<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</SPAN></span>
<h2 class="nobreak">VIII<br/> AT THE END OF THE LONG NIGHT</h2></div>
<p class="drop-cap">“EXTRA! EXTRA!” in shrill diminuendo
awakened Jack Lanagan from the very
heart of his morning slumber. The morning paper
man sleeps late and nothing short of cataclysm
or the cry of an extra is likely to awaken him.
Lanagan was from his bed to the window in a lanky
leap hailing the newsboy.</p>
<p>It was the <i>Evening Record</i> with a “screamer”
head and two hundred words of black-face type.
Lanagan swept through it in a comprehensive flash.
With more speed than was his custom he thereupon
dressed.</p>
<p>“<i>Swanson!</i>” he said. “Gad, what a story!”</p>
<p>He sat on the edge of the bed, more leisurely to
roll a brown-paper cigarette and read the story more
carefully. Stripped of flaring headlines, it was as
follows:</p>
<p>“All hope for the safety of Captain Robert
Swanson, the retired millionaire shipping man who
disappeared on Wednesday evening, was dissipated
this morning, shortly after 9.30 o’clock, when the
body of the well-known philanthropist was found
in a subcellar room in the notorious Palace Hotel
in Chinatown.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</SPAN></span>“Death was due to strangulation.</p>
<p>“Life had probably been extinct three days, and
it is the police theory that Captain Swanson went
directly to the hotel or was lured there on the evening
of his disappearance.</p>
<p>“His watch and valuables were found on his
person.</p>
<p>“So far as a hasty examination could discover
no one saw him enter the hotel, which bears an
evil reputation and is occupied by the lowest
type of denizen of Chinatown and the Barbary
Coast.</p>
<p>“The room where the body was found is one of
several that have been dug out beneath the basement
and is used entirely by opium smokers.</p>
<p>“Chief of Police Leslie has ordered all available
detectives on the case and arrests are expected at
any moment.”</p>
<p>“Which means,” finally grumbled Lanagan,
“that I get no day off to-morrow to split a quart of
Chianti with mine host Pastori.</p>
<p>“Swanson,” he ran quickly back in his mind,
“is president of the Seamen’s Bank; director of
the Cosmos Club; director of a dozen corporations;
trustee of his church; sound as a nut at sixty-five;
solidly established in the old conservative families
of Nob Hill, with a family of married children likewise
solidly established in the solidest kind of respectability
and a wife who is a silvery-haired saint
if there ever was one.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</SPAN></span>“Yet he, a man who probably didn’t know such
a place as Chinatown’s Palace Hotel existed until
that night, is found dead in the lowest sink of that
hole. The extremes of the social system met in
his end and the place of it.”</p>
<p>The Chinatown Palace Hotel of the days just
before the fire gave that quarter of San Francisco
obliteration, the one thing that could cleanse it,
was a sorry second to the pretentious hostelry on
Market Street. A ramshackle structure, illy lit
through its crooked corridors and musty rooms
with ancient gas jets, it looked more, in its complete
dirt and dinginess, like an exaggerated rabbit warren.
Three stories above ground and one or two
below, cut up into rooms, the largest not more than
eight by ten, the smallest just large enough for a
bunk and an opium layout, it had survived by some
miracle the health authorities to hive in musty murk
the off-scourings of a city. Once, when Portsmouth
Square was the civic centre, it had harboured
the kings of the early gold days.</p>
<p>The rooms were larger in those days; the front
suites that gave ease to the idling, new-made
Crœsus had long since been cut up into five, six,
seven, or eight, as the increasing congestion of the
quarter threw an increasing swarm of vermin to
its recesses.</p>
<p>Save for white “dope fiends,” known in the
vernacular of the police as “hops,” “cokes,” or
“morphs,” users of opium, cocaine, or morphine,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</SPAN></span>
it was inhabited solely by Chinese, some of them
coolie labourers, but the most of them likewise
“fiends.”</p>
<p>Below the basement floor were a dozen rooms not
high enough for a man to stand erect in. The light
of day never entered. What light they received
came from one main gas jet in the corridor or the
occasional flash of a policeman’s pocket light as the
Chinatown squad made their rounds. Save for
the members of the squad, and at times a jaded
police reporter, idling from the reporters’ room in
the near-by Hall of Justice on a quiet night through
the district with the squad sergeant, it is probable
no white man save the “fiends” of the district had
ever before gasped for breath in that foul den—no
white man, that is, before Captain Robert Swanson,
who entered there one night never to emerge.
It was three days before one of the denizens of the
subcellar, finally realising that the occupant of the
next bunk was not in the stupor of drug but the
stiffness of death, made his way with frantic hippity-hoppings
to the first member of the squad he could
find and reported the matter, not forgetting to
whine for his ten cents for so doing.</p>
<p>Such, in substance, were the facts in the mystery
that set the city and the coast—Swanson was a
notable figure in shipping circles—in a ferment
for a week.</p>
<p>For, more than the initial fact of finding the
body in Chinatown’s cesspool, five days had now<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</SPAN></span>
elapsed with not one single additional fact of consequence
to clear the mystery. Suspects without
number had been jailed. Every ex-convict,
“fiend,” vagrant, or questionable character of the
district, white, yellow, or black, male or female,
had been put through the police mill. The opium
dens had been emptied of their wastrels, blinking
like bats in the light of day. Swanson’s past and
his present life were run under a high-power lens;
his servants’ and his employees’ lives and the lives
of his former servants and former employees; Chief
Leslie was a fellow member of the Cosmos Club
with Swanson, and if any additional good to his
natural police pride were necessary to spur him on,
that afforded it. Every recourse that police experience
could adapt or devise was applied.</p>
<p>Always there was lacking motive: that mainspring
for crime.</p>
<p>That Swanson had by any chance been addicted
to the drug habit was early dismissed. Practically
every hour of his methodical life could be accounted
for for months back.</p>
<p>But in so far as his movements were concerned
from the moment he left his doorstep on Wednesday
evening until the body was found, he may as
well have left his doorstep invested in an invisible
mantle, for no living person that could be located
had seen him alive.</p>
<p>There was one peculiar circumstance. He had
worn that night a heavy ulster overcoat, although<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</SPAN></span>
the night had not been chilly, and Mrs. Swanson
had remarked on it at parting. The coat was not
found with the body.</p>
<p>It is not exaggeration to say that in physical
output Lanagan worked harder than any three reporters
or detectives during the first five days of
the case. He did not take me into his confidence:
he seldom did until the “smash” approached on
any story. He smoked eternally or chewed to pulp
his own select brand of rank Manilas, or consumed
innumerable cigarettes. Lanagan never had to
bother with the daily routine of a story; that was
all left to me. His work was the big “feature”
stuff. He might not write a line for a week and
then he would saunter into the picture with a news
sensation that would upend the town.</p>
<p>But there seemed to be no “upending” on this
case. During the five days that had elapsed the
big portion of the work had fallen to me. Lanagan
had absolutely not turned a trick. On Wednesday
evening at midnight, as I turned in my story
for the day, identical as I felt it would be with the
other two morning papers, Lanagan ’phoned me to
meet him at the Hall of Justice.</p>
<p>I drifted down there.</p>
<p>“I just wanted to tell you,” was his greeting,
“that I am going to disappear. Don’t look for
me. I will discover myself when the time comes.
I’m going to lose myself up in Chinatown, for the
solution of that story is there, and I’m not coming<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</SPAN></span>
until I’ve landed something and choked off the
side remarks of the <i>Times</i> and <i>Herald</i> outfit,
if I stay there for the balance of my natural life.
The police can hang as they please to their hoary
old dogma that a ‘hop head’ never commits murder.
Just because they’re so positive, I am going
to take the other tack; at least until I have proved
their theory to my own satisfaction. There isn’t
a man outside the frequenters of this quarter knew
of that subcellar and that’s the theory I am going
to stick with now. Keep in pretty close touch with
the office so I can get you in a hurry if anything
turns up. Good-by.”</p>
<p>In another moment he was walking rapidly up
Washington Street to disappear down Dupont, out
of sight for three days.</p>
<p>The story had run eight days and a dearth of
fresh angles had thinned it out a trifle, when, on
Saturday evening, along about ten o’clock, as I
hung around the local room hoping against hope
for a call from Lanagan, it came.</p>
<p>“Meet me in front of old St. Mary’s,” he said,
shortly, and I thrilled instantly with that same
premonitory tremor that always came over me when
the climax was on. I sped down Kearney Street
and in the shadow of the church steps picked him
up.</p>
<p>“Dorrett is watching me,” he said. “He’s been
covering me for days.” Dorrett was the oldest
special policeman in Chinatown and generally held<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</SPAN></span>
to be a “leak” for the <i>Herald</i> through personal
friendship for a former police reporter, now city
editor of that paper. In such fashion do papers
develop their “sources” of news. “I have one
clue that may be the key to the solid brick wall we
have been up against. And I am not going to lose
that key to the <i>Herald</i> via Dorrett,” concluded
Lanagan, as he suddenly stepped fully into the glare
of the gas street lamp on the corner just as Dorrett
sidled up. I saw that Lanagan had deliberately
exposed himself.</p>
<p>“Really, Dorrett,” he remarked in that sinister
tone he could assume so well on occasion, “some
of these days I shall actually trip over you if you
persist in blundering beneath my feet. You might
fall quite hard in that case and hurt yourself.
However, just tell Cartwright” (city editor of the
<i>Herald</i>) “that I am going to hand him a package
of nitroglycerin right on your own particular
little bailiwick, will you? Please run along now,
like a good little special policeman, because we are
going to lose you—thusly.”</p>
<p>He turned on his heel and ran for a California
Street car just lumbering past us up the hill and I
followed suit. After a few blocks he crossed
through the car and dropped off on the other side.
Scouting cautiously back toward Chinatown by way
of Washington Street, drifting along with eyes
wide for Dorrett, we finally made Ross Alley,
where Lanagan stopped for a fraction of a second<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</SPAN></span>
at the wicket of the gambling house at No. 8.</p>
<p>At that time it was a strict rule of the gambling
“joints” that a white man could not enter. Personally,
for all of my four years’ dubbing around
on police, I never had been able to enter a Chinese
gambling house when the play was on. Yet the
lookout flashed one glance at Lanagan, grinned yellowly
and ingenuously, and the massive solid oak
door before us swung noiselessly open and we
passed quickly through. As it shut behind us I
heard a faint click-click, and glanced back. Three
separate two-by-four scantlings, heavily re-enforced
with iron, had dropped back into their sockets. The
door was as solid as a concrete wall against the
axes of the Chinatown squad; the theory being that
by the time the squad had the door battered down,
the players had departed through some secret runway.</p>
<p>“Melodrama?” laughed Lanagan at me. “But
I had to come by the back door, as it were. I
wouldn’t like to have any stray police or reporters
or Dorrett suspect I was about to interview the man
I am. They might smell a rat, possibly. We are
more isolated among these hundred Chinks, gambling
their fool heads off, than we would be in one
of Leslie’s dark cells.”</p>
<p>We passed directly through the long room with
its eight high tables, at each of which ten or a
dozen impassive Celestials, with chopsticks, beans,
and teacups, stood engaged in the contraband pastime<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</SPAN></span>
of fantan. At a table or two a pie gow game
was running, and in a corner dominoes. The air
was so heavy and heated that I felt the perspiration
starting in an instant. The Chinese gambler, if he
is winning, sticks in that thick atmosphere for hours
at a time.</p>
<p>At the rear of the room was another door, likewise
barred in triplicate. Here another lookout
grinned friendly at Lanagan and pressed on an innocent-appearing
nail head in the wainscoting and
the bars dropped and the door opened to a steep
ladder. We went down about ten feet into a blind
areaway between two buildings.</p>
<p>It was as black as your derby hat. But Lanagan,
the marvellous, stepped ahead with assurance and I
followed him gropingly. In another moment he
rapped faintly on what I took to be a section of the
brick base of the building, a click sounded, he took
me by the arm, pulled me after him, another click,
and the next moment a blaze of electric light discovered
us to be in a small lounging room elaborately
appointed in Oriental furnishings.</p>
<p>“Hullo, Mist’ Lamagum!”</p>
<p>The voice came from a corpulent, twinkling-eyed,
richly garbed Chinaman just arisen from a
massive chair of ebony and mother-of-pearl.</p>
<p>“Hello, Fu,” said Lanagan, sinking into another
massive chair and motioning me to do likewise.</p>
<p>“My friend Norton, Fu. Norton, Mr. Fu
Wong, otherwise known to me as Why Because.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</SPAN></span>
You will understand ‘why because’ presently.”</p>
<p>“Why? Becaus’? I tell you,” said Fu Wong,
chuckling. “Him funny boy, Mist’ Lamagum.
He, whatyoucalem, jolly me. You likem smoke?”
He pressed a button on the arm of his chair and a
flowing-garbed Chinese boy appeared with rich
Havanas on a tray, together with individual teacups
and two-piece teapots for three.</p>
<p>“Did you find See Wong?” Lanagan asked abruptly,
while I studied Fu, whom I knew by reputation
as one of the Chinese merchant princes. “I
am in a hurry, Fu.”</p>
<p>“I catchem. He say Charley drive aut-o-mob-<i>eel</i>.
Charley live there three, fo’ wicks. She
cry one time See bringem tea: ‘Oh, Charley!
Charley! Why fo’ you do him? What’s mala you,
Charley?’ She stop quick see See. Why? Becaus’?
See, he donno. He say Charley he usem,
what you call ’em? Hop.”</p>
<p>For the first time since this story broke, that
singular flashing, almost like a cat’s eyes, flamed
into Lanagan’s dark eyes and they shot a responsive
shiver of high tension interest through me, because
I knew that at last he had struck the trail.</p>
<p>“You have done more for me than I can ever
repay,” said Lanagan at parting. “You are a remarkable
man, Fu Wong.”</p>
<p>Fu laughed boyishly.</p>
<p>“Why? Becaus’? You save my sto’ good
name? I help you.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</SPAN></span>As we went back out the way we came in, Lanagan
enlightened me.</p>
<p>“Fu is president of the Suey Sing Tong. There
is a Chinaman, Swanson’s cook, See Wong, whom
I have been hammering on for two days. Of all
the household servants, I have a vague suspicion of
him. I couldn’t land him. Finally I looked up his
affiliation, found he was a Suey Sing man, and then
I enlisted the services of Fu Wong. See Wong
would have to talk to his tong leader where the police
or the reporters couldn’t drag information out
of him with a team of mules. He purely and
simply wouldn’t ‘sabe,’ and that’s all the satisfaction
you could get.</p>
<p>“‘Why Because’ is not only proprietor of one of
the biggest bazaars here and a director of the
Chinese Bank, but he is also proprietor—I am telling
you Chinatown secrets and not to be repeated—of
of the gambling house we came through and several
others. He is one of the powers of the quarter.</p>
<p>“There was an English tourist robbed in his
bazaar once of a couple of hundred dollars and I
was sent up here. Fu laboured under the impression
that the entire sixteen pages of the <i>Enquirer</i>
were going to be turned over to that particular robbery.
He felt the disgrace of the thing keenly,
as any high-class Chinaman would, and personally
offered the Englishman back the money. That was
a good story. For some reason Fu, not understanding<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</SPAN></span>
the American newspaper idea of ‘human interest,’
elected to think I had written a eulogy of him
deliberately. I could have had half his store at
that time, I guess, if I had wanted it. But I took
a cigar and a cup of tea, and ever since that time
I have been taken inside the inner circle up here.
The room we were in is a runway through the
basement of the bazaar next door in case of a raid.</p>
<p>“‘Charley’ was a chauffeur named Thorne, employed
by Mrs. Swanson about three months ago
for several weeks. He was one of the numerous
wastrels that that woman of unostentatious but
magnificent charities had under her protection.
There are scores in and about the city, men and
women, boys and girls, that she had taken from the
under side of life and put on top. I didn’t see him,
but some of Leslie’s men did and found nothing
suspicious. Had they known he was a ‘hop,’ however,
they might have thought differently. It establishes
a very clear apparent connection between
Swanson and the Palace Hotel and the only definite
clue that has been turned up. We will save a lot
of time by getting his address from Leslie.”</p>
<p>Lanagan was through with Leslie in a few moments.</p>
<p>“He is going home, but will be on tap with Brady
and Wilson if we need him later,” he said. “He
got curious when I mentioned Thorne, but promised
to lay off until he heard from me. Thorne
lives at Lombard and Larkin, where, in view of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</SPAN></span>
Mrs. Swanson’s undoubted suspicion that he committed
the crime, coupled with See Wong’s charge
that he is a ‘hop,’ we will now proceed to call on
him.”</p>
<p>We were there in a few moments. It was a
squalid lodging house, in charge of a slatternly beldam.
She didn’t know whether Thorne was in or
not. He was kind of loony, lately, she thought.</p>
<p>“Too bad,” said Lanagan, genially. “Has
Charley been so that he couldn’t be out the last
week? He wasn’t feeling well last time I saw him.”</p>
<p>“Ain’t seen much of him this week,” she replied.
“I didn’t know about it, but I am beginnin’ to think
he is one of them there fiends. He is actin’ something
awful sometimes lately, what with his skippin’s
and hoppin’s. You can go on up.”</p>
<p>The door was locked, but it was a rickety affair
and the lock yielded to the pressure of our shoulders.
A man who might have been any age from
twenty to forty swung himself to a sitting position
on a disordered bed and glared at us with eyes that
were wide open but only half seeing.</p>
<p>“Full of hop; and I might as well jam him on a
gamble,” said Lanagan, in an aside to me as he
stepped quickly over and pulled Thorne to his feet,
slapped him across the face, and sat him down in a
chair. A high-pitched, querulous protest was voiced
at the treatment, and then Thorne whimpered:</p>
<p>“Oh, you are so cruel! What have I ever done
to be treated so cruelly?” He began to cry.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</SPAN></span>“Done? You snivelling viper, put on your shoes
and come with me to jail. You murdered Robert
Swanson and you are going to hang for it. Get
up and come along.” Again Lanagan caught him
a sharp slap across the face. This time Thorne did
not whimper. A look of cunning came into his
eyes.</p>
<p>“Getting your wits back pretty quick, now, eh?”
sneered Lanagan.</p>
<p>Thorne stared. It seemed for a moment his
clouded eyes entirely cleared; and then the film of
the drug-sodden brain fell over his eyes again, and
he relapsed to his hunched position. He was shivering
and rocking himself, his angular knees drawn
up to his chin, clasped around with his arms.</p>
<p>“Oh, dear! Oh, dear!” His voice was pitched
high again like a woman’s. “Why is everyone so
cruel to me? I am very nervous, as you can see,
gentlemen. I really need something to quiet my
nerves. It is the doctor’s orders, really. Would
it be asking too much, now, to ask for the loan of
ten cents? Oh, dear—”</p>
<p>“<i>Thorne!</i>” Lanagan, his aspect actually ferocious,
leaped before the half-arisen suppliant. I
shrank back myself, his acting was so consummately
done.</p>
<p>“I’ll give you ten cents, you viper! You murdering,
crawling, poisonous viper! I’ll give you
the condemned cell at San Quentin and the death
watch and the black cap, and the quick drop, until<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</SPAN></span>
they crack that snake’s neck of yours into a dozen
pieces! That’s what I’ll give you!”</p>
<p>Chattering, jabbering incoherently, his long, lean,
sharp-nailed, claw-like hands working spasmodically
before his face and toward Lanagan, the fiend huddled
back. He glanced from side to side, his head
lolling, as though seeking some avenue of escape
by a desperate leap.</p>
<p>Lanagan’s eyes were within a foot of his face.
Thorne began to foam at the mouth. I thought he
was going into a fit as I watched, fascinated, the
horrible scene. Bearing down upon the wretch with
savagery in his voice and manner, Lanagan hammered
on:</p>
<p>“Give you ten cents! What do you want with
ten cents? You’ll never get another shot of coke
as long as you live, Thorne! Never in this world!
You are coming with me now, coming where you
will never need coke again! Coming to your death
by hanging for murder! <i>Not another shot in all
this world will you ever get!</i>”</p>
<p>With a shriek that was more animal’s than man’s,
Thorne suddenly lunged forward. Quicker than
the dart of a snake’s head, those hands, with their
long, lean, writhing fingers, had twisted around
Lanagan’s neck. With a strength that was the
strength of temporary insanity, he flung Lanagan
from him and fell with him. Then, like a lean
gorilla, he shook Lanagan’s head from side to side
while he screeched fearful imprecations.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</SPAN></span>“<i>You lie! You lie! I’ll get all I want! That’s
what he said, and I killed him, and I’ll kill you, too!
Yah! Yeeah!</i>” He trailed away into a maniacal
scream.</p>
<p>I hurled myself at him, but the fiend, for the
moment at least, had the strength of three men. I
finally managed to get in a blow that settled him.</p>
<p>Lanagan, rubbing his bruised neck ruefully, rose
slowly. He was panting a little but chuckling.</p>
<p>“Score one for mental suggestion on a weak
subject,” he laughed. “But I didn’t figure those
scrawny hands had quite that much strength. This
murder is clearer than print. We all but re-enacted
the scene.</p>
<p>“Now, my boy, to establish the connection that
would bring a man of Swanson’s position to a rendezvous
at the Palace, to arouse the slumbering
demon in this human orang-utang. It’s rather a
commentary on that hoary police doctrine that a
dope fiend never commits murder. I was right.”</p>
<p>Within thirty minutes Chief Leslie and Brady,
and Wilson, his right-hand men, were in the room,
and Lanagan swiftly detailed the circumstances.
Thorne had come to and was shaking and shivering
as the drug wore out of his system, leaving
him nerve-racked. He did not attempt to repudiate
his utterance, but sullenly admitted the murder.</p>
<p>In view of the words overheard by See Wong,
there was but one person to clear up the mystery.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</SPAN></span>
Leslie, Lanagan and I hurried in the chief’s machine
to the Swanson home, nearly midnight as it was.
That they had had Thorne once under examination
and had permitted him to go was a source of bitter
chagrin to the chief. Thorne showed none of the
ravages of the habit that men of weaker physique
exhibited; the day the police picked him up he had
happened to be comparatively normal, and consequently
he had passed safely through the quiz.</p>
<p>Mrs. Swanson had not yet retired, and, upon
learning that the chief was one of her late callers,
summoned us at once to the drawing-room. She
had one of those splendid faces seen occasionally in
the aged, where strength of mind or religious fervour
has brought endurance of lifelong secret pain
of body or soul. The calmness of a noble resignation
looked forth in a slight clouding of her clear
eyes and expressed itself in the faint traces of suppression
about her mobile lips. The gleaming,
snow-white hair, combed straight back from a forehead
of a remarkable breadth in a woman, invested
her like an aureole.</p>
<p>She was a woman probably of sixty years.</p>
<p>“You will appreciate, gentlemen, I trust,” she
said in a low voice of refined modulation, “that I
have endured much and am still suffering.”</p>
<p>“It is a very painful errand we are on, Mrs.
Swanson, and we will endeavour to be brief,” said
Lanagan in a voice that a Chesterfield might have
envied for courteous inflection and gentleness of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</SPAN></span>
expression, “but nevertheless it is an errand that
must be performed.” He glanced at the chief, who
nodded.</p>
<p>“Speaking as a newspaper man,” continued Lanagan,
“it is my wish at all times to spare the feelings
of those, particularly women, with whom I am
brought into relation. But the true newspaper man
is a seeker after truth, and he must follow as definite
a path as the police follow.”</p>
<p>There was an eloquent pause. She gazed from
one to the other during the interim, as though striving
to read their thoughts. It was evident that the
undercurrent that these skilled cross-examiners intended
to convey had carried home.</p>
<p>“Well?” finally. Neither Lanagan nor Leslie
spoke. There was another pause. She said at last:
“You have some information to impart to me? Or
some information to seek?”</p>
<p>“We desire to inform you,” said Leslie slowly,
and with just a shade more of hardness in his tone
as the detective began to work in him, “that we
have under arrest the confessed murderer of your
husband.”</p>
<p>She leaned involuntarily forward in her chair
and grasped the arms so hard that her knuckles
showed white through the fair skin of her hands.</p>
<p>“And we desire to inform you,” added Lanagan
quickly, “that the name of your husband’s murderer
is Charles Thorne; and we desire to ask you
what the motive was for the murder of your husband<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</SPAN></span>
by Charles Thorne; <i>and why, when you suspected
that Charles Thorne was the murderer, you
did not immediately notify the police?</i>”</p>
<p>Her hands slowly relaxed their grip on the chair
arms as she sank back into its depths. Curiously,
in the way the light struck down at her hair and her
face, it seemed that the beautiful halo of white that
had invested her, and the delicate, well-preserved
whiteness of her skin, turned suddenly to dirty grey.
If ever the blight of age settled visibly in fact or
in fiction, it settled upon her then.</p>
<p>“You—have—Charles—Thorne—under—arrest?”
she said, and her very tone was grey. She
did not deny the truth of the charge; she did not
express satisfaction that the murderer was found;
she merely asked whether they had Charles Thorne
under arrest.</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>Her eyes closed and her head dropped suddenly
back against the chair. We stepped swiftly forward,
but before we could take any measures to revive
her, her eyes had opened again. The lips
moved. She was speaking, but so gaspingly that
we bent to hear.</p>
<p>“It is the end of the long night,” she said with
many halts; “the end of the long night. A life’s
nightmare is done. God have mercy on me—”</p>
<p>She stopped completely. Then:</p>
<p>“God pity all mothers who bear as I bore—”</p>
<p>Another long pause. She was by strong effort<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</SPAN></span>
retaining the clarity of her faculties under some
heavy shock. She repeated:</p>
<p>“Who bear as I bore!”</p>
<p>The silence became acutely poignant.</p>
<p>“It must be told,” she breathed finally. “You
have asked me why I did not tell you my suspicions.
I will tell you now. Charles Thorne—”</p>
<p>Her next words came so low that had it not been
for the pregnant silence of the great drawing-room
they could not have been heard.</p>
<p>“<i>Is my son.</i>”</p>
<p>I found I had been holding my breath; and I
glanced quickly at Lanagan, to see his breast falling
with a deep exhalation.</p>
<p>“My husband did not know,” she continued,
colourlessly. “Charles Thorne does not know I
am his mother. I have tried to live a full Christian
life. I have given by tens of thousands to aid the
erring. I have thought to make all atonement....</p>
<p>“And yet the blood of my blood slew the heart
of my heart, my dear husband, one of God’s noble
men....”</p>
<p>After that wrenching confession her normal poise
began by degrees to return as the strength of an extraordinary
mind began to assert itself. The story
was soon told: of an alliance before her marriage to
Swanson, of the boy, taken by the father, to be sent
back to her after fifteen years. The dissolute
father, on his deathbed, sent Charles back to the
mother.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</SPAN></span>For fifteen years since that day she had steadily
stood sponsor for the boy. To her husband he was
but one of the many others of her objects of charity.
It may be said the boy inherited the dissolute traits
of his father. Finally, her own children by Swanson
all marrying, that profound mysterious quality
of motherhood prompted her to make one last effort
to redeem the boy under her own eyes, and she
adopted the dangerous course, for her, of bringing
him to the house as a chauffeur.</p>
<p>That he was given to drugs she did not know.
Thorne had been caught in a series of petty thefts.
Swanson had finally been compelled to discharge
him. He had left the house with maledictions upon
Swanson. Instinctively she had felt he was the
author of the crime.</p>
<p>Considering all of these circumstances, and understanding
the character of the fiend and his paternity,
it is evident that in his brain, constantly weakening
under drugs, became fixed a sinister purpose to
work out some scheme of revenge on Swanson for
driving him from a rich home and a cozy living,
with ample funds and opportunity for a secret indulgence
in his weakness.</p>
<p>As it subsequently appeared, Thorne did not
originally plan murder. Some abortive scheme of
blackmail had but half formed in his crazy brain.
He lured Swanson with a cunning letter, full of explicit
directions, to the Palace Hotel by writing that
he was seriously ill there. He begged that Mrs.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</SPAN></span>
Swanson be not informed until after Swanson had
seen him. He wanted an opportunity to redeem
himself, he wrote; and Swanson, as warm-hearted
as his wife, and not caring evidently to worry her
needlessly about the condition of one of her charges
until he had made an investigation, set out on his
errand of humanity, never to return.</p>
<p>He wore his ulster, obviously so that he would
not be recognised going alone into the Palace Hotel.
In the subcellar he had met Thorne. There
was a prolonged talk, and Swanson made the mistake
of chiding the fiend on his habits. Desire coming
upon him strongly, Thorne finally exhibited himself
in all his ugly weakness, and the spectacle was
too much for the eyes of Swanson, unaccustomed to
such sights. He was stooping his way out of the
little room after sternly refusing Thorne’s appeal
for money, when the long, lean fingers of the half-insane
man, with some congenital strain outcropping
perhaps of that vagabond, dissolute father,
found an easy goal in a man already half-suffocated
in the thick air of the place.</p>
<p>Alarmed, when his fit had passed, at what he had
done, and fearing to rob the body, Thorne had
quakingly slipped into Swanson’s ulster and made
his way in terror to his own room. First he had
journeyed to the foot of Powell Street, weighted the
coat with a rock, and cast it into the water of the
bay. It was subsequently recovered and served as
the single bit of incriminating evidence to substantiate<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</SPAN></span>
his confession. His letter to Swanson, in
Swanson’s pocket, he had taken with him to destroy by
tearing into fine bits.</p>
<p>Such were the salient features of a most extraordinary
crime as ultimately established.</p>
<p>But to return to Mrs. Swanson’s drawing-room,
where Lanagan is speaking:</p>
<p>“Charles Thorne does not know, then, that you
are his mother?”</p>
<p>“He does not know.”</p>
<p>“Who does know?”</p>
<p>“No living person save myself and you gentlemen.”</p>
<p>“In that case, then, Mrs. Swanson,” said Lanagan
simply, “your secret will die with us.”</p>
<p>She choked in attempting to speak, and, tears
streaming from her eyes, bade us each adieu.
For my part I confess I was blinking like a boy.
The outer doors closed behind us. Then:</p>
<p>“Back to the room for you, chief,” snapped Lanagan
laconically. “Throw Thorne in at 2:15.
Charles Thorne, a former chauffeur, murdered
Swanson after attempted blackmail failed. You
stand, of course, chief?”</p>
<p>“Stand, Jack?” replied that sterling officer, “it’s
in so deep it can only come out when the last drop
leaves my veins.”</p>
<p>“I knew that,” said Lanagan. “Now, Norrie,”
sharply, “get together! We have exactly <i>fifty-five
minutes to press time</i>!”</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="ph2">IX<br/>
THE DOMINANT STRAIN</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr class="tb" />
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