<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></SPAN>CHAPTER X</h2>
<h3>A SHADOW IN THE FOG</h3>
<p>Again I saw that glow from the Gilbert garage,
hanging on the fog; a luminosity of the fog;
saw it disappear as the mist deepened and shrouded
it. But Worth was answering me, and somehow his
words seemed forced;</p>
<p>"Sit tight a minute, Jerry. Have another cup of
coffee while I telephone, then I'll put the roadster in
and open up down there. I'll call you—or you can
see my lights."</p>
<p>He left me. I heard him at the instrument in the
hall get his number, talk to some one in a low voice,
and then go out the front door; next thing was the
sound of the motor, the glare of its lamps as it
rounded into the driveway and started down back,
illuminating everything. In the general glare thrown
on the fog, the fainter light was invisible, but across
a plot of kitchen garden I saw where it had been; a
square, squat building of concrete, flat roofed, vining
plants in boxes drooping over its cornice; the typical
garage of such an establishment, but nearly double
the usual size. The light had come from there, but
how? In the short time that the lamps of the machine
were showing it up to me, there seemed no windows
on this side; only the double doors for the car's entrance—closed
now—and a single door which was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</SPAN></span>
crossed by two heavy, barricading planks nailed in the
form of a great X.</p>
<p>Worth ran the machine close up against the doors,
jumped down, and I could see his tall form, blurred
by the mist, moving about to slide them open. The
lamps of the roadster made little showing now as he
rolled it in. Then these were switched off and everything
down there was dark as a pocket. For a time
I sat and waited for him to light up and call me, then
started down. The fog was making the kind of
dimness that has a curious, illusory character. I
suppose I had gone half the distance of the garden
walk, when, thrown up startlingly on the obscurity,
I saw a square of white, and across that shining
screen, moved the silhouette of a human head. The
whole thing danced before my eyes for a bare second,
then blackness.</p>
<p>With Cummings' queer hints in my mind, I started
running across the garden toward it. About the first
thing I did was step into a cold frame, plunging
my foot through the glass, all but going to my knees
in it; and when I got up, swearing, I was turned
around, ran into bushes, tripped over obstructions,
and traveled, I think, in a circle.</p>
<p>Then I began to go more cautiously. No use getting
excited. That was only Worth I had seen. And
still I was unwilling to call, ask him to show a light.
I groped along until my outstretched fingers came
across the corner of a building, rough, stonelike—the
concrete garage and study. I felt along, seeing a bit
now, and was soon passing my hands over the barricading
planks of that door.</p>
<p>I might have lit a match, but I preferred to find<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</SPAN></span>
out what I could by feeling around, and that cautiously.
I discovered that the door had been broken
in, the top panels shattered to kindling wood, the
force of the assault having burst a hinge, so that the
whole thing sagged drunkenly behind the heavy planks
that propped it, while a strong bolt, quite useless, was
still clamped into a socket which had been torn, screws
and all, from the inside casing.</p>
<p>Sliding my hands over the broken top panel I
found that it had been covered on its inner side by a
piece of canvas; the screen on which that shadow had
been thrown—from within the room. There was no
light there now; there was no sound of motion within.
The drip of the fog from the eaves was the only
break in the stillness.</p>
<p>"Worth?" I shouted, at last, and he answered me
instantly, hallooing from behind me, and to one side
of the house. I could hear him running and when he
spoke it was close to my shoulder.</p>
<p>"Where are you, Jerry?"</p>
<p>"Where are you," I countered. "Or rather, where
have you been?"</p>
<p>"Getting a bar to pry off these boards."</p>
<p>"A bar?" I echoed stupidly.</p>
<p>"A crowbar from the shed. These planks will have
to come off to let us in."</p>
<p>"The devil you say!" I was exasperated. "There's
some one in here now—or was a minute back. Show
me the other way in."</p>
<p>I heard the ring of the steel bar as its end hit the
hard graveled path.</p>
<p>"Some one in there? Jerry, you're seeing things."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</SPAN></span>"Sure I am," I agreed drily. "But you get me to
that other door quick!"</p>
<p>"The only other door is locked. I tried it from the
garage. You're dreaming."</p>
<p>For reply, I ran up to the door and thrust my fist
through the canvas, ripping it away from its clumsy
tacking.</p>
<p>"Who's in there?" I cried. "Answer me!"</p>
<p>Dead silence; then a click as Worth snapped on a
flood of light from his pocket torch, saying tolerantly,
tiredly,</p>
<p>"I told you there was no one. There couldn't be."</p>
<p>"I tell you, Worth, there was. I saw the shadow
on the square of that canvas. Give me the torch."</p>
<p>I pushed the flashlight through the opening and
played the light cone about the room in a quick survey;
then brought the circle of white glow to rest upon one
of the side walls; and my hand went down and back
to grip fingers about the butt of my revolver. There
was, as Worth had said, but one other door to this
room; but more, there was apparently no other exit;
no windows, no breaks in the walls. My circle of light
was on this second door; and the very heart of that
circle was a heavy steel bolt on the door, the bar of
which was firmly shot into the socket on the frame.
The only exit from that room, other than the door
through which I now leaned with pistol raised, was
locked—bolted from the inside!</p>
<p>Worth was crowding his big frame into the opening
beside me.</p>
<p>"Keep back," I growled. "Some one's inside," and
I sent the light shaft into corners to drive out the
shadows, to cut in under the desk and chairs. Worth's<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</SPAN></span>
reply was a laugh, and his arm went by me to reach
inside the door. Then, as his fingers found the button,
a light sprang out from a lamp upon the center desk.</p>
<p>"You're letting your nerves play the deuce with you,
Jerry," he said lightly. "Make way for my crowbar
and we'll get in out of the wet."</p>
<p>I made no answer, but for a long moment more I
searched that room with my eyes; but it was the kind
you see all over at a glance. Big, square, plain, it
hadn't a window in it; the walls, lined with book
shelves, floor to ceiling; a fireplace; a library table
with drawers; a few chairs. No chance for a hideout.
I glanced at the ceiling and confirmed the evidence
of my eyes. There was a skylight, and through
it had come that curious glow that first attracted my
attention to the place.</p>
<p>Then I gave Worth room to wield his tools on the
barred door, while I ran quickly back to the house,
into the kitchen, and plumped down in the chair where
I had sat before. The light showed on the fog,
brightened and dimmed as the mist drifted past.
There was no possibility of a mistake: some one had
been in the study, had turned on the table lamp, had
projected his shadow against the patched panel of the
door, and had somehow left the room, one door bolted,
the only other exit barred and nailed.</p>
<p>I went back and rejoined Worth who was standing
where a brownish stain on the rug marked a spot a
little nearer the corner of the table than it was to the
outer door. A curious place for a suicide to fall.
Behind the table was the library chair in which Thomas
Gilbert worked when at his desk; beside it a small
cabinet with a humidor on its top and the open door<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</SPAN></span>
below revealing several decanters and bottles, whisky
and wine glasses, a tray; between the desk and the
fireplace were two other chairs, large and comfortable;
but in front of the table—between it and the door—was
barren floor.</p>
<p>It is a fact that most men who shoot themselves do
so while sitting; some lying in a bed; few standing.
The psychology of this I must leave to others, but
experience has taught me to question the suicide of
one who has seemingly placed the muzzle of a revolver
against him while on his feet. Thomas Gilbert had
stood; had chosen to take his life as he was walking
from door to desk, or from desk to door.</p>
<p>"Worth," I said. "There was somebody in here
just now."</p>
<p>"Couldn't have been, Jerry," he answered absently;
then added, his eyes on that stain, "I never could
calculate what my father would do. But when I
talked to him last night, right here in this room, he
didn't seem to me a man ready to take his own life."</p>
<p>"You quarreled?"</p>
<p>"We always quarreled, whenever we met."</p>
<p>"But this quarrel was more bitter than usual?"</p>
<p>"The last quarrel would seem the bitterest, wouldn't
it, Jerry?" he asked. Then, after a moment, "Poor
Jim Edwards!"</p>
<p>I caught my tongue to hold back the question.
Worth went on,</p>
<p>"When I phoned him just now, he hadn't heard a
word about it. Seemed terribly upset."</p>
<p>"Hadn't heard?" I echoed. "How was that?"</p>
<p>"You know we saw him at Tait's last night. He
took the Pacheco Pass road from San Francisco;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</SPAN></span>
drove straight to his ranch without hitting Santa
Ysobel."</p>
<p>I wanted another look at that man Edwards. I
was to have it. Worth went on absently,</p>
<p>"He'll be along presently to stay here while I'm
away Monday. Told me it would be the first time
he'd put foot in the house for four years. As boys
up in Sonoma county, he and father always disagreed,
but sometime these last years there was a big split
over something. They were barely on speaking terms—and
good old Jim took my news harder than
as though I'd been telling him the death of a near
friend."</p>
<p>"Works like that with us humans," I nodded. "Let
some one die that you've disagreed with, and you
remember every row you ever had with them; remember
it and regret it—which is foolish."</p>
<p>"Which is foolish," Worth repeated, and seemed
for the first time able to get away from the spot at
which he had stopped.</p>
<p>He went over to the empty, fireless hearth and stood
there, his back to the room, elbows on the mantel
propping his head, face bent, oblivious to anything that
I might do. It oughtn't to be hard to find the way
this place could be entered and left by a man solid
enough to cast a shadow, with quick fingers to snap
the light on and off. But when I made a painstaking
examination of a corner grate with a flue too small
for anything but a chimney swallow to go up and
down, a ceiling solidly beamed and paneled, the glass
that formed the skylight set in firmly as part of the
roof, when I'd turned up rugs and inspected an unbroken
floor, even tried the corners of book cases to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</SPAN></span>
see if they masked a false entrance, I owned myself,
for the moment, beaten there.</p>
<p>"Give me your torch—or go with me, Worth," I
said. "I'd like to take a scoot around outside."</p>
<p>He didn't speak, only indicated the flashlight by a
motion, where it lay on the shelf beside his hand. I
took it, unbolted the door, and stepped into the garage.</p>
<p>Everything all right here. My roadster; a much
handsomer small machine beyond it; a bench, portable
forge and drill made a repair shop of one corner, and
as my light flashed over these, I checked and stared.
Why had Worth gone to the shed hunting a crowbar
to open the door? Here were tools that would have
served as well. I put from me the hateful thought,
and damned Cummings and his suspicions. The
shadow didn't have to be Worth. Certainly he had
not first lit that lamp, for I had seen it from the kitchen
with him beside me. Some one other than Worth
had been in there when Worth put up the roadster.
I'd find the man it really was. But even as I crossed
to Eddie Hughes's door, something at the back of my
head was saying to me that Worth could have been in
that room—that there was time for it to be, if he had
taken the crowbar from the garage and not from the
shed as he said he did.</p>
<p>At this I took myself in hand. The lie would have
been so clumsy a one that there was no way but to
accept this statement for the truth; and some one else
had made that shadow on the canvas.</p>
<p>I tried the chauffeur's door and found it locked;
called, shook it, and had set my shoulder against it to
burst it in, when the rolling door on the street side
moved a little, and a voice said,</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</SPAN></span>
"H-y-ah! What you doin' there?"</p>
<p>I turned and flashed my light on the six-inch crack
of the sliding door. It gave me a strip of man, a
long drab face at top, solid, meaty looking, yet somehow
slightly cadaverous, a half shut eye, a crooked
mouth—if I'd met that mug in San Francisco, I'd have
labeled it "tough," and located it South of Market
Street.</p>
<p>Slowly, it seemed rather reluctantly, Eddie Hughes
worked the six-inch crack wider by working himself
through it.</p>
<p>"What the hell do you want in my room for?" he
demanded. The form of the words was truculent, but
the words themselves slid in a sort of spiritless fashion
from the corner of that crooked mouth of his, and he
added in the next breath, "I'll open up for you, when
I've lit the blinks."</p>
<p>There was a central lamp that made the whole place
as bright as day. Eddie fumbled a key out of his
pocket, threw the door of his room open, and stepped
back to let me pass him.</p>
<p>"Capehart tells me Worth's here," he said as we
went in.</p>
<p>"When?" I gave him a sharp look. He seemed
not to notice it.</p>
<p>"Just now. I came straight from there."</p>
<p>He came straight from there? Did he supply an
alibi so neatly because of that shadowy head on the
door panel? For a long minute we each took measure
of the other, but Eddie's nerves were less reliable than
mine; he spoke first.</p>
<p>"Well?" he grunted, scarcely above his breath.
And when I continued to stare silently at him, he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</SPAN></span>
writhed a shoulder with, "What's doing? What
d'yuh want of me?"</p>
<p>Still silently, I pulled out with my thumb through
the armhole of my vest the police badge pinned to the
suspender. His ill-colored face went a shade nearer
the yellow white of tallow.</p>
<p>"What for?" he asked huskily. "You haven't got
nothin' on me. It was suicide—cor'ner's jury says
so. Lord! It has to be, him layin' there, all hunched
up on the floor, his gun so tight in his mitt that they
had to pry the fingers off it!"</p>
<p>"So you found the body?"</p>
<p>He nodded and gulped.</p>
<p>"I told all I knowed at the inquest," he said doggedly.</p>
<p>"Tell it again," I commanded.</p>
<p>Standing there, working his hands together as
though he held some small, accustomed tool that he
was turning, shifting from foot to foot, with long
breaks in his speech, the chauffeur finally put me into
possession of what he knew—or what he wished me
to know. He had been out all night. That was usual
with him Saturdays. Where? Over around the canneries.
Had friends that lived there. He got into
this place about dawn, and went straight to bed.</p>
<p>"Hold on, Hughes," I stopped him there. "You
never went to bed—that night, or any other night—until
you'd had a jolt from the bottle inside."</p>
<p>He gave me a surly, half frightened glance, then
said quickly,</p>
<p>"Not a chance. Bolts on the doors, locks everywhere;
all tight as a jail. Take it from me, he wasn't
the kind you want to have a run-in with—any time.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</SPAN></span>
Always just as cool as ice himself; try to make you
believe he could tell what you were up to, clear across
town. Hold it over you as if he was God almighty
that stuck folks together and set 'em walkin' around
and thinkin' things."</p>
<p>He broke off and looked over his shoulder in the
direction of the study. The walls were thick—concrete;
the door heavy. No sound of Worth's moving
in there could be heard in this room. Apparently it
was the old terror of his employer, or the new terror
of the employer's death, that spoke when he said,</p>
<p>"I got up this morning late with a throat like the
back of a chimney. Lord! I never wanted a drink
so bad in my life—had to have one. The chink leaves
my breakfast for me Sundays; but I knew I couldn't
eat till I'd had one. So I—so I—"</p>
<p>It was as though some recollection fairly choked off
his voice. I finished for him.</p>
<p>"So you went in there—" I pointed at the study
door, "and found the body."</p>
<p>"Naw! How the hell could I? I told you—locked.
I crawled up on the roof, though; huntin' a way in,
and I looked through the skylight. There he was.
On the floor. His eyes weren't open much, but they
was watchin' me—sort of sneerin'. I come down off
that roof like a bat outa hell, and scuttled over to Vandeman's
where his chink was on the porch, I bellerin'
at him. I telephoned from there. For the bulls; and
the cor'ner; and everybody. Gawd! I was all in."</p>
<p>I caught one point in the tale.</p>
<p>"So the way into the study is through the skylight,
Hughes?" and he shook his head vaguely, fumbling
his lips with a trembling hand as he replied,</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</SPAN></span>"Honest to God, Cap'n, I don't know. I never
tried. I gave just one look through it, and—" He
broke off with a shudder.</p>
<p>"Get a ladder," I commanded. "I want to see that
skylight."</p>
<p>While he was gone on his errand to the shed, I investigated
the outer walls of the study with the torch,
hunting some break in their solidity. They were concrete;
a hair-crack would have been visible in the
electric glow; there was no break. Then, as he placed
the ladder against the coping, I climbed to the roof
and stepped across its firmness to the skylight. I
looked down.</p>
<p>Worth, kneeling on the hearth, was laying a fire in
the corner grate. As he did not glance up, I knew he
had not heard me. Evidently the study had been built
to resist the disturbance of sound from without.
That meant that the report of the revolver inside had
not been heard by any one outside the walls.</p>
<p>Directly below me was the library table and upon
its top a blue desk blotter; a silver filagreed inkstand
stood open; penholders, pencils, paper knife were on a
tray beside it, one pen lying separate from the others
with a ruler, upon the blotting pad; books and a magazine
neatly in a pile. The walls, as I circled them with
my eyes, were book-lined everywhere except for the
grate and the two doors.</p>
<p>Then I inspected the skylight, frame and glass, feeling
it over with my hands. There was no entrance
here. Even should a pane of glass be removable—all
seemingly solid and tight—the frame between and
the sash were of steel, and the panes were too small
for the passage of a man. I crept back to the ladder<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</SPAN></span>
as Worth was striking a match to light the pitch-pine
kindling.</p>
<p>"What about this Vandeman chink?" I asked of
Hughes as I rejoined him at the foot of the ladder.
"Does he hang around here much?"</p>
<p>"Him and Chung visit back and forth a bit. I hear
'em talkin' hy-lee hy-lo sometimes when I go by the
kitchen."</p>
<p>"Take me over there," I said.</p>
<p>The fog was beginning to blow away in threads;
moonlight somewhere back of it made a queer, gray,
glimmering world around us. We circled the garden
by the path, passing a sort of gardener's tool shed
where Hughes left the ladder, and from which I judged
Worth had brought the bar he pried the door planks
off with, to find a gap in a hedge between this place
and the next.</p>
<p>There was a light in the rear of the house over
there, and a well-trodden path leading from the hedge
gap made what I took to be a servants' highway.</p>
<p>Vandeman's house proved to be, as nearly as one
could see it in the darkness, a sprawling bungalow,
with courts, pergolas and terraces bursting out on all
sides of it. I could fairly see it of a fine afternoon,
with its showy master sitting on one of the showy
porches, serving afternoon tea in his best manner to
the best people of Santa Ysobel. Just the husband
for that doll-faced girl, if she only thought so. What
could she have done with a young outlaw like Worth?</p>
<p>When I looked at the Chinaman in charge there, I
gave up my idea of questioning him. Civilly enough,
with a precise and educated usage of the English language,
he confirmed what Eddie Hughes had already<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</SPAN></span>
told me about the telephoning from that place this
morning; and I went no further. I know the Chinese—if
anybody not Mongolian can say they know the
race—and I have also a suitable respect for the value
of time. A week of steady questioning of Vandeman's
yellow man would have brought me nowhere.
He was that kind of a chink; grave, respectful, placid
and impervious.</p>
<p>On the way back I asked Eddie about the Thornhill
servants at the house on the other side of Gilbert's,
and found they kept but one, "a sort of old lady,"
Eddie called her, and I guessed easily at the decayed
gentlewoman kind of person. It seemed that Mrs.
Thornhill was a widow, and there wasn't much money
now to keep up the handsome place.</p>
<p>I left Eddie slipping eel-like through the big doors,
and went into the study to find Worth sitting before
the blazing hearth. He looked up as I entered to
remark quietly,</p>
<p>"Bobs said she'd be over later, and I told her to
come on down here."</p>
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