<h2>CHAPTER XX</h2>
<h3>THE CREVICE</h3></div>
<p class="dropcapq" ><small>“</small><span class="drop">B</span><span class="dcap">ut I</span> don’t understand”––Guy Morrow’s voice
was plaintive, and he eyed his chief reproachfully,
as he stood before Blaine’s desk, twisting
his hat nervously––“why you didn’t nail him!
You’ve got the goods on him, all right; and now, just
because you only had him arrested on a charge of assault
with intent to kill, he’s gone and used his influence, and
got himself released under heavy bail. Oh, why won’t
you go heeled or guarded? We can’t afford to lose you,
sir, any of us, and now he’ll do for you, as sure as shooting!”</p>
<p>“Who––Carlis?” Blaine spoke almost absently, as
if the portentous scene of two hours before had already
almost slipped from his memory. “Oh, he won’t get
away, and I’m not afraid of him! I let him go for the
same reason that I didn’t have Mallowe arrested this
morning––for the same reason why I haven’t stopped
Paddington’s philandering with the French girl, Fifine:
because a link is still missing in the chain; the shell, the
exterior of the whole conspiracy is in the hollow of my
hand, but I can’t find the chink, the crevice into which
to insert my lever and split it apart, lay the whole dastardly
scheme irrefutably open to the light of day. I
want to complete my case: in other words, Guy––I
want to win!”</p>
<p>“And you will, sir; you’ve never failed yet! Only I––I
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_291' name='page_291'></SPAN>291</span>
don’t have any luck!” The young man’s haggard
face grew wistful. “I want Emily Brunell; I need her––and
I seem farther from finding her than ever!”</p>
<p>“I didn’t know that was your job!” the detective objected,
with a brusqueness which was not unkind. “I
told you I’d take care of that, in my own way. I
thought I assigned you to the task of finding out who
fired at you, from the darkened window of your own
room, when you were in Brunell’s house across the street;
also I wanted a line on those two mysterious boarders
of Mrs. Quinlan’s.”</p>
<p>“Nothing doing on either count, sir,” Morrow returned,
ruefully. “I can’t get a glimpse of them, or a
line on either of them; and as for who tried to plug me––well,
there isn’t an iota of evidence, that I can discover,
beyond the bare fact. I didn’t come to report, for
there’s nothing to say, except that I’m sticking at it,
and if I don’t get a sight of those two before long I’m
going to burn a red sulphur light some fine night, and
yell ‘fire!’ I bet that’ll bring the old codger out, for
all his rheumatism!”</p>
<p>“Not a bad idea,” Blaine commented, adding dryly:
“What did you come for, then, Guy?”</p>
<p>“To find out if you had any news you were willing to
tell me yet, sir––of Emily?”</p>
<p>“Yes.” The detective’s slow smile was quizzical.
“The most significant news in the world.”</p>
<p>“You’ve discovered their destination––hers and her
father’s?” the young operative cried eagerly. “You
traced their taxi, of course!”</p>
<p>“No.”</p>
<p>“Then what is it?”</p>
<p>“Just that, Guy––that I haven’t been able to trace
the taxicab in which they left their house. Think it
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_292' name='page_292'></SPAN>292</span>
over. Report to me when you’ve got anything definite
to tell me.”</p>
<p>With a curt nod Blaine dismissed him, but he glanced
after the dejected, retreating figure with a very kindly,
affectionate light in his fatherly eyes. It was dusk when
he was aroused from a deep study of his carefully annotated
résumé of the case by the excited jangle of the
telephone bell, to hear Guy Morrow’s no less excited but
joyous voice at the other end of the wire.</p>
<p>“I’ve found her! I’ve found Emily! She loves me!
She does! I made her listen, and she understands everything!
She don’t mind a bit about my hounding her
father down, because she sees how it all had to be, and the
old man’s a regular brick about it!”</p>
<p>“Where––”</p>
<p>“It was the kitten did it––that blessed Caliban!
And think of it, sir; I’ve always hated cats, ever since I
was a kid! Emily says––”</p>
<p>“But how––”</p>
<p>“Maybe if the hall had been lighted––but Mrs.
Quinlan’s got that parsimony peculiar to all landladies––and
I trod on its tail, and it was all up!”</p>
<p>“Morrow, are you a driveling idiot, or an operative?
Are you reporting, or exploding? If you called me up
to tell me that you trod on the tail of your landlady’s
parsimony, you don’t need a job in a detective bureau;
you need a lunacy commission!” Blaine’s voice was
vexed, but little smiling lines crinkled at the corners of
his eyes.</p>
<p>“I beg your pardon, sir; I am almost crazy, I think––with
happiness. I’ve found Mr. Jimmy Brunell and
his daughter. They are the two mysterious boarders
whom Mrs. Quinlan has been shielding all this time, and
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_293' name='page_293'></SPAN>293</span>
I never even suspected it! It was Jimmy Brunell who
fired at me that night of the day they disappeared. He
didn’t recognize me, and thought I was one of his enemies––one
of Paddington’s men, like young Charley Pennold.</p>
<p>“You remember, I told you I found the kitten in the
deserted house and brought it home for Mrs. Quinlan to
take care of? Well, she never lights the gas until the
very last minute, and late this afternoon, about half an
hour ago, I was stumbling along the second-floor hallway
to my room in the dark, when I stepped on the kitten.
It yelled like mad, and Emily heard it from her room
above. Forgetting caution and everything else, she
opened the door and called it!</p>
<p>“Of course, when I heard her voice, I was upstairs
two steps at a time, with the cat under my arm clawing
like a vixen. She was perfectly freezing at first––not
the cat; it’s a he; I mean Emily. But after I explained
that when I’d gotten to care for her I only tried to help
her, she––oh, well, I’m going to let her tell you herself,
if you’re willing, sir! I’ll bring them both down to you
now, if you say so, she and her father. Jimmy Brunell’s
more than anxious to see you; he wants to make a clean
breast of the whole affair––tell all he knows about the
case; and I think what he’s got to say will astonish you
and finish the whole thing––crack that nut you were
talking to me about this afternoon, provide the link in
the chain, the crevice in the crime cube! May I bring
them?”</p>
<p>Blaine acquiesced, and after issuing his orders to the
subordinates about him, waited in a fever of impatience
which he could scarcely control, and which, had he
stopped to think of it, would have astonished him beyond
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_294' name='page_294'></SPAN>294</span>
measure. That he––who had daily, almost hourly,
awaited unmoved the appearance of men famous and infamous,
illustrious and obscure, should so agitatedly
view the coming of this old offender, was incomprehensible.</p>
<p>Yet although he had really learned little that was conclusive
from Guy’s somewhat incoherent account, he felt,
in common with his young operative, that the crux of the
matter lay here, to his hand, that from the lips of this
old ex-convict would fall the magic word which would
open to him the inner door of this mystery of mysteries––which
would prove, as the golden key of truth, absolute
and unassailable.</p>
<p>After what seemed an incredibly long period of suspense,
the door opened and Marsh ushered them in––Morrow,
his face wreathed in triumph and smiles; a
brown-haired, serene-eyed girl whom Blaine remembered
from his memorable interview with her at the Anita Lawton
Club; and a tall, grizzled, smooth-shaven man, who
held himself proudly erect, as if the weight of years had
fallen from his shoulders.</p>
<p>“Yes, sir, I’m Brunell,” the latter announced, when
the incidental salutations were over, “––Jimmy Brunell,
the forger. I’ve lived straight, and tried to keep the
truth from my little girl, for her own sake, but perhaps
it is better as it is. She knows everything now, and has
forgiven much, because she’s a woman like her mother,
God bless her! I’ve come of my own free will, to tell
you all you want to know, and prove it, too!”</p>
<p>“Sit down, all of you. Brunell, you forged the signature
to the mortgage on Pennington Lawton’s home,
at Paddington’s instigation?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir. And the signature on the note given for
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_295' name='page_295'></SPAN>295</span>
the loan from Moore, and the whole letter supposed to be
from Mr. Lawton to Mallowe, asking him to procure
that loan for him, and all the other crooked business
which helped sweep Mr. Lawton’s fortune away. But I
didn’t understand how big the job was, nor just what
they were trying to put over, or I wouldn’t have done it.
I wish to heaven I hadn’t, now, but it’s too late for that;
I can only do what’s left me to help repair the damage.
I wish I’d taken the consequences Paddington threatened
me with, through Charley Pennold––curse them both!</p>
<p>“For it wasn’t because of the money I did it, sir,
although what they offered me was a small fortune, and
would have been a mighty hard temptation in the old
days. It was because if I refused they were going to
strike at me through my little girl, the one thing on earth
I’ve got left to love! They were going to have me sent
up on an old score which no one else even had suspected
I’d been mixed up in. I didn’t know––until just now
when this young friend here, Mr. Morrow, told me––that
it had been outlawed long years ago, and I can see
that they counted on my not knowing. How they found
out about it, anyway, is a mystery to me, but that Paddington
is the devil himself! However, if I didn’t do
the trick for them, they’d have me convicted, and once
out of the way, my little girl would be helpless in their
hands. They talked of sweatshops, and worse––”</p>
<p>The old man broke down, and shuddering, covered his
face with his thin fingers. But in a moment, before the
pitying, outstretched hand of his daughter could reach
his shoulder, he had regained control of himself, and
resumed:</p>
<p>“I did what they asked of me––all they asked. But
I was suspicious, not only because they didn’t take me
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_296' name='page_296'></SPAN>296</span>
fully into their confidence, but because I knew Paddington
and his breed; and also, Miss Lawton had been kind
to my little girl. If they meant any harm to Pennington
Lawton’s daughter, or if their scheme, whatever kind
of a hold-up it was, failed to pan out as they expected,
and they tried to make me the scape-goat––well, I meant
to protect myself and Lawton. My word would have
to be proof against theirs that they forced me into what
I did, but I could fix it so that I could prove to anybody,
without any doubt, that Lawton never wrote that note to
Mallowe from Long Bay about that loan two years ago,
and that would sort of substantiate my word that the
signatures weren’t his, either.”</p>
<p>“How could you prove such a thing?” Blaine
leaned forward tensely.</p>
<p>“Young Morrow, here, tells me that you’ve got that
note––the note asking Mallowe to arrange the loan for
Lawton. Will you get it, please, sir? I don’t want to
see it; I want you to read it to me, and then I’ll tell you
something about it. They thought they were clever,
the rascals, but I fooled them at their own game! I cut
out the words from a bundle of Lawton’s old letters
which they gave me, and I manufactured the note, all
right. I did it, word for word, just like they wanted
me to––but I put my <i>own private mark</i> on it, that they
couldn’t discover, so that I could prove anywhere, any
time, that it was a forgery!”</p>
<p>In a concealed fever of excitement, the detective produced
the fateful note from his private file.</p>
<p>“That looks like it!” chuckled old Jimmy. “It’s
dated August sixteenth, nineteen hundred and twelve,
isn’t it? Now, sir, will you read it out loud, please?”</p>
<p style='margin-bottom: 1em' >Blaine unfolded the single sheet of hotel note-paper,
and looked once more at the following message:</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_297' name='page_297'></SPAN>297</span></div>
<div style='width:27em; margin: 1em 0 1em 2.5em;'>
<p class='typewriter'>
My Dear Mallowe:<br/><br/>
Kindly regard this letter as strictly<br/>
confidential. I desire to negotiate a private loan immediately,<br/>
for a considerable amount,–three hundred<br/>
and fifty thousand dollars, in fact,–but<br/>
for obvious reasons, which you, as a man of<br/>
discretion and financial astuteness second to<br/>
none in this country, will readily understand, a<br/>
public assumption of it by me would be disastrous<br/>
to a degree, under the prevailing conditions. Ask<br/>
Moore if he can arrange the matter for me, but<br/>
feel him out tentatively first. If he does not see<br/>
his way clear to it, let me know without delay,<br/>
and I will come to Illington and confer with<br/>
you.<br/><br/>
I am prepared, of course, to give him my personal<br/>
note for same, but do not desire any direct<br/>
dealings with him. In fact, it would be exceedingly<br/>
dangerous to my interests if he ever mentioned<br/>
it to me personally, even when he fancied<br/>
himself alone with me. Impress this upon him.<br/>
I will pay far above the legal rate of interest, of<br/>
course. You can arrange this with him.<br/>
I will go into the whole matter of this contingency<br/>
confidentially with you when I see you. In<br/>
the meantime, I know that I can rely upon you.<br/><br/>
Awaiting the earliest possible reply, and thanking<br/>
you for the interest I know you will take<br/>
in this affair,<br/></p>
<p class='typewriter' style='text-align:right; margin-right: 10em;'>Sincerely, your friend,<br/><br/>Pennington Lawton.</p>
</div>
<p style='margin-top: 1em' >After glancing at it a moment Blaine read the letter
aloud in a calm, unemotional voice which gave no hint
of the tumult within him. He had scarcely finished when
Jimmy Brunell, greatly excited, interrupted triumphantly:</p>
<p>“That’s it! That’s the note! Don’t see anything
phony about it, do you, sir? Neither did they! Now,
leave out the ‘My dear Mallowe,’ and beginning with the
next as the first line, count down five lines. The last
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_298' name='page_298'></SPAN>298</span>
letter of the last word on that line is <i>f</i>, <i>isn’t it</i>? Omit a
line and take the last letter of the next, and so on for
four letters––that is, the last words of the four alternate
lines beginning with the fifth from the top are:
<i>of</i>, <i>a</i>, <i>ask</i>, and <i>see</i>, and the last letters of those four spell
a word. That word is <i>fake</i>, and so is the note, and the
whole infernal business! <i>Fake</i>, from beginning to end!
I put my mark on it, sir, so it could be known for what
it is, in case of need. Now the need has come.”</p>
<p>“By Jove, so it is!” Guy Morrow cried, unable to
restrain himself longer. “You’re a wonder, Mr. Brunell!”</p>
<p>“You have rendered us a greater service than you
know,” supplemented Blaine, the while his pulses
throbbed in time to his leaping heart. The crevice!
The rift in the criminal’s almost perfected scheme, into
which he had succeeded in inserting the little silver
probe of his specialized knowledge, and disclosed to a
gaping world the truth! He had found it at last, and
his work was all but done.</p>
<p>“But what’s to happen to me now?” The exultation
had died out of his voice, and Jimmy Brunell looked suddenly
pinched and gray and tired, and very, very old.
“I don’t care much what happens to me, but my daughter––Emily––”</p>
<p>“I’ll take care of her, whatever happens!” Guy’s
heart was in his buoyant voice. “But you’ll be all
right. Don’t you worry! Haven’t you got Mr. Blaine
on your side?”</p>
<p>“I’ll try to see that you don’t suffer for your enforced
share in the Lawton conspiracy, Brunell. It seems to
me that you’ve already gone through trouble enough
on that score, great as was the damage you half-unwittingly
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_299' name='page_299'></SPAN>299</span>
wrought,” Blaine remarked, reassuringly––adding:
“But why didn’t you come forward before, and
give your testimony?”</p>
<p>“There wasn’t any court action,” the old man returned,
hesitatingly. “And besides, I was afraid to
come forward and tell what I knew, because of Emily.
I would have done it, though, as soon as I learned they
had robbed Miss Lawton of everything. I wasn’t sure
of that, you see.”</p>
<p>“One thing more!” Blaine pressed the bell which
would summon his secretary. “Why, if you had reformed,
did you keep in your possession all these years
your forging apparatus?”</p>
<p>“I had it taken care of for me while I served my term,
meaning to use it again when I came out. I was bitter
and revengeful, and I meant to do everybody up brown
that I could. But when I was free and found my––my
wife had gone and left me Emily, it seemed like a hostage
from her gentle spirit given to the world, that I wouldn’t
do any more wrong. I kept the plant because I didn’t
know how to dispose of it so no one else could use it, and
as the years went by, I got more and more scared at the
thought of it.</p>
<p>“I was afraid both ways––afraid it would be discovered,
but more afraid I’d be found out if I tried to get
rid of it. So I buried it in the cellar of my little shop
and did my level best to forget it. I’d almost succeeded
when, God knows how, Paddington found me. You
know the rest.”</p>
<p>“You rang, sir?” Marsh, the secretary, had entered
noiselessly.</p>
<p>“Yes. Have these two people––this young lady
and her father––conducted in my own limousine to my
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_300' name='page_300'></SPAN>300</span>
house, and made comfortable there until I give you
further directions as to what I wish done concerning
them.”</p>
<p>Blaine cut short the old forger’s broken words of
gratitude in his brusquely kind fashion, but his heart
imaged always the light in the girl’s soft eyes as she
bent a parting glance upon him, like a benediction, before
the door closed.</p>
<p>“What are you going to do with them, sir?” young
Morrow asked anxiously when they were alone.</p>
<p>Henry Blaine paused a moment before replying.</p>
<p>“I might let him take his chance before the court, on
the strength of his years, and his having turned State’s
evidence voluntarily, Guy, but he’s an old offender, and
Carlis’ faction is strong. My racing car will make
ninety miles an hour, easily, and it can do it unmolested,
with my private sign on the hood. It can meet the
Canadian express at Branchtown at dawn. I’ve a little
farm in a nice community in Canada, not too isolated,
and I’m going to make it over to you as part of your
reward for your work on the Lawton case....</p>
<p>“No, don’t thank me! I’m sworn on the side of law
and order, but Justice is stern and sometimes blind because
she will not see. Remember, the Greatest Jurist
Himself recommended mercy!”</p>
<p>Soon afterward, as they sat discussing the wind-up
of the case, the subject of the second set of cryptograms
was broached, and Blaine smiled at Morrow’s utter bewilderment
concerning them.</p>
<p>“Still puzzling about those, Guy? They weren’t as
simple as the first one was, that of the system of odd-shaped
characters and dots. The later ones were the
more difficult because they were of no set system at all––I
mean no one system, but a primitive conglomeration,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_301' name='page_301'></SPAN>301</span>
probably evolved by Paddington himself, based on script
music and also the old childish trick of writing letters
shaped like figures, which can be read by reversing the
paper, and holding it up to the light.</p>
<p>“Just a minute, and we’ll look at the two notes, the
one you found in Brunell’s room in the deserted cottage,
and the other which came to me in the cigarette box
meant for Paddington, from Mac Alarney. Then we’ll
be able to see how they were worked out. And you’ll see
that though they look extremely meaningless and confusing,
they are in reality extremely simple.”</p>
<p>As he spoke, Blaine produced them from his desk
drawer, and spread them out before him.</p>
<p>“Before you examine them,” he went on, “let me explain
the musical script idea on which they are fundamentally
based, in case you are unfamiliar with it. The
sign ‘&’ before a bar of music means that music is written
in the treble clef––that is, all the notes following
it are above the central <i>C</i> on the piano keyboard.
Thus”––here he drew rapidly on a scrap of paper and
passed a scrawled scale over to the interested operative.</p>
<div class='figtag'>
<SPAN name='linki_7' id='linki_7'></SPAN></div>
<div class='figcenter'>
<ANTIMG src='images/png308.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 367px; height: 75px;' /><br/></div>
<p>“The dot on the line below the five lines which are
joined together by the sign of the treble clef is <i>C</i>. The
dot on the space between that and the first of the five
lines is <i>D</i>. The dot on the first line is <i>E</i>; on the next
space is <i>F</i>, and so forth, in their alphabetical order on
the alternating lines and spaces. Do you see how easily,
they could be used as the letters of words in a cryptogram,
by any one of an ingenious turn of mind? Of
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_302' name='page_302'></SPAN>302</span>
course, each bar––that is, each section enclosed by
lines running straight up and down––represents a
word. Now for the rest of it:</p>
<p>“Leaving the script music idea aside, and taking the
characters not so represented in the cryptogram, we find
that ‘3’ when viewed from the under side of the paper
will look very much like an English <i>E</i>; 7 like <i>T</i>; 9 like
<i>P</i>; 2 like <i>S</i>, and so forth.</p>
<p>“Try it. Here is the first note, the one you found.
Puzzle out the musical notes by their alphabetical
nomenclature from the key I just gave you on the scrap
of paper there; then hold the note up to the light, and
read the other letters from the under side. Try it with
both notes, and tell me what you find.”</p>
<p>Guy took the papers, and wonderingly spelled out the
letters represented by the musical notes, from the scale
Blaine had given him. Then turning the pages over, he
held them up to the light, an exclamation of absorbed
interest escaping from him.</p>
<p>The great detective watched him in silence, until at
last, with a glowing sense of achievement, Guy read:</p>
<p>“‘Beat it at once. You are suspected. Detective
on trail. Rite old address. I am sending funds as
usual. If caught you get life sentence. Pad.’”</p>
<p>Blaine nodded.</p>
<p>“Now, the other.”</p>
<p>“‘Patient still unconscious. Consultation necessary
at once to save life. Should he die advise Reddy what
disposition to make of body. Mac.’”</p>
<p>The last cryptogram proved the more easily decipherable,
and when the young operative had read it aloud,
he looked up with a glowing face.</p>
<p>“By George, it’s a world-beater! What put you
on the right track?”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_303' name='page_303'></SPAN>303</span></div>
<p>“The last one. I realized then that they were afraid
the kidnaped man, Ramon Hamilton, who had been
grievously wounded, would die on their hands, and that
rather than face the results of such a contingency they
would attempt to obtain some obscure but experienced
medical aid, and in a way which would give the physician
no inkling of his patient’s identity or whereabouts. I
therefore sent out that circular letter to every doctor
in Illington, warning each one to come to me in the event
of his having received a mysterious summons. It
worked, as you know, and Doctor Alwyn responded.”</p>
<p>“Well, if you hadn’t been able to read the cryptogram,
sir, the Lord knows what would have happened!”</p>
<p>“And if you hadn’t trodden on the cat’s tail––”
Blaine suggested dryly.</p>
<div class='figtag'>
<SPAN name='linki_8' id='linki_8'></SPAN></div>
<div class='figcenter'>
<ANTIMG src='images/png310.jpg' alt='' title='' style='width: 363px; height: 63px;' /><br/></div>
<p>Guy glanced at him in sudden, swift comprehension.</p>
<p>“Why, look here, sir, I believe you knew that Emily
and her father were the two mysterious boarders at Mrs.
Quinlan’s, all the time! You said it was significant that
you hadn’t been able to trace the number of the taxicab
in which they had run away from the neighborhood!
There never was a taxicab in all Illington which couldn’t
be traced by its number! You knew, of course, that
that story of Mrs. Quinlan’s was a fake, and then when
I told you of the two concealed people there, you had it
all doped out! Oh, why didn’t you tell me?”</p>
<p>“Because I didn’t want you to precipitate matters
just then, Guy,” the detective responded, kindly.
“The house was watched––they couldn’t get away.”</p>
<p>“That’s a good one!” Young Morrow looked his
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_304' name='page_304'></SPAN>304</span>
self-disgust. “Hire operatives on your staff, sir, and
then have to set others to tail them, and see that they
don’t get into trouble! Heavens, what an idiot I am!
I’ve found out one thing, though, from those cryptograms”––he
pointed to the cipher notes on the desk.
“Music’s a cinch! I can read it already, and I’m going
to start in and learn how to play on something or other,
the first chance I get! There’s a fellow next door to
Mrs. Quinlan’s with a clarinet––” He paused, and his
face sobered as he added: “But I forgot! I sha’n’t
be there any more.”</p>
<p>Before Blaine could speak, there was a knock upon
the door, and Marsh entered with hurried circumspection.
There was a look of latent, shocked importance
upon his usually impassive face, and he carried in his
hand a newspaper which was still damp from the press.</p>
<p>“I beg your pardon, sir, but I thought you would
want to know at once. There’s been a murder! Paddington,
the private detective, was found in the Rhododendron
Alley, just off the Mall in the park, stabbed to
the heart!”</p>
<p>Henry Blaine took the paper and spread it out upon
the desk before him, as Guy Morrow, with a soft, low
whistle, turned away. The “extra” imparted little
more than the secretary’s announcement had done.
There was no known motive for the crime, no clue to
the murderer. When found, the man had been dead for
some hours.</p>
<p>“Well, sir,” observed Guy at last, when the secretary
had withdrawn, “one by one they’re getting away from
us––and by the same route. First Rockamore, now
Paddington!”</p>
<p>Blaine looked up with a grim smile.</p>
<p>“Putting a woman wise to anything is like lighting a
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faulty time-fuse: you never can tell when you’re going
to get your own fingers blown off! But tell me something,
Guy. What was that tune you whistled a moment
ago, when Marsh came in with the news? It had a
vaguely familiar ring.”</p>
<p>“Oh, that?” asked the operative, with a sheepishly
guileless air. “It was just a bit from an English
musical comedy of two or three years back, I think.
It’s got a silly-sounding name––something like
‘There’s a Boat Sails on Saturday––’”</p>
<p>Blaine’s wry smile broadened to a grin of genuine
appreciation, and rising, he clapped the young man
heartily on the shoulder.</p>
<p>“Right you are, Guy! And it won’t be our job to
search the sailing lists. You may not always be able to
see what lies under your nose, but your perspective is
not bad. Hell has only one fury worse than a woman
scorned, that I know of, and that is a woman fooled!
We’ll let it go at that!”</p>
<p>The evening had already grown late, but that eventful
day was not to end without one more brief scene of vital
import. Marsh presently reappeared, this time bearing
a card.</p>
<p>“‘Mr. Mallowe,’” read Blaine, with a half-smile.
“Show him in, Marsh, and have your men ready. You
know what to do. No, Guy, you needn’t go. This interview
will not be a private one.”</p>
<p>“Mr. Blaine!” Mallowe entered pompously and
then paused, glancing rather uncertainly from the detective
to Morrow. It needed no keen observer to note
the change in the man since the scene of that morning, at
Miss Lawton’s. He had become a mere shell of his former
self. The smug unctuousness was gone; the jaunty
side-whiskers drooped; his chalk-like skin fell in flabby
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_306' name='page_306'></SPAN>306</span>
folds, and his crafty eyes shifted like a hunted animal’s.</p>
<p>“Mr. Blaine, I had hoped for a strictly confidential
conference with you, but I presume this person to be
one of your trusted assistants, and it is immaterial now––the
matter upon which I have come is too pressing!
Scandal, notoriety must be averted at all costs! I find
that a frightful, a hideous mistake has been made, and
I am actually upon the point of being involved in a conspiracy
as terrible as that of which my poor friend Pennington
Lawton was the victim! And I am as innocent
as he! I swear it!”</p>
<p>“You may as well conserve your strength and your
strategic ingenuity for the immediate future, Mr. Mallowe.
You’ll need both,” Blaine returned, coolly. “If
you’ve come here to make any appeal––”</p>
<p>“I’ve come to assert my innocence!” the broken man
cried with a flash of his old proud dignity. “I only
learned this evening of the truth, and that those scoundrels
Carlis and Rockamore had implicated me! How
a man of your discernment and experience could believe
for a moment that I was a party to any fraudulent––”</p>
<p>Blaine pressed the bell.</p>
<p>“There is no use in prolonging this interview, Mr.
Mallowe!” he said, curtly. “All the evidence is in my
hands.”</p>
<p>“But allow me to explain!” The flabby face grew
more deathlike, until the burning eyes seemed peering
from the face of a corpse.</p>
<p>Two men entered, and at sight of them, the former
pompous president of the Street Railways of Illington
plumped to his fat, quaking knees.</p>
<p>“For God’s sake, listen! You must listen, Blaine!”
he shrieked. “I am one of the prominent men of this
country! I have three married daughters, two of them
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with small children! The disgrace, the infamy of this,
will kill them! I will make restitution; I will––”</p>
<p>“Pennington Lawton had one daughter, unmarried,
unprovided for! Did you think of <i>her</i>?” asked Blaine,
grimly. “I’m sorry for the innocent who must suffer
with you, Mr. Mallowe, but in this instance the law must
take its course. Lead him away.”</p>
<p>When the wailing, quavering voice had subsided behind
the closing door, Henry Blaine turned to young
Morrow with a weary look of pain, age-old, in his eyes.</p>
<p>“Unpleasant, wasn’t it?” he asked grimly. “I try
to school myself against it, but with all my experience, a
scene like this makes me sick at heart. I know the
wretch deserves what is coming to him, just as Rockamore
knew when he unfalteringly sped that bullet––just
as Carlis knew when he heard his own voice repeated
by the dictagraph. And yet I, who make my living,
and shall continue to make it, by unearthing malefactors;
I, who have built my career, made my reputation,
proved myself to be what I am by the detection and
punishment of wrong-doing––I wish with all my heart
and soul, before God, that there was no such thing as
crime in all this fair green world!”</p>
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