<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
<h3>THE EMPTY HOUSE</h3></div>
<p class="dropcapq" ><small>“</small><span class="drop">D</span><span class="dcap">on’t</span> spare them now. Get the truth at all
costs.”</p>
<p style="clear: both; padding-top: .4em;" >With the last instructions of his chief ringing
in his ears, the following morning Guy Morrow set
out for Brooklyn, to interview his erstwhile friends, the
Pennolds, in his true colors.</p>
<p>Mame Pennold, who was cleaning the dingy front
room, heard the click of the gate, and peered with
habitual caution from behind the frayed curtains of the
window. The unexpected reappearance of their young
banking acquaintance sent her scurrying as fast as her
palsied legs could carry her back to the kitchen, where
her husband sat luxuriously smoking and toasting his
feet at the roaring little stove.</p>
<p>“Wally, who d’you think’s comin’ up the walk?
That young feller, Alfred Hicks, who skipped from the
Brooklyn and Queens Bank!”</p>
<p>“Good Lord!” Walter Pennold took his pipe from
his lips and stared at her. “What <SPAN name='TC_5'></SPAN><ins title="Was ''d' you'' in the original text">d’you</ins> s’pose
brought him back? Think he’s broke, an’ wants a
touch?”</p>
<p>“No-o,” his wife responded, somewhat doubtfully.
“He looked prosperous, all right, by the flash I got at
him, an’ he’s walkin’ real brisk and businesslike. Maybe
he’s back on the job.”</p>
<p>“’Tain’t likely, not after the way he left his boarding
place, if that Lindsay woman didn’t lie.” Pennold
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_172' name='page_172'></SPAN>172</span>
laid aside his pipe and frowned thoughtfully, as steps
echoed from the rickety porch and a knock sounded
upon the door. “He’s a lightweight, every way you
take him––he’d never stick anywhere.”</p>
<p>“Maybe he’s come to try an’ get you into somethin’,”
Mame suggested. “Don’t you go takin’ up with a bad
penny at your time o’ life, Wally. He might know
somethin’ an’ try blackmail, if he’s real up against it.”</p>
<p>“Well, go ahead an’ open the door!” ordered Walter
impatiently. “We’re straight with the bank. If
he’s workin’ there again we ain’t got nothin’ to worry
about, an’ if he ain’t, we got nothin’ against him. Let
him in.”</p>
<p>With obvious reluctance, Mame shuffled through the
hall and obeyed.</p>
<p>“Hello, Mrs. Pennold!” Guy greeted her heartily,
but without offering his hand. He brushed past her
half-defensive figure with scant ceremony, and entered
the kitchen. “Hello, Pennold. Thought I might find
you home this cold morning. How goes it?”</p>
<p>“Same as usual.” Pennold rose slowly and looked at
his visitor with swiftly narrowed eyes. There was a new
note in the young man’s voice which the other vaguely
recognized; it was as if a lantern had suddenly flashed
into his face from the darkness, or an authoritative hand
been laid upon his shoulder. He motioned mechanically
toward a chair on the other side of the stove, and added
slowly: “S’prised to see you, Al. Didn’t expect
you’d be around here again after your get-away.
Workin’ once more?”</p>
<p>“Oh, I’m right on the job!” responded Guy briskly.
He drew the chair close to the square deal table, so close
that he could have reached out, had he pleased, and
touched his host’s sleeve. Pennold seated himself again
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_173' name='page_173'></SPAN>173</span>
in his old position, significantly half-turned, so that
when he glanced slyly at his visitor it was over his
shoulder, in the furtive fashion of one on guard.</p>
<p>“Ain’t back with the Brooklyn and Queens, are
you?” he asked.</p>
<p>“No. It got too slow for me there. I found something
bigger to do.”</p>
<p>Mame Pennold, who had been hovering in the background,
came forward now and faced him across the
table, her shrewd eyes fastened upon him.</p>
<p>“Must have easy hours, when you can get off in the
morning like this?” she observed. “Didn’t forget your
old friends, did you?”</p>
<p>“No, of course not. I hadn’t anything more important
to do this morning, so I thought I’d drop in
and see you both.”</p>
<p>His hand traveled to his breast pocket, and at the
gesture, Mame’s gaunt body stiffened suddenly.</p>
<p>“Didn’t come to inquire about our health, did you?”
she shot at him, acrimoniously.</p>
<p>“I came to see you about another matter––”</p>
<p>“Not on the trail of old Jimmy Brunell still, on that
business of the bonds found at the bank?” Walter’s
voice was suddenly shrill with simulated mirth.
“Nothin’ in that for you, Al; not a nickel, if that’s
what you’re here for.”</p>
<p>“I’m not on Brunell’s trail. I’ve found him,” Morrow
returned quietly; and in the tense pause which ensued
he added dryly: “You led me to him.”</p>
<p>“So that’s what it was, a plant!” Walter started
from his chair, but Mame laid a trembling, sinewy hand
upon his shoulder and forced him back.</p>
<p>“What d’you mean, young man?” she demanded.
“What do we know about old Brunell?”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_174' name='page_174'></SPAN>174</span></div>
<p>“You wrote him a letter––you knew where to find
him.”</p>
<p>“I only wish we did!” she ejaculated. “We didn’t
write him! You must be crazy!”</p>
<p>“‘Big money coming to you from old score left unpaid.
What is my share for collecting for you?’”
quoted Morrow, adding: “I have a friend who is very
much interested in ciphers, and he wanted me to ask
you about the one you use, Pennold. His name is
Blaine. Ever hear of him?”</p>
<p>“Blaine!” Mame’s voice shrank to a mere whisper,
and her sallow face whitened.</p>
<p>“Blaine! Henry Blaine? The guy they call the
Master Mind?” Pennold’s shaking voice rose to a
breaking cry, but again his wife silenced him.</p>
<p>“Suppose we did write such a letter––an’ we ain’t
admittin’ we did, for a minute––what’s Blaine got on
us?” demanded Mame, coolly. “It’s no crime, as I
ever heard, to write a letter any way you want to. Who
are you, young man? You’re no bank clerk!”</p>
<p>“He’s a ’tec, of course! Shut up your fool mouth,
Mame. An’ as for you, d––n you, get out of this house,
an’ get out quick, or I’ll call the police myself! We’ve
been leadin’ straight, clean, respectable lives for years,
Mame an’ me, an’ nobody’s got nothin’ on us! I ain’t
goin’ to have no private ’tecs snoopin’ in an’ tryin’ to
put me through the third degree. Beat it, now!”</p>
<p>He rose blusteringly and advanced toward Morrow
with upraised fist, but the other, with the table between
them, drew from his pocket a folded paper.</p>
<p>“Not so fast, Pennold. I have a warrant here for
your arrest!”</p>
<p>“Don’t you believe him, Wally!” shrilled Mame.
“It’s a fake! Don’t you talk to him! Put him out.”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_175' name='page_175'></SPAN>175</span></div>
<p>“The warrant was issued this morning, and I am
empowered to arrest you. You can look at it for yourselves;
you’ve both seen them before.” He opened the
paper and spread it out for them to read. “Walter
Pennold, alias William Perry, alias Wally the Scribbler,
number 09203 in the Rogues’ Gallery. First term at
Joliet, for forgery; second at Sing Sing for shoving
the queer. This warrant only holds you as a suspicious
character, Pennold, but we can dig up plenty of other
things, if it’s necessary; there’s a forger named Griswold
in the Tombs now awaiting trial, who will snitch
about that Rochester check, for one thing.”</p>
<p>“Don’t let him bluff you, Wally.” Mame faced
Morrow from her husband’s side. “They can’t rake
up a thing that ain’t outlawed by time. You’ve lived
clean more’n seven years, an’ you’re free from the bulls.
They can’t hold you.”</p>
<p>“I haven’t any warrant yet for you, Mrs. Pennold,”
observed Morrow, imperturbably. “I admit that it’s
more than seven years since every department-store detective
was on the look-out for Left-handed Mame. I
believe you specialized in furs and laces, didn’t you?”</p>
<p>“What’s it to you? You can’t lay a finger on me
now!” the woman stormed, defiantly.</p>
<p>“Not for shop-lifting or forgery––but how about
receiving stolen goods?”</p>
<p>The shot found an instant target. Walter Pennold
slumped and crumpled down into his chair, his arms outspread
upon the table. He laid his head upon them, and
a single dry, shuddering sob tore its way from his
throat. The woman backed slowly away, and for the
first time a shadow as of approaching terror crossed her
hard, challenging face.</p>
<p>“Stolen goods!” she repeated. “What are you
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_176' name='page_176'></SPAN>176</span>
tryin’ to put over? Do you think we’re so green at the
game that you can plant the goods here an’ get us put
away on the strength of a past record? You’re a––”</p>
<p>“Nothing like it!” Morrow leaned forward impressively.
“We don’t have to do any planting, Mame.
It’s a good deal less than seven years since the Mortimer
Chase’s silver plate lay in your cellar.”</p>
<p>“Silver plate––in our cellar!” echoed Mame in genuine
amazement.</p>
<p>She stepped forward again, her shrewish chin out-thrust,
but Walter Pennold raised his face, and at sight
of it she stopped as if turned to stone.</p>
<p>“It’s no use!” he cried, brokenly. “They’ve got
me, Mame!”</p>
<p>“Got you? They’ll never get you!” her startled
scream rang out. “Wally, d’you know what the next
term means? It’s a lifer, on any count! I don’t know
what he means about any silver plate, but it’s a bluff!
Don’t let him get your nerve!”</p>
<p>“Is it a bluff, Pennold?” asked Morrow, with dominant
insistence.</p>
<p>The broken figure huddled in the chair shuddered uncontrollably.</p>
<p>“No, it ain’t,” he muttered. “I––I held out on
you, Mame! I knew you wouldn’t risk it, so I didn’t
say nothin’ to you about it, but the money was too easy
to let get by. The old gang offered me five hundred
bucks just to keep it ten days, and pass it on to Jennings.
He came here with a rag-picker’s cart, you remember?
You wondered what I was givin’ him, an’ I
told you it was some rolls of old carpet I got from that
place I was night watchman at, in Vandewater Street.
I hid the stuff under the coal––”</p>
<p>“Shut up!” cried Mame, fiercely. “You don’t know
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_177' name='page_177'></SPAN>177</span>
what you’re sayin’. Wally, hold your tongue for God’s
sake! Where’s your spirit? Are you goin’ to break
down now like a reformatory brat, you that had ’em all
guessin’ for twenty years!”</p>
<p>The gaunt woman had recovered from the sudden
shock of her husband’s unexpected revelation and now
towered protectingly over his collapsed form, her palsied
hands for once steady and firm upon his shoulders, while
her keen eyes glittered shrewdly at the young operative
confronting them.</p>
<p>“Look here!” she said, shortly. “If you wanted
us for receiving stolen goods, you wouldn’t come around
here with a warrant for Wally’s arrest as a suspicious
character, an’ you wouldn’t have worked that Brunell
plant. What’s your lay?”</p>
<p>“Information,” responded Morrow, frankly. “The
police don’t know where the plate was, for those ten
days, and there’s no immediate need that they should.
Blaine cleaned up that case eventually, you know––recovered
the plate and caught the butler in Southampton,
under the noses of the Scotland Yard men. I want to
know what you can tell me about Brunell––and about
your nephew, Charley Pennold.”</p>
<p>Walter opened his lips, but closed them without
speech, and his wife replied for him.</p>
<p>“We’re no snitchers,” she said coldly. “There’s
nothin’ we can tell. Jimmy Brunell’s run straight for
near twenty years, so far as we know.”</p>
<p>“And Charley?” persisted Morrow.</p>
<p>“It’s no use, Mame,” Walter Pennold repeated, dully.
“If I go up again, it means the end for me. Charley’s
got to take his chance, same as the rest of us. God
knows I tried to do the right thing by the boy, same as
Jimmy did by his daughter, but Charley’s got the blood
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_178' name='page_178'></SPAN>178</span>
in him. It’s hell to peach on your own, but it’s worse
to hear that iron door clank behind you, and to know it’s
for the last time! After all, there ain’t nothin’ in what
we can tell about Charley that a lot of other people
wouldn’t spill, an’ nothin’ that could land him behind the
bars. I ain’t the man I was, or I’d take my medicine
without squealin’, but I can’t face it again, Mame, I
can’t! I’m an old man now, old before my time, perhaps,
but it’s been so long since I smelled the prison
taint, so long since I had a number instead of a name,
that I’d die now, quick, before I’d rot in a cell!”</p>
<p>The terrible, droning monotone ceased, and for a
moment there was silence in the squalid little room.
The woman’s face was as impassive as Morrow’s, as she
waited. Only the tightening of her hands upon her
husband’s shoulders, until her bony knuckles showed
white through the drawn skin, betrayed the storm of
emotion which swept over her, at the memories evoked
by the broken words.</p>
<p>“I’m not asking you to snitch, Pennold,” Morrow
said, not unkindly. “We know all we want to about
Brunell’s life at present––his home in the Bronx, and
his little map-making shop––and we’re not trying to
rake up anything from the past to hold over him now; it
is only some general information I want. As to your
nephew, you’ve got to tell me all you know about him,
or it’s all up with you. Blaine won’t give you away,
if you’ll answer my questions frankly and make a clean
breast of it, and this is your only chance.”</p>
<p>Pennold licked his dry lips.</p>
<p>“What do you want to know?” he asked, at last.</p>
<p>“When did Jimmy Brunell turn his last trick?”</p>
<p>“Years ago; I’ve forgotten how many. It’s no
harm speakin’ of it now, for he did his seven years up
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_179' name='page_179'></SPAN>179</span>
the river for it––his first and only conviction. That
was the time old Cowperthwaite’s name was forged to
five checks amounting to thirty thousand, all told, and
Jimmy was caught on the last.”</p>
<p>“Where was his plant?”</p>
<p>“In a basement on Dye Street. The bulls never
found it. He was running a little printer’s shop in
front, as a blind––oh, he was clever, old Jimmy, the
sharpest in his line!”</p>
<p>“What became of his outfit, when he was sent up?”</p>
<p>“Dunno. It just disappeared. Some of his old
pals cribbed it, I guess, or Jimmy may have fixed it with
them to remove it. He was always close-mouthed, and
he never would tell me. I knew where his plant was, of
course, and I went there myself, after he was sent up and
the coast was clear, to get the outfit, to––to take care
of it for him until he came out. Oh, I ain’t afraid to
tell now; it’s so long ago! I could take you to the place
to-day, but the outfit’s gone.”</p>
<p>“And when he had served his term, what happened?”</p>
<p>“He came out to find that his wife was dead, and
Emily, the little girl that was born just after he went
up, was none too well treated by the people her mother’d
had to leave her with. He’d learned in the pen’ to
make maps, an’ he opened a little shop an’ made up his
mind to live straight, an’––an’ so far as I know, he
has.” Pennold faltered, as if from weakness, and for a
moment his voice ceased. Then he went on: “I ain’t
seen him for a long time, but we kept track of each
other, an’ when you come with that cock-an’-bull story
about the bonds, and the bank backed you up in it, why
I––I went to see him.”</p>
<p>“You wrote him first. Why did you send a cipher
letter?”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_180' name='page_180'></SPAN>180</span></div>
<p>“Because I suspicioned the whole thing was a plant,
just like it turned out to be, an’ I didn’t want to get an
old pal into no trouble. The cipher’s an old one we
used years ago, in the gang, an’ I know he wouldn’t forget
it. I never thought he’d squeal on me to Blaine!”</p>
<p>“He didn’t. The letter––er––came into Blaine’s
possession, and he read it for himself.”</p>
<p>“He did?” Pennold looked up quickly, with a flash
of interest on his sullen face. “He’s a wonder, that
Blaine! If he’d only got started the other way, the
way we did, what a crook he would have made! As it is,
I guess we ain’t afraid of all the organized police on
earth combined, as much as we are of him. It’s a queer
thing he ain’t been shot up or blown into eternity long
ago, an’ yet they say he’s never guarded. He must be
a cool one! Anyhow, I’m glad Jimmy didn’t squeal on
me; I’d hate to think it of him. When I went to see
him about the bonds, he wouldn’t have nothin’ to do with
them. Swore they was a plant, he did, an’ warned me
off. He seemed real excited, considerin’ he had nothin’
to worry about, but I took his word for it, an’ beat it.
That’s the last I seen of him.”</p>
<p>“Did you send your nephew to him?”</p>
<p>“Me?” Pennold’s tones quickened in surprise. “I
ain’t seen him in a long while, an’ I don’t believe he even
remembers old Jimmy; he was only a kid when Jimmy
went up the river. What would I send Charley for,
when I’d gone myself an’ it hadn’t worked?”</p>
<p>It was evident to Morrow that the man he was interrogating
was ignorant of Brunell’s connection with the
Lawton case, and he changed his tactics.</p>
<p>“Tell me about Charley. You say you tried to do
right by him.”</p>
<p>“Of course I did! Wasn’t he my brother’s boy?”
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_181' name='page_181'></SPAN>181</span>
Pennold hunched over the table, and continued eagerly:
“Mame kept him clean an’ fed, an’ we sent him to public
school, just like any other kid. But it wasn’t no use.
He had it in him to go wrong, without the wit to get
away with it. He was caught pinchin’ lead piping when
he was sixteen, an’ sent to Elmira for three years.
Them three years was his finish. When he came out
he’d had what you’d call a graduate course in every form
of crookedness under the sun, from fellers harder an’
cleverer than he’d ever thought of bein’, an’ he was bitter
besides, an’ desperate. There wasn’t no chance for him
then, an’ he just drifted on down the line. I never
heard of him turnin’ a real trick himself, an’ he never
got caught at nothin’ again, but he chummed in with
the gang, an’ he always seemed to have coin enough. I
ain’t seen him in more’n a year. The last I heard of
him, he was workin’ as a stool-pigeon an’ snitcher for
the worst scoundrel of the lot.”</p>
<p>“Who was that?” asked Morrow.</p>
<p>Pennold hesitated and then replied with dogged reluctance.</p>
<p>“I dunno what that’s got to do with it, but the feller’s
name is Paddington, an’ he’s the worst kind of a crook––a
’tec gone wrong. At least, that’s what they say
about him, but I ain’t got nothin’ on him; I don’t believe
I ever seen the man, that I know of. He’s worked on a
lot of shady cases; I know that much, an’ he’s clever.
More’n a dozen crooks are floatin’ around town that
would be up the river if he told what he knew about ’em;
so naturally, he owns ’em, body an’ soul. Not that
Charley’s one that’d go up––he’s only in it for the coin––but
I’d rather see him get pinched an’ do time for
pullin’ off somethin’ on his own account, than runnin’
around doin’ dirty work for a man who ain’t in his
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_182' name='page_182'></SPAN>182</span>
father’s class, or mine. He’s a disgrace; that’s what
Charley is––a plain disgrace.”</p>
<p>Pennold’s voice rang out in highly virtuous indignation.
Morrow forbore to smile at the oblique moral
viewpoint of the old crook.</p>
<p>“What does he look like?” he asked. “Short and
slim, isn’t he, with a small dark mustache?”</p>
<p>“That’s him!” ejaculated Pennold disgustedly.
“Dresses like a dude, an’ chases after a bunch of skirts!
Spreads himself like a ward politician when he gets a
chance! He’s my nephew, all right, but as long as he
won’t run straight, same as I’m doin’ now, I’d rather
he’d crack a crib than play errand boy for a man I
wouldn’t trust on look-out!”</p>
<p>“Where does Charley live?” asked Morrow.</p>
<p>“How should I know? He hangs out at Lafferty’s
saloon, down on Sand Street, when he ain’t off on some
steer or other––leastways he used to.”</p>
<p>Morrow folded the warrant slowly, in the pause which
ensued, and returned it to his pocket while the couple
watched him tensely.</p>
<p>“All right, Pennold,” he said, at last. “I guess I
won’t have to use this now. If you’ve been square, an’
told me all you know, you won’t be bothered about that
matter of the Mortimer Chase silver plate. If you’ve
kept anything back, Blaine will find it out, and then it’s
good-night to you.”</p>
<p>“I ain’t!” returned Pennold, with tremendous eagerness.
“I’ve told you everything you asked, an’ I don’t
savvy what you’re gettin’ at, anyway. If you’re tryin’
to mix Jimmy Brunell up in any new case you’re dead
wrong; he’s out of the game for good. As for Charley,
he wouldn’t know enough to pick up a pocket-book if he
saw one lyin’ on the sidewalk, unless he was told to!”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_183' name='page_183'></SPAN>183</span></div>
<p>“Well, I may as well warn both of you that you’re
watched, and if you try to make a get-away, you’ll be
taken up––and it won’t be on suspicion, either. Play
fair with Blaine, and he’ll be square with you, but don’t
try to put anything over on him, or it’ll be the worse for
you. It can’t be done.”</p>
<p>Morrow closed the door behind him, leaving the
couple as they had been almost throughout the interview––the
woman erect and stony of face, the man miserable
and shaken, crouched dejectedly over the table. But
scarcely had he descended the steps of the ramshackle
little porch when the voice of Mame Pennold reached
him, pitched in a shrill key of emotional exultation.</p>
<p>“Oh, Wally, Wally! Thank God you ain’t a
snitcher! Thank God you didn’t tell!”</p>
<p>The voice ceased suddenly, as if a hand had been laid
across her lips, and after a moment’s hesitation, Morrow
swung off down the path, conscious of at least one pair
of eyes watching him from behind the soiled curtains of
the front room.</p>
<p>What had the woman meant? Pennold obviously had
kept something back, but was it of sufficient importance
to warrant his returning and forcing a confession?
Whether it concerned Brunell or their nephew Charley
mattered little, at the moment. He had achieved the
object of his visit; he knew that Pennold himself had no
connection with the Lawton forgeries, nor knowledge of
them, and at the same time he had learned of Charley’s
affiliation with Paddington. The couple back there in
the little house could tell him scarcely more which would
aid him in his investigation, but the dapper, viciously
weak young stool-pigeon, if he could be located at once,
might be made to disclose enough to place Paddington
definitely within the grasp of the law.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_184' name='page_184'></SPAN>184</span></div>
<p>Guy Morrow boarded a Sand Street car, and behind
the sporting page of a newspaper he kept a sharp look-out
for Lafferty’s saloon. He came to it at last––a
dingy, down-at-heel resort, with much faded gilt-work
over the door, and fly-specked posters of the latest social
function of the district’s political club showing dimly
behind its unwashed windows.</p>
<p>He rode a block beyond––then, alighting, turned
back and entered the bar. It was deserted at that hour
of the morning, save for a disconsolate-looking individual
who leaned upon one ragged elbow, gazing mournfully
into his empty whisky glass at the end of the narrow,
varnished counter. The bartender emerged from a door
leading into the back room, with a tall, empty glass in
his hand, and Morrow asked for a beer. As he stood
sipping it, he watched the bartender replenish the empty
unwashed glass he had carried with a generous drink of
doubtful looking absinthe and a squirt from a syphon.</p>
<p>“Bum drink on a cold morning,” he observed tentatively.
“Have a whisky straight, on me?”</p>
<p>“I will that!” the bartender returned heartily.
“This green-eyed fairy stuff ain’t for me; it’s for a
dame in the back room––one of the regulars. She’s
been hittin’ it up all the morning, but it don’t seem to
affect her––funny, too, for she ain’t a boozer, as a
general thing. Her guy’s gone back on her, an’ she’s
sore. I’ll be with you in a minute.”</p>
<p>He vanished into the back room with the glass, and
before he returned, the disconsolate individual had slunk
out, leaving Morrow in sole possession. If this place
was indeed the rendezvous of the gang of minor criminals
with which Charley Pennold had allied himself, he
had obviously come at the wrong time to obtain any
information concerning him, unless the voluble bartender
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_185' name='page_185'></SPAN>185</span>
could be made to talk, and that would be a difficult
matter.</p>
<p>“Look here!” Morrow decided on a bold move, as
the bartender reappeared and placed a bottle of whisky
between them. He leaned forward, after a quick, furtive
glance about him, and spoke rapidly, with a disarming
air of confidential frankness. “I’m in an awful
hole. I’m new at this game, and I’ve got to find a fellow
I never saw, and find him quick. He hangs out
here, and the big guy sent me for him.”</p>
<p>“What big guy?” The cordiality faded from the
bartender’s ruddy countenance and he stepped back
significantly.</p>
<p>“You know––Pad!” Morrow shot back on a desperate
bluff. “The fellow’s name’s Charley Pennold,
and Pad wants him right away. He didn’t tell me to
ask you about him, but he made it pretty plain to me
that he’d got to get him.”</p>
<p>“Say!” The bartender approached cautiously.
He rested one hand upon the counter, keeping the other
well below it, but Morrow did not flinch. “What’s
your lay?”</p>
<p>“Anything there’s coin in,” returned the operative,
with a knowing leer. “Anything from planting divorce
evidence to shoving the queer. I’ve been working
for a pal of Pad’s in St. Louis for three or four
years––that’s why I’m strange around here. Pad’s
up in the air about something, and wants this
Charley-boy right away, and he tells me to look here for
him and not come back without him, see? This is on
the level. If you know where he is, be a good fellow
and come across, will you?”</p>
<p>The bartender felt under the counter for the shelf,
and then raised his hand, empty, toward the bottle.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_186' name='page_186'></SPAN>186</span></div>
<p>“I guess you’re all right,” he remarked. “Anyway,
I’ll take a chance. What’s your moniker?”</p>
<p>“Guy the Blinker,” returned Morrow promptly.
“Guess you’ve heard of me, all right. I pulled off––but
I haven’t got time to chin now. I got to find this
boy if I want to keep in with Pad, and there’s coin in
it.”</p>
<p>“Sure there is,” the bartender affirmed. “But he’s
a queer one––the big guy, as you call him. What’s
his game? Why, only this morning, he tipped Charley
off to beat it, and Charley did. Maybe he thinks the
kid’s double-crossed him.”</p>
<p>Morrow’s heart leaped in sudden excitement at this
astounding news, but he controlled himself, and replied
nonchalantly:</p>
<p>“Search me. He told me I’d find this Charley-boy
here; that’s all I know. He isn’t talking for publication––not
Pad.”</p>
<p>“You bet not!” The bartender nodded. Then he
jerked a grimy thumb in the direction of the back room.
“Why, the dame in there, cryin’ into her absinthe, is
Charley’s girl. She’s a queen––straight as they make
’em, if she does work the shops now and then––and
Charley was fixin’ to hook up with her next month,
preacher-fashion, and settle down. Now he gets the
office and skips without a word to her, and she’s all
broke up over it!”</p>
<p>The door at the rear opened suddenly, and a girl
stood upon the threshold. She was tall and slender,
and her face showed traces of positive beauty, although
it was bloated and distorted with weeping and dissipation,
and her big black eyes glittered feverishly.</p>
<p>“What’s that you’re sayin’ about Charley?” she
demanded half-hysterically. “He’s gone! He’s left
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_187' name='page_187'></SPAN>187</span>
me! I don’t believe Pad gave him the office, and if he
did, Charley’s a fool to beat it! They’ve got nothin’
on him––it’s Pad who’s got to save his own skin!”</p>
<p>“Shut up, Annie!” advised the bartender, not unkindly.
“Pad’s sent this here feller for him, now!”</p>
<p>“Then it was a lie––a lie! Pad didn’t tell him to
beat it––he’s gone on his own account, gone for good!
But I’ll find him; I’ll––”</p>
<p>The girl suddenly burst into a storm of sobs, and,
turning, reeled back into the inner room.</p>
<p>“You see!” the bartender observed, confidentially,
as the door swung shut behind her. “She thinks he’s
gone off with another skirt; that’s the way with women!
I knew Pad had given him the office, though. I got it
straight. You’re right about Pad bein’ up in the air.
He must have bitten off more than he can chew, this
time. I heard Reddy Thursby talkin’ to Gil Hennessey
about it, right where you’re standin’, not two hours ago.
They’re both Pad’s men––met ’em yet?”</p>
<p>Morrow shook his head, not trusting himself to speak,
and the loquacious bartender went on.</p>
<p>“It was Reddy brought the word for Charley to
skip, and he dropped somethin’ about a raid on some
plant up in the Bronx. Know anything about it?”</p>
<p>For a moment the rows of bottles on their shelves
seemed to reel before Morrow’s eyes, and his heart
stood still, but he forced himself to reply:</p>
<p>“Oh, that? I know all about it, of course. Wasn’t
I in on the ground floor? But that’s only a fake steer;
this Charley-boy hasn’t got anything to do with it,
that I know of. Maybe the big guy thought he hadn’t
got out of the way, and sent me to find out. No use
my hanging round here any longer, anyhow. I’ll amble
back and tell Pad he’s gone. Swell dame, that Annie––some
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_188' name='page_188'></SPAN>188</span>
queen, eh? Let’s have one more drink and I’ll
blow!”</p>
<p>With assurances of an early return, Morrow contrived
to beat a retreat without arousing the suspicions
of the bartender, but he went out into the pale, wintry,
sunlight with his brain awhirl. To his apprehensive
mind a raid on a plant in the Bronx could mean only
one place––the little map-making shop of Jimmy
Brunell. Something had happened in his absence;
some one had betrayed the old forger. And Emily––what
of her?</p>
<p>Morrow sped as fast as elevated and subway could
carry him to the Bronx. Anxious as he was about the
girl he loved, he did not go directly to the house on
Meadow Lane, but made a detour to the little shop a
few blocks away.</p>
<p>Morrow’s instinct had not misled him. Before he
had approached within a hundred feet of the shop he
knew that his fears had been justified.</p>
<p>The door swung idly open on its hinges, and the single
window gave forth a vacant stare. Within everything
was in the wildest disorder. The table which served
as a counter, the racks of maps, the high stool, the
printing apparatus, all were overturned. The trap
door leading into the cellar was open, and Morrow flung
himself wildly down the sanded steps. The forger’s
outfit had disappeared.</p>
<p>What had become of Jimmy Brunell? His purpose
served, had Paddington betrayed him to the police, or
had some warning reached him to flee before it was too
late?</p>
<p>With mingled emotions of fear and dread, Morrow
emerged from the little dismantled shop and made the
best of his way to Meadow Lane. The Brunell cottage
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_189' name='page_189'></SPAN>189</span>
appeared much as usual as he neared it, and for
an instant hope surged up within him. Emily would
be at the club, of course. If her father had been arrested,
or had succeeded in getting away safely alone,
she would not know of it until she came back in the
evening. He would wait for her, intercept her, and tell
her the whole truth.</p>
<p>Instead of entering his own lodgings, he crossed the
road, and paused at the Brunells’ gate. Something
forlorn and desolate in the atmosphere of the little
home seemed to clutch at his heart, and on a swift impulse
he strode up the path, ascended the steps of the
porch and peered in the window of the living-room.
Everything in the usually orderly room was topsy-turvy,
and everywhere there was evidence of hurried
flight. From where he stood the desk––her desk––was
plainly visible, its ransacked drawers pulled open,
the floor before it strewn with torn and scattered
papers. Its top was bare, amid the surrounding litter,
and even his photograph which he had recently given
her, and which usually stood there in the little frame she
had made for it with her own hands, was gone.</p>
<p>A chill settled about his heart. Had Brunell been
captured, and police detectives searched the house, his
picture could hold no interest for them. Had the old
forger fled alone, he would not have taken so insignificant
an object from among all his household goods and
chattels. Emily alone would have paused to save the
photograph of the man she loved from the wreckage of
her home; Emily, too, had gone!</p>
<p>Scarcely knowing what he was doing, and caring
less, Morrow rushed across the street, and descended
upon Mrs. Quinlan, his landlady, at her post in the
kitchen.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_190' name='page_190'></SPAN>190</span></div>
<p>“What’s happened to the Brunells?” he demanded
breathlessly.</p>
<p>“Land’s sakes, but you scared me, Mr. Morrow!”
Mrs. Quinlan turned from the stove with a hurried start,
and wiped her plump, steaming face on her apron. “I
should like to know what’s happened myself. All I do
know is that they’ve gone bag and baggage––or as
much of it as they could carry with them––and never;
a word to a soul except what Emily ran across to say
to me.”</p>
<p>“What was it?” he fairly shouted at her. But
there were few interests in Mrs. Quinlan’s humdrum existence,
and seldom did she have an exciting incident to
relate and an eager audience to hang upon her words.
She sat down ponderously and prepared to make the
most of the present occasion.</p>
<p>“I thought it was funny to see a man goin’ into their
yard at five o’clock this mornin’, but my tooth was so
bad I forgot all about him and it never come into my
mind again until I seen them goin’ away. I sleep in the
room just over yours, you know, Mr. Morrow, an’ my
tooth ached so bad I couldn’t sleep. It was five by my
clock when I got up to come down here an’ get some hot
vinegar, an’ I don’t know what made me look out my
winder, but I did. I seen a man come running down
the lane, keepin’ well in the shaders, an’ looking back as
if he was afraid he was bein’ chased, for all the world
like a thief. While I looked, he turned in the Brunells’
yard an’ instead of knocking on the door, he began
throwin’ pebbles up at the old man’s bedroom winder.
Pretty soon it opened and Mr. Brunell looked out.
Then he come down quick an’ met the man at the front
door. They talked a minute, an’ the feller handed over
somethin’ that showed white in the light of the street
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_191' name='page_191'></SPAN>191</span>
lamp, like a piece of paper. Mr. Brunell shut the door
an’ the man ran off the way he had come. I come down
an’ got my hot vinegar an’ when I got back to my room
I seen there were lights in Mr. Brunell’s room an’
Emily’s, an’ one in the livin’-room, too, but my tooth
was jumpin’ so I went straight to bed. About half an
hour after you’d left for business I was shakin’ a rug
out of the front sittin’-room winder, when Emily come
runnin’ across the street.</p>
<p>“‘Oh, Mrs. Quinlan!’ she calls to me, an’ I see she’d
been cryin’. ‘Mrs. Quinlan, we’re goin’ away!’</p>
<p>“‘For good?’ I asked.</p>
<p>“‘Forever!’ she says. ‘Will you give a message to
Mr. Morrow for me, please? Tell him I’m sorry I was
mistaken. I’m sorry to have found him out!’</p>
<p>“She burst out cryin’ again an’ ran back as her father
called her from the porch. He was bringin’ out a pile
of suit-cases and roll-ups, and pretty soon a taxicab
drove up with a man inside. I couldn’t see his face––only
his coat-sleeve. They got in an’ went off kitin’
an’ that’s every last thing I know. What d’you s’pose
she meant about findin’ you out, Mr. Morrow?”</p>
<p>He turned away without reply, and went to his room,
where he sat for long sunk in a stupor of misery. She
had found out the truth, before he could tell her. She
knew him for what he was, knew his despicable errand in
ingratiating himself into her friendship and that of her
father. She believed that the real love he had professed
for her had been all a mere part of the game he
was playing, and now she had gone away forever! He
would never see her again!</p>
<p>“By God, no!” he cried aloud to himself, in the bitterness
of his sorrow. “I will find her again, if I search
the ends of the earth. She shall know the truth!”</p>
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