<h2>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
<h3>THE LIBRARY CHAIR</h3></div>
<p class="dropcapq" ><small>“</small><span class="drop">P</span><span class="dcap">addington’s</span> on the run!” Ross, the operative,
announced to Henry Blaine the next
morning, jubilantly. “He left his rooms
about an hour after I got back on the job, and went to
Carlis’ office. He only stayed a short time, and came
out looking as black as a thunder-cloud&ndash;&ndash;I guess the
interview, whatever it was, didn’t go his way. He went
straight from there to Rockamore, the promoter. I pretended
an errand with Rockamore, too, and so got into
the outer office. The heavy glass door was closed between,
and I couldn’t hear anything but a muffled growling
from within, but they were both angry enough, all
right. Once the stenographer went in and came out
again almost immediately. When the door opened to
admit her, I heard Paddington fairly shout:</p>
<p>“‘It’s your own skin you’re saving, you fool, as well
as mine! If I’m caught, you all go! Carlis thinks he
can bluff it, and Mallowe’s a superannuated, pig-headed
old goat. He’ll try to stand on his reputation,
and cave in like a pricked balloon when the crash
comes. I know his kind; I’ve hounded too many of ’em
to the finish. But you’re a man of sense, Rockamore,
and you know you’ve got to help me out of this for your
own sake. I tell you, some one’s on to the whole game,
and they’re just sitting back and waiting for the right
moment to nab us. They not only learn every move we
make––they anticipate them! It’s every man for himself,
now, and I warn you that if I’m cornered in this––’</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_225' name='page_225'></SPAN>225</span></div>
<p>“‘Hold your tongue!’ Rockamore ordered. ‘Can’t
you see––’</p>
<p>“Then the door closed, and I couldn’t hear any more.
The voices calmed down to a rumble, and in about twenty
minutes I could hear them approaching the door. I
decided I couldn’t wait any longer, and got outside just
in time to give Paddington a chance to pass me. He
seemed in good humor, and I guess he got what he was
after––money, probably, for he went to his bank and
put through a check. Then he returned to his rooms,
and didn’t show up again until late afternoon, when he
went away up Belleair Avenue, to the rectory of the
Church of St. James. He didn’t go in––just talked
with the sexton in the vestibule, and when he came down
the steps he looked dazed, as if he’d received a hard jolt
of some sort. He couldn’t have been trying to blackmail
the minister, too, could he?”</p>
<p>“Hardly, Ross. Go on,” Blaine responded.
“What did he do next?”</p>
<p>“Nothing. Just went back to his rooms and stayed
there. It seemed as if he was afraid to leave––not so
much afraid to be found, but as if he might miss something,
if he left. He even had his dinner sent in from a
restaurant near there. Knowing him, I might have
known what it was he was waiting for––he’s always
chasing after some girl or other.”</p>
<p>“There was a woman in it, then?” asked the detective,
quietly.</p>
<p>“You can bet there was––very much in it, sir!”
the operative chuckled. “She came along while I
watched––a tall, slim girl, plainly dressed in dark
clothes, but with an air to her that would make you
look at her twice, anywhere. She hesitated and looked
uncertainly about her, as if she were unfamiliar with the
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_226' name='page_226'></SPAN>226</span>
place and a little scary of her errand, but at last she
made up her mind, and plunged in the vestibule, as if she
was afraid she would lose her courage if she stopped to
think.</p>
<p>“For a few minutes her shadow showed on the window-shades,
beside Paddington’s. They stood close together,
and from their gestures, he seemed to be arguing
or pleading, while she was drawing back and refusing,
or at least, holding out against him. At last they
fell into a regular third-act clinch––it was as good as
a movie! After a moment she drew herself out of his
arms and they moved away from the window. In a
minute or two they came out of the house together, and
I tailed them. They walked slowly, with their heads
very close, and I didn’t dare get near enough to try
to hear what they were discussing so earnestly. But
where do you suppose he took her? To the Anita Lawton
Club for Working Girls! He left her at the entrance
and went back to his own rooms, and he seemed
to be in a queer mood all the way––happy and up in
the air one minute, and down in the dumps the next.</p>
<p>“He didn’t stir out again last night, but early this
morning he went down to the office of the Holland-American
line, and purchased two tickets, first-class to
Rotterdam, on the <i>Brunnhilde</i>, sailing next Saturday, so
I think we have the straight dope on him now. He
means to skip with the girl.”</p>
<p>“Saturday––two days off!” mused Blaine. “I
think it’s safe to give him his head until then, but keep
a close watch on him, Ross. The purchase of those
tickets may have been just a subterfuge on his part to
throw any possible shadow off the trail. Did you ascertain
what name he took them under?”</p>
<p>“J. Padelford and wife.”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_227' name='page_227'></SPAN>227</span></div>
<p>“Clever of him, that!” Blaine commented. “If he
really intends to fool this girl with a fake marriage and
sail with her for the other side, he can explain the
change of names on the steamer to her by telling her it
was a mistake on the printed sailing-list. Once at sea,
without a chance of escape from him, he can tell her
the truth, or as much of it as he cares to, and she’ll
have to stick; that type of woman always does. She
might even come in time to take up his line, and become
a cleverer crook than he is, but we’re not going to let
that happen. We’ll stop him, right enough, before he
goes too far with her. What’s he doing now?”</p>
<p>“Walking in the park with her. She met him at
the gates, and Vanner took the job there of tailing
them, while I came on down to report to you.”</p>
<p>“Good work, Ross. But go back and take up the
trail now yourself, if you’re fit. And here, you’d better
take this warrant with you; I swore it out against
him several days ago, in case he attempted to bolt. If
he tries to get the girl into a compromising situation,
arrest him. Let me know if anything of importance
occurs meanwhile.”</p>
<p>As Ross went out, the secretary, Marsh, appeared.</p>
<p>“There’s an elderly gentleman outside waiting to see
you, sir,” he announced. “He does not wish to give
his name, but says that he is a physician, and is here in
answer to a letter which he received from you.”</p>
<p>“Good! They pulled it off, then! We were only
just in time with those letters we sent out yesterday,
Marsh. Show him in at once.”</p>
<p>In a few moments a tall, spare figure appeared in the
doorway, and paused an instant before entering. He
had a keen, smooth-shaven, ascetic face, topped with a
mass of snow-white hair.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_228' name='page_228'></SPAN>228</span></div>
<p>“Come in, Doctor,” invited the detective. “I am
Henry Blaine. It was good of you to come in response
to my letter. I take it that you have something interesting
to tell me.”</p>
<p>The doctor entered and seated himself in the chair
indicated by Blaine. He carried with him a worn, old-fashioned
black leather instrument case.</p>
<p>“I do not know whether what I have to tell you will
prove to have any connection with the matter you referred
to in your letter or not, Mr. Blaine. Indeed, I
hesitated about divulging my experience of last night
to you. The ethics of my profession––”</p>
<p>“My profession has ethics, too, Doctor, although
you may not have conceived it,” the detective reminded
him, quietly. “Even more than doctor or priest, a
professional investigator must preserve inviolate the secrets
which are imparted to him, whether they take the
form of a light under a bushel or a skeleton in a closet.
In the cause of justice, only, may he open his lips. I
hold safely locked away in my mind the keys to mysteries
which, were they laid bare, would disrupt society,
drag great statesmen from their pedestals, provoke international
complications, even bring on wars. If you
know anything pertaining to the matter of which I
wrote you, justice and the ethics of your profession require
you to speak.”</p>
<p>“I agree with you, sir. As I said, I am not certain
that my adventure––for it was quite an adventure for
a retired man like myself, I assure you––has anything
to do with the case you are investigating, but we can
soon establish that. Do you recognize the subject of
this photograph?”</p>
<p>The doctor drew from his pocket a small square bit
of cardboard, and Blaine took it eagerly from him.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_229' name='page_229'></SPAN>229</span>
One glance at it was sufficient, and it was with difficulty
that the detective restrained the exclamation of triumph
which rose to his lips. Upon the card was
mounted a tiny, thumbnail photograph of a face––the
face of Ramon Hamilton! It was more like a death-mask
than a living countenance, with its rigid features
and closed eyes, but the likeness was indisputable.</p>
<p>“I recognize it, indeed, Doctor. That is the man
for whom I am searching. How did it come into your
possession?”</p>
<p>“I took it myself, last night.” The spare figure of
the elderly physician straightened proudly in his chair.
“When your communication arrived, I did not attach
much importance to it because it did not occur to me
for a moment that I should have been selected, from
among all the physicians and surgeons of this city, for
such a case. When the summons came, however, I remembered
your warning––but I anticipate. Since my
patient of last night is your subject, I may as well tell
you my experiences from the beginning. My name is
Alwyn––Doctor Horatius Alwyn––and I live at
Number Twenty-six Maple Avenue. Until my retirement
seven years ago I was a regular practising physician
and surgeon, but since my break-down––I
suffered a slight stroke––I have devoted myself to my
books and my camera––always a hobby with me.</p>
<p>“Well––late last night, the front door-bell rang.
It was a little after eleven, and my wife and the maid
had retired, but I was developing some plates in the
dark-room, and opened the door myself. Three men
stood there, but I could see scarcely anything of their
faces, for the collars of their shaggy motor coats were
turned up, their caps pulled low over their eyes, and
all three wore goggles.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_230' name='page_230'></SPAN>230</span></div>
<p>“‘Doctor Alwyn?’ asked one of the men, the burliest
of the three, advancing into the hall. ‘I want you
to come out into the country with me on a hurry call.
It’s a matter of life and death, and there’s five thousand
dollars in it for you, but the conditions attached to it
are somewhat unusual. May we come into your office,
and talk it over?’</p>
<p>“I led the way, and listened to their proposition.
Briefly, it was this: a young man had fallen and injured
his head, and was lying unconscious in a sanitarium in
the suburbs. There were reasons which could not be
explained to me, why the utmost secrecy must be maintained,
not only concerning the young man’s identity,
but the location of the retreat where he was in seclusion.
They feared that he had suffered a concussion
of the brain, possibly a fractured skull, and my diagnosis
was required. Also, should I deem an operation
necessary, I must be prepared to perform it at once.
They would take me to the patient in the car, but when
we reached our destination, I was to be blindfolded, and
led to the sickroom, where the bandage would be removed
from my eyes. I was to return in the same manner.
For this service, and of course my secrecy, they
offered me five thousand dollars.</p>
<p>“Although that would not have been an exorbitant
sum for me to obtain for such an operation in the
days of my activities, it looked very large to me now,
especially since some South American securities in
which I invested had declined, but I did not feel that
it would be compatible with my dignity and standing to
accept the conditions which were imposed. I was,
therefore, upon the point of indignantly declining, when
I suddenly remembered your letter, and resolved to see
the affair through.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_231' name='page_231'></SPAN>231</span></div>
<p>“It occurred to me, while I was selecting the instruments
to take with me, that it would not be a bad idea
to take also my latest camera, and if possible obtain a
photograph of the patient to show you. I managed
to slip it into my vest pocket, unobserved by my visitors.
Here it is.”</p>
<p>Dr. Alwyn took the instrument case upon his knee
and opening it, produced what looked like a large old-fashioned
nickel-plated watch of the turnip variety. The
doctor extended it almost apologetically.</p>
<p>“You see,” he observed, “it is really more a toy
than a real camera, although it served admirably last
night. I have had a great deal of amusement with it,
pretending to feel people’s pulses, but in reality snapping
their photographs. It takes very small, imperfect
pictures, of course, as you can see from the print
there on your desk, and only one to each loading, but it
can be carried in the palm of one’s hand, and it uses a
peculiarly sensitive plate that will register a snap-shot
even by electric light. It had fortunately just been
reloaded before the advent of my mysterious visitors,
and I resolved to make use of it if an opportunity offered.</p>
<p>“The curtains were tightly drawn in the car, and
as the interior lights had been extinguished, we sat in
total darkness. I could not, of course, tell in what
direction we were going, although the car had been
pointed south when we left my door. We appeared to
be travelling at a terrific rate of speed and swung around
a confusing number of curves.</p>
<p>“I tried at first to remember the turns, and their
direction, but there were so many that I very soon lost
count. I think they took me in a round-about way
purposely, to confuse me. I have no idea how long
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_232' name='page_232'></SPAN>232</span>
we drove, but it must have been well over two hours.
At last we struck a long up-grade, and one of my companions
announced that we were almost there.</p>
<p>“They bound my eyes with a dark silk handkerchief,
and a moment later the car swerved and turned abruptly
in, evidently at a gateway, for we curved about up a
graveled driveway––I could hear it crunching beneath
the wheels––and came to a grinding stop before the
door. They helped me out of the car, up some shallow
stone steps and across the threshold.</p>
<p>“I was led down a thickly carpeted hall and up a single
long flight of stairs, to a door just at its head. We
entered; the door closed softly behind us; and the bandage
was whipped from my eyes. There was only a low
night-light burning in the room, but I made out the
outlines of the furniture. There was a great bed over
in the corner, with a motionless figure lying upon it.</p>
<p>“‘There’s your patient, Doc; go ahead,’ my burly
friend said, and accordingly I approached the bed, asking
at the same time for more light. The young man
was unconscious, and in answer to a question of mine
the attendant who had sat at the head of the bed as we
entered informed me that he had been in a complete
state of coma since he had been brought there, several
days before.</p>
<p>“I remembered the description in your letter of the
subject for whom you were searching, and I fancied, in
spite of the bandages which swathed his head, that I
recognized him in the young man before me. The
lights flashed on full in answer to my request, and on
a sudden decision I drew the watch camera from my
pocket, took the patient’s wrist between my thumb and
finger as if to ascertain his pulse, and snapped his picture.
The result was a fortunate chance, for I did not
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_233' name='page_233'></SPAN>233</span>
dare focus deliberately, with the eyes of the attendant
and the three men who had accompanied me, all directed
at my movements.</p>
<p>“Then I gave the patient a thorough examination.
I found a fracture at the base of the brain––not necessarily
fatal, unless cerebral meningitis sets in, but
quite serious enough. He was still bleeding a little
from the nose and ears. I washed them out, and
packed the ears with sterile gauze, leaving instructions
that a specially prepared ice cap be placed at once upon
his head and kept there. That was all which could be
done at that time, but the patient should have constant,
watchful attention. He must either have suffered
a severe backward fall, or received a violent blow
at the base of the skull, to have sustained such an injury.</p>
<p>“When I had finished, they blindfolded me again, led
me from the room, and conveyed me home in the same
manner in which I had come, with the possible exception
that the car in returning seemed to take a different and
more direct route; the journey appeared to be a much
shorter one, with fewer twists and turns. The same
three men came back to the house with me, and entered
my <SPAN name='TC_7'></SPAN><ins title="Was ''offce'' in the original text">office</ins>, where the burly one turned over to me ten five-hundred-dollar
bills. They left almost immediately,
and although it was close on to dawn, I went into my
dark room, and developed the negative of the thumbnail
photograph I had taken.</p>
<p>“The events of the night had been so extraordinary
that when I did retire, it was long before I could sleep.
In the morning, I made a couple of prints from the
negative, then took the five thousand dollars down and
deposited it to my account in the bank.”</p>
<p>“When I decided to come here, I ran over in my
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_234' name='page_234'></SPAN>234</span>
mind every moment of the previous night’s adventure,
to catalogue my impressions. The habit of years has
made me methodical in all things, and I jotted them
down in the order in which they occurred to me, that I
might not forget to relate them to you. Memory plays
one sad tricks, sometimes, when one reaches my age.
These notes may be of no assistance to you, sir, but
they are entirely at your service.”</p>
<p>“I am eager to hear them, Doctor. I only wish all
witnesses were like you––my tasks would be lightened
by half,” Blaine said, heartily.</p>
<p>The elderly physician drew from his pocket a paper,
at which he peered, painstakingly.</p>
<p>“I have numbered them. Let me see––oh, yes.
First, the burly man walks with a slight limp in the
right leg. Second, of the two men with him, all I
could note was that one spoke with a decided French
accent and had a hollow cough, tuberculous, I think;
the other, who scarcely uttered a word, was short and
stocky, and of enormous strength. He fairly lifted me
into and out of the car when I was blindfolded at the
entrance of the place they called a sanitarium. Third,
the car had a peculiar horn; I have never heard one
like it before. Its blast was sharp and wailing, not
like a siren, but more like the howl of a wounded animal.
I would know it again, anywhere. Fourth, there
is a railroad bridge very near the house to which I was
taken––I distinctly heard two trains thunder over the
trestles while I was attending my patient. Fifth, I
should judge the place to be more of a retreat for alcoholics
or the insane, than for those suffering from accident,
or any form of physical injury. A patient in
some remote part of the house was undoubtedly a maniac
or in the throes of an attack of delirium tremens.
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_235' name='page_235'></SPAN>235</span>
I heard his cries at intervals as I worked, until he
quieted down finally.</p>
<p>“Sixth, the bedroom where my patient is lying is on
the second floor, the windows facing south and east;
there was a moon last night, and one of the curtains
was partly raised. His door is just at the head of the
stairs on your right as you go up, and the stairs are
on a straight line with the front door––therefore the
house faces south. Seventh, when we returned to my
home, and were in my office, the burly man had to pull
the glove off his right hand to get the wallet from his
pocket in order to pay me my fee, and I saw that two
fingers were missing––they had both been amputated
at the middle joint. Also, when they were leaving, I
heard the man who spoke with an accent address him as
‘Mac.’”</p>
<p>“Mac! It’s three-fingered Mac Alarney, by the
Lord!” Blaine started from his chair. “Why did I
not think of him before! Doctor, you have rendered
to me and to my client an invaluable service, which
shall not be forgotten. Mac Alarney is a retired prize-fighter,
in close touch with all the political crooks and
grafters in the city. He runs a sort of retreat for
alcoholics up near Green Valley, and bears a generally
shady reputation. Are you game to go back with me
to-night for another call on your patient? You will
be well guarded and in no possible danger, now or for
the future. I give you my word for that. I may need
you to verify some facts.”</p>
<p>The doctor hesitated visibly.</p>
<p>“I am not afraid,” he replied, at last, “but I
scarcely feel that it is conformable with the ethics of
my calling. I was called in, in my professional capacity––”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_236' name='page_236'></SPAN>236</span></div>
<p>“My dear Doctor,” the detective interrupted him
with a trace of impatience in his tones, “your patient
is one of the most widely known young men of this city.
He was kidnaped, and the police have been searching
for him for days. The press of the entire country has
rung with the story of his mysterious disappearance.
He is Ramon Hamilton.”</p>
<p>“Good heavens! Can it be possible!” the physician
exclaimed. “I assure you, sir, I had no idea of his
identity. He was to have married Pennington Lawton’s
daughter, was he not? I have read of his disappearance,
of course; the newspapers have been full
of it. And he was kidnaped, you say? No wonder
those ruffians maintained such secrecy in regard to
their destination last night! Mr. Blaine, I will accompany
you, sir, and give you any aid in my power,
in rescuing Mr. Hamilton!”</p>
<p>“Good! I’ll make all the necessary arrangements
and call for you to-night at eight o’clock. Meanwhile,
keep a strict guard upon your tongue, and say nothing
to anyone of what has occurred. Have you told your
wife of your adventure?”</p>
<p>“No, Mr. Blaine; I merely told her I was out on a
sudden night call. I decided to wait until I had seen
you before mentioning the extraordinary features of
the case.”</p>
<p>“You are a man of discretion, Doctor! Until eight
o’clock, then. You may expect me, without fail.”</p>
<p>Doctor Alwyn left, and Blaine spent a busy half-hour
making his arrangements for the night’s raid.
Scarcely had he completed them when the telephone
shrilled. The detective did not at first recognize the
voice which came to him over the wire, so changed was
it, so fraught with horror and a menace of tragedy.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_237' name='page_237'></SPAN>237</span></div>
<p>“It is you, Miss Lawton?” he asked, half unbelievingly.
“What is the matter? What has happened?”</p>
<p>“I must see you at once, <i>at once</i>, Mr. Blaine! I
have made a discovery so unexpected, so terrible, that
I am afraid to be alone; I am afraid of my own
thoughts. Please, please come immediately!”</p>
<p>“I will be with you as soon as my car can reach
your door,” he replied.</p>
<p>What could the young girl have discovered, shut up
there in that great lonely house? What new developments
could have arisen, in the case which until this
moment had seemed plain to him to the end?</p>
<p>He found her awaiting him in the hall, with ashen
face and trembling limbs. She clutched his hand with
her small icy one, and whispered:</p>
<p>“Come into the library, Mr. Blaine. I have something
to tell you––to show you!”</p>
<p>He followed her into the huge, somber, silent room
where only a few short weeks ago her father had met
with his death. Coming from the brilliant sunshine
without, it was a moment or two before his eyes could
penetrate the gloom. When they did so, he saw the
great leather chair by the hearth, which had played
so important a part in the tragedy, had been overturned.</p>
<p>“Mr. Blaine,”––the girl faced him, her voice
steadied and deepened portentously,––“my father died
of heart-disease, did he not?”</p>
<p>The detective felt a sudden thrill, almost of premonition,
at her unexpected question, but he controlled
himself, and replied quietly:</p>
<p>“That was the diagnosis of the physician, and the
coroner’s findings corroborated him.”</p>
<p>“Did it ever occur to you that there might be another
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_238' name='page_238'></SPAN>238</span>
and more terrible explanation of his sudden
death?”</p>
<p>“A detective must consider and analyze a case from
every standpoint, you know, Miss Lawton,” he answered.
“It did occur to me that perhaps your
father met with foul play, but I put the theory from me
for lack of evidence.”</p>
<p>“Mr. Blaine, my father was murdered!”</p>
<p>“Murdered! How do you know? What have you
discovered?”</p>
<p>“He was given poison! I have found the bottle
which contained it, hidden deep in the folds of his
chair there. It was no morbid fancy of mine after
all; my instinct was right! No wonder that chair has
exerted such a horrible fascination for me ever since
my poor father died in it. See!”</p>
<p>With indescribable loathing, she extended her left
hand, which until now she had held clenched behind
her. Upon the palm lay a tiny flat vial, with a pale,
amber-colored substance dried in the bottom of it.
Blaine took it and drew the cork. Before he had time
to place it at his nostrils, a faint but unmistakable
odor of bitter almonds floated out upon the air and pervaded
the room.</p>
<p>“Prussic acid!” he exclaimed. “It has the same
outward effect as an attack of heart-disease would produce,
to a superficial examination. Miss Lawton, how
did you discover this?”</p>
<p>“By the merest accident. I have a habit of creeping
in here, when I am more deeply despondent than
usual, and sitting for a while in my father’s chair.
It calms and comforts me, almost as if he were with
me once more. I was sitting there just before I telephoned
you, thinking over all that had occurred in these
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_239' name='page_239'></SPAN>239</span>
last weeks, when I broke down and cried. I felt for
my handkerchief, but could not find it, and thinking
that I might perhaps have dropped it in the chair, I
ran my hand down deep in the leather fold between the
seat and the side and back. My fingers encountered
something flat and hard which had been jammed away
down inside, and I dug it out. It was this bottle!
Mr. Blaine, does it mean that my father was murdered
by that man whose voice I heard––that man
who came to him in the night and threatened him?”</p>
<p>“I’m afraid it does, Miss Lawton.” Henry Blaine
said slowly. “When you hear that voice again and
recognize it, we shall be able to lay our hands upon the
murderer of your father.”</p>
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