<h4><SPAN name="div1_05" href="#div1Ref_05">CHAPTER V</SPAN></h4>
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<p>Lyon went straight to the jail to report to Lawrence. He had little
difficulty in securing admittance, for the sheriff was sufficiently
pliable and Lawrence sufficiently important to permit a softening of
the rigors of prison discipline in his case. His arrest might, indeed,
be considered merely a detention on suspicion until the Grand Jury had
formally indicted him, and the sheriff had evidently considered that
his duty was filled by ensuring his safety, without undue severity.
The room was guarded without and barred within, but in itself it was
more an austerely furnished bedroom than a cell, and Lawrence had more
the air of a host receiving his guests than a prisoner. That, however,
was Lawrence's way. It would have taken more than a stone wall and a
locked door to force humiliation upon him. He tossed circumstances
aside like impertinent meddlers, and scarcely condescended to be aware
of their futile attempts to hamper him.</p>
<p>At the moment he was in consultation with his attorney, Howell,--or,
rather, Howell was trying to hold a consultation with him, and,
judging by his looks, not very successfully.</p>
<p>"It is unfortunate that your memory should be so curiously unequal,"
Howell said drily, as Lyon entered.</p>
<p>"If it is equal to the occasion, that's sufficient," Lawrence said
carelessly. "Don't you be putting on airs with me, Howell. I'm your
associate counsel in this affair. You go and see if you can get me out
on bail, and then we'll talk some more. Hello, here's Lyon, of the
<i>News</i>. At last I have attained to a distinction I have secretly
longed for all my life. I am going to be interviewed."</p>
<p>"If he succeeds In getting any really valuable information out of you,
I'll take him on for associate counsel," grumbled Howell, as he
gathered up his papers and took his departure.</p>
<p>"Well?" demanded Lawrence, the instant they were alone. His Celtic
blue eyes were snapping with impatience.</p>
<p>"I delivered your message. Judging from the balance of our interview,
your hint was accepted."</p>
<p>Lawrence laughed. He threw himself down in his chair and laughed with
a keen appreciation of the situation suggested by Lyon's words and a
sudden relaxation of his nervous tension that struck Lyon as
significant.</p>
<p>"Come, you might tell me something more, considering!" he said.</p>
<p>"There isn't much that I know," said Lyon. But he understood very well
what it was that Lawrence wanted and he went over his interview with a
good deal of detail. Lawrence sat silent, listening, with his hand
hiding his mouth and his eyes veiled by their drooping lids. At the
end he drew a long breath and slowly stretched his arms above his
head.</p>
<p>"Well, that's all right, and you're a jewel of an ambassador," he
said. Then suddenly he pushed the whole subject away with an airy wave
of his hand. "You are here on professional business, I suppose. Are
you going to write up my picturesque appearance in my barren cell, or
do you want my opinion of Yeats' poetry or on the defects of the jury
system? By Jove, old man, you'd have to hunt hard to ask for something
that I wouldn't give you."</p>
<p>"I am very glad you gave me the opportunity," said Lyon simply. Then
he hesitated. He had an instinctive feeling that, as a mere
ambassador, he must not presume to assert any personal interest in the
situation, and yet he felt there was something which Lawrence might
consider important in the old gentleman's revelation. Of course he
could not repeat the whole of that conversation! That, luckily, was
not necessary. But if he might venture on the friendly interest which
he really felt, he must mention one item.</p>
<p>"I met Miss Wolcott's grandfather," he said, with the casual air of
one who is filling in a conversational break. "He inquired if you were
in town,--said he had expected you to call Monday night, but supposed
perhaps you had not done so, because you knew Miss Wolcott was to be
out."</p>
<p>Lawrence looked up sharply.</p>
<p>"He said that, did he?"</p>
<p>"Yes. He seemed to be cherishing a grievance because she had gone out
without notifying him, and because she let herself in by the side-door
when she returned at ten o'clock."</p>
<p>Lawrence looked at him with concentrated gaze.</p>
<p>"I wonder to how many people he has confided his grievance," he said
slowly. "He doesn't see very many people, and he is apt to forget
things in time. We'll have to hope for the best. Here's to his poor
memory!"</p>
<p>"If the subject isn't revived! But I gathered that he doesn't read the
papers."</p>
<p>"No, his eyesight is really very bad, though of course he won't admit
it. If worst came to worst,--I mean if his testimony came into the
case,--it would not be difficult to cast some uncertainty on the time.
He couldn't read the face of a watch, I feel sure."</p>
<p>"Then here's to his poor eyes," said Lyon with a smile.</p>
<p>And Lawrence laughed and shook hands with him with a tacit acceptance
of his partisanship that bound Lyon to him more strongly than any
formal words could have done. Indeed, when Lyon went away he
considered himself pledged, heart and soul, to Lawrence's cause. No
henchman of the days of chivalry ever felt a more passionate throb of
devotion to an unfortunate chieftain than this quiet, self-effacing
young reporter felt for the brilliant and audacious man who was so
evidently determined to play a lone hand against fate. This feeling
was in no respect lessened by the possibility which he had been forced
to consider that Lawrence might in fact be much more nearly involved
than he had at first supposed. Men had been swept away from the
moorings of convention and morality by the passions of love and hate
ever since the world began, and Lawrence, for all his breeding and
gentleness, was a man of vital passions. No one could know him at all
and fail to recognize that. And he had loved Miss Wolcott and hated
Fullerton; that was clear. But the question of whether he was, in
fact, guilty or innocent, was merely secondary. The first question for
Lyon, as for any true and loyal clansman it must always be, was merely
by what means and to what extent he could serve him. And that settled
once and for all the question of his own obligation to speak. The
cause of justice might demand that he should give Howell a hint as to
important witnesses. The language in which he mentally consigned the
cause of justice to the scaffold was not exactly feminine, but the
sentiment behind it was peculiarly and winningly feminine. If Lawrence
wanted this thing, he should be allowed to have it, and the cause of
justice might go hang.</p>
<p>At the same time, he was absorbed in a constant speculation on the
facts of the case. The little light he had gained only made the
darkness more visible. If Lawrence had indeed struck the fatal blow,
how had it come about? Had he encountered Fullerton and Miss Wolcott
together, and had there been a sudden quarrel with this unexpected
termination? Then Miss Wolcott was the sole witness, and Lawrence's
injunction to silence was easy enough to understand. That was of
course the most obvious explanation, though on that theory it was hard
to understand Lawrence's amazement when his cane had been produced at
the inquest. On the other hand, if Lawrence's tale was true about his
being behind Lyon on Hemlock Avenue, then his persistent evasion of
all really conclusive proof of his alibi must be due to his
determination to shield Miss Wolcott. Did he think it possible that
she herself was the murderer? It was necessary to consider even that
possibility. Lyon recalled the girl's sphinx-like composure, and he
was by no means sure that it might not cover passional possibilities
which could, on occasion, burst into devastating force. She was the
sort of woman who would be quite equal to taking the law into her own
hands if she felt it expedient to do so. Lyon knew the brooding type.
If, for instance, she loved Lawrence, and if she felt that Fullerton
stood between them, and particularly if she had any cause for
bitterness against Fullerton which would make her feel that in slaying
him she was an instrument of justice,--well, tragedies were happening
every day that were no more difficult of belief. She was not an
ordinary woman; and when a woman breaks through the lines of
convention she will go farther than a man. She had had a grudge
against Fullerton, she had prayed for his death, she had been on the
spot when he was killed. Whether she struck the blow herself or not,
it was clear that her connection with the affair was intimate. If she
was the woman Donohue had seen in Fullerton's company when they left
the Wellington together, it would seem that she had been agitated to
the point of sobbing aloud as she walked beside him. Any emotion that
could reduce Miss Wolcott to sobs must have been powerful. All this
Lawrence knew as well as Lyon, but it was conceivable that he knew
more. Had he been a witness of the murder, if not an actor in it? How
had his cane come to be on the spot unless he had been there himself?
And the fact that Fullerton's overcoat had been turned seemed to
indicate a deliberate attempt at concealment which did not accord with
the girl's frantic flight from the spot. Some one else had been
involved in that, some one with steady nerves and a cool head. In all
the uncertainty, the one thing clear was that Lawrence had been so
concerned about protecting the girl that he had almost seemed to
invite rather than to repel suspicion. Whether the Grand Jury would
consider the evidence against him as strong enough to warrant an
indictment remained to be seen, but if it did not, it would not be
because of any efforts on Lawrence's own part. That unfortunate public
quarrel in the Court House was a serious complication, and since the
murder that point had been much before the public. Half a dozen
different versions had been given by as many positive eye-witnesses.
That they differed so widely in detail only made the public more
certain that there must have been something very serious in it. The
wiseacres who had prophesied that something would come of it took
credit to themselves.</p>
<p>It was merely from curiosity, and with no idea of the discovery he was
about to make, that Lyon went to Hemlock Avenue that evening at ten to
retrace the course he had taken the night before. He wanted to fix the
scene in his memory definitely, and to take note of what he had seen
and what he might have seen if he had looked. He stopped at the place
where he had seen the running girl, and looked about. Certainly she
had come from Sherman Street, and, cutting diagonally across Hemlock
Avenue, had crossed the field of his vision squarely. He shut his eyes
for an instant to recall the scene. She ran well,--he could see now
that swift, sure flight. Was it possible that the statuesque Miss
Wolcott could ever forget herself in that Diana-like run? Somehow the
picture, as he now looked at it, was not like Miss Wolcott. It was
lither, quicker, than he could imagine her. Yet there was no question
about her running in at the Wolcott house. Stay, was he so sure of
that? He had not seen her enter. She had simply run in by the walk
that led to the side door. Could she have gone through the Wolcott
yard on her way elsewhere? If the running girl was not in fact Miss
Wolcott, then his whole theory fell down. Trusting to luck and the
inspiration of the moment if he should be challenged, Lyon coolly
followed the concrete walk past the side door into the Wolcott back
yard. It was a sixty foot lot, running back about a hundred feet. At
the front it was unfenced and open to the street, but at the back and
on the two sides back of the rear line of the houses it was enclosed
by a close board wall six feet high. By the posts and the clothes
lines here, it was evident that the back yard was consecrated to Eliza
and wash day. So far as might be seen, there was no gate in the
enclosing wall. Was there an alley beyond or did this lot abut on the
lot which faced on the next street south,--Locust? Lyon felt that
might be an important question, and he went down to the corner of the
lot and pulled himself up by his hands to look over the top of the
wall. He satisfied himself of two points,--that there was no alley
between this lot and the adjoining one, and that the board which he
had laid his hand upon was not firm. He bent down to examine it. It
was a broad board near the left corner of the wall. It was fastened to
the upper cross-piece of the fence by a single large spike, and the
lower end was unnailed. The effect of this was that while it hung
straight in its place so long as it was untouched the lower end could
be easily swung on that upper spike as a pivot, leaving a triangular
aperture at the bottom quite large enough for a slender person to
squeeze through. To test it, Lyon pulled himself through, and swung
the board back into its place. He found himself in a large enclosed
space, boarded in on all sides except the front, where a high wire
fence separated it from the street. With a certain astonishment, Lyon
recognized his surroundings. He was in the enclosed grounds of Miss
Elliott's Private School for Girls on Locust Avenue,--a highly select
and exclusive establishment. Was it as easy to get out as to get in?
He hesitated a moment before deciding on further explorations, but the
trees in the yard gave him the aid of convenient shadows, and he
cautiously followed the wall around the lot, trying each board. There
were no more secret panels. Everything was as firm as it looked. He
had thought to get out by the gate on Locust Avenue, for it somehow
touched his dignity to crawl out by the little hole that had admitted
him, but to his surprise he found that the wire fence, which enclosed
the lot on the front, came up to the house itself in such a way that
no exit could be made on that side except through the house. Moreover
the fence was too high to jump, even for him. Emboldened by the fact
that the house was as entirely dark as though it were vacant, Lyon
made another and even more careful examination of the enclosing wall.
There was no break, and he was forced to make his way out, as he had
come in, by Miss Wolcott's back yard.</p>
<p>He regained the open street with a tingling pulse. Perhaps his
discovery meant nothing,--but perhaps it meant everything. It might
enable him in time to tell Lawrence that the running girl was not
Edith Wolcott. The sudden recognition of that possibility excited him
keenly. Could it be that Lawrence had mistakenly jumped to the same
conclusion that he had? Were Lawrence and Miss Wolcott both keeping
silence, each to shield the other, while the guilty person made her
escape through the sacred precincts of Miss Elliott's select school?
He would interview Miss Elliott to-morrow.</p>
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