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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78643 ***




                                                         ---------------
                                                         THORNLEY COLTON
                                                         BLIND DETECTIVE
                                                         ---------------




------------------------------------------------------------------------




                            THORNLEY COLTON
                            BLIND DETECTIVE


                                   BY

                            CLINTON H. STAGG

                         AUTHOR OF “HIGH SPEED”


                                NEW YORK
                             G. HOWARD WATT
                            558 MADISON AVE.
                                  1923

------------------------------------------------------------------------




                          Copyright, 1923, by
                             G. HOWARD WATT




                Printed in the United States of America

------------------------------------------------------------------------




                                CONTENTS


                                                      Page
              The First Problem--
                 The Keyboard of Silence,                7

              The Second Problem--
                 Unto the Third Generation,             56

              The Third Problem--
                 The Money Machines,                    94

              The Fourth Problem--
                 The Flying Death,                     130

              The Fifth Problem--
                 The Thousand Facets of Fire,          168

              The Sixth Problem--
                 The Gilded Glove,                     209

              The Seventh Problem--
                 The Ringing Goblets,                  258

              The Eighth Problem--
                 The Eye of the Seven Devils,          301

------------------------------------------------------------------------




                            THORNLEY COLTON

                            Blind Detective




                           THE FIRST PROBLEM

                        THE KEYBOARD OF SILENCE


                                   I.

Not often did mere man attract attention in the famous dining-room of
the “Regal,” but men and women alike, who were seated near the East
Archway, raised their eyes to stare at the man who stood in the doorway,
calmly surveying them. The smoke-glass, tortoise-shell library
spectacles, which made of his eyes two great circles of dull brown,
brought out the whiteness of the face strikingly. The nose, with its
delicately sensitive nostrils, was thin and straight; the lips, now
curved in a smile, somehow gave one the impression that, released by the
mind, they would suddenly spring back to their accustomed thin, straight
line. For a smile seemed out of place on that pale, masterful face, with
its lean, cleft chin. The snow-white hair of silky fineness that curled
away from the part to show the pink scalp underneath contrasted sharply
with the sober black of the faultless dinner-coat that fell in just the
proper folds from the broad shoulders and deep chest.

The eyes of the girl at the sixth table seemed to be held, fascinated.
The elder woman, who was with her, toyed with her salad and conformed to
convention by stealing covert glances at the man in the archway, and the
square-chinned, clean-looking young man who made the third of the party
stared openly, unashamed; but his eyes held not the other diners’ rude
questioning, nor yet the girl’s frank fascination.

“You are staring, Rhoda,” rebuked the elder woman mildly.

The girl turned her eyes with a little sigh.

“What wonderful character there is in his face!” she murmured.

“He is a wonderful character,” asserted the man, his face lighting up
boyishly, his tone one of admiration.

“You know him?” Both asked it in a breath, eyes eager.

“Yes. He is Thornley Colton, man about town, club member, musician,
whose recreation is the solving of problems that baffle other men. It
was he who found the murderer of President Parkins of the up-town
National, and, when the crash came, secured me my position in the
Berkley Trust.”

“A detective?” The elder woman asked it; the girl’s eyes were again on
Colton.

“No.” The man shook his head. “He jokingly calls himself a problemist,
and accepts only those cases that he thinks will prove interesting, for
the solving of them is merely his recreation. He takes no fees. The man
with him is his secretary, Sydney Thames, whose name is pronounced like
that of the river. He, too, is a remarkably handsome man, but he is
never noticed when with Thornley Colton, except as his coal-black hair
and eyes, and red cheeks, form a striking contrast to Colton.”

“I had not even noticed him,” confessed the elder woman, as she glanced
for the first time at the slim young man of twenty-five or six, who
stood at Colton’s side, eyes apparently taking in every detail of the
big dining-room. Then she remembered her duty as mentor. “You _must_ not
stare so rudely, Rhoda!” she chided.

“I don’t think Mr. Colton minds the stare,” the man said quietly. “He
has been totally blind since birth, though many people refuse to believe
it.”

“Blind!” They both breathed it, in their voices the tender sympathy all
women feel for the misfortunes of others.

“He is coming,” warned the elder woman unnecessarily.

They had seen the head-waiter apparently apologize to Colton, and step
aside. The secretary had whispered a few words, and Thornley Colton, his
slim stick held lightly and idly in his fingers, started down the aisle
between the rows of tables, shoulders swung back, chin up, followed by
Sydney Thames. The woman and the girl watched his approach with parted
lips, in their eyes mother fear for his safety as he hurried toward
them, stepping aside at exactly the proper moment to avoid a hurrying
waiter, walking around the very much overdressed, stout woman whose
chair projected a foot over the unmarked aisle line. As he neared their
table, they saw the thin lips frame a smile of friendly greeting.

“How do you do, Mr. Norris?” His voice, rich, of wonderful musical
timbre, seemed to thrill the girl with its kindliness and strength, as
he stepped around her chair to shake hands with her escort. “Sydney saw
you while we were waiting for our table.”

“Will you meet Miss Richmond?” asked Norris, when he had answered the
greeting in kind. Colton turned instantly to face the girl, his slim
white hand, with its long, tapering fingers, outstretched.

“It is a concession we of the darkness ask of every one,” he apologized.

Their hands met, the girl felt the warm grip, and her sensitive wrist
seemed to feel a touch, light as the touch of wind-blown thistle-down,
but it was gone instantly, and she knew it was but the telepathic thrill
of the meeting palms. She murmured a commonplace, and bit her lips in
vexation, because it was a commonplace. The man before her seemed to
call for more.

“Your singing is wonderful, Miss Richmond,” he declared
enthusiastically. “Sydney and I have had orchestra seats three nights
this week. You know, to me music must give the combined pleasures of
painting, sculpture, architecture, and other beautiful things the
average person doesn’t even appreciate.”

Her eyes expressed their pity, but her lips said only: “My mother, Mr.
Colton.” They shook hands across the table, Mrs. Richmond with a
heartiness that was not part of the artificial code New York has fixed,
he with a few words that brought a flush of pleasure to her faded
cheeks.

“Why didn’t Mr. Thames stay?” asked Norris curiously. “He hurried on as
though he thought we were plague victims.”

“He usually does,” smiled Colton. “He has a very curious fear. I’ll tell
you about it some time.”

“Why don’t you drop into the bank and see me some day? You haven’t been
in my tomb-like office for months. Miss Richmond and her mother saw me
at work for a few minutes this afternoon. It compares very favourably
with the dressing-rooms given to opera-singers, they say.”

“I should say so!” laughed the girl. “If you can compare Persian rugs
and mahogany with our cracked walls, and box-propped dressing-tables,
and plugged gas-jets!”

“Men always do take the best,” conceded Colton smilingly. Then he
addressed Norris directly. “How is Simpson attending to business
nowadays?”

“He has been away for a week. He came in this afternoon to amaze us with
the news that he had just been married. He didn’t have much to say about
his wife, however, except that he was going to turn over a new leaf.”

“That’s news!” whistled Colton. “He never struck me as the marrying
kind.”

“Nor any one else,” laughed Norris, with a tender, significant glance at
the girl across the table.

“I’ll have to look him up and congratulate him. Till we meet again,
then.” And with a pleasant nod of parting to each of them, a touch of a
chair leg with his slim stick, Colton hurried down the aisle to the
small table in the far corner, where Sydney Thames was giving his order
to the waiter. The serving-man responded to a friendly nod from Colton,
closed his order tablet, and hurried away. Thornley took a cigarette
from his case, scratched a match on the bronze box, and leaned
comfortably back in his chair.

“Some time, Sydney, your terrible fear of beautiful women is going to
get me into a very embarrassing position.” He said it half seriously,
half smilingly. “Instead of seventeen steps, it was but sixteen and a
short half. If it hadn’t been for Norris’s habit of nervously tapping
his glass with his finger-tips, my outstretched hand would have gone
back of his neck.”

“I thought I had figured it exactly!” There was earnest contrition in
the tone; the sombre, black eyes showed the pain of the mistake.

“It is forgotten,” dismissed Colton. Then: “But you should have stopped,
Sydney. Miss Richmond’s personality is as remarkable as her singing, and
her mother is so proud and happy she forgets to be embarrassed at the
difference between Keokuk and the Regal. Norris is lucky, for she loves
him, and he----” The smiling lips needed no finishing words.

“But she is already commanding two hundred dollars a week at the very
beginning of her career, and Norris cannot be earning more than five
thousand a year,” protested Thames.

“You poor boy!” smiled Colton. “You’ll never know women; that
susceptible heart of yours, which drives you away like a scared sheep
whenever a beautiful woman approaches, will never be good for anything
but pumping blood.”

“Thorn, don’t I know my weakness!” The tone was indescribably bitter. “I
must keep away, though I’m starving for the society of good women. To
meet one would be to fall in love, hopelessly, helplessly. I’d forget
that I was a thing of shame, a brat picked up on the banks of the river
that gave me the only name I know.”

Colton was instantly serious. “Starvation seems a peculiar cure for
hunger,” he mused. “But we have argued that so many times----” Again the
thin, expressive lips finished the sentence.

Then came the waiter with a club sandwich for Thames and Colton’s
invariable after-theatre supper that was always ready when he came, and
which he never needed to order; two slices of graham bread covered with
rich, red beef-blood gravy, and a bottle of mineral water. Colton’s slim
cane, hollow, and light as a feather, the slightest touch of which sent
its warning to his supersensitive finger-tips, rested between his knees
as he ate.

Sydney Thames nibbled his sandwich absentmindedly, eyes roving around
the dining-room, now stopping at a gaudily-dressed dowager, now at an
overpainted lady who smiled her fixed smile at the bull-necked man at
her table, now at the circle-eyed girl who stabbed the cherry from her
empty cocktail glass with a curved tine of her oyster fork; but always
coming back to the fresh, wholesomely beautiful face of Rhoda Richmond.
Then the sombre eyes would light up; for a beautiful face, to Sydney
Thames, was more intoxicating than wine, and, to his highly sensitive
nature, more dangerous.

Colton pushed his plate aside as the other’s eyes once more started
their round of the dining-room.

“The gods give gaudiness in recompense for the eye-sparkle they have
taken, and the wrinkles they have given,” Thornley Colton murmured
quietly. “One must come to a New York restaurant to realize the true
pathos of beauty.” Colton’s mood had been curiously serious since those
few words at Norris’s table.

Thames did not answer, for no answer was needed. His wandering eyes had
rested on a table to the left.

“One often wonders,” continued Colton, in that same musing, low-pitched
voice, “why a stout woman, like that one two tables to our left, for
instance, will suffer the tortures of her hereafter for the sake of
drinking high balls in a tight, purple gown.”

Sydney had turned his eyes to stare at Colton, as he always did when the
man who had picked him up as a bundle of baby-clothes on the banks of
the Thames, twenty-five years before, made an observation of this kind.
Many such had he heard, but never did they fail to startle him.

“How, in Heaven’s name, did you know what I was doing, or that she was
dressed in purple?” he demanded.

“You should keep both feet flat on the floor if you want to keep your
staring a secret,” laughed Colton quietly. “You forget that crossed
knees make your suspended foot tell my cane each time you turn your head
ever so slightly. See that my fingers are not on my stick when you
covertly watch the women you fear to meet.”

“But the purple gown?” demanded Sydney, repressing the inclination to
uncross his knees, and flushing at the amused smile the involuntary
first motion of the foot had brought to the lips of Colton.

“All stout women who breathe asthmatically wear purple,” declared Colton
emphatically. “It is the only unfailing rule of femininity. And to one
who has practised the locating of sounds that come to doubly sharp ears
the breathing part was easy. There is no one at the next table on the
left, you’ll observe. Now you can resume your overt watching of Miss
Richmond; see”--he laid both hands on the white table-cloth before
him--“I won’t look.”

The head-waiter stopped at the table.

“Mr. Simpson would like to have you come to his table, Mr. Colton. He
wants you to meet his wife.”

“His wife?” put in Thames quickly.

“She is, sir.” It was said with a positiveness there was no gainsaying.

“Where is Mr. Simpson?” asked Colton. “We had not seen him.”

“In the east wing, sir, where the palms are.”

“We will go to him immediately.”

“I’ll tell him, sir.” His beckoning finger brought the waiter who had
served them with the check.

Sydney Thames spoke. “Some one of his cheap actress friends has roped
him at last,” he said scornfully. “He’s a pretty specimen of man to be
first vice-president of the conservative Berkley Trust Company.”

“I’ll wager you’re wrong,” declared Colton quietly, as he handed the
waiter a two-dollar bill from his fold. “If it were one of the women for
whom he has been buying wine suppers for the past two years, she
wouldn’t be ‘where the palms are,’ nor would the waiter be so positive
of the marriage relation.”

“I’m not going,” protested Thames quickly.

“Surely, Sydney, you are not afraid a married woman will kidnap you?”
smiled Colton, as he took the stick between his fingers and prepared to
rise. “How many?”

Sydney, who had turned half around in his chair to gaze toward the
entrance to the east wing, faced him. “I’ll go,” he said shortly;
another hasty glance, and he rose with Colton. “Thirty-seven straight,
eighteen left, nine right. We will stop at the door of the east wing. I
can’t see it.”

“There are no pretty women to disturb the distance judgment you have
been so many years acquiring?” queried Colton mildly.

Without answering, Thames turned on his heel, and made his way rapidly
between the tables toward the east wing. Colton laughed silently, picked
up his change, and hurried after, his perfectly trained brain counting
the steps automatically, his thoughts busy elsewhere. He was thinking of
Simpson, who had gained such an unenviable reputation as a spender along
the gay White Way during the past two years.

Simpson had always interested him, student of human nature that he was,
as the one man who had never lived up to the impression Colton’s
unerring instinct had told him was the right one the first time they had
met. The problemist had expected things of Simpson, and Simpson had done
nothing but idle as much time as possible in the position as first
vice-president of one of the most conservative banks in the city, and
spend money on women.

Colton stopped for an instant beside Thames in the archway, apparently
gazing idly at the crowd of men and women at the palm-shaded tables.

“Two left, nineteen straight, half in,” directed Thames, stepping aside
to follow.

The heavy-lidded, thickset man, with the faint lines of blue vein
traceries in his cheeks, rose to meet them.

“This is a pleasure, Mr. Colton,” he exclaimed, in heavy-voiced
heartiness. “You are the one man I wanted to see; though I hardly
believed it would be my luck to catch you this night of all nights. You
knew the pace I was going, and I want you to meet the little girl I went
back to the old town to marry. We’ve been friends since we were tots.
Thank God, I waked up in time to know what a good woman means! When next
you see us it will be in our own home. One moment, please”--his voice
sank to an almost reverent whisper--“my wife is deaf and dumb, Mr.
Colton.”

Thames had heard; had seen, with curiously mixed feelings, the little
woman with the small, boyish face around which the tendrils of brown
hair curled from under the close-fitting toque, and had appraised the
slim, quietly dressed figure, the half smile as she stared inquiringly
at them. The girl seemed but a child, but he saw that her face was
heavily daubed with powder and rouge, as though its application had
neither been taught nor practised. Until those last explaining words he
had stood back with a half-pitying light in his eyes, for he knew
Simpson’s reputation with women. But at the quietly spoken sentence he
had undergone an instant change of feeling, such as only highly-strung,
hypersensitive men like him are capable of, toward the man who had gone
away from his women of wine to marry a simple country girl who could
neither speak nor hear.

Simpson’s fingers had been moving rapidly; he bowed toward Thornley
Colton. The girl smiled, and put out her small hand, the movement
throwing back from her wrist the filmy lace of the long sleeve. For a
moment they clasped hands; then the girl’s fingers worked again.

Simpson laughed. “She does not believe you are blind, Mr. Colton; she
says you have eyes like every one else.”

Thornley Colton smiled. “If you tell her that I’ve got to wear these
large-lensed, smoked glasses to prevent the light giving me a headache
you will probably never convince her,” he observed, as he refused the
chair the waiter had drawn up.

Sydney Thames acknowledged his introduction with a bow and the usual
meaningless words, but his eyes were soft and tender as a woman’s as
they met those of the girl in the instant’s glance she gave him before
the lashes were lowered. A woman’s face never failed to stir him.

“Won’t you sit down?” pleaded Simpson. “It will probably be the last
time you will ever find me in one of these gilded palaces. A man who has
been my kind of a fool _can_ appreciate his own fireside, and Gertie,
who was all aflutter to visit one of the famous Broadway restaurants,
recognized in ten minutes the crass artificiality it took me years to
discover.” He was holding her hand openly and unashamed as he said it.

Thornley Colton shook his head. “It is past my time for going home, and
you know my habits. A glass of Célestin’s at one-fifteen, the beauties
of the Moonlight Sonata on my piano for fifteen minutes, and then to
bed. If I may visit you at your home, Mrs. Simpson?” his outstretched
hand met that of the girl. “Ah, you read the lips? A wonderful
accomplishment to us who have never had eyes.” His lips framed a smile
of pleasure; he turned to Thames. “The same, Sydney?” he asked.

The secretary’s eyes travelled up the aisle. “The man nine steps up is
gesticulating quite freely.”

“Lots of room.” Colton’s slim stick touched a chair-leg, he bowed, and
hurried away, the hearty good-night of Simpson following. Thornley
Colton never needed any direction for going back over the same route,
for his mind, trained to the figures of steps, neither hesitated nor
made mistakes in following them backward. He stepped aside to avoid the
swinging arm of the loud-voiced man who was punctuating his liquor-born
blatancy with violent gestures, and paused at the archway of the main
dining-room for Thames.

“Is Norris still at his table?” he asked.

“It is empty.”

“Um!” Colton’s high forehead wrinkled a frown, his slim stick tapped his
leg. “Time enough to-morrow,” he announced finally, and started through
the maze of tables towards the entrance.

They received their hats and overcoats and left the big hotel to enter
the long, black car that awaited them at the north entrance at one
o’clock each morning. They were well on their way to the big,
old-fashioned brownstone house where Thornley Colton had been born,
before the silence was broken. Then Sydney Thames spoke:

“There must be a lot of latent goodness in a man who could take a woman
like that to love, and cherish, and protect,” he said slowly.

“You mean Miss Richmond?” The darkness concealed the whimsical smile on
Colton’s lips.

“No!” The negative was short. “Norris will marry Miss Richmond just
because she is beautiful and accomplished; because his man’s vanity will
be tickled to exhibit her before men as his possession. I mean Simpson,
who took a simple country girl whom God had handicapped, just because he
loved her. That means something.”

“But, Sydney”--Colton’s thin fingers rested lightly on the other’s
sleeve; there was just the faintest trace of laughter in the
words--“don’t you think she was a bit too heavily rouged?”

He felt the highly-strung man jump under his hand.

“Good heavens, Thorn!” Sydney burst out. “Sometimes I wonder if you
_are_ blind!”

“God gives fingers to the sightless, Sydney,” Colton’s voice was quietly
serious. “In the darkness the keyboard of my piano gives me the soul
secrets of dead men gone to dust. In the lights of a Broadway restaurant
the keyboard of silence gives me the secrets of living hearts. And they
cannot lie.”

“What do you mean? What have I missed?” Thames asked the questions
eagerly, tensely, for he knew the moods of this man who had been the
only father he had ever known; he understood that something of grave
portent had given its significance to the man who could not see, while
he with five perfect senses, had seen nothing, suspected nothing.

Colton pulled his crystalless watch from his pocket, and touched it with
a finger-tip. “One-thirty; we are fifteen minutes late.” He put his hand
on the door catch as the big machine slowed up before his home. And it
was not until they were ascending the broad brownstone steps that he
answered the question.

“You have missed the first act of what promises to be a very remarkable
crime, Sydney,” he said quietly.


                                  II.

Colton scowled when the red jack failed to turn up, but the mouth
corners smiled when the ace of diamonds slid between the sensitive
fingers to take its place in the top row of Mr. Canfield’s famous game.
The deuce followed, the red jack immediately after; then the problemist
looked up toward the doorway of the library.

“Well, Shrimp?” he smiled.

“They’s the theatrical papers yuh wanted.” The red-headed, freckle-faced
boy with the slightly-twisted nose came forward with an armful of big
magazines and newspapers, the front pages of which were adorned with
full-length portraits of stage celebrities. Before he quite reached the
table he stopped short, eyes crackling their excitement. “Snakes! You’re
gettin’ it, Mr. Colton! They’s the four of hearts and the five of
spades. Don’t stop now.”

Colton laughed. “All right, Shrimp. Do you want to do a little detective
work for me?”

“Do I?” The eyes danced with eagerness. “Ain’t I been studyin’? Nineteen
steps from the kitchen t’ the first chair in the dinin’-room. Six----”

“I know,” assured Colton hastily. “But you take those papers to your
room and write down the names of all the vaudeville actors--men, you
know--who have quit the stage within the last two months; where they
have gone, and why, if possible.”

“Snakes!” The boy’s face showed his disappointment. “Nick Carter never
had t’ do that.”

“He never had to count steps for a blind man, either,” smiled Thornley
Colton. “You do that and there’ll probably be some real detective
work--shadowing, disguises, and the rest of it.”

There was no answer. The boy had taken a firmer grip on the papers, and
was already out of the room.

The four of hearts and the five of spades had been placed when Sydney,
face broad in a smile, entered.

“What’s the matter with ‘The Fee’?” he demanded. “He ran past me as
though he were on his way to a fire.” Thames always referred to Shrimp
as The Fee, because the red-headed, freckle-faced boy had become part of
the Colton household after a particularly baffling case, at the
conclusion of which the joy of capturing the murderer had been
overshadowed by the blind man’s sorrow for the broken-nosed boy who had
jumped between him and a vicious blackjack. And Shrimp had been his fee
for the case. As the boy’s mother was the murdered one, and his father
the murderer, there had been no one to object.

Before Colton had a chance to voice his laughing explanation, the
tinkling telephone-bell on the desk demanded attention. At the first
words the thin lips tautened to a straight line, the voice became
pistol-like in its crispness, the muscles under the pale skin of the
face became tense.

The problemist had a problem.

“When? Last night. All right. Still that two-wire burglar connection on
the safe? Never mind further details. We’ll be right down.”

As his hand dropped the receiver on the hook a finger pressed the garage
bell button that would bring his machine instantly at any hour of the
day or night.

“Get your hat and coat, Sydney,” he ordered curtly. “We’re going to the
Berkley Trust Company. Somebody’s gotten away with half a million in
negotiable bonds!”

“Half a million?” gasped Thames.

“So they said. Didn’t wait for details.” Colton grabbed his private
phone-book of often-needed numbers, and ran his fingers down the backs
of the thin pages on which the names and numbers had been heavily
written with a hard pencil. As Sydney hurried out he heard the curt
voice give a number over the phone. And it was fully five minutes before
Colton took his place in the car.

In the smooth-running machine, with the wooden-faced Irish chauffeur at
the wheel, Sydney Thames voiced the question:

“Last night, you said?”

“Yes, the second act came sooner than I expected,” broke in Thornley
Colton. “I underrated the man.” And the expression on the pale face
augured ill for some one.

The funereal atmosphere of the Berkley Trust Company could be _felt_ as
they entered. In the office of the third secretary, the white-haired
president of the institution stopped his nervous pacing to mumble a
greeting in tremulous accents. First Vice-President Simpson’s grave face
broke into a smile of welcome. Norris raised his bowed head from his
hands, and came forward joyfully, pleadingly. The red-faced man who had
been standing over him kept a step away, but always near enough to touch
him with an outstretched hand.

“My God, Mr. Colton! They think I’m guilty!” There was agony unutterable
in Norris’s voice.

“Ridiculous!” snapped Simpson, his heavy-lidded eyes half closed. “Mr.
Colton will soon put this detective right.”

The problemist nodded a grim acquiescence, and took the outstretched
hand of Norris. “I know better,” he said kindly. The red-faced man gave
voice to a grunt, and Colton instantly swung around to face him. “So
you’ve cleaned it up already, Jamison?” he asked mildly.

“Nobody said he was guilty,” growled the red-faced central-office man
significantly. “I just been questionin’ him, that’s all.”

“And accusing him with every question!” snapped Colton. “Like the rest
of your kind, you haven’t the intelligence to suit your methods to the
crime. Every crime must be worked according to the old Mulberry Street
formula. That didn’t change with the modern Centre Street building.”

“But we know enough not to make any cracks till we get all the
information,” sneered Jamison. “We don’t hand out that know-it-all stuff
till we know _something_!”

“True,” smiled the problemist with his lips, but there was no smile in
his tone. Two hectic spots glowed in his cheeks, the muscles worked
under the pale skin. “What do you think, President Montrose?” The
white-haired president halted his pacing once more, and stroked his
Vandyke.

“The first stain on the unsullied escutcheon of the Berkley Trust
Company,” he groaned. “In all of the half century----”

“I know all that!” broke in Colton impatiently. “What happened? Why are
the police here instead of the protective-agency men?”

“I was excited,” moaned the president. “It was the first thing that
occurred to me. In all the half century of----”

“I guess we were all excited,” interjected Simpson, his lips twisted in
a wry smile. “I know I was up in the air. I came down here, happier than
I ever was before in my life, to arrange for a short vacation to take a
wedding trip. Now this comes up. When I came to my senses I telephoned
for you, because I want the robbery solved as soon as possible. The
little girl has banked so much on our little time.”

“Too bad,” murmured Colton. “Tell me the story, Norris.” Before he could
get an answer he turned to Thames, who always stayed discreetly in the
background when Colton was on a case. “See that no one goes near that
safe, Sydney; I may want to examine it.”

“Kind of dropped that bluff of bein’ blind, ain’t you?” sneered Jamison,
who was one of the hundreds of persons in New York who would not believe
that Thornley Colton was really sightless. And the problemist did not
deign to explain that once he had been in a room and touched its objects
with his cane his trained brain held the correct mental picture for
ever.

“The bonds were fifty in number, ten thousand each, government fours,
negotiable anywhere,” began Norris, licking his dry lips to make the
words come easier. “They were the bulk of the Stillson estate, on which
I was working. We are settling it up. As third secretary my work is with
trusts and estates. It was necessary to have everything finished by
to-night. I worked late yesterday, so late that the bonds and other
papers could not go into the time-locked vaults, and I had to be at work
on them this morning before the clock-release time.”

“Is it customary to keep valuable bonds in the small safe in this
office?” interrupted Colton.

“It is not unusual. The safe is practically as strong as the big vaults,
and only lacks the clocks. This office is really part of the vault
itself, the walls are windowless, and of four-foot concrete reinforced
by interlocked steel rails. The sheet-steel door, the only entrance to
the room, opens into a small cage that is occupied during the day by
Thompson, head of the trust and estate routine clerks, and at night by
one of our two watchmen. The watchmen never leave it, because it often
happens that valuable papers and bonds are left out of the big vaults so
that we can work on them before nine o’clock, the hour set on the
vault’s clocks. To get to the steel door of this office one would have
to enter the outer and inner steel cages, the steel-barred door of the
small ante-room, besides setting off burglar-alarms on all, disturbing
the watchman, and ringing the bells in the burglar-alarm department of
the Bankers’ Protective Association, of which we are a member. And there
was no sign of a break, the safe was opened with the combination that
only Mr. Montrose and Mr. Simpson and myself know.”

“The watchman could get to this door without any trouble?”

“Both have been in the employ of the bank for forty years. They are
absolutely above suspicion. Both are illiterate. Even though they could
enter the office, they could not open the safe, and even if they did
that they would not know enough to steal all the notes I had made
regarding the estate, or the bonds that have so utterly vanished. They
have been sent for, however, and should be here any minute.”

“Were the notes you made stolen, too?”

“All of them.”

“Any of the other employees of the bank know the bonds were in this
safe?”

“Several, probably.”

“All have access to this room, at any time?”

“Only Thomas, the head of the T. and E. clerks.”

“Trustworthy?”

“He grew up with the bank.”

“You require other clerical assistance at times?”

“Thomas takes the papers from this office, and the clerks get them from
him outside. All must be returned to me before closing time. I carefully
checked over every one last night before any of them went away.”

“Any one in here yesterday while you were at work on the papers; any one
who could have seen the bonds?”

For a moment there was no answer; then it came, almost in a whisper:
“Miss Richmond and her mother were in for a few moments----”

“And I was, too, by Jove!” The interruption came from Simpson. “And I
remember asking you how you were getting on with the Stillson estate. I
just finished my part when I went away. I guess I really held them up
longer than I should.”

“Has Miss Richmond been sent for?” Colton paid absolutely no heed to the
first vice-president.

A grunting laugh from the detective. “She sure has, bo. After I found
out this guy’s stage lady had been in here with a tailor’s suit-box
after closin’ time, my partner went right up to her hotel.”

“By Heaven! You----” Norris rose to his feet, face black with fury.
Colton’s hand on his shoulder forced him back into the chair. Sydney
Thames, to whom all women were angels, clenched his fists.

“Is that true?” There was a new tone to Colton’s voice.

Norris seemed to recognize the menace. “She isn’t guilty, I tell you!
She can’t be. She’s--Listen, man! She’s my wife!”

“Your wife!” They all echoed it. The detective with laughing triumph;
President Montrose with horror; Sydney Thames in dazed surprise; Simpson
with a half-suppressed, significant gasp.

“We were married two days ago; but it was to be a secret until the end
of her season.”

“How long ago was she sent for?”

The detective answered: “My side kick ought to be back now. We was on
the job there, all right, all right.”

Voices outside came to their ears--the harsh, commanding voice of a man,
the half-subdued sobbing of a woman. The door was thrown open, and Rhoda
Richmond, opera singer, and wife of Norris, was half pushed, half
carried into the small room.

“Good work, Jim!” grinned Jamison. “Did she put up a howl at the hotel?”

“Hotel?” growled the other scornfully. “No hotel for hers. I had a lot
of luck or I’d never’ve got her. She was boardin’ a boat fer South
America that sails in an hour.”

“It’s a lie!” Norris screamed the words as he leaped toward the man
whose rough hand was clenched around the slim arm of the girl. Sydney
Thames, obeying Colton’s silent signal, forced him back, his own hands
trembling. The problemist without a word untwisted the central-office
man’s fingers, and gently seated the girl in a chair at the long table.

“Who the----” The blustering detective was cut off suddenly.

“We’ve had enough of your strong-arm methods!” Colton’s voice was hard
as flint. “We’ll get some facts now.” The hardness vanished; in its
place came gentle sympathy. “When did you get the message, Miss
Richmond?” he asked.

The voice seemed to have the reassuring effect of a pat on the head of a
hurt child. With an effort the girl controlled her sobs, and answered as
though it had been the most natural question in the world: “An hour
ago--over the telephone--I thought I recognized How--Mr. Norris’s voice.
He wanted me to meet him at the Buenos Aires dock. He had to go to South
America secretly, he said, and I must tell no one. I hurried to the dock
without even telling mother. I waited for an hour, but he did not come;
then I decided to go aboard and see if he had missed me and gone to his
state room. This man--said Howard had--robbed--I thought----”

She broke down again.

“I guess that’s bad!” grinned Jamison gloatingly. “In another hour
there’d of been a clean get-away.”

“The whereabouts of the bonds doesn’t seem to worry you!” snapped Colton
sarcastically.

“The stuff ain’t never far away from the guy that took it,” growled
Jamison. “When you get through your know-it-all talk we’ll sweat that
out, all right.”

“Did you have a tailor’s suit-box with you yesterday?” asked Colton
abruptly of the girl.

“Yes. I called to see if my new walking-suit was finished. It was all
ready to be sent to my home, but when I saw the poor, tired little boy
who would have to carry it I took it myself. The tailor is just around
the corner, on the avenue; that is why mother and I dropped in here.”

“Of course,” nodded Colton, his teeth snapping together as he seemed to
sense the derisive grins on the faces of the detectives. “Did you
recognize the bonds among the papers on which Mr. Norris was working?”

“Oh, he showed them to me, and we laughingly spoke of what we could do
with half a million dollars. Then, when he took mother out to show her
around the bank--I was too tired--I picked one up and read it.”

“Rhoda!” cried Norris. He could realize the present significance of
yesterday’s innocent words.

“That’ll be about all from you!” scowled Jamison. “If this guy wants to
third-degree her, and cinch it for us, let him.”

“An’ if he don’t cinch it this will.” The other detective pulled a paper
from his pocket. “Here’s the _Buenos Aires’s_ passenger list, and here’s
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Morris, who booked yesterday, added in pencil. Morris
for Norris! Slick enough to be almost good.”

Every one in the room but Colton seemed to be shocked into a state of
stupefied rigidity.

“Now----” Jamison said that word in the tone one uses to introduce some
especially clever thing, and accompanied it with a sarcastic glance
toward the blind man, who tapped his trouser leg with his cane in
thoughtful silence. “If _you_ ain’t got no objection we’ll take these
two to headquarters, and get a line on where they got the stuff cached.”
He paused suggestively, mockingly.

The permission came, with a deprecatory wave of the cane, and a smile
that was menacing in its very suaveness. “Go as far as you like,
Jamison. Don’t be too gentle with them.”

“My God, Mr. Colton! You don’t think----” The words choked in Norris’s
throat.

“I think you had better go.” The problemist’s tone was peculiarly quiet.
“Jamison and his partner have the reputation of being the two wealthiest
detectives in the department. No one knows how they got it, but they’ve
enough to give you and your wife a twenty-thousand-dollar nest egg each
on a false-arrest suit. Isn’t that worth a few hours’ discomfort? I can
prove your innocence when they have gone. They worry me here.”

Simpson whistled, and turned it into a jerky laugh. “Gad, that was
clever!” he exclaimed.

“Oh, is that so!” The detectives chorused it, in their voices
sarcasm--and just a tinge of something else, too. Colton knew the one
thing that would make them stop and think.

“Are you going?” snapped Colton.

“We’ll see them two watchmen first,” growled Jamison.

“Good!” The problemist laughed at the sudden change. “I think you’ll
have quite a crowd to take down to head-quarters if you hang around long
enough. Before I started I telephoned to the burglar-alarm telegraph
department of the protective agency to get hold of the men who answered
the alarm that rang in from this office early this morning.”

“What burglar-alarm?” snarled Jamison. He whirled on the white-haired
president. “Why didn’t you tell us there was an alarm rung in?”

“Really”--the Vandyke received several severe yanks--“I didn’t know it.
We do not receive the clock reports and emergency alarm sheets until
about noon. Er--Mr. Colton, might I ask where you got this information?”

“I telephoned for it,” answered Colton curtly. “If these policemen
hadn’t been so anxious to make arrests, and the robbery hadn’t been too
obvious for their thick heads, they might have investigated. But they
are just head-quarters men; the obvious arrest is the one they always
make. Feet make good central-office men, not heads. Ah, here are the
men, all together.”

They came in slowly, two old men first; one with straggly, white
whiskers that concealed the weak chin and grew up around the faded,
watery eyes; the other’s parchment-like face a network of wrinkles.
Honesty shone from every part of them; the weak, helpless honesty of
their kind.

As Colton took each man’s hand with a murmured greeting he felt it
tremble in his. The aged watchmen knew that something had happened;
something that concerned them and the bank they had guarded so long. The
two men from the burglar-alarm company nodded to the two detectives, and
their eyes narrowed as they shook the hand of the problemist. Both knew
him, and both knew this had been no common summons. Thornley Colton
never bothered with common things. Sydney Thames had pulled two chairs
up to the table, and the old men sat down. Colton lighted a cigarette
thoughtfully, then he spoke:

“This morning, gentlemen, that small safe was robbed of five hundred
thousand dollars’ worth of government bonds.” His slim cane, apparently
held idly between his fingers, touching the chair of the man nearest
him, felt the watchman’s involuntary jump. The others saw the old jaws
drop, saw the watchmen glance helplessly at each other, their trembling
fingers picking at worn trouser-knees. Colton heard the gasp of the two
protective-agency men.

“I knowed it!” quavered the white-whiskered watchman. “I knowed
something’d happen when Mary took sick.”

“Who’s Mary?” queried Colton interestedly. The others crowded forward.

“She’s Mary, my wife. She’s been scrubbin’ the bank floors fer thirty
years, an’ nobody ever said a word against her.” He glanced at them all
with pathetic belligerence. “She even picked up the pins she found on
the floor, and put ’em in a box on the cashier’s desk.”

“That’s true,” laughed Simpson. “It’s the joke of the bank.”

“And she was taken sick last night?” Thornley asked gently.

“A week ago.” The other watchman answered, while the first brushed his
dry lips with his work-gnarled hand. “Mrs. Bowden, she’s got the
consumption, and lives across the hall from us and----”

“Where do you live?” interrupted Colton.

“Sixteen hundred Third Avenue. I been boardin’ with him an’ his wife fer
thirty years. Mrs. Bowden’s been doin’ Mary’s work. We didn’t say
nothin’ about Mary bein’ sick, ’cause she might get laid off. An’ Mrs.
Bowden’s awful poor.” His voice was a childish, quavering treble.

“Last night, after Mrs. Bowden had gained your confidence, you allowed
her to scrub Mr. Norris’s office?” encouraged Colton.

Norris started. “I’d forgotten that!” he ejaculated. A motion from
Colton commanded silence.

“Yes,” trembled Mary’s husband. “John opened the door, an’ started to
punch his clocks, an’ I stayed in the ante-room, like I allus do, to
watch Mrs. Bowden. Then somehow the door got closed. An’ Mrs. Bowden got
scared there in the dark. She screamed an’ cried till it was real sad.
But John had the key, an’ he had to punch his clocks on the minute, er
Mr. Montrose’d be mad when he got the records next day. An’ I couldn’t
leave my place in the ante-room. So I encouraged her, sayin’ that
John’ld be back in half an hour an’ let her out. She quieted after a
while, an’ didn’t scream so loud, but I could hear her stumblin’ around.
Then John had to run to the front door to see who was knockin’, an’ he
let these gentlemen in. The burglar-alarm on the safe had rung, they
said, an’----”

“Never mind that part,” halted Colton. “One of these men will tell me
that part.”

“We was called at seven-eighteen,” began the taller of the two Bankers’
Protective Agency men, “by the safe bell. The safe is connected with one
wire, and under the carpet, running all around the safe, is a thin steel
plate connected with the other. A man standing near enough to touch the
safe forms a connection that rings our gong. In the day-time, of course,
we pull the switch. We got here, and found the door locked, an’ we could
hear moaning. This guy”--he indicated the one with the straggly
beard--“unlocked the door, and behind it was a woman, her skirt pinned
up around her, laying on the floor, frightened to death. When she seen
us she jumped to her feet with a little screech, and muttered something
about thanking God.”

“You were satisfied that she was frightened?”

“Sure! But we didn’t let it go at that. We snapped on every light, and
examined the room. Nothing had been touched. We frisked the woman,
gentle, of course, but enough to know that she hadn’t a thing on her. We
finally got it out of her that she’d fell against the safe trying to
find the door in the dark. She didn’t know enough to snap on a light.”

“She couldn’t have had fifty ten-thousand-dollar bonds on her person?”

Both men laughed. “Gee, Mr. Colton,” laughed the short one. “She was so
frail you could almost see through her. She couldn’t hardly have hid a
cigarette paper without making a hump.”

“What happened then?”

“She picked up the pail she had--it was full of dirty scrub water, and
the yellow bar of soap was bobbing around in it--and John, here, took
her into the cashier’s cage. We hung around, talking, an’ watching her
scrub and weep into the pail until it was time fer her to go home. She
was so all in I put her on a car.”

“Um!” Colton puffed his cigarette in silence; then he turned to Jamison
and his partner. “Looks mighty suspicious, doesn’t it, Jamison? I’d
advise you to arrest these four men and get the woman. Five hundred
thousand is likely to make any honest man a crook.”

“Some kidder, ain’t you?” sneered Jamison. “I know Pete, there, an’ if
he says it was all right, it was. We got the guilty parties first off,
an’ we’ll get the stuff, too!”

The smile went from Colton’s lips instantly. “You arrest them, and we’ll
start false-arrest proceedings in an hour!” he warned. “You leave Norris
and Miss Richmond here! Any one but a fool detective would know they
weren’t guilty.”

As he said the last word he jumped toward the safe, ran his highly
sensitive fingers over the steel surface, knelt down, brushed the heavy
carpet lightly with his finger tips. The two hectic spots on his cheeks
glowed redder; the nostrils quivered like those of a hound on the scent,
even the eyes, behind the great, round, smoked glass lenses seemed to
shine. Silently they watched him. He lowered his face almost to the
floor, the cane was laid down, and his hand gave the carpet a resounding
slap. They crowded closer. One hand went to his hip-pocket, a
handkerchief brushed the hard-wood floor under the safe, between the
edge of the rug and the wall. He rose, touched the burning end of his
cigarette ever so lightly to the linen handkerchief that was now covered
with a fine yellow powder.

“See it! See it!” he snapped. “You couldn’t before because it was the
same colour as the hard-wood floor.”

“It’s wood-polish powder, used for cleaning the varnished wood,” sneered
Jamison, stepping forward. “We don’t want----”

“Smell it, then!” The blind man thrust the handkerchief under the
central-office man’s nose. “Do you recognize it now? It’s sulphur.
Ordinary powdered sulphur. The thing that would tell any man how the
bonds were taken out of the office. Go to a drug store and find out what
sulphur is used for.”

He thrust the handkerchief into his coat-pocket, brushed off the knees
of his trousers, and picked up his stick.

“Come, Sydney,” he said quietly. “We’ve finished.”

Before the astonished men could make move or protest he hurried from the
office, automatically counting the steps. He jumped into the waiting
machine, Sydney Thames followed, and as Simpson and Jamison ran to the
door, he snapped: “Home, John!” to the Irish chauffeur, and the machine
sped away.

Around the first corner he leaned forward.

“Sixteen hundred Third Avenue--quick!” he ordered.

“You don’t think those two old watchmen guilty?” asked Thames, in
surprise.

“No!” The tone was almost brusque. “Merely an unimportant detail I want
to clear up.”

“You certainly left that crowd in the office at sixes and sevens.”
Thames laughed at the recollection.

“I intended to. That’s why I went into all those details. I wanted to
leave every one up in the air, especially the two detectives. They’ll
begin to think now. And they won’t let any one get away before we have
made this call. I want to think, now.”

Sydney Thames knew the moods of the blind man; knew he could expect no
explanations, or even replies, until Colton was ready to give them; so
they sped in silence to the upper East Side.

Soon they were on upper Third Avenue. Overhead the clanking “L” trains
pounded their din into the two men’s ears. The streets were crowded with
their heterogeneous mass of men, women, and children. The rusty
fire-escapes staggered drunkenly across the dirty, red tenement-fronts.

The look of tense concentration left Colton’s face. “A far cry from the
luxurious, staidly conservative Berkley Trust, eh, Sydney?” He smiled,
leaning back in the cushions, puffing his cigarette as though untroubled
by a serious thought; his eyes, behind the smoked library glasses,
seemingly fixed on the narrow strip of blue sky overhead.

The car came to a stop.

“Is this it, John?”

“Th’ saloon on th’ corner is fifteen-ninety-four, sorr.”

“Lead the way, Sydney.” Again the twin red spots glowed in Colton’s
white cheeks, he jumped to the sidewalk, his slim stick tapping his
trouser-leg eagerly.

Thames stepped along beside him, close enough for his coat-sleeve to
touch that of Thornley Colton. And with that slight touch to guide him
the problemist followed; for Thornley Colton was a trifle sensitive over
his blindness, and nothing made him angrier than an attempt to lead him.
Sydney found the entrance, between a second-hand-clothing store and a
pawnbroker’s shop. As he stopped to make sure of the weather-dimmed,
painted number the clothing-store proprietor popped out, rubbing his
dirty palms together, and coughing apologetically.

“On which floor does Mrs. Bowden live?” asked Colton sharply.

“Der fourt’, front. You maybe like some clo’es?”

“Is her husband watchman at the Berkley Trust Company?”

“He’s dead. You means Mrs. Schneider, across the hall. Her man watches.
Dere boarder also. You like a elegant skirt for der poor vimens. Such
a----”

Thames opened the door, and they left the clothing man in the middle of
his sentence. In the dark hall Sydney made his way cautiously. Colton,
cane lightly touching the heels of the man ahead, followed
unhesitatingly. The journey up the rickety steps was torture to Colton.
To his doubly acute ears and sense of smell the odours, the squalling of
half-starved babies were terrible, but his brain automatically counted
the steps so that he would have not the slightest difficulty in finding
his way back to the automobile.

“Schneider first,” whispered Colton, as Thames stopped in the
fourth-floor hall.

In the dim light Thames saw that they were standing between two doors.

“I don’t know which it is, but I’ll take a chance.” He knocked on the
one at his left.

The one behind immediately popped open.

“Mrs. Bowden’s gone away,” shrilly proclaimed a tottery old woman,
bobbing her head.

“Could you give us her address?” asked Colton, doffing his hat and
bowing politely.

“Laws!” The woman’s fluttering hand set her spectacles farther askew, in
a hurried effort to straighten them. “She’s gone to spend the day with
her sister in Brooklyn. Them boys of mine pestered her till she’s near
sick. And she bein’ so delicat’ an’ out late last night washin’ dishes
at the church sociable.”

“Are you Mrs. Schneider?”

The darkness hid the smile the reference to the “boys” had caused.

“I’m her. Be you the Associated Charities? Mis’ Bowden said she’d asked
fer help. She came here two weeks ago, after losin’ her job in the
department store on account of her weak lungs. She had to take in odd
day’s work. Asthma, _she_ calls it, but I ain’t fooled on consumption.
Two of my----”

“And you helped her by pretending you were ill?” interrupted Colton.

“I was sick fer two days.” The woman hastened to set him right. “But she
was so powerful glad to earn a few cents fer her asthma snuff, not that
it is asthma. My sister’s brother----”

“Of course she left the key with you until her return?” Colton left the
sister’s brother in mid-air.

“Yes; but----” There was just a shade of suspicion in the voice.

“As agents of the Associated Charities we must make an examination of
the room, to prove that she is really in need of financial help,”
assured Colton gravely. “We can wait until she returns, of course, but
this is the last application day for this month.”

“Laws! I’ll get it right away.” She darted back into the room with
surprising agility, and returned a moment later with an iron key tied to
a broken-tined fork.

“There’s no need of bothering you, Mrs. Schneider,” declared Colton
earnestly, as Thames took the key.

“Laws! Soon’s I get these pataters on I’ll be right with you. My boys
had to go down to their bank----” The rest of the sentence was lost, for
as she turned to the stove Colton had jerked Thames from the door.

“Quick!” he whispered. In an instant the key was in the lock, and the
door was open. Colton pushed his way in, his cane touching the scarred,
tumbled bed and the one broken chair. “Where’s the trunk?” he queried,
cane feeling around.

“No sign of one, nor a case.”

“Damn!” snapped Colton. “The bureau drawers! See what your eyes find.”

Thames had the top drawer open almost before he had finished. He
whistled in amazement. “Nothing but an empty pill-box, with no
druggist’s label, three quills with the feathers cut off, and a tuft of
cotton. What the----”

“Those are what I want! Put them in your pocket!” The tenseness went out
of his voice; it became politely ingratiating, for his keen ears had
heard the woman coming. “There is no doubt that Mrs. Bowden is in need
of our assistance, Mrs. Schneider,” he said smoothly. “Er--is that some
of her asthma snuff in the top bureau-drawer?”

She ran past him, and bobbed her head over the open drawer. “Yes, sir;
there is a little sprinkled over the bottom. You got mighty powerful
eyes, mister.” She nodded vigorously at the blind man. He had not been
within five feet of the bureau. “She’s dead set on it bein’ asthma, but
my sister’s brother was----”

“Do you know anything against Mrs. Bowden’s character?” Again the
sister’s brother was left dangling.

“Laws, no. She’s that frightened she’s afraid of her own shadow. I’m the
on’y one in the house she took to, an’ even me she kept at a distance.”
Another vigorous nod. “An’ so modest! Laws, she wouldn’t ha’ come into
the halls half dressed, like some of the other women does. An’ clean!
Laws! She lugged all her clo’es over to her sister’s in Brooklyn to-day,
to be washed in their Thirtieth Century Washer; not that I----”

“Ah, thank you, but we have four other calls to make.” And, bowing
gravely, Colton backed from the room, and hurried toward the head of the
stairs, followed by Thames and the shrill-voiced encomiums of the woman.

They took their places in the car silently, and it was not until they
had left the noise of the avenue for the quiet of the side-streets that
Colton spoke.

“What do you think of it, Sydney?” asked the problemist gravely.

“I’m completely at sea,” confessed Thames, with a shake of his head. “It
looked awfully bad for Norris when we arrived at the bank. Then that
South American boat business. How did you know she had received a
message?” he asked suddenly.

“Didn’t. But I knew Miss Richmond, or rather Mrs. Norris. Common sense
would have told any one that could be the only reason for her presence
at the dock. Jamison and his kind don’t use common sense. They use the
old policeman’s formula; arrest the logical suspect and then convict
him. With persons like Norris and his wife, each half doubting, half
suspecting, either would have confessed to save the other. It was an
ideal arrest, from the police view-point.”

“Then you seemed to involve the two watchmen and the two men from the
protective agency. Jamison will have a whole waggon-load.”

“He’ll take no one,” answered Colton. “I know him. He’ll spend the rest
of the day trying to find out what I was talking about. Then he’ll
telephone to head-quarters, and they’ll send men to find out who sent
the message to Miss Richmond, and to locate Mrs. Bowden.”

“There’s the woman, Thorn!” Thames spoke nervously, excitedly. “She took
a dress-suit case, presumably full of clothes, to her ‘sister’ in
Brooklyn. The bonds----”

“You forget that the agency men saw her come out of the room
empty-handed; they even searched her, and one put her on the trolley.”
Colton smiled curiously. “This was wholly a man’s job, Sydney. The work
of the rarest kind of criminal; a detailist. This crime, while perfectly
simple, is, I think, unique in its attention to details. That’s why it
interests me.”

“Simple!” ejaculated Thames. “Simple? You speak as though you knew the
guilty man.”

“I do. Perfectly. I knew last night.”

“Last night? The----”

“The robbery was committed early to-day. Exactly.”

“Why--why----” Helpless amazement was in Sydney Thames’s voice. “Why
don’t you arrest him? Why all this----”

“Simply because I would be laughed at. I haven’t the proof--yet. The
usual criminal stumbles on his opportunity, and seizes it in a haphazard
fashion. The rare criminal, the detailist, attends to every detail;
works his problem out with the shrewdness and forethought of a captain
of finance, plans a coup months ahead. Then he creates the opportunity.
You must understand, Sydney, that half a million is worth a few months’
work.”

“But suspicion points only to Miss Richmond, Norris, and this Mrs.
Bowden.”

“Suspicion points to every one,” corrected the problemist. “Doesn’t it
seem suspicious that President Montrose should call in the police when
he would naturally take all steps in his power to avoid publicity?
Doesn’t the very eagerness of the central-office men to arrest Norris
and his wife seem queer? Isn’t there a bit of suspicion in Simpson’s
confession that he delayed the Stillson estate until Norris was
compelled to work after hours on them? Doesn’t Miss Richmond’s story
that she was carrying her suit home to save work for a delivery boy seem
highly improbable and unwomanlike? How about Norris telling his wife of
the bonds? An unbusinesslike proceeding in the case of half a million’s
worth of negotiable bonds, truly. Didn’t the two men who answered the
early-morning alarm seem a bit too sure that nothing was wrong? Weren’t
the two watchmen in the conspiracy to pretend that Mrs. Schneider was
ill, so that a woman whom they had known but two weeks could gain access
to the bank? Doesn’t the finding of an unlabelled pill-box, three
featherless quills, and surgeon’s cotton in the otherwise empty room of
a woman dying with tuberculosis strike you as strange? As a further
detail in this crime of details, doesn’t my confession that I knew the
criminal before the crime was committed seem a trifle like guilty
knowledge?” He smiled broadly.

“Great Scott, Thorn!” Sydney Thames’s voice trailed off in a whistle of
pure bewilderment. “You’ve involved every one.”

“Oh, no.” Colton snapped his cigarette into the street. “Not every one.
An unfortunate vaudeville actor will appear on the scene as soon as I
get the list on which I left Shrimp busily at work.”


                                  III.

In the absolute darkness of the shade-drawn library Thornley Colton
softly whistled a syncopated version of Mendelssohn’s “Spring Song” as
his deft fingers filled an empty goose-quill with a fine white powder
from an improvised paper funnel. He plugged the open end with a small
wad of cotton; then his wonderfully sharp ears caught the rustle of the
double portières.

“Oh, Sydney,” he called, “have you heard anything from the bank this
morning?”

Thames entered the darkness unhesitatingly, for his constant practice of
judging distance and figuring steps for Colton had made him almost as
much at home in the darkness as the blind man himself.

“No,” he answered shortly. Then, with the frank criticism of long
friendship: “It’s a crime, Thorn, for you to be idle while that girl is
being dogged, and harassed, and----”

“I thought she sang remarkably well last night for a person under such a
strain,” interrupted Colton musingly.

“It was wonderful, wonderful!” Sydney Thames spoke with the breathless
enthusiasm a beautiful girl always aroused in his woman-hungry heart.

“Here, here!” protested the problemist laughingly. “Remember that she is
another man’s wife!”

“Great heavens, Thorn! How can you laugh?” cried Thames resentfully.
“Think of those two dogs of detectives, questioning, bulldozing,
shadowing! Why, they didn’t let Miss Richmond get away from the bank
until late in the afternoon, then Jamison insisted on going with her.
His partner hung around the bank till it closed----”

“Trying to discover the use of powdered sulphur,” smiled Colton. “I
thought he would. Any one but a central-office man would have gone to a
drug store, as I suggested.”

“Two other head-quarters men hauled that frail old Mrs. Schneider and
the two watchmen to police head-quarters, and put them through the third
degree.”

“And a half-dozen more were on the trail of Mrs. Bowden, while we were
enjoying the opera and an alleged cabaret show afterward, for which this
dark room is the penalty. Too much light yesterday gave me a frightful
headache.”

The sudden ringing of the telephone in the darkness made Thames jump,
and Colton’s cane, which was never away from him, felt the movement.

“Answer it, Sydney,” he requested.

The secretary’s hands had not the sureness of his feet, and he had to
fumble a moment. When he had given the customary salutation and had
listened a moment he gasped:

“It’s Simpson, Thorn. His wife is missing! He wants you.” He extended
the phone in the darkness, but Thornley Colton made no move to take it.

“Tell him I’ll be down to the bank in an hour or so. I’ll see him then.”
Colton spoke idly.

Sydney repeated the message. Followed a silence. “He’s frantic, Thorn!”
Thames’s voice shook with excitement. “When he got home last night she
was gone. The doorman at his apartment house said that she had gone out
in the morning, for a short walk, he supposed. Simpson was so excited
about the robbery he did not telephone her during the day, as he had
promised. He spent half the night searching, and tried a dozen times to
get you. She is deaf and dumb, Thorn. Think of it! Deaf and dumb, and
lost!” It only needed a woman in trouble to shatter Sydney Thames’s
nerves.

“Tell him that I’m trying to figure out that robbery. Tell him also that
I never let one case interfere with another. I’m not a detective.
There’s nothing interesting about a missing woman. Hundreds of ’em every
day. I find my pleasure in interesting problems, not in police work.”
Colton’s voice was sharp, curt, utterly devoid of sympathy.

Sydney knew that tone, as he knew the man who used it. He repeated part
of the message, added gentle-voiced apologies, and hung up the receiver
with a sigh.

“That was heartless, Thorn! Think of that woman, deaf and dumb, lost in
this----”

“Sometimes, Sydney, that susceptible heart of yours becomes wearisome.”
Colton spoke a bit sharply. “A moment ago you were protesting because I
was here instead of running around after the man who stole the
half-million in bonds from the Berkley Trust Company.”

“But Mrs. Norris is not helpless----” And for fifteen minutes he argued,
while Colton smiled imperturbably in the darkness, and filled two other
quills with the white powder, and plugged the ends with tufts of cotton.

Suddenly Thames stopped, for Colton had picked up the telephone and was
giving a number.

“Hello, Shrimp!” he called, when the connection had been made.
“Everything all right? Fine business. Three hours, eh? Good! Be on time,
and obey orders. Good-bye!”

“Where’s The Fee?” demanded Sydney. “I haven’t seen him since
yesterday.”

“Emulating the example of his worthy hero, Nick Carter. Shrimp is a real
detective now.” Colton returned the crystalless watch to his pocket,
picked up the three quills, and arose. “Come on, Sydney. We’ll walk over
to the bank.”

“Walk?” ejaculated Thames, for he knew the blind man’s aversion to
walking when he could ride. “Where’s the machine?”

“John and the machine are helping Shrimp in his detective work,”
explained Colton. And in the twenty minutes’ walk to the Berkley Trust
Company he absolutely refused to answer questions, but kept up a
continuous conversation on trivial topics, that was maddening to the
nervous secretary.

The effect of the previous day’s badgering, questioning, and threats of
the central-office men could be seen as one entered the bank. The aged
cashier’s hands trembled as he tried to count a sheaf of new bills.
Book-keepers in the rear wrote figures and erased them. Thompson, head
of the trust and estate clerks, in his little ante-room cage, was in a
pitiable state of nerves. The typewriter’s chair by President Montrose’s
desk was vacant, because the lady stenographer was at home under the
care of a doctor. The fifty years of staid, conservative calm that had
characterized the Berkley Trust Company during its long and useful life
had been hit by a five-hundred-thousand-dollar storm.

The group in the vaultlike office of Second Secretary Norris was little
better. President Montrose could hardly control his trembling hand to
stroke his Vandyke; Norris’s eyes showed the sleeplessness of the night
before; Miss Richmond was calm with the calmness that means coming
nervous collapse; her mother was crying softly; Simpson seemed
positively haggard, and Sydney Thames murmured words of sympathy for the
man who had two troubles. Jamison and the other central-office man could
not make their sneers wholly sceptical. The protective-agency men were
plainly puzzled.

“I see you are all on hand.” There was no smile in Colton’s voice now,
or on his lips; he was deadly calm, coldly earnest. “You didn’t think it
necessary to send for the two watchmen?”

“We got men watchin’ them,” put in the surly Jamison.

“Thanks!” came curtly from Colton. “Sit down at this table, all of you.
I want to tell you a story.”

“We didn’t come to hear----”

Simpson interrupted the detective: “For God’s sake, make it short, Mr.
Colton! My wife----”

“I’ll look into that later.” Colton’s cane assured him that the chairs
were around the long table, and his finger-tips felt the face of his
watch in his pocket.

“Will you?” Simpson’s voice was almost sarcastically eager, his
heavy-lidded eyes narrowed. Thames could not blame the man’s natural
resentment for Colton’s offhandedness.

Silently they took seats. Colton sat facing the closed door; across the
table was Simpson and Norris. Miss Richmond and her mother were at the
end. The four detectives were on either side of the problemist.

“This is a story of a criminal who was born a criminal; who couldn’t be
honest if he tried,” began Colton, in his quietly expressive voice. One
hand lay idly on the table before him, the other on his knees, fingers
holding the slim, hollow cane. “He wasn’t just born crooked. He started
petty thieving before he was out of short trousers. He was the rare
criminal that works years as an honest man to pave the way for
criminality. He had brains. He could have been a wonderful success as an
honest man. But he couldn’t be straight. The criminal instinct was
there. He was waiting for the proper time. But the coarser side of his
nature refused to be held in leash. He needed money. And with the
inherent craft of his kind he began to plan the robbery of the Berkley
Trust Company. It wasn’t so hard, because, being an old, conservative
institution, in which men had grown gray, the personal side entered as
it cannot in the modern, up-to-date institutions where men come and go.
Instead of elaborate safeguards the simple protection of proven honesty
entered largely into the protection of the bank’s valuables. And where
there is simple honesty there is always vulnerability.

“This criminal had found the vulnerable spot years before the robbery
was actually planned; when the time came for its consummation luck came
to his aid, as it often does.” He paused. On the outside door came a
knock, so faint that only his wonderfully sharp ears heard it. “There
was no possibility of suspicion attaching itself to him, for he had
planned an elaborate programme to foist suspicion on others. And this
robbery was but one of a series, for the method his shrewd brain had
devised was capable of endless combinations. In a few years the Berkley
Trust losses would have mounted to millions!”

His fist crashed down on the heavy table. The door opened. Between the
sober-faced Shrimp and the expressionless Irish chauffeur was a
sunken-eyed, tottering creature, unshaven----

“_There’s your wife, Simpson!_” In the silence Colton’s voice came like
the crack of a pistol.

“My God, Thorn, it’s a _man_!” In Sydney Thames’s tone was agony that
the sensitive blind man whom he loved could have made such a mistake.

“Yes, a man! _Sit still, Simpson!_” With a movement as quick as light
itself Colton’s fingers had dropped the slim cane that had given its
warning, and held a blue-steel automatic. “Or rather what was once a
man.” His tone rang with deadly menace. “Charlie de Roque, vaudeville
actor, the youngest and best female impersonator on the stage; Mrs.
Bowden, the consumptive who played so well on the sympathies of the
three simple-minded souls at sixteen-hundred Third Avenue; Mrs. Simpson,
the deaf-and-dumb little girl who was going to make Simpson lead a
better life.”

“You lie!” The shambling shadow of a man screamed it as he tried to jerk
away from the chauffeur. “They told me they were going to take me to a
sanatorium. I don’t know what you’re talking about. They’ve kept me----”
His whole body racked with sobs.

“Would you tell the truth for these?” The automatic did not waver a
fraction of an inch as Colton’s unoccupied hand threw down on the table
three cotton-plugged quills.

“Merciful God! _Yes!_” With insane strength he broke away from the big
Irishman and darted to the table. His twitching fingers snatched a
quill, pulled the cotton from the end, threw his head back----

“Enough of these damn’ theatrics!” Simpson snarled it viciously, but he
did not move. “By Heaven, Colton, you can’t railroad me to save Norris
and his wife with the fool ravings of a cocaine snuffler!” His face was
purple, the veins in his forehead seemed ready to burst. “Mrs. Bowden!”
He scoffed. “How did she get the bonds? Where are they? Find ’em!” he
laughed triumphantly at Colton across the table, and the two
central-office men who now stood over him.

“Here yuh are, Mr. Colton.” It was Shrimp, staggering under the weight
of a big bucket of dirty water. He set it down beside the problemist’s
chair.

“The bonds are here, Simpson!” Colton’s hand plunged into the water, and
came up with a dripping, shiny black object. “There’s the first package,
in an all-rubber ice bag!”

“You devil!” Simpson’s rage made his voice a scream.

“Take your prisoner, policemen.” Colton could not refrain from adding
that last scornful word to the two detectives who had not seen until a
blind man had shown them.


                                  IV.

“Of course, De Roque, who was merely the drug-crazed tool of the real
criminal, would have told where the bonds were,” declared Thornley
Colton, when they were once more in the shade-drawn library of the big,
old-fashioned house. “But Simpson would have had time to be on his
guard. The finding of the bonds, as I did, before he had time to recover
his nerve, drew from him those last betraying words. The police can
establish his connection with the telephone message to Miss Richmond,
the booking of the two passages under the name of Morris, and the place
where he and De Roque met while the fake Mrs. Bowden was supposed to be
out at day’s work. Those details were not even worth bothering with, for
me, because the keyboard of silence told me the guilty persons before
the robbery was committed.”

“I am as much at sea as ever,” confessed Sydney Thames.

“In the Regal we saw the first act. Simpson, with the dare-devilishness
that characterizes the type, introduced me to the accomplice. It was not
wholly dare-devilishness, however, for it was to prepare the get-away.
He wanted, before the time came for her to disappear, to arouse your
sympathy and my interest in the deaf-and-dumb woman, whom he had married
to accomplish his reformation. After a fruitless search he would need a
long vacation in Europe, with the bonds, of course, to recover from the
shock. There could be no suspicion attached to him. No sane man would
look for a deaf-and-dumb wife in the person of a vaudeville actor dying
of tuberculosis and cocaine who had drug dreams of money coming his way.
Once Simpson had gotten out of the country, De Roque could have raved
and stormed, even confessed, and his confession would have been accepted
as nothing but cocaine dementia. Simpson never intended to play fair; it
isn’t his nature. From the first time I ever shook his hand I have known
him to be a born criminal, for I can read hands as the physiognomist
reads faces. And I have the advantage, because men like Simpson, with
the aid of their strong wills, can mask their emotions behind eyes and
faces so that no man can read their minds. But they have never given a
thought to their hands.”

“Do you mean to say you could tell what Simpson was planning by shaking
his hands there in the Regal?” demanded Thames incredulously.

“Not quite,” protested Colton laughingly. “But you know how I shake
hands. My long index finger always rests lightly on the keyboard of
silence--the wrist. With a touch like mine, so light that I can read
handwriting by feeling the ridges left on the blank side of the paper,
not one person in a million could feel it. I think Miss Richmond did,
when I shook hands with her, because I felt a responsive thrill. In the
case of Simpson his heart was working like a steam-engine, though his
face and eyes were a mask that neither you nor any man with eyes could
read; my finger-tip on his pulse told me that he was labouring under
some strong excitement. When I shook hands with his ‘wife,’ I discovered
why.”

“Why?” echoed Thames blankly.

“Because the wife was a man, and a drug-fiend.”

“Your hand told you that, and my eyes were deceived!”

“My knowledge of anatomy told me the man part. Don’t you know that over
the muscles of a woman is a layer of fat that gives the beautiful
feminine curves? The man’s muscles play directly under the skin, and the
curves of female impersonators are due to flabby muscles, and not the
feminine fat layer. Besides, the cocaine pulse of the ‘wife,’ my
finger-tip immediately felt the play of the muscles as the hand gripped
mine. Knowing Simpson, the impersonation could mean nothing else but a
contemplated crime. I further proved it by getting her to put out her
hand before she could have had any knowledge, by signs, of my intention
to say good-bye. Remember my reference to lipreading? Simpson was taking
no chance of letting her talk. The cocaine gave her the brightness of
eye, and the heavily-daubed rouge I knew would have to be there to
convince you that she was really a country girl who didn’t know the use
of cosmetics, and also to cover any trace of man’s beard and cocaine
pastiness of skin. It would have deceived any one who had eyes, where an
artistic make-up would immediately have aroused suspicion. Simpson was a
wonderful detailist.

“Commonsense told me that Simpson could not risk working with an
amateur. Therefore I set Shrimp to looking up actors who had been forced
to leave the stage on account of ill health within the last two months.
The whole thing must have been rehearsed many times, for the detailist
would overlook no detail. In Shrimp’s list was De Roque. A few telephone
inquiries proved that he was really a cocaine fiend of the worst kind,
also that he had returned, yesterday morning, from a sanitarium, no
better, to his old boarding-house. It was Simpson’s scheme to let him do
that, for it eliminated him. As soon as I found out that Simpson would
not risk visiting him, Shrimp and John got him on the pretence that they
were from Simpson. Cocaine snufflers as far gone as he need the drug
every hour. For three hours before the time arranged for Shrimp to bring
him to the bank De Roque hadn’t had a pinch; he was insane with craving.
The visit to Third Avenue, and the finding of the quills which cocaine
snufflers use to hide the stuff on their bodies and conceal it in their
palms so that no one can see them snuff it gave me the things I needed
to make him talk. You saw how they worked.”

“But the detectives who helped him out of the room? How did you ever
figure the possibility of the bonds being in the scrub water?”

“The protective-agency men told me. Their eyes saw what my lack of eyes
understood. The yellow bar of soap bobbing on top of the water, I think
one of them expressed it. An instant’s intelligent thought would tell
any one that the yellow soap used for scrubbing floors never floats. The
finding of the powdered sulphur showed me the clever ice-bag trick, for
powdered sulphur is always used by druggists to keep the thin rubber
from sticking together when the bags are in the boxes. Of course, De
Roque carried it with him every night waiting for his opportunity, and
in pulling it out the powder scattered on the carpet. The natural thing
was to brush it under the safe, where my handkerchief found it after my
slapping hand had raised the scattered grains he had missed.

“The ringing of the burglar-alarm was a master-stroke. It was the link
necessary to establish the innocence of Mrs. Bowden. Simpson, of course,
knew of the connection. De Roque probably removed his shoes and stood on
the rubber ice-bags while he opened the safe and took out the bonds and
papers Simpson had so accurately described. Then, when they had all been
packed and the safe closed, a natural stumbling against the safe would
bring the protective-agency men to swear that nothing could have been
taken from the room. When the time came to leave the building, the pail,
still full of water, was carefully put in a far, dark corner of the
cellar closet, where the scrub pails and mops are kept. It would have
been safe until Simpson was ready to take the bonds away. That was why I
worked to keep Jamison and his partner around the bank; I didn’t want
Simpson to have any opportunity to get the loot out.

“Of course, it was he who suggested the calling of the regular police to
the flustered President Montrose. Because, while he was sure that he
could deceive me, he wasn’t taking any foolish risks. He wanted the
central-office men to muddle the thing as much as possible, and he was
shrewd enough not to overdo the casting of suspicion on Norris and his
wife; the way he put in a word here and there, and looks, of course, was
quite in keeping with the other details. This morning, I think, he had
begun to realize what I was doing, but there was nothing he could do but
count on a bluff. I took him off his guard.”

For several minutes the two men smoked in silence.

“But why didn’t you warn some one instead of letting the robbery go on?”
Sydney asked finally.

Colton’s expressive lips framed a wry smile. “You will insist on showing
the fly in the ointment, Sydney. The truth is, I was caught napping. But
I guess it’s just as well I didn’t. Jails are built for the protection
of society, and Simpson is the one man in a thousand against whom
society needs protection.”

------------------------------------------------------------------------




                           THE SECOND PROBLEM

                       UNTO THE THIRD GENERATION


                                   I.

For weeks the five-hundred-thousand-dollar reception of the Jimmy
Raeltons had been heralded as the greatest event of the New York social
season. The news columns had been filled with accounts of the costly
preparations, the wonderful gowns, the millions in jewels that would
grace the first appearance of the Raeltons in society since the
Carlton-Browne reception of thirteen months before. The newspapers had
retold, lest their readers should forget, the tragic story of the
mysterious suicide of Mrs. Jimmy Raelton’s sister, Mrs. Donald Wreye, on
the night following the Carlton-Browne affair. The consequent retirement
of the Raeltons had been reviewed; the report of the ill health of Mrs.
Raelton had been substantiated; and the two months’ cruise on the
palatial Raelton yacht was said to have brought back the bloom to faded
cheeks. And to-night the Jimmy Raeltons were formally to re-enter New
York’s social scheme of things; again to fill the niche that had been
vacant for thirteen months.

The small army of police herded the curious crowd from the side-walk as
a black limousine drove up silently and came to a stop at the canopied
curb. The door swung open, and men and women, who would stand patiently
for hours to catch a mere glimpse of the notables they worshipped from
afar, saw the first man alight. The electric globe under the awning
brought out the striking whiteness of the face and hair; the contrast of
the great blue circles of the smoked-glass, tortoise-rimmed library
spectacles that rested lightly on the thin nose; the broad shoulders,
and deep chest under the Inverness. The first arrival rapped the
pavement lightly with the slim stick he carried as the apple-cheeked,
black-haired man who accompanied him spoke a word to the driver and
stepped beside him.

A policeman touched his hat. “Early, ain’t you, Mr. Colton?” he greeted
the other.

“These things never interest me, Peters,” returned Thornley Colton, in
his deep, musical voice. “A quiet chat with Jimmy and my goddaughter
before the crowd arrives, then home and quiet.”

He started briskly toward the wide steps, the red-cheeked man so close
that his coat-sleeve touched that of the other. The policeman turned to
his partner.

“A great guy, Tom,” he observed, in a hoarse whisper. “He says he’s
blind, an’ everybody else says he’s blind, but if he is, then I wish I
was! That’s all.”

The two men had ascended the steps. A man of impassive face opened the
door, two others took their coats and sticks. Silent-footed servants
were everywhere, deftly arranging the last details before the guests
should arrive. On every hand was evidence of the lavishness that would
mark the reception; but it was the lavishness of good taste, not the
garishness of mere money. Through the great, high hall they were
conducted to the Moorish room, where Jimmy Raelton greeted them with
characteristic enthusiasm. But the superkeen ears of Thornley Colton
caught an undercurrent of seriousness in the host’s voice.

“Robbery?” he asked quietly, as the slim, hollow stick he always carried
found a chair.

“Scott, yes!” laughed Raelton; then, seriously: “That mind-reading stunt
of yours is positively uncanny at times, Colton.”

“Simple elimination,” explained the blind problemist. “Something more
serious would have been given publicity before this; something less
serious would not have caused you to ask us here an hour before guests
should arrive.”

“It’s more puzzling than really serious,” declared Raelton. “You know
I’m so foolishly happy to-night because Dorothy is herself again that
nothing else could really matter.” His face lighted up boyishly. The
Jimmy Raeltons had been married five years, and society still called
them the Newlyweds.

He took a small leather case from the inlaid taboret beside him, and
snapped open the lid. Sydney Thames, the blind man’s secretary and
constant companion, could not repress a gasp of admiration as the
wonderful diamond necklace sent its thousand flashing fires toward the
shaded lights above.

“This is the thing I wanted to see you about,” quizzically smiled Jimmy
Raelton, as he extended the open case toward the blind man. A question
would be needed here, at least.

Colton took the case, weighed it on his open palm an instant, brushed
the stones ever so lightly with the tip of his forefinger, and snapped
shut the lid.

“Worth fifty thousand--if it wasn’t paste,” he announced.

“Good Lord!” Raelton sank weakly into a big morris chair, the one
anachronism his comfort-loving body demanded.

“To a person with highly sensitive finger-tips there can be no such
thing as a fake diamond; because no crystal less hard will hold a
sharply-defined facet edge. When, and how, was the substitution made?”

“That is just the point. Since the morning following the Carlton-Browne
reception they have been in the safe-deposit vault to which only Dorothy
and I have access. You know she has never used them since; she hasn’t
been herself for six months or so.” A troubled light came to his eyes.
“It wasn’t her sister’s death so much--it seemed to be something else.
Sometimes I almost feared that she was discontented; that she didn’t
want to stay at home with the kiddies any more. Her father was always a
wanderer, and her grandfather died in China--you know how. But, thank
God, that’s over. The two months’ cruise on the _Sea Mew_ have made her
the same old Dorothy.”

He paused an instant, then came back to the point. “I’m quite an expert
in an amateur way, and I recognized the substitution instantly to-night.
The discovery seemed to agitate Dorothy terribly. She always set great
store by the necklace--it was my wedding-present. The thing has upset
her so that she will be positively ill, unless you discover how the
substitution was made, and by whom. She wouldn’t let me call the
police.”

“Where is Dorothy?” asked Colton anxiously.

“She is lying down. I’m afraid this thing is going to spoil the whole
evening.” Again came the troubled note. He touched a small silver bell.
“I’ll call her. I want you to convince her that it isn’t worth worrying
about. You can do it, because she has always looked upon you as a
father.”

A servant entered, bowed at the order, withdrew.

They waited in silence for the coming of Dorothy Raelton. Thornley
Colton’s mind went back to the death of Colonel Calvin, the promise
given by the blind man that he would be a father to the two parentless
girls. A look of sadness came to the thin expressive lips. He was
thinking of the other beautiful daughter; the suicide that had never
been explained.

The servant returned. His ruddy English face had lost a bit of its
colour; his voice trembled slightly.

“Mrs. Raelton is sleeping. The door’s locked--and Dora can’t wake her.”

In three minds leaped a single, horrible thought. Jimmy Raelton leaped
to his feet, dry-lipped.

“My God, Thornley!” He ran toward the door, and into the hall. Thornley
Colton was at his heels, supersensitive ears following each footfall
unerringly. Sydney Thames hurried after them; the servant brought up the
rear. They raced up the marble stairs. In the upper hall a maid leaned
against the wall, wringing her hands.

“Mr. Raelton!” she sobbed. “Oh, I can’t bear it!”

Thornley Colton had not paused; his slim stick found the closed door. He
turned to face them, on his countenance an expression Sydney Thames had
never seen before. He spoke to the white-faced servant.

“The guests will begin to arrive any moment, now,” he said, and his tone
was as strange as the look on his face. “Tell them that Mrs. Raelton has
been taken suddenly ill. The reception is postponed--indefinitely. Let
no one in.” He waited a moment till the man had gone; then his hand fell
on Jimmy Raelton’s shoulder. “Sydney and I will go,” he said huskily.

“She isn’t----” Raelton could not finish.

Colton shook his head sadly. “She isn’t dead, Jimmy,” he said, and
stopped, with a world of suggestion in his tone.

“Then I want you to stay,” pleaded the husband hysterically. “Nothing
else matters--if she is alive.”

He thrust his shoulder against the door. The lock gave way. He staggered
in; stopped short with a gasp of horror. On the wide bed lay Dorothy
Raelton, unconscious, hair disarranged, priceless gown dishevelled. From
one limp hand dangled a long, black opium pipe. On a low table beside
the bed a sweet-oil lamp burned flickeringly. A small can of opium was
overturned beside it. The needle that had cooked the drug over the flame
stained the white coverlet of the bed. The pungent smell of opium smoke
was in the air.

Jimmy Raelton darted across the room, flung himself on his knees beside
the bed.

“My God!” he moaned in agony. “My God!”

Thornley Colton’s hand fumbled for the knob, found it.

“Come, Sydney,” he murmured softly. Mechanically Thames obeyed. The door
closed softly behind them. The Jimmy Raeltons were alone.


                                  II.

Black headlines in the morning papers told of the strange postponement
of the Raelton reception. Black type told eager readers of the scene in
front of the Raelton home when arriving guests were met at the door with
a startling announcement: “Mrs. Raelton is ill. The reception has been
postponed indefinitely.” And the door had been closed in their faces!

Eager readers learned of the silent line of servants that had filed from
the rear entrance of the darkened house; the fifty thousand dollars’
worth of flowers left to wilt unseen; the caterers’ elaborate
preparations--estimated to have cost thousands--left to spoil untasted.
Much was made of the fact that Jimmy Raelton refused even to see a
reporter, and all the papers, yellow and conservative alike, hinted at a
sinister something that would explain a thing so unprecedented in the
annals of New York society. Two of the most progressive sheets learned
that Doctor Henry, the young physician who had made such rapid strides
in his practice among the social leaders, had not been called, and knew
nothing of Mrs. Raelton’s reported illness until told by the reporters.

In the library of his old-fashioned up-town house Thornley Colton sat
with bowed head. At his feet were the crumpled papers Sydney had read to
him.

“This is the saddest day of my life, Sydney,” the blind man said slowly.
“I promised Colonel Calvin that I would watch over his daughters. His
father died an opium fiend.”

Sydney’s eyes widened. “I never knew that!”

“Few did. I have zealously guarded the secret all my life. Not even the
girls knew it, though I told Jimmy when he married Dorothy. Colonel
Calvin was always afraid of the stain being in the blood. He had fought
the craving, but he feared for his daughters. I laughed at him, for
atavism, to me, has always seemed merely a cloak for weakness. Now I am
reaping my whirlwind. One is dead by her own hand, the other an opium
fiend. I can never forget my feelings when I caught the unmistakable
smell of opium smoke before we opened that door.”

Silence came again, to be broken by The Fee, a red-haired, freckle-faced
blue-eyed boy, who had become a part of the Colton household at the
conclusion of a particularly baffling murder case.

“Dere’s a feller an’ goil downstairs wants to see yuh. Looks like
soivents, and says dere name’s Rayton.”

Only for an instant was the expression of surprise on the blind man’s
face. “Send them up,” he said quietly, and he rose to meet Jimmy Raelton
and his wife.

A cry of pity came to Sydney Thames’s lips as the man and woman entered.
Jimmy Raelton, in an ill-fitting suit of blue, a plaid cap pulled down
over his eyes, had grown an old man in a night. Mrs. Raelton, in a
tawdry dress, leaned heavily on the arm of her husband, as she had
leaned when their disguises took them safely past the cordon of
newspaper men.

Silently Thornley Colton took a hand in each of his, the mobile face
telling them what his tongue could not; silently he lead them to chairs.
Not until they were seated did Jimmy Raelton speak.

“We are going away,” he said, and his tone was dead, hopeless. “We are
going to fight the fight together. Dorothy wanted to say good-bye--and
tell you.”

“I couldn’t go without seeing you,” Dorothy Raelton sobbed chokingly.
“It will make it easier--to know that you understand. I’m glad--that
Jimmy knows at last.” Her voice steadied, and she went on simply,
bravely: “If it hadn’t been for little Jimmy and Dorothy, I would have
done as Marjorie did--ended it all. Marjorie, too, had the curse, though
I didn’t know it until that hideous morning I waked with a terrible
headache and the opium pipe on the floor beside me. I screamed for my
maid. Then she told me why Marjorie had written that pitiful, pleading
note, begging me to take Dora because she could be trusted if anything
happened. Dora was the only one who even suspected that my sister was an
opium fiend, just as my grandfather was. Marjorie had told her that.
Dora said that she had heard me going downstairs in the night, and in a
dream I seem to remember going to the Chinese room and taking the opium
set and small glass jar of the drug we kept as curiosities; but it seems
hazy, unreal.

“I hid the set in my room; I didn’t dare risk getting it out. Every week
the longing would come. I’d go blind, insane with craving, and in the
morning I would wake, with the opium pipe beside me, and the little lamp
still burning. Time after time I tried to hide the things, but in my
blind delirium I always found them. One day I gave them to Dora for her
to destroy, and that night I went and choked her until she gave them
back. She had not had time to carry out my orders. I don’t remember
going to her at all, but in the morning I waked with the pipe beside me,
and on Dora’s throat were the marks of my fingers.”

She stopped, sobs racking her slender frame. Beside her Jimmy Raelton’s
head was in his hands, his body quivering. She went on: “Jimmy thought
it was nervous break-down. He insisted on a long cruise in the yacht.
For two whole months I never once felt the craving! I thought it was
gone! I romped and played with the children; I laughed and joked with my
husband. Then we planned last night’s reception. My God! The discovery
by Jimmy of the substitute diamonds in my necklace overwrought me. I
went upstairs, took a headache powder, and I waked----”

She broke down utterly. Jimmy Raelton raised his bowed head. “Now you
know the whole pitiful story. Will you keep our secret till we win the
fight?”

“Always,” assured Thornley Colton softly. He laid a gentle hand on
Dorothy’s shoulder. “You may need help, little goddaughter; will you
call on me?”

A nod answered him; she could not speak.

“The fight will be short; such faith cannot help but win quickly,” he
added. His voice brought a look that was almost hopeful into the woman’s
eyes, so full of assurance was it. Some subtle special sense seemed to
tell him, for his thin lips curved in one of their rare smiles of
encouragement. “I know you will win,” he repeated. Then, to change the
subject: “I will investigate the necklace substitution while you are
gone. We’ve forgotten it completely.”

Only the silent Sydney Thames saw the startled look leap to the eyes of
the man and woman. Dorothy Raelton found her voice first. “Don’t!” she
cried brokenly. “I took the stones. They--were all--I had--to pay some
one.”

“What!” The tone of Colton’s voice startled them. In it was amazement;
under it was anguish, the anguish of a man who has made a horrible
mistake. “You have been paying blackmail?” His voice was almost harsh.

“Yes.” She scarcely breathed it.

“How long? To whom?” He was standing over her now; his attitude half
menacing. His voice compelled an answer.

“For six months,” she whispered, “the letters have been coming. They
said I must pay, or the world would be told of the curse. I could do
nothing else. I burned the letters as fast as they came, and I’ve sent
fifty thousand dollars to a lock-box in Philadelphia. I had to sell my
diamonds, and have them replaced by imitations to make the last
payment.”

“My God, what a fool I’ve been!” There was only anguish in the blind
man’s voice now. He paced the floor with tigerish strides.

“Do you ever remember cooking the opium pill?” It came like a
pistol-shot.

“Cooking----” He gave her no chance to finish.

“Where did you get the headache powders you take?”

“Doctor Grayton gave me the prescription, just before he died. I have
never taken any others.”

“How often do you take them?”

“Several times a week. They quiet my nerves. I have been taking them for
years, renewing the prescription when necessary.”

“Did you take any on the cruise?”

“Perhaps a dozen. They prevent sea-sickness.”

“You never felt the craving for that two months?”

“Never.”

“They put you to sleep?”

“A light sleep that comes of quieted nerves.” She was answering the
questions automatically, staring at him. Her husband listened, lips
parted, breath coming fast. Sydney Thames was leaning forward, tense,
expectant.

The blind problemist whirled from her and continued his pacing. Twice he
made the length of the room.

“The inhuman devils!” they heard him mutter. “God, what devils there
are!”

Jimmy Raelton could stand it no longer. “What do you mean?” he cried.

The blind man stopped before him, sightless eyes behind the round, dark
glasses apparently staring deep into his. “I mean that my neglect is
responsible for this.” There was terrible bitterness in his voice. “_Not
a breath of opium smoke has ever passed Dorothy Raelton’s lips!_”

Dumb, stupefied, they could only stare; then, as though moved by hidden
springs, the man and woman leaped to their feet. But as quickly as it
came the look of hope died in Dorothy Raelton’s eyes. She fell back into
the chair.

“Don’t!” she sobbed. “I can’t bear it! I’ve used the horrible stuff a
hundred times. I couldn’t fight against it!”

The man still stood, swaying ever so slightly, finger-nails biting into
his palms, as his hands clenched convulsively.

Gently the blind man forced him down into his chair. “It is true,
Jimmy,” he said, and his voice was normal once more. “I should have
known it last night when the whole game was in my hands. Now I must
start at the beginning. The mind I have trained for years to be purely
eliminative, that I have thought impervious to outside influences, is
only human, after all. Last night I believed the evidence of my four
senses and did not use my brain.”

Only Sydney Thames realized what this confession cost the man who had so
prided himself on his infallibility.

“I don’t understand,” came dully from Jimmy Raelton.

The blind man resumed his pacing of the room. “Dorothy doesn’t even know
that the opium pill must be ‘cooked’ over the sweet-oil lamp! She
doesn’t know the first thing about opium smoking! And last night there
was no key on the inside of the door. _It was locked from the outside!_
I remember distinctly that my fumbling fingers felt no key as I went
out. I know--now--that none fell. Someone wanted you”--his finger
pointed at Jimmy Raelton--“to see your wife!” He paused for an instant,
then continued, rapidly, crisply: “The whole thing is the most devilish
blackmail I have ever heard of. It is based on the one thing that all
the past dead centuries have taught us to fear--atavism. When Dorothy’s
money had gone, and the selling of the necklace stones told the
blackmailers so, the husband must be the next victim of the vampire. The
scene of last night was arranged so that only a touch would be needed to
explode the powder-magazine the reception postponement had started if
Jimmy refused to pay. The fiendish simplicity of it!”

“But who----” began Dorothy Raelton, and there was almost eagerness in
her voice. Then the hopelessness came back. “But it is impossible. I
know----”

“You know nothing! Where is your maid?”

A terrible expression came to Raelton’s face. “The maid! She----” The
words came like curses before the problemist stopped him.

“The maid is absolutely innocent! Absolutely! Remember that above all
things!” cried Colton. “Where is she?”

“I sent her to mail a letter so that she would be out of the way when we
started. I wouldn’t even trust her,” Jimmy Raelton answered slowly.

“To whom was the letter addressed?”

“To you. I didn’t want to come here, but Dorothy insisted.”

“Did you get a letter from the blackmailer this morning?”

Silently Jimmy Raelton took a letter from his pocket and extended it.
Colton received it eagerly, jerked out the inclosure, laid it face down
on the desk. His hypersensitive finger-tips brushed lightly the
reversed, raised words the typewriter keys had driven through the paper
as he read aloud slowly:

    “_Mr. Raelton._

    “SIR,--May be you don’t know it, but your wife smokes
    hop. If you don’t want the wurld to get wise, send 25
    one-thousand-dollar bills to lock-box 117, Philadelphia. Don’t
    register. We’ll take a chance they land safe. If you’re too up
    in the air to-day give you till to-morrow, but put a personal in
    the _Telegram_ saying when. And do it, too!”

The blind man paused an instant, then continued: “The fact that they
want the money in thousand-dollar bills proves that the blackmailers are
persons who can pass them without question, despite the childish attempt
at illiteracy. They also know that the money would arrive safely without
registry, which would necessitate signing a receipt. The fact that they
want the money sent to a place so easily watched as a public lock-box
proves that they have some means of getting their hands on it before it
gets there!”

He grasped the telephone. “Six thousand Greeley. _Telegram?_ Take a
personal for the next edition. Ready? ‘Lock-box 117. Not even
twenty-five cents.--J. R.’ That’s all. On the street in an hour? Charge
it to Thornley Colton. Right.”

They listened, white-faced; he shot a question at Dorothy before a
protest could be voiced:

“Have you ever called in Doctor Henry?”

“There are things one can’t tell even one’s physician,” she said simply.
“Jimmy called him, once, when he thought I was suffering from nervous
break-down. Doctor Henry never suspected, couldn’t suspect. He told
Jimmy that his plans for a two months’ cruise were excellent. That is
the only time I have seen him during this awful six months. He has
dropped in several times to see the children, but I have been out.”

“A curious coincidence,” mused Colton idly; then his questions took a
new turn. “You had no suspicion that your sister was an opium fiend?”

“No--I wouldn’t have believed--if----” The words choked in her throat.

“Didn’t you drift apart after her marriage?”

“Donald Wreye turned out a cad!” blurted Raelton. “You know that as well
as I! He spent every cent of Marjorie’s money. There wasn’t a penny of
the hundred thousand her father left when she died. Wreye tried to
borrow ten thousand from me five months ago, and I ordered him from the
house!”

“Five months ago?” murmured Colton. “He must have got it from someone. I
know he was on the ragged edge about that time.” He turned away from
them and jabbed two desk-buttons. “You are going back home now. I want
you to slip in the way you came. Shrimp will go with you.”

He turned to face The Fee, who had answered one button. “The reporters
will probably hold you up, thinking you servants. Let Mr. and Mrs.
Raelton slip past, then let the newspaper men get the information that
Mrs. Raelton had a serious heart-attack, also that Doctor Henry was
asked not to divulge the fact that he had been called. I’ve rung for the
machine. It will take you within two or three blocks of your home. Walk
the rest of the way, and stay indoors until you hear from me. Now this
is important: I want you to give Shrimp two of the headache powders you
have been taking, without the knowledge of the maid or any one else. Can
you?”

Mrs. Raelton nodded dumbly.

“No one is to know that you have seen me. No one!”

He sat down at the desk and wrote rapidly for a moment.

“Send this telegram on your way back, Shrimp, and tell Michael not to
wait for you. Sydney and I want to use the machine.”

He held out his hands to the man and woman. “Good-bye, for a little
while,” he said. Silently he watched them out, then he turned toward
Sydney.

“Tell John to serve us a cold lunch immediately.”

For the first time in an hour Sydney Thames spoke. “Where are we going?”
he asked curiously.

“To see Donald Wreye.”


                                  III.

Society had never called the marriage of Marjorie Calvin and Donald
Wreye a brilliant one. Seven years before Marjorie had entered New York
society, and society had knelt at her feet. She had many offers of
marriage; all were laughed aside. Then came Donald Wreye, big, blond,
masterful. He carried the little black-haired girl off her feet, swept
the other suitors aside like chaff. He had neither money nor family. By
sheer doggedness he had fought his way to a ten-thousand-dollar position
in the Street. Society had pleaded with Marjorie Calvin. Thornley Colton
had pleaded. But she loved with the love that only women of the
Southland feel. They eloped.

For five years the marriage had seemed ideal. Then came the last year.
Marjorie’s sunny nature changed completely. Wreye was constantly at his
club, drinking, gambling. Thornley Colton was received almost coldly by
the girl he loved as a daughter. Then she was found in her room, the
pistol she had used beside her.

Wreye cast restraint to the winds then. His position was lost because of
dissipation. He had opened an office of his own, and although he was
known to do comparatively little business, for the past few months he
had seemed to have plenty of money. But to the men and women he had
known in the old days he became a pariah.

And it was to his office that Colton and Sydney Thames started in the
big machine an hour later. The blind man’s lips were a thin, straight
line; the bloodless face sinister in its grimness. What his thoughts
were none could tell. Sydney’s were a maze of conflict. The astounding
assertion of Colton’s that Dorothy Raelton had never smoked opium had
carried him off his feet, mentally, when it was made, but now, with
sober afterthought, came the utter absurdity of it. Dorothy had
known--_known_--that the blind craving could only be satisfied by the
drug, and she had used it. It was not within the range of human
possibility that _she_ could be mistaken. And _they_ had seen.

The car came to a stop before a tall office-building near Wall Street.
Colton, cane in hand, stepped to the side-walk, and, with only the touch
of Sydney’s sleeve against his to guide him, made his way to the
elevator. On an upper floor they halted before the door with its plain
announcement:

“Donald Wreye, Broker. Odd Lots.”

Following Thornley Colton’s knock came the slam of a hastily-shut
drawer, and a gruff invitation to enter. The smile of welcome faded as
the heavy-featured man with the tawny hair saw his visitors.

“Well?” he snapped ungraciously, slumping into the swivel chair without
even inviting them to be seated.

Thornley Colton’s slim stick located a chair before he answered. “You
won’t be well very long unless you keep away from that black bottle in
the drawer,” he said grimly.

Wreye jumped to his feet with an oath. “That bottle’s my own affair,” he
snarled. “I’ll drink when I damn’ please! I’m not in your bootlicking
set any more. I got----” He stopped suddenly. “Get down to cases! This
is my busy day.”

The blind man picked up the chair and placed it directly before the big
man, not two feet from him. “I want you to answer a few questions.” He
said it simply, quietly, but some indefinable timbre of his voice made
it a command.

“I’ll answer if I see fit!” blustered Wreye.

“You’ll answer whether you want to or not.” Still that quiet voice; the
velvet covering for the will of steel beneath it. Sydney Thames held his
breath as he watched the two men. One, a veritable giant, clumsy in his
very bigness, face flushed with anger and liquor; the other, half a head
shorter, with the chest and shoulders of an athlete, belied by the
well-tailored slimness the faultless clothes gave him; face and hair
white, accentuated by the big circles of the smoked library-glasses, his
cane, held idly between the slim, supersensitive fingers, touching the
floor a few inches from Donald Wreye’s foot.

“I’ll see about that!” blustered Wreye, and the words seemed foolishly
puerile.

“When did you first discover that your wife was an opium fiend?” It was
put so unexpectedly, so baldly, that even Sydney Thames gasped.

The livid fury mounted to the face of Wreye. “By God! You----” His voice
trembled with unleashed passion.

Knife-like Thornley Colton’s voice cut in: “Answer me!”

And, like lightning, the answer came--a vicious, smashing right fist
straight at the face of the seated blind man!

The exact sequence of ensuing events could never be told by Sydney, for
the simple reason that his eyes were incapable of following the moves of
the man who was sightless. He remembered leaping to his feet with a cry
of horror as the blind man’s chair toppled over. Then he saw a
purple-faced, cursing man straining and tugging to release the arms that
were being slowly doubled behind him. A crash of a great body hurled
downward in the heavy swivel chair, and Thornley Colton, unruffled,
breathing accelerated but a trifle, straightened the tortoise-rimmed
glasses and smiled down at the man he had so easily mastered.

Mechanically Sydney righted the chair and picked up the blind man’s
cane.

“Thanks,” murmured Colton absently, and Sydney Thames gasped in
amazement at the smile he saw on the thin lips of the problemist. It was
a smile of pure joy; the joy of a man who has learned something more
easily than he had expected.

“Don’t you know that a seated man can’t leap to his feet without a
warning move of the foot on the floor?” Thornley Colton asked quietly.
“My cane told me what you were going to do the instant you knew
yourself. Do you want to proceed conversationally or physically?” he
finished grimly.

“I could kill you for that!” The big man’s voice was like a sob.

“It was raw,” apologized Colton, but both knew he was referring to the
question he had asked, and not the vicious blow, or the struggle. Then
the menace came again to his voice. “Where did you get that ten thousand
you needed so badly five months ago?”

The effect of this question was fully as startling, in a totally
different way, to Sydney Thames as the other had been. The red rage
receded from Wreye’s face, the snarl went from the lips; a sneering
smile came.

“So you come from my lily-fingered brother-in-law, eh? Hasn’t got the
nerve to come himself, I suppose?”

“Where did you get it?” repeated Colton.

“Oh, I’ll tell you quick enough. _I got it from Jimmy Raelton!_”

If this reply was unexpected, it did not cause the slightest change of
expression on the face of Thornley Colton.

“Quite strange that he should have given you the money after he had so
emphatically refused it once before, wasn’t it?” he observed quietly.

The black scowl came back to Donald Wreye’s face. “The letter that came
with the money was devilish plain. The ten thousand was to keep me away
from him and his wife. I was told that I’d get something worse than mere
loss of position if I even told where it came from. Now I suppose he
wants it back.”

“Oh, no,” assured Colton, as he rose. “He doesn’t even know I’m here.”

“What do you want, then?” There was snarling suspicion in the voice now.

“Information--which I got.” The blind man smiled down curiously at the
scowling man; then the smile went as quickly as it came. “What became of
Marjorie’s hundred thousand dollars?” he jerked out.

“She----” Wreye’s jaws snapped together, the big shoulders hunched
aggressively. “If you’re so damn’ clever, find out!” he challenged
sullenly.

Sydney Thames could see the man’s huge muscles tighten under the coat,
as if he expected force once more, and was prepared to meet it. But
Colton only nodded and turned toward the door.

“I will,” he promised grimly. “And I’m going to have you on hand when I
make the discovery.”

It was not until they were on the side-walk outside that a word was
spoken.

“A man like that makes my blood boil!” ejaculated Sydney Thames.

“Yes?” replied the blind man seriously, but the rising inflection made
it enigmatical. His beckoning finger brought a leather-lunged newsboy.

“Latest _Telegram_?”

It was thrust into his hand.

“Did Shrimp see the reporters, Sydney?” he asked, as he handed the paper
to Thames and stepped into the car.

“The heart-stroke story is on the first page.”

“Good! Then the advertisement I telephoned must be in. Take us to Doctor
Henry’s home, Michael.”


                                  IV.

With plenty of money, a distinguished appearance, and the manners of a
courtier, Doctor Charles V. Henry had entered New York society three
years before, with letters of introduction from prominent men and women
in Paris. He soon opened an office in the fashionable up-town
residential district. He had an independent fortune--his bachelor
apartments cost him fifteen thousand a year--but it pleased him to
follow his profession, and when Doctor Grayton died he fell natural heir
to his society practice.

“Do not tell me that you are ill, Mr. Colton!” he laughed, as he ushered
the blind man and Sydney into his quietly luxurious office half an hour
after they had left Donald Wreye.

“Old Hippocrates and I are sworn enemies,” smiled the problemist. “I
came to get a little professional information.”

“Yes?” politely from the physician, as he accepted a proffered
cigarette.

“It is this.” Colton spoke seriously; all trace of the smile had gone.
“Is there any medicinal cure for opium craving?”

The heavy lashes of the doctor veiled his eyes as he looked down
thoughtfully at the floor. “There are several reputed cures,” he said
finally. “The most effective, and simple, probably, is rice powder and
morphia. The morphia satisfies the violent craving at first, then the
drug is diminished gradually, until the patient is satisfied with the
harmless rice powder. This is effective, however, only in the first
stages.”

“I am speaking of atavistic craving. The opium craving, having skipped
one generation, appears doubly strong in the next.”

“You mention a rare case,” said Doctor Henry slowly; “and an incurable
one. The effect of opium smoking, primarily, is a sensation of the
nerves, or, rather, lack of sensation. The nerves feel the craving
first. When that craving finds lodgment in the brain, the case is
hopeless. With the inherited craving the process is absolutely reversed.
The seat of the trouble is in the brain before the nerves know the drug,
and when the nerves once feel the satisfied craving, it becomes a
monomania. There is no cure.”

For a full minute there was silence in the office. Thornley Colton blew
thoughtful smoke-rings toward the ceiling. Sydney Thames was conscious
of a strange, new feeling toward the man he loved; the man who had
picked him up as a bundle of baby-clothes on the banks of the English
river that had given him the only name he had ever known. The feeling
was almost bitter. He could not keep his mind from the man and woman
that Colton had sent back to their home but a short time before, full of
hope, of joy. Now he realized that the words had been but empty
encouragement. And there was no hope!

Thornley Colton spoke again. “I disagree with you, doctor. There is a
cure!” He had risen to his feet; his voice trembled with vehemence.

The physician, startled from his usual professional calmness, was on his
feet, staring. Colton took a step forward, stumbled blindly against a
chair, his hands thrust out gropingly. Before Sydney Thames could reach
him, Doctor Henry was again the cool physician. He extended a hand, and
led the blind man back to his seat.

“I forgot myself,” apologized the blind man huskily. “This thing has
unnerved me.” He swallowed hard, his voice became normal. “The time for
equivocation is past, doctor; I’m going to be frank. Dorothy Raelton is
an opium fiend!”

The physician half rose again from his chair in amazement.
“Why--why--such a thing is incredible!” he gasped.

Briefly, dispassionately, Colton told him of the night before. “Now,” he
continued, “for the cure.” Again there was excitement in his voice.
“Early to-morrow morning the Raeltons start for a year’s cruise on their
yacht. I am making all the arrangements. They will go to the South
Pacific, and keep wholly out of touch with the world, Mrs. Raelton will
not take her maid, Jimmy will not even have his man. They will be
absolutely alone, except for the crew. What do you think of that?”

Doctor Henry’s fingers ceased their nervous drumming on the chair-arm,
his lowered eyes raised. “It may be effective,” he admitted, in his
deepest professional tones. “At what time--do they start?”

“With the seven-o’clock tide. To-night Mrs. Raelton is going to receive
a few intimate friends, and explain last night’s postponement. By the
way”--he took the newspaper he had purchased from his pocket--“I used
your name in explaining to the reporters the cause of last night’s
affair. I knew you wouldn’t object.” The physician took the paper
eagerly.

The problemist was almost to the door before he remembered another
question. “Did you ever suspect that Mrs. Donald Wreye was an opium
fiend?” he asked.

The unexpectedness of the question made Doctor Henry forget his usual
suave manner for an instant, and his voice was almost sharp as he
replied: “She was not! Her death was----” He stopped suddenly; then, in
a different tone, “I am going to meet your frankness with frankness,” he
said slowly. “I have always thought Mrs. Wreye’s suicide was a natural
result of an utter breaking of her hypersensitive nervous system.”

“Her husband?” put in Colton.

“Yes!” emphatically.

“Marjorie Wreye’s death was not a suicide!” Colton spoke quietly, but in
his tone was that ominous menace Sydney Thames had noticed so many times
that day. “It was deliberate murder! Good-day, doctor.”

He extended his hand. It was taken by the serious-faced physician.
Thornley Colton nodded a jerky farewell, and hurried from the office,
his brain automatically counting the steps it had registered when he
entered.

In the car, speeding homeward, Sydney Thames drew a long breath.

“Great Scott!” he murmured. “What a villain he is!”

“Doctor Henry?” There was mild surprise in the blind man’s voice.

“Donald Wreye,” corrected Sydney shortly. “Hanging is too good for him!”

“Did you notice the almost curious resemblance between the deep
professional tones of Doctor Henry and the ordinary voice of Wreye?”
asked the problemist seriously.

Without giving Thames a chance to reply he leaned forward to speak to
the driver. “Take us to the nearest drug-store telephone pay-station,
Michael,” he ordered. And as the car turned in toward the curb he
explained to Sydney: “I must tell the Raeltons of my plans; also get
twenty grains of trional and a heavy rubber band. Trional is one of the
few harmless narcotics. The rubber band is _highly_ important. It is
going to trap the most inhuman criminal I have ever known!”


                                   V.

Sydney Thames paced the library floor impatiently. Where was Thornley
Colton? For three hours he had asked himself that question. The blind
problemist had spent fully half an hour in the closed telephone booth at
the drug-store after he had purchased two morphia powders and half a
dozen strong rubber bands. Then, when Michael had driven them home,
Sydney had been curtly ordered from the machine, and the eager-eyed
Shrimp had taken his place as guide.

As he walked he tried to piece together the events of the day; to
discover some loose end in the snarl of circumstances. But his mind
refused to find logic in the tangle of statements, of events that
apparently led nowhere. Donald Wreye was a villain. He had driven his
wife to suicide after squandering her fortune. That was certain. But
what part had he in the life of Dorothy Raelton? Why had Jimmy Raelton
secretly sent him ten thousand dollars after openly refusing it? Why had
Raelton pretended such bitterness against his brother-in-law that
morning? Why had Colton made the astounding statement that Dorothy
Raelton had never smoked opium, and then sought a physician’s advice for
a possible cure? Why had the blind man remarked the similarity of Donald
Wreye’s voice to that of Doctor Henry? These, and a hundred more, raced
back and forth through his brain like a flying shuttle. He took out his
watch for the fiftieth time; then turned eagerly as the blind man
hurried into the room.

With a sigh of weariness Thornley Colton dropped into a chair and
lighted a cigarette; when he spoke there was weariness in his voice.

“A strange case, Sydney,” he said slowly, as though he had accepted this
first quiet opportunity for retrospection. “The strangest I have ever
known. A crime so damnably ingenious that even I--who have made a study
of crime and criminals for years--did not recognize it. A crime so
infernally clever that even the victim refuses to believe that it is a
crime. A criminal who could confess this minute, and be laughed to scorn
by any jury in the land. It is a crime unique in the annals of crime.”

He took a telegram from his pocket. “Here is the answer to a query I
sent regarding the lock-box in Philadelphia.”

Sydney took it and read:

    “Lock-box 117 one of six rented to Philadelphia Insurance Co.
    for past five years.”

“That means an accomplice there!” ejaculated Sydney.

“It proves my former statement that the blackmailer never allowed the
money to get to that box. And there could be only one method of
interception in this case. It was never mailed!”

“But Mrs. Raelton said----” began Sydney dazedly.

“She also said she was an opium fiend,” interrupted Colton brusquely.
Again his hand went to his pocket; on his palm as he extended it were
two white, folded papers. “These are the powders Shrimp brought. The
papers have been changed by me, but these powders have been used to mask
the weapon of a fiend. Get me a glass of water.”

Mechanically Sydney obeyed. He returned in a moment with the water and a
question.

“But Mrs. Raelton declared that Doctor Grayton had given her those
powders?” he objected.

“Yes.” Thornley Colton carefully unfolded one. “And Doctor Grayton has
been dead two years.” He held the paper, opened, between his thumb and
forefinger. “These powders were used to cause the suicide of Marjorie
Wreye and make Dorothy Raelton, to all intents and purposes, an opium
fiend!” He raised the powder to his lips, dropped it on his tongue.
Sydney could not repress a gasp of horror. The blind man took a sip of
the water, and stood up, fingers feeling the crystalless watch in his
pocket. “It is seven o’clock, Sydney, time we were starting for the
Raelton home. The machine is waiting.”

Thames licked his dry lips. “My God, Thorn!” he choked. “It
isn’t--poison?”

“No.” The blind man’s smile held no humour. “These powders are perfectly
harmless. Doctor Grayton was a careful practitioner, and his
prescriptions have helped my headaches before.”

“But what--how----” gulped Sydney, amazed into incoherence by this new
convolution.

“I’ll tell you later,” promised Thornley Colton. “I can’t now. There is
too much at stake to spoil with premature explanations.”

He took his hat and coat from the tree, and hurried down the stairs,
Sydney following. In the automobile the blind man lay back in the deep
seat, only rousing when the machine came to a stop before the Raelton
home. The awning canopy was gone now; there was no waiting crowd.
Another machine came to a stop behind them; where it had come from
Sydney did not know. Then came a feminine greeting; the blind man lifted
his hat, and hurried to the other car unerringly.

“How are you, Mrs. Neilton, and you, Mrs. Bracken, also your husbands?”
The assumed cheeriness in the voice seemed perfect to the listening
Sydney Thames. As the blind man assisted the women to alight, Thames was
surprised to note that they were all strangers to him. As Colton’s
constant companion and guide he knew most of the blind man’s friends,
though his memory of faces was not to be compared with the blind
problemist’s wonderful memory of voices.

Sydney was introduced to the men and women as Thornley Colton’s
secretary; they were presented to him as friends of the Jimmy Raeltons,
who had come to see them on the eve of the departure for the South
Pacific.

Together they mounted the steps. Thornley Colton rang the bell. And the
door was opened by the red-haired Shrimp!

“The servants is all gone,” explained the boy, as he closed the door
after them. “All but Mrs. Raelton’s maid. Mr. Raelton’s in the Moorish
room.”

But at the first sound of their voices Jimmy Raelton had hurried out to
meet them; his face was still haggard, and in the eyes was a piteous
expression of pleading.

“Where is Mrs. Raelton?” asked Thornley Colton quietly.

“She is lying down. I’ll call her.” Raelton had not even nodded to the
two men and the women who were quietly watching.

“Wait!” Thornley Colton grasped his arm. Some one was coming up the
steps outside. The door-bell rang. Shrimp opened it, and into the hall
stumbled Donald Wreye! His bloodshot eyes blinked in the bright light as
he glared at them, his hands twitched at his sides. He hunched his great
shoulders, and clenched his fists to get a grip on himself.

“Where’s----” he began, in the deep, hoarse voice so like that of the
physician.

From above them came a frightened scream--a woman’s scream.

“Mr. Raelton! Mr. Raelton!” It was the maid.

He bounded toward the stairs, the others at his heels. At the top was
the maid, weeping and wringing her hands.

“She told me to get myself something to eat, and I wasn’t downstairs
twenty minutes,” she cried hysterically. “And I found her----”

Jimmy Raelton dashed past her. Sydney felt Colton brush past him, and
realized that somehow he had gotten behind the others when they started.

At the door of the room where they had stopped the night before they
halted again. The door was not even closed this time, and once more
their eyes took in the same scene. But the electrics were out now, only
the flickering rays of the sweet-oil lamp shone on the sleeping woman
and the opium-pipe at her side.

“My God! Again!” The words came in sobs from Jimmy Raelton.

He tried to leap forward, but the outstretched hand of Thornley Colton
stopped him. Then the others saw the blind man dart across the room to
the bed without a false move; saw him pick up a white, dangling arm,
brush his fingers up the whole length of it, under the flowing sleeve of
the loose kimono, then stop at the wrist. They were all around him now.
He straightened up to face them.

“It’s something more, this time,” he said huskily. “Mrs. Raelton is
dead!”

“Dead!” the terror-stricken word came from the maid. The others seemed
suddenly turned to stone.

Silently Colton held the arm for her to feel the pulse. Her fingers
found the artery, her face went dead white. They could hear the
fluttering gasp of her breath as she dropped the arm.

Raelton brushed past her; his trembling fingers searched for a single
faint heart-beat. A cry of agony burst from him. Colton gently drew him
away.

“Phone Doctor Henry, Dora!” he ordered sharply. Then he seemed to sense
that the maid was staring at Donald Wreye, who stood in the centre of
the room, swaying back and forth, hands clenching and unclenching at his
sides.

“_You_, Wreye!”

The blind man’s voice seemed to galvanize Donald Wreye into action. He
whipped a revolver from his pocket.

“Like Marjorie, eh?” His laugh seemed insane. “Get out of here, all of
you!”

He stood beside the door-way, the revolver threateningly sweeping the
silent men and women. Jimmy Raelton tensed his body for a spring, but
Thornley Colton’s hand viced his arm.

“We can do nothing,” he whispered.

Like sheep they filed past the menacing pistol, the two men and women
who had met them outside going first. In the hall-way they stopped.

“Straight ahead!” ordered Wreye. He spoke over his shoulder to the maid.
“Call Doctor Henry,” he sneered. “Go downstairs and call him.”

The girl’s limbs seemed hardly able to support her as she walked past
him to the head of the stairs. He turned his attention again to the
driven men and women. Sydney’s eyes caught a glimpse of a portiered
door-way at their left, but Colton’s grip on his arm held him. Down the
hall they went. A door was open at the extreme end, the key in the
outside of the lock.

“In there, all of you!” ordered Wreye.

The women stumbled in. The men followed. The door slammed behind them.
The key turned. Outside they heard running footsteps.

“He’s gone down the backstairs,” muttered one of the men.

The dot of light at the keyhole disappeared.

“He’s put out the lights,” hoarsely whispered the other.

Thornley Colton took something from his pocket. He inserted it in the
keyhole; they heard the bolt slip back.

“He’ll return,” he whispered. “You four stay here and kick at the door.
The darkness means nothing to me. I’m going to take Sydney and Raelton
outside to watch. Give us a minute, and then begin your noise.”

He opened the door without a sound. His hands on the two men’s arms drew
them out. The blackness of the unlighted hall was impenetrable, but the
blind man pulled them forward almost on a run. Sydney’s feet
mechanically obeyed the pulling arm; Raelton, still in a daze, was
merely an automaton obeying the will of a master. The blind man thrust
them through the portieres Sydney had noticed before.

“Not a sound!” he warned, as he dragged them down to the floor, his
fingers biting deep into their arms.

The house echoed with the blows of feet and fists on the door of the
room they had just left. A door slammed downstairs. They heard the voice
of The Fee, shrill with fright.

“Dere all locked in back!”

Hurried footsteps sounded on the stairs. They heard a woman’s voice
whisper; a man’s deep, hoarse voice in answer. Sydney’s muscles grew
tense. It was the heavy voice of Donald Wreye!

“She’s dead, I tell you!” trembled the maid. They were passing the door
now.

The man’s answering whisper sounded like the growling of an animal. “You
little fool!” he hissed. “You let the other get away from us, and this
one was worth a million----”

The words ended in a woman’s scream. They heard the sound of a falling
body. A man’s curse. A short struggle. Then the dull impact of fist
against flesh. Thornley Colton’s gripping hands relaxed. He jumped
through the sheltering portieres. His voice cut the darkness:

“Stop, Wreye, stop! Doctor Henry is unconscious! Shrimp!”

The incandescents leaped to light.

On the floor was the maid, senseless. Near her was Doctor Henry, limp,
torn, his face bruised and beaten. Standing over him was Donald Wreye,
panting, trembling.

The two men who had stayed in the locked room came running forward,
shining handcuffs in their hands.

“Handcuff Mrs. Henry,” ordered Colton. “She has only fainted.” He turned
to face the still-dazed Jimmy Raelton and Sydney. “There is the
atavistic vampire!” He touched the limp body of the physician as though
it was a snake. “God knows how many lives he has ruined with his
devilish schemes. He blackmailed Marjorie Wreye out of a hundred
thousand dollars, and murdered her as surely as though his finger had
pulled the trigger that sent the bullet crashing into her brain. He made
Donald Wreye a pariah. And he almost succeeded in ruining the lives of
you and Dorothy.”

The name aroused Jimmy Raelton.

“Dorothy!” he cried brokenly. “He killed Dorothy!”

The blind man’s hand fell gently on his shoulder. “It was necessary that
she should sleep through it all,” he said quietly. “I didn’t think she
could stand another dose of the doctor’s morphia, so the powder she took
was trional powder. She will wake in an hour, suffering no ill effects.
If you’ll remove the tight rubber band I put on her arm under the kimono
sleeve the blood will flow back through the pulse.”


                                  VI.

Sydney and Thornley Colton were back in the library of the old-fashioned
house. The blind man had removed the tortoise-rimmed glasses, and around
his head and over his eyes was an alcohol-soaked bandage to relieve the
splitting headache the loss of his usual four hours of darkness in the
afternoon had produced.

“Yes, it was melodrama, Sydney,” he admitted. “But it was necessary. It
was carefully staged to shatter the nerves of the cool Dora, and arouse
the doctor’s anger at what he thought was a mistake of his accomplice.
That last resulted in the angry confession we overheard. I knew his
temper would give way under certain conditions, and I made those
conditions. Shrimp was stationed downstairs to let him in at the proper
moment, and also to keep the maid and the doctor from confidences until
they were upstairs, where they could hear the door-pounding, and would
suppose we were all together. Of course, the quartet of men and women
were private detectives posing as guests to deceive the maid. They were
stationed around the corner with orders to follow right behind us. Wreye
was across the street from the Raelton house, so that he could run over
and ring the bell a moment after we entered.”

“But how did Doctor Henry happen to be there?” demanded the puzzled
Sydney.

“Shrimp, mimicking the maid’s voice, called him up the minute our
machine appeared, and told him that Mrs. Raelton was dead. He rang off
before the doctor could get in a word. But that gave Henry all the time
he needed to get there. Shrimp says the physician fumed and fretted in
the vestibule fully three minutes before the boy heard the door-pounding
that was the signal to admit him.”

“But I thought Donald Wreye----” began Sydney helplessly.

“It was Doctor Henry and the maid from the first. Pure elimination and
the headache powders told me that.”

“But you said the powders were harmless, that Doctor Grayton was
careful,” objected Sydney.

“Their harmlessness was the crux. It put them above suspicion, but when
it became necessary to impress Dorothy Raelton with the fact that she
was a hopeless opium fiend the powder the maid gave her was a heavy dose
of morphia, which is the base of opium, and produces almost the same
after-effects. Of course, as soon as Dorothy became unconscious the
outfit was arranged for her awakening. Dorothy’s highly-strung nervous
system, like that of her sister, made it easy for a strong mind like
that of the maid to make her know--_know_--that she had smoked the drug
in a blind delirium of craving. And the wonderful suggestive stories of
the maid, and the fake finger-marks on her throat, made the thing
complete. I understood them all when I heard of the blackmail, but it
was necessary to impress the Raeltons with Dora’s innocence so that she
would be unsuspicious until the time came for the dénouement.

“The ten thousand I knew Wreye must have got puzzled me at first, though
it didn’t seem possible that he could be in the plot. The interview in
the morning proved his utter incapability of such a thing. The game
required a cool, iron-nerved man. His actions during our talk proved
conclusively that he was neither. Five minutes’ conversation with Doctor
Henry gave me all I wanted to know. His coolness, his nerve, the fact
that he had called at the Raelton home several times when Mrs. Raelton
was out, ostensibly to see the children, but really to see the maid, the
clever way he blamed Wreye for Marjorie’s suicide, his eager desire to
know at what time the Raeltons sailed in the morning, the manner in
which he took the paper he knew should contain the personal, were all
guide-posts on the right track. His beautifully clever explanation why
the opium craving I described could not be alleviated was intended to
show me my helplessness. But it gave me what I wanted. Pretending to
stumble, I got his hand in mine; my finger was on his pulse--the
Keyboard of Silence. He knew I was going to tell him of Dorothy! Though
his face was a mask, his heart-beats showed the nervousness underneath;
the nervousness no eye could have detected. That was the final proof.

“Then I realized his real cleverness. _He_ had sent the money to Wreye
with a forged note, apparently from Raelton. The maid had undoubtedly
told him of Wreye’s need and attempt to borrow from his brother-in-law,
and the doctor was afraid that Wreye, in a hot-headed rage at continued
refusals, would blurt out Marjorie’s trouble, and cause a premature
confession from Dorothy before the blackmailer had gotten her firmly in
his clutches. Henry was overlooking no possibility, and the ten thousand
was a paltry amount, beside what he expected to get. Of course, you see
how he really got the money into his hands? The envelopes containing the
bills, given to a trusted maid to mail to the fake lock-box, were merely
handed over to the real vampire. There was no chance of detection.

“This afternoon Shrimp and I went to Wreye’s office and explained the
whole game to him. He refused to believe, at first, because Marjorie had
confessed five months before her death that she was an opium fiend.
Wreye was more of a man than we ever thought. He hid the fact from the
world. He let her go her own way. He didn’t suspect the blackmailing,
because Marjorie probably feared to tell him, lest his temper should
lead him to expose the secret in his efforts to seek out the
blackmailer. And when she died, penniless, he supposed she had lost her
money gambling, the usual passion that follows opium smoking. He kept
quiet, but naturally he was bitter against the whole world.

“But I finally persuaded him to do his part in trapping the vampire.
Remember the similarity of the two voices? That was my trump card. I
knew that my story of the Raeltons’ early departure and the curt
advertisement would rouse the doctor to drastic action, and force him to
call up Dora, and give new instructions. That was what I wanted--it
would make her unsuspicious when the second call I planned came. It
worked like a charm. She never suspected the voice. It was then, by the
way, that we learned Dora was really Mrs. Henry, and that she was
getting tired of her part. We learned, also, that Mrs. Raelton was to be
given an extra heavy dose of morphia, so that it would be impossible for
her to get away in the morning. Doctor Henry needed time, you see.

“Wreye, impersonating the doctor over the phone, gave her new
instructions. The same plan was to be followed, but the doctor would
send her two new powders--they were my trional powders; I wouldn’t take
a chance on morphia again--and she was to arrange the opium set as
usual, and scream for Jimmy as soon as Donald Wreye arrived. Then, if
anything went wrong, she was to foist suspicion upon Wreye, who, she was
told, was on the verge of delirium tremens, and would be sent by the
doctor on some pretext.

“Donald, as you saw, could hardly control himself, but that made him
perfect in her eyes, though I had to stay behind a second after you
started upstairs to warn him, and I also had to give him his cue in the
room before he acted. My little trick with the rubber band utterly
unnerved the maid, who supposed that her husband had really sent poison.
So, when the doctor got there, they were at cross-purposes, and the
angry betrayal we heard was the logical result.”

For a minute there was silence; then Sydney Thames spoke. “But Wreye,
why did you let him----” There was no need to finish.

“It was pure brutishness, Sydney,” confessed Thornley Colton slowly.
“The brutishness that makes us think of physical revenge before we think
of the law. There are crimes so foul that we want to pound, to tear
their perpetrators. The driving to death of one innocent girl and the
nearly successful attempt to make a mental wreck of Dorothy Raelton, who
had never known the taste of opium smoke in her life, is one of them. My
fingers itched for Doctor Henry’s throat. But Donald Wreye’s right came
first. He took it. I am glad.”

------------------------------------------------------------------------




                           THE THIRD PROBLEM

                           THE MONEY MACHINES


                                   I.

The man in the long blue car was a person of consequence. The big
traffic policeman had stopped all north and south traffic, but the
chauffeur of the blue machine darted in front of a stopped Bowling Green
car without the slightest slackening of speed, and shot between an
eastbound slot car and a westbound delivery truck. Traffic cop 7389
saluted gravely and silenced with a warning scowl the snarling driver of
a held-up van, who had to reach the ten-thirty boat.

The lone occupant of the roomy tonneau, rigidly straight on the
cushions, answered the salute with a barely perceptible nod of his head,
and a half smile of the thin, almost bloodless lips. But there was no
change of expression in the granite-hard gray eyes, nor a movement of
the straight back. One lean hand gripped the tonneau door, the fingers
resting just above the small silvered monogram on the blue enamel; the
other dropped lightly on the seat beside his knee. John T. Villers, the
power behind the throne of Money, was on his way to his office.

It was characteristic of the man that he did not lounge back in his
seat; that his pose was one of tense rigidity. No one had ever seen John
T. Villers relax; none of the hundreds who knew him thought that he
could relax. Alert, watchful, a machine for the massing of millions; a
machine that never required rest; that never needed the lubrication of
pleasure to insure its smooth running; a human mechanism that never
deviated a hair’s breadth from its schedule. Such was the king of the
kings of finance.

At ten-fifteen he would be at his office in Wall Street. Elsewhere, a
monarch of half a million fighting men paced the floor of his castle
room, impatiently awaiting the word that a simple touch of a desk button
in that Wall Street office would bring. Ten thousand yellow coolies,
half a world away, idled in bamboo-thatched construction huts for a
stroke of John T. Villers’s pen. And he answered the salute of a traffic
policeman!

Men and women on Broadway halted in their hurrying to stare at the big
blue car, and the silent, straight-backed occupant; for the face and the
pose of the financier were as familiar to the reading public as Broadway
itself. Weak-chinned men of the unemployed ranks cursed the “luck” that
gave him money and them hunger. Clerks, from high office windows,
bemoaned the fate that compelled them to commence work at eight and
allowed him to begin at ten. There was no sign in the hard gray eyes of
the man who answered the traffic men’s salutes that the money machine
had been working until daylight over the inch-thick packet of papers now
buttoned tightly beneath his coat. The machine never showed signs of its
running.

At Murray Street a deeper inclination of the head was the honour paid a
business friend in a passing automobile. At Park Place the blue machine
skirted ahead of the traffic block where the huge Woolworth Building
mounted skyward. A taxi darted in front of it, tried to cut in ahead;
then stopped. Villers’s chauffeur cursed under his breath as he swerved
toward the curb. The wheels of the smooth-running car struck the thin
end of a building girder, ran over it with a great jolt that jarred the
car body down on its springs. A fat traffic cop hurried across the
street just as the stalled taxi came to life and scurried down Broadway.
The blue car had never even paused; the incident was closed.

The chauffeur bent lower over his wheel so that his muttered oaths would
not reach the silent man behind him, for he knew that his job hung on
the hair of his employer’s morning humour. John T. Villers’s one rule,
whether it be for trusted clerks or chauffeurs, was smoothness; he did
not like jolts.

The next traffic cop, who had sworn sympathetically when he saw that
jar, let his jaw drop and his salute become a gesture of surprise. The
lone man in the tonneau was lying back in the cushions, his eyes closed,
the fingers of the hand that had been on the door relaxed.

“’Tis a tired man he is this mornin’,” muttered the traffic man in
sympathy.

The car swung into Wall Street, stopped before the world-known banking
house of Villers. Instantly the chauffeur was down, his hand pulled open
the door. But the machine that never relaxed was sleeping. Wonderment
came to the face of the driver; then fear. He laid a hand lightly on the
shoulder of his employer. The breathing man did not stir. The fear on
the chauffeur’s face deepened. Mr. Villers must be sick!

He obeyed the first instinct, and looked wildly around. Relief chased
some of the fear away when he saw the approaching private watchman, who
had been stationed before the Villers’s house for years.

“Mr. Villers is sick!” he cried.

The watchman brushed him aside, and stared at the bloodless face with
the closed, blue-veined lids.

“He must ’a’ fainted!” gasped the watchman; and he, too, looked wildly
around for help.

“Can I be of any assistance?” Both jumped nervously as the stout,
full-bearded man with the black satchel spoke. “I am a doctair.” He
enunciated the words slowly, distinctly, with a pause after each.

“Mr. Villers has fainted.” They chorused it, huge relief in their
voices, and stepped back instantly.

The bearded man stepped to the car, ripped open the unconscious man’s
coat and vest, and placed his hand over the beating heart
professionally.

“Heart trouble. Seerious,” he told them slowly, as if the words caused
him trouble. “Tell them inside.” Both started. He called the watchman
back. “Spread the robe on the side-walk.” The watchman’s clumsy fingers
fumbled with the robe as the physician put his ear to the financier’s
chest, muttered an angry ejaculation, and fumbled with the black bag at
his feet.

“It’s ready, sir.” Then the watchman swore under his breath at the
crowding men and boys who had apparently sprung from the very side-walk.

The big man paid not the slightest attention. He lifted the slight form
of the man of millions and laid it gently on the robe-covered stones.
“He must go to a hospital,” he announced with precise distinctness. “I
will call the ambu-lance.”

The crowd parted, he hurried through.

Inside the banker’s office the chauffeur blurted the news to the
multi-millionaire’s private secretary, utterly unmindful of the two
strangers who were with him.

“Fainted?” echoed the secretary blankly.

“Fainted?” repeated the red-cheeked, black-haired stranger.

“Men like Villers don’t faint. Where is he?” The chauffeur stared at the
deep-chested, striking-looking man with the wavy white hair, fine as
silk, and the strong, lean face, whose extreme paleness was accentuated
by the great blue circles of the smoked tortoise-shell library glasses
that rested lightly on the nose with its delicate, sensitive nostrils.
“Show me where he is, Sydney.” The cleft chin was set at an ominous
angle, his slim stick, apparently of heavy ebony, dangled idly between
the tapering fingers of his right hand.

“Can’t you see the crowd running?” The shock had made the chauffeur
forget that he was only a chauffeur; he jerked his head toward the door
he had opened so unceremoniously.

“I am blind.” The white-haired man said it simply, quietly.

“Come, Thorn.” His apple-cheeked secretary led the way from the office,
the blind man at his heels. Villers’s private secretary and the
chauffeur followed dumbly after.

There were now two policemen to keep the surging crowd from the still
body of the master of millions on the cold side-walk. The outer ranks
parted for the apple-cheeked man, the blind one followed him to the
centre. One of the policemen mopped his brow in relief as they entered
the small circle.

“It looks like heart trouble, Mr. Colton,” he murmured nervously.

“Think so, Thompson?” The end of the slim stick touched a knee of the
prostrate man lightly. Thornley Colton knelt and picked up a lax arm.
His fingers felt the pulse.

“That’s what the doctor said it was.” The watchman licked his dry lips.
“He ought to be back by now.”

“Doctor?” snapped the kneeling man, without looking up.

“He laid him there t’ call th’ ambulance.” Once more the watchman wet
his lips.

“Who is Mr. Villers’s physician?” The blind man’s finger-tips were
lightly brushing the coat-lining.

“Doctor Clayton.” The private secretary answered.

“Get him. Quick!” The tone of the voice sent a bareheaded clerk who had
followed them on the jump to obey.

“Is it a serious heart attack?” stammered the still-dazed private
secretary.

“Heart attack? _No!_” The blind man spoke sharply, crisply. “This is a
morphine stupor!”

“Morphine?” gasped the dazed secretary incredulously.

“Yes!” The word was jerked out, a slim fore-finger and thumb raised an
eyelid of the prostrate man. “See the contracted pupils? Pin-points!”

“But how----Thank Heaven, Mr. MacLaren!” The secretary’s voice changed
from helpless amazement to joyous relief as the square-shouldered,
square-chinned man with the iron-gray hair pushed his way though the
crowd.

“My God! What does this mean?” cried the new comer.

The blind man rose, picked up his stick, and brushed his trousers knees.

“It means robbery--now,” he said grimly. “It will probably mean murder
in a few hours!”

Dreyfus MacLaren, the one man in all the world who enjoyed the full
confidence of John T. Villers, paced the floor of his office with
nervous strides, halting at every turn, ears strained to catch the
faintest sounds from the inner room, where the doctor worked over the
unconscious money machine. On the street outside, stretching from the
sub-treasury steps to the dingy buildings where the sugar brokers buy
and sell, the crowd still waited, whispered. In the outer room of the
financier’s office came the low-voiced hum of half a hundred newspaper
men, tensely waiting a word from that inner room. At the end of his
small office MacLaren swung around to face the blind problemist, who
rolled the thin, hollow stick he always carried between his tapering
white fingers.

“My God, Mr. Colton!” he broke out. “It couldn’t have happened!”

“It did,” answered the blind man mildly.

“But he was in an open automobile; a thousand persons saw him; he
answered the salutes of, perhaps, fifty policemen along Broadway. No one
was near him; no one could have got near enough to render him
unconscious with morphine.”

“The fact that he is still in a morphine stupor is the best answer to
that.” Thornley Colton’s voice was still mild, even gentle.

“You say that the man who lifted him out of the car did not inject the
stuff?”

“Yes. The bounding pulse my fingers felt told me immediately that it had
been in the system at least ten minutes. The bounding pulse, as it is
called, is peculiar to morphia. I have made a special study of pulse
beats.” The blind man did not add that the pulse, to him, was the
Keyboard of Silence that told many secrets of the heart to the
supersensitive finger-tips that always rested on the wrist when he shook
hands.

“Then that puts it right up to the chauffeur, whom the police arrested,”
admitted MacLaren. “But I can’t see how he did it,” he added.

Sydney Thames, silent in a corner chair, also shook his head.

“He didn’t!” snapped Colton. “If the police were forced to use brains
instead of feet to hold their jobs, there wouldn’t be so many fool
mistakes made. They should have arrested the automobile,” he finished
seriously.

Before the surprised expression on MacLaren’s face could be put into
words the inner door opened, and the grave-faced doctor stood before
them.

“Has Mr. Villers’s family been notified?” he asked.

“He won’t die!” There was utter disbelief in MacLaren’s tone.

“He will die,” amended the physician quietly. “His nerve has been
keeping his worn-out body going for years; such an overdose of morphine
could not but be fatal. I have tried to arouse him, but heroic methods
would only result in an instant stopping of his heart. He will sleep
for, perhaps, an hour more; then he will quietly stop breathing.”

“My God, doctor! That is murder!” MacLaren’s great body dropped limply
into a chair, his face was white. He had refused to believe, before,
that the master of millions could die. It was impossible. The wonderful
machine could not stop. Now it was silent, useless.

The doctor was speaking: “There is no doubt that a heavy dose of morphia
is responsible; every symptom points to it unmistakably, but”--the
physician stroked his Vandyke perplexedly--“I have been unable to find
the spot on his body where the hypodermic needle entered. I have
minutely examined the chest, the abdomen, the arms, thighs, even the
face. It is puzzling, very.”

“Mr. Villers is still lying on his back?” The question was put casually
by the blind man, whom the physician had not even noticed.

“Certainly!” The doctor answered as one answers a foolish question.

“If you will turn him gently on his side for a moment you will probably
find the broken point of the hypodermic needle under his
shoulder-blade.”

“His back--why----” The physician darted through the inner door.

The doctor’s going left them silent. MacLaren’s square shoulders were
hunched forward, his eyes fixed steadily on the closed door. Sydney
Thames, in the big leather chair in the corner, was tense, rigid. A
hundred times he had heard the blind man, whom he loved, make a
statement of this kind. Never had he known him to be wrong; but always
did he fear that Thornley Colton would make some terrible mistake in his
sureness of himself. And the sightless problemist smoked his cigarette
calmly, the great, blue circles of eyes fixed on the ceiling above him.
The door opened; the doctor faced them.

“The needle had broken under the right shoulder-blade--as you said.”
Doctor Clayton’s keen eyes bored the blind man with a look of
half-suspicion.

The words seemed to arouse MacLaren; he realized their significance.
“How--did--you--know--that?” Each separate word was a gasp. “And blind!”
The tone of his voice was a demand for explanation.

“I knew it because of my blindness,” explained the problemist quietly.
“We of the darkness must learn to visualize, mentally, what your eyes
accept unconsciously. We learn to see with our brains, you see without
them. My whole life has been spent in this development of mental
visualization. I can instantly picture, in my brain, a scene that has
been given me in pieces by my four other senses. And that mental picture
often goes back to events that lead up to, and make, the scene.”

“Do you mean that you can _imagine_ who administered the morphine?”
asked MacLaren incredulously.

“Not at all!” There was just a shade of impatience in the tone. “I have
no clairvoyant powers. I haven’t the remotest idea of the guilty
persons’ identity--yet. But I knew Mr. Villers; I knew his habits, just
as every man in New York, and Europe, too, who reads the papers, knows
them. He has probably been given more columns of newspaper space than
any other man who ever lived. Everything he did was machine-like, never
changing; as sure as the sun and moon. I know how he sits in an
automobile; I know the attention he attracts. You do, too, but you
accepted them merely as something too obvious for the brain--as merely a
routine report of the eyes. So, when I felt the unmistakable morphia
pulse, an instant’s thought told me the only possible way it could have
been administered. The trained mind doesn’t have to take up time with
the consideration of innumerable possibilities; it is trained to the
instant elimination of impossibilities. The back was the only place it
could have been injected.”

“How? By whom?” They chorused it eagerly.

“By the innocent tool of a master mind: Mr. Villers’s automobile.”

“The automobile! What do you mean?” Incredulity, amazement were in the
voices of the excited men.

“During the excitement attending the carrying of Mr. Villers to his
office my fingers were examining the cushions of the tonneau. The
upholstery had been cut in the crease formed by the two tuft buttons,
about where a man’s back would come. A specially made hypodermic was
inserted, and the cut sewed. Of course, the crease concealed the
stitches. No one ever used the car but Villers, and every one knows how
he sits in the machine. You heard the statement of the chauffeur before
the police arrested him. The jolt caused by the girder and the stalled
taxi in front of the Woolworth Building were all that was needed. If
that had not succeeded, the taxi would have swung in front and caused a
collision. Then the ‘doctor’ would have gotten right on the job there,
as he did here, when the taxi hurried on ahead to be on hand here. The
breaking of the hypo needle was almost a certainty. It only required the
barest fraction of an instant for the stuff to enter the body, and the
broken needle would at once destroy the instrument and make its presence
for some time unsuspected by any one sitting in the car.”

“How fiendish,” murmured Doctor Clayton, and the words seemed puerile.

MacLaren shook his head, as if to clear the cobwebs from his usually
alert brain; then he leaped to his feet, totally unmindful of the dying
man in the next room.

“Colton, he _can’t_ die! The quarter-billion Chinese loan must be put
through to-day. The new German bond bid is being held open for us till
midnight. Another twenty-four hours’ delay means that we lose both. He
had all the data, the papers! They were----”

“Stolen,” finished Thornley Colton quietly. “That was the object of the
game--as I told you outside.”

“I never thought of them!” In MacLaren’s voice was the strong man’s
contrition for an unpardonable oversight. His teeth snapped together
with the squaring of his jaw as he paced the room before the silent
blind man and the red-cheeked, black-haired Sydney Thames. Behind the
closed door they could hear the hum of the doctor’s voice, as he tried
vainly to call up the Villers’s up-town house; though a hundred thousand
black-typed extras were on the street telling of the racing special
train that was bringing the family to the city and the dying man.

MacLaren made a circuit of the office before he stopped in front of the
blind man, who idly twirled his cane. The sudden stopping of the machine
that he had thought could not stop had unnerved him completely, driven
every other thought from his mind. But theft was something he
understood. It meant money. MacLaren, too, was a money machine.

“The loss of those papers means millions!” He was calm now, with the
calm of deadly earnestness. “More than that! The stealing of those data
Mr. Villers had means that the United States will be frozen out of both
the Chinese and German loans. You know how we had to fight for the
chance! Ours is the only American banking house that could handle them.
All the figures were prepared by Mr. Villers, and you know his
invariable rule to hold things like this until his last minute of grace.
Those papers must be recovered before midnight! Even the murder--there
seems to be no doubt that it will be murder--pales into insignificance
beside this, and”--there was a curious catch in his voice--“God knows I
loved John T. Villers. But the loss of that Chinese loan means that the
United States won’t have a say in the new republic; that American
interests will be crowded out by the powers who control China
financially. Every last detail was in those papers he was to have ready
to-day. Think of the German loan!” He was pacing the floor again,
talking as he walked. One money machine had stopped; another must take
its place. “The loss of those papers means a loss of at least ten
millions to us, and American interests in China and Germany will lose a
hundred millions in the next ten years!”

“Midnight,” murmured Thornley Colton, as a sensitive finger-tip touched
the crystalless watch in his pocket. “And it’s now one-fifteen.”

“Less than eleven hours!” MacLaren fairly jumped to the telephone on his
desk. “The police must have inducements to hustle!” One hand lifted the
receiver; then he swung round. “_You!_” It was almost an accusation as
he hurled it at the blind problemist. “You solved that code-book theft
for us a year ago. I’d forgotten! There isn’t a minute to lose!”

“A man is dying in the next room,” reminded Thornley Colton quietly.

MacLaren wet his dry lips. “I know.” His voice was lower, calmer. “But
think what it means. The hugeness of it! A theft of a hundred millions!”
It wasn’t lack of human feeling in MacLaren. He was a money machine,
doing what the man in the next room would wish done.

The blind man nodded understandingly. “I came in this morning to see Mr.
Villers regarding his cheque for our Home for Blind Children. We haven’t
received it this year.”

“If you can recover those papers I will give you my personal cheque for
a hundred thousand!”

“I never accept fees,” corrected Colton. “The solving of mysteries is my
recreation. But if you will continue Mr. Villers’s contributions to the
home----” His expressive lips finished the sentence without words.

“Yes! Ten times the amount.” MacLaren was half out of his chair, staring
at the blind man.

“Thank you. That home means a lot to me.” The blind man spoke
reverently. “Sydney and I will look into the case after lunch; I am
hungry.”

“Hungry? My God!” MacLaren fell back weakly into the chair. “Don’t you
realize that you have less than eleven hours? Don’t you understand that
every minute of delay may be fatal?”

“Oh, no,” replied the problemist easily. “It will be at least several
hours before the man who has the papers finishes his elaborate
precautions for putting the police off his trail. There is no sense in
hurrying after a man who is dodging and doubling to avoid possible
pursuit. When he is convinced that his trail has been covered he will
resume his normal way. The chased hare can wear out a hundred dogs that
follow his devious windings, and when they are worn out he returns to
the bosom of his family, contented and serene. That’s where the ferret
gets him.”

For a full minute MacLaren stared, as if the blind man had presented a
problem in Euclid which he could not understand. Then he brushed his
sweat-beaded forehead with a trembling hand. “But the police didn’t
waste an instant,” he protested. “There are two hundred detectives
working now. They’ve got a minute description of the man.” He stopped
suddenly. “You weren’t even present when they questioned the chauffeur
and the watchman!”

“The senseless bulldozing of the police always makes me lose my temper,”
confessed Thornley Colton. “I spoke to the chauffeur for ten minutes
before the detectives arrived. Afterward I preferred to sit here, where
I could smoke a cigarette and use the telephone.”

“But the police learned that the man who lifted Mr. Villers from the car
was stout, with a full brown beard, and dressed in light gray,”
persisted MacLaren.

“And in this office, alone with my cigarette, I learned that he was slim
and smooth-shaven,” smiled Thornley Colton, as he rose. “But those are
minor details. He had the nail of his right index finger broken, and
wore a curious thumb ring. Also, he did not actually place the
hypodermic in the tonneau cushions. That was done by a small, slightly
built man, and a very beautiful woman who is left-handed.”

“Without eyes----” began MacLaren gaspingly.

“With my ten eyes.” Thornley Colton held out his two hands, with their
tapering hypersensitive fingers.

Broadway was a pandemonium of newsboys’ shouts; Wall Street a murmur of
low-voiced speculation; newspaper offices a buzz of humming activity.
John T. Villers was dead--murdered. London whispered it solemnly, Paris
gesticulated over it, Berlin gutturaled the news phlegmatically, Tokyo
took it with characteristic lack of characteristics. Men in tin-roofed
cable offices on the coast of Africa caught the telegraph clicks with
news eagerness instead of curses. The wireless aerials of a thousand
ships filched the story from the air. The man who had builded the
American empire of money was dead. Would the empire crumble? Would the
world-power of money return to the seats of the mighty on the other side
of the ocean, where it had been before the money machine had demanded a
hand-grasp on the golden sceptre the jealous hands of Europe had wielded
so long? The money machines of Paris, London, Berlin awaited the answer
that would be in the Chinese loan, the German loan--the answer that was
in the pocket of a murderer!

And in the quiet dining-room of the old Astor House Thornley Colton
complained to the waiter of the lack of crust shortening in the
apple-pie he was eating. It was three o’clock.

Across the table Sydney Thames chewed his cigar nervously and tried to
keep his mind on the “latest” extra he held in his hands. He had read
the life story of John T. Villers, printed under the great black word:
“DEAD!” It was the story of the poor boy who came to the city, the story
of machine-like habits, of putting through vast deals only when he had
taken the last possible hour to consider every point, until he became
known in Europe and America as “Last-Minute” Villers.

He read of Johnson, Villers’s personal chauffeur, who slept alone with
his wife and three small children in the big private garage that was now
empty because the dozen other Villers machines and their drivers had
gone to Bar Harbour with Mrs. Villers and the two sons. He read of
Johnson’s five years of service, of his exemplary habits, his nights
spent at home with his family; even of his taking his wife and two
larger children to the theatre the night before, while the baby was
cared for by a neighbour. Even the police admitted that he was innocent,
but police-like, they still held him.

The story of finding the curious hypodermic, surrounded by a strong
spring to hold it in place, caused Sydney to laugh nervously. The police
had not discovered it until reporters, who had interviewed MacLaren
after Thornley Colton had left, told them of it. Now the search was on
for the taxi which had caused the Villers machine to run over the
girder. And there was no clue! The three traffic policemen who had seen
the whole thing had neither number nor idea of the machine. It was red;
so were a thousand others. An expert had said that the hypodermic of
death had been made abroad, possibly in Germany. And that was all.

But the papers revelled in the details; they gave inch-typed prominence
to the announcement that MacLaren had offered a huge reward for certain
papers stolen from the unconscious Villers. It was a big story; the
biggest story of the most daring crime New York had ever known.

Yes, Sydney read, and re-read, until the inch paragraph in the lower
left-hand corner regarding the activities of a band of international
smugglers was a relief. On any other day that story would have been
given prominence, to-day it was only a filler. He glanced up at the
clock on the wall, then his eyes turned toward the blind man, in them a
look of appeal for hurry.

“Nervous, Sydney?” smiled Thornley Colton over the top of his glass of
milk.

Thames flushed, as he usually did when this man, who had picked him up
as a bundle of baby-clothes on the banks of the English river that had
given him the only surname he had ever known, read his thoughts.

“It is five minutes past three,” he murmured apologetically.

“And we haven’t done a thing,” finished Colton, the smile still on his
thin, expressive lips.

“But this is so big; the consequences----”

“Do you expect the success of this murder to pave the way for others?”
interjected Thornley Colton mildly.

“I wasn’t thinking----” Sydney stopped suddenly.

“Of the murder.” The problemist again finished the sentence for him.
“You were thinking of the stolen data. So are a million others.” The
smile was cynical, now. “What a pitiful thing a human life is, compared
to a few millions. No one thinks of Villers’s death as the death of a
man. It is merely the stopping of a machine with its work unfinished.”
He took a bill from his fold and laid it beside his plate. “Come, then;
I’ll get busy.”

“To the Villers garage?” asked Thames eagerly. “There should be
countless clues, for you, leading to the persons who placed the
hypodermic.”

“All superfluous,” declared Thornley Colton, with a slight wave of the
thin, hollow stick he always carried. “Following a multitude of
unimportant clues is police work. We are going to the office of the
Manhattan Tug and Lighterage Company; yesterday was quite foggy.
Remember?”

“What----” began Sydney amazedly.

Thornley Colton interrupted. “The same?” he asked quietly.

Sydney Thames choked back the words and glanced over the dining-room.
His brain, trained for years to count steps for the man who could not
see, and who refused a guiding arm, calculated rapidly. “The waiter is
serving the table twelve steps straight. Turn eleven, four right, and
seven to the door, left.”

A nod, and the blind man hurried forward confidently with long, swinging
strides, the hollow cane dangling idly from his fingers. Sydney
followed, and, at the door, he stepped beside Colton. The slight touch
of his sleeve on the sightless man’s arm guided him to a taxi-cab. It
was not until the directions had been given, and they were on their way
toward the Battery, that Thornley Colton spoke.

“The Manhattan Tug and Lighterage Company got a whole lot of free
publicity a few weeks ago in connection with that rescue at sea of the
Oldwell private yacht by one of their big sea-going tugs that happened
to be near. Recollect?”

“Yes,” admitted Thames, puzzled. “But what has that to do with it?”

“Nothing, except that the story went the rounds, and the name would
naturally occur to any one who needed a sea-going tug. I have an idea
that the fog of yesterday caused several persons a whole lot of anxiety.
Ah, here we are.”

Dazedly Sydney Thames followed the blind man to the side-walk. What had
a sea-going tug to do with a robbery on Wall Street? What had the fog of
yesterday to do with the murder of to-day? But Sydney knew the
uselessness of the eager questions that were in his mind. The problemist
would tell him, all in good time. So, silently, he fell in beside
Thornley Colton, and guided him into the offices with the slight touch
of his sleeve.

President M‘Inness was the man Colton asked for, and they were shown
into the private office immediately.

“Glad to see you, Mr. Colton; glad to see you!” boomed the
wide-shouldered, rugged-faced man, as he took the other’s fingers in his
vice-like grip. “What is it this time; smugglers again? They say a new
gang’s workin’. They’re even watching my boats.”

Thornley Colton shook his head, for answer to that last. Then he came
right to the point.

“You got a wireless from the _Moravia_, early yesterday morning, to take
a passenger off at Quarantine, and rush him to New York.” It was not a
question; it was a simple statement of a known fact.

“Sure,” admitted M‘Inness. “Then the Lord stepped in and brushed away
the fog at midnight, and the _Moravia_ docked at eight o’clock this
morning.”

“Can you give us the name that was on the wireless?”

“Sure. I guess you’ve heard it often enough. Percy Vanderpoole.”

Sydney Thames could not repress a gasp of surprise; but Thornley
Colton’s tone was merely casual as he said:

“Dreyfus MacLaren’s nephew?”

“That’s him. He’s got about nine million dollars, you know, and he’s
certainly been making it fly in the four years since he left college.
Hasn’t brains enough to get in out of the rain, either.”

“Um!” Thornley rolled the hollow stick between his fingers absently.
“Nothing else in the wireless, I suppose?”

“Nope. Just wanted a tug if the _Moravia_ was held up after two o’clock.
Wasn’t. The fog lifted, she docked, and we lost two hundred dollars.”
The sentence ended in a wry smile.

“From what I’ve heard of Vanderpoole, and from what I know of him, I
should think he’d have taken that tug anyway, and hang the expense.” The
blind man rose. “He must have been taking some one’s advice,” he
finished.

“Be the first time he ever did, then, according to the papers,” grunted
M‘Inness. “Accordin’ to them I’ve seen, he has a bug for giving fool
dinners.”

“So I’ve heard,” murmured Colton, backing toward the door.

“Ain’t any use asking your game, I guess?” grinned the amiable Mr.
M‘Inness.

“You’ll probably read about it in the morning papers,” smiled Colton.
Then he hurried out, his brain automatically counting the steps it had
registered as he entered.

On the side-walk outside, Sydney allowed his thoughts to find expression
in two words:

“Great Scott!”

“It was a surprise,” admitted the problemist. “It means a total change
of plans. Take me to a telephone.”

There was one at hand in the corridor of a big office building. For
nearly half an hour Colton telephoned, while Sydney waited outside the
closed booth vainly trying to understand this new complication. What
connection had the nephew of the man who had offered them a hundred
thousand dollars for the recovery of the papers with their theft, and
with the murder of John T. Villers?

Colton emerged from the booth, a smile of triumph on his thin lips.

“Now a jewellery store, Sydney,” he said crisply. “I want to buy a
cheap, unset diamond.”

“A diamond?” echoed Thames blankly.

“Exactly. I’ve just accepted an invitation for you and me and MacLaren
to a little dinner aboard Percy Vanderpoole’s yacht this evening. I’m
going to see if a diamond really has the wonderful power of suggestion
so often attributed to it.”


                                  II.

The Fee’s eyes sparkled with delight as he listened. When Thornley
Colton had finished, queer gurgling noises of joy issued from the boy’s
throat before the words came:

“Jumpin’ Jiminy, Mr. Colton! A motor boat at night an’ a disguise.
That’s _real_ detective work!”

The blind man’s lips framed a whimsical smile as he gazed down at the
red-haired, freckled-faced youth, with the slightly twisted nose, who
had become a member of the Colton household as the result of a
particularly baffling murder case, for which he had been the only fee.

“A whole lot depends on you, Shrimp,” said Thornley Colton seriously.
“Michael will go with you, but your part will have to be done all alone.
I don’t think you will be in any personal danger; if I did I wouldn’t
let you go.”

Some of the joyous light went from the boy’s eyes. “Chee! I wisht there
was goin’ t’ be some real gun play,” he sighed.

“You have a long life before you,” laughed Colton. “Hurry now; here
comes Sydney.”

As his secretary entered he turned to face him. “Your foolish fear of
women is not going to spoil it, Sydney?” he asked amusedly.

“No!” Sydney answered with the gruffness that was always in his voice
when this subject was brought up. Sydney’s fear of woman was really
adoration. All women, to him, were angels; his fear was that he would
fall in love with one--and he was nameless, a bundle of rags, abandoned
on the banks of the Thames in London. This was constantly in Sydney
Thames’s mind.

“Here comes MacLaren,” the blind man said suddenly; a moment later the
big, square-jawed man burst into the room.

“Where are they? Have you got them?” he gasped, the top-coat, flung over
his arm, dragging on the floor.

“Your coat will need the services of a dozen brushers in a short while,”
murmured Colton.

“Damn the coat!” flared MacLaren, flinging it on to the library desk.
“I’ve walked forty miles, in that office of mine, this afternoon. Every
reporter in the world has baited me. I’ve had a very devil of a time
getting here without them on my trail. Our code messages from Europe say
the financiers are grinning up their sleeves at us. They know! And all
the word I get from you is to be here at seven o’clock, and you’d show
me where the papers were.”

“I said I’d get the papers, and show you where the murderers were,”
corrected Colton mildly. “I have an old-fashioned idea of the value of
human life.”

“Yes. Certainly,” choked MacLaren. The hours of inaction had done their
work.

“We have a dinner engagement at eight,” went on Colton smoothly.

“Dinner!” exploded the square-jawed man. “My God, man! You----”

“Exactly.” The voice of the blind man held a new tone now; a steel-like
timbre that Sydney Thames instantly recognized. “I am taking you to that
dinner to get your mind off the terrible events of this afternoon.
Nothing else!”

“Where is the dinner?” The meekness of the big man was almost ludicrous.

“On the yacht of your nephew, Percy Vanderpoole.”

“That fool!” There was acridity in the voice this time.

“He has that reputation.” Sydney Thames thought the tone dry. “He is
giving what he calls a wireless dinner on his yacht, anchored off the
Metropolis Yacht Club. All the arrangements were made, and the
invitations sent out from the _Moravia_, by wireless. You know Percy has
quite a reputation for unique affairs of this kind. I called him up this
afternoon regarding some other matter, and he insisted that I come. I
sought an invitation for you, and I got it. Several men who were friends
on the way over are included.”

“All right,” agreed MacLaren gloweringly.

“We’ll go to the club in your car,” was all Thornley Colton said, as he
led the way from the room.

Vanderpoole’s guests were all awaiting their appearance, and
introductions were hurried through. There was a gushy, black-haired Miss
Clements, who was paired with an anæmic, slightly-built American; a
tall, stout German, who answered the name of Von Wagnen, with pale
cheeks, and chin that contrasted strangely with his ruddy forehead; a
dissipated-looking Englishman named Brookes; several feminine
nonentities, and one or two of Percy’s male society friends. It was a
mixed party, characteristic of the money-flinging Percy Vanderpoole.

The hurry was in honour of the military-looking Count d’Auboi whom Percy
had met in Europe two years before, with his charming wife, the
countess. The count had been aboard the _Moravia_. So had the countess,
though Percy chaffed her for taking her cabin before he even knew she
was aboard, and staying there the whole time. Her cheeks were
colourless, but her eyes shone, despite the fearful ordeal of
seasickness she now laughed over. And there was the great joke of the
count, who confessed that he had never been in America, losing Percy on
the pier, and wandering around the city for several hours, with his
nervous wife, until they succeeded in locating Percy by telephone.

“They finally got to the Waldorf, Lord knows how,” laughed Percy, as he
led the way to the dining-cabin. “And now they’re going on the midnight
train to Frisco, so we’ll have to hustle this little affair through.”

“My seestair, she is married there,” smiled the count, in his broken
English. Then, with entire disregard of connection: “An’ I even mees my
brodair-in-law, Mr. Clauson”--he indicated the anæmic-looking
American--“who come to meet us.”

Sydney took his seat, almost tremulously between the Countess d’Auboi
and the vivacious Miss Clements, at the table in the mahogany-finished
cabin. But in a few minutes he was surprised and delighted to find that
his foolish fear of the sex was being driven away like mist before the
sunshine of the charming countess’s conversation. Miss Clements, at his
left, chattered away at a mad rate to Clauson, and did not bother him.
But the countess, her wonderful voice surcharged with sympathy and the
intuitive understanding of women, drew him from his shell immediately.

Across the table the blind man chatted with Count d’Auboi, who was even
more charming, if possible, than his wife. At the head of the table
Percy laughed uproariously at the dissipated-looking Englishman’s
account of his first pigsticking in India. At the foot, MacLaren
glowered in silence, utterly ignoring the sullen-looking German and the
yellow-haired woman who was his partner. The dissipated Englishman and
the German were cabin friends Percy had met on the _Moravia_. They had
both been interesting, and that was all Percy ever asked.

During a lull in the conversation Percy happened to glance at the face
of the German, who had relapsed into sullen silence after repeated
attempts to get a word from MacLaren.

“Any one would think you’d committed a crime, Von Wagnen,” he laughed.

The blind man was the only one who did not see the blood mount to the
strangely pale cheeks of the Teuton; but MacLaren was the only one who
caught the lighting eye signal from the Englishman. His own eyes
narrowed cunningly. This was no mere dinner engagement!

“But what a horrible crime the murder of Mr. Villers was!” gushed Miss
Clements, with a shiver.

“By Jove!” The ejaculation came from Percy Vanderpoole. “You used to be
quite clever at solving mysteries, Mr. Colton. Why don’t you get on this
one?”

MacLaren cursed under his breath. Sydney Thames could not keep the
startled look from his eyes.

“You are a detective, Mr. Colton?” The countess asked it almost
accusingly, the charming touch of accent in her voice giving it a subtle
undercurrent of laughter.

Thornley Colton’s thin lips smiled back at her. “I do a little in that
line,” he admitted.

“Tell us about eet.” It was the count at his side, eyes eager with
interest.

“My cases are only simple little affairs, naturally,” deprecated the
blind man. He thrust two fingers into his waistcoat pocket. “Here is
something that I expect to solve a mystery for me.” He held a small,
glittering diamond on his outstretched palm. MacLaren’s keen ears caught
the sharp intake of breath of the German at his side. “Yes,” continued
the problemist. “That came from the thumb ring of a pickpocket, torn
from the prongs by the lining of his victim’s coat.”

“An’ he deed not know eet--what a joke!” laughed the count, picking up
the diamond from the extended palm, more closely to examine the stone.
The light from the shaded incandescents above reflected in the four
small rubies that formed the eyes of the twisted snake ring he wore on
his thumb.

The sullen-looking German had apparently recovered his nerve. MacLaren
looked puzzled.

“Let’s see it; I know a bit about the bally things.” The Englishman took
the stone from the count. “There’s a flaw in it as big as a shilling!”
he announced, with the disgust of an expert. Again MacLaren caught the
signal of eyes to the German beside him.

“Dere iss few goot stones,” announced the Teuton ponderously.

“Ple-ese tell us about it?” pleaded the countess.

“Oh, do, please do,” pouted Miss Clements, as if to forestall a refusal.
The request was chorused by the others.

“It really isn’t worth it,” protested Colton; then he seemed to know,
for the first time, that the Englishman held the stone for him to take
back. “Thank you,” he smiled, as he replaced it carefully in his pocket.
“I was afraid some one would switch off the lights and steal it in the
darkness and confusion. By the way, Percy, is that deck-light switch
still where it used to be when your father was alive?”

“The same place,” nodded Vanderpoole. “Right beside the cabin-door, on
the after-deck.”

“See!” Colton’s laugh was loud, but somehow it did not seem to ring
true. “Any one could steal the stone in the darkness, and get away with
it.”

MacLaren scowled. His quick mind understood that Colton wanted the
location of that switch for some purpose of his own. And, without eyes,
he must take this method of learning its location. But he knew that the
other guests, too, had recognized some sinister motive under the
palpable affectation of banter the blind man had assumed. There came a
tenseness there had not been before. And every one knew the location of
the switch that could plunge the decks into instant darkness.

“Let’s have the coffee and cigarettes under the awnings on the
after-deck,” suggested Percy, to cover the break.

“Let’s,” acquiesced Colton eagerly, then he paused impressively for an
instant. “If you’ll hurry I’ll tell you something about the Villers
murder. I _am_ working on that case!”

Instantly chairs were pushed back as the guests crowded to the door.

As Sydney rose, the countess found time to whisper in his ear:

“He speaks strangely, your Mr. Colton.” There was feminine nervousness
in her voice. Sydney nodded dumbly, sick at heart. The blind man he
loved had made a mistake.

MacLaren kept close to the sullen German, utterly ignoring his
yellow-haired dinner partner. The money machine’s hands were clenched in
his pockets, his shoulders braced for some attack. “A big, stout man,
with a full beard,” was the description he remembered. The Teuton
answered that description perfectly; the pale cheeks showed where the
beard had been recently shaven. He passed out to the awninged,
dimly-lighted deck, brushing the coat of the blind man, who stood beside
the door, almost over the small wicker table where the countess and
Sydney had taken their seats with the brother-in-law of the count and
the chatty Miss Clements.

For several seconds the blind man stood there, apparently calmly eyeing
them. The light of the switch incandescent shone on his wavy, white
hair, his broad shoulders, his deep chest. The German moved uneasily.
The dissipated-looking Englishman, who had manœuvred to a seat beside
him, gripped his arm. Every muscle in MacLaren’s body was tense. The
yellow-haired woman and the three other feminine nonentities bit their
lips nervously.

Sydney Thames could not repress his own nervousness. Was the blind man
going to accuse desperate men who had murdered a man and robbed him of
papers worth a hundred millions? No help was near. The sky was cloudy,
the anchorage was deserted, except for an empty speed boat that rode at
anchor in the silent darkness two hundred yards away.

Then Thornley Colton spoke quietly, smoothly. “The story of the diamond
is the story of the Villers murder.” One hand drew out the crystalless
watch. “It is now ten-thirty; at ten-forty-five the police will search
this boat for the papers stolen from the unconscious man in front of his
office!” Men and women jumped to their feet. “Sit still!” His hand went
above his head. The switch snapped out. They were in darkness.

A chair toppled over. They heard him fumble with the switch lever. Then,
shrill, frightened, came the voice of a boy:

“Let go! Let go! I’m workin’ fer Mister Colton!”

The lights came. Startled men and women saw a small boy squirming in the
grasp of a brawny man. Sydney Thames knocked over the empty chair at his
right as he leaped to his feet. It was The Fee, caught, and in his hand
was a black bag.

“It’s the papers!” yelled The Fee.

Thames knew instantly the reason for that sudden darkness. It was
Colton’s plan--and an ignorant deck hand had ruined it!

But almost in a bound Thornley Colton was at the boy’s side. He tore the
man’s hands from his arm, with fingers like steel.

“It’s all right, Mike; start ’er!” screamed the freckle-faced boy.

Under their very feet, seemingly, came the bark of a gasoline engine.

“Stand back!” ordered Colton.

Dumbly, as if dazed, they obeyed. The boy stood alone at the rail. Below
him the motor boat coughed.

Dreyfus MacLaren jumped forward to take the bag. A clenched fist sent
him sprawling. A hand tore the bag from the boy’s hand. A black
automatic swept before the circle of white faces. Behind it was Count
d’Auboi, lips drawn back in a snarl.

“I take it!” The snarling smoothness went out of the voice; it rose to a
yell: “_Jean!_”

At the signal the darkness again shut down on them. They stood huddled
together before the menacing automatic they could not see.

“A move, I shoot into ze crowd, a woman, maybe,” came the flint-like
voice of the count before them. Somewhere behind them came the sounds of
a short scuffle, a snarled oath. A man leaped to the rail. A splash
sounded below; then a hoarse order in French.

“’Nette!” snapped the count. There was no response. Again came that
hoarse voice from the water. A scrambling shadow over the rail. The
motor boat leaped away from the side.

Out of the darkness came the piercing call of a police whistle. Across
the black waters a broad beam of dazzling white shot out--picked up the
boat--held it. Men were running on the decks of the speed craft two
hundred yards away. It fairly leaped in pursuit of the smaller boat.

The white searchlight brought out the escaping boat with startling
vividness. The two men crouched over the wheel. The black bag was on the
seat beside them. A line of fire shot from the pursuing boat. Another.
The small engine went dead. The space was closing now--fifty
yards--twenty--the searchlight still held like a calcium.

The stupefied watchers on the yacht saw the count stand up in the boat;
saw him look wildly around. He stooped, picked up the black satchel, and
flung it far out into the water. In the bright glare they could see his
very teeth bared in a snarling smile as he waited. The ripples gleamed
in an ever-widening circle where the satchel had sunk.

“Nervy devil, isn’t he?” It was the cool voice of Thornley Colton. For
the first time the watchers realized that the lights were on again; that
they had been actors in reality, not wraiths in a dream.

Dreyfus MacLaren was first to recover, and as he raised his voice it had
in it the strong man’s sob:

“My God! The data!”

“The charming Countess Annette is sitting on them,” smiled Thornley
Colton. “I couldn’t bear exposing her to police shots. She is handcuffed
to her chair.”


                                  III.

“Yes, Sydney, the police can’t be beaten when it comes to making
arrests. Find the guilty ones, label them, lead them up to the police,
and the cops’ll get them every time. And the police dearly love a plant,
that’s why they worked so well to-night. You see, I made all the
arrangements this afternoon when you had left me in disgust to walk off
your nervousness. The telephone is a mighty handy thing for the blind.”
He took a sip of the vichy at his elbow, and touched the crystalless
watch lying on the old-fashioned library table before him. It was
twelve-thirty.

“But how--where?” Sydney Thames changed it to a confession. “I am still
dazed.”

“I suppose you’ll have to have it all,” smiled Colton. “All right. Ten
minutes’ intelligent conversation with the chauffeur before the fool
detectives arrived gave me practically all of the information I needed.
He told me of the theatre party with his wife and two eldest children. I
was interested because they went to a famous Broadway children’s show,
where the seat prices are high. The tickets had been given his wife by a
rich woman who devoted her time to showing mothers how to care for their
babies, and had taken an interest in his own. Of course, that told me
immediately how the chauffeur had been gotten away while the car was
fixed. Through his wife and tots was the only way he could be reached.

“Then I wanted to know if there was a good, quiet hotel near by. The
woman must have taken quarters near his home to be on the watch for the
opportunity to get acquainted with his wife and children. They are
fairly well-to-do, and would resent the professional interference of a
settlement worker. There was. A telephone call from MacLaren’s office
while you and the others were outside with the police--with the
description the chauffeur had given me--fixed her as a Mrs. Allen, a
widow, who was spending her money and time on poor babies. She had been
there two weeks. She wasn’t in when I called, but would be in the
morning. See how clever. Not a breath of suspicion by telling them that
she was going to leave. Did she have a habit of calling a special taxi?
She did, from the Nelson House. It was easy to get a description of the
chauffeur from the starter there. The calls had been made without any
attempt at concealment; for who would connect a settlement worker in New
York with the wife of a French count? The chauffeur had been employed a
week. He was undoubtedly an American. The woman was French, though she
spoke English perfectly. See how simple the possibilities are when the
foolish impossibilities the police delight in are eliminated?

“Then the chauffeur’s recollection of the bearded man who had lifted
Villers out of the car; his stilted way of speaking. I knew then that
he, too, was a Frenchman, trying to hide it by repeating, slowly and
carefully, without his usual accent, words he had learned by rote. Where
had he been while the other two were making the arrangements? A man with
the brains and knowledge to plan a crime like that couldn’t be common
enough, even in appearance, to hide successfully for two weeks. I
remembered the _Moravia_, due from Havre last night. What could be a
greater alibi than that of a man who had been in the city but a few
hours? But the fog must have caused him considerable anxiety. That’s why
I went to see M‘Inness. I knew the name of the Manhattan Tug and
Lighterage Company would still be in everybody’s mind. You know that
Percy stepped in and sent that message on his own hook--at a hint from
the count, of course, who was quick to see that that would cover his
last possible connection. When I got him on the phone I learned of the
count and his wife for the first time. Then I realized how infernally
clever they were, and knew I’d have to act accordingly. The Englishman
and the German also entered to complicate affairs. I didn’t know whether
they were in it or not.”

“But the description you gave in MacLaren’s office,” interrupted Sydney.
“It was wholly at variance with that of every one who had seen him. And
the left-handed woman who placed the hypodermic?”

Colton laughed. “The first came from knowledge of human nature. If he
was stout and full-bearded when he exposed himself before the eyes of
several hundred persons, it was a moral certainty that he was neither,
with the disguise off. He’d absolutely reverse it when he stepped into
the taxi that was waiting around the corner after it had let him off in
time to get the papers. The stitches in the cushions told me the other.
They were too fine to have been made by a man. My fingers showed me that
the needle had been thrust upward, instead of downward, as would have
been the case with a right-handed person.”

“But the actual robbery?” insisted Sydney. “The man with the broken
finger-nail? I paid particular attention at the dinner. All seemed
perfect.”

“You are learning to observe,” smiled the blind man. “When my fingers
brushed the coat-lining of the unconscious man they felt the torn
threads of the caught finger-nail as it swept upward when he thrust his
hand under the coat for the thick packet of papers. But the packet was
evidently wedged, in some way, for it was necessary for him to thrust
his whole hand down into the pocket. His thumb ring tore the lining
slightly at the corner. These things could not be seen with the naked
eye, but they could be felt with fingers trained to read handwriting by
touching the reverse side of the paper, and feeling the indentations of
the pencil.”

Sydney nodded understandingly. “Now if you’ll explain the diamond, and
The Fee’s entrance?” he asked.

“Suggestion. Psychology,” declared Thornley Colton seriously. “The
diamond held on my palm was primarily intended to find the man whose
broken finger-nail had pulled the threads from the coat lining. Held on
my palm, the man who picked it up must touch my flesh with his
finger-nail. The count’s was cut to the quick; that of his thumb was
long and tapering. Then the Englishman wanted to see it. I knew he
wasn’t the man, therefore I caused the stampede to the after-deck with
the promise of telling about the Villers murder to find out what he and
his German friend really were. A quick touch in the crowd, as they came
through the door, felt the heavy belt around the German’s waist.
Smugglers!

“That was easy, merely an incident in the case. But the police seemed
glad to get them. They were part of the long-sought band. So we’ll
dismiss them. But their presence shows further cleverness on the part of
the wily count in including them to divert suspicion if it became
necessary. He probably knew their game, and would have used it to cover
his, if he had to.

“My talk of the thumb-ringed pickpocket was intended to make the count
suspicious of me. My reference to the light switch and the darkness were
for the sole purpose of showing him how he could escape if it came to a
show-down. My idiotic attempt to cover up what he, and others, supposed
to be the only means I had of locating that switch was not intended to
deceive them; it was intended to make them understand that I thought I
was deceiving them. I knew the papers must be somewhere near; they
planned to get away at midnight. But I couldn’t take a chance of
arresting them, and then searching; for men clever enough to steal those
papers would be clever enough to put them where no one could get them.
Therefore the talk of the police search and the pulling of the switch to
put out the lights.

“By that time they understood that the only thing they could do was get
away. I’d stood watching them in silence long enough to let them see
that the anchorage was deserted, and that they had a pretty fair chance
of escaping. When the darkness came I knew one of them would take
instant advantage of it, and get the papers if they weren’t already on
his person. You didn’t give a thought to Clauson’s being absent when you
toppled over his empty chair, as you saw The Fee with that fake bag
bait. I did, and I knew the count would look at that bag as I intended
he should. He wasn’t given an opportunity to see that Clauson had gone.
He was told of the ready boat, given an opportunity to grab the bag from
the boy’s hand. He called ‘Jean’ as a signal for Clauson to put out the
lights. Jean wasn’t there, but the quick-witted countess was. Jean, of
course, heard that call, and came running. I met him at the cabin-door,
held him long enough to get the packet from his inside pocket. It was
easy, for”--a whimsical-smile came to the thin lips--“I am quite at home
in the darkness. It was done so quickly that the frightened Jean hardly
knew it, I guess, and, of course, the count supposed the boy had gotten
the data for me. Then the police stepped in, and we saw the spectacular
play of the greatest crook I ever had the pleasure of meeting, while the
countess struggled on the chair to escape. I’d put the papers under her
for safe-keeping, and also because they wouldn’t go in my dinner-coat
pocket.”

“Then,” puzzled Sydney, “the doctor who first attended Villers was--this
count! But I can’t see why--he needed his bag?”

“Because he was a mighty clever man. He knew it would be easy to take a
thick packet of papers from Villers’s pocket without being seen, but he
also knew that it would be almost impossible to slip them into his own
unobserved. Therefore the open doctor’s bag at his feet, where they
could be dropped in an instant.”

“Papers worth a hundred million,” murmured Sydney Thames, almost in awe.

“And costing a single, human life,” digressed Thornley Colton wearily.

------------------------------------------------------------------------




                           THE FOURTH PROBLEM

                            THE FLYING DEATH


                                   I.

The last sobbing notes of the violin died away. Slowly, reverently, the
girl lowered the bow and lifted her chin; the throat-filling hush
wrought by the conjuring of her music became wild, unrestrained applause
as the spell broke. The beating surges of sound from the gallery, the
balcony, the floor seemed to frighten her a little; the frail body in
its simple white frock shrank before it; but the girlish lips smiled
bravely as she bowed her way to the wings.

Clamorous, insistent, the applause continued. She reappeared; silence
came as she lifted the violin to her chin. The lilting fantasy of a
folk-song rollicked from under the dancing bow. Once more came the
enthusiastic outburst when she finished. She gestured her thanks, smiled
an instant at the upper right-hand box, laughed and kissed her hand to
the lone occupant of lower left and ran from the stage.

“Sheer genius, Sydney!” murmured Thornley Colton, in expression of the
reverence good music always aroused in him; for music, to the blind man,
held all the pleasures that painting, sculpture, and beautiful
architecture hold for those whom God has given sight. Now his whole
face, from the high forehead to the lean, cleft chin, was alight; even
the sightless eyes seemed to shine behind the great blue circles of the
smoked-glass, tortoise-shell-rimmed library spectacles that accentuated
the striking whiteness of his face and hair.

“Wonderful!” breathlessly agreed the red-cheeked, black-haired Sydney
Thames, secretary and constant companion of the blind man.

“It makes my woids muss up when I try to talk,” gulped The Fee,
freckle-faced, red-haired, blue-eyed boy, who had become a member of the
Colton household at the conclusion of a particularly baffling murder
case. Thornley Colton laughed softly and pushed back his chair. Then
real alarm came to the boy’s voice. “Gee, yuh ain’t goin’ now?” he
pleaded. “They’s a coupla comedy acr’bats an’ a wop knife t’rower yet!”

“We’ll wait,” promised Colton, as he made room for a pale-faced young
man who had just risen to hurry past him and out of the box.

The problemist moved his chair farther back, and whispered to Sydney.
“Our friend who just left seems to be troubled with a mighty bad case of
nerves,” he observed. “My cane could feel his chair trembling under him
the whole time the girl was playing. He seemed to jump a foot when she
left the stage that last time, and he’s been muttering under his breath
ever since. What happened?”

“I’d say he was wildly in love with her, and madly jealous of some one
else,” accounted Sydney. “She smiled up at him an instant after that
last encore, but she immediately turned and kissed her hand to the man
in the lower left-hand box. If ever black rage shone in a man’s face it
was on that of our neighbour. He isn’t more than twenty-two or three,
and he doesn’t look as if he had ever learned to curb a nasty temper.”

“He left as if he were going in search of some one’s heart blood,”
smiled the blind man, leaning back in his chair.

One of the comedy acrobats had just succeeded in pushing the other from
a high table, and was joyously dancing on his rubber stomach, to the
great delight of The Fee, and some fourteen or fifteen hundred others.

“You don’t happen to know the occupant of lower left?” asked Colton.
Somehow the thought of sordid jealousy of two men, and a girl whose
witchery could produce such music, seemed to jar.

Sydney gazed covertly down at the occupant of lower left. He was a
big-bodied man, and fat. There were fleshy pouches of good living and
bad drinking under his eyes; but no dissipation could hide the iron
will, the dominant arrogance the heavy chin showed. He sat back in the
deep box, the black of his evening clothes verging into the black of the
heavy velvet hangings that covered the wall behind him. The white
expanse of shirt front contrasted strikingly with the sombre background;
one white fist rested on the back of a gold chair.

“It’s James P. Cartwright, the theatrical manager!” returned Sydney
suddenly. “Her manager!” he supplemented in sudden anger as he compared
the innocent girlishness of the violinist and the coarse grossness of
the recognized man in the box. Sydney Thames deified all women from
afar, for he had forbidden himself the joys of propinquity, because he
could never forget that he had no name but that of the English river on
the banks of which Thornley Colton had found him, a bundle of dirty
baby-clothes, years before.

“Cartwright has an unenviable reputation among his women of the stage,”
muttered Colton. The smile was gone from the thin, expressive lips now.
The rocking notes of the fantastic folk-song still haunted him; the
sobbing cadence of the piece she had played before was in his mind: an
omen of tragedy. A soul that could conjure music like that--and a
Cartwright who, gossip said, demanded his price for others’ success!

The two comedy acrobats had disinterred themselves from an avalanche of
chairs and a table; the first to his feet had been promptly knocked down
by the other, and dragged off the stage by his heels, while The Fee and
a few hundred others shouted and clapped their approval. A card
announced Signor Delvetoi and his marvellous whirling knives.

Sydney, watching the occupant of the lower left, saw him take out a big
watch impatiently, lean ponderously back in a chair, and summon an
usher. The uniformed man came, listened a moment, nodded, and opened the
door at the stage end of the box, to reappear a moment later and whisper
his message, or news. Cartwright nodded, and turned his attention idly
toward the stage, where the signor sent a whirling knife toward the high
boards before which his yellow-haired partner had set a red apple
swinging on a long string. The knife point thudded into the wood; the
cut string parted, and the apple rolled to the stage floor.

“Gee, that’s some stunt!” ecstatically exclaimed The Fee, as he
enthusiastically described the feat of the black-bearded signor to
Colton.

A handful of playing cards flurried before the wooden stop. Three
whirling knives shot across the whole length of the stage; three cards
were pinned fast, and the assistant held them up triumphantly to show
the pierced ace spots.

Cartwright inclined his head in a nod of grudging approval, then turned
quickly as he heard the door that led back to the stage open. Sydney saw
the girl who had played appear in her street clothes, a simple white
shirt waist and dark skirt, her coat thrown over her arm. He gritted his
teeth at the greeting she gave the theatrical manager, and as he saw the
flush of happiness on the winsome face, while the thick lips of the man
grinned as he took her coat. Cartwright jerked his thumb toward the
stage where the dexterous signor had just succeeded in planting five
knives in a black spot not bigger than a half dollar.

He pulled his chair close to that of the girl, and they sat talking; the
girl with many pretty, unconscious gestures, the man listening, with a
jerky nod now and then. They were in the rear of the box, not three feet
from the heavy velvet hangings that covered the wall back of them. They
could not be seen from the body of the theatre, but from the upper box
opposite, where Sydney sat, everything in their box was visible.

Sydney interrupted The Fee’s excited description of the signor’s act
long enough to tell the news to Colton; and he made no excuse for his
spying. The blind man nodded grimly, and continued his patient listening
to The Fee, who was having the time of his young life. The signor, in
his suit of black silk and his black, pointed beard, had performed
miracles with the whirling knives. Now the boy waited breathlessly for
this last feat, because the soft music of the orchestra told him it
would be the best of all. A huge frame was being lowered from the flies.
The blond assistant stepped to the small shelf, thrust her hands through
the leather loops, and stood against the golden back, arms spread wide,
feet apart. The signor brought his table of glittering knives to the
footlights; the frame and the assistant swung aloft. The lights went
out. Darkness for a few brief seconds, then the calcium from the balcony
outlined the suspended woman and the gold background.

“Ah!” The Fee’s gasp swelled a thousand others, as the knife shot into
the calcium beam from the darkness below, whirled with a thousand silver
fires, and buried its point in the wood, blade grazing the cheek of the
woman. A few seconds of breathless suspense, and another followed, to
graze the ear. Even Sydney forgot the man and girl in the box as he
watched the whirling blades. The weirdness of the thing held him
fascinated; the knives, hurled from the hands of the man who was
invisible in the darkness below the single light beam, pinwheeled
through the light to find their place unerringly.

Then something caused Sydney Thames to turn his eyes again to the lower
box. At the instant a flash of lurid light leaped from the darkness,
silhouetting with startling vividness the seated man and girl. The roar
of a pistol came to his ears; and while the light cut the darkness he
saw behind the seated man and girl the face of the youth who had been in
the box with them; the man whose jealousy had been shown so plainly.

Pandemonium followed instantly. A chair crashed over in the darkness
across the theatre; clear above the cries of the panic-stricken men and
women came the scream of a man:

“My God! I didn’t do it! I didn’t! I didn’t!”

The scream stopped. “Lights!” frenziedly called some one from the
darkness.

They came. In the box opposite, Sydney Thames saw Cartwright struggling
with the man whose face he had seen so distinctly in the pistol’s flash.
On the floor of the box, face downward, was the girl of the violin.
Between her shoulders, on the white shirt waist, was a widening splotch
of crimson.


                                  II.

The girl was dead. The white-coated ambulance surgeon who examined her
had shaken his head, and refused to take her in the ambulance. The
morgue waggon had taken the body but a short time after the police
reserves had beaten their way through a mob of thousands to arrest the
white-faced, hysterical prisoner, who cried his innocence through lips
battered by the fist of Cartwright.

In the precinct station the prisoner had collapsed, and Cartwright told
his story. He had heard a slight noise, and swung around in his chair.
At that instant came the flash of the pistol behind him. He heard the
man drop it, and he leaped to grapple with him. Yes, he knew the
prisoner; name was Nelson, a half-baked kid, who had bothered Miss
Reynolds for months. Yes, this was Miss Reynolds’s first engagement; her
first appearance on any stage. He was her manager. No, nothing else.
Emphatically!

The prisoner, brought around roughly, swore that he was innocent. He had
known Miss Reynolds for months, they had been friends in Europe. She had
asked him to be present at her first appearance, and at the end of her
act he had gone to meet her at the stage entrance. It was there that he
was told that she had an engagement with Cartwright. That this made him
wild with jealousy he admitted; he knew Cartwright by reputation, and
Miss Reynolds was but a girl, innocent, unsophisticated.

He had walked around outside the theatre for about fifteen minutes, then
he had decided to go to the box and demand an explanation. The theatre
was in darkness for the knife-throwing act, but he knew his way. His
hand had been on the black velvet hangings when he stopped. And the
revolver flash had come _from the air_ not a foot ahead of him. No, he
could not explain how the shot had been fired. No one could have moved
from the spot where the pistol had been, _because the weapon dropped on
his toe_!

He was taken away to a cell on a charge of murder.

Cartwright, leaving the station when the last of the curious crowd had
drifted away, seemed to have aged ten years since the tragedy. He was
haggard, the grim, hard smile that had been characteristic was gone, his
big hands trembled. He tried in vain to get permission to remove the
girl’s body from the morgue immediately. But the law demanded that the
coroner see it first; and the official was out of town.

Cartwright remembered his political friends. He tried to locate a dozen
over the telephone and failed. Then, by chance, he met the one man in
the city who could help him; the one man among the four millions whom he
could trust: Theodore Rogers, the theatrical lawyer, a friend for thirty
years.

He tried to tell Rogers what he wanted, but his nervousness made his
words a jumble.

“What is it, Jim? What’s the trouble?” Rogers shook him, and he looked
into his eyes anxiously.

Cartwright told him of the shooting. “And, by God, Ted!” he finished
passionately. “I won’t rest a minute till I see that devil in the
electric chair! God! To kill a girl like that!”

The lawyer looked at him curiously. This was not the cool, suave
Cartwright he had known so long.

Cartwright read the look on the lawyer’s face, and the thoughts behind
it. “Not that! I swear it’s not that, Ted!” he choked.

“Come, have a drink,” pleaded Rogers, pulling him toward the lighted
entrance of a rathskeller.

“With that girl on a slab in the morgue?”

“One drink,” insisted Rogers. “You are worse than useless this way.
Come!”

He dragged Cartwright down the steps. The clock over the bar said
half-past two, and the leather-seated booths were in darkness. But
drinks could be had. The barman dozed, and the lone waiter yawned as he
carried a tray toward the booths in the rear. Rogers led the theatrical
man to a seat at the side of the room in front of the bar, ordered
whisky, and waited patiently until Cartwright had gulped down the
liquor.

“Now tell me about it, Jim,” demanded Rogers.

Cartwright, as near the end of the leather seat as he could get, glanced
at the dark booths in the back, then turned and surveyed the front of
the place. The rathskeller was empty, except for the dozing barman and
the waiter, who had gone into one of the front booths to figure his
day’s checks.

“Don’t think--what you’ve been thinking about me and that girl, Ted.”
There was almost pathetic pleading in the manager’s voice; it was
pitched so low that even the lawyer at the other side of the narrow
table could scarcely hear. “She was--a daughter to me--the daughter of
the only woman I ever loved.”

Rogers stared. This from the man Broadway thought it knew!

“Remember twenty years ago?” continued Cartwright, in that same low,
pleading voice. “The girl I took away from Kelly, that drunken burlesque
magician?”

The lawyer nodded, a look of understanding in his eyes.

“You know we loved each other, and we ran away; she, and I, and the six
months’ old kid,” he went on. “You know how she died: killed in the C. &
O. wreck two hours out of Chicago, two hours after we started--and the
kid under her body, alive! I guess that’s what woke me up. All I thought
about after that was making money for the kid. I put her with good
people, and I didn’t tell them who she was, or who I was. When she got
old enough to understand, I adopted her legally. But she never knew who
her father and mother were. I couldn’t tell her about the drunken sot
that died in the Chicago alcoholic ward. A thing like that would have
spoiled her.

“She was born with music in her. I kept her away from me and the people
that knew me. I sent her abroad. And to-night was her try-out! I wanted
to see if she could face the lights, because I wouldn’t have her laughed
at by the highbrows if she couldn’t make good. And she did! God, how
they went wild! I wouldn’t tell a soul that she was my adopted
daughter--until to-morrow. Now----” He fingered his whisky glass with
twitching hands.

Theodore Rogers, whose heart was reputed to be of stone, felt a lump in
his throat. He pushed his gloves from the table, so in bending he would
get the needed instant to hide his feelings. Something made him jerk up
his head! He saw----

The roar of the pistol in his ears deafened him. He cried out as the
long-barrelled gun recoiled across the table and struck him, butt
foremost, on the chest. His glass was crashed to a hundred pieces as the
pistol fell on the table before him. The white shirt front of Cartwright
was black, a small circle of fire glowed in the linen; on his face was
an awful look of horror as his head pitched forward on his arms.

And then Rogers understood what his eyes had first seen; the picture
that had lasted but the hundredth part of a second, perhaps, but which
would be graven on his mind for a lifetime.

He had seen the pistol against Cartwright’s heart, _with nothing to hold
it there_; the recoil of the explosion had driven it across the table
before it fell, _because no human hand had grasped it; no finger had
pulled the trigger_!


                                  III.

In the darkness of his library Thornley Colton paced back and forth. The
cigarette-end glowed and died as he puffed thoughtfully. Each detail of
the girl’s murder at the theatre, described to him by the excited
Sydney, while panic had raged above them and below them in the playhouse
the night before, was being visualized by the wonderful brain that so
unerringly found logic in seeming absurdity; explanation in apparent
impossibility--because that brain had never been tricked by seeing eyes.

The murder of the girl had moved him mightily; the stilling forever of
that wonderful music seemed more a crime against the world than against
an individual. And as he paced the curtained room the mosaics of detail
became a complete picture, and he knew--_knew_--that the man who had
left their box so hurriedly the night before; the man whom Sydney had
_seen_ fire the shot, was guiltless of the murder!

He turned to face the door as hurried footsteps proclaimed to his
trained, supersensitive ears that Sydney Thames was approaching.

“Cartwright has been murdered!” cried the red-cheeked secretary
breathlessly. “It happened too late for the morning papers, but The Fee
got some early extras of the evening editions with full details.”

“Where? How?” asked Colton.

“In an up-town rathskeller. He was shot by Theodore Rogers, the lawyer.”

“He was not,” corrected the blind man quietly.

“How did you hear of it?” demanded Sydney, in surprise.

“This is the first intimation I had of such a thing, but your statement
was just a little too positive; your voice told me that _you_ believe
Rogers guilty because of the utter impossibility of the story he must
have given the police.”

Sydney flushed. “But his story is crazy, insane!” he insisted.

“Perhaps if I heard it----” suggested Colton.

Excitedly, with utter disbelief in his voice, Sydney Thames told of the
unheld pistol Rogers swore he saw; of its firing with no finger near the
trigger; of its recoil, and fall.

“Of course the police arrested him,” continued Sydney. “Cartwright held
a lot of Rogers’s paper. That’s the motive. They’ve got a clear case, as
clear as the one against the love-crazed kid who shot the violinist.”

“Just as clear,” echoed Colton slowly. Then: “But haven’t you withheld
the fact that the pistols used in both murders are exactly alike?”

“How--did you know--that?” gasped Sydney. Many times he had heard the
blind man make such amazing statements, but they always startled him.

“Because both crimes were committed by the same man in the same way!”

“But Nelson, the kid who shot the girl, was locked up in a cell,”
protested Thames.

“Exactly,” admitted the blind man. “But he killed Cartwright as surely
as he murdered the girl.”

It was several seconds before the meaning of that sentence struck
Sydney. “He shot that girl in the back!” rebelled Thames. “I saw his
face over the flash of the pistol. Even he admits that no one else could
have fired it, because it fell on his toe!”

“Rogers swears that no one did fire the bullet which killed Cartwright,”
reminded Colton. “And the pistol fell on the table in front of him.”

“That’s impossible,” asserted Thames emphatically. “Some one must have
held the gun. Some one must have pulled the trigger. There can be no
explanation of what he says he saw. The days of ghosts and black magic
have passed.”

“But not the days of black murder,” retorted Colton. “There is no black
art, ghosts, or hypnotism in the murders of last night. The method is
unique, that’s all.”

He picked up the slim, hollow stick he always carried. “I’m going to
find that murderer,” he said. “A man who could kill a girl like that is
either a fiend or a hideous blunderer. I think it’s the latter. Will you
call the machine?”

The big automobile was always ready for instant service, day or night,
and ten minutes later they were on their way down town. Beside the
driver, eager-eyed, joyful, was The Fee. Colton had promised to let him
help on the case, and the boy’s cup of happiness was full. The Fee had
but two heroes: Thornley Colton in real life; Nick Carter in his
favourite fiction.

“We’ll go to police head-quarters first,” decided Colton. “The prisoners
will be there this morning, and I’d like to question Rogers.” Then he
got from Sydney all the details the papers had given of Cartwright’s
murder.

The Fee found a friendly doorman when they reached police head-quarters
and prepared to have the time of his life. Colton’s card secured them
grudging admittance to the office of the chief of detectives. The chief,
like his men, had all the professional’s scorn for the amateur, but he
knew the blind man, with his wide acquaintance with influential people,
was not a person to antagonize. And the police had found Rogers a
different proposition from the youth whose infatuation had led him to
the dark box and the murder charge. The lawyer was well known, and his
story demanded respect despite the utter impossibility of the thing he
described. Of course, the barman and the waiter had been arrested as
witnesses, but they had not seen the actual shooting. The barman had
been dozing, and the waiter had been busy in a front booth. The shot had
aroused them.

“Going to give us some more pointers?” asked the chief tolerantly, when
he had shaken hands with Colton and nodded curtly to Sydney.

“I’d like to look into that double-murder case a bit,” confessed the
problemist, paying no attention to the tone.

“You mean the two murders committed last night,” corrected the chief
gruntingly. “Nothing to ’em. We’ve got the goods on young Nelson. Twenty
people in the three front rows saw him do it. And Rogers’s fool story is
enough to hang any man.” The real detective’s scorn for the criminal
whose methods are crude came to his voice. “He might have got away with
a suicide story--Cartwright was all broken up about the girl--but Rogers
swears it wasn’t suicide, because the manager’s hands were not near the
pistol when it was fired. He says Cartwright’s look was one of horror,
as if he’d seen his end coming, and couldn’t get away from it.”

“He did see his death coming,” put in Colton quietly; “and I think that
during the last instant he lived he realized at whose hand it came.”

“You think he got wise to Rogers at the end, eh?” guessed the chief.

“No!” The negative was sharp. “Rogers had no more to do with the murder
than you or I. Cartwright was killed by a man who had been planning the
murder for years; the death of the girl was a terrible mistake.”

The chief jumped from his chair. “What do you know?” he demanded.

“Nothing--definitely. With a little help from you I think I can show you
the real murderer.”

“You can’t show me any murderer but Rogers and Nelson,” snapped the
chief, with an air of finality. “Because you can’t convince me or
anybody else that a man could see what Rogers says he saw. A pistol with
no hand near it. It’s impossible! It’s dam’ foolishness!” He snorted.

Unconsciously Sydney Thames found himself nodding confirmation. That was
the whole thing: an impossibility. No one had been near Cartwright but
Rogers. The girl had been shot in the back, and no one could have been
behind her but Nelson. This last Sydney knew, and had seen.

“Let me see the pistols which killed Cartwright and the girl, and I’ll
convince you that the same man murdered both,” offered Colton.

“Duplicate guns aren’t so rare,” instantly resented the chief. This man
was practically telling him that he didn’t know his business!

“Those two pistols--and others that may be in the possession of the
murderer--are the only ones of their kind in the world!”

“Look at ’em, then.” The chief grabbed them from his desk. “They’re a
standard German make, single-shot target pistols, blued steel, with
barrels six inches long, numbered and sold all over Europe.”

Colton took the two pistols, and Sydney drew his chair closer to see.

“In the first place,” began the blind man, as his thin, supersensitive
fingers examined one gun, while the other lay on his knees, “murderers
don’t usually have this kind of pistol. They can’t be carried in any
ordinary pocket, and”--his forefinger-tip rested over the shallow slot
near the muzzle--“you never before saw target pistols without front
sights!”

“Took ’em off so they wouldn’t catch in the pocket,” grunted the chief
knowingly.

Colton’s lips curved in a smile. “An ingenious theory,” he grunted.
“Have you one to fit the banged-up appearance of these butts?” He held
out the pistol and indicated the nicks and scratches.

“Been used to hammer nails,” declared the chief, exaggerated weariness
in his voice. “Gun owners use ’em that way sometimes, like a woman uses
a hairbrush. Nothing to that.”

“Yes there is! No gun owner in the world ever drove a nail by holding a
gun vertically, hand on the barrel, and pounding it up and down like a
pile driver! See, the hard usage doesn’t show on the bottom of the butt,
as it would have done had the pistol been swung as a hammer. The dents
and scratches are all on the outside edge!”

The chief took the extended gun. The sarcastic smile on his lips faded
as he tried the two ways of holding it. The blind man was right! No
driving of nails could have made nicks and scratches where they were on
this pistol! “What’s that got to do with the murder?” he growled.

“Everything,” answered the problemist shortly. He took the other pistol
on his palm. “Didn’t it strike you that these were two finely balanced
pistols, even for target use?” Before the chief could reply Colton shot
another inquiry: “Didn’t you wonder at the fact that both triggers had
been filed to a hair so that the slightest jar would cause the hammer to
fall? See!” He cocked the pistol and jammed the muzzle against the
chief’s desk. The hammer choked down sharply. He tried it again, this
time jamming the butt down on a chair arm. Once more the hammer snapped
on the empty chamber.

The chief’s jaw dropped. “That’s how those nicks were made!” he
ejaculated, shocked from his supercilious attitude. The lightning-like
questions, the proving of fact after fact by Colton, had disconcerted
him. In ten minutes the man who was sightless had shown him details that
neither his keen eyes nor the eyes of his hundred men had seen, and
Colton had made of those details startling, vivid possibilities.

“May I speak to Mr. Rogers?” Colton asked the question quietly, simply,
but under his voice was a subtle note that was dominantly compelling; a
note that had made bigger and stronger men than the chief of the New
York detective bureau bow to his wishes.

“That’s all very interesting stuff,” began the chief pompously, “but
Rogers is the man who shot Cartwright, and we know that Cartwright held
a dozen thousand dollars’s worth of his paper.”

The door opened to admit an attaché, and Sydney hid a grin with his
hand. He had seen the chief press the call button even before he began
to speak.

“Bring Rogers here,” grunted the head of the detective bureau.

The lawyer came in a moment later, and the two men who accompanied him
were curtly ordered out. The strong face of the prisoner was marred by
lines indicating loss of sleep; his lips were shut grimly, a scowl
creased his forehead, his eyes, sharp and piercing, were fixed on the
chief.

“This is Mr. Colton, Rogers,” introduced the detective shortly. “He’s
got a sort of a theory on the Cartwright murder.”

“If it’s the right one he’ll save you a lot of trouble,” snapped the
lawyer ungraciously. He turned to Colton. “I’ve heard of your work on
the Villers case.” His tone was almost amiable; then into it came dull
wonder. “But that was simplicity itself beside this. I saw that revolver
before the shot was fired, unsupported by human hands, against Jim
Cartwright’s shirt front. It must have flown there on invisible wings!”

The chief grunted sarcastically, as he had grunted at each repetition of
that unvarying statement.

Thornley Colton, tapping his foot lightly with his thin stick, looked
up. “That is just what it did do!” he said. The three men stared
blankly. The blind man continued: “According to the newspapers, Mr.
Rogers, you said that something caused you to jerk up your head in time
to see that picture. Do you know what it was?”

“I do not.” Rogers shook his head. “I can only describe it as some inner
impulse.”

“Wasn’t it”--Thornley Colton’s tone was impressive--“wasn’t it a shadow,
a swift-passing shadow, your eyes saw on the floor?”

Rogers leaped to his feet. “By Heaven, it was!” he shouted. “I remember
now!” His voice trembled with excitement. “I had lowered my head, and
across the streak of light between the seat edge and table flew a
shadow--like a bird passing overhead.” He stopped suddenly, the
bewildered look on his face telling the sudden realization of his words.
“How could you know that?” he burst out.

“The human brain is a curious thing,” explained the blind man slowly.
“It unconsciously records impressions the eyes give, but they are
instantly forgotten--because the giving is so automatic--until something
recalls them. Without sight I have been compelled to figure all things
in my brain. Even the steps that you take without seeing must be
mentally visualized by me. I knew it _must_ have been a shadow that
caused you to look up. To you it was merely one of the thousand
unconscious-conscious things your eyes see during the day which are
locked up in the brain until some outside influence brings them back.”

“You can solve this thing!” Rogers shot out the words as if he had just
made a wonderful discovery. The blind man’s conscious power in himself
had won the confidence of the lawyer; made him realize that there was
some logical explanation for the thing which his eyes had seen, and
which his reason refused to accept. He forgot that he was a prisoner
formally charged with murder, he paced the room nervously. And the
chief, scowling down at his desk, was silent. “If you can find the man
who killed Jim Cartwright!” The excitement died from Roger’s voice, a
new tone came. “I knew him for thirty years, yet I never knew him until
last night!”

“I want to bring to justice the man that could kill a girl whose soul
held the music of Miss Reynolds’s.” There was unconscious rebuke in the
problemist’s voice. All his powers he had brought to avenge the innocent
girl; but he knew his efforts must be concentrated on the Cartwright
murder because that was the key, the only key that would lead to the
murderer.

“The love-crazed kid did that! He----” Rogers stopped, his eyes saw the
two pistols side by side on the commissioner’s desk. Instantly his keen
brain recognised the significance. “They’re the same!” he exclaimed.

“What were Cartwright’s relations with Miss Reynolds?” It was a command,
as Colton put it. Rogers lifted his eyes from the two pistols.

“You wrong Jim Cartwright,” he said quietly. “You’ve accepted the
general opinion of him; the opinion he never cared enough about to
refute. He wasn’t an angel, but he wasn’t the devil a thousand
jealousies have painted him. I’m going to tell you the story he told me
last night.” And he did, with all the deep feeling of his friendship,
splendidly, simply.

As the men listened they understood the tragedy of Cartwright’s love for
the woman who had been killed in the first moments of her new-found
happiness--and his; of the little girl he had taken from her dead
mother’s arms to work for, to protect, to give the happiness the mother
had been denied--only to see her foully murdered when her cup of joy had
but just been filled. The fiendishness of it held them spell-bound. The
two beings that Cartwright had loved had been snatched from him, and he
had been killed, knowing in the last instant of his life that the real
murderer of the girl was not even suspected, could not be suspected,
because of the devilish ingenuity of his crime.

“Kelly, the drunken magician, is the man who killed Cartwright!”
ejaculated the chief.

Rogers was startled for a moment, but Colton, with an inscrutable smile
on his thin lips, put a question:

“The father of the girl is dead, isn’t he?”

Rogers glanced at the blind man in surprise. “Yes,” he admitted. “He
died in the alcoholic ward of a Chicago hospital three months after his
wife was killed. He was buried in the potters’ field.”

“Where did you find that out?” scowlingly demanded the chief.

“That I didn’t proves the fact,” answered the blind man crisply. “If
Cartwright hadn’t known he was dead you’d have heard of him before. Do
you want me to go on?” he asked.

“Might as well,” granted the chief. “Maybe this is your lucky day.”

“Then I’d like to ask a few questions of the boy who was arrested as
Miss Reynolds’s murderer.”

The chief gave the order, but there was a light of triumphant
anticipation in his eyes as he waited. Unlike the murderer of
Cartwright, there was nothing mysterious in the killing of the girl,
despite the clever efforts of the blind man to prove differently. A
score of persons had seen the flash of the pistol from the rear of the
box. His men had examined the velvet-hung wall toward which the girl’s
back had been, and there was not a break in it, not a crack.

When the boy--he was little more--was led in by two detectives there
came a look of pity to the faces of Sydney and Rogers. He staggered to a
chair when the men released his arms. His lips were purple and torn
where Cartwright had beaten him to the floor the night before. A
haunting look of terror was in his eyes; his face was pasty white.

“I didn’t do it! I didn’t! I didn’t!” he whispered hoarsely, when he had
wet his dry lips to make even the whisper possible.

Colton put his hand on the boy’s shoulder. “I know you didn’t,” he said,
and there was a world of sympathy in his voice. A new look came to the
boy’s eyes, a trembling hand sought that of the blind man.

“I loved her and she loved me,” he said chokingly. “We were going to be
married--but that Cartwright----” Shrill vehemence came to the tone, and
he stopped.

Colton’s hand quieted him. “Listen closely now, Mr. Nelson, and tell me
if this is what happened: You groped your way to the box with your right
hand on the wall. You felt the black velvet hangings, stopped, and the
pistol went off while your right hand was stretched above you, on the
hangings, and you were facing the door that led back off the stage.”

“I remember that!” interjected Sydney. “His left side was towards
Cartwright and the girl!”

“Yet you said that the pistol flash crossed his body.”

“It did!” broke in the boy. “It was not twelve inches ahead of me! My
right foot was extended to take another step, and the pistol fell on my
toe!”

Colton turned to the three listening men. “To have fired that shot he
would have had to double his left arm behind him and have shot around
his body--a physical impossibility, even with a long-barrelled pistol.”
He placed his hand gently on the boy’s shoulder once more. “Go outside
to the men who brought you in,” he said. “You will be free in a few
hours.”

Silently the boy obeyed. When Colton faced them again there was a
curious expression on his face; the expression of a man who has seen a
thoughtless boy destroy a priceless work of art by his clumsiness.

“He killed that girl as surely as if he had placed the pistol at her
back,” he said sadly. “Yet he is as innocent of her murder as a child
unborn!”

Eager questions, demands for an explanation of that cryptic remark, were
fairly hurled at the blind man by the excited Rogers. What did he mean?
How could the boy have killed Miss Reynolds and not be guilty of her
murder? How had she been killed? By whom? Sydney Thames forbore the
questions he knew would not be answered. The chief scowled down at the
two pistols, silent, thoughtful. Colton’s statement regarding the firing
of the pistol across the boy’s body had struck him like a dash of cold
water. It was true! The boy could not have fired the shot that killed
the girl! Once more the blind man’s unerring instinct for truth had torn
down the case he and his men had been building for hours. In less than
five minutes the sightless problemist had proved a fact that twenty
pairs of eyes had failed to see.

“Where are the two men who were arrested in the rathskeller?” asked
Colton curtly, utterly ignoring the questions.

“Bailed by their boss,” answered the chief. “They can only establish
details anyway.”

“I want to interview at least one of them,” declared Colton. “I also
want to visit the rathskeller. Can Mr. Rogers go, in your company, of
course?”

“Yes.” The chief took the responsibility unhesitatingly. He realized
that he must see the thing through now.

“Is your machine down here? I want to send my boy on an errand with
mine.”

“Outside, waiting.” The chief took his hat and coat from the tree. “I’ll
go with Rogers while he gets his,” he added, as he opened the door.

The blind man hurried out, feet unerringly retracing the steps his brain
had registered when they entered. The red-haired boy ran from the group
of detectives he had been entertaining.

“Shrimp!” The blind man used the name he always called the boy, and took
him aside. He whispered instructions, thrust two or three bills into the
other’s hand. The youngster darted for the machine, and jumped up beside
the driver as the chief and Rogers came from the front door.

In silence the quartet climbed into the car; in silence they made the
journey to the rathskeller, where James Cartwright had been shot a few
hours before. The waiter who had been on duty early in the morning was
again on hand, heavy-eyed. The barman was at his home.

“Where’s the booth you occupied?” asked Colton of Rogers, when the chief
had established their identity with the nervous proprietor.

The lawyer went to it, stopped at the table, and stared down at the dark
stain that could not be removed.

“This is where we were,” he said huskily.

Colton stepped in between the table and the seat edge, and sat down,
facing the rear of the rathskeller. “Cartwright was seated at the end of
the seat, like this?” He illustrated.

Rogers nodded. “He was on the extreme end, so he could assure himself
that no one would hear.”

Colton rose, and with only the slim stick to guide him, made his way to
a booth that faced the front of the rathskeller, at right angles to the
one where the watching men still stood.

“Who was in this booth when Cartwright was shot?” It was snapped out
like the crack of a whip to the waiter.

“No-body,” faltered the serving man, wincing under the battery of eyes.

“There was!” The voice held accusation. “A man was in this booth, and he
entered a moment or so before Mr. Rogers and Mr. Cartwright!”

The waiter brushed his dry lips with the back of his hand. “He couldn’t
have had nothin’ to do with it,” he mumbled, fingers twisting and
untwisting the napkin in his hands.

“No one said he did!” said the blind man sharply. “You’ve been a witness
in a murder case before, haven’t you?”

The watching men saw a look of alarm come to the man’s eyes. The chief
stepped toward him menacingly. “Yes, sir,” muttered the waiter,
shrinking. “I saw a man shot while I was at the Royal. The police kept
me in the detention for three months, and I lost my job.”

There was a grim smile on Colton’s lips as he nodded understandingly.
“You weren’t going to take a chance on that again, were you?” His tone
was less brusque. “I’ll assure you that you won’t be held a minute if
you give me a description of the man.”

The chief opened his mouth, then closed it with a snap.

“Then I’ll tell you,” consented the waiter eagerly. “He was a good-sized
guy, with a yellow, old-lookin’ face, bald-headed, with a scar on the
top, and he had eyes that was like slits. He came in that door.” He
pointed to one that opened at the rear corner of the rathskeller,
apparently on a side street. “He was so drunk he couldn’t hardly walk,
and he almost fell into the seat. I was goin’ to put him out, we closed
in half an hour, an’ I didn’t want to have to throw no drunks in the
street. But he wanted a whisky and----” The waiter flushed and stopped.

“Go on,” prodded Colton.

The waiter looked at the proprietor and gulped nervously. “He gave me a
five-spot, an’ told me to keep the change. I was bringin’ the drink when
the other two came in. I got theirs, and went up front to figger my
checks. Then I heard the shot. When I thought of the drunk again he was
gone. But he couldn’t ’a’ done nothin’. He had a horrible bun, an’ we
seen the gun layin’ in front of this guy.” He indicated Rogers. “Me an’
the bartender figgered we wouldn’t say nothin’ about him. If we did the
police ’ld put us in the detention till they found him. His gettin’ out
like that would ’a’ looked suspicious to them if it didn’t to nobody
else. He was scared sober an’ beat it quick. That’s my idear.”

“Probably he’d had an experience in the house of detention, too,”
declared the blind man dryly; then: “You never saw him before?”

“No, sir.”

“That’s all. Let’s go, chief. There’s a detail I want to clear up at the
theatre. I’ve got to prove that girl’s murder.” Again there was the
ominous ring in the problemist’s voice.

The chief glowered at the waiter. “You stay right here till I want you,”
he warned. “If you try to beat it you go up the river.” He turned to
Colton. “Wait a minute, until I call up headquarters. I’ll give ’em the
description of that drunk, and have every man in the city on his trail.”

“And spend a week following up clues,” snapped the blind man
impatiently. “I’ll show you where he is in less than an hour!”

He paid no further attention to the gaping chief of detectives, but made
his way out of the place, the silent Sydney Thames at his elbow, the
latter’s coat sleeve lightly touching that of Thornley Colton. And the
chief followed meekly.

The blind man climbed into the front seat with the driver, and Sydney
realized that he wanted to avoid interrogation; to figure out the last
steps alone. But in the tonneau the men could not resist voicing the
questions that filled their minds. Who had killed Miss Reynolds, and
what could have been the object of the murder? What connection could a
drunken man have with the murder of Cartwright; with a pistol that had
been fired without the aid of human hands?

They were at the theatre. The box-office had just been opened for the
day, and the manager took them into the darkened house. The big
interior, dim and tomblike, sent a shudder through Sydney Thames. Last
night there had been brilliant lights, happy men, laughing women--and
the girl of the violin. To-day the great stage gaped before them, huge,
untenanted; the seats were covered with their white dust cloths; voices
sounded eerie in the barnlike emptiness. The velvet hangings at the rear
of the box, which had looked so striking with their sleek blackness the
night before, now appeared worn and dusty. The overturned chairs had
been righted, the blood-stained carpet had been replaced.

Thornley Colton’s thin stick located the chairs. His right hand groped
along the wall, so that the velvet moved under it. He thrust his slim
cane under his arm, and the wonderful fingers went over the velvet inch
by inch, sometimes so strongly that the thick stuff moved under them,
then the pressure was so light that not a quiver of the loose velvet
betrayed their presence. Inch by inch the feeling fingers made their
way, as the men watched breathlessly. Rogers could stand it no longer.

“Was the murderer concealed behind those hangings?” he asked excitedly.

“No,” Colton answered him, without moving. “The pistol flash came from
this side of the velvet.”

Silence came again. The slow-moving fingers stopped. The blind man
looked up; then his doubly keen ears caught the sound of hurrying
footsteps coming toward them down the aisle.

“A telephone message for me?” he asked, as the attaché stopped.

“Mr. Colton?”

“Yes.” He turned to the others. “Come! I think this is the last detail.”

They were at his heels as he entered the boxlike office. Tense,
expectant, though they knew not for what, they listened to the one-sided
conversation.

“Yes. Good. Did you see him? No, that’s all right. Stay there until we
come.” He spoke an aside to the ticket-seller: “Will you please take
this address for me?” The man picked up his pencil and drew a small pad
toward him. “Nine hundred and ninety-seven West Forty-fourth.” The blind
man hung up the receiver.

“What is it?” The question was chorused by the excited men.

“The address of the man who murdered Cartwright and Miss Reynolds!”


                                  IV.

Before the gasps of amazement, the ejaculations of incredulity could
become coherent questions, Thornley Colton had turned and made his way
from the office, light stick dangling idly from his fingers. Dazedly
they followed him from the theatre and into the waiting automobile. He
had located the murderer of Cartwright and the girl! They were dumb with
the wonder of it. Swiftly, unerringly, the blind man had found the
murderer whose very being they had not suspected a short time before. To
the men who had followed every step of the problemist, who had seen
things that he could not see, the finding seemed magic comparable only
to the magic of the pistol that had apparently flown from the air to
deal its death. There was a new expression on the face of the chief of
detectives now. The scowl was gone; the sarcastic curve of lips had
vanished. In their place had come wonder, tinged with awe toward the man
who had builded a wonderful structure of truth from the pieces he and
his hundred men had either discarded or had not seen.

The car turned into Forty-fourth, passed the brownstone houses where
every door bore its sign: “Table Board. Furnished Rooms.” A red-headed
boy ran out into the street, and the chauffeur slowed up.

“It’s t’ree houses down, Mr. Colton.” The Fee’s voice fairly trembled
with excitement. “He’s on the top floor. Kin I go with yuh?”

Colton nodded and stepped down from the machine. “We’ll walk the rest of
the way,” he told them. He started, the bright-eyed boy at his elbow.

They mounted the steps of a brownstone house, and Colton rang the bell.
A frowsy-haired lady in a grease-spotted kimono opened the door. The
smell of cooking onions assailed their nostrils; somewhere within a
piano banged out a ragtime tune; a raucous voice screeched: “I call her
Little Hy’cinth, but her name’s M‘Swigg;” from the depths of the house a
squeaky clarinet piped off-key opera.

“Profesh’n?” snapped the lady of the kimono suspiciously before any one
had a chance to speak.

“We want to see Signor Delvetoi,” said the blind man quietly.

Sydney Thames never remembered the short colloquy that followed; never
recollected just how they entered the house. Signor Delvetoi! That name
drove everything else from his mind. Once more he saw the black-clothed,
black-bearded man at the theatre; again he saw the whirling knives
flashing from the darkness into the beam of the calcium to bury their
points beside the woman of the golden frame; once more came to his mind
the wonderful skill that had directed those keen-pointed knives toward
their target of living flesh--to brush a cheek and not even scratch it.

Then he found himself following the others up the narrow stairs. In the
second floor hall-way a fat, greasy-faced woman murmured husky
endearments to a monkey in her arms, while a goose waddled at her side.
A dozen discordant tunes came from the closed rooms. This was the place
they had come to arrest a murderer!

On the third floor Thornley Colton stopped and knocked on a door panel.
Thames could feel the tenseness of the men’s bodies as they crowded up
close to the door as it slowly opened. Standing before them, framed in
the light that came into the hallway from the room, stood a big man in a
stained red bath-robe that trailed the floor behind the worn
carpet-slippers. His head was bald, and across the skull ran a livid
scar; his face was a deep-lined, jaundiced yellow.

“We want you for the murder of Cartwright and the girl at the theatre.”
That was all Colton said, and his voice was low.

For an instant the face of the man went a fish-belly white; then
murderous red rage leaped to the cheeks, and darted from the slit eyes.

“You devils!” he shrieked.

The red robe was flung back; but with a movement as quick as light
itself Colton’s hand darted out, closed with a grip of steel on a wrist,
and the red robe whirled as the man spun to his knees.

“Better handcuff him,” advised the blind man quietly, as he pushed aside
the fallen knife with the thin cane that had warned him of the murderous
movement. The handcuffs clicked on the knife-thrower’s wrists as the
chief dragged him to a chair.

“So you’re the one, eh?” The detective chief tried to make his tone
casual, but he could not keep the wonder from his eyes, or voice.

“Oh, you got me right,” sneered the knife-thrower.

“How did you do it?” put in Rogers dazedly. The picture he had seen the
night before was still in his mind.

A cunning light leaped to the half-closed eyes of the red-robed man.
“D’you want to hear the whole thing?” he asked. “You might as well,” he
boasted. “I’ll never swing for it.”

“Go ahead,” growled the chief, drawing his chair up closer and placing
his revolver on his knees. The knife-thrower grinned sneeringly.

“Well,” he began, and his evil eyes seemed to gloat at them. “I’m the
only man in the world that could have pulled the trick. It took years of
practice to get it down pat, but there’s Indian blood in me, mixed with
the Irish. They don’t know much about me in this country, and I didn’t
want them to, till I got Jim Cartwright. But in Europe I’m the best in
the business, and I’m the only one that could ever plant five knives in
a spot the size of a half dollar at thirty feet, and do it on the
level.”

There was boasting in the tone, but to Sydney Thames, who had seen his
amazing work of the night before, it was not idle boasting.

“The story of why I killed Cartwright is the same old game: I had a
woman and he took her. She wasn’t much good, only a doll-faced fool, and
there was a squalling kid that got on my nerves; but she was mine, body
and soul.” The listening men gritted their teeth at the tone, and he
sneered at them for it. “Cartwright took her, and I went after them
both. I had a little money, I was headin’ the olio in a burlesque.
Before I started I went in a place along the river front in Chicago,
where I was. I musta showed my roll, because--now I don’t expect you to
believe what’s comin’, and I don’t give a damn whether you do or not!”
There was sullen defiance in the voice. “But I woke up in a hospital I
never saw before, and the nurse talked German! It was in Berlin, and it
was ten years after! Oh, it wasn’t anything new, the doctors told me.
One of the Windy City thugs had lead-piped me for my roll; you can see
the scar I got. Something cracked in my head then, and when I woke I’d
just been in a German train smash-up. The doctors said the bump I got
there straightened me out.

“I remembered everything after a while. I was doin’ a knife-throwin’
act. Some wop had picked me up when I didn’t know my own name, and
brought me to Europe with him. Somehow the kink had kept me off the
booze, and I was even better than him, and he was the best in the world,
bar none. He died a few months after I got out, and I copped his layout.
We’d been rehearsin’ a stunt that was going to make ’em all sit up. The
Flyin’ Death, we called it, and we threw pistols instead of knives. We
had a blank board at one end of the stage, and a target at the other.
We’d stand in the centre, let it fly at the blank board, duck, and the
butt striking would jar down the trigger, and the bullet’d go over our
heads and hit the bull’s-eye three times out of five. It was big stuff!
But I wasn’t satisfied, because I wanted to hit the bull’s-eye every
time. I was goin’ to play that act fer one man; the one that stole my
wife and ten years out of my life. So I put in two more years on the
Continent, still practisin’. If you looked at the nicks in the
pistol-butts you can see how many times they’d been used.

“When I got so I couldn’t go wrong I came to the States. I learned I was
dead--one of the thugs that got my coin and papers, I guess. But that
suited me right down to the ground. I found Cartwright was the big
cheese in the business, but I couldn’t find the wife, or the kid. I
wanted to get them, too; ten years don’t make no difference to me.”
Again came the sneer to the evil, yellow face, as his eyes caught their
looks of horror and disgust. “I spent a year touring here before I could
book Cartwright’s house. I wanted to get him right before everybody’s
eyes. That’s why I had that dark act. He was up to the rehearsal in the
mornin’ with a kid that looked something like the woman he stole, but it
wasn’t my kid, because he made it plain he was only her manager. You can
bet he’d a showed it if he had claims. I heard him make a date for the
box after her act, and that looked good to me, because I’d get him right
beside her.

“Under the knives for the spotlight act was the pistol with a real
cartridge, of course. I only used minichure ones with a pinch of powder
for the act. The guns was balanced special in Germany, and the front
sights was off the barrels so they could slide out of my hand. I could
see the white of the girl’s waist and his shirt between every
knife-throw, because I waited a few seconds each time to get ’em right.
Then, when I knew I couldn’t make a mistake, I let the gun fly. I was
goin’ to have the butt hit the wall in back of him, and bullet catch him
between the shoulders. It was easy, because I was above him on the
stage, and I thought there couldn’t be any suspicion because I was in
front of him, and he’d be shot in the back. But that darn’ fool kid,” he
spat out snarlingly, “had to have his hands on the hanging just when the
gun hit, and throw it off enough to kill the girl.”

Sydney Thames gasped audibly.

“It wasn’t my fault she was in the way, but a little thing like that
wasn’t going to keep me from gettin’ the man I wanted. I got another of
the guns out of my prop trunk and went after him. I couldn’t get him
right until I heard the other feller arguin’ with him in front of the
rathskeller. I ducked around to the side-door. I’d been in there before,
but I’d had my black stage-whiskers and wig on, and the waiter didn’t
know me. I played drunk, and gave the waiter a five-spot for a drink,
and told him not to turn on the booth-light.

“Cartwright faced my booth, but I was in the dark. They started to
whisper. The waiter was out of sight, and the bartender was sleepin’. I
had the gun ready for five minutes. This man bent down--and I let her
fly. There wasn’t going to be any mistake this time, because I was going
to put another half turn on the gun and make it jam its muzzle against
his heart. No chance of missin’ that way! And he saw the gun comin’ when
it was too late to dodge! And he knew me then! And the last thing he
ever saw was me grinnin’ at him! It was a cinch to slope out in the
excitement after.”

There was silence in the room when he had finished. From beyond the
closed door came the discordant medley of the tinny piano, the
screeching clarinet, the hoarse-voiced singers. Before them a manacled
man, with sneers in his voice, and boasts, and snarls, had just told
them of the man whose death he had accomplished with such fiendish
cunning; of the innocent girl whose life he had destroyed.

“Do you mean to say that you could fling those pistols as accurately as
all that?” demanded the chief, who was a policeman, first, last, and all
the time. The case, to him, had ceased to be one of human emotions, of
sorrow and tragedy; it was a matter of proof, of conviction. Such is the
policeman’s philosophy of life--and death.

“Do you want me to prove it?” taunted the murderer. “There’s the other
pistol for the act on the bureau. It ain’t loaded. Get it and I’ll show
you.”

“Better take his word,” suggested Colton warningly.

“I’ll see that he plays no tricks,” boasted the chief. It was his case
now. He got the pistol from the bureau. “I’ll take one cuff off, and
I’ll have this gun on you every second!” he snapped.

The knife-thrower leered at him with his bloodless lips, and the slit
eyes shone with an exultant gleam. He took a stubby pencil from his
bath-robe pocket and drew a small circle on the blank wall. He walked to
the other end of the room, the chief watching him like a hawk. The
pistol dangled from the man’s hand as he turned. A snap of the arm, and
it became a flying whirl of blue. The muzzle struck the exact centre of
the small circle, the hammer snapped down, and for an instant the gun
seemed suspended against the wall before it jangled to the floor.

“God! That’s what I saw last night!” choked Rogers.

The knife-thrower picked up the pistol. “It’s just as easy to make the
butt strike first, with the muzzle pointed at me, as it should have
pointed at Cartwright’s back last night.”

The commissioner watched every move as he walked to the end of the room.

Suddenly Colton’s voice rang out:

“_Don’t let him throw that pistol!_”

The chief jumped from his chair as the red arm swung.

A line of fire leaped from the blank wall toward the scarlet-robed
figure across the room. The explosion echoed and re-echoed in the room.
The pistol clattered on the bare boards under the small circle it had
struck so unerringly. On the butt were flakes of the white plaster where
it had been driven into the wall. The red robe seemed slowly to crumple
as the knife-thrower sank to the floor; and as they ran to where he lay,
the lips twisted in an evil leer of triumph, the slit eyes gleamed their
gloating.

“I told you I’d never swing for it!” he sneered up at them. “Palming
that cartridge was easy. I used to be a magician--when my name
was--Kelly!”


                                   V.

“Yes, Sydney, he paid the price the State puts on murder, and I guess it
is just as well.” A fleeting smile crossed Colton’s thin lips for an
instant. “But the chief is naturally angry that such a spectacular
murderer should escape his clutches so easily. My keen ears caught the
click of the breech as he put in the cartridge. But I was too late; he
had waited until the last second.”

The two men were in the library of the old-fashioned house, where the
blind man had come to spend his regular afternoon four hours in darkness
that meant insurance against the splitting headaches too-long-continued
light on his sensitive, sightless eyes always caused. The knife-thrower
had lived but a few minutes, for his skill had not failed him, and the
bullet had pierced one of his lungs. Rogers had gone to arrange for the
funerals of Cartwright and the daughter he had loved. They were to be
side by side in death, and the story would go to their graves. On that
the men had agreed in the big bare room where the last act of the
tragedy had been played.

“How did you ever connect the knife-thrower with the murders?” asked
Sydney finally.

“Your story of the shooting in the box, as you told it to me while we
were waiting for the panic to cease in the theatre, gave me the first
clue,” explained the blind man thoughtfully. “The fact that you saw the
face of Nelson so plainly told me that the flash must have crossed his
body, and, in groping his way in the darkness, his right hand must have
been on the hangings. Shrimp’s enthusiastic description of the
knife-thrower’s act told me how wonderful it was, and--he was the
possibility.

“Then the murder of Cartwright was the proof needed. There could be no
explanation but that of a thrown pistol for the thing Rogers saw. And
the two pistols being identical was the last link. But no one would
believe the theory without irrefutable proof. That I got, first by the
nicked-up butts of the guns, showing how long they had been used in
practice. Then Rogers’s story of Cartwright told me the guilty person.
But then came the necessity of explaining where he had been all the
years. I sent Shrimp to the stage-entrance to get the knife-thrower’s
address and locate him. He did, and, being a boy, he aroused not the
slightest suspicion when he made an inquiry at the house. I knew also
that at least one of the two employees of the rathskeller must have
known another man had been on hand when the murder was committed. I had
to go there to see why they had withheld the information from the
police. The explanation was logical enough, but the police would never
have seen it. Then I had to go to the theatre and find the place where
the butt of the gun had struck on the wall. The finding was more of a
job than I thought. In his excitement the boy must have moved the
hangings a foot, for the scar in the velvet was a foot lower than I
should have found it. And you must remember that it was a scar that no
eye could have seen, one that could only be found with a microscope, or
supersensitive finger-tips like mine. Then came the message from Shrimp,
whom I had told to call me up either at the rathskeller or the theatre.”

Silence came in the darkened room. When Thornley Colton spoke again his
voice was low, solemn, its tone one of reverent wonder. “The death of
that girl is one of the higher mysteries, Sydney. Was she murdered
because of a terrible mistake, or did a merciful Providence send a
thoughtless, foolish boy to grope in the darkness at just the right
instant to deflect that pistol, and send the bullet into her back? She
died in the happiest moment of her life; joy was in her heart and on her
lips. If the pistol had not been turned by the moving velvet, Cartwright
would have died. Her whole story would have had to come out then; she
would have heard it bandied by unclean lips on the street-corners; to
know that her father, the father who did not even recognize her, was a
murderer. A merciful Providence? I’ll always wonder, Sydney.”

------------------------------------------------------------------------




                           THE FIFTH PROBLEM

                      THE THOUSAND FACETS OF FIRE


                                   I.

Outside was the hurry and bustle of the busy avenue; inside was the
quietness and calm that characterised the house of Osmuhn & Son,
jewellers and dealers in articles of vertu. The Heppelwhite chairs were
carefully placed before each velvet square on the crystal cases that
extended the length of the shop on both sides. In rows of expert array
on the shelves and in the cabinets on the velvet-carpeted floor were
rich European and Oriental porcelains: Faïence and cloisonné; rare
pieces of Limoges, Satsuma, Arita, and Ninsei; lacquer ware of Kajikawa,
Ritsuo, and Korin. The salesmen, soft-footed, soft-voiced, appeared
merely indolent to the casual observer, but to one who could look
beneath the surface of things, they gave the impression of being alertly
on guard against a hidden something.

A limousine stopped before the door. The woman who alighted was
beautiful; the girl who followed her was wonderful--the type that makes
men putty and women envious. The uniformed attendant opened the door,
they stepped inside. If those two women had crossed the threshold of any
other shop on the avenue, there would have been a noticeable flurry of
excitement instantly. But not a clerk in the shop showed more than
courteous readiness. Osmuhn’s customers were all of the same type: the
richest, the most cultured, the most exclusive persons in New York. A
diamond ceased to be merely a diamond when it had been sold by Osmuhn.
It became a gem with the reputation of the seller behind it; a flawless,
matchless carbon. So it was with anything else one bought from Osmuhn &
Son.

But if the clerks showed no particular interest, the same could not be
said of the light-haired, blue-eyed young man who had been talking with
two others at the end of a long glass case. A smile of welcome came to
his lips as he hurried forward, hand outstretched.

“Mrs. Marle!” he exclaimed. “And Helen!”

His two hands met theirs in more than friendly clasp; the left to the
woman, the right to the girl. Only one man in the shop could not see the
light in the man’s eyes as he looked at the girl; but that one had
recognised love in the man’s voice.

“You knew I’d be here, didn’t you, Mr. Osmuhn?” laughed the woman
rippingly.

“The ruby.” It was not a question, just a smiling statement.

“Could mother ever resist a wonderful jewel?” put in the girl.

“It hasn’t been taken out of the private safe since you
saw it before, three months ago,” said the younger Osmuhn.
“Five-hundred-thousand-dollar rubies aren’t the playthings of the
average gem-buyer.”

“Respect my weakness, please,” pouted the woman in mock pleading; then
her eyes saw for the first time one of the men young Osmuhn had just
left, and they lighted with pleasure.

“I must speak to Mr. Colton,” she said, and she hurried to where he was
standing. The girl and the man followed slowly, talking in earnest
undertones.

Thornley Colton’s pale face lighted with pleasure as he took her hand,
and his thin, expressive lips smiled their glad welcome. Only the eyes
behind the great, round lenses of the smoked, tortoise-rimmed library
glasses did not change. His slim stick, apparently of ebony, hung
lightly from the tapering fingers of his left hand, as did the hat which
a moment before had covered the snow-white hair that curled from the
pink scalp.

“Now tell me where you’ve been keeping yourself!” the woman demanded
severely. “No evasion! We haven’t seen you since that wonderful thing
you did for the Jimmy Raeltons. It _was_ wonderful!” she added
earnestly.

“Thank you,” Colton said simply. There was no mock modesty; only quiet
sincerity in his rich deep voice.

“But you didn’t answer my questions,” she smiled. She turned to the
apple-cheeked, black-haired man who had stood silent. “Can you answer
them for him, Mr. Thames?”

The black-haired man started nervously as she spoke, for he had been
paying attention only to the beautiful girl with Osmuhn. Mrs. Marle
repeated the question before he had time to stammer the apology she saw
trembling on his lips.

“I am merely Mr. Colton’s secretary.” He said it a trifle stiffly, and
she understood that his hypersensitive nature resented her intuitive
understanding.

“I don’t like gaiety,” put in Colton quickly. “A quiet chat is my
greatest pleasure. Crowds confuse me, and make my eyes nervous.” He laid
his hand fondly on the other man’s shoulder, and to her eyes came
womanly sympathy. She knew what Thornley Colton meant. He was blind, and
the red-cheeked man beside him furnished the only eyes he knew.

“But you’ll come to my reception to-morrow night?” she asked earnestly.
“Only for a few minutes, but _do_ come.”

“I had intended to,” he smiled.

“That’s settled,” she nodded. “Now,” she added, with mock pleading in
her voice, “who is to be the happy recipient of your favour this time?”
One gloved hand made a small gesture toward the trays of jewels under
the glass. The blind man, whose years of practice had made him reader of
every inflection, understood instantly, but young Osmuhn came up in time
to answer.

“Mr. Colton has kindly consented to investigate a small matter for us,”
he said nervously.

“The necklace robbery you were telling me about?” asked the girl, eyes
shining.

“Here comes father.” Young Osmuhn’s face was red, his tone guilty.

Mrs. Marle repressed a smile with difficulty. She had never heard a
whisper of a necklace robbery in the house of Osmuhn & Son. She
understood how carefully the secret must have been guarded, and she
understood also the lack of caution that was part of youth and love. But
she was a wonderfully bright woman, and apparently she had not even
heard her daughter’s remark. All her attention was on the stout little
man with the shiny bald head and the bright eyes that gleamed from under
bushy brows.

“A great pleasure, Mrs. Marle,” said the elder Osmuhn, as he bowed
gravely. “You have come to see the Thousand Facets of Fire.”

“To buy it, I think,” she smiled, extending her hand.

“Ah,” murmured the gem-dealer, in a tone of quiet satisfaction. “I will
show it to you at once. It is in the vault.” Then a troubled light came
to his eyes, as they rested on Thornley Colton and Sydney Thames. Some
subtle fifth sense seemed to tell the blind man the cause instantly.

“Sydney and I will wait in your office, if you don’t mind,” he put in
quickly.

Osmuhn’s voice showed his relief. Experience had taught him that there
was much more appreciation when the customer was alone. “My son will
tell you everything,” he said. He looked around to where the other
member of the firm had been standing a moment before; then shrugged his
shoulders in parental helplessness. Osmuhn, junior, was leading Miss
Helen Marle toward the rear of the shop.

Mrs. Marle laughed. “You would have done the same thing at his age,” she
accused.

The jeweller shook his head. “I suppose so.” Then, to the blind man: “A
minute only, Mr. Colton,” he apologised.

“Make it ten,” smiled Colton. “Your son told me practically everything,
and I’d like to have ten minutes or so to think over the facts.”

Osmuhn turned toward the small, glass-enclosed office at the rear of the
shop, from which he could see everything that went on. The blind man
followed unhesitatingly, superkeen ears noting each footfall of the man
who preceded him.

“Only a minute,” repeated the seller of jewels again, when the two men
had been made comfortable in the two big chairs by the desk. “Come, Mrs.
Marle.” He seemed to take an unnecessary step or two as he said it, and
only the blind man heard the click of some secret electric connection
releasing the steel door that Osmuhn opened a minute later by a curious
pressure of his fingers on the knob, and a peculiar-looking key.

Mrs. Cornelius Marle, probably the richest woman in New York, lover of
jewels because they were jewels, and not merely as ornaments, owner of
what was reputed to be the finest collection of rare gems, entered the
innermost citadel of the house of Osmuhn. The steel door shut softly
behind her, and she knew that she was as far removed from the world
outside as though she were a thousand feet underground. She knew that
the tapestry-covered walls of the twelve-foot room were of eighteen-inch
concrete, interlaced with steel rails; that the Winton-carpeted floor
and the panelled ceiling were the same. The steel door behind her was
the only opening in the walls of man-made stone.

She needed no direction to take a seat at the small Sheraton table
against the wall at the far side of the vault. She had been there
before; each time when Osmuhn had picked up some rare and costly jewel.
The jeweller, with a soft-voiced apology, leaned over her shoulder to
press the pearl-centred black button in the brass wall-plate a foot from
the woman’s elbow. The table light shed its brilliance on the white
velvet table-pad.

“The Thousand Facets of Fire is the most wonderful ruby I have ever seen
or handled,” declared Osmuhn enthusiastically, as he stepped behind her
to twirl the two combination knobs on the door of the steel safe that
was imbedded in the concrete wall. “Mr. Norvel heard of it when he was
in Europe last year. He negotiated for months, and sent it to me just
ten days before his horrible accident in France.”

“The accident left him a hopeless cripple, did it not?” she asked
politely, turning in her chair so that she could see the deft fingers at
work with the combination.

“Yes.” Osmuhn’s voice was sad. “He must walk with canes always.” Then a
note of pride came to his voice. “But he refuses to give up. He is here
every day, and I need him. In the twenty-eight years he has been with me
he has learned everything I know about stones, and to-day he is probably
the greatest living expert on diamonds.”

The round safe-door swung open, and, with a wholly unconscious flourish,
he placed the big jewel-case before her and snapped back the lid.

A thousand blood-red flashes of living fire seemed to leap upward,
battling with their myriad sword points against the soft glow of the
electric--then the whole room seemed lighted only by the wonderful ruby
in its velvet case.

As great music hypnotises, intoxicates to sense-numbing silence, so the
refraction of the ruby’s million rays held the woman spellbound. She
could not speak, nor move; her eyes were held by the lights that danced
and flashed from the thousand facets--now invitingly, now mockingly, but
always sure of their victory.

Osmuhn’s eyes, under their bushy brows, gleamed brighter--they
understood. At his first sight of the jewel he, too, had known why men
had risked their lives and why women had bartered their souls and bodies
for the Thousand Facets of Fire.

“Is it not well named?” he asked.

His words seemed to break the spell that bound her. She nodded as one in
a dream, and put forth her fingers almost timidly to touch the flashing
stone.

“Take it in your hand, feel the weight of it.” He turned away, walked
the length of the room. When he came back she was holding the ruby on
her palm. The velvet box had been thrust aside, and in her eyes was
almost childish wonder that a thing so full of fire could be so cold.

With a quiet nod of satisfaction Osmuhn turned away again--it was no
time for words. Mrs. Marle would want to speak in a moment; until
then----. He went behind her, and bent down to the safe, his hands idly
rearranging the small boxes that held the most valuable jewels in his
possession; jewels that were never allowed to go from the
specially-constructed safe in the specially-constructed room, unless his
hands removed them.

The woman still gazed at the jewel. A wavering streamer of mist seemed
to hover over it for an instant--or was it a picture the jewel had
conjured in her brain? As she watched, immovable, it spread over her
hand, then over the whole table--an impenetrable veil of filmy nothing.
She lifted her unoccupied hand to brush her eyes.

A gasping noise came from her throat. The man behind her seemed to sense
something wrong in the very sound. He wheeled, the hand that had been on
the safe-door clanged it shut.

“It’s gone!” she choked. “_Gone!_”

The mist had vanished as it had come. The hand that never moved; the
hand that had held the ruby was empty!


                                  II.

As the steel door closed behind Osmuhn and Mrs. Marle, Thornley Colton
leaned back in his chair and thoughtfully puffed a cigarette. But Sydney
Thames, the secretary the blind man had picked up twenty-five years
before as a bundle of baby-clothes on the bank of the English river that
had given him his name, could not remain silent. The story young Osmuhn
had been telling them when the Marles had interrupted was not one
calculated to keep the ever-doubting Sydney still.

“What do you think of that necklace disappearance Osmuhn asked you to
investigate?” he demanded.

“One of the most interesting problems I’ve been called to solve in a
long time,” answered Colton. A smile of joy curved the thin lips, for a
problem, to the blind man who solved crime-puzzles as his recreation,
was the greatest pleasure he knew.

“But the thing is utterly impossible!” protested Sydney. “Such a thing
couldn’t have happened in broad daylight and in New York.”

“As I’ve told you once or twice before, Sydney, the fact remains that it
did happen. And there must be some explanation.”

Sydney shook his head. “The statement that a man in full possession of
his senses could stare blankly at a two-hundred-thousand-dollar diamond
necklace while it disappeared into a thin mist before his very eyes is a
trifle too strong for me,” he averred stoutly.

“Do you think young Osmuhn is lying?” smiled Colton.

“He seems to be absolutely straight,” hesitated Sydney. “But his
story----” The rest was obvious.

The smile on the blind man’s face broadened. “But consider his frankness
in telling of it, Sydney. If he’d been lying I imagine he’d have
concocted a better story than that. Consider how every detail of the
disappearance is firmly impressed in his mind. The robbery, for that’s
what it was, occurred after closing hours, when all the clerks and other
employees had gone. Only the younger Osmuhn and the diamond-expert for
the firm were on the premises. Norvel, the expert, seeing young Osmuhn
behind the long case in the shop, wanted to show him the completed
diamond necklace that was to be delivered at the Nevin home next day. He
laid it before Osmuhn, and together they examined it for possible flaws.
Norvel placed his cane on the case while he took a cigarette from his
pocket. Finding he had no matches, he limped with the aid of his other
cane to his overcoat, which he had thrown over the back of a chair five
feet or so away. A gasp from Osmuhn caused him to turn, with the
overcoat still on his arm. He saw the other man staring wildly at the
place where, a few minutes before, the diamond necklace had been. Osmuhn
swears that, while Norvel was walking toward his overcoat, a thick mist,
which he describes as not unlike steam, appeared over the necklace,
completely hiding it from his eyes. He confesses that the thing was so
remarkable that for an instant he could do nothing but stare. Then the
mist began to dissolve, and he saw that the necklace had vanished
utterly. His gasp caused Norvel to turn. Norvel hadn’t seen the mist,
for it had entirely disappeared when he had hobbled back to the case.
Together they searched for the missing diamonds without finding a trace.
Also, without leaving one another’s sight for an instant, they
telephoned to the elder Osmuhn, and sat watching one another for their
mutual protection, until he and a private detective came. They submitted
to a thorough search, and took part in the all-night hunt for the jewels
that covered every part of the store and building. Why, the very
impossibility of the story stamps it with truth!”

“But Norvel was there,” reminded Sydney.

“He had no possible chance of touching the necklace. He had turned away,
and his back was toward Osmuhn.”

“But the mist?” persisted Sydney. “That is the impossible part of the
whole thing. How, in Heaven’s name, could there be a mist such as he
describes in a New York jewellery shop? It’s absurd!”

“Not absurd, Sydney,” corrected the problemist mildly. “Merely the
solution; the solution of the whole thing.”

The smile went from his face, he leaned forward with a sudden tenseness
of face and body; the delicate nostrils quivered like those of a hound
scenting a new trail.

“Something’s wrong inside, Sydney!” His sightless eyes were fixed on the
closed, soundproof door, his head was bent forward expectantly. Then he
straightened back in his chair, and was quietly puffing his cigarette
when the door opened, and the elder Osmuhn, white-faced, trembling,
staggered out of the vault-room.

“It’s gone!” He choked the words just as the woman had choked them a few
minutes before. “The Thousand Facets of Fire has vanished!”

The blind man had risen at the first word, and before the gem-dealer had
finished speaking he had brushed past him, the thin, hollow stick that
gave its messages to the hypersensitive finger-tips locating the steps
unerringly.

The sobbing, hysterical woman at the small table did not even look up as
he laid his hand gently on her shoulder, but he felt her body shudder
under the touch, as though her overwrought mind had already pictured
visions of the police.

“Tell me how it happened, Mrs. Marle.” The words were soft-spoken,
kindly.

“There is nothing to tell,” she sobbed. “The ruby just--went.”

“Dissolved into mist?”

She looked up, sudden, wild hope showing behind the tears in her eyes.
“Would you believe that?” she asked breathlessly. “It seems
so--impossible--I was afraid----.”

“I know that is how it disappeared,” Thornley Colton said quietly. “Mr.
Osmuhn will tell you that a diamond necklace vanished in the same way
nearly ten days ago.”

The white-faced jeweller brushed his sweat-beaded forehead with a
shaking hand. “Yes,” he groaned, “that, and this ruby, will bring the
loss to nearly three-quarters of a million. But it couldn’t have
happened!” he declared, almost fiercely. “Mrs. Marle was holding it in
her hand! I wasn’t two feet away. The walls are solid concrete! There
isn’t a crack in them!” Each staccato sentence was jerked out almost
passionately. Osmuhn seemed to be trying to convince himself, as well as
his hearers, that the thing he knew had happened was utterly impossible.

Colton paid no attention. He spoke to the woman, still quietly, gently,
smoothing his questions so that they became merely statements for which
he wanted confirmation.

“You knew the ruby was gone, even before your eyes saw the empty hand?”

Osmuhn and Sydney Thames came closer to the little table.

“Yes.” She spoke more calmly. “I raised my other hand to brush my
eyes--I thought it was an optical illusion of some kind--then I felt the
stone--go.”

“How?”

“I don’t know,” she faltered, looking from one to the other in
bewilderment. “I could see nothing but the thick mist that seemed to
cover the whole table. Then--I suddenly felt my outstretched hand
relieved of the weight. It--seemed to just fly away!”

“A ruby weighing nearly two hundred carats would make a very good
flyer,” observed the blind man smilingly. Then: “But the mist, wasn’t it
a trick of the lights?”

She shook her head. “Mist is the only word that describes it. When my
eyes first noticed it, it was a ribbon that widened almost instantly to
hide the whole table, though the light shone above it perfectly. I know
that last unconsciously, for I think the jewel had hypnotised me--I
couldn’t take my eyes away, even when the mist hid it from sight.”

“Where is the switch for the table-light? Snap it off, Mr. Osmuhn.”

The jeweller leaned across the table to obey. Colton examined every inch
of the table-light with his fingers.

“Absolutely nothing there,” he murmured. Then his fingers felt the two
buttons in the brass plate that he had made the jeweller locate for him.
He snapped the light on again, then off, and back.

“It wasn’t a trick of the light,” he declared emphatically. “Nor of your
eyes, Mrs. Marle.” He stood erect. “Tell your son to come here, Mr.
Osmuhn,” he said quietly.

The white-faced jeweller almost tottered from the small room. The
instant that Osmuhn’s footsteps told the blind man that he had gone
through the door, Thornley Colton spoke.

“Mrs. Marle.” His voice was crisp, imperative. “At the instant you first
saw the mist, _was_ it as wide as a ribbon?”

She answered steadily enough, despite the sudden change in the blind
man’s tone: “Yes, it seemed to stretch over the table lengthways, waving
slightly, as a ribbon would do in a breath of air, but almost instantly
it widened and widened, until it covered the whole table.” There was
only a slight tremor in her voice, but in her eyes was awe, as she spoke
of the inexplicable thing her eyes had seen.

“Mr. Osmuhn had his back toward you?”

“Yes.”

“How do you know that?”

She smiled wanly up at him, forgetting, as people usually did when
Colton was speaking, that he could see nothing. “I don’t know it because
I saw him,” she replied, “but I _do_ know it because he always turns
toward the small safe back of this chair, and idly arranges the
jewel-cases on the shelves when a customer is examining one of the rare
gems he keeps in this room. He knows the value of silence when a lover
of jewels is looking at a wonderful stone like the Thousand Facets of
Fire.”

Colton smiled understanding; then wheeled to face the door as Osmuhn
entered, followed by his son. Following them, unnoticed, came Helen
Marle. She took her place behind her mother without a word.

“Father says the ruby has vanished!” cried the younger Osmuhn, and his
voice, and eyes, and very manner seemed a wild plea for denial.

Colton merely nodded. “Utterly,” he confirmed. “Just as the necklace
disappeared--into a mist. Now tell me, Mr. Osmuhn,” he continued
quietly, “what was the appearance of the mist when you first saw it over
the necklace on the glass case outside?”

“Why, it was just a mist,” stammered the son. “Just a cloud that spread
instantly.”

“You never lifted your eyes from the stones?”

“I don’t think so--though I may have looked up for an instant as Mr.
Norvel started toward his coat.”

“Cloud--ribbon,” murmured the blind man, apparently to himself, tapping
his trouser-leg with his slim stick.

“That wonderful ruby--gone!” muttered the elder Osmuhn, sinking, almost
inertly, into a chair at the other side of the small table.

“My God!” They all turned, as the cry burst from the man who had entered
the vault-room unnoticed. The new comer was a cripple who hobbled along
with the aid of two heavy black canes. But it was the lean, intelligent
face, with the coal-black eyes and the thin nose, that held Sydney’s
gaze. Mentality was stamped in every deep-graven line, but now there
seemed a pitiful helplessness in the tremulous lips of the man as he
advanced toward them.

“Mr. Norvel?” Colton stepped to meet the man with outstretched hand.
Then he answered the surprised looks some inner consciousness told him
was on the faces of the other persons in the room: “Mr. Osmuhn told me
of you when we were talking outside, and the tap of your canes as you
entered was all the identification I needed.”

“Yes, I am Mr. Norvel.” The words came almost gaspingly, and Colton felt
the man’s hand tremble in his. “I was in my office when I saw Mr. Osmuhn
speak to Henry. I knew there was something wrong with the Thousand
Facets of Fire, and----.”

He gasped chokingly, and staggered. Osmuhn jumped from his chair with a
cry of concern, the sight of the man before him momentarily driving from
his mind even the loss of the great ruby. “Sit down, Philip,” he
commanded, leading the crippled man to a chair.

“These things--are taking the life out of me,” gasped the diamond expert
of the firm. “The necklace--then this!”

“Mr. Norvel is on the verge of collapse,” whispered young Osmuhn. “He
has had valvular heart trouble for years. The loss of the diamond
necklace he had worked on upset him terribly--and he worked for months
to get the Thousand Facets of Fire.”

Colton nodded sympathetically. “He should take a long rest,” murmured
the blind man.

Norvel heard him. “I’ll get it soon,” he said helplessly, “in the
grave.”

“You have years before you yet,” smiled Colton encouragingly.
“Disappearances like these are calculated to frazzle the best of
nerves.” Then, in the same gentle tone he had used in questioning Mrs.
Marle, he went on: “Mr. Osmuhn told me of the terrible auto accident you
had in France last summer, Mr. Norvel. Your driver and the occupant of
the other car were killed, weren’t they?”

“Yes,” the cripple shuddered. “And it made an old man of me, that and my
rotten heart.”

Again Thornley Colton nodded sympathetically. “You hovered between life
and death for several months, I understand?”

“Practically dead,” Norvel answered.

“Um!” The blind man rolled the thin stick between his slender fingers,
and puzzled lines appeared on his forehead.

“What is the object of those questions?” demanded the elder Osmuhn, and
he could not keep the impatience from his voice.

“A long chance, nothing more,” Colton assured him quietly. “A chance
that Mr. Norvel, in his delirium, might have told secrets that gave the
criminal information necessary to commit these robberies.”

The diamond expert half rose from his chair, his hands clutching his
heavy canes. “That may be true--I may be responsible!”

“Ridiculous!” snapped Osmuhn, and he made no attempt to keep the
impatience from his tone now.

“We can’t afford to overlook even the remotest possibility in a case
like this,” said Thornley Colton evenly.

Norvel lowered the hand that had been clutching at his heart. “Why don’t
you search?” he cried. “The stone couldn’t have gotten out of the room!
The walls are of solid concrete, impregnable. The ruby must be here!”

The elder Osmuhn looked around nervously, eyes travelling from one face
to the other, seeking vainly for some way out. Mrs. Marle rose and
slipped her arm around the waist of her daughter.

“I will submit to a search,” she said quietly.

“Thank you! Thank you!” Osmuhn fairly choked his relief. “I will get
Miss----.”

“Do you want to search Sydney and me?” asked Thornley Colton, with a
half smile on his expressive lips.

“I don’t think it is necessary; you weren’t----.” Osmuhn stopped,
understanding that he had practically admitted that Mrs. Marle was the
only one on whom suspicion rested. His son opened his mouth to protest,
but the woman forestalled him.

“I understand,” she said steadily.

“Then we will go; it is long past my lunch-hour.” The blind man’s
fingers touched the crystalless watch in his pocket.

“Don’t you want to know the result of the search?” Osmuhn asked blankly.

“I know it now,” said the blind man, with that same curious smile on his
lips. “Good-bye, Mr. Osmuhn.” He shook hands heartily with the jeweller,
and held the woman’s hand in his for an instant.

“I shall be at your reception to-morrow night,” he reminded, and she
murmured a steady-voiced “Thank you.”

The blind man touched the fingers of the daughter, clasped the palm of
the younger Osmuhn and that of Norvel, and hurried out, leaving them
staring after him.

It was not until he and Sydney were in the big car on their way to the
old-fashioned up-town house and luncheon that Thornley Colton spoke.

“One of the most remarkable crimes I’ve ever had the good fortune to
work on, Sydney. And a remarkable thief--a criminal with an
imagination.”

“But how did they vanish; where did the ruby and the necklace go?” asked
Sydney Thames helplessly.

“Regarding the first part of your double-barrelled question: Is it
possible, after all you have heard, that you don’t know _how_ they
vanish?” The smile on the thin lips was inscrutable. “Where they go,
Sydney, is not half so important as where they are. That’s where the
work comes in. I am sure that I know where the Thousand Facets of Fire
is, but I don’t know where the necklace is. I never half complete a
case. By waiting I can get both the necklace and the ruby. By jumping
recklessly I can arrest the criminal and recover the ruby; but I’m not a
detective, Sydney; problems are merely my recreation. So I’ll recover
both.”

“The ruby!” exclaimed Sydney. “You know where that is?”

“Certainly,” nodded Colton, snapping his smoked cigarette into the
street. “The thief has been safe because he has worked against men who
have imaginations that are handicapped by eyes. My imagination is
unhampered. As I told Osmuhn, the search will reveal nothing, despite
the fact that the ruby is just about three feet from the place where it
disappeared!”


                                  III.

The red-haired boy with the slightly twisted nose who had become a
member of the Colton household as the only fee to a particularly
baffling murder case, shifted from one foot to the other in an ecstasy
of joy, listening intently and eagerly as the blind man talked. When
Thornley Colton had finished, he could contain himself no longer.

“Gee! I’m gettin’ to be a reg’ler detective. Yuh reelly want me to trail
him?” He asked the last anxiously, fearful lest he had heard wrong.

“Yes,” smiled the problemist. “Shadow him.”

“B’lieve me, Mr. Colton.” The boy’s eyes were round and serious. “If I
locate that nigger, I’ll show him Nick Carter ain’t got nothin’ on me.
An’ I’ll find him, too!” he boasted.

“There’s a Hindu somewhere around,” nodded Colton. “He doesn’t amount to
much, except as a trail to the real criminal, but I expect him to do a
certain thing, and I want to make sure of it. That’s all.”

“I’ll get him,” chirped the boy, and, pulling his cap down over his
ears, he darted from the room.

Colton snapped out the light and sat puffing his cigarette in the
darkness. For half an hour he did not move, except to light a new
cigarette. Sydney Thames entered with a slip of paper in his hand, and
Colton switched on the light again.

“Three boats leave this week,” announced Sydney. “The _Bordeaux_
to-morrow, the _Trevoila_ Thursday, and the _Paris_ Saturday.”

“I think that last is about it,” mused Colton, his thin fingers beating
a devil’s tattoo on the arm of his chair.

“What?”

“The date of the thief’s departure for Europe.”

“The date of----,” gasped Sydney.

Thornley Colton nodded. “He’ll have time for that one after he finds out
that the next trick he’s going to play hasn’t thrown me off the track.
He doesn’t realise--yet--the possibilities of blindness; he doesn’t
understand that the things which deceive the ordinary man only make
facts clearer to me.” Colton pushed the desk-button that would summon
the automobile at any hour of the twenty-four. “Let’s take in a matinée,
Sydney,” he said, rising.

That afternoon, and that night, not a word was said regarding the
remarkable thefts at the shop of Osmuhn & Son. Thornley Colton had
apparently forgotten all about it. Early the next morning he answered an
anxious query from Osmuhn by saying that he was hard at work, and
immediately after he idled away two hours in his music-room. At ten
o’clock the telephone rang, and the puzzled Sydney heard the following
one-sided conversation:--

“Hello, Shrimp. English valet, eh? Funny! What! Invalid who has a Hindu
servant that wheels him out every afternoon at four o’clock? Hindu went
away alone at ten o’clock this morning? Where? Good! Good! That’s all
now. Go to one of your moving-picture shows for the rest of the day.”

There was a broad smile on his lips as he hung up the receiver.

“What is it?” asked Sydney.

“Just another example of how a clever man will accomplish his object in
a clever way. Look up Irotette’s number, will you? I haven’t got it on
my list.”

“The caterer?”

“Yes.” When Colton got the connection, and gave his name, there was no
doubt of his standing with New York society’s biggest caterer. “I want a
favour,” he said, when the head of the firm was at the other end of the
wire. “An exceptionally intelligent-looking coloured man just applied
for a night’s work at Mrs. Marle’s reception to-night. You took him? I
thought you would, for I know the difficulty of getting good men for a
big affair like that. Now for the favour. Can you fix it so that his
work will allow him the freedom of the rooms? Thanks!”

Sydney started to ask a question, but the blind man forestalled him.
“To-morrow you’ll know all about it,” he promised.

Sydney realised that Colton would not say a word till the time came,
and, under protest, he accompanied the problemist to the Marle reception
that night. Colton apparently enjoyed every minute of the time, but
Sydney, as usual, was on edge continuously, for his fear of pretty women
amounted almost to an obsession. Even the wonderful personality of Mrs.
Marle, who went from one guest to another, as though she had not a care
in the world, and as though the disappearance of the ruby had never
occurred, was not able to put him at his ease.

Promptly at eleven o’clock next morning Colton summoned his car. “We’re
going to make a party call on Mrs. Marle,” was the way he answered
Sydney’s question.

“Didn’t you get enough last night?” groaned Thames.

“Quite,” nodded the blind man, “but did you notice that bright-looking
serving man with the coal-black eyes? Mrs. Marle pointed him out to me.
He is the Hindu whom I spoke to Irotette about.”

“Hindu?” ejaculated Sydney. “Why should a Hindu be serving ices at a
fool reception?”

“Because he had a little job to do. I’m going to call on Mrs. Marle this
morning, and see how he did it,” replied Colton, as he pulled on his
gloves.

When Mrs. Marle appeared, Sydney Thames had hard work to repress a gasp
of astonishment. Last night she had been happy, cheerful. Now she was
haggard, there were circles under her eyes, and her hand trembled as she
held it out.

“An unexpected pleasure, Mr. Colton.” She tried to say it graciously,
but her voice shook, and there was a piteous look in her eyes.

Thornley Colton spoke quietly, evenly. “The ruby, please.” The words
struck the astounded Sydney like a pistol-shot.

The woman choked a sob in her throat, and swayed slightly. Thornley
Colton led her gently to a chair.

“I didn’t take it!” she cried brokenly. “I didn’t! I’m _not_ a thief! I
found it in my jewel-case last night. I don’t know how it got there--and
Helen saw it, too!” The last words came in a sobbing gasp.

“Of course you didn’t take it!” declared Colton. “You haven’t even got
it!” She looked up, searching his eyes to find the truth she had prayed
for during the long hours of the night.

“You mean it! You know!” Her hand was on his arm; pleading, joy
unutterable was in her voice.

“I didn’t think that you would find it until this morning,” Colton said
contritely. “It was placed there last night by an accomplice of the real
thief. I knew it would be. The thief realised that he must throw some
dust in the eyes of all of us. He failed to understand that dust
wouldn’t affect my eyes. The ruby you have is only an imitation, but it
would have served its purpose. Let me have it.”

“Yes! Yes! Take it!” The hysteria of reaction was in her voice; she held
out her left hand, and the red stone gleamed as the folds of the
covering handkerchief fell away from it. “I must tell Helen--I asked her
to call up Mr. Osmuhn.”

“I’m going to see him now,” Colton told her, and he hurried out,
followed by her tremulous thanks.

The elder Osmuhn seemed on the verge of nervous prostration when they
arrived at the shop. He jumped from the chair in his glass-enclosed
office, and fairly ran to meet them.

“I’ve been trying to get you for fifteen minutes!” he said hoarsely.
“Mrs. Marle has the ruby. Henry has just gone there. I never
thought----.”

“I have seen Mrs. Marle,” said Colton sharply. “You should know her
better than that. The ruby she had was a mere imitation. Here it is.”

Osmuhn snatched it eagerly, glanced at it, and groaned. “But how did she
get this stone?” he demanded. “It is exactly the same weight and cut as
the Thousand Facets of Fire. She saw the ruby three months ago!” There
was suspicion in his voice now. “She is the only one in New York who did
see it! No one could have made an imitation so exactly in the few hours
since the original was stolen. And her story of the disappearance was so
impossible!” Hours of brooding over the loss of the stone had apparently
done their work.

“Don’t you believe your son’s story of the necklace disappearance?”
asked Colton impatiently.

“But _she_ has a passion for jewels. The ruby must have destroyed----.”

“If she had stolen it, she would have had more sense than bring this new
suspicion against herself. I’ll get the thief, also the ruby and
necklace. But I’ll get him in my own way and my own time. You’d better
wait. Good day!”

Leaving the head of the house of Osmuhn & Son staring, mouth agape, he
left the shop. Thornley Colton never had patience with men who couldn’t
see through a ladder when God had given them eyes.

“Telephone-booth, Sydney,” the blind man said, when they were out of the
shop. “I’m going to put joy into the heart of Shrimp. Then we’ll kill a
few hours before the next act. This is a show with long intermissions.”

The next three hours seemed the longest Sydney Thames had ever spent.
They went to an up-town restaurant, and Colton ate as though there was
not another thing worth thinking about in the world. Sydney was a
flutter of impatience. He couldn’t enjoy his food; the music of the
orchestra grated on his nerves; the waiter angered him by his continued
hovering. But Sydney knew the futility of questioning the blind man. He
knew that each apparently irrelevant thing the blind man had done would
lead logically to the finish of the case. But what was the finish? Who
was the thief? Where were the jewels that Thornley Colton expected to
get by waiting?

At last the crystalless watch told the blind man that the time had come.
“We’ll take a little walk along Ninety-first Street,” he said. “I expect
to meet a white-haired invalid in a wheel-chair, with a Hindu servant.
Watch for him.”

They reached Ninety-first Street, and strolled along casually; two
idlers out for an afternoon walk. Suddenly Sydney saw the invalid.

“A man in a wheel-chair was just brought out of that brownstone house a
block up the street. The man wheeling him is coloured.”

“Don’t notice him,” warned Colton.

They walked slowly toward the on-coming wheel-chair. Sydney tried his
best to appear as calm as the blind man, but he could feel his heart
pounding in his chest. What was going to happen? The street, for a
block, was deserted, save for them, the two others, and a ragged street
gamin, who was speeding along the smooth pavement on roller skates.

Sydney could see the man in the chair plainly now. His long, white hair
almost touched his shoulders, the white beard swept his breast, and came
up almost to his eyes. His legs were wrapped tight in a red blanket, and
a shawl was thrown over his shoulders.

Only five feet separated them. As they stepped out to let the chair go
past, the gamin, with a wild whoop, came speeding up in back of the
chair, head down. He skated straight at the Hindu servant, struck him,
and bowled him over. With a shriek of joy he continued on his way after
staggering Sydney Thames as he brushed past him.

Colton leaped forward with a cry of mingled anger and sympathy. His hand
on the round iron handle of the chair kept it from going over, and he
grasped one of the big knobs at the handle-ends to steady himself as he
helped the muttering servant to his feet.

“Little devil!” snapped the invalid, in a high-pitched, querulous voice.
Then, as Thornley Colton stepped in front of him: “Thank you, young
man.”

“He should be arrested,” declared Colton emphatically. He held out his
hand. “I am blind,” he apologised. “Will you shake the hand of another
of the afflicted? My secretary described you to me as you came along.”

“Well, you’re no worse off than I am,” cackled the man in the chair. “I
see too devilish much! Good day.”

Colton bowed and stood aside. The impassive-faced servant pushed the
chair down the side-walk.

“It’s a crime the way those gamins carry on,” muttered Sydney, when they
had walked a hundred yards or so in silence.

Colton chuckled. “I’ll have to tell Shrimp how good his disguise was,”
he laughed.

“Shrimp!” echoed Sydney in amazement.

“Certainly.” Thornley Colton grinned broadly. “He was on hand to give
our Hindu friend a bump when the proper time came.”

“In Heaven’s name why?”

“So that I could locate the probable hiding-place of the ruby and the
necklace when the time came for hiding them there. Also, to give me a
chance to shake the hand of the man who stole them. Davidson is the
invalid’s name. Quite a character, isn’t he?”


                                  IV.

In the darkened music-room Thornley Colton’s fingers wandered idly over
the keys, now improvising, now filling the room with the ever-living
soul of Beethoven, now swinging crashingly into Wagner; then his fingers
on the upper treble brought forth a strange discord of notes through
which ran a weird minor melody. The last seemed to please him, for he
repeated it, until Sydney Thames, who had been nervously pacing the
room, stopped in his tracks.

“What the deuce do you call that?” he demanded, the discords still
ringing in his ears. “It’s horrible!”

“Because it doesn’t agree with your orthodox ideas of music,” declared
Colton seriously. “That is one of the most beautiful pieces of music I
know. It is a Hindustan adaptation of the ‘Chinese Flute Song’ of _Siao
She_. It is a fitting accompaniment for this latest case of ours.”

“And just as understandable,” observed Sydney, walking up and down the
room again. Colton turned again toward the keys, and Sydney broke out
impatiently: “Why don’t you do something, Thorn? Two whole days have
passed since you found the man who stole the ruby, and you haven’t done
a thing! Osmuhn suspects Mrs. Marle, and she is on the verge of
collapse. You haven’t made an attempt to clear up the mystery. It isn’t
right! Osmuhn is rapidly losing his patience; his son must stand
helplessly by and see the mother of the girl he loves suspected; and the
thing is making a nervous wreck of Norvel. It is only a matter of days
when he will have to leave the business for good.”

“Osmuhn’s patience became exhausted last night,” Thornley Colton said.
“He advised me that he had lost faith in my efforts, and that he was
going to call in the police.”

“Great Heaven!” exclaimed Sydney. “That means that they will arrest Mrs.
Marle!” It only needed a woman in trouble to put the susceptible Sydney
Thames at sixes and sevens.

“I think even the police will hesitate before arresting a woman like
Mrs. Marle on mere suspicion,” the blind man declared.

The electric bell at the front door sent out its announcement.

“See who it is, will you? Shrimp is out on a little job for me.”

Sydney hurried out, and the problemist’s sensitive finger-tips felt the
face of the crystalless watch in his pocket. A frown furrowed his
forehead for a minute. He went into the library, and was sitting at the
desk which held the telephone when Sydney came back, followed by Henry
Osmuhn, junior.

“They are going to arrest Helen’s mother!” burst out Osmuhn the instant
he crossed the threshold.

Colton’s mobile face expressed sympathy. “I don’t think they will,” he
assured quietly.

“But they’re going to!” cried Osmuhn fiercely. “My father put the thing
into the hands of the police yesterday afternoon. The days of brooding
over the loss of the Thousand Facets of Fire have driven him half crazy.
The finding of the imitation ruby in Mrs. Marle’s possession, and your
refusal to explain what you are waiting for, have driven every bit of
commonsense from him. Detectives badgered her for two hours last night.
She is on the verge of hysteria. And Helen----.” He paced up and down
the room like a caged tiger, each word tumbling over the other as it
came from his lips; his hands clenched and unclenched at his sides. The
sensitive-nerved Sydney Thames caught the contagion.

“It’s a crime to let those innocent women suffer, while you sit there,
calmly smoking a cigarette!” charged the secretary bitterly. He turned
away as the blind man’s lips curved in a smile. “He has known the thief
for two days!” he told Osmuhn, beside himself at the injustice of the
problemist.

“He knows the thief!” Osmuhn stopped dead in his tracks, staring
incredulously at Sydney. Then he whirled to face the blind man, who sat
quietly back in his chair, blowing smoke-rings towards the ceiling. “Why
don’t you have him arrested?” he demanded, voice high with excitement.

“Because I want to get the jewels,” answered the blind man.

“But a search, a confession, will----.”

“Do you suppose that a man with the daring and cleverness necessary to
accomplish those robberies would either confess or hide the stones where
they could be found?” he asked, a trifle impatiently. “I’m waiting for
the thief to hide the jewels in a place where I can find them. That will
be when he is about to start away. To arrest him before would mean an
endless search. You must understand that the thief who could commit
robberies like those is a wonderfully clever man. I know that he is
marvellous, for he is the only man I ever saw whose heart-beats failed
to show any emotion whatever.”

“Who is the thief!” asked Osmuhn soberly. All the excitement and
incredulity had gone from his voice now.

“A man who calls himself Davidson; an invalid who is wheeled around by a
Hindu servant for an hour or so each afternoon. He is never seen at
other times. He lives next door to Mr. Norvel, your diamond-expert.”

“So that’s how he knew!” cried Osmuhn, eye alight with understanding.
“Was he in France when Mr. Norvel’s accident occurred?” The question
Colton had put at the time of the ruby robbery flashed back in his mind.

The blind man nodded. “I am going to see him the minute my boy calls me
up and tells me that he is getting ready to start to the steamer
_Paris_, which sails at noon to-day.”

The jangling telephone-bell came as a period to the sentence. Colton
removed the receiver, listened a moment, said a single “All right,
Shrimp,” and rose. “The curtain is up for the last act,” he said
soberly. He pulled open a drawer of the desk and took out a
wicked-looking blued-steel automatic and slipped it into his side
coat-pocket.

“There won’t be any need of that?” Osmuhn asked nervously.

“The man we are going after isn’t the kind that holds his hands out for
the steel bracelets,” replied the problemist grimly.

“But you are blind!” cried Osmuhn. “You can’t see!”

The blind man’s smile was one of amusement as he answered: “If I had not
been blind, I wouldn’t have solved this case, and, if I’m not mistaken
in my man, my lack of eyes is going to do more toward his actual capture
than your keen ones. I have an idea you’ll see another mysterious
disappearance--of men this time.”

He slipped on his overcoat and led them out of the house and into the
waiting car, which had stood at the curb for the last half-hour. There
was not a word spoken by the three men until the car turned into
Ninety-first Street.

“Hadn’t we better stop at the corner and walk?” asked Osmuhn, as the car
continued on and swerved in toward the curb before the brownstone house.

Colton flicked his cigarette away and shook his head. “I guess Mr.
Davidson is expecting us. I’ve had Shrimp working pretty openly in the
last day or two. I think the thief will want to pull off one last
grand-stand play before he leaves.”

The red-haired boy who had been leaning against a tree at the other side
of the street ran over and hopped on the run-board.

“Kin I go in with yuh, Mr. Colton?” he asked eagerly, eyes shining with
excitement.

The blind man shook his head. “No, Shrimp,” he denied. “You go over and
telephone for the police. We’ll need them in a few minutes.”

The boy’s face showed his disappointment, but he tried bravely to keep
it out of his voice. “All right, sir,” he said, with an assumed
cheeriness that was pathetic.

Sydney opened the tonneau-door, and Colton alighted, his slim stick
before him locating the way up the wide stone steps. His lips were a
grim, straight line as he pushed the button, and Osmuhn saw him put his
hand in his pocket to assure himself that the automatic was ready for
instant use. The nerves of the junior Osmuhn were taut, and his muscles
tensed as the door swung back and the grave-faced Hindu that the
disguised Shrimp had bowled over two days before stood looking at them
gravely.

“What wish the Sahibs?” His voice was deep and rich. He had only
muttered when they had seen him last.

“Is Mr. Davidson in?” asked Colton politely. Sydney thought he saw a
gleam of fire in the Hindu’s dark eyes for an instant.

“Sahib Davidson is busied. He starts for the German baths at noon on the
boat.”

“It is highly important.” The blind man’s voice was suave.

From somewhere in the rear of the house came the piping, querulous voice
of the invalid: “Who the devil is it, Pinjur?”

“I know not, Sahib,” called the Hindu, in reply.

“The blind man who spoke to him two days ago when the boy of the street
nearly upset his chair,” enlightened Thornley Colton, and the ears of
the old man were keen, for they heard.

“Send him in!” snapped the squeaky voice. “And come in yourself. There’s
a very devil of a draft!”

The Hindu stood aside gravely as they entered, closed the door carefully
behind them, and, with a bowed invitation to follow, led the way down
the hall toward the library.

Osmuhn’s tense muscles relaxed, and a gasp of amazement came to his lips
as they stepped inside the semi-darkened room, and he saw the
white-haired, white-bearded old man Thornley Colton had declared was the
thief who had stolen the Thousand Facets of Fire and the diamond
necklace. Could this be the man, who, by some infernal magic, had caused
three-quarters of a million dollars’ worth of jewels to disappear while
people watched them?

The old man drew himself closer to the desk, with his white hands on the
wheels of his steel-framed chair, and peered at them short-sightedly.

“What do you want, gentlemen?” he piped. “I haven’t but a minute. Have
I, Pinjur?” He darted a queer, bird-like glance toward the Indian
servant, who stood, straight-backed, before the one window that broke
the lines of high bookshelves surrounding the room. The Hindu bowed.

Colton advanced half a step toward the desk. “We want,” he said, slowly
and distinctly, “the Thousand Facets of Fire and the diamond necklace!”

The old man’s cackling laugh came from the white beard even before the
last word had been uttered. “You want the ruby, eh?” he squealed, his
hand falling on the desk before him. “He wants the necklace, too,
Pinjur.”

Osmuhn’s eyes turned toward the Hindu; he saw the Indian lift one
hand--then a rising curtain of mist seemed to hide him! Another rose
over the desk! In an instant the two had joined, and a solid wall of
fog, dense, impenetrable, hid half of the room.

“The mist!” he cried, falling back a step, the fear of the supernatural
in his eyes.

He saw Thornley Colton leap forward; saw him swallowed up--vanish
utterly. He could not move, nor could Sydney Thames beside him. They
both heard a weird, gurgling cry, an oath in a strange language. Then
the report of a pistol echoed through the room; the flash showed
yellow-pink through the mist.

Thornley Colton’s voice rang out:--

“Fling open the door!” The words loosed the leaden muscles of Sydney
Thames. He sprang to obey. The current of air seemed to tear the mist to
shreds instantly. Osmuhn took a half-step forward--stopped. Horror
showed on his face for an instant; then amazement.

On the floor beside the bookcase lay the Hindu. The blood from his wound
was staining the carpet. Beside him was a curious-looking knife, with
the point stained a dull green. But Thornley Colton and the invalid had
vanished utterly!

The line of bookcases was still unbroken. The wheel-chair was where it
had been before, but the occupant and the blind man were gone!

Fascinated, horror-stricken, the two men gazed at the empty chair and
the silent form of the Indian. A soft click sounded like a pistol-shot
in the death stillness of the room. A section of the case swung outward,
and Thornley Colton, his overcoat slashed from shoulder to waist, stood
before them, smiling grimly.

“My God, Thorn!” gasped Sydney, his strictured heart beating once more.

“Is there any blood on that knife-point, Sydney?” asked the blind man
quietly.

Thames picked up the knife to examine it.

“Careful,” warned the problemist. “By the way he slashed at me I think
there is one of the devilish Indian poisons on the point.”

Osmuhn and Sydney looked at the green-stained point, the slashed coat of
the man who stood before them, smiling calmly, as he awaited the verdict
of life or death.

“No,” choked Sydney. He staggered against the wall. “Thank God! Thank
God!” he prayed, eyes on the man who had been the only father he had
ever known.

Thornley Colton dismissed his escape with a nod and spoke to the
white-faced Osmuhn. “I think I told you that eyes would be of very
little use in the _denouement_. I knew the man, and the chances he’d
take. I expected the fog. The game was to spring open the secret door,
wheel the man and the chair inside, and leave us gaping idiotically.
Would you like to see the thief; the cleverest, most daring I have ever
encountered?”

He stepped aside. Dazedly Osmuhn and Sydney followed, only to stop at
the doorway.

Manacled on the floor was the thief. Beside him, in a little heap, was
the white wig and beard.

The thief was Norvel, the diamond expert!

“No,” said Thornley Colton, “it isn’t Norvel. It is the man who has been
impersonating him for months. The man who lay in a French hospital
learning every secret of the real Norvel, as he raved in delirium
following the accident. Where Norvel is----.” He paused significantly.

“His carcass is feeding fishes in the Seine!” snarled the crippled man.
Then he burst into a vicious, sneering laugh. “Find the jewels?” he
taunted.

“Easily.” Colton went through the door that Sydney and Osmuhn now knew
connected Norvel’s house with the one next door. He wrenched off one of
the knobs at the end of the wheel-chair handle. They saw the red flash
of the ruby as he held it up to the light.

“The necklace and the dozen other jewels that haven’t yet been missed
are in the hollow handle,” he said quietly.


                                   V.

It was several hours later. In the ornately furnished vault at the shop
of Osmuhn & Son were the younger Osmuhn and Helen Marle, seated side by
side in two Heppelwhite chairs, their hands clasped, unashamed. At the
small table was Osmuhn, senior; across from him, where she had been when
the wonderful ruby disappeared, was Mrs. Marle.

Young Osmuhn jumped to his feet as footsteps sounded outside.

“Here he comes!” his voice rang out joyously, as Thornley Colton
entered, a long, paper-wrapped bundle under his arm.

Osmuhn, senior, came forward and held out his hand. “I can never thank
you enough,” he said brokenly.

“Thank me?” smiled the blind man. “The thanks are all on my side. It was
the most interesting problem I ever tackled.”

He laid down the long bundle on the small table, and took Mrs. Marle’s
extended hand. She did not say a word, but the expression on her face
told volumes; and she understood that the man without eyes knew.

“Now tell us how it was all done,” broke in Helen Marle eagerly. “Henry
has just told us how wonderful you were at the house. Tell us how the
ruby vanished.”

The irrepressible curiosity of the girl brought a smile to the blind
man’s lips. “I’ll start right at the beginning,” he promised. “At the
police station the false Norvel consented to talk--a little. The Hindu
is in the hospital. The two of them followed the Thousand Facets of Fire
all through Europe, trying to get their hands on it. The real Norvel
bought it before they had a chance to steal it, and substitute the
imitation they had had made. Not knowing that he had already sent it to
America, they were following Norvel when their automobile crashed into
his on the outskirts of an obscure French village. The drivers of both
cars were killed. Norvel got a knock on the head that resulted in
concussion of the brain.

“The thief, who refuses to tell his name, or anything of his history,
had both hips broken, and was made a cripple for life. But he is a
wonderful man. He had a cot next to Norvel, and for weeks he heard
Norvel rave of his past life, the ruby, the business--things that are
reiterated over and over in the raving of delirium. The thief realised
what the knowledge was worth. The fake news of Norvel’s death went out.
When he had recovered sufficiently to leave the hospital, he was
murdered, and the thief became Norvel. He returned here, a changed man,
but there was never a chance for suspicion. He was a wonderful actor. He
knew everything that Norvel had known, and he knew jewels even better
than Norvel himself.

“His Hindu partner and an Englishman who merely played the role of
Norvel’s valet came with him. But the thief was a master. The crude
stealing made possible by his position didn’t appeal to him. He wanted
excitement, to astound people. So he planned to make a million by the
cleverest thefts ever committed in the world. The Hindu had learned
secrets from the greatest yogi in India, and he was a wonderful worker
in gold plate and other metals. For weeks he worked and produced these.”
Colton stripped the paper from the long bundle, and the two heavy canes
Norvel had always carried were revealed.

“What----,” began Osmuhn dazedly.

Colton took one of the canes and laid it on the table. “This is the cane
Norvel put on the glass case when the diamond necklace disappeared. Let
me have that one he stole for a minute, will you?”

Osmuhn swung open the door of the safe and laid it before the blind man.

“Your son was talking, while Norvel was fingering the necklace like
this.” Colton pretended to examine the string of stones with his eyes,
placing them in a perfectly straight line with the end of the cane, not
four inches from its feruled bottom. “Watch!” he commanded. “Don’t take
your eyes from the stones!” He turned away; not one of them saw the
delicate pull he gave to the black thread that was attached to an almost
invisible knob at the cane handle. But they did see the feruled bottom
spring open. They saw a small claw dart out, swift as the fang of a
snake, catch the first stone of the necklace, and in a fraction of an
instant the necklace had been drawn into the hollow cane like a snake in
its hole--swiftly, silently. The cap closed at the bottom, the cane was
merely a cane once more.

He showed them the thread, like the one Norvel had pulled when he
started toward his overcoat.

“But the mist I saw?” demanded Osmuhn, junior. “What was that?”

“That is the most wonderful thing the Hindu yogi have in their bag of
tricks. I was present at a private exhibition of it twenty years ago in
the hill country of India. The men who were with me said that they saw a
man disappear in a cloud of mist, just as you saw it attempted to-day.
Twenty years ago it was one of the most profound mysteries of India.
To-day it isn’t.”

“Isn’t?” echoed Osmuhn.

“No. The trick is done with a wonderful powder called _scurtii-scurtii_.
The powder is so finely ground that when let free in absolutely still
air it hangs in the shape of a mist until a breeze blows it away. But it
doesn’t billow out like mist, or fog. By some curious property it hangs
in the form of a thin, impenetrable curtain, either vertically or
horizontally, according to the way it has been shot into the air. The
disappearance trick in India can be done only on an absolutely calm day.
Just as it could be done only in a vault like this, or in the store
outside, when every one had gone, and there was no possibility of a door
opening. The powder was released from the cane when the end opened.”

“But the ruby?” asked Mrs. Marle. “There is no break in the concrete
walls; no way that Mr. Norvel could have gotten access to this room.”

Colton pointed toward the brass wall-plate, with its two light buttons,
a foot from her elbow. “There is the explanation, and the thing that
told me how the trick had been done.”

They crowded around the table to gaze at the two innocent-appearing
buttons.

“When you snapped off the light for me,” said the blind man to the
jeweller, “my ear, trained for years to read every sound, immediately
caught the false note in the snap of the button against the contact.
When I snapped on the lights my fingers found something that no eye
could ever have detected. Instead of being roughly ground
mother-of-pearl, as the centre of those black buttons always is, my
supersensitive finger tip knew instantly that it was highly polished
glass; a lens, in fact.”

“By Jove, you’re right!” Osmuhn had been examining it with a powerful
glass.

“Yes,” nodded Colton, “and if you put the glass to the other plain
button you’ll see a narrow slot, not much thicker than a sheet of paper,
through which the _scurtii-scurtii_ was injected the minute Mr. Osmuhn
turned his back to follow his invariable rule of arranging the small
boxes in the safe, while the customer looked at the jewel. The minute
the mist had covered the ruby, Norvel, in his office on the other side
of the wall, where there is a plate exactly opposite this, so that the
electricians would only have to make one hole for both in the solid
concrete, swung the plates back and stole the jewel like this.”

He unscrewed the heavy knob from the other cane, and from the hollow
interior took what looked like a slender cane that, they could see, was
made like a telescope of wonderfully thin metal sections. At the small
end was a shallow, heavy rubber cup, with the interior smeared with a
thick, gummy substance. Colton’s fingers found a curious trigger-like
projection at the larger end.

“I don’t need the ruby for this. When the wall plate, which he and the
Hindu had fixed when Norvel was supposed to be working late, swung
open--hidden, of course, from Mrs. Marle by the mist--he thrust the cup
end of the cane through the opening like this.” He thrust the cane
toward Mrs. Marle’s hand. Before she could jerk it away, his finger
touched the trigger, and the cane shut up like a telescope, as swiftly
and silently as a darting shaft of light. “The actual theft didn’t take
an instant,” explained Colton, and he couldn’t keep the admiration from
his voice. “All he had to do was to touch the stone in your hand, which
wasn’t a foot from the wall-plate, the partial vacuum of the cup and the
gummy substance would make it stick, and the spring inside would bring
it through the plate-hole instantly. Then the plate closed, and the
thing was accomplished before you could move a muscle.”

“But what made the mist disappear?” Osmuhn wanted to know. “There was no
current of air here.”

“When you turned you must have shut the safe door. Of course, that would
blow it away instantly, and the powder is so fine that you’d never see a
trace of it. In the robbery of the necklace Norvel swung around with his
coat on his arm, so that it formed a fan.”

“But how did you ever connect the man who had fooled us all; the man who
had impersonated Norvel so successfully?” queried Osmuhn.

Colton’s lips curved in a curious smile. “The impersonation was so
perfect that it would have deceived any one with eyes, just as his
thefts did. And his acting of Davidson was a wonderful piece of work. He
could impersonate everything but valvular heart disease.”

“Valvular heart disease?” queried Osmuhn dumbly.

“Yes.” Colton’s lips and voice were serious. “He was the most wonderful
criminal I have ever met. A criminal with imagination great enough to
plan such crimes, and daring sufficient to execute them when a single
move, or a breath of air, would have betrayed him. But his acting was
too good. When he came in here after stealing the ruby there was not a
fraction of a beat above normal in his heart. He was as cool as ice when
the heart of ninety-nine men out of a hundred would have been pounding
like a trip hammer. It was steady as a clock even when I left him in the
chair apparently on the verge of collapse. Even then he was planning an
unsuspicious get-away. Even when Shrimp, my boy, almost knocked his
chair over, there wasn’t a flutter. I shook hands with him, so that I
could establish his identity absolutely. To me there is as much
difference between hands and wrists as there is between faces to men who
see. But the pulse beat of valvular heart disease is absolutely
unmistakable. The heart of the man who played Norvel so successfully was
as sound as my own.

“I spoke in here of the possibility of the thief having learned his
facts by listening to Norvel in his delirium. The thief realised that a
cable to France might give away his whole game. I was afraid that he had
hidden the necklace so cunningly that we wouldn’t find it, though I knew
where the ruby was ten minutes after it was stolen.”

Osmuhn half jumped from his chair.

“You--knew where--the ruby was!” he gasped.

“Yes. I took care to touch his cane handles as I shook hands with him.
Your son’s story of the necklace theft told me that one of the canes was
responsible for that. While he was in here the ruby was in the big knob
at the end of the cane, not three feet away from where it had been
stolen. But with my own stick and wonderfully sensitive finger-tips, I
knew that the necklace had been put somewhere else. Therefore, I gave
him the hint he needed about Mrs. Marle’s reception. I knew if he had an
imitation--which was likely, because he must have been on the track of
the ruby to meet Norvel on the other side--he would try to get it into
Mrs. Marle’s possession for the purpose of confusing all of us. Then my
boy found out about his dual role of Davidson and Norvel. Davidson
appeared only after Norvel had arrived home, and Norvel was supposed to
be in such physical condition that he couldn’t be seen at home. I
immediately told you that the jewel was an imitation, put in Mrs.
Marle’s home by the real thief, because I knew Norvel would hear all
about it, and understand that I wasn’t fooled for a minute. It was time
for him to go. The French boat sailed at noon to-day. I knew he would
see me, because he wouldn’t miss an opportunity to prove his
superiority, and make a final grand-stand play by disappearing before
our very eyes as Davidson, and walk out of the next house a few minutes
later as Norvel the diamond expert, whose twenty-eight years’ service
with Osmuhn & Son placed him above suspicion. You see, he was taking no
chances; he always had two ways open. But he forgot that the mist he had
appear in his library meant nothing to me. _My eyes can’t be deceived!_”

------------------------------------------------------------------------




                           THE SIXTH PROBLEM

                            THE GILDED GLOVE


                                   I.

A hundred eyes turned as the woman entered the dining-room; a hundred
lips parted in admiration as she made her way through the winding aisle
of tables in the wake of the straight-backed head-waiter. There were
many beautiful women in the room, but, among them all, she was
wonderful. Under the soft glow of shaded lights the ivory tints of her
skin, with the colour of rich warm blood under it, were accentuated by
the burnished gold of her hair. Behind the full red lips the pearl of
her teeth showed; the great brown eyes looked over the room calmly, with
aloofness. There was nothing girlish about the new arrival. Every line,
every curve, bespoke perfect maturity.

Then the lips that had been parted in admiration curved in a smile as
the eyes saw the man who followed her. He was scarcely five feet tall; a
caricature of a man. His small moustache and ragged Vandyke were so
colourless that they could not be seen at a distance. And he walked
behind the woman with a peculiar lifting of knees at each step that
reminded every one who saw of a helpless little coach-dog. To a hundred
minds flashed the simile: the beauty and the beast of Madame
Villeneuve’s immortal story.

The waiter, conscious of the new attraction that was to make his
dining-room picture perfect, stopped at a table in the corner and pulled
back a chair with an unconscious flourish.

“Your table, ma-dame!” Then real regret tinged his tone: “It was all we
had.”

A startled look leaped to the eyes of the woman; died on the instant.
Her tone was merely casual as she asked:

“You got the reservation--how long ago?”

“A scant ten minutes, ma-dame.”

She turned her great eyes on the little man, and in her voice as she
spoke was the lilt of badinage. “And you were to telephone an hour ago,
Pierre?” she censured. Her hand idly moved the napkin on the table.

But the man did not answer. He had slumped into the chair at the other
side of the small table even before she had made a move toward taking
her own seat. His teeth chewed his ragged moustache-ends. Under the
table his fingers interlocked and twitchingly separated.

The woman’s opera cloak slipped to the back of the chair, revealing the
white purity of the skin of her shoulders, and the curves of the throat.
She picked up the _carte du jour_ languidly, and a little pout came to
her lips, and a tracery of a scowl appeared on her forehead as she
studied the items.

“Absinthe, Pierre, and a cup of bouillon?” she smiled.

The man nodded.

“Only the bouillon for me.”

A slight inclination of her head dismissed the waiter, and he hurried
away. The woman rested an elbow on the table-edge and leaned forward.
The wonderful smile still curved her lips, but the voice was hard as
flint as she whispered in sibilant Italian:--

“Stop it, you fool of a coward!”

His tongue touched his lips. “It has found us!” he muttered chokingly,
and the language he used was Russian.

“Hasn’t it always found us?” she demanded hissingly, but the expression
on her face changed not a bit. “Hasn’t it always been on our heels? But
have I not laughed at it for years? Laugh!” The last word came like the
lash of a whip through the smiling lips.

The man’s throat twitched, his face contorted, and a tremulous parody of
laughter came.

“Hideous!” she snapped. “Pitiful ape of a man! Stop it!”

“We cannot all be creatures of steel and stone!” he muttered, in the
curious patois of northern Hungary.

“We can all act! We can play our parts! Be a gay boulevardier of Paris
with the false courage of the green poison in the water of your veins!”
She spoke vehemently, and her words were the words of the Gascony
peasant.

She turned her gracious smile on the waiter as he appeared with the
bouillon and the absinthe for the little man.

“We shall order again presently,” she said, in her perfect English, and
the serving-man backed away.

Without touching the folded napkin, she took a sip of the bouillon. Her
eyes, pin-points of fire under the shade of the long lashes, watched the
man take up the glass of dull-green liquor and drain it at a gulp. The
fire died from her eyes as they saw the faint flush of colour come to
the yellow skin of the man and the steadiness of the hand that put the
empty glass on the cloth.

“Ah,” she murmured, in liquid Spanish, her eyes fixed fondly on the face
of the little man. “My Pierre is himself again. Sip of your bouillon, my
dear.”

The little man obeyed her meekly. “The gaming-table has played the devil
with my nerves,” he growled.

“But they are strong once more. See!” Her fingers lifted the folded
napkin and laid it on her knee. The man leaned forward to stare at the
white tablecloth it had covered. A gasping whistle of indrawn breath
came from his lips. On the white linen beside the woman’s bouillon cup
were five smudges of gold; prints of the finger and thumb tips of a
right hand.

“The sign of the Gilded Glove!” he choked, and the colour went from his
face.

“Cease staring, owl of a man!” she commanded in Italian. “Have you not
seen the sign before? Do the wrecked nerves of the _rouge et noir_ table
need another franc’s worth of green heart? Summon the waiter.”

With a doglike shake of his body the man threw off the fear that gripped
him. He touched his empty glass. The woman gave another order, and the
waiter hurried away. Then the man’s eyes were drawn again to the five
spots of gold.

“The finger prints of warning, the crushed glove of sentence, the
clutched glove of death!” He repeated it as though it were a lesson
that, once learned, was never to be forgotten.

“But have they not always been at _my_ side?” she asked quietly. “In
Paris, in Constantinople, in Budapest, in St. Petersburg, have I not
seen them always by my side? Yet I live! Should I fear in New York, when
I have escaped in Europe, where the Long Arm sweeps everything?”

The waiter returned with the absinthe. The little man took the glass up
slowly, sipped part of the liquor, and set it down. A glance from the
eyes of the woman rewarded him.

“Does my Pierre see any one who might wear the Gilded Glove?” she asked.

His small eyes roved around the dining-room, gazing intently at every
face. He shook his head. “They are all Americans; men of wood and women
of china. Asses all!” The heavy gutturals of the German he now used made
even more incongruous the puniness of his body.

She nodded. “Those who so carefully reserved the table that we might see
the sign have gone,” she said, “and other ears cannot follow our
talking.”

The man caught a glimpse of some one his eyes had missed before; he
moved a trifle to the left, to see behind a great pillar in a far corner
of the room.

“Your blind friend is eating his midnight meal of bread and beef-gravy,”
he said.

“Mr. Colton?” There was a new tone in the voice now, and the man
instantly recognised it.

“A blind man?” There was a sneer in the words.

“I fear him!” she whispered. “He is the only man on earth I have ever
feared. He is the only man on earth I know I cannot deceive. All the
things I have--my beauty, my nerves of steel, my acting, are to him as
nothing. They delude only men of keen eyes! The American secret agents
who watch us are fools, but he----.”

“Bah! A blind pig of an American!” he sneered again. It was the man
whose nerve was perfect now; it was the woman who was unstrung.

“His blindness makes me afraid!” She was talking passionately in French.
“Minds that are closed to all the world are an open book to him. I know
it!”

“You think he knows of the plans; of our going away to-morrow?” The
voice was sarcastic, but the words came slowly, haltingly, droned in the
dialect of the lower Yang-tse-Kiang River.

“I know not!” she whispered, in purest Japanese. “He may; he may not.
But no mistake have I ever made in a man!”

“Then hide your fear,” warned the man. “He has emptied his last glass of
Célestin, and is coming toward this table.”

The woman’s hand fluttered tremulously toward her throat; but in an
instant she was her calm, collected self. As she ate, and talked French
commonplaces to the little man, she watched the approach of Thornley
Colton from the corner of her eyes. She saw the white hair that curled
and waved from the pink scalp; the wonderful paleness of the face that
was brought out strikingly by the great round lenses of the smoked-glass
library spectacles with their tortoise-shell rims. She knew that the
eyes behind them had been sightless from birth; yet the strides of the
approaching man through the winding aisle of tables were long and
confident. Not a false move did he make, stepping aside at just the
proper moment to avoid hurrying waiters, halting a second to let a
nimble omnibus pass; never once turning to ask a question of the
black-haired, apple-cheeked man who followed at his heels.

At the table he stopped, a smile of pleasure lighting his pale, strong
face, as he extended his hand. “A delightful surprise, Madame Gorski!”
he said, with quiet enthusiasm. “Sydney told me that you were here, but
I could scarcely credit my good fortune. When is the next of your
marvellous recitals to be?”

The woman’s smile of joy and surprise as she took his hand had been
wonderful in its perfection, and as she answered his last question, no
human ear could have detected the lie behind the words: “In a few days,
M’seur Colton. You are an inspiration. One seldom finds so appreciative
a person. My husband thinks them frightful affairs.”

“But Monsieur Gorski is not blind,” smiled Colton, as he took the hand
of the little man. “Music is the only beautiful thing we of the darkness
have, you know. Eyes can see God’s wonderful creations and the beautiful
things man’s hands have wrought. We can only hear.”

A tender look of genuine sympathy came to the eyes of Madame Gorski.
“Won’t you sit down and talk?” she invited.

She saw Thornley Colton’s hand go to his vest-pocket, and she knew that
the supersensitive finger-tips were feeling the face of the crystalless
watch he carried.

He shook his head. “It is twelve-forty,” he apologised. “I make it my
invariable rule to be in bed at one.” He stepped back regretfully.
“Pardon me,” he said suddenly, “your napkin has fallen to the floor.” He
leaned over quickly, picked it up, and put it on the end of the table.
“Au revoir.” He smiled again, and with a nod to the silent Sydney
Thames, who had merely bowed to the man and the woman, he started
between the tables towards the entrance of the dining-room.

The woman’s eyes followed him. When he had disappeared through the door
she turned to her husband. “A wonderful man!” she murmured. “Wonderful!”
She expected a sneer, but her husband was staring at the crumpled-up
napkin Thornley Colton had picked up.

“You say he is blind!” he hissed, in French.

She nodded, puzzled.

“Then how did he know your napkin had fallen? Can he hear the fall of
linen on velvet? Can he?”

She reached toward the napkin, lifted a corner as she pulled it toward
her; then withdrew her hand suddenly. In the crumpled-up folds of the
linen both had seen the dull glint of gilt; both knew that concealed in
the napery was a crushed, gilded glove!

“The sentence!” choked the man.

The woman lifted her eyes to the door through which Thornley Colton had
passed a few minutes before. “Can he be one of the sinews of the Long
Arm?” she murmured: “A man like that!”

Her fingers toyed with her fork a moment. “Pay the check, Pierre,” she
said finally, and there was a note of hopelessness in her voice. “We
will go home. I am tired.”

The admiring eyes that had watched the woman enter followed her as she
left the room. The face, calm, patrician, was beautiful; and the long
lashes hid the look in the deep, brown eyes. In the taxi seat she
relaxed; the beautiful face held an expression of utter weariness. The
little man’s hand touched her shoulder reverently, caressingly.

“Do not falter now, _ma chère_,” he murmured. “To-morrow we will have
the plans of the harbour mines and the hundred thousand dollars they
will bring. We will go far away, then, out of reach of the Long Arm and
its glove of gilt.”

“To-morrow,” she breathed softly, and she touched his cheek with her
lips. She was a woman, was Hedwig Gorski, strange, unreadable. Her heart
was a woman’s heart, and grim-lipped men in a hundred cities knew that
she loved this little caricature of a man. A smile came to her lips.
“Yes,” she whispered, in low-voiced Russian, “to-morrow we will be
through with it all.”

At the big hotel where they stopped the woman commanded the same
admiration; the man the same derisive smiles. But they did not see. In
their apartment on the thirteenth floor, whose door was watched night
and day by the floor clerks they had bribed to see that no one entered,
the woman sank into a big chair beside the table. The man snapped on the
lights in every room, and peered into every corner. “No one has
entered,” he announced, when he had seen that every window still held
the screws he had driven through the frames the first hour they had
occupied the apartments.

“Leave me a few minutes, _mon cher_,” the woman said, and she pulled his
head down to kiss him. “I must think--alone.”

Obediently, doglike, he went out into the hall and turned the key in the
lock behind him. The woman sighed. She rose and went to the small
cabinet, took from it a bottle of wine and a glass. She started to pour
the liquor; then shook her head.

“Poison,” she whispered. “That would be their only chance. I can’t risk
it.” She went into the bathroom and turned on the hot water, rinsing the
glass under the stream until the water was almost boiling. Then she
filled the glass to the brim under the cold-water tap, drained it. She
walked slowly back to the room, switched off the lights, and seated
herself again in the big chair.

The minutes passed. The woman never moved; her eyes stared unwaveringly
into the darkness before her. And from out the dark a gilded hand came
slowly, certainly. It touched the throat of the woman. Hedwig Gorski did
not move. The fingers of gold tightened.

Outside the door came the voice of Gorski: “Do you wish anything,
Hedwig, _ma chère_?”

And from the darkness came the voice of his wife: “_Non_, Pierre, _mon
cher_.”

But neither the eyes nor the lips of the woman, nor yet the gilded
fingers, had moved.

Silence. The man’s voice called again. There was no answer. Shaking, he
unlocked the door and entered the room. A curtain that had been pulled
to the bottom of the window was up now. A shaft of moonlight shone on
the woman’s face--a dead face. At her throat a golden hand seemed
clutched. But he came nearer, and saw that it was an empty, gilded
glove. And in the air of the room was the faint odour of crushed
bananas.


                                  II.

The little French clock had just chimed the hour of three when the
tinkling telephone-bell waked Thornley Colton. He reached forth a hand
to the crystalless watch on the small table at his bed-side and
whistled. The bell jingled again. He threw a bath robe over his
shoulders and went into the library.

He answered the inquiring voice instantly: “Good morning, Mr. Ames.
Certainly. I will be ready in ten minutes.”

For a minute after he had hung up the receiver he stood in the darkness,
his sightless eyes fixed on the mouthpiece of the instrument. Then he
went into Sydney Thames’s room and touched him lightly on the shoulder.
“Get dressed,” he said quietly, but the apple-cheeked secretary saw the
grim, ominous lines that were around the thin lips. “Ames, of the
diplomatic secret service, will be here in fifteen minutes. Madame
Gorski has been murdered.”

“Murdered!” The emotional, highly-strung Thames echoed the word in
horror.

“Yes.” Still that tone of quiet certainty. “An hour or so ago, I should
judge. We will probably go down to the hotel. Hustle!” he admonished
again, as he hurried from the room.

In less than ten minutes Thornley Colton, fully dressed, and smoking a
cigarette, was seated in the library awaiting the coming of the secret
agent. The door-bell rang, and he rose to answer it.

He stopped in the hall, when his superkeen ears caught the patter of
bare feet on the carpet. “Go back to bed, Shrimp,” he ordered.

“Gee, is it a case, Mister Colton?” The wide-eyed boy, with the
fiery-red hair, the multitude of freckles, and the slightly-twisted
nose, asked the question eagerly. His hands literally trembled with
anticipation as they fumbled with the front of his purple pyjama coat.

“Yes.” Thornley Colton’s lip curved in a slight smile, and he patted the
boy’s shoulder fondly. “But you can do nothing to-night. Go back to bed,
and to-morrow there may be some real detective work for you to do.”

“Gosh, I hope so!” the boy exclaimed fervently; then his voice became
almost wistful: “Gee, Mister Colton. I wisht youh’d let me get in a case
where there was real Nick Carter stuff; blackjacks, an’ assaults, an’
stuff like that.”

“You’ve got a long life before you, Shrimp,” smiled the blind man, as he
started downstairs to answer the second ring of the bell.

The man who entered had his rain-coat buttoned up to his chin, and the
brim of his soft hat came down to the eyes that gleamed from under it.

Colton bowed gravely. “Rather an early-morning call, Mr. Ames.”

The gimlet eyes of the secret agent were fixed on his pale face, seeming
to bore and probe into the very soul of the blind man. “Mind telling me
how you knew my name?” he asked. “To my knowledge we have never met
before.”

“I think we never have.” The grave smile still curved Thornley Colton’s
thin lips. “But I never forget a voice I have once heard. I heard yours
several years ago, when I was trying to solve the puzzle of the missing
Villers code book. The diplomatic service was somewhat interested in
that case, I believe.”

“So you’re that man!” There was new respect in the tone, and the eyes of
the secret agent gleamed brighter.

“A lucky touch of the fingers found the solution of the case,” explained
Colton modestly. “If you will come up to my library we can talk more
comfortably.” He turned and ascended the stairs.

Sydney Thames was already in the library, and Thornley Colton introduced
him. “My secretary, Mr. Ames.” He seemed to sense the other’s desire for
a private conversation, and added: “My eyes, also.”

The secret agent accepted the presence of a third person, and took off
his rain-coat. Seated in a big chair, which a gesture of the blind man’s
arm had indicated, he asked his first question abruptly, curtly:--

“Mr. Colton, what do you know about Hedwig Gorski?”

A thin ribbon of blue smoke rose from the blind man’s lips. He seemed to
watch the smoke waver ceilingward before he answered: “I think she is
one of the most remarkable women I have ever met. There is no subject
she cannot discuss intelligently. She speaks all languages, apparently,
and she is the only woman I ever met who can interpret Grieg properly.
In fact, I would consider her the most accomplished and wonderful
international spy I ever met.”

Ames straightened in his chair as though he had been suddenly jabbed
with a pin. “How did you know that?” he demanded.

“By a process of elimination made necessary by lack of eyes. I sought an
introduction to Madame Gorski after I had heard her husband address her
in the Cantonese dialect. I spent several years in China, and,
naturally, I was interested. And her _musicales_ have been wonderful
affairs--wonderful, and food for considerable thought!” he finished
musingly.

“You know that she is dead--murdered?”

“Your visit at this hour could mean nothing else. I have known for some
time that Madame Gorski feared something. I have known also that she was
constantly watched.”

For a minute there was silence in the room. Ames took a cigarette from
his case, lighted it, and became absorbed in the spiraling smoke. Sydney
Thames, silent, as always, sat back to listen. The secret agent reached
his decision and spoke:--

“Mr. Colton, I came here with a different plan of procedure in my mind.
I’m going to be frank. For months we have known that negotiations have
been going on with a foreign government to obtain possession of the
secret naval plans of the harbour mines in New York harbour. When you
understand that those planted electrical mines are the only real
safeguard against the invasion of the greatest city in America, you will
know just what they are worth. We know Hedwig Gorski came to this
country to get them--from whom we have never been able to discover. But
we have watched every movement, opened every line of mail she has
received, and have not been able to find a single clue. For a month my
wife and I have occupied an apartment in the hotel directly opposite the
Gorski rooms. We have been on guard day and night, as have the floor
clerks we learned that she had bribed. This morning at one-twenty-five
Hedwig Gorski and her husband returned to their apartment. They went in,
lighted every light, and I know they were examining everything to see
whether or not the rooms had been entered. In a few minutes Gorski came
out, locked the door, and began pacing up and down before it. This was
something new, and we watched him curiously. He called. His wife
answered cheerily in French. Ten minutes later he called again. There
was no answer. He unlocked the door and stumbled in. I was at his heels.
Madame Gorski was dead in her chair. At her throat was an empty gilded
glove--like a hand of gold that had strangled her.”

“A gilded glove.” Colton repeated it without incredulity or surprise in
his voice; merely as the verification of a known fact.

“You know of the Gilded Glove?” asked the secret agent quickly.

“Yes. My world wanderings have taken me to Russia. The glove has always
had a peculiar significance. In China two thousand years ago a glove was
always given to make legal the transfer of land. The custom was also in
vogue among the ancient Egyptians and Phœnicians. In the correct literal
translations of the Bible the word ‘glove’ is found instead of ‘shoe’ in
the fourth chapter of Ruth, and in the one hundred and eighth Psalm.”

Ames nodded, and the blind man went on: “Twenty years ago a certain
Russian order first used the gilded glove as a death sign for traitors
to the government. With a love of the significant that only the true
Oriental mind has--and the mind of the Russian is all Oriental--the
gilded glove was left at the throat of persons who transferred their
allegiance for gold.”

“That is right,” corroborated Ames. “Hedwig Gorski and her husband were
the greatest spies Russia had. Then, for some unknown reason, they went
into the service of another country. And for five years she has laughed
at the Gilded Glove and its wearers, who have been constantly on her
trail.” Again he smoked in silence for a few minutes, his eyes fixed on
the ceiling. “You seem to know a whole lot about this thing, Mr.
Colton,” he said frankly. “I’d like you to come with me to the hotel.
When I entered the room, Gorski, who is a little rat, and heaven only
knows how a woman like Hedwig could love him, was absolutely insane. He
moaned and cried without seeing me for several minutes. When he did, he
accused _you_ of the murder!”

“Accused----” Sydney Thames half rose in his chair and flopped back into
it with a gasp of amazed horror.

Thornley Colton’s face had not a flicker of expression. “Yes?” he said
politely.

The gimlet eyes of the secret agent went ceilingward once more. “He
muttered something about his wife having always feared you--which is the
highest compliment that could possibly come from a woman like Hedwig
Gorski. He also babbled something about your not being blind because you
had seen his wife’s napkin fall to the floor, and that, when you put it
on the table, its folds concealed a crushed gilded glove--the sentence
of death. He swears that you couldn’t have heard the napkin fall on the
velvet carpet.”

“The napkin had not fallen,” Colton said evenly. “I pulled it from
Madame Gorski’s knees as I leaned over to pick up the crushed gilt glove
I knew was on the carpet by her chair.” His fingers felt the crystalless
watch in his pocket. “If you don’t mind,” he apologised, “I’d like to
get down to the hotel as soon as possible. The most valuable clue, I
think, will disappear shortly.”

Ames opened his mouth, then closed it. “My taxi is waiting at the door,”
he said quietly, as he picked up his rain-coat. “I warned the hotel
manager that the police were not to be notified until I gave permission.
Even the murder is of secondary importance to finding a clue to the
damned traitor who is going to sell those harbour plans!”

“A human life, to me, is a wonderful thing,” murmured Colton, as he
slipped into his overcoat and took the thin cane that gave its messages
to his supersensitive finger-tips. There was unconscious rebuke in his
tone.

It was not until they were in the taxi, well on their way down, that the
silence was broken. Then Ames spoke again. “I’ll frankly admit that the
murder is a most wonderful piece of work. I went over every inch of the
rooms while Gorski was gibbering. The door is absolutely the only
entrance, and I know they looked over the apartment pretty thoroughly.
Gorski could not have done it, even if he had the nerve. I heard his
wife answer him. I couldn’t see a thing!”

In the darkness Colton nodded. “I don’t think this will be a case where
eyes will be of much use,” he said quietly.

The taxi stopped at the entrance of the big hotel, and they went through
the lobby without exciting comment or receiving a single stare. The news
of the murder had not been allowed to get downstairs. But a man
lounging, half asleep, in a leather chair, made a slight signal that
Ames understood. The secret-service agents had covered the hotel, and
were working in a dozen different places.

As the three men entered the Gorski apartment, Monsieur Gorski rose from
his chair with a half-suppressed scream of rage. “Murderer!” he hissed,
in French. “Murderer!”

A heavy hand forced him back, and an apologetic voice came to the ears
of Thornley Colton.

“He’s been ravin’ that way for an hour, Mister Colton,” put in the
red-faced man at Gorski’s side.

“Good morning, Joe,” Colton greeted the house detective.

The white-faced manager of the hotel, who had stood back, nervously
biting his finger-nails, came forward. “We must notify the police, Mr.
Ames,” he protested. “I have obeyed your instructions, but if they ever
know----” The manager left unspoken the horrible possibilities, but his
whole manner cried them aloud.

“You can notify them in a very few minutes, Mr. Jones,” the blind man’s
voice cut in curtly. He went to the side of the dead woman unerringly. A
faint flush seemed to mount to his pale cheeks; his thin nostrils
quivered like those of a hound on the scent. Almost reverently he
touched the cheek of Hedwig Gorski. His fingers, light as wind-blown
thistledown, brushed the beautiful cold skin under the eyes, then down
to the throat, stopping short before reaching the five finger-marks of
gold that were deep in the flesh. The gilded glove was on the table,
where it had fallen as soon as Gorski had touched it. The blind man
seemed not even aware of its existence.

“Have you a glass, Mr. Ames?” asked the problemist, and there was
unintentional curtness in his tone. Thornley Colton’s whole mind was on
the case before him; nothing else existed.

The secret agent took a magnifying glass from his pocket.

“Look at the gilt finger-prints!” ordered the blind man, as his two
hands lifted the woman’s arms. “Are the prints cleanly cut, sharp?”

“Not a single blur!” announced Ames, raising his eyes. “She never moved
a muscle after those fingers clutched her throat.”

“Ah!” Quiet triumph was in the blind man’s voice. “Madame Gorski was
poisoned!”

“Poisoned!” It seemed that every one in the room echoed it. The clutched
glove at the throat, the deep graven finger-prints of gilt had seemed to
point to but one thing.

“Yes. No hand of that size could have sufficient strength to keep the
woman from moving and blurring the gilt prints that were put there with
another gilt glove worn on the hand of the murderer. The wearer of the
gilt glove would not overlook a detail. He probably carried the other
glove in a box so that its shape would not be lost, and fitted it to the
prints after. It is the usual way.”

“The bottle and the glass!” Ames took a step nearer, but Colton’s hand
picked up the glass beside the tall wine-bottle. He stepped away from
the table, and raised the glass to his lips; held it there for several
seconds.

“Hedwig Gorski did not drink from this glass!”

“Why? How do you know that?” Ames gasped it.

“Because it was put there by the man whose gloved hand made those marks
on Madame Gorski’s throat after she was dead.”

“Bah!” The expletive came in a snarling sneer from the dead woman’s
husband. “You think my wonderful Hedwig a fool? She would drink of no
wine that had been unguarded all evening! I heard her in the bathroom
washing the glass for one, two, three minutes. If she drank she drank
fresh water.”

“How long after you heard the water running did she answer you?” asked
Colton; and even in his sightless eyes there seemed to come a light.

“Five, six, seven, ten minutes. Ten minutes,” repeated the husband, with
sullen positiveness.

“As long as that?”

“Yes.”

“Where is the bathroom, Sydney?” snapped Colton. The muscles under the
skin of his lean jaws played back and forth. He was tense as a hound in
leash.

“Five steps to the right, half turn,” Sydney answered mechanically, his
eyes judging the distance instantly because of years of practice.

Colton darted inside. He turned on the hot water and bent down so that
his face was not an inch away from the running stream. He did the same
thing when he had turned the cold-water tap.

“The devilish ingenuity of it!” They heard him mutter as he straightened
up.

“What is it?” Again Ames asked the question. Student of men as his work
had made him, Ames had realised, minutes before, that he was in the
presence of a man who would lead always; he understood that he was but a
pupil before a master.

“They knew Madame Gorski was too clever to be poisoned in any ordinary
way. They knew that she would even suspect the presence of poison in an
empty glass, and would wash any glass, under the hot-water tap, before
she drank, because the heat would dissolve any poison. They knew, also,
that if she wanted a drink it would be of cold water, fresh from the
tap. The poison, a paste of peculiar odour that my keen sense of smell
instantly detected, is smeared on the inside of the cold-water faucet.
The minute it was turned, the stream that flowed was almost pure
poison!”

“Good God!” came the horror-stricken voice of the hotel manager.

“But there must have been some one here to make those marks and leave
the gilded glove,” put in Ames.

“Where is the clothes-closet?” Colton asked.

The secret agent hurried into the bedroom that adjoined the room of
death. Colton was at his heels, the slim, hollow cane locating every
piece of furniture as he passed. Ames opened the door of a closet full
of clothes, and stepped inside. Colton stood at the threshold, his head
bent forward, apparently peering intently into the depths of the closet.

“Another?” he asked curtly.

In the other bedroom was a huge wardrobe. Ames opened it, and again the
blind man seemed to look into every corner of it. “The murderer hid in
there behind the clothes! Take some of them out and you’ll find flecks
of gilt from the glove he wore!”

The secret agent grabbed an armful and threw them on the bed, with no
regard for their mussing. He pawed them over. His eyes found what they
sought, and he uttered a shout of triumph. “Here they are! On the
Inverness and this black evening gown!” Then awe came to his voice. “How
did you know that?” he asked. “How could you know it--and blind?”

“Because I am blind. Because my other senses are abnormally developed to
recompense the loss of sight. I knew the murderer had hidden in the
closet; I knew the gilt from the glove he wore on his hand would come
off on the clothes that concealed him, just as I knew the glass on the
table was not the one Madame Gorski had used, and just as I knew the
crushed glove was at her feet in the restaurant--because I have a sense
of smell that is more than doubly acute. Wherever there is gilt there is
banana oil. It is always used in gilding, and its odour is unmistakable.
I knew of the men of the Gilded Glove, and I suspected that Madame
Gorski feared it. When my nostrils caught the odour and located it at
the floor beside her chair, I knew instantly what it meant. I covered it
with the napkin so that people would not stare. I wanted her to see it
so that she might be warned. The glass on the table has the banana-oil
odour because the murderer placed it there with the hand that still
smelled of the oil with which the soft kid of the glove had become
saturated. The smell was also in the wardrobe. Simple, isn’t it?” A
mirthless smile curved his thin lips. Thornley Colton could not forget
that in the next room was the body of the woman killed by the hand that
left its trail so faintly that only his blindness enabled him to follow
it.

“Where are the windows?” Colton asked sharply, before any one had a
chance to say a word.

“In the next room, overlooking the street.”

“Show them to me.”

Ames hurried back to the sitting-room. The hotel manager still bit his
finger-nails. The husband of the woman who was dead had buried his face
in his hands, and was sobbing. The eyes of the hotel detective were
fixed on Colton, following his every movement, in them a look of
wondering admiration.

The blind man’s feeling fingers examined every inch of the casements
that overlooked busy Broadway, thirteen storeys below. “Nothing here,”
he said, when he had finished. “There must be another window!”

“Only a small one, in the bathroom, that overlooks an air-shaft,” the
secret agent informed him.

Colton turned and darted into the bathroom. “This is the one!” Once more
his exploring fingers went over every inch.

“But that hasn’t been touched. Not a screw has been loosened,” declared
Ames positively.

“No, there hasn’t been a screw touched. The murderer was too clever for
that, but he wasn’t clever enough to get the banana-oil smell from his
fingers. The entire pane was taken out by cutting away the putty, and
probably put back with triangular tin tacks that would never be noticed
through the frosted glass.”

“That’s a mighty small opening,” Ames said slowly.

“The murderer must have been small, and as active as a cat. Also----”
Colton did not finish; he stepped out of the bathroom. “Who has the
rooms directly over this one?” he asked the manager.

“They have no occupants yet,” hesitated the nervous Mr. Jones.

“When were they coming? Who were they?” The questions came sharply,
crisply.

“A couple from Philadelphia, who telegraphed to have them reserved. They
had occupied them once before, and liked them.”

“Clever,” muttered the blind man. “They wouldn’t take a chance of
occupying them, but were going to see to it that they were empty when
wanted. Let’s look at them.”

“But what am I going to do?” began the nerve-frayed manager. “The
police----”

“Notify them.”

Colton gave the permission grimly; then a look of compassion came to his
face as he seemed aware of the presence of Monsieur Gorski for the first
time. He took a step toward him; then halted. He could do nothing--now.

“Joe?” he said softly. The house detective glanced at the inert figure
of the man, and came forward. “When the police come, let them arrest
Gorski,” Colton whispered. “He will be safe in their hands, and God
knows he isn’t safe from that band of gilt-handed devils anywhere else.
It will only be a short time before the real murderer is found.”

The house detective nodded. “It’ll be best that way,” he admitted.

“Show us the rooms!” ordered Colton; then, as the manager hesitated:
“Let Joe telephone police headquarters from here,” he advised shortly.

With Ames and Sydney at his heels, he followed the manager to the floor
above. The minute the lights were snapped on in the apartment, Ames ran
to the open bathroom window. In a heap on the floor under it was a thin,
strong rope. Beside it were fragments of what had been a wine flask, and
an empty pasteboard box, with the inside smeared with gilt--the one in
which the gilt glove found at the woman’s throat had been carried to
prevent its handling. And under the bath-tub was thrown another glove of
gilt, with most of the gold worn off the inside of the fingers.

“Good Lord!” gasped Ames eagerly. “There’s clues enough here!”

“Too many!” declared Colton tersely. He turned to the manager. “Who has
the apartments opposite this?”

“A German family,” the head of the hotel answered, as a pupil to a
teacher.

“How many?”

“Three. A big, bearded man and his wife, and a gawky boy. They’ve been
here a week.”

“The boy! Describe him!”

“Well,” began the manager nervously. “He’s about seventeen, I should
judge, but small. He’s awkward, and speaks the rottenest English I ever
heard in the darndest, squeakiest voice. Seems to like to listen to
people, though, and he’s always sitting around the lobby gaping at the
guests.”

“I want to see him!” Colton’s voice had a new note, dominant,
compelling.

“At this hour?” stammered the manager.

“Now!”

Ames, attracted by the tone and the words, came from the bathroom.

“What is it?” he asked eagerly.

“The man who murdered Madame Gorski.”

“Where?”

“I don’t know--now.” Thornley Colton spoke the words over his shoulder,
for he was following the manager out of the room. A knock at the door
across the hall brought no response. Colton pushed the manager aside,
and, with his horrified protest unheeded, opened the unlocked door. A
snap of the fights under Ames’ fingers, and the men saw that the rooms
were empty. But in the air was a strong smell of banana oil.

“The floor clerk!” demanded Colton, and the manager went meekly to get
him.

Ames was everywhere, rummaging, prying with practiced fingers into every
drawer, every closet. Each piece of clothing he pulled out was examined
with lightning-moving fingers. He picked the lock of the big trunk, and
cursed when the opened lid revealed only cloth-wrapped stones. But in
the bottom was an overturned bottle that had once held gilt.

“The glove had just been gilded,” guessed the secret agent.

The floor clerk entered, visibly nervous.

“When did the German boy return here to-night?” asked Colton.

“About twelve-thirty.”

“Alone?”

“Yes.”

“Were his mother and father in the room?”

The floor clerk scratched his head. “I didn’t see them come in, but I
heard them giving the kid the very devil. They raised an awful row.” He
grinned at the recollection.

“Ah!” The blind man’s tone held quiet satisfaction. “And an hour or so
later the boy slipped out, saying that his mother and father were
asleep, and he was going downstairs to watch the people for a while.”

“Yes.” There was amazement written all over the hotel clerk’s face.

Colton turned to face Ames. “The bird has flown,” he said quietly. “He
is the one who entered Madame Gorski’s rooms, put the poison in the tap
and the glove at her throat. For a week the three have been waiting
their opportunity. To-night all was ready. The father and mother left
early in the evening, and did not return. They, or another accomplice,
dropped the glove at Madame Gorski’s chair in passing, expecting her to
look down and see it. The waiter probably kicked it so near her chair
that she couldn’t have noticed it if the smell of the banana oil hadn’t
made me find it.”

“But the clerk heard the father and mother talking?” protested Ames. “He
didn’t see them go out, and,” he added, “there are several of my men
around who would have stopped them instantly.”

“No one left that room but the boy!” There was no gainsaying the
positiveness in the floor clerk’s tone.

The grim smile came again to Thornley Colton’s lips. “When I learned
that Madame Gorski had answered her husband _ten minutes_ after he had
heard the water running, and she must have taken the poison, I began to
suspect the true facts. A poison that left no signs of agony must have
killed quickly and painlessly. It wasn’t her voice monsieur heard at
all! It was the voice of a wonderful mimic; the mimic who made the floor
clerk believe that his mother and father were scolding him in this room.
And who would stop a gawky German boy? You have his description. Put
your men at work.” He rose. “Come, Sydney, it is time for breakfast.”

The secret agent took his hand and shook it fervently. “I can’t tell you
how I thank you,” he said, and there was genuine feeling in his voice.
“But I will see that Washington recognises this night’s work of yours.”

Once more the mirthless smile that had been in evidence so often that
night came to his lips. “I want no recognition,” he said slowly. “I
merely want to avenge the death of the most wonderful woman I ever met.
There is nothing half so precious as the life of a woman, or a child.”

He bowed gravely. Silently he and Sydney walked to the elevator and into
the lobby. Halfway out Thornley Colton stopped.

“I want to telephone the house, Sydney. There’s a foolish fear in my
mind that I can’t throw off.” He went into the telephone-booth. When he
emerged a minute later, there was a look on his face that Sydney Thames
had never seen before; a look terrible in its earnestness.

“Do you believe in presentiments, Sydney?” The blind man’s voice was
calm, even. He gave his secretary no chance to answer. “I have just had
one come true. John found five finger-smudges of gold on the white
table-cloth in the dining-room, and Shrimp has disappeared absolutely!”


                                  III.

Thornley Colton paced the floor of his library with long, tigerish
strides. His head was bowed, and over his eyes the lines of
concentration had deepened in the hours of the long day. His fingers
touched the face of the crystalless watch in his pocket.

“Three o’clock,” he muttered. He turned to the desk and its telephone;
stretched forth a hand, withdrew it, and shook his head. Again his
strides covered the length of the room; across and back, across and
back.

He lifted his head eagerly--lowered it. The steps his superkeen ears had
heard were only those of Sydney Thames, as he left his bedroom on the
floor above.

“Any news yet, Thorn?” asked the apple-cheeked secretary as he entered.
The blind man shook his head.

“Nothing,” he said quietly. He took a half-turn around the room, then
suddenly wheeled to face the silent Thames. “If anything happens to that
boy, Sydney, I swear to God I’ll punish those responsible!” The voice,
always so calm, so unstirred by any inner feeling, now trembled with
fierce passion. The blind man seemed to realise that the mask he had
cultivated so carefully for years had dropped; for his tone was even as
he continued: “I thought when I took him that I could give him the real
life he had been denied. But I understand now that I was only bringing
him to take the risks that have never caused me a second thought. I
realise now the dozens of times I have sent him into places of danger,
merely to satisfy my own conceit; to enable me to beat some one else on
a baffling case. Now he is gone! All my vaunted powers are useless, and
I’m as much at sea as the veriest tyro. A problemist? I!” His voice
vibrated with scorn and self-denunciation.

“You are in no way to blame!” defended Sydney Thames instantly.

Colton turned again on his heel. “I’m as guilty as hell!” he declared
vehemently. “Why do you suppose John or the other servants heard no
noise? Do you think it was because the man who murdered Madame Gorski,
the man who made those glove prints downstairs, overcame Shrimp so
easily and so quietly? No! It was because of the training I have given
the boy; training to be instantly on the alert to follow, to shadow, to
discover; training that no boy should have had. Shrimp, sent brusquely
to bed by me, couldn’t sleep. What boy could? But I didn’t understand. I
only looked at it from my side. He probably heard the man who entered.
Instead of raising an alarm as a normal person would, he probably
followed him outside. Then----” His hands spread wide before him in a
gesture of helplessness.

This was a side of Thornley Colton that Sydney Thames had never seen
before; a new side, a human side. He understood now the deep love for
the undersized, red-haired boy with the twisted nose that was in the
heart of the blind man. He hadn’t understood the depths of Colton’s
feelings when the blind man had gone through the house calmly when they
returned to search for clues. He hadn’t suspected that there was
anything but the cold, analytical love of a problem in the cool voice
that had put ten thousand police in the big city on the trail of the
missing boy. Nor had he understood the cool way Thornley Colton had
directed Ames and his squad of underground diplomatic workers to rake
the city with a fine-tooth comb for the murderer of Hedwig Gorski. No,
he hadn’t understood then. Through it all Colton had been the same
dominant, emotionless machine, directing, suggesting, issuing curt
orders.

But the hours of inaction had done their work. For the first time in his
life the problemist was completely at sea. The signs he had read so
unerringly a hundred times before; signs that were usually hidden from
men of eyes, were missing in this new development of the Gorski case.
The man who had left the finger-prints of the gilded glove had
apparently entered with a key, for there was not a scratch on a window
or door. He had touched nothing but the white table-cloth, for there was
not a trace of the banana oil anywhere else. There was nothing,
absolutely nothing, to tell a fact about the disappearance of The Fee.
He was gone. That was all. And Thornley Colton could do nothing but
wait. His blindness made him helpless now.

The telephone-bell rang, and Colton sprang to answer it. The eager
expression died from his face as the voice of the secret agent came over
the wire.

“No trace of the boy yet--Ah!--A bundle of manuscript music addressed to
Madame Gorski at the post-office?--No word?--Yes, bring it up to the
house. I think it will fit a theory I have been constructing for some
time. Good-bye.”

He hung up the receiver wearily, and his voice was tired as he spoke to
Sydney Thames. “Not a word,” he said slowly. “Ames is wholly engrossed
with the search for those harbour-mine plans. That is the big thing to
him. The murder of Madame Gorski and the disappearance of Shrimp are
only incidents.” He resumed his pacing of the room. “It’s another case
like that of the Money Machines, Sydney. Human life and happiness are
pushed aside as unimportant because of a few papers and figures in
lifeless ink.”

Sydney Thames silently withdrew. He knew that the man who had picked him
up, as a bundle of dirty baby-clothes, on the banks of the English river
that had given him the only name he ever knew, wanted to be alone. So he
left him to his tireless pacing while the wonderful brain behind the
high forehead figured each step in the problem; aligning motives;
testing theories.

When the front-door bell announced the coming of Ames, Colton seated
himself at the desk, and when the secret agent entered there was no
inkling of the thoughts in the mind of the blind man.

“There’s absolutely nothing in this,” began Ames apologetically, as he
laid the thick envelope on the desk. “It’s just music, poor stuff, too.
Probably written by some sentimental amateur who has read of Madame
Gorski and her recitals, and wants a criticism.”

“Such persons usually inclose a long letter of pleading,” remarked
Colton dryly, as he took the thin sheets from the big envelope and ran
his supersensitive finger-tips over the back of the paper to feel the
indentations of the pen. “You have no trace of the boy, yet?” His tone
was almost uninterested, and his finger-tips still brushed the back of
the music sheet.

“No.” Ames shook his head. “The men are combing the city. Finding the
boy means finding those harbour-mine plans, probably.”

Colton’s lips tightened. “No, it doesn’t,” he said quietly. “These are
the plans of the location of every electrically-operated mine in the
harbour and bay.”

“_What!_” Ames fairly shouted the word as he leaped to his feet. He
jumped to the desk and picked up one of the manuscript sheets Colton had
examined and laid aside. As he stared, the expression of incredulity
gave way to one of bewildered puzzlement. “What do you mean?” he
demanded. “There is nothing concealed here. This is straight music.”

“It would contain some horrible discords if you tried to play it, I
imagine, though it was done by a man who has some knowledge of
composing. But, as you said before, any one with _eyes_ would put that
down as mere amateurishness. Eyes are the greatest handicap pure
eliminative reasoning has. For weeks you have watched Madame Gorski. You
have had men at her _musicales_, and have attended them yourself, no
doubt. To you those wonderful affairs were merely a cloak the woman had
assembled to hide her real purpose for being here. To me they were
something else. They were part of a carefully thought-out plan. She knew
that you were watching her. She knew that every person who approached
her and every bit of her mail would be examined. But who would suspect a
dozen sheets of music manuscript? Who but a blind man!” The faint colour
of excitement was in his cheeks, the lean, cleft jaw was set. “See!” He
turned over the sheet he had examined last. “Every sheet is written in
five flats, yet in this page alone there are more than a dozen sharp
accidentals. Three notes out of five must be played on the black keys.
Every sharp and flat on every sheet denotes the placement of a blind
mine! Look!” He snatched up a pencil from the desk, located the middle
bar in the top staff with his finger-tip, and drew down the paper a
wide, curving line, following the course of his feeling finger, to a
measure in the lower right-hand corner. “Notice,” he observed quietly,
“that not one of the measures the pencil has touched contains either a
sharp or a flat.”

“The secret naval lane through the outer harbour,” whispered Ames, and
in his voice was the awe that had been there once before.

“Yes.” Thornley Colton leaned back in his chair. “You know that the
harbour is laid out in half-mile squares, subdivided by smaller squares
of two-hundred-and-eighty-yard mine placements. Take the sheets
numerically, and draw perpendicular parallel lines. Each one of these
will represent the two-hundred-and-eighty-yard square. The measures of
the treble and bass clefs placed directly under each other will make the
half-mile squares. The sheets lettered A, B, C should be laid from left
to right, I imagine, to give the anchorage width. I think a line
following the staccato notes will give the rough shore-line necessary.”
He lighted a cigarette, and his sightless eyes were apparently fixed on
the ceiling, his thoughts far away.

Ames lifted his eyes from the papers to the impassive face of the blind
man. “My God, Mr. Colton!” he cried, and his voice shook with feeling.
“Do you realise what you’ve done? Do you understand that in ten minutes
you have accomplished a thing that has baulked every secret agent in the
country for months? Do you know that you have kept in the hands of this
country the greatest naval secret we possess”--his voice choked--“the
secret I was about to let slip through my fingers? It means----”

A wave of the problemist’s hand stopped him. “It means that my boy is
missing, perhaps dead,” the blind man said dispassionately. “It means
that the most wonderful woman I ever knew is dead. That is all.”

A look of pity came to the face of the secret agent. “We will do all we
can,” he assured. “We will find the boy just as surely as we will find
the traitor who is responsible for these.” He picked up the precious
sheets, and put them carefully in his pocket, and buttoned his coat.

“Finding the traitor should be comparatively easy,” Colton told him.
“Men who have the knowledge of music composition necessary to put that
together are not common in the war department.”

Ames picked up his hat and held out his hand. “Believe me, Mr. Colton,
Washington will not forget this work of yours. I will let you know the
instant we hear anything. Good day!”

Colton sat quiet while the secret agent and Sydney Thames left the room.
There was no hope in his heart. By his showing the government agent the
secret of the music he had filled his mind with thoughts of finding the
man who was responsible. Every effort of the secret agents would be in
that direction now. What was a little, red-headed kid beside a traitor
who would betray his country? Nothing--to the men who were paid to guard
the secrets of state.

By silence Colton could have kept the trained government-men on the
trail of the boy he loved. But he had given all that was in him to solve
the puzzle of the music. The secret agents would go on that track now.
The police could do nothing against men like those of the Gilded Glove.
They had been content to arrest Monsieur Gorski; they had proclaimed in
every morning-paper that he was the murderer. They were already lying
back on their laurels, smug, complacent. No, there was no one but the
blind man to find The Fee!

The long hours of the afternoon passed. Still Thornley Colton sat in the
arm-chair, immovable. From time to time Sydney Thames came to the
doorway, looked in, and went away. He knew that the problemist did not
want to be disturbed. And the blind man’s mind through the hours was the
mind of the men who were behind the gilded glove. His mind worked as
their minds would work; planning out each step they would take in their
next move; leading off into tangents that made necessary the discarding
of entire trains of thought. Patiently he would start again at the
beginning. Finally his brow cleared; the rigid lip-lines softened.

“It is the only way,” he murmured, and his hand went out to the button
on the desk that would summon his automobile any hour of the day or
night. Another button brought Sydney on the run.

Colton sensed the unasked question and shook his head. “No,” he
anticipated. “I am going out in the machine to get a breath of fresh
air--alone.”

“But----” Sydney started to protest.

“Alone,” repeated the blind man. “I shall not be gone more than an
hour.”

Sydney Thames went with him to the waiting car, and watched with anxious
eyes as the stolid Irish chauffeur whirled him away. It was less than an
hour later that the blind man returned.

“Any news?” he asked of Thames, as he threw off his hat and coat.

“Headquarters report that they have gone through every house in the
Russian sections.”

“The one place where he would not be likely to be,” sneered the blind
man. Then weariness made his voice heavy. “I’m going to bed, Sydney. I
don’t want to be disturbed under any circumstances. Good-night.”

He went to the bedroom that adjoined the library, undressed, and in a
few minutes was under the covers, sleeping peacefully. Sydney Thames
shook his head and went to his own room. It was the first time in years
he had known the blind man to miss an evening out.

When the little clock on the mantel chimed twelve, Thornley Colton waked
immediately, got up noiselessly, and put on his clothes, all but his
collar and tie, coat and vest. From his overcoat-pocket he took the
thing he had gone out for in the early evening. It was a small rubber
bulb with a long rubber tube that had a curved end of hollow, red glass.
He carefully placed the bulb in his right armpit, adjusted the tube down
the length of his arm, so that the curved end of red glass was concealed
in his half-shut right palm. He drew the coat of his pyjamas over his
shirt, and, without even removing his shoes, crawled back under the
covers.

The little clock chimed one--two. The calm, even breathing of the blind
man came regularly. The superkeen ears caught the faint sound of an
opening door. But he did not move. Dead silence. He heard the
library-door open, and to his nostrils came the strong odour of banana
oil. His regular breathing was the only sound that broke the stillness.
The library-door closed. Instantly, noiselessly, he was out of bed.
Seemingly with one motion he was in his coat, and vest, and overcoat.
His hand touched the loaded automatic in his outside pocket. He did not
even wait to put on the smoked glasses his sensitive, sightless eyes
needed to protect them from the burning light. He did not wait to pick
up the thin, hollow stick that gave its message to his finger-tips. Nor
did he pause an instant in the library, where the smell of bananas told
him that a crushed glove of gilt had been laid on the desk. Down the
stairs he ran with steps that were as silent as the night itself. He
flung wide the front door. Down the street he heard an automobile door
slam; the engine barked.

“Was I mistaken? Was it all wrong?” ran the bitter thought through his
mind. He had staked everything on his ability to anticipate a probable
plan of action on the part of the murderers. Then an eager look came to
his face.

“Gee, Mister Colton, I’m glad yuh come!” The piping boy’s voice came
from his side.

“What is it, Shrimp?” he asked tensely. “Where have you been?”

“I been watchin’ them guys. I follered the one that got in the house,
an’ I know where dey hang out. Gee, Mister Colton, dere’s a taxi.”

“Hail it!”

The shrill voice brought the cab to the curb. The chauffeur nodded at
the low-voiced instructions. In the darkness Thornley Colton lolled back
in the cushions. On his face was a curious look of resolution, content,
victory. His wonderfully-keen ears, trained for years to know every
sound, every voice and inflection of voice, knew that the person at his
side was not Shrimp! He had known from the first that the voice was that
of the man whose marvellous mimicry of Hedwig Gorski’s voice had
deceived even her husband. He knew that the man beside him was Madame
Gorski’s murderer. Blind, helpless but for the automatic pistol in his
pocket, he was allowing himself to be taken to the men who had left
their death-sentence sign on the desk in his library; to the men who had
taken the boy he loved!

One chance in a thousand there had been, and the blind man had grasped
it eagerly. He knew that one false move would destroy even that chance.
He had realized that hours before. He had not dared give an inkling of
his plan to a soul; he had not dared ask for help in the one desperate
chance, for he did not know how many keen eyes were watching. He did not
know where he was going, and he could not risk having men who would come
to his aid shadowing him. No, the one chance in a thousand could only be
taken _alone_.

As they rode the voice chattered on, telling of trailing the man who had
left the glove-prints to a little house in Harlem; of stealing a
basement-door key from a servant. Thornley Colton complimented quietly
and often, but his whole mind was fixed on the street-corners the cab
turned, calculating distance, remembering directions. And he knew they
were not going near Harlem; but were in the dark, winding side-streets
of Greenwich Village.

The taxi came to a stop. “The house is three doors down, Mister Colton.
We’ll chase dis guy an’ slide up soft.”

Colton took a bill from his pocket, and the hand of the murderer
snatched it to pay the driver. “Dis way,” whispered the voice, when the
chauffeur had gone. Colton felt a hand lightly touch his elbow to guide
him.

Stealthily they went, keeping close to the dark shadows of the houses.
With a hiss of warning the hand drew him against the wall of a house,
seconds after the blind man had heard the sound of approaching
footsteps. A policeman passed, swinging his stick and whistling softly.

“Come on!” The hand pulled him forward and down an area-way. He heard a
handle turn and an iron-grille door open rustily. A key in the hand of
his guide opened another door, and he felt the carpet of the
basement-hall under his feet as the door closed behind him.

“Wait here a minute, Mister Colton,” came the whisper at his side. “I
want a scout ’round a little.”

Obediently the blind man stood in the darkness. He heard the light,
almost soundless footsteps retreating until they died away somewhere in
the depths of the house. Like a flash he whirled to the door. His
fingers found the catch, sprung it back. The way to escape was open!
Then he crept forward into the darkness, every nerve strained to catch
the slightest warning sound. From the floor above came the hoarse murmur
of voices, but even his wonderful ears could not distinguish words. Then
his lips tautened to a thin, straight line. A moan, faint, quavering,
came from the darkness. He knew instantly that it was the voice of the
boy he had come to find. He had heard it before, years ago, when the boy
had tossed on his bed and dreamed horrid dreams of his murdered mother
and his murderer father, from whom Thornley Colton had taken him.

“Only a few minutes more, kiddie,” he breathed, then he darted back to
the place his guide had left him. His superkeen ears had warned him.

“Here upstairs playin’ cards an’ half drunk,” whispered the piping voice
so like that of Shrimp. “Got a gun?”

Thornley Colton knew that the man was leaning forward, watching him in
the darkness, but his hand touched the pocket that contained the heavy
pistol, and he nodded. The lips of the blind man set even grimmer as he
heard the sharp breath-intake of satisfaction. So the thousandth chance
demanded that he lose even the pistol! Well, he would play the game
according to their own set rules.

Up the stairs he followed at the heels of his leader, his brain
automatically counting the steps and turns, as it had been taught to do
years before. The guide stopped. Colton could hear the faint murmur of
voices.

“Dere’s where dey are!” whispered the voice. “Get in before dey know
where dey’s at.” The blind man’s hand fumbled for the door-handle. He
flung the door wide.

The bright lights of the room stung his naked eyeballs like a million
swords of living fire; his hands went involuntarily to shield them.
Instantly he felt the fingers of the man who had guided him dive toward
his pocket, snatch out the pistol.

“Welcome, Herr Colton!” The voice came from in front of him in heavy
German, and each word was a sneer. “Fool!” grated the voice. “Into our
hands like a baby you come. Three pistols are pointed at your heart! Sit
down!”

Colton groped forward blindly, his hand found a chair, his fingers told
him that it was set close to a heavy oak table.

“Goot!” grunted the man who had spoken. Colton knew that he was sitting
directly in front of him, across the table. The blind man’s ears also
informed him that on either side of the voice was another man. Three
against one! Three with loaded pistols against an unarmed man who was
blind!

The door closed softly, and Colton knew that the man who had led him was
gone.

“Where’s my boy?” demanded the problemist suddenly, fiercely. “Where is
he!” He leaned across the table, and the heavy voice commanded him to
sit back. But Thornley Colton had learned the table’s width; a powerful
lift of his knee had told him of its weight. That table was his
thousandth chance! He slumped back in his chair, his left hand
protecting his burning eyes, his right hand half closed on the arm of
his chair.

“You have offended the Gilded Glove,” began the rumbling German voice.

“I understand Russian!” broke in the blind man curtly.

The man at the right drew in his breath sharply. Colton heard the man at
the left tilt his chair until its back touched a wall.

“The Gilded Glove has always been sacred to traitors,” the voice went
on, and the language was Russian. “But you have learned things that men
with eyes would never have learned. We have watched you with Hedwig
Gorski, and we knew that you knew. We know that you discovered the
secret written in the music. But for you, that secret would have been
our secret. The clutching fingers of the Long Arm are always reaching
for those who fight the Little Father. You fell into our trap. You are a
brave man. Your hands do not shake, nor does your body tremble. Your
death will be an easy death.”

“Thanks.” The word came laconically from the blind man, but every nerve,
every sense was alert as he mentally pictured the room and its
occupants. He knew that the heavy table must be less than three feet
from the wall. The tilted chair had told him that. Even the quiet
breathing of the men located them for the blind man, who was waiting the
thousandth chance.

“This chamber is sound-proof. Its secrets are always secrets,” continued
the voice. “We could riddle you with bullets, and the world would be
none the wiser. But we will be merciful.”

Colton heard the click of a bottle-neck on a glass, heard the gurgle of
the flowing wine, then the glass was pushed across the table.

“Drink!” ordered the harsh voice. “It is the poison that killed Hedwig
Gorski; swift, powerful, painless. Drink!”

Thornley Colton drew back, a look of horror on his face.

“That, or the bullets which do not kill painlessly!”

The problemist’s right hand reached blindly for the glass. His palm
almost tipped it as it covered the top for an instant; then his fingers
lifted it.

“You will not harm my boy?” he asked, and there was a queer chokiness in
his voice.

“Drink!”

“You will not harm my boy?” The voice was pleading.

“I shall count three!”

Slowly, his hands shaking so that it required both of them to keep the
drink from spilling. Thornley Colton lifted the glass to his lips. Six
eyes watched him, but the nervousness seemed to pass as the fire of the
wine entered his veins. He set down the empty glass and wiped his lips
with his handkerchief. Narrowly the men watched him. A hectic flush
seemed to mount the pale cheeks; the lean, cleft jaw was set rigidly.
Suddenly Thornley Colton bent forward across the table; his left hand
gripping its edge. And his voice came to their ears like the snap of a
steel cable.

“For every minute of pain you have caused the boy I will make you
suffer hours of agony!” he swore passionately. The voice became dull,
then, the words came slowly, haltingly. “Hours--hours--for my
boy’s--hours--hours----”

The half-closed right fist dropped to his chair arm; the left hand
dropped limply to his side; his body convulsively turned in the chair so
that his hip was at the table-edge; the eyes stared straight ahead.

“It has done its work--as always,” whispered the man at the left.

“A pity we could not make of him another Boris!” said the man at the
right.

“Put away the needless pistols!” commanded the heavy voice. “Darkness
for the sign!” The hand that had held the pistol reached back of him.
The fingers pulled a switch, and the lights went out. The door opened
softly.

From the darkness a gilded hand came slowly, certainly. The fingers
touched the throat of the blind man----

With every ounce of strength in his powerful body, Thornley Colton sent
the table crashing on the three men, pinning them like rats in the
narrow space their chairs had occupied, knocking the breath from them,
half stunning them. So instantaneously that it seemed part of the same
lightning movement the blind man’s hand darted out to grasp the
invisible arm that held the gilded glove. A snapping jerk, and Madame
Gorski’s murderer was on his knees. Colton’s right fist went out; the
curved glass tube in his palm that had sucked up the wine to the bulb in
his arm-pit while his hands had concealed the wineglass, shattered with
the impact, cutting his tender palm in a dozen places. A choking gurgle
came from the torn lips of the murderer, and the problemist knew that
the sudden movement of his right arm had sent a spurting stream of the
poison down the throat of the mimic. He let the lax body slide to the
floor. A groan came from one of the pinned-down men. It was only a
matter of seconds now.

The steps of a running man sounded in the hall-way. The superkeen ears
of the problemist located them in the direction of the basement-stairs,
and he realised that the approaching man must have been on the lower
floor guarding the boy. That would leave the coast clear! He darted
across the room; crouched beside the door. The man who had groaned
cursed jerkingly, and one of the heavy chairs creaked as he tried to
writhe from under the big table. A hoarse growl came from the doorway.
Like a cat, crouching, Thornley Colton spun on the balls of his feet and
caught the man around the knees. A wrestler’s twist of his body, and the
new comer went down. The problemist pulled the door closed with a slam
and jumped into the hall-way.

A shot sounded in the room, and the blind man’s lips curved in a grim
smile. The way to escape was clear! In the darkness of the closed room
the men of the Gilded Glove would be for precious minutes wholly at sea;
in the darkness of the halls, Colton was at home--himself. He knew that
he had gained several minutes now, because in the dark and the confusion
of returning senses the men would not realise that he had escaped; every
suspicious sound made by one of them would mean, to the others’
bewildered brains, the location of the enemy.

Colton ran down the hall noiselessly; every nerve, every faculty alert
to warn him of danger before a man with eyes would ever suspect its
presence. His brain counted the steps without conscious effort. At the
top of the basement-stairs he paused a second. From the room came a
crash, and he knew the crushing weight of the table had been lifted.
Then another shot. They were fighting among themselves in the darkness!
Down the basement-stairs he ran. His wonderful ears told him that no
other guard was there.

His hand brushing the wall, as he hurried back into the dark lower
hall-way, located the door. He found the bolt and slid it back. From the
corner came a faint moan. In a single stride he was across the floor. He
leaned over a pile of blankets in the corner, and his hand brushed the
face of the boy; his fingers felt the warm stickiness of the hair, and
he cursed the men upstairs.

“Shrimp!” he called softly. The boy stirred, and his eyes opened as
Thornley Colton picked him up tenderly in his strong arms.

“I fought ’em like--the very dickens!” Shrimp’s voice was scarcely a
whisper, but it took every bit of the gameness in the small body to make
it even that. “They blackjacked me.” His body went limp.

Colton ran with his burden down the dark hall to the front door. The
confusion upstairs had ceased. He heard a door slam; a rumbling Russian
curse; running footsteps. The minutes he had counted on had become
seconds again! He jerked open the door he had unlatched, swung back the
iron grille, and took a great gulp of the cool night air; let the wind
fan his still-burning eyeballs. Running footsteps sounded; a dozen of
them.

“Colton! My God, Colton!” It was the voice of Ames; and there were men
with him.

“In the house with the open basement-door!” gasped Colton, and in his
voice was a prayer of thankfulness for the thousandth chance. “The whole
crowd!” he finished.

The running footsteps sounded once more. Ames lingered.

“The taxi-driver put us wise,” he jerked out. “He knew the boy, and
realised there was something wrong when the man with you imitated his
voice. Reported it to the police. I got the tip instantly. Called up
your house, and Thames found you gone. I got half a dozen of my men here
in taxis.”

“Where are the cabs?” snapped Colton. “I want one. My boy is hurt!”

“Around the corner.” Ames whistled shrilly. “Here comes one. I’ve got to
be with my men!” He was gone.

Colton laid the boy gently on the cushions, and, as the taxi started
uptown, Shrimp’s eyes fluttered open. “Gee!” he murmured faintly. “I got
m’ real detective work--that--time--assaults--blackjacks----” The voice
died as unconsciousness came again.


                                  IV.

The afternoon sun came slantingly through the great glass windows,
lighting the happy face of the blind man and the pale, smiling face of
The Fee, as he lay in bed, his head swathed in bandages, one arm in a
sling.

“I was goin’ round, ’cause I couldn’t sleep, an’ I heard somebody open
the front door”--Shrimp scowled as his voice became weak, and set his
teeth for a moment. “I thought it was you. Then I seen his whole head
was covered with a black thing, an’ there was black gloves on his hands,
an’ he didn’t wear no shoes.”

Colton nodded. “So that he could not be seen, nor heard, in the
darkness. The hood covered everything but his eyes and lips; the latter
were left free so that he could mimic a voice.”

“I watched him sneak into the library an’ come out. Then I beat it down
the backstairs, an’ when he got in his automobile I was hangin’ on the
back. He musta knew I was there all the time, but he never let on. I was
scoutin’ ’round the house when three of ’em jumped me. I guess they
knocked me out good, for it was a long time ’fore I come round. Then a
guy I couldn’t see came in the dark room where I was an’ started
knockin’ you. I told him where he stood, all right.”

“It was the mimic,” Colton explained. “He wanted to learn every tone of
your voice.”

“The government agents got every one of them,” put in Sydney
unnecessarily.

“Yes, and the house has been the scene of many crimes. Ames and his men
found a lot of valuable papers, together with the ringleaders of the
Gilded Glove. Jones, of the hotel, identified the bearded man who did
all the talking as the German husband who had the rooms. The chair arms
didn’t protect him very much from the falling table, and his three
broken ribs will keep him quiet for a while. The one who posed as his
wife, and the third man at the table, have bruises and contusions enough
to last them a lifetime. The murderer of Hedwig Gorski”--Thornley Colton
paused a minute and went on--“was brought around all right by the
ambulance surgeon; only a little of the poison went down his throat; but
he told his story. He was a wonderful boy mimic fifteen years ago. Any
sound, any voice was as easy for him to learn as names would be to you
and me. Then the Gilded Glove got him. What devilish method they used I
don’t know, but they made him their tool. Boris Strevelski forgot that
he had ever been anything but a dealer of death to traitors; that he was
the Hammer of God was the only idea left in his mind. But they taught
him all languages, and he picked them up as the average man would
remember names.

“He worked for half an hour to get the pane of glass from the window of
the Gorski bathroom, and, in a skin-tight suit of black silk that
covered everything but his mouth and eyes, he hid behind the coat and
dress in the closet after putting the poison in the tap. He had on the
same suit at the house. My hands told me that.”

“But how did you know he would come here?” asked Sydney breathlessly.

“I risked everything on my mental ability to follow the workings of the
Oriental mind,” Colton said slowly. “The Caucasian mind is always
content with mere killing. But the Oriental mind must have the
significant! Think of the risk of staying in the Gorski rooms when they
knew the poison would do its work. But to them the mere death was only
part; their whole course of thought demanded that the sign be left.

“I knew it would be the same in my case. So I gave them no chance to
leave the crushed glove anywhere but here; and I knew they would come. I
didn’t know that they had been watching me for weeks because of my
friendship with Madame Gorski, nor that they had gotten a duplicate key.
But I was almost at the heels of the stranger. When he saw me I knew he
would instantly think of luring me to my death. The sign had been left,
and death was next. I knew, also, that he would never overlook the
opportunity to mimic Shrimp’s voice, because in the years mimicry has
become a mania with him. He slammed the door of the car in which he came
so that I would think he had escaped. Then his playing Shrimp’s part
seemed easy and logical. What was there to do but take me to the New
York headquarters of the Gilded Glove? Following out their
mind-processes further, I had no doubt that they would give me a chance
to drink the poison, for that, too, is a peculiar kink of the Oriental
mind. Hence my precaution. The rest was simple.”

“Simple!” gasped Sydney Thames, and there was sweat on his brow. “My
God, Thorn, think of you, _blind_, risking yourself alone with those
men.”

“My blindness was my greatest ally there,” smiled Colton faintly. “The
instant darkness came they were helpless, while I was my normal self,
which I couldn’t be in the burning light, but”--he touched the
alcohol-soaked bandage that covered his head and eyes--“the tortures of
the Inquisition were mild beside that light on my unprotected eyeballs.”

He patted the hand of the boy gently. “And it was Shrimp who led the
secret agents, after all,” he said quietly. “If the taxi-driver hadn’t
been one of the hundred friends he has made around the city, there might
have been another story to tell. The men of the Gilded Glove weren’t far
behind me.”

The door-bell rang downstairs. “Ames again,” commented Colton, a trifle
wearily, and in a few minutes the government agent was ushered into the
room by John, the butler.

“We got everything, Mr. Colton!” he cried. “The whole gang is cleaned
up. Gorski was released from jail to-day, and is going back to Paris.
Without his wife he will never bother any one. Even the Gilded Glove
didn’t think him worthy of their attention. And those harbour-mine
plans! A wonderful piece of work! Placed in order under an onion-skin
paper map of the harbour, with the staccato-note marks at certain points
on the shore line, every sharp and flat traced on the map gave, as you
said, the exact locations of the mines.”

“Have you found the traitor?” asked Colton.

“Yes.” Ames’s voice was sober. “His body was found this morning in his
office. The pistol he had used was beside him. A closed incident.” Then
enthusiasm came to his tone once more. “What you have done on this case
will never be forgotten, Mr. Colton,” he said earnestly. “It will not be
made public, of course, but the secretary of state will write you a
personal letter offering you any reward you may ask. The president
himself will tender you a position that----”

Thornley Colton’s upraised hand stopped him. The blind man turned his
sightless eyes toward the closed eyes of The Fee, and gently withdrew
his fingers from the clasp of the small hand. “Hush,” he said softly.
“The boy is sleeping.”

------------------------------------------------------------------------




                          THE SEVENTH PROBLEM

                          THE RINGING GOBLETS


                                   I.

His chin resting on his chest, his hands gripping the wide-spread
leather arms of the chair, the man stared at the log fire--fixedly,
intently; as though the ceaseless war the flames waged against the
darkness held him enthralled by its hopelessness. The wind, whistling
encouragement down the wide chimney, caused the fire to leap upward and
drive the shadows in retreat to the farthest corner of the library. For
an instant the flames crackled their triumph; then died down. The
shadows rushed forward, swiftly and silently, to recover the territory
they had lost. The fire sputtered its chagrin.

The man in the chair shivered, though his hands felt the warmth of the
leather arms. For an instant the hopeless look went from his eyes; his
chin lifted. Then the eyes resumed their staring at the flames. “I
won’t!” he muttered. “I won’t! I’ll----” The thin right fist doubled; he
raised it to smite the arm of the chair. In the air it unclenched and
dropped lifelessly.

“There must be some way!” Hope again shone in his eyes. The flames,
apparently encouraged by his spirit, again leaped to their fight with
the shadows. “There is!” His voice, low, passionate, died suddenly. He
jerked his head around the side of the high chair, and darted a fearful
glance at a dark corner. A trembling chill shook his body, and his lips
formed the silent words: “I mustn’t forget _that_ devilish thing!”

The door opened softly, and the man in the chair heard, but he did not
move. The impassive-faced servant came forward with soundless footsteps.

“You wish anything, sir?” he asked humbly.

“Nothing, Paul.”

“A bit more wood on the fire, sir?”

The seated man turned his eyes back to the glowing logs that had given
up their fight with the darkness, and whose flames no longer leaped
their defiance, but spluttered their defeat.

“I think not,” came finally.

“Your wine, sir?”

“At eight, Paul.”

“Yes, sir. I’ll remember, sir.” The servant bowed himself back a step,
then stopped. “Miss Nadine says as ’ow she ’opes you are quite fit this
evenin’, sir.”

A sudden draft of cold air seemed to strike the man, for his body shook
and his hands gripped tighter on the leather arms.

“Tell her I feel much better,” he lied pitifully, moistening his dry
lips with his tongue.

“I will, sir.” The man bowed gravely and withdrew, closing the door
quietly behind him.

Silence came again to the room, broken only by the crackle of the dying
fire that gave to the haggard, deep-lined face of the man a pink glow of
health that belied the hunted look in his eyes, and the lines of utter
hopelessness around the mouth. For minutes he sat, immovable, swallowed
in the depths of the big leather chair.

The door opened again, and the sound of it brought a new expression to
his face; a curious expression of mingled joy and dread. His thin hands
clenched as if the very action were intended to brace his whole body.
Then his lips formed a tremulous smile as the golden-haired,
pink-cheeked girl ran across the room, and flung her arms around his
neck. Her lips touched his cheek; she drew back and gazed deep into his
eyes for an instant before he lowered them.

“Oh, daddy-father,” she pleaded. “You _mustn’t_ worry so!” She seated
herself on the chair-arm, her small hand patted his shoulder. “It will
all come out right,” she whispered fondly.

“Hush!” he breathed, and she could feel his body tremble under her
fingers.

“The curs!” she said passionately, lifting her head to look over the
back of the high leather chair and gaze into the dark corner, as her
father had done a few minutes before.

He lifted a hand and touched her lips warningly, but she shook her head
away.

“It’s killing you, daddy-father!” There was a sobbing catch in her
voice. “You’ve grown old, old, in the past month. Won’t you _please_ let
that wonderful blind man help you? Oh, daddy-father”--both hands were on
his shoulders now; her eyes bright with held-back tears, looked into
his--“think of what he did for Ned--and I love you so!”

“No, no!” he choked. “I--he--please don’t make me talk.” The last was a
whisper, even the girl in the arm-chair barely heard it.

“I don’t care!” she cried. “I’ll----”

From the shadowed shelf over the fire-place came the mellow chime of a
clock. The girl and the man started as though some sudden electric shock
had passed through them. Her hand clutched at his shoulder; a sob came
from her throat. The man’s fingers picked at the leather chair-arms; his
dry lips moved mechanically as he counted the eight strokes of the
clock-bell. When the last note had died away the girl’s hand fell
lifelessly from his shoulder; she rose to her feet.

“You are going to the opera to-night, Nadine?” he asked, trying bravely
to keep the quaver from his voice.

“Yes,” she said steadily. She bent down to kiss him, her hand touched
his thin white hair for a minute before she turned to go. Half-way
across the room she stopped, and her little hands clenched at her sides
as the door-handle turned softly; but she merely bowed bravely and
hurried past the wooden-faced manservant who entered.

“Your wine, sir?”

The man rubbed his hands together, as though warming them in the glow of
the logs; his face was hidden in the shadows above.

“Yes, Paul.”

From the shadow beside the fire-place the servant brought a small, round
tabouret, and set it beside the big chair.

“Turn me around a bit, Paul. The light hurts my eyes.”

Obediently the servant placed the big chair so that its side was to the
fire-light. The little man was completely swallowed up in its depths.
Only the tip of one slippered foot showed in the ruddy crimson that came
under the chair. The tabouret was in the dark at the side away from the
fire.

“The usual two goblets, sir?” asked the servant, as he swung back the
door of the cellaret.

“Yes, Paul, and a cigar.”

The man placed the two wine-filled goblets on the small table, and a few
drops of the wine spilled as it swayed a trifle on its uneven legs.

“Table seems a trifle wabbly, sir. Shall I put something under the legs
to steady it?”

The seated man merely shook his head and stretched forth a hand to lift
one of the goblets to his lips. Slowly he sipped it while the servant
stood patiently by with the box of cigars. In the flare of the match,
held to light the cigar he had selected, the servant’s eyes, invisible
in the shadows above, studied every line of the haggard face. But there
was no commiseration in the studying--only satisfaction and triumph.

“That is all; I won’t need you again to-night, Paul.”

“Very well, sir.” The servant bowed and withdrew.

For several minutes the smoke from the unmoving cigar spiraled in the
darkness. Then the seated man turned in the big chair, and the ashes
dropped to his knee unheeded as he shuddered. His two hands on the small
tabouret moved it an inch toward him. He shook his head, and moved it
half an inch to the right. The wine in the full glass was spilling, and
he poured half of it into the other goblet. Apparently the uneven legs
that caused the tabouret to teeter back and forth bothered him, for he
spent several minutes setting it to his satisfaction. Then he carefully
placed the two goblets in the exact centre, so that the rims touched,
and leaned back in the big leather chair.

One hand showed on the arm-chair nearest the fire; the other was in the
shadow. Suddenly the two glasses clicked together with a musical,
ringing sound, as though his hand had nervously fallen on the table and
caused it to sway. Then his shaking fingers on the tabouret-edge caused
a musical soothing jingle of the egg-shell rims. The sound seemed to
please him, for the clink-click-tap-tap-clink kept up for minutes.

“I won’t!” he cried suddenly, vehemently. His trembling fingers made the
wine dance in the ringing goblets.

The hand holding the cigar rested on the chair-arm, the fingers clenched
so that the wrapper almost crackled under their pressure.

“No, no! Nadine----” The moaning voice died; he bent forward in his
chair. The slipper that showed in the light under the chair lifted, then
dropped back to its original position. The cigar smoke curled upward
from the chair-arm, an iridescent ribbon in the feeble glow of the
darkness-defeated logs.

Clink! Clink-clink! Tap! Tap-tap! came the ring of the goblets on the
tabouret. The clock on the mantel ticked off minute after minute.

Softly, silently the door opened--an inch, two inches. From the darkness
of the hall outside two eyes stared into the darkness of the room.

The streamer of smoke rose steadily; the glasses still sang their song
of nervousness. Suddenly the door opened a full half. The owner of the
watching eyes had smelled burning leather. The servant stepped into the
room, stumbled over a big chair near the door, and swore softly.

“Do you wish anythink, sir?” It was the respectful voice of the servant.

The smoke still ascended unwaveringly; the music of the goblets did not
cease. But no answer came from the big chair.

The servant approached the chair on tiptoe. A sound made him turn toward
the door. It was swinging open. He walked to it, and stopped it before
it struck the heavy bookcase, and closed it noiselessly.

“Do you wish anythink, sir?” he whispered again.

The slipper still showed in the ribbon of light. The glasses were still
ringing. The cigar still burned. The man sniffed again, then reached the
side of the chair in a single bound.

A curse escaped him; a deep curse of bafflement, rage.

_The chair was empty!_

On the arm the cigar was burning the leather. The empty slipper was just
where the foot had been. The wine still moved in the now-silent glasses.
But the man he had left a few minutes before, the man whose nervous
fingers had caused the glasses to ring but a second before, had
vanished!

Two steps took the servant across the room. A snap, and the
incandescents sprang to light. The big chair by the door, a counterpart
of the one at the fire-place, was unmoved. Everything in the room was as
he had left it. But the man was gone.

“Damn him!” muttered the fellow who had been a servant. But he wasn’t a
servant now. His shoulders were hunched aggressively. The wooden look
had gone. In its place was tenseness, animal strength; the muscles
played back and forth under the tightly-drawn skin of the cheek-bones.

“He’s gone, chief!” he said, and his voice was low. “How the devil he
did it is more than I can figure.” He ran to the fire-place and knelt on
the hearth, his sharp eyes studying every inch. And as he leaned over
the fire he talked: “I watched the door every minute. His infernal
nervousness gave me the willies. I heard the glasses clink till I got to
the chair, chief--to the _chair_!”

He ran to the high window, and searched every inch of the sill and
curtains, still speaking in that level, even tone: “Get the boys out and
cover the house! Spread ’em around the block! He can’t have been gone
more than ten minutes. There’s not a damn’ crack in the wall. I know
that!”

His fingers were running over the bookcases, his eyes seeming to bore
into their very depths as he went on: “The girl’s all ready for the
opera----” His keen ears heard footsteps, and his voice changed to an
agonised wail as the girl entered: “’E’s gone, Miss Nadine, ’e’s gone!”

“Gone!” she cried, staggering against the chair near the door. “Gone!”
she repeated, and her voice was scarcely a whisper.

“I smelled ’is cigar burning the leather. I thought as ’ow ’e was
asleep.”

She forced her limbs to support her weight across the floor. She looked
down into the chair where the untouched cigar still burned. The opera
cloak slipped from her shoulders unheeded as she touched the
tabouret-edge with her fingers for an instant. The glasses clinked
mockingly.

“Gone!” she said again. “He has gone to them--at last!”

She swayed, fell, sending the tabouret and glasses crashing to the
floor. The servant leaned over her for an instant; then ran to the
corner of the room.

“Hear that, chief!” he whispered tensely. “Get it? Rip out the wires
when I cut ’em. There’ll be merry hell around here in a little while!”

A gleam of nickel showed in his hand as he thrust it behind a high
bookcase. Came two sharp clicks, and as he turned toward the girl he put
into his pocket a round, black disc. It was a dictograph.


                                  II.

For two hours Nadine Nelson had sat, white-faced but steady-voiced, as
the three men questioned, cajoled, badgered, and threatened. At her
right, his chair within a foot of that in which she sat, was the man who
had posed as a servant. At her left was another, just as keen-eyed and
alert. Before her sat a heavy-chinned, broad-shouldered man whose
fingers crackled the typewritten sheets as he jerked out his questions.
The girl’s eyes met his fairly, unwaveringly. Yet she knew he was Chief
Whittson, of the United States secret service.

“You know that, for months, hundreds of thousands of dollars have been
passed through the agency of your father’s bank?” he snapped.

“I know nothing,” she said unemotionally.

“Then why did you say----” He referred to the typewritten sheets: “‘It
will all come out right?’”

“Because it will,” she replied steadily.

The men at her sides snorted impatiently.

“Did you know that your father was the head of the best-organised
counterfeiting gang in the country?” jerked out the secret-service
chief.

Her eyes did not flinch for an instant. “I knew nothing.”

“Where is your father, Miss Nelson?”

“I do not know.”

“Then why did you say”--his forefinger punched the typewritten page
viciously, and in his voice was snarled impatience--“‘he has gone to
them at last.’ Who did you mean?”

“I know nothing,” came the unvarying answer she had given a hundred
times before.

“Why didn’t you call in the police when you knew that your father had
disappeared?”

For the first time a shade of expression came to the girl’s face; her
lips curved in contempt. “Because I knew that the police could do no
more than the secret-service men of the United States.” There was more
than a tinge of contempt in her voice.

Chief Whittson straightened back in his chair. “Did you know that your
servant was not what he pretended to be?” he demanded.

“Yes,” she said defiantly. “We knew from the first that he was a spy.”

The former servant leaped to his feet, face red with rage. “So that’s
why you took it so cool, eh? That’s why you didn’t raise the fuss I
expected?” he flared. “And you went to your own room and locked the
door to cry. And I was _sorry_ for you. Me! A wise guy!
Some--clever--actress!”

She shrank back before the lashing sneer in the words.

“Then you knew of the dictograph?” demanded the chief, instantly alert
to take advantage of the first signs of break-down.

“Yes,” she whispered tremulously. “We knew, and we----” she stopped, her
breath catching suddenly.

“‘We,’” repeated the chief sharply. “What? What?”

Her lips quivered piteously. The nerve that had forced her frail woman’s
body to bear the rack for hours was breaking.

“What did you do? Tell me!” he commanded viciously.

“Don’t you think you’ve gone quite far enough on that line?” The quiet,
even voice of the man in the door-way caused the two men at the girl’s
side to leap to their feet, and the chief to jerk his body erect. “If I
were you, Miss Nelson,” the man in the door-way spoke to the girl, and
his voice was gentle, “I would answer only courteous questions.”

His white face, with its lean, cleft chin, and thin, firm lips, lighted
in a wonderful smile of encouragement; the hand that was not holding the
slim stick brushed back from his high forehead the hair whose whiteness
was accentuated by the great blue circles of the tortoise-rimmed library
glasses.

“Who are you?” demanded the chief, but there was no bluster in his tone.
The manner he had assumed for the girl had dropped like a mask. He was
the calm, alert detective once more, and his keen judgment told him
instantly that the new comer was not the type to bluff.

Before the man at the door-way could answer, a youth rushed past him to
the girl’s side.

“I found him, Nadine,” he cried joyously. “Here’s Mr. Colton. He’ll find
uncle.”

“Thank God!” breathed the girl, and her body relaxed.

Thornley Colton turned his head to speak over his shoulder. “A glass of
water, Sydney. Quickly!”

“So you’re Thornley Colton, eh?” The secret-service chief eyed him
sharply. “I understand you’ve done some rather remarkable work--for a
blind man.”

Colton smiled, then stepped aside as his black-haired, apple-cheeked
secretary came in with a glass of water. The girl’s eyes fluttered open,
and the blind man realised that she needed time to regain her scattered
senses.

“You have the average person’s idea of the blind, chief,” he said. “And
the average person gets _his_ notion from the blind beggar on the
street-corners who hobbles along led by a small boy and a dog, and taps
every inch of the side-walk with a heavy cane. Very few realise that is
mostly for effect. Fewer still know that in New York there are nearly
two hundred sightless men and women who go to business every day without
help or guidance. Some of the highest-paid private secretaries and
stenographers in the country are blind. Several of the blind
proof-readers are famous. And for many years the court of last resort in
the dead-letter office at Washington was a blind man. He was the most
expert ever employed by the government, and could read with his
supersensitive finger-tips addresses that had passed through the hands
of the keenest-eyed readers of illegible writing in the world. So you
see, the blind are not so helpless as one might imagine. Ah, Miss
Nelson, do you feel better?”

“Yes.” She looked up at him with a curious expression in her eyes. It
was the look of a child who has sought a protector only to be a little
frightened at the result. But she smiled bravely. “You did such a
wonderful thing for Ned”--she rested her hand fondly on her cousin’s
arm--“when he was arrested for the murder of the girl in the theatre,
and I thought----” Again came the look that was almost fear.

“I will do my best,” promised the blind man. “Do you mind my hearing the
story from Chief Whittson--his side of it?”

“No,” she said, with only a bit of nervousness in her voice.

Whittson smiled quizzically. This blind man might be interesting. On his
face and the faces of his men there was no doubt of the outcome. They
were government men, trained, efficient; the interloper was an
amateur--and blind.

“We know that Dryden F. Nelson was the biggest passer of counterfeit
money in the country!” began the chief. “He is the cleverest of them
all. Who would suspect the bank of a man like Nelson as a clearing house
for the cleverest counterfeits ever made? The scheme was wonderful, the
only organised gang in the country who could pass ‘queer’ at its face
value was that of this girl’s father. How long it’s been going on we
don’t know. The bills have the ‘feel,’ something no other counterfeiter
has ever been able to get. It was only within the past six months we
traced the bills to their source. And that was Nelson’s bank! For six
months we have tried to locate the plant, and failed. For the past three
weeks my man here has been in the house, and there has been a dictograph
in the library.”

“And you discovered nothing?”

“Nothing except to make morally certain his guilt. And he knew we were
closing in. He was frightened stiff! Now we find out that the girl,
here, was wise. She’s fooled us right along. We never suspected that she
was one of the gang.”

The girl cowered in her chair. “I’m not,” she faltered. “It isn’t true.”

“Now Nelson’s slipped through our fingers,” went on the chief
relentlessly. “Just when we had him worked up to a confession. He got
out of that room in some devilish way.”

“I’ve got the facts of his disappearance,” put in Colton.

“So have we!” snapped the chief. “Within ten minutes of the time he
went, every inch of this block was covered, and to-day ten thousand
police and two hundred secret-service men are scouring the city for him.
He can’t get out of it, and he can’t stay in it--long.”

“Why didn’t you arrest him before if you were so certain of his guilt?”

“Because we wanted his pals! We wanted to locate the plant! And he went
while Jim was watching the door every minute! While my ears were glued
to the dictograph-receivers and my pencil taking every word down in
shorthand.”

“You heard nothing?”

“After Jim brought the wine there wasn’t a sound but the infernal
ringing of the two glass rims on the teetery tabouret he insisted on
having beside his chair.”

Colton looked up with sudden interest. “Did you ever hear those glasses
ring before?”

“Every night at eight, when Jim here served his wine.”

“What other time did he have wine served?”

The former servant answered: “He only had it at eight in the library,
and he wanted it on the minute.”

“Significance--somewhere,” mused the problemist. For several seconds
there was silence as his slim cane idly tapped his shoe-sole.

Suddenly the girl sat rigid in her chair. “I can’t!” she cried. “Oh,
please! Please! I can’t!”

The expression on the blind man’s face was the only one that did not
change. The three secret-service men looked the amazement the sudden
irrelevant words had caused. The youth who was kneeling at the girl’s
side gazed at her in wonder.

“The truth will help us all, Miss Nelson,” said Colton gently.

But she paid no attention to the words. Her eyes, widened in fear, were
fixed on the shoe of the problemist.

“Yes,” she said, and her voice was barely a whisper. “Every night!”

The chief jumped to his feet. “What’s that?” he demanded. “What’s that?”

“The one thing you overlooked; the significance of two plus two,”
declared Thornley Colton. “If you will show me the library perhaps I can
point out some other things that your eyes have missed.”

The girl lifted her bowed head. “Oh, Mr. Colton,” she pleaded, “do not
show them--you don’t know what it means!”

The blind man went to her side, and put his hand gently on her shoulder.
“It is necessary,” he said, and his voice was tender. Then, to the
chief: “If you will lead the way.”

Chief Whittson rose, and jerked his thumb toward the girl as she buried
her head in her arms. One of the men nodded. She was to be guarded every
minute.

“I’ll stay here,” whispered Sydney Thames, as Colton passed him. The
black-haired secretary, tender-hearted, deifier of all women, was going
to guard the girl against further badgering.

The government man who had posed as the servant opened the door of the
library. “This is the room,” he growled. “There isn’t a break in the
walls. We’ve gone over every inch.”

Colton’s thin cane located the big chair near the door. He walked around
it, touched its back, the walls behind it, and measured the distance to
the room entrance. On his white cheeks was a hectic flush of excitement;
his nostrils quivered like those of a hound on the scent.

“You were watching the door every minute?” His voice was unconsciously
sharp.

“Yes.”

The blind man turned to the chief, a curious smile on his face. “This is
an instance of the blind’s superiority. You and your man know that there
is but one possible way for a man to get out of this room. You’re as
sure of that as you are of death. Yet you can’t realise that that is the
way Nelson got out because your eyes deceive your brain into thinking it
impossible. Sight is the greatest handicap pure reasoning has. Even a
man with eyes instinctively closes them when he is trying to figure out
some particularly intricate problem. The trouble is that you haven’t
closed your eyes. Nelson went out through that door!”

“What?” The chief and his man chorused it blankly.

The blind problemist did not answer at once. He darted across the room.
His stick found the chair at the fire-place.

“Nelson wanted you to turn this chair away from the fire?” he said
suddenly.

“How did you know that?” asked the chief, and in his tone was wonder.

“Because it was necessary for his escape.” The words came like staccato
notes on a taut wire. “He knew that a man was watching that door. He
didn’t know what instant it might open an inch. But he knew that with
the high sides of the chair toward the fire he would be invisible in the
depths. He pulled his slippers off, and left one so that it could be
seen--young Nelson, who came to see his cousin last night, gave me most
of the facts. Then he slid from the chair, and crawled across the floor
to crouch down behind that other big chair near the door. From past
tests he knew just how the servant would enter the room and just what he
would do. It was the work of an instant to slip through the open door as
the servant was crossing the room toward the fire-place. His stockinged
feet made his exit absolutely noiseless. The very simplicity of the
thing would deceive any man in the world who could _see_. Yet you knew
it was the only way he _could_ have gone!”

“I saw the door open!” gasped the secret-service man. “I thought it was
a draught.”

“Yes,” nodded the blind man, “because your eyes saw the cigar-smoke and
the slipper. They wouldn’t let your brain get any idea but that he was
in the chair.”

“But the very simplicity of that would make elaborate preparations
necessary,” objected the chief. “The thing would have to be timed to the
instant. Nelson hadn’t a chance to communicate with any one without our
knowledge. Jim, here, and the dictograph took care of that.”

Colton’s lips curved in a mirthless smile. “They made it possible! Their
very actions prove that both Nelson and his daughter knew of the
dictograph. They understood that, so long as you didn’t suspect they
knew, you would take no other precautions. They knew that you would
depend on the instrument to hear every word, and on this man to see that
there wasn’t a written word of instruction put into their hands. And
they fooled you! Tricked you every day!”

At the last word he dropped to his knees beside the big chair by the
fire-place. His supersensitive finger-tips brushed the carpet. Back and
forth they went a dozen times, then stopped. “See that!” he cried. “See
that!”

The two men leaned forward. For a minute they stared.

“Only a nail-hole through the rug,” declared the chief.

“Yes, only a nail-hole,” Colton repeated quietly. “That’s the only thing
your eyes can see. But my finger-tip felt the point of a nail under the
carpet and on a level with the floor.”

“Nail?” repeated the chief dumbly. He had forgotten his superior
attitude of a short time before. The dominant personality of the blind
man; his absolute sureness of himself compelled respect, and brought a
realisation that Thornley Colton was the master, he the pupil.

The blind man walked from the chair. His stick, poking in the corner
beside the fire-place, found the tabouret. With an exclamation of
satisfaction he pulled it out and touched its edge with his finger-tips.

“You spoke of it as being ‘teetery.’ See how finely it is balanced on
the two legs that are a fraction of an inch longer than the others. And
see here!” His stick fell to the floor as he used both hands to turn it
upside-down. The two secret-service men saw that all four legs were
tipped with metal balls. “See the scars of the nail-point on the balls
of the short legs?” cried Colton. He took his knife from his pocket, and
tapped with the blade. A low, musical click-click-click that could be
heard distinctly by the men resulted. “Hear that?” he demanded.

“What does it mean?” The chief made no effort to keep the bewilderment
from his voice.

“It means that under the floor, and under that nail-hole in the rug, is
a finely-adjusted magnet with a nail-pointed plunger in the centre of
the coil. That’s how Nelson beat your dictograph! That’s how he beat
your spy. Just as the girl inside understood the Morse messages I tapped
with my cane.”

“Telegraphy!” gasped the chief. “Nelson was chief staff-telegrapher in
the army for years.”

The blind man nodded. “The table was set here at eight because that is
the time the person at the other end would be ready to send the
messages. Nelson adjusted the tabouret so that one of the short legs
would be directly above the magnet-plunger, which was as sensitive to
the touch of the telegraph-key sending the current through the
magnet-coils as the most delicate instrument in the world. To the
trained operator who has learned to take a message from any single
instrument in a room where a thousand others are clattering away, the
click of the plunger against that hollow metal ball would be as easy to
read as print to the average man. But ordinarily the dictograph would
also hear. That’s why the goblets were placed rim to rim--so that the
ringing would drown the other sound over the wires of the dictograph, or
to a man listening at the door. Acoustics would take care of that. The
dot-dash of the magnet-plunger could not be heard five feet away, though
the man in the chair could get every word.”

“By God, that’s clever!” There was admiration in Chief Whittson’s tone.
“Pull back that chair, Jim! We’ll get the rug up and see the thing!
We’ll follow those wires and land the whole gang.”

He stopped as Nadine Nelson entered the room. She wasn’t the sobbing
girl they had left who now entered; but a white-cheeked, white-lipped
woman who did not speak until she had crossed the room and stood before
the chief.

“I am the ‘gang’ you speak of,” she said quietly. “The wires go to my
room!”


                                  III.

Calmly, disdainfully, the girl stood at the door of her room, and
watched the secret-service men search it with no regard for care. At her
side stood her cousin, looking on helplessly. His boyish protests had
been stilled by a terse “Shut up!” from the chief. At the other side of
the girl, his face black with a scowl, and his hands clenched at his
sides, stood Sydney Thames. To the soft-hearted Sydney no crime was so
great as that of causing a woman pain. So he gritted his teeth, and
darted murderous glances at the secret-service men, and looks of
pleading at the blind man who leaned against the wall, apparently
watching the searchers.

The girl had shown them the room. She had flung open the door of the
closet, and cleverly concealed behind hanging clothes they had found a
telegraph-key on a small shelf. They had pulled out the wires, and found
they led to the magnets in the library. Now they were beginning a
systematic search of the room--and finding nothing. The girl had
evidently told the truth. She, and only she, could have sent the
messages.

“Where did you learn telegraphy?” demanded the chief suddenly.

“I can’t remember when I didn’t have a key to play with,” she answered
coolly. “Father was an expert telegrapher for years, and he taught us
almost before we could read and write.”

“‘Us?’” snapped out the chief.

“My brother and me,” she answered, and the ears of the blind man,
trained to interpret every inflection of tone, caught the sudden forced
note.

“Where is your brother, Miss Nelson?” he asked.

“He died ten years ago, in the tropics,” she answered, and there was a
curious break in her voice.

“And you left the library every night at eight so you could send your
father messages?” asked the chief sarcastically.

“Yes. We did not dare talk because of your spy. And his eyes were never
off my father.”

“Well,” the chief’s tone was even more sarcastic than before, “_you_
might have found an easier way.”

She did not answer, but watched Thornley Colton as he stepped across the
room to the closet. For a minute he poked inside with his cane, moving
the hanging clothes away from the telegraph-instrument. He leaned over
it, and seemed to be examining it intently. There was a frown of
puzzlement on his forehead as he straightened up. It disappeared almost
instantly, and in its place came a look of sudden enlightenment.

“Did you ever smoke South American cigarettes with licorice-pectoral
papers, Miss Nelson?” he asked.

“No, never!” She tried to make the denial indignant, but Colton’s
superkeen ears caught the false note instantly, as did the keen-eyed
chief of the secret service. He opened his mouth to ask a question, but
the blind man forestalled him.

“The next house is built right against this one, isn’t it, chief?”

“Yes, but the crazy Frenchman next door is absolutely above suspicion.
We looked up his whole life’s history. He’s a semi-invalid and nutty. He
has a pet bear; also two servants to take care of the animal.”

“Crazy, eh?” muttered Colton. He hurried across the room, his cane
locating every piece of furniture. He stopped before the bureau, and
leaned forward toward a drawer-pull. An instant he paused, and in that
instant came the betrayal he had hoped to bring from the girl.

“Don’t, please!” She stopped suddenly, biting her lips until the blood
came.

Colton straightened up; his lips set grimly. “Pull out the bureau, and
you’ll find an opening into the house of the crazy Frenchman,” he said.

“What?” The chief jumped across the room, and pulled out the heavy piece
of furniture. Behind it was a jagged hole that a crouching man could go
through with ease.

The two secret-service men jumped through the opening, but the chief
paused. “How did you know that?” he asked wonderingly.

“Because the clothes in the closet held the faint licorice odour of the
pectoral cigarette papers that South Americans affect. Therefore some
man must have been sending those messages. It wasn’t a man in this
house. There had to be an entrance--and I tricked the girl into telling
me that it was concealed behind the bureau. It had to be in this room
because the message-sender wouldn’t risk entering another to get where
the telegraph-key was!”

The girl leaned back against the wall, and a sob came from her lips.
“Oh, why did I ask Ned to find you!” she cried. “Their eyes could have
seen nothing, and you----”

“It was necessary, Miss Nelson!” The gentleness that had been in the
blind man’s voice downstairs was missing now; it was brusque, sharp.
“Better have one of your men remain here, chief,” he said, and there was
no mistaking his meaning. “I’d like to go through that house.”

The chief looked at him curiously; then, with the docility that came to
most men when the blind man advised or ordered, he whistled sharply. One
of the men returned.

“Stay here!” commanded the chief, and he stepped aside as the blind man
bent low and entered the next house. The chief followed.

“What do you know about the occupant here?” Colton asked the chief as he
walked around the room, his thin cane locating furniture again, and
giving his brain a mental picture of the whole chamber.

“He’s lived here for some time. We looked him up from A to Izzard, also
his three servants. About six months ago, it appears, he bought a pet
bear, a nasty beast, and sometimes takes him out. Attracts quite a lot
of attention because the old man wears a huge fur coat that makes him
look like the animal’s big brother.”

“And because every man in your business thinks the crook is always
seeking cover there would be no suspicion of a man who courts attention
by means of keeping a pet bear. Clever game enough to throw any man that
had eyes off the track!”

“Oh, the Frenchman’s on the level,” resented the chief. “He’s getting
worse, failing fast. Anybody can see that. Doctor comes twice a day to
see him.”

“And he comes every night about eight o’clock!” declared Colton
suddenly. “He’s the man that’s been sending those messages. He’s the
chief of the gang you’ve been trying to locate so long. He must be, or
he’d stay here all the time. He has to attend to the outside work while
the men here do the actual counterfeiting. And it was never suspected
because all you could see was a _pet bear_! Look!” He pulled open the
drawer of a dresser. “Here’s a dozen cigarette ends, all of pectoral
paper and Brazilian paper. The doctor smoked them here the times he had
to wait for eight o’clock and the time to talk to Nelson.”

“By Jove! You’re----”

“Hey, chief!” The cry came from downstairs.

“It’s Jim. He’s found something!” The chief started toward the door and
stopped. “Do you want me to guide you?” he asked.

“Go ahead!” Colton said dryly. “My ears will follow your footfalls.”

“This way, chief! Quick!” The voice directed them to the kitchen. The
chief stopped with an ejaculation of amazement at the door.

The secret-service operative who had entered the house first was lifting
an unconscious man from a heavy wooden chair. On the floor were the cut
ropes that had bound him, and the wadded handkerchiefs that had
prevented outcries.

“The Frenchman!” gasped the chief. “He’s got to talk! Lay him down,
Jim!”

The Frenchman groaned feebly as they put him on the floor, and choked
when a pocket flask was held to his lips.

“_Mon Dieu!_” he moaned weakly. Then his dazed brain realised that men
were standing over him. “Pleeze stop! I do nozzing!” he cried
supplicatingly.

“We are friends--gendarmes.” Chief Whittson said the words slowly and
distinctly, so that the man could understand. “Who did this?”

The fear went from the Frenchman’s eyes. “My servants,” he whispered
hoarsely. “Zay have kep’ me prisoner for mont’s; ever since my old
servants go an’ zay come.”

“Damn!” jerked out the chief. “They’ve tricked us right along. We looked
up the old servants’ records, and didn’t suspect for an instant the
impersonation. Where did they go? When?”

The Frenchman fell back, his eyes closed

“I think I can answer the ‘when’ part of that question,” put in Thornley
Colton, as he appeared at the doorway. “I apologise to the man here for
the things I said upstairs. But even I didn’t give the master
counterfeiter credit for such diabolical ingenuity as this. The fake
servants left the minute you entered Nelson’s house to question the
girl. And the man that went with them as the Frenchman was Dryden F.
Nelson. That’s the only way he could go!”

The Frenchman stirred, and tried to lift his head. “Zat is right,” he
gasped chokingly. “He----” His eyes closed.

“Get an ambulance, Jim!” ordered the chief. “This man’s in bad shape.
Get the boys from outside! Put two on the trail of the carriage. Nelson
and his gang won’t get far. Bring the others in to search the house!”
The man darted out, and the chief picked the invalid up in his strong
arms and carried him gently to a couch in the dining-room.

The Frenchman moaned, and a shudder shook his body. “Don’t make ze bear
hurt me!” he cried weakly. “Don’t knock ze glasses togezzer and make him
mad-crazee.” He lapsed back into unconsciousness.

The chief looked at Colton significantly, but the blind man only nodded.

“But how did old man Nelson ever get a chance to get in here?” puzzled
the chief.

“He didn’t!” Colton’s voice was sharp. “The man who posed as the doctor
is the ringleader.” There came a ring of menace in his tone. “I’ll find
him! I know him!”

“You know him?” The chief did not even nod to the three men who entered
the room and stood respectfully by for orders.

“Yes! He’s tanned a dark brown, an expert telegrapher, thirty-five years
old, a man who likes to pet and fondle a bear, and his first name is
Joe. There are a few other details I’ll give you when the proper time
comes.”

“Great Scott!” Amazement, incredulity were in the chief’s voice. He
turned to one of his men. “Was the doctor here last night, Tom?” he
asked.

“We saw him coming out a minute before we got the alarm from you, chief.
Said good evening, and told us it was only a matter of days for the old
guy here.”

“Eyes attach no significance to things they have seen a dozen times
before,” Colton observed.

The chief turned to him again. “Where did you get those facts?” he
demanded, with the brusqueness of chagrin in his voice.

“The Brazilian tobacco and pectoral papers told me he had spent years in
South America. Naturally he’d be tanned a dark brown. The fact that he
must be an expert telegrapher is obvious. I know that he is thirty-five
years old because I know that he is fifteen years older than Nadine
Nelson. How I knew that you’ll know later. This told me his name--and
another fact.” The blind man held out a charred fragment of paper
scarcely two inches square, a deep brown in colour from heat and smoke.
“The fact that the man you want takes pleasure in fondling and handling
a bear my keen sense of smell told me. The bear-fur odour is
unmistakable and clings to a thing for hours. It was on the handkerchief
in the kitchen, and in the corner of the linen was the initial J!”

“It’s impossible to decipher a word of this!” protested the chief,
looking up from the charred fragment of paper.

“With eyes--yes. But my finger-tips found the tracery of that name, even
though the ink had entirely disappeared! The pen-ridges remain, and
would remain until the paper was consumed.” He changed the subject
suddenly. “There comes the ambulance. I want to go up and see the girl
again.”

“I’ll go with you.” Chief Whittson’s tone was curiously humble. He
turned to give curt orders to the men, and followed the blind man out of
the room.

Despite the minutes that had passed, Nadine Nelson was just where they
had left her. The secret-service guard sat easily on a gilt chair.
Sydney Thames and the girl’s cousin were alternately pleading with her
to sit down. As the chief and Thornley Colton stepped into the room her
teeth gripped her lower lip, and her hands clenched tighter at her
sides.

“Who is the man who has been coming into this room every night to send
those messages?” Thornley Colton’s voice was hard, stern.

The face of the girl went white at the cruelty of it. Sydney Thames took
a half step forward, and a gesture of the blind man stopped him.

“Who is he?” snapped the blind man again.

She raised her head to look straight into his sightless eyes.

“My husband!” she answered defiantly.

“That isn’t true!” The words came like the lash of a whip.

“Thorn!” In Sydney Thames’s voice was agony that the man he loved could
say such a thing to a woman.

“And you were the man I thought could help me!” Scorn, bitterness,
self-accusation were in the vibrant voice of the girl. “You’re worse
than those curs who listened to every word! You’ve _killed_ my father!
If I were a man I’d kill _you_--even though you are blind!”

The last words came through her clenched, white teeth, and she advanced
half a step, so that her hot breath reached the face of the blind man.
But he only idly twirled his slim cane and looked down at her with a
tolerant, amused grin that was maddening.

“You’ll talk!” he promised curtly. “She’ll talk in jail, chief!”

“I wouldn’t talk if you tore me to little pieces!” she cried vehemently.

Colton did not answer; he nodded curtly to the chief, and with a “Come,
Sydney!” he hurried from the room, and from the girl who stared straight
ahead of her with dull, fixed eyes.

Sydney Thames followed him down the stairs silently. In the lower hall
he spoke. “God, Thorn, that was barbarous! It almost made me forget----”

“Find the telephone and get me the number of the United Fruit Company,”
ordered the blind man sharply.

Without a word Thames found the ’phone in an alcove of the hall, and
gave the number to Colton.

“What boat sails for South America to-day?” asked the problemist when
the connection had been established. “The _Carracas_? Is there a bear
consigned on that boat? Hasn’t arrived yet? The sailing’s at five? Thank
you!”

As he hung up the receiver the angry boy’s tone of Nadine Nelson’s
cousin came to them indistinctly. Sydney Thames jumped as though a pin
had jabbed him. When he spoke to the blind man there was a look on his
face that had never been on it before.

“Thorn,” he said, and there was a break in his voice, “you’ve been the
only father I ever knew, but I _won’t_ leave that girl to the mercy of
those police brutes!”

“This is no time for sentiment!” snapped Colton.

“It is time for good-bye, then!” Sydney Thames, the colourless, the
characterless, the counter of steps for the man who had picked him up, a
bundle of baby-clothes on the banks of the English river that had given
him the only name he ever knew, held out his hand.

The blind man’s lips tightened; he ignored the outstretched hand as he
pulled on a glove. “Make it _auf wiedersehen_,” he said wearily. “Shrimp
and I are going to catch the boat for Brazil at five o’clock!”


                                  IV.

The Fee, red-haired, freckle-faced boy, who had become a member of the
Colton household as the blind man’s only pay for solving a particularly
baffling murder case, eased his plaster-encircled arm on the rail of the
_Carracas_, and watched with all the power of his round blue eyes the
lowering of the big cage on the forward deck. As it swung for an instant
on a level with the promenade deck on which they stood, the boy caught a
glimpse of the shaggy animal under the canvas protecting-hood that
covered the top and fitted tightly halfway down the sides.

“Gee, Mister Colton, it’s certain’y got some claws on its feet!”
observed the boy admiringly. A hitch of the rope jarred the cage, and
brought forth a deep growl that could be heard above the creaking of
ropes and the squeaky wheels of the stevedores’ trucks as they rushed
the last few cases of freight on deck. “There she bumps!” cried the boy
as the cable touched the deck.

Then came a shriek of pain. “Gee whiz!” gasped the boy, and the blind
man’s cane felt him jump a foot. “One of the workin’men bent down to get
the rope off the bottom of the cage, and the bear reached under the
canvas, tore his arm with its claws. Darn it, but he’s wicious!”

The bawling voice of an officer broke in: “Here, you men that own that
bear! Unsling the cage!”

Three ragged, dark-skinned men jumped to the cage, and unslung the
tackle ropes without arousing even a deep-throated growl from the
animal.

The tense look left Thornley Colton’s face as he heard the block slip to
the deck, and for the first time in hours there came the slightest trace
of satisfaction in the curve of the thin lips. He was right! Once more
he had risked everything on his judgment and his wonderful mental
ability to find logic in seeming chaos by following to their end the
mind processes of men against whom he was pitted.

The proof had come with the shriek of the clawed stevedore. Thornley
Colton’s whole mind had been concentrated to catch one other sound among
the multitude of noises. He had heard it and recognised it--the musical
clink of glass on glass--the ring of a goblet! That had been the thing
that had aroused the fury of the bear at exactly the instant that the
workman was within reach of the tearing claws. That was the thing that
had sent Dryden F. Nelson’s daughter to jail, and had caused Sydney
Thames to renounce the man who loved him.

“I’ll bet nobody but them guys that own the bear’ll go near him after
this,” observed the boy sagely.

“I don’t think they will,” the blind man said grimly. “Let’s take a walk
around.”

The boy’s eyes squinted along the deck from his feet to the rail at the
other side. “It’s ten steps,” he calculated. “They’s a man an’ a fat
woman five ahead lookin’ down at the front deck, an’ at the other rail
there’s a guy in a chair readin’ a paper. Yuh gotta step out a bit for
him.”

“All right,” nodded the blind man, as he started.

The boy walked at his side, and he avoided the man and the woman, but
his foot seemed to slip at the steamer chair, and he fell sprawling into
the lap of the seated man, sending the thin glass he had held in his
hands behind the paper in a hundred pieces to the deck.

“What the devil!” snapped the hoarse voice of the man, as he angrily
brushed away the sparks of fire that had fallen on his coat when the
black-brown cigarette had fallen from his lips.

Instantly Colton was on his feet, apologising. “I am blind; I made a
false step,” he said contritely.

“Oh, all right,” growled the man ungraciously.

The problemist started again on his walk. The grim lines had returned
around his thin-lipped mouth, but there was no other change in the blind
man’s expression, not even triumph. Yet he had located the man he
wanted; the man who had fooled the entire secret service of the country
for months! Reasoning had done it; the pure eliminative reasoning that
was made possible by his lack of sight. The man into whose lap he had
just fallen was the one who had aroused the bear’s anger with the tap of
his glass. He was the man whose pectoral cigarette papers and tobacco
had scented the closet at the Nelson home. And he had recently handled a
bear!

As his brain worked at lightning speed behind his high, white forehead,
the blind man walked with the boy aimlessly around the decks, hardly
hearing Shrimp’s delighted chatter. The _Carracas_ was in mid-stream
now, her nose pointed toward the Narrows. Most of the passengers had
gone to their state-rooms, and the steam hissed from the winch cylinders
forward as the last pieces of cargo were lowered into the hold. The
blind man’s ears were strained to catch each sound, or suspicion of
sound that would tell him the things he could not see, and his brain
counted the steps, measuring distance, memorising directions as years of
training had taught it to do. Suddenly Colton realised that some one was
following them, watching every move. A growingly familiar furtive
footstep every little while as the shadow quickly dodged, whiffs of the
Brazilian tobacco smoke wafted to his nostrils on sudden gusts of wind,
told him more than eyes could have told. His fall, crude because of its
necessity, had aroused the other man’s suspicion.

“Show me our stateroom, Shrimp,” he said finally. “Then you can come up
on deck again. I’ll remember all the steps.”

“Gee!” grinned the boy, in huge relief. “I’m glad I don’t have to stay
down there. I wanta watch that little yacht that’s comin’ out.”

Colton nodded. He knew why the “little yacht” was coming out. He knew
she should be flying a flag with perpendicular red stripes--the flag of
the revenue service. And he knew that on board her was Chief Whittson
and his men, who awaited his signal.

The boy proudly opened the door of the little white room, and Colton
closed it behind him. “Wait a minute, Shrimp,” he said quietly. From his
pocket he took a memorandum book and pencil. For a minute he wrote, then
he handed the torn-out leaf to the boy, who read, with widening eyes:

    If you miss me for fifteen minutes, or see me on deck with the
    man I fell over, run to the wireless house and give the operator
    this message: John Jones, 56 Cedar Street, New York. Close.

                                                             PAYTON.

“Gee!” whispered the boy joyfully. “I _knowed_ it was a case! I knowed
you didn’t mean what you said about not lettin’ me in on any more when I
broke this arm. Gee!”

“Go up on the deck and see all the sights you can, Shrimp,” smiled the
blind man. “See you later.”

The problemist sat down on the edge of the brass bed to go over the
situation again and make sure that there was not a loose end. He had
figured out on deck the only way, but he wanted to prove his reasoning
by mental tests. The master counterfeiter, cunning, desperate, could do
only one thing--eliminate the man he knew suspected him. And Thornley
Colton could do but one thing--“watch” every minute the head of the
gang. The success of the whole case depended on Colton’s alertness in
preventing the criminal from making one move that the problemist knew he
would make the instant the master rogue discovered all was lost. Yet the
presence of the man at the dénouement was _necessary_! Colton rose. He
must take a desperate chance, just as he had taken them many times
before.

He opened the door, and went down the narrow corridor, his brain
automatically counting the steps it had registered when he entered. He
stopped. He smelled the heavy licorice odour of the pectoral papers
again. For an instant a grim smile flashed to his lips. He had followed
the mind-processes of the man correctly once more. The smell of the
smoke was too obvious; it had been overdone.

A stateroom door opened before him.

“Got a match?” asked a voice, and Colton understood the disguising of
tone instantly.

The blind man held out his match safe; then the snarling whisper of the
man cut the stillness, and he felt a gun-muzzle jab viciously into his
ribs. “Get in here!” Colton quietly obeyed the order, and stepped over
the threshold into the stateroom that was filled almost to suffocation
with cigarette smoke.

“Put ’em over your head! Up!” The snarl changed to a sneer. “So you’re
the slick blind man that sister of mine talked about, eh? The lonehander
that makes boobs of the police and secret service? Well, little bat-eye,
I’ve been laying for you ever since I got wise to that slick fall trick.
Got a damn’ fine nose, eh, smelling that pec smoke I’ve been filling the
lower deck with ever since you and the kid came down.”

“Humour palls when the audience is forced to stand in so uncomfortable a
position,” said the blind man evenly.

He felt his own pistol snatched away.

“Back up a step, and you’ll find the bed!” ordered the voice.

The blind man sat down and waited patiently. When the other man spoke
again there was grudging admiration in his voice. “I’ve got to hand it
to you,” he admitted. “I didn’t think there was one man on earth that’d
get wise. Now I suppose you want the old man?”

“I want you first,” Colton told him.

“You got me!” laughed the man with the gun. “But you haven’t got me like
you got that sister of mine, have you? She wouldn’t say a word, would
she? Well, it’s a damn’ good thing she didn’t!”

“I knew that,” said Colton quietly.

“You didn’t think the wayward son could come back after ten years, with
a counterfeiting process that couldn’t be beat, and then get his father
in on the scheme to pass the phony money through his bank, did you? And
you didn’t know that staid old Dryden Nelson would ever become head of
the gang, and then slide out under the noses of the secret-service men.
I guess he’s the man you want to get, eh? Well, I’m the little man
that’s going to see that you don’t!”

“I will find him when the time comes.”

“You will, eh--you will!” Snarling viciousness dominated the voice.
“Well, you won’t! You, with your lone hand! Why, you poor boob, it’d
take a gang to get me!”

“I had about concluded you were just taking a chance on a word dropped
by Miss Nelson and a thing or two you might have heard of me,” Colton
said quietly. “I didn’t think you’d dare have any one near enough to get
real information. This is one of the games where I don’t play a lone
hand. The boat that’s been following us ever since we left the dock is
the revenue cutter _Proctor_, with Chief Whittson and his men aboard.”

The man ripped out an oath. “So that’s it!” he snarled. “Fooled me, eh?
Stand up! Put your hands behind your back! No funny work! I’ve tied men
before with one hand.”

Colton smiled at him sardonically. “If I am off the deck fifteen minutes
Chief Whittson and his men will board the _Carracas_, and nab the fake
owners of the bear. Quite a scheme, that. No one would ever suspect
ignorant, ragged-looking, brown men with a dancing bear as
counterfeiters, would they?” His tone was a burlesque of the man’s own.
“And what do you suppose the chief’ll do when he finds me here? Tied up
or dead makes no difference. I promised myself to get you, and get you
alone. But it’ll be just as good that way.” The mockery had died out of
his voice at that last sentence; there was a tinge of bitterness that
the man instantly recognised.

“Well, you couldn’t put him wise to _me_!” gritted the man. “So you
_are_ a lone-handed worker, after all. Get up!” he commanded. Colton
obeyed the jabbing gun-barrel. “I’m a single-hander, too!” went on the
counterfeiter. “We’re going up on the deck, and if there’s a move to get
me, out you go! This gun’ll be in my pocket, jamming your kidneys every
minute. Let ’em get the gang! I’m through with ’em! Let ’em have the
bear, too! It’ll be no good to anybody! I’ll see to that. But if you
even lift a finger to point me out----” He made a horrible gurgling
sound in his throat that was more than significant. “Come on!” he
ordered sharply.

They left the stateroom, Colton idly twirling his slim stick, the man at
his side talking commonplaces in a grim tone that made them anything but
commonplaces. To the passengers who saw them on the deck they were only
ship acquaintances, but the blind man felt the gun-muzzle now and then
in his side.

“We’ll stop here,” growled the man at the forward rail, overlooking the
open deck below. “I want to be where I can watch those men of mine. Put
your hands on the rail where I can see ’em!”

Colton quietly obeyed, resting his elbows on the wood and dangling his
cane over the edge. The crash of the wireless sender broke out; the
blind man felt his companion grow tense as his trained ears read the
dots and dashes. Then he knew that the message he had written so that
the man who was an expert telegrapher could not suspect had flashed to
the revenue cutter, “John Jones, 56 Cedar Street,” meant nothing but a
business deal.

Minutes passed. Below them the three ragged men lounged around the cage.
Four or five other men, of the crew off watch, stood around, scowling
vindictively at the bear cage and its sleeping animal. Then came the
thing that the blind man had been waiting for. He felt the big engines
slow down. Not a muscle of his body seemed to move, but the knuckles of
his right hand whitened as he gripped the end of his cane.

An oath came from the man at his side. “So you tricked----”

So sudden that it seemed but a whir in the light, the slim cane in the
hand of the blind man swished around, straight for the other man’s eyes.
There had been not a warning move but a lightning turn of the wrist. The
first instinct man has is to protect his eyes. The criminal obeyed it,
forgetting all else. He dodged with a gasp. Colton’s knees seemed to
give way under him, he spun around on the balls of his feet like a cat;
then his whole body straightened like a suddenly released whalebone, his
right fist found the jaw of the other, and the master counterfeiter fell
without a groan and lay still.

Colton’s whistle rang out shrilly. A screamed oath came from the deck
below. The sound of a struggle.

“Get the bear!” shouted Colton.

A shot rang out. Another. He could hear the big cage rattle and groan as
the dying animal thrashed out its life. Around the cage seven men were
struggling, the three ragged, dark-skinned men who had guarded the cage
and the four men who had been apparently lounging sailors.

The blind man listened for a moment, then he smiled a grim smile. “A
lone hand!” he murmured. “I hate assistants--but I’m not such an
egotistical fool as all that!”

On the port side of the boat he heard the scrambling of men to the high,
white deck. Then Chief Whittson’s voice came:

“Did you get him?”

Colton touched the unconscious body of the man near the rail just as he
would have touched the body of a snake with his foot.

“Where’s Nelson?” asked the chief eagerly.

“Down there in the false, canvas-covered top of that bear cage!”

“What!”

“Yes. Drugged! For God’s sake get that suffocating cover off, and send
for the ship’s doctor.”

The order was bawled to the men below. Willing hands ripped the cover to
pieces, and on a thin mattress, in a steel-floored, steel-meshed upper
compartment of the cage, was Dryden F. Nelson, white-faced, unconscious!

“By Heaven, he had his nerve with him to take that chance to get away!”
gasped the chief, in admiration. “It’s a new one! We’d never have
suspected a bear cage in a thousand years. And we had every way out of
the city guarded.”

“Yes!” The word came as a half groan, half snarl, from the man on the
deck, whom one of the secret-service operatives had just manacled. “He
had his nerve! He’s my father! And he’s the greatest counterfeiter of
them all!”

Thornley Colton leaned forward. He grasped a wrist of the man, and
almost pulled the arm out of its socket.

“You dirty, lying cur!” he said, and his tone was one that he had never
used before. “You forced that old man to serve you after he had
discovered what you were doing! You forced the girl who thought you were
her brother to protect you! By God, if ever a man deserved hanging
you’re the one!”

“He’s my father!” grated the handcuffed man. “If I go to jail he’ll go,
too! He knows I’m his son!”

“You dog!” Colton’s voice fairly shook with passion. “You fooled him
into believing that you were his rotten-hearted son that died ten years
ago. But you can’t fool me! You may look like Joe Nelson! You may
deceive even the eyes of a father! But I’m blind! Blind! I talked for an
hour with a school chum who played in the football game in which Joe
Nelson broke his wrist. You never had a broken wrist in your life! The
bones are perfect!” He turned to the chief. “Keep a careful guard on
that cage, chief, until we get to the cutter. I think there’s a million
or so dollars that this dog got from Nelson’s bank stuffed into that
mattress!”

“Damn you!” The man half rose to his knees as he shrieked it. “I tricked
them all! And you----”

“That’s the confession I wanted to vindicate Nelson,” said the blind man
contentedly.


                                   V.

Nadine Nelson rose as the blind man entered the room, her lips curved in
a wonderful smile of joyous greeting, and she hurried across the floor
to meet him.

“Can you ever forgive me?” he asked, in his rich, musical voice.

“Forgive you?” she cried happily. “Why, I could--kiss you!” She stopped,
crimson-cheeked.

He smiled seriously down at her. “It was necessary, the way I spoke to
you,” he said gently. “Before, I did not realise how desperate the game
was. I knew that your father’s life hung on the thread of your silence.
And I knew that the only way I could assure myself that you wouldn’t
break down and talk was to arouse every bit of that wonderful fighting
gameness you have. The men who had your father would have killed him
rather than risk getting him away if they thought there was a breath of
suspicion.”

“I know,” she said; “I know--and understand.”

“The ringleader talked a little to the chief on the way back in the
revenue cutter,” went on Colton. “He had been a pal of your brother’s
for years in South America. They worked together in a telegraph office
in Rio.”

“He was a wonderful operator,” murmured the girl. “He is the only man I
ever knew of who could imitate another man’s touch on the key. That was
the proof that convinced father that he was Joe. You know the touch of
an operator on a sender is as individual as handwriting.”

Colton nodded. “My knowledge of that fact is what threw me off the track
at first. You knew your brother was implicated the minute you spoke of
him in your room. I remembered then the stories I had heard of him. I
remembered that he was fifteen years older than you, and was supposed to
have been shot in South America ten years ago, where he went following
some trouble here.”

“Joe always was wild,” the girl confessed softly, “though I only
remember him as a big, strong brother who used to hold me on his knee
while he told me wonderful stories. I couldn’t believe sometimes that
the man who was making daddy do such horrible things could be the
brother I knew. But I couldn’t convince father. The counterfeiter knew
every incident of Joe’s life, and there was the touch of the operator
that father thought was so indisputable. I tried to get father to
confess it all. I refused to carry him the messages that were left in my
room after we knew the secret-service men were watching us, and that Joe
and his men were next door. Then Joe--I can’t call him anything
else----”

“That is the name he has gone under for years,” put in Colton.

“Then Joe rigged up the magnets and key,” went on the girl. “He had to
give father instructions every night where to distribute the counterfeit
money that was packed in the vaults of the bank in place of the reserve.
And he made father sell all his bonds to cover the shortage. Then, with
the help of a watchman, who was another of the gang, they got the
counterfeit money in to take the place of that father had gotten to make
good. Every day Joe promised that he would make restitution, for he had
made father believe that he had sent the money to Brazil for investment,
and it would double in a month. So father hoped and prayed, and got
years older every hour. The secret-service men were dogging every step,
watching every move. Jail stared him in the face--and he believed the
man he thought his son, believed that he would have the money to look
the world squarely in the face once more.

“Then Joe told him one night, over the wire, that he had lost all.
Father must go. I watched outside my door every night to see that Paul
did not come near. I caught a word. I pleaded with father. For four days
I fought against them. Then they won. I was at the door last night when
father came running up the stairs, panting, half dead with the
excitement of having slipped past the secret-service man. He darted past
me. I followed. Joe grabbed me by the arm when I started to protest.
‘Get downstairs and throw a fit because your father has gone!’ he
hissed. ‘You’ll be along in a little while, and be with him!’ he
finished, and there was a look in his eyes that frightened me. So you
see it wasn’t only acting in the library.” She shuddered.

Colton understood, even more than she, for he had heard the confession
of the master counterfeiter on the revenue cutter that had brought them
all back to the city. He had learned then why he had taken such pains to
get the old man away. The crook had not been satisfied to take every
dollar of the old man’s fortune. He had seen the girl; he had wanted
her, and she was to have been the price of her father’s life!

“The chief’s men got the whole plant next door,” he put in hastily.
“It’s a new process of bleaching one-dollar bills, and making hundreds
from them with a new photographic process. The master crook had been
perfecting it for years in Brazil, waiting for a big stake in New York.
He put one of his assistants as correspondent of your father’s bank down
there. A year ago he had him write a humble letter asking for a position
in New York. Your father gave it to him.”

“Yes,” admitted the girl. “And the man who took the position was the one
who posed as my brother. He pretended to be very dull. That’s why the
secret-service men never suspected him. When he had been in the bank
three months, father discovered a shortage of sixty thousand dollars. He
accused the man who came from Brazil. Father’s bank, you know, is a
private institution, and only has seven employees. The man confessed,
and convinced father that he was Joe. He said he would make good the
loss. And he did, with the clever counterfeits. That was the entering
wedge. After that father was only putty in his hands. Six months ago he
resigned, after seeing to it that one of his gang was put in as watchman
and another took his place.”

“That is when he took up his role as doctor,” put in Colton, “and got
his scheme of taking the poor Frenchman’s house. And at the hospital
they say the Frenchman will recover fully.”

“And father is upstairs sleeping,” she said softly. “You brought him
back to me--and he knows that the man who tried to ruin him, the man who
would have killed him if you had not been there to prevent him when the
revenue men came, was not his son! That is the greatest of all! We owe
you a debt that we can never repay; you and Sydney, here, who stood so
bravely by when I thought all the world had turned against me.”

She touched the arm of the black-haired man who had sat silent beside
her, and he looked at her with a wonderful new light in his eyes. Gone,
now, was Sydney Thames’s great fear of women that had been his obsession
all his life. He had met _the_ woman.

“Can you ever forgive me, Thorn?” he asked, speaking for the first time.
He had not even raised his eyes to the face of the man he had renounced
that morning. Ever since Dryden Nelson had been brought back to his
home, and the wireless message from the revenue cutter had opened the
jail-door for the girl, his thoughts had been torturing him.

“I must forgive myself first,” the blind man said quietly. “It hurt me
more than anything else to talk to you like that. But a man’s life hung
in the balance. I could not tell you, for I knew you would tell the girl
rather than see her suffer a minute.” One of his rare smiles lighted up
his face. “Let’s make it a burned paper, more completely burned than the
charred fragment I found in the Frenchman’s house; the part of a note
one of the outside men sent to the master counterfeiter. For on that my
fingers read three words: Joe, cage, _Carracas_. That finished the
case--my case.” And his sightless eyes seemed to look at them with
understanding and joy.

------------------------------------------------------------------------




                           THE EIGHTH PROBLEM

                      THE EYE OF THE SEVEN DEVILS


                                   I.

A jarring incongruity in the room of tapestries, silken-shaded lights,
and furnishings of mahogany, the rough wooden box, with its dirty,
scarred sides, scratched the top of the polished table in a hundred
places without arousing even a murmur of protest from the four men who
watched every movement of the little Japanese servant as he carefully
pried the holding nails from the cover boards. A chorused “Ah!” came
from four pairs of lips as the servant laid the chisel down and lifted
the last board.

“Careful, Nesu,” warned the frock-coated man with the white moustache
and sun-tanned cheeks.

The dissipated-looking youth, with the Egyptian cigarette dangling
loosely from his lower lip, rose to get a better view of the interior.
“’Nough cotton stuffing there to fill a barrel, captain,” he grinned,
vacuously.

“Yes,” nodded the white-moustached captain. “Nearly ten pounds, and the
Devils are bound into place with nearly twenty yards of silk strips. A
man takes a little care with a thing that’s cost him forty thousand,
Meynerd.”

The Japanese servant pulled out a huge handful of cotton, and placed it
on a spread newspaper as another of the group spoke. “Is it really worth
that, captain?” he asked.

“Three times that, Joslyn. Forty thousand is only what I paid the
hunchback outcast priest in the Yunling mountain monastery in Sze Chuen.
He had had it hidden for nearly fifty years. The eye alone is worth
sixty-five thousand, if it’s worth a cent. The forty thousand I paid
will buy the priest all the prayers he needs for the next hundred years;
and they’ll be the best prayers money can buy, at that.” He smiled,
grimly. “I needed a few of those same prayers on several occasions
myself,” he went on. “Especially on that three-hundred-mile journey
through the Yunlings to Chingtu. I have an idea the priest wanted to
steal a march on the prayers, and threw out a hint that the ‘white dogs’
had found the pearl-eyed Seven Devils of Sin. During the half century
that had passed since he stole it, of course, it has been ‘lost.’”

“Why didn’t he return it instead of getting forty thousand dollars to
buy prayer papers to burn for his soul?” asked Wilson, the fourth member
of the group, taking his eyes from the busy-fingered Jap.

“Because he was a Chinese,” explained Captain Richards. “He stole the
thing when he had just entered the monastery, for a white man who bribed
him--that’s a long story in itself. The briber was killed the day of the
theft. The young priest was suspected, and tortured until he became a
hunchback and outcast, but no confession could be gotten. In the years
the blame has been laid on the white man’s devil, who stole the Chinese
devils and took them to his home, when the white master was killed. The
peculiar kink of the Chinese mind would not let the thief confess or
return the devils. He couldn’t see where the mere restitution would
expiate his sin. The only way he could figure was to wait until some one
came with enough money to pray him into heaven for a hundred years after
he had gone. Peculiar cusses, the Chinese.”

He rose at the last word, and the others rose with him. The Japanese was
unwinding yard after yard of two-inch silken strips.

“Ah!” It was more than an exclamation: it was a three-man-power cry of
amazement, wonder, and surprise as the captain lifted the thing from the
box and set it gently on the table.

“Great guns!” gasped the dissipated-looking youth, backing away a step
and stopping with a sheepish grin.

“The Seven Golden Devils of Sin with the single eye!” announced the
captain, with a flourish.

The men stared at the most curious-looking object they had ever seen. At
first glance it seemed merely a spidery collection of arms and legs;
then seven figures stood out, separately and distinctly, grouped closely
together. In the centre stood the shortest; around him, in every
conceivable position, were six others. Their bodies were grotesquely
deformed, their backs misshapen, their limbs twisted; and the genius who
had fashioned the thing of his dull, hand-hammered gold in the centuries
gone, had given to the bodies and limbs the distortion of horrible
agony.

But it was the head; the single head that surmounted the seven bodies,
which held their attention. The face was hideous; but in the very
hideousness the gold worker had put cunning, power, strength. The thick
lips leered a smile of satanic triumph; the cheek bones were high,
oblique. And above the squat, wide-nostriled nose was a single eye! It
was a pearl, perfect, flawless: milk-white against the red-yellow gold.

As they stared there seemed to come into the single eye of pearl a glow
of red, as though the heart of the great jewel were a spark of fire that
shone through the lustred surface. It was a trick of the lights,
perhaps, or the reflected colour of the overhanging brow, but to the men
who watched, it seemed that the eye held all the malevolence and cruelty
of the Pit itself.

“The devilish thing gives a man the creeps!” growled Meynerd; and his
hand shook a bit as he took the cigarette from his lips.

Joslyn laughed jerkily, for the spell of the thing was on him, too.

“Better cut out a few of those high balls, Mey,” he taunted.

A flush of resentment mounted the youth’s cheeks; but the captain
forestalled his angry reply.

“Those figures represent the seven sins, each one enough to keep a
Chinese from his heaven. The one in the centre, though the shortest and
most horribly deformed of all, has the biggest and strongest body. That
is Deceit, the most powerful of devils. The Mongolian reasons that none
of the other devils can enter the heart of man unless deceit has entered
first.”

“Excellent philosophy, that,” commented Wilson.

“That is why the head rests on the centre figure and the bodies of the
others are bent forward to meet it,” continued the captain. “Notice,
too, that though the limbs are terribly twisted, and the bodies scarred
to symbolize the awful punishment the gods have inflicted on the wicked
seducers of men’s hearts, the head is perfect, showing that the devils
can still think with their one head, and plan traps for the unwary. And
the eye”--his face lighted with the enthusiasm of the collector--“the
wonderful eye that is all-seeing, alert to catch the first sign of
weakening in the lowest coolie in the kingdom. That, gentlemen, is the
thing I worked years to get; the thing that nearly cost me my life a
dozen times--the Eye of the Seven Devils! The most wonderful pearl in
the world; the pearl with a heart of fire!”

“Funny the thief priest didn’t pry out the eye and sell it to buy his
prayers, without risking getting rid of the whole thing,” put in Joslyn.

“That’s the wonder of the thing!” exclaimed the captain. “By some method
that no one has ever been able to fathom, the maker of the thing set the
stone in such a way that it can’t be taken out without cutting the whole
thing to pieces. The pearl appears merely pasted in its socket, but the
microscope can see, in the space around it, that the jewel is gripped in
four prongs that fit into tiny holes bored in the back of the pearl. The
space around it is so narrow that no instrument of strength, sufficient
to cut or break the prongs, can be inserted. And if it could, the very
act would cause the gem to chip, and, perhaps, split. That is the way
the maker made theft impossible!”

“Wouldn’t mind having the pearl,” growled Meynerd, “but I’d throw the
rest of it in a sewer.”

The tanned cheeks of Captain Richards went a dull red with anger, and
his moustache bristled; but Wilson cut in to prevent an open break.

“Let’s have a little drink.”

The servant, who had stuffed the last silk strip into the empty case,
straightened up.

“High ball,” grunted Meynerd.

“Another absinthe drip,” added Joslyn.

“Bourbon,” ordered Wilson, and the captain nodded.

Silence followed the going of the servant. The captain took out his
watch, glanced at it, chewed his cigar almost nervously, and lounged
back in the chair he had taken beside Joslyn. The eyes of the others
wandered around the room, but always returned to the twisted bodies of
the seven devils of the single eye. The thing of hand-wrought metal on
the table seemed to exert an uncanny influence over men who had never
known superstition. As the silent seconds passed there came a tension in
the mood of all. Each found himself continually catching the other’s
eye, only to glance hastily and sheepishly away. And the twisted devil
mouth leered at them; in the smouldering fire of the devil eye seemed
infinite scorn.

The return of the servant with the tray of drinks made each one sit up
eagerly. The Japanese went to the captain first and held out a card.

“Hustle the high ball,” growled Meynerd. The Jap hurried over. Meynerd’s
unsteady hands had spilled a third of the liquor before Wilson took the
small carafe from his shaking hands and poured the remainder over the
ice. The youth growled monosyllabic thanks. Captain Richards whistled as
Meynerd tossed his drink off at a gulp.

“Going to leave us, captain?” asked Joslyn, poking his straws farther
down in the cracked ice of the absinthe.

Captain Richards looked up from the card he held between his thumb and
forefinger. “Puzzling thing,” he prefaced. “Here’s the card of Ching Li
Chu.” His eyes went again to the pasteboard as he read: “Secretary to
the ambassador at Washington of the Imperial Chinese Republic.”

“What does he want?” asked Wilson. “That?” He jerked his head toward the
table.

“How on earth----” Sudden decision cleared the look of puzzlement from
the captain’s brow. “Send him in, Nesu,” he ordered.

“Chink devils, chink secretaries,” grinned Meynerd. The liquor had
pulled his nerves together again, and his lips curved in contempt when
he caught Joslyn stealing a covert glance toward the table, as the door
opened.

The man who entered, unquestionably a Mongolian, had a lean, intelligent
face. The eyes, but slightly aslant, looked straight before him, giving
no sign that they even saw the seated men, but stared fixedly at the
table and its thing of gold. In the centre of the room the Chinese
stopped and made a deep obeisance, once, twice, thrice. A low laugh of
contempt came from Meynerd’s lips, but the Chinese paid no heed. He
walked to the table, and for several silent seconds gazed steadily into
the eye of the pearl. With another deep bow he turned, his eyes
searching each face.

“Captain Richards?” His voice was low, mellow, with no trace of accent.

“I am he!” The captain rose from his seat and bowed.

“So my information was correct; it is the Seven Devils with the True
Eye.” Again the Chinese bowed toward the figures. Once more Meynerd
laughed sneeringly. This time the Mongolian turned toward him
inquiringly.

“You do not mock me,” he rebuked, mildly. “Your mockery is of the Seven
Devils. I would be careful, were I you.”

“Bah!” Meynerd set down his empty glass. “I didn’t know you fellows
worshipped devils, and little gold devils on a table, at that.”

“Nor do we.” Still that mild, even voice. “We worship our gods; but we
are careful not to incur the wrath of our devils. The gods may forgive
the ignorant mocker; the devils slay. That I believe, and I am no
coolie, but a man educated in your own universities.”

“Drunken kid!” muttered the captain, his fingers moving along the
table-edge as he leaned against it. “You wanted to see me on business?”
he asked the Chinese.

“Yes. I wish to pay you one hundred thousand dollars for the golden
Seven Devils of Sin!” The amazement this announcement caused showed
plainly on each man’s face. The Chinese went on: “The new republic seeks
to unite its people, but throughout the province of Chingtu it is known
that the lost Seven Devils has been taken from the country. They demand
that the new government see that it is returned if they are to believe
that government’s power. Our failure will mean a costly and bloody war,
for the Yunling mountain men are fighters who know every inch of its
vast slopes.”

“So my six months of devious routes and constant guarding amounted to
nothing.” The captain’s lips smiled grimly, but there was a light in his
eyes that had not been there before. “I suppose the priest is being
honoured for having been told by the gods that the white dog had stolen
the thing.”

“Prayer papers have been burning this last five months for the
hunchback,” said the Chinese, quietly.

“Um.” The smile left the captain’s lips. He shook his head. “I will not
sell,” he declared, and there was finality in his voice.

It seemed a full minute before any one spoke. The noiseless Jap servant
industriously picked up small tufts of cotton that had fallen to the rug
back of the table. Joslyn set his glass, with its green-tinged cracked
ice on the table, clinkingly, and the captain’s eyes left the
Mongolian’s face as the noise attracted them. Meynerd’s lips still
grinned contemptuously as he spun the piece of ice around in his empty
high-ball glass.

“The devils can only bring sorrow to you.” The voice of the Chinese was
deep, full of sincerity. “Perhaps death, for in your country there will
be mockers, and, as I told your friend, the devils slay those who mock
them.” His deep eyes rested on Meynerd. The face of the youth went red
for an instant; then the sneer came back.

“Like to see ’em kill me!” he said, boastfully. “A chink knife in back
might, but no pigeon-toed gang of devils with one eye could!”

“Do not speak that way!” There was stern reproof in the tone of the
Chinese. “You may know the things of the West, but there are things of
the East that you do not know!”

“Is that so!” Meynerd shook off the restraining hand of Wilson and stood
up. The face of the captain went white with rage, and his hands fumbled
with the handkerchief he had been in the act of lifting to his brow.

“Be a gentleman!” he snapped.

Meynerd paid no heed. “Here’s to you devils!” he laughed, sneeringly.
“Long may you wave--in a glass case!”

“The mockers kotow before they die!” The words came rapidly, almost
hissingly, from the lips of the Chinese.

“Here’s to crime!” Meynerd stood in front of the golden devils and
drained the last drops of his drink. A gasp came from the Japanese as he
backed away a step, his hand full of cotton tufts he had picked up from
the floor. Captain Richards crushed the handkerchief in his hand as he
brushed his lips. Every eye in the room was on the gently swaying man
with the glass to his lips.

Suddenly Meynerd’s face went livid; the glass fell to the floor. Slowly
his knees bent. For a second he seemed to kneel before the leering face
of gold. His body fell forward. His forehead touched the ground. Then
the limbs straightened convulsively, and he lay still.

The seated men jumped to their feet, with exclamations of horror. The
Chinese, face impassive, leaned over and touched the pulse of the man on
the floor. Then he looked up into the faces of the three white-faced men
who bent over him.

“He is dead,” said the Mongolian, quietly. “The devils have slain.”

Mechanically, involuntarily, they turned toward the hideous thing on the
table. As one the startled cry came from three pairs of lips:

“_The Eye! The Eye!_”

The twisted, thick lips of gold still leered at them, but where the eye
of pearl had been, only an empty socket seemed to stare down at the dead
man on the floor.


                                  II.

“Pawn to king five and checkmate.” Thornley Colton took a final puff of
his cigarette, and dropped it in the ash tray beside the chessboard.

Sydney Thames, the apple cheeked, black-haired secretary to the blind
problemist, laughed ruefully. “I almost believe that you could beat me
with pawns alone, Thorn,” he declared, looking over the pieces on the
board.

“Your whole game is attack,” Colton observed. “You forget all about
defence. Another?”

Thames merely nodded, and silently rearranged the pieces on the board.
“Three and pawn again?” he asked.

“Yes, if you----” The ringing telephone-bell on the desk broke in, and
Sydney rose to answer it. He returned almost on the run.

“It’s Captain Richards, at the Wanderers’ Club,” he began, breathlessly.
“He wants you at once. He said something about a murder, and the eye of
some seven devils of sin, as near as I could understand.”

Thornley Colton’s mobile face, whose paleness was strikingly accentuated
by the great blue circles of the tortoise-rimmed library glasses that
shielded his sightless eyes from all glares, lighted up with interest.
“Is he still on the wire?” He rose as he asked the question.

Thames shook his head. “He blurted out the message and rang right off.
He seemed positive you’d come.”

A faint smile came to Thornley Colton’s lips. “I guess he knew that a
single breath from the Orient would interest me.” He touched the
call-button on the desk that would summon the big black automobile
instantly, at any hour of the day or night. “I hadn’t any idea Captain
Richards had returned. I haven’t seen him for years.” The smile left his
face. “My fingers have been itching to see those wonderful Seven Devils
I’ve heard so much about.”

“Your interest in things Chinese is beyond me,” confessed Sydney, as he
followed the blind man out of the room and down the stairs.

“You were in college the last four years I spent in China, Sydney.”
Colton spoke as the chauffeur closed the tonneau-door of the touring
car, and threw in the gears. “The lure of the East has never gotten out
of my veins. To a man who can see, China must be wonderful. To me it is
marvellous. Old, satiated of every human emotion before we discovered
emotion; a view-point as incomprehensible as the hereafter itself; a
character that cannot be visualized--why, Sydney, to men of eyes, the
lure of China is the lure of a beautiful picture. To me it is the lure
of the unattainable.”

“Something like the mystery of woman?” asked Sydney Thames, seriously.

“Not at all.” The slim cane waved an impatient gesture over the side of
the car. “The so-called mystery of woman is her constantly shifting
view-point dependent on outside influences; the mystery of the Chinese
is his undeviating view-point.”

“Too deep for me,” laughed Thames; then he swung open the door as the
car stopped before the great Gothic door-way of the Wanderers’ Club.

The mantle of tragedy hung heavily over the luxurious, exclusive
interior of the famous club as they entered. In the main lounging-room a
small group of members talked in hushed whispers, and their nervous
starts at each sound belied the reputations most of them had gained as
travellers in countries where danger lurked constantly. The servitors,
usually alert, swift to receive and execute an order, moved with lagging
footsteps. Thornley Colton recognised the atmosphere of uneasiness
immediately, and a cynical smile flashed across his thin lips as he
understood the cause. The Wanderers, rich seekers of excitement and
danger in foreign countries, hard-headed, with nerves of steel when face
to face with violent death, had fallen under the spell of the uncanny,
the supernatural.

The chief steward, from his vantage-point at the head of the stairs,
spied them and hurried down.

“It’s--they’re upstairs, sir.” A scared note was in his voice. “The
physician has just this minute arrived. The police haven’t been told.
Captain Richards thought maybe---- It’s terrible, sir.”

“Very, Peters,” nodded Colton, absently, as he followed the man up the
broad staircase, and to himself he muttered, “Lucky the police haven’t
had a chance to bungle it. Very, very lucky.”

The instant they opened the door Captain Richards bounded across the
floor to meet them. “Thank God you came, Mr. Colton!” he cried, shaking
the hand of the blind man with more than heartiness.

“Who was it?” asked Colton.

“Meynerd. The doctor’s trying to find the cause of death now.” He nodded
his head toward the broad leather couch against the wall, with its grim
occupant, and the physician bending over it.

Colton asked a dozen crisp, terse questions. The answers he got told him
the whole story. The captain introduced him to every one in the room,
and Colton shook their hands, even to the obsequious Japanese servant,
who stood patiently awaiting orders, near the wall.

The doctor finished his examination and straightened up.
“Heart-failure,” he announced. “Brought on by alcoholic excesses, I
should judge, and probably superinduced by excitement.”

“Strange that the hand of God should have descended at the exact moment
chosen by a thief to steal the pearl,” remarked Colton quietly.

“You don’t think it’s murder?” There was a queer chokiness in Captain
Richards’s voice.

“_Yes!_” Colton shot out the word as he stood in the centre of the room,
turning his head slowly, as though his sightless eyes were trying to
surprise some expression of guilt on the white faces of the men.
Wilson’s hands gripped his chair-arms so tightly that the knuckles
cracked. Joslyn stretched an arm toward the glass, with its green-tinged
ice on the table, but withdrew it quickly, to let his hands fall on his
knees. The Japanese servant’s foot shifted nervously over a small wad of
cotton that had fallen from his hands, minutes before. Only the Chinese
was unmoved.

“Neither the gods nor the devils murder,” he said. “They kill.”

The blind man nodded toward him, slowly. “True,” he answered, and his
voice was serious. “But when the killing is done by human instruments,
the law calls it murder.”

“You are of the West,” shrugged the Mongolian.

“But the whole thing is impossible!” There seemed almost a whine of
incredulous protest in Captain Richards’s voice.

“Does the impossible happen?” Colton’s voice was sharp, curt. “No! But
the improbable does! A hundred times a day! Every time a perfect match
fails to strike an improbable thing has happened. Because that thing on
the table hypnotized your eyes into waking the superstition that is the
mental appendix handed down through the thousand centuries, you say that
_it_ is impossible. What is impossible? Meynerd’s death? The fact that
he was killed? My statement that he was murdered? Or do you mean that
each one of you is so wise that no one could have deceived you? Yet the
eye is gone! And even if the devils had killed Meynerd, would they have
stolen their own eye?”

Each crisp sentence fairly sizzled as he shot it out. The hand that held
his slim, hollow cane, that gave its messages to his super-sensitive
finger-tips, waved up and down for emphasis, touching blindly the table,
the golden devils, and some part of each man’s body as he paced back and
forth across the floor.

“A man can’t give another man heart-failure to kill him,” declared the
physician, pompously.

“Can’t!” The smile on the problemist’s face was sardonic as he faced the
doctor. “Then no murder was ever committed. If a man’s heart didn’t fail
he’d keep right on living. What caused Meynerd’s heart to fail is the
thing we’ve got to find out. Do you know how Meynerd fell?”

“No, immaterial details----”

“Very material!” The blind man interrupted brusquely. “Every
diagnostician should be a detective, and I might mention right here that
one of the greatest surgeons and diagnosticians in America is a blind
man. You should know that a man standing as Meynerd stood, suddenly
stricken with heart-disease, would fall flat on his back. Yet he fell on
his knees, his body bent forward so that his forehead touched the ground
for an instant before it relaxed.”

“By Jove--I supposed----” the physician sputtered his chagrin. Then his
face brightened. “Some caustic, causing a griping in the intestines.”

“Exactly.” The sharpness had gone from the detective’s voice now, and he
spoke in his old calm, even tone.

“He drank a toast!” Even as he spoke, the doctor’s foot crunched a bit
of the broken glass on the floor.

“You’d have to analyze the rug,” reminded Colton. “And who had the
chance?” He looked around inquiringly.

“Wilson poured his drink!” The words came in a gasp from Joslyn.

Wilson sprang to his feet with an oath. “Are you accusing me of killing
him?” He snarled the question, but his face was white.

“Meynerd had gulped his drink even before Ching Li Chu entered,”
suddenly remembered Captain Richards. “There was only a few drops of the
melted ice-water in his glass when he stood before the Seven Devils.”

“There are poisons that act after minutes have passed.” The even,
monotonous voice of the Chinese broke in.

“Do you think the poisoner knew to the second when Meynerd’s drunken
folly would take the turn it did?” demanded Colton; and each man in the
room recognised the menace in his tone.

A gleam flashed to the eyes of the Mongolian for an instant, then
vanished. “The instruments of the gods and the devils cannot fail,” he
answered, quietly.

“No poison known could be timed like that,” declared Colton, positively.

“Right!” growled Wilson, as he resumed his seat and darted a glance of
new-born hatred across the room toward the man who had virtually accused
him of the murder.

Again came silence as the blind man stood in the centre of the room,
alternately brushing the rug where lay the untouched pieces of the
broken high-ball glass, and swishing at his trouser-leg. Across his
high, white forehead, and at his eye-corners behind the round, blue
glasses, innumerable fine lines deepened as his wonderful brain worked:
visualizing each object in the room, every detail in the picture, every
action that must have taken place at the instant of hopeless confusion
when Meynerd had pitched forward on the floor.

Immovable, the men watched, each tense for the first word or movement to
break the suspense. Sydney Thames sat in his chair, with his eyes fixed
on the devils of gold. Ever since he had entered the room the thing on
the table had held him fascinated. More sinister, more fiendish than
ever, without its single eye of pearl, the empty eye socket seemed to
glare at him as though it gloated over the repugnant fascination it
exerted. Sydney had heard the captain’s story; in his mind’s eye he
could picture the toast, the sneers, the fall. _Had_ the devils killed
Meynerd?--as the Chinese had said they would. Then his eyes narrowed
slightly as they went to the Mongolian, whose impassive face showed
nothing of the thoughts behind the bright, slit eyes. He had said that
death would follow. He was a Chinese--of a race to whom a life means
nothing; a race of mystery. Then his eyes went to the Jap servant who
stood against the wall, patiently waiting permission to leave the room;
then, at the two scowling men, who carefully avoided each other’s
glances as they stared straight ahead of them--at nothing. Wilson had
poured the drink. Why had Joslyn been so quick to tell the fact?

Suddenly the swishing taps of the blind man’s cane ceased; the lines
across his forehead and at his eye-corners vanished. “There is one way.”
He spoke apparently to himself. “Only one way.”

He crossed the room to the couch where the dead man lay, his face
covered with a handkerchief. He pulled aside the coat, and unloosed a
button of the thin silk shirt. From his vest-pocket he took a small
rubber band, and the watching men saw him put it around the middle
finger of his right hand, until the black rubber strands were deep
sunken in the flesh. Then, gingerly, as though he were testing the heat
of a red-hot stove, he opened the shirt, and with the tourniqueted
finger gently touched the skin of Meynerd. Slowly, very slowly, the
finger moved over the cold flesh of the dead man, then stopped.

“See, doctor!” He held the banded finger aloft. The physician’s
ejaculation of amazement was echoed by every other man in the room, but
the unemotional Chinese and the well-trained servant. On the tip of the
blind man’s finger was a drop of blood!

“And see here!” His fingers, holding the shirt back, exposed an inch or
so of the dead man’s skin. Four men bent their heads to see the small
smear of red Colton’s finger had left when it had brushed away the
single blood-drop.

“I don’t understand.” There was no doubt of the physician’s
bewilderment.

Colton pulled the coat back and stood erect. “The most diabolically
primitive of all murderous weapons,” he said. “A poisoned dart.”

“But who? How?” gasped the captain.

“That’s what we’ve got to find out,” the blind man said, curtly. With
his pocket-knife he carefully cut the strands of the rubber and gently
massaged the swollen, blood-congested finger. “A nasty thing to try to
locate with delicate finger-tips,” he remarked, casually. “A big chance
that the thing hadn’t penetrated its full length, as this one had, and a
scratch would have meant another dead man.”

Sydney Thames’s face lost its last vestige of colour as he realized that
once again the blind man had toyed with death. A hundred times had
Thames seen the problemist--the benefactor who had picked him up on the
bank of the English river from which came his only name--take his life
in his hands for the sake of solving one of the crime-puzzles he loved;
but always before there had been a chance for a fight against men with
lesser brains. This time a single scratch of his feeling finger would
have killed him instantly, horribly; just as the mocker of the Seven
Devils had been killed by the man among them who had coveted the
wonderful pearl that had been the eye. And that man----

Joslyn laughed a jerky laugh of nervousness as he turned away and
reached out his hand for the glass that had held his absinthe. The ice
had melted partially, and there was a half-inch or so of the pale-green
liquid showing through the cracked-ice crystals.

“Don’t touch that glass!” The command came, shot-like, from the lips of
Colton. He lowered the slim cane that had touched Joslyn’s leg and
warned him of the movement.

Joslyn withdrew his hand as if it had suddenly touched fire.

“Why? Wh-y?” he gasped, and his face was pasty white.

“Because I don’t want you to kill yourself!” The blind man’s hand moved
to pick up the glass. He held it up and gingerly poked into the ice with
his fingers. A grim smile came to his lips, and he dumped the whole
thing on the polished top of the mahogany table. Colton’s eight fingers
seemed to touch every piece of ice in a single instant, so quickly did
they move. Then his fore-finger separated a small pile of
curiously-shaped crystals.

“Broken glass!” The exclamation came from the physician.

Colton corroborated him with a nod, and spoke to the still pasty-faced
Joslyn. “Some of the smaller particles would surely have gone down your
throat.”

Joslyn’s Adam’s apple moved convulsively for a moment. “What is it?” he
gulped, finally.

“The broken glass-tube that was used to shoot the poisoned dart;
probably not more than two inches long, because of the short distance,
and of the thinnest glass, with just this object in view.”

“But how on earth did it get there?” puzzled Captain Richards.

“I’ll bet it wasn’t there five minutes ago!” Wilson cried; and every man
in the room remembered Joslyn’s movement toward the glass a few minutes
before.

The suave voice of the Chinese cut in. “Might I be informed how one who
is blind could know of the glass?” he asked.

“Because the cracked ice made an absolutely perfect hiding-place for
fine pieces of broken glass. If dropped on the floor with the bigger,
thicker pieces of high-ball glass, the difference would have been
immediately noted. I discovered that it had been a frappéd drink when I
walked up and down before the table and talked.”

Ching Li Chu rose and bowed gravely toward the golden thing on the
table. “Truly, the wisdom of the gods and of the devils is infinite,” he
said, in his even voice. “But one man has such a drink. The devils chose
him to protect their emissary!”

“Pretty philosophy,” admitted Colton, “made grim by the fact that some
one must suffer for being the devils’ tool.” He turned to face the
silent Japanese servant, who stood still by the wall. “Tell the steward
he can notify the police now, Nesu.”

The sunny Japanese smile that had been missing so long came to the
little servitor’s face, and he took a step forward to obey the order.

“What about the pearl?” asked Captain Richards, suddenly.
“This man shouldn’t get out until he has been searched. A
sixty-five-thousand-dollar gem would tempt ’most any one.”

Colton broke in, amazedly: “Hasn’t the search been made yet?”

“No.” The captain stammered over the monosyllable. “I called you as
quickly as I could get to a telephone, after warning every one to stay
in the room. I knew you were a member here, and clever at this sort of
thing. The police are such asses, you know, and the scandal----”

Again the blind man cut him short. “Because there seemed no possible way
by which the jewel could have been stolen--if the stories I heard of the
famous Seven Devils, when I was first in China twenty years ago, are
true--logically the jewel could be nowhere. Is that it?” he asked.

“Something like that.” The tan on the captain’s cheeks was a deeper
tinge than usual.

“The jewel is nowhere.” The Chinese spoke solemnly, earnestly, almost
reverently. “The devils have merely hidden it from the sight of mockers.
My government will give you one hundred and fifty thousand dollars for
the Seven Devils without the True Eye.”

“So that’s it!” The captain’s voice was almost a shout; the tone one of
a man who has made a great discovery. “_You_ have it! You killed Meynerd
to make me sell, eh?” He advanced a step, threateningly.

“The police will attend to that part!” warned the blind man, curtly.
“Search Nesu--or go yourself.”

He turned to the table, and his wonderful fingers, each one an eye that
could see things the eye of a normal man could not discern, touched the
twisted limbs of one of the Seven Devils.

“Come over nearer the light, Nesu,” ordered Captain Richards, and the
serious-faced Japanese followed him around the table.

The attention of the silent men in the room was divided between the
search of the Jap and Colton’s examination of the thing on the table. At
times the blind man’s fingers moved swiftly over the dull-gold surface;
at others they seemed to rest for seconds, unmoving, only to resume
their journey, slowly. Each man in the room understood, subconsciously,
that those marvellous finger-tips would give to the sightless man a
mind-picture as perfect as that their eyes had given them--more perfect,
perhaps.

“All right!” There was a growl of chagrin in the captain’s voice, as he
finished the search. The little Jap pattered out.

“Didn’t find it, eh?” Colton spoke idly, without raising his head. His
right forefinger was gently probing into the empty eye-socket. He put
his hand in his vest-pocket for an instant, then felt again where the
pearl had been, first with one finger, then another.

“Strange,” they heard him murmur. “Strange.” Then he whirled to face
them. “The prongs that held the pearl are unbent and unbroken! They are
exactly as they were when they gripped the jewel! Yet it is gone!”

“I want to search you, Ching!” There was no mistaking the threat in
Captain Richards’s tone this time.

Calmly, disdainfully, the Mongolian raised his arms and stood ready.
Richards explored every thread of his clothing. There was no doubt he
had done similar things before; not a pin could have escaped him. He
stepped back with a muttered curse of bafflement.

“Go through me, too.” It was a snarl from Joslyn; the snarl of a man
whose nerves are raw.

No second invitation was needed. Thornley Colton stood leaning against
the table, his back toward the golden devils. He idly swished his cane
and apparently watched every move. Wilson was searched--and there was
nothing.

“The thief who had brains and nerve enough to commit that theft would
certainly know enough not to have the pearl in his clothing,” observed
Colton, quietly.

“It’s in the room here, then,” growled the loser of the pearl, pacing
the floor. “I’ll tear it apart! That jewel was worth sixty-five
thousand!”

“You haven’t searched Meynerd’s clothes yet. Every one in the room had a
chance to secrete it there--temporarily,” suggested Colton.

The captain’s face went white, and he shuddered as his eyes went to the
body of the man whose death had been caused by the thing of gold he had
brought into the room. “I’m not a ghoul,” he choked. “The police can
attend to that part of it.”

“I think I hear them coming now; the tread is unmistakable.” The
problemist took a firmer grip on his cane with the hand that was not in
his pocket. “They can mess things as badly as they want to now; I’ve
finished.” He took a step toward the door, then turned to face them--the
captain, the physician, who had not spoken for minutes, Joslyn, Wilson,
and the silent Chinese. “If you’ll bring the Seven Devils to my house at
six-thirty this evening, captain, I will show you the pearl, and
handcuff the man who killed Meynerd!” Another step, and he halted again.
“All of you must come, for only the guilty one will want to stay away.
_All_, especially Ching Li Chu!”


                                  III.

Guided by the touch of Sydney Thames’s sleeve against his, the blind man
made his way through the crowd of curious, idle persons, whom the sight
of a policeman entering a building always attracts in New York. From the
precinct station around the corner had come two uniformed men, and two
detectives on the run, to answer the murder-call that had gone out.
Colton and his secretary had met them coming up the stairs, and the
problemist had given curt nods to their gruff greetings. Nearly every
detective in the city knew the blind man; and he knew all of them by the
sound of their voices, just as he knew the voices of a thousand other
men. A hundred times his abilities had made their efforts look
ridiculous, and scores of the city-paid sleuths refused to believe that
he was blind. Nor did any one in the morbid crowd that opened before him
suspect that the slight touch of cloth against cloth was guiding him in
the darkness that had been his since birth.

Leaning back in the soft cushions of the tonneau, Thornley Colton
lighted a cigarette and took several deep puffs. The machine had started
without orders, as it always did when there was any one around who might
hear. For several blocks they went in silence; then Colton leaned
forward.

“Osmuhn’s, Fifth Avenue, Michael,” he directed.

“A jewellery shop?” asked Sydney Thames, in surprise.

“Yes. I am going to make sure of every property for the last scene.
There can’t be a chance of failure!” There was an ominous ring in his
voice.

“You speak as though you knew the murderer and the thief!” cried Thames,
in amazement. “I don’t see----”

“You _do_ see!” interrupted the blind man, with unconscious sharpness.
“Like the average person, you see too much. To any one with perfect eyes
the whole thing is a jumble, for the murder of Meynerd was
planned--devilishly planned--to make possible the one minute of hopeless
confusion necessary to steal the jewel. The eyes of the men in that room
could see but one thing, then--the mocker of the devils. Nothing could
have drawn their gaze from Meynerd! That is the one fault of eyes. In
great crises they numb every other sense!”

“But if you know the murderer, why not arrest him at once?” asked
Sydney, his brain trying to fix upon the one man who could be guilty.

“Because I’m not a policeman. The arrest of the guilty person is always
secondary, with me, to the complete solving of a problem. A crime-puzzle
is never solved until the guilt of the prisoner is established beyond
_all_ question. No, Sydney, I’m not a detective, for a detective
arrests, and then tries to fix the guilt. I fix the guilt first. That is
the problem in this case!”

“Joslyn and Wilson certainly acted queer,” mused Sydney. “The Chinese,
too, seemed strange.” A new thought flashed to his mind. “There is
something Oriental about that murder!” he exclaimed, suddenly. “A dart,
and a poison which could act like that!”

Colton nodded as he flicked his cigarette into the street. “Devilishly
Oriental, Sydney,” he said, quietly.

“Ching Li Chu!” gasped Sydney. “He----”

“Is secretary of a foreign legation, and therefore immune from arrest.
Also, I think he could prove absolutely that he was standing in such a
position that he could not have shot the poisoned dart at Meynerd!”

The machine swung into the curb before the shop of Osmuhn & Son. Colton
alighted and hurried into the shop, followed by Sydney. He knew every
step here, for he had learned them in the days when the problem of the
Thousand Facets of Fire had interested him.

The elder Osmuhn came forward with a smile of welcome and extended hand.
Colton swung his slim stick under his left arm and extended his left
hand; the other had been in his pocket since they had left the room in
the Wanderers’ Club.

“I want to get an imitation pearl the size of this finger-tip, with
small holes drilled in the back at exactly these distances apart.” He
drew his right hand from his pocket, and Thames saw that his right
index-finger was smudged with ink, and on the middle finger were four
dots of black, at equal distances around the finger-tip. “A bit of ink
from my fountain pen on the four prongs, then I got the marks, to tell
me where the holes had been, when I poked my middle finger into the
eye-socket,” he explained to his secretary.

“Come into my office,” requested Osmuhn. “We have some imitation gems
that we use merely to show sizes. They wouldn’t fool an expert for a
minute.”

“I don’t want them to,” Thornley Colton smiled, faintly. “I only want
him to feel the gem.”

“Ah, another of your problems.” Osmuhn pulled open a velvet-lined
drawer. “Hold out your finger, please.” He adjusted a small caliper over
the tip, and with a smaller one measured the distances between the dots.
“How soon do you want it?” he asked, when he had made several cabalistic
notes on his small desk pad.

“As soon as possible.”

“In two hours, then.”

Colton nodded and hurried out.

“Police headquarters,” he ordered, when the tonneau-door had clicked
shut behind Sydney.

“So soon?” asked the secretary, in wonderment.

“Griffith and Jensen, the two detectives we passed on the stairs, are,
perhaps, the most dull-witted in New York. Naturally they’d be on hand
in a case like this. The thing will be bungled hopelessly if I let them
have their way. After they have been shown the facts I gathered”--a grim
smile hovered on his lips for a second--“they’ll have every one in the
room under arrest, even Captain Richards. I want them all--_all_--at my
house to-night.”

Thames knew the futility of further questions. Colton would do the thing
in his own way, and explain when the time came. So they rode in silence
to the big building that housed the central departments of the big
force.

“While I’m inside, Sydney, call up Shrimp and tell him to get an inch
auger and the most powerful pocket tubular flash-light he can buy.”

“An auger and a flash-light?” repeated the secretary.

“More scenery,” explained the blind man, laconically. “If I had been in
the room when the murder was committed, my lack of eyes would have
enabled me to detect the murderer-thief in the very act. Now I must
carefully work on his nerves until I have the confession. And I’ll do
it!” Again there was the ominous ring in his voice that Sydney had
noticed every time the blind man spoke of the murderer.

With a curt nod of emphasis, Colton turned on his heel and walked
briskly into headquarters, unerringly finding his way through the
corridors he had travelled many times before.

There was no doubt of The Fee’s delight when Sydney Thames gave him the
strange order. “Gee! Anoder case!” came his squeal of joy over the wire.
“An’ the arm I got broke in the gilded-glove thing is all right. You bet
I’ll get ’em!”

Sydney smiled as he rang off. Nothing pleased the freckle-faced,
blue-eyed boy, with the slightly-twisted nose, who had become a member
of the Colton household at the conclusion of a particularly baffling
murder case, like participation in one of the blind man’s problems. But
since the affair of the gilded glove, Colton had been careful to keep
the irrepressible youngster out of all harm’s way.

For half-an-hour Sydney sat in the automobile and puzzled over the theft
and the murder, the use of the imitation eye, the request for an auger
and a flash-light. Then Colton came out of headquarters.

“One more stop,” he said, as the car glided away from the curb. “Five
o’clock,” he announced, as his fingers touched the face of the
crystalless watch in his pocket. “Just time for the call, a hurried
bite, and then the dénouement.” He leaned forward to speak to the
driver. “The Waldorf,” was the order he gave.

At the big desk of the famous hotel, Colton’s low-voiced inquiry brought
an involuntary ejaculation of amazement from Sydney Thames. The blind
man had asked for the Chinese ambassador.

“Not here!” declared the man at the desk with a positiveness that only
hotel-clerks can assume when they are lying.

“Tell him I’d like to see him in regard to the Seven Devils of Sin.”
Colton’s voice was quiet and even, but there was something in it that
commanded respect--and got it.

“I’ll see!” The clerk turned to the house switchboard, and a few minutes
later Thames and the blind man were being ushered to the suite of the
diplomat. The ambassador, unlike his secretary, who had worn clothes of
the latest cut, was dressed in robes rich with embroidery. He looked at
them inquiringly as they entered, and the man at his side bowed deeply.

“His excellency bids you welcome,” the interpreter said, in precise
English.

“I came to tell you that the eye of the Seven Devils has been stolen,
and one of my countrymen murdered to make the theft possible,” Colton
said, without preamble or preface.

The interpreter might have been a graven image for all the expression
that came to his face. He bowed again, and spoke in Chinese to the
ambassador. When the diplomat had answered him, he spoke again to
Colton.

“His excellency says that the thing of which you speak is impossible.
The devils would not allow it. The eye of the Seven Devils of Sin
disappears for a week every hundred years, and has done so for centuries
at the Yunling temple.”

“Ah!” There was a note of quiet satisfaction in the problemist’s voice
as though sudden light had been thrown on an obscure point. “How did his
excellency know where the devils were?” he asked, gravely.

For several minutes the two Chinese talked. Colton stood in the middle
of the floor, idly switching his trouser-leg with his slim stick,
apparently paying no attention to the two Chinese. But Sydney Thames
knew that the keen ears of the blind man were taking in every word; for
he knew that the problemist understood the language perfectly! What were
the two Mongolians talking about? Why the discussion before such a
simple question could be answered?

Then the interpreter spoke. “The gods decreed that his excellency should
know the exact place and the hour at which it would be ready,” he said,
solemnly. “The devils stirred to anger the people of Chingtu against the
white rogue who so cleverly outwitted the Yunling mountain men. But the
gods found him, after months had passed, so the anger of the devils
might be appeased and the people made content.”

“Thank you.”

Sydney Thames thought he detected a dryness in the words, but the look
on the blind man’s face as he left the room augured ill for some one.

“I can’t see how apparently intelligent men can believe such rot!”
declared Sydney, impatiently.

“The undeviating view-point, Sydney, the undeviating view-point. That
religion has been ingrained for centuries and tens of centuries. No
Western knowledge can ever change it.” A peculiar smile came to his
lips. “They never consider the incongruity of the gods helping them find
devils--no more than they would consider a human life beside that thing
of gold we left on the table at the club.”

Thames tried to read the expression on the blind man’s face; but there
was no expression. Was the Chinese the murderer? Then what could the
problemist do alone? What had been the object of those apparently
irrelevant questions? And why had Colton pretended he knew no Chinese.

“One thing more, Sydney.” The problemist stopped beside the operator’s
desk at the telephone-booths. “Call up the club and tell the president
that I’ll contribute enough to have that upper hall re-decorated. Tell
him that the workmen will be there to-night. It’s about time it was
fixed.”

Sydney asked no questions this time. He merely obeyed the order. During
the hurried, silent meal that followed, he was all at sixes and sevens,
and his brain fairly reeled as the questions raced, shuttlelike, through
his mind. The Chinese had known the exact hour the thing would be
unpacked at the Wanderers’ Club. The secretary had virtually threatened
Meynerd with death. Yet Colton had said Ching Li Chu had not been in a
position to shoot the poisoned dart. Who had been in the right position,
and how did the blind man know? He had not asked the positions of the
men. There were Wilson and Joslyn. What of them? He remembered stories
he had heard of the men. Joslyn was an absinthe-drinker, supposed to
have an independent income. But what was the source of that income?
Sydney had never heard. Wilson was noted for his temper--but the crime
was not that of a man with temper. It was cold-blooded, devilish.

“Six o’clock.” Colton paid his check and hurried down the winding aisle
of tables, his brain unconsciously counting the steps it had registered
when he entered. “Get me a paper, Sydney,” he asked, when they were on
the side-walk once more.

Sydney hailed a boy and bought one. At the first sight of the black
headlines he gasped aloud.

“They’ve arrested Nesu!” he cried. “The two detectives took him to
headquarters!”

He saw again the quiet little Jap; the one man he had never suspected!
Colton had said that the murder was devilishly Oriental; he had said
that the Chinese had not committed it. The Japanese was the guilty one!
He must have been standing at the side of the table opposite Meynerd,
for Sydney had seen the cotton tufts he had dropped. And the police had
beaten the blind man; they had gotten ahead of the problemist who had
scorned them so often. Sydney could see them laughing up their sleeves
at the man he loved.

“It’s a shame, Thorn!” he choked.

“It is,” admitted Colton, quietly. “But better a live prisoner than a
dead freeman. I asked the chief to arrest Nesu, for he would have been
the next victim of the poisoned dart!”

“The next----” began Sydney, dully; but Colton did not let him finish.

“Yes, but we haven’t time to discuss it now. Run up to Osmuhn’s, and get
the fake pearl. I’ll take the car, and you can come home in the subway.
There’s a little job Shrimp and I have to do.”

Once more Thames silently did as he was told, and when he got back to
the old-fashioned, brownstone house in the upper eighties, he found the
blind man carefully studying two deep scratches in the polished top of
the library table.

“All right, Shrimp,” called Colton, without raising his head.

Thames looked around, but could see no sign of the boy; he was not in
the hall, nor in the music-room. He opened his lips for the question,
then the electric front-door bell tinkled its announcement.

“The jewel! Quick!” Sydney Thames thrust the imitation pearl into
Colton’s hand. For a second the blind man rubbed it between his flexible
fingers. With a nod of satisfaction he dropped it carelessly into his
lower vest-pocket, and was sitting on the table, feet dangling, smoking
a cigarette, when the servant entered to announce the four men.

Captain Richards came first, and in his arms, held as carefully as
though it were fragile glass, was the Seven Devils. He grunted in relief
as he set it down on the table and mopped his sweat-beaded forehead.
Ching Li Chu, who had been at his heels, remained standing, straight and
rigid, beside the thing of gold on the table. Joslyn, who could not seem
to keep his twitching fingers still, flopped into a chair without even a
grunt of greeting. Wilson seemed strangely cool, and calmly chewed an
unlighted cigar as he shook hands with the blind man and his secretary.

“No trouble getting us all here together,” he grinned. “Not one of us
has dared leave the other’s sight all afternoon. Sat like bumps on a log
glaring at each other, and trying to figure which of us was a murderer.”

“For God’s sake, get it over with!” Joslyn licked his dry lips with his
tongue, and his voice was shaky. “The police were going to arrest all of
us until their brains got untangled, and they took the right one. What
d’ye want us here for, anyway?” he demanded.

“To show you the eye of the Seven Devils,” Colton said, quietly. He
moved the golden image along the table, and carefully placed it in the
centre, facing the five chairs that were drawn up against the wall. The
blind man was very careful of the placing, and his secretary knew that
he was putting it exactly over the scratches. Why?

“I told you not to drink so much absinthe this afternoon, Joslyn,” put
in the captain, impatiently. “Your nerves are all gone.” He spoke to the
problemist. “Are you really going to find the eye?” he asked, and there
was a note of disbelief in his voice that Sydney Thames instantly
resented.

A nod was Colton’s only answer.

Richards shook his head doubtfully. “Where that infernal Jap could have
hidden the thing is beyond me. We literally tore the room to pieces, and
picked the cotton apart, tuft by tuft.” His voice changed suddenly. “Did
you find it?” he demanded.

The blind man straightened up. “Take seats,” he invited, for he had
apparently not even heard the question. “You, too, Ching; the devils
won’t get away.”

“The ambassador said that I must guard them,” replied the Chinese,
simply.

“I expected he would,” declared Colton. “I saw him for a few minutes
this afternoon.”

“You did!” The exclamation came from Captain Richards.

“Yes. I’d like to speak to you a few minutes in private, if the others
will excuse us?” he turned to them, apologetically.

“Long as you like,” granted Wilson, lightly.

“Have it over with!” snarled Joslyn.

Colton put his hand on the captain’s shoulder and drew him to a far
corner of the room. For several minutes they conversed in earnest
whispers. The blind man’s back was toward the seated men, but they could
see him making gestures of emphasis with the hand that was not resting
on the captain’s arm.

The captain nodded emphatically, and they returned to the others. His
face was grave, unreadable, but Sydney Thames saw a look of satisfaction
gleaming in his eyes. So the blind man had convinced him that the pearl
would be recovered!

They were all seated now, even the Chinese. Colton leaned against the
table beside the seven golden devils, and faced them. His finger-tips
felt of his crystalless watch.

“Ten minutes of seven,” he said. “At seven o’clock the jewel will be
returned. Seven has been a mystic number for centuries.”

Wilson laughed shortly. “You’re worse than the Chinese, Colton,” he
accused.

“Rot!” growled Joslyn.

“You know that seven is the number sacred to our devils?” asked the
Chinese, gravely.

An inclination of the blind man’s head was his only answer. Silence
came. The minutes slowly ticked past. As time went the men again felt
the sinister influence of the thing of gold before them; just as the
blind man had intended they should. Joslyn could not keep his twitching
hands still. Wilson bit through his cigar and muttered a curse as it
fell to the floor. Even Captain Richards nervously tapped his vest-front
with his fingers. Sydney Thames shifted uncomfortably. What was going to
happen? Was this merely another of the irrelevant, apparently senseless
things?--like the others of the afternoon.

Colton’s voice, low, solemn, broke the stillness. “The murderer of
Meynerd can never receive his full punishment on this earth. He has
murdered thousands!” Every man straightened in his chair. “For years he
has lived on the blood of innocent women and children, and for years I
have waited this opportunity. Thank God it has come!”

From the lower hall came the first stroke of seven. The blind man stood
facing them, hands resting lightly on the table at his sides. The mellow
note of the second stroke came. Unconsciously each man’s muscles
tightened for something--they knew not what. Week-long seconds passed
before the gong sounded the third time. Still the blind man did not
move. He stood there as rigid as the hideous, eyeless thing of gold
beside him.

“Do not move!”

With the snapped-out order came darkness, black, impenetrable. An
indrawn breath sounded hissingly, sucked in through tight, clenched
teeth.

Again the clock sounded. From over their head, behind them, came a
single shaft of soft, white light. In the small circle of brightness the
face of the Seven Devils leered at them. And over the squat,
wide-nostriled nose the single eye of pearl, perfect, flawless, gleamed
with its spark-red heart!

An animal-like snarl broke the silence. Sydney Thames felt the sweeping
rush of a body past his chair; heard body meet body in struggle. He knew
one was the blind man. The other----

He made a move to rise and snap on the lights.

Some subtle fifth sense of the blind man seemed to tell him the very
thought in his secretary’s mind.

“Stay where you are!” came his command. “Don’t touch the lights!”

Came a crash of a falling body.

The blind man’s voice cut the blackness. “You would, eh!” He followed in
with a half-dozen words in Chinese. In the tone was some terrible
accusation, and they seemed to goad the other to madness.

“Your devilish Oriental poisons will never kill another!” There was not
even a catch in the blind man’s breath; but the men who could not move a
muscle heard the sobbing gasps of the other. Suddenly came silence. Then
two sharp clicks of snapped handcuffs.

And as though the clicks had been a signal, the lights came, and with
them the voice of Thornley Colton, quietly triumphant:

“The murder of Ralph Meynerd will at last bring you the death you have
deserved so long, _Captain Richards_! Yes, the pearl you have been
assuring yourself you still had in your pocket is an imitation. I took
the real eye from you while we were talking in the corner. My fingers
might make me a successful pickpocket.”

He turned to face the doorway, and there the dazed Sydney Thames saw the
wide-eyed Fee. Behind him were two stalwart detectives.

“The prisoner I promised your chief,” Colton said, shortly.

They came forward and jerked the cursing man to his feet. “One minute!”
commanded Colton. He faced the Chinese. “The Seven Devils was stolen
from your temple. It is yours. Take it.”

“Damn you!” shrieked Richards. “You----”

For a silent second Colton’s eyes seemed to stare at him, then his eyes
dropped.

“Take it to its true owners,” repeated Colton. “But first, see!” He went
to the golden thing on the table. One hand, held cuplike, under the eye.
A finger touched the toe of one of the figures. The eye dropped to his
hand! “The true secret of the image,” he said, quietly. “The prongs, by
some method of a forgotten genius, open by the pressure of one of the
toes. That is how it was stolen in the instant you could see nothing but
the dead man before you!”


                                  IV.

An alcohol-soaked bandage around his eyes to ease the splitting headache
the loss of four hours of sleep in the afternoon had caused, Thornley
Colton sat in the darkened music-room. Hours before, the hand-cuffed
Captain Richards had been led away, cursing, raving, blaspheming. The
table in the library where had been the wonderful Seven Devils of Sin,
was empty now, but in a room at the Waldorf four sleepless Chinese
guarded the sacred thing with their lives; praying alternately to it and
to their gods in thanks. Under the waters of the Pacific had already
sped the news that the True Eye would again look from the altar of the
Yunling monastery. The Chinese ambassador had come personally to thank
Colton. He had promised the blind man honours, decorations, and Thornley
Colton had smiled them aside.

“A curious crime; that of committing a murder to steal the thing he
already owned?” The blind man repeated the question Sydney Thames had
asked minutes before. “Yes, it was a curious crime, Sydney. But Richards
knew that he was dealing with a curious people; he had dealt with them
for thirty years. He understood perfectly that a Chinese who knew the
legend regarding the impossibility of theft would not deviate a hair’s
breadth from his century-old ideas. The devils would not let it be done;
therefore it could not be done. The disappearance of the eye--coupled
with the century vanishings which, of course, the captain knew all
about--would only make the Chinese more anxious to get the image. It
would prove to his peculiar mind that the devils had not lost their
powers in the years they had been gone. You heard him raise the price.
You saw Richards’s clever acting then; though he must have known that
Ching couldn’t be found guilty of the murder. He would have seen to it
that at the time of the killing the Chinese was in the wrong position to
shoot the dart. He was wise enough to know that police suspicion would
be immediately directed toward the Mongolian, but it was no part of his
game to have him arrested. The others could have sworn Ching could not
have committed the crime.

“The reason for it all is very simple--money. Richards, temple-looter
for years, knew that this was his last game. No collector would have
given him more than a hundred thousand, and that would have included the
eye. He could not have substituted a gem that would deceive an expert.
And by murdering in such a way as to make the Chinese think it was the
work of the devils, he could have sold the image to the Chinese
government for two hundred thousand _without the eye_! They would have
staked their lives on the pearl re-appearing in some supernatural manner
the minute the thing was restored to the monastery. And by killing
Meynerd, Richards would gain the eye; an extra sixty-five thousand
dollars. That was the price of the boy’s life. It was Richards, too, who
sold the jade god that caused the Boxer trouble; that cost the lives of
a thousand innocent women and children, and lives of ten thousand men to
net him twenty-five thousand dollars!”

“He did that?” gasped Sydney, horror in his tone.

“Yes. He stole it and laid the blame on a white missionary to save his
own worthless hide. That caused the first massacre. How he aroused the
people of Chingtu over the Seven Devils I don’t know, but he had been in
China long enough to learn all of the underground methods. He must have
stayed there months to get the people in a proper spirit to make the
government willing to go to any lengths to prevent an insurrection. Then
he picked New York for the final scene. He joined the Wanderers’ years
ago, and no one knew that his money came from the loot of temples and
the blood of massacred women and children. I did, but I could do nothing
but wait.

“See how carefully he picked his audience. Meynerd, drunken kid, could
be depended upon to mock the serious Chinese. Joslyn, whose nerves were
shattered by absinthe, would surely act suspiciously because of his very
nervousness. Then Wilson to add fuel. And the Chinese! The scene was
laid just as he has probably laid dozens of others.

“How he learned the secret of the devils’ eye I don’t know, nor care.
Perhaps he learned it accidentally. Perhaps he picked it up in some
obscure corner of the kingdom during his years of wandering. But he
never thought that my supersensitive finger-tips would discover it,
though his bringing of Nesu to the window was done so that he could get
into a position where he could watch me. But I had found the thing in an
instant, and while he watched I carefully kept away from it. The minute
my finger felt the unbent prongs I knew they must have opened, and the
toes would be the most ingenious place for the manipulator of them.

“It was he who notified the Chinese ambassador the exact hour he would
unpack the image. I wanted to make sure of that, so I went to the
Waldorf. I knew the thing was important enough to bring the diplomat all
the way from Washington, though I knew, too, as Richards did, that a
secretary would make the first visit.”

“How do you know that Richards told them?” asked Sydney. “Was he the
‘gods’ they spoke of?”

“The discussion between the ambassador and the interpreter before they
answered my question told me that. While they spoke of the gods they
mentioned a note sent the night before from New York. Of course, I was
careful to conceal the fact that I understood Chinese, because I knew
they would never tell any one of that. To them it was a decree of the
gods; and a state secret.”

“And Richards deliberately killed Meynerd to make the one necessary
minute of confusion?” put in Sydney.

“It didn’t matter whether it was Meynerd or not. But luck was with him;
luck and the working out of the chance on which he had invited Meynerd
as one of the party. The poisoned dart, in its short glass-tube, was in
his handkerchief. I also took that from the pocket of his frock-coat
when we talked in the library, and in it were fine glass particles. He
hadn’t even thought it necessary to get rid of the thing. A simple
crushing of the tube in his handkerchief when a breath had sent the dart
on its journey of death, the dropping of the pieces into Joslyn’s drink,
where eyes would never have seen them, was the work of an instant. Of
course, if Joslyn hadn’t had the frappéd drink Richards needed as a
hiding-place, the captain would have ordered one for himself. But there
was one break in the programme. The Jap saw the theft of the jewel.”

“How did you know that?”

Colton smiled grimly. “The keyboard of silence again. When I shook hands
my index-finger on the Jap’s wrist told me that his heart was pounding
like a trip hammer. A mere death would never have excited an Oriental
like that. For a time I suspected that he had shot the poisoned dart,
and the captain had stolen the jewel. But the glass in the ice instead
of the cotton, and the captain’s gentle manner toward him, proved that
they were not working together. If they had been accomplices Richards
would have acted harshly to avert suspicion. He was trying to convince
the Jap that silence would mean a share of the theft. But I knew
Richards wasn’t the kind to divide, or pay blackmail. The poisoned dart
was too easy. There wasn’t a chance to end the Jap’s life in the room,
for I knew the captain would have hardly dared bring two darts and
tubes. There was always a possibility of his being searched by the
police. At the first opportunity outside, though, puff! A dead Japanese
who would tell no tales. Therefore I had the police arrest Nesu because
Captain Richards probably had another one of his devilish darts
somewhere around the club.”

“But the pearl?” demanded Sydney. “Why didn’t you search Richards before
we left that room?”

“Do you think he would have taken such pains to hide the broken tube and
then have kept the pearl?” asked Colton, dryly. “He hid the gem in a
previously picked-out place when he left the room to call me on the
telephone. Suppose I had arrested him; suppose we had torn the club
apart and found the jewel. Would Captain Richards have gone to the chair
for murder? Not with an American jury, and the mass of other suspicious
things that would make more than a ‘reasonable doubt’ of his guilt.

“So I arranged to-night’s affair for a dénouement. I knew his nerves
weren’t steel, for he had shown that when I told him to search the body
of the man he had killed. That was a little too much even for him. Then
I got the ‘eye’ while I pretended to tell him of a plan I had to make
Joslyn confess. I substituted the fake pearl that would feel just the
same in the darkness, because the whole thing depended on his having no
premature suspicion. My announcement that workmen would be on hand to
re-decorate the upper hall of the club, the place he must have chosen
because of its nearness, forced him to take the pearl from its
hiding-place to-night. He had to bring it here because I timed the thing
so that he would have no chance to find another hiding-place. During the
afternoon he probably saw to it that Joslyn kept on drinking absinthe,
though Wilson’s drinks only seemed to straighten out his nerves.

“It was simple, very simple, but I have waited years for the
opportunity; ever since I heard the true story of the Boxer uprising
from the lips of a dying coolie who had helped to steal the jade god. I
knew my chance would come some day, and the cocksure attitude I always
took when Captain Richards was around, I knew would make Captain
Richards welcome the opportunity to amuse himself by watching me try to
solve a puzzle. That Chinese sentence I used there in the darkness told
him for the first time that I knew all about him, and he realized then
that I had been waiting for the chance his egotism had brought me.”

Sydney Thames’s lips curved in a superior smile. “And the Chinese can
only see it as the working-out of the gods’ decree,” he murmured.

The blind man leaned back in his chair and blew a thoughtful smoke ring
toward the ceiling. When he spoke his voice was low, almost reverent. “A
half-century ago the thing was stolen by a young priest who did not know
the secret that had been carefully guarded by the highest priests for
centuries. Fifty years later it passes into the hand of a white man, and
is brought thousands of miles to New York. A man is killed, another is
in a prison-cell, and the devils are returned by one who is blind. The
working of the gods? I wonder, Sydney, I wonder.”


                                THE END.

------------------------------------------------------------------------




                          Transcriber’s Notes


This file uses _underscores_ to indicate italic text. New original cover
art included with this ebook is granted to the public domain.

Spelling, hyphenation, and italicisation of words like “dénouement” and
“finger-tip” are inconsistent between the different stories in the
printed source text and have not been standardised.

The following changes and corrections have been made:

 • p. 159: Replaced “Thomas” with “Thames” in phrase “Thames could feel
   the tenseness of the men’s bodies.”
 • p. 159: Added comma after “servant” in phrase “He skated straight at
   the Hindu servant, struck him, and bowled him over.”
 • p. 213: Added period after phrase “He shook his head.”
 • p. 231: Replaced “it” with “its” in phrase “in which the gilt glove
   found at the woman’s throat had been carried to prevent its
   handling.”
 • p. 285: Replaced closing single with double quotation mark after
   phrase “Shrimp and I are going to catch the boat for Brazil at five
   o’clock!”
 • p. 312: Replaced closing single with double quotation mark after
   phrase “To me it is the lure of the unattainable.”
 • p. 159: Replaced “its” with “it” in phrase “the law calls it murder.”
 • p. 324: Removed stray apostrophe before phrase “I don’t see----.”

*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78643 ***