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                             THE INCENDIARY

                           A Story of Mystery.

                             BY W. A. LEAHY.


    CHICAGO AND NEW YORK:
    RAND, McNALLY & COMPANY,
    MDCCCXCVII.

    A PRIZE STORY
    In THE CHICAGO RECORD series of "Stories of Mystery."

    THE INCENDIARY

    BY W. A. LEAHY.

    (This story--out of 816 competing--was awarded the fourth prize in the
    CHICAGO RECORD'S "$30,000 to Authors" competition.)

    Copyright, 1896, by W. A. Leahy.




THE INCENDIARY.




CHAPTER I.

FANFARE: THE PLAY BEGINS.


It was about half-past three in the afternoon when Bertha, the
housemaid, came running down the steps, with a shrill cry of "Fire!" and
fell plump into the arms of the bake-shop girl, who had seen the smoke
curling from Prof. Arnold's window and was hastening across to warn the
occupants of his house. The deep bark of a dog was heard within and
presently Sire, the professor's old St. Bernard, rushed by the two young
women and darted hither and thither, accosting the bystanders
distractedly, as if burdened with a message he could not communicate.

"Ring the alarm!" cried Bertha and the bake-shop girl in a breath, as
soon as they had recovered from the shock of their collision. Their cry
was taken up by a knot of three boys, who, as usual, were the first on
the spot; passed along till it reached some loungers on the corner,
whose inertia was more gradually overcome; and presently half the
neighborhood, as if by a spontaneous impulse, came thronging into
Cazenove street, each following his leader, like a flock of startled
ewes. Bertha, caught in the middle of this ring of sight-seers, stood
paralyzed a moment; then singling out the one man of action, she broke
through the crowd and stopped him midway in his advance.

"For the love of heaven, will you ring the alarm?"

The postman turned and scudded to the box. There was an interval of
suspense that seemed an age.

"Is there any one in the house?" was the first question of Patrolman
Chandler, when he galloped up to the scene. He had been attracted at
once by the barking of Sire.

"Mr. Robert," cried Bertha, wringing her hands. "Mr. Robert was in the
study." The crowd looked up and measured the swift gains of the
destructive element.

"Young Floyd?" said Chandler. Then he rushed into the house and up the
first flight of winding stairs, the dog, as he did so, following him
with a great fusillade of delighted barks.

"There's some one inside," said the crowd, and the rumor passed from
mouth to mouth.

"Fire! Fire!" called Chandler from the corridor window above. "Yell, you
fellows, as you never yelled before!"

In response a cry of "Fire!" went up from man, woman and child, bass and
treble intermingling, loud enough to have waked the seven sleepers from
their trance. But no one stirred inside. Just at this moment the tardy
bells rang out the number of the box, and almost immediately, as an
engine came rounding a distant corner and the great gray horses bounded
up the grade, the uproar began to subside. On, on, past the doomed
house, now enveloped in flames, to the nearest hydrant, the driver
lashed his pair. The hydrant cover had been thrown off and the first
block of coal flung into the engine's furnace before Patrolman Chandler
reissued from the door which he had entered.

"There is no one there," he gasped, as if choking with the smoke. But
the dog continued to leap about, accosting the bystanders appealingly,
until his barks and pawing became a nuisance to several and they spurned
him pettishly away.

Now engines from many directions came clattering by and the air was full
of clangor. Lines of hose were unraveled, ladders hoisted against the
walls, and finally, amid hoarse shouts that pierced the deep sighing of
the flames within, a rubber-clad, helmeted fellow, with a nozzle
strapped to his body, slowly led a line up to the second-story window,
where the fire had apparently started. There was another interval of
suspense, orders to and fro, and then a helpless pause. Something
refused to work.

But the fire met no such impediment. Suddenly an explosion of uncertain
origin shook the air, and the onlookers retreated in terror, as if the
ground were yawning beneath them. Of a sudden one, two, three slack,
snaky hose lines rounded out, and a burst of foam, battering in
window-panes and sashes, inaugurated the great combat of elements--one
angry, vindictive, as if ravening to sunder the bonds of control cast
about it by the pigmy, its master, the other docile and benignant, but
in the end the more puissant of the two.

"Exactly nine minutes from the start before a drop of water fell on that
fire," said the bake-shop girl, who was noted for her accurate
observation of time. By the "start" she meant the moment when Bertha and
she collided on the doorsteps, but the fire must have gained a strong
headway before that. For every timber in the house was flaming now. The
heat scorched the firemen's cheeks and made frightened children in the
windows opposite turn away. All the neighbors were packing up their
valuables, preparing for the worst. Singed and blinded, the firemen had
been driven back down their ladders and compelled to fight from the
street. At 3:40 the district chief ordered a second alarm rung in, and,
as this was followed by another explosion, a third alarm immediately
after. Amid a great clanging of bells, engine after engine, with drivers
standing at the reins and firemen riding backward, drove up and sought
out positions of vantage.

With the arrival of Chief Federhen their plan of attack seemed to assume
a definite shape at once. The ding, ding, ding, of his light carriage,
riding over distended and bedraggled hose, told the impatience of the
man on the seat. A tall, gaunt figure, wrapped in a cloak, which he
threw off as the excitement grew on him, he first turned his attention
to the police and the crowd.

"We want room to do this work in," he cried in a loud voice, and the
bluecoats began vigorously routing the onlookers back until the fire was
to them like something seen through an inverted opera glass, and the
sagging ropes nearly broke under the black weight of humanity which they
fended off.

Federhen's practiced eye saw the doom of the dwelling-house. So he
called off his engines and threw up ladders against the great mercantile
buildings to leeward and in the rear. It was from one of these,
presumably the fireworks-room of Schnitzler Bros., that the second
explosion, scattered and prolonged like an enfilading volley of
musketry, had come, and already a thatch of flame had run around under
the projecting roof of the structure. Against this the fire tower was
slowly brought into position and sloped over, its tip just topping the
eaves, but the axes of the squad sent up failed to make any impression
on the solid sheathing of the roof. When the tower ladder itself began
to take fire, and a stream had to be played on it constantly, the order
was given, none too early, "Come down!" and the firemen's first
ambition, to get above the enemy, had to be abandoned for less
efficacious measures. Fountain jets, rising from the street, and level
streams from the roofs of the dwelling-houses opposite, did their
ineffectual best to quench the red thirst of the triumphing element.

"This is glorious!"

"Tristram!"

The girl pulled a dolman over her shoulders, fear simulating cold,
before the savage dance of the flames. Their carriage had passed through
Broad street, in the rear of Cazenove, a few minutes before, and when
the alarm sounded Tristram had ordered the coachman to turn and drive
them back.

"Glorious, Rosalie!" he repeated, looking up at the red streamers and
the swirling smoke.

"It was just here we met your friend, Harry Arnold," murmured Rosalie.
"Did you notice he had only one glove on?"

"Glorious!" echoed her enraptured brother, as a section of the wall
fell in, disclosing an oven view like the interior of a Bessemer blast
furnace.

"See the horses pawing. The sparks will fall on them. Let us drive
away."

"My palette!" was Tristram's answer. "Brush! Easel! Canvas! Oh, the lost
chance of a lifetime!"

"Doesn't it make you shudder?"

"Certainly, my dear. That is the very deliciousness of it"

"But the danger!"

"Ah, you know I'm a perfect Bluebeard in the taste for horrors. I really
envy Parrhasius his enjoyment in flaying the old slave--or did he flog
him? But it's of no consequence which. He tortured him somehow, you
remember, and chained him to a stake in his studio, so that he might
paint Prometheus' writhings to the life."

But just here something happened which cut short his tirade of irony.

It was on the Broad street side of the Harmon building (such the great
six-story structure was called), just where the Marches' coachman had
halted their span, that the most pitiful incident of this memorable fire
took place. By 4 o'clock everybody conceded that the Harmon building was
lost. Occupied principally by dry-goods firms, whose light wares, spread
over the counters, were like so much hay to the flames, it needed
scarcely more than the touch of a match to convert it into smoke. At the
sound of the second explosion hundreds of salesgirls and male employes
had rushed to the exits, barely outstripping the fire. It was supposed
that all had been warned and escaped, and only a signal shriek from the
top story in the rear notified the beholders that human lives were in
peril. Looking up, they saw at the windows a dozen girls and half as
many youths huddling together with the blanched faces of deadly fear.
Thick smoke was already curling up and enveloping them and reflections
of the flames, like an aurora rising in the north, were visible behind.
The cries they made could not be understood, but their gestures were
dumbly eloquent.

"Jump!" came the cry from a hundred throats below. A teamster pulled
the rubber covers off the Protective company's wagon. Firemen and
policemen improvised nets of canvas, which they tore from the awnings
near by and spread under the shrinking group. Two or three of the girls,
who leaped for a telegraph pole on the outer edge of the sidewalk,
almost miraculously succeeded in scrambling down. Others climbed out on
the ledge and made as if to jump, but drew back from the awful plunge.
The fire was upon them now, and one could weep to see the men, brave
fellows, coaxing their timid companions to take the leap. One woman of
coarser build ran along the dizzy ledge, which scarcely yielded footing
for a sparrow, and sprang into the branches of a tree on the corner, her
dress saving her at the cost of fearful laceration. Then a form came
crashing down into the outspread nets, another and another, without
pause, without certainty of aim. Two struck the sidewalk and were
carried off shapeless and silent. One young girl's fall was broken by a
policeman's brawny arms--no other than Patrolman Chandler. She picked
herself up laughing, only to faint away, while her rescuer was borne off
groaning. It was all over soon--a tragedy of five minutes--but those who
witnessed it felt as if their hearts had been standing still for a
century.

"Let us drive away," said Rosalie, a sickness seizing her.

"Yes," answered Tristram; "the people are beginning to stare at you."
His sensitive lips were pale and he shut his eyes lest their film of
pity should be seen. It was true, some of the bystanders had pointed out
his companion to one another as Rosalie March. The face of this
beautiful girl had become familiar since Manager Mapletree the season
before had persuaded her to come out from the privacy of her home and
assume two or three roles in his revival of Shakespeare's comedies.
Perhaps they wondered who the gentleman beside her might be. Brother and
sister bore each other little specific resemblance.

"What's that carriage halting here for? Do you think this is a
procession? Pass on!" cried Federhen to the coachman, who whipped up his
horses in a hurry. The police had not yet got around to this side of
the block, but the fire chief seemed at all times to be where the crisis
was. At a word from him ambulances arose from the very ground and the
dead and injured were carried off to the hospital. His straggly gray
beard confronted the fire-fighters everywhere, goading on the laggards,
cheering the valiant. Indomitable, tireless, he sent them again and
again at the ruined shell, drowning the neighboring dwelling-houses
meanwhile in a flood of water. The calm air favored him. People said
"him," for somehow the forces of salvation seemed to be embodied and
centralized in one implacable form. But the wind created by the fire was
carrying sparks and brands to a distance of half a mile. The awed
spectators winced and scattered at these hot showers. It was still a
speculation where the holocaust would end.

If the Southern depot caught, then the whole Bay quarter, a warren of
tinder-box tenements, swarming densely with poor tenants, was in peril.
To save the depot was to win the day. But special editions of the
newspapers, appearing at 5 o'clock, were only able to announce, under
half-column scare-heads, that the result was still in doubt; and when
twilight came it was not the sunset glow (for a storm was gathering in
the overcast sky) which burnished the factory windows across the harbor
till they shone like plates of gold.




CHAPTER II.

MIDNIGHT--ALL'S WELL.


"Accident is out of the question, John Davidson." The hands of the clock
were moving toward midnight in Klein's restaurant, but mugs were still
clinking, dishes rattling and waiters hurriedly cleansing soiled tables
with their towels. The freedom of the saloon had been extended to the
victorious fire-fighters, who, after supping with Duke Humphrey, were
not at all reluctant to lunch with Commoner Klein.

"A health to Carl Klein," shouted one, tossing a tumblerful high in air.

"Your health!" the place echoed, as the whole group stood up and shouted
a rousing toast. They were tough, middle-sized fellows, all of them, of
the true fireman's build, which is just a shade taller and broader than
a sailor's. The smiling old German hovered near and bowed and rubbed his
hands in appreciation. To judge from the girth under his apron, he was
himself a worshiper of the worthy trinity, breakfast, dinner and supper,
which he served. The two men chattering in low tones at a side table had
not stood up or noticed the interruption.

"I can't believe it, McCausland," answered John Davidson, the fire
marshal. "There is no motive. It's devilish. It's beneath flesh and
blood. Four lives already and heaven knows how many more. It isn't in
human kind to do that without a reason."

"Mankind is my kind, too," answered McCausland, pleasantly, but in such
a manner as to convey the idea that he was a diver of some experience
into the deep-sea depths of human turpitude. "But suppose we look at the
status quo. Everybody--Wotherspoon, Chandler and all the others--agreed
that the fire must have been going some time when the servant-girl ran
out of the house. If her story is to be believed, and she never turned a
hair under cross-questioning, you'll allow?"

"The girl's fair spoken, I admit that," answered the marshal.

"Then the blaze started in a room two flights above the only fire which
was going in the house, and that one a low coal fire in the cook stove.
The cook stove and the study-hearth get their drafts from different
chimneys. No possible connection there?"

"No," answered the marshal, for McCausland's last inflection had been
slightly interrogative.

"The cast-away cigar doesn't fit," continued his companion, telling off
the thumb on his chubby left hand. "There was no tobacco allowed in the
house. Mungovan, their last coachman, was discharged for smoking on the
sly. The professor was eccentric, you know, and this was the stanchest
of his dogmas."

"Well?"

"No boys with firecrackers playing around. It's the lull between the
17th of June and the Fourth."

"No."

"No phosphorescent rat-bane on the premises," went on McCausland,
telling off finger after finger. "You heard what the domestic said?"

"Yes; she was positive about that."

"Because they were not troubled with mice. Another accidental cause
removed. But if rodents were swarming like flies in a meat shop, I don't
see what substance more combustible than the pasted bindings of old
books they could have found in that library to nibble. The lucifers were
all kept in a safe downstairs, excepting a few for the sleeping-rooms."

"That's true, but----"

"Number six," interrupted McCausland. "What shall it be? Cotton waste
taking fire spontaneously? Benzine? Naphtha varnish? Celluloid? None of
them about, according to Bertha. I'm at my rope's end. Where are you?"

"Do you suppose they have been as careful since the professor died?"
asked the marshal.

"That was only four days ago and the study has been locked ever since.
Only opened fifteen minutes before the fire."

"Aren't you done guzzling yet?" broke in a strident tone of command from
the open door. Chief Federhen's face was haggard and sooty, and his
voice, naturally harsh, had a ragged edge from shouting that grated on
the ear like the squawking of a peacock. But the firemen leaped
immediately to attention. They did not resent their gray chief's
reprimand, for they knew that he himself had gone without any supper at
all and that he stood ready at that moment to lead wherever he ordered
them to follow. In personal courage, as well as generalship, he was
believed to be the foremost chief in the country, and, though not
exactly popular personally, he was professionally adored. Only the
insurance companies had ever ventured to criticise his bold methods, and
they, as everybody knows, are simple-minded idealists, who expect an
immunity from fire such as even the arctic regions can hardly enjoy.

"Take your machine alongside of fourteen, Tyrrell, and keep two lines on
the Harmon building all night."

"All right, chief," answered Capt. Tyrrell, and his men followed him out
through the curious crowd that stood peeking in on their collation.

"Impossible!" exclaimed the marshal, raising his voice, now that they
were nearly alone.

"Impossible, that's what I say," smiled McCausland; "we're not living in
fairyland. This is earth, where effects have causes."

"But who would have the heart to set it?"

McCausland shrugged his shoulders.

"If that's your impossible," he replied, "in the case of my own son, I'd
rather his defense were a concrete alibi."

Inspector McCausland was a detective of the good old school, renowned in
many states and not unknown to Scotland Yard and the keen Parisians.
Nature had favored him with an exterior of deceptive smoothness. No
vulpine contraction of the muzzle, such as would have suggested the
sleuth and invited suspicion. Round, florid, pleasant-faced, a little
sloping in the shoulders, decidedly suave of voice and genial in manner,
he did not look the figure to be feared. Yet some, not easily
frightened, would depart in haste from the neighborhood of Richard
McCausland.

"The only living occupants of the room," he continued, unfolding his
chain of reasoning to the still skeptical marshal, "at the time when
Bertha went in, were the St. Bernard, Sire, whose barking had attracted
her attention upstairs, and the canary bird, whose life she tried to
save."

"Probably the delicate creature was dead when she opened the door," said
the marshal.

"At any rate, it is impossible that an old dog, sleeping on the mat, or
a golden-feathered songster, whistling in his cage, could be the author
of this fire----"

"And loss of life."

"If the housemaid is telling the truth there was some other cause; and
if she is lying," he concluded, arising to go, "it must be to cover up
carelessness or guilt, either on her own part or on the part of some one
in whom she takes an interest."

Intimate associates found McCausland a rollicking companion; but, in the
pursuit of crime, he was a practical believer in the doctrine of total
depravity, or, rather, to be just, he knew the potential evil which is
harbored in every human heart until some life-or-death temptation
effects, perhaps, the wreck of honor and humanity.

"Well, this is another feather in Federhen's cap," said the marshal,
cheerily, at the door.

"He must share it with Jupiter Pluvius," answered McCausland.

As dark came on there had been a heavy fall of rain, which dampened the
roofs and stifled many a darting tongue and incipient blaze in the
vicinity, though it appeared to have no more effect on the body of the
fire than so much fuel thrown into its maw. But it had enabled Federhen
to concentrate his streams, which before this had necessarily been
scattered about, protecting exposed points of danger. In fact, one or
two serious subsidiary fires had only been checked with the utmost
difficulty. If either of them had extended, and the Bay quarter once
fairly caught, 500 poor families might have been ruined and two hotels
and one depot would have been included in the loss.

At 6:45 Federhen had issued an order to blow up the Columbia shoe store
building. Against the frantic protest of the owners his oracular answer
was "Necessity!" and a high-handed jostle of the remonstrants to one
side. The magazines were promptly laid and a wide space cleared.
Precision and dispatch followed, like two leashed hounds, in the
footsteps of the chief. At 7 o'clock, with a mammoth concussion, the
middle of the building seemed lifted bodily into midair. Its walls caved
in, and at once twenty lines of hose were wetting down the debris, while
pickax men began widening still further the breach on the side toward
the van of the approaching fire. This corner building laid low, the
flames were sixty yards away from the depot, and all their surging and
leaping failed to clear the gap. Confined at last, assaulted from every
side, drenched, smothered and confounded, they spent their rage in a
blind, internal fuming.

Those who returned to visit the fire in the evening, attracted, perhaps,
by the noise of the last concussion, witnessed a miraculous
transformation. The black night made a spacious and harmonious
background for the flames, now a spectacle of sinister beauty, charging
heavenward solidly to great heights only to flutter back and writhe at
their manifest impotence. The streets below, flushed with rain, were
glistening in the lamplight and the awestruck wonder of the crowd had
subsided to a mere vulgar curiosity about details. Already the event was
old to many, its solemn lesson and the revelation of underlying forces
making only a shallow impress on shallow minds. Gangs of rowdies swung
to and fro, elbowing respectable sight-seers into the puddles and
rendering night hideous with their ill-timed pranks and depredations,
like prowlers stripping the slain after battle.

The police were occupied guarding the ropes and ejecting without
ceremony all intruders whose credentials were imperfect. Lines of hose
lay about in inextricable confusion, half-buried in an amalgam of lake
water, litter and mud, while at every corner the engines still sent up
showers of sparks, the rhythm of their dull pumping resounding through
the city like the labored beatings of some giant heart. Comments on the
losses, the injuries, the probable hour when the flames would be
conquered, beguiled the ranks of spectators who lined the ropes, those
behind crushing forward as the front file yielded place, and drinking in
all they could (not much at that distance), until the exhaustion of
their interest in turn became evident by their repeated yawns. It was
Saturday night, the late night in America, but by 11 o'clock there were
gaps in the solid phalanxes and the homeward-bound stream far
outnumbered that flowing toward the still vigorous but dull-red and
smoke- sheet of fire.

Eleven was just ringing when a young man rushed up to the lines
stretched across Cazenove street at its junction with Meridian, and half
by force, half by entreaty, breasted his way to the rope.

"I wish to pass, officer; my property is among those burned," he said.

"Your property?" echoed the policeman, a phlegmatic-looking fellow. The
youth was not over 21 and Higgins had heard this story at least a dozen
times within an hour. His orders were to throw the burden of proof in
every case upon the petitioner.

"Yes; that is to say, not mine, but my uncle's. I am a nephew of Prof.
Arnold and lived with him."

The slight correction which the young man made in his explanation
evidently prejudiced his cause in the policeman's eyes--as if confusion
were a mark peculiar to the glib kinsmen of Ananias. The youth had
slipped under the rope and the crowd craned near, expecting an
altercation.

"Get back there!" came the sharp rebuke, and a heavy hand was laid on
the young man's breast, gathering up the lapels of his coat and half his
vest bosom.

"But my uncle's house is burned, I tell you," he protested.

"Outside!"

"I am also a member of the press."

"Outside the ropes!"

"You're a bully," cried the young citizen, pushing sturdily on his own
side and fairly holding his own. "Sergeant!"

The sergeant in charge had come over when he saw trouble brewing and
stepped closer at this personal appeal.

"I think you must know me. My name is Floyd. I am a nephew of Prof.
Arnold, in whose house the fire is said to have started. Am I refused
permission to pass the ropes?"

"I'm afraid there's little to be seen of your uncle's house, Mr. Floyd,"
quietly answered the sergeant, who knew him. "This gentleman is all
right, Higgins."

Higgins nonchalantly moved a few steps off, doubtless reflecting that he
had only erred on the side of vigilance.

"But the servants--do you know where they may be found?"

"Try opposite. They're still at home. The wind was the other way, you
see."

The young man sped up to the site of his former home. One look at the
black ruin sickened though it fascinated him. In that old-fashioned
house on the hill he had lived since infancy. Indeed, he had known no
other home, no other parent save the eccentric old professor, his uncle.
On Thursday, the body of Prof. Arnold had been carried away and laid in
another resting-place. Tonight the old home smoldered before him, a heap
of blackening embers, wearing no vestige of resemblance to its beloved
familiar contours. But little time was given him for meditation now.

"Oh, Mr. Robert!"

He felt his hands seized in a warm, strong grasp, which did not quickly
loosen.

"Oh, Mr. Robert!" repeated Bertha, drawing him into the doorway of the
bake-shop and beginning to cry. "I thought you were burned in the fire.
Where have you been all the time?"

"Only at Miss Barlow's. How did it happen?"

"It was soon after you left. The library took fire. I heard Sire barking
and ran down to find out what was the matter, when what should I see but
the room full of smoke."

"Ellen is safe, I hope?"

"Ellen went out. We haven't seen her yet. But if it hadn't been for
Sire----"

They had gone inside the shop and the great St. Bernard jumped up and
fondled his young master joyfully, but again with that strange
undertone in his barking, as of one who had a tale to tell, if only
stupid men folk could understand it.

"What ails you, Sire? Poor fellow! Old master gone; house burned down;
getting old yourself. Yes, it's too bad. Good dog."

Sire whined at the sympathy in Robert Floyd's voice.

"Nothing was saved?" asked the youth.

"Not a stitch. But I don't mind if I was only sure Ellen----"

"Are you really anxious about Ellen? I thought she went out?"

"Oh, yes. It was her day out. But when she came back to supper she ought
to have looked for me."

"Perhaps she did hunt for you and missed you, or went to her sister's in
the confusion. You haven't found a lodging yet yourself for the night?"

"I suppose I'll have to go to my aunt's."

"Mrs. Christenson's. That's the place for you; and take good care of
Sire until I call for him."

"Go with Bertha, Sire," he commanded, but the dog had to be dragged
away, the tall Swedish maiden laying her hand on his collar.

"Well, your house, as the little girl said in the story, presents a
remarkable disappearance."

Robert turned toward the stranger who was so facetious out of season.
Inspector McCausland had just parted company with the fire marshal and
was sauntering carelessly about.

"How did it happen? Do they know yet?" asked Robert, anxiously.

"I don't," answered McCausland. "Possibly so"--he filliped off the
lighted end of his cigar, but it fell into a black moat alongside of the
curbstone and went out with a gentle hiss.

"But none of us smoked."

"Perhaps it was of incendiary origin," said the detective. "There have
been some strange fires lately."

"It is a mystery," answered Robert Floyd.




CHAPTER III.

SEQUELAE.


"You don't care for 'The Headless Horseman'?" said Robert to little
Elsie Barlow, who was sitting on his knee in Emily's parlor. "Which of
the stories do you like best of all?"

Elsie shut up her book of fairy tales, trying to think.

"You ask mamma which she likes best, Bessie or me?"

"Oh, Elsie, that's dodging," laughed Robert.

"No, 'tisn't dodging," protested Elsie. "'Cause mamma don't like either
of us best; and I like 'The House of Clocks' and 'The Ball of Gold' just
the same as each other."

"'The Ball of Gold'--what a charming title! Tell me that. It can't help
being pretty."

"Well, you see there was a great, tall giant," began Elsie, hunting
diligently for his picture in the wonder-book, "and this giant had a
ball of gold that rested on a saucer in his castle, just like an egg in
its cup. It was round-shaped like a crystal and weighed, oh, ever so
many tons. See, there he is."

"Ugh!" Robert shuddered realistically. "What a monster!"

"And oh, so cruel! Every knight that rode by he would challenge him to
battle, and the giant would cut off his head and hang them around his
belt, and the bodies he would throw to three great, savage dogs. That
was all they had to eat."

"What cannibals!"

"Here comes Emily," said Mrs. Barlow, who had been rocking in her chair.
The young lady wore a water lily at her bosom and was reading from the
Sunday Beacon.

"Six lives lost, Robert," she cried, "and the Beacon has started a
subscription for their families."

"But I haven't finished my story," pouted forgotten little Elsie.

"Put it away, dear," said her mother, riding roughshod over the child's
wishes, as the best of mothers do. Perhaps these crosses are
educational.

The following list printed in heavy capitals was the first paragraph
Emily read:

    KILLED.

    MARY LACY, salesgirl.
    FLORENCE F. LACY, bookkeeper.
    ALEXANDER WHITLOVE, elevator boy ().
    OSCAR SCHUBERT, ladder man.
    An unknown girl.

"At midnight," she continued, reading aloud, "Rosanna Moxom, a
lace-worker, was reported dying, and the injuries of nearly a dozen
others are serious enough to excite alarm."

"Did you say the Beacon has started a relief fund for their families?"
asked Robert.

"Yes, and headed it with $1,000."

Robert inwardly resolved to make the total $1,025.

"Most of those dead or likely to die," continued Emily, while Robert
held Elsie and Mrs. Barlow rocked in her easy-chair, "belonged to the
hapless group that had been penned in the top story of the Harmon
building. They were employes of the firm of Carter & Hallowell, lace
dealers. Shut off by a solid wall from the Cazenove street side of the
building, they had not heard the shouts of fire until too late. A broad
sheet of flame barred their exit to the stairs, which were midway along
the corridor. Over fifteen of the girls, however, had come down safely
in the elevator, and Alexander, the  elevator boy, had promised
to make a return trip for the others. He was true to his word and was
seen remounting as high as the fifth story. But here the heated iron
cables refused to work, and the poor fellow, stuck fast between two
floors, unable to escape from his wooden box, must have suffered a
martyr's death."

"Poor boy!" murmured Mrs. Barlow. Perhaps she was thinking of her own
17-year-old son, whose death within a twelvemonth had deprived her home
of its only masculine presence.

"Heroism!" cried Robert. "It is all around us in homespun, and yet we
run back to search for it under togas or coats of mail."

"Oscar Schubert's death was equally mysterious," continued Emily,
turning the Beacon inside out. "He was a hook-and-ladder man, attached
to company 3, a German, and in every way a valuable servant. The poor
fellow left a wife and two flaxen-haired children, whose lamentations at
the hospital when the body proved to be that of their father brought
tears to the eyes even of the stoical attendants, accustomed as they are
to the surroundings of death."

Here Emily was interrupted by a glee of laughter from a romping group
downstairs. It was the children coming home from Sunday school. A tiptoe
peep at the visitor magically hushed their merriment, but Robert
persuaded the youngest to intrust herself to his unoccupied knee, where
he held her as a counterpoise to Elsie, inwardly resolving to increase
his subscription to $50 for the sake of Oscar Schubert's two little
ones.

"But the tenderest sympathy," read Emily, "is reserved for the Lacy
girls, sole supports of a large family, the cares of which, however, did
not seem to weigh upon their amiable dispositions. They had embraced
each other on the ledge before jumping, and leaped together, arm in arm,
missing the extended net by taking too strong a horizontal impulse,
which threw them almost to the curbstone. In the case of Mary, the elder
sister, death was instantaneous, but the features were not marred in the
least. The face of Florence, the younger, had been crushed in beyond
recognition, yet she lingered on and it was nearly two hours before her
heart finally ceased to beat. A feeble mother, an irresponsible brother
and several small sisters are left to mourn these truly estimable young
women."

During this paragraph Robert's promissory subscription had silently
risen to $100. If it continued mounting he would soon have little ready
cash to meet his current expenses with. Little Elsie and Bessie, the
<DW40> of all, listened wonderingly on his knee; and it is not
surprising if during the paragraph that followed, all about money losses
and insurance policies and proprietors' histories, his thoughts,
startled by a casual mention of Prof. Arnold's name in the reading,
roamed away to his own teens, when he used to sit on his Uncle
Benjamin's knee, as the little girls were sitting on his.

He called up a picture of the Yorkshire youth who had been brought over
to the new world, with a younger brother and sister, by parents richer
in virtue than in coin of the world. Both the sons had won wealth and
Benjamin fame. Beginning as a gardener, he soon wrung recognition for
his botanical learning from a world which he affronted from beginning to
end by an independence passing far over the line into the region of
eccentricity. He belonged to the rare class of self-made scholars, and a
popular herb-balsam of his compounding had laid the corner-stone of a
fortune which sixty years of prudent addition had reared even higher
than that of his brother Henry, the banker. An Englishman by birth, he
had refused to change his allegiance. "Salute the flag you're born
under," was the motto he preached; and, consistently inconsistent in
this regard, he applauded the equally strong American loyalty of his
sister's son, Robert Floyd.

How upright, how unimpeachable, he had been, thought Robert, in his
old-school fixity of principle! Overbearing to those he distrusted,
irritable among shams, he was charity itself to real merit and to the
poor. His pet aversions made a long and amusing list--lawyers, electric
lights, theaters, agnostics, cats; but each was only the reverse side of
a medal whose obverse was passionate love. If, for instance, he was
known to have stoned stray kittens from his garden, he made up for his
cruelty by treating dogs almost as human beings.

"You and I have the canine temperament," he would say to Robert, a touch
of self-sufficiency mingling with his character, as is not unusual in
really benevolent men. "You and I have the canine temperament. Thank the
heaven that blessed us, and beware of cats. Two-foot and four-foot, it's
all the same. Feline! Catty!" The last word was pronounced with all the
explosive scorn which features as incapable of sneering as a hound's
could manage to express. Robert saw the great smooth face rise before
him now, tinged by time and weather to a pure cherry-wood red, and
crowned with luxuriant silver hair fringing out from under the
skull-cap. Sometimes, indeed, in the drawn corners of the mouth and the
limpid brown eyes, he had read a true affinity to the noble St. Bernard
who used to lie stretched upon the mat between them.

"Three o'clock, latest. Here's something special." Emily's rise of tone
recalled the young man out of his dream. Elsie was once more deep in her
wonder-book and Bessie had slipped down from his knee and run to the
window.

"At 2:49 Rosanna Moxom passed away at the hospital, making the sixth
victim of the fire. An employe of John Kalinovitch, the furrier, who
occupied rooms on the same floor with Carter & Hallowell, has identified
the unknown girl as Katie Galuby, a young Polish maiden----"

"Katie Galuby?" cried Mrs. Barlow. "Can that be the girl we know?"

"What about Katie Galuby, mamma?" asked Elsie, looking up.

"She's dead," said mamma, and Elsie's lip quivered at the awful word.

"A young Polish maiden, who stitched pelts in their musky establishment.
She had probably run the wrong way," Emily read, "as children will--for
Katie was no more than a child, though a workwoman these two years--and
so, finding herself with the Carter & Hallowell group, had followed them
in their random flight and shared their unhappy fate. This was the girl
Patrolman Chandler caught in his arms, who laughed and then fainted
away. The smile was still on her lips in death, and her face looked
sweet in its expression of happy innocence, though old, prematurely old
and wan."

"Perhaps the poor girl is more blessed out of this world," said Mrs.
Barlow, whose eyes showed that she herself had not had a fair-weather
voyage through life. The Galubys lived in the next block, where there
was a colony of poor Poles, and she had often spoken to Katie.

"Listen," cried Emily, reading another paragraph: "Up to 2:30 o'clock no
news has been received of Ellen Greeley, the cook in Prof. Arnold's
house. Inquiries made at her sister's failed to throw any light on the
question of her whereabouts. Dark rumors afloat, however, at a late
hour, emanating from an authoritative source and rapidly taking shape,
seemed to put her disappearance in close connection with other
mysterious facts, to the detriment of a well-known young man's
reputation."

"I wonder who that can be?" asked Mrs. Barlow, but before any one could
answer a loud murmur in the street interrupted the quiet party.

"Look, mamma, see all the people coming!" cried Bessie, pulling Mrs.
Barlow nearer to the window. Oaths and imprecations in some unknown
tongue thrilled the little group of listeners.

"It's a riot among the Poles," said Mrs. Barlow. Emily and Robert at
once joined the group in the bay window.

"There he is!" shouted some one in the crowd, pointing, and immediately
the covered heads became a sea of upturned faces--for the parlor was one
flight up--foreign faces, inflamed with passion. A hatless father,
brandishing a hatchet, led them on. But whither?

"They are breaking in our door!" shrieked Mrs. Barlow. "And Mr. Galuby
at their head."

Almost instantly a volley of stones crashed against the side of the
house and the windows were riddled. Emily and her mother drew back, with
the whimpering little ones, but Robert stood his ground, watching old
Galuby hacking at the door like a madman.

"What are you doing?" he called down, raising the sash.

There was a furious ring at the bell, followed by a snap, as if the
cord were pulled out. A small pebble sailed through the open window and
struck Robert in the cheek. At sight of the blood, though it was no more
than a strawberry splash, Emily seized his arm.

"I must go down and stop this, Emily."

"No, Robert; they are savages when they get excited."

"What do they want?"

"Heaven knows! We have never quarreled with them!"

By this time the mob was augmented by swarms of gamins and roughs of the
neighborhood, but a change of tone in the uproar indicated that there
was some opposition to their mischief-making.

"It is the police who have come," said Mrs. Barlow, but Emily clung to
Robert, so that he could neither approach the window nor go downstairs
to the door without violence to the fragile girl he loved. For many
minutes she held him there, till the murmurs below were mingled with
shrieks of pain, and their dispersion and diminution told of the
scattering of the crowd. Mrs. Barlow cautiously peeped out.

"They are arresting Mr. Galuby. He is covered with blood," she cried.
Just then came a loud knocking at the front door. Robert tore himself
free and ran down to open it. A police sergeant stepped inside.

"What is it all about?" asked Floyd.

"We'll give you safe escort to the cars. Hurry up!"

"Why should I be escorted?"

"Galuby's girl was killed in the fire and the Poles learned you were
here."

"What of that?"

"Why, it's all over town that you set it."




CHAPTER IV.

THE INDEX FINGER POINTS.


John Davidson, the marshal, was officially supposed to be endowed with
insight into the origin of fires. In fact, he drew a comfortable salary
for pursuing no other occupation than this. A swift horse and a buggy
enabled him to be among the first to arrive and a uniform of dark blue
cloth, such as old sailors cling to, but with brass buttons for insignia
in place of the little woven anchor that serves to remind the old salt
of his element, entitled him to salutes from fire captains as well as
from the rank and file. His written reports were read by insurance
underwriters, and his wise shake of the head went a great way with those
who knew little about fires and less about John Davidson.

For "old John Davidson," as he was generally known, had one failing
which sadly impaired his official usefulness. He was an innate and
inveterate optimist. The mild-blue eyes which beamed from behind his
spectacles--old eyes, too, that no longer saw things as vividly as they
used to--were meant to train fatherly glances on winsome children or
dart gleams of approval at heroic hosemen whose sacrifices were rewarded
by medal or purse. Indeed, he was very popular in both these functions,
for old John Davidson had himself served his country and was comrade
John of Sherman post, No. 5. But these kindly orbs were not those of the
hawk, the lynx or the ferret, like Inspector McCausland's, of whose
small gray pair, eyelets rather than eyes, rumor said that the off one
contained a microscopic lens and its nigh fellow never went to sleep.

"John Davidson will never set the world on fire himself," Inspector
McCausland had said when the veteran's nomination was first reported.
Yet "old John" went his way cheerfully poohpoohing suspicion and really
diffusing a globe of good feeling by his presence such as no fox in the
police ranks could pretend to radiate.

However, the wisdom of the serpent is called for at times, as well as
the meekness of the dove. When Marshal Davidson, against all proof and
persuasion, gave out his intention to report the Arnold fire as
accidental, originating in some unknown manner, or by spontaneous
combustion, owing to the extreme heat of the day (the thermometer having
registered 97), it was felt by his best friends that he allowed his
optimism to blind him too far. He had made the same report in the Low
street fire, the authors of which, an organized gang of blackmailers,
trapped on another charge by McCausland, had just confessed their crime.
Such laxity could only embolden the firebugs and encourage an epidemic
of burnings. Something must be done, the police department thought, and
when they selected Inspector McCausland to work up the case there was a
general faith that something would be done.

By Sunday noon the inspector had gathered an array of data, sufficient
to give a start to his active faculty of divination. Critics said that
his one failing was a slight impatience in feeling his way to a
conclusion, or, as his brother detectives expressed it, a tendency to
"get away before the pistol shot."

"Going to hang some one, Dick?" asked Smith, whose specialty was
counterfeiters.

"Well, we are sowing the hemp," answered McCausland, always ready with a
jovial answer.

The first person upon whom suspicion rested was the Swedish housemaid,
Bertha Lund. But it did not linger long, or with more than a moth-like
pressure, on that robust and straightforward individual. Her story,
thrice repeated in response to questions by the marshal, Chief Federhen,
Inspector McCausland and the district attorney, had not varied a hair,
although each time new details were added, as the questions of the
different examiners opened new aspects of the affair.

"Prime proof of her honesty," said McCausland. "The rote story shrinks
and varies, but never expands."

So the only fruit yielded by the ordeal which Bertha underwent was a
thorough description of the house and household, pieced together from
her replies, and McCausland had soon left her far behind in his search
for a tenable theory.

The cook, Ellen Greeley, had not yet made her appearance. Bertha
professed to have seen her dressing herself in her chamber and gave a
clear description of her clothing, for the benefit of McCausland's
note-book--green plaid skirt, brown waist, straw hat with red, purple
and yellow pompons. Ellen was dressing "uncommonly rich" of late, they
said. Bertha had talked with her upstairs and had heard the back door
slam about the time when Ellen might be supposed to be departing. It had
been the cook's holiday afternoon, and she was going to run over to her
sister's, as she generally did, and return for supper, leaving Bertha to
keep house.

But her sister had not seen her and she had not returned. A slow, heavy
girl, rather apt to take the color of her mood from those around her,
she seemed a creature who might be influenced to wrongdoing, but hardly
the one to instigate it. So far as could be learned, the plain truth was
romantic enough for Ellen Greeley, and she was not accustomed to
embellish it with flowers of her own imagination. Nevertheless, after
exhausting this subject, McCausland checked her name with the mental
note "an accomplice, if anything," and the woman's prolonged absence,
together with those "uncommonly rich" dresses she wore of late, the more
he dwelt on them, prompted him the more to erase the modifying clause
and let his mental comment stand "an accomplice."

But of whom? Ellen's sister and Bertha had both mentioned one Dennis
Mungovan, the cook's sweetheart, who, until three weeks ago, had been
coachman at the Arnold's. Some repartee, or insolence, when reprimanded
for smoking (he was described as a tonguey lout) had provoked his
discharge and he had been heard to threaten vengeance behind the
professor's back, though at the time his words were muttered they were
ignored as a braggart's empty vaporing. Twice he had called to see Ellen
at the house, but he had not shown his face since the week before the
professor died; and even at his favorite haunt, a certain Charles street
stable, all trace of him had been lost. As he was a resident of this
country for less than a year he may have crossed the water again to his
home, but if this were so Bertha felt sure Ellen would have manifested
her lonesomeness. "She had a great heart to the man," said the Swedish
housemaid.

"Well, what have you collected against him?" said the district attorney,
to whom McCausland had just been exhibiting these results of his
investigation. They were alone, save for a bloodhound, in the
inspector's office at police headquarters.

"Opportunity, motive and circumstances. I don't rule out the other two
as accessories, you understand." The "other two" were Mungovan and Ellen
Greeley, who with Robert had been arranged in a triangle by the
detective.

"That remains to be fitted into the developments, I presume?"

"First, as to circumstances. The young man turns up about 11 o'clock at
a fire which started at 3:30, which destroyed his own home, and which
was advertised all over the country within a radius of thirty miles
before sunset."

"In itself not a very damaging circumstance. It might be explained. You
have questioned him on his movements?"

"In two interviews," replied the inspector, puffing his cigar leisurely
and watching the smoke curl as though it were the most fascinating study
in the world just then.

"Account not satisfactory?"

"He has none to give." (Puff.)

"What does he mean by that?"

"Memory a blank between 3:30 and 7:30." (Puff.)

"Up to some mischief, then."

"A curiously opportune lapse," said the inspector, his eye twinkling
humorously. "So much for circumstances after the fact. And now for
opportunity."

"Of course the evidence for opportunity will depend upon the inmates of
the house. You are convinced of Bertha's candor?"

"On my reputation as an adept in mendacity. You have not found me
overcredulous, as a rule?"

"Quite the contrary."

"Bertha was upstairs, Floyd in the study, Ellen, the cook, had just gone
out. After awhile the barking of the St. Bernard in the study aroused
the girl. Something was wrong. She ran down, opened the study door and
fell back before a live crater of smoke and flame. Accident, we agree,
is out of the question. The front door was locked. There was no approach
to the study (up one flight, remember) from the street, unless you
raised a ladder to the window, and half the neighborhood would have seen
this. At least I'm sure the bake-shop girl, Senda Wesner, would have
seen it. The previous actions of Floyd were those of a criminal
meditating crime; his subsequent course until 7:30 he refuses to
explain."

"But the motive, McCausland?" said the district attorney gravely.
McCausland contracted his beady eyelets till they shone like two pin
punctures in a lighted jack-o'-lantern. But a knock at the door delayed
his answer. The bloodhound promptly arose, grasped the knob in his
forepaws, and turning it skillfully, admitted a mulatto attendant in
fatigue uniform, the bloodhound's master patting him approvingly for the
performance.

"Officer Costa to see the inspector," said the attendant.

"Send him in," answered McCausland. "One of my fetch-and-carry
dogs--willing enough, but no hawk."

"I've looked the matter up," said Officer Costa, saluting, and glancing
from McCausland to the district attorney.

"With what result?"

"Dennis Mungovan and Ellen Greeley were privately married on June 18,
before Justice of the Peace Gustavus Schwab, at 126 Harlow street," said
Costa, as if proud of his morsel of information and its precision of
detail.

"Is this our Mungovan?" asked the district attorney, evincing keen
interest.

"What was his description, Costa?" said McCausland.

"Native of Ireland, aged 29; a coachman by occupation. The bride a cook,
born in New Brunswick."

"Very well done. Will you look over the steerage list of the European
steamers for a fortnight back and ahead? We want that couple, if
possible."

"I will," answered Costa, in a manner which showed that the compliment
was not wasted. Once more McCausland rose and looked out before shutting
the door. Evidently this was another of his mannerisms, and perhaps not
the least useful, since one never knows what interlopers may be harking
about.

"We have connected numbers two and three of the triangle," he resumed as
soon as he was fairly seated, "the interests of Mr. and Mrs. Mungovan
being presumably identical."

"I cannot; seriously I cannot credit the charge against Floyd," said the
district attorney, "in face of the tender relations known to have
subsisted between the young man and his uncle."

"Tender"--McCausland's fat face creased all over into dimples of
merriment. "Do young men elope with their grandmothers?"

"Not often," answered the district attorney.

"Neither do they dote madly on their crotchety uncles in the slippers
and dressing-gowns of 78."

"Even at 78 I should expect consideration from a nephew whom I had taken
in as an orphan and raised to wealth and position."

"Wealth and position! Perhaps that's the rub."

"Just what do you mean?"

"I mean that all was not smooth in the Arnold household; that nephew and
uncle were cut too near together from the same block of granite to
match; that they wrangled constantly and that one of their wrangles led
to this very crisis of the will."

"A will?" echoed the district attorney.

"A will" (puff), smiled McCausland, relapsing into silence.

"Prof. Arnold left a will?" repeated the district attorney, slowly, but
McCausland only nodded mysteriously and puffed.

"And--and disinherited the nephew?"

"Exactly--cut him down to $20,000."

"Where is this will?"

"This will was burned. It was the cause of the burning." McCausland had
lowered his voice, if anything, but the district attorney stood up in
horror.

"More wealth changed hands by the destruction of that document,"
continued the inspector, "than was converted into smoke and ashes by the
fire."

"You mean that young Floyd planned to burn up the will which left him a
pauper, so that he might obtain his interest as heir-at-law?"

"That's the motive you were asking for when Costa interrupted us. It was
clumsily done, wasn't it? But not so clumsily, when you look at it
further. The professor kept his valuables in an iron lock-box which he
called a safe. To blow it open was dangerous, unless"--McCausland paused
to drive his meaning home--"unless the sound of the explosion could be
smothered in the general confusion of a fire."

"You attribute the explosions to----"

"Placed the charge himself in a wooden box under the safe. Told Bertha a
plausible story to provide against discovery."

"Six human lives to pay for a few paltry dollars."

"Five million dollars! The professor must have left nearly ten and Floyd
would have shared them equally with the other nephew. Hardly a paltry
figure, $5,000,000! I've seen murder committed for a 10-cent piece."

"But that was manslaughter in the heat of a quarrel."

"To be sure; and by expert Sicilian carvers, with magnifying-glass eyes
and tempers formed between Etna and Vesuvius. But $5,000,000 is a
fortune, Bigelow."

The district attorney paced up and down, meditating. At last he turned
and brought his fist down on the table so hard that the bloodhound
bayed.

"This is murder as well as arson. I want that understood."

"I understood it," smiled the inspector.

"Who saw this will?"

"There's no secret there. Its contents are common property, I should
say. It was Mrs. Arnold, the sister-in-law, who dropped me the first
hint; and Floyd himself has owned that his uncle made a will three weeks
ago, cutting him down to $20,000."

"How did the professor come to postpone his will-making so long?"

"Satisfied, I suppose, with the laws of intestate descent."

"The other heir gets it all?"

"Harry Arnold? No. I believe some goes to charity, the servants and so
on. A $10,000,000 cake will cut up into several neat slices, you know."
But the thoughts of the district attorney seemed to move habitually on a
higher plane.

"Floyd was a sister's son. Perhaps that is why the professor preferred
him to his cousin," he said.

"A life-long preference which does not appear in his testament,
however."

"But why did he cast him off at the eleventh hour?"

"The boy didn't know enough to groom and currycomb the old gentleman
properly. Only 21, you know, and self-willed. That's in the Arnold
blood. Besides, he's a socialist or anarchist, I'm told, and keeps
company with a photographic retoucher as poor as Job. Something of the
sort. Who knows? A straw will turn a man's mind at fourscore."

"And how about Mungovan and the Greeley woman?"

"Accomplices," said McCausland, but added more cautiously, "from present
appearances, at least."

There was a knock on the door and the bloodhound again performed the
duties of sentinel, receiving his master's praise with such marks of
dignified gratification as became his enormous size.

"Miss Wesner," announced the mulatto.

"Presently," answered the inspector. "Well, action or inaction?" he
said, presenting an alternative of two fingers to the district attorney.

"I must go over this evidence in detail. Will you send the Swedish girl
to my office again to-morrow?"

"I think I can lay my hands on her."

At that very moment, in another part of the city Robert Floyd was
walking down to the electric car between a squad of policemen, followed
by a motley crowd that profaned the Sabbath with its clamor. Once aboard
the swift vehicle, he was safe from pursuit, but his liberty was
short-lived. For, as a result of Noah Bigelow's second interview with
Bertha and his review of McCausland's reasoning, a warrant was made out
and he was arrested Monday noon on the charge of arson and homicide.




CHAPTER V.

HE IS TRIED IN THE BALANCE.


There was a pause in the little court-room when the formal proclamations
of the crier and clerk were ended.

"Are you guilty or not guilty, Robert Floyd?"

He bore the scrutiny of many hundred eyes calmly. Earnestness must have
been the usual expression of his face, but today its flashing eyes and
curled upper lip controlled the aquiline features and made their
dominant aspect one of defiance.

He was olive-skinned, as his uncle may have been in his youth. His hair
was dark. Spots of dark red were burning in his cheek, and his voice,
when he spoke, of a rich contralto quality, had some subtle affiliation
with darkness, too. Altogether a Roman soul, the unprejudiced observer
would have said, but somewhat lacking in the blitheness which is proper
to youth.

"Not guilty," the answer was recorded.

The spectators listened in a strained and oppressive silence. Within the
bar sat old John Davidson, looking very sympathetic and not a little
perplexed as he reared his chair back against the railing. Through the
open door of an ante-room peeped the chubby form of Inspector
McCausland, cordially shaking hands with acquaintances and answering to
the sobriquet of "Dick." For professional reasons the inspector avoided
making his person known to the multitude, but once or twice he sent in
messages to the district attorney, and finally stepping to the door,
caught his eye and beckoned him outside. Noah Bigelow had been sitting
silently at the prosecutor's desk, his prodigious black beard sweeping
his breast and his tufted eyebrows leveled steadily at the prisoner, as
if to read his soul. When he rose at McCausland's signal the entire
court-room followed his broad back receding through the door of the
chamber.

"The prisoner," said the judge, "declines the advice of counsel and
offers himself for examination unaided. He is hereby warned of his right
under the law to challenge any question which may incriminate or tend to
incriminate him. The court will see that this right is protected. We are
ready for the evidence."

"Miss Bertha Lund," called Badger. She arose, the same tidy, buxom
maiden as ever, but pale and with traces of tears. An oath was
administered and the young woman motioned to the witness-box.

"How long have you been a servant in the Arnold house, Miss Lund?" asked
Badger, who was conducting the case for the government.

"Going on six years."

"And you have known the prisoner all this time?"

"Of course."

"You were in at the time of the fire, on Saturday?"

"I was."

"And gave the alarm, did you not?"

"I did."

Bertha's rising inflection had hardly varied in the last three answers,
and her blue eyes were riveted on the lawyer's.

"Won't you tell the court how you were occupied prior to your discovery
of the fire?"

Thus directed, Bertha half-inclined her person toward the judge.

"Part of the time I was dusting the study and part of the time I was
upstairs."

"What were you doing upstairs?"

"Nothing, except looking out of the window into the street."

"What window?"

"Mr. Robert's."

"And what street?"

"Cazenove street."

"Was any one else in the house at that time?"

"Not after Ellen went out."

"You are sure Ellen had gone out?"

"Well, what do you mean by sure?"

"What made you think she had gone out?"

"She told me she was going out. She was dressed in her street dress and
I heard the door slam. That's three reasons."

"You heard the door slam? The front door, I suppose? There is only one
door?"

"No, there's the back door, leading into the passageway."

"And where does the passageway lead?"

"Why, it runs alongside the house from Cazenove street to Broad."

The district attorney diverted attention for a moment by making his way
to his seat through the crowd. He was the opposite of Badger in
everything; the one burly and slack, but with the stamp of moral energy
in his bearing; the other immaculate from cravat to cuff borders and
athletic if slight in build.

"Was it the back door or the front door you heard slam, Miss Lund?"
resumed Badger, continuing to confer in an undertone with the district
attorney.

"It was the back door, sir, I suppose."

"Aren't you sure?"

"Pretty sure."

"Wasn't it probably the front door?"

"No, it was the back door, I'm positive."

"Then Ellen went out of the back door and left you and Floyd alone in
the house?"

"Yes, sir, Mr. Robert and I were the only ones in."

"Just when was this slamming of the door, at what time? With reference,
I mean, to your own movements and the movements of others in the house?"

"Well, I was up stairs and down, in and out, and Mr. Robert was in the
study. I couldn't tell you just when."

"Very well----"

"And, if it's not improper, I wish to say that I am not here of my own
choosing, for as sure as my name is Bertha Lund, Robert Floyd never set
that fire."

This sally was received in silence by the spectators. They looked
expectantly toward the judge and the attorneys. Floyd's look was as
spirited and firm as ever, as he scanned the faces packed around him,
nodding to a lady in the front bench, but letting his eyes dwell
oftenest, with a kind of interrogative look, followed by an expression
of soft satisfaction, on a younger face. It was golden-haired Emily
Barlow, transfixed with interest in the proceedings. Not even the dark
visage of the <DW64> in the corner stood out so cameo-like from the
multitude as hers, partly by its sweetness of beauty, but more by the
parted lips and eager gaze.

"The witness is not to volunteer opinions, but simply to give the facts
she is requested to give, clearly and truthfully, as her oath requires."
This reproof was not harshly spoken by the judge. "You may continue, Mr.
Badger."

"Mr. Floyd was in the study, then?"

"Yes, sir, he was."

"Where the fire started?"

"It started in the study."

"Will you describe to the court, without any omissions, everything you
did and everything you saw Mr. Floyd do from the time he opened the
study door until you descended the stairway and discovered the room
afire?"

"Well, sir, when Mr. Robert unlocked the door----"

"Which door?"

"The study."

"It had been locked, then?"

"Yes, sir; Mr. Robert had locked it after the professor died."

"Which was on Tuesday?"

"Yes, sir."

"Go on with your story."

"After Mr. Robert opened the study door he was acting lonesome. I went
in and said, 'Shall I dust the room, Mr. Robert? It needs it.' 'Yes, do,
Bertha,' said he. 'I'm expecting a lawyer. Is Ellen in?' 'She was going
out,' I answered, 'but I think I heard her run upstairs to her room.'
Well, I went for the duster, and when I came back Mr. Robert was
standing over the hearth. 'Is that you, Ellen?' he said, dazed-like and
absent-minded. But when he saw it was me he only laughed."

"What was Mr. Floyd doing when you startled him?" interposed the deep
bass of the district attorney, cutting short the progress of the girl's
high treble.

"Why, sir, he was stooping over."

"Over the hearth, you said?"

"Yes, sir."

"Did you see anything in his hands at the time?"

"Why, he was picking up little bits of paper, as though he had just torn
a letter to pieces."

"Go on," said Badger, making a note of this fact.

"While I was dusting the furniture Mr. Robert went out into the
professor's chamber and brought in the canary. The poor thing hadn't
sung since the professor died. It was he who used to feed it and talk to
it. But when Mr. Robert brought it into its old room and I pulled up the
curtains to let in the sunshine it set up such a trilling and chirping I
could hardly help crying."

"On which floor is this study?"

"The front room, one flight up."

"How high above the street? You couldn't reach it from the sidewalk?"

"Not without a ladder."

"And you didn't keep a ladder resting against the front of your house,
usually?"

"No more usually than other folks do."

"There was no tree," asked the district attorney, "whose branches hung
near the window?"

"No, sir; there was none," answered Bertha, respectfully.

"Now, the rest of your story, Miss Lund," said Badger; "the canary bird
had been brought in. Did it perch on Floyd's finger?"

"Canary birds will use their wings like other folks if they are let.
No, it was brought in in the cage and the cage hung on the hook, just as
it used to be."

"Why had it been removed?"

"So as to feed it," answered Bertha, triumphantly.

"Was there any other living thing in the room at this time?"

"Is a dog a living thing?" Being human, Bertha resented catechising. The
temptation to answer one question by another is strong, even when one
isn't a New-Englander by birth.

"Previous to its death, it may be considered alive," answered Badger,
dryly.

"Well, Sire was there."

"A dog, I presume, from your last response. Continue from the point when
the cage was brought in."

"I went upstairs, as I told you before, when I had finished my dusting.
Then I sat down in Mr. Robert's room."

"Was that all you did?--to sit down?"

"Yes."

Bertha's replies had gradually come down to monosyllabic length and it
looked as if the next step might be silence. But the district attorney
interposed with a nod and a smile, which worked like magic in loosening
her tongue.

"Well," she continued, "I was sitting at Mr. Robert's window when I
noticed Sire's barking. I thought it was odd if he was playing with Mr.
Robert, they both took on so at the professor's death. But it kept up
and kept up, so I slipped down to see and the first thing I smelled was
smoke. It was leaking out through the study keyhole and I could hear
Sire barking and pawing at the knob inside. Of course I opened the door
and rushed in to save the canary, but the fire stung me so I thought I
was suffocated. Sire began running around and I called for Mr. Robert,
thinking he was in the room, for the smoke was hiding everything. Oh, I
tell you my heart stopped when my voice came back to me all hollow in
that empty house. It was then I ran down to the street."

"One moment, Miss Lund. Did you or did you not observe anything new or
unusual in the room when you were engaged in dusting the chairs?"

"No, sir; I don't remember anything unusual."

"How long were you upstairs?"

"I couldn't say. I'm not good at guessing time. There are some folks,
like Senda Wesner, seem to have a clock going in their heads, but I'm
not one of them. Perhaps it was ten minutes."

"Miss Lund," the district attorney stroked his great beard, as he was
apt to do in driving home a crucial question. "Can you now fix more
precisely the moment of the door slam, which you say convinced you of
Ellen's departure?"

"No, sir; the door slam," Bertha touched her forehead, trying to
remember, "the door slam is all mixed up with the barking and fire, so I
can't untangle it at all."

"It seems to be a part of this chain of events you have just narrated so
clearly for us? You think, you thought at the time, it was Ellen leaving
the house?"

"Yes, sir. It was the back door. Who else could it be? Besides, Mr.
Robert was quiet. He never slammed the door."

"I simply wanted the girl's best evidence to the fact that they were
alone in the house at this time," said the district attorney.

"But the girl, Ellen, seems to have been about until the fire was set,"
answered the judge.




CHAPTER VI.

AND IS FOUND WANTING.


After the noon recess Bertha was called to finish her testimony, with
the promise that she would not be detained long.

"A description of the study, Miss Lund, when you were dusting."

"Everything was left just as it was when the professor fell dead on the
threshold Tuesday evening."

"Did you notice any foreign substance--any accumulation of what might
afford fuel for a fire?"

"No, sir."

"Any odor?"

"Only that the room was close from being shut up."

"Describe the contents of the room."

"Well, it was full of books, on shelves that ran all around."

"Yes?"

"Two windows; a cage before one, the nearest to the door, and a writing
desk before the one in the farthest corner."

"Well?"

"A safe partly built in the wall beside the door."

"How high from the ground?"

"About up to my waist."

"Did you notice anything underneath it?"

"Yes, there was the gunpowder box Mr. Robert put there."

"A box full of gunpowder placed there by Floyd?"

"Yes, sir."

This statement made a profound impression, but Badger did not push the
subject further. The prisoner almost smiled.

"Well?" Badger said.

"Oh, everything else was just as the professor left it. His slippers
under his chair, his dressing-gown over the back of it, his spectacles
on the desk, his bible laid down open. He was going to meet a caller,
you know, when he was taken with the stitch."

"Very well. Perhaps we have had enough of the professor," said Badger.
But the accused did not find these minutiae trivial. For the first time
his proud face broke and he hid the tears with his hand. The mention of
the bible, slippers and the other personal mementos had called up the
dearest picture he ever knew.

All the grand life, equally compounded of whims and principles, passed
before him at Bertha's mention of the empty chair.

But the sympathy of the spectators was short-lived. While Robert wept a
strain of sad music stole into the court-room. Faint at first, it rose
in volume as the players approached, but still with a muted sound, as if
their instruments were muffled. The drum-beats were rare and
unobtrusive, and the burden of the melody, if melody it were, was borne
by proud bugles and quivering oboes. Its cadences were old and
mysterious, like some Gregorian chant intoned in cloisters before organ
and orchestra had trained our ears to the chords of harmony. No wonder
the court-room was hushed until it died away in the distance.

It was the Masonic dead march, for on this day the funerals of the dead
whom Robert Floyd was accused of murdering were being held. Oscar
Schubert, as a member of the mystic order, was buried with all the pomp
of its ceremonies, and it was his cortege, proceeding to the sepulcher,
whose passage occasioned this pause in the trial.

The revulsion of sympathy was instant. Every man in the court-room saw
the wife and two children, sitting behind drawn curtains in the carriage
of the chief mourners, and beyond this picture the bodies of six
victims, four of them young girls, done to death at the prompting of
avarice. The prisoner himself seemed to understand, for he shut his
teeth, though his bold eyes still dared the multitude. But they rested
more and more upon the lovely face which was his one point of
consolation in that unfriendly assemblage. Badger's indifferent voice
showed no quiver when he asked Miss Lund to step down and called for
Robert Floyd. It was a brusque opening.

"What was contained in the safe in your uncle's study?"

"I never opened it."

"You knew, however?"

"What he had told me."

"Was his will there?"

"I have reason to believe so."

"Did you believe so on Saturday, while you were in the room with Miss
Lund?"

"I did not give the matter any thought at that time." Floyd spoke as
though the spirit burned hot within him. "And I will add----"

"Nothing," said Badger. But the judge looked up.

"This is a court, not a court-martial," he said, quietly, a pale,
studious man. "The witness has a right to modify his answers."

"I have only this to say," continued Floyd, "to hasten as much as
possible this preposterous trial, that I indorse every word of Miss
Lund's testimony, and accept it and proffer it as my own upon the points
which it covers."

"We prefer----" But the district attorney interrupted his assistant.
"Are you aware, Mr. Floyd, of the gravity of the position in which Miss
Lund's testimony involves you? Sole opportunity is almost the major head
among those which the government is required to prove."

"I accept it in toto, subject to the privilege of volunteering a
statement if my examination is incomplete or misleading."

"We shall endeavor to make it both adequate and fair," said the district
attorney.

"Leaving the safe for a moment," resumed the examiner, "will you kindly
relate your movements, Mr. Floyd, subsequent to the time when Bertha
left you to go upstairs?"

The young man hesitated. The pause was so long as to be embarrassing.
Old John Davidson coughed loudly to relieve his agitation. When the
witness spoke at last he seemed to be remembering with difficulty.

"I remember leaving the house and walking about among the fields, in the
park, I think. Yes, I took a car for the park. In the evening I called
upon Miss Barlow."

He looked up at the aureoled face and faintly smiled. The sight appeared
to revive him. "From that point my recollections become as distinct as
usual. But----" He hesitated once more and Badger left him unaided in
his distress. "The truth is, this was my first visit since his death to
my uncle's study. The executor had telegraphed and afterward written me
to close and lock it. This I did. But that afternoon I was expecting a
visit from him----"

"Who is this executor?"

"Mr. Hodgkins Hodgkins."

"Of the firm of Hodgkins, Hodgkins & Hodgkins?"

"I believe so. My aunt, Mrs. Arnold, had called at 3 o'clock to say that
he had arrived from New York and would take possession of the papers
that afternoon. So I unlocked the room and let the servant dust it. The
whole meaning of my loss seemed to come over me then, when I saw the
empty chair. Before that I had been calm enough. But the sight dazed and
staggered me. I went out, fled, taking no note of time or place. I
believe, I know, I was in the park, but until I arrived at Miss
Barlow's, outward occurrences made little memorable impression upon me."

"I presume you saw or were seen by persons on the way?"

"I do not remember any one in particular."

"Are we to understand," said the district attorney, listening intently,
"that you passed this long period in a species of reverie or trance?"

"An intense fit of abstraction," answered Robert; but the district
attorney looked puzzled, as if an utterly new and virgin problem had
been put before him to solve.

"Without food until you returned at 11 o'clock to the fire?" asked
Badger.

"Excepting a light lunch at Miss Barlow's. Her mother noticed some
fatigue in me and pressed me to take refreshment."

"Was there no mention of the fire there--a fire which was destroying
your home?"

"We spoke of it casually, but I did not know until later that it was
destroying my home."

"Was it not described in the evening papers?"

"Not in the early editions, Badger," put in the district attorney. "Only
in the later specials."

"Very well. Now let us get back to the safe. Your uncle had made a will,
I believe?"

"He made a will several weeks ago."

"What were the terms of that document?"

"I do not know them in full."

"As to your share?"

"My legacy was $20,000."

"Out of an estate valued at?"

"I have heard $10,000,000."

"You are an anarchist, Mr. Floyd?"

"No, sir."

"But a radical of some sort?"

"I am a socialist; a developer, not a destroyer."

"Ah!" said Badger. His exclamation was icy cold. "And you differed from
your uncle on other points, did you not?"

"We took the liberty of honest men to differ."

"In religion?"

"Yes. He was a high churchman. I am--simply a Christian."

This avowal of a creed brought titters among the spectators, who
apparently were accustomed to definitions narrower if more precise.

"And as a result of these quarrels your uncle disinherited you?"

"Sir?"

For a moment the prisoner's outburst of indignation checked the current
of opinion which had been flowing swiftly against him.

"In one sentence you have managed to outrage the dead as well as the
living--and to convey two impressions distinctly false. My uncle and I
never quarreled, never! He was a father and more than a father to me.
Neither did he disinherit me. It was his wish to assign me the whole
property. I begged him to omit me without more than a memento or
keepsake, that I might enter life as he had done, as every man should,
untrammeled--but with the advantage, I feel sure, of an example and an
inspiration given to few to enjoy. The sum left me was far in excess of
my desires."

There was another long silence after this statement, but it expressed
only incredulity.

"When was this very extraordinary will drawn up?"

"Three weeks ago."

"The witnesses are living, then? It is to be presumed that they, too,
were not carried off by the holocaust which so reduced our population
last Saturday." Badger's sarcasm was brutal, but it told.

"The witnesses were three neighbors, called in. The servants could not
act, as they were remembered in the document."

"No lawyer was present?"

"My uncle seldom employed a lawyer."

Such a statement, relating to a man of Prof. Arnold's wealth, might have
excited doubt if his eccentricity on this point had not been noised
about beforehand.

"He drew up the will himself, then? Has any one seen it except you?"

"Not so far as I know. I myself never saw it."

"But you knew it was in the safe?"

"I supposed so."

"One moment," said the district attorney, interrupting. "Once more, why
did you reopen the study on this particular day?"

"Because I had been informed that Mr. Hodgkins was coming to remove the
will."

"By whom were you so informed?"

"Mrs. Arnold drove up about 3 o'clock and mentioned the fact. Indeed,
she had expected to find him at the house. He was an old acquaintance of
hers, as well as of my uncle--her legal adviser, in fact."

A stylish woman, still fair in spite of her 50 years, was sitting in
front of Robert as he testified. She was the widow of Benjamin Arnold's
brother, Henry, and her son, Henry, or Harry, had just offered a reward
of $5,000 for the incendiary--a sum which McCausland might well have
hopes of securing. The inspector was still hovering about the threshold
of his ante-room, and now that Floyd's examination was concluded he
called the district attorney to one side, apparently urging him to
reserve the remainder of his evidence, which would naturally consist of
rebuttal of Floyd and corroboration of Bertha. At any rate, Mr. Badger
arose, and, announcing that the case was closed, offered a summary of
the evidence, rapid, methodical, but unimpressive, like himself. Then
the prisoner was asked if he desired to speak in his own behalf.

"Your honor," he said, "this monstrous charge of having set on foot a
fire in the most populous section of our noble city overwhelms me so
that I am impotent to express the indignation I feel. I leave it to your
own sense of justice, your own discrimination, whether I am to be
dishonored with the suspicion of an infamous crime, on evidence so
flimsy that the bare denial of a veracious man should be sufficient to
upset it. I read in many faces around me the hunger for blood; the
unthinking call for a victim. Heed that, and my good name is taken from
me. I am irreparably wronged. Resist it, and you will prove yourself
worthy of the honorable title which you bear."

Not a few were swayed toward the youth by his manifest emotion. But the
judge waited fully a minute before he arose and his eyeglasses were
trembling in his hand.

"You have elected, against good counsel," he began, "to be your own
advocate. I cannot and do not adjudge you unsuccessful, in the sense of
having demonstrated your guilt rather than your innocence. But that you
have failed to break the government's chain of evidence in its most
damaging links--sole opportunity, motive and suspicious conduct,
especially after the act--is plain to me, and would be plain to any mind
accustomed to weighing such evidence calmly.

"It is true the evidence is wholly circumstantial. No eye but God's saw
this foul deed done. But since William Rufus was found dead in the New
Forest, with Walter Tyrrell's arrow in his breast, men have been
convicted of murder on circumstantial evidence, and will continue to be
so convicted as long as probability remains the guide of life.

"I am obliged, therefore, to remand you for trial, not only on the
charge of arson, but upon the graver charge of homicide involved in it
under the peculiar circumstances of the case. This is not a final
verdict. Far be it from me, one erring man, to say that the government
has fastened this crime upon you beyond reasonable doubt. But in the
face of the evidence which has been brought forward I could not order
your release. It becomes my unhappy duty, as the examining magistrate,
to commit you to custody, to await the approaching session of the grand
jury."

When Emily Barlow awoke from her swoon she found herself in the arms of
old John Davidson. Perhaps it was as well she did not hear the jeer of
execration which greeted the prisoner outside when he passed over the
sidewalk, ironed between two stalwart officers, into the jail van.
McCausland's identification with the case had affected public opinion
profoundly, for he was said never to have failed to convict a criminal
whom he had once brought into court. But possibly the outburst was due
to the circumstance that this was the neighborhood in which the Lacy
girls lived and that their funeral had taken place that very morning.




CHAPTER VII.

THE CLOUDS THICKEN.


"Shagarach is the man to defend him, Miss Barlow," said old John
Davidson. She was lying back against the cushions of the cab, with
cheeks as white as the handkerchief she held to her lips. For the
marshal had kindly offered to accompany her home and she had told him
part of her story.

She was, as McCausland had said to the district attorney, a photographic
retoucher. You must know that a negative when it leaves the camera is no
more fit for display than milk fresh from the cow is drinkable. All the
minor blemishes which you and I, not being made in the stamp of bluff
old Oliver, dislike to see perpetuated in our counterfeit presentments,
must be carefully stippled out. The work is not without its irksomeness,
requiring long hours of labor as well as firmness of touch. The strain
upon the young lady's eyes was evident, and her face, for all its
beauty, was as delicate as thinnest porcelain. One felt that her
fingers, if she held them toward the sun, would show the red suffusion
of a child's. But her earnings supported a family of five, and her
character had won the love of Robert Floyd.

"Who is Shagarach?" she asked, as if struck by the name.

"Shagarach! Why, Shagarach's the coming man, the greatest criminal
lawyer in the state and the greatest cross-examiner in the world--a mind
reader, black art in it. Never lost a case."

"This is my number, Mr. Davidson."

"Ho, there! John! Cabby!" The marshal rapped at the window.

"What was the number, miss?"

"Four hundred and twelve."

"Stop at 412."

"You have been very kind to interest yourself in one who is not known to
you, Mr. Davidson. I should have been badly off without your
assistance."

"Didn't do half enough," answered the marshal. "Glad to be of service.
Call on me again. Here's Shagarach's address. Take my advice and look
him up."

He had been writing on the back of a card while the cab-driver was
slowing his team around in front of Miss Barlow's door. It read in a
scrawl, rendered half-illegible by the jolting: "Meyer Shagarach, 31
Putnam Street."

Emily looked twice at the singular name. McCausland never failed to
convict his prisoners. Shagarach's clients invariably escaped. What
would happen if the two were pitted against each other? This was her
thought when she mounted the dear steps of home and fell weeping into
the arms of her mother.

The following morning a remarkable discovery was made on the site of
Prof. Arnold's house. The burned district had been roped off and was
guarded by policemen, owing to the danger from the standing walls and
still smoking debris. But tip-carts had begun to remove what was
removable of the wreck, and the work of clearing away the ground was
already well under way. Sight-seers in great numbers went out of their
course to pass the ruins, for the Harmon building was of recent erection
and had been styled a model of business architecture.

But "Toot" Watts, "Turkey" Fenton and "The Whistler" were not indulging
in reminiscences of departed architectural glories that morning. They
averaged 14 years and 110 pounds, a combination hostile to sentiment in
any but its most robust forms. "That nutty duffer gives me a pain," was
their unanimous criticism from the gallery of the "Grand Dime," upon the
garden rhapsodies of their co-mate and brother in adolescence, Romeo.
But in the evenings, if that long fence, which is the gamin's delight,
happened to be under surveillance from the "cop," they would march up
street and down, Turkey mouthing his harmonica, Toot opening and
shutting a wheezy accordion, the Whistler fifing away with that
thrush-like note to which he owed his nickname, and all three beating
time by their own quick footsteps to the melody of some sweet, familiar
song. Amid such surroundings even the ditties sung by our mothers many
seasons ago can bring up wholesome sentiments in which the boyish
musicians who evoke them are surely sharers.

On the day before Toot had surreptitiously conveyed a fresh egg to
school and rolled it playfully down the aisle, whereupon Turkey, as he
was walking out at 4, had set the stamp of approval on his friend's
property. All three had decided to take a day off until the affair
should blow over, and no better pastime suggested itself than a visit to
the fire, in which they took a sort of proprietary interest, since they
had been the first after the bake-shop girl, to arrive on the spot. The
passageway beside the house was still left open and unguarded. So our
urchins, approaching from the Broad street side, coolly entered the
forbidden precincts thereby, thus eluding the blue-coated watchers by a
flank movement as simple as it was effective.

"I'm goin' to pick up junk and sell it to Bagley," said Turkey, filling
his pocket with bolts, nuts and other fragments which he deemed of
value. The others followed his example and began rummaging about with
insecure footing among the heaps.

"Whew!" the Whistler emitted a long-drawn note no flute could possibly
rival. He had been brushing away the ashes from a heavy object, when his
eye was attracted by a fragment of cloth, which clung about it. His
whistle drew the attention of his companions, but it also invited a less
welcome arrival, no other than one of the patrolmen doing guard duty,
who swooped down and seized Turkey and the Whistler by their collars,
while Toot scrambled off with unseemly haste and escaped down the
alleyway.

"What are you doing here?" said the officer, shaking the boys till their
teeth chattered, and several pieces of iron, dropping out of Turkey's
pockets, disclosed the object of their visit. "Stealing junk, eh?"

"Say, look," said the Whistler, who was cool and inventive; "it's a
woman." He was pointing to the object he had laid bare. The officer
slackened his grip.

"My God!" he cried; then stooped and by a full exertion of his strength
lifted the thing out of the ashes and half-burned timbers which overlay
it. It was, indeed, the body of a woman, short and stout. The boys did
not run. They looked on, spellbound, in open-mouthed wonder.

"Run and call the sergeant," said the policeman to his quondam captives.

The news spread like wildfire. Hundreds swarmed to the scene, but none
among them who had the key to the woman's identity. Her charred face and
burned body rendered identification difficult. It was Inspector
McCausland who, after consulting his notebook, recognized the garment
and the form which it clad as Ellen Greeley's. An ambulance was called
and the corpse of the poor woman carried away to the morgue, to await
her sister's instructions.

Senda Wesner, the bake-shop girl, had described this discovery for the
eleventh time to her customers, and was standing on the steps of her
store alone--a condition to which she was by nature averse--when the
golden-haired lady "flashed in upon her," as she afterward said, "like a
Baltimore oriole." It was Emily Barlow, who had run down during her
lunch hour to the scene of the tragedy. At the first mention of her
name, Miss Wesner knew her.

"Oh, you're the young lady he kept company with," she said. "Isn't it
too bad? I don't believe he ever did it. No man in his senses would set
his own house afire and then walk out in broad daylight, as I saw Mr.
Floyd do."

"You saw Mr. Floyd coming out, then? Pardon my curiosity, but I am so
deeply interested----"

"I shouldn't think much of you if you were not," said Senda Wesner. "I'm
glad to tell all I know about it, and I can't see for the life of me why
they didn't call me to the stand."

Emily saw that no apology was needed for questioning the bake-shop girl.
She was easy to make free with and fond of running on. Being a little
reticent herself, Emily was glad to be relieved of the necessity of
putting inquiries. So she simply guided the little gossip's talk.

"You did see Mr. Floyd leave the house? Was it long before the fire
broke out?"

"Four or five minutes. I'd noticed Bertha raising the curtains--two
Washington pies? yes'm--I'd seen Bertha up in the study, I say, but then
Joe Tyke, Joey, we call him, the <DW36> newsboy, though he is quite a
man now, but he never grew, deformed, you know--Joey was trundling
himself along on his little cart, and I couldn't take my eyes off of
him--20 cents, yes'm." The bake-shop girl continued to spread jam, ladle
milk and wrap warm loaves in fresh brown paper, all the while, but her
interruptions only formed tiny ripples on her flowing stream of prattle.
"Then Mr. Robert came out and walked down to the corner slowly. But do
you know what puzzled me? What was he stooping over the hearth for and
picking up those pieces of paper?"

"People often do that. Perhaps he had torn up a letter and some of it
had scattered outside the fireplace."

"Well, I didn't see another thing, not one thing, against him," said
Miss Wesner, decidedly. Her ideas on the value of evidence were
certainly of the most feminine order. "I'm sure he's a young man of the
highest reputation. Never smoked or drank or----"

"You didn't see any other person coming out of the house?"

"No, I didn't. Yes, Gertrude, and how's your mamma? That's a sweet
thing, only 10 years old, but does all the errands and half the
housework for her mother, that's sick, and never slaps the baby."

"Or any stranger about?" edged in Emily again, when the spigot was
finally turned off and the waters of gossip had ceased to run.

"Do you know----" The bake-shop girl dimpled her cheek with her
forefinger. It was a healthy cheek, but not beautiful. "Do you know,
there has been the oddest peddler around here for the last three weeks?"

"Do tell me about him. What did he look like? A stranger?"

"Never passed this street before as long as I know and that's a good
many years. He was a sunburnt sort of man, like all the peddlers (only
I'd say homelier, if I wasn't a fright myself), and with crazy blue
eyes. Always came in a green cart and sold vegetables, no, once potted
plants. But how he would yodel. Why, he'd make you deaf. Ellen used to
buy of him sometimes. Nobody else ever did, and it's my opinion when he
left the Arnolds he used to whip up his horse and hurry right round the
corner."

"Was this peddler here lately?"

"Not since Friday, the day before the fire; I'm positive."

"He wasn't here Saturday?"

"No, he wasn't. But I must say, peddler or no peddler, I don't believe
Robert Floyd ever set that fire."

There was more that Senda Wesner believed and disbelieved--so much,
indeed, that when Emily left her she had asked herself twice what a room
full of Senda Wesners would be like. But she checked this uncharitable
thought. The girl was good-hearted and her information about the peddler
might prove a clew. After making a half-circuit of the house which was
so familiar to her, for she had visited it often, she returned to her
stippling pencil in the photograph gallery, pondering now upon the
identity of the strange peddler, now upon the sad fate of Ellen Greeley,
and oftenest of all on the lover who was spending his first day in the
solitude of a felon's cell.




CHAPTER VIII.

ENTER SHAGARACH.


"Meyer Shagarach, Attorney-at-Law."

The shingle could not have been more commonplace, the office stairs more
dingy. A Jewish boy opened the door at Emily's knock and a young man of
the same persuasion arose from his desk and bustled forward to inquire
her business.

"Meester Shagarach is in. Did you wish to see him?"

After a moment a second door was opened and Emily was motioned into the
inner office.

"This way, madam."

The man writing at the table barely glanced up at first, but, seeing who
his visitor was, he rose and placed a seat for her. There was courtesy
but no geniality in the gesture. Shagarach did not smile. It was said
that he never smiled.

From the beginning Emily felt that she was in the presence of a man of
destiny. Before sitting down her intuitions had determined her to enlist
this force on Robert's side at any cost. Shagarach's body was small, his
clothing mean and crinkled all over, as if its owner spent many hours
daily crouched in a chair. But the face drew one's gaze and absorbed it.
With care it might have been handsome, though the dead-black beard grew
wild and the hair, tossed carelessly to one side, fell back at
intervals, requiring to be brushed in place by the owner's hand. Under
the smooth, bony brow that marks the Hebrew shone two eyes of
extraordinary splendor, the largest, Emily thought, she had ever seen,
and set the widest apart--brown and melting as a dog's, but glowing, as
no dog's ever did, with profundities of human intelligence. Wide open at
all times, they cast penetrating glances, never sidelong, always
full--the eyes of a soul-searcher, a student of those characters,
legible but elusive; which the spirit writes upon its outer garment.
Their physical dimensions lent a large power to the face, as if more of
the visible world could be comprehended within those magnificent organs
than the glances of ordinary men compass. But the mouth below seemed
rigid as granite, even during the play of speech.

"My name is Miss Barlow," said Emily.

"Come to engage my services for Floyd?" he inquired. It was his habit to
cut into the heart of a problem at the first stroke and Emily felt
grateful on the whole that the preliminaries were shortened.

"Mr. Floyd is innocent and I want you to save him."

"Why did he not employ an advocate?"

"The judge----"

"Pursued the only course open to him. The evidence was damaging. What
have you learned since yesterday?"

"Ellen Greeley----"

"Is dead. The dog's instincts were right then. There was some one
inside. Aronson."

The young man answered this peremptory call.

"My Evening Beacon."

It was brought at once.

"The newspapers are correct in their surmise. Ellen Greeley went
upstairs, as Bertha testified. The day was hot. She lay upon the bed in
her own room, and fell asleep. The barking of Sire did not wake her.
Her room was in the rear, two flights up. The shouting of the crowd did
not wake her. The fire may have waked her too late and her shrieks
escaped notice in the uproar; or she may have been suffocated during her
nap."

Shagarach spoke in a clear, loud voice that expressed and carried
conviction. Emily wondered at his familiarity, far surpassing her own,
with the details of the case.

"You see the improvement in our cause at once?"

Emily tried hard to think.

"Of course it proved Ellen could not have been a confederate," she
suggested, modestly.

"Ellen Greeley sleeping in the attic chamber, who slammed the door?"

Shagarach's eyes shone like carbuncles. "It was not Floyd. He was not in
the habit of slamming doors. And no man seeking to escape does that
which will attract attention--unless"--he dwelt on the word
significantly--"unless he is fleeing in haste."

"Then you believe, Mr. Shagarach----"

"It was the back door which slammed. They failed to confuse Bertha on
that. It slammed after Floyd had gone out. Did Floyd go out the back
door?"

"Miss Wesner, the young lady who lives opposite, saw him coming down the
front steps."

"When?"

"Four or five minutes before the fire."

"Ellen did not go out the back door. Floyd did not go out the back door.
Some one else did."

"And you will take the case, Mr. Shagarach?" Emily awaited his answer as
breathlessly as if Robert's life or death hung in a trembling balance
which Shagarach's finger could tip to one side or the other.

"It interests me. Have you a photograph of the accused with you?"

"No," answered Emily, thinking the request somewhat strange.

Shagarach began gazing at her with extraordinary intensity. The great
will inclosed in his little body seemed to bear down hard upon her so as
really to hurt. But she felt no resentment, only a kind of satisfied
acquiescence, as if all were for the best. Yet, among ordinary people
Emily was an individuality rare and fragrant, asserting herself
forcefully, without being in the least self-assertive.

"Have you anything else?" asked the lawyer. Emily did not know how long
the interim was.

"There is the strange peddler," she ventured to say. This time his
answer was an interrogative look.

"Miss Wesner spoke of him today--a vegetable vender, who has been coming
to the Arnold's for the last few weeks----"

"How many?"

"Three or four, I think."

"Since the will was made, then?"

"And dealing with Ellen. About the will----"

"Let us finish with the peddler."

"He had blue eyes and drove a cart painted green. Nobody had ever seen
him in the neighborhood before, till he came selling vegetables and
potted plants. His last visit was made on Friday."

"Not Saturday, the day of the fire?"

"Miss Wesner, who is very observing, has not seen him since Friday."

"Not as a peddler," said Shagarach, sotto voce. "Now as to the will. You
wish to say that Floyd has told you of his uncle's desire to make him
sole heir and his own aversion to the responsibilities of so large a
property."

"Does he practice clairvoyance?" asked Emily of herself.

"Robert is no lover of money," she said. "To allege avarice against him
as a motive is monstrous."

"Avarice, Miss Barlow? To love money is not avarice. Men grow to their
opportunities. Without opportunities they wither and without money today
there is no opportunity."

"The artist--does his genius gain or lose when it is gilded?" replied
Emily, who felt a match even for Shagarach in the defense of her lover.

"The artist--ah, he is not of the world! Gold might well be to him an
incumbrance. But to the worker among men it is the key to a thousand
coffers."

There was deep feeling in these words of the criminal lawyer. Emily
wondered if there might not have been a past of poverty, perhaps of
spiritual aspiration and disappointment in his life, all subdued to the
present indomitable aim at fortune and reputation.

"The refusal was a folly, a stripling's fatal blunder--yet a blunder of
which not three men in our city are capable. Let us leave the will. It
may reappear in its proper sequence. No suspicious character was seen
loitering about or leaving the house on Saturday?"

"My inquiries have been limited to Miss Wesner."

"Aronson!"

The young man reappeared as before.

"Make thorough inquiry this evening in the neighborhood of the Arnold
house, rear and front, for a stranger seen loitering about the premises
or issuing from them on Saturday afternoon."

"Yes, Miss Barlow, I have a theory," resumed Shagarach, turning to Emily
again. He folded his arms and looked at her steadfastly, yet as though
his gaze were fixed on something beyond.

"I see your lover's photograph in your eyes--mild blue eyes, but
touchstones of integrity, hard to deceive. He impresses me well. His
story, moreover, bears a somewhat uncommon voucher. It is true because
of its improbability. How improbable that any man would refuse a gift of
$10,000,000! How improbable that any man, not a sleep-walker, would
wander through the streets of a city without any record of his sensuous
impressions!"

"But----"

"The improbability of the story demonstrates its truth. Men lie, women
lie, children lie. Have you watched a band of girls playing at the
imitation of school? How cunningly the teacher feigns anger, the pupils
naughtiness and sad repentance. Have you observed the plausibility in
the inventions of toddling babes to escape imminent chastisement?
Falsehood is a normal faculty and equipped with its protective armor,
plausibility. Your friend's story is too preposterous to be untrue."

Emily was bewildered by these rapid paradoxes.

"I congratulate you upon your friendship with so unusual a specimen of
our kind, the man who cannot or will not lie. But I should not like to
present his defense on such grounds to twelve of his fellow-creatures,
normal in that respect. Fortunately we are not driven to that extreme
refuge.

"The material for a theory is meager; the chain shows many gaps. But I
find no evidence that Floyd attempted to get rid of the servant, Bertha.
A child, meditating this crime, would not have neglected so obvious a
precaution. Her continued absence was only an opportune accident. Her
re-entrance would have resulted in his discovery. The point is pivotal.

"I find that a favorite house dog was left in the room to be
sacrificed--a needless cruelty if the incendiary were his master, a
necessary precaution if he were a stranger whose actions the animal
would have understood and whom he would have followed to the street."

"But would Sire have allowed a stranger even to enter the study?"

"True; but between strangers and friends there is a middle category
consisting of persons whom we may call acquaintances. Into these three
degrees we are divided by dogkind. It was not a stranger or he would
have been attacked. He had no friends left but Bertha, Ellen and Floyd.
The dog was drowsing on the mat. The man who entered was an
acquaintance.

"Who was this man? We have a few items of his description. Some one
known to the dog, familiar with the premises and interested in the
destruction of the document of which that house, that room and that safe
were the triple-barred shrine. An expert criminal could have destroyed
the safe without detection, but the incendiary was an amateur, and such
an act would require time. There was no time, not an instant. The
executor was to arrive that afternoon. McCausland started right. The
Harmon building was destroyed and seven lives sacrificed in order that
Benjamin Arnold's will might be irrevocably canceled. Who benefited by
its destruction?

"The professor had desired to make Robert Floyd his sole heir, in other
words, to disinherit Harry Arnold!"

Shagarach's monologue had reached its climax. The name of the other
cousin came out like the ring of a hammer. He waited, as if yielding
Emily an opportunity to object, but as she sat passive and expectant, he
went on, his arms still folded, and his glowing eyes evincing deep
absorption in the problem he was elucidating.

"Harry Arnold was in disfavor, then. The drafting of the will must have
been communicated to him, but probably not its items. The mere fact,
however, was ominous. It might mean the loss of a fortune. One of the
servants was dressing 'uncommonly rich' of late. The wherewithal came to
her as payment for conveying to Harry Arnold all she could pick up about
the will. It may not have been pleasant news.

"It was from Mrs. Arnold McCausland first learned of the will. It was
Harry Arnold who hastened to advertise a reward of $5,000--McCausland's
fee if----"

"As to the fee," said Emily.

"I understand; the legacy of $20,000 amply protects me."

Emily was uncertain whether or not Shagarach meant to demand the whole
$20,000 for his services.

"I find that the flies were about the honey pot. Mrs. Arnold's carriage
drove up about 3 o'clock. The executor was to call that afternoon.
Revelation could not be long delayed. The plot was desperately formed,
favored by circumstance and executed by Harry Arnold and his
accomplices."

"But Harry Arnold has been ill, Mr. Shagarach."

"The name of his physician?"

"I believe, Dr. Whipple, the pathologist. You suspect Harry, then, of
the crime?"

"I have not studied him yet. This is only an alternative theory. You see
how easily it could have been constructed in your friend's behalf.

"Mungovan, the discharged coachman, has not yet been found. The strange
peddler may prove a confederate. You will send Bertha to me. She is the
central witness. Is Floyd in jail?"

"Yes," said Emily, sadly; "but a permit----"

"I shall not need one. I am his counsel."

Emily descended the creaking stairway and rode home with a certain new
elation, such as we sometimes feel after contact with some electric
character, some grand reservoir of human vitality. Meyer Shagarach
meanwhile began pacing up and down, occasionally speaking to himself
sotto voce.

A criminal lawyer, but with the head of an imperial chancellor.

What was known of this rare man's history? About thirty years before he
was born in a small town on the upper Nile, a descendant of those mighty
Jewish families whose expulsion impoverished Spain, while spreading her
tongue throughout the orient, even beyond the Turcoman deserts to the
unvisited cities of Khiva and Merv. Languages were his birthright, as
naturally and almost as numerously as the digits on his hands. In his
youth his father had wandered to America--refuge of all wild, strange
spirits of the earth--and died, leaving a widow and a son. The boy had
been visionary, unpractical--a white blackbird among his tribe. For
years he had struggled to support his mother, first as an attorney's
drudge, then as a scribbler. There was no market for his wares. Then by
a sudden wrench, showing the vise-like strength of his will, he had
burst the bubble of his early hopes and chosen for his profession that
of all professions which requires the most thorough subjection of the
sentiments. It was six years since he had first rented the obscure
quarters he now occupied, the same where, as a lad, he had sighed away
many hours of distasteful toil.

For the first two years Shagarach's face showed the desperation of his
fortunes. His own people shunned him as a seceder from the synagogue. To
the public he was still unknown. But one day a trivial case had matched
him against a certain eminent pleader, a Goliath in stature and in
skill. The end of the day's tourney witnessed his bulk prostrated
before the undersized scion of the house of David. From that hour the
dimensions of his fame had grown apace. Critics noticed an occasional
simplicity in everyday matters, just as a gifted foreigner who has
become eloquent in our tongue may have to ask some commonplace native
for a word now and then. Rivals questioned his technical learning, who
had little else to boast. Yet Shagarach's knowledge, practical or legal,
was always found adequate to his cause. Whether he was pedantically
profound in the law or not might be an open question. But all who knew
him at all knew him for a Titan.

The man appeared to be lonely by nature. Excepting the young assistant,
Aronson, he associated no colleague with him, carrying all the details
of his growing volume of business in his own capacious mind. Other men
made memoranda. Shagarach remembered. What he might be in himself none
knew; yet "all things to all men" was a motto he spurned. Shagarach was
Shagarach to judge or scullion, everywhere masterful, unruffled,
mysterious. Were it not for the luminous eyes he might be taken for an
abstract thinker. These orbs supplied the magnetism to rivet crowds and
suggested a seer of deep soul-secrets (unknown even to their possessor),
dormant, perhaps subdued, but not annihilated, under the exterior
equipment of the criminal lawyer.

Shagarach often colloqued with himself as he was doing now. In his
trials, though he neither badgered witnesses nor wrangled with
opponents, he was noted for sotto-voce comments, sometimes ironical,
that seemed scarcely conscious. These mannerisms might be relics of a
solitary pre-existence, in which the habit of thinking aloud had been
formed.

"Was it Arnold or Mungovan who touched the match?" He continued his
pacing in silence. "Both knew the premises, Mungovan the better of the
two."

The electric street lamp shone into his room and the footfalls of the
last tenant, receding on the stairs, had long since died to silence.

"I will study Arnold," he said, finally, buttoning his coat, as if the
problem were as good as solved.




CHAPTER IX.

THE ROYSTERERS.


"Get the mail, Indigo."

The letters made a goodly heap on the salver, but Harry Arnold sifted
them over with an air of dissatisfaction. One cream- envelope,
superscribed in a dainty hand, he laid apart. The rest he tore open and
tossed into Indigo's lap, as if they were duns, invitations and other
such formal matters.

"Drop a line apiece to these bores," he said to his valet, with a yawn.
Like the whole tribe of the unoccupied, he was too busy to answer
letters.

"Where's Aladdin?"

"Grazing in the paddock."

"Did you get the roses for Miss March?"

"Two dozen Marechal Neils."

"I want some paper for a note to go with them. Mother's prompt," he
added, opening the letter he had reserved, while Indigo went on his
errand. It was headed "Hillsborough," and ran as follows:

     "Dear Harry: It is a pleasure to be in our old summer home again,
     especially after the trying day I spent in that courtroom. The
     orchards are no longer in bloom, and the pear tree in the angle
     (your favorite), which was just a great pyramid of snowy blossoms
     when we arrived last year, is now budding with fruit. These things
     remind me how late the season has begun this year. Do not prolong
     it too far, Harry, dear. I am sure, after your illness, the mere
     sight of the open fields would do you good. Woodlawn is suburban,
     but it is not real country. Besides, we are only twenty miles out
     and you could ride in town in an hour whenever you liked.

     "Be assured you shall have the money for your club expenses as soon
     as I can collect it. But property has its embarrassments, you know;
     and we may be rich in bonds and indentures, yet lack ready pennies
     at times, strange as it may seem to your inexperience. Do not
     worry, dear. In your present delicate state of health it may injure
     you more than I care to think. The very next time I come to town
     you shall have what you desire. But I make my own terms. You must
     be a good boy and come to Hillsborough for it. Forgive my writing
     so soon. I have been thinking of you, and it surely cannot
     displease you to hear once more how dearly you are remembered,
     wherever she goes, by your loving mother,

     "ALICE BREWSTER ARNOLD."

"Once more! No, nor a thousand times more!" cried Harry. "But I wish
she'd come down sooner with the cash," he added. "What's this?
Postscript?"

"Your friends, the Marches, have taken their cottage in Lenox. Possibly
this may hasten your coming more than my entreaties."

"Jealous of Rosalie, already," laughed Harry. "Poor mother! What,
another?"

     "P. S. (Private)--It would be wise, Harry, if you should call upon
     your cousin. A visit from you would look well at this time."

"A call on Rob? Gad, I never thought of that. Give me the stationery,
Indigo."

For five minutes Harry Arnold was alone, writing his prettiest note of
compliment to accompany the gift of flowers to Miss Rosalie March. He
had just moistened the mucilage when there came a ring at the bell.

"See if that's the fellows, Indigo. Look through the shutters."

"It's Kennedy," said Indigo, twisting his neck and eyes so as to get a
slanting view of the callers.

"Who else?"

"Idler and Sunburst."

"Let them up."

"Well, Harry," cried the first of the three bloods, extending a hand,
"what's the tempo of your song this morning?"

"Allegro, vivace, vivacissimo, Idler. Convalescing; doctor says I may go
out; mother agreeable; medicine chest thrown to the dogs. Have a pill;
only a few more left."

"Hello!" cried the fragile youth who had entered last. "Miss Rosalie
March!" He picked up the envelope which Harry had laid down. "Sits the
wind in that quarter still, Horatio?"

"The actress, Harry?" cried a second of the trio.

"What actress, you booby? Miss March isn't an actress."

"Nevertheless, she occasionally acts," retorted Sunburst. His yellow
beard entitled him to this alias.

"Just the opposite, then, of her brother, Tristram," said the tall,
sallow youth addressed as Idler. "He is a sculptor, but he never sculps.
Did you see his alto-relievo of a Druid's head in the Art club? Capital
study. Why in the deuce doesn't he work?"

"If he did he might get his goods on the market," said Kennedy.

"Out on you for a Philistine, a dunderhead!" cried Harry. "Do you
confound genius with salability? Idler could correct you on that point.
You remember his satire on 'The Religious Significance of Umbrellas in
China?' Was anything ever more daringly conceived, more wittily
executed, more--but I spare the shades of Addison and Lamb. And how much
did it fetch him? A paltry $15."

Idler was the only one of these well-born good-for-naughts who ever
turned his gifts to use. Sketches over the sobriquet by which he was
known to his friends occasionally appeared in the lighter magazines.

"But my 'New Broom' made a clean sweep, Harry," he protested.

"Murder," groaned Harry. "He had that in for us. A prepared joke is
detestable. It's like bottled spring water."

"Hang spring water!" said Idler. "Hang water anyway!"

"Indigo," cried Harry, jumping at the hint, "fetch us some very weak
whey from the spa. Let's have a real old high jinks of a slambang bust
to celebrate my convalescence. Hello! What's that?"

The wild wail of a bagpipe smote the air and the four boon companions
rushed to the window.

"Have him in!"

"Yoho!"

"Here, Sawnie!"

"He's coming."

Indigo and the piper entered from opposite doors at about the same time,
the former fetching the "whey," which had a suspiciously reddish hue and
was served in narrow bottles, the latter arrayed in all the bravery of
his plaids, with a little boy by his side in similar costume.

"Hit her up, Sawnie," cried Kennedy.

"Let him wet his whistle first," said the Sunburst.

"And here's a handsel to cross his palm," added Harry, passing the piper
something invisible. The minstrel pocketed it with an awkward bow and
drank down the proffered "whey" at one gulp.

"I'll be reminding you, gentlemen," he said in "braid Scots," "lest ye
labor under a misapprehension of my cognomen, that my name is not
Sawnie, but Duncan McKenzie Logan, and this is my wee bairn, Archibald
Campbell of that ilk. We're half-lowland, as ye doubtless know, the
Logans being a border clan."

"Why don't you make the youngster blow the bellows?" cried Idler. "The
organ-player never does the pumping."

"I'm no organ-player, if you please. 'Tis the hieland pipes I play, and
there's no blowing the bellows except with my ain mouth. But the laddie
dances prettily. Show your steps, Archie. Show the gentlemen a fling.
Ainblins they've never seen the like of it before."

Archie was as highland as his father in rig, from his jaunty feathered
bonnet to the kilt just reaching below his bare, brown knees. His firm
boyish face had a Scotch prettiness in it, nothing effeminate, yet sweet
to look at, and he went through the steps of the highland fling
gracefully, one hand on hip, the other over his head, reversing them now
and then, and occasionally spinning around, while the piper struck up
"Roy's Wife." The conclusion was greeted with a burst of applause.

"Can't we dance to that tune, boys?" shouted Harry, seizing Kennedy
around the waist. "Choose your partners. Give us a Tarantella."

"There's nae such tune in the hielands," said the piper, gravely.

"Well, the skirt dance will do. Hit her up and I'll make you a present
big enough to buy all your aunts and cousins porridge for a fortnight."

"There's nae skeert dance known to my pipes," said the highlander,
shaking his head. "Dinna ye mean the sword dance?"

"Try 'Highland Laddie'," suggested Idler, hitting up a lively jig on the
piano. The piper fell in and soon was pacing up and down the room, red
in the face from his exertions, while the four merrymakers capered,
kicked and skipped, with all sorts of offhand juvenilities. Harry,
though the tallest present, was graceful as a girl.

"Hold up, fellows," cried the Sunburst, at last, puffing audibly. But
the piper continued pacing up and down, forgetting everything in the
furore of his enthusiasm except the moaning and shrieking of his
instrument.

"Hold up, I say. Shut off your infernal drone. We can't hear ourselves
think."

"'Tis the wind wailing on Craig-Ellachie I hear," said he of the
Caledonian names.

"I think it's delirium tremens. Take a nip of the whey. That'll cure
you. Here, Indigo, tap the geyser again for Sawnie."

Logan was not the man to set up frivolous punctilios against such an
order as Idler's.

"There's medicine for the inner mon," he said, smacking his lips with
gusto.

"Medicinal, eh? If you happen to take an overdose it's a medicinal
spree, I suppose."

"I say, isn't tomorrow the Fourth?" cried Sunburst. "Play something
patriotic, Sawnie, 'Hull's Victory,' or 'Lady Washington's Reel.'"

"There's nane o' them known to me or my instrument," said the minstrel.
"It's a Scotch pipe and will play nane but the auld tunes of Scotland."

"Scotland! What's Scotland?" asked Idler.

"Wha--can it be ye never heard tell o' bonnie Scotland?" gasped the
highlander, who was nearing the condition which Idler had described as
a "medicinal spree."

"What is it, a man or a place? Did you ever meet the name before,
fellows?"

All three solemnly shook their heads, whereat the Caledonian's jaw
dropped in amazement.

"Wull, wull, I knew 'twas a most barbarous country I entered, but I'd
thought the least enlightened peoples of the airth had heard of the
glory and the celebrity of bonnie Scotland."

"Bonnie Scotland? Is Bonnie his first name?"

"Why, 'tis the country o' Scotland, I mean."

"Oh, I know," interposed Harry; "that little, barren, outlying province
somewhere to the north of England."

"Oh, that!" cried the others, in contemptuous chorus.

"Where the coast line gets ragged, like an old beggar's coat," said
Idler.

"And the people live on haggis and finnan haddie," added Kennedy.

"They are mostly exiles of Erin that have drifted back into barbarism,"
cried the Sunburst.

"Yes, that's the place," said Harry. "I've heard travelers tell of it. I
believe it's put down in the latest gazetteer."

Poor Logan looked like a stifling man, but before he could launch his
reply the long-drawn tones of a rival troubadour invaded the apartment.
Once more the four roysterers rushed to the window.

"It's a <DW55>!"

"Ahoy!" they signaled, waving their hands.

"Open the door for him, Indigo," cried Harry.

"Did you ever hear tell o' such savages, Archie?" whispered the piper to
his son; "that had no enlightenment on the name o' bonnie Scotland,
which is famous wherever valor and minstrelsy are honored."

"They maun be jestin', daddy."

"Jestin'? Tut, tut! Whaur's the jest?"

"Presto bellisimo, Paganini," cried the four youths, each rushing to the
door and welcoming the organ-grinder, with a warm shake-hands. The
Italian smiled profusely and doffed his cap, his monkey climbing to the
organ top and imitating him in every gesture.

"Tune up your bagpipes, Sawnie," cried Harry. "We are going to have a
tournament. Take a smell, Paganini?"

"Noa," answered the Italian, shaking his head, "noa drink--a."

"Then you're a bigger fool than you look," cried Idler, stumbling
tipsily. "(Hic) I'm losing control of my curves."

"What tunes have you got in that box?" asked Harry of the organ-grinder,
while Logan eyed him grimly with a look of scorn.

"What-a sing-a? 'Anni Runi.'"

"That will do. Grind away. Hold on. Get a full breath, Sawnie. Now for a
medley."

The organ-grinder began turning his crank, but the Scotchman sulked in
the corner.

"Stop there, Paganini. False start. Try again."

"I'll accompany nae uncivilized barrel-box, that's only fit to dandle
idiot bairns wi'."

"What are you talking about?" cried Idler. "Uncivilized! You wildman of
the hills! A red outlaw in his war paint couldn't look and act more
outlandish than you do."

"Smooth him down, Harry," cried Sunburst. "Here, Sawnie, how much will
you take for your pipes?"

"Enough to buy me them back again," answered the Scotchman, cannily,
"and a bonus for the time o' their privation."

"You'll do," said Idler.

"Have another nip of the whey and let's hear you drown the <DW55>,"
whispered Harry, confidentially, patting Logan on the back.

"Drown him? 'Twad na tak' a big puddle to do that."

"Of course not. But he's vain enough to think just the opposite. A good
swig! Start her up now."

Idler drummed on the piano a few bars of "Scots Wha Ha'e," which set the
piper marching and stamping again. At a nod from Harry the bowing
Italian resumed his tune, and when the four carousers took hands in a
circle and began chanting "Should Auld Acquaintance Be Forgot," the air
was infernal with discord.

"Faster! Faster!" cried Harry. The Scotchman pranced in his industrious
ecstasy, while the Italian put both hands to the organ-crank and turned
for all that was in him.

"Oh, a smile for my Rosalie!" shouted Kennedy, maliciously, changing the
air.

"None of that!" cried Harry, barely making his voice heard above the
din. The little boy sitting in one corner had clapped both palms over
his ears, and the monkey, watching his gesture, gravely climbed up and
perched beside him, doing likewise.

"A kiss for my Rosalie," roared Kennedy, tantalizing his host.
Half-angry, Harry caught up a wine bottle from the tray and pointed it
at his tormentor.

"Pop!" the cork flew out and Kennedy put his hand to his eye with an
exclamation of pain.

"Hello! What have I done?" cried Harry.

"Didn't know it was loaded," jeered Idler. But the concert had stopped,
and when Kennedy uncovered his eye there was a blue swelling already
under the lid.

"A surgeon!" cried Sunburst. "Amputate his head. It is the only hope of
saving the eye."

"What's good for a black eye?" asked Harry, less unfeelingly than the
others.

"Black the other for symmetry," cried Sunburst.

"Get some beefsteak, Indigo," said Harry.

"Kill the Jersey cow, Indigo, and cut off a sirloin," mocked Idler, who
was half-seas over now. Meanwhile the Scotchman and the Italian,
counting their emoluments, had folded their instruments and silently
stolen away; while Sunburst, apparently as porous as a sponge, calmly
and steadily put the bottle Harry had popped to his lips and drained it
to the dregs.




CHAPTER X.

APPEARANCES AND DISAPPEARANCES.


"Now for Sir Galahad in jail!" said Harry, touching the bay with the
point of his whip.

"He was an awfully virtuous cad!" laughed Kennedy. Sunburst had offered
to convey Idler safely home, while Kennedy, the black-eyed, accompanied
Harry, himself none the better for his morning bottle-bout, to the
clubhouse in town. On the way they would make the visit to Robert.

There was evidently a strong dash of the Arnold blood in Harry. He
showed more resemblance to his cousin than to the proud, thin-lipped
woman who had sat through Floyd's preliminary trial. A stranger might
even confuse them at the first glance, though Harry was five years the
older of the two. It could not be gainsaid that he bore his age well.
His movements were leopard-like in their swiftness and ease and his eyes
shone with mesmeric power. The little darkness under their lids might be
a peculiarity of complexion, but occasionally, in moments of repose, a
shadow, no more, seemed to cross the cheek and make it look worn. His
companions had noticed that the cue-point wavered a trifle in his hands
of late and that his masse shots sometimes failed to draw the balls. But
he was still facile princeps among gentlemen boxers of the city; and his
long, brown arms were a delight to watch on the river, crossing and
recrossing in the graceful rhythm of the practiced oarsman.

Arnold's true nature was hard to judge, for circumstances had conspired
to spoil him from the cradle. A comely child, he had been allowed to
carry the knickerbocker period of tossing curls and gratified whims far
into his teens, and the discovery that her darling was a man, and no
longer a painted picture to be gazed at and displayed, had come upon his
mother suddenly, like an unforeseen catastrophe. It had cost her many a
pang to realize that she, who aspired to be sole mistress of his heart,
shared now only a divided affection with a score of alien interests.
Still she continued to indulge and anticipate his desires. They were
rich and social station was her birthright. But it was with a jealous
gnawing in her heart that she would sign the check for his new pleasure
yacht or watch him pat the neck of his steeplechaser Aladdin.

The dislike she bore to Robert Floyd was a natural consequence of his
uncle's partiality. The families were outwardly upon good terms. If
early influence counts, there could not well be much similarity of taste
between the youth whose steps had been guided by the virile head of
Benjamin Arnold and the idol of that indulgent, worldly mother who never
forgot that she belonged to the Brewsters of Lynn.

"Hold her ten minutes," said Harry, giving the reins to Kennedy at the
outer gate of the jail. His name was a sufficient passport to the
officer who guarded the outer turnstile, and he was directed across a
bricked yard to the jail building proper. Here a more detailed
explanation was exacted. Harry answered the questions suavely but not
without some suppressed impatience. A few moments of delay, which he
beguiled with an incessant finger-tattoo, and he was conducted to
murderers' row.

"This isn't much like home, Rob," was his greeting, fortified by a hand
extended through the cell bars. Floyd pressed it somewhat coldly.

"I'm grateful for the visit, Harry," he said.

"I was deucedly down with malaria when uncle died, you know."

"I was sorry to hear that from your mother."

"Yes, might have come around to the trial, I suppose; but mother
wouldn't have it. You understand how she feels. Besides, what good could
I do?"

"You are better now?"

"Awoke this morning as fresh as a new-born babe. Going down to play
with the foils awhile. Can't stop long."

Was it the glow of convalescence or of wine that shone in Harry's face?
He made one or two imaginary passes with his cane, regardless of the
feelings of the prisoner, to whom such a picture of prospective
enjoyment could hardly be soothing.

"But I say, Rob," he cried, apparently remembering himself, "this is
hard on you. What do you think of it all?"

Floyd eyed his cousin, as if the appropriate answer were not easy to
find.

"It is hard," he replied.

"What would Uncle Ben say if he were alive?"

"Uncle Benjamin would be the first to proclaim my innocence," said
Robert, his voice vibrant with emotion.

"To tell the truth, Rob, I don't know whether to be sorry his old
scrawl's canceled or not. I had my doubts how I fared at Uncle Ben's
hands. Mother said my half was hunky, but you know uncle hadn't that
respect for my precious person she has." Harry's laugh showed that he
was well aware of his mother's weakness in that regard. "How was it? Do
you know? Did the old gentleman forget me?"

"I believe we were treated nearly alike," answered Robert.

"Gad, then I owe you $5,000,000----"

"Did you come here to insult me?"

At this outburst of indignation the sheriff's deputy drew near.

"That was nothing, Rob," said Harry, sobering up. "Only my cursed
thoughtlessness. I'm sorry, on my word, you've got into the fix."

"Carry your condolences somewhere else."

"Oh, well----"

"I was always literal and I mean now what I say. Your apology only makes
the matter worse."

There is nothing more subversive of dignity than an unpremeditated
sneeze. Not that Saul Aronson had much dignity to spare. On the
contrary, he was an extremely modest young man, with apparently one
great passion in his life, the service of Shagarach. On this occasion
his resounding ker-choo proclaimed from afar the arrival of that
personage and threw a ridiculous damper on the rising temper of the
cousins. Seeing the two strangers approach, Harry fumbled out a farewell
and withdrew with an air of languid bravado. Shagarach watched him as he
passed.

"Follow that young man for a few hours," he said to Aronson. "I should
like to know his afternoon programme."

Aronson hung on his master's lips and trotted off to obey his command.

"I am Shagarach, come to defend you," he said to the prisoner, still
flushed with the remembrance of the quarrel.

"Who sent you to defend me?" was the curt reply.

"Your friend, Miss Barlow."

"Emily?"

Robert's voice grew softer.

"I have some questions to ask you."

"What have I done to be questioned as if I were a cut-throat? What have
I done to be jailed here like some wild beast, before whom life would
not be safe if he were let at large?"

"I know you are innocent, Floyd."

Only the falsely accused can tell how the first assurance of trust from
another revives hope and faith in their kind. Robert Floyd was no man to
lean on strangers, yet Shagarach's words were as soothing to him as a
gentle hand laid on a feverish forehead.

"Your cousin Harry came here to verify his knowledge of the will, which
disinherited him, did he not?"

"Harry was disinherited, that is true."

"How came you to give up the profession of botanist, in which your uncle
trained you?"

"Men interest me more than vegetables."

"But you refused your uncle's wealth, that would have given you power
among men."

"It was not mine. I had not earned it. I feared the temptation."

"You are a journalist, I believe?"

"Six months ago I happened to report a conference of charities for the
Beacon. Today I am eking out my income by occasional work for that
paper."

Shagarach thought of his own first brief. A youth, imperfectly
acquainted with English, was charged with the larceny of an overcoat
from his fellow-lodger. Something about him enlisted the sympathy of a
kind-hearted lady who drew Shagarach into the case because of his
knowledge of the Hebrew jargon which the prisoner spoke. The youth was
acquitted and was now a student of law, being no other than Shagarach's
assistant and idolater, Aronson. That was years ago. Today hundreds
flocked to hear his pleading of a cause, judges leaned over alertly, as
if learning their duty from him, and the very hangers-on of the
courtroom acquired a larger view of the moral law when Shagarach
expounded it.

"My own beginnings were as humble," he said.

"You are a criminal lawyer by choice, people say."

"The moral alternative of innocence or guilt, of liberty or
imprisonment--sometimes, as now, of life or death--exalts a cause in my
eyes far above any elevation to which mere financial litigation can
attain."

Robert looked his visitor over thoughtfully. The criminal lawyer was not
reputed the highest grade of the guild. But there was a sneer, too, in
many quarters for the journalist. He, too, must mingle in the reek of
cities, share Lazarus' crust and drink from the same cup with the
children of the slums.

"And you have risen to the defense of murderers," he said.

"Men accused of murder," answered Shagarach.

"You are reputed to be uniformly successful."

"That is no miracle. My clients are uniformly innocent. My first step is
to satisfy myself of that."

"When were you first satisfied of my innocence?"

"When I saw you here."

"I am to be removed to the state prison while the jail is repaired,"
said Robert, who had indulged dreams of some powerful intervention which
should procure his release. "How long before a final hearing will be
given me?"

"Two months at most. The evidence against your cousin is growing rapidly
under my hands."

"It was 'evidence' that brought me here. Is your 'evidence' against
Harry no more valuable?"

"I am not prosecuting Harry Arnold, but every item that points to his
guilt guides the finger of suspicion away from you."

Shagarach was satisfied with his interview. He had elicited proof to his
own mind of Robert's innocence and legal evidence of Harry's
disinheritance under the will. To fasten knowledge of the fact upon the
cousin would now be an easier task.

"Miss Barlow will be permitted to see you," was his parting assurance to
the prisoner before he hurriedly returned to his office, to find an
unexpected client awaiting him.

John Davidson, the marshal, had a friendly habit, the legacy of a
country bringing-up, which his acquaintances found both useful and
agreeable. Our tired Emily, trudging to Shagarach's with the heavy
message of a day's failure, must have agreed with them heartily. At
least, she did not decline his invitation when the kindly old gentleman
drove up behind her and urged her to share his seat in the carriage.

"I am bringing him some evidence now," said Emily in answer to the
marshal's first question, after he had settled her according to his
liberal ideas of comfort and clucked his horse to a gentle trot.

"Evidence--no need of evidence, miss. If Shagarach has your case, that
will be prima-facie evidence in itself of your sweetheart's innocence."

"He is a wonderful man. But do people like him?"

"Like him? Well, 'like' is a medium word, you see, used for medium
people. He's a good deal of a sphinx to us all, my dear. But aren't you
a brave girl to be tramping the streets for your sweetheart? Don't mind
being called sweethearts, I hope? That was the old-country word when I
courted Elizabeth. But I believe young folks now call it fiancee,
inamorata--French words and Italian, as though they were ashamed to
speak it out in good old English."

"Oh, we prefer sweethearts a hundred times. But I see Mr. Shagarach's
sign."

The marshal handed her out with old-fashioned gallantry, threw his
horse's head-weight on the curbstone and accompanied her upstairs.
Neither Aronson, nor Jacob, the office boy, answered his knock, but a
throaty falsetto, somewhat the worse for wear, was intoning an
evangelical hymn within. Strange quavers ad libitum and a constant
beating of the foot, occasionally heightened to a break-down stamp,
intermingled with the air. It was only by giving a rap with his whole
clenched hand that the marshal was able to arouse the attention of this
musical inmate.

"Evenin', Mr. Davidson. Keepin' house, you see."

"Good evening, Jupiter." Then to Emily: "This is Pineapple Jupiter."

"Cullud gospel-preacher, missus. Belong to the mission upstairs. Buy a
mission paper, missus?"

His complexion was as black as a coal shovel, but everything artificial
about him made the antithesis of the swan to the raven. His suit was of
bleached linen, his shirt bosom, choker and spotless cravat, all the
color of snow. Even his wool was wintry and the rolling eyes and
brilliant teeth gave his ensemble the effect of a pen-and-ink sketch, or
one of those black-and-white grotesques that recently captured a passing
vogue.

"When will Shagarach return?" asked Davidson, but a light step on the
stairs, which Emily knew to be his, rendered an answer needless. The
lawyer bowed with his usual stateliness and ushered them in.

"Remain outside till Jacob comes, Jupiter," he said. The <DW64> salaamed
deferentially.

"As a result of today's inquiries," Shagarach folded his arms, "two
desirable witnesses are missing. The peddler, as I surmised, is not a
peddler; and the incendiary, who could assist us materially in our
researches, still remains in the Arnold mansion."

Emily's face was puzzled at this enigmatic opening.

"That is to say, he was not seen by any one coming out. I believe,
however, that he succeeded in getting away unobserved, as I think I had
the pleasure of meeting him this afternoon."

"The incendiary?" cried Emily, and the marshal echoed her.

"At the county jail."

Emily's heart fluttered. Had Shagarach become a convert to the belief in
Robert's guilt? And if so?

"You know Harry Arnold?" he asked.

"I have never met him." She  a little, for she was not descended
from the Brewsters of Lynn. "But it seems to me your argument against
him is inferential, Mr. Shagarach." Twenty times she had gone over it on
her pillow the night before.

"Were the a priori case against Mr. Floyd as strong, you would have more
reason than you have to be apprehensive, Miss Barlow," said Shagarach,
in that ringing tone of his, from which all the sap of emotion seemed
purposely wrung out, leaving only a residuum of dry logic.

Immediately he began writing a letter, as if to terminate the interview,
and John Davidson reached for his hat, casting a glance down at his
carriage in the street. Then with an effort Emily unburdened herself of
the portentous message which she had come to deliver.

"I have done my best," she said. "But Bertha Lund is not to be found."




CHAPTER XI.

A KISS IN THE DARK.


Bertha Lund's aunt, Mrs. Christenson, kept a boarding house for Swedes,
on a street near the water front. By virtue of an intelligence-office
license she was also empowered to obtain places in domestic service for
newly imported Frederikas and Katherinkas. But the Swedish housemaid is
one of those rare commodities in which the demand exceeds the supply. So
there had been no crowded gallery of sodden faces around the
waiting-room when Emily called Thursday morning before going to work,
but only two or three laughing maidens who chatted with the boarders.
All had the bloom of a winter apple in their cheeks and their blue eyes
sparkled with reflections of the sea. Mrs. Christenson was making terms
with a lady in an inner room.

"You wish for a servant?" she said, coming forward pleasantly.

"My business is with Miss Bertha Lund, your niece. I believe she is
lodging here."

"My niece is gone," answered the landlady, unceremoniously turning her
back and shutting the door with that emphasis which is feminine for
profanity. Then her voice was heard, pitched a little higher, as she
interpreted the silvery Swedish of the girl within, for the benefit of
her future mistress.

"Something must be wrong," thought Emily. But there was nothing for her
to do but retreat, somewhat hurt and a great deal troubled. She had
reached the head of the stairs when one of the domestics in the
waiting-room came forward sympathetically and in her pretty, broken
English explained Mrs. Christenson's conduct. Bertha, it seems, had not
returned home since the night of the trial. Search had been made for
her, but without result. From what the girl said, though this was put
guardedly and in an almost inaudible whisper, Emily inferred that
Bertha, who was naturally quick-tempered, had chafed under her aunt's
imperious discipline and had probably gone to board with some friend,
registering herself for employment meanwhile in one of the other
intelligence offices. Once before she had manifested the same impatience
of restraint and had disappeared into the country for an entire summer.

It was still possible, even probable, that she could be found if search
were instituted at once. Bertha had only a day's start of her pursuer,
and it was not likely that she had secured a situation to her taste so
soon. Emily formed the heroic resolve to scour the intelligence offices
herself. Finding the list in the directory incomplete, she boldly
visited police headquarters, from which licenses are issued, and copied
the name and address of every keeper in the city.

With a letter from one of the police commissioners and a minute
description of Bertha at her tongue's end, Emily had passed from office
to office, braving discourtesy and even insult. As this was the busy
season her truancy from the studio would have to be made up by lamplight
work, which meant ache to her weary eyes, and the unwonted climbing of
stairs and trudging about for hours soon exhausted her small stock of
strength. But Emily was less concerned over her personal sacrifice than
over the failure of her inquiries. By 4 o'clock her task was still
uncompleted. The rounds of the offices had not been half-made. Still no
Bertha could be found, no girl answering her description or dressed as
Bertha had been dressed at the trial having applied for work on the
previous day. With a cloud of despondency forming over her heart, only
lightened by a dim hope of consolation from Shagarach, she had turned
her steps in the direction of his office when John Davidson overtook
her.

"Not to be found!" echoed the marshal.

"When was she seen last?" inquired Shagarach, calmly.

"The evening of the trial," answered Emily. "She hasn't returned to her
aunt's, where she was lodging, since then."

"Why, I saw the girl talking with McCausland," said Davidson.

"When?" asked the lawyer.

"Tuesday evening. Everybody else had gone and Miss Barlow and I were
alone in the ante-chamber. McCausland put his head in, as if he wanted
the room, and I noticed two women behind him. One was the housemaid and
the other was----"

"Mrs. Arnold?"

"True enough. 'Twa'nt no need to tell you, was it?"

The marshal's eyes grew big with admiration.

"Merely a guess. Bertha Lund is a government witness, and McCausland has
a habit of keeping his witnesses under cover, especially when they are
poor and he is fighting wealth or influence. However, we have a right to
know all Bertha knows. Could you find out if she is living with the
Arnolds?" he said, turning to Emily.

"They are out of town, but I'll make inquiries," answered the resolute
girl.

"This may be of use." Shagarach handed her the note he had rapidly
written. It was unsealed and addressed to the warden of the state
prison. When the young girl was settled again to John Davidson's
satisfaction in the seat of his buggy, she opened the envelope and read
its contents aloud:

     "My Dear Sir: The bearer, Miss Emily Barlow, is assigned to
     important duties for the defense in the cause of Commonwealth vs.
     Floyd. I shall esteem it a favor if you will grant her admission to
     the defendant as my personal representative at all times when she
     may apply to you. Respectfully yours,

     "MEYER SHAGARACH,
     "Counsel for the Accused."

"Well, that was clever, wasn't it?" said old John Davidson, and for the
rest of the ride he entertained her with anecdotes of Shagarach's most
memorable victories, as well as other fascinating relations. For the
marshal, among his many virtues, was a famous traveler, being one of the
handful who can boast of having set foot in every state of our union. He
may not have been a marvel of detective cunning, as McCausland had
intimated, but Emily had forgotten all about her fatigue and was in an
agreeably hopeful frame of mind when he set her down before her house
door in the plain side street.

That night Robert Floyd slept in a state prison cell. The atmosphere of
the place oppressed him. Everything, down to the very keys and padlocks,
was more massive than at the county jail. Led along a narrow corridor by
tenanted cells, whose inmates came to the bars and greeted him, or
crouched in the inmost recesses, he was reminded of a menagerie of
dangerous beasts. At the door of his own cell the revulsion had seized
him like an epileptic fit and he had wrenched himself loose from the
jailer. In an instant four vise-like hands were tightened on him and he
was flung bodily into the apartment. The iron door swung to with a clang
and he heard the jailer's footsteps receding.

"Coo-ee! Ducky, don't ee like ee c'adle?"

"He's a lifer, sure!"

"Don't cry, Johnnie. You'll never get out any more."

"I move a resolution of sympathy for our newly elected associate. All in
favor, curse Longlegs!"

There is a passage in Bach's "Passion" music where the infuriated Jews,
being offered the choice of pardon for Barabbas or the Savior, shriek
out the name of the robber. Robert remembered thinking that up to then
he had never heard anything more devilish than the roar of rage with
which the multitude express their preference for "Barabbas!" But the
chorus of curses from the convict pack that greeted the sobriquet of
"Longlegs" was like an uproar from still lower deeps, where spirits more
hideous than the deicides may be confined.

This is not the normal temper of prisons, by any means. But the
Georgetown prison had been for months in a state of incipient mutiny and
the brewing storm was now threatening to break. Among the grounds of
complaint alleged against the present warden was his retention of the
obnoxious turnkey, "Longlegs," who was loathed as a "squealer," because
he could not be bought. It was further alleged that the men's tobacco
rations had been unjustly diminished one-half, such a thing as gratitude
for the allowance of this luxury at all not entering their minds. The
teams that carted goods from the workshops had recently been put in
charge of prison employes, and a useful means of communication with
outer friends thus cruelly cut off. In the eyes of the "solitaries" and
"hard-labor" men their bill of rights had been monstrously trampled
upon, and there was ample cause for the deposing of Warden Tapp and the
establishment of anarchy in the institution. Only the "lifers" were for
peace.

"Half a plug is better than no smoke, boys," said John Bryant, who had
killed his wife, humorously. But he had served fourteen years already
and lived in hopes of a pardon some Thanksgiving day for his good
behavior.

After exhibiting so clearly their position "against the government,"
Robert's fellow-lodgers began to put inquiries to himself.

"Say, freshy, what's your name?"

Robert was too exasperated, too disgusted, to answer.

"He's tongue-tied."

"Wants his supper."

"Look out for a spy, fellers. That ain't true blue."

"Mum's the word."

It was evident that Floyd's refusal to make free had branded him at once
with the stamp of unpopularity. But the young man had other thoughts to
occupy his mind. He was pondering upon his own terrible plight and upon
Shagarach's visit. Fully an hour must have passed in these reflections,
for it was very dark, when they were disturbed by a low remark from his
left-hand neighbor.

"Say, chummy, I hain't one of these 'ere bloomin' mutineers."

It was a wheezy voice and Floyd remembered to have heard at intervals
from that quarter one of those racking coughs which distress the
listener almost as much as the sufferer. The man seemed to be in the
rear of his cell and to have his mouth to the wall. Robert said nothing,
but his interest was languidly aroused.

"Say, get into the hospital, Dobbs," remarked a voice that was beginning
to be familiar to Robert.

"I 'ave been in the 'ospital, you unfeelin', bloomin' coves," replied
the asthmatic prisoner.

"Ho, ee's Henglish, ee his," said some one, whereupon there was a faint
storm of laughter. Robert's sympathy was enlisted on the side of the man
called Dobbs. His uncle had been an Englishman and the national feeling
was strong in the nephew. Speaking as low as possible, so that the
others might not hear, he said to Dobbs:

"You are an Englishman? This is bad company you've got into."

"Lord, me boy, Hi know that--a scurvy job lot o' bloomin' ordinary coves
as I'd cut dead if Hi was a gentleman of fortune. But you see Hi
hain't. Being only Bill Dobbs, Hi can't afford to preach hinnocence, and
choose me hown 'ouse-mates, like a juke."

The cough choked his utterance for awhile and evoked further
remonstrance from the yawning crew around him.

"What is your sentence?" asked Robert.

"Height years for burglary--if they can 'old me," and Bill Dobbs
chuckled knowingly, like one who had tested the fragility of prison
walls before. "W'ich, bein' a slippery fish, is a question Hi 'ave been
considerin' seriously."

"Why did you leave England?" asked Robert.

"The climate is gettin' so warm," answered the cockney. "W'y, the gulf
stream is comin' so near us there it would almost boil a turkey.
Hawfully bloomin' 'ot, you know, chummy. I'm a-winkin' at you."

"Especially about Scotland Yard, I suppose. You're a professional
burglar?"

"Not always, young man. Hi 'ad a Henglish mother once, w'ich I shall
never forget 'ow she 'eard my prayers. And hevery day Hi dressed myself
up in my blue blouse and breeches, and my dinner pail (w'ich wasn't
hempty) under my harm, and hevery bloomin' bobby I met says Hi to him,
says Hi: 'Hi'm Martin Thimblethorpe, from the west country, and can you
tell me w'ere's Regent row?' Blarst me if they wouldn't point their
fingers this way and that way and follow my departing footsteps with a
look of pride, as much as to say: 'There goes a honest Hinglish
workingman; see 'is hindependent hair."

"But you never worked very hard, I fancy, with your blouse and your
dinner-pail?"

"'Ard? Hi fancy Hi did."

"What did you do?"

"Jeweler's 'elp."

"That is, you sold your plunder to a fence?"

"Fence? Wot fence? Hi 'ad an accommodatin' friend in the business, who
asked no impertinent questions and paid me 'alf price for my
contributions--w'ich was bloomin' low figures, considering Hi never
accepted hanything cheap. If there's one class Hi 'ate, positively 'ate,
young man, it's them bloomin' shoddy gaffers wot sport a genteel
reputation on plated spoons and paste."

"You always discriminated against such people?"

"Halways! Ho, it used to do my 'eart good," continued Dobbs, chuckling
at the reminiscence, "w'en they wrote up one of my nocturnal visits (Hi
halways make my collections in the quiet hours of the hevenin') as 'ow
the leavin' of the plated ware and the abandonin' of a temptin' case of
hartificial diamonds shows the 'and of the solitary cracksman. There's
appreciation, Hi used to say! There's fame! You 'it it 'appily, young
man. Hi always discriminated."

"Martin Thimblethorpe, then, was the solitary cracksman, and your real
name is Dobbs?"

"Bill Dobbs. Wot's your line, chummy? Fashionable embezzlement? Hi
admire that line. It's genteel and the perquisites is liberal
accordingly."

Floyd was getting interested in spite of himself. These first-hand
experiences of a professional burglar were life, and in spite of the
fellow's utter villainy and vulgarity (he could almost see his cunning
leer through the walls) they had a spice of romance that held him. But
their colloquy was interrupted just here by a sound of footsteps and the
approach of a light, which set the whole ward raving again.

"Shut up your screeching," came a voice of command, at which the
mutinous crew subsided, and Robert heard apologetic remarks.

"It's Gradger."

"It isn't Longlegs."

"We thought it was Longlegs."

Gradger, for some reason, was a favorite with the men. He went straight
to Floyd's cell and pointed him out to Emily Barlow.

"Emily!"

"Robert!"

That was all they could say for awhile.

"My darling," cried Robert, who was the first to recover command of
himself. He was indignant to think that she, too, should be forced into
these surroundings. "Why have you come here?"

"Only to be with you for a few moments, Robert. I thought of you all
friendless and lonesome."

"God bless you, dear. But you must not remain. Go away quickly and do
not come here again."

It was the old, natural instinct to screen the purer half of our race
from degrading contact with things we ourselves must meet.

"But why should I not visit you, Robert?"

"Because this is hell and you are an angel."

He drew her to him and kissed her through the bars. Instantly the sound
was re-echoed a hundred times, distorted and vulgarized, throughout the
ward. In the silence which followed Emily's first words, the sweethearts
had forgotten their audience of thieves and cutthroats, to whom every
syllable was audible. Hierarchs of sin, virtuosos in infamy, all the
demon in their souls seemed roused by this innocent pledge of mutual
faith between youth and maiden, and even the stern threats of Gradger
could not silence their outbreak of hideous derision.

Emily started back as red as fire.

"Go, darling," cried Robert, between his set teeth, while shouts of "Ta,
ta, Robert," "Kiss me, Emily," intermingled with the foul ribaldry
generated in minds shut away from all purifying touch of womanhood,
taunted the fleeing girl and roused her imprisoned lover's passion to
frenzy. He could have strangled three of them single-handed.

"Better call daytimes, miss, when the men are working in the shops,"
said Gradger. He had not taken Emily for a girl who herself had to work
daytimes in a shop.

Meanwhile the storm raged louder and louder, and several turnkeys were
called to quell the disturbance and carry the ringleaders away to the
"block." But the more it volleyed around him the cooler grew young
Floyd. His resentment gradually hardened to a kind of pitying scorn, and
when the last oath died away it was with sweeter thoughts that he had
indulged for three bitter nights that he laid his head on the pallet and
drowsed into oblivion. His pillow lay close to the point of the wall
where Dobbs liked to do his talking, and while the midnight bell was
ringing he thought he heard the cracksman whisper:

"The young lady stretched it, chummy. You 'ave one friend 'ere. Let 'em
screech their bloomin' lungs off."

But this may have been a dream.




CHAPTER XII.

SIMPLE SIMON.


"The appointment you heard them make. I missed the rendezvous."

"Harry Arnold said Wednesday was his locky day----"

"Lucky day," corrected Shagarach.

"His lucky day," said Aronson, "and if the old lady put up he would
break the bank."

"That I understand. A gambling tryst. The old lady is his mother. Put up
means to pay his money. But the place--what was the name of the place?"

"When they left each other Arnold said: 'Wednesday at the Tough-Coat,'
and Kennedy said: 'All right, Harry.'"

"Repeat that word."

"Tough-Coat."

"Repeat it again."

"Tough-Coat."

Still Shagarach looked nonplused. The syllables conveyed no meaning
whatever. Yet Aronson felt sure of the substantial accuracy of his
version.

"Very well." The lawyer dismissed the subject, sent Aronson off on
irrelevant business and gave a few hours of attention to his other
clients. The law's delay had not infected Shagarach. Whatever the matter
he undertook, he was punctual as the clock in its performances, though
not, in the ordinary sense of the word, a methodical man.

Early in the afternoon an unlooked-for visitor took his place among
those waiting in the outer room. Jacob hastened to give him the chair of
precedence, and announced his name to Shagarach, then in closet
conference with an honest-appearing bookkeeper, whose acquittal on a
charge of forgery he had just procured.

"I will see Mr. Rabofsky next," said the lawyer to Jacob.

The man so called was a short, bulky Hebrew, of 60-odd winters (one
would prefer reckoning his years by the more rigorous season). His nose
was like an owl's beak and his beard spread itself luxuriantly over his
face, plainly undefiled of the scissors. The hair was indeterminately
reddish and gray and his eyes were the color of steel. Shagarach bowed
him into his private room, the caller strutting like one accustomed to
homage.

Although the door was closed behind him as usual, Rabofsky glanced
suspiciously around and spoke in the Hebrew jargon--that grafting of
foreign idioms on a German patois which his tribe has carried all over
eastern Europe, and latterly, via Hamburg, into the cities of America.

"It is a long time since we have met, kinsman Shagarach," he said.

"A long time since I have had that honor," replied the lawyer, bowing
with the Hebrew's respect for age.

"Not since your respected father's funeral, I believe. He was one of my
friends, whose memory always remains to uplift me--a glory to our race
and religion."

"My respected father's friends are my friends to the end of my days."

Shagarach's father had been a rabbin or expounder of the sacred books.
Great was the scandal when Rabbi Moses' son abandoned daily attendance
at the synagogue and gave himself over to the ways, though not to the
society, of the gentiles. His mother, with whom he lived, still kept up
the observances of the law, baking the unleavened bread at the paschal
season and purchasing the flesh only of the lawfully butchered ox. Her
son neither praised nor blamed, but she knew he was no longer of
Israel's sects; not even of the mystical Essenes, among whom his father
might be counted, and whose study is the unpronounceable name of God.
Others of his people who lacked a mother's indulgence knew this, and it
was rarely that one of the orthodox children of Israel brought his
worldly troubles to Shagarach.

"Your health is strong under Jehovah, I trust," continued Simon
Rabofsky.

"Have you come to inquire about my health?" asked Shagarach. The old
man's prelude, beginning so fitfully and far away, threatened to prolong
itself interminably.

"Nay, a small affair of consultation which it shall be richly worth your
while to advise upon," answered the other, craftily.

"State the facts with brevity and clearness."

"Speedily, kinsman Shagarach, speedily." Again he looked cautiously
around. "You are aware that out of the savings of my days of hard labor
I occasionally permit the use of small sums to my friends."

"You are a money-lender? That I know. One of my clients desires a loan
of you. Which is it?"

"Not one of your clients, kinsman Shagarach."

"Who?"

"Mrs. Arnold."

Not a muscle of Shagarach's well-schooled countenance quivered, though
the old Jew's eyes almost pierced him as he uttered the name. Opposite
as the two men were in every trait, a substratum of affinity came out in
this deadlock of their glances. On both sides the same set lip, the same
immobile forehead, trained by centuries of traffic to conceal the
fermentation of the powerful brain within.

"I am not acquainted with the lady," said Shagarach.

"But you are acquainted with her estate under the will of her
brother-in-law."

Thoroughly aroused now to his subject, Rabofsky had abandoned his
roundabout manner and pushed his words rapidly forth in an indistinct
growl.

"Slightly so. State the facts."

"I will. Yesterday there came to my office a lady, all veiled, and asked
me for $10,000. 'That is a large sum,' said I. 'You have it,' said she,
'and I want it. I will pay for it.' 'Yes, indeed, you shall pay for it,'
I said to myself, but aloud I only asked her: 'What security could you
give me if I should go about among my friends and trouble them and
trouble myself for your service?' 'The security of my name,' she
answered, proudly, like a queen commanding her scullion. 'I am Mrs.
Arnold, widow of the banker, Henry Arnold, and a daughter of Ezra
Brewster of Lynn.' 'Oh, madam,' said I, 'I am Simon Rabofsky, husband of
Rebecca Rabofsky, and a son of the high priest Levi, who is twice
mentioned in the talmud; but I could not borrow $10,000 without pledging
something more substantial than my great ancestor's name.' Then she
sneered a little under her veil, the proud unbeliever, and took out her
rubies and diamonds and watch--a glittering heap. 'Keep these until I
return you the money,' she said. 'This is not enough,' said I, examining
the stones. 'Have you nothing more?' 'My son's interest in the estate of
the late Prof. Arnold will cover your paltry loan 500 times over.' 'I
will reflect upon the subject,' said I. 'Call again in two days.' So I
came to consult kinsman Shagarach."

"Well?"

"Has her son any interest in Prof. Arnold's estate?"

The question had come point-blank at last and Shagarach found himself
less prepared to answer it than he could have wished.

The Arnolds were financially embarrassed, possibly ruined, by Harry's
infatuation for the gaming-table. This was to be inferred from the
conversation with Kennedy over-heard by Aronson. Their real estate must
be mortgaged to the limit, perhaps beyond its shrunken value, or Mrs.
Arnold would not be begging a loan at a money-lender's shop. Family
jewels were invariably the last resort of declining fortunes unwilling
to abandon cherished appearances. Should he advise the loan and let
Harry cast it away, as he seemed likely to do, in his ambition to "break
the bank?" Such a step might place the young man in his power.

For the standing of the will was still uncertain. Evidence might be in
existence sufficient to uphold the destroyed document. In that event
Mrs. Arnold's promissory note to Rabofsky would be worth no more than
the value of the securities he held. Robert's statement was positive
that Harry was disinherited. This opened up a new view to Shagarach.

It would be fatal to the interests of Floyd if the will should be
ignored and half the estate allowed him as heir-at-law. Such a parade of
the profits of the incendiary's crime could not fail to rearouse a burst
of public indignation which would work its way into the jury-box.
Shagarach determined then and there to strive for the upholding of the
will, though it should mean the ruin of the Arnold fortune and the loss
to Robert Floyd of $5,000,000.

"I do not know," he answered. Something was due to Rabofsky.

"You have waited a long time. You have been thinking. What do you
think?"

"It is a difficult part of a difficult problem. My advice----"

"You will not charge your respected father's friend unreasonably?" put
in the Jew.

Shagarach knew that Rabofsky was a pharisee of the strictest sect and
had not been his father's friend. He knew also that reasonableness of
charge was not one of his own eccentricities, and probably would not be
exemplified in the loan to Mrs. Arnold. But he replied:

"Certainly not. I shall consider that when the work is done."

"Now, kinsman Shagarach."

"Not now. I cannot foresee the amount of labor, the number of
consultations, involved," said Shagarach, resolutely. "Do you wish my
advice?"

"I shall not pay the charge if it is unreasonable," growled Rabofsky.

"For the present I advise you to lend only what you can with safety on
the pledges. I will see Mrs. Arnold about the estate and confer with you
further after our interview."

At that moment Aronson opened the door, his eyes dancing with
excitement. He panted, as if he had just run upstairs.

"Meester Shagarach," he broke in, but stood awed in the presence of
Rabofsky, who was a potent man in the Ghetto.

"Escort Mr. Rabofsky to the stairs," said Shagarach, approaching
Aronson, so that the latter might have an opportunity to whisper his
message. He was none too soon, for a young man had already entered the
door of the outer room.

"Kennedy," whispered Aronson.

It was Harry Arnold's friend.




CHAPTER XIII.

BROWBEATING EXTRAORDINARY.


"Will you take in my card? I'm in a deuce of a rush," said Kennedy to
Aronson when the latter had dismissed Simon Rabofsky. Shagarach read his
name, daintily engraved in the form to which the weather-vane of fashion
had at that moment veered and was imperatively pointing. It introduced
"Mr. Arthur K. Foxhall."

"I will see the gentleman in a few minutes," said he. Shagarach must
have transacted an almost incredible amount of business in the interim,
for his waiting-room was cleared of clients when "Mr. Arthur K. Foxhall"
was at length admitted.

"I received this communication from you. My lawyer informs me that it
contains matter defamatory per se." He tossed a letter down on the table
at which Shagarach was sitting, with his arms folded as usual. "But
before taking action on the matter I thought I would give you an
opportunity to explain."

"The note is in English, is it not?" said Shagarach.

"It might pass for such," replied young man supercilious.

"Then it needs no further explanation. The sooner you and your lawyer
begin your action the better pleased I shall be." Shagarach began
writing a letter coolly, as if the matter were at an end, but his
visitor, either in nervousness or anger, tapped the polished tip of his
shoe with his cane. It was certainly a most aggressive-looking weapon,
with its knob carved into a scowling bulldog's head.

"Gentlemen"--he emphasized the word--"men of honor," he paused again,
"do not use language of others which they cannot defend, either before
the courts of law or by giving personal satisfaction."

"Gentlemen and men of honor do not fabricate lies after taking a solemn
oath to tell nothing but the truth," answered Shagarach, without
glancing up from the note he was scribbling.

"The third person protects you. You use the coward's refuge, innuendo,
because you dare not address the charge to me directly."

Shagarach picked up his letter, which the visitor had thrown down.

"I have taken particular pains to be direct as well as explicit over my
own signature. I find that I have accused you, Arthur Kennedy Foxhall,"
he emphasized the middle name, though it was only initialed in the
address, "of deliberate perjury in the case of Commonwealth vs. Bail. My
letters do not as a rule require marginal annotations or parol addition
to make their meaning clear, and I am credited with sufficient prudence
to foresee their consequences before writing them."

Shagarach folded his arms again and his great eyes pierced Foxhall--or
Kennedy as he was generally called. It was the family name of a rich
relative who had adopted and supported him.

"No," he added, slowly, "this is hardly a case for prosecution or for
personal satisfaction. The duello is out of date."

"My valet might object to the opponent I assigned him," said the
self-styled gentleman and man of honor. Shagarach's retort was swift,
yet uttered without the twitch of an eyelash, as though he were simply
recalling his visitor to the original business.

"His master lied in order to prove an alibi for Charles Munroe----"

Kennedy's chalky face flushed faintly.

"If the sword is out of fashion the cane is not," he cried, lifting his
formidable bulldog.

"The principal witness against my client in the Bail case," continued
Shagarach, raising his voice and controlling Kennedy with his eyes, "and
himself the beneficiary of the check which my client was accused of
forging."

"You got him off. That was enough. Are you trying to blackmail us for a
heavier fee?"

"The case was a conspiracy instigated by Charles Munroe and abetted by
his friends, among whom Arthur Kennedy Foxhall was the most conspicuous
for his zeal."

"You scum of a shyster! Do you think you can jew me into a dicker?"

Shagarach arose and walked to the window. He was not an equestrian, but
natural perception taught him the useful rule to turn his horse's head
when he starts to run away. Facing suddenly about, he said:

"I am a Jew, true. Perhaps that is why I do not poison myself with
opium."

The young man's cheek grew pale again. The cane dropped and he sunk in
his chair.

"Am I to be prosecuted for that also?" The anger in his tones had
flickered away to a feeble peevishness. "How do you know?"

"Because you are wearing a light overcoat with the mercury at 80,"
answered Shagarach, who had glanced at the thermometer in his window.
"Because you have the glazed eye of a man in fever, and because you lie
like an oriental!"

This time Kennedy made no protest against the insult. He was succumbing
to the strain placed upon his shattered nerves by the remorseless man
across the table.

"There is your cause of action," said Shagarach, tossing back his
letter. Again he dipped his pen in the ink preparing to write.

"What do you want of me?" asked Kennedy.

"Nothing," Shagarach had half-filled the sheet. He was stamping the
envelope when the next question slowly came.

"Why do you follow up the matter? Your client is safe?"

"But the community is no longer safe when perjurers strut about,
masquerading as the sole guardians of honor."

He folded his arms once more and looked straight at his man. In another
the gesture might seen theatrical, but it was Shagarach's natural
attitude in thought, like the bowed head and lowered eyes of the
philosopher burrowing into the depths of things, or the uplifted gaze of
the poet leaving earth for the stars and sunset. The lawyer's interests
lay in the horizontal plane, and the faces of fellow-men were his study.

"Yes, I am reputed inexorable to perjurers. It is true. They rarely
escape me unpunished. As a consequence, witnesses prefer to tell me the
truth, which is an advantage to my clients, of whose interests I am the
devoted servitor."

"And you will ruin me to gratify this--this----"

"I will procure your indictment for perjury and conspiracy in the case
of Commonwealth vs. Bail."

Kennedy trembled like one with an ague. But stronger men than he had
yielded as abjectly to Shagarach. He was a blood of high standing, with
a fortune as well as a reputation to lose. The chances of a felon's
succeeding to the property of old Angus Kennedy, the millionaire, who
had adopted him, were relatively slight.

"What is the penalty for perjury?" he asked, in a random way, as if at a
loss what to say or do.

"Imprisonment at hard labor."

"It is not punishable by fine?"

"Never."

There was a pause, broken only by the rustling of Aronson's papers in
the outer room. Then Shagarach spoke.

"You have an appointment with Harry Arnold for next Wednesday evening."

Kennedy started up. His smooth face grew cadaverous and the helpless
look of a kneeling suppliant came into his eyes, which were riveted on
the great, wide orbs of his tormentor.

"At a gambling resort," continued Shagarach.

"I am not a gambler," Kennedy's voice was hollow, his expression
piteous. Shagarach studied him a moment. Probably he was speaking the
truth. The evil passions are jealous and absolute monarchs. Seldom does
more than one of them reign at a time.

"But Harry Arnold is."

"Harry is plunging heavily."

Shagarach was satisfied at last. An adequate motive for Harry's deed was
clearly in view. It was not the most heinous crime which had been
committed to gratify the gamester's passion.

"I wish to be with you on that occasion."

"It will be hard," answered Kennedy, his face clouded with consternation
and a torrid flush of something like shame sweeping over it. "The
Dove-Cote is too well guarded."

"The Dove-Cote!" Shagarach was betrayed into an ejaculation of surprise.
This was the "Tough-Coat" which Aronson's imperfect articulation had
disguised.

"It may be hard, but it is not impossible."

"Not impossible, no."

"Well-known men are seen there at times?"

"Oh, yes."

Kennedy smiles.

"And your escape from prison depends upon my obtaining entrance."

The smile had faded away.

"Why do you wish to be there?"

"My reasons are my own. However, I will make a limited confidant of you.
I am at work upon a cause which logical study does not perfectly
elucidate. That frequently happens. I must see my man off his guard,
when he is most himself. My visit to the Dove-Cote will be a
psychological study."

"They will compel me to vouch for your good faith."

"You may do so. Nothing seen or heard by me there will ever be revealed.
I go, as I have told you, to study a soul, not to gather facts. The
facts are already mine."

"Where shall I call for you?"

"Here."

"At 8 o'clock?"

"Very well. There is one condition attached to our bargain. You shall
not reveal this appointment to Harry Arnold."

"He will be there----"

"But he does not know me. We probably shall not meet. Other--gentlemen,
as you call them--will be there."

"Miss Barlow," said Aronson, at this moment opening the door.

Kennedy had arisen to go, but turned curiously when he heard the sweet
voice from without.

"Only a moment, Mr. Shagarach."

The lawyer stepped out and conferred with her. She had run down in her
lunch hour, full of a new project which she burned to carry out, but
like everything else, she had thought it best first to submit it to
Shagarach. His approval was given coolly, she thought.

"Some one of the park policemen may have seen him."

"Possibly."

"If not, how can you explain those four hours of forgetfulness--I mean,
of course, to the satisfaction of a jury?"

"It is not unprecedented. I have an explanation, or the germ of one.
However, pursue your inquiries. They may prove of value. And, when you
visit Floyd, occasionally wear a water lily."

"Why?"

"It was the flower he brought you that evening."

Emily caught the impertinent stare of the manikin within just as she was
turning to leave.

"Understand, Kennedy," said Shagarach, "if Arnold is informed of this
agreement, directly or indirectly, our contract is broken and I will
spare no pains to lodge you where you belong."

His tone made the weakling shudder.

"Why do you desire to conceal it from Harry?" he asked, obstinately.

"Draw what inference you choose."

Shagarach returned to his desk and Emily was uneasily aware that the
youth whom she had seen in his office passed her twice in the crowd
while she was making her way back to the studio. But Arthur Kennedy
Foxhall was too perturbed that day to practice with success even the
easy arts of the professional lady-killer. His pursuit of Emily only
registered on his memory a face which was to haunt him in his drug-fed
dreams.




CHAPTER XIV.

GNAWING OF THE RAT'S TOOTH.


"Hello, Bobbs," called the solitary cracksman. "Put your hear to the
chink and let's 'ave a palaver."

The "chink" was that hollow spot in the rear of the cell, where by
pressing his ear against the wall Floyd could hear communications from
Dobbs, inaudible to the rest of the prisoners.

Robert wondered not a little at the persistent friendliness of the
fellow. He felt conscious of lacking the touch of comradeship. He might
even be called ascetic, were not the stigma precluded by his passion for
music and his love of landscape. Long botanical tramps with his uncle
had given him an acute feeling for the moods of nature, and in his
violin playing a deep sensibility found outlet through the practiced and
sensitive fingertips. But in general he had little palate for the
bouquet and effervescence of life, and was credited, therefore, with
less readiness of sympathy than his cousin, who responded quickly to
all fleeting impressions of pleasure.

While Harry, as adjutant of his crack cadets, was seen prancing on
parade in all the bravery of gold lace, his sword hilt resting on his
saddle, his mustaches twisted to the curl of an ostrich feather, a
masterpiece of poise and splendor, Robert would be found in dun
civilian's garb, shoulder to shoulder with the multitude on the
sidewalk, studying the significance of the pageant. This strenuousness
acted as a bar to popularity. Harry could count twenty friends to
Robert's one. People called him by his given name at the second or third
meeting. Women, in particular, circled about him like moths about a
taper. But Floyd, who shunned no man's eye, sought no woman's. This may
have been why the one girl to whom he had given his heart believed his
nature to be of sterling gold.

There was much in the prison life to quicken the thoughts of so serious
an observer, but all his attempts to record the impressions had ended in
failure. He soon realized that no man can at once live and write. Our
deeper experiences need to be mellowed by distance, just as we must back
away to a certain focus before we can feel the sentiment of a painting.
There was nothing left but to bide his time as patiently as possible,
occasionally beguiling the long hours by conversation with Dobbs.

This scoundrel had an unctuous manner which was hard to resist. His
quaint, infectious chuckle and preeminence in crime made him a favorite
among the inmates of the ward--a popularity which he generously used to
secure for Robert a certain immunity from insult. The young man could
not help feeling grateful for this. Besides, the man's incurable asthma,
which he attributed himself to "hexposure to cold night blarsts in the
performance of perfessional duties," entitled him to sympathy. Indeed,
he was often removed to the hospital for days at a time. During these
intervals Robert remarked the cessation of a curious grating noise which
seemed to come from his neighbor's cell.

"Blood's thicker than water, Bobbs. You and Hi are Henglish, you know.
These 'ere bloomin' coves get red-'eaded over nothing. Don't catch me
mutineerin' and violatin' the rules. Ho, no."

This was true. So far as outward behavior went, Dobbs was an exemplary
prisoner.

"By the way, Dobbs, my name is Floyd," said Robert.

"Ho, you don't mind bein' called Bobbs, chummy. That's cute for Robert.
Hi found out your name. We hall know wot you're jugged for. It's harson,
eh?"

"Yes."

"'Ow did you set it?"

"I am as innocent of the charge as you are." Robert's tone was curt. He
felt vexed to be the subject of discussion among this crew.

"That's just wot I told the judge, chummy, w'en ee politely hasked me if
Hi 'ad anything to say. But it didn't work, chummy. Hi'm a-winkin' at
you, Bobbs."

The invisible wink probably expressed incredulity, but Robert did not
care to debate his own case with his neighbor.

"Hi knows it's a delicate matter, and some folks Hi wouldn't trust,
neither. But Dobbs is your friend, Bobbs, and ready to prove ee's true
blue. Do you know I like the sound o' them two names. Dobbs and Bobbs.
Suppose we go into business together.

     "DOBBS AND BOBBS
       "ROBS FOBS.

"'Ow's that for a partnership sign?"

Dobbs exploded in a paroxysm of laughter and coughing over his own
cleverness as a rhymester. The fit was continued so long that his
neighbors began to protest in their ungentle fashion.

"Say, Dobbs, get into your coffin, quick," cried one. The same whose
voice sounded familiar to Robert though he was unable to place it. It
was a thick, uncouth utterance, as though the speaker's natural brogue
were assisted by the presence of a ball of yarn.

"'Old your bloomin' breath for Longlegs," answered Dobbs.

The passage of the hated turnkey caused a diversion in his favor.
Longlegs was a tall man of remarkably bony strength. The convicts were
only collectively brave against him. When not gathered in packs they
avoided his stern visage as a lone wolf slinks away from the hunter. His
right name was Hawkins, but almost nobody within these precincts escaped
a sobriquet. Warden Tapp was "the Pelican," Turnkey Gradger was "Gimp"
and a particularly vile denizen went under the name of "Parson." Dobbs
explained his own escape quaintly.

"You see, chummy, Dobbs his a nickname halready. You can't forshorten it
no more."

The visitor who accompanied Hawkins shared the unpopularity of his
escort.

"Whoop, da, da, da!"

"He's a yellow aster."

"Lend me your monocle, Cholly, and don't be wude."

But the tall, blond-bearded man with the monocle sauntered leisurely
along, looking into every cell until he reached the end of the corridor.
Then he turned back and stopped before Dobbs, while Hawkins clanked his
keys beside him.

"If God writes a legible hand, that man's a villain," he quoted from the
old-time actor; "what name do you go by?"

"Bill Dobbs."

"Hand me out that pen and ink and I'll draw your picture."

"W'ere?"

"On your thumb nail. The right one. That's it."

It seemed scarcely half a minute before Hawkins was heard exclaiming:

"That's a stunning likeness."

"Take away this 'ere lookin'-glass o' mine, Longlegs, and bestow it on
the poor. Wot use 'ave Hi for it w'en Hi carry my hown himage on the
hend of my bloomin' thumb?"

"You've a face of great power and cunning," said the artist, "but
there's one thing you lack."

"Wot's that?"

"Reverence. Some day I'll use you for a mask of Iago that I've had in
mind."

"Thanks. Wot's your name, stranger?"

"Tristram March." It was our artist friend, rummaging for types in this
out-of-the-way corner.

"You've a sort of a soft lip about you and a delicate horgan of hodor.
But there's one thing you lack?"

"What?"

"Starch. Hi'm a-thinkin' Hi'll copy my make-up after you next time Hi
play 'Amlet to the queen's Ophelia."

Tristram's good-natured laugh was the last thing Robert heard as he
sauntered away.

A sculptor, friends called him if pressed for a definition. Yet in truth
he had never yet executed a figure of life size, being a modern instance
of talent without ambition, dispersing and dividing its strength. He
modeled, painted, rhymed, composed--a many-faceted reflector of
impressions; but everything he did was done by halves and the most
finished of his products were only brilliant sketches. His sister
Rosalie's single gift, besides her beauty (which, to be sure, entered
into it as a primary element), came to her less by nature than by ardent
aspiration. But critics had compared her Rosalind to a perfect rose,
blown into a bulb of glass; and she was still a patient learner,
standing tiptoe on the vestibule of her art, with an untold future
before her.

"'Ow did Hi begin?" said the cracksman, when the confusion had subsided.

Robert was again at the chink, like some penitent whispering through a
grating to his father confessor. "Hi never began. Hi was born wicked.
Wicked Willie they called me w'en Hi wasn't old enough to toddle halone.
And 'ere's 'ow Hi earned it, Bobbs."

"How?"

"You see, my mother, who was a hinnocent woman and a Christian, took me
out on 'er harms to see the lord mayor's procession, the lord mayor o'
Lunnon wot 'as all the wittles to eat, you know. And w'ile they was all
preoccupied admirin' 'is lordship's gold buttons, wot was Wicked Willie
a-doin' of but leanin' forward in 'is mamma's harms and pluckin' a
hear-ring w'ich ee liked, hout of a grand lady's hear. 'Ow!' says the
lady, w'en it 'urt; and Wicked Willie 'ad 'is 'ands slapped, w'ich Hi
say ee richly deserved, seein' as 'ow ee bungled the bloomin' job."

"From the cradle up you were a thief," said Robert, sadly.

"Ho, them bantam games don't count."

"When did you first begin professionally?"

"Do you count a gunniff a perfessional in this 'ere country?"

"A gunniff? What's that?"

"Don't you know wot a gunniff is, Bobbs? W'y. Hi'm amazed. Hi'll 'ave to
present chummy with a Century dictionary in sixteen volumes w'ich we'll
be hable to do w'en we get out of 'ere, w'ich won't be long. Hi'm
a-winkin.'"

All the time that he spoke Robert heard a low scraping noise, softer
than the rasping he had noticed in the evenings. Apparently it was close
to his ear.

"A gunniff is a juvenile institution peculiar to our bloomin' hold
Hengland."

"Leave out some of your bloomings, won't you, especially about England."

"W'y not, chummy? Ain't it in the dic? Is it a wulgar word?"

Robert did not reply, but he thought how many words as sacred and
beautiful as this have been profaned to foul uses or cheapened to the
vapidity of a Frenchman's "Mon Dieu."

"Hi beg your bloomin' pardon, Bobbs. If it's wulgar, Hi drop it, and
with your leave Hi'll resume my hinterrupted hautobiography."

"You call yourself a gunniff?"

"Gunniff in general, but more particularly Hi was a snatcher, w'ich
takes precedence of the mob by reason of the difficulty of 'is duties,
of the taker as well as of the blokie and the moke."

"What's the English for blokie and moke?"

"The Henglish? W'y, Hi'm amazed. Don't tell me you bilked 'em all so
'andily on settin' that 'ouse afire. Hi won't believe it of a chummy as
hasks me wot a blokie and a moke is."

"I never heard the words before."

"W'y, the mokes do the scrappin' wen the gent 'as been relieved of 'is
pocketbook, w'ich is too heavy for 'im to carry, by the willin' and
accommodatin' little snatcher, w'ich was me."

"You began as a pickpocket?"

"Pickpocket? Wot does that mean? Hi never 'eard that word. We were
hexpress boys. Is pickpocket the bloomin' Americanese for that? Hi'm
a-winkin' at you, Bobbs."

This conclusion was invariably the prelude to a burst of laughter, which
was so droll and self-satisfied that it put Robert in good humor in
spite of everything.

"Four of us, Bobbs, and that makes a mob. First we picked out our gent,
always a hold gent or a bloomin' swell, a-standin' in the crowd. Four of
us playin', rompin', friskin', about 'im, as hinnocent little fellows
will, bless 'em all, w'en, hall of a sudden, one bumps up against the
bloomin' gent's pocket not with 'is 'ands, you know? The bloomin' gent
might fancy ee was a hobject of hinterest to us if ee used 'is 'ands,
w'ich ee hisn't, ho, no! That's the blokie wot does the bumpin'. Ee
wears a thin shirt and a huncommonly hintelligent spine w'ich can feel a
'ard lump in a gent's pocket surprisin'."

"The blokie ascertains where his purse is located?"

"And the snatcher, w'ich was Wicked Willie, relieves 'im of it gently."

"How?"

"'Ow? By makin' a hopportunity. There's nothin' in this world like
makin' a hopportunity for yourself, Bobbs. And if two little fellers get
a-scrappin' and jostle a hold gent hover, and a crowd comes and the hold
gent gets hinterested in separatin' the little fellers, and givin' them
a moral lecture, 'ow's ee a-goin' to know w'ere 'is valuables went,
unless ee reaches to present 'em with a 'alf-crown apiece, w'ich he
don't."

"Is that common in London?"

"Run into the ground, Bobbs, completely wulgarized. No self-respectin'
gent would bring up 'is bantams in that line nowadays. But hafterward,
w'en Hi was alightin' my 'Avana cigars with the old lady's ten-pun
notes, Hi always looked back on my rompin's with the mob as the
beginnin's, 'umble but 'onorable, of a great and useful career."

During the talk it had seemed to Robert that the cracksman's voice was
coming nearer.

"What's making that noise, Dobbs?"

"Wot noise, chummy?"

"That little scraping."

"You can 'ear it?"

"It's close to the chink."

"That's a rat's tooth gnawin'. Hi'm a-winkin' at you, Bobbs."

"Are you cutting into the wall?"

"Look 'ere, chummy. Dobbs 'as given hall the confidence so far, and
Bobbs 'as given none. 'Ow is Dobbs to know Bobbs is true blue?"

This was a puzzler. Robert did not feel prepared to abet prison-breach
yet, if that was the cracksman's aim, though his own feeling toward the
authorities was anything but submissive.

"Hi'm 'urt, Bobbs. Hi've a sensitive nature and a large bump of
curiosity, both of w'ich is offended by my chummy's lack of confidence
in me. But Hi'll prove Hi'm true blue, wotever Bobbs says. Chummies is
chummies and bobbies is bobbies, there's the distinction Hi draw. Do you
'ear the tooth?"

The gnawing sound became louder at Robert's ear.

"That's a hinstrument Hi hown w'ich Hi wouldn't show to the Pelican
'imself, but Bobbs shall see it and feel it if he likes."

"Is it a file?"

"A wery little file."

"How did you smuggle it in?"

"Just in a little plug o' smoke, Bobbs, w'ich a friend sent me for my
'ealth, w'ich is poor, as my bloomin' associates around me 'ere
frequently observe. Nobody'd look for a little rat's tooth laid
crossways in a little plug o' smoke, with the 'andle alongside of it,
would they, Bobbs?"

"Are you sawing the bars?"

"Ham I? It's all done."

"You've sawed them through?"

"And poor little hinnocent Bobbs never 'eard me."

Dobbs went off in a peal of laughter.

"But how do you hide the cuts in the bars when any one comes?"

"Wot'll stop a leak in a gas-pipe? Soap. Wot'll 'ide a slice in a sawed
bar? Gum."

"Gum?"

"You see, chummy, the wentilation is poor in 'ere. There's a green
mildew on my floor and the bloomin' spiders is too silent to be sociable
company. But you never 'eard me 'ollerin', Bobbs."

Indeed, he always lay low during the outbreaks. His methods were more
secretive. He was the villain by trade.

"But my sympathy is with the bloomin' mutineers hall the time. So I pick
away with my rat's tooth w'en the others is 'ollerin' and even green
little hinnocent Bobbs cawn't 'ear me."

The rasping sound illustrated his meaning.

"Ee won't trust me, but Hi trust 'im. We'll see who can keep a secret,
and who leaks."

There was a sound as if something had been slid out of the wall on the
other side and of a sudden Dobbs' whisper became startlingly distinct.

"Honly a few minutes, Bobbs. Hi 'old the plaster in my pockets, and the
rat's tooth in my fingers w'ile Hi gnaw and gnaw." The tool began
working rapidly and dexterously. In a short time Dobbs spoke again:

"Tap 'em till you feel it 'ollow, and shove on the 'ollow spot."

Robert tapped the wall.

"Shove 'arder."

Robert gave a stiff push with his elbow. The brick was loosened and gave
way.

"Now, catch it, chummy."

Slowly the Englishman shoved the brick toward Robert, till it protruded
from his side of the cell. It would have fallen on the bed if Robert had
not caught it. After the brick came a hand and the striped sleeve of a
convict's arm. It was a characteristic hand, broad, with spatulate
fingernails and a black star on the fleshy ball between forefinger and
thumb. But the cracksman must have fallen out with his own likeness as
Iago, for his thumb-nail was clean as a whistle. Between the fingers lay
a tiny file of rarest workmanship. Its teeth were set almost as sharply
as those of a saw, and the steel was tempered to the hardness of
adamant.

"'Ow's that for a tooth, Bobbs?"

Floyd took it for a moment, but a step was heard coming along the
corridor. It was Longlegs.

"Quick, Bobbs, put back the brick."

Dobbs' voice grew hoarse with excitement. Robert replaced the block on
his side, and heard the convict doing the same on the other. As Longlegs
passed, Dobbs fell into a tremendous spasm of coughing. The turnkey
hastened to the end of the corridor, jangling his keys as if deriding
the derision with which he was greeted all the way. He had run his
gantlet too often to heed the jeers and grimaces he met. There was a
sound as if he were unlocking the farther door and then relocking it
from the outside.

"That's a very useful cough," whispered Dobbs to Floyd. It had ceased
all of a sudden. "It drives undesirable acquaintances about their
business and it procures me admission to the 'ospital, w'ich is a
sociable and communicative quarter. Hi'm a-winkin'."

Robert was beginning to understand things. The cracksman was
malingering. It was through the hospital that he communicated with his
friends outside.

"And Hi 'ope that Dobbs 'as given ample proof to Bobbs that ee his
deservin' of 'is confidence."

Robert looked down and started at the temptation before him. The file
lay in his hand.




CHAPTER XV.

A TRIP TO HILLSBOROUGH.


The life of Emily Barlow during this balmy month of summer might be
described as an oscillation in criss-cross between her home and the
studio in one direction, and Shagarach's office and the state prison in
the other. For in spite of Robert's protest she had returned several
times to pour the sunlight of her sympathy into his cell, and the
convicts, either because the latent manhood in them went out to a brave
girl doing battle for her lover, or because Dobbs had exercised his
influence in her behalf, offered no repetition of their first affront.

The point of intersection between these two much-traveled routes was a
certain down-town corner, where Emily was already becoming a familiar
figure to the policeman who escorted ladies over the crossing. A more
disagreeable feature of her passage of this point was the frequent
appearance there of Mr. Arthur Kennedy Foxhall. But Emily, like other
golden-haired girls, was accustomed to rude glances from men, and had
learned to tolerate them as we accept turbid weather, muddy streets and
the other unavoidable miseries of life.

She had been riding in the steam car fully fifteen minutes before she
could determine in what direction the hostile influence lay. It could
not be the mere uncertainty of her journey. Even if Bertha were not with
the Arnolds at Hillsborough, it did not follow that her sweetheart was
lost. At first broadly pervasive, like an approaching fog, the malign
presence had gradually begun to locate itself near her, and it was with
a sudden shock, like the first splash of a long-delayed shower, that she
realized she was under observation from the passenger in front.

He had never turned around since they had left the station. To all
appearances he was buried in a magazine. There was not even a sidewise
position to indicate that he was keeping her within the field of his
vision. Yet Emily knew that every sense of the man was alert in her
direction, and that by a sort of diffused palpation, like that of the
blind, he was aware of her slightest gesture. She thought of moving back
to escape the oppression, or forward into another car. But the station
platforms on either side lay in full view of the windows, and she felt
that the relief would be only temporary. He would follow her out.

Who was the stranger? She was certain she had never seen his round,
shaven face before, yet she felt that it was some one whose fortunes
were bound in with hers, some one whom she would recognize, when his
name was uttered, as a familiar. All efforts to dispel this dim fear
were fruitless. She tried to gaze out at the skimming landscape, but
some subtle force gripped her muscles and turned her head to the front.
She closed her eyes, but the image still floated before her and she knew
it was there to thwart her purpose and work her lover harm.

Fully fifty minutes of the ride had been rendered wretched to Emily by
these doubts and fears, when the conductor entered to collect the
tickets for Hillsborough. The man in front seemed to jerk himself out of
his fit of absorption. He fumbled for his oblong blue card, on which
Emily espied the lettering "Hillsborough." But the hand which delivered
it struck a numbness in her heart. It was broad and fleshy, with the
fingernails which are said to betray the professional criminal, and a
star worked in black ink on the protuberance between forefinger and
thumb. Robert had described this peculiarity in his cell-acquaintance,
Bill Dobbs. If it were he, this was a strange situation in which to find
the solitary cracksman. Perhaps it was one of his "hospital days."

"Hillsborough! Hillsborough!" came the announcement from both ends of
the car, followed by the usual banging of doors. Emily started for the
rear exit, which was the nearer. Once alighted, she walked leisurely
forward along the platform. A side glance upward revealed Bill Dobbs
just leaving his seat and passing to the rear, exactly in her footsteps.
When he caught her eye he smiled. It was true. He was pursuing her. Her
spirits sank, and she did not quicken her pace. The engine stood
champing like an impatient horse beside her, for she was almost abreast
of the tender.

"All aboard!" the uniformed trainmen were crying. Emily glanced around.
Bill Dobbs was just entering the station door, apparently taking no more
notice of her than of the drivers soliciting his custom. But she knew
that her least movement was under his cognizance. With a quick jump she
placed her foot on the step, and, catching a conductor's hand, remounted
the moving train. A backward glance, as she sunk into her seat,
discovered Bill Dobbs sauntering up the road.

An interval of regret seized Emily when she reviewed her conduct calmly.
Had she, indeed, escaped some unknown danger? Or was she the victim of a
girl's foolish illusion? She was beginning to chide herself as a prey to
superstition when the realities of her predicament suddenly forced
themselves upon her by the reappearance of the conductor.

"What is the next station, please?"

"Elmwood."

"How far is that?"

"Two miles."

Two miles. To be carried two miles beyond Hillsborough into the
neighboring township! Possibly the Arnold estate lay midway between, but
it was more probable that she would be footsore and spent before she
reached the house where Bertha was supposed to be living. There was an
extra fare to pay, a brief whirling glimpse of woodland and meadow, and
then the engine slacked up again before a cottage-like, rustic station.

A circle of 12-year-olds desisted from their romp to watch the sweet
lady approaching them.

"Little boy, could you direct me to the Arnold mansion?" she said to the
oldest.

"Arnold mansion? Don't know any Arnolds round here."

"They live in Hillsborough. How far is that?"

"Oh, I know," put in a tot in tires. "That's the lady that has the
gardens way over on the Hillsborough line."

"'Bout five miles from here, isn't it, Chester?" said another.

"Can't I get a carriage to drive me there?" Emily felt equal to five
miles or twenty, now that she was once started, but if feasible she
would have preferred to let some four-footed creature do the walking.

"Well," said Chester, "you see the coach is up at the academy and I
guess it won't come down till the game is over. You might get a wagon."

"Oh, well, somebody may give me a ride. Which way does Hillsborough
lie?"

"Follow this road straight along, till you come to the bridge. That's
the Hillsborough line and I guess anybody over there will tell you."

Emily thanked her guides and sped off on her long trudge. Behind her she
heard the boys' shrill chirps, mingled with the light soprano of
girlhood, running up and down the bright gamut of pleasure. How
melodious their joyous inflections were, compared with the harsh
syllables she was accustomed to hear from the children of the pavements.
How much richer and deeper this country stillness than the everlasting
murmur of the city, which makes silence only a figure of speech to the
dwellers within its walls.

But is not all silence figurative and relative, thought Emily, a mere
hint at some magnificent placid experience, only possible in its purity
to the inhabitants of outer space? Even the countryside was not still.
Plump sparrows, dusting themselves in the road, never ceased their
brawling. The shy brown thrush swerved across her path at intervals and
bubbled his song from the thickets. The meadowlark left his
tussock-hidden nest to greet the world proudly from the pasture rock,
and far away the phoebe's plaintive utterance of his lost love's name
pierced the sibilance of the trees.

"There's a loam for you," said an old gardener, spading an oval plot on
a lawn. His bulbs and potted sproutings were arranged at one side.
"Feel. 'Twouldn't soil a queen's hands. Dry as meal and brown as a
berry. Same for two feet down."

Emily took up a handful to please the old man. It crumbled between her
fingers like the soft brown sugar which grocers display in crocks,
though not, as youthful customers sometimes think, to be scooped and
paddled with by idle hands.

"I can see roses in that, miss," said the gardener, turning up a deep
spadeful for her inspection. But time was precious and she shortened the
commonplaces, breaking away toward Hillsborough.

All that was visible of Elmwood was a cluster of cottages about the
station and a few outlying farms. A brick building crowning its highest
hill was probably the academy to which her guides had referred. On both
sides the country opened out in great reaches of level fertility, groves
of dark trees rising at intervals where the pools lay that nourished
their roots. Now they sprung up by the roadside and overarched her with
drooping boughs.

Looking upward, as she walked, almost alone, Emily felt herself the
center of a greater mystery, embracing, as it were, that in which her
sweetheart was entangled. Nights of vigil had begun to overstring her
nerves. That strange doubling of impressions which attacks us in such
moods, making a kind of mirage of the mind, came over her. Everything
about her seemed familiar, as old as her infancy, as the world itself.
Elmwood! She had babbled the name in her cradle days, her earliest
rambles had been through its grassy paths. Yonder silver-birch, whose
delicately scalloped foliage rose and drooped in long strings, as if the
foamy spurt of a fountain should be frozen in its fall, had it not
printed itself on her memory somewhere a thousand times before? The
three urchins passing her from behind, surely their faces were not
strange.

It may be Emily was right about the urchins and that there was no
mirage in her recollection of them. She had been present on the morning
when Ellen's body was found and they may have stood by her side in the
crowd.

"I'm stiff, Whistler," said one of them in the broad drawl of the city
gamin.

"Don't expect to be limber after ridin' twenty miles on a car truck, do
yer, Turkey? What place is this, anyway?"

"I'll stump yez to come over in the swamp and get some little frogs,"
said urchin number three, who was no other than our crabbed young
acquaintance, Toot Watts.

Emily wondered, as she saw them disappear down in the meadows, whether
they had really been her fellow-passengers all the way from the city.
How dingy they were! Not a point of color except the peachy cheeks of
Whistler and the golden glow at the end of Turkey's cigarette.

When she reached the academy playground she thought she must have
covered two miles. There was a game in progress between two baseball
clubs of rival academies and the sight of sportive youths and cheering
onlookers was welcome to her after so long a spell of solitude. She was
unhappily ignorant of the rudiments of that most scientific of games.
"Fly" and "grounder" to her were simply undistinguishable terms of a
barbaric technical jargon. But the sparkle of eager eyes and the motion
of active limbs, set off by graceful costumes, was, perhaps, more
apparent to her than if appreciation of the spectacle had been
overwhelmed by interest in the match.

What breeding in the salute, in the very tones, when one of the
outfielders, chasing a hit out of bounds, begged pardon for jostling
against her ever so little. For a moment, admiring the liberal swing of
his arm, as he made the long throw home, though the most womanly of
women, she envied men the bodily freedom which they deny to their
sisters. Presumably the play was successful, for its result was greeted
with plaudits, and the club afield closed in toward the plate.

Beyond the ball ground, under a clump of willows, Emily was surprised
to come upon her three fellow-passengers once more. They must have cut
through the meadows on the other side of the academy. The grove made a
screen completely hiding them from the playground, and there was no one
else about. Against a rocky wall three bicycles were resting.

"Let's take a ride, fellers," said the one who had been addressed as
"Turkey."

"Cheese it. There's somebody comin'," protested the Whistler.

"Come on. I'm sick of this. Them fellers can't play a little bit."

"On'y a little ride around. They'll never know," added Toot.

Turkey boldly led the way, mounting like a veteran. Toot followed
quickly, and finally the Whistler, finding himself abandoned by his
comrades, swallowed his scruples and joined them. His was a girl's
wheel, but he overtook his companions easily.

"Boys! Stop!" Emily found herself calling out a remonstrance. All three
turned their heads at this shrill command, but it only made them speed
away more rapidly. The road was downhill here, and the pedals whirled
around like the crank-shaft of a flying locomotive. Should she turn back
and give the alarm? It was a good stretch for limbs already weary and
with an unknown number of miles before them. Besides, this was probably
nothing worse than a boyish prank. If only city-street boys were like
country-academy boys, she sighed. Perhaps they would be if they all had
natty uniforms to wear and a bicycle apiece. No doubt the gamins would
soon turn about, although they acted as though her outcry had frightened
them; and the last she saw of them they were pedaling for dear life
toward the city, twenty miles away.

Circumstances were to be greatly altered when Emily met these young
racers again.




CHAPTER XVI.

STAMPEDE AND AVALANCHE.


Is there in all the world a sight more wholesome and comforting to the
tired wayfarer than a loaded hay-cart? When Emily spied one ahead of her
she felt a little throb of pleasure in her bosom and at once hastened
her step to overtake it. The farmer was asleep on the seat, with a
sundown over his face.

"Perhaps I had better wake him," thought Emily. "Won't your horse run
away?"

"Run away?" The peaked old face was wide open of a sudden. "Guess not,
miss, not with that load on. Dobbin ain't no pony. Step aboard? How far
are you baound?"

"I am looking for the Arnold mansion."

"Arnold mansion? This is just the kerridge you want to take. Mrs.
Arnold's a putty close neighbor of aours."

Grateful for the offer, Emily climbed into the creaky seat under the
fragrant, overhanging load.

"You b'long in Foxtaown, I s'pose?"

"No. I'm from the city."

"All the way from the city? Well, I declare. I thot I knew all the
Elmwood leddies. I s'pose things are putty brisk in taown these days?"

"Oh, yes. We always have plenty of excitement. Too much, I fear. Some of
us miss the quiet you enjoy out here among the meadows."

The rustic meditated upon this a moment, chewing a straw.

"Speakin' of medders, haow's hay sellin'?"

"I don't know, really," answered Emily. She was not informed on this
utilitarian side of the subject.

"Just been shavin' my ten-acre lot daown the road. Did most o' the
mowin' ourselves, me and Ike, that's my brother, with the Loomis boy.
But he ain't good for much except forkin' it on. You wouldn't s'pose
there was a clean ton o' hay on this wagon, would you?"

"No, indeed," answered Emily. This was true. She would not have ventured
any supposition at all as to the weight of the hay.

"Good medder-grass, too."

"Do you live in Hillsborough?"

"Aour haouse jest abaout straddles the line, but wife goes to meetin' in
Elmwood."

"I suppose she likes the services better?"

"Nao. You see the Elmwood parson takes all our eggs, and wife thinks
'twouldn't do to spile a payin' customer. Woa! Here comes wife's nephew,
Silas Tompkins."

"Evenin' uncle," nodded the young man in the buggy.

"Evenin', Silas. Been down to the pasture?"

"Yaas."

"Well, haow are the oats lookin'?"

"Comin' putty green, Uncle Silas," drawled the other, speeding by.

Emily was wondering if a life of agricultural labor always gives such a
vegetable cast to people's minds, when a clatter of hoofs behind caused
her to turn her head. The cavalier was clothed in velvet of a soft, rich
bulrush-brown. Just as he passed them his eye caught something afar and
he shouted to the farmer:

"Here's a runaway! Hug the right of the road!"

They were turning a bend, but across the angle through the bushes a pair
of coal-black horses could be seen heading toward them. The farmer's
jerking at the reins was comical but effective. In a twinkling he had
his nag squeezed against the wall which bounded the narrow road.

"Get up, Aladdin!" whispered the rider, and the horse, a powerful
roadster or steeplechaser, yet with limbs like a stag's, cantered
forward, as if to meet the wild blacks. But suddenly his master turned
him about and began trotting gently back, keeping to the other side of
the road and turning his head over his left shoulder toward the
approaching runaways. As they slewed around the bend their coachman was
flung from his seat into the grass border of the roadside.

"Rosalie!" exclaimed the waiting cavalier, cutting his horse over the
flanks. It bounded away abreast of the team. Emily remembered a vague
whirl of spangled reins and a frightened face of rare beauty blushing
through its silver veil.

"He's killed!" she cried, dismounting and running toward the coachman.
But the grass was like a cushion in its midsummer thickness, and he had
already picked himself up uninjured, save for bruises and a tattered
sleeve.

"It was the gobbler frightened 'em," he said, starting off at a lame
dog-trot after the retreating carriage. Emily turned just in time to
witness a rare exhibition of coolness and skill. The chestnut had kept
abreast of the blacks with ease. At the right moment his rider, clinging
to the saddle and stirrup like a cossack, reached over with his left
hand and caught the reins of the foaming pair. Then gradually he slowed
up his steeplechaser, jerking powerfully at the bridles. The added
weight was too much for the runaways to pull, and all three were ambling
peacefully when they faded from sight in a cloud of dust.

"I guess we'll start for hum," said the farmer. Emily was standing with
her finger on her lip, unconscious of his presence.

"Putty slick on a horse, ain't he?"

"Who?"

"Young Arnold. He kin stick on like a clothes-pin, I tell yew."

"Is that Harry Arnold?"

"'Tain't no one else."

Emily remembered how his expression had changed when he recognized the
lady in peril as "Rosalie," and felt like asking the farmer if he knew
her. But Griggs (she now learned his name) was prosing on about his new
barn, and she relapsed into silence. The rest of their road was an
avenue of elms. Through their interstices smiled the calm blue of the
late afternoon sky, tempered by contrast with the green of the foliage.
It was the first time she had ever observed this rare harmony of colors.

"Woa! There!" said Griggs. "I'll set you daown here. The Arnolds' house
is up yonder over the hill. They ain't p'ticler friends of aours, but
the help come over and buy wife's cream."

"Have they a girl in help named Bertha Lund?"

"I s'pose wife knows the women-folks. I don't," replied the old man,
energetically reaching for his rake.

"A new servant, this is."

As if to answer her question, there came a loud bark from the little
woody knoll on the right of the road, and a great St. Bernard came
bounding down. It was Sire, who had recognized Emily. She knew that he
had been left in Bertha's charge and probably the housemaid was behind
him.

"Sire! Sire!" her cheerful voice was heard calling through the
stillness. How fresh she looked with her soft country bloom and a golden
tan.

"Is it you, Miss Barlow?" cried Bertha, opening her eyes in amazement. A
cream pitcher in one hand revealed her errand, but Farmer Griggs was
already half-way to his new barn, which lay fifty yards off the left of
the road.

"Yes, Bertha," answered Emily, fondling Sire, who seemed almost to know
that she bore him a message from his master. "I have come all the way
out to meet you."

"How is poor Mr. Robert?"

"Not very well contented with his present quarters."

"He is still in jail? Ah, poor young man! What a shame! And Ellen gone,
too! It was the beginning of trouble for all of us when the old
professor died."

"It wasn't easy to find you, Bertha. You didn't leave your address with
Mrs. Christenson."

"Indeed I did not." Bertha gave an independent toss of her head. "I had
no wish to be chased by her and coaxed to come back, and I'm very well
satisfied where I am, with my $5 and light duties and out of the city
and as kind treatment as if I was a visitor."

Emily thought she might understand the reason of this bountiful
hospitality.

"Mr. Shagarach, the lawyer, who is defending Robert, suggested that I
come and see you. You were so near the fire when it broke out, he
thought that you might know something that would help our side."

"That I'll tell heartily. They sha'n't tie my tongue."

"You don't believe Robert set the fire?"

"No more than I did or Sire."

Emily looked at the dog, who was crouched before them. He had lifted his
head at the mention of his name.

"Ah, Sire, you know the solution of all this mystery, don't you? And
you'd tell it if you could."

Sire barked an answer to this appeal and turned his head away, blinking,
as old dogs do.

"But who could have done it, Bertha?"

"Nobody in all the world. It just happened, like the other fire before."

"Was there another fire before?" asked Emily, all eagerness.

"Two or three years ago we had a fire in the study."

"Tell me about it."

"Oh, the professor had just gone upstairs a minute and when I went in
the big waste basket was blazing up."

"There wasn't much damage then?"

"If I hadn't opened the window and thrown it out on the sidewalk the
whole house might have been burned. Why, the study was nothing but a
tinder-box with the books on the shelves and magazines and papers always
thrown about."

"After the fire had once started, I can see how it would spread. But the
mystery is, how did it start? You never followed the first fire up?"

"Indeed we did. The professor was careful to follow it up, but they
could find nobody then and they'll find nobody now. It was just the will
of heaven."

"I wish you could have told about this other fire at the examination,
Bertha."

"I had it in my mind to tell, but the little thread of a man made me so
cross with his nagging, it all flew out of my head."

"Robert--was Robert in the house when the other fire happened?"

"Yes. I remember calling him, and he flew downstairs four at a time and
stamped out the sparks on the carpet."

"What time of day was it?"

"I'm not good to remember time. It was daytime, I know."

"Forenoon or afternoon?"

Bertha's knitted forehead brought no clarity to her recollections.

"I've forgotten, Miss Barlow. I know it was the hot summer time, but
forenoon or afternoon, that's all gone from me now."

"But you will try to bring it back, Bertha? It may be important. Mr.
Shagarach is a wonderfully wise man who could build up a great
explanation out of a little thing like that. You will tell him all you
know if he comes to see you?"

"I'll be as free-spoken as I choose, and forty inspectors won't stop
me."

"Could you describe the study again, Bertha, just as it looked when you
were dusting it, with Robert standing over the hearth?"

"Why, you know the room, Miss Barlow--square, high-studded, with two
windows, the professor's desk at one and the bird cage before the other.
Shelves and books all round, hundreds of them, and magazines and papers
scattered about. Chairs, pictures, the safe and the professor's things
just as he left them--his slippers on the floor, his spectacles and
bible on the desk, his dressing-gown over the back of the arm-chair----"

"And a waste-basket?"

"Oh, yes, the big waste-basket always beside his desk. The professor had
so much writing to do."

"Was it full?"

"All full of black wrapping paper that came off of his books. The
professor got so many books."

"And his safe with the papers in it?"

"Nobody ever touched it but the professor. At least, I never meddled
with it."

Emily noticed the emphasis Bertha laid on the first person, but an
unwelcome interruption prevented further disclosures.

The knoll which Bertha and Sire had descended made a grade like the
pitch of an old gable roof. Toward the top a tempting tussock of clover
lay in sight, scenting the atmosphere and titillating the nostrils of
the horse attached to Farmer Griggs' hay-cart. Dobbin was ordinarily a
staid and trustworthy animal, who might be left alone for hours; but on
this occasion his carnal appetite overmastered his sense of duty and led
him gradually higher and higher up the grade toward the odorous herbage.
The first hint the two girls had of the peril which was imminent was
when they heard the voice of the farmer shouting from the barn.

Turning in that direction, they beheld him running toward them, hat in
hand, as if racing for a guerdon, and brandishing a pitchfork. Whether
they or some one else were the object of his outcries they could not in
the confusion of the moment determine. But the doubt was speedily
settled by the occurrence of the very catastrophe which Farmer Griggs
was hastening to avert.

Dobbin had just climbed within reach and was relishing the first morsel
of his stolen supper, when suddenly the top of the hay load, which was
tipped up to an exceedingly steep angle by his ascent of the knoll, slid
down like a glacier and deposited itself at the feet of the startled
girls.

But this was not all. From the midst of it the figure of a man, badly
shaken but unhurt, arose and straightened itself out.

Both girls gave a shriek in unison. Emily recognized, to her
astonishment and dismay, the face of her train companion, the supposed
Bill Dobbs. But Bertha's surprise was quickly converted into merriment.

"Why, Mr. McCausland, what a tumble!" she laughed, just as Farmer Griggs
arrived.




CHAPTER XVII.

REPORTING TO HEADQUARTERS.


"McCausland!"

Emily bit off the exclamation just a moment too late. This, then, was
the interesting convict who had tried to worm himself into Robert's
confidence. This was Shagarach's vaunted opponent, the evil genius
arrayed against the good, in mortal combat for her sweetheart's life.
With Sire worrying his heels, Bertha holding her side in unchecked
laughter, and Emily eying him with an expression of amazement gradually
turning to scorn, the detective looked for a moment as if he would have
resigned his whole reputation to be elsewhere. But suddenly he righted
himself and led the horse around to the road, snatched Griggs' pitchfork
and was tossing the spilled hay back into place before the fuming farmer
realized what he was about.

"This is Miss Barlow," said Bertha. "But I suppose you don't need an
introduction."

"We were fellow-passengers on the train coming down."

"Don't tell me, after that, we servants are the only keyhole listeners."

"Mr. McCausland makes eavesdropping a science," added Emily, who was not
at all disposed to spare him.

"There!"

The inspector had finished his task. As the old farmer led his recovered
property back to the barn he never relaxed his hold on the bridle and
vented his wrath all the way on the offending beast. When he had
disappeared inside his barn, they could still hear him scolding.

"Tarnal idiot! Yer fool, yer! I'll shorten yer fodder for yer! I'll
teach yer to stand! Woa!"

"Eavesdropping! What nonsense!" said McCausland, smiling. Shorn of its
mustache his face looked more ferret-like than ever and one could excuse
Tristram March's estimate of its owner's villainy. "I had to leave
Hillsborough on the 6:21, and natural impatience led me to follow the
lazy girl who went after the cream for my supper."

"It took you a long time to make up that fib," retorted Bertha, but she
took the hint and went over to the farmhouse to fill her pitcher.

"Perhaps you will join me at lunch, Miss Barlow. You may be taking the
same train and I shall have the pleasure of your company to the station
in Mrs. Arnold's carriage."

"No, I thank you. I will not trouble Mrs. Arnold either for lunch or for
the carriage."

"Or, Mr. McCausland?"

"Or Mr. McCausland."

Emily spoke in a tone which was meant to convey that there were too many
unforgiven injuries between them to permit her to accept favors from
either of them. She looked at her watch. It was 5:30.

"There is no other conveyance from here and the station is three miles,"
urged the inspector, with good humor.

"I can walk there in an hour."

"You must have walked a part of the way from Elmwood."

"Please do not press me, Mr. McCausland."

He muttered something about "spunk" as he looked after the girl's slight
figure retreating. Then he gallantly relieved Bertha of her foaming
pitcher and sauntered with her back to the Arnold mansion.

When Emily reached the Hillsborough station she was indeed a footsore
girl, fully convinced that country miles are as indefinite as nautical
knots, but in the few moments she had to spare before the train came by
she purchased a lunch of fruit, which refreshed her a little. Before
they were well out of the station Inspector McCausland came up and asked
permission to occupy the seat at her side.

During her walk Emily had come around to a gentler view of the
detective's behavior. She could not look back on the afternoon's events
without a certain complacency. For the true aspect of the case against
Robert, as a grand chess duel between the criminal lawyer and the
detective, was gradually dawning upon her, and surely in the discovery
of Bertha's hiding-place and the unmasking of Bill Dobbs, white, her
champion, had gained two positive advantages over black, the enemy's
color. Besides, loyal as she was to her sweetheart, with that singleness
of heart which we sometimes call womanly prejudice, there was a genial
persistency in McCausland few could resist. So she forbore to fire upon
his flag of truce and assented to the request.

They talked for the most part of irrelevant matters, and she herself did
not like to broach the subject of all subjects. Only once did he appear
to glance at his official relation to her.

"The fisherman, Miss Barlow, doesn't enjoy the death struggles of the
mackerel in his nets," he said. "But he is obliged to see that they do
not escape."

"Then you do disagreeable work from a sense of public duty?"

"And for the support of my family," he added. "But as we've arrived at
the city perhaps I'd better return these now."

So saying, he laid Emily's watch, pocketbook and brooch in her lap.
Dumfounded, she felt of her bodice, where these articles should be. The
neck-clasp was missing, the watch-pocket empty. McCausland had picked
her pockets while they were conversing.

"Set a thief to catch a thief," said the detective, still smiling, but
raising his hat with respect. Emily smiled herself, less at the prank he
had played than because she thought she had good reasons to be cheerful.
But she did not communicate them to Richard McCausland, alias William
Dobbs.

It happened that her course through town took her by Shagarach's office.
It was nearly 7:30, but there was a light in his window still, and an
impulse seized her to convey the glad tidings of her successful journey
to the lawyer. So she picked her way across the street and tripped
light-heartedly up the stairs.

"You bring good news, Miss Barlow," said Shagarach, a little heavily. He
was standing at the window with his hands in his pockets and his back
turned, but there was power in his very carelessness. If he could not
pick pockets he could master men.

"How could you know?" she asked.

"I simply heard you coming. There is mood in a footstep," he answered,
facing her and offering a chair, while he sat himself at the table with
his arms folded expectantly. Through the open window where he had been
standing Emily felt the cool evening air, dim with dew it held in
suspension; and far away the hill-built capitol of the city, printed
darkly against the blood-orange sunset, seemed lifted into the uppermost
heavens, at an immeasurable height from earth. Had this been the object
of Shagarach's contemplation?

"What is the result?"

"Bertha is found again."

"At Arnold's?"

"At Arnold's."

Knowing his taste for brevity, she condensed the story of her day's
wanderings, not omitting, however, the incidents which seemed to connect
McCausland with the pretended English cracksman.

Toward the end of the narrative she perceived an unwonted wandering of
attention in her listener. A trio of street minstrels, with flute,
violin and harp, had set up a passionate Spanish dance tune, just far
enough away to afford that confused blending of harmonies which adds so
much to the effect of carelessly rendered music. Shagarach's eyes had
left Emily's face and strayed toward the window. Twice he had asked her
to repeat, as though he were catching up a lost thread. At last he arose
abruptly and shut down the sash, muffling the minstrelsy at the height
of its wildest abandon.

"Our street troubadours distract you?" asked Emily.

"The violinist is a gypsy," said the lawyer, shutting his eyes. Emily
remembered this saying afterward, and even now she began to understand
why a certain compassion, mingled with the fear and admiration which
this man so gifted, but so meanly surrounded, aroused.

"That is all?" he said. She thought it amounted to a good deal. "I fear
Miss Barlow may not descend the stairs as gayly as she mounted them."

"What have I done? How have I blundered?" she asked herself.

"To have caught McCausland napping was a pleasant diversion, but of
little practical value. He is merely playing the nest-egg game."

"The nest-egg game?"

"Dressing up as a convict, locating himself in the adjoining cell and
confessing some enormity himself so as to induce his bird to lay. The
trick has an excellent basis in psychology, since the second law of life
is to imitate."

"And the first?"

"To devour. You think that crude?" he added, noting Emily's look. "Ah,
fact is crude, and we must never shirk fact. But since Floyd is innocent
it could have availed McCausland little to continue his harmless efforts
to wheedle a confession out of him--which I presume you will now
interrupt."

"Not necessarily," answered Emily, who would by no means be sorry to
prolong the joke at the expense of the subtle inspector.

"But that our discovery of Bertha's hiding-place should be known to
McCausland is a little unfortunate. She may be removed at once, this
time beyond our reach."

"Is he so suspicious a man?"

"When fighting wealth."

"But we are not rich."

"You forget the $5,000,000 and McCausland's point of view."

Emily  slightly. This was the bitter fruit of her wasted
afternoon, her six miles' walk, her long fast. But she kept these things
to herself. And Shagarach did not look at all perturbed. John Davidson
had told her that he was accounted by some a trifle slack in the
preparation of his matter, trusting overmuch to his power in the
cross-examination to bring out the truth. His record, however, showed
that he did not overrate his own skill. As certain clever exhibitors,
blindfolded, will take the arm of a reluctant guide, and, by noting his
resistances, compel him to lead them to some article in hiding, so
Shagarach followed the windings and subterfuges of unwilling testimony,
bringing witnesses at last face to face with the truth they had striven
to conceal.

"Our cause has assumed a novel aspect," said the lawyer, opening a
drawer and producing three or four letters. "I am the victim of an
anonymous correspondent."

Emily glanced at the envelopes. Their penmanship appeared to be that of
an illiterate person, the "Shagarach" in particular bearing a strong
resemblance to the four priceless if illegible autographs which are the
only relics left us bearing the immediate personal impress of the man of
Stratford.

"The earlier epistles merely threaten me with death in its least
desirable forms if I do not surrender my brief for Robert Floyd. The
writer appears to cherish a grievance against your friend. Had he any
enemies?"

"Not that I know of."

"Very well. It appears I was to suffer martyrdom for his sake. Today's
mail, however, discloses a change of policy. The handwriting is the
same, but sloped backward to disguise it."

He passed a letter over so that Emily might read the wretched scrawl.

     "Dear Mr. Shagarach: I mean to let you know that I have discovered
     a important klew which will save your cliant. Pleeze be at the
     bridge, the Pere leading over to the island Fort, at 8 o'clock (8
     P. M.) sharp To-morrow, and I mean to let you know my klew for
     nothing. If you do not cum, yore life is not worth living. You will
     be torn into on site."

A rude skull and crossbones was figured in place of a signature.

"Don't you think the writer's brain has a flaw in it?" asked Emily.

"Possibly. There is something not entirely consistent in the promise to
rend me in two if I do not accept his assistance."

"Or hers?"

"You do not recognize the handwriting?"

"It might be that of any very ignorant person. There is almost no style
or character."

"Rather masculine. It may be some irresponsible being, as you say. But
there is a singular accent of sincerity in the earlier letters; a
genuine hatred of Floyd."

"You will not venture to the meeting-place at that hour?"

"I hardly fear Mr. Skull-and-Crossbones."

Shagarach drew a delicate revolver from his lowest drawer. It lay like a
toy in his small white palm, but Emily could not repress a shudder.

"You do not value my advice. You ask it, but you will not follow it?"

"The chance of seeing and studying my correspondent is too good to be
lost."

"Do you really read minds, Mr. Shagarach?" asked Emily.

"Not in the charlatan's sense, certainly not. But the dominant thought
in every man's soul--self, money, pleasure, fame--is written plainly on
his face. The trained psychologist can predict much from a photograph."

Eight! The ringing bells recalled Emily to thoughts of home. Almost
simultaneously a knock on the door ushered in a visitor, who proved to
be Mr. Arthur Kennedy Foxhall. The opium-eater was feathered in peacock
fashion this evening, but no brilliancy of plumage could offset the
undervitalized appearance of his tenuous form and sallow cheeks. He
started on recognizing Emily and appeared confused, but lifted his hat
with a sweep meant to be grandly courteous.

"I beg pardon. Shall I be so fortunate as to have the privilege of an
introduction?"

"I was just about to leave," said Emily, passing him without a glance.
"Good-evening, Mr. Shagarach."

"Good-evening."

Shagarach attended her to the door with the deference he habitually
showed, and she felt his strong presence like a zone of protection
thrown around her.

"You are punctual, Kennedy," said Shagarach, returning to the newcomer.
He had clicked his desk to and donned a hat and coat while the other was
drawling out an answer.

"The Dove-Cote is just about on."

Meanwhile Emily, as Shagarach predicted, had descended the stairs much
more doubtfully than she had mounted them. But she clung to her woman's
faith that even the interrupted conversation with Bertha might yield
items which would germinate at a later stage; and, empty though it were,
her victory over the great McCausland was one of those successes which
give cheer to a young campaigner.

Sustained by these hopes, she rode home at last and related the whole
story of her day's adventures and misadventures to her wondering mother
over the supper that had been cold for two hours.




CHAPTER XVIII.

INSIDE THE DOVE-COTE.


"Here we are!" cried Kennedy.

The sudden flood of light dazzled Shagarach's eyes. Glittering
chandeliers threw prismatic reflections upon the twenty or thirty
occupants of the room, many of them in full evening dress, like his
escort, and several adding the sparkle of diamonds to the iridescence of
mirrors and cut glass around them. Across one corner stretched an
arc-shaped bar, from which two  waiters served liquors to the
patrons, while others at intervals disappeared behind curtains and
reappeared balancing platters of light delicious viands for the men who
chatted at the tables. These were octagon-topped and covered with plush.
The carpeted floor yielded like turf to the feet. The conversation ran
low. The servants whispered their requests and answers. It was an
atmosphere of stealth and suppression.

The getting there had been a story in two brief chapters. This palace of
fortune owed its name to its location on the uppermost floor of one of
those tall, slender structures, like dominoes set on end, which
illustrate the reaching upward for space in our cities when horizontal
expansion becomes no longer possible. It fronted on a blind passageway
in the heart of the hotel district. Its proprietor was a jovial
man-about-town, rather prone than averse to the society of police
captains. On the ground floor a commercial agency conducted its business
quietly. Tailors rented the second and third flights, but the fourth
story was always unoccupied and never advertised for hire. Applicants
covetous of its advantages were frightened away by the rental asked. It
was at the head of the stairs leading from this landing up that Kennedy
had pressed the three white bell buttons in the massive door.

The door immediately swung open, and the pair found themselves in front
of a second door, similar to the first except that the opaque panels
were replaced by glass. Through these the stairs could be seen beyond.
Kennedy repeated his signal, this time, however, reversing the order and
beginning with the lowest knob. A slide opened at the head of the
stairs, and the two men were the object of scrutiny for awhile.
Shagarach's sponsor was evidently persona grata to the sentinel, for the
second door now swung in and they were free to mount the stairs.

"Sure it's true-blue, Kennedy?" said the sentinel, when they passed him.

"Sure," answered the manikin, but his smirk was forced. "Wine, <DW71>."

Kennedy began breaking the ice in this manner for his companion.

"Not a life-long votary of the fickle goddess, I should judge," remarked
a man introduced as Mr. Faught.

"This is my initiation into her mysterious rites," answered Shagarach,
sweeping the room for Harry Arnold.

"Ah, then, it is not too late for you to withdraw. The ceremonies are
trying. I myself am only a neophyte of low degree. Perhaps, being a
student of character, you have observed as much from my appearance?"

"I should have known that you had not lost a fortune this evening, at
least."

"There is one simple rule to escape that."

"Not to bring one here?"

"Precisely."

Shagarach had indeed been contrasting Faught with the other habitues,
most of them men of fashion, still young in years, but middle-aged in
the lines of their faces. Several beardless youths appeared to be
college students. Two or three wore the style of confidential
bookkeepers or bank cashiers. As many more were flush-faced veterans,
with wrinkled pouches under their worldly eyes and gray mustaches of
knowing twist. Against such a gathering, smiling, but irritable withal
underneath from the nervous tension, the large man of bland visage and
ironical phrase certainly struck a discordant note.

"Come to the altar and I will explain our ritual."

They moved toward the table in the middle of the room, which was the
center of all interest. If men appeared to be chatting absently in a
corner, their heads were constantly swiveled this way, their ears caught
the announcement of every result.

"None of that, Perley. It was on Stuart's spot," cried a harsh voice
from behind the table.

"The needle was on the line," protested Perley, reckless-looking and
sadly young. "I say, the needle was on the line, Reddy."

He had missed the prize by a hair. Perhaps the bill he had laid down for
this turn was his last. But a friend led him away, still muttering, by
the arm, and the gap in the circle which his removal made was quickly
closed. The man called Reddy gathered the pile of bills together,
separated a small portion, which he swept into the till, and passed the
remainder to Stuart.

"Reddy runs things," whispered Faught, not so low but that the
bank-tender heard and looked the newcomer over suspiciously. "Comes from
the west, a desperado. Just the man to keep them down."

"The bad blood breaks out sometimes?"

"Would if there wasn't a strong hand at the needle."

There was certainly nothing weak about Reddy. He sprawled sidewise in
his chair, with his left elbow on the table and his right arm free for a
variety of uses--a big-boned ruffian with a sandy face and an eye
apparently riveted on the disk before him, but really sweeping in the
whole compass of the room. Overhanging eyebrows veiled these furtive
glances. As a rule he spoke quietly, in a sepulchral bass, warning the
players to adjust their stakes more evenly on the spots, or announcing
the winners of the prizes. The recent jar with Perley was something
uncommon in the mute and decorous chamber over which Reddy presided.

"It's a new game--roletto; simple as odd or even," explained Faught.
"The circle is segmented off into black and white rays, or spots, as we
call them----"

"And red?"

"Those are used, too. You see, they are numbered like the others. But
they are specially  for the game with the bank. In the ordinary
game some one proposes a stake and puts it down on its lucky number.
Then the rest follow suit. Would you like to try this round? It's only a
$10 trick."

"Very well."

Shagarach laid his stake down on one of the spaces.

"That starts it. See them join in. Twenty-four spaces, black and white,
and twenty-three filled. My ten spot quits it out. Now thank your stars
if you see that bill again."

The gamblers stood near while Reddy reached toward the needle. A squad
of grenadiers at attention would not be more rigid. They were frozen
with suspense. But something paralyzed Reddy's wrist. He had caught the
full glance of Shagarach. It was several seconds before he twisted the
pointer. For several more it spun around, gradually slowing up and
coming to a rest over Shagarach's number.

"Twenty!" called Reddy.

"Mine!"

Shagarach coolly smoothed out the bills and folded them in his pocket,
while the unsuccessful players eyed him greedily. Eleven-twelfths of the
stakes went to the winner, and 2,000 per cent would be considered a fair
profit in any speculation. But the return to the bank was still more
liberal, being the steady harvest of two-spots. It was easy to see how
the luxuries and free accessories of the Dove-Cote could be provided.

"Try again," said Faught, shaking Shagarach's hand.

"Perhaps that is enough for an experiment," answered the lawyer, a
little undecided still whether Faught were a decoy of the establishment.

"A hundred dollars even I come out whole to-night!" cried a voice at the
door. It was Harry Arnold.

"A little quieter, gentlemen," said Reddy, tapping on his desk. "This
isn't the stock exchange."

"It's a more respectable place," answered Harry, surrendering his wraps
to a servant.

"I take you," said several, picking up the gantlet he had thrown down.
Faught had spoken first and Kennedy was chosen stake-holder. Shagarach,
meanwhile, had retired to a table in the corner and ordered some wine.

"One thousand to ten I break the bank," called Harry as loudly as
before.

"I will debar any man who uses that tone again," said Reddy, never
moving a muscle. His eyes were as cold and steady as the barrels of two
Derringers in the hands of a Texan train robber, and the young bravo,
though his lip curled, did not reply. His second bet was taken and the
game resumed amid its former silence.

The losers repaired to the sideboard now and then and renewed their
courage with stimulants, but one or two who called for brandy were told
that no strong liquors were allowed. The little outbreak over Perley's
protest showed the wisdom of this rule. Harry Arnold's purse seemed to
be well lined to-night, for he led the play higher and higher.

Shagarach held his wineglass toward the chandelier, so as to shield a
searching glance at the young man's face. Under the artificial light it
was brilliantly beautiful, the face of a man who could say to almost any
woman "Come" and she would follow him to the ends of the earth.

"Do you know young Arnold?" asked Faught of Shagarach, who had just
lowered his wineglass. He began to take some notice of this large, quiet
man, who, all unobserved, was making the rounds of the room.

"By sight," he answered, suppressing a yawn. "You took his bet, I
noticed?"

"Only a hundred, and as good as mine already. He's bucking the reds."

"Gad, Harry, you have nerve," Kennedy's pipe was heard exclaiming.

"I see you don't understand," continued Faught. "There are four red
spots, you remember. Ordinarily these are not used. In the common game
it is impossible for the bank to lose, though one of the players may
win."

He smiled in allusion to Shagarach's maiden try.

"But sometimes the bank condescends to take a risk. Then the stakes are
high. Each player lays a thousand opposite one of the four reds. If the
needle stops over white or black, Reddy scoops the pot. But if it favors
a red the man on the spot opposite gets $5,000 from the bank and the
others quit whole. You see it's perfectly fair. Twenty blacks and whites
and four reds, that makes the odds five to one against the players. So
the bank, if red wins, quintuples the stakes all round."

"But the bank twists the needle," said Shagarach.

"Oh, that's all open and above board."

"Do you see Reddy looking down?"

"He is watching the checker board."

"Why not a mirror under the table?"

"What would it show?"

"Two slender bar magnets crossed under the disk. His foot can rotate
them so as to underlie any four of the spots; and the needle is of
steel." Faught opened his eyes.

"Bravo!" an exclamation burst from the crowd.

"That's number one," Harry Arnold was heard exulting. Followed by
Kennedy and the taker of his second bet, he crossed over to the bar.

"Has Arnold set the place on fire?" asked Shagarach. It was said during
a pause of the hum and he raised his voice. In one of the facets of his
wineglass he saw Harry, who had just passed him, start and turn, but it
was impossible to tell whether the expression of his face had altered.
Certainly it was no more than a glance and he took no notice of
Shagarach. The lawyer's low stature diminished at a distance the effect
of his splendid head and eyes, which were so powerful at short range. On
the present occasion, if disguise were at all his purpose, this
insignificance was useful.

"He has beaten the bank," said Faught.

"A Pyrrhic victory," answered Shagarach, "and a Parthian flight." His
companion rose and sauntered behind Reddy, but either the mirror was
hidden or the bank-tender was too wary to be caught. Suddenly his harsh
voice was heard again.

"Put that down, Perley."

Every one looked in the direction of the youthful gambler, who had been
the center of the dispute when Shagarach and Kennedy entered. He had
brooded moodily since his loss, sitting alone at a corner table, and was
just raising a revolver to his temple when Reddy's command checked and
bewildered him. Instantly Harry Arnold, who was nearest, wrenched his
wrist and some one else secured the weapon. Perley writhed like a
madman, so that it took several minutes to quiet him. When at last his
contortions were helpless his spirit seemed to give suddenly and he
burst into tears.

Shagarach felt a deep pity in his breast. The youth looked weak rather
than wicked. Possibly others, whom he loved, would suffer by his
recklessness this night. An aversion to the whole tinseled exterior,
gilding over soul-destroying corruption, came upon him and he longed
for the sight of something wholesome and pure--if only a basketful of
speckled eggs or a clothes-press hung with newly lavendered linen. But
his purpose in coming was still unfulfilled, so he merely stopped the
youth as he was passing out in dejection, accompanied by a friend.

"I was luckier than you," he said, taking out the roll of bills he had
won. "Will you accept my first winnings as a loan?"

Perley halted irresolutely.

"They amount to $200 or so. You may have them on one condition."

"What is it?"

"That you go immediately home."

"I will," said Perley.

From now on the play became more and more exciting, as the champagne
began to work in the veins of the gamblers. Once again Harry Arnold won,
then lost and lost again. Still he laid down bill after bill from a
bulky roll, sometimes leading at the simple game, oftener challenging
the bank. As luck turned against him (if luck it were) his temper
changed. He grew hilarious, but at the same time savage. Once or twice
his differences with Reddy promised to culminate in a serious quarrel,
but each time the coolness of the experienced bank-tender prevailed.
Shagarach paid no attention to Kennedy, little to Faught. He was
studying the soul of Prince Charming.

When Harry came over and demanded brandy and struck the bar with his
clenched fist because he could not have it, every one knew that his wad
of crisp bills had shrunken to almost nothing. But still he would not
surrender.

"The whole pile," he cried, laying the roll down opposite a red spot. It
was the same one he had played all the evening. Reddy counted the money
coolly.

"A thousand is all we go," he said, returning one bill to Arnold--the
last poor remnant of Rabofsky's loan.

"I challenge you to play higher. I dare you to give me my revenge."

"There's only a hundred over and you'll need more than that to settle
your outside bets with," answered Reddy, as if victory for the bank were
a foregone conclusion. Three others, carried away by the force of play,
put down stakes of $1,000 each and all of the reds were covered. Reddy
snapped the needle with his forefinger as carelessly as a schoolboy
twirling a card on a pin. Four necks craned over, four lungs ceased to
draw breath, while it slowly, slowly paused.

"Mine!" exulted Harry, stretching forth his hand; but Reddy intercepted
it.

"The bank!" he growled.

"It's on the line," said Harry, flushing.

"By the rules I am judge, and I say the bank!" Reddy lowered his voice
to its most sepulchral register, while Harry raised his to a shriek.

"Between man and man, but not between a player and the bank. I leave it
to these gentlemen if it wasn't on the line."

"Always," answered Reddy. He snapped the needle again. Whether the
bar-magnets below had been carelessly adjusted, whether the pointer had
really rested over the line, that was a matter upon which arbitration
was now rendered forever impossible. Then he reached for the money.

"You swindler!" shrieked Harry, striking at his face across the table.
Instantly Reddy's right hand, the free hand, opened a drawer and
presented a cocked revolver. His finger was on the trigger to pull, when
Shagarach gave the shout of warning.

"Spies!" he cried. It was a word to strike terror. Perhaps it saved
Harry's life.

During the confusion, observed of none but Shagarach, a whistle had been
heard from the outside, and the quiet man, Faught, had passed over to
one of the windows. There were only two, and these were protected by
iron shutters, which closed with a latch. The first sound heard was
Faught lifting the latch and throwing the shutters apart. A uniformed
man dropped into the room, followed by another and another. Faught
rushed behind Reddy and the second window was soon opened. All the
officers carried lanterns and clubs.

"The first man who moves his little finger dies," said the foremost of
the invaders, advancing. His tone was easy and his pistol covered Reddy.
The whole room looked toward the desperado as if expecting him to do
something. He turned his revolver's muzzle quickly as if from Arnold to
the officer, but instantly his right hand was knocked up by Faught. With
his left he pressed an electric button for some daring purpose. Then the
pistol shot rang out, a moment too late, and the room was in total
darkness.

The slides of the officer's lanterns, however, were opened at once, and
in a jiffy the door was guarded. Through the yellowish light Shagarach
could see tussling groups and hear cries of anger and pain. He himself
was seized and handcuffed. Presently the uproar quieted down and the
voice of the spokesman was heard ordering one of the <DW64>s to light
up.

But it was a different sight that met Shagarach's eye when the
chandeliers blazed again. The roletto table had disappeared, probably
carried downstairs by a trapdoor at Reddy's touch of the button. This
was the use for which the vacant fourth story was reserved. All around
among the smaller tables the gamblers stood like lambs, trembling and
pale in the grip of the law. In the middle of the floor lay Reddy, the
blood bubbling from a pea-sized hole that divided his left eyebrow and
gathering in a thick pool on the carpet. McCausland's bullet had flown
true to its target.

Only one of the gamblers was missing.

"He must have climbed out of the window," said Shagarach, sotto voce.




CHAPTER XIX.

LEX REX.


Stupefaction is a weak word to express the feelings of Saul Aronson when
a messenger awakened him at 1 o'clock Thursday morning with a request
from Shagarach that he would come to police station No. 5 at once. The
attorney's assistant was never a sluggard, but the celerity with which
on this occasion he scrambled into his street clothes would have done
credit to a lightning-change artist.

The police captain received him courteously, explaining, as he conducted
him to Shagarach's cell, his hesitancy about discharging the lawyer
without permission from McCausland, who had maliciously disappeared.
Both he and Shagarach were agreed that the most judicious course was to
accept a temporary release on bail, and later to secure a quashing of
the charge by an explanation to the district attorney. So Aronson set
out again to secure bail, and at 4 o'clock had the joy of seeing his
master pass down the station steps with his bondsman.

It was fortunate that the affair turned out so well, for the very next
day had been set down for the hearing in the Probate court on the
settlement of Benjamin Arnold's estate.

Hodgkins Hodgkins, Esq., flanked by the other two members of the firm of
Hodgkins, Hodgkins & Hodgkins--namely, his brother and his nephew--was
already on his feet to address the court when Shagarach, as
representative of Robert Floyd's interest, arrived and pushed to the
front. Except for the fact that he was Prof. Arnold's oldest
acquaintance in the city, it was hard to understand the selection of
Hodgkins for the responsible position of executor over a property of
$10,000,000.

A tall, withered specimen of nearly 70, thin-whiskered and jejune of
speech, you would have looked instinctively for the green bag at his
side if you had met him on the street. "Whereas" and "aforesaid" and a
dozen other legal barbarisms disfigured his rhetoric and the trick of
buttoning his coat with an important air over documents mysteriously
shuffled into his breast pocket was as natural to him as crossed legs to
a tailor.

But all this pomp, ridiculous as it was, gave no promise of the
disloyalty that was to follow. From the first words of his address it
became evident that Hodgkins Hodgkins, Esq., was there not to execute
the will of his friend but to oppose its execution. Like many another
intrusted with the same office, he had transferred his allegiance from
the forgotten dead to the living who had bounty to bestow. Mrs. Arnold,
sitting among the spectators, alone, might well congratulate herself
upon a clever stroke in engaging the services of the quondam executor
for her son.

"As counsel for the petitioner, Mr. Harry Arnold," said Hodgkins,
ahemming huskily, "I desire to explain to the court briefly my relation
to the case. As your honor has been informed, I enjoyed the privilege of
the testator's--or, more properly, the intestate's--acquaintance during
a period of nearly fifty years. During that period nothing, I believe,
ever occurred to mar our mutual trust and confidence. Up to six weeks
ago the deceased had never expressed any desire to alter the natural
distribution of his property after his death. Up to that time, although
approaching his seventy-ninth birthday, my honored friend had been
entirely satisfied, entirely satisfied, I repeat, with the prospects of
a division of his estate according to the laws of descent in this
commonwealth."

"A statement which we deny," broke in Shagarach, sotto voce. Hodgkins
was a little nonplussed.

"Am I to understand that Brother Shagarach, representing, I presume,
the interests of the other nephew, refers to some previously existing
testament?"

"Not at all. I refer, your honor, to oral expressions of an intention to
will his entire property to the nephew who lived with him, Mr. Robert
Floyd."

"There was a will drawn, which is not extant, I believe?" inquired the
judge.

"There was a will drawn," answered Shagarach, "but since unfortunately
destroyed, by which Floyd was disinherited."

"I opine, then"--Mr. Hodgkins frequently opined--"that Brother Shagarach
concedes the destruction of the document and is here----"

"To argue for its upholding."

The whole firm of Hodgkins, Hodgkins & Hodgkins looked as if a
thunderbolt had struck them at this announcement. Shagarach was throwing
away Robert's share, amounting to $5,000,000.

"We were not aware of this intention," said the senior member, after a
consultation, "and as to the alleged oral expressions of a purpose to
leave the--the accused nephew sole legatee--er--er in any case we should
have contested such a will on the ground of undue influence. Six weeks
ago," Hodgkins was now frowning as formidably as possible, "I received a
letter from my honored friend, informing me that he had made a will and
requesting me to assume the function of sole executor--a request which I
felt it a duty, as well as an honor, to accept."

"May I see the testator's letter?" said Shagarach, breaking in.

"I trust the court will accept my assurance----"

"It is no question of your word. I desire to see the terms of your
appointment as executor, and request that the letter be read."

"As the first step toward establishing the existence of a will," said
the judge, "upon which, I believe, both parties, all parties"--there
were several other lawyers present--"are agreed----"

Hodgkins and Shagarach bowed.

"The letter had best be read in evidence."

There was a great diving into green bags for awhile among the Hodgkins
firm, at the end of which the senior member read the following letter:

     "Friend Hodgkins: You are the only one of your cursed tribe to whom
     I ever got nearer than swearing distance, and our intimacy began
     before you were admitted to the vulpine crew. Here I am, a
     youngster of 78, anticipating death by thirty years at least and
     indulging in the folly of will-making. Can you conceive anything
     more absurd? I might as well think of getting insured so early in
     life. But I was always excessively cautious, you know--hence my
     odium advocatorum, I suppose. Can you superintend the job? Most of
     my hoard goes elsewhere, but there will be some for the executor to
     distribute, and you will find legal pickings in it that will pay
     you. Write at once.

     "BENJAMIN ARNOLD."

This eccentric epistle raised a smile among the lawyers, but Shagarach
was busily occupied drafting a verbatim copy while Hodgkins continued
his plea.

"I was remarking," he repeated, one of his favorite introductory
formulae, "that upon receiving this request I made haste to indite a
favorable response, as I felt bound in duty and honor----"

"And the prospect of pickings," added Shagarach, sotto voce, still
copying the letter. The senior member glared.

"It is needless to relate the unfortunate circumstance, in which Brother
Shagarach's client is so deeply implicated, which has relieved me of
this welcome if laborious trust. The will under which I was to serve in
the capacity of executor has been destroyed--destroyed, presumably, by
the party whose hopes of a fortune is cut off, and we stand here to-day
facing the same status which existed up to six weeks ago. I say the
same--I am in error. There is an important, a melancholy difference. Six
weeks ago my friend's nephew was not an accused and all but a convicted
murderer."

Hodgkins paused, as if expecting a rejoinder from Shagarach, but the
latter appeared profoundly absorbed in a telegram which Jacob had just
brought him.

"The property now stands in no man's name. There is no person to whom
its dividends, its rents, its interest, constantly becoming due, can
safely be paid. Under the laws of descent its title vests equally in the
heirs-at-law, the nephews of the deceased. But there is need of an
administration, in order that the two shares may be apportioned in a
satisfactory manner. I need not again allude to the circumstance which
renders a joint administration improper and impossible, the circumstance
which explains the absence of Brother Shagarach's client----"

"I do not see Brother Hodgkins' client in the courtroom," Shagarach
retorted to this sarcasm. As he spoke his eye fell on Mrs. Arnold's
haughty face.

"It is certain, however, that he is not occupying a felon's cell,"
answered Hodgkins. "Briefly, your honor, there is only one course open.
An administrator is urgently needed for this immense estate. In the
absence of a will, the heirs-at-law, being of age, would naturally be
selected, but under the circumstances I respectfully suggest that the
younger of the two nephews is debarred and that your honor's choice
should fall upon the elder, a college graduate, a young man who moves in
the highest social circles, and who has not, I believe, the honor of an
acquaintance with the inmates and turnkeys of the state prison."

Hodgkins had hardly sat down after this acrid peroration when Shagarach
was on his feet.

"I have only a few words to say at present. The case is by no means so
simple as my learned brother imagines. My learned brother assumes that
the physical destruction of the will has involved the extinction of its
contents. So mature an advocate does not need to be reminded that parol
proof of the contents of a will, of its accuracy in technical form, and
of its existence unrevoked at the time of the testator's death, are
equivalent in law to the presentation of the document itself.

"We have in the court-room today a number of witnesses who will testify
to the contents of the will. We have the witnesses who signed it to
prove its compliance with statutory requirements as to form; and I do
not understand that Brother Hodgkins denies that the paper was in
existence until destroyed at the Arnold fire."

"You object, then, to the issuance of administration papers to Mr. Harry
Arnold?" asked the judge.

"Emphatically. We desire to uphold the will. Brother Hodgkins has
introduced evidence as to the making of a will in the letter which he
read. I should like to put in evidence now the testimony of the three
witnesses to the signature."

When the three witnesses had sworn to Prof. Arnold's acknowledgment in
their presence of the will, to their own attestation of his signature,
and to the date, June 7, of these occurrences, another lawyer, who
appeared to act in concert with Shagarach, briefly announced his
guardianship of the interests of the heirs of Ellen Greeley, a legatee
in the sum of $1,000. After recounting the long and meritorious services
of the dead domestic, he called upon her sister to testify to several
conversations in which she had referred to the professor's generous
remembrance of her in his will.

"It is proper to state at this point," said Shagarach, "that the other
servant, Bertha Lund, is not represented here by counsel, but there is
evidence to show that she was remembered in the same manner as her
colleague."

Mrs. Christenson was thereupon called and deposed, exactly as Ellen
Greeley's sister had done, to the several conversations in which Bertha
had referred to her employer's liberality.

"Until yesterday evening," said Shagarach, "Bertha Lund was employed in
the country house of Mrs. Arnold at Hillsborough. A telegram, however,
sent to the station-master at that place, brings the answer that Miss
Lund took the outward-bound train at 5:21 this morning, being alone and
accoutred with a large baggage trunk. I doubt, therefore, if this
important witness as to the contents of the will can readily be found."

While he made this statement Shagarach searched Mrs. Arnold's face. Her
gaze shifted and she perceptibly whitened. Then the rise of still
another lawyer, also seeming to act in concert with Shagarach, drew
attention to the court. The new attorney represented, as he immediately
informed the judge, certain charitable institutions which had been
remembered under the clauses of the will--namely, the Duxborough
institution for the blind, of which the professor, who had himself been
operated on for cataract, had been throughout his life a conspicuous
supporter; the Woodlawn home for consumptives, the dipsomaniac hospital,
the Magdalen reformatory, the asylum for idiots and the Christian
orphanage. Letters were read from Prof. Arnold to the superintendents of
each of these institutions, requesting them to accept legacies of
$20,000 each under the will which he had just drawn. The letters were
couched in a stereotyped form and all dated alike.

But the most significant testimony of the day was contained in the last
document which this attorney presented--a letter.

"Dr. Silsby himself," he explained, "is detained from attendance at this
hearing by important scientific labors in the west."

The mention of Dr. Jonas Silsby's name caused the eyebrows of the
Hodgkins firm to elevate themselves unanimously in a manner which
amusingly accented the facial resemblance of the members. Jonas Silsby
had been a pupil of Prof. Arnold and was at present the most
distinguished arboreal botanist in the country. Along with some of his
master's eccentricities, such as vegetarianism, he had imbibed much of
his independence and noble honor. He was, moreover, Robert Floyd's most
intimate friend, bridging, as it were, by the full vigor of his
fifty-odd years, the great gap of half a century which separated the
boyish nephew from his octogenarian uncle.

Mrs. Arnold's quick smoothing with her finger of an imaginary loose
lock--the characteristic feminine gesture of embarrassment--did not
escape Shagarach's lustrous glance. The letter was worded as quaintly as
the other:

     "My Dear Jonas: Rob has gone back on me, God bless him, the rogue,
     and you've got to take my dollars. I know you don't want them, but
     I'm going to commit inverse larceny just the same. I'll grab you by
     the throat and stuff your pockets with gold, though you bellow
     like an ox. You know what it's all about. We've talked it over
     often enough. And I want it called the 'Arnold academia,' too. If
     agriculture stops going to the dogs in this country through the
     preaching of the dons my hoard keeps in shoe leather, then I want
     the credit of it for my ghost downstairs. It'll need some comfort,
     Jonas. But don't suppose I dream of quitting you yet, my boy, and
     don't expect all of the pudding I've baked. There will be some
     plums for the asylums, and some for the servants, and Rob, the
     young rogue, has got to be provided for, willy-nilly. This is only
     a hint, but verbum sap. We'll talk it over when you come east
     again, with your pouches full of seeds. Here's good luck to you,
     Jonas. It is God's world, anyway, and not the devil's. Your old
     friend,

     "BENJAMIN ARNOLD."

"Dr. Silsby explains," added the lawyer, "that the allusion in the text
to an academia refers to a cherished project for elevating the position
of the American farmer. The idea was to establish a great agricultural
university. It had been a frequent subject of discussion between them,
and nothing could be more natural than that Dr. Silsby should be
selected as president of the institution."

"And trustee of its funds," added Shagarach, looking at the senior
member of the bewildered firm of Hodgkins, Hodgkins & Hodgkins. Then the
court adjourned for lunch.




CHAPTER XX.

TWO STEPS FORWARD AND ONE TO THE REAR.


At the afternoon session Mrs. Arnold was found at her place, still
unaccompanied by her son. Five lawyers had already outlined their
standpoints to the judge, but still there were new complications in
store. Lawyer Howell was Shagarach's earliest opponent, the Goliath of
his first great duel. He contented himself with stating his intention to
attach Floyd's share of the property in behalf of the insurance
companies and proprietors who had suffered loss through the crime with
which he was charged. He was of opinion that the evidence offered to
uphold the will lacked particularity and was insufficient----

"Brother Howell is not here as associate justice." Shagarach was on his
feet in a flash. "His opinions are impertinences, too manifestly
dictated by his interests. Naturally the insurance companies and
burned-out proprietors desire to break this will, in order that Robert
Floyd may take the $5,000,000 which he does not want and they may join
the hue and cry of the other conspirators against an innocent man."

Howell was protesting against such a suggestion, when he was interrupted
by a roar from one of the learned brethren who had been impatiently
waiting his turn.

"I speak for the murdered girls," he cried, "whose pure young blood
stains the hands of that guilty monster, and in the name of their
bleeding corpses and young lives, ruthlessly done to death, I utter my
protest against the imputation of innocence to their slayer."

The auditors, who had begun to drowse over the technical details of the
case, were stirred to attention at once by this declamatory opening.
Even Saul Aronson, sleepy from his restless night, checked a yawn midway
with his fingers and turned around. The new speaker was a middle-sized,
burly man, whose most conspicuous feature was a projection of the flesh
beneath the outer corners of his eyebrows, so as to bury the eyes and
give his whole face an expression almost Mongolian in its cunning. His
clothes were seedy, and his remarks punctuated by amber- shots at
the cuspidor. Altogether it was a decidedly rakish craft and the look on
Judge Dunder's face was by no means propitious.

"It is an axiom of law," said the orator, waving his hand and executing
a demi-volt toward the spectators, "that no man can take advantage of
his own tort. I hereby accuse Robert Floyd of the murder of my
clients----"

"Who are your clients?" interrupted the judge.

"Mary and Florence Lacy, two virtuous maidens, the sunshine of a happy
home, the pride of a loving and admiring circle of friends"--just here
came one of the orator's punctuation points, which produced a sadly
antithetical effect--"the comforts of a bereaved mother's heart----"

An old lady in the audience burst into tears. Presumably it was Mrs.
Lacy. This tribute to his eloquence warmed the orator to a mighty
outburst.

"Woe, I say, to that ruthless hand! Perdition gripe that marble
heart----"

"Will you kindly make your statements relevant?" The judge's manner was
arctic. "We are considering the disposition of Benjamin Arnold's
estate."

"I beg to interpose." Hodgkins had seen a ray of hope in the utterances
of the last two speakers. Slack, the grandiloquent, was a bibulous
shyster, who made a precarious livelihood by imposing on just such
victims as Mrs. Lacy, but at this juncture he might prove a useful ally.
"Brother Slack is not unnaturally, I may say most creditably, carried
away by his feelings on behalf of his clients; and I, for one, heartily
join him in opposing the efforts which have been made here today to put
the means of redress for those--er--unhappy victims beyond their
reach--or, rather, to reduce them to a paltry $20,000."

"Twenty thousand dollars!" shrieked Slack. "Who dares insult the
sanctity of human life by estimating its value at such a bagatelle. I
say not $20,000,000 would recompense that weeping mother for the loss of
the children of her bosom."

With pointed finger he held up the grief of the now blushing and
embarrassed woman to the curious gaze of the crowd. Then, wearied of his
vulgarity, and confident of a case already complete, Shagarach rose and
immediately drew all eyes and ears.

"Brother Slack has unwittingly uttered the strongest argument of the day
in favor of the request which I make--a request, be it understood, for
postponement only, until sufficient time elapses to permit the contents
of this will to be demonstrated. Brother Slack assumes the guilt of my
client in a criminal cause now pending. Brother Howell assumes it;
Brother Hodgkins, in asking you to exclude him from the
administratorship, also assumes it. This is a new doctrine of law, to
adjudge a man guilty without according him an opportunity for defense. I
ask your honor to consider the stigma which the choice of Harry Arnold
as sole administrator would cast upon Robert Floyd, and the prejudice it
would work him in the cause I have mentioned.

"But, aside from this, I ask you to consider the chain of evidence
presented as to the will itself. Let us keep in mind that will is only
legalized wish. I am aware that great particularity is required in such
cases as ours. But when your honor reviews the statements of Martha
Greeley, of Mrs. Christenson, of the six superintendents of institutions
of charity, and of Dr. Silsby--yes, and I will add the letter to Brother
Hodgkins, who, it now appears, was to stand as executor only of that
small residue of the estate which did not go to the founding of the
Arnold academia--when your honor reviews these I am convinced that you
will agree that the disposition of this vast property is not a matter to
be hastily determined.

"My brother has referred to the supposed advantage reaped by Floyd from
the destruction of the will. Floyd is not here to speak for himself, but
he has contended consistently that the reduction of his legacy to
$20,000 was made at his own request, and that even that small sum was in
excess of his wishes. Read as I read them, the expressions of endearment
in the letter to Dr. Silsby support this statement. They are not the
language of an irate testator, used in reference to a disinherited heir.
Allow me, moreover," Shagarach was now looking straight at Mrs. Arnold,
"to point out that Robert Floyd was not the only gainer by the
destruction of Prof. Arnold's will. What atom of evidence has been
adduced to show that the testator remembered Harry Arnold?"

Mrs. Arnold started and reddened at the mention of her son's name. Then
she put her handkerchief to her lips and coughed nervously. Shagarach's
glance was just long enough to avoid attracting general attention toward
her.

"For these reasons I ask that your honor schedule a second hearing of
this important cause, to take place after a complete survey of the
evidence shall have demonstrated that not Robert Floyd but another is
responsible for the death of Mary and Florence Lacy."

Mrs. Arnold's trembling was painfully apparent, and there was nothing in
Hodgkins' feeble and desultory reply to give her hope.

"I will take the matter under consideration," said Judge Dunder, when he
had closed, and Shagarach knew that a severe blow at Robert's
reputation, as well as a timely relief to the Arnold purse, had been
prevented by that morning's work.

There were fewer clients than usual in the office when he returned. One
of them, a large man, immediately arose.

"I am Patrolman Chandler," said he.

"What can we do for each other?"

"Not much, perhaps." The policeman drew an envelope from his pocket and
showed a lemon- glove inside. "Will that help you any?"

"Perhaps. It has a story?"

"A short one. That glove's been in my pocket ever since I was taken to
the hospital when the girl fell on me. Never thought of it; hardly knew
it was there. Had broken bones to think of, you know."

"I read of your bravery at the fire."

"Pshaw! Well, here's the history of that article. I know Floyd; have
known him ever since I took that route. Things look blue for the boy,
but I never heard harm of him before, and says I to myself, yesterday
when I found the glove, perhaps Mr. Shagarach can turn this to good
account, and perhaps he can't. It's worth trying, and if it saves
Floyd's neck, why, it's no more'n I'd like to have him do for me if our
positions were just right about."

"That's the golden rule, stated in the vernacular. Where did you find
this?"

"On the stairs in the Arnold house."

"After the fire?"

"When I went into the house at the beginning."

"How was it lying?"

"About the middle of the staircase, I believe."

"A little to the left, with the fingers pointing to the door?"

"Exactly--close to the wall."

"It is a right-hand glove. He was carrying it in his left hand and
dropped it when running downstairs." Shagarach said this sotto voce, as
if to himself.

"Who? Floyd?"

"The incendiary."

"I don't know that I ever saw young Floyd with gloves on except in
winter. Seems too loud for him anyway--more like some swell's."

"You will leave this with me?"

"Glad to, glad if it helps you," said the officer, rising to go.
Shagarach took his hand and thanked him, then tried on the glove and
studied it for fully five minutes before admitting his regular clients.
If it were Floyd's the case had neither gained nor lost. But he felt
that the kid was too fine, the make too fashionable, for the eccentric
young radical, who, as Chandler had noticed, never wore gloves except
for protection against the cold. There was no hint of identity about it.
Had it belonged to Harry Arnold? If so, how did it happen to lie on the
stairs of his uncle's house immediately after the fire?

       *       *       *       *       *

The island fort was a many-angled specimen of ancient masonry, following
the shore line of an islet in the harbor. It was useless now. No flag
streamed from its pole. Passing vessels no longer saluted it, only a
lame old sergeant being about to protect the property. By an arrangement
with the local authorities it had been converted into a pleasure-ground
and connected with an adjacent peninsular of the city by a pier or
bridge of half a mile's length. This was the rendezvous mentioned by the
anonymous correspondent.

When Shagarach stepped from the car on his way to meet Mr.
Skull-and-Crossbones he found that he was early. It still wanted twenty
minutes to the appointed hour. The humanity of the district was just
rising from its supper tables in teeming tenements to enjoy the cool
liberty of the twilight air, and Shagarach listened to the sayings of
the multitude whose current he found himself stemming. They were flowing
to an open-air concert at some point behind him. The correspondent had
timed his evening well for a lonely conference.

As he approached the pier the crowd thinned and at last he found himself
walking near the water alone. Ships were putting into port, with red and
green caution lights hung aloft. The sea, now violet, melted into the
sky and a gathering dimness subdued everything to one tone. Only the
black tree-masses and the outlines of the houses stood out somberly
distinct.

"We violate nature," said Shagarach to himself, "with our angular,
unsightly houses, but she puts her own fairer version on all at
last--mosses the manse, curves the beach, litters the ruin, bathes the
hard carpentry and mason work of the city with soft twilight balm." He
looked back upon the sad accumulation of misery, amid whose foulest reek
he was doomed to live. A greenish tint hung over it where the sunset had
sunk. It was a rare hue for the heavens to wear--something bizarre yet
beautiful, like yellow roses.

Thus far Shagarach had walked alone. Leaning over the railing on the
right, he saw three boys fishing in a dory below. One of them was just
lighting a lantern, for the thick dusk had begun to gather. The
penetrating silence favored their occupation and he paused a moment to
watch the silver-bellied mackerel slapping their bodies in the basket. A
little farther on an oafish monster stood against the railing on the
left. Shagarach thought he leered mirthlessly when their eyes met.

Then at the middle of the pier he came to a closed gate, shutting off
access to the island.

"No admission to the fort after 7 p. m.----" He had started to read the
placard, when suddenly he felt himself seized from behind. A hand over
his mouth throttled the outcry he launched. It was too late to reach
for the revolver. A brief, fierce trial of strength and he found
himself forced over the railing into the water. The shock, to one who
had never entered the ocean before, was icy as death.

His senses did not depart from him. He made an effort to lie still on
the surface and to hold his breath. A hideous face projected over the
railing, printed itself on his memory, and then disappeared. He knew
that he clutched his assailant's cap in his right hand, and that the
lights of the city were dancing before him as he rose and sunk. Then the
only thing he felt was the gurgling of the deep, dark water nearer,
nearer, nearer. How to fight it off? His hands wildly strove to push it
away. All the sweetness of the world he was leaving flashed through him
in one pregnant second, whereupon his resolution yielded. He opened his
lips to utter the fatal "Help!" of the drowning man, and the element
rushed in and made him its own.




CHAPTER XXI.

THE BREWING STORM.


Friday was to be the last day of Warden Tapp's tenure, and Robert was
aware that the convicts had determined to celebrate his removal by some
demonstration of their joy. Everybody was dissatisfied with his
government--the public, his deputies, his charges, alike. Stalking about
with that inveterate preference for his own company which had won him
the nickname of "The Pelican," he gnawed his huge mustache in a manner
that seemed to betray that he was not oversatisfied with the results
himself.

The prison which he had taken from his predecessor, as orderly as any
barracks the world over, he left to his successor (a military man)
slovenly, rebellious and tunneled with secret avenues of communication
to the outside world. He had begun with leniency and a smiling face.
Vice, indolence and a thousand weedy growths flourished up under his
elevated chin. When he awoke at last his rigor in uprooting them was
intemperate and ineffectual. Several felons escaped. A riot broke out
and the warden had been helplessly holding the reins behind a runaway
horse ever since.

He had flogged men for not saluting when he passed, yet he was hooted at
every time he showed his head to the crowd. He had strung three
brushmakers up by the thumbs for idling, yet every shop except the
harness-makers, in spite of free labor, showed a deficit for the last
half-year. The cells were so littered with storage that it was almost
impossible to enter them. Contraband tobacco, gift books, tools, bird
cages, shirts and shoes smuggled from the workshops, even knives and
revolvers, were found in them.

The "block," or dark dungeon, was always full. If some dozen of the
conniving deputies had been sent there, Warden Tapp might have had less
to extenuate.

"It's quiet this evening," said Robert to Dobbs on Thursday.

"That's the lull before the storm, my boy," said the cracksman.

"You think we'll have trouble, then?"

"Keep your 'ead in, my boy, when it rains. These 'ere coves 'll get a
wetting that'll spoil their Sunday duds. They 'aven't no hart."

"No what?"

"No hart, no hingenuity. They hask first and then try to take it. We'll
take what we want first--honly a little fresh air, Bobbs--and then we'll
hask for it, as a matter of form. Hi'm horfully punctilious on forms,
Bobbs."

Dobbs chuckled at the prospect of writing a letter to the warden,
requesting his release from the safe distance of 3,000 miles.

"Hi ain't the fool of the family, ham Hi, Bobbs?"

"Who's that talking now, Dobbs?"

"The thick-mouthed cove wot gets choked with 'is hown Adam's happle?
That's Quirk."

"Quirk?" It was the familiar voice he had often tried to place, but
Floyd knew nobody named Quirk.

"What is he grumbling for? Is he a ring-leader among the men?"

"Ring-leader, ho, no. Ee lost 'is temper the first time ee saw 'is mug
in the quicksilver and ee's never found it since."

This conversation had been conducted face to face in the dark through
the aperture formed by the removal of four bricks on each side of the
partition. Dobbs had already outlined a general plan to Robert by which
they were to escape. He was only waiting, he said, for his "chummy" to
"drop the sweet hinnocence game and hown up ee wasn't a lamb."

"So you expect me to climb through that hole, Dobbs?"

"If you won't gnaw your hown bars, you must."

"It's too small."

"Then we'll stretch her till she fits, as the 'aberdasher said when 'is
royal 'ighness' trousers didn't meet round 'is royal 'ighness'
waistband."

"I doubt if even six will be wide enough. The bricks are only eight by
four apiece, and I think I'm more than sixteen by twelve."

"Can a cat jump through a keyhole? No-sirree. But a corpuscle can wiggle
through a capillary."

About 11 o'clock the next morning the entire prison force was summoned
to the rotunda to hear the farewell address of the warden. The rotunda
was a great round hall at one end of the bastile, or prison proper,
communicating through two double doors with the warden's office, from
which it was only a step to the street. Looking around at the desperate
gallery of 600 faces, all shaven, but ill-shaven, and most of them
brutal from the indulgence of hateful passions, Robert thought how small
a chance the forty keepers stood if that sullen herd should ever
stampede.

But the walls of the rotunda were undressed bowlders of granite and the
windows all around were double-barred with iron rods that looked strong
enough to hold up a mountain. Only the rear doors were vulnerable at
all, and these simply led through the kitchen to the cells, or right and
left into the yard, at the end of which, and all along one side,
abutting the rotunda, were the workshops, while the other side was
impregnable with its twenty-foot wall.

Flanked by Gradger and Longlegs, the Pelican rose to address his
mutineers. At his approach there was such a tremendous joggling in the
crowd, that for a time it looked as if the volcano would burst then and
there. But three spokesmen who had wriggled their way to the front
stepped forward with their hands clasped over their heads as a token of
peaceful intentions and requested the privilege of a word to the warden.
They were all marked men, undergoing long sentences and recognized as
dangerous criminals. The difference of type between them was conspicuous
as they stood in front of the surging crowd--Dickon Harvey, the Right
Spur and Minister Slick.

Dickon Harvey was a diamond thief, polished in person and of fluent
address. Like those madmen in asylums whom the casual visitor finds
perfectly rational and indeed delightful companions, Dickon Harvey never
failed to convince callers at the prison of his moral sanity. He
admitted past misuse of undeniable talents, though stoutly denying the
particular crime upon which he was sentenced. His legends of early
temptation and ambition to reform had softened the heart of many a
philanthropist to pity. But his cold eye glittered with a point of light
sharp enough to cut the Koh-i-noor, and a turnkey of exceptional ability
was assigned to the ward which contained Dickon Harvey.

The Right Spur derived his sobriquet from his position as head of the
rooster gang. There was little of what Dobbs called "hart" in his line
of work, which consisted simply in sandbagging and garroting picked-up
acquaintances or passers-by. But in the crude occupation of the footpad
he had displayed a brute daring that had surrounded his name with
associations of terror, and this diabolical halo had been brightened and
enlarged by his turbulence in jail. He was middle-sized and
barrel-built, with the complexion of a teamster, a wicked smile and a
scar.

Minister Slick's career would be pictured by a line more excursive than
the diagram with which Sterne represents the history of Tristram Shandy.
His criminal twist had begun just where most men's end. Up to the age of
forty he had been able to delude several congregations into a belief in
his fitness for the sacred ministry. His sermons had been noted no less
for unction than for orthodoxy, their only heresies being grammatical
ones. Then came a fall, sudden and irretrievable. In a few months he had
developed unusual skill as a confidence man, in which he was aided by a
certain oiliness of manner and insinuating ease of speech. He was tall
and dignified, with a long gray beard, which Tapp permitted him to wear
on account of a chronic quinsy, though his kennel-mates whispered this
was all in your eye--a strange location to be sure, for a clergyman's
sore throat--but minute veracity was never expected of Minister Slick.

"Mr. Warden," said Dickon Harvey, "I am desired, with my
fellow-spokesmen, by the entire community, to tender you our deepest
respect upon your retirement from the office whose duties you have so
conscientiously fulfilled."

Tapp's lips quivered. Was this irony or praise?

"If you have not always met with success, if our interests and yours
have seemed to clash at times, believe me there are few among us who do
not appreciate that the fault is in the system and not the man."

"The system, the system," there rose a murmur among the men, which died
away like a stifled cry when Longlegs raised his gun.

"We have read with interest the article on 'Prison Discipline,'
contributed by you to the last number of the Penological Quarterly, and
the petition we present is, we believe, in line with most of the reforms
you suggest."

"You desire to present me a petition. Of what value is that? Col.
Mainwaring enters to-morrow. It belongs to him."

"A recommendation from yourself, Mr. Warden," answered Minister Slick,
"would surely have great weight."

"What is the burden of your document?"

Dickon Harvey removed a paper from his "budge."

"A seriatim schedule of the reforms which we respectfully ask to be
enacted."

"Take the paper to your office," whispered Longlegs to the warden, but
the obstinate official only flushed angrily at his presumption.

"I will hear what you have to say," he said, weakly clutching at this
last hope of favor among the convicts. Dickon Harvey proceeded to read
his production.

     "To the Warden of Georgetown State Prison: We, the undersigned,
     being inmates of your institution and the chief sufferers by its
     irregularities of government, hereby offer and present the
     following schedule of reforms which we regard as necessary----"

"Necessary," emphasized the Right Spur, and nearly 500 heads wagged
approval.

     "Necessary to the quiet and welfare of the community.

     "1. That the grotesque, degrading, uncomfortable and unhealthful
     striped garb which we are at present condemned to wear be exchanged
     for a uniform of gray woolen goods.

     "2. That the practice of shaving, designed to destroy our
     self-respect and efface all evidences of our former and better
     identity, be abolished, and each man allowed free choice in the
     matter of his personal appearance, which concerns himself so deeply
     and nobody else at all.

     "3. That intervals of conversation be allowed among the whist
     parties. (This was the local name of the shop-gang, who, under the
     existing system, were compelled to work amid a silence as absolute
     as that of a Trappist monastery.)

     "4. That the dunce-cap rule be suspended and workers who happen to
     be unemployed for a few moments be allowed to sit at their benches
     instead of standing face to the wall.

     "5. That the cat-o'-nine-tails and thumb-screw be abolished and
     punishment limited to the block or extension of sentence, and that
     the rules for shortening of sentence on account of good behavior be
     made more liberal.

     "6. That the tobacco rations and weekly prune stew be restored.

     "7. That the cells be lighted until 9 o'clock with a gas-jet in
     each, and reading or writing allowed.

     "8. That Ezra C. Hawkins, Kenneth Douglas, Murtagh McMorrow and
     Johann Koerber be discharged for inordinate and unnecessary
     severity and cruelty."

This article was greeted with a swell of cheers and taunts which Tapp
seemed impotent to quell.

     "9. That favoritism and privilege shall be a thing unknown."

Another bellow greeted this, and Floyd knew from the glance that the
clause was a blow at himself. The cell he occupied was known as "the
parlor" from its greater width, its ventilation and its possession of a
reading-table and cupboard. There was jealousy, moreover, because he had
been allowed to do light work about the greenhouse (which he was
entirely competent to supervise, from his botanical knowledge) instead
of being put at a bench. They forgot that his status was different from
theirs. The labor was quite voluntary.

     "10. That the indeterminate sentence be put into effect, so that
     through the specious pretext of punishing crime, the abominable
     crime of depriving peaceable and perfectly harmless citizens, who
     have bitterly atoned for some past peccadillo and earnestly desire
     to demonstrate their change of spirit to the world, be not
     committed under the sanction of law."

Harvey handed the petition to Tapp. It was, on the whole, an enlightened
document. Two of the men who prepared it were probably as able as any of
the officials of the prison. Robert could see the different hands at
work in its composition. The "past peccadilloes" were Dickon Harvey's
"flim-flam" adventures, while the demands for more tobacco, for Hawkins'
removal and the reduction of his own "privilege" were a concession to
the ruffian element, represented by the Right Spur of the Rooster gang.
Yet several of the recommendations were as wise and sound as though all
the prison associations in the country had indorsed them.

"Prisoners----" Tapp started to reply.

"No gammon," interrupted the Right Spur, scowling, while a hundred other
scowls immediately gathered on the foreheads of his particular
followers.

Tapp  again. His obstinacy was aroused. He was not a timid man.

"It would be a breach of courtesy toward my successor to offer him such
suggestions. I do not propose to recommend the discharge of employes
whose only offense is their fidelity to duty; neither do I propose to
constitute myself the spokesman of a mob of law-breakers."

A hiss--the most hateful sound that issues from the human throat, with
its serpentine suggestions and its vagueness of origin--greeted this
challenge. The keepers gripped their guns, awaiting an order, but the
Pelican stood helpless, furious, perplexed.

"To the shops!" he cried at last, and the triumphant convicts were
driven like a herd of cattle to their tables and tools. There were
muffled yells from the offenders buried in the block when they passed
it; and at dinner, when the men filed up to the kitchen slide and
carried off their platters of bread and pork, a dozen unruly boarders
were only subdued to moderate quiet at the rifle's point.




CHAPTER XXII.

A BATTLE IN THE ROTUNDA.


At 2 o'clock the alarm bell rang out thirteen ominous notes. This was
the fire-box of the prison. The flames had broken out in the
wicker-workers' shop, where the younger and lighter convicts plaited
summer chairs, flower-stands and all kinds of basket articles. On a high
throne set against the middle of one wall sat Johann Koerber, the deputy
in charge, overseeing everything, pistol in hand. He was a Titan of 300
pounds, who might have proved admirable in his proper work of putting
maniacs in strait-jackets. But his selection as overseer of the
work-rooms was another instance of Tapp's want of judgment. For all his
formidable strength, Koerber lacked the power to govern. The slenderest
boy did not fear him, while even "papa," the giant <DW64> who loaded the
teams, stood in awe of "Slim" Butler, the lightweight deputy who had
charge of the harness-makers. Right under Koerber's eye, the match was
applied in several places, and almost before he smelled smoke the canes
and osiers were on fire.

Then came the wild riot. In every shop but "Slim" Butler's the officer
in charge was overpowered before the alarm bell had ceased ringing.
Butler held his men down by sheer strength of will, until the sight of
others rushing about in the yard below drove the men at the windows to
frenzy, and with the loss of one of their number the brave deputy was
disarmed, mangled, crushed. Brushmakers, tailors, shoemakers, saddlers,
teamsters and handy men, all streamed from the workshop doors, making by
concert toward the wire pole in the middle of the yard. Here the Right
Spur was executing a dangerous but ingenious maneuver.

Astride of the cross-bars of the pole, which he had climbed in full view
of a dozen deputies, he was cutting the thick telephone wire with a huge
pair of shears. The thing could be done in twenty seconds if his
confederates mobbed the keepers below, and it might mean a delay of
twenty minutes in the arrival of re-enforcements from the nearest
station. Stupefied and absorbed, the convict crew were gazing upward at
their chief on his perilous perch, when the tall form of Hawkins was
seen striding down from the bath-room entrance. The other deputies had
contented themselves with fronting the crowd, shoulder to shoulder,
rifles leveled, like a herd of musk-bulls with lowered horns defending
their females against wolves or men. Hawkins raised his rifle and fired.

The bullet missed its mark and the crack of the powder roused the
convicts from their stupor. With a bestial cry and faces on fire, the
forward rank, pushed on by those behind, swept down on the group of
deputies. Chisels, mallets, hammers, tools and weapons of all kinds from
a wheel-spoke to a blunderbuss were brandished in their hands. One
volley and the deputies fled--all but Hawkins. Almost simultaneously,
it seemed, the second barrel of his rifle hurled its missile, the Right
Spur was seen to drop from his post, dragging the severed wire with him
to the ground, and "Longlegs" himself was felled, bleeding and
senseless, with a heavy bottle.

The mob would have been glad to outrage his body, but time was precious
and Dickon Harvey had already sped to the north corner of the "bastile"
and was beckoning and summoning his men to follow. They rushed in his
wake, turned one corner of the bastile and then another, gave a great
shout of joy as they saw the wide outlet of freedom before them.

The bastile was the great granite castle which contained the cells, a
continuation of the rotunda. It projected into the yard, leaving a wide
space at one end and at both sides. On the opposite side from that in
which the shops were located stood the greenhouses, where Robert Floyd
was accustomed to work whenever he wearied of writing. He had been
crouching under the slant glass roof of the conservatory, snipping off
the dead leaves, when the alarm bell sounded. The cries on the other
side of the bastile brought him out on the open grass plot, and he was
standing there, scissors in hand, when the convict pack swept toward him
around the angle 100 yards away. At the same time he heard the impatient
bells of the fire-engines jingling up the street.

The riot had been ably planned. Over on this side of the yard stood the
entrance for teams. It was this point that the fire engines from without
and the convicts from within were making for together. The alternative
offered was that of letting the workshops burn or of emptying the jail
of its inmates. Outside there was a ponderous iron gate, guarded by a
deputy. Within this a stout one of oak wood, which a convict was
detailed to open and shut. This convict was no other than Minister
Slick, who had persuaded the warden to assign him to this light duty on
the score of advancing age and feebleness.

Minister Slick's door was only open a crack. He was too cunning to give
the deputy outside a view of the convicts racing down the yard. Not
until the outer iron gate was swung back and the fire horses came
galloping along did he throw his own gate in, without any marked
evidence of "feebleness." The fire engine burst through; the convicts
were at hand. Before the heavy iron gate outside could be shut they
would be down upon its guardian and he would be swept aside like a
sapling before the moose.

Floyd was quick to take in the situation and quick to choose his course
of action. The deputies were flying in every direction before the
victorious mob. A hundred yards can be covered in a very few seconds,
even by men who are not professional sprinters. The wooden gate must not
remain open.

The fire engine shielded him from the gaze of Minister Slick, who had
drawn a revolver, but, not daring to attack the outside deputy alone,
stood awaiting the onset of his fellow-prisoners. Robert was upon him in
an instant and drove the greenhouse scissors into his neck, then thrust
him aside, swung the door to with a mighty shove and turned just in time
to dodge the rush of the maddened convicts.

Fifty of them flung themselves against the gate. It groaned but held
firm. The original oak had buffeted winter gales fiercer than this, when
the sap was in its veins and its green leaves rustled about the
spreading branches. Like a wave of ocean breaking into foam against a
cliff the oncoming mob scattered and reeled back in indecision. Several
of them made at Robert, hurling their weapons at his flying form. Others
ran along the great wall, like tigers along their cage bars, as if
feeling for an opening. Only Dickon Harvey, from the moment that the
inner gate clanged, had stood still in the middle of the clashing
throng, turning his head to and fro and studying the situation. He was
not slow to make up his mind.

"Out by the rotunda!" he shouted, waving his hand, and the whole rabble
was making for the rotunda before the fire-horses had rounded the angle
of the bastile at the other end of the yard.

Now Robert, hemmed in by a broad line of 400 armed opponents, had
already chosen this outlet of escape for himself. He had foiled their
plan and it would go hard with him if he and they should remain within
these prison walls alone. There was a possibility that the flying
deputies had left the rotunda doors ajar, since they were so heavy as to
require several seconds to open and shut. So through the kitchen, up the
iron stairs and across the tiled floor of the rotunda he sped, with the
foremost of the pursuers almost at his heels. Only one deputy, Gradger,
opposed himself to his progress, gun in hand, and Robert eluded him with
the ease of a football dodger.

Both doors were ajar, the outer one, however, only a dozen inches or
less. Perhaps twenty feet lay between him and safety. He had almost
flung himself upon the knob, when a man coming toward him from the
outside forestalled his purpose and drew the door to with a clang. It
was Tapp, who from his office, unable to rally his routed deputies, was
rushing to the scene of the riot, determined to retrieve by a last act
of courage the numberless shortcomings of his administration.

Robert's predicament was fearful. The door barred egress, the dogs were
at his heels. Something of the cowering awe that benumbs the stag when
his legs at last tremble under him and he turns to face the baying pack
swept through his breast for an instant. But it was no more than an
instant, for the young man's blood was roused and it was not unmixed
with iron. With a leap at the knob and a mighty tug he drew the inner
door between himself and the criminals.

A snarl, hardly human, burst from hundreds of throats when they saw this
last avenue closed. The thick glass of the door was splintered in a
jiffy and vicious hands, armed with bludgeons and cutting tools,
stretched through the bars at the traitor who had twice cheated them. As
green displaces yellow in the chameleon's coat, so a wave of revenge
suddenly swept aside the hope of escape in the temper of the crowd.
Fortunately the space between the two doors was so wide that Robert
could back away and avoid the blows intended for his vitals.

But he had not reckoned on Dickon Harvey. Harvey had been the first to
hurl himself on the door that Robert drew between the convicts and
himself. Without a word, without a moment of hesitation, he had turned
back diagonally, the others making a lane for him, and thrown himself on
the turnkey Gradger. The struggle was fierce. Had Harvey been alone, he
would have gone down underneath in the bout. But he was not alone.
Twenty hands reached at the keeper and presently Harvey came pushing
through the others, waving a huge bunch of keys over his head with a
shout that the whole hall echoed.

Robert looked behind him through the outer door. Tapp had disappeared
into his office. There was only the clerk and some idlers about and none
of these, if they could have opened the door, dared to exercise the
power. It was only a question of time when Dickon Harvey would find the
right key. He could see the weapons waving in bared right arms and the
shouts of the rabble once more had a hopeful ring. He said nothing, did
nothing. There was nothing to do. But a rippling in his cheek showed
that his teeth were clenching and unclenching. Instinctively he spread
his arms out, backing against the outer door, clutching the bars and
facing his hunters. It was the attitude of crucifixion.

"Ha!" Dickon Harvey was silent as death, but the shriek of exultation
told that his wrist had turned on the handle of the key. It fitted the
wards. Slowly, all too slowly for the convicts, all too quickly for
Floyd, the inner door was drawn ajar and the foremost men crouched to
spring. Then came a crash in the glass behind Floyd at his very ear. A
long tube of steel passed by his cheek, and, turning, he looked into the
eye of Warden Tapp sighting along the barrel of a rifle. The report rang
out and Dickon Harvey fell forward, the keys jangling at his feet.
Robert wrenched them from his unclasping hand. They were his only
weapon. He had lost the scissors.

At the fall of Harvey the men recoiled for an instant. Quickly another
rifle, and another, and another were thrust through the bars behind
Robert, and he was cautioned to stand motionless. Like a mountebank's
daughter, whose body outlined against a board the father fringes with
skillfully cast knives, each missing her by only a hair, the prisoner
stood with his arms outspread, protected by the chevaux de frise of
protruding guns. Several of the defenders were kneeling and one thrust
his muzzle between the young man's legs.

"Retire!" said Tapp. "Clear the rotunda!" The men sullenly stood.

"One! Two----"

Before the fatal "Three" was added they broke and turned. Then the
muzzles were drawn in, the door behind Robert opened and the warden, at
the head of half a dozen deputies and a dozen policemen who had just
arrived, charged in upon them. The odds were twenty to one, but with the
Right Spur lying senseless under the telephone pole, Minister Slick
wounded at the gate where Robert had stabbed him and Dickon Harvey dead
on the threshold to freedom, the rabble was merely a torso of Hercules,
formidable in physique but powerless without head or limbs. The clubs of
the officers made heavy thuds and the red blood starting here and there
splashed curious spots of color in the dingy crowd. At one stairway
Robert saw the tall form of Hawkins, bleeding but revived, thrashing
around with an empty gun barrel. Then the mob was driven down the
stairs, dividing itself into two portions in the right and left yards.

"Open the team gate," cried Hawkins, leading the deputies and officers
to the left, through the kitchen, instead of to the right through the
bath-rooms, whither Tapp had started. This time the warden was content
to follow and the reason became at once apparent. The solitary fire
engine stood over against the burning shops, helpless without its hose.
From the outside several streams were playing on the buildings and the
firemen, mounting by ladders, were climbing along the roof. But access
from within was necessary if any headway were to be made. The engines
stood outside the gate, occupying the interval of delay by getting up
their fires.

Hawkins stationed his men in a cordon across the gate and admitted the
engines and hose carriages and ladder trucks. One by one they dashed by
till as many as could be supplied with water from the hydrants in the
yard had entered. Then the tall deputy locked the others out, detailed
one squad to guard the rotunda and another to close all doors of the
bastile. With the remainder of the company, re-enforced by more
policemen and keepers, he began to corral his steers.

In order to do this it was necessary that his own men should maintain
the solidarity of a phalanx, while deploying out like a line of
skirmishers from wall to wall. Spread over the width of the yard at one
side, they began their march with rifles and revolvers ready. The
stragglers fled before them. Their gait was slow. Turning the upper
angle, an ambush was to be feared, but the spirit of the convicts was
broken and they only hurled their weapons and fled. Hawkins wheeled his
line to the right, making the pivot-mark time, and passed along the end
of the yard, which was deserted. Turning the second angle, a more
desperate resistance was shown. Here all was confusion, the engines and
burning shops offering places of refuge, while the presence of the
firemen made it impossible to shoot. Hawkins halted his command.

"All firemen in the yard fall behind this line!" he shouted. The firemen
left their engines, several of them only tearing themselves away by
force. Three were captured and held in front by the convicts. The
others, seeing this murderous purpose, could hardly be restrained from
rushing to their rescue.

"Club guns!" cried Hawkins, and the breeches instead of the muzzles were
presented to the mob. But they seemed to dread this end of the weapon as
much as the other, for they released the firemen and slowly withdrew,
Hawkins' line continuing its Macedonian march. Suddenly from a thick
nucleus among the rebels, a spokesman started forward with a white
handkerchief tied to a pole. Hawkins motioned him back and the march was
continued. The men were penned up against the bath-room entrance,
leading into the rotunda and the bastile, where four deputies with
leveled rifles prevented escape. Hawkins had cleared the hydrants and
the firemen resumed their work.

"Deputies at the bath-room door fall back and guard the stairs leading
up to the rotunda! The prisoners will file into their cells in the
bastile!"

This was the last straw. A yell of rage burst from the mob. To be flung
back into their kennels with the bitter crust of disappointment to gnaw,
and the prospect of punishment for the day's misdoings, this was too
much to endure without a last resistance. They turned upon their keepers
with the courage of the beast at bay.

"Now!" cried Hawkins, and his line rushed forward. The hand-to-hand
struggle of the rotunda was renewed more equally, for there were
resolute men in the mob, men reckless of life and maddened by the
goading around the yard. Nor was their accoutrement of iron tools
despicable. Dozens slipped through the line, and policemen as well as
convicts were seen staggering under blows. But the timid ones speedily
fled into the bastile, and, thinning the multitude, robbed it of that
consciousness of numerical superiority which had given it confidence. At
last not more than twenty desperadoes remained, backs to the wall, in
front of the line.

"Club them down!" cried Hawkins.

There was no choice but to obey. The men were of that mettle which
breaks but does not bend. One by one they were beaten to the ground.

The whole of the afternoon was required to lock the mutineers up
properly. With the aid of those prisoners who had not joined the riot
the fire in the shops was finally put out and a good deal of the
property was saved. Only one life had been lost, that of Dickon Harvey,
but the hospital beds were full that night.

When Warden Tapp called Robert to the office and thanked him in person
for his behavior at the team gate and in the rotunda there were tears in
the proud man's eyes. This was a shameful legacy of ruin and rebellion
which he was leaving to his successor.

Passing out of the warden's room, through the rotunda, Robert heard the
familiar voice which had puzzled him so often.

"Aisy, Misther Butler, aisy, for the love o' heaven," the uncouth fellow
groaned.

Floyd turned and looked. "Slim" Butler, the overseer of the
harness-shop, was superintending the transfer to the hospital on an
improvised stretcher of the prisoner whom he had shot when his section
rose against him. His own head was bandaged and his clothes were burned.
The firemen had rescued them both with difficulty. But the face of the
prisoner caused Robert to start, for he recognized in the convict whom
Dobbs called Quirk his uncle's coachman, Dennis Mungovan.




CHAPTER XXIII.

THREE OF A KIND.


"I've got him! I've got him! Take his other arm, Toot!"

"Let go; she's tipping!"

"Will I let go and see the bloke drownded? You're a spunky feller, Toot
Watts. Anybody'd think you never rocked a dory before yourself. Get up
in the stern, Turkey. Now pull her in to the bridge and hold on to the
logs. That'll balance her."

With one hand the Whistler held the drowning man's arm, while with the
other he lifted his chin out of the water. It was a dangerous position,
leaning over the bow in this manner, but the man in tow was unconscious
and could not struggle. In a half-dozen strokes Turkey had brought the
dory's stern up against one of the piles of the pier. This support he
clasped with might and main, while Toot and the Whistler drew the body
over the bow. Both were breathing hard when it was finally boarded.

"Turn him over," cried the Whistler. "You take the oars, Turkey, and row
like fury for the beach. Get the bloke's head around, Toot, up against
the bow. That's it. Now work his left arm up and down; I'll take the
right--not so fast--about like this. That'll make him breathe."

"Do you think he's dead?" asked Toot in an awestruck whisper.

"He ain't dead. I felt of his heart."

"I seen a bloke at the bath-house that was in the water half an hour and
they brought him round," said Turkey, panting at the oars.

"Keep the arm going, Toot. Never mind if you're tired."

"Are we near the beach?" asked Toot. He was the youngest of the trio,
not much more than a child, in fact, and even the slum child, precocious
in many kinds of knowledge, does not peep without tremors behind the
veil of the mystery of mysteries. No one answered his query. An answer
was not necessary, for over his shoulder the white line of the surf
could be seen. When they got near the Whistler jumped to Turkey's side,
seized the right oar and gave the added impetus of his lithe young arms
to the headway of the boat. The water hardly rippled the glorious ribbon
of moonlight behind them and wind and tide were set toward shore. Under
these favoring circumstances the dory was carried high and dry upon the
sands.

"Lift him out," cried the Whistler. Shagarach's body was laid upon the
beach, dripping and disheveled. "You run up to the refectory, Toot, and
tell the cop there to bring some whisky. Turn him over, Turkey, and let
the water run out. Now slap his cheeks. Slap them hard."

"He's breathing."

"How did he tumble in, I wonder? Gee, didn't he come down flopping?"

"P'raps he was loaded."

"Lucky he didn't hit on them rocks there."

"He would if the tide was dead low."

Neither the Whistler nor Turkey had checked their vigorous efforts to
resuscitate the limp body. Even the catching of their boat on a
high-crested wave did not seduce them from their work.

"I'll swim after her," said the Whistler, watching the dory drift slowly
off the sands.

Soon Shagarach's eyes opened and his lips muttered indistinctly.
Presently he moved his arms. How cool the air was! He had often longed
to lie like this on a soft, white sand, and let the shallow water play
over him, while he pierced with his gaze the deep blue sky. But the
stars were above him now--not pendulous tongues of flame such as
throbbed in the oriental heavens of his childhood, but the smoldering
embers of the northern night, paling in the moonlight. And whose were
those two strange faces thrust darkly over the golden disk?

"Are you better, mister?" It was unmistakably an earthly tone, the voice
and accent of the city gamin, but warm with that humaneness of heart
which a ragged jacket shelters as often as a velvet one.

"Take my coat, mister. You're shivering," said the Whistler, suiting
action to word, so that Shagarach found himself embraced by a garment,
not dry by any means, but more grateful than the soaked apparel which
was chilling his skin.

"If you can get up, mister, and run around, it'll warm you. Toot'll be
here soon with some whisky."

Shagarach gathered his strength to rise, but the effort was fruitless.

"How did I come here?" he gasped.

"You fell over the bridge, right near us. We were fishing for smelts and
rowed over and saved you."

"That was fortunate. I thank you," murmured Shagarach.

"Can't yer swim?" asked Turkey in a pitying tone, but Shagarach was
preoccupied with his recollections. He had made a mistake of judgment.
He should have declined the rendezvous. But who and what was the
assailant, the leering oaf he had passed on the pier? Was it some agent
of the Arnolds? The anonymous letters pointed to that source. They were
all seamed with allusions to the trial of Robert Floyd. And they formed
his only clew. Stay, the hat he still clutched in his hand. He raised it
feebly--for the mental energies of the lawyer were more elastic than the
physical--and his teeth were still chattering though his brain was
clear. It was a round, rimless cap of a common pattern.

"Here comes Toot." The Whistler, who was all eyes, had been the first to
espy him, running at the top of his speed. Out of the darkness behind
him loomed the powerful form of a policeman.

"The cop's comin', fellers. Here he is," cried Toot.

"Gimme the whisky," said the Whistler. "Take a swig, mister. It'll warm
you up."

Shagarach applied his lips to the bottle and took a sparing draught.

"Well, how is the gentleman?" sang out the policeman, cheerily.

"He's all right now," answered the Whistler, a strange uneasiness coming
over him.

The officer stooped down to the man's face.

"Why, Mr. Shagarach----" Surprise prevented him from saying more and
Shagarach looked up at hearing his name.

"You're not on the old beat now?" he said.

"No, I'm on the park force till I get strong again. This is a bad
accident. Coming round all right, though, by the look o' things."

"Yes, give me a hand and I'll try to rise."

Officer Chandler's great hand swung Shagarach on his feet. For a moment
his knees sunk. Then he shook himself like a draggled dog. The liquor
was working its way to his marrow and banishing the deep-seated chill.

"I owe my life to these boys," he said.

"Hello, what are you stripping for?" asked the officer, turning around.

"My dory," answered the Whistler. He had already reduced himself to the
minimum of wearing apparel and stood ankle-deep in the surf.

The dory was twenty yards out, showing a dark broadside against the
moonlit waves.

"Oh, all right," laughed Chandler. "Give me your arm, Mr. Shagarach.
We'll furnish you a new outfit at the refectory. How did it all happen?"

"One moment, till the boy comes back." Shagarach knew that his assailant
had had time to escape and that search for the present would be useless,
but he saw no advantage in keeping the incident to himself. So he
sketched the story of the letters, the rendezvous and the struggle, in
his curt, forcible style.

"Find the head that cap fits and you'll do me a service," he concluded,
showing Chandler the headgear.

"There was nobody on the bridge?"

"Nobody but the oaf I described."

"Wade out, Turkey," the Whistler was calling to his barefoot companions.
He seemed shy of putting his boat ashore. Since the arrival of the
officer all three urchins had become singularly distant and distressed.
Was this only the natural awe which slum children feel in the presence
of the police? Or was it conscience that made cowards of them all?

"Come ashore, young feller. The gentleman wants to thank you," said
Chandler.

"We must look for the fishing-pole under the pier," answered the
Whistler. It was true that he had thrown his rod away when they heard
the loud splash of Shagarach's body in the water. But his manner
indicated that while what he said might be true, it was not the fact.
Turkey and Toot also had shown unseemly haste in wading out to the dory
with the Whistler's outer raiment. The Whistler was digging the blade in
for his first stroke when Shagarach addressed him in a tone that made
him pause.

"My young friends, I am too weak to thank you to-night. To-morrow is
Saturday. Could you call at my office in the morning, 31 Putnam street?
Mr. Shagarach. Can you come?"

"Yes, sir," answered the boys, with more submission than gladness in
their voices. All the gamin's impudence melts at a touch of true
kindness. The boys waited a moment, then disappeared into the night,
while Shagarach, with the policeman's assistance, made his way through
the gathering crowd to the refectory.

It was the misfortune of Jacob, Shagarach's office boy, to be the owner
of a most preposterous nose, the consciousness of which led him to fear
society and shun the mannerless multitude. Boys of his own age in
particular he dreaded, as a tame crow is said to fear nothing so much as
a wild one. So when our three mischiefmakers entered the office the next
morning and seated themselves till Mr. Shagarach should return, the poor
lad began squirming by anticipation in his chair as if its seat were a
pin cushion with the points of the pins protruding. As a matter of
defensive tactics, this was the worst possible attitude to take, as it
courted assault. But Jacob was not a strategist.

Before long his torture began, first by side comments and giggles,
suppressed in deference to the decorum of the surroundings. Then he was
subjected to a running fire of personal questions, the tone of which
speedily began to mimic the muffled nasals of his own richly accented
responses. This would have been acute torment to a sensitive lad and a
spirited one would have ended the comedy by an appeal to arms. But poor
Jacob was stolid and peaceable. So his tormenters had things their own
way. The Whistler especially seemed to have neither conscience nor
reason in his make-up, but an enormous funny-bone which usurped the
functions of both. It was not until Aronson came in that Jacob was able
to make his escape.

Saul Aronson was not a musical young man. If he yawned down the major
chord twice or thrice at bedtime this was the nearest he ever got to
singing. But when the Whistler raised his flexible pipe, at first
softly, then loudly, with wonderful trills, breaking into still more
wonderful tremolos, with staccato volleys, and ascending arpeggios that
would have put a mocking-bird to shame, it is no wonder that he gave up
the attempt to insert the metes and bounds correctly in a quit-claim
deed and contented himself with furtively watching the o-shaped orifice
from which this flood of melody issued. This was his occupation when
Shagarach's form, crossing the threshold, sent him back to his copying
and checked the Whistler in the full ecstasy of an improvised cadenza.

"You have saved my life," said Shagarach to the boys when they had
followed him into the inner room. He used the plural number, but his
gaze seemed to be attracted to the Whistler, whose neatly brushed hair
told of a mother's hand, and whose restless blue eyes, fringed with
heavy dark lashes, centered a face oval, high-born and sweet, which gave
out in every contour the glad emanation of a youth which was natural and
pure. There was less in the others to make them distinctive. Turkey
seemed to be a hulking clod and Toot was wizened and shrill-voiced and
sharp.

"You have saved my life. How can I repay you?"

"I don't want any pay," spoke up Whistler. "I on'y came here to tell you
about the fire."

"What fire?"

"Turkey said you was defending the bloke that set fire to the house on
Cazenove street."

"Do you know something about that?"

"We seen a blo--a man coming out of the house," answered the Whistler.

"Then you come to make me still more obliged to you. But you must let me
discharge a part of my other debt first I have just come from the bank.
Here are fifteen double eagles. You will each give me your mother's name
and address and I will send her five."

Turkey and Toot showed no reluctance in doing this, but the Whistler
still held back.

"My mother doesn't want any reward," he said. All three of the boys had
just graduated from the Phillips grammar school, and could place their
negatives correctly when they chose.

"This is not a reward. I only ask you to allow me to be your friend. At
your age I had never seen this amount of money."

But still the Whistler blushed and shook his head till Shagarach
perceived the boy's principle could not be shaken.

"You will give me your mother's address? Perhaps I may be able to get
you work. Wouldn't you like to go to work?"

"Oh, yes, sir." The Whistler's face, which obstinate refusal, even for
so honorable a scruple, had clouded with a trace of sullenness,
brightened at once and his blue eyes smiled. Shagarach copied the
address carefully and determined not to lose sight of the boy who knew
how to say no so decidedly.

"And now----" he pushed the memorandum book aside. "I am defending
Floyd. What did you wish to tell me?"

"We was the first at the fire," said Toot, eagerly.

"And we found the body of the servant," added Turkey.

But Shagarach's eyes never left the Whistler.

"Just when the fire broke out," said the Whistler, "we were coming
through the alleyway side of the house."

"Yes."

"A big bloke--I mean a tall man--was running down the alleyway into
Broad street. I noticed him, because the alley was narrow and he knocked
me down."

"Where?"

"In the alleyway."

"Near Broad street?"

"Yes, sir."

"Ran against you and knocked you down?"

"Yes, sir, and said: 'Darn it, get out of the way.'"

"Was he running?"

"Well, half-running."

"We was running," added Toot; "'cause we heard them yelling 'Fire!'"

"What kind of a looking man was it?"

"A big, brown man, with a black mustache."

"He looked like a dood," added Toot.

"You didn't know him?"

"No, sir."

"Would you know him again?"

"Oh, yes," answered the Whistler. "I seen--I saw him last week pulling a
single scull up the river."

Shagarach remembered having seen a portrait of Harry Arnold displayed in
a fashionable photographer's showcase--shaggy cape-coat and fur cap
setting off his splendid beauty. Immediately he wrote the address on a
card, and, summoning Aronson, bade him obtain a half-dozen copies of the
photograph.

"He was a handsome young man, then? About how old?"

The three guesses varied from 21 to 27. Either of these ages seems
fabulously advanced from the standpoint of 14.

"Did you notice anything about his hands? Were they bare or did he wear
gloves?"

"His right hand was bare," answered the Whistler, "'cause his fingernail
scratched me when he thrun me--when he threw me down."

Shagarach drew forth the glove which Chandler had brought him and was
studying it profoundly. Apparently he forgot the presence of the boys,
so deep was his meditation. Then at last he started out of the reverie,
thanked them again and with kind assurances of friendship shook their
hands in parting at the door.

"Ain't he a dandy bloke?" whispered Turkey on the stairs.

"Why didn't yer take it, Whistler?" said Toot.

But the Whistler held his peace.




CHAPTER XXIV.

DEATHBED REVELATIONS.


When Emily Barlow ran down to Shagarach's office at noon this Saturday
she was accompanied by her friend, Beulah Ware. Beulah Ware was as dark
as Emily was fair. In temperament, as in complexion, the two girls
offered a contrast, Beulah's carriage having the recollected dignity of
a nun's, while Emily's sensibilities were all as fine as those Japanese
swords which are whetted so keenly they divide the light leaves that
fall across their edges.

"We should like to leave a note with the flowers, Mr. Aronson. Could you
furnish us paper?"

Aronson was only too eager to furnish not only paper, but envelope,
ink-well and a ready-filled pen. When the young ladies went out he
thought a cloud passed over the arid chapters of his Pickering XII. This
was the note, pinned to a graceful bouquet, that Shagarach read on his
return:

     "My Dear Mr. Shagarach: You must have read of the riot yesterday in
     which Robert behaved so nobly. But he is even more pleased with a
     discovery which he made during the affair. It seems that one of the
     wounded convicts, who has been passing under the name of Quirk, is
     no other than the coachman, Mungovan, whom none of us could find.
     Could you manage to call at the prison to-day? The poor fellow is
     seriously injured and may have important evidence in his
     possession. Yours truly,

     "EMILY BARLOW."

The violets seemed to move Shagarach far more than the note, momentous
as its revelation might be. His hand trembled when he reached to clasp
the stems. Then he withdrew it and stood irresolute. A procession was
passing through the street below. From the window he could see the
tilted necks of a line of fifers. Was it a horror of music that made him
shut out these sounds so often? A dread of perfume and loveliness that
made him leave the room at once with brief directions to Aronson? The
casual observer would have said that he merely hurried to obey the
suggestion of Emily's note, for he took his way at once to the state
prison across the river.

When Col. Mainwaring took hold of the prison that morning it was
expected that two out of every five of the convicts would have to be
bastinadoed before peace could be restored. Against the advice of all
the deputies, including Hawkins, he had summoned his wards to the
rotunda and outlined his course of action in a cool speech. The burden
of it was that he intended to begin with a clean sheet and to look out
for their interests rather than their sensibilities, or, as he expressed
it, "to give them hard words but soft mattresses."

The matter and manner of the address had a tranquillizing effect and
some of the shops that day wore as quiet and decent an aspect as any
factory-room in the state. Moreover, as soon as it became known that the
colonel had resolved to adopt several of the reforms demanded in Dickon
Harvey's petition, even the moodiest of the ring-leaders felt that they
could submit without any hurt to pride.

Stretched on a hospital cot, whispering with contrite eyes to a
black-robed clergyman, lay Dennis Mungovan. The look on his face was
peaceful and exalted. His hands were clasped. The groans of patients and
the odor of drugs which filled the chamber did not reach his senses. He
had just finished his deathbed confession and stood upon a secure
footing on the terra firma of faith, awaiting the summons from above.

"A lawyer to speak with Quirk," announced the attendant.

"Not Quirk, but Mungovan," said the clergyman, making way.

"And must you lave me, father dear?" besought the patient, stretching
out his hands as a cold man in winter reaches toward the fire.

"I have a wedding to perform, my son. Remember, your hours in this
valley of tears are few, and you have left everything worldly behind
you. Thank God, who in His infinite mercy has given you the grace of a
happy death."

"I do, father, I do," cried the pallid sufferer.

"And an opportunity to repent of your sins. God bless you. Good-by."

The clergyman bowed to Shagarach and departed--from the deathbed to the
wedding service, from the grave to the cradle of life, so wide was the
compass of his ministrations.

"You are dying, then?" asked Shagarach.

"Wid a bullet in me breast, misthur, that the doctors can't rache. Och,
they murdhered me wid their probin'. And all for what? All for nawthin'.
What was I to be mixin' in their riots for? Wirrasthrue! Wirrasthrue!"

"You know Robert Floyd is in the prison here?"

"Robert Floyd! For the love o' heaven, misthur, don't tell him it's me.
Tell him I'm Quirk. Och, that lie is a sin on me sowl."

"The truth will be best when you are so near death," said Shagarach,
quietly. "Perhaps it would be better at all times. Besides, Mr. Floyd
knows you are here."

"Misther," the dying man drew Shagarach toward him. "Misther! Do me a
favor for the love o' doin' good."

"What is it?"

"Will you do it--an' I'll pray for your sowl before the throne, so help
me----"

"I will if I can. What is it?"

"Keep it from Ellen."

"Keep what?"

"My name, my disgrace. Never let the poor girl know. She was my wife."

"Your wife?" Shagarach was puzzled a moment. "You mean Ellen Greeley?"

"Ellen Mungovan, before God."

"Ellen Greeley is dead. She perished in the fire."

The man started up in his bed so violently as to burst the bandage of
his wound. His blood began to stain the linen and Shagarach was obliged
to call an attendant, who adjusted it and tucked the patient snugly in.
Still his glassy eyes were fixed on Shagarach and his muttering lips
seemed to say over the word: "Dead! Dead! Dead!"

"She was burned to death in the Arnold fire. Robert Floyd is accused of
setting it and causing her death."

"Burned to death!" The man's brain seemed bewildered.

"Didn't you know these things?"

"Shure, how would I know them, misther, all cooped in here like a bat in
a cave?"

"How did you come here?"

"Och, the foolishness came over me, wid my head tangled in dhrink. What
does a man know in dhrink? He can't tell his friend from his inimy. And
me that had a dacent mother in the ould counthry and a dacent wife in
the new, look at this, where it druv me."

"What crime are you charged with?"

"Wid breakin' and enterin', misther; and, sure, it was the stableman put
me up to it that night I was full, and they got away and I was caught
wid the watches on me and I was so shamed of Ellen and me mother at
home, says I, I'll niver disgrace them, says I, and so I gev in me name
Quirk, and none of them could tell the differ."

"When was it you were arrested?" asked Shagarach.

"It's three weeks and three days yesterday, misther; that I know by the
scratches I made in me cell."

"Can't you read?"

"Only the big, black letthers, misther."

This explained Mungovan's ignorance of Floyd's arrest. It seemed to be
an accident that the two had never met in prison. Though they occupied
cells in the same ward, their daily work carried them to opposite parts
of the yard, Mungovan's to the harness-shop under "Slim" Butler;
Robert's to the greenhouses near the team gate.

"Misther!" The poor wretch clasped Shagarach's wrist and drew the
lawyer's ear to his lips again.

"Misther, will you bury me where Ellen is buried?"

"I'll see if that can be done."

"Misther!" The man's eyes were glazing. "Look!" He fumbled with aspen
fingers in his breast, finally drawing forth an envelope. From this he
removed a ringlet of black hair, probably a love-lock of Ellen's. Then
he showed the inclosed writing to Shagarach. It was not addressed.

"Read it," he whispered. "Ellen gev it me to carry."

Shagarach opened the envelope and read in a servant-girl's painstaking
hand the following words:

     "The peddler has not come for two days, so I send you this by a
     trustworthy messanger. As I rote you in my last, the professor said
     in the study, 'Harry gets his deserts.' That was all I could hear
     only he and Mr. Robert talked for a long time afterwards. The will
     is in the safe in the study. If I hear ennything more I will let
     you know, and please send me the money you promised me soon."

There was neither address nor signature to this document.

"To carry where?" asked Shagarach, but the man's brain was all clotted
with a single idea.

"Will you bury me by Ellen's side, misther, in the green churchyard
under the soft turf that the wind combs smooth like in my own dear
counthry? Will you bury me beside Ellen I disgraced so, misther? She'll
know I'm wid her there. Will you bury me, misther?"

"I will. I will. Where did Ellen bid you carry the letter?"

"The letther? Och, I carried the letther in me mouth. Sure, I wouldn't
be afther givin' up Ellen's letther to the warden."

"I mean----" But the man was passing through the delirium that precedes
the last fainting calm. Several times his lips moved, murmuring "Ellen."
His fingers clutched the love-lock to his breast. Once he turned his
head and asked for "Father Flynn." But Father Flynn was ministering now
at another ceremony as opposite to this as laughter is to tears.

Toward the end a smile of singular sweetness irradiated his rough face,
made delicate by the waxy color of death. Were his thoughts playing back
again among the memories of childhood, in the beloved island, perhaps at
the knee of that honest mother whom he feared to disgrace? Or were they
leaping forward to the joy of the cool bed under the churchyard daisies
at Ellen's side? Shagarach, holding the shred of paper in his hand,
brooding over the answer to his unanswered question, could only watch
the flickering spark in reverential awe.

But he did not default his side of the pact they had made, he and Dennis
Mungovan, with clasped hands in the hospital alcove. At a great
sacrifice of time he sought out Ellen Greeley's sister, explained the
secret of Ellen's marriage and Mungovan's repentance for his follies,
and, with the help of Father Flynn, persuaded her to consent to an
interment of the couple together. He even went to the pains of
communicating the death to Mungovan's worthy mother, having obtained her
address from Ellen Greeley's sister and heir. But the circumstances and
place of the "accident" which killed him were humanely concealed.

In return for all this solicitude the lawyer had an unaddressed and
ambiguous scrawl in his possession. Three facts were established in
relation to the person for whom it was intended. In the first place
whoever it was he knew that Harry Arnold had "got his deserts" under his
uncle's will. Secondly, he had employed Ellen Greeley as a spy upon the
doings in the professor's household. Thirdly, he was in league with the
missing peddler, who seemed to act as a go-between for Ellen and her
correspondent.




CHAPTER XXV.

THE NEST-EGG HATCHES OUT.


"St! Bobbs!"

The sound was at Robert's left ear. He had been dreaming of Emily
arrayed in bridal white and kneeling at his side before the altar of
joy. Uncle Benjamin in a clergyman's surplice was pronouncing a
benediction upon them. The good old custom of a nuptial kiss was about
to be observed, when the warning whisper and his prison nickname rudely
awakened him to his surroundings. The sweet vision melted into a black
reality, the wide arches of the cathedral contracting to narrow cell
walls and the loved faces of Emily and his uncle cruelly vanishing.

"Bobbs! Do you 'ear?"

"Yes!" Robert rubbed his eyes as if to restore the illusion and his
answer was slumbrously indistinct.

"Count that bell."

A distant clock was giving out two strokes faintly but with vibrations
prolonged in the silence.

"'Ear the hother coves snoozing."

The deep breathing of the convicts grew more and more audible as
Robert's senses became sharper and he sat up on his couch.

"Hi 'ear you, Bobbs. Hare you making your toilet?" inquired the
facetious cracksman.

"Yes."

"Leave your bloomin' boots be'ind as a keepsake. We haren't
pussy-footed, me hangel."

"All right, I'm ready."

"Now, take out the blocks, me boy, and 'andle with care. If they falls
on your toes they might 'urt, besides disturbin' the bloomin' deputy,
which we must be werry careful to havoid, Bobbs, out of consideration
for 'is feelings. Sh!"

A footstep was heard coming along the corridor, and the re-enforcement
of light told the prisoners that the turnkey had a lantern in his hand,
the dim gas jet at one end only sufficing to deepen the shadows in the
cells. Robert lay back on his pallet and closed his eyes till the steps
retreated. In a half-minute the turnkey would be back. He was a new man,
both Gradger and Hawkins being still on the sick list from the blows
they had received in the riot of the day before.

"St, Bobbs, hare you ready?"

"All ready."

Robert had removed six bricks and carefully muffled them in his
bedquilt, leaving an aperture not much larger than the door of a kennel.
The light came nearer and nearer and suddenly he heard the cracksman
groaning piteously. The turnkey raised his lantern, approached the cell
from which these sounds issued and peered in.

"Somebody bludgeoned yesterday," thought he. But "somebody" was standing
at the front of his cell, with his hands firmly grasping two bars. As
the turnkey stooped and brought his eyes nearer, the two bars were
wrenched out and clasped around his neck. Being a sturdy fellow, his
instinct was to struggle rather than to cry. But his struggle availed
him nothing in the surprise of the moment, with the odds of position
against him. His head was drawn down through the bars and he nuzzled a
soft substance on the cracksman's breast. Then a strange odor got
possession of his senses. He gasped, fought, gasped again, and finally
fainted away. When his writhings had ceased the cracksman removed his
lantern and laid it lightly on the floor outside.

"Climb through, Bobbs--not that way."

Robert had stood on the bed and thrust one leg through the aperture.

"Head foremost, as the little feller dives."

Robert reversed his position, and with a terrible wrenching of his
shoulders worked the upper part of his body through the opening, Dobbs
giving him loyal assistance and encouragement meanwhile. The turnkey
hanging helpless into the cracksman's cell, his body outlined against
the lantern, caused him to start back.

"Ee's hall right. Hi nursed 'im asleep on my breast-pin. Hain't it
daintily perfumed?"

Attached to the cracksman's breast was a large sponge saturated with
chloroform. The turnkey had inhaled this and was soundly asleep.

"Now for running the gantlet, Bobbs."

Dobbs' motions were lightning-like. First he laid the turnkey softly
outside, then climbed through the cell-bars, this time feet foremost,
for the cuts had been made nearly two feet apart vertically and the bars
were not set close together. Once outside, he motioned to Robert to
follow him, while he detached the prostrate man's keys from his girdle,
dabbing his nose now and then with the sponge. Squeezing them tightly so
as to avoid clanking, he coolly selected one of the largest.

"That comes of watching Longlegs w'en the others were 'ollering," he
whispered to Robert, holding up his prize. It was the key to the door at
the blind end of the corridor, which a turnkey passing through with the
intention of going out into the yard would naturally select from his
bunch and carry separate. Hawkins' habit of swinging his keys
nonchalantly had not escaped Dobbs' observant eyes.

"Now," whispered Dobbs, making for the blind end of the corridor. There
was no time to remove the lantern and the chloroformed turnkey from
sight. Most of the convicts were still asleep, but two or three,
awakened by the noises, started up in their night clothes and stood
behind the bars, making gestures but uttering no sound.

Thus far Dobbs' plan had proved successful. There was no other outlet
than the one he had chosen, since the cells were backed against the
middle of the bastile and were impregnable at the rear. There remained
two strong doors in the opposite wall to force. One turn of the key in
its wards slipped the lock of the first. Before the second Dobbs waited
and listened. A rhythm of receding footsteps was heard outside.
Suddenly they seemed to cease.

"He's turned the corner," whispered the cracksman, immediately opening
the outer door.

"Pull the inside one to, me boy."

Robert did as he commanded.

"Out with you now."

Robert preceded his confederate into the deserted yard, while Dobbs
closed the great outer gate softly and sprung its iron bolt. Pursuit
from within was thus cut off.

"Now run, me boy."

Robert followed, easily keeping up with his leader. As they approached
the end of the bastile, Dobbs slowed his pace.

"Tiptoes, now," he cried stealthily working his way up to the corner of
the building, where he stood crouching as if in ambush. Their shadows
were thrown forward beyond the corner, so that the cracksman could not
get within a yard of the edge.

"The hother cove Hi greased, but this one we'll 'ave to sponge, Bobbs,"
he said, taking the sponge from his breast and sprinkling it anew from a
tiny vial.

"'Ere ee comes a-waggin' of 'is 'ead, but this at 'is beak will set 'im
snoozin', Hi fawncy."

The footsteps came nearer and nearer, as monotonously regular as the
ticking of a clock, but slow and heavy, as if the sentinel were a man of
size. Dobbs stood ready to spring, the sponge in his right hand, his
left free to disarm the deputy if he should present his gun. The form of
a man turned the angle. It was Koerber, the giant, whom Col. Mainwaring
had transferred from the caneshop to this less responsible duty.

Luckily Dobbs caught him in the midst of a capacious gape, and the great
sponge stuffed into his open mouth served at once as gag and smothering
instrument.

"'Old 'is harm," cried Dobbs to Robert, who leaped to his side and held
down the powerful right arm of the German Titan. Koerber kicked and
fought with desperation, bruising each of his assailants, but the
sponge muffled his outcries and gradually he sunk in a stupor, Dobbs,
with a strength no one would have suspected, breaking the fall of his
body and laying him gently on the ground.

Another long application of the sponge and again he sped away. Koerber's
beat stopped at the middle of the end-section of the yard, where he and
the other sentinel must have met and saluted. But no one had come to his
aid, and when the two fugitives crossed the "left yard," as it was
called, making directly for the wall, no one impeded their progress.
Eighty yards away, near the greenhouses, the back of a deputy could be
seen marching in the opposite direction. Was this the man whom Dobbs had
"greased?"

The cracksman had made a bee-line for the twenty-foot wall. How did he
hope to surmount such a barrier? It was as smooth as a planed board,
with hardly crevice enough at the cemented seams to give a cat's claw
footing.

"Ere's a hinstrument of my hown inventing which I call the 'andy 'inge,"
said Dobbs, removing from his bosom an iron thing coiled around with
rope. Unreeling the rope with lightning twists, he displayed for a
second a plain, strong hinge, very broadplated and sharp at the inner
angle. With a cast that no professional angler could excel, he flung
this far over the top of the wall, and drew it taut, by means of the
rope. The edges of the wall being drilled off perfectly square, the
hinge must have caught on the other side, and the security of the
apparatus as a means of ascent was only limited by the strength of the
rope. The device was as simple, yet as ingenious, as the clock-face.

"Climb, me boy," said Dobbs.

Robert was up in a few seconds, the rope being thick enough to give his
hands good purchase, and the cool night air and exhilaration buoying his
strength. Dobbs climbed with more difficulty and was puffing heavily
when, with Robert's help, he reached the broad top of the wall.

"Hi'll 'ave you gazetted hensign in the royal navy, Bobbs, next time Hi
confab with 'er royal 'ighness," he smiled, his humor never appearing to
desert him. "Such climbing would do credit to a powder monkey."

Just then, with the two figures standing on the top of the wall, a loud
clang smote the silent air. It was followed by another and another till
the world seemed awake once more.

"The alarm bell!" cried Dobbs. "They're after us! Drop!"

Both men were on the ground in a second, Dobbs coiling his "handy hinge"
as he led the way running. Fear lent him wings and though he panted and
his voice grew husky, he managed to keep abreast of his fleeter
companion. The prison wall skirted a long, ill-lighted alley, which
debouched in an unfrequented street. Here the houses were scattered,
barren lots intervening, and a glimpse of the river breaking into the
background now and then. It was broad moonlight, and the trees and
fences afforded little shelter to the runaways.

Any policeman who met them would have been justified in shooting down
two men, one in convict garb, fleeing from the direction of the prison.
Doubtless Dobbs had prepared himself for this emergency, but luck
favored him here and his reserve resources were not called into play. To
left and right and left again he turned, finally climbing a low fence
and crossing a stableyard that bordered on the river. A second fence to
climb and Robert found himself on the rocky embankment of the stream.

How dark and beautiful it was in the moonlight! "Free, and I know not
another as infinite word"--the line of the poet came back to him, and
for an instant he felt in his veins all the glory of that treasure for
which nations have thought rivers of their purest blood no extravagant
price. But there was little leisure now for meditation. The alarm bell
could still be heard sounding distinctly at the distance of a quarter of
a mile and Dobbs was peering down the embankment, which cast an inky
pall over the water in its shadow.

Presently he whistled. An answer came, some fifty yards to the right.
Clutching his comrade's arm, the Englishman ran along the bank to the
spot from which the response proceeded. A light keel-boat with a single
occupant was moored in the gloom below, but so far below that to jump
would surely capsize her, for the tide was at its ebb and the stream had
sunk like an emptying canal lock.

"Shall we plunge in?" asked Robert, not averse to the bracing midnight
bath.

"'Ardly, with a four-mile row in wet clothes before us, me hangel,"
answered the cracksman, "and the 'andy 'inge still lovingly clasped to
my bosom."

Scooping out some earth at the rim of the flags which crowned the
embankment wall, he made a hollow for the hinge and threw the rope down
into the boat. The corner to which it clung had not been chiseled off
clean like the edge of the prison wall and there was some chance of its
slipping, but the risk had to be run.

This time Dobbs descended first. Robert followed him nimbly. All through
the adventure he had reflected and even echoed the cracksman's humorous
mood, and had displayed as little nervousness as if it were a student's
lark upon which he was engaged instead of the grave crime of prison
breach. So when the hinge slipped, just as he was dangling midway, and
he fell plump into Dobbs' arm, with a coil of rope and an iron implement
behind him, he only laughed as delightedly as a high-perched tomboy
after climbing a forbidden fence.

"Well, that gives us back the hinge," he said. "We might have had to
leave it."

Evidently the serious-talking young radical had a vein of drollery under
his thoughtful exterior.

"You didn't 'urt yourself?" asked Dobbs, gathering his own dispersed
members together.

"Not a bit. You're as good as a feather bed. I'd just enjoy tumbling on
you four or five times a day."

But Dobbs, ruefully rubbing his barked shins, only ordered the boatman
to "give way," which is nautical for "pull straight ahead," and in three
or four strokes they were clear of the embankment and out in the full
current of the flowing tide.




CHAPTER XXVI.

ITS CHICK PROVES PECULIAR.


Have you never lain back at midnight in the bow of a Whitehall, with
your hands clasped behind your head and your legs lazily
outstretched--no comrades but the oarsman amidships, and the
fellow-passenger facing you from the stern, no sound but the gurgle of
your own gliding, no sensation but the onward impulse of the boat, as
gentle as the swaying of a garden swing, and the scarcely perceptible
breeze aerating the surface of the river? Then the moon has never tinted
the atmosphere for you with such voluptuous purity as it did for Robert
Floyd that night, and the sparse, dim stars have never announced
themselves so articulately as the lights of a grander city than that
whose gloomy masses and scattered lamps they overhung. Even Dobbs'
lighting of a cigar--no cosmic event, surely--did not jar upon the grand
totality. The tiny flame, drawn in and then flaring up, gave flash-light
glimpses of a face unmatched in the shrewdness and humor of its lines.

For fully ten minutes not a word was spoken. Suddenly Dobbs' voice
snapped out:

"The hother duds, quick, chummy. There's a bobby on the draw."

A pair of black trousers was thrown toward him by the oarsman and Dobbs
drew them on over his prison garb.

"Now the coat."

He was turning his striped blouse inside out.

"Now, let's 'ear you in the chorus," said Dobbs, who immediately set up
a sailor's song about Nancy Lee. Robert and the boatman swelled the
chorus as desired, with rollicking "Heave ho's."

"Quit your caterwauling there!" cried the policeman above. The
pseudo-sailors at once hushed as if much frightened and rowed swiftly
under the bridge, while the policeman, satisfied with this display of
obedience, stalked along on his lonely beat. Above the bridge the river
narrowed and the banks were no longer of granite, but of arable loam
scalloped into a thousand little inlets. An hour must have elapsed and
three more bridges had been passed, when the boatman turned into one of
these coves and drove his keel against a grating sand bank. The
passengers jumped out and shook the cramp from their limbs.

"Is that all, Mr. M----"

A finger on Dobbs' lips checked the boatman's sentence half-way and a
nod gave the answer to his uncompleted question. Robert was not paying
attention, but when Dobbs touched his arm and led the way up to the
road, he promptly followed. By this time the milkmen and marketmen were
about. A rattle of distant wheels broke the silence now and then. The
dawn-birds trebled their matin greeting and a pearly flush located the
eastern quarter of the sky. After a few turns, Dobbs approached the side
entrance of a large house, not unlike an inn. The waiter who answered
his tap appeared to have been expecting him.

"'Ere we are, Bobbs, me boy. 'Ere we'll shift our duds and 'ave a talk
over the breakfast victuals. Whew! Hi'm tired! Fetch a lamp, Johnnie,
into the guest chamber. We haren't clemmin' on you, we've got rocks.
Hey, Johnnie?"

The white-aproned waiter grinned and led them into a private room with a
table in the middle.

"The porker, Johnnie, and plenty of good hold hale with the fixins."

Dobbs had drawn his chair up to the table, set Floyd opposite him, and
made one hand wash the other with the true gourmand's expectancy while
he gave this savory order.

"Well, you bloomin' old milksop! Hi suppose you'll put me in your
prayers now, hey? Hey? Hey?"

Dobbs poked Robert under the ribs in a fashion which the young man might
have resented in any but a familiar and a benefactor. Apparently his
acknowledgment of his obligation was not warm enough for the cracksman,
who began grumbling in an injured tone.

"Thankful? Wot's thankful? A word. Hi don't want words. Words is for
magistrates and ministers and such like 'ipocrites. Hi want a mark of
confidence. 'Asn't Dobbs trusted Bobbs?"

"Yes, he has."

"Well, w'y won't Bobbs trust Dobbs? Are we mis-mated? Do we work at
cross-purposes? Hi need a pal, Bobbs--upon which you may remark w'ere is
the shillin' comin' from wot's payin' this piper? But there's pals and
pals! And if Hi offer my friendship to a honorable associate Hi made the
acquaintance of while we was both serving in Col. Mainwaring's regiment,
wot's Jim Budge got to say? Cut and run, Jim, says I, and much obliged
for your 'elp. 'Ave a glass, Bobbs?"

The waiter had brought in several bottles of ale. Robert filled out a
glass of the brown, foaming liquor and poured it down with a gusto that
seemed to cheer Dobbs immensely.

"The uniform, Johnnie, and don't overtoast the porker."

Johnnie seemed afflicted once more with his grinning fit, for he stuffed
his apron in his mouth when he got to the door.

"What are your plans ahead, Dobbs?" asked Floyd, nibbling a pretzel,
while the cracksman helped himself liberally to the ale.

"My plans is Chicago. Hi'm going into business as a reformer."

"Ha, ha; what will you reform--yourself first, I suppose?"

"Hi'll begin on the police force. You haren't a-drinkin', Bobbs. Your
'ealth, me boy, a-standin' toast to the 'ealth of Dobbs' pal. Hip, hip,
hip-oh, 'ere's Johnnie, with the porker."

Johnnie seemed to have caught a sharp glance from Dobbs on the
threshold, for his grin subsided and he was obsequious in his attentions
to the breakfasting pair. Dobbs accepted them as a lord would the bows
of a lackey, but Robert felt constrained to brush off the importunate
caresses which he had no means of repaying in coin.

"If there's one meat in creation wot's sweet and savory," said Dobbs
ecstatically, digging a fork in the dish just brought, "it's a juicy
little 3-months-old baby porker, swimmin' in greens and gravy."

Robert could hardly help smiling while Dobbs carved the young pig,
smacking his lips prodigiously meanwhile.

"A hearty breakfast, me boy; we've a long ride before us."

"Where to?"

"Pitch in and don't spare the gravy--w'ere to? W'ot say to the
Hargentine Republic, w'ere you can sue for your uncle's money by proxy,
hey?"

"My uncle's money?"

"It's your'n, now the will's busted."

"I don't want the money and never wanted it."

"Then wot are you 'ere for?"

"Only the fresh air and the trip. I thought they might do me good."

"See 'ere, Bobbs, if you think Hi'm a-fishin' for a slice o' your
bloomin' pile, Hi'll show you Hi'm straight as a flag-pole. Them's not
the harticles of partnership Hi propose."

"I never said they were, Dobbs."

"But your heye says you suspect me, and it don't pay to be too
suspicious, me boy. Hi'm opposed to suspicion, bein' of a hinnocent
nature myself. 'Aven't you learned that, Bobbs, halready? 'Aven't Hi
trusted a hutter stranger with my rat's tooth and gone 'alvesies with
'im, doublin' the risk and not doublin' the enjoyment?"

"You've placed me under a great obligation, certainly. I wouldn't have
missed this night for the world."

"'Ere's a 'ealth to it, Bobbs--a standin' toast--and may we never bunk
in the bastile again. Hip, hip, hip--"

"Here are the clothes, Mr. Mc--"

The crashing of a beer bottle on the floor cut the name off at the
initial letter, and for some reason Johnnie did not finish it after he
had picked up the fragments.

"Lay the duds on the chair, Johnnie; we haren't done discussin' the
porker." A black business outfit, including headgear and footgear, bore
witness to the cracksman's foresight. "Bring us some more hale. 'Ave a
pretzel, Bobbs (hic)."

Bobbs was undeniably succumbing to the influence of his potations, but
Robert knew the thirst-creating properties of salted cracker, so he
declined the proffered morsel.

"Won't break bread with me! Hi say, Bobbs, this is a houtrage--a
houtrage. W'ere'd you be this minute if it wasn't for me? Afore a tender
little juicy porker, asprawlin' of your legs under the table and
a-facin' a hail jolly Johnnie, w'ich is me? Or snoozin' in a ten-foot
kennel, with sweet dreams o' the swingin' gallows?"

"I wouldn't be here, certainly, Dobbs."

"You wouldn't be 'ere! That's so. A glass on the 'ead of it. Your 'and,
Bobbs, and your 'ealth. Bobbs says (hic), and Bobbs is a gemman (hic),
Bobbs says he wouldn't be 'ere. But afore we part," here the cracksman
sat down again, "Hi 'ope ee'll show ee's a gemman and not mistrust 'is
pal. Hi ain't no psalm-singer, Bobbs, me boy. Wot's more natural, with a
blank check before 'im, than for the confidential clark to facsimilate
'is marster's hautograph? Wot's the hodds? Hi'll drink with 'im hall the
same--and a glass on the 'ead of it, Bobbs."

Dobbs was rapidly becoming incoherent and his incoherence took a
boastful turn.

"Ho, Hi cawn't 'elp a-grinnin, w'en Hi think of old Koerber a-wakin' up
and a-roarin' for 'elp. Didn't Hi do 'im brown, Bobbs (hic)?"

"He was no match for you, certainly."

"Ee? Koerber? Lemme tell you there's few in the fawncy stand as 'igh as
Bill Dobbs. Wot's Jim Budge? A hordinary bloomin' safe-cracker as must
'ave a pal. Ee cawn't stand alone, no more'n one leg of a scissors,
which is the Hirish for bachelor. Barney Pease (hic) is truly great, Hi
own. For sleight-of-'and work ee 'as no superior in the three kingdoms."

"Not even the solitary cracksman?"

"Not even the solitary cracksman, w'ich is me. But sleight-of-'and
hisn't hall, Bobbs. It's sleight-of-'ead! Do you fawncy Barney Pease
could 'ave got you over that sky-scrapin' wall? It was Bill Dobbs' 'andy
'inge done that. Lor' bless us! We'll be famous for this 'ere night's
outin'."

"I've a notion you'd be a bad man to cross, Dobbs, eh?"

"Do you fawncy Hi'd 'urt you, Bobbs, me hangel? Hi wouldn't 'arm you no
more'n a wadge-dog would bark at a baby. Hi'll (hic) Hi'll protect you,
Bobbs."

Floyd smiled at the cracksman's offer of patronage. But this time he
thought it better not to seal the compact with a bumper.

"Not drink?" Dobbs' temper had changed again. "Won't drink and won't
give me no mark of 'is confidence--"

"What is it you want, Dobbs? A confession?"

"Confession? Hi? Ho!" the cracksman laughed as if the joke were a rich
one. He was far gone, as indeed any man might be after taking so many
quarts of ale.

"Confession, ho, ho--wot do Hi want of a confession? Hi 'ad a natural
curiosity to know 'ow you set it, and"--his voice assumed reproachful
quavers--"a natural mortification to find that my pal (hic) wouldn't
trust me."

"Well, the truth is, Dobbs--"

"Wot is the truth?"

"Is this house safe? Walls have ears, they say."

"Safeazherown (hic)."

"I'm afraid--couldn't I write it down--that waiter, you know--" Robert
walked uneasily to the door, but the waiter was not eavesdropping.

"Waiter," Dobbs rung the bell and Johnnie appeared.

"Bring me pen and paper." They were brought with expedition.

"Zhall I 'old the lamp, Bobbs?"

"It's almost lightsome enough to see, if you draw up the curtains."

"Hi'll 'old the light, Bobbs."

"Steady, now, you'll drop it."

Dobbs staggered over behind Robert, with the lamp in his trembling hand
and stood over the young man's shoulder while he wrote the following
confession:

"When you pick a lady's pocket on a railway train next time, do it with
your left hand, Mr. McCausl--"

Before he realized what was happening the lamp had been shattered
against the opposite wall and he found himself forced to the floor, with
a cold circle of steel at his temple.




CHAPTER XXVII.

BEHIND THE VEIL.


"My mother has your flowers," said Shagarach. "She would be delighted if
you would come to see her."

It was in response to this invitation that Emily had selected an
appropriate dress from her modest wardrobe and kissed her mother good-by
for the evening. She was at first not a little alarmed when a young man
sidled up to her from behind and began uttering incoherent avowals of
devotion, which not even her chilling glance and hastened step could
check. Kennedy had disappeared for some time,--probably busy extricating
himself from his Dove-Cote scrape,--and she had congratulated herself
on good riddance of the lovesick manikin. But here he was, bolder and
more nauseously enamored than before.

She felt like summoning a bystander to her aid, but as she was walking
close to the edge of the sidewalk, with Kennedy on the very curbstone,
this appeal for help was rendered unnecessary. A quick, firm shove with
her brave little hands sent the shadow of a man topsy-turvy into the
gutter, while Emily, with burning cheeks and quickened pulse, made on to
the car corner.

An old Hebrew housemaid answered her ring and ushered her into the tiny
parlor of the tiny house, none too large for even the three persons who
occupied it--and three is the smallest number that can be called a
family. It need not be said that Emily was all a-flutter with the
privilege of admission to the great lawyer's private acquaintance and
that she cast a curious glance upon the surroundings. There was
something oriental about them, even to the barely perceptible odor of
musk in the air.

The carpet was clocked in a Turkish pattern, though the bough birds
woven in the corners suggested that it came from one of the countries
further east, where the shah, not the sultan, rules under Allah, and the
admonitions of the prophet are less literally observed. The lamp was a
silver fantasy, brazed with arabesques in gold, and the furniture in its
scroll-work and the embroideries, like gossamer, all whispered of a
taste exotic and luxurious.

Yet the articles were few and severely disposed in their places. A bust
of Swedenborg over a massively carved bookcase, filled with volumes of
royal exterior, attracted Emily's eye. On the opposite wall were several
shelves, crowded with plainer books, as tattered and dingy as a
schoolboy's algebra. A portrait of Spinoza reclined on an easel, and a
well-thumbed Marcus Aurelius, of pocket size, with flexible covers, lay
face down and open on the table. It was a far cry from the Swedish
mystic to the imperial stoic of Rome.

"You are welcome, Miss Barlow, to my home," exclaimed Shagarach,
extending his hand and sunning her with his great warm eyes.

"Pardon my curiosity. I am a woman and a book-lover," said Emily, who
had been standing before Shagarach's gorgeous volumes when he crossed
the threshold.

"They are not secreted from those who can handle them without danger,"
answered the lawyer, opening the bookcase.

"I call them my meeting of the masters."

Emily marveled at the range and judgment of the selection. Here were
Homer, Dante, Shakespeare and Goethe in the original tongues, which her
own studies just enabled her to distinguish one from the other; the
Koran, the Talmud, the Zend-Avesta; Camoens, Luis de Leon and a dozen
others from the hidalgo land; Maimonides and all the great mediaeval
Hebrews; Keats, Wordsworth and Coleridge--whatever richest remnants
remain from the cultured nations of Europe and western Asia. What rare
powers of acquisition, what hermit-like seclusion from the busy world,
were implied in the ability to read and enjoy these treasures!

"And which are your especial favorites?" asked Emily.

"The Persian poets," answered Shagarach, pointing to the uppermost
shelf, where the titles were in characters she could not read,
resembling odd curves of beauty and flourishes of a draughtsman's pen.
"Firdusi, the weaver of the magic carpet, who spurned back the
treasure-laden caravan of the shah; Sadi, the nightingale of a thousand
songs, planter of the rose garden and the garden of trees; Hafiz, the
sugar-lipped dervish of Shiraz, whose couplets are appealed to as
oracles by the simple, and whose legion of commentators surround him
like the stars clustering around the orb of the moon."

Was this the criminal lawyer, the granite-lipped reasoner of the
immobile forehead, forever pacing to and fro, folding his arms in
solution of problems?

The memory of the barren law office was vivid upon her, and of the
austere occupant, the last being in the world from whom dithyrambics
would be expected. She found it hard to reconcile the task-ridden
Shagarach with this praiser of Firdusi, the half-fabulous minstrel who
had loved to recline on silken divans, smothered with roses and waited
upon by his hundred slaves.

"Inspect them," said Shagarach. Emily reached for the Persian shelf. The
books stuck a little, and when they came away she was surprised to find
that they were attached together in sets of five; still more surprised
when she turned them over and saw a fine chain of steel running from
edge to edge through the covers, just where the clasp of an album fits,
and meeting again in an exquisite padlock at the middle volume. All this
splendor of beauty and thought was sealed as effectively as if the pages
had been bathed in glue.

"The keys to the padlock?" she looked interrogatively. "There is only
one," said Shagarach, a divine smile for the first time breaking the set
curve of his lips. "It fits them all, but the dragon is jealous of its
possession. My mother, Miss Barlow."

The lady who had entered approached Emily and greeted her warmly.

"My son said you were beautiful," she said.

Emily blushed. She was usually disconcerted by praise, but somehow the
entrance of the mother put her more at her ease. Standing beside her
son, the lady appeared to be taller than he, though this may have been
more in looks than in inches, since the standard of stature for women is
lower. The resemblance between them was marked. It was from her that the
son inherited his beauty, for she must have been queenly in her
maiden-hood. Even now her coloring was autumnally perfect, the rich dark
skin, oxidizing like an old painting, having gained in mellowness a part
of what it had lost in brilliancy.

"We live plainly, you see," she said, speaking with a strong accent, as
if she had learned our stubborn language too late in life ever to master
it.

"I admire your furnishings," answered Emily, "but your library amazes me
most of all."

The son and mother exchanged a sparkling glance, while Shagarach
replaced the Persian set on its shelf. But he did not explain the
mystery of his padlocked treasures.

"Miss Barlow has been wondering at my taste in the poets," he said,
diverting the conversation a little. "She forgets, perhaps, that we are
orientals, a long way back. And still in my dreams at times I feel the
rocking rhythm of the camel ride and the winged bulls of the Assyrians
seem to haunt me like familiar sights."

All at once Emily remembered that she had often divined a more emotional
and mystical side to the criminal lawyer.

And then in a flash many things became clear to her--Shagarach's
constant repression of emotion, his frugality and tireless toil, his
shutting out of the gypsy violinist's strain that day when she brought
him the news of Bertha--all these told of some great resignation, the
ruthless division of a dual nature and the discarding of one part,
perhaps the better beloved, and the abandonment with that resignation of
almost all that was personal to him in life--leaving only the restlessly
energizing intellect, the ethical strenuousness as of a modern Isaiah,
the filial love and these sealed mementos of a more congenial but
probably less successful past.

"And this is Spinoza--the greatest of our race," added Shagarach. "Not
the least refined of human faces."

"My ancestors were his kinsmen," added the mother, not without pride.
"We were Spanish once and my son can claim the title of count in Spain
if he chose--"

"And many a castle in that country besides," added the son, smiling the
rare, sweet smile which he reserved for this privacy of his home.

"But my mother speaks the truth, Miss Barlow. She is an accurate
historian, as you see. An ancestor of mine rose to power in the court of
Ferdinand and left his wealth to two sons. The elder, bearer of the
title, chose exile when our people were harried from Spain. The younger,
by apostatizing, succeeded to his name and property, and the heirs of
that brother still survive in Valencia. That makes us feel for Spinoza,
who was also an exile--and a heretic," he concluded, in a lower tone.

"This way, Miss Barlow," the mother led Emily through portieres into a
rear room, not unlike the parlor in its furnishings. "Here are the
flowers which you were so good, so thoughtful, to send. I have changed
the water twice every day, and last night put them out to drink in the
rain, for they love the rain from heaven, it is manna to them." The
mother fondled them as if they were living things, and gave them to
Emily to smell. They were indeed wonderfully fresh, considering the
number of days they had been kept.

Shagarach stepped to the cleft in the portieres and excused himself to
answer a ring at the doorbell. Emily was left chatting alone in the dim
light with his mother. From flowers to other subjects of feminine
interest the transition was easy, and the old lady's vivacity, strong
sense and above all her warmth of heart made the minutes pass
delightfully for the sensitive young girl. She had not been conscious of
any unusual merit in offering Shagarach a simple bouquet, yet it had
deeply touched the lonely son and his devoted mother, both of whom
seemed to regard her now with that intensity of friendship which the
Arab lavishes upon the stranger whom he admits to his hospitality.

It was while they were alone in the rear chamber, and Shagarach was
conversing in low tones with the visitor behind the drawn
portieres--probably a client calling in the evening--that Emily's
attention was called to a tapping noise which seemed to come from the
window. She thought it best not to speak of it, though it continued for
almost a minute. Besides, she remembered having often arisen in the
night to investigate the origin of just such a tapping, and lifted the
sash to find nothing and hear nothing, not even a departing sparrow,
who, perched on the sill, might have been feeling his way along the
transparent glass. Shagarach's mother was talking herself at the time
and probably the sound of her voice obscured the interruption.

"Is it not pleasanter in here, mother?" Shagarach had thrown the
portieres aside and stood again in the cleft, widening it for the ladies
to pass. His visitor had been dismissed, but it was a few moments before
he recovered his earlier manner. By a graduated ascent, however, his
conversation rose to its former glow of enthusiasm, and Emily could not
help contrasting its richness and elasticity with the sententiousness,
the compressed statement, bare of all accessories, which characterized
him when at his desk in the office. Probably this was the style he had
used in addressing his caller, and the transition to and fro was not
easy.

"'Try how the life of a good man suits thee,'" Shagarach began reading
from his Marcus Aurelius; "'the life of him who is satisfied with his
portion out of the whole and satisfied with his own just acts and
benevolent disposition.' That is the advice I gave to my visitor and
charged him nothing for it."

"It was Simon Rabofsky's voice?" asked the mother keenly.

"Yes," answered Shagarach.

"Then you did wrong. You should have charged him double. He is a rogue."

"For the emperor's wisdom?" smiled Shagarach.

"What mischief is he about?"

"He wishes to sell Mrs. Arnold's jewels. It is his legal right, since
she has defaulted in the payment, but I have counseled a postponement of
its exercise."

"And will he postpone it?" asked Emily, sympathetically.

"He? My dear, you do not know him," said the mother. "He is of the tribe
of Aaron, who worshiped the golden calf."

Emily wondered if some of the proud Spanish blood had not become mingled
with the Hebrew in her veins. Scorn of petty avarice was betrayed in
every line of her noble face. Yet Emily felt sure that it was she who
had called Shagarach away from the companionship of the Persian poets
and impelled him to write his signet on the living world in letters of
self-assertion and honorable achievement.




CHAPTER XXVIII.

AN UNBIDDEN GUEST.


"What tainted people you have to deal with!" she exclaimed,
unconsciously continuing her vein of silent thought. "I should crave
another environment, I think."

"Your Christ lived with sinners and publicans. And they are not all
tainted, my dear," added the mother, smiling so that Emily might know
whom she meant to except. "There is so much in common between my son and
Mr. Floyd. Both proud, serious, too serious, I tell him, and both true
Castilians in honor. But the one looked about wisely and found him
a--lady; and the other--"

"The other will grow gray by his good mother's side, I fear," said
Shagarach, gently kissing the laughing and delighted old lady. Emily
smiled herself to see John Davidson's sphinx, whose reticence outside
was indeed a mask of stone, unbending thus to the frankness and
simplicity of a child. The mother's ways were more demonstrative, but
with deep reserves of dignity.

"But you are right, Miss Barlow. The lawyer's profession is one shade
more distasteful than the surgeon's, for he handles the moral sores of
humanity."

"Handles them to cure them," cried Emily, shifting about, like a true
woman.

"Possibly. Though for my own part I agree with those who hold that the
law perpetrates no less wickedness than it punishes--were it not that it
prevents more than it perpetrates," he added, smiling, "we should live
in a very troublesome world. It is a profession which uses the
conscience as a whetstone upon which to sharpen the intellect. I
attribute the venality of our congress and legislatures partly to the
disproportion among them of lawyers."

"But surely there are exceptions?"

"In the criminal courts," answered Shagarach. Emily asked herself if
this was Shagarach's destiny, to continue as a criminal lawyer. As if in
answer to her question, he added:

"There alone one can feel at all times that he is either protecting the
innocent or punishing the guilty. This is my working library," he
pointed to the thumbed volumes on the shelves. Emily noticed that most
of them were treatises on psychology, the old and the new.

"I do not carry the keys for those," said his mother, gayly.

"Light to illuminate our case," Shagarach took down one of the books.
"By the way, my correspondent, Mr. Skull-and-Crossbones, has honored me
again."

The two ladies started and the mother seized her son by the arm.

"A black-edged letter, apprising me that I am marked and doomed." Just
then Emily heard the strange tapping that had startled her before. It
came from the window of the front parlor this time. She shuddered in a
sudden terror and drew closer to Mrs. Shagarach. The old lady had heard
the sound and blanched a little, but her voice was firm when she spoke:

"Is that a mouse in the wainscoting, my son?"

"I thought it was a tapping at the window, mother."

"Go and look. There may be a stranger in the yard."

Shagarach raised the curtain and looked out, then opened the window. The
cool night air flowed in and heightened Emily's tremors so that the
elder lady took pity on her.

"There is no one in sight, mother, but I will put on my hat and go out
the back door."

In a few minutes Shagarach returned by the street entrance.

"I thought I heard footsteps in the passageway and followed them around,
but there is no one. The yard is empty."

"I will inform the policeman to-morrow," said his mother. "There are
many loiterers about in these bad times. And you should acquaint them
with the letter you received."

"I have done so, mother. I have considered it strange," he added,
turning toward Emily, "that the parties opposed to us in the Floyd case
should resort to murder. It is a confession of guilt."

"If they are caught."

"Murder will out. Moreover, I do not work alone. I have engaged the
assistance of--whom do you think?"

"Of Mr. McCausland," said the mother, breaking in. "It was my
suggestion."

"McCausland investigating Harry Arnold!" exclaimed Emily.

"Is it not amusing? But he will not allow that Arnold is at all open to
suspicion, and of course I have not laid all my evidence before him."

"But surely the letters are connected with our case, and who else could
it be?"

Since the finding of the glove and the testimony of the three gamins
Emily was coming around to Shagarach's view of Harry Arnold's possible
guilt and the attack on Robert's lawyer had aroused her sympathies so as
almost if not quite to convince her.

"Mr. McCausland is very keen--a wonderful man--of deceptive exterior,
but like the rest of us, he sometimes makes mistakes," said Shagarach.
"His defect is that he uses the logical method only and ignores the
psychological. It is necessary first to find out if the accused is
capable of the crime. I first became sure of Robert Floyd's innocence
when I saw him through the cell-bars of the jail. He is incapable of the
crime."

"My son so admires your lover," added Mrs. Shagarach.

"These other friends of mine," continued her son, taking down the
thumbed volume which he had put back when the tapping startled them,
"commit the opposite error. They are strictly physiological. They
predict too much from a man's physical peculiarities."

The book he opened for Emily was a treatment on criminology, illustrated
with villainous heads in profile and full face. It was in Italian, so
Shagarach exchanged it for another.

"Behold the brands of the true criminal--'enormous zygomae,' 'ear lobes
attached to the cheek,' 'spatulate fingernails----'"

"That takes in Mr. McCausland," said Emily, roguishly. She had got over
her fright by this time and the allusion to spatulate fingernails
recalled the whole train of events which had ended in the inspector's
discomfiture.

"The refutation of such theorists," said Shagarach, "is simple. We need
only point to the fact that the greatest crimes are committed by men who
are not professional criminals at all and who do not belong to the
criminal type."

"Like this man," said the mother, going to a closet at one side and
drawing forth a bundle of photographs. One of them she showed to Emily.
It was Harry Arnold, bold and handsome, with the shaggy cape coat thrown
carelessly over his shoulders.

"Has he enormous zygomae, ear-lobes attached to his cheek?" she asked.

"I wish I could see his fingernails," laughed Emily.

"Arnold's face in repose does not show much capacity for evil. But it
lights up badly. I have seen him crossed and in passion."

"I think he looks as if he were veined of evil and good," said Emily
frankly, studying the portrait long, as she loved to do. She had seen
Harry once when he was at his best. Besides, her service in the
photograph studio had made her something of a physiognomist, too, though
not, of course, such a soul-reader as Shagarach.

"His crimes are of the preventable order and therefore the more
culpable. There are men born to crime, as the theorists argue; others
driven to crime. For both of these classes it is hardly more than a
misplaced emphasis, a wrong direction of energies."

"Here is another volume--I am showing you all my workshop. Does it
fatigue you?"

"Nothing which helps to clear up the mystery is dull to me," answered
Emily.

"This treatise deals with 'Incidental Homicide.' Rather legal than
clinical. The cases are all parallel to ours. The indictment, by the
way, has just been given out. The weakest count charges Robert Floyd
with arson and murder in the second degree. The punishment for that is
only imprisonment for life."

"Only! Robert says he would rather be hanged."

"Let him have no fear of either," said Mrs. Shagarach, cheerily.

"The newspapers tell us that the government offered much new evidence,"
said Shagarach.

"I should like to know what it was," cried Emily, eagerly.

"So should I. Ordinarily, the grand-jury room is leaky enough, but Mr.
McCausland, who is the government in this case, appears to have found a
way to seal it hermetically."

"Perhaps he padlocked the jurors' lips," suggested Emily, whereat all
three were merry.

From time to time during the conversation relapses of the old shudder
had come back to Emily, though the tapping had utterly ceased since
Shagarach investigated the yard. He had left the curtain half-raised, so
that any one approaching the window would be visible from within. It was
just at this moment that she happened to change her seat, bringing her
face around to the darkened window. Before the others could catch her,
she had risen, pointed to the window and fallen to the floor with a
terrified shriek.

Shagarach started to raise her, but the terrible detonation of a pistol
rung out, sacrilegiously invading their quietude. Then all was darkness,
a noise of crashing glass telling that the lamp had been shattered and
extinguished. Another report followed and another. Mrs. Shagarach,
trembling, heard her son quickly crossing to the window. The panes
seemed to be broken, and there were sounds of a scuffle, mingled with a
gnashing of teeth and growls more animal than human. Suddenly, with a
ripping sound, the scuffle ceased, and rapid footsteps were heard
pattering away. Then her son spoke to her in the loud, firm voice which
he used in all practical affairs.

"Light the little lamp, mother. It is safe now. There are matches on the
mantel."

"Are you hurt, Meyer?" she asked, anxiously, while lighting the lamp.

"A little," he answered.

"You were shot, my son?" she cried, embracing him.

"No. Let us revive Miss Barlow. Some water, Rachel," he said to the old
servant who had come to the door.

When Emily came to she found Mrs. Shagarach sponging her forehead, while
her son was washing his hands in a basin of bloody water.

"Wrap the cotton around them quickly, Rachel," he was saying. "I must
notify the police."

"Meyer, it is not safe."

Emily heard the mother protesting, then swooned again. When full
consciousness returned the lawyer was gone and the three women were
alone in the room. Rachel began picking up the fragments of the lamp.
Only its chimney and globe had been broken, the metal being still
intact. The windowpanes showed great ragged holes, which explained the
laceration of Shagarach's hands.

"Poor lady," cried the mother. "This is ill treatment we give you. But
we are not to blame. It is the wicked enemies who are pursuing us
all--your lover and my son." With terms of endearment she petted the
weak girl back into a coherent understanding of her position. But every
now and then the remembrance of something would cause her to shudder
again visibly; whereat the elder lady would renew her caresses.

"I have notified the policeman. That was the best I could do," said
Shagarach, re-entering. He looked extremely grave. It was a narrow
escape for one or more of the three. "This is all I have to identify
him by. It was detached in the struggle."

He laid a common coat button down on the table, with a piece of cloth
adhering.

"That face! Who could ever forget it?" cried Emily.

"You saw him, then?" asked son and the mother in one breath.

"Shall I call it 'him'? Was it a man?" answered Emily. "Rather a
monster, no more than half-human."

"It had the form of a man," said Shagarach, "as I felt it through the
glass."

Rachel was busy bandaging his cuts with plaster during this
conversation, but they bled through, calling for the surgeon's thread.

"But it snarled like a tiger," said the mother.

"Oh the wild, blue eyes! They were staring at me through the cleft of
the draperies. And the demon leer, and the forehead, retreating like a
frog's----"

"It is the oaf I passed on the pier," cried Shagarach, interrupting
Emily. "We have found Mr. Skull-and-Crossbones."

"Oaf? What is oaf?" asked the mother.

"An idiot, a monster."

She shuddered.

"A man of that description cannot long elude search," said the son in a
more hopeful tone.

"They are often very cunning," replied the mother.

"Can it be Harry Arnold would employ such an agent?" asked Emily, still
trembling.

"Twice," said Shagarach, as if speaking to himself. "A cap and a button.
Men have been captured on slighter clews."

"You will give the button to Mr. McCausland," said the mother.

"Yes; since it fits with the cap."

"Maybe he will help you to bring Harry Arnold to justice."

"And so to acquit Robert Floyd," said Shagarach, smiling to cheer his
guest.

The mention of her lover restored the wilted girl, who was brave enough
when there was anything definite to be done. Shagarach showed her the
book on "Arson" which he had been holding when the first shot was fired.
The bullet had pierced it on its career toward the lamp.

"The bullets will be evidence also," he said, "and I will measure the
footprints before the rain comes down and washes them away."

"You will wish to go home, poor child," said Mrs. Shagarach to Emily.
"Not yet, but soon, when you are stronger. Rachel!"

The soothing words of the mother warmed Emily quite as much as the wine
which Rachel brought. Meanwhile two policemen entered and began to
examine the premises. Shagarach visited the yard in their company and
soon returned with a tape measure and a paper block, on which he had
recorded the lengths of the footprints.

He was assiduous in his regrets and inquiries toward Emily and insisted
on accompanying her home in a carriage, which the mother, however, would
not allow them to enter until she had exacted from her visitor a promise
that she would come again on an appointed evening, and pressed upon her
in true oriental fashion a certain rose-embroidered gossamer scarf for
which Emily had expressed admiration.

At her own door the sweet girl heard Shagarach order the hackman to
drive to Dr. Lund's, and she guessed that his cuts would be somewhat
worse for the delay in stitching them. That night she saw gorgon faces
leering in at her window, and her dreams were of new-moon scimiters and
the rocking of the camel ride.




CHAPTER XXIX.

JACOB AND DELILAH.


"Put your wrists together!"

The voice was totally different from Dobbs' whine; a strong, deep
register, like a ledge of the basal rock peeping out from a smiling
meadow. For the first time Robert felt the veiled strength which resided
in the detective's character. There was no option but to obey.

"Pull up the curtains, Johnnie."

The servant had been attracted by the crash of the lamp. A faint stream
of daylight entered the chamber, and the noises of the city could be
heard in the distance. McCausland's face seemed to have altered in every
line.

"Get a hack! Jump into those shoes!" He tossed a curt order right and
left, one for Johnnie, the other for Robert.

"To the county jail," was his direction to the hack driver. Robert
wondered at this, but he sat back smiling and said nothing during all
the ride.

"Here's your prisoner," said McCausland when they arrived. It was not
yet 6 o'clock, but the sheriff was up and showed no great surprise.
Robert wondered at this again and his amazement was not abated when they
assigned him to his original cell in murderers' row. However, the change
was to his liking, for the surroundings were less presageful of
permanency.

"You missed your vocation as a character actor," was his parting shot at
McCausland.

It is easy to imagine the dismay in the prison that morning when the
escape was discovered. Col. Mainwaring was a very different man from
Warden Tapp, and for a time it looked as though McCausland might lose
his badge. But when he showed an order from the sheriff empowering him
to bring the body of Robert Floyd from the state prison back to the
county jail, which had now been put in repair, Col. Mainwaring saw a
light; and when McCausland pointed out that he had laid his finger
precisely on certain weaknesses of the bastile, frequently suggested
without avail to Tapp, the new warden thanked him pleasantly.

The story at first was given to the public that Inspector McCausland had
captured the fugitive, Robert Floyd, and for a time not only did the
detective's cap wear a bright new feather but all the credit of Robert's
conduct during the riot was canceled by this outbreak, which was
construed as a confession of guilt. But of course the truth leaked out,
and the failure of his "nest-egg game," with its brilliant but desperate
climax, was made the occasion of much chaffing to the contriver.

"Has Bill Dobbs been taken yet?" a brother-in-buttons would ask him; and
the two lovers had many a good laugh over the game which they had played
and won. For the first time since the great shadow fell across them they
were as happy and hopeful as lovers should be, and for several days
little smiles of reminiscence would creep into the corners of Emily's
lips while she was touching out the blemishes in some negative destined
to pass from young Amaryllis to her Strephon or old Darby to his Joan.

Meanwhile Shagarach, too, was interesting himself in the study of
photographs.

"Have they all been returned?" he asked Aronson one morning.

"All but Meester Davidson's."

"And none of the neighbors saw Arnold coming out?"

"They all shake their heads and say no, they don't know that face."

"Very well. Jacob may put them in his desk. We shall hardly need them
again. Go over to the second session and answer for me in the Morrow
case. I am expecting Mr. McCausland."

"Speak of angels," said the inspector, entering cordially. "You know the
rest of the saying."

"Good-morning. Be seated."

It did not escape even modest Saul Aronson what a contrast the
antagonists made, sitting with the table between them. McCausland had,
apparently, not glanced around with more than casual interest, yet, if
blindfolded then and there and put to the test, he could have surprised
those who did not know him with the minute and copious inventory of the
office, not excluding its occupants, which this glance had furnished
him. It was this, with his almost infallible memory, which made him so
formidable an opponent at whist. Shagarach was hardly his equal in mere
perception, perhaps not his superior in analysis, when the subject was
within McCausland's range. His advantage lay, if anywhere, as he had
said himself, in his deeper insight into the human soul, in his
psychological reach.

"Sorry I was out when you called the other day," said McCausland. "I've
been looking up your matter."

"With what result?"

"These clippings may interest you."

Shagarach glanced rapidly over the newspaper scraps.

"The Broadbane murder--I remember that well."

"It occurred about a week before your first attack. You remember
Broadbane lured the young woman to a lonely bridge in his carriage and
threw her into the river."

"The circumstances were similar to my adventure. The second item is
strange to me."

"It's from a New York paper, dated July 28--the very day before your
second attack. The circumstances are closely similar this time again. A
jealous husband shot his wife through the window of her room."

"Our monster reads, then."

"He is a lunatic (puff)," said McCausland, who had lighted his
invariable cigar.

"You believe so?"

"The evidence convinces me. They have an itch to imitate, as you are
aware. This man is a victim of homicidal mania, of which you have
unfortunately become the object (puff)."

"Why Shagarach and not another?"

"Newspaper notoriety. You should see my crop of cranks. This particular
crack-brain has aimed his illusion at you. We must strait-jacket him
before it goes further."

"You expect, then, to have him soon?"

"Sooner or later (puff). Let us know if you hear anything. I see you
were hurrying off as I came in. Good-day."

McCausland had been deputed to investigate the attacks on Shagarach,
because they connected themselves so manifestly, through the threatening
letters, with the Floyd case, which he was handling. Neither he nor
Shagarach had objected to this opportunity to meet and possibly force
each other's hands a little.

"I shall be in the Criminal Court, second session, Jacob. Remain here
till Mr. Aronson comes." Shagarach was gone and Jacob left alone to his
meditations.

To judge from his expression, they were never very pleasant. Perhaps,
like Job of old, he daringly questioned the power behind human destiny,
why he showers cleverness and attraction on one boy of 14, while another
is afflicted with a manner of nose preposterous, conspicuous and
undistinguishable, to carry which is a burden. That godlike young man in
the photograph, how he would like to be as handsome as he! Was there no
way to attain it? He took the bundle of photographs out of his drawer
and laid them on his desk to study and admire.

While thus engaged the jingle of harness outside attracted him. He knew
by the sound that the carriage had stopped before his door. It wasn't
often that equipages, sprinkling sleigh-bell music in their course,
paused at the door of the dingy old business building. So Jacob became
interested enough to approach the window of the inner office languidly
and peep down into the street.

There stood a covered black carriage, as polished as a mirror, with a
buff-liveried coachman holding the reins. His seat was perched so high
that his legs made one straight, unbending line to the footrest, and his
back was as vertical as a carpenter's plummet. Mrs. Arnold was not
careless of these niceties. It would have shocked her sense of the
fitness of things almost as much to publish the fact that her coachman
had knees, as if her own lorgnette should stray from the proscenium box
higher than the first balcony--an impropriety which had happened only
once to her knowledge, and that by inadvertence, on an opera night.

"This is Mr. Shagarach's office, I believe," said the grand lady to
Jacob.

"Yes'm," he mumbled, abashed.

"He is out, I perceive. Does he return soon?"

"No'm."

"About when could I see him if I should wait?"

"He is trying a case'm, over in the second court'm, criminal session,"
answered Jacob, mixing things badly in his confusion.

"Couldn't you send for him?"

"Mr. Aronson will be here soon. Perhaps he would know."

"I will wait a few minutes," said the lady, sitting down with hauteur in
the cushioned chair which Jacob pushed toward her. After a spell of
silence she addressed him again in a gentler tone:

"What is your name, little boy?" she asked.

"Jacob," he answered. Servants and office boys grow to think of
themselves as having only one name.

"Jacob. That is a very old and dignified name. Are you Mr. Shagarach's
clerk?"

"No'm."

"His errand boy, then?"

"Yes'm."

"It's too bad you had to leave school so young. I suppose you give all
you earn to your mother?"

"Yes'm."

"Haven't you any father?"

"No'm."

Jacob thought he had never met such a kind lady. How sympathetic she
seemed and was it not gracious of her to inquire about his father and
mother? How much more agreeable it was to deal with real ladies and
real gentlemen who never, never would call vulgar names. He would have
given almost half his week's spending money to oblige this sweet-tongued
lady then, and his only regret was that he could think of no better
answer to her questions than "Yes'm" and "No'm."

"If you are an errand boy perhaps you could do a little errand for me,"
said the lady sweetly after a pause.

"Yes'm," answered Jacob, putting a world of eagerness into the word.

"You are sure you can do errands and not make a mistake?"

"No'm--yes'm," he replied, a little puzzled as to which of the two words
which seemed to constitute his whole vocabulary fitted into his meaning
here.

"Then, perhaps, I will let you take this for me."

She drew out the tiniest, daintiest purse Jacob's eyes had ever beheld,
and, opening its clasp, gingerly fingered forth a bill.

"I want very much to have this changed. Mr. Shagarach will not be back
immediately, you say?"

"No'm."

"Then perhaps you can spare a moment to run down to the corner and get
some silver for this."

"They'll change it upstairs," said Jacob, at last finding his voice.

"Upstairs? Very well, you may take it upstairs and bring me back small
silver, Jacob."

With a skip of elation Jacob mounted the stairs. There was a little
delay in the mission, to which he had repaired. When he came downstairs,
the silver clutched in his hand, his heart rose to his mouth at
discovering that the office was empty. To think that he had kept the
kind lady waiting so long! Probably she had become disgusted with him.
He stood a moment in perplexity. Then glancing at his own desk, he
opened his mouth in horror.

"My pictures!" cried Jacob. The photographs were gone.

If there was one being that Jacob reverenced and feared it was his
master. To feel now that he had betrayed him at the prompting of a grand
lady, who deceived him with honeyed words and was undoubtedly one of his
master's enemies--how could he ever face Shagarach again?

"My pictures!" he cried a second time, running into the entry. But here
at the head of the stairs a dubitation seized him. Shrill and re-echoing
through the narrow passage came the flute-like warble which Jacob knew
only too well. It was the precursor of torment for him. True, the
Whistler himself had almost ceased to pick on the office boy and even
taken him under his wing of late, but Turkey Fenton and Toot Watts were
as implacable as inquisitors turning a heretic on a lukewarm gridiron.

Turkey's tyranny was of the grosser order, as became an urchin who in
Jacob's presence had swallowed a whole banana, skin and all. Toot's
nature was subtle and spiderlike. He possessed the enviable distinction
of being able to wag his ears, and his devices of torture were
correspondingly refined and ingenious. During the last visit of the boys
he had played a small mirror into Jacob's eyes all the while behind
Shagarach's back, and it wasn't until they were going out that Jacob
discovered why he had been dazzled almost to blindness.

If he took the stair route down he would be stopped and teased and the
wicked lady would get away. Perhaps she was already gone--gone with the
photographs which should have been securely locked in his drawer. Why
had he ever taken them out?

The emergency was desperate and Jacob met it heroically. Rushing to
Shagarach's window, he saw the grand lady just crossing the sidewalk and
waving her parasol to the coachman. In a moment she would be ensconced
on the cushions within and the disaster would be beyond remedy. The
window was open, and there was a little piazza outside. Jacob stepped
out and shouted. The lady looked up and hastened her pace. Leading down
to the first story from the piazza was a flight of steps, and from the
first story down to within twelve feet of the ground, another--an
old-fashioned fire-escape.

Down these steps Jacob scrambled, scratching his hands and nearly losing
his balance, to the first piazza and thence to the lowermost round,
where the awful fall of twelve feet checked him. But the sight of the
coachman mounting his box nerved his courage and he released his hands.
For a moment he felt dizzy. But the horses were already started. With a
flying leap he caught the tailboard in his hand, and after being dragged
along with great giraffe-like bounds for nearly a block managed to draw
himself up to something like a sitting position.

There, through an eye-shaped dead-light in the back of the carriage he
obtained a dim view of its occupant. His master's stolen pictures were
in her hand. What was she kissing them for--and crying? But Jacob was
determined to have no pity upon her. He had just resolved to call out
and demand her attention, when the crack of a lash made him turn and his
lip began to tingle. The coachman had discovered his unlawful presence
on the tailboard and had reached him with just the tip end of his whip.

Probably he had meant only to frighten the lad. If so, he had thoroughly
succeeded. Again the whip curled backward over the coachman's shoulder
and snapped like a pistol shot close to Jacob's ear. To add to his
discomfort a great St. Bernard, which had been running under the
carriage, had become aware of his intrusion, and began rearing at him in
a manner more alarming than dangerous, to be sure, but sufficient to
make a peaceable lad tremble. Between the whip and the dog's teeth his
ride had begun to be worse torture than the gantlet of the stairway,
flanked by the three gamins, would have been, when the ordeal was
brought to a sudden end by the stopping of the carriage at a great brick
railroad station.

Jacob's time had come. Disregarding the St. Bernard, he jumped down and
stood on the sidewalk. The dog growled and the coachman spoke to him
roughly as he opened the door with practiced alacrity for his mistress.
But Jacob was now within his legal rights.

"I want my pictures," he said, catching the grand lady by the arm. Mrs.
Arnold looked down at him with amazement not unmingled with fear. It was
the same stupid little boy she had bribed to go upstairs in the office
where Harry's photographs had been lying--for no good purpose, her
instincts told her.

"What does this little ragamuffin say?" she asked.

"I want my photographs," said Jacob, doggedly, as the coachman shoved
him aside. He ran after Mrs. Arnold, the tears in his eyes, and clung to
her dress. A scene was imminent. The policeman approached, doubtless to
render assistance to the lady in distress. But Mrs. Arnold did not
desire his assistance just then. With a quick motion she removed a
parcel from her pocket and placed it in Jacob's hands.

"Take back your things, then, and don't bother me," she said, with a
flushed face.

Jacob gloated on his recovered treasures. Then his hands likewise sought
his trousers pocket, and he jingled a handful of silver into Mrs.
Arnold's hand.

"Take the money, Joseph," she said to the coachman. "These small
storekeepers are so ill-mannered."

The policeman gave Jacob a hard look as he passed him, but the office
boy was obliviously counting his pictures.

When he returned to the office the gamins were gone and Aronson was
there alone. To Aronson's question where he had been, Jacob, not being
an imaginative boy, gave an answer which was strictly truthful,
whereupon Aronson, not being a humorous young man (for such are always
grave), laughed immoderately, and proposed that the fire escape
henceforth be known as Jacob's ladder.




CHAPTER XXX.

CUPID TAKES AIM.


"Mother, my friend, Miss March."

Mrs. Arnold came forward on the rose-embroidered veranda. An old look
crept into her face. Her brow darkened. Her heart froze. But love
conquered jealousy, and for Harry's sake she took both hands of the
young woman whom she knew he loved, and smiled.

"And Mr. Tristram March."

"Welcome to Hillsborough. Will you not come inside?"

"Let's sit on the veranda," said Harry, throwing himself on a seat.
"It's cooler here."

The others became seated and submitted their foreheads to the cool
caresses of the breeze.

"I enjoy your road from the station so much, Mrs. Arnold. It winds like
a river all the way," said Tristram March.

"A narrow river, I fear, and rough in parts," answered the lady.

"Do you know I like a soft country road. It seems padded for the horse's
hoofs," said Miss March.

"Rosalie is a philanthropist, you know. She is vice-president--one of
the vice-presidents--I believe there are nineteen--of the ladies' league
for the abolition of race dissension in the south by the universal
whitewashing of <DW64>s."

"Mrs. Arnold knows better than to believe that."

"A chimerical plan, I should call it," said Mrs. Arnold.

"Not at all," added Tristram. "Most scientific. The whitewash is
indelible. All charity fads must be scientific nowadays."

"Brother Tristram plays the cynic, Mrs. Arnold," said Rosalie. "But he
has an excellent heart of his own."

"It is a burned-out crater," said Tristram, solemnly, at which Harry
burst into a laugh and the sister smiled.

Watching her furtively, Mrs. Arnold saw that she was as exquisite a
masterpiece as nature had ever put forth. Her figure was virginal and
full; her manner, auroral; her age, Hebe's, the imperceptible poise of
the ascending ball before it begins to descend, which in woman is
earlier by a decade than in man; her coloring, a mixture of the wild
rose and gold. Art seconded nature; she was faultlessly dressed. In that
instant of inspection the mother knew that her son's heart had been
weaned from her forever. She had always felt that it would be a blonde
woman. Are they charged with opposite magnetisms from northern and
southern poles, that they attract each other so, the dark type and the
fair?

"Will you never be serious, Tristram?" cried Rosalie.

"Well, dear, the crater has humming-birds' nests built along its inner
sides, like the old volcano of Chocorua, and the little winged jewels
flash out sometimes and land in Sister Rosalie's lap."

"What is this?"

"You prefer rubies. I picked those up at a sale in the city. Did you
ever meet such stones--perfect bulbs?"

"How can I ever rebuke you again?"

"Then I needn't try to be serious?"

"Oh, if it's a bribe----"

"Look at the name on the plate behind--'Alice.'"

"That will have to be changed," said Harry, coming nearer to glance at
the brooch. "Why!" he snatched at the jewels, but caught himself in
time. His mother looked at him in an eloquent appeal for silence.

"Where did you get them?" he asked.

"Rabofsky. An old bric-a-brac man. Why, do you fancy they're stolen?"

"Oh, no. I congratulate your sister. The name made me start. It is my
mother's, you know."

"I was Alice Brewster," said Mrs. Arnold.

"Speaking of philanthropists, Rosalie," said Tristram, to change the
subject, "how did you like the noble Earl of Marmouth?"

"The most overbearing person."

"With the courtesy of a snapping-turtle," said Tristram.

"And the humor of a comic valentine," added Harry.

"Still there is something grand about the title of earl," said Mrs.
Arnold, who chose to forget that the original Brewster of Lynn was a
yeoman.

"Mme. Violet interested me more," said Rosalie. "Rumor is linking their
names, you know. I feel that she and I might become friends."

"She has just the saving spark of deviltry that you lack, Rosalie."

"It isn't every brother who can call his sister an angel so happily,"
said Mrs. Arnold.

"Nothing was farther from his thoughts than to compliment me, Mrs.
Arnold. You should hear him abuse me in private. I am a philistine, a
prude. But I grow accustomed to his taunts."

"Dear Rosalie, you are only not esthetic because you are so divinely
moral. Just think, she objects to my marble cupids, that they are not
ashamed of their innocence."

"Surely that is going far," interposed Harry, who had long been silent.
"The modeling was capital. Most little cupids are just doughy duplicates
of each other. But yours have character--baby-face wisdom--Puck and
Ariel linking arms."

"Say two Pucks, Harry, or Rosalie will moralize. Ariel was a wicked
little sprite. He used to go on bats."

Rosalie lifted a finger of reproof.

"But from my standpoint a dash of wickedness is just the sine qua non in
art. How fascinating the Inferno is! And how tame the Paradiso! In art,
do I say? In religion itself? What the horizon line is to the
landscape--a rare pageant you have before you, Mrs. Arnold--such is the
fall in the garden to the faith of our fathers."

"Do you mean that it separates earth from heaven?" laughed Harry.

"You would think, to hear this grumbler, it was his strait-laced sister
and not his own laziness that prevented him from--" Rosalie hesitated.

"From amounting to something. Say it out. Ah, Rosalie, you have indeed
achieved. Your Rosalind is divine, Carp says--and surely Carp knows."

"And Portia," added Harry.

"While my medallions----"

"Would be glorious if they were ever finished. But come," continued
Harry, "I must dress for my wager. Where's Indigo?"

"He is about the house, Harry."

"What a name! Your valet, I suppose?" asked Tristram.

"And secretary. That is, he answers my duns."

"And so spares you the blues?"

"Punning again, Tristram," said Rosalie. "And you profess not to
consider word-plays respectable."

"Right, always right, Rosalie."

The party passed inside, and the Marches were escorted to their rooms,
while Harry went in quest of Indigo. When he returned he found his
mother alone in the front room. She seemed to be awaiting him.

"The rubies, mother?"

"They were mine. Sit down, Harry. I must speak with you."

Her manner was sad, and Harry thought in the strong light her face
looked careworn.

"We are very much pressed for money--temporarily, of course. As soon as
your uncle's estate is settled our income will be larger than ever; and
even without that, Mr. Hodgkins has hopes----"

"But mother, you did not sell the rubies?"

"I have sold all my jewels, Harry."

Harry stood up. His mother gave him a long look. She had made this
sacrifice for him. He understood and  when he remembered the fate
of the money his mother's rubies had brought. It was luck alone which
had saved their name from a blot on the evening when McCausland raided
the Dove-Cote.

"I must curtail my expenses," he said, rising to go.

"There is another matter, Harry," said his mother, still sadly but
gently. "I saw Mr. McCausland in town today. He desires you to testify
at your cousin's trial."

"Testify against Bob!"

"It is in relation to the will--the disinheriting of your cousin."

"Why, he admits that himself."

"He may deny it if his conviction hangs upon that point Mr. McCausland
wishes to leave no weak link in the chain."

"Hang it, mother, I don't want to be mixed up in it. Think of the
looks."

"All he wants is a word. You heard your cousin say he was disinherited
under the will."

"Yes, that is--why, of course, I knew it. He told me at the jail that
day."

"Then I will write to Mr. McCausland that your testimony covers that
point----"

"No, but mother----"

Rosalie March re-entered at this moment. Her first glance was toward
Harry and his toward her. Their thoughts had been traveling the same
route and meeting half-way all during the talk on the veranda, when
Harry was so unwontedly silent. Alas, he knew well that he was unfit
even to look at her.

In their outward demeanor to each other he was embarrassed and she
reserved. The religious difference seemed likely to be permanent. For
Rosalie was a Catholic, the daughter of an eminent Maryland family, as
historic and proud as the Brewsters and more wealthy than even the
Arnolds. But this barrier between them only acted with the charm of a
material fence over which or through which a rustic couple are plighting
forbidden troth.

"All ready to win my wager," cried Tristram, following his sister in.
He, also, had changed his attire, and looked very handsome in his
curling Vandyke beard of the cut which artists affect.

"What wager is that?" asked Mrs. Arnold.

"We passed the river coming down, and I offered to canoe the rapids."

"And the river so low, Harry. It is rash."

"Would you have them set me down a boaster?" Harry was eager now. His
mother knew "them" meant "her," and her heart yearned more and more to
the son who was drifting away.

"Indigo!" he cried out the window to his valet.

"But the danger--was it not there the canoeist was drowned last year?"
said his mother, anxiously.

"Hang the danger! It's the prospect of scraping the bottom off my new
canoe that troubles me."

"Old age is privileged to prate, I suppose," said Mrs. Arnold, feebly
attempting to smile.

"Cut the fingers off that lemon- mitten, Indigo, and get me some
salve double quick. My oar blister's worse than ever."

Indigo sped up stairs for the scissors, and the party was soon on its
way.

At the bridge Harry left them, proceeding alone to the boat-house,
up-stream, while Indigo led the others to a rock below the rapids, where
they were to witness the feat. To look at the long <DW72>, nowhere steep,
but white from end to end with foam, it did seem incredible that any
craft could live through such a surge. The murmur was audible far away
in the still countryside, and the air, even where the three onlookers
stood, was moist with impalpable spray.

"Looks as though that wager was mine," said Tristram. "He might as well
try to swim Niagara."

"Ought we not to have a rope in case of accident?" said Mrs. Arnold.

"By all means," cried Rosalie, and for an instant the two women were one
in sympathy.

"Indigo," said Mrs. Arnold, "go over to Farmer Hedge's and procure a
stout rope. If anything should happen----"

"Nothing will happen," said Indigo. But he obeyed her command, and
departed in the direction of the nearest farmhouse. The moments were
long drawn out with anxiety before he returned, until at last even
Tristram's sallies could not draw a smile from the two ladies. So he
coolly took out a pad of white paper, sharpened his pencil and sketched
off the rapids.

"There he comes," cried Rosalie, peering up-stream.

"Harry!" murmured Mrs. Arnold, as her son rounded a bend of the river
into view. Already he was coasting down without using his paddle. His
brown arms rested on the handle before him and his muscles, seemingly
relaxed, were tense for exertion.

A great log which had preceded him down had been whirled around like a
chip and finally submerged, reappearing only in the clear water forty
yards beyond. A similar fate surely awaited the light cockleshell which
bore the beloved life.

As his canoe half-turned, Harry pushed his paddle into the water.
Evidently it met a rock, for the prow righted at once and swept down a
narrow channel where the rush was swiftest, but the foam seemed parted
in two. Here again it caught, poised and spun around. It was fast on a
ledge, and the young athlete was straining every sinew to push it off.
While he was struggling in this peril, Indigo came down, staggering
under a coil of thick rope.

"Indigo," said Mrs. Arnold, excitedly, "throw him the rope."

Indigo stood on the bank, but instead of obeying, ran farther down to a
rock that jutted over the clear water where the rapids ended. On his way
he heard the ladies shrieking.

"His oar is broken."

"But he has worked himself free," said Tristram, nonchalantly sketching.
"He will win, confound it! Yet it's worth losing once to see that play
of his right deltoid."

Harry's paddle had indeed broken in the last successful shove, but it
was a double blade, and the half in his hand was used to good advantage.
As he came sweeping down, his eyes intent on the prow before him,
Tristram raised his hat and the ladies leaned forward, waving their
kerchiefs. Harry answered their salute by standing up in the boat. It
was a superb piece of bravado.

       *       *       *       *       *

"He doesn't always wear a glove canoeing?" asked Mrs. Arnold of Indigo.
Harry had just put ashore an eighth of a mile down stream.

"No, the mate to that one's lost," replied the valet, "and Mr. Harry
told me to cut it up for his hand."

"When lost and where?" said Rosalie.

"I don't know that."

"Let me tell you."

"What a sibyl!" exclaimed brother Tristram.

"It was on Broad street, the afternoon of the fire. Don't you remember,
when we saw him crossing the street so hurriedly and I remarked he had
only one glove on."

"You must be mistaken," said Mrs. Arnold. "Harry was ill at home all
that day."




CHAPTER XXXI.

MATER DOLOROSA.


Honora Riley, who washed for Mrs. Barlow, lived in a ramshackle,
desolate district of the city which was appropriately known as "the
Barrens." Colliers, sooty to the eyerims, trudging home; ashy
dump-pickers; women cowled in drab shawls from beneath whose folds
peeped pitchers brimmed with foam like the whipped surface of the milk
pail, but the liquor was not milk; such were the sights Emily noticed
when she called at Mrs. Riley's to inquire whether it was a spell of
illness that had prevented her from coming to wash that Monday.

"Come in," a feeble voice answered her knock. "Oh, is it you, Miss
Barlow?"

Emily saw that the supper on the table, laid for two, was untasted, and
that the eyes of the woman who sat on the chair clasping her knees
before her, were red.

"We thought you might be ill, Mrs. Riley," she said.

"It is heartsick I am, and too broken-hearted to work, dear. Land knows
I have good reason or I wouldn't fail your mother."

"It isn't the pneumonia again, I hope."

"Shame and loneliness have come upon me in my old age," said Mrs. Riley,
wiping her tears with the corner of her tidy apron. "They've taken
Walter away."

"Who took him away?"

"The officer came with a warrant this morning--and he my only child, and
the kindest boy to his mother, with no harm or wickedness in him at all,
at all."

Walter was Mrs. Riley's only child, the last of seven. All the others
had preceded their father to the grave, narrowing the resources of the
little family with continual illnesses and funerals. Finally her husband
himself, an honest roofer, had been fatally injured in a fall and had
passed away, kissing the six-months' infant who would never know a
father. This was long ago. For this child the good mother had provided
by her willing labor, and he had grown to be her pride and hope, a
promising boy of 14.

"'It was a bicycle he stole,' said the officer, 'away out in the
country.' 'But I never meant to steal it, mother,' says Walter, and the
boy was that truthful he never lied to a soul that breathes. 'I never
meant to steal it, mother,' he says," repeated Mrs. Riley softly, her
grief overmastering her.

"Did you say Walter stole a bicycle?" asked Emily, a vague reminiscence
coming back to her.

"It was the bad company I warned him against, especially that Fenton boy
and Mrs. Watts' little imp that has more tricks in him than a monkey.
'Keep away from them, Walter,' says I, but no, he would choose them for
companions. And 'tis old Bagley, the junkman, I blame most of all. Upon
my word, I believe he put them up to the trick. What would three little
boys travel out to the country like that for, and ride away on three
bicycles and then sell them to Bagley?"

"Walter sold it, then?" said Emily, thoughtfully.

"Indeed, Walter did not. 'Mine is safe and sound in the club-room,' says
he; that's Lanty Lonergan's back kitchen he lets them use for a meeting
place. 'It's in the club-room,' says Walter, 'and I wouldn't sell it,
mother, but I was afraid to give it back; only I never meant to steal
it.'"

"That I believe, Mrs. Riley, for I saw him take that bicycle."

Mrs. Riley's tears stopped flowing for a moment in her surprise. Then
Emily related the story of her trip to Hillsboro and the conversation of
the boys which she had overheard, not forgetting to explain her own
share in frightening them away.

"So perhaps by my officiousness I converted an innocent prank into
something more serious," she concluded.

"If it was the price of it only, I'd give double that, and land knows
I've no stockingful, like some that go to the city for help, for I'd
rather rub my knuckles off than beg," said the good woman.

There was a piece of old carpet stuffed in one window-pane, adequate in
summer, no doubt, but hardly impregnable to the winter winds--and Emily
judged from the table before her that more than once the mother and son
had sat down to a Barmecide feast, in which the imagination had to be
called on to help appease the palate. So it was by inheritance that the
Whistler came by his aversion to Shagarach's charity.

"I think it strange Walter and I have never become acquainted."

"Indeed he knows all your goodness to me."

"Is he still at school?"

"Graduated this year, and his masters recommend him for the
best-tempered boy and as innocent--but full of the old Harry, like his
father, that would always be dancing, even with seven children between
him and his youth."

"What a pity if he should turn out bad now after you've made so many
sacrifices for him."

"Oh, for the sacrifices, Walter's willing to take his share. With his
paper route he would bring me in sometimes $2 a week, and there was
nothing he wouldn't do, distribute handbills, deliver baskets in the
meat-market on Saturday nights. Look, here's the shoeblack's kit he just
bought. Come in, Miss Barlow."

Emily entered the small side room which completed Mrs. Riley's suite.

"There's the blacking-box. Bought it himself with his own savings."

"But he was too changeable. I should think he would have done better to
stick to one thing."

"That's what I told him. But you know how a boy is fickle-minded. 'Get
me something good, mother,' says he. There's the little cradle I rocked
him in that I kept all these years--" Emily herself could hardly check
her tears at thought of the mother rocking this empty memento.

"His Aunt Mary gave it to me--not that we couldn't afford it--plenty and
to spare I had when my husband was alive, but it wasn't lucky to buy a
cradle for your first baby, she said, and so I rocked them all in hers,
and now six of them are in heaven with their father, God ha' mercy, and
Walter, all that was left me, is in the lockup this night with the bad
people."

Walter's little room was bare but not squalid. A knockabout suit hung on
pegs at one side, and a washbowl stood on a cheap commode, like a
prophecy of cleanliness in the occupant.

"Don't worry, Mrs. Riley. Since I helped Walter into this scrape, I am
bound to help him out of it."

"Heaven bless you, if you can save my Walter--and I know you would try
if you knew him. The lovingest boy, full of mischief like his father,
but he'd give the blood out of his heart to a soul in trouble. Oh, well
I knew he had something on his mind all these weeks. For he wouldn't run
up stairs two steps at a time, as he used to, and whistle so that it was
sweeter and louder than a cage full of canaries. When I heard him
whistle low I knew it was something troubling his mind. 'Yes, mother, it
is,' says he, but that was all I could get out of him."

"Suppose I bring a very great lawyer to be his counsel," said Emily,
deeply moved by the lonely mother's sorrow, and haunted, too, by a dim
remembrance of the central face among the three gamins--a frank
boy-face, with red lips and cheeks. "Wouldn't he stand a better chance
of getting off?"

"Just as you say, Miss Barlow," answered the sad woman, brightening a
little.

"He is very busy, but I feel sure that he will attend to this if I ask
him. I'll see him to-night. Don't brood over it too much and never mind
about the washing. I will have Mr. Shagarach call at the station and
talk with Walter, and then let you know. Good-night."

"Good-night and bless you," said Mrs. Riley, holding the little
candlestick high at the landing. Emily picked her way down two crazy
flights of stairs and a doorway barred with sprawling children on to the
sidewalk. "While we wink, the lightning may have flashed," was a motto
she had copied out of an old book of maxims and embroidered into her
life; so, without taking time even for a wink, she hailed a passing car
that would carry her near Shagarach's house.

Not all that Mrs. Riley had said of her boy, the Whistler, should be set
down to a mother's partiality. Mischievous Walter was, if the
unquenchable avidity for excitement which reigns at fourteen entitles a
boy to such an aspersion. The five hours' rigid confinement at a school
desk especially provoked him to perpetual fidget, and no teacher had yet
been found who could make him buckle to his books so long. Yet he was a
favorite with one and all, less because of his deft hand at the drawing
lesson than because of the real salubrity of his nature, which made him
exceptional among the slum children who were his fellow-pupils.

To these very schoolmates Walter figured as a hero, an Admirable
Crichton, invincible at all games and master of most things worth
knowing for boys. There was no swimmer of his age could equal him in
grace or speed, and his dive from the top of the railroad dock was
famous in local annals. So was his successful set-to in the brewery yard
with Lefty Dinan, the Tenth street cock-of-the walk.

Yet for all his proficiency in the art of give, take and avoid, Walter
was the least combative of boys, being, as his mother said, "loving" in
disposition. The great gray Percherons with shaggy fetlocks, that drew
the fire-engines, knew this, and admitted him to a brotherly
comradeship, bowing with delight when he patted and stroked them.
Mechanics found him handy beyond his years, and often employed him at
odd jobs. For he had a carpenter's eye for short distances and a
surveyor's for long, and there was no tool that did not fit his fingers.
If he had run away to join the circus last summer, that was not the
unpardonable sin.

Shagarach heard Emily gravely.

"An important witness for our cause," he answered, when she had
finished. "We surely cannot suffer him to be thrust into prison." Emily
knew that it was unnecessary for her to press the matter further, so she
spent a brief evening in conversation with the quaint, affectionate
mother, rarely alluding to the Floyd case or the mysterious oaf who had
so alarmed her in that oriental room.

The following noon she ran down to the jail to see Robert,
half-expecting to hear him playing the violin which she had sent him the
day before. Robert's own Stradivarius, with all his other personal
effects, had been destroyed at the fire, so Emily, having begged the
sheriff's permission, had pinched herself to buy him a new one as
richly toned as her slender means could purchase. Her own instrument was
the piano, whose keys turned to silver beneath her touch, and it had
been in the ensemble classes of the conservatory that she and Robert
(through Beulah Ware) first met. When Dr. Silsby, the botanist, who had
just come home from the west, called yesterday, she had insisted on his
taking the violin to Robert, without betraying the giver's name.
However, Robert's corridor (murderers' row, the name made her indignant)
was silent when she approached it, and she searched his cell vainly for
a violin box.

"Dr. Silsby has been to see you, Robert?" she asked, after the greetings
due from sweetheart to sweetheart.

"He came in yesterday to cheer me."

"His usual method of cheering, I suppose."

"Oh, yes, said he had never expected me to outlive uncle; I always acted
so much older than he did," laughed Robert.

"He is such a droll tease," said Emily, who never could be brought to
admit that Robert was overserious for his years.

"But I made myself even with him before he went. He promised to read an
article I had written while in prison, and took the manuscript under his
arm, little suspecting what was in store for him. You know how he abhors
my social heresies."

"And the article was----"

"My 'Modest Proposal for a Consumers' Trust,' socialistic from kappa to
kappa. How Jonas will writhe! The last words he spoke were a thrust at
my 'fad.' Yet every letter-carrier and uniformed employe I meet," added
Robert, returning to his natural gravity, "contented and useful,
convinces me more and more that the world is moving toward
co-operation."

"But the reading will be torture to Dr. Silsby."

"It ought to do him good. How hard that lumper works!" Several <DW64>s
were staggering down the corridor, shouldering huge sides of beef for
the jail cuisine. "And in fifty offices within a radius of a mile men
are receiving large salaries for dawdling at elegant desks two or three
hours a day."

"There are no sinecures at $10 a week," sighed Emily, drawing upon
experience for this generalization. "But did Dr. Silsby have nothing
with him when he called?"

"I believe he had--a violin box."

"Just so," said a cheerful voice behind them; "a violin-box, and forgot
to leave it. You see I had the jacketing of that birch tree so much on
my mind," it was Dr. Silsby himself, "everything else slipped out. You
remember my speaking of the birch tree, Rob?"

"At least seven times," answered Robert.

"Cruelty, Miss Barlow, positive cruelty. That fine silver-birch in the
jailyard--you saw it, I suppose, coming in--all peeled and naked from
the ground as high as my reach. Wanton cruelty. Think of the winter
nights. It will die. It will die."

One of Jonas Silsby's eccentricities was his keen sympathy for arboreal
life, to which his rugged nature yearned even more than to the delicate
products of the flower garden.

"I complained to the sheriff. There ought to be an ordinance severely
punishing the barking of trees."

"Don't they fine the boys who mutilate foliage in the parks?" asked
Emily.

"Fine! Horsewhip them! Rattan their knuckles! I'd teach them a lesson or
two! The young barbarians! Well, cut it short, thinking of the trees, I
forgot your violin. So last night I ordered a jacket made, good canvas
cloth, that'll interest you, Rob, if you haven't forgotten all your
botany in your wild----"

"How did you like my essay, Jonas?" asked Robert, mischievously.

"Quackery! A poultice to cure incurable diseases. Bah!"

"But you brought the violin to-day?" asked Emily, smiling.

"Yes, with the canvas jacket. You see it's Miss Barlow's present----"

"What!" cried Robert.

"There! Thunder! I've let it out. She was going to blindfold you and let
you guess the giver."

"And the violin is in your vest pocket, I suppose?" asked Emily,
innocently, on the brink of a peal of laughter.

"The violin! Jupiter!" exclaimed Dr. Silsby, thunderstruck. "It's a box
of bulbs. I thought they were rather heavy."

Emily and Robert had a merry time over the botanist's absentmindedness,
but he insisted that the original fault lay with the young barbarians
who had upset him by unbarking the birch tree.

There was little news to exchange except the arrest of their "important
witness," and the lunch hour at best was only sixty minutes long, so
Emily was soon forced to make her adieus and leave Robert with his
second best friend.




CHAPTER XXXII.

EMILY STRIKES A MATCH.


Beulah Ware called that evening to talk over their plans for a trip to
the provinces, which Dr. Eustis, the Barlows' family physician, had
imperatively ordered for the wasting girl. Could he have looked into her
brain while she was preparing to retire in her chamber, and seen the
velocity of the thoughts which were coursing through it then, he would
surely have lengthened the weeks to months.

"Would the will be upheld?" she asked herself. Dr. Silsby's oral
evidence was strong in its favor and Shagarach had spoken hopefully of
late. The least that he could expect was a postponement until the trial
was concluded. Since the evening she spent at his house, the lawyer had
applied himself, if possible, more sternly than ever to the case, and
his manner was more than ever that of a man repressing all lightness of
spirit to make room for weighty thoughts.

What a mesh they were all entangled in. Shagarach as well as Robert,
with the monster reaching again and again at his life! And
McCausland--she hated his eternal smile. As if this business of life or
death were a comedy for his amusement or the display of his superfine
powers. She had begun to doubt whether their triumph over the false Bill
Dobbs had been as genuine as they first supposed.

"A lie will travel a league while truth is putting on his boots," old
John Davidson had said, shaking his head, when she described the
adventure to him. And the result had proved him right. Although the
truth leaked out, the original impression that Robert had really broken
out of prison was never quite corrected, and of course it did him no
good with the public.

In spite of herself, Emily could not help feeling that both these
powerful minds were overreaching themselves by their very fertility and
keenness, like the colossus of old, which tumbled by its own huge
height. For the hundredth time she set their theories before her, trying
to imagine how a jury would look at them.

Her rambling drowse naturally brought back the whole trip to
Hillsborough and her conversation with Bertha. She tried to recall every
word that the housemaid had uttered, rendered doubly precious, as it
seemed to Emily, by the impossibility of consulting her again until the
trial. What she had said of the previous fire especially struck Emily
now. She tried to form a vivid picture on the curtain of darkness which
surrounded her of that fatal study. The books all upright on their
shelves, the canary bird singing, the waste-basket, the slippers under
the arm-chair, and the dressing-gown thrown over it, the dog--suddenly
Emily's heart stood still. She started up in bed and sat on its edge.

A minute later she was feeling for the match-box. As she stood before
the mirror, her image came out slowly, slowly, emerging by the
sulphurous blue flame. Lighting the gas, she drew the curtains. The bark
of a watchdog broke the silence, or the footsteps of tardy home-comers,
and now and then the shrill, faint whistle of a distant steamer,
ocean-bound. But her ears were closed to outer impressions. She snatched
at a volume of the great encyclopedia which she kept in her room, and,
sitting on the bed, laid one knee across its fellow for a book-rest. In
this posture she read eagerly, then exchanged the volume for another,
and that for another, until she had ranged through the entire set and
peeped at every letter from Archimedes to Zero, with long and very
attentive stops at many curious headings. It was after 1 o'clock when
she turned out the light and nearly 3 when her brain stopped buzzing.
Next morning she limped in her left knee where the heavy encyclopedia
had rested and her eyes were dull at their work.

The idea was so bold, so novel, that she waited a day before submitting
it to Shagarach. Beulah Ware was her first confidant. Beulah took it up
enthusiastically, and was for developing it farther before giving it out
at all. But Emily judged this secrecy unjust to her lawyer, and,
besides, was eager to know his opinion. He listened with interest to her
"maybes" and "might bes" and commented in his usual tone of conviction.

"There are a great many 'ifs.' You depend entirely upon Bertha, and she
is not at hand. When she does appear it will be so late that you will
have little time to work up your idea. This is not said to discourage
you; only to point out the obstacles you must surmount. By all means
follow out the thought."

This was not the worst that Emily had feared, although she understood
that it meant "There are at present only two theories, McCausland's and
mine. Those are the horns of the dilemma between which the jury must
choose." Seeing that she did not reply, Shagarach turned the subject
toward Walter Riley's case, which was more serious than his mother
knew.

The robbery of the bicycles was only one of a series of thefts which had
been traced to this youthful "gang." In the club-room at Lonergan's, not
only the Whistler's bicycle, which he had refused to sell, but a store
of cigars, whisky, cheap jewelry and ladies' pocketbooks had been found,
and the junkman, Bagley, was under arrest for acting as a "fence" to the
thieves.

Walter asserted his innocence of other thefts, and also his ignorance of
all the articles excepting the bicycle, which they had urged him to
sell. His refusal to do so was corroborated by Turkey and Toot. On this
very head he had had a falling out with the crowd and had ceased to
visit the club-room, but, although it was frequented by as many as
twenty youngsters, some of them half-grown men, no one had dared to heed
Bagley's suggestion and dispose of Walter's abandoned property.

"Riley's act at its worst was no more serious than breaking a window or
plucking pears from the tree. With your help he may get clear and be put
on probation."

"Oh, must I testify?" asked Emily.

"Next Monday the case will be heard. You can be of service to the boy. I
shall recommend short terms for Fenton and Watts."

Emily promised to be present. While she was returning to her studio old
John Davidson overtook her in his carriage. She was glad to meet his
kindly glance again and accept his proffered seat, especially as she
espied the manikin, Kennedy, crossing the street in her direction. It
was only a few blocks to her destination, but before they arrived she
had poured out her new theory to the marshal, as if he were her father.

"Don't you think it's possible, Mr. Davidson?" she appealed to him,
craving a morsel of sympathy.

"Possible? Of course it's possible," he answered cheerily; "I've met
things a hundred times stranger myself."

But Emily's heart sunk a little, for she saw that he only spoke so out
of kindness and that he did not really believe in her idea. And from
that day she followed Beulah Ware's advice and hardly mentioned it,
except to Beulah.




CHAPTER XXXIII.

McCAUSLAND'S AMMUNITION.


It is no wonder at all that Emily Barlow should have come to regard
Inspector McCausland as the villain of the drama in which she was taking
a part. Although whenever she tried to formulate his theory of the case
it seemed to her too frail to hang a kitten by, yet she had moments of
doubt in which his great reputation and clean record of victories
oppressed and appalled her. And these moments were rendered frequent by
a quality which McCausland seemed to possess in common with other
satanic characters, his ubiquity, in which he was only surpassed by Mr.
Arthur Kennedy Foxhall. In justice to McCausland, however, it should be
stated that he did not make a practice, as the manikin did, of writing
bi-weekly billet-doux.

The first time the detective's shadow fell across Emily's path--after
her discovery of his identity--was on one of her visits to Senda Wesner.
Who should be coming out of the bakeshop but chubby Richard in person?
His bow was gallant and his smile serene.

"My weekly call," he said, stopping to chat for a moment. "A sociable
little magpie, that one," jerking his thumb toward the bakeshop girl.
Emily thought this uncomplimentary. From Miss Wesner she gathered enough
to lead her to suspect that he was trying to connect the peddler in the
green cart, who was certainly no peddler and who had eluded all pursuit
thus far, with the slamming of the rear door, which must have been done
by some one else than Floyd.

A few days later she had called at the office of the Beacon, the
newspaper for which Robert wrote special articles, to obtain some papers
from his desk. The desk was indeed there, but all its drawers had been
removed and the managing editor explained that they might be found at
the office of Inspector McCausland.

Twice she had met the inspector climbing Shagarach's stairs, but passing
by the lawyer's door and mounting to the top story. The second time she
had heard his voice in conference with a throaty falsetto she thought
she knew, and the black mask of Pineapple Jupiter, appearing at the head
of the stairs, confirmed her suspicions. Without scruple she entered the
mission herself one day and expended all her arts to pump the old <DW64>.
The moment McCausland's name was introduced, however, his loquacity was
checked of a sudden, then took dizzy flights of irrelevance.

"Oh, dese chillun, chillun," cried Jupiter, puttering away at a broken
pane, "dey done gone break my winders."

"The stout, ruddy gentleman, I mean," persisted Emily, but Jupiter was
so absorbed in his hymn tune that he did not hear her.

Sharper heads than Emily's had failed to force McCausland's hand when he
chose to shut it tight. The newspaper reporters, whom no ordinary walls
can bar, had bestirred themselves to secure for an inquisitive public
the "new evidence" that the government had presented before the grand
jury in the Floyd case, but absolutely without avail. Where such
experienced allies owned themselves beaten, the gentle maiden might
surely do so without dishonor.

As Shagarach foretold, Bertha had been spirited away. Mrs. Christenson,
the intelligence offices, the Swedish consul, the Lutheran pastor, were
all visited and revisited by Emily, especially since the new inspiration
seized her, but none of them knew the address of the housemaid since she
left Hillsborough that morning on an outward-bound train. The only rumor
of her whereabouts was that vague report, coming from the bakeshop girl,
which Dr. Silsby had set out to investigate.

With regard to the Arnolds' coachman, who had driven their carriage on
the day of the fire, Emily considered Shagarach to be curiously
indifferent. He had promised to subpoena the man for the trial, but that
was all. Yet his testimony was crucial, since he must know whether Harry
was with his mother in the vehicle.

This was a peculiarity of Shagarach's, in which he differed again from
McCausland. Though he prepared his defense with consummate painstaking,
when it came his turn to prosecute an unwilling witness, he seemed
satisfied to know the truth in his own mind, relying upon his genius to
extort a confession during the cross-examination. With a perjurer before
him he wielded the lash like a slave-driver, and perhaps he was
justified in this case in omitting a rehearsal which would only put the
Arnolds on their guard.

But Emily's greatest disappointment came in what seemed to her the one
weak point of Robert's defense, the axis around which the entire
prosecution revolved. Time and again she had conferred with Shagarach on
the subject of her lover's reverie after the deed. To think that he
could not remember a face he had seen, an incident, a word spoken,
during those four hours--nothing but a vague itinerary of the afternoon,
which came out with difficulty each time, and the course of his own
meditations, which, to tell the truth, was clear and copious enough, but
worthless for the purpose.

At her last visit to the lawyer's home he had entered into this more
deeply. Apparently the method of attacking the enigma, which he had
hinted at possessing from the very first, was now ripened. For he loaned
Emily a ponderous volume on "Diseases of the Memory," and asked her to
bring in all the evidence possible showing the mutual affection of
nephew and uncle, not failing to wear the water lily from time to time,
as he had suggested before. But she was not satisfied with this, and,
knowing Robert had visited the park, spent one whole Sunday making a
tour of that district, questioning each of the gray-coated policemen.

At last she had found an officer who recollected "something of such a
young man as she described." He "couldn't swear to it," but "had an
idea he noticed him." In fact, his recollection grew vaguer and vaguer
the more they tried to make it specific, and to Emily's chagrin, when
they brought him to the jail, he asserted positively that Robert was not
the man. This disappointment was sharpened tenfold by her meeting
Inspector McCausland, passing out of the corridor, arm in arm with a car
conductor.

"I am certain that was my passenger," the conductor was saying. To have
her own failure and McCausland's success thus brought into contact
accentuated both and gave Emily a miserable day.

The case of the old chemist was not so bad, and besides, was none of
Emily's doing. John Davidson, the marshal, had taken up Shagarach's
theory of Harry Arnold's guilt with remarkable zeal and had borrowed one
of the photographs, so as to see if he could be of use. One day he came
in, greatly excited, and asked for the lawyer.

"Got some evidence that'll surprise you, brother," said the marshal.

"Then it must be extraordinary," answered Shagarach.

"What do you think that young rascal did?"

"Who?"

"Arnold. Went to a chemist, a friend of mine, fellow-townsman, too,
Phineas Fowler, and bought a big heap of combustible powder, a day or
two before the fire. Sprinkled it over the whole room, probably."

"He wasn't so foolish as to leave his name, however?"

"Oh, Phineas knew the photograph. Spotted him right away when I fetched
her out. Lucky I took it now, wan't it? 'That's the man,' says Phineas."

"I believe I have your friend's address already," said Shagarach, and in
two or three days he was paying a long-delayed visit to Phineas Fowler.

Amid the compound odor of chemicals sat a shriveled pantaloon, with a
long, thin beard whose two forks he kept pulling and stroking. Shagarach
was about to state his business, when a stranger at the window came
forward and interrupted him.

"The young man who bought the combustion powder was identified in jail
yesterday," said Inspector McCausland, smiling. "It was only Floyd, on
that matter of the bomb."

That matter of the bomb! Perhaps it would be harder to explain than
Emily thought.

But McCausland was not always out beating the bush for evidence.
Occasionally the mountain went to Mahomet. The reward of $5,000, which
Harry Arnold had advertised, drew a dribbling stream of callers to the
inspector's office. There was the veiled lady, who had seen the crime
with the eyes of her soul, and would accept a small fee for a
clairvoyant seance, and the lady with green glasses, whose card
announced her as "Phoebe Isinglass, metaphysician." The moderation of
her terms could only be accounted for by her scientific interest in the
matter. She asked only $1,000 if she proved Floyd insane, $500 if she
proved him sane, and $100 (merely as a compensation for her time) if the
case baffled her skill.

Prof. I. Noah Little, the conchologist, paid McCausland the honor of a
call and even brought his whelk-shell with him. With this occult
instrument at his ear he had been known to make the most remarkable
prophecies, declaring to gullible girls the names of their future
spouses, and even portending the great snowfall of May 21 in the year
1880.

As for suggestions by mail, the office porter's spine grew bent with
emptying the waste-basket which received them. Hypnotism was the
favorite explanation with a large majority of the correspondents,
followed by a somnambulism and various ingenious theories of accident.
The pope and the czar were named as authors, and the freemasons were
accused in one epistle of a plot to burn up the ocean with some
diabolical explosive, to procure which they had all sold their souls to
the devil, though what this had to do with the Floyd case was a greater
mystery than the fire itself.

Out of all this chaff the inspector sifted a solitary grain. One morning
he was joking in the office with Hardy, Johnson and Smith, three of his
brothers-in-buttons. Hardy handled sneak-thieves and shoplifters,
Johnson swindlers of a higher order, such as confidence men, and Smith
the gangs of forgers and counterfeiters. They were all, like McCausland,
common-looking men. This enabled them to slouch through life quietly,
taking observations by the way.

"Well, Dick," said Johnson, "I hear you've been appointed
confessor-general to Col. Mainwaring's sinners."

This was received with a hearty laugh, for they were a jolly four, these
men of iron.

"That arson case is a puzzler," put in Smith. "Why didn't you send a
bottle of the smoke to Sherlock Holmes?"

"With a blank label," added Johnson, "for the incendiary's name."

"Would he notice such an A B C riddle?" laughed Hardy.

"A lady for Mr. McCausland," announced the mulatto policeman, and the
brothers-in-buttons quickly found other business.




CHAPTER XXXIV.

HONEY, NOT WITHOUT STING


She looked so timid and demure, with the blue straw bonnet which framed
her sweet face, the red band lettered in gold, "Salvation Army."

Eyes, lifted slowly, of deep, dark blue, and the level brows laid over
them for a foil. Beautiful eyes, we male observers say in our rough,
generic fashion, but the finer perception of our sisters discriminates
more closely. Not the iris alone makes the beauty of eyes. Lashes long
and thick, lids of bewitching droop, brows penciled in the bow curve,
any of these may be the true feature that starts our exclamation of
delight. But in Miss Serena Lamb (as the girl gave her name) nearly all
these marks were blended, and they overhung a feature which used to be
fashionable and is still, when perfect, divine--the rosebud mouth.

She might well be timid in those surroundings--revolvers and handcuffs
to right of her, medals and canes to left; shutter-cutters, winches,
chisels, diamond drills, skeleton keys, wax molds, jimmies, screws, in
the glass case in front--an elaborate outfit of burglar's tools, the
trophies of McCausland's hunting expeditions, for the inspector's
specialty was burglary. On one side the portrait of the true Bill Dobbs
looked out from the center of a congenial group, and a tiny plush case
kept the file made from a watch-spring with which the famous Barney
Pease had cut his way to liberty. All this was formidable enough in
itself, to say nothing of the huge bloodhound that lay half-asleep, with
his jowl on the hearthstone.

"I thought I ought to tell you," said Miss Lamb, modestly, "although it
may not be of importance."

"And yet it may," said the inspector, politely. "We often work from the
merest trifles."

"It concerns the fire in Prof. Arnold's house."

"Ah!"

"You know our labors often bring sinners back to the fold and many of
them insist on unburdening their past misdeeds to us. It is very
distressing to hear, but it seems to ease their consciences."

McCausland mentally registered a great broad mark in her favor. She had
not begun by asking for the reward.

"One day a young convert of ours came to my house and spent an hour with
me. We sung hymns and conversed, and I truly believe he has heard the
word. Hosanna! Alleluia!"

McCausland fidgeted a little at these transports, but the sweet face in
the blue bonnet kept him respectful.

"I am young," she hardly looked 18, "but I strove earnestly with him
that night. Moved by the spirit, he told me a guilty story, which I put
aside until reading about your case stirred my memory, and I felt in
duty bound to relate it. Alleluia!"

"Proceed, Miss Lamb."

"The young convert had been in his early days a locksmith and a great
sinner before the world. One day a stranger proposed to him a reward if
he should enter a certain room and open a safe which it contained. The
temptation was great and he yielded, for he was poor in the riches of
earth, and knew not then of the treasures of heaven. Alleluia! Praise!

"Weakly he consented to accompany the stranger, and on a certain Sunday,
during the early hours of evening, suffered himself to be led into the
room, where he found himself alone with the stranger. It was the name of
this man and the description he gave me of the room which led me
afterward to think that his action might have a connection with your
case."

"What name?"

"Robert Floyd."

McCausland took a cigar from his pocket and bit off the end.

"And how did he describe the room?"

"A library, he said, with a bird cage before one window and a desk in
the corner."

"And the safe?"

"He could not open it at first, but tried again and again. Something
alarmed them, however, or so I gathered. For you must know his accent
was very hard to follow and--and"--(Serena blushed)--"he was very much
agitated while he told me. But I gathered that they were interrupted and
put off their wicked work."

"I must see this young convert. He may have sinned to good purpose that
time."

"There comes the strange part of it. Since he made the confession I have
not seen him again. He has not come to our meetings, as he used. Perhaps
he has fallen back into the evil ways of the worldly minded. Perhaps the
wicked ones have punished him."

"The description is certainly similar," said McCausland, shutting his
right eye, so as to fix more keenly on his visitor's face the other,
which was the one reputed microscopic in its powers.

"So it seemed to me, reading the papers, which are full of profane
sayings, alas! But where sin is there must be the workers in the
vineyard."

"I am glad you read them and you did well to come. But--do you know the
convert's name? Without some clew, I fear----"

The young girl hesitated awhile, then answered:

"Aronson!"

McCausland started. It was not a common name.

"A young man, you say? And spoke with an accent?"

"Yes, slightly."

"Can it be Shagarach's man?" said McCausland to himself, reaching for
the city directory. "There was something shady about his record." Then
he rung a bell.

"Have the criminal docket looked up about four years ago for a case
against one Aronson--larceny of an overcoat, I believe," he said to the
mulatto officer.

"That was all," said Miss Lamb, arising to go.

"One moment," said McCausland, running his forefinger up the directory
page. "Was his first name Saul?"

"I don't remember. I remember very little about him."

"'Saul Aronson, law student.' Let's look farther back," said McCausland,
restoring the 1895 volume to the shelf; "'94, '93, '92, '91," he drew
out the last. "It would be queer," he said to himself, "if Floyd's
junior counsel should turn out to be an accomplice."

"Aronson," he read aloud. "Isaac, Jacob, Marks--Saul! 'Saul Aronson,
locksmith'!"




CHAPTER XXXV.

A BACK-STITCH.


This was how Aronson made the acquaintance of Serena Lamb. One day there
resounded through the Ghetto (where Aronson lived) the pounding of a
violent drum. Tum, tum, tum! Tum, tum, tum! Tumtyty, Tumtyty! Tum, tum,
tum! And every now and then its bass companion marked the ictuses with a
cavernous "Boom!" Then Moses and Samuel ceased their buying and selling
for a few moments and the coats, vests and trousers which draped their
window-fronts swung idly in the wind. And the little Samuels swarmed
from their hiding-places till both curbstones were fringed two deep with
humanity, eying the musical invaders. For the notes of the bugle burst
out after this percussion prelude and a mixed choir of voices lifted a
strange refrain.

Motley singers they were! Shabbily dressed men, with exaltation in their
faces, and women of all ages and types, uniform only in their costumes.
Raising the song, they clapped their hands together, like bacchants or
chorybantes dashing cymbal on cymbal in the ecstasy of the dance. But
such bacchants! Bacchants in blue bonnets, like grandmother's sundown!
Bacchants with pure faces of undefiled girlhood! Bacchants with
crone-faces all wrinkled and yellow! And away at the rear, chanting with
might and main, though bent nearly double under the bass-drum which
rested on his back, proudly marched Pineapple Jupiter.

Frowns gathered on the foreheads of Moses and Samuel when the import of
this procession became clear, and many a portly Rachel clucked warningly
to her brood. But youth is frivolous and inquisitive even in Israel; so
the square was jammed with onlookers when the army set up its standard
in the very heart of the Ghetto. True, not all these were children of
the tribe. The slurred consonants of the Italian, vainly trying to
smooth and liquefy our rugged tongue, were heard; the muffled nasals of
the Portuguese; the virile drawl of the Celt; and a youthful accent
which seemed to be a resultant of all this polyglot mixture. And to
these others also the army was an abomination even as to Samuel and
Moses.

Therefore, when the music ceased and the army formed in a wide ring with
hands joined sisterly and brotherly, a great pandemonium took up and
prolonged the last note of the dying bugle. The cock crew, the cat
called and the bulldog barked at these devoted soldiers. But they only
blessed their enemies and danced round and round as if rejoicing at
persecution. Whereat the multitude fringing their circle danced with
them, too, and staid Saul Aronson, who was passing, found himself
whirled perforce in a maelstrom of larking boys, full-grown hoodlums and
petticoated hobbledehoys.

When the first sister stepped forth to give her "testimony" the face
beneath her bonnet compelled silence. Her voice was gentle, her figure
petite. Her eyebrows lay across her forehead straight and dark, and she
spoke from a rosebud mouth. No wonder the nearest onlookers leaned
forward and the idlers on the outskirts inclined their heads to one side
and hollowed their hands at their ears so as to catch the utterance
which promised so fairly to their eyes.

To Saul Aronson it was a vision of paradise. The lashes of her modestly
drooped eyes lay in dark half-moons on her cheek, but once when she
lifted them a blue light seemed to flash down into his very heart; and
that organ, amorphous before, grew suddenly crystal--a great blood-red
ruby which he longed to lay at her feet. This was what she said, this
lily of the morass:

"I give thanks to the Lord,"--her utterance was slow, her shrill voice
pierced the stillness, "that He has led me away from my sins."

"Alleluia!" murmured the chorus.

"That He has poured into my heart the grace of His love and made
manifest the wonder of His works. Are ye weary, sinners, weary of the
way ye tread? Oh, come to the true way, where ye shall find life and
light and joy and peace, as I have found it."

"Bress de name ob de Lord!" said Pineapple Jupiter, loudly. Whereat
several tittered and a discreet sister whispered "Hush!"

"It is not to-day for which we live or the things of to-day--not for
bread, or for gold, or for fame, which are perishable things. Not for
to-day nor for to-morrow should we strive, but for eternity! Not for the
approval of men, but of Him who is the just Judge everlasting. Holy!
Holy! Holy!"

"Alleluia!" murmured the chorus.

"It is written in the word, which cannot lie, that the keys of the
kingdom are given to Peter. Therefore, when ye go forth to the labor of
your days, ask yourselves not what will men say, but what will Peter say
when I knock at the golden door for admittance. Will he welcome me as a
true child or will he spurn me to the outer darkness? Ask yourselves
this, oh, sinners, each and all. What will Peter say, Joseph? What will
Peter say, John? What will Peter say, Christian soul?"

This conclusion seemed to be the refrain of a hymn which the circle took
up:

    "What will Peter say, Christian soul,
    When the last great trumpet sounds?"

The trombone here drew forth a sepulchral note, representing, no doubt,
the trump of doom, and Saul Aronson could almost feel its vibrations in
the earth beneath him. He could have pummeled the irreverent knot of
gamins who mimicked it grotesquely. Such courage, such loveliness, such
sincerity, imposed reverence even for opposite opinions. Never before
had he seen their performance in such a light as now. For performance it
was. One after another of the brethren stepped into the circle and
recited "testimony" to the jeering crowd around. Each testimony was
followed by a hymn, in regular alternation. Not even the curiosity about
the different sisters and brothers could prevent this evangel from
becoming monotonous. So the captain varied it with more and more
ecstatic exhibitions.

"Volunteers to clap hands!" he would call and four or five brothers
jumped into the middle, clapping hands to the verses of a simple hymn,
repeated ten or fifteen times. Brisker and brisker the tempo became,
till the captain and his volunteers found themselves galloping around
the ring, with sweet bonneted faces eagerly chanting their
accompaniment. Aronson marveled but he did not sneer. For his gaze was
on the rosebud mouth, whose "Alleluias" (adapted from his own liturgy,
he knew) seemed to him the sweetest music mortal throat ever gave forth,
the distilled honey of sound.

After more than an hour of such missionary effort, the captain called
for a show of converts. "Hands up, all that have the love of the Lord in
their hearts!"

Two seafaring men and a <DW54> had the courage to show their palms, and
they were standing very near the circle.

"How many souls love Jesus who died on the cross?"

Aronson, still at his post, felt a traitorous gladness when a dozen more
of the crowd gave the signal of assent. This meager harvest of souls was
the result of their labors. Then Pineapple Jupiter again bent his back
under the heavy bass-drum, and the army reformed. Tumtyty, tum! Tumtyty,
tum! Tumtyty, tumtyty, boom! The ringing bugle revived the languishing
interest of the mob. One Jew of the Jews followed the music for nearly a
mile. When he finally fell to the rear the rosebud mouth was still
singing:

    "What will Peter say, Christian soul?"

and he felt as if a great light had come to him and then vanished again,
leaving a deeper darkness than ever.

Next morning he awoke with a rapid pulse. "What will Peter say,
Aronson?" he asked as he drew on his garments, and when he sat down to
copy a brief for Shagarach, "What will Peter say, Aronson?" the question
again recurred. Strangely enough, it always took the clear, shrill
accent of the girl. "What will Peter say, Aronson?" was the prayer for
success he offered, when a week later, he mustered up courage to cross
the mission threshold and ask Jupiter her name.

From that day Saul Aronson was an altered youth. The least beat of a
drum in the Ghetto found him ready to quit dinner or company or work and
fly out of the house with a hasty snatch at his hat in the entry.

Sometimes he returned with a rueful look and then his mother knew it was
only the Garibaldi guard parading. But at other times it was a subject
of remark how long he stayed and how moody he returned.

There was a family living in the rear of the Aronsons, with a divine
little 8-year-old girl. Saul knew she was divine, although he had never
seen anything but the back of her head. For at noontime when he came to
dinner, or in the evening when he returned from work, she would be
sitting in the swing her father had built for her, with her back toward
him--swinging, singing, in blissful ignorance of the eyes that doted on
her through the slats of Saul Aronson's blinds. She had one song of "the
Savior" which she delighted to croon. Her voice was like that of a
fledgling lark and her carols were made sweet with little improvised
turns which often threatened to fail but always came out true--so sure
was the child-singer's instinct, feeling the way before her. Nothing
reminded him of Serena so much as this earthly angel, and he loved her
for the image she called up.

Serena always looked at him. That is to say, her blue eyes pierced him
through, accused him, reproved him, every time they were lifted toward
the onlookers. But it was not until the day he raised his hand among the
converts that she noted down his face for remembrance. He knew its
features were not fascinating, especially the red mustache that bristled
out horizontally from his lips, with the ends trimmed off as clean as a
scrubbing-brush. But no one else, he felt sure, could worship her with
such reverent adoration; and now she had deigned to notice him. What if
Simon Rabofsky scowled at his raising his hand? Not "What will Simon
Rabofsky say?" but "What will Peter say, Aronson?" was the question of
questions. But I fear Peter was confused somewhat oddly in Saul's mind
with the possessor of a certain rosebud mouth.

One night Aronson dreamed of Serena Lamb as his bride and the next
morning announced his conversion to Pineapple Jupiter, at the same time
asking for an introduction to blue eyes.




CHAPTER XXXVI.

A RECANTATION.


Saul Aronson was not the only person who found pleasure in the company
of Miss Lamb. There were others, with eyes not glamoured by any golden
mist of love, who would have found it hard to select an adjective strong
enough to express their approbation of the petite devotee. About a year
before she had come down from the country to be a companion to her aunt,
Mrs. Wolfe, who had just lost her husband.

Mrs. Wolfe (according to neighbors' gossip) had been no more than a
moderately loving wife, but she made a devoted widow. She had the waist
of a wasp and a temper to match it. Her frame was angular, and her
disposition, too, revealed shoulder blades and elbows. If she loved
anything in this world it was her marbled cat, which was hated by every
boarder in the house, and a pariah among its tribe. From constant
visiting of her husband's grave her manners had assumed a cast which
would have been appropriate to a cemetery, but was most depressing in
everyday converse. Even her smile had something acrid about it, like a
shopworn lemon, and the acidity of her scowl would have reddened blue
litmus paper.

People wondered why her niece, such a tender little body, should be
doomed to the martyrdom of waiting upon "Old Tabby Wolfe and her
boarders." Mrs. Gubbins, who was the landlady's most intimate
crony--probably because among her other virtues she had a keen sense of
the doleful--spread the report that Serena would inherit her aunt's
property, and that her own mother, Mrs. Wolfe's sister, had had an eye
to this when she parted with the eldest of her household. However that
might be, the girl put up patiently with all the widow's quirks and
oddities; entered into religious work enthusiastically, and in six
months had rubbed off the slight rusticity with which eighteen years of
choring on a farm, before she came down to the city, had touched her
accent and manner.

There were hardly any traces of kinship between aunt and niece. To be
sure, Serena had the slenderest slip of a waist that nature ever
fashioned, and just the least suggestion of cheek bones, too, which were
not at all disagreeable, however. When occasion demanded, she could give
a sharp order, much as she may have rebuked Spot and Bossy for switching
when she milked them in the cowshed at home. But to the boarders these
bursts of impatience only gave their sweet waitress a piquancy like the
tartness of the full-ripe strawberry.

With them she was a general favorite. They used to declare that she put
yeast in their beds, for they were like pans of dough, feathery and
white, when she made them of a morning; and Serena, spinning the
pie-plates round, scalloping the edges of the crust with a four-tined
fork, or knitting in the sitting-room from a ball of pink yarn that
danced on the carpet as she unraveled it, was a spectacle of domesticity
at which they never tired of gazing. Yet her dignity, which was far
beyond her years, prevented their making her a plaything. Though
cordial, she was very reserved. Young ladies called her set; young men,
seraphic but cold.

You may imagine how Aronson's heart hopped in his bosom when Jupiter
presented him to this goddess.

"I have seen you at our meetings, Mr. Aronson," she graciously observed.
She had noticed him, then. He knew it before, but the assurance from her
lips gave him measureless joy. But this joy swelled to rapture
inexpressible, such as only the saints in the ninth heaven and happy
lovers on earth are privileged to know, when she invited him to call
upon her and pressed his hand a second time on bidding him adieu. The
thrill of her fingertips did not die out all that day; but it was a week
again (for Aronson was a bashful youth) before he presumed to accept her
invitation.

His mother marveled why Saul furbished himself up so carefully that
evening. He had risen from the supper table prematurely and spent
exactly fifty-five minutes smoothing his hair, tidying his cravat and
drawing on his new pair of gloves. When he went out, instead of
soliciting admiration for this array, he seemed to avoid it.

As he drew toward the mansion whose door-plate still bore the name of
the departed Ephraim Wolfe, an unwelcome surprise met Aronson. There in
the doorway, silhouetted against the hall lamp, was the form which he
knew to be Serena's. She was admitting a visitor--a youth. The door
quickly closed and a rosy light came through the tinted curtains behind.
But Aronson's spirits had sunk, his resolution departed. Instead of
crossing the street, as he had planned to, and ringing the bell, with a
little speech of greeting all prepared, he walked on to the next corner
and irresolutely turned back.

This time a shadow fell on the white curtain of the front room. It was
Serena rocking herself placidly in the rocking-chair. Every forward
inclination brought her sweet profile into view, every backward one
removed it. Her lips moved. She was conversing, doubtless, with the
youth whose stolid shadow occupied the center of the opposite curtain.
Eight times Saul Aronson passed and repassed that house-front before he
could tear himself away and return home to divest himself downheartedly
of all his finery.

Two days later, however, he saw Serena again; and she renewed the
invitation. This time, when he approached, there was no hostile youth at
the door. Serena herself admitted him to the portals of the paradise
which she inhabited in common with Mrs. Wolfe and the seven boarders,
and 10 o'clock had long ceased striking when, incoherent with ecstasy,
Saul Aronson uttered his last lingering doorstep adieu and promised to
return.

He never returned. As she informed Inspector McCausland, Serena had
never looked on that lovelorn visage again.

This was how he came to break his promise: One Sunday afternoon a
messenger came to the Aronson door with a request from Simon Rabofsky
that Saul should favor him with a visit. The young man had misgivings,
but he dared not disobey.

Up a squalid flight, into a dingy back room, Aronson took his way
reluctantly. The clamor of voices died when he crossed the threshold and
six pairs of inimical eyes, he thought, were lifted to his face. At a
table in the midst sat Rabofsky, his yellowish earlocks dangling beneath
his skull-cap and a great book spread open before him.

"Peace be with you, Saul Aronson," he said in the jargon.

"The angel Dumah spare you, Simon Rabofsky," answered Aronson.

"I rejoice to see that you have not forgotten the holy salutations."

The twelve eyes sharpened their glances at Aronson and he knew the
ordeal was come. They were six of the strictest in the congregation,
from old Silberstein, who sat on the left of the ark and led the
recitation of the eighteen psalms of a morning, to young Cohen, the
Jewish butcher, a zealot of zealots, than whom none more devoutly beat
his bosom in prayer or observed the allotted holy days.

"Brother Silberstein was just proposing that your place in the
synagogue be disposed of. It is a pity to see a seat vacant, when so
many must stand. But I bade him not be hasty, for perhaps you had been
ill of late."

"Why play the innocent, Simon Rabofsky," broke in Cohen, "when you know
as well as we that he has been consorting with the gentiles?"

"It is because I am loath to believe it," answered Rabofsky, in a
sorrowful tone, as if rebuking Cohen. "I am loath to believe one of
Isaac Aronson's household would turn away to bow before the idols of
Babylon."

"Is it forbidden to search for wisdom?" said Aronson.

"You do not search for it in the book where it is found," said Rabofsky,
laying his finger on the book before him. It was printed in Semitic
characters, but the language was the jargon, for Rabofsky was no master
of Hebrew and Aramaic, "the divine talmud, which our fathers have
preserved through their hundred persecutions."

"But its wisdom is obscure," answered Aronson.

"Are there not doctors to explain those parts which are dark?" rejoined
Rabofsky. "And behold, in this edition, which a Hebrew so enlightened as
Saul Aronson should possess, are not all the lengthy passages shortened
and the unnecessary omitted by the labors of that light of Israel, born
at Cordova, Moses ben Maimon, whom the gentiles miscall Maimonides?"

"Why plead with the apostate?" cried Silberstein, angrily. "He is no
longer a Jew. He toileth on the Sabbath. He goeth not down to the
waterside to lament."

"It is false," said Aronson, hotly.

"I said so," nodded Rabofsky.

"Who are you to reprove me, Simon Rabofsky," continued Aronson, "because
I cannot lie idle two days in the week? Do you rest from your
money-getting on the Sabbath? I think your wife, Rebecca, could answer
me that. Did I not see her selling jewels to a Christian on the seventh
day of this very week?"

"It is written," answered Rabofsky, his steel-blue eyes contracting,
"that the high priests in the hour of necessity made food of the bread
of the tabernacle. So saith the holy book," he laid his finger again on
the page, "which Jehovah hath covered with the wings of His protection
so that torches could not destroy it. Behold it has arisen from a
thousand burnings uncharred!"

All the Hebrews plucked their garments and with bowed heads muttered a
prayer, in which Aronson found himself joining.

"Too many of our youth are beguiled by the flatteries of the gentiles,"
continued Rabofsky, not unwilling to divert the conversation.

"But such are only the lax ones, who worship no God," said Cohen. "Few
grovel before idols, like this one."

"And hath Saul Aronson done this?" asked Rabofsky, as if in surprise.

"Did you not see him yourself at the gentile ceremony raising his
hands?"

"You wrong the Christians," protested Aronson. "They are not all cruel
and there is much sweetness of love in their doctrine."

"Not cruel!" rejoined Cohen. "How have they not poured out our blood in
the ages!"

"Jehovah hath stored it up," added a gentler voice, piteously. It was
Abraham Barentzen, the patriarch of the colony, who had not spoken
before, but kept looking at the backslider kindly, as if more in sorrow
than bitterness.

"Sweetness of love!" cried Silberstein. "Love indeed and enough. How
they love each other! Sect embracing sect! Pah!"

"They hate us; they mock us, and our children court them," droned
another in a minor key.

"They call us cheats and usurers," cried Cohen, "because we make wealth
out of the waste they cast away."

"Psh!" said old Barentzen, raising his hands. "Be just. Those are only
the few."

"Perhaps it is some gentle girl that is tempting Saul Aronson, even as
the Philistine women of old weakened the faith of Samson," said
Rabofsky, keenly.

"Are there not black-eyed daughters of Israel," cried old Barentzen,
mild-voiced and reproving, "who will make him a home? If he wants a wife
comely, buxom, well-dowered, modest, a good housekeeper and free from
tittle-tattle, are there not such by scores in the neighborhood?"

"I fear it is Meyer Shagarach's doing," murmured Silberstein.

"Not so," spoke Cohen, sharply. Though young, he seemed a leader.
"Shagarach is lost to the fold of Israel, but does he chant with cracked
voice out of a tattered hymn-book? Pretty soon we shall see Saul Aronson
shivering in the waters of baptism, and then he will change his name to
Paul, like that other traitor, the fire-brand of Tarsus?"

"Traitor yourself!" cried Aronson, stung by Cohen's irony.

The word has terrible force in Israel. The whole past of the race is
vivid in the minds of the wanderers, and recollection of its sorrows
makes a bond so strong that no temptation can break it. Aronson paused
to think. The dim traditions, all tears and fire and blood--the exodus
from Egypt, the Babylonian captivity, the burning of Jerusalem, the
dispersion, the persecutions without number--could he forget all those,
snapping ties so sacred?

"After all, I think Saul Aronson's heart is not with the gentiles," said
old Barentzen, in a soothing voice. "Would he rather be buried when he
dies under some idolatrous mound stuck with the symbol of him whom Judas
righteously delivered----"

"There never was such a Nazarene," broke in Cohen impetuously. "It is
all a fable and the text in Josephus was written in by the gentiles."

"I say the Christ was real and rightly condemned as a creator of
sedition," said Rabofsky, with authoritative pomp. Like the misers of
every race, he was both devotee and formalist.

"He is not mentioned in the talmud," argued Cohen. "Nor elsewhere,
until the history of our race crosses the history of the pagans. It is
all an invention."

Thereupon the two zealots wrangled and jangled till Aronson's ears
ached. But his mind was dwelling upon old Barentzen's saying and sadly
acknowledging its truth. His heart was not really with the Christians.
What did he know of their teachings? He had been given a bible, but it
was locked in his office drawer, unread. Besides, these were deep
questions. Who was he to dispute the great doctors, like Moses ben
Maimon?

"So be it, obstinate youth," said Rabofsky at last, waving his hands to
end the discussion.

"I had begun to ask Saul Aronson a question," resumed Barentzen, in a
tone of rebuke. "Would you not rather lie like your fathers with the
shards on your eyelids and a handful of earth from the land of Israel
thrown over your resting-place?"

Aronson hung his head.

"Enough of this pleading and coaxing," snarled Cohen. "He is
stiff-necked, I see. I will put his name with the other traitors. There
are twenty in all. They shall be published in the next issue."

"Stay," said Aronson.

"On the first page," said Silberstein. "And the first page shall be hung
outward in my store window."

"That the very children may know them for apostates and greedy
hypocrites," added Rabofsky, to clinch the threat.

"Hold," cried Aronson. He foresaw the fatal result of his misstep. He
could hear the storm rising around him; the clamor of children on the
streets, the pointed fingers of men and women, the ironical comments
from the doorstep groups when he passed, the sly digs at the supper
table, the estranged glances of his mother. "It is all wrong," he cried.

"Then, why do you haunt the gentile mountebanks?" asked Cohen, seizing
his sleeve.

"Fangled like a <DW2>!" said Silberstein, catching his lapel.

"And shun the blessed synagogue?" added another, fumbling at his vest
buttons.

"Are you a gentile or a Jew?" questioned Rabofsky, as chief inquisitor.

"I am a Jew!" cried Aronson, in honest wrath, tousled and clapperclawed
until his patience had given away. Then he rushed from the room.

The list of "traitors" appeared in the Jewish Messenger without Saul
Aronson's name. The old, old conflict between love and honor had ended
with another defeat for the imperious boy-god. But it is no discredit to
Serena Lamb that her influence yielded to a passion which is hardly
second to any in the world for intensity--the Israelite's devotion to
his race. All that she retained of the young convert from whom so much
had been expected was a confused memory of the conversation in her
sitting-room. What had Aronson told her in his agitation during that
confidential interview? It would seem that he had been too frank. At
least, for several weeks after Serena's visit to McCausland, he was
strangely conscious that some one was dogging his footsteps, both at
home and about the office. Naturally, he ascribed this espionage to the
sacred brotherhood, whose power is great in Israel, and, fearing their
vigilance, redoubled his evening invocations and waxed regular in his
attendance at the synagogue.




CHAPTER XXXVII.

THE WRATH OF SHAGARACH.


Walter Riley, Thomas J. Fenton and Arthur Watts had a separate trial
from the other members of the "club," which resorted to Lanty Lonergan's
back kitchen. There was only one charge against them--to wit, the
larceny of three bicycles and their sale to one Timothy Bagley,
aforesaid, dealer in junk.

The government had little difficulty in proving its case. First, one of
the owners of the bicycles testified to having recognized his wheel,
cunningly repainted, in a stranger's possession, to following up its
rider and tracing it finally to an auction sale at which he had
purchased it cheap. From the auctioneer to Bagley, from Bagley to the
"club," was easy work for the officer detailed to investigate the theft.
Walter's unsold wheel was confiscated, together with all the other
stolen property on the premises, and no fewer than seven of the boys
placed under arrest. But the only charge against Riley, Fenton and Watts
was the theft of the bicycles.

Bagley, the junkman, who was involved in the affair, had made a singular
confession, candid enough in most particulars but with great hiatuses
here and there concerning the disposal of certain articles, principally
articles of value--a watch, a meerschaum pipe and the third of the
bicycles. No threats or promises in private had been able to wring from
him a confession concerning these points. But at the mention of a pipe
Shagarach had raised his head and, crossing over to the prosecuting
attorney, secured a description of the missing object.

"You admit, then, that you offered Riley $10 for the bicycle which he
had ridden?" asked Shagarach of Bagley on cross-examination.

"Yes, sir."

"How often did you repeat this offer?"

"Several times--about four or five times."

"And the boy each time refused?"

"Yes, sir."

"What language did he use?"

"He said the wheel wasn't his."

"Which you knew very well, didn't you, without being told?"

"Yes, sir."

"And when you proposed that Fenton should ride the bicycle over to your
shop, what was Riley's conduct then?"

"I don't know of my own knowledge. But they told me that he wouldn't
have it."

"He threatened them, then?"

"Yes, sir, you might call it threatening."

"Then Riley would appear to have put forward some claim upon the
bicycle, although he denied that it was his. Would you not say that he
seemed to regard himself as its custodian rather than its proprietor?
That he was storing it in Lonergan's kitchen until the occasion should
arise when it might be returned to its owner?"

"Well, the boys said he was sorry for taking the wheel and that he never
meant to steal it."

"That is all--all on that point, I mean." Bagley had started to leave
the stand. "There is another matter, however, with regard to the third
bicycle--the one which has not been recovered"--Bagley shifted uneasily
to the opposite foot. "How does it happen that you, the sole repository
of the secrets of these young law-breakers, can tell us nothing of
that?"

"I know nothing about it."

"And about the gold watch stolen from Mr. Merchant's window?"

"I don't know, sir."

"And the meerschaum pipe--of rare coloring, according to the connoisseur
who testified in the previous trial?"

"I know nothing about the watch and the pipe, sir. They are not in my
line. I couldn't dispose of such articles."

"Ah! But you might be acquainted with somebody who could, might you
not?"

"I suppose I might----"

"Some second-hand dealer, let us say?"

Bagley's eye dropped and he looked pale.

"Have you been visited, Bagley, by any one, since you were let out on
bail?"

"Only by my bondsman."

"What is your bondsman's name?"

Bagley hesitated so long that the judge finally had to order him to
answer.

"Mr. Rabofsky," he stammered.

"Kindly subpoena Mr. Simon Rabofsky," said Shagarach to Aronson. "It is
that gentleman just starting to leave the room. He will remain for a few
moments."

The writ was made out and handed by the awe-stricken Aronson to the
money-lender, who glared at him furiously. But he could not escape.

"Mr. Rabofsky is a second-hand dealer, I believe?" continued Shagarach.

"I think so."

"Of a higher class than yourself?"

"Oh, yes sir. Mr. Rabofsky's reputation is first class."

"How much money did Simon Rabofsky offer you to keep him out of this
scrape?" was the next question. The witness looked over at the
money-lender in terror; then back at Shagarach, and his terror was
intensified.

"No money," he finally gasped.

"Would you be willing to swear that if Mr. Henderson, the owner of that
pipe, should call to-day at 84 Salem street and request Mrs. Rebecca
Rabofsky to sell him the  meerschaum which her husband was
showing to a customer yesterday, when Mr. Shagarach called, he would be
told that no such article was in the store?"

Either the length of the question or its import confused the witness.

"No, sir," he answered.

"You would not be willing----"

"Yes, sir, I mean--that is--how do I know?"

"Mr. Henderson," said Shagarach, turning to a gentleman present, "will
doubtless be interested enough to try. He could be back in half an hour.
That will do, Bagley."

During the half-hour Shagarach put on, as witnesses for the defense,
Walter's schoolmaster, who told an anecdote of his truthfulness and
another of his generosity, which were better than the warmest words of
general commendation; and Emily Barlow, whose story of the theft
accorded exactly with Walter's own, which was honestly told, with a
correctness of language that his former master did not fail to notice.

"Only I never meant to steal it," he said finally. "We all clung
together and I was sorry before I got home. I read the papers to see if
the owners' names were given, but they lived too far out of town. If I
knew whose it was I would have ridden it out to him again."

To all this the judge listened coldly. He was a new appointee, fearful
lest the balance of Libra on his unpracticed fingertip should incline
too much one way or the other. Just as Walter concluded, Mr. Henderson
returned and Simon Rabofsky was summoned to the stand. He muttered in
his beard and flashed a glance of hatred at Shagarach.

"What do you know of this case?" asked the lawyer.

"Nothing."

He looked furtively at Mr. Henderson.

"That will do for the present. Mr. Henderson, will you kindly testify as
to the result of your search?"

Mr. Henderson's testimony was brief and pointed. He had visited 84 Salem
street, stating that he came from Mr. Rabofsky and desired to see a
 meerschaum pipe. The lady had shown him his own pipe. He had
priced it. Twenty-five dollars. She had procured it, she said----

"One moment," interrupted Shagarach. "Will you kindly remain awhile, Mr.
Henderson? Mr. Rabofsky again."

Rabofsky returned.

"You have heard Mr. Henderson's testimony?"

"I have heard it. If you had sense enough to ask me, I could have told
you that without sending him off on a wild-goose chase."

Shagarach knew that Rabofsky was excited, because his accent came out so
strongly.

"Go on," he said, giving him the rope to hang himself by.

"I know nothing about this case. That pipe I took from a woman who wanted
money. I lent her $25 and she never came back. All I ask is what I paid
for it, no more, no less, and so I wash my hands of all of you."

"Not yet," said Shagarach. "You are required by law to record the names
of persons who pawn articles. If we should send an officer down to your
shop would he find the woman's name in your book?"

"She would not give me her name."

"But you loaned her the money?"

"She cried and was so poor I took pity----"

"Enough," said Shagarach in temper. "Mr. Henderson!"

Mr. Henderson replaced Rabofsky a second time.

"You were about to say that you inquired of Mrs. Rabofsky where her
husband obtained the pipe, were you not?"

"Yes, sir, I asked her that."

"What was her answer?"

"That it was his own pipe he had smoked for eleven years."

This statement produced a visible effect on the spectators. It concluded
the defense for Walter Riley. After the prosecuting attorneys had
pleaded for sentence, Shagarach briefly addressed the judge.

"The real criminals in this case, your honor, are the last two
witnesses--adults of responsible years, and one of them, at least,
enjoying a reputable position. They were the receivers of the stolen
goods and the encouragers of the crimes. Were I prosecuting attorney, I
should suspend the cases against the young defendants until justice had
been done to both of these maturer thieves.

"I cannot look upon the deed committed on the lonely roadside at
Hillsborough as a serious offense, for which our code provides a
penalty. It was a prank, played in the ebullient spirit of mischief, but
given an ambiguous color by Miss Barlow's well-meant outcry of warning.
Evil resides in the intentions of the mind. Not until Fenton and Watts
disposed of the property which was not theirs was their misdemeanor
consummated and an unhappy practical jest warped into a legal theft.

"Even then, I might recommend clemency to all three offenders, on
account of their youth and the restitution of the property. For I have
no doubt that the missing bicycle will be found installed beside the
meerschaum pipe in Simon Rabofsky's back room. But, considering the evil
associations which these boys have formed, and their unfortunate homes,
Fenton having no mother and Watts an intemperate one, I believe that a
short period of retirement, under the regular discipline of the
reformatory, would be of advantage to them.

"But the case of Riley is different. His character is better than that
of the others. He is fortunate in possessing an excellent mother, who
depends upon him in part for support. Moreover, the refusal on his part
to dispose of the bicycle, against a pressure few boys of his age could
resist, shows a moral courage which is exceedingly rare in my
experience, and which only needs fostering to develop its possessor into
an admirable man. I, therefore, respectfully suggest that Riley be
placed on probation."

If the judge were not so new to the bench he would have known that
Shagarach's addresses were always brief. But, knowing the great lawyer
only by reputation, he judged that the brevity of his plea denoted a
perfunctory interest in the case. The sentencing was deferred until 4
o'clock, when a whole batch of prisoners filed into the "cage," one
after another, to receive their punishments.

"Ochone!" cried a maundering old woman after every sentence, and even
the court officers whispered to each other:

"Perkins is having a picnic to-day."

But there was little severity in the sentence accorded to the
white-faced youth who came just before the three gamins. Emily
recognized in amazement Mr. Arthur Kennedy Foxhall.

"In consideration of your social standing," said the judge, "of your
promise to reform and of the fact that your weakness is one which
injures only yourself, I will mitigate the penalty."

Then the clerk read out a fine of $20 and costs. The opium parlors of Hi
Wong King had recently been raided. That is to say, four tall, youngish
men had entered one evening and called for dinner. For Hi Wong King's
restaurant was open to all. Chicken wings had been served them and an
aromatic salad. Jelly pats had been dropped over their heads into dainty
plates, on which droll baboons scratched their heads and tigers grimaced
fiercely. Such is the art of the orient. Tea leaves newly steeped in a
bowl had taught them their first lesson in the needlessness of sugar and
milk; and they had practiced with the merry chopsticks, a pair in each
hand. Then, by way of diversion, they broke through the painted screens
into Hi Wong King's rear parlors and arrested eight opium smokers,
Mongol and Caucasian, of both sexes; among these one who was dreaming
over a peculiarly elegant pipe proved to be Emily's admirer.

"Riley, Fenton and Watts, stand up," said the clerk. Walter's cheeks
were burning red, as he stood between his companions. They seemed to
feel the disgrace less keenly and looked at the clerk with sheepish and
cunning glances.

"Fenton and Watts, you are sentenced to the reform school during your
minority, and Riley for the space of one year!"

"Ochone!" broke out the maundering old woman and a chill fell on Emily's
heart. Then the voice of Shagarach was heard in wrath. The building
seemed to quake with its power. It was such a voice as that Roman
tribune may have owned who could make himself heard from end to end of
the forum.

"Sir, you have just imposed a nominal fine on a mature man, who has not
only, as you speciously alleged, ruined himself by a degrading vice, but
done what example could to spread its contagion. Immediately after you
sentence three poor children to long terms of imprisonment. Are you
ignorant that four in seven of all who enter those institutions return
to them sooner or later? Do you see no possible spark of reform in the
natures of these boys, no means of tiding over the danger period of
youth, the formative years, the sowing season? Or do you think to
scatter seeds inside a jail and reap some other crop than crime? Sir, it
is not my sense of justice that social standing should condone offenses
and social obscurity magnify them."

The ticking of the clock could be heard when Shagarach paused. Officer
looked at officer, as if they expected immediately to be called upon to
execute a sentence of contempt on the audacious lawyer. But Shagarach's
reputation was great, and Judge Perkins could not afford to inaugurate
his session in the Criminal Court by a conflict with such a man. He only
stroked his chin nervously and pulled at his severe legal whiskers.

"I do not know which is the more deserving of censure," continued
Shagarach, "the dangerous laxity of the one judgment, which virtually
acquits a convicted lawbreaker, or the atrocious severity of the other,
which condemns to a year's whole punishment the innocent act, already
more than atoned for, of a boy for whose uprightness I would pledge my
personal word."

"Oh, if you are willing to vouch for the boy's good behavior," said the
judge, "I will put him on probation and reconsider the other sentences."

"I will accept the charge," said Shagarach.

Emily's heart leaped for joy, and Mrs. Riley could not be restrained
from rushing forward and embracing Walter in rapture. But the most
touching moment came when Walter walked over to Shagarach and, with
tears in his eyes, but a stanch voice, said: "I want to show you I am
grateful."




CHAPTER XXXVIII.

COUNT L'ALIENADO.


"Here is the substitute I promised you, Rosalie. Miss March--Count
L'Alienado."

There was a vacant seat in the barouche that stood before the Marches'
villa. It had been destined for Tristram, but even behind the black
glasses he wore the August sunshine dazzled his eyes, so he was
compelled at the last moment to excuse himself.

"Mme. Violet--his lordship, the Earl of Marmouth."

Count L'Alienado was thus informally presented to his other two riding
companions. There was just a suggestion of Spanish reserve in his
obeisance, and he bowed a graceful adieu to Tristram before mounting to
his seat.

It was curious that Tristram should have been the first to break the
count's incognito. He had arrived at Lenox a few days before, attended
by a single valet, and registered at the hotel as M. L. L'Alienado,
Valencia. Though not imposing in stature, he exhibited a head of rare
distinction--the black beard trimmed to an exquisite point at the chin
and the curled mustaches setting off a pair of glowing eyes which
riveted the beholder from the moment he met their gaze.

As the artist spoke Spanish, they had become friends in an afternoon.

"We have flattered ourselves that the coaching party is something purely
American," said Rosalie, who sat beside him, to the stranger.

"I am glad of it for the color. That is an element I have observed to be
generally a little lacking in your life."

"Color and lordliness," sighed Mme. Violet. "Ah, there are no
troubadours, no spurred cavaliers, no mailed knights in this busy
America--not even scarlet soldiers parading. You men are so dingy, dingy
in your black propriety. Why be so funereal? My heart goes out sometimes
to a very mountebank, all spangled and jingling like a tambourine when
he moves. Color! Give me color. Ah, it is not we who have taste, it is
the canaille! It is Victorine, my lady's maid, with her bonnet-ribbons
flaunting all the colors of the rainbow."

A silk banner lay outspread in Rosalie's lap, throwing warm blushes
against her throat. It was the prize for the gentlemen's steeplechase,
which was to close the programme of the afternoon.

"Scarlet, sea-blue and gold," she cried, stroking the tasseled fringe
which justified the last addition. "Are not these the primary hues, the
major chord of color, and the white their perfect blending?"

The Violet laughed. When addressing her directly or referring to her in
her own presence, people carefully called her Mme. Violet. But to the
world, out of earshot, she was simply the Violet, just as Cleopatra is
Cleopatra. It was taken for granted that her blood was French, but Count
L'Alienado, noting her fawn-brown eyes and the strong black hair, which
made Rosalie's fluff appear like carded golden silk--thought he detected
the marks of the Romany. Yet the full mouth hinted at a Spanish cross.
She was not very young, or, at first sight, very beautiful, but she
possessed a diablerie stronger than girlhood or beauty, and gossip said
the Earl of Marmouth was succumbing to its spell.

"The signal!" cried Rosalie, as the notes of a hunting-horn pealed,
faint and mellow, from a distant quarter. "It is time to start."

For several minutes the occupants of the barouche lay back, reveling in
the luxury of the cushions and in the changing view which the drive
afforded. Other equipages swept into the main road here and there, from
cottage and mansion and by-path, each freighted with its cargo of
flower-raimented beauty. Marshals in velvet hunting garb galloped up and
down, with low salutes to the passengers and brusque orders to the
coachmen. On the top of a little hill there came a pause while the
procession was arranging itself, and the conversation rippled out again.

"The color is overdone," said the Earl of Marmouth. "It smacks of Latin
degeneracy."

"Such as appears in the canvases of Titian?" asked Count L'Alienado
quietly.

The Violet, sitting opposite him, caressed her bronze-eyed spaniel to
her cheek, so that she might survey the newcomer more closely. His
lordship, at her side, alone of the party had sat upright during the
ride.

"You are Spanish, not Italian, I am told," he said, much in the tone of
a hotel clerk demanding the settlement of an overdue bill. The Violet's
eyes met the count's interrogatively.

"Question me in Castilian," he smiled.

"Where are your estates?"

"In Valencia."

"I was there last autumn. I seem to have overlooked the L'Alienados."

"Our estates are in dispute with another branch of the family."

Marmouth grunted.

"The title is very old?" asked Rosalie, to blunt the edge of his
impertinence.

"Not very old," answered Count L'Alienado, gently, but looking full at
Marmouth. "Before Columbus set out from Palos my ancestor was knighted
by Ferdinand the Great--for honorable services."

"We are moving at last," growled the earl, as if personally grieved at
the delay. His own title was less than 200 years old and the services
for which it was granted, by the second Charles, though historic, could
not possibly be called honorable.

"Ah, this is joyous!" cried the Violet, as the sensuous pleasure of the
ride stole over her. A quick-step, taken from the start, gave the party
a gentle jolting, just sufficiently softened by the padded carriage
upholstery. Up hill and down dale, through the riches of midsummer, the
route chosen wound. Forest and meadow sailed leisurely by them.
Handkerchiefs waved from piazza and window wherever they passed a
dwelling house, and at every cross-road stood a group of the fresh-faced
country-folk to give them greeting. At the end of an hour the road
recurved on itself along a hillside overlooking the valley of the racing
park and the pageant bent its length into the form of a letter S, so
that without the delay of a formal review each carriage was permitted to
inspect the others.

Count L'Alienado saw barges filled with maidens, like living flowers,
four-in-hand tally-hos, crowded with sportive collegians, odd
jaunting-cars and donkey-carts got up by the wags, staid family coaches
with footmen faced rearward to enjoy the retrospect, and open drags like
his own without number, all brilliant with lovely womanhood.

The Violet stood apart from the others, sensuous and exotic--like an
orange lily in a garden of snowdrops. But, supreme over all, like a
bright light, enhanced by reflectors, shone the loveliness of Rosalie
March--pure, placid and faultlessly costumed as ever. The jockeys
whispered to one another when her vehicle entered the racing park. An
eager look at that moment chased away the slight hauteur of her
expression--not unbecoming in one so clearly removed from the common
order, and far from approaching disdain. She turned her head toward the
stables expectantly.

"Paradise," said the Violet, when they had entered and the carriages
circled around the great oval.

"This is something like England," said the earl.

"None the worse for that," smiled Rosalie.

"No. Most of the good things I have seen here are derived from the
mother country."

"Do you agree, Count L'Alienado?" asked Rosalie, appealing to the
stranger.

"Candor is too sharp a sword to carry about unsheathed," answered Count
L'Alienado.

Mme. Violet smiled archly, bringing her Gainsborough brim close to the
earl's great face and caressing her spaniel with provoking abandon.

Rosalie's little abstraction since they passed through the gate might
easily be understood, for Harry Arnold was entered in the steeplechase
for gentlemen riders.

"There they come!" she cried, but it was only a group of motley jockeys
for the ring race. This passed off quietly enough.

"Now for the steeplechase," cried Rosalie. "There's Harry!" She
instinctively plucked the Violet's hand. Then, remembering they were not
alone, she . Harry led the group of riders who came from the
stables, mounted on strong-limbed steeplechasers. His uniform was of
the bulrush brown velvet he liked, and his horse a bright chestnut,
which pranced as if proud to carry such a master. Even at a distance his
splendid seat gave presage of victory.

"Mr. Arnold is the favorite," said Count L'Alienado.

"Although he gives away forty pounds to Leroy," added Rosalie, the
technical terms of the track coming strangely from her lips. It was
fortunate for her peace of mind Tristram was not there to hear them.

"Now they start!" she cried, alive with interest; but it was only Harry
Arnold who spurted his curvetting chestnut across the turf, then reined
him up on his haunches with a sudden jerk, as you may have seen an old
cavalry sergeant perform the trick. But Leroy, who, as Rosalie said,
weighed nearly half a hundred less, wisely reserved his white horse's
strength.

"Now!" repeated Rosalie, unconsciously clasping the flag, as if eager to
bestow it. The horses, six in number, had started in a bunch and kept
together easily till the pistol flash. Then each bounded as if cut with
a whip, and rider and horse bent forward.

"Hurrah!" shouted the ring of onlookers about the inclosure, as all six
took the first low wall together. The course led straightway across the
oval, up a hill at one end, then out of sight for a circuit of a mile,
and back by another route, over ditch and mound. Harry Arnold's chestnut
and Leroy's white could be seen a length in the lead of the others and
neck and neck, as they struggled up the hill and sunk to view on the
other side.

"How glorious! How delightful!" cried the Violet, in the interim of
suspense. "It is better than the wild Indians that rode in the coliseum
last year. Your full-blooded racers, they are too lean, like
grasshoppers. Oh, the steeplechase is better. I believe, after all, you
owe something to old England, which bequeathed you this legacy."

"You remember the horse-race in 'Anna Karenina?'" asked his lordship,
much mollified. "One of the most ethical of books, in the broader sense
of the word."

His question seemed addressed to Count L'Alienado.

"I have not read the Russians," he answered.

"You are behind the world, senor. And where may your diversions lie?"

"My favorites," he answered, "are the Persian poets."

Rosalie desisted for a moment from scanning the black crest of the
distant hill with her great eyes full of eagerness. Then she recovered
herself suddenly, and cried out, in a piercing voice:

"They are coming!"

"Who is ahead?"

"The chestnut and the white are even," said the count.

"Oh, I hope he will win!" prayed Rosalie, clutching the prizes she was
to award. Down the <DW72> they strained, heading toward the goal. Only a
close side view could have disclosed the advantage in favor of either.

"Harry Arnold will win," said Count L'Alienado. "Leroy is whipping his
horse."

The count's judgment proved correct. Almost immediately the chestnut
began drawing away from the white. A nose, a neck, half a length, and
the clear ground intervened. Harry did not touch whip or spur to the
sides of his mount, until the last leap, when a high wall and a long
ditch had to be taken together. On the very rise of the jump he switched
his chestnut's flanks, and just as the conductor's baton seems a wand
visibly producing the swell of the orchestra, so this light motion
seemed to give the impulse to the horse's spring. The clatter of his
feet on the hard turf beyond announced him the winner amid cheers.
Leroy's white took the ditch gallantly, too, but the blood showed red in
its nostrils.

Instead of reining up at the goal, Harry executed a characteristic
caprice. The fence surrounding the race-track was nearly five feet high.
Careering on at full gallop, the victor urged his animal toward this
obstacle. A great shout greeted him as he cleared it, the chestnut's
hind hoofs grazing the boards. Then, swiftly turning to the right, he
cantered up to Rosalie's carriage, gracefully backed his horse and
saluted. Leroy joined him through the gate, and stood at his side,
while the losers straggled in, haphazard and blown.

"That was for you, Rosalie," said Harry in her ear as she laid the
flagstaff in his hand. It was meant for a whisper, but others heard it,
and on the morrow the news had spread all over Lenox that Harry Arnold
and the beautiful Rosalie March were definitely betrothed. When it
reached Mrs. Arnold in Hillsborough, as though by special messenger, she
retired at once to her room.

The coaching party paraded out and dispersed amid merrymakings freer
than before. Mme. Violet was bewitching during the journey home, making
up by a double stream of effortless prattle for Rosalie's unwonted
silence.

"But Poe," protested the girl, as if waking suddenly, when the earl, who
had got back to book talk again, inveighed against the poverty of our
literature.

"Ting-a-ling," said his noble lordship. The carriage had just stopped to
leave Count L'Alienado at his hotel.




CHAPTER XXXIX.

THE PURPLE TEA.


"The Earl of Marmouth sends his regards. He will be unable to join us."
Tristram March held a coroneted note in his hands while he made this
announcement to the company. There was a faint salvo of regrets, meant
for the Violet's ears. Only Miss Milly Mills was heard remarking, sotto
voce:

"I'm glad the old bear is chained for once."

"But the grizzly is grand in its den, dear," chided Dorothea Goodbody, a
little louder.

"True. We do not fit everywhere," said the Violet, who had overheard
them. "Imagine Thoreau in a salon."

"Or Talleyrand in the Walden woods," added Count L'Alienado.

More than one of the company had noted this as the third occasion on
which his noble lordship avoided a meeting with the count. Was it that
in the reserved Spaniard he had encountered a force which he could not
overbear? Or was he jealous of the count's attention to the Violet?
Twice at the Ryecroft's hop she had inadvertently answered the slender
foreigner and turned her smooth, brown shoulder to the Englishman.

"Well," said Tristram, "the menagerie must perform without its lion."

"How flattering, brother!" cried Rosalie. Harry Arnold was leaning over
her chair. "You compare us to wolves and panthers."

"Not unhappily," said the Violet. "Mine host is clever. He will put us
all in an apologue like Aesop's. I am curious to see how I shall be
transformed."

"The mood is wanting," cried Tristram, while the young ladies seconded
the suggestion. "I am savage. I should affront you all with some furious
satire."

"Imagine Tristram furious," said Harry.

"A smothered volcano. I have committed to-day the sin against the Holy
Ghost. Guess what that is?"

"Success," said the Violet.

"Candor," the count.

"Bachelorhood," Miss Milly Mills.

"Punning," his sister Rosalie.

But Tristram shook his head drearily at each response.

"Well, then, tell us," cried a chorus of impatient voices.

"I have prostituted art to lucre--having disposed of my great design of
Ajax's shield--for what purpose, do you think?"

All the guesses were wild again.

"For a bed-spread," said Tristram, and there was a chorus of laughter,
amid which the circle broke up into little moving knots, all
electrically united, however, so that the talk flew from one part of the
room to another.

It was one of Tristram's soirees, which were the events of the season in
Lenox. The flavor of art was substituted for that of artificiality, and
usually some souvenir, bearing the touch of the host's own fanciful
hand, was carried away by each of the guests. The coveted invitation for
this night's affair announced "a purple tea," and the furnishings
verified the description. Rich muslin shades over the chandeliers
(Rosalie's work) purpled all the atmosphere of the parlors. Purple
hangings here and there carried out the suggestion, but not too
obtrusively, and each of the guests appeared with some purple garment.

Among the ladies these generally verged toward the wine- shades,
for they were all too young to carry well the full warmth of the Tyrian.
Thus the Violet's mantilla, Rosalie's cloud, Harry Arnold's sash, were
all steeped to the same dye, now the crimson, now the blue element
prevailing in the mixture. Count L'Alienado alone appeared to have
evaded the rule until, raising his right hand to smell a rose, he
scattered a pencil of purple light from an opalescent stone which none
present were learned enough in lapidary science to name.

"Let's have tableau charades!" cried Miss Milly Mills, who flitted from
person to person, from subject to subject, like a butterfly, and was
accused of a partiality for spruce gum. The suggestion was taken up with
approval, and nearly every one present acted out the first word that
came to him on the spur of the moment.

Tristram gave what he called a definition of himself in lengthy
pantomime which no one could fathom. So he was obliged to explain that
meed--eye--ochre--tea, summed up "mediocrity," at which one and all
protested. Most of the other attempts were quite as laborious. But when
the Violet stepped forward and trilled an upper C, then buzzed like an
insect and put her right foot forward, there was a unanimous cry of
"Trilby!" and the flatness began to be taken out of the game.

Then the pleasures grew more miscellaneous and Count L'Alienado found
himself for a time alone on the outer balcony with Mme. Violet. The sky
was starlit above, the shadows lay deep in the garden bushes below, and
the diamonds burned amid her braids. They talked of the Persian poets
till the light voice of Tristram within interrupted them and a ripple
of laughter from the purple interior reached their ears.

"Ah, this is not fair; that our wisest and wittiest should impoverish
the company by their absence. Your places are waiting and the bell is
tired of tinkling to you."

"We were lost among the stars," replied Count L'Alienado.

Opposite the count sat Harry Arnold; opposite the Violet, Rosalie.
Waiters were serving refreshments, and a purple tea was poured into the
wine- cups. On each table lay a souvenir containing verse or
prose by Tristram March, with fantastic decorations in the border. Harry
Arnold was just passing the souvenir of their table to Rosalie. It
contained a caricature in profile of Tristram himself, and a brief
"Autobiography," which Harry read aloud:

    "I went to school
    To Ridicule.
    He taught me civility,
    The peacock humility,
    Depth and subtility
    Feste, the fool.


    Meeker and meeker becomes my mood
    From studying Conscious Rectitude;
    And if my speech be firm and pat,
    Madam Garrulity taught me that."

"Oh, I hate sarcasm," burst out Rosalie. "Why won't you be literal,
commonplace, something positive, if it's only a woman-hater?"

"An abominable fault, brother Tristram," said Harry, sternly.

"Hideous!" cried the others, drowning poor Rosalie's homily in a flood
of irony more heartless than Tristram's own.

Then Rosalie gave him up as incorrigible.

"I wonder if Count L'Alienado's jewel has not a legend attached to it?"
said some one.

"It is an alamandine ruby from Siam," began the count.

"Oh, do go on," cried Miss Milly Mills from the rear, who had been
listening over her shoulder. "Tell us the story. I'm sure it will be
better than Cleverly's last book."

"Oh, if it isn't better than that----"

"But the setting was fresh," said Tristram, who was Cleverly's friend.
"He rehangs his gallery well, even if the portraits are familiar."

"This talisman of mine has indeed a story attached to it," said Count
L'Alienado at last, "but you may read hundreds better in any book of
oriental tales. Its quality, however, is curious. You know that
mesmerism has long been known in the east, and that many of the occult
feats of the Hindoo magicians are ascribed to that power. It was an Arab
caliph who first attributed to this stone the quality of securing
immunity to its possessor from the magic trance. As a matter of fact, I
have never been hypnotized while I wore it."

"A challenge, Harry," said Tristram.

"You possess the power?" asked the count.

"So I am told," laughed Harry.

"People go to sleep at his bidding," said Tristram. "He is the surest
recipe I have seen for insomnia."

"Except the Rev. Dr. Fourthly," whispered Miss Milly Mills, but at this
Dorothea Goodbody looked shocked.

"Shall I hypnotize you, Rosalie?" smiled Harry to his sweetheart.

But Rosalie shook her head with a little shudder.

"The count," said the Violet.

"The count! Hypnotize the count!" a chorus echoed.

"Very well," said the Spaniard; "a moment till I invoke the genii of the
carbuncle. Now."

"Are you ready?" said Harry, laughing a little awkwardly. He made one or
two cabalistic passes with his hands, looking straight into the eyes of
the count. They were large burning eyes, the like of which Harry had
never met before. Gazing into their depths, he seemed to feel a new
spell. They were drawing him, drawing his soul away. Other objects
disappeared. Rosalie, Tristram, the Violet--he clutched at them, but
they were gone. The count himself grew shadowy. Only his eyes--fixed,
haunting, luminous--remained, centering a vast drab vault, which was all
that was left of the populous world and its occupants. What could Harry
do but surrender his faculties and be absorbed like the rest?

"It is Harry who is hypnotized," cried Tristram. Rosalie fixed her gaze
on her lover's face.

"Raise your right hand," said the count. Harry obeyed. His stare was
glassy, his lower lip stupidly dropped.

"Do you know this glove?" asked the count, raising a lemon- kid.

"I do," came the answer, mechanical, monotonous.

"Try it on."

Harry drew the glove on his right hand, his eyes never leaving those of
the count.

"Button it tightly," said the Spaniard. "Do you remember where you wore
this glove last?"

"I do."

"Can you see the side door opening from the passageway?"

"I can."

"Do you recognize the youth who is entering?"

"I do."

"Is it Harry Arnold?"

"It is Harry Arnold."

"Does he listen cautiously?"

"He listens cautiously."

"Does he climb the stairs softly?"

"He climbs the stairs softly."

"Does he enter the study?"

The young man's face twitched and convulsed. His eyes started from their
sockets. The foam rose to his lips as they worked.

"Harry!"

It was the agonized cry of Rosalie March, throwing herself upon her
lover and turning defiantly at Count L'Alienado, whose fierce insistence
had amazed the onlookers. The spell seemed to be broken, for Harry sunk
from his chair, supported by Rosalie's arms.

"Some wine," cried Tristram, chafing Harry's forehead and gently
striving to unclasp his sister's arms. But she clung to her sweetheart
with love in her eyes.

Count L'Alienado approached the unconscious man, the crowd parting
before him.

"Wake!" he said, "and forget!" Harry's eyes shut naturally and then
opened. He drank the wine which Rosalie pressed to his lips. In a few
minutes he was erect, eagerly questioning the company.

"Call it a faint," said Count L'Alienado, quietly. "It is better that he
should not know."

"But what was it all about?" asked Miss Milly Mills, on tiptoe with
curiosity.

"Only an experiment in clairvoyance," answered Count L'Alienado.




CHAPTER XL.

THREE TIMES RUNNING.


Shagarach's office was a hive of industry the next time Emily Barlow
called. Walter Riley, installed in Jacob's place, looked smartly
clerical, with a pen over one ear, docketing some papers, and Aronson
was knitting his brows over a decision in the digest. But the lawyer
himself, she thought, did not appear to have profited greatly by his
fortnight's vacation. His cheek was worn and his manner betrayed an
unusual aberration at times.

He had returned only the evening before. When she entered the parlor to
greet him his mother found the padlock chain of the Persian poets torn
through their edges, and her son face down on the carpet buried in a
volume of Hafiz, with Sadi and Firdusi scattered near. She trembled, but
she did not disturb him.

"Our cause progresses," he said, in answer to Emily's query. "Important
links have been discovered since we last conferred."

The sweet girl lifted her eyebrows and waited.

"In the first place we shall put Harry Arnold on the stand. I have
traced him to the door of the study a moment before the fire was set."

Emily bit her lip just a trifle in disappointment, for her own cherished
theory would only be embarrassed by the presence of Harry Arnold there.

"The other points?" she asked.

"You remember the peddler in the green cart, alluded to in Ellen
Greeley's letter, who carried messages to some person unknown?"

"Perfectly."

"Three witnesses stand ready to swear that a peddler in a green cart
cried his wares through the roads of Woodlawn about the time of the fire
and frequently stopped at the house of the Arnolds."

"That connects them legally," said Emily, still more discontented. "How
soon do you expect a trial?"

"In less than two weeks. I am sorry you will have to shorten your
vacation."

"Oh, it is better over; the suspense is agony."

"The door, Walter," said Shagarach, as she passed out. Pretty soon he
went home to his own midday meal. Aronson was called away to look up a
title and left the Whistler in charge.

Walter had already caught just a little of his employer's decision of
manner, which sat oddly on his rosy face, but was no more, after all,
than a laudable aspiration toward manfulness. The lawyer had discovered
his skill with the pencil and his mechanical interests, and had set him
to work evenings copying the designs in a drawing manual. Meanwhile, his
gamesome impulses had quieted a good deal, and it was only when the
office was empty, as now, that the old rich whistle was heard. Shagarach
and Shagarach's suggestions seemed to consume that whole fund of
adolescent energy which formerly had overleaped all bounds in its search
for an outlet.

He was just in the middle of a skylark solo, interrupted by bites at the
contents of his lunch-box, when a white-bearded old man entered. At
first Walter, hearing the limp on the stairs, took it for old Diebold,
the pensioner, one of Shagarach's clients. The lunch-box vanished like
magic and there was a hasty brushing of crumbs and swallowing of a
half-masticated mouthful before he turned the knob.

"Is Mr. Shagarach in?" asked the stranger, glancing around with a senile
leer.

"Not now, sir, but I expect him soon," answered Walter. "He's gone to
dinner. Won't you be seated while you wait for him?"

"How long?" said the old man, mumbling his words, as if he were
toothless, and nodding at the boy over and over again.

"How long before he comes back? Oh, he never stays away long. He'll be
here in five minutes, I guess."

The old man sat down feebly in the chair. Such a strange old man,
thought Walter. His white beard almost covering his face and reaching
down on his bosom, and long white curls coming out from under his hat.
He must be almost a hundred, said the boy to himself. Yet his eyes
rolled around quickly and his skin wasn't wrinkled at the corners of the
eyes, nor did he have those time-scored furrows in the neck that
soldiers call saber cuts.

"Buy a pencil," he said to Walter, taking out a bunch from his pocket.

Walter shook his head in some disappointment. It was only a peddler,
after all.

"Two for five," persisted the visitor.

Should he show him the door? Mr. Shagarach did not like to be troubled
with peddlers, but this one was so very old. Walter hesitated about
dismissing him. Besides he had asked for the lawyer. Perhaps he had some
business, too.

Just then Shagarach's brisk step was heard in the entry, and the little
man came flying across the room to his desk in the inner office.

"That is Mr. Shagarach?" asked the gray-beard, jerking his thumb and
leering again.

"Walter," said Shagarach. Walter jumped and was preceding the visitor in
when a terrible snarl of rage caused him to turn. The white-bearded old
man seemed to have been transformed into a beast, glaring with his wild
blue eyes and gritting his great teeth at Shagarach. He raised a bottle
in his hand and hurled its contents at the lawyer. But Walter had caught
his arm and pulled it down with all the might in his bourgeoning
muscles. The liquor hissed where it fell, and several drops spattered on
his neck and bosom, causing him to shrink as if touched with a caustic.
Still he tore at the old man's face, and covered the mouth of the bottle
with his palm so as to intercept the hot shower.

Shagarach had been looking down at some papers when he first heard the
sound of the old man's breath forced between his teeth. As quick as
thought he reached for the paper-weight and hurled it with all his
force. It struck the stranger full in the forehead, cutting a ragged
gash with its edge. Then the lawyer sprung from his chair, following up
his missile with the quickness of a cat. But just as he reached across
Walter's body the boy fell back in his arms with a shriek of pain, the
stranger's white beard coming away in his fingers.

"The oaf!" cried Shagarach, but the assailant was gone in a flash.

"Water! Water!" shrieked the office boy, writhing in his arms.

The lawyer glanced around. The wainscoting was charred where the liquor
had fallen. The boy's jacket was eaten away in holes. It was vitriol
that had been thrown.

"A quart of lime-water at the nearest apothecary's," he shouted to
Aronson, who had just come back. "And the first physician you can fetch.
Don't lose a second."

Aronson was off like the wind, while Shagarach unbuttoned the boy's vest
and tore away the saturated portions of his undergarments that were
clinging to his shriveled skin. Already great blisters rose under the
action of the acid.

"Will you telephone central 431, Inspector McCausland," he said to the
tenant opposite who had been attracted in by the noise. "Ask him to call
at once, and state that I have been attacked again."

It was the physician who arrived first, then Aronson. Walter's burns
were bathed profusely with the lime-water, and the blisters pricked open
by the doctor's needle. After the first agony he bore the pain without a
groan. His breast and palm would be scarred for life, but the only wound
on the visible parts was a long, pear-shaped corrosion extending along
the side of his neck. You may imagine how tenderly Shagarach nursed him
and how excitedly Aronson ran to and fro fetching whatever was asked
for.

"It is time this should be stopped," said McCausland, entering. But he
was not alone. He held a great bloodhound in leash. "It was the same
customer, I suppose? Can you give me any article belonging to the man? I
picked up this in the doorway."

He held up a white wig.

"The false beard," cried Walter, holding it out from the stretcher on
which they were bundling him.

"Better the blood drops," said Shagarach. "Search the stairs. He was
wounded."

McCausland rushed out, his hound tugging strongly at the leash.

"Smell, Wolf, smell," they could hear him saying, and then a half-trip
and a clatter down the stairs told that the dog had caught the scent and
nearly pulled the inspector off his feet.

"I am glad it is no worse, Walter. The doctor will do all that skill can
to soothe your pain. You have saved my life twice," said Shagarach,
pressing the boy's hands, which were clasped over his bosom, where the
lint lay on his burns. Gently the ambulance men carried him down the
stairs, with never a cry from his brave lips tightened over the sound.

"I will call to-night, Walter. May you be better then," said the lawyer,
giving the driver Mrs. Riley's address. The physician climbed into the
spare seat and the wagon drove off with its suffering passenger.

"A cap, a coat button and a false beard," said Shagarach. "And still we
grope in the dark. Yet an anatomist will reconstruct a mastodon from a
fragment of his tooth!"

"Lost again," said McCausland, re-entering with his bloodhound, which
nosed about in corners of the room. The inspector sat down, puffing and
looked thoroughly disgusted.

"You lost the trail?"

"Never fear Wolf for that. Lie down, Wolf! No; the hound kept his track
through all the cross-scents of the city--something to boast of,
that--there was blood dripping here and there, that I knew by his
yelping. By the way, you must have struck him hard."

"The paper-weight is heavy," said Shagarach, picking it up from under
the desk where it had rolled. As he did so the hound gave a roar and a
bound, and stood up to reach it with his forepaws.

"Down, Wolf! Lie down!" cried McCausland, sternly. "There is blood on
the edge. That may help us another time."

"Take it," said Shagarach. "But you lost the trail, you said."

"It vanished into the air. Wolf took us to the northern station, running
me off my feet all the way--through the waiting-room, up and down the
platform twice, inside track gate No. 5, and then--flatted fair and
square. You know the random way he runs about when he's lost the scent?
Our man had taken a train."

"The western express, 12:59," said Shagarach.

"How did you know?"

"I have had occasion to take the same train at track No. 5 on a visit to
Woodlawn. Had he purchased a ticket?"

"No man with a cut on his face, or of our description."

"Then he has a trip ticket and lives there."

"Where?"

"At Woodlawn," said the lawyer. "Near Harry Arnold."

McCausland smiled incredulously.

"Is Woodlawn the only station between here and Albany?" he asked.
"However, I telegraphed along the route to have the runaway stopped."

"What time did you send the telegram?" asked Shagarach.

"At 1:19 by the station clock."

"Just a minute too late. The express reaches Woodlawn at 1:18. It is the
first station."

"Heigho! Here's a to-do. What about Woodlawn?" asked a cheerful voice.
It was Dr. Jonas Silsby, brown as a berry, with a broad-brimmed straw
hat and a basketful of botanical specimens under one arm. The casual
observer would have taken him for an uncommonly good-looking farmer,
bringing some choice greens to market.




CHAPTER XLI.

A HUT IN THE FOREST.


"Who's talking of Woodlawn? Just where I came from, and if the fronds of
those ferns aren't as fine-cut as petals, then I don't know an oak from
a gooseberry bush."

"Dr. Silsby--Inspector McCausland."

The men clasped hands.

"Didn't meet a maniac with a gash in his forehead on the way back, did
you?" laughed McCausland.

"Maniac--well, no; but I've rooted out a peeping Tom there, that's been
frightening the women."

"How was that?" asked Shagarach.

"It was those ferns did it. Aren't they beauties, though? Feel! Silky!
Maidenhair! Rare variety."

"They helped you find the peeping Tom?" said Shagarach, who knew the
botanist's tendency to forget.

"Oh, yes," said Dr. Silsby. "I was just about to tell that story. You
know the hemlock forest back of the blue hills in Woodlawn--marshy place
thereabouts, lots of clay in the soil--some of it on those boots, eh?
Well, those ferns came from there. Didn't walk in of themselves, I
guess. No, I had to wade for them. Pretty boggy, but not quite up to the
Dismal swamp. Well, I was feeling about, pulling up things, when I came
on the hut."

"A hut?"

"I call it a hut by courtesy. Begging your pardon, said I, and tumbled
in the sides of it. Hadn't any door that I could see--only two loose
boards--and was mighty poor carpenter work all over. Just a roof and
three sides, the whole thing backed against a pudding-stone ledge that
juts out into Hemlock lake."

"Had it an occupant?" asked Shagarach.

"Three squirrels," answered Dr. Silsby, "investigating a can of corn."

"Nothing else?"

"Some old newspapers, a blanket, a stool and a mighty ugly collection of
instruments, I tell you, including this article, which I confiscated."

He removed a pistol which lay at the bottom of his basket, handling the
specimens as carefully as if they had been wounded kittens.

"Is it loaded?" asked McCausland, taking it in his hand and unhinging
the butt. The backs of three cartridges stared out from the cylinder.

"You kept the second bullet, Shagarach, I believe," said McCausland,
removing a cartridge. Shagarach rolled out a flattened bullet from a pen
box in his drawer.

"Same caliber," said McCausland. "This looks like the pistol that was
aimed at you that evening."

"So you know peeping Tom, then?" asked Dr. Silsby.

"Mr. McCausland and I have two of the three bullets that round out his
pistol's complement," answered Shagarach, "and the third is lodged in my
ceiling at home too deep for the probe to reach."

"I thought the hut had a human atmosphere. There were fresh tracks
around, and the station-master spoke to me about a scoundrel that's been
frightening the country-folks--frightening them by running away from
them, as far as I could see. But you don't suppose he was fern-gathering
down in that swamp, do you?"

"Hardly," said McCausland. "Could you take us there now?"

"Now? I've my lecture at Hilo hall--A Study in Ingratitude; or, the
Threatened Extinction of the Great Horned Owl."

"It is an important piece of evidence in the Floyd case," said
Shagarach, though McCausland still smiled incredulously. "We want the
occupant of that hut."

"Robert's case. Command me," said Dr. Silsby. "Sorry Mr. Hutman wasn't
at home when I called. I'd have had him here dead or alive."

"Wolf!" said McCausland. The great dog started up, wagging his tail.
"Smell." He offered him the revolver butt. The hound barked and smelled
his way to the door again, but McCausland pulled him back.

"It is our man," he said, thrusting the paper-weight in his pocket.

"My pathfinder, Aronson," said Shagarach, who sprung to his desk.

"The next train for Woodlawn doesn't leave till 4:03."

"We can go more quickly by team," said McCausland. "I will have one here
in ten minutes."

Then he departed with his hound, and Shagarach sent Aronson to announce
at Hilo hall that an imperative summons compelled the defender of the
great horned owl to neglect for once the cause of that calumniated
biped.

"This is where I left the road," cried Dr. Silsby, an hour later. "A
good, smart journey lies before us."

"It's uncertain when we'll return," said McCausland to the driver.
"Probably not before 6 at the earliest. You'd better drive home. We'll
take the train into town."

The driver wheeled his team and drove away, while the party of
three--Shagarach, McCausland and Silsby--crossed a bush-skirted meadow
with the bloodhound still in leash. But they were not destined to
remain long unattended. The curious folk had got wind of their intention
to unearth the peeping Tom, and the sight of an officer in buttons
emboldened many to follow in their wake. Several men offered to help in
the search, and McCausland did not refuse their assistance.

"The more the merrier," he said, whereupon not only men but women
trailed behind them.

Among these followers was one young woman, familiar to two of the three
leaders of the party.

"Good evening, Miss Wesner," said Shagarach and McCausland almost
together, and the great inspector was not above entertaining that
somewhat vulgar curiosity many of us feel as to the relationship of any
chance couple we meet. For Miss Wesner was attended by an exceedingly
attentive young man. Courting? Engaged? Married? The question rises as
naturally as a bubble in water. In this case the truth lay midway. What
more natural than that she should spend her afternoon off with Hans
Heidermann at the picnic park in Woodlawn?

"Now you've left the cheap bombast of the town behind you," said Dr.
Silsby, looking at the great trees as if he would embrace them one and
all. "Isn't this grand? Isn't this Gothic? Pillars, gloom, fretted
roof--don't tell me art's cathedrals are any improvement on nature's."

The bloodhound interrupted his rhapsody.

"We may leave Dr. Silsby behind, if he chooses, as well as the town
bombast," said McCausland. "We shall not need his guidance any farther.
Wolf has caught the trail again."

Two or three times on the march the inspector had held the glass
paper-weight out so that the dog might smell the blood-clot on its edge.
His joyful bark and eager straining at the leash announced that he had
scented the fugitive.

"Not I," said Dr. Silsby.

Pulled on by the hound, McCausland and his two companions were soon
trotting far ahead of the plodding laggards behind them. Their talk had
died away. The heart of each was tense. Not a sound broke the mid-forest
silence save the harsh screams of purple jays resenting their intrusion,
and the snapping of twigs and branches.

"There are the ferns," said Dr. Silsby.

"Are we near?" asked McCausland.

"Within a hundred yards, I should say. This is the hemlock grove."

"Step on the moss. It will deaden our footfalls," said the detective.
"Slow, Wolf, slow!"

He reined in the impetuous animal as best he could and his companions
crept behind him softly.

"I see it," whispered Shagarach, pointing through the trees. It was
nearly 5 o'clock and the light was beginning to slant more dimly through
the aisles of the forest. But following his finger, the eye of the
detective made out a rude shelter, sharply distinct by the smoothness of
its boarded walls from the rough bark surfaces around. It seemed to lean
against the steep ledge which Dr. Silsby had described and the roof
derived most of its support from the projecting arms of two great trees
whose roots spread up into the crevices of the rock. Osiers and strong
withes took the place of nails, and the chinks were stopped with moss.
No log cabin or camper's shed was ever more roughly joined. It had every
appearance of being recent and temporary.

"We must surround it," said McCausland. The loud barking of the hound,
re-echoing in the stillness, had betrayed their presence to the
occupant. Shagarach and Dr. Silsby stationed themselves each at one
side, the former empty-handed, the latter clubbing his stout cane.
McCausland waited for the followers to arrive through the woods, but
most of them hung back at a safe distance, only three or four of the men
coming close to the besiegers.

"Who is inside there?" asked the detective loudly.

The silence succeeding his question was intense and prolonged.

"We have come to take you in the name of the law, and we will take you,
living or dead," said the detective.

There was no response but the rustling of the leaves. Song-birds were
few in the deep recesses, and these few had been frightened from their
nests. A creeping fear entered the hearts of the ring in the background
and they edged farther away. For the gloom was gathering swiftly. Only
one patch of sky was visible, above the steep ledge, and that lay toward
the darkening east.

"I prefer that he should be taken alive, if possible," said Shagarach in
a low voice to the detective. The latter gave three strong raps with a
bough on the trunk of a mighty tree, then cried again to the secreted
fugitive:

"Once more, I will state our errand. We are officers of the law. You are
wanted for the murderous attacks you have made on Meyer Shagarach----"

A hoarse snarl of rage burst from within the hut, causing some of the
distant spectators to turn in alarm. But it angered the bloodhound, as
the spur a proud horse, and with an answering roar he burst loose
from his leash and sprung at the hut, forcing a loose plank in
with his impetus. Then a sharp tool was seen to descend in the
opening--apparently an adze--and the hound's head sunk under the blow.
He leaped from side to side in agony, and as he ran back whining to his
master the blood dripped into his eyes from a hideous wound that had
bared the bone of the skull. McCausland swore furiously and the
lingering shadow of a smile vanished from his face. He unwound the rope
which he had brought along and secured one circle of a double handcuff
to his left wrist.

"We'll march home Siamese fashion or my name is Muggins," said the
inspector, between his teeth. Then he began gathering brushwood in a
heap before the hut.

"What are you at, man?" cried Dr. Silsby.

"Smoke him out," said McCausland.

"And fire these woods? Are you crazy?" The botanist was greatly
excited.

"Confound your woods! Good Wolf! Poor Wolf!" said the inspector,
alternately petting the hound, who, amid all his pain, licked his
master's hand, and throwing fagots on his pyre.

"But--but--name o' conscience, man," stammered Dr. Silsby. "This is the
finest hemlock grove this side of the White mountains."

"We could demolish the walls, I think," said Shagarach, "and capture him
with a rush."

"Where are the axes?" asked McCausland.

"Poles will do." There were heavy boughs and light saplings lying about,
which would make excellent impromptu crowbars. Without a word Shagarach
seized one of these and wedged it into the crack between two of the
boards. The roar of rage within told them the occupant was watching.

"Fall to!" said McCausland, scattering his brush-heap with an angry
kick. The three men began prying the boards apart. Several of them
creaked and gave way, and soon nearly the whole front lay in ruins.

"Surrender!" cried the inspector, pointing his revolver into the
cave-like gloom. There was no reply. The three men peered in, then
entered. The hut was empty!




CHAPTER XLII.

THE SECRET OF THE POOL.



Suddenly a shout from the onlookers behind called them back to the
breach.

"The roof!" they cried. "He is climbing out by the roof!"

McCausland and Silsby stepped back to see the top of the hut, while
Shagarach rushed in once more and reached at the ceiling with his bough.

There on the top of the hut, his body half emerging where the planks had
been shoved aside, McCausland for the first time saw the long-missing
oaf, and Dr. Silsby his peeping Tom. But Shagarach was groping within,
vainly smashing upward in the darkness.

With wonderful strength the fugitive raised himself erect, sprung from
the insecure footing of the slippery boards, and began clambering up the
ledge.

"After him, Wolf!" cried McCausland, and the bloodhound, nerved by his
tones, tore up the ledge in the monster's wake. McCausland and Silsby
clambered as best they could on all fours, and presently Shagarach,
hearing the outcry, followed them. The crack of the inspector's revolver
was heard once, but the fugitive had turned like lightning and hurled
his adze. McCausland uttered a sharp cry as the pistol was struck from
his hand. The fugitive then stood for a moment on the crest, twenty feet
above them, outlined in hideous distinctness against the pale patch of
sky. But, espying the hound at his heels, he had given a mad plunge, and
the onlookers, who had drawn nearer, heard a heavy splash behind the
ledge. The bloodhound paused at the summit.

"After him, Wolf!" urged McCausland, and the dog's plunge was heard, as
heavy as the man's.

"It is a pool," said Shagarach, gazing into the black water below him.

"Hemlock lake," answered Dr. Silsby. "The land beyond it is marshy for
miles."

"And no boat?" asked McCausland.

"One at the upper end, a mile or so, kept by a farmer."

"Then it all depends upon Wolf," muttered the detective. The water side
of the precipice afforded no stair for descent, and the party slowly
picked its way down the ledge which it had climbed, and made a circuit,
so as to stand on the grassy edge of the pool.

"Wolf!" cried McCausland. The dark heads of man and dog had long
vanished from sight. No answer came but the night sighing of the trees
that fringed the dark lake. A pale quarter-moon arose in the open sky
and lent a translucent gloss to its opaque surface. The swallows
twittered high in air, reduced to the size of a bee-swarm. But the lake
gave back no tale of the two that had entered it.

"Wolf!" cried McCausland, again and again. He whistled till the woods
echoed. He clapped his hands with a hollow reverberation. A plash close
by startled the listeners. But it was only a pickerel rising to his food
or a bullfrog plunging in. Again the mysterious terror invaded the
hearts of the pursuers, and the women clung nearer to the men, clutching
their bosoms.

Had man and dog reached the other side in safety, there to continue
their terrible race? Had they fought their death struggle in the water,
and one or both of them sunk to his doom? Who could tell? The lake
guarded its secret.

"It is dark," said Shagarach, but McCausland lingered on the bank,
shading his eyes with his right hand. In his left the empty handcuff
clanked.

"We have failed," said Dr. Silsby. Then McCausland started with a jerk.

"To-morrow," he said. "To-morrow may tell."

"The way back will be hard to find," said Shagarach.

"Light these," said Dr. Silsby, cutting a pitch-pine bough. It blazed up
almost at the touch of a match, and as the others followed his example
the forest was strangely illuminated, weird shadows playing about the
party. One coming upon them might have taken them for some brigand band
en route to their mountains with plunder.

"We'll miss the guidance of the hound going home," said Shagarach, and
the women shuddered at the prospect of being lost in the forest at
nightfall. It was an unfrequented place. But there were boys present
whose holiday ramblings might now be turned to good account.

"Yes, we shall miss Wolf," said McCausland, looking behind him, as if
still hoping for a signal from his faithful hound.

"Let us explore the hut," proposed Shagarach, entering.

"And tear it to pieces," cried Dr. Silsby.

Instantly the roof was torn from the rude pile, and its remaining
timbers, hardly more than rested on end, almost fell asunder of
themselves. A strange heap was revealed by the flickering torches. A
stool, a sheet of tin laid over a clam-bake oven, some cans of prepared
food, half-empty, an old coat, a blanket and a collection of knives,
spikes and other weapons, picked up or stolen, that would have made a
formidable array in the belt of a pirate. One of the lads, who had
lighted a dry rush for a torch, was about to touch off the newspapers
that lay about in great profusion, when McCausland sharply checked him.

"Bundle those up," he said, and the boys obeyed, while the inspector
curiously scanned one of them by Dr. Silsby's torch.

"I thought so," he cried in triumph, motioning to Shagarach. "This is
dated, like the others, only two days back--a New York paper again.
The----" he pointed to the name. "He knew where to look for sensations,
you see."

"A vitriol-throwing case?" asked Shagarach.

"Read it for yourself," said the detective.

"At my leisure. We may as well start."

"Has any one a compass?" asked McCausland.

"Nonsense," replied Dr. Silsby. "Do I need a compass with the flora to
guide me? There is the fern bed ahead of us, and, by the way, I think
I'll gather a few more specimens."

"Not now, doctor," remonstrated Shagarach, and the frightened women
echoed him.

"Tut, tut," said the botanist. "Have I slept out o' night in the woods
since I was so high to be frightened by a little miscalculation of time?
Who asked you to come?" he said to the followers, and the coolness with
which he rooted up several ferns actually reassured his timid
companions. "I'll take your newspapers to wrap them in," said he to one
of the boys, but McCausland interposed.

"Something else, doctor."

"My hands, then," said the botanist, cheerfully. And in fact he guided
them out by his trained remembrance of the vegetation he had passed
almost as quickly and surely as the hound had led them in by his scent.

It was then Miss Senda Wesner proved to Shagarach that for all her
reputation as a chatterbox she could be prudent on occasion. For she
selected a moment when Shagarach was bringing up the rear, to slip off
the arms of her escort and pluck the lawyer's sleeve.

"Do you know who he was, Mr. Shagarach?" she asked.

"Who?"

"The crazy man, I saw him plainly on the top of the rock. It was the
peddler in the green cart that used to come to Prof. Arnold's."




CHAPTER XLIII.

AN OLD SINGING SOLDIER.


"What will remind me of the summer while you are away, dear?" Robert had
said to Emily one morning, little thinking that the sweet girl would
treasure the saying for a whole day and end with a pitiful accusation to
herself of "selfishness" for leaving him. Could she have consulted her
own wish she would have put off the excursion then and there, but a
stateroom had already been booked in the Yarmouth, Beulah Ware was
looking forward joyfully to the trip and Dr. Eustis' orders had been
imperative. So good Mrs. Barlow sensibly stamped her foot at the notion
of her daughter's withdrawal and the maternal fiat went forth finally
and irrevocably that Emily must go.

But Emily determined that while she was away the bare cell in murderers'
row should not wholly lack touches of the midsummer of whose passing
glories Robert, their loyal votary, was cruelly denied a glimpse.

And so one day the carpenter came and plotted off a space over a foot
wide at the side of the cell, and the florist followed with a load of
beautiful long sods rolled up like jelly cake, and little potted plants
all in bloom. And the sods were laid down in the trough the carpenter
had made, and places scooped out with a trowel for the roots of the
plants, and presto, there was a flower bed all along the side that got
the sunshine, for Robert's window faced toward the south.

There were twiggy verbenas and fuchsias of tropic coloring, the
nappy-leaved rose geranium, less highly rouged than its scarlet-flowered
sisters, and blue oxalis along the border, plaintively appealing for
notice with its spray of tiny stars. And lest these should not insinuate
the odor of the country sufficiently into Robert's senses a pot of sweet
basil was suspended from the ceiling to give out fragrance like the live
coal in an acolyte's censer. Robert had complained of sleeplessness.
What was better for this than a pillow stuffed with prunings of a
fir-balsam at night and a sweet-clover cushion by day, when he sat at
his table and wrote down his thoughts on "The Parisian Police Theory of
Concentration of Crime," or some other such momentous topic.

But the last day, when the finishing touch had been placed on this
narrow bower, over which the shadow of the scaffold so imminently hung,
while Emily was sprinkling the beds with her watering-jar, Robert had
laid aside his pen and was drawing forth sweet music from the violin.

"How divine it will be, Emily," he said. "The ocean sail and the week at
beautiful Digby!"

"I wish you were coming, Robert," she answered, sadly.

"We may arrange a voyage in September. That is the month of glory in the
provinces."

Robert had never admitted entertaining a doubt as to his acquittal. It
must have been the confinement and the ignominy that had worn him down
and converted his nights into carnivals of restless thought.

"But I will be with you in imagination," he added, while Emily silently
poured the fine spouting streams over thirsty leaf and flower. Poor
little green prisoners! They, too, would miss the air and the sunshine
and, perhaps, would reproach her, when she returned, with wilted stalks
and withering petals.

While she hung her head a far-away voice stole over the high jailyard
wall, through the narrow cell window, into the lover's ears. It was a
tenor voice, not without reminiscences of bygone sweetness, though worn,
and still powerful as if from incessant use. Something in its tones told
the listeners that it was no common youth of the city trolling a snatch.
For when do such sing, except in derision of song, with grating irony
that is ashamed of the feelings to which true song gives expression? We
are ashamed of our best impulses and proud of our worst, we cynical city
folk! But this was a street singer, a minstrel, musical and sincere.
Straining their attention, the lovers caught here and there the import
of this ballad. Or was it a ballad repeated by rote? Was it not rather a
recitative improvised as the impulse came, both words and music?

He sang of the southward march of armed battalions. Their ranks were
full, their banners untattered, and the men shouted watchwords of joy
when they beheld the battle-ground before them. A great chieftain stood
mounted and motioned them into place with his brandished sword. Grant!
Grim Grant! They echoed his name. Then came the thunder of artillery
from distant hills, and the lines of the enemy's rifles were seen
glistening as they advanced. The defenders did not linger, but rushed
forward to meet them and their embrace was the death-lock of Titans.
Hurrah, the chivalry of the south give way! It is cavalry Sheridan who
routs them! Then the sun stood at its meridian. It was the noon of all
glory, for the northern crusaders, doing battle in the just cause. Oh,
the chase, the rallies, the heroic stands, and the joyful return, with
plunder! But the corpse-strewn field checked their paean. Sire and son
lay clasped in death, facing each other. The garb of one was gray, of
the other blue. Ambulances issued empty from the hospital tents, and
rode back groaning with the wounded. Nurses knelt with water cups at the
dying hero's side. And until night closed over, sorrow mingled with joy
in that bivouac by the fresh-fought field.

A loud salvo of applause told that the singer was done. Emily could see
in her mind's eye the ring at the sidewalk edge, arrested in the course
of meaner thoughts or idle vacuity by his heart-moving story. The gift
of Homer, in a humble degree, was his; and men to-day are not unlike
what they were 3,000 years ago. Robert had long since hushed his violin
and stood with bow suspended in air.

"Emily!" he said in a strange tone.

She looked at him and started. He was eying her so eagerly.

"Emily!" he repeated.

The bow dropped from his hand. He reached forward as if he would touch
her.

"What is it, Robert?" she asked.

"The water-lily. You are still wearing it?"

"Still wearing it, Robert. I put it on this morning."

Robert uttered a cry.

"It comes back! It comes back!" he said. "The old singing soldier that I
met at the park gate. He is blind and wears a brown shade over one eye.
His hair is white when he takes off his cap and passes among the crowd.
I see him again! I see it all!"

Robert's gaze was far away. He was not looking at Emily, yet he heard
her voice.

"When was this all, Robert?"

"That day, the day of the fire. I could not remember before."

She repressed a throb of joy. Was it indeed returning? God was good. He
had at last answered her prayers.

"And the water-lily, Robert?"

"Do you not remember, Emily, that I brought you one that evening? It was
the first of the season, I told you."

"I do--I do!"

"Search out the old gardener, who lives in the lodge at the west angle
of the park. He will remember. 'This is the first of the season,' he
said. He will remember the date. He will have kept some memorandum."

"And you talked with him, Robert?"

"We are friends of old. He will remember the incident--our stroll into
the glen where the little pond glistens, my noting the one white flower
floating among the pads, our poling the flat-bottomed boat from the bank
and the courteous speech of presentation he made. 'For your sweetheart,'
he said. Oh, it is as plain to me now as the sound of my own voice,
Emily. How could I ever have forgotten?"

"It is Providence who sent us the old singing soldier," said Emily. "Let
us thank Him for His mercy."

Then Robert ran over detail after detail of that afternoon, when he
rambled from the house, burdened with the fresh grief of his uncle's
death--seeing little, hearing little, mechanically following a familiar
route, all his outer senses muffled, as it were. The great shock of the
calamity when he came home late at night had canceled even the feeble
impressions that lingered, and not till the voice of the old singing
soldier came to his ears once more was the impediment removed.

Now the events rushed upon him, few in number, but clearly,
microscopically outlined. The sight of the lily brought up the image of
the gardener. He could no longer be suspected of hiding himself after
the fire or of secret escape with confederates, or of other conduct that
might require concealment and a mask of affected forgetfulness.

"The last link of his chain is broken," said Emily, joyfully, meaning,
no doubt, the great inspector's. This happy turn of affairs reconciled
her more than anything else to her vacation trip, and it was a gladsome
farewell the sweethearts took that day.

On her way through the city she heard again the chant of the old singing
soldier and a gush of gratitude impelled her to follow him. He was
indeed blind and wore the brown shade as Robert had described. A little
girl clung to his coat and guided him when he walked, and the cap he
held out bore the initials of the Grand Army and was ribboned with
silver cord. The bystanders stared at the sweet-faced lady who laid a
bill in the maiden's hand and hurried off without waiting for her "Thank
you," hurried off to acquaint Shagarach of the glad, good news.

It was not until she reached the upper flight of the office stairs that
she remembered that it was Shagarach's suggestion that she wear a
pond-lily now and then so as to start if possible the clogged wheels of
her lover's recollection, as we shake a stopped watch to make it go.

There was a similar case, too, in "The Diseases of Memory."

"But it was heaven," she said, "that brought us the old singing
soldier."




CHAPTER XLIV.

THE OCEAN NIGHT.


"Tristram!"

The artist started at his sister's voice. He had been lounging over the
steamer's side watching a full-rigged ship in the offing. Its majestic
sails glistened as white as snow, but the heaving motion from bow to
stern was apparent even at that distance. For the sea was all hills and
hollows, and the Yarmouth herself lay darkened under the shadow of a
cloud.

"Let me break in on your reverie. This is my brother--Miss Barlow--Miss
Ware."

"We shall have a storm," said Tristram, after the formalities.

"Oh, I hope not," cried all three ladies. They had become acquainted
while watching the patent log on the saloon-deck stern, which Beulah
Ware, who knew almost everything, had explained for Rosalie's
information.

"It was due when we started," said Tristram.

"And you never told me," cried Rosalie.

"You would have postponed the trip, my dear."

"Make everything tight," came the cheery voice of the captain. "Get your
wraps on, ladies. It's going to pour in a hurry."

"Do let us remain outside," cried Beulah. "I've nothing on that will
spoil, under a waterproof."

The others assented, and Tristram and Beulah disappeared for a few
moments, returning with mackintoshes and rubber cloaks.

"There, you look like fisher folk," said Tristram, when the ladies had
pulled the cowls of their glazed garments over their heads.

"And romantic for the first time, I suppose," said Rosalie. "Tristram is
a great stickler for barbarism, you know."

"Esthetically," said Tristram.

"He has positive ideas."

"Of negative value."

The rain had begun to spatter the deck beneath them and the cool wind
was working its own will with their garments. They were almost alone on
the quarter-deck. An officer eyed them loftily.

"That is the first mate," said Tristram.

"How can you tell?" asked Rosalie.

"Because he is so far off. The captain is always approachable. The first
mate is rather distant, the second mate more so. The third mate is
rarely visible to the naked eye."

"Hear that bell," cried Emily.

A ding-dong clangor resounded through the ship.

"Supper! All hands to supper!" piped the steward. "Early supper!
Captain's orders! Early supper!"

"Hang the captain's orders!" said Tristram. "This is better than
supper."

But the foamy crest of a great wave that was level with the bow was
caught just then by the wind and hurled up in their faces. The ladies
sputtered, drenched with the spray, and the water seethed at their feet.
Of course they shrieked and there was nothing for it but to descend and
repair to their staterooms to prepare for the supper.

The dishes were clattering and dancing like marionettes. Capt. Keen had
acted wisely in ordering an early supper. If the sea increased it would
soon be impossible to eat at all.

"Isn't this superb?" cried the enthusiast again, as the vessel
perceptibly rose under them, but she fell so suddenly that he probably
bit his tongue. At least for a moment his eloquence abated.

"Now to go above again," he said when at last the tipping of the dishes
made satisfactory eating no longer possible. "What a rare quality
portability is! The portable arts--music and poetry; the portable
instruments--fiddles, flutes, etc.; the portable eatables (excuse the
unhappy jingle)--oranges, bananas, biscuits."

Suiting the word to the action, he laid in a liberal supply himself and
pressed as much more on each of the ladies. He was not so unpractical as
he seemed, our friend Tristram, with all his badinage and transparent
sophistries.

"But you are not seriously going out on deck?" cried his sister in some
alarm, when he made for the stairs.

"And surely you are not going to remain in?" answered Tristram in
feigned astonishment. "Lose this glorious sea picture? Atmosphere,
nature's own murk; canvas, infinity; music furnished by old Boreas
himself, master of Beethoven and Rubinstein; accompaniments, night,
sleet, danger and the lightning."

"I fear we are philistines," said Beulah Ware; "we prefer painted storms
and the mimic thunders of the symphony."

"Accompaniment, dry dresses," added Rosalie. Whereupon Tristram
gallantly saw the ladies housed in his sister's cabin and left them,
lunching on his portable eatables, but not a little anxious while he
himself climbed up to his perch on the quarter-deck. The sea tumbled
over the steamer when she cut her way into a billow, but Tristram had
drawn on thick boots and felt prepared to rough it.

"Better lash yourself down," cried the captain warningly. The artist's
answer was lost in the tempest.

There was little sleep for the passengers on the Yarmouth that night.
Stewards and matrons passed about reassuring them. The boat was
seaworthy; everything was locked in; they could lie on their pillows
with an absolute certainty of rising on the morrow with the Nova Scotia
shore in view. Only they wouldn't. They dared not. And as Rosalie looked
as timid as any one, her new acquaintances conspired to remain with her
in her stateroom, all three sharing the two cots and getting what naps
they could.

They had run out of talk and were almost drowsing when the great crash
came. Have you felt your heart jump when a pistol-shot smites the
silence? No crack of land ordnance could inspire the fear that
resounding bump did in the breasts of the apprehensive girls.

"A rock!" was the thought of each, but they only expressed their terror
in an inarticulate shriek. Then the whimpering of women and the cries of
men were heard in the saloon.

"We are sinking!" cried some one, and the girls rushed out. A hundred
white-clad forms darted to and fro like gnats in a swarm, or clung
together, wringing their hands in misery. Some of the men fought to
unbar the doors. But they were bolted from the outside. The whole cabin
was penned in there to drown. Then each one felt for his dearest.

"Tristram!" moaned Rosalie, knocking at his stateroom door. "Tristram!"
But there came no answer. "He is out on the deck! He is swept away and
drowned!" she cried, with truer tears than the imagined sorrows of
Desdemona had ever drawn from her eyes. But Tristram was safe in the
pilot's box, where Capt. Keen was signaling the engineer to reverse his
engines; and the engineer, shut in amid the deafening clangor of his
machinery, ignorant of what had happened but trained to his duty, obeyed
promptly his bell and forced the great vessel back.

The headlights of the Yarmouth had been doused out long before, and
there was no lantern that could live in that surge, even if it were
possible to hang a second one aloft From time to time the captain had
ordered a rocket sent up, to warn approaching vessels, for the air was
densely opaque. Only out of the gloom before them, just before the shock
came, Tristram could see a long row of lights, feeble and flickering.
His imagination constructed the broadside of a steamship about them and
once it seemed that he really did catch a vague, shadowy outline. But
the reality became certain to another sense. Before the Yarmouth's
engines were reversed and her bow disengaged itself, a wail of terror
reached him out of the night, and a tearing as of parted timbers. Then
hoarse shouts were heard from the emptiness soaring high above the wind.

"We stove in her side," said the captain. Then a signal rocket, hissing
into the quenching rain, told him of his fellow's distress. The Yarmouth
still receded. The double row of lights was withdrawn into the gloom.
But the wailing increased and from the covered cabin below rose the
responsive clamor of the passengers.

"Say that we have struck a vessel," telephoned the captain to the
steward. After several repetitions the message was understood and it
quieted the half-clad throng a little. But anxiety was legible on every
face.

Twice more the signal of distress went up and the captain answered it,
though helpless to assist. Then the air was blank.

"Head her east," said the captain to the pilot. He knew by the lights
that the other vessel was pointed to the larboard when she crossed his
bow. He could not back forever or heave to in that sea. He must
circumnavigate the vessel or the vortex if she were sunk. So he nosed
his prow oceanward into the teeth of the wind. Under these
circumstances the headway of his boat was slow.

"Ahoy!"

Was it a voice from the darkness? A huge wave rose over them like a
cliff and hurled itself against the strong glass of the pilot's window.
In a moment they were soused and the wind blowing in upon them told them
that their brittle sheath was shattered. But the electric globes still
cast their white gleams over the foredeck and revealed a dark object
that was not there before.

"A boat!" cried Tristram.

"Save them!" shouted Capt. Keen, rushing down the steps, with the artist
at his heels. It was indeed a lifeboat, which had been carried on the
crest of a billow clear over the Yarmouth's gunwale and left high, if
not dry. Only five forms could be seen--three of them stirring, the
other two motionless. All were men.

"Climb!" shouted Keen, seizing one of the limp bodies in his arms.
Tristram caught up the other and staggered back in the direction of the
light, the three wrecked men following and grappling at them in their
bewilderment. Another wave like the last and they were lost, all seven.
But these great surges come in rhythmic intervals. Rescuers and rescued
reached the pilot house in safety.

"Who are you, shipmates?" asked the captain, pouring brandy down the
mouths of the unconscious men. The others answered in German.

"The Hamburg liner, Osric," translated Tristram. "She broke her rudder
and was driven off her course by the gale."

"Heaven save us from meeting any more such driftwood," said the pilot
unsteadily with a hiccough.

"Were any other boats out?" asked Capt. Keen. Tristram interpreted
question and answer.

"Two others, but they were swamped. All on board are lost."

A thrill went through the strong men. Usage does not render sailors
callous to the perils of the sea. Death under the ocean is still the
most awe-inspiring of fates--the doom of the irrecoverable body, of the
skeleton lying on the bottom, like a coral freak.

"Mostly immigrants from Germany and Sweden," answered the spokesman to
the next question. All five were common sailors. They had waited their
turn and the captain had ordered them into the lifeboat when it came. He
himself had stood by his sinking ship to the end.

In a lull of the breaking seas, Tristram and Capt. Keen picked their way
down into the cabin. The captain's appearance was a signal for a cheer.
He addressed the passengers briefly, outlined the terrible event and
assured them that, as lightning never strikes twice in the same spot,
they might turn in and count on a clear voyage oceanward for the rest of
the night. He could not control the weather or promise them sleep. But
he felt so safe himself that he had just come down to retire for his own
spell of slumber.

This little lie was one of those which the recording angel will blot
away with tears. The old salt would no more have slept that night than
he would have taken a dose of poison. Even for the few minutes he was
below he had been as uneasy within as a young mother when she sees her
baby in the arms of some one whose carelessness she has good reason to
dread. The pilot was in liquor, and Capt. Keen, making a quick tour aft
so that every one might get a view of him and a cheery word, together
with a brazen repetition of his salutary invention, simply turned into
the cook's room forward and swung himself out by its skylight-hatch.
Meanwhile Tristram elbowed his way through the crowd to Rosalie. His
reappearance soothed her, but she was still hysterical, and the good
offices of the other two ladies were found seasonable during the night.




CHAPTER XLV.

ON DIGBY SHORE.


Daylight rose, gray and hollow-eyed, on the Atlantic. The sun was merely
a moving brightness in the sky. Ocean, the blind Titan, still heaved and
roared, playing his part in some grander drama than ours of flesh and
blood--ingulfing sailor or bark as we crush the poor gnat toward whom
neither pagan sage nor Christian doctor enjoins mercy--cruel without
enmity, indifferent without contempt, divider or uniter of continents
according to his chance-born mood.

The storm had scarcely begun to die. But with a clear outlook forward it
was possible once more for the sturdy Yarmouth to resume her course.
With Capt Keen himself at the wheel, she steamed into the narrow harbor
of the little city whose name she bore, situated on the nearest eastward
tip of the Nova Scotia peninsula, half a day late, but with her 300
passengers safe and sound.

Several days later, our party of four were peacefully rowing across the
calm waters of Digby bay--that isleless harbor of purest ultramarine,
where the Bay of Fundy has cloven its way through peaks still wooded to
the water's edge and lifts and lowers its huge tides as far north as
Annapolis, at the head of the valley of Evangeline. Chance would have
it that this resort was the destination of the Marches as well as
Emily and Beulah; and the acquaintance made on shipboard under such
unusual circumstances was already ripening into something like
friendship--perhaps more than friendship--between Tristram and Beulah
Ware.

She was his opposite, his complementary color, as he said to Rosalie,
and so she harmonized with him and perhaps comprehended him, as Rosalie
at times did not. In only one thing did she agree with Tristram's
sister. She misunderstood his irony; for her own speech was yea, yea.

"Let us cross over to the camp of the Micmacs," proposed the artist,
resting on his oars.

"Are they real Indians?" asked Emily.

"Full-blooded. See their tepees." A cluster of conical tents could be
seen rising from the dark foliage on the hillside. For Digby rises from
the water with a <DW72> like a toboggan slide all the way up to the white
cottages on its crest.

"There is a specimen," said Tristram, as a canoe skimmed by them. "Isn't
he noble? The great face, the grim mouth, the high cheek-bones, the
straight hair--it is a bronze mask of Saturn. I may utilize him."

"When?"

"When I carve my life group for the Academy's grand prize."

"Have you chosen your subject?"

"Driftwood Pickers at the Sea Level."

Beulah Ware looked up. She had suggested it the day before, while
strolling alone with the man of hazy purposes.

The boat was beached without difficulty and the ladies stepped
ashore--Beulah Ware collectedly, as usual, but Emily and Rosalie as
warily as you may have seen a lame pigeon alighting.

"Let us follow my leader," said Tristram, meaning the brown canoeist,
who had shouldered his craft and was climbing the beach.

"What is that?" cried Emily, pointing to an object that was tossing on
the sands.

"A body," said the others, recoiling, but Tristram walked in the
direction indicated. It proved on closer inspection to be the body of a
woman, stout and tall. Her long yellow hair floated in the surf, but the
features were swollen beyond recognition. It was impossible to tell
whether she was old or young. Only her clothing, which was thick and of
foreign style, denoted a woman of the poorer class.

"Is it a body?" asked Rosalie, apparently doubting the evidence of her
eyes. The quick assemblage of a crowd rendered an answer unnecessary.
There were men and women watching all along the Nova Scotia coast in
those weary days. Schooners and smacks had put out before the storm,
perhaps to be blown far out of their course and suffer the hardships of
hunger and shipwreck, perhaps to founder in midocean and never to
return. So the body rolling in the surf at the water's edge had been
espied by others before the party of four landed, and there was a
converging stream of searchers from bush and cottage, and even from the
lonely tepees.

"Search her pockets," said one, and the woman's dress was torn open. A
packet of papers came out, but the ink had run and the paper was as soft
as jelly.

"She has been in the water a week," cried another.

"Perhaps it is a body from the Osric," suggested a boy.

The party of four shrunk in greater horror. There were rumors of
lifeboats that had been launched and swamped from the sunken steamer.
Could one of the bodies have been carried up the Bay of Fundy on its
swift-running tide, forced by a current through Digby Gut, and cast
ashore on this unfrequented beach?

"See if her linen is marked?" asked a woman who held a baby. But the
search proved fruitless. No stenciled initials, not even a brand on the
shoes, to identify the unfortunate. A truck was suggested to carry her
up to the town.

"One moment," said Tristram, "her ring may be engraved."

The slender gold circlet was deeply imbedded in the flesh, but a
fisherman ruthlessly cut it loose with his knife. Tristram held it up to
the light and read a name from the inside.

"Bertha Lund," he read.

Emily Barlow turned pale and glanced at Beulah Ware. If she could have
looked across the ocean to the city just then and seen Inspector
McCausland closeted with the district attorney, she would have been
confirmed in her fears. The detective was scanning a list of the
passengers on the Osric.

"Bertha Lund, Upsala, Sweden. That is her birthplace. She was to return
on the Osric," he said, uneasily.

"Then it must be she," answered the district attorney. "It is most
unfortunate. However, we have her testimony at the hearing. We do not
rely solely upon her."

But Emily did rely solely upon Bertha's knowledge, and her heart sunk
within her. Without Bertha, there was only Robert to describe the room
as she wished it described. And would people believe Robert in so novel,
so miraculous, a junction of circumstances as her theory demanded?

"Read that again, please," she cried to Tristram.

"Bertha Lund," Tristram seemed puzzled a moment by the third word,
"Bertha Lund, Upsala."




CHAPTER XLVI.

TURNPIKE TOLL.


"So to-morrow is the day of the trial, Miss Barlow?"

Mrs. Riley was pinning the bandage on Walter's neck, while Emily
buttoned his jacket. She and the quondam Whistler had become fast
friends, especially since the day of the struggle in Shagarach's office,
and now that his burns were healing and he was able to get out they had
arranged a Sunday afternoon excursion to Hemlock grove, with some vague
hope of visiting the site of the demolished hut, if Walter's strength
could carry him so far. There would be no lack of guides, for the spot
had already become locally famous.

"Yes," answered Emily, "the talesmen have been sifted down to twelve at
last."

"May the good Lord put mercy in their hearts," prayed Mrs. Riley.

"I wish it was a jury of ladies," said Walter.

"Why, ladies are never selected for the jury," cried his mother.

"Jurywomen is a word not yet included in the dictionaries," smiled
Emily.

"But they are all so kind," said Walter simply, but in such a way that
his mother and Emily might each take half of the compliment. The bright
slum boy was already losing all trace of his plebeian associations, as
the innate aristocracy of his nature asserted itself. How luckily he was
placed, if he could have foreseen. To begin at the lower-most round of
the ladder, but with the unconquerable instinct in him to climb; and so
at last, on the topmost round, to have the whole of life for a
retrospect.

Mrs. Riley bade them a proud good-by and watched them from her window
boarding the car. The down-town ride on a Sunday is always curious, for
the desertion of the usually crowded streets gives them a foreign
appearance. Emily was commenting on this when Walter called her
attention to something in the sky.

"Look, it's a man," he said, pointing almost vertically upward.

"Where?" she asked, leaning forward.

"On the top of the Amory building. He is calling for help."

The Amory building was the tallest structure in the city, the tenants in
the sixteenth story enjoying a view that swept in the entire harbor and
flattened the men walking in the avenues below to the dimensions of
crawling flies.

"We can change cars here, Walter. Let us get off and see."

From the sidewalk Emily could distinguish the minute figure of a man
leaning over the parapet around the roof, and shouting through his hands
to attract attention.

"Perhaps it is on fire," she said in alarm, framing the thought that lay
uppermost in her mind.

"I think he wants to get down," suggested Walter, although not a word
of the man's vociferations could be heard.

"Let us speak to the policeman," said Emily, just as a large hat came
sailing down on Walter's head. It crossed her mind that the broad brim
had a familiar look. The patrolman followed her index finger with his
glance and presently there was a knot of passers-by doing likewise. Then
the knot grew to a crowd, and the crowd to a multitude. Meanwhile the
officer had hunted up the janitor of the building and both entered
through the great carved doors. About five minutes later they came down,
with a heavily laden, portly gentleman, who seemed taken aback when the
crowd hurrahed him.

"Dr. Silsby!" cried Emily. He looked about in surprise.

"Miss Barlow," he said, shaking his head, "here's a to-do. I suppose
you'll go right over and tell that Rob."

"Tell him what?"

"Tell him I got lost in the heart of the city I was born in," grumbled
the botanist so that she could hardly help laughing. "Well, what are you
sniggling at?" he shouted at the crowd, who fell back a little at this.

"And were you lost up there?"

"Haven't had a bite to eat since yesterday noon. Made a call on that
ninny, Hodgkins, about his confounded will. Judge is going to decide
against him and we'll have our academia after all."

"Good! Good!" cried Emily, clapping her hands.

"Office on the sixteenth floor. Ninny was out. Took my specimens up to
the roof. Got worked up. Scribbled notes for my new lecture on----"

"I know. Rob told me. On the beneficent activity of the great horned
owl. How interesting!"

Dr. Silsby glared.

"Janitor missed me. Didn't notice the time. Locked out. Slept four hours
all night, and now I'm hoarse from bawling ten. What's the matter with
Sleepy Hollow? Are they all in bed?"

"Why, this is Sunday morning," explained Emily, repressing her
merriment.

"They ought to have ladders up there, so a man could climb down,"
grumbled Dr. Silsby.

Walter thought this a somewhat unreasonable demand.

"You might have descended by the mail chute," said Emily, laughing
outright, "and then the postman would have collected you just before
breakfast."

The learned doctor made no reply, so they left him shuffling away in
search of a restaurant.

"I do hope Judge Dunder will allow the will," she said; and it took the
whole ride to explain the why of this hope to her eager auditor.

At Woodlawn they were directed to Hemlock grove and wandered among its
dark trees, peace-breathing in themselves, but haunted for them by the
vague pervasive shadow of a tragedy. The hut was too far for Walter's
strength, so they turned off at an angle, following a footpath which
they knew would lead to some road. Once or twice they heard a murmur of
voices, seeming to come from the left. It was very deep and indistinct
and not unlike the mooing of a cow. But her bell would have tinkled if
it had really been a stray tenant of the milk-shed.

"What is it, Walter?" asked Emily. It had sounded again, this time more
humanly and close to their ears. They had been moving toward it
unawares.

Walter only clutched her arm in answer.

"Look!" he said, and she saw his eyes white with distension of the lids.
"It is the oaf."

Through a parting in the boughs Emily saw the sight. There was a little
cemetery near by, unpretending but neat with scattered headstones. In
the midst of it, kneeling with his forehead bared and his eyes
up-lifted, was the human monster who had woven himself into their life
so terribly. What was he doing? Should she run? Her first impulse was to
fly, but a fascination held her. The oaf's face was averted and they
were screened from his gaze.

Looked at now, the creature's countenance was less repulsive than she
had thought. Emily had only seen it convulsed with murderous passion,
and those who had described it to her had beheld it under similar
circumstances. Yet at best it was horribly misshapen.

"Is he crying?" asked Walter. Strange to say, the oaf seemed to be
shedding tears and the quick sympathy went out from Emily's bosom, in
spite of the past.

"Hark!"

Emily pulled Walter back, as he leaned forward too eagerly to catch what
he was saying.

The oaf moaned in a guttural tone that swelled to its close, crescendo.
Then he threw himself on the mound before which he knelt.

It was a grave. No headstone covered it. The mourners of the dead who
house there were either forgetful or poor. But strange little bunches of
withered wild flowers were strewn upon it. And a heap of fresher flowers
lay at one side. What was the monster doing?

With his fingers he scooped out hollows in the earth, then lifted the
cut daisies and buttercups he had brought, with many a late violet and
honeysuckle, and laid their stalks one by one in the cavities. Holding
them in place, he propped them up with the loosened earth, till all
along the narrow mound there was a bloom of red and yellow and blue.
Then the oaf rose and looked down upon his work, with a childish
pleasure.

"Does he think they will grow that way?" asked Walter, but Emily put her
finger on her lips. The oaf began muttering in a low, indistinct murmur,
like one soothing a child.

Suddenly he drew his soiled hands across his brow. The streaks of earth
added to his hideousness and his expression had changed. Some new
current of thought was in his mind. He ground his teeth, as Walter had
seen him in Shagarach's office, and roared with fists clenched at some
invisible adversary.

"Run, run," called Walter, dragging Emily with him along the little
footpath--on, on. They could hear their own footsteps echoed behind,
but the roars did not appear to be gaining on them.

"Faster! Faster!" urged Emily, as Walter weakened. The briers scratched
her dress, the boughs brushed in her face, but what were these to the
monster behind them? She dared not turn, lest his fierce eyes should be
glaring into hers and his grimy hands clutch at her flying hair.

"I cannot keep up," cried Walter breathing hard, when they had covered a
quarter of a mile.

"Oh, Walter, try!" cried Emily, dragging him in her turn.

"I cannot. I can only walk. He is not behind us," he added. Emily slowed
up and peeped around timidly. The expected image did not confront her.
The woods had a less lonely look here, but they were perfectly still.

"Have we escaped him?" she said, all flushed and out of breath. Without
the wings of fear, she could not have run a third of the distance.

Walter held his breath to listen before he answered. There was not a
stir in the woods save the sighing of the leaves.

"Let us walk on fast," he said, and Emily was glad to moderate her pace.
But they had not proceeded twenty steps, when again she started off,
dragging Walter by the hand. This time the sound was on their right. The
oaf had crossed the path and was tearing through the woods. With the
advantage of the smooth path they might outstrip him and get to the
road, where succor could be had.

"Oh, I cannot go farther," cried Emily, fainting. "Leave me, Walter, and
bring help as soon as you can." The elastic sinews of the boy had
recovered their strength and he was now the fresher of the two.

"Only a little farther, Miss Barlow. I can see the road through the
trees."

The pursuer seemed to have slowed his own pace to a walk. Once they
caught a glimpse of his form. He was not aiming at them straight but
slantingly toward the road, as if he would head them off. At present he
was almost abreast and gaining.

"There is the road and a cottage," said Walter, but the pursuer was
ahead of them now, running swiftly. They could see him leap the wall
only ten paces off, just as they emerged from the footpath. Bewildered
and spent, Emily turned the wrong way and ran straight into the arms of
Mr. Arthur Kennedy Foxhall.

"Turnpike toll!" exclaimed the manikin, deliriously prolonging the
accidental embrace, while Emily strove to tear herself away in a flurry
of amazement, horror and disgust.

"Let her alone!" cried Walter, clutching at Kennedy's neck. But the
manikin took no account of the boy, merely cuffing him over the ears,
and endeavoring to force a kiss upon Emily.

"Forgive me, Emily--Miss Barlow," he said at last, while she stood
flaming like a rose with indignation. "Forgive me if I press my suit too
ardently----"

But he was not afforded an opportunity to continue his amorous speech.
Walter Riley possessed a spirit which rose against cuffing. Weak and
weary as he was, he drew off after a moment's survey, to get the import
of the conversation, and sent the manikin spinning with a blow that
brought blood drops from his nose. Kennedy felt the trickling organ in
momentary confusion, but before his idol he could not show the white
feather.

Whack! Whack! He brought his cane--bulldog end for a handle--down on the
boy's shoulder, neck and head--bursting the bandages over his still
acutely tender burns. Walter clinched, but Kennedy threw him off and
continued his caning. Even Emily's intercession only brought her a smart
rap over the fingers with which she tried to grasp his weapon.

"You brute!" she exclaimed, and threw herself between Kennedy and the
boy. But help from another quarter was at hand. A tall, lithe form
vaulted a neighboring wall and the swish of a horsewhip cut the air. It
must have cut something else, for Kennedy hopped and turned, and
presently was capering with as much agility as if the ground were redhot
iron. Emily could hear the repeated swishes and the manikin's
supplications, but she did not look up. She was stroking Walter's
forehead. The boy had fainted in her arms.

"It's me, Harry. It's Kennedy. Don't you know me?"

This cry caused her to turn.

"It's a coward. Run."

Emily had heard the voice only once before, in that eventful ride to
Hillsborough; but she would have known Harry Arnold instantly from his
photograph. How broad-chested he was! How superb! Yet there was
something feverish in his excitement now. He came toward her, raising
his hat.

"I have to apologize for a slight acquaintance with that blackguard,
which led me to refuse at first to credit his conduct. Otherwise I might
have been of assistance earlier."

"Slight acquaintance? You owe me twelve hundred and by George you'll pay
it," snarled Kennedy, moving away. Harry never turned.

"The boy has fainted. He must come up to the house."

The "cottage" in view, then, was the Arnold house. A carriage stood in
front of the terrace at the head of the gravel drive which led up from
the turnpike. Harry had probably just arrived home from an afternoon
spin through the suburbs.

"Thank you, Mr. Arnold----" Emily stopped, but the mischief was out.
Harry had lifted the unconscious boy tenderly in his strong arms and was
carrying him up the drive. He turned and smiled, showing his beautiful
teeth, but, seeing Emily's confusion, did not speak the words that were
on his lips. Inside the house he called for Indigo.

"Some wine," he ordered.

"And a little sweet oil, if you have it," added Emily; for the neck
bandage had been torn away and the vitriol burn was bleeding from one of
Kennedy's blows.

"This is Walter Riley," said Emily, at last recovering from her
embarrassment, "Mr. Shagarach's clerk, who was assaulted about ten days
ago."

She studied Harry's face as she bathed the tender part with the sweet
oil and poor, sick-eyed Walter revived under the wine. But there was no
expression other than one of surprise crossed with sympathy.

"And yourself, may I ask?"

"I am Miss Barlow."

Harry's astonishment reached a climax at this, but he was too well bred
to display it.

"I am delighted to have you for my guest, Miss Barlow. It is unfortunate
that my mother is not at home. We have both admired your efforts in
behalf of Rob. And Miss March was just speaking of you."

By the time that Walter was ready to go home, Emily had fixed with
feminine absoluteness her opinion about Harry's innocence.

But then she was under a heavy debt to Harry. He had rid her once for
all of the impertinences of Mr. Arthur Kennedy Foxhall.




CHAPTER XLVII.

THE HEEL OF ACHILLES.


"I shall be compelled to alter my theory at one point," said Shagarach.

"Yet your general conviction remains unchanged?"

"Absolutely. Your cousin is capable of the crime. A powerful motive was
present. We have traced him to the door of the room. What factor is
wanting?"

"I cannot believe it of Harry," said Robert, shaking his head
doubtfully. "But what has occurred to cause you to reconstruct your
theory?"

"My interview with Dr. Whipple, his physician."

"Harry was ill at the time, I believe?"

"He is able to prove an alibi."

"A hard obstacle to get over," said Robert.

"But not insurmountable," replied the lawyer. "Dr. Whipple happens to
be the most methodical of men. 'At 3:48 p. m., on Saturday, June 28, I
took Mr. Harry Arnold's pulse in his own room at Woodlawn,' said he,
consulting his notes. 'It was eighty-three beats to the minute.'"

"Rather high," said Robert.

"'Abnormal,' Dr. Whipple observed, 'something on his mind, I should say.
Overexcitement, worry, the fever of modern life.' His diagnosis was
incorrect; but the time is important. The fire was discovered, you
remember, at 3:30."

"So Harry couldn't have set it and got to Woodlawn," said Robert, as if
sincerely glad.

"Not in his mother's carriage, as I had surmised," said Shagarach. "But
an express train leaves the Southern depot at 3:29. It arrives in
Woodlawn at 3:45. Harry crossed Broad street from the passageway after
setting fire to the study--it is barely a minute's walk--there caught
the train and reached Woodlawn at 3:45. His house is close to the
station. Dr. Whipple found him feverish and with rapid pulse from the
excitement of his crime and the hurried escape."

"His mother stated, however, when she called, earlier in the afternoon,
that she had left him at home ill," said Robert, thoughtfully.

"She is solicitous about his delicate health," said Shagarach, with
almost imperceptible irony. The delicate health of the powerful
canoeist, the victorious steeplechaser, need hardly weigh on the most
tender mother's mind. This was their last consultation before the trial,
and the lawyer shook Robert's hand with a word of encouragement when he
left the young man to his hopes and forebodings.

The lawyer turned into a byway which carried him through the Ghetto.

Solomon and Rachel were sitting on their doorsteps, fanning away the
heat of the August afternoon.

"There goes Shagarach," said someone.

"He who fawns on the gentiles," said another, "that he may obtain places
from them."

"He is ashamed of his father's blood; he will deny his mother," was the
taunt of a third.

"Who is it?" asked the boys, flocking up.

"It is Shagarach, who was called an apostate in the Messenger last
week."

Jewish boys nearly all learn enough of Hebrew to read the characters.
They understood the answer and passed it along to their comrades.

"Here comes Shagarach, who was printed among the apostates," they cried,
edging near the lawyer, while the older folks prudently contented
themselves with passing remarks.

Shagarach only turned a deaf ear and a pitying glance upon his misguided
people. But as he chanced to look into the window of Silberstein's
store, the first page of the Messenger, conspicuously spread out,
attracted his attention, and he saw, under a black heading, among a list
of "apostates" his own name, with the description "Gentile Judge." The
malevolent features of Simon Rabofsky scowled at him from within, but
were instantly withdrawn. Shagarach, however, stopped and rung the bell,
while the circle around him stared in wonder. Was the pervert going into
Nathan Silberstein's house?

There was a long pause before any one answered. The maid who finally
came was wiping her hands on her apron.

"Good-evening, Mrs. Silberstein," said the lawyer. "I am Meyer
Shagarach, of whom you have doubtless heard. I desire to see Simon
Rabofsky, who, I perceive, is within."

A great flurry of moving chairs could be heard, as though the
convocation was breaking up.

"Bid him not depart." Shagarach was already in the narrow entry, with
the door closed behind him, and the stupefied woman in front. "Simon
Rabofsky," he cried, after the form which was disappearing through a
rear door. It stopped reluctantly.

"I wish to confer with you and with Moses Cohen. He is there. I saw him
through the window. The others may go or stay, as they please."

Cohen and Rabofsky stood before Shagarach in the store.

"Sit down. Draw down the curtain," said the lawyer to Mrs. Silberstein,
who with her husband and the others stood on the threshold listening.

"'Vengeance is mine,' saith the Lord. As an interpreter of the
scriptures, you have met that text, Simon Rabofsky?"

"It is graven on my heart," said the money-lender, with unction.

"Liar, thief and hypocrite!" cried Shagarach, "you are as vindictive as
the viper, who stings the hand of his benefactor. Our conference shall
be short. I spare your white hairs before these people who respect you.
See to it that I walk through this street unmolested and I may forbear
for a time to punish you for the perjury you committed and the receipt
of stolen articles."

"I had not known the people of Israel so far forgot their good
teachings," said Rabofsky, "as to insult a peaceful passer-by, like the
gentile ruffians."

"Go forth without excuses," said Shagarach sternly.

"I will gladly remind them," said the cowed usurer, leaving the room.

"Moses Cohen, you will retract and apologize in your next issue, or I
shall prosecute the Messenger for slander."

"I have only told the truth," answered the young editor, doggedly. "You
are no longer a Jew."

"I am always a Jew," said Shagarach. "Though I worship not with the
ancient rites and forms, adapted for simple minds, my God is the God of
my fathers and my heart is with my people. I value them, I love them,
better than some who prey on their prejudices and wring ducats by
pretended piety."

"But----" urged Cohen, stiff-necked and arrogant.

"I have spoken," said Shagarach. "You have slandered me. Retract."

When he left Silberstein's house the Ghetto was deserted. The people had
fled within, and he saw Rabofsky far up the street, warning them with
uplifted hands. Only two or three children, with eyes like jewels,
played on the curbstone, innocent of the guile that comes with years.
Shagarach lifted one of these in his arms and kissed her. "Good-by,"
lisped the baby, as he continued his walk.

Bitter tears came into the strong man's eyes.

That night he wrote late in his chamber; and though he was usually the
earliest of risers, the next morning his mother knocked on his door
repeatedly in vain.

"It is the trial day, my son," she said, loudly. Slowly he arose and
rubbed his eyes. His clothing was dusty with the bedding lint. And when
he came down to the breakfast table his look was mournful and
abstracted.




CHAPTER XLVIII.

OYEZ! OYEZ!


"This is the gravest charge known to the law," said the district
attorney, "and the man found guilty of it by a jury of his peers is
condemned, under the statutes of this commonwealth, to be hanged by the
neck until he is dead."

Dead! The solemn word reverberated through every listener's heart. The
crowded court-room was hushed. The jurymen had just been contemplating
their own portraits in the last newspaper which they would see for many
days, and now bent forward in the first flush of eager attention. Court
officers were carrying whispered messages to and fro. On the bench sat
Chief Justice Playfair, silver-haired and handsome, between two of his
judicial brethren. The case was considered of such importance that
three judges had been assigned to decide upon the legal questions which
might arise.

On the threshold of an ante-room Inspector McCausland was cordially
shaking hands with Shagarach. In the front row of the spectators sat
Mrs. Arnold, thin-lipped and cold, beside a sad-faced woman in black.
She had bowed distantly to the prisoner--no longer fettered, but
permitted to occupy a seat in the "cage" in full view--between Dr.
Silsby and Emily Barlow, who had bravely elected to join him. Evidently
he was not one of those who grow plump on jail regime and batten under
the shadow of the scaffold. The young man's dark cheek was lean, his
eyes unwontedly bright, but he never flinched from the district
attorney's gaze.

"You have learned from the reading of the indictment," thundered the
district attorney, stroking his patriarchal beard with one hand and
holding his notes in the other, "that the immediate act committed by the
accused was not murder but arson. It is true that he did not
deliberately procure the deaths of the seven persons who were deprived
of their most precious property, of life itself, in that calamity with
which our city rung on the evening of June 28. He did not draw their
blood personally with the usual weapons of homicide--pistol, dagger,
bludgeon or ax. But the evidence will show you that a new weapon, more
dangerous, because more deadly, than any of these, was used on this
occasion, and that he set on foot forces which did procure the deaths of
the victims, and which, but for the vigilance of man and the mercy of
Providence, might have doubled or trebled their number--yes, laid the
greater part of our fair city in ruins.

"For myself, I might be willing to suppose that the accused did not
foresee the consequences which would follow his rash deed; that he
trusted to a confined and local destruction, of property merely,
following his application of the match to his deceased uncle's study.
But the law, justly and wisely, we must admit, presumes foresight,
imputes deliberation and malice, when loss of life follows the
commission of a felony, and taxes the felon not alone with the initial
damage but with all damages that accrue. I leave it to your own good
sense, gentlemen, whether the fire-fiend who applies the torch in the
heart of a crowded city is not potentially as guilty as the Malay
running amuck with brandished dagger or the anarchist hurling his bomb.
There can be only one answer to the question. Our own lives, the lives
of our wives, sisters, children, are imperiled by any other doctrine
than that which the law lays down.

"Therefore, reluctantly, sorrowfully, with misgivings and fear, we have
impeached Robert Floyd of the murder of Ellen Greeley, who was burned to
death in her chamber; of Rosanna Moxom, Katie Galuby, Mary Lacy and
Florence F. Lacy, who died of injuries received while attempting to
escape from the Harmon building; of Alexander Whitlove, who was caught
between the floors of that building, in a heroic attempt to conduct his
elevator to the imprisoned occupants of the upper story; and of Peter
Schubert, the fireman who lost his life nobly in the performance of his
duty."

This catalogue of the victims moved the spectators, and Emily noticed
the woman in black crying softly in her handkerchief.

"I will not attempt to instruct your consciences or call to your minds
the responsibility which rests upon your shoulders as well as upon mine.
For I am convinced that every man before me approaches this case with
the same unwillingness which I myself have felt, but also with the same
determination to uphold the law, to do justice and nothing more or less
than justice, to all parties, that I myself have formed."

The district attorney spoke this disclaimer of officiousness or
persecution with genuine feeling, but it was scarcely necessary for any
who knew him. The name of Noah Bigelow, like that of Shagarach, was
guaranty in itself that the cause would be tried with courtesy and
fairness. Yet something in his bearing might have told the psychologist
that the nature of the man, unsuspicious, candid and slow to entertain a
conviction of guilt, would be equally slow to part with such a
conviction when it had once obtained a lodging.

The outline of the evidence to be presented consumed more than an hour
in its delivery; and the reading, in a high drawl, of the minutes of the
previous trial, occupied the remaining time until the noon recess
tediously. If the jury had not been provided with a typewritten copy it
would have profited little by this latter proceeding.




CHAPTER XLIX.

THE BATTERIES OPEN FIRE.


Assistant District Attorney Badger conducted the examination of the
first witness for the government, who gave his name as the Rev. St.
George Thornton and wore the manner of an Oxford graduate.

"You knew the uncle of the accused, Prof. Arnold?"

"Excellently. He had been for many years an attendant at my church."

"The Church of the Messiah, of the Episcopal denomination?"

"The Episcopal church, sir; we do not consider it a denomination."

"You officiated at Prof. Arnold's funeral service, I believe?" said
Badger, disregarding this nice distinction.

"I did."

"This took place on June 26, I believe?"

"On Thursday, June 26; yes, sir."

"And saw the accused, Robert Floyd?"

"Yes, sir."

"Kindly describe his actions and appearance on that occasion, Dr.
Thornton."

"In common with others who knew him, I was greatly struck by the absence
of any signs of grief."

"Such as what?"

"Such as tears and--and general signs of dejection."

"As though he were meditating upon something else than the death of his
uncle?"

"As though his thoughts were far away."

"That is all," said Badger, and Shagarach, who had apparently expected
something more substantial than this, arose.

"You have officiated at hundreds of funerals, I presume, Dr. Thornton?"

"At many hundreds, sir," answered the clergyman, gravely.

"And the ordinary marks of grief, as you say, are tears?"

"It is a rare burial in which tears are not shed."

"So rare that the exceptions impress themselves upon you, like the
burial of Prof. Arnold?"

"Yes, sir."

"Would you say that in this class of rare exceptions the absence of
tears was always due to callousness in the mourners?"

"Always? No, sir; not always."

"Generally?"

"I should not attempt to say, sir."

"You would scarcely judge the sincerity of a mourner's sorrow by the
copiousness of flow from his lachrymal glands?"

"Hardly."

"One moment," said Badger, detaining Dr. Thornton for the redirect. "Did
you mean to emphasize the tearlessness of the accused as the principal
feature of his bearing which attracted your attention?"

"No, sir; it was the coldness, I may say the general indifference
expressed in his countenance, which struck me."

"Will you allow me to see your eyeglasses, Dr. Thornton?" asked
Shagarach. "The lenses are concave. You are near-sighted?"

"Yes, sir."

"Badly so, I should say?"

"Yes, sir."

"That will do."

"John Harkins," answered the next witness to Badger's preliminary
question.

"Were you ever employed by Prof. Arnold?"

"I was."

"In what capacity?"

"As coachman."

"When?"

"About a year ago, just before Mungovan."

"How long did you remain in his household?"

"About two weeks."

"Did you notice anything unusual in the relations between the accused
and his uncle?"

"Well, I heard them quarr'ling two or three times."

"What do you mean by quarreling?"

"Oh, they were talking angrily to each other."

"Did you listen so as to hear the import of any of these conversations?"

"Well, I didn't listen, but I heard what they were saying."

"How often did you hear what they said?"

"I heard the old gentleman say once that he was a young rogue to be
herding with the like of them cattle."

"Who?"

"The young fellow--his nephew."

"Called his nephew a rogue to be herding with such cattle?"

"Yes, sir."

"Those were his own words?"

"As near as I can remember."

"What kind of a master was Prof. Arnold?" asked Shagarach.

"He was a pretty good man. I haven't anything against him."

"Particular, wasn't he?"

"Yes, he was particular."

"Why were you discharged at the end of a fortnight?"

"He didn't give any reason; just said I didn't suit, that was all."

"But he paid you in full?"

"Oh, yes."

"And you found him not unreasonably exacting?"

"Well, he used to grumble a good deal."

"At you?"

"At me, yes, and the others, too."

"You never heard the others complaining, however?"

"No, sir."

"What did they say when you told them of his grumbling at you?"

"Oh, they said when you get used to him you won't mind."

"When the two 'quarreled,' as you call it, how many of the voices were
raised in what you took to be anger?"

"How many?"

"One or both?"

"Why, it was the professor that was angry."

"Didn't he always talk loudly?"

"Yes, sir."

"When he 'grumbled' at you?"

"Yes, sir."

"When he 'grumbled' at the other servants?"

"Yes, sir."

"But they didn't mind it?"

"No; they said I wouldn't mind it after awhile."

"Did Floyd seem to mind it, when you saw him after these 'quarrels,' as
you call them?"

"I didn't notice."

"Will you, upon reflection, swear that these quarrels were anything more
than frank, warm discussions, misunderstood by you at the time, but such
as any two men of independent mold and opposite views might indulge in?"

The witness was greatly puzzled.

"Well, I can't say. It was pretty loud talking, that was all."

The redirect by Badger brought out nothing new for the government's
case. It was felt that their attempt to show strained relations between
uncle and nephew was no great success. But the next witness was looked
to curiously. He gave his name and position as James L. Carberry,
secretary of Bricklayers' council No. 31, C. L. U. He was a powerful
man, with a conspicuously well-filled sleeve, suggesting that mighty
flexed arm, grasping a mallet, which is the workingman's favorite
symbol. But the low brow hinted at a degree of honest dullness. While
Carberry was taking the stand Badger asked leave to submit a newspaper
clipping to the jury.

"This bears upon the point we shall now endeavor to prove, your
honors--namely, the anti-social opinions of the accused."

Against Shagarach's protest and exception, Chief Justice Playfair
allowed the jury to read an article from the Beacon, signed "Robert
Floyd," in which the following sentence was marked as especially
obnoxious:

     "When the highest court in the land decides that offensive
     combination of capitalists in trusts is right, but defensive
     combination of workingmen in labor unions is wrong, then the time
     is ripe for revolution."

Shagarach's defense of his client's right to freedom of speech and
thought was eloquent. But courts are and no doubt should be the
sanctuaries of orthodoxy, and any other conclusion than that which Chief
Justice Playfair and his two colleagues reached, in a matter so personal
to themselves, could hardly be expected.

"You know the accused?" asked the district attorney of Carberry.

"I have met him," answered the witness.

"State to the jury the occasion upon which you met him."

"It was at a meeting of the union one Sunday afternoon, about six months
ago."

"Did you have any conversation with him at that time?"

"Yes, sir."

"On what topic?"

"On strikes and labor questions and anarchy and----"

"Will you state what opinions, if any, the defendant expressed in regard
to anarchy?"

"He told me he sympathized with the anarchists."

"Anything further?"

"Yes, sir; he said in his opinion assassination was justifiable."

"Where did this conversation take place?"

"In a little smoking-room off the hall."

"Were you alone?"

"Yes, sir."

"Do you remember the particular occasion which started your discussion
of anarchism with the accused?" asked Shagarach, after a consultation
with Floyd.

"No, sir."

"Wasn't it the arrest of Dr. Hyndman in London?"

"Oh, yes, I believe it was."

"It was for Dr. Hyndman that Floyd expressed sympathy, was it not?"

"Yes, sir, it was Hyndman."

"Do you happen to know whether Dr. Hyndman is a philosophical anarchist
or not?"

"Sir?"

"Do you know what school of anarchism Dr. Hyndman represents?"

"No, sir."

"Do you know whether he advocates bomb-throwing?"

"I suppose so."

"You take it for granted, then, that all anarchists are bomb-throwers?"

"Yes, sir."

"Had Dr. Hyndman thrown a bomb?"

"I don't remember."

"Don't you remember that he merely made an anarchistic speech, in
denunciation of society?"

"No, sir."

"You didn't inquire into the matter much?"

"No, sir."

"But Floyd, you say, expressed sympathy with the anarchists?"

"Yes, sir." This was said emphatically.

"Didn't he say that he sympathized with Dr. Hyndman?"

"That's what I told you."

"No, sir, it is not what you told me. Didn't Floyd say he sympathized
with Dr. Hyndman as opposed to the bomb-throwing anarchists?"

"I don't remember that he did."

"Didn't he say that he sympathized with Dr. Hyndman's objects, but not
his methods?"

"I don't remember anything about that."

"Then you didn't carry away a very clear idea of the conversation, did
you?"

"I think I did," the witness replied with positiveness. Then the
cross-examiner dismissed him, satisfied to have made it apparent that
fine distinctions would pass through Mr. Carberry's mind like beach sand
through a sieve. The redirect examination went over the same ground, and
Badger placed a Mr. Lovejoy on the stand.

"You are treasurer of the Beacon company, are you not?"

"Yes, sir."

"All checks in payment for services rendered pass through you?"

"Through my subordinates or myself."

"Have you calculated, as requested, the total sums paid to Robert Floyd
for special articles during the time of his employment?"

"I have."

"Will you state to the jury the earning capacity of this young man at
the time of his uncle's death?"

"The question is prejudicially framed, Brother Badger," said Shagarach.
"Please do not incorporate your own inferences when examining a
witness."

"How much had Floyd earned while with you?" asked Badger.

"From January to June, inclusive, six monthly checks were made out
payable to Robert Floyd, for services, and three smaller checks for
expenses incurred. The amount of the former checks was $309."

"During six months?"

"Yes, sir."

"Mr. Hero Leander," said the next witness.

"City editor of the Beacon, I believe?"

"Yes, sir."

"Will you state any conversation you had with Inspector McCausland on
Monday morning, June 30?"

"The conversation on my side was conducted in the deaf-and-dumb
alphabet. Mr. McCausland entered our office and inquired which was
Floyd's desk."

"And what did you do?"

"I pointed."

"To Floyd's desk?"

"Yes, sir."

"Mr. McCausland."

A buzz of expectancy went around when the inspector walked in from the
ante-room and mounted the stand. He wore a rose in his buttonhole, but
the smile had left his countenance. With his testimony, it was felt, the
real case for the prosecution began.

"You arrested the accused, I believe, Mr. McCausland?" asked the
district attorney, amid the breathless attention of the court.

"I had that disagreeable task to perform."

"Where was the arrest made?"

"On the steps of the Putnam hotel."

"What was your first act upon reaching the station?"

"I stripped the accused and confiscated the clothes he wore."

"These were the clothes he had worn at the time of the fire, also?"

"He stated so."

"You have preserved those garments?"

"Yes, sir."

"You also confiscated the desk which Floyd had occupied at the Beacon
office?"

"The drawers of it, yes, sir."

"Have you preserved the contents of that desk?"

"Yes, sir."

"Will you inform the jury what you found in the drawers of Robert
Floyd's desk?"

"Three copies of the anarchist organ, Freiheit. There they are."

"Do these papers preach philosophical anarchy, Mr. McCausland?"

"I should say not. They are in German, but the leading editorial of this
one--which was kindly translated for me by a friend--recommends the
'stamping out by fire and sword of John Burns and all such
peace-mongering worms.'"

"A forcible expression, surely. It is the Most organ, in short?"

"Yes, sir."

"Will you state the further results of your search in the desk?"

"I found this paper of powder, a part of a fuse, a written formula for
manufacturing a bomb, a blotter with part of a note on it, legible by
the help of a mirror----"

"That will do for the present, Mr. McCausland. And will you state what
you may have found in the pockets of Floyd's coat?"

"A quantity of powder. There were grains of it also on the knees of his
trousers."

"Similar to that found in his desk?"

"Yes, sir."

"What else?"

"A burnt match," said the inspector, just as the clock struck five and
the constable's gavel sounded a prelude to adjournment.




CHAPTER L.

THE BOMBARDMENT CONTINUES.


Nearly the same gathering was admitted to the courtroom on the second
day as on the first. But, wedged in between Mrs. Arnold and the unknown
woman in black, Emily had pointed out to her the famous novelist Ecks,
who sat with his head inclined toward the still more famous playwright
Wye. Wye was mooting volubly the chain of testimony which had been spun
around the accused on the foregoing day, which seemed to possess for him
all the circumscribed but inexhaustible interest of the chessboard or a
dramatic intrigue. But Ecks was sketching in pencil the principal
characters of the trial.

"We shall summon Mr. McCausland again," said the district attorney. "At
present we surrender him to the counsel for the accused."

A keen glance shot from lawyer to witness, comparing the two great
opponents. Shagarach's face was a mask, stern and impenetrable, but
McCausland visibly braced himself for the encounter. Equal they might be
in a sense, as Mount Everest is the peer of the Amazon, but as different
in their spheres as the river and the mountain. In the detective's
subtle eye the keen observer might have discovered a finesse and a
suppleness not altogether remote from the corresponding traits in the
cracksman whom he had impersonated. But Shagarach could no more have
counterfeited Bill Dobbs than McCausland could have acted with success
the role of Count L'Alienado.

"Would you hang a kitten on the evidence of a burned match, inspector?"
asked the lawyer.

"If he were old enough to scratch it," answered the detective.

"Will you turn out the contents of your upper right vest pocket?"

McCausland's face became rosy with embarrassment, but he obeyed the
request. A ripple of laughter went around when among the broken-up
fractions of a card of lucifers there appeared one that was blackened at
the end. The inspector allowed the merriment to die, then coolly
remarked:

"It is the match I found on Floyd."

And it was felt that he had held his own.

"Phineas Fowler," called the district attorney. The old chemist tottered
to the stand and held a parchment hand high in air while the clerk
administered his oath.

"What is your business, Mr. Fowler?"

The pantaloon trembled visibly and twisted the two horns of his forked
board one after the other with nervous fingers, blinking about all the
while like an old Rosicrucian projected into the daylight world.

"A chemist," he piped, in a treble so high that the thoughtless smiled,
but so feeble the chief justice bent forward to hear and the
stenographer requested him to raise his voice. Ecks began sketching away
rapidly at the advent of this character. The very odor of acids seemed
to exhale from his shivering person.

"What lines of trade do you supply?"

"Photographers, dyers, armorers----"

"The last class with explosives and fulminating compounds, I presume?"

"Also with oils and varnishes," answered the pantaloon, his voice
breaking in the desperate effort he made to be audible.

"Would you call him senile or venerable?" whispered Ecks.

"He must have sold Floyd the powder," answered Wye, intent on the
imbroglio.

"Have you ever met the accused?"

"Yes, sir."

"When and where?"

"In my office twice."

"What was the date of the first visit of the accused to your office?"

"June 23."

"And of the second?"

"June 27."

"On what business did the accused call to see you, Mr. Fowler?"

"He was inquiring about bombs," answered the witness, a strong
back-country twang coming out as he proceeded and adding to his other
peculiarities.

"What did he especially desire to know about bombs?"

"How they were made."

"Were you able to inform him? Have you made a study of this subject?"

"Oh, yes. There's nothing mysterious about it."

"You entered into a minute discussion, then, with Floyd on the subject
of bomb-making?"

"Well, no; I answered his questions. Didn't volunteer nothing." Mr.
Fowler grew reckless of the niceties of speech as he accelerated his
replies. "Don't believe it's a proper matter to be preached from the
housetops."

"Your room is tolerably near the top of the house, however?"

"Top story, sir."

"Well, proper or improper, what was the upshot of your conversation?"

"He was coming again and I was to sell him some powder."

"Anything else?"

"Yes, three feet of fuse."

"Will you describe this fuse?"

"Why it's just common fuse, made out of linen cloth, sprinkled with a
slow-burning mixture--nitre, sulphur and a little powder--sheathed in
rubber and fitted into a metal plug."

"You sold Floyd three feet of this fuse?"

"Yes, sir."

"And how much of the powder?"

"Two pounds."

"Common gunpowder?"

"Yes, sir; American army powder."

"You were to sell him these commodities, you say. Did he actually return
and purchase them?"

"Yes, sir; I had them all done up when he called again."

"Called on June 27, as he had promised to?"

"Called on June 27, sir."

"Which was the day before the fire and the day after his uncle's
funeral, according to Dr. Thornton's testimony as to the date."

"I dare say you are right, sir," squeaked the pantaloon, who evidently
stood in trepidation of his burly examiner.

"For what purpose did you understand that the accused wanted this powder
and this fuse?"

"Told me he wanted to make some sort of a bomb."

"Did he ask you for particular directions?"

"Well, yes."

"Did you furnish him the shell or envelope of this projected bomb?"

"Oh, no; he said he had a teakittle to hum," said the pantaloon,
whereupon the repressed volcano of merriment exploded once more, to the
indignation of John Davidson, who occupied a front seat, listening to
the testimony of his townsman. The chief justice looked stern and the
district attorney's deep bass rumbled on without a pause.

"A teakettle at home. And how was that to be converted into the covering
of a bomb?"

"Why, I told him to put the fuse inside and draw it through the nozzle,
so the plug would stop up the spout, then shovel in the powder, tamp her
up with nails and pellets, fasten down the lid and you have a bomb ready
made. The kettle, I understood, was a frail one, hardly stronger than a
canister."

"Not a concussion bomb, Mr. Fowler, I suppose?"

"No, sir. Those are filled with dynamite or giant powder. I don't deal
in the high explosives."

"This bomb would have to be fired through the fuse?"

"Yes, sir."

"But it would explode with considerable force."

"Well, I guess it would rip things jest a trifle." Here the pantaloon
forced the ghost of a smile himself.

"Kindly bring in the safe."

It came in on the shoulders of two stout porters, all breached and
battered and bubbled in places, as if the iron had melted like tar.

"The explosion of this shell, the construction of which you have just
described, would blast away a very considerable obstacle, you say?"

"Lord, yes! Slit a cannon."

"Would it be sufficient--I ask your opinion as one having experience in
this line--would it be sufficient to cause the mutilation visible in
that safe?"

"All that and a sight more."

"And the accused gave you to understand that he had undertaken the
construction of just such a bomb?"

"I took him so."

"Very well. So much for that. Did you examine the piece of fuse which
Mr. McCausland found in the desk occupied by Floyd at the Beacon
office?"

"I did."

"What kind of fuse was it?"

"Same as I sold him."

At this point a small piece of fuse, some six inches in length, was
submitted to the jury for inspection and passed along from hand to hand.

"And the powder found in it?"

"Same powder."

"And the powder in Floyd's coat pockets?"

"Same powder."

"And the grains on the knees of his trousers, where they may have
spilled?"

"Same powder."

"That's the black side of the shield," whispered Ecks, as the district
attorney sat down.

"Now for the white," answered Wye.

"It is not part of your regular business, I presume," said Shagarach,
"to furnish anarchists with bombs?"

"Oh, no, sir," answered the witness, making corkscrew curls of his beard
points.

"Or incendiaries with igniting material?"

"No, sir; never did it before in my life, sir."

"Why did Floyd say he wanted this powder and fuse and information as to
the construction of bombs?"

"Said he was studying up anarchism."

"For what purpose?"

"Wanted to write an article on it, he said."

"And you seem to have believed him?"

"At the time, or I wouldn't have sold him the goods."

"What made you believe him?"

The witness paused, puzzled and shifted from foot to foot.

"Well, I can't say, sir, as to his credentials."

"Couldn't he have procured these materials in some less public way if
secrecy had been an object with him?"

"Plenty of other ways of getting such things, sir."

"Yet he walked in openly to your office?"

"Yes, sir."

"Told you his name?"

"No, sir."

"Gave you his card?"

"Yes, sir; business card; said he was a reporter."

"Where is the card?"

"I don't know, sir."

"Did you notice the name?"

"No, sir; took no particular notice. Thought it was all right at the
time."

"But the young man stated that he was studying up anarchism?"

"And wanted to see for himself just how easy it was to make a bomb."

"That will do."

"Rather an eccentric whim," said Wye. "Putting up a clever defense,
though."

"Did you notice how the defendant's jaws are set?" answered Ecks.

"Mr. Hero Leander," called Badger, and the city editor again took the
stand.

"Did the Beacon ever give Floyd an assignment to write up anarchy?"

The witness shook his head.

"Mr. McCausland once more," said Badger, while the city editor, whose
occupation had taught him to reduce laconicism to a science, rushed off
to write up his own somewhat abbreviated testimony for the evening
edition of his paper.

"Did you find any manuscript or notes of an article on anarchism in the
desk occupied by the accused?"

"None, sir."

"Or in the garments he wore at the time of the fire?"

"None."

"You had no opportunity," asked Shagarach, "after the fire to search
Floyd's room at his uncle's house?"

"I wish I had," replied the inspector.

"Then you could not testify that such notes or such a manuscript were
not in existence before the fire?"

"I could offer an opinion."

"Mr. Chandler."

In the interim, during which our old acquaintance, the patrolman, was
hunted up, the jury curiously examined the powder, which McCausland
handed them.

"You recognize this article, Mr. Chandler?" asked Badger, pointing to
the safe.

"I do."

"You removed it or had it removed from the ruins of the Arnold house
after the fire?"

"Acting under Mr. McCausland's instructions, I did so."

"It presented the same appearance as now?"

"As far as I know."

"The safe will be removed to the jury-room later for inspection," said
Badger.

"What was the date of Prof. Arnold's death, Mr. Chandler?" asked
Shagarach.

"He died on a Tuesday. Let me see. The fire was on the 28th; then it
must have been the 24th."

"How is that competent, your honor?" objected Badger.

"Perhaps Mr. Shagarach can explain its relevancy," said Chief Justice
Playfair.

"Easily, your honor. Fowler, the chemist, has testified that Floyd's
first visit was on the 23d, which was Monday. His uncle died on Tuesday,
suddenly and unexpectedly. The prosecution asks us to believe that the
accused either foresaw in some occult manner his uncle's death or
contemplated blowing up the house while his uncle was still alive."

"Admit the testimony," said the judge.

"District Chief Wotherspoon," called the district attorney, relieving
his assistant. The witness was rugged and weather-beaten and his uniform
was not brushed for inspection. He had just answered an alarm.

"You had charge of the fire forces in the early part of the Arnold fire,
did you not?"

"Yes, sir; until Chief McKay arrived I was senior officer."

"Do you recall the explosions which took place?"

"Perfectly."

"How many in number were the explosions?"

"Two."

"Two distinct explosions?"

"Yes, sir."

"Will you state to the best of your knowledge the portion of the burning
buildings from which the explosions came?"

"The first one was a single discharge. It came from the second story of
the Arnold house."

"Where the study was located?"

"Yes, sir."

"You feel positive?"

"I do. I was climbing a ladder at the time and was thrown off my hold by
the shock."

"And the second of the explosions?"

"The second came after an interval and was different in character--more
like the setting-off of a bunch of firecrackers, but greatly exaggerated
in the volume of sound. There can be no doubt this was the fireworks
shop in the adjoining building."

"But the first one positively came from the study?"

"Positively."

"A very loud report?"

"Very loud."

"Such as might have been caused by the explosion of the bomb Mr. Fowler
described?"

"I should say so."

"At what time," asked Shagarach, "did the explosion take place? How long
after you arrived?"

"I couldn't say exactly; a few minutes."

"One?"

"More than one."

"Two?"

"Yes."

"Three?"

"Possibly."

"And when did you arrive?"

"At 3:32."

"How long had the fire been going when you arrived?"

"As nearly as I could estimate from the headway, about five minutes.
Opinions varied a good deal on that point."

"Let us say five and add the three which elapsed before you heard the
explosion. Then if there were a bomb in the study or library and its
fuse were lighted at the start of the fire that fuse must have burned
for eight minutes before it reached the powder."

"He's a genius," exclaimed Wye, but Ecks was sketching Shagarach's
forehead and did not answer.

"I suppose so," said the fireman.

"A somewhat incombustible fuse. But if the fuse were not lighted at the
start then presumably the fire started at the opposite end of the room
and worked its way slowly toward the fuse?"

"Presumably."

"Even so, it seems likely that the fuse must have been boxed up tightly
or it would have caught earlier."

"It certainly does to me, sir, though I haven't given the subject any
thought."

"It is not a difficult one," said Shagarach. "Wouldn't you say, then,
that this fire must have been started by some one who was ignorant that
there was a bomb in the room in close proximity to the safe? Otherwise
he would have lighted the fuse."

"Perhaps."

"And consequently by some one else than Floyd?"

"I object," said the district attorney. He ought to have objected long
before, since Shagarach's previous question was wholly out of order, but
his attention had been distracted by McCausland.

"If it had been the incendiary's desire to secure a gradual spread of
the flames, so as to permit himself ample time to escape, while at the
same time insuring the destruction of the safe, would it not have been
prudent for him to apply the match at the other end of the room, as he
appears to have done?" asked the district attorney. But Shagarach
objected to this in his turn and the two questions were left unanswered,
locking horns like tangled stags in the minds of the wondering jurors.

"May I add one further question to my cross-examination of Mr. Fowler?"
asked Shagarach, when the fireman was dismissed.

"How long, Mr. Fowler, would it take for that bomb to explode after the
tip of the fuse had ignited?"

"About a minute," answered the chemist.

"For the present," said the district attorney, "we are obliged to rest
this portion of the case. The fatality which has pursued all the
occupants of the Arnold house, even to the discharged coachman, Dennis
Mungovan, has deprived us by Miss Lund's death of a witness who would
have directly and immediately connected the bomb which Floyd constructed
with the mutilated safe. This afternoon we shall enter upon a different
phase of the subject--namely, an earlier attempt on the part of the
accused to obtain possession of the will."




CHAPTER LI.

GLORY ALLELUIA.


"Saul Aronson," called the district attorney.

Shagarach's assistant had been amazed to find a subpoena thrust into his
hands just as he returned to his desk after the noon recess. Of what
service could he be to the prosecution? As little as possible, he
inwardly determined, while he made his way to the stand.

"Do you know a young lady named Miss Serena Lamb?" asked Badger, in his
iciest voice. The cruelty of it was exquisite. If he had discharged a
revolver at Aronson point blank the witness could not have looked more
terror-stricken. To have the secrets of the affections thus held up to
public scorn! To be compelled to wear on his sleeve the heart whose
bleeding in his bosom he had with difficulty stanched! His face grew
pale--or, rather, a mottled white. But Shagarach rose on purpose and his
master's presence acted like a cordial on the fainting witness.

"Yes, sir," he stammered out, marveling what was to come; how long the
torture would be prolonged.

"That is all for the present," said Badger.

"Prof. Borrowscales," called the district attorney, and a shadow of
disappointment fell on the court-room. There is no testimony less
amusing than that of the writing expert and none more inconclusive. At
least eleven jurors out of twelve disregard it and form their own
opinions by the rule of thumb.

"You are a professor of penmanship?" asked the district attorney.

"An expert in handwriting, yes, sir."

"Of many years' experience?"

"Twenty-nine."

"Have you examined the papers submitted to you by Inspector McCausland?"

"I have microscopically."

"Describe them, please, for the benefit of the jury."

"This one is a page of manuscript purporting to be the work of Robert
Floyd and bearing his signature. The other contains a chemical formula."

"The bomb formula, taken from the desk of the accused," explained the
district attorney. "Anything else?"

"A number, apparently jotted down on the same sheet."

"Please read out that number."

"No. 1863."

"What do you say as to the identity of the handwritings, professor?"

"I give it as my conviction that they are the same. The capital Q----"

"Never mind the capital Q," interrupted Shagarach. "We admit that the
formula was written by the accused."

"Retain the autograph for one moment," said the district attorney.
"There was another article submitted to you for comparison. What was
that?"

"A blotting-pad," said the professor, holding it up in his fingers and
showing a clean side, bearing the reversed impressions of two or three
lines of writing.

"Will you kindly hold that up to the mirror you have brought and read
what may be read of the writing taken up by the pad?"

"Looks to me as if it came from the back of a postal card. Just fits
that size and says:

     "'Dear Aronson: The lock that I told you about still sticks. Please
     come and open it. I will not trust it to an ordinary locksmith.

     "ROBERT FLOYD.'"

"As to the signature and writing? Are they genuine?"

"Beyond peradventure and on the strength of my twenty-nine years of
experience."

"During your twenty-nine years of experience," asked Shagarach, "have
you ever failed to arrive at the conclusion your employers expected?"

"I object," said the district attorney, and Shagarach withdrew his
question. It was one of those ramrod questions, the office of which is
simply to drive the charge home and then be withdrawn.

"Will you kindly write your own name on that?"

He handed up a common paper block and a pen. The expert flushed a little
and put the pen in his mouth. This blackened his lips and raised a
titter. His tongue rolled in his cheek like a schoolboy's while he
wrote. The effort was unconsciously prolonged. Shagarach took the
autograph and passed it to the jury. A broad smile spread from face to
face like a row of lamps lighted successively by an electric current.
Then the half-legible scrawl was passed to the district attorney and
Shagarach sat down.

"I do not understand," said the district attorney, "that you profess to
be an ornamental writer?"

"It is not necessary, Brother Bigelow," interrupted Shagarach again. "We
acknowledge the note on the postal card."

"He has a spark of humor, after all," said Ecks, who was still in his
seat.

"What do you suppose Aronson has to do with it?" asked Wye, while the
jury studied the blotter, one after another, mirror in hand.

"Pineapple Jupiter!" called Badger. The old <DW64> hobbled to the stand
and immediately opened his mouth in a good-natured smile, which set the
spectators' lips working responsively.

"This is a murder case, involving life and death," said Chief Justice
Playfair, with dignity, and the court officers rapped their staffs and
bustled about, commanding silence.

"You know Mr. Aronson, the last witness but one?" asked Badger.

"See him most every day, sah."

"Do you also know a young lady named Miss Serena Lamb?"

"See her most every day, sah."

"Did you ever introduce Mr. Aronson to Miss Lamb?"

"Yes, sah."

"When and where?"

"Well, you see, I fotched him up to her and says I, 'Here's a convert,
sister,' says I. 'Hallelujah!' says she, and that's how I done it, sah."

"Where was this?"

"Down on the square, sah--Salem street."

"And when?"

"When?"

"Yes, when did you introduce Mr. Aronson and Miss Lamb?"

The <DW64> scratched his woolly poll.

"Clean forgot de time, sah."

"Was it a year ago?"

"'Bout a year, sah."

"Couldn't you fix the time exactly? It is important."

"Well, you see, sah, it was about de second-last time I got a hair-cut."

This answer provoked a roar, but the district attorney took the witness
in hand.

"Can you count?"

"Oh, yes, sah; I can count, sah."

"Up to how far?"

"Up to ten mostly, sah."

"You can't read?"

"Born before Massah Linkun, sah. Chillun can read. Old folks picking
cotton; no time for school, sah."

"And you reckon time by the occasions when your hair needs cutting?"

"Yes, sah; wife and I reckons pretty close on that, sah."

"An excellent way for want of a better hour-glass," said the district
attorney. "About how often do you get your hair cut from winter to
winter?"

"Oh, about six times, sah. My ole wool grows putty stiddy-reg'lar, sah."

"Six times? You have had your hair cut lately?"

"This morning, sah. Wife said I wasn't looking 'spectable enough to
come into court before genteel gemlen."

"And you introduced Miss Lamb and Mr. Aronson about the second hair-cut
before that?"

"Yes, sah, third-last time. 'Scuse me."

"It must have been four months ago, then. That will do. Mr. Hardwood."

A business-looking old gentleman took the stand.

"You are a member of the firm of Hardwood & Lockwell?" asked Badger.

"Senior member."

"What is your business?"

"Safemakers."

"How long have you been established?"

"Thirty-seven years."

"Do you recollect filling an order for a safe from Prof. Arnold?"

"I do, sir. It is the first order on our books."

"Are those books in existence to-day?"

"They are, sir," said the old business man, with pride.

"Do you happen to know whether that safe ordered by Prof. Arnold was
still used by him at the time of the fire which destroyed his home?"

"I have reason to believe so. I remember seeing it and reminding him of
the circumstance in his house within a year."

"You regarded it as in a way the foundation stone of your business
prosperity?"

"It was our first sale."

"What, if you recollect, was the number of the safe--an old-fashioned
article, I presume?"

"Somewhat antiquated in style, sir. I have consulted our books, at the
request of the officer--Mr. McCausland, I think. The number of the safe
sold to Benjamin Arnold was 1863."

"Were you here," asked Shagarach, "when Prof. Borrowscales read out the
number which was jotted down upon a sheet of paper in Floyd's desk?"

"I was. I was struck at the identity."

"You have no means of knowing, however, whether or not that number was a
memorandum of the date in the life of Bakunin, the anarchistic writer?"

"I have not."

"Mr. McCausland, again," said the district attorney.

For the third time the inspector came to the box from the ante-room
through the door at which he watched and listened.

"You occupied a cell adjoining that of the prisoner in the state prison
at one time?"

"Yes, sir."

"Will you state any conversation relevant to this trial which you may
have overheard?"

"It was a soliloquy rather than a conversation."

"Describe this soliloquy, then."

"Floyd used to talk at night a good deal. He wasn't sleeping well." The
court was hushed at this strange introduction. "There was a
communication between our cells and by listening carefully one night I
managed to make out what he was saying."

"And what was he saying?" asked the district attorney, while Floyd
studied the witness' face with more curiosity than he had yet at any
time shown.

"'Don't tell anybody, Aronson.'"

To the surprise of everybody the accused burst out into a hearty laugh,
which rung through the court-room and evidently nettled the whole
prosecuting force. Then he bent over to Shagarach and whispered in his
ear. Shagarach jumped to his feet, promptly as usual, for the district
attorney had finished. His opportunity had come.

"What crime had you committed, Mr. McCausland, that the state should
isolate you in one of its prison cells?"

"I was a voluntary prisoner," answered the detective. He had put his
neck in the noose and must bear the strangling as cheerfully as
possible.

"For what purpose?"

"A professional one."

"You were there to win the confidence of the accused and extort a
confession of guilt from him if possible?"

"Yes, sir."

"Did you succeed?"

"Owing to the cleverness of the prisoner and his having been forewarned,
I failed."

"Not owing to the fact that he is innocent, you think?"

"I think not."

Shagarach seemed satisfied not to press this further and asked for the
blotter, which was in the foreman's hand.

"You were requested to state any conversation relevant to this cause
which you had with the accused while in prison. You answered with a few
meaningless words pronounced in sleep. I confess the relevance of all
this later testimony escapes me," said Shagarach.

"The next witness, Miss Lamb," answered the district attorney, "will
make the connection of all these threads of testimony plain."

"Do you know Mr. Aronson, the piano dealer?" asked Shagarach of the
witness.

"By sight."

McCausland, though he kept his own identity as hidden as possible, knew
the whole city by sight.

"Is it not possible to construe this note on the postal card as
referring to the refractory lock of Miss Barlow's piano, which the
accused had recently purchased for her as a birthday present?"

"Out of the $309 he earned?" asked McCausland.

"That and the lifelong income he has enjoyed from his mother's
property," said Shagarach. Whereupon McCausland, Bigelow and the whole
court-room stared, and even Chief Justice Playfair's trained eyebrow was
perceptibly lifted.

"Miss Serena Lamb," called the district attorney. How Aronson blushed
and fidgeted when his idol, with eyes downcast in virgin shyness,
tripped in from the corridor at a constable's beck and mounted the
stand!

"Glory alleluia!" she said, with her right hand raised, when the clerk
had repeated the formula of the oath.

"You are a member of the salvation army, Miss Lamb?" asked the district
attorney. Her bonnet and garb sufficiently answered the question.

"You are acquainted with a young man named Saul Aronson?" was the first
question put to Serena.

"I was made known unto such an one," said the girl, in quasi-scriptural
parlance.

"By whom?"

"Pineapple Jupiter."

"How did Aronson first present himself to your attention?"

"As one who had seen the error of unbelief and wished to repent.
Alleluia!"

"As a convert, then? Did you ever have any private conference with this
convert?"

"I did."

"Will you kindly tell the jury when and where?"

"It was the month of May at my home in the city."

"In the parlor of your house?"

"Even so."

"On what date, if you remember?"

"Early in May, but the day escapes me."

"State the substance of your conversation."

"The youth had been a sinner, but his heart was touched and he
unburdened his misdeeds to me, of which this was the gravest:

"While he was still unregenerate a certain youth of his own age"--she
looked full at Robert--"had tempted him with a bribe to enter a certain
house wrongfully and open a certain safe. For the youth had cunning in
that craft. The room he entered was filled with books and a canary bird
slept in his cage, for it was evening, and a desk stood before a window
in one corner."

"I desire to call the attention of the jury to this description," said
the district attorney. "It corresponds strikingly with the description
of Prof. Arnold's study in the printed copy of Bertha Lund's testimony
at the hearing, which is in their possession. Proceed, Miss Lamb."

"And the name of the tempter was Robert Floyd." The hush deepened
perceptibly as Serena paused.

"Upon his knees with many tools," she resumed, "he toiled at the door,
but it was firm and resisted his skill. Nevertheless the youth stated
that he would have succeeded had not an interruption come and startled
the guilty pair."

"Are there any further details you desire to add to this recital?"

"Only that it was done on the Sabbath and surely unblessed labor."

"You have not seen the convert since?"

"Never, but I have heard that the courage of his faith deserted him."

"Is the man here?" asked the district attorney, turning toward
Aronson--poor Aronson, who sat open-mouthed, goggle-eyed, with gaze
riveted on the pale sweet face in the bonnet. Now a thousand eyes were
turned upon him, but still he saw only the rosebud mouth and awaited
breathlessly its answer.

"That is the man," answered the witness, pointing. The greater "Ecce
<DW25>" of history scarcely drew forth such a murmur from the bystanders.
But the gavel of the crier was heard rapping for attention, for the
court had risen promptly at the strokes of the clock.

"One moment, your honor," said Shagarach, rising, after a whispered
consultation with his assistant, now voluble and stuttering with
excitement. "I desire to ask that the court issue a warrant for the
arrest of the last witness, Miss Serena Lamb, on the charge of malicious
perjury."




CHAPTER LII.

THE ROSEBUD MOUTH.


"What in the world is he smiling for?" asked Emily. Inspector
McCausland's smile was a barometer of her own uneasiness, and she could
not help remarking his unusual geniality at the opening of the court on
Wednesday.

The previous day's work had closed with a sturdy wrangle between
Shagarach and the district attorney. Whether it was that Shagarach's
charge of perjury was not sufficiently supported (it was merely
Aronson's word against Serena's) or that Bigelow's inelastic mind
characteristically clung in the face of cogent proof to the convictions
it had already formed, he had objected might and main to the proposed
issue of a warrant and even gone so far as to protest against his
learned brother's effort to intimidate a witness of the weaker sex.
McCausland had amicably agreed to secure the attendance of Miss Lamb for
cross-examination, and so the confusion subsided. Miss Lamb was there
and so was the inspector. But what made him smile?

"Good morning, Miss Barlow," said a familiar voice, close to Emily's
ear.

"Bertha Lund!" she exclaimed. There it was, the large, fair Swedish
face, with sparkling blue eyes that danced with the pleasure of the
surprise. After a moment of silent study Emily gave her a bear-like
squeeze and only released her that she might shake hands with Robert.

"It's none of my doing, Mr. Robert," said Bertha. "If I could, I'd have
staid home in Upsala, but I gave my word to Mr. McCausland that I'd come
back, and here I am to keep it."

"But we thought you were lost. We saw the body and buried it," cried
Emily.

"Oh, that was another Bertha Lund. Mr. McCausland thought it was me,
too."

"Another one from Upsala?"

"Why, if you took all the Bertha Lunds and Nils Nilssons in Upsala you
could fill a big town with them," said the housemaid, laughing.

"And how did you happen to go home to Sweden?" asked Robert.

"Mrs. Arnold wanted another house-girl and I'd told her about my sister
Christina, who is old enough now to be handy. She was kind enough to
pay my passage over so I could bring her out with me, and let me stay
all summer, too. Did you ever see such goodness?"

"She's a very uncommon mistress, certainly," said Emily.

"It was the day after we were talking at Hillsborough that I started,"
said Bertha. "Do you remember?"

"Yes, indeed," answered Emily, brightening up, "and now let us finish
that talk. I have a hundred questions I want to ask you. Shall you
testify to-day?"

"No; I've only just got here and the lawyer said he would leave me till
the last. The voyage is very tiresome, you know."

"Then come with me," cried Emily, with animation, and drew Bertha after
her into the ante-room. Here Robert caught a glimpse of her from time to
time questioning, explaining, measuring with her hands, as if she were
satisfying herself on doubtful points of her theory. And when she
finally came out, in the middle of Miss Lamb's cross-examination, her
face wore a smile so auroral that even Chief Justice Playfair's eyes
left the witness and wandered over toward the true-hearted girl.

"Mr. Aronson told you that he worked on his knees at this mysterious
safe?" was Shagarach's opening question to Miss Lamb.

"On his knees," answered the maiden, still bonneted and fanning herself
with Emily's fan, which she had forgotten to return in the excitement of
the previous evening.

"Mr. Aronson is not an uncommonly tall man, is he?"

"A trifle taller than you are."

"But yet not above the average," persisted Shagarach.

"Perhaps not."

"The government wishes us to believe that there was a bomb purposely
placed under this safe. That would raise it from the floor several
inches, would it not?"

"I suppose so. I know nothing about the bomb."

"Will you kindly explain how the locksmith could be kneeling while at
work on a safe which, according to the testimony of Miss Lund, at the
hearing, was resting on a shelf as high as her waist from the ground?"

The witness fanned herself nervously and once or twice opened her lips
to reply, but no sound came forth. A wave of frightened sympathy passed
through the spectators in the prolonged interim of silence, like that
which seizes an audience when an orator falters and threatens to break
down.

"You do not answer, Miss Lamb?"

"I feel faint," said the girl. A chair and a glass of water were hurried
to her aid.

"Are you sure this is the man Aronson who visited you?" asked Shagarach
when she had recovered.

"Oh, yes."

"Then we have two Aronsons in the case; Mr. Saul Aronson, my assistant,
and Mr. Jacob Aronson, the piano dealer, who will testify to having
received the postal card copied on the blotting-pad. And this Mr.
Aronson who visited you declared that he had been a locksmith, if I
understood your story?"

"He said so."

"That is not surprising. Mr. Aronson, my assistant, was formerly a
locksmith. What was the date of your interview?"

"The first part of July. I can't remember the exact day," replied the
witness, a bit nettled. The rusticity was rubbing on again in her
manner, and to Saul Aronson it actually seemed that her cheekbones were
becoming prominent, like those of her horrid aunt whom he had met on
that fateful evening. But this may have been an optical illusion. The
sympathy of the spectators trembled in the balance. She seemed so young
and dove-like. But there stood Shagarach confronting her, hostile,
skeptical, uncompromising.

"Mr. Aronson had made this alleged attempt to open a safe on Sunday
evening, you said?"

"On the evening of the Sabbath."

Here Aronson gesticulated and whispered in Shagarach's ear. The lawyer
listened calmly.

"When did you first become acquainted with him?"

"I don't remember exactly. He came to our meetings for a long time
before I was introduced to him."

Serena blushed a little and Aronson's cheeks were all abloom.

"He was a convert to your faith?"

"So we thought."

"How long had he been converted?"

"I don't know."

"Pineapple Jupiter says he introduced you to Mr. Aronson about four
months ago, if the district attorney reckons rightly from his periodic
hair-cuts. Then at the time of the visit to your house in July he must
have been a convert nearly two months?"

"Perhaps."

"But the will was only drawn on June 7. And Mr. Aronson, I understand
you to testify, yielded to this temptation before he was converted?"

The witness did not answer, but looked around the court-room as if for
sympathy.

"Are we to understand that he broke into the safe before the will was
placed there?"

The witness fluttered her fan nervously and her lips were quivering. She
looked down.

"Sunday evening, you said. You are probably not aware that Prof. Arnold
read in his own library every Sunday evening up to the time of his
death?"

Serena began to cry. Instantly the tension of the audience was relaxed
and comments passed to and fro.

"She belongs to the romantic school of statisticians," whispered Wye.
Ecks responded with a cartoon of "Miss Meekness, making a slip of the
decimal point."

"Religious mania; hysterical mendacity," a doctor diagnosed it, with a
pompous frown.

"Little minx had a craving for notoriety," said a woman, elderly,
unmarried and plain.

"I should say it illustrates the pernicious effect of novel reading on a
rustic brain," murmured a clerical personage, clearing his throat before
he delivered himself.

Suddenly Shagarach's insistence left him. His voice softened. With his
very first question, the distressed look, half of reproach, half of
sympathy, toward Serena, cleared away from Aronson's face.

"Wasn't Mr. Aronson agitated on that evening, Miss Lamb?"

She blushed amid her tears and her answer was less defiant.

"Extremely agitated."

"Wasn't his story to you somewhat confused in the telling?"

"Very confused, yes, sir."

"And perhaps the outlines blurred still more in your memory by the lapse
of time?"

"Perhaps. I meant to speak of that myself," answered Serena,
brightening. Whereat the entire court-room brightened. Shagarach's
inflections became kind, almost genial now. One would have thought she
was his own witness, he stroked her so gently.

"And his accent was somewhat hard to follow?"

"Oh, very."

"He is not perfectly familiar with our language as yet?"

"No, he speaks it poorly."

The court-room was all curiosity.

"Didn't this picture of the study, which you have quoted, come in as
part of his description of a law case?"

"Why, yes; he began talking about the Floyd case."

"In which he was deeply interested at that time, as my assistant. That,
however, he did not make clear to you?"

"No."

"Can you swear that this whole picture of a Sunday-night entrance and
experiment on the safe was not an imaginary one--a piece of fiction,
invented and vividly told in the first person to illustrate what Robert
Floyd might easily have done if he had desired to destroy the will, but
what----"

Shagarach inclined slightly toward the jury, "but what he evidently did
not do?"

"Perhaps. Truly I couldn't catch half of what he was saying when he
began to talk rapidly."

"I myself am a locksmith. He could come and give me money. We go Sunday
night. Nobody home. House all still. I get down on my knees. File a
little. Drill. Somebody come. I go away. Come again. Try again."

Serena smiled a smile that sent waves of sunshine through the room.
Shagarach had not once descended to mimicry of his assistant's dialect.
But the broken fragments of speech, the confused arrangement, seemed to
call before Serena's eye an amusing picture of her lovelorn swain's
incoherence.

"Perhaps I was altogether mistaken," she volunteered.

Shagarach waved her with courtesy to the nonplussed though apparently
still obstinate district attorney. A long conference followed among the
prosecuting lawyers, while Emily heaved a sigh of relief.

Over in his front seat Ecks was gazing at Shagarach, as if trying to
pierce the great brow, not opened showily, but masked, as it were, by
the loose-falling hair. The marvelous skill of his tactics--first, the
breaking down of Serena's story through its intrinsic discrepancies,
then the building up from her own lips of a hypothetical case in the
jurors' minds--all without deviating a hair line from true courtesy and
delicacy of treatment--sank deeply into the novelist's heart. He did not
reply to Wye's comment on the underplot.

"Incarnate self-control!" he muttered to himself.

But alas for poor Saul Aronson! It was bad enough to be compelled to
flee from suspicion post haste through the gateway of public ridicule.
But to realize at last that Serena was human and no angel--capable of
pique, brusqueness and tears--capable even of resisting Shagarach! The
scales of illusion fell from his eyes and he hung his head, a chastened
youth.

"The redirect is deferred," said Bigelow, and Serena, after returning
the fan to Emily, stepped softly out. Her footfalls barely broke the
dead silence as she picked her way through the crowd.

Aronson lifted his eyes to her face. What imperfections he noted now!
The eyebrows too level, the rosebud mouth too small and the cheekbones
unmistakably present, even if barely breaking the curve. It was fated
so. Doubtless in time he would follow old Abraham Barentzen's counsel
and take some comely daughter of Israel to wife, well-dowered, a good
housekeeper, and free from tittle-tattle. But never again would his
naive heart palpitate with such virginal ecstasy as when he first gazed
through the rose-misted spectacles of love on that sweetly imperfect
gentile maiden.

"We shall now offer a mass of evidence," said the district attorney,
"tending to prove the crucial point of exclusive opportunity."

Seven witnesses took the box, one after another, and in response to
Badger's questions, swore that they were neighbors of the Arnolds, were
wide-awake and observant about the time of the fire, but saw no person
coming out of the house either in front or rear. The evidence was
negative, but cumulatively it produced its effect, leading the minds of
the jury away from Serena Lamb and her legend to the real core of the
puzzle. By the time the last witness on this point arrived, a cordon of
watchers, completely environing the house, had been drawn around it by
the government, and it seemed impossible that any one could have slipped
through unobserved.




CHAPTER LIII.

A DUMB EYEWITNESS.


"Hodgkins Hodgkins," answered the first witness who testified after the
noon recess.

"When did you first learn that Prof. Arnold had made a will?" asked the
district attorney.

"On receipt of a letter from my esteemed friend, dated June 15."

"What was the reason of Prof. Arnold's informing you of his action?"

"A long-standing, I may say a life-long friendship, had induced him to
select me as his executor."

"When you heard of his death, what action did you take?"

"I was in New York at the time on important business, which I proceeded
to expedite as far as its weighty nature would permit. Large bodies
travel slowly, you know. Then when the transaction was completed to my
satisfaction I repaired to the city and visited the home of my departed
friend, the testator."

"Did you let Floyd know of your coming?"

"I apprised him of my intention and instructed him to lock the room in
which the document was guarded."

"Did you actually call on the afternoon of the fire?"

"A short delay, occasioned by my failure to find Mr. Hardwood, the
locksmith, who was to assist me in opening the safe, retarded my arrival
until 3:45. At that time the paper was beyond my reach."

"You could not testify as to the contents of the will?"

"Only in a general way."

"Do you know any reason why, if the accused were expecting you, as he
stated that he was when he ordered the housemaid to dust the room, do
you know any reason why he should leave the house suddenly, without any
instructions as to your reception?"

"That's the best point the prosecution has made!" exclaimed Wye.

Ecks was executing a series of caricatures illustrating the involution
of Hodgkins' face back into a crab-apple. "You leave out his cunning,"
suggested Wye, looking over the heads.

"Not unless he had lighted this fire," said the senior member solemnly.
At which answer Shagarach rose with a shade more promptitude than
usual.

"Why do you profess to be the executor of Benjamin Arnold's will?"

"I am so styled over his own signature," answered Hodgkins, flourishing
the professor's letter.

"Wasn't it proved in the probate proceedings that you were only to carry
out certain minor legacies?"

"It is not becoming in me to anticipate the decision of the honorable
court in that matter."

"As executor, then, did you try to uphold the will of your friend?"

"In my opinion as a lawyer, it cannot be upheld."

"In my opinion as a lawyer, it can. I ask you a question. Did you make
any effort to uphold the will of which you claim to have been nominated
executor?"

"I satisfied myself that the task was fruitless."

"You represented a client desirous of breaking the will at the probate
proceedings, did you not?"

"The will was already broken, canceled, destroyed."

"Do you or do you not perceive a gross indelicacy in your desperate
attempt to break the will of which you say you were appointed executor,
in order to retrieve the fallen fortunes of the disinherited heir?"

"I am not here to discuss my conduct with you, sir," answered Hodgkins
testily, for the cross-examiner flusters quickly when he becomes the
cross-examined.

"When did you arrive in New York?"

"Friday evening."

"When did you call on the Arnolds?"

"On the Arnolds?" repeated Hodgkins, as if he did not understand the
question.

"On Harry Arnold, I mean?"

"Oh, Friday evening."

"You went there directly?"

"I did."

"They were your clients?"

"I am Mrs. Arnold's legal adviser."

"You told Harry Arnold of your intention to call at his uncle's on the
following day and open the safe?"

"I believe I announced my intention to approach the affair with
expedition."

"Did he object or suggest a postponement?"

"I cannot remember that he approved or demurred."

"Do you mean to testify that you informed Floyd by letter the hour at
which you would call?"

"I announced my general intention of calling."

"In the same letter in which you requested him to lock the study?"

"There was only one letter. It was dispatched from New York."

"Then how did Floyd learn of your contemplated visit?"

"I have understood that he was informed by Mrs. Arnold that afternoon."

"From whom did you understand this?"

"From Mrs. Arnold herself," said Hodgkins, looking toward that lady.

"You told her the hour?"

"Half-past two."

"And Mrs. Arnold called on Floyd, I believe, at about 2:45?"

"I believe so. I am not informed as to the exact minute."

"Was she there by appointment with you?"

"Not exactly. However, I had informed her of the time."

"As you stated before. Then Floyd only knew of your proposed visit at
second hand through Mrs. Arnold?"

"I had not informed him."

"You might have entered and taken the will away without his knowledge,
then?"

"It might have been done, though I assure you we had no such intention."

"When did you arrive at the house?"

"At 3:45."

"And Floyd had left a little before 3:30. He had waited for one hour,
without the courtesy of an appointment from you. Then because he chose
to leave the house, and did not wait upon your pleasure, you infer that
he must have committed arson and procured the death of seven of his
fellow-creatures. That will do."

"Charles Checkerberry."

A railroad conductor stepped forward to take the oath.

"What names!" said Ecks to Wye. "It's like a census of Bedlam Proper."

But Wye did not answer. He was wondering if he could weave the safe
explosion into the plot of his next melodrama.

"You are a conductor on the Southern railroad?" asked the district
attorney.

"Yes, sir."

"What time did your train leave the city on the afternoon of Saturday,
June 28?"

"The express train left at 3:29."

"Did you see the accused riding on that train?"

"Yes, sir."

"Get a full look at him."

"I am positive that is the man. I remember the fact because he had no
ticket and had to pay his fare----"

"To what point?"

"To Woodlawn."

"Go on."

"He paid his fare and declined to take the coupon, which is worth ten
cents when presented at the ticket office. Told me to keep it myself."

"This generosity is not common among passengers?"

"No, sir. That is why the incident impressed itself upon my memory."

"Did you notice anything unusual in the appearance of the accused?"

"I noticed he seemed rather excited."

"And got off at Woodlawn?"

"Yes, sir; jumped off at Woodlawn and crossed the fields over toward the
woods."

"On the unfrequented side of the station?"

"Yes, sir; toward the cemetery. There is only one house on that side."

"Whose house is that?" asked Shagarach.

"The Arnolds', I believe."

"Do you know Harry Arnold?"

"No, sir."

"He rides in on the Northern line usually, I presume?"

"I believe so; it is more up-town."

"In the city, you mean?"

"Yes, sir; a great deal more convenient to the high-toned section."

"Then if this passenger were Harry Arnold he would have had to pay a
cash fare on your railroad, as well as one not used to riding over the
road, like Floyd?"

"I suppose so. We don't exchange tickets with the Northern."

"You see a great many hundred faces in the course of a week?"

"Yes, sir."

"How many tall, dark young men, wearing full mustaches and answering to
the general description of the accused, should you say you had seen
since June 28?"

"Oh, I couldn't say as to that."

"A hundred?"

"More, probably."

"But out of these hundred or more you have a distinct recollection of
this one, the accused?"

"Yes, sir."

"And would swear his life away on the strength of your recollection?"

"Well, not exactly----"

"That is all."

"One moment," said the district attorney. "Your occupation and
experience give you exceptional training in the study of faces, do they
not?"

"Yes, sir."

At this moment Harry Arnold came into the courtroom, attended by a great
St. Bernard. The young man had hardly stepped inside the bar, when a
deep bark was heard and the dog leaped toward the accused, standing on
his hind legs and placing his paws on the wall of the cage, while he
licked Robert's hands like a spaniel. Emily was deeply affected and
tried to distract Sire's attention, but he had eyes only for his master.

"Down, Sire," said Robert.

Shagarach had paused during the interruption.

"Will you kindly shut your eyes, Mr. Checkerberry?" he now said.

The witness did as requested. Then Shagarach stepped up to Harry Arnold
and whispered to him. Harry looked at him oddly. But he shook off the
momentary confusion, and, scarcely looking at the witness, exclaimed:

"Am I the man you saw?"

"You are," answered the conductor.

"Open your eyes. Which of these two men spoke to you?" asked Shagarach.
Robert stood up beside his cousin. The resemblance was indeed striking.
Both were about the same height and both strongly marked with the
peculiarities of kindred blood. The conductor turned from one to the
other.

"Very well," said Shagarach. "It is the face of Jacob, but the voice of
Esau. For the present, that will do."

"Miss Senda Wesner."

While the bakeshop girl was pushing her way forward from the back seat
which she had occupied, Sire, who was squeezed where he lay, gravely
arose, climbed the vacated witness-box and spread his great limbs out,
majestically contemplating the spectators.

"This is the one eyewitness of the crime," said the district attorney.

"But unfortunately dumb," added Shagarach. Just then an impulse seized
Emily, who had left the cage for a moment--Emily, the most shrinking of
girls--and catching a large waste-basket which stood under the lawyers'
desks to receive the litter that accumulates in trials, she stood up and
shoved it toward the dog.

To everybody's surprise, he scrambled to his feet in alarm, backed
hastily away and barked continuously at the harmless object. Then
before the whole court, judges, jury and all, Emily clapped her hands
and gave a girlish shriek of delight--only to sink in her place
afterward, as the spectators smiled, and hide her blushes behind her
fan. But it was some little while before Sire would let her pat him.

"You work opposite the Arnold house, Miss Wesner?" asked the district
attorney.

"Directly opposite. I can look right over into their windows," said
Senda.

"But I hope you don't."

"Well, I try not to, but sometimes, you know, you can't resist the
inclination," chattered the bakeshop girl.

"You can always try."

"Oh, I do try, but you know----"

"Yes, I know. We all know. At what hour did you see Floyd coming out of
his house on the afternoon of the fire?"

"The fire was going before 3:30, because I saw it. And I'll swear Mr.
Floyd left the house at least four minutes, probably five, before."

"Walking to the right or to the left?"

"To my right, his left," answered Senda, glibly.

"And the flames broke out shortly after he went out?"

"Well, of course----" began the witness, all primed with an argument.

"Please answer yes or no."

"No--I mean yes."

"You heard the explosion?"

"Heard it? Why----"

"Where did it appear to come from?"

"It came from Prof. Arnold's study, as plain as your voice comes from
you, but I don't see----"

"That will do," said the district attorney, handing the witness over to
Shagarach.

"What do you say to my sketch of this Hebe?" asked Ecks.

"The drawing would be creditable in a gingerbread doll," answered Wye.

They were a sorry pair of lookers-on, both of them, appearing to regard
the whole panorama of creation as a sort of arsenal of happy
suggestions, especially established by Providence for the embellishment
of their forthcoming works. But Hans Heiderman in his back seat didn't
think she appeared homely at all in her red-checked dress and flaming
hair, done up in Circassian coils. Of course he was looking at the soul
of the girl, which was better than gold, and which neither Ecks nor Wye,
for all their wise smiles, the least bit understood.

"You are rather accurate in your observations of time?" asked Shagarach.

"Oh, yes; I'm noted for that. I haven't looked at the clock for an hour,
but I could tell you what time it is now."

"Shut your eyes and tell me."

"It is--about seventeen minutes past 4."

"Seventeen and a half," announced Shagarach, taking out his watch. Every
man in the room, except the judges, had done likewise, while the ladies
all studied the clock.

"Very good. At what time would you fix the explosion in the study?"

"About 3:34."

"One minute earlier, then, than District Chief Wotherspoon. Now, Miss
Wesner, do you recollect anything about a peddler in a green cart that
used to come to Prof. Arnold's?"

"Oh, that peddler. Yes, indeed, I----"

"How long had he been vending his goods through Cazenove street?"

"About a month. I know I never----"

"Had you seen him before that?"

"Never saw him before in my life, but----"

"How often did he come by?"

"Two or three times a week."

She had almost given up the attempt to work in her explanations
edgewise. The rapid volley of questions prevented all elaboration.

"How often did he stop at Prof. Arnold's?"

"Almost every time."

"Was it Bertha who came to the door?"

"No, sir; it was Ellen generally. She was the cook, you know; got $4 a
week, but she wasn't a patch on Bertha just the same."

"When did he stop coming with his--vegetables, was it, he sold?"

"Yes, sir; vegetables, and once potted plants."

"And when did he stop coming?"

"Just before the Arnold fire."

"You never saw him after the fire--as a peddler, I mean?"

Shagarach had not yet received an answer from the superintendent of
Woodlawn cemetery, and was still in the dark about his assailant. But
from the evidence he had he was satisfied that he could prove a
connection with Harry Arnold.

"No, sir; not as a peddler."




CHAPTER LIV.

THE FOOL OF THE FAMILY.


So McCausland was right, after all. The oaf had just been captured by
the local police of Woodlawn, and inquiry had vindicated the inspector's
surmise.

Far back in our story there was mention of a half-witted brother of the
Lacy girls, who jumped from the Harmon building and were killed. Nature
had made one of her capriciously unequal divisions of talent in this
family, gifting the daughters with all graces and allurements of
character, but misshaping their elder brother, Peter, both in body and
mind. And Fate, instead of rectifying the hard allotment by the merciful
removal of the oaf, had deprived the household instead of its fairer
inmates, leaving the monster to flourish on, sleeping, breathing,
performing all animal functions healthily, but reflecting only sorrow
into the heart of the mother who bore him.

The death of his sisters had converted this harmless driveller into a
maniac, nursing one deadly thought. At the Lacy common table the case of
Robert Floyd was, of course, followed with keen interest, especially
since the shyster, Slack, had persuaded certain advisory relatives, and
through them the mother, that some compensation in money for the loss of
her girls might result from an appeal to the courts. Shagarach's name,
as the defender, the possible savior of Floyd, this wrecker of their
household peace, had impressed itself on the addled intelligence of the
oaf, and being sufficiently taught to read and endowed with the cunning
of his sort, he had begun with the incoherent letters to the lawyer, and
ended with three assaults which had so nearly cost him his life. Floyd,
behind the prison bars, was beyond his reach; but if the criminal
records of the time had included any attempt to force a way into a jail
cell it is probable that the maniac would have essayed an imitation of
this. For, as McCausland had keenly noted, each of his attacks had been
made under suggestion from the daily chronicles.

Since the fire he had wandered away from home--though previously a
devoted house-haunter--probably making the rude hut in the forest his
abode and indulging his mania amid that forest solitude in long fits of
brooding. Just why he chose this habitation the mother could not say,
unless it was to be near his sister's grave. From time to time he had
returned, always to beg a little money or some articles of necessity,
and when questioned on his doings he had manifested a temper which he
was rarely known to exhibit before.

The mystery of his identity with the peddler was explained by Mrs. Lacy
when Shagarach asked her the whereabouts of her son during June. It
seems there was a street vender named Hotaling, who added to his revenue
in summer time by hiring young men to exploit the outlying suburbs with
spring produce. Strictly speaking, a license would be required, even
though their sales were made beyond the city limits. But Hotaling
dispensed with this formality, and the teamsters he employed were
unsteady fellows, of the least savory appearance, whom he rewarded with
a commission, keeping their accounts correct by the terror by which he
personally inspired them. Among Hotaling's possessions was a green cart,
and the driver selected to occupy its seat had been Peter Lacy, who had
wit enough to harness a horse and make change (indeed, he was very
shrewd at a bargain), and who accepted a pittance as recompense. The
simpleton's district had been Woodlawn. But his road from the city
market took him close to Cazenove street.

When, the next morning, the district attorney announced that Harry
Arnold and Bertha would testify, closing the case for the prosecution,
Shagarach knew that his time was at hand.

"Mr. Hodgkins has attested the existence of a will and the accused
himself at the preliminary hearing admitted knowing that he was
virtually disinherited. We have, however, thought it well to strengthen
this vital point by calling a witness who will testify to the same
admission made upon another occasion. Mr. Harry Arnold."

"You are a nephew of the late Prof. Arnold?"

"Yes, sir; his brother's son," answered Harry. He was just the least bit
nervous, his glances wandering from Shagarach's face to his mother's and
then resting with a brighter expression on that of Rosalie March, who
had come into the court-room to-day for the first time. The wild rose in
her cheeks was blooming warmly through the gossamer she wore to hide
them and her blue eyes were lifted trustfully to her lover's. Once they
caught Emily's and she bowed with a smile. Emily returned the bow, but
her heart was too full for smiling. She was sorry Rosalie had come that
morning, for Shagarach's manner told her that he was condensing his
thoughts in the resolve to wring the truth from Harry.

"And a cousin of the accused?"

"Yes, sir."

"Your relations have always been pleasant, I presume?"

"We have never had any permanent falling-out."

"And are so still?"

"Yes, sir, on my part. I hope with all my heart the jury will find him
innocent," answered Harry, with every appearance of candor.

"Have you ever had any conversation with him on the subject of your
uncle's will?"

"Only once."

"When was that?"

"Within a week after the fire."

"And where?"

"At the county jail."

"It was while the accused was in custody of the sheriff, I believe?"

"Yes, sir."

"How did you happen to visit the accused at that time?"

"I was his only living kinsman. My visit was one of sympathy."

"And what statement did the accused make regarding his knowledge of the
will?"

"Why, I believe he owned incidentally that he was disinherited, but
everybody knew it then. It was all over the town. So was I, it seems,
for that matter," added Harry.

"Everybody's knowledge is nobody's knowledge. We cannot take things for
granted because rumor has spread them broadcast. We want your specific
testimony that the accused acknowledged having learned from his uncle
that he was to receive only an insignificant fraction of the fortune
which all his life he had been expecting."

"That is my recollection of it."

"Was there any further conversation on the subject?"

"No, sir; it came up incidentally."

Shagarach paused a moment before beginning the cross-examination. Harry
eyed him and during every second of the pause the witness' color
mounted. Something in the lawyer's appearance still confused him. "This
was a visit of sympathy?" asked Shagarach.

"Yes, sir."

"Then you have seen the accused frequently since his imprisonment, I
presume?"

"Well, no, I have not."

"When did you see him last previous to yesterday?"

"Well, not since the first week."

"Not since this visit of sympathy, do you mean?"

"That was the last time."

"Then all your sympathy expended itself in that single visit?"

"No, not exactly."

"Why didn't you renew it?"

"Rob and I didn't part good friends."

"Indeed? And what was the cause of your disagreement?"

"Some thoughtless words of mine."

"Then you were at fault?"

"Wholly. I have been sorry since."

"But you have kept your repentance to yourself until now, have you not?"

"Well----"

"And volunteered to testify against your cousin?"

"No, sir; I was subpoenaed."

"From what quarter do you suppose these rumors of Floyd's disinheritance
arose?"

"I don't know."

"Consider that answer carefully."

"I have done so. I don't know. I read it in the papers."

"You knew Floyd was disinherited before your visit to his cell?"

"No, sir."

"You knew you yourself were disinherited before the fire?"

"No, sir."

"You knew a will had been made?"

"Yes, sir."

"From whom?"

"From my mother."

"Your mother and yourself share most items of family interest between
you?"

"Naturally we do. We have no secrets from each other."

"Wasn't it your mother who first informed Mr. McCausland that Robert had
been disinherited?"

"I don't know."

"Yet you read the papers, you said."

"I must have skipped that item."

"How did Mrs. Arnold know this fact?"

"I don't know."

"You are very rich, Mr. Arnold?"

"Yes, we are considered wealthy."

"So rich that I presume you were indifferent whether Prof. Arnold added
to your fortunes or not by a bequest of his property?"

"He may have thought we didn't need anything more."

"How large a stud of horses do you keep?"

"In all? Only six."

"How many servants?"

"Six."

"For a family of two?"

"My mother and myself. But then, we entertain a good deal."

"You have a summer residence at Hillsborough?"

"Yes, sir."

"And a house at Woodlawn?"

"Yes, sir."

"The supplies for your table are not generally purchased from a common
street vender, I presume?"

"I don't know. I don't attend to the commissariat."

"Shouldn't you suppose they would come from market?"

"Game and such things, yes."

"And greens?"

"Yes, I suppose so."

"When did you first hear of the burning of Prof. Arnold's house?"

"That's hard to say at this distance of time."

"I wish you would try to recollect."

"Why, I think the morning afterward--Sunday morning. Yes, it was in the
Sunday papers. I remember now."

"You remember distinctly?"

"Yes, sir."

"What paper?"

"The Beacon. We take no other."

The Beacon was the paper upon which Robert was employed, thus forming a
curious bond of communication between the two Arnold households.

"You were not in town, then, that afternoon?"

"No, sir."

"Positive of that?"

"Why, yes; I was ill--or, rather, just convalescing from a fever. Dr.
Whipple called, I believe, to see me that very Saturday."

"In the forenoon or afternoon?"

"Afternoon."

"About what hour?"

"About 3:45."

"And this fire started at 3:30?"

"I heard a witness say so in the testimony yesterday."

"Of your own knowledge you couldn't say when it started?"

"No, sir."

Harry was red as fire during all these rapid questions, some apparently
aimless, some sharply pointed.

"A man could not start that fire in Cazenove street at 3:30 and reach
your house in Woodlawn at 3:45, could he?"

"Not very well."

"He might, however, start the fire at 3:28 and reach your house at
3:48?"

"I don't know," said Harry. "Twenty minutes isn't long."

"Isn't there a train which leaves the Southern depot at 3:29?"

"I never use the Southern depot."

"Never?"

"Well, not enough to know the trains."

"I have not said that you did, Mr. Arnold. It happens, however, that
there was a train--an express train--which left the Southern depot at
3:29 on June 28, arriving in Woodlawn at 3:45. A person starting from
Prof. Arnold's house at 3:28 could have caught that train, could he
not?"

"In one minute? Yes, by hurrying."

"And, leaving the train at Woodlawn at 3:45, he could have arrived in
your house at 3:48, could he not?"

"Yes, sir, by walking briskly."

"Across the fields?"

"Across the fields."

"Wasn't it 3:48 when Dr. Whipple visited you on that Saturday of the
fire?"

"Why, of course I could not swear within a minute or two."

"But a minute or two is momentous at times--when a train is to be taken,
for example."

"Oh, yes."

"What were you doing all Saturday afternoon before the doctor arrived?"

"Why"--Harry hesitated--"I was ill in my chamber."

"Reading?"

"Perhaps. Killing time lazily."

"You have frequently to do that, I presume?"

"Sir?"

"You have no orderly programme arranged for every day?"

"Well, it varies."

"But never includes any useful occupation, I believe?"

"Well, I can afford to enjoy life."

"You are rich, you said. How fortunate to be rich! The great problem of
life then is solved for you by the drawing of a quarterly check?"

"Well, not exactly."

"If you require money, however, you simply ask for it and it comes forth
like the genii of the lamp?"

"I can usually meet what expenses I incur."

"Do you remember a man named Reddy?"

"Reddy?" repeated Harry, coloring a shade more and glancing over at
Rosalie.

"Reddy," repeated Shagarach, insistently.

"What is his business?"

"He is dead," said the lawyer, and the witness knew that evasion was
futile.

"Oh, yes, I knew that Reddy--slightly."

"Do you remember forfeiting several thousand dollars to him one evening
in a certain room?"

"Yes."

Harry was driven to the wall. He set his teeth, and now, finally at bay,
his spirit seemed to return.

"Where did that money come from?"

"From my mother."

"And from whom did she get it?"

Harry hesitated.

"From one Simon Rabofsky, a money-lender, was it not?"

"Yes."

"She had sold her family jewels, had she not?"

"Yes."

"She kept you in funds?"

"Yes, but she knew nothing of my habits."

"Then you lied to her to obtain money?"

"Yes."

"And you lied to the court awhile ago when you said that you were rich?"

"No, sir; it was only a temporary embarrassment."

"Have the jewels been redeemed?"

"I believe not."

"Do rich people generally pawn their family heirlooms and permit them to
be sold?"

"Well, no."

"Then you were so circumstanced that your disinheritance under your
uncle's will might seriously incommode you?"

"Well, his money might afford us relief."




CHAPTER LV.

WEATHERVANES VEER.


"Do you know Ellen Greeley?"

"I did know her slightly."

"Never corresponded with her?"

"Oh, no."

"You have a key to your own house, I suppose?"

"Certainly."

"And can slip out and in unobserved?"

"If I choose to."

"Which door do you generally use going into your uncle's house?"

"The front door always."

"And in coming out?"

"The same."

"You knew, however, that there was a side door opening into the
passageway?"

"Yes."

"How long are you back from Lenox?"

"Two weeks."

"Do you remember an evening entertainment there at Mr. March's?"

"The purple tea? Yes, sir."

"Do you remember falling into a species of trance on that occasion?"

"Perfectly."

"Do you remember what was on your right hand when you awoke?"

The witness drew a deep breath before he answered. He no longer had the
heart to look toward Rosalie, though her eyes were turned with stony
fixity upon his face and she had even lifted her veil.

Shagarach's manner was now as imperious, as fierce, as on that memorable
evening.

"Yes," answered Harry; "it was a lemon- glove."

"Whose glove?"

"Mine."

"A lost glove?"

"Yes."

"A right-hand glove?"

"Yes."

"Where had you lost it?"

Harry hesitated.

"Will you look about the room and tell me if you see any person besides
your mother whom you saw on that Saturday afternoon of the fire?"

Walter Riley had recovered by this time from Kennedy's caning and
occupied a front seat among the spectators. But it was Rosalie's eye
that Harry met--met and hastily avoided. Had she seen him after all that
afternoon when he crossed Bond street from the burning house? Would this
remorseless inquisitor contradict his denial with the affirmation of the
woman he loved?

"Wasn't it you instead of Floyd who paid a cash fare to Conductor
Checkerberry on the 3:29 train and whose voice he recognized here
yesterday?"

"Yes," said Harry, "it was."

"Then you had heard of the fire before Sunday morning?"

"I had."

"And you lied again when you testified to the contrary?"

"I am sick of lying. Let me tell you the truth."

"It is the truth I am searching for."

"You have tripped and tangled me," said Harry, speaking slowly, "so that
my actions when I make a clean breast of them may look worse than they
were. I wish I had told you the truth from the beginning. I was a fool
to hide it at all.

"I did leave Woodlawn that Saturday for my uncle's house on the 3
o'clock train and returned on the 3:29 from the city. I had been wrought
up by Mr. Hodgkins' visit of the night before. He was going to open the
safe at 2:30 the next day and the will would be read at last. If I were
disinherited I should be absolutely penniless, dependent on my mother,
and her property, I knew, was encumbered."

"Your mother, then, was your father's sole heir?" asked the district
attorney.

"Yes, sir."

"Encumbered largely through your extravagance?" added Shagarach.

"Through my extravagance. I was on pins and needles, too nervous to
sleep, to eat--the servants can corroborate that--until this should be
settled; too nervous even to await my mother's return."

"She had driven in to meet Mr. Hodgkins?"

"She had. It must have been nearly 3:25 when I arrived and the
appointment of Hodgkins was at 2:30."

"You took the Southern line?"

"Yes."

"Why?"

"Because I heard the train coming. I acted on the impulse, flung out of
the house and headed it off."

"Go on."

"I walked toward my uncle's up Broad street, entered the passageway,
mounted the steps and found the side door open."

"Open?"

"I mean unlocked, not ajar. There was no one stirring in the lower
floor. I wondered whether Hodgkins had come and the safe was opened.
Then I went upstairs to the study."

"Your glove in your left hand?"

"As I remember it, yes. I forgot to mention the barking of the dog
upstairs. When I got to the study door the barking was louder and the
dog seemed to be pawing at the door inside. Smoke was streaming out
through the keyhole and I could hear a loud crackling inside. I looked
at my watch"--here Harry's delivery grew broken and he stuttered over
the words--"I looked at my watch and saw that I had time to catch the
3:29. So I ran out the way I had come, slammed the door, knocked over
some boys that were blocking up the alleyway, crossed Broad street and
dove into the little passage called Marketman's row, which opens at the
other end opposite the door of the depot.

"The 3:29 train was just steaming out when I caught the last car. At
Woodlawn I jumped off on the unused side of the station and crossed the
meadows to my house. Dr. Whipple had just come and had been directed to
my room. I doubt if even the servants knew of my departure and arrival."

There was a pause when Harry finished. He looked straight at Shagarach,
flush-cheeked and ashamed, but with all the Arnold boldness.

"You have left out the vital part of your story," said the lawyer, when
it appeared that the witness had nothing more to add. "Why did you fly
from a stream of smoke issuing through a keyhole?"

"There were two reasons, shameful both of them, but I ask you to
remember that I had recently risen from a fever and that I was greatly
excited at the time. In the first place, the image of the safe in that
study had haunted me for days."

"Although you have testified that you did not know you were
disinherited. Is that another lie?"

"No, sir; it is the truth. I had absolutely no knowledge of the terms of
my uncle's will."

"Then why were you apprehensive? Why did the image of the safe in which
it was guarded haunt you?"

"Because--because I feared what actually did happen. I feared that he
had bequeathed my share of his property elsewhere."

"Go on."

"I knew that the destruction of the safe would set me back to my
position as heir, would assure me $5,000,000. It could do me no harm.
That idea flashed through me as I stood on the landing, with my hand on
the knob. And then my own position! I might be accused of setting the
fire for that very purpose. This was the thought that led me to flee. I
remember looking at my watch, as I said. The 3:29 train would place me
in safety almost before the fire was under way."

"And as a matter of fact, you were back in Woodlawn almost before the
first stream of water was played upon the burning building?"

"I reached there at 3:45."

"You didn't stop to liberate the dog?"

"No, sir."

"You didn't think it your duty to save property and life by checking the
flames or at least giving the alarm?"

"No, sir."

"You simply wanted your uncle's money."

"I wanted my uncle's money."

The gathering indignation of the audience expressed itself at this
avowal by a sharp, spontaneous hiss. But the prisoner only bit his lips.
The officers rapped for order and Chief Justice Playfair arose.

"I cannot find it in my heart to rebuke this manifestation, unseemly
though it be in a temple of justice. For I knew Benjamin Arnold for many
years. His cheek at the age of nearly fourscore had the rosy flush of a
boy's and his unimpaired vigor was a living attestation of the pure
youth and honorable manhood through which he had passed. He deserved a
better return from his brother's son than the avaricious greed for his
riches which the witness has confessed."

"Your honor," said Harry, "I have not made myself understood. It is not
for me to parry your honor's rebuke. I have richly deserved it. I have
been selfish and a seeker of my own pleasure. But it would be unjust to
my better self, which is now struggling to the surface, if I did not
disown the entertainment of such feelings now. I am on the stand under
oath and I told you the simple truth about my motives at that critical
moment."

"I find it hard," replied the chief justice, "to understand such a frame
of mind. If you were present and consented to the fire, as you admit, by
failing to check the flames or give the alarm, then it appears to me
that you are morally if not legally a self-confessed accessory after the
fact."

"The explanation can only deepen my blame, your honor. I itched for
money at that time. Yet all that I received flowed from me faster than
it came. I had exhausted my mother's income, trenched upon her credit,
borrowed of my friends, and still I craved more. I was a victim of the
passion for games of chance."

"Then you were capable of the gravest crimes," said Chief Justice
Playfair.

"The fact that the witness took the 3 o'clock train when the will was
supposed to have been read at 2:30," said the district attorney, "seems
to me evidence that he had not contemplated a crime in coming."

"I do not charge that he contemplated a crime when he started from the
house," answered Shagarach, promptly, "but I do charge that, finding an
opportunity to hand, Harry Arnold, who by his own confession was present
at the door of his uncle's study at the time this fire started, yielded
to an evil impulse, ignited the loose papers lying about and fled."

"Harry Arnold has, indeed, been traced to the study door," retorted the
district attorney, "but Robert Floyd was inside the room."

"Then we must bring Harry Arnold across the threshold," said Shagarach,
resuming the cross-examination.

"Did you not know when you entered the house that the safe was unopened,
owing to Hodgkins' detention?"

"No, sir; I knew nothing about that. When I went I expected to meet
Hodgkins there."

"Then what good would it do you to see your uncle's study burned if it
contained only an empty safe?"

"I didn't know whether the will was in the safe or not."

"And you didn't know whether the will disinherited you or not?"

"No, sir."

"But, acting on the possibility that there might be a will there, which
might disinherit you, you ran away and left the house to burn?"

"It was contemptible, I admit."

"Hadn't you met your mother that afternoon?"

"Not after she left Woodlawn."

"What time was that?"

"Before 2 o'clock."

"She left in a carriage?"

"Yes, sir; one of the family carriages."

"And arrived at your uncle's toward three?"

"She has told me so."

"Leaving there a little after three?"

"Yes, sir."

"She might have driven around, then, for fifteen minutes and returned by
the Southern depot just in time to meet you?"

"She might have done so."

"And inform you of Hodgkins' detention?"

"She might have done so, but whether you believe me or not, I never saw
my mother until she came home that evening."

"Or any messenger from her?"

"Or any messenger."

"Did you set the fire?"

"No, sir."

"Did Floyd set it?"

"I refuse to believe that he did."

"Then who did? It must have been one or the other of you two."

"Or both of them," whispered Inspector McCausland to John Davidson, but
the marshal shook his head.

"It is a mystery I cannot solve," said Harry Arnold.

"Let us help you, then. You testified before that you never corresponded
with Ellen Greeley?"

"Why should I correspond with the girl?"

"In order that she might sell you what information she could overhear
about your uncle's will."

Shagarach brought his face closer to Harry's and his eyes seemed to
blaze like searchlights, illuminating the depths of the young man's
soul.

"Will you kindly read that aloud?" The lawyer handed his witness a
letter. Harry glanced it over curiously, then read:

     "'The peddler has not come for two days, so I send you this by a
     trustworthy messenger. As I wrote you in my last, the professor
     said in the study: "Harry gets his deserts." That was all I could
     hear. Only he and Mr. Robert talked for a long time afterward. The
     will is in the safe in the study. If I hear anything more I will
     let you know, and please send me the money you promised me soon.'"

"Whose handwriting is that?" asked Shagarach.

"I never saw it before."

"It is unsigned, unaddressed and undated, is it not?"

"Yes, sir."

"Presumably, then, a letter in which both sender and receiver desired to
conceal their names?"

"Perhaps so. I cannot offer an opinion as to that."

"Don't you know that letter was written by Ellen Greeley to you?"

"No, sir; I never received such a letter."

"I am aware that you never received it. But you received the previous
letters referred to in this case, did you not? You received the letter
stating that 'Harry gets his deserts,' meaning obviously that he gets
nothing, did you not?"

"No, sir; I have never received a shred of communication from Ellen
Greeley."

"Do you know the peddler referred to in this letter?"

"No, sir."

At this point Mrs. Arnold, who had sat through each of the three
previous days' sessions, arose hurriedly and passed out. Shagarach just
caught a glimpse of a lady's back departing, but the vacant seat told
its story. He paused in his examination of Harry. It was Mrs. Arnold who
had put McCausland on Floyd's track, Mrs. Arnold who had stolen Harry's
photographs from Jacob, Mrs. Arnold who had driven up to the house in a
carriage, Mrs. Arnold who would naturally deal, through her servants,
with a street vender calling at the house.

"A subpoena blank!" he cried suddenly to Aronson. His pen flew over the
paper, filling in names and other details.

"Serve that at any cost," he said to his assistant, and Aronson smooched
the ink, so eager was he to obey.

"You do not know the peddler?" said Shagarach, taking up the
cross-examination.

"No, sir."

"You never saw a peddler in a green cart that used to call at your house
in Woodlawn during the month of June?"

"Not to my knowledge. Of course, there are peddlers everywhere and some
of them have green carts."

"Wouldn't you regard it as a peculiar circumstance if a particular
peddler began calling at your house and your uncle's house about the
time your uncle made his will and stopped his visits after the fire?"

"I don't know that I should attach importance to that circumstance. It
might be accidental."

"But he might also be a go-between."

"Between whom?"

"Between you and Ellen Greeley."

"I never conducted any intrigue of any kind with Ellen Greeley."

"Did you know the man who was captured here yesterday?"

"No, sir."

"Wasn't he the peddler referred to in Ellen Greeley's letter?"

"The letter you handed me? I do not know."

"Is this one of your lies or the truth?"

"This is the truth."

"How are we to distinguish between your lying and truth-telling?"

Harry was silent.

"The only means of distinction thus far has been our own superior proof
of the facts."

"I can only give you my word. If you choose to doubt it I am helpless."

"Will you please explain how your mother, who has left the court-room, I
perceive, was able to inform Mr. McCausland that Robert Floyd was
disinherited by his uncle and thus guide the finger of suspicion toward
an innocent man from you, the incendiary?"

"I had no hand or finger in setting that fire. Circumstances tell
against me. I have debased my own word, ruined my credibility, by a
series of perjuries, all flowing from one initial folly. I can now
understand my cousin's position--the shame of being misunderstood,
unjustly suspected, though I am not fortified, as I feel that he is, by
a consciousness of stainless honor throughout the affair. If he is
guilty, then I am, and I ask--or, rather, I insist--that you shall place
me under the same restriction of liberty as my cousin. Let me sleep
under the same roof, endure the same privations, until he is acquitted
and set free. For if to have had wrongdoing, ever so remotely, in one's
heart is guilt, then I am the guiltier of us two."

"The sheriff, I think, will provide you a lodging," said Shagarach,
coolly, and after a conference between the chief justice, the district
attorney and the lawyer it was announced that a warrant for Harry
Arnold's arrest would be granted and that he would spend the night in a
cell.

"There are still several points against the prisoner not met," said the
district attorney, when Shagarach moved for Robert's discharge.

"It is a new doctrine that a man should be held because there is
reasonable doubt of his innocence," said the lawyer. But the district
attorney was rigid and the chief justice thought it best, since there
was only one more witness for the prosecution, to let the jury decide
upon the facts, which were properly their province.

"Forgive me, Rosalie," said Harry, humbly, as he passed her, going out,
and her eyes, though they were full of mortification, disillusion,
rebuke, told that she forgave him because she loved him.

"Arnold or Floyd?" was the alternative on the lips of the multitude
surging homeward after that dramatic day, and Robert for the first time
was actually cheered when he left the courthouse.

"Looks as though we might have two hangings instead of one," remarked
Inspector McCausland to a reporter.

"Did you notice the expression on that woman who went out?" said Ecks to
Wye.

"No."

"Guilt," said Ecks, shuffling his notes into his pocket. Then Emily saw
Rosalie March's beautiful face soiled with tears and hastened down to
comfort her.

"I am sorry," she said. "Don't fear for Harry. Nobody in the world set
that fire. It just caught----"

But why importune readers with Emily's theory, when they have doubtless
already guessed it in detail?




CHAPTER LVI.

MARK TIME, MARCH!


Now that Robert's acquittal was almost assured, Emily's pity began to
overflow toward Harry Arnold and Rosalie, whose position was exactly her
own of the day before. For the vox populi had generally determined on
Harry's guilt, though there were not wanting some who, like the father
in the parable, were disposed to welcome the brilliant prodigal with
lavish entertainment, freely extending the forgiveness he implored,
while slighting the steadfastly loyal son who had never wandered from
the path of virtue. This was poor recompense to Robert for his
summer-long immurement, but he was put together of a substance
impervious to the acid actions of criticism or neglect--the oaken fiber
of the English Arnolds.

In all quarters curiosity was active about the defense. It was said by
some that the prosecution had broken down, or might break down at any
minute, and even if the last reluctant victim were haled up by Bigelow
to the shambles, where Shagarach stood, ax in hand, awaiting her, that
it would be hammering on a driven nail to put on the long array of
witnesses who had been summoned in behalf of the accused. Nevertheless
the newspapers were at pains to worm out the names of these witnesses
and to diet the public with prophetic outlines of their testimony.

The gist of it all was that Shagarach meant to clinch his client's
defense by building up a case against Harry.

Of course Emily found it hard to communicate her own confidence to
Rosalie March, although Bertha was to take the stand the following
morning and her theory would then (as she believed) receive a triumphant
demonstration. What made Harry's face fall more bitter was that the date
of his espousal to the beautiful actress had just been given to the
world. From Rosalie's hard glance at Shagarach, Emily knew there was as
much blame in her heart for the lawyer as for her lover. And Rosalie was
not the only girl who would have ransomed Harry Arnold, perjurer,
self-seeker, gambler, as he owned himself to have been, with her life,
if such a price should be asked.

"Are they sisters?" asked the thoughtless, misled by their golden hair,
when the two beautiful girls went out together, leaving Mme. Violet
behind. But a student of faces would never have fallen into such an
error. One placid and aloof, even toward the audiences whose favor she
courted, the other impulsive and approachable, throwing out tentacles of
sympathy toward every human being with whom she came in contact, they
supplemented rather than reflected each other; otherwise they would
hardly have been drawn together so strongly, and made such a concord of
friendliness.

Several surprises awaited Emily when she reached home. The first and
pleasantest was an envelope, surcharged in the upper left-hand corner
with the name of a certain magazine. This she opened with trembling
fingers, for it was not quite three weeks since she mailed to the
editor, unsigned, Robert's article on, "Proposals for a Consumers'
Trust," that fruit of his prison reflections which Dr. Silsby had found
so unpalatable. When an oblong slip of paper, perforated at the margin,
slipped out, she knew it was a check; and the editor's letter was very
urgent that "so striking a contribution should not be given to the world
without its author's signature." Here was the beginning of a career for
her sweetheart. She looked forward to the time when his qualities and
talents should be recognized, and she herself perhaps be pointed out as
the wife of Floyd, the famous writer, or thinker, or worker, or
whatsoever other name they chose to give to the best, the truest and the
most abused of men. The check, too, was of comforting value, and, since
she was a shrewd little housekeeper withal, this discovery did not abate
one particle of Emily's joy.

And yet, so little was she a lover of lucre for its own sake, the very
first item on which her eye lighted in the evening paper, though it
meant a money loss which the whole cash box of the Forum, converted into
checks, could not make good, evoked almost a scream of delight from
Emily and sent her flying into the kitchen where her mother was steeping
the tea. The good lady wiped her honest hands on her apron and with a
"Do tell!" fingered the Evening Beacon, which to-day is skimmed and
tomorrow cast into the oven, as respectfully as if it had been a fancy
valentine; then read, with Jennie, a slip of 14, on tiptoe leaning over
her shoulder, that Judge Dunder had finally decided to uphold the late
Prof. Arnold's will. Even Shagarach had hardly expected this decision.
For Judge Dunder was a confirmed devotee of legal technique and it had
been supposed that nothing less than a verbatim copy of a destroyed will
would be sustained by him.

But the main clauses of the will had certainly been reproduced, with an
abundance of circumstantial detail. The only hiatus was a remote
possibility. There may have been some smaller bequests that could not be
traced. Apparently Judge Dunder had in this case resolved to wink a
little at chicane and decide for justice in the broader sense.

"Harry Arnold may have to do something to justify his existence now,"
said Mrs. Barlow after supper to Emily. She had a prejudice against wild
young men.

"Oh, Rosalie has enough for two," answered Emily, who was standing
before the mirror putting her hat on for a visit to Walter Riley.

The first sight that met her eye when she reached the sidewalk was a
squad of salvation army soldiers, with Serena Lamb at their head,
parading through the street, chanting their invitation to sinners.
Serena held her tambourine high in air and her shrill voice dominated
the chorus like that of a precentor in the kirk. But the exercise seemed
to lack its usual spirit this evening. Was it because nobody took any
particular notice of the group? Curiosity about them was wearying itself
threadbare, and even the toddling urchins no longer gathered at the
drumbeat as they used to. Emily had often admired the devotion of these
sisters, but, looking at this unnoticed and discouraged band, she
wondered if the antagonism of the multitude were not in truth the very
sustenance of their zeal. Might not all their heroic energy exhaust
itself, like the nerve of a boxer, compelled to waste his blows in the
air, if the atmosphere of opposition should change to one of apathy?




CHAPTER LVII.

A STERN CHASE.


"At any cost!" The last words of his master tingled in Saul Aronson's
ears when he left the court-room with the summons in his hand. Ever
since the disclosures of Serena Lamb he had been more than usually
abashed in his demeanor. For in some measure he felt that it was he who
had brought this threatened catastrophe upon their cause. Here was the
opportunity to retrieve his misstep. He would prove his fidelity and
serve the writ "at any cost."

Mrs. Arnold had secured a few minutes' start, but Aronson did not doubt
his ability to overtake her. She would probably call a cab, since she
was an all-day attendant at the sittings and it was unlikely her family
carriage would be waiting for her. Impatiently he rang the elevator up,
and then, deciding just as it arrived that it was quicker to walk down,
balked the boy by tacking off toward the staircase and descending it two
steps at a time. When he reached the exit, the square was deserted. But
just around the corner, like the whisk of a vanishing tail, he caught a
glimpse of a rapidly driven cab. After this he sped, down the crowded
main thoroughfare, dodging the pedestrians as well as he could, with his
eyes on the distant vehicle, and yawing wildly at last into the arms of
a man who stood waiting on the curbstone.

"Where in the----" but the man was a herdic driver and his language may
as well be left to the imagination. Aronson saw the badge on his hat;
that was enough.

"Catch that carriage," he said, "and I'll give you $2."

"Jump in," cried the driver. The door was locked in a jiffy and
presently they were bumping over the cobblestones.

"Stop there!" shouted the burly policeman who used to escort Emily so
gallantly over the street crossing.

"It's a runaway!" cried the herdic driver, giving himself the lie by a
savage snap of his whip. The officer was in no trim for a spurt, so he
fell behind puffing. Still they bumped on, till Aronson's anxiety
mastered him and he rapped at the window for attention. The driver
stupidly reined up.

"Go on!" cried the passenger, and the whip-lash circled once more with a
crack. They were out on the long bridge to Oxford now, and the fugitive
could not be far ahead.

"Hello!" shouted the driver. The jehu in front turned his head.

"Haul up!" he hailed.

The driver in front obeyed and the two herdics were soon abreast,
Aronson getting a dusty toss in his impatience to get out. As he picked
himself up, a great fat man put his head out of the other herdic window
and began to ask the cause of the detention.

"Is Mrs. Arnold in there?" inquired Aronson, putting his head into the
herdic, just by the fat passenger's.

"Mrs. Arnold? What Mrs. Arnold? Take your head out, you impudent,--drive
away, you----" cried the fat passenger, settling back on the cushions
which he almost filled with the breadth of his back. Aronson was left
standing alone on the road, puzzling his wits what to do.

"You lost the right carriage," he said.

"I followed the one you pointed out," answered the driver, surlily.

"Well, take me back."

"Where's my $2?" asked No. 99, and Aronson had to pay him this sum, as
well as an advance fare for the ride back, before he would turn his
horse's head. Going in town, the animal made up for time gained by a
heartbreaking leisureliness of pace. No one could blame the poor hack
horse. There had been some attempt to make him look respectable by
docking his tail, but it was no more successful than a silk hat on a
prize-fighter, designed to foster the same illusion.

It was just 5:40 when Aronson reached the Northern depot and the train
for Hillsborough had left at 5:38. He had the misery of knowing that
Mrs. Arnold was probably well on her way to her summer residence by this
time, and that there was no train earlier than 7 o'clock. In the interim
he bought a ticket, supped, reflected, counted his money and studied the
subpoena.

A village bell was tolling 8 when Aronson stepped from the passenger car
out on the platform of the Hillsborough station. They had left the
sunset behind them in their eastward ride and the country village was
dark.

"I want a carriage to Mrs. Arnold's house," he said to the
station-master.

"Hacks are all in now," answered the official behind the grating,
turning to his books. But he underrated the persistency of his customer.

"I'll give you $1.50 for a team," said Aronson. The suggestion worked
magically and in less than an hour he was let down before the veranda of
the Arnold mansion. A ruby porch-light flooded him with a kind of
delighted confusion. How mild and solemn the country is at night! How
suggestive of grassy comforts the humming of the crickets! All the
shepherd that lay deep down in Aronson's nature, as in that of every one
of us, even the plainest, had time to show itself in the interval
between his ring and the servant's answer.

"Mrs. Arnold is in Woodlawn," answered the housemaid. "Can you leave
your business?"

"No, I want to see her personally."

Woodlawn! She had escaped him then. The teamster was waiting and the
servant diminishing the aperture of the door to a suspicious crack,
while he collected his thoughts.

"How long has she been in Woodlawn?" he asked.

"She just moved in yesterday morning," replied the servant, closing the
door with a slam.

"Take me back in time for the next train," said Aronson to the driver.

"Too late for the next train," came the drawling answer. "Next train is
at 9:15 and it's most 9 now."

"When is the last train?" asked Aronson, figuring on a midnight visit to
Woodlawn.

"That's the last train to-night."

Here was a wild-goose chase indeed, but Aronson had a keen suspicion
that it was the goose who was the chaser.

"What is the first train in the morning?"

"At 6:15 a. m.," answered the rustic, who usually knows his local
time-table better than his prayers.

"Can I lodge here for the night?"

"Dunno. Sam Cook might put you up. He used to keep an inn. Maybe he can
find a spare bed for you under the roof somewheres."

"Drive me to Sam Cook's," said Aronson. All the nocturnal interest of
the countryside had vanished from him now, and it was with no kindly
feeling toward Hillsborough that he stretched his limbs in the old
boniface's spare bed, laying the subpoena under his pillow and muttering
a petition to Jehovah that he might not oversleep himself and lose the
6:15 a. m. But the real danger proved to be that he would get no sleep
at all. For at midnight he was still tossing.

A cow-bell, furiously jingled, awoke him at sunrise, and he was in the
city at 7:15, on schedule time.

"To Woodlawn," a sign on one of the tracks read. But the hands of the
mock clock pointed to 7:45 and there was another half-hour of waiting.
All the world was out of bed, for the steeple bell had just tolled 8
when he arrived in Woodlawn and inquired his way to the Arnolds'.

"Just moved back!" thought Aronson. "I should say so."

Mats were hanging out of windows, servants were mopping panes, a hostler
was hosing a muddy carriage in the stable; everything showed that a
general scrubbing process had begun. To his surprise and pleasure, he
recognized the housemaid who answered his ring as Bertha Lund. She was
dressed in her smartest pink, for this was the day of her testimony.

"I want to see Mrs. Arnold," said Aronson, blurting out his message like
a schoolboy.

"Mrs. Arnold? Well, you've come too late," answered Bertha.

"Isn't she here?"

"Here! She's on her way to Europe by this time."

"To Europe!"

Saul Aronson's jaw dropped and the subpoena began to burn a hole in his
pocket. Was this a subterfuge? He would be on the alert.

"When did she start?"

"Why, this morning. You must have passed her coming out."

Passed her coming out! It was like chasing his own shadow, this constant
missing of the game he hunted.

"But wha--wha--what made her go to Europe?" stammered Aronson. He
remembered hearing Shagarach say one day that flight was confession. Was
Mrs. Arnold involved in her son's guilt? Then all the more reason for
waylaying her before she gave them the slip.

"Can't a lady go abroad if she chooses? Mrs. Arnold goes abroad every
summer."

"But Harry----"

"Yes, we're cleaning things up for Harry. They'll live here after
they're married, you know, Harry and Miss March."

"But he was arrested!"

"Arrested!"

Bertha had left the court early on the previous day and did not read the
papers.

"Didn't his mother know Harry was arrested?"

"Arrested! Harry? What for?"

"For setting his uncle's house on fire," answered Aronson, who as a
loyal partisan was one shade more thorough in his conviction of Harry's
guilt than Shagarach himself.

"Setting his uncle's house on fire! Nonsense!"

"What boat did she take?" asked Aronson, breaking in upon Bertha's
astonishment with a gesture of impatience.

"The Venetia, of the Red Star line."

"And it starts so early in the morning?"

"Yes; somewhere between 8 and 9."

Aronson looked at his watch. It was just 8:15. If he could catch a train
back, he might be in town at a little after half-past. And then--a
delay! These great steamers are often delayed!

"Toot! Toot! Toot!" came the warning whistle of an engine, and Aronson
was dashing down the path, never stopping to pick up his hat that was
lifted off by the wind, bent only on beating his steam-propelled rival
to the station. It took him the whole journey townward to recover the
wind he had lost in that unwonted quarter-mile run. People laughed at
his hatless head, but he did not heed them. Besides, if he had been a
philosopher, he might have retorted that hats on a dog-day are simply
one of the nuisances of civilized conventionality. So he took a wharf
car and in less than half an hour was running out to the edge of the
great Red Star quay, there to behold the Venetia proudly backing into
the channel on the flood of the tide and turning her head oceanward. I
regret to say this spectacle filled Aronson with violent wrath, and the
wharf loungers must have taken him for a wild man as he smote his fists
together and danced about.

"Missed your boat?" inquired casually a sea-beaten man, but Aronson was
too irate to appreciate his well-meant sympathy. He only ran to the edge
of the wharf and looked off, shading his eyes from the glare of the
water.

Presently he found the man at his elbow again.

"I can catch her for you if it's anything important," said the tar.

"I'll give you--I'll give you--" and then he checked himself, appalled
at his own rashness. "How much will you charge?" he asked.

"Well, the Venetians steaming for a record this trip."

"How much?"

"She's got a start of a mile, and going twenty knots."

"How much?"

"There were some picnic folks I expected down here to charter my tug.
Don't see them, but they may drop in. I suppose you'll allow something
for the disappointment if they come."

"How much?" persisted Aronson, but the Venetia had just disappeared
behind an island and the thought of returning empty-handed to Shagarach
acted like a rowel in his flank. "I'll give you $50," he cried,
suddenly.

"Done," said the Yankee, wringing his hand, and then Aronson knew that
he ought to have offered $25. But it was no time for haggling. "At any
cost," he repeated to himself. The mariner hurried him in and out among
the wharves, till they came upon a battered but resolute-looking
tugboat, on which two or three deck-hands were lounging.

"Get steam up, Si," cried the skipper, and after a delay which seemed an
hour to Aronson the water began to be churned to foam before her bow and
the little craft had started on its long chase.

Past the islands of the harbor, past the slow merchant schooners, past
the white-sailed careening pleasure sloops, past the harbor police boat,
past the revenue cutter, past the excursion steamers to local beaches,
past the crowded Yarmouth, they flew, cheered on by the passengers--for
everybody soon saw it was a race.

Aronson was studying the wide beam of the Venetia in front. How slowly
they were gaining! They were out beyond the farthest island in the
harbor, the lighthouse shoal that is covered at high tide, and still the
Red Star liner bore away from them with half a mile of clear water
between.

"Cheer up, shipmate," cried Perkins; "she's gettin' bigger and bigger.
Heap the coals on down there, Si."

The Venetia must have sighted her pursuer long ago, and indeed the faces
of her passengers on the bow were becoming more and more visible every
moment. But this was a record trip, and it would be beneath her dignity
to slow up for every petty rowboat that hailed her. So her engines
continued to pump and she clove the glorious waters swiftly.

"Ahoy!" shouted Capt. Perkins.

"Ahoy yourself!" came the answer. Aronson thought he saw a woman's face
that he knew on the deck.

"Heave to! A boarder!"

"Tell him to get out of bed in time," came the ungracious reply.
Evidently the Venetia's third mate was under orders not to stop for any
belated passenger.

"What's your errand?" asked the skipper, a little puzzled, of Aronson.

"I have a subpoena from the court," cried Aronson, all agog.

"Oh, you're a court officer."

Then he rounded his hands and holloaed up:

"A court officer aboard!"

Court officer! This made an impression. The third mate withdrew from the
gunwale and presently reappeared with the captain.

"Lash her to!" cried the captain. The tug-boat hugged her great sister
and a ladder was let down, upon which Aronson mounted. With the white
paper in his hand he looked decidedly formidable.

"I have a subpoena for Mrs. Alice Arnold, one of your passengers. She is
wanted as a witness in a murder trial. There she is," he added, for Mrs.
Arnold stood in front of the crowd that had rolled like a barrel of
ballast toward the center of interest. The captain was nonplused. He was
not familiar enough with law terms to know the limits of a subpoena's
authority. But he felt that he was to some extent the protector of his
passengers.

"I don't understand this," he said, turning to Mrs. Arnold.

"It is a great annoyance to me if I must go on so trifling a matter,"
she said. She was pale and her manner was haughty. To Aronson it was
something more. It bore every indication of conscious guilt. He had not
foreseen resistance. The document, with Shagarach's name appended, he
had thought would open caverns and cause walls to fall.

"There is the lady. She prefers not to go. I presume you will have to
compel her. But I don't see that I can permit violence on board my
ship."

The passengers seemed to gloat on Saul Aronson's discomfiture, and
Shagarach's faithful courier was almost beside himself. In the distance
lay the city, crowned with its gold dome, dwindling from sight. The
lonely ocean roared around him. Capt. Perkins' tiny tug still hugged the
larboard of her giant sister.

"It appears to me that paper's no good," said the second mate suddenly.
He happened to be a little of a lawyer. "Let's have a look."

Aronson reluctantly saw the summons leave his hand.

"Suffolk county. This ain't Suffolk county," cried the mate, while the
ring of passengers laughed.

"Shinny on your own side, youngster," he added, returning the paper.

"But it's America," cried Aronson.

"Just passed the three-mile limit," said the captain. He was an
Englishman, the mate was an Englishman. They had no particular love for
anything American, except the output of our national mints.

"I'm afraid the captain's right, young man," said a kind, elderly
gentleman, who might be a lawyer recruiting his health by an ocean trip
before the fall term opened. "You've got beyond your jurisdiction."

Mrs. Arnold had gone below and the hatless invader reluctantly abandoned
his prize. On the homeward voyage he gave way to exhaustion and fell
into several naps of forty winks' duration, during the last of which a
grotesque dream troubled his peace. He found himself chasing Serena Lamb
around an enormous bass drum, as big as the Heidelberg tun, on the
stretched skin of which the oaf, the manikin and the pantaloon were
dancing a fandango. Still he chased Serena and still she escaped him,
the toes of the dancers pounding a heavy tattoo. Faster and faster
pursuer and pursued whirled around the side of the drum, till Aronson's
head swam like a kitten's in hot pursuit of his own tail. At last in his
despair he hurled the subpoena at Serena's head.

The three dancers disappeared with a bursting sound into the hollow of
the drum, and he awoke to find the tugboat just bumping its side against
the dock. The sea had smoothed down to a lack-luster glaze, but it was
less dreary than the heart of the baffled pursuer.

"We may as well cancel that little debit item now," said Skipper
Perkins, flinging a coil of rope ashore.

"At any cost," repeated Aronson sorely to himself. He had done his best,
but Mrs. Arnold was out of sight of land--a fugitive from justice.




CHAPTER LVIII.

THE MIRACLE.


It was after two o'clock when, breathless, spiritless, and penniless,
Saul Aronson arrived at the court-room again. The examination of Bertha
was nearly ended.

"Will you take these spectacles, Miss Lund?" said Shagarach, handing
Bertha a pair. They looked like the "horns" that used to straddle our
grandfathers' noses, being uncommonly large, circular in shape and
fitted with curved wires to pass over the ears.

"Do they bear any resemblance to Prof. Arnold's?"

"I thought they were his at first."

"Let us suppose they are. Will you kindly leave the stand and adjust
them on this desk near the window exactly as the professor's spectacles
lay on his desk that afternoon?"

Bertha took the spectacles without hesitation, walked over to the
crier's desk and placed them on its edge, with their wires toward the
window. Then she laid a book under the wires. This made the glasses tip
a little downward. The sun was shining in fiercely.

"I believe there was a waste basket in the study?" continued Shagarach.

"Yes, sir."

"Like this one?" He held up an uncommonly capacious basket, over two
feet high.

"The very same kind."

"And as full as this is?"

"Fuller. It was just bursting with papers."

"What kind of paper?"

"Black wrapping paper that comes off the professor's books."

"Something like this?"

"Just like that."

The paper in Shagarach's wicker basket was not black, exactly, but of a
deep shade which could hardly be described by the name of any known
color.

"Why are you wearing a white dress, Miss Lund?"

Bertha blushed a little.

"Because light colors are cooler."

"Coolness is a strong recommendation on a day like this. Do you remember
whether the Saturday of the fire was as warm?"

"It was very hot, I know."

"The hottest day of a hot June, was it not?"

"Well, I couldn't answer that. The thermometer goes up and down like a
jumping-jack here."

"You had pulled up the study curtains so as to let in the sunlight, I
believe?"

"Yes, sir. That was for the poor canary. And, besides, the professor
used to say the sunlight was good--good for plants and animals and
everything that has life in it."

"The sun, then, was shining down on the desk where the spectacles lay?"

"Just as you see it here, sir."

She pointed to the desk, by which she was still standing.

"You know, from your own experience in dresses, that dark colors absorb
more heat than light ones?"

"Sir?"

"Light dresses are cooler than dark ones?"

"Yes, sir."

"Brown paper burns more quickly than white?"

"Oh, yes. You can kindle a fire with brown paper better."

"Will you take the waste-basket and place it on the floor just as far
from those spectacles as the waste-basket in the study stood, and in the
same direction."

Bertha measured off a short distance with her eye, picked up the basket,
shifted it once or twice, and finally set it down with a satisfied air.

"There!"

"It stood just behind the desk, then?"

"What is the drift of all this?" interrupted the district attorney, his
deep voice falling on a breathless silence. A presentiment had spread
from one to another that the solution was at hand.

"We are reproducing the exact condition of the study at the time the
fire occurred. These spectacles, containing powerful cataract lenses,
are made from the same prescription as Prof. Arnold's, by his optician,
Mr. Dean. The large basket, a mild eccentricity of the professor's, and
the black paper, are also duplicates."

"What do you hope to prove?" asked Chief Justice Playfair. His answer
was a shrill cry, like a bird note, from Emily, who had never withdrawn
her eye from the waste basket.

"It's catching!"

Every eye in the court-room turned. Those who sat near enough beheld two
tiny holes, like worm holes, suddenly pierced in the black paper, where
the rays of light converged through the tilted lenses. Each had a crisp,
brown margin around it. Gradually they widened and spread, as though
instinct with life, one working faster than the other. Then suddenly a
little circle of flame curled out, and before the onlookers realized the
miracle in progress, the waste basket was throwing up red tongues of
fire and sighing softly. If it were not for Sire's furious barking the
railing of the bar might have caught. As it was, its varnish had begun
to crackle before the nearest court officer recovered his presence of
mind and threw the blazing basket out of the window.

Gazing at Shagarach the spectators waited breathlessly for an
elucidation. Before speaking he walked over and shook hands warmly with
Emily. When he turned at last, his words came forth like a whirlwind.

"I think nothing more is needed to convince us of the source from which
this fire originated. We have reproduced every circumstance of its
occurrence in order to provide you with ocular demonstration. The sun
supplying extraordinary heat, the burning glass duplicated by an expert
and placed in position by a trustworthy witness, the focal distance
estimated by her, the highly combustible fuel, identical in color and
substance--can you not turn back in imagination and see happening in
that deserted study all that has happened here? Can you not follow it on
to the destruction of the mantel fringe just above, the awaking of the
sleepy dog, the mad leap of the flames from wall to wall, and at last
that whole irresistible carnival of the elements? It was no human torch,
but the hot gaze of the sun, condensed through these powerful lenses,
which lit that funeral pyre and dug graves for seven human beings. Fate,
working out its processes in that lonely room, was the mysterious
incendiary toward whom we have all been blindly groping."

As Shagarach pointed upward in his awful close, the audience, on the
very brink of an outburst, held back their enthusiasm for an instant.
But the chief justice was seen to bow his head, and at once the
excitement broke all barriers. A loud spontaneous cheer, rendered half
articulate by cries of "Shagarach, Shagarach!" scattered to the winds
the customary restraints of the surroundings. Women embraced each other;
strangers shook hands warmly; Emily Barlow rushed over and hugged
Rosalie March, and drops were glistening on Chief Justice Playfair's
eyelashes when he lifted his head. McCausland, standing agape on the
threshold of his ante-room, completed the happy picture.

By a natural reaction the outburst was succeeded by a spell of tense
repression, amid which the district attorney rose and moved the
withdrawal of the case against Robert Floyd. The foreman of the jury
announced that he and his associates had long been agreed upon the
innocence of the accused, and Chief Justice Playfair, dignified as an
archbishop blessing his flock, expressed in his golden idiom the common
feeling of thankfulness that the trial had so felicitous a termination.

And so the logic of Richard McCausland and the psychology of Meyer
Shagarach were both overmatched by the intuitions of a loyal girl--a
girl who knew something about lenses because she dealt with cameras, and
who brought to the problem a concentration of thought as powerful as
that of the sunlight on the professor's spectacles. Both the lawyer and
the detective came forward promptly to pay her their homage; and the
last she saw of McCausland he was focusing one of the lenses on the end
of his cigar, readily obtaining the desired red light.

But Emily was not holding court even for them while there was still a
stroke of work to be done. Her second thought was of Harry in his cell.
With admirable modesty avoiding Robert's kiss, she took him and Rosalie
by the hand and made them friends at once. Then, leaving Beulah Ware to
chat with Brother Tristram, the trio sped over to the jail. At the
court-house door they met Dr. Silsby, who came flying along, florid and
out of breath, mopping his face with a napkin which he had probably
mistaken in his hurry for a handkerchief.

"Is it over?" he cried.

"Over? We're acquitted," cried Emily, using a reckless plural. "What
makes you so late?"

"Stopped to nib a quill after lunch," grumbled the director of the
Arnold Academie, as he gave Robert a pump-handle squeeze.

It was a changed Harry that stepped out of the cell in murderers' row.
In the confidence of the preceding night the two cousins had grown
closer together than ever before. After all, as Harry had said on the
stand, they were both Arnolds and the sole survivors of that eccentric
blood.

But a stronger bond was soon to rivet them together in the waxing amity
of the two girls, one of whom was dearer than kin to each of the
cousins. Rosalie's exclusiveness and the wealth she continued to enjoy
with an equanimity he could not understand at first prevented Robert
from doing full justice to her. But on acquaintance she proved as merry
(among her chosen few) as any lassie, and a certain child-like
innocence, all the more singular from her association with the stage,
made a charming foil to the ripe womanly beauty of her person.

Moreover, as the months roll by, and Robert learns more and more what
men and women really are, he lowers his standards gradually as to what
may be expected of them. Not that he has given up his ideals. Far from
it! He is still a socialist; and, what is better, a sower of good seed
in action, placing goodly portions of his income here and there, with
something of his uncle's bow-wow manner, to be sure, as though it were
no personal pity tugging at his heart-strings, but only an abstract
desire to see things ship-shape in the world, an impatience at disorder.
But this affected matter-of-factness doesn't suffice to shake off the
blessings of his pensioners.

If he chooses to set all orthodoxy by the ears with that series of
fire-brand polemics which, as readers remember, succeeded the "Modest
Proposal for a Consumers' Trust," so that one old granny among his
opponents has already christened him "the Legicide," what do Mrs. Lacy
and Mrs. Riley know or care? I fancy most of us, if we were burdened
with a maniac son or blessed with the love of a dutiful boy like
Walter, would accept assistance for their sakes, and ask no questions of
the giver.

Mrs. Arnold is too old now ever to forget that her maiden name was Alice
Brewster. It was the fear of staining that name with the published
details of a petty intrigue that caused her to sail for Europe so
suddenly. For it was she, conscious of her own financial straits, and
anxious for Harry if his inheritance should be cut off, who had
conducted the correspondence with Ellen Greeley. In this there was
nothing criminal; but much to wound her pride. So she had fled from the
ordeal of testifying before Shagarach, and the disclosures which she
foresaw were inevitable.

Her embarrassments have since been tided over and the family fortune
saved, at least from total shipwreck. The match with Rosalie March
guarantees to Harry the gratification of all his tastes; and, as the
young couple are coming to Woodlawn to live, the sting of separation is
softened. Ah, the fond jealous mothers who must forget their own
honeymoons to chide the child that only obeys divine injunctions in
cleaving to another when the time is ripe!

Of Emily Barlow what more can be said? Praise is superfluous; intrusion
on her betrothal joys, soon to merge into marriage happiness, deeper if
less unmixed with care, an impertinence.

Of late the whole world seems conspiring to bless her. Only the other
day Tristram March won the sculpture prize at the academy with his
life-size group "Driftwood Pickers at the Sea Level." The critics have
gone mad over the boldness of his conception--one figure erect and
peering far off, two stooping and adding to their fagot bundles. The
whole ocean is there in that fretted line of surf--a bare suggestion.
One interpreter has gone so far as to see in the figures a type of
humanity itself, on the margin of some mysterious beneficent element
which surrounds it. But the salient fact to Emily is that Tristram won
the prize, and is striving might and main for another more precious--the
hand of the dark, collected girl who gave him both subject and
inspiration during their memorable week at Digby.

And Shagarach--the iron will, the giant mind--what is his destiny? To be
always a criminal lawyer, a consorter with publicans and sinners?
Always, we may be sure, to protect the innocent, to whatever sphere the
buoyancy of his genius may lift him; and whether he wear ultimately the
ermine or the laurel wreath he will never forget one cause, which
brought him, with much added celebrity and some unhappiness, the
friendship of three couples so rare and fine--that great search for the
Incendiary which is registered (not without pique) in Inspector
McCausland's private docket as "The Eye-Glass Fiasco."

THE END.

       *       *       *       *       *

Transcriber's Note: Hyphen variations left as printed.





End of Project Gutenberg's The Incendiary, by W. A. (William Augustine) Leahy

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