewel.
-
-Could it be that the pretty little thing was merely a sly adventuress?
-That she cajoled Waring into giving her the valuables, and then--
-
-No, Gordon Lockwood could not and would not believe any evil of the girl
-he loved. Even though she should admit her love for Waring, he would not
-lose faith in her.
-
-"Answer me," Cray demanded. "Answer this direct question directly. Did
-you love Doctor Waring?"
-
-Almost like one hypnotized, Miss Mystery gave a helpless glance at her
-inquisitor and murmured a low, almost inaudible "yes."
-
-"Then why did you kill him?" Cray stormed at her.
-
-"I--I didn't."
-
-"You were there, in his study the night he--he died."
-
-"N--no, I wasn't."
-
-"You were! It's been proved. You went over from this house, across the
-snow field, and you went in the study and you sat on the plush chair,
-near the desk. Didn't you?"
-
-The great dark eyes seemed unable to tear themselves from Cray's face,
-and again the half-breathed whisper was, "yes."
-
-"I protest!" said Trask. "That girl shall not be tortured. Whether she's
-guilty or not, she's entitled to fairer treatment. You can't make her say
-those things that may be used against her! Quit it, Cray. I forbid it."
-
-"That's right, Cray," Lockwood said, quietly. "You've no right to bait
-Miss Austin--you make her admit things through sheer fright."
-
-And it was true. Miss Mystery was trembling, and her face was white, save
-for the delicate flush on her cheeks and lips that she had placed there
-herself.
-
-Her great eyes, beneath their heavy dark brows flew from one face to
-another, and she did not fail to notice the fact that every man in the
-room, Cray perhaps excepted, was in sympathy with her, while every woman
-was against her.
-
-This must have comforted her, for she looked about, a faint smile dawning
-in her eyes.
-
-"Is that true?" she said, "may I be excused from this questioning until I
-can get counsel? I don't know what to say--myself--"
-
-Her pretty distress and helplessness again appealed to the masculine
-sympathy, and, realizing this, she ignored the other sex.
-
-A puzzled expression crossed the face of Maurice Trask.
-
-"Who in the world can she be?" he thought. "That last flash of those
-eyes, as she drew her heavy eyebrows into a straight line surely reminded
-me of somebody. By heavens! the Truesdell brows!"
-
-Again he scanned the oval little face. He shook his head in uncertainty,
-but again declared to himself, "The Truesdell eyebrows!"
-
-"Now look here, all of you," Old Saltonstall Adams said, "I don't believe
-this child is guilty of anything really wrong. If she caught the fancy of
-Doctor Waring, it may seem pretty awful to us old fogies, but a pretty
-girl like Miss Austin can't help charming the menfolks. I don't want to
-discuss that, but I do say that it's no crime to go to see a man in the
-evening, and too, she may have had some errand we know nothing about. Did
-Doctor Waring give you that money of his own free will, Miss Austin?"
-
-"Yes," said Anita, involuntarily, and then bit her lip as she added, "I
-told you he didn't give it to me."
-
-"There, there, don't say any more, you only contradict yourself. I had no
-business to ask that. Now, Mr. Cray, from now on, I take Miss Austin
-under my personal care. I'll be responsible for her appearance when you
-want her. And," he looked at his wife, "Mrs. Adams will back me up. She
-too will shelter and care for Miss Austin--"
-
-"Unless she is proved guilty," Esther Adams broke in. "In that case--"
-
-"Wait until she is," Old Salt said, in his calm way. "I don't guarantee
-her innocence--I only want to prevent injustice to her. Have you funds to
-engage a lawyer, Miss Austin?"
-
-Again that frightened look made the girl seem anything but innocent.
-
-"Would I have to tell a lawyer--everything?" she asked.
-
-"Yes, yes--to be sure," Trask broke in. "But what of that? I'll bet
-you've nothing to tell him incriminating to yourself. You exaggerate your
-connection with this matter. I'll bet you were there that night on some
-perfectly innocent errand--at least so far as Doctor Waring's death is
-concerned."
-
-"Oh, I was!" Anita said, and then, as quickly, "But I wasn't there at
-night--it was in the afternoon."
-
-Lockwood groaned in spirit. Everything this girl said made her more of a
-prevaricator, even though she might be innocent of crime. Surely she was
-mixed up in the matter, and must know who gave the fatal stab--if she
-didn't do it herself. If only Nogi could be found. He, of course, was
-implicated.
-
-"I'll get a lawyer for you, if you'll let me, Miss Austin," Lockwood
-said, unable to resist his impulse to help her.
-
-"I am a lawyer," said Maurice Trask, "I here and now offer my services to
-Miss Austin. If you'll accept, my dear young lady, I promise to use my
-best efforts to do all that can be done for you."
-
-"But do I have to tell you--" again Anita began, perplexedly--her brows
-straight.
-
-Trask gazed at her fixedly, and then he said, "That will be between us.
-You will decide when we talk things over, what to tell me and what not."
-
-He spoke as to a fractious child, and his voice was kind and helpful even
-though his inflections were not cultured.
-
-Lockwood looked at him uneasily. Might not this man's kindness and
-assistance to the distressed girl lead her to feel such gratitude that it
-would be no hard matter for Trask to win more than gratitude? Lockwood
-was nervously sensitive to the interest Trask took in Anita, and well
-knew his state of mind toward the little beauty.
-
-And, instead of being lessened by the trend of suspicion toward Anita,
-Lockwood's own infatuation deepened with every glance he allowed himself
-at the lovely face.
-
-The countenance of Miss Mystery was ever changing. Now, she was a
-wistful-eyed child, and in a flash she was an inscrutable young
-woman--only to change the next instant to a wrongly accused and innocent
-martyr.
-
-Anyway, Lockwood told himself, he meant to win her, and if Trask stood in
-his way, Trask must be set aside, that was all. An indomitable will ought
-to be able to conquer the intents of a self-made, unattractive man of
-Trask's type. And, too, a love like his own, surging more fully every
-moment must appeal to the girl, once he could get a chance to declare it.
-
-Lockwood was by no means a conceited man, but he had a true sense of
-value and he knew that he was a fitter mate for Miss Mystery than Trask,
-if the girl could know them both.
-
-"I know a lawyer," Lockwood began, "here in Corinth. Might he not be a
-better man for you, Miss Austin, than a stranger in the town?"
-
-"Just why?" Trask said, his eyes coldly scanning Lockwood's face.
-
-"Because he would have known Doctor Waring, and--and all the
-circumstances," Lockwood concluded a little lamely.
-
-"Not much of an argument," Trask dismissed the suggestion. "Also, I
-promise not to cost the lady as much as any other counsel would."
-
-This speech was accompanied by an admiring glance that was so nearly a
-smirk that Lockwood with difficulty kept his hands off Trask's throat.
-
-Mrs. Peyton, who with Helen had sat almost wordless through the whole
-session, now rose to go.
-
-"Come, Helen," she said, "we are of no use here, and I'd rather take you
-away."
-
-Her implication that the presence of Miss Mystery was contaminating was
-too plain to be mistaken, and mother and daughter left the room.
-
-"Well," Cray said, "I've pretty much made up my mind in this matter. I
-make no arrest now, since you're going to be responsible, Mr. Adams, for
-Miss Austin's presence when desired. But, I think I see it all. I think I
-can reconstruct the whole case, and I think there will be decided
-developments very soon."
-
-"You do," was Trask's response to this speech, and as one by one all
-present rose to go, Trask remained, and asked that he might see Miss
-Austin alone.
-
-"Guess I'll stand by," said Old Salt, and something in the grim but
-kindly old face made Trask give tacit consent.
-
-Straightforwardly the man set about his inquiries.
-
-"Now, first of all, Miss Austin," Trask said, "where is your home?"
-
-An obstinate look came into her eyes, and she hesitated a moment. Then,
-with a sudden change of expression, she said, "Indianapolis."
-
-"Address?"
-
-"Six-twenty-seven Jackson Street."
-
-Trask's eyebrows went up at this, and he gave her a searching look, but
-Miss Mystery showed no embarrassment.
-
-"Sure of the number?" he said, "I know Indianapolis pretty well."
-
-"I'm sure," was the cool reply, and Trask went on.
-
-"Know Doctor Waring before you came here?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Never saw him before?"
-
-"Never, to my knowledge."
-
-"You didn't kill him?"
-
-Anita only shook her head slowly, but Trask did not press her for a
-verbal answer.
-
-"Yet you were there that night. Now, it's useless to deny it, for the
-prints of those doodads on the back of that very frock you have on now
-were on the plush back of the chair you sat in. Young Lockwood smoothed
-them away--Lord knows why! He must suspect you, I should say, and tried
-to shield you that way."
-
-"Could he?" asked Miss Mystery, hopefully.
-
-"Could he shield you? No, my child, he couldn't, but I can. You just
-trust yourself to me, and you'll have no trouble, no trouble at all.
-You've got Mr. Saltonstall, here, and me for friends. Something tells me
-you won't need anybody else. We'll pull you through, eh, Old Salt?"
-
-Though accustomed to the nickname from the townspeople, Mr. Adams didn't
-relish it from this stranger, and he merely said, "I'm Miss Austin's
-friend, be sure of that."
-
-"So'm I," Trask declared. "Now, little lady, you needn't tell all you
-know, but some things you must tell me. Anybody among your relatives
-named Truesdell?"
-
-Only a quick eye could have caught a fleeting look of dismay on her face,
-as Anita promptly responded, "No--not that I know of."
-
-"Falsehood number one," said Trask to himself. "What the deuce is she up
-to?"
-
-But aloud, he only said,
-
-"All right. Now, why did you come to Corinth?"
-
-"To sketch," said Anita glibly, and smiling at him. "I'm an artist, you
-see--I paint water-colors."
-
-"Yes--I see. Now, just why did you hide that stiletto of yours?"
-
-"I was frightened. I was afraid they would think I killed Doctor Waring."
-
-"Why did you fear that?"
-
-"Oh, I don't know." She was almost flippant now. "Those detectives are so
-queer, they're likely to suspect anybody. And they said the weapon used
-was a round, sharp instrument, so--so I hid the thing."
-
-"You didn't use that to kill him?"
-
-"Oh, no!"
-
-"What did you use?"
-
-"I didn't kill him."
-
-"Who did?"
-
-"I think he killed himself."
-
-"Mr. Adams," Trask turned to the old man, "please leave us two alone for
-a few moments. I ask you as a personal favor."
-
-Without a word Old Salt left the room.
-
-"Now, look here, Miss Austin," Trask said, in a determined tone, "I know
-you killed that man as well as I know you're here. Also, I know why. Or,
-at least, I don't know exactly why, but I have knowledge that will lead
-straight to a revelation of the whole affair. I know you are related to
-the Truesdells--though perhaps you don't know that yourself. Now, here's
-my proposition. I'm a lawyer, and I'm known as a shrewd one. Many a time
-I've made black appear white--and I can do it in your case. But--if
-you'll marry me, I'll get you off. Wait a minute--don't speak yet. I'm
-not bad-looking, I'm kind-hearted and, by my cousin's death, I'm a rich
-man. You may not love me yet--but I'll guarantee I can win your
-affection. I fell in love with you, the very minute I saw you and I want
-you for my wife. You needn't marry me now--wait as long as you say--but
-give me your promise, and I'll clear you of all suspicion in this
-terrible affair. On the other hand--"
-
-There was a pause, and then Anita said:
-
-"On the other hand?"
-
-"I shall tell what I know about you--and, well, you know yourself what
-chance you will have then of getting off scotfree!"
-
-"A threat?" and Miss Mystery flung up her proud little head.
-
-"No; don't misunderstand. Not a threat. But I admit, a bribe. Marry me,
-and I'll free you. Say no--and I don't have to do a thing. The law will
-do it all. You simpleton! Do you suppose you can keep your secret once
-the law really begins to hound you? Cray is only just opening his eyes to
-your connections with the case. Lockwood has realized that you must be
-guilty, though he's trying hard not to believe it. Old Salt only
-befriends you because you're helpless and pretty--not because he thinks
-you're innocent--any more than his wife does. The two Peytons hate
-you--for reasons of their own--probably because you snared Lockwood away
-from the lovely Helen. But none of those things will matter if you take
-up with my offer. I'll carry you through with flying colors. You'll be
-not only freed from suspicion but eulogized and beloved by all who know
-you, and as my wife, you'll have a proud and enviable position."
-
-Miss Mystery gave the speaker a look that not only took him in from head
-to foot but seemed to penetrate his very soul, and in a quiet, even tone,
-she said:
-
-"Rather than marry you--I would face the electric chair."
-
-The scorn in her voice, even more than the scathing words themselves,
-enraged Trask.
-
-"Oh," he said, with ill-repressed fury, "you would, would you? Have your
-own way, then, Miss Mystery--and soon your mystery will be known and you
-may have your desire, and--face the electric chair!"
-
-The girl rose, and stood, waiting.
-
-"Go," she said, without glance or gesture.
-
-And in a white heat of anger, Trask went.
-
-"Now, dearie," Mrs. Adams said, coming in, "I don't want you to tell me
-anything. My husband bids me befriend you--and I will, so long as your
-case is uncertain. But if you're proved to be guilty, I--"
-
-"Oh, don't fail me," and Miss Mystery threw herself into the other's
-arms. "I am so lonely and so friendless--"
-
-"Why are you? Where's your folks?"
-
-Then Miss Mystery drew herself up, with a forlorn little attempt at
-dignity, and said, "I'd like to go to my room now, please."
-
-Upstairs she went, slowly, and as she neared her own room Lockwood met
-her in the hall.
-
-"Count me your friend," he said, simply, and held out his hand.
-
-"I will," she replied, putting her little hand in his, and then, with one
-deep glance, each knew of the other's love.
-
-Lockwood's was written plain on his face, and his eyes, usually so calm
-and cold, were lighted with the intensity of his passion.
-
-This Anita read, and her own response was quick and involuntary.
-
-Perhaps it was a rebound from the awful proposals of Maurice Trask;
-perhaps it was a heart finding its mate--perhaps, remembering Miss
-Mystery's ways, it was mere coquetry, but the glances were exchanged and
-they knew.
-
-Anita went on to her room, and throwing herself into a chair, sat long in
-thought.
-
-"What shall I do?" she asked herself over and over again. "What can I do?
-If only I hadn't taken the money--and the pin. Why did I do it? And he
-said Truesdell! How did he know? My eyebrows, I suppose. That awful man!
-And he'll tell--oh, yes, he'll surely tell--and that will poison Gordon's
-mind against me--oh, was anybody ever in such trouble as I?"
-
-A tap at her door announced the maid with a note.
-
-Alone again, Anita read it. It was from Lockwood and begged an interview.
-
-"Please let me see you alone," it said; "I don't know how best to manage
-it. Will you go for a walk with me now? There's time for a short stroll
-before dark."
-
-Hurriedly Anita flung on hat and coat, and opened her door.
-
-Lockwood was on the stair.
-
-"Going out?" he said, casually, "may I walk with you?"
-
-"Please do," said Anita, and they started out together.
-
-"I'm sorry enough to do anything that seems clandestine," said Lockwood
-as they walked, "but that feline lady, Miss Bascom, is watching your
-every move, and I can't let her get anything to criticise you for."
-
-A grateful look rewarded him, and then Gordon went on: "Tell me, did I
-read your eyes aright? Do you, can you care to know how I love you? How I
-have loved you from the moment I first saw you. Do you care, Anita? May I
-love you?"
-
-"But you don't know me," she said, in a soft little voice. "And you do
-know dreadful things about me."
-
-"I don't care for any of those things. If they're dreadful, they're not
-true."
-
-"Yes--they are true--some of them. And there are more dreadful things to
-know--that you don't even suspect--Gordon."
-
-The last word, spoken in the lowest, tenderest of voices, completed
-Lockwood's infatuation. Had she not said that, he might have been
-deterred by her statements, but that softly-breathed name, stirred his
-pulses, and in the deepening dusk he found her hand and said:
-
-"Anita, I want you--I love you--none of these things count. I know you
-are in no way guiltily connected with this crime--if you are mixed up
-with it, it is through force of circumstances, and anyway, I don't care
-who or what you are--I love you, I believe in you and I want you."
-
-"But it's all so dreadful--and I can't tell--"
-
-"Don't tell anything you don't want to--"
-
-"But that man will tell. That terrible Trask man."
-
-Lockwood didn't waver in his fealty or loyalty but it was a blow to learn
-that Trask knew something of Anita's secrets.
-
-"I don't care," he said, firmly, "I love you."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
- A PROPOSAL
-
-
-Maurice Trask took up his reins of government with a firm hand. He left
-all housekeeping and domestic matters to Mrs. Peyton, but the business
-affairs of Doctor Waring, he concluded to clean up as rapidly as
-possible.
-
-"It's astonishing," he said to Lockwood, "what a lot of varied interests
-my cousin had. This morning's mail brings all sorts of things from Rare
-Book Catalogues to Mining Prospectuses. By the way, I think I shall have
-an auction of his rare books. Such things don't interest me, and I
-believe they have a big money value."
-
-"Some of them have," Lockwood returned, indifferently.
-
-He could not bring himself to like his new employer, but as he had agreed
-to stay with him for a time, he did his best to meet requirements.
-
-"Take this lot, now," and Trask indicated a bookcase full of old volumes
-of the classics. "They mean nothing to me--I can't read Latin or Greek,
-and wouldn't if I could. My good heavens! Look at this one!"
-
-Trask had taken down the volume that had been on Doctor Waring's desk the
-night of his death. As he flipped over the pages, two were stuck
-together, and the ghastly red stains showed only too clearly that they
-were the spilled blood of the dying man.
-
-"Ugh!" he said, holding out the volume to Lockwood, "burn that up. How
-could anyone have put it back on the shelf? Never let me see it again!"
-
-The secretary took it, noting that it was a copy of Martial, to which
-Doctor Waring had been greatly attached. Indeed, it had, to Lockwood's
-knowledge, been lying on the Doctor's desk for a week or more before his
-death.
-
-Laying the stained volume aside in his own desk, Lockwood proceeded to
-assist in the examination of the books.
-
-He was not at all surprised to find Trask discarding the ones he would
-have retained and keeping the most worthless--though there was little
-that could really be called trash in the Waring library.
-
-"Where are the story books?" the new owner grumbled. "No detective
-stories? No spicy novels? No joke-books?"
-
-"Doctor Waring was serious-minded," Lockwood reminded him. "He cared
-little for lighter reading. He was a scholar."
-
-"He sure was--to judge from these old dry-as-dust tomes. But, I'll fire a
-lot of the poky old stuff, and so make room for more entertaining books.
-You see, Lockwood, I hope--and I expect to get me a wife before long."
-
-Gordon's heart seemed to contract, for he divined what was coming.
-
-"Yeppy, that's so. Little Old Maurice wants a wifie--and--who do you
-suppose has caught my fancy?"
-
-"Who?" was the mechanical response.
-
-"Why, none other than the little Miss Mystery. Oh, yes, I know she is
-under a cloud--but I can get her off--I'm a bird of a lawyer, you
-know--and we'll fix up all that. Then, I'll elevate that little nonentity
-to the elevated position of the missus of Maurice Trask. Hey, my boy,
-how's that?"
-
-Had Lockwood's calm not been habitual with him, he could scarcely have
-maintained it through this scene. As it was, he was a boiling, seething
-furnace inside him, but his judgment told him that any exhibition of
-surprise or annoyance would only irritate the other man without doing any
-good.
-
-Moreover, if Trask were really a shrewd lawyer, and if he knew something
-that would make any trouble for Anita--and she had hinted that he
-did--then, Lockwood argued, he must keep friendly with Trask, at least
-until he found out more of the matter.
-
-So he said, lightly, "Has the lady agreed?"
-
-"Well--not yet; but--I say, Lockwood, you're hit in that same direction,
-eh?"
-
-"I admire Miss Austin very much, yes."
-
-"Well--you keep off--do you hear?"
-
-"I hear," said Lockwood, in his imperturbable way, but when Trask looked
-up and caught the cold stare of his secretary, he dropped the subject and
-returned to the books.
-
-Since Doctor Waring's death, Lockwood had formed the habit of going back
-to the Adams house for his luncheon. This, of course, in the hope of
-seeing something of Anita, and also, because his new employer preferred
-it that way.
-
-At luncheon, Trask took occasion to eulogize Miss Austin.
-
-Helen Peyton stood it as long as she could, and then broke out with: "I
-don't see what you can find to admire in that thin, sallow little thing!
-And, beside, she is a wicked girl. I think she killed Doctor Waring, but
-even if she didn't, she came over here to see him, secretly, late at
-night, and if that isn't wrong-doing, I don't know what is! But just
-because she puts up a helpless bluff, all the men fall for her!"
-
-"Jealous, Miss Peyton?" and Trask looked at her shrewdly.
-
-"No," Helen tossed her head. "I've no reason to be. That girl is nothing
-to me, and the sooner she gets out of Corinth the better. If the police
-will let her go!"
-
-"Now then, Miss Peyton," Trask began, in his most emphatic manner, "and
-Mrs. Peyton, too, once for all, I will hear no word against Miss Austin
-in my house. Put any meaning you like into that, but remember it. One
-word against Anita Austin, and the speaker of it goes out of my door
-never to return. Am I clear?"
-
-"Clear? Yes; but I can tell you--"
-
-"Hush, Helen," said her mother. "We want to stay here, don't we? Well,
-then, as Mr. Trask is evidently much in earnest, I insist that you obey
-his wishes--as I shall."
-
-"That's right, Mrs. Peyton. And if your daughter forgets my hints I trust
-to you to keep her reminded. That's all about that."
-
-In this fashion Maurice Trask settled every question that arose. His word
-was law, and he spoke no unnecessary words.
-
-The servants could obey or leave. The housekeeper had been told the same,
-and the secretary understood it, too.
-
-Returning to the library after luncheon, Trask sat at the desk in deep
-thought.
-
-"Got to get the girl," he told himself. "Plenty to hold over her
-head--but she's skittish, that's plain to be seen. Also, she's in love
-with Lockwood. Got to get him out of town. Nothing doing while he's
-around. Now, how? Morton hinted of his being deeply in debt. If so, he's
-got some past history, guess I can get something on him--got to, whether
-I can or not. H'm. Wonder if the little girl did do the sticking. Hard to
-believe it, and yet that kid's got it in her. She sure has! And she's a
-Truesdell all right. Nobody ever had those beetling brows, almost joining
-above those dark eyes, in that level line--why, if she's a Truesdell--!
-Good Lord, I've got to marry her! I'll have to scare her into it! Now,
-Maurice, my boy, get in some of your finest work."
-
-Clapping on his hat, he started for the Adams house.
-
-As luck would have it, he met Anita and his secretary walking toward him.
-
-"Playing truant?" he called out gaily to Lockwood.
-
-"I'm just on my way to your house," Gordon returned, coldly.
-
-"You too, Miss Mystery?" and Trask gave her a wide smile.
-
-"No; I'm going to the post-office."
-
-"Ah, I see. Then, on your way, Lockwood--and I'll step along with Miss
-Austin."
-
-There was no good way out of this arrangement, so it obtained, and Trask
-fell into step with the girl, as Lockwood turned off toward the Waring
-house.
-
-"Now, my dear young lady," Trask began, unheeding her look of aversion,
-"you may as well understand me first as last. I've got the whip hand--or,
-as that isn't a very graceful expression, let us say, I hold the trumps.
-I know all about you, you see. I know why you went to the doctor's
-library that night, and--I know what happened there."
-
-"You don't," said Anita, coolly. "You're bluffing, and I know it."
-
-"No, I'm not bluffing--not entirely, anyway. True, there are some things
-I don't know yet, but--I soon will! Don't think you can keep anything
-from me! I'm going to take a week for investigation. Also, to give you
-your chance. If I find out what I fully expect to find out I shall make
-it all public--how will you like that?"
-
-A great fear showed in Anita's eyes, and she murmured, brokenly:
-
-"Don't--oh, Mr. Trask, don't!"
-
-"Hah! Scared, are you? I thought you'd be! Now, you know my price. You
-marry me--promise to marry me, that is, and I'll get you through this
-thing with bells on. No shadow of suspicion shall remain attached to
-you--or, to any one you care for."
-
-"I heard you were not going to rest until you learned who killed Doctor
-Waring," Anita temporized.
-
-"Yes, yes; but that was before I saw you. Now, I don't care if you have
-killed half the people in Corinth, I want you all the same. You've
-bewitched me. You, a silly little slip of a girl, with no particular
-claim to beauty, except your big, mournful eyes, and your peach of a
-mouth! I'll bring the smiles to that sad little face. Oh, Anita, I'm not
-a brute, and I do love you so. Give up your foolish fancy for Lockwood,
-for it is only a passing attraction. And he hasn't any money, and he's
-deeply in debt, and oh, I'm a thousand times a better catch!"
-
-"If you knew how you damaged your cause by talking like that--" the girl
-began, her eyes cold with scorn.
-
-"Then I won't talk like that," Trask said, humbly. "Only take me, Anita,
-and you can make me over to suit yourself. I'll do whatever you say. I'll
-read the books you want me to, I'll get cultured and refined--and all
-that."
-
-Anita almost laughed. "You are so funny," she said.
-
-But this was a little too much for Trask's self-love.
-
-"Funny, am I?" he stormed. "Funny! You'll see how funny I am when I tell
-the police why you killed that man! You'll see if I'm funny when I refuse
-the evidence that might help you out. When I keep still instead of
-speakin' out in meetin'! You look here, Anita Austin, I hold you in the
-hollow of my hand, and don't you forget it! You've got a deep dark
-secret--and though I don't know quite all of it--I'll know it soon. What
-M. Trask sets out to find out, he finds out. See? Now, do you want to
-tell me who you are--or not? Want to tell me who your father was? Your
-mother was a Truesdell--I'll bet on that!"
-
-Miss Mystery's face fell. Abject despair was written on every line of it.
-She glanced at Trask, and his own determined expression showed her that
-she could hope for nothing from him save on his own terms.
-
-And those terms were too hard for her. Just aware of loving Lockwood,
-just learning to know what love meant and how sweet it could be, just
-realizing, too, the awfulness of her own position, the dire necessity for
-secrecy, the terrible result of Trask's revelations, should they be made,
-altogether Miss Mystery faced a dangerous crisis.
-
-"You say you'll give me a week?" she said, at last, grasping at a hope of
-reprieve.
-
-Trask looked at her with curiosity.
-
-"What good'll that do you? Better put yourself under my protection at
-once. Every day you lose is that much nearer discovery."
-
-"All right, I'll dare it! They won't--won't condemn me, anyhow."
-
-"Ho, ho. Banking on your sex to save you! Well, honestly, I don't really
-think they'd send a pretty girl like you to the chair, but a trial would
-convict you in the eyes of the world, even if twelve men were too
-soft-hearted to see you electrocuted. And there'd be imprisonment--"
-
-"Oh, hush! Mr. Trask, have you no pity?"
-
-"Plenty for the girl that is to be my wife. None for any other. And
-especially none for a girl who scorns me and throws me over for my own
-secretary. I'm a red-blooded man, I am, and you can't play fast and loose
-with me and get away with it!"
-
-"I don't mean to play fast and loose with you, if by that you mean
-changing my mind. But, I do ask for a few days to think it over. That's
-not unreasonable, is it?"
-
-Miss Mystery's little smile was cajoling, and Trask couldn't resist it.
-
-"All right," he said, as he looked hungrily at her bewitching face, "take
-a coupla days, then. But, only on condition that you don't let Lockwood
-make love to you. Promise me that for the forty-eight hours, you won't
-see that man alone."
-
-"How can I promise that?"
-
-"You'll have to, whether you can or not."
-
-"All right, I promise."
-
-He looked at her sternly.
-
-"And you'll keep that promise, or you'll be sorry! I haven't much opinion
-of your promises, you're not the sort to keep faith. But, remember I'm a
-power. Maurice Trask can do whatever he sets out to do. And if you forget
-that, you're mighty apt to regret it."
-
-"I gave you a promise," Anita said, looking at him coldly, "and I fully
-intend to keep it. It's not such a very hard one to keep."
-
-Her lip curled, and though he guessed the tumult in her heart, there was
-no sign of it on her face.
-
-Trask accompanied her to the postoffice, and then, bidding him a careless
-good afternoon, Anita went into a large drygoods shop and he made no
-attempt to follow her.
-
-He would have been interested, however, had he noted her proceedings. For
-she went straight to a telephone booth, and called up the Waring house.
-Ito answered and when she asked to be connected with Mr. Lockwood, the
-butler gave the connection without question.
-
-"Gordon?" came the soft little voice. "This is Anita."
-
-And then she told him quickly but fully all that had passed between her
-and Trask.
-
-"So you see," she concluded, "I do want these two days to think things
-out, and I mustn't see you alone, for he's sure to know of it."
-
-"All right," Lockwood said, "We'll do our courting over the telephone.
-Let me see, I'll go down town this evening and telephone you--"
-
-"No, that won't do. I can't talk to you in the Adams front hall! Here's a
-better plan. Tomorrow, when Mr. Trask goes out, you call me up there, and
-I'll go out to a pay station and call you up where you are now. And the
-day after tomorrow the time will be up."
-
-"Yes, and what are you going to do then?"
-
-"I don't know," said the girl, her voice suddenly losing its brightness.
-"I'm going to think it out. Good-by."
-
-"Oh, wait a minute. I'll see you at dinner, shan't I?"
-
-"Oh, yes; and this evening, I suppose, but only with others present."
-
-And after a few more words Anita left the booth and walked slowly home.
-
-When Trask returned to his library he said to Lockwood, "Get busy on
-those old books at once, will you? I want the shelves cleared for some of
-my own books that I've sent for."
-
-"Very well," returned the secretary, thinking of the probable difference
-between the expected books and those they would replace.
-
-"Do you mind, Mr Trask, if I take a few of these old ones myself? I'll
-pay you whatever price a first class dealer sets on them."
-
-"Oh, take what you want, without pay. I'm in a good humor today,
-Lockwood, better take advantage of it. Help yourself from the shelves."
-
-"Thank you, I'll not impose on your kindness and generosity."
-
-Nor did he, but among the few volumes he chose was the crimson stained
-copy of Martial's Epigrams.
-
-Distasteful though it was, Lockwood looked at the book with a feeling of
-reverence and opened the volume at the page that had last held the
-interest of its owner's scholarly mind.
-
-The crimson stain completely obscured the print, but Lockwood gazed long
-at the defaced page.
-
-"I wonder," he said to himself, "if a crack detective could get anything
-from this. There's that Stone, Mercer is always raving over--I suppose
-he's terribly expensive--yet this strange case might intrigue him--and
-yet--there's Anita to be considered. If it should turn the tide against
-her--"
-
-Later that afternoon, Trask went out again and Lockwood seized his
-chance.
-
-Calling Anita at the Adams house, he said, "Listen, dear, you needn't say
-anything but yes or no, and then no one will understand."
-
-"All right," came the reply.
-
-"I've just about come to the conclusion I'll get a clever detective and
-put him on the case. I mean a real detective--in fact, Fleming Stone."
-
-"Oh, no!" Anita's voice was one of utter dismay.
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"I--I can't tell you this way! You said--"
-
-"So I did. Well, here, I'll ask questions. Don't you want me to do this?"
-
-"No!" very emphatically.
-
-"You'd rather I wouldn't?"
-
-"Very much rather."
-
-"Because you fear ill effects to yourself?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"You are sure you're not overestimating the danger of that?"
-
-"I am sure."
-
-"Then there's no more to be said. Good-by."
-
-Lockwood hung up the receiver, and turned around to see Trask frowning at
-him.
-
-"So that's the way you and Miss Austin whip the devil around the stump!"
-
-"That's the way," returned Lockwood, coolly.
-
-"She promised not to see you alone--is this how she keeps the letter of
-her promise and breaks it in spirit?"
-
-"Leave her out of this. I called her up, she did not call me."
-
-"All the same. Now, I gather from the interesting talk I overheard that
-Miss Austin does not wish to have Fleming Stone take up this case."
-
-"You are at liberty to gather anything you choose."
-
-"See here, Lockwood, you make a mistake when you try to antagonize me.
-I'd be a better friend to you than an enemy."
-
-"I've no reason to want you for either." Lockwood was by no means
-impertinent, he merely spoke indifferently. Trask noted this, and went
-on, more suavely:
-
-"Now, my dear Lockwood, what I propose to do now, is to employ Fleming
-Stone myself."
-
-Lockwood was astounded. At first he was glad, for he felt sure Stone
-could solve the whole mystery. But, then, suppose it incriminated Anita,
-and though Lockwood was sure of her innocence, he was just enough so to
-realize that his surety was largely because of his affection for her.
-Suppose Stone should prove her to be the criminal!
-
-It couldn't be--and yet--
-
-He looked up to find Trask smiling broadly.
-
-"You've the reputation of being of an impassive countenance, Lockwood,
-but to me your face is as an open book! However, it's only because you
-are up against a difficult problem. You want Stone to come, yet you're
-afraid he'll find out that Miss Austin is pretty deep in this murder
-mystery. But I've made up my mind, and I think you'll see that any
-attempt on your part to change my decision would look bad for Miss
-Austin."
-
-"You let her name alone, Trask, or I'll reason with you myself."
-
-"Have you any real right to tell me to leave her name alone?"
-
-"Yes, I have."
-
-"Are you and she engaged?"
-
-"So far as I am concerned, we are. Miss Austin prefers to wait until
-later to announce it, but I can answer for her to you in confidence."
-
-"Oh, it's in confidence, all right. Don't fear I'll breathe the news.
-For, you see, I've made up my mind to marry Anita Austin myself; and if
-Fleming Stone proves that she is a murderess, I'll marry her all the
-same. She'll escape punishment--what woman doesn't?"
-
-"Then, look here," Lockwood's manner changed. "If you're going to get
-Stone anyway, why can't we work with each other and not at odds? Whatever
-else we think or feel we both want to save Miss Austin all the trouble or
-distress we can. Let's be friends, then, and talk things over with Stone,
-and then--"
-
-"I'm on! Then if we see things are going against her, shut him off!"
-
-"Well, yes, if we can."
-
-"Of course we can. I've money enough for anything--even to buy off
-Fleming Stone. No man's too big to be bought."
-
-"I don't mean all this exactly as you do, but I do mean this: if Stone
-can solve the mystery and clear Anita, let him do it. If he finds her
-implicated, let it be understood by him beforehand, he is to cease
-investigations."
-
-Trask thought a minute.
-
-"That goes," he said; "I agree."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
- FLEMING STONE COMES
-
-
-"Terence."
-
-"Yes, sir."
-
-"We're off for New England."
-
-"New England it is."
-
-"Start this afternoon, stay a few days, maybe a week among the classic
-shades of Corinth."
-
-"Corinth it is."
-
-This somewhat laconic conversation was all that was necessary for Fleming
-Stone's assistant and general factotum to make preparations for the trip,
-achieve tickets, and arrive, with his chief, at the train gate at the
-proper time.
-
-Terence McGuire, sometimes called Fibsy, because of a certain tendency to
-mendacity, had begun as Stone's office boy, and, by virtue of his general
-aptitude for detective work and his utter devotion to Stone, had become a
-worthwhile and much appreciated assistant. Not only did the lad look
-after all details of their trips as well as taking care of the offices,
-but many times his ingenious mind so stimulated or aided Stone's own,
-that more often than not they were practically colleagues.
-
-They had a compartment to themselves at the end of the car, and they were
-no sooner started than Stone began to discuss the case with the boy.
-
-"I don't know all the details, of course," he began, "but it's a setting
-after my own heart."
-
-"Then I can guess it," put in the wise Fibsy. "Man found dead in sealed
-room."
-
-"You're a wizard! What made you think of that?"
-
-"'Cause that's the problem you like best, F. Stone. Wise me up some
-more."
-
-"It's further interesting, because the victim is a great and good man, in
-fact, the President-elect of the University of Corinth."
-
-"My! Somebody didn't want him for president? That the idea?"
-
-"Apparently not. Nothing in the letter about that."
-
-"Who wrote the letter?"
-
-"The relative who inherits the whole estate."
-
-"He do the job?"
-
-"No reason as yet to think so. But the criminal mustn't be guessed at.
-The point is, the locked room."
-
-"How was the killing done?"
-
-"Stabbed. No weapon found and no way to get in or out of the locked room.
-Fine problem."
-
-"Yes--if we don't find a secret stairway--or, a lying servant. Such cases
-generally fizzle out that way."
-
-"Fibs, you're a Boy Cassandra."
-
-"What's that?"
-
-Stone explained, for it was his habit to supplement McGuire's very scant
-education by bits of information now and then, when time served.
-
-"But, there's a queer clause in the arrangement," Stone went on, "if we
-find the evidence leading in a certain direction, the chase is to cease."
-
-"That won't do."
-
-"Of course not, and I'll soon make that clear. But I can't think it will
-lead in the given direction as that implicates a young girl, and rarely
-indeed, have I found a criminal answering to that description."
-
-"'Tisn't usual--but, you know, F. Stone, since the war, girls are so
-independent and so cocky that there's no telling what they'll do. Me for
-the girl--as a suspect."
-
-"Fibsy, you're a fool."
-
-"No, sir. I don't admit it. See here, sir, if they're so 'fraid s'picion
-will turn to that girl, there's reason for it. Yet, as you can guess, if
-she didn't do it, they want her skirts entirely cleared."
-
-"Pretty good deduction so far. But we can't judge rationally until we
-know the facts."
-
-The facts were told them, when, some hours later, they sat, alone with
-Maurice Trask in the room where John Waring breathed his last.
-
-"I'm a plain man," Trask said, for he didn't care to pose unduly before
-an astute detective. "I've come into this estate of my cousin's--my
-second cousin, he was, and I started out with a firm determination to
-find the villain who killed him. But, there is some cause for suspicion
-of the young lady I expect to marry. And here's the situation. If you can
-solve the mystery of Doctor Waring's death, and free that girl from any
-taint of blame, go ahead. But if your investigation leads to her--stop
-it. I want to marry her just the same, whether she killed anybody or not.
-But if she didn't do it, I want to know it."
-
-"Can't you learn the truth from the young lady herself--if she is your
-fiancee?" asked Stone.
-
-"Oh, she says she didn't do it, of course. But there's such an
-overwhelming mass of evidence--or, apparent evidence against her, that
-it's the deepest sort of a mystery."
-
-"Main facts first. Where was the body found?"
-
-"In that desk chair, seated at his desk, as he often was evenings.
-Reading in a Latin book, so you see, he wasn't looking for trouble."
-
-"Found dead in the morning? Been dead all night?"
-
-"Yes, to both those questions. And locked in his room. Had to break in."
-
-"And no weapon about?"
-
-"Not a sign of any--"
-
-"Then that cuts out all suicide idea."
-
-"It does and it doesn't. You may as well say the locked up room cuts out
-all idea of a murder."
-
-"But it must be one or the other. And isn't it more plausible to look for
-some way that the murderer could have gone away and left the room locked,
-than to think up a way that the suicide could have disposed of this
-weapon?"
-
-"Yes, that's so, but I want you to investigate both possibilities. You
-see, if you could prove a suicide, that would free Miss Austin at once.
-And--if things go against her--I want you to--oh, hang it, it's hard to
-put into words--"
-
-"I'll do that," said Fibsy, "if things go against Miss Austin, you want
-Mr. Stone to frame up suicide, and declare it the truth."
-
-"Exactly that," and Trask looked relieved at the thought all his cards
-were on the table. "I don't want Miss Austin suspected, but I do want to
-know if she's innocent."
-
-"Any other suspects?" asked Stone.
-
-"Not definite ones. There's the Japanese who absconded that same night,
-and of course, there's the secretary, Gordon Lockwood. I'd like to
-suspect him, all right, and he has a round silver penholder that just
-fits the wound that killed Waring. But it doesn't look like he did it, he
-never would have left the penholder in evidence, and he would have
-arranged matters to look more like a suicide. Then, too, how could he
-lock the door behind him?"
-
-"That question must be answered first of all," said Stone. "I'll examine
-the room, of course, but after the local police and detectives have done
-that, I doubt if I find anything enlightening. So far as I can see, this
-whole affair is unique, and I think we will find some surprising evidence
-and soon. Tell me more of this Miss Austin. Who is she?"
-
-"Nobody knows. In fact, they call her Miss Mystery, because so little is
-known of her. She appeared here in Corinth from nowhere. She knew no one,
-and as she began to make acquaintances somebody brought her over here.
-She met Doctor Waring, and inside of twenty-four hours had so bewitched
-him that it would seem he had her visiting him in his study late at
-night. She said at first, she wasn't here, but as she left the impress of
-her dress trimmings on that chair-back, and as she has a ruby pin and a
-lot of money that were in the Doctor's possession, it looks, one might
-say, a bit queer."
-
-"Weren't the valuables planted on her?" put in Fibsy.
-
-"That's what she says--or rather, that's one of the things she said. The
-girl contradicts herself continually. She says one thing one day and
-another the next."
-
-"Is she pretty?" This from Fibsy.
-
-"Pretty as the devil! And that's not so bad as a description. She has
-great big dark eyes, with straight black brows that almost meet. She has
-a jaunty little face, that can be roguish or scornful or merry or
-pathetic as the little rascal chooses. She has completely bowled me over,
-and I'd be glad to have her on any terms and whatever her past history.
-But, there it is. If she has a clean slate in this murder business, I
-want to know it."
-
-"And if she hasn't?"
-
-"Then I don't want anybody else to know it. If you find, Mr. Stone, real
-evidence that Anita Austin killed John Waring, or if she confesses to the
-deed, then you whip around and prove a suicide, and I'll double your
-charge. You needn't do anything wrong, you know. Just sum up that all
-indications point to a suicide, and let it go at that. Nobody will arrest
-Miss Austin if you say that."
-
-"You must be crazy, Mr. Trask," returned Stone, coldly. "I don't conduct
-my business on any such principles as those. I can't perjure myself to
-save your lady love from a just condemnation."
-
-"You haven't seen her yet." Trask nodded his sagacious head. "Wait till
-you do."
-
-"Give me all the points against her," the detective suggested.
-
-"I will. I'd rather you knew them from me. Not that I'll color
-them--they're facts that speak for themselves, but other people might
-exaggerate them. Well, to begin with, this girl, a day or so after she
-arrived here was seen kissing the picture of Doctor Waring which she had
-cut from a newspaper. I tell you this, 'cause you'll hear it anyway, and
-the gossips think it shows a previous acquaintance between the two. But I
-hold that as girls have matinee idols and movie heroes, this girl might
-easily have adored the scholarly man, though she had never seen him."
-
-"It is possible," Stone agreed, "but not very probable. She denies they
-were acquainted?"
-
-"Yes. Vows she never saw him until one night she went to his lecture,
-soon after her arrival here."
-
-"What is she in Corinth for?"
-
-"To sketch--she's an artist."
-
-"Go on."
-
-"Well, as I said, she must have come here that Sunday night, for one of
-the boarders at the house she lives in saw her cross the snowy field.
-Also, the footprints just fitted her shoes. Also, the tracks led right up
-on the side porch here to that long French window. And led right back
-again to the Adams house."
-
-"Whew!" Fibsy exploded, "aren't you rubbing it in?"
-
-"Well, that's what they tell me--" Trask asserted, doggedly, "and I want
-you to know it all, Mr. Stone, before the other people tell you a garbled
-version."
-
-"Go on."
-
-"Then, they say, the girl left marks of her dress trimming on that chair,
-and Lockwood, the secretary, rubbed them off next morning, as soon as the
-body was discovered. We have the word of two witnesses for this episode."
-
-"Who are the witnesses?"
-
-"Ito, the Japanese butler, and Miss Peyton, who lives in this house."
-
-"Go on."
-
-"Well, then, ever since the tragedy, Miss Austin has acted queer. Queer
-in all sorts of ways. She is sad and desolate one minute, and saucy and
-independent the next. I can't make her out at all. And she is more than
-half in love with this Lockwood. I have to cut him out, you see. And I
-figure, if you prove the case against Miss Austin, and if I agree to
-marry her and hush up the whole matter, and make it seem a suicide--"
-
-"You figure that she'll throw over the secretary for you," cried Fibsy,
-his eyes aghast at the man's plan.
-
-"Exactly that. You see, Mr. Stone, I don't try to deceive you. While I
-have a natural sorrow at my cousin's death, yet remember that I never
-knew him in life, and that, while I want to avenge his death in any case
-but one, I do not want to if it implicates Anita Austin."
-
-"I understand," said Stone, seemingly not so shocked at the conversation
-as his assistant was.
-
-"There's another queer thing," said Trask. "They tell me that when the
-body was found there was the impress of a ring on the forehead."
-
-"A seal ring?"
-
-"Oh, no. Not a finger ring, but a circle, about two inches across, a red
-mark, as if it had been made as a sign or symbol of some sort."
-
-"It remained on the flesh?"
-
-"Until the embalming process took place. That removed it. I didn't see
-it, but I'm told it was a clearly defined circle, quite evidently
-impressed with some intent."
-
-"Sounds like a sign of a secret society," Fibsy suggested, but Stone paid
-no heed.
-
-"Let's reconstruct the case," he said; "Waring sat at his desk his
-secretary outside in that hall?"
-
-"Yes; the Japanese, the other one, the one that disappeared, brought in
-water, and then Doctor Waring closed the door and locked it."
-
-"Immediately?"
-
-"I don't know that, but anyway, no one that we know of saw him again
-alive. Nogi is under no suspicion, for after he came out of the room, the
-Doctor rose and locked the door. Lockwood can't be suspected, as he heard
-the door locked, and couldn't get in. He _is_ more or less suspected
-because of his penholder, but much as I should like to think him the
-criminal, I know he isn't."
-
-"You're very honest, Mr. Trask."
-
-"Yes, because I want the truth. Can you get it?"
-
-"I think so."
-
-"You still eliminate suicide?"
-
-"I can't see how I can think it, with no weapon. You say that death was
-instantaneous--?"
-
-"Yes; the doctors agree that it was. Positively he had no chance to hide
-or dispose of the instrument of death."
-
-"And why should he? Suicides never make their death seem a murder, though
-often a murderer tries to simulate a suicide."
-
-"Yet that wasn't done in this case, or the murderer would have left the
-weapon."
-
-"That may be the very point he neglected. Now, how did the murderer get
-out? Get busy, Fibs."
-
-For nearly half an hour, the three men searched the room. Had there been
-any secret exit, or any concealed passage, it must have been found.
-Fleming Stone's knowledge of architecture would not let him overlook any
-thing of the sort, and Fibsy's alert eyes and quick wits would have found
-anything out of the ordinary.
-
-"No way out," Stone concluded, finally; "and no way of locking a door or
-a window after departure from the room. Looks as if the murder theory was
-as untenable as the other. No chance of a natural death?"
-
-"With a round hole in his jugular vein? No, sir. The doctors here won't
-stand for that. Try again."
-
-"I shall. I don't know when I've had such a baffling, intriguing case, as
-this appears to be at first sight. It may resolve itself into a simple
-problem, but I can't think so now. Even if it were the work of your Miss
-Austin--how did she get in and out?"
-
-"Oh, she got in, all right. Waring let her in, at the French window.
-Probably that's when he locked his door. But--say she killed him--how did
-she get out and lock the room behind her?"
-
-"She couldn't. The window locks are bolts, and could not be shot from
-outside. For the moment I see no explanation. It is blank, utter mystery.
-When can I see Miss Austin?"
-
-"Too late tonight, tomorrow morning will have to do. But she won't run
-away. The police won't let her."
-
-"Yet they can't hold her."
-
-"They are doing so. They claim she was the last one to see the victim
-alive--"
-
-"Does she admit that?"
-
-"Not she! She admits nothing. You'll get nothing out of that little
-Sphinx!"
-
-"All right, then, Mr. Trask, if you've finished your tale, suppose you
-leave me here to ruminate over this thing, and I'll go up to my room when
-I wish."
-
-Trask went off to bed, and Stone and his young assistant sat and looked
-at each other.
-
-"Up against it, F. Stone?"
-
-"I certainly am, Fibs. And yet, the thing is so absolutely impossible
-that there must be a solution within easy reach. It can't be suicide,
-with the weapon gone, and it can't be murder with the room locked up.
-Now, as it must be either suicide or murder, then it follows, that either
-the weapon isn't gone, or the room isn't locked up."
-
-"Wasn't, you mean."
-
-"Yes, wasn't. But I don't yet think that any one disturbed the conditions
-purposely. For why would the secretary take away the weapon to make it
-seem a suicide--"
-
-"He would if he did it."
-
-"He didn't do it. Trask sees that. The man Trask is a sharp one. He sees
-all there is to see, and since there's practically nothing to see that
-solves the mystery, he sent for me. It would be a good one on me,
-Terence, if I have to give the thing up as unsolvable."
-
-"That won't happen, F. Stone, but I'm free to confess, I can't see any
-way to look."
-
-The next morning, Maurice Trask went over to the Adams house, and brought
-Miss Mystery back with him.
-
-She came willingly enough, and the interview with the detective took
-place in the room of the tragedy itself.
-
-Stone noticed that the girl showed no horror or distaste of the scene,
-and even sat in the chair he placed for her, which was the same
-plush-covered one that had received the tell-tale imprints.
-
-Fleming Stone regarded Miss Austin curiously. Not only was her beauty all
-that Trask had described it, but there was an added quality of fineness,
-a trace of high mentality, that naturally enough Maurice Trask quite
-overlooked.
-
-At first glance, Stone's thought was--"That child commit murder? Never!"
-But a few moments later, he was not quite so sure of his negation.
-
-Fibsy just sat and looked at her. He had no occasion to speak, unless
-addressed, so, in silence he merely let his eyes feast on the piquant
-face with its ever changing expressions.
-
-After casual questions, Stone said directly, "Did you know Doctor Waring
-before you came to Corinth, Miss Austin?"
-
-"No," she said, a little hesitantly; "I had heard of him, but I had never
-before seen him."
-
-"How had you heard of him?"
-
-"There was much in the papers about his election."
-
-"And that interested you?"
-
-"Not specially," she said, with a sudden accession of hauteur.
-
-And thereupon, she became a most unsatisfactory witness. She listened to
-Stone's questions with an absent-minded air, answered in monosyllables,
-or by a movement of her head. She even gave a side smile to Fibsy, which,
-though it amazed him, also filled him with a strange exultant joy, and
-made him her abject slave at once.
-
-Stone went on, drawling out a string of unimportant questions in a
-monotonous voice, and at length, he said, in the same unimportant way,
-
-"And when you saw Doctor Waring that night, was there a red ring on his
-forehead?"
-
-"No," said Miss Austin, and then, suddenly awakening to what she had
-done, she cried impetuously, "I mean, I don't know. I wasn't here."
-
-Stone smiled gravely. "You were here," he said. "Now let us talk about
-what happened during your visit."
-
-An interruption was caused by a tap at the closed door.
-
-Impatiently, Trask rose and went to the door. It was Ito, bringing a
-telegram for Miss Austin. It had arrived at the Adams house, and had been
-sent over.
-
-Miss Mystery read it, with great difficulty controlled her agitation, as
-she quickly went to the blazing log fire and dropped the paper in.
-
-"Skip over to the Telegraph office and get a copy," said Stone quietly,
-and Fibsy obeyed.
-
-Then to Miss Austin's continued distress, Stone read the message aloud.
-It was from San Francisco, and it said:
-
-"Better own up and tell the whole truth. I have annexed Carl." It was
-signed merely "A" and apparently it was of dire import to its recipient.
-Miss Mystery sat silent, and wide-eyed in desperation, as she looked
-hopelessly from one to another.
-
-"Don't you think," said Stone, not unkindly, "that you'd better follow
-A's advice and make a clean breast of the whole matter?"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
- MISS MYSTERY'S TESTIMONY
-
-
-Miss Mystery looked from Stone's impassive face to Fibsy's eager boyish
-countenance. Then she looked at Maurice Trask.
-
-The latter showed deepest sympathy and interest but Trask also had a wary
-air, as if ready to interrupt any disclosures that might be damaging to
-the girl.
-
-"First of all," Stone said, "who sent you that telegram from San
-Francisco?"
-
-"I don't know." The calm little face was as expressionless as Stone's
-own, and she made her statement as straightforwardly as if it had been
-true.
-
-"Miss Austin," Stone spoke severely now, "it's to your own advantage to
-adopt a more amenable manner. You will not help your cause by
-prevarication or evasion. Unless you will answer my questions truly, I
-must find out these things for myself. I can do it."
-
-"If you can find out who sent that telegram, go ahead," she flared at
-him. "I tell you I don't know who sent it, and I don't know who 'A' is."
-
-"I know who she is," said Fibsy, and then Anita's quick, startled glance
-proved to the boy that his little ruse was successful and he had at least
-guessed the sex of the sender.
-
-"A woman," the astute lad mused, "and she has annexed Carl. Maybe Carl is
-another name for that escaped Japanese. But it's all so far away. How can
-they conduct operations between here and California!"
-
-"Miss Austin," Stone tried to win her confidence, "believe me I am most
-anxious to help you. Please tell me why you came over here that Sunday
-night. It is utterly useless to deny that you did come, now tell me why."
-
-Anita looked baffled, but after a moment's pause, she said, "Do you think
-I killed Doctor Waring?"
-
-"I know you didn't," broke in Fibsy, with enthusiasm. "Now, come across,
-Miss Austin, and I'll bet you F. Stone can dope out the whole game."
-
-"I know most of the circumstances already," Stone smiled, and followed up
-the small advantage he had gained. "You came over here late, secretly,
-across the snowy field. Doctor Waring let you in?"
-
-"Yes," Anita breathed the word, and her starry eyes never left Stone's
-face. She seemed almost hypnotized.
-
-"Then you sat down in the chair you're in now, and he locked the
-door--why did he do that?"
-
-"I don't know--he didn't! Stop! You have no right to torment me like
-this! I have counsel--Mr. Trask here is my lawyer. Let him tell me what
-to do!"
-
-Her nerves were tense, and her little fingers were continually twisting
-round themselves. Her face was agonized, and Stone felt as if he were
-guilty of utter cruelty. But he must go on.
-
-"Mr. Trask cannot tell what he does not know," he said, coldly. "I am in
-authority, you must answer me. Did Doctor Waring give you the money and
-the ruby pin?"
-
-"Yes, he did."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"As gifts. Why does any one give presents?"
-
-"Because he loved you?"
-
-"Yes." Anita's voice dropped to a softer tone, her eyes had a faraway
-look, and her sensitive little mouth quivered.
-
-"Yet you had known him but a few days! You had never seen him before you
-came to Corinth?"
-
-"Never."
-
-"Isn't that a strange admission? How could he become so infatuated in so
-short a time?"
-
-"Have you never heard of such a thing?" the face was almost roguish now,
-and the dark eyes showed a hint of smile.
-
-Stone was baffled. He gazed at this strange young person, who was either
-fooling him to the top of her bent or was a helpless, harassed child.
-
-"Was Doctor Waring related to you?" he asked, with a sudden new idea.
-
-"Oh, no. He was no relation. I tell you I never met him before I came
-here."
-
-"And he gave you the valuables?"
-
-"He did. I'll swear to that--though I have no witness to prove it."
-
-"And you accepted them! Accepted a large sum of money and a pin set with
-a precious stone from a man you scarcely knew! A man engaged to be
-married! A man of twice your own age! You must admit this calls for
-explanation."
-
-"Why does it? Hadn't he a right to give me those things if he chose?"
-
-"Wait a minute, Miss Austin. You loved him?"
-
-"Maybe."
-
-"Then, if you did, do you want his name stained, his memory blotted by an
-act that is, to say the least, questionable?"
-
-"But he did give them to me."
-
-"Unless you can say more clearly why he did so I'm not sure I can believe
-you. Did you ask for them?"
-
-"Oh, no!"
-
-Her disclaimer sounded true, but Stone began to think she was a
-consummate little actress as well as a clever falsifier.
-
-"Well," he said, after a short pause, "I may as well tell you, Miss
-Austin, that I am here to solve this mystery. That I am not at all
-satisfied that you are telling me the truth; that, therefore, I shall
-have to seek the truth elsewhere. I will tell you, too, that I don't want
-to implicate you, that I should much prefer to keep your name out of it
-all, but that you leave me no choice but to go ahead with my
-investigations wherever they may lead. A few more questions and you may
-go. What was Doctor Waring doing when you came?"
-
-"He--he was sitting at his desk." She looked troubled at Stone's speech
-and seemed half inclined to be more friendly.
-
-"You saw him through the French window, before you came in?"
-
-"Yes; the window has a silk curtain, but I saw him between the edge of
-the silk and the window sash."
-
-"Was he reading?"
-
-"No; there were books on the desk, but he was not reading."
-
-"He rose and let you in?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"He had sent for you?"
-
-"No--that is, yes."
-
-"You spoke truly the first time. He did not send for you and you came of
-your own accord. Was he surprised to see you?"
-
-"He didn't say so."
-
-"What did he say? What was his first word?"
-
-"Why--I don't know. He said--'Anita! You!'--or something like that."
-
-"And kissed you?"
-
-"Yes." And then a sudden wave of crimson spread over the scared little
-face. It was evident she had not voluntarily made the admission. It had
-slipped out as her memory was busy with the scene.
-
-"I won't stand it!" she cried, "I can't stand it! Mr. Trask, save me from
-this terrible man!"
-
-Maurice Trask sitting near her, held out his hand, and Miss Mystery took
-it. It seemed to reassure her, and she said, "Remember, you're my lawyer.
-Don't let him question me any more. Tell him things yourself--"
-
-"But he doesn't know things--" said Stone, gravely.
-
-"Then let him make them up! I refuse to stand this persecution. I didn't
-kill that man--"
-
-"Wait a moment, Miss Austin," Stone feared if he let her go now, he would
-lose his chance, "since you are admittedly the last person who is known
-to have seen Doctor Waring alive, you cannot avoid, or evade the
-strictest questioning. You were here," he spoke very gravely, "late at
-night. Next morning he was found dead. There are no footprints in the
-snow but your own. There was no other way into the room. Therefore, you
-are responsible for his death or--you know who is."
-
-"Must I--must I be convicted?"
-
-Her tone was heartbroken, her strained little face piteous in its appeal.
-But Stone did not believe in her. He had concluded she was entirely
-capable of pulling wool over her questioners' eyes, and he watched her
-keenly.
-
-"I don't say you must," he returned deliberately, "but I say you may."
-
-"Never," declared Trask. "You know what I told you, Mr. Stone."
-
-"And you know that I refused to accept your terms. I shall carry this
-matter through to the end. I do not say I think Miss Austin guilty of
-crime, but I do say she knows all about the death of Doctor Waring and
-she must be made to tell."
-
-"Suppose I say I--he killed himself," she said, "will you believe me?"
-
-"With your stiletto?" asked Stone, quickly.
-
-"Y--Yes."
-
-"And then you took the stiletto home and hid it?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"What for?"
-
-"To shield his memory. Suicide is a coward's act."
-
-"Rubbish!" Fibsy exploded, unable to keep quiet any longer. "I say, Miss
-Mystery, you _are_ a mystery! Why don't you tell what you know. It's up
-to you. Here you were with the victim, shortly before his death, you
-probably know all about what happened. By the way, how did you get out?"
-
-"Out the same way I came in."
-
-"And bolted that window-door behind you?"
-
-"Oh--no--well, you see--"
-
-"I see you are not to say another word, Miss Austin," Trask decreed. "I'm
-very sorry I asked Mr. Stone to take up this case. However, I shall take
-you home now, then I'll come back and I hope I can persuade Mr. Stone to
-discontinue his work. If I'd had any idea of these disclosures you've
-made, I never should have engaged his services. Come, Anita, I will take
-you home. Mr. Stone, await my return. I shan't be long."
-
-The two went, and Stone, pacing up and down the long room said musingly,
-"All centers round that girl."
-
-"Righto," said Fibsy, "but she didn't kill the man."
-
-"The trouble is, Terence, your saying that doesn't make it so."
-
-"No, but its being so makes me say it."
-
-Gordon Lockwood came in, his face full of anxiety.
-
-"I'm glad to see you alone for a moment, Mr. Stone," he said. "I saw
-Trask taking Miss Austin home. Now, tell me, please, can you get at the
-truth about that girl?"
-
-"I haven't as yet. She's as great a mystery as the death of Doctor
-Waring."
-
-"She is. But I have every faith in her. She is the victim of some
-delusion--"
-
-"Delusion?"
-
-"Yes; I mean she's under a mistaken sense of duty to somebody, or--"
-
-"State your meaning more definitely, will you?"
-
-"I'm not sure that I can. But I'm positive--"
-
-"Ah, now, Mr. Lockwood," this from Fibsy, "you're positive the young lady
-is an angel of light, because you're head over heels in love with her.
-That's all right, and I don't blame you--but, take it from me, you'll
-prove your case quicker, better and more surely, if you investigate the
-secret of Miss Mystery, than if you just go around babbling about her
-innocence and purity."
-
-Lockwood looked at the boy, ready to resent his impudence. But Fibsy's
-serious face and honest eyes carried conviction and the secretary at once
-took him for an ally.
-
-"You're right, McGuire," he said; "and, I for one am not afraid of the
-result of a thorough investigation of Miss Austin's affairs."
-
-"You've reason to be, though," Stone observed. "I can't be sure, of
-course, but many stray hints and bits of evidence, to my mind point to
-Miss Austin's close connection with the whole matter."
-
-"What is your theory as to the death, Mr. Stone," Lockwood asked.
-"Suicide or murder?"
-
-"Honestly, I don't know. I'm quite ready to form an opinion when I get
-some real evidence. I'm through questioning Miss Austin--I shouldn't have
-let her go otherwise. I want next to do a lot of further questioning. And
-I'd very much like to get hold of that servant, Nogi."
-
-"You think he's implicated?" Lockwood stared.
-
-"Why else would he run away? He must be found. He is probably the key to
-the whole situation."
-
-"Guilty?"
-
-"Maybe and maybe not. If he and Miss Austin were in collusion--"
-
-"I beg your pardon, Mr. Stone, but I cannot have any thing said in my
-presence that reflects on that young lady's good name. We are engaged to
-be married--that is, I consider myself bound to her, and hope to win her
-full consent."
-
-"But I understood--I thought, Trask--"
-
-"Mr. Trask wants to marry her, but I hardly think his suit will succeed.
-The lady must decide, of course, but I have reason to hope--"
-
-"Gee, Mr. Lockwood, 'course she'll take you," Fibsy informed him, "now,
-let's you and me get busy to find out Miss Mystery's mystery. You ought
-to know it, if you're going to marry her--and too, you can't believe
-there's anything that can't stand the light."
-
-"What can it be?" Lockwood asked, helplessly. "How can a young girl like
-that have a real secret that so pervades and surrounds her whole life
-that she will give no hint of it? Who is she? What is she? Why is she
-here? I don't believe she came here merely to sketch in water colors."
-
-"No," agreed Stone. "If that were all, why the mystery about her home and
-family? I understand she has given several contradictory statements as to
-where she really lives."
-
-"She has," assented Lockwood. "But may it not be just a twist of her
-humorous nature? I assure you she is roguishly inclined--"
-
-"No; it isn't a joke," Fibsy said, frowning at the thought. "She's got a
-real secret, a mystery that means a whole lot to her,--and prob'ly to
-other people. Well, F. Stone, I guess it's up to me to go out and seek
-her people." He sighed deeply. "I hate to leave the seat of war, but I
-gotta do it. Nobody else could ever ferret out the antecedents and
-general family doings of Miss Mystery but Yours Truly. And this is no
-idle boast. I'm going out for the goods and I'll fetch home the bacon."
-
-He looked glum at the prospect, for it looked like no easy or simple
-matter that he proposed to undertake.
-
-"You see," he went on, "that girl is stubborn--my, but she's stubborn.
-You'll have a handful, Mr. Lockwood. But if so be's you're willing to
-face the revelations, I'll go and dig 'em up."
-
-"Where do you think you'll go, Terence?" asked Stone.
-
-"To California, F. S., of course. Didn't that telegram come from there?
-All I've got to do is to find 'A' and the 'Carl' that she 'annexed' and
-there's your mystery of the young lady solved. But the death of the
-Doctor--that's another thing."
-
-"Do you really mean this?" Lockwood said, staring at Fibsy. "How can you
-find a needle in a haystack, like that?"
-
-"I can't--but I've gotta."
-
-"But it's so much simpler to get the information from Miss Austin
-herself."
-
-"You call that simple!" Fibsy looked at him. "Well, it isn't. It's easier
-to go to Mars, I should say, than to get any real information out of that
-little scrap of waywardness."
-
-"No, nothing can be learned from her," said Stone.
-
-"Then, shall I be off?" asked Fibsy.
-
-"Wait twenty-four hours, my lad, and then if we're no further along, I
-suppose you'll have to go. Nogi must be found."
-
-"I'm glad Mr. Trask called you in, Mr. Stone," Lockwood said, slowly,
-"but I do hope you won't associate any thought of Miss Austin with the
-crime. She could no more commit crime than a small kitten could."
-
-"I fancy you're right," and Stone, half absent-mindedly, "but opinions as
-to what people can or can't do, are of not much real use."
-
-"Have you a theory?"
-
-"Yes, I have a theory, but the facts don't fit it--and it seems as if
-they could not be made to. Yet it's a good theory."
-
-"You don't care to tell it to me?"
-
-"Why, I'm willing to do so. My theory is that John Waring committed
-suicide, but I can't make any facts bear me out. You see, it's not only
-the absence of a weapon, but all absence of motive, and even of
-opportunity."
-
-"Surely he had opportunity--in here alone."
-
-"It can't be opportunity if he had no implement handy. And nothing can
-explain away the missing weapon, and the locked room, on the suicide
-theory."
-
-"What can explain the locked room, on a murder theory?" Lockwood asked.
-
-"I haven't thought of anything as yet. What book was Doctor Waring
-reading that night?"
-
-"There were several on his desk, but the one that was found nearest the
-body, the one stained with blood, is a copy of Martial's Epigrams."
-
-"May I see it, please?"
-
-Lockwood brought the book and Fleming Stone examined it carefully. It was
-not a rare or finely bound edition, it seemed more a working copy or a
-book for reference. It was printed in Latin.
-
-"He was fond of Martial?" asked Stone.
-
-"He was a reader of all the classics. He preferred them, of course, in
-their original Latin or Greek. He was also a modern linguist."
-
-Stone opened the volume to the stained page, which was numbered 87. He
-studied it closely.
-
-"It's all Greek to me," he said, frowning, "even though it's Latin, but I
-hoped to read something on the page beside the printed text."
-
-However, the irregularly shaped red blur gave him no clue, and he
-returned the book to Lockwood.
-
-"Had the Doctor any private accounts?" the detective asked suddenly.
-
-"Not that I know of," replied the secretary. "He was a man of singularly
-few secrets, and I was always at liberty to open all letters, and had
-free access to his desk and safe. I never knew him to hide or secrete a
-paper of any sort."
-
-"No harm in looking," Stone said, and began forthwith to search the desk
-drawers and compartments.
-
-The search was fruitless, until at length, a small checkbook was found.
-
-And a curious revelation it gave them. For of its blank checks but one
-had been torn out, and the remaining stub gave the information that it
-was a check for ten thousand dollars drawn to the order of Anita Austin.
-
-Those who looked at it stared incredulously.
-
-"It is dated," Stone said, "the date that Doctor Waring died."
-
-It was. Had this too, been given to the strange young woman, whom Stone
-was beginning to designate to himself by the title of adventuress? Was it
-possible that young girl, who seemed scarce more than a child, had some
-how maneuvered to get all this from a man whom she had deliberately
-fascinated and infatuated?
-
-It was incredible--yet what else could be assumed?
-
-Gordon Lockwood looked deeply distressed. His lips set in a tight line,
-and he said, through his clenched teeth:
-
-"I don't care! Nothing can shake my faith in that girl! She is blameless,
-and only these misleading circumstances make you think otherwise, Mr.
-Stone."
-
-The detective looked at him as one might regard a hopeless lunatic.
-
-But young McGuire's face was a study.
-
-He looked horror-stricken and then dazed. Then he had an inspiration
-apparently, for he smiled broadly--only to lapse again into a profound
-gloom.
-
-"If it ain't the beatin'est!" he said, at last. "Whatcha make of it, F.
-Stone?"
-
-"I'm completely staggered for the moment. Fibs," the detective returned,
-"but these cumulative evidences of Miss Mystery's--er--acquisitive
-disposition, seem--I say _seem_ to lead to a suspicion of her undue
-influence over Doctor Waring, at least, as to obtaining money."
-
-"Oh, she didn't!" Lockwood fairly groaned. "Don't blame her! Perhaps
-Waring fell a victim to her beauty and grace, and perhaps he urged these
-gifts upon her--"
-
-"Perhaps," Fibsy said; "perhaps he threatened to kill her if she didn't
-accept his checks and coin and rubies!--and maybe she had to kill him in
-self-defense--"
-
-"Self-defense!" Lockwood cried, grasping at any straw. "Could it have
-been that?"
-
-"No," Stone said; "be rational, man, whatever made Anita Austin kill
-Doctor Waring, it wasn't a case of self-defense."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
- PLANNING AN ELOPEMENT
-
-
-There was some sort of telepathy or some subconscious impulse that made
-Anita Austin open her bedroom door in response to a light tap, although
-she had resolved to talk to nobody just then.
-
-But when she saw Gordon Lockwood she was glad she had, and, without
-waiting for an invitation he stepped inside the room and closed the door.
-
-He looked at her with a face full of compassion and love, but he spoke as
-one who must attend to an important business.
-
-"Anita," he said, speaking very low, "the crisis has come. They have
-learned of the check Doctor Waring gave you that night, and it is the
-last straw. Stone is already, I think, convinced of your guilt, and that
-young chap, McGuire, will get at the bottom of everything, I'm sure."
-
-"Check? What do you mean?" Miss Mystery said, with a blank look on her
-face.
-
-"Don't equivocate with me, dear." Lockwood laid his hand gently on hers.
-"There's no time now to tell you of my love, as I want to tell it. Now,
-we can only assume that it is all told, that we are engaged, and that we
-are to be married at once. We are going to elope, Anita."
-
-"Elope!" she stared at him, but her eyes grew soft and her pale cheeks
-flushed. "What _do_ you mean?"
-
-"It isn't a pretty word," Gordon smiled, "but it's the only thing to do,
-you see. If you stay here, you'll be arrested. If you go, I go with you.
-So--we both go, and that makes it an elopement."
-
-"But, Gordon--"
-
-"But, Anita--answer me just one question--do you love me?"
-
-"Yes," with an adorable upward glance and smile.
-
-"More than you loved Doctor Waring?"
-
-Their eyes met. Lockwood's usually inscrutable face was desperately
-eager, and his deep eyes showed smouldering passion. He held her by the
-shoulders, he looked steadily at her, awaiting her answer.
-
-"Yes," she said, at last, her lovely lips quivering.
-
-"That's all I want to know!" he whispered, triumphantly, as he kissed the
-scarlet lips, and drew the slender form into his embrace.
-
-"You must know more--" she began, "and--and I can't tell you. Oh,
-Gordon--"
-
-She hid her face on his broad shoulder, and he gently stroked her hair,
-as he said:
-
-"Don't tell me anything now, dearest. Don't ever tell me, unless you
-choose. And, anyway, I know it all. I know you had never known the Doctor
-before, and I'll tell you how I know. I found in his scrap basket a note
-to you--"
-
-"A note to me!" Fresh terror showed in the dark eyes.
-
-"Yes--don't mind. No one else ever saw it. I burned it. But it said,
-'Darling Anita. Since you came into my life, life is worth living'--or
-something like that--"
-
-"When--when did he write that?"
-
-"Sometime on that fatal Sunday. I suppose after he met you in the
-afternoon, and before you came that evening. Remember, Sweetheart, if
-ever you want to tell me all about that late visit to him, do so. But, if
-not, I never shall ask or expect you to. But that's all in the
-future--our dear future, which we shall spend together--together, Anita!
-Are you glad?"
-
-"Oh, so glad!" and the soft arms crept round his neck and Miss Mystery
-gave him a kiss that thrilled his very soul. "Will you take care of me,
-Gordon?"
-
-"Take care of you, my little love! Take care of you, is it? Just give me
-the chance!"
-
-"You seem to have a pretty big chance, right now," a smiling face reached
-up to his. "But--" she seemed suddenly to recollect something, "about a
-check--he didn't give me a check--"
-
-Lockwood laid a hand over her mouth.
-
-"Hush, dearest. Don't tell me things that aren't--aren't so. I saw the
-stub--a check for ten thousand dollars--made out to Anita Austin, and
-dated that very Sunday. Now, hush--" as she began to speak, "we've no
-time to talk these things over. I tell you the police are on your track.
-They will come here, they will arrest you--try to get that in your head.
-I am going to save you--first, for your own sweet sake, and also for my
-own."
-
-"But, Gordon, wait a minute. Do you believe I killed John Waring?"
-
-Lockwood looked at her.
-
-"Don't ask me that, Anita. And, truly, I don't know whether I believe it
-or not. I know you have told falsehoods, I know you were there that
-night, I know of his letter to you, of the check and of the ruby pin and
-the money. But I--no, I do not know that you killed him. There are many
-other theories possible--there's Nogi--but, my darling, it all makes no
-difference. I love you, I want you, whatever the circumstances or
-conditions of your life, or your deeds. I love you so, that I want you
-even if you are a criminal--for in that case, I want to protect and save
-you. Now, don't tell me you did or didn't kill the man, for--" he gave
-her a whimsical smile, "I couldn't believe you in either case! I've not
-much opinion of your veracity, and, too, it's too big a matter to talk
-about now. Of course I don't believe you killed him! You, my little love!
-And yet, the evidence is so overpowering that I--believe you did kill
-him! There, how's that for a platform? Now, let all those things be, and
-get ready to go away with me. I tell you we're going to elope and mighty
-quickly too. The difficulty is, to get away unseen. But it must be done.
-Pack a small handbag--a very small one. I'll plan our way out--and if we
-can make a getaway under the noses of Stone and his boy, we'll soon be
-all right. I've a friend who will motor us to a nearby town, where a dear
-old minister, who has known and loved me from boyhood, will marry us."
-
-"Doesn't he know about--about me?"
-
-"My little girl, leave all the details of this thing to me. Don't bother
-your lovely head about it. It will be all right--trust me--if we can
-escape."
-
-"Is it right for me to go? Oughtn't I stay and--what do they call it?
-give myself up?"
-
-"Anita, if I didn't love you so, I'd scold you, hard! Now, you obey your
-future lord and master, and get ready for a hurry-up wedding, I'm sorry
-that you can't have bridesmaids and choir boys--but, you'll pardon me, I
-know, if I remind you that that isn't my fault."
-
-Miss Mystery looked up and broke into laughter. Truly, she was a mystery!
-Her gayety was as spontaneous and merry as if she had never heard of
-crime or tragedy.
-
-Lockwood gazed at her curiously, and then nodded his handsome head, as he
-said, "You'll do, Anita! You're a little bit of all right."
-
-But in a moment her mood changed.
-
-"Gordon, we can't," she said, slowly. "We never can get away from this
-house--let alone the detectives. Miss Bascom is on continual watch and
-Mrs. Adams--"
-
-"I know, dear. That's it. I thought if you could manage that part, I'd
-see to evading the Stone faction. Can't you think up a plan?"
-
-"Love will find a way," she whispered, and unable to resist the inviting
-smile, Gordon again caught her in his arms, and held her close in an
-ecstasy of possession.
-
-"You are so sweet," he murmured, with an air of saying something
-important. "Oh, my Little Girl, how I love you! The moment I first saw
-you--"
-
-"When was that?"
-
-"That night at--at the Doctor's lectures. I sat behind you, I changed my
-seat to do so--and I counted the buttons on your dear little gray
-frock--that was one way I discovered your presence in the study that
-night." He spoke gravely now. "And there was another way. I heard you
-talking. Yes, I heard your blessed voice--remember, I loved you then--and
-I heard Waring talking to you. I could make out no word--I didn't
-try--but now I wish I had--for it might help you."
-
-"I wish you had, Gordon," she returned, solemnly, "it would have helped
-me."
-
-"But you can tell me, dear, tell me all the conversation. Surely you
-trust me now."
-
-"I trust you--but--oh, as you say, there's no time. It's a long story--a
-dreadful story--I don't want to tell you--"
-
-"Then you shan't. I've promised you that, you know. Not until you want to
-tell me, will I ask for a word of it."
-
-"Now, here's another thing," and Anita blushed, deeply, "if we go
-away--as you say--what about--about money?"
-
-Lockwood stared at her. "I have money," he said; "why do you ask that?"
-
-"But--but the awful detective people--said you--you were terribly in
-debt."
-
-"Brave little girl, to say that. I know you hated to. Well, my darling,
-those precious bills that those precious detectives dug up in my desk,
-are old bills that were owed by my father--his name was the same as
-mine--"
-
-"The same as yours! How queer!"
-
-"Oh, not a unique instance. Anyway, those bills I am paying off as I can.
-I'm not legally responsible for them, but I want to clear my dad's name,
-and all that. Now, all that can wait--while I take unto me a wife, and
-arrange for her comfort and convenience. But, is there--now remember, I'm
-not prying--is there any one whose permission you must ask to marry me?"
-
-"No, I'm twenty-one--that's of age in any state."
-
-"Why, you aged person! I deemed you about eighteen."
-
-"Do you mind?"
-
-"No; you goosie! But--your mother, now?"
-
-"Oh--my mother. She doesn't care what I do."
-
-"And your father? Forgive me, but I have to ask."
-
-"My father is dead."
-
-"Then come along. Let's begin to get ready to go."
-
-"Wait a minute--Gordon--to get married--must I--must I tell my real
-name?"
-
-His eyes clouded a trifle.
-
-"Yes, dear heart," he said, very gently, "yes, you must."
-
-"Then I can't get married, Gordon."
-
-Miss Mystery sat down and folded her little hands in her lap, her whole
-attitude that of utter despair.
-
-"But, Sweetheart, no one need know except the minister and witnesses--"
-
-"And you?"
-
-"Yes--and I--"
-
-"Oh, I can't marry you, anyway. I can't marry anybody. I can't tell who I
-am! Oh, let them take me away, and let them arrest me and I hope they'll
-convict me--and--"
-
-"Hush, my precious girl, hush." Lockwood took her in his arms, and let
-her stifle her sobs on his breast. He was bewildered. What was the truth
-about this strange child? For in her abandonment of grief, Anita seemed a
-very child, a tortured irresponsible soul, whose only haven was in the
-arms now around her.
-
-"You will go with me, anyway, Anita," he said, with an air of authority.
-"I must take care of you. We will go, as I planned. The minister I told
-you of, is a great and good man, he will advise you--"
-
-"Oh, no, I don't want to talk to a minister!"
-
-"Yes, you do. And his wife is a dear good woman. They will take you into
-their hearts and home--and then we can all decide what to do. At any
-rate, you must get away from here. Come, now, pack your bag--and would
-you mind--Anita--if I ask you not to take the--the money and the ruby
-pin--"
-
-"But he gave them to me! I tell you, Gordon, John Waring gave me those of
-his own free will--"
-
-"Because of his affection for you?"
-
-"Yes; for no other reason! I will keep the pin, anyway--I will!"
-
-"Anita, have you any idea how you puzzle me? how you torture me? Well,
-take what you like. Will you get ready now, and I will let you know as
-soon as I can, how and when we can start."
-
-A loud rap was followed by an immediate opening of the door, and Mrs.
-Adams came into the room.
-
-She stared at Lockwood, but made no comment on his presence there.
-
-"Miss Austin," she began, "I do not wish you to stay in my house any
-longer. I have kept you until now, because my husband was so sorry for
-you, and refused to turn you out. Nor am I turning you out, but--I wish
-you would leave us alone, Mr. Lockwood."
-
-Gordon started to speak, but Anita interrupted him.
-
-"Go, please," she said, quietly, and Lockwood obeyed.
-
-"I cannot blame you, Mrs. Adams," Miss Mystery said; "I daresay you have
-to consider your other boarders, and I thank you for your kindness and
-forbearance you have shown me so far."
-
-The tears were in the big dark eyes, and even as they moved Mrs. Adams to
-sympathy, she also wondered if they were real. "A girl who would redden
-her lips would be capable of any deceit and duplicity," Esther Adams
-reasoned.
-
-But she went on, calmly.
-
-"I come now, Miss Austin, to tell you that Mr. Trask is down stairs and
-wants to see you. He wants you to go to his house to stay. The Peytons
-are there, of course, and he offers you the shelter of his roof and
-protection until this dreadful matter is settled up."
-
-"Mr. Trask!" Anita looked her amazement.
-
-"Yes; now don't be silly. You very well know he is mad about you, and he
-hopes to get you freed and then marry you."
-
-"Oh, he does!" It was the old, scornful Miss Mystery who spoke. "Well,
-will you please tell him from me--"
-
-"Now, don't you be too hoity-toity, miss! You're mighty lucky to have a
-home offered you--"
-
-"Yes, that's quite true. Well, Mrs. Adams, will you go down, then and say
-I'll be down in a moment or two. Give me time to freshen my appearance a
-bit."
-
-"Yes, with paints and powders and cosmetics!" Esther Adams grumbled to
-herself, as she went down the stairs.
-
-As a matter of fact she quite misjudged the girl. Very rarely did Anita
-resort to artificial aid of that sort, but when she so desired, she used
-it as she would any other personal adornment.
-
-"She's coming down," Mrs. Adams announced, as she returned to Trask and
-they waited.
-
-But when the minutes grew to a quarter of an hour, and then nearly to a
-half, Mrs. Adams again climbed the stairs to hasten proceedings.
-
-This time she found the room empty.
-
-The absence, too, of brushes and combs, the disappearance of a small
-suitcase, and the fact that her hat and coat were gone all pointed
-unmistakably to the assumption that the girl had fled.
-
-"Well!" Mrs. Adams reported, "she's lit out, bag and baggage."
-
-"Gone!" exclaimed Trask in dismay.
-
-"Well, she isn't in her room. Her trunk is locked and strapped and her
-suitcase is missing. Her hat and coat's gone, too, so you can make your
-own guess."
-
-But Maurice Trask didn't stay there to make his guess.
-
-He went back home as fast as he could and told Fleming Stone the news.
-
-"Run away, has she?" said Stone. "I rather looked for that."
-
-"You did! And took no steps to prevent it! You're a nice detective, you
-are. Well, if you're so smart, where'd she go?"
-
-"Where's Lockwood?" was Stone's laconic response.
-
-"Lockwood!" exclaimed Trask. "Wherever he is, he hasn't run off with
-Anita Austin! If he has--by Jove, I'll break every bone in his body!"
-
-"You'll have to catch him first," smiled the detective.
-
-"I'll catch him! I'll set you to do it. And, looky here, if she's gone
-off with that man, you can go ahead and catch her, catch them both, and
-then go ahead and prove her guilty."
-
-"Is she?"
-
-"Is she? You bet she is! And I know it."
-
-"How do you know?"
-
-"I'll tell you. I know her eyebrows!"
-
-"So do I know her eyebrows. But they don't tell me she's a murderer."
-
-"Well, they tell me that! It's this way. Her eyebrows, are not only heavy
-and dark, but they almost meet over the bridge of her nose."
-
-"Darling nose!" put in Fibsy, who was interested in Anita but not in
-Trask's deductions.
-
-"Does your knowledge of physiognomy tell you that those meeting eyebrows
-are a sign of a criminal?" asked Stone.
-
-"Nothing of that sort. But they are the Truesdell brows."
-
-"The Truesdell brows?" Stone raised his own. "Sounds like a proprietary
-article. Not artificial, are they?"
-
-"Now, see here, Mr. Stone, I'm in no mood to be guyed. Those eyebrows are
-frequently seen in the Truesdell family. My grandfather's brother married
-a Truesdell."
-
-"Your grandfather's brother married a Truesdell. And your own grandfather
-didn't?"
-
-"No; I haven't those brows."
-
-"Well, you're not entitled to them, having no Truesdell blood in your
-veins."
-
-"But that girl has."
-
-"Indeed! Interesting, is it not?"
-
-"Aw, come off that line o' talk, F. S.," said Fibsy, knitting his brows,
-which were not Truesdellian. "I'm seein' a chink o' light. The brother of
-your grandfather, now, Mr. Trask, he was named--?"
-
-"Waring, of course. Henry Waring. My grandfather was James Waring."
-
-"And this Henry Waring--he was the father of Doctor John Waring?"
-
-As Fibsy said this, Stone sat upright, and gazed hard at Trask.
-
-"Yes, John Waring's father was Henry, and my grandfather was Henry's
-brother James. That's how I'm related. And being the only one, that's why
-I'm the heir here. But, don't you see, Doctor Waring's mother was a
-Truesdell--"
-
-"And Miss Austin is a relative of hers--a connection of the Truesdell
-family somehow--" exclaimed the now excited Fibsy, "and she found out
-about it, and came here and--"
-
-"Yes," Trask said, "and tried to get some money from John Waring on the
-ground of relationship."
-
-"What relation could she be?"
-
-"Maybe a niece of Doctor Waring--or a cousin. Maybe the same relation to
-Doctor Waring's mother that I am to his father. Then, that would explain
-his giving her money and the pin--and maybe she burnt the will! and then
-she--"
-
-"But it complicates everything," said Stone, who was thinking quickly.
-"However, if Miss Austin is connected with the Truesdell family it gives
-us a way to look to learn her history."
-
-"Well, learn it," said Trask, abruptly. "I'm not afraid of losing my
-inheritance for I'm in the direct Waring line and she can't be."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
- MISS MYSTERY NO LONGER
-
-
-Trask, helped along by Fleming Stone, investigated the family tree of the
-Warings. But they ran up against a blank wall. As far as they could learn
-Doctor Waring never had brother or sister. His mother, who was a
-Truesdell, had also been an only child. But of course, Miss Mystery could
-be of the Truesdell family, and could, as Trask observed, be the same
-relation to John Waring's mother that Trask was to John Waring's father.
-Which relation was that of second cousin.
-
-"It gives a reason for the girl's presence here," Stone said, "and as
-it's the only reason we can think of, it must be followed up."
-
-"And I'll follow it up," Trask said, "if I once get hold of that girl.
-Where can she be, Mr. Stone?"
-
-"Not very far away, I think, as all the stations and routes out of town
-are watched. She'd have trouble to leave Corinth."
-
-"She could get out in a motor car."
-
-"Who'd take her?"
-
-"Lockwood, of course."
-
-But just then, Gordon Lockwood came into the Waring study. His usual calm
-was entirely gone, his eyes wildly staring and his voice quivered as he
-said, "She's gone! Anita's gone!"
-
-"Yes, I know it--I thought you went with her!" and Stone stared in turn.
-
-"No, I didn't!" Lockwood said, quite unnecessarily. "Find her, Mr.
-Stone--you can, can't you?"
-
-"I can find her," said Fibsy, "if you'll tell me one thing, Mr. Lockwood,
-right straight out."
-
-"What is it? I'll tell you anything. I'm afraid--"
-
-"You're afraid she's killed herself," said Fibsy, calmly. "Well you tell
-me this. Are you two--aw--you know--"
-
-The boy blushed, and Stone smiled a little as he said:
-
-"McGuire is a bit shy of romantic matters. He means are you and Miss
-Austin lovers?"
-
-"We are," said Lockwood, emphatically. "She is my fiancee--"
-
-"All right," said Fibsy, "then I'll find her. She hasn't done anything
-rash, in that case."
-
-He wagged his wise little head.
-
-"Where is she?" Stone asked, confident that the boy could tell. He knew
-of Fibsy's almost clairvoyant powers of divining truth in certain
-situations.
-
-"Want her here?" he asked, laconically.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"I'll get her."
-
-Snatching his cap, he darted from the house, but he was closely followed
-by Maurice Trask. Lockwood would have stopped Trask, but Stone said:
-
-"Let him go. This thing is coming to a crisis--Trask will help it along."
-
-Fibsy went toward the Adams house, but stopped at the house next door to
-it. This was the home of Emily Bates.
-
-Ringing that lady's doorbell, Fibsy asked to see her.
-
-"Mrs. Bates," he said, politely, while Trask listened, "we want to see
-Miss Austin, please."
-
-"Anita!" said Mrs. Bates, flurriedly; "why--she--she isn't--"
-
-"Oh, yes, she is here," said the boy, patiently, rather than rudely. "We
-have to see her, you see."
-
-"Here I am," said Miss Mystery, coming in from the next room. "I think,"
-she said turning to Mrs. Bates, "I think, as you advised me, I'll tell
-all."
-
-"Don't tell it here!" cried Fibsy. "Please, Miss Austin--don't spill your
-yarn here--oh, I mean, don't--don't divulge--"
-
-The unusual word nearly choked the excited boy, who always in moments of
-strong emotion lapsed into careless English, but who tried not to.
-
-"Now, look here," Maurice Trask put in. "Here's where I take hold. Miss
-Austin, you have told your story to Mrs. Bates?"
-
-"Yes," said, Anita, looking very sad, but determined.
-
-"Then you tell it to me. I'm heir to the Waring estate, and so I have a
-right to know all you know about--the family."
-
-His knowing look proved to Anita that he assumed also her right to be
-classed with "the family" and she looked at him in astonishment.
-
-"You know?" she cried.
-
-"Yes--I know," he spoke very sternly. "And I insist upon a private
-interview with you, before you tell your story to any one else."
-
-"You shall have it, then," she said, and her eyes grew grave. "Mrs.
-Bates, will you and Terence leave us alone for ten minutes. That will be
-long enough, and then, I'll go to see Mr. Stone--if necessary."
-
-"Now, look here," Trask said, as the door closed after the others, "I
-know who you are."
-
-"I don't believe it," and Miss Mystery looked at him straight from
-beneath the "Truesdell brows."
-
-"Well, anyway, I know you are a Truesdell connection."
-
-"Yes, I am. Go on."
-
-"I don't know just what branch," he went on, a little lamely.
-
-"But it's a branch strong enough to hold me--and also to interfere with
-this heirship of yours."
-
-"Can't be. There's no Truesdell so close to John Waring as I am."
-
-"You think so? Then listen."
-
-As Miss Mystery told him her story, the man's face fell, he sat, almost
-petrified with astonishment, and when she had finished the short but
-amazing recital, he said:
-
-"My heavens! What are you going to do?"
-
-"I don't know what to do."
-
-"If you tell--I--"
-
-"Of course you do."
-
-"And if you don't tell--then John Waring's name is left unstained--"
-
-"There is no shadow of stain on John Waring's name! What do you mean?"
-
-"Now, look here, Miss Austin, you keep quiet about all this, will you?
-I'll call off those sleuths and I'll arrange to close up and cover up the
-whole matter. Then, you marry me--there's only a distant cousinship
-between us--and I'll put up the biggest memorial to Waring you ever heard
-of."
-
-"Omit the clause about my marrying you," she returned, "and I may agree
-to your plans. I haven't quite decided what to do--and beside, Mr. Trask,
-who killed my--Doctor Waring?"
-
-"Never mind who killed him. Call it suicide--it must have been anyway--"
-
-"No--I'm not sure it was--oh, I don't know what to do."
-
-"Time's up," called Fibsy through the closed door. "And, I say, Miss
-Austin, you take my tip, and come along and tell your story to F. Stone.
-It'll be your best bet in the long run."
-
-Perhaps it was the boy's speech, perhaps it was the gleam of disappointed
-greed that Anita saw in Trask's eyes, but she rose, with a sudden
-decision, and said, as she opened the door:
-
-"That's just what I'll do. Come with me, Mrs. Bates--or, would you rather
-not?"
-
-"Oh, I can't," said Emily Bates, "don't ask me, Anita, dear."
-
-"No, you stay here. I'll come back soon."
-
-And so Miss Mystery again walked across the snow-covered field to the
-Waring house, this time to remove all occasion for using her nickname.
-
-"You found her?" said Stone, as the trio came into the study, where he
-and Lockwood still sat.
-
-"Yes," said Fibsy. "I just thought where would a poor, hunted kid go? And
-I said to myself, she'd go to the nearest and nicest lady's house she
-knew of. And of course, that was Mrs. Bates' and sure enough there she
-was. And--she's going to tell all!"
-
-Fibsy was melodramatic by nature, and his gesture indicated an important
-revelation.
-
-"I am," said Anita, quietly.
-
-She went straight to Lockwood's side, and he took her hand calmly, and
-led her to a seat on the wide davenport, then sat beside her.
-
-Her hand still in his, she told her story.
-
-"I am of Truesdell blood," she began, "as Mr. Trask surmised. But, also,
-I am of Waring blood. Doctor John Waring was my father."
-
-No one spoke. The surprise was too great. In his wildest theories,
-Fleming Stone had never thought of this.
-
-Fibsy's great astonishment was permeated with the quick conviction, "then
-she didn't kill him!"
-
-Gordon Lockwood was conscious of a rapturous reassurance that he had no
-rival as a lover.
-
-Trask, already knowing the truth, sat gloomily realizing he was not the
-heir.
-
-Anita, her beautiful face sad, yet proud to acknowledge her ancestry,
-went on:
-
-"This is his story. When John Waring was twenty years old, he met a young
-woman--an actress--who so infatuated him that he married her. They were
-absolutely uncongenial and unfitted for one another, and after a few
-weeks, they agreed to separate. There was no question of divorce, they
-merely preferred to live apart. He sent her money at stated intervals but
-he pursued his quiet, studious life, and she her life of gayety and
-sport. She was a good woman--she _is_ a good woman--she is my mother."
-
-Another silence followed this disclosure. Is, she had said--not was. And
-John Waring her father!
-
-Gordon Lockwood held her hand closely. He was content to listen. Whatever
-she could say could not lessen his love and adoration.
-
-"I tell you this, for her sake and--my father's also. There is no stigma
-to be attached to either, they were merely so utterly opposite in
-character and disposition that they could not live together.
-
-"As I said, after a few weeks they separated, and--my father did not know
-of my birth. My mother would not let him know, lest he come back to her.
-She was a light-hearted, carefree girl, and while she loved me, she did
-not love my father. Later on--when I was about four, I think, she caused
-a notice of her death to be sent to my father. This was because she
-wanted to sever all connection, and take no chance of ever meeting him
-again. She was at that time a successful actress, and earned all the
-money she wanted. She adored me, she had no love affairs, she lived only
-for me and her art. Though a good actress, she was not widely renowned,
-and in California, where she had chosen to make her home, she was liked
-and respected. The climate just suited her love of ease, freedom and
-indolence--as a New England life of busy activity would have been
-impossible to her. I want you to understand my mother. She was--she is, a
-mere butterfly, caring only for trifles and simple gayety. Her home is
-charming, her personality, that of a delightful child. But her
-temperament is one that cannot stand responsibilities and chafes at
-demands. However, all that matters little. The facts are that John
-Waring, learning of his wife's death, devoted himself utterly to his
-books and his study.
-
-"When my mother saw in the papers he was about to marry, she was
-appalled. She didn't know what to do. She couldn't let him marry another
-woman, unaware of her existence. She couldn't raise a question of divorce
-for she knew that would tend to reflect unpleasantly on his past.
-
-"And, too, at last, she was beginning to feel as if she might like to
-resume her position as his wife, now that he was prominent and wealthy.
-She told me the whole story--of which I had been utterly ignorant, and
-she sent me here. I was to see Doctor Waring and use my own judgment as
-to when and how I should tell him all this.
-
-"I came here, with a feeling of dislike and resentment toward a father
-who had been no father to me. Mother exonerated him, to be sure, but it
-was all such a surprise to me, that I accepted the errand in a spirit of
-bravado and was prepared to make trouble if necessary.
-
-"But when I saw John Waring--when I realized that splendid man was my
-father--I knew that all my love, all my allegiance was his, and that my
-mother was as nothing to me, compared with my wonderful father!
-
-"Except for what Mr. Trask calls the Truesdell brows, I look exactly like
-my mother. Also she resumed her maiden name of Anita Austin after they
-separated. So you may imagine the shock when Doctor Waring first heard
-the name, and first saw the living image of his wife, whom, you must
-remember, he supposed dead.
-
-"But I had my mission to perform--and so, I came here, that Sunday
-night."
-
-The audience sat motionless. Lockwood, holding her hand, felt every
-tremor of her emotion as the girl told her story. Fleming Stone,
-realizing that he was hearing the most dramatic revelation of his career,
-listened avidly. Fibsy, with staring eyes and open mouth, clenched his
-fists in enthralled interest, and Maurice Trask heard it all with ever
-growing conviction that he must give up his supposed inheritance.
-
-As Anita began to tell of that Sunday night, the situation became even
-more tense.
-
-"I came to the French window, and tapped lightly. Doctor Waring let me
-in, and I sat by him in that plush chair.
-
-"The conversation I had with my father I shall not detail. It is my most
-sacred and beloved memory. We were as one in every way. We loved each
-other from the first word. We proved to be alike in our tastes and
-pursuits. Oh, if he could have lived! I told him of my mother and myself,
-and he was crushed. I wanted to spare him, but what could I do? He had to
-know--although the knowing meant the ruining of his career. He said, at
-once, he could not take the Presidency of the College, with the story of
-his past made public, nor could he honorably suppress it. He couldn't
-marry Mrs. Bates--nor could he instal my mother as mistress here.
-
-"He had done no real wrong, in making that early and ill-advised
-marriage, but it seemed to him a blot on his scutcheon, and an indelible
-one.
-
-"He would sit and brood over these fearful conditions, then, suddenly he
-would realize my existence afresh, and rejoice in it. He loved me at once
-and deeply--and I adored him. Never father and daughter, I am sure,
-crowded a lifetime of affection into such a few moments."
-
-Bravely Anita went on, not daring to pause to think. Her hand, tightly
-clasped in Lockwood's, trembled, but her voice was steady, for it was her
-opportunity to clear her father's name, and she must neglect no slightest
-point.
-
-"At last, he told me I must go away, and he would think out what he could
-do. He gave me the money, for he was afraid I hadn't sufficient cash with
-me, and he gave me the ruby pin, saying I must keep it forever as my
-father's first gift to me. With infinite gentleness he bade me good-by,
-and softly opened the glass door for me. I went away and he closed the
-door.
-
-"I went home to the Adams house, making, of course, those footprints in
-the snow. It was a very cold night, I remember the clear shining stars,
-but I thought of nothing but my father--my splendid, wonderful father.
-And I hoped, oh, how I hoped, that some way would be found that he and I
-could spend our lives together. I didn't know what he would do--but I
-prayed to God that some way out might be found.
-
-"The rest you know. Of the manner of my father's death, I know nothing at
-all. Of Nogi, I have no knowledge. I kept all this secret at first,
-because I hoped to shield my father's name better that way. But I think
-now, it's better told. I couldn't live under the weight of such a secret.
-
-"One more word as to my mother. She has had an admirer for many years,
-named Carl Melrose. She has kept him at a distance, but, as you know from
-the telegram she sent me, she has already either married him or promised
-to. Also, she advised me to tell the whole truth. I have done so."
-
-Unheeding the others, Lockwood put his arm round the exhausted girl as
-she fell over toward him. His wonderful calm helped her, and his gentle
-yet firm embrace gave her fresh courage to endure the strain.
-
-"Thank you, Miss Austin," and Stone spoke almost reverently. "You have
-shown marvelous wisdom and bravery and I congratulate you on your entire
-procedure. You are an exceptional girl, and I am proud to know you."
-
-This was a great deal for Fleming Stone to say, and Anita acknowledged it
-with a grateful glance.
-
-Fibsy, his eyes streaming with unchecked tears, came over and knelt
-before her.
-
-"Oh, Miss Austin!" he sobbed, "Oh, Miss Anita!"
-
-Trask alone remained unmoved, and sat with folded arms and frowning face.
-
-But little attention was paid him, and Stone said, thoughtfully:
-
-"Our problem of the mystery of Doctor Waring's death is as great as
-ever."
-
-"It is," agreed Lockwood, "but I am sure now, Mr. Stone, that it was a
-suicide. The motive is supplied, for I knew Doctor Waring so well, I knew
-the workings of his great and good mind, and I am sure that he felt there
-was no other course for him. I can see just how he decided that the
-exposure of all this would react against the reputation of the College.
-That the sensation and scandal that would fill the papers would harm the
-standing of the University of Corinth, and that--and that alone--caused
-his decision. I know him so well, that I can tell you that never, never
-would he take his life to save himself trouble or sorrow, but for others'
-sake--and I include Mrs. Bates--he made the sacrifice.
-
-"I can see--and I am sure of what I say--how he realized that the press
-and the public would forgive and condone a dead man, when, if he lived,
-the brunt of the whole matter would fall on his beloved College and on
-the woman he loved and respected.
-
-"Now--as I feel sure he foresaw--such of this story as must be made
-public will have far less weight and prominence, than if he were alive.
-_I_ know all this is so--for, I knew John Waring as few people knew him."
-
-A grateful glance from John Waring's daughter thanked him for this
-tribute.
-
-"That ten thousand dollar check?" Trask said, suddenly, for his mind was
-still concerned with the financial side.
-
-"I think that must have been sent to my mother," said Anita. "She, as I
-told you, returned to the use of her maiden name, and during our
-interview, my father told me he should write her at once and send her
-money. I feel sure he did do so--"
-
-"Without doubt," Lockwood said; "and if so, the letter would have been
-mailed with the collection next morning. The returning voucher will
-show."
-
-"Also the letter he wrote my mother will corroborate all I have told
-you," said Anita, and both her assertion and Gordon's, later came true.
-
-"I felt," Anita said, by way of further explanation, "that Mrs. Bates
-ought to know all. So, when Mrs. Adams practically put me out of her
-house, and I had no wish to accept Mr. Trask's invitation to come over
-here, nor," she smiled affectionately at Lockwood, "could I fall in with
-your crazy plans--I just went next door and told Mrs. Bates all about it.
-She was very dear and sweet to me, and now, if you please, I will go back
-there. I am weary and exhausted--I cannot stand any more. But when you
-want me, I can be found at Mrs. Bates'. I leave all matters to be decided
-or settled, in the hands of Mr. Lockwood and Mr. Stone. Fibsy, dear, will
-you escort me home?"
-
-With a suddenly acquired dignity, Fibsy rose, and stood by her side, and
-in a moment the two went away together.
-
-When the boy returned the others were absorbed in the discussion of the
-mysterious death of John Waring.
-
-"I'm inclined to give it up," Fleming Stone said, thinking deeply.
-
-"Don't do it, F. Stone," Fibsy said, earnestly. "It's better to find out.
-You never have gave up a case."
-
-"No. Well, Fibs, which way shall we look?"
-
-A strange embarrassment came over the boy's face, and then he said,
-diffidently:
-
-"Say, gentlemen, could I be left alone in this room for a little while? I
-don't say I kin find out anythin'--but I do wanta try."
-
-The lapse into careless enunciation told Stone how much in earnest his
-young colleague was, and he rose, saying, "You certainly may, my boy. The
-rest of us will have a conference in some other room, as to what part of
-Miss Austin's story must be made public."
-
-Left to himself, Fibsy went at once to the bookcase that held the defaced
-copy of Martial, that John Waring had been reading the night he died.
-
-Opening the volume at the blood-stained page, the unlettered boy eagerly
-read the lines. Tried to read them, rather, and groaned in spirit because
-he knew no Latin.
-
-Small wonder that he was nonplused, for this was all he read:
-
- MARTIAL'S EPIGRAMS
-
- Liber IV, Epigram XVIII
-
- Qua vicina pluit Vipsanis porta columnis
- Et madet assiduo lubricus imbre lapis,
- In iugulum pueri, qui roscida tecta subibat,
- Decidit hiberno praegravis unda gelu:
- Cumque peregisset miseri crudelia fata,
- Tabuit in calido vulnere mucro tener.
- Quid non saeva sibi voluit Fortuna licere?
- Aut ubi non mors est, si iugulatis aquae?
-
-His chin in his hands, he pored over the Latin in utter despair, and
-rising, started for the door.
-
-Then he paused; "I must do it myself--" he murmured: "_I must._"
-
-So he hunted the shelves until he found a Latin Dictionary.
-
-He was not entirely unversed in the rudiments of the language, for Stone
-had directed his education at such odd hours as he could find time for
-study.
-
-And so after some hard and laborious digging, Fibsy at last gathered the
-gist of the Latin stanza.
-
-His eyes shone, and he stared about the room.
-
-"It ain't possible--" he told himself, "and yet--gee, there ain't nothing
-else possible!" He rose and looked out at every window, he noted
-carefully the catches--he paced from the desk to the small rear windows
-of the room, and back again.
-
-"It's the only thing," he reiterated, "the _only_ thing. Oh, gee! _what_
-a thing!"
-
-He went in search of Stone, and found the three men shut in the living
-room and with them was Nogi.
-
-Stone's persevering efforts, by advertisements and circulars had at last
-succeeded, and the impassive and non-committal Japanese was there, and
-quite willing to tell all he knew.
-
-Fibsy interrupted his story.
-
-"Go back," he directed, "to the beginning. Let me hear it all. It's O.
-K., F. S."
-
-"I was attending to my dining-room duties," Nogi said, "and I had taken
-the water tray to the study. I was weary and hoped the master would soon
-retire. So, I occasionally peeped through the small window from the
-dining-room. I saw a lady come and make a visit, and then I saw her and I
-heard her go away. Then I hoped the master would go to bed. But, no--he
-was very busy. He wrote letters, he burned some papers, he moved about
-much. He was restless, disturbed. Then he sat at his desk and read his
-book."
-
-"This one?" cried Fibsy, excitedly waving the Martial.
-
-"I think so--one like that, anyway."
-
-"This was the one! Go on."
-
-"Then--oh, it was strange! Then the master got up, went to the small
-window at the back of the room--"
-
-"Which one?"
-
-"The one by the big globe, and he opened it. But for a moment--"
-
-"Did he put his hand out?" Fibsy cried.
-
-"Yes, I suppose to see if it rained. Yes, he put his hand out for a
-moment, then he closed the window."
-
-"And locked it?" asked Fibsy.
-
-"It locks itself, with a snap catch. Then--ah, here is the strange thing!
-Then he went back, sat at his desk, and in a moment he fell over and the
-blood spurted out."
-
-"Didn't he stab himself?" Fibsy asked.
-
-"I don't know. He didn't seem to do anything but scratch his ear, and
-over he fell! Such a sight! I was afraid, and I ran away--fast."
-
-"All very well," said Stone, "but what became of the weapon?"
-
-"I know," Fibsy almost screamed, in his excitement. "Oh, F. Stone--I
-know!"
-
-"Well, tell us, Terence--but steady, now, my boy. Don't get too excited."
-
-"No, sir," and the lad grew suddenly quiet. "But I know. Wait just a
-minute, sir. Where are the photographs of the house that the detectives
-took the day after?"
-
-"I'll get them," Lockwood said, and left the room.
-
-He returned, and Fibsy found a magnifying glass and looked carefully at
-certain pictures.
-
-"It proves," he said, solemnly. "F. Stone, you have solved your greatest
-case!"
-
-It was characteristic of the boy, that although the solution was his own,
-his deference to Stone was sincere and un-self-conscious.
-
-"Please," he said, "I don't know Latin, but you will find the explanation
-of Doctor Waring's death on that red stained page. He was reading
-Martial, as we know, and--" he pointed to the Epigram on the page in
-question, "as he read that, he found a way out."
-
-The grave statement was impressive, and Stone took the book.
-
-"Shall I translate, or read the Latin aloud?" he asked the others.
-
-"Wait a minute, I'll get a Martial in English," Lockwood said, out of
-consideration for Trask's possible ignorance of the dead language.
-
-"What number is the Epigram?" he asked, returning.
-
-Stone told him, and Lockwood found the place, and passed the English
-version to Stone. Aloud, the detective read this:
-
- TRANSLATION
-
- Book IV, Epigram 18
-
- On a youth killed by the fall of a piece of ice.
-
- Just where the gate near the portico of Agrippa is always dripping with
- water, and the slippery pavement is wet with constant showers, a mass
- of water, congealed by winter's cold, fell upon the neck of a youth who
- was entering the damp temple, and, when it had inflicted a cruel death
- on the unfortunate boy, the weapon melted in the warm wound it had
- made. What cruelties does not Fortune permit? Or where is not death to
- be found, if you, the waters, turn cut-throats.
-
-"And so you see," Fibsy broke the ensuing silence, "he decided to stab
-himself with an icicle, and he did. He did!" he repeated, triumphantly,
-"he went to that window back by the big globe and got one--and here's the
-proof! Look through the glass, F. S."
-
-Stone did so, and without doubt, the fringe of icicles that hung from
-that particular window sash showed one missing! It was the very window
-that Nogi stated Waring had opened, and had put his hand out of for a
-moment.
-
-Clearly, he had broken off an icicle, strong and firm on that freezing
-night, had returned to his chair, and inspired by the story of the youth
-under the portico of Agrippa, had stabbed his own jugular vein with the
-sharp, round point, and had fallen unconscious.
-
-The icicle, melting in the wound, had disappeared, and death had followed
-in a moment or two.
-
-They went to the study, and Nogi was made to imitate the movements he saw
-Doctor Waring make. It left no doubt of the exact facts and the mystery
-was solved.
-
-"Do you suppose he meant to make it seem a murder?" asked Stone,
-thoughtfully.
-
-"He did not!" defended Lockwood. "That is he did not mean to implicate
-anybody. He was a man amenable to sudden suggestion, and apt to follow
-it. I am certain the idea came to him, as he read his book, and in the
-impulse of the moment he rose, got the implement and did the deed. It was
-like him to read that book after his talk with his daughter. He often
-resorted to reading for a time to clear his mind for some important
-decision. Had he not read that very page, he would in all probability not
-have taken his life at that time."
-
-"There can be no doubt of it all," said Stone. "Fibsy, the credit of the
-discovery is yours. You did a great piece of work."
-
-Fibsy blushed with delight at Stone's praise, which he cared for more
-than anything else in life, but he said:
-
-"Aw, I just chanced on it. But I found out another thing! While I was
-workin' on that translatin' business, the telephone rang. I answered, but
-somebody took it on an extension, so I hung up.
-
-"But I was waitin' quite a few minutes, and, what do you think? I
-happened to rest my forehead on the telephone transmitter, and--"
-
-"The red ring!" cried Stone. "Of course!"
-
-"Of course," Fibsy repeated. "Pokin' around for a Latin Dictionary, I
-passed a lookin' glass, and there on me noble forehead I saw a red ring,
-about two inches across. It's gone now."
-
-"Yes," Stone said. "Without doubt, Doctor Waring was telephoning--or
-perhaps was answering a call and he rested his head on the instrument."
-
-"He often did that," said Lockwood, "but I never noticed a ring left."
-
-"In life," Stone said, "it would disappear quickly. But if it happened
-just before he died, rigor mortis would preserve the mark. Any way it
-must have been that."
-
-The solution of the mystery, so indubitably the true one, was accepted by
-the police.
-
-The matter was given as little publicity as possible, for Anita and Mrs.
-Bates, the two most deeply concerned both wished it so. No stigma of
-cowardice rested on John Waring's name, for all who knew him knew that
-his act was the deed of a martyr to circumstances and was prompted by a
-spirit of loyalty to his College and unwillingness to let his own
-misfortunes in any way redound to its disparagement.
-
-He trusted, they felt sure, that the truth would never be discovered and
-that the tragedy of his death would preclude blame or censure.
-
-Himself, he never thought of, in his unselfish life or equally unselfish
-death.
-
-Trask, perforce, resigned all claim to the estate, and Anita and her
-mother arranged matters between themselves.
-
-The assumption was that John Waring's will, which he burned, had been
-made in Mrs. Bates' favor, but on learning of his nearer heirs, he
-destroyed it.
-
-"Anita Waring," Lockwood murmured softly when at last they were alone
-together.
-
-"I love the name," she said, "and it is really mine."
-
-"But it will be yours so short a time, it's scarcely worth while to use
-it," Gordon returned. "It will be a short time, won't it, sweetheart?"
-
-"Yes, indeed! I want to go away from Corinth forever. I love my father's
-memory, but I can't stand these scenes. I am tired of mystery in name and
-in deed. I just want to be--Anita Lockwood."
-
-Whereupon Gordon lost his head entirely.
-
-
-
-
- _CAROLYN WELLS'_
- _Baffling detective stories in which Fleming Stone, the great American
-Detective, displays his remarkable ingenuity for unravelling mysteries_
-
-
- THE MYSTERY OF THE SYCAMORE
- RASPBERRY JAM
- THE DIAMOND PIN
- VICKY VAN
- THE MARK OF CAIN
- THE CURVED BLADES
- THE WHITE ALLEY
- ANYBODY BUT ANNE
- THE MAXWELL MYSTERY
- A CHAIN OF EVIDENCE
- THE CLUE
- THE GOLD BAG
-
- EACH WITH FRONTISPIECE IN COLOR
- 12MO. CLOTH
-
- PTOMAINE STREET
- A Rollicking Parody on a Famous Book.
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber's Notes
-
-
---Copyright notice provided as in the original--this e-text is public
- domain in the country of publication.
-
---Moved promotional material to the end of the book.
-
---Silently corrected palpable typos; left non-standard spellings and
- dialect unchanged.
-
---Provided an original cover image, for free and unrestricted use with
- this Distributed Proofreaders eBook.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mystery Girl, by Carolyn Wells
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mystery Girl, by Carolyn Wells
-
-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 Mystery Girl
-
-Author: Carolyn Wells
-
-Release Date: March 19, 2014 [EBook #44984]
-
-Language: English
-
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-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MYSTERY GIRL ***
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-(This book was produced from scanned images of public
-domain material from the Google Print project.)
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-</pre>
+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44984 ***</div>
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<li>Silently corrected palpable typos; left non-standard spellings and dialect unchanged.</li>
<li>Provided an original cover image, for free and unrestricted use with this Distributed Proofreaders eBook.</li></ul>
-
-
-
-
-
-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mystery Girl, by Carolyn Wells
-
-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 Mystery Girl
-
-Author: Carolyn Wells
-
-Release Date: March 19, 2014 [EBook #44984]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MYSTERY GIRL ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Mardi Desjardins and the
-Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
-(This book was produced from scanned images of public
-domain material from the Google Print project.)
-
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-
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-
-
-
-
- THE MYSTERY
- GIRL
-
-
- BY
- CAROLYN WELLS
- _Author of "Vicky Van," "Raspberry Jam," &c._
-
-
- PHILADELPHIA AND LONDON
- J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
- 1922
-
- COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
- PRINTED BY J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY
- AT THE WASHINGTON SQUARE PRESS
- PHILADELPHIA, U. S. A.
-
-
- TO
- HUBER GRAY BUEHLER
- A GRAVE AND REVEREND SEIGNEUR WHO
- POSSESSES THE ADDED GRACE OF A RARE
- TASTE IN MYSTERY STORIES
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
- I. A President-elect 9
- II. Miss Mystery Arrives 28
- III. Thirteen Buttons 47
- IV. A Broken Teacup 65
- V. The Tragedy 84
- VI. An Incredible Case 103
- VII. The Volume of Martial 121
- VIII. Where is Nogi? 140
- IX. A Love Letter 158
- X. Who is Miss Mystery? 176
- XI. The Spinster's Evidence 193
- XII. Maurice Trask, Heir 212
- XIII. The Truesdell Eyebrows 231
- XIV. A Proposal 250
- XV. Fleming Stone Comes 269
- XVI. Miss Mystery's Testimony 287
- XVII. Planning an Elopement 305
- XVIII. Miss Mystery no Longer 322
-
-
-
-
- THE MYSTERY GIRL
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I
- A PRESIDENT-ELECT
-
-
-Quite aside from its natural characteristics, there is an atmosphere
-about a college town, especially a New England college town, that is
-unmistakable. It is not so much actively intellectual as passively aware
-of and satisfied with its own intellectuality.
-
-The beautiful little town of Corinth was no exception; from its
-tree-shaded village green to the white-columned homes on its outskirts it
-fairly radiated a satisfied sense of its own superiority.
-
-Not that the people were smug or self-conceited. They merely accepted the
-fact that the University of Corinth was among the best in the country and
-that all true Corinthians were both proud and worthy of it.
-
-The village itself was a gem of well-kept streets, roads and houses, and
-all New England could scarce show a better groomed settlement.
-
-In a way, the students, of course, owned the place, yet there were many
-families whose claim to prominence lay in another direction.
-
-However, Corinth was by all counts, a college town, and gloried in it.
-
-The University had just passed through the throes and thrills of one of
-its own presidential elections.
-
-The contest of the candidates had been long, and at last the strife had
-become bitter. Two factions strove for supremacy, one, the conservative
-side, adhering to old traditions, the other, the modern spirit,
-preferring new conditions and progressive enterprise.
-
-Hard waged and hard won, the battle had resulted at last in the election
-of John Waring, the candidate of the followers of the old school.
-
-Waring was not an old fogy, nor yet a hide-bound or narrow-minded back
-number. But he did put mental attainment ahead of physical prowess, and
-he did hold by certain old-fashioned principles and methods, which he and
-his constituents felt to be the backbone of the old and honored
-institution.
-
-Wherefore, though his election was an accomplished fact, John Waring had
-made enemies that seemed likely never to be placated.
-
-But Waring's innate serenity and acquired poise were not disturbed by
-adverse criticism, he was a man with an eye single to his duty as he saw
-it. And he accepted the position of responsibility and trust, simply and
-sincerely with a determination to make his name honored among the list of
-presidents.
-
-Inauguration, however, would not take place until June, and the months
-from February on would give him time to accustom himself to his new
-duties, and to learn much from the retiring president.
-
-Yet it must not be thought that John Waring was unpopular. On the
-contrary, he was respected and liked by everybody in Corinth. Even the
-rival faction conceded his ability, his sterling character and his
-personal charm. And their chagrin and disappointment at his election was
-far more because of their desire for the other candidate's innovations
-than of any dislike for John Waring as a man.
-
-Of course, there were some who candidly expressed their disapproval of
-the new president, but, so far, no real opposition was made, and it was
-hoped there would be none.
-
-Now, whether because of the exigencies of his new position, or merely
-because of the irresistible charms of Mrs. Bates, Waring expected to make
-the lady his wife before his inauguration.
-
-"And a good thing," his neighbor, Mrs. Adams, observed. "John Waring
-ought to've been somebody's good-looking husband long ago, but a bachelor
-president of Corinth is out of all reason! Who'd stand by his side at the
-receptions, I'd like to know?"
-
-For certain public receptions were dearly loved by the citizens of
-Corinth, and Mrs. Adams was one of the most reception-loving of all.
-
-As in all college towns, there were various and sundry boarding houses,
-inns and hotels of all grades, but the boarding house of Mrs. Adams was,
-without a dissenting voice, acclaimed the most desirable and most
-homelike.
-
-The good lady's husband, though known as "Old Salt," was by no means a
-seafaring man, nor had he ever been. Instead, he was a leaf on a branch
-of the Saltonstall family tree, and the irreverent abbreviation had been
-given him long ago, and had stuck.
-
-"Yes, indeed," Mrs. Adams asserted, "we've never had a bachelor president
-of Corinth and I hope we never will. Mrs. Bates is a nice sweet-spoken
-lady, a widow of four years standing, and I do say she's just the one for
-Doctor Waring's wife. She has dignity, and yet she's mighty human."
-
-Emily Bates was human. Not very tall, a little inclined to plumpness,
-with fair hair and laughing blue eyes, she was of a cozy, home-loving
-sort, and her innate good nature and ready tact were unfailing.
-
-At first she had resisted John Waring's appeal, but he persisted, until
-she found she really liked the big, wholesome man, and without much
-difficulty learned to love him.
-
-Waring was distinguished-looking rather than handsome. Tall and
-well-made, he had a decided air of reserve which he rarely broke through,
-but which, Emily Bates discovered, could give way to confidences showing
-depths of sweetness and charm.
-
-The two were happily matched. Waring was forty-two and Mrs. Bates half a
-dozen years younger. But both seemed younger than their years, and
-retained their earlier tastes and enthusiasms.
-
-Also both were bound up, heart and soul, in the welfare of the
-University. Mrs. Bates' first husband had been one of its prominent
-professors and its history and traditions were known and loved by the
-cheery little lady.
-
-Perhaps the only person in Corinth who was not pleased at the approaching
-nuptials of John Waring and Emily Bates was Mrs. Peyton, Waring's present
-housekeeper. For it meant the loss of her position, which she had
-faithfully filled for ten years or more. And this meant the loss of a
-good and satisfactory home, not only for herself, but for her daughter
-Helen, a girl of eighteen, who lived there also.
-
-Not yet had Waring told his housekeeper that she was to be dethroned but
-she knew the notice would come,--knew, too, that it was delayed only
-because of John Waring's disinclination to say or do anything unwelcome
-to another. And Mrs. Peyton had been his sister's school friend and had
-served him well and faithfully. Yet she must go, for the incoming
-mistress needed no other housekeeper for the establishment than her own
-efficient, capable self.
-
-It was a very cold February afternoon, and Mrs. Peyton was serving tea in
-the cheerful living-room. Emily Bates was present; an indulgence she
-seldom allowed herself, for she was punctilious regarding conventions,
-and Corinth people, after all, were critical. Though, to be sure, there
-was no harm in her taking tea in the home so soon to be her own.
-
-The two women were outwardly most courteous, and if there was an
-underlying hostility it was not observable on the part of either.
-
-"I came today," Emily Bates said, as she took her tea cup from the
-Japanese butler who offered it, "because I want to tell you, John, of
-some rumors I heard in the town. They say there is trouble brewing for
-you."
-
-"Trouble brewing is such a picturesque phrase," Waring said, smiling
-idly, as he stirred his tea. "One immediately visions Macbeth's witches,
-and their trouble brew."
-
-"You needn't laugh," Emily flashed an affectionate smile toward him,
-"when the phrase is used it often means something."
-
-"Something vague and indefinite," suggested Gordon Lockwood, who was
-Waring's secretary, and was as one of the family.
-
-"Not necessarily," Mrs. Bates returned; "more likely something definite,
-though perhaps not very alarming."
-
-"Such as what?" asked Waring, "and from what direction? Will the freshmen
-make me an apple-pie bed, or will the seniors haze me, do you think?"
-
-"Be serious, John," Mrs. Bates begged. "I tell you there is a movement on
-foot to stir up dissension. I heard they would contest the election."
-
-"Oh, they can't do that," Lockwood stated; "nor would anybody try. Don't
-be alarmed, Mrs. Bates. I'm sure we know all that's going on,--and I
-can't think there's any 'trouble brewing' for Doctor Waring."
-
-"I've heard it, too," vouchsafed Mrs. Peyton. "It's not anything
-definite, but there are rumors and hints, and where there's smoke,
-there's bound to be fire. I wish you'd at least look into it, Doctor."
-
-"Yes," agreed Emily Bates, "do look into it, John."
-
-"But how can I?" Waring smiled. "I can't go from door to door, saying
-'I've come to investigate a rumor,' can I?"
-
-"Oh, don't be absurd!" Mrs. Bates' plump little hands fluttered in
-protest and then fell quietly to rest in her lap. "You men are so
-tactless! Now, Mrs. Peyton or I could find out all about it, without any
-one knowing we were making inquiry."
-
-"Why don't you, then?" asked Waring, and Mrs. Peyton gave a pleased smile
-as the guest bracketed their names.
-
-"I will, if you say so." Emily spoke gravely. "That is what I wanted to
-ask you. I didn't like to take up the matter with any one unless you
-directly approved."
-
-"Oh, go ahead,--I see no harm in it."
-
-"But, Doctor Waring," put in Lockwood, "is it wise? I fear that if Mrs.
-Bates takes up this matter she may get in deeper than she means or
-expects to, and--well, you can't tell what might turn up."
-
-"That's so, Emily. As matters stand, you'd best be careful."
-
-"Oh, John, how vacillating you are! First, you say go ahead, and then you
-say stop! I don't mind your changing your opinions, but I do resent your
-paying so little attention to the matter. You toss it aside without
-thought."
-
-"Doctor Waring thinks very quickly," said Mrs. Peyton, and Emily gave her
-a slight stare.
-
-It was hard for the housekeeper to realize that she must inevitably lose
-her place in his household, and the thought made her a little assertive
-while she still had opportunity.
-
-"Yes, I know it," was the reply Emily gave, and went on, addressing
-herself to the two men.
-
-"Persuade him, Mr. Lockwood. Not of his duty, he never misapprehends
-that, but of the necessity of looking on this matter as a duty."
-
-"What a pleader you are, Emily," and Waring gave her an admiring bow; "I
-am almost persuaded that my very life is in danger!"
-
-"Oh, you won't be good!" The blue eyes twinkled but the rosy little mouth
-took on a mutinous pout. "Well, I warn you, if you don't look out for
-yourself, I'm going to look out for you! And that, as Mr. Lockwood hints,
-may get you into trouble!"
-
-"What a contradictory little person it is! In an effort to get me out of
-trouble, you admit you will probably get me into trouble. Well, well, if
-this is during our betrothal days, what will you do after we are
-married?"
-
-"Oh, then you'll obey me implicitly," and the expressive hands indicated
-with a wide sweep, total subjection.
-
-"You'll find him not absolutely easy to manage," Mrs. Peyton declared,
-and though Emily Bates said no word, she gave a look of superior managing
-power that brought the housekeeper's thin lips together in a resentful
-straight line.
-
-This byplay was unnoticed by large-minded John Waring, but it amused
-Lockwood, who was an observer of human nature.
-
-Unostentatiously, he watched Mrs. Peyton, as she turned her attention to
-the tea tray, and noted the air of importance with which she continued
-her duties as hostess.
-
-"Bring hot toast, Ito," she said to the well-trained and deferential
-Japanese. "And a few more lemon slices,--I see another guest coming."
-
-She smiled out through the window, and a moment later a breezy young chap
-came into the room.
-
-"Hello, folkses," he cried; "Hello, Aunt Emily."
-
-He gave Mrs. Bates an audible kiss on her pretty cheek and bowed with
-boyish good humor to Mrs. Peyton.
-
-"How do you do, Uncle Doctor?" and "How goes it, Lock?" he went on, as he
-threw himself, a little sprawlingly into an easy chair. "And here's the
-fair Helen of Troy."
-
-He jumped up as Helen Peyton came into the room. "Why, Pinky," she said,
-"when did you come?"
-
-"Just now, my girl, as you noted from your oriel lattice,--and came
-running down to bask in the sunshine of my smiles."
-
-"Behave yourself, Pinky," admonished his aunt, as she noted Helen's quick
-blush and realized the saucy boy had told the truth.
-
-Pinckney Payne, college freshman, and nephew of Emily Bates, was very
-fond of Doctor Waring, his English teacher, and as also fond, in his
-boyish way, of his aunt. But he was no respecter of authority, and, now
-that his aunt was to be the wife of his favorite professor, also the
-President-elect of the college, he assumed an absolute familiarity with
-the whole household.
-
-His nickname was not only an abbreviation, but was descriptive of his
-exuberant health and invariably red cheeks. For the rest, he was just a
-rollicking, care-free boy, ring leader in college fun, often punished,
-but bobbing up serenely again, ready for more mischief.
-
-Helen Peyton adored the irrepressible Pinky, and though he liked her, it
-was no more than he felt for many others and not so much as he had for a
-few.
-
-"Tea, Mrs. Peyton? Oh, yes, indeed, thank you. Yes, two lemon and three
-sugar. And toasts,--and cakies,--oh, what good ones! What a tuck! Alma
-Mater doesn't feed us like this! I say, Aunt Emily, after you are
-married, may I come to tea every day? And bring the fellows?"
-
-"I'll answer that,--you may," said John Waring.
-
-"And I'll revise the answer,--you may, with reservations," Mrs. Bates
-supplemented. "Now, Pinky, you're a dear and a sweet, but you can't annex
-this house and all its affairs, just because it's going to be my home."
-
-"Don't want to, Auntie. I only want you to annex me. You'll keep the same
-cook we have at present, won't you?"
-
-He looked solicitously at her, over a large slice of toast and jam he was
-devouring.
-
-"Maybe and maybe not," Mrs. Peyton spoke up. "Cooks are not always
-anxious to be kept."
-
-"At any rate, we'll have a cook, Pinky, of some sort," his aunt assured
-him, and the boy turned to tease Helen Peyton, who was quite willing to
-be teased.
-
-"I saw your beau today, Helen," he said.
-
-"Which one?" she asked placidly.
-
-"Is there a crowd? Well, I mean the Tyler person. Him as hangs out at Old
-Salt's. And, by the way, Uncle President,--yes, I am a bit previous on
-both counts, but you'll soon have the honor of being both President and
-my uncle,--by the way, I say, Bob Tyler says there's something in the
-wind."
-
-"A straw to show which way it blows, perhaps," Waring said.
-
-"Perhaps, sir. But it's blowing. Tyler says there's a movement on foot to
-make things hot for you if you take the Presidential chair with your
-present intentions."
-
-"My intentions?"
-
-"Yes, sir; about athletics, and sports in general."
-
-"And what are my so-called intentions?"
-
-"They say, you mean to cut out sport--"
-
-"Oh, Pinckney, you know better than that!"
-
-"Well, Doctor Waring, some seem to think that's what you have in mind. If
-you'd declare your intentions now,--"
-
-"Look here, Pinky, don't you think I've enough on my mind in the matter
-of marrying your aunt, without bringing in other matters till that's
-settled."
-
-"Going to be married soon, Uncle Doc?"
-
-"We are. As soon as your aunt will select a pleasant day for the
-ceremony. Then, that attended to, I can devote my mind and energies to
-this other subject. And meanwhile, my boy, if you hear talk about it,
-don't make any assertions,--rather, try to hush up the subject."
-
-"I see,--I see,--and I will, Doctor Waring. You don't want to bother with
-those things till you're a settled down married man! I know just how you
-feel about it. Important business, this getting married,--I daresay,
-sir."
-
-"It is,--and so much so, that I'm going to take the bride-elect off right
-now, for a little private confab. You must understand that we have much
-to arrange."
-
-"Run along,--bless you, my children!" Pinky waved a teacup and a sandwich
-beneficently toward the pair, as they left the room and went off in the
-direction of the Doctor's study.
-
-The house was a large one, with a fine front portico upheld by six
-enormous fluted columns.
-
-One of the most beautiful of New England doorways led into a wide hall.
-To the right of this was the drawing-room, not so often used and not so
-well liked as the more cozy living-room, to the left as one entered, and
-where the tea-drinking group now sat.
-
-Behind these two rooms and hall, ran a cross hall, with an outer door at
-the end back of the living-room and a deep and wide window seat at the
-other end, behind the drawing-room.
-
-Further back, beyond the cross hall, on the living-room side, was the
-dining-room, and beside it, back of the drawing-room was the Doctor's
-study. This was the gem of the whole house. The floor had been sunken to
-give greater ceiling height, for the room was very large, and of fine
-proportions. It opened on to the cross hall with wide double doors, and a
-flight of six or seven steps descended to its rug covered floor.
-
-Opposite the double doors was the great fireplace with high over-mantel
-of carved stone. Each side of the mantel were windows, high and not
-large. The main daylight came through a great window on the right of the
-entrance and also from a long French window that opened like doors on the
-same side.
-
-This French window, giving on a small porch, and the door that opened
-into the cross hall of the house were the only doors in the great room,
-save those on cupboards and bookcases.
-
-On the other side of the room, opposite the French window was a row of
-four small windows looking into the dining-room. But these were high, and
-could not be seen through by people on the sunken floor of the study.
-
-The whole room was done in Circassian walnut, and represented the ideal
-abode of a man of letters. The fireside was flanked with two facing
-davenports, the wide window seat was piled with cushions. The French
-window-doors were suitably curtained and the high windows were of truly
-beautiful stained glass.
-
-The spacious table desk was in the middle of the room, and bookcases,
-both portable and built in, lined the walls. There were a few good busts
-and valuable pictures, and the whole effect was one of dignity and repose
-rather than of elaborate grandeur.
-
-The room was renowned, and all Corinth spoke of it with pride. The
-students felt it a great occasion that brought them within its walls and
-the faculty loved nothing better than a session therein.
-
-Casual guests were rarely entertained in the study. Only especial
-visitors or those worthy of its classic atmosphere found welcome there.
-Mrs. Peyton or Helen were not expected to use it, and Mrs. Bates had
-already declared she should respect it as the sanctum of Doctor Waring
-alone.
-
-The two made their way to the window seat, and as he arranged the soft
-cushions for her, Waring said, "Don't, Emily, ever feel shut out of this
-room. As I live now, I've not welcomed the Peytons in here, but my wife
-is a different proposition."
-
-"I still feel an awe of the place, John, but I may get used to it.
-Anyway, I'll try, and I do appreciate your willingness to have me in
-here. Then if you want to be alone, you must put me out."
-
-"I'll probably do that, sometimes, dear, for I have to spend many hours
-alone. You know, I'm not taking the presidency lightly."
-
-"I know it, you conscientious dear. But, on the other hand, don't be too
-serious about it. You're just the man for the place, just the character
-for a College President, and if you try too hard to improve or
-reconstruct yourself, you'll probably spoil your present perfection."
-
-"Well nothing would spoil _your_ present perfection, my Emily. I am too
-greatly blest,--to have the great honor from the college,--and you, too!"
-
-"Are you happy, John? All happy?"
-
-Waring's deep blue eyes fastened themselves on her face. His brown hair
-showed only a little gray at the temples, his fine face was not touched
-deeply by Time's lines, and his clear, wholesome skin glowed with health.
-
-If there was an instant's hesitation before his reply came, it was none
-the less hearty and sincere. "Yes, my darling, all happy. And you?"
-
-"I am happy, if you are," she returned. "But I can never be happy if
-there is a shadow of any sort on your heart. Is there, John? Tell me,
-truly."
-
-"You mean regarding this trouble that I hear is brewing for me?"
-
-"Not only that; I mean in any direction."
-
-"Trouble, Emily! With you in my arms! No,--a thousand times no! Trouble
-and I are strangers,--so long as I have you!"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II
- MISS MYSTERY ARRIVES
-
-
-Anyone who has arrived at the railroad station of a New England village,
-after dark on a very cold winter night, the train late, no one to meet
-him, and no place engaged for board and lodging, will know the desolation
-of such a situation.
-
-New England's small railroad stations are much alike, the crowds that
-alight from the trains are much alike, the people waiting on the platform
-for the arriving travelers are much alike, but there came into Corinth
-one night a passenger who was not at all like the fellow passengers on
-that belated train. It was a train from New York, due in Corinth at
-five-forty, but owing to the extreme cold weather, and various untoward
-freezings occasioned thereby, the delays were many and long and the train
-drew into the station shortly after seven o'clock.
-
-Tired, hungry and impatient, the travelers crowded out of the train and
-stamped through the snow to the vehicles awaiting them, or footed it to
-their nearby homes.
-
-The passenger who was unlike the others stepped down from the car
-platform, and holding her small suitcase firmly, crossed the track and
-entered the station waiting room. She went to the ticket window but found
-there no attendant. Impatiently she tapped her little foot on the old
-board floor but no one appeared.
-
-"Agent," she called out, rapping with her knuckles on the window shelf,
-"Agent,--where are you?"
-
-"Who's there? What d'y' want?" growled a surly voice, and a head appeared
-at the ticket window.
-
-"I want somebody to look after me! I'm alone, and I want a porter, and I
-want a conveyance and I want some information."
-
-"Oh, you do! Well, I can't supply porters nor yet conveyances; but
-information I may be able to give you."
-
-"Very well then," and a pair of big, dark eyes seemed to pierce his very
-brain. "Then tell me where I can find the best accommodations in
-Corinth."
-
-The now roused agent looked more interestedly at the inquirer.
-
-He saw a mere slip of a girl, young, slender, and very alert of manner.
-Her dark, grave little face was oval, and her eyes had a strange uncanny
-way of roving quickly about, and coming suddenly back, greatly
-disconcerting the stolid ticket agent.
-
-This agent was not unused to girls,--a college town is often invaded by
-hordes of smart young women, pretty girls and gay hoydens. Many Junes he
-had sold tickets or given information to hundreds of feminine inquirers
-but none had ever seemed quite like this one.
-
-"Best accommodations?" he repeated stupidly.
-
-"You heard me, then! About when do you propose to reply?"
-
-Still he gazed at her in silence, running over in his mind the various
-boarding houses, and finding none he thought she'd like.
-
-"There's a rule of the Railroad Company that questions must be answered
-the same day they're asked," she said, witheringly, and picking up her
-suitcase she started for the door, feeling that any one she might find
-would know more than this dummy.
-
-"Wait,--oh, I say, miss, wait a minute."
-
-"I did," she said coolly, proceeding to the door.
-
-"But,--oh, hold on,--try Old Salt Adams,--you couldn't do better."
-
-"Where is it?" she deigned to pause a moment, and he replied quickly:
-
-"He's right outside,--hurry up out,--you can catch him!"
-
-Here was something she could understand, and she hurried up out, just in
-time to see an old man with long white beard jump into his sleigh and
-begin to tuck fur robes about him.
-
-"He sprang to his sleigh,--to his team gave a whistle,--" she quoted to
-herself, and then cried out, "Hey, there, Santa Claus, give me a lift?"
-
-"You engaged for our house?" the man called back, and as she shook her
-head, he gathered up his reins.
-
-"Can't take any one not engaged," he called back, "Giddap!"
-
-"Wait,--wait! I command you!" The sharp, clear young voice rang out
-through the cold winter air, and Old Saltonstall Adams paused to listen.
-
-"Ho, ho," he chuckled, "you command me, do you? Now, I haven't been
-commanded for something like fifty years."
-
-"Oh, don't stop to fuss," the girl exclaimed, angrily. "Don't you see I'm
-cold, hungry and very uncomfortable? You have a boarding house,--I want
-board,--now, you take me in. Do you hear?"
-
-"Sure I hear, but, miss, we've only so many rooms and they're all
-occupied or engaged."
-
-"Some are engaged, but as yet unoccupied?" The dark eyes challenged him,
-and Adams mumbled,--"Well, that's about it."
-
-"Very well, I will occupy one until the engager comes along. Let me get
-in. No, I can manage my suitcase myself. You get my trunk,--here's the
-check. Or will you send for that tomorrow?"
-
-"Why wait? Might's well get it now--if so be you're bound to bide. 'Fraid
-to wait in the sleigh alone?"
-
-"I'm afraid of nothing," was the disdainful answer, and the girl pulled
-the fur robes up around her as she sat in the middle of the back seat.
-
-Shortly, old Salt returned with the trunk on his shoulder, and put it in
-the front with himself, and they started.
-
-"Don't try to talk," he called back to her, as the horses began a rapid
-trot. "I can't hear you against this wind."
-
-"I've no intention of talking," the girl replied, but the man couldn't
-hear her. The wind blew fiercely. It was snowing a little, and the drifts
-sent feathery clouds through the air. The trees, coated with ice from a
-recent sleet storm, broke off crackling bits of ice as they passed. The
-girl looked about, at first curiously, and then timidly, as if frightened
-by what she saw.
-
-It was not a long ride, and they stopped before a large house, showing
-comfortably lighted windows and a broad front door that swung open even
-as the girl was getting down from the sleigh.
-
-"For the land sake!" exclaimed a brisk feminine voice, "this ain't Letty!
-Who in the earth have you got here?"
-
-"I don't know," Old Salt Adams replied, truthfully. "Take her along,
-mother, and give her a night's lodging."
-
-"But where is Letty? Didn't she come?"
-
-"Now can't you see she didn't come? Do you s'pose I left her at the
-station? Or dumped her out along the road? No--since you will have it,
-she didn't come. She _didn't_ come!"
-
-Old Salt drove on toward the barns, and Mrs. Adams bade the girl go into
-the house.
-
-The landlady followed, and as she saw the strange guest she gazed at her
-in frank curiosity.
-
-"You want a room, I s'pose," she began. "But, I'm sorry to say we haven't
-one vacant--"
-
-"Oh, I'll take Letty's. She didn't come, you see, so I can take her room
-for tonight."
-
-"Letty wouldn't like that."
-
-"But I would. And I'm here and Letty isn't. Shall we go right up?"
-
-Picking up her small suitcase, the girl started and then stepped back for
-the woman to lead the way.
-
-"Not quite so fast--_if_ you please. What is your name?"
-
-As the landlady's tone changed to a sterner inflection, the girl likewise
-grew dignified.
-
-"My name is Anita Austin," she said, coldly. "I came here because I was
-told it was the best house in Corinth."
-
-"Where are you from?"
-
-"New York City."
-
-"What address?"
-
-"Plaza Hotel."
-
-By this time the strange dark eyes had done their work. A steady glance
-from Anita Austin seemed to compel all the world to do her bidding. At
-any rate, Mrs. Adams took the suitcase, and without a further word
-conducted the stranger upstairs.
-
-She took her into an attractive bedroom, presumably made ready for the
-absent Letty.
-
-"This will do," Miss Austin said, calmly. "Will you send me up a tray of
-supper? I don't want much, and I prefer not to come down to dinner."
-
-"Land sake, dinner's over long ago. You want some tea, 'n' bread, 'n'
-butter, 'n' preserves, 'n' cake?"
-
-"Yes, thank you, that sounds good. Send it in half an hour."
-
-To her guest Mrs. Adams showed merely a face of acquiescence, but once
-outside the door, and released from the spell of those eerie eyes, she
-remarked to herself, "For the land sake!" with great emphasis.
-
-"Well, what do you know about that!" Old Salt Adams cried, when, after
-she had started him on his supper, his wife related the episode.
-
-"I can't make her out," Mrs. Adams said, thoughtfully. "But I don't like
-her. And I won't keep her. Tomorrow, you take her over to Belton's."
-
-"Just as you say. But I thought her kinda interesting looking. You can't
-say she isn't that."
-
-"Maybe so, to some folks. Not to me. And Letty'll come tomorrow, so that
-girl'll have to get out of the room."
-
-Meanwhile "that girl" was eagerly peering out of her window.
-
-She tried to discern which were the lights of the college buildings, but
-through the still lightly falling snow, she could see but little, and
-after a time, she gave up the effort. She drew her head back into the
-room just as a tap at the door announced her supper.
-
-"Thank you," she said to the maid who brought it. "Set it on that stand,
-please. It looks very nice."
-
-And then, sitting comfortably in an easy chair, robed in warm dressing
-gown and slippers, Miss Anita Austin devoted a pleasant half hour to the
-simple but thoroughly satisfactory meal.
-
-This finished, she wrote some letters. Not many, indeed, but few as they
-were, the midnight hour struck before she sealed the last envelope and
-wrote the last address.
-
-Then, prepared for bed, she again looked from the window, and gazed long
-into the night.
-
-"Corinth," she whispered, "Oh, Corinth, what do you hold for me? What
-fortune or misfortune will you bring me? What fortune or misfortune shall
-I bring to others? Oh, Justice, Justice, what crimes are committed in thy
-name!"
-
-The next morning Anita appeared in the dining-room at the breakfast hour.
-
-Mrs. Adams scanned her sharply, and looked a little disapprovingly at the
-short, scant skirt and slim, silken legs of her new boarder.
-
-Anita, her dark eyes scanning her hostess with equal sharpness, seemed to
-express an equal disapproval of the country-cut gingham and huge white
-apron.
-
-Not at all obtuse, Mrs. Adams sensed this, and her tone was a little more
-deferential than she had at first intended to make it.
-
-"Will you sit here, please, Miss Austin?" she indicated a chair next
-herself.
-
-"No, thank you, I'll sit by my friend," and the girl slipped into a
-vacant chair next Saltonstall Adams.
-
-Old Salt gave a furtive glance at his wife, and suppressed a chuckle at
-her surprise.
-
-"This is Mr. Tyler's place," he said to the usurper, "but I expect he'll
-let you have it this once."
-
-"I mean to have it all the time," and Anita nodded gravely at her host.
-
-"All the time is this one meal only," crisply put in Mrs. Adams. "I'm
-sorry, Miss Austin, but we can't keep you here. I have no vacant room."
-
-The entrance of some other people gave Anita a chance to speak in an
-undertone to Mr. Adams, and she said;
-
-"You'll let me stay till Letty comes, won't you? I suppose you are boss
-in your own house."
-
-As a matter of fact almost any phrase would have described the man better
-than "boss in his own house," but the idea tickled his sense of irony,
-and he chuckled as he replied, "You bet I am! Here you stay--as long as
-you want to."
-
-"You're my friend, then?" and an appealing glance was shot at him from
-beneath long, curling lashes, that proved the complete undoing of
-Saltonstall Adams.
-
-"To the death!" he whispered, in mock dramatic manner.
-
-Anita gave a shiver. "What a way to put it!" she cried. "I mean to live
-forever, sir!"
-
-"Doubtless," Old Salt returned, placidly. "You're a freak--aren't you?"
-
-"That isn't a very pretty way of expressing it, but I suppose I am," and
-a mutinous look passed over the strange little face.
-
-In repose, the face was oval, serene, and regular of feature. But when
-the girl smiled or spoke or frowned, changes took place, and the mobile
-countenance grew soft with laughter or hard with scorn.
-
-And scorn was plainly visible when, a moment later, Adams introduced
-Robert Tyler, a fellow boarder, to Miss Austin.
-
-She gave him first a conventional glance, then, as he dropped into the
-chair next hers, and said,
-
-"Only too glad to give up my place to a peach," she turned on him a
-flashing glance, that, as he expressed it afterward, "wiped him off the
-face of the earth."
-
-Nor could he reinstate himself in her good graces. He tried a penitent
-attitude, bravado, jocularity and indifference, but one and all failed to
-engage her interest or even attention. She answered his remarks with
-calm, curt speeches that left him baffled and uncertain whether he wanted
-to bow down and worship her, or wring her neck.
-
-Old Salt Adams took this all in, his amusement giving way to curiosity
-and then to wonder. Who was this person, who looked like a young, very
-young girl, yet who had all the mental powers of an experienced woman?
-What was she and what her calling?
-
-The other boarders appeared, those nearest Anita were introduced, and
-most of them considered her merely a pretty, new guest. Her manners were
-irreproachable, her demeanor quiet and graceful, yet as Adams covertly
-watched her, he felt as if he were watching an inactive volcano.
-
-The meal over, he detained her a moment in the dining-room.
-
-"Why are you here, Miss Austin?" he said, courteously; "what is your
-errand in Corinth?"
-
-"I am an artist," she said, looking at him with her mysterious intent
-gaze. "Or, perhaps I should say an art student. I've been told that there
-are beautiful bits of winter scenery available for subjects here, and I
-want to sketch. Please, Mr. Adams, let me stay here until Letty comes."
-
-A sudden twinkle in her eye startled the old man, and he said quickly,
-"How do you know she isn't coming?"
-
-That, in turn, surprised Anita, but she only smiled, and replied, "I saw
-a telegram handed to Mrs. Adams at breakfast--and then she looked
-thoughtfully at me, and--oh, well, I just sort of knew it was to say
-Letty couldn't come."
-
-"You witch! You uncanny thing! If I should take you over to Salem, they'd
-burn you!"
-
-"I'll ride over on a broomstick some day, and see if they will," she
-returned, gleefully.
-
-And then along came Nemesis, in the person of the landlady.
-
-"I'm sorry, Miss Austin," she began, but the girl interrupted her.
-
-"Please, Mrs. Adams," she said, pleadingly, "don't say any thing to make
-me sorry, too! Now, you want to say you haven't any room for me--but that
-isn't true; so you don't know what to say to get rid of me. But--why do
-you want to get rid of me?"
-
-Esther Adams looked at the girl and that look was her undoing.
-
-Such a pathetic face, such pleading eyes, such a wistful curved mouth,
-the landlady couldn't resist, and against her will, against her better
-judgment, she said, "Well, then, stay, you poor little thing. But you
-must tell me more about yourself. I don't know who you are."
-
-"I don't know, myself," the strange girl returned. "Do we, any of us know
-who we are? We go through this world, strangers to each other--don't we?
-And also, strangers to ourselves." Her eyes took on a faraway, mystical
-look. "If I find out who I am, I'll let you know."
-
-Then a dazzling smile broke over her face, they heard a musical ripple of
-laughter, and she was gone.
-
-They heard her steps, as she ran upstairs to her room, and the two
-Adamses looked at each other.
-
-"Daffy," said Mrs. Adams. "A little touched, poor child. I believe she
-has run away from home or from her keepers. We'll hear the truth soon.
-They'll be looking for her."
-
-"Perhaps," said her husband, doubtfully. "But that isn't the way I size
-her up. She's nobody's fool, that girl. Wish you'd seen her give Bob
-Tyler his comeuppance!"
-
-"What'd she say?"
-
-"'Twasn't what she said, so much as the look she gave him! He almost went
-through the floor. Well, she says she's a painter of scenery and
-landscapes. Let her stay a few days, till I size her up."
-
-"You size her up!" returned his wife, with good-natured contempt. "If she
-smiles on you or gives you a bit of taffy-talk, you'll size her up for an
-angel! I'm not so sure she isn't quite the opposite!"
-
-Meanwhile the subject of their discussion was arraying herself for a
-walk. Equipped with storm boots and fur coat, she set out to inspect
-Corinth. A jaunty fur cap, with one long, red quill feather gave her
-still more the appearance of an elf or gnome, and many of the Adams house
-boarders watched the little figure as she set forth to brave the icy
-streets.
-
-Apparently she had no fixed plan of procedure, for at each corner, she
-looked about, and chose her course at random. The snow had ceased during
-the night, and it was very cold, with a clear sunshiny frostiness in the
-air that made the olive cheeks red and glowing.
-
-Reaching a bridge, she paused and stood looking over the slight railing
-into the frozen ravine below.
-
-Long she stood, until passers-by began to stare at her. She was unaware
-of this, absorbed in her thoughts and oblivious to all about her.
-
-Pinckney Payne, coming along, saw her, and, as he would have expressed
-it, fell for her at once.
-
-"Don't do it, sister!" he said, pausing beside her. "Don't end your young
-life on this glorious day! Suicide is a mess, at best. Take my advice and
-cut it out!"
-
-She turned, ready to freeze him with a glance more icy even than the
-landscape, but his frank, roguish smile disarmed her.
-
-"Freshman?" she said, patronizingly, but it didn't abash him.
-
-"Yep. Pinckney Payne, if you must know. Commonly called Pinky."
-
-"I don't wonder," and she noticed his red cheeks. "Well, now that you're
-properly introduced, tell me some of the buildings. What's that one?"
-
-"Dormitories. And that," pointing, "is the church."
-
-"Really! And that beautiful colonnade one?"
-
-"That's Doctor Waring's home. Him as is going to be next Prexy."
-
-"And that? And that?"
-
-He replied to all her questions, and kept his eyes fastened on her
-bewitching face. Never had Pinky seen a girl just like this. She looked
-so young, so merry, and yet her restless, roving eyes seemed full of
-hidden fire and tempestuous excitement.
-
-"Where you from?" he said, abruptly. "Where you staying?"
-
-"At Mrs. Adams," she returned, "is it a good house?"
-
-"Best in town. Awful hard to get into. Always full up. Relative of hers?"
-
-"No, just a boarder. I chanced to get a room some one else engaged and
-couldn't use."
-
-"You're lucky. Met Bob Tyler?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"You don't like him! I see that. Met Gordon Lockwood?"
-
-"No; who's he?"
-
-"He's Doctor Waring's secretary, but he's mighty worthwhile on his own
-account. I say, may I come to see you?"
-
-"Thank you, no. I'm not receiving callers--yet."
-
-"Well, you will be soon--because I'm coming. I say my aunt lives next
-door to Adams'. May I bring her to call on you?"
-
-"Not yet, please. I'm not settled."
-
-"Soon's you say the word, then. My aunt is Mrs. Bates, and she's a love.
-She's going to marry Doctor Waring--so you see we're the right sort of
-people."
-
-"There are no right sort of people," said the girl, and, turning, she
-walked away.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III
- THIRTEEN BUTTONS
-
-
-Apparently Miss Austin's statement that there were no right sort of
-people was her own belief, for she made no friends at the Adams house.
-Nor was this the fault of her fellow-boarders. They were more than
-willing to be friendly, but their overtures were invariably ignored.
-
-Not rudely, for Miss Austin seemed to be a girl of culture and her
-manners were correct, but, as one persistent matron expressed it, "you
-can't get anywhere with her."
-
-She talked to no one at the table, merely answering a direct question if
-put to her. She retained the seat next Old Salt, seeming to rely on him
-to protect her from the advances of the others. Not that she needed
-protection, exactly, for Miss Anita Austin was evidently quite able to
-take care of herself.
-
-But she was a mystery--and mysteries provoke inquiry.
-
-The house was not a large one, and the two-score boarders, though they
-would have denied an imputation of curiosity, were exceedingly interested
-in learning the facts about Miss Mystery, as they had come to call her.
-
-Mrs. Adams was one of the most eager of all to know the truth, but, as he
-did on rare occasions, Old Salt Adams had set down his foot that the girl
-was not to be annoyed.
-
-"I don't know who she is or where she hails from," he told his wife, "but
-as long as she stays here, she's not to be pestered by a lot of gossiping
-old hens. When she does anything you don't like, send her away; but so
-long's she's under my roof, she's got to be let alone."
-
-And let alone she was--not so much because of Adams' dictum as because
-"pestering" did little good.
-
-The girl had a disconcerting way of looking an inquisitor straight in the
-eyes, and then, with a monosyllabic reply, turning and walking off as if
-the other did not exist.
-
-"Why," said Miss Bascom, aggrievedly relating her experience, "I just
-said, politely, 'Are you from New York or where, Miss Austin?' and she
-turned those big, black eyes on me, and said, 'Where.' Then she turned
-her back and looked out of the window, as if she had wiped me off the
-face of the earth!"
-
-"She's too young to act like that," opined Mrs. Welby.
-
-"Oh, she isn't so terribly young," Miss Bascom returned. "She's too
-experienced to be so very young."
-
-"How do you know she's experienced? What makes you say that?"
-
-"Why," Miss Bascom hesitated for words, "she's--sort of
-sophisticated--you can see that from her looks. I mean when anything is
-discussed at the table, she doesn't say a word, but you can tell from her
-face that she knows all about it--I mean a matter of general interest,
-don't you know. I don't mean local matters."
-
-"She's an intelligent girl, I know, but that doesn't make her out old. I
-don't believe she's twenty."
-
-"Oh, she is! Why, she's twenty-five or twenty-seven!"
-
-"Never in the world! I'm going to ask her."
-
-"Ask her!" Miss Bascom laughed. "You'll get well snubbed if you do."
-
-But this prophecy only served to egg Mrs. Welby on, and she took the
-first occasion to carry out her promise.
-
-She met Anita in the hall, as the girl was about to go out, and smilingly
-detained her.
-
-"Why so aloof, my dear," she said, playfully. "You rarely give us a
-chance to entertain you."
-
-As Mrs. Welby was between Anita and the door, the girl was forced to
-pause. She looked the older woman over, with an appraising glance that
-was not rude, but merely disinterested.
-
-"No?" she said, with a curious rising inflection, that somehow seemed
-meant to close the incident.
-
-But Mrs. Welby was not so easily baffled.
-
-"No," she repeated, smilingly. "And we want to know you better. You're
-too young and too pretty not to be a general favorite amongst us. How old
-are you, my dear child?"
-
-"Just a hundred," and Miss Austin's dark eyes were so grave, and seemed
-to hold such a world of wisdom and experience that Mrs. Welby almost
-jumped.
-
-Too amazed to reply, she even let the girl get past her, and out of the
-street door, before she recovered her poise.
-
-"She's uncanny," Mrs. Welby declared, when telling Miss Bascom of the
-interview. "I give you my word, when she said that, she looked a
-hundred!"
-
-"Looked a hundred! What do you mean?"
-
-"Just that. Her eyes seemed to hold all there is of knowledge, yes--and
-of evil--"
-
-"Evil! My goodness!" Miss Bascom rolled this suggestion like a sweet
-morsel under her tongue.
-
-"Oh--I don't say there's anything wrong about the girl--"
-
-"Well! If her eyes showed depths of evil, I should say there _was_
-something wrong!"
-
-The episode was repeated from one to another of the exclusive _clientele_
-of the Adams house, until, by exaggeration and imagination it grew into
-quite a respectable arraignment of Miss Mystery, and branded her as a
-doubtful character if not a dangerous one.
-
-Before Miss Austin had been in the house a week, she had definitely
-settled her status from her own point of view.
-
-Uniformly correct and courteous of manner, she rarely spoke, save when
-necessary. It was as if she had declared, "I will not talk. If this be
-mystery, make the most of it."
-
-Old Salt, apparently, backed her up in this determination, and allowed
-her to sit next him at table, without addressing her at all.
-
-More, he often took it upon himself to answer a remark or question meant
-for her and for this he sometimes received a fleeting glance, or a ghost
-of a smile of approval and appreciation.
-
-But all this was superficial. The Adamses, between themselves, decided
-that Miss Austin was more deeply mysterious than was shown by her
-disinclination to make friends. They concluded she was transacting
-important business of some sort, and that her sketching of the winter
-scenery, which she did every clear day, was merely a blind.
-
-Though Mrs. Adams resented this, and urged her husband to send the girl
-packing, Old Salt demurred.
-
-"She's done no harm as yet," he said. "She's a mystery, but not a wrong
-one, 's far's I can make out. Let her alone, mother. I've got my eye on
-her."
-
-"I've got my two eyes on her, and I can see more'n you can. Why, Salt,
-that girl don't hardly sleep at all. Night after night, she sits up
-looking out of the window, over toward the college buildings--"
-
-"How do you know?"
-
-"I go and listen at her door," Mrs. Adams admitted, without
-embarrassment. "I want to know what she's up to."
-
-"You can't see her."
-
-"No, but I hear her moving around restlessly, and putting the window up
-and down--and Miss Bascom--her room's cornerways on the ell, she says she
-sees her looking out the window late at night 'most every night."
-
-"Miss Bascom's a meddling old maid, and I'd put her out of this house
-before I would the little girl."
-
-"Of course _you_ would! You're all set up because she makes so much of
-you--"
-
-"Oh, come now, Esther, you can't say that child makes much of me! I wish
-she would. I've taken a fancy to her."
-
-"Yes, because she's pretty--in a gipsy, witch-like fashion. What men see
-in a pair of big black eyes, and a dark, sallow face, I don't know!"
-
-"Not sallow," Old Salt said, reflectively; "olive, rather--but not
-sallow."
-
-"Oh you!" exclaimed Mrs. Adams, and with that cryptic remark the subject
-was dropped.
-
-Gordon Lockwood, secretary of John Waring, had a room at the Adams house.
-But as he took no meals there save his breakfasts, and as he ate those
-early, he had not yet met Anita Austin.
-
-But one Saturday morning, he chanced to be late, and the two sat at table
-together.
-
-An astute reader of humanity, Lockwood at once became interested in the
-girl, and realized that to win her attention he must not be eager or
-insistent.
-
-He spoke only one or two of the merest commonplaces, until almost at the
-close of the meal, he said:
-
-"Can I do anything for you, Miss Austin? If you would care to hear any of
-the College lectures, I can arrange it."
-
-"Who are the speakers?"
-
-She turned her eyes fully upon him, and Gordon Lockwood marveled at their
-depth and beauty.
-
-"Tonight," he replied, "Doctor Waring is to lecture on Egyptian
-Archaeology. Are you interested in that?"
-
-"Yes," she said, "very much so. I'd like to go."
-
-"You certainly may, then. Just use this card."
-
-He took a card from his pocket, scribbled a line across it, and gave it
-to her. Without another word, he finished his breakfast, and with a mere
-courteous bow, he left the room.
-
-Miss Austin's face took on a more scrutable look than ever.
-
-The card still in her hand, she went up to her room. Unheeding the maid,
-who was at her duties there, the girl threw herself into a big chair and
-sat staring at the card.
-
-"The Egyptian Temples," she said to herself, "Doctor John Waring."
-
-The maid looked at her curiously as she murmured the words half aloud,
-but Miss Austin paid no heed.
-
-"Go on with your work, Nora, don't mind me," she said, at last, as the
-chambermaid paused inquiringly in front of her. "I don't mind your being
-here until you finish what you have to do. And I wish you'd bring me a
-Corinth paper, please?' There is one, isn't there?"
-
-"Oh, yes, ma'am. Twice a week."
-
-Nora disappeared and returned with a paper.
-
-"Mr. Adams says you may have this to keep. It's the newest one."
-
-The girl took it and turned to find the College announcements. The
-Egyptian Lecture was mentioned, and in another column was a short article
-regarding Doctor Waring and a picture of him.
-
-Long the girl looked at the picture, and when the maid, her tasks
-completed, left the room, she noticed Miss Austin still staring at the
-fine face of the President-elect of the University of Corinth.
-
-After a time, she reached for a pair of scissors, and cut out the
-portrait and the article which it illustrated.
-
-She put the clipping in a portfolio, which she then locked in her trunk,
-and the picture she placed on her dresser.
-
-That night she went to the lecture. She went alone, for Gordon Lockwood
-did not reappear and no one else knew of her going.
-
-"Shall I have a key, or will you be up?" she asked of Mrs. Adams, as she
-left the house.
-
-"Oh, we'll be up." The round, shrewd eyes looked at her kindly. "You're
-lucky to get a ticket. Doctor Waring's lectures are crowded."
-
-"Good night," said Miss Austin, and went away.
-
-The lecture room was partly filled when she arrived, and her ticket
-entitled her to a seat near the front.
-
-Being seated, she fell into a brown study, or, at least, sat motionless
-and apparently in deep thought.
-
-Gordon Lockwood, already there, saw her come in, and after she was in her
-place, he quietly arose and went across the room, taking a seat directly
-behind her.
-
-Of this she was quite unaware, and the student of human nature gave
-himself up to a scrutiny of the stranger.
-
-He saw a little head, its mass of dark, almost black hair surmounted by a
-small turban shaped hat, of taupe colored velvet, with a curly ostrich
-tip nestling over one ear.
-
-Not that her ears were visible, for Miss Austin was smartly groomed and
-her whole effect modish.
-
-She had removed her coat, which she held in her lap. Her frock was taupe
-colored, of a soft woolen material, ornamented with many small buttons.
-These tiny buttons formed two rows down her back, from either shoulder to
-the waist line, and they also formed a border round the sailor collar.
-
-They were, perhaps, Lockwood decided, little balls, rather than buttons,
-and he idly counted them as he sat watching her.
-
-He hoped she would turn her head a trifle, but she sat as motionless as a
-human being may.
-
-He marveled at her stillness, and impatiently waited for the lecture to
-begin that he might note her interest.
-
-At last Doctor Waring appeared on the platform, and as the applause
-resounded all over the room, Lockwood was almost startled to observe Miss
-Austin's actions.
-
-She clasped her hands together as if she had received a sudden shock.
-She--if it hadn't seemed too absurd,--he would have said that she
-trembled. At any rate she was a little agitated, and it was with an
-effort that she preserved her calm. No one else noticed her, and Lockwood
-would not have done so, save for his close watching.
-
-Throughout the lecture, Miss Austin's gaze seemed never to leave the face
-of the speaker, and Lockwood marveled that Waring himself was not drawn
-to notice her.
-
-But Waring's calm gaze, though it traveled over the audience, never
-rested definitely on any one face, and Lockwood concluded he recognized
-nobody.
-
-"Miss Mystery!" Gordon Lockwood said to himself. "I wonder who and what
-you are. Probably a complex nature, psychic and imaginative. You think it
-interesting to come up here and pretend to be a mystery. But you're too
-young and too innocent to be--I'm not so sure of the innocent,
-though,--and as to youth,--well, I don't believe you're much older than
-you look any way. And you're confoundedly pretty--beautiful, rather.
-You've too much in your face to call it merely pretty. I've never seen
-such possibilities of character. You're either a deep one or your looks
-belie you."
-
-Lockwood heard no word of the lecture, nor did he wish to; he had helped
-in the writing of it, and almost knew it by heart anyway. But he was
-really intrigued by this mysterious girl, and he determined to get to
-know her.
-
-He had been told, of course, of the futile attempts of the other boarders
-to make friends with her, but he had faith in his own attractiveness and
-in his methods of procedure.
-
-Pinky Payne, too, had told of the interview he had on the bridge. His
-account of the girl's beauty and charm had first roused Lockwood's
-interest, and now he was making a study of the whole situation.
-
-Idly he counted the buttons again. There were thirteen across the collar.
-The vertical rows he could not be sure of as the back of the seat cut off
-their view.
-
-"Thirteen," he mused; "an unlucky number. And the poor child looks
-unlucky. There's a sadness in her eyes that must mean something. Yet
-there's more than sadness,--there's a hint of cruelty,--a possibility of
-desperate deeds."
-
-And then Lockwood laughed at himself. To romance thus about a girl to
-whom he had not said half a dozen sentences in his life! Yet he knew he
-was not mistaken. All that he had read in Anita Austin's face, he was
-sure was there. He knew physiognomy, and rarely, if ever, was mistaken in
-his reading thereof.
-
-After the lecture was over, Miss Austin went home as quickly as possible.
-
-Lockwood would have liked to escort her, but he had to remain to report
-to Doctor Waring, who might have some orders for him.
-
-There were none, however, and after a short interview with his employer,
-Gordon Lockwood went home.
-
-As he went softly upstairs to his room in the Adams house, he passed the
-door of what he knew to be Miss Austin's room. He fancied he heard a
-stifled sob come from behind that closed door, and instinctively paused
-to listen a moment.
-
-Yes, he was not mistaken. Another sob followed, quickly suppressed, but
-he could have no doubt the girl was crying.
-
-For a moment Lockwood was tempted to go back and ask Mrs. Adams to come
-and tap at the girl's door.
-
-Then he realized that it was not his affair. If the girl was in sorrow or
-if she wanted to cry for any reason, it was not his place to send someone
-to intrude upon her. He went on to his own room, but he sat up for a long
-time thinking over the strange young woman in the house.
-
-He remembered that she had paid undeviating attention to the lecture,
-quite evidently following the speaker with attention and interest. He
-remembered every detail of her appearance, her pretty dark hair showing
-beneath her little velvet toque,--the absurd buttons on the back of her
-frock.
-
-"That will do, Gordon, old man," he told himself at last. Better let her
-alone. She's a siren all right, but you know nothing about her, and
-you've no reason to try to learn more.
-
-And then he heard voices in the hall. Low of tone, but angry of
-inflection.
-
-"She threw it away!" Miss Austin was saying; "I tell you she threw it
-away!"
-
-"There, there," came Mrs. Adams' placating voice, "what if she did? It
-was only a newspaper scrap. She didn't know it was of any value."
-
-"But I want it! Nora has no business to throw away my things! She had no
-reason to touch it; it was on the dresser--standing up against the mirror
-frame. What do you suppose she did with it?"
-
-"Never mind it tonight. Tomorrow we will ask her. She's gone to bed."
-
-"But I'm afraid she destroyed it!"
-
-"Probably she did. Don't take on so. What paper was it?"
-
-"The Corinth Gazette."
-
-"The new one?"
-
-"I don't know. The one she brought me this afternoon."
-
-"Well, if she has thrown it away, you can get another copy. What was in
-it that you want so much?"
-
-"Oh,--nothing special."
-
-"Yes, it was." Mrs. Adams' curiosity was aroused now. "Come, tell me what
-it was."
-
-"Well, it was only a picture of Doctor Waring, the man who lectured
-tonight."
-
-"Such a fuss about that! My goodness! Why, you can get a picture of him
-anywhere."
-
-"But I want it now."
-
-An obstinate note rang in the young voice. Perhaps Miss Austin spoke
-louder than she meant to, but at any rate, Lockwood heard most of the
-conversation, and he now opened his door, and said:
-
-"May I offer a photograph? Would you care to have this, Miss Austin?"
-
-The girl looked at him with a white, angry face.
-
-"How dare you!" she cried; "how dare you eavesdrop and listen to a
-conversation not meant for your ears? Don't speak to me!"
-
-She drew up her slender figure and looked like a wrathful pixie defying a
-giant. For Lockwood was a big man, and loomed far above the slight,
-dainty figure of Miss Mystery.
-
-He smiled good-naturedly as he said, "Now don't get wrathy. I don't mean
-any harm. But you wanted a picture of Doctor Waring, and I've several of
-them. You see, I'm his secretary."
-
-"Oh,--are you! His private secretary?"
-
-"Yes--his confidential one,--though he has few confidences. He's a public
-man and his life is an open book."
-
-"Oh, it is!" The girl had recovered her poise, and with it her ability to
-be sarcastic. "Known to all men, I suppose?"
-
-"Known to all men," repeated Lockwood, thinking far more of the girl he
-was speaking to than of what he was saying.
-
-For, again he had fallen under the spell of her strange personality. He
-watched her, fascinated, as she reached out for the picture and almost
-snatched at it in her eagerness.
-
-Mrs. Adams yawned behind her plump hand.
-
-"Now you've got your picture, go to bed, child," she said with a kind,
-motherly smile. "I'll come in and unhook you, shall I?"
-
-Obediently, and without a word of good night to Lockwood, Anita turned
-and went into her room, followed by Mrs. Adams. The good lady offered no
-disinterested service. She wanted to know why Miss Austin wanted that
-picture so much. But she didn't find out. After being of such help as she
-could, the landlady found herself pleasantly but definitely dismissed.
-Outside the door, however, she turned and reopened it. Miss Mystery,
-unnoticing the intruder, was covering the photograph with many and
-passionate kisses.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV
- A BROKEN TEACUP
-
-
-"I'll tell her you're here, but I'm noways sure she'll see you."
-
-Mrs. Adams stood, her hand on the doorknob, as she looked doubtfully at
-Emily Bates and her nephew.
-
-"Why not?" asked Mrs. Bates, in astonishment, and Pinky echoed, "Why not,
-Mrs. Adams?"
-
-"She's queer." Mrs. Adams came back into the room, closed the door, and
-spoke softly. "That's what she is, Mrs. Bates, queer. I can't make her
-out. She's been here more'n a week now, and I do say she gets queerer
-every day. Won't make friends with anybody,--won't speak at all at the
-table,--never comes and sits with us of an afternoon or evening,--just
-keeps to herself. Now, that ain't natural for a young girl."
-
-"How old is she?"
-
-"Nobody knows. She looks like nineteen or twenty, but she has the ways of
-a woman of forty,--as far's having her own way's concerned. Then again,
-she'll pet the cat or smile up at Mr. Adams like a child. I can't make
-her out at all. The boarders are all fearfully curious--that's one reason
-I take her part. They're a snoopy lot, and I make them let her alone."
-
-"You like her, then?"
-
-"You can't help liking her,--yet she is exasperating. You ask her a
-question, and she stares at you and walks off. Not really rude,--but just
-as if you weren't there! Well, I'll tell her you're here, anyway."
-
-It was only by his extraordinary powers of persuasion that Pinky Payne
-had won his aunt's consent to make this call, and, being Sunday
-afternoon, the recognized at-home day in Corinth, they had gone to the
-Adams house unannounced, and asked for Miss Austin.
-
-Upstairs, Mrs. Adams tapped at the girl's door.
-
-It was opened slowly,--it would seem, grudgingly,--and Anita looked out
-inquiringly.
-
-"Callers for you, Miss Austin," the landlady said, cheerily.
-
-"For me? I know no one."
-
-"Oh, now, you come on down. It's Mrs. Bates, and her nephew, Pinky Payne.
-They're our best people--"
-
-"What makes you think I want to see your best people?"
-
-"I don't say you do, but they want to see you,--and--oh, pshaw, now, be a
-little sociable. It won't hurt you."
-
-"Please say to Mrs. Bates that I have no desire to form new
-acquaintances, and I beg to be excused from appearing."
-
-"But do you know who she is? She's the lady that's going to marry Doctor
-Waring, the new President. And Pinckney Payne, her cousin, is a mighty
-nice boy."
-
-Mrs. Adams thought she detected an expression of wavering on the girl's
-face, and she followed up her advantage.
-
-"Yes, he's an awfully nice chap and just about your age, I should judge."
-
-"I'll go down," said Miss Austin, briefly, and Mrs. Adams indulged in a
-sly smile of satisfaction.
-
-"It's Pinky that fetched her," she thought to herself. "Young folks are
-young folks, the world over."
-
-Triumphantly, Mrs. Adams ushered Anita into the small parlor.
-
-"Mrs. Bates," she said, "and Mr. Payne,--Miss Austin."
-
-Then she left them, for Esther Adams had strict notions of her duties as
-a boarding-house landlady.
-
-"Mrs. Bates?" Anita said, going to her and taking her hand.
-
-"Yes, Miss Austin,--I am very glad to know you."
-
-But the words ceased suddenly as Emily Bates looked into the girl's eyes.
-Such a depth of sorrow was there, such unmistakable tragedy and a hint of
-fear. What could it all mean? Surely this was a strange girl.
-
-"We have never met before, have we?" Mrs. Bates said,--almost
-involuntarily, for the girl's gaze was too intent to be given to a
-stranger.
-
-"No," Anita said, recovering her poise steadily but slowly,--"not that I
-remember."
-
-"We have," burst forth the irrepressible Pinky. "I say, Miss Austin,
-please realize that I'm here as well as my more celebrated aunt! Don't
-you remember the morning I met you on the bridge,--and you were just
-about to throw yourself over the parapet?"
-
-"Oh, no, I wasn't," and a delightful smile lighted the dark little face.
-The lips were very scarlet, but it was unmistakably Nature's own red, and
-as they parted over even and pearly teeth, the smile transformed Miss
-Austin into a real beauty.
-
-It disappeared quickly, however, and Pinky Payne thenceforward made it
-his earnest endeavor to bring it back as often as possible.
-
-"Of course you weren't," agreed Mrs. Bates, "don't pay any attention to
-that foolish boy."
-
-"I'm a very nice boy, if I am foolish," Pinky declared, but Miss Austin
-vaguely ignored him, and kept her intent gaze fixed on Emily Bates.
-
-"We thought perhaps you would go with us over to Doctor Waring's for
-tea," Mrs. Bates said, after an interval of aimless chat. "It would, I am
-sure be a pleasant experience for you. Wouldn't you like it?"
-
-"Doctor Waring's?" repeated Anita, her voice low and tense, as if the
-idea was of more importance than it seemed.
-
-"Yes; I may take you, for the Doctor is my fiance,--we are to be married
-next month."
-
-"No!" cried the girl, with such a sharp intonation that Mrs. Bates was
-startled.
-
-"Sure they are," put in Pinky, anxious to cover up any eccentricity on
-the part of this girl in whom he took an increasing interest. "They're as
-blissful as two young turtle-doves. Come on, Miss Austin, let's go over
-there. It's a duck of a house to go to, and jolly good people there. The
-view from the study window is worth going miles to see. You're an
-artist,--yes?"
-
-"I sketch some," was the brief reply.
-
-"All right; if you can find a prettier spot to sketch on this terrestrial
-globe than the picture by the Waring study window, I'll buy it for you!
-Toddle up and get your hat."
-
-His gay good nature was infectious and Anita smiled again as she went for
-her hat and coat.
-
-The walk was but a short one, and when they entered the Waring home they
-found a cheery group having tea in the pleasant living room.
-
-Doctor Waring was not present and Mrs. Peyton was pouring tea, while
-Helen and Robert Tyler served it. The capable Ito had always Sunday
-afternoon for his holiday, and while Nogi, the Japanese second man, was
-willing enough, his training was incomplete, and his blunders frequent.
-He was a new servant, and though old Ito had hopes of educating him, Mrs.
-Peyton was doubtful about it. However, she thought, soon the
-responsibilities of the Waring menage would be hers no longer, and she
-resolved to get along with the inexperienced Nogi while she remained.
-
-Mrs. Peyton was very regretful at the coming change of affairs.
-
-She had looked upon John Waring as a confirmed bachelor, and had not
-expected he would ever marry. Now, she declared, he was marrying only
-because he thought it wiser for a College President to have a wife as a
-part of his domestic outfit.
-
-Helen disagreed with her mother about this. She said Doctor Waring had
-begun to take a personal interest in the attractive Mrs. Bates before he
-had any idea of becoming President of the University.
-
-But it didn't matter. The wedding was imminent, and Mrs. Peyton had
-received due notice that her services would be no longer needed.
-
-It was a blow to her, and it had made her depressed and disconsolate.
-Also, a little resentful, even spiteful toward Emily Bates.
-
-The housekeeper greeted Miss Austin with a cold smile, and then
-disregarded her utterly.
-
-Helen was frankly curious, and met the newcomer with full intention of
-finding out all about her.
-
-For Helen Peyton had heard of Miss Mystery from her friend and admirer,
-Robert Tyler, who, however, did not report that the girl had snubbed him
-more than once.
-
-One or two other guests were present and, having been told of Mrs. Bates'
-arrival Doctor Waring and his secretary came from the study and joined
-the others at tea.
-
-With a welcoming smile, John Waring greeted his fiancee, and then Mrs.
-Bates turned to the girl she had brought.
-
-"Miss Austin," she said, "let me present Doctor Waring. John,--Miss Anita
-Austin."
-
-At that very moment Helen Peyton offered Waring a cup of tea, and he was
-in the act of taking it from her hand when Mrs. Bates made the
-introduction.
-
-The cup and saucer fell to the floor with a crash, and those nearest saw
-the Doctor's face blanch suddenly white, and his hand clench on a nearby
-chair.
-
-But with a sudden, desperate effort he pulled himself together, and gave
-a little laugh, as he directed Nogi to remove the wrecked teacup.
-
-"Pick up the four corners, and carry it all off at once," he ordered,
-pointing to the small rug on which the cup had fallen, and Nogi, a little
-clumsily, obeyed.
-
-"Pardon the awkwardness, Miss Austin," he said, turning to smile at the
-girl, but even as he did so, his voice trembled, and he turned hastily
-away.
-
-"What is it, John?" asked Emily Bates, going to his side. "Are you ill?"
-
-"No,--no, dear; it's--it's all right. That foolish teacup upset my
-nerves. I'll go off by myself for a few moments."
-
-Somewhat abruptly, he left the room and went back to his study.
-
-Listening intently, Mrs. Bates heard him lock the door on the inside.
-
-"I'm sorry," she said, turning to Anita, "but I know you'll forgive
-Doctor Waring. He is under so much strain at present, and a foolish
-accident, like the broken teacup, is enough to give him a nervous shock."
-
-"I know," said the girl, sympathetically. "He must be very busy and
-absorbed."
-
-She spoke, as she often did, in a perfunctory way, as if not interested
-in what she was saying. Her glance wandered and she bit her red lower
-lip, as if nervous herself. Yet she was exceedingly quiet and calm of
-demeanor, and her graceful attitudes betokened only a courteous if
-disinterested guest.
-
-Gordon Lockwood immediately followed his chief and tapped at the locked
-study door.
-
-"All right, Lockwood," Waring recognized the knock. "I don't want you
-now. I'll reappear shortly. Go back to the tea room."
-
-Willingly, Lockwood went back, hoping to have a chance for conversation
-with Miss Mystery.
-
-She was chatting gayly with Helen Peyton, Pinky and Mrs. Tyler.
-
-To Lockwood's surprise, Miss Austin was really gay and merry and quite
-held her own in the chaff and repartee.
-
-Yet as Lockwood noted her more closely, his quick perception told him her
-gayety was forced.
-
-The secretary's ability to read human nature was almost uncanny, and he
-truly believed the girl was making merry only by reason of her firm
-determination to do so.
-
-Why? He wondered.
-
-Gordon Lockwood was a rare type of man. He was possessed of the most
-impassive face, the most immobile countenance imaginable. He never
-allowed himself to show the slightest excitement or even interest. This
-habit, acquired purposely at first, had grown upon him until it was
-second nature. He would not admit anything could move him, could stir his
-poise or disturb his equanimity. He heard the most gratifying or the most
-exasperating news with equal attention and equal lack of surprise or
-enthusiasm.
-
-Yet, though this may sound unattractive, so great was Lockwood's
-personality, so responsive and receptive his real nature beneath his
-outer calm, that all who really knew him liked him and trusted him.
-
-Waring depended on him in every respect. He was more than a secretary to
-his employer. He was counselor and friend as well.
-
-And Waring appreciated this, and rated Lockwood high in his esteem and
-affection.
-
-Of course, with his insight, Gordon Lockwood could not be blind to the
-fact that both Mrs. Peyton and her daughter would be pleased if he could
-fall a victim to the charms of the fair Helen. Nor could he evade the
-conviction that Mrs. Peyton herself had entertained hopes of becoming
-mistress of the Waring home, until the advent of Emily Bates had spoiled
-her chances.
-
-But these things were merely self-evident facts, and affected in no way
-the two men concerned.
-
-The Peytons were treated with pleasant regard for both, and that ended
-the matter so far as they were concerned.
-
-The subject had never been alluded to by Waring or Lockwood, but each
-understood, and when the Doctor's marriage took place, that would
-automatically end the Peytons' incumbency.
-
-And now, Gordon Lockwood smiled patronizingly at himself, as he was
-forced to admit an unreasonable, inexplicable interest in a slip of a
-girl with a dark, eerie little face and a manner grave and gay to
-extremes.
-
-For Anita was positively laughing at some foolishness of Pinky Payne's.
-Still, Lockwood concluded, watching her narrowly, yet unobserved, she was
-laughing immoderately. She was laughing for some reason other than
-merriment. It verged on hysterical, he decided, and wondered why.
-
-He joined the group of young people, and in his quiet but effective way,
-he said:
-
-"You've had enough foolery for the moment, Miss Austin,--come and talk to
-me."
-
-And to the girl's amazement, he took her hand and led her to a davenport
-on the other side of the room.
-
-"There," he said, as he arranged a pillow or two, "is that right?"
-
-"Yes," she said, and lapsed into silence.
-
-She sat, looking off into vacancy, and Lockwood studied her. Then he
-said, softly:
-
-"It's too bad, isn't it?"
-
-"Yes," Anita sighed, and then suddenly; "what do you mean? What's too
-bad?"
-
-"Whatever it is that troubles you." The deep blue eyes met her own, but
-there was no sign of response or acquiescence on the girl's face.
-
-"Good-by," she said, rising quickly, "I must go."
-
-"Oh, no,--don't go," cried Pinky, overhearing. "Why, you've only just
-come."
-
-"Yes, I must go," said Miss Mystery, decidedly. "Good afternoon, Mrs.
-Bates, and thank you for bringing me. Good afternoon, Mrs. Peyton."
-
-Including all the others in a general bow of farewell, the strange girl
-went to the front door, and paused for the attendant Nogi to open it.
-
-Door-tending the assistant butler understood, and he punctiliously waited
-until Miss Austin had buttoned her gloves and had given an adjusting pat
-to her veil, after a fleeting glance in the hall mirror.
-
-Then he opened the door with an obsequious air, and closed it behind her
-departing figure.
-
-But it was immediately flung open again by Pinky Payne, who ran through
-it and after the girl.
-
-"Wait a minute, Miss Austin. How fast you walk! I'm going home with you."
-
-"Please not," she said, indifferently, scarcely glancing at him.
-
-"Yep. Gotto. Getting near dusk, and you might be kidnapped. Needn't talk
-if you don't want to."
-
-"I never want to talk!" was the surprising and crisply spoken retort.
-
-"Well, didn't I say you needn't! Don't get wrathy--don't 'ee, don't
-'ee--now,--as my old Scotch nurse used to say."
-
-But Miss Mystery gave him no look, although she allowed him to fall into
-step beside her, and the two walked rapidly along.
-
-"How'd you like the looks of the Doctor?" Pinky asked, hoping to induce
-conversation.
-
-"I scarcely saw him."
-
-"Oh, you saw him,--though you had small chance to get to know him.
-Perfect old brick, but a little on edge of late. Approaching matrimony, I
-suppose. Did you notice his ruby stickpin?"
-
-"Yes; it didn't seem to suit him at all."
-
-"No; he's a conservative dresser. But that pin,--it's a famous gem,--was
-given him by his own class,--I mean his graduating class, but long after
-they graduated, and he had to promise to wear it once a week, so he
-usually gets into it on Sundays. It's a corking stone!"
-
-"Yes," said Miss Austin.
-
-On reaching the Adams house, the girl said a quick good-by, and Pinky
-Payne found himself at liberty to go in and see the other members of the
-household, or to go home, for Miss Austin disappeared into the hall and
-up the staircase with the rapidity of a dissolving view.
-
-Young Payne turned away and strolled slowly back to the Waring home,
-wondering what it was about the disagreeable young woman that made him
-pay any attention to her at all.
-
-He found her the topic of discussion when he arrived.
-
-"Of all rude people," Mrs. Peyton declared, "she was certainly the
-worst!"
-
-"She was!" Helen agreed. "I couldn't make her out at all. And I don't
-call her pretty, either."
-
-"I do," observed Emily Bates. "I call her very pretty,--and possessed of
-great charm."
-
-"Charm!" scoffed Helen; "I can't see it."
-
-"She isn't rude," Pinky defended the absent. "I'm sure, Mrs. Peyton, she
-made her adieux most politely. Why should she have stayed longer? She
-didn't know any of us,--and, perhaps she doesn't like any of us."
-
-"That's it," Gordon Lockwood stated. "She doesn't like us,--I'm sure of
-that. Well, why should she, if she doesn't want to?"
-
-"Why shouldn't she?" countered Tyler. "She's so terribly superior,--I
-can't bear her. She acts as if she owned the earth, yet nobody knows who
-she is, or anything about her."
-
-"Are we entitled to?" asked Lockwood. "Why should we inquire into her
-identity or history further than she chooses to enlighten us?"
-
-"Where is Miss Austin?" asked Doctor Waring, returning, quite composed
-and calm.
-
-"She went home," informed Mrs. Bates. "Are you all right, John?"
-
-"Oh, yes, dear. I wasn't ill, or anything like that. The awkward accident
-touched my nerves, and I wanted to run away and hide."
-
-He smiled whimsically, looking like a naughty schoolboy, and Emily Bates
-took his hand and drew him down to a seat beside her.
-
-"What made you drop it, John?" she said, with a direct look into his
-eyes.
-
-He hesitated a moment, and his own glance wandered, then he said, "I
-don't know, Emily; I suppose it was a sudden physical contraction of the
-muscles of my hand--and I couldn't control it."
-
-Mrs. Bates didn't look satisfied, but she did not pursue the subject.
-Then the discussion of Anita was resumed.
-
-"How did you like her looks, Doctor Waring?" Helen Peyton asked.
-
-"I scarcely saw her," was the quiet reply. "Did you all admire her?"
-
-"Some of us did." Mrs. Bates answered; "I do, for one. Did you ever see
-her before, John?"
-
-Doctor Waring stared at the question.
-
-"Never," he declared. "How could I have done so?"
-
-"I don't know, I'm sure," Mrs. Bates laughed. "I just had a sort of an
-impression--"
-
-"No, dear, I never saw the girl before in my life," Waring reasserted.
-
-"And you need never want to see her again," Robert Tyler informed him.
-"She's sulky, silly and supercilious. She's a mystery, they say, but I
-say she merely wants to be thought a mystery to make a little sensation.
-I can't abide that sort."
-
-Helen Peyton heard this with undisguised satisfaction, for she had quite
-enough girls in her life to be jealous and envious of, without adding
-another to the list. Also, she especially wanted to retain the admiration
-of Robert Tyler, and was glad to know it was not newly endangered.
-
-"Miss Austin is very beautiful," Gordon Lockwood declared, in his usual
-way of summing up a discussion and announcing his own opinion as final.
-"Also, she is a mystery. I live in the same boarding house--"
-
-"So do I," put in Tyler, "and she snubs us both."
-
-"She hasn't snubbed me," said Lockwood, simply.
-
-"Never mind, Oscar, she will!" returned Tyler, and then laughed
-immoderately at his own would-be wit.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V
- THE TRAGEDY
-
-
-That same Sunday evening the Waring household dined alone. Oftener than
-not there were guests, but tonight there were only the two Peytons,
-Lockwood and John Waring himself.
-
-Ito, the butler, had holiday Sunday afternoon and evening, and Nogi, the
-second and less experienced man, was trying his best to satisfy the
-exactions of Mrs. Peyton as to his service at table.
-
-Helen Peyton was in a talkative mood and commented volubly on the caller
-of the afternoon, Miss Austin.
-
-She met little response, for her mother was absorbed in the training of
-the Japanese, and the two men seemed indisposed to pursue the subject.
-
-"Don't you think she's odd looking?" Helen asked, of Doctor Waring.
-
-"Odd looking," he repeated; "I don't know. I didn't notice her
-especially. She seemed to me a rather distinguished type."
-
-"Distinguished is the word," agreed Lockwood. "What about the lecture
-tomorrow night, Doctor? Will Fessenden take care of it?"
-
-"No; I must lecture myself tomorrow night. I'm sorry, for I'm busy with
-that book revision. However, I'll look up some data this evening, and I
-shall be ready for it."
-
-"Of course you will," laughed Mrs. Peyton. "You were never caught unready
-for anything!"
-
-"But it means some work," Waring added, as he rose from the table.
-
-He went into the study, followed by Lockwood, whose experience made him
-aware of what books his chief would need, and he began at once to take
-them from the shelves.
-
-"Right," Waring said, looking over the armful of volumes Lockwood placed
-on the desk and seating himself in the swivel chair.
-
-"Bring me Marcus Aurelius, too, please, and Martial."
-
-"The classic touch," Lockwood smiled.
-
-"Yes, it adds dignity, if one is a bit shy of material," Waring admitted,
-good-naturedly. "That's all, Lockwood. You may go, if you like."
-
-"No, sir. I'll stay until eleven or so. I'm pretty busy with the reports,
-and, too, some one may call whom I can take care of."
-
-"Good chap you are, Lockwood. I appreciate it. Very well, then, don't
-bother me unless absolutely necessary."
-
-The secretary left the room and closed the study door behind him.
-
-This door gave on to the end of the cross hall, and the hall ended then,
-in a roomy window seat, and also held a book rack and table; altogether a
-comfortable and useful nook, frequently occupied by Gordon Lockwood. The
-window looked out on the beautiful lake view, as did the great study
-window, and it also commanded a view of the highroad on which stood, not
-far away, the Adams boarding-house.
-
-Lockwood lodged there, as being more convenient, but most of his waking
-hours were spent in his employer's home. A perfect secretary he had
-proved himself to be, for his prescience amounted almost to clairvoyance,
-and his imperturbability was exceedingly useful in keeping troublesome
-people or things away from John Waring.
-
-So, he determined to stay on guard, lest a chance caller should come to
-disturb the Doctor at his work.
-
-But Lockwood's own work was somewhat neglected. Try as he would to
-concentrate upon it, he could not entirely dismiss from his mind a
-certain mysterious little face, whose meaning eluded him. For once,
-Gordon Lockwood, reader of faces, was baffled. He couldn't classify the
-girl who was both rude and charming, both cruel and pathetic.
-
-For cruelty was what this expert read in the knowing eyes and firm little
-mouth of Miss Mystery. And because of this indubitable element in her
-nature, he deemed her pathetic. Which shows how much she interested him.
-
-At any rate he thought about her while his work waited. And, then, he
-thought of other things--for he had troubles of his own, had this
-supercilious young man. And troubles which galled him the more, that they
-were sordid--money troubles, in fact. His whole nature revolted at the
-mere thought of mercenary considerations, but if one is short of funds
-one must recognize the condition, distasteful though it be.
-
-At nine-thirty, Nogi came with a tray bearing water and glasses. Under
-the watchful eye of Mrs. Peyton the Japanese tapped at the study door
-and, in response to the master's bidding, went in with his tray. He left
-it punctiliously on the table directed, and with his characteristic bow,
-departed again.
-
-At ten-thirty, Mrs. Peyton and Helen went upstairs to their rooms, the
-housekeeper having given Nogi strict and definite instructions, which
-included his remaining on duty until the master should also retire.
-
-And the night wore on.
-
-A clear, cold night, with a late-rising moon, past the full, but still
-with its great yellow disk nearly round.
-
-It shone down on what seemed like fairyland, for the sleet storm that had
-covered the trees with a coating of ice, and had fringed eaves and fences
-with icicles, had ceased, and left the glittering landscape frozen and
-sparkling in the still, cold air.
-
-And when, some hours later, the sun rose on the same chill scene its rays
-made no perceptible impression on the cold and the mercury stayed down at
-its lowest winter record.
-
-And so even the stolid Japanese Ito, shivered, and his yellow teeth
-chattered as he knocked at Mrs. Peyton's door in the early dawn of Monday
-morning.
-
-"What is it?" she cried, springing from her bed to unbolt her door.
-
-"Grave news, madam," and the Oriental bowed before her.
-
-"What has happened? Tell me, Ito."
-
-"I am not sure, madam--but, the master--"
-
-"Yes, what about Doctor Waring?"
-
-"He is--he is asleep in his study."
-
-"Asleep in his study! Ito, what do you mean?"
-
-"That, madam. His bed is unslept in. His room door ajar. I looked in the
-study--through from the dining-room--he is there by his desk--"
-
-"Asleep, Ito--you said asleep!"
-
-"Yes--madam--but--I do not know. And Nogi--he is gone."
-
-"Gone! Where to?"
-
-"That also, I do not know. Will madam come and look?"
-
-"No; I will not! I know something has happened! I knew something would
-happen! Ito, he is not asleep--he is--"
-
-"Don't say it, madam. We do not know."
-
-"Find out! Go in and speak to him."
-
-"But the door is locked. I tried it."
-
-"Locked! The study door locked, and Doctor Waring still in there? How do
-you know?"
-
-"I peeped from the dining-room window--and I could see him, leaning down
-on his desk."
-
-"From the dining-room window! What do you mean?"
-
-"The small little inside windows. Madam knows?"
-
-The study had been added to the Waring house after the house had been
-built for some years. Wherefore, the dining-room, previously with a lake
-view from its windows, was cut off from that view. But, the windows,
-three small, square ones, remained, and so, looked into the new study.
-
-However, the study, a higher ceiling being desired, had its floor sunken
-six feet or more, which brought the windows far too high to see through
-from the study side, but one could look through them from the
-dining-room. The original sashes had been replaced by beautiful stained
-glass, opaque save for a few tiny transparent bits through which a
-persistent and curious-minded person might discern some parts of the
-study.
-
-The stained glass sashes were immovable, and were there more as a
-decoration than for utility's sake.
-
-And it was through these peepholes that Ito had discovered the presence
-of Doctor Waring in his study at the unusual hour of seven o'clock in the
-morning.
-
-The Japanese, true to his tribal instinct, showed no agitation, and his
-calm demeanor helped to soothe Mrs. Peyton. But as she hastily dressed
-herself, she decided upon her course of action.
-
-Her first impulse was to call her daughter, but she concluded not to
-disturb the girl. Instead, she telephoned to Gordon Lockwood, and asked
-him to come over as soon as he possibly could.
-
-Old Salt took the message, and transmitted it to the secretary.
-
-"What's the matter over there?" asked Lockwood.
-
-"Don't know. Mrs. Peyton seemed all on edge, 's far's I could judge from
-her voice--but she only said for you to come over."
-
-"All right, I'll go as soon as I can get dressed."
-
-Once out of doors, Lockwood couldn't fail to be impressed with the beauty
-of the morning landscape. One of the most beautiful bits of New England
-scenery, it was newly lovely in its sheath of ice.
-
-Lockwood's hasty steps crunched through the crusted snow, and he hurried
-over to the Waring house.
-
-Ito opened the door for him and Mrs. Peyton met him in the hall.
-
-"Something has happened to Doctor Waring," she said at once; "he stayed
-in the study all night."
-
-"Why? What do you mean?" asked the secretary.
-
-"Just that. His room door is still open, and his bed hasn't been slept
-in. Also, Ito says he can see him in the study, through the dining-room
-window. I--I haven't looked--"
-
-"Why don't you go in?"
-
-"The study door is locked."
-
-"Locked! And Doctor Waring still in there?"
-
-"Yes; I think he must have had a stroke--or, something--"
-
-"Nonsense! He's just asleep. He's overworked of late, anyway."
-
-"Well, I'm glad you're here." And Mrs. Peyton looked relieved. "You see
-about it, Mr. Lockwood, won't you?"
-
-The secretary went first to the study door. He rapped, and then he tried
-the door, and then rapped again, very loudly. But no response came, and
-Lockwood returned to the dining-room.
-
-"Can you see through that glass?" he asked in surprise, noting the thick,
-leaded mosaic of pieces.
-
-"Yes, sir, through this corner," Ito directed him, and, peering through,
-Lockwood discerned the figure of John Waring. He sat at his desk, his
-body fallen slightly forward, and his head drooped on his breast.
-
-"Sound asleep," said Lockwood, but his tone carried no conviction.
-
-Mrs. Peyton well knew the man's disinclination to show any emotion, and
-in spite of his calm, she was almost certain he shared her own belief
-that John Waring was not merely asleep.
-
-"We must get to him," Lockwood said, after a moment's pause. "Can you get
-through one of these windows, Ito, and unbolt the door?"
-
-"No, sir; these windows do not open at all."
-
-"Not open? Why not?"
-
-Save to remark the beauty of their color and design, Lockwood had never
-before noticed the windows, especially, and was genuinely surprised to
-discover that they could not be opened at all.
-
-"Of what use are they?" he mused, aloud; "They give very little light."
-
-"They were outside windows before the study was built," Mrs. Peyton told
-him, "and when the stained glass was put in, it was merely for decoration
-and the panes were not made movable."
-
-"Well, we must get in," said Lockwood, almost impatiently. "How shall we
-do it? You, Ito, must know how."
-
-"No, sir, there is no way. Unless, the long window is unfastened."
-
-The long French window--really a double door--was on the other side of
-the study, exactly opposite the useless high windows that gave into the
-dining-room.
-
-To reach it one must go out and around the house.
-
-"It is very bad snow--" Ito shrugged.
-
-"You heathen!" Lockwood exclaimed, scornfully, and himself dashed out at
-the front door and around to the side of the house.
-
-Mrs. Peyton started to follow, but the secretary bade her go back lest
-she take cold.
-
-He reached the French window only to find it locked on the inside. He
-could not see in through its curtained panes, and impulsively he raised
-his foot and kicked through the glass at a point high enough to allow of
-his putting in a hand and turning back the latch.
-
-He went into the room, and after the briefest glance at the man by the
-desk he went on and unbolted the door to the hall.
-
-Helen had joined her mother and Ito, and the three stood cowering on the
-threshold.
-
-"He is dead," Gordon Lockwood said, in a calm, unemotional way. "But not
-by a stroke--he has killed himself."
-
-"How do you know?" Mrs. Peyton cried, her eyes staring and her face
-white.
-
-"Go away, Helen," Lockwood said; "go back into the living-room, and stay
-away."
-
-And willingly the girl obeyed.
-
-"Come in, Mrs. Peyton," Lockwood went on. "You must see him, though it
-will shock you. See, the flow of blood is dreadful. He stabbed or shot
-himself."
-
-Conquering her aversion to the sight, Mrs. Peyton, from a sense of duty,
-drew nearer, and as Lockwood had said, the condition of the body was
-terrible indeed.
-
-Wounded, apparently in the side of the head, Waring had fallen forward in
-such a way that the actual wound was concealed, but the fact was only too
-apparent that he had bled to death. The blotter on the desk and many of
-the furnishings were crimsoned and there was a large and dark stain on
-the rug.
-
-"He is positively dead," said Lockwood, in cool, even tone, "so I advise
-that we do not touch the body but send at once for Doctor Greenfield. He
-will know best what to do."
-
-"Oh, you cold-blooded wretch!" Mrs. Peyton burst forth, uncontrollably.
-"Have you no feelings whatever? You stand there like a wooden image, when
-the best man in the world lies dead before you! And you, Ito!" She turned
-on the awe-struck butler. "You're another of those impassive, unnatural
-creatures! Oh, I hate you both!"
-
-The housekeeper ran from the room, and was soon closeted with her
-daughter, who, at least showed agitation and grief at the tragedy that
-had occurred.
-
-The two she had called impassive, stood regarding one another.
-
-"Who did it, Master?" inquired the Japanese, calmly.
-
-"Who did it!" Lockwood stared at him. "Why, he did it himself, Ito."
-
-Otherwise immovable, the Oriental shook his head in dissension, but
-Lockwood was already at the telephone, and heeded him not.
-
-Doctor Greenfield consented to come over at once, and Lockwood going to
-the living room, advised the Peytons to have breakfast, as there was a
-terrible ordeal ahead of them.
-
-"I'll have some coffee with you, if I may," he went on. "Brace up, Helen,
-it's pretty awful for you, but you must try to be a brave girl."
-
-A grateful glance thanked him for the kindness, and Lockwood returned
-quickly to the study.
-
-"What are you doing?" he said sternly, as he saw Ito bending over the
-dead man.
-
-"Nothing, sir," and the butler straightened up quickly and stood at
-attention.
-
-"Leave the room, and do not return here without permission. Serve
-breakfast to the ladies. Where is Nogi?"
-
-"He is gone, sir."
-
-"Gone where?"
-
-"That I do not know. Last night he was here. Now he is gone. I know no
-more."
-
-"You don't know anything. Get out."
-
-"Yes, sir."
-
-Left to himself, Gordon Lockwood gazed thoughtfully about the room. He
-did not confine his attention to the bent figure of his late employer,
-nor even to the desk or its nearby surroundings. He wandered about
-looking at the windows, the floor, the furniture.
-
-One chair, standing rather near the desk, he looked at intently. An
-expression of bewilderment came into his face, followed by a look of
-dismay.
-
-Then, after a cautious almost furtive glance about him, he passed his
-hand quickly over the plush back of the chair, rubbing it hard, with a
-scrubbing motion.
-
-Then he looked about the room even more eagerly and carefully, and
-finally sat down in the same plush chair, to await the Doctor's arrival.
-
-Helen Peyton came timidly to the door to ask him to come to breakfast.
-
-"No, Helen," he answered. "My place is here until the Doctor comes. Eat
-your breakfast, child, and try to throw off your distress. It will do you
-no good to brood over it. You can be of real help if you keep brave and
-calm, but it will be quite otherwise if you get hysterical."
-
-He did not see the adoring glance she gave him, nor did he realize how
-much effect his words had on her subsequent behavior. For Helen Peyton
-was suffering from shocked nerves, and only Lockwood's advice would have
-been heeded by her.
-
-She returned to the dining room, saying, quietly, "Gordon will come after
-a while. Let us eat our breakfast, mother, and try to be brave and
-strong."
-
-It was not more than fifteen minutes later that Lockwood joined them.
-
-He took his seat at the table and as he shook out his breakfast napkin he
-said,
-
-"Doctor Greenfield is there now. He says Doctor Waring was stabbed not
-shot. He says the instrument was round and pointed--not flat, like a
-knife."
-
-"Who did it?" asked Helen, wide-eyed.
-
-"It must have been suicide, Helen, for, as you know, the room was locked.
-How could any one get in or out?"
-
-"But how absurd to think of Doctor Waring killing himself!" The girl
-looked more amazed than ever.
-
-"He never killed himself," stated Mrs. Peyton. "Why, you know that man
-had everything to live for! Just about to be married, just about to be
-President of the College--full of life and enthusiasm--suicide!
-Nonsense!"
-
-"I'm only telling you what the doctor said. And you know yourselves, the
-room was all locked up."
-
-"Yes, that's so. Ito, leave the room!"
-
-Mrs. Peyton spoke sharply to the butler, who was quite evidently drinking
-in the conversation.
-
-"He must not hear all we say," she observed after the butler had
-disappeared.
-
-"What's this about Nogi being gone?" asked Lockwood, suddenly.
-
-"Yes, he's gone," Mrs. Peyton said, "and I can't understand it. I didn't
-think he'd stay, he didn't like the duties at all--you know he's just
-learning to be a butler--but queer he went off like that. His wages are
-due for three weeks."
-
-"He'll be back, then," surmised Lockwood. "Now, what shall we do first?
-The faculty must be notified of this tragedy and also, Mrs. Bates must be
-told. Which of you two will go and tell Mrs. Bates about it?"
-
-"You go, Helen," said her mother after a moment's thought. "I ought to be
-here to look after the house, and anyway, dear, you can do it wisely and
-gently. Mrs. Bates likes you, and after all, it can be soon told."
-
-"Oh, I can't!" cried Helen, dismayed at the thought of the awful errand.
-
-"Yes, you can," and Lockwood looked at her with a firm kindliness. "You
-want to be of help, don't you Helen? Well, here's one thing you can do
-that will be of great assistance to your mother and to me. For on us two
-must fall most of the sad duties of this day."
-
-"But what can I say? What can I tell her?"
-
-"Just tell her the facts as far as you know them yourself. She will guess
-from your own agitation that something has happened. And then you will
-tell her, as gently as you can. Be a true woman, Helen, and remember that
-though your news must break her heart, yet she'd far rather hear it from
-you than from some less sympathetic messenger."
-
-"I'll do it," said Helen, struggling bravely to keep her tears back.
-
-"That's a good girl. Run right along, now, for ill news flies fast, and
-rumors may get to her before you reach there."
-
-"Now about that Nogi," Lockwood said, thoughtfully. "Call Ito back,
-please, Mrs. Peyton."
-
-"When did you see Nogi last?" the secretary asked of the butler.
-
-"When I came home last night, sir. Sunday is my holiday. I returned about
-ten, and as I found Nogi with his duties all properly done, and at his
-post, I went to bed. I found this morning that he had not been in his bed
-at all. His clothes are gone, and all his belongings. I think he will not
-come back."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI
- AN INCREDIBLE CASE
-
-
-When Lockwood returned to the study, he found the Medical Examiner and
-Doctor Greenfield in consultation.
-
-The Examiner was a large, pompous-looking man, with an air of authority.
-He looked at Gordon Lockwood from beneath his heavy brows, and demanded,
-"What do you know of this?"
-
-The younger man resented the tone but he knew the question was justified,
-and so he replied, respectfully:
-
-"Nothing more than you can see for yourself, sir. I broke in at that
-glass door, being unable to get in any other way, and I found Doctor
-Waring--as you see him now."
-
-"There was some other way, though, to get in and out," Examiner Marsh
-stated.
-
-"Positively not," Lockwood repeated.
-
-"Don't contradict me! I tell you there must have been--for this man was
-murdered."
-
-"Impossible, sir," and Lockwood's eyes met the Examiner's with a gaze
-fully as calm and insistent as his own.
-
-"Very well, then, how came he by his death?"
-
-"I am not the Examiner," the Secretary said, and he folded his arms and
-leaned against the corner of the great mantelpiece; "but since you ask
-me, I will repeat that there was no way of ingress into this room last
-night, and that necessarily, the case is a suicide."
-
-"Just so; and, granting that, will you suggest what may have become of
-the weapon that was used?"
-
-"What was the weapon?" Lockwood asked, not so disturbed by the question
-as the Examiner had expected him to be.
-
-"That is what puzzles me," returned Doctor Marsh. "As you can clearly see
-the wound was inflicted with a sharp instrument. The man was stabbed just
-below his right ear. The jugular vein was pierced, and he bled to death.
-A plexus of nerves was pierced also, and this fact doubtless rendered the
-victim unconscious at once--I mean as soon as the stab wound was made,
-though he may have been alive for a few minutes thereafter."
-
-Gordon Lockwood gazed imperturbably at the speaker. He had always prided
-himself on his unshakable calm, and now he exhibited its full
-possibilities. It annoyed Doctor Marsh, who was accustomed to having his
-statements accepted without question. He took a sudden dislike to this
-calm young man, who presumed to differ from his deductions.
-
-"I must say," observed the mild-mannered Doctor Greenfield, "I knew
-Doctor Waring very well, and he was surely the last person I would expect
-to kill himself. Especially at the present time--when he was looking
-forward to high honors in the College and also expected to marry a
-charming lady."
-
-"That isn't the point," exclaimed Doctor Marsh, impatiently. "The point
-is, if he killed himself, where is the weapon?"
-
-"I admit it isn't in view--and I admit that seems strange," Lockwood
-agreed, "but it may yet be discovered, while a way of getting into a
-locked room cannot be found."
-
-"All of which is out of your jurisdiction, young man," and Marsh looked
-at him severely. "The police will be here soon, and I've no doubt they
-will learn the truth, whatever it may be. What instrument do you deduce,
-Doctor Greenfield?"
-
-"That's hard to say," replied Greenfield, slowly. "You see the aperture
-it made is a perfectly round hole. Now, most daggers or poniards are
-flat-bladed. I'm not sure a real weapon is ever round. The hole is much
-too large to have been made by a hatpin--it is as big as a--a--"
-
-"Slate pencil," suggested the Examiner.
-
-"Yes, or a trifle larger--but not so large as a lead-pencil."
-
-"A lead-pencil could hardly accomplish the deed," Marsh mused. "A
-slate-pencil might have--but that is a most unusual weapon."
-
-"How about a bill-file?" asked Doctor Greenfield. "I knew of a man killed
-with one."
-
-"Yes, but where is the bill-file?" asked Marsh. "There's one on the desk,
-to be sure, but it is full of papers, and shows no sign of having been
-used for a criminal purpose. If, as Mr. Lockwood insists, this is a
-suicide case, the victim positively could not have cleaned that file and
-restored the papers after stabbing himself!"
-
-"He most certainly could not have done that!" declared Doctor Greenfield.
-
-Marsh examined the file carefully. It was an ordinary affair consisting
-of a steel spike on a bronze standard. It would without doubt make an
-efficacious implement of murder, but it was difficult to believe it had
-been used in that way. For the bills and memoranda it contained were, to
-all appearance, just as they had been thrust on the sharp point--and
-surely, had they been removed and replaced, they would have shown traces
-of such moving.
-
-"Anyway," Doctor Greenfield said, after another examination, "the hole in
-the side of Waring's neck seems to me to have been made with an
-instrument slightly larger than that file. Surely, there are round
-stilettos, are there not?"
-
-"Yes, there are," said Lockwood, "I have seen them."
-
-"Where?" demanded the Examiner, suddenly turning on him.
-
-"Why--I don't know." For once, the Secretary's calm was a trifle shaken.
-"I should say in museums--or in private collections, perhaps."
-
-"Are you familiar with so many private collections of strange weapons
-that you can't remember where you have seen a round-shaped blade?"
-
-Examiner Marsh stared hard at him and Lockwood became taciturn again.
-
-"Exactly that," he conceded. "I have sometime, somewhere, seen a
-round-bladed stiletto--but I cannot remember where."
-
-"Better brush up your memory," Marsh told him, and then the police
-arrived.
-
-The local police of Corinth were rather proud of themselves as a whole,
-and they had reason to be. Under a worthwhile chief the men had been well
-trained, and were alert, energetic and capable.
-
-Detective Morton, who took this matter in charge, went straight to work
-in a most business-like way.
-
-He examined the body of John Waring, not as the medical men had done, but
-merely to find possible clues to the manner of his death.
-
-"What's this ring on his forehead?" he asked, looking at the dead man's
-face.
-
-"I don't know--that struck me as queer," said Greenfield. "What is it,
-Doctor Marsh?"
-
-The Examiner peered through his glasses.
-
-"I can't make that out, myself," he confessed, frankly.
-
-Morton looked more closely.
-
-There was a red circle on Waring's forehead, that looked as if it had
-been put there of some purpose.
-
-A perfect circle it was, about two inches in diameter, and it was red and
-sunken into the flesh, as if it might have been done with a branding
-iron.
-
-"Not a very hot one, though," Morton remarked, after suggesting this,
-"but surely somebody did it. I'll say it's the sign or seal of the
-murderer himself. For a dead man couldn't do it, and there's no sense in
-assuming that Doctor Waring branded himself before committing suicide.
-Was it done before or after death?" he asked of the two doctors present.
-
-"Before, I should say," Doctor Greenfield opined.
-
-"Yes," concurred Marsh, "but not long before. I'm not sure it is a
-brand--such a mark could have been made with, say, a small cup or
-tumbler."
-
-"But what reason is there in that?" exclaimed Morton. "Even a lunatic
-murderer wouldn't mark his victim by means of a tumbler rim."
-
-Absorbedly, he picked up a tumbler from the water tray, and fitted it to
-the red mark on Waring's forehead.
-
-"It doesn't fit exactly," he said, "but it does almost."
-
-"Rubbish!" said Gordon Lockwood, in his superior way. "Why would any one
-mark Doctor Waring's face with a tumbler?"
-
-"Yet it has been marked," Morton looked at the secretary sharply. "Can
-you suggest any explanation--however difficult of belief?"
-
-"No," Lockwood said. "Unless he fell over on some round thing as he
-died."
-
-"There's nothing here," said Morton, scanning the furnishings of the desk
-"The inkstand is closed--and it's a smaller round, anyway. There's no one
-of these desk fittings that could possibly have made that mark.
-Therefore, since it was made before death, it must have been done by the
-murderer."
-
-"Or by the suicide," Lockwood insisted firmly.
-
-Morton, looking at the secretary, decided to keep an eye on this cool
-chap, who must have some reason for repeating his opinion of suicide.
-
-"Now," the detective said, briskly, "to get to business, I must make
-inquiries of the family--the household. Suppose I see them in some other
-room--"
-
-"Yes," agreed Lockwood, with what seemed to Morton suspicious eagerness.
-Why should the secretary be so obviously pleased to leave the
-study--though, to be sure, it was a grewsome place just now.
-
-"Wait a minute," Morton said, "how about robbery? Has anything been
-missed?"
-
-Lockwood looked surprised.
-
-"I never thought to look," he said; "assuming suicide, of course robbery
-didn't occur to me." He looked round the room. "Nothing seems to be
-missing."
-
-"Stay on guard, Higby," the detective said to a policeman, and then asked
-the secretary where he could interview the housekeeper and the servants.
-
-Lockwood took Morton to the living-room, and there they found Mrs. Bates
-as well as the two Peytons.
-
-Though her eyes showed traces of tears, Emily Bates was composed and met
-the detective with an appealing face.
-
-"Do find the murderer!" she cried; "I don't care how much that room was
-locked up, I know John Waring never killed himself! Why would he do it?
-Did ever a man have so much to live for? He couldn't have taken his
-life!"
-
-"I'm inclined to agree with you, Mrs. Bates," Morton told her, "yet you
-must see the difficulties in the way of a murder theory. I'm told the
-room was inaccessible. Is not that right, Mrs. Peyton?"
-
-Flustered at the sudden question the housekeeper wrung her hands and
-burst into tears. "Oh, don't ask me," she wailed, "I don't know anything
-about it!"
-
-"Nothing indicative, perhaps," and Morton spoke more gently, "but at
-least, tell me all you do know. When did you see Doctor Waring last?"
-
-"At the supper table, last evening."
-
-"Not after supper at all?"
-
-"No; that is, I didn't _see_ him. I am training a new servant, and I
-watched him as he took a tray of water pitcher and glasses into the
-study, but I didn't look in, nor did I see the doctor."
-
-"Did you hear him?"
-
-"I don't think I heard him speak. I heard a paper rustle, and I knew he
-was there."
-
-"The servant came right out again?"
-
-"Yes; my attention was all on him. I told him exactly what to do during
-the evening."
-
-"What were those instructions?"
-
-"To attend to his dining-room duties, putting away the supper dishes and
-that, and then to stay about, on duty, until Doctor Waring left his study
-and went to bed."
-
-"This servant had done these things before?"
-
-"Not these things. He arrived but a few days ago, and Ito the butler,
-attended to the Doctor. But Sunday afternoon and evening Ito has off, so
-I began to train Nogi."
-
-"And this Nogi has disappeared?"
-
-"Yes; he is not to be found this morning. Nor has his bed been
-disturbed."
-
-"Then we may take it he left in the night or early morning. Now the
-doctors judge that Doctor Waring died about midnight. We must therefore
-admit the possibility of a connection between the Jap's disappearance and
-the Doctor's death."
-
-At this suggestion, Gordon Lockwood looked interested. Whereas he had
-preserved a stony calm, his face now showed deep attention to the
-detective's words and he nodded his head in agreement.
-
-"You think so, too, Mr. Lockwood?" Morton asked, in that sudden and often
-disconcerting way of his.
-
-"I don't say I think so," the secretary returned, quietly, "but I do
-admit a possibility."
-
-"It would seem so," Mrs. Peyton put in, "if Nogi could have got into the
-study. But he couldn't. You know it was locked--impossible, Mr.
-Lockwood?"
-
-"Yes," Gordon returned. "I heard Doctor Waring lock his door."
-
-"When was that?" asked the detective, sharply.
-
-"I should say about ten o'clock."
-
-"Where were you, then?"
-
-"Sitting in the window nook outside the study door."
-
-"Could you not, then, hear anything that went on in the study?"
-
-"Probably not. The walls and door are thick--they were made so for the
-doctor's sake--he desired absolute privacy, and freedom from interruption
-or overhearing. No, I could not know what was taking place in that
-room--if anything was, at that time."
-
-"At what time did you last see the doctor?"
-
-"After supper I went with him to the study. I looked after his wants,
-getting him a number of books from the shelves, and selecting from his
-files such notes or manuscript as he asked for. Those are my duties as
-secretary."
-
-"And then?"
-
-"Then he practically dismissed me, saying I might leave for the night.
-But I remained in the hall window until eleven o'clock."
-
-"Why did you do this?"
-
-"Out of consideration for my employer. He was exceedingly busy and if a
-caller came, I could probably attend to his wants and spare the doctor an
-interruption."
-
-"Did any one call?"
-
-"No one."
-
-"Yet you remained until eleven?"
-
-"Yes; I was doing some work of my own, and it was later than I thought,
-when I decided to go home."
-
-"And you spoke to the Doctor before leaving?"
-
-"As is my custom, I tapped lightly at the door and said good-night. This
-is my rule, when he is busy, and if he makes no response, or merely
-murmurs good-night, I know there are no further orders till morning, and
-I go home."
-
-"Did he respond to your rap last night?"
-
-"I--I cannot say. I heard him murmur a good-night but if he did, it was
-so low as to be almost inaudible. I thought nothing of it. Since he did
-not call out. 'Come in, Lockwood,' as he does when he wants me, I paid
-little attention to the matter."
-
-"And you reached home--when?"
-
-"Something after eleven. It's but a few steps over to the Adams house,
-where I live."
-
-"Now," summed up the detective, "here's the case. You, Mr. Lockwood, are
-not sure Doctor Waring responded to your good-night. You did not see or
-hear him when Nogi took in the water tray?"
-
-"No; I did not."
-
-"Mrs. Peyton did not see him then, either--though she imagined she heard
-a paper rustle. Nogi is gone--he cannot be questioned. So, Mr. Lockwood,
-the last person whom we know definitely to have seen John Waring alive,
-is yourself when, as you say, you left him at about--er--what time?"
-
-"About half-past eight or nine," said Lockwood, carelessly.
-
-"Yes; you left him and sat in the hall window. Now, we have no positive
-evidence that he was alive after that."
-
-"What!" Lockwood stared at him.
-
-"No positive evidence, I say. Nogi went in, but no one knows what Nogi
-saw in there."
-
-"Come now, Detective Morton," Lockwood said, coldly, "you're romancing.
-Do you suppose for a minute, that if there had been anything wrong with
-Doctor Waring when Nogi went in with the water, that he would not have
-raised an alarm?"
-
-"I suppose that might have easily have been the case. The Japanese are
-afraid of death. Their one idea is to flee from it. If that Japanese
-servant had seen his master dead, he would have decamped, just as he did
-do."
-
-"But Nogi was here when I went home. He handed me my overcoat and hat,
-quite with his usual calm demeanor."
-
-"You must remember, Mr. Lockwood, we have only your word for that."
-
-Gordon Lockwood looked at the detective.
-
-"I will not pretend to misunderstand your meaning," he said, slowly and
-with hauteur. "Nor shall I say a word, at present, in self defence. Your
-implication is so absurd, so really ridiculous, there is nothing to be
-said."
-
-"That's right," and Morton nodded. "Don't say anything until you get
-counsel. Now, Mrs. Bates--I'm mighty sorry to bother you--but I must ask
-you a few questions. And if I size you up right, you'll be glad to tell
-anything you can to help discover the truth. That so?"
-
-"Yes," she returned, "yes--of course, Mr. Morton. But I can't let you
-seem to suspect Mr. Lockwood of wrong-doing without a protest! Doctor
-Waring's secretary is most loyal and devoted--of that I am sure."
-
-"Never mind that side of it just now. Tell me this, Mrs. Bates. Who will
-benefit financially by Doctor Waring's death? To whom is his fortune
-willed? I take it you must know, as you expected soon to marry him."
-
-"But I don't know," Emily Bates said, a little indignantly. "Nor do I see
-how it can help you to solve the mystery to get such information as that.
-You don't suppose anybody killed him for his money, do you?"
-
-"What other motive could there be, Mrs. Bates? Had he enemies?"
-
-"No; well, that is, I suppose he had some acquaintances who were
-disappointed at his election to the College Presidency. But I'd hardly
-call them enemies."
-
-"Why not? Why wouldn't they be enemies? It's my impression that election
-was hotly contested."
-
-"It was," Mrs. Peyton broke in. "It was, Mr. Morton, and if Doctor Waring
-was murdered--which I can't see how he was--some of that other faction
-did it."
-
-"But that's absurd," Gordon Lockwood protested; "there was disappointment
-among the other faction at the result of the election, but it's
-incredible that they should kill Doctor Waring for that reason!"
-
-"The whole case is incredible," Morton returned. "What is it, Higby, what
-have you found?"
-
-"The doctor," Higby said, coming into the living room, "they have just
-noticed that although there is a pinhole in Doctor Waring's tie, there is
-no stickpin there. Did he wear one?"
-
-"Of course he did," Mrs. Bates cried. "He had on his ruby pin yesterday."
-
-"He did so," echoed Mrs. Peyton. "That ruby pin was worth an immense sum
-of money! That's why he was killed, then, robbery!"
-
-"He certainly wore that pin last night," said Lockwood. "Are you sure
-it's missing? Hasn't it dropped to the floor?"
-
-"Can't find it," returned Higby, and then all the men went back to the
-study.
-
-"Anything else missing?" asked Morton, who was deeply chagrined that he
-hadn't noticed the pin was gone himself.
-
-"How about money, Mr. Lockwood?" said Doctor Marsh. "Any gone, that you
-can notice?"
-
-With an uncertain motion, Gordon Lockwood pulled open a small drawer of
-the desk.
-
-"Yes," he said, "there was five hundred dollars in cash here last
-night--and now it is not here."
-
-"Better dismiss the suicide theory," said Detective Morton, with a quick
-look at the secretary.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII
- THE VOLUME OF MARTIAL
-
-
-The Medical Examiner, Doctor Marsh, the Detective Morton, and the
-Secretary of the late John Waring, Gordon Lockwood, looked at one
-another.
-
-Without any words having been spoken that might indicate a lack of
-harmony, there yet was a hint of discord in their attitudes.
-
-Doctor Marsh was sure the case was a suicide.
-
-"You'll find the stiletto somewhere," he shrugged, when held upon that
-point. "To find the weapon is not my business--but when a man is dead in
-a locked room, and dead from a wound that could have been
-self-administered, I can't see a murder situation."
-
-"Nor I," said Lockwood. "Has the waste-basket been searched for the thing
-that killed him?"
-
-Acting quickly on his own suggestion, Gordon Lockwood dived beneath the
-great desk.
-
-Like a flash, Morton was after him, and though the detective was not
-sure, he thought he saw the secretary grasp a bit of crumpled paper and
-stuff it in his pocket.
-
-"Now, look here, I'll make that search," Morton exclaimed, and almost
-snatched the waste-basket from the other's grasp.
-
-"Very well," and Lockwood put his hands in his pockets and stood looking
-on, as Morton fumbled with the scraps.
-
-He emptied the basket on the floor, but there were only a few torn
-envelopes and memoranda, which were soon proved to be of no indicative
-value to the searchers.
-
-"I'll save the stuff, anyway," Morton declared, getting a newspaper and
-wrapping in it the few bits of waste paper.
-
-"Did you take a paper from this basket and put it in your pocket?" the
-detective suddenly demanded.
-
-Lockwood, without moving, gave Morton a cold stare that was more negative
-than any words could be, and was, moreover, exceedingly disconcerting.
-
-"Look here, Mr. Morton," he said, "if you suspect me of killing my
-employer, come out and say so. I know, in story-books, the first one to
-be suspected is the confidential secretary. So, accuse me, and get it
-over with."
-
-The very impassivity of Lockwood's face seemed to put him far beyond and
-above suspicion, and the detective, hastily mumbled,
-
-"Not at all, Mr. Lockwood, not at all. But you don't seem real frank,
-now, and you must know how important it is that we get all the first hand
-information we can."
-
-"Of course, and I'm ready to tell all I know. Go on and ask questions."
-
-"Well, then, what do you surmise has become of that five hundred dollars
-and that ruby stickpin? Doesn't their disappearance rather argue against
-suicide?"
-
-Lockwood meditated. "Not necessarily. If they have been stolen--"
-
-"Stolen! Of course they've been stolen, since they aren't here! I don't
-see any safe."
-
-"No, Doctor Waring had no safe. There has been little or no robbery in
-Corinth, and Doctor Waring rarely kept much money about."
-
-"Five hundred dollars is quite a sum."
-
-"That was for housekeeping purposes. Whenever necessary, I drew for him
-from the bank that amount, and he kept it in that drawer until it was
-used up. He always gave Mrs. Peyton cash to pay the servants and some
-other matters as well as her own salary. His tradesman's bills were paid
-by check."
-
-"Was the money in bills?"
-
-"I invariably brought it to him in the same denominations. Two hundred in
-five dollar bills, two hundred in ones, and a hundred in silver coins."
-
-"In paper rolls?"
-
-"Yes; it may have been injudicious to keep so large a sum in his desk
-drawer, but he always did. Though, to be sure, he often paid out a great
-deal of it at once. Sometimes he would cash checks for some one or give
-some to the poor."
-
-"Drawer never locked?"
-
-"Always locked. But both the Doctor and I carried a key. He was not so
-suspicious of me as you are, Mr. Morton." The speaker gave his cold
-smile.
-
-"And as to the ruby pin, Mr. Lockwood?" Morton went on. "Are you willing
-we should search your effects?"
-
-Lockwood started and for a moment he almost lost his equipoise.
-
-"I am not willing," he said, after an instant's pause, "but if you say it
-is necessary, I suppose I shall have to submit."
-
-Morton looked at him uneasily. He had no appearance of a criminal, he
-looked too proud and haughty to be a culprit, yet might that not be sheer
-bravado?
-
-Discontinuing the conversation, Morton turned his attention to the table
-in the window in the hall where the secretary so often sat.
-
-He examined the appurtenances, for the table was furnished almost like a
-desk, and he picked up a silver penholder.
-
-It was round and smooth and without chasing or marking of any sort, save
-for the initials G. L.
-
-"This yours?" he asked, and Lockwood nodded assent.
-
-"I ask you, Doctor Marsh," Morton turned to the Examiner, "whether that
-wound which is in Doctor Waring's neck could have been made with this
-penholder."
-
-Startled, Marsh took the implement and carefully scrutinized it. Of usual
-length, it was tapering and ended in a point. The circumference at the
-larger end was just about the circumference of the wound in question.
-
-"I must say it could be possible," Marsh replied, his eyes alternately on
-the penholder and on the dead man. "Yes, it is exactly the size."
-
-"And it is strong enough and sharp enough, and it is round," summed up
-Morton. "Now, Mr. Lockwood, I make no accusation. I'm no novice, and I
-know there's a possibility that this might have been the weapon used, and
-yet it might not have been used by you. But I will say, that I have much
-to say to you yet, and I advise you not to try to leave town."
-
-"I've no intention of leaving town or of trying to do so," Lockwood
-asserted, "but," he went on, "would you mind telling me, if I killed the
-man I was devoted to, how I left the room locked behind me?"
-
-"Those locked rooms bore me," said Morton, "I've read lots of detective
-stories founded on that plot. Invariably the locked room proves to be
-vulnerable at some point. I haven't finished examining the doors and
-windows myself as yet."
-
-"Proceed with your examinations, then," said Lockwood; "if you can find a
-secret or concealed entrance, it's more than I can do."
-
-"More than you will do, perhaps, but not necessarily more than you can
-do."
-
-"Don't forget that vanished Japanese," prompted Marsh. "I've small faith
-in Orientals, and if there is a way to get in and out secretly, I'd
-question the Jap before I would Mr. Lockwood here."
-
-"So should I," declared the impassive secretary himself. "And another
-thing don't forget, Morton, after the Private Secretary, the next person
-to be suspected is the butler--that is in fiction, which I gather you
-take as your manual of procedure."
-
-Lockwood's sarcasm drove Morton frantic, but he was too wise to show his
-annoyance.
-
-"I shall neglect no possible suspect," he said, with dignity.
-
-And then two men came from the police, who said they were photographers
-and desired to take some pictures, at the Chief's orders.
-
-Lockwood left them, and went to the living-room where the household and a
-few neighbors were assembled.
-
-"I'm glad to get out of that detective atmosphere," he said, relaxing in
-an easy chair. "It's bad enough to have the man dead, without seeing and
-hearing those cold-blooded police bungling over their 'clues' and
-'evidences.'"
-
-"Tell me a little of the circumstances," asked Mrs. Bates, who was
-present. "I can bear it from you, Gordon, and I must know."
-
-"Apparently, Doctor Waring was sitting at his desk, reading," Lockwood
-began, with a faraway look, as if trying to reconstruct the scene. "He
-must have been reading Martial--for the volume was open on the desk--and
-the pages were blood-stained."
-
-Mrs. Bates gave a little cry, and shuddered, but Lockwood went unmovably
-on.
-
-"There were other books about, some open, some closed, but Martial was
-nearest his hand--quite as if he were reading up to the last moment."
-
-"When the murderer came!" Mrs. Bates breathed softly, her eyes wide with
-horror.
-
-"It couldn't have been murder," Lockwood said, in a positive way, "you
-see, Mrs. Bates, it just couldn't have been. That Morton detective is
-trying to trump up a way the assassin could have entered that locked
-room--but he can't find any way. I know he can't. So it must have been
-suicide. Much as we dislike to admit it, it is the only possible theory."
-
-"But they say there was robbery," Mrs. Peyton put in. "The ruby pin is
-gone and the money from the drawer."
-
-"But, perhaps," Gordon said, "they were taken by a robber who did not
-also murder his victim. Nogi, now--"
-
-"Of course!" cried Helen Peyton, quickly; "I see it! I never could abide
-Nogi, with his stealthy ways. He stole the things, and then he ran away,
-and later, Doctor Waring killed himself!"
-
-"Because of the robbery!" exclaimed Emily Bates.
-
-"Oh, no!" Lockwood returned. "Certainly not for that. Indeed, the motive
-is the greatest mystery of all. We could perhaps imagine a motive for
-murder--whether it was robbery, or some brute of 'the other faction' or
-some old enemy of whom we know nothing. But for suicide, though I am sure
-it was that, I can think of no motive whatever."
-
-"Nor I," said Mrs. Bates. "I knew him better than any of you, and I
-know--I know for a certainty, that he was a happy man. That he looked
-forward eagerly to his marriage with me, that he was happy in the thought
-of his Presidency--that he hadn't a real trouble in the world."
-
-"The other faction," began Mrs. Peyton.
-
-"No," said Mrs. Bates, firmly. "He knew he was doing his duty, upholding
-the principles and tradition of his College, and the other faction did
-not worry him. He was too big-minded, too broad-visioned to allow that to
-trouble him."
-
-"I think you're quite right, Mrs. Bates," Lockwood agreed; "but granting
-it was suicide, what do you think was the cause?"
-
-"That's just it," she declared; "I don't think it was suicide, I know it
-couldn't have been. He was too happy, too good, too fine, to do such a
-thing, even if he had had a reason. And then, what did he do it with?"
-
-"Morton imagines a secret entrance of some sort," said Lockwood. "If
-there is one, the robber could have come in afterward, and could have
-carried off the weapon--"
-
-"Hush, Gordon," said Mrs. Bates, sternly. "That's too absurd! If it had
-been suicide--which it wasn't--why under heaven would a burglar coming in
-later, take away the weapon?"
-
-"To save himself," said Lockwood, shortly. "So he wouldn't be suspected
-of the greater crime."
-
-"Nonsense!" said Mrs. Peyton, irately; "I never heard such rubbish! And,
-in the first place, there's no secret entrance to the study. I haven't
-swept and dusted and vacuum-cleaned that place all these years without
-knowing that! Yes, and had the room redecorated and refloored, and--Oh, I
-know every inch of it! There's no possible chance of a secret entrance.
-Who built it and when and why? Not Doctor Waring. His life's always been
-an open book. Never has he had any secret errands, any callers whom I
-didn't know, any matters on which he was silent or uncommunicative. Until
-his engagement to Mrs. Bates, he hadn't a ripple in his quiet life, and
-that he told me about as soon as it occurred."
-
-Mrs. Peyton looked squarely at Doctor Waring's fiancee, as if to imply a
-complete knowledge of the courtship, as well as an intimate knowledge of
-the Doctor's life.
-
-"That's true," Lockwood said. "He was a man without secrets. He was
-always willing I should open his mail, and there was never a letter that
-I did not know about."
-
-Yet even as he spoke, the man remembered the crumpled paper he had taken
-from the waste basket, and he felt it in his pocket, though he made no
-sign.
-
-"Oh, people, is my aunt here?"
-
-It was Pinky Payne, who, all excitement, came running in.
-
-"I've just heard, and I want to see Aunt Emily."
-
-"Here I am, dear. Come here, my boy," and she drew him down beside her on
-the sofa.
-
-"What do they say, Pinky? What's the talk in town?" Lockwood asked.
-
-"Oh, the place is in a turmoil. There are the wildest reports. Some say
-it's a--a--that he killed himself, you know, and some say--he didn't.
-Which was it?"
-
-The boy's lip quivered as he looked about at the silent people.
-
-"Tell him, Gordon," begged Mrs. Bates, and Lockwood told the principal
-details of the mystery.
-
-"Never a suicide! never!" Pinckney Payne declared. "I know Doc Waring too
-well for that. Suicide means a coward--and he was never that! No, Aunt
-Emily, it was murder. Oh, how terrible," and the boy almost lost control
-of himself. "You were at the bottom of it, Auntie. I'm sure it was either
-one of those men you refused when you took up with Doc Waring."
-
-"Why, Pinckney! How dreadful of you! Don't say such a thing!"
-
-"But I know it. If you'd heard Jim Haskell and Philip Leonard talk--I
-felt sure they meant to kill Doctor Waring."
-
-"Pinky, I forbid you--"
-
-"But it's true, Auntie. And if it's true, you want them shown up, don't
-you, whichever one it was?"
-
-"Hush, Pinky--hush!"
-
-"Yes, shut up, Pink," Lockwood spoke sternly. "What you suggest is highly
-improbable, but even if there's suspicion of such a thing, don't babble
-about it. That's the detective's work."
-
-"Yes--and who's your detective? Old blind-as-a-bat Morton, I'll bet, who
-can't see a hole through a ladder! I'll show him now--"
-
-"Pinky, I beg of you, hush," said his Aunt, losing her self-control.
-
-"There, Auntie, dear, don't cry. I didn't mean to worry you, but
-something must be done--"
-
-"Something will be done, Pinky," Lockwood assured him. "But I tell you
-right now, if you try to stick your inexperienced finger in this pie,
-you'll make trouble for us all--from your aunt down. Now, behave
-yourself. Try to be a man, not a foolish boy."
-
-"That's what I'm doing! And I don't propose to lie down on the job,
-either. I tell you, Gordon. I know a lot about detective work--"
-
-"Cut it out, Pink," said Helen, and her words seemed to have an effect on
-the irrepressible youth. "To read detective stories is one thing--to
-solve a real, live mystery is quite another."
-
-"That's right, Helen," and Lockwood nodded approval. "Many a person
-thinks he has a bit of detective instinct, when all he has is curiosity
-and imagination."
-
-Helen, pleased at this appreciation went on to lay down the law for
-Pinckney Payne.
-
-She was interrupted by the entrance of Morton who wanted to learn more of
-the departed Japanese, Nogi.
-
-"What other servants are there?" he asked Mrs. Peyton.
-
-"Only the two Japanese," she replied. "They do all the cooking and
-serving at table; all the cleaning of the house; and the rest, my
-daughter and myself attend to."
-
-"There is a chauffeur?"
-
-"Yes, but the garage is a few blocks away, and the chauffeur lives at
-home."
-
-"You had Nogi but a short time?"
-
-"Only a few days."
-
-"He came well recommended?"
-
-"He had very fine written recommendations, but from people I did not
-know, and too far away to inquire of. I took him on trial."
-
-"He seemed honest and faithful?"
-
-"He seemed so--but he was silent and moody--a man one could scarcely
-understand."
-
-"Can you imagine his killing his master--granting the opportunity?"
-
-Mrs. Peyton considered. "I can imagine it," she said, "but I shouldn't
-like to say I would suspect him of it. He was soft-footed, and went about
-with a sort of stealthy manner, but I'm not prepared to say he was wrong
-in any way."
-
-"Call in Ito, the other one."
-
-Ito came, and stood stolidly by. His impassive demeanor was not unlike
-that of Gordon Lockwood. Waring had sometimes remarked this in a chaffing
-way to his secretary.
-
-"You knew this Nogi?" asked Morton.
-
-"Only since he came here," answered the butler, in perfect English.
-
-"You liked him?"
-
-"Neither yes nor no. He knew little of his duties, but he was willing to
-learn. He was respectful to me, and friendly enough. I had no reason to
-dislike him."
-
-Morton didn't seem to get anywhere with this man.
-
-"Well, what do you think of his character?" he said. "Would you say he
-was capable of killing his employer?"
-
-"All men are capable of crime," said the Jap, in a low, even voice, "but
-he could not kill Doctor Waring and go away leaving the study locked on
-the inside."
-
-"Why did he go away, then?"
-
-"That I do not know. It may be he tired of the place here."
-
-"But there was money due him."
-
-"Yes; that makes it hard to understand."
-
-Morton had an uncomfortable feeling that the Japanese was scornful of
-him, and, worse still, that the other listeners were also.
-
-"You may go," he told Ito, and then, turning to Lockwood, he said, a
-little belligerently, "Who is in charge here? To whom do I make my
-report?"
-
-The question was like a bombshell. All were silent, until Mrs. Bates
-said, "I suppose I am what might be called in charge. You may report to
-me."
-
-"To you, ma'am?" Morton was, clearly, surprised.
-
-"Yes; as Doctor Waring's affianced wife, and as his heir, I feel I am in
-authority. And also, I wish all reports made to me, as I am the one most
-deeply interested in learning the identity of the murderer."
-
-"If he was murdered," supplemented Mrs. Bates.
-
-And Mrs. Peyton broke in, "You needn't think, Mr. Morton, that there's
-such a thing as a secret entrance or secret passage in this house, for I
-know there is not."
-
-"Yet there are other theories, other possibilities," the detective said,
-his air a little less important than it had been. "Suppose, now, that
-Nogi had robbed and murdered his master, when he carried in the water
-tray. Just suppose that, and suppose that, with his Japanese cunning he
-had devised a way to lock the door behind him--or, say, he had gone out
-by the glass door, and had locked that behind him."
-
-"How?" cried Pinckney, his eyes wide with excitement.
-
-"Say he had previously removed a pane of glass--they are not large panes.
-Say, he reached through, locked the door inside--the French window, I
-mean--and then had put in the pane, reputtied it, and gone away."
-
-"Gee!" cried the boy. "That could be!"
-
-"Of course it could. And there are other ways it might have been
-accomplished. Now, we don't say that did happen, but what I want to know
-is, who is at the head of this investigation?"
-
-"I can't feel that Mrs. Bates is," Mrs. Peyton said, a little sullenly.
-"She was not married yet, and therefore, as resident housekeeper, I feel
-rather in authority myself."
-
-"But you say you are the heir, Mrs. Bates?" the detective inquired.
-
-"Perhaps I ought not to have told that," Emily Bates spoke regretfully.
-"But Doctor Waring's lawyer will tell you, it is true I am the principal
-heir. It is so designated in his will, which you will find in a secret
-drawer in his desk."
-
-"You know where this drawer is?"
-
-"I do."
-
-"Later on, I will ask you to show us. If you are the heir, there is no
-further question of your authority here."
-
-And Detective Morton left the room.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII
- WHERE IS NOGI?
-
-
-Twenty-four hours later Cray, the District Prosecuting Attorney, stood in
-the Waring study.
-
-The body of the master had been removed, and to Cray's regret he had not
-seen it before the embalmer's work had removed the red ring on the
-forehead.
-
-"It was a sign," he said to Morton, who was moodily listening. "A sign
-like that, left by the murderer, always means revenge."
-
-"You agree to murder, then?" Morton spoke eagerly, glad to have his
-theory corroborated.
-
-"What else? Look here, Morton; it's got to be either murder or suicide,
-hasn't it? Yes? Well, then, to which of the two do the greater number of
-clues point? Sum up. For suicide we have only the locked room argument. I
-admit I don't know how any one could get in or out of this study, but, as
-I say, that's the only sign of suicide. Now, for murder we have the
-absence of the weapon, the robbery of the money and the ruby, and sign of
-a circle on the dead man's forehead. Wish I'd seen that. It wasn't burnt
-on, for it disappeared after the embalmers took care of it."
-
-"Oh, no, it wasn't as deep as a burn. More like an impression left by a
-ring of cold metal or the edge of a glass tumbler."
-
-"Very strange, and decidedly an important clue. For, here's the queer
-part. The doctors declare the mark must have been made while the man was
-alive--now, how can that be explained?"
-
-"Give it up. It's too much for me. But it was too small a circle to have
-been made by the tumbler on the water tray. I measured it."
-
-"I know; that's why I think it was a sign of revenge. Suppose the motive
-was revenge and the reason for revenge had something to do with a quarrel
-in which a small glass or cup figured. That's the idea, though, of
-course, it needn't have been a glass or cup at all, but something with a
-ring-like edge. Thus, there was a reason for the sign on the dead man's
-face."
-
-"I see; though I never could have doped it out like that."
-
-"Oh, I don't say it's exactly what happened, but there must have been
-something of the sort, for what other hypothesis fits the case at all? We
-can't imagine Doctor Waring branding his own forehead, and then killing
-himself, can we?"
-
-"No; and if he had, where's the branding iron--to call it that--and
-where's the dagger?"
-
-"That's right. Now, I propose to treat the matter as a murder case, and
-look for the criminal first, and then find out how he entered the locked
-room afterward."
-
-"Pooh! those locked rooms--"
-
-"You're 'way off, Morton, when you sneer at a 'locked room.'"
-
-"It was locked--I mean impenetrably locked. There is no secret
-passage--of that I'm sure. Your ingenious idea of removing and replacing
-a whole pane of glass was clever, I grant, but we've seen that not a pane
-has been lately reputtied. They're all framed in old, dried, hard, and
-even painted putty."
-
-"I know it. But some other such way might have been devised."
-
-"Can't think of any. We've examined all the window sashes and door
-frame--oh, well, so far as I can see the room was absolutely unenterable.
-But, notwithstanding, I'm going to work on a murder basis. Because
-inexplicable as that seems, there are even more insurmountable
-difficulties in the way of the suicide theory. Now, I suppose you've had
-the finger print expert in?"
-
-"No--I haven't--not yet."
-
-"Good Lord! What kind of a detective are you? Well, get him, and put him
-to work. What about footprints?"
-
-"Inside the room?"
-
-"Or outside, either. But inside, I suppose has been trampled by a score
-of people!"
-
-"You can't get footprints on a thick rug," the discomfited Morton
-grumbled.
-
-"Sometimes you can. And a polished floor will often show marks. What have
-you done, anyway?"
-
-"There was enough to do, Mr. Cray," Morton flared back at him. "I have
-been busy every minute since I began, except for a few hours sleep."
-
-"Over twenty-four hours since the alarm was given. You've put in at least
-twelve, then. What have you done?"
-
-"A lot. I've found out, to my own satisfaction, that--if it is a
-murder--Gordon Lockwood knows all about it."
-
-"You suspect him?"
-
-"Either of the deed, or of guilty knowledge."
-
-"And his motive?"
-
-"Money. That young man is over head and ears in debt."
-
-"To whom?"
-
-"To shops--jewelers, florists, restaurants. All the debts a gay young
-blade would incur."
-
-"You amaze me, Morton. Lockwood isn't that sort."
-
-"Isn't he? You're deceived, like every one else, by that icy calm of his.
-He stares haughtily, and appears above and beyond ordinary mortals, but
-he's deep. That's what he is, deep."
-
-"Well, how did he do it?"
-
-"With his penholder. A smooth, sharp silver penholder. And he took the
-money and the ruby."
-
-"And how did he leave the room?"
-
-"Don't ask me that! That's his secret. But, I've a notion he was in
-cahoots with that new Jap, the one that vamoosed. I theorize," Morton
-waxed important as he noted the Prosecutor's attention, "that the Jap had
-some grudge against Waring, and it was he who branded his forehead, and
-who contrived a way to leave the room locked behind him. Why, I read a
-story the other day, where a key was turned from the other side of a door
-by means of a slender steel bar through the key handle, and a string from
-the bar, leading down and under the door. Once outside, the murderer
-pulled the string, the bar turned the key in the lock, the bar fell to
-the floor and he dragged it under the door by means of the string."
-
-"Ingenious! but it implies a door raised from the floor."
-
-"I know. And this one isn't. But it all goes to prove that there can be
-some way--some diabolically clever way to do the trick. And the Japanese
-are diabolically clever. And so is Lockwood. And if the two worked
-together they could accomplish wonders. Then Lockwood with his wooden
-face, could disarm suspicion. The Jap, let us say, couldn't, so Lockwood
-packed him off."
-
-"Interesting--but all theory."
-
-"To be proved or disproved, then."
-
-"Yes, but meantime, you are losing time on more practical investigation.
-Let's look outside for footprints--I mean for any one coming or going
-from this side entrance."
-
-"The French window? Nobody comes or goes that way in this weather; the
-path isn't even shoveled. That's used mostly in summer time."
-
-"Nevertheless," Cray opened the window door, "somebody has been here."
-
-Morton looked out and stared hard. How had he come to neglect a matter of
-such importance. There were two plainly visible lines of footprints in
-the snow, one quite obviously coming toward the house and one going away
-from it.
-
-"There's your murderer," said Cray, quietly.
-
-"Oh, no," but Morton wriggled uneasily. "It couldn't be. No murderer is
-going to walk through crusted snow, to and from the scene of his crime,
-leaving definite footprints like those!"
-
-"That's no argument. He might have come here with no intent of crime, and
-afterward, might have been so beside himself he couldn't plan safely."
-
-"Oh, well, get what you can from them," said Morton, pettishly. "I
-suppose you deduce a tall man, with blue eyes and two teeth missing."
-
-"Don't be cheap, Morton. And, on the contrary, I deduce a small man. They
-are small footprints, and close together. The Japanese are small men,
-Morton."
-
-"Well, these prints are more than twenty-four hours old, and they're not
-clear enough to incriminate anybody."
-
-"They haven't changed an iota from the moment they were made. This cold
-snap has kept everything frozen solid. Look at the frost still on the
-panes, the icicles still on the window sashes, the ice coating still on
-all the trees and branches. In fact it has grown steadily colder since
-night before last, and until it begins to thaw we have these footprints
-as intact evidence. I will have them photographed."
-
-"They are small," Morton agreed after further examination. "And as you
-say, too close together for an ordinary sized man. It looks like the
-Jap."
-
-"Beginning to wake up, are you? You've sure been asleep at the switch,
-Morton."
-
-"Nothing of the sort, Mr. Cray. But I ought to have help. I've had all I
-could tackle, making the necessary first inquiries, and getting the facts
-straightened out."
-
-"That business could have waited better than these other things. Now,
-there's Crimmins, the lawyer arriving. Let's interview him. But not in
-the study. Keep that clear."
-
-They met Crimmins in the hall, and took him to the living room.
-
-The matter of the will was immediately taken up, and Mrs. Bates was asked
-to tell which desk drawer it was in.
-
-Accompanied by the lawyer and the secretary, Mrs. Bates indicated the
-drawer, and Lockwood opened it with his key.
-
-There were a few papers in it but no will.
-
-Nor could further search disclose any such document.
-
-"Who took it?" said Mrs. Bates, blankly.
-
-But no one could answer her. The others came thronging in, Cray's urgent
-requests to keep out of the study being entirely ignored.
-
-"I knew it," declared Mrs. Peyton, triumphantly. "Now, I guess you won't
-be so cocky, Emily Bates--you or your 'authority!'"
-
-Mrs. Bates looked at her. "I am the heir," she said haughtily. "I assert
-that--but I cannot prove it until the will is found. It isn't in your
-possession, Mr. Crimmins?"
-
-"No; Doctor Waring preferred to keep it himself. I cannot understand its
-disappearance."
-
-"A lot of paper has been burned in this fireplace," said Helen Peyton who
-was poking the ashes around.
-
-Morton hastened to look, for it seemed to him as if everybody was
-stealing his thunder.
-
-"Nothing that can be identified," he said, carelessly.
-
-"No?" demurred Cray. "At any rate, it looks as if some legal papers were
-destroyed. This bit of ash is quite evidently the remainder of several
-sheets folded together."
-
-But no definite knowledge could be gained outside the fact that much
-paper had been burned there. As no fire had been made since the discovery
-of the tragedy, it stood to reason the papers were burned by Doctor
-Waring himself or by his midnight intruder, if there were such a one.
-
-"Well," Cray demanded of the lawyer, "if no will can be found, then who
-inherits the property of Doctor Waring? And is it considerable?"
-
-"Yes; Doctor Waring had quite a fortune," Crimmins told them. "As to an
-heir, he has a distant cousin--a second cousin, who, I suppose would be
-the legal inheritor, in the absence of any will. But, I know he made a
-will in Mrs. Bates' favor, and it included a few minor legacies to the
-members of this household and some neighbors."
-
-"I know it," Mrs. Bates said. "I'm perfectly familiar with all the
-bequests. But where is the will? It must be found! It can't have been
-burnt!"
-
-"We've no right to assume that those paper ashes are the will, but I
-confess I fear it," Crimmins announced, his face drawn with anxiety. "I
-should be deeply sorry, if it is so, for the cousin I speak of is a ne'er
-do well young man, and not at all a favorite of his late relative. His
-name is Maurice Trask and he lives in St. Louis. I suppose he must be
-notified in any case."
-
-"Yes," said Cray, "that must be done. But, please, all go out of this
-room, for the finger print experts and the photographers are coming soon,
-and every moment you people stay here, you help to cloud or destroy
-possible clues."
-
-Impressed by his sternness, they filed out and gathered in the
-living-room.
-
-There they found a neighbor, Saltonstall Adams, awaiting them.
-
-"I came over," he said, with scant preliminary greetings, "because I have
-something to tell. You in charge, Mr. Cray?"
-
-"Yes, Salt, what do you know?"
-
-"This. I was awake late, night before last--the night Doc Waring died,
-and I was looking out my window, and it was pretty light, with the snow
-and the moonlight and all, and I saw a man--a small man, creeping along
-sly like. And I watched him, he went along past my house down toward the
-railroad tracks. He had a bag with him, and a bundle beside. I wouldn't
-have noticed him probably, but he skulked along so and seemed so fearful
-that somebody'd see him."
-
-"Nogi?" said Gordon Lockwood, calmly, looking at the speaker.
-
-"Don't say it was, and don't say it wasn't. But I went down to the
-station and the station master told me that that Jap of Waring's went off
-on the milk train."
-
-"He did!" cried Morton, "what time does that train go through?"
-
-"'Bout half past four. The fellow passed my house 'long about half past
-twelve, I should say--though I didn't look, and he must have waited
-around the station all that time till the milk train came along."
-
-"Is the station master sure it was Nogi?" asked Mrs. Peyton, greatly
-excited.
-
-"Said he was, and there's mighty few Japs in Corinth, all told."
-
-"Of course it was Nogi," said Lockwood, and Morton snapped him up with,
-"Why are you so sure?"
-
-Lockwood treated the detective to one of his most disconcerting stares,
-and said,
-
-"You, a detective, and ask such a simple question! Why, since there are
-but a very few Japanese in this town, and since one of them left on that
-milk train, and since all the rest are accounted for, and only Nogi is
-missing--it doesn't seem to me to require superhuman intelligence to
-infer that it was Nogi who took his departure."
-
-"And who was mixed up in the murder of Doctor John Waring?" cried Morton,
-exasperated beyond all caution by the ironic tone of Lockwood. "And,
-unless you can explain some matters, sir, you may be considered mixed in
-the same despicable deed!"
-
-"What matters?" Gordon Lockwood asked, but his already pale face turned a
-shade whiter.
-
-"First, sir, you have a large number of unpaid bills in your possession."
-
-The secretary's face was no longer white. The angry blood flew to it, and
-he fairly clenched his hands in an effort to preserve his usual calm, nor
-even then, could he entirely succeed.
-
-"What if I have?" he cried, "and how do you know? You've searched my
-rooms!"
-
-"Certainly," said Morton, "I warned you I should do so."
-
-"But, in my absence!"
-
-"The law is not always over ceremonious."
-
-"Now, Mr. Lockwood," Cray began, "don't get excited."
-
-Gordon Lockwood almost laughed. For him to be told not to get excited!
-He, who never allowed himself to be even slightly ruffled or perturbed!
-This would never do!
-
-"I'm not excited, Mr. Cray," he said, and he wasn't, now, "but I am
-annoyed that my private papers should be searched without my knowledge.
-Surely I might--"
-
-"Never mind the amenities of life, Mr. Lockwood," Cray went on; "your
-effects were searched on the authority of a police warrant. Now,
-regarding these bills--"
-
-"I have nothing to say. A man has a right to his unpaid bills."
-
-"But he has not a right to steal five hundred dollars in cash and a ruby
-pin, in order to be able to pay them!" This from Morton, and instead of
-replying to the detective in any way, Lockwood ignored the speech
-utterly, quite as if he had not heard it, and addressed Cray.
-
-"Was anything further found to incriminate me?" he asked.
-
-"Was there anything else to be found?" said Cray, catching at the implied
-suggestion.
-
-"That's for your sleuths to say. I know of nothing."
-
-"Well, there's your round, sharp penholder. And the fact that you had
-keys to all desk drawers. Also the fact that only you and the Jap are
-known to have been in that part of the house that night. These things
-were not learned from the search of your rooms; but your pecuniary
-embarrassment, which was discovered, all go together to make a web of
-circumstances that call for investigation."
-
-"Don't beat about the bush!" exclaimed Lockwood, his lips set, and his
-eyes staring coldly at the District Attorney. "I'd far rather be accused
-definitely than have it hinted that I am responsible for this crime."
-
-"But we haven't sufficient evidence, Mr. Lockwood, to accuse you
-definitely, that's why we must question you."
-
-"Sufficient! You haven't any evidence at all!"
-
-"Oh, we have some." With a turn of his head, Cray summoned a man who
-stood at the hall door.
-
-The man came in, and handed Cray a report.
-
-"H'm," the attorney scanned the paper. "We find, Mr. Lockwood, fresh
-finger prints on the chair which stood near Doctor Waring's desk. Facing
-the Doctor's chair, in fact, as if some one had sat there talking to him.
-Did you?"
-
-"No; I never sat down and talked to him. I was always waiting on him in
-the matter of bringing books or taking letters for transcription, and in
-any case, I either stood, or sat at my desk, never in that chair you
-speak of."
-
-"This man will take the finger prints of all present," the Attorney
-directed, and one and all submitted to the process.
-
-Old Salt Adams was greatly interested.
-
-"But you can't get the prints of Friend Jap," he said. "Like's not, he'd
-be of more importance than all of us put together. Me, now, I can't see
-where I come in."
-
-Yet, after time enough had passed to complete the processes, it was
-learned that the finger prints on the shiny black wood of the chair under
-discussion were indubitably those of Gordon Lockwood. Also, there were
-other prints there, slightly smaller, that Cray immediately assumed to be
-those of the missing Japanese.
-
-Lockwood looked more supercilious than usual, if that were possible.
-
-"How can you identify the prints of a man not here?" he asked with an
-incredulous look.
-
-"Supposition not identification," said Cray, gravely. "But we're
-narrowing these things down, and we may yet get identification."
-
-"Get the Jap back," advised Old Salt Adams. "That's your next move, Cray.
-Get him, check up his finger prints and all that, and best of all get his
-confession. There's your work cut out for you."
-
-"Find Doctor Waring's will," Mrs. Bates lamented. "There's your work cut
-out for you. I am not unduly mercenary, but when I know how anxious
-Doctor Waring was that I should inherit his estate, when I realize what
-it meant that he drew this will before our marriage, so urgent was his
-desire that all should be mine, you must understand that I do not
-willingly forego it all in favor of a distant relative, whom, Mr.
-Crimmins tells us, Doctor Waring did not care for at all."
-
-"I should say not!" and Crimmins looked positive. "It will be an outrage
-if Mr. Trask inherits the estate already willed to Mrs. Bates. I stand
-ready to do all I can to see justice done in this matter."
-
-"But justice, as you see it, can only result from finding the will," said
-Cray.
-
-"Yes," agreed Crimmins, "and the whole matter opens up a new train of
-thought. May not the distant cousin, this man Trask be in some way
-responsible for the destruction of the will and the death of the
-decedent?"
-
-"It is a new way to look," Cray agreed, with a thoughtful air; "and we
-will look that way, you rest assured. We will at once get in touch with
-this cousin, you will give us his address, and learn where he was and how
-employed on the night of Doctor Waring's death. We still have to face the
-problem of an outsider's exit from a locked room, and though it seems
-more explicable in the case of a member of the household, yet a new
-suspect brings fresh conditions, and perhaps fresh evidence, which may
-show us where to look. At any rate, we must speedily find Mr. Maurice
-Trask."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX
- A LOVE LETTER
-
-
-"Look here, Esther," said old Salt to his wife, "that's a mighty curious
-case over at Waring's."
-
-"How you do talk! I should think that to you and me, knowing and loving
-John Waring as we did, you'd have no doings with the curious part of it!
-As for me, I don't care who killed him. He's dead, isn't he? It can't
-bring him back to life to hang his murderer. And to my mind it's
-heathenish--all this detectiving and evidencing--or whatever they call
-it. Whom do they suspect now? You?"
-
-Adams looked at his wife with a mild reproach. "Woman all over! No sense
-of justice, no righteous indignation. Don't you know the murderer must be
-found and punished? That is if it was a murder."
-
-"Of course it was! That blessed man never killed himself! And he about to
-marry Emily Bates--a lady, if ever there was one!"
-
-"Well, now you listen to me, Esther, and whatever you do, don't go
-babbling about this. They say the Jap, who vamoosed from the Waring
-house, made a line of foot tracks in the snow. The snow's crusted over,
-you know, and those footprints are about as clear now as when they were
-made."
-
-"Huh! footprints! Corinth is full of footprints."
-
-"Yes, but these--listen, Esther--these lead straight from the Waring
-house, over to this house. And back again."
-
-"How can they?" Mrs. Adams looked mystified. "That Japanese didn't come
-over here."
-
-"You can't say that he didn't. And, look here, Esther, where's Miss
-Austin? What's she doing?"
-
-"Miss Austin? She's in her room. She hasn't been quite up to the mark for
-a day or two, and she's had her meals upstairs."
-
-"What's the matter with her?"
-
-"A slight cold, she says. I can't make her out, Salt. What's she doing
-here, anyway?"
-
-"Don't pester her, my dear. How you and Bascom do love to pick at that
-girl! Why does she have to do anything?"
-
-"It's queer, though. And I hate a mystery."
-
-"Well, she is one--I grant you that. Have you told her about Doctor
-Waring? Though I daresay it wouldn't interest her."
-
-"And I daresay it would! Why, that girl cut his picture out of the paper,
-and she did have one stuck up on her dresser, till I looked at it sort of
-sharp like, and she put it away."
-
-"Poor child! Can't even have a newspaper cutting, if she wants it! You're
-a tyrant, Esther! Don't you ever try to boss me like that!"
-
-The good-natured smile that passed between them, proved the unlikelihood
-of this, and Old Salt went on. "I wish you'd tell her, wife, about the
-tragedy. Seems like she ought to know."
-
-Mrs. Adams stared at him. "I'll tell her, as a matter of course, but I
-don't know why you're so anxious about it."
-
-"Good morning, Miss Austin," the good lady said, soon after, "better this
-morning?"
-
-"Yes, thank you. My cold is almost entirely well."
-
-The girl was sitting by the window, in an easy chair. She had on a
-Japanese dressing gown of quilted silk, embroidered with chrysanthemums,
-and was listlessly gazing out across the snow covered field opposite.
-
-The Adams house was on the outskirts of the little town, and separated by
-a wide field from the Waring place.
-
-"Heard the news about Doctor Waring?" Mrs. Adams said, in a casual tone,
-but watching the girl closely.
-
-"No; what is it?"
-
-The words were simple, and the voice steady, but Miss Austin's hands
-clutched the arms of the chair, and her face turned perfectly white.
-
-"Why, what ails you? You don't know the man, do you?"
-
-"I--I heard him lecture, you know. Tell me--what is the--the news?"
-
-"He's dead." Mrs. Adams spoke bluntly on purpose. She had felt in a vague
-way, that this strange person, this Miss Mystery, had more interest in
-Doctor Waring than she admitted, and the landlady was determined to find
-out.
-
-To her own satisfaction she did find out, for the girl almost fainted.
-She didn't quite lose consciousness, indeed it was not so much a faint as
-such a desperate effort to regain her poise, that it unnerved her.
-
-"Now, now, Miss Austin, why do you take it so hard? He was a stranger to
-you, wasn't he?"
-
-"Yes--yes, of course he was."
-
-"Why are you so disturbed then?"
-
-"He was such a--such a fine man--" the girl's stifled sobs impeded her
-speech.
-
-"Well, somebody killed him."
-
-At that, Miss Austin seemed turned to stone. "Killed him!" she whispered,
-in accent of terror.
-
-"Yes--or else he killed himself--they don't feel sure." Mrs. Adams, once
-embarked on the narrative, told all she knew of the circumstances, and in
-the exciting recital, almost forgot to watch the effect of the tale on
-her listener.
-
-But this effect was not entirely unnoted. At the partly open door, Old
-Salt Adams, stood, eavesdropping, but with a kindly, anxious look on his
-face, that boded no ill to any one.
-
-And he noticed that the girl's attention was wandering. She was pitifully
-white, her face drawn and scared, and soon she exclaimed, with a burst of
-nervous fury, "Stop! please stop! Leave the room, won't you?"
-
-It was not a command but an agonized entreaty. Mrs. Adams fairly jumped,
-and alarmed as well as offended, she rose and started for the door, only
-to meet her husband entering.
-
-"Go downstairs, Esther," he said, gravely, "I want to speak to Miss
-Austin myself."
-
-Staring at one then at the other, and utterly routed by this unbelievable
-turn of affairs, Mrs. Adams went.
-
-Old Salt closed the room door, and turned to the trembling girl.
-
-"Miss Austin," he said kindly, "I like you, I want to help you--but I
-must ask you to explain yourself a little. The people in my house call
-you Miss Mystery. Why are you here? Why are you in Corinth at all?"
-
-For a moment the girl seemed about to respond to his kindly, gentle
-attitude and address. Then, something stayed her, and she let her lovely
-face harden to a stony blankness, as she replied, "It is a bit intrusive,
-but I've no reason not to tell. I am an art student, and I came here to
-paint New England winter scenery."
-
-"Have you done much?"
-
-"I haven't been here quite a week yet--and I've been picking out
-available bits--and for two days I've had a cold."
-
-"How did you get cold?" The voice was kind but it had a definite note, as
-if desirous of an accurate answer.
-
-Miss Mystery looked at him.
-
-"How does any one get cold?" she said, trying to smile; "perhaps sitting
-in a draught--perhaps by means of a germ. It is almost well now."
-
-"Perhaps by walking in the snow, and getting one's feet wet," Mr. Adams
-suggested, and the girl turned frightened eyes on him.
-
-"Don't," she breathed; "Mr. Adams, don't!" Her voice was piteous her eyes
-implored him to stop torturing her.
-
-"Why, what's the harm in my saying that?" he went on, inexorably. "You
-wouldn't go anywhere that you wouldn't want known--would you--Miss
-Mystery?"
-
-He spoke the last two words in a meaning way, and the great dark eyes
-faced him with the look of a stag at bay.
-
-Then again, by a desperate effort the girl recovered herself, and said,
-coldly,
-
-"Please speak plainly, Mr. Adams. Is there a special meaning in your
-words?"
-
-"There is, Miss Austin. Perhaps I have no right to ask you why--but I do
-ask you if you went over to Doctor Waring's house, late in the
-evening--night before last?"
-
-"Sunday night, do you mean?"
-
-Miss Mystery controlled her voice, but her hands were clenched and her
-foot tapped the floor in her stifled excitement.
-
-"Yes, Sunday night."
-
-"No; of course I did not go over there at night. I was there in the
-afternoon, with Mrs. Bates and Mr. Payne."
-
-"I know that. And you then met Doctor Waring for the first time?"
-
-"For the first time," she spoke with downcast face.
-
-"The first time in your life?"
-
-"The first time in my life," but if ever a statement carried its own
-denial that one seemed to. The long dark lashes fell on the white cheeks.
-The pale lips quivered, and if Anita Austin had been uttering deepest
-perjury she could have shown no more convincing evidence of falsehood.
-
-Yet old Salt looked at her benevolently. She was so young, so small, so
-alone--and so mysterious.
-
-"I can't make you out," he shook his head. "But I'm for you, Miss Austin.
-That is," he hedged, "unless I find out something definite against you. I
-feel I ought to tell you, that you've enemies--yes," as the girl looked
-up surprised, "you've made enemies in this house. Small wonder--the way
-you've acted! Now, why can't you be chummy and sociable like?"
-
-"Chummy? Sociable? With whom?"
-
-"With all the boarders. There's young Lockwood now--and there's young
-Tyler--"
-
-"Yes, yes, I know. I will--Mr. Adams--I will try to be more sociable.
-Now--as to--to Doctor Waring--why did he kill himself?"
-
-Old Salt eyed her narrowly. "We don't know that he did," he began.
-
-"But Mrs. Adams told me all the details"--she shuddered, "and if that
-room he was in was so securely locked that they had to break in, how
-could it be the work of--of another?"
-
-"Well, Miss Austin, as they found a bad wound in the man's neck, just
-under his right ear, a wound that produced instant unconsciousness and
-almost instant death, and as no weapon of any sort could be found in the
-room, how could it have been suicide?"
-
-"Which would you rather think it?" the strange girl asked, looking
-gravely at him.
-
-"Well, to me--I'm an old-fashioned chap--suicide always suggests
-cowardice, and Doc Waring was no coward, that I'll swear!"
-
-"No, he was not--"
-
-"How do you know?"
-
-Miss Mystery started at the sudden question.
-
-"I heard him lecture, you know," she returned; "and, too, I saw him in
-his home--Sunday afternoon--and he seemed a fine man--a fine man."
-
-"Well, Miss Austin," Old Salt rose to go, "I'm free to confess you're a
-mystery to me. I consider myself a fair judge of men--yes, and of women,
-but when a slip of a girl like you acts so strange, I can't make it out.
-Now, I happen to know--"
-
-He paused at the panic-stricken look on her face, and lamely concluded;
-
-"Never mind--I won't tell."
-
-With which cryptic remark he went away.
-
-"Well, what you been saying to her?" demanded his aggrieved spouse, as
-the Adamses met in their own little sitting-room.
-
-"Why, nothing," Old Salt replied, and his troubled eyes looked at her
-pleadingly. "I don't think she's wrong, Esther."
-
-"Well, I do. And maybe a whole lot wrong. Why, Saltonstall, Miss Bascom
-says she _saw_ Miss Austin traipsing across the field late Sunday night."
-
-"She didn't! I don't believe a word of it! She's a meddling old maid--a
-snooping busybody!"
-
-"There, now, you carry on like that because you're afraid we will
-discover something wrong about Miss Mystery."
-
-"Look here, Esther," Adams spoke sternly; "you remember she's a young
-girl, without anybody to stand up for her, hereabouts. Now, you know what
-a bobbery a few words can kick up. And we don't want that poor child's
-name touched by a breath of idle gossip that isn't true. I don't believe
-Liza Bascom saw her out on Sunday night! I don't even believe she thought
-she did!"
-
-"Well, I believe it. Liza Bascom's no fool--"
-
-"She's worse, she's a knave! And she hates little Austin, and she'd say
-anything, true or false, to harm the girl."
-
-"But, Salt, she says she saw Miss Austin, all in her fur coat and cap
-going cross lots to the Waring house Sunday evening--late."
-
-"Can she prove it?"
-
-"I don't know about that. But she saw her."
-
-"How does she know it was Miss Austin? It might have been somebody who
-looked like her."
-
-"You know those footprints."
-
-"The Jap's?"
-
-"You can't say they're the Jap's. Miss Bascom says they're the Austin
-girl's."
-
-"Esther!" Old Saltonstall Adams rose in his wrath, "you ought to be
-ashamed of yourself to let that girl's name get into the Waring matter at
-all. Even if she did go out Sunday night, if Miss Bascom did see her, you
-keep still about it. If that girl's wrong, it'll be discovered without
-our help. If she isn't, we must not be the ones to bring her into
-notice."
-
-"She couldn't be--be implicated--could she, Salt?"
-
-"No!" he thundered. "Esther, you astound me. That Bascom woman has turned
-your brain. She's a viper, that's what _she_ is!"
-
-He stormed out of the room, and getting into his great coat, tramped down
-to the village.
-
-Gordon Lockwood was in his room. This was much to the annoyance of
-Callie, the impatient chambermaid, who wanted to get her work done.
-
-Lockwood was himself impatient to get over to the Waring house, for he
-had much to do with the mass of incoming mail and the necessary
-interviews with reporters and other callers.
-
-Yet he tarried, in his pleasant bedroom at Mrs. Adams', his door securely
-locked, and his own attitude one of stupefaction.
-
-For the hundredth time he reread the crumpled paper that he had taken
-from the study waste-basket under the very nose of Detective Morton.
-
-Had that sleuth been a little more worthy of his profession he never
-would have allowed the bare-faced theft.
-
-And now that Lockwood had it he scarce knew what to do with it.
-
-And truly it was an astonishing missive.
-
-For it read thus:
-
-My darling Anita:
-
-At the first glance of your brown eyes this afternoon, love was born in
-my heart. Life is worth living--with you in the world! And yet--
-
-That was all. The unfinished letter had been crumpled into a ball and
-thrown in the basket. Had another been started--and completed? Had Anita
-Austin received it--and was that why she kept to her room for two days?
-Was she a--he hated the word! a vamp? Had she secretly become acquainted
-with John Waring during her presence in Corinth, and had so charmed him
-that he wrote to her thus? Or, had they known each other before? What a
-mystery!
-
-There was not the slightest doubt of the writing. Lockwood knew it as
-well as he knew his own. And on top of all the other scraps in the
-waste-basket it must have been the last missive the dead man wrote--or,
-rather the last he threw away.
-
-This meant he had been writing it on the Sunday evening. Then, Lockwood
-reasoned, knowing the routine, if he had written another, which he
-completed and addressed, it would, in natural course, have been put with
-the letters for the mail, and would have been posted by Ito that next
-morning.
-
-What an oversight, never to have asked Ito about that matter.
-
-It was an inviolable custom for the butler to take all letters laid on a
-certain small table, and put them in the pillar box, early in the
-morning.
-
-Had Ito done this? It must be inquired into.
-
-But far more absorbing was the actual letter before him. How could it be
-possible that John Waring, the dignified scholar, the confirmed bachelor,
-should have loved this mystery girl?
-
-Yet, even as he formulated the question, Gordon Lockwood knew the answer.
-He knew that from his own point of view it would not be impossible or
-even difficult for any man with two eyes in his head to love that
-fascinating, enchanting personality.
-
-And as he pondered, he knew that he loved her himself. Yes, had loved her
-almost from the moment he first saw her. Certainly from the time he sat
-behind her at the lecture, and counted the queer little ball fringes in
-the back of her dainty gown.
-
-Those fringes! Lockwood gave a groan as a sudden thought came to him.
-
-He jumped up, and with a determined air, set about burning the
-inexplicable letter that John Waring had written and thrown away.
-
-In the empty fireplace of the old-fashioned room, Lockwood touched a
-match to the sheet and burned it to an ash.
-
-Then he went over to the Waring house.
-
-It was an hour or so later that Callie reported to Miss Bascom.
-
-"Queer goin's on," the girl said, rolling her eyes at her eager listener,
-"Mr. Lockwood, now, he burnt some papers, and Miss Austin, too, she burnt
-some papers."
-
-"What's queer about that?" snapped Miss Bascom, who had hoped for
-something more sensational.
-
-"Well, it's sorta strange they're both burnin' paper at the same time.
-And both so sly about it. Mr. Lockwood he kep' lookin' back at the
-fireplace as he went outa the door, and Miss Austin, she jumped like she
-was shot, when I come in suddenly an' found her stoopin' over the
-fireplace. An' too, Miss Bascom, whatever else she burnt, she burnt that
-picture she had of Doctor Waring."
-
-"Did she have his picture?"
-
-"Yep, one Mr. Lockwood guv her, after Nora carried off the one she cut
-out of a paper."
-
-"What in the world did that girl want of Doctor Waring's picture?"
-
-"I dunno, ma'am. What they call hero-worship, I guess. Just like I've got
-some several pictures of Harold Massinger, that man who plays Caveman in
-the Movies! My, but he's handsome!"
-
-"And so Miss Austin burned a photograph of John Waring?"
-
-"Yes, ma'am. And you know they're kinda hard to burn. Anyways, she was a
-kneelin' by the fireplace an' the picture was smokin' like everything."
-
-"'Lemme help you miss,' I says, as polite as could be--"and watcha think,
-she snatched back, and says, 'You lemme lone. Get outahere!' or somethin'
-like that. Oh, she was mad all right."
-
-"She has a high temper, hasn't she?"
-
-"Yes'm, there's no denyin' she has. Then again, she's sweet as pie, and
-nice an' gentle. She's a queer makeup, I will say."
-
-"There, Callie, that will do; don't gossip," and Miss Bascom, sure she
-had learned all the maid had to tell, went downstairs to tell it to Mrs.
-Adams.
-
-The landlady seemed less receptive than usual, being still mindful of her
-husband's admonitions. But Miss Bascom's story of the burnt photograph
-roused her curiosity to highest pitch.
-
-"There's something queer about that girl," Mrs. Adams opined, and the
-other more than agreed.
-
-"Let's go up and talk to her," Miss Bascom suggested, and after a
-moment's hesitation, Mrs. Adams went.
-
-The landlady tapped lightly at the door, but there was no response.
-
-"Go right in," the other whispered, and go in they did.
-
-Miss Mystery lay on the couch, her eyes closed, her cheeks still wet with
-tears. She did not move, and after a moment's glance to assure herself
-the girl was sound asleep, Miss Bascom audaciously opened one of the
-small top drawers of the dresser.
-
-Mrs. Adams gasped, and frantically made motions of remonstrance, but
-swiftly fingering among the veils and handkerchiefs, Miss Bascom drew out
-a large roll of bills, held by an elastic band.
-
-Anita Austin's eyes flew open, and after one staring glance at the
-intrusive woman, she jumped from the couch and flew at her like a small
-but very active tiger.
-
-"How dare you!" she cried, snatching the money from Miss Bascom's hand,
-even as that elated person was unrolling it.
-
-And from inside the roll, down on the painted floor, fell a ruby
-stickpin.
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X
- WHO IS MISS MYSTERY?
-
-
-Mrs. Adams fell limply into a chair, her round eyes staring in horror.
-
-Miss Bascom had taken upon herself the role of dictator and with an
-accusing finger pointed at Miss Mystery she said:
-
-"What have you to say for yourself?"
-
-"Nothing," replied Anita Austin, coolly, "except to insist that you leave
-my room."
-
-"Leave your room, indeed! I am only too glad to! And I know where to go,
-too."
-
-Miss Bascom's determined air as she strode out of the door gave a hint of
-her desperate intention and within five minutes she was out on the road
-toward the village.
-
-Mrs. Adams, still almost speechless with surprise and dismay, looked
-sorrowfully at Anita. Something in the girl's face stayed the kindly
-words the woman meant to say, and, instead, she broke out:
-
-"You must leave this house! What are you anyway? A thief--and a
-murderer?"
-
-"Oh! Don't!" Anita put up her hand as if to ward off a physical blow.
-
-Then, as if the cruel words had stung her to a quickened sense of her own
-danger, she cried, piteously:
-
-"Oh, Mrs. Adams, help me--protect me--won't you? I don't know what to
-do--I'm all alone--so alone--"
-
-She sank into a chair and buried her face in her hands.
-
-Esther Adams was uncertain what course to pursue. Should she protect this
-guilty girl, of whom she really knew nothing, or should she dismiss her
-at once from her house, in the interests of her other boarders, who must
-be considered?
-
-Surely, her first duty was to the others--the people she had known so
-long, and who looked upon her house as a home and a safeguard.
-
-"You must go," she said, though her voice wavered as she saw the pathetic
-face Anita raised to look at her.
-
-"Oh, no! Don't send me away! Where could I go? Even the Inn people
-wouldn't take me!"
-
-"Of course they wouldn't! Go home! Haven't you a home? Who are you,
-anyway? But I don't care who you are--you must get out of this house
-today--this morning. Do you hear?"
-
-Meantime Miss Bascom, on her virtuous errand had trotted quickly to the
-office of the Prosecuting District Attorney.
-
-There, however, she was told that Mr. Cray was over at the Waring house,
-and she concluded to go there. Nor did this displease her. She longed to
-be in the limelight, and the tale she had to tell would surely give her
-the right to be there.
-
-Mrs. Peyton received her coldly, for the two were not friends.
-
-"I came to see Mr. Cray," Miss Bascom announced, "on important business."
-
-"Oh, very well," the housekeeper returned, "take a seat and I'll ask him
-to see you."
-
-Miss Bascom waited in the living-room, secure in her knowledge of the
-importance of her news.
-
-The attorney welcomed her cordially for he saw at once that she brought
-news of value.
-
-And, expressed in emphatic language, and interspersed with many and
-unfavorable personal opinions, Liza Bascom told of the incident of
-finding the money and the ruby in Miss Austin's bureau drawer.
-
-"Astonishing!" commented Cray. "Who is she?"
-
-"Nobody knows, that's the queer part. We call her Miss Mystery."
-
-"Where did she come from?"
-
-"Nobody knows. She just appeared."
-
-"Don't the Adamses know?"
-
-"No, they don't."
-
-"A young girl, you say?"
-
-"She appears to be very young--but you never can tell with those sly
-things. I daresay she makes herself look several years younger than she
-really is."
-
-"Did she know Doctor Waring?"
-
-"How do I know? She came over to this house late Sunday night--for I saw
-her--"
-
-"Good heavens! Are you sure?"
-
-"Well, it was fairly light, with the moon, and the snow all over the
-ground, you know, and I saw her, all wrapped up in her fur coat, sneaking
-away from the house--"
-
-"How late?"
-
-"Oh--after everybody had gone upstairs and the lights were all out at the
-Adamses."
-
-"You saw her come back?"
-
-"No; I didn't think much about it at the time--she's a crazy piece
-anyway--and--"
-
-"What do you mean by a crazy piece?"
-
-"Why, she's queer--not like other folks. She won't have anything to do
-with any of us over there--"
-
-"That doesn't make her out crazy."
-
-Miss Bascom shrugged impatiently. "I don't mean insane or demented. I
-only mean sly and secretive. She never speaks to anybody at the
-table--and though she makes eyes at Gordon Lockwood, she snubs Mr. Tyler,
-who is just as good a young man. They both admire her--anybody can see
-that, but she treats them like the dust under her feet."
-
-"Not an adventuress, then?"
-
-"I don't know. But I do know she's a thief--or how did she get that money
-and the ruby?"
-
-"Perhaps Doctor Waring gave them to her?"
-
-"Then she is a wrong one! Why should he give a strange girl such things?"
-
-"If he was in love with her--"
-
-"Now, look here, Mr. Cray, do try to show ordinary common sense! Doctor
-Waring was about to marry Mrs. Bates, a sweet, dear woman, of suitable
-age. Is he going to have a little flibbertigibbet coming to see him late
-at night, for any romantic reasons?"
-
-Cray hesitated to speak his mind, but he ruminated that he had heard of
-such things, in the course of his life. Miss Bascom, he thought was an
-unsophisticated old maid, but there was certainly a new condition to be
-investigated, and the case of Miss Anita Austin must be carefully
-considered.
-
-"Now, Miss Bascom," he said, diplomatically, "I'll have to ask you to
-keep this whole matter quiet for a time. You must see that we can't work
-successfully if we take the whole town into our confidence. Or even this
-entire household."
-
-"Don't you try to bamboozle me, Stephen Cray! I know your sort. You want
-to keep this matter quiet because you want to get that girl off scotfree!
-I know you men! Just because she has a pair of big, dark eyes and a slim
-little shape you are ready to hide her guilt and let her off easy. I
-won't have it! That girl stole those things, or else she got them from
-poor John Waring in a way no decent woman would--"
-
-"What are you talking about, Liza Bascom?"
-
-Mrs. Peyton appeared in the doorway, and though she asked the question,
-it was fairly evident that she knew the answer, and had been listening.
-
-"Yes," she went on, "I've been listening at the door, and I'm glad I did.
-First of all, I won't have Doctor Waring's name traduced, and next, if
-there's a girl implicated in the matter, the whole truth about her has
-got to come out! I know the girl, she was here Sunday afternoon, and a
-more brazen-faced, bold-mannered chit, I never want to see!"
-
-"She was here?" asked the bewildered Cray. "You know her?"
-
-"I know all I want to know of her," Mrs. Peyton declared. "Yes, she was
-here--came over with Emily Bates and Pinky. Wouldn't condescend to be
-really one of us, but just acted offish and seemed to me about
-half-witted."
-
-"Don't be silly," put in Miss Bascom. "That's the last thing to say of
-her! Whatever that girl may be she's got all her wits about her! I can
-see that for myself."
-
-"Was Doctor Waring present when Miss Austin was here?" asked Cray,
-thinking hard.
-
-"Yes," replied Mrs. Peyton, "and that's a strange thing. When he first
-saw her--unexpectedly, you know--he dropped his teacup."
-
-"Because of the meeting?" asked Cray.
-
-"I don't know," Mrs. Peyton said. "He declared afterward he had never
-seen the girl before--but--oh--I can't believe she came back here that
-night!"
-
-"Of course she didn't," Cray said. "How could she get in, unless someone
-admitted her."
-
-"There's the French window in the study," Mrs. Peyton suggested,
-uncertainly. "Doctor Waring could have let her in that way--"
-
-"Well, he didn't!" Miss Bascom declared. "Land! I've known John Waring
-all my life, and he's not the kind of man that had anything to do with
-flirtatious young women."
-
-Of a truth, Liza Bascom had known Waring for many years and had spent a
-number of them in desperate efforts to persuade him to renounce
-bachelorhood in her favor.
-
-Yet her words carried little weight with Attorney Cray, who fancied that
-he knew men better than the insistent spinster possibly could.
-
-"Miss Bascom," he said, after further thought, "and Mrs. Peyton, too, I'm
-going to ask you--I'm going to instruct you to keep this matter quiet
-until after the funeral of Doctor Waring. That occurs tomorrow, and I
-want a day or so to look into this thing quietly. We would gain nothing
-by rushing matters. I will see Miss Austin, of course, and rest assured,
-if she is guilty of any wrong doing, she shall not escape. But it is a
-serious matter to accuse a suspect without giving any chance for
-explanation--"
-
-"There's no explanation of that ruby pin and all that money, that is not
-incriminating to that girl!" Miss Bascom exclaimed.
-
-"Nevertheless, I am in authority, and I forbid you to discuss the
-connection of Miss Austin with the case at all."
-
-Cray knew how to impress belligerent women, and he even added a hint of
-their making trouble for themselves unless they obeyed his explicit
-command.
-
-He returned to the study, where Gordon Lockwood was going over the
-morning's mail.
-
-The secretary was a busy man, for his late employer had had a number of
-diversified interests and every mail brought letters, catalogues,
-circulars and newspapers that required careful attention. John Waring had
-been a collector of rare books, and other curios, and was interested in
-several literary enterprises.
-
-To many of these correspondents Lockwood could merely send a statement of
-the Doctor's death. But others involved careful and wise judgment, and
-Lockwood conscientiously discharged his duties.
-
-The study had been put in order, and all traces of the tragedy had been
-removed. The books that had been on the desk, including the blood-stained
-copy of Martial, Lockwood had, after consideration, restored to their
-places on the shelves.
-
-Although it gave him a thrill of horror, Lockwood had nerved himself to
-appropriate Waring's desk, for it meant far greater convenience in his
-work.
-
-He sat there as Cray entered, and raised his impassive face to note the
-attorney's excitement.
-
-"By Jove, Lockwood," Cray, exclaimed, as he closed the door behind him,
-"there's a new way to look, which seems to promise to straighten out a
-lot of things. Do you know that little piece over at your boarding house,
-named Austin?"
-
-"I know her slightly. What about her?"
-
-From Lockwood's voice no one would suspect that his heart was pounding
-desperately.
-
-"Well, she was here late Sunday night! What do you know about that?"
-
-"I don't know anything about it," returned Lockwood, coldly, "and I don't
-believe it. For if she had been here I should have known about it. I was
-here myself, just outside the study door, until eleven. You don't mean
-later than that, do you?"
-
-"Dunno. The Bascom spinster tells the story--"
-
-"Then don't bank on it. With all due deference to Miss Bascom, I know she
-is not always a reliable source of information."
-
-"But she says she saw the girl coming over here late that night--"
-
-"She didn't! It's not true! What under the heavens would she have come
-for?"
-
-"What does any girl visit a man for?" Cray gave an unpleasant wink, and
-Lockwood with difficulty controlled an insane desire to spring at his
-throat. "And, beside, she is even now in possession of the missing five
-hundred dollars and the ruby pin."
-
-"I don't believe it!"
-
-"See here, Mr. Lockwood, it doesn't matter to anybody whether you believe
-these things or not. Miss Austin has the valuables, and I'm going over
-there now to inquire how she got them. Also, it just occurs to me that
-those small footprints leading across the field, are directed toward the
-Adams house, and may have been made by a woman as likely as by our
-hypothetical small-footed man."
-
-"Those are Nogi's footprints."
-
-"How do you know?"
-
-"Common sense. Even if Miss Austin did come over here for any reason she
-would have come by the street, not across the snowy field."
-
-"Apparently she chose the field. So I'm going to ask her why."
-
-"All right, Cray, but you must admit you're illogical, inconsequent and
-inconsistent. You think I killed Doctor Waring, because I have a sharp,
-round penholder, and owe some large bills. Then, because a gossiping old
-maid comes over here and babbles, you fly off at a tangent and accuse an
-unprotected girl of absurd and unbelievable crime."
-
-"Oho! Interested in the siren yourself, eh?"
-
-"No; I'm not--if you mean Miss Austin. That is, not personally."
-
-Few men could have told this lie with such a convincing manner but
-Lockwood's phlegmatic calm stood him now in good stead, and his air of
-obvious indifference carried conviction.
-
-"But," he went on, "I am sorry for her. It's nobody's business who or
-what she is, yet those women over at the Adams house are one and all
-possessed to find out something against her. I only want to advise you,
-Cray, if you talk to anybody over there, get Old Salt himself. He's more
-fair minded than his wife or the other women."
-
-"Men are apt to be--where a pretty girl is concerned," said Cray, drily,
-and Lockwood ground his teeth in rage, as the Attorney went away.
-
-His demand to see Miss Austin was listened to by Old Salt Adams, who had
-seen him coming and opened the door for him.
-
-"Well, Cray," said the old man, as he ushered him into the sitting room
-and shut the door. "I know what you're after--and I just want to say, go
-slow. That's all--go slow."
-
-"All right, Salt. Will you send Miss Austin down here--also, I must
-interview her alone."
-
-"Yes--I understand. But don't be led away now, by circumstantial
-evidence. You know yourself, it isn't always dependable."
-
-"Go along, Salt, don't try to teach me my business. Have you talked to
-the girl?"
-
-"Not a word. My wife has, but she didn't learn much."
-
-Adams went away, and in a few moments Anita Austin came into the room.
-
-A first glance showed Cray's experienced eye that the girl was what he
-called a siren.
-
-Her oval, olive face was sad and sweet. The pale cheeks were not touched
-up with artificial color, and the scarlet lips were, even to his close
-scrutiny, also devoid of applied art. She wore a smart little gown of
-black taffeta, with crisp, chic frills of finely plaited white organdie.
-
-Whether this was meant as mourning wear or not, Cray could not determine.
-
-The frock was fashionably short, showing thin silk stockings and black
-suede ties.
-
-But Miss Mystery seemed wholly unconscious of her clothes, and her great
-dark eyes were full of wondering inquiry as she looked at the attorney,
-and then a little diffidently offered a greeting hand.
-
-The little brown paw touched Cray's with a pathetic, hopeful clasp, and
-he looked up quickly to find himself looking into a pair of hopeful eyes,
-that, without a word, expressed confidence and trust.
-
-He shrugged his shoulders a trifle and secretly admonished himself to
-keep a tight rein on his sympathy.
-
-Then relinquishing the lingering hand, he sat down opposite the chair she
-had chosen to occupy.
-
-"Miss Austin," he began, and paused, for the first time in his life
-uncertain what tack to take.
-
-"Yes," she said, as the pause grew longer, and her soft, cultured voice
-helped him not at all.
-
-How could he say to this lovely small person that he suspected her of
-wrong doing?
-
-"Go on, Mr. Cray," she directed him, meantime looking at him with eyes
-full of a haunting fear, "what is it?"
-
-Cray had a sudden, insane feeling that he would give all he was worth for
-the pleasure of removing that look of fear, then commanding himself to
-behave, he said,
-
-"I am sorry, Miss Austin, but I must ask you some unpleasant questions."
-
-"That's what I'm here for," she said, with the ghost of a smile on her
-curved red lips, and, smoothing down her taffeta lap, she demurely
-clasped her sensitive little hands and waited.
-
-Those hands bothered Cray. Though they lay quietly, he felt that at his
-speech they would flutter in anxiety--even in fear, and he was loath to
-disturb them.
-
-Because of this hesitancy, he plunged in more abruptly than he meant to
-do.
-
-"Where do you come from, Miss Austin?"
-
-"New York City," she said, a brighter look coming to her face, as if she
-thought the ordeal would not be so terrible after all.
-
-"What address there?"
-
-"One West Sixty-seventh Street."
-
-"You told some one else the Hotel Plaza."
-
-"Yes; I have lived at both addresses. Why?"
-
-The "why" was disconcerting. After all, Cray thought, he was not a census
-taker.
-
-He gave up getting past history, and said, briefly,
-
-"Were you at Doctor Waring's house Sunday evening?"
-
-"Not evening," she returned, looking thoughtful. "I was there Sunday
-afternoon."
-
-"And went back again, late in the evening--to see Doctor Waring, in his
-study."
-
-"Why do you say that?" she asked quietly, but a small red spot showed on
-either olive cheek.
-
-"Because I must. How well do you--did you know the Doctor?"
-
-"Know Doctor Waring? Not at all. I never saw him in my life until I came
-here to Corinth."
-
-"You are sure of that?"
-
-"Almost sure--oh, why, yes--that is, I am quite sure."
-
-"Yet you went over there Sunday evening, and came back to this house in
-possession of Doctor Waring's valuable pin, and a large sum of money."
-
-"Oh, no, Mr. Cray, I didn't do any such thing!"
-
-"Then can you explain your possession of those articles?"
-
-"You mean, I suppose the roll of bills that Miss Bascom put into my top
-bureau drawer?"
-
-"Miss Bascom put in the drawer!"
-
-"Yes--that is, she must have done so, or--how else could they have been
-found there? You know yourself, now, don't you, Mr. Cray, that I'm not a
-burglar--or a bandit or a sneak thief? You know I never went in to Doctor
-Waring's study and took those things! So, as I say, isn't it the only
-plausible theory, that Miss Bascom, who found the valuables so readily,
-first put them there herself?"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI
- THE SPINSTER'S EVIDENCE
-
-
-"That matter can easily be settled," Cray said, and going to the door he
-asked Mrs. Adams to send Miss Bascom to them.
-
-With an important air the spinster entered the room.
-
-Holding herself very erect and even drawing aside her skirts as she
-passed Miss Austin, she took a seat on the other side of the room.
-
-"Now, Miss Bascom," Cray began at once, "what made you think of looking
-in this lady's bureau drawer for that money?"
-
-"I didn't look for it, Mr. Cray. I merely felt that she had done wrong
-and I thought perhaps some evidence would be hidden away in her room. And
-a top drawer is the place a woman oftenest hides things."
-
-Cray gave a short laugh. "Rather clever of you, I admit. But Miss Austin
-says she did not put that money there, herself--that it was a plant."
-
-"A plant?" Miss Bascom looked puzzled at the word.
-
-"Yes; she thinks some in-disposed person put it there to implicate her,
-falsely."
-
-"Oh, I see. Well, Mr. Cray, let her say who did it, and who could have
-got that money to do it with."
-
-The hard old face took on a look that was almost malignant in its
-accusation, and little Anita Austin gave a low cry as she saw it, and hid
-her face in her hands.
-
-"Take her away," she moaned, "oh, take that woman away."
-
-"You hear her," Miss Bascom went on, unrelentingly. "Now, Mr. Cray, I'm a
-bit of a detective myself, and while you've been down here talking to
-Miss Mystery, I've been searching her room more carefully, and I've found
-a few more things, of which I should like to tell you."
-
-Cray was nonplused. His sympathies were all with the poor little girl,
-who, clinging to the arms of her chair, seemed about to go to pieces,
-nervously, but was bravely holding on to herself. Yet, if the Bascom
-woman was telling the truth, he must beware of the "poor little girl."
-
-"I'm not sure you're within your rights, Miss Bascom," he began, but he
-was interrupted with:
-
-"Rights! Indeed, the rights of this matter are above your jurisdiction!
-The blood of John Waring calls from the ground! I am the instrument of
-justice that has been chosen by an over-ruling Providence to discover the
-criminal. She sits before you! That girl--that mysterious wicked girl is
-both thief and murderess!"
-
-"Oh, no!" Anita cried, putting up her arm as if to ward off a physical
-blow.
-
-Then she suddenly became quiet--almost rigid in her composure.
-
-"That is a grave accusation, Miss Bascom," she said, "you must prove it
-or retract it."
-
-Cray stared at the girl in astonishment. Her agonized cry had been human,
-feminine, natural--but this sudden change to stony calm, to icy hauteur
-was amazing--and, to his mind, incriminating.
-
-Miss Bascom, however, was in no way daunted.
-
-"Prove it I will!" she said, sternly. "In another drawer, Mr. Cray, I
-found the rolls of silver coin--exactly one hundred dollars worth--that
-we have been told were in the desk with the roll of bills. The ruby pin,
-you know about. And so, these thefts are proved. Now, as to the murder--I
-admit, it seems impossible that a girl should commit the awful crime--but
-I do say that I have found the weapon, with which it was done, hidden in
-Miss Austin's room."
-
-Again that short, low cry--more like a hurt animal than a human being.
-And then, Anita Austin, the girl of mystery fell back into the depths of
-her chair, and closed her eyes.
-
-"You needn't faint--or pretend to," admonished Miss Bascom, brutally;
-"you're caught red-handed, and you know it, and you may as well give up."
-
-"I didn't--I didn't--" came in low moans, but the girl's bravery had
-deserted her. Limp and despairing, she turned her great eyes toward Cray
-for help.
-
-With an effort, he looked away from her pleading face, and said:
-
-"What is the weapon? Where did you find it?"
-
-"It is a stiletto--an embroidery stiletto--and I found it tucked down in
-the crevice between the back and seat of a stuffed chair in Miss Austin's
-room. Did you put it there?"
-
-She turned on the girl and fired the question at her with intentional
-suddenness, and though Anita uttered a scared, "No," it was a palpable
-untruth.
-
-"She did," Miss Bascom went on. "You can see for yourself, Mr. Cray, she
-is lying."
-
-"But even if she is, Miss Bascom, I must ask you to cease torturing her!
-I can't stand for such cruelty!"
-
-Cray's manhood revolted at the methods of the older woman who was causing
-such anguish to the poor child she accused.
-
-"You are not a legal inquisitor, Miss Bascom," he went on; "it is for me
-to establish the truth or falsity of your suspicions."
-
-"Yes, you! You're like all the other men! If a girl is pretty and
-alluring, you would believe her statement that white is black!"
-
-"I believe no statements that cannot be proved to my satisfaction. Miss
-Austin, do you own an embroidery stiletto?"
-
-"Yes," was the hesitating answer, and the dark eyes swept him a
-beseeching glance that made Miss Bascom fairly snort with scorn.
-
-"Where is it?"
-
-"I--I fear I must admit that it is just where Miss Bascom says it
-is--unless she has removed it. Tell me, Mr. Cray," and Miss Mystery
-suddenly resumed her most independent air, "must I submit to this? I
-thought accused people were entitled to a--oh, you know, counsel--a
-lawyer, or somebody to take care of them."
-
-"Wait, Miss Austin. You're not accused yet--that is, not by legal
-authority."
-
-"Oh, am I not? Then--" and she gave Miss Bascom a glance of unutterable
-scorn, "I have nothing to say."
-
-"Nothing to say!" the spinster almost shrieked. "Nothing to say! Of
-course she hasn't! She kills a man, takes his valuables, and then
-declares she has nothing to say."
-
-"Now, now, Miss Bascom, be careful! Why did you put your stiletto in such
-a place, Miss Austin?"
-
-"I don't know."
-
-The dark eyes gave him a gaze of childlike innocence, and Cray couldn't
-decide whether he was looking at a deep-dyed criminal or a helpless
-victim of unjust suspicion.
-
-"And where did you get the money and the ruby pin?"
-
-"I don't know--I mean I don't know how they got in my room. This lady
-says she found them there--that's all I know about them."
-
-An indifferent shrug of the slim shoulders seemed to imply that was all
-Miss Mystery cared, either, and Cray asked:
-
-"Then, if the valuables--the pin and the money are not yours, you are, of
-course, ready to relinquish possession of them."
-
-"Of course I am not! Since I am accused of stealing them, I propose to
-retain possession until that accusation is proved or disproved! Perhaps
-Miss Bascom wishes to take them herself."
-
-"You know, Miss Austin," Mr. Cray spoke very gravely, "you are making a
-mistake in treating this matter flippantly. You are in danger--real
-danger, and you must be careful what you say. Do you want a lawyer?"
-
-"I don't know," the girl suddenly looked helpless. "Do you think I ought
-to have one?"
-
-"Have you funds?"
-
-"Yes. I am not a rich girl--but, neither am I poor. However, I think I
-shall ask advice of some one before I decide upon any course."
-
-"Of whom? Perhaps no one can advise you better than I can."
-
-"What is your advice, Mr. Cray?"
-
-The sweet face looked at him hopefully, the curved red lips quivered a
-little as the speaker added, "I am very alone."
-
-Again Miss Bascom sniffed. Unattractive, herself, she resented with a
-sort of angry jealousy the appealing effect this girl had on men. She
-knew intuitively that Cray would sympathize with and pity the lonely
-girl.
-
-"My advice is, Miss Austin, first, that you dispel this mystery that
-seems to surround you. Tell frankly who you are, what is your errand in
-Corinth, how you came into possession of Doctor Waring's ruby, and why
-you hid your stiletto, if it is merely one of your sewing implements."
-
-Miss Mystery hesitated a moment, and then said, quietly:
-
-"Your advice is good, Mr. Cray. But, unfortunately, I cannot follow it.
-However, I am willing to state, upon oath, that I did not kill Doctor
-Waring with that stiletto."
-
-"I'm afraid your oath will be doubted," Miss Bascom intervened sharply.
-"And, too, Mr. Cray, even if this girl did not strike the fatal blow, she
-well knows who did! She is in league with the Japanese, Nogi. That I am
-sure of!"
-
-"Nogi!" exclaimed Anita.
-
-"Yes, Nogi," Miss Bascom went on, positively. "You came here only a day
-or two after he did. You have a Japanese kimono, and several Japanese
-ornaments adorn your room. You went to the Waring house that night, Nogi
-let you in and out, and though the Japanese doubtless committed the
-murder, you stole the money and the ruby, and then, your partner in crime
-departed for parts unknown."
-
-Miss Bascom sat back in her chair with a look of triumph on her plain,
-gaunt face.
-
-Clearly, she was rejoiced at her denunciation of the girl before her, and
-pleased at the irrefutable theory she had promulgated.
-
-"And how did Miss Austin or the Jap, either, leave the room locked on the
-inside?" propounded Cray, his own opinions already swayed by the
-arraignment.
-
-"That," said Miss Bascom, with an air of finality, "I can't explain
-definitely, but I am sure it was an example of Japanese jugglery. When
-you remember the tales of how the Japanese can do seemingly impossible
-tricks, can swallow swords and get out of locked handcuffs, it is quite
-within the realm of possibility that one could lock a door behind him,
-and give it the appearance of having been locked from the inside."
-
-Now, Cray had already concluded that the door had been cleverly locked by
-some one, but he hadn't before thought of the cleverness of the Japanese.
-
-He rose almost abruptly, and said, "I must look into some of these
-matters. Miss Austin, you need not attempt to leave town, for you will
-not be able to do so."
-
-"I most certainly shall not attempt to leave--as you express it--if I am
-asked not to. But, I may say, that when I am entirely at liberty to do
-so, I propose to go away from Corinth."
-
-Her dignity gave no effect of a person afraid or alarmed for her own
-safety, merely a courteous recognition of Cray's attitude and a frank
-statement of her own intentions.
-
-Miss Bascom sniffed and said:
-
-"Don't worry, Mr. Cray. I'll see to it, that this young woman does not
-succeed in evading justice, if she tries to do so."
-
-At which Miss Mystery gave her a smile that was so patronizing, even
-amused, that the spinster was more irate than ever.
-
-"And, now, Miss Austin," the attorney said, "I'll take your finger
-prints, please, as they may be useful in proving what you did not do."
-
-He smiled a little as the girl readily enough gave her consent to the
-procedure.
-
-"And," he went on, more gravely, "I will ask you for one of your
-shoes--one that you wore on Sunday."
-
-Surprised into a glance of dismay, Miss Mystery rose without a word and
-went upstairs for the shoe.
-
-She returned with the dainty, pretty thing, and merely observed, "I'd
-like to have it back, when you are through with it."
-
-Putting the shoe in his overcoat pocket, Cray went away.
-
-"Miss Bascom," Anita said, turning to her enemy, "may you never want a
-friend as much as I do now."
-
-"The nerve of her!" Liza Bascom muttered to herself, as Miss Mystery went
-upstairs to her own room.
-
-"There's a very deep mystery here!" Cray soliloquized, as he returned to
-the Waring house. "But I'm getting light on it."
-
-Cray was far from lacking in ingenuity, and he proceeded at once to
-compare the finger prints he had of Anita Austin with the prints on the
-small black-framed chair that had been found drawn up to the desk chair
-of John Waring.
-
-They were identical and Cray mused over the fact.
-
-"That girl was here that night," he decided; "there's no gainsaying
-that." He called the butler to him.
-
-"Ito," he began, "did you let in any one late Sunday night--after you
-came home?"
-
-"No, sir," the imperturbable Jap declared, thinking the question foolish,
-as all the inquirers knew the details of his Sunday evening movements.
-
-"Do you remember seeing this chair, Monday morning?"
-
-"Distinctly. I saw Mr. Lockwood smoothing its back."
-
-"Smoothing its back! What do you mean?"
-
-"I looked through from the dining-room window, to see if Mr. Lockwood was
-coming to breakfast, and I perceived him carefully smoothing the plush of
-the little chair, sir."
-
-Cray meditated. Here was a point of evidence. Lockwood was not the sort
-to absent-mindedly paw over a chair back. He was doing it on purpose. For
-what reason? What reason could be, save to erase some evidence?
-
-Cray examined the chair. It had a frame of shiny black wood, while seat
-and back were covered with a dark plush of a fine soft quality.
-
-Cray drew his fingers across the back. They left a distinct trail of
-furrows in the fabric.
-
-Ito, watching, nodded his head, gravely.
-
-"Not finger-prints," Cray said to himself--"but, maybe finger-marks.
-Whose?"
-
-"You surely saw this, Ito?"
-
-"Yes, sir; and Miss Peyton also saw. She was then in the doorway, asking
-Mr. Lockwood to come to breakfast."
-
-Cray went in search of Helen and put the question to her suddenly.
-
-"What was Gordon Lockwood doing, when you went to call him to breakfast,
-Monday morning?"
-
-"He was--I don't remember."
-
-"Speak the truth--or it may be mean trouble for you and him, too."
-
-"He was--he seemed to be dusting off a chair."
-
-"With a duster?"
-
-"No; just passing over it with his hand."
-
-"That isn't dusting it."
-
-"Well, I don't know what you call it! Perhaps he was merely pushing the
-chair into place."
-
-"It isn't his custom to push the study furniture into place. He was
-erasing indicative marks on that plush chair back--that's what he was
-doing."
-
-"Absurd!" Helen cried; "what marks could there be?"
-
-"I don't know. Come and let us see."
-
-Cray took Helen to the study, and asked her to sit in the chair.
-
-"Lean back," he directed. "Now, get up."
-
-The girl obeyed, and there was plainly seen on the plush the faint but
-unmistakable imprint of the beaded design that adorned the back of the
-frock she wore.
-
-"I told you so!" Cray said, in triumph. "That plush registers every
-impress, and when Lockwood rubbed it smooth it was to erase a damaging
-bit of testimony."
-
-"Rather far-fetched, Mr. Cray," said Gordon Lockwood himself, who had
-come in and had heard and seen the latter part of the detective's
-investigation.
-
-"Not so very, Mr. Lockwood, when you learn that the finger prints on the
-chair frame are your own and those of a certain young person who is
-already under suspicion."
-
-Gordon Lockwood, as always under a sudden stress, became even more
-impassive, and his eyes glittered as he faced the attorney.
-
-"Don't be too absurd, Mr. Cray," he advised, coldly. "I suppose you mean
-Miss Austin--I prefer to have no veiled allusions. But the finding of her
-finger prints on a chair in this room, and mine also, does not seem to me
-to be in any way evidence of crime."
-
-"No?" Cray gave him scorn for scorn. "Perhaps then, you can explain Miss
-Austin's presence here that night."
-
-"I don't know that she was here--and I most certainly could not explain
-any of her movements. But I do deny your right to assume her guilty from
-her presence."
-
-"Ah, you tacitly admit her presence, then. Indeed, one can scarcely doubt
-it, when it is shown that this little shoe of hers," he took it from his
-pocket, "exactly fits the prints that cross the field of snow between
-here and the Adams house."
-
-"To measure footprints--after all this time!" and Lockwood's lip curled.
-
-"The prints are exactly as they were made, Mr. Lockwood. The unchanging
-cold weather has kept them intact. I tried this shoe, and the prints are
-unmistakable. Moreover, the short stride is just the measure of the
-natural steps of Miss Austin. The footprints lead from the Adams house
-over here and back again. The returning prints occasionally overlap the
-ones that came this way, showing that the trip away from this house was
-made latest. Miss Austin was seen to come over in this direction--well,
-none but a half-wit would be blind to the inevitable conclusions!"
-
-"None but a half-wit would read into this evidence what you pretend to
-see," retorted Lockwood, almost losing his calm.
-
-"That's my business," Cray said, sharply: "now, Mr. Lockwood, why did you
-smooth off that chair back? Careful, now, two witnesses saw you do it."
-
-"I'm not denying it"--Lockwood smiled in a bored, superior way, "but if I
-did it, I was--and am unconscious of it. One often touches a piece of
-furniture in passing with no thought of doing so."
-
-"That won't go down. Both the butler and Miss Peyton saw you definitely
-and deliberately rub over the back of that chair. Why did you do it?"
-
-Cray was inexorable.
-
-But the impassive secretary merely shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"I can't answer you, Mr. Cray. I can only repeat it must have been an
-unconscious act on my part, and it has no sinister significance. I may
-have been merely pushing the chair out of my way, you know."
-
-"Look here, Mr. Lockwood, you are a man of honor. Do you, upon oath,
-declare that you did not purposely smooth that chairback, for the reason
-that it showed some incriminating impress?"
-
-"I am not under oath. I have stated that I did not do what you accuse me
-of, and I have nothing further to say on the subject."
-
-Lockwood drew himself up and leaned with folded arms against the
-mantelpiece.
-
-Cray dropped the subject, but his snapping eyes and compressed lips
-seemed to show he had not finally dismissed it.
-
-"At what time," he said, abruptly, "did Doctor Waring lock his study
-door?"
-
-"About ten o'clock," the secretary replied.
-
-"And you heard nothing from the room after that? No sound of voices?
-Nobody coming in at the French window?"
-
-"No," replied Lockwood.
-
-"Then we are forced to the conclusion that whoever entered did so very
-quietly, that it was with the knowledge and permission of Doctor Waring
-himself, that the visitor was the person whose footprints lead straight
-to the door, and whose finger prints are on the chair that stood near the
-Doctor's own chair. We are borne out in this view by the fact that the
-same person now possesses the money and the ruby pin which we know Doctor
-Waring had in his room with him, and we know that the person is here in
-Corinth for unexplained reasons, and is, in fact, so peculiar that she is
-known as--Miss Mystery. Just why, Mr. Lockwood, are you arguing against
-these obvious inferences, and why do you undertake to free from suspicion
-one against whom everything is so definitely black?"
-
-"Because," Lockwood spoke very quietly, but his jaw was set in a stubborn
-way, "the lady you call Miss Mystery, is a young and defenseless girl,
-without, so far as I know, a friend in this town. It is unfair to accuse
-her on the strength of this fantastic story and it is unfair to condemn
-her unheard."
-
-"Not unheard," said the attorney, "but what she says only incriminates
-her more deeply."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII
- MAURICE TRASK, HEIR
-
-
-The funeral services of John Waring were solemn and impressive. No
-reference was made to the manner of his taking-off, save to call it
-mysterious, and the encomiums heaped upon him by the clergy and the
-college faculty were as sincere as they were well-deserved.
-
-There were two members of the great audience who were looked at with
-curiosity by many.
-
-One of these was Miss Mystery, the girl who, it was vaguely rumored was
-in some way connected with the tragedy.
-
-To look at her, this seemed impossible, for a sweeter face or a gentler
-manner could scarce be imagined.
-
-Anita Austin sat near the front, on one of the side aisles. She wore a
-gown of taupe-colored duvetyn, and a velvet toque of the same color. Her
-olive face was pale, and now and then her small white teeth bit into her
-scarlet lower lip, as if she were keeping her self-control only by
-determined effort.
-
-A close observer might note that she paid no heed to the utterance of the
-able men who gave tribute to John Waring's character, but her troubled
-eyes rested on the flower-covered casket, and the rising tears overflowed
-as she stifled an occasional sob.
-
-And then, fairly clenching her hands in a determination to show no
-emotion, this strange girl would straighten up, and stare blankly ahead
-of her as if in utter oblivion of the scene.
-
-Directly behind her was Helen Peyton, who had chosen that place with the
-intention of watching Miss Mystery. Mrs. Peyton was by her daughter's
-side, but her whole attention was on the funeral services, and she
-thought of little else.
-
-Not far off was Gordon Lockwood, and with him were Mrs. Bates and her
-nephew, Pinckney Payne. Of this trio only the secretary let his gaze
-wander now and then to the sad little face that was rapidly becoming the
-dearest thing in life to him. As the church filled, and the
-flower-scented atmosphere grew oppressive, Miss Austin let her coat fall
-from her shoulders, and Lockwood noted with a start that she wore the
-same gown she had worn to the lecture at which he first saw her. Again he
-counted the queer little buttons that edged the sailor collar. He shook
-his head, and a great feeling of compassion filled his heart.
-
-"Poor child," he said to himself, "what does it all mean?"
-
-The other magnet for strangers' eyes was Maurice Trask, the relative of
-John Waring, who had come from his home in St. Louis, to take possession
-of his inheritance.
-
-For, in the absence of any will, he had proved himself the next of kin,
-and had gladly, even eagerly, taken the reins of government of the
-affairs and home of the dead man.
-
-He was the son of John Waring's cousin, and though the two men had never
-met, the credentials and records brought by Maurice Trask left no
-possible doubt as to his heirship.
-
-Trask was not prepossessing of appearance, though he was well-mannered
-and moderately well-dressed. His lack was that of sophistication, and he
-seemed ignorant of the finer conventions of life. He was what is known as
-a self-made man, and men of home manufacture require some sterling
-qualities to start with if they are to turn out a satisfactory product.
-
-These qualities Trask didn't have, and a first glance at the
-sharp-featured face gave an impression of greed and shrewdness.
-
-There was also a slight air of bravado, which was quite evidently caused
-by an uneasy feeling of inferiority. He seemed to say, "I am as good as
-you are," because his conviction of that fact needed some such assertion
-to bolster it up.
-
-In his seat as chief mourner, he was decorum itself. His black garb was
-very black, and if it betrayed a provincial cut or fit, such an effect
-was more in keeping with the man than correct apparel would have been.
-
-His grief might have seemed a trifle ostentatious to one who remembered
-he had never seen his cousin, but on the whole Maurice Trask was accepted
-by those whose curiosity led to criticism, as a satisfactory heir to the
-Waring estate.
-
-Nor was this an inconsiderable matter, for John Waring, beside his
-profession, had written several successful books, and possessed in all a
-goodly fortune.
-
-Moreover, there was no mystery about Trask. His life was an open book,
-the lawyers had said; his family tree was of correct record and his claim
-to the estate clear and true.
-
-While as to that minx, Miss Mystery, nobody knew or could find out where
-she came from, what she was doing in Corinth, or who she was, anyway.
-Clearly she was mixed up with Doctor Waring in some unconventional
-way--that is, if the reports were true that she visited him in his study
-without the knowledge of his household. No shadow of blame was attached
-to John Waring for this--although it would seem that the man was old and
-wise enough to ward off an attack from such a small vampire.
-
-"That's what she is," Helen Peyton concluded, to herself, as she mused on
-the girl who sat in front of her. "She just plain vamped poor Doctor
-Waring--and she got into the study--and, now, I can prove it!"
-
-After the funeral, the chief mourners went back to the Waring home to
-discuss matters. Mrs. Peyton had tea served in the living-room, for all
-who came, and many neighbors, drawn by curiosity, accepted her
-hospitality.
-
-Trask, rubbing his hands involuntarily, slipped easily into his new role
-of host, and rather overdid his part.
-
-"Yes," he would say, "yes, yes. I learned from the addresses how fine a
-man my cousin was--yes, yes, a noble character. Now, I can't expect to
-take his place in your community all at once--but I'll get there! I'll
-get there! And you'll all help me, won't you?" he beamed on them. "Yes,
-yes, you'll all help me to become one of the first citizens of
-Corinth--one of the first citizens of your lovely, tree-decked town. Yes,
-yes."
-
-Plate and cup in hand, he moved around among his guests, a little
-awkwardly but full of amiability and good cheer. His sentiment was quite
-evidently, "the king is dead; long live the king," and he wanted to get
-settled on his throne at once.
-
-But the cousin of John Waring had another side to him.
-
-This was shown when, later on, he met a few people in the study.
-
-Cray was there, by invitation, and Morton also. Lockwood and the two
-Peytons.
-
-"Just a few words at the outset," Trask began, and he was noticeably more
-at ease in this executive session than he had been in the social
-atmosphere.
-
-"I want to maintain this household, for a time at least, as I find it. I
-shall be glad, Mrs. Peyton, if you will continue to keep house for me,
-and I should like you, Mr. Lockwood, to remain as secretary, if you are
-willing. There is, of course, much to be done in settling the estate, and
-your knowledge would be invaluable. Also, if you will, Mrs. Peyton, I'd
-like you to engage servants--or keep the ones you have. In fact, please
-look after the house matters entirely. For, here is what I want to do
-first. Find the man who killed my cousin. I never shall feel right in
-taking and using his home and his money unless I do everything in my
-power to discover his murderer."
-
-"It may be a case of suicide," suggested Attorney Cray, who was narrowly
-watching the speaker.
-
-"No-sir-ee! First place, as near as I can figure it out, my cousin was
-not the man to take his own life. Also, he was on the eve of taking a
-fine position as College President--also he was about to marry a
-beautiful lady. Why worry? And too--and this is to me the strongest
-argument against the suicide theory--I've read lots of detective
-stories--you needn't sniff, Mr. Cray, those stories are often founded on
-fact--and many of them hinge on the mystery of a sealed room. Often a
-book starts out with a situation just like this; man found dead. Room
-locked up. No weapon about. Murder or suicide? And, listen here;
-invariably the solution is murder. Yes, sir--invariably! Why? 'Cause
-suicide is a mighty scarce article. You don't find Human Nature putting
-an end to itself very often. That is, not worthwhile Human Nature. Your
-suicides are weak men, down and outers, ignorant, half-baked chaps. Not
-fine, upstanding men such as John Waring was. You know that, Mr. Cray?"
-
-"Yes," the attorney nodded. "That's certainly so, Mr. Trask. And, anyway,
-if you're going to make investigations, you have to start on the theory
-of murder."
-
-"Just that exactly," Trask agreed. "Then if we run up against
-proof--actual proof of suicide, why then, we know where we're at."
-
-Lockwood looked at Trask and listened to him with interest. He was a new
-type to the secretary, who with all his knowledge of characterization
-couldn't quite place him.
-
-At first, Lockwood had felt an instinctive dislike, the newcomer had been
-so patently pleased with his inheritance, and so evidently insincere in
-his mourning. But this sensible, straightforward insistence on avenging
-his cousin's murder--if it were murder--raised Trask in Lockwood's
-estimation, and he concluded to remain as secretary, for a time, at
-least.
-
-"You have the case in charge, Mr. Cray," Trask went on, "and I want you
-to push it--push it, sir. Get help if you want--get some hifalutin
-detective, if that's the proper caper--but, get results. Results, that's
-what I'm after! Here's my idea. Get busy, and do all you can as quick as
-you can. Don't dawdle. Put things through. And then--if you can't find
-the criminal, after due effort, then, we'll give up the hunt. That's my
-idea. Do all you can--and then quit."
-
-"Very well, Mr. Trask," Cray replied; "I understand, and I'll do as you
-say. When you have the time to devote to it, I'll give you a history of
-the case."
-
-"The time is now, Mr. Cray. And your history must be put in a nutshell.
-The circumstances of John Waring's death, I know. Also, I know whom I
-suspect as the murderer. So tell me your decisions to date."
-
-"I fear we have made no decision, Mr. Trask. As a matter of fact the
-evidence to date points in a most painful direction."
-
-"What! You're deterred from justice because evidence points in a painful
-direction! My stars, Cray! is that the way you detect in New England!"
-
-"But evidence may be false, and it is unwise to accuse without
-certainty--"
-
-"I have some certain evidence," said Helen Peyton, and all turned to look
-at the girl, who spoke hesitatingly and in a low tone.
-
-"Yes, I wouldn't tell it--but--I think I ought to. I just found it out
-today."
-
-"Of course you must tell it, Miss Peyton," Trask said, dictatorially.
-"Out with it!"
-
-"Well," Helen spoke to Cray, "you know Mr. Lockwood rubbed off some marks
-from this chair the morning after--after we found Doctor Waring."
-
-"Yes, they were without doubt indicative marks. What do you know about
-them?" Cray looked at her earnestly, for he had great interest in that
-act of the secretary's.
-
-"They were the marks made by the buttons on the back of the dress Miss
-Austin wore today."
-
-For a moment Gordon Lockwood's calm almost deserted him. It was but a
-fleeting instant, yet Cray's sharp eyes caught the look of utter dismay
-that crossed the impassive face of the secretary. Immediately the usual
-hauteur returned and the grave eyes met Cray's without a tremor.
-
-"How do you know?" Cray was all alertness.
-
-"I sat behind her at the funeral. She took off her coat and I couldn't
-help noticing a certain arrangement of buttons. It struck me, because I
-noticed the marks on the chair back, and they were just the same design."
-
-"Absurd," Lockwood said, quietly, but with a deep scorn in his tone. "As
-if you could identify the trimming on a lady's gown!"
-
-"But I did," Helen persisted, spurred by Lockwood's manner. "I noticed it
-on the chair, a clear pattern of the trimming of the collar, and two rows
-down the back. And then I saw Mr. Lockwood rub it off of the chairback
-with utmost care. And today, when I saw Miss Austin's dress, I recognized
-it at once. She was here that night--Mr. Lockwood knew it--and he erased
-the marks--"
-
-"Helen, don't be too ridiculous!" Lockwood spoke now in a soft drawl,
-that made Helen flush with anger.
-
-"I'm not ridiculous! Am I, Mr. Cray? It's evidence, isn't it? It proves
-that girl was here--doesn't it? And Gordon did rub it off--Ito saw him
-too, and I saw him. He was rubbing the chair when I came to call him to
-breakfast--he can't deny it!"
-
-"I do deny it," Lockwood said, quietly. "Miss Peyton is excited and
-doesn't remember accurately."
-
-"Nothing of the sort!" blazed Helen. "It's all true. Gordon won't admit
-it because--"
-
-"Helen, hush!" Gordon's look stopped her at once. "Don't say things
-you'll regret."
-
-"But I don't regret them," put in Cray. "All this is important. Mr.
-Lockwood, do you deny obliterating these marks in question?"
-
-"Of course I do," Lockwood smiled slightly. "If I was moving the chair or
-touching it, when Miss Peyton came to call me to breakfast I don't
-remember it. At any rate, it was with no intention of removing evidence."
-
-Gordon Lockwood told these falsehoods with as calm an air as he would
-have shown in making truthful statements. He was not only deeply in love
-with Anita Austin, but he did not and would not believe her guilty of
-crime, or of any connection with a crime. Wherefore, he was ready and
-willing to tell any number of lies to save or shield her.
-
-And from his manner none could guess he was saying other than absolute
-truth.
-
-"But look here," spoke up Maurice Trask. "This won't do, you know. Are
-you people accusing a girl of Doctor Waring's murder? A _girl_!"
-
-"Not accusation yet," Cray told him, "but we want to know more about the
-young lady in question. In fact, she's been dubbed Miss Mystery, because
-so little is known about her."
-
-"Miss Mystery, eh? And she came here to see the Doctor the night he
-died?"
-
-"She did not!" Lockwood asserted, calmly. "Had she done so, I should have
-known it."
-
-"Of course you would," Trask looked at him shrewdly. "Of course. But the
-impress of her clothing was left on the chairback? Is that it?"
-
-"That's it," said Helen, sharply. "And when forty-leven other things
-prove her presence here that evening, I don't know why Mr. Lockwood so
-positively denies it. He must have a deep interest in the young lady!"
-
-Helen's spitefulness was undisguised, and her mother looked pained and
-regretful. Both these women had hoped that Gordon Lockwood's affections
-might turn toward Helen, and the older one realized that such speeches as
-this would in no way further their plans.
-
-But Helen was thoroughly jealous of Miss Mystery, for more reasons than
-one, and she let her unbridled tongue expose her feelings.
-
-Cray knew all this, and therefore took Helen's statements with a grain of
-salt. And yet, he soliloquized, she would scarcely make up that rigmarole
-of the dress trimming. He fancied it was true. And why shouldn't it be?
-The evidence of Anita Austin's presence in John Waring's study that fatal
-night was far too strong to be ignored. Moreover, the girl's possession
-of the money and the ruby pin had yet to be satisfactorily explained. It
-was unthinkable that anyone should have stolen these things and "planted"
-them in Miss Austin's bureau drawer!
-
-"I'd like to see this young woman," said Trask, suddenly.
-
-"I'm going over to see her now, come along," invited Cray, who was a
-little impressed by the perspicuity of this stranger.
-
-"I'm going, too," declared Helen Peyton, and as Lockwood couldn't keep
-away, they all went over to the Adams house.
-
-In the cosy sitting-room they congregated, and Mrs. Adams went upstairs
-to summon Anita.
-
-She found the room locked. When, in response to a repeated summons, the
-door was opened, Mrs. Adams faced a tearful, sad-faced girl, who asked
-indifferently what was wanted.
-
-"You'll have to come down stairs," the landlady said; "Mr. Cray is there,
-and--and some others. They want to see you."
-
-"I won't go down. I don't want to see anybody."
-
-"I guess you'll have to." Mrs. Adams spoke a little crisply. "It's a--a
-summons. You've got to come."
-
-"Oh." Miss Austin's manner changed. "Well, I will, then. Wait till I
-bathe my face."
-
-Mrs. Adams came in, closed the door and waited. She felt sorry for Miss
-Mystery, but she also felt suspicious of her. Perhaps the mystery would
-now be cleared up.
-
-The good woman was about to speak kindly to her strange boarder but as
-she watched, she lost the desire to help her.
-
-For, to Mrs. Adams' primitive notions, the girl was doing dreadful
-things.
-
-Having bathed her tear-stained face, Miss Mystery proceeded to powder it
-lightly, and, horror of horrors, she added the merest flick of rouge to
-her pale cheeks. And not content with such baseness she stooped to
-further degradation and touched her pale lips with some heathenish
-contraption that made them just a little redder!
-
-No, Mrs. Adams had no sympathy for a girl who would do such awful things,
-and she waited in a grim and stony silence.
-
-Then Miss Mystery fluffed out her pretty dark hair a little more over her
-ears, settled her sailor collar, with its row of tiny buttons for
-trimming, and with a critical glance at her shoes, signified her
-readiness to go down stairs.
-
-Still in disapproving silence, Mrs. Adams marched by her side, and they
-went together to face the visitors.
-
-The attitude of the girl as she entered the room was a triumph of
-perfection.
-
-Her beauty, which usually needed no artificial aid, was striking, and her
-large dark eyes rested on each in turn with an air of innocent wonder,
-quickly followed by a pathetic, beseeching little smile that touched the
-heart of several auditors, even though they deemed it disingenuous.
-
-Maurice Trask, shrewd and calculating, sized her up, as he would have
-expressed it.
-
-And his sizing up was decidedly complimentary. So much so, in fact, that
-he almost concluded to take her part against all comers.
-
-"I'm for her," he said to himself, "and yet," he added, to the same
-confidant, "she's nobody's fool! That girl knows what she's about--and by
-jingo, if she wanted to kill a man, she could kill him! I'll say she
-could!"
-
-It was Miss Austin's dress that caught every one's eye. Not a person
-present, among the visitors, but wanted to say, "turn around--oh, do!"
-
-But the girl sank into a low chair beside Saltonstall Adams and quietly
-awaited developments.
-
-"May I present Mr. Trask," Cray said, a little awkwardly, for it was not
-easy to be casual under the glance of those pathetic eyes.
-
-Anita bowed courteously if coldly, and then there was an embarrassing
-silence.
-
-"Well," Trask remarked, at last, "you people are not very talkative,
-guess I'll take the helm myself. Miss Austin, will you be good enough to
-get up and turn around?"
-
-The request was so simply made, that, almost without thinking of its
-strangeness, Anita did exactly as she was asked.
-
-Sure enough, there were two rows of buttons down the back of her bodice,
-and another row across the sailor collar.
-
-At a nod from Trask she sat down again, and then the storm broke.
-
-"I told you so!" cried Helen Peyton. "That's the very dress that made the
-marks on that chair back! Dare you deny, Miss Austin, that you were in
-Doctor Waring's study that night he died?"
-
-The dark eyes of Miss Mystery opened wide in horror. She seemed fairly
-paralyzed with fright, and glanced wildly from one face to another.
-
-Maurice Trask's showed only frank admiration. He looked at the girl as if
-he had never before seen any one so attractive.
-
-Gordon Lockwood's face betrayed no emotion of any sort. Had he been
-indifferent to Miss Mystery instead of loving her, as he did, he could
-have shown no less expressive countenance.
-
-And all the others present showed definite and decided suspicion, scorn
-and hatred.
-
-Except one. Old Salt looked kindly at the agitated girl. He even held out
-a protective hand, and with a gentle inflection, said:
-
-"Tell the truth, dear child. _Did_ you know Doctor Waring?"
-
-Slowly Miss Mystery's eyes traveled round the room. Looking at each face
-in turn, her own expression became more and more hard and stubborn. Then,
-seeing the kindness on the face of Old Salt, she broke down utterly and
-sobbed out. "Oh, he's dead--he's dead! what shall I do?"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII
- THE TRUESDELL EYEBROWS
-
-
-Maurice Trask looked at Miss Mystery with rapidly growing interest and
-curiosity. She seemed so young and helpless and she was so pretty and so
-pathetic that he immediately decided she could not be mixed up in any
-wrong-doing. He also decided, for he was a man of quick conclusions, that
-this was the girl for him. Having his new fortune, he wanted a wife to
-help him enjoy it, and where could he find a more utterly desirable girl
-than Miss Austin?
-
-Straightforwardly he asked:
-
-"Did Doctor Waring make love to you? Did you love him?"
-
-The others looked aghast at these suggestions, and then Mrs. Adams said,
-
-"Yes, she did! I saw her one night, kissing Doctor Waring's picture."
-
-Cray turned on Anita.
-
-"Did you love that man?" he asked, sternly. "If you did, you surely
-didn't kill him."
-
-"Of course she didn't kill him," Old Salt put in. "Impossible to imagine
-such a thing! Speak up, little girl. Why did you kiss the picture of a
-man you had never seen?"
-
-Several of those listening waited breathlessly for a response.
-
-Gordon Lockwood, for one, could scarce control his impatience to hear the
-answer. For, only too well he remembered the letter he had found in the
-Doctor's waste-basket. The words were graven in his brain.
-
-Darling Anita: At the first glance of your brown eyes love was born in my
-heart. Life is worth living--with you in the world.
-
-If love at first sight had been born in the man's heart, must it not have
-found response in the girl's? Or, even if not, could she have killed a
-man who felt thus toward her? Truly she was a mystery. For, the very fact
-that Waring had fallen in love with her, made possible, even plausible,
-her clandestine visit to him, and her possession of the money and jewel.
-
-Could it be that the pretty little thing was merely a sly adventuress?
-That she cajoled Waring into giving her the valuables, and then--
-
-No, Gordon Lockwood could not and would not believe any evil of the girl
-he loved. Even though she should admit her love for Waring, he would not
-lose faith in her.
-
-"Answer me," Cray demanded. "Answer this direct question directly. Did
-you love Doctor Waring?"
-
-Almost like one hypnotized, Miss Mystery gave a helpless glance at her
-inquisitor and murmured a low, almost inaudible "yes."
-
-"Then why did you kill him?" Cray stormed at her.
-
-"I--I didn't."
-
-"You were there, in his study the night he--he died."
-
-"N--no, I wasn't."
-
-"You were! It's been proved. You went over from this house, across the
-snow field, and you went in the study and you sat on the plush chair,
-near the desk. Didn't you?"
-
-The great dark eyes seemed unable to tear themselves from Cray's face,
-and again the half-breathed whisper was, "yes."
-
-"I protest!" said Trask. "That girl shall not be tortured. Whether she's
-guilty or not, she's entitled to fairer treatment. You can't make her say
-those things that may be used against her! Quit it, Cray. I forbid it."
-
-"That's right, Cray," Lockwood said, quietly. "You've no right to bait
-Miss Austin--you make her admit things through sheer fright."
-
-And it was true. Miss Mystery was trembling, and her face was white, save
-for the delicate flush on her cheeks and lips that she had placed there
-herself.
-
-Her great eyes, beneath their heavy dark brows flew from one face to
-another, and she did not fail to notice the fact that every man in the
-room, Cray perhaps excepted, was in sympathy with her, while every woman
-was against her.
-
-This must have comforted her, for she looked about, a faint smile dawning
-in her eyes.
-
-"Is that true?" she said, "may I be excused from this questioning until I
-can get counsel? I don't know what to say--myself--"
-
-Her pretty distress and helplessness again appealed to the masculine
-sympathy, and, realizing this, she ignored the other sex.
-
-A puzzled expression crossed the face of Maurice Trask.
-
-"Who in the world can she be?" he thought. "That last flash of those
-eyes, as she drew her heavy eyebrows into a straight line surely reminded
-me of somebody. By heavens! the Truesdell brows!"
-
-Again he scanned the oval little face. He shook his head in uncertainty,
-but again declared to himself, "The Truesdell eyebrows!"
-
-"Now look here, all of you," Old Saltonstall Adams said, "I don't believe
-this child is guilty of anything really wrong. If she caught the fancy of
-Doctor Waring, it may seem pretty awful to us old fogies, but a pretty
-girl like Miss Austin can't help charming the menfolks. I don't want to
-discuss that, but I do say that it's no crime to go to see a man in the
-evening, and too, she may have had some errand we know nothing about. Did
-Doctor Waring give you that money of his own free will, Miss Austin?"
-
-"Yes," said Anita, involuntarily, and then bit her lip as she added, "I
-told you he didn't give it to me."
-
-"There, there, don't say any more, you only contradict yourself. I had no
-business to ask that. Now, Mr. Cray, from now on, I take Miss Austin
-under my personal care. I'll be responsible for her appearance when you
-want her. And," he looked at his wife, "Mrs. Adams will back me up. She
-too will shelter and care for Miss Austin--"
-
-"Unless she is proved guilty," Esther Adams broke in. "In that case--"
-
-"Wait until she is," Old Salt said, in his calm way. "I don't guarantee
-her innocence--I only want to prevent injustice to her. Have you funds to
-engage a lawyer, Miss Austin?"
-
-Again that frightened look made the girl seem anything but innocent.
-
-"Would I have to tell a lawyer--everything?" she asked.
-
-"Yes, yes--to be sure," Trask broke in. "But what of that? I'll bet
-you've nothing to tell him incriminating to yourself. You exaggerate your
-connection with this matter. I'll bet you were there that night on some
-perfectly innocent errand--at least so far as Doctor Waring's death is
-concerned."
-
-"Oh, I was!" Anita said, and then, as quickly, "But I wasn't there at
-night--it was in the afternoon."
-
-Lockwood groaned in spirit. Everything this girl said made her more of a
-prevaricator, even though she might be innocent of crime. Surely she was
-mixed up in the matter, and must know who gave the fatal stab--if she
-didn't do it herself. If only Nogi could be found. He, of course, was
-implicated.
-
-"I'll get a lawyer for you, if you'll let me, Miss Austin," Lockwood
-said, unable to resist his impulse to help her.
-
-"I am a lawyer," said Maurice Trask, "I here and now offer my services to
-Miss Austin. If you'll accept, my dear young lady, I promise to use my
-best efforts to do all that can be done for you."
-
-"But do I have to tell you--" again Anita began, perplexedly--her brows
-straight.
-
-Trask gazed at her fixedly, and then he said, "That will be between us.
-You will decide when we talk things over, what to tell me and what not."
-
-He spoke as to a fractious child, and his voice was kind and helpful even
-though his inflections were not cultured.
-
-Lockwood looked at him uneasily. Might not this man's kindness and
-assistance to the distressed girl lead her to feel such gratitude that it
-would be no hard matter for Trask to win more than gratitude? Lockwood
-was nervously sensitive to the interest Trask took in Anita, and well
-knew his state of mind toward the little beauty.
-
-And, instead of being lessened by the trend of suspicion toward Anita,
-Lockwood's own infatuation deepened with every glance he allowed himself
-at the lovely face.
-
-The countenance of Miss Mystery was ever changing. Now, she was a
-wistful-eyed child, and in a flash she was an inscrutable young
-woman--only to change the next instant to a wrongly accused and innocent
-martyr.
-
-Anyway, Lockwood told himself, he meant to win her, and if Trask stood in
-his way, Trask must be set aside, that was all. An indomitable will ought
-to be able to conquer the intents of a self-made, unattractive man of
-Trask's type. And, too, a love like his own, surging more fully every
-moment must appeal to the girl, once he could get a chance to declare it.
-
-Lockwood was by no means a conceited man, but he had a true sense of
-value and he knew that he was a fitter mate for Miss Mystery than Trask,
-if the girl could know them both.
-
-"I know a lawyer," Lockwood began, "here in Corinth. Might he not be a
-better man for you, Miss Austin, than a stranger in the town?"
-
-"Just why?" Trask said, his eyes coldly scanning Lockwood's face.
-
-"Because he would have known Doctor Waring, and--and all the
-circumstances," Lockwood concluded a little lamely.
-
-"Not much of an argument," Trask dismissed the suggestion. "Also, I
-promise not to cost the lady as much as any other counsel would."
-
-This speech was accompanied by an admiring glance that was so nearly a
-smirk that Lockwood with difficulty kept his hands off Trask's throat.
-
-Mrs. Peyton, who with Helen had sat almost wordless through the whole
-session, now rose to go.
-
-"Come, Helen," she said, "we are of no use here, and I'd rather take you
-away."
-
-Her implication that the presence of Miss Mystery was contaminating was
-too plain to be mistaken, and mother and daughter left the room.
-
-"Well," Cray said, "I've pretty much made up my mind in this matter. I
-make no arrest now, since you're going to be responsible, Mr. Adams, for
-Miss Austin's presence when desired. But, I think I see it all. I think I
-can reconstruct the whole case, and I think there will be decided
-developments very soon."
-
-"You do," was Trask's response to this speech, and as one by one all
-present rose to go, Trask remained, and asked that he might see Miss
-Austin alone.
-
-"Guess I'll stand by," said Old Salt, and something in the grim but
-kindly old face made Trask give tacit consent.
-
-Straightforwardly the man set about his inquiries.
-
-"Now, first of all, Miss Austin," Trask said, "where is your home?"
-
-An obstinate look came into her eyes, and she hesitated a moment. Then,
-with a sudden change of expression, she said, "Indianapolis."
-
-"Address?"
-
-"Six-twenty-seven Jackson Street."
-
-Trask's eyebrows went up at this, and he gave her a searching look, but
-Miss Mystery showed no embarrassment.
-
-"Sure of the number?" he said, "I know Indianapolis pretty well."
-
-"I'm sure," was the cool reply, and Trask went on.
-
-"Know Doctor Waring before you came here?"
-
-"No."
-
-"Never saw him before?"
-
-"Never, to my knowledge."
-
-"You didn't kill him?"
-
-Anita only shook her head slowly, but Trask did not press her for a
-verbal answer.
-
-"Yet you were there that night. Now, it's useless to deny it, for the
-prints of those doodads on the back of that very frock you have on now
-were on the plush back of the chair you sat in. Young Lockwood smoothed
-them away--Lord knows why! He must suspect you, I should say, and tried
-to shield you that way."
-
-"Could he?" asked Miss Mystery, hopefully.
-
-"Could he shield you? No, my child, he couldn't, but I can. You just
-trust yourself to me, and you'll have no trouble, no trouble at all.
-You've got Mr. Saltonstall, here, and me for friends. Something tells me
-you won't need anybody else. We'll pull you through, eh, Old Salt?"
-
-Though accustomed to the nickname from the townspeople, Mr. Adams didn't
-relish it from this stranger, and he merely said, "I'm Miss Austin's
-friend, be sure of that."
-
-"So'm I," Trask declared. "Now, little lady, you needn't tell all you
-know, but some things you must tell me. Anybody among your relatives
-named Truesdell?"
-
-Only a quick eye could have caught a fleeting look of dismay on her face,
-as Anita promptly responded, "No--not that I know of."
-
-"Falsehood number one," said Trask to himself. "What the deuce is she up
-to?"
-
-But aloud, he only said,
-
-"All right. Now, why did you come to Corinth?"
-
-"To sketch," said Anita glibly, and smiling at him. "I'm an artist, you
-see--I paint water-colors."
-
-"Yes--I see. Now, just why did you hide that stiletto of yours?"
-
-"I was frightened. I was afraid they would think I killed Doctor Waring."
-
-"Why did you fear that?"
-
-"Oh, I don't know." She was almost flippant now. "Those detectives are so
-queer, they're likely to suspect anybody. And they said the weapon used
-was a round, sharp instrument, so--so I hid the thing."
-
-"You didn't use that to kill him?"
-
-"Oh, no!"
-
-"What did you use?"
-
-"I didn't kill him."
-
-"Who did?"
-
-"I think he killed himself."
-
-"Mr. Adams," Trask turned to the old man, "please leave us two alone for
-a few moments. I ask you as a personal favor."
-
-Without a word Old Salt left the room.
-
-"Now, look here, Miss Austin," Trask said, in a determined tone, "I know
-you killed that man as well as I know you're here. Also, I know why. Or,
-at least, I don't know exactly why, but I have knowledge that will lead
-straight to a revelation of the whole affair. I know you are related to
-the Truesdells--though perhaps you don't know that yourself. Now, here's
-my proposition. I'm a lawyer, and I'm known as a shrewd one. Many a time
-I've made black appear white--and I can do it in your case. But--if
-you'll marry me, I'll get you off. Wait a minute--don't speak yet. I'm
-not bad-looking, I'm kind-hearted and, by my cousin's death, I'm a rich
-man. You may not love me yet--but I'll guarantee I can win your
-affection. I fell in love with you, the very minute I saw you and I want
-you for my wife. You needn't marry me now--wait as long as you say--but
-give me your promise, and I'll clear you of all suspicion in this
-terrible affair. On the other hand--"
-
-There was a pause, and then Anita said:
-
-"On the other hand?"
-
-"I shall tell what I know about you--and, well, you know yourself what
-chance you will have then of getting off scotfree!"
-
-"A threat?" and Miss Mystery flung up her proud little head.
-
-"No; don't misunderstand. Not a threat. But I admit, a bribe. Marry me,
-and I'll free you. Say no--and I don't have to do a thing. The law will
-do it all. You simpleton! Do you suppose you can keep your secret once
-the law really begins to hound you? Cray is only just opening his eyes to
-your connections with the case. Lockwood has realized that you must be
-guilty, though he's trying hard not to believe it. Old Salt only
-befriends you because you're helpless and pretty--not because he thinks
-you're innocent--any more than his wife does. The two Peytons hate
-you--for reasons of their own--probably because you snared Lockwood away
-from the lovely Helen. But none of those things will matter if you take
-up with my offer. I'll carry you through with flying colors. You'll be
-not only freed from suspicion but eulogized and beloved by all who know
-you, and as my wife, you'll have a proud and enviable position."
-
-Miss Mystery gave the speaker a look that not only took him in from head
-to foot but seemed to penetrate his very soul, and in a quiet, even tone,
-she said:
-
-"Rather than marry you--I would face the electric chair."
-
-The scorn in her voice, even more than the scathing words themselves,
-enraged Trask.
-
-"Oh," he said, with ill-repressed fury, "you would, would you? Have your
-own way, then, Miss Mystery--and soon your mystery will be known and you
-may have your desire, and--face the electric chair!"
-
-The girl rose, and stood, waiting.
-
-"Go," she said, without glance or gesture.
-
-And in a white heat of anger, Trask went.
-
-"Now, dearie," Mrs. Adams said, coming in, "I don't want you to tell me
-anything. My husband bids me befriend you--and I will, so long as your
-case is uncertain. But if you're proved to be guilty, I--"
-
-"Oh, don't fail me," and Miss Mystery threw herself into the other's
-arms. "I am so lonely and so friendless--"
-
-"Why are you? Where's your folks?"
-
-Then Miss Mystery drew herself up, with a forlorn little attempt at
-dignity, and said, "I'd like to go to my room now, please."
-
-Upstairs she went, slowly, and as she neared her own room Lockwood met
-her in the hall.
-
-"Count me your friend," he said, simply, and held out his hand.
-
-"I will," she replied, putting her little hand in his, and then, with one
-deep glance, each knew of the other's love.
-
-Lockwood's was written plain on his face, and his eyes, usually so calm
-and cold, were lighted with the intensity of his passion.
-
-This Anita read, and her own response was quick and involuntary.
-
-Perhaps it was a rebound from the awful proposals of Maurice Trask;
-perhaps it was a heart finding its mate--perhaps, remembering Miss
-Mystery's ways, it was mere coquetry, but the glances were exchanged and
-they knew.
-
-Anita went on to her room, and throwing herself into a chair, sat long in
-thought.
-
-"What shall I do?" she asked herself over and over again. "What can I do?
-If only I hadn't taken the money--and the pin. Why did I do it? And he
-said Truesdell! How did he know? My eyebrows, I suppose. That awful man!
-And he'll tell--oh, yes, he'll surely tell--and that will poison Gordon's
-mind against me--oh, was anybody ever in such trouble as I?"
-
-A tap at her door announced the maid with a note.
-
-Alone again, Anita read it. It was from Lockwood and begged an interview.
-
-"Please let me see you alone," it said; "I don't know how best to manage
-it. Will you go for a walk with me now? There's time for a short stroll
-before dark."
-
-Hurriedly Anita flung on hat and coat, and opened her door.
-
-Lockwood was on the stair.
-
-"Going out?" he said, casually, "may I walk with you?"
-
-"Please do," said Anita, and they started out together.
-
-"I'm sorry enough to do anything that seems clandestine," said Lockwood
-as they walked, "but that feline lady, Miss Bascom, is watching your
-every move, and I can't let her get anything to criticise you for."
-
-A grateful look rewarded him, and then Gordon went on: "Tell me, did I
-read your eyes aright? Do you, can you care to know how I love you? How I
-have loved you from the moment I first saw you. Do you care, Anita? May I
-love you?"
-
-"But you don't know me," she said, in a soft little voice. "And you do
-know dreadful things about me."
-
-"I don't care for any of those things. If they're dreadful, they're not
-true."
-
-"Yes--they are true--some of them. And there are more dreadful things to
-know--that you don't even suspect--Gordon."
-
-The last word, spoken in the lowest, tenderest of voices, completed
-Lockwood's infatuation. Had she not said that, he might have been
-deterred by her statements, but that softly-breathed name, stirred his
-pulses, and in the deepening dusk he found her hand and said:
-
-"Anita, I want you--I love you--none of these things count. I know you
-are in no way guiltily connected with this crime--if you are mixed up
-with it, it is through force of circumstances, and anyway, I don't care
-who or what you are--I love you, I believe in you and I want you."
-
-"But it's all so dreadful--and I can't tell--"
-
-"Don't tell anything you don't want to--"
-
-"But that man will tell. That terrible Trask man."
-
-Lockwood didn't waver in his fealty or loyalty but it was a blow to learn
-that Trask knew something of Anita's secrets.
-
-"I don't care," he said, firmly, "I love you."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV
- A PROPOSAL
-
-
-Maurice Trask took up his reins of government with a firm hand. He left
-all housekeeping and domestic matters to Mrs. Peyton, but the business
-affairs of Doctor Waring, he concluded to clean up as rapidly as
-possible.
-
-"It's astonishing," he said to Lockwood, "what a lot of varied interests
-my cousin had. This morning's mail brings all sorts of things from Rare
-Book Catalogues to Mining Prospectuses. By the way, I think I shall have
-an auction of his rare books. Such things don't interest me, and I
-believe they have a big money value."
-
-"Some of them have," Lockwood returned, indifferently.
-
-He could not bring himself to like his new employer, but as he had agreed
-to stay with him for a time, he did his best to meet requirements.
-
-"Take this lot, now," and Trask indicated a bookcase full of old volumes
-of the classics. "They mean nothing to me--I can't read Latin or Greek,
-and wouldn't if I could. My good heavens! Look at this one!"
-
-Trask had taken down the volume that had been on Doctor Waring's desk the
-night of his death. As he flipped over the pages, two were stuck
-together, and the ghastly red stains showed only too clearly that they
-were the spilled blood of the dying man.
-
-"Ugh!" he said, holding out the volume to Lockwood, "burn that up. How
-could anyone have put it back on the shelf? Never let me see it again!"
-
-The secretary took it, noting that it was a copy of Martial, to which
-Doctor Waring had been greatly attached. Indeed, it had, to Lockwood's
-knowledge, been lying on the Doctor's desk for a week or more before his
-death.
-
-Laying the stained volume aside in his own desk, Lockwood proceeded to
-assist in the examination of the books.
-
-He was not at all surprised to find Trask discarding the ones he would
-have retained and keeping the most worthless--though there was little
-that could really be called trash in the Waring library.
-
-"Where are the story books?" the new owner grumbled. "No detective
-stories? No spicy novels? No joke-books?"
-
-"Doctor Waring was serious-minded," Lockwood reminded him. "He cared
-little for lighter reading. He was a scholar."
-
-"He sure was--to judge from these old dry-as-dust tomes. But, I'll fire a
-lot of the poky old stuff, and so make room for more entertaining books.
-You see, Lockwood, I hope--and I expect to get me a wife before long."
-
-Gordon's heart seemed to contract, for he divined what was coming.
-
-"Yeppy, that's so. Little Old Maurice wants a wifie--and--who do you
-suppose has caught my fancy?"
-
-"Who?" was the mechanical response.
-
-"Why, none other than the little Miss Mystery. Oh, yes, I know she is
-under a cloud--but I can get her off--I'm a bird of a lawyer, you
-know--and we'll fix up all that. Then, I'll elevate that little nonentity
-to the elevated position of the missus of Maurice Trask. Hey, my boy,
-how's that?"
-
-Had Lockwood's calm not been habitual with him, he could scarcely have
-maintained it through this scene. As it was, he was a boiling, seething
-furnace inside him, but his judgment told him that any exhibition of
-surprise or annoyance would only irritate the other man without doing any
-good.
-
-Moreover, if Trask were really a shrewd lawyer, and if he knew something
-that would make any trouble for Anita--and she had hinted that he
-did--then, Lockwood argued, he must keep friendly with Trask, at least
-until he found out more of the matter.
-
-So he said, lightly, "Has the lady agreed?"
-
-"Well--not yet; but--I say, Lockwood, you're hit in that same direction,
-eh?"
-
-"I admire Miss Austin very much, yes."
-
-"Well--you keep off--do you hear?"
-
-"I hear," said Lockwood, in his imperturbable way, but when Trask looked
-up and caught the cold stare of his secretary, he dropped the subject and
-returned to the books.
-
-Since Doctor Waring's death, Lockwood had formed the habit of going back
-to the Adams house for his luncheon. This, of course, in the hope of
-seeing something of Anita, and also, because his new employer preferred
-it that way.
-
-At luncheon, Trask took occasion to eulogize Miss Austin.
-
-Helen Peyton stood it as long as she could, and then broke out with: "I
-don't see what you can find to admire in that thin, sallow little thing!
-And, beside, she is a wicked girl. I think she killed Doctor Waring, but
-even if she didn't, she came over here to see him, secretly, late at
-night, and if that isn't wrong-doing, I don't know what is! But just
-because she puts up a helpless bluff, all the men fall for her!"
-
-"Jealous, Miss Peyton?" and Trask looked at her shrewdly.
-
-"No," Helen tossed her head. "I've no reason to be. That girl is nothing
-to me, and the sooner she gets out of Corinth the better. If the police
-will let her go!"
-
-"Now then, Miss Peyton," Trask began, in his most emphatic manner, "and
-Mrs. Peyton, too, once for all, I will hear no word against Miss Austin
-in my house. Put any meaning you like into that, but remember it. One
-word against Anita Austin, and the speaker of it goes out of my door
-never to return. Am I clear?"
-
-"Clear? Yes; but I can tell you--"
-
-"Hush, Helen," said her mother. "We want to stay here, don't we? Well,
-then, as Mr. Trask is evidently much in earnest, I insist that you obey
-his wishes--as I shall."
-
-"That's right, Mrs. Peyton. And if your daughter forgets my hints I trust
-to you to keep her reminded. That's all about that."
-
-In this fashion Maurice Trask settled every question that arose. His word
-was law, and he spoke no unnecessary words.
-
-The servants could obey or leave. The housekeeper had been told the same,
-and the secretary understood it, too.
-
-Returning to the library after luncheon, Trask sat at the desk in deep
-thought.
-
-"Got to get the girl," he told himself. "Plenty to hold over her
-head--but she's skittish, that's plain to be seen. Also, she's in love
-with Lockwood. Got to get him out of town. Nothing doing while he's
-around. Now, how? Morton hinted of his being deeply in debt. If so, he's
-got some past history, guess I can get something on him--got to, whether
-I can or not. H'm. Wonder if the little girl did do the sticking. Hard to
-believe it, and yet that kid's got it in her. She sure has! And she's a
-Truesdell all right. Nobody ever had those beetling brows, almost joining
-above those dark eyes, in that level line--why, if she's a Truesdell--!
-Good Lord, I've got to marry her! I'll have to scare her into it! Now,
-Maurice, my boy, get in some of your finest work."
-
-Clapping on his hat, he started for the Adams house.
-
-As luck would have it, he met Anita and his secretary walking toward him.
-
-"Playing truant?" he called out gaily to Lockwood.
-
-"I'm just on my way to your house," Gordon returned, coldly.
-
-"You too, Miss Mystery?" and Trask gave her a wide smile.
-
-"No; I'm going to the post-office."
-
-"Ah, I see. Then, on your way, Lockwood--and I'll step along with Miss
-Austin."
-
-There was no good way out of this arrangement, so it obtained, and Trask
-fell into step with the girl, as Lockwood turned off toward the Waring
-house.
-
-"Now, my dear young lady," Trask began, unheeding her look of aversion,
-"you may as well understand me first as last. I've got the whip hand--or,
-as that isn't a very graceful expression, let us say, I hold the trumps.
-I know all about you, you see. I know why you went to the doctor's
-library that night, and--I know what happened there."
-
-"You don't," said Anita, coolly. "You're bluffing, and I know it."
-
-"No, I'm not bluffing--not entirely, anyway. True, there are some things
-I don't know yet, but--I soon will! Don't think you can keep anything
-from me! I'm going to take a week for investigation. Also, to give you
-your chance. If I find out what I fully expect to find out I shall make
-it all public--how will you like that?"
-
-A great fear showed in Anita's eyes, and she murmured, brokenly:
-
-"Don't--oh, Mr. Trask, don't!"
-
-"Hah! Scared, are you? I thought you'd be! Now, you know my price. You
-marry me--promise to marry me, that is, and I'll get you through this
-thing with bells on. No shadow of suspicion shall remain attached to
-you--or, to any one you care for."
-
-"I heard you were not going to rest until you learned who killed Doctor
-Waring," Anita temporized.
-
-"Yes, yes; but that was before I saw you. Now, I don't care if you have
-killed half the people in Corinth, I want you all the same. You've
-bewitched me. You, a silly little slip of a girl, with no particular
-claim to beauty, except your big, mournful eyes, and your peach of a
-mouth! I'll bring the smiles to that sad little face. Oh, Anita, I'm not
-a brute, and I do love you so. Give up your foolish fancy for Lockwood,
-for it is only a passing attraction. And he hasn't any money, and he's
-deeply in debt, and oh, I'm a thousand times a better catch!"
-
-"If you knew how you damaged your cause by talking like that--" the girl
-began, her eyes cold with scorn.
-
-"Then I won't talk like that," Trask said, humbly. "Only take me, Anita,
-and you can make me over to suit yourself. I'll do whatever you say. I'll
-read the books you want me to, I'll get cultured and refined--and all
-that."
-
-Anita almost laughed. "You are so funny," she said.
-
-But this was a little too much for Trask's self-love.
-
-"Funny, am I?" he stormed. "Funny! You'll see how funny I am when I tell
-the police why you killed that man! You'll see if I'm funny when I refuse
-the evidence that might help you out. When I keep still instead of
-speakin' out in meetin'! You look here, Anita Austin, I hold you in the
-hollow of my hand, and don't you forget it! You've got a deep dark
-secret--and though I don't know quite all of it--I'll know it soon. What
-M. Trask sets out to find out, he finds out. See? Now, do you want to
-tell me who you are--or not? Want to tell me who your father was? Your
-mother was a Truesdell--I'll bet on that!"
-
-Miss Mystery's face fell. Abject despair was written on every line of it.
-She glanced at Trask, and his own determined expression showed her that
-she could hope for nothing from him save on his own terms.
-
-And those terms were too hard for her. Just aware of loving Lockwood,
-just learning to know what love meant and how sweet it could be, just
-realizing, too, the awfulness of her own position, the dire necessity for
-secrecy, the terrible result of Trask's revelations, should they be made,
-altogether Miss Mystery faced a dangerous crisis.
-
-"You say you'll give me a week?" she said, at last, grasping at a hope of
-reprieve.
-
-Trask looked at her with curiosity.
-
-"What good'll that do you? Better put yourself under my protection at
-once. Every day you lose is that much nearer discovery."
-
-"All right, I'll dare it! They won't--won't condemn me, anyhow."
-
-"Ho, ho. Banking on your sex to save you! Well, honestly, I don't really
-think they'd send a pretty girl like you to the chair, but a trial would
-convict you in the eyes of the world, even if twelve men were too
-soft-hearted to see you electrocuted. And there'd be imprisonment--"
-
-"Oh, hush! Mr. Trask, have you no pity?"
-
-"Plenty for the girl that is to be my wife. None for any other. And
-especially none for a girl who scorns me and throws me over for my own
-secretary. I'm a red-blooded man, I am, and you can't play fast and loose
-with me and get away with it!"
-
-"I don't mean to play fast and loose with you, if by that you mean
-changing my mind. But, I do ask for a few days to think it over. That's
-not unreasonable, is it?"
-
-Miss Mystery's little smile was cajoling, and Trask couldn't resist it.
-
-"All right," he said, as he looked hungrily at her bewitching face, "take
-a coupla days, then. But, only on condition that you don't let Lockwood
-make love to you. Promise me that for the forty-eight hours, you won't
-see that man alone."
-
-"How can I promise that?"
-
-"You'll have to, whether you can or not."
-
-"All right, I promise."
-
-He looked at her sternly.
-
-"And you'll keep that promise, or you'll be sorry! I haven't much opinion
-of your promises, you're not the sort to keep faith. But, remember I'm a
-power. Maurice Trask can do whatever he sets out to do. And if you forget
-that, you're mighty apt to regret it."
-
-"I gave you a promise," Anita said, looking at him coldly, "and I fully
-intend to keep it. It's not such a very hard one to keep."
-
-Her lip curled, and though he guessed the tumult in her heart, there was
-no sign of it on her face.
-
-Trask accompanied her to the postoffice, and then, bidding him a careless
-good afternoon, Anita went into a large drygoods shop and he made no
-attempt to follow her.
-
-He would have been interested, however, had he noted her proceedings. For
-she went straight to a telephone booth, and called up the Waring house.
-Ito answered and when she asked to be connected with Mr. Lockwood, the
-butler gave the connection without question.
-
-"Gordon?" came the soft little voice. "This is Anita."
-
-And then she told him quickly but fully all that had passed between her
-and Trask.
-
-"So you see," she concluded, "I do want these two days to think things
-out, and I mustn't see you alone, for he's sure to know of it."
-
-"All right," Lockwood said, "We'll do our courting over the telephone.
-Let me see, I'll go down town this evening and telephone you--"
-
-"No, that won't do. I can't talk to you in the Adams front hall! Here's a
-better plan. Tomorrow, when Mr. Trask goes out, you call me up there, and
-I'll go out to a pay station and call you up where you are now. And the
-day after tomorrow the time will be up."
-
-"Yes, and what are you going to do then?"
-
-"I don't know," said the girl, her voice suddenly losing its brightness.
-"I'm going to think it out. Good-by."
-
-"Oh, wait a minute. I'll see you at dinner, shan't I?"
-
-"Oh, yes; and this evening, I suppose, but only with others present."
-
-And after a few more words Anita left the booth and walked slowly home.
-
-When Trask returned to his library he said to Lockwood, "Get busy on
-those old books at once, will you? I want the shelves cleared for some of
-my own books that I've sent for."
-
-"Very well," returned the secretary, thinking of the probable difference
-between the expected books and those they would replace.
-
-"Do you mind, Mr Trask, if I take a few of these old ones myself? I'll
-pay you whatever price a first class dealer sets on them."
-
-"Oh, take what you want, without pay. I'm in a good humor today,
-Lockwood, better take advantage of it. Help yourself from the shelves."
-
-"Thank you, I'll not impose on your kindness and generosity."
-
-Nor did he, but among the few volumes he chose was the crimson stained
-copy of Martial's Epigrams.
-
-Distasteful though it was, Lockwood looked at the book with a feeling of
-reverence and opened the volume at the page that had last held the
-interest of its owner's scholarly mind.
-
-The crimson stain completely obscured the print, but Lockwood gazed long
-at the defaced page.
-
-"I wonder," he said to himself, "if a crack detective could get anything
-from this. There's that Stone, Mercer is always raving over--I suppose
-he's terribly expensive--yet this strange case might intrigue him--and
-yet--there's Anita to be considered. If it should turn the tide against
-her--"
-
-Later that afternoon, Trask went out again and Lockwood seized his
-chance.
-
-Calling Anita at the Adams house, he said, "Listen, dear, you needn't say
-anything but yes or no, and then no one will understand."
-
-"All right," came the reply.
-
-"I've just about come to the conclusion I'll get a clever detective and
-put him on the case. I mean a real detective--in fact, Fleming Stone."
-
-"Oh, no!" Anita's voice was one of utter dismay.
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"I--I can't tell you this way! You said--"
-
-"So I did. Well, here, I'll ask questions. Don't you want me to do this?"
-
-"No!" very emphatically.
-
-"You'd rather I wouldn't?"
-
-"Very much rather."
-
-"Because you fear ill effects to yourself?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"You are sure you're not overestimating the danger of that?"
-
-"I am sure."
-
-"Then there's no more to be said. Good-by."
-
-Lockwood hung up the receiver, and turned around to see Trask frowning at
-him.
-
-"So that's the way you and Miss Austin whip the devil around the stump!"
-
-"That's the way," returned Lockwood, coolly.
-
-"She promised not to see you alone--is this how she keeps the letter of
-her promise and breaks it in spirit?"
-
-"Leave her out of this. I called her up, she did not call me."
-
-"All the same. Now, I gather from the interesting talk I overheard that
-Miss Austin does not wish to have Fleming Stone take up this case."
-
-"You are at liberty to gather anything you choose."
-
-"See here, Lockwood, you make a mistake when you try to antagonize me.
-I'd be a better friend to you than an enemy."
-
-"I've no reason to want you for either." Lockwood was by no means
-impertinent, he merely spoke indifferently. Trask noted this, and went
-on, more suavely:
-
-"Now, my dear Lockwood, what I propose to do now, is to employ Fleming
-Stone myself."
-
-Lockwood was astounded. At first he was glad, for he felt sure Stone
-could solve the whole mystery. But, then, suppose it incriminated Anita,
-and though Lockwood was sure of her innocence, he was just enough so to
-realize that his surety was largely because of his affection for her.
-Suppose Stone should prove her to be the criminal!
-
-It couldn't be--and yet--
-
-He looked up to find Trask smiling broadly.
-
-"You've the reputation of being of an impassive countenance, Lockwood,
-but to me your face is as an open book! However, it's only because you
-are up against a difficult problem. You want Stone to come, yet you're
-afraid he'll find out that Miss Austin is pretty deep in this murder
-mystery. But I've made up my mind, and I think you'll see that any
-attempt on your part to change my decision would look bad for Miss
-Austin."
-
-"You let her name alone, Trask, or I'll reason with you myself."
-
-"Have you any real right to tell me to leave her name alone?"
-
-"Yes, I have."
-
-"Are you and she engaged?"
-
-"So far as I am concerned, we are. Miss Austin prefers to wait until
-later to announce it, but I can answer for her to you in confidence."
-
-"Oh, it's in confidence, all right. Don't fear I'll breathe the news.
-For, you see, I've made up my mind to marry Anita Austin myself; and if
-Fleming Stone proves that she is a murderess, I'll marry her all the
-same. She'll escape punishment--what woman doesn't?"
-
-"Then, look here," Lockwood's manner changed. "If you're going to get
-Stone anyway, why can't we work with each other and not at odds? Whatever
-else we think or feel we both want to save Miss Austin all the trouble or
-distress we can. Let's be friends, then, and talk things over with Stone,
-and then--"
-
-"I'm on! Then if we see things are going against her, shut him off!"
-
-"Well, yes, if we can."
-
-"Of course we can. I've money enough for anything--even to buy off
-Fleming Stone. No man's too big to be bought."
-
-"I don't mean all this exactly as you do, but I do mean this: if Stone
-can solve the mystery and clear Anita, let him do it. If he finds her
-implicated, let it be understood by him beforehand, he is to cease
-investigations."
-
-Trask thought a minute.
-
-"That goes," he said; "I agree."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV
- FLEMING STONE COMES
-
-
-"Terence."
-
-"Yes, sir."
-
-"We're off for New England."
-
-"New England it is."
-
-"Start this afternoon, stay a few days, maybe a week among the classic
-shades of Corinth."
-
-"Corinth it is."
-
-This somewhat laconic conversation was all that was necessary for Fleming
-Stone's assistant and general factotum to make preparations for the trip,
-achieve tickets, and arrive, with his chief, at the train gate at the
-proper time.
-
-Terence McGuire, sometimes called Fibsy, because of a certain tendency to
-mendacity, had begun as Stone's office boy, and, by virtue of his general
-aptitude for detective work and his utter devotion to Stone, had become a
-worthwhile and much appreciated assistant. Not only did the lad look
-after all details of their trips as well as taking care of the offices,
-but many times his ingenious mind so stimulated or aided Stone's own,
-that more often than not they were practically colleagues.
-
-They had a compartment to themselves at the end of the car, and they were
-no sooner started than Stone began to discuss the case with the boy.
-
-"I don't know all the details, of course," he began, "but it's a setting
-after my own heart."
-
-"Then I can guess it," put in the wise Fibsy. "Man found dead in sealed
-room."
-
-"You're a wizard! What made you think of that?"
-
-"'Cause that's the problem you like best, F. Stone. Wise me up some
-more."
-
-"It's further interesting, because the victim is a great and good man, in
-fact, the President-elect of the University of Corinth."
-
-"My! Somebody didn't want him for president? That the idea?"
-
-"Apparently not. Nothing in the letter about that."
-
-"Who wrote the letter?"
-
-"The relative who inherits the whole estate."
-
-"He do the job?"
-
-"No reason as yet to think so. But the criminal mustn't be guessed at.
-The point is, the locked room."
-
-"How was the killing done?"
-
-"Stabbed. No weapon found and no way to get in or out of the locked room.
-Fine problem."
-
-"Yes--if we don't find a secret stairway--or, a lying servant. Such cases
-generally fizzle out that way."
-
-"Fibs, you're a Boy Cassandra."
-
-"What's that?"
-
-Stone explained, for it was his habit to supplement McGuire's very scant
-education by bits of information now and then, when time served.
-
-"But, there's a queer clause in the arrangement," Stone went on, "if we
-find the evidence leading in a certain direction, the chase is to cease."
-
-"That won't do."
-
-"Of course not, and I'll soon make that clear. But I can't think it will
-lead in the given direction as that implicates a young girl, and rarely
-indeed, have I found a criminal answering to that description."
-
-"'Tisn't usual--but, you know, F. Stone, since the war, girls are so
-independent and so cocky that there's no telling what they'll do. Me for
-the girl--as a suspect."
-
-"Fibsy, you're a fool."
-
-"No, sir. I don't admit it. See here, sir, if they're so 'fraid s'picion
-will turn to that girl, there's reason for it. Yet, as you can guess, if
-she didn't do it, they want her skirts entirely cleared."
-
-"Pretty good deduction so far. But we can't judge rationally until we
-know the facts."
-
-The facts were told them, when, some hours later, they sat, alone with
-Maurice Trask in the room where John Waring breathed his last.
-
-"I'm a plain man," Trask said, for he didn't care to pose unduly before
-an astute detective. "I've come into this estate of my cousin's--my
-second cousin, he was, and I started out with a firm determination to
-find the villain who killed him. But, there is some cause for suspicion
-of the young lady I expect to marry. And here's the situation. If you can
-solve the mystery of Doctor Waring's death, and free that girl from any
-taint of blame, go ahead. But if your investigation leads to her--stop
-it. I want to marry her just the same, whether she killed anybody or not.
-But if she didn't do it, I want to know it."
-
-"Can't you learn the truth from the young lady herself--if she is your
-fiancee?" asked Stone.
-
-"Oh, she says she didn't do it, of course. But there's such an
-overwhelming mass of evidence--or, apparent evidence against her, that
-it's the deepest sort of a mystery."
-
-"Main facts first. Where was the body found?"
-
-"In that desk chair, seated at his desk, as he often was evenings.
-Reading in a Latin book, so you see, he wasn't looking for trouble."
-
-"Found dead in the morning? Been dead all night?"
-
-"Yes, to both those questions. And locked in his room. Had to break in."
-
-"And no weapon about?"
-
-"Not a sign of any--"
-
-"Then that cuts out all suicide idea."
-
-"It does and it doesn't. You may as well say the locked up room cuts out
-all idea of a murder."
-
-"But it must be one or the other. And isn't it more plausible to look for
-some way that the murderer could have gone away and left the room locked,
-than to think up a way that the suicide could have disposed of this
-weapon?"
-
-"Yes, that's so, but I want you to investigate both possibilities. You
-see, if you could prove a suicide, that would free Miss Austin at once.
-And--if things go against her--I want you to--oh, hang it, it's hard to
-put into words--"
-
-"I'll do that," said Fibsy, "if things go against Miss Austin, you want
-Mr. Stone to frame up suicide, and declare it the truth."
-
-"Exactly that," and Trask looked relieved at the thought all his cards
-were on the table. "I don't want Miss Austin suspected, but I do want to
-know if she's innocent."
-
-"Any other suspects?" asked Stone.
-
-"Not definite ones. There's the Japanese who absconded that same night,
-and of course, there's the secretary, Gordon Lockwood. I'd like to
-suspect him, all right, and he has a round silver penholder that just
-fits the wound that killed Waring. But it doesn't look like he did it, he
-never would have left the penholder in evidence, and he would have
-arranged matters to look more like a suicide. Then, too, how could he
-lock the door behind him?"
-
-"That question must be answered first of all," said Stone. "I'll examine
-the room, of course, but after the local police and detectives have done
-that, I doubt if I find anything enlightening. So far as I can see, this
-whole affair is unique, and I think we will find some surprising evidence
-and soon. Tell me more of this Miss Austin. Who is she?"
-
-"Nobody knows. In fact, they call her Miss Mystery, because so little is
-known of her. She appeared here in Corinth from nowhere. She knew no one,
-and as she began to make acquaintances somebody brought her over here.
-She met Doctor Waring, and inside of twenty-four hours had so bewitched
-him that it would seem he had her visiting him in his study late at
-night. She said at first, she wasn't here, but as she left the impress of
-her dress trimmings on that chair-back, and as she has a ruby pin and a
-lot of money that were in the Doctor's possession, it looks, one might
-say, a bit queer."
-
-"Weren't the valuables planted on her?" put in Fibsy.
-
-"That's what she says--or rather, that's one of the things she said. The
-girl contradicts herself continually. She says one thing one day and
-another the next."
-
-"Is she pretty?" This from Fibsy.
-
-"Pretty as the devil! And that's not so bad as a description. She has
-great big dark eyes, with straight black brows that almost meet. She has
-a jaunty little face, that can be roguish or scornful or merry or
-pathetic as the little rascal chooses. She has completely bowled me over,
-and I'd be glad to have her on any terms and whatever her past history.
-But, there it is. If she has a clean slate in this murder business, I
-want to know it."
-
-"And if she hasn't?"
-
-"Then I don't want anybody else to know it. If you find, Mr. Stone, real
-evidence that Anita Austin killed John Waring, or if she confesses to the
-deed, then you whip around and prove a suicide, and I'll double your
-charge. You needn't do anything wrong, you know. Just sum up that all
-indications point to a suicide, and let it go at that. Nobody will arrest
-Miss Austin if you say that."
-
-"You must be crazy, Mr. Trask," returned Stone, coldly. "I don't conduct
-my business on any such principles as those. I can't perjure myself to
-save your lady love from a just condemnation."
-
-"You haven't seen her yet." Trask nodded his sagacious head. "Wait till
-you do."
-
-"Give me all the points against her," the detective suggested.
-
-"I will. I'd rather you knew them from me. Not that I'll color
-them--they're facts that speak for themselves, but other people might
-exaggerate them. Well, to begin with, this girl, a day or so after she
-arrived here was seen kissing the picture of Doctor Waring which she had
-cut from a newspaper. I tell you this, 'cause you'll hear it anyway, and
-the gossips think it shows a previous acquaintance between the two. But I
-hold that as girls have matinee idols and movie heroes, this girl might
-easily have adored the scholarly man, though she had never seen him."
-
-"It is possible," Stone agreed, "but not very probable. She denies they
-were acquainted?"
-
-"Yes. Vows she never saw him until one night she went to his lecture,
-soon after her arrival here."
-
-"What is she in Corinth for?"
-
-"To sketch--she's an artist."
-
-"Go on."
-
-"Well, as I said, she must have come here that Sunday night, for one of
-the boarders at the house she lives in saw her cross the snowy field.
-Also, the footprints just fitted her shoes. Also, the tracks led right up
-on the side porch here to that long French window. And led right back
-again to the Adams house."
-
-"Whew!" Fibsy exploded, "aren't you rubbing it in?"
-
-"Well, that's what they tell me--" Trask asserted, doggedly, "and I want
-you to know it all, Mr. Stone, before the other people tell you a garbled
-version."
-
-"Go on."
-
-"Then, they say, the girl left marks of her dress trimming on that chair,
-and Lockwood, the secretary, rubbed them off next morning, as soon as the
-body was discovered. We have the word of two witnesses for this episode."
-
-"Who are the witnesses?"
-
-"Ito, the Japanese butler, and Miss Peyton, who lives in this house."
-
-"Go on."
-
-"Well, then, ever since the tragedy, Miss Austin has acted queer. Queer
-in all sorts of ways. She is sad and desolate one minute, and saucy and
-independent the next. I can't make her out at all. And she is more than
-half in love with this Lockwood. I have to cut him out, you see. And I
-figure, if you prove the case against Miss Austin, and if I agree to
-marry her and hush up the whole matter, and make it seem a suicide--"
-
-"You figure that she'll throw over the secretary for you," cried Fibsy,
-his eyes aghast at the man's plan.
-
-"Exactly that. You see, Mr. Stone, I don't try to deceive you. While I
-have a natural sorrow at my cousin's death, yet remember that I never
-knew him in life, and that, while I want to avenge his death in any case
-but one, I do not want to if it implicates Anita Austin."
-
-"I understand," said Stone, seemingly not so shocked at the conversation
-as his assistant was.
-
-"There's another queer thing," said Trask. "They tell me that when the
-body was found there was the impress of a ring on the forehead."
-
-"A seal ring?"
-
-"Oh, no. Not a finger ring, but a circle, about two inches across, a red
-mark, as if it had been made as a sign or symbol of some sort."
-
-"It remained on the flesh?"
-
-"Until the embalming process took place. That removed it. I didn't see
-it, but I'm told it was a clearly defined circle, quite evidently
-impressed with some intent."
-
-"Sounds like a sign of a secret society," Fibsy suggested, but Stone paid
-no heed.
-
-"Let's reconstruct the case," he said; "Waring sat at his desk his
-secretary outside in that hall?"
-
-"Yes; the Japanese, the other one, the one that disappeared, brought in
-water, and then Doctor Waring closed the door and locked it."
-
-"Immediately?"
-
-"I don't know that, but anyway, no one that we know of saw him again
-alive. Nogi is under no suspicion, for after he came out of the room, the
-Doctor rose and locked the door. Lockwood can't be suspected, as he heard
-the door locked, and couldn't get in. He _is_ more or less suspected
-because of his penholder, but much as I should like to think him the
-criminal, I know he isn't."
-
-"You're very honest, Mr. Trask."
-
-"Yes, because I want the truth. Can you get it?"
-
-"I think so."
-
-"You still eliminate suicide?"
-
-"I can't see how I can think it, with no weapon. You say that death was
-instantaneous--?"
-
-"Yes; the doctors agree that it was. Positively he had no chance to hide
-or dispose of the instrument of death."
-
-"And why should he? Suicides never make their death seem a murder, though
-often a murderer tries to simulate a suicide."
-
-"Yet that wasn't done in this case, or the murderer would have left the
-weapon."
-
-"That may be the very point he neglected. Now, how did the murderer get
-out? Get busy, Fibs."
-
-For nearly half an hour, the three men searched the room. Had there been
-any secret exit, or any concealed passage, it must have been found.
-Fleming Stone's knowledge of architecture would not let him overlook any
-thing of the sort, and Fibsy's alert eyes and quick wits would have found
-anything out of the ordinary.
-
-"No way out," Stone concluded, finally; "and no way of locking a door or
-a window after departure from the room. Looks as if the murder theory was
-as untenable as the other. No chance of a natural death?"
-
-"With a round hole in his jugular vein? No, sir. The doctors here won't
-stand for that. Try again."
-
-"I shall. I don't know when I've had such a baffling, intriguing case, as
-this appears to be at first sight. It may resolve itself into a simple
-problem, but I can't think so now. Even if it were the work of your Miss
-Austin--how did she get in and out?"
-
-"Oh, she got in, all right. Waring let her in, at the French window.
-Probably that's when he locked his door. But--say she killed him--how did
-she get out and lock the room behind her?"
-
-"She couldn't. The window locks are bolts, and could not be shot from
-outside. For the moment I see no explanation. It is blank, utter mystery.
-When can I see Miss Austin?"
-
-"Too late tonight, tomorrow morning will have to do. But she won't run
-away. The police won't let her."
-
-"Yet they can't hold her."
-
-"They are doing so. They claim she was the last one to see the victim
-alive--"
-
-"Does she admit that?"
-
-"Not she! She admits nothing. You'll get nothing out of that little
-Sphinx!"
-
-"All right, then, Mr. Trask, if you've finished your tale, suppose you
-leave me here to ruminate over this thing, and I'll go up to my room when
-I wish."
-
-Trask went off to bed, and Stone and his young assistant sat and looked
-at each other.
-
-"Up against it, F. Stone?"
-
-"I certainly am, Fibs. And yet, the thing is so absolutely impossible
-that there must be a solution within easy reach. It can't be suicide,
-with the weapon gone, and it can't be murder with the room locked up.
-Now, as it must be either suicide or murder, then it follows, that either
-the weapon isn't gone, or the room isn't locked up."
-
-"Wasn't, you mean."
-
-"Yes, wasn't. But I don't yet think that any one disturbed the conditions
-purposely. For why would the secretary take away the weapon to make it
-seem a suicide--"
-
-"He would if he did it."
-
-"He didn't do it. Trask sees that. The man Trask is a sharp one. He sees
-all there is to see, and since there's practically nothing to see that
-solves the mystery, he sent for me. It would be a good one on me,
-Terence, if I have to give the thing up as unsolvable."
-
-"That won't happen, F. Stone, but I'm free to confess, I can't see any
-way to look."
-
-The next morning, Maurice Trask went over to the Adams house, and brought
-Miss Mystery back with him.
-
-She came willingly enough, and the interview with the detective took
-place in the room of the tragedy itself.
-
-Stone noticed that the girl showed no horror or distaste of the scene,
-and even sat in the chair he placed for her, which was the same
-plush-covered one that had received the tell-tale imprints.
-
-Fleming Stone regarded Miss Austin curiously. Not only was her beauty all
-that Trask had described it, but there was an added quality of fineness,
-a trace of high mentality, that naturally enough Maurice Trask quite
-overlooked.
-
-At first glance, Stone's thought was--"That child commit murder? Never!"
-But a few moments later, he was not quite so sure of his negation.
-
-Fibsy just sat and looked at her. He had no occasion to speak, unless
-addressed, so, in silence he merely let his eyes feast on the piquant
-face with its ever changing expressions.
-
-After casual questions, Stone said directly, "Did you know Doctor Waring
-before you came to Corinth, Miss Austin?"
-
-"No," she said, a little hesitantly; "I had heard of him, but I had never
-before seen him."
-
-"How had you heard of him?"
-
-"There was much in the papers about his election."
-
-"And that interested you?"
-
-"Not specially," she said, with a sudden accession of hauteur.
-
-And thereupon, she became a most unsatisfactory witness. She listened to
-Stone's questions with an absent-minded air, answered in monosyllables,
-or by a movement of her head. She even gave a side smile to Fibsy, which,
-though it amazed him, also filled him with a strange exultant joy, and
-made him her abject slave at once.
-
-Stone went on, drawling out a string of unimportant questions in a
-monotonous voice, and at length, he said, in the same unimportant way,
-
-"And when you saw Doctor Waring that night, was there a red ring on his
-forehead?"
-
-"No," said Miss Austin, and then, suddenly awakening to what she had
-done, she cried impetuously, "I mean, I don't know. I wasn't here."
-
-Stone smiled gravely. "You were here," he said. "Now let us talk about
-what happened during your visit."
-
-An interruption was caused by a tap at the closed door.
-
-Impatiently, Trask rose and went to the door. It was Ito, bringing a
-telegram for Miss Austin. It had arrived at the Adams house, and had been
-sent over.
-
-Miss Mystery read it, with great difficulty controlled her agitation, as
-she quickly went to the blazing log fire and dropped the paper in.
-
-"Skip over to the Telegraph office and get a copy," said Stone quietly,
-and Fibsy obeyed.
-
-Then to Miss Austin's continued distress, Stone read the message aloud.
-It was from San Francisco, and it said:
-
-"Better own up and tell the whole truth. I have annexed Carl." It was
-signed merely "A" and apparently it was of dire import to its recipient.
-Miss Mystery sat silent, and wide-eyed in desperation, as she looked
-hopelessly from one to another.
-
-"Don't you think," said Stone, not unkindly, "that you'd better follow
-A's advice and make a clean breast of the whole matter?"
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI
- MISS MYSTERY'S TESTIMONY
-
-
-Miss Mystery looked from Stone's impassive face to Fibsy's eager boyish
-countenance. Then she looked at Maurice Trask.
-
-The latter showed deepest sympathy and interest but Trask also had a wary
-air, as if ready to interrupt any disclosures that might be damaging to
-the girl.
-
-"First of all," Stone said, "who sent you that telegram from San
-Francisco?"
-
-"I don't know." The calm little face was as expressionless as Stone's
-own, and she made her statement as straightforwardly as if it had been
-true.
-
-"Miss Austin," Stone spoke severely now, "it's to your own advantage to
-adopt a more amenable manner. You will not help your cause by
-prevarication or evasion. Unless you will answer my questions truly, I
-must find out these things for myself. I can do it."
-
-"If you can find out who sent that telegram, go ahead," she flared at
-him. "I tell you I don't know who sent it, and I don't know who 'A' is."
-
-"I know who she is," said Fibsy, and then Anita's quick, startled glance
-proved to the boy that his little ruse was successful and he had at least
-guessed the sex of the sender.
-
-"A woman," the astute lad mused, "and she has annexed Carl. Maybe Carl is
-another name for that escaped Japanese. But it's all so far away. How can
-they conduct operations between here and California!"
-
-"Miss Austin," Stone tried to win her confidence, "believe me I am most
-anxious to help you. Please tell me why you came over here that Sunday
-night. It is utterly useless to deny that you did come, now tell me why."
-
-Anita looked baffled, but after a moment's pause, she said, "Do you think
-I killed Doctor Waring?"
-
-"I know you didn't," broke in Fibsy, with enthusiasm. "Now, come across,
-Miss Austin, and I'll bet you F. Stone can dope out the whole game."
-
-"I know most of the circumstances already," Stone smiled, and followed up
-the small advantage he had gained. "You came over here late, secretly,
-across the snowy field. Doctor Waring let you in?"
-
-"Yes," Anita breathed the word, and her starry eyes never left Stone's
-face. She seemed almost hypnotized.
-
-"Then you sat down in the chair you're in now, and he locked the
-door--why did he do that?"
-
-"I don't know--he didn't! Stop! You have no right to torment me like
-this! I have counsel--Mr. Trask here is my lawyer. Let him tell me what
-to do!"
-
-Her nerves were tense, and her little fingers were continually twisting
-round themselves. Her face was agonized, and Stone felt as if he were
-guilty of utter cruelty. But he must go on.
-
-"Mr. Trask cannot tell what he does not know," he said, coldly. "I am in
-authority, you must answer me. Did Doctor Waring give you the money and
-the ruby pin?"
-
-"Yes, he did."
-
-"Why?"
-
-"As gifts. Why does any one give presents?"
-
-"Because he loved you?"
-
-"Yes." Anita's voice dropped to a softer tone, her eyes had a faraway
-look, and her sensitive little mouth quivered.
-
-"Yet you had known him but a few days! You had never seen him before you
-came to Corinth?"
-
-"Never."
-
-"Isn't that a strange admission? How could he become so infatuated in so
-short a time?"
-
-"Have you never heard of such a thing?" the face was almost roguish now,
-and the dark eyes showed a hint of smile.
-
-Stone was baffled. He gazed at this strange young person, who was either
-fooling him to the top of her bent or was a helpless, harassed child.
-
-"Was Doctor Waring related to you?" he asked, with a sudden new idea.
-
-"Oh, no. He was no relation. I tell you I never met him before I came
-here."
-
-"And he gave you the valuables?"
-
-"He did. I'll swear to that--though I have no witness to prove it."
-
-"And you accepted them! Accepted a large sum of money and a pin set with
-a precious stone from a man you scarcely knew! A man engaged to be
-married! A man of twice your own age! You must admit this calls for
-explanation."
-
-"Why does it? Hadn't he a right to give me those things if he chose?"
-
-"Wait a minute, Miss Austin. You loved him?"
-
-"Maybe."
-
-"Then, if you did, do you want his name stained, his memory blotted by an
-act that is, to say the least, questionable?"
-
-"But he did give them to me."
-
-"Unless you can say more clearly why he did so I'm not sure I can believe
-you. Did you ask for them?"
-
-"Oh, no!"
-
-Her disclaimer sounded true, but Stone began to think she was a
-consummate little actress as well as a clever falsifier.
-
-"Well," he said, after a short pause, "I may as well tell you, Miss
-Austin, that I am here to solve this mystery. That I am not at all
-satisfied that you are telling me the truth; that, therefore, I shall
-have to seek the truth elsewhere. I will tell you, too, that I don't want
-to implicate you, that I should much prefer to keep your name out of it
-all, but that you leave me no choice but to go ahead with my
-investigations wherever they may lead. A few more questions and you may
-go. What was Doctor Waring doing when you came?"
-
-"He--he was sitting at his desk." She looked troubled at Stone's speech
-and seemed half inclined to be more friendly.
-
-"You saw him through the French window, before you came in?"
-
-"Yes; the window has a silk curtain, but I saw him between the edge of
-the silk and the window sash."
-
-"Was he reading?"
-
-"No; there were books on the desk, but he was not reading."
-
-"He rose and let you in?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"He had sent for you?"
-
-"No--that is, yes."
-
-"You spoke truly the first time. He did not send for you and you came of
-your own accord. Was he surprised to see you?"
-
-"He didn't say so."
-
-"What did he say? What was his first word?"
-
-"Why--I don't know. He said--'Anita! You!'--or something like that."
-
-"And kissed you?"
-
-"Yes." And then a sudden wave of crimson spread over the scared little
-face. It was evident she had not voluntarily made the admission. It had
-slipped out as her memory was busy with the scene.
-
-"I won't stand it!" she cried, "I can't stand it! Mr. Trask, save me from
-this terrible man!"
-
-Maurice Trask sitting near her, held out his hand, and Miss Mystery took
-it. It seemed to reassure her, and she said, "Remember, you're my lawyer.
-Don't let him question me any more. Tell him things yourself--"
-
-"But he doesn't know things--" said Stone, gravely.
-
-"Then let him make them up! I refuse to stand this persecution. I didn't
-kill that man--"
-
-"Wait a moment, Miss Austin," Stone feared if he let her go now, he would
-lose his chance, "since you are admittedly the last person who is known
-to have seen Doctor Waring alive, you cannot avoid, or evade the
-strictest questioning. You were here," he spoke very gravely, "late at
-night. Next morning he was found dead. There are no footprints in the
-snow but your own. There was no other way into the room. Therefore, you
-are responsible for his death or--you know who is."
-
-"Must I--must I be convicted?"
-
-Her tone was heartbroken, her strained little face piteous in its appeal.
-But Stone did not believe in her. He had concluded she was entirely
-capable of pulling wool over her questioners' eyes, and he watched her
-keenly.
-
-"I don't say you must," he returned deliberately, "but I say you may."
-
-"Never," declared Trask. "You know what I told you, Mr. Stone."
-
-"And you know that I refused to accept your terms. I shall carry this
-matter through to the end. I do not say I think Miss Austin guilty of
-crime, but I do say she knows all about the death of Doctor Waring and
-she must be made to tell."
-
-"Suppose I say I--he killed himself," she said, "will you believe me?"
-
-"With your stiletto?" asked Stone, quickly.
-
-"Y--Yes."
-
-"And then you took the stiletto home and hid it?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"What for?"
-
-"To shield his memory. Suicide is a coward's act."
-
-"Rubbish!" Fibsy exploded, unable to keep quiet any longer. "I say, Miss
-Mystery, you _are_ a mystery! Why don't you tell what you know. It's up
-to you. Here you were with the victim, shortly before his death, you
-probably know all about what happened. By the way, how did you get out?"
-
-"Out the same way I came in."
-
-"And bolted that window-door behind you?"
-
-"Oh--no--well, you see--"
-
-"I see you are not to say another word, Miss Austin," Trask decreed. "I'm
-very sorry I asked Mr. Stone to take up this case. However, I shall take
-you home now, then I'll come back and I hope I can persuade Mr. Stone to
-discontinue his work. If I'd had any idea of these disclosures you've
-made, I never should have engaged his services. Come, Anita, I will take
-you home. Mr. Stone, await my return. I shan't be long."
-
-The two went, and Stone, pacing up and down the long room said musingly,
-"All centers round that girl."
-
-"Righto," said Fibsy, "but she didn't kill the man."
-
-"The trouble is, Terence, your saying that doesn't make it so."
-
-"No, but its being so makes me say it."
-
-Gordon Lockwood came in, his face full of anxiety.
-
-"I'm glad to see you alone for a moment, Mr. Stone," he said. "I saw
-Trask taking Miss Austin home. Now, tell me, please, can you get at the
-truth about that girl?"
-
-"I haven't as yet. She's as great a mystery as the death of Doctor
-Waring."
-
-"She is. But I have every faith in her. She is the victim of some
-delusion--"
-
-"Delusion?"
-
-"Yes; I mean she's under a mistaken sense of duty to somebody, or--"
-
-"State your meaning more definitely, will you?"
-
-"I'm not sure that I can. But I'm positive--"
-
-"Ah, now, Mr. Lockwood," this from Fibsy, "you're positive the young lady
-is an angel of light, because you're head over heels in love with her.
-That's all right, and I don't blame you--but, take it from me, you'll
-prove your case quicker, better and more surely, if you investigate the
-secret of Miss Mystery, than if you just go around babbling about her
-innocence and purity."
-
-Lockwood looked at the boy, ready to resent his impudence. But Fibsy's
-serious face and honest eyes carried conviction and the secretary at once
-took him for an ally.
-
-"You're right, McGuire," he said; "and, I for one am not afraid of the
-result of a thorough investigation of Miss Austin's affairs."
-
-"You've reason to be, though," Stone observed. "I can't be sure, of
-course, but many stray hints and bits of evidence, to my mind point to
-Miss Austin's close connection with the whole matter."
-
-"What is your theory as to the death, Mr. Stone," Lockwood asked.
-"Suicide or murder?"
-
-"Honestly, I don't know. I'm quite ready to form an opinion when I get
-some real evidence. I'm through questioning Miss Austin--I shouldn't have
-let her go otherwise. I want next to do a lot of further questioning. And
-I'd very much like to get hold of that servant, Nogi."
-
-"You think he's implicated?" Lockwood stared.
-
-"Why else would he run away? He must be found. He is probably the key to
-the whole situation."
-
-"Guilty?"
-
-"Maybe and maybe not. If he and Miss Austin were in collusion--"
-
-"I beg your pardon, Mr. Stone, but I cannot have any thing said in my
-presence that reflects on that young lady's good name. We are engaged to
-be married--that is, I consider myself bound to her, and hope to win her
-full consent."
-
-"But I understood--I thought, Trask--"
-
-"Mr. Trask wants to marry her, but I hardly think his suit will succeed.
-The lady must decide, of course, but I have reason to hope--"
-
-"Gee, Mr. Lockwood, 'course she'll take you," Fibsy informed him, "now,
-let's you and me get busy to find out Miss Mystery's mystery. You ought
-to know it, if you're going to marry her--and too, you can't believe
-there's anything that can't stand the light."
-
-"What can it be?" Lockwood asked, helplessly. "How can a young girl like
-that have a real secret that so pervades and surrounds her whole life
-that she will give no hint of it? Who is she? What is she? Why is she
-here? I don't believe she came here merely to sketch in water colors."
-
-"No," agreed Stone. "If that were all, why the mystery about her home and
-family? I understand she has given several contradictory statements as to
-where she really lives."
-
-"She has," assented Lockwood. "But may it not be just a twist of her
-humorous nature? I assure you she is roguishly inclined--"
-
-"No; it isn't a joke," Fibsy said, frowning at the thought. "She's got a
-real secret, a mystery that means a whole lot to her,--and prob'ly to
-other people. Well, F. Stone, I guess it's up to me to go out and seek
-her people." He sighed deeply. "I hate to leave the seat of war, but I
-gotta do it. Nobody else could ever ferret out the antecedents and
-general family doings of Miss Mystery but Yours Truly. And this is no
-idle boast. I'm going out for the goods and I'll fetch home the bacon."
-
-He looked glum at the prospect, for it looked like no easy or simple
-matter that he proposed to undertake.
-
-"You see," he went on, "that girl is stubborn--my, but she's stubborn.
-You'll have a handful, Mr. Lockwood. But if so be's you're willing to
-face the revelations, I'll go and dig 'em up."
-
-"Where do you think you'll go, Terence?" asked Stone.
-
-"To California, F. S., of course. Didn't that telegram come from there?
-All I've got to do is to find 'A' and the 'Carl' that she 'annexed' and
-there's your mystery of the young lady solved. But the death of the
-Doctor--that's another thing."
-
-"Do you really mean this?" Lockwood said, staring at Fibsy. "How can you
-find a needle in a haystack, like that?"
-
-"I can't--but I've gotta."
-
-"But it's so much simpler to get the information from Miss Austin
-herself."
-
-"You call that simple!" Fibsy looked at him. "Well, it isn't. It's easier
-to go to Mars, I should say, than to get any real information out of that
-little scrap of waywardness."
-
-"No, nothing can be learned from her," said Stone.
-
-"Then, shall I be off?" asked Fibsy.
-
-"Wait twenty-four hours, my lad, and then if we're no further along, I
-suppose you'll have to go. Nogi must be found."
-
-"I'm glad Mr. Trask called you in, Mr. Stone," Lockwood said, slowly,
-"but I do hope you won't associate any thought of Miss Austin with the
-crime. She could no more commit crime than a small kitten could."
-
-"I fancy you're right," and Stone, half absent-mindedly, "but opinions as
-to what people can or can't do, are of not much real use."
-
-"Have you a theory?"
-
-"Yes, I have a theory, but the facts don't fit it--and it seems as if
-they could not be made to. Yet it's a good theory."
-
-"You don't care to tell it to me?"
-
-"Why, I'm willing to do so. My theory is that John Waring committed
-suicide, but I can't make any facts bear me out. You see, it's not only
-the absence of a weapon, but all absence of motive, and even of
-opportunity."
-
-"Surely he had opportunity--in here alone."
-
-"It can't be opportunity if he had no implement handy. And nothing can
-explain away the missing weapon, and the locked room, on the suicide
-theory."
-
-"What can explain the locked room, on a murder theory?" Lockwood asked.
-
-"I haven't thought of anything as yet. What book was Doctor Waring
-reading that night?"
-
-"There were several on his desk, but the one that was found nearest the
-body, the one stained with blood, is a copy of Martial's Epigrams."
-
-"May I see it, please?"
-
-Lockwood brought the book and Fleming Stone examined it carefully. It was
-not a rare or finely bound edition, it seemed more a working copy or a
-book for reference. It was printed in Latin.
-
-"He was fond of Martial?" asked Stone.
-
-"He was a reader of all the classics. He preferred them, of course, in
-their original Latin or Greek. He was also a modern linguist."
-
-Stone opened the volume to the stained page, which was numbered 87. He
-studied it closely.
-
-"It's all Greek to me," he said, frowning, "even though it's Latin, but I
-hoped to read something on the page beside the printed text."
-
-However, the irregularly shaped red blur gave him no clue, and he
-returned the book to Lockwood.
-
-"Had the Doctor any private accounts?" the detective asked suddenly.
-
-"Not that I know of," replied the secretary. "He was a man of singularly
-few secrets, and I was always at liberty to open all letters, and had
-free access to his desk and safe. I never knew him to hide or secrete a
-paper of any sort."
-
-"No harm in looking," Stone said, and began forthwith to search the desk
-drawers and compartments.
-
-The search was fruitless, until at length, a small checkbook was found.
-
-And a curious revelation it gave them. For of its blank checks but one
-had been torn out, and the remaining stub gave the information that it
-was a check for ten thousand dollars drawn to the order of Anita Austin.
-
-Those who looked at it stared incredulously.
-
-"It is dated," Stone said, "the date that Doctor Waring died."
-
-It was. Had this too, been given to the strange young woman, whom Stone
-was beginning to designate to himself by the title of adventuress? Was it
-possible that young girl, who seemed scarce more than a child, had some
-how maneuvered to get all this from a man whom she had deliberately
-fascinated and infatuated?
-
-It was incredible--yet what else could be assumed?
-
-Gordon Lockwood looked deeply distressed. His lips set in a tight line,
-and he said, through his clenched teeth:
-
-"I don't care! Nothing can shake my faith in that girl! She is blameless,
-and only these misleading circumstances make you think otherwise, Mr.
-Stone."
-
-The detective looked at him as one might regard a hopeless lunatic.
-
-But young McGuire's face was a study.
-
-He looked horror-stricken and then dazed. Then he had an inspiration
-apparently, for he smiled broadly--only to lapse again into a profound
-gloom.
-
-"If it ain't the beatin'est!" he said, at last. "Whatcha make of it, F.
-Stone?"
-
-"I'm completely staggered for the moment. Fibs," the detective returned,
-"but these cumulative evidences of Miss Mystery's--er--acquisitive
-disposition, seem--I say _seem_ to lead to a suspicion of her undue
-influence over Doctor Waring, at least, as to obtaining money."
-
-"Oh, she didn't!" Lockwood fairly groaned. "Don't blame her! Perhaps
-Waring fell a victim to her beauty and grace, and perhaps he urged these
-gifts upon her--"
-
-"Perhaps," Fibsy said; "perhaps he threatened to kill her if she didn't
-accept his checks and coin and rubies!--and maybe she had to kill him in
-self-defense--"
-
-"Self-defense!" Lockwood cried, grasping at any straw. "Could it have
-been that?"
-
-"No," Stone said; "be rational, man, whatever made Anita Austin kill
-Doctor Waring, it wasn't a case of self-defense."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII
- PLANNING AN ELOPEMENT
-
-
-There was some sort of telepathy or some subconscious impulse that made
-Anita Austin open her bedroom door in response to a light tap, although
-she had resolved to talk to nobody just then.
-
-But when she saw Gordon Lockwood she was glad she had, and, without
-waiting for an invitation he stepped inside the room and closed the door.
-
-He looked at her with a face full of compassion and love, but he spoke as
-one who must attend to an important business.
-
-"Anita," he said, speaking very low, "the crisis has come. They have
-learned of the check Doctor Waring gave you that night, and it is the
-last straw. Stone is already, I think, convinced of your guilt, and that
-young chap, McGuire, will get at the bottom of everything, I'm sure."
-
-"Check? What do you mean?" Miss Mystery said, with a blank look on her
-face.
-
-"Don't equivocate with me, dear." Lockwood laid his hand gently on hers.
-"There's no time now to tell you of my love, as I want to tell it. Now,
-we can only assume that it is all told, that we are engaged, and that we
-are to be married at once. We are going to elope, Anita."
-
-"Elope!" she stared at him, but her eyes grew soft and her pale cheeks
-flushed. "What _do_ you mean?"
-
-"It isn't a pretty word," Gordon smiled, "but it's the only thing to do,
-you see. If you stay here, you'll be arrested. If you go, I go with you.
-So--we both go, and that makes it an elopement."
-
-"But, Gordon--"
-
-"But, Anita--answer me just one question--do you love me?"
-
-"Yes," with an adorable upward glance and smile.
-
-"More than you loved Doctor Waring?"
-
-Their eyes met. Lockwood's usually inscrutable face was desperately
-eager, and his deep eyes showed smouldering passion. He held her by the
-shoulders, he looked steadily at her, awaiting her answer.
-
-"Yes," she said, at last, her lovely lips quivering.
-
-"That's all I want to know!" he whispered, triumphantly, as he kissed the
-scarlet lips, and drew the slender form into his embrace.
-
-"You must know more--" she began, "and--and I can't tell you. Oh,
-Gordon--"
-
-She hid her face on his broad shoulder, and he gently stroked her hair,
-as he said:
-
-"Don't tell me anything now, dearest. Don't ever tell me, unless you
-choose. And, anyway, I know it all. I know you had never known the Doctor
-before, and I'll tell you how I know. I found in his scrap basket a note
-to you--"
-
-"A note to me!" Fresh terror showed in the dark eyes.
-
-"Yes--don't mind. No one else ever saw it. I burned it. But it said,
-'Darling Anita. Since you came into my life, life is worth living'--or
-something like that--"
-
-"When--when did he write that?"
-
-"Sometime on that fatal Sunday. I suppose after he met you in the
-afternoon, and before you came that evening. Remember, Sweetheart, if
-ever you want to tell me all about that late visit to him, do so. But, if
-not, I never shall ask or expect you to. But that's all in the
-future--our dear future, which we shall spend together--together, Anita!
-Are you glad?"
-
-"Oh, so glad!" and the soft arms crept round his neck and Miss Mystery
-gave him a kiss that thrilled his very soul. "Will you take care of me,
-Gordon?"
-
-"Take care of you, my little love! Take care of you, is it? Just give me
-the chance!"
-
-"You seem to have a pretty big chance, right now," a smiling face reached
-up to his. "But--" she seemed suddenly to recollect something, "about a
-check--he didn't give me a check--"
-
-Lockwood laid a hand over her mouth.
-
-"Hush, dearest. Don't tell me things that aren't--aren't so. I saw the
-stub--a check for ten thousand dollars--made out to Anita Austin, and
-dated that very Sunday. Now, hush--" as she began to speak, "we've no
-time to talk these things over. I tell you the police are on your track.
-They will come here, they will arrest you--try to get that in your head.
-I am going to save you--first, for your own sweet sake, and also for my
-own."
-
-"But, Gordon, wait a minute. Do you believe I killed John Waring?"
-
-Lockwood looked at her.
-
-"Don't ask me that, Anita. And, truly, I don't know whether I believe it
-or not. I know you have told falsehoods, I know you were there that
-night, I know of his letter to you, of the check and of the ruby pin and
-the money. But I--no, I do not know that you killed him. There are many
-other theories possible--there's Nogi--but, my darling, it all makes no
-difference. I love you, I want you, whatever the circumstances or
-conditions of your life, or your deeds. I love you so, that I want you
-even if you are a criminal--for in that case, I want to protect and save
-you. Now, don't tell me you did or didn't kill the man, for--" he gave
-her a whimsical smile, "I couldn't believe you in either case! I've not
-much opinion of your veracity, and, too, it's too big a matter to talk
-about now. Of course I don't believe you killed him! You, my little love!
-And yet, the evidence is so overpowering that I--believe you did kill
-him! There, how's that for a platform? Now, let all those things be, and
-get ready to go away with me. I tell you we're going to elope and mighty
-quickly too. The difficulty is, to get away unseen. But it must be done.
-Pack a small handbag--a very small one. I'll plan our way out--and if we
-can make a getaway under the noses of Stone and his boy, we'll soon be
-all right. I've a friend who will motor us to a nearby town, where a dear
-old minister, who has known and loved me from boyhood, will marry us."
-
-"Doesn't he know about--about me?"
-
-"My little girl, leave all the details of this thing to me. Don't bother
-your lovely head about it. It will be all right--trust me--if we can
-escape."
-
-"Is it right for me to go? Oughtn't I stay and--what do they call it?
-give myself up?"
-
-"Anita, if I didn't love you so, I'd scold you, hard! Now, you obey your
-future lord and master, and get ready for a hurry-up wedding, I'm sorry
-that you can't have bridesmaids and choir boys--but, you'll pardon me, I
-know, if I remind you that that isn't my fault."
-
-Miss Mystery looked up and broke into laughter. Truly, she was a mystery!
-Her gayety was as spontaneous and merry as if she had never heard of
-crime or tragedy.
-
-Lockwood gazed at her curiously, and then nodded his handsome head, as he
-said, "You'll do, Anita! You're a little bit of all right."
-
-But in a moment her mood changed.
-
-"Gordon, we can't," she said, slowly. "We never can get away from this
-house--let alone the detectives. Miss Bascom is on continual watch and
-Mrs. Adams--"
-
-"I know, dear. That's it. I thought if you could manage that part, I'd
-see to evading the Stone faction. Can't you think up a plan?"
-
-"Love will find a way," she whispered, and unable to resist the inviting
-smile, Gordon again caught her in his arms, and held her close in an
-ecstasy of possession.
-
-"You are so sweet," he murmured, with an air of saying something
-important. "Oh, my Little Girl, how I love you! The moment I first saw
-you--"
-
-"When was that?"
-
-"That night at--at the Doctor's lectures. I sat behind you, I changed my
-seat to do so--and I counted the buttons on your dear little gray
-frock--that was one way I discovered your presence in the study that
-night." He spoke gravely now. "And there was another way. I heard you
-talking. Yes, I heard your blessed voice--remember, I loved you then--and
-I heard Waring talking to you. I could make out no word--I didn't
-try--but now I wish I had--for it might help you."
-
-"I wish you had, Gordon," she returned, solemnly, "it would have helped
-me."
-
-"But you can tell me, dear, tell me all the conversation. Surely you
-trust me now."
-
-"I trust you--but--oh, as you say, there's no time. It's a long story--a
-dreadful story--I don't want to tell you--"
-
-"Then you shan't. I've promised you that, you know. Not until you want to
-tell me, will I ask for a word of it."
-
-"Now, here's another thing," and Anita blushed, deeply, "if we go
-away--as you say--what about--about money?"
-
-Lockwood stared at her. "I have money," he said; "why do you ask that?"
-
-"But--but the awful detective people--said you--you were terribly in
-debt."
-
-"Brave little girl, to say that. I know you hated to. Well, my darling,
-those precious bills that those precious detectives dug up in my desk,
-are old bills that were owed by my father--his name was the same as
-mine--"
-
-"The same as yours! How queer!"
-
-"Oh, not a unique instance. Anyway, those bills I am paying off as I can.
-I'm not legally responsible for them, but I want to clear my dad's name,
-and all that. Now, all that can wait--while I take unto me a wife, and
-arrange for her comfort and convenience. But, is there--now remember, I'm
-not prying--is there any one whose permission you must ask to marry me?"
-
-"No, I'm twenty-one--that's of age in any state."
-
-"Why, you aged person! I deemed you about eighteen."
-
-"Do you mind?"
-
-"No; you goosie! But--your mother, now?"
-
-"Oh--my mother. She doesn't care what I do."
-
-"And your father? Forgive me, but I have to ask."
-
-"My father is dead."
-
-"Then come along. Let's begin to get ready to go."
-
-"Wait a minute--Gordon--to get married--must I--must I tell my real
-name?"
-
-His eyes clouded a trifle.
-
-"Yes, dear heart," he said, very gently, "yes, you must."
-
-"Then I can't get married, Gordon."
-
-Miss Mystery sat down and folded her little hands in her lap, her whole
-attitude that of utter despair.
-
-"But, Sweetheart, no one need know except the minister and witnesses--"
-
-"And you?"
-
-"Yes--and I--"
-
-"Oh, I can't marry you, anyway. I can't marry anybody. I can't tell who I
-am! Oh, let them take me away, and let them arrest me and I hope they'll
-convict me--and--"
-
-"Hush, my precious girl, hush." Lockwood took her in his arms, and let
-her stifle her sobs on his breast. He was bewildered. What was the truth
-about this strange child? For in her abandonment of grief, Anita seemed a
-very child, a tortured irresponsible soul, whose only haven was in the
-arms now around her.
-
-"You will go with me, anyway, Anita," he said, with an air of authority.
-"I must take care of you. We will go, as I planned. The minister I told
-you of, is a great and good man, he will advise you--"
-
-"Oh, no, I don't want to talk to a minister!"
-
-"Yes, you do. And his wife is a dear good woman. They will take you into
-their hearts and home--and then we can all decide what to do. At any
-rate, you must get away from here. Come, now, pack your bag--and would
-you mind--Anita--if I ask you not to take the--the money and the ruby
-pin--"
-
-"But he gave them to me! I tell you, Gordon, John Waring gave me those of
-his own free will--"
-
-"Because of his affection for you?"
-
-"Yes; for no other reason! I will keep the pin, anyway--I will!"
-
-"Anita, have you any idea how you puzzle me? how you torture me? Well,
-take what you like. Will you get ready now, and I will let you know as
-soon as I can, how and when we can start."
-
-A loud rap was followed by an immediate opening of the door, and Mrs.
-Adams came into the room.
-
-She stared at Lockwood, but made no comment on his presence there.
-
-"Miss Austin," she began, "I do not wish you to stay in my house any
-longer. I have kept you until now, because my husband was so sorry for
-you, and refused to turn you out. Nor am I turning you out, but--I wish
-you would leave us alone, Mr. Lockwood."
-
-Gordon started to speak, but Anita interrupted him.
-
-"Go, please," she said, quietly, and Lockwood obeyed.
-
-"I cannot blame you, Mrs. Adams," Miss Mystery said; "I daresay you have
-to consider your other boarders, and I thank you for your kindness and
-forbearance you have shown me so far."
-
-The tears were in the big dark eyes, and even as they moved Mrs. Adams to
-sympathy, she also wondered if they were real. "A girl who would redden
-her lips would be capable of any deceit and duplicity," Esther Adams
-reasoned.
-
-But she went on, calmly.
-
-"I come now, Miss Austin, to tell you that Mr. Trask is down stairs and
-wants to see you. He wants you to go to his house to stay. The Peytons
-are there, of course, and he offers you the shelter of his roof and
-protection until this dreadful matter is settled up."
-
-"Mr. Trask!" Anita looked her amazement.
-
-"Yes; now don't be silly. You very well know he is mad about you, and he
-hopes to get you freed and then marry you."
-
-"Oh, he does!" It was the old, scornful Miss Mystery who spoke. "Well,
-will you please tell him from me--"
-
-"Now, don't you be too hoity-toity, miss! You're mighty lucky to have a
-home offered you--"
-
-"Yes, that's quite true. Well, Mrs. Adams, will you go down, then and say
-I'll be down in a moment or two. Give me time to freshen my appearance a
-bit."
-
-"Yes, with paints and powders and cosmetics!" Esther Adams grumbled to
-herself, as she went down the stairs.
-
-As a matter of fact she quite misjudged the girl. Very rarely did Anita
-resort to artificial aid of that sort, but when she so desired, she used
-it as she would any other personal adornment.
-
-"She's coming down," Mrs. Adams announced, as she returned to Trask and
-they waited.
-
-But when the minutes grew to a quarter of an hour, and then nearly to a
-half, Mrs. Adams again climbed the stairs to hasten proceedings.
-
-This time she found the room empty.
-
-The absence, too, of brushes and combs, the disappearance of a small
-suitcase, and the fact that her hat and coat were gone all pointed
-unmistakably to the assumption that the girl had fled.
-
-"Well!" Mrs. Adams reported, "she's lit out, bag and baggage."
-
-"Gone!" exclaimed Trask in dismay.
-
-"Well, she isn't in her room. Her trunk is locked and strapped and her
-suitcase is missing. Her hat and coat's gone, too, so you can make your
-own guess."
-
-But Maurice Trask didn't stay there to make his guess.
-
-He went back home as fast as he could and told Fleming Stone the news.
-
-"Run away, has she?" said Stone. "I rather looked for that."
-
-"You did! And took no steps to prevent it! You're a nice detective, you
-are. Well, if you're so smart, where'd she go?"
-
-"Where's Lockwood?" was Stone's laconic response.
-
-"Lockwood!" exclaimed Trask. "Wherever he is, he hasn't run off with
-Anita Austin! If he has--by Jove, I'll break every bone in his body!"
-
-"You'll have to catch him first," smiled the detective.
-
-"I'll catch him! I'll set you to do it. And, looky here, if she's gone
-off with that man, you can go ahead and catch her, catch them both, and
-then go ahead and prove her guilty."
-
-"Is she?"
-
-"Is she? You bet she is! And I know it."
-
-"How do you know?"
-
-"I'll tell you. I know her eyebrows!"
-
-"So do I know her eyebrows. But they don't tell me she's a murderer."
-
-"Well, they tell me that! It's this way. Her eyebrows, are not only heavy
-and dark, but they almost meet over the bridge of her nose."
-
-"Darling nose!" put in Fibsy, who was interested in Anita but not in
-Trask's deductions.
-
-"Does your knowledge of physiognomy tell you that those meeting eyebrows
-are a sign of a criminal?" asked Stone.
-
-"Nothing of that sort. But they are the Truesdell brows."
-
-"The Truesdell brows?" Stone raised his own. "Sounds like a proprietary
-article. Not artificial, are they?"
-
-"Now, see here, Mr. Stone, I'm in no mood to be guyed. Those eyebrows are
-frequently seen in the Truesdell family. My grandfather's brother married
-a Truesdell."
-
-"Your grandfather's brother married a Truesdell. And your own grandfather
-didn't?"
-
-"No; I haven't those brows."
-
-"Well, you're not entitled to them, having no Truesdell blood in your
-veins."
-
-"But that girl has."
-
-"Indeed! Interesting, is it not?"
-
-"Aw, come off that line o' talk, F. S.," said Fibsy, knitting his brows,
-which were not Truesdellian. "I'm seein' a chink o' light. The brother of
-your grandfather, now, Mr. Trask, he was named--?"
-
-"Waring, of course. Henry Waring. My grandfather was James Waring."
-
-"And this Henry Waring--he was the father of Doctor John Waring?"
-
-As Fibsy said this, Stone sat upright, and gazed hard at Trask.
-
-"Yes, John Waring's father was Henry, and my grandfather was Henry's
-brother James. That's how I'm related. And being the only one, that's why
-I'm the heir here. But, don't you see, Doctor Waring's mother was a
-Truesdell--"
-
-"And Miss Austin is a relative of hers--a connection of the Truesdell
-family somehow--" exclaimed the now excited Fibsy, "and she found out
-about it, and came here and--"
-
-"Yes," Trask said, "and tried to get some money from John Waring on the
-ground of relationship."
-
-"What relation could she be?"
-
-"Maybe a niece of Doctor Waring--or a cousin. Maybe the same relation to
-Doctor Waring's mother that I am to his father. Then, that would explain
-his giving her money and the pin--and maybe she burnt the will! and then
-she--"
-
-"But it complicates everything," said Stone, who was thinking quickly.
-"However, if Miss Austin is connected with the Truesdell family it gives
-us a way to look to learn her history."
-
-"Well, learn it," said Trask, abruptly. "I'm not afraid of losing my
-inheritance for I'm in the direct Waring line and she can't be."
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII
- MISS MYSTERY NO LONGER
-
-
-Trask, helped along by Fleming Stone, investigated the family tree of the
-Warings. But they ran up against a blank wall. As far as they could learn
-Doctor Waring never had brother or sister. His mother, who was a
-Truesdell, had also been an only child. But of course, Miss Mystery could
-be of the Truesdell family, and could, as Trask observed, be the same
-relation to John Waring's mother that Trask was to John Waring's father.
-Which relation was that of second cousin.
-
-"It gives a reason for the girl's presence here," Stone said, "and as
-it's the only reason we can think of, it must be followed up."
-
-"And I'll follow it up," Trask said, "if I once get hold of that girl.
-Where can she be, Mr. Stone?"
-
-"Not very far away, I think, as all the stations and routes out of town
-are watched. She'd have trouble to leave Corinth."
-
-"She could get out in a motor car."
-
-"Who'd take her?"
-
-"Lockwood, of course."
-
-But just then, Gordon Lockwood came into the Waring study. His usual calm
-was entirely gone, his eyes wildly staring and his voice quivered as he
-said, "She's gone! Anita's gone!"
-
-"Yes, I know it--I thought you went with her!" and Stone stared in turn.
-
-"No, I didn't!" Lockwood said, quite unnecessarily. "Find her, Mr.
-Stone--you can, can't you?"
-
-"I can find her," said Fibsy, "if you'll tell me one thing, Mr. Lockwood,
-right straight out."
-
-"What is it? I'll tell you anything. I'm afraid--"
-
-"You're afraid she's killed herself," said Fibsy, calmly. "Well you tell
-me this. Are you two--aw--you know--"
-
-The boy blushed, and Stone smiled a little as he said:
-
-"McGuire is a bit shy of romantic matters. He means are you and Miss
-Austin lovers?"
-
-"We are," said Lockwood, emphatically. "She is my fiancee--"
-
-"All right," said Fibsy, "then I'll find her. She hasn't done anything
-rash, in that case."
-
-He wagged his wise little head.
-
-"Where is she?" Stone asked, confident that the boy could tell. He knew
-of Fibsy's almost clairvoyant powers of divining truth in certain
-situations.
-
-"Want her here?" he asked, laconically.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"I'll get her."
-
-Snatching his cap, he darted from the house, but he was closely followed
-by Maurice Trask. Lockwood would have stopped Trask, but Stone said:
-
-"Let him go. This thing is coming to a crisis--Trask will help it along."
-
-Fibsy went toward the Adams house, but stopped at the house next door to
-it. This was the home of Emily Bates.
-
-Ringing that lady's doorbell, Fibsy asked to see her.
-
-"Mrs. Bates," he said, politely, while Trask listened, "we want to see
-Miss Austin, please."
-
-"Anita!" said Mrs. Bates, flurriedly; "why--she--she isn't--"
-
-"Oh, yes, she is here," said the boy, patiently, rather than rudely. "We
-have to see her, you see."
-
-"Here I am," said Miss Mystery, coming in from the next room. "I think,"
-she said turning to Mrs. Bates, "I think, as you advised me, I'll tell
-all."
-
-"Don't tell it here!" cried Fibsy. "Please, Miss Austin--don't spill your
-yarn here--oh, I mean, don't--don't divulge--"
-
-The unusual word nearly choked the excited boy, who always in moments of
-strong emotion lapsed into careless English, but who tried not to.
-
-"Now, look here," Maurice Trask put in. "Here's where I take hold. Miss
-Austin, you have told your story to Mrs. Bates?"
-
-"Yes," said, Anita, looking very sad, but determined.
-
-"Then you tell it to me. I'm heir to the Waring estate, and so I have a
-right to know all you know about--the family."
-
-His knowing look proved to Anita that he assumed also her right to be
-classed with "the family" and she looked at him in astonishment.
-
-"You know?" she cried.
-
-"Yes--I know," he spoke very sternly. "And I insist upon a private
-interview with you, before you tell your story to any one else."
-
-"You shall have it, then," she said, and her eyes grew grave. "Mrs.
-Bates, will you and Terence leave us alone for ten minutes. That will be
-long enough, and then, I'll go to see Mr. Stone--if necessary."
-
-"Now, look here," Trask said, as the door closed after the others, "I
-know who you are."
-
-"I don't believe it," and Miss Mystery looked at him straight from
-beneath the "Truesdell brows."
-
-"Well, anyway, I know you are a Truesdell connection."
-
-"Yes, I am. Go on."
-
-"I don't know just what branch," he went on, a little lamely.
-
-"But it's a branch strong enough to hold me--and also to interfere with
-this heirship of yours."
-
-"Can't be. There's no Truesdell so close to John Waring as I am."
-
-"You think so? Then listen."
-
-As Miss Mystery told him her story, the man's face fell, he sat, almost
-petrified with astonishment, and when she had finished the short but
-amazing recital, he said:
-
-"My heavens! What are you going to do?"
-
-"I don't know what to do."
-
-"If you tell--I--"
-
-"Of course you do."
-
-"And if you don't tell--then John Waring's name is left unstained--"
-
-"There is no shadow of stain on John Waring's name! What do you mean?"
-
-"Now, look here, Miss Austin, you keep quiet about all this, will you?
-I'll call off those sleuths and I'll arrange to close up and cover up the
-whole matter. Then, you marry me--there's only a distant cousinship
-between us--and I'll put up the biggest memorial to Waring you ever heard
-of."
-
-"Omit the clause about my marrying you," she returned, "and I may agree
-to your plans. I haven't quite decided what to do--and beside, Mr. Trask,
-who killed my--Doctor Waring?"
-
-"Never mind who killed him. Call it suicide--it must have been anyway--"
-
-"No--I'm not sure it was--oh, I don't know what to do."
-
-"Time's up," called Fibsy through the closed door. "And, I say, Miss
-Austin, you take my tip, and come along and tell your story to F. Stone.
-It'll be your best bet in the long run."
-
-Perhaps it was the boy's speech, perhaps it was the gleam of disappointed
-greed that Anita saw in Trask's eyes, but she rose, with a sudden
-decision, and said, as she opened the door:
-
-"That's just what I'll do. Come with me, Mrs. Bates--or, would you rather
-not?"
-
-"Oh, I can't," said Emily Bates, "don't ask me, Anita, dear."
-
-"No, you stay here. I'll come back soon."
-
-And so Miss Mystery again walked across the snow-covered field to the
-Waring house, this time to remove all occasion for using her nickname.
-
-"You found her?" said Stone, as the trio came into the study, where he
-and Lockwood still sat.
-
-"Yes," said Fibsy. "I just thought where would a poor, hunted kid go? And
-I said to myself, she'd go to the nearest and nicest lady's house she
-knew of. And of course, that was Mrs. Bates' and sure enough there she
-was. And--she's going to tell all!"
-
-Fibsy was melodramatic by nature, and his gesture indicated an important
-revelation.
-
-"I am," said Anita, quietly.
-
-She went straight to Lockwood's side, and he took her hand calmly, and
-led her to a seat on the wide davenport, then sat beside her.
-
-Her hand still in his, she told her story.
-
-"I am of Truesdell blood," she began, "as Mr. Trask surmised. But, also,
-I am of Waring blood. Doctor John Waring was my father."
-
-No one spoke. The surprise was too great. In his wildest theories,
-Fleming Stone had never thought of this.
-
-Fibsy's great astonishment was permeated with the quick conviction, "then
-she didn't kill him!"
-
-Gordon Lockwood was conscious of a rapturous reassurance that he had no
-rival as a lover.
-
-Trask, already knowing the truth, sat gloomily realizing he was not the
-heir.
-
-Anita, her beautiful face sad, yet proud to acknowledge her ancestry,
-went on:
-
-"This is his story. When John Waring was twenty years old, he met a young
-woman--an actress--who so infatuated him that he married her. They were
-absolutely uncongenial and unfitted for one another, and after a few
-weeks, they agreed to separate. There was no question of divorce, they
-merely preferred to live apart. He sent her money at stated intervals but
-he pursued his quiet, studious life, and she her life of gayety and
-sport. She was a good woman--she _is_ a good woman--she is my mother."
-
-Another silence followed this disclosure. Is, she had said--not was. And
-John Waring her father!
-
-Gordon Lockwood held her hand closely. He was content to listen. Whatever
-she could say could not lessen his love and adoration.
-
-"I tell you this, for her sake and--my father's also. There is no stigma
-to be attached to either, they were merely so utterly opposite in
-character and disposition that they could not live together.
-
-"As I said, after a few weeks they separated, and--my father did not know
-of my birth. My mother would not let him know, lest he come back to her.
-She was a light-hearted, carefree girl, and while she loved me, she did
-not love my father. Later on--when I was about four, I think, she caused
-a notice of her death to be sent to my father. This was because she
-wanted to sever all connection, and take no chance of ever meeting him
-again. She was at that time a successful actress, and earned all the
-money she wanted. She adored me, she had no love affairs, she lived only
-for me and her art. Though a good actress, she was not widely renowned,
-and in California, where she had chosen to make her home, she was liked
-and respected. The climate just suited her love of ease, freedom and
-indolence--as a New England life of busy activity would have been
-impossible to her. I want you to understand my mother. She was--she is, a
-mere butterfly, caring only for trifles and simple gayety. Her home is
-charming, her personality, that of a delightful child. But her
-temperament is one that cannot stand responsibilities and chafes at
-demands. However, all that matters little. The facts are that John
-Waring, learning of his wife's death, devoted himself utterly to his
-books and his study.
-
-"When my mother saw in the papers he was about to marry, she was
-appalled. She didn't know what to do. She couldn't let him marry another
-woman, unaware of her existence. She couldn't raise a question of divorce
-for she knew that would tend to reflect unpleasantly on his past.
-
-"And, too, at last, she was beginning to feel as if she might like to
-resume her position as his wife, now that he was prominent and wealthy.
-She told me the whole story--of which I had been utterly ignorant, and
-she sent me here. I was to see Doctor Waring and use my own judgment as
-to when and how I should tell him all this.
-
-"I came here, with a feeling of dislike and resentment toward a father
-who had been no father to me. Mother exonerated him, to be sure, but it
-was all such a surprise to me, that I accepted the errand in a spirit of
-bravado and was prepared to make trouble if necessary.
-
-"But when I saw John Waring--when I realized that splendid man was my
-father--I knew that all my love, all my allegiance was his, and that my
-mother was as nothing to me, compared with my wonderful father!
-
-"Except for what Mr. Trask calls the Truesdell brows, I look exactly like
-my mother. Also she resumed her maiden name of Anita Austin after they
-separated. So you may imagine the shock when Doctor Waring first heard
-the name, and first saw the living image of his wife, whom, you must
-remember, he supposed dead.
-
-"But I had my mission to perform--and so, I came here, that Sunday
-night."
-
-The audience sat motionless. Lockwood, holding her hand, felt every
-tremor of her emotion as the girl told her story. Fleming Stone,
-realizing that he was hearing the most dramatic revelation of his career,
-listened avidly. Fibsy, with staring eyes and open mouth, clenched his
-fists in enthralled interest, and Maurice Trask heard it all with ever
-growing conviction that he must give up his supposed inheritance.
-
-As Anita began to tell of that Sunday night, the situation became even
-more tense.
-
-"I came to the French window, and tapped lightly. Doctor Waring let me
-in, and I sat by him in that plush chair.
-
-"The conversation I had with my father I shall not detail. It is my most
-sacred and beloved memory. We were as one in every way. We loved each
-other from the first word. We proved to be alike in our tastes and
-pursuits. Oh, if he could have lived! I told him of my mother and myself,
-and he was crushed. I wanted to spare him, but what could I do? He had to
-know--although the knowing meant the ruining of his career. He said, at
-once, he could not take the Presidency of the College, with the story of
-his past made public, nor could he honorably suppress it. He couldn't
-marry Mrs. Bates--nor could he instal my mother as mistress here.
-
-"He had done no real wrong, in making that early and ill-advised
-marriage, but it seemed to him a blot on his scutcheon, and an indelible
-one.
-
-"He would sit and brood over these fearful conditions, then, suddenly he
-would realize my existence afresh, and rejoice in it. He loved me at once
-and deeply--and I adored him. Never father and daughter, I am sure,
-crowded a lifetime of affection into such a few moments."
-
-Bravely Anita went on, not daring to pause to think. Her hand, tightly
-clasped in Lockwood's, trembled, but her voice was steady, for it was her
-opportunity to clear her father's name, and she must neglect no slightest
-point.
-
-"At last, he told me I must go away, and he would think out what he could
-do. He gave me the money, for he was afraid I hadn't sufficient cash with
-me, and he gave me the ruby pin, saying I must keep it forever as my
-father's first gift to me. With infinite gentleness he bade me good-by,
-and softly opened the glass door for me. I went away and he closed the
-door.
-
-"I went home to the Adams house, making, of course, those footprints in
-the snow. It was a very cold night, I remember the clear shining stars,
-but I thought of nothing but my father--my splendid, wonderful father.
-And I hoped, oh, how I hoped, that some way would be found that he and I
-could spend our lives together. I didn't know what he would do--but I
-prayed to God that some way out might be found.
-
-"The rest you know. Of the manner of my father's death, I know nothing at
-all. Of Nogi, I have no knowledge. I kept all this secret at first,
-because I hoped to shield my father's name better that way. But I think
-now, it's better told. I couldn't live under the weight of such a secret.
-
-"One more word as to my mother. She has had an admirer for many years,
-named Carl Melrose. She has kept him at a distance, but, as you know from
-the telegram she sent me, she has already either married him or promised
-to. Also, she advised me to tell the whole truth. I have done so."
-
-Unheeding the others, Lockwood put his arm round the exhausted girl as
-she fell over toward him. His wonderful calm helped her, and his gentle
-yet firm embrace gave her fresh courage to endure the strain.
-
-"Thank you, Miss Austin," and Stone spoke almost reverently. "You have
-shown marvelous wisdom and bravery and I congratulate you on your entire
-procedure. You are an exceptional girl, and I am proud to know you."
-
-This was a great deal for Fleming Stone to say, and Anita acknowledged it
-with a grateful glance.
-
-Fibsy, his eyes streaming with unchecked tears, came over and knelt
-before her.
-
-"Oh, Miss Austin!" he sobbed, "Oh, Miss Anita!"
-
-Trask alone remained unmoved, and sat with folded arms and frowning face.
-
-But little attention was paid him, and Stone said, thoughtfully:
-
-"Our problem of the mystery of Doctor Waring's death is as great as
-ever."
-
-"It is," agreed Lockwood, "but I am sure now, Mr. Stone, that it was a
-suicide. The motive is supplied, for I knew Doctor Waring so well, I knew
-the workings of his great and good mind, and I am sure that he felt there
-was no other course for him. I can see just how he decided that the
-exposure of all this would react against the reputation of the College.
-That the sensation and scandal that would fill the papers would harm the
-standing of the University of Corinth, and that--and that alone--caused
-his decision. I know him so well, that I can tell you that never, never
-would he take his life to save himself trouble or sorrow, but for others'
-sake--and I include Mrs. Bates--he made the sacrifice.
-
-"I can see--and I am sure of what I say--how he realized that the press
-and the public would forgive and condone a dead man, when, if he lived,
-the brunt of the whole matter would fall on his beloved College and on
-the woman he loved and respected.
-
-"Now--as I feel sure he foresaw--such of this story as must be made
-public will have far less weight and prominence, than if he were alive.
-_I_ know all this is so--for, I knew John Waring as few people knew him."
-
-A grateful glance from John Waring's daughter thanked him for this
-tribute.
-
-"That ten thousand dollar check?" Trask said, suddenly, for his mind was
-still concerned with the financial side.
-
-"I think that must have been sent to my mother," said Anita. "She, as I
-told you, returned to the use of her maiden name, and during our
-interview, my father told me he should write her at once and send her
-money. I feel sure he did do so--"
-
-"Without doubt," Lockwood said; "and if so, the letter would have been
-mailed with the collection next morning. The returning voucher will
-show."
-
-"Also the letter he wrote my mother will corroborate all I have told
-you," said Anita, and both her assertion and Gordon's, later came true.
-
-"I felt," Anita said, by way of further explanation, "that Mrs. Bates
-ought to know all. So, when Mrs. Adams practically put me out of her
-house, and I had no wish to accept Mr. Trask's invitation to come over
-here, nor," she smiled affectionately at Lockwood, "could I fall in with
-your crazy plans--I just went next door and told Mrs. Bates all about it.
-She was very dear and sweet to me, and now, if you please, I will go back
-there. I am weary and exhausted--I cannot stand any more. But when you
-want me, I can be found at Mrs. Bates'. I leave all matters to be decided
-or settled, in the hands of Mr. Lockwood and Mr. Stone. Fibsy, dear, will
-you escort me home?"
-
-With a suddenly acquired dignity, Fibsy rose, and stood by her side, and
-in a moment the two went away together.
-
-When the boy returned the others were absorbed in the discussion of the
-mysterious death of John Waring.
-
-"I'm inclined to give it up," Fleming Stone said, thinking deeply.
-
-"Don't do it, F. Stone," Fibsy said, earnestly. "It's better to find out.
-You never have gave up a case."
-
-"No. Well, Fibs, which way shall we look?"
-
-A strange embarrassment came over the boy's face, and then he said,
-diffidently:
-
-"Say, gentlemen, could I be left alone in this room for a little while? I
-don't say I kin find out anythin'--but I do wanta try."
-
-The lapse into careless enunciation told Stone how much in earnest his
-young colleague was, and he rose, saying, "You certainly may, my boy. The
-rest of us will have a conference in some other room, as to what part of
-Miss Austin's story must be made public."
-
-Left to himself, Fibsy went at once to the bookcase that held the defaced
-copy of Martial, that John Waring had been reading the night he died.
-
-Opening the volume at the blood-stained page, the unlettered boy eagerly
-read the lines. Tried to read them, rather, and groaned in spirit because
-he knew no Latin.
-
-Small wonder that he was nonplused, for this was all he read:
-
- MARTIAL'S EPIGRAMS
-
- Liber IV, Epigram XVIII
-
- Qua vicina pluit Vipsanis porta columnis
- Et madet assiduo lubricus imbre lapis,
- In iugulum pueri, qui roscida tecta subibat,
- Decidit hiberno praegravis unda gelu:
- Cumque peregisset miseri crudelia fata,
- Tabuit in calido vulnere mucro tener.
- Quid non saeva sibi voluit Fortuna licere?
- Aut ubi non mors est, si iugulatis aquae?
-
-His chin in his hands, he pored over the Latin in utter despair, and
-rising, started for the door.
-
-Then he paused; "I must do it myself--" he murmured: "_I must._"
-
-So he hunted the shelves until he found a Latin Dictionary.
-
-He was not entirely unversed in the rudiments of the language, for Stone
-had directed his education at such odd hours as he could find time for
-study.
-
-And so after some hard and laborious digging, Fibsy at last gathered the
-gist of the Latin stanza.
-
-His eyes shone, and he stared about the room.
-
-"It ain't possible--" he told himself, "and yet--gee, there ain't nothing
-else possible!" He rose and looked out at every window, he noted
-carefully the catches--he paced from the desk to the small rear windows
-of the room, and back again.
-
-"It's the only thing," he reiterated, "the _only_ thing. Oh, gee! _what_
-a thing!"
-
-He went in search of Stone, and found the three men shut in the living
-room and with them was Nogi.
-
-Stone's persevering efforts, by advertisements and circulars had at last
-succeeded, and the impassive and non-committal Japanese was there, and
-quite willing to tell all he knew.
-
-Fibsy interrupted his story.
-
-"Go back," he directed, "to the beginning. Let me hear it all. It's O.
-K., F. S."
-
-"I was attending to my dining-room duties," Nogi said, "and I had taken
-the water tray to the study. I was weary and hoped the master would soon
-retire. So, I occasionally peeped through the small window from the
-dining-room. I saw a lady come and make a visit, and then I saw her and I
-heard her go away. Then I hoped the master would go to bed. But, no--he
-was very busy. He wrote letters, he burned some papers, he moved about
-much. He was restless, disturbed. Then he sat at his desk and read his
-book."
-
-"This one?" cried Fibsy, excitedly waving the Martial.
-
-"I think so--one like that, anyway."
-
-"This was the one! Go on."
-
-"Then--oh, it was strange! Then the master got up, went to the small
-window at the back of the room--"
-
-"Which one?"
-
-"The one by the big globe, and he opened it. But for a moment--"
-
-"Did he put his hand out?" Fibsy cried.
-
-"Yes, I suppose to see if it rained. Yes, he put his hand out for a
-moment, then he closed the window."
-
-"And locked it?" asked Fibsy.
-
-"It locks itself, with a snap catch. Then--ah, here is the strange thing!
-Then he went back, sat at his desk, and in a moment he fell over and the
-blood spurted out."
-
-"Didn't he stab himself?" Fibsy asked.
-
-"I don't know. He didn't seem to do anything but scratch his ear, and
-over he fell! Such a sight! I was afraid, and I ran away--fast."
-
-"All very well," said Stone, "but what became of the weapon?"
-
-"I know," Fibsy almost screamed, in his excitement. "Oh, F. Stone--I
-know!"
-
-"Well, tell us, Terence--but steady, now, my boy. Don't get too excited."
-
-"No, sir," and the lad grew suddenly quiet. "But I know. Wait just a
-minute, sir. Where are the photographs of the house that the detectives
-took the day after?"
-
-"I'll get them," Lockwood said, and left the room.
-
-He returned, and Fibsy found a magnifying glass and looked carefully at
-certain pictures.
-
-"It proves," he said, solemnly. "F. Stone, you have solved your greatest
-case!"
-
-It was characteristic of the boy, that although the solution was his own,
-his deference to Stone was sincere and un-self-conscious.
-
-"Please," he said, "I don't know Latin, but you will find the explanation
-of Doctor Waring's death on that red stained page. He was reading
-Martial, as we know, and--" he pointed to the Epigram on the page in
-question, "as he read that, he found a way out."
-
-The grave statement was impressive, and Stone took the book.
-
-"Shall I translate, or read the Latin aloud?" he asked the others.
-
-"Wait a minute, I'll get a Martial in English," Lockwood said, out of
-consideration for Trask's possible ignorance of the dead language.
-
-"What number is the Epigram?" he asked, returning.
-
-Stone told him, and Lockwood found the place, and passed the English
-version to Stone. Aloud, the detective read this:
-
- TRANSLATION
-
- Book IV, Epigram 18
-
- On a youth killed by the fall of a piece of ice.
-
- Just where the gate near the portico of Agrippa is always dripping with
- water, and the slippery pavement is wet with constant showers, a mass
- of water, congealed by winter's cold, fell upon the neck of a youth who
- was entering the damp temple, and, when it had inflicted a cruel death
- on the unfortunate boy, the weapon melted in the warm wound it had
- made. What cruelties does not Fortune permit? Or where is not death to
- be found, if you, the waters, turn cut-throats.
-
-"And so you see," Fibsy broke the ensuing silence, "he decided to stab
-himself with an icicle, and he did. He did!" he repeated, triumphantly,
-"he went to that window back by the big globe and got one--and here's the
-proof! Look through the glass, F. S."
-
-Stone did so, and without doubt, the fringe of icicles that hung from
-that particular window sash showed one missing! It was the very window
-that Nogi stated Waring had opened, and had put his hand out of for a
-moment.
-
-Clearly, he had broken off an icicle, strong and firm on that freezing
-night, had returned to his chair, and inspired by the story of the youth
-under the portico of Agrippa, had stabbed his own jugular vein with the
-sharp, round point, and had fallen unconscious.
-
-The icicle, melting in the wound, had disappeared, and death had followed
-in a moment or two.
-
-They went to the study, and Nogi was made to imitate the movements he saw
-Doctor Waring make. It left no doubt of the exact facts and the mystery
-was solved.
-
-"Do you suppose he meant to make it seem a murder?" asked Stone,
-thoughtfully.
-
-"He did not!" defended Lockwood. "That is he did not mean to implicate
-anybody. He was a man amenable to sudden suggestion, and apt to follow
-it. I am certain the idea came to him, as he read his book, and in the
-impulse of the moment he rose, got the implement and did the deed. It was
-like him to read that book after his talk with his daughter. He often
-resorted to reading for a time to clear his mind for some important
-decision. Had he not read that very page, he would in all probability not
-have taken his life at that time."
-
-"There can be no doubt of it all," said Stone. "Fibsy, the credit of the
-discovery is yours. You did a great piece of work."
-
-Fibsy blushed with delight at Stone's praise, which he cared for more
-than anything else in life, but he said:
-
-"Aw, I just chanced on it. But I found out another thing! While I was
-workin' on that translatin' business, the telephone rang. I answered, but
-somebody took it on an extension, so I hung up.
-
-"But I was waitin' quite a few minutes, and, what do you think? I
-happened to rest my forehead on the telephone transmitter, and--"
-
-"The red ring!" cried Stone. "Of course!"
-
-"Of course," Fibsy repeated. "Pokin' around for a Latin Dictionary, I
-passed a lookin' glass, and there on me noble forehead I saw a red ring,
-about two inches across. It's gone now."
-
-"Yes," Stone said. "Without doubt, Doctor Waring was telephoning--or
-perhaps was answering a call and he rested his head on the instrument."
-
-"He often did that," said Lockwood, "but I never noticed a ring left."
-
-"In life," Stone said, "it would disappear quickly. But if it happened
-just before he died, rigor mortis would preserve the mark. Any way it
-must have been that."
-
-The solution of the mystery, so indubitably the true one, was accepted by
-the police.
-
-The matter was given as little publicity as possible, for Anita and Mrs.
-Bates, the two most deeply concerned both wished it so. No stigma of
-cowardice rested on John Waring's name, for all who knew him knew that
-his act was the deed of a martyr to circumstances and was prompted by a
-spirit of loyalty to his College and unwillingness to let his own
-misfortunes in any way redound to its disparagement.
-
-He trusted, they felt sure, that the truth would never be discovered and
-that the tragedy of his death would preclude blame or censure.
-
-Himself, he never thought of, in his unselfish life or equally unselfish
-death.
-
-Trask, perforce, resigned all claim to the estate, and Anita and her
-mother arranged matters between themselves.
-
-The assumption was that John Waring's will, which he burned, had been
-made in Mrs. Bates' favor, but on learning of his nearer heirs, he
-destroyed it.
-
-"Anita Waring," Lockwood murmured softly when at last they were alone
-together.
-
-"I love the name," she said, "and it is really mine."
-
-"But it will be yours so short a time, it's scarcely worth while to use
-it," Gordon returned. "It will be a short time, won't it, sweetheart?"
-
-"Yes, indeed! I want to go away from Corinth forever. I love my father's
-memory, but I can't stand these scenes. I am tired of mystery in name and
-in deed. I just want to be--Anita Lockwood."
-
-Whereupon Gordon lost his head entirely.
-
-
-
-
- _CAROLYN WELLS'_
- _Baffling detective stories in which Fleming Stone, the great American
-Detective, displays his remarkable ingenuity for unravelling mysteries_
-
-
- THE MYSTERY OF THE SYCAMORE
- RASPBERRY JAM
- THE DIAMOND PIN
- VICKY VAN
- THE MARK OF CAIN
- THE CURVED BLADES
- THE WHITE ALLEY
- ANYBODY BUT ANNE
- THE MAXWELL MYSTERY
- A CHAIN OF EVIDENCE
- THE CLUE
- THE GOLD BAG
-
- EACH WITH FRONTISPIECE IN COLOR
- 12MO. CLOTH
-
- PTOMAINE STREET
- A Rollicking Parody on a Famous Book.
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber's Notes
-
-
---Copyright notice provided as in the original--this e-text is public
- domain in the country of publication.
-
---Moved promotional material to the end of the book.
-
---Silently corrected palpable typos; left non-standard spellings and
- dialect unchanged.
-
---Provided an original cover image, for free and unrestricted use with
- this Distributed Proofreaders eBook.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Mystery Girl, by Carolyn Wells
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