<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</SPAN></span>
<h2 class="nobreak">X<br/> OUT OF THE DEPTHS</h2></div>
<p class="drop-cap">THE Stockslager case will be recalled immediately
upon the Pacific Coast as a crime of
some years ago marked by the peculiar atrocity of
the circumstances. Aged Mrs. Stockslager, living
in a small cottage at the extreme northern end of
Thirty-third Avenue—in those days a region
sparsely settled and visited chiefly by picknickers
bound for Baker’s Beach—was found one Sunday
morning literally hacked to pieces.</p>
<p>From the location of portions of the dismembered
body it was apparent that the author had planned to
carry the evidences of the crime away and sink them
in the waters of the ocean, which tumbled and rolled
on the rocks at the base of the steep cliff that
marked the extremity of Thirty-third Avenue. A
potato sack, with the torso, was found near the rear
door to the cottage, indicating that whoever had
committed the deed had probably been interrupted
while carrying the remains to the bay; and had then
fled.</p>
<p>A kitchen butcher knife was the weapon used.
Robbery was evidently the motive, for the hut had
been ransacked thoroughly, such poor and mean<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</SPAN></span>
trinkets as the recluse was known to possess having
been taken.</p>
<p>Mrs. Stockslager did a small business in sandwiches,
pop corn and soda water with the picknickers.
The rumours of a miser’s hoard that usually
attached to such as she had long been current. But
whether the slayer or slayers realised a profit in
money could not be determined as there was no one
who could be found sufficiently familiar with her
life to say whether she did or did not have a store
of money on the premises.</p>
<p>Such were the general facts which Sampson, city
editor of the <i>Enquirer</i>, skeletonised tersely to Lanagan
as that police reporter of superior talents reported
for duty after a lapse of more than ordinary
duration.</p>
<p>“Hop to it, Jack,” added Sampson. “You’ve
had your salary for two weeks. Show your appreciation.”</p>
<p>Those were the days before automobiles might
be requisitioned—occasionally—for big assignments,
and Lanagan, taking the steam line that in
those days twisted around the ocean shore, was considerably
later than the coroner’s deputies, who had
already discharged their functions and now were
engaged in making an impromptu meal upon the
old woman’s supply of sandwiches, the only loot
available.</p>
<p>Phillips and Castle, special duty men from the
Golden Gate Park police station, were also on the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</SPAN></span>
scene. The “upper office” at headquarters is recruited—where
it is not recruited by politics or
favouritism—by these active young officers on
special duty at the outside stations, and Lanagan
knew that this particular brace of plain-clothes men
were hardworking and ambitious and without the
“strings” that many times bring the ablest of upper
office men a trifle too considerately into touch
with the outlaw clans.</p>
<p>“What do you make of it, Phillips?” asked Lanagan,
as the officer placed his note-book in his pocket.</p>
<p>“Wouldn’t call it a suicide, exactly,” replied
Phillips, offishly.</p>
<p>Lanagan laughed. “No?” he drawled. “I
wouldn’t put it past you to call it natural causes,
though.”</p>
<p>Phillips flushed to the base of his thick neck but
held himself from answering. He knew Lanagan
by reputation and did not care to match wits with
him. Lanagan worked with most of the “upper
office” men on intimate terms, but found it occasionally
necessary to put a “crimp” in the arrogance,
or ignorance, of the outside station officers,
who do not come into contact with newspaper men
as frequently as the down town men and at times
elect to affect the same impartiality with which they
treat ordinary persons. Such Lanagan took pride in
bringing to a proper appreciation of the honourable
place occupied by the brothers of the Tribe.</p>
<p>Lanagan ignored the two detectives and gave his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</SPAN></span>
attention to the coroner’s deputies, the cottage and
outskirts, and the contents of the wicker basket.
Before the next train arrived, bringing a dozen reporters
and camera men from the other papers, and
myself, Lanagan had finished his investigations. I
found him seated on a salt grass hummock, smoking
and gazing absently up and down the ragged, rocky
shore line. The surf was tumbling heavily although
a few hundred yards out the sea was an undulating
swell of greenish beauty.</p>
<p>“Some fine day,” was his greeting. “Let’s take
a stroll down.”</p>
<p>We made our way down the cliff to the rocks at
the water’s edge.</p>
<p>“Imagination is oftentimes a great thing in solving
crime,” he remarked, as he poised himself perilously
on a slippery rock and relit his cigar. “That
and the ‘take a chance’ instinct. Call it a hunch,
bull-luck, accident, or as one great French detective
said, ‘le grand hasard.’ Beautiful picture, is it
not?”</p>
<p>He pointed toward the Heads, where a Pacific
Mail steamship was just putting her pilot down the
side. She made a fine picture in truth, with her
clean, lithe lines and her smoke blowing back like
the wind-blown tresses of a girl.</p>
<p>We strolled along the intermittent stretches of
sandy beach or clambered over the rocks and it
finally struck me that Lanagan’s ferret eyes were not
at all absent-minded or entirely busied with the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</SPAN></span>
natural beauties of the scene, but that he was examining
closely every square inch of the ground we
travelled; and the waters as we passed.</p>
<p>“Phillips is rather cagey,” he remarked. “He’ll
have to be taught his place. He’s a good officer,
though; and Leslie has his eye on him. We must
look out for that chap. He not only has good legs,
a prime requisite of a detective or a reporter, but
he has a head that really works once in a while.”</p>
<p>He sat down finally under the shelter of a great
rock and motioned me to do likewise. Then he
pulled from his pocket, carefully tucked away, a
V-shaped piece of paper written over with Chinese
characters. The corner that made the apex of the
V was crinkled.</p>
<p>“What do you make of it?”</p>
<p>“It’s a piece of a Chinese newspaper,” I replied.</p>
<p>“Really! You would do credit to Phillips.
<i>Examine</i> it this time.”</p>
<p>I tried again, but could make nothing of it.</p>
<p>“Look.”</p>
<p>He uncrumpled the slight crinkling at the apex
and a tiny bit of red paper was exposed. I was
ashamed of my own lack of observation; but just
as puzzled as before and said so.</p>
<p>“I should say,” said Lanagan, “that this paper
with the Chinese characters was a piece of wrapping
paper; that someone tore it from a package
with his finger nails and that a portion of the red
wrapper of the package itself, came off in his finger<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</SPAN></span>
nails. See?” He crumpled it up and sure enough
it fitted neatly into the space under his finger nail.</p>
<p>“Well?” I asked, vaguely. Then I had an inspiration.
The Chinese burial ground was only an
eighth of a mile away. Lanagan obviously had
some theory connecting Chinese with the crime, the
bit of paper evidently having dropped from a
Chinaman’s blouse. I told him so. He laughed
immoderately but indulgently and carefully put the
bit of paper away in his pocket.</p>
<p>“You’re a stem-winder when it comes to writing
fancy leads for my police stories,” he said, still
chuckling, “but I guess I’ll have to give up for
keeps trying to make a detective out of you. I
have shown you in perspective as it were, during the
past twenty minutes, the solution of this entire
crime—if my theory is not altogether wrong—and
you can’t see it. Let’s get busy. Your legs
can at least be of service to me.</p>
<p>“I want you to stick around here for a couple
of hours. Tackle everybody in sight for a knowledge
of Mrs. Stockslager; how long she has been
out here, her past, who her family are if any, who
her visitors have been; if she had any particular
idiosyncrasies or hobbies. Take in all the houses
within a radius of a mile—there are only four or
five—and try to get some kind of a line on her.
Don’t overlook the small boy. In out-of-the-way
regions like this he is the pioneer of civilisation and
you may tumble on to more through some roving<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</SPAN></span>
urchin than all the grown-ups in the county. I
will leave instructions at the office where to meet
me later. I anticipate lively entertainment ahead.”</p>
<p>When we got back to the cottage the coroner’s
deputies had gone, as had Phillips and Castle.
Camera men were taking the house from many
angles; artists were busy sketching the interior—that
was the heyday of “yellow journalism”—marking
the “spot” with the old familiar cross.
Reporters were still cluttering around. A crowd
of morbid persons, attracted out of the very sky
like vultures, were already gathered.</p>
<p>“Suppose you’ve got it all cleared?” remarked
Bradley of the <i>Times</i> to Lanagan. He was Lanagan’s
nearest approach to a rival as a police reporter.</p>
<p>“Clear as print can make it,” replied Lanagan as
he turned for the train.</p>
<p>He ran for the car, leaving Bradley secretly uneasy.
He had a wholesome regard for Lanagan
and knew that he was of few words and not given
to wasting them. I slipped the rest of the newspaper
men and tramped the sandhills “covering”
all the houses, “buzzing” an occasional small boy.
The best I could get for two hours’ hard work—and
the first “tip” came from an unwashed, sling-shooting
young American—was a vague story that
no one could substantiate, that Mrs. Stockslager
had a worthless son who infrequently visited her
for money. I hugged this information close until<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</SPAN></span>
I could see Lanagan. It so happened he ordered
me to keep it quiet for that day, giving no reasons.</p>
<p>I was chagrined the next morning to awaken and
find that Bradley had the same piece of information
and had “flashed” it on the front page for an exclusive
double-leaded feature to his story.</p>
<p>The search then turned to the son. He could be
traced to within six or seven months of the murder.
I had to lumber along as best I could in handling
the story without Lanagan’s assistance. The stories
in all of the papers became monotonously uniform.
On the third day the interest was thinning. There
had not been a single new fact discovered; nor, so
far as the <i>Enquirer</i> was concerned, had there been
a word from Lanagan.</p>
<p>“He must have something,” Sampson said to me
irritably on the third day. “But take a flier through
his hangouts on the chance that he might have
gone off again.”</p>
<p>I shook my head. “That isn’t Lanagan with a
story on,” I said. “He does his drinking when the
story is turned in.” Nevertheless I took a quick
skirmish to Connor’s, Fogarty’s and “Red”
Murphy’s; looked up “Kid” Monahan and some
of Lanagan’s intimates in the upper office. I could
find no trace of him.</p>
<p>Toward evening I dropped back to the <i>Enquirer</i>
after a final round-up of the ends of the story at
police headquarters, and there Lanagan sat with
his heels on Sampson’s desk, with that pulseless individual<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</SPAN></span>
shooting questions at him with the speed
and precision of an automatic revolver.</p>
<p>“I’ve given you all I am free to give just now,”
said Lanagan, shutting down on the questioning.
“You’ve got a good enough scoop to hold the story
for to-morrow. Let me handle the rest in my own
way, will you?” He was nettled. “Don’t be so
didactic. Do you think I’ve been spending the last
three days with a dry nurse?” He was the only
man on the <i>Enquirer</i> who could take that tone with
Sampson and hold his job.</p>
<p>“No. I know you’ve been on your toes hard,
Jack, and I appreciate it. Only the news-call gets
the best of me and this story has us all on edge,”
replied Sampson.</p>
<p>“You’re not to go near the prison,” continued
Lanagan. “I need Norton to-night. Let Martin
write the story from here. Stockslager is absolutely
out of it. He has been a trusty at the city
prison for about six months, which clears him up.
Name he goes under is ‘Swede’ Stockley. The
police have known it all along but they have kept it
dark for certain reasons which I am not at liberty
now to state.</p>
<p>“Lend me that nice, new mackintosh of yours,
Sampson. It’s raining like blazes and the enthusiastic
Mr. Norton and myself will have a hard stand
to-night. Take your raincoat, Norton. We are
going out looking for ghosts around the Stockslager
cottage. There’s a real ghost of the old lady<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</SPAN></span>
out there and I’ve wanted for a long time to have
a run-in with a genuine spook. She was seen on
the cliff last night as the train stopped. McCluskey,
the conductor, thought he heard a sort of moaning.
He’s a pretty nervy chap and the moans, coming
it seemed from the hut, didn’t scare him much.
He walked over that way and silhouetted at the edge
of the cliff he swears he saw the old lady herself.
It was too much even for McCluskey and he ran
back to the train.</p>
<p>“He and the engineer, Roberts, went back with
a couple of crowbars although he didn’t say what
good crowbars would do in tackling a bonafide
ghost. They just got one glimpse of the thing and
it disappeared and they both swear it couldn’t have
had time to get any place before they reached the
scene. It was a fairly clear night, during a break
in the storm, and they wasted five minutes and then
went back to their train.</p>
<p>“I was out there to-day and McCluskey told me
the yarn. They’ve kept it quiet around the car
barn for fear of being ridiculed. I have them
pledged to secrecy. Don’t use that angle of the
story to-morrow, though, as I want to do some
ghost hunting before the whole town hears about
it and flocks out there.</p>
<p>“Come on, Norrie. Got your gun?”</p>
<p>That ghost talk gave me all sorts of forebodings.
With a black night ahead and a driving rain, ghost
hunting on the scene of the murder, in an environment<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</SPAN></span>
sufficiently forbidding on a wintry night in
any event, failed to stir me to any particular height
of enthusiasm.</p>
<p>“Fire ahead,” said Sampson, with one of his
mirthless grins. But he was sitting comfortably in
a steam-heated office.</p>
<p>It was nine o’clock when we boarded the steam
cars at the old Central Avenue terminal. McCluskey
was a solid-jawed, sensible, self-reliant looking
chap. It puzzled me. A sober, steady man like
that must have seen something very convincing before
sponsoring talk of ghosts.</p>
<p>“Ghost hunting?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Yes,” replied Lanagan. “Good feature story,
this ghost stuff. Keep it quiet for a day or two
longer, will you?”</p>
<p>“Sure. I’ll be on the watch for the <i>Enquirer</i>
to see about it. Looked for it to-night, but didn’t
see it.”</p>
<p>He slowed down for us about an eighth of a mile
from the Thirty-third Avenue stop and we dropped
off into a bitter rain.</p>
<p>That rain would have quenched the tail fires of
hell.</p>
<p>We struggled on, heads down. There was no
use in trying to talk and I knew Lanagan would take
his own time about giving me any information.
We suddenly pulled stiffly up against two bulky,
raincoated figures. A dark lantern flashed, first in
my face, then in Lanagan’s.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</SPAN></span>“Well, well!” It was Lanagan’s ready voice,
pitched a trifle high on account of the beating rain.
“If it isn’t Messrs. Phillips and Castle! Walking
to reduce weight, I presume?”</p>
<p>“What are you fellows doing out here?” asked
Phillips, gruffly.</p>
<p>“Well, Phillips, seeing that it’s you, I’ll tell you:
It’s none of your business. Maybe we’re going to
swim to the Farallones. Do you understand me
perfectly?”</p>
<p>“Isn’t it? We’ll see. And I don’t know
whether we want you snuffing around here or not,”
replied Phillips. He was a choleric man, was Phillips,
with a neck too thick even for a policeman. I
thought for a moment Lanagan would have us both
ordered back, but he only laughed, in that mocking,
Machiavelian laugh of his that could rasp like a file
on a sore tooth.</p>
<p>“Dear me,” he said, “your mood fits the weather,
Phillips; very disagreeable. I am not concerned
with your wants. I’m going to snuff to my heart’s
content. Now please step off the right of way and
permit us to pass. We are both citizens of this
great and glorious city that overpays you most disgracefully
in proportion to your attainments; and
as such citizens our powers and privileges on the
county domain are precisely as full and complete as
yours. Phillips, you’ll never do. No policeman
ever succeeds who begins by antagonising newspaper
men. I’m telling you, you won’t do. Step<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</SPAN></span>
aside, please. We want to go on and we don’t
purpose to walk around you to do it.”</p>
<p>For a moment things looked ugly, with Phillips
standing fast. Castle took him by the arm.</p>
<p>“Come on, Tom, you’re wrong,” he said, and the
two officers stepped to one side and we passed on,
with Lanagan chuckling aloud.</p>
<p>“Ghost hunting is becoming a regular fad,” he
said finally. “And I shouldn’t be surprised to find
a few more hunters scattered around. We will let
Phillips and Castle pass.”</p>
<p>We stepped quickly to one side and sank down
behind a hillock of very wet and very cold sand.
Lanagan was correct. The two detectives had
turned and followed us. They went on ahead, having
missed us.</p>
<p>It was shivery. Here were four men, two trailing
two others who assumed they were the trailers;
and all bound for a murder house on a black night
to hunt ghosts: for it was safe to assume that in
some fashion Phillips and Castle had heard the
ghost episode. Did we but know it at the time,
we were in turn being trailed by two keen eyed,
storm-coated men, each of whom kept a ready hand
in his overcoat pocket.</p>
<p>For, as Phillips and Castle disappeared on ahead
and we were just stepping back to the railroad
tracks from our place of concealment, Lanagan suddenly
bore back and dropped. I followed suit.</p>
<p>“More ghost hunters,” he whispered in my ear,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</SPAN></span>
pointing. Two blurred, indistinct figures passed
along the right of way. It was awesome. But
Lanagan gave me no time for questions. Stooping
low, threshing softly through the dripping salt
grass, in and out among the sand dunes, we worked
our way gradually toward the cliffs along the ocean.
The coat fairly well protected my body, but my
shoes were soaked and I was drenched with the
cold, numbing rain to my knees.</p>
<p>In a position I should judge about twenty yards
from the point where the path from the Stockslager
path led over the cliff to the rocks below, we
crouched against a hummock. The ocean roared
beneath us and the white froth of the breakers,
tumbling on the rocks, could be faintly seen. Each
time it would flash into the corner of my eye, I
thought it was ghost time. I don’t believe in ghosts,
of course; but, under such circumstances, one can’t
help wondering a little bit. From behind us, as we
lay there, once, twice, thrice, four times we heard
the toot, toot of the train; and I knew that we had
lain there for two mortal hours, because the train
made hourly round trips.</p>
<p>I thought of Sampson and his snug office and his
snug salary; and I compared myself, taking the
chances of anything from a pistol ball to pneumonia
for my thirty dollars a week. I concluded to quit
the business at the end of this scrape. But I always
determined to do that under such circumstances.
So does every newspaper man; and they always<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</SPAN></span>
show up for work the next day. Were we not at
least potential paranoiacs we wouldn’t be newspaper
men. Certainly otherwise we wouldn’t do the
things we do for the pay we get. Regarding newspaper
photographers, there is no question. They
are all crazy; except one.</p>
<p>We had drunk the last drop from the healthy
flask apiece we had brought and I was settling back
in soggy misery for more suffering, my eyes so
blurred with watching and staring that I could see
slinking forms in fancy every place I turned, when
Lanagan’s lean hand clutched my leg. He had
taken a position lower and nearer the path than I
and could get a dim perspective of the edge of the
cliff just where the path descended.</p>
<p>I peered ahead. Faintly I could see a single figure,
outlined in blurred relief and then it disappeared,
apparently into thin air. Whether it was
man or woman I could not have told. That it disappeared
before my eyes I knew.</p>
<p>It gave one a creepy feeling. I was about to
speak to Lanagan but his warning pressure was still
on my calf. Probably thirty minutes passed, or it
may have been only three. Another figure came
into view; and then another, and disappeared.</p>
<p>Then I realised that the first figure had simply
slipped down the path and out of sight. I wondered
if something of the sort hadn’t happened when
McCluskey was ghost hunting.</p>
<p>Still Lanagan held that vice-like clutch on me.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</SPAN></span>
Another prolonged interval. Two more figures
bulked into view and disappeared. Many more
minutes passed and Lanagan said no word. The
wind during the hours had died away, but the rain
continued, pelting now straight down. Lanagan’s
hand finally loosened itself from my leg. He
pointed over the ocean toward the intermittent
flashes of the lighthouse at Land’s End. Between
the Land’s End and Fort Point lights could be seen—the
lights of a vessel.</p>
<p>“She’s a day overdue on account of the storm,”
Lanagan shot up at me. “She’s heading through
the Golden Gate now. We’ll have some fun shortly,
I reckon.”</p>
<p>He straightened up and stretched himself and I
did likewise, threshing my arms to start the blood
into circulation. I was cold, cramped and grouchy.</p>
<p>“Jack,” I said impatiently, “cut out this mystery
stuff and give me the facts. You’ve got me neck
and neck with pneumonia now. Kick through with
this story, whatever it is, or I’m going to tear down
that cliff after those fellows and start something if
only to keep warm.”</p>
<p>Of course he only laughed. The man must have
been made of chilled steel.</p>
<p>“Easy, Norrie. Think of the ten cents’ carfare
you can charge up on this assignment. That ought
to be some compensation, that and the glory of the
thing, even if you do get sciatica or lumbago or some
other old woman’s complaint. Norrie, sometimes<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</SPAN></span>
you make me weary. Here I’m staging one of the
finest climaxes you have ever participated in. I
have adopted a true Shakespearean method of suiting
the natural surroundings to the action. It’s
rather an epic situation, in my opinion.</p>
<p>“Now that liner—it was the Mail boat <i>Hongkong</i>—has
finally passed inside the gate. Any
minute something may happen, and I pick you out
of the entire staff to be here when it does happen;
here in an elemental atmosphere where human lives
may be snuffed out as we snuffed out the contents of
those flasks, and still you’re not satisfied. It’s a big,
vital, gripping situation. Where’s your imagination?”</p>
<p>“Oh, hell. You’re drunk. Let’s chase down
after those men. Let’s do something to start things,
whatever they may be. I’m cold.”</p>
<p>Lanagan was genuinely put out with me. Later
I knew why. He had been hanging around those
bleak cliffs for two nights and skulking in the sand
dunes for two days watching the Stockslager hut.
No wonder I was a “quitter” by comparison. He
whirled on me and I saw his eyes flashing with that
curious light that I had seen in them on rare occasions
when he was thoroughly aroused.</p>
<p>“You either quit whining or beat it back to
town.”</p>
<p>If he had struck me in the face it couldn’t have
affected me differently, such was the magnetism of
that remarkable man.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</SPAN></span>“I beg your pardon, Jack. I didn’t mean to
rough you,” I said, and he was his natural self in a
moment, too.</p>
<p>“All right. Forget it. Let’s take a peek over
the cliff.” We crawled to the edge of the path.
Lanagan was ahead. He was on his feet with a
leap the instant he struck the ledge, and I up beside
him.</p>
<p>“<i>Ha!</i>” he shouted. “<i>They’re at it! Now we’ll
see! Now we’ll see! Le grand hasard!</i>”</p>
<p>Far down below I saw a half a dozen flares in the
darkness; smattered, smeared flares of yellowish
light and then all was blackness again. There came
no report from weapons, the roaring of the surf
drowning that. More by instinct than anything
else to be on the scene of action, I made a quick step
toward the path. Lanagan’s hand was on my arm.</p>
<p>“Wait,” he said, curtly. “This is no funeral of
ours. Wait.”</p>
<p>He knelt down, arching his hands around his
eyes and peering long and intently.</p>
<p>“Revenue officers,” he said. “We can’t monkey
with them. Haven’t got them on my staff like
Leslie and his men. They’ll be up.”</p>
<p>Revenue officers! A light began to dawn upon
me.</p>
<p>The toot, toot of the engine came.</p>
<p>“Beat it, Norrie! Hold that train,” ordered
Lanagan. “There may be some wounded here to
rush to town. Quick!”</p>
<div class="figcenter"><ANTIMG src="images/i295.jpg" alt="" /></div>
<p class="caption">“On the floor they placed the figure they bore, a stalwart figure of a man.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</SPAN></span>I was already off on the run past the Stockslager
hut to the little platform where the train stopped.
It was some distance away around the curve. As I
stood there, with the rain pattering a monotonous
tattoo on the planking, there came a sudden groan,
a drawn-out, rasping groan, and I whirled toward
the house; my body one quiver of gooseflesh. It
came again, from up toward the roof; and as it came
there was a breathing of light wind across my face.
I laughed aloud; but nervously. Another light
puff of wind, another long-drawn groan—loose
shingles, or a loose piece of clapboarding, giving, evidently,
just the slightest against a nail. The other
end of the ghost mystery was cleared.</p>
<p>The train pulled in. I told McCluskey there had
been a shooting, and to hold the train.</p>
<p>“Can’t back her in. We’ll run out to the first
switch!” he cried, as he jumped into the cab with
the engineer.</p>
<p>I ran back to find four men bearing a form between
them. Lanagan was alongside the leader of
the four, talking swiftly. They kicked in the door
of the hut and made a light. On the floor, littered
just as it had been littered the Sunday morning of
the murder discovery, they placed the figure they
bore, a stalwart figure of a man. A leg and an arm,
I could see, were useless. They felt of his arm and
leg and he never winced, staring straight at the ceiling.
They ripped away his oilskin coat, his over-shirt
and undershirt. He had a bullet just over the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</SPAN></span>
heart, a deep wound and one that bled inwardly, for
no blood oozed out.</p>
<p>Two of the four men had deposited on the floor
bulky bundles wrapped in rubber, around which
double pairs of life preservers were strapped.</p>
<p>He who seemed to be the leader of the four
(“Marshall, chief revenue inspector,” Lanagan
whispered to me), took the man’s pulse after the
examination was ended. No one had spoken. In
the faces of all, as far as I could detect in the murky
light of the smoky chimney of an oil lamp, was a
set, grim look; not the look that officers usually wear
when there has been a killing or a successful capture
in a crime.</p>
<p>Marshall straightened up. He said, solemnly:</p>
<p>“Billy, I think you are going. What have you
got to say? Any message?”</p>
<p>“No, Jim,” said the man on the floor, weakly.
“You got me right. I went into the thing with my
eyes open. Only don’t ask me to squeal on the
others. I got what I deserved, I guess. I’ve
brought shame to the service and I’m ready to pass.
Thank God, thank God,” he burst out with sudden
choking, “the wife is not here—passed out last
year, you know; and there never were any kiddies.
No one to suffer but you boys that I’ve disgraced.”</p>
<p>A tear rolled from his eyes to the floor.</p>
<p>“Can I say a word to him, Marshall?” It
was Lanagan who spoke. The other men had
bowed their heads. On one or two faces I could<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</SPAN></span>
see a tear, for all the wetness that the rain had left
there.</p>
<p>“Enright,” said Lanagan, kneeling down beside
the stricken man, “you know you are passing.
Make a clean breast. <i>Who killed Mrs. Stockslager?</i>”</p>
<p>His eyes closed and he seemed to shrink as though
trying to hug the floor he was lying upon.
“Whisky!” came Lanagan’s sharp whisper. Unconsciously
he was taking command of the situation,
asserting his natural leadership as he always
did in tense moments. Marshall passed him a
pocket flask and he forced a sip to Enright’s lips,
holding his head up with his left arm. The eyes
opened.</p>
<p>“<i>I did.</i>”</p>
<p>“Oh, God, Billy! No, no! Not that, not
that!” It was Marshall. He broke down and
sobbed like a boy. Twenty-five years he had been
in the federal blue with Billy Enright, one in the
revenue, the other in the customs service.</p>
<p>“Yes—<i>I did!</i> Jim, get me a priest! Don’t let
me die like this! For old time’s sake, Jim!”</p>
<p>The train was whistling on its return.</p>
<p>“We’re taking you right in,” said Lanagan,
soothingly. “We’ll have a priest for you. Why
did you kill her?”</p>
<p>Enright motioned for the flask with his free arm.
Lanagan gave him a long pull. For a time at least
his voice was stronger.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</SPAN></span>“She was threatening to tip off the gang. She
used to work with us. She was well paid. She
didn’t know I was in the service. She found it out
some way. I came out one day to talk over with
her about her threats. I’d been drinking, worrying
over fear of exposure. She wouldn’t listen to
reason. She was a wolf. She goaded me crazy, I
guess. She taunted me about being a traitor to
the country I served. Well, I lost my head. I
grabbed the butcher knife and killed her. So help
me God as I am about to die, that’s the truth.”</p>
<p>The eyes closed for a space, and then he continued:</p>
<p>“I stuck a few things in my pockets to make it
look like robbery. Then I started to cut up the
body to pack it in a sack and bury it or drop it off
the cliff. I weakened and dropped it outside the
door and ran. It was dark but I ran for miles
around over the sandhills and it seemed she was
always right after me. It was awful.</p>
<p>“I got my wits back later. I saw the police and
the papers were after the son. I felt easier. There
was a big shipment coming in on the <i>Hongkong</i>—$40,000
all told. No one would come out here and
take a chance landing it. Afraid the police were
watching the house. I volunteered. I figured if
any one saw me nosing around I could give them
the inspector talk. I hung around last night but
the ship was held away out on account of the storm.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</SPAN></span>
I had to come out—again—to-night—that’s all,
boys—”</p>
<p>The door flung open and through it came Phillips
and Castle. McCluskey and Roberts followed.
The train had stopped unnoticed, so tense was the
interest within the hut in the dying man’s recital.</p>
<p>“Quick, take him up,” said Lanagan. They
stooped to lift him.</p>
<p>“Here, what’s all this?” It was Phillips.</p>
<p>“Stand aside!” came Marshall’s blunt command.
It was obeyed. Enright’s eyes had closed. He was
made as comfortable as possible with cushions on
the train, as that ancient rattle-trap strained and
tugged to make the greatest speed of its history.
Enright’s eyes did not open on the trip in.</p>
<p>They never opened again.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Lanagan filled in for me the details of the story.
The bit of red paper, crinkled inside the paper with
the Chinese characters, meant but one thing: opium.
Here was where his wide acquaintance with the underworld
and Chinatown, the customs service and
the water front, aided him.</p>
<p>Puzzling over the presence of an opium wrapping
in that isolated hut Lanagan had seated himself upon
the salt grass hummock to smoke. Into his field of
vision steamed the Pacific Mail liner—and his
“hunch” came with it. His examination of the
shore followed to locate a cove that would give a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</SPAN></span>
safe place to float the opium to land from a launch
or white hall boat by day or night. Such a cove he
had found, where the waters for a sixteenth of a
mile deposited their driftwood. His theory was
complete. The hut was a smuggler’s runway; the
woman was in the ring and for a breach of faith
had been slain, an attempt being made to have it
appear she was slain by robbers.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>That Marshall and his men had been preparing to
close in on the gang that made the cabin their rendezvous
Lanagan did not know until the night before.</p>
<p>“Then I found the whole map out here sprinkled
with them. Recognised Marshall, who nearly
tumbled over me; but he probably figured I was one
of his men, and said nothing.</p>
<p>“It was funny. McCluskey and Roberts chasing
ghosts with myself and four revenue officers as the
audience. I nearly laughed when McCluskey told
me the story this morning. They didn’t come
within fifteen yards of the edge of the cliff, either,
although they said they did.</p>
<p>“The weather man told me to-day the storm
would blow over by evening and I figured the <i>Hongkong</i>
would be making port and the ring would
attempt to land their stuff; every liner has been
bringing it in. I came out last night on the chance
she might try to make port.</p>
<p>“No one suspected Enright.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</SPAN></span>It was a quarter to one o’clock when the train
pulled into the depot. Marshall turned the body
over to Phillips and Castle with a terse resume of
the facts and then took his men and his bundles of
opium and disappeared. They laid Enright out on
a bench to await the coroner’s deputies.</p>
<p>Phillips came over to us.</p>
<p>“I guess I acted kind of stiff,” he said, in awkward
apology. “But I want to hand it to you.
You scored on us strong.”</p>
<p>Lanagan put out his hand. The detective took it.</p>
<p>“You’ll never make any mistake treating newspaper
men right, Phillips. Just do this much for us
now, will you? Hold off thirty minutes before you
telephone the morgue. That will keep the story
exclusively for the <i>Enquirer</i>.”</p>
<p>“I’ll do it,” said Phillips.</p>
<p>And he did; which may seem to the layman a little
thing, but to the newspaper man a detail of vast importance;
because it enabled Lanagan, sending the
story to the office by telephone, to score once again
in sensational manner over his contemporaries, the
<i>Times</i> and the <i>Herald</i>.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<div class="transnote">
<p class="ph3">TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:</p>
<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
<p>Archaic spelling that may have been in use at the time of publication has been retained.</p>
<p>Incorrect page reference in the Table of Contents has been corrected.</p>
</div>
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