<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
<h3>THE CONFIDENCE OF EMILY</h3></div>
<p class="dropcap" ><span class="dcap">All</span> during that day and the night which followed
it, the search for Ramon Hamilton continued,
but without result. With the announcement of
his disappearance, in the press, the police had started a
spectacular investigation, but had been as unsuccessful
as Henry Blaine’s own operatives, who had been working
unostentatiously but tirelessly since the news of the
young lawyer’s evanescence had come.</p>
<p>No one could be found who had seen him. When he
left the offices of the great detective on the previous
morning he seemed to have vanished into thin air. It
was to Blaine the most baffling incident of all that had
occurred since this most complex case had come into his
hands.</p>
<p>He kept his word and called to see Anita in the late
afternoon. He found that she had slept for some hours
and was calmer and more hopeful, which was fortunate,
for he had scant comfort to offer her beyond his vague
but forceful reassurances that all would be well.</p>
<p>Early on the following morning Suraci returned from
Long Bay and presented himself at the office of his chief
to report.</p>
<p>“Here are the tracings from the register of ‘The
Breakers’ which you desired, sir,” he began, spreading
some large thin sheets of paper upon the desk. “The
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_135' name='page_135'></SPAN>135</span>
Lawtons spent three weeks there at the time you designated,
and Mr. Hamilton went out each week-end, from
Friday to Monday, as you can see here, and here. They
had no other visitors and kept much to themselves.”</p>
<p>Blaine scanned the papers rapidly, pausing here and
there to scrutinize more closely a signature which appeared
to interest him. At length he pushed them aside
with a dissatisfied frown, as if he had been looking for
something which he had failed to find.</p>
<p>“Anything suspicious about the guests who arrived
during the Lawtons’ stay?” he asked. “Was there
any incident in connection with them worthy of note
which the proprietor could recall?”</p>
<p>“No, sir, but I found some of the employees and
talked to them. The hotel is closed now for the winter,
of course, but two or three of the waiters and bell-boys
live in the neighborhood. A summer resort is a hot-bed
of gossip, as you know, sir, and since Mr. Lawton’s
sudden death the servants have been comparing notes of
his visit there two years ago. I found the waiter who
served them, and two bell-boys, and they each had a
curious incident to tell me in connection with the Lawtons.
The stories would have held no significance if it
weren’t for the fact that they all happened to concern
one person––a man who arrived on the eighth of
August. This man here.”</p>
<p>Suraci ran his finger down the register page until he
came to one name, where he stopped abruptly.</p>
<p>“Albert Addison, Baltimore, Maryland,” read
Blaine. Then, with a sudden exclamation he bent closer
over the paper. A prolonged scrutiny ensued while
Suraci watched him curiously. Reaching into a drawer,
the Master Detective drew out a powerful magnifying
glass and examined each stroke of the pen with minute
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_136' name='page_136'></SPAN>136</span>
care. At length he swung about in his chair and pressed
the electric button on the corner of the desk. When his
secretary appeared in response to the summons, Blaine
said:</p>
<p>“Ask the filing clerk to look in the drawer marked
‘P. 1904,’ and bring me the check drawn on the First
National Bank signed <i>Paddington</i>.”</p>
<p>While the secretary was fulfilling his task the two
waited in silence, but with the check before him Henry
Blaine gave it one keen, comparing glance, then turned
to the operative.</p>
<p>“Well, Suraci, what did you learn from the hotel employees?”</p>
<p>“One of the bell-boys told me that this man, Addison,
arrived with only a bag, announcing that his luggage
would be along later and that he anticipated remaining
a week or more. This boy noticed him particularly because
he scanned the hotel register before writing his
own name, and insisted upon having one of two special
suites; number seventy-two or seventy-six. Seventy-four
the suite between, was occupied by Mr. Lawton.
They were both engaged, so he was forced to be content
with number seventy-three, just across the hall.
The boy noticed that although the new arrival did not
approach Mr. Lawton or his daughter, he hung about
in their immediate vicinity all day and appeared to be
watching them furtively.</p>
<p>“Late in the afternoon, Mr. Lawton went into the
writing-room to attend to some correspondence. The
boy, passing through the room on an errand, saw him
stop in the middle of a page, frown, and tearing the
paper across, throw it in the waste-basket. Glancing
about inadvertently, the bell-boy saw Addison seated
near by, staring at Mr. Lawton from behind a newspaper
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_137' name='page_137'></SPAN>137</span>
which he held in front of his face as if pretending to
read. The boy’s curiosity was aroused by the eager,
hungry, expectant look on the stranger’s face, and he
made up his mind to hang around, too, and see what was
doing.</p>
<p>“He attended to his errand and returned just in time
to see Mr. Lawton seal the flap of his last envelope, rise,
and stroll from the room. Instantly Addison slipped
into the seat just vacated, wrote a page, crumpled it,
and threw it in the same waste-basket the other man
had used. Then he started another page, hesitated and
finally stopped and began rummaging in the basket, as
if searching for the paper he himself had just dropped
there. The boy made up his mind––he’s a sharp one,
sir, he’d be good for this business––that the stranger
wasn’t after his own letter, at all, but the one Mr.
Lawton had torn across, and in a spirit of mischief, he
walked up to the man and offered to help.</p>
<p>“‘This is your letter, sir. I saw you crumple it up
just now. That torn sheet of paper belongs to one of
the other guests.’</p>
<p>“According to his story, he forced Addison’s own
letter on him, and walked off with the waste-basket to
empty it, and if looks could kill, he’d have been a dead
boy after one glance from the stranger. That was all
he had to tell, and he wouldn’t have remembered such
a trifling incident for a matter of two years and more, if
it hadn’t been for something which happened late that
night. He didn’t see it, being off duty, but another boy
did, and the next day they compared notes. They were
undecided as to whether they should go to the manager
of the hotel and make a report, or not, but being only
kids, they were afraid of getting into trouble themselves,
so they waited. Addison departed suddenly that
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_138' name='page_138'></SPAN>138</span>
morning, however, and as Mr. Lawton never gave any
sign of being aware of what had taken place, they kept
silent. I located the second boy, and got his story at
first hand. His name is Johnnie Bradley and he’s as
stupid as the other one is sharp.</p>
<p>“Johnnie was on all night, and about one o’clock he
was sent out to the casino on the pier just in front of
the hotel, with a message. When he was returning, he
noticed a tiny, bright light darting quickly about in
Mr. Lawton’s rooms, as if some one were carrying a
candle through the suite and moving rapidly. He remembered
that Mr. Lawton and his daughter had motored
off somewhere just after dinner to be gone overnight,
so he went upstairs to investigate, without mentioning
the matter to the clerk who was dozing behind
the desk in the office. There was a chambermaid on
night duty at the end of the hall, but she was asleep, and
as he reached the head of the stairs, Johnnie observed
that some one had, contrary to the rules, extinguished
the lights near Mr. Lawton’s rooms. He went softly
down the hall, until he came to the door of number
seventy-four. A man was stooping before it, fumbling
with a key, but whether he was locking or unlocking the
door, it did not occur to Johnnie to question in his own
mind until later. As he approached, the man turned,
saw him, and reeled against the door as if he had been
drinking.</p>
<p>“‘Sa-ay, boy!’ he drawled. ‘Wha’s matter with
lock? Can’t open m’ door.’</p>
<p>“He put the key in his pocket as he spoke, but that,
too, Johnnie did not think of until afterward.</p>
<p>“‘That isn’t your door, sir. Those are Mr. Pennington
Lawton’s rooms,’ Johnnie told him. ‘What is
the number on your key?’</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_139' name='page_139'></SPAN>139</span></div>
<p>“The man produced a key from his pocket and gave
it to Johnnie in a stupid, dazed sort of way. The key
was numbered seventy-three.</p>
<p>“‘That’s your suite, just across the hall, sir,’ Johnnie
said. He unlocked the door for the newcomer, who
muttered thickly about the hall being d–––d confusing
to a stranger, and gave him a dollar. Johnnie waited
until the man had lurched into his rooms, then asked
if he wanted ice-water. Receiving no reply but a
mumbled curse, he withdrew, but not before he had seen
the light switched on, and the man cross to the door and
shut it. The stranger no longer lurched about, but
walked erectly and his face had lost the sagged, vapid,
drunken look and was surprisingly sober and keen and
alert.</p>
<p>“The two boys decided the next day that Addison
had come to ‘The Breakers’ with the idea of robbing
Mr. Lawton, but, as I said, nothing came of the incident,
so they kept it to themselves and in all probability
it had quite passed from their minds until the news of
Mr. Lawton’s death recalled it to them.”</p>
<p>Suraci paused, and after a moment Blaine suggested
tentatively:</p>
<p>“You spoke of a waiter, also, Suraci. Had he anything
to add to what the bell-boys had told you, of this
man Addison’s peculiar behavior?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir. It isn’t very important, but it sort of
confirms what the first boy said, about the stranger trying
to watch the Lawtons, without being noticed himself,
by them. The waiter, Tim Donohue, says that on the
day of his arrival, Addison was seated by the head waiter
at the next table to that occupied by Mr. Lawton, and
directly facing him. Addison entered the dining-room
first, ordered a big luncheon, and was half-way through
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_140' name='page_140'></SPAN>140</span>
it when the Lawtons entered. No sooner were they
seated, than he got up precipitately and left the room.
That night, at dinner, he refused the table he had occupied
at the first meal, and insisted upon being seated at
one somewhere back of Mr. Lawton.</p>
<p>“This Donohue is a genial, kind-hearted soul, and he
was a favorite with the bell-hops because he used to save
sweets and tid-bits for them from his trays. Johnnie
and the other boy told him of their dilemma concerning
number seventy-three, as they designated Addison, and
he in turn related the incident of the dining-room. The
boys told me about him and where he could be found.
He’s not a waiter any longer, but married to one of the
hotel chamber-maids, and lives in Long Bay, running a
bus service to the depot for a string of the cheaper
boarding houses. He corroborated the bell-hops’ story
in every detail, and even gave me a hazy sort of description
of Addison. He was small and thin and dark; clean
shaven, with a face like an actor, narrow shoulders and
a sort of caved-in chest. He walked with a slight limp,
and was a little over-dressed for the exclusive, conservative,
high-society crowd that flock to ‘The Breakers.’”</p>
<p>“That’s our man, Suraci––that’s Paddington, to
the life!” Blaine exclaimed. “I knew it as soon as I
compared his signature on this check with the one in
the register, although he has tried to disguise his hand,
as you can see. I’m glad to have it verified, though, by
witnesses on whom we can lay our hands at any time,
should it become necessary. He left the day after his
arrival, you say? The morning after this boy, Johnnie,
caught him in front of Mr. Lawton’s door?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir. The bell-hops don’t think he came back,
either. They don’t remember seeing him again.”</p>
<p>“Very well. You’ve done splendidly, Suraci. I
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_141' name='page_141'></SPAN>141</span>
couldn’t have conducted the investigation better myself.
Do you need any rest, now?”</p>
<p>“Oh, no, sir! I’m quite ready for another job!”
The young operative’s eyes sparkled eagerly as he spoke,
and his long, slim, nervous fingers clasped and unclasped
the arms of his chair spasmodically. “What is it?
Something new come up?”</p>
<p>“Only that disappearance, two days ago, of the
young lawyer to whom Miss Lawton is engaged, Ramon
Hamilton. I want you to go out on that at once, and
see what you can do. I’ve got half a dozen of the best
men on it already, but they haven’t accomplished anything.
I can’t give you a single clue to go upon, except
that when he walked out of this office at eleven o’clock
in the morning, he wore a black suit, black shoes, black
tie, a black derby and a gray overcoat with a mourning
band on the sleeve––for Mr. Lawton, of course. Outside
the door there, he vanished as if a trap had opened
and dropped him through into space. No one has seen
him; no one knows where he went. That’s all the help
I can offer you. He’s not in jail or the morgue or any
of the hospitals, as yet. That isn’t much, but it’s something.
Here’s a personal description of him which the
police issued yesterday. It’s as good as any I could
give you, and here are two photographs of him which I
got from his mother yesterday afternoon. Take a good
look at him, Suraci, fix his face in your mind, and then
if you should manage, or happen, to locate him, you
can’t go wrong. I know your memory for faces.”</p>
<p>The “shadow” departed eagerly upon his quest, and
Blaine settled down to an hour’s deep reflection. He
held the threads of the major conspiracy in his hands,
but as yet he could not connect them, at least in any
tangible way to present at a court of so-called justice,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_142' name='page_142'></SPAN>142</span>
where everyone, from the judge to the policeman at the
door could, and inevitably would, be bought over, in advance,
to the side of the criminals. It was a one-man
fight, backed only with the slender means provided by a
young girl’s insignificant financial ventures, against the
press, the public, a corrupt political machine of great
power, the desperate ingenuity of three clever, unscrupulous
minds brought to bay, and the overwhelming influence
of colossal wealth. Henry Blaine felt that the
supreme struggle of his whole career was confronting
him.</p>
<p>The unheard-of intrepidity of conception, the very
daring of the conspiracy, combined with the prominence
of the men involved, would brand any accusation, even
from a man of Henry Blaine’s celebrated international
reputation, as totally preposterous, unless substantiated.
And what actual proof had he of their
criminal connection with the alleged bankruptcy of
Pennington Lawton?</p>
<p>He had established, to his own satisfaction, at least,
that the mortgage on the family home on Belleair Avenue
had been forged, and by Jimmy Brunell. The signature
on the note held by Moore, the banker, and the entire
letter asking Mallowe to negotiate the loan had been
also fraudulent, and manufactured by the same hand.
Paddington, the private detective with perhaps the most
unsavory record of any operating in the city, was in
close and constant communication with the three men
Blaine held under suspicion, and probably also with
Jimmy Brunell. Lastly, Brunell himself was known to
be still in possession of his paraphernalia for the pursuit
of his old nefarious calling. Paddington, on Margaret
Hefferman’s testimony, had assuredly succeeded
in mulcting the promoter, Rockamore, of a large sum in
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_143' name='page_143'></SPAN>143</span>
a clear case of blackmail, but on the face of it there was
no proof that it was connected with the matter of Pennington
Lawton’s insolvency.</p>
<p>The mysterious nocturnal visitor, on the night the
magnate met his death, was still to be accounted for, as
was the disappearance of Ramon Hamilton; and in spite
of his utmost efforts, Henry Blaine was forced to admit
to himself that he was scarcely nearer a solution, or
rather, a confirmation of his steadfast convictions, than
when he started upon his investigation.</p>
<p>Unquestionably, the man Paddington held the key to
the situation. But how could Paddington be approached?
How could he be made to speak? Bribery
had sealed his lips, and only greed would open them.
He was shrewd enough to realize that the man who had
purchased his services would pay him far more to remain
silent than any client of Blaine’s could, to betray
them. Moreover, he was in the same boat, and
must of necessity sink or swim with his confederates.</p>
<p>Fear might induce him to squeal, where cupidity would
fail, but the one sure means of loosening his tongue was
through passion.</p>
<p>“If only that French girl, Fifine Déchaussée, would
lead him on, if she had less of the saint and more of the
coquette in her make-up, we might land him,” the detective
murmured to himself. “It’s dirty work, but
we’ve got to use the weapons in our hands. I must have
another talk with her, before she considers herself affronted
by his attentions, and throws him down hard––that
is, if he’s making any attempt to follow up his
flirtation with her.”</p>
<p>Blaine’s soliloquy was interrupted by the entrance of
Guy Morrow, whose face bore the disgusted look of one
sent to fish with a bent pin for a salmon.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_144' name='page_144'></SPAN>144</span></div>
<p>“I found Paddington, all right, sir,” he announced.
“I tailed him until a half-hour ago, but I might as well
have been asleep for all I learned, except one fact.”</p>
<p>“Which is––” the detective asked quickly.</p>
<p>“That he went to Rockamore’s office yesterday morning,
remained an hour and came away with a check for
ten thousand dollars. He proceeded to the bank, had it
certified, and deposited it at once to his own account in
the Merchants’ and Traders’. He evidently split it up,
then, for he went to three other banks and opened accounts
under three different names. Here’s the list. I
tailed him all the way.”</p>
<p>He handed the Master Detective a slip of paper,
which the latter put carefully aside after a casual
glance.</p>
<p>“Then what did he do?”</p>
<p>“Wasted his own time and mine,” the operative responded
in immeasurable contempt. “Ate and drank
and gambled and loafed and philandered.”</p>
<p>“Philandered?” Blaine repeated, sharply.</p>
<p>“In the park,” returned the other. “Spooning with
a girl! Rotten cold it was, too, and me tailing on like
a blamed chaperon! After he made his last deposit at
the third bank, he went to lunch at Duyon’s. Ate his
head off, and paid from a thick wad of yellowbacks.
Then he dropped in at Wiley’s, and played roulette for
a couple of hours––played in luck, too. He drank
quite a little, but it only seemed to heighten his good
spirits, without fuddling him to any extent. When he
left Wiley’s, about five o’clock, he sauntered along Court
Street, until he came to Fraser’s, the jeweler’s. He
stopped, looked at the display window for a few minutes,
and then, as if on a sudden impulse, turned and entered
the shop. I tailed him inside, and went to the men’s
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_145' name='page_145'></SPAN>145</span>
counter, where I bought a tie-clasp, keeping my eye on
him all the time. What do you think he got? A gold
locket and chain––a heart-shaped locket, with a chip
diamond in the center!”</p>
<p>“The eternal feminine!” Blaine commented; and
then he added half under his breath: “Fifine Déchaussée’s
on the job!”</p>
<p>“What, sir?” asked the operative curiously.</p>
<p>“Nothing, Guy. Merely an idle observation. Go on
with your story.”</p>
<p>“Paddington went straight from the jeweler’s to the
Democratic Club for an hour, then dined alone at
Rossi’s. I was on the look-out for the woman, but
none appeared, and he didn’t act as if he expected anybody.
After dinner he strolled down Belleair Avenue,
past the Lawton residence, and out to Fairlawn Park.
Once inside the gates, he stopped for a minute near a
lamp-post and looked at his watch, then hurried straight
on to Hydrangea Path, as if he had an appointment
to keep. I dropped back in the shadow, but tailed
along. She must have been late, that girl, for he
cooled his heels on a bench for twenty minutes, growing
more impatient all the time. Finally she came––a
slender wisp of a girl, but some queen! Plainly dressed,
dark hair and eyes, small hands and feet and a face like
a stained-glass window!</p>
<p>“They walked slowly up and down, talking very confidentially,
and once he started to put his arm about her,
but she moved away. I walked up quickly, and passed
them, close enough to hear what she was saying: ‘Of
course it is lonely for a girl in a strange country, where
she has no friends.’ That was all I got, but I noticed
that she spoke with a decidedly foreign accent, French
or Spanish, I should say.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_146' name='page_146'></SPAN>146</span></div>
<p>“Around a bend in the path I hid behind a clump of
bushes and waited until they had passed, then tailed
them again. I saw him produce the locket and chain
at last, and offer them to her. She protested and took
a lot of persuading; but he prevailed upon her and she
let him clasp it about her neck and kiss her. After
that––Good Lord! They spooned for about two hours
and never even noticed the snow which had begun to
fall, while I shivered along behind. About half-past ten
they made a break-away and he left her at the park
gates and went on down to his rooms. I put up for the
night at the Hotel Gaythorne, just across the way, and
kept a look-out, but there were no further developments
until early this morning. At a little after seven he left
his apartment house and started up State Street as if he
meant business. Of course I was after him on the
jump.</p>
<p>“He evidently didn’t think he was watched, for he
never looked around once, but made straight for a little
shop near the corner of Tarleton Place. It was a stationery
and tobacco store, and I was right at his heels
when he entered. He leaned over the counter, and asked
in a low, meaning tone for a box of Cairo cigarettes.
The man gave him a long, searching glance, then turned,
and reaching back of a pile of boxes on the first shelf,
drew out a flat one––the size which holds twenty cigarettes.
He passed it quickly over to Paddington, but
not before I observed that it had been opened and rather
clumsily resealed.</p>
<p>“Paddington handed over a quarter and left the
shop without another word. He went directly to a cheap
restaurant across the street, and, ordering a cup of
coffee, he tore open the cigarette box. It contained only
a sheet of paper, folded twice. I was at the next table,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_147' name='page_147'></SPAN>147</span>
too far away to read what was written upon it, but
whatever it was, it seemed to give him immense satisfaction.
He finished his coffee, returned to his rooms,
changed his clothes, and went directly to the office of
Snedecker, the man whose divorce case he is trying to
trump up. Evidently he’s good for a day’s work on
that, so I thought I could safely leave him at it, and report
to you.”</p>
<p>“Humph! I’d like to have a glimpse of that communication
in the cigarette box, but it isn’t of sufficient
importance, on the face of it, to show our hand by having
him waylaid, or searching his rooms,” Blaine cogitated
aloud. “I’ll put another man on to-morrow
morning. Leave the address of the tobacconist with my
secretary on your way out, and if there is another message
to-morrow, he’ll get it first. You needn’t do anything
more on this Paddington matter; I think the other
end needs your services more; and since you’ve already
broken ground up there, you’ll be able to do better than
anyone else. I want you to return to the Bronx, get
back your old room, if you can, and stick close to the
Brunells.”</p>
<p>Back in his old rooms at Mrs. Quinlan’s, Guy sat in
the window-seat at dusk, impatiently awaiting the appearance
of a slender, well-known figure. The rain,
which had set in early in the afternoon, had turned to
sleet, and as the darkness deepened, the rays from a
solitary street lamp gleamed sharply upon the pavement
as upon an unbroken sheet of ice.</p>
<p>Presently the spare, long-limbed form of James
Brunell emerged from the gloom and disappeared within
the door of this little house opposite. Morrow observed
that the man’s step lacked its accustomed jauntiness and
spring, and he plodded along wearily, as if utterly preoccupied
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_148' name='page_148'></SPAN>148</span>
with some depressing meditation. A light
sprang up in the front room on the ground floor, but
after a few moments it was suddenly extinguished, and
Brunell appeared again on the porch. He closed the
door softly behind him, and strode quickly down the
street. There was a marked change in his bearing, a
furtiveness and eager haste which ill accorded with his
manner of a short time before.</p>
<p>Scarcely had Brunell vanished into the encroaching
gloom, when his daughter appeared. She, too, approached
wearily, and on reaching the little sagging
gate she paused in surprised dismay at the air of detached
emptiness the house seemed to exude. Then a
little furry object scurried around the porch corner and
precipitated itself upon her. She stooped swiftly, gathered
up the kitten in her arms and went slowly into the
house.</p>
<p>Morrow ate his supper in absent-minded haste, and
as soon as he decently could, he made his way across the
street.</p>
<p>Emily opened the door in response to his ring and
greeted him with such undisguised pleasure and surprise
that his honest heart quickened a beat or two, and
it was with difficulty that he voiced the plausible falsehood
concerning his loss of position, and return to his
former abode.</p>
<p>Under the light in the little drawing-room, he noticed
that she looked pale and careworn, and her limpid, childlike
eyes were veiled pathetically with deep, blue
shadows. As he looked at her, however, a warm tint
dyed her cheeks and her head drooped, while the little
smile still lingered about her lips.</p>
<p>“You are tired?” he found himself asking solicitously,
after she had expressed her sympathy for his supposed
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_149' name='page_149'></SPAN>149</span>
ill fortune. “You found your work difficult to-day
at the club?”</p>
<p>“Oh, no,”––she shook her head slowly. “My position
is a mere sinecure, thanks to Miss Lawton’s wonderful
consideration. I have been a little depressed––a
little worried, that is all.”</p>
<p>“Worried?” Morrow paused, then added in a lower
tone, the words coming swiftly, “Can’t you tell me,
Emily? Isn’t there some way in which I can help you?
What is it that is troubling you?”</p>
<p>“I––I don’t know.” A deeper, painful flush spread
for a moment over her face, then ebbed, leaving her
paler even than before. “You are very kind, Mr. Morrow,
but I do not think that I should speak of it to anyone.
And indeed, my fears are so intangible, so vague,
that when I try to formulate my thoughts into words,
even to myself, they are unconvincing, almost meaningless.
Yet I feel instinctively that something is wrong.”</p>
<p>“Won’t you trust me?” Morrow’s hand closed
gently but firmly over the girl’s slender one, in a clasp
of compelling sympathy, and unconsciously she responded
to it. “I know that I am comparatively a new
friend. You and your father have been kind enough to
extend your hospitality to me, to accept me as a friend.
You know very little about me, yet I want you to believe
that I am worthy of trust––that I want to help you.
I do, Emily, more than you realize, more than I can express
to you now!”</p>
<p>Morrow had forgotten the reason for his presence
there, forgotten his profession, his avowed purpose,
everything but the girl beside him. But her next words
brought him swiftly back to a realization of the present––so
swiftly that for a moment he felt as if stunned
by an unexpected blow.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_150' name='page_150'></SPAN>150</span></div>
<p>“Oh, I do believe that you are a friend! I do trust
you!” Emily’s voice thrilled with deep sincerity, and
in an impetuous outburst of confidence she added:
“It is about my father that I am troubled. Something
has happened which I do not understand; there is something
he is keeping from me, which has changed him.
He seems like a different man, a stranger!”</p>
<p>“You are sure of it?” Morrow asked, slowly.
“You are sure that it isn’t just a nervous fancy? Your
father really has changed toward you lately?”</p>
<p>“Not only toward me, but to all the world beside!”
she responded. “Now that I look back, I can see that
his present state of mind has been coming on gradually
for several months, but it was only a short time ago that
something occurred which seemed to bring the matter,
whatever it is, to a turning-point. I remember that it
was just a few days before you came––I mean, before
I happened to see you over at Mrs. Quinlan’s.”</p>
<p>She stopped abruptly, as if an arresting finger had
been laid across her lips, and after waiting a moment for
her to continue, Morrow asked quietly:</p>
<p>“What was it that occurred?”</p>
<p>“Father received a letter. It came one afternoon
when I had returned from the club earlier than usual.
I took it from the postman myself, and as father had
not come home yet from the shop, I placed it beside his
plate at the supper table. I noticed the postmark––‘Brooklyn’––but
it didn’t make any particular impression
upon me; it was only later, when I saw how it
affected my father, that I remembered, and wondered.
He had scarcely opened the envelope, when he rose,
trembling so that he could hardly stand, and coming
into this room, he shut the door after him. I waited as
long as I could, but he did not return, and the supper
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_151' name='page_151'></SPAN>151</span>
was getting cold, so I came to the door here. It was
locked! For the first time in his life, my father had
locked himself in, from me! He would not answer me at
first, as I called to him, and I was nearly frightened to
death before he spoke. When he did, his voice sounded
so harsh and strained that I scarcely recognized it. He
told me that he didn’t want anything to eat; he had
some private business to attend to, and I was not to
wait up for him, but to go to bed when I wished.</p>
<p>“I crept away, and went to my room at last, but I
could not sleep. It was nearly morning when Father
went to bed, and his step was heavy and dragging as he
passed my door. His room is next to mine, and I heard
him tossing restlessly about––and once or twice I
fancied that he groaned as if in pain. He was up in
the morning at his usual time, but he looked ill and
worn, as if he had aged years in that one night.
Neither of us mentioned the letter, then or at any subsequent
time, but he has never been the same man since.”</p>
<p>“And the letter––you never saw it?” Morrow asked
eagerly, his detective instinct now thoroughly aroused.
“You don’t know what that envelope postmarked
‘Brooklyn’ contained?”</p>
<p>“Oh, but I do!” Emily exclaimed. “Father had
thrust it in the stove, but the fire had gone out, without
his noticing it. I found it the next morning, when I
raked down the ashes.”</p>
<p>“You––read it?” Morrow carefully steadied his
voice.</p>
<p>“No,” she shook her head, with a faint smile.
“That’s the queer part of it all. No one could have
read it––no one who did not hold the key to it, I
mean. It was written in some secret code or cipher,
with oddly shaped figures instead of letters; dots and
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_152' name='page_152'></SPAN>152</span>
cubes and triangles. I never saw anything like it before.
I couldn’t understand why anyone should send
such a funny message to my father, instead of writing it
out properly.”</p>
<p>“What did you do with the letter––did you destroy
it?” This time the detective made no effort to
control the eagerness in his tones, but the girl was so
absorbed in her problem that she was oblivious to all
else.</p>
<p>“I suppose I should have, but I didn’t. I knew that
it was what my father had intended, yet somehow I felt
that it might prove useful in the future––that I might
even be helping Father by keeping it, against his own
judgment. The envelope was partially scorched by the
hot ashes, but the inside sheet remained untouched. I
hid the letter behind the mirror on my dresser, and
sometimes, when I have been quite alone, I took it out
and tried to solve it, but I couldn’t. I never was good
at puzzles when I was little, and I suppose I lack that
deductive quality now. I was ashamed, too: it seemed
so like prying into things which didn’t concern me,
which my father didn’t wish me to know; still, I was
only doing it to try to help him.”</p>
<p>Morrow winced, and drew a long breath. Then resolutely
he plunged into the task before him.</p>
<p>“Emily, don’t think that I want to pry, either, but
if I am to help you I must see that letter. If you trust
me and believe in my friendship, let me see it. Perhaps
I may be able to discover the key in the first word
or two, and then you can decipher it for yourself. You
understand, I don’t wish you to show it to me unless you
really have confidence in me, unless you are sure that
there is nothing in it which one who has your welfare
and peace of mind at heart should not see.”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_153' name='page_153'></SPAN>153</span></div>
<p>He waited for her reply with a suffocating feeling as
if a hand were clutching at his throat. A hot wave of
shame, of fierce repugnance and self-contempt at the
rôle he was forced to play, surged up within him, but
he could not go back now. The die was cast.</p>
<p>She looked at him––a long, searching look, her childlike
eyes dark with troubled indecision. At length they
cleared slowly and she smiled, a faint, pathetic smile,
which wrung his heart. Then she rose without a word,
and left the room.</p>
<p>It seemed to him that an interminable period of time
passed before he heard her light, returning footsteps
descending the stairs. A wild desire to flee assailed
him––to efface himself before her innocent confidence
was betrayed.</p>
<p>Emily Brunell came straight to him, and placed the
letter in his hands.</p>
<p>“There can be nothing in this letter which could
harm my father, if all the world read it,” she said
simply. “He is good and true; he has not an enemy
on earth. It can be only a private business communication,
at the most. My father’s life is an open book; no
discredit could come to him. Yet if there was anything
in the cryptic message written here which others, not
knowing him as I do, might misjudge, I am not afraid
that you will. You see, I do believe in your friendship,
Mr. Morrow; I am proving my faith in you.”</p>
<hr class='major' />
<div style='margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 2em; padding-bottom: 1em'>
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_154' name='page_154'></SPAN>154</span>
<SPAN name='CHAPTER_XII_THE_CIPHER' id='CHAPTER_XII_THE_CIPHER'></SPAN>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />