<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>CHAPTER IX. <br/> <small>CHANCE PLAYS INTO GORDON’S HANDS.</small></h2>
<p>The newspaper proprietor nodded gloomily in response
to Gordon’s question.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he answered, “Simpson disappeared four
days ago.”</p>
<p>“Has he a family?”</p>
<p>“A wife.”</p>
<p>“And she knows nothing about him, or professes
to know nothing?”</p>
<p>“I feel sure she’s as much in the dark as we are.”</p>
<p>“Perhaps—perhaps not,” murmured the bogus detective,
joining the tips of his fingers as he had seen
Nick do. “Please tell me now how the fellow managed
to get hold of the money, to get it out of the
bank or banks in which it had been deposited to the
credit of the fund. Surely, his wasn’t the only signature
required, was it? The checks drawn against
the fund must have been countersigned by some one
else?”</p>
<p>“They were—by Mr. Driggs, the vice president of
our organization.”</p>
<p>“Then how——”</p>
<p>“In a very ingenious way. I wouldn’t have thought
John Simpson capable of so much adroitness. I was
away at the time, but he prevailed upon Mr. Driggs<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</SPAN></span>
to withdraw the fund from the two New York banks
in which it had been deposited—the Broadway Exchange
Bank, and the Hudson National—and to transfer
everything to the Cotton and Wool National at
Hattontown.”</p>
<p>“Thus making it possible to deal with only one
bank, and that a smaller one whose officials presumably
were not so wary,” Green Eye commented judicially.
“What excuse did he give?”</p>
<p>“A most plausible one. He pointed out that the
Hattontown sufferers and the citizens generally would
feel more comfortable, more sure of the reality of
the fund if they knew that it had been transferred to
one of their local banks. ‘We aren’t ready to pay
the money all over to them,’ he told Driggs. ‘Most
of them would like to have it all at once, of course,
and they’re somewhat dissatisfied, even though the
more sensible among them realize that mere temporary
relief isn’t a solution to their problems. If we transfer
the fund to Hattontown, however, that will encourage
them. They will feel it is almost in their
hands.’</p>
<p>“Well, it looked like sound sense, and Driggs agreed,
with the result that every cent was withdrawn from the
two New York banks. As you say, that made it much
easier for the thief. Still, the task that remained
would have seemed big enough to most men. In fact,
they would have passed it up as impossible. Not so
our old, reliable John Simpson, though—confound
him! After plodding along as methodically as any
spiritless work horse for fifteen or eighteen years, he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</SPAN></span>
had suddenly developed a streak of lawlessness, and,
along with it, in some unaccountable fashion, had
come something approaching brilliancy of mind. The
Hattontown bank was now the custodian of the entire
fund, less what had been paid out to the victims for
their immediate necessities. As the disbursements
amounted to a little less than twenty thousand, there
was a balance of about eighty thousand when the
transfer took place. Naturally, Simpson then turned
his attention to Hattontown.</p>
<p>“The Cotton and Wool Bank there, so far as I’ve
been able to ascertain, is a fair sample of hundreds of
good, average, conservatively conducted institutions
of the kind of our smaller cities. Apparently there
was no rottenness of which Simpson could take advantage,
and evidently he didn’t waste time over that
possibility. He seems to have felt himself quite
capable of getting that money out by his own unaided
efforts, and subsequent events prove that his confidence
was far from misplaced.”</p>
<p>“What did he do?” Gordon urged eagerly.</p>
<p>He was greatly interested; not from the standpoint
of law and order, but from that of one criminal studying
the work of another. He had been inclined at first
to think that the fugitive would be easy to catch,
and easy to swindle out of the proceeds of the theft,
but he was not so sure of that now.</p>
<p>“You would never guess in a hundred years, gentlemen,”
Griswold assured his two hearers. “This is
new to Cray, too,” he added in explanation, addressing<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</SPAN></span>
Gordon. “I didn’t cover this point when I explained
matters to him.</p>
<p>“This is the way he worked it: After getting the
money where he wanted it, he went to Driggs with
another adroit idea—a suggestion for the publicity
stunt this time. One of the smaller papers under my
ownership, as you probably know, is published in
Hattontown—the Hattontown <em>Observer</em>. Well,
Simpson went to Driggs and proposed that that eighty
thousand dollars be temporarily withdrawn from the
bank in gold, and exhibited under strong guard in the
windows of the <em>Observer</em> office. See the point? He
argued very convincingly that the sight of so much
money would create the greatest possible local sensation,
and give the people in Hattontown an exalted idea
of the importance and power of the <em>Observer</em>. Driggs
offered certain objections, but Simpson argued them
away without much trouble. As a matter of fact, I
have no doubt but that I would have fallen for it as
readily as Driggs did.”</p>
<p>The millionaire paused and smiled in a rather grim
fashion.</p>
<p>“To tell the truth, I’ve actually adopted the suggestion,”
he informed them. “Eighty thousand dollars
in gold is actually on exhibition at the present time
in the windows of the Hattontown <em>Observer</em>—under
the eyes of armed guards day and night.”</p>
<p>“But——” Gordon had started to speak, but a gesture
of Griswold’s stopped him.</p>
<p>“Let me explain,” the great newspaper owner hastened
to say. “The original fund has been stolen, but,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</SPAN></span>
of course, that fact is known only to very few, including
the officials of the Cotton and Wool Bank in
Hattontown. We cannot afford to let the truth get
out, if we can possibly help it, for it would be a serious
blow to the prestige of our organization; therefore
I have duplicated the fund, drawing on my private
account for the purpose, and, as Simpson suggested,
the money has been placed on exhibition. It’s
attracting an immense amount of favorable attention,
and will doubtless mean a great increase in circulation
for the Hattontown <em>Observer</em>. We have that much to
thank Simpson for, at any rate.”</p>
<p>“Very extraordinary!” murmured the supposed detective
aloud. “Better and better!” he commented inwardly.
“I haven’t any scruples to speak of, but it
goes without saying that I’d rather relieve this hog
of a millionaire of eighty thousand than take it from a
few hundreds of poor devils who have been cleaned
out of everything. That money seems to be fatherless,
and waiting to be adopted. It was contributed to the
fund, but the fund is now complete without it. It
doesn’t belong to Simpson, and Griswold doesn’t need
it. Obviously, it’s mine, and I’m going to have it.”</p>
<p>“But you haven’t told us yet,” he added, addressing
his visitors, “how the missing treasurer actually got
his hands on the money. The bank in Hattontown
naturally wouldn’t have turned any such amount over
to a stranger.”</p>
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