<h3>I AM TEMPTED</h3>
<p>"Some ninety miles from here, in a more or less inaccessible region,
there is a small but interesting village, which has been the scene of so
many unaccountable disappearances that the attention of the New York
police has at last been directed to it. The village, which is at least
two miles from any railroad, is one of those quiet, placid little spots
found now and then among the mountains, where life is simple, and crime,
to all appearance, an element so out of accord with every other
characteristic of the place as to seem a complete anomaly. Yet crime, or
some other hideous mystery almost equally revolting, has during the last
five years been accountable for the disappearance in or about this
village of four persons of various ages and occupations. Of these, three
were strangers and one a well-known vagabond accustomed to tramp the
hills and live on the bounty of farmers' wives. All were of the male
sex, and in no case has any clue ever come to light as to their fate.
That is the matter as it stands before the police to-day."</p>
<p>"A serious affair," I remarked. "Seems to me I have read of such things
in novels. Is there a tumbled-down old inn in the vicinity where beds
are made up over trap-doors?"</p>
<p>His smile was a mild protest against my flippancy.</p>
<p>"I have visited the town myself. There is no inn there, but a
comfortable hotel of the most matter-of-fact sort, kept by the frankest
and most open-minded of landlords. Besides, these disappearances, as a
rule, did not take place at night, but in broad daylight. Imagine this
street at noon. It is a short one, and you know every house on it, and
you think you know every lurking-place. You see a man enter it at one
end and you expect him to issue from it at the other. But suppose he
never does. More than that, suppose he is never heard of again, and that
this thing should happen in this one street four times during five
years."</p>
<p>"I should move," I dryly responded.</p>
<p>"Would you? Many good people have moved from the place I speak of, but
that has not helped matters. The disappearances go on just the same and
the mystery continues."</p>
<p>"You interest me," I said. "Come to think of it, if this street were the
scene of such an unexplained series of horrors as you have described, I
do not think I should move."</p>
<p>"I thought not," he curtly rejoined. "But since you are interested in
this matter, let me be more explicit in my statements. The first person
whose disappearance was noted——"</p>
<p>"Wait," I interrupted. "Have you a map of the place?"</p>
<p>He smiled, nodded quite affectionately to a little statuette on the
mantel-piece, which had had the honor of sharing his confidences in days
gone by, but did not produce the map.</p>
<p>"That detail will keep," said he. "Let me go on with my story. As I was
saying, madam, the first person whose disappearance was noted in this
place was a peddler of small wares, accustomed to tramp the mountains.
On this occasion he had been in town longer than usual, and was known to
have sold fully half of his goods. Consequently he must have had quite a
sum of money upon him. One day his pack was found lying under a cluster
of bushes in a wood, but of him nothing was ever again heard. It made an
excitement for a few days while the woods were being searched for his
body, but, nothing having been discovered, he was forgotten, and
everything went on as before, till suddenly public attention was again
aroused by the pouring in of letters containing inquiries in regard to a
young man who had been sent there from Duluth to collect facts in a law
case, and who after a certain date had failed to communicate with his
firm or show up at any of the places where he was known. Instantly the
village was in arms. Many remembered the young man, and some two or
three of the villagers could recall the fact of having seen him go up
the street with his hand-bag in his hand as if on his way to the
Mountain-station. The landlord of the hotel could fix the very day at
which he left his house, but inquiries at the station failed to
establish the fact that he took train from there, nor were the most
minute inquiries into his fate ever attended by the least result. He was
not known to have carried much money, but he carried a very handsome
watch and wore a ring of more than ordinary value, neither of which has
ever shown up at any pawnbroker's known to the police. This was three
years ago.</p>
<p>"The next occurrence of a like character did not take place till a year
after. This time it was a poor old man from Hartford, who vanished
almost as it were before the eyes of these astounded villagers. He had
come to town to get subscriptions for a valuable book issued by a
well-known publisher. He had been more or less successful, and was
looking very cheerful and contented, when one morning, after making a
sale at a certain farmhouse, he sat down to dine with the family, it
being close on to noon. He had eaten several mouthfuls and was chatting
quite freely, when suddenly they saw him pause, clap his hand to his
pocket, and rise up very much disturbed. 'I have left my pocket-book
behind me at Deacon Spear's,' he cried. 'I cannot eat with it out of my
possession. Excuse me if I go for it.' And without any further
apologies, he ran out of the house and down the road in the direction of
Deacon Spear's. He never reached Deacon Spear's, nor was he ever seen in
that village again or in his home in Hartford. This was the most
astonishing mystery of all. Within a half-mile's radius, in a populous
country town, this man disappeared as if the road had swallowed him and
closed again. It was marvellous, it was incredible, and remained so even
after the best efforts of the country police to solve the mystery had
exhausted themselves. After this, the town began to acquire a bad name,
and one or two families moved away. Yet no one was found who was willing
to admit that these various persons had been the victims of foul play
till a month later another case came to light of a young man who had
left the village for the hillside station, and had never arrived at that
or any other destination so far as could be learned. As he was a distant
relative of a wealthy cattle owner in Iowa, who came on post-haste to
inquire into his nephew's fate, the excitement ran high, and through his
efforts and that of one of the town's leading citizens, the services of
our office were called into play. But the result has been nil. We have
found neither the bodies of these men nor any clue to their fate."</p>
<p>"Yet <i>you</i> have been there?" I suggested.</p>
<p>He nodded.</p>
<p>"Wonderful! And you came upon no suspicious house, no suspicious
person?"</p>
<p>The finger with which he was rubbing his eyeglasses went round and round
the rims with a slower and slower and still more thoughtful motion.</p>
<p>"Every town has its suspicious-looking houses," he slowly remarked,
"and, as for persons, the most honest often wear a lowering look in
which an unbridled imagination can see guilt. I never trust to
appearances of that kind."</p>
<p>"What else can you trust in, when a case is as impenetrable as this
one?" I asked.</p>
<p>His finger, going slower and slower, suddenly stopped.</p>
<p>"In my knowledge of persons," he replied. "In my knowledge of their
fears, their hopes, and their individual concerns. If I were twenty
years younger"—here he stole a glance at me in the mirror which made me
bridle; did he think I was only twenty years younger than himself?—"I
would," he went on, "make myself so acquainted with every man, woman,
and child there, that—" Here he drew himself up with a jerk. "But the
day for that is passed," said he. "I am too old and too crippled to
succeed in such an undertaking. Having been there once, I am a marked
man. My very walk betrays me. He whose good fortune it will be to get at
the bottom of these people's hearts must awaken no suspicions as to his
connection with the police. Indeed, I do not think that any man can
succeed in doing this now."</p>
<p>I started. This was a frank showing of his hand at least. No man! It was
then a woman's aid he was after. I laughed as I thought of it. I had not
thought him either so presumptuous or so appreciative of talents of a
character so directly in line with his own.</p>
<p>"Don't you agree with me, madam?"</p>
<p>I did agree with him; but I had a character of great dignity to
maintain, so I simply surveyed him with an air of well-tempered
severity.</p>
<p>"I do not know of any woman who would undertake such a task," I calmly
observed.</p>
<p>"No?" he smiled with that air of forbearance which is so exasperating to
me. "Well, perhaps there isn't any such woman to be found. It would take
one of very uncommon characteristics, I own."</p>
<p>"Pish!" I cried. "Not so very!"</p>
<p>"Indeed, I think you have not fully taken in the case," he urged in
quiet superiority. "The people there are of the higher order of country
folk. Many of them are of extreme refinement. One family"—here his tone
changed a trifle—"is poor enough and cultivated enough to interest even
such a woman as yourself."</p>
<p>"Indeed!" I ejaculated, with just a touch of my father's hauteur to hide
the stir of curiosity his words naturally evoked.</p>
<p>"It is in some such home," he continued with an ease that should have
warned me he had started on this pursuit with a quiet determination to
win, "that the clue will be found to the mystery we are considering.
Yes, you may well look startled, but that conclusion is the one thing I
brought away with me from—X., let us say. I regard it as one of some
moment. What do you think of it?"</p>
<p>"Well," I admitted, "it makes me feel like recalling that <i>pish</i> I
uttered a few minutes ago. It would take a woman of uncommon
characteristics to assist you in this matter."</p>
<p>"I am glad we have got that far," said he.</p>
<p>"A lady," I went on.</p>
<p>"Most assuredly a lady."</p>
<p>I paused. Sometimes discreet silence is more sarcastic than speech.</p>
<p>"Well, what lady would lend herself to this scheme?" I demanded at last.</p>
<p>The tap, tap of his fingers on the rim of his glasses was my only
answer.</p>
<p>"I do not know of any," said I.</p>
<p>His eyebrows rose perhaps a hair's-breadth, but I noted the implied
sarcasm, and for an instant forgot my dignity.</p>
<p>"Now," said I, "this will not do. You mean me, Amelia Butterworth; a
woman who—but I do not think it is necessary to tell you either who or
what I am. You have presumed, sir—Now do not put on that look of
innocence, and above all do not attempt to deny what is so manifestly in
your thoughts, for that would make me feel like showing you the door."</p>
<p>"Then," he smiled, "I shall be sure to deny nothing. I am not anxious to
leave—yet. Besides, whom could I mean but you? A lady visiting friends
in this remote and beautiful region—what opportunities might she not
have to probe this important mystery if, like yourself, she had tact,
discretion, excellent understanding, and an experience which if not
broad or deep is certainly such as to give her a certain confidence in
herself, and an undoubted influence with the man fortunate enough to
receive her advice."</p>
<p>"Bah!" I exclaimed. It was one of his favorite expressions. That was
perhaps why I used it. "One would think I was a member of your police."</p>
<p>"You flatter us too deeply," was his deferential answer. "Such an honor
as that would be beyond our deserts."</p>
<p>To this I gave but the faintest sniff. That he should think that I,
Amelia Butterworth, could be amenable to such barefaced flattery! Then I
faced him with some asperity, and said bluntly: "You waste your time. I
have no more intention of meddling in another affair than——"</p>
<p>"You had in meddling in the first," he politely, too politely,
interpolated. "I understand, madam."</p>
<p>I was angry, but made no show of being so. I was not willing he should
see that I could be affected by anything he could say.</p>
<p>"The Van Burnams are my next-door neighbors," I remarked sweetly. "I had
the best of excuses for the interest I took in their affairs."</p>
<p>"So you had," he acquiesced. "I am glad to be reminded of the fact. I
wonder I was able to forget it."</p>
<p>Angry now to the point of not being able to hide it, I turned upon him
with firm determination.</p>
<p>"Let us talk of something else," I said.</p>
<p>But he was equal to the occasion. Drawing a folded paper from his
pocket, he opened it out before my eyes, observing quite naturally:
"That is a happy thought. Let us look over this sketch you were sharp
enough to ask for a few moments ago. It shows the streets of the village
and the places where each of the persons I have mentioned was last seen.
Is not that what you wanted?"</p>
<p>I know that I should have drawn back with a frown, that I never should
have allowed myself the satisfaction of casting so much as a glance
toward the paper, but the human nature which links me to my kind was too
much for me, and with an involuntary "Exactly!" I leaned over it with an
eagerness I strove hard, even at that exciting moment, to keep within
the bounds I thought proper to my position as a non-professional,
interested in the matter from curiosity alone.</p>
<p>This is what I saw:</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/diagram.jpg" alt=""/></div>
<p>"Mr. Gryce," said I, after a few minutes' close contemplation of this
diagram, "I do not suppose you want any opinion from me."</p>
<p>"Madam," he retorted, "it is all you have left me free to ask for."</p>
<p>Receiving this as a permission to speak, I put my finger on the road
marked with a cross.</p>
<p>"Then," said I, "so far as I can gather from this drawing, all the
disappearances seem to have taken place in or about this especial road."</p>
<p>"You are as correct as usual," he returned. "What you have said is so
true, that the people of the vicinity have already given to this winding
way a special cognomen of its own. For two years now it has been called
Lost Man's Lane."</p>
<p>"Indeed!" I cried. "They have got the matter down as close as that, and
yet have not solved its mystery? How long is this road?"</p>
<p>"A half mile or so."</p>
<p>I must have looked my disgust, for his hands opened deprecatingly.</p>
<p>"The ground has undergone a thorough search," said he. "Not a square
foot in those woods you see on either side of the road, but has been
carefully examined."</p>
<p>"And the houses? I see there are three houses on this road."</p>
<p>"Oh, they are owned by most respectable people—<i>most</i> respectable
people," he repeated, with a lingering emphasis that gave me an inward
shudder. "I think I had the honor of intimating as much to you a few
minutes ago."</p>
<p>I looked at him earnestly, and irresistibly drew a little nearer to him
over the diagram.</p>
<p>"Have none of these houses been visited by you?" I asked. "Do you mean
to say you have not seen the inside of them all?"</p>
<p>"Oh," he replied, "I have been in them all, of course; but a mystery
such as we are investigating is not written upon the walls of parlors or
halls."</p>
<p>"You freeze my blood," was my uncharacteristic rejoinder. Somehow the
sight of the homes indicated on this diagram seemed to bring me into
more intimate sympathy with the affair.</p>
<p>His shrug was significant.</p>
<p>"I told you that this was no vulgar mystery," he declared; "or why
should I be considering it with <i>you</i>? It is quite worthy of your
interest. Do you see that house marked A?"</p>
<p>"I do," I nodded.</p>
<p>"Well, that is a decayed mansion of imposing proportions, set in a
forest of overgrown shrubbery. The ladies who inhabit it——"</p>
<p>"Ladies!" I put in, with a small shock of horror.</p>
<p>"Young ladies," he explained, "of a refined if not over-prosperous
appearance. They are the interesting residue of a family of some repute.
Their father was a judge, I believe."</p>
<p>"And do they live there alone," I asked,—"two young ladies in a house
so large and in a neighborhood so full of mystery?"</p>
<p>"Oh, they have a brother with them, a lout of no great attractions," he
responded carelessly—too carelessly, I thought.</p>
<p>I made a note of the house A in my mind.</p>
<p>"And who lives in the house marked B?" I now queried.</p>
<p>"A Mr. Trohm. You will remember that it was through his exertions the
services of the New York police were secured. His place there is one of
the most interesting in town, and he does not wish to be forced to leave
it, but he will be obliged to do so if the road is not soon relieved of
its bad name; and so will Deacon Spear. The very children shun the road
now. I do not know of a lonelier place."</p>
<p>"I see a little mark made here on the verge of the woods. What does that
mean?"</p>
<p>"That stands for a hut—it can hardly be called a cottage—where a poor
old woman lives called Mother Jane. She is a harmless imbecile, against
whom no one has ever directed a suspicion. You may take your finger off
that mark, Miss Butterworth."</p>
<p>I did so, but I did not forget that it stood very near the footpath
branching off to the station.</p>
<p>"You entered this hut as well as the big houses?" I intimated.</p>
<p>"And found," was his answer, "four walls; nothing more."</p>
<p>I let my finger travel along the footpath I have just mentioned.</p>
<p>"Steep," was his comment. "Up, up, all the way, but no precipices.
Nothing but pine woods on either side, thickly carpeted with needles."</p>
<p>My finger came back and stopped at the house marked M.</p>
<p>"Why is a letter affixed to this spot?" I asked.</p>
<p>"Because it stands at the head of the lane. Any one sitting at the
window L can see whoever enters or leaves the lane at this end. And some
one is always sitting there. The house contains two crippled children, a
boy and a girl. One of them is always in that window."</p>
<p>"I see," said I. Then abruptly: "What do you think of Deacon Spear?"</p>
<p>"Oh, he's a well-meaning man, none too fine in his feelings. He does not
mind the neighborhood; likes quiet, he says. I hope you will know him
for yourself some day," the detective slyly added.</p>
<p>At this return to the forbidden subject, I held myself very much aloof.</p>
<p>"Your diagram is interesting," I remarked, "but it has not in the least
changed my determination. It is you who will return to X., and that,
very soon."</p>
<p>"Very soon?" he repeated. "Whoever goes there on this errand must go at
once; to-night, if possible; if not, to-morrow at the latest."</p>
<p>"To-night! to-morrow!" I expostulated. "And you thought——"</p>
<p>"No matter what I thought," he sighed. "It seems I had no reason for my
hopes." And folding up the map, he slowly rose. "The young man we have
left there is doing more harm than good. That is why I say that some one
of real ability must replace him immediately. The detective from New
York must seem to have left the place."</p>
<p>I made him my most ladylike bow of dismissal.</p>
<p>"I shall watch the papers," I said. "I have no doubt that I shall soon
be gratified by seeing in them some token of your success."</p>
<p>He cast a rueful look at his hands, took a painful step toward the door,
and dolefully shook his head.</p>
<p>I kept my silence undisturbed.</p>
<p>He took another painful step, then turned.</p>
<p>"By the way," he remarked, as I stood watching him with an
uncompromising air, "I have forgotten to mention the name of the town in
which these disappearances have occurred. It is called X., and it is to
be found on one of the spurs of the Berkshire Hills." And, being by this
time at the door, he bowed himself out with all the insinuating suavity
which distinguishes him at certain critical moments. The old fox was so
sure of his triumph that he did not wait to witness it. He knew—how, it
is easy enough for me to understand now—that X. was a place I had often
threatened to visit. The family of one of my dearest friends lived
there, the children of Althea Knollys. She had been my chum at school,
and when she died I had promised myself not to let many months go by
without making the acquaintance of her children. Alas! I had allowed
years to elapse.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<h2><SPAN name="III" id="III"></SPAN>III</h2>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />