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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Ear in the Wall, by Arthur B. Reeve
+
+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 Ear in the Wall
+
+Author: Arthur B. Reeve
+
+Posting Date: September 15, 2012 [EBook #5150]
+Release Date: February, 2004
+First Posted: May 15, 2002
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE EAR IN THE WALL ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Franks and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE EAR IN THE WALL
+
+BY
+
+ARTHUR B. REEVE
+
+FRONTISPIECE BY WILL FOSTER
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+CHAPTER
+
+ I THE VANISHER
+
+ II THE BLACK BOOK
+
+ III THE SAFE ROBBERY
+
+ IV THE ANONYMOUS LETTER
+
+ V THE SUFFRAGETTE SECRETARY
+
+ VI THE WOMAN DETECTIVE
+
+ VII THE GANG LEADER
+
+ VIII THE SHYSTER LAWYER
+
+ IX THE JURY FIXER
+
+ X THE AFTERNOON DANCE
+
+ XI THE TYPEWRITER CLUE
+
+ XII THE "PORTRAIT PARLE"
+
+ XIII THE CONVICTION
+
+ XIV THE BEAUTY PARLOUR
+
+ XV THE PHANTOM CIRCUIT
+
+ XVI THE SANITARIUM
+
+ XVII THE SOCIETY SCANDAL
+
+XVIII THE WALL STREET WOLF
+
+ XIX THE ESCAPE
+
+ XX THE METRIC PHOTOGRAPH
+
+ XXI THE MORGUE
+
+ XXII THE CANARD
+
+XXIII THE CONFESSION
+
+ XXIV THE DEBACLE OF DORGAN
+
+ XXV THE BLOOD CRYSTALS
+
+ XXVI THE WHITE SLAVE
+
+XXVII THE ELECTION NIGHT
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+THE VANISHER
+
+
+"Hello, Jameson, is Kennedy in?"
+
+I glanced up from the evening papers to encounter the square-jawed,
+alert face of District Attorney Carton in the doorway of our apartment.
+
+"How do you do, Judge?" I exclaimed. "No, but I expect him any second
+now. Won't you sit down?"
+
+The District Attorney dropped, rather wearily I thought, into a chair
+and looked at his watch.
+
+I had made Carton's acquaintance some years before as a cub reporter on
+the Star while he was a judge of an inferior court. Our acquaintance
+had grown through several political campaigns in which I had had
+assignments that brought me into contact with him. More recently some
+special writing had led me across his trail again in telling the story
+of his clean-up of graft in the city. At present his weariness was
+easily accounted for. He was in the midst of the fight of his life for
+re-election against the so-called "System," headed by Boss Dorgan, in
+which he had gone far in exposing evils that ranged all the way from
+vice and the drug traffic to bald election frauds.
+
+"I expect a Mrs. Blackwell here in a few minutes," he remarked,
+glancing again at his watch. His eye caught the headline of the news
+story I had been reading and he added quickly, "What do the boys on the
+Star think of that Blackwell case, anyhow?"
+
+It was, I may say, a case deeply shrouded in mystery--the disappearance
+without warning of a beautiful young girl, Betty Blackwell, barely
+eighteen. Her family, the police, and now the District Attorney had
+sought to solve it in vain. Some had thought it a kidnaping, others a
+suicide, and others had even hinted at murder. All sorts of theories
+had been advanced without in the least changing the original dominant
+note of mystery. Photographs of the young woman had been published
+broadcast, I knew, without eliciting a word in reply. Young men whom
+she had known and girls with whom she had been intimate had been
+questioned without so much as a clue being obtained. Reports that she
+had been seen had come in from all over the country, as they always do
+in such cases. All had been investigated and had turned out to be based
+on nothing more than imagination. The mystery remained unsolved.
+
+"Well," I replied, "of course there's a lot of talk now in the papers
+about aphasia and amnesia and all that stuff. But, you know, we
+reporters are a sceptical lot. We have to be shown. I can't say we put
+much faith in THAT."
+
+"But what is your explanation? You fellows always have an opinion.
+Sometimes I think the newspapermen are our best detectives."
+
+"I can't say that we have any opinion in this case--yet," I returned
+frankly. "When a girl just simply disappears on Fifth Avenue and there
+isn't even the hint of a clue as to any place she went or how,
+well--oh, there's Kennedy now. Put it up to him."
+
+"We were just talking of that Betty Blackwell disappearance case,"
+resumed Carton, when the greetings were over. "What do you think of it?"
+
+"Think of it?" repeated Kennedy promptly with a keen glance at the
+District Attorney; "why, Judge, I think of it the same as you evidently
+do. If you didn't think it was a case that was in some way connected
+with your vice and graft investigation, you wouldn't be here. And if I
+didn't feel that it promised surprising results, aside from the
+interest I always have naturally in solving such mysteries, I wouldn't
+be ready to take up the offer which you came here to make."
+
+"You're a wizard, Kennedy," laughed Carton, though it was easily seen
+that he was both pleased and relieved to think that he had enlisted
+Craig's services so easily.
+
+"Not much of a wizard. In the first place, I know the fight you're
+making. Also, I know that you wouldn't go to the police in the present
+state of armed truce between your office and Headquarters. You want
+someone outside. Well, I'm more than willing to be that person. The
+whole thing, in its larger aspects, interests me. Betty Blackwell in
+particular, arouses my sympathies. That's all."
+
+"Exactly, Kennedy. This fight I'm in is going to be the fight of my
+life. Just now, in addition to everything else, people are looking to
+me to find Betty Blackwell. Her mother was in to see me today; there
+isn't much that she could add to what has already been said. Betty was
+a most attractive girl. The family is an excellent one, but in reduced
+circumstances. She had been used to a great deal as a child, but now,
+since the death of her father, she has had to go to work--and you know
+what that means to a girl like that."
+
+Carton laid down a new photograph which the newspapers had not printed
+yet. Betty Blackwell was slender, petite, chic. Her dark hair was
+carefully groomed, and there was an air with which she wore her clothes
+and carried herself, even in a portrait, which showed that she was no
+ordinary girl.
+
+Her soft brown eyes had that magnetic look which is dangerous to their
+owner if she does not know how to control it, eyes that arrested one's
+gaze, invited notice. Even the lens must have felt the spell. It had
+caught, also, the soft richness of the skin of her oval face and full
+throat and neck. Indeed one could not help remarking that she was
+really the girl to grace a fortune. Only a turn of the hand of that
+fickle goddess had prevented her from doing so.
+
+I had picked up one of the evening papers and was looking at the
+newspaper half-tone which more than failed to do justice to her. Just
+then my eye happened on an item which I had been about to discuss with
+Carton when Kennedy entered.
+
+"As a scientist, does the amnesia theory appeal to you, Craig?" I
+asked. "Now, here is an explanation by one of the special writers,
+headed, 'Personalities Lost Through Amnesia.' Listen."
+
+The article was brief:
+
+Mysterious disappearances, such as that of Betty Blackwell, have
+alarmed the public and baffled the police before this--disappearances
+that have in their suddenness, apparent lack of purpose, and
+inexplicability much in common with her case. Leaving out of account
+the class of disappearances for their own convenience--embezzlers,
+blackmailers, and so forth--there is still a large number of recorded
+cases where the subjects have dropped out of sight without apparent
+cause or reason and have left behind them untarnished reputations and
+solvent back accounts. Of these, a small percentage are found to have
+met with violence; others have been victims of suicidal mania, and
+sooner or later a clue has come to light which has established the
+fact. The dead are often easier to find than the living.
+
+Of the remaining small proportion, there are on record, however, a
+number of carefully authenticated cases where the subject has been the
+victim of a sudden and complete loss of memory.
+
+This dislocation of memory is a variety of aphasia known as amnesia,
+and when the memory is recurrently lost and restored, we have
+alternating personality. The Society for Psychical Research and many
+eminent psychologists, among them the late William James, Dr. Weir
+Mitchell, Dr. Hodgson of Boston, and Dr. A. E. Osborn of San Francisco,
+have reported many cases of alternating personality.
+
+Studious efforts are being made to understand and to explain the
+strange type of mental phenomena exhibited in these cases, but as yet
+no one has given a clear and comprehensive explanation of them. Such
+cases are by no means always connected with disappearances, and
+exhaustive studies have been made of types of alternating personality
+that have from first to last been carefully watched by scientists of
+the first rank.
+
+The variety known as the ambulatory type, where the patient suddenly
+loses all knowledge of his own identity and of the past and takes
+himself off, leaving no trace or clue, is the variety which the present
+case of Miss Blackwell seems to suggest.
+
+There followed a number of most interesting cases and an elaborate
+argument by the writer to show that Betty Blackwell was a victim of
+this psychological aberration, that she was, in other words, "a
+vanisher."
+
+I laid down the paper with a questioning look at Kennedy.
+
+"As a scientist," he replied deliberately, "the theory, of course, does
+appeal to me, especially in the ingenious way in which that writer
+applied it. However, as a detective"--he shook his head slowly--"I must
+deal with facts--not speculations. It leaves much to be explained, to
+say the least."
+
+Just then the door buzzer sounded and Carton himself sprang to answer
+it.
+
+"That's Mrs. Blackwell now--her mother. I told her that I was going to
+take the case to you, Kennedy, and took the liberty of asking her to
+come up here to meet you. Good-afternoon, Mrs. Blackwell. Let me
+introduce Professor Kennedy and Mr. Jameson, of whom I spoke to you."
+
+She bowed and murmured a tremulous greeting. Kennedy placed a chair for
+her and she thanked him.
+
+Mrs. Blackwell was a slender little woman in black, well past middle
+age. Her face and dress spoke of years of economy, even of privation,
+but her manner was plainly that of a woman of gentle breeding and
+former luxury. She was precisely of the type of decayed gentlewoman
+that one meets often in the city, especially at some of the
+middle-class boarding-houses.
+
+Deeply as the disappearance of her daughter had affected her, Mrs.
+Blackwell was facing it bravely. That was her nature. One could imagine
+that only when Betty was actually found would this plucky little woman
+collapse. Instinctively, one felt that she claimed his assistance in
+the unequal fight she was waging against the complexities of modern
+life for which she had been so ill prepared.
+
+"I do hope you will be able to find my daughter," she began,
+controlling her voice with an effort. "Mr. Carton has been so kind,
+more than kind, I am sure, in getting your aid. The police seem to be
+able to do nothing. They make out reports, put me off, tell me they are
+making progress--but they don't find Betty."
+
+There was a tragic pathos in the way she said it.
+
+"Betty was such a good girl, too," she went on, her emotions rising.
+"Oh, I was so proud of her when she got her position down in Wall
+Street, with the broker, Mr. Langhorne."
+
+"Tell Mr. Kennedy just what you told me of her disappearance," put in
+Carton.
+
+Again Mrs. Blackwell controlled her feelings. "I don't know much about
+it," she faltered, "but last Saturday, when she left the office early,
+she said she was going to do some shopping on Fifth Avenue. I know she
+went there, did shop a bit, then walked on the Avenue several blocks.
+But after that there is no trace of her."
+
+"You have heard nothing, have no idea where she might have gone--even
+for a time?" queried Kennedy.
+
+He asked it with a keen look at the face of Mrs. Blackwell. I recalled
+one case where a girl had disappeared in which Kennedy had always
+asserted that if the family had been perfectly frank at the start much
+more might have been accomplished in unravelling the mystery.
+
+There was evident sincerity in Mrs. Blackwell as she replied quickly,
+"Absolutely none. Another girl from the office was with her part of the
+time, then left her to take the subway. We don't live far uptown. It
+wouldn't have taken Betty long to get home, even if she had walked,
+after that, through a crowded street, too."
+
+"Of course, she may have met a friend, may have gone somewhere with the
+friend," put in Kennedy, as if trying out the remark to see what effect
+it might have.
+
+"Where could she go?" asked Mrs. Blackwell in naive surprise, looking
+at him with a counterpart of the eyes we had seen in the picture. "I
+hope you don't think that Betty---"
+
+The little widow was on the verge of tears again at the mere hint that
+her daughter might have had friends that were not all, perhaps, that
+they should be.
+
+Carton came to the rescue. "Miss Blackwell," he interposed, "was a very
+attractive girl, very. She had hosts of admirers, as every attractive
+girl must have. Most of them, all of them, as far as Mrs. Blackwell
+knows and I have been able to find out, were young men at the office
+where she worked, or friends of that sort--not the ordinary clerk, but
+of the rising, younger, self-made generation. Still, they don't seem to
+have interested her particularly as far as I have been able to
+discover. She merely liked them. There is absolutely nothing known to
+point to the fact that she was any different from thousands of girls in
+that respect. She was vivacious, full of fun and life, a girl any
+fellow would have been more than proud to take to a dance. She was
+ambitious, I suppose, but nothing more."
+
+"Betty was not a bad girl," asserted Mrs. Blackwell vehemently. "She
+was a good girl. I don't believe there was much, in fact anything
+important, on which she did not make me her confidante. Yes, she was
+ambitious. So am I. I have always hoped that Betty would bring our
+family--her younger sister--back to the station where we were before
+the panic wiped out our fortune and killed my husband. That is all."
+
+"Yes," added Carton, "nothing at all is known that would make one think
+that she was what young men call a 'good fellow' with them."
+
+Kennedy looked up, but said nothing. I thought I could read the
+unspoken word on his lips, as he glanced from Carton to Mrs. Blackwell,
+"known."
+
+She had risen and was facing us.
+
+"Is there no one in all this great city," appealed the distracted
+little woman with outstretched arms, "who can find my daughter? Is it
+possible that a girl can disappear in broad daylight in the streets and
+never be heard of again? Oh, won't you find her? Tell me she is
+safe--that she is still the little girl I---"
+
+Her voice failed and she was crying softly in her lace handkerchief. It
+was touching and I saw that Kennedy was deeply moved, although at once
+to his practical mind the thought must have occurred that nothing was
+to be gained by further questions of Mrs. Blackwell.
+
+"Believe me, Mrs. Blackwell," he said in a low tone, taking her hand,
+"I will do all that is in my power to find her."
+
+"Thank you," murmured the mother, overcome.
+
+A moment later, however, she had recovered her composure to some degree
+and rose to go. There was a flattering look of relief on her face which
+in itself must have been ample reward to Craig, a retainer worth more
+to him in a case like this than money.
+
+"I'm going back to my office," remarked Carton. "If I learn anything, I
+shall let you know."
+
+The District Attorney went out with Mrs. Blackwell. Busy as he was, he
+had time to turn aside to help this bereaved woman, and I admired him
+for it.
+
+"Do you think it is one of those cases like some that Carton has
+uncovered on the East Side and among girls newly arrived in the city?"
+I asked Craig when the door was shut.
+
+"Can't say," he returned, in an abstracted study.
+
+"It's awful if it is," I pursued. "And if it is, I suppose all that
+will result from it will be a momentary thrill of the
+newspaper-readers, and then they will fall back on the old saying that
+after all it is only a result of human nature that such things
+happen--they always have happened and always will--that old line of
+talk."
+
+"That sort of thing is NOT a result of human nature," returned Kennedy
+earnestly. "It's a System. I mean to say that if it should turn out to
+be connected with the vice investigations of Carton, and not a case of
+aphasia, such a disappearance you would find to be due to the
+persistent, cunning, and unprincipled exploitation of young girls.
+
+"No, Walter, it is not that women are weak or that men are inherently
+vicious. That doesn't account for a case like this. Then, too, some
+mawkish people to-day are fond of putting the whole evil on low wages
+as a cause. It isn't that--alone. It isn't even lack of education or of
+moral training. Human nature is not so bad in the mass as some good
+people think. No, don't you, as a reporter, see it? It is big business,
+in its way, that Carton is fighting--big business in the commercialized
+ruin of girls, such, perhaps, as Betty Blackwell--a vicious system that
+enmeshes even those who are its tools. I'm glad if I can have a chance
+to help smash it.
+
+"Now, I'll tell you what I want you to do, just so that we can start
+this thing with a clear understanding of what it amounts to. I want you
+to look up just what the situation is. I know there is an army of
+'vanishers' in New York. I want to know something about them in the
+mass. Can't you dig up something from your Star connections?"
+
+Kennedy had some matters concerning other cases to clear up before he
+felt free to devote his whole time to this. As there was nothing we
+could do immediately, I spent some time getting at the facts he wanted.
+Indeed, it did not take me long to discover that the disappearance of
+Betty Blackwell, in spite of the prominence it had been given, was by
+no means an isolated case. I found that the Star alone had chronicled
+scores of such disappearances during the past few months, cases of
+girls who had simply been swallowed up in the big city. They were the
+daughters of neither the rich nor of the poor, most of them, but girls
+rather in ordinary circumstances.
+
+Even the police records showed upward of a thousand missing young
+girls, ranging in age from fourteen to twenty-one years and I knew that
+the police lists scarcely approximated the total number of missing
+persons in the great city, especially in those cases where a hesitancy
+on the part of parents and relatives often concealed the loss from
+public records.
+
+I came away with the impression that there were literally hundreds of
+cases every bit as baffling as that of Betty Blackwell, of young girls
+who had left absolutely no trace behind, who had made no preparations
+for departure and of whom few had been heard from since they
+disappeared. Many from homes of refinement and even high financial
+standing had disappeared, leaving no clues behind. It was not alone the
+daughters of the poor that were affected--it was all society.
+
+Many reasons, I found, had been assigned for the disappearances. I knew
+that there must be many causes at work, that no one cause could be
+responsible for all or perhaps a majority of the cases. There were
+suicides and murders and elopements, family troubles, poverty, desire
+for freedom and adventure; innumerable complex causes, even down to
+kidnapping.
+
+The question was, however, which of these causes had been in operation
+in the case of Betty Blackwell? Where had she gone? Where had this
+whole army of vanishers disappeared? Were these disappearances merely
+accidents--or was there an epidemic of amnesia? I could bring myself to
+no such conclusions, but was forced to answer my own queries in lieu of
+an answer from Kennedy, by propounding another. Was there an organized
+band?
+
+And, after I had tried to reason it all out, I still found myself back
+at the original question, as I rejoined Kennedy at the laboratory,
+"Where had they all--where had Betty Blackwell gone?"
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+THE BLACK BOOK
+
+
+I had scarcely finished pouring out my suspicions to Kennedy when the
+telephone rang.
+
+It was Carton on the wire, in a state of unsuppressed excitement.
+Kennedy answered the call himself, but the conversation was brief and,
+to me, unenlightening, until he hung up the receiver.
+
+"Dorgan--the Boss," he exclaimed, "has just found a detectaphone in his
+private dining-room at Gastron's."
+
+At once I saw the importance of the news and for the moment it obscured
+even the case of Betty Blackwell.
+
+Dorgan was the political boss of the city at that time, apparently
+entrenched, with an organization that seemed impregnable. I knew him as
+a big, bullnecked fellow, taciturn to the point of surliness, owing his
+influence to his ability to "deliver the goods" in the shape of graft
+of all sorts, the archenemy of Carton, a type of politician who now is
+rapidly passing.
+
+"Carton wants to see us immediately at his office," added Craig,
+jamming his hat on his head. "Come on."
+
+Without waiting for further comment or answer from me, Kennedy, caught
+by the infectious excitement of Carton's message, dashed from our
+apartment and a few minutes later we were whirling downtown on the
+subway.
+
+"You know, I suppose," he whispered rather hoarsely above the rumble
+and roar of the train, but so as not to be overheard, "that Dorgan
+always has kept a suite of rooms at Gastron's, on Fifth Avenue, for
+dinners and conferences."
+
+I nodded. Some of the things that must have gone on in the secret suite
+in the fashionable restaurant I knew would make interesting reading, if
+the walls had ears.
+
+"Apparently he must have found out about the eavesdropping in time and
+nipped it," pursued Kennedy.
+
+"What do you mean?" I asked, for I had not been able to gather much
+from the one-sided conversation over the telephone, and the lightning
+change from the case of Betty Blackwell to this had left me somewhat
+bewildered. "What has he done?"
+
+"Smashed the transmitter of the machine," replied Kennedy tersely. "Cut
+the wires."
+
+"Where did it lead?" I asked. "How do you know?"
+
+Kennedy shook his head. Either he did not know, yet, or he felt that
+the subway was no place in which to continue the conversation beyond
+the mere skeleton that he had given me.
+
+We finished the ride in comparative silence and hurried into Carton's
+office down in the Criminal Courts Building.
+
+Carton greeted us cordially, with an air of intense relief, as if he
+were glad to have been able to turn to Kennedy in the growing
+perplexities that beset him.
+
+What surprised me most, however, was that, seated beside his desk, in
+an easy chair, was a striking looking woman, not exactly young, but of
+an age that is perhaps more interesting than youth, certainly more
+sophisticated. She, too, I noticed, had a tense, excited expression on
+her face. As Kennedy and I entered she had looked us over searchingly.
+
+"Let me present Mr. Kennedy and Mr. Jameson, Mrs. Ogleby," said Carton
+quickly. "Both of them know as much about how experts use those little
+mechanical eavesdroppers as anyone--except the inventor."
+
+We bowed and waited for an explanation.
+
+"You understand," continued Carton slowly to us in a tone that enjoined
+secrecy, "Mrs. Ogleby, who is a friend of Mr. Murtha, Dorgan's
+right-hand man, naturally is alarmed and doesn't want her name to
+appear in this thing."
+
+"Oh--it is terrible--terrible," Mrs. Ogleby chimed in in great
+agitation. "I don't care about anything else. But, my reputation--it
+will be ruined if they connect my name with the case. As soon as I
+heard of it--I thought of you, Mr. Carton. I came here immediately.
+There must be some way in which you can protect me--some way that you
+can get along without using--"
+
+"But, my dear Mrs. Ogleby," interrupted the District Attorney, "I have
+told you half a dozen times, I think, that I didn't put the
+detectaphone in--"
+
+"Yes, but you will get the record," she persisted excitedly. "Can't you
+do something?" she pleaded.
+
+I fancied that she said it with the air of one who almost had some
+right in the matter.
+
+"Mrs. Ogleby," reiterated Carton earnestly, "I will do all I can--on my
+word of honour--to protect your name, but--"
+
+He paused and looked at us helplessly.
+
+"What was it that was overheard?" asked Craig point-blank, watching
+Mrs. Ogleby's face carefully.
+
+"Why," she replied nervously, "there was a big dinner last night which
+Mr. Dorgan gave at Gastron's. Mr. Murtha took me and--oh--there were
+lots of others--" She stopped suddenly.
+
+"Yes," prompted Kennedy. "Who else was there?"
+
+She was on her guard, however. Evidently she had come to Carton for one
+purpose and that was solely to protect herself against the scandal
+which she thought might attach to having been present at one of the
+rather notorious little affairs of the Boss.
+
+"Really," she answered, colouring slightly, "I can't tell you. I
+mustn't say a word about who was there--or anything about it. Good
+heavens--it is bad enough as it is--to think that my name may be
+dragged into politics and all sorts of false stories set in motion
+about me. You must protect me, Mr. Carton, you must."
+
+"How did you find out about the detectaphone being there?" asked
+Kennedy.
+
+"Why," she replied evasively, "I thought it was just an ordinary little
+social dinner. That's what Mr. Murtha told me it was. I didn't think
+anyone outside was interested in it or in who was there or what went
+on. But, this morning, a--a friend--called me up and told me--something
+that made me think others besides those invited knew of it, knew too
+much."
+
+She paused, then resumed hastily to forestall questioning, "I began to
+think it over myself, and the more I thought of it, the stranger it
+seemed that anyone else, outside, should know. I began to wonder how it
+leaked out, for I understood that it was a strictly private affair. I
+asked Mr. Murtha and he told Mr. Dorgan. Mr. Dorgan at once guessed
+that there had been something queer. He looked about his rooms there,
+and, sure enough, they found the detectaphone concealed in the wall. I
+can't tell any more," she added, facing Carton and using her bewitching
+eyes to their best advantage. "I can't ask you to shield Mr. Dorgan and
+Mr. Murtha. They are your opponents. But I have done nothing to you,
+Mr. Carton. You must suppress--that part of it--about me. Why, it would
+ruin---"
+
+She cut her words short. But I knew what she meant, and to a certain
+extent I could understand, if not sympathize with her. Her husband,
+Martin Ogleby, club-man and man about town, had a reputation none too
+savoury. But, man-like, I knew, he would condone not even the
+appearance of anything that caused gossip in his wife's actions. I
+could understand how desperate she felt.
+
+"But, my dear lady," repeated Carton, in a manner that showed that he
+felt keenly, for some reason or other, the appeal she was making to
+him, "must I say again that I had nothing whatever to do with it? I
+have sent for Mr. Kennedy and---"
+
+"Nothing--on your honour?" she asked, facing him squarely.
+
+"Nothing--on my honour," he asserted frankly.
+
+She appeared to be dazed. Apparently all along she had assumed that
+Carton must be the person to see, that he alone could do anything for
+her, would do something.
+
+Her face paled as she met his earnest look. She had risen and now, half
+chagrined, half frightened, she stood irresolute. Her lips quivered and
+tears stood in her eyes as she realized that, instead of protecting
+herself by her confidence, she had, perhaps, made matters worse by
+telling an outsider.
+
+Carton, too, had risen and in a low voice which we could not overhear
+was trying to reassure her.
+
+In her confusion she was moving toward the door, utterly oblivious,
+now, to us. Carton tactfully took her arm and led her to a private
+entrance that opened from his office down the corridor and out of sight
+of the watchful eyes of the reporters and attendants in the outer hall.
+
+I did not understand just what it was all about, but I could see
+Kennedy's eye following Carton keenly.
+
+"What was that--a plant?" he asked, still trying to read Carton's face,
+as he returned to us alone a moment later. "Did she come to see whether
+you got the record?"
+
+"No--I don't think so," replied Carton quickly. "No, I think that was
+all on the level--her part of it."
+
+"But who did put in the instrument, really--did you?" asked Kennedy,
+still quizzing.
+
+"No," exclaimed Carton hastily, this time meeting Craig's eye frankly.
+"No. I wish I had. Why--the fact is, I don't know who did--no one seems
+to know, yet, evidently. But," he added, leaning forward and speaking
+rapidly, "I think I could give a shrewd guess."
+
+Kennedy said nothing, but nodded encouragingly.
+
+"I think," continued Carton impressively, "that it must have been
+Langhorne and the Wall Street crowd he represents."
+
+"Langhorne," repeated Kennedy, his mind working rapidly. "Why, it was
+his stenographer that Miss Blackwell was. Why do you suspect Langhorne?"
+
+"Because," exclaimed Carton, more excited than ever at Kennedy's quick
+deduction, bringing his fist down on the desk to emphasize his own
+suspicion, "because they aren't getting their share of the graft that
+Dorgan is passing out--probably are sore, and think that if they can
+get something on the Boss or some of those who are close to him, they
+may force him to take them into partnership in the deals."
+
+Carton looked from Kennedy to me, to see what impression his theory
+made. On me at least it did make an impression. Hartley Langhorne, I
+knew, was a Wall Street broker and speculator who dealt in real estate,
+securities, in fact in anything that would appeal to a plunger as
+promising a quick and easy return.
+
+Kennedy made no direct comment on the theory. "In what shape is the
+record, do you suppose?" he asked merely.
+
+"I gathered from Mrs. Ogleby," returned Carton watchfully, "that it had
+been taken down by a stenographer at the receiving end of the
+detectaphone, transcribed in typewriting, and loosely bound in a book
+of limp black leather. Oh," he concluded, "Dorgan would give almost
+anything to find out what is in that little record, you may be sure.
+Perhaps even, rather than have such a thing out, he would come to terms
+with Langhorne."
+
+Kennedy said nothing. He was merely absorbing the case as Carton
+presented it.
+
+"Don't you see?" continued the District Attorney, pacing his office and
+gazing now and then out of the window, "here's this record hidden away
+somewhere in the city. If I could only get it--I'd win my fight against
+Dorgan--and Mrs. Ogleby need not suffer for her mistake in coming to
+me, at all."
+
+He was apparently thinking aloud. Kennedy did not attempt to quiz him.
+He was considering the importance of the situation. For, as I have
+said, it was at the height of the political campaign in which Carton
+had been renominated independently by the Reform League--of which, more
+later.
+
+"You don't think that Langhorne is really in the inner ring, then?"
+questioned Craig.
+
+"No, not yet."
+
+"Well, then," I put in hastily, "can't you approach him or someone
+close to him, and get---"
+
+"Say," interrupted Carton, "anything that took place in that private
+dining-room at Gastron's would be just as likely to incriminate
+Langhorne and some of his crowd as not. It is a difference in degree of
+graft--that is all. They don't want an open fight. It was just a piece
+of finesse on Langhorne's part. You may be sure of that. No, neither of
+them wants a fight. That's the last thing. They're both afraid. What
+Langhorne wanted was a line on Dorgan. And we should never have known
+anything about this Black Book, if some of the women, I suppose, hadn't
+talked too much. Mrs. Ogleby added two and two and got five. She
+thought it must be I who put the instrument in."
+
+Carton was growing more and more excited again, "It's exasperating," he
+continued. "There's the record--somewhere--if I could only get it.
+Think of it, Kennedy--an election going on and never so much talk about
+graft and vice before!"
+
+"What was in the book--mostly, do you imagine?" asked Craig, still
+imperturbable.
+
+Carton shrugged his shoulders. "Oh, almost anything. For instance, you
+know, Dorgan has just put through a new scheme of city planning--with
+the able assistance of some theoretical reformers. That will be a big
+piece of real estate graft, unless I am mistaken. Langhorne and his
+crowd know it. They don't want to be frozen out."
+
+As they talked, I had been revolving the thing over in my head.
+Dorgan's little parties, as reported privately among the men on the
+Star whom I knew, were notorious. The more I considered, the more
+possible phases of the problem I thought of. It was not even impossible
+that in some way it might bear on the Betty Blackwell case.
+
+"Do you think Dorgan and Murtha are hunting the book as anxiously
+as--some others?" I ventured.
+
+"You have heard of the character of some of those dinners?" answered
+Carton by asking another question, then went on: "Why, Dorgan has had
+some of our leading lawyers, financiers, and legislators there. He
+usually surrounds them with brilliant, clever women, as unscrupulous as
+himself, and--well--you can imagine the result. Poor little Mrs.
+Ogleby," he added sympathetically. "They could twist her any way they
+chose for their purposes."
+
+My own impression had been that Mrs. Ogleby was better able to take
+care of herself than his words gave her credit for, but I said nothing.
+
+Carton paused before the window and gazed out at the Bridge of Sighs
+that led from his building across to the city prison.
+
+"What a record that Black Book must hold!" he exclaimed meditatively.
+"Why, if it was only that I could 'get' Murtha--I'd be happy," he
+added, turning to us.
+
+Murtha, as I have said, was Boss Dorgan's right bower, a clever and
+unscrupulous politician and leader in a district where he succeeded
+somehow or other in absolutely crushing opposition. I had run across
+him now and then in the course of my newspaper career and, aside from
+his well-known character in delivering the "goods" to the organization
+whenever it was necessary, I had found him a most interesting character.
+
+It was due to such men as Murtha that the organization kept its grip,
+though one wave of reform after another lashed its fury on it. For
+Murtha understood his people. He worked at politics every hour--whether
+it was patting the babies of the district on the head, or bailing their
+fathers out of jail, handing out shoes to the shiftless or judiciously
+distributing coal and ice to the deserving.
+
+Yet I had seen enough to know the inherent viciousness of the
+circle--of how the organization took dollars from the people with one
+concealed hand and distributed pennies from the other hand, held aloft
+and in the spotlight. Again and again, Kennedy and I in our excursions
+into scientific warfare on crime in the underworld had run squarely up
+against the refined as well as the debased creatures of the "System."
+Pyramided on what looked like open-handed charity and good-fellowship
+we had seen vice and crime of all degrees.
+
+And yet, somehow or other, I must confess to a sort of admiration for
+Murtha and his stamp--if for nothing else than because of the frankness
+with which he did what he sought to do. Neither Kennedy nor I could be
+accused of undue sympathy with the System, yet, like many who had been
+brought in close contact with it, it had earned our respect in many
+ways.
+
+And so, I contemplated the situation with more than ordinary interest.
+Carton wanted the Black Book to use in order to win his political fight
+for a clean city and to prosecute the grafters. Dorgan wanted it in
+order to suppress and thus protect himself and Murtha. Mrs. Ogleby
+wanted it to save her good name and prevent even the appearance of
+scandal. Langhorne wanted it in order to coerce Dorgan to share in the
+graft, yet was afraid of Carton also.
+
+Was ever a situation of such peculiar, mixed motives?
+
+"I would move heaven and earth for that Black Book!" exclaimed Carton
+finally, turning from the window and facing us.
+
+Kennedy, too, had risen.
+
+"You can count on me, then, Carton," he said simply, as the
+recollection of the many fights in which we had stood shoulder to
+shoulder with the young District Attorney came over him.
+
+A moment later Carton had us each by the hand.
+
+"Thank you," he cried. "I knew you fellows would be with me."
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+THE SAFE ROBBERY
+
+
+It was late that night that Kennedy and I left Carton after laying out
+a campaign and setting in motion various forces, official and
+unofficial, which might serve to keep us in touch with what Dorgan and
+the organization were doing.
+
+Not until the following morning, however, did anything new develop in
+such a way that we could work on it.
+
+Kennedy had picked up the morning papers which had been left at the
+door of our apartment and was hastily running his eye over the
+headlines on the first page, as was his custom.
+
+"By Jove, Walter," I heard him exclaim. "What do you think of that--a
+robbery below the deadline--and in Langhorne's office, too."
+
+I hurried out of my room and glanced at the papers, also. Sure enough,
+there it was:
+
+SAFE ROBBED IN WALL ST. OFFICE
+
+Door Into Office of Langhorne & Westlake, Brokers, Forced and Safe
+Robbed.
+
+One of the strangest robberies ever perpetrated was pulled off last
+night in the office of Langhorne & Westlake, the brokers, at-----Wall
+Street, some time during the regular closing time of the office and
+eight o'clock.
+
+Mr. Langhorne had returned to his office after dining with some friends
+in order to work on some papers. When he arrived, about eight o'clock,
+he found that the door had been forced. The office was in darkness, but
+when he switched on the lights it was discovered that the office safe
+had been entered.
+
+Nothing was said about the manner in which the safe robbery was
+perpetrated, but it is understood to have been very peculiar. So far no
+details have been announced and the robbery was not reported to the
+police until a late hour.
+
+Mr. Langhorne, when seen by the reporters, stated positively that
+nothing of great value had been taken and that the firm would not
+suffer in any way as a result of the robbery.
+
+One of the stenographers in the office, Miss Betty Blackwell, who acted
+as private secretary to Mr. Langhorne, is missing and the case has
+already attracted wide attention. Whether or not her disappearance had
+anything to do with the robbery is not known.
+
+"Naturally he would not report it to the police," commented Kennedy;
+"that is, if it had anything to do with that Black Book, as I am sure
+that it must have had."
+
+"It was certainly a most peculiar affair if it did not," I remarked.
+"There must be some way of finding that out. It's strange about Betty
+Blackwell."
+
+Kennedy was turning something over in his mind. "Of course," he
+remarked, "we don't want to come out into the open just yet, but it
+would be interesting to know what happened down there at Langhorne's.
+Have you any objection to going down with me and posing as a reporter
+from the Star?"
+
+"None whatever," I returned.
+
+We stopped at the laboratory on the campus of the University where
+Craig still retained his professorship. Kennedy secured a rather bulky
+piece of apparatus, which, as nearly as I can describe, consisted of a
+steel frame, which could be attached by screws to any wooden table. It
+contained a lower plate which could move forward and back, two lateral
+uprights stiffened by curved braces, and a cross piece of steel
+attached by strong bolts to the tops of the posts. In the face of the
+machine was a dial with a pointer.
+
+Kennedy quickly took the apparatus apart and made it up into two
+packages so that between us we could carry it easily, and at about the
+time that Wall Street offices were opening we were on our way downtown.
+
+Langhorne proved to be a tall, rather slim, man of what might be called
+youngish middle age. One did not have to be introduced to him to read
+his character or his occupation. Every line of his faultlessly fitting
+clothes and every expression of his keen and carefully cared-for face
+betokened the plunger, the man who lived by his wits and found the
+process both fascinating and congenial.
+
+"Mr. Langhorne," began Kennedy, after I had taken upon myself the duty
+of introducing ourselves as reporters, "we are preparing an article for
+our paper about a new apparatus which the Star has imported especially
+from Paris. It is a machine invented by Monsieur Bertillon just before
+he died, for the purpose of furnishing exact measurements of the
+muscular efforts exerted in the violent entry of a door or desk by
+making it possible to reproduce the traces of the work that a burglar
+has left on doors and articles of furniture. We've been waiting for a
+case that the instrument would fit into and it seemed to us that
+perhaps it might be of some use to you in getting at the real robber of
+your office. Would you mind if we made an attempt to apply it?"
+
+Langhorne could not very well refuse to allow us to try the thing,
+though it was plainly evident that he did not want to talk and did not
+relish the publicity that the news of the morning had brought him.
+
+Kennedy had laid the apparatus down on a table as he spoke and was
+assembling the parts which he had separated in order to carry it.
+
+"These are the marks on the door, I presume?" he continued, examining
+some indentations of the woodwork near the lock.
+
+Langhorne assented.
+
+"The door was open when you returned?" asked Kennedy.
+
+"Closed," replied Langhorne briefly. "Before I put the key into the
+lock, I turned the knob, as I have a habit of doing. Instead of
+catching, it yielded and the door swung open without any trouble."
+
+He repeated the story substantially as we had already read it in the
+papers.
+
+Kennedy had taken a step or two into the office, and was now facing the
+safe. It was not a large safe, but was one of the most modern
+construction and was supposed to be burglar proof.
+
+"And you say you lost practically nothing?" persisted Craig.
+
+"Nothing of importance," reiterated Langhorne.
+
+Kennedy had been watching him closely. The man was at least baffling.
+There was nothing excited or perturbed about his manner. Indeed, one
+might easily have thought that it was not his safe at all that had been
+robbed. I wondered whether, after all, he had had the Black Book.
+Certainly, I felt, if he had lost it he was very cool about the loss.
+
+Craig had by this time reached the safe itself. In spite of Langhorne's
+reluctance, his assurance had taken Kennedy even up to the point which
+he wished. He was examining the safe.
+
+On the front it showed no evidence of having been "souped" or drilled.
+There was not a mark on it. Nor, as we learned later from the police,
+was there any evidence of a finger-print having been left by the
+burglar.
+
+Langhorne now but ill concealed his interest. It was natural, too, for
+here he had one of the most modern of small strong-boxes, built up of
+the latest chrome steel and designed to withstand any reasonable
+assault of cracksman or fire.
+
+I was on the point of inquiring how on earth it had been possible to
+rob the safe, when Kennedy, standing on a chair, as Langhorne directed,
+uttered a low exclamation.
+
+I craned my neck to look also.
+
+There, in the very top of the safe, yawned a huge hole large enough to
+thrust one's arm through, with something to spare.
+
+As I looked at the yawning dark hole in the top of what had been only a
+short time ago a safe worthy of the latest state of the art, it seemed
+incomprehensible.
+
+Try as I could to reason it out, I could find no explanation. How it
+had been possible for a burglar to make such an opening in the little
+more than two hours between closing and the arrival of Langhorne after
+dinner, I could not even guess. As far as I knew it would have taken
+many long hours of patient labour with the finest bits to have made
+anything at all comparable to the destruction which we saw before us.
+
+A score of questions were on my lips, but I said nothing, although I
+could not help noticing the strange look on Langhorne's face. It
+plainly showed that he would like to have known what had taken place
+during the two or more hours when his office had been unguarded, yet
+was averse to betraying any such interest.
+
+Mystified as I was by what I saw, I was even more amazed at the cool
+manner in which Kennedy passed it all by.
+
+He seemed merely to be giving the hole in the top of the safe a passing
+glance, as though it was of no importance that someone should have in
+such an incredibly short time made a hole through which one might
+easily reach his arm and secure anything he wanted out of the interior
+of the powerful little safe.
+
+Langhorne, too, seemed surprised at Kennedy's matter of fact passing by
+of what was almost beyond the range of possibility.
+
+"After all," remarked Kennedy, "it is not the safe that we care to
+study so much as the door. For one thing, I want to make sure whether
+the marks show a genuine breaking and entering or whether they were
+placed there afterwards merely to cover the trail, supposing someone
+had used a key to get into the office."
+
+The remark suggested many things to me. Was it that he meant to imply
+that, after all, the missing Betty Blackwell had had something to do
+with it? In fact, could the thing have been done by a woman?
+
+"Most persons," remarked Craig, as he studied the marks on the door,
+"don't know enough about jimmies. Against them an ordinary door-lock or
+window-catch is no protection. With a jimmy eighteen inches long, even
+an anemic burglar can exert a pressure sufficient to lift two tons. Not
+one door-lock in ten thousand can stand this strain. It's like using a
+hammer to kill a fly. Really, the only use of locks is to keep out
+sneak thieves and to compel the modern, scientific educated burglar to
+make a noise. This fellow, however, was no sneak thief."
+
+He continued to adjust the machine which he had brought. Langhorne
+watched minutely, but did not say anything.
+
+"Bertillon used to call this his mechanical burglar detector,"
+continued Kennedy. "As you see, this frame carries two dynamometers of
+unequal power. The stronger, which has a high maximum capacity of
+several tons, is designed for the measurement of vertical efforts. The
+other measures horizontal efforts. The test is made by inserting the
+end of a jimmy or other burglar's tool and endeavouring to produce
+impressions similar to those which have been found on doors or windows.
+The index of the dynamometer moves in such a way as to make a permanent
+record of the pressure exerted. The horizontal or traction dynamometer
+registers the other component of pressure."
+
+He pressed down on the machine. "There was a pressure here of
+considerably over two tons," he remarked at length, "with a very high
+horizontal traction of over four hundred pounds. What I wanted to get
+at was whether this could have been done by a man, woman, or child, or
+perhaps by several persons. In this case, it was clearly no mere fake
+to cover up the opening of the door by a key. It was a genuine attempt.
+Nor could it have been done by a woman. No, that is the work of a man,
+a powerful man, too, accustomed to the use of the jimmy."
+
+I fancied that a shade of satisfaction crossed the otherwise impassive
+face of Langhorne. Was it because the Bertillon dynamometer appeared at
+first sight to exonerate Betty Blackwell, at least so far, from any
+connection with the crime? It was difficult to say.
+
+Important though it was, however, to clear up at the start just what
+sort of person was connected with the breaking of the door I could not
+but feel that Kennedy had some purpose in deferring and minimizing for
+the present what, to me at least, was the greater mystery, the entering
+of the safe itself.
+
+He was still studying and comparing the marks on the door and the
+record made on the dynamometer, when the office telephone rang and
+Langhorne was summoned to answer it. Instead of taking the call in his
+own office, he chose to answer it at the switchboard, perhaps because
+that would allow him to keep an eye also on us.
+
+Whatever his purpose, it likewise enabled us to keep an ear on him, and
+it was with surprise which both Kennedy and I had great difficulty in
+concealing, that we heard him reply, "Hello--yes--oh, Mrs. Ogleby,
+good-morning. How are you? That's good. So you, too, read the papers.
+No, I haven't lost anything of importance, thank you. Nothing serious,
+you know. The papers like to get hold of such things and play them up.
+I have a couple of reporters here now. Heaven knows what they are
+doing, but I can foresee some more unpaid advertising for the firm in
+it. Thank you again for your interest. You haven't forgotten the studio
+dance I'm giving on the twelfth? No--that's fine. I hope you'll come,
+even if Martin has another engagement. Fine. Well-good-bye."
+
+He hung up the receiver with a mingled air of gratification and
+exasperation, I fancied.
+
+"Haven't you fellows finished yet?" he asked finally, coming over to
+us, a little brusquely.
+
+"Just about," returned Kennedy, who had by this time begun slowly to
+dismember and pack up the dynamometer, determined to take advantage of
+every minute both to observe Langhorne and to fix in his mind the
+general lay-out of the office.
+
+"Everybody seems to be interested in me this morning," he observed, for
+the moment forgetting the embargo he had imposed on his own words.
+
+As for myself, I saw at once that others besides ourselves were keenly
+interested in this robbery.
+
+"There," remarked Kennedy when at last he had finished packing up the
+dynamometer into two packages. "At least, Mr. Langhorne, you have the
+satisfaction of knowing that it was in all probability a man, a strong
+man, and one experienced in forcing doors who succeeded in entering
+your office during your brief absence last night."
+
+Langhorne shrugged his shoulders non-committally, but it was evident
+that he was greatly relieved and he could not conceal his interest in
+what Kennedy was doing, even though he had succeeded in conveying the
+impression that it was a matter of indifference to him.
+
+"I suppose you keep a great many of your valuable papers in safety
+deposit vaults," ventured Kennedy, finishing up the wrapping of the two
+packages, "as well as your personal papers perhaps at home."
+
+He made the remark in a casual manner, but Langhorne was too keen to
+fall into the trap.
+
+"Really," he said with an air of finality, "I must decline to be
+interviewed at present. Good-day, gentlemen."
+
+"A slippery customer," was Craig's comment when we reached the street
+outside the office. "By the way, evidently Mrs. Ogleby is leaving no
+stone unturned in her effort to locate that Black Book and protect
+herself."
+
+I said nothing. Langhorne's manner, self-confident to the point of
+bravado, had baffled me. I began to feel that even if he had lost the
+detectaphone record, his was the nature to carry out the bluff of still
+having it, in much the same manner that he would have played the market
+on a shoestring or made the most of an unfilled four-card flush in a
+game of poker.
+
+Kennedy was far from being discouraged, however. Indeed, it seemed as
+if he really enjoyed matching his wit against the subtlety of a man
+like Langhorne, even more than against one the type of Dorgan and
+Murtha.
+
+"I want to see Carton and I don't want to carry these bundles all over
+the city," he remarked, changing the subject for the moment, as he
+turned into a public pay station. "I'll ring him up and have him meet
+us at the laboratory, if I can."
+
+A moment later he emerged, excited, perspiring from the closeness of
+the telephone booth.
+
+"Carton has some news--a letter--that's all he would say," he
+exclaimed. "He'll meet us at the laboratory."
+
+We hastily resumed our uptown journey.
+
+"What do you think it is?" I asked. "About Betty Blackwell?"
+
+Kennedy shook his head non-committally. "I don't know. But he has some
+of his county detectives watching Dorgan and Murtha in that Black Book
+case, I know. They are worried. It doesn't look as though they, at
+least, had the record--that is, if Langhorne has really lost it."
+
+I wondered whether Langhorne might not, after all, as Kennedy had
+hinted, have concealed it elsewhere. The activity of Dorgan and Murtha
+might indicate that they knew more about the robbery than appeared yet
+on the surface. Had they failed in it? Had they been double-crossed by
+the man they had chosen for the work, assuming that they knew of and
+had planned the "job"?
+
+The safe-breaking and the way Langhorne took it had served to
+complicate the case even further. While we had before been reasonably
+sure that Langhorne had the book, now we were sure of nothing.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+THE ANONYMOUS LETTER
+
+
+"What do you make of that?" inquired Carton half an hour later as he
+met us breathlessly at the laboratory.
+
+He unfolded a letter over which he had evidently been puzzling
+considerably. It was written, or rather typewritten, on plain paper.
+The envelope was plain and bore no marks of identification, except
+possibly that it had been mailed uptown.
+
+The letter ran:
+
+DEAR SIR:
+
+Although this is an anonymous letter, I beg that you will not consider
+it such, since it will be plain to you that there is good reason for my
+wishing to remain nameless.
+
+I want to tell you of some things that have taken place recently at a
+little hotel in the West Fifties. No doubt you know of the place
+already--the Little Montmartre.
+
+There are several young and wealthy men who frequent this resort. I do
+not dare tell you their names, but one is a well-known club-man and man
+about town, another is a banker and broker, also well known, and a
+third is a lawyer. I might also mention an intimate friend of theirs,
+though not of their position in society--a doctor who has somewhat of a
+reputation among the class of people who frequent the Little
+Montmartre, ready to furnish them with anything from a medical
+certificate to drugs and treatment.
+
+I have read a great deal in the newspapers lately of the disappearance
+of Betty Blackwell, and her case interests me. I think you will find
+that it will repay you to look into the hint I have given. I don't
+think it is necessary to say any more. Indeed it may be dangerous to
+me, and I beg that you will not even show this letter to anyone except
+those associated with you and then, please, only with the understanding
+that it is to go no farther.
+
+Betty Blackwell is not at this hotel, but I am sure that some of those
+whose wild orgies have scandalized even the Little Montmartre know
+something about her.
+
+ Yours truly,
+ AN OUTCAST.
+
+Kennedy looked up quickly at Carton as he finished reading the letter.
+
+"Typical," he remarked. "Anonymous letters occasionally are of a
+friendly nature, but usually they reflect with more or less severity
+upon the conduct or character of someone. They usually receive little
+attention, but sometimes they are of the most serious character. In
+many instances they are most important links in chains of evidence
+pointing to grave crimes.
+
+"It is possible to draw certain conclusions from such letters at once.
+For instance, it is a surprising fact that in a large number of cases
+the anonymous letter writer is a woman, who may write what it does not
+seem possible she could write. Such letters often by their writing,
+materials used, composition and general form indicate at once the sex
+of the writer and frequently show nationality, age, education, and
+occupation. These facts may often point to the probable author.
+
+"Now in this case the writer evidently was well educated. Assumed
+illiteracy is a frequent disguise, but it is impossible for an author
+to assume a literacy he or she does not possess. Then, too, women are
+more apt to assume the characteristics of men than men of women. There
+are many things to be considered. Too bad it wasn't in ordinary
+handwriting. That would have shown much more. However, we shall try our
+best with what we have here. What impressed you about it?"
+
+"Well," remarked Carton, "the thing that impressed me was that as usual
+and as I fully expected, the trail leads right back to protected vice
+and commercialized graft. This Little Montmartre is one of the swellest
+of such resorts in the city, the legitimate successor to the scores and
+hundreds of places which the authorities and the vice investigators
+have closed recently. In fact, Kennedy, I consider it more dangerous,
+because it is run, on the surface at least, just like any of the
+first-class hotels. There's no violation of law there, at least not
+openly."
+
+Craig had continued to examine the letter closely. "So, you have
+already investigated the Little Montmartre?" he queried, drawing from
+his pocket a little strip of glass and laying it down carefully over
+the letter.
+
+"Indeed I have," returned the District Attorney, watching Kennedy
+curiously. "It is a place with a very unsavoury reputation. And yet I
+have been able to get nothing on it. They are so confounded clever.
+There is never any outward violation of law; they adhere strictly to
+the letter of the rule of outward decency."
+
+Over the typewritten characters Kennedy had placed the strip of glass
+and I could see that it was ruled into little oblongs, into each of
+which one of the type of the typewritten sheet seemed to fall.
+Apparently he had forgotten the contents of the letter in his interest
+in the text itself. He held the paper up to the light and seemed to
+study its texture and thickness. Then he examined the typed characters
+more closely with a little pocket magnifying glass, his lips moving as
+if he were counting something. Next he seized a mass of correspondence
+on his desk and began comparing the letter with others, apparently to
+determine just the shade of writing of the ribbon. Finally he gave it
+up and leaned back in his chair regarding us.
+
+"It is written in the regular pica type," he remarked thoughtfully,
+"and on a machine that has seen considerable rough usage, although it
+is not an old machine. It will take me a little time to identify the
+make, but after I have done that, I think I could identify the
+particular machine itself the moment I saw it. You see, it is only a
+clue that would serve to fix it once you found that machine. The point
+is, after all, to find it. But once found, I am sure we shall be close
+to the source of the letter. I may keep this and study it at my
+leisure?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+For a moment Carton was silent. Then it seemed as though the matter of
+Betty Blackwell brought to mind what he had read in the morning papers.
+
+"That robbery of Langhorne's safe was a most peculiar thing, wasn't
+it?" he meditated. "I suppose you know what Miss Blackwell was?"
+
+"Langhorne's stenographer and secretary, of course," I replied quickly.
+
+"Yes, I know. But I mean what she had actually done? I don't believe
+you do. My county detectives found out only last night." Kennedy paused
+in his rummaging among some bottles to which he had turned at the
+mention of the safe robbery. "No--what was it?" he asked.
+
+Carton bent forward as if our own walls might have ears and said in a
+low voice: "She was the operator who took down the detectaphone
+conversations at the other end of the wire in a furnished room in the
+house next to Gastron's."
+
+He drew back to see what effect the intelligence had on us, then
+resumed slowly: "Yes, I've had my men out on the case. That is what
+they think. I believe she often executed little confidential
+commissions for Langhorne, sometimes things that took her on short
+trips out of town. There is a possibility that she may be on a mission
+of that sort. But I think--it's this Black Book case that involves her
+now."
+
+"Langhorne wouldn't talk much about anything," I put in, hastily
+remembering his manner. "He may not be responsible--but from his
+actions I'd wager he knows more about her than appears."
+
+"Just so," agreed Carton. "If my men can find out that she was the
+operator who 'listened in' and got the notes and the transcript of the
+Black Book, then she becomes a person of importance in the case and the
+fact must be known to others who are interested. Why," he pursued,
+"don't you see what it means? If she is out of the way, there is no one
+to swear to the accuracy of the notes in the record, no one to identify
+the voices--even if we do manage finally to locate the thing."
+
+"Dorgan and the rest are certainly leaving nothing undone to shake the
+validity of the record," ruminated Kennedy, accepting for the moment at
+least Carton's explanation of the disappearance of Miss Blackwell.
+"Have you any idea what might have happened to her?"
+
+Carton shook his head negatively. "There are several explanations," he
+replied slowly. "As far as we have been able to find out she led a
+model life, at home with her mother and sister. Except for the few
+commissions for Langhorne and lately when she was out rather late
+taking the detectaphone notes, she was very quiet,--in fact devoted to
+her mother and the education of her younger sister."
+
+"What sort of place was it in which the receivers of the detectaphone
+were located--do you know?" asked Kennedy quickly.
+
+"Yes, it seems to be a very respectable boardinghouse," answered
+Carton. "She came there with a grip about a week ago and hired a room,
+saying she was out of town a great deal. Just about the same time a
+young man, who posed as a student in electrical engineering at some
+school uptown, left. It must have been he who installed the
+detectaphone--perhaps with the aid of a waiter in Gastron's. At any
+rate, she seems to have been alone in the boarding-house--that is, I
+mean, not acquainted with any of the other guests--during the time when
+she was taking down the record. Dorgan traced the wires, outside the
+two buildings, to her rooms, but she was not there. In fact there was
+nothing there but a grip with a few articles that give no clue to
+anything. Somehow she must have heard of it, for no one knows anything
+about her, since then."
+
+"Perhaps Langhorne is keeping her out of the way so that no one can
+tamper with her testimony," I suggested.
+
+"It's possible," said Carton in a tone that showed that he did not
+believe in that explanation. "How about that safe robbery, Kennedy?
+Some of the papers hinted that she might have known something of that.
+I had a man down there watching, afterwards, but I had cautioned him to
+be careful and keep under cover. One of the elevator boys told him that
+the robbers had made a hole in the safe. What did he mean? Did you see
+it?"
+
+Rapidly Kennedy sketched what we had done, telling the story of how the
+dynamometer had at least partly exonerated Betty Blackwell.
+
+When he reached the description of the hole in the safe, Carton was
+absolutely incredulous. As for myself, it presented a mystery which I
+found absolutely inexplicable. How it was possible in such a short time
+to make a hole in a safe by any known means, I could not understand. In
+fact, if I had not seen it myself, I should have been even more
+sceptical than Carton.
+
+Kennedy, however, made no reply immediately to our expressions of
+doubt. He had found and set apart from the rest a couple of little
+glass bottles with ground glass stoppers. Then he took a thick piece of
+steel and laid it across a couple of blocks of wood, under which was a
+second steel plate.
+
+Without a word of explanation, he took the glass stopper out of the
+larger bottle and poured some of the contents on the upper plate of
+steel. There it lay, a little mound of reddish powder. Then he took a
+little powder of another kind from the other bottle.
+
+He lighted a match and ignited the second pile of powder.
+
+"Stand back--close to the wall--shield your eyes," he called to us.
+
+He had dropped the burning mass on the red powder and in two or three
+leaps he joined us at the far end of the room.
+
+Almost instantly a dazzling, intense flame broke out. It seemed to
+sizzle and crackle. With bated breath we waited and, as best we could,
+shielding our eyes from the glare, watched.
+
+It was almost incredible, but that glowing mass of powder seemed
+literally to be sinking, sinking right down into the cold steel. In
+tense silence we waited. On the ceiling we could see the reflection of
+the molten mass in the cup which it had burned for itself in the cold
+steel plate.
+
+At last it fell through to the lower piece of steel, on which it burnt
+itself out--fell through as the burning roof of a frame building might
+have fallen into the building.
+
+Neither Carton nor I spoke a word, but as we now cautiously advanced
+with Kennedy and peered over the steel plate we instinctively turned to
+Craig for an explanation. Carton seemed to regard him as if he were
+some uncanny mortal. For, there in the steel plate, was a hole. As I
+looked at the clean-cut edges, I saw that it was smaller but identical
+in nature with that which we had seen in the safe in Langhorne's office.
+
+"Wonderful!" ejaculated Carton. "What is it?"
+
+"Thermit," was all Kennedy said, as just a trace of a smile of
+satisfaction flitted over his face.
+
+"Thermit?" echoed Carton, still as mystified as before.
+
+"Yes, an invention of a chemist named Goldschmidt, of Essen, Germany.
+It is composed of iron oxide, such as conies off a blacksmith's anvil
+or the rolls of a rolling-mill, and powdered metallic aluminum. You
+could thrust a red-hot bar into it without setting it off, but when you
+light a little magnesium powder and drop it on thermit, a combustion is
+started that quickly reaches fifty-four hundred degrees Fahrenheit. It
+has the peculiar property of concentrating its heat to the immediate
+spot on which it is placed. It is one of the most powerful oxidizing
+agents known, and it doesn't even melt the rest of the steel surface.
+You see how it ate its way directly through this plate. Steel, hard or
+soft, tempered, annealed, chrome, or Harveyized--it all burns just as
+fast and just as easily. And it's comparatively inexpensive, also. This
+is an experiment Goldschmidt it fond of showing his students--burning
+holes in one--and two-inch steel plates. It is the same with a
+safe--only you need more of the stuff. Either black or red thermit will
+do the trick equally well, however."
+
+Neither of us said anything. There was nothing to say except to feel
+and express amazement.
+
+"Someone uncommonly clever or instructed by someone uncommonly clever,
+must have done that job at Langhorne's," added Craig. "Have you any
+idea who might pull off such a thing for Dorgan or Murtha?" he asked of
+Carton.
+
+"There's a possible suspect," answered Carton slowly, "but since I've
+seen this wonderful exhibition of what thermit can do, I'm almost
+ashamed to mention his name. He's not in the class that would be likely
+to use such things."
+
+"Oh," laughed Kennedy, "never think it. Don't you suppose the crooks
+read the scientific and technical papers? Believe me, they have known
+about thermit as long as I have. Safes are constructed now that are
+proof against even that, and other methods of attack. No indeed, your
+modern scientific cracksman keeps abreast of the times in his field
+better than you imagine. Our only protection is that fortunately
+science always keeps several laps ahead of him in the race--and
+besides, we have organized society to meet all such perils. It may be
+that the very cleverness of the fellow will be his own undoing. The
+unusual criminal is often that much the easier to run down. It narrows
+the number of suspects."
+
+"Well," rejoined Carton, not as confident now as when he had first met
+us in the laboratory, "then there is a possible suspect--a fellow known
+in the underworld as 'Dopey' Jack--Jack Rubano. He's a clever
+fellow--no doubt. But I hardly think he's capable of that, although I
+should call him a rather advanced yeggman."
+
+"What makes you suspect him?" asked Kennedy eagerly.
+
+"Well," temporized Carton, "I haven't anything 'on' him in this
+connection, it's true. But we've been trying to find him and can't seem
+to locate him in connection with primary frauds in Murtha's own
+district. Dopey Jack is the leader of a gang of gunmen over there and
+is Murtha's first lieutenant whenever there is a tough political battle
+of the organization either at the primaries or on Election Day."
+
+"Has a record, I suppose?" prompted Kennedy.
+
+"Would have--if it wasn't for the influence of Murtha," rejoined Carton.
+
+I had heard, in knocking about the city, of Dopey Jack Rubano. That was
+the picturesque title by which he was known to the police and his
+enemies as well as to his devoted followers. A few years before, he had
+begun his career fighting in "preliminaries" at the prize fight clubs
+on the lower East Side.
+
+He had begun life with a better chance than most slum boys, for he had
+rugged health and an unusually sturdy body. His very strength had been
+his ruin. Working decently for wages, he had been told by other petty
+gang leaders that he was a "sucker," when he could get many times as
+much for boxing a few rounds at some "athletic" club. He tried out the
+game with many willing instructors and found that it was easy money.
+
+Jack began to wear better clothes and study the methods of other young
+men who never worked but always seemed to have plenty of money. They
+were his pals and showed him how it was done. It wasn't long before he
+learned that he could often get more by hitting a man with a blackjack
+than by using his fists in the roped ring. Then, too, there were
+various ways of blackmail and extortion that were simple, safe, and
+lucrative. He might be arrested, but he early found that by making
+himself useful to some politicians, they could fix that minor
+difficulty in the life.
+
+Thus because he was not only strong and brutal, but had a sort of
+ability and some education, Dopey Jack quickly rose to a position of
+minor leadership--had his own incipient "gang," his own "lobbygows."
+His following increased as he rose in gangland, and finally he came to
+be closely associated with Murtha himself on one hand and the "guns"
+and other criminals of the underworld who frequented the stuss games,
+where they gambled away the products of their crimes, on the other.
+
+Everyone knew Dopey Jack. He had been charged with many crimes, but
+always through the aid of "the big fellows" he avoided the penitentiary
+and every fresh and futile attempt to end his career increased the
+numbers and reverence of his followers. His had been the history and he
+was the pattern now of practically every gang leader of consequence in
+the city. The fight club had been his testing ground. There he had
+learned the code, which can be summarized in two words, "Don't squeal."
+For gangland hates nothing so much as a "snitch." As a beginner he
+could be trusted to commit any crime assigned to him and go to prison,
+perhaps the chair, rather than betray a leader. As a leader he had
+those under him trained in the same code. That still was his code to
+those above him in the System.
+
+"We want him for frauds at the primaries," repeated Carton, "at least,
+if we can find him, we can hold him on that for a time. I thought
+perhaps he might know something of the robbery--and about the
+disappearance of the girl, too.
+
+"Oh," he continued, "there are lots of things against him. Why, only
+last week there was a dance of a rival association of gang leaders.
+Against them Dopey Jack led a band of his own followers and in the
+ensuing pistol battle a passer-by was killed. Of course we can't
+connect Dopey Jack with his death, but--then we know as well as we know
+anything in gangland that he was responsible."
+
+"I suppose it isn't impossible that he may know something about the
+disappearance of Miss Blackwell," remarked Kennedy.
+
+"No," replied Carton, "not at all, although, so far, there is
+absolutely no clue as far as I can figure out. She may have been bought
+off or she may have been kidnapped."
+
+"In either case the missing girl must be found," said Craig. "We must
+get someone interested in her case who knows something about what may
+happen to a girl in New York."
+
+Carton had been revolving the matter in his mind. "By George," he
+exclaimed suddenly, "I think I know just the person to take up that
+case for us--it's quite in her line. Can you spare the time to run down
+to the Reform League headquarters with me?"
+
+"Nothing could be more important, just at the minute," replied Craig.
+
+The telephone buzzed and he answered it, a moment later handing the
+receiver to Carton.
+
+"It's your office," he said. "One of the assistant district attorneys
+wants you on the wire."
+
+As Carton hung up the receiver he turned to us with a look of great
+satisfaction.
+
+"Dopey Jack has just been arrested," he announced. "He has shut up like
+an oyster, but we think we can at least hold him for a few days this
+time until we sift down some of these clues."
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+THE SUFFRAGETTE SECRETARY
+
+
+Carton took us directly to the campaign headquarters of the Reform
+League, where his fight for political life was being conducted.
+
+We found the offices in the tower of a skyscraper, whence was pouring
+forth a torrent of appeal to the people, in printed and oral form of
+every kind, urging them to stand shoulder to shoulder for good
+government and vote the "ring" out of power.
+
+There seemed to me to be a different tone to the place from that which
+I had ordinarily associated with political headquarters in previous
+campaigns. There was a notable absence of the old-fashioned politicians
+and of the air of intrigue laden with tobacco.
+
+Rather, there was an air of earnestness and efficiency, which was
+decidedly encouraging and hopeful. It seemed to speak of a new era in
+politics when things were to be done in the open instead of at secret
+meetings and scandalous dinners, as Dorgan did them at Gastron's.
+
+Maps of the city were hanging on the walls, some stuck full of various
+coloured pins, denoting the condition of the canvass. Other maps of the
+city in colours, divided into all sorts of districts, told how fared
+the battle in the various strongholds of Boss Dorgan and Sub-boss
+Murtha.
+
+Huge systems of card indexes, loose leaf devices, labour-saving
+appliances for getting out a vast amount of campaign "literature" in a
+hurry; in short, a perfect system, such as a great, well-managed
+business might have been proud of, were in evidence everywhere one
+looked.
+
+Work was going ahead in every department under high pressure, for the
+campaign, which had been more than usually heated, was now drawing to a
+close. Indeed, it would have taken no great astuteness, even without
+one's being told, to deduce merely from the surroundings that the
+people here were engaged in the annual struggle of seeking the votes of
+their fellow-citizens for reform and were nearly worn out by the
+arduous endeavour.
+
+It had been, as I have said, the bitterest campaign in years. Formerly
+the reformers had been of the "silk-stocking" type, but now a new and
+younger generation was coming upon the stage, a generation which had
+been trained to achieve results, ambitious to attain what in former
+years had been considered impossible. The Reform League was making a
+stiff campaign and the System was, by the same token, more frightened
+than ever before.
+
+Carton was fortunate in having shaken off the thralldom of the old
+bosses even before the popular uprising against them had assumed such
+proportions as to warrant anyone in taking his political life in his
+hands by defying the powers that ruled behind the scenes. In fact, the
+Reform League itself owed its existence to a fortunate conjunction of
+both moral and economic conditions which demanded progress.
+
+Of course, the League did not have such a big "barrel" as their
+opponents under Dorgan. But, at least they did have many willing
+workers, men and women, who were ready to sacrifice something for the
+advancement of the principles for which they stood.
+
+In one part of the suite of offices which had been leased by the
+League, Carton had had assigned to him an office of his own, and it was
+to this office that he led us, after a word with the boy who guarded
+the approach to the door, and an exchange of greetings with various
+workers and visitors in the outside office.
+
+We seated ourselves while Carton ran his eye through some letters that
+had been left on his desk for his attention.
+
+A moment later the door of his office opened and a young lady in a very
+stunning street dress, with a pretty little rakish hat and a
+tantalizing veil, stood a moment, hesitated, and then was about to turn
+back with an apology for intruding on what looked like a conference.
+
+"Good-morning, Miss Ashton," greeted Carton, laying down the letters
+instantly. "You're just the person I want to see."
+
+The girl, with a portfolio of papers in her hand, smiled and he quickly
+crossed the room and held the door open, as he whispered a word or two
+to her.
+
+She was a handsome girl, something more than even pretty. The lithe
+gracefulness of her figure spoke of familiarity with both tennis and
+tango, and her face with its well-chiselled profile denoted
+intellectuality from which no touch of really feminine charm had been
+removed by the fearsome process of the creation of the modern woman.
+Sincerity as well as humour looked out from the liquid depths of her
+blue eyes beneath the wavy masses of blonde hair. She was good to look
+at and we looked, irresistibly.
+
+"Let me introduce Professor Kennedy and Mr. Jameson, Miss Ashton,"
+began Carton, adding: "Of course you have heard of Miss Margaret
+Ashton, the suffragist leader? She is the head of our press bureau, you
+know. She's making a great fight for us here--a winning fight."
+
+It seemed from the heightened look of determination which set Carton's
+face in deeper lines that Miss Ashton had that indispensable political
+quality of inspiring both confidence and enthusiasm in those who worked
+with her.
+
+"It is indeed a great pleasure to meet you," remarked Kennedy. "Both
+Mr. Jameson and myself have heard and read a great deal about your
+work, though we seem never before to have had the pleasure of meeting
+you."
+
+Miss Ashton, I recalled, was a very clever girl, a graduate of a famous
+woman's college, and had had several years of newspaper experience
+before she became a leader in the cause of equal suffrage.
+
+The Ashtons were well known in society and it was a sore trial to some
+of her conservative friends that she should reject what they considered
+the proper "sphere" for women and choose to go out into life and devote
+herself to doing something that was worth while, rather than to fritter
+her time and energy away on the gaiety and inconsequentiality of social
+life.
+
+Among those friends, I had understood, was Hartley Langhorne himself.
+He was older than Miss Ashton, but had belonged to the same social
+circle and had always held her in high regard. In fact the attentions
+he paid her had long been noticeable, the more so as she seemed
+politely unaffected by them.
+
+Carton had scarcely more than introduced us, yet already I felt sure
+that I scented a romance behind the ordinarily prosaic conduct of a
+campaign press bureau.
+
+It is far from my intention even to hint that the ability or success of
+the head of the press bureau were not all her own or were in any degree
+overrated. But it struck me, both then and often later, that the
+candidate for District Attorney had an extraordinary interest in the
+newspaper campaign, much more, for instance, than in the speakers'
+bureau. I am sure that it was not wholly accounted for by the fact that
+publicity is playing a more and more important part in political
+campaigning.
+
+Nevertheless, as we came to know afterwards such innovations as her
+card index system by election districts all over the city, showing the
+attitude of the various newspaper editors, local leaders, and other
+influential citizens, recording changes of sentiment and possible
+openings for future work, all were very full and valuable. Kennedy, who
+had a regular pigeon-hole mind for facts himself, was visibly impressed
+by the huge mechanical memory built up by Miss Ashton.
+
+Though he said nothing to me, I knew that Craig also had observed the
+state of affairs between the reform candidate and the suffrage leader.
+
+"You see, Miss Ashton," explained Carton, "someone has placed a
+detectaphone in the private dining-room of Dorgan at Gastron's. I heard
+of it first through Mrs. Ogleby, who attended one of the dinners and
+was terribly afraid her name would be connected with them if the record
+should ever be published."
+
+"Mrs. Ogleby?" cried Miss Ashton quickly. "She--at a dinner--with Mr.
+Murtha? I--I can't believe it."
+
+Carton said nothing. Whether he knew more about Mrs. Ogleby than he
+cared to tell, I could not even guess.
+
+As he went on briefly summarizing the story, Miss Ashton shot a quick
+glance or two at him.
+
+Carton noticed it, but appeared not to do so. "I suppose," he
+concluded, "that she thought I was the only person capable of
+eavesdropping. As a matter of fact, I think the instrument was put in
+by Hartley Langhorne as part of the fight that is going on fiercely
+under the surface in the organization."
+
+It was Carton's turn now, I fancied, to observe Miss Ashton more
+closely. As far as I could see, the information was a matter of perfect
+indifference to her.
+
+Carton did not say it in so many words, but one could not help
+gathering that rather than seem to be pursuing a possible rival and
+using his official position in order to do it, he was not considering
+Langhorne in any other light than as a mere actor in the drama between
+himself and Dorgan and Murtha.
+
+"Now," he concluded, "the point of the whole thing is this, Miss
+Ashton. We have learned that Betty Blackwell--you know the case--who
+took the notes over the detectaphone for the Black Book, has suddenly
+and mysteriously disappeared. If she is gone, it may be difficult to
+prove anything, even if we get the book. Miss Blackwell happens to be a
+stenographer in the office of Langhorne & Westlake."
+
+For the first time, Miss Ashton seemed to show a sign of embarrassment.
+Evidently she would just as well have had Miss Blackwell in some other
+connection.
+
+"Perhaps you would rather have nothing to do with it," suggested
+Carton, "but I know that you were always interested in things of the
+sort that happen to girls in the city and thought perhaps you could
+advise us, even if you don't feel like personally taking up the case."
+
+"Oh, it doesn't--matter," she murmured. "Of course, the first thing for
+us to do is, as you say, to find what has become of Betty Blackwell."
+
+Carton turned suddenly at the word "us," but Miss Ashton was still
+studying the pattern of the rug.
+
+"Do you know any more about her?" she asked at length.
+
+As fully as possible the District Attorney repeated what he had already
+told us. Miss Ashton seemed to be more than interested in the story of
+the disappearance of Langhorne's stenographer.
+
+As Carton unfolded the meagre details of what we knew so far, Miss
+Ashton appeared to be torn by conflicting opinions. The more she
+thought of what might possibly have happened to the unfortunate girl,
+the more aroused about the case she seemed to become.
+
+Carton had evidently calculated on enlisting her sympathies, knowing
+how she felt toward many of the social and economic injustices toward
+women, and particularly girls.
+
+"If Mr. Murtha or Mr. Dorgan is responsible in any way for any harm to
+her," she said finally, her earnest eyes now ablaze with indignation,
+"I shall not rest until someone is punished."
+
+Kennedy had been watching her emotions keenly, I suspect, to see
+whether she connected Langhorne in any way with the disappearance. I
+could see it interested him that she did not seem even to consider that
+Langhorne might be responsible. Whether her intuition was correct or
+not, it was at least better at present than any guess that we three
+might have made.
+
+"They control so many forces for evil," she went on, "that there is no
+telling what they might command against a defenceless girl like her
+when it is a question of their political power."
+
+"Then," pursued Kennedy, pacing the floor thoughtfully, "the next
+question is, How are we to proceed? The first step naturally will be
+the investigation of this Little Montmartre. How is it to be done? I
+presume you don't want to go up there and look the place over yourself,
+do you, Carton?"
+
+"Most certainly not," said Carton emphatically. "Not if you want this
+case to go any further. Why, I can't walk around a corner now without a
+general scurry for the cyclone cellars. They all know me, and those who
+don't are watching for me. On the contrary, if you are going to start
+there I had better execute a flank movement in Queens or Jersey to
+divert attention. Really, I mean it. I had better keep in the
+background. But I'll tell you what I would like to do."
+
+Carton hesitated and came to a full stop.
+
+"What's the matter?" asked Kennedy quickly, noticing the hesitation.
+
+"Why--I--er--didn't know just how you'd take a suggestion--that's all."
+
+"Thankfully. What is it?"
+
+"You know young Haxworth?"
+
+"You mean the son of the millionaire who is investigating vice and whom
+the newspapers are poking fun at?"
+
+"Yes. Those papers make me tired. He has been working, you know, with
+me in this matter. He is really serious about it, too. He has a corps
+of investigators of his own already. Well, there is one of them, a
+woman detective named Clare Kendall, who is the brains of the whole
+Haxworth outfit. If you would be willing to have them--er--to have her
+co-operate with you, I think I could persuade Haxworth---"
+
+"Oh," broke in Kennedy with a laugh. "I see. You think perhaps there
+might be some professional jealousy? On the contrary, it solves a
+problem I was already considering. Of course we shall need a woman in
+this case, one with a rare amount of discretion and ability. Yes, by
+all means let us call in Miss Kendall, and let us take every advantage
+we can of what she has already accomplished."
+
+Carton seized the telephone.
+
+"Tell her to meet us at my laboratory in half an hour," interposed
+Kennedy. "You will come along?"
+
+"I can't. Court opens in twenty minutes and there is a motion I must
+argue myself."
+
+Miss Ashton appeared to be greatly gratified at Craig's reception of
+the suggestion, and Carton noticed it.
+
+"Oh, yes," recollected Carton, "by the way, as I was on my way down
+here, my office called up and told me that they had succeeded in
+locating and arresting Dopey Jack. That ought to please you,--it will
+mean cutting down the number of those East Side 'rackets' considerably
+if we succeed with him."
+
+"Good!" she exclaimed. "Yes, I don't think there were any worse affairs
+than the dances of that Jack Rubano Association. They have got hold of
+more young girls and caused more tragedies than any other gang. If you
+need any help in getting together evidence, Mr. Carton, I shall be only
+too glad to help you. I have several old scores myself to settle with
+that young tough."
+
+"Thank you," said Carton. "I shall need your help, if we are to do
+anything. Of course, we can hold him only for primary frauds just now,
+but I may be able to do something about that dance that he broke up as
+a shooting affray."
+
+Miss Ashton nodded encouragingly.
+
+"And," he went on, "it's barely possible that he may know something, or
+some of his followers may, about the robbery of Mr. Langhorne's
+safe,--if not about the complete and mysterious disappearance of Betty
+Blackwell."
+
+"They'd stop at nothing to save their precious skins," commented Miss
+Ashton. "Perhaps that is a good lead. At any rate I can suggest that to
+the various societies and other agencies which I intend to set in
+motion trying to trace what has happened to her. You can have him held
+until they have time to report?"
+
+"I shall make it a point to do so at any cost," he returned, "and I can
+say only this, that we are all deeply indebted to you for the interest
+you have shown in the case."
+
+"Not at all," she replied enthusiastically, evidently having overcome
+the first hesitation which had existed because Miss Blackwell had been
+Langhorne's stenographer.
+
+Miss Ashton had quickly jotted down in her notebook the best
+description we could give of the missing girl, her address, and other
+facts about her, and a list of those whom she meant to start at work on
+the case.
+
+For a moment she hesitated over one name, then with a sudden resolution
+wrote it down.
+
+"I intend to see Hartley Langhorne about it, too," she added frankly.
+"Perhaps he may tell something of importance, after all."
+
+I am sure that this final resolution cost her more than all the rest.
+Carton would never have asked it of her, yet was gratified that she saw
+it to be her duty to leave nothing undone in tracing the girl, not even
+considering the possibility of offending Langhorne.
+
+"Decent people don't seem to realize," she remarked as she shut her
+little notebook and slipped it back into her chatelaine, "how the
+System and the underworld really do affect them. They think it is all
+something apart from the rest of us, and never consider how closely we
+are all bound together and how easy it is for the lowest and most
+vicious stratum in the social order to pass over and affect the
+highest."
+
+"That's exactly the point," agreed Carton. "Take this very case. It
+goes from Wall Street to gangland, from Gastron's down to the
+underworld gambling joints of Dopey Jack and the rest."
+
+"Society--gambling," mused Miss Ashton, taking out her notebook again.
+"That reminds me of Martin Ogleby. I must see Mary and try to warn her
+against some of those sporty friends of her husband's."
+
+"Please, Miss Ashton," put in Carton quickly, "don't mention that I
+have told you of the detectaphone record. It might do more harm than
+good, just at present. For a time at least, I think we should try to
+keep under cover."
+
+Whether or not that was his real reason, he turned now to Kennedy for
+support. We had been, for the most part, silent spectators of what had
+been happening.
+
+"I think so--for the present--at least as far as our knowledge of the
+Black Book goes," acquiesced Craig. He had turned to Miss Ashton and
+made no effort to conceal the admiration which he felt for her, after
+even so brief an acquaintance. "I think Miss Ashton can be depended
+upon to play her part in the game perfectly. I, for one, want to thank
+her most heartily for the way in which she has joined us."
+
+"Thank you," she smiled, as she rose to go to her own office. "Oh, you
+can always depend on me," she assured us as she gathered up her
+portfolio of papers, "where there are the interests of a girl like
+Betty Blackwell involved!"
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+THE WOMAN DETECTIVE
+
+
+Half an hour later, a tall, striking, self-reliant young woman with an
+engaging smile opened the laboratory door and asked for Professor
+Kennedy.
+
+"Miss Kendall?" Craig inquired, coming forward to meet her.
+
+She was dark-haired, with regular features and an expression which
+showed a high degree of intelligence. Her clear grey eyes seemed to
+penetrate and tear the mask off you. It was not only her features and
+eyes that showed intelligence, but her gown showed that without
+sacrificing neatness she had deliberately toned down the existing
+fashions which so admirably fitted in with her figure in order that she
+might not appear noticeable. It was clever, for if there is anything a
+good detective must do it is to prevent people from looking twice.
+
+I knew something of her history already. She had begun on a rather
+difficult case for one of the large agencies and after a few years of
+experience had decided that there was a field for an independent woman
+detective who would appeal particularly to women themselves. Unaided
+she had fought her way to a position of keen rivalry now with the best
+men in the profession.
+
+Narrowly I watched Kennedy. Here, I felt instinctively, were the "new"
+woman and the "new" man, if there are such things. I wondered just how
+they would hit it off together. For the moment, at least, Clare Kendall
+was an absorbing study, as she greeted us with a frank, jerky
+straight-arm handshake.
+
+"Mr. Carton," she said directly, "has told me that he received an
+anonymous letter this morning. May I see it?"
+
+There are times when the so-called "new" woman's assumed masculine
+brusqueness is a trifle jarring, as well as often missing the point.
+But with Clare Kendall one did not feel that she was eternally trying
+to assert that she was the equal or the superior of someone else,
+although she was, as far as the majority of detectives I have met are
+concerned. It was rather that she was different; in fact, almost from
+the start I felt that she was indispensable. She seemed to have that
+ability to go straight to the point at issue, a sort of faculty of
+intuition which is often more valuable than anything else, the ability
+to feel or sense things for which at first there was no actual proof.
+No good detective ever lacks that sort of instinct, and Clare Kendall,
+being a woman, had it in large degree. But she had more. She had the
+ability to go further and get the facts and actual proof; for, as she
+often said during the course of a case, "Woman's intuition may not be
+good evidence in a court of law, but it is one of the best means to get
+good evidence that will convince a court of law."
+
+"My investigators have been watching that place for some time," she
+remarked as she finished the letter. "Of course, having been closely in
+touch with this sort of thing for several months in my work, I have had
+all the opportunity in the world to observe and collect information.
+The letter does not surprise me."
+
+"Then you think it is a good tip?" asked Kennedy.
+
+"Decidedly, although without the letter I should not have started
+there, I think. Still, as nearly as I can gather, there is a rather
+nondescript crowd connected in one way or another with the Montmartre.
+For instance, there is a pretty tough character who seems to be
+connected with the people there, my investigators tell me. It is a
+fellow named 'Ike the Dropper,' one of those strong-arm men who have
+migrated up from the East Side to the White Light District. At least my
+investigators have told me they have seen him there, for I have never
+bothered with the place myself. There has been plenty of work elsewhere
+which promised immediate results. I'm glad to have a chance to tackle
+this place, though, with your help."
+
+"What do you think of the rest of the letter?" asked Craig.
+
+"I think I could make a pretty shrewd guess from what I have heard, as
+to the identity of some of those hinted at. I'm not sure, but I think
+the lawyer may be a Mr. Kahn, a clever enough attorney who has a large
+theatrical clientele and none too savoury a reputation as a local
+politician. The banker may be Mr. Langhorne, although he is not exactly
+a young man. Still, I know he has been associated with the place. As
+for the club-man I should guess that that was Martin Ogleby."
+
+Kennedy and I exchanged glances of surprise.
+
+"As a first step," said Kennedy, at length, "I am going to write a
+letter to Betty Blackwell, care of the Little Montmartre--or perhaps
+you had better do the actual writing of it, Miss Kendall. A woman's
+hand will look less suspicious."
+
+"What shall I write?" she asked.
+
+"Just a few lines. Tell her that you are one of the girls in the
+office, that you have heard she was at the Montmartre--anything. The
+actual writing doesn't make any difference. I merely want to see what
+happens."
+
+Miss Kendall quickly wrote a little note and handed it to him.
+
+"Then direct this envelope," he said, reaching into a drawer of his
+desk and bringing out a plain white one. "And let me seal it."
+
+Carefully he sealed and stamped the letter and handed it to me to post.
+
+"You will dine with us, Miss Kendall?" he asked. "Then we will plan the
+next step in our campaign."
+
+"I shall be glad to do so," she replied.
+
+Fifteen minutes later I had dropped the letter in the drop of a branch
+of the general post-office to ensure its more prompt delivery, and it
+was on its way through the mails to accomplish the purpose Kennedy may
+have contemplated.
+
+"Just now it is more important for us to become acquainted with this
+Little Montmartre," he remarked. "I suppose, Miss Kendall, we may
+depend on you to join us?"
+
+"Indeed you may," she replied energetically. "There is nothing that we
+would welcome more than evidence that would lead to the closing of that
+place."
+
+Kennedy seemed to be impressed by the frankness and energy of the young
+woman.
+
+"Perhaps if we three should go there, hire a private dining-room, and
+look about without making any move against the place that would excite
+suspicion, we might at least find out what it is that we are fighting.
+Of course we must dine somewhere, and up there at the same time we can
+plan our campaign."
+
+"I think that would be ripping," she laughed, as the humour of the
+situation dawned on her. "Why, we shall be laying our plans right in
+the heart of the enemy's country and they will never realize it.
+Perhaps, too, we may get a glimpse of some of those people mentioned in
+the anonymous letter."
+
+To Clare Kendall it was simply another phase of the game which she had
+been playing against the forces of evil in the city.
+
+The Little Montmartre was, as I already knew, one of the smaller hotels
+in a side street just off Broadway, eight or ten stories in height, of
+modern construction, and for all the world exactly like a score of
+other of the smaller hostelries of the famous city of hotels.
+
+Clare, Craig, and myself pulled up before the entrance in a taxicab,
+that seeming to be the accepted method of entering with eclat. A boy
+opened the door. I jumped out and settled with the driver without a
+demur at the usual overcharge, while Craig assisted Clare.
+
+Laughing and chatting, we entered the bronze plate-glass doors and
+walked slowly down a richly carpeted corridor. It was elegantly
+furnished and decorated with large palms set at intervals, quite the
+equal in luxuriousness, though on a smaller scale, of any of the larger
+and well-known hotels. Beautifully marked marbles and expensive
+hangings greeted the eye at every turn. Faultlessly liveried servants
+solicitously waited about for tips.
+
+Craig and Clare, who were slightly ahead of me, turned quickly into a
+little alcove, or reception room and Craig placed a chair for her.
+Farther down the corridor I could see the office, and beyond a large
+main dining-room from which strains of music came and now and then the
+buzz of conversation and laughter from gay parties at the immaculately
+white tables.
+
+"Boy," called Kennedy quietly, catching the eye of a passing bell hop
+and unostentatiously slipping a quarter into his hand, which closed
+over the coin almost automatically, "the head waiter, please.
+Oh--er--by the way--what is his name?"
+
+"Julius," returned the boy, to whom the proceeding seemed to present
+nothing novel, although the whole atmosphere of the place was beyond
+his years. "I'll get him in a minute, sir. He's in the main
+dining-room. He's having some trouble with the cabaret singers. One of
+them is late--as usual."
+
+We sat in the easy chairs watching the people passing and repassing in
+the corridor. There was no effort at concealment here.
+
+A few minutes later Julius appeared, a young man, tall and rather
+good-looking, suave and easy. A word or two with Kennedy followed,
+during which a greenback changed hands--in fact that seemed to be the
+open sesame to everything here--and we were in the elevator decorously
+escorted by the polished Julius.
+
+The door of the elevator shut noiselessly and it shot up to the next
+floor. Julius preceded us down the thickly carpeted corridor leading
+the way to a large apartment, or rather a suite of rooms, as handsomely
+furnished as any in other hotels. He switched on the lights and left
+us, with the remark, "When you want the waiter or anything, just press
+the button."
+
+In the largest of the rooms was a dining-table and several chairs of
+Jacobean oak. A heavy sideboard and serving-table stood against
+opposite walls. Another, smaller room was furnished very attractively
+as a sitting-room. Deep, easy chairs stood in the corners and a wide,
+capacious davenport stretched across one wall. In another nook was a
+little divan or cosy corner.
+
+Electric bulbs burned pinkly in the chandeliers and on silver
+candelabra on the table, giving a half light that was very romantic and
+fascinating. From a curtained window that opened upon an interior court
+we could catch strains from the cabaret singers below in the main
+dining-room. Everything was new and bright.
+
+Kennedy pressed the button and a waiter brought a menu, imposing in
+length and breath-taking in rates.
+
+"The cost of vice seems to have gone up with the cost of living,"
+remarked Miss Kendall, as the waiter disappeared as silently as he had
+responded to the bell. It was a phrase that stuck in my head, so apt
+was it in describing the anomalous state of things we found as the case
+unrolled.
+
+Craig ordered, now and then consulting Clare about some detail. The
+care and attention devoted to us could not have been more punctilious
+if it had been an elaborate dinner party.
+
+"Well," he remarked, as the waiter at last closed the door of the
+private dining-room to give the order in downstairs in the kitchen,
+"the Little Montmartre makes a brave showing. I suppose it will be some
+time before the dinner arrives, though. There is certainly some
+piquancy to this," he added, looking about at the furnishings.
+
+"Yes," remarked Miss Kendall, "risque from the moment you enter the
+door."
+
+She said it with an impersonal tone as if there were complete
+detachment between herself as an observer and as a guest of the
+Montmartre.
+
+"Miss Kendall," asked Kennedy, "did you notice anything particularly
+downstairs? I'd like to check up my own impressions by yours."
+
+"I noticed that Titian beauty in the hotel office as we left the
+reception room and entered the elevator."
+
+Craig smiled.
+
+"So did I. I thought you would be both woman enough and detective
+enough to notice her. Well, I suppose if a man likes that sort of girl
+that's the sort of girl he likes. That's point number one. But did you
+notice anything else--as we came in, for instance?"
+
+"No--except that everything seems to be a matter of scientific
+management here to get the most out of the suckers. This is no place
+for a piker. It all seems to run so smoothly, too. Still, I'm sure that
+our investigators might get something on the place if they kept right
+after it, although on the surface it doesn't look as if any law was
+being openly violated here. What do you mean? What is your point number
+two?"
+
+"In the front window," resumed Craig, "just as you enter, I noticed one
+of those little oblong signs printed neatly in black on white--'Dr.
+Vernon Harris, M. D.' You recall that the letter said something about a
+doctor who was very friendly with that clique the writer mentioned?
+It's even money that this Harris is the one the writer meant. I suppose
+he is the 'house physician' of this gilded palace."
+
+Clare nodded appreciatively. "Quite right," she agreed. "Just how do
+you think he might be involved?"
+
+"Of course I can't say. But I think, without going any further, that a
+man like that in a place like this will bear watching anyway, without
+our needing more than the fact that he is here. Naturally we don't know
+anything about him as a doctor, but he must have some training; and in
+an environment like this--well, a little training may be a dangerous
+thing."
+
+"The letter said something about drugs," mused Clare.
+
+"Yes," added Kennedy. "As you know, alcohol is absolutely necessary to
+a thing like this. Girls must keep gay and attractive; they must meet
+men with a bright, unfaltering look, and alcohol just dulls the edge of
+conscience. Besides, look over that wine list--it fills the till of the
+Montmartre, judging by the prices. But then, alcohol palls when the
+pace is as swift as it seems to be here. Even more essential are drugs.
+You know, after all, it is no wonder so many drug fiends and drunkards
+are created by this life. Now, a doctor who is not over-scrupulous, and
+he would have to be not over-scrupulous to be here at all, would find a
+gold mine in the dispensing of drugs and the toning up of drug fiends
+and others who have been going the pace too rapidly."
+
+"Yes," she said. "We have found that some of these doctors are a great
+factor in the life of various sections of the city where they hang out.
+I know one who is deeply in the local politics and boasts that any
+resort that patronizes him is immune. Yes, that's a good point about
+Dr. Harris."
+
+"I suppose your investigators have had more or less to do with watching
+the progress of drug habits?" ventured Craig.
+
+"Very much," she replied, catching the drift of his remarks. "We have
+found, for instance, that there are a great many cases where it seems
+that drugs have been used in luring young and innocent girls. Not the
+old knockout drops--chloral, you know--but modern drugs, not so
+powerful, perhaps, but more insidious, and in that respect, I suppose,
+more dangerous. There are cocaine fiends, opium smokers; oh, lots of
+them. But those we find in the slums mostly. Still, I suppose there are
+all kinds of drugs up here in the White Light District--belladonna to
+keep the eyes bright, arsenic to whiten the complexion, and so on."
+
+"Yes," asserted Craig. "This section of the city may not be so brutal
+in its drug taking as others, but it is here--yes, and it is over on
+Fifth Avenue, too, right in society. Before we get through I'm sure
+we'll both learn much more than we even dream of now."
+
+The door opened after a discreet tap from the waiter and the lavish
+dinner which Craig had ordered appeared. The door stayed open for a
+moment as the bus boy carried in the dishes. A rustle of skirts and low
+musical laughter was wafted in to us and we caught a glimpse of another
+gay party passing down the hall.
+
+"How many private dining-rooms are there?" asked Craig of the waiter.
+
+"Just this one, sir, and the next one, which is smaller," replied the
+model waiter, with the air of one who could be blind and deaf and dumb
+if he chose.
+
+"Oh, then we were lucky to get this."
+
+"Yes, sir. It is really best to telephone first to Julius to make sure
+and have one of the rooms reserved, sir."
+
+Craig made a mental note of the information. The party in the next room
+were hilariously ordering, mostly from the wine list. None of us had
+recognized any of them, nor had they paid much attention to us.
+
+Craig had eaten little, although the food was very good.
+
+"It's a shame to come here and not see the whole place," he remarked.
+"I wonder if you would excuse me while I drop downstairs to look over
+things there--perhaps ingratiate myself with that Titian? Tell Miss
+Kendall about our visit to Langhorne's office while I am gone, Walter."
+
+There was not much that I could tell except the bare facts, but I
+thought that Miss Kendall seemed especially interested in the broker's
+reticence about his stenographer.
+
+I had scarcely finished when Craig returned. A glance at his face told
+me that even in this brief time something had happened.
+
+"Did you meet the Titian?" I asked.
+
+"Yes. She is the stenographer and sometimes works the switchboard of
+the telephone. I happened to strike the office while the clerk was at
+dinner and she was alone. While I was talking to her I was looking
+about and my eye happened to fall on one of the letter boxes back of
+the desk, marked 'Dr. Harris.' Well, at once I had an overwhelming
+desire to get a note which I saw sticking in it. So I called up a
+telephone number, just as a blind, and while she was at the switchboard
+I slipped the note into my pocket. Here it is."
+
+He had laid an envelope down before us. It was in a woman's hand,
+written hastily.
+
+"I'd like to know what was in it without Dr. Harris knowing it," he
+remarked. "Now, the secret service agents abroad have raised
+letter-opening to a fine art. Some kinds of paper can be steamed open
+without leaving a trace, and then they follow that simple operation by
+reburnishing the flap with a bone instrument. But that won't do. It
+might make this ink run."
+
+Among the ornaments were several with flat wooden bases. Kennedy took
+one and placed it on the edge of the table, which was perfectly square.
+Then he placed the envelope between the table and the base.
+
+"When other methods fail," he went on, "they place the envelope between
+two pieces of wood with the edges projecting about a thirty-second of
+an inch."
+
+He had first flattened the edge of the envelope, then roughened it, and
+finally slit it open.
+
+"Scientific letter-opening," he remarked, as he pulled out a little
+note written on the hotel paper. It read:
+
+DEAR HARRY:
+
+Called you up twice and then dropped into the hotel, but you seem to be
+out all the time. Have something VERY IMPORTANT to tell you. Shall be
+busy to-night and in the morning, but will be at the dansant at the
+Futurist Tea Room to-morrow afternoon about four. Be sure to be there.
+
+ MARIE.
+
+"I shall," commented Kennedy. "Now the question is, how to seal up this
+letter so that he won't know it has been opened. I saw some of this
+very strong mucilage in the office. Ring the bell, Walter. I'll get
+that impervious waiter to borrow it for a moment."
+
+Five minutes later he had applied a hair line of the strong, colourless
+gum to the inside of the envelope and had united the edges under
+pressure between the two pieces of wood. As soon as it was dry he
+excused himself again and went back to the office, where he managed to
+secure an opportunity to stick the letter back in the box and chat for
+a few minutes longer with the Titian.
+
+"There's a wild cabaret down in the main dining-room," he reported on
+his return. "I think we might just as well have a glimpse of it before
+we go."
+
+Kennedy paid the cheque, which by this time had mounted like a
+taximeter running wild, and we drifted into the dining-room, a rather
+attractive hall, panelled in Flemish oak with artificial flowers and
+leaves about, and here and there a little bird concealed in a cage in
+the paper foliage.
+
+As cabarets go, it was not bad, although I could imagine how wild it
+might become in the evening or on special occasion.
+
+"That Dr. Harris interests me," remarked Kennedy across the table at
+us. "We must get something in writing from him in some way. And then
+there's that girl in the office, too. She seems to be right in with all
+these people here."
+
+Evidently the cabaret had little of interest to Miss Kendall, who,
+after a glance that took in the whole dining-room and disclosed none
+there in the gay crowd who, as far as we could see, had any relation to
+the case, seemed bored.
+
+Craig noticed it and at once rose to go.
+
+As we passed out and into the corridor, Miss Kendall turned and
+whispered, "Look over at the desk--Dr. Harris."
+
+Sure enough, chatting with the stenographer was a man with one of those
+black bags which doctors carry. He was a young man in appearance, one
+of those whom one sees in the White Light District, with unnaturally
+bright eyes which speak of late hours and a fast pace. He wore a flower
+in his buttonhole--a very fetching touch with some women. Debonair,
+dapper, dashing, his face was not one readily forgotten. As we passed
+hurriedly I observed that he had torn open the note and had thrown the
+envelope, unsuspectingly, into the basket.
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+THE GANG LEADER
+
+
+With the arrest of Dopey Jack, it seemed as if all the forces of the
+gang world were solidified for the final battle.
+
+Carton had been engaged in a struggle with the System so long that he
+knew just how to get action, the magistrates he could depend on, the
+various pitfalls that surrounded the snaring of one high in gangland,
+the judges who would fix bail that was prohibitively high.
+
+As he had anticipated and prepared for, every wire was pulled to secure
+the release of Rubano. But Carton was fortunate in having under him a
+group of young and alert assistants. It took the combined energies of
+his office, however, to carry the thing through and Kennedy and I did
+not see Carton again for some time.
+
+Meanwhile we were busy gathering as much information as we could about
+those who were likely to figure in the case. It was remarkable, but we
+found that the influence of Dorgan and Murtha was felt in the most
+unexpected quarters. People who would have talked to us on almost any
+other subject, absolutely refused to become mixed up in this affair. It
+was as though the System practised terrorism on a large scale.
+
+Late in the afternoon we met in Carton's office, to compare notes on
+the progress made during the day.
+
+The District Attorney greeted us enthusiastically.
+
+"Well," he exclaimed as he dropped into his big office chair, "this has
+been a hard day for me--but I've succeeded."
+
+"How?" queried Kennedy.
+
+"Of course the newspapers haven't got it yet," pursued Carton, "but it
+happened that there was a Grand Jury sitting and considering election
+cases. It went hard, but I made them consider this case of Dopey Jack.
+I don't know how it happened, but I seem to have succeeded in forcing
+action in record time. They have found an indictment on the election
+charges, and if that falls through, we shall have time to set up other
+charges against him. In fact we are 'going to the mat,' so to speak,
+with this case."
+
+The office telephone rang and after a few sentences of congratulation,
+Carton turned to us, his spirits even higher than before. "That was one
+of my assistants," he explained, "one of the cleverest. The trial will
+be before Judge Pomeroy in General Sessions and it will be an early
+trial. Pomeroy is one of the best of them, too--about to retire, and
+wants to leave a good record on the bench behind him. Things are
+shaping up as well as we could wish for."
+
+The door opened and one of Carton's clerks started to announce the name
+of a visitor.
+
+"Mr. Carton, Mr.--"
+
+"Murtha," drawled a deep voice, as the owner of the name strode in,
+impatiently brushing aside the clerk. "Hello, Carton," greeted the
+Sub-boss aggressively.
+
+"Hello, Murtha," returned Carton, retaining his good temper and seeing
+the humour of the situation, where the practice of years was reversed
+and the mountain was coming to Mahomet. "This is a
+little--er--informal--but I'm glad to see you, nevertheless," he added
+quietly. "Won't you sit down? By the way, meet Mr. Kennedy and Mr.
+Jameson. Is there anything I can do for you?"
+
+Murtha shook hands with us suspiciously, but did not sit down. He
+continued to stand, his hat tilted back over his head and his huge
+hands jammed down into his trousers pockets.
+
+"What's this I hear about Jack Rubano, Carton?" he opened fire. "They
+tell me you have arrested him and secured an indictment."
+
+"They tell the truth," returned Carton shortly. "The Grand Jury
+indicted Dopey Jack this afternoon. The trial---"
+
+"Dopey Jack," quoted Murtha in disgusted tones. "That's the way it is
+nowadays. Give a dog a bad name--why,--I suppose this bad name's going
+to stick to him all his life, now. It ain't right. You know, Carton, as
+well as I do that if they charged him with just plain fighting and got
+him before a jury, all you would have to say would be, 'Gentlemen, the
+defendant at the bar is the notorious gangster, Dopey Jack.' And the
+jurors wouldn't wait to hear any more, but'd say, 'Guilty!' just like
+that. And he'd go up the river for the top term. That's what a boy like
+that gets once the papers give him such an awful reputation. It's
+fierce!"
+
+Carton shook his head. "Oh, Murtha," he remonstrated with just a
+twinkle in his eye, "you don't think I believe that sort of soft stuff,
+do you? I've had my eye on this 'boy'--he's twenty-eight, by the
+way--too long. You needn't tell me anything about his respectable old
+father and his sorrowing mother and weeping sister. Murtha, I've been
+in this business too long for that heart throb stuff. Leave that to the
+lawyers the System will hire for him. Let's cut that out, between
+ourselves, and get down to brass tacks."
+
+It was a new and awkward role for Murtha as suppliant, and he evidently
+did not relish it. Aside from his own interest in Dopey Jack, who was
+one of his indispensables, it was apparent that he came as an emissary
+from Dorgan himself to spy out the land and perhaps reach some kind of
+understanding.
+
+He glanced about at us, with a look that broadly hinted that he would
+prefer to see Carton alone. Carton made no move to ask us to leave and
+Kennedy met the boss's look calmly. Murtha smothered his rage, although
+I knew he would with pleasure have had us stuck up or blackjacked.
+
+"See here, Carton." he blurted out at length, approaching the desk of
+the District Attorney and lowering his big voice as much as he was
+capable, "can't we reach some kind of agreement between ourselves? You
+let up on Rubano--and--well, I might be able to get some of my friends
+to let up on Carton. See?"
+
+He was conveying as guardedly as he could a proposal that if the
+District Attorney would consent to turn his back while the law stumbled
+in one of the numerous pitfalls that beset a criminal prosecution, the
+organization would deliver the goods, quietly pass the word along to
+knife its own man and allow Carton to be re-elected.
+
+I studied Carton's face intently. To a man of another stripe, the
+proposal might have been alluring. It meant that although the
+organization ticket won, he would, in the public eye at least, have the
+credit of beating the System, of going into office unhampered, of
+having assured beyond doubt what was at best only problematical with
+the Reform League.
+
+Carton did not hesitate a moment. I thought I saw in his face the same
+hardening of the lines of his features in grim determination that I had
+seen when he had been talking to Miss Ashton. I knew that, among other
+things, he was thinking how impossible it would be for him ever to face
+her again in the old way, if he sold out, even in a negative way, to
+the System.
+
+Murtha had shot his huge face forward and was peering keenly at the man
+before him.
+
+"You'll--think it over?" he asked.
+
+"I will not--I most certainly will not," returned Carton, for the first
+time showing exasperation, at the very assumption of Murtha. "Mr.
+Murtha," he went on, rising and leaning forward over the desk, "we are
+going to have a fair election, if I can make it. I may be beaten--I may
+win. But I will be beaten, if at all, by the old methods. If I win--it
+will be that I win--honestly."
+
+A half sneer crossed Murtha's face. He neither understood nor cared to
+understand the kind of game Carton played.
+
+"You'll never get anything on that boy," blustered Murtha. "Do you
+suppose I'm fool enough to come here and make a dishonest
+proposition--here--right in front of your own friends?" he added,
+turning to us. "--I ain't asking any favours, or anything dishonest.
+His lawyers know what they can do and what you can do. It ain't because
+I care a hang about you, Carton, that I'm here. If you want to know the
+truth, it's because you can make trouble, Carton,--that's all. You
+can't convict him, in the end, because--you can't. There's nothing 'on'
+him. But you can make trouble. We'll win out in the end, of course."
+
+"In other words, you think the Reform League has you beaten?" suggested
+Carton quietly.
+
+"No," ejaculated Murtha with an oath. "We don't know--but maybe YOU
+have us beaten. But not the League. We don't want you for District
+Attorney, Carton. You know it. But here's a practical proposition. All
+you have to do is just to let this Rubano case take its natural course.
+That's all I ask."
+
+He dwelt on the word "natural" as if it were in itself convincing.
+"Why," he resumed, "what foolishness it is for you to throw away all
+your chances just for the sake of hounding one poor fellow from the
+East Side. It ain't right, Carton,--you, powerful, holding an important
+office, and he a poor boy that never had a chance and has made the most
+of what little nature gave him. Why, I've known that boy ever since he
+hardly came up to my waist. I tell you, there ain't a judge on the
+bench that wouldn't listen to what we can show about him--hounded by
+police, hounded by the District Attorney, driven from pillar to post,
+and---"
+
+"You will have a chance to tell the story in court," cut in Carton.
+"Pomeroy will try the case."
+
+"Pomeroy?" repeated Murtha in a tone that quite disguised the anger he
+felt that it should come up before the one judge the System feared and
+could not control. "Now, look here, Carton. We're all practical men.
+Your friend--er--Kennedy, here, he's practical."
+
+Murtha had turned toward us. He was now the Murtha I had heard of
+before, the kind that can use a handshake or a playful slap on the
+back, as between man and man, to work wonders in getting action or
+carrying a point. Far from despising such men as Murtha, I think we all
+rather admired his good qualities. It was his point of view, his
+method, his aim that were wrong. As for the man himself he was
+human--in fact, I often thought far more human than some of the
+reformers.
+
+"I'll leave it to Kennedy," he resumed. "Suppose you were running a
+race. You knew you were going to win. Would you deliberately stop and
+stick your foot out, in order to trip up the man who was coming in
+second?"
+
+"I don't know that the cases are parallel," returned Kennedy with an
+amused smile.
+
+Murtha kept his good nature admirably.
+
+"Then you would stick your foot out--and perhaps lose the race
+yourself?" persisted Murtha.
+
+"I'll relieve Kennedy of answering that," interrupted Carton, "not
+because I don't think he can do it better than I can, perhaps, but
+because this is my fight--my race."
+
+"Well," asked Murtha persuasively, "you'll think it over, first, won't
+you?"
+
+Carton was looking at his opponent keenly, as if trying to take his
+measure. He had some scheme in mind and Kennedy was watching the faces
+of both men intently.
+
+"This race," began Carton slowly, in a manner that showed he wanted to
+change the subject, "is different from any other in the politics of the
+city as either of us have ever known it, Murtha."
+
+Murtha made as though he would object to the proposition, but Carton
+hurried on, giving him no chance to inject anything into the
+conversation.
+
+"It may be possible--it is possible," shot out the young District
+Attorney, "to make use of secret records--conversations--at
+conferences--dinners--records that have been taken by a new invention
+that seems to be revolutionizing politics all over the country."
+
+The look that crossed Murtha's face was positively apoplectic. The
+veins in his forehead stood out like whipcords.
+
+He started to speak, but choked off the words before he had uttered
+them. I could almost read his mind. Carton had said nothing directly
+about the Black Book, and Murtha had caught himself just in time not to
+betray anything about it.
+
+"So," he shouted at last, "you are going to try some of those fine
+little scientific tricks on us, are you?"
+
+He was pacing up and down the room, storming and threatening by turns.
+
+"I want to tell you, Carton," pursued Murtha, "that you're up against a
+crowd who were playing this game before you were born. You reformers
+think you are pretty smooth. But we know a thing or two about you and
+what you are doing. Besides," he leaned over the desk again, "Carton,
+there ain't many men that can afford to throw stones. I admit my life
+hasn't been perfect--but, then I ain't posing as any saint. I don't
+mind telling you that the organization, as you call it, is looking into
+some of the things that you reformers have done. It may be that some of
+your people--some of the ladies," he insinuated, "don't look on life in
+the broad-minded way that some of the rest do. Mind you--I ain't making
+any threats, but when it comes to gossip and scandal and
+mud-slinging--look out for the little old organization--that's all!"
+
+Carton had set his tenacious jaw. "You can go as far as you like,
+Murtha," was all he said, with a grim smile.
+
+Murtha looked at him a moment, then his manner changed.
+
+"Carton," he said in a milder tone, at length, "what's the use of all
+this bluffing? You and I understand each other. These men
+understand--life. It's a game--that's what it is--a game. Sometimes one
+move is right, sometimes another. You know what you want to accomplish
+here in this city. I show you a way to do it. Don't answer me,"
+persisted Murtha, raising a hand, "just--think it over."
+
+Carton had taken a step forward, the tense look on his face unchanged.
+"No," he exclaimed, and we could almost hear his jaw snap as if it had
+been a trap. "No--I'll not think it over. I'll not yield an inch. Dopey
+Jack goes to trial before election."
+
+As Carton bit off the words, Murtha became almost beside himself with
+rage and chagrin. He was white and red by turns. For a moment I feared
+that he might do Carton personal violence.
+
+"Carton," he ground out, as he reached the door, "you will regret this."
+
+"I hope not," returned the other summoning with a mighty effort at
+least the appearance of suavity. "Good-bye."
+
+The only answer was the vicious slam which Murtha gave the door.
+
+As the echo died, the District Attorney turned to us. "Apparently,
+then, Dorgan did not secure the Black Book," was all he said, "even
+supposing Dopey Jack planned and executed that robbery of Langhorne."
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+THE SHYSTER LAWYER
+
+
+That's a declaration of war," remarked Kennedy, as Carton resumed his
+seat at the desk unconcernedly after the stormy ending of the interview
+with Murtha.
+
+"I suppose it is," agreed the District Attorney, "and I can't say that
+I am sorry."
+
+"Nor I," added Craig. "But it settles one thing. We are now out in what
+I call the 'open' investigation. They have forced us from cover. We
+shall have to be prepared to take quick action now, whatever move they
+may make."
+
+Together we were speculating on the various moves that the System might
+make and how we might prepare in advance for them.
+
+Evidently, however, we were not yet through with these indirect
+dealings with the Boss. The System was thorough, if nothing else, and
+prompt. We had about decided to continue our conference over the dinner
+table in some uptown restaurant, when the officer stationed in the hall
+poked his head in the door and announced another visitor for the
+District Attorney.
+
+This time the entrance was exactly the opposite to the bluster of
+Murtha. The man who sidled deferentially into the room, a moment after
+Carton had said he would see him, was a middle-sized fellow, with a
+high, slightly bald forehead, a shifty expression in his sharp ferret
+eyes, and a nervous, self-confident manner that must have been very
+impressive before the ignorant. "My name is Kahn," he introduced
+himself. "I'm a lawyer."
+
+Carton nodded recognition.
+
+Although I had never seen the man before, I recollected the name which
+Miss Kendall had mentioned. He was one of the best known lawyers of the
+System. He had begun his career as an "ambulance chaser," had risen
+later to the dignity of a police court lawyer, and now was of the type
+that might be called, for want of a better name, a high class
+"shyster"--unscrupulous, sharp, cunning.
+
+Shyster, I believe, has been defined as a legal knave, a lawyer who
+practises in an unprofessional or tricky manner. Kahn was all that--and
+still more. If he had been less successful, he would have been the
+black sheep of the overcrowded legal flock. Ideals he had none. His
+claws reached out to grab the pittance of the poverty-stricken client
+as well as the fee of the wealthy. He had risen from hospitals to
+police courts, coroner's court, and criminal courts, at last attaining
+the dignity of offices opposite an entrance to the criminal courts
+building, from which vantage point his underlings surveyed the scene of
+operations like vultures hovering over bewildered cattle.
+
+Carton knew him. Kahn was the leader among some score of men more or
+less well dressed, of more or less evil appearance, who are constantly
+prowling from one end to the other of the broad first floor of the
+criminal courts building during the hours of the day that justice is
+being administered there.
+
+These are the shyster lawyers and their runners and agents who prey
+upon the men and women whom misfortune or crime have delivered into the
+hands of the law. Others of the same species are wandering about the
+galleries on other floors of the building, each with a furtive eye for
+those who may be in trouble themselves or those who seem to be in need
+of legal assistance for a relative or friend in trouble.
+
+Perhaps the majority of lawyers practising in the courts are reputable
+to the highest degree, and many of the rest merely to a safe degree.
+Many devote themselves to philanthropic work whenever a prisoner is
+penniless. But the percentage of shysters is high. Kahn belonged in the
+latter class, although his days of doing dirty work himself were
+passed. He had a large force of incipient shysters for that purpose. As
+for himself, he handled only the big cases in which he veneered the
+dirty work by a sort of finesse.
+
+Kahn bowed and smiled ingratiatingly. "Mr. Carton," he began in a
+conciliatory tone, "I have intruded on your valuable time in the
+interest of my client, Mr. Jack Rubano."
+
+"Huh!" grunted Carton. "So they've retained you, have they, Ike?" he
+mused familiarly, closely regarding the visitor.
+
+Kahn, far from resenting the familiarity, seemed rather to enjoy it and
+take it as his due measure of fame.
+
+"Yes, Mr. Carton, they have retained me. I have just had a talk with
+the prisoner in the Tombs and have gone over his case very carefully,
+sir."
+
+Carton nodded, but said nothing, willing to let Kahn do the talking for
+the present until he exposed his hand.
+
+"He has told me all about his case," pursued Kahn evenly. "It is not
+such a bad case. I can tell you that, Mr. Carton, because I didn't have
+to resort to the 'friend of the judge' gag in order to show him that he
+had a good chance."
+
+Kahn looked knowingly at Carton. At least he was frank about his own
+game before us; in fact, utterly shameless, it seemed to me. Probably
+it was because he knew it was no use, that Carton had no illusions
+about him. Still, there was an uncanny bravado about it all. Kahn was
+indeed very successful in making the worst appear the better reason. He
+knew it and knew that Carton knew it. That was his stock in trade.
+
+He had seated himself in a chair by the District Attorney's desk and as
+he talked was hitching it closer and closer, for men of Kahn's stamp
+seem unable to talk without getting into almost personal contact with
+those with whom they are talking. Carton drew back and folded his hands
+back of his head as he listened, still silent.
+
+"You know, Mr. Carton," he insinuated, "it is a very different thing to
+be sure in your own mind that a man is guilty from being able to prove
+it in court. There are all sorts of delays that may be granted,
+witnesses are hard to hold together, in fact there are many
+difficulties that arise in the best of cases."
+
+"You don't need to tell me that, Kahn," replied Carton quietly.
+
+"I know it, Mr. Carton," rejoined the other apologetically. "I was just
+using that as a preface to what I have to say."
+
+He took another hitch of the chair nearer Carton and lowered his voice
+impressively. "The point, sir, at which I am driving is simply this.
+There must be some way in which we can reach an agreement, compromise
+this case, satisfactorily to the people with a minimum of time and
+expense--some way in which the indictment or the pleadings can be
+amended so that it can be wound up and--you understand--both of us
+win--instead of dragging it out and perhaps you losing the case in the
+end."
+
+Carton shook his head. "No, Kahn," he said in a low tone, but firmly,
+"no compromise."
+
+Kahn bent his ferret eyes on Carton's face as if to bore through into
+his very mind.
+
+"No," added the District Attorney, "Murtha was just here, and I may as
+well repeat what I said to him--although I might fairly assume that he
+went from this room directly across the street to your office and that
+you know it already. This case has gone too far, it has too many other
+ramifications for me to consent to relax on it one iota."
+
+Kahn was baffled, but he was cleverer than Murtha and did not show it.
+
+"Surely," he urged, "you must realize that it is not worth your while
+at such a critical time for yourself to waste energies on a case when
+there are so many more profitable things that you could do. The fact is
+that I would be the last one to propose anything that was not open and
+above board and to our mutual advantage. There must be some way in
+which we can reach an agreement which will be satisfactory to all
+parties in interest, sir."
+
+"Kahn," repeated Carton a little testily, "how often must I repeat to
+you and your people that I am NOT going to compromise this case in any
+shape, form, or manner? I am going to fight it out on the lines I have
+indicated if I have to disrupt this entire office to get men to do it.
+I have plenty to do seeking re-election, but my first duty is to act as
+public prosecutor in the office to which I have been already elected.
+Otherwise, it would be a poor recommendation to the people to return me
+to the same position. No, you are merely wasting your time and ours
+talking compromise."
+
+Kahn had been surveying Carton keenly, now and then taking a shifty
+glance at Kennedy and myself.
+
+As Carton rapped out the last words, as if in the nature of an
+ultimatum, Kahn gazed at him in amazement. Here was a man whom he knew
+he could neither bribe, bully, or bulldoze.
+
+"You must consider this, too," he added pointedly. "There has been a
+good deal of mud-slinging in this campaign. We may find it necessary to
+go back into the antecedents and motives of those who represent the
+people in this case."
+
+It was a subtle threat. Just what it implied I could not even guess,
+nor did Carton betray anything by look or word. Carton had voluntarily
+placed himself in the open and in a position from which he could not
+retreat. Evidently, now, he was willing to force the fight, if the
+other side would accept the issue. It meant much to him but he did not
+balk at it.
+
+"No, Kahn," he repeated firmly, "no compromise."
+
+Kahn drew back a bit and hastily scanned the face of the prosecutor.
+Evidently he saw nothing in it to encourage him. Yet he was too smooth
+to let his temper rise, as Murtha had. By the same token I fancied him
+a more dangerous opponent. There was something positively uncanny about
+his assurance.
+
+Kahn rose slowly. "Then it is war--without quarter?" asked Kahn
+shrewdly.
+
+"War--without quarter," repeated Carton positively.
+
+He withdrew quietly, with an almost feline tread, quite in contrast
+with the bluster of Murtha. I felt for the first time a sort of sinking
+sensation, as I began to realize the varied character of the assault
+that was preparing.
+
+Not so, Carton and Kennedy. It seemed that every event that more
+clearly defined our position and that of our opponents added zest to
+the fight for them. And I had sufficient confidence in the combination
+to know that their feelings were justified.
+
+Carton silently pulled down and locked the top of his desk, then for a
+moment we debated where we should dine. We decided on a quiet hotel
+uptown and, leaving word where we could be found, hurried along for the
+first real relaxation and refreshment after a crowded day's work.
+
+If, however, we thought we could escape even for a few minutes we were
+mightily mistaken. We had not fairly done justice to the roast when a
+boy in buttons came down the line of tables.
+
+"Mr. Carton--please."
+
+The District Attorney crooked his finger at the page.
+
+"You're wanted at the telephone, sir."
+
+Carton rose and excused himself.
+
+The message must have given him food of another kind, for when he
+returned after a long absence, he pushed aside the now cold roast and
+joined us in the coffee and cigars.
+
+"One of my men," he announced, "has been doing some shadowing for me.
+Evidently, both Murtha and Kahn having failed, they are resorting to
+other tactics. It looks as if they had in some way, probably from some
+corrupt official of the court or employee in charge of the jury list,
+obtained a copy of the panel which Justice Pomeroy has summoned for the
+case."
+
+"It ought to be a simple thing to empanel another set of talesmen and
+let these fellows serve in some other part of the court," I suggested,
+considering the matter hastily.
+
+"Much better to let it rest as it is," cut in Craig quickly, "and try
+to catch Kahn with the goods. It would be great to catch one of these
+clever fellows trying to 'fix' the jury, as well as intimidate
+witnesses, as he already hinted himself."
+
+"Just the thing," exclaimed Carton, whose keen sense of proportion
+showed what a valuable political asset such a coup would make in
+addition to its effect on the case.
+
+"We'll get Kahn right, if we have a chance," planned Craig. "You are
+acquainted more or less with his habits, I suppose. Where does Kahn
+hang out? Most fellows like him have a sort of Amen Corner where they
+meet their henchmen, issue orders, receive reports and carry on
+business that wouldn't do for an office downtown."
+
+"Why, I believe he goes to Farrell's--has an interest in the place, I
+think."
+
+Farrell's, we recognized, as a rather well-known all-night cafe which
+managed to survive the excise vicissitudes by dint of having no cabaret
+or entertainment.
+
+We finished the dinner in silence, Kennedy turning various schemes over
+in his mind, and rejecting them one after another.
+
+"There's nothing we can do immediately, I suppose," he remarked at
+length. "But if you and Carton care to come up to the laboratory with
+me, I might in time of peace prepare for war. I have a little apparatus
+up there which I think may fit in somehow and if it does, Mr. Kahn's
+days of jury fixing are numbered."
+
+A few minutes later, we found ourselves in Kennedy's laboratory, where
+he had gathered together an amazing collection of paraphernalia in the
+warfare of science against crime which he had been waging during the
+years that I had known him.
+
+Carton looked about in silent admiration. As for myself, although one
+might have thought it was an old story with me, I had found that no
+sooner had I become familiar with one piece of apparatus to perform one
+duty, than another situation, entirely different and unprecedented in
+our cases arose which called for another, entirely new. I had learned
+to have implicit confidence in Kennedy's ability to meet each new
+emergency with something fully capable of solving the problem.
+
+From a cabinet, Kennedy took out what looked like the little black
+leather box of a camera, with, however, a most peculiar looking lens.
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+THE JURY FIXER
+
+
+"Let's visit Farrell's," remarked Craig, after looking over the
+apparatus and slinging it over his shoulder.
+
+It was early yet, and the theatres were not out, so that there were
+comparatively few people in the famous all-night cafe. We entered the
+bar cautiously and looked about. Kahn at least was not there.
+
+In the back of this part of the cafe were several booths, open to
+conform to the law, yet sufficiently screened so that there was at
+least a little privacy.
+
+Above the booths was a line of transoms.
+
+"What's back there?" asked Kennedy, under his breath.
+
+"A back room," returned Carton.
+
+"Perhaps Kahn is there," Craig suggested. "Walter, you're the one whom
+he would least likely recognize. Suppose you just stick your head in
+the door and look about as quietly as you can."
+
+I lounged back, glanced at the records of sporting events posted on the
+wall at the end of the bar, then, casually, as if looking for someone,
+swung the double-hinged door that led from the bar into the back room.
+
+The room was empty except for one man, turned sidewise to the door,
+reading a paper, but in a position so that he could see anyone who
+entered. I had not opened the door widely enough to be noticed, but I
+now let it swing back hastily. It was Kahn, pompously sipping something
+he had ordered.
+
+"He's back there," I whispered to Kennedy, as I returned, excitedly
+motioning toward one of the transoms over the booths back of which Kahn
+was seated.
+
+"Right there?" he queried.
+
+"Just about," I answered.
+
+A moment later Kennedy led the way over to the booth under the transom
+and we sat down. A waiter hovered near us. Craig silenced him quickly
+with a substantial order and a good-sized tip.
+
+From our position, if we sat well within the booth, we were effectually
+hidden unless someone purposely came down and looked in on us. We
+watched Kennedy curiously. He had unslung the little black camera-like
+box and to it attached a pair of fine wires and a small pocket storage
+battery which he carried.
+
+Then he looked up at the transom. It was far too high for us to hear
+through, even if those in the back room talked fairly loud. Standing on
+the leather wall seats of the booth to listen or even to look over was
+out of the question, for it would be sure to excite suspicion among the
+waiters, or the customers who were continually passing in and out of
+the place.
+
+Kennedy was watching his chance, and when the cafe emptied itself after
+being deluged between the acts from a neighbouring theatre, he jumped
+up quickly in the seat, stood on his toes and craned his neck through
+the diagonally opened transom. Before any of the waiters, who were busy
+clearing up the results of the last theatre raid, had a chance to
+notice him, Craig had slipped the little black box into the shadow of
+the corner.
+
+From it dangled down the fine wires, not noticeable.
+
+"He's sitting just back of us yet," reported Kennedy. "I don't know
+about that flaming arc light in the middle of the room, but I think it
+will be all right. Anyhow, we shall have to take a chance. It looks to
+me as if he were waiting for someone--didn't it to you, Walter?"
+
+I nodded acquiescence.
+
+"He has wasted no time in getting down to work," put in Carton, who had
+been a silent spectator of the preparations of Kennedy. "What's that
+thing you put on the ledge up there--a detectaphone?"
+
+Kennedy smiled. "No--they're too clever to do any talking, at least in
+a place like this, I'm afraid," he said, carefully hiding the wires and
+the battery beside him in the shadow of the corner of the booth. "It
+may be that nothing will happen, anyhow, but if it does we can at least
+have the satisfaction of having tried to get something. Carton, you had
+better sit as far back in the booth as I am. The longer we can stay
+here unnoticed the better. Let Walter sit on the outside."
+
+We changed places.
+
+"Lawyers have been complaining to me lately," remarked Carton in a well
+modulated voice, "about jury fixing. Some of them say it has been going
+on on a large scale and I have had several of my county detectives
+working on it. But they haven't landed anything yet,--except rumours,
+like this one about the Dopey Jack jury. I've had them out posing as
+jurymen who could be 'approached' and would arrange terms for other
+bribable jurymen."
+
+"And you mean to say that that's going on right here in this city?" I
+asked, scenting a possible newspaper story.
+
+"This campaign I have started," he replied, "is only the beginning of
+our work in breaking up the organized business of jury bribing. I mean
+to put an end to the work of what I have reason to believe is a secret
+ring of jury fixers. Why, I understand that the prices for 'hanging' a
+jury range all the way from five to five hundred dollars, or even
+higher in an important case. The size of the jury fixer's 'cut' depends
+upon the amount the client is willing to pay for having his case made
+either a disagreement or a dismissal. Usually a bonus is demanded for a
+dismissal in criminal cases. But such things are very difficult to--"
+
+"Sh!" I cautioned, for from my vantage point I saw two men approaching.
+
+They saw me in the booth, but not the rest of us, and turned to enter
+the next one. Though they were talking in low tones, we could catch
+words and phrases now and then, which told us that we ourselves would
+have to be very careful about being overheard.
+
+"We've got to be careful," one of them remarked in a scarcely audible
+undertone. "Carton has detectives mingling with the talesmen in every
+court of importance in the city."
+
+The reply of the other was not audible, but Carton leaned over to us
+and whispered, "One of Kahn's runners, I think."
+
+Apparently Kahn was taking extreme precautions and wanted everything in
+readiness so that whatever was to be done would go off smoothly.
+Kennedy glanced up at the little black leather box perched high above
+on the sill of the partition.
+
+"The chief says that a thousand dollars is the highest price that he
+can afford for 'hanging' this jury--providing you get on it, or any of
+your friends."
+
+The other man, whose voice was not of the vibrating, penetrating
+quality of the runner, seemed to hesitate and be inclined to argue.
+
+"We've had 'em as low as five dollars," went on the runner, at which
+Carton exchanged a knowing glance with us. "But in a special case, like
+this, we realize that they come high."
+
+The other man grumbled a bit and we could catch the word, "risky."
+
+Back and forth the argument went. The runner, however, was a worthy
+representative of his chief, for at last he succeeded in carrying both
+his point and his price.
+
+"All right," we heard him say at last, "the chief is in the back room.
+Wait until I see whether he is alone."
+
+The runner rose and went around to the swinging door. From the other
+side of the transom we could, as we had expected, hear nothing. A
+moment later the runner returned.
+
+"Go in and see him," he whispered.
+
+The man rose and made his way through the swinging door into the back
+room.
+
+None of us said a word, but Kennedy was literally on his toes with
+excitement. He was holding the little battery in his hand and after
+waiting a few moments pressed what looked like a push button.
+
+He could not restrain his impatience longer, but had jumped up on the
+leather seat and for a moment looked at the black leather box, then
+through the half open transom, as best he could.
+
+"Press it--press it!" he whispered to Carton, pointing at the push
+button, as he turned a little handle on the box, then quickly dropped
+down and resumed his seat.
+
+"Craig--one of the waiters," I cried hurriedly.
+
+The outside bar had been filling up as the evening advanced and the
+sight of a man standing on one of the seats had attracted the attention
+of a patron. A waiter had followed his curious gaze and saw Kennedy.
+
+With a quick pull on the wire, Kennedy jerked the black leather box
+from its high perch and deftly caught it as it fell.
+
+"Say--what are youse guys doin', huh?" demanded the waiter pugnaciously.
+
+Carton and I had risen and stood between the man and Craig.
+
+The sound of voices in high pitch was enough to attract a crowd ever
+ready to watch a scrap. Mindful of the famous "flying wedge" of waiters
+at Farrell's for the purpose of hustling objectionable and obstreperous
+customers with despatch to the sidewalk, I was prepared for anything.
+
+The runner who was sitting alone in the next booth, leaned out and
+gazed around the corner into ours.
+
+"Carton!" he shouted in a tone that could have been heard on the street.
+
+The effect of the name of the District Attorney was magical. For the
+moment, the crowd fell back. Before the tough waiters or anyone else
+could make up their minds just what to do, Kennedy, who had tucked the
+box into his capacious side pocket, took each of us by the arm and we
+shoved our way through the crowd.
+
+The head waiter followed us to the door, but offered no resistance. In
+fact no one seemed to know just what to do and it was all over so
+quickly that even Kahn himself had not time to get a glimpse of us
+through the swinging door.
+
+A moment later we had piled into a taxicab at the curb and were
+speeding through the now deserted streets uptown to the laboratory.
+
+Kennedy was jubilant. "I may have almost precipitated a riot," he
+chortled, "but I'm glad I stood up. I think it must have been at the
+psychological moment."
+
+At the laboratory he threw off his coat and prepared to plunge into
+work with various mysterious pans of chemicals, baths, jars, and
+beakers.
+
+"What is it?" asked Carton, as Kennedy carefully took out the dark
+leather box, shielding it from the glare of a mercury vapour light.
+
+"A camera with a newly-invented electrically operated between-lens
+shutter of great illumination and efficiency," he explained. "It has
+always been practically impossible to get such pictures as I wanted,
+but this new shutter has so much greater speed than anything else ever
+invented before, that it is possible to use it in this sort of
+detective work. I've proved its speed up to one two-thousandth of a
+second. It may or may not have worked, but if it has we've caught
+someone, right in the act."
+
+Kennedy had a "studio" of his own which was quite equal to the
+emergency of developing the two pictures which he had taken with the
+new camera.
+
+Late as it was, we waited for him to finish, just as we would have
+waited down in the Star office if one of our staff photographers had
+come in with something important.
+
+At last Kennedy emerged from his workshop. As he did so, he slapped
+down two untoned prints.
+
+Both were necessarily indistinct owing to the conditions under which
+they had had to be taken. But they were quite sufficient for the
+purpose.
+
+As Carton bent over the second one, which showed Kahn in the very act
+of handing over a roll of bills to the rather anemic man whom his
+runner had brought to him, Carton addressed the photograph as if it had
+been Kahn himself.
+
+"I have you at last," he cried. "This is the end of your secret ring of
+jury fixers. I think that will about settle the case of Kahn, if not of
+Dopey Jack, when we get ready to spring it. Kennedy, make another set
+of prints and let me lock them in a safe deposit vault. That's as
+precious to me as if it were the Black Book itself!"
+
+Craig laughed. "Not such a bad evening's work, after all," he remarked,
+clearing things up. "Do you realize what time it is?"
+
+Carton glanced perfunctorily at his watch. "I had forgotten time," he
+returned.
+
+"Yes," agreed Craig, "but to-morrow is another day, you know. I don't
+object to staying up all night, or even several nights, but there
+doesn't seem to be anything more that we can do now, and it may be that
+we shall need our strength later. This is, after all, only a beginning
+in getting at the man higher up."
+
+"The man highest up," corrected Carton, with elation as we parted on
+the campus, Kennedy and I to go to our apartment.
+
+"See you in the morning, Carton," bade Kennedy. "By that time, no
+doubt, there will be some news of the Black Book."
+
+We arrived at our apartment a few minutes later. On the floor was some
+mail which Kennedy quickly ran over. It did not appear to be of any
+importance--that is, it had no bearing on the case which was now
+absorbing our attention.
+
+"Well, what do you think of that?" he exclaimed as he tore open one
+diminutive letter. "That was thoughtful, anyhow. She must have sent us
+that a few minutes after we left headquarters."
+
+He handed me an engraved card. It was from Miss Ashton, inviting us to
+a non-partisan suffrage evening at her studio in her home, to be
+followed by a dance.
+
+Underneath she had written a few words of special invitation, ending,
+"I shall try to have some people there who may be able to help us in
+the Betty Blackwell matter."
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+THE AFTERNOON DANCE
+
+
+It was early the following morning that I missed Kennedy from our
+apartment. Naturally I guessed from my previous experiences with that
+gentleman that he would most likely be found at his laboratory, and I
+did not worry, but put the finishing touches on a special article for
+the Star which I had promised for that day and had already nearly
+completed.
+
+Consequently it was not until the forenoon that I sauntered around to
+the Chemistry Building. Precisely as I had expected, I found Kennedy
+there at work.
+
+I had been there scarcely a quarter of an hour when the door opened and
+Clare Kendall entered with a cheery greeting. It was evident that she
+had something to report.
+
+"The letter to Betty Blackwell which you sent to the Montmartre has
+come back, unopened," she announced, taking from her handbag a letter
+stamped with the post-office form indicating that the addressee could
+not be found and that the letter was returned to the sender. The
+stamped hand of the post-office pointed to the upper left-hand corner
+where Clare had written in a fictitious name and used an address to
+which she frequently had mail sent when she wanted it secret.
+
+"Only on the back," she pursued, turning the letter over, "there are
+some queer smudges. What are they? They don't look like dirt."
+
+Kennedy glanced at it only casually, as if he had fully expected the
+incident to turn out as it did.
+
+"Not unopened, Miss Kendall," he commented. "We have already had a
+little scientific letter-opening. This was a case of scientific
+letter-sealing. That was a specially prepared envelope."
+
+He reached down into his desk and pulled out another, sealed it
+carefully, dried it, then held it over a steaming pan of water until
+the gum was softened and it could be opened again. On the back were
+smudges just like those on the letter that had been returned.
+
+"On the thin line of gum on the flap of the envelope," he explained, "I
+have placed first a coating of tannin, over which is the gum. Then on
+the part of the envelope to which the flap adheres when it is sealed I
+placed some iron sulphate. When I sealed the envelope so carefully I
+brought the two together separated only by the thin film of gum. Now
+when steam is applied to soften the gum, the usual method of the
+letter-opener, the tannin and the sulphate are brought together. They
+run and leave these blots or dark smudges. So, you see, someone has
+been found at the Montmartre, even if it is not Betty Blackwell
+herself, who has interest enough in the case to open a letter to her
+before handing it back to the postman. That shows us that we are on the
+right trail at least, even if it does not tell us who is at the end of
+the trail. Here's another thing; This 'Marie' is a new one. We must
+find out about her."
+
+"At the Futurist Tea Room at four this afternoon, when she meets our
+good friend, young Dr. Harris," reminded Clare. "Between cabarets and
+tea rooms I don't know whether this is work or play."
+
+"It's work, all right," smiled Kennedy, adding, "at least it would be
+if it weren't lightened by your help."
+
+It was the middle of the afternoon when Craig and I left the laboratory
+to keep our appointment with Miss Kendall at the Futurist Tea Room,
+where we hoped to find Dr. Harris's friend "Marie," who seemed to want
+to see him so badly.
+
+A long line of touring and town cars as well as taxicabs bore eloquent
+testimony not only to the popularity of this tea room and cabaret, but
+to the growth of afternoon dancing. One never realizes how large a
+leisure class there is in the city until after a visit to anything from
+a baseball game to a matinee--and a dance. People seemed literally to
+be flocking to the Futurist. They seemed to like its congeniality, its
+tone, its "atmosphere."
+
+As we left our hats to the tender mercies of the "boys" who had the
+checking concession we could see that the place was rapidly filling up.
+
+"If we are to get a table that we want here, we'd better get it now,"
+remarked Kennedy, slipping the inevitable piece of change to the head
+waiter. "If we sit over there in that sort of little bower we can see
+when Miss Kendall arrives and we shall not be so conspicuous ourselves,
+either."
+
+The Futurist was not an especially ornate place, although a great deal
+of money had evidently been expended in fitting it up to attract a
+recherche clientele.
+
+Our table, which Kennedy had indicated, was, as he had said, in a sort
+of little recess, where we could see without being much observed
+ourselves, although that seemed almost an impossibility in such a
+place. In fact, I noticed before we had had time to seat ourselves that
+we had already attracted the attention of two show girls who sat down
+the aisle and were amusing themselves at watching us by means of a
+mirror. It would not have been very difficult to persuade them to
+dispense with the mirror.
+
+A moment later Clare Kendall entered and paused at the door an instant,
+absorbing the gay scene as only a woman and a detective could. Craig
+rose and advanced to meet her, and as she caught sight of us her face
+brightened. The show girls eyed her narrowly and with but slight
+approval.
+
+"We feel more at ease with a lady in the party," remarked Craig, as
+they reached the table and I rose to greet her. "Two men alone here are
+quite as noticeable as two ladies. Walter, I know, was quite
+uncomfortable."
+
+"To say nothing of the fact which you omitted," I retaliated, "that it
+is a pleasure to be with Miss Kendall--even if we must talk shop all
+the time."
+
+Clare smiled, for her quick intuition had already taken in and
+dismissed as of no importance the two show girls. We ordered as a
+matter of course, then settled back for a long interval until the
+waiter out of the goodness of his heart might retrieve whatever was
+possible from the mob of servitors where refreshments were dispensed.
+
+"Opposite us," whispered Clare, resting her chin on her interlocked
+fingers and her elbows on the tip-edge of the table, "do you see that
+athletic-looking young lady, who seems to be ready for anything from
+tea to tango? Well, the man with her is Martin Ogleby."
+
+Ogleby was of the tall, sloping-shouldered variety, whom one can see on
+the Avenue and in the clubs and hotels in such numbers that it almost
+seems that there must be an establishment for turning them out, even
+down to a trademark concealed somewhere about them, "Made in England."
+Only Ogleby seemed a little different in the respect that one felt that
+if all the others were stamped by the same die, he was the die, at
+least. Compared to him many of the others took on the appearance of
+spurious counterfeits.
+
+"Dr. Harris," Craig whispered, indicating to us the direction with his
+eyes.
+
+Outside on a settee, we could see in the corridor a man waiting,
+restless and ill at ease. Now and then he looked covertly at his watch
+as if he expected someone who was late and he wondered if anything
+could be amiss.
+
+Just then a superbly gowned woman alighted from a cab. The starter
+bowed as if she were familiar. It was evident that this was the woman
+for whom Harris waited, the "Marie" of the letter.
+
+She was a carefully groomed woman, as artificial as French heels. Yet
+indeed it was that studied artificiality which constituted her chief
+attraction. As Harris greeted her I noted that Clare was amazed at the
+daring cut of her gown, which excited comment even at the Futurist.
+
+Her smooth, full, well-rounded face with its dark olive skin and just a
+faint trace of colour on either cheek, her snappy hazel eyes whose fire
+was heightened by the penciling of the eyebrows, all were a marvel of
+the dexterity of her artificial beautifier. And yet in spite of all
+there was an air of unextinguishable coarseness about her which it was
+difficult to describe, but easy to feel. "Her lips are too thick and
+her mouth too large," remarked Clare, "and yet in some incomprehensible
+way she gives you the impression of daintiness. What is it?"
+
+"The woman is frankly deceptive from the tip of her aigrette to the
+toes of her shoes," observed Craig.
+
+"And yet," smiled Clare, watching with interest the little stir her
+arrival had made among the revellers, "you can see that she is the envy
+of every woman here who has slaved and toiled for that same effect
+without approaching within miles of it or attracting one quarter the
+notice for her pains that this woman receives."
+
+Dr. Harris was evidently in his element at the attention which his
+companion attracted. They seemed to be on very good terms indeed, and
+one felt that Bohemianism could go no further.
+
+They paused, fortunately, at a just vacated table around an "L" from us
+and sat down. For once waiters seemed to vie in serving rather than in
+neglecting.
+
+By this time I had gained the impression that the Futurist was all that
+its name implied--not up to the minute, but decidedly ahead of it.
+There was an exotic flavour to the place, a peculiar fascination, that
+was foreign rather than American, at seeing demi-monde and decency
+rubbing elbows. I felt sure that a large percentage of the women there
+were really young married women, whose first step downward was truly
+nothing worse than saying they had been at their whist clubs when in
+reality it was tango and tea. What the end might be to one who let the
+fascination blind her perspective I could imagine.
+
+Dr. Harris and "Marie" were nearer the dancing floor than we were, but
+seemed oblivious to it. Now and then as the music changed we could
+catch a word or two.
+
+He was evidently making an effort to be gay, to counteract the feeling
+which she had concealed as she came in, but which had the upper hand
+now that they were seated.
+
+"Won't you dance?" I heard him say.
+
+"No, Harry. I came here to tell you about how things are going."
+
+There was a harshness about her voice which I recognized as belonging
+exclusively to one class of women in the city. She lowered it as she
+went on talking earnestly.
+
+"It looks as though someone has squealed, but who--" I caught in the
+fragmentary lulls of the revelry.
+
+"I didn't know it was as bad as that," Dr. Harris remarked.
+
+They talked almost in whispers for several moments while I strained my
+ears to catch a syllable, but without success. What were they talking
+about? Was it about Dopey Jack? Or did they know something about Betty
+Blackwell? Perhaps it was about the Black Book. Even when the music
+stopped they talked without dropping a word.
+
+The music started again. There was no mistaking the appeal that the
+rocking whirl of the rhythmic dance made. From the side of the table
+where Kennedy was seated he could catch an occasional glimpse of the
+face of Marie. I noticed that he had torn a blank page off the back of
+the menu and with a stub of a pencil was half idly writing.
+
+At the top he had placed the word, "Nose," followed by "straight, with
+nostrils a trifle flaring," and some other words I could not quite
+catch. Beneath that he had written "Ears," which in turn was followed
+by some words which he was setting down carefully. Eyes, chin, and
+mouth followed, until I began to realize that he was making a sort of
+scientific analysis of the woman's features.
+
+"I shall need some more--" I caught as the music softened unexpectedly.
+
+A singer on the little platform was varying the programme now by a solo
+and I shifted my chair so as to get a better view and at the same time
+also a look at the table around the corner from us.
+
+As I did so I saw Dr. Harris reach into his breast pocket and take out
+a little package which he quickly handed to Marie. As their hands met,
+their eyes met also. I fancied that the doctor struggled to
+demagnetize, so to speak, the look which she gave him.
+
+"You'll come to see me--afterwards?" she asked, dropping the little
+package into her handbag of gold mesh and rattling the various
+accoutrements of beautification which tinkled next to it.
+
+Harris nodded.
+
+"You're a life saver to some--" floated over to me from Marie.
+
+The solo had been completed and the applause was dying away.
+
+"... tells me he needs ... badly off ... don't forget to see ..."
+
+The words came in intervals. What they meant I did not know, but I
+strove to remember them. Evidently Marie and a host of others were
+depending on Harris for something. At any rate, it seemed, now that she
+had talked she felt easier in mind, as one does after carrying a weight
+a long time in secret.
+
+"Tanguez-vous?" he asked as the orchestra struck up again.
+
+"Yes--thank you, Harry--just one."
+
+We watched the couple attentively as they were alternately lost and
+found in the dizzy swaying mass. The music became wilder and they threw
+themselves into the abandon of the dance.
+
+They had been absorbed so much in each other and the unburdening of
+whatever it was she had wanted to tell him, that neither had noticed
+the other couple on the other side of the floor whose presence had
+divided our own attention.
+
+Martin Ogleby and his partner were not dancing. It was warm and they
+were among the lucky ones who had succeeded in getting something
+besides a cheque from the waiters. Two tall glasses of ginger ale with
+a long curl of lemon peel sepentining through the cracked ice stood
+before them.
+
+The dance had brought Dr. Harris and Marie squarely around to within a
+few feet of where Ogleby was sitting. As Harris swung around she faced
+Ogleby in such a way that he could not avoid her, nor could she have
+possibly missed seeing him.
+
+For a moment their eyes met. Not a muscle in either face moved. It was
+as if they were perfect strangers. She turned and murmured something to
+her partner. Ogleby leaned over, without the least confusion, and made
+a witty remark to his partner. It was over in a minute. The acting of
+both could not have been better if they had deliberately practised
+their parts. What did it mean?
+
+As the dance concluded I saw Ogleby glance hastily over in the
+direction of Marie. He gave a quick smile of recognition, as much as to
+say "Thank you."
+
+It was evident now that both Dr. Harris and Marie, whoever she was,
+were getting ready to leave. As they rose to move to the door, Kennedy
+quickly paid our own cheque, leaving the change to the waiter, and
+without seeming to do so we followed them.
+
+Harris was standing near the starter with his hat off, apparently
+making his adieux. Deftly Kennedy managed to slip in behind so as to be
+next in line for a cab.
+
+"Walter and I will follow Harris if they separate," he whispered to
+Clare Kendall. "You follow the woman."
+
+The afternoon was verging toward dinner and people were literally
+bribing the taxicab starter. Our own cab stood next in line behind that
+which Harris had called.
+
+"I have certainly enjoyed this little glimpse of Bohemia," commented
+Kennedy to Miss Kendall as we waited. "I shouldn't mind if detective
+work took me more often to afternoon dances. There, they are going down
+the steps. Here's the cab I called. Let me know how things turn out.
+Goodbye. Here--chauffeur, around that way--where that other cab is
+going--the lady will tell you where to drive."
+
+Harris hesitated a moment as if considering whether to take a cab
+himself, then slowly turned and strolled down the street.
+
+We followed, slowly also. There was something unreal about the bright
+afternoon sunshine after the atmosphere of the Futurist Tea Room, where
+everything had been done to promote the illusion of night.
+
+Harris walked along meditatively, crossing one street after another,
+not as if debating where he was going, but rather in no great hurry to
+get there.
+
+Instead of going down Broadway he swerved into Seventh Avenue, then
+after a few blocks turned into a side street, quickened his pace, and
+at last dived down into a basement under a saloon.
+
+It was a wretched neighbourhood, one of those which reminds one of the
+life of an animal undergoing a metamorphosis. Once it had evidently
+been a rather nice residential section. The movement of population
+uptown had left it stranded to the real estate speculators, less
+desirable to live in, but more valuable for the future. The moving in
+of anyone who could be got to live there had led to rapid deterioration
+and a mixed population of whites and negroes against the day when the
+upward sweep of business should bring the final transformation into
+office and loft buildings. But for the present it was decaying, out of
+repair, a mass of cheap rooming-houses, tenements, and mixed races.
+
+The joint into which Harris had gone was the only evidence of anything
+like prosperity on the block, and that evidence was confined to the two
+entrances on the street, one leading into the ground floor and the
+other down a flight of steps to the basement.
+
+"Do you want to go in?" asked Kennedy in a tone that indicated that he
+himself was going.
+
+Just then a negro, dazzling in the whiteness of his collar and the
+brilliancy of his checked suit, came up the stairs accompanied by a
+light mulatto.
+
+"It's a black and tan joint," Craig went on, "at least
+downstairs--negro cabaret, and all that sort of thing."
+
+"I'm game," I replied.
+
+We stumbled down the worn steps, past a swinging door near which stood
+the proprietor with a careful eye on arrivals and departures. The place
+was deceiving from the outside. It really extended through two houses,
+and even at this early hour it was fairly crowded.
+
+There were negroes of all degrees of shading, down to those who were
+almost white. Scattered about at the various tables were perhaps half a
+dozen white women, tawdry imitations of the faster set at the Futurist
+which we had just left, the leftovers of a previous generation in the
+Tenderloin. There was also a fair sprinkling of white men, equally
+degraded. White men and coloured women, white women and coloured men,
+chatted here and there, but for the most part the habitues were
+negroes. At any rate the levelling down seemed to have produced
+something like an equality of races in viciousness.
+
+As we sat down at a table, Kennedy remarked: "They used to drift down
+to Chinatown, a good many of these relics. You used to see them in the
+old 'suicide halls' of the Bowery, too. But that is all passing away
+now. Reform and agitation have closed up those old dives. Now they try
+to veneer it over with electric lights and bright varnish, but I
+suppose it comes to the same thing. After they are cast off Broadway,
+the next step lower is the black and tan joint. After that it is
+suicide, unless it is death."
+
+"I don't think this is any improvement over the--the bad old days," I
+ventured.
+
+Kennedy shook his head in agreement. "There's Harris, down there in the
+back, talking to someone, a white man, alone."
+
+A waiter came over to us grinning, for we had assumed the role of
+sightseers.
+
+"Who is that, 'way back there, with his chair tipped to the wall,
+talking to the man with his back to us?" asked Kennedy.
+
+"Ike the Dropper, sah," informed the waiter with obvious pride that
+such a celebrity should be harboured here.
+
+I looked with a feeling akin to awe at the famous character who, in
+common with many others of his type, had migrated uptown from the
+proverbial haunts of the gunmen on the East Side in search of pastures
+new and untroubled.
+
+Ike the Dropper may have once been a strong-arm man, but at present I
+knew that he was chiefly noted for the fact, and he and his kind were
+reputed to be living on the earnings of women to whom they were
+supposed to afford "protection." I reflected on the passing glories of
+brutality which had sunk so low.
+
+There were noise and life a plenty here. At a discordant box of a piano
+a negro performer was playing with a keen appreciation of time if of
+nothing else, and two others with voices that might not have been
+unpopular in a decent minstrel show were rendering a popular air. They
+wore battered straw hats and a make-up which was intended to be
+grotesque.
+
+From time to time, as the pianist was moved, he played snatches of the
+same music as that which we had heard at the Futurist, and between us
+and Harris and Ike the Dropper several couples were one-stepping, each
+in their own sweet way. As the music became more lively their dancing
+came more and more to resemble some of the almost brutal Apache dances
+of Paris, in that the man seemed to exert sheer force and the woman
+agility in avoiding him. It was an entirely new phase of afternoon
+dancing, an entirely new "leisure class," this strange combination of
+Bohemia and Senegambia.
+
+At a table next to us, so near that we could almost rub elbows with
+them, sat a white man and a white woman. They had been talking in low
+tones, but I could catch whole sentences now and then, for they seemed
+to be making no extraordinary effort at concealment.
+
+"He was framing a sucker to get away with a whole front," I heard the
+man say, "or with a poke or a souper, but instead he got dropped by a
+flatty and was canned for a sleep."
+
+"Two dips--pickpockets," whispered Craig. "Someone was trying to take
+everything a victim had, or at least his pocketbook or watch, but
+instead he was arrested by a detective and locked up over night."
+
+"Good work," I laughed. "You are 'some' translator."
+
+I looked at our neighbours with a certain amount of respect. Were they
+framing up something themselves? At any rate I felt that I would rather
+see them here and know what they were than to be jostled by them in a
+street car. The sleek proprietor kept a careful eye on them and I knew
+that a sort of unwritten law would prevent them from trying on anything
+that would endanger their welcome in a joint none too savoury already.
+
+Nevertheless I was quite interested in the bits of pickpocket argot
+that floated across to us, expressions like "crossing the mit,"
+"nipping a slang," a "mouthpiece," "making a holler" and innumerable
+other choice bits as unintelligible to me as "Beowulf."
+
+After a few minutes the woman got up and went out, leaving the man
+still sitting at the table. Of course it was none of my business what
+they were doing, I suppose, but I could not help being interested.
+
+That diversion being ended, I joined Kennedy in his scrutiny of Harris
+and his choice friend. Of course at our distance it was absolutely
+impossible to gain any idea of what they were talking about, and indeed
+our chief concern was not to attract any attention. Whatever it was,
+they were very earnest about it and paid no attention to us.
+
+The dancing had ceased and the two "artists" were entertaining the
+select audience with some choice bits of ragtime. We could see Ike the
+Dropper and Dr. Harris still talking.
+
+Suddenly Kennedy nudged me. I looked up in time to see Dr. Harris reach
+into his inside breast pocket again and quietly slip out a package much
+like that which we had already seen him hand to Marie at the Futurist.
+Ike took it, looked at it a moment with some satisfaction, then stuffed
+it down carefully into the right-hand outside pocket of his coat.
+
+"I wonder what that is that Harris seems to be passing out to them?"
+mused Craig.
+
+"Drugs, perhaps," I ventured offhand.
+
+"Maybe. I'd like to know for certain."
+
+Just then Harris and Ike rose and walked down on the other side of the
+place toward the door. Kennedy turned his head so that even if they
+should look in our direction they would not see his face. I did the
+same. Fortunately neither seemed interested in the other occupants.
+Harris having evidently fulfilled his mission, whether of delivering
+the package or receiving news which Ike seemed to be pouring into his
+ear, had but one thought, to escape from a place which was evidently
+distasteful to him. At the door they paused for a moment and spoke with
+the proprietor. He nodded reassuringly once or twice to Dr. Harris,
+much to the relief, I thought, of that gentleman.
+
+Kennedy was chafing under the restraint which kept him in the
+background and prevented any of his wizardry of mechanical
+eavesdropping. I fancied that his roving eye was considering various
+means of utilizing his seemingly inexhaustible ingenuity if occasion
+should arise.
+
+At last Harris managed to shake hands good-bye and disappeared up the
+steps to the sidewalk still followed by Ike.
+
+Kennedy leaned over and looked the "dip" sitting alone back of us
+squarely in the face.
+
+"Would you like to make twenty-five dollars--just like that?" he asked
+with a quick gesture that accorded very well with the slang.
+
+The man looked at him very suspiciously, as if considering what kind of
+new game this was.
+
+"That was your gun moll who just went out, wasn't it?" pursued Kennedy
+with assurance.
+
+"Aw, come off. Whatyer givin' us?" responded the man half angrily.
+
+"Don't stall. I know. I'm not one of the bulls, either. It's just a
+plain proposition. Will you or won't you take twenty-five of easy
+money?"
+
+Kennedy's manner seemed to mystify him. For a moment he looked us over,
+then seemed to decide that we were all right.
+
+"How?" he asked in a harsh but not wholly ungracious whisper. "I'll tip
+yer off if the boss is lookin'. He don't like no frame-ups in here."
+
+"You saw Ike the Dropper go out with that man?"
+
+"The guy with the glasses?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"The guy with the glasses gave Ike a little package which Ike put into
+the right-hand outside pocket of his coat. Now it's worth twenty-five
+beans to me to get that package--get me?"
+
+"I gotyer. Slip me a five now and the other twenty if I get it."
+
+Kennedy appeared to consider.
+
+"I'm on the level," pursued the dip. "Me and the goil is in hard luck
+with a mouthpiece who wants fifty bucks to beat the case for one of the
+best tools we ever had in our mob that they got right to-day."
+
+"From that I take it that one of your pals needs fifty dollars for a
+lawyer to get him out of jail. Well, I'll take a chance. Bring the
+package to me at--well, the Prince Henry cafe. I'll be there at seven
+o'clock."
+
+The pickpocket nodded, slid from his place and sidled out of the joint
+without attracting any attention.
+
+"What's the lay?" I asked.
+
+"Oh, I just want that package, that's all. Come on, Walter. We might as
+well go before any of these yellow girls speak to us and frame up
+something on us."
+
+The proprietor bowed as much as to say, "Come again and bring your
+friends."
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+THE TYPEWRITER CLUE
+
+
+Ike was nowhere to be seen when we reached the street, but down the
+block we caught sight of Dr. Harris on the next corner. Kennedy
+hastened our pace until we were safely in his wake, then managed to
+keep just a few paces behind him.
+
+Instead of turning into the street where the Futurist was, Harris kept
+on up Broadway. It was easy enough to follow him in the crowd now
+without being perceived.
+
+He turned into the street where the Little Montmartre was preparing for
+a long evening of entertainment. We turned, and to cover ourselves got
+into a conversation with a hack driver who seemed suddenly to have
+sprung from nowhere with the cryptic whisper, "Drive you to the Ladies'
+Club, gents?"
+
+Out of the tail of his eye Kennedy watched Harris. Instead of turning
+into the Montmartre and his office, he went past to a high-stooped
+brownstone house, two doors away, climbed the steps and entered.
+
+We sauntered down the street and looked quickly at the house. A brass
+sign on the wall beside the door read, "Mme. Margot's Beauty Shop."
+
+"I see," commented Kennedy. "You know women of the type who frequent
+the Futurist and the Montmartre are always running to the hairdressing
+and manicure parlours. They make themselves 'beautiful' under the
+expert care of the various specialists and beauty doctors. Then, too,
+they keep in touch that way with what is going on in the demi-monde.
+That is their club, so to speak. It is part of the beauty shop's trade
+to impart such information--at least of a beauty shop in this
+neighbourhood."
+
+I regarded the place curiously.
+
+"Come, Walter, don't stare," nudged Kennedy. "Let's take a turn down to
+the Prince Henry and wait. We can get a bite to eat, too."
+
+I had hardly expected that the pickpocket would play fair, but
+evidently the lure of the remaining twenty dollars was too strong. We
+had scarcely finished our dinner when he came in.
+
+"Here it is," he whispered. "The house man here at the Prince Henry
+knows me. Slip me the twenty."
+
+Kennedy leisurely tore the wrappings from the packet.
+
+"I suppose you have already looked at this first and found that it
+isn't worth anything to you compared to twenty dollars. Anyhow, you
+kept your word. Hello--what is it?"
+
+He had disclosed several small packets. Inside each, sealed, was a
+peculiar glistening whitish powder.
+
+"H'm," mused Kennedy, "another job for the chemist. Here's the
+bankroll."
+
+"Thanks," grinned the dip as he disappeared through the revolving door.
+
+We had returned to the laboratory that night where Kennedy was
+preparing to experiment on the white powder which he had secured in the
+packet that came from Dr. Harris. The door opened and Clare Kendall
+entered.
+
+"I've been calling you up all over town," she said, "and couldn't find
+you. I have something that will interest you, I think. You said you
+wanted something written by Dr. Harris. Well, there it is."
+
+She laid a sheet of typewriting on the laboratory table.
+
+"How did you get it?" asked Kennedy in eager approbation.
+
+"When I left you at the Futurist Tea Room to follow that woman Marie in
+the cab, I had a good deal of trouble. I guess people thought I was
+crazy, the way I was ordering that driver about, but he was so stupid
+and he would get tangled up in the traffic on Fifth Avenue. Still, I
+managed to hang on, principally because I had a notion already that she
+was going to the Montmartre. Sure enough, she turned down that block,
+but she didn't go into the hotel after all. She stopped and went into a
+place two doors down--Mme. Margot's Beauty Parlour."
+
+"Just where we finally saw Harris go," exclaimed Kennedy. "I beg your
+pardon for interrupting."
+
+"Of course I couldn't go in right after her, so I drove around the
+corner. Then it occurred to me that it would be a good time to stop in
+to see Dr. Harris--when he was out. You know my experience with the
+fakers has made me pretty good at faking up ailments. Then, too, I knew
+that it would be easy when he was not there. I said I was an old
+patient and had an appointment and that I'd wait, although I knew those
+were not his regular office hours. He has an alleged trained nurse
+there all the time. She let me into his waiting-room on the second
+floor in front--you remember the private dining-rooms are in back. I
+waited in momentary fear that he WOULD come back. You see, I had a
+scheme of my own. Well, I waited until at last the nurse had to leave
+the office for a short time.
+
+"That was my chance. I tiptoed over to his desk in the next room. On it
+were a lot of letters. I looked over them but could find nothing that
+seemed to be of interest. They were all letters from other people. But
+they showed that he must have quite an extensive practice, and that he
+is not over-scrupulous. I didn't want to take anything that would
+excite suspicion unless I had to. Just then I heard someone coming down
+the corridor from the elevator. I had just time to get back to a chair
+in the waiting-room when the door opened and there was that Titian from
+the office, you remember. She saw me without recognizing me, went in
+and laid some papers on his desk. As soon as she was gone, I went in
+again and looked them over. Here was one that she had copied for him."
+
+Kennedy had been carefully scrutinizing the sheet of paper as she told
+how she obtained it.
+
+"It couldn't be better as far as our purposes are concerned," he
+congratulated. "It seems to consist of some notes he had made and
+wished to preserve about drugs."
+
+I leaned over and read:
+
+VERONAL.--Diethylmalonyl or diethylbarbituric acid. A hypnotic used
+extensively. White, crystalline, odourless, slightly bitter. Best in
+ten to fifteen grain cachets. Does not affect circulatory or
+respiratory systems or temperature. Toxicity low: 135 gr. taken with no
+serious result. Unreasonable use for insomnia, however, may lead to
+death.
+
+HEROIN.--Constant use of heroin has been known to lead to--
+
+I looked inquiringly at Kennedy.
+
+"Just some fragmentary notes which he had evidently been making. Rather
+interesting in themselves as showing perhaps something of his practice,
+but not necessarily incriminating."
+
+While we were discussing the contents of the notes, Kennedy had laid
+over the typewritten sheet the rules and graduated strip of glass which
+he had used in examining the strange letter signed "An Outcast."
+
+A moment later he pulled the letter itself from a drawer and laid the
+two pieces of writing side by side, comparing them, going from one to
+the other successively.
+
+"People generally, who have not investigated the subject," he remarked
+as he worked, "hold the opinion that the typewriter has no
+individuality. Fortunately that is not true. The typewriting machine
+does not always afford an effective protection to the criminal. On the
+contrary, the typewriting may be a direct means of tracing a document
+to its source and showing it to be what it really is. This is
+especially true of typewritten anonymous letters. Without careful
+investigation it is impossible to say what can be determined from the
+examination of any particular piece of typewriting, but typewriting can
+often be positively identified as being the work of a certain
+particular typewriting machine and even the date of writing can
+sometimes be found out."
+
+He had been carefully counting something under the lens of a pocket
+glass. "Even the number of threads to the inch in the ribbon, as shown
+in the type impression, plainly seen and accurately measured by the
+microscope or in an enlarged photograph, may show something about the
+identity of a disputed writing."
+
+He was pointing to a letter "r." Under the glass I noticed that there
+was a break in the little curl at the top.
+
+"Now if you find such a break in the same letter in another piece of
+typewriting, what would you think?"
+
+"That they were from the same machine," I replied.
+
+"Not so fast," he cautioned. "True, it might raise a presumption that
+it was from the same machine. But the laws of chance would be against
+your enthusiasm, Walter."
+
+"Of course," I admitted on second thought.
+
+"It's just like the finger-print theory. There must be a sort of
+summation of individual characteristics. Now here's a broken 'l' and
+there is an 'a' that is twisted. Now, if the same defects are found in
+another piece of writing, that makes the presumption all the stronger,
+and when you have massed together a number of such characteristics it
+raises the presumption to a mathematical certainty, does it not?"
+
+I nodded and he went on. "The faces of many letters inevitably become
+broken, worn, or battered. Not only does that tend to identify a
+particular machine, but it is sometimes possible, if you have certain
+admitted standard specimens of writing covering a long period, to tell
+just when a disputed writing was made. There are two steps in such an
+inquiry, the first the determination of the fact that a document was
+written on a certain particular kind of machine and the second that it
+was written on a certain individual machine of that make. I have here
+specimens of the writing of all the leading machines. It is easy to
+pick out the make used, say in the 'Outcast' letter. Moreover, as I
+said when I first saw that letter, it is in the regular pica type. So
+are they all, but as ninety-five per cent, use the pica style that in
+itself proved nothing."
+
+"What is that bit of ruled glass?" asked Clare, bending over the
+letters in deep interest.
+
+"In ordinary typewriting," replied Craig, "each letter occupies an
+imaginary square, ten to the inch horizontally and six to the inch
+vertically. Typewriting letters are in line both ways. This ruled glass
+plate is an alinement test plate for detecting defects in alinement. I
+have also here another glass plate in which the lines diverge each at a
+very slightly different angle--a typewriting protractor for measuring
+the slant of divergence of various letters that have become twisted, so
+to speak.
+
+"When it is in perfect alinement the letter occupies the middle of each
+square and when out of alinement it may be in any of the four corners,
+or either side of the middle position or at the top or bottom above or
+below the middle. That, you see, makes nine positions in all--or eight
+possible divergences from normal in this particular alone."
+
+Clare had been using the protractor herself, quickly familiarizing
+herself with it.
+
+"Another possible divergence," went on Kennedy, "is the perpendicular
+position of the letter in relation to the line. That is of great value
+in individualizing a machine. It is very seldom that machines, even
+when they are new, are perfect in this particular. It does not seem
+much until you magnify it. Then anyone can see it, and it is a
+characteristic that is fixed, continuous, and not much changed by
+variations in speed or methods of writing.
+
+"Here's another thing. Typewriter faces are not flat like printing
+type, but are concaved to conform to the curve of the printing surface
+of the roller. When they are properly adjusted all portions should
+print uniformly. But when they are slightly out of position in any
+direction the two curved surfaces of type and roller are not exactly
+parallel and therefore don't come together with uniform pressure. The
+result is a difference in intensity in different parts of the
+impression."
+
+It was fascinating to see Craig at work over such minute points which
+we had never suspected in so common a thing as ordinary typewriting.
+
+"Then you can identify these letters positively?" asked Clare.
+
+"Positively," answered Craig. "If two machines of the same make were
+perfect to begin with and in perfect condition--which is never found to
+be the case when they are critically examined--the work from one would
+be theoretically indistinguishable from that of another until actual
+use had affected them differently. The work of any number of machines
+begins inevitably to diverge as soon as they are used. Since there are
+thousands of possible particulars in which differences may develop, it
+very soon becomes possible to identify positively the work of a
+particular typewriting machine."
+
+"How about the operator?" I asked curiously.
+
+"Different habits of touch, spacing, speed, arrangement, and
+punctuation all may also tend to show that a particular piece of
+writing was or was not done by one operator. In other words,
+typewriting individuality in many cases is of the most positive and
+convincing character and reaches a degree of certainty which may almost
+be described as absolute proof. The identification of a typewritten
+document in many cases is exactly parallel to the identification of an
+individual who precisely answers a general description as to features,
+complexion, size, and in addition matches a long detailed list of
+scars, birthmarks, deformities, and individual peculiarities."
+
+Together we three began an exhaustive examination of the letters, and
+as Kennedy called off the various characteristics of each type on the
+standard keyboard we checked them up. It did not take long to convince
+us, nor would it have failed to convince the most sceptical, that both
+had come from the same source and the same writer.
+
+"You see," concluded Kennedy triumphantly, "we have advanced a long
+step nearer the solution of at least one of the problems of this case."
+
+Miss Kendall had evidently been thinking quickly and turning the matter
+over in her mind.
+
+"But," she spoke up quickly, "even that does not point to the same
+person as the author--not the writer, but the author--of the three
+pieces of writing."
+
+"No indeed," agreed Craig. "There is much left to be done. As a matter
+of fact, there might have been one author, or there might have been
+two, although all the mechanical work was done by one person. But we
+are at least sure that we have localized the source of the writing. We
+know that it is from the Montmartre that the letter came. We know that
+it is in some way that that place and some of the people who frequent
+it are connected with the disappearance of Betty Blackwell."
+
+"In other words," supplied Clare, "we are going to get at the truth
+through that Titian-haired stenographer."
+
+"Exactly."
+
+Clare had risen to go.
+
+"It quite takes my breath away to think that we are really making such
+progress against the impregnable Montmartre. At various times my
+investigators have been piecing together little bits of information
+about that place. I shall have the whole record put together to-night.
+I shall let you know about it the first thing in the morning."
+
+The door had scarcely closed when Kennedy turned quickly to me and
+remarked, "That girl has something on her mind. I wonder what it is?"
+
+
+
+
+XII
+
+THE "PORTRAIT PARLE"
+
+
+What it was that Clare Kendall had on her mind, appeared the following
+day.
+
+"There's something I want to try," she volunteered, evidently unable to
+repress it any longer. "I have a plan--or half a plan. Don't you think
+it would be just the thing, under the circumstances, to ring up
+District Attorney Carton, tell him what we have accomplished and take
+him into our confidence? Perhaps he can suggest something. At any rate
+we have all got to work together, for there is going to be a great
+fight when they find out how far we have gone."
+
+"Bully idea," agreed Craig.
+
+Twenty minutes later we were seated in the District Attorney's office
+in the Criminal Courts Building, pouring into his sympathetic ear the
+story of our progress so far.
+
+Carton seemed to be delighted, as Kennedy proceeded to outline the
+case, at the fact that he and Miss Kendall had found it possible to
+co-operate. His own experience in trying to get others to work with the
+District Attorney's office, particularly the police, had been quite the
+reverse.
+
+"I wish to heaven you could get the right kind of evidence against the
+Montmartre gang," he sighed. "It is a gang, too--a high-class gang. In
+fact--well, it must be done. That place is a blot on the city. The
+police never have really tried to get anything on it. Miss Kendall
+never could, could you? I admit I never have. It seems to be understood
+that it is practically impossible to prove anything against it. They
+openly defy us. The thing can't go on. It demoralizes all our other
+work. Just one good blow at the Montmartre and we could drive every one
+of these vile crooks to cover." He brought his fist down with a thud on
+the desk, swung around in his chair, and emphasized his words with his
+forefinger.
+
+"And yet, I know as well as I know that you are all in this room that
+graft is being paid to the police and the politicians by that place and
+in fact by all those places along there. If we are to do anything with
+them, that must be proved. That is the first step and I'm glad the
+whole thing hinges on the Blackwell case. People always sit up and take
+notice when there is something personal involved, some human interest
+which even the newspapers can see. That Montmartre crowd, whoever they
+are, must be made to feel the strong arm of the law. That's what I am
+in this office to do. Now, Kennedy, there must be some way to catch
+those crooks with the goods."
+
+"They aren't ordinary crooks, you know," ruminated Kennedy.
+
+"I know they are not. But you and Miss Kendall and Jameson ought to be
+able to think out a scheme."
+
+"But you see, Mr. Carton," put in Clare, "this is a brand new
+situation. Your gambling and vice and graft exposures have made all of
+them so wary that they won't pass a bill from their right to their left
+pockets for fear it is marked."
+
+Carton laughed.
+
+"Well, you are a brand new combination against them. Let me see; you
+want suggestions. Why don't you use the detectaphone--get our own
+little Black Book?"
+
+Kennedy shook his head.
+
+"The detectaphone is all right, as Dorgan knows. It might work again.
+But I don't think I'll take any chances. No, these grafters wouldn't
+say 'Thank you' in an open boat in mid-ocean, for fear of wireless,
+now. They've been educated up to a lot of things lately. No, it must be
+something new. What do you know about graft up there?"
+
+"The people who are running those places in the fifties are making
+barrels of money," summarized Carton quickly. "No one ever interferes
+with them, either. I know from reliable sources, too, that the police
+are 'getting theirs.' But although I know it I can't prove it; I can't
+even tell who is getting it. But once a week a collector for the police
+calls around in that district and shakes them all down. By Jove, to-day
+is the day. The trouble with it all is that they have made the thing so
+underground that no one but the principals know anything about it--not
+even the agents. I guess you are right about the detectaphone."
+
+"To-day's the day, is it?" mused Craig.
+
+"So I understand."
+
+"I think I can get them with a new machine they never dreamed of,"
+exclaimed Kennedy, who had been turning something over in his mind.
+
+He reached for the telephone and called the Montmartre.
+
+"Julius, please," he said when they answered; then, placing his hand
+over the transmitter, he turned to Clare. "That was your friend the
+Titian, Miss Kendall."
+
+"No friend of mine if she happens to remember seeing me in Dr. Harris's
+office the other day. Still, I doubt if she would."
+
+"Hello--Julius? Good morning. How about a private dining-room for
+three, Julius?"
+
+We could not hear the reply, but Craig added quickly, "I thought there
+were two?"
+
+Evidently the answer was in the affirmative, for Craig asked next,
+"Well, can't we have the small one?"
+
+He hung up the receiver with a satisfied smile after closing with
+"That's the way to talk. Thank you, Julius. Good-bye."
+
+"What was the difficulty?" I asked.
+
+"Why, I thought I'd take a chance--and it took. Now figure it out for
+yourself. Carton says it's dough day, so to speak, up there. What is
+more natural than that the money for all those places leased to various
+people should be passed over in a place that is public and yet is not
+public? For instance, there is the Montmartre itself. Now think it out.
+Where would that be done in the Montmartre? Why, in one of the private
+dining-rooms, of course."
+
+"That seems reasonable," agreed Carton.
+
+"That was the way I doped it," pursued Craig. "I thought I'd confirm it
+if I could. You remember they told us to call up always if I wanted a
+private dining-room and it would be reserved for me. So it was the most
+natural thing in the world for me to call up. If they had said yes, I
+should have been disappointed. But they said no, and straightway I
+wanted one of those rooms the worst way. One seems to be engaged--the
+large one. He said nothing about the other, so I asked him. Since I
+knew about it, he could hardly say no. Well, I have engaged it for
+lunch--an early luncheon, too."
+
+"It sounds all right, as though you were on the right trail," remarked
+Carton. "But, remember, only the best sort of evidence will go against
+those people. They can afford to hire the best lawyers that money can
+retain. And be careful not to let them get anything on you, for they
+are fearful liars, and they'll go the limit to discredit you."
+
+"Trust us," assured Craig. "Now, Miss Kendall, if you will give us the
+pleasure of lunching with you at the Montmartre again, I think we may
+be able to get the Judge just the sort of open and shut evidence he is
+after."
+
+"I shall be glad to do it. I'm ready now."
+
+Kennedy glanced at his watch. "It's a little early yet. If we take a
+taxicab we shall have plenty of time to stop at the laboratory on our
+way."
+
+Arriving at the laboratory, he went to a drawer, from which he took a
+little box which contained a long tube, and carefully placed it in the
+breast pocket of his coat. Then from a chest of tools he drew several
+steel sections that apparently fitted together, and began stuffing the
+parts into various pockets.
+
+"Here, Walter," he said, "these make me bulge like a yeggman with his
+outfit under his coat. Can't you help me with some of these parts?"
+
+I jammed several into various pockets--heavy pieces of metal--and we
+were ready.
+
+Our previous visits to the Montmartre seemed to have given us the
+entree and the precaution of telephoning made it even easier. Indeed,
+it appeared that about all that was necessary there was to be known and
+to be thought "right." We carefully avoided the office, where the
+stenographer might possibly have recognized Clare, and entered the
+elevator.
+
+"Is Dr. Harris in?" asked Craig, both by way of getting information and
+showing that he was no stranger.
+
+The black elevator boy gave an ivory grin. "No, sah. He done gone on
+one o' them things."
+
+Another question developed the fact that whenever Harris was away it
+was generally assumed that he was tinting the metropolis vermilion from
+the Battery to the Bronx.
+
+We passed down the hall to the smaller of the two dining-rooms, and as
+we went by the larger we could see the door open and that no one was
+there.
+
+We had ordered and the waiter had scarcely shut the door before Kennedy
+had divested himself of the heavy steel sections which he had hidden in
+his pockets. I did the same.
+
+With a quick glance he seemed to be observing just how the furniture
+was placed. The smaller dining-room was quite as elaborately furnished
+as the larger, though of course the furniture was more crowded.
+
+He moved the settee and was on his knees in a corner. "Let me see," he
+considered. "There was nothing on this side of the larger room except
+the divan in the centre."
+
+As nearly as he could judge he was measuring off just where the divan
+stood on the opposite side of the wall, and its height. Then he began
+fitting together the pieces of steel. As he added one to another, I saw
+that they made a sectional brace and bit of his own design, a long,
+vicious-looking affair such as a burglar might have been glad to own.
+
+Carefully he started to bore through the plaster and lath back of the
+settee and to one side of where the divan must have been. He was making
+just as small a hole as possible, now and then stopping to listen.
+
+There was no noise from the next room, but a tap on the door announced
+the waiter with luncheon. He shoved the settee back and joined us. The
+discreet waiter placed the food on the table and departed without a
+word or look. Kennedy resumed his work and we left the luncheon still
+untasted.
+
+The bit seemed to have gone through as Kennedy, turning it carefully,
+withdrew it now and then to make sure. At last he seemed to be
+satisfied with the opening he had made.
+
+From the package in his breast pocket he drew a long brass tube which
+looked as if it might be a putty-blower. Slowly he inserted it into the
+hole he had bored.
+
+"What is it?" I asked, unable to restrain my curiosity longer.
+
+"I felt sure that there would be no talking done in that room,
+especially as we are in this one and anyone knows that even if you
+can't put a detectaphone in a room, it will often work if merely placed
+against a wall or door, on the other side, in the next room. So I
+thought I'd use this instead. Put your eye down here."
+
+I did so and was amazed to find that through a hole less than a quarter
+of an inch in diameter the brass tube enabled me to see the entire room
+next to us.
+
+I looked up at Kennedy in surprise. "What do you think of this, Miss
+Kendall?" I asked, moving the settee out of her way. "What do you call
+it?"
+
+"That is a detectascope," he replied, "a little contrivance which makes
+use of the fish-eye lens.
+
+"Yes. The detectascope enables you to see what is going on in another
+room. The focus may be altered in range so that the faces of those in
+the room may be recognized and the act of passing money or signing
+cheques, for instance, may be detected. The instrument is fashioned
+somewhat after the cytoscope of the doctors, with which the human
+interior may be seen."
+
+"Very remarkable," exclaimed Clare. "But I can't understand how it is
+possible to see so much through such a little tube. Why, I almost fancy
+I can see more in that room than I could with my own eyes if I were
+placed so that I could not move my head."
+
+Kennedy laughed.
+
+"That's the secret," he went on. "For instance, take a drop of water.
+Professor Wood of Johns Hopkins has demonstrated recently the
+remarkable refracting power of a drop of water, using the camera and
+the drop of water as a lens. It is especially interesting to scientists
+because it illustrates the range of vision of some fishes. They have
+eyes that see over half a circle. Hence the lens gets its name--'the
+fish-eye lens.' A globe refracts the light that reaches it from all
+directions, and if it is placed as the lens is in the detectascope so
+that one half of it catches the light, all this light will be refracted
+through it. Ordinary lenses, because of their flatness, have a range of
+only a few degrees, the widest in use, I believe, taking in only
+ninety-six degrees, or a little over a quarter of a circle. So you see
+my detectascope has a range almost twice as wide as that of any other
+lens."
+
+The little tube was fascinating, and although there was no one in the
+next room yet, I could not resist the desire to keep on looking through
+it.
+
+"Since you are so interested, Walter," laughed Craig, "we'll appoint
+you to take the first shift at watching. Meanwhile we may as well eat
+since we shall certainly have to pay. When you are tired or hungry I'll
+take a turn."
+
+Kennedy and I had been taking turns at watching through the
+detectascope while Miss Kendall told us more about how she had come to
+be associated with the organization to clean up New York.
+
+"We have struck some delicate situations before," she was saying,
+"times when it meant either that we must surrender and compromise the
+work of the investigation or offend an interest that might turn out to
+be more powerful than we realized. Our rule from the start was, 'No
+Compromise.' You know the moment you compromise with one, all the
+others hear it and it weakens your position. We've made some powerful
+enemies, but our idea is that as long as we keep perfectly straight and
+honest they will never be able to beat us. We shall win in the end,
+because so far it has never come to a show-down, when we appealed to
+the public itself, that the public had not risen and backed us
+strongly."
+
+I had come to have the utmost confidence in Clare Kendall and her frank
+way of handling a ticklish yet most important subject without fear or
+prudishness. There was a refreshing newness about her method. It was
+neither the holier-than-thou attitude of many religionists, nor the
+smug monopoly of all knowledge of the social worker, nor the brutal
+wantonness of the man or woman of the world who excuses everything
+"because it is human nature, always has been and always will be."
+
+"We have no illusions on the subject," she pursued. "We don't expect to
+change human nature until the individual standard changes. But we are
+convinced of this--and it is as far as we go and is what we are out to
+accomplish--and that is that we can, and are going to, smash protected,
+commercialized vice as one of the big businesses of New York."
+
+"Sh-h," cautioned Kennedy, whose turn it happened to be just then to
+watch. "Someone has just entered the room."
+
+"Who is it?" I whispered eagerly.
+
+"A man. I can't see his face. His back is toward me, but there is
+something familiar about him. There--he is turning around. For Heaven's
+sake--it's Ike the Dropper!"
+
+We had already recounted to Miss Kendall our experiences in following
+Dr. Harris to the black and tan joint and the meeting with Ike the
+Dropper.
+
+"Then Ike the Dropper is the collector for the police or the
+politicians higher up," she exclaimed under her breath. "If we learned
+nothing more, that would be enough. It would tell us whom to watch."
+
+Hastily we took turns at getting a good look at Ike through the
+wonderful little detectascope. Then Kennedy resumed his watch,
+whispering now and then what he saw. Apparently Ike had proceeded to
+make himself comfortable in the luxurious surroundings of the private
+dining-room, against the arrival of the graft payers.
+
+"I wonder who the man higher up is," whispered Miss Kendall.
+
+"Someone is coming in," reported Kennedy. "By George, it is that
+stenographer from the office downstairs. She is handing him an
+envelope. Good for her! He tried to kiss her and she backed away in
+disgust. The scoundrel!
+
+"Isn't it clever, though? Not a word is said by anyone. I don't suppose
+she could swear to knowing anything about what is in the envelope.
+There she goes out. He is opening the envelope and counting out the
+money--ten one-hundred-dollar bills. There they go into the fob pocket
+of his trousers. I imagined he learned something from my pick-pocket.
+That is the safest pocket a man has. That little contribution, I take
+it, was from the Montmartre itself."
+
+Then followed an interval in which Ike puffed away on his cigar in
+silent state.
+
+"Here's another now," announced Craig. "Another woman. I never saw her
+before."
+
+Both Miss Kendall and I looked and neither of us recognized her. She
+was slim and would have been young-looking if she had not made such
+obvious efforts to imitate the healthy colour of the cheeks which she
+probably would have had if she had lived sensibly and left cosmetics
+alone.
+
+Kennedy was hastily jotting down some notes on the back of an envelope.
+
+"They are going through the same proceedings again. I guess Ike doesn't
+like her. There she goes. Only two hundred this time."
+
+Another wait followed, during which Ike smoked down his cigar and
+lighted another from the stub. Then the door opened again.
+
+Kennedy motioned quickly to Clare to look through the detectascope.
+Meanwhile he pulled from his pocket the piece of paper he had written
+on and torn from the back of the menu at the Futurist.
+
+"Marie!" exclaimed Clare under her breath.
+
+"The same," whispered Kennedy. "Miss Kendall, you have the true 'camera
+eye' of the born detective. Now--please--let me see if I can get what
+occurs."
+
+She yielded her place to him.
+
+"Three hundred more," he murmured. "Marie must be in the game, though.
+He didn't wait for her to leave before he tore open the envelope. Now
+they are burning the envelopes in the ash tray. And still not a word.
+This is clever, clever. Think of it--fifteen hundred dollars of easy
+money like that! I wonder how much of it sticks to Ike's hands on the
+way up. He must have a capacious fob pocket for that. Say, he's a
+regular fellow with the ladies, Ike is. Only this one doesn't seem to
+resent it. By George, I wonder if this fellow Ike isn't giving the
+police or the politicians the double-cross. He couldn't be on such
+intimate terms with one who was paying graft to him as collector
+otherwise; do you think so?"
+
+Craig looked up without waiting for an answer. "You will excuse any
+levity, but that was some kiss she just gave him."
+
+Kennedy resumed his position for looking through the detectascope,
+occasionally glancing down at the notes he had made the day before and
+now and then making a slight alteration.
+
+"There. She is going away now. Well, I guess the collection is all
+over. He has his hat on and a third cigar, ready to go as soon as
+somebody signals that the coast is clear. That was a good day's work
+for Ike and the man higher up, whoever he is. Ah--there he goes. It was
+a signal from the waiter he was after. Now we may as well finish this
+luncheon. It cost enough."
+
+For several minutes we ate in silence.
+
+"I wish I could have followed Ike," observed Craig. "But of course it
+would have been of no use. To go out right after him would have given
+the whole thing away."
+
+"Who is that dark-haired, dark-skinned woman, Marie, do you suppose?"
+asked Clare. "Sometimes I almost think she is part negro."
+
+"I don't know. I wouldn't be surprised, though, if you were right. If
+you have any investigators to spare, they might try to find out who she
+is and something of her history. I will give them a copy of these notes
+which I intend to turn over to the Department of Justice men who have
+been making the white slave investigation for the Federal Government."
+
+Kennedy had laid the notes which he had made on the menu before us and
+was copying them. Both Clare and I leaned over to read them. It was
+Greek to me:
+
+Nose--straight, base elevated, nostrils thick, slightly flaring.
+
+Ears--lobe descending oval, traversed by a hollow, antitragus concave;
+lobe separated from cheek.
+
+Lips--large.
+
+Mouth--large.
+
+Chin--receding.
+
+There was much more that he had jotted down and added to the
+description.
+
+"Oh," exclaimed Clare, as she ran through the writing, "that is this
+new portrait parle, the spoken picture, isn't it?"
+
+"Yes," replied Kennedy. "You may know that the Government has been
+using it in its white slave inquiry and has several thousands of such
+descriptions. Under the circumstances, I understand that the Government
+agents find it superior to finger-prints. Finger-prints are all right
+for identification, as we have found right here, for instance, in the
+Night Court. But Bertillon's new portrait parle is the thing for
+apprehension."
+
+"What is it?" I asked.
+
+"Well, take the case before us. We have had no chance to finger-print
+that woman and what good would it do if we had? No one could recognize
+her that way until she was arrested or some means had been taken to get
+the prints again.
+
+"But the portrait parle is scientific apprehension, the step that comes
+before scientific identification by finger-prints. It means giving the
+detective an actual portrait of the person he is sent after without
+burdening him with a photograph. As descriptions are now given,
+together with a photograph, a person is described as of such a weight,
+height, general appearance, and so on. A clever crook knows that. He
+knows how to change his appearance so that there are few even of the
+best detectives who can recognize him. This new system describes the
+features so that a man can carry them in his mind systematically,
+features that cannot be changed.
+
+"Take the nose, for example," explained Kennedy. "There are only three
+kinds, as Bertillon calls them--convex, straight, and concave. A
+detective, we will say, is sent out after a man with a concave nose or,
+as in this case a woman with a straight nose. Thus he is freed from the
+necessity of taking a second glance at two-thirds of the women,
+roughly, that he meets--that is, theoretically. He passes by all with
+convex and concave noses.
+
+"There are four classes of ears--triangular, square, oval, and round,
+as they may be called. Having narrowed his search to women with
+straight noses, the detective needs to concern himself with only
+one-fourth of the women with straight noses. Having come down to women
+with straight noses and, say, oval ears, he will eliminate all those
+that do not have the mouth, lips, chin, eyes, forehead, and so on that
+have been given him. Besides that, there are other striking differences
+in noses and ears that make his work much easier than you would
+imagine, once he has been trained to observe such things quickly."
+
+"It sounds all right," I agreed haltingly.
+
+"It is all right, too," he argued warmly. "The proof of it is its use
+in Paris and other cities abroad and the fact that it has been imported
+here to New York in the Police Department and has been used by the
+Government. I could tell you many interesting stories about how it has
+succeeded where photographs would have failed."
+
+I had been reading over the description again and trying to apply it.
+
+"For instance," Craig resumed thoughtfully. "I believe that this woman
+is a mulatto, but that is a long way from proving it. Still, I hope
+that by using the portrait parle and other things we may be able to
+draw the loose threads together into a net that will catch
+her--providing, of course, that she ought to be caught."
+
+He had finished making copies of the portrait parle and had called for
+a cheque for the lunch.
+
+"So you see," he concluded, "this is without any doubt the woman we saw
+at the Futurist, whom Miss Kendall followed to Madame Margot's Beauty
+Shop, two doors down."
+
+Kennedy handed a copy to Miss Kendall.
+
+"Using that and whatever other means you may have, Miss Kendall," he
+said, "I wish that you would try to find this woman and all you can
+about her. Walter, take this other copy and see Carton. I think he has
+a county detective who knows the system. I shall spend the rest of the
+day getting in touch with the Federal authorities in this city and in
+Washington trying to find out whether they know anything about her."
+
+We left the Montmartre with as much care as we had entered and
+seemingly without having yet aroused any suspicion. The rest of the day
+was spent in setting to work those whom we felt we could trust to use
+the portrait parle to locate the mysterious dark-haired Marie who
+seemed to cross our trail at every turn, yet who proved so elusive.
+
+
+
+
+XIII
+
+THE CONVICTION
+
+
+Meanwhile, the organization was using every effort to get possession of
+the Black Book, as Kennedy had suspected.
+
+Miss Ashton had been busy on the case of the missing Betty Blackwell,
+but as yet there was no report from any of the agencies which she had
+set in motion to locate the girl. She had seen Langhorne, and, although
+she did not say much about the result of the interview, I felt sure
+that it had resulted in a further estrangement between them, perhaps a
+suspicion on the part of Langhorne that Carton had been responsible for
+it.
+
+In as tactful a way as possible, Miss Ashton had also warned Mrs.
+Ogleby of the danger she ran, but, as I had already supposed, the
+warning had been unnecessary. The rumours about the detectaphone record
+of the dinner had been quite enough. As for the dinner itself, what
+happened, and who were present, it remained still a mystery, perhaps
+only to be explained when at last we managed to locate the book.
+
+Since the visit of Kahn, we had had no direct or indirect
+communications with either Dorgan or Murtha. They were, however, far
+from inactive, and I felt that their very secrecy, which had always
+been the strong card of the organization, boded no good. Although both
+Carton and Kennedy were straining every nerve to make progress in the
+case, there was indeed very little to report, either the next day or
+for some time after the episode which had placed Kahn in our power.
+
+Carton was careful not to say anything about the graphic record we had
+taken of Kahn's attempt to throw the case. It was better so, he felt.
+The jury fixing evidence would keep and it would prove all the stronger
+trump to play when the right occasion arose. That time rapidly
+approached, now, with the day set for the trial of Dopey Jack.
+
+The morning of the trial found both Kennedy and myself in the part of
+General Sessions to which the case had been assigned to be tried under
+Justice Pomeroy.
+
+To one who would watch the sieve through which justice vigorously tries
+to separate the wheat from the chaff, the innocent from the guilty, a
+visit to General Sessions is the best means. For it is fed through the
+channels that lead through the police courts, the Grand Jury chambers,
+and the District Attorney's office. There one can study the largest
+assortment of criminals outside of a penal institution, from the Artful
+Dodger and Bill Sykes, Fagin and Jim the Penman, to the most modern of
+noted crooks of fact or fiction, all done here in real flesh and blood.
+It is the busiest of criminal courts. More serious offenders against
+the law are sentenced here than in any other court in New York. The
+final chapter in nearly every big crime is written there, sooner or
+later.
+
+As we crowded in, thanks to the courtesy of Carton, we found a roomy
+chamber, with high ceiling, and grey, impressive walls in the southeast
+corner of the second floor of the Criminal Courts Building. Heavy
+carved oaken doors afforded entrance and exit for the hundreds of
+lawyers, witnesses, friends, and relatives of defendants and
+complainants who flocked thither.
+
+Rows upon rows of dark-brown stained chairs filled the west half of the
+courtroom, facing a three-foot railing that enclosed a jury box and
+space reserved for counsel tables, the clerk and the District Attorney
+representing the people.
+
+At the extreme east rose in severe dignity the dais or bench above
+which ascended a draped canopy of rich brown plush. Here Justice
+Pomeroy presided, in his robes of silk, a striking, white-haired figure
+of a man, whose face was seamed and whose eyes were keen with thought
+and observation.
+
+Across the street, reached by the famous Bridge of Sighs, loomed the
+great grey hulk of stone and steel bars, the city prison, usually
+referred to as "The Tombs." As if there had been some cunning design in
+the juxtaposition, the massive jail reared itself outside the windows
+as an object lesson. It was a perpetual warning to the lawbreaker. Its
+towers and projections jutted out as so many rocks on a dangerous shore
+where had been wrecked thousands of promising careers just embarked on
+the troublesome seas of life.
+
+Skirting the line of southern windows through which The Tombs was
+visible, ran a steel wire screen, eight feet high, marking off a narrow
+chute that hugged the walls to a door at the rear of the courtroom
+leading to the detention pen. Ordinarily prisoners were brought over
+the Bridge of Sighs in small droves and herded in the detention pens
+just outside the courtroom until their cases were called.
+
+The line-up of prisoners at such times awaiting their turn at the bar
+of justice affords ample opportunity for study to the professional or
+the amateur criminalist.
+
+Almost daily in this court one might look upon murderers, bank looters,
+clever forgers, taxicab robbers, safe crackers, highwaymen,
+second-story men, shoplifters, pickpockets, thieves, big and
+little--all sorts and conditions of crooks come to pay the price.
+
+The court was crowded, for the gang leaders knew that this was a
+show-down for them. Carton himself, not one of his assistants, was to
+conduct the case. If Dopey Jack, who had violated almost every law in
+the revised statutes and had never suffered anything worse than a
+suspended sentence, could not get off, then no one could. And it was
+unthinkable that Dopey should not only be arrested and held in jail
+without bail, but even be convicted on such a trivial matter as slight
+irregularities that swung the primaries in a large section of the city
+for his superior, "higher up."
+
+Rubano's father, a decent, sorrowing old man, sat in the rear of the
+courtroom, probably wondering how it had all happened, for he came
+evidently of a clean, law-abiding family.
+
+But there was nothing in the appearance of the insolent criminal at the
+bar to show that he was of the same breed. He was no longer the
+athlete, whom "prize fighting" had inculcated with principles of
+manliness and fair play as well as a strong body. All that, as I had
+seen often before, was a pitiful lie. He was rat-eyed and soft-handed.
+His skin had the pastiness that comes of more exposure to the glare of
+vile dance halls than the sunlight of day. His black hair was slicked
+down; he was faultlessly tailored and his shoes had those high, bulging
+toes which are the extreme of Fourteenth Street fashion.
+
+Outside, overflowing into the corridor, were gangsters, followers and
+friends of Dopey Jack. Only an overpowering show of force preserved the
+orderliness of the court from their boasting, bragging, and threats.
+
+The work of selecting the jury began, and we watched it carefully.
+Kahn, cool and cunning, had evidently no idea of what Carton was
+holding out against him. In the panel I could see the anemic-looking
+fellow whom we had caught with the goods up at Farrell's. Carton's men
+had shadowed him and had learned of every man with whom he had spoken.
+As each, for some reason or other, was objected to by Carton, Kahn
+began to show exasperation.
+
+At last the anemic fellow came up for examination. Kahn accepted him.
+
+For a moment Carton seemed to fumble among his papers, without even
+looking at the prospective juror. Then he drew out the print which
+Kennedy had made. Quietly, without letting anyone else see it, he
+deliberately walked to Kahn's table and showed it to the lawyer,
+without a word, in fact without anyone else in the court knowing
+anything about it.
+
+Kahn's face was a study, as he realized for the first time what it was
+that Carton and Kennedy had been doing that night at Farrell's. He
+paled. His hand shook. It was with the utmost effort that he could
+control his voice. He had been cornered and the yellow streak in him
+showed through.
+
+In a husky voice he withdrew the juror, and Carton, in the same cold,
+self-possessed manner resumed his former position, not even a trace of
+a smile on his features.
+
+It was all done so quickly that scarcely a soul in the court besides
+ourselves realized that anything had happened.
+
+"Isn't he going to say anything about it?" I whispered to Craig.
+
+"That will come later," was all that Kennedy replied, his eyes riveted
+still on Carton.
+
+Though no one besides ourselves realized it, Carton had thrown a
+bombshell that had demolished the defence. Others noticed it, but as
+yet did not know the cause. Kahn, the great Kahn by whom all the forces
+of the underworld had conjured, was completely unnerved. Carton had
+fixed it so that he could not retreat and leave the case to someone
+else. He had knocked the props from under his defence by uncannily
+turning down every man whom he had any reason of suspecting of having
+been approached. Then he had given Kahn just a glimpse of the evidence
+that hinted at what was in store for himself personally. Kahn was never
+the same after that.
+
+Judge Pomeroy, who had been following the progress of the case
+attentively, threw another bombshell when he announced that he would
+direct that the names of the jurors be kept secret until it was
+absolutely necessary to disclose them, a most unusual proceeding
+designed to protect them from reprisals of gangmen.
+
+At last the real trial began. Carton had been careful to see that none
+of the witnesses for the people should be "stiffened" as the process
+was elegantly expressed by those of Dopey Jack's class--in other words,
+intimidated, bribed, or otherwise rendered innocuous. One after
+another, Carton rammed home the facts of the case, the fraudulent
+registration and voting, the use of the names of dead men to pad the
+polling lists, the bribery of election officials at the primaries--the
+whole sordid, debasing story of how Dopey Jack had intimidated and
+swung one entire district.
+
+It was clever, as he presented it, with scarcely a reference to the
+name of Murtha, the beneficiary of such tactics--as though, perhaps,
+Murtha's case was in his mind separate and would be attended to later
+when his turn came.
+
+Rapidly, concisely, convincingly, Carton presented the facts. Now and
+then Kahn would rise to object to something as incompetent, irrelevant,
+and immaterial. But there was lacking something in his method. It was
+not the old Kahn. In fact, one almost felt that Carton was disappointed
+in his adversary, that he would have preferred a stiff, straight from
+the shoulder, stand-up fight.
+
+Now and then we could hear a whisper circulating about among the
+spectators. What was the matter with Kahn? Was he ill? Gangdom was in a
+daze itself, little knowing the smooth stone that Carton had slung
+between the eyes of the great underworld Goliath of the law.
+
+At last Carton's case was all in, and Kahn rose to present his own, a
+forced smile on his face.
+
+There was an attempt at a demonstration, but Judge Pomeroy rapped
+sharply for order, and alert court attendants were about to nip
+effectively any such outburst. Still, it was enough to show the
+undercurrent of open defiance of the court, of law, of the people.
+
+What it was no one but ourselves knew but Kahn was not himself. Others
+saw it, but did not understand. They had waited patiently through the
+sledge-hammer pounding of Carton, waiting expectantly for Kahn to
+explode a mine that would demolish the work of the District Attorney as
+if it had been so much paper. Carton had figuratively dampened the
+fuse. It sputtered, but the mine did not explode.
+
+Once or twice there were flashes of the old Kahn, but for the most part
+he seemed to have crumpled up. Often I thought he was not the equal of
+even a police court lawyer. The spectators seemed to know that
+something was wrong, though they could not tell just what it was.
+Kahn's colleagues whispered among themselves. He made his points, but
+they lacked the fire and dash and audacity that once had caused the
+epigram that Kahn's appearance in court indicated two things--the guilt
+of the accused and a verdict of acquittal.
+
+Even Justice Pomeroy seemed to notice it. Kahn had tried many a case
+before him and the old judge had a wholesome respect for the wiley
+lawyer. But to-day the court found nothing so grave as the strange
+dilatoriness of the counsel.
+
+Once the judge had to interfere with the remark, "I may remind the
+learned counsel for the defence that the court intends to finish this
+case before adjournment for the day, if possible; if not, then we shall
+sit to-night."
+
+Kahn seemed not to grasp the situation, as he had of old. He actually
+hurried up the presentation of the case, oblivious to the now black
+looks that were directed at him by his own client. If he had expected
+to recover his old-time equanimity as the case proceeded, he failed.
+For no one better than he knew what that little photograph of Carton's
+meant--disgrace, disbarment, perhaps prison itself. What was this Dopey
+Jack when ruin stared himself so relentlessly in the face in the person
+of Carton, calm and cool?
+
+At last the summing up was concluded and both sides rested. Judge
+Pomeroy charged the jury, I thought with eminent fairness and
+impartiality, even, perhaps, glossing over some points which Kahn's
+weak presentation might have allowed him to make more of if Kahn had
+been bolder and stronger in pressing them.
+
+The jury filed out and the anxious waiting began. On all sides was the
+buzz of conversation. Kahn himself sat silent, gazing for the most part
+at the papers before him. There must have been some wrangling of the
+jury, for twice hope of the gangsters revived when they sent in for the
+record.
+
+But it was not over an hour later when the jury finally filed back
+again into their box. As Judge Pomeroy faced them and asked the usual
+question, the spectators hung, breathless, on the words of the foreman
+as the jurors stood up silently in their places. There was a tense hush
+in the courtroom, as every eye was fastened on the face of the foreman.
+
+The hush seemed to embarrass him. But finally he found his voice.
+Nervously, as if he were taking his own life in his hands he delivered
+the verdict.
+
+"We find the defendant guilty as charged in the indictment!"
+
+Instantly, before anyone could move, the dignified judge faced the
+prisoner deliberately.
+
+"You have heard the verdict," he said colourlessly. "I shall sentence
+you Friday."
+
+Three court attendants were at Dopey Jack's side in a moment, but none
+too soon. The pent-up feeling of the man idolized by blackmailers, and
+man-killers, and batteners on street-women, who held nothing as
+disgrace but a sign of respect for law or remorse for capture, burst
+forth.
+
+He cast one baleful look at Kahn as they hurried him to the
+wire-screened passageway. "It's all a frame-up--a damned frame-up!" he
+shouted.
+
+As he disappeared a murmer of amazement ran through the room. The
+unthinkable had happened. An East Side idol had fallen.
+
+
+
+
+XIV
+
+THE BEAUTY PARLOUR
+
+
+"It seems strange," remarked Kennedy the following morning when we had
+met in his laboratory for our daily conference to plan our campaign,
+"that although we seem to be on the right trail we have not a word yet
+about Betty Blackwell herself. Carton has just telephoned that her
+mother, poor woman, is worrying her heart out and is a mere shadow of
+her former self."
+
+"We must get some word," asserted Miss Kendall. "This silence is almost
+like the silence of death."
+
+"I'm afraid I shall have to impose on you that task," said Kennedy
+thoughtfully to her. "There seems to be no course open to us but to
+transfer our watch from Dr. Harris to this Marie. Of course it is too
+early to hear from our search by means of the portrait parle. But we
+have both seen Dr. Harris and Marie enter the beauty parlour of Madame
+Margot. Now, I don't mean to cast aspersions on your own good looks,
+Miss Kendall. They are of the sort with which no beauty parlour except
+Nature can compete."
+
+A girl of another type than Clare would probably have read a half dozen
+meanings into his sincere compliment. But then, I reflected that a man
+of another type than Craig could not have made the remark without
+expecting her to do so. There was a frankness between them which, I
+must confess, considerably relieved me. I was not prepared to lose
+Kennedy, even to Miss Kendall.
+
+She smiled. "You want me to try a course in artificial beautification,
+don't you?"
+
+"Yes. Walter doesn't need it, and as for me, nothing could make me a
+modern Adonis. Seriously, though, a man couldn't get in there, I
+suppose. At least that is one of the many things I want you to find
+out. Under the circumstances, you are the only person in whom I have
+confidence enough to believe that she can get at the facts there. Find
+out all you can about the character of the place and the people who
+frequent it. And if you can learn anything about that Madame Margot who
+runs the place, so much the better."
+
+"I'll try," she said simply.
+
+Kennedy resumed his tests of the powder in the packets which Dr. Harris
+had been distributing, and I endeavoured to make myself as little in
+the way as possible. It was not until the close of the afternoon that a
+taxicab drove up and deposited Miss Kendall at the door.
+
+"What luck?" greeted Kennedy eagerly, as she entered. "Do you feel
+thoroughly beautified?"
+
+"Don't make me smile," she replied, as she swept in with an air that
+would have done credit to the star in a comic opera. "I'd hate to crack
+or even crease the enamel on my face. I've been steamed and frozen,
+beaten and painted and---"
+
+"I'm sorry to have been the cause of such cruel and unusual
+punishment," apologized Craig.
+
+"No, indeed. Why, I enjoyed it. Let me tell you about the place."
+
+She leaned against the laboratory table, certainly an incongruous
+picture in her new role as contrasted with the stained and dirty
+background of paraphernalia of medico-legal investigation. I could not
+help feeling that if Clare Kendall ever had decided to go in for such
+things, Marie herself would have had to look sharp to her laurels.
+
+"As you enter the place," she began, "you feel a delightful warmth and
+there is an odour of attar of roses in the air. There are thick
+half-inch carpets that make walking a pleasure and dreamy Sleepy Hollow
+rockers that make it an impossibility. It is all very fascinating.
+
+"There are dull-green lattices, little gateways with roses, white
+enamel with cute little diamond panes of glass for windows, inviting
+bowers of artificial flowers and dim yellow lights. It makes you feel
+like a sybarite just to see it. It's a cosmetic Arcadia for that
+fundamental feminine longing for beauty.
+
+"Well, first there are the little dressing-rooms, each with a bed, a
+dresser and mirror, and everything in such good taste. After you leave
+them you go to a white, steamy room and there they bake you. It's a
+long process of gentle showers, hot and cold, after that, and massage.
+
+"I thought I was through. But it seems that I had only just started.
+There was a battery of white manicure tables, and then the hairdressers
+and the artists who lay on these complexions--what do you think of
+mine? I can't begin to tell all the secrets of the curls and puffs, and
+reinforcements, hygienic rolls, transformations, fluffy puffers, and
+all that, or of the complexions. Why, you can choose a complexion, like
+wall-paper or upholstery. They can make you as pale as a sickly heroine
+or they can make you as yellow as a bathing girl. There is nothing they
+can't do. I asked just for fun. I could have come out as dusky as a
+gipsy.
+
+"They tried electrolysis on my eyebrows, and one attendant suggested a
+hypodermic injection of perfume. Ever hear of that? She thought 'new
+mown hay' was the best to saturate the skin with. Then another
+suggested, as long as I had chosen this moonbeam make-up, that perhaps
+I'd like a couple of dimples. They could make them permanent or lasting
+only a few hours. I declined. But there is nothing so wild that they
+haven't either thought of themselves or imported from Paris or
+somewhere else. I heard them discussing someone who wanted odd
+eyes--made by pouring in certain liquids. They don't seem to care how
+they affect sight, hearing, skin, or health. It is decoration run mad."
+
+"How about the people there?" asked Kennedy.
+
+"Oh, I must tell you about that. There's so much to tell, I hardly know
+where to begin--or stop. I saw some flashy people. You know one
+customer attracts her friends and so on. There is every class there
+from the demi-monde up to actresses and really truly society. And they
+have things for all prices from the comparatively cheap to the most
+extravagant. They're very accommodating and, in a way, democratic."
+
+"Did it seem--straight?" asked Kennedy.
+
+"On the surface, yes, as far as I could judge. But I'll have to go back
+again for that. For instance, there was one thing that seemed queer to
+me. I had finished the steaming and freezing and was resting. A maid
+brought a tray of cigarettes, those dainty little thin ones with gilt
+tips. There seemed to be several kinds. I managed to try some of them.
+One at least I know was doped, although I only had a whiff of it. I
+think after they got to know you they'd serve anything from a cocktail
+in a teacup to the latest fads. I am sure that I saw one woman taking
+some veronal in her coffee."
+
+"Veronal?" commented Craig. "Then that may be where Dr. Harris comes
+in."
+
+"Partly, I think. I've got to find out more about what is hidden there.
+Once I heard a man's voice and I know it was Dr. Harris's."
+
+"Harris! Why, the elevator boy at the Montmartre said he was painting
+the town," I observed.
+
+"I don't believe it. I think he has all he can do keeping up with the
+beauty shop. You see, it is more than a massage parlour. They do real
+decorative surgery, as it is called. They'll engage to give you a new
+skin as soft and pink as a baby's. Or they will straighten a nose, or
+turn an ear. They have light treatment for complexions--the ruby ray,
+the violet ray, the phosphorescent ray.
+
+"You would laugh at the fake science that is being handed out to those
+gullible fools. They can get rid of freckles and superfluous hair, of
+course. But they'll even tell you that they can change your mouth and
+chin, your eyes, your cheeks. I should be positively afraid of some of
+their electrical appliances there. They sweat down your figure or build
+it up--just as you please.
+
+"Oh, no one need be plain in these days, not as long as Madame Margot's
+exists. That is where I think Dr. Harris comes in. He can pose as a
+full-fledged, blown-in-the-bottle cosmetic surgeon. I'll bet there is
+no limit to the agonized beautification that they can put you through
+if they think they can play you for a sucker."
+
+"By the way, did you see Madame Margot herself?" asked Craig.
+
+"No. I made all sorts of discreet inquiries after her, but they seemed
+to know nothing. The nearest I could get was a hint from one of the
+girls that she was away. But I'll tell you whom I think I heard,
+talking to the man whose voice sounded like Dr. Harris's, and that was
+Marie. Of course I couldn't see, but in the part of the shop that looks
+like a fake hospital I heard two voices and I would wager that Marie is
+going through some of this beautification herself. Of course she is.
+You remember how artificial she looked?"
+
+"Did you see anyone else?"
+
+"Oh, yes. You know the place is two doors from the Montmartre. Well, I
+think they have some connection with that place between them and the
+Montmartre. Anyhow it looks as if they did, for after I had been there
+a little while a girl came in, apparently from nowhere. She was the
+girl we saw paying money to Ike the Dropper, you remember--the one none
+of us recognized? There's something in that next house, and she seems
+to have charge of it."
+
+"Well, you have done a good day's work," complimented Kennedy.
+
+"I feel that I have made a start, anyhow," she admitted. "There is a
+lot yet to be learned of Margot's. You remember it was early in the day
+that I was there. I want to go back sometime in the afternoon or
+evening."
+
+"Dr. Harris is apparently the oracle on beauty," mused Kennedy.
+
+"Yes. He must make a lot of money there."
+
+"They must have some graft, though, besides the beauty parlour," went
+on Kennedy. "They wouldn't be giving up money to Ike the Dropper if
+that was all there was."
+
+"No, and that is where the doped cigarette comes in. That is why I want
+to go again. I imagine it's like the Montmartre. They have to know you
+and think you are all right before you get the real inside of the
+place."
+
+"I don't doubt it."
+
+"I can't go around looking like a chorus girl," remarked Miss Kendall
+finally, with a glance at a little mirror she carried in her bag.
+"I'm afraid you'll have to excuse me until I get rid of this
+beautification."
+
+The telephone rang sharply.
+
+As Kennedy answered, we gathered that it was Carton. A few minutes of
+conversation, mostly on Carton's part, followed. Kennedy hung up the
+receiver with an exclamation of vexation.
+
+"I'm afraid I did wrong to start anything with the portrait parle yet,"
+he said. "Why, this thing we are investigating has so many queer turns
+that you hardly know whom to trust."
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"I don't know who could have given the thing away, but Carton says it
+wasn't an hour after the inquiries began about Marie that it became
+known in the underworld that she was being looked for in this way. Oh,
+they are clever, those grafters. They have all sorts of ways of keeping
+in touch. I suppose they remember they had one experience with the
+portrait parle and it has made them as wary as a burglar is over
+finger-prints. Carton tells me that Marie has disappeared."
+
+"I could swear I heard her or someone at Margot's," said Clare.
+
+"And Harris has disappeared. Of course you thought you overheard him,
+too. But you may have been mistaken."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"As nearly as Carton can find out," said Kennedy quickly, "Marie is
+Madame Margot herself."
+
+
+
+
+XV
+
+THE PHANTOM CIRCUIT
+
+
+"I want to go to Margot's again to-day," volunteered Miss Kendall the
+following morning, adding with a smile, "You see, I've got the habit.
+Really, though, there is a mystery about that place that fascinates me.
+I want to find out more about this Marie, or Margot, or whoever it was
+that I thought I heard there. And then those doped cigarettes interest
+me. You see, I haven't forgotten what you said about dope the first
+time we talked about Dr. Harris. They will be more free with me, too,
+now that I am no longer a stranger."
+
+"That is a good idea," agreed Kennedy, who was now chafing under the
+enforced inaction of the case. "I hope that this time they will let you
+into some of the secrets. There is one thing, though, I wish you'd look
+out for especially."
+
+"What do you mean?" she asked.
+
+"I should like to know what ways there are of communicating with the
+outside. You realize, of course, that it is very easy for them, if they
+come to suspect you, to frame up something in a place like that. There
+are strong-arm women as well as men, and I'm not at all sure that there
+may not be some men besides Dr. Harris who are acquainted with that
+place. At any rate Dr. Harris is unscrupulous enough himself."
+
+"I shall make it a point to observe that," she said as she left us. "I
+hope I'll have something to tell you when I come back."
+
+"Walter," remarked Craig as the door closed, "that is one of the gamest
+girls I ever knew."
+
+I looked across at him inquiringly.
+
+"Don't worry, my boy," he added, reading my expression. "She's not of
+the marrying kind, any more than I am."
+
+The morning passed and half of the afternoon without any word from Miss
+Kendall. Kennedy was plainly becoming uneasy, when a hurried footstep
+in the hall was followed by a more hurried opening of the door.
+
+"Let me sit down, just a minute, to collect myself," panted Miss
+Kendall, pressing her hands to her temples where the blue veins stood
+out and literally throbbed. "I'm all in."
+
+"Why, what is the matter?" asked Kennedy, placing a chair and switching
+on an electric fan, while he quickly found a bottle of restorative
+salts which was always handy for emergencies in the laboratory.
+
+"Oh--such a time as I've had! Wait--let me see whether I can recollect
+it in order."
+
+A few minutes later she resumed. "I went in, as before. There seemed to
+be quite a change in the way they treated me. I must have made a good
+impression the first time. A second visit seemed to have opened the way
+for everything. Evidently they think I am all right.
+
+"Well, I went through much the same thing as I did before, only I tried
+to make it not quite so elaborate, down to the point where several of
+us were sitting in loose robes in the lounging-room. That was the part,
+you know, that interested me before.
+
+"The maid came in with the cigarettes and I smoked one of the doped
+ones. They watch everything that you do so closely there, and the
+moment I smoked one they offered me another. I don't know what was in
+them, but I fancy there must be just a trace of opium. They made me
+feel exhilarated, then just a bit drowsy. I managed to make away with
+the second without inhaling much of the smoke, for my head was in a
+whirl by this time. It wasn't so much that I was afraid I couldn't take
+care of myself as it was that I was afraid that it would blunt the
+keenness of my observation and I might miss something."
+
+"Besides the cigarettes, was there anything else?" asked Craig.
+
+"Yes, indeed. I didn't see anyone there I recognized, but I heard some
+of them talk. One was taking a little veronal; another said something
+about heroin. It was high-toned hitting the pipe, if you call it
+that--a Turkish bath, followed by massage, and then a safe complement
+of anything you wanted, taken leisurely by these aristocratic dope
+fiends.
+
+"There was one woman there who I am sure was snuffing cocaine. She had
+a little gold and enamelled box like a snuff box beside her from which
+she would take from time to time a pinch of some white crystals and
+inhale it vigorously, now and then taking a little sip of a liqueur
+that was brought in to her."
+
+"That's the way," observed Kennedy. "There are always a considerable
+number of inhuman beings who are willing to make capital out of the
+weaknesses of others. This illicit sale of cocaine is one example. Such
+conditions have existed with the opium products a long time. Now it
+seems to be the 'coke fiend.'"
+
+"I was glad I did just as I did," resumed Clare, "because it wasn't
+long before I saw that the thing to do was to feign drowsiness. A maid
+came over to me and in a most plausible and insinuating way hinted that
+perhaps I might feel like resting and that if the noise in the beauty
+parlour annoyed me, they had the entire next house--the one next to the
+Montmartre, you know--which had been fitted up as a dormitory."
+
+"You didn't go?" cut in Craig immediately.
+
+"I did not. I pleaded an engagement. Why, the place is a regular dope
+joint."
+
+"Exactly. I suspected as much as you went along. Everything seems to
+have moved uptown lately, to have been veneered over to meet the
+fastidious second decade of the twentieth century. But underneath it
+all are the same old vices. I'm glad you didn't attempt to go into the
+next house. Anyhow, now we are certain about the character of the
+place. Did you notice anything about the means of communicating with
+the outside--the telephones, for instance?"
+
+Miss Kendall was evidently feeling much better now.
+
+"Oh, yes," she answered. "I took particular care to observe that. They
+have a telephone, but there is a girl who attends to it, although they
+don't really need one. She listens to everything. Then, too, in the
+other house--You remember I spoke about the girl whom we saw paying Ike
+the Dropper? It seems that she has a similar position at the telephone
+over there."
+
+"So they have two telephones," repeated Craig.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Good. There are always likely to be some desperate characters in
+places like that. If we ever have anyone go into that dope joint we
+must have some way of keeping in touch and protecting the person."
+
+Miss Kendall had gone home for a few hours of rest after her exciting
+experience. Craig was idly tapping with his fingers on the broad arm of
+his chair.
+
+Suddenly he jumped up. "I'm going up there to look that joint over from
+the outside," he announced.
+
+We walked past the front of it without seeing anything in particular,
+then turned the corner and were on the Avenue. Kennedy paused and
+looked at a cheap apartment house on which was a sign, "Flats to Let."
+
+"I think I'll get the janitor to show me one of them," he said.
+
+One was on the first floor in the rear. Kennedy did not seem to be very
+much interested in the rent. A glance out of the window sufficed to
+show him that he could see the back of the Montmartre and some of the
+houses. It took only a minute to hire it, at least conditionally, and a
+bill to the janitor gave us a key.
+
+"What are you going to do?"
+
+"We can't do anything just yet, but it will be dark by the time I get
+over to the laboratory and back and then we can do something."
+
+That night we started prowling over the back fences down the street.
+Fortunately it was a very black night and Craig was careful not to use
+even the electric bull's-eye which he had brought over from the
+laboratory together with some wire and telephone instruments.
+
+As we crouched in the shadow of one of the fences, he remarked: "Just
+as I expected; the telephone wires run along the tops of the fences.
+Here's where they run into 72--that's the beauty parlour. These run
+into 70--that's the dope joint. Then next comes the Montmartre itself,
+reaching all the way back as far as the lot extends."
+
+We had come up close to the backs of the houses by this time. The
+shades were all drawn and the blinds were closed in both of them, so
+that we had really nothing to fear provided we kept quiet. Besides the
+back yards looked unkempt, as if no one cared much about them.
+
+Kennedy flashed the electric bull's-eye momentarily on the wires. They
+branched off from the back fence down the party fence to the houses,
+both sets on one fence.
+
+"Good!" he exclaimed. "It is better than I hoped. The two sets go on up
+to the first floor together, then separate. One set goes into the
+beauty parlour; the other into the dope joint."
+
+Craig had quietly climbed up on a shed over the basements of both the
+houses. He was working quickly with all the dexterity of a lineman. To
+two of the four wires he had attached one other. Then to two others he
+attached another, all the connections being made at exactly
+corresponding points.
+
+The next step was to lead these two newly connected wires to a window
+on the first floor of the house next to the Montmartre. He fastened
+them lightly to the closed shutter, let himself down to the yard again
+and we beat a slow and careful retreat to our flat.
+
+In one of the yards down near the corner, however, he paused. Here was
+an iron box fastened to one of the fences, a switch box or something of
+the sort belonging to the telephone company. To it were led all the
+wires from the various houses on the block and to each wire was
+fastened a little ticket on which was scrawled in indelible pencil the
+number of the house to which the wire ran.
+
+Kennedy found the two pairs that ran to 70 and 72, cut in on them in
+the same way that he had done before and fastened two other wires, one
+to each pair. This pair he led along and into the flat.
+
+"I've fixed it," he explained, "so that anyone who can get into that
+room on the back of the first floor of the dope joint can communicate
+with the outside very easily over the telephone, without being
+overheard, either."
+
+"How?" I asked completely mystified by the apparent simplicity of the
+proceeding.
+
+"I have left two wires sticking on the outside shutter of that room,"
+he replied. "All that anyone who gets into that room has to do is to
+open the window softly, reach out and secure them. With them fastened
+to a transmitter which I have, he can talk to me in the flat around the
+corner and no one will ever know it."
+
+There was nothing more that we could do that night and we waited
+impatiently until Clare Kendall came to make her daily report in the
+morning.
+
+"The question is, whom are we going to get whom we can trust to go to
+that dope joint and explore it?" remarked Kennedy, after we had
+finished telling Miss Kendall about our experiences of the night before.
+
+"Carton must have someone who can take a course in beauty and dope," I
+replied. "Or perhaps Miss Kendall has one of her investigators whom she
+can trust."
+
+"If the thing gets too rough," added Craig, "whoever is in there can
+telephone to us, if she will only be careful first to get that back
+room in the 'dormitory,' as they call it. Then all we'll have to do
+will be to jump in there and---"
+
+"I'll do it," interrupted Clare.
+
+"No, Miss Kendall," denied Kennedy firmly.
+
+"Let me do it. There is no one whom I can trust more than myself.
+Besides, I know the places now."
+
+She said it with an air of quiet determination, as if she had been
+thinking it over ever since she returned from her visit of the day
+before.
+
+Kennedy and Miss Kendall faced each other for a moment. It was evident
+that it was against just this that he had been trying to provide. On
+her part it was equally evident that she had made up her mind.
+
+"Miss Kendall," said Kennedy, meeting her calm eye, "you are the most
+nervy detective, barring none, that it has ever been my pleasure to
+meet. I yield under protest."
+
+I must say that it was with a great deal of misgiving that I saw Clare
+enter Margot's. We had gone as far as the corner with her, had watched
+her go in, and then hurried into the unfurnished apartment which Craig
+had rented on the Avenue.
+
+As we sat on the rickety chairs which we had borrowed from the janitor
+under pretence of wanting to reach something, the minutes that passed
+seemed like hours.
+
+I wondered what had happened to the plucky girl in her devotion to the
+cause in which she had enlisted, and several times I could see from the
+expression of Craig's face that he more and more regretted that he had
+given in to her and had allowed her to go, instead of adhering to his
+original plan. From what she had told us about the two places, I tried
+to imagine what she was doing, but each time I ended by having an
+increased feeling of apprehension.
+
+Kennedy sat grimly silent with the receiver of the telephone glued to
+his ear, straining his hearing to catch even the faintest sound.
+
+At last his face brightened.
+
+"She's there all right," he exclaimed to me. "Managed to make them
+think in the beauty parlour that she was a dope fiend and pretty far
+gone. Insisted that she must have the back room on the first floor
+because she was afraid of fire. She kept the door open so that she
+would not miss anything, but it was a long time before she got a chance
+to reach out of the window and get the wires and connect them with the
+instruments I gave her. But it's all right now.
+
+"Yes, Miss Kendall, right here, listening to everything you get a
+chance to say. Only be careful. There is no use spoiling the game by
+trying to talk to me until you have all that you think you can obtain
+in the way of evidence. Don't let them think you have any means of
+communication with the outside or they'll go to any length to silence
+you. We'll be here all the time and the moment you think there is any
+danger, call us."
+
+Kennedy seemed visibly relieved by the message.
+
+"She says that she has found out a great deal already, but didn't dare
+take the time to tell it just yet," he explained. "By the way, Walter,
+while we are waiting, I wish you would go out and see whether there is
+a policeman on fixed post anywhere around here."
+
+Five minutes later when I returned, having located the nearest peg post
+a long block away on Broadway, Kennedy raised a warning hand. She was
+telephoning again.
+
+"She says that attendants come and go in her room so often that it's
+hard to get a chance to say anything, but she is sure that there is
+someone hidden there, perhaps Marie or Madame Margot, whoever she is,
+or it may even be Betty Blackwell. They watch very closely."
+
+"But," I asked, almost in a whisper, as if someone over there might
+hear me, "isn't this a very dangerous proceeding, Craig? It seems to me
+you are taking long chances. Suppose one of the telephone girls in
+either house, whom she told us keep such sharp watch over the wires,
+should happen to be calling up or answering a call. She would hear
+someone else talking over the wire and it wouldn't be difficult for her
+to decide who it was. Then there'd be a row."
+
+"Not a chance," smiled Kennedy. "No one except ourselves, not even
+Central, can hear a word of what is said over these connections I have
+made. This is what is called a phantom circuit."
+
+"A phantom circuit?" I repeated. "What kind of a weird thing is that?"
+
+"It is possible to superimpose another circuit over the four telephone
+wires of two existing circuits, making a so-called phantom line," he
+explained, as we waited for the next message. "It seems fantastic at
+first, but it is really in accordance with the laws of electricity. You
+use each pair of wires as if it were one wire and do not interfere in
+the least with them, but are perfectly independent of both. The current
+for the third circuit enters the two wires of one of the first
+circuits, divides, reunites, so to speak, at the other end, then
+returns through the wires of the second circuit, dividing and reuniting
+again, thus just balancing the two divisions of the current and not
+causing any effect on either of the two original circuits. Rather
+wonderful, isn't it?"
+
+"I should say that it was," I marvelled. "I am glad I see it actually
+working rather than have to believe it second hand."
+
+"It's all due to a special repeating coil of high efficiency absolutely
+balanced as to resistances, number of turns of wire, and so on which I
+have used--Yes--Miss Kendall--we are here. Now please don't let things
+go on too far. At the first sign of danger, call. We can get in all
+right. You have the evidence now that will hold in any court as far as
+closing up that joint goes, and I'll take a chance of breaking
+into--well, Hades, to get to you. Good-bye.
+
+"I guess it is Hades there," he resumed to me. "She has just telephoned
+that one of the dope fiends upstairs--a man, so that you see they admit
+both men and women there, after all--had become violent and Harris had
+to be called to quiet him before he ran amuck. She said she was
+absolutely sure, this time at least, that it was Harris. As I was
+saying about this phantom circuit, it is used a good deal now.
+Sometimes they superimpose a telephone conversation over the proper
+arrangement of telegraph messages and vice versa.
+
+"What's that?" cried Craig, suddenly breaking off. "They heard you
+talking that last time, and you have locked the door against them? They
+are battering it down? Move something heavy, if you can, up against
+it--the bureau, anything to brace it. We'll be there directly. Come on,
+Walter. There isn't time to get around Broadway for that fixed post
+cop. We must do it ourselves. Hurry."
+
+Craig dashed breathlessly out on the street. I followed closely.
+
+"Hurry," he panted. "Those people haven't any use for anyone that they
+think will snitch on them."
+
+As we turned the corner, we ran squarely into a sergeant slowly going
+his rounds with eyes conveniently closed to what he was paid not to see.
+
+Kennedy stopped and grabbed his arm.
+
+"There's a girl up here in 72 who is being mistreated," he cried.
+"Come. You must help us get her out."
+
+"Aw, g'wan. Whatyer givin' us? 72? That's a residence."
+
+"Say--look here. I've got your number. You'll be up on the most serious
+charges of your whole career if you don't act on the information I
+have. All of Ike the Dropper's money'll go for attorney's fees and
+someone will land in Sing Sing. Now, come!"
+
+We had gained the steps of the house. Outside all was dark, blank, and
+bare. There was every evidence of the most excessive outward order and
+decency--not a sign of the conflict that was raging within.
+
+Before the policeman could pull the bell, which would have been a first
+warning of trouble to the inmates, Kennedy had jumped from the high
+stoop to a narrow balcony running along the front windows of the first
+story, had smashed the glass into splinters with a heavy object which
+he had carried concealed under his coat, and was engaged in a herculean
+effort to wrench apart some iron bars which had been carefully
+concealed behind the discreetly drawn shades.
+
+As one yielded, he panted, "No use to try the door. The grill work
+inside guards that too well. There goes another."
+
+Inside now we could hear cries that told us that the whole house was
+roused, that even the worst of the drug fiends had come at least partly
+to his senses and begun to realize his peril. From Margot's beauty
+parlour a couple of girls and a man staggered forth in a vain effort to
+seem to leave quietly.
+
+"Close that place, too, officer," cried Kennedy to the now astounded
+policeman. "We'll attend to this house."
+
+The sergeant slowly lumbered across in time to let two more couples
+escape. It was evident that he hated the job; indeed, would have
+arrested Kennedy in the old days before Carton had thrown such a scare
+into the grafters. But Kennedy's assurance had flabbergasted him and he
+obeyed.
+
+Another bar yielded, and another. Together we squeezed in and found
+ourselves in a dark front parlour. There was nothing to distinguish it
+from any ordinary reception room in the blackness.
+
+Hurried footsteps were heard as if several people were retreating into
+the next house. Down the hall we hastened to the back room.
+
+A second we listened. All was silent. Was Clare safe? It looked
+ominous. Still the door, partly battered in, was closed.
+
+"Miss Kendall!" called Craig, bending down close to the door.
+
+"Is it you, Professor Kennedy?" came back a faint voice from the other
+side.
+
+"Yes. Are you all right?"
+
+There was no answer, but she was evidently tugging at something which
+appeared to be a heavy piece of furniture braced against the door. At
+last the bolt was slipped back, and there in the doorway she swayed,
+half exhausted but safe.
+
+"Yes, all right," murmured Clare, bracing herself against the
+chiffonier which she had moved away from the door, "just a little shaky
+from the drugs--but all right. Don't bother about me, now. I can take
+care of myself. I'll feel better in a minute. Upstairs--that is where I
+think that woman is. Please, please don't--I'm all right--truly.
+Upstairs."
+
+Kennedy had taken her gently by the arm and she sank down in an easy
+chair.
+
+"Please hurry," she implored. "You may be too late."
+
+She had risen again in spite of us and was out in the lower hall. We
+could hear a footstep on the stairs.
+
+"There she goes, the woman who has been hiding up there, Madame--"
+
+Clare cut the words short.
+
+A woman had hastily descended the steps, evidently seeing her
+opportunity to escape while we were in the back of the house. She had
+reached the street door, which now was open, and the flaming arc light
+in front of the house shone brightly on her.
+
+I looked, expecting to see our dark-haired, olive-skinned Marie. I
+stared in amazement. Instead, this woman was fair, her hair was flaxen,
+her figure more slim, even her features were different. She was a
+stranger. I could not recollect ever having seen her.
+
+Again I strained my eyes, thinking it might be Betty Blackwell at last,
+but this woman bore no resemblance apparently to her. She looked older,
+more mature.
+
+In my haste I noted that she had a bandage about her face, as if she
+had been injured recently, for there seemed to be blood on it where it
+had worked itself loose in her flight. She gave one glance at us, and
+quickened her pace at seeing us so close. The bandage, already loose,
+slipped off her face and fell to the floor. Still she did not seem
+other than a stranger to me, though I had a half-formed notion that I
+had seen that face somewhere before. She did not stop to pick the
+bandage up. She had gained the door and was down the front step on the
+sidewalk before we could stop her.
+
+Taxicabs in droves seemed to have collected, like buzzards over a dead
+body. They were doing a thriving business carrying away those who
+sought to escape. Into one by which a man was waiting in the shadow the
+woman hurried. The man looked for all the world like Dr. Harris. An
+instant later the chauffeur was gone.
+
+The policeman had the front door of Madame Margot's covered all right,
+so efficiently that he was neglecting everything else. From the
+basement now and then a scurrying figure catapulted itself out and was
+lost in the curious crowd that always collects at any time of day or
+night on a New York street when there is any excitement.
+
+"It is of no use to expect to capture anyone now," exclaimed Craig, as
+we hurried back into the dope joint. "I hardly expected to do it. All I
+panted was to protect Miss Kendall. But we have the evidence against
+this joint that will close it for good."
+
+He stooped and picked up the bandage.
+
+"I think I'll keep that," he remarked thoughtfully. "I wonder what that
+blonde woman wore that for?"
+
+"She MUST be up there," reiterated Clare, who had followed us. "I heard
+them talking, it seemed to me only the moment before I heard you in the
+hall."
+
+The excitement seemed now to have the effect of quieting her unstrung
+nerves and carrying her through.
+
+"Let us go upstairs," said Kennedy.
+
+From room to room we hurried in the darkness, lighting the lights. They
+were all empty, yet each one gave its mute testimony to the character
+of its use and its former occupants. There were opium lay-outs with
+pipes, lamps, yen haucks, and other paraphernalia in some. In others
+had been cocaine snuffers. There seemed to be everything for drug users
+of every kind.
+
+At last in a small room in front on the top floor we came upon a girl,
+half insensible from a drug. She was vainly trying to make herself
+presentable for the street, ramblingly talking to herself in the
+meantime.
+
+Again my hopes rose that we had found either the mysterious Marie
+Margot or Betty Blackwell. A second glance caused us all to pause in
+surprise and disappointment.
+
+It was the Titian-haired girl from the Montmartre office.
+
+Miss Kendall, recovering from the effects of the drugs which she had
+been compelled to take in her heroic attempt to get at the dope joint,
+was endeavouring to quiet the girl from the Montmartre, who, now
+vaguely recollecting us, seemed to realize that something had gone
+wrong and was trembling and crying pitifully.
+
+"What's the matter with her?" I asked.
+
+"Chloral," replied Miss Kendall in a low voice aside. "I suppose she
+has had a wild night which she has followed by chloral to quiet her
+nerves, with little effect. Didn't you ever see them? They will go into
+a drug store in this part of the city where such things are sold, weak,
+shaky, nervous wrecks. The clerk will sell them the stuff and they will
+retire for a moment into the telephone booth. Sometimes they will come
+out looking as though they had never felt a moment's effect from their
+wild debauches. But there are other times when they are too weakened to
+get over it so quickly. That is her case, poor girl."
+
+The soothing hand which she laid on the girl's throbbing head was quite
+in contrast with the manner in which I recalled her to have spoken of
+the girl when first we saw her at the Montmartre. She must have seen
+the look of surprise on my face.
+
+"I can't condemn these girls too strongly when I see them themselves,"
+she remarked. "It would be so easy for them to stop and lead a decent
+life, if they only would forget the white lights and the gay life that
+allures them. It is when they are so down and out that I long to give
+them a hand to help them up again and show them how foolish it is to
+make slaves of themselves."
+
+"Call a cab, Walter," said Kennedy, who had been observing the girl
+closely. "There is nothing more that we can expect to accomplish here.
+Everybody has escaped by this time. But we must get this poor girl in a
+private hospital or sanitarium where she can recover."
+
+Clare had disappeared. A moment later she returned from the room she
+had had downstairs with her hat on.
+
+"I'm going with her," she announced simply.
+
+"What--you, Miss Kendall?"
+
+"Yes. If a girl ever needed a friend, it is this girl now. There is
+nothing I can do for the moment. I will take care of her in my
+apartment until she is herself again."
+
+The girl seemed to half understand, and to be grateful to Clare.
+Kennedy watched her hovering over the drug victim without attempting to
+express the admiration which he felt.
+
+Just as the cab was announced, he drew Miss Kendall aside. "You're a
+trump," he said frankly. "Most people would pass by on the other side
+from such as she is."
+
+They talked for a moment as to the best place to go, then decided on a
+quiet little place uptown where convalescents were taken in.
+
+"I think you can still be working on the case, if you care to do so,"
+suggested Craig as Miss Kendall and her charge were leaving.
+
+"How?" she asked.
+
+"When you get her to this sanitarium, try to be with her as much as you
+can. I think if anyone can get anything out of her, you can. Remember
+it is more than this girl's rescue that is at stake. If she can be got
+to talk she may prove an important link toward piecing together the
+solution of the mystery of Betty Blackwell. She must know many of the
+inside secrets of the Montmartre," he added significantly.
+
+They had gone, and Craig and I had started to go also when we came
+across a negro caretaker who seemed to have stuck by the place during
+all the excitement.
+
+"Do you know that girl who just went out?" asked Craig.
+
+"No, sah," she replied glibly.
+
+"Look here," demanded Craig, facing her. "You know better than that.
+She has been here before, and you know it. I've a good mind to have you
+held for being in charge of this place. If I do, all the Marie Margots
+and Ike the Droppers can't get you out again."
+
+The negress seemed to understand that this was no ordinary raid.
+
+"Who is she?" demanded Craig.
+
+"I dunno, sah. She come from next door."
+
+"I know she did. She's the girl in the office of the Montmartre. Now,
+you know her. What is her name?"
+
+The negress seemed to consider a moment, then quickly answered, "Dey
+always calls her Miss Sybil here, sah, Sybil Seymour, sah."
+
+"Thank you. I knew you had some name for her. Come, Walter. This is
+over for the present. A raid without arrests, too! It will be all over
+town in half an hour. If we are going to do anything it must be done
+quickly."
+
+We called on Carton and lost no time in having the men he could spare
+placed in watching the railroads and steamship lines to prevent if we
+could any of the gang from getting out of the city that way. It was a
+night of hard work with no results. I began to wonder whether they
+might not have escaped finally after all. There seemed to be no trace.
+Harris had disappeared, there was no clue to Marie Margot, no trace of
+the new blonde woman, not a syllable yet about Betty Blackwell.
+
+
+
+
+XVI
+
+THE SANITARIUM
+
+
+"It seems as if the forces of Dorgan are demoralized," I remarked the
+afternoon after the raid on Margot's.
+
+"We have them on the run--that's true," agreed Kennedy, "but there's
+plenty of fight in them, yet. We're not through, by any means."
+
+Still, the lightning swiftness of Carton's attack had taken their
+breath away, temporarily, at least. Already he had started proceedings
+to disbar Kahn, as well as to prosecute him in the courts. According to
+the reports that came to us Murtha himself seemed dazed at the blow
+that had fallen. Some of our informants asserted that he was drinking
+heavily; others denied it. Whatever it was, however, Murtha was changed.
+
+As for Dorgan, he was never much in the limelight anyhow and was less
+so now than ever. He preferred to work through others, while he himself
+kept in the background. He had never held any but a minor office, and
+that in the beginning of his career. Interviews and photographs he
+eschewed as if forbidden by his political religion. Since the discovery
+of the detectaphone in his suite at Gastron's he had had his rooms
+thoroughly overhauled, lest by any chance there might be another of the
+magic little instruments concealed in the very walls, and having
+satisfied himself that there was not, he instituted a watch of private
+detectives to prevent a repetition of the unfortunate incident.
+
+Whoever it was who had obtained the Black Book was keeping very quiet
+about it, and I imagined that it was being held up as a sort of sword
+of Damocles, dangling over his head, until such time as its possessor
+chose to strike the final blow. Of course, we did not and could not
+know what was going on behind the scenes with the Silent Boss, what
+drama was being enacted between Dorgan and the Wall Street group,
+headed by Langhorne. Langhorne himself was inscrutable. I had heard
+that Dorgan had once in an unguarded moment expressed a derogatory
+opinion of the social leanings of Langhorne. But that was in the days
+before Dorgan had acquired a country place on Long Island and a taste
+for golf and expensive motors. Now, in his way, Dorgan was quite as
+fastidious as any of those he had once affected to despise. It amused
+Langhorne. But it had not furthered his ambitions of being taken into
+the inner circle of Dorgan's confidence. Hence, I inferred, this bitter
+internecine strife within the organization itself.
+
+Whatever was brewing inside the organization, I felt that we should
+soon know, for this was the day on which Justice Pomeroy had announced
+he would sentence Dopey Jack.
+
+It was a very different sort of crowd that overflowed the courtroom
+that morning from that which had so boldly flocked to the trial as if
+it were to make a Roman holiday of justice.
+
+The very tone was different. There was a tense look on many a face, as
+if the owner were asking himself the question, "What are we coming to?
+If this can happen to Dopey Jack, what might not happen to me?"
+
+Even the lawyers were changed. Kahn, as a result of the proceedings
+that Carton had instituted, had yielded the case to another, perhaps no
+better than himself, but wiser, after the fact. Instead of demanding
+anything, as a sort of prescriptive right, the new attorney actually
+adopted the unheard of measure of appealing to the clemency of the
+court. The shades of all the previous bosses and gangsters must have
+turned in disgust at the unwonted sight. But certain it was that no one
+could see the relaxation of a muscle on the face of Justice Pomeroy as
+the lawyer proceeded with his specious plea. He heard Carton, also, in
+the same impassive manner, as in a few brief and pointed sentences he
+ripped apart the sophistries of his opponent.
+
+The spectators fairly held their breath as the prisoner now stood
+before the tribune of justice.
+
+"Jack Rubano," he began impressively, "you have been convicted by
+twelve of your peers--so the law looks on them, although the fact is
+that any honest man is immeasurably your superior. Even before that,
+Rubano, the District Attorney having looked into all the facts
+surrounding this charge had come to the conclusion that the evidence
+was sufficiently strong to convict you. You were convicted in his mind.
+In my mind, of course, there could be no prejudgment. But now that a
+jury has found you guilty, I may say that you have a record that is
+more than enough to disgrace a man twice your age. True, you have never
+been punished. But this is not the time or place for me to criticise my
+colleagues on the bench for letting you off. Others of your associates
+have served terms in prison for things no whit worse than you have done
+repeatedly. I shall be glad to meet some of them at this bar in the
+near future."
+
+The justice paused, then extended a long, lean accusatory finger out
+from the rostrum at the gangster. "Rubano," he concluded, "your crime
+is particularly heinous--debauching the very foundations of the
+state--the elections. I sentence you to not less than three nor more
+than five years in State's prison, at hard labour."
+
+There was an audible gasp in the big courtroom, as the judge snapped
+shut his square jaw, bull-dog fashion. It was as though he had snapped
+the backbone of the System.
+
+The prisoner was hurried from the room before there was a chance for a
+demonstration. It was unnecessary, however. It seemed as if all the
+jaunty bravado of the underworld was gone out of it. Slowly the crowd
+filed out, whispering.
+
+Dopey Jack, Murtha's right-hand man, had been sentenced to State's
+prison!
+
+Outside the courtroom Carton received an ovation. As quickly as he
+could, he escaped from the newspapermen, and Kennedy was the first to
+grasp his hand.
+
+But the most pleasing congratulation came from Miss Ashton, who had
+dropped in with two or three friends from the Reform League.
+
+"I'm so glad, Mr. Carton--for your sake," she added very prettily, with
+just a trace of heightened colour in her cheeks and eyes that showed
+her sincere pleasure at the outcome of the case. "And then, too," she
+went on, "it may have some bearing on the case of that girl who has
+disappeared. So far, no one seems to have been able to find a trace of
+her. She just seems to have dropped out as if she had been spirited
+away."
+
+"We must find her," returned Carton, thanking her for her good wishes
+in a manner which he had done to none of the rest of us, and in fact
+forgetful now that any of us were about. "I shall start right in on
+Dopey Jack to see if I can get anything out of him, although I don't
+think he is one that will prove a squealer in any way. I hope we can
+have something to report soon."
+
+Others were pressing around him and Miss Ashton moved away, although I
+thought his handshakes were perhaps a little less cordial after she had
+gone.
+
+I turned once to survey the crowd and down the gallery, near a pillar I
+saw Langhorne, his eyes turned fixedly in our direction, and a deep
+scowl on his face. Evidently he had no relish for the proceedings, at
+least that part in which Carton had just figured, whatever his personal
+feelings may have been toward the culprit. A moment later he saw me
+looking at him, turned abruptly and walked toward the stone staircase
+that led down to the main floor. But I could not get that scowl out of
+my mind as I watched his tall, erect figure stalking away.
+
+Neither Murtha, nor, of course, Dorgan, were there, though I knew that
+they had many emissaries present who would report to them every detail
+of what had happened, down perhaps to the congratulations of Miss
+Ashton. Somehow, I could not get out of my head a feeling that she
+would afford them, in some way, a point of attack on Carton and that
+the unscrupulous organization would stop at nothing in order to save
+its own life and ruin his.
+
+Carton had not only his work at the District Attorney's office to
+direct, but some things to clear up at the Reform League headquarters,
+as well as a campaign speech to make.
+
+"I'm afraid I shan't be able to see much of you, to-day," he apologized
+to Kennedy, "but you're going to Miss Ashton's suffrage evening and
+dance, aren't you?"
+
+"I should like to go," temporized Kennedy.
+
+Carton glanced about to see whether there was anyone in earshot. "I
+think you had better go," he added. "She has secured a promise from
+Langhorne to be there, as well as several of the organization leaders.
+It is a thoroughly non-partisan affair--and she can get them all
+together. You know the organization is being educated. When people of
+the prominence of the Ashtons take up suffrage and make special
+requests to have certain persons come to a thing like that, they can
+hardly refuse. In fact, no one commits himself to anything by being
+present, whereas, absence might mean hostility, and there are lots of
+the women in the organization that believe in suffrage, now. Yes, we'd
+better go. It will be a chance to observe some people we want to watch."
+
+"We'll go," agreed Kennedy. "Can't we all go together?"
+
+"Surely," replied Carton, gratified, I could see, by having succeeded
+in swelling the crowd that would be present and thus adding to the
+success of Miss Ashton's affair. "Drop into the office here, and I'll
+be ready. Good-bye--and thanks for your aid, both of you."
+
+We left the Criminal Courts Building with the crowd that was slowly
+dispersing, still talking over the unexpected and unprecedented end of
+the trial.
+
+As we paused on the broad flight of steps that led down to the street
+on this side, Kennedy jogged my elbow, and, following his eyes, I saw a
+woman, apparently alone, just stepping into a town car at the curb.
+
+There was something familiar about her, but her face was turned from me
+and I could not quite place her.
+
+"Mrs. Ogleby," Kennedy remarked. "I didn't see her in the courtroom.
+She must have been there, though, or perhaps outside in the corridor.
+Evidently she felt some interest in the outcome of the case."
+
+He had caught just a glimpse of her face and now that he pronounced her
+name I recognized her, though I should not have otherwise.
+
+The car drove off with the rattle of the changing gears into high
+speed, before we had a chance to determine whether it was otherwise
+empty or not.
+
+"Why was she here?" I asked.
+
+Kennedy shook his head, but did not venture a reply to the question
+that was in his own mind. I felt that it must have something to do with
+her fears regarding the Black Book. Had she, too, surmised that Murtha
+had employed his henchman, Dopey Jack, to recover the book from
+Langhorne? Had she feared that Dopey Jack might in some moment of heat,
+for revenge, drop some hint of the robbery--whether it had been really
+successful or not?
+
+It was my turn to call Kennedy's attention to something, now, for
+standing sidewise as I was, I could see the angles of the building back
+of him.
+
+"Don't turn--yet," I cautioned, "but just around the corner back of
+you, Langhorne is standing. Evidently he has been watching Mrs. Ogleby,
+too."
+
+Kennedy drew a cigarette from his case, tried to light it, let the
+match go out, and then as if to shield himself from the wind, stepped
+back and turned.
+
+Langhorne, however, had seen us, and an instant later had disappeared.
+
+Without a word further Kennedy led the way around the corner to the
+subway and we started uptown, I knew this time, for the laboratory.
+
+He made no comment on the case, but I knew he had in mind some plan or
+other for the next move and that it would probably involve something at
+the suffrage meeting at Miss Ashton's that evening.
+
+During the rest of the day, Craig was busy testing and re-testing a
+peculiar piece of apparatus, while now and then he would despatch me on
+various errands which I knew were more as an outlet for my excitement
+than of any practical importance.
+
+The apparatus, as far as I could make it out, consisted of a simple
+little oaken box, oblong in shape, in the face of which were two square
+little holes with side walls of cedar, converging pyramid-like in the
+interior of the box and ending in what looked to be little round black
+discs.
+
+I had just returned with a hundred feet or so of the best silk-covered
+flexible wire, when he had evidently completed his work. Two of the
+boxes were already wrapped up. I started to show him the wire, but
+after a glance he accepted it as exactly what he had wanted and made it
+into a smaller package, which he handed to me.
+
+"I think we might be journeying down to Carton's office," he added,
+looking impatiently at his watch.
+
+It was still early and we did not hurry.
+
+Carton, however, was waiting for us anxiously. "I've called you at the
+laboratory and the apartment--all over," he cried. "Where have you
+been?"
+
+"Just on the way down," returned Kennedy. "Why, what has happened?"
+
+"Then you haven't heard it?" asked Carton excitedly, without waiting
+for Craig's answer. "Murtha has been committed to a sanitarium."
+
+Kennedy and I stared at him.
+
+"Pat Murtha," ejaculated Craig, "in a sanitarium?"
+
+"Exactly. Paresis--they say--absolutely irresponsible."
+
+Coming as it did as a climax to the quick and unexpected succession of
+events of the past few days, it was no wonder that it seemed impossible.
+
+What did it mean? Was it merely a sham? Or was it a result of his
+excesses? Or had Carton's relentless pursuit, the raid of Margot's, and
+the conviction of Dopey Jack, driven the Smiling Boss really insane?
+
+
+
+
+XVII
+
+THE SOCIETY SCANDAL
+
+
+Nothing else was talked about at the suffrage reception at Miss
+Ashton's that evening, not even suffrage, as much as the strange fate
+that seemed to have befallen Murtha.
+
+And, as usual with an event like that, stories of all sorts, even the
+wildest improbabilities, were current. Some even went so far as to
+insinuate that Dorgan had purposely quickened the pace of life for
+Murtha by the dinners at Gastron's in order to get him out of the way,
+fearing that with his power within the organization Murtha might become
+a serious rival to himself.
+
+Whether there was any truth in the rumour or not, it was certain that
+Dorgan was of the stamp that could brook no rivals. In fact, that had
+been at the bottom of the warfare between himself and Langhorne.
+Certain also was it that the dinners and conferences at the now famous
+suite of the Silent Boss were reputed to have been often verging on, if
+not actually crossing, the line of the scandalous.
+
+Miss Ashton's guests assembled in force, coming from all classes of
+society, all parties in politics, and all religions. Her object had
+been to show that, although she personally was working with the Reform
+League, suffrage itself was a broad general issue. The two or three
+hundred guests of the evening surely demonstrated it and testified to
+the popularity of Miss Ashton personally, as well.
+
+She had planned to hold the meeting in the big drawing-room of the
+Ashton mansion, but the audience overflowed into the library and other
+rooms. As the people assembled, it was interesting to see how for the
+moment at least they threw off the bitterness of the political campaign
+and met each other on what might be called neutral ground. Dorgan
+himself had been invited, but, in accordance with his custom of never
+appearing in public if he could help it, did not come. Langhorne was
+present, however, and I saw him once talking to a group of labour union
+leaders and later to Justice Pomeroy, an evidence of how successful the
+meeting was in hiding, if not burying, the hatchet.
+
+Carton, naturally, was the lion of the evening, though he tried hard to
+keep in the background. I was amused to see his efforts. In fleeing
+from the congratulations of some of his own and Miss Ashton's society
+friends, he would run into a group of newspaper men and women who were
+lying in wait for him. Shaking himself loose from them would result in
+finding himself the centre of an enthusiastic crowd of Reform Leaguers.
+
+Mrs. Ogleby was there, also, and both Kennedy and I watched her
+curiously. I wondered whether she might not feel just a little relieved
+to think that Murtha was seemingly out of the way for the present. Her
+knowledge of the Black Book which had first given the tip to Carton had
+always been a mystery to Kennedy and was one of the problems which I
+knew he would like to solve to-night. She was keenly observant of
+Carton, which led us to suppose that she had not yet got out of her
+mind the idea that somehow it was he who had been responsible for the
+detectaphone record which so many of those present were struggling to
+obtain. Though Langhorne studiously avoided her, I noticed that each
+kept an eye on the other, and I felt that there was something common to
+both of them.
+
+It was with an unexpressed air of relief to several members of the
+party that Miss Ashton at last rapped for order and after a short,
+pithy, pointed speech of introduction presented the several speakers of
+the evening. It was, like the audience, a well-balanced programme,
+which showed the tactfulness and political acumen of Miss Ashton. I
+shall pass over the speeches, however, as they had no direct bearing on
+the mystery which Kennedy and I found so engrossing.
+
+The meeting had been cleverly planned so that in spite of its
+accomplishing much for the propaganda work of the "cause," it did not
+become tiresome and the speaking was followed by the entrance of one of
+the best little orchestras for dance music in the city.
+
+Instantly, the scene transformed itself from a suffrage meeting to a
+social function that was unique. Leaders of the smart set rubbed
+elbows, and seemed to enjoy it, with working girls and agitators.
+Conservative and radical, millionaire and muckraker succumbed to the
+spell of the Ashton hospitality and the lure of the new dances. It was
+a novel experience for all, a levelling-up of society, as contrasted to
+some of the levelling-down that we had recently seen.
+
+Kennedy and I, having no mood as things stood for the festivities, drew
+aside and watched the kaleidoscopic whirl of the dancers. Across from
+us was a wide doorway that opened into a spacious conservatory, a nook
+of tropical and temperate beauty. Several couples had wandered in there
+to rest and, as the orchestra struck up something new that seemed to
+have the "punch" to its timeful measures, they gradually rejoined the
+dancers.
+
+It had evidently suggested an idea to Kennedy, for a moment later he
+led me toward the coat room and uncovered the package which he had
+brought consisting of the two oaken boxes I had seen him adjusting in
+the laboratory.
+
+We managed to reach the conservatory and found in a corner a veritable
+bower with a wide rustic seat under some palms. Quickly Kennedy
+deposited in the shadow of one of them an oaken box, sticking into it
+the plugs on the ends of the wires that I had brought. It was an easy
+matter here in the dim half light to conceal the wire behind the plants
+and a moment later he tossed the end through a swinging window in the
+glass and closed the window.
+
+Casually we edged our way out among the dancers and around to the room
+into which he had thrown the wire. It was a breakfast room, I think,
+but at any rate we could not remain there for it was quite easy to see
+into it through the crystal walls of the conservatory. There was,
+however, what seemed to be a little pantry at the other end, and to
+this Kennedy deftly led the wires and then plugged them in on the other
+oaken box.
+
+He turned a lever. Instantly from the wizard-like little box issued
+forth the strains of the dance music of the orchestra and the rhythmic
+shuffle of feet. Now and then a merry laugh or a snatch of gay
+conversation floated in to us. Though we were effectually cut off from
+both sight and hearing in the pantry, it was as though we had been
+sitting on the rustic bench in the conservatory.
+
+"What is it?" I asked in amazement, gazing at the wonderful little
+instrument before us.
+
+"A vocaphone," he explained, moving the switch and cutting off the
+sound instantly, "an improved detectaphone--something that can be used
+both in practical business, professional, and home affairs as a loud
+speaking telephone, and, as I expect to use it here, for special cases
+of detective work. You remember the detectaphone instruments which we
+have used?"
+
+Indeed I did. It had helped us out of several very tight
+situations--and seemed now to have been used to get the organization
+into a very tight political place.
+
+"Well, the vocaphone," went on Kennedy, "does even more than the
+detectaphone. You see, it talks right out. Those little apertures in
+the face act like megaphone horns increasing the volume of sound." He
+indicated the switch with his finger and then another point to which it
+could be moved. "Besides," he went on enthusiastically, "this machine
+talks both ways. I have only to turn the switch to that point and a
+voice will speak out in the conservatory just as if we were there
+instead of talking here."
+
+He turned the switch so that it carried the sounds only in our
+direction. The last strains of the dance music were being followed by
+the hearty applause of the dancers.
+
+As the encore struck up again, a voice, almost as if it were in the
+little room alongside us, said, "Why, hello, Maty, why aren't you
+dancing?"
+
+There was an unmistakable air of familiarity about it and about the
+reply, "Why aren't you, Hartley?"
+
+"Because I've been looking for a chance to have a quiet word with you,"
+the man rejoined.
+
+"Langhorne and Mrs. Ogleby," cried Craig excitedly.
+
+"Sh!" I cautioned, "they might hear us."
+
+He laughed. "Not unless I turn the switch further."
+
+"I saw you down at the Criminal Courts Building this morning," went on
+the man, "but you didn't see me. What did you think of Carton?"
+
+I fancied there was a trace of sarcasm or jealousy in his tone. At any
+rate, woman-like, she did not answer that question, but went on to the
+one which it implied.
+
+"I didn't go to see Carton. He is nothing to me, has not been for
+months. I was only amusing myself when I knew him--leading him on,
+playing with him, then." She paused, then turned the attack on him.
+"What did you think of Miss Ashton? You thought I didn't see you, but
+you hardly took your eyes off her while I was in the hallway waiting to
+hear the verdict."
+
+It was Langhorne's turn to defend himself. "It wasn't so much Margaret
+Ashton as that fellow Carton I was watching," he answered hastily.
+
+"Then you--you haven't forgotten poor little me?" she inquired with a
+sincere plaintiveness in her voice.
+
+"Mary," he said, lowering his voice, "I have tried to forget
+you--tried, because I had no right to remember you in the old way--not
+while you and Martin remained together. Margaret and I had always been
+friends--but I think Carton and this sort of thing,"--he waved his hand
+I imagined at the suffrage dancers--"have brought us to the parting of
+the ways. Perhaps it is better. I'm not so sure that it isn't best."
+
+"And yet," she said slowly, "you are piqued--piqued that another should
+have won where you failed--even if the prize isn't just what you might
+wish."
+
+Langhorne assented by silence. "Hartley," she went on at length, "you
+said a moment ago you had tried to forget me--"
+
+"But can't," he cut in with almost passionate fierceness. "That was
+what hurt me when I--er--heard that you had gone with Murtha to that
+dinner of Dorgan's. I couldn't help trying to warn you of it. I know
+Martin neglects you. But I was mad--mad clean through when I saw you
+playing with Carton a few months ago. I don't know anything about
+it--don't want to. Maybe he was innocent and you were tempting him. I
+don't care. It angered me--angered me worse than ever when I saw later
+that he was winning with Margaret Ashton. Everywhere, he seemed to be
+crossing my trail, to be my nemesis. I--I wish I was Dorgan--I wish I
+could fight."
+
+Langhorne checked himself before he said too much. As it was I saw that
+it had been he who had told Mrs. Ogleby that the Black Book existed. He
+had not told her that he had made it, if in fact he had, and she had
+let the thing out, never thinking Langhorne had been the eavesdropper,
+but supposing it must be Carton.
+
+"Why--why did you go to that dinner with Murtha?" he asked finally,
+with a trace of reproach in his tone.
+
+"Why? Why not?" she answered defiantly. "What do I care about Martin?
+Why should I not have my--my freedom, too? I went because it was wild,
+unconventional, perhaps wrong. I felt that way. If--if I had felt that
+you cared--perhaps--I could have been--more discreet."
+
+"I do care," he blurted out. "I--I only wish I had known you as well as
+I do now--before you married--that's all."
+
+"Is there no way to correct the mistake?" she asked softly. "Must
+marriage end all--all happiness?"
+
+Langhorne said nothing, but I could almost hear his breathing over the
+vocaphone, which picked up and magnified even whispers.
+
+"Mary," he said in a deep, passionate voice, "I--I will defend
+you--from this Murtha thing--if it ever gets out. I know it is always
+on your mind--that you couldn't keep away from that trial for fear that
+Carton, or Murtha, or SOMEBODY might say something by chance or drop
+some hint about it. Trust me."
+
+"Then we can be--friends?"
+
+"Lovers!" he cried fiercely.
+
+There was a half-smothered exclamation over the faithful little
+vocaphone, a little flurried rustle of silk and a long, passionate sigh.
+
+"Hartley," she whispered.
+
+"What is it, Mary?" he asked tensely.
+
+"We must be careful. Carton MUST be defeated. He must not have the
+power--to use that--record."
+
+"No," ground out Langhorne. "Wait--he shall not. By the way, aren't
+those orchids gorgeous?"
+
+The encore had ceased and over the vocaphone we could hear gaily
+chatting couples wandering into the conservatory. The two conspirators
+rose and parted silently, without exciting suspicion.
+
+For several minutes we listened to snatches of the usual vapid chatter
+that dancing seems to induce. Then the orchestra blared forth with
+another of the seductive popular pieces.
+
+Kennedy and I looked at each other, amazed. From the underworld up to
+the smart set, the trail of graft was the same, debauching and blunting
+all that it touched. Here we saw the making of a full-fledged scandal
+in one of the highest circles.
+
+We had scarcely recovered from our surprise at the startling
+disclosures of the vocaphone, when we heard two voices again above the
+music, two men this time.
+
+"What--you here?" inquired a voice which we recognized immediately as
+that of Langhorne.
+
+"Yes," replied the other voice, evidently of a young man. "I came in
+with the swells to keep my eye peeled on what was going on."
+
+The voice itself was unfamiliar, yet it had a tough accent which
+denoted infallibly the section of the city where it was acquired. It
+was one of the gangsters.
+
+"What's up, Ike?" demanded Langhorne suspiciously.
+
+Craig looked at me significantly. It was Ike the Dropper!
+
+The other lowered his voice. "I don't mind telling you, Mr. Langhorne.
+You're in the organization and we ain't got no grudge against you. It's
+Carton."
+
+"Carton?" repeated Langhorne, and one could feel the expectant catch in
+his breath, as he added quickly: "You mean you fellows are going to try
+to get him right?"
+
+"Bet your life," swaggered Ike, believing himself safe. "How?"
+
+The gangster hesitated, then reassured by Langhorne, said: "He's
+ordered a taxicab. We got it for him--a driver who is a right guy
+and'll drive him down where there's a bunch of the fellows. They ain't
+goner do nothing serious--but--well, he won't campaign much from a
+hospital cot," he added sagely. "Say--here he comes now with that girl.
+I better beat it."
+
+Langhorne also managed to get away apparently, or else Carton and Miss
+Ashton were too engrossed in one another to notice him, for we heard no
+word of greeting.
+
+A moment later Carton's and Miss Ashton's voices were audible.
+
+"Must you go?" she was saying.
+
+"I'm afraid so," he apologized. "I've a speech to prepare for to-morrow
+and I've had several hard days. It's been a splendid evening, Miss
+Ashton--splendid. I've enjoyed it ever so much and I think it has
+accomplished more than a hundred meetings--besides the publicity it
+will get for the cause. Shall I see you to-morrow at headquarters?"
+
+"I shall make it a point to drop in," she answered in a tone as
+unmistakable.
+
+"Mr. Carton--your cab is waiting, sir," announced a servant with an
+apology for intruding. "At the side entrance, sir, so that you can get
+away quietly, sir."
+
+Carton thanked him.
+
+I looked at Kennedy anxiously. If Carton slipped away in this fashion
+before we could warn him, what might not happen? We could hardly expect
+to get around and through the press of the dancers in time.
+
+"I hate to go, Miss Ashton," he was adding. "I'd stay--if I saw any
+prospect of the others going. But--you see--this is the first time
+to-night--that I've had a word with you--alone."
+
+It was not only an emergency, but there were limits to Kennedy's
+eavesdropping propensities, and spying on Carton's love affairs was
+quite another thing from Langhorne's.
+
+Quickly Craig turned the lever all the way over.
+
+"Carton--Miss Ashton--this is Kennedy," he called. "Back of the big
+palm you'll find a vocaphone. Don't take that cab! They are going to
+stick you up. Wait--I'll explain all in a moment!"
+
+
+
+
+XVIII
+
+THE WALL STREET WOLF
+
+
+It was a startled couple that we found when we reached the
+conservatory. As we made our hasty explanation, Carton overwhelmed us
+with thanks for the prompt and effective manner in which Kennedy had
+saved him from the machinations of the defeated gangsters.
+
+Miss Ashton, who would have kept her nerves under control throughout
+any emergency, actually turned pale as she learned of the danger that
+had been so narrowly averted. I am sure that her feelings, which she
+made no effort to conceal, must have been such as to reassure Carton if
+he had still any doubt on that score.
+
+The delay in his coming out, however, had been just enough to arouse
+suspicion, and by the time that we reached the side entrance to the
+house both Ike and the night-hawk taxicab which had evidently been
+drafted into service had disappeared, leaving no clue.
+
+The result of the discovery over the vocaphone was that none of us left
+Miss Ashton's until much later than we had expected.
+
+Langhorne, apparently, had gone shortly after he left the conservatory
+the last time, and Mrs. Ogleby had preceded him. When at last we
+managed to convince Miss Ashton that it was perfectly safe for Carton
+to go, nothing would suffice except that we should accompany him as a
+sort of bodyguard to his home. We did so, without encountering any
+adventure more thrilling than seeing an argument between a policeman
+and a late reveller.
+
+"I can't thank you fellows too much," complimented Carton as we left
+him. "I was hunting around for you, but I thought you had found a
+suffrage meeting too slow and had gone."
+
+"On the contrary," returned Kennedy, equivocally, "we found it far from
+slow."
+
+Carton did not appreciate the tenor of the remark and Craig was not
+disposed to enlighten him.
+
+"What do you suppose Mrs. Ogleby meant in her references to Carton?"
+mused Kennedy when we reached our own apartment.
+
+"I can't say," I replied, "unless before he came to really know Miss
+Ashton, they were intimate."
+
+Kennedy shook his head. "Why will men in a public capacity get mixed up
+with women of the adventuress type like that, even innocently?" he
+ruminated. "Mark my words, she or someone else will make trouble for
+him before we get through."
+
+It was a thought that had lately been in my own mind, for we had had
+several hints of that nature.
+
+Kennedy said no more, but he had started my mind on a train of
+speculative thought. I could not imagine that a woman of Mrs. Ogleby's
+type could ever have really appealed to Carton, but that did not
+preclude the possibility that some unscrupulous person might make use
+of the intimacy for base purposes. Then, too, there was the threat that
+I had heard agreed on by both Langhorne and herself over the vocaphone.
+
+What would be the next step of the organization now in its sworn
+warfare on Carton, I could not imagine. But we did not have long to
+wait. Early the following forenoon an urgent message came to Kennedy
+from Carton to meet him at his office.
+
+"Kennedy," he said, "I don't know how to thank you for the many times
+you have pulled me through, and I'm almost ashamed to keep on calling
+on you."
+
+"It's a big fight," hastened Craig. "You have opponents who know the
+game in its every crooked turn. If I can be only a small cog on a wheel
+that crushes them, I shall be only too glad. Your face tells me that
+something particularly unpleasant has happened."
+
+"It has," admitted Carton, smoothing out some of the wrinkles at the
+mere sight of Craig.
+
+He paused a moment, as if he were himself in doubt as to just what the
+trouble was.
+
+"Someone has been impersonating me over the telephone," he began. "All
+day long there have been reports coming into my office asking me
+whether it was true that I had agreed to accept the offer of Dorgan
+that Murtha made, you know,--that is, practically to let up on the
+organization if they would let up on me."
+
+"Yes," prompted Kennedy, "but, impersonation--what do you mean by that?"
+
+"Why, early to-day someone called me up, said he was Dorgan, and asked
+if I would have any objection to meeting him. I said I would meet
+him--only it would do no good. Then, apparently, the same person called
+up Dorgan and said he was myself, asking if he had any objection to
+meeting me. Dorgan said he'd see. Whoever it was, he almost succeeded
+in bringing about the fool thing--would have done it, if I hadn't got
+wise to the fact that there was something funny about it. I called up
+Dorgan. He said he'd meet me, as long as I had approached him first. I
+said I hadn't. We swore a little and called the fake meeting off. But
+it was too late. It got into the papers. Now, you'd think it wouldn't
+make any difference to either of us. It doesn't to him. People will
+think he tried to slip one over on ME. But it does make a difference to
+me. People will think I'm trying to sell out."
+
+Carton showed plainly his vexation at the affair.
+
+"The old scheme!" exclaimed Kennedy. "That's the plan that has been
+used by a man down in Wall Street that they call, 'the Wolf.' He is a
+star impersonator--will call up two sworn enemies and put over
+something on them that double-crosses both."
+
+"Wall Street," mused Carton. "That reminds me of another batch of
+rumours that have been flying around. They were that I had made a deal
+with Langhorne by which I agreed to support him in his fight to get
+something in the contracts of the new city planning scheme in return
+for his support of the part of the organization he could swing to me in
+the election,--another lie."
+
+"It might have been Langhorne himself, playing the wolf," I suggested.
+
+Kennedy had reached for the telephone book. "Also, it might have been
+Kahn," he added. "I see he has an office in Wall Street, too. He has
+been the legal beneficiary of several shady transactions down there."
+
+"Oh," put in Carton, "it might have been any of them--they're all
+capable of it from Dorgan down. If Murtha was only out, I'd be inclined
+to suspect him."
+
+He tossed over a typewritten sheet of paper. "That's the statement I
+gave out to the press," he explained.
+
+It read: "My attention has been called to the alleged activities of
+some person or persons who through telephone calls and underground
+methods are seeking to undermine confidence in my integrity. A more
+despicable method of attempting to arouse distrust I cannot imagine. It
+is criminal and if anyone can assist me in placing the responsibility
+where it belongs I shall be glad to prosecute to the limit."
+
+"That's all right," assented Kennedy, "but I don't think it will have
+any effect. You see, this sort of thing is too easy for anyone to be
+scared off from. All he has to do is to go to a pay station and call up
+there. You couldn't very well trace that."
+
+He stopped abruptly and his face puckered with thought.
+
+"There ought to be some way, though," I murmured, without knowing just
+what the way might be, "to tell whether it is Dorgan and the
+organization crowd, or Langhorne and his pool, or Kahn and the other
+shysters."
+
+"There IS a way," cried Kennedy at last. "You fellows wait here while I
+make a flying trip up to the laboratory. If anyone calls us, just put
+him off--tell him to call up later."
+
+Carton continued to direct the work of his office, of which there had
+been no interruptions even during the stress of the campaign. Now and
+then the telephone rang and each time Carton would motion to me, and
+say, "You take it, Jameson. If it seems perfectly regular then pass it
+over to me."
+
+Several routine calls came in, this way, followed by one from Miss
+Ashton, which Carton prolonged much beyond the mere time needed to
+discuss a phase of the Reform League campaign.
+
+He had scarcely hung up the receiver, when the bell tinkled
+insistently, as though central had had an urgent call which the last
+conversation had held up.
+
+I took down the receiver, and almost before I could answer the inquiry,
+a voice began, "This is the editor of the Wall Street Record, Mr.
+Carton. Have you heard anything of the rumours about Hartley Langhorne
+and his pool being insolvent? The Street has been flooded with
+stories--"
+
+"One moment," I managed to interrupt. "This is not Mr. Carton, although
+this is his office. No--he's out. Yes, he'll certainly be back in half
+an hour. Ring up then."
+
+I repeated the scrap of gossip that had filtered through to me, which
+Carton received in quite as much perplexity as I had.
+
+"Seems as if everybody was getting knocked," he commented.
+
+"That may be a blind, though," I suggested.
+
+He nodded. I think we both realized how helpless we were when Kennedy
+was away. In fact we made even our guesses with a sort of lack of
+confidence.
+
+It was therefore with a sense of relief that we welcomed him a few
+minutes later as he hurried into the office, almost breathless from his
+trip uptown and back.
+
+"Has anyone called up?" he inquired unceremoniously, unwrapping a small
+parcel which he carried.
+
+I told him as briefly as I could what had happened. He nodded, without
+making any audible comment, but in a manner that seemed to show no
+surprise.
+
+"I want to get this thing installed before anyone else calls," he
+explained, setting to work immediately.
+
+"What is it?" I asked, regarding the affair, which included something
+that looked like a phonograph cylinder.
+
+"An invention that has just been perfected," he replied without
+delaying his preparations, "by which it is possible for messages to be
+sent over the telephone and automatically registered, even in the
+absence of anyone at the receiving end. Up to the present it has been
+practicable to take phonograph records only by the direct action of the
+human voice upon the diaphragm of the instrument. Not long ago there
+was submitted to the French Academy of Sciences an apparatus by which
+the receiver of the telephone can be put into communication with a
+phonograph and a perfect record obtained of the voice of the speaker at
+the other end of the wire, his message being reproduced at will by
+merely pressing a button."
+
+"Wouldn't the telegraphone do?" I asked, remembering our use of that
+instrument in other cases.
+
+"It would record," he replied, "but I want a phonograph record. Nothing
+else will do in this case. You'll see why, before I get through.
+Besides, this apparatus isn't complicated. Between the diaphragm of the
+telephone receiver and that of the phonographic microphone is fitted an
+air chamber of adjustable size, open to the outer atmosphere by a small
+hole to prevent compression. I think," he added with a smile, "it will
+afford a pretty good means of collecting souvenirs of friends by
+preserving the sound of their voices through the telephone." For
+several minutes we waited.
+
+"I don't think I ever heard of such effrontery, such open, bare-faced
+chicanery," fumed Carton impatiently.
+
+"We'll catch the fellow yet," replied Kennedy confidently. "And I think
+we'll find him a bad lot."
+
+
+
+
+XIX
+
+THE ESCAPE
+
+
+At last the telephone rang and Carton answered it eagerly. As he did
+so, he quickly motioned to us to go to the outside office where we,
+too, could listen on extensions.
+
+"Yes, this is Mr. Carton," we heard him say.
+
+"This is the editor of the Wall Street Record," came back the reply in
+a tone that showed no hesitation or compunction if it was lying. "I
+suppose you have heard the rumours that are current downtown that
+Hartley Langhorne and the people associated with him have gone broke in
+the pool they formed to get control of the public utilities that would
+put them in a position to capture the city betterment contracts?"
+
+"No--I hadn't heard it," answered Carton, with difficulty restraining
+himself from quizzing the informant about himself. Kennedy was
+motioning to him that that was enough. "I'm sure I can't express any
+opinion at all for publication on the subject," he concluded brusquely,
+jamming down the receiver on the hook before his interlocutor had a
+chance to ask another question.
+
+The bell continued to ring, but Craig seized the receiver off its hook
+again and called back, "Mr. Carton has gone for the day," hanging it up
+again with a bang.
+
+"Call up the Record now," advised Craig, disconnecting the recording
+instrument he had brought. "See what the editor has to say."
+
+"This is the District Attorney's office," said Carton a moment later
+when he got the number. "You just called me."
+
+"I called you?" asked the editor, non-plussed.
+
+"About a rumour current in Wall Street."
+
+"Rumour? No, sir. It must be some mistake."
+
+"I guess so. Sorry to have troubled you. Good-bye."
+
+Carton looked from one to the other of us. "You see," he said in
+disgust, "there it is again. That's the sort of thing that has been
+going on all day. How do I know what that fellow is doing now--perhaps
+using my name?"
+
+I had no answer to his implied query as to who was the "wolf" and what
+he might be up to. As for Kennedy, while he showed plainly that he had
+his suspicions which he expected to confirm absolutely, he did not care
+to say anything about them yet.
+
+"Two can play at 'wolf,'" he said quietly, calling up the headquarters
+of Dorgan's organization.
+
+I wondered what he would say, but was disappointed to find that it was
+a merely trivial conversation about some inconsequential thing, as
+though Kennedy had merely wished to get in touch with the "Silent
+Boss." Next he called up the sanitarium to which Murtha had been
+committed, and after posing as Murtha's personal physician managed to
+have the rules relaxed to the extent of exchanging a few sentences with
+him.
+
+"How did he seem--irrational?" asked Carton with interest, for I don't
+think the District Attorney had complete confidence in the commonly
+announced cause of Murtha's enforced retirement.
+
+Kennedy shook his head doubtfully. "Sounded pretty far gone," was all
+he said, turning over the pages of the telephone book as he looked for
+another number.
+
+This time it was Kahn whom he called up, and he had some difficulty
+locating him, for Kahn had two offices and was busily engaged in
+preparing a defence to the charges preferred against him for the jury
+fixing episode.
+
+Among others whom he called up was Langhorne, and the conversation with
+him was as perfunctory as possible, consisting merely in repeating his
+name, followed by an apology from Kennedy for "calling the wrong
+number."
+
+In each case, Craig was careful to have his little recording instrument
+working, taking down every word that was uttered and when he had
+finished he detached it, looking at the cylinder with unconcealed
+satisfaction.
+
+"I'm going up to the laboratory again," he announced, as Carton looked
+at him inquiringly. "The investigation that I have in mind will take
+time, but I shall hurry it along as fast as I possibly can. I don't
+want any question about the accuracy of my conclusions."
+
+We left Carton, who promised to meet us late in the afternoon at the
+laboratory, and started uptown. Instead, however, of going up directly,
+Craig telephoned first to Clare Kendall to shadow Mrs. Ogleby.
+
+The rest of the day he spent in making microphotographs of the
+phonograph cylinder and studying them very attentively under his
+high-powered lens.
+
+Toward the close of the afternoon the first report of Miss Kendall, who
+had been "trailing" Mrs. Ogleby, came in. We were not surprised to
+learn that she had met Langhorne in the Futurist Tea Room in the middle
+of the afternoon and that they had talked long and earnestly. What did
+surprise us, though, was her suspicion that she had crossed the trail
+of someone else who was shadowing Mrs. Ogleby.
+
+Kennedy made no comment, though I could see that he was vitally
+interested. What was the significance of the added mystery? Someone
+else had an interest in watching her movements. At once I thought of
+Dorgan. Could he have known of the intimacy of his guest at the Gastron
+dinner with Langhorne, rather than with Murtha, with whom she had gone?
+Suddenly another explanation occurred to me. What was more likely than
+that Martin Ogleby should have heard of his wife's escapade? He would
+certainly learn now to his surprise of her meeting with Langhorne. What
+would happen then?
+
+Kennedy had about finished with his microphotographic work and was
+checking it over to satisfy himself of the results, when Carton, as he
+had promised, dropped in on us.
+
+"What are you doing now?" he asked curiously, looking at the prints and
+paraphernalia scattered about. "By the way, I've been inquiring into
+the commitment of Murtha to that sanitarium for the insane. On the
+surface it all seems perfectly regular. It appears that, unknown even
+to many of his most intimate friends, he has been suffering from a
+complication of diseases, the result of his high life, and they have at
+last affected his brain, as they were bound to do in time. Still, I
+don't like his 'next friends' in the case. One is his personal
+physician--I don't know much about him. But Dorgan is one of the
+others."
+
+"We'll have to look into it," agreed Kennedy. "Meanwhile, would you
+like to know who your 'wolf' is that has been spreading rumours about
+broadcast?"
+
+"I would indeed," exclaimed Carton eagerly. "You were right about the
+statement I issued. It had no more effect than so many unspoken words.
+The fellow has kept right on. He even had the nerve to call up Miss
+Ashton in my name and try to find out whether she had any trace of the
+missing Betty Blackwell. How do you suppose they found out that she was
+interested?"
+
+"Not a very difficult thing," replied Kennedy. "Miss Ashton must have
+told several organizations, and the grafters always watch such
+societies pretty closely. What did she say?"
+
+"Nothing," answered Carton. "I had thought that they might try
+something of the sort and fortunately I warned her to disregard any
+telephone messages unless they came certainly from me. We agreed on a
+little secret formula, a sort of password, to be used, and I flatter
+myself that the 'wolf' won't be able to accomplish much in that
+direction. You say you have discovered a clue? How did you get it?"
+
+Kennedy picked up one of the microphotographs which showed an
+enlargement of the marks on the phonograph cylinder. He showed it to us
+and we gazed curiously at the enigmatic markings, greatly magnified. To
+me, it looked like a collection of series of lines. By close scrutiny I
+was able to make out that the lines were wavy and more or less
+continuous, being made up of collections of finer lines,--lines within
+lines, as it were.
+
+An analysis of their composition showed that the centre of larger lines
+was composed of three continuous series of markings which looked, under
+the lens, for all the world like the impressions of an endless straight
+series of molar teeth. Flanking these three tooth-like impressions were
+other lines--varying in width and in number--I should say, about four,
+both above and below the tooth-like impressions. When highly magnified
+one could distinguish roughly parallel parts of what at even a low
+magnification looked like a single line.
+
+"I have been studying voice analysis lately," explained Kennedy,
+"particularly with reference to the singing voice. Mr. Edison has made
+thousands and thousands of studies of voices to determine which are
+scientifically perfect for singing. That side of it did not interest me
+particularly. I have been seeking to use the discovery rather for
+detective purposes."
+
+He paused and with a fine needle traced out some of the lines on the
+photographs before us.
+
+"That," he went on, "is a highly magnified photograph of a minute
+section of the phonographic record of the voice that called you up,
+Carton, as editor of the Wall Street Record. The upper and lower lines,
+with long regular waves, are formed by a voice with no overtones. Those
+three broader lines in the middle, with rhythmic ripples, show the
+overtones."
+
+Carton and I followed, fascinated by the minuteness of his
+investigation and knowledge.
+
+"You see," he explained, "when a voice or a passage of music sounds or
+is sung before a phonograph, its modulations received upon the
+diaphragm are written by the needle point upon the surface of the
+cylinder or disc in a series of fine waving or zig-zag lines of
+infinitely varying depth and breadth.
+
+"Close familiarity with such records for about forty years has taught
+Mr. Edison the precise meaning of each slightest variation in the
+lines. I have taken up and elaborated his idea. By examining them under
+the microscope one can analyze each tone with mathematical accuracy and
+can almost hear it--just as a musician reading the score of a song can
+almost hear the notes."
+
+"Wonderful," ejaculated Carton. "And you mean to say that in that way
+you can actually identify a voice?"
+
+Kennedy nodded. "By examining the records in the laboratory, looking
+them over under a microscope--yes. I can count the overtones, say, in a
+singing voice, and it is on the overtones that the richness depends. I
+can recognize a voice--mathematically. In short," Craig concluded
+enthusiastically, "it is what you might call the Bertillon measurement,
+the finger-print, the portrait parle of the human voice!"
+
+Incredible as it seemed, we were forced to believe, for there on the
+table lay the graphic evidence which he had just so painstakingly
+interpreted.
+
+"Who was it?" asked Carton breathlessly.
+
+Kennedy picked up another microphotograph. "That is the record I took
+of one of the calls I made--merely for the purpose of obtaining samples
+of voices to compare with this of the impersonator. The two agree in
+every essential detail and none of the others could be confounded by an
+expert who studied them. Your 'wolf' was your old friend Kahn!"
+
+"Fighting back at me by his usual underhand methods," exclaimed Carton
+in profound disgust.
+
+"Or else trying himself to get control of the Black Book," added
+Kennedy. "If you will stop to think a moment, his shafts have been
+levelled quite as much at discrediting Langhorne as yourself. He might
+hope to kill two birds with one stone--and incidentally save himself."
+
+"You mean that he wants to lay a foundation now for questioning the
+accuracy of the Black Book if it ever comes to light?"
+
+"Perhaps," assented Kennedy carefully.
+
+"Surely we should take some steps to protect ourselves from his
+impostures," hastened Carton.
+
+"I have no objections to your calling him up and telling him that we
+know what he is up to and can trace it to him--provided you don't tell
+him how we did it--yet."
+
+Carton had seized the telephone and was hastily calling every place in
+which Kahn was likely to be. He was not at either of his offices, nor
+at Farrell's, but at each place successively Carton left a message
+which told the story and which he could hardly fail to receive soon.
+
+As Carton finished, Kennedy seemed to be emerging from a brown study.
+He rose slowly and put on his hat.
+
+"Your story about Murtha's commitment interests me," he remarked,
+"particularly since you mentioned Dorgan's name in connection with it.
+I've been thinking about Murtha myself a good deal since I heard about
+his condition. I want to see him myself."
+
+Carton hesitated a minute. "I can break an engagement I had to speak
+to-night," he said. "Yes, I'll go with you. It's more important to look
+to the foundations than to the building just now."
+
+A few minutes later we were all on our way in a touring car to the
+private sanitarium up in Westchester, where it had been announced that
+Murtha had been taken.
+
+I had apprehended that we would have a great deal of difficulty either
+in getting admitted at all or in seeing Murtha himself. We arrived at
+the sanitarium, a large building enclosed by a high brick wall, and
+evidently once a fine country estate, at just about dusk. To my
+surprise, as we stopped at the entrance, we had no difficulty in being
+admitted.
+
+For a moment, as we waited in the richly furnished reception room, I
+listened to the sounds that issued from other parts of the building.
+Something was clearly afoot, for things were in a state of disorder. I
+had not an extensive acquaintance with asylums for the care and
+treatment of the insane, but the atmosphere of excitement which
+palpably pervaded the air was not what one would have expected. I began
+to think of Poe's Dr. Tarr and Professor Fether, and wonder whether
+there might not have been a revolution in the place and the patients
+have taken charge of their keepers.
+
+At last one of the attendants passed the door. No one had paid any
+attention to us since our admission and this man, too, was going to
+pass us without notice.
+
+"I beg your pardon," interrupted Kennedy, who had heard his footsteps
+approaching and had placed himself in the hallway so that the attendant
+could not pass, "but we have called to see Mr. Murtha."
+
+The attendant eyed us curiously. I expected him to say that it was
+against the rules, or to question our right to see the patient.
+
+"I'm afraid you're too late," he said briefly, instead.
+
+"Too late?" queried Kennedy sharply. "What do you mean?"
+
+The man answered promptly as if that were the quickest way to get back
+to his own errand.
+
+"Mr. Murtha escaped from his keepers this evening, just after dinner,
+and there is no trace of him."
+
+
+
+
+XX
+
+THE METRIC PHOTOGRAPH
+
+
+Murtha's escape from the sanitarium had again thrown our calculations
+into chaos. We rode back to the city in silence, and even Kennedy had
+no explanation to offer.
+
+Even at a late hour that night, although a widespread alarm had been
+sent out for him, no trace of the missing man could be found. The next
+morning's papers, of course, were full of the strange disappearance,
+but gave no hint of his discovery. In fact, all day the search was
+continued by the authorities, but without result.
+
+On the face of it, it seemed incredible that a man who was so well
+known, especially to the thousands of police and others in the official
+and political life of the city, could remain at large unrecognized.
+Still, I recalled other cases where prominent men had disappeared. The
+facts in Murtha's case spoke for themselves.
+
+Comparatively little occurred during the day, although the political
+campaign which had begun with the primaries many weeks before was now
+drawing nearer its close and the campaigners were getting ready for the
+final spurt to the finish.
+
+With Kennedy's unmasking of the unprincipled activities of Kahn, that
+worthy changed his tactics, or at least dropped out of our sight. Mrs.
+Ogleby lunched with Langhorne and I began to suspect that the shadow
+that had been placed on her could not have been engaged by Martin
+Ogleby, for he was not the kind who would take reports of the sort
+complaisantly. Someone else must be interested.
+
+As for the Black Book itself, I wondered more as time went on that no
+one made use of it. Even though we gained no hint from Langhorne after
+the peculiar robbery of his safe, it was impossible to tell whether or
+not he still retained the detectaphone record. On the other hand, if
+Dorgan had obtained it by using the services of someone in the criminal
+hierarchy that Murtha had built up, it would not have been likely that
+we would have heard anything about it. We were in the position of men
+fighting several adversaries in the dark without knowing exactly whom
+we fought.
+
+We had just finished dinner, that night, Kennedy and I, and, as had
+been the case in most of the waking hours of the previous twenty-four,
+had been speculating on the possible solution of the mysterious
+dropping out of sight of Murtha. The evening papers had contained
+nothing that the morning papers had not already published and Kennedy
+had tossed the last of an armful into the scrap basket when the buzzer
+on the door of our apartment sounded.
+
+A young man stood there as I opened the door, and handed me a note, as
+he touched his hat. "A message for Professor Kennedy from Mr. Carton,
+sir," he announced.
+
+I recognized him as Carton's valet as he stood impatiently waiting for
+Craig to read the letter.
+
+"It's all right--there's no answer--I'll see him immediately," nodded
+Kennedy, tossing the hasty scrawl over to me as the valet disappeared.
+
+"My study at home has been robbed, probably by sneak thieves," read the
+note. "Would you like to look it over? I can't find anything missing
+except a bundle of old and valueless photographs. Carton."
+
+"Looks as if someone thought Carton might have got that Black Book from
+Langhorne," I commented, following the line on which I had been
+thinking at the time.
+
+"And the taking of the photographs was merely a blind, after not
+finding it?" Kennedy queried, I cannot say much impressed by my theory.
+
+"Perhaps," I acquiesced weakly, as we went out.
+
+Instead of turning in the direction of Carton's immediately, Kennedy
+walked across the campus toward the Chemistry Building. At the
+laboratory we loaded ourselves with a large and heavy oblong case
+containing a camera and a tripod.
+
+The Cartons lived in an old section of the city which still retained
+something of its aristocratic air, having been passed by, as it were,
+like an eddy in the stream of business that swirled uptown, engulfing
+everything.
+
+It was an old four-story brownstone house which had been occupied by
+his father and grandfather before him, and now was the home of Carton,
+his mother, and his sister.
+
+"I'm glad to see you," Carton met us at the door. "This isn't quite as
+classy a robbery as Langhorne's--but it's just as mysterious. Must have
+happened while the family were at dinner. That's why I said it was a
+robbery by a sneak thief."
+
+He was leading the way to his study, which was in an extension of the
+house, in the rear.
+
+"I hope you've left things as they were," ventured Craig.
+
+"I did," assured Carton. "I know your penchant for such things and
+almost the first thought I had was that you'd prefer it that way. So I
+shut the door and sent William after you. By the way, what have you
+done with him?"
+
+"Nothing," returned Craig. "Isn't he back yet?"
+
+"No--oh, well I don't need him right away."
+
+"And nothing was taken except some old photographs?" asked Craig,
+looking intently at Carton's face.
+
+"That is all I can find missing," he returned frankly.
+
+Kennedy's examination of the looted study was minute, taking in the
+window through which the thief had apparently entered, the cabinet he
+had forced, and the situation in general. Finally he set up his camera
+with most particular care and took several flashlight pictures of the
+window, the cabinet, the doors--including the study--from every angle.
+Outside he examined the extension and back of the house carefully,
+noting possible ways of getting from the side street across the fences
+into the Carton yard.
+
+With Carton we returned to Craig's splendidly equipped photographic
+studio and while Carton and I made the best of our time by discussing
+various phases of the case, Kennedy employed the interval in developing
+his plates.
+
+He had ten or a dozen prints, all of exactly the same size, mounted on
+stiff cardboard in a space with scales and figures on all four margins.
+Carton and I puzzled over them.
+
+"Those are metric photographs, such as Bertillon of Paris used to
+take," Craig explained. "By means of the scales and tables and other
+methods that have been worked out, we can determine from those pictures
+distances and many other things almost as well as if we were on the
+spot ourselves. Bertillon cleared up many crimes with this help, such
+as the mystery of the shooting in the Hotel Quai d'Orsay and other
+cases. The metric photograph, I believe, will in time rank with other
+devices in the study of crime."
+
+He was going over the photographs carefully.
+
+"For instance," he continued, "in order to solve the riddle of a crime,
+the detective's first task is to study the scene topographically. Plans
+and elevations of a room or house are made. The position of each object
+is painstakingly noted. In addition, the all-seeing eye of the camera
+is called into requisition. The plundered room is photographed, as in
+this case. I might have done it by placing a foot rule on a table and
+taking that in the picture. But a more scientific and accurate method
+has been devised by Bertillon. His camera lens is always used at a
+fixed height from the ground and forms its image on the plate at an
+exact focus. The print made from the negative is mounted on a card in a
+space of definite size, along the edges of which a metric scale is
+printed. In the way he has worked it out, the distance between any two
+points in the picture can be determined. With a topographical plan and
+a metric photograph one can study a crime, as a general studies the map
+of a strange country. There were several peculiar things that I
+observed at your house, Carton, and I have here an indelible record of
+the scene of the crime. Preserved in this way, it cannot be questioned.
+You are sure that the only thing missing is the photographs?"
+
+Carton nodded, "I never keep anything valuable lying around."
+
+"Well," resumed Kennedy, "the photographs were in this cabinet. There
+are other cabinets, but none of them seems to have been disturbed.
+Therefore the thief must have known just what he was after. The marks
+made in breaking the lock were not those of a jimmy, but of a
+screwdriver. No amazing command of the resources of science is needed
+so far. All that is necessary is a little scientific common sense."
+
+Carton glanced at me, and I smiled, for it always did seem so easy,
+when Craig did it, and so impossible when we tried to go it alone.
+
+"Now, how did the robber get in?" he continued, thoroughly engrossed in
+his study. "All the windows were supposedly locked. I saw that a pane
+had been partly cut from this window at the side--and the pieces were
+there to show it. But consider the outside, a moment. To reach that
+window even a tall man must have stood on a ladder or something. There
+were no marks of a ladder or even of any person in the soft soil of the
+garden under the window. What is more, that window was cut from the
+inside. The marks of the diamond which cut it plainly show that.
+Scientific common sense again."
+
+"Then it must have been someone in the house or at least familiar with
+it?" I exclaimed.
+
+Kennedy shook his head affirmatively.
+
+I had been wondering who it could be. Certainly this was not the work
+of Dopey Jack, even if the far cleverer attempt on Langhorne's safe had
+been. But it might have been one of his gang. I had not got as far as
+trying to reason out the why of the crime.
+
+"Call up your house, Carton," asked Craig. "See if William, your valet,
+has returned."
+
+Carton did so, and a moment later turned to us with a look of
+perplexity on his face. "No," he reported, "he hasn't come back yet. I
+can't imagine where he is."
+
+"He won't come back," asserted Kennedy positively. "It was an inside
+job--and he did it."
+
+Carton gasped astonishment.
+
+"At any rate," pursued Kennedy, "one thing we have which the police
+greatly neglect--a record. We have made some progress in reconstructing
+the crime, as Bertillon used to call it."
+
+"Strange that he should take only photographs," I mused.
+
+"What were they?" asked Kennedy, and again I saw that he was looking
+intently at Carton's face.
+
+"Nothing much," returned Carton unhesitatingly, "just some personal
+photographs--of no real value except to me. Most of them were amateur
+photographs, too, pictures of myself in various groups at different
+times and places that I kept for the associations."
+
+"Nothing that might be used by an enemy for any purpose?" suggested
+Kennedy.
+
+Carton laughed. "More likely to be used by friends," he replied frankly.
+
+Still, I felt that there must have been some sinister purpose back of
+the robbery. In that respect it was like the scientific cracking of
+Langhorne's safe. Langhorne, too, though he had been robbed, had been
+careful to disclaim the loss of anything of value. I frankly had not
+believed Langhorne, yet Carton was not of the same type and I felt that
+his open face would surely have disclosed to us any real loss that he
+suffered or apprehension that he felt over the robbery.
+
+I was forced to give it up, and I think Kennedy, too, had decided not
+to worry over the crossing of any bridges until at least we knew that
+there were bridges to be crossed.
+
+Carton was worried more by the discovery that one he had trusted even
+as a valet had proved unfaithful. He knew, however, as well as we did
+that one of the commonest methods of the underworld when they wished to
+pull off a robbery was to corrupt one of the servants of a house.
+Still, it looked strange, for the laying of such an elaborate plan
+usually preceded only big robberies, such as jewelery or silver. For
+myself, I was forced back on my first theory that someone had concluded
+that Carton had the Black Book, had concocted this elaborate scheme to
+get what was really of more value than much jewelry, and had found out
+that Carton did not have the precious detectaphone record, after all. I
+knew that there were those who would have gone to any length to get it.
+
+A general alarm was given, through the police, for the apprehension of
+William, but we had small hope that anything would result from it, for
+at that time Carton's enemies controlled the police and I am not sure
+but that they would have been just a little more dilatory in
+apprehending one who had done Carton an injury than if it had been
+someone else. It was too soon, that night, of course, to expect to
+learn anything, anyhow.
+
+It was quite late, but it had been a confining day for Kennedy who had
+spent the hours while not working on Carton's case in some of the
+ceaseless and recondite investigations of his own to which he was
+always turning his restless mind.
+
+"Suppose we walk a little way downtown with Carton?" he suggested.
+
+I was not averse, and by the time we arrived in the white light belt of
+Broadway the theatres were letting out.
+
+Above the gaiety of the crowds one could hear the shrill cry of some
+belated newsboys, calling an "Extra Special"--the only superlative left
+to one of the more enterprising papers whose every issue was an "Extra."
+
+Kennedy bought one, with the laughing remark, "Perhaps it's about your
+robbery, Carton."
+
+It was only a second before the smile on his face changed to a look of
+extreme gravity. We crowded about him. In red ink across the head of
+the paper were the words:
+
+"BODY OF MURTHA, MISSING, FOUND IN MORGUE"
+
+Down in a lower corner, in a little box into which late news could be
+dropped, also in red ink, was the brief account:
+
+This morning the body of an unknown man was found in The Bronx near the
+Westchester Railroad tracks. He had been run over and badly mutilated.
+After lying all day in the local morgue, it was transferred, still
+unidentified, to the city Morgue downtown.
+
+Early this evening one of the night attendants recognized the
+unidentified body as that of Murtha, "the Smiling Boss," whose escape
+day before yesterday from an asylum in Westchester has remained a
+mystery until now.
+
+"Well--what do you--think of that!" ejaculated Carton.
+"Murtha--dead--and I thought the whole thing was a job they were
+putting up on me!"
+
+Kennedy crooked his finger at a cabby who was alertly violating the new
+ordinance and soliciting fares away from a public cab stand.
+
+"The Morgue--quick!" he ordered, not even noticing the flabbergasted
+look on the jehu's face, who was not accustomed to carrying people
+thither from the primrose path of Broadway quite so rapidly.
+
+
+
+
+XXI
+
+THE MORGUE
+
+
+There had come a lull in the activities which never entirely cease,
+night or day, in the dingy building at the foot of East Twenty-sixth
+Street. Across the street in the municipal lodging-house the city's
+homeless were housed for the night. Even ever wakeful Bellevue Hospital
+nearby was comparatively quiet.
+
+The last "dead boat" which carries the city's unclaimed corpses away
+for burial had long ago left, when we arrived. The anxious callers who
+pass all day through the portals of the mortuary chamber seeking lost
+friends and relatives had disappeared. Except for the night keeper and
+one or two assistants, the Morgue was empty save of the overcrowded
+dead.
+
+Years before, as a cub reporter on the Star, I had had the gruesome
+assignment once of the Morgue. It was the same old place after all
+these years and it gave me the same creepy sensations now as it did
+then. Even the taxicab driver seemed glad to set down his fares and
+speed away.
+
+It was ghoulish. I felt then and I did still that instead of
+contributing to the amelioration of conditions that could not be
+otherwise than harrowing, everything about the old Morgue lent itself
+to the increase of the horror of the surroundings.
+
+As Kennedy, Carton, and I entered, we found that the principal chamber
+in the place was circular. Its walls were lined with the ends of
+caskets, which, fitting close into drawer-like apertures were
+constantly enveloped in the refrigerated air.
+
+It seemed, even at that hour, that if these receptacles were even
+adequate to contain all of the daily tenants of the Morgue, much of the
+anguish and distress inseparable from such a place might be spared
+those who of necessity must visit the place seeking their dead. As it
+was, even for those bound by no blood ties to the unfortunates who
+found their way to the city Morgue, the room was a veritable chamber of
+horror.
+
+We stood in horrified amazement at what we saw. On the floor, which
+should be kept clear, lay the overflow of the day's intake. Bodies for
+which there was no room in the cooling boxes, others which were yet
+awaiting claimants, and still more awaiting transfer to the public
+burying ground, lay about in their rough coffins, many of them brutally
+exposed.
+
+It seemed, too, that if ever there was a time when conditions might
+have been expected to have halfway adjusted themselves to the pressure
+which by day brought out all too clearly the hopeless inadequacy of the
+facilities provided by the city to perform one of its most important
+and inevitable functions, it was at that early morning hour of our
+visit. Presumably preparation had been completed for the busy day about
+to open by setting all into some semblance of respectful order. But
+such was not the case. It was impossible.
+
+In one group, I recall, which an attendant said had been awaiting his
+removal for a couple of days, the rough board coffins, painted the
+uniform brown of the city's institutions, lay open, without so much as
+face coverings over the dead.
+
+They lay as they had been sent in from various hospitals. Most of them
+were bereft of all the decencies usual with the dead, in striking
+contrast, however, with the bodies from Bellevue, which were all
+closely swathed in bandages and shrouds.
+
+One body, that of a negro, which had been sent in to the Morgue from a
+Harlem hospital, lay just as it came, utterly bare, exposing to public
+view all the gruesome marks of the autopsy. I wondered whether anything
+like that might be found to be the fate of the once jovial and popular
+Murtha, when we found him.
+
+I almost forgot our mission in the horror of the place, for, nearby was
+an even more heartrending sight. Piled in several heaps much higher
+than a man's head and as carelessly as cordwood were the tiny coffins
+holding the babies which the authorities are called on by the poor of
+the city to bury in large numbers--far too poor to meet the cost of the
+cheapest decent burial. Atop the stack of regulation coffins were the
+nondescript receptacles made use of by the very poor--the most pathetic
+a tiny box from the corner grocery. The bodies, some dozens of them,
+lay like so much merchandise, awaiting shipment.
+
+"What a barbarity!" I heard Craig mutter, for even he, though now and
+then forced to visit the place when one of his cases took him there,
+especially when it was concerned with an autopsy, had never become
+hardened to it.
+
+Often I had heard him denounce the primitive appointments, especially
+in the autopsy rooms. The archaic attempts to utilize the Morgue for
+scientific investigation were the occasion for practices that shocked
+even the initiated. For the lack of suitable depositories for the
+products of autopsies, these objects were plainly visible in rude
+profusion when a door was opened to draw out a body for inspection.
+About and around the slabs whereon the human bodies lay, in bottles and
+in plates, this material which had no place except in the cabinets of a
+laboratory was inhumanly displayed in profusion, close to corpses for
+which a morgue is expected to provide some degree of reverential care.
+
+"You see," apologized the keeper, not averse to throwing the blame on
+someone else, for it indeed was not his but the city's fault, "one
+reason why so many bodies have to remain uncared for is that I could
+show you cooling box after cooling box with some subject which figured
+during the past few months in the police records. Why victims of
+murders committed long ago should be held indefinitely, and their
+growing numbers make it impossible to give proper places to each day's
+temporary bodies, I can't say. Sometimes," he added with a sly dig at
+Carton, "the only explanation seems to be that the District Attorney's
+office has requested the preservation of the grisly relics."
+
+I could see that Carton was making a mental note that the practice
+would be ended as far as his office was concerned.
+
+"So--you saw the story in the newspapers about Mr. Murtha," repeated
+the keeper, not displeased to see us and at the publicity it gave him.
+"It was I that discovered him--and yet many's the times some of the
+boys that must have handled the body since it was picked up beside the
+tracks must have seen him. It was too late to get anyone to take the
+body away to-night, but the arrangements have all been made, and it
+will be done early in the morning before anyone else sees Pat Murtha
+here, as he shouldn't be. We've done what we could for him
+ourselves--he was a fine gentleman and many's the boy that owes a boost
+up in life to him."
+
+Reverentially even the hardened keeper drew out one of the best of the
+drawer-like boxes. On the slab before us lay the body. Carton drew
+back, excitedly, shocked.
+
+"It IS Murtha!" he exclaimed.
+
+I, too, looked at it quickly. The name as Carton pronounced it, in such
+a place, had, to me at least, an unpleasant likeness to "murder."
+
+Kennedy had bent down and was examining the mutilated body minutely.
+
+"How do you suppose such a thing is possible--that he could lie about
+the city, even here until the night keeper came on,--unknown?" asked
+Carton, aghast.
+
+"I don't know," I said, "but I imagine that in connection with the
+actual inadequacy of the equipment one would find reflected the same
+makeshift character in the attitude and actions of those who handle the
+city's dead. It used to be the case, at least, that the facilities for
+keeping records were often almost totally neglected, and not through
+the fault of the Morgue keepers, entirely. But, I understand it is
+better now."
+
+"This is terrible," repeated Carton, averting his face. "Really,
+Jameson, it makes me feel like a hound, for ever thinking that Murtha
+might have been putting up a game on me. Poor old Murtha--I should have
+preferred to remember him as the 'Smiling Boss' as everyone always
+called him!"
+
+I called to mind the last time we had seen Murtha, in Carton's office
+as the bearer of an offer which had made Carton almost beside himself
+with anger at the thought of the insult that he would compromise with
+the organization. What a contrast, this, with the Murtha who, in turn,
+had been trembling with passion at Carton's refusal!
+
+And yet I could not but reflect on the strangeness of it all--the fact
+that the organization, of which Murtha was a part, had by its neglect
+and failure to care for the human side of government when there was
+graft to be collected, brought about the very conditions which had made
+possible such neglect of the district leader's body, as it had been
+bandied back and forth, unwittingly by many who owed their very
+positions to the organization.
+
+I could not help but think that if he had served humanity with one-half
+the zeal which he had served graft, this could not have happened.
+
+The more I contemplated the case, the more tragic did it seem to me. I
+longed for the assignment of writing the story for the Star--the chance
+I would have had in the old days to bring in a story that would have
+got me a nod of approval from my superior. I determined, as soon as
+possible, to get the Star on the wire and try to express some of the
+thoughts that were surging through my brain in the face of this awful
+and unexpected occurrence.
+
+There he lay, alone, uncared for except by such rude hands as those of
+the Morgue attendants. I could not help reflecting on the strange
+vicissitudes of human life, and death, which levelled all distinctions
+between men of high and low degree. Murtha had almost literally sprung
+from the streets. His career had been one possible only in the social
+and political conditions of his times. And now he had only by the
+narrowest chance escaped a burial in a pauper's grave at the hands of
+the city which he had helped Dorgan to debauch.
+
+Carton, too, I could see was overwhelmed. For the moment he did not
+even think of how this blow to the System might affect his own chances.
+It was only the pitiful wreck of a human being before us that he saw.
+
+I was not an expert on study of wounds, such as was Kennedy, who was
+examining Murtha's body with minute care, now and then muttering under
+his breath at the rough and careless handling it had received in its
+various transfers about the city. But there were some terrible wounds
+and disfigurements on the body, which added even more to the horror of
+the case.
+
+One thing, I felt, was fortunate. Murtha had had no family. There had
+been plenty of scandal about him, but as far as I knew there was no one
+except his old cronies in the organization to be shocked by his loss,
+no living tragedy left in the wake of this.
+
+"How do you suppose it happened?" I asked the night keeper.
+
+He shook his head doubtfully. "No one knows, of course," he replied
+slowly. "But I think the big fellow got worse up there in that asylum.
+He wasn't used to anything but having his own way, you know. They say
+he must have waited his chance, after the dinner hour, when things were
+quiet, and then slipped out while no one was looking. He may have been
+crazy, but you can bet your life Pat Murtha was the smartest crazy man
+they ever had up there. THEY couldn't hold him."
+
+"I see," I said, struck by the faith which the man had inspired even in
+those who held the lowest of city positions. "But I meant how do you
+suppose he was killed?"
+
+The attendant looked at me thoughtfully a while. "Young man," he
+answered, "I ain't saying nothing and it may have been an accident
+after all. Have you ever been up in that part of town?"
+
+I had not and said so.
+
+"Well," he continued, "those electric trains do sneak up on a fellow
+fast. It may have been an accident, all right. The coroner up there
+said so, and I guess he ought to know. It must have been late at
+night--perhaps he was wandering away from the ordinary roads for fear
+of being recaptured. No one knows--I guess no one will know, ever. But
+it's a sad day for many of the boys. He helped a lot of 'em. And Mr.
+Dorgan--he knows what a loss it is, too. I hear that it's hit the Chief
+hard."
+
+The attendant, rough though he was and hardened by the daily succession
+of tragedies, could not restrain an honest catch in his voice over the
+passing of the "big fellow," as some of them called the "Smiling Boss."
+It was a pretty good object lesson on the power of the system which the
+organization had built up, how Murtha, and even the more distant Dorgan
+himself, had endeared himself to his followers and henchmen. Perhaps it
+was corrupt, but it was at least human, and that was a great deal in a
+world full of inhumanities. In the face of what had happened, one felt
+that much might be forgiven Murtha for his shortcomings, especially as
+the era of the Murthas and Dorgans was plainly passing.
+
+"Here at least," whispered Carton, as we withdrew to a corner to escape
+the palling atmosphere, "is one who won't worry about what happens to
+that Black Book any more. I wonder what he really knew about it--what
+secrets he carried away with him?"
+
+"I can't say," I returned. "But, one thing it does. It must relieve
+Mrs. Ogleby's fears a bit. With Murtha out of the way there is one less
+to gossip about what went on at Gastron's that night of the dinner."
+
+He said nothing and just then Kennedy straightened up, as though he had
+finished his examination. We hurried over to him. I thought the look on
+Craig's face was peculiar.
+
+"What is it--what did you find?" both Carton and I asked.
+
+Kennedy did not answer immediately.
+
+"I--I can't say," he answered slowly at length, as we thanked the
+Morgue keeper for his courtesy and left the place. "In fact I'd rather
+not say--until I know."
+
+I knew from previous experiences that it was of no use to try to quiz
+Kennedy. He was a veritable Gradgrind for facts, facts, facts. As for
+myself, I could not help wondering whether, after all, Murtha might not
+have been the victim of foul play--and, if so, by whom?
+
+
+
+
+XXII
+
+THE CANARD
+
+
+We did not have to wait long for the secret of the robbery of Carton to
+come out. It was not in any "extras," or in the morning papers the next
+day, but it came through a secret source of information to the Reform
+League.
+
+"A clerk in the employ of the organization who is really a detective
+employed by the Reform League," groaned Carton, as he told us the story
+himself the next morning at his office, "has just given us the
+information that they have prepared a long and circumstantial story
+about me--about my intimacy with Mrs. Ogleby and Murtha and some
+others. The story of the robbery of my study is in the papers this
+morning. To-morrow they plan to publish some photographs--alleged to
+have been stolen."
+
+"Photographs--Mrs. Ogleby," repeated Kennedy. "Real ones?"
+
+"No," exclaimed Carton quickly, "of course not--fakes. Don't you see
+the scheme? First they lay a foundation in the robbery, knowing that
+the public is satisfied with sensations, and that they will be sure to
+believe that the robbery was put up by some muckrakers to obtain
+material for an expose. I wasn't worried last night. I knew I had
+nothing to conceal."
+
+"Then what of it?" I asked naively.
+
+"A good deal of it," returned Carton excitedly, "The story is to be, as
+I understand it, that the fake pictures were among those stolen from me
+and that in a roundabout way they came into the possession of someone
+in the organization, without their knowing who the thief was. Of course
+they don't know who took them and the original plates or films are
+destroyed, but they've concocted some means of putting a date on them
+early in the spring."
+
+"What are they that they should take such pains with them?" persisted
+Kennedy, looking fixedly at Carton.
+
+Carton met his look without flinching. "They are supposed to be
+photographs of myself," he repeated. "One purports to represent me in a
+group composed of Mrs. Ogleby, Murtha, another woman whom I do not even
+know, and myself. I am standing between Murtha and Mrs. Ogleby and we
+look very familiar. Another is a picture of the same four riding in a
+car, owned by Murtha. Oh, there are several of them, of that sort."
+
+He paused as a dozen unspoken questions framed themselves in my mind.
+"I don't hesitate to admit," he added, "that a few months ago I knew
+Mrs. Ogleby--socially. But there was nothing to it. I never knew Murtha
+well, and the other woman I never saw. At various times I have been
+present at affairs where she was, but I know that no pictures were ever
+taken, and even if there had been, I would not care, provided they told
+the truth about them. What I do care about is the sworn allegation
+that, I understand, is to accompany these--these fakes."
+
+His voice broke. "It's a lie from start to finish, but just think of
+it, Kennedy," he went on. "Here is the story, and here, too, are the
+pictures--at least they will be, in print, to-morrow. Now, you know
+nothing could hurt the reform ticket worse than to have a scandal like
+this raised at this time. There may be just enough people to believe
+that there is some basis for the suspicion to turn the tide against me.
+If it were earlier in the campaign, I might accept the issue, fight it
+out to a finish, and in the turn of events I should have really the
+best sort of campaign material. But it is too late now to expose such a
+knavish trick on the Saturday before election."
+
+"Can't we buy them off?" I ventured, perplexed beyond measure at this
+new and unexpected turn of events.
+
+"No, I won't," persisted Carton, shutting his square jaw doggedly. "I
+won't be held up--even if that is possible."
+
+"Miss Ashton on the wire," announced a boy from the outer office.
+
+The look on Carton's face was a study. I saw directly what was the
+trouble--far more important to him than a mere election.
+
+"Tell her--I'm out--will be back soon," he muttered, for the first time
+hesitating to speak to her.
+
+"You see," he continued blackly, "I'll fight if it takes my last
+dollar, but I won't allow myself to be blackmailed out of a cent--no,
+not a cent," he thundered, a heightened look of determination fixing
+the lines on his face as he brought his fist down with a rattling bang
+on the desk.
+
+Kennedy was saying nothing. He was letting Carton ease his mind of the
+load which had been suddenly thrust upon it. Carton was now excitedly
+pacing the floor.
+
+"They believe plainly," he continued, growing more excited as he paced
+up and down, "that the pictures will of course be accepted by the
+public as among those stolen from me, and in that, I suppose, they are
+right. The public will swallow it. If I say I'll prosecute, they'll
+laugh and tell me to go ahead, that they didn't steal the pictures. Our
+informant tells us that a hundred copies have been made of each and
+that they have them ready to drop into the mail to the leading hundred
+papers, not only of this city but of the state, in time for them to
+appear Sunday. They think that no amount of denying on our part can
+destroy the effect."
+
+"That's it," I persisted. "The only way is to buy them off."
+
+"But, Jameson," argued Carton, "I repeat--they are false. It is a plot
+of Dorgan's, the last fight of a boss, driven into a corner, for his
+life. And it is meaner than if he had attempted to forge a letter.
+Pictures appeal to the eye much more than letters. That's what makes
+the thing so dangerous. Dorgan knows how to make the best use of such a
+roorback on the eve of an election and even if I not only deny but
+prove that they are a fake, I'm afraid the harm will be done. I can't
+reach all the voters in time. Ten see such a charge to one who sees the
+denial."
+
+He looked from one to the other of us helplessly. "If we had a week or
+two, it might be all right. But I can't make any move to-day without
+making a fool of myself, nothing until they are published, as the last
+big thing of the campaign. Monday and Tuesday morning do not give me
+time to reply in the papers and hammer it in. Even if they were out
+now, it would not give me time to make of it an asset instead of a
+liability. And then, too, it means that I am diverted by this thing,
+that I let up in the final efforts that we have so carefully planned to
+cap the campaign. That in itself is as much as Dorgan wants, anyway."
+
+Kennedy had been, so far, little more than an interested listener, but
+now he asked pointedly, "You have copies of the pictures?"
+
+"No--but I've been promised them this morning."
+
+"H'm," mused Craig, turning the crisis over in his mind. "We've had
+alleged stolen and forged letters before, but alleged stolen and forged
+photographs are new. I'm not surprised that you are alarmed,
+Carton,--nor that Walter suggests buying them off. But I agree with
+you, Carton--it's best to fight, to admit nothing, as you would imply
+by any other method."
+
+"Then you think you can trace down the forger of those pictures before
+it is too late?" urged Carton, leaning forward almost like a prisoner
+in the dock to catch the words of the foreman of the jury.
+
+"I haven't said I can do that--yet," measured Craig with provoking
+slowness.
+
+"Say, Kennedy, you're not going to desert me?" reproached Carton.
+
+Kennedy laughed as he put his hand on Carton's shoulder.
+
+"I've been afraid of something like this," he said, "ever since I began
+to realize that you had once been--er--foolish enough to become even
+slightly acquainted with that adventuress, Mrs. Ogleby. My advice is to
+fight, not to get in wrong by trying to dicker, for that might amount
+to confession, and suit Dorgan's purpose just as well. Photographs," he
+added sententiously, "are like statistics. They don't lie unless the
+people who make them do. But it's hard to tell what a liar can
+accomplish with either, in an election. I--I don't know that I'd desert
+you--if the pictures were true. I'd be sure there was some other
+explanation."
+
+"I knew it," responded Carton heartily. "Your hand on that, Kennedy.
+Say, I think I've shaken hands with half the male population of this
+city since I was nominated, but this means more than any of them. Spare
+no reasonable expense and--get the goods, no matter whom it hits higher
+up--Langhorne--anybody. And, for God's sake get it in time--there's
+more than an election that hangs on it!"
+
+Carton looked Kennedy squarely in the eye again, and we all understood
+what it was he meant that was at stake. It might be possible after all
+to gloss over almost anything and win the election, but none of us
+dared to think what it might mean if Miss Ashton not only suspected
+that Carton had been fraternizing with the bosses but also that there
+had been or by some possibility could be anything really in common
+between him and Mrs. Ogleby.
+
+That, after all, I saw was the real question. How would Miss Ashton
+take it? Could she ever forgive him if it were possible for Langhorne
+to turn the tables and point with scorn at the man who had once been
+his rival for her hand? What might be the effect on her of any
+disillusionment, of any ridicule that Langhorne might artfully heap up?
+As we left Carton, I shared with Kennedy his eagerness to get at the
+truth, now, and win the fight--the two fights.
+
+"I want to see Miss Ashton, first," remarked Kennedy when we were
+outside.
+
+Personally I thought that it was a risky business, but felt that
+Kennedy must know best.
+
+When we arrived at the Reform League headquarters, the clerks and girls
+had already set to work, and the office was a hive of industry in the
+rush of winding up the campaign. Typewriters were clicking, clippings
+were being snipped out of a huge stack of newspapers and pasted into
+large scrapbooks, circulars were being folded and made ready to mail
+for the final appeal.
+
+Carton's office there had been in the centre of the suite. On one side
+were the cashier and bookkeeper, the clerical force and the speakers'
+bureau, where spellbinders of all degrees were getting instructions,
+final tours were being laid out, and reports received of meetings
+already held.
+
+On the other side was the press bureau, with its large and active
+force, in charge of Miss Ashton.
+
+As we entered we saw Miss Ashton very busy over something. Her back was
+toward us, but the moment she turned at hearing us we could see that
+something was the matter.
+
+Kennedy wasted no time in coming to the point of his visit. We had
+scarcely seated ourselves beside her desk when he leaned over and said
+in a low voice, "Miss Ashton, I think I can trust you. I have called to
+see you about a matter of vital importance to Mr. Carton."
+
+She did not betray even by a fleeting look on her proud face what the
+true state of her feelings was.
+
+"I don't know whether you know, but an attempt is being made to slander
+Mr. Carton," went on Kennedy.
+
+Still she said nothing, though it was evident that she was thinking
+much.
+
+"I suppose in a large force like this that it is not impossible that
+your political enemies may have a spy or two," observed Kennedy,
+glancing about at the score or more clerks busily engaged in getting
+out the "literature."
+
+"I have sometimes thought that myself," she murmured, "but of course I
+don't know. There isn't anything for them to discover in THIS office,
+though."
+
+Kennedy looked up quickly at the significant stress on the word "this."
+She saw that Kennedy was watching. Margaret Ashton might have made a
+good actress, that is, in something in which her personal feelings were
+not involved, as they were in this case. She was now pale and agitated.
+
+"I--I can't believe it," she managed to say. "Oh, Mr. Kennedy--I would
+almost rather not have known it at all,--only I suppose I must have
+known it sooner or later."
+
+"Believe me, Miss Ashton," soothed Kennedy, "you ought to know. It is
+on you that I depend for many things. But, tell me, how do you know
+already? I didn't think--it was known."
+
+She was still pale, and replied nervously, "Our detective in the
+organization brought the pictures up here--one of the girls opened them
+by mistake--it got about the office--I couldn't help but know."
+
+"Miss Ashton," remonstrated Kennedy soothingly, "I beg you to be calm.
+I had no idea you would take it like this, no idea. Please, please.
+Remember pictures can lie--just like words."
+
+"I--I hope you're right," she managed to reply slowly. "I'm all broken
+up by it. I'm ready to resign. My faith in human nature is shaken. No,
+I won't say anything about Mr. Carton to anyone. But it cuts me to have
+to think that Hartley Langhorne may have been right. He always used to
+say that every man had his price. I am afraid this will do great harm
+to the cause of reform and through it to the woman suffrage cause which
+made me cast myself in with the League. I--I can hardly believe--"
+
+Kennedy was still looking earnestly at her. "Miss Ashton," he implored,
+"believe nothing. Remember one of the first rules of politics in the
+organization you are fighting is loyalty. Wait until--"
+
+"Wait?" she echoed. "How can I? I hate Mr. Carton for--for even
+knowing--" she paused just in time to substitute Mr. Murtha for Mrs.
+Ogleby--"such men as Mr. Murtha--secretly."
+
+She bit her lip at thus betraying her feelings, but what she had seen
+had evidently affected her deeply. It was as though the feet of her
+idol had turned to clay.
+
+"Just think it over," urged Kennedy. "Don't be too harsh. Don't do
+anything rash. Suspend judgment. You won't regret it."
+
+Kennedy was apparently doing some rapid thinking. "Let me have the
+photographs," he asked at length.
+
+"They are in Mr. Carton's office," she answered, as if she would not
+soil her hands by touching the filthy things.
+
+We excused ourselves and went into Carton's office.
+
+There they were wrapped up, and across the package was written by one
+of the clerks, "Opened by mistake."
+
+Kennedy opened the package again. Sure enough, there were the
+photographs--as plain as they could be, the group including Carton,
+Mrs. Ogleby, Murtha, and another woman, standing on the porch of a
+gabled building in the sunshine, again the four speeding in a touring
+car, of which the number could be read faintly, and other less
+interesting snapshots.
+
+As I looked at them I said nothing, but I must admit that the whole
+thing began to assume a suspicious look in my mind in connection with
+various hints I had heard dropped by organization men about probing
+into the past, and other insinuations. I felt that far from aiding
+Carton, things were now getting darker. There was nothing but his
+unsupported word that he had not been in such groups to counterbalance
+the existence of the actual pictures themselves, on the surface a
+graphic clincher to Dorgan's story. Kennedy, however, after an
+examination of the photographs clung no less tenaciously to a purpose
+he already had in mind, and instead of leaving them for Carton, took
+them himself, leaving a note instead.
+
+He stopped again to speak to Margaret Ashton. I did not hear all of the
+conversation, but one phrase struck me, "And the worst of it is that he
+called me up a little while ago and tried to act toward me in the same
+old way--and that after I know what I know. I--I could detect it in his
+voice. He knew he was concealing something from me."
+
+What Kennedy said to her, I do not know, but I don't think it had much
+effect.
+
+"That's the most difficult and unfortunate part of the whole affair,"
+he sighed as we left. "She believes it."
+
+I had no comment that was worth while. What was to be done? If people
+believed it generally, Carton was ruined.
+
+
+
+
+XXIII
+
+THE CONFESSION
+
+
+Dorgan was putting up a bold fight, at any rate. Everyone, and most of
+all his opponents who had once thought they had him on the run, was
+forced to admit that. Moreover, one could not help wondering at his
+audacity, whatever might be the opinion of his dishonesty.
+
+But I was quite as much struck by the nerve of Carton. In the face of
+gathering misfortunes many a man of less stern mettle might have gone
+to pieces. Not so with the fighting District Attorney. It seemed to
+spur him on to greater efforts.
+
+It was a titanic struggle, this between Carton and Dorgan, and had
+reached the point where quarter was given or asked by neither.
+
+Kennedy had retired to his laboratory with the photographs and was
+studying them with an increasing interest.
+
+It was toward the close of the afternoon when the telephone rang and
+Kennedy motioned to me to answer it.
+
+"If it's Carton," he said quickly, "tell him I'm not here. I'm not
+ready for him yet and I can't be interrupted."
+
+I took down the receiver, prepared to perjure my immortal soul. It was
+indeed Carton, bursting with news and demanding to see Kennedy
+immediately.
+
+Almost before I had finished with the carefully framed, glib excuse
+that I was to make, he shouted to me over the wire, "What do you think,
+Jameson? Tell him to come down right away. The impossible has happened.
+I have got under Dopey Jack's guard--he has confessed. It's big. Tell
+Kennedy I'll wait here at my office until he comes."
+
+He had hung up the receiver before I could question him further. I
+think it cured Kennedy, temporarily of asking me to fib for him over
+the telephone. He was as anxious as I to see Carton, now, and plunged
+into the remaining work on the photographs eagerly.
+
+He finished much sooner than he would, otherwise, and only to preserve
+the decency of the excuse that I had made did not hasten down to the
+Criminal Courts Building before a reasonable time had elapsed. As we
+entered Carton's office we could tell from the very atmosphere of the
+halls that something was happening. The reporters in their little room
+outside were on the qui vive and I heard a whisper and a busy
+scratching of pencils as we passed in and the presence of someone else
+in the District Attorney's office was noted.
+
+Carton met us in a little ante-room. He was all excitement himself, but
+I could see that it was a clouded triumph. His mind was really
+elsewhere than on the confession that he was getting. Although he did
+not ask us, I knew that he was thinking only of Margaret Ashton and how
+to regain the ground that he had apparently lost with her. Still, he
+said nothing about the photographs. I wondered whether it was because
+of his confidence that Kennedy would pull him through.
+
+"You know," he whispered, "I have been working with my assistants on
+Dopey Jack ever since the conviction, hoping to get a confession from
+him, holding out all sorts of promises if he would turn state's
+evidence and threats if he didn't. It all had no effect. But Murtha's
+death seems to have changed all that. I don't know why--whether he
+thinks it was due to foul play or not, for he won't say anything about
+that and evidently doesn't know--but it seems to have changed him."
+
+Carton said it as though at last a ray of light had struck in on an
+otherwise black situation, and that was indeed the case.
+
+"I suppose," suggested Craig, "that as long as Murtha was alive he
+would rather have died than say anything that would incriminate him.
+That's the law of the gang world. But with Murtha no longer to be
+shielded, perhaps he feels released. Besides, it must begin to look to
+him as though the organization had abandoned him and was letting him
+shift pretty much for himself."
+
+"That's it," agreed Carton. "He has never got it out of his head that
+Kahn swung the case against him and I've been careful not to dwell on
+the truth of that Kahn episode."
+
+Carton led us into his main office, where Rubano was seated with two of
+Carton's assistants who were quizzing him industriously and obtaining
+an amazing amount of information about gang life and political
+corruption. In fact, like most criminals when they do confess, Dopey
+Jack was in danger of confessing too much, in sheer pride at his own
+prowess as a bad man.
+
+Outside, I knew that it was being well noised abroad, in fact I had
+nodded to an old friend on the Star who had whispered to me that the
+editor had already called him up and offered to give Rubano any sum for
+a series of articles for the Sunday supplement on life in the
+underworld. I knew, then, that the organization had heard of it, by
+this time--too late.
+
+Most of the confession was completed by the time we arrived, but as it
+had all been carefully taken down we knew we had missed nothing.
+
+"You see, Mr. Carton," Rubano was saying as we three entered and he
+turned from the assistant who was quizzing him, "it's like this. I
+can't tell you all about the System. No one can. You understand that.
+All any of us know is the men next to us--above and below. We may have
+opinions, hear gossip, but that's no good as evidence."
+
+"I understand," reassured Carton. "I don't expect that. You must tell
+me the gossip and rumours, but all I am bartering a pardon for is what
+you really know, and you've got to make good, or the deal is off, see?"
+
+He said it in a tone that Dopey Jack could understand and the gangster
+protested. "Well, Mr. Carton, haven't I made good?"
+
+"You have so far," grudgingly admitted Carton who was greedy for
+everything down to the uttermost scrap that might lead to other things.
+"Now, who was the man above you, to whom you reported?"
+
+"Mr. Murtha, of course," replied Jack, surprised that anyone should ask
+so simple a question.
+
+"That's all right," explained Carton. "I knew it, but I wanted you on
+record as saying it. And above Murtha?"
+
+"Why, you know it is Dorgan," replied Dopey, "only, as I say, I can't
+prove that for you any better than you can."
+
+"He has already told about his associates and those he had working
+under him," explained Carton, turning to us. "Now Langhorne--what do
+you know about him?"
+
+"Know about Langhorne--the fellow that was--that I robbed?" repeated
+Jack.
+
+"You robbed?" cut in Kennedy. "So you knew about thermit, then?"
+
+Dopey smiled with a sort of pride in his work, much as if he had
+received a splendid recommendation.
+
+"Yes," he replied. "I knew about it--got it from a peterman who has
+studied safes and all that sort of thing. I heard he had some secret,
+so one night I takes him up to Farrell's and gets him stewed and he
+tells me. Then when I wants to use it, bingo! there I am with the
+goods."
+
+"And the girl--Betty Blackwell--what did she have to do with it?"
+pursued Craig. "Did you get into the office, learn Langhorne's habits,
+and so on, from her?"
+
+Dopey Jack looked at us in disgust. "Say," he replied, "if I wanted a
+skirt to help me in such a job, believe me I know plenty that could put
+it all over that girl. Naw, I did it all myself. I picked the lock,
+burnt the safe with that powder the guy give me, and took out something
+in soft leather, a lot of typewriting."
+
+We were all on our feet in unrestrained excitement. It was the Black
+Book at last!
+
+"Yes," prompted Carton, "and what then--what did you do with it?"
+
+"Gave it to Mr. Murtha, of course," came back the matter-of-fact answer
+of the young tough.
+
+"What did he do with it?" demanded Carton.
+
+Dopey Jack shook his head dubiously. "It ain't no use trying to kid
+you, Mr. Carton. If I told you a fake you'd find it out. I'd tell you
+what he did, if I knew, but I don't--on the level. He just took it.
+Maybe he burnt it--I don't know. I did my work."
+
+Unprincipled as the young man was, I could not help the feeling that in
+this case he was telling only the truth as he knew it.
+
+We looked at each other aghast. What if Murtha had got it and had
+destroyed it before his death? That was an end of the dreams we had
+built on its capture. On the other hand, if he had hidden it there was
+small likelihood now of finding it. The only chance, as far as I could
+see, was that he had passed it along to someone else. And of that Dopey
+Jack obviously knew nothing.
+
+Still, his information was quite valuable enough. He had given us the
+first definite information we had received of it.
+
+Carton, his assistants, and Kennedy now vigorously proceeded in a sort
+of kid glove third degree, without getting any further than convincing
+themselves that Rubano genuinely did not know.
+
+"But the stenographer," reiterated Carton, returning to the line of
+attack which he had temporarily abandoned. "Something became of her.
+She disappeared and even her family haven't a trace of her, nor any
+other institutions in the city. We've got something on you, there,
+Rubano."
+
+Jack laughed. "Mr. Carton," he answered easily, "the police put me
+through the mill on that without finding anything, and I don't believe
+you have anything. But just to show you that I'm on the square with
+you, I don't mind telling you that I got her away."
+
+It was dramatic, the off-hand way in which the gangster told of this
+mystery that had perplexed us.
+
+"Got her away--how--where?" demanded Carton fiercely.
+
+"Mr Murtha gave me some money--a wad. I don't know who gave it to him,
+but it wasn't his money. It was to pay her to stay away till this all
+blew over. Oh, they made it worth her while. So I dolled up and saw
+her--and she fell for it--a pretty good sized wad," he repeated, as
+though he wished some of it had stuck to his own hands.
+
+We fairly gasped at the ease and simplicity with which the fellow
+bandied facts that had been beyond our discovery for days. Here was
+another link in our chain. We could not prove it, but in all
+probability it was Dorgan who furnished the money. Even if the Black
+Book were lost, it was possible that in the retentive memory of this
+girl there might be much that would take its place. She had seen a
+chance for providing for the future of herself and her family. All she
+had to do was to take it and keep quiet.
+
+"You know where she is, then?" shot out Kennedy suddenly.
+
+"No--not now," returned Dopey. "She was told to meet me at the Little
+Montmartre. She did. I don't think she knew what kind of place it was,
+or she wouldn't have come."
+
+He paused, as though he had something on his mind.
+
+"Go on," urged Kennedy. "Tell all. You must tell all."
+
+"I was just thinking," he hesitated. "I remember I saw Ike the Dropper
+and Marie Margot there that day, too, with Martin Ogleby--"
+
+"Martin Ogleby!" interrupted Carton in surprise.
+
+"Yes, Martin Ogleby. He hangs about the Montmartre and the Futurist,
+all those joints. Say--I've been thinking a heap since this case of
+mine came up. I wonder whether it was all on the level--with me. I gave
+the money. But was that a stall? Perhaps they tried to get back.
+Perhaps she played into their hands--I saw her watching the sports,
+there, and believe me, there are some swell lookers. Oh well, _I_ don't
+know. All I know is my part. I don't know anything that happened after
+that. I can't tell what I don't know, can I, Mr. Carton?"
+
+"Not very well," smiled the prosecutor. "But you can tell us anything
+you suspect."
+
+"I don't know what I suspect. I was only a part of the machine. Only
+after I read that she disappeared, I began to think there might have
+been some funny business--I don't know."
+
+Eager as we were, we could only accept this unsatisfactory explanation
+of the whereabouts of Betty.
+
+"After all, I was only a part," reiterated Jack. "You better ask
+Ike--that's all."
+
+Just then the telephone buzzed. Carton was busy and Kennedy, who
+happened to be nearest, answered it. I fancied that there was a puzzled
+expression on his face, as he placed his hand over the transmitter and
+said to Carton, "Here--it's for you. Take it. By the way, where's that
+thing I left down here for recording voices?"
+
+"Here in my desk. But you took the cylinder with you."
+
+"Haven't you got another? Don't you ever use them for dictating
+letters?"
+
+Carton nodded and sent his stenographer to get a new one.
+
+"Just a minute, please," cut in Kennedy. "Mr. Carton will be here in a
+few moments, now."
+
+Carton took the telephone and placed his hand over it, until, with a
+nod from Kennedy as he affixed the machine, he answered.
+
+"Yes--this is the District Attorney," we heard him answer. "What?
+Rubano? Why you can't talk to him. He's a convicted man. Here? How do
+you know he's here? No--I wouldn't let you talk to him if he was. Who
+are you, anyway? What's that--you threaten him--you threaten me? You'll
+get us both, will you? Well, I want to tell you, you can go plumb--the
+deuce! The fellow's cut himself off!"
+
+As Carton finished, a peculiar smile played about Rubano's features. "I
+expected that, but not so soon," he said quietly. "New York'll be no
+place for me, Mr. Carton, after this. You've got to keep your word and
+smuggle me out. South Africa, you know--you promised."
+
+"I'll keep my word, Rubano, too," assured Carton. "The nerve of that
+fellow. Where's Kennedy?"
+
+We looked about. Craig had slipped out quietly during the telephone
+conversation. Before we could start a search for him, he returned.
+
+"I thought there was something peculiar about the voice," he explained.
+"That was why I wanted a record of it. While you were talking I got
+your switchboard operator to connect me with central on another wire.
+The call was from a pay station on the west side. There wasn't a chance
+to get the fellow, of course--but I have the voice record, anyhow."
+
+Dopey Jack's confession occupied most of the evening and it was late
+when we got away. Carton was overjoyed at the result of his pressure,
+and eager to know, on the other hand, whether Kennedy had made any
+progress yet with his study of the photographs.
+
+I could have told him beforehand, however, that Craig would say nothing
+and he did not. Besides, he had the added mystery of the new phonograph
+cylinder to engross him, with the result that we parted from Carton, a
+little piqued at being left out of Craig's confidence, but helpless.
+
+As for me, I knew it was useless to trail after Kennedy and when he
+announced that he was going back to the laboratory, I balked and, in
+spite of my interest in the case, went home to our apartment to bed,
+while Kennedy made a night of it.
+
+What he discovered I knew no better in the morning than when I left
+him, except that he seemed highly elated.
+
+Leisurely he dressed, none the worse for his late work and after
+devouring the papers as if there were nothing else in the world so
+important, he waited until the middle of the morning before doing
+anything further.
+
+"I merely wanted to give Dorgan a chance to get to his office," he
+surprised me with, finally. "Come, Walter, I think he must be there
+now."
+
+Amazed at his temerity in bearding Dorgan in his very den, I could do
+nothing but accompany him, though I much feared it was almost like
+inviting homicide.
+
+The Boss's office was full of politicians, for it was now approaching
+"dough day," when the purse strings of the organization were loosed and
+a flood of potent argument poured forth to turn the tide of election by
+the force of the only thing that talks loud enough for some men to
+hear. Somehow, Kennedy managed to see the Boss.
+
+"Mr. Dorgan," began Kennedy quietly, when we were seated alone in the
+little Sanctum of the Boss, "you will pardon me if I seem to be a
+little slow in coming to the business that has brought me here this
+morning. First of all I may say that you probably share the idea that
+ever since the days of Daguerre photography has been regarded as the
+one infallible means of portraying faithfully any object, scene, or
+action. Indeed, a photograph is admitted in court as irrefutable
+evidence. For, when everything else fails, a picture made through the
+photographic lens almost invariably turns the tide. However, such a
+picture upon which the fate of an important case may rest should be
+subjected to critical examination, for it is an established fact that a
+photograph may be made as untruthful as it may be reliable."
+
+He paused. Dorgan was regarding him keenly, but saying nothing. Kennedy
+did not mind, as he resumed.
+
+"Combination photographs change entirely the character of the initial
+negative and have been made for the past fifty years. The earliest,
+simplest, and most harmless photographic deception is the printing of
+clouds in a bare sky. But the retoucher with his pencil and etching
+tool to-day is very skilful. A workman of ordinary ability can
+introduce a person taken in a studio into an open-air scene well
+blended and in complete harmony without a visible trace of falsity."
+
+Dorgan was growing interested.
+
+"I need say nothing of how one head can be put on another body in a
+picture," pursued Craig, "nor need I say what a double exposure will
+do. There is almost no limit to the changes that may be wrought in form
+and feature. It is possible to represent a person crossing Broadway or
+walking on Riverside Drive, places he may never have visited. Thus a
+person charged with an offence may be able to prove an alibi by the aid
+of a skilfully prepared combination photograph.
+
+"Where, then," asked Kennedy, "can photography be considered as
+irrefutable evidence? The realism may convince all, except the expert
+and the initiated after careful study. A shrewd judge will be careful
+to insist that in every case the negative be submitted and examined for
+possible alterations by a clever manipulator."
+
+Kennedy bent his gaze on Dorgan. "Now, I do not accuse you, sir, of
+anything. But a photograph has come into my possession in which Mr.
+Carton is represented as standing in a group on a porch, with Mr.
+Murtha, Mrs. Ogleby, and an unknown woman. The first three are in poses
+that show the utmost friendliness. I do not hesitate to say that was
+originally a photograph of yourself, Mr. Murtha, Mrs. Ogleby, and a
+woman whom you know well. It is a pretty raw deal, a fake in which
+Carton has been substituted by very excellent photographic forgery."
+
+"A fake--huh!" repeated Dorgan, contemptuously. "How about the story of
+them? There's no negative. You've got to show me that the original
+print stolen from Carton, we'll say, is a fake. You can't do it. No,
+sir, those pictures were taken this summer."
+
+Kennedy quietly laid down the bundle of photographs copied from those
+alleged to have been stolen from Carton. He was pointing to a shadow of
+a gable on the house.
+
+"You see that shadow of the gable, Dorgan?" he asked. "Perhaps you
+never heard of it, but it is possible to tell the exact time at which a
+photograph was taken from a study of the shadows. It is possible in
+theory and practice, and it can be trusted absolutely. Almost any
+scientist, Dorgan, may be called in to bear testimony in court
+nowadays, but you probably think the astronomer is one of the least
+likely.
+
+"Well, the shadow in this picture can be made to prove an alibi for
+someone. Notice. It is seen prominently to the right, and its exact
+location on the house is an easy matter. The identification of the
+gable casting the shadow ought to be easy. To be exact, I have figured
+it out as 19.62 feet high. The shadow is 14.23 feet down, 13.10 feet
+east, and 3.43 feet north. You see, I am exact. I have to be. In one
+minute it moves 0.080 feet upward, 0.053 feet to the right, and 0.096
+feet in its apparent path. It passes the width of a weatherboard, 0.37
+foot, in four minutes and thirty-seven seconds."
+
+Kennedy was talking rapidly of data which he had derived from the study
+of the photograph as from plumb line, level, compass, and tape,
+astronomical triangle, vertices, zenith, pole, and sun, declination,
+azimuth, solar time, parallactic angles, refraction, and a dozen other
+bewildering terms.
+
+"In spherical trigonometry," he concluded, "to solve the problem three
+elements must be known. I know four. Therefore, I can take each of the
+known, treat it as unknown, and have four ways to check my result. I
+find that the time might have been either three o'clock, twenty-one
+minutes and twelve seconds in the afternoon, or 3:21:31 or 3:21:29, or
+3:21:33. The average is 3: 21:26 and there can be no appreciable error
+except for a few seconds. I tell you that to show you how close I can
+come. The important thing, however, is that the date must have been one
+of two days, either May 22 or July 22. Between these two dates we must
+decide on evidence other than the shadow. It must have been in May, as
+the immature condition of the foliage shows. But even if it had been in
+July, that would be far from the date you allege. Why, I could even
+tell you the year. Then, too, I could look up the weather records and
+tell something from them. I can really answer, with an assurance and
+accuracy superior to the photographer himself, if you could produce him
+and he were honest, as to the real date. The original picture, aside
+from being doctored, was actually taken last May. Science is not
+fallible, but exact in this matter."
+
+Kennedy felt that he had scored a palpable hit. Dorgan was speechless.
+Still, Craig hurried on.
+
+"But, you may ask, how about the automobile picture? That also is an
+unblushing fake. Of course I must prove that. In the first place you
+know that the general public has come to recognize the distortion of a
+photograph as denoting speed. A picture of a car in a race that doesn't
+lean is rejected. People demand to see speed, speed, more speed, even
+in pictures. Distortion does indeed show speed, but that, too, can be
+faked.
+
+"Almost everyone knows that the image is projected upside down by the
+lens on the plate, and that the bottom of the picture is taken before
+the top. The camera mechanism admits light, which makes the picture, in
+the manner of a roller blind curtain. The slit travels from the top to
+the bottom and, the image on the plate being projected upside down, the
+bottom of the object appears on the top of the plate. For instance, the
+wheels are taken before the head of the driver. If the car is moving
+quickly, the image moves on the plate and each successive part is taken
+a little in advance of the last. The whole leans forward. By widening
+the slit and slowing the speed of the shutter, there is more distortion.
+
+"Now, that is just what has been done. A picture has been taken of a
+car owned once by Murtha, probably at rest, with perhaps yourself,
+Murtha, Mrs. Ogleby, and your friend in it. The matter of faking Carton
+or anyone else is simple. If, with an enlarging lantern, the image of
+this faked picture is thrown on the printing paper like a lantern
+slide, and if the right-hand side is moved a little further away than
+the left, the top further away than the bottom, you can in that way
+print a fraudulent high-speed picture ahead.
+
+"True, everything else in the picture, even if motionless, is
+distorted, and the difference between this faking and the distortion of
+the shutter can be seen by an expert. But it will pass with most
+people. In this case, however," added Kennedy suddenly, "the faker was
+so sure of it that he was careless. Instead of getting the plate
+further from the paper on the right, he did so on the left. It was
+further away on the bottom than on the top. He got the distortion, all
+right, enough to satisfy anyone. But it is distortion in the wrong
+direction! The top of the wheel, which goes fastest and ought to be
+most indistinct, is, in the fake, as sharp as any other part. It is a
+small mistake that was made, but fatal. Your picture is not of a joy
+ride at all. It is really high speed--backwards! It is too raw, too
+raw."
+
+"You don't think people are going to swallow all that stuff, do you?"
+asked Dorgan coolly, in spite of the exposures. "What of it all?" he
+asked surlily. "I have nothing to do with it, anyhow. Why do you come
+to me? Take it to the proper authorities."
+
+"Shall I?" asked Kennedy quietly, leaning over and whispering a few
+words in Dorgan's ear. I could not hear what he said, but Dorgan
+appeared to be fairly staggered.
+
+When Kennedy passed out of the Boss's office there was a look of quiet
+satisfaction on his face which I could not fathom. Not a word could I
+extract from him on the subject, either. I was still in the dark as to
+the result of his visit.
+
+
+
+
+XXIV
+
+THE DEBACLE OF DORGAN
+
+
+Sunday morning came and with it the huge batch of papers which we
+always took. I looked at them eagerly, though Kennedy did not seem to
+evince much interest, to see whether the Carton photographs had been
+used. There were none.
+
+Kennedy employed the time in directing some work of his own and had
+disappeared, I knew not where, though I surmised it was on one of his
+periodic excursions into the underworld in which he often knocked
+about, collecting all sorts of valuable and interesting bits of
+information to fit together in the mosaic of a case.
+
+Monday came, also, the last day before the election, with its lull in
+the heart-breaking activities of the campaign. There were still no
+pictures published, but Kennedy was working in the laboratory over a
+peculiar piece of apparatus.
+
+"I've been helping out my own shadows," was all the explanation he
+vouchsafed of his disappearances, as he continued to work.
+
+"Watching Mrs. Ogleby?" I hinted.
+
+"No, I didn't interfere any more with Miss Kendall. This was someone
+else--in another part of the city."
+
+He said it with an air that seemed to imply that I would learn all
+about it shortly and I did not pursue the subject.
+
+Meanwhile, he was arranging something on the top of a large, flat
+table. It seemed to be an instrument in two parts, composed of many
+levers and discs and magnets, each part with a roll of paper about five
+inches wide.
+
+On one was a sort of stylus with two silk cords attached at right
+angles to each other near the point. On the other was a capillary glass
+tube at the junction of two aluminum arms, also at right angles to each
+other.
+
+It was quite like old times to see Kennedy at work in his laboratory
+again, and I watched him curiously. Two sets of wires were attached to
+each of the instruments, and they led out of the window to some other
+wires which had been strung by telephone linemen only a few hours
+before.
+
+Craig had scarcely completed his preparations when Carton arrived.
+Things were going all right in the campaign again, I knew, at least as
+far as appeared on the surface. But his face showed that Carton was
+clearly dissatisfied with what Craig had apparently accomplished, for,
+as yet, he had not told Carton about his discovery after studying the
+photographs, and matters between Carton and Margaret Ashton stood in
+the same strained condition that they had when last we saw her.
+
+I must say that I, too, was keenly disappointed by the lack of
+developments in this phase of the case. Aside from the fact that the
+photographs had not actually been published, the whole thing seemed to
+me to be a mess. What had Craig said to Dorgan? Above all, what was his
+game? Was he playing to spare the girl's feelings merely by allowing
+the election to go on without a scandal to Carton? I knew the result of
+the election was now the least of Carton's worries.
+
+Carton did not say much, but he showed that he thought it high time for
+Kennedy to do something.
+
+We were seated about the flat table, wondering when Kennedy would break
+his silence, when suddenly, as if by a spirit hand, the stylus before
+us began to move across one of the rolls of paper.
+
+We watched it uncomprehendingly.
+
+At last I saw that it was actually writing the words. "How is it
+working?"
+
+Quickly Craig seized the stylus on the lower part of the instrument and
+wrote in his characteristic scrawl, "All right, go ahead."
+
+"What is the thing?" asked Carton, momentarily forgetting his own
+worries at the new marvel before us.
+
+"An instrument that was invented many years ago, but has only recently
+been perfected for practical, every-day use, the telautograph, the
+long-distance writer," replied Kennedy, as we waited. "You see, with
+what amounts to an ordinary pencil I have written on the paper of the
+transmitter. The silk cord attached to the pencil regulates the current
+which controls another capillary glass tube-pen at the other end of the
+line. The receiving pen moves simultaneously with my stylus. It is the
+same principle as the pantagraph, cut in half as it were, one half
+here, the other half at the other end of the line, two telephone wires
+in this case connecting the halves. Ah,--that's it. The pencil of the
+receiving instrument is writing again. Just a moment. Let us see what
+it is."
+
+I almost gasped in astonishment at the words that I saw. I looked
+again, for I could not believe my eyes. Still, there it was. My first
+glance had been correct, impossible as it was.
+
+"I, Patrick Murtha," wrote the pen.
+
+"What is it?" asked Carton, awestruck. "A dead hand?"
+
+"Stop a minute," wrote Kennedy hastily.
+
+We bent over him closely. Craig had drawn from a packet several
+letters, which he had evidently secured in some way from the effects of
+Murtha. Carefully, minutely, he compared the words before us with the
+signatures at the bottom of the letters.
+
+"It is genuine!" he cried excitedly.
+
+"Genuine!" Carton and I echoed.
+
+What did he mean? Was this some kind of spiritism? Had Kennedy turned
+medium and sought a message from the other world to solve the
+inexplicable problems of this? It was weird, uncanny, unthinkable. We
+turned to him blankly for an explanation of the mystery.
+
+"That wasn't Murtha at all whose body we saw at the Morgue," he hurried
+to explain. "That was all a frame-up. I thought as soon as I saw it
+that there was something queer."
+
+I recalled now the peculiar look on his face which I had interpreted as
+indicating that he thought Murtha had been the victim of foul play.
+
+"And the other night, when we were in Carton's office and someone
+called up threatening you, Carton, and Dopey Jack, I saw at once that
+the voice was concealed. Yet there was something about it that was
+familiar, though I couldn't quite place it. I had heard that voice
+before, perhaps while we were getting the records to discover the
+'wolf.' It occurred to me that if I had a record of it I might identify
+it by comparing it with those we had already taken. I got the record. I
+studied it. I compared it with what I already had, line, and wave, and
+overtone. You can imagine how I felt when I found there was only one
+voice with which it corresponded, and that man was supposed to be dead.
+Something more than intuition as I looked at the body that night had
+roused my suspicions. Now they were confirmed. Fancy how that
+information must have burned in my mind, during these days while I knew
+that Murtha was alive, but could say nothing!"
+
+Neither Carton nor I could say a word as we thought of this voice from
+the dead, as it almost seemed.
+
+"I hadn't found him," continued Craig, "but I knew he had used a pay
+station on the West Side. I began shadowing everyone who might have
+helped him, Dorgan, Kahn, Langhorne, all. I didn't find him. They were
+too clever. He was hiding somewhere in the city, a changed personality,
+waiting for the thing to blow over. He knew that of all places a city
+is the best to hide in, and of all cities New York is safest.
+
+"But, though I didn't actually find his hiding place, I had enough on
+some of his friends so that I could get word to him that his secret was
+known to me, at least. I made him an offer of safety. He need not come
+out of his hiding place and I would agree to let him go where and when
+he pleased without further pursuit from me, if he would let me install
+a telautograph in a neutral place which he could select and the other
+end in this laboratory. I myself do not know where the other place is.
+Only a mechanic sworn to secrecy knows and neither Murtha nor myself
+know him. If Murtha comes across, I have given my word of honour that
+before the world he shall remain a dead man, free to go where he
+pleases and enjoy such of his fortune as he was able to fix so that he
+could carry it with him into his new life."
+
+Carton and I were entranced by the romance of the thing.
+
+Murtha was alive!
+
+The commitment to the asylum, the escape, the search, the finding of a
+substitute body, mutilated beyond ordinary recognition, the mysterious
+transfers, and finally the identification in the Morgue--all had been
+part of an elaborately staged play!
+
+We saw it all, now. Carton had got too close to him in the conviction
+of Dopey Jack and the proceedings against Kahn. He had seen the
+handwriting on the wall for himself. In Carton's gradual climbing, step
+by step, for the man higher up, he would have been the next to go.
+
+Murtha had decided that it was time to get out, to save himself.
+
+Suddenly, I saw another aspect of it. By dropping out as though dead,
+he destroyed a link in the chain that would reach Dorgan. There was no
+way of repairing that link if he were dead. It was missing and missing
+for good.
+
+Dorgan had known it. Had it been a hint as to that which had finally
+clinched whatever it was that Kennedy had whispered to the Silent Boss
+that morning when we had seen him in his office?
+
+All these thoughts and more flashed through my head with lightning-like
+rapidity.
+
+The telautograph was writing again, obedient to Kennedy's signal that
+he was satisfied with the signature.
+
+"... in consideration of Craig Kennedy's agreement to destroy even this
+record, agree to give him such information as he has asked for, after
+which no further demands are to be made and the facts as already
+publicly recorded are to stand."
+
+"Just witness it," asked Kennedy of us. "It is a gentleman's agreement
+among us all."
+
+Nervously we set our names to the thing, only too eager to keep the
+secret if we could further the case on which we had been almost
+literally sweating blood so long.
+
+Prepared though we were for some startling disclosures, it was,
+nevertheless, with a feeling almost of faintness that we saw the stylus
+above moving again.
+
+"The Black Book, as you call it," it wrote, "has been sent by messenger
+to be deposited in escrow with the Gotham Trust Company to be
+delivered, Tuesday, the third of November, on the written order of
+Craig Kennedy and John Carton. An officer of the trust company will
+notify you of its receipt immediately, which will close the entire
+transaction as far as I am concerned."
+
+Kennedy could not wait. He had already seized his own telephone and was
+calling a number.
+
+"They have it," he announced a moment later, scrawling the information
+on the transmitter of the telautograph.
+
+A moment it was still, then it wrote again.
+
+"Good-bye and good luck," it traced. "Murtha!"
+
+The Smiling Boss could not resist his little joke at the end, even now.
+
+"Can--we--get it?" asked Carton, almost stunned at the unexpected turn
+of events.
+
+"No," cautioned Kennedy, "not yet. To-morrow. I made the same promise
+to Murtha that I made to Dorgan, when I went to him with Walter,
+although Walter did not hear it. This is to be a fair fight, for the
+election, now."
+
+"Then," said Carton earnestly, "I may as well tell you that I shall not
+sleep to-night. I can't, even if I can use the book only after election
+in the clean-up of the city!"
+
+Kennedy laughed.
+
+"Perhaps I can entertain you with some other things," he said
+gleefully, adding, "About those photographs."
+
+Carton was as good as his word. He did not sleep, and the greater part
+of the night we spent in telling him about what Craig had discovered by
+his scientific analysis of the faked pictures.
+
+At last morning came. Though Kennedy and I had slept soundly in our
+apartment, Carton had in reality only dozed in a chair, after we closed
+the laboratory.
+
+Slowly the hours slipped away until the trust company opened.
+
+We were the first to be admitted, with our order ready signed and
+personally delivered.
+
+As the officer handed over the package, Craig tore the wrapper off
+eagerly.
+
+There, at last, was the Black Book!
+
+Carton almost seized it from Kennedy, turning the pages, skimming over
+it, gloating like a veritable miser.
+
+It was the debacle of Dorgan--the end of the man highest up!
+
+
+
+
+XXV
+
+THE BLOOD CRYSTALS
+
+
+Much as we had accomplished, we had not found Betty Blackwell. Except
+for her shadowing of Mrs. Ogleby, Clare Kendall had devoted her time to
+winning the confidence of the poor girl, Sybil Seymour, whom we had
+rescued from Margot's. Meanwhile, the estrangement of Carton and
+Margaret Ashton threw a cloud over even our success.
+
+During the rest of the morning Craig was at work again in the
+laboratory. He was busily engaged in testing something through his
+powerful microscopes and had a large number of curious microphotographs
+spread out on the table. As I watched him, apparently there was nothing
+but the blood-stained gauze bandage which had been fastened to the face
+of the strange, light-haired woman, and on the stains on this bandage
+he was concentrating his attention. I could not imagine what he
+expected to discover from it.
+
+I waited for Kennedy to speak, but he was too busy more than to notice
+that I had come in. I fell to thinking of that woman. And the more I
+thought of the fair face, the more I was puzzled by it. I felt somehow
+or other that I had seen it somewhere before, yet could not place it.
+
+A second time I examined the unpublished photograph of Betty Blackwell
+as well as the pictures that had been published. The only conclusion
+that I could come to was that it could not be she, for although she was
+light-haired and of fair complexion, the face as I remembered it was
+that of a mature woman who was much larger than the slight Betty. I was
+sure of that.
+
+Every time I reasoned it out I came to the same contradictory
+conclusion that I had seen her, and I hadn't. I gave it up, and as
+Kennedy seemed indisposed to enlighten me, I went for a stroll about
+the campus, returning as if drawn back to him by a lodestone.
+
+About him was still the litter of test tubes, the photographs, the
+microscopes; and he was more absorbed in his delicate work than ever.
+
+He looked up from his examination of a little glass slide and I could
+see by the crow's feet in the corners of his eyes that he was not
+looking so much at me as through me at a very puzzling problem.
+
+"Walter," he remarked at length, "did you notice anything in particular
+about that blonde woman who dashed down the steps into the taxicab and
+escaped from the dope joint?"
+
+"I should say that I did," I returned, glad to ease my mind of what had
+been perplexing me ever since. "I don't want to appear to be foolish,
+but, frankly, I thought I had seen her before, and then when I tried to
+place her I found that I could not recognize her at all. She seemed to
+be familiar, and yet when I tried to place her I could think of no one
+with just those features. It was a foolish impression, I suppose."
+
+"That's exactly it," he exclaimed. "I thought at first it was just a
+foolish impression, too, an intuition which my later judgment rejected.
+But often those first impressions put you on the track of the truth. I
+reconsidered. You remember she had dropped that bandage from her face
+with the blood-stain on it. I picked it up and it occurred to me to try
+a little experiment with these blood-stains which might show something."
+
+He paused a moment and fingered some of the microphotographs.
+
+"What would you say," he went on, "if I should tell you that a
+pronounced blonde, with a fair complexion and thin, almost hooked,
+nose, was in reality a negress?"
+
+"If it were anyone but you, Craig," I replied frankly, "I'd be tempted
+to call him something. But you--well, what's the answer? How do you
+know?"
+
+"I wonder if you have ever heard of the Reichert blood test? Well, the
+Carnegie Institution has recently published an account of it. Professor
+Edward Reichert of the University of Pennsylvania has discovered that
+the blood crystals of all animals and men show characteristic
+differences.
+
+"It has even been suggested that before the studies are over
+photographs of blood corpuscles may be used to identify criminals,
+almost like fingerprints. There is much that can be discovered already
+by the use of these hemoglobin clues. That hemoglobin, or red colouring
+matter of the blood, forms crystals has been known for a long time.
+These crystals vary in different animals, as they are studied under the
+polarizing microscope, both in form and molecular structure. That is of
+immense importance for the scientific criminologist.
+
+"A man's blood is not like the blood of any other living creature,
+either fish, flesh, or fowl. Further, it is said that the blood of a
+woman or a man and of different individuals shows differences that will
+reveal themselves under certain tests. You can take blood from any
+number of animals and the scientists to-day can tell that it is not
+human blood, but the blood, say, of an animal.
+
+"The scientists now can go further. They even hope soon to be able to
+tell the difference between individuals so closely that they can trace
+parentage by these tests. Already they can actually distinguish among
+the races of men, whether a certain sample of blood, by its crystals,
+is from a Chinaman, a Caucasian, or a negro. Each gives its own
+characteristic crystal. The Caucasian shows that he is more closely
+related to one group of primates; the negro to another. It is
+scientific proof of evolution.
+
+"It is all the more wonderful, Walter, when you consider that these
+crystals are only 1-2250th of an inch in length and 1-9000th of an inch
+in width."
+
+"How do you study them?" I asked.
+
+"The method I employed was to take a little of the blood and add some
+oxalate of ammonium to it, then shake it up thoroughly with ether to
+free the hemoglobin from the corpuscles. I then separated the ether
+carefully from the rest of the blood mixture and put a few drops of it
+on a slide, covered them with a cover slip and sealed the edges with
+balsam. Gradually the crystals appear and they can be studied and
+photographed in the usual way--not only the shapes of the crystals, but
+also the relation that their angles bear to each other. So it is
+impossible to mistake the blood of one animal for another or of one
+race, like the white race, for that of another, like the black. In fact
+the physical characteristics by which some physicians profess to detect
+the presence of negro blood are held by other authorities to be
+valueless. But not so with this test."
+
+"And you have discovered in this case?" I asked.
+
+"That the blood on the bandage from the face of that woman who escaped
+was not the blood of a pure Caucasian. She shows traces of negro blood,
+in fact exactly what would have been expected of a mulatto."
+
+It dawned on me that the woman must have been Marie, after all; at
+least that that was what he meant.
+
+"But," I objected, "one look at her face was enough to show that she
+was not the dark-skinned Marie with her straight nose, her dark hair
+and other features. This woman was fair, had a nose that was almost
+hooked and hair that was almost flaxen. Remember the portrait parle."
+
+"Just so--the portrait parle. That is what I am remembering. You recall
+Carton discovered that in some way these people found out that we were
+using it? What would they do? Why, they have thought out the only
+possible way in which to beat it, don't you see?
+
+"Marie, Madame Margot, whatever you call her, had a beauty parlour. Oh,
+they are clever, these people. They reasoned it all out. What was a
+beauty parlour, a cosmetic surgery, for, if it could not be used to
+save them? They knew we had her scientific description. What was the
+thing to do, then? Why, change it, of course, change her!"
+
+Kennedy was quite excited now.
+
+"You know what Miss Kendall said of decorative surgery, there? They
+change noses, ears, foreheads, chins, even eyes. They put the thing up
+to Dr. Harris with his knives and bandages and lotions. He must work
+quickly. It would take all his time. So he disappeared into Margot's
+and stayed there. Marie also stayed there until such time as she might
+be able to walk out, another person entirely. Harris must have had
+charge of her features. The attendants in Margot's had charge of her
+complexion and hair--those were the things in which they specialized.
+
+"Don't you see it all now? She could retire a few days into the dope
+joint next door and she would emerge literally a new woman ready to
+face us, even with Bertillon's portrait parle against her."
+
+It was amazing how quickly Kennedy pieced the facts together into an
+explanation.
+
+"Yes," he concluded triumphantly, "that blonde woman was our
+dark-skinned mulatto made over--Marie. But they can't escape the power
+of science, even by using science themselves. She might change her
+identity to our eyes, but she could not before the Reichert test and
+the microscope. No, the Ethiopian could not change her skin before the
+eye of science."
+
+It was late in the afternoon that Kennedy received a hurried telephone
+call from Miss Kendall. I could tell by the scraps of conversation
+which I overheard that it was most important.
+
+"That girl, Sybil Seymour, has broken down," was all he said as he
+turned from the instrument. "She will be here to-day with Miss Kendall.
+You must see Carton immediately. Tell him not to fail to be here, at
+the laboratory, this afternoon at three, sharp."
+
+He was gone before I could question him further and there was nothing
+for me to do but to execute the commission he had laid on me.
+
+I met Carton at his club, relating to him all that I could about the
+progress of the case. He seemed interested but I could see that his
+mind was really not on it. The estrangement between him and Margaret
+Ashton outweighed success in this case and even in the election.
+
+Half an hour before the appointed time, however, we arrived at the
+laboratory in Carton's car, to find Kennedy already there, putting the
+finishing touches on the preparations he was making to receive his
+"guests."
+
+"Dorgan will be here," he answered, evading Carton's question as to
+what he had discovered.
+
+"Dorgan?" we repeated in surprise.
+
+"Yes. I have made arrangements to have Martin Ogleby, too. They won't
+dare stay away. Ike the Dropper, Dr. Harris, and Marie Margot have not
+been found yet, but Miss Kendall will bring Sybil Seymour. Then we
+shall see."
+
+The door opened. It was Ogleby. He bowed stiffly, but before he could
+say anything, a noise outside heralded the arrival of someone else.
+
+It proved to be Dorgan, who had come from an opposite direction. Dorgan
+seemed to treat the whole affair with contempt, which he took pleasure
+in showing. He was cool and calm, master of himself, in any situation
+no matter how hostile.
+
+As we waited, the strained silence, broken only by an occasional
+whisper between Carton and Kennedy, was relieved even by the arrival of
+Miss Kendall and Sybil Seymour in a cab. As they entered I fancied that
+a friendship had sprung up between the two, that Miss Kendall had won
+her fight for the girl. Indeed, I suspect that it was the first time in
+years that the girl had had a really disinterested friend of either sex.
+
+I thought Ogleby visibly winced as he caught sight of Miss Seymour. He
+evidently had not expected her, and I thought that perhaps he had no
+relish for the recollection of the Montmartre which her presence
+suggested.
+
+Miss Seymour, now like herself as she had appeared first behind the
+desk at the hotel, only subdued and serious, seemed ill at ease.
+Dorgan, on the other hand, bowed to her brazenly and mockingly. He was
+evidently preparing against any surprises which Craig might have in
+store, and maintained his usual surly silence.
+
+"Perhaps," hemmed Ogleby, clearing his throat and looking at his watch
+ostentatiously, "Professor Kennedy can inform us regarding the purpose
+of this extra-legal proceeding? Some of us, I know, have other
+engagements. I would suggest that you begin, Professor."
+
+He placed a sarcastic emphasis on the word "professor," as the two men
+faced each other--Craig tall, clean-cut, earnest; Ogleby polished,
+smooth, keen.
+
+"Very well," replied Craig with that steel-trap snap of his jaws which
+I knew boded ill for someone.
+
+"It is not necessary for me to repeat what has happened at the
+Montmartre and the beauty parlour adjoining it," began Kennedy
+deliberately. "One thing, however, I want to say. Twice, now, I have
+seen Dr. Harris handing out packets of drugs--once to Ike the Dropper,
+agent for the police and a corrupt politician, and once to a mulatto
+woman, almost white, who conducted the beauty parlour and dope joint
+which I have mentioned, a friend and associate of Ike the Dropper, a
+constant go-between from Ike to the corrupt person higher up.
+
+"This woman, whom I have just mentioned, we have been seeking by use of
+Bertillon's new system of the portrait parle. She has escaped, for the
+time, by a very clever ruse, by changing her very face in the beauty
+parlour. She is Madame Margot herself!"
+
+Not a word was breathed by any of the little audience as they hung on
+Kennedy's words.
+
+"Why was it necessary to get Betty Blackwell out of the way?" he asked
+suddenly, then without waiting for an answer, "You know and District
+Attorney Carton knows. Someone was afraid of Carton and his crusade.
+Someone wanted to destroy the value of that Black Book, which I now
+have. The only safety lay in removing the person whose evidence would
+be required in court to establish it--Betty Blackwell. And the manner?
+What more natural than to use the dope fiends and the degenerates of
+the Montmartre gang?"
+
+"That's silly," interrupted Ogleby contemptuously.
+
+"Silly? You can say that--you, the tool of that--that monster?"
+
+It was a woman's voice that interrupted. I turned. Sybil Seymour, her
+face blazing with resentment, had risen and was facing Ogleby squarely.
+
+"You lie!" exclaimed the Silent Boss, forgetting both his silence and
+his superciliousness.
+
+The situation was tense as the girl faced him.
+
+"Go on, Sybil," urged Clare.
+
+"Be careful, woman," cried Dorgan roughly.
+
+Sybil Seymour turned quickly to her new assailant. "You are the man for
+whom we were all coined into dollars," she scorned,
+"Dorgan--politician, man higher up! You reaped the profits through your
+dirty agent, Ike the Dropper, and those over him, even the police you
+controlled. Dr. Harris, Marie Margot, all are your tools--and the worst
+of them all is this man Martin Ogleby!"
+
+Dorgan's face was livid. For once in his life he was speechless rather
+than silent, as the girl poured out the inside gossip of the Montmartre
+which Kennedy had now stamped with the earmarks of legal proof.
+
+She had turned from Dorgan, as if from an unclean animal and was now
+facing Ogleby.
+
+"As for you, Martin Ogleby, they call you a club-man and society
+leader. Do you want to know what club I think you really belong to--you
+who have involved one girl after another in the meshes of this devilish
+System? You belong to the Abduction Club--that is what I would call
+it--you--you libertine!"
+
+
+
+
+XXVI
+
+THE WHITE SLAVE
+
+
+Carton had sprung to his feet at the direct charge and was facing
+Ogleby.
+
+"Is that true--about the Montmartre?" he demanded.
+
+Ogleby fairly sputtered. "She lies," he almost hissed.
+
+"Just a moment," interrupted Dorgan. "What has that to do with Miss
+Blackwell, anyhow?"
+
+Sybil Seymour did not pause.
+
+"It is true," she reiterated. "This is what it has to do with Betty
+Blackwell. Listen. He is the man who led me on, who would have done the
+same to Betty Blackwell. I yielded, but she fought. They could not
+conquer her--neither by drugs nor drink, nor by clothes, nor a good
+time, nor force. I saw it all in the Montmartre and the beauty
+parlour--all."
+
+"Lies--all lies," hissed Ogleby, beside himself with anger.
+
+"No, no," cried Sybil. "I do not lie. Mr. Carton and this good woman,
+Miss Kendall, who is working for him, are the first people I have seen
+since you, Martin Ogleby, brought me to the Montmartre, who have ever
+given me a chance to become again what I was before you and your
+friends got me."
+
+"Have a care, young woman," interrupted Dorgan, recovering himself as
+she proceeded. "There are laws and--"
+
+"I don't care a rap about laws such as yours. As for gangs--that was
+what you were going to say--I'd snap my fingers in the face of Ike the
+Dropper himself if he were here. You could kill me, but I would tell
+the truth.
+
+"Let me tell you my case," she continued, turning in appeal to the rest
+of us, "the case of a poor girl in a small city near New York, who
+liked a good time, liked pretty clothes, a ride in an automobile,
+theatres, excitement, bright lights, night life. I liked them. He knew
+that. He led me on, made me like him. And when I began to show the
+strain of the pace--we all show it more than the men--he cast me aside,
+like a squeezed-out lemon."
+
+Sybil Seymour was talking rapidly, but she was not hysterical.
+
+"Already you know Betty Blackwell's story--part of it," she hurried on.
+"Miss Kendall has told me--how she was bribed to disappear. But beyond
+that--what?"
+
+For a moment she paused. No one said a word. Here at last was the one
+person who held the key to the mystery.
+
+"She did disappear. She kept her word. At last she had money, the one
+thing she had longed for. At last she was able to gratify those desires
+to play the fashionable lady which her family had always felt. What
+more natural, then, than while she must keep in hiding to make one
+visit to the beauty parlour to which so many society women
+went--Margot's? It was there that she went on the day that she
+disappeared."
+
+We were hanging breathlessly now on the words of the girl as she
+untangled the sordid story.
+
+"And then?" prompted Kennedy.
+
+"Then came into play another arm of the System," she replied. "They
+tried to make sure that she would disappear. They tried the same arts
+on her that they had on me--this man and the gang about him. He played
+on her love of beauty and Madame Margot helped him. He used the
+Montmartre and the Futurist to fascinate her, but still she was not
+his. She let herself drift along, perhaps because she knew that her
+family was every bit the equal socially of his own. Madame Margot tried
+drugs; first the doped cigarette, then drugs that had to be forced on
+her. She kept her in that joint for days by force; and there where I
+went for relief day after day from my own bitter thoughts I saw her, in
+that hell which Miss Kendall now by her evidence will close forever.
+Still she would not yield.
+
+"I saw it all. Maybe you will say I was jealous because I had lost him.
+I was not. I hated him. You do not know how close hate can be to love
+in the heart of a woman. I could not help it. I had to write a letter
+that might save her.
+
+"Miss Kendall has told me about the typewritten letters; how you,
+Professor Kennedy, traced them to the Montmartre. I wrote them, I
+admit, for these people. I wrote that stuff about drugs for Dr. Harris.
+And I wrote the first letter of all to the District Attorney. I wrote
+it for myself and signed it as I am--God forgive me--'An Outcast.'"
+
+The poor girl, overwrought by the strain of the confession that laid
+bare her very soul, sank back in her chair and cried, as Miss Kendall
+gently tried to soothe her.
+
+Dorgan and Ogleby listened sullenly. Never in their lives had they
+dreamed of such a situation as this.
+
+There was no air of triumph about Kennedy now over the confession,
+which with the aid of Miss Kendall, he had staged so effectively.
+Rather it was a spirit of earnestness, of retribution, justice.
+
+"You know all this?" he inquired gently of the girl.
+
+"I saw it," she said simply, raising her bowed head.
+
+Dorgan had been doing some quick thinking. He leaned over and whispered
+quickly to Ogleby.
+
+"Why was she not discovered then when these detectives broke into the
+private house--an act which they themselves will have to answer for
+when the time comes?" demanded Ogleby.
+
+It seemed as if the mere sound of his voice roused the girl.
+
+"Because it was dangerous to keep her there any longer," she replied.
+"I heard the talk about the hotel, the rumour that someone was using
+this new French detective scheme. I heard them blame the District
+Attorney--who was clever enough to have others working on the case whom
+you did not know. While you were watching his officers, Mr. Kennedy and
+Miss Kendall were gathering evidence almost under your very eyes.
+
+"But you were panic-stricken. You and your agents wanted to remove the
+danger of discovery. Dr. Harris and Marie Margot had a plan which you
+grasped at eagerly. There was Ike the Dropper, that scoundrel who lives
+on women. Between them you would spirit her away. You were glad to have
+them do it, little realizing that, with every step, they had you
+involved deeper and worse. You forgot everything, all honour and
+manhood in your panic; you were ready to consent, to urge any course
+that would relieve you--and you have taken the course that involves you
+worse than any other."
+
+"Who will believe a story like that?" demanded Ogleby. "What are
+you--according to your own confession? Am I to be charged with
+everything this gang, as you call it, does? You are their agent,
+perhaps working for this blackmailing crew. But I tell you, I will
+fight, I will not be blackened by--"
+
+Sybil laughed, half hysterically.
+
+"Blackened?" she repeated. "You who would put this thing all off on
+others who worked for you, who played on your vices and passions, not
+because you were weak, but because you thought you were above the law!
+
+"You did not care what became of that girl, so long as she was where
+she could not accuse you. You left her to that gang, to Ike, to Marie,
+to Harris." She paused a moment, and flashed a quick glance of scorn at
+him. "Do you want to know what has become of her, what you are
+responsible for?
+
+"I will tell you. They had other ideas than just getting her out of the
+way of your selfish career. They are in this life for money. Betty
+Blackwell to them was a marketable article, a piece of merchandise in
+the terrible traffic which they carry on. If she had been yielding,
+like the rest of us, she might now be apparently free, yet held by a
+bondage as powerful and unescapable as if it were of iron, a life from
+which she could not escape. But she was not yielding. They would break
+her. Perhaps you have tried to ease your conscience, if you have any,
+by the thought that it is they, not you, who have her hidden away
+somewhere now. You cannot escape that way; it was you who made her, who
+made others of us, what we are."
+
+"Let her rave, Ogleby," sneered Dorgan.
+
+"Yes--raving, that's it," echoed Ogleby. But his expression belied him.
+
+"There it is," she continued. "You have not even an opinion of your
+own. You repeat even the remarks of others. They have you in their
+power. You have put yourself there."
+
+"All very pretty," remarked Dorgan with biting sarcasm. "All very
+cleverly thought out. So nice here! Wait until you have to tell that
+story in court. You know the first rule of equity? Do you go into court
+with clean hands? There is a day of reckoning coming to you, young
+woman, and to these other meddlers here--whether they are playing
+politics or meddling just because they are old-maidish busy-bodies."
+
+She was facing the politician with burning cheeks.
+
+"You," she scorned, "belong to an age that is passing away. You cannot
+understand these people like Miss Kendall, like Mr. Carton, who cannot
+be bought and controlled like your other creatures. You do not know how
+the underworld can turn on the upperworld. You would not pull us
+up--you shoved us down deeper, in your greed. But if we go down, we
+shall drag you, too. What have we to lose? You and your creatures, like
+Martin Ogleby, have taken everything from us. We--"
+
+"Come, Ogleby," interposed Dorgan, deliberately turning his back on her
+and slowly placing his hat on his half-bald head. "We are indebted to
+Professor Kennedy for a pleasant entertainment. When he has another
+show equally original we trust he will not forget the first-nighters
+who have enjoyed this farce."
+
+Dorgan had reached the door and had his hand on the knob. I had
+expected Kennedy to reply. But he said nothing. Instead his hand stole
+along the edge of the table beside which he was standing.
+
+"Good-night," bowed Dorgan with mock solemnity. "Thank you for laying
+the cards on the table. We shall know how to play--"
+
+Dorgan cut the words short.
+
+Kennedy had touched the button of an electric attachment which was
+under the table by which he could lock every door and window of the
+laboratory instantly and silently.
+
+"Well?" demanded Dorgan fiercely, though there was a tremble in his
+voice that had never been heard before.
+
+"Where is Betty Blackwell?" demanded Craig, turning to Sybil Seymour.
+"Where did they take her?"
+
+We hung breathlessly on the answer. Was she being held as a white slave
+in some obscure den? I knew that that did not mean that she was
+necessarily imprisoned behind locked doors and barred windows, although
+even that might be the case. I knew that the restraint might be just as
+effective, even though it was not actually or wholly physical.
+
+An ordinary girl, I reasoned, with little knowledge of her rights or of
+the powers which she might call to her aid if she knew how to summon
+them, might she not be so hemmed in by the forces into whose hands she
+had fallen as to be practically held in bonds which she could not break?
+
+Here was Sybil herself! Once she had been like Betty Blackwell. Indeed,
+when she seemed to have every chance to escape she did not. She knew
+how she could be pursued, hounded at every turn, forced back, and her
+only course was to sink deeper into the life. The thought of what might
+be accomplished by drugs startled me.
+
+Clare bent over the poor girl reassuringly. What was it that seemed to
+freeze her tongue now? Was it still some vestige of the old fear under
+which she had been held so long? Clare strove, although we could not
+hear what she was saying, to calm her.
+
+At last Sybil raised her head, with a wild cry, as if she were sealing
+her own doom.
+
+"It was Ike. He kept us all in terror. Oh, if he hears he will kill
+me," she blurted out.
+
+"Where did he take her?" asked Clare.
+
+She had broken down the girl's last fear.
+
+"To that place on the West Side--that black and tan joint, where Marie
+Margot came from before the gang took her in."
+
+"Carton," called Kennedy. "You and Walter will take Miss Kendall and
+Miss Seymour. Let me see. Dorgan, Ogleby, and myself will ride in the
+taxicab."
+
+Carton was toying ostentatiously with a police whistle as Dorgan
+hesitated, then entered the cab.
+
+I think at the joint, as we pulled up with a rush after our wild ride
+downtown, they must have thought that a party of revellers had dropped
+in to see the sights. It was perhaps just as well that they did, for
+there was no alarm at first.
+
+As we entered the black and tan joint, I took another long look at its
+forbidding exterior. Below, it was a saloon and dance hall; above, it
+was a "hotel." It was weatherbeaten, dirty, and unsightly, without,
+except for the entrance; unsanitary, ramshackle, within, except for the
+tawdry decorations. At every window were awnings and all were down,
+although it was on the shady side of the street in the daytime and it
+was now getting late. That was the mute sign post to the initiated of
+the character of the place.
+
+Instead of turning downstairs where we had gone on our other visit,
+Kennedy led the way up through a door that read, "Hotel
+Entrance--Office."
+
+A clerk at a desk in a little alcove on the second floor mechanically
+pushed out a register at us, then seeming to sense trouble, pulled it
+back quickly and with his foot gave a sharp kick at the door of a
+little safe, locking the combination.
+
+"I'm looking for someone," was all Kennedy said. "This is the District
+Attorney. We'll go through--"
+
+"Yes, you will!"
+
+It was Ike the Dropper. He had heard the commotion, and, seeing ladies,
+came to the conclusion that it was not a police plainclothes raid, but
+some new game of the reformers.
+
+He stopped short in amazement at the sight of Dorgan and Ogleby.
+
+"Well--I'll be--"
+
+"Carton! Walter!" shouted Kennedy. "Take care of him. Watch out for a
+knife or gun. He's soft, though. Carton--the whistle!"
+
+Our struggle with the redoubtable Ike was short and quickly over.
+Sullen, and with torn clothes and bleeding face, we held him until the
+policeman arrived, and turned him over to the law.
+
+At a room on the same floor Craig knocked.
+
+"Come in," answered a woman's voice.
+
+He pushed open the door. There was the woman who had fled so
+precipitately from the dope joint.
+
+Evidently she did not recognize us. "You are under arrest," announced
+Kennedy.
+
+The blonde woman laughed mockingly.
+
+"Under arrest? For what?"
+
+"You are Marie Margot. Never mind about your alias. All the arts of
+your employees and Dr. Harris himself cannot change you so that I
+cannot recognize you. You may feel safe from the portrait parle, but
+there are other means of detection that you never dreamed of. Where is
+Betty Blackwell? Marie, it's all off!"
+
+All the brazen assurance with which she had met us was gone. She looked
+from one to the other and read that it was the end. With a shriek, she
+suddenly darted past us, out of the door. Down the hall was Ike the
+Dropper with the policeman and Carton. Beside her was a stairway
+leading to the upper floors. She chose the stairs.
+
+Following Kennedy we hurried through the hotel, from one dirty room to
+another, with their loose and creaking floors, rotten and filthy,
+sagging as we walked, covered with matting that was rotting away. Damp
+and unventilated, the air was heavy and filled with foul odours of
+tobacco, perfumery, and cheap disinfectants. There seemed to have been
+no attempt to keep the place clean.
+
+The rooms were small and separated by thin partitions through which
+conversations in even low tones could be heard. The furniture was cheap
+and worn with constant use.
+
+Downstairs we could hear the uproar as the news spread that the
+District Attorney was raiding the place. As fast as they could the
+sordid crowd in the dance hall and cabaret was disappearing. Now and
+then we could hear a door bang, a hasty conference, and then silence as
+some of the inmates realized that upstairs all escape was cut off.
+
+On the top floor we came to a door, locked and bolted. With all the
+force that he could gather in the narrow hall, Kennedy catapulted
+himself against it. It yielded in its rottenness with a crash.
+
+A woman, in all her finery, lay across the foot of a bed, a formless
+heap. Kennedy turned her over. It was Marie, motionless, but still
+breathing faintly. In an armchair, with his hands hanging limply down
+almost to the floor, his head sagging forward on his chest, sprawled
+Harris.
+
+Kennedy picked up a little silver receptacle on the floor where it lay
+near his right hand. It was nearly empty, but as he looked from it
+quickly to the two insensible figures before us he muttered: "Morphine.
+They have robbed the law of its punishment."
+
+He bent over the suicides, but it was too late to do anything for them.
+They had paid the price.
+
+"My heavens!" he exclaimed suddenly, as a thought flashed over his
+mind. "I hope they have not carried the secret of Betty Blackwell with
+them to the grave. Where is Miss Kendall?"
+
+Down the hall, cut off from the rest of the hotel into a sort of
+private suite, Clare had entered one of the rooms and was bending over
+a pale, wan shadow of a girl, tossing restlessly on a bed. The room was
+scantily furnished with a dilapidated bureau in one corner and a
+rickety washstand equipped with a dirty washbowl and pitcher. A few
+cheap chromos on the walls were the only decorations, and a small badly
+soiled rug covered a floor innocent for many years of soap.
+
+I looked sharply at the girl lying before us. Somehow it did not occur
+to me who she was. She was so worn that anyone might safely have
+transported her through the streets and never have been questioned, in
+spite of the fact that every paper in the country which prints pictures
+had published her photograph, not once but many times.
+
+It was Betty Blackwell at last, struggling against the drugs that had
+been forced on her, half conscious, but with one firm and acute feeling
+left--resistance to the end.
+
+Kennedy had dropped on his knees before her and was examining her
+closely.
+
+"Open the windows--more air," he ordered. "Walter, see if you can find
+some ice water and a little stimulant."
+
+While Craig was taking such restorative measures as were possible on
+the spur of the moment, Miss Kendall gently massaged her head and hands.
+
+She seemed to understand that she was in the hands of friends, and
+though she did not know us her mute look of thanks was touching.
+
+"Don't get excited, my dear," breathed Miss Kendall into her ear. "You
+will be all right soon."
+
+As the wronged girl relaxed from her constant tension of watching, it
+seemed as if she fell into a stupor. Now and then she moaned feebly,
+and words, half-formed, seemed to come to her lips only to die away.
+
+Suddenly she seemed to have a vision more vivid than the rest.
+
+"No--no--Mr. Ogleby--leave me. Where--my mother--oh, where is mother?"
+she cried hysterically, sitting bolt upright and staring at us without
+seeing us.
+
+Kennedy passed the broad palm of his hand over her forehead and
+murmured, "There, there, you are all right now." Then he added to us:
+"I did not send for her mother because I wasn't sure that we might find
+her even as well as this. Will someone find Carton? Get the address and
+send a messenger for Mrs. Blackwell."
+
+Sybil was on her knees by the bedside of the girl, holding Betty's hand
+in both of her own.
+
+"You poor, poor girl," she cried softly. "It is--dreadful."
+
+She had sunk her head into the worn and dirty covers of the bed.
+Kennedy reached over and took hold of her arm. "She will be all right,
+soon," he said reassuringly. "Miss Kendall will take good care of her."
+
+As we descended the stairs, we could see Carton at the foot. A patrol
+wagon had been backed up to the curb in front and the inmates of the
+place were being taken out, protesting violently at being detained.
+
+Further down the hall, by the "office," Dorgan and Ogleby were
+storming, protesting that "influence" would "break" everyone concerned,
+from Carton down to the innocent patrolmen.
+
+Kennedy listened a moment, then turned to Clare Kendall.
+
+"I will leave Miss Blackwell in your care," he said quietly. "It is on
+her we must rely to prove the contents of the Black Book."
+
+Clare nodded, as, with a clang, Carton drove off with his prisoners to
+see them safely entered on the "blotter."
+
+"Our work is over," remarked Kennedy, turning again to Miss Kendall, in
+a tone as if he might have said more, but refrained.
+
+Looking Craig frankly in the eye, she extended her hand in that same
+cordial straight-arm shake with which she had first greeted us, and
+added, "But not the memory of this fight we have won."
+
+
+
+
+XXVII
+
+THE ELECTION NIGHT
+
+
+It was election night. Kennedy and Carton had arranged between them
+that we were all to receive the returns at the headquarters of the
+Reform League, where one of the papers which was particularly
+interested, had installed several special wires.
+
+The polls had scarcely closed when Kennedy and I, who had voted early,
+if not often, in spite of our strenuous day, hastened up to the
+headquarters. Already it was a scene of activity.
+
+The first election district had come in, one on the lower East Side,
+which was a stronghold of Dorgan, where the count could be made
+quickly, for there were no split tickets there. Dorgan had drawn first
+blood.
+
+"I hope it isn't an omen," smiled Carton, like a good sport.
+
+Kennedy smiled quietly.
+
+We looked about, but Miss Ashton was not there. I wondered why not and
+where she was.
+
+The first returns had scarcely begun to filter in, though, when Craig
+leaned over and whispered to me to go out and find her, either at her
+home, or if not there, at a woman's club of which she was one of the
+leading members.
+
+I found her at home and sent up my card. She had apparently lost
+interest in the election and it was with difficulty that I could
+persuade her to accompany me to the League headquarters. However, I
+argued the case with what ability I had and finally she consented.
+
+The other members of the Ashton family had monopolized the cars and we
+were obliged to take a taxicab. As our driver threaded his way slowly
+and carefully through the thronged streets it gave us a splendid chance
+to see some of the enthusiasm. I think it did Margaret Ashton good,
+too, to get out, instead of brooding over the events of the past few
+days, as she had seen them. Her heightened colour made her more
+attractive than ever.
+
+The excitement of any other night in the year paled to insignificance
+before this.
+
+Distracted crowds everywhere were cheering and blowing horns. Now a
+series of wild shouts broke forth from the dense mass of people before
+a newspaper bulletin board. Now came sullen groans, hisses, and
+catcalls, or all together, with cheers, as the returns swung in another
+direction. Not even baseball could call out such a crowd as this.
+
+Enterprising newspapers had established places at which they flashed
+out the returns on huge sheets on every prominent corner. Some of them
+had bands, and moving pictures, and elaborate forms of entertainment
+for the crowds.
+
+Now and then, where the crowd was more than usually dense, we had to
+make a wide detour. Even the quieter streets seemed alive. On some boys
+had built huge bonfires from barrels and boxes that had been saved
+religiously for weeks or surreptitiously purloined from the grocer or
+the patient house-holder. About the fires, they kept an ever watchful
+eye for the descent of their two sworn enemies--the policeman and the
+rival gang privateering in the name of a hostile candidate.
+
+Boys with armfuls of newspapers were everywhere, selling news that in
+the rapid-fire change of the statistics seemed almost archeologically
+old.
+
+Lights blazed on every side. Automobiles honked and ground their gears.
+The lobster palaces, where for weeks, Francois, Carl, and William had
+been taking small treasury notes for tables reserved against the
+occasion, were thronged. In theatres people squirmed uneasily until the
+ends of acts, in order to listen to returns read from the stage before
+the curtain. Police were everywhere. People with horns, and bells, and
+all manner of noise-making devices, with confetti and "ticklers" pushed
+up on one side of Broadway and down on the other.
+
+At every square they congested foot and vehicle traffic, as they paused
+ravenously to feed on the meagre bulletins of news.
+
+Yet back of all the noise and human energy, as a newspaperman, I could
+think only of the silent, systematic gathering and editing of the news,
+of the busy scenes that each journal's office presented, the haste, the
+excitement, the thrill in the very smell of the printer's ink.
+
+Miss Ashton, I was glad to note, as we proceeded downtown, fell more
+and more into the spirit of the adventure.
+
+High up in the League headquarters in the tower, when we arrived, it
+was almost like a newspaper office, to me. A corps of clerks was
+tabulating returns, comparing official and semi-official reports. As
+first the city swung one way, then another, our hopes rose and fell.
+
+I could not help noticing, however, after a while that Miss Ashton
+seemed cold and ill at ease. There was such a crowd there of Leaguers
+and their friends that it was easily possible for her not to meet
+Carton. But as I circulated about in the throng, I came upon him.
+Carton looked worried and was paying less attention to the returns than
+seemed natural. It was evident that, in spite of the crowd, she had
+avoided him and he hesitated to seek her out.
+
+There were so many things to think of thrusting themselves into one's
+attention that I could follow none consistently. First I found myself
+wondering about Carton and Miss Ashton. Before I knew it I was
+delivering a snap judgment on whether the uptown residence district
+returns would be large enough to overcome the hostile downtown vote. I
+was frankly amazed, now, to see how strongly the city as a whole was
+turning to the Reform League.
+
+A boy, pushing through the crowd, came upon Kennedy and myself, talking
+to Miss Ashton. He shoved a message quickly into Craig's hand and
+disappeared.
+
+"For heaven's sake!" he exclaimed as he tore open the envelope and
+read. "What do you think of that? My shadows report that Martin Ogleby
+has been arrested and his confession will be enough, with the Black
+Book and Betty Blackwell, to indict Dorgan. Kahn has committed suicide!
+Hartley Langhorne has sailed for Paris on the French line, with Mrs.
+Ogleby!"
+
+"Mary Ogleby--eloped?" repeated Miss Ashton, aghast.
+
+The very name seemed to call up unpleasant associations and her face
+plainly showed it. Kennedy had said nothing to her since the day when
+he had pleaded with her to suspend judgment.
+
+"By the way," he said in a low voice, leaning over toward her, "have
+you heard that those pictures of her were faked? It was really Dorgan,
+and some crook photographer cut out his face and substituted Carton's.
+We got the Black Book, this morning, too, and it tells the story of
+Mrs. Ogleby's misadventures--as well as a lot of much more important
+things. We got it from Mr. Murtha and---"
+
+"Mr. Murtha?" she inquired, in surprise.
+
+"It is a secret, but I think I can violate it to a certain extent for
+Mr. Carton is a party to it and--"
+
+Kennedy paused. He was speaking with the assurance of one who assumed
+that John Carton and Margaret Ashton had no secrets. She saw it, and
+coloured deeply.
+
+Then he lowered his voice further to a whisper and when he finished,
+her face was even a deeper scarlet. But her eyes had a brightness they
+had lacked for days. And I could see the emotion she felt as her slight
+form quivered with excitement.
+
+Kennedy excused himself and we worked our way through the press toward
+Carton.
+
+"Dorgan has lost his nerve!" ejaculated Craig as we came up with him,
+watching district after district which showed that the Boss's usual
+pluralities were being seriously reduced.
+
+"Lost his nerve?" repeated Carton.
+
+"Yes. I told him I would publish the whole affair of the photographs
+just as I knew it, not caring whom it hit. I advised him to read his
+revised statutes again about money in elections and I added the threat,
+'There will be no "dough day" or it will be carried to the limit,
+Dorgan, and I will resurrect Murtha in an hour!' You should have seen
+his face! There was no dough day. That's what I meant when I said it
+was to be a fair fight. You see the effect on the returns."
+
+Carton was absolutely speechless. The tears stood in his eyes as he
+grasped Kennedy's hand, then swung around to me.
+
+A terrific cheer broke out among the clerks in the outer office. One of
+them rushed in with a still unblotted report.
+
+Kennedy seized it and read:
+
+"Dorgan concedes the city by a safe plurality to Carton, fifty-two
+election districts estimated. This clinches the Reform League victory."
+
+I turned to Carton.
+
+Behind us, through the crowd, had followed a young lady and now Carton
+had no ears for anything except the pretty apology of Margaret Ashton.
+
+Kennedy pulled me toward the door.
+
+"We might as well concede Miss Ashton to Carton," he beamed. "Let's go
+out and watch the crowd."
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Ear in the Wall, by Arthur B. Reeve
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