<h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
<h3>IN THE OPEN</h3></div>
<p class="dropcap" ><span class="dcap">Guy Morrow’s</span> resolve to find Emily Brunell at
all costs, stirred him from the apathy of despair
into which he had fallen, and roused him to instant
action. Leaving the house, he went to the nearest
telephone pay station, where he could converse in
comparative privacy, and called up Henry Blaine’s office,
only to discover that the master detective had departed
upon some mission of his own, was not expected
to return until the following morning, and had left no
instructions for him.</p>
<p>This unanticipated set-back left Morrow without definite
resource. As a forlorn hope he telephoned to the
Anita Lawton Club, only to learn that Miss Brunell had
sent in her resignation as secretary early that morning,
but told nothing of her future plans, except that she
was leaving town for an indefinite period.</p>
<p>There was nothing more to be learned by another examination
of the dismantled shop, and the young operative
turned his steps reluctantly homeward. A sudden
suspicion had formed itself in his mind that Blaine himself,
and not the police, had been responsible for the
raid on the forger’s little establishment––that Blaine
had done this without taking him into his confidence and
was now purposely keeping out of his way.</p>
<p>When the early winter dusk came, Guy could endure
it no longer, but left the house. Drawn irresistibly by
his thoughts, he crossed the road again, and entering
the Brunells’ gate, he strolled around the deserted cottage,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_193' name='page_193'></SPAN>193</span>
to the back. At the kitchen door a faint, piteous
sound made him pause. It was an insistent, wailing cry
from within, the disconsolate meowing of a frightened,
lonely kitten.</p>
<p>Caliban had been left behind, forgotten! Emily’s
panic and haste must have been great indeed to cause
her to forsake the pet she had so tenderly loved! Much
as he detested the spiteful little creature, he could not
leave it to starve, for her sake.</p>
<p>Morrow tried the kitchen door, but found it securely
bolted from within. The catch on the pantry window
was loose, however, and Morrow managed to pry it open
with his jackknife. With a hasty glance about to see
that he was not observed, he pushed up the window and
clambered in, closing it cautiously after him. He
stumbled through the semi-obscurity and gloom into the
kitchen; instantly the piteous cry ceased and Caliban
rose from the cold hearth and bounded gladly to him,
purring and rubbing against his legs. Mechanically he
stooped and stroked it; then, after carefully pulling
down the shades, he lighted the lamp upon the littered
table, and looked about him. Everything bore evidence,
as had the living-room, of a hasty exodus. The
fire was extinguished in the range, and it was filled to
the brim with flakes of light ashes. Evidently Brunell
or his daughter had paused long enough in their flight
to burn armfuls of old papers––possibly incriminating
ones.</p>
<p>On the table was the débris of a hasty meal. Morrow
poured some milk from the pitcher into a saucer and
placed it on the floor for the hungry kitten; then, taking
the lamp, he started on a tour of inspection through
the house. Everywhere the wildest confusion and disorder
reigned.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_194' name='page_194'></SPAN>194</span></div>
<p>Morrow turned aside from the door of Emily’s room,
but entered her father’s. There, save for a few articles
of old clothing strewn about, he found comparative order
and neatness. The simple toilet articles were in
their places, the narrow bed just as Jimmy Brunell had
left it when he sprang up to admit his nocturnal visitor.</p>
<p>On the floor near the bureau on which the lamp stood,
something white and crumpled met Morrow’s eye; he
stooped quickly and picked it up. It was a large single
sheet of paper, and as the operative smoothed it out, he
realized that it must be the message which had been hurriedly
brought to Brunell in the early hour before the
dawn. The paper had lain just where he had dropped
it, crushed from his hand after reading the warning it
contained.</p>
<p>Morrow turned up the wick of his own lamp and
stared curiously at the missive. The sheet of paper
was ruled at intervals, the lines and interstices filled
with curious hieroglyphics, and at a first glance it appeared
to the operative’s puzzled eyes to be a mere portion
of a page of music. Then he observed that old
figures and letters, totally foreign to the notes of a
printed score, were interspersed between the rest, and
moreover only the treble clef had been used.</p>
<p>“Oh, Lord!” he groaned to himself. “It’s another
cryptogram, and I don’t believe Blaine himself will be
able to solve this one!”</p>
<p>He stared long and uncomprehendingly at it; then
with a sigh of baffled interest he folded it carefully and
placed it in his pocket. As he did so, there came a sudden
sharp report from outside, the tinkle of a broken
window pane, and a bullet, whistling past his ear, embedded
itself in the wall behind him!</p>
<p>Instinctively Morrow flung himself flat upon the
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_195' name='page_195'></SPAN>195</span>
floor, but no second shot was fired. Instead, he heard
the muffled receding of flying footsteps from the sidewalk,
and an excited cry or two as neighboring windows
were raised and curious heads were thrust out.</p>
<p>Hastily extinguishing the lamp, Morrow felt his way
to the kitchen, where he pocketed Caliban with scant
ceremony and departed swiftly the way he had come,
through the pantry window. By scaling a back-yard
wall or two he found an alley leading to the street; and
making a detour of several blocks, he returned to his
lodgings, to find Mrs. Quinlan waiting in great excitement
to relate her version of the revolver shot.</p>
<p>Morrow listened with what patience he could muster,
and then handed Caliban over to her mercy.</p>
<p>“It’s Miss Brunell’s cat,” he explained. “You’ll
take care of it for a day or two, at least, won’t you? I
expect to hear from her soon, and I’d like to be able to
restore it to her.”</p>
<p>“Well, I ain’t what you would call crazy about cats,”
the landlady returned, somewhat dubiously, “but I
couldn’t let it die in this cold. I’ll keep it, of course,
till you hear from Emily. Where did you find it?”</p>
<p>“Over in their yard,” he responded, with prompt
mendacity. “I was in the neighborhood and heard the
shot fired, so I ran in to have a look around and see if
anyone was hurt, and I came across this poor little chap
yowling on the doorstep. I won’t want any supper to-night,
Mrs. Quinlan. I’m going out again.”</p>
<p>Within the hour, Morrow presented himself at
Henry Blaine’s office. This time he did not wait to be
told that the famous investigator was out, but writing
something on a card, he sent it in to the confidential
secretary.</p>
<p>In a moment he was admitted, to find Blaine seated
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_196' name='page_196'></SPAN>196</span>
imperturbably behind his desk, fingering the card his
young operative had sent in to him.</p>
<p>“What is it, Guy?” he asked, not unkindly. “You
say you have a communication of great importance.”</p>
<p>“I think it is, sir,” returned the other, stiffly. “At
least I have the message which warned Brunell of your
raid upon his shop. It’s another cipher, a different one
this time.”</p>
<p>“Indeed? That’s good work, Guy. But how did
you know it was a warning to old Jimmy of the raid?
Could you read it?”</p>
<p>Morrow shook his head.</p>
<p>“No, and I don’t see how anyone else could! It
must have been a warning of some sort, for it was what
caused them both, old Jimmy and his daughter, to run
away. Here it is.”</p>
<p>He passed the cryptogram over to his chief, who
studied it for a while with a meditative frown, then laid
it aside and listened in a non-committal silence to his
story. When the incidents of the day had been narrated,
Blaine said:</p>
<p>“That was a close call, Guy, that shot from the darkness.
It must have come from the opposite side of the
street, of course, from before your own lodgings. The
bullet glanced upward in its course, didn’t it?”</p>
<p>“No, sir. That’s the funny part of it! The spot
where it is embedded in the wall is very little higher than
the hole in the window pane.”</p>
<p>“And Mrs. Quinlan’s, where you board, is directly
opposite?”</p>
<p>“Yes. It’s the only house on the other side of the
street for fifty feet or more on either side.”</p>
<p>“Then you’d better look out for trouble, Guy. That
shot came from your own house, probably from the window
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_197' name='page_197'></SPAN>197</span>
of your own room, if it is the second floor front, as
you say. There’s a traitor in camp. Any new lodgers
to-day that you know of?”</p>
<p>“No, sir,” Morrow replied, startled at the theory
evolved by his chief. “But how do you account for
the fact that I distinctly heard some one running away
immediately after the shot was fired?”</p>
<p>“It was probably a look-out, or a decoy to draw investigation
away from the house had a prompt pursuit
ensued. Be careful when you go back, Guy, and don’t
take any unnecessary chances.”</p>
<p>“I’m not going back, sir,” the younger man returned,
with quiet determination. “I’m sorry, but I’m
through. I wanted to resign before, to protect the
woman I love from just this trouble which has come
upon her, but you overruled me, and I listened and
played the game fairly. Now I’ve lost her, and nothing
else matters under the sun except that I must find her
again and tell her the truth, and I mean to find her!
Nothing shall stand in my way!”</p>
<p>“And your duty?” asked Blaine quietly.</p>
<p>“My duty is to her first, last, and all the time! I
know I have no right, sir, to ask that I should be
taken into your confidence in regard to any plans you
make in conducting an investigation, but I think in view
of the exceptional conditions of this case that I might
have been told in advance of the raid you intended, so
that I might have spared Emily much of the trouble
which has come upon her, or at least have told her the
truth, and squared myself with her, and known where
she was going. I’ve got to find her, sir! I cannot rest
until I do!”</p>
<p>“And you shall find her, Guy. I promise you on my
word that if you are patient all will be well. It is not
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_198' name='page_198'></SPAN>198</span>
my custom to explain my motives to my subordinates,
but as you say, this case is exceptional, and you have
been faithful to your trust under peculiarly trying circumstances.
I raided Jimmy’s little shop last night and
carried off his forgery outfit because I had received
special information of a confidential nature that Paddington
intended to make the same move and lay it to
the work of the police, not only to scare poor old Jimmy
out of town, but to obtain possession of the outfit himself
and destroy the evidence, in case the old forger was
caught and lost his spirit and confessed, implicating
him. I did not know the raid would be discovered and
the warning take effect so soon. I had arranged to
have the Brunells watched and tailed later in the day,
but they escaped my espionage.</p>
<p>“I shall at once set the wheels in motion to discover
the number of the taxicab in which they went away, and
I will leave no stone unturned to find their ultimate
destination and see that no harm comes to either of
them; you may depend upon that. I don’t mind going
a little further with this subject with you now than I
have before, and I’ll tell you confidentially that I believe
whatever part Jimmy played in this conspiracy, in
forging the letter, note, and signatures, was a compulsory
one; and in the end we shall be able to clear him.
You know that I am a man of my word, Guy. I want
you to go on with this case under my instructions and
leave the search for the Brunells absolutely in my hands.
Will you do this, on my assurance that I will find
them?”</p>
<p>“If I can have your word, sir, that at the earliest
possible moment I may go to her, to Emily, and tell her
the truth,” Morrow replied, earnestly. “You don’t
know what it means to me, to have her feel that I have
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_199' name='page_199'></SPAN>199</span>
been such a dog as not to mean a word of all that I said
to her, to have her believe that it was all part of a plan
to trap her into betraying her father. It drives me almost
mad when I think of it! This inaction, the suspense
of it, is intolerable.”</p>
<p>“Then go home and find out who fired at you from
the window of your own house. Watch the Brunell
cottage, too––there will be developments there, if I’m
not mistaken. To-morrow I may want you to go out
on another branch of this investigation––the search
for Ramon Hamilton.”</p>
<p>“Very good, sir, I’ll try,” Morrow promised with obvious
reluctance. “I know how busy you are and how
much every day counts in this matter just now; but for
God’s sake, do what you can to find the Brunells for
me!”</p>
<p>Blaine repeated his assurances, and Morrow returned
to the Bronx with considerably lightened spirits.
The sight of the little cottage across the way, dark
and deserted, brought a pang to his heart, but it also
served to remind him of the duty which lay before him.
He must find out whose hand had fired that shot at him
from the house which had given him shelter.</p>
<p>Mrs. Quinlan had not yet retired. He found her
reading a newspaper in the kitchen, with Caliban curled
up in drowsy content beside the stove.</p>
<p>“Cold out, ain’t it?” she observed. “I went round
to the store, an’ I like to’ve froze before I got back.
They said they’d send the things, but they didn’t.”</p>
<p>“I’ll go get them for you,” offered Morrow. “Was
it the grocery to which you went?”</p>
<p>“No, the drug store. I––I’ve got a new lodger upstairs
at the back––an old gentleman who’s kind of
sickly and rheumatic, and he asked me to get some
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_200' name='page_200'></SPAN>200</span>
things for him. Thank you just the same, Mr. Morrow,
but there ain’t no hurry for them.” Mrs. Quinlan’s
wide, ingenuous face flushed, and for a moment she
seemed curiously embarrassed. Could she have guessed
that the revolver shot which had created so much excitement
that afternoon had been fired from beneath her
roof?</p>
<p>“A new lodger!” repeated Morrow. “Came to-day,
didn’t he?”</p>
<p>“No, yesterday,” she responded quickly––too
quickly, the operative fancied. The ruddy flush had
deepened on her cheek, and she added, as if unable to
restrain the question rising irresistibly to her lips:
“What made you think he came to-day?”</p>
<p>“I thought this afternoon that I heard furniture being
moved about in the room directly over mine,” he returned,
with studied indifference.</p>
<p>“Oh, you did!” Mrs. Quinlan affirmed. “That’s
my room, you know. I was exchanging my bureau for
the old gentleman’s.”</p>
<p>“Let me see; that makes four lodgers now, doesn’t
it?” Morrow remarked thoughtfully, as he toasted his
back near the stove. “Peterson, the shoe clerk; Acker,
the photographer; me––and now this old gentleman.
What’s his name, by the way?”</p>
<p>“Mr.––Brown.” Again there was that obvious hesitation,
followed by a hasty rush of words as if to cover
it. “Yes, my house is full now, and I think I’m
mighty lucky, considering the time of year. Just think,
it’s most Christmas! The winter’s just flyin’ along!”</p>
<p>The next morning, from his bed Morrow heard the
clinking of china on a tray as Mrs. Quinlan laboriously
carried breakfast upstairs to her new boarder. Guy
rose quickly and dressed, and when he heard her descending
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_201' name='page_201'></SPAN>201</span>
again he flung open his door and met her face
to face, quite as if by accident. She started violently
at the sudden encounter and nearly dropped the tray.</p>
<p>“Land sakes, how you scared me, Mr. Morrow!” she
exclaimed. “You’re up earlier than usual. I’ll have
your breakfast ready in the dining-room in ten minutes.”</p>
<p>She hurried on quickly, but not before the operative’s
keen eyes had noted in one lightning glance the
contents of the tray. Upon it was a teapot, as well
as one for coffee, and service for two. Peterson and
Acker had both long since gone to their usual day’s
work. Mrs. Quinlan had lied, then, after all. She
had two new lodgers instead of the single rheumatic old
gentleman she had pictured; two, and one of them had
entered his own room, and from the window fired that
shot across the street at him, as he bent over the lamp
in the Brunell cottage. He had one problematic advantage––it
was possible that he had not been recognized
as the intruder in the deserted house. He must
contrive by hook or crook to obtain a glimpse of the
mysterious newcomers, and learn the cause of their interest
in the Brunells and their affairs. They were in
all probability emissaries of Paddington’s––possibly
one of them was Charley Pennold himself.</p>
<p>At that same moment Henry Blaine sat in his office,
receiving the report of Ross, one of his minor operatives.</p>
<p>“I tried the tobacconist’s shop yesterday morning,
sir, but there wasn’t any message there for Paddington,
and although I waited around a couple of hours he
didn’t show up,” Ross was saying. “This morning,
however, I tried the same stunt, and it worked. I
wasn’t any too quick about it, either, for Paddington
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_202' name='page_202'></SPAN>202</span>
was just after me. I strolled in, asked for a package of
Cairos and gave the man the office, as you told me. He
handed it over like a lamb, and I walked out with it,
straight to that little café across the way. I had four
of the boys waiting there, and my entrance was a signal
to them to beat it over and buy enough tobacco to keep
the shopkeeper busy while I made a getaway from the
dairy-lunch place. I only went three doors down, to a
barber’s, and while I was waiting my turn there I
watched the street from behind a newspaper.</p>
<p>“In about ten minutes Paddington came along, walking
as if he was in quite a hurry. He went into the
tobacconist’s, but he came out quicker than he had entered,
and his face was a study––purple with rage one
minute, and white with fear the next. I don’t believe he
knows yet who’s tailing him, sir, but he looks as if he
realized we had him coming and going. He went
straight over to the little restaurant, with murder in his
eye, but he only stayed a minute or two. I tailed him
home to his rooms, and he stamped along at first as if he
was so mad he didn’t care whether he was followed or
not. When he got near his own street, though, he got
cautious again, and I had all I could do to keep him
from catching me on his trail––he’s a sharp one, when
he wants to be, and he’s on his mettle now.”</p>
<p>“I know the breed. He’ll turn and fight like any
other rat if he’s cornered, but meanwhile he’ll try at any
cost to get away from us,” Blaine responded. “You
have him well covered, Ross?”</p>
<p>“Thorpe is waiting in a high-powered car a few
doors away, Vanner in a taxi, and Daly is on the job
until I get back. He won’t take a step to-day without
being tailed,” the operative answered, confidently.
“Here’s the cigarette box, sir. I opened it as soon as
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_203' name='page_203'></SPAN>203</span>
I got in the restaurant, to see if it was the real goods
and not a plant, as you instructed. It’s the straight
tip, all right. There were no cigarettes inside, only
this single sheet of paper covered with little marks––looks
like music, only it isn’t. I don’t know much
about sight-reading, but some of those figures couldn’t
be played on any instrument!”</p>
<p>Henry Blaine opened the little box and drew from it
the bit of folded paper, which he spread out upon the
desk before him. A glance was sufficient to show him
that it was another cryptic message, similar to that
which Guy Morrow had found in the Brunells’ deserted
cottage, and which he had vainly studied until far into
the night.</p>
<p>“Very good, Ross. Get back on the job, now, and
report any developments as soon as you have an opportunity.”</p>
<p>When the operative had gone, Blaine drew forth the
cryptogram received the previous evening and compared
the two. They were identical in character, although
from the formation of the letters and figures,
the message each conveyed was a different one. The
first had baffled him, and he scrutinized the second with
freshly awakened interest:</p>
<div class='figtag'>
<SPAN name='linki_5' id='linki_5'></SPAN></div>
<div class='figcenter'>
<ANTIMG src='images/png209.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 366px; height: 65px;' /><br/></div>
<p>The three lines fascinated him by their tantalizing
problem, and he could not take his eyes from them.
The musical notes could be easily read in place of letters,
of course, with the sign of the treble clef as a basic
guide, but the other figures still puzzled him.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_204' name='page_204'></SPAN>204</span></div>
<p>All at once, a word upon the lowest line which explained
itself caught his eye; then another and another,
until the method of deciphering the whole message burst
upon his mind. One swift gesture, a few eagerly
scrawled calculations, and the truth was plain to him.</p>
<p>Calling his secretary, he hastily dictated a letter.</p>
<p>“I want a copy of that sent at once, by special delivery,
to every physician and surgeon in town, no matter
how obscure. See to it that not one is overlooked.
Even those on the staffs of the different hospitals must
be notified, although they are the least likely to be called
upon. Above all, don’t forget the old retired one, those
of shady professional reputation and the fledglings just
out of medical colleges. It’s a large order, Marsh, but
it’s bound to bring some result in the next forty-eight
hours.”</p>
<p>With the closing of the door behind his secretary,
Henry Blaine rose and paced thoughtfully back and
forth the length of his spacious office. The problem
before him was the most salient in its importance of any
which had confronted him during his investigation of the
Lawton mystery––probably the weightiest of his entire
career. Should he, dared he, throw caution to the
winds and step out into the open, in his true colors at
last?</p>
<p>It was as if he held within his hands the kernel of the
mystery, yet surrounded still by an invulnerable shield
of cunning and duplicity with which the master criminals
had so carefully safe-guarded their conspiracy. He
held it within his hands, and yet he could not break
the shell of the mystery and expose the kernel of truth
to justice. There seemed to be no interstice, no crevice
into which he might insert the keen probe of his marvelous
deductive power. And yet his experience told him
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_205' name='page_205'></SPAN>205</span>
that there must be some rift, some hiatus in the scheme.
If only he could discover that rift, could prove beyond
a shadow of a doubt the facts which he had circumstantially
established, he would not hesitate to lay his
hands upon the culprits, high in power and influence
throughout the country as they were, and bring them
before any court of so-called justice, however it might
be undermined by bribery and corruption.</p>
<p>He had accomplished much, working as a mole works,
in the dark. Could he not accomplish more by declaring
himself; could he not by one bold stroke lay bare
the heart of the mystery?</p>
<p>Seating himself again at his desk, he took the telephone
receiver from its hook and called up Anita <SPAN name='TC_6'></SPAN><ins title="Was ''Lawnot'' in the original text">Lawton</ins>
at her home––not upon the private wire he had had
installed for her, but on the regular house wire.</p>
<p>“Oh, Mr. Blaine, what is it! Have you found him?
Have you news for me of Ramon?” Her voice, faint
and high-pitched with the hideous suspense of the days
just past, came to him tremulous with eagerness and an
abiding hope.</p>
<p>“No, Miss Lawton, I am sorry to say that I have
not yet found Mr. Hamilton, but I have definite information
that he still lives, at least,” he returned. “I
hope that in a few days, at most, I may bring him to
you.”</p>
<p>“Thank heaven for that!” she responded fervently.
“I have tried so hard to believe, to have faith that he
will be restored to me, and yet the hideous doubt will
return again and again. These days and nights have
been one long, ceaseless torture!”</p>
<p>“You have taken my advice in regard to receiving
your visitors?”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, Mr. Blaine. My three guardians have
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_206' name='page_206'></SPAN>206</span>
been unremitting in their attentions, particularly Mr.
Rockamore, who calls daily. He has just left me.”</p>
<p>“Miss Lawton, I have decided that the time has come
for us to declare ourselves openly––not in regard to
the mystery of your father’s insolvency, but concerning
the disappearance of Ramon Hamilton. I want you to
call his mother up on the telephone as soon as I ring off,
and tell her that you have resolved to retain me, on
your account, to find him for you. Should she put forward
any objections, over-rule her and refuse to listen.
I will be with you in an hour. In the meantime, should
anyone call, you may tell them that you have just retained
me to investigate the disappearance of your
fiancé. Tell that to anyone and everyone; the more
publicity we give to that fact the better. The moment
has arrived for us to carry war into the enemy’s camp,
and I know that we shall win! Keep up your courage,
Miss Lawton! We’re done with maneuvering
now. You’ve borne up bravely, but I believe your
period of suspense, in regard to many things, is past.
Before this day is done, they will know that we are in this
to fight to the finish––and to fight to win!”</p>
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