<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
<h3>THE WILL</h3></div>
<p class="dropcap" ><span class="dcap">Henry Blaine</span> sat in his office, leisurely turning
over the pages of a morning newspaper;
his attitude was one of apparent idleness, but
the occasional swift glances he darted at the clock and
a slight lifting of his eyebrows at the least sound from
without betokened the fact that he was waiting for
some one or something.</p>
<p>His eyes scanned the columns of each page with
seeming carelessness, yet their keen glances missed not
one significant phrase. And suddenly his gaze was
transfixed by a paragraph tucked away in a corner of
the second page.</p>
<p>It was merely an account of trouble between capital
and labor in a distant manufacturing city, and a hint
of an organized strike which threatened for the immediate
future. The great detective was not at all a
politician, and the social and economic conditions of the
day held no greater import for him than for any other
conscientious, far-seeing citizen of the country, yet he
sat for a long moment with wrinkled brow and pursed
lips, musing, while the newspaper dropped unheeded
upon the desk.</p>
<p>His reverie was suddenly interrupted by the sharp,
insistent tinkling of the telephone; a clear, girlish voice
came to him over the wire:</p>
<p>“Is this Grosvenor 0760? This is Miss Lawton
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_54' name='page_54'></SPAN>54</span>
speaking. An alteration must be made at once in that
last gown you sent me, and it is imperative that I see
you in person concerning it. It will be inconvenient for
me to have you come here this morning. Where shall I
see you? At your establishment or––”</p>
<p>She paused suggestively, and he replied with a hurried
question.</p>
<p>“It is absolutely necessary, Miss Lawton, that you
see me in person? You are quite sure?”</p>
<p>“Absolutely.” Her voice held a ring of earnestness
and something more which caused him to jump to a
lightning-like decision.</p>
<p>“Very well. I will meet you in twenty minutes at
your Working Girls’ Club. I am an architect, remember,
and you wish to build a new and more improved
institution of the same order on another site. Therefore,
you have met me there to show me over the old
building and suggest changes in its plans for the new
one. You understand, Miss Lawton? My name is
Banks, remember, and––be a few minutes late.”</p>
<p>“I understand perfectly. Thank you. Good-by.”</p>
<p>The receiver at the other end of the line clicked
abruptly, and the detective sprang to his feet.</p>
<p>A quarter of an hour later Blaine presented himself
at the Anita Lawton Club, where a trim maid ushered
him into a tiny office. There, behind the desk, sat a girl,
and at sight of her, the detective, master of himself as
he was, gave an imperceptible start.</p>
<p>There was nothing remarkable about her; she was
quite a common type of girl: slender, not too tall, with
a wealth of red-brown hair, and soft hazel eyes; yet she
reminded Blaine vaguely but insistently of some one else––some
one whom he had encountered in the past.</p>
<p>He recovered himself at once, and presented the card
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_55' name='page_55'></SPAN>55</span>
which announced him as the senior member of the firm
of Banks and Frost, architects.</p>
<p>“Whom did you wish to see, sir?” The girl turned
slowly about in her swivel chair and regarded him respectfully
but coolly. Her voice was low and gentle
and distinctly feminine, yet it brought to him again that
haunting sense of resemblance which the first vision of
her had caused.</p>
<p>“Miss Lawton,” he replied, quietly.</p>
<p>“But Miss Lawton is not here.” The girl’s surprise
was unfeigned.</p>
<p>“I have an appointment to meet her here at this time.
She may perhaps have been detained. She has arranged
to go over the club building with me. As you
see by my card, I am an architect and she is planning
more extensive work, I believe, along the lines instituted
here––at least that is the impression she has given my
firm. I will wait a short time, if I may. You are connected
with the official work of the club?”</p>
<p>“I am the secretary.” The girl paused and then
added, “I understand perfectly, sir. Will you be
seated, please? Miss Lawton had not told me of her
appointment here with you. She will without doubt
arrive shortly.”</p>
<p>Henry Blaine seated himself, and as she started to
turn back to her desk, he asked quickly:</p>
<p>“You must find the work here very interesting, do
you not? We––our firm––have erected several
philanthropic institutions of learning and recreation,
but none precisely on this order. Miss Lawton has
shown us the plans of this present club and we consider
the arrangement of the dormitories particularly ingenious,
with regard to economy of space and the requisite
sunlight and air.”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_56' name='page_56'></SPAN>56</span></div>
<p>“Oh, yes!” The girl turned toward him swiftly, her
face suffused with interest. “Miss Lawton drew all the
plans herself, and they were not changed in the least. I
don’t see how they could possibly be improved upon.
Miss Lawton has done splendid work here, sir; the club
has been a wonderful success since it was first opened.”</p>
<p>“It must have been.” The detective paused, then
added easily, “I know that her late father was very
proud of her executive ability. You––er––you educate
young women here, do you not, and train them for
positions?”</p>
<p>“We not only train the members of the club, but
obtain positions for them, with reputable business
firms,” the girl answered.</p>
<p>“Indeed?” Blaine asked, with apparent surprise.
“What sort of positions do the members of your club
fill?”</p>
<p>“Whatever they are capable of acquiring a working
knowledge of. Filing clerks, stenographers, secretaries,
switchboard operators, telegraphers, even governesses.
We have never had a failure, and I think it is
because Miss Lawton gives not only her personal attention,
but real love and faith to each girl. She is––wonderful.”</p>
<p>The face of the young woman was rapt as she spoke,
and Blaine could guess without further explanation that
she herself was a protégée of Miss Lawton’s, and a
grateful one––unless she were playing a part. If so,
she was an actress of transcendent ability.</p>
<p>“You say that you have never had a failure. That
must, indeed, be encouraging,” Blaine remarked, tentatively.
“Perhaps we might arrange later with you or
Miss Lawton to place one or two of your clerks or
stenographers. We are enlarging our offices––”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_57' name='page_57'></SPAN>57</span></div>
<p>“Good morning!” a fresh young voice interrupted
him, and Anita Lawton stood upon the threshold.
“Did Mr. Banks come yet?––ah, yes, I see. How do
you do?”</p>
<p>Blaine arose, and Anita gave him her hand cordially.
His quick eyes observed that in passing she patted the
shoulder of her secretary affectionately, and the girl
looked up at her quickly, with eyes aglow. The truth
was no longer concealed from his discernment. The
girl was staunch in every fiber of her being.</p>
<p>“Miss Lawton, I am sorry, but I have really not any
too much time this morning. If we could proceed to
business at once.”</p>
<p>“Certainly. If you will come this way, Mr.
Banks––” At the door she paused, and turned to the
secretary: “I will see you later, dear.”</p>
<p>Anita led the detective swiftly through the wide, clean
halls and up the stairs, explaining in clear, distinct tones
the floor-plan. On the second floor she opened the door
leading into a little ante-room at the front of the house
just over the office, and when they were seated, she said
quickly, with rising excitement, although her voice was
carefully hushed.</p>
<p>“Mr. Bl––Banks, I have something to show you––my
father’s will! It was discovered, or rather, produced,
yesterday. The lawyers who have charge of the
estate––Anderson & Wallace, you know––seem to me
to be perfectly disinterested, and honest, but I am so
hedged in on every hand by a stifling feeling of deceit
and treachery that I feel I can trust no one save you and
Mr. Hamilton––not even poor old Ellen, my maid, who
has been with me since I was born!”</p>
<p>“I quite understand, Miss Lawton, and I realize how
difficult the situation is for you, but I want you to trust
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_58' name='page_58'></SPAN>58</span>
no one––at least, to the extent of giving them your
confidence. Now about the will; it was produced by
your late father’s attorneys?”</p>
<p>“No, by President Mallowe, of the Street Railways.
It appears that Father left it in his charge. Mr. Anderson
drew it; his partner, Mr. Wallace, witnessed it;
and they both assure me that it is absolutely authentic.
Here it is.”</p>
<p>She opened her bag and handed a long envelope to
him, but at first his attention was held by what she had
said, and he frowned as he repeated quickly:</p>
<p>“‘Authentic?’ I trust you did not show any suspicion
that you doubted for a moment that it was genuine?”</p>
<p>“Oh, by no means! It was Mr. Anderson himself
who took especial pains to assure me of its authenticity.”</p>
<p>Blaine regarded the envelope reflectively for a moment
before he raised the flap. Why had the attorney
considered it necessary to assure his late client’s daughter
that the will which he had himself drawn was genuine?</p>
<p>The will was short and to the point. In it Pennington
Lawton left everything of which he died possessed
to his daughter, unconditionally and without reservation.</p>
<p>“Of course, Miss Lawton, since you are only twenty,
and your father has named no guardian or trustee, the
courts will at once appoint one, and I have no hesitation
in saying that I believe the guardian so appointed
will be one of your father’s three associates, presumably
Mr. Mallowe. However, that will make little difference
in our investigation, and, since it is claimed that all your
father’s huge fortune is lost, the matter of a guardian
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_59' name='page_59'></SPAN>59</span>
cannot tie our hands in any way. Now, just a moment,
please.”</p>
<p>He drew from his pocket a small but powerful magnifying
glass and the slip of paper which Ramon Hamilton
had sent him, on which was the signature of the
late Pennington Lawton. Through the microscope he
carefully compared it with that affixed to the will and
then looked up reassuringly.</p>
<p>“It is quite all right, Miss Lawton. In my estimation
the will is authentic and your father’s signature
genuine.” He folded the paper, slipped it in its envelope
and returned it to her. “There is one thing now
which I must most earnestly caution you against. Do
not sign any paper, no matter who wishes it or orders
it––no matter if it is the most trivial household receipt.
Do not write any letters yourself, or notes to any one,
even to Mr. Hamilton; you understand they might be
intercepted. If anyone wishes you to sign a paper relating
to the matter of your father’s estate, say you cannot
do so until you have shown it in private to Mr. Hamilton––that
you have promised you will not do so.
Any other papers you can easily evade signing. As for
your private correspondence, obtain a social secretary,
and permit her to sign everything––one whom you can
trust––say, one of your girls from here, that girl downstairs,
for instance. What is her name?”</p>
<p>Anita Lawton rose, and a peculiar pained expression
passed over her features.</p>
<p>“I am sorry, Mr. Blaine––really, really I am sorry.
I cannot tell you her name. That was one of the conditions
under which she came to us here––that is why I
have given her an official position here in the Club. She
is staunch and faithful and true; I know it, I feel it;
and she is too high-principled to pass under any name
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_60' name='page_60'></SPAN>60</span>
not her own. I know and am heartily in sympathy with
the reason for her secretiveness. You know that I trust
you implicitly, but I know you would not have me go
back on my word when once it has been given.”</p>
<p>“Certainly not, Miss Lawton. I realize that many
of your protégées here may come of unfortunate antecedents.
If you feel that you can trust her, use her. Do
you feel equally sure of the other members of your
Club?”</p>
<p>“Absolutely. I feel that they all really love me; that
they would do anything for me they could in the world,
and yet I have done so little for them––only given them
the little help which I was able to bestow, which we
should all do for those less fortunate than ourselves....
Why did you ask me, Mr. Blaine, if I felt that I could
trust the girls who have placed themselves under my
care?”</p>
<p>“Because we may have need of them in the future.
They may be of the most vital assistance to us in this
investigation, should events turn out as I anticipate and
they prove worthy of the charge it may be necessary for
me to impose on them. But enough of that for now.
If at any time you wish to see me, personally, telephone
me as you did this morning and I will meet you here.”</p>
<p>The detective left her in the office of the secretary,
and as he made his adieus to them both he cast a last
quick, penetrating glance at the girl behind the desk.
Again that vague sense of resemblance possessed him.
With whom was she connected? Why was her name so
significantly withheld?</p>
<p>In the meantime Guy Morrow, from his post of observation
in the window of the little cottage on Meadow
Lane, had watched the object of his espionage for several
fruitless days––fruitless, because the actions of the
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_61' name='page_61'></SPAN>61</span>
man Brunell had been so obviously those of one who felt
himself utterly beyond suspicion.</p>
<p>The erect, gray-haired, clear-eyed man had come and
gone about his business, without the slightest attempt at
concealment. A few of the simplest inquiries of his
land-lady had elicited the fact that the gentleman opposite,
old Mr. Brunell, was a map-maker, and worked at
his trade in a little shop in the nearest row of brick buildings
just around the corner––that he had lived in the
little cottage since it had first been erected, six years before,
alone with his daughter Emily, and before that,
they had for many years occupied a small apartment
near by––in fact, the girl had grown up in that neighborhood.
He was a quiet man, not very talkative, but
well liked by his neighbors, and his daughter was devoted
to him. According to Mrs. Quinlan, Guy Morrow’s
aforesaid land-lady, Emily Brunell was a dear, sweet
girl, very popular among the young people in the neighborhood,
but she kept strictly at home in her leisure
hours and preferred her father’s companionship to that
of anyone else. She was employed in some business capacity
downtown, from nine until six; just what it was
Mrs. Quinlan did not know.</p>
<p>Morrow kept well in the background, in case Mr. Pennold
should put in an appearance again, but he did not.
Evidently that conversation overheard by Suraci had
been a final one, concerning the securities at least, and
no one else called at the little cottage door over the way,
except a vapid-faced young man to whom Morrow took
an instant and inexplicable dislike.</p>
<p>Morrow made it a point to visit and investigate the
little shop at an hour when he knew Brunell would not be
there, and found in the cursory examination possible at
that time that its purpose seemed to be strictly legitimate.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_62' name='page_62'></SPAN>62</span>
A shock-headed boy of fifteen or thereabout was
in charge, and the operative easily succeeded in engaging
his stolid attention elsewhere while, with a bit of soft
wax carefully palmed in his left hand, he succeeded in
gaining an impression of the lock on the flimsy door.
From this he had a key made in anticipation of orders
from his chief, requiring a thorough search of the little
shop––orders which for the first time in his career, he
shrank from.</p>
<p>He made no effort to scrape an acquaintance with
Brunell himself, but frequently encountered, as if by
accident, the daughter Emily, on her way to and from
the subway station. If she recognized in him the young
lodger across the street, she made no sign, and as the
days passed, Morrow, the man, despaired of gaining her
friendship, save through her father, whom Morrow––the
operative––had received orders not to approach
personally.</p>
<p>Before he had seen her, had he known that the old
forger possessed a daughter, he would have laid his plans
to worm himself into the confidence of the little family
through the girl, but having once laid eyes upon her face
in all its gentle, trusting purity, every manly instinct in
him revolted at the thought of making her a tool of her
father’s probable downfall.</p>
<p>There was a third member of the Brunell household
whom Morrow had observed frequently seated upon the
doorstep, or on one of the lower window sills––a small,
scraggly black kitten, with stiff outstanding fur, and an
absurdly belligerent attitude whenever a dog chanced to
pass through the lane. It waited in the doorway each
night for the return of its mistress, and in the soft glow
of the lamplight which streamed from within, he had
seen her catch the little creature up affectionately and
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_63' name='page_63'></SPAN>63</span>
cuddle it up against her neck before the door closed upon
them.</p>
<p>One afternoon in the early November twilight, as Morrow
was returning to his own door after shadowing
Brunell on an aimless and chilly walk, he saw the kitten
lying curled up just outside its own gate, and an inspiration
sprang to his ingenious mind. He seated himself
upon the steps of Mrs. Quinlan’s front porch and waited
until the darkness had deepened sufficiently to cloak his
nefarious scheme. Then, with soft beguiling tone––and
a few <i>sotto voce</i> remarks, for he hated cats––Morrow
began a deliberate attempt to entice the kitten across to
him.</p>
<p>“Come here, kitty, kitty,” he called softly. “Come,
pussy dear! Come here, you mangy, rat-tailed little
beast! Come cattykins.”</p>
<p>At his first words the kitten raised its head and regarded
him with yellow eyes gleaming through the dusk,
in unconcealed antagonism. But, at the soft, purring
flattery of his voice, the gleam softened to a glow of
pleased interest, and the little creature rose lazily,
stretched itself, and tripped lightly over to him, its tail
erect in optimistic confidence.</p>
<p>Morrow picked it up gingerly by the neck and tucked
it beneath his coat, stroking its head with a reluctant
thumb, while it purred loudly in sleepy content, at the
warmth of its welcome. The hour was approaching
when Emily Brunell usually made her appearance, and
he trusted to luck to keep the little animal quiet until she
had entered her home and discovered its loss, but the
fickle goddess failed him.</p>
<p>The kitten grew suddenly uneasy, as if some intuition
warned it of treachery, and tried valiantly to escape
from his grasp, and never did Spartan boy with wolf concealed
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_64' name='page_64'></SPAN>64</span>
beneath his tunic suffer more tortures than Morrow
with the wretched little creature clawing at his
hands.</p>
<p>Would Emily Brunell never come? What could be
keeping her to-night, of all nights? Morrow gripped
the soft, elusive bundle of fur with desperate firmness
and looked across the street. Evidently he was not the
only one impatient for her arrival. The doorway opposite
had opened, and Jimmy Brunell stood peering anxiously
forth into the darkness.</p>
<p>At that moment the kitten emitted a fearsome yowl,
which Morrow smothered hastily with his coat. He
fancied that the old man turned his head quickly and
glanced in his direction, and never had the operative felt
guiltier.</p>
<p>Brunell, however, retired within, closing the door after
him, and the kitten’s struggles gradually grew weaker
and finally ceased.</p>
<p>Morrow felt a horrible fear surging up within him
that he had strangled the little beast, and his grasp
gradually relaxed. Then he opened his overcoat cautiously
and peered within. The kitten was sleeping
peacefully, and he heaved a sigh of relief, glancing up
just in time to see Emily Brunell pass quickly through
her own gate and up to the door.</p>
<p>He sat motionless on the steps of Mrs. Quinlan’s, and
his patience was rewarded when after a few moments
the Brunell’s door re-opened and he heard the girl’s
voice calling anxiously: “Kitty! Kitty!”</p>
<p>Morrow rose with unfeigned alacrity and crossing
the road, opened the little gate without ceremony and
mounted the steps of the porch.</p>
<p>“I beg your pardon,” he said blandly. “Is this
your kitten? It––er––wandered across the street to
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_65' name='page_65'></SPAN>65</span>
me and fell asleep under my coat. I board just over the
way, you know, with Mrs. Quinlan. My name is Morrow.”</p>
<p>The girl gave a little cry of relieved anxiety, and
caught the kitten in her arms.</p>
<p>“Oh, I am so glad! I was afraid it was lost, and it
is so tiny and defenseless to be out all alone in the cold
and darkness. Thank you so much, Mr. Morrow. I
suppose it was waiting for me, as it usually does, and
grew restless at my delay, poor little thing! It was
kind of you to comfort it!”</p>
<p>Feeling like an utter brute, Morrow stammered a
humble disclaimer of her undeserved gratitude, and
moved toward the steps.</p>
<p>“Oh, but it was really kind of you; most men hate
cats, although my father loves them. I should have
been home much earlier but I was detained by some extra
work at the club where I am employed.”</p>
<p>“The club?” he repeated stupidly.</p>
<p>“Yes,” replied the girl, quietly, cuddling the kitten
beneath her chin. “The Anita Lawton Club for Working
Girls.”</p>
<p>She caught herself up sharply, even as she spoke, and
a look almost of apprehension crossed her ingenuous
face for a moment, and was gone.</p>
<p>“Thank you again for protecting my kitten for me,”
she said softly. “Good-night.”</p>
<p>Guy Morrow walked down the steps and across to his
own lodgings with his brain awhirl. The investigation,
through the medium of a small black kitten, had indeed
taken an amazing turn. Jimmy Brunell’s daughter was
a protégée of the daughter of Pennington Lawton!</p>
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