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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Pawned, by Frank L. Packard
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Pawned
-
-Author: Frank L. Packard
-
-Release Date: May 2, 2016 [EBook #51965]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PAWNED ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by David Widger from page images generously
-provided by the Internet Archive
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-PAWNED
-
-By Frank L. Packard
-
-The Copp, Clark Co., Limited Toronto
-
-1921
-
-[Illustration: 0001]
-
-[Illustration: 0007]
-
-
-
-
-PAWNED
-
-
-
-
-BY WAY OF INTRODUCTION
-
-
-
-
-HER STORY
-
-
-|A HANSOM cab, somewhat woebegone in appearance, threaded its way in a
-curiously dejected manner through the heart of New York's East Side. A
-fine drizzle fell, through which the street lamps showed as through a
-mist; and, with the pavements slippery, the emaciated looking horse,
-the shafts jerking and lifting up at intervals around its ears, appeared
-hard put to it to preserve its footing.
-
-The cabman on his perch drove with his coat collar turned up and his
-chin on his breast. He held the reins listlessly, permitting the horse
-to choose its own gait. At times he lifted the little trap door in the
-roof of the cab and peered into the interior; occasionally his hand,
-tentatively, hesitantly, edged toward a bulge in his coat pocket-only to
-be drawn back again in a sort of panic haste.
-
-The cab turned into a street where, in spite of the drizzle, hawkers
-with their push-carts under flaring, spitting gasoline banjoes were
-doing a thriving business. The horse went more slowly. There was very
-little room. With the push-carts lining the curbs on both sides, and
-the overflow of pedestrians from the sidewalks into the street, it was
-perhaps over-taxing the horse's instinct to steer a safe course for the
-vehicle it dragged behind it. Halfway along the block a wheel of
-the hansom bumped none too gently into one of the push-carts, nearly
-upsetting the latter. The hawker, with a frantic grab, saved his wares
-from dis-aster-by an uncomfortably narrow margin, and, this done, hurled
-an impassioned flood of lurid oratory at the two-wheeler.
-
-The cabman lifted his chin from his breast, stared stonily at the
-hawker, slapped the reins mechanically on the roof of the cab as an
-intimation to the horse to proceed, and the cab wended its way along
-again.
-
-At the end of the block, it turned the corner, and drew up before a
-small building that was nested in between two tenements. The cabman
-climbed down from his perch, and stood for a moment surveying the three
-gilded balls that hung over the dingy doorway, and the lettering--"Paul
-Veniza. Pawnbroker"--that showed on the dully-lighted windows which
-confronted him.
-
-He drew his hand across his eyes; then, reaching suddenly inside the
-cab, lifted a bundle in his arms, and entered the shop. A man behind the
-counter stared at him, and uttered a quick ejaculation. The cabman went
-on into a rear room. The man from behind the counter followed. In the
-rear room, a woman rose from a table where she had been sewing, and took
-the bundle quickly from the cabman's arms, as it emitted a querulous
-little cry.
-
-The cabman spoke for the first time.
-
-"She's dead," he said heavily.
-
-The woman, buxom, middle-aged, stared at him, white-faced, her eyes
-filling suddenly with tears.
-
-"She died an hour ago," said the cabman, in the same monotonous
-voice. "I thought mabbe you'd look after the baby girl for a bit, Mrs.
-Veniza--you and Paul."
-
-"Of course!" said the woman in a choked voice. "I wanted to before,
-but--but your wife wouldn't let the wee mite out of her sight."
-
-"She's dead now," said the cabman. "An hour ago."
-
-Paul Veniza, the pawnbroker, crossed to the cabman's side, and, placing
-his hands on the other's shoulders, drew the man down into a chair.
-
-"Hawkins," he said slowly, "we're getting on in years, fifty each of us,
-and we've known each other for a good many of those fifty." He cleared
-his throat. "You've made a mess of things, Hawkins."
-
-The woman, holding the baby, started suddenly forward, a red flush
-dyeing her cheeks.
-
-"Paul!" she cried out sharply. "How can you be so cruel at such an hour
-as this?"
-
-The pawnbroker shook his head. He had moved to the back of the cabman's
-chair. Tall, slight, grave and kindly-faced, with high forehead and the
-dark hair beginning to silver at the temples, there seemed something
-almost esthetic about the man.
-
-"It is _the_ hour," he said deliberately; "the one hour in which I must
-speak plainly to my old friend, the one hour that has come into his
-life which may mean everything to him." His right hand slipped from the
-cabman's shoulder and started, tentatively, hesitantly, toward a bulge
-in the cabman's coat pocket--but was drawn back again, and found its
-place once more on the cabman's shoulder. "I was afraid, Hawkins, when
-you married the young wife. I was afraid of your curse."
-
-The cabman's elbows were on the table; he had sunk his chin in his
-hands. His blue eyes, out of a wrinkled face of wind-beaten tan, roved
-around the little room, and rested finally on the bundle in the woman's
-arms.
-
-"That's finished now," he said dully.
-
-"I pray God it is," said Paul Veniza earnestly; "but you said that
-before--when you married the young wife."
-
-"It's finished now--so help me, God!" The cabman's lips scarcely moved.
-He stared straight in front of him.
-
-There was silence in the little, plainly furnished room for a moment;
-then the pawnbroker spoke again:
-
-"I was born here in New York, you know, after my parents came from
-Italy. There was no money, nothing--only misery. I remember. It is like
-that, Hawkins, isn't it, where you have just come from, and where you
-have left the young wife?"
-
-"Paul!" his wife cried out again. "How can you say such things? It--it
-is not like you!" Her lips quivered. She burst into tears, and buried
-her face in the little bundle she snuggled to her breast.
-
-The cabman seemed curiously unmoved--as though dazed, almost detached
-from his immediate surroundings. He said nothing.
-
-The pawnbroker's hands still rested on the cabman's shoulders, a
-strange gentleness in his touch that sought somehow, it seemed, to offer
-sympathy for his own merciless words.
-
-"I have been thinking of this for a long time, ever since we knew that
-Claire could not get better," he said. "We knew you would bring the
-little one here. There was no other place, except an institution. And so
-I have been thinking about it. What is the little one's name?"
-
-The cabman shook his head.
-
-"She has no name," he said.
-
-"Shall it be Claire, then?" asked the pawnbroker gently.
-
-The cabman's fingers, where they rested on his cheeks, gathered a fold
-of flesh and tightened until the blood fled, leaving little white spots.
-He nodded his head.
-
-Again the pawnbroker was silent for a little while.
-
-"My wife and I will take little Claire--on one condition," he said at
-last, gravely. "And that condition is that she is to grow up as our
-child, and that, though you may come here and see her as often as you
-like, she is not to know that you are her father."
-
-The cabman turned about a haggard face.
-
-"Not to know that I am her father--ever," he said huskily.
-
-"I did not say that," said Paul Veniza quietly. He smiled now, leaning
-over the cabman. "I am a pawnbroker; this is a pawn-shop. There is a way
-in which you may redeem her."
-
-The cabman pressed a heavy hand over his eyes.
-
-"What is that way?" He swallowed hard as he spoke.
-
-"By redeeming yourself." The pawnbroker's voice was low and earnest.
-"What have you to offer her to-day, save a past that has brought only
-ruin and misery? And for the future, my old friend? There is no home.
-There was no home for the young wife. You said when you married Claire,
-as you have said to-night, that it was all finished. But it was not
-finished. And your curse was the stronger. Well, little Claire is only
-a baby, and there would be years, anyhow, before just a man could take
-care of her. Do you understand, my old friend? If, at the end of those
-years, enough of them to make sure that you are sure of yourself, you
-have changed your life and overcome your weakness, then you shall have
-little Claire back again, and she shall know you as her father, and be
-proud of you. But if you do not do this, then she remains with us, and
-we are her parents, and you pledge me your word that it shall be so."
-
-There was no answer for a long time. The woman was still crying--but
-more softly now. The cabman's chin had sunk into his hands again. The
-minutes dragged along. Finally the cabman lifted his head, and, pushing
-back his chair, stumbled to his feet.
-
-"God--God bless you both!" he whispered. "It's all finished now for
-good, as I told you, but you are right, Paul. I--I ain't fit to have her
-yet. I'll stand by the bargain." He moved blindly toward the door.
-
-The pawnbroker interposed.
-
-"Wait, Hawkins, old friend," he said. "I'll go with you. You'll need
-some help back there in the tenement, some one to look after the things
-that are to be done."
-
-The cabman shook his head.
-
-"Not to-night," he said in a choked way. "Leave me alone to-night."
-
-He moved again toward the door, and this time Paul Veniza stepped aside,
-but, following, stood bareheaded in the doorway as the other clambered
-to his perch on the hansom cab.
-
-Hawkins slapped his reins on the roof of the cab. The horse started
-slowly forward.
-
-The drizzle had ceased; but the horse, left to his own initiative, was
-still wary of the wet pavements and moved at no greater pace than a
-walk. Hawkins drove with his coat collar still turned up and his chin on
-his breast.
-
-And horse and man went aimlessly from street to street--and the night
-grew late.
-
-And the cabman's hand reached tentatively, hesitantly, a great many
-times, toward a bulge in his coat pocket, and for a great many times
-was withdrawn as empty as it had set forth. And then, once, his fingers
-touched a glass bottle neck... and then, not his fingers, but his
-lips... and for a great many times.
-
-It had begun to rain again.
-
-The horse, as if conscious of the futility of its own movements, had
-stopped, and, with head hanging, seemed to cower down as though seeking
-even the slender protection of the shafts, whose ends now made half
-circles above his ears.
-
-Something slipped from the cabman's fingers and fell with a crash to the
-pavement. The cabman leaned out from his perch and stared down at the
-shattered glass.
-
-"Broken," said the cabman vacantly.
-
-
-
-
-TWENTY YEARS LATER
-
-|IT was silver light. Inside the reefs the water lay placid and still,
-mirroring in a long, shimmering line the reflection of the full tropic
-moon; beyond, ever and anon, it splashed against its coral barriers in
-little crystal showers. It was a soundless night. No breeze stirred the
-palms that, fringing white stretches of beach around the bay, stood out
-in serene beauty, their irregular tops etched with divine artistry into
-the sky-line of the night.
-
-Out from the shore, in that harbor which holds no sanctuary in storm,
-the mail boat, dark save for her riding lights, swung at her moorings;
-shoreward, the perspective altered in the moonlight until it seemed that
-Mount Vaea had lowered its sturdy head that it might hover in closer
-guardianship over the little town, Apia straggled in white patches along
-the road. And from these white patches, which were dwellings and stores,
-there issued no light.
-
-From a point on the shore nearest the mail boat, a figure in cotton
-drawers and undershirt slipped silently into the water and disappeared.
-Thereafter, at intervals, a slight ripple disturbed the surface as the
-man, coming up to breathe, turned upon his back and lay with his face
-exposed; for the rest he swam under water. It was as though he were in
-his natural element. He swam superbly even where, there in the Islands,
-all the natives were born to the sea; but his face, when visible on the
-few occasions that it floated above the surface, was the face, not of a
-native, but of a white man.
-
-And now he came up in the shadow of the steamer's hull where, near the
-stern, a rope dangled over the side, almost touching the water's edge.
-And for a moment he hung to the rope, motionless, listening. Then he
-began to swarm upward with fine agility, without a sound, his bare feet
-finding silent purchase against the iron plates of the hull.
-
-Halfway up he paused and listened intently again. Was that a sound as of
-some one astir, the soft movement of feet on the deck above? No, there
-was nothing now. Why should there be? It was very late, and Nanu, the
-man who lisped, was no fool. The rope had hung from exactly that place
-where, of all others, one might steal aboard without attracting the
-attention of the watch.
-
-He went on again, and finally raised his head above the rail. The deck,
-flooded with moonlight, lay white and deserted below him. He swung
-himself over, dropped to the deck--and the next instant reeled back
-against the rail as a rope-end, swung with brutal force, lashed across
-his face, raising a welt from cheek to cheek. Half stunned, he was
-still conscious that a form had sprung suddenly at him from out of the
-darkness of the after alleyway, that the form was one of the vessel's
-mates, that the form still swung a short rope-end that was a murderous
-weapon because it was little more flexible than iron and was an inch in
-thickness, and that, behind this form, other forms, big forms, Tongans
-of the crew, pressed forward.
-
-A voice roared out, hoarse, profane, the mate's voice:
-
-"Thought you'd try it again, did you, you damned beachcomber? I'll teach
-you! And when I find the dog that left that rope for you, I'll give
-him a leaf out of the same book! You bloody waster! I'll teach you!
-I'll----"
-
-The rope-end hissed as it cut through the air again, aiming for the
-swimmer's face. But it missed its mark. Perhaps it was an illusion
-of the white moonlight, lending unreality to the scene, exciting the
-imagination to exaggerate the details, but the swimmer seemed to move
-with incredible speed, with the lithe, terrible swiftness of a panther
-in its spring. The rope-end swished through the air, missing a suddenly
-lowered head by the barest fraction of an inch, and then, driven home
-with lightning-like rapidity, so quick that the blows seemed as one, the
-swimmer's fists swung, right and left, crashing with terrific impact to
-the point of the mate's jaw. And the mate's head jolted back, quivered
-grotesquely on his shoulders for an instant like a tuning fork, sagged,
-and the great bulk of the man collapsed and sprawled inertly on the
-deck.
-
-There was a shuffle of feet from the alleyway, cries. The swimmer swung
-to face the expected rush, and it halted, hesitant. It gave him time to
-spring and stand erect upon the steamer's rail. On the upper deck faces
-and forms began to appear. A man in pajamas leaned far out and peered at
-the scene.
-
-There was a shout from out of the dark, grouped throng in the alleyway;
-it was chorused. The rush came on again for the rail; and the dripping
-figure that stood there, with the first sound that he had made--a laugh,
-half bitter, half of cool contempt--turned, and with a clean dive took
-the water again and disappeared.
-
-Presently he reached the shore. There were more than riding lights out
-there on the steamer now. He gave one glance in that direction, shrugged
-his shoulders, and started off along the road. At times he raised his
-hand to brush it across his face where the welt, raw and swollen now,
-was a dull red sear. He walked neither fast nor slow.
-
-The moonlight caught the dripping figure now and then in the open
-spaces, and seemed to peer inquisitively at the great breadth of
-shoulder, and the rippling play of muscle under the thin cotton drawers
-and shirt, which, wet and clinging, almost transparent, scarce hid the
-man's nakedness; and at the face, that of a young man, whose square jaw
-was locked, whose gray eyes stared steadily along the road, and over
-whose forehead, from the drenched, untrimmed mass of fair hair, the
-brine trickled in little rivulets as though persistent in its effort
-to torture with its salt caress the raw, skin-broken flesh across the
-cheeks.
-
-Then presently a point of land ran out, and, the road ignoring this, the
-bay behind was shut out from view. And presently again, farther on, the
-road came to a long white stretch of beach on the one hand, and foliage
-and trees on the other. And here the dripping figure halted and stood
-hesitant as though undecided between the moonlit stretch of sand, and
-the darkness of a native hut that was dimly outlined amongst the trees
-on the other side of the road.
-
-After a moment he made his way to the hut and, groping around, secured
-some matches and a box of cigarettes. He spoke into the empty blackness.
-
-"You lose, Nanu," he muttered whimsically. "They wouldn't stand water
-and I left them for you. But now, you see, I'm back again, after all."
-
-He lighted a cigarette, and in the flame of the match stared
-speculatively at the small, broken pieces of coral that made the floor
-of the hut, and equally, by the addition of a thin piece of native
-matting, his bed.
-
-"The sand is softer," he said with a grim drawl.
-
-He went out from the hut, crossed the road, flung himself upon his back
-on the beach, and clasped his hands behind his head. The smoke from his
-cigarette curled languidly upward in wavering spirals, and he stared for
-a long time at the moon.
-
-"Moon madness," he said at last. "They say if you look long enough the
-old boy does you in."
-
-The cigarette finished, he flung the stub away. After a time, he raised
-his head and listened. A moment later he lay back again full length on
-the sand. The sound of some one's footsteps coming rapidly along the
-road from the direction of the town was now unmistakably audible.
-
-"The jug for mine, I guess," observed the young man to the moon.
-"Probably a file of native constabulary in bare feet that you can't hear
-bringing up the rear!"
-
-The footsteps drew nearer, until, still some distance away, the
-white-clad figure of a man showed upon the tree-fringed road. The
-sprawled figure on the beach made no effort toward flight, and less
-toward concealment. With a sort of studied insolence injected into his
-challenge, he stuck another cigarette between his lips and deliberately
-allowed full play to the flare of the match.
-
-The footsteps halted abruptly. Then, in another moment, they crunched
-upon the sand, and a tall man, with thin, swarthy face, a man of perhaps
-forty or forty-five, who picked assiduously at his teeth with a quill
-toothpick, stood over the recumbent figure.
-
-"Found you, have I?" he grunted complacently.
-
-"If you like to put it that way," said the young man indifferently. He
-raised himself on his elbow again, and stared toward the road. "Where's
-the army?" he inquired.
-
-The tall man allowed the point of the quill toothpick to flex and strike
-back against his teeth. The sound was distinctive. _Tck!_ He ignored the
-question.
-
-"When the mate came out of dreamland," he said, "he lowered a boat and
-came ashore to lay a complaint against you."
-
-"I can't say I'm surprised," admitted the young man. "I suppose I am
-to go with you quietly and make no trouble or it will be the worse for
-me--I believe that's the usual formula, isn't it?"
-
-The man with the quill toothpick sat down on the sand. He appeared to be
-absorbed for a moment in a contemplation of his surroundings.
-
-"These tropic nights are wonderful, aren't they? Kind of get you."
-He plied the quill toothpick industriously. "I'm a passenger on the
-steamer, and I came ashore with the mate. He's gone back--without laying
-the complaint. There's always a way of fixing things--even injured
-feelings. One of the native boat's-crew said he knew where you were to
-be found. He's over there." He jerked his head in the direction of the
-road.
-
-The young man sat bolt upright.
-
-"I don't get you," he said slowly, "except that you are evidently not
-personifying the majesty of the law. What's the idea?"
-
-"Well," said the other, "I had three reasons for coming. The first was
-that I thought I recognized you yesterday when they threw you off the
-steamer, and was sure of it to-night when--I am a light sleeper--I came
-out on the upper deck at the sound of the row and saw you take your
-departure from the vessel for the second time."
-
-"I had no idea," said the young man caustically, "that I was so well
-known. Are you quite sure you haven't made a mistake?"
-
-"Quite!" asserted the other composedly. "Of course, I am not prepared
-to say what your present name is--you may have considered a change
-beneficial--so I will not presume in that respect. But you are, or were,
-a resident of San Francisco. You were very nice people there. I have
-no knowledge of your mother, except that I understand she died in your
-infancy. A few years ago your father died and left you, not a fortune,
-but quite a moderate amount of money. I believe the pulpits designate
-it as a 'besetting sin.' You had one--gambling. The result was that you
-traveled the road a great many other young men have traveled; the only
-difference being that, in so far as I am competent to speak, you
-hold the belt for speed and all-round proficiency. You went utterly,
-completely and whole-heartedly to hell."
-
-The tall man became absorbed again in his surroundings. "And I take it,"
-he said presently, "that in spite of the won became absorbed again in
-his surroundings. And I take it," he said presently, "that in spite of
-the wonders of a tropic night, you are still there."
-
-The young man shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"You have put it very delicately," he said, with a grim smile. "I'm
-sorry, but I am obliged to confess that the recognition isn't mutual.
-Would you mind telling me who you are?"
-
-"We'll get to that in due course," said the other. "My second reason was
-that it appeared to me to be logical to suppose that, having once
-been the bona fide article, you could readily disguise yourself as a
-gentleman again, and your interpretation of the rôle would be beyond
-suspicion or----"
-
-"By God!" The welt across the young man's face grew suddenly white, as
-though the blood had fled from it to suffuse his temples. He half rose,
-staring levelly into the other's eyes.
-
-The tall man apparently was quite undisturbed.
-
-"And the third reason is that I have been looking for just such a--there
-really isn't any other word--gentleman, providing he was possessed
-of another and very essential characteristic. You possess that
-characteristic in a most marked degree. Your actions tonight are
-unmistakable evidence that you have nerve."
-
-"It strikes me that you've got a little of it yourself," observed the
-young man evenly.
-
-The quill toothpick under the adroit guidance of his tongue traveled
-from the left- to the right-hand side of the other's mouth.
-
-"It is equally as essential to me," he said dryly. "You appear to fill
-the bill; but there is always the possibility of a fly in the ointment;
-complications--er--unpleasant complications, perhaps, you know,
-that might have arisen since you left San Francisco, and that
-might--er--complicate matters."
-
-The young man relapsed into a recumbent position upon the sand, his
-hands clasped under his head again, and in his turn appeared to be
-absorbed in the beauty of the night.
-
-"Moon-madness!" he murmured pityingly.
-
-"A myth!" said the tall man promptly. "Would you mind sketching in
-roughly the details of your interesting career since you left the haunts
-of the aristocracy?"
-
-"I don't see any reason why I should." The young man yawned.
-
-"Do you see any reason why you shouldn't?" inquired the other
-composedly.
-
-"None," said the young man, "except that the steamer sails at daybreak,
-and I should never forgive myself if you were left behind."
-
-"Nor forgive yourself, perhaps, if you failed to sail on her as a
-first-class passenger," said the tall man quietly.
-
-"What?" ejaculated the young man sharply.
-
-The other shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"It depends on the story," he said.
-
-"I--I don't understand." The young man frowned. "There's a chance for me
-to get aboard the mail boat?"
-
-"It depends on the story," said the other again.
-
-"Moon-mad!" murmured the young man once more, after a moment's silence.
-"But it's cheap at the price, for it's not much of a story. Beginning
-where you left off in my biography, I ducked when the crash came in San
-Francisco, and having arrived in hell, as you so delicately put it, I
-started out to explore. Mr. Dante had it right--there's no use stopping
-in the suburbs. I lived a while in his last circle. It's too bad he
-never knew the 'Frisco water-front; it would have fired his imagination!
-I'm not sure, though, but Honolulu's got a little on 'Frisco, at that!
-Luck was out. I was flat on my back when I got a chance to work my way
-out to Honolulu. One place was as good as another by then."
-
-The young man lit a cigarette, and stared at the glowing tip
-reminiscently with his gray eyes.
-
-"You said something about gambling," he went on; "but you didn't say
-enough. It's a disease, a fever that sets your blood on fire, and makes
-your life kind of delirious, I guess--if you get it chronic. I guess I
-was born with it. I remember when I was a kid I--but I forgot, pardon
-me, the mail boat sails at daybreak."
-
-"Go as far as you like," said the tall man, picking at his teeth with
-the quill toothpick.
-
-The young man shook his head.
-
-"Honolulu is the next stopping place," he said. "On the way out I picked
-up a few odd dollars from my fellow-members of the crew, and----"
-
-"Tck!" It was the quill toothpick.
-
-The young man's eyes narrowed, and his jaw set challengingly.
-
-"Whatever else I've done," he stated in a significant monotone, "I've
-never played crooked. It was on the level."
-
-"Of course," agreed the tall man hastily.
-
-"I sat in with the only stakes I had," said the young man, still
-monotonously. "A bit of tobacco, a rather good knife that I've got yet,
-and a belt that some one took a fancy to as being worth half a dollar."
-
-"Certainly! Of course!" reiterated the tall man in haste.
-
-The quill toothpick was silent.
-
-"A pal of mine, one of the stokers, said he knew of a good place to play
-in Honolulu where there was a square deal," continued the young man;
-"so, a night or so after we reached there, we got shore leave and
-started off. Perhaps you know that part of Honolulu. I don't. I didn't
-see much of it. I know there's some queer dumps, and queer doings, and
-the scum of every nationality under the sun to run up against. And I
-know it was a queer place my mate steered me into. It was faro. The
-box was run by an old Chinaman who looked as though he were trying to
-impersonate one of his ancestors, he was so old. My mate and I formed
-the English-speaking community. There were a Jap or two, and a couple of
-pleasant-looking cutthroats who cursed in Spanish, and a Chink lying on
-a bunk rolling his pill. Oh, yes, the place stunk! Every once in a while
-the door opened and some other Godforsaken piece of refuse drifted in.
-By midnight we had a full house of pretty bad stuff.
-
-"It ended in a row, of course. Some fool of a tout came in chaperoning
-a party of three men, who were out to see the sights; they were
-passengers, I found out later, from one of the ships in port. I don't
-know what started the rumpus; some private feud, I guess. The first
-thing I knew one of the Spaniards had a knife out and had jumped for the
-tout. It was a free-for-all in a minute. I saw the tout go down, and he
-didn't look good, and the place suddenly struck me as a mighty unhealthy
-place to be found in on that account. The stoker and I started to fight
-our way through the jam to the door. There was a row infernal. I guess
-you could have heard it a mile away. Anyway, before we could break from
-the clinches, as it were, the police were fighting their way in just as
-eagerly as we were fighting our way out.
-
-"I didn't like the sight of that tout lying on the floor, or the thought
-of what might happen in the police court the next morning if I were one
-of the crowd to adorn the dock. And things weren't going very well. The
-police were streaming in through the doorway. And then I caught sight of
-something I hadn't seen before because it had previously been hidden by
-a big Chinese screen--one of those iron-shuttered windows they seem so
-fond of down there. Things weren't very rosy just at that moment because
-about the worst hell-cat scramble on record was being made a little
-worse by some cheerful maniac starting a bit of revolver practice, but I
-remember that I couldn't help laughing to save my soul. In the mêlée one
-of the folding wings of the screen had suddenly doubled up, and,
-besides the window, I saw hiding behind there for dear life, his
-face pasty-white with terror, a very courageous gentleman--one of the
-rubbernecks who had come in with the tout. He was too scared, I imagine,
-even to have the thought of tackling such formidable things as iron
-shutters enter his head. I yelled to the stoker to get them open, and
-tried to form a sort of rear guard for him while he did it. Then I heard
-them creak on their hinges, and heard him shout. I made a dash for it,
-but I wasn't quite quick enough. One of the policemen grabbed me, but
-I was playing in luck then. I got in a fortunate swing and he went down
-for the count. I remember toppling the screen and the man behind it
-over on the floor as I jumped sideways for the window; and I remember a
-glimpse of his terrorized face, his eyes staring at me, his mouth wide
-open, as I took a headlong dive over the window sill. The stoker picked
-me up, and we started on the run.
-
-"The police were scrambling through the window after us. I didn't need
-to be told that there wouldn't be a happy time ahead if I were caught.
-Apart from that tout who, though I had nothing to do with it, gave the
-affair a very serious aspect, I was good for the limit on the statute
-books for resisting arrest in the first place, and for knocking out an
-officer in the second. But the stoker knew his way about. We gave
-the police the slip, and a little later on we landed up in a sailors'
-boarding-house run by a one-eyed cousin of Satan, known as Lascar Joe.
-We lay there hidden while the tout got better, and the Spanish hidalgo
-got sent up for a long term for murderous assault. Finally Lascar Joe
-slipped the stoker aboard some ship; and a week or so later he slipped
-me, the transfer being made in the night, aboard a frowsy tramp, bound
-for New Zealand."
-
-The young man paused, evidently inviting comment.
-
-"Go on," prompted the man with the quill toothpick softly.
-
-"There isn't very much more," said the young man. He laughed shortly.
-"As far as I know I'm the sole survivor from that tramp. She never got
-to New Zealand; and that's how I got here to Samoa. She went down in
-a hurricane. I was washed ashore on one of this group of islands about
-forty or fifty miles from here. I don't know much about the details; I
-was past knowing anything when the bit of wreckage on which I had lashed
-myself days before came to port. There weren't any--I was going to say
-white people on the island, but I'm wrong about that. The Samoans are
-about the whitest people on God's green earth. I found that out. There
-were only natives on that island. I lived with them for about two
-months, and I got to be pretty friendly with them, especially the old
-fellow who originally picked me up half drowned and unconscious on the
-beach, and who took me into the bosom of his family. Then the missionary
-boat came along, and I came back with it to Apia here."
-
-The young man laughed again suddenly, a jarring note in his mirth.
-
-"I don't suppose you've heard that original remark about the world
-being such a small place after all! I figured that back here in Apia a
-shipwrecked and destitute white man would get the glad hand and at least
-a chance to earn his stake. Maybe he would ordinarily; but I didn't. I
-hadn't said anything to the missionary about that Honolulu escapade, and
-I was keeping it dark when I got here and started to tell the shipwreck
-end of my story over again. Queer, isn't it? Lined up in about the first
-audience I had was the gentleman with the pasty face that I had toppled
-over with the screen in the old Chink's faro dump. He was one of the big
-guns here, and had been away on a pleasure trip, and Honolulu had been
-on his itinerary. That settled it. The missionary chap spoke up a bit
-for me, I'll give him credit for that, though I had a hunch he was going
-to use that play as an opening wedge in an effort to reform me later on.
-But I had my fingers crossed. The whites here turned their backs on me,
-and I turned my back on the missionary. That's about all there was to
-it. That was about two weeks ago, and for those two weeks I've lived in
-another of Mr. Dante's delightful circles."
-
-He sat suddenly upright, a clenched fist flung outward.
-
-"Not a cent! Not a damned sou-marquee! Nothing but this torn shirt, and
-what's left of these cotton pants! Hell!"
-
-He lay back on the sand quite as suddenly again, and fell to laughing
-softly.
-
-"Tck!" It was the quill toothpick.
-
-"But at that," said the young man, "I'm not sure you could call me
-a cynic, though the more I see of my own breed as compared with the
-so-called heathen the less I think of--my own breed! I still had a card
-up my sleeve. I had a letter of introduction to a real gentleman and
-landed proprietor here. His name was Nanu, and he gave me his house to
-live in, and made me free of his taro and his breadfruit and all his
-worldly possessions; and it was the old native who took care of me on
-the other island that gave me the letter. It was a queer sort of letter,
-too--but never mind that now.
-
-"Splendid isolation! That's me for the last two weeks as a cross between
-a pariah and a mangy cur! What amazes me most is myself. The gentleman
-of the Chinese screen is still in the land of the living and walking
-blithely around. Funny, isn't it? That's one reason I was crazy to get
-away--before anything happened to him." The tanned fist closed fiercely
-over a handful of sand, then opened and allowed the grains to trickle
-slowly through the fingers, and its owner laughed softly again. "I've
-lived through hell here in those two weeks. I guess we're only built to
-stand so much. I was about at the end of my rope when the mail steamer
-put in yesterday. I hope I haven't idealized my sojourn here in a way
-that would cause you to minimize my necessity for getting away, no
-matter to where or by what means! Nanu and I went out to the ship in his
-outrigger. Perhaps I would have had better luck if I had run into any
-other than the particular mate I did. I don't know. I offered to work my
-passage. Perhaps my fame had already gone abroad--or aboard. He invited
-me to make another excursion into Dante-land. But when he turned his
-back on me I slipped below, and tucked myself in behind some of the
-copra sacks they were loading. Once the steamer was away I was away
-with her, and I was willing to take what was coming. But I didn't get a
-chance. I guess the mate was sharper than I gave him credit for. After
-about four hours of heat and stink down there below decks that I had to
-grit my teeth to stand, he hauled me out as though he knew I had been
-there all the time. I was thrown off the steamer.
-
-"But I wasn't through. Steamers do not call here every day. I wonder
-if you'll know what I mean when I say I was beginning to be afraid of
-myself and what might happen if I had to stick it out much longer? That
-mangy cur I spoke of had me lashed to the mast from a social standpoint.
-I tried it again--to-night. Nanu fixed it for me with one of the crew to
-hang that rope over the side, and--well, I believe you said you had seen
-what happened. I believe you said, too, that a chance still existed of
-my sailing with the mail boat, depending upon my story." He laughed a
-little raucously. "I hope it's been interesting enough to bail me out;
-anyway, that's all of it."
-
-The tall man sat for a moment in silence.
-
-"Yes," he said at last; "I am quite satisfied. Dressed as a gentleman,
-with money in your pockets, and such other details as go with the rôle,
-you would never be associated with that affair in Honolulu. As a matter
-of fact your share in it was not so serious that the police would dog
-you all over the world on account of it. In other words, and what really
-interests me, is that you are not what is commonly designated as a
-'wanted' man. Yes, I may say I am thoroughly satisfied."
-
-The young man yawned and stretched himself.
-
-"I'm delighted to hear it. I haven't any packing to do. Shall we stroll
-back to the ship?"
-
-"I hope so." The quill toothpick was busy again. "The decision
-rests with you. I am not a philanthropist. I am about to offer you a
-situation--to fill which I have been searching a good many years to find
-some one who had the necessary qualifications. I am satisfied you are
-that man. You do not know me; you do not know my name, and though you
-have already asked what it is, I shall still withhold that information
-until your decision has been given. If you agree, I will here and now
-sign a contract with you to which we will both affix our bona fide
-signatures; if you refuse, we will shake hands and part as friends and
-strangers who have been--shall we use your expression?--moon-mad under
-the influence of the wonders of a tropic night."
-
-"Something tells me," said the young man softly, "that the situation is
-not an ordinary one."
-
-"And you are right," replied the other quietly. "It is not only not
-ordinary, but is, I think I may safely say, absolutely unique and
-without its counterpart. I might mention in passing that I am not in
-particularly good health, and the sea voyage I was ordered to take
-explains my presence here. I am the sole owner of one of the largest,
-if not the largest, business enterprises in America; certainly its
-turn-over, at least, is beyond question the biggest on the American
-continent. I have establishments in every city of any size in both the
-United States and Canada--and even in Mexico. The situation I offer you
-is that of my confidential representative. No connection whatever will
-be known to exist between us; your title will be that of a gentleman of
-leisure--but your duties will be more arduous. I regret to say that in
-many cases I fear my local managers are not--er--making accurate returns
-to me, and they are very hard to check up. I would require you to travel
-from place to place as a sort of, say, secret inspector of branches,
-and furnish me with the inside information from the lack of which my
-business at present, I am afraid, is suffering severely."
-
-"And that business?" The young man had raised himself to his elbow on
-the sand.
-
-"The one that is nearest to your heart," said the tall man calmly.
-"Gambling."
-
-The young man leaned slowly forward, staring at the other.
-
-"I wonder if I quite get you?" he said.
-
-"I am sure you do." The tall man smiled. "My business is a chain of
-select and exclusive gambling houses where only high play is indulged
-in, and whose clientele is the richest in the land."
-
-The young man rose to his feet, walked a few steps away along the beach,
-and came back again.
-
-"You're devilishly complimentary!" he flung out, with a short laugh. "As
-I understand it, then, the price I am to pay for getting away from here
-is the pawning of my soul?"
-
-"Have you anything else to pawn?" inquired the other--and the quill
-toothpick punctuated the remark: "Tck!"
-
-"No," said the young man, with a twisted smile. "And I'm not sure I've
-got that left! I am beginning to have a suspicion that it was in your
-'branch' at San Francisco that I lost my money."
-
-"You did," said the other coolly. "That is how I came to know you.
-Though not personally in evidence in the 'house' itself, San Francisco
-is my home, and my information as to what goes on there at least is
-fairly accurate."
-
-The young man resumed his pacing up and down the sand.
-
-"And I might add," said the tall man after a moment, "that from a point
-of ethics I see little difference in the moral status between one who
-comes to gamble and one who furnishes the other with the opportunity to
-do so. You are perhaps hesitating to take the hurdle on that account?"
-
-"Moral status!" exclaimed the young man sharply. He halted abruptly
-before the other. "No--at least I am not a hypocrite! What right have I
-to quarrel with moral status?"
-
-"Very well, then," said the other; "I will go farther. I will give you
-everything in life that you desire. You will live as a gentleman of
-wealth surrounded by every luxury that money can procure, for that is
-your rôle. You may gamble to your heart's content, ten, twenty, fifty
-thousand a night--in my houses. You will travel the length and breadth
-of America. I will pay every expense. There is nothing that you may not
-have, nothing that you may not do."
-
-The young man was silent for a full minute then, with his hands dug in
-his pockets, he fell to whistling under his breath very softly--but very
-deliberately.
-
-An almost sinister smile spread over the tall man's lips as he listened.
-
-"If I am not mistaken," he observed dryly, "that is the aria from
-Faust."
-
-"Yes," said the young man--and stared the other in the eye. "It is the
-aria from Faust."
-
-The tall man nodded--but now his lips were straight.
-
-"I accept the rôle of Mephistopheles, then," he said softly. "Doctor
-Faustus, you know, signed the bond."
-
-The young man squatted on the sand again. His face was curiously white;
-only the ugly welt, dull red, across his cheeks, like the mark of some
-strange branding-iron, held color.
-
-"Then, draw it!" he said shortly. "And be damned to you!"
-
-The tall man took a notebook and a fountain pen from his pocket. He
-wrote rapidly, tore out the leaf, and on a second leaf made a copy of
-the first. This, too, he tore out.
-
-"I will read it," he said. "You will observe that no names are
-mentioned; that I have still reserved the privilege of keeping my
-identity in abeyance until the document is signed. This is what I have
-written: _For good and valid consideration the second signatory to
-this contract hereby enters unreservedly into the employ of the first
-signatory for a period which shall include the lifetime of one or
-other of the undersigned, or until such time as this agreement may be
-dissolved either by mutual consent or at the will of the first signatory
-alone. And the first signatory to this contract agrees to maintain
-the second signatory in a station in life commensurate with that of a
-gentleman of wealth irrespective of expense, and further to pay to the
-second signatory as a stated salary the sum of one thousand dollars a
-month._" He looked up. "Shall I sign?"
-
-"Body and soul," murmured the young man. He appeared to be fascinated
-with the restless movement of the quill toothpick in the other's
-mouth. "Have you another toothpick you could let me have?" he inquired
-casually.
-
-The tall man mechanically thrust his fingers into his vest pocket; and
-then, as though but suddenly struck with the irrelevancy, and perhaps
-facetiousness, of the request, frowned as he found himself handing over
-the article in question.
-
-"Shall I sign?" His tone was sterner. "It is understood that the
-signatures are to be bona fide and----"
-
-"Yes, sign it. It is quite understood." The young man spoke without
-looking up. He seemed to be engrossed in carefully slitting the point of
-the quill toothpick he had acquired with his knife.
-
-The other signed both sheets from the notebook.
-
-The young man accepted the two slips of paper, but refused the proffered
-fountain pen. In the moonlight he read the other's signature: Gilbert
-Larmon. His lips tightened a little. It was a big name in San Francisco,
-a name of power. Few dreamed perhaps where the sinews of that power came
-from! He drew from his pocket a small bottle, uncorked it, dipped in
-the quill toothpick, and with his improvised pen wrote with a rasping,
-spluttering noise beneath the other's signature on each of the two slips
-of paper. One of these slips he returned to the other--but beneath the
-tall man's signature there was no mark of any kind whatever.
-
-Through narrowing eyes the tall man had been watching, and now his face
-darkened ominously, and there was something of deadly coolness in his
-voice as he spoke.
-
-"What tomfoolery is this?" he demanded evenly.
-
-"No; it's quite all right," said the young man placidly. "Just a whim
-of mine. I can't seem to get that Doctor Faustus thing out of my head.
-According to the story, I think, he signed in a drop of blood--and I
-thought I'd carry a sort of analogy along a bit. That stuff's all right.
-I got it from my old native friend on that island I was telling you
-about. It's what my letter of introduction to Nanu was written with.
-And--well, at least, I guess it stands for the drop of blood, all right!
-Take it down there to the shore and dip that part of the paper in the
-salt water."
-
-The tall man made no answer. For a moment he remained staring with
-grim-set features at the other, then he got up, walked sharply to the
-water's edge, and, bending down, moistened the lower portion of the
-paper. He held it up to the moonlight. Heavy black letters were slowly
-taking form just beneath his own signature. Presently he walked back up
-the beach to the young man, and held out his hand.
-
-"Let us get back to the ship--John Bruce," he said.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER ONE--ALADDIN'S LAMP
-
-|JOHN BRUCE, stretched at full length on a luxurious divan in the most
-sumptuous apartment of the Bayne-Miloy, New York's newest and most
-pretentious hostelry, rose suddenly to his feet and switched off the
-lights. The same impulse carried him in a few strides to the window. The
-night was still, and the moon rode high and full. It was the same moon
-that, three months ago, he had stared at from the flat of his back
-on the beach at Apia. A smile, curiously tight, and yet curiously
-whimsical, touched his lips. If it had been "moon-madness" that had
-fallen upon the gambler king and himself that night, it had been a
-madness that was strangely free in its development from hallucination!
-That diagnosis no longer held. It would be much more apposite to lay it
-bluntly to the door of--Mephistopheles! From the moment he had boarded
-the mail steamer he had lived as a man possessed of unlimited wealth,
-as a man with unlimited funds always in his possession or at his instant
-command.
-
-He whistled softly. It was, though, if not moon-madness, perhaps the
-moon, serene and full up there as it had been that other night, which he
-had been watching from the divan a few moments before, that had sent his
-mind scurrying backward over those intervening months. And yet, perhaps
-not; for there would come often enough, as now, moments of mind groping,
-yes, even the sense of hallucination, when he was not quite sure but
-that a certain bubble, floating at one moment in dazzlingly iridescent
-beauty before his eyes, would dissolve the next into blank nothingness,
-and---- Well, what would it be then? Another beach at some Apia, until
-another Mephistopheles, in some other guise, came to play up against his
-rôle of Doctor Faustus again?
-
-He looked sharply behind him around the darkened room, whose darkness
-did not hide its luxury. His shoulder brushed the heavy silken portière
-at his side; his fingers touched a roll of banknotes in his pocket,
-a generous roll, whose individual units were of denominations more
-generous still. These were realities!
-
-Mephistopheles at play! He had left Larmon at Suva, Fiji. Thereafter,
-their ways and their lives lay apart--outwardly. Actually, even here
-in New York with the continent between them, for Larmon had resumed
-his life in which he played the rôle of a benevolent and retired man of
-wealth in San Francisco, they were in constant and extremely intimate
-touch with each other.
-
-A modern Mephistopheles! Two men only in the world knew Gilbert Larmon
-for what he was! One other besides himself! And that other was a man
-named Maldeck, Peter Maldeck. But only one man knew him, John Bruce, in
-his new rôle, and that was Gilbert Larmon. Maldeck was the manager of
-the entire ring of gambling houses, and likewise the clearing house
-through which the profits flowed into Larmon's coffers; but to Maldeck,
-he, John Bruce, was exactly what he appeared to be to the world at
-large, and to the local managers of the gambling houses in particular--a
-millionaire plunger to whom gambling was as the breath of life. The
-"inspector of branches" dealt with Gilbert Larmon alone, and dealt
-confidentially and secretively over Maldeck's head--even that invisible
-writing fluid supplied by the old Samoan Islander playing its part when
-found necessary, for it had been agreed between Larmon and himself that
-even the most innocent appearing document received from him, John Bruce,
-should be subjected to the salt water test; and he had, indeed, already
-used it in several of the especially confidential reports that he had
-sent Larmon on some of the branches.
-
-He shrugged his shoulders. The whole scheme of his changed existence
-had all been artfully simple--and superbly efficient. He was under no
-necessity to explain the source of his wealth except in his native city,
-San Francisco, where he was known--and San Francisco was outside
-his jurisdiction. With both Larmon and Maldeck making that their
-headquarters, other supervision of the local "branch" was superfluous;
-elsewhere, his wealth was inherited--that was all. So, skipping San
-Francisco, he had come leisurely eastward, gambling for a week or
-two weeks, as the case might be, in the various cities, following as
-guidance apparently but the whim of his supposedly roué inclinations,
-and he had lost a lot of money--which would eventually find its way
-back to its original source in the pockets of Gilbert Larmon, via the
-clearing house conducted by Peter Maldeck. It was extremely simple--but,
-equally, extremely systematic. The habitues of every branch were
-carefully catalogued. He had only--and casually--to make the
-acquaintance of one of these in each city, and, in turn, quite
-inevitably, would follow an introduction to the local "house"; and, once
-introduced, the entrée, then or on any subsequent visit to that city,
-was an established fact.
-
-John Bruce laughed suddenly, softly, out into the night. It had been
-a good bargain that he had made with Mephistopheles! Wealth, luxury,
-everything he desired in life was his. On the trail behind him in the
-cities he had already visited he had nightly lost or won huge sums of
-money until he had become known as the millionaire plunger. It was quite
-true that, in as much as the money, whether lost or won, but passed from
-his right- to his left-hand pocket--the pockets being represented by
-one Gilbert Larmon--the gambler craving within him was but ill
-served, almost in a sense mocked; but that phase of it had sunk into
-insignificance. The whole idea was a gigantic gamble--a gamble with
-life. The whole fabric was of texture most precarious. It exhilarated
-him. Excitement, adventure, yes, even peril, beckoned alluringly and
-always from around the corner just ahead. He stood against the police;
-he stood a very excellent chance of being discovered some morning minus
-his life if the men he was set to watch, and who now fawned upon him and
-treated him with awe and an unholy admiration, should get an inkling of
-his real identity and his real purpose in their houses!
-
-He yawned, and as though glorying in his own strength flexed his great
-shoulders, and stretched his arms to their full length above his head.
-God, it was life! It made of him a superman. He had no human ties to
-bind him; no restraint to know; no desire that could not be satiated.
-The past was wiped away. It was like some reincarnation in which he
-stood supreme above his fellow men, and they bowed to their god. And he
-was their god. And if he but nodded approval they would lie, and cheat,
-and steal, and commit murder in their greed of worship, they whose souls
-were in pawn to their god!
-
-He turned suddenly from the window, switched on the lights, drew from
-his pocket a great sum of money in banknotes, and stood staring at it.
-There were thousands in his hand. Thousands and thousands! Money! The
-one universally-orthodox god! For but one of these pieces of paper in
-his hand he could command what he would, play upon human passions at his
-whim, and like puppets on a stage of his own setting move the followers
-of the Great Creed, that were numbered in their millions, at his will!
-It was only over the few outcasts, the unbelievers, that he held no
-sway. But he could afford to ignore the minority! Was he not indeed a
-god?
-
-And it had cost him nothing. Only the pawning of his soul; and, like
-Faustus, the day of settlement was afar off. Only the signing of a bond
-that postulated a denial of what he had already beforehand held in light
-esteem--a code of canting morals. It was well such things were out of
-the way! Life stretched the fuller, the rosier, the more red-blooded
-before him on that account. He was well content. The future lured him.
-Nor was it money alone. There was the spice of adventure, the battle
-of wits, hardly inaugurated yet, between himself and those whose
-underground methods were the _raison d'être_ of his own magically
-enhanced circumstances.
-
-John Bruce replaced the money in his pocket abruptly, and frowned. That
-was something, from still another standpoint, which he could not afford
-to lose sight of. He had to justify his job. Gilbert Larmon had stated
-that he was not a philanthropist, and it was written in the bond that
-Larmon could terminate the agreement at will. Yes, and that was
-queer, tool What kind of a man was Larmon? He knew Larmon, as Larmon
-superficially subjected himself to inspection and speculation; but
-he was fully aware that he did not know Larmon the man. There seemed
-something almost sinister in its inconsistency that Larmon should at one
-and the same time reserve the right to terminate that bond at will while
-his very signature upon it furnished a weapon which, if he, John Bruce,
-chose to use it, placed the other at his mercy. What kind of a man was
-Larmon? No fool, no weak-ling--that was certain. And yet at a word he,
-John Bruce, could tear the other from the pseudorighteous pedestal upon
-which he posed, strip the other naked of the garments that clothed his
-criminal activities, and destroy utterly the carefully reared structure
-of respectability that Larmon had built up around himself. It might be
-very true that he, John Bruce, would never use such a weapon, even under
-provocation; but Larmon could not be sure of that. How then did Larmon
-reconcile his reservation to terminate the contract at will and yet
-furnish his co-signatory with the means of black-mailing him into a
-continuance of it? What kind of a man was Larmon? What would he be like
-with his back to the wall? What _other_ reservation had been in Larmon's
-mind when he had drawn that bond?
-
-And then a queer and bitter smile came to John Bruce's lips. The god
-of money! Was he so sure that he was the god and not the worshiper? Was
-that it? Was that what Larmon counted upon?--that only a fool would risk
-the sacrifice of the Aladdin's lamp that had been thrust into his
-hands, and that only a fool but would devote body and soul to Larmon's
-interests under the circumstances!
-
-The smile grew whimsical. It was complimentary in a sense. It was based
-on the premise that he, John Bruce, was not a fool. He shrugged his
-shoulders. Well, therein Larmon was right. It would not be his, John
-Bruce's, fault if anything short of death terminated the bond which had
-originated that tropic night on the moon-lit beach in Samoa three months
-ago!
-
-He looked at his watch. It was nine o'clock. It was still early for
-play; but it was not so early that his arrival in the New York "branch,"
-where he had been a constant visitor for the last four nights, could
-possibly arouse any suspicion, and one's opportunities for inside
-observation were very much better when the play was desultory and but
-few present than in the crowded rooms of the later hours.
-
-"If I were in England now," said John Bruce, addressing the chandelier,
-as he put on a light coat over his evening clothes, "I couldn't get away
-with this without a man to valet me--and at times, though he might be
-useful, he might be awkward. Damned awkward! But in America you do, or
-you don't, as you please--and I don't!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER TWO--THE MILLIONAIRE PLUNGER
-
-|JOHN BRUCE left the hotel and entered a taxi. A little later, in
-that once most fashionable section of New York, in the neighborhood of
-Gramercy Square, he was admitted to a stately mansion by a white-haired
-negro butler, who bowed obsequiously.
-
-Thereafter, for a little while, John Bruce wandered leisurely from room
-to room in the magnificently appointed house, where in the rich carpets
-the sound of footsteps was lost, where bronzes and paintings, exquisite
-in their art, charmed the eye, where soft-toned draperies and portières
-were eloquent of refinement and good taste; he paused for a moment at
-the threshold of the supper room, whose table was a profusion of every
-delicacy to tempt the palate, where wines of a vintage that was almost
-priceless were to be had at no greater cost than the effort required
-to lift a beckoning finger to the smiling ebony face of old Jake, the
-attendant. And here John Bruce extended a five-dollar bill, but shook
-his head as the said Jake hastened toward him. Later, perhaps, he might
-revisit the room--when a few hours' play had dimmed the recollection of
-his recent dinner, and his appetite was again sharpened.
-
-In the card rooms there were, as yet, scarcely any "guests." He chatted
-pleasantly with the "dealers"--John Bruce, the millionaire plunger,
-was _persona grata_, almost effusively so, everywhere in the house.
-Lavergne, the manager, as Parisian as he was immaculate from the tips of
-his patent-leathers to the tips of his waxed mustache, joined him; and
-for ten minutes, until the other was called away, John Bruce proceeded
-to nourish the already extremely healthy germ of intimacy that, from the
-first meeting, he had planted between them.
-
-With the manager's million apologies for the unpardonable act of tearing
-himself away still sounding in his ears, John Bruce placidly resumed
-his wanderings. The New York "branch," which being interpreted meant
-Monsieur Henri de Lavergne, the exquisite little manager, was heavily
-underscored on Gilbert Larmon's black-list!
-
-The faint, musical whir of the little ivory ball from the roulette table
-caught John Bruce's attention, and he strolled in that direction. Here
-a "guest" was already at play. The croupier smiled as John Bruce
-approached the table. John Bruce smiled pleasantly in return, and sat
-down. After a moment, he began to make small five-dollar bets on the
-"red." His fellow-player was plunging heavily--and losing. Also, the man
-was slightly under the influence of liquor. The croupier's voice droned
-through half a dozen plays. John Bruce continued to make five-dollar
-bets. The little by-play interested him. He knew the signs.
-
-His fellow-player descended to the supper room for another drink, it
-being against the rules of the house to serve anything in the gambling
-rooms. The croupier laughed as he glanced at the retreating figure and
-then at another five-dollar bet that John Bruce pushed upon the "red."
-
-"He'll rob you of your reputation, Mr. Bruce, if you don't look out!"
-the croupier smiled quizzically. "Are you finding a thrill in playing
-the minimum for a change?"
-
-"Just feeling my way." John Bruce returned the smile. "It's a bit early
-yet, isn't it?"
-
-The other player returned. He continued to bet heavily. He made another
-excursion below stairs. Other "guests" drifted into the room, and the
-play became more general.
-
-John Bruce increased his stakes slightly, quite indifferent naturally as
-to whether he lost or won--since he could neither lose nor win. He was
-sitting beside the player he had originally joined at the table, and
-suddenly his interest in the other became still more enlivened. The man,
-after a series of disastrous plays, was palpably broke, for he snatched
-off a large diamond ring from his finger and held it out to the
-croupier.
-
-"Give me--hic!--somethin' on that," he hiccoughed. "Might as well make a
-clean-up, eh?"
-
-The croupier took the ring, examined it critically for an instant, and
-handed it back.
-
-"I'm sorry," he said; "but you know the rules of the house. I couldn't
-advance anything on it if it were worth a million. But the stone's
-valuable, all right. You'd better take a trip to Persia."
-
-The man replaced the ring with some difficulty upon his finger, and
-stared owlishly at the croupier.
-
-"T' hell with your--hic!--trip to Persia!" he said thickly. "Don't like
-Persia! Been--hic!--there before! Guess I'll go home!"
-
-The man negotiated his way to the door; the game went on. John Bruce
-began to increase his stakes materially. A trip to Persia! What,
-exactly, did that mean? It both piqued his curiosity and stirred his
-suspicions. He smiled as he placed a heavy stake upon the table. It
-would probably be a much more expensive trip to this fanciful Persia
-than to the Persia of reality, for it seemed that one must go broke
-first! Well, he would go broke--though it would require some little
-finesse for John Bruce, the millionaire plunger, to attain that envious
-situation without exciting suspicion. He was very keenly interested in
-this personally conducted tour, obviously inaugurated by that exquisite
-little man, Monsieur Paul de Lavergne!
-
-John Bruce to his inward chagrin--won. He began to play now with a
-zest, eagerness and excitement which, heretofore, the juggling of
-Mephistopheles' money had deprived him of. Outwardly, however, the calm
-impassiveness that, in the few evenings he had been in the house, had
-already won him the reputation of being par excellence a cool and nervy
-plunger, remained unchanged.
-
-He continued to win for a while; and then suddenly he began to lose.
-This was much better! He lost steadily now. He staked with lavish hand,
-playing numerous long chances for the limit at every voyage of the
-clicking little ivory ball. Finally, the last of his visible assets were
-on the table, and he leaned forward to watch the fall of the ball. He
-was already fingering the magnificent jeweled watch-fob that dangled
-from the pocket of his evening clothes.
-
-"Zero!" announced the croupier.
-
-The "zero" had been one of his selections. The "zero" paid 35 for 1.
-
-A subdued ripple of excitement went up from around the table. The room
-was filling up. The still-early comers, mostly spectators for the time
-being, lured to the roulette table at the whisper that the millionaire
-plunger was out to-night to break the bank, were whetting their own
-appetites in the play of Mr. John Bruce, who had obviously just escaped
-being broke himself by a very narrow margin.
-
-John Bruce smiled. He was in funds again--more so than pleased him!
-
-"It's a 'zero' night, Mr. Croupier," observed John Bruce pleasantly.
-"Roll her again!"
-
-But now luck was with John Bruce. The "zero" and his other combinations
-were as shy and elusive as fawns. At the expiration of another half hour
-the net result of John Bruce's play consisted in his having transferred
-from his own keeping into the keeping of the New York branch thirty
-thousand dollars of Mephistopheles' money. He was to all appearances
-flagrantly broke as far as funds in his immediate possession were
-concerned.
-
-"I guess," said John Bruce, with a whimsical smile, "that I didn't bring
-enough with me. I don't know where I can get any more to-night, and--oh,
-here!" He laughed with easy grace, as he suddenly tossed his jeweled
-watch-fob to the croupier. "One more fling anyhow--I've still unbounded
-faith in 'zero'! Let me have a thousand on that. It's worth about two."
-
-The croupier, as on the previous occasion, examined the article, but, as
-before, shook his head.
-
-"I'm awfully sorry, Mr. Bruce, but it's strictly against the rules of
-the house," he said apologetically. "I can fix it for you easily enough
-though, if you care to take a trip to Persia."
-
-"A trip to Persia?" inquired John Bruce in a puzzled way. "I think I
-heard you suggest that before this evening. What's the idea?"
-
-Some of those around the table were smiling.
-
-"It's all right," volunteered a player opposite, with a laugh. "Only
-look out for the conductor!"
-
-"Shoot!" said John Bruce nonchalantly. "That's good enough! You can book
-my passage, Mr. Croupier."
-
-The croupier called an attendant, spoke to him, and the man left the
-room.
-
-"It will take a few minutes, Mr. Bruce--while you are getting your hat
-and coat. The doorman will let you know," said the croupier, and with a
-bow to John Bruce resumed the interrupted game.
-
-John Bruce strolled from the room, and descended to the lower floor. He
-entered the supper room, and while old Jake plied him with delicacies he
-saw the doorman emerge from the telephone booth out in the hall, hurry
-away, and presently return, talking earnestly with Monsieur Henri de
-Lavergne. The manager, in turn, entered the booth.
-
-Monsieur Henri de Lavergne came into the supper room after a moment.
-
-"In just a few minutes, Mr. Bruce--there will be a slight delay," he
-said effusively. "Too bad to keep you waiting."
-
-"Not at all!" responded John Bruce. He held a wine glass up to the
-light. "This is very excellent, Monsieur de Lavergne."
-
-Monsieur Henri de Lavergne accepted the compliment with a gratified bow.
-
-"Mr. Bruce is very kind to say so," he said--and launched into an
-elaborate apology that Mr. Bruce should be put to any inconvenience
-to obtain the financial accommodation asked for. The security that Mr.
-Bruce offered was unquestioned. It was not that. It was the rule of the
-house. Mr. Bruce would understand.
-
-Mr. Bruce understood perfectly.
-
-"Quite so!" he said cordially.
-
-Monsieur Henri de Lavergne excused himself, and left the room.
-
-"A fishy, clever little crook," confided John Bruce to himself. "I
-wonder what's the game?"
-
-He continued to sip his wine in apparent indifference to the passing
-minutes, nor was his indifference altogether assumed. His mind was quite
-otherwise occupied. It was rather neat, that--a trip to Persia. The
-expression in itself held a lure which had probably not been overlooked
-as an asset. It suggested Bagdad, and the Arabian Nights, and a Caliph
-and a Grand Vizier who stalked about in disguise. On the other hand, the
-inebriated gentleman had evidently had his fill of it on one occasion,
-and would have no more of it. And the other gentleman who had, as it
-were, indorsed the proceeding, had, at the same time, taken the occasion
-to throw out a warning to beware of the conductor.
-
-John Bruce smiled pleasantly into his wine glass. Not very difficult to
-fathom, perhaps, after all! It was probably some shrewd old reprobate
-with usurious rates in cahoots with the sleek Monsieur Henri de
-Lavergne, who made a side-split on the said rates in return for the
-exclusive privilege accorded the other of acting as leech to the guests
-of the house when in extremity.
-
-It had been perhaps twenty minutes since he had left the roulette table.
-He looked at his watch now as he saw the doorman coming toward the
-supper room with his hat and coat. The night was still early. It was a
-quarter to eleven.
-
-He went out into the hall.
-
-"Yassuh," said the gray-haired and obsequious old darky, as he assisted
-John Bruce into his coat, "if yo'all will just come with me, Mistuh
-Bruce, yo'all will be 'commodated right prompt."
-
-John Bruce followed his guide to the doorstep.
-
-The darky pointed to a closed motor car at the curb by the corner, a few
-houses away.
-
-"Yo'all just say 'Persia' to the shuffer, Mistuh Bruce, and-------"
-
-"All right!" John Bruce smiled his interruption, and went down the steps
-to the sidewalk.
-
-John Bruce approached the waiting car leisurely, scrutinizing it the
-while; and as he approached, it seemed to take on more and more the
-aspect of a venerable and decrepit ark. The body of the car was entirely
-without light; the glass front, if there were one, behind the man whom
-he discerned sitting in the chauffeur's seat, was evidently closely
-curtained; and so, too, he now discovered as he drew nearer, were the
-windows and doors of the car as well.
-
-"The parlor looks a little ominous," said John
-
-Bruce softly to himself. "I wonder how far it is to the spider's dining
-room?"
-
-He halted as he reached the vehicle.
-
-"I'm bound for Persia, I believe," he suggested pleasantly to the
-chauffeur.
-
-The chauffeur leaned out, and John Bruce was conscious that he was
-undergoing a critical inspection. In turn he looked at the chauffeur,
-but there was very little light. The car seemed to have chosen a spot
-as little disturbed by the rays of the street lamps as possible, and
-he gained but a vague impression of a red, weather-beaten face, clean
-shaved, with shaggy brows under grizzled hair, the whole topped by an
-equally weather-beaten felt hat of nondescript shape and color.
-
-The inspection, on the chauffeur's part at least, appeared to be
-satisfactory.
-
-"Yes, sir," said the man. "Step in, sir, please."
-
-The door swung open--just how, John Bruce could not have explained.
-He stepped briskly into the car--only to draw back instinctively as he
-found it already occupied. But the door had closed behind him. It was
-inky black in the interior now with the door shut. The car was jolting
-into motion.
-
-"Pardon me!" said John Bruce a little grimly, and sat down on the back
-seat.
-
-A woman! He had just been able to make out a woman's form as he had
-stepped in. It was clever--damned clever! Of both the exquisite Monsieur
-Henri de Lavergne and the money-lending spider at the other end of this
-pleasant little jaunt into unexplored Persia! A woman in it--a luring,
-painted, fair and winsome damsel, no doubt--to make the usurious pill
-of illegal interest a little sweeter I Oh, yes, he quite understood now
-that warning to beware of the conductor!
-
-"I did not anticipate such charming company," said John Bruce
-facetiously. "Have we far to go?"
-
-There was no answer.
-
-Something like a shadow, deeper than the surrounding blackness, seemed
-to pass before John Bruce's eyes, and then he sat bolt upright, startled
-and amazed. In front of him, let down from the roof of the car, was a
-small table covered with black velvet, and suspended some twelve inches
-above the table, throwing the glow downward in a round spot of light
-over the velvet surface, was a shaded electric lamp. A small white hand,
-bare of any ornament, palm upward, lay upon the velvet table-top under
-the play of the light.
-
-A voice spoke now softly from beside him:
-
-"You have something to pawn?"
-
-John Bruce stared. He still could not see her face. "Er--yes," he said.
-He frowned in perplexity. "When we get to Persia, alias the pawn-shop."
-
-"This is the pawn-shop," she answered. "Let me see what you have,
-please."
-
-"Well, I'm da----" John Bruce checked himself.
-
-There was a delicacy about that white hand resting there under the light
-that rebuked him. "Er--pardon me," said John Bruce.
-
-He felt for his jeweled watch-fob, unfastened it, and laid it in the
-extended palm. He laughed a little to himself. On with the game! The
-lure was here, all right; the stage setting was masterly--and now the
-piper would be paid on a basis, probably, that would relegate Shylock
-himself to the kindergarten class of money lenders!
-
-And then, suddenly, it seemed to John Bruce as though his blood whipping
-through his veins was afire. A face in profile, bending forward to
-examine the diamonds and the setting of the fob-pendant, came under the
-light. He gazed at it fascinated. It was the most beautiful face he had
-ever seen. His eyes drank in the rich masses of brown, silken hair,
-the perfect throat, the chin and lips that, while modelled in sweet
-womanliness, were still eloquent of self-reliance and strength. He had
-thought to see a pretty face, a little brazen perhaps, and artfully
-powdered and rouged; what he saw was a vision of loveliness that seemed
-to personify the unsullied, God-given freshness and purity of youth.
-
-He spoke involuntarily; no power of his could have kept back the words.
-
-"My God, you are wonderful!" he exclaimed in a low voice.
-
-He saw the color swiftly tinge the throat a coral pink, and mount
-upwards; but she did not look at him. Her eyes! He wanted to see her
-eyes--to look into them! But she did not turn her head.
-
-"You probably paid two thousand dollars for this," she said quietly,
-"and----"
-
-"Nineteen hundred," corrected John Bruce mechanically.
-
-"I will allow you seventeen hundred on it, then," she said, still
-quietly. "The interest will be at seven per cent. Do you wish to accept
-the offer?"
-
-Seventeen hundred! Seven per cent! It was in consonance with the vision!
-His mind was topsy-turvy.
-
-He did not understand.
-
-"It is very liberal," said John Bruce, trying to control his voice. "Of
-course, I accept."
-
-The shapely head nodded.
-
-He watched her spellbound. The watch-fob had vanished, and in its place
-now under the little conical shaft of light she was swiftly counting
-out a pile of crisp, new, fifty-dollar banknotes. To these she added a
-stamped and numbered ticket.
-
-"You may redeem the pledge at any time by making application to the same
-person to whom you originally applied for a loan to-night," she said, as
-she handed him the money. "Please count it."
-
-Her head was in shadow now. He could no longer even see her profile. She
-was sitting back in her corner of the car.
-
-"I--I am quite satisfied," said John Bruce a little helplessly.
-
-"Please count it," she insisted.
-
-With a shrug of protest, John Bruce obeyed her. It was not at all the
-money that concerned him, nor the touch of it that was quickening his
-pulse.
-
-"It is quite correct," he said, putting money and ticket in his pocket.
-He turned toward her. "And now----"
-
-His words ended in a little gasp. The light was out. In the darkness
-that shadow passed again before his eyes, and he was conscious that the
-table had vanished--also that the car had stopped.
-
-The door opened.
-
-"If you please, sir!" It was the chauffeur, holding the door open.
-
-John Bruce hesitated.
-
-"I--er--look here!" he said. "I----"
-
-"If you please, sir!" There was something of significant finality in the
-man's patient and respectful tones.
-
-John Bruce smiled wryly.
-
-"Well, at least, I may say good-night," he said, as he backed out of the
-car.
-
-"Certainly, sir--good-night, sir," said the chauffeur calmly--and closed
-the door, and touched his hat, and climbed back to his seat.
-
-John Bruce glared at the man.
-
-"Well, I'm damned!" said John Bruce fervently.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER THREE--SANCTUARY
-
-
-|THE car started off. It turned the corner. John Bruce looked around
-him. He was standing on precisely the same spot from which he had
-entered the car. He had been driven around the block, that was all!
-
-He caught his breath. Was it real? That wondrous face which, almost as
-though at the touch of some magician's wand, had risen before him out of
-the blackness! His blood afire was leaping through his veins again. That
-face!
-
-He ran to the corner and peered down the street. The car was perhaps
-a hundred yards away--and suddenly John Bruce started to run again,
-following the car. Madness! His lips had set grim and hard. Who was she
-that prowled the night in that bizarre traveling pawn-shop? Where did
-she live? Was it actually the Arabian Nights back again? He laughed at
-himself--not mirthfully. But still he ran on.
-
-The car was outdistancing him. Fool! For a woman's face! Even though it
-were a divine symphony of beauty! Fool? Love-smitten idiot? Not at
-all! It was his job! Nice sound to that word in conjunction with that
-haunting memory of loveliness--job!
-
-The traveling pawn-shop turned into Fourth Avenue, and headed downtown.
-John Bruce caught the sound of a street car gong, spurted and swung
-breathlessly to the platform of a car going in the same direction.
-
-Of course, it was his job! The exquisite Monsieur Henri de Lavergne was
-mixed up in this.
-
-"Hell!"
-
-The street car conductor stared at him. John Bruce scowled. He swore
-again--but this time under his breath. It brought a sudden wild,
-unreasonable rage and rebellion, the thought that there should be
-anything, even of the remotest nature, between the glorious vision in
-that car and the mincing, silken-tongued manager of Larmon's gambling
-hell. But there was, for all that, wasn't there? How else had she come
-there? It was the usual thing, wasn't it? And--beware of the conductor!
-The warning now appeared to be very apt! And how well he had profited by
-it! A fool chasing a siren's beauty!
-
-His face grew very white.
-
-"John Bruce," he whispered to himself, "if I could get at you I'd pound
-your face to pulp for that!"
-
-He leaned out from the platform. The traveling pawn-shop had increased
-its speed and was steadily leaving the street car behind. He looked back
-in the opposite direction. The street was almost entirely deserted as
-far as traffic went. The only vehicle in sight was a taxi bowling along
-a block in the rear. He laughed out again harshly. The conductor eyed
-him suspiciously.
-
-John Bruce dropped off the car, and planted himself in the path of the
-on-coming taxi. Call it his job, then, if it pleased him! He owed it to
-Larmon to get to the bottom of this. How extremely logical he was! The
-transaction in the traveling pawn-shop had been so fair-minded as almost
-to exonerate Monsieur Henri de Lavergne on the face of it, and if it had
-not been for a certain vision therein, and a fire in his own veins,
-and a fury at the thought that even her acquaintance with the gambling
-manager was profanity, he could have heartily applauded Monsieur Henri
-de Lavergne for a unique and original----
-
-The taxi bellowed at him, hoarsely indignant.
-
-John Bruce stepped neatly to one side--and jumped on the footboard.
-
-"Here, you! What the hell!" shouted the chauffeur. "You----"
-
-"Push your foot on it a little," said John Bruce calmly. "And don't lose
-sight of that closed car ahead."
-
-"Lose sight of nothin'!" yelled the chauffeur. "I've got a fare,
-an'----"
-
-"I hear him," said John Bruce composedly. He edged in beside the
-chauffeur, and one of the crisp, new, fifty-dollar banknotes passed
-into the latter's possession. "Keep that car in sight, and don't make it
-hopelessly obvious that you are following it. I'll attend to your fare."
-
-He screwed around in his seat. An elderly, gray-whiskered gentleman, a
-patently irate gentleman, was pounding furiously on the glass panel.
-
-"We should be turnin' down this street we're just passin'," grinned the
-chauffeur.
-
-John Bruce lowered the panel.
-
-"What's the meaning of this?" thundered the fare.
-
-"I'm very sorry, sir," said John Bruce respectfully.
-
-"A little detective business." He coughed. It was really quite true.
-His voice became confidential. "The occupants of that car ahead got away
-from me. I--I want to arrest one of them. I'm very sorry to put you to
-any inconvenience, but it couldn't be helped.. There was no other way
-than to commandeer your taxi. It will be only for a matter of a few
-minutes."
-
-"It's preposterous!" spluttered the fare. "Outrageous! I--I'll----"
-
-"Yes, sir," said John Bruce. "But there was nothing else I could do. You
-can report it to headquarters, of course."
-
-He closed the panel.
-
-"Fly-cop--not!" said the chauffeur, with his tongue in his cheek. "Any
-fly-cop that ever got his mitt on a whole fifty-dollar bill all at one
-time couldn't be pried lose from it with a crowbar!"
-
-"It lets you out, doesn't it?" inquired John Bruce pleasantly. "Now
-let's see you earn it."
-
-"I'll earn it!" said the chauffeur with unction. "You leave it to me,
-boss!"
-
-The quarry, in the shape of the traveling pawn shop, directed its way
-into the heart of the East Side. Presently it turned into a hiving,
-narrow street, where hawkers with their push-carts in the light of
-flaring, spitting gasoline banjoes were doing a thriving business. The
-two cars went more slowly now. There was very little room. The
-taxi almost upset a fish vendor's wheeled emporium. The vendor was
-eloquent--fervently so. But the chauffeur's eyes, after an impersonal
-and indifferent glance at the other, returned to the car ahead. The taxi
-continued on its way, trailing fifty yards in the rear of the traveling
-pawn-shop.
-
-At the end of the block the car ahead turned the corner. As the taxi,
-in turn, rounded the corner, John Bruce saw that the traveling pawn-shop
-was drawn up before a small building that was nested in between two
-tenements. The blood quickened in his pulse. The girl had alighted, and
-was entering the small building.
-
-"Hit it up a little to the next corner, turn it, and let me off there,"
-directed John Bruce.
-
-"I get you!" said the chauffeur.
-
-The taxi swept past the car at the curb. Another minute and it had swung
-the next corner, and was slowing down. John Bruce jumped to the ground
-before the taxi stopped.
-
-"Good-night!" he called to the chauffeur.
-
-He waved his hand debonairly at the scowling, whiskered visage that was
-watching him from the interior of the cab, and hurriedly retraced his
-way back around the corner.
-
-The traveling pawn-shop had turned and was driving away. John Bruce
-moderated his pace, and sauntered on along the street. He smiled half
-grimly, half contentedly to himself. The "trip to Persia" had led him
-a little farther afield than Monsieur Henri de Lavergne had perhaps
-counted on--or than he, John Bruce, himself had, either! But he knew now
-where the most glorious woman he had ever seen in his life lived, or, at
-least, was to be found again. No, it wasn't the _moon!_ To him, she was
-exactly that. And he had not seen her for the last time, either! That
-was what he was here for, though he wasn't so mad as to risk, or,
-rather, invite an affront to begin with by so bald an act as to go to
-the front door, say, and ring the bell--which would be tantamount to
-informing her that he had--er--played the detective from the moment
-he had left her in the car. To-morrow, perhaps, or the next day, or
-whenever fate saw fit to be in a kindly mood, a meeting that possessed
-all the hall-marks of being quite inadvertent offered him high hopes.
-Later, if fate still were kind, he would tell her that he had followed
-her, and what she would be thoroughly justified in misconstruing now,
-she might then accept as the tribute to her that he meant it to be--when
-she knew him better.
-
-John Bruce was whistling softly to himself.
-
-He was passing the house now, his scrutiny none the less exhaustive
-because it was apparently casual. It was a curious little two-story
-place tucked away between the two flanking tenements, the further one of
-which alone separated the house from the corner he was approaching. Not
-a light showed from the front of the house. Yes, it was quite a curious
-place! Although curtains were on the lower front windows, indicating
-that it was purely a dwelling, the windows themselves were of abnormal
-size, as though, originally perhaps, the ground floor had once been a
-shop of some kind.
-
-John Bruce turned the corner, and from a comparatively deserted street
-found himself among the vendors' push-carts and the spluttering gasoline
-torches again. He skirted the side of the tenement that made the corner,
-discovered the fact that a lane cut in from the street and ran past the
-rear of the tenement, which he mentally noted must likewise run past the
-rear of the little house that was now so vitally interesting to him--and
-halted on the opposite side of the lane to survey his surroundings. Here
-a dirty and uninviting café attracted his attention, which, if its dingy
-sign were to be believed, was run by one Palasco Ratti, a gentleman of
-parts in the choice of wines which he offered to his patrons. John Bruce
-surveyed Palasco Ratti's potential clientele--the street was full of it;
-the shawled women, the dark-visaged, ear-ringed men. He smiled a little
-to himself. No--probably not the half-naked children who sprawled in the
-gutter and crawled amongst the push-carts' wheels! How was it that _she_
-should ever have come to live in a neighborhood to which the designation
-"foreign," as far as she was concerned, must certainly apply in
-particularly full measure? It was strange that she----
-
-John Bruce's mental soliloquy came to an abrupt end. Half humorously,
-half grimly his eyes were riveted on the push-cart at the curb directly
-opposite to him, the proprietor of which dealt in that brand of
-confection so much in favor on the East Side--a great slab of candy from
-which, as occasion required, he cut slices with a large carving knife.
-A brown and grimy fist belonging to a tot of a girl of perhaps eight or
-nine years of age, who had crept in under the pushcart, was stealthily
-feeling its way upward behind the vendor's back, its objective being,
-obviously, a generous piece of candy that reposed on the edge of the
-push-cart. There was a certain fascination in watching developments. It
-was quite immoral, of course, but his sympathies were with the child.
-It was a gamble whether the grimy little hand would close on the coveted
-prize and disappear again victorious, or whether the vendor would turn
-in time to frustrate the raid.
-
-The tot's hand crept nearer and nearer its goal.
-
-No one, save himself of the many about, appeared to notice the little
-cameo of primal instinct that was on exhibition before them. The
-small and dirty fingers touched the candy, closed on it, and
-were withdrawn--but were withdrawn too quickly. The child, at the
-psychological moment under stress of excitement, eagerness and probably
-a wildly thumping heart, had failed in finesse. Perhaps the paper
-that covered the surface of the push-cart and on which the wares were
-displayed rattled; perhaps the sudden movement in itself attracted the
-vendor's attention. The man whirled and made a vicious dive for the
-child as she darted out from between the wheels. And then she screamed.
-The man had hit her a brutal clout across the head.
-
-John Bruce straightened suddenly, a dull red creeping from his set
-jaw to his cheeks. Still clutching the candy in her hand the child was
-running blindly and in terror straight toward him. The man struck again,
-and the child staggered, and, reeling, sought sanctuary between John
-Bruce's legs. A bearded, snarling face in pursuit loomed up before
-him--and John Bruce struck, struck as he had once struck before on a
-white moon-flooded deck when a man, a brute beast, had gone down before
-him--and the vendor, screaming shrilly, lay kicking in pain on the
-sidewalk.
-
-It had happened quickly. Not one, probably, of those on the street
-had caught the details of the little scene. And now the tiny thief had
-wriggled through his legs, and with the magnificent irresponsibility
-of childhood had darted away and was lost to sight. It had happened
-quickly--but not so quickly as the gathering together of an angry,
-surging crowd around John Bruce.
-
-Some one in the crowd shrieked out above the clamor of voices:
-
-"He kill-a Pietro! Kill-a da dude!"
-
-It was a fire-brand.
-
-John Bruce backed away a little--up against the door of Signor Pascalo
-Ratti's wine shop. A glance showed him that, with the blow he had
-struck, his light overcoat had become loosened, and that he was
-flaunting an immaculate and gleaming shirt-front in the faces of the
-crowd. And between their Pietro with a broken jaw and an intruder far
-too well dressed to please their fancy, the psychology of the crowd
-became the psychology of a mob.
-
-The fire-brand took.
-
-"Kill-a da dude!" It was echoed in chorus--and then a rush.
-
-It flung John Bruce heavily against the wine shop door, and the door
-crashed inward--and for a moment he was down, and the crowd, like a
-snarling wolf pack, was upon him. And then the massive shoulders heaved,
-and he shook them off and was on his feet; and all that was primal,
-elemental in the man was dominant, the mad glorying in strife upon him,
-and he struck right and left with blows before which, again and again, a
-man went down.
-
-But the rush still bore him backward, and the doorway was black and
-jammed with reenforcements constantly pouring in. Tables crashed to the
-floor, chairs were overturned. Out of the corner of his eye he saw a
-white-mustached Italian leap upon the counter and alternately wave his
-arms and wring his hands together frantically.
-
-"For the mercy of God!" the man screamed--and then his voice added to
-the din in a flood of impassioned Italian.
-
-It was Signor Pascalo Ratti, probably.
-
-John Bruce was panting now, his breath coming in short, hard gasps. It
-was not easy to keep them in front of him, to keep his back free. He
-caught the glint of knife blades now.
-
-He was borne back foot by foot, the space widening as he retreated from
-the door, giving room for more to come upon him at the same time. A
-knife blade lunged at him. He evaded it--but another glittering in
-the ceiling light at the same instant, flashing a murderous arc in its
-downward plunge, caught him, and, before he could turn, sank home.
-
-A yell of triumph went up. He felt no pain. Only a sudden sickening of
-his brain, a sudden weakness that robbed his limbs of strength, and he
-reeled and staggered, fighting blindly now.
-
-And then his brain cleared. He flung a quick glance over his shoulder.
-Yes, there was one chance. Only one! And in another minute, with another
-knife thrust, it would be too late. He whirled suddenly and raced down
-the length of the café. In the moment's grace earned through surprise at
-his sudden action, he gained a door he had seen there, and threw himself
-upon it. It was not fastened, though there was a key in the lock. He
-whipped out the key, plunged through, locked the door on the outside
-with the fraction of a second to spare before they came battering upon
-it--and stumbled and fell headlong out into the open.
-
-It was as though he were lashing his brain into action and virility. It
-kept wobbling and fogging. Didn't the damned thing understand that his
-life, was at stake! He lurched to his feet. He was in a lane.
-
-In front of him, like great looming shadows, shadows that wobbled too,
-he saw the shapes of two tenements, and like an inset between them, a
-small house with a light gleaming in the lower window.
-
-That was where the vision lived. Only there was a fence between.
-Sanctuary! He lunged toward the fence. He had not meant to--to make a
-call to-night--she--she might have misunderstood. But in a second now
-_they_ would come sweeping around into the lane after him from the
-street.
-
-He clawed his way to the top of the fence, and because his strength was
-almost gone fell from the top of the fence to the ground on the other
-side.
-
-And now he crawled, crawled with what frantic haste he could, because he
-heard the uproar from the street. And he laughed. The kid was
-probably munching her hunk of candy now. Queer things--kids! Got her
-candy--happy----
-
-He reached up to the sill of an open window, clawed his way upward,
-as he had clawed his way up the fence, straddled the sill unsteadily,
-clutched at nothingness to save himself, and toppled inward to the floor
-of the room.
-
-A yell from the head of the lane, a cry from the other end of the room,
-spurred him into final effort. He gained his feet, and swept his hand,
-wet with blood, across his eyes. That was the vision there running
-toward him, wasn't it?--the wonderful, glorious vision!
-
-"Pardon me!" said John Bruce in a sing-song voice, and with a desperate
-effort reached up and pulled down the window shade. He tried to smile
-"Queer--queer things--kids--aren't they? She--she just ducked out from
-under."
-
-The girl was staring at him wildly, her hands tightly clasped to her
-bosom.
-
-"Pardon me!" whispered John Bruce thickly. He couldn't see her any more,
-just a multitude of objects whirling like a kaleidoscope before his
-eyes. "She--she got the candy," said John Bruce, attempting to smile
-again--and pitched unconscious to the floor.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER FOUR--A DOCTOR OF MANY DEGREES
-
-|DEAD! The girl was on her knees beside John Bruce. Dead--he did not
-move! It was the man who had pawned his watch-fob hardly half an hour
-before! What did it mean? What did those angry shouts, that scurrying
-of many feet out there in the lane mean? Hurriedly, her face as deadly
-white as the face upturned to her from the floor, she tore open the once
-immaculate shirt-front, that was now limp and wet and ugly with a great
-crimson stain, and laid bare the wound.
-
-The sounds from without were receding, the scurrying footsteps were
-keeping on along the lane. A quiver ran through the form on the floor.
-Dead! No, he was not dead--not--not yet.
-
-A little cry escaped from her tightly closed lips, and for an instant
-she covered her eyes with her hands. The wound was terrible--it
-frightened her. It frightened her the more because, intuitively, she
-knew that it was beyond any inexperienced aid that she could give. But
-she must act, and act quickly.
-
-She turned and ran into the adjoining room to the telephone, but even as
-she reached out to lift the receiver from the hook she hesitated. Doctor
-Crang! A little shudder of aversion swept over her--and then resolutely,
-even pleading with central to hurry, she asked for the connection. It
-was not a matter of choice, or aversion, or any other consideration in
-the world save a question of minutes. The life of that man in there on
-the floor hung by a thread. Doctor Crang was nearby enough to respond
-almost instantly, and there was no one else she knew of who she could
-hope would reach the man in time. And--she stared frantically at the
-instrument now--was even he unavailable? Why didn't he answer? Why
-didn't----
-
-A voice reached her. She recognized it.
-
-"Doctor Crang, this is Claire Veniza," she said, and it did not seem as
-though she could speak fast enough. "Come at once--oh, at once--please!
-There's a man here frightfully wounded. There isn't a second to lose,
-so----"
-
-"My dear Claire," interrupted the voice suavely, "instead of losing one
-you can save several by telling me what kind of a wound it is, and where
-the man is wounded."
-
-"It's a knife wound, a stab, I think," she answered; "and it's in his
-side. He is unconscious, and----"
-
-The receiver at the other end had been replaced on its hook.
-
-She turned from the telephone, and swiftly, hurrying, but in cool
-self-control now, she obtained some cloths and a basin of warm water,
-and returned to John Bruce's side. She could not do much, she realized
-that--only make what effort she could to staunch the appalling flow of
-blood from the wound; that, and place a cushion under the man's head,
-for she could not lift him to the couch.
-
-The minutes passed; and then, thinking she heard a footstep at the front
-door, she glanced in that direction, half in relief, and yet, too, in
-curious apprehension. She listened. No, there was no one there yet. She
-had been mistaken.
-
-Suddenly she caught her breath in a little gasp, as though startled.
-Doctor Crang was clever; but faith in Doctor Crang professionally was
-one thing, and faith in him in other respects was quite another. Why
-hadn't she thought of it before? It wasn't too late yet, was it?
-
-She began to search hastily through John Bruce's pockets. Doctor Crang
-would almost certainly suggest removing the man from the sitting room
-down here and getting him upstairs to a bedroom, and then he would
-undress his patient, and--and it was perhaps as well to anticipate
-Doctor Crang! This man here should have quite a sum of money on his
-person. She had given it to him herself, and--yes, here it was!
-
-The crisp new fifty-dollar bills, the stamped and numbered ticket that
-identified the watch-fob he had pawned, were in her hand. She ran across
-the room, opened a little safe in the corner, placed the money and
-ticket inside, locked the safe again, and returned to John Bruce's side
-once more.
-
-And suddenly her eyes filled. There was no tremor, no movement in the
-man's form now; she could not even feel his heartbeat. Yes, she wanted
-Doctor Crang now, passionately, wildly. John Bruce--that was the man's
-name. She knew that much. But she had left him miles away--and he was
-here now--and she did not understand. How had he got here, why had he
-come here, climbing in through that window to fall at her feet like one
-dead?
-
-The front door opened without premonitory ring of bell, and closed
-again. A footstep came quickly forward through the outer room--and
-paused on the threshold.
-
-Claire Veniza rose to her feet, and her eyes went swiftly, sharply,
-to the figure standing there--a man of perhaps thirty years of age,
-of powerful build, and yet whose frame seemed now woefully loose,
-disjointed and without virility. Her eyes traveled to the man's clothing
-that was dirty, spotted, and in dire need of sponging, to the necktie
-that hung awry, to the face that, but for its unhealthy, pasty-yellow
-complexion, would have been almost strikingly handsome, to the jet-black
-eyes that somehow at the moment seemed to lack fire and life. And with a
-little despairing shrug of her shoulders, Claire Veniza turned away her
-head, and pointed to the form of John Bruce on the floor.
-
-"I--I am afraid it is very serious, Doctor Crang," she faltered.
-
-"That's all right, Claire," he said complacently. "That's all right, my
-dear. You can leave it with confidence to Sydney Angus Crang, M.D."
-
-She drew a little away as he stepped forward, her face hardening into
-tight little lines. Hidden, her hands clasped anxiously together. It--it
-was what she had feared. Doctor Sydney Angus Crang, gold medalist from
-one of the greatest American universities, brilliant far beyond his
-fellows, with additional degrees from London, from Vienna, from Heaven
-alone knew where else, was just about entering upon, or emerging from,
-a groveling debauch with that Thing to which he had pawned his manhood,
-his intellect and his soul, that Thing of gray places, of horror, of
-forgetfulness, of bliss, of torture--cocaine.
-
-Halfway from the threshold to where John Bruce lay, Doctor Crang halted
-abruptly.
-
-"Hello!" he exclaimed, and glanced with suddenly darkening face from
-Claire Veniza to the form of John Bruce, and back to Claire Veniza
-again.
-
-"Oh, _will_ you hurry!" she implored. "Can't you see that the wound----"
-
-"I am more interested in the man than in the wound," said Doctor Crang,
-and there was a hint of menace in his voice. "Quite a gentleman of
-parts! I had expected--let me see what I had expected--well, say, one of
-the common knife-sticking breed that curses this neighborhood."
-
-Claire Veniza stamped her foot.
-
-"Oh, hurry!" she burst out wildly. "Don't stand there talking while the
-man is dying! Do something!"
-
-Doctor Crang advanced to John Bruce's side, set down the little handbag
-he was carrying, and began to examine the wound.
-
-"Yes, quite a gentleman of parts!" he repeated. His lips had thinned.
-"How did he get here?"
-
-"I do not know," she answered. "He came in through that window there and
-fell on the floor."
-
-"How peculiar!" observed Doctor Crang. "A _gentleman_ down here in this
-locality, who is, yes, I will state it as a professional fact, in a very
-critical state, climbs in through Miss Claire Veniza's window, and----"
-
-The telephone in the other room rang. Claire Veniza ran to it. Doctor
-Crang's fingers nestled on John Bruce's pulse; he made no other movement
-save to cock his head in a listening attitude in the girl's direction;
-he made no effort either to examine further or to dress the wound.
-
-Claire Veniza's voice came distinctly:
-
-"Yes... No, I do not think he will return to-night"--she was
-hesitating--"he--he met with an--an accident-----"
-
-Doctor Crang had sprung from the other room and had snatched the
-receiver from the girl's hand. A wave of insensate fury swept his face
-now. He pushed her roughly from the instrument, and clapped his hand
-over the transmitter.
-
-"That's one lie you've told me!" he said hoarsely. "I'll attend to the
-rest of this now." He withdrew his hand from the transmitter. "Yes,
-hello!" His voice was cool, even suave. "What is it?... Monsieur Henri
-de Lavergne speaking--yes... Mister--who?... Mister John Bruce--yes." He
-listened for a moment, his lips twitching, his eyes narrowed on Claire
-Veniza, who had retreated a few steps away. "No, not to-night," he said,
-speaking again into the transmitter. "Yes, a slight accident.... Yes..,
-Good-by."
-
-Doctor Sydney Angus Crang hung up the receiver, and with a placid smile
-at variance with the glitter that suddenly brought life into his dulled
-eyes, advanced toward the girl. She stepped backward quickly into the
-other room, retreating as far as the motionless form that lay upon the
-floor. Doctor Crang followed her.
-
-And then Claire Veniza, her face grown stony, her small hands clenched,
-found her voice again.
-
-"Aren't you going to help him? Aren't you going to do something? Is he
-to die there before your eyes?" she cried.
-
-Doctor Crang shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"What can I do?" he inquired with velvet softness. "I am helpless. How
-can I bring the dead back to life?"
-
-"Dead!" All color had fled her face; she bent and looked searchingly at
-John Bruce.
-
-"Oh, no; not yet," said Doctor Crang easily. "But very nearly so."
-
-"And you will do nothing!" She was facing him again. "Then--then I will
-try and get some one else."
-
-She stepped forward abruptly.
-
-Doctor Crang barred her way.
-
-"I don't think you will, Claire, my dear!" His voice was monotonous; the
-placid smile was vanishing. "You see, having spoken to that dear little
-doll of a man, Monsieur Henri de Lavergne, I'm very much interested in
-hearing your side of the story."
-
-"Story!" the girl echoed wildly. "Story--while that man's life is lost!
-Are you mad--or a murderer--or----"
-
-"Another lover," said Doctor Crang, and threw back his head and laughed.
-
-She shrank away; her hands tight against her bosom. She glanced around
-her. If she could only reach the telephone and lock the connecting door!
-No! She did not dare leave him _alone_ with the wounded man.
-
-"What--what are you going to do?" she whispered.
-
-"Nothing--till I hear the story," he answered.
-
-"If--if he dies"--her voice rang steadily again--"I'll have you charged
-with murder."
-
-"What nonsense!" said Doctor Crang imperturbably. "Did I stab the
-gentleman?" He took from his pocket a little case, produced a hypodermic
-syringe, and pushed back his sleeve. "A doctor is not a magician. If he
-finds a patient beyond reach of aid what can he be expected to do? My
-dear Claire, where are your brains to-night--you who are usually so
-amazingly clever?"
-
-"You are mad--insane with drug!" she cried out piteously.
-
-He shook his head, and coolly inserted the needle of the hypodermic in
-his arm.
-
-"Not yet," he said. "I am only implacable. Shall we get on with the
-story? Monsieur de Lavergne says he sent a gentleman by the name of John
-Bruce out in your father's car a little while ago for the purpose of
-obtaining a loan in order that the said John Bruce might return to the
-gambling joint and continue to play. But Mr. Bruce did not return,
-and the doll, for some reason being anxious, telephones here to make
-inquiries. Of course"--there was a savage laugh in his voice--"it is
-only a suspicion, but could this gentleman on the floor here by any
-chance be Mr. John Bruce?"
-
-"Yes," she said faintly. "He is John Bruce."
-
-"Thanks!" said Doctor Crang sarcastically. He very carefully replaced
-his hypodermic in his pocket. "Now another little matter. I happen to
-know that your father is spending the evening uptown, so I wonder who
-was in the car with Mr. John Bruce."
-
-She stared at him with flashing eyes.
-
-"I was!" she answered passionately. "I don't know what you are driving
-at! I never did it before, but father was away, and Monsieur de Lavergne
-was terribly insistent. He said it was for a very special guest.
-I--I didn't, of course, tell Monsieur de Lavergne that father couldn't
-go. I only said that I was afraid it would not be convenient to make any
-loan to-night. But he wouldn't listen to a refusal, and so I went--but
-Monsieur de Lavergne had no idea that it was any one but father in the
-car."
-
-Doctor Crang's lips parted wickedly.
-
-"Naturally!" he snarled. "I quite understand that you took good care of
-that! Who drove you?"
-
-"Hawkins."
-
-"Drunk as usual, I suppose! Brain too fuddled to ask questions!"
-
-"That's not true!" she cried out sharply. "Hawkins hasn't touched a drop
-for a year."
-
-"All right!" snapped Doctor Crang. "Have it that way, then! Being in his
-dotage, he makes a good blind, even sober. And so you went for a little
-ride with Mr. John Bruce to-night?"
-
-Claire Veniza was wringing her hands as she glanced in an agony of
-apprehension at the wounded man on the floor.
-
-"Yes," she said; "but--but won't you----"
-
-"And where did you first meet Mr. John Bruce, and how long ago?" he
-jerked out.
-
-Claire Veniza's great brown eyes widened.
-
-"Why, I never saw him in my life until to-night!" she exclaimed. "And he
-wasn't in the car ten minutes. Hawkins drove back to the corner just as
-he always does with father, and Mr. Bruce got out. Then Hawkins drove me
-home and went uptown to get father. I--I wish they were here now!"
-
-Doctor Crang was gritting his teeth together. A slight unnatural color
-was tinging his cheeks. He moved a little closer to the girl.
-
-"I'm glad to hear you never saw Mr. Bruce before," he said cunningly.
-"You must have traveled _fast_ then--metaphorically speaking. Love at
-first sight, eh? A cooing exchange of confidences--or was it all on one
-side? You told him who you were, and where you lived, and----"
-
-"I did nothing of the kind!" Claire Veniza interrupted angrily. "I did
-not tell him anything!"
-
-"Just strictly business then, of course!" Doctor Crang moved a step
-still nearer to the girl. "In that case he must have pawned something,
-and as Lavergne sends nothing but high-priced articles to your father,
-we shall probably find quite a sum of money in Mr. Bruce's pockets.
-Eh--Claire?"
-
-She bit her lips. She still did not quite understand--only that she
-bitterly regretted now, somehow, that she had removed the money from
-John Bruce's person; only that the drug-crazed brain of the man in front
-of her was digging, had dug, a trap into which she was falling. What
-answer was she to make? What was she to----
-
-With a sudden cry she shrank back--but too late to save herself. A face
-alight with passion was close to hers now; hands that clamped like a
-steel vise, and that hurt, were upon her shoulder and throat.
-
-"You lie!" Doctor Crang shouted hoarsely. "You've lied from the minute
-I came into this room. John Bruce--hell! I know now why you have always
-refused to have anything to do with me. That's why!" He loosened one
-hand and pointed to the figure on the floor. "How long has this been
-going on? How long have you been meeting him? To-night is nothing,
-though you worked it well. Hawkins to take you for a little joy ride
-with your lover while father's away. Damned clever! You left him on that
-corner--and he's here wounded! How did he get wounded? You never saw him
-before! You never heard of him! You told him nothing about yourself! He
-didn't know where you lived--he could only find the private entrance!
-Just knows enough about you to climb in through your back window like a
-skewered dog! But, of course, your story is true, because in his pockets
-will be the money you gave him for what he pawned! Shall we look and see
-how much it was?"
-
-She tore herself free and caught at her throat, gasping for breath.
-
-"You--you beast!" she choked. "No; you needn't look! I took it from him,
-and put it in the safe over there before _you_ came--to keep it away
-from you."
-
-Doctor Crang swept a hand across his eyes and through his hair with a
-savage, jerky movement, and then he laughed immoderately.
-
-"What a little liar you are! Well, then, two can play at the same game.
-I lied to you about your lover there. I said there was nothing could
-save him. Yes, yes, Claire, my dear, I lied." He knelt suddenly, and
-suddenly intent and professional studied John Bruce's face, and felt
-again for the pulse beat at John Bruce's wrist. "Pretty near the limit,"
-he stated coolly. "Internal bleeding." He threw back his shoulders in
-a strangely egotistical way. "Not many men could do anything; but I,
-Sydney Angus Crang, could! Ha, ha! In ten minutes he could be on the
-road to recovery--but ten minutes, otherwise, is exactly the length of
-time he has to live."
-
-An instant Claire Veniza stared at him. Her mind reeled with chaos, with
-terror and dismay.
-
-"Then do something!" she implored wildly. "If you can save him, do it!
-You must! You shall!"
-
-"Why should I?" he demanded. His teeth were clamped hard together. "Why
-should I save your lover? No--damn him!"
-
-She drew away from him, and, suddenly, on her knees, buried her face in
-her hands and burst into sobs.
-
-"This--this is terrible--terrible!" she cried out. "Has that frightful
-stuff transformed you into an absolute fiend? Are you no longer even
-human?" Flushed, a curious look of hunger in his eyes, he gazed at her.
-
-"I'm devilishly human in some respects!" His voice rose, out of control.
-"I want you! I have wanted you from the day I saw you."
-
-She shivered. Her hands felt suddenly icy as she pressed them against
-her face.
-
-"Thank God then," she breathed, "for this, at least--that you will never
-get me!"
-
-"Won't I?" His voice rose higher, trembling with passion. "Won't I? By
-God, I will! The one thing in life I will have some way or another! You
-understand? I will! And do you think I would let _him_ stand in the way?
-You drive me mad, Claire, with those wonderful eyes of yours, with that
-hair, those lips, that throat----"
-
-"Stop!" She was on her feet, and in an instant had reached him, and
-with her hands upon his shoulders was shaking him fiercely with all her
-strength. "I hated you, despised you, loathed you before, but with that
-man dying here, you murderer, I----"
-
-Her voice trailed off, strangled, choked. He had caught her in his
-arms, his lips were upon hers. She struggled like a tigress. And as they
-lurched about the room he laughed in mad abandon. She wrenched herself
-free at last, and slipped and fell upon the floor.
-
-"Do you believe me now!" he panted. "I will have you! Neither this man
-nor any other will live to get you. His life is a snap of my fingers--so
-is any other life. It's you I want, and you I will have. And I'll tame
-you! Then I'll show you what love is."
-
-She was moaning now a little to herself. She crept to John Bruce and
-stared into his face. Dying! They were letting this man die. She tried
-to readjust the cloths upon the wound. She heard Doctor Crang laugh at
-her again. It seemed as though her soul were sinking into some great
-bottomless abyss that was black with horror. She did not know this
-John Bruce. She had told Doctor Crang so. It was useless to repeat it,
-useless to argue with a drug-steeped brain. There was only one thing
-that was absolute and final, and that was that a man's life was ebbing
-away, and a fiend, an inhuman fiend who could save him, but whom
-pleading would not touch, stood callously by, not wholly indifferent,
-rather gloating over what took the form of triumph in his diseased mind.
-And then suddenly she seemed so tired and weary. And she tried to pray
-to God. And tears came, and on her knees she turned and flung out her
-arms imploringly to the unkempt figure that stood over her, and who
-smiled as no other man she had ever seen had smiled before.
-
-"For the pity of God, for anything you have ever known in your life that
-was pure and sacred," she said brokenly, "save this man."
-
-He looked at her for a moment, still with that sardonic smile upon his
-lips, and then, swift in its transition, his expression changed and
-cunning was in his eyes.
-
-"What would you give?" he purred.
-
-"Give?" She did not look up. She felt a sudden surge of relief. It
-debased the man the more, for it was evidently money now; but her father
-would supply that. She had only to ask for it. "What do you want?" she
-asked eagerly.
-
-"Yourself," said Doctor Crang.
-
-She looked up now, quickly, startled; read the lurking triumph in his
-eyes, and with a sudden cry of fear turned away her head.
-
-"My--myself!" Her lips scarcely moved.
-
-"Yes, my dear! Yourself--Claire!" Doctor
-
-Crang shrugged his shoulders. "Edinburgh, London, Vienna, Paris, degrees
-from everywhere--ha, ha!--am I a high-priced man? Well, then, why don't
-you dismiss me? You called me in! That is my price--or shall we call it
-fee? Promise to marry me, Claire, and I'll save that man."
-
-Her face had lost all vestige of color. She stood and looked at him, but
-it did not seem as though she any longer had control over her limbs.
-She did not seem able to move them. They were numbed; her brain was
-mercifully numbed--there was only a sense of impending horror, without
-that horror taking concrete form. A voice came to her as though from
-some great distance:
-
-"Don't take too long to make up your mind. There isn't much time. It's
-about touch and go with him now."
-
-The words, the tone, the voice roused her. Realization, understanding
-swept upon her. A faintness came. She closed her eyes, swayed
-unsteadily, but recovered herself. Something made her look at the
-upturned face on the floor. She did not know this man. He was nothing
-to her. Why was he pleading with her to pawn herself for him? What right
-had he to ask for worse than death from her that he might live? Her soul
-turned sick within her. If she refused, this man would die. Death! It
-was a very little thing compared with days and months and years linked,
-fettered, bound to a drug fiend, a coward, a foul thing, a potential
-murderer, a man only in the sense of physical form, who had abused every
-other God-given attribute until it had rotted away! Her hands pressed
-to her temples fiercely, in torment. Was this man to live or die? In her
-hands was balanced a human life. It seemed as though she must scream
-out in her anguish of soul; and then it seemed as though she must fling
-herself upon the drug-crazed being who had forced this torture upon her,
-fling herself upon him to batter and pommel with her fists at his face
-that smiled in hideous contentment at her. What was she to do? The
-choice was hers. To let this man here die, or to accept a living
-death for herself--no, worse than that--something that was abominable,
-revolting, that profaned.... She drew her breath in sharply. She was
-staring at the man on the floor. His eyelids fluttered and opened. Gray
-eyes were fixed upon her, eyes that did not seem to see for there was a
-vacant stare in them--and then suddenly recognition crept into them and
-they lighted up, full of a strange, glad wonder. He made an effort to
-speak, an effort, more feeble still, to reach out his hand to her--and
-then the eyes had closed and he was unconscious again.
-
-She turned slowly and faced Doctor Crang.
-
-"You do not know what you are doing." She formed the words with a great
-effort.
-
-"Oh, yes, I do!" he answered with mocking deliberation. "I know that if
-I can't get you one way, I can another--and the way doesn't matter."
-
-"God forgive you, then," she said in a dead voice, "for I never can or
-will! I--I agree."
-
-He took a step toward her.
-
-"You'll marry me?" His face was fired with passion.
-
-She retreated a step.
-
-"Yes," she said.
-
-He reached out for her with savage eagerness.
-
-"Claire!" he cried. "Claire!"
-
-She pushed him back with both hands.
-
-"Not yet!" she said, and tried to steady her voice. "There is another
-side to the bargain. The price is this man's life. If he lives I will
-marry you, and in that case, as you well know, I can say nothing of what
-you have done to-night; but if he dies, I am not only free, but I will
-do my utmost to make you criminally responsible for his death."
-
-"Ah!" Doctor Crang stared at her. His hands, still reaching out to touch
-her, trembled; his face was hectic; his eyes were alight again with
-feverish hunger--and then suddenly the man seemed transformed into
-another being. He was on his knees beside John Bruce, and had opened his
-handbag in an instant, and in another he had forced something from a
-vial between John Bruce's lips; then an instrument was in his hands. The
-man of a moment before was gone; one Sydney Angus Crang, of many
-degrees, professional, deft, immersed in his work, had taken the other's
-place. "More water! An extra basin!" he ordered curtly.
-
-Claire Veniza obeyed him in a mechanical way. Her brain was numbed,
-exhausted, possessed of a great weariness. She watched him for a little
-while. He flung another order at her.
-
-"Make that couch up into a bed," he directed. "He can't be moved even
-upstairs to-night."
-
-Again she obeyed him; finally she helped him to lift John Bruce to the
-couch.
-
-She sat down in a chair and waited--she did not know what for. Doctor
-Crang had drawn another chair to the couch and sat there watching his
-patient. John Bruce, as far as she could tell, showed no sign of life.
-
-Then Doctor Crang's voice seemed to float out of nothingness:
-
-"He will live, Claire, my dear! By God, I'd like to have done that piece
-of work in a clinic! Some of 'em would sit up! D'ye hear, Claire, he'll
-live!"
-
-She was conscious that he was studying her; she did not look at him, nor
-did she answer.
-
-An eternity seemed to pass. She heard a motor stop outside in front of
-the house. That would be her father and Hawkins.
-
-The front door opened and closed, footsteps entered the room--and
-suddenly seemed to quicken and hurry forward. She rose from her chair.
-
-"What's this? What's the matter? What's happened?" a tall, white-haired
-man cried out.
-
-It was Doctor Crang who answered.
-
-"Oh--this, Mr. Veniza?" He waved his hand indifferently toward the
-couch. "Nothing of any importance." He shrugged his shoulders in cool
-imperturbability, and smiled into the grave, serious face of Paul
-Veniza. "The really important thing is that Claire has promised to be my
-wife."
-
-For an instant no one moved or spoke--only Doctor Crang still smiled.
-And then the silence was broken by a curious half laugh, half curse that
-was full of menace.
-
-"You lie!" Hawkins, the round, red-faced chauffeur, had stepped from
-behind Paul Veniza, and now faced Doctor Crang. "You lie! You damned
-coke-eater! I'd kill you first!"
-
-"Drunk--again!" drawled Doctor Crang contemptuously. "And what have you
-to do with it?"
-
-"Steady, Hawkins!" counselled Paul Veniza quietly. He turned to Claire
-Veniza. "Claire," he asked, "is--is this true?"
-
-She nodded--and suddenly, blindly, started toward the door.
-
-"It is true," she said.
-
-"Claire!" Paul Veniza stepped after her. "Claire,
-
-"Not to-night, father," she said in a low voice. "Please let me go."
-
-He stood aside, allowing her to pass, his face grave and anxious--and
-then he turned again to Doctor Crang.
-
-"She is naturally very upset over what has happened here," said Doctor
-Crang easily--and suddenly reaching out grasped Hawkins' arm, and pulled
-the old man forward to the couch. "Here, you!" he jerked out. "You've
-got so much to say for yourself--take a look at this fellow!"
-
-The old chauffeur bent over the couch.
-
-"My God!" he cried out in a startled way. "It's the man we--I--drove
-to-night!"
-
-"Quite so!" observed Doctor Crang. He smiled at Paul Veniza again.
-"Apart from the fact that the fellow came in through that window with a
-knife stab in his side that's pretty nearly done for him, Hawkins knows
-as much about it as either Claire or I do. He's in bad shape. Extremely
-serious. I will stay with him to-night. He cannot be moved." He nodded
-suggestively toward the door. "Hawkins can tell you as much as I can.
-It's got to be quiet in here. As for Claire"--he seemed suddenly to be
-greatly disturbed and occupied with the condition of the wounded man on
-the couch--"that will have to wait until morning. This man's condition
-is critical. I can't put you out of your own room, but-----" Again he
-nodded toward the door.
-
-For a moment Paul Veniza hesitated--but Doctor Crang's back was already
-turned, and he was bending over the wounded man, apparently oblivious to
-every other consideration. He motioned to Hawkins, and the two left the
-room.
-
-Doctor Crang looked around over his shoulder as the door closed. A
-malicious grin spread over his face. He rubbed his hands together. Then
-he sat down in his chair again, and began to prepare a solution for his
-hypodermic syringe.
-
-"Yes, yes," said Doctor Crang softly, addressing the unconscious form of
-John Bruce, "you'll live, all right, my friend, I'll see to that, though
-the odds are still against you. You're too--ha, ha!--valuable to die!
-You played in luck when you drew Sydney Angus Crang, M.D., as your
-attending physician!"
-
-And then Doctor Sydney Angus Crang made a little grimace as he punctured
-the flesh of his arm with the needle of the hypodermic syringe and
-injected into himself another dose of cocaine.
-
-"Yes," said Doctor Sydney Angus Crang very softly, his eyes lighting,
-"too valuable, much too valuable--to die!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER FIVE--HAWKINS
-
-|IN the outer room, the door closed behind them, Paul Veniza and
-Hawkins stared into each other's eyes. Hawkins' face had lost its ruddy,
-weatherbeaten color, and there was a strained, perplexed anxiety in his
-expression.
-
-"D'ye hear what she said?" he mumbled. "D'ye hear what he said? Going
-to be married! My little girl, my innocent little girl, and--and that
-dope-feeding devil! I--I don't understand, Paul. What's it mean?"
-
-Paul Veniza laid his hand on the other's shoulder, as much to seek, it
-seemed, as to offer sympathy. He shook his head.
-
-"I don't know," he said blankly.
-
-Hawkins' watery blue eyes under their shaggy brows traveled miserably in
-the direction of the staircase.
-
-"I--I ain't got the right," he choked. "You go up and talk to her,
-Paul."
-
-Paul Veniza ran his fingers in a troubled way through his white hair;
-then, nodding his head, he turned abruptly and began to mount the
-stairs.
-
-Hawkins watched until the other had disappeared from sight, watched
-until he heard a door open and close softly above; then he swung sharply
-around, and with his old, drooping shoulders suddenly squared, strode
-toward the door that shut him off from Doctor Crang and the man he had
-recognized as his passenger in the traveling pawn-shop earlier that
-night. But at the door itself he hesitated, and after a moment drew
-back, and the shoulders drooped again, and he fell to twisting his hands
-together in nervous indecision as he retreated to the center of the
-room.
-
-And he stood there again, where Paul Veniza had left him, and stared
-with the hurt of a dumb animal in his eyes at the top of the staircase.
-
-"It's all my fault," the old man whispered, and fell to twisting his
-hands together once more. "But--but I thought she'd be safe with me."
-
-For a long time he seemed to ponder his own words, and gradually they
-seemed to bring an added burden upon him, and heavily now he drew his
-hand across his eyes.
-
-"Why ain't I dead?" he whispered. "I ain't never been no good to
-her. Twenty years, it is--twenty years. Just old Hawkins--shabby old
-Hawkins--that she loves 'cause she's sorry for him."
-
-Hawkins' eyes roved about the room.
-
-"I remember the night I brought her here." He was still whispering to
-himself. "In there, it was, I took her." He jerked his hand toward the
-inner room. "This here room was the pawn-shop then. God, all those years
-ago--and--and I ain't never bought her back again, and she ain't known
-no father but Paul, and----" His voice trailed off and died away.
-
-He sank his chin in his hands.
-
-Occasionally he heard the murmur of voices from above, occasionally the
-sound of movement through the closed door that separated him from Doctor
-Crang; but he did not move or speak again until Paul Veniza came down
-the stairs and stood before him.
-
-Hawkins searched the other's face.
-
-"It--it ain't true, is it, what she said?" he questioned almost
-fiercely. "She didn't really mean it, did she, Paul?"
-
-Paul Veniza turned his head away.
-
-"Yes, she meant it," he answered in a low voice. "I don't understand.
-She wouldn't give me any explanation."
-
-Hawkins clenched his fists suddenly.
-
-"But didn't you tell her what kind of a man Crang is? Good God, Paul,
-didn't you tell her what he is?"
-
-"She knows it without my telling her," Paul Veniza said in a dull tone.
-"But I told her again; I told her it was impossible, incredible. Her
-only answer was that it was inevitable."
-
-"But she doesn't love him! She can't love him!" Hawkins burst out.
-"There's never been anything between them before."
-
-"No, she doesn't love him. Of course, she doesn't!" Paul Veniza said, as
-though speaking to himself. He looked at Hawkins suddenly under knitted
-brows. "And she says she never saw that other man in her life before
-until he stepped into the car. She says she only went out to-night
-because they were so urgent about it up at the house, and that she felt
-everything would be perfectly safe with you driving the car. I can't
-make anything out of it!"
-
-Hawkins drew the sleeve of his coat across his brow. It was cool in the
-room, but little beads of moisture were standing out on his forehead.
-
-"I ain't brought her nothing but harm all my life," he said brokenly.
-"I----"
-
-"Don't take it that way, old friend!" Paul Veniza's hands sought the
-other's shoulders. "I don't see how you are to blame for this. Claire
-said that other man treated her with all courtesy, and left the car
-after you had gone around the block; and she doesn't know how he
-afterwards came here wounded any more than we do--and anyway, it can't
-have anything to do with her marrying Doctor Crang."
-
-"What's she doing now?" demanded Hawkins abruptly. "She's up there
-crying her heart out, ain't she?"
-
-Paul Veniza did not answer.
-
-Hawkins straightened up. A sudden dignity came to the shabby old figure.
-
-"What hold has that devil got on my little girl?" he cried out
-sharply. "I'll make him pay for it, so help me God! My little girl, my
-little------"
-
-"S-sh!" Paul Veniza caught hurriedly at Hawkins' arm. "Be careful, old
-friend!" he warned. "Not so loud! She might hear you."
-
-Hawkins cast a timorous, startled glance in the direction of the stairs.
-He seemed to shrink again, into a stature as shabby as his clothing. His
-lips twitched; he twisted his hands together.
-
-"Yes," he mumbled; "yes, she--she might hear me." He stared around the
-room; and then, as though blindly, his hands groping out in front of
-him, he started for the street door. "I'm going home," said Hawkins.
-"I'm going home to think this out."
-
-Paul Veniza's voice choked a little.
-
-"Your hat, old friend," he said, picking up the old man's hat from the
-table and following the other to the door.
-
-"Yes, my hat," said Hawkins--and pulling it far down over his eyes,
-crossed the sidewalk, and climbed into the driver's seat of the old,
-closed car that stood at the curb.
-
-He started the car mechanically. He did not look back. He stared
-straight ahead of him except when, at the corner, his eyes lifted and
-held for a moment on the lighted windows and the swinging doors of a
-saloon--and the car went perceptibly slower. Then his hands tightened
-fiercely in their hold upon the wheel until the white of the knuckles
-showed, and the car passed the saloon and turned the next corner and
-went on.
-
-Halfway down the next block it almost came to a halt again when opposite
-a dark and dingy driveway that led in between, and to the rear of,
-two poverty-stricken frame houses. Hawkins stared at this uninviting
-prospect, and made as though to turn the car into the driveway; then,
-shaking his head heavily, he continued on along the street.
-
-"I can't go in there and sit by myself all alone," said Hawkins
-hoarsely. "I--I'd go mad. It's--it's like as though they'd told me
-to-night that she'd died--same as they told me about her mother the
-night I went to Paul's."
-
-The car moved slowly onward. It turned the next corner--and the next. It
-almost completed the circuit of the block. Hawkins now was wetting his
-lips with the tip of his tongue. His hands on the wheel were trembling.
-The car had stopped. Hawkins was staring again at the lighted windows
-and the swinging doors of the saloon.
-
-He sat for a long time motionless; then he climbed down from his seat.
-
-"Just one," Hawkins whispered to himself. "Just one. I--I'd go mad if I
-didn't."
-
-Hawkins pushed the swinging doors open, and sidled up to the bar.
-
-"Hello, Hawkins!" grinned the barkeeper. "Been out of town? I ain't seen
-you the whole afternoon!"
-
-"You mind your own business!" said Hawkins surlily.
-
-"Sure!" nodded the barkeeper cheerily. "Same as usual?" He slid a
-square-faced bottle and a glass toward the old man.
-
-Hawkins helped himself and drank moodily. He set his empty glass back
-on the bar, jerked down his shabby vest and straightened up, his eyes
-resolutely fixed on the door. Then he felt in his pocket for his pipe
-and tobacco. His eyes shifted from the door to his pipe. He filled it
-slowly.
-
-"Give me another," said Hawkins presently--without looking at the
-barkeeper.
-
-Again the old man drank, and jerked down his vest, and squared his thin
-shoulders. He lighted his pipe, tamping the bowl carefully with his
-forefinger. His eyes sought the swinging doors once more.
-
-"I'm going home," said Hawkins defiantly to himself. "I've got to think
-this out." He dug into his vest pocket for money, and produced a few
-small bills. He stared at these for a moment, hesitated, started to
-replace them in his pocket, hesitated again, and the tip of his tongue
-circled his lips; then he pushed the money across the bar. "Take the
-drinks out of that, and--and give me a bottle," he said. "I--I don't
-like to be without anything in the house, and I got to go home."
-
-"You said something!" said the barkeeper. "Have one on the house before
-you go?"
-
-"No; I won't."
-
-"No," said Hawkins with stern determination.
-
-Hawkins crowded the bottle into the side pocket of his coat, passed out
-through the swinging doors, and resumed his seat on the car. And again
-the car started forward. But it went faster now. Hawkins' face was
-flushed; he seemed nervously and excitedly in haste. At the driveway
-he turned in, garaged his car in an old shed at the rear of one of the
-houses, locked the shed with a padlock, and, by way of the back door,
-entered the house that was in front of the shed.
-
-It was quite dark inside, but Hawkins had been an inmate of the somewhat
-seedy rooming-house too many years either to expect that a light should
-be burning at that hour, or, for that matter, to require any light.
-He groped his way up a flight of creaking stairs, opened the door of a
-room, and stepped inside. He shut the door behind him, locked it, and
-struck a match. A gas-jet wheezed asthmatically, and finally flung a
-thin and sullen yellow glow about the place. It disclosed a cot bed, a
-small strip of carpet long since worn bare of nap, a washstand, an old
-trunk, a battered table, and two chairs.
-
-Hawkins, with some difficulty, extricated the bottle from his pocket,
-and lifted the lid of his trunk. He thrust the bottle inside, and in the
-act of closing the lid upon it--hesitated.
-
-"I--I ain't myself to-night, I ain't," said Hawkins tremulously. "It's
-shook me, it has--bad. Just one--so help me God!--just one."
-
-Hawkins sat down at the table with the bottle in front of him.
-
-And while Hawkins sat there it grew very late.
-
-At intervals Hawkins talked to himself. At times he stared owlishly
-from a half-emptied bottle to the black square of window pane above the
-trunk--and once he shook his fist in that direction.
-
-"Crang--eh--damn you!" he gritted out. "You think you got her, do you?
-Some dirty, cunning trick you've played her! But you don't know old
-Hawkins. Ha, ha! You think he's only a drunken bum!"
-
-Hawkins, as it grew later still, became unsteady in his seat. Gradually
-his head sank down upon the table.
-
-"I--hie!--gotta think this--out," said Hawkins earnestly--and fell
-asleep.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER SIX--THE ALIBI
-
-|JOHN BRUCE opened his eyes dreamily, unseeingly; and then his eyelids
-fluttered and closed again. There was an exquisite sense of languor
-upon him, of cool, comfortable repose; a curious absence of all
-material things. It seemed as though he were in some suspended state of
-animation.
-
-It was very strange. It wasn't life--not life as he had ever known it.
-Perhaps it was death. He did not understand.
-
-He tried to think. He was conscious that his mind for some long
-indeterminate period had been occupied with the repetition of queer,
-vague, broken snatches of things, fantastic things born of illusions,
-brain fancies, cobwebby, intangible, which had no meaning, and were
-without beginning or end. There was a white beach, very white, and a
-full round moon, and the moon winked knowingly while he whittled with a
-huge jack-knife at a quill toothpick. And then there was a great chasm
-of blackness which separated the beach from some other place that seemed
-to have nothing to identify it except this black chasm which was the
-passageway to it; and here a man's face, a face that was sinister in
-its expression, and both repulsive and unhealthy in its color, was
-constantly bending over him, and the man's head was always in the same
-posture--cocked a little to one side, as though listening intently
-and straining to hear something. And then, in the same place, but less
-frequently, there was another face--and this seemed to bring with it
-always a shaft of warm, bright sunlight that dispelled the abominable
-gloom, and before which the first face vanished--a beautiful, the
-wondrously beautiful, face of a girl, one that he had seen somewhere
-before, that was haunting in its familiarity and for which it seemed
-he had always known a great yearning, but which plagued him miserably
-because there seemed to be some unseen barrier between them, and because
-he could not recognize her, and she could not speak and tell him who she
-was.
-
-John Bruce opened his eyes again. Dimly, faintly, his mind seemed to be
-grasping coherent realities. He began to remember fragments of the past,
-but it was very hard to piece those fragments together into a concrete
-whole. That white beach--yes, he remembered that. And the quill
-toothpick. Only the huge jack-knife was absurd! It was at Apia with
-Larmon. But he was in a room somewhere now, and lying on a cot of some
-sort. And it was night. How had he come here?
-
-He moved a little, and suddenly felt a twinge of pain in his side. His
-hand groped under the covering, and his fingers came into contact with
-bandages that were wrapped tightly around his body.
-
-And then in a flash memory returned. He remembered the fight in Ratti's
-wine shop, the knife stab, and how he had dragged himself along the lane
-and climbed in through _her_ window. His eyes now in a startled way were
-searching his surroundings. Perhaps this was the room! He could not
-be quite sure, but there seemed to be something familiar about it. The
-light was very low, like a gas-jet turned down, and he could not make
-out where it came from, nor could he see any window through which he
-might have climbed in.
-
-He frowned in a troubled way. It was true that, as he had climbed in
-that night, he had not been in a condition to take much note of the
-room, but yet it did seem to be the same place. The frown vanished. What
-did it matter? He knew now beyond any question whose face it was that
-had come to him so often in that shaft of sunlight. Yes, it _did_
-matter! He must have been unconscious, perhaps for only a few hours,
-perhaps for days, but if this was the same place, then she was _here_,
-not as a figment of the brain, not as one created out of his own
-longing, but here in her actual person, a living, breathing reality. It
-was the girl of the traveling pawn-shop, and----
-
-John Bruce found himself listening with sudden intentness. Was he
-drifting back into unconsciousness again, into that realm of unreal
-things, where the mind, fevered and broken, wove out of its sick
-imagination queer, meaningless fancies? It was strange that unreal
-things should seem so real! Wasn't that an animal of some sort
-scratching at the wall of the house outside?
-
-He lifted his head slightly from the pillow--and held it there. A voice
-from within the room reached him in an angry, rasping whisper:
-
-"Damn you, Birdie, why don't you pull the house down and have done with
-it? You clumsy hog! Do you want the police on us? Can't you climb three
-feet without waking up the whole of New York?"
-
-John Bruce's lips drew together until they formed a tight, straight
-line. This was strange! Very strange! It wasn't a vagary of his brain
-this time. His brain was as clear now as it had ever been in his life.
-The voice came from beyond the head of his cot. He had seen no one in
-the room, but that was natural enough since from the position in which
-he was lying his line of vision was decidedly restricted; what seemed
-incomprehensible though, taken in conjunction with the words he had
-just heard, was that his own presence there appeared to be completely
-ignored.
-
-He twisted his head around cautiously, and found that the head of the
-cot was surrounded by a screen. He nodded to himself a little grimly.
-That accounted for it! There was a scraping sound now, and heavy,
-labored breathing.
-
-John Bruce silently and stealthily stretched out his arm. He could just
-reach the screen. It was made of some soft, silken material, and his
-fingers found no difficulty in drawing this back a little from the edge
-of that portion of the upright framework which was directly in front of
-him.
-
-He scarcely breathed now. Perhaps he was in so weak a state that his
-mind faltered if crowded, for there was so much to see that he could
-not seem to grasp it all as a single picture. He gazed fascinated. The
-details came slowly--one by one. It _was_ the room where he had crawled
-in through the window and had fallen senseless to the floor--whenever
-that had been! That was the window there. And, curiously enough, another
-man was crawling in through it now! And there was whispering. And two
-other men were already standing in the room, but he could not see their
-faces because their backs were turned to him. Then one of the two swung
-around in the direction of the window, bringing his face into view. John
-Bruce closed his eyes for a moment. Yes, it must be that! His mind was
-off wandering once more, painting and picturing for itself its fanciful
-unrealities, bringing back again the character it had created, the man
-with the sinister face whose pallor was unhealthy and repulsive.
-
-And then he opened his eyes and looked again, and the face was still
-there--and it was real. And now the man spoke:
-
-"Come on, get busy, Birdie! If you take as long to crack the box as you
-have taken to climb in through a low window, maybe we'll be invited to
-breakfast with the family! You act just like a swell cracksman--not! But
-here's the combination--so try and play up to the part!"
-
-The man addressed was heavy of build, with a pockmarked and forbidding
-countenance. He was panting from his exertions, as, inside the room now,
-he leaned against the sill.
-
-"That's all right, Doc!" he grunted. "That's all right! But how about
-his nibs over there behind the screen? Ain't he ever comin' out of his
-nap?"
-
-The man addressed as "Doc" rolled up the sleeve of his left arm, and
-produced a hypodermic syringe from his pocket.
-
-"There's the safe over there, Birdie," he drawled, as he pricked his arm
-with the needle and pushed home the plunger. "Get busy!"
-
-The big man shuffled his feet.
-
-"I know you know your business, Doc," he said uneasily; "but I guess
-me an' Pete here 'd feel more comfortable if you'd have put that shot of
-coke into the guy I'm speakin' about instead of into yourself. Ain't I
-right, Pete?"
-
-The third man was lounging against the wall, his back still turned to
-John Bruce.
-
-"Sure," he said; "but I guess you can leave it to Doc. A guy that's
-been pawin' the air for two days ain't likely to butt in much all of a
-sudden."
-
-The man with the hypodermic, in the act of replacing the syringe in his
-pocket, drew it out again.
-
-"Coming from you, Birdie," he murmured caustically, "that's a
-surprisingly bright idea. I've been here for the last three hours
-listening to his interesting addresses from the rostrum of delirium, and
-I should say he was quite safe. Still, to oblige you, Birdie, and make
-you feel more comfortable, we'll act on your suggestion."
-
-John Bruce's teeth gritted together. How weak he was! His arm ached from
-even the slight strain of extending it beyond his head to the screen.
-
-And then he smiled grimly. But it wasn't a case of strength now, was it?
-He was obviously quite helpless in that respect. This man they called
-Doc believed him to be still unconscious, and--he drew his arm silently
-back, tucked it again under the sheet and blanket that covered him,
-and closed his eyes--and even if he could resist, which he couldn't, a
-hypodermic injection of morphine, or cocaine, or whatever it was that
-the supreme crook of the trio indulged in, could not _instantly_ take
-effect. There ought to be time enough to watch at least----
-
-John Bruce lay perfectly still. He heard a footstep come quickly around
-the screen; he sensed the presence of some one bending over him; then
-the coverings were pulled down and his arm was bared. He steeled himself
-against the instinctive impulse to wince at the sharp prick of the
-needle which he knew was coming--and felt instead a cold and curiously
-merciless rage sweep over him as the act was performed. Then the
-footstep retreated--and John Bruce quietly twisted his head around on
-the pillow, reached out his arm, and his fingers drew the silk panel of
-the screen slightly away from the edge of the framework again.
-
-He could see the safe they had referred to now. It was over at the far
-side of the room against the wall, and the three men were standing in
-front of it. Presently it was opened. The man called Doc knelt down in
-front of it and began to examine its contents. He swung around to his
-companions after a moment with a large pile of banknotes in his hands.
-From this pile he counted out and handed a small portion to each of the
-other two men--and coolly stuffed the bulk of the money into his own
-pockets.
-
-The scene went blurry then for a moment before John Bruce's eyes, and
-he lifted his free hand and brushed it across his forehead. He was so
-beastly weak, anyhow, and the infernal dope was getting in its work
-too fast! He fought with all his mental strength against the impulse
-to relax and close his eyes. What was it they were doing now? It looked
-like some foolish masquerade. The two companions of the man with the
-sinister, pasty face were tying handkerchiefs over their faces and
-drawing revolvers from their pockets; and then the big man began to
-close the door of the safe.
-
-The Doc's voice came sharply:
-
-"Look out you don't lock it, you fool!"
-
-Once more John Bruce brushed his hand across his eyes. His brain must
-be playing him tricks again. A din infernal rose suddenly in the room.
-While the big man lounged nonchalantly against the safe, the other two
-were scuffling all over the floor and throwing chairs about. And then
-from somewhere upstairs, on the floor there too, John Bruce thought he
-caught the sound of hurried movements.
-
-Then for an instant the scuffling in the room ceased, and the
-pasty-faced man's voice came in a peremptory whisper:
-
-"The minute any one shows at the door you swing that safe open as though
-you'd been working at it all the time, Birdie, and pretend to shove
-everything in sight into your pockets. And you, Joe, you've got me
-cornered and covered here--see? And you hold the doorway with your gun
-too; and then both of you back away and make your getaway through the
-window." The scuffling began again. John Bruce watched the scene, a
-sense of drowsiness and apathy creeping upon him. He tried to rouse
-himself. He ought to do something. That vicious-faced little crook who
-had haunted him with unwelcome visitations, and who at this precise
-moment had the bulk of the money from the safe in his own pockets, was
-in the act of planting a somewhat crude, but probably none the less
-effective, alibi, and----
-
-John Bruce heard a door flung open, and then a sudden, startled cry,
-first in a woman's and then in a man's voice. But he could not see any
-door from the position in which he lay. He turned over with a great
-effort, facing the other way, and reached out with his fingers for the
-panel of the screen that overlapped the head of the cot. And then John
-Bruce lay motionless, the blood pounding fiercely at his temples.
-
-He was conscious that a tall, white-haired man in scanty attire was
-there, because the doorway framed two figures; but he _saw_ only a
-beautiful face, pitifully white, only the slim form of a girl whose
-great brown eyes were very wide with fear, and who held her dressing
-gown tightly clutched around her throat. It was the girl of the
-traveling pawn-shop, it was the girl of his dreams in the shaft of
-sunlight, it was the girl he had followed here--only--only the picture
-seemed to be fading away. It was very strange! It was most curious! She
-always seemed to leave that way. This was Larmon now instead, wasn't it?
-Larmon... and a jack-knife... and a quill toothpick... and....
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER SEVEN--THE GIRL OF THE TRAVELING PAWN-SHOP
-
-|JOHN BRUCE abstractedly twirled the tassel of the old and faded
-dressing gown which he wore, the temporary possession of which he
-owed to Paul Veniza, his host. From the chair in which he sat his eyes
-ventured stolen glances at the nape of a dainty neck, and at a great
-coiled mass of silken brown hair that shone like burnished copper in the
-afternoon sunlight, as Claire Veniza, her back turned toward him, busied
-herself about the room. He could walk now across the floor--and a
-great deal further, he was sure, if they would only let him. He had not
-pressed that point; it might be taking an unfair advantage of an already
-over-generous hospitality, but he was not at all anxious to speed his
-departure from--well, from where he was at that precise moment.
-
-And now as he looked at Claire Veniza, his thoughts went back to the
-night he had stepped, at old Hawkins' invitation, into the traveling
-pawn-shop. That was not so very long ago--two weeks of grave illness,
-and then the past week of convalescence--but it seemed to span a great
-and almost limitless stretch of time, and to mark a new and entirely
-different era in his life; an era that perplexed and troubled and
-intrigued him with conditions and surroundings and disturbing elements
-that he did not comprehend--but at the same time made the blood in his
-veins to course with wild abandon, and the future to hold out glad and
-beckoning hands.
-
-He loved, with a great, overwhelming, masterful love, the girl who stood
-there just across the room all unconscious of the worship that he knew
-was in his eyes, and which he neither tried nor wished to curb. Of his
-own love he was sure. He had loved her from the moment he had first seen
-her, and in his heart he knew he held fate kind to have given him the
-wound that in its turn had brought the week of convalescence just past.
-And yet--and yet---- Here dismay came, and his brain seemed to stumble.
-Sometimes he dared to hope; sometimes he was plunged into the depths of
-misery and despair. Little things, a touch of the hand as she had nursed
-him that had seemed like some God-given tender caress, a glance when
-she had thought he had not seen and which he had allowed his heart to
-interpret to its advantage with perhaps no other justification than
-its own yearning and desire, had buoyed him up; and then, at times,
-a strange, almost bitter aloofness, it seemed, in her attitude toward
-him--and this had checked, had always checked, the words that were ever
-on his lips.
-
-A faint flush dyed his cheeks. But even so, and for all his boasted
-love, did he not in his own soul wrong her sometimes? The questions
-_would_ come. What was the meaning of the strange environment in which
-she lived? Why should she have driven to a gambling hell late at night,
-and quite as though it were the usual thing, to transact business alone
-in that car with----
-
-God! His hands clenched fiercely. He remembered that night, and how the
-same thought had come then, mocking him, jeering him, making sport of
-him. He was a cad, a pitiful, vile-minded cad! Thank God that he was at
-least still man enough to be ashamed of his own thoughts, even if they
-came in spite of him!
-
-Perhaps it was the strange, unusual characters that surrounded her, that
-came and went in this curious place here, that fostered such thoughts;
-perhaps he was not strong enough yet to grapple with all these confusing
-things. He smiled a little grimly. The robbery of the safe, for
-instance--and that reptile whom he now knew to be his own attending
-physician, Doctor Crang! He had said nothing about his knowledge of the
-robbery--yet. As nearly as he could judge it had occurred two or three
-days prior to the time when his actual convalescence had set in, and as
-a material witness to the crime he was not at all sure that in law his
-testimony would be of much value. They must certainly have found him in
-an unconscious state immediately afterward--and Doctor Crang would
-as indubitably attack his testimony as being nothing more than the
-hallucination of a sick brain.
-
-The luck of the devil had been with Crang! Why had he, John Bruce, gone
-drifting off into unconsciousness just at the psychological moment when,
-if the plan had been carried out as arranged and the other two had made
-their fake escape, Crang would have been left in the room with Claire
-and Paul Veniza--with the money in his pockets! He would have had Doctor
-Crang cold then! It was quite different now. He was not quite sure what
-he meant to do, except that he fully proposed to have a reckoning with
-Doctor Crang. But that reckoning, something, he could not quite define
-what, had prompted him to postpone until he had become physically a
-little stronger!
-
-And then there was another curious thing about it all, which too had
-influenced him in keeping silent. Hawkins, Paul Veniza, Claire and
-Doctor Crang had each, severally and collectively, been here in this
-room many times since the robbery, and not once in his presence had the
-affair ever been mentioned! And--oh, what did it matter! He shrugged his
-shoulders as though to rid himself of some depressing physical weight.
-What did anything matter on this wonderful sunlit afternoon--save Claire
-there in her white, cool dress, that seemed somehow to typify her own
-glorious youth and freshness.
-
-How dainty and sweet and alluring she looked! His eyes were no longer
-contented with stolen glances; they held now masterfully, defiant of any
-self-restraint, upon the slim figure that was all grace from the trim
-little ankles to the poise of the shapely head. He felt the blood
-quicken his pulse. Stronger than he had ever known it before, straining
-to burst all barriers, demanding expression as a right that would not be
-denied, his love rose dominant within him, and----
-
-The tassel he had been twirling dropped from his hand. She had
-turned suddenly; and across the room her eyes met his, calm, deep and
-unperturbed at first, but wide the next instant with a startled shyness,
-and the color sweeping upward from her throat crimsoned her face, and in
-confusion she turned away her head.
-
-John Bruce was on his feet. He stumbled a little as he took a step
-forward. His heart was pounding, flinging a red tide into the pallor of
-his cheeks that illness had claimed as one of its tolls.
-
-"I--I did not mean to tell you like that," he said huskily. "But I have
-wanted to tell you for so long. It seems as though I have always wanted
-to tell you. Claire--I love you."
-
-She did not answer.
-
-He was beside her now--only her head was lowered and averted and he
-could not look into her face. Her fingers were plucking tremulously at a
-fold of her dress. He caught her hand between both his own.
-
-"Claire--Claire, I love you!" he whispered.
-
-She disengaged her hand gently; and, still refusing to let him see her
-face, shook her head slowly.
-
-"I--I-----" Her voice was very low. "Oh, don't you know?"
-
-"I know I love you," he answered passionately. "I know that nothing else
-but that matters."
-
-Again she shook her head.
-
-"I thought perhaps he would have told you. I--I am going to marry Doctor
-Crang."
-
-John Bruce stepped back involuntarily; and for a moment incredulity and
-helpless amazement held sway in his expression--then his lips tightened
-in a hurt, half angry way.
-
-"Is that fair to me, Claire--to give me an answer like that?" he said in
-a low tone. "I know it isn't true, of course; it couldn't be--but--but
-it isn't much of a joke either, is it?"
-
-"It is true," she said monotonously.
-
-He leaned suddenly forward, and taking her face between his hands, made
-her lift her head and look at him. The brown eyes were swimming with
-tears. The red swept her face in a great wave, and, receding, left it
-deathly pale--and in a frenzy of confusion she wrenched herself free
-from him and retreated a step.
-
-"My God!" said John Bruce hoarsely. "You--and Doctor Crang! I don't
-understand! It is monstrous! You can't love that----" He checked
-himself, biting at his lips. "You can't love Doctor Crang. It is
-impossible! You dare not stand there and tell me that you do. Answer me,
-Claire--answer me!"
-
-She seemed to have regained her self-control--or perhaps it was the one
-defense she knew. The little figure was drawn up, her head held back.
-
-"You have no right to ask me that," she said steadily.
-
-"Right!" John Bruce echoed almost fiercely. His soul itself seemed
-suddenly to be in passionate turmoil; it seemed to juggle two figures
-before his consciousness, contrasting one with the other in most hideous
-fashion--this woman here whom he loved, who struggled to hold herself
-bravely, who stood for all that was pure, for all that he reverenced in
-a woman; and that sallow, evil-faced degenerate, a drug fiend so lost to
-the shame of his vice that he pricked himself with his miserable needle
-quite as unconcernedly in public as one would smoke a cigarette--and
-worse--a crook--a thief! Was it a coward's act to tell this girl _what_
-the man was whom she proposed to marry? Was it contemptible to pull a
-rival such as that down from the pedestal which in some fiendish way he
-must have erected for himself? Surely she did not know the man for what
-he actually was! She could not know! "Right!" he cried out. "Yes, I have
-the right--both for your sake and for my own. I have the right my love
-gives me. Do you know how I came here that first night?"
-
-"Yes," she said with an effort. "You told me. You were in a fight in
-Ratti's place, and were wounded."
-
-He laughed out harshly.
-
-"And I told you the truth--as far as it went," he said. "But do you know
-how I came to be in this locality after leaving you in that motor car? I
-followed you. I loved you from the moment I saw you that night. It seems
-as though I have always loved you--as I always shall love you. That is
-what gives me the right to speak. And I mean to speak. If it were an
-honorable man to whom you were to be married it would be quite another
-matter; but you cannot know what you are doing, you do not know this man
-as he really is, or what he----"
-
-"Please! Please stop!" she cried out brokenly. "Nothing you could say
-would tell me anything I do not already know."
-
-"I am not so sure!" said John Bruce grimly. "Suppose I told you he was a
-criminal?"
-
-"He is a criminal." Her voice was without inflection.
-
-"Suppose then he were sent to jail--to serve a sentence?"
-
-"I would marry him when he came out," she said. "Oh, please do not
-say any more! I know far more about him than you do; but--but that has
-nothing to do with it."
-
-For an instant, motionless, John Bruce stared at Claire; then his hands
-swept out and caught her wrists in a tight grip and held her prisoner.
-
-"Claire!" His voice choked. "What does this mean? You do not love him;
-you say you know he is even a criminal--and yet you are going to marry
-him! What hold has he got on you? What is it? What damnable trap has he
-got you in? I am going to know, Claire! I will know! And whatever it is,
-whatever the cause of it, I'll crush it, strangle it, sweep it out of
-your dear life at any cost! Tell me, Claire!"
-
-Her face had gone white; she struggled a little to release herself.
-
-"You--you do not know what you are saying. You----" Her voice broke in a
-half sob.
-
-"Claire, look at me!" He was pleading now with his soul in his eyes and
-voice. "Claire, I----"
-
-"Oh, please let me go!" she cried out frantically. "You cannot say
-anything that will make any difference. I--it only makes it harder."
-The tears were brimming in her eyes again. "Oh, please let me
-go--there's--there's some one coming."
-
-John Bruce's hands dropped to his sides. The door, already half open,
-was pushed wide, and Hawkins, the old chauffeur, stood on the threshold.
-And as John Bruce looked in that direction, he was suddenly and
-strangely conscious that somehow for the moment the old man dominated
-his attention even to the exclusion of Claire. There was something of
-curious self-effacement, of humbleness in the bent, stoop-shouldered
-figure there, who twisted a shapeless hat awkwardly in his hands; but
-also something of trouble and deep anxiety in the faded blue eyes as
-they fixed on the girl, and yet without meeting her eyes in return, held
-upon her as she walked slowly now toward the door.
-
-"Dear old Hawkins," she said softly, and laid her hand for an instant on
-the other's arm as she passed by him, "you and Mr. Bruce will be able
-to entertain each other, won't you? I--I'm going upstairs for a little
-while."
-
-And the old man made no answer; but, turning on the threshold, he
-watched her, his attitude, it seemed to John Bruce, one of almost
-pathetic wistfulness, as Claire disappeared from view.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER EIGHT--ALLIES
-
-|CLAIRE'S footsteps, ascending the stairs, died away. John Bruce
-returned to his chair. His eyes were still on the old chauffeur.
-
-Hawkins was no longer twisting his shapeless hat nervously in his
-fingers; instead, he held it now in one clenched hand, while with the
-other he closed the door behind him as he stepped forward across the
-threshold, and with squared shoulders advanced toward John Bruce. And
-then, quite as suddenly again, as though alarmed at his own temerity,
-the old man paused, and the question on his lips, aggressively enough
-framed, became irresolute in tone.
-
-"What--what's the matter with Claire?" he stammered. "What's this mean?"
-
-It was a moment before John Bruce answered, while he eyed the other from
-head to foot. Hawkins was not the least interesting by any means of the
-queer characters that came and went and centered around this one-time
-pawn-shop of Paul Veniza; but Hawkins, of them all, was the one he
-was least able, from what he had seen of the man, to fathom. And yet,
-somehow, he liked Hawkins.
-
-"That's exactly what I want to know," he said a little brusquely.
-"And"--he eyed Hawkins once more with cool appraisal--"I think you are
-the man best able to supply the information."
-
-Hawkins began to fumble with his hat again.
-
-"I--I--why do you say that?" he faltered, a sudden note of what seemed
-almost trepidation in his voice.
-
-John Bruce shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"Possibly it is just a hunch," he said calmly. "But you were the one who
-was driving that old bus on a certain night--you remember? And you seem
-to hang around here about as you please. Therefore you must stand in on
-a fairly intimate basis with the family circle. I'd like to know what
-hold a rotten crook like Doctor Crang has got on Claire Veniza that she
-should be willing to marry him, when she doesn't love him. I'd like to
-know why a girl like Claire Veniza drives alone at night to a gambling
-hell to----"
-
-"That's enough!" Hawkins' voice rose abruptly, peremptorily. He advanced
-again threateningly oft John Bruce. "Don't you dare to say one word
-against my--against--against her. I'll choke the life out of you, if you
-do! Who are you, anyway? You are asking a lot of questions. How did you
-get here in the first place? You answer that! I've always meant to ask
-you. You answer that--and leave Claire out of it!"
-
-John Bruce whistled softly.
-
-"I can't very well do that," he said quietly, "because it was Claire who
-brought me here."
-
-"Claire brought you!" The old blue eyes grew very hard and very steady.
-"That's a lie! She never saw you after you got out at the corner that
-night until you came in through the window here. She didn't tell you
-where she lived. She didn't invite you here. She's not that kind, and,
-sick though you may be, I'll not keep my hands off you, if----"
-
-"Steady, Hawkins--steady!" said John Bruce, his voice as quiet as
-before. "We seem to possess a common bond. You seem to be pretty fond
-of Claire. Well, so am I. That ought to make us allies." He held out his
-hand suddenly to the old man. "I had just asked Claire to marry me when
-you came to the door."
-
-Hawkins stared from the outstretched hand into John Bruce's eyes, and
-back again at the outstretched hand. Bewilderment, hesitation, a curious
-excitement was in his face.
-
-"You asked Claire to marry you?" He swallowed hard. "You--you want to
-marry Claire? I--why?"
-
-"Why?" John Bruce echoed helplessly. "Good Lord, Hawkins, you _are_ a
-queer one! Barring beasts like Crang, why does a man ordinarily ask a
-woman to marry him? Because he loves her. Well, I love Claire. I loved
-her from the moment I saw her. I followed her, or, rather, that old bus
-of yours, here that night. And that is how, after that fight at Ratti's
-when I got out the back door and into the lane, I crawled over here for
-sanctuary. I said Claire brought me here. You understand now, don't you?
-That's how she brought me here--because I loved her that night. But it
-is because of Crang"--his voice grew hard--"that I am telling you this.
-I love her now--and a great deal too much, whether she could ever care
-for me or not, to see her in the clutches of a crook, and her
-life wrecked by a degenerate cur. And somehow"--his hand was still
-extended--"I thought you seemed to think enough of her to feel the same
-way about this marriage--for I imagine you must know about it. Well,
-Hawkins, where do you stand? There's something rotten here. Are you for
-Claire, or the dope-eater?"
-
-"Oh, my God!" Hawkins whispered huskily. And then almost blindly he
-snatched at John Bruce's hand and wrung it hard. "I--I believe you're
-straight," he choked. "I know you are. I can see it in your eyes. I
-wouldn't ask anything more in the world for her than a man's honest
-love. And she ain't going to marry that devil! You understand?" His
-voice was rising in a curious cracked shrillness. "She ain't! Not while
-old Hawkins is alive!"
-
-John Bruce drew his brows together in a puzzled way.
-
-"I pass you up, Hawkins," he said slowly. "I can't make you out. But if
-you mean what you say, and if you trust me----"
-
-"I'm going to trust you!" There was eagerness, excitement, a tremble in
-the old man's voice. "I've got to trust you after what you've said. I
-ain't slept for nights on account of this. It looks like God sent you.
-You wait! Wait just a second, and I'll show you how much I trust you."
-
-John Bruce straightened up in his chair. Was the old man simply erratic,
-or perhaps a little irresponsible--or what? Hawkins had pattered across
-the floor, had cautiously opened the door, and was now peering with
-equal caution into the outer room. Apparently satisfied at last, he
-closed the door noiselessly, and started back across the room. And
-then John Bruce knew suddenly an indefinable remorse at having somehow
-misjudged the shabby old chauffeur, whose figure seemed to totter now a
-little as it advanced toward him. Hawkins' face was full of misery, and
-the old blue eyes were brimming with tears.
-
-"It--it ain't easy"--Hawkins' voice quavered--"to say--what I got to
-say. There ain't no one on earth but Paul Veniza knows it; but you've
-got a right to know after what you've said. And I've got to tell you for
-Claire's sake too, because it seems to me there ain't nobody going to
-help me save her the way you are. She--she's my little girl. I--I'm
-Claire's father." John Bruce stared numbly at the other. He could find
-no words; he could only stare.
-
-"Yes, look at me!" burst out the old man finally, and into his voice
-there came an infinite bitterness. "Look at my clothes! I'm just what I
-look like! I ain't no good--and that's what has kept my little girl and
-me apart from the day she was born. Yes, look at me! I don't blame you!"
-
-John Bruce was on his feet. His hand reached out and rested on the old
-man's shoulder.
-
-"That isn't the way to trust me, Hawkins," he said gently. "What do your
-clothes matter? What do your looks matter? What does anything in the
-world matter alongside of so wonderful a thing as that which you have
-just told me? Straighten those shoulders, Hawkins; throw back that
-head of yours. Her father! Why, you're the richest man in New York, and
-you've reason to be the proudest!"
-
-John Bruce was smiling with both lips and eyes into the other's face. He
-felt a tremor pass through the old man's frame; he saw a momentary flash
-of joy and pride light up the wrinkled, weather-beaten face--and then
-Hawkins turned his head away.
-
-"God bless you," said Hawkins brokenly; "but you don't know. She's all
-I've got; she's the only kith and kin I've got in all the world, and
-oh, my God, how these old arms have ached just to take her and hold her
-tight, and--and----" He lifted his head suddenly, met John Bruce's eyes,
-and a flush dyed his cheeks. "She's my little girl; but I lie when I say
-I love her. It's drink I love. That's my shame, John Bruce--you've got
-it all now. I pawned my soul, and I pawned my little girl for drink."
-
-"Hawkins," said John Bruce huskily, "I think you're a bigger man than
-you've any idea you are."
-
-"D'ye mean that?" Hawkins spoke eagerly--only to shake his head
-miserably the next instant. "You don't understand," he said. "I as
-good as killed her mother with drink. She died when Claire was born. I
-brought Claire here, and Paul Veniza and his wife took her in. And Paul
-Veniza was right about it. He made me promise she wasn't to know I was
-her father until--until she would have a man and not a drunken sot to
-look after her. That's twenty years ago. I've tried.. God knows I've
-tried, but it's beaten me ever since. Paul's wife died when Claire was
-sixteen, and Claire's run the house for Paul--and--and I'm Hawkins--just
-Hawkins--the old cab driver that's dropping in the harness. Just Hawkins
-that shuffers the traveling pawn-shop now that Paul's quit the regular
-shop. That's what I am--just old Hawkins, who's always swearing to God
-he's going to leave the booze alone."
-
-John Bruce did not speak for a moment. He returned to his chair and sat
-down. Somehow he wanted to think; somehow he felt that he had not quite
-grasped the full significance of what he had just heard. He looked at
-Hawkins. Hawkins had sunk into a chair by the table, and his face was
-buried in his hands.
-
-And then John Bruce smiled.
-
-"Look here, Hawkins," he said briskly, "let's talk about something else
-for a minute. Tell me about Paul Veniza and this traveling pawn-shop.
-It's a bit out of the ordinary, to say the least."
-
-Hawkins raised his head, and his thoughts for the moment diverted into
-other channels, his face brightened, and he scratched at the scanty
-fringe of hair behind his ear.
-
-"It ain't bad, is it?" he said with interest. "I'm kind of proud of it
-too, 'cause I guess mabbe, when all's said and done, it was my idea. You
-see, when Paul's wife died, Paul went all to pieces. He ain't well now,
-for that matter--nowhere near as well as he looks. I'm kind of scared
-about Paul. He keeps getting sick turns once every so often. But when
-the wife died he was just clean broken up. She'd been his right hand
-from the start in his business here, and--I dunno--it just seemed to
-affect him that way. He didn't want to go on any more without her. And
-as far as money was concerned he didn't have to. Paul ain't rich, but
-he's mighty comfortably off. Anyway, he took the three balls down from
-over the door, and he took the signs off the windows, and in comes
-the carpenters to change things around here, and there ain't any more
-pawn-shop."
-
-Hawkins for the first time smiled broadly.
-
-"But it didn't work out," said Hawkins. "Paul's got a bigger business
-and a more profitable one to-day than he ever had before in his life.
-You see, he had been at it a good many years, and he had what you might
-call a private connection--swells up on the Avenue, mostly ladies, but
-gents too, who needed money sometimes without having it printed in the
-papers, and they wouldn't let Paul alone. Paul ain't got a hair in his
-head that ain't honest and fair and square and above-board--and they
-were the ones that knew it better than anybody else. See?"
-
-"Yes," said John Bruce. "Go on, Hawkins," he prompted.
-
-"Well," said Hawkins, "I used to drive an old hansom cab in those days,
-and I used to drive Paul out on those private calls to the swell houses.
-And then when Mrs. Paul died and Paul closed up the shop here he kind of
-drew himself into his shell all round, and mostly he wouldn't go out any
-more, though the swells kept telephoning and telephoning him. He'd only
-go to just a few people that he'd done business with since almost
-the beginning. He said he didn't want to go around ringing people's
-doorbells, and being ushered into boudoirs or anywhere else, and he was
-settling down to shun everybody and everything. It wasn't good for Paul.
-And then a sort of crazy notion struck me, and I chewed it over and over
-in my mind, and finally I put it up to Paul. In the mood he was in, it
-just caught his fancy; and so I bought a second-hand closed car, and
-fitted it up like you saw, and learned to drive it--and that's how there
-came to be the traveling pawn-shop.
-
-"After that, there wasn't anything to it. It caught everybody else's
-fancy as well as Paul's, and it began to get him out of himself. The old
-bus, as you called it, was running all the time. Lots of the swells
-who really didn't want to pawn anything took a ride and did a bit of
-business just for the sake of the experience, and the regular customers
-just went nutty over it, they were that pleased.
-
-"And then some one who stood in with that swell gambling joint where
-we picked you up must have tipped the manager off about it, and he
-saw where he could do a good stroke of business--make it a kind of
-advertisement, you know, besides doing away with any lending by the
-house itself, and he put up a proposition to Paul where Paul was to
-get all the business at regular rates, and a bit of a salary besides on
-account of the all-night hours he'd have to keep sometimes. Paul said
-he'd do it, and turned the salary over to me; and they doped out that
-pass word about a trip to Persia to make it sound mysterious and help
-out the advertising end, and--well, I guess that's all."
-
-John Bruce was twirling the tassel of his dressing gown again
-abstractedly; but now he stopped as Hawkins rose abruptly and came
-toward him.
-
-"No--it ain't all," said Hawkins, a curious note almost of challenge
-in his voice. "You said something about Claire going to that gambling
-joint. It was the first time she had ever been there. That night Paul
-was out when they telephoned. You must be one of their big customers,
-'cause they wouldn't listen to anything but a trip to Persia right on
-the spot. They were so set on it that Claire said it would be all right.
-She sent for me. At first I wasn't for it at all, but she said it seemed
-to be of such importance, and that there wasn't anything else to do.
-Claire knows a bit of jewelry or a stone as well as Paul does, and I
-knew Claire could take care of herself; and besides, although she didn't
-know it, it--it was her own old father driving the car there with her."
-
-"Thank you, Hawkins," said John Bruce simply; and after a moment: "It
-doesn't make the love I said I had for her show up very creditably to
-me, does it--that I should have had any questions?"
-
-Hawkins shook his head.
-
-"I didn't mean it that way," he said earnestly. "It would have been a
-wonder if you hadn't. Anyway, you had a right to know, and it was only
-fair to Claire."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER NINE--THE CONSPIRATORS
-
-|JOHN BRUCE fumbled in the pocket of his dressing gown and produced a
-cigarette; but he was a long time in lighting it.
-
-"Hawkins," he demanded abruptly, "is Paul Veniza in the house now?"
-
-"He's upstairs, I think," Hawkins answered. "Do you want him?"
-
-"Yes--in a moment," said John Bruce slowly. "I've been thinking a good
-deal while you were talking. I can only see things one way; and that
-is that the time has come when you should take your place as Claire's
-father."
-
-The old man drew back, startled.
-
-"Tell Claire?" he whispered. Then he shook his head miserably. "No, no!
-I--I haven't earned the right. I--I can't break my word to Paul."
-
-"I do not ask you to break your word to Paul. I want you to earn the
-right--now."
-
-Hawkins was still shaking his head.
-
-"Earn it now--after all these years! How can I?"
-
-"By promising that you won't drink any more," said John Bruce quietly.
-
-Hawkins' eyes went to the floor.
-
-"Promise!" he said in a shamed way. "I've been promising that for twenty
-years. Paul wouldn't believe me. I wouldn't believe myself. I went and
-got drunker than I've been in all my life the night that dog said he was
-going to marry Claire, and Claire said it was true, and wouldn't listen
-to anything Paul could say to her against it."
-
-"I would believe you," said John Bruce gravely.
-
-For an instant Hawkins' face glowed, while tears came into the old blue
-eyes--and then he turned hurriedly and walked to the window, his back to
-John Bruce.
-
-"It's no use," he said, with a catch in his voice. "You don't know me.
-Nobody that knows me would take my word for that--least of all Paul."
-
-"I know this," said John Bruce steadily, "that you have never been
-really put to the test. The test is here now. You'd stop, and stop
-forever, wouldn't you, if it meant Claire's happiness, her future,
-her salvation from the horror and degradation and misery and utter
-hopelessness that a life with a man who is lost to every sense of
-decency must bring her? I would believe you if you promised under those
-conditions. It seems to me to be the only chance there is left to save
-her. It is true she believes Paul is her father and accepts him as
-such, and neither his influence nor his arguments will move her from her
-determination to marry Crang; but I think there is a chance if she is
-told your story, if she is brought to her own father through this very
-thing. I think if you are in each other's arms at last after all these
-years from just that cause it might succeed where everything else
-failed. But this much is sure. It has a chance of success, and you owe
-Claire that chance. Will you take it, Hawkins? Will you promise?"
-
-There was no answer from the window, only the shaking of the old man's
-shoulders.
-
-"Hawkins," said John Bruce softly, "wouldn't it be very wonderful if you
-saved her, and saved yourself; and wonderful, too, to know the joy of
-your own daughter's love?"
-
-The old man turned suddenly from the window, his arms stretched out
-before him as though in intense yearning; and there was something almost
-of nobility in the gray head held high on the bent shoulders, something
-of greatness in the old wrinkled face that seemed to exalt the worn and
-shabby clothes hanging so formlessly about him.
-
-"My little girl," he said brokenly.
-
-"Your promise, Hawkins," said John Bruce in a low voice. "Will you
-promise?"
-
-"Yes," breathed the old man fiercely. "_Yes_--so help me, God! But"--he
-faltered suddenly--"but Paul-----"
-
-"Ask Paul to come down here," said John Bruce. "I have something to say
-to both of you--more than I have already said to you. I will answer for
-Paul."
-
-The old cab driver obeyed mechanically. He crossed the room and went
-out. John Bruce heard him mounting the stairs. Presently he returned,
-followed by the tall, straight, white-haired figure of Paul Veniza.
-
-Hawkins closed the door behind them.
-
-Paul Veniza turned sharply at the sound, and glanced gravely from one to
-the other. His eyebrows went up as he looked at John Bruce. John Bruce's
-face was set.
-
-"What is the matter?" inquired Paul Veniza anxiously.
-
-"I want you to listen first to a little story," said John Bruce
-seriously--and in a few words he told Paul Veniza, as he had told
-Hawkins, of his love for Claire and the events of the night that had
-brought him there a wounded man. "And this afternoon," John Bruce ended,
-"I asked Claire to marry me, and she told me she was going to marry
-Doctor Crang."
-
-Paul Veniza had listened with growing anxiety, casting troubled and
-uncertain glances the while at Hawkins.
-
-"Yes," he said in a low voice.
-
-John Bruce spoke abruptly:
-
-"Hawkins has promised he will never drink again."
-
-Paul Veniza, with a sudden start, stared at Hawkins, and then a sort of
-kindly tolerance dawned in his face.
-
-"My poor friend!" said Paul Veniza as though he were comforting a
-wayward child, and went over and laid his hand affectionately on
-Hawkins' arm.
-
-"I have told Hawkins," went on John Bruce, "that I love Claire, that I
-asked her to marry me; and Hawkins in turn has told me he is Claire's
-father, and how he brought her to you and Mrs. Veniza when she was a
-baby, and of the pledge he made you then. It is because I love Claire
-too that I feel I can speak now. You once told Hawkins how he could
-redeem his daughter. He wants to redeem her now. He has promised never
-to drink again."
-
-Paul Veniza's face had whitened a little. Half in a startled, half in a
-troubled way, he looked once more at John Bruce and then at Hawkins.
-
-"My poor friend!" he said again.
-
-John Bruce's hand on the arm of his chair clenched suddenly.
-
-"You may perhaps feel that he should not have told me of his
-relationship to Claire; but it was this damnable situation with Crang
-that forced the issue."
-
-Paul Veniza left Hawkins' side and began to pace the room in an agitated
-way.
-
-"No!" he said heavily. "I do not blame Hawkins. We--we neither of us
-know what to do. It is a terrible, an awful thing. Crang is like some
-loathsome creature to her, and yet in some way that I cannot discover
-he has got her into his power. I have tried everything, used every
-argument I can with her, pleaded with her--and it has been useless."
-He raised his arms suddenly above his head, partly it seemed in
-supplication, partly in menace. "Oh, God!" he cried out. "I, too, love
-her, for she has really been my daughter through all these years. But I
-do not quite understand." He turned to Hawkins. "Even if you kept your
-promise now, my friend, what connection has that with Doctor Crang?
-Could that in any way prevent this marriage?"
-
-It was John Bruce who answered.
-
-"It is the last ditch," he said evenly; "the one way you have not
-tried--to tell her her own and her father's story. I do not say it will
-succeed. But it is the great crisis in her life. It is the one thing
-in the world that ought to sway her, win her. Her father! After twenty
-years--her father!"
-
-Paul Veniza's hands, trembling, ruffled through his white hair. Hawkins'
-fingers fumbled, now with the buttons on his vest, now with the brim of
-his hat which He had picked up aimlessly from the table; and his eyes,
-lifting from the floor, glanced timorously, almost furtively, at Paul
-Veniza, and sought the floor again.
-
-John Bruce got up from his chair and stepped toward them.
-
-"I want to tell you something," he said sharply, "that ought to put an
-end to any hesitation on your parts at _any_ plan, no matter what, that
-offers even the slightest chance of stopping this marriage. Listen!
-Devil though you both believe this Crang to be, you do not either of you
-even know the man for what he is. While I was lying there"--he flung out
-his hand impulsively toward the couch--"the safe here in this room was
-opened and robbed one night. You know that. But you do not know that it
-was done by Doctor Crang and his confederates. You know what happened.
-But you do not know that while the 'burglars' pretended to hold Crang
-at bay with a revolver and then made their 'escape,' Crang, with most
-of the proceeds of that robbery in his own pockets, was laughing up his
-sleeve at you."
-
-Hawkins' jaw had dropped as he stared at John Bruce.
-
-"Crang did it! You--you say Crang committed that robbery?" stammered
-Paul Veniza. "But you were unconscious! Still you--you seem to know that
-the safe was robbed!"
-
-"Apparently I do!" John Bruce laughed shortly. "Crang too thought I
-was unconscious, but to make sure he jabbed me with his needle. It
-took effect just at the right time--for Crang--just as you and Claire
-appeared in the doorway. And"--his brows knitted together--"it seems a
-little strange that none of you have ever mentioned it in my presence;
-that not a word has ever been said to me about it."
-
-Paul Veniza coughed nervously.
-
-"You were sick," he said; "too sick, we thought, for any excitement."
-
-Hawkins suddenly leaned forward; his wrinkled face was earnest.
-
-"That is not true!" he said bluntly. "It might have been at first,
-but it wasn't after you got better. It was mostly your money that was
-stolen. Claire put it there the night you came here, and----"
-
-"Hawkins!" Paul Veniza called out sharply in reproof.
-
-"But he knows now it's gone," said the old cabman a little helplessly.
-He blundered on: "Paul felt he was responsible for your money, and he
-was afraid you might not want to take it if you knew he had to make it
-up out of his own pocket, and----"
-
-John Bruce took a step forward, and laid his hand on Paul Veniza's
-shoulder. He stood silently, looking at the other.
-
-"It is nothing!" said Paul Veniza, abashed.
-
-"Perhaps not!" said John Bruce. "But"--he turned abruptly away, his lips
-tight--"it just made me think for a minute. In the life I've led men
-like you are rare."
-
-"We were speaking of Doctor Crang," said Paul Veniza a little awkwardly.
-"If you know that Doctor Crang is the thief, then that is the way out of
-our trouble. Instead of marrying Claire, he will be sent to prison."
-
-John Bruce shook his head.
-
-"You said yourself I was unconscious at the time. You certainly must
-have found me that way, and Crang would make you testify that for days I
-had been raving in delirium. I do not think you could convict him on my
-testimony."
-
-"But even so," said Paul Veniza, "there is Claire. If she knew that
-Crang was a criminal, she----"
-
-"She does know," said John Bruce tersely.
-
-"Claire knows!" ejaculated Paul Veniza in surprise. "You--you told her,
-then?"
-
-"No," John Bruce answered. "I said to her: 'Suppose I were to tell you
-that the man is a criminal?' She answered: 'He is a criminal.' I said
-then: 'Suppose he were sent to jail--to serve a sentence?' She answered:
-'I would marry him when he came out.'"
-
-"My God!" mumbled the old cabman miserably.
-
-"I tell you this," said John Bruce through set teeth, and speaking
-directly to Paul Veniza, "because it seems to me to be the final proof
-that mere argument with Claire is useless, and that something more is
-necessary. I do not ask you to release Hawkins from his pledge; I ask
-you to believe his promise this time because back of it he knows it may
-save Claire from what would mean worse than death to her. I believe him;
-I will vouch for him. Do you agree, Paul Veniza?"
-
-For an instant the white-haired pawnbroker seemed lost in thought; then
-he nodded his head gravely.
-
-"In the last few days," he said slowly, "I have felt that it was no
-longer my province to masquerade as her father. I know that my influence
-is powerless. As you have said, it is the crisis, a very terrible
-crisis, in her life." He turned toward Hawkins, and held out his hand.
-"My old friend"--his voice broke--"I pray Heaven to aid you--to aid us
-all."
-
-Hawkins' blue eyes filled suddenly with tears.
-
-"You believe me, too, Paul, this time!" he said in a choking voice.
-"Listen, Paul! I promise! So help me, God--I promise!"
-
-A lump had somehow risen in John Bruce's throat. He turned away, and for
-a moment there was silence in the room. And then he heard Paul Veniza
-speak:
-
-"She is dear to us all. Let us call her--unless, my old friend, you
-would rather be alone."
-
-"No, no!" Hawkins cried hurriedly. "I--I want you both; but--but
-not now, don't call her now." He swept his hands over his shabby,
-ill-fitting clothes. "I--not like this. I----"
-
-"Yes," said Paul Veniza gently, "I understand--and you are right. This
-evening then--at eight o'clock. You will come back here, my old friend,
-at eight o'clock. And do you remember, it was in this very room, twenty
-years ago, that----" He did not complete his sentence; the hot tears
-were streaming unashamed down his cheeks.
-
-John Bruce was staring out of the window, the panes of which seemed
-curiously blurred.
-
-"Come," he heard Paul Veniza say.
-
-And then, as the two men reached the door, John Bruce looked around.
-Hawkins had turned on the threshold. Something seemed to have
-transfigured the old cab driver's face. It was illumined. There seemed
-something of infinite pathos in the head held high, in the drooped
-shoulders resolutely squared.
-
-"My little girl!" said Hawkins tenderly. "To-night at eight o'clock--my
-little girl!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER TEN--AT FIVE MINUTES TO EIGHT
-
-|BEFORE the rickety washstand and in front of the cracked glass that
-served as a mirror and was suspended from a nail driven into the wall,
-Hawkins was shaving himself. Perhaps the light from the wheezing
-gas-jet was over-bad that evening, or perhaps it was only in playful
-and facetious mood with the mirror acting the rôle of co-conspirator;
-Hawkins' chin smarted and was raw; little specks of red showed here and
-there through the repeated coats of lather which he kept scraping off
-with his razor. But Hawkins appeared willing to sacrifice even the skin
-itself to obtain the standard of smoothness which he had evidently set
-before himself as his goal. And so over and over again he applied the
-lather, and hoed it off, and tested the result by rubbing thumb and
-forefinger critically over his face. He made no grimace, nor did he show
-any irritation at the none-too-keen blade that played havoc with more
-than the lather, nor did he wince at what must at times have been
-anything but a painless operation. Hawkins' round, weatherbeaten face
-and old watery blue eyes smiled into the mirror.
-
-On the washstand beside him lay a large, ungainly silver watch, its case
-worn smooth with years of service. It had a hunting-case, and it was
-open. Hawkins glanced at it. It was twenty minutes to eight.
-
-"I got to hurry," said Hawkins happily. "Just twenty minutes--after
-twenty years."
-
-Hawkins laid aside the razor, and washed and scrubbed at his face until
-it shone; then he went to his trunk and opened it. From underneath the
-tray he lifted out an old black suit. Perhaps again it was the gas-jet
-in either baleful or facetious mood, for, as he put on the suit, the
-cloth in spots seemed to possess, here a rusty, and there a greenish,
-tinge, and elsewhere to be woefully shiny. Also, but of this the gas-jet
-could not have been held guilty, the coat and trousers, and indeed the
-waistcoat, were undeniably most sadly wrinkled.
-
-And now there seemed to be something peculiarly congruous as between the
-feeble gas-jet, the cracked mirror, the wobbly washstand, the threadbare
-strip of carpet that lay beside the iron bed, and the old bent-shouldered
-figure with wrinkled face in wrinkled finery that stood there knotting
-with anxious, awkward fingers a large, frayed, black cravat about his
-neck; there seemed to be something strikingly in keeping between the man
-and his surroundings, a sort of common intimacy, as it were, with the
-twilight of an existence that, indeed, had never known the full sunlight
-of high noon.
-
-It was ten minutes to eight.
-
-Hawkins put the silver watch in his pocket, extinguished the spluttering
-gas-jet, that hissed at him as though in protest at the scant ceremony
-with which it was treated, and went down the stairs. He stepped briskly
-out on the street.
-
-"Claire!" said Hawkins radiantly. "My little Claire! I'm her daddy, and
-she's going to know it. I'm going to get her to call me that--daddy!"
-
-Hawkins walked on halfway along the block, erect, with a quick, firm
-step, his head high, smiling into every face he met--and turning to
-smile again, conscious that people as they passed had turned to look
-back at him. And then very gradually Hawkins' pace slackened, and into
-his face and eyes there came a dawning anxiety, and the smile was gone.
-
-"I'm kind of forgetting," said Hawkins presently to himself, "that it
-ain't just that I'm getting my little girl. I--I'm kind of forgetting
-her 'rouble. There--there's Crang."
-
-The old man's face was furrowed now deep with storm and care; he walked
-still more slowly. He began to mutter to himself. At the corner of the
-street he raised an old gnarled fist and shook it, clenched, above his
-head, unconscious and oblivious now that people still turned and looked
-at him.
-
-And then a little way ahead of him along the street that he must go to
-reach the one-time pawn-shop of Paul Veniza, his eyes caught the patch
-of light that filtered out to the sidewalk from under the swinging doors
-of the familiar saloon, and from the windows in a more brilliant flood.
-
-Hawkins drew in a long breath.
-
-"No, no!" he whispered fiercely. "I will never go in there again--so
-help me, God! If I did--and--and she knew it was her daddy, it would
-just break her heart like--like Crang 'll break it."
-
-He went on, but his footsteps seemed to drag the more now as he
-approached the saloon. His hand as he raised it trembled; and as he
-brushed it across his brow it came away wet with sweat.
-
-The saloon was just a yard away from him now.
-
-There was a strange, feverish glitter in the blue eyes. His face was
-chalky white.
-
-"So help me, God!" Hawkins mumbled hoarsely.
-
-It was five minutes of eight.
-
-Hawkins had halted in front of the swinging doors.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER ELEVEN--THE RENDEZVOUS
-
-|PAUL VENIZA, pacing restlessly about the room, glanced surreptitiously
-at his watch, and then glanced anxiously at John Bruce.
-
-John Bruce in turn stole a look at Claire. His lips tightened a little.
-Since she had been told nothing, she was quite unconscious, of course,
-that it mattered at all because it was already long after eight o'clock;
-that Hawkins in particular, or any one else in general, was expected to
-join the little evening circle here in what he, John Bruce, had by now
-almost come to call his room. His forehead gathered in a frown. What was
-it that was keeping Hawkins?
-
-Claire's face was full in the light, and as she sat there at the table,
-busy with some sewing, it seemed to John Bruce that, due perhaps to the
-perspective of what he now knew, he detected a weariness in her eyes and
-in sharp lines around her mouth, that he had not noticed before. It
-was Crang, of course; but perhaps he too--what he had said to her that
-afternoon--his love--had not made it any easier for her.
-
-Paul Veniza continued his restless pacing about the room.
-
-"Father, do sit down!" said Claire suddenly. "What makes you so nervous
-to-night? Is anything the matter?"
-
-"The matter? No! No, no; of course not!" said Paul Veniza hurriedly.
-
-"But I'm sure there is," said Claire, with a positive' little nod of her
-head. "With both of you, for that matter. Mr. Bruce has done nothing but
-fidget with the tassel of that dressing gown for the last half hour."
-
-John Bruce let the tassel fall as though it had suddenly burned his
-fingers.
-
-"I? Not at all!" he denied stoutly.
-
-"Oh, dear!" sighed Claire, with mock plaintiveness. "What bores you two
-men are, then! I wish I could send out--what do you call it?--a thought
-wave, and inspire some one, and most of all Hawkins, to come over here
-this evening. He, at least, is never deadly dull."
-
-Neither of the two men spoke.
-
-"You don't know Hawkins, do you, Mr. Bruce?" Claire went on. She was
-smiling now as she looked at John Bruce. "I mean really know him, of
-course. He's a dear, quaint, lovable soul, and I'm so fond of him."
-
-"I'm sure he is," said John Bruce heartily. "Even from the little I've
-seen of him I'd trust him with--well, you know"--John Bruce coughed as
-his words stumbled--"I mean, I'd take his word for anything."
-
-"Of course, you would!" asserted Claire. "You couldn't think of doing
-anything else--nobody could. He's just as honest as--as--well, as father
-there, and I don't know any one more honest." She smiled at Paul Veniza,
-and then her face grew very earnest. "I'm going to tell you something
-about Hawkins, and something that even you never knew, father. Ever
-since I was old enough to remember any one, I remember Hawkins. And when
-I got old enough to understand at all, though I could never get him to
-talk about it, I knew his life wasn't a very happy one, and perhaps I
-loved him all the more for that reason. Hawkins used to drink a great
-deal. Everybody knew it. I--I never felt I had the right to speak to him
-about it, though it made me feel terribly, until--until mother died."
-
-Claire had dropped her sewing in her lap, and now she picked it up again
-and fumbled with it nervously.
-
-"I spoke to him then," she said in a low voice. "I told him how much you
-needed him, father; and how glad and happy it would make me. And--and I
-remember so well his words: 'I promise, Claire. I promise, so help me,
-God, that I will never drink another drop.'" Claire looked up, her face
-aglow "And I know, no matter what anybody says, that from that day to
-this, he never has."
-
-Paul Veniza, motionless now in the center of the room, was staring at
-her in a sort of numbed fascination.
-
-John Bruce was staring at the door. He had heard, he thought, a step in
-the outer room.
-
-The door opened. Hawkins stood there. He plucked at his frayed, black
-cravat, which was awry. He lurched against the jamb, and in groping
-unsteadily for support his hat fell from his other hand and rolled
-across the floor.
-
-Hawkins reeled into the room.
-
-"Good--hic!--good-evenin'," said Hawkins thickly.
-
-Claire alone moved. She rose to her feet, but as though her weight were
-too heavy for her limbs. Her lips quivered.
-
-"Oh, Hawkins!" she cried out pitifully--and burst into tears, and ran
-from the room.
-
-It seemed to John Bruce that for a moment the room swirled around before
-his eyes; and then over him swept an uncontrollable desire to get his
-hands upon this maudlin, lurching creature. Rage, disgust, a bitter
-resentment, a mad hunger for reprisal possessed him; Claire's future,
-her faith which she had but a moment gone so proudly vaunted, were
-all shattered, swept to the winds, by this seedy, dissolute wreck. Her
-father! No, her shame! Thank God she did not know!
-
-"You drunken beast!" he gritted in merciless fury, and stepped suddenly
-forward.
-
-But halfway across the room he halted as though turned to stone. Hawkins
-wasn't lurching any more. Hawkins had turned and closed the door; and
-Hawkins now, with his face white and drawn, a look in his old blue eyes
-that mingled agony and an utter hopelessness, sank into a chair and
-buried his face in his hands.
-
-It was Paul Veniza who moved now. He went and stood behind the old
-cabman.
-
-Hawkins looked up.
-
-"You are sober. What does this mean?" Paul Veniza asked heavily.
-
-Hawkins shook his head.
-
-"I couldn't do it," he said in a broken voice. "And--and I've settled
-it once for all now. I got to thinking as I came along to-night, and
-I found out that it wasn't any good for me to swear I wasn't going to
-touch anything any more. I'm afraid of myself. I--I came near going into
-the saloon. It--it taught me something, that did; because the only way
-I could get by was to promise myself I'd go back there after I'd been
-here."
-
-Hawkins paused. A flush dyed his cheeks. He turned around and looked at
-Paul Veniza again, and then at John Bruce.
-
-"You don't understand--neither of you understand. Once I promised Claire
-that I'd stop, and--and until just now she believed me. And I've
-hurt her. But I ain't broken her heart. It was only old Hawkins, just
-Hawkins, who promised her then; it would have been her _father_ who
-promised her to-night, and--and it ain't any good, I'd have broken that
-promise, I know it now--and she ain't ever going to share that shame."
-
-Hawkins brushed his hands across his eyes.
-
-"And then," he went on, A sudden fierceness in his voice, "suppose she'd
-had that on top of Crang, 'cause it ain't sure that knowing who I am
-would have saved her from him! Oh, my God, she'd better be dead! I'd
-rather see her dead. You're wrong, John Bruce! It wasn't the way. You
-meant right, and God bless you; but it wasn't the way. I saw it all so
-clearly after--after I'd got past that saloon; and--and then it was all
-right for me to promise myself that I'd go back. It wouldn't hurt her
-none then."
-
-John Bruce cleared his throat.
-
-"I don't quite understand what you mean by that, Hawkins," he said a
-little huskily.
-
-Hawkins rose slowly to his feet.
-
-"I dressed all up for this," said Hawkins, with a wan smile; "but
-something's snapped here--inside here." His hand felt a little aimlessly
-over his heart. "I know now that I ain't ever going to be worthy; and I
-know now that she ain't ever to know that I--that I--I'm her old daddy.
-And so I--I've fixed it just now like you saw so there ain't no going
-back on it. But I ain't throwing my little girl down. It ain't Claire
-that's got to be made change her mind--_it's Crang_." He raised a
-clenched fist. "And Crang's going to change it! I can swear to _that_
-and know I'll keep it, so--so help me, God! And when she's rid of him,
-she ain't going to have no shame and sorrow from me. That's what I
-meant."
-
-"Yes," said John Bruce mechanically.
-
-"I'm going now," said Hawkins in a low voice. "Around by the other way,"
-said Paul Veniza softly. "And I'll go with you, old friend."
-
-For a moment Hawkins hesitated, and then he nodded his head.
-
-No one spoke. Paul Veniza's arm was around Hawkins' shoulders as they
-left the room. The door closed behind them. John Bruce sat down on the
-edge of his bed.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER TWELVE--THE FIGHT
-
-|FOR a long time John Bruce stared at the closed door; first a little
-helplessly because the bottom seemed quite to have dropped out of
-things, and then with set face as the old cabman's words came back to
-him: "Crang--not Claire." And at this, a sort of merciless joy crept
-into his eyes, and he nodded his head in savage satisfaction. Yes,
-Hawkins had been right in that respect, and--well, it would be easier to
-deal with Crang!
-
-And then suddenly John Bruce's face softened. Hawkins! He remembered
-the fury with which the old man had inspired him as the other had reeled
-into the room, and Clare, hurt and miserable, had risen from her chair.
-But he remembered Hawkins in a different way now. It was Hawkins, not
-Claire, who had been hurt. The shabby old figure standing there had paid
-a price, and as he believed for Claire's sake, that had put beyond his
-reach forever what must have meant, what did mean, all that he cherished
-most in life.
-
-John Bruce smiled a little wistfully. Somehow he envied Hawkins, so
-pitifully unstable and so weak--his strength!
-
-He shook his head in a puzzled way. His thoughts led him on. What a
-strange, almost incomprehensible, little world it was into which fate,
-if one wished to call it fate, had flung him! It was an alien world to
-him. His own life of the past rose up in contrast with it--> not of his
-own volition, but because the comparison seemed to insist on thrusting
-itself upon him.
-
-He had never before met men like Hawkins and Paul Veniza. He had met
-drunkards and pawnbrokers. Very many of them! He had lived his life,
-or, rather, impoverished it with a spendthrift hand, among just such
-classes--but he was conscious that it would never have been the poorer
-for an intimacy with either Hawkins or Paul Veniza.
-
-John Bruce raised his head abruptly. The front door had opened. A moment
-later a footstep sounded in the outer room, and then upon the stairs.
-That would be Paul Veniza returning of course, though he hadn't been
-gone very long; or was it that he, John Bruce, had been sitting
-here staring at that closed door for a far longer period than he had
-imagined?
-
-He shrugged his shoulders, dismissing the interruption from his mind,
-and again the wistful smile flickered on his lips.
-
-So that was why nothing had been said in his hearing about the robbery!
-Queer people--with their traveling pawn-shop, which was bizarre; and
-their standards of honesty, and their unaffected hospitality which
-verged on the bizarre too, because their genuineness and simplicity were
-so unostentatious--and so rare. And somehow, suddenly, as he sat
-there with his chin cupped now in his hands, he was not proud of this
-contrast--himself on the one hand, a drunkard and a pawnbroker on the
-other!
-
-And then John Bruce raised his head again, sharply this time, almost in
-a startled way. Was that a cry--in a woman's voice? It was muffled
-by the closed door, and it was perhaps therefore his imagination; but
-it----
-
-He was on his feet. It had come again. No door could have shut it out
-from his ears. It was from Claire upstairs, and the cry seemed most
-curiously to mingle terror and a passionate anger. He ran across the
-room and threw the door open. It was strange! It would be Paul Veniza
-in a new rôle, if the gentle, white-haired old pawnbroker could inspire
-terror in any one!
-
-A rasping, jeering oath--in a man's voice this time--reached him.
-John Bruce, a sudden fury whipping his blood into lire, found himself
-stumbling up the stairs. It wasn't Veniza! His mind seemed to convert
-that phrase into a sing-song refrain: "It wasn't Veniza! It wasn't
-Veniza!"
-
-Claire's voice came to him distinctly now, and there was the same terror
-in it, the same passionate anger that he had distinguished in her cry:
-
-"Keep away from me! I loathe you! It is men like you that prompt a woman
-to murder! But--but instead, I have prayed God with all my soul to let
-me die before----" Her voice ended in a sharp cry, a scuffle of feet.
-
-It was Crang in there! John Bruce, now almost at the top of the
-stairs, was unconscious that he was panting heavily from his exertions,
-unconscious of everything save a new refrain that had taken possession
-of his mind: "It was Crang in there! It was Crang in there!"
-
-It was the door just at the right of the landing.
-
-Crang's voice came from there; and the voice was high, like the squeal
-of an enraged animal:
-
-"You're mine! I've got a right to those red lips, you vixen, and I'm
-going to have them! A man's got the right to take the girl he's going to
-marry in his arms! Do you think I'm going to be held off forever? You're
-mine, and----"
-
-The words were lost again in a cry from Claire, and in the sound of a
-struggle--a falling chair, the scuffle once more of feet.
-
-John Bruce flung himself across the hall and against the door, It
-yielded without resistance, and the impetus of his own rush carried him,
-staggering, far into the room. Two forms were circling there under the
-gas light as though in the throes of some mad dance--only the face
-of the woman was deathly white, and her small clenched fists beat
-frantically at the face of the man whose arms were around her. John
-Bruce sprang forward. He laughed aloud, unnaturally. His brain, his
-mind, was whirling; but something soft was grasped in his two encircling
-hands, and that was why he laughed--because his soul laughed. His
-fingers pressed tighter. It was Crang's throat that was soft under his
-fingers.
-
-Suddenly the room swirled around him. A giddiness seemed to seize
-upon him--and that soft thing in his grip slipped from his fingers and
-escaped him. He brushed his hand across his eyes. It would pass, of
-course. It was strange that he should go giddy like that, and that his
-limbs should be trembling as though with the ague! Again he brushed his
-hand across his eyes. It would pass off. He could see better now. Claire
-had somehow fallen to the floor; but she was rising to her knees now,
-using the side of the bed for support, and----
-
-Her voice rang wildly through the room.
-
-"Look out! Oh, look out!" she cried.
-
-To John Bruce it seemed as though something leaped at him out of
-space--and struck. The blow, aimed at his side, which was still
-bandaged, went home. It brought an agony that racked and tore and
-twisted at every nerve in his body. It wrung a moan from his lips, it
-brought the sweat beads bursting out upon his forehead--but it cleared
-his brain.
-
-Yes, it was Doctor Crang--but disreputable in appearance as he had never
-before seen the man. Crang's clothes were filthy and unkempt, as though
-the man had fallen somewhere in the mire and was either unconscious
-or callous of the fact; his hair draggled in a matted way over his
-forehead, and though his face worked with passion, and the passion
-brought a curious hectic rose-color to supplant the customary lifeless
-gray of his cheeks, the eyes were most strangely glazed and fixed.
-
-And again John Bruce laughed--and with a vicious guard swept aside a
-second blow aimed at his side, and his left fist, from a full arm swing,
-crashed to the point of Doctor Crang's jaw. But the next instant they
-had closed, their arms locked around each other's waists, their chins
-dug hard into each other's shoulders. And they rocked there, and swayed,
-and lurched, a curious impotence in their ferocity--and toppled to the
-floor.
-
-John Bruce's grip tightened as Doctor Crang fought madly now to tear
-himself free--and they rolled over and over in the direction of the
-door. Hot and cold waves swept over John Bruce. He was weak, pitifully
-weak, barely a convalescent. But he was content to call it an equal
-fight. He asked for no other odds than Crang himself had offered. The
-man for once had over-steeped himself with dope, and was near the point
-of collapse. He had read that in the other's eyes, as surely as though
-he had been told. And so John Bruce, between his gasping breaths, still
-laughed, and rolled over and over--always toward the door.
-
-From somewhere Claire's voice reached John Bruce, imploringly, in
-terror. Of course! That was why he was trying to get to the door, to
-get out of her room--through respect for her--to get somewhere where he
-could finish this fight between one man who could scarcely stand upon
-his feet through weakness, and another whose drug-shattered body was
-approaching that state of coma which he, John Bruce, had been made to
-suffer on the night the robbery had been committed. And by the same
-needle! He remembered that! Weak in body, his mind was very clear. And
-so he rolled over and over, always toward the door, because Crang was
-heedless of the direction they were taking, and he, John Bruce, was
-probably not strong enough in any other way to force the other out of
-the room where they could finish this.
-
-They rolled to the threshold--and out into the hall. John Bruce loosened
-his hold suddenly, staggered to his feet, and leaned heavily for an
-instant against the jamb of the door. But it was only for an instant.
-Crang was the quicker upon his feet. Like a beast there was slaver
-on the other's lips, his hands clawed the air, his face was contorted
-hideously like the face of one demented, one from whom reason had flown,
-and with whom maniacal passion alone remained--and from the banister
-railing opposite the door Crang launched himself forward upon John Bruce
-again.
-
-"She's mine!" he screamed. "I've been watching you two! I'll teach you!
-She's mine--mine! I'll finish you for this!"
-
-John Bruce side-stepped the rush, and Crang pitched with his head
-against the door jamb, but recovering, whirled again, and rushed again.
-The man began to curse steadily now in a low, abominable monotone. It
-seemed to John Bruce that he ought to use his fist as a cork and thrust
-it into the other's mouth to bottle up the vile flow of epithets that
-included Claire, and coupled his name with Claire's. Claire might hear!
-The man was raving, insane with jealousy. John Bruce struck. His fist
-found its mark on Crang's lips, and found it again; but somehow his arm
-seemed to possess but little strength, and to sag back at the elbow from
-each impact. He writhed suddenly as Crang reached him with another blow
-on his side.
-
-And then they had grappled and locked together again, and were swaying
-like drunken men, now to this side, and now to that, of the narrow hall.
-
-It could not last. John Bruce felt his knees giving way beneath him. He
-had under-estimated Crang's resistance to the over-dose of drug. Crang
-was the stronger--and seemed to be growing stronger every instant. Or
-was it his own increasing weakness?
-
-Crang's fist with a short-arm jab smashed at John Bruce's wounded side
-once more. The man struck nowhere else--always, with the cunning born
-of hell, at the wounded side. John Bruce dug his teeth into his lips.
-A wave of nausea swept over him. He felt his senses leaving him, and
-he clung now to the other, close, tight-pressed, as the only means of
-protecting his side.
-
-He forced himself then desperately to a last effort. There was one
-chance left, just one. In the livid face, in the hot, panting breath
-with which the other mouthed his hideous profanity, there was murder.
-Over his shoulder, barely a foot away, John Bruce glimpsed the
-staircase. He let his weight sag with seeming helplessness upon Crang.
-It brought Crang around in a half circle. Crang's back was to the stairs
-now. John Bruce let his hands slip slowly from their hold upon the
-other, as though the last of his strength was ebbing away. He accepted
-a vicious blow on his wounded side as the price that he must pay, a
-blow that brought his chin crumpling down upon his breast--and then
-with every ounce of remaining strength he hurled himself at Crang, and
-Crang's foot stumbled out into space over the topmost stair, and with a
-scream of infuriated surprise the man pitched backward.
-
-John Bruce grasped with both hands at the banister for support.
-Something went rolling, rolling, rolling down the stairs with queer,
-dull thumps like a sack of meal. His hands slipped from the banister,
-and he sat limply down on the topmost step and laughed. He laughed
-because that curious looking bundle at the bottom there began a series
-of fruitless efforts to roll back up the stairs again.
-
-And then the front door opened. He could see it from where he sat, and
-Paul Veniza--that was Paul Veniza, wasn't it?--stepped into the room
-below, and cried out, and ran toward the bundle at the foot of the
-stairs.
-
-John Bruce felt some one suddenly hold him back from pitching down the
-stairs himself, but nevertheless he kept on falling and falling into
-some great pit that grew darker and darker the farther he went down, and
-this in spite of some one who tried to hold him back, and--and who had a
-face that looked like Claire's, only it was as--as white as driven snow.
-And as he descended into the blackness some one screamed at him: "I'll
-finish you for this!" And screamed it again--only the voice kept growing
-fainter. And--and then he could neither see nor hear any more.
-
-*****
-
-When John Bruce opened his eyes again he was lying on his cot. A little
-way from him, their backs turned, Claire and Paul Veniza were whispering
-earnestly together. He watched them for a moment, and gradually as his
-senses became normally acute again he caught Claire's words:
-
-"He is not safe here for a moment. Father, we must get him away. I am
-afraid. There is not a threat Doctor Crang made to-night but that he is
-quite capable of carrying out."
-
-"But he is safe for to-night," Paul Veniza answered soothingly. "I
-got Crang home to bed, and as I told you, he is too badly bruised and
-knocked about to move around any before morning at least."
-
-"And yet I am afraid," Claire insisted anxiously. "Fortunately Mr.
-Bruce's wound hasn't opened, and he could be moved. Oh, if Hawkins only
-hadn't----"
-
-She stopped, and twisted her hands together nervously.
-
-Paul Veniza coughed, averted his head suddenly and in turning met John
-Bruce's eyes--and stared in a startled way.
-
-"Claire!" John Bruce called softly.
-
-"Oh!" she cried, and ran toward him. "You----"
-
-"Yes," smiled John Bruce. "And I have been listening. Why isn't it safe
-for me to stay here any longer? On account of Crang's wild threats?"
-
-"Yes," she said in a low voice.
-
-John Bruce laughed.
-
-"But you don't believe them, do you?" he asked. "At least, I mean, you
-don't take them literally." Claire's lips were trembling.
-
-"There is no other way to take them." She was making an effort to steady
-her voice. "It is not a question of believing them. I know only too well
-that he will carry them out if he can. You are not safe here, or even in
-New York now--but less safe here in this house than anywhere else."
-
-John Bruce came up on his elbow.
-
-"Then, Claire, isn't this the end?" he demanded passionately. "You know
-him for what he is. You do not love him, for I distinctly heard you
-tell him that you loathed him, as I went up the stairs. Claire, I am not
-asking for myself now--only for you. Tell me, tell Paul Veniza here,
-to whom it will mean so much, that you have now no further thought of
-marriage with that"--John Bruce's voice choked--"with Crang." She shook
-her head.
-
-"I cannot tell you that," she said dully, "for I am going to marry
-Doctor Crang."
-
-John Bruce's face hardened. He looked at Paul Veniza. The old pawnbroker
-had his eyes on the floor, and was ruffling his white hair helplessly
-with his fingers.
-
-"Why?" John Bruce asked.
-
-"Because I promised," Claire said slowly.
-
-"But a promise like that!" John Bruce burst out. "A promise that you
-will regret all your life is----"
-
-"No!" Her face was half averted; her head was lowered to hide the tears
-that suddenly welled into her eyes. "No; it is a promise that I--that I
-am glad now I made."
-
-"_Glad!_" John Bruce sat upright. She had turned her head away from the
-cot. He could not see her face. "Glad!" he repeated incredulously.
-
-"Yes." Her voice was scarcely audible.
-
-For a moment John Bruce stared at her; then a bitter smile tightened his
-lips, and he lay back on the cot, and turned on his side away from both
-Claire and Paul Veniza.
-
-When John Bruce looked around again, only Paul Veniza was in the room.
-
-"I don't understand," said Paul Veniza--he was still ruffling his hair,
-still with his eyes on the floor.
-
-"I do," said John Bruce grimly. "Claire is right. It isn't safe for me
-to stay here, and I'll go to-night. If only Hawkins hadn't----" He
-laughed a little harshly. "But I'll go to-night, just the same. A taxi
-will do quite as well."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER THIRTEEN--TRAPPINGS OF TINSEL
-
-|UNDER the shaded light on his table, in his private sitting room in
-the Bayne-Miloy Hotel, John Bruce had been writing steadily for half an
-hour--but the sheets of paper over which his pen had traveled freely and
-swiftly were virgin white. He paused now, remained a moment in thought,
-and then added a line to the last sheet. No mark was left, but from the
-movement of the pen this appeared to be a signature.
-
-He gathered the sheets together, folded them neatly, and slipped them
-into an envelope. He replaced the cap on the fountain pen he had been
-using, placed the pen in his vest pocket, and from another pocket took
-out another pen that was apparently identical with the first. With
-this second pen, in black ink, he addressed the envelope to one Gilbert
-Larmon in San Francisco. He sealed the envelope, stamped it, put it in
-his pocket, returned the second fountain pen to his vest pocket, lighted
-a cigarette leaned back in his chair, and frowned at the ascending
-spirals of smoke from the cigarette's tip.
-
-The report which he had just written to Larmon, explaining his inaction
-during the past weeks, had been an effort--not physical, but mental. He
-had somehow, curiously, felt no personal regret for the enforced absence
-from his "work," and he now felt no enthusiasm at the prospect of
-resuming it. He had had no right to tinge or color his letter to Larmon
-with these views; nor had he intended to do so. Perhaps he had not;
-perhaps he had. He did not know. The ink originated by the old Samoan
-Islander had its disadvantages as well as its advantages. He could not
-now read the letter over once it was written!
-
-He flicked the ash irritably from his cigarette. He had been back here
-in the hotel now for two days and that feeling had been constantly
-growing upon him. Why? He did not know except that the cause seemed to
-insist on associating itself with his recent illness, his life in the
-one-time pawn-shop of Paul Veniza. But, logically, that did not hold
-water. Why should it? He had met a pawnbroker who roamed the streets at
-night in a fantastic motor car, driven by a drunkard; and he had fallen
-in love with a girl who was glad she was going to marry a dope-eating
-criminal. Good God, it was a spectacle to make----
-
-John Bruce's fist crashed suddenly down on the desk beside him, and he
-rose from his chair and stood there staring unseeingly before him.
-That was not fair! What was uppermost now was the recrudescence of the
-bitterness that had possessed him two nights ago when he had returned
-from Paul Veniza's to the hotel here. Nor was it any more true than
-it was fair! What of the days and nights of nursing, of care, of the
-ungrudging and kindly hospitality they had given to an utter stranger?
-Yes, he knew! Only--only she had said she was _glad!_
-
-He began to pace the room. He had left Veniza's in bitterness. He had
-not seen Claire. It was a strange sort of love he boasted, little of
-unselfishness in it, much of impatience, and still more of intolerance!
-That it was a hopeless love in so far as he was concerned did not place
-him before himself in any better light. If he cared for her, if there
-was any depth of feeling in this love he claimed to have, then at least
-her happiness, her welfare and her future could not be extraneous
-and indifferent considerations to him. And on the spur of the moment,
-piqued, in spite of Paul Veniza's protestations, he had left that night
-without seeing Claire again!
-
-He had been ashamed of himself. Yesterday, he had telephoned Claire. He
-had begged her forgiveness. He had not meant to say more--but he had!
-Something in her voice had--no, not invited; he could not say that--but
-had brought the passion, pleading almost, back into his own. It had
-seemed to him that she was in tears at the other end of the wire; at
-least, bravely as she had evidently tried to do so, she had been unable
-to keep her voice under control. But she had evaded an answer. There had
-been nothing to forgive, she had said. He had told her that he must see
-her, that he would see her again. And then almost hysterically, over
-and over again, she had begged him to attempt nothing of the sort, but
-instead to leave New York because she insisted that it was not safe for
-him to stay even in the city.
-
-John Bruce hurled the butt of his cigarette in the direction of the
-cuspidor, and clenched his fist. Crang! Safe from Crang! He laughed
-aloud harshly. He asked nothing better than to meet Crang again. He
-would not be so weak the next time! And the sooner the better!
-
-He gnawed at his under lip, as he continued to pace the room. To-day, he
-had telephoned Claire again--but he had not spoken to her this time. He
-had not been surprised at the news he had received, for he remembered
-that Hawkins had once told him that the old pawnbroker was in reality
-far from well. Some one, he did not know who, some neighbor probably,
-had answered the phone. Paul Veniza had been taken ill. Claire had been
-up with him all the previous night, and was then resting.
-
-John Bruce paused abruptly before the desk at which he had been writing,
-and looked at his watch. It was a little after ten o'clock. He was
-going back to "work" again to-night. He smiled suddenly, and a little
-quizzically, as he caught sight of himself in a mirror. What would they
-say--the white-haired negro butler, and the exquisite Monsieur Henri
-de Lavergne, for instance--when the millionaire plunger, usually so
-immaculate in evening clothes, presented himself at their door in a suit
-of business tweeds?
-
-He shrugged his shoulders. Down at Ratti's that night his apparel--it
-was a matter of viewpoint--had been a source of eminent displeasure, and
-as such had been very effectively disposed of. He had had no opportunity
-to be measured for new clothes.
-
-The smile faded, and he stood staring at the desk. The millionaire
-plunger! It seemed to jar somehow on his sensibilities. Work! That was a
-queer way, too, to designate it. He was going to take up his work again
-to-night, pick up the threads of his life again where he had dropped
-them. A bit ragged those threads, weren't they? Frayed, as it were!
-
-What the devil was the matter with him, anyway?
-
-There was money in it, a princely existence. What more could any one
-ask? What did Claire, his love for a girl who was glad to marry some
-one else infinitely worse than he was, have to do with it? Ah, she _did_
-have something to do with it, then! Nonsense! It was absurd!
-
-He took a key abruptly from his pocket, and unlocked one of the drawers
-of the desk. From the drawer he took out a large roll of bills. The
-hotel management had sent to the bank and cashed a check for him that
-afternoon. He had not forgotten that he would need money, and plenty of
-it, at the tables this evening. Well, he was quite ready to go now, and
-it was time; it would be halfpast ten before he got there, and----
-
-"The devil!" said John Bruce savagely--and suddenly tossed the money
-back into the drawer, and locked the drawer. "If I don't feel like
-it to-night, why should I? I guess I'll just drop around for a little
-convalescent visit, and let it go at that."
-
-John Bruce put on a light overcoat, and left the room. In the lobby
-downstairs he posted his letter to Gilbert Larmon. He stepped out on the
-street, and from the rank in front of the hotel secured a taxi. Twenty
-minutes later he entered Gilbert Larmon's New York gambling hell.
-
-Here he received a sort of rhapsodical welcome from the exquisite
-Monsieur Henri de Lavergne, which embraced poignant regret at the
-accident that had befallen him, and unspeakable joy at his so-splendid
-recovery. It was a delight so great to shake the hand of Mr. Bruce again
-that Monsieur Henri de Lavergne complained bitterly at the poverty of
-language which prevented an adequate expression of his true and sincere
-feelings. Also, Monsieur Henri de Lavergne, if he were not trespassing,
-would be flattered indeed with Mr. Bruce's confidence, if Mr. Bruce
-should see fit to honor him with an account of how the accident had
-happened. He would be desolated if in any way it could be attributable
-to any suggestion that he, Monsieur de Lavergne, on behalf of the house
-which he had the honor to represent as manager, had made to Mr. Bruce
-which might have induced----
-
-"Not at all!" John Bruce assured him heartily. He smiled at Monsieur de
-Lavergne. The other knew nothing of Claire's presence in the car that
-night, and for Claire's sake it was necessary to set the man's mind so
-completely at rest that the subject would lack further interest. The
-only way to accomplish that was to appear whole-heartedly frank. John
-Bruce became egregiously frank. "It was just my own damned curiosity,"
-he said with a wry smile. "I got out of that ingenious contraption at
-the corner after going around the block, and, well, my curiosity, as I
-said, got the better of me. I followed the thing, and found out where
-Mr. Veniza lived. I started on my way back, but I didn't get very far.
-I got into trouble with a rather tough crowd just around the corner, who
-didn't like my shirt front, I believe they said. The fight ended by
-my being backed into a wine shop where I was stabbed, but from which I
-managed to escape into the lane. I was about all in, and the only chance
-I could see was a lighted window on the other side of a low fence. I
-crawled in the window, and flopped on the floor. It proved to be Mr.
-Veniza's house."
-
-"_Pour l'amour du dieu!_" exclaimed Monsieur Henri de Lavergne
-breathlessly.
-
-"And which also accounts," said John Bruce pleasantly, "for the apology
-I must offer you for my appearance this evening in these clothes. The
-mob in that respect was quite successful."
-
-"But that you are back!" Monsieur de Lavergne's hands were raised in
-protest. "That is alone what matters. Monsieur Bruce knows that in any
-attire it is the same here for monsieur as though he were at home."
-
-"Thank you!" said John Bruce cordially. "I have only dropped in through
-the urge of old habits, I guess. I'm hardly on my feet yet, and I
-thought I'd just watch the play for a little while to-night."
-
-"And that, too," said Monsieur Henri de Lavergne with a bow, as John
-Bruce moved toward the staircase, "is entirely as monsieur desires."
-
-John Bruce mounted the stairs, and began a stroll through the roulette
-and card rooms. The croupiers and dealers nodded to him genially; those
-of the "guests" Whom he knew did likewise. He was treated with marked
-courtesy and consideration by every attendant in the establishment.
-Everything was exactly as it had been on his previous visits. There were
-the soft mellow lights; the siren pur of the roulette wheel, the musical
-_click_ of the ball as it spun around on its little fateful orbit; the
-low, quiet voices of the croupiers and dealers; the well-dressed
-players grouped around the tables, the hilarious and the grim, the
-devil-may-care laugh from one, the thin smile from another. It was
-exactly the same, all exactly the same, even to the table in the supper
-room, free to all though laden with every wine and delicacy that money
-could procure; but somehow, even at the end of half an hour, where he
-was wont to be engrossed till daylight, John Bruce became excessively
-bored.
-
-Perhaps it was because he was simply an on-looker, and not playing
-himself. He had drawn close to a group around a faro bank. The play was
-grim earnest and for high stakes. No, it wasn't that! He did not want
-to play. Somehow, rather, he knew a slight sense both of contempt and
-disgust at the eager clutch and grasp of hands, the hoarse, short laugh
-of victory, the snarl of defeat, the trembling fingers of the more
-timorous who staked with Chance and demanded that the god be charitable
-in its omnipotence and toss them crumbs!
-
-Well, what was he caviling about? It was the life he had chosen. It was
-his life work. Wasn't he pleased with it? He had certainly liked it well
-enough in the old days to squander upon it the fair-sized fortune
-his father had left him. He decidedly had not gone into that infernal
-compact with Larmon blindfolded. Perhaps it was because in those days
-he played when he wanted to; and in these, and hereafter, he would play
-because he had to. Perhaps it was only that, to-night, there was upon
-him the feeling, which was natural enough, and which was immeasurably
-human too, that it was irksome to be a slave, to be fettered and
-shackled and bound to anything, even to what one, with one's freedom his
-own, was ordinarily out of choice most prone to do and delight in. Well,
-maybe! But that was not entirely a satisfactory or conclusive solution
-either.
-
-He looked around him. There seemed to be something hollow to-night in
-these trappings of tinsel; and something not only hollow, but sardonic
-in his connection with them--that he should act as a monitor over the
-honesty of those who in turn acted as the agents of Larmon in an already
-illicit traffic.
-
-"Oh, hell!" said John Bruce suddenly.
-
-The dealer looked up from the table, surprise mingling with polite
-disapproval. Several of the players screwed around their heads.
-
-"That's what I say!" snarled one of the latter with an added oath, as a
-large stack of chips was swept away from him.
-
-Some one touched John Bruce on the elbow. He turned around. It was one
-of the attendants.
-
-"You are being asked for downstairs, Mr. Bruce," the man informed him.
-
-John Bruce followed the attendant. In the hall below the white-haired
-negro doorkeeper came toward him.
-
-"I done let him in, Mistuh Bruce, suh," the old darky explained a little
-anxiously, "'cause he done say, Mistuh Bruce, that it was a case of
-most particular illness, suh, and----"
-
-John Bruce did not wait for more. It was Veniza probably--a turn for the
-worse. He nodded, and passed hurriedly along the hall to where, near the
-door, a poorly dressed man, hat in hand and apparently somewhat ill at
-ease in his luxurious surroundings, stood waiting.
-
-"I am Mr. Bruce," he said quickly. "Some one is critically ill, you say?
-Is it Mr. Veniza?"
-
-"No, sir," the man answered. "I don't know anything about Mr. Veniza.
-It's Hawkins."
-
-"Hawkins!" ejaculated John Bruce.
-
-"Yes, sir," said the man. He shuffled his feet. "I--I guess you know,
-sir."
-
-John Bruce for a moment made no comment. Hawkins! Yes, he knew! Hawkins
-had even renounced his pledge, hadn't he? Not, perhaps, that that would
-have made any difference!
-
-"Bad?" he asked tersely.
-
-"I'm afraid so, sir," the man replied. "I've seen a good bit of Hawkins
-off and on in the last two years, sir, because I room in the same house;
-but I've never seen him like this. He's been out of his head and clawing
-the air, sir, if you know what I mean. He's over that now, but that weak
-he had me scared once, sir, that he'd gone."
-
-"What does the doctor say?" John Bruce bit off his words.
-
-The man shook his head.
-
-"He wouldn't have one, sir. It's you he wants. You'll understand, sir,
-that he's been alone. I don't know how long ago he started on this
-spree. It was only by luck that I walked into his room to-night. I was
-for getting a doctor at once, of course, but he wouldn't have it; he
-wanted you. At times, sir, he was crying like a baby, only he hadn't
-the strength of one left. Knowing I could run her, me being a motortruck
-driver, he told me to take that car he drives and go to the hotel for
-you, and if you weren't there to try here--which I've done, sir, as
-you see, and I hope you'll come back with me. I don't know what to do,
-though I'm for picking up a doctor on the way back whether he wants one
-or not."
-
-John Bruce turned abruptly, secured his coat and hat, motioned the man
-to lead the way, and followed the other out of the house and down the
-steps to the sidewalk.
-
-The traveling pawn-shop was at the curb. The man opened the door, and
-John Bruce stepped inside--and was instantly flung violently down upon a
-seat. The door closed. The car started forward. And in a sudden glare of
-light John Bruce stared into the muzzle of a revolver, and, behind the
-revolver, into a bruised and battered face, which was the face of Doctor
-Crang.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER FOURTEEN--THE TWO PENS
-
-|JOHN BRUCE stared for a moment longer at the revolver that held a
-steady bead between his eyes, and at the evil face of Crang that leered
-at him from the opposite seat; then he deliberately turned his head and
-stared at the face of still another occupant of the car--a man who sat
-on the seat beside him. He was trapped--and well trapped! He recognized
-the other to be the man known as Birdie, who had participated on a
-certain night in the robbery of Paul Veniza's safe. It was quite plain.
-The third man in that robbery, whose face he had not seen at the time,
-was undoubtedly the man who had brought the "message" a few minutes ago,
-and who was now, with almost equal certainty, engaged in driving the
-car. Thieving, at least, was in the trio's line! They must somehow or
-other have stolen the traveling pawn-shop from Hawkins!
-
-He smiled grimly. If it had been Birdie now who had brought the message
-he would never have fallen into the trap! Crang had played in luck and
-won by a very narrow margin, for Crang was naturally in ignorance that
-he, John Bruce, had ever seen either of the men before. And then John
-Bruce thought of the bulky roll of bills which by an equally narrow
-margin was _not_ in his pocket at that moment, and his smile deepened.
-
-Crang spoke for the first time.
-
-"Take his gun away from him, if he's got one!" he gnarled tersely.
-
-"It's in the breast pocket of my coat," said John Bruce imperturbably.
-
-Birdie, beside John Bruce, reached over and secured the weapon.
-
-John Bruce leaned back in his seat. The car was speeding rapidly along
-now.
-
-The minutes passed. None of the three men spoke. Crang sat like some
-repulsive gargoyle, leering maliciously.
-
-John Bruce half closed his eyes against the uncanny fascination of that
-round black muzzle which never wavered in its direction, and which was
-causing him to strain too intently upon it. What was the game? How far
-did Crang intend to go with his insane jealousy? How far would Crang
-dare to go? The man wasn't doped to-night. Perhaps he was even the
-more dangerous on that account. Instead of mouthing threats, there was
-something ominous now, it seemed, in the man's silence. John Bruce's
-lips drew together. He remembered Claire's insistence that Crang had
-meant what he said literally--and Claire had repeated that warning over
-the telephone. Well, if she were right, it meant--_murder_.
-
-From under his half closed lids, John Bruce looked around the car. The
-curtains, as they always were, were closely drawn. The interior was
-lighted by that same soft central light, only the light was high up now
-near the roof of the car. Well, if it was to be murder, why not _now?_
-The little velvet-topped table was not in place, and there was nothing
-between himself and that sneering, sallow face. Yes, why not now--and
-settle it!
-
-He straightened almost imperceptibly in his seat, as impulse suddenly
-bade him fling himself forward upon Crang. Why not? The sound of a
-revolver shot would be heard in the street, and Crang might not even
-dare to fire at all. And then John Bruce's glance rested on the man
-beside him--and impulse gave way to common sense. He had no intention of
-submitting tamely and without a struggle to any fate, no matter what it
-might be, that Crang proposed for him, but that struggle would better
-come when there was at least a chance. There was no chance here. Birdie,
-on the seat beside him, held a deadlier and even more effective weapon
-than was Crang's revolver, a silent thing--a black-jack.
-
-"Wait! Don't play the fool! You'll get a better chance than this!" the
-voice of what he took to be common sense whispered to him.
-
-The car began to go slower. It swerved twice as though making sharp
-turns; and then, running still more slowly, began to bump over rough
-ground.
-
-Crang spoke again.
-
-"You can make all the noise you want to, if you think it will do you any
-good," he said viciously; "but if you make a move you are not told to
-make you'll be _carried_ the rest of the way! Understand?"
-
-John Bruce did not answer.
-
-The car stopped. Birdie opened the door on his side, and stepped to the
-ground. He was joined by the man who had driven the car, and who, as
-John Bruce now found he had correctly assumed, had acted as the decoy at
-the gambling house.
-
-"Get out!" ordered Doctor Crang curtly.
-
-John Bruce followed Birdie from the car. It was dark out here,
-exceedingly dark, but he could make out that the car had been driven
-into a narrow lane, and that they were close to the wall of a building
-of some sort. The two men gripped him by his arms. He felt the muzzle of
-Crang's revolver pressed into the small of his back.
-
-"Mind your step!" cautioned Birdie gruffly.
-
-It was evidently the entrance to a cellar. John Bruce found himself
-descending a few short steps; and then, on the level again, he was
-guided forward through what was now pitch blackness. A moment more and
-they had halted, but not before John Bruce's foot had come into contact
-with a wall or partition of some kind in front of him. One of the
-men who gripped his arms knocked twice with three short raps in quick
-succession.
-
-A door opened in front of them, and for an instant John Bruce was
-blinded by a sudden glare of light; but the next instant, his eyes grown
-accustomed to the transition, he saw before him a large basement room,
-disreputable and filthy in appearance, where half a dozen men sat at
-tables drinking and playing cards.
-
-A shove from the muzzle of Crang's revolver urged John Bruce forward
-into an atmosphere that was foul, hot and fetid, and thick with tobacco
-smoke that floated in heavy, sinuous layers in mid-air. He was led down
-the length of the room toward another door at the opposite end. The men
-at the tables, as he passed them, paid him little attention other than
-to leer curiously at him. They greeted Birdie and his companion with
-blasphemous familiarity; but their attitude toward Crang, it seemed to
-John Bruce, was one of cowed and abject respect.
-
-John Bruce's teeth closed hard together. This was a nice place, an
-ominously nice place--a hidden den of the rats of the underworld,
-where Crang was obviously the leader. He was not so sure now that the
-promptings of so-called common sense had been common sense at all! His
-chances of escaping, practically hopeless as they had been in the car,
-would certainly have been worth trying in view of this! He began to
-regret his "common sense" bitterly now.
-
-He was in front of the door toward which they had been heading now.
-It was opened by Birdie, and John Bruce was pushed into a small,
-dimly-lighted, cave-like place. Crang said something in a low voice to
-the two men, and, leaving them outside, entered himself, closing the
-door only partially behind him.
-
-For a moment they faced each other, and then Crang laughed--tauntingly,
-in menace.
-
-John Bruce's eyes, from Crang's sallow face, and from Crang's revolver,
-swept coolly over his surroundings. A mattress, a foul thing, lay on the
-ground in one corner. There was no flooring here in the cellar. A small
-incandescent bulb hung from the roof. There was one chair and a battered
-table--nothing else; not even a window.
-
-"It was like stealing from a child!" sneered Crang suddenly. "You poor
-mark!"
-
-"Quite so!" said John Bruce calmly. "And the more so since I was warned
-that you were quite capable of--murder. I suppose that is what I am here
-for."
-
-"Oh, you were warned, were you?" Crang took an abrupt step forward, his
-lips working. An angry purple clouded the pallor of his face. "More of
-that love stuff, eh? Well, by God, here's the end of it! I'll teach you
-with your damned sanctimonious airs to fool around the girl I'm going to
-marry! You snivelling hypocrite, you didn't tell her who _you_ were, did
-you?"
-
-John Bruce stared blankly.
-
-"Who I am?" he repeated. "What do you mean?"
-
-Crang for the moment was silent. He seemed to be waging a battle with
-himself to control his passion.
-
-"I'm too clever a man to lose my temper, now I've got you!" he rasped
-finally. "That's about the size of your mentality! The sweet, naïve,
-innocent rôle! Yes, I said a snivelling hypocrite! You don't eat dope,
-but perhaps you've heard of a man named Larmon--Mr. Gilbert Larmon, of
-San Francisco!"
-
-To John Bruce it seemed as though Crang's words in their effect were
-something like one of those blows the same man had dealt him on his
-wounded side in that fight of the other night. They seemed to jar him,
-and rob his mind of quick thinking and virility--and yet he was quite
-sure that not a muscle of his face had moved.
-
-"You needn't answer," Crang grinned mockingly. "If you haven't met him,
-you'll have the opportunity of doing so in a few hours. Mr. Larmon will
-arrive in New York to-night in response to the telegram you sent him."
-
-"I know you said you were clever," said John Bruce shortly, "and I have
-no doubt this is the proof of it! But what is the idea? I did not send a
-telegram to any one.
-
-"Oh, yes, you did!" Crang was chuckling evilly.
-
-"It was something to the effect that Mr. Larmon's immediate presence in
-New York was imperative; that you were in serious difficulties. And in
-order that Mr. Larmon might have no suspicions or anxiety aroused as to
-his own personal safety, he was to go on his arrival to the Bayne-Miloy
-Hotel; but was, at the same time, to register under the name of R. L.
-Peters, and to make no effort to communicate with you until you gave
-him the cue. The answer to the telegram was to be sent to a--er--quite
-different address. And here's the answer."
-
-His revolver levelled, Crang laid a telegram on the table, and then
-backed away a few steps.
-
-John Bruce picked up the message. It was dated from San Francisco
-several days before, and was authentic beyond question. It was addressed
-to John Bruce in the care of one William Anderson, at an address which
-he took to be somewhere over on the East Side. He read it quickly:
-
-Leaving at once and will follow instructions. Arrive Wednesday night. Am
-exceedingly anxious.
-
-Gilbert Larmon.
-
-"This is Wednesday night," sneered Crang.
-
-John Bruce laid down the telegram. That Crang in some way had discovered
-his, John Bruce's connection with Larmon, was obvious. But how--and what
-did it mean? He smiled coldly. There was no use in playing the fool by
-denying any knowledge of Larmon. It was simply a question of exactly how
-_much_ Crang knew.
-
-"Well?" he inquired indifferently.
-
-The door was pushed open, and Birdie came in. He carried pen and ink, a
-large sheet of paper, and an envelope.
-
-Crang motioned toward the table.
-
-"Put them down there--and get out!" he ordered curtly; and then as the
-man obeyed, he stared for an instant in malicious silence at John Bruce.
-"I guess we're wasting time!" he snapped. "I sent the telegram to Larmon
-a few days ago, and I know all about you and Larmon, and his ring
-of gambling houses. You talked your fool head off when you were
-delirious--understand? And----"
-
-John Bruce, his face suddenly white, took a step forward--and stopped,
-and shrugged his shoulders. Crang's outflung revolver was on a level
-with his eyes. And then John Bruce turned his back deliberately, and
-walked to the far end of the little room.
-
-Crang laughed wickedly.
-
-"I am afraid I committed a breach of medical étiquette," he said. "I
-sent to San Francisco and got the dope on the quiet about this Mr.
-Larmon. I found out that he is an enormously wealthy man; and I also
-found out that he poses as an immaculate pillar of society. It looks
-pretty good, doesn't it, Bruce--for me? Two birds with one stone; you
-for trying to get between me and Claire; and Larmon coughing up the
-dough to save your hide and save himself from being exposed for what he
-is!"
-
-John Bruce made no answer. They were not so fanciful now, not so unreal
-and wandering, those dreams when he had been ill, those dreams in
-which there had been a man with a quill toothpick, and another with a
-sinister, loathsome face, whose head was always cocked in a listening
-attitude.
-
-"Well, I guess you've got it now, all of it, haven't you?" Crang
-snarled. "It's lucky for you Larmon's got the coin, or I'd pass you
-out for what you did the other night. As it is you're getting out of it
-light. There's paper on the table. You write him a letter that will get
-him down here with a blank check in his pocket. I'll help you to word
-it." Crang smiled unpleasantly. "He will be quite comfortable here while
-the check is going through the bank; for it would be most unfortunate,
-you know, if he had a chance to stop payment on it. And I might say that
-I am not worrying at all about any reprisals through the tracing of the
-check afterward, for if Mr. Larmon is paying me to keep my mouth shut
-there is no fear of his opening his own."
-
-John Bruce turned slowly around.
-
-"And if I don't?" he asked quietly.
-
-Crang studied the revolver in his hand for a moment. He looked up
-finally with a smile that was hideous in its malignancy.
-
-"I'm not sure that I particularly care," he said. "You are going to get
-out of my path in any case, though my personal inclination is to snuff
-you out, and"--his voice rose suddenly--"damn you, I'd like to see you
-dead; but on the other hand, my business sense tells me that I'd be
-better off with, say, a hundred thousand dollars in my pocket. Do you
-get the idea, my dear Mr. Bruce? I am sure you do. And as your medical
-advisor, for your health is still very much involved, I would strongly
-urge you to write the letter. But at the same time I want to be
-perfectly frank with you. There is a tail to it as far as you are
-concerned. I have a passage in my pocket--a first-class passage, in fact
-a stateroom where you can be secured so that I may make certain you
-do not leave the ship prematurely at the dock--for South America, on a
-steamer sailing to-morrow afternoon. The passage is made out in the name
-of John Bruce."
-
-"You seem to have taken it for granted that I would agree to your
-proposal," said John Bruce pleasantly.
-
-"I have," Crang answered shortly. "I give you credit in some respects
-for not being altogether a fool."
-
-"In other words," said John Bruce, still pleasantly, "if I will trap Mr.
-Larmon into coming here so that you will have him in your power, and can
-hold him until you have squeezed out of him what you consider the fair
-amount he should pay as blackmail, or do away with him perhaps, if he
-is obstinate, I am to go free and sail for South America to-morrow
-afternoon; failing this, I am to snuff out--I think you called it--at
-the hands of either yourself or this gentlemanly looking band of apaches
-you have gathered around you."
-
-"You haven't made any mistake so far!" said Crang evenly. He jerked his
-hand toward the table. "It's that piece of paper there, or your hide."
-
-"Yes," said John Bruce slowly. He stared for an instant, set-faced, into
-Crang's eyes. "Well, then, go ahead!"
-
-Crang's eyes narrowed.
-
-"You mean," his voice was hoarse with menace, "you mean----"
-
-"Yes!" said John Bruce tersely. "My hide!"
-
-Crang did not answer for a moment. The revolver in his hand seemed to
-edge a little nearer to John Bruce as though to make more certain of its
-aim. Crang's eyes were alight with passion.
-
-John Bruce did not move. It was over--this second--or the next. Crang's
-threats were _literal_. Claire had said so. He knew it. It was in
-Crang's eyes--a sort of unholy joy, a madman's frenzy. Well, why didn't
-the man fire and have done with it?
-
-And then suddenly Crang's shoulders lifted in a mocking shrug.
-
-"Maybe you haven't got this--_straight_," he said between closed teeth.
-"I guess I've paid you the compliment of crediting you with a quicker
-intelligence than you possess! I'll give you thirty minutes alone to
-think it over and figure out where you stand."
-
-Crang backed to the door.
-
-The door closed. John Bruce heard the key turn in the lock. He stared
-about him at the miserable surroundings. Thirty minutes! He did not need
-thirty minutes, or thirty seconds, to realize his position. He was not
-even sure that he was thankful for the reprieve. It meant half an hour
-more of life, but----
-
-Cornered like a rat! To go out at the hands of a degenerate dope
-fiend... the man had been cunning enough... Hawkins!
-
-John Bruce paced his little section of the cellar. His footsteps made
-no sound on the soft earth. This was his condemned cell; his warders a
-batch of gunmen whose trade was murder.
-
-Larmon! They had not been able to trick Larmon into their power so
-easily, because there wasn't any Hawkins. No, there was--John Bruce.
-John Bruce was the bait. Queer! Queer that he had ever met Larmon, and
-queer that the end should come like this.
-
-Faustus hadn't had his fling yet. That quill toothpick with which he had
-signed----
-
-John Bruce stood stock still--his eyes suddenly fastened on the piece of
-paper on the table.
-
-"My God!" John Bruce whispered hoarsely.
-
-He ran silently to the door and listened. He could hear nothing. He ran
-back to the table, threw himself into the chair, and snatching the sheet
-of paper toward him, took out a fountain pen from his pocket. Near the
-lower edge of the paper, and in a minutely small hand, he began to write
-rapidly.
-
-At the end of a few minutes John Bruce stood up. There was neither sign
-nor mark upon the paper, save an almost invisible impression made by
-his thumb nail, which he had set as a sign post, as it were, to indicate
-where he had begun to write. It was a large sheet of unruled paper,
-foolscap in size, and there was but little likelihood of reaching so far
-down with the letter that Crang was so insistent upon having, but he did
-not propose in any event to superimpose anything over what he had just
-written. He could always turn the sheet and begin at the top on the
-other side! Again he began to pace up and down across the soft floor,
-but now there was a grim smile on his face. Behind Larmon and his
-enormous wealth lay Lar-mon's secret organization, that, once set in
-motion, would have little difficulty in laying a dozen Crangs, by the
-heels. And Crang was yellow. Let Crang but for an instant realize that
-his own skin was at stake, and he would squeal without hesitation--and
-what had narrowly escaped being tragedy would dissolve into opera
-bouffe. Also, it was very nice indeed of Crang to see that the message
-reached Larmon's hands!
-
-And it was the way out for Claire, too! It was Crang who had mentioned
-something about two birds with one stone, wasn't it? Claire! John
-Bruce frowned. Was he so sure after all? There seemed to be something
-unfathomable between Claire and Crang; the bond between them one that no
-ordinary means would break.
-
-His brain seemed to go around in cycles now--Claire, Larmon, Crang;
-Claire, Larmon, Crang.... He lost track of time--until suddenly he heard
-a key rattle in the lock. And then, quick and silent as a cat in his
-movements, he slipped across the earthen floor, and flung himself face
-down upon the mattress.
-
-A moment more, and some one prodded him roughly. His hair was rumpled,
-his face anxious and dejected, as he raised himself on his elbow. Crang
-and two of his apaches were standing over him. One of the latter held an
-ugly looking stiletto.
-
-"Stand him up!" ordered Crang.
-
-John Bruce made no resistance as the two men jerked him unceremoniously
-to his feet.
-
-Crang came and stared into his face.
-
-"I guess from the look of you," Crang leered, "you've put in those
-thirty minutes to good advantage. You're about ready to write that
-letter, aren't you?"
-
-John Bruce looked around him miserably. He shook his head.
-
-"No--no; I--I can't," he said weakly. "For God's sake, Crang, you--you
-know I can't."
-
-"Sure--I know!" said Crang imperturbably. He nodded to the man with the
-stiletto. "He's more used to steel than bullets, and he likes it better.
-Don't keep him waiting."
-
-John Bruce felt the sudden prick of the weapon on his flesh--it went a
-little deeper.
-
-"Wait! Stop!" he screamed out in a well-simulated paroxysm of terror.
-"I--I'll write it."
-
-"I thought so!" said Crang coolly. "Well, go over there to the
-table then, and sit down." He turned to the two men. "Beat it!" he
-snapped--and the room empty again, save for himself and John Bruce,
-he tapped the sheet of paper with the muzzle of his revolver. "I'll
-dictate. Pick up that pen!"
-
-John Bruce obeyed. He circled his lips with his tongue.
-
-"You--you won't do Larmon any harm, will you?" he questioned abjectly.
-"I--my life's worth more than a little money, if it's only that,
-and--and, if that's all, I--I'm sure he'd rather pay."
-
-"Don't apologize!" sneered Crang. "Go on now, and write. Address him as
-you always do."
-
-John Bruce dipped the pen in the ink, and wrote in a small hand:
-
-"Dear Mr. Larmon:--"
-
-He looked up in a cowed way.
-
-"All right!" grunted Crang. "I guess we'll kill another bird, too, while
-we're at it." He smiled cryptically. "Go on again, and write!"
-
-And John Bruce wrote as Crang dictated:
-
-"I'm here in my rooms in the same hotel with you, but am closely
-watched. Our compact is known. I asked a girl to marry me, and in doing
-so felt she had the right to my full confidence. She did me in. She----"
-
-John Bruce's pen had halted.
-
-"Go on!" prompted Crang sharply. "It's got to sound right for Larmon--so
-that he will believe it. He's not a fool, is he?"
-
-"No," said John Bruce.
-
-"Well, go on then!"
-
-And John Bruce wrote:
-
-"She was all the time engaged to the head of a gang of crooks." Crang's
-malicious chuckle interrupted his dictation.
-
-"I'm not sparing myself, you see. Go on!"
-
-John Bruce continued his writing:
-
-"They are after blackmail now, and threaten to expose you. I telegraphed
-you to come under an alias because we are up against it and you should
-be on the spot; but if they knew you were here they would only attach
-the more importance to it, and the price would go up. They believe you
-are still in San Francisco, and that I am communicating with you by
-mail. They are growing impatient. You can trust the bearer of this
-letter absolutely. Go with him. He will take you where we can meet
-without arousing any suspicion. I am leaving the hotel now. If possible
-we should not risk more than one conference together, so bring a blank
-check with you. There is no other way out. It is simply a question of
-the amount. I am bitterly sorry that this has happened through me. John
-Bruce."
-
-Crang, with his revolver pressed into the back of John Bruce's neck,
-leaned over John Bruce's shoulder and read the letter carefully.
-
-"Fold it, and put it in that envelope without sealing it, and address
-the envelope to Mr. R. L. Peters at the Bayne-Miloy Hotel!" he
-instructed.
-
-John Bruce folded the letter. As he did so, he noted that his signature
-was a good two or three inches above the thumb nail mark. He placed the
-letter in the envelope, and addressed the latter as Crang had directed.
-
-Crang moved around to the other side of the table, tucked the envelope
-into his pocket, and grinned mockingly.
-
-And then without a word John Bruce got up from his chair, and flung
-himself face down on the mattress again.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER FIFTEEN--THE CLEW
-
-|PAUL VENIZA, propped up in bed on his pillows, followed Claire with his
-eyes as she moved about the room. It was perhaps because he had been too
-ill of late to notice anything, that he experienced now a sudden
-shock at Claire's appearance. She looked pale and drawn, and even her
-movements seemed listless.
-
-"What's to-night?" he asked abruptly.
-
-"Wednesday, father," she answered.
-
-Paul Veniza plucked at the counterpane. It was all too much for Claire.
-Besides--besides Crang, she had been up all night for the last two
-nights, and since Monday she had not been out of the house.
-
-"Put on your hat, dear, and run over and tell Hawkins I want to see
-him," he smiled.
-
-Claire stared at the old pawnbroker.
-
-"Why, father," she protested, "it's rather late, isn't it? And, besides,
-you would be all alone in the house."
-
-"Nonsense!" said Paul Veniza. "I'm all right. Much better. I'll be up
-to-morrow. But I particularly want to see Hawkins to-night." He did not
-particularly want to see Hawkins or any one else, but if he did not have
-some valid excuse she would most certainly refuse to go out and leave
-him alone. A little walk and a breath of fresh air would do Claire
-a world of good. And as for the lateness of the hour, Claire in that
-section of the city was as safe as in her own home. "Please do as I ask
-you, Claire," he insisted.
-
-"Very well, father," she agreed after a moment's hesitation, and went
-and put on her hat.
-
-From downstairs, as she opened the front door, she called up to him a
-little anxiously:
-
-"You are sure you are all right?"
-
-"Quite sure, dear," Paul Veniza called back. "Don't hurry."
-
-Claire stepped out on the street. It was not far to go--just around the
-first corner and halfway down the next block--and at first she walked
-briskly, impelled by an anxiety to get back to the house again as soon
-as possible, but insensibly, little by little, her footsteps dragged.
-
-What was it? Something in the night, the darkness, that promised a
-kindly cloak against the breaking of her self-restraint, that bade her
-let go of herself and welcome the tears that welled so spontaneously
-to her eyes? Would it bring relief? To-day, all evening, more than ever
-before, she had felt her endurance almost at an end. She turned her face
-upward to the night. It was black; not a star showed anywhere. It seemed
-as though something dense and forbidding had been drawn like a somber
-mantle over the world. God, even, seemed far away to-night.
-
-She shivered a little. Could that really be true--that God was turning
-His face away from her? She had tried so hard to cling to her faith.
-It was all she had; it was all that of late had stood between her and
-a despair and misery, a horror so overwhelming that death by contrast
-seemed a boon.
-
-Her lips quivered as she walked along. It almost seemed as though she
-did not want to fight any more. And yet there had been a great and
-very wonderful reward given to her before she had even made the final
-sacrifice that she had pledged herself to make. If her soul revolted
-from the association that must come with Doctor Crang, if every instinct
-within her rose up in stark horror before the contamination of the man's
-wanton moral filth, one strange and wondrous thing sustained her. And
-she had no right to mistrust God, for God must have brought her this.
-She had bought an unknown life--that had become dearer to her than her
-own, or anything that might happen to her. She knew love. It was no
-longer a _stranger_ who would live on through the years because she
-was soon to pay the price that had been set upon his life--it was John
-Bruce.
-
-Claire caught her hands suddenly to her breast. John Bruce! She was
-still afraid--for John Bruce. And to-night, all evening, that fear had
-been growing stronger, chilling her with a sense of evil premonition and
-foreboding. Was it only premonition? Crang had threatened. She had heard
-the threats. And she knew out of her own terrible experience that Crang,
-as between human life and his own desires, held human life as naught.
-And yet, surely John Bruce was safe from him now--at least his life was
-safe. That was how Crang had wrung the promise from her. No, she was
-not so sure! There was personal enmity between them now. Besides,
-if anything happened she would not be able to bring it to Crang's
-door--Crang would take care of that--and her promise would still hold.
-And so she was afraid.
-
-She had not seen Crang since the night that John Bruce had thrown him
-down the stairs. She had thanked God for the relief his absence had
-brought her--but now, here again, she was not so sure! What had kept him
-away? Where was John Bruce? She began to regret that she had told John
-Bruce he must not attempt to see her or communicate with her any
-more, though she had only done so because she had been afraid for his
-sake--that it would but arouse the very worst in Doctor Crang. Perhaps
-John Bruce had yielded to her pleading and had left the city. She shook
-her head. If she knew the man she loved at all, John Bruce would run
-from no one, and----
-
-Claire halted abruptly. She had reached the dingy rooming house where
-Hawkins lived. She brushed her hand resolutely across her eyes as she
-mounted the steps. The tears had come after all, for her lashes were
-wet.
-
-It was not necessary either to ring or knock; the door was always
-unfastened; and, besides, she had been here so many, many times that
-she knew the house almost as well as her own home. She opened the door,
-stepped into a black hallway, and began to feel her way up the creaking
-staircase. There was the possibility, of course, that Hawkins was either
-out or already in bed; but if he were out she would leave a note in his
-room for him so that he would come over to the old pawn-shop when he
-returned, and if he were already in bed her message delivered through
-the door would soon bring Hawkins out of it again--Hawkins, since he had
-been driving that old car which he had created, was well accustomed to
-calls at all hours of the night.
-
-A thin, irregular streak of light, the only sign of light she had
-seen anywhere in the house, showed now at the threshold under Hawkins'
-ill-fitting door, as she reached the landing. She stepped quickly to
-the door and knocked. There was no answer. She knocked again. There was
-still no answer. Claire smiled a little whimsically. Hawkins was growing
-extravagant--he had gone out and left the light burning. She tried the
-door, and, finding it unlocked, opened it, stepped forward into the
-room--and with a sudden, low, half-hurt, half-frightened cry, stood
-still. Hawkins was neither out, nor was he in bed. Hawkins was sprawled
-partly on the floor and partly across a chair in which he had obviously
-been unable to preserve his balance. Several bottles, all empty but one,
-stood upon the table. There were two dirty glasses beside the bottles,
-and another one, broken, on the floor. Hawkins was snoring stertorously.
-
-It seemed somehow to Claire standing there that this was the last
-straw--and yet, too, there was only a world of pity in her heart for
-the old man. All the years rolled before her. She remembered as a child
-climbing upon his knee and pleading for the _tick-tick_--that great
-cumbersome silver watch, which, fallen out of his pocket now, dangled by
-its chain and swung in jerky rhythm to his breathing. She remembered the
-days when, a little older, she had dressed herself in her best clothes,
-and to Hawkins' huge delight had played at princess, while he drove her
-about in his old ramshackle hansom cab; and, later still, his gentle
-faithfulness to Paul Veniza in his trouble, and to her--and the love,
-and a strange, always welcome, tenderness that he had ever shown her.
-Poor frail soul! Hawkins had been good to every one--but Hawkins!
-
-She could not leave him like this, but she was not strong enough alone
-to carry him to his bed. She turned and ran hurriedly downstairs. There
-was the widow Hedges, of course, the old landlady.
-
-Back at the end of the lower hall, Claire pounded upon a door. Presently
-a woman's voice answered her. A moment later a light appeared as the
-door was opened, and with it an apparition in an old gingham wrapper and
-curl papers.
-
-"Oh, it's you, Miss Claire!" the woman exclaimed in surprise. "What's
-brought you over here to-night, dear? Is your father worse?"
-
-"No," Claire answered. "He wanted Hawkins, and----"
-
-Mrs. Hedges shook her head.
-
-"Hawkins ain't in," she said; "but I'll see that he gets the message
-when he comes back. He went out with the car quite a little while ago
-with some men he had with him."
-
-"With the car?" Claire found herself suddenly a little frightened, she
-did not quite know why. "Well, he's back now, Mrs. Hedges."
-
-"Oh, no," asserted Mrs. Hedges positively. "I might not have heard him
-going upstairs, but I would have heard the car coming in. It ain't come
-back yet."
-
-"But Hawkins _is_ upstairs," said Claire a little heavily. "I--I've been
-up."
-
-"You say Hawkins is upstairs?" Mrs. Hedges stared incredulously. "That's
-very strange!" She turned and ran back into her room and to a rear
-window. "Look, Miss Claire! Come here! You can see!" And as Claire
-joined her: "The door of the shed, or the gradge as he calls it, is
-open, and you can see for yourself it's empty. If he's upstairs what
-could he have done with the car? It ain't out in front of the house,
-is it, and--oh!" She caught Claire's arm anxiously. "There's been an
-accident, you mean, and he's----"
-
-"I am sure he never left the house," said Claire, and her voice in
-its composed finality sounded strange even in her own ears. She was
-thoroughly frightened now, and her fears were beginning to take concrete
-form. There were not many who would have any use for that queer old car
-that was so intimately associated with Hawkins! She could think of
-only one--and of only one reason. She pulled at Mrs. Hedges' arm. "Come
-upstairs," she said.
-
-Mrs. Hedges reached the door of Hawkins' room first.
-
-"Oh, my God!" Mrs. Hedges cried out wildly. "He ain't dead, is he?"
-
-"No," said Claire in a strained voice. "He's--he's only had too much to
-drink. Help me lift him on the bed."
-
-It taxed the strength of the two women.
-
-"And the car's stole!" gasped Mrs. Hedges, fighting for her breath.
-
-"Yes," said Claire; "I am afraid so."
-
-"Then we'll get the police at once!" announced Mrs. Hedges.
-
-Claire looked at her for a moment.
-
-"No," she said slowly, shaking her head. "You mustn't do that. It--it
-will come back."
-
-"Come back?" Mrs. Hedges stared helplessly. "It ain't a cat! You--you
-ain't quite yourself, are you, Miss Claire? Poor dear, this has upset
-you. It ain't a fit thing for young eyes like yours to see. Me--I'm used
-to it."
-
-"I am quite myself." Claire forced a calmness she was far from feeling
-into her voice. "You mustn't notify the police, or do a thing, except
-just look after Hawkins. It--it's father's car, you know; and he'll know
-best what to do."
-
-"Well, maybe that's so," admitted Mrs. Hedges.
-
-"Do you know who the men were who were here with Hawkins?" Claire asked.
-
-"No, I don't," Mrs. Hedges answered excitedly. "The thieving devils,
-coming here and getting Hawkins off like this! I just knew there were
-some men up in his room with him because I heard them talking during the
-evening, and then when I heard them go out and get the car I thought, of
-course, that Hawkins had gone with them."
-
-"I--I see," said Claire, striving to speak naturally. "I--I'll go back
-to father now. I can't leave him alone very long, anyhow. I'll tell him
-what has happened, and--and he'll decide what to do. You'll look after
-Hawkins, won't you, Mrs. Hedges?"
-
-"You run along, dear," said Mrs. Hedges reassuringly. "Who else but me
-has looked after him these ten years?"
-
-Claire ran from the room and down the stairs, and out to the street.
-The one thing left for her to do was to reach home and get to the
-telephone--get the Bayne-Miloy Hotel--and John Bruce. Perhaps she was
-already too late. She ran almost blindly along the street. Her
-intuition, the foreboding that had obsessed her so heavily all evening,
-was only too likely now to prove itself far from groundless. What
-object, save one, could anybody have in obtaining possession of the
-traveling pawn-shop, and at the same time of keeping Hawkins temporarily
-out of the road? Perhaps her deduction would show flaws if it were
-subjected to the test of pure logic, perhaps there were a thousand other
-reasons that would account equally well, and even more logically, for
-what had happened, but she _knew_ it was Crang--and Crang could have but
-one object in view. The man was clever, diabolically clever. In some way
-he was using that car and Hawkins' helplessness to trap the man he had
-threatened. She must warn John Bruce. There was not an instant to lose!
-To lose! How long ago had that car been taken? Was there even a chance
-left that it was not already far too late? She had not thought to ask
-how long ago it was when Mrs. Hedges had heard the car leave the garage.
-
-It had never seemed so far--just that little half block and halfway
-along another. It seemed as though she had been an hour in coming that
-little way when she finally reached her home. Her breath coming in hard,
-short gasps, she opened the door, closed it, and, with no thought but
-one in her mind, ran across the room to the telephone. She remembered
-the number of the Bayne-Miloy. She snatched the telephone receiver from
-the hook--and then, as though her arm had suddenly become incapable of
-further movement, the receiver remained poised halfway to her ear.
-
-Doctor Crang was leaning over the banister, and looking down at her.
-
-With a stifled little cry, Claire replaced the receiver.
-
-Paul Veniza's voice reached her from above.
-
-"Is that you, Claire?" he called.
-
-"Yes, father," she answered.
-
-Doctor Crang came down the stairs.
-
-"I just dropped in a minute ago--not professionally"--a snarl crept into
-his voice--"for I have never been informed that your father was ill."
-
-Claire did not look up.
-
-"It--it wasn't serious," she said.
-
-"So!" Crang smiled a little wickedly. "I wonder where you get the
-_gambling_ spirit from? One of these days you'll find out how serious
-these attacks are!" He took a step forward. "Your father tells me you
-have been over to Hawkins' room."
-
-There was a curious hint of both challenge and perverted humor in his
-voice. It set at rest any lingering doubt Claire might have had.
-
-"Yes," she said, and faced him now, her eyes, hard and steady, fixed on
-his.
-
-"Poor Hawkins!" sighed Doctor Crang ironically. "Even the best of us
-have our vices! It should teach us to be tolerant with others!"
-
-Claire's little form was rigidly erect.
-
-"I wonder if you know how much I hate you?" she said in a tense, low
-voice.
-
-"You've told me often enough!" A savage, hungry look came into Crang's
-eyes. "But you're mine, for all that! Mine, Claire! Mine! You understand
-that, eh?"
-
-He advanced toward her. The door of the inner room, that for weeks,
-until a few days ago, had been occupied by John Bruce, was just behind
-her, and she retreated through it. He followed her. She did not want to
-cry out--the sound would reach the sick room above; and, besides, she
-dared not show the man that she had any fear.
-
-"Don't follow me like that!" she breathed fiercely.
-
-"Why not?" he retorted, as he switched on the light and closed the door.
-"I've got the right to, even if I hadn't something that I came over here
-particularly to-night to tell you about--quite privately."
-
-She had put the table between them. That he made no effort to come
-nearer for the moment afforded her a certain relief, but there was
-something in the smile with which he surveyed her now, a cynical,
-gloating triumph, that chilled her.
-
-"Well, what is it?" she demanded.
-
-"I trapped that damned lover of yours to-night!" he announced coolly.
-
-Claire felt her face go white. It _was_ true, then! She fought madly
-with herself for self-possession.
-
-"If you mean Mr. Bruce," she said deliberately, "I was just going to try
-to warn him over the phone; though, even then, I was afraid I was too
-late."
-
-"Ah!" he exclaimed sharply. "You knew, then?"
-
-Claire shrugged her shoulders.
-
-"Oh, yes!" she said contemptuously. "My faith in you where evil is
-concerned is limitless. I heard your threats. I saw Hawkins a few
-minutes ago. He was quite--quite helpless. You, or some of your
-confederates, traded on his weakness, took the key of the car away from
-him, and then stole the car. Ordinary thieves would not have acted like
-that." An icy smile came to her lips. "His landlady thought the police
-should be notified that the car had been stolen."
-
-"You always were clever, Claire," Crang grinned admiringly. "You've got
-some brains--all there are around here, as far as I can make out.
-You've got it straight, all right. Mr. John Bruce, Esquire, came out of
-Lavergne's on being informed that Hawkins was in bad shape--no lie about
-that!--and walked into the car without a murmur. Too bad to bother the
-police, though--the car will have been left in front of Hawkins' door
-again by now."
-
-It was hard to keep her courage; hard to keep her lips from trembling;
-hard to keep the tears back; hard to pretend that she was not afraid.
-
-"What are you going to do with him?" Her voice was very low. "The
-promise that I gave you was on the condition that he _lived_--not only
-then, but now." Crang laughed outright.
-
-"Oh, don't worry about that! He'd never let it get that far. He thinks
-too much of Mr. Bruce! He has already taken care of himself--at another
-man's expense."
-
-Claire stared numbly. She did not understand.
-
-"I'll tell you," said Crang, with brutal viciousness. "He's a
-professional gambler, this supposedly wealthy gentleman of leisure. He
-works for a man in San Francisco named Larmon, who really is wealthy,
-but who poses as a pillar of the church, or words to that effect. Never
-mind how, but Larmon will be here to-night in New York--just at the
-right moment. And Mr. Bruce has very kindly consented to assist in
-convincing Mr. Larmon that exposure isn't worth the few dollars that
-would buy him immunity."
-
-Claire did not speak. Still she did not understand. She sat down wearily
-in the chair beside the table.
-
-Crang took a letter from his pocket abruptly, and, opening it, laid it
-in front of Claire.
-
-"I thought perhaps you would like to read it," he said carelessly.
-
-Claire rested her elbows on the table and cupped her chin in her hands.
-She stared at the letter. At first the words ran together, and she could
-not make them out. Then a sentence took form, and then another--and she
-read them piteously. "... I asked a girl to marry me, and in doing so
-felt she had the right to my full confidence. She did me in... She read
-on to the end.
-
-"But it's not true!" she cried out sharply. "I don't believe it!"
-
-"Of course, it isn't true!" said Crang complacently. "And, of course,
-you don't believe it! But Larmon will. I've only shown you the letter to
-let you see what kind of a yellow cur this would-be lover of yours is.
-Anything to save himself! But so long as he wrote the letter, I had no
-quarrel with him if he wanted to fake excuses for himself that gave him
-a chance of holding his job with Larmon afterwards."
-
-It couldn't be true--true that John Bruce had even written the letter, a
-miserable Judas thing that baited a trap, for one who trusted him, with
-the good name of a woman for whom he had professed to care. It couldn't
-be true--but the signature was there, and--and it was genuine: "John
-Bruce.... John Bruce.... John Bruce." It seemed to strike at her with
-the cruel, stinging blows of a whip-lash: "John Bruce.... John Bruce....
-John----"
-
-The words became blurred. It was the infinite hopelessness of everything
-that crushed her fortitude, and mocked it, and made of it at last a
-beaten thing. A tear fell and splashed upon the page--and still another.
-She kept looking at the letter, though she could only see it through a
-blinding mist. And there was something ominous, and something that
-added to her fear, that she should imagine that her tears made _black_
-splashes on the blurred letter as they fell, and-----
-
-She heard a sudden startled snarl from Crang, and the letter was
-snatched up from the table. And then he seemed to laugh wildly, without
-reason, as a maniac would laugh--and with the letter clutched in his
-hand rushed from the room. Claire crushed her hands against her temples.
-Perhaps it was herself who had gone mad.
-
-The front door banged.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER SIXTEEN--A WOLF LICKS HIS CHOPS
-
-|OUTSIDE the house Crang continued to run. He was unconscious that he
-had forgotten his hat. His face worked in livid fury. Alternately he
-burst out into short, ugly gusts of laughter that made of laughter an
-evil thing; alternately, racked with unbridled passion, he mouthed a
-flood of oaths.
-
-He ran on for some three blocks, and finally dashed up the steps of a
-small, drab-looking, cheap frame house. A brass sign, greenish with mold
-from neglect, flanked one side of the door. Under the street light it
-could just barely be deciphered: SYDNEY ANGUS CRANG, M.D.
-
-He tried the door. It was locked. He searched impatiently and hastily in
-his pockets for his pass-key, and failing to find it instantly he rang
-the bell; and then, without waiting for an answer to the summons, he
-immediately began to bang furiously upon the panels.
-
-An old woman, his housekeeper, whose bare feet had obviously been
-thrust hurriedly into slippers, and who clutched at the neck of a woolen
-dressing gown that also obviously, and with equal haste, had been flung
-around her shoulders over her nightdress, finally opened the door.
-
-"Get out of the road!" Crang snarled--and brushed his way roughly past
-her.
-
-He stepped forward along an unlighted hall, opened a door, and slammed
-it behind him. He switched on the light. He was in his consulting room.
-The next instant he was standing beside his desk, and had wrenched
-John Bruce's letter from his pocket. He spread this out on the desk and
-glared at it. Beyond any doubt whatever, where Claire's tears had fallen
-on the paper, traces of writing were faintly discernible. Here, out of
-an abortive word, was a well-formed "e"; and there, unmistakably, was a
-capital "L."
-
-Crang burst into a torrent of abuse and oaths; his fists clenched, and
-he shook one of them in the air.
-
-"Double-crossed--eh?--damn him!" he choked. "He tried to double-cross
-me--did he?"
-
-Carrying the letter, he ran now into a little room behind his office,
-where he compounded his medicines, and that was fitted up as a sort of
-small laboratory.
-
-"I'm a clever man," Crang mumbled to himself. "We'll see about this!"
-
-With sudden complacence he began to study the sheet of paper. He nodded
-curtly to himself as he noted that the traces of the secret writing were
-all on the lower edge of the paper.
-
-"We'll be very careful, _very_ careful"--Doctor Crang was still
-mumbling--"it may be useful in more ways than one."
-
-He turned on the water faucet, wet a camel's-hair brush, and applied the
-brush to the lower edge of the letter. The experiment was productive of
-no result. He stared at the paper for a while with wrinkled brow, and
-then suddenly he began to laugh ironically.
-
-"No, of course, not!" He was jeering at himself now. "Clever? You are
-not clever, you are a fool! She _cried_ on the paper. Tears! Tears
-possess a slight trace of"--he reached quickly for a glass container,
-and began to prepare a solution of some sort--"a very slight trace...
-that's why the characters that already show are so faint. Now we'll see,
-Mr. John Bruce, what you've got to say.... Salt!... A little salt, eh?"
-
-He dipped the camel's-hair brush in the solution and drew it across the
-bottom edge of the paper again.
-
-"Ha, ha!" exclaimed Doctor Crang in eager excitement. Letters, words and
-sentences began to take form under the brush. "Ha, ha! He'd play that
-game with me, would he? Damn him!"
-
-Very carefully Sydney Angus Crang, M.D., worked his brush upward on
-the paper line by line, until, still well below the signature that John
-Bruce had affixed in his, Crang's, presence, there failed to appear
-any further trace of the secret writing. He read as fast as a word
-appeared--like a starving beast snatching in ferocious greed at morsels
-of food. It made whole and complete sense. His eyes feasted on it now in
-its entirety:
-
-Keep away. This is a trap. Stall till you can turn tables. Information
-obtained while I was delirious. Am a prisoner in hands of a gang whose
-leader is a doctor named Crang. Veniza will tell you where Crang lives.
-Get Veniza's address from Lavergne at the house. The only way to save
-either of Us is to trick Crang. Look out for yourself. Bruce.
-
-He tossed the camel's-hair brush away, returned to his desk, spread the
-letter out on a blotter to allow the lower edge to dry, and slumping
-down in his desk chair, glued his eyes on the secret message, reading it
-over and over again.
-
-"Trick Crang--eh?--ha, ha!" He began to chuckle low; then suddenly his
-fingers, crooked and curved until they looked like claws, reached out
-as though to fasten upon some prey at hand. And then he chuckled once
-more--and then grew somber, and slumped deeper in his chair, and his
-eyes, brooding, were half closed. "Not to-night," he muttered. "One job
-of it to-morrow... squeal like a pair of rats that----"
-
-He sat suddenly bolt upright in his chair. It came again---a low tapping
-on the window; two raps, three times repeated. He rose quickly, crossed
-the room, opened the door, and stood motionless for a moment peering
-out into the hall. It was a purely precautionary measure--he had little
-doubt but that his old housekeeper had long since mounted the stairs and
-returned to her bed. He stepped rapidly then along the hall, and opened
-the front door.
-
-"That you, Birdie?" he called in a low voice.
-
-A man's form appeared from the shadow of the stoop.
-
-"Sure!" the man answered.
-
-"Come in!" Doctor Crang said tersely.
-
-He led the way back into the consulting room, and slumped down again in
-his chair.
-
-"Well?" he demanded.
-
-"Peters arrived all right," Birdie reported. "He registered at the
-Bayne-Miloy Hotel, and he's there now."
-
-"Good!" grunted Crang.
-
-For a full five minutes he remained silent and without movement in his
-chair, apparently utterly oblivious of the other, who stood, shifting a
-little awkwardly from foot to foot, on the opposite side of the desk.
-
-Then Crang spoke--more to himself than to Birdie.
-
-"He'll be anxious, of course, and growing more so," he said. "He might
-make a break of some kind. I'll have to fix that. I'm not ready yet.
-What?"
-
-Birdie, from staring inanely at the wall, came to himself with a sudden
-start at what he evidently interpreted as a direct question.
-
-"Yes--sure!" he said hurriedly. "No--I mean, no, you're not ready."
-
-Crang glared at the man contemptuously.
-
-"What the hell do you know about it?" he inquired caustically.
-
-He picked up the telephone directory, studied it for a moment, then,
-reaching for the desk telephone, asked for his connection. Presently the
-Bayne-Miloy Hotel answered him, and he asked for Mr. R. L. Peters' room.
-A moment more and a voice reached him over the phone.
-
-"Is that Mr. Peters?" Crang inquired quietly. "Mr. R. L. Peters, of San
-Francisco?... Yes? Then I' have a message for you, Mr. Peters, from the
-person who sent you a telegram a few days ago... I beg your pardon?...
-Yes, I am sure you do... Myself? I'd rather not mention any names over
-the phone. You understand, don't you? He told me to tell you that it is
-absolutely necessary that no connection is known to exist between you,
-and for that reason he does not dare take the chance of getting
-into touch with you to-night, but he will manage it somehow by early
-afternoon to-morrow... What say?... Yes, it is very serious, otherwise
-he would hardly have telegraphed you to come on from San Francisco...
-No, personally, I don't know. That was his message; but I was also to
-warn you on no account to leave your rooms, or have communication
-with anybody until you hear direct from him.... No, I do not know the
-particulars. I only know that he is apparently in a hole, and a bad one,
-and that he is now afraid that you will get into it too.... Yes. You are
-sure you fully understand?... No, not at all I I am only too glad....
-Good-night."
-
-Crang, with a curious smile on his lips, hung up the receiver. He turned
-abruptly to Birdie.
-
-"You get a taxi to-morrow," he said brusquely. "We'll want it for two or
-three hours. Slip the chauffeur whatever is necessary, and change places
-with him. See? You'll know where to find one that will fall for that.
-Then you come here for me at--let's see--the boat sails at four--you
-come here at half past one sharp. Get me?"
-
-"Sure!" said Birdie, with a grin. "That's a cinch!"
-
-"All right, then!" Crang waved his hand. "Beat it!"
-
-Birdie left the room. A moment later the front door closed behind him.
-
-Crang picked up the letter and examined it critically. The lower three
-or four inches of the paper was slightly crinkled, but quite dry now;
-the body of the original letter showed no sign whatever of his work upon
-the lower portion.
-
-Doctor Crang nodded contentedly.
-
-He rose abruptly, secured his surgical bag, and from it selected a
-lance. With the aid of a ruler and the keen-bladed little instrument,
-he very carefully cut away the lower section of the paper. The slip
-containing the erstwhile secret message he tucked away in his inside
-pocket; then he examined the letter itself again even more critically
-than before. For all evidence that it presented to the contrary,
-it might have been the original size of the sheet. There was even a
-generous margin of paper still left beneath John Bruce's signature.
-He folded the letter, replaced it in its envelope--and now sealed the
-envelope.
-
-"To-morrow!" said Doctor Sydney Angus Crang with a sinister smile, as he
-produced a hypodermic syringe from his pocket and rolled up the
-sleeve of his left arm. He laughed as the needle pricked his flesh.
-"To-morrow--John Bruce!"
-
-He slumped far down in his chair once more. For half an hour he sat
-motionless, his eyes closed. Then he spoke again.
-
-"Damn you!" he said.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER SEVENTEEN--ALIAS MR. ANDERSON
-
-DOCTOR Sydney Angus Crang looked at his watch, as he stepped from a taxi
-the next afternoon, and entered the Bayne-Miloy Hotel. It was fifteen
-minutes of two. He approached the desk and obtained a blank card. "From
-J. B.," he wrote upon it. He handed it to the clerk.
-
-"Please send this up to Mr. R. L. Peters," he requested.
-
-He leaned nonchalantly against the desk as a bellboy departed with
-the card. From where he stood the front windows gave him a view of the
-street, and he could see Birdie parking the taxi a little way up past
-the entrance. He smiled pleasantly as he waited.
-
-Presently the bell-boy returned with the information that Mr. Peters
-would see him; and, following the boy upstairs, he was ushered into the
-sitting room of one of the Bayne-Miloy's luxurious suites. A tall man
-with a thin, swarthy face confronted him. Between his fingers the tall
-man held the card that he, Crang, had sent up; and between his lips the
-tall man sucked assiduously at a quill toothpick.
-
-"Mr. Peters, of course?" Crang inquired easily, as the door closed
-behind the bell-boy.
-
-Mr. Peters, alias Gilbert Larmon, nodded quietly. "I was rather
-expecting Mr. Bruce in person," he said.
-
-Crang looked cautiously around him.
-
-"It still isn't safe," he said in a lowered voice. "At least, not here;
-so I am going to take you to him. But perhaps you would prefer that I
-should explain my own connection with this affair first?"
-
-Again Larmon nodded.
-
-"Perhaps it would be just as well," he said.
-
-Once more Crang looked cautiously around him.
-
-"We--we are quite alone, I take it?"
-
-"Quite," said Larmon.
-
-"My name is Anderson, William Anderson," Crang stated smoothly. "I was
-the one who telephoned you last night. I am a friend of John Bruce--the
-only one he's got, I guess, except yourself. Bruce and I used to be boys
-together in San Francisco. I hadn't seen him for years until we ran into
-each other here in New York a few weeks ago and chummed up again. As I
-told you over the phone, I don't know the ins and outs of this, but I
-know he is in some trouble with a gang that he got mixed up with in the
-underworld somehow."
-
-"_Tck!_" The quill toothpick flexed sharply against one of the
-tall man's front teeth. "William Anderson"--he repeated the name
-musingly--"yes, I remember. I sent a telegram in your care to Mr. Bruce
-a few days ago."
-
-"Yes," said Crang.
-
-The quill toothpick appeared to occupy the tall man's full attention for
-a period of many seconds.
-
-"Are you conversant with the contents of that telegram, Mr. Anderson?"
-he asked casually at last.
-
-Crang suppressed a crafty smile. Mr Gilbert Larmon was no fool! Mr.
-Gilbert Larmon stood here as Mr. R. L. Peters--the telegram had been
-signed: "Gilbert Larmon." The question that Larmon was actually asking
-was: How much do you really know?
-
-"Why, yes," said Crang readily. "I did not actually see the telegram,
-but Bruce told me it was from a friend of his, a Mr. Peters, who would
-arrive in New York Wednesday night, and whom he seemed to think he
-needed pretty badly in his present scrape." Larmon took a turn or two up
-and down the room. He halted again before Crang.
-
-"I am obliged to admit that I am both anxious and considerably at sea,"
-he said deliberately. "There seems to be an air of mystery surrounding
-all this that I neither like nor understand. You did not allay my fears
-last night when you telephoned me. Have you no more to tell me?"
-
-Crang shook his head slowly.
-
-"No," he said. "You've got everything I know. Bruce has been like a
-clam as far as the nature of what is between himself and this gang is
-concerned. He will have to tell you himself--if he will. He won't tell
-me. Meanwhile, he sent you this."
-
-Crang reached into his pocket and took out the envelope addressed to Mr.
-R. L. Peters, that he had taken pains to seal the night before.
-
-Larmon took the envelope, stepped over to the window, presumably for
-better light, and opening the letter, began to read it.
-
-Crang watched the other furtively. The quill toothpick, from a series
-of violent gyrations, became motionless between Larmon's lips. The thin
-face seemed to mold itself into sharp, dogged lines. Again and again
-Larmon appeared to read the letter over; and then the hand that held the
-sheet of paper dropped to his side, and he stood for a long time staring
-out of the window. Finally he turned slowly and came back across the
-room.
-
-"This is bad, Mr. Anderson--far worse than I had imagined," he said in a
-hard voice. "I believe you said you would take me to Bruce. This letter
-asks me to accompany you, and I see we are to go at once." He motioned
-toward a box of cigars on the table. "Help yourself to a cigar, Mr.
-Anderson, and take a chair while I change and get ready. I will only be
-a few minutes, if you will excuse me for that length of time?"
-
-Crang's face expressed concern.
-
-"Why, certainly, Mr. Peters," he agreed readily. He helped himself to a
-cigar, and sat down in a chair. "I'm sorry if it's as bad as that."
-
-Larmon made no answer, save to nod his head gravely as he stepped
-quickly toward the door of the apartment's adjoining room.
-
-Crang struck a match and lighted his cigar. The door of the connecting
-room closed behind Larmon. A cloud of blue smoke veiled Crang's
-face--and a leer that lighted his suddenly narrowed eyes.
-
-"So that's it, is it?" grinned Crang to himself. "I wondered how he was
-going to work it! Well, I guess he would have got away with it, too--if
-I hadn't got away with it first!"
-
-He sat motionless in his chair--and listened. And suddenly he smiled
-maliciously. The sound of running water from a tap turned on somewhere
-on the other side of the connecting door reached him faintly.
-
-"And now a little salt!" murmured Doctor Sydney
-
-Angus Crang. He blew a smoke ring into the air and watched it dissolve.
-"And, presto!--like the smoke ring--nothing!"
-
-The minutes passed, perhaps five of them, and then the door opened again
-and Larmon reappeared.
-
-"I'm ready now," he announced quietly. "Shall we go?"
-
-Crang rose from his chair.
-
-"Yes," he said. He glanced at Larmon, as he tapped the ash from the end
-of his cigar. Larmon had _not_ forgotten to change his clothes. "I've
-got a taxi waiting."
-
-"All right," agreed Larmon briskly--and led the way to the elevator.
-
-Out on the street, Crang led the way in turn--to the taxi. Birdie
-reached out from his seat, and flung the door open. Crang motioned
-Larmon to enter, and then leaned toward Birdie as though to give the man
-the necessary address. He spoke in a low, quiet tone:
-
-"Keep to the decent streets as long as you can, so that he won't have
-a chance to get leery until it won't matter whether he does or not.
-Understand?"
-
-Birdie touched his cap.
-
-"Yes, sir," he said.
-
-The taxi jerked forward.
-
-"It's not very far," said Crang. He smiled engagingly as he settled
-back in his seat--and his hand in his coat pocket sought and fondled his
-revolver.
-
-Larmon, apparently immersed in his own thoughts, made no immediate
-reply. The taxi traversed a dozen blocks, during which time Crang, quite
-contented to let well enough alone, made no effort at conversation.
-Larmon chewed at his quill toothpick until, following a savage little
-click, he removed it in two pieces from his mouth. He had bitten it in
-half. He tossed the pieces on the floor, and produced a fresh one from
-his pocket.
-
-"My word!" observed Crang dryly. "You've got good teeth."
-
-Larmon turned and looked at him.
-
-"Yes, Mr. Anderson, I have!" His voice was level. "And I am going to
-show them--when I get hold of Bruce."
-
-Crang's expression was instantly one of innocent bewilderment.
-
-"Why," he said, "I thought you----"
-
-"Have you ever met the lady?" Larmon asked abruptly.
-
-"The--lady?" Crang glanced out of the window. Birdie was making good
-time, very good time indeed. Another five minutes at the outside and the
-trick was done.
-
-"The woman in the case," said Larmon.
-
-"Oh!" Crang whistled low. "I see! No, I've never met her. I didn't know
-there was one. I told you he had said nothing to me."
-
-Larmon was frowning heavily; his face was strained and worried. He
-laughed out suddenly, jerkily.
-
-"I suppose I should give him credit for keeping you at least in the
-dark," he said shortly; "though it strikes me as more or less of a case
-of locking the stable door after the horse has gone."
-
-Crang's eyebrows were raised in well-simulated perplexity.
-
-"I don't quite get you, Mr. Peters," he said politely.
-
-"It's of no consequence." Larmon's eyes were suddenly fastened on the
-window. From an already shabby street where cheap tenements hived a
-polyglot nationality, the taxi had swerved into an intersection that
-seemed more a lane than anything else, and that was still more shabby
-and uninviting. "This is a rather sordid neighborhood, isn't it?" he
-observed curiously.
-
-"It's safe," said Crang significantly.
-
-The taxi stopped.
-
-"We get out here, Mr. Peters," Crang announced pleasantly, as Birdie
-opened the door. "It's a bit rough, I'll admit; but"--he shrugged his
-shoulders and smiled--"you'll have to blame Bruce, not me. Just follow
-me, Mr. Peters--it's down these steps."
-
-He began to descend the steps of a cellar entrance, which was
-unprepossessingly black, and which opened from the rear of a seedy
-looking building that abutted on the lane. He did not look behind him.
-Larmon had made _sure_ that the letter was to be relied upon, hadn't
-he?--and it was John Bruce, not anybody else, that Larmon was trusting
-now. Certainly, it was much easier to _lead_ Larmon as long as Larmon
-could be led; if Larmon hesitated about following, Birdie stood ready to
-pitch the other headlong down the steps--the same end would be attained
-in either case!
-
-But Larmon still showed no suspicion of the good faith of one William
-Anderson. He was following without question. The daylight streaking down
-through the entrance afforded enough light to enable Crang, over his
-shoulder, to note that Larmon was always close behind him. At a door
-across the cellar Crang gave two raps, three times repeated, and as the
-door was opened, entered with Larmon beside him.
-
-The man who had let them in--one of three, who had evidently been
-rolling dice at a table close to the entrance--closed the door behind
-them, and resumed his game.
-
-"If you'll just wait here a minute, Mr. Peters," Crang said breezily,
-"I'll find Bruce for you."
-
-He did not wait for a reply. It mattered very little as to what Larmon
-said or did now, anyhow--Larmon's exit was barred by three men! He
-walked up the length of the low-ceiled, evil-smelling place, and with a
-key which he took from his pocket unlocked a door at the farther end. As
-he stepped through the door his revolver was in his hand.
-
-He laughed in an ugly way, as John Bruce rose from the mattress and
-faced him.
-
-"Salt is a great thing, isn't it?" he jeered. He drew from his pocket
-the slip of paper he had cut from the bottom of the letter, and held
-it so that John Bruce could see it. Then he put it back in his pocket
-again. "Understand? He got the _rest_ of the letter, all right; and so
-he has come down to pay you a little visit. He's outside there now."
-
-John Bruce made no answer.
-
-Crang laughed again.
-
-"You thought you'd double-cross me, did you? You poor fool! Well, it's a
-showdown now. I'm going to bring him in here--and let you tell him what
-he's up against. I guess you can convince him. He's got less than an
-hour in which to come across--if you are going to sail on that steamer.
-If you don't make yourself useful to that extent, you go out--for keeps;
-and Larmon stays here until he antes up--or rots! Is that quite clear?"
-
-John Bruce's lips scarcely moved.
-
-"Yes; it is quite clear," he said.
-
-"I thought it would be!" snarled Crang--and backed out through the door.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER EIGHTEEN--THE HOSTAGE
-
-|AS Crang disappeared through the doorway, John Bruce stepped
-noiselessly forward across the earthen floor. With the door half open
-and swung inward, it left a generous aperture at the hinges through
-which he could see down the length of the cave-like den outside.
-
-He was strangely calm. Yes, there was Larmon down there--and Crang was
-walking toward him. And Crang had left the door open here. Well,
-why not?--with those three apaches at that table yonder! Yes, why
-not?--except that Crang had also left open the way to one last move,
-left him, John Bruce, one last card to play!
-
-Strange, the cold, unnatural calmness that possessed him! His mind
-seemed instantaneously to have conceived and created a project that
-almost subconsciously he was now in the act of putting into effect.
-He reached out, and extracting the key from the outside of the door,
-inserted it on the inside of the lock. He smiled grimly. So far, it was
-quite safe! The door was swung so far inward that the inner edge of it,
-and therefore his act, certainly could not be seen by any one out there.
-
-A last card! His lips tightened. Well, perhaps! But it was more than
-that. His unnatural composure had something deeper than that behind
-it--a passionate fury smoldering on the verge of flame. Larmon was out
-there--trapped! He could not put Larmon in greater jeopardy now, no
-matter what he, John Bruce, did personally, because Larmon dead would
-not be worth anything to them. But for himself--to stand and take it all
-like a sheep at the hands of a damned, cringing----
-
-He shook his head in quick, curious self-rebuke. Not yet! He needed that
-cold composure a little longer since it was to be a showdown now. That
-was what Crang had said--a showdown. And Crang was right! It meant the
-end--one way or the other. But with luck, if Crang was as yellow as he
-believed the man to be, the idea of the bluff that had leaped into his
-mind would work successfully; and if it didn't work--well, then, there
-was the end--and at least it would not be a scatheless one for Crang!
-
-The mind works swiftly. Had Crang had time only to walk down _half_ the
-length of that room out there toward Larmon? Yes, he saw Crang halt now,
-and heard Crang call out sharply to the three men at the table:
-
-"See if he's got a gun!"
-
-John Bruce, through the crack, saw Larmon whirl around suddenly, as
-though aware for the first time that he was in danger; saw two of the
-men grasp Larmon roughly, while the third searched through his clothes.
-
-And then Crang laughed out raucously:
-
-"This way, _Mr. Peters_--please! You three can stay where you are--I'll
-call you if I need you!"
-
-For still another instant John Bruce watched through the crack. Larmon,
-though his face was set and stern, advanced calmly to where Crang stood.
-Crang, with a prod of his revolver, pushed him onward. They were coming
-now--Larmon first, and Crang immediately behind the other. Without a
-sound, John Bruce slipped around to the other side of the door; and,
-back just far enough so that he would not be seen the instant the
-threshold was reached, crouched down close against the wall.
-
-A second passed.
-
-"Go on in there!" he heard Crang order.
-
-Larmon's form crossed the threshold; and then Crang's--and John Bruce
-hurled himself forward, striking, even while his hands flew upward to
-lock like a vise around Crang's throat, a lightning blow at Crang's
-wrist that sent the revolver to the soft earthen floor without a
-sound--and a low, strangling, gurgling noise was alone the result of
-Crang's effort at a shout of alarm.
-
-"Shut the door--_quietly!_ And lock it, Larmon!" John Bruce flung out.
-
-It was an impotent thing. It struck at the air blindly, its fists going
-like disjointed flails. Strong! He had not just risen from a sick bed
-this time! John Bruce and the soul within him seemed to chuckle In
-unison together at this wriggling thing that he held up by the neck with
-its feet off the ground. But he saw Larmon, though for the fraction of a
-second held spellbound in amazement, spring and lock the door.
-
-"If you make a sound that reaches out there"--John Bruce was whispering
-now with panting, labored breath, as he swung Crang over to the corner
-and forced him down upon the mattress--"it will take too long to break
-that door in to be of any use to you! Understand?"
-
-"Bruce!"
-
-It was Larmon standing over them. John Bruce scarcely turned his head.
-His hands were still on Crang's throat, though the man lay cowed and
-passive now.
-
-"His inside coat pocket!" John Bruce jerked out. "It will save a lot of
-explanation."
-
-Larmon leaned over and thrust his hand into Crang's pocket. He produced
-several envelopes and the slip of paper cut from John Bruce's letter.
-
-"Read the slip!" said John Bruce grimly. "He showed it to me a minute
-ago when he came in to tell me you were here. It was written in our
-invisible ink at the bottom of the letter he brought you." He laughed
-shortly. "When you've read it, I'll introduce you."
-
-Larmon read the slip hurriedly.
-
-"Good God!" he cried out.
-
-"This is Crang," said John Bruce evenly.
-
-"But"--Larmon's face was tense and strained--"how------"
-
-"How did he discover there was anything there to begin with, and then
-hit on the salt solution?" John Bruce interrupted. "I don't know. We'll
-find out." He relaxed his hold a little on Crang's throat, and taking
-the slip of paper from Larmon, thrust it into his own pocket. "Go on,
-Crang! Tell us!"
-
-Crang's eyes roved from John Bruce to Larmon and back to John Bruce
-again. His face was ashen. He shook his head.
-
-"You'll _talk!_" said John Bruce with ominous quiet.
-
-"And the less urging"--his grip began to tighten again--"the better for
-you."
-
-"Wait!" Crang choked. "Yes--I--I'll tell you. I showed the letter to
-Claire. She--she cried on it. A tear splash--black letter began to
-appear. I took the letter home, and--trace of salt in tears--and----"
-
-Crang's voice died away in a strangling cry. Claire! John Bruce had
-barely caught any other word but that. Claire! The face beneath him
-began to grow livid. Claire! So the devil had brought Claire into this,
-too. _Too!_ Yes, there was something else. Something else! He remembered
-now. There was a reckoning to come that was beyond all other reckonings,
-wasn't there? He would know now what hold this thing, that was beast,
-not man, had upon her. He would know now--or it would end now!
-
-"Claire! D'ye hear?" John Bruce whispered hoarsely. "You know what I
-mean! What trick of hell did you play to make her promise to marry you?
-Answer me!"
-
-The thing on the mattress moaned.
-
-"Bruce! For God's sake, Bruce, what are you doing?" Larmon cried out
-sharply.
-
-John Bruce raised his head and snarled at Larmon. Neither Larmon, nor
-any other man, would rob him of this now!
-
-"You stand aside, Larmon!" he rasped out. "This is between me and Crang.
-Keep out of the way!"
-
-He shook at Crang again. He laughed. The man's head bobbed limply.
-
-"Answer me!" He loosened his grip suddenly. Queer, he had forgotten
-that--Crang couldn't speak, of course, if he wouldn't let him!
-
-The man gasped, and gasped again, for his breath.
-
-"I give you one second." John Bruce's lips did not move as he spoke.
-
-Twice Crang tried to speak.
-
-"Quick!" John Bruce planted his knees on the other's chest.
-
-"Yes--yes, yes, yes!" Crang gurgled out. "It's you--the night you--you
-were stabbed. You were--were nearly gone. I--I gave her the--the
-choice--to marry me, or--or I'd let you--go out."
-
-John Bruce felt his shoulders surge forward, felt his muscles grow taut
-as steel, and he shook at something flabby that made no resistance,
-and his knees rocked upon something soft where they were bedded.
-_him_--Claire had faced that inhuman choice, born in this monster's
-brain--to save _his_ life! Madness seized upon him. The room, everything
-before him whirled around in great, red, pulsing circles. A fury that
-shook at the roots of his soul took possession of him. He knew nothing,
-saw nothing, was moved by nothing save an overwhelming lust for
-vengeance that seemed to give him superhuman strength, that enabled him
-to crush between his two bare hands this nauseous thing that-----
-
-He heard a voice. It seemed to come from some infinite distance:
-
-"You are killing the man! In the name of God, John Bruce, come away!"
-
-It was Larmon's voice. He looked up. He was vaguely conscious that it
-was Larmon who was pulling at his shoulders, wrenching madly at his
-hands, but he could not see Larmon--only a blurred red figure that
-danced insanely up and down. Killing the man! Of course! What an inane
-thing to say! Then he felt his hands suddenly torn away from a hold they
-had had upon something, and he felt himself pulled to his feet. And
-then for a little he stood swaying unsteadily, and he shuddered, then he
-groped his way over to the chair by the table and dropped into it.
-
-He stared in front of him. Something on the floor near the door
-glittered and reflected the light from the single, dim incandescent. He
-lurched up from the chair, and going toward the object, snatched it up.
-It was Crang's revolver--but Larmon was upon him _in_ an instant.
-
-"Not that way, either!" said Larmon hoarsely.
-
-John Bruce brushed his hand across his eyes.
-
-"No, not that way, either," he repeated like a child.
-
-He went back to the chair and sat down. He was aware that Larmon was
-kneeling beside the mattress, but he paid no attention to the other.
-
-"The man's unconscious," Larmon said.
-
-John Bruce did not turn his head.
-
-The minutes passed.
-
-John Bruce's brain began to clear; but the unbalanced fury that had
-possessed him was giving place now only to one more implacable in its
-considered phase. He looked around him. Crang, evidently recovered, was
-sitting up on the mattress. The letters Larmon had taken from Crang's
-pocket lay on the table. John Bruce picked them up idly. From one
-of them a steamer ticket fell out. He stared at this for a moment. A
-passage for John Bruce to South America! Then low, an ugly sound, his
-laugh echoed around the place.
-
-South America! It recalled him to his actual surroundings--that on the
-other side of the door were Crang's apaches. There was still time
-to catch the steamer, wasn't there--for South America? "If the bluff
-worked"--he remembered his thoughts, the plan that had actuated him when
-he had crouched there at the door, waiting for Crang to enter. Strange!
-It wouldn't be a _bluff_ any more! All that was gone. What he would do
-now, and carry it through to its end, was what he had intended to bluff
-Crang into believing he would do. And Crang, too, would understand now
-how little of bluff there was--or, misunderstanding, pay for it with his
-life.
-
-He thrust the ticket suddenly into his pocket, stepped from his chair,
-the revolver in his hand, and confronted Crang. The man shrank back,
-trembling, his face gray with fear.
-
-"Stand up!" John Bruce commanded.
-
-Crang, groveling against the wall, got upon his feet.
-
-It was a full minute before John Bruce spoke again, and then the words
-came choking hot from his lips.
-
-"You damned cur!" he cried. "That's what you did, was it? The price
-Claire paid was for my life. Well, it's hers, then; it's no longer mine.
-Can you understand that, and understand that I am going to pay it back,
-if necessary, to rid her of you? We are going to walk out of here. You
-will lead the way. We are going down to that steamer, and you are going
-on John Bruce's ticket where you proposed to send me--to South America.
-Either that--or you are going on a longer journey. I shall carry this
-revolver in the pocket of my coat, and walk beside you. It is your
-affair how we pass those men out there. If you make any attempt at
-trickery in getting out of here, or later in the street attempt to
-escape, I will fire instantly. It does not matter in the slightest
-degree what happens to me at the hands of your men, or at the hands of
-a thousand people in the most crowded street. You will have gone out
-_first_. The only consideration that exists is that Claire shall be free
-of you."
-
-"Tck!" It was the quill toothpick flexing against one of Larmon's teeth.
-
-John Bruce turned.
-
-"I did not understand," said Larmon in a low, grim way. "If I had, I am
-not sure I should have stopped you from throttling him when I did."
-
-John Bruce nodded curtly. He spoke again to Crang.
-
-"I am not asking you whether you agree to this or not," he said with
-level emphasis. "You have your choice at any moment to do as you
-like--you know the consequences." He slipped his hand with his revolver
-into the right-hand side pocket of his coat, and took his place at
-Crang's left side. "Now, go ahead and open that door, and lead the way
-out! Mr. Larmon, you follow close behind me."
-
-"Yes," Crang stammered, "yes--for God's sake--I--I'll do it--I---"
-
-"Open that door!" said John Bruce monotonously. "I didn't ask you to
-talk about it!"
-
-Crang opened the door. The little procession stepped out into the long,
-low cellar, and started down toward the lower end. The three men, from
-playing dice at the table near the door, rose uncertainly to their feet.
-John Bruce's revolver in his pocket pressed suggestively against Crang's
-side.
-
-"It's all right, boys," Crang called out. "Open the door. I've got
-Birdie outside."
-
-They passed the table, passed through the doorway, and the door closed
-behind them. In the semi-darkness here, as they headed for the exit to
-the lane, Larmon touched John Bruce's elbow.
-
-"He brought me down here in a taxi," Larmon whispered. "I suppose now it
-was one of his men who drove it."
-
-"Birdie, he just told those rats," said John Bruce tersely. "Do you
-hear, Crang? If he's still out there, send him away!"
-
-They emerged into the lane. A taxi-cab stood opposite the exit; Birdie
-lounged in the driver's seat.
-
-John Bruce's revolver bored into Crang's side.
-
-"Beat it!" said Crang surlily to the man. "I won't want you any more."
-
-"You won't--what?" Birdie leaned out from his seat. He stared for a
-moment in bewilderment, and then started to climb out of the taxi.
-
-The pressure of John Bruce's revolver increased steadily.
-
-"Damn it, you fool!" Crang screamed out wildly. "Beat it! Do you hear?
-Beat it!"
-
-Birdie's face darkened.
-
-"Oh--sure!" he muttered, with a disgruntled oath. He shot the gears into
-place with a vicious snap. "Sure--anything _you_ say!" The taxi
-roared down the lane, and disappeared around the corner in a volley of
-exhausts.
-
-"Go on!" John Bruce ordered.
-
-At the corner of the lane John Bruce turned to Larmon.
-
-"You are safe, and out of it now," he said. "I am going to ask you to
-step into the first store we pass and get me some good light rope, but
-after that I think you had better leave us. If anything happened between
-here and the steamer, or on the steamer, you would be implicated."
-
-"Tck!" It was the quill toothpick again. "I'll get the rope with
-pleasure," Larmon said calmly; "but I never lay down a good hand. I am
-going to the steamer."
-
-John Bruce shrugged his shoulders. Larmon somehow seemed an abstract
-consideration at the moment--but Larmon had had his chance.
-
-"What time does the steamer sail, Crang?" John Bruce bit off his words,
-as he looked at his watch.
-
-"Four o'clock," Crang mumbled.
-
-"Walk faster!"
-
-They stopped for a moment in front of a store. Larmon entered, and came
-out again almost immediately with a package under his arm.
-
-A block farther on John Bruce hailed a passing taxi.
-
-Fifteen minutes later, pushing through the throng on the dock, John
-Bruce produced the ticket, they mounted the gangway, and a steward led
-them to a stateroom on one of the lower decks.
-
-John Bruce closed the door and locked it. His revolver was in his hand
-now.
-
-"There isn't much time left," he said coldly. "About ten minutes."
-
-At the end of five, Crang, bound hand and foot, and gagged, lay lashed
-into his bunk.
-
-A bugle sounded the "All Ashore!"
-
-John Bruce tossed the ticket on the couch.
-
-"There's your ticket!" he said sternly. "I wouldn't advise you to come
-back--nor worry any further about exposing Mr. Larmon, unless you
-want to force a showdown that will place some very interesting details
-connected with the life of Doctor Crang in the hands of the police!"
-
-The bugle rang out again.
-
-John Bruce, without a further glance in Crang's direction, opened the
-cabin window slightly, then unlocking the door, he motioned Larmon to
-pass out. He locked the door on the outside, stepped to the deck, tossed
-the key through the window to the floor of Crang's cabin, and drew the
-window shut again. A minute more, and with Larmon beside him, he was
-standing on the dock.
-
-Neither John Bruce nor Larmon spoke.
-
-And presently the tugs caught hold of the big liner and warped her out
-of her berth.
-
-"John Bruce" had sailed for South America.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER NINETEEN--CABIN H-14
-
-|FOR a time, Crang lay passive. Fear was dominant. He could move his
-head a little, and he kept screwing it around to cast furtive glances
-at the cabin door. He was sure that Bruce was still outside there, or
-somewhere near--Bruce wouldn't leave the ship until the last moment,
-and....
-
-The craven soul of the man shrivelled within him. Bruce's eyes! Damn
-Bruce's eyes, and that hideous touch of Bruce's pocketed revolver! The
-fool would even have killed him back there in the cellar if it hadn't
-been for Larmon! He could still feel those strangling fingers at his
-throat.
-
-Mechanically he made to lift his hand to touch the bruised and swollen
-flesh--but he could not move his hands because they were bound behind
-his back and beneath him. The fool! The fool had _wanted_ to shoot.
-Perhaps with Larmon out of the road, and just at the last minute, that
-was what he still meant to do--to open the door there, and--and _kill_.
-Terror swept upon him. He tried to scream--but a gag was in his mouth.
-
-What was that? He felt a slight jar, another, and another. He
-listened intently. He heard a steady throbbing sound. The ship was
-moving--moving! That meant that Bruce was ashore--that he need not fear
-that door there. He snarled to himself, suddenly arrogant with courage.
-To the devil's pit with John Bruce!
-
-He began to work at his bonds now--at first with a measure of contained
-persistence; and then, as he made no progress, angry impatience came,
-and he began to struggle. He tossed now, and twisted himself about on
-the bunk, and strained with all his might. The gag choked him. The bonds
-but grew the tighter and cut into his wrists. He became a madman in his
-frenzy. Passion and fury lashed him on and on. He flogged himself into
-effort beyond physical endurance--and finally collapsed through utter
-exhaustion, a limp thing bathed in sweat.
-
-Then he began the struggle again, and after that again. The periods came
-in cycles... the insensate fury... exhaustion... recuperation...
-
-After a time he no longer heard the throbbing of the engines or the
-movement of the ship during those moments when he lay passive in
-weakness, nor did the desire for freedom, for merely freedom's sake, any
-longer actuate him; instead, beneath him, in his pocket, he had felt
-the little case that held his hypodermic syringe, and it had brought
-the craving for the drug. And the craving grew. It grew until it became
-torture, and to satisfy it became the one incentive that possessed
-him. It tormented, it mocked him. He could feel it there in his
-pocket, always there in his pocket. Hell could not keep him from it.
-He blasphemed at the ropes that kept it from his fingers' reach, and
-he wrenched and tore at them, and sobbed and snarled--and after long
-minutes of maniacal struggle would again lie trembling, drained of the
-power either to move or think.
-
-It grew dark in the cabin.
-
-And now, in one of his series of struggles, something snapped beneath
-him--a cord! One of the cords around his wrists had given away. He tore
-one hand free. Yes, yes--he could reach his pocket! Ha, ha--his pocket!
-And now his other hand was free. He snatched at the hypodermic syringe
-with feverish greed--and the plunger went home as the needle pricked its
-way beneath the skin of his forearm.
-
-He reached up then, unloosened the knots at the back of his head, and
-spat the gag from his mouth. His penknife freed his legs. He stood
-up--tottered--and sat down on the edge of his bunk. He remained
-motionless for a few minutes. The drug steadied him.
-
-He looked around him. It was dark. The ship was very still; there was no
-sense of movement, none of vibration from the engines. It seemed to him
-that in a hazy, vague way he had noticed that fact a long time ago. But,
-nevertheless, it was very curious!
-
-He stood up again. This was better! He felt secure enough now on his
-feet. It was only as though a great fatigue were upon him, and that he
-seemed to be weighted down with lead--nothing more than that. He crossed
-to the window, drew the shade, and opened the window itself.
-
-And then, for a long time, puzzled, his brows drawn together, he stood
-there staring out. Close at hand, though but faintly outlined in the
-darkness, he could see the shore. And it was not imagination, for beyond
-the shore line, he could see innumerable little lights twinkling.
-
-It was strange! He rubbed his eyes. Here was something else! The window
-opened on a narrow, dimly lighted and deserted deck--one of the lower
-decks, he remembered. Below this deck, and evidently alongside of the
-steamer's hull, he could make out the upper-structure of some small
-vessel.
-
-A figure came along the deck now from the forward end--one of the crew,
-Crang could see from the other's dress, as the man drew nearer. Crang
-thrust his head out of the window.
-
-"I say, look here!" he called, as the other came opposite to him.
-"What's all this about? Where are we?"
-
-"Down the bay a bit, that's all, sir," the man answered. "We've had some
-engine trouble."
-
-Crang pointed to the small vessel alongside. A sudden, wild elation
-surged upon him.
-
-"That's a tug down there, isn't it?" he said. "They're going to tow us
-back, I suppose?"
-
-"Oh, no, sir," the man replied. "It's the company's tug, all right,
-that they sent down to us, but she'll be going back as soon as we're off
-again. It's nothin' serious, and we won't be more'n another hour, sir."
-
-Crang snarled under his breath.
-
-"I beg your pardon, sir?" inquired the man.
-
-"Nothing!" said Crang. "I'm much obliged to you."
-
-"Thank you, sir," said the man, and went on along the deck.
-
-Crang returned to his bunk and sat down again on its edge. He could
-still see the reflection of the shore lights. This seemed to obsess
-him. He kept staring out through the window. Suddenly he chuckled
-hoarsely--and then, as suddenly, his fist clenched and he shook it in
-the air.
-
-"Another hour, eh?" he muttered. "Then, I'll get you yet, Bruce--ha, ha,
-I'll get you yet! But I'll make sure of Claire _first_ this time! That's
-where I made the mistake--but Doctor Sydney Angus Crang doesn't make two
-mistakes alike!"
-
-He relapsed into silent meditation. At the end of five minutes he spoke
-again.
-
-"I'm a clever man," said Doctor Crang between his teeth. "First
-Claire--then you, Bruce. And I'll take good care that you know nothing,
-Mr. John Bruce--not this time--not until it is too late--both ways! I'll
-show you! I'll teach you to pit your clumsy wits against me!"
-
-He got up from the bunk and turned on a single incandescent light. Bruce
-had thrown the key in through the window, he remembered. Yes, there it
-was on the floor! He picked it up; and quickly and methodically he began
-to work now. He gathered together the pieces of rope with which he
-had been bound, tucked them under his coat, and running to the window,
-thrust his head outside again. The deck was clear, there was not a soul
-in sight. He unlocked the door now, stepped noiselessly out on the deck,
-dropped the pieces of rope overboard, and then, returning to the cabin,
-smiled ironically as he made a mental note of the number on the cabin
-door.
-
-"H-14," observed Doctor Crang grimly. "Quite so--H-14!"
-
-He halted before the mirror and removed the more flagrant traces of his
-dishevelled appearance; then he took off his coat, flung it on a chair,
-pushed the electric button, and returned to his bunk.
-
-He was sitting up on the edge of the bunk, and yawning, as the steward
-answered his summons.
-
-"Hello, steward!" said Crang somewhat thickly. "I guess I've overslept
-myself. Overdid the send-off a little, I'm afraid. What are we stopping
-for?"
-
-"A little engine trouble, sir," the steward answered. "It was right
-after we started. We're only a little way down the bay. But it's all
-right, sir. Nothing serious. We'll be off again shortly."
-
-"Humph!" Crang dismissed the subject with a grunt. "I suppose I've
-missed my dinner, eh?"
-
-"Oh, no, sir," replied the steward. "It's only just a little after seven
-now, sir."
-
-"That's better!" smiled Crang. "Well, get my traps right up here, like a
-good fellow, and I'll clean up a bit. And hurry, will you?"
-
-The steward looked a little blank.
-
-"Your traps, sir?"
-
-"Luggage--traps--baggage," defined Crang with facetious terseness.
-
-"Oh, I knew what you meant, sir," said the steward. "It's where your
-traps are, sir? I--I thought it a bit strange you didn't have anything
-with you when you came aboard this afternoon."
-
-"Did you, now?" inquired Crang sweetly. "Well, then, the sooner you get
-them here the less strange it will seem. Beat it!"
-
-"But where are they, sir?" persisted the man. "Where are they? Good God,
-how do I know!" ejaculated Crang sarcastically. "I sent them down to the
-ship early this morning to be put aboard--in your baggage room. You've
-got a baggage room aboard, haven't you?"
-
-"Yes, sir; but----"
-
-"I would suggest the baggage room, then!" interrupted Crang crisply.
-"And if they are not there, ask the captain to let you have any of the
-crew who aren't too busy on this engine trouble, and get them to help
-you search the ship!"
-
-The steward grinned.
-
-"Very good, sir. Would you mind describing the pieces?"
-
-"There are four," said Crang with exaggerated patience, as he created
-the non-existent baggage out of his imagination. "And they have all got
-your 'wanted on the voyage' labels, with my name and cabin written on
-them--Mr. John Bruce; Cabin H-14. There is a steamer trunk, and two
-brown alligator-leather--which I do not guarantee to be genuine in spite
-of the price--suit-cases, and a hat box."
-
-"Very good, sir," said the steward again--and hurried from the cabin.
-
-Crang got up and went to the window. The tug alongside seemed to furnish
-him with engrossing reflections, for he stood there, smiling queerly,
-until he swung around in answer to a knock upon his door.
-
-A man in ship's uniform entered ahead of the steward.
-
-"The steward here, sir," said the man, "was speaking about your
-baggage."
-
-"_Speaking_ about it!" murmured Crang helplessly. "I told him to get
-it."
-
-"Yes, sir," said the man; "but I am sorry to say that no such baggage as
-you describe has come aboard the ship. There has been no baggage at all
-for Mr. Bruce, sir."
-
-"Not aboard!" gasped Crang. "Then--then where is it?"
-
-"I can't say, sir, of course," said the other sympathetically. "I am
-only stating a fact to you."
-
-"But--but I sent it down to the dock early this morning." Crang's voice
-was rising in well-affected excitement. "It must be here! I tell you, it
-must be here!"
-
-The man shook his head.
-
-"It's my job, sir. I'm sorry, Mr. Bruce, but I know positively your
-baggage is not aboard this ship."
-
-"Then what's to be done?" Crang's voice rose louder. "You've left it on
-the dock, that's what--fools, thundering idiots!"
-
-The man with the baggage job looked uncomfortable.
-
-Crang danced up and down on the floor of the cabin.
-
-"On the way to South America to stay six months," he yelled insanely,
-"and my baggage left behind! I can't go on without my baggage, do you
-hear?"
-
-There was a whispered conference between the two men. The steward
-vanished through the doorway.
-
-"I've sent for the purser, sir," volunteered the other.
-
-Crang stormed up and down the floor.
-
-Presently the purser appeared. Crang swung on him on the instant.
-
-"You've left my baggage behind!" he shouted. "My papers, plans,
-everything! I can't go on without them!" He shook his fist. "You'll
-either get that baggage here, or get me ashore!"
-
-The purser eyed Crang's fist, and stiffened perceptibly.
-
-"I'm not a magician, Mr. Bruce," he said quietly. "I am very sorry
-indeed that this should have happened; but it is quite impossible, of
-course, to get your baggage here."
-
-"Then get me ashore!" Crang snatched up his coat and put it on. "There's
-a tug, or something, out there, isn't there?"
-
-"Yes," said the purser, "that's the company's tug, and I suppose you
-could go back on her, if you think you----"
-
-"Think!" howled Crang. "I don't _think_ anything about it! I know
-that----" His eye suddenly caught the envelope on the couch containing
-the ticket. "And what about this?" He picked it up, jerked out the
-ticket, and waved it in the purser's face.
-
-The purser refused the document.
-
-"You'll have to see the New York office, sir, about that," he said.
-
-"I will, will I?" snapped Crang. "Well, that isn't all I'll see them
-about!"
-
-"I am sure they will do what they can, sir, to make things right--if
-they are to blame," said the purser a little sharply. "But it might
-have been your teamer, you know, who made the mistake." He turned to the
-door. "I will arrange about your going ashore, Mr. Bruce."
-
-"Yes!" growled Crang savagely--and five minutes later, swearing volubly
-for the benefit of those within hearing, he wriggled his way down a rope
-ladder to the tug's deck.
-
-A deck hand led him to the pilot house.
-
-"The captain 'll be along as soon as we start," the man informed him.
-
-Crang made himself comfortable in a cushioned chair. He sat chuckling
-maliciously, as he stared up at the towering hull that twinkled with
-lights above him--and then the chuckle died away, and little red spots
-came and burned in his sallow cheeks, and his lips worked, and his hands
-curled until the nails bit into the palms.
-
-He lost track of time.
-
-A man came into the pilot house, and gave the wheel a spin.
-
-"We're off!" said the man heartily. "You've had tough luck, I hear."
-
-Crang's fingers caressed his bruised and swollen throat.
-
-"Yes," said Crang with a thin smile; "but I think somebody is going to
-pay the bill--in full."
-
-The tug was heading toward New York.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER TWENTY--OUTSIDE THE DOOR
-
-|HAWKINS very cautiously got out of bed, and consulted his watch. It was
-five minutes after nine. He stole to the door and listened. There was no
-sound from below. Mrs. Hedges, who had been his jailor all day, had now,
-he was fairly certain, finally retired for the night.
-
-The old blue eyes blinked in perplexity and he scratched at the
-fringe of hair behind his ear in a perturbed way, as he began, still
-cautiously, to dress. It had been a very dreary day, during which he
-had suffered not a little physical discomfort. Mrs. Hedges had been
-assiduous in her attentions; more than that, even--motherly.
-
-"God bless her!" said Hawkins to one of his boots, as he laced it up.
-"Only she wouldn't let me out."
-
-He stopped lacing the boot suddenly, and sat staring in front of him.
-Mrs. Hedges had been more than even motherly; she had been--been--yes,
-that was it--been puzzling. If she had said Paul Veniza wanted to see
-him, why had she insisted that Paul Veniza didn't want to see him?
-Hawkins' gaze at the blank wall in front of him became a little more
-bewildered. He tried to reconstruct certain fragments of conversation
-that had taken place between Mrs. Hedges and himself.
-
-"Now, you just lie still," Mrs. Hedges had insisted during the
-afternoon, when he had wanted to get up. "Claire told me----"
-
-He remembered the sinking of his heart as he had interrupted her.
-
-"Claire," he had said anxiously, "Claire ain't--she don't know about
-this, does she?"
-
-"Certainly _not!_" Mrs. Hedges had assured him.
-
-"But you said she told you something"--Hawkins continued to reconstruct
-the conversation--"so she must have been here."
-
-"Law!" Mrs. Hedges had returned. "I nearly put my foot in it, didn't
-I--I--I mean starting you in to worry. Certainly she don't know anything
-about it. She just came over to say her father wanted to see you, and I
-says to her you ain't feeling very well, and she says it's all right."
-
-Hawkins resumed his dressing. His mind continued to mull over the
-afternoon. Later on he had made another attempt to get up. He was
-feeling quite well enough to go over and find out what Paul Veniza
-wanted. And then Mrs. Hedges, as though she had quite forgotten what she
-had said before, said that Paul Veniza didn't want to see him, or else
-he'd send word.
-
-Hawkins scratched behind his ear again. His head wasn't quite clear.
-Maybe he had not got it all quite straight. Suddenly he smiled. Of
-course! There wasn't anything to be bewildered about. Mrs. Hedges was
-just simply determined that he would not go out--and he was equally
-determined that he would. Paul Veniza or not, he had been long enough in
-bed!
-
-"Yes," said Hawkins; "God bless her, that's it!"
-
-Hawkins completed his toilet, and picking up his old felt hat,
-reconnoitered the hallway. Thereafter he descended the stairs with
-amazing stealth.
-
-"God bless her!" said Hawkins softly again, as he gained the front door
-without raising any alarm and stepped outside--and then Hawkins halted
-as though his feet had been suddenly rooted to the spot.
-
-At the curb in front of the house was an old closed motor car. Hawkins
-stared at it. Then he rubbed his eyes. Then he stared at it again. He
-stared for a long time. No; there was no doubt about it--it was the
-traveling pawn-shop.
-
-Hawkins' mind harked back to the preceding evening. He had met two men
-in the saloon around the corner, whom he had seen there once or twice
-before. He had had several drinks with them, and then at some one's
-suggestion, he could not recollect whose. There had followed the
-purchase of a few bottles, and an adjournment to his room for a
-convivial evening. After that his mind was quite blank. He could not
-even remember having taken out the car.
-
-"I--I must have been bad," said Hawkins to himself, with a rueful
-countenance.
-
-He descended the steps, and approached the car with the intention of
-running it into the shed that served as garage behind the house. But
-again he halted.
-
-"No," said Hawkins, with a furtive glance over his shoulder at the front
-door; "if I started it up, Mrs. Hedges would hear me. I guess I'll wait
-till I come back."
-
-Hawkins went on down the street and turned the corner. He had grown a
-little dejected.
-
-"I'm just an old bum," said Hawkins, "who ain't ever going to swear off
-any more 'cause it don't do any good."
-
-He spoke aloud to himself again, as he approached the door of Paul
-Veniza's house.
-
-"But I _am_ her daddy," whispered the old man fiercely; "and she is my
-little girl. It don't change nothing her not knowing, except--except
-she ain't hiding her face in shame, and"--Hawkins' voice broke a
-little--"and that I ain't never had her in these arms like I'd ought to
-have." A gleam of anger came suddenly into the watery blue eyes under
-the shaggy brows. "But he ain't going to have her in _his!_ That
-devil from the pit of hell ain't going to kill the soul of my little
-girl--somehow he ain't--that's all I got to live for--old Hawkins--ha,
-ha!--somehow old Haw-kins 'll----"
-
-Hawkins' soliloquy ended abruptly. He was startled to find himself in
-the act of opening the front door of the one-time pawn-shop. He even
-hesitated, holding the door ajar--and then suddenly he pushed the door
-wider open and stepped softly inside, as the sound of a voice, angry and
-threatening in its tones, though strangely low and muffled, reached him.
-He knew that voice. It was Doctor Crang's.
-
-It was dark here in the room that had once been the office of the
-pawn-shop, and upon which the front door opened directly; but from under
-the door leading into the rear room there showed a thread of light, and
-it was from there that Hawkins now placed the voice.
-
-He stood irresolute. He stared around him. Upstairs it was dark.
-Paul Veniza, because he had not been well, had probably gone to bed
-early--unless it was Paul in there with Crang. No! He caught the sound
-of Claire's voice now, and it seemed to come to him brokenly, in a
-strangely tired, dreary way. And then Crang's voice again, and an ugly
-laugh.
-
-The wrinkled skin of Hawkins' old weather-beaten hands grew taut and
-white across the knuckles as his fists clenched. He tiptoed toward the
-door. He could hear distinctly now. It was Crang speaking:
-
-"... I'm not a fool! I did not speak about it to make you lie again. I
-don't care where you met him, or how long you had been lovers before he
-crawled in here. That's nothing to do with it. It's enough that I know
-you were lovers before that night. But you belong to me now. Understand?
-I spoke of it because the sooner you realize that _you_ are the one who
-is the cause of the trouble between Bruce and me, the better--_for him!_
-I wasn't crowding you before, but I'm through fooling with it now for
-keeps. I let you go too long as it is. To-day, for just a little while,
-he won out--yes, by God, if you want the truth, he nearly killed me. He
-got me tied in a cabin of a ship that sailed this afternoon for South
-America; but the engines broke down in the harbor, and, damn him, I'm
-back! You know what for. I've told you. There's one way to save him.
-I've told you what that is, too. I'm waiting for your answer."
-
-"Why should it be me?" Claire's voice was dull and colorless. "Why
-cannot you leave me alone--I, who hate and loathe you? Do you look for
-happiness with me? There will be none."
-
-"Why should it be you?" Crang's voice was suddenly hoarse with passion.
-"Because you have set my brain on fire, because you have filled me with
-a madness that would mock God Himself if He stood between us. Do you
-understand--Claire? Claire! Do you understand? Because I want you,
-because I'm going to have you, because I'm going to own you--yes,
-_own_ you, one way or another--by marriage, or----"
-
-A low cry came from Claire. It tore at Hawkins' heart in its bitter
-shame and anguish. His face blanched.
-
-"Well, you asked for it, and you got it!" Crang snarled. "Now, I'm
-waiting for your answer."
-
-There was a long pause, then Claire spoke with an obvious effort to
-steady her voice:
-
-"Have I got to buy him _twice?"_
-
-"You haven't bought him _once_ yet," Crang answered swiftly. "I
-performed my part of the bargain. I haven't been paid."
-
-And Hawkins, standing there, listening, heard nothing for a long time;
-and then he distinguished Claire's voice, but it was so low that he
-could not catch the words. But he heard Crang's reply because it was
-loud with what seemed like passionate savagery and triumph:
-
-"You're wise, my dear! At eight o'clock to-morrow morning, then. And
-since Mr. John Bruce's skin is involved in this, you quite understand
-that he is not to be communicated with in any way?"
-
-"I understand." Hawkins this time caught the almost inaudible reply.
-
-"All right!" Crang said. "There's a padre I know, who's down on Staten
-Island now. We'll go down there and be married without any fuss. I'll be
-here at eight o'clock. Your father isn't fit to ride in that rattle-trap
-old bus of yours. I'll have a comfortable limousine for him, and you can
-go with him. Hawkins can drive me, and"--he was laughing softly--"and be
-my best man. I'll see that he knows about it in time to----"
-
-Like a blind man, Hawkins was groping his way toward the front door.
-Married! They were to be married to-morrow morning!
-
-He found himself on the street. He hurried. Impulse drove him along. He
-did not reason. His mind was a tortured thing. And yet he laughed as he
-scurried around the corner, laughed in an unhinged way, and raised both
-hands above his head and pounded at the air with his doubled fists. They
-were to be married to-morrow morning, and he--he was to be _best man_.
-And as he laughed, his once ruddy, weather-beaten face was white as a
-winding-sheet, and in the whiteness there was stamped a look that it was
-good on no man's face to see.
-
-And then suddenly two great tears rolled down his cheeks, opening the
-flood gates of his soul.
-
-"My little girl!" he sobbed. "Daddy's little girl!"
-
-And reason and a strange calmness came.
-
-"John Bruce," he said. "He loves her too."
-
-And in front of Mrs. Hedges' rooming-house he climbed into the driver's
-seat of the old traveling pawn-shop.
-
-It didn't matter now how much noise he made.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER TWENTY-ONE--THE LAST CHANCE
-
-|JOHN BRUCE closed the door of Larmon's suite, and, taking the elevator,
-went up to his own room in the Bayne-Miloy Hotel, two floors above.
-Here, he flung himself almost wearily into a chair. Larmon had gone to
-bed; but bed offered no appeal to him, John Bruce, in spite of the fact
-that he was conscious of great mental fatigue. Bed without sleep was
-a horror, and his spirits were too depressed to make sleep even a
-possibility.
-
-From a purely selfish standpoint, and he admitted to utter selfishness
-now, it had been a hollow victory. Crang was gone, disposed of, and as
-far as Larmon was concerned the man no longer existed, for if Crang had
-held certain intimate knowledge of Larmon's life over Larmon's head,
-Larmon was now in exactly the same position in respect to Crang. And
-Crang, too, for the time being at least, was no longer a factor in
-Claire's life.
-
-He smiled grimly to himself. Hollow! The victory had been sweeping,
-complete, conclusive--for every one but himself! He had not even waited
-to leave the dock before he had telephoned Claire. And Claire had---- He
-rose suddenly and began to walk feverishly up and down the room. Hollow!
-He laughed out shortly. She had curtly refused to talk to him.
-
-He had only meant to telephone to say that he was on the way up to
-her house, and he had managed to say that much--and she had coldly,
-contemptuously informed him that she would not be at home, and had hung
-up the receiver. She had given him no opportunity to say any more.
-
-It was not like Claire. It had been so unexpected that he had left the
-dock mentally dazed. The sight of the liner out in the stream had seemed
-to mock him ironically. After that, until now, he had followed the line
-of least resistance. He had come back here to the hotel, and dined with
-Larmon.
-
-He stood still in the middle of the room. Larmon! It had been a singular
-evening that he had just spent with Larmon. He had got a new viewpoint
-on Larmon--a strange, grave, sympathetic Larmon. He had given Larmon the
-details of everything that had happened; and Larmon had led him on to
-talk--of everything, and anything, it seemed now, as he looked back upon
-it. And somehow, he could not tell why, even while he felt that Larmon
-was drawing him out, urging him even to speak of Claire and the most
-intimate things of the last few weeks, he had been glad to respond. It
-was only when Larmon for a little while had discussed his great chain of
-gambling houses that he, John Bruce, had felt curiously detached from it
-all and estranged from the other, as though he were masquerading as
-some one else, as some one whom Larmon believed to be John Bruce, and as
-though he in his true self had no interest in these matters any
-longer in a personal sense, as though his connection with them had
-automatically ceased with the climax of Crang's removal. It was queer!
-But then his mind had been obsessed, elsewhere. And yet here, too, he
-had been frank with Larmon--frank enough to admit the feelings that
-had prompted him to refrain from actual play only two nights before. He
-remembered the quick little tattoo of Larmon's quill toothpick at this
-admission, and Larmon's tight little smile.
-
-Yes, it had been a singular evening! In those few hours he seemed to
-have grown to know Larmon as though he had known the man all his life,
-to be drawn to Larmon in a personal way, to admire Larmon as a man.
-There was something of debonair sang-froid about Larmon. He had made
-no fuss over his escape that day, and much less been effusive in any
-thanks. Larmon's philosophy of life was apparently definitely fixed and
-settled; and, in so far as Larmon was concerned, satisfactorily so. The
-whole world to Larmon was a gamble--and, consistently enough, his own
-activities in that respect were on as vast a scale as possible.
-
-Larmon with his unemotional face and his quill toothpick! No; not
-unemotional! When Larmon had finally pleaded fatigue and a desire to
-go to bed, there had been something in Larmon's face and Larmon's
-"good-night," that still lingered with him, John Bruce, and which even
-now he could not define.
-
-John Bruce's brows gathered into tight furrows. His mind had flown off
-at a tangent. There was Claire! It had not been like Claire. Nor had he
-meant, nor did he intend now to accept her dismissal as final. But
-what was it that had happened? What was it? He could think of only one
-thing--the letter he had written to Larmon, and which, on that account,
-he had asked for and received back from the other.
-
-It was a certainty that Crang's hand was in this somewhere, and Crang
-had said that he had shown the letter to Claire, but----
-
-The telephone rang.
-
-John Bruce stepped to the desk, and picked up the instrument.
-
-"Yes? Hello!" he said.
-
-The clerk's voice from the office answered him:
-
-"There's a man down here, Mr. Bruce, who insists on seeing you. He's
-pretty seedy, and looks as though he had been on a bat for a week. I'm
-sorry to bother you, but we can't get rid of him. He says his name is
-Hawkins."
-
-"Send him up at once!" said John Bruce sharply.
-
-"Yes, sir." The clerk coughed deprecatingly. "Very well, Mr. Bruce.
-Thank you."
-
-Hawkins! John Bruce walked to the door of his suite, and opened it. He
-looked at his watch. It was getting on now to eleven o'clock. What on
-earth had brought Hawkins up here to the Bayne-Miloy at this hour? He
-smiled a little grimly as he stood waiting on the threshold, and the
-recollection of the night before last came back to him. Well, at least,
-he was safe to-night from any kidnaping through the medium of Hawkins!
-
-The elevator door clanged a little way down the corridor, and Hawkins,
-followed by a bell boy, stepped out.
-
-"This way, Hawkins!" John Bruce called--and dismissed the bell boy with
-a wave of his hand.
-
-And then, as Hawkins reached the door, John Bruce stared in amazement,
-and for a moment absolved the clerk for his diagnosis. Hawkins' face
-was like parchment, devoid of color; his hands, twisting at the old felt
-hat, trembled as with the ague; and the blue eyes, fever-burned they
-seemed, stared out in a fixed way from under the shaggy brows.
-
-John Bruce pulled the old man inside the apartment, and closed the door.
-
-"Good Lord, Hawkins!" he exclaimed anxiously. "What's the matter with
-you?"
-
-Hawkins caught at John Bruce's arm.
-
-"It's to-morrow morning," he said hoarsely. "Tomorrow morning at eight
-o'clock."
-
-"What is?" inquired John Bruce. He forced the old cabman gently into a
-chair. "You're upset, Hawkins. Here--wait! I'll get you something."
-
-But Hawkins held him back.
-
-"I don't want a drink." There was misery, bitterness, in Hawkins' voice.
-"I don't want a drink--for once. It's come! It--it's come to the end
-now. Crang and--and my little girl are going to be married to-morrow
-morning."
-
-And then John Bruce laughed quietly, and laid his hand reassuringly on
-the old cabman's shoulder.
-
-"No, Hawkins," he said. "I don't know where you got that idea; but
-it won't be to-morrow morning, nor for a good many to-morrow mornings
-either. Crang at the present moment is on board a ship on his way to
-South America."
-
-"I know," said Hawkins dully. "But half an hour ago I left him with
-Claire in Paul Veniza's house."
-
-John Bruce's hand tightened on Hawkins' shoulder until the old man
-winced.
-
-"You what?" John Bruce cried out.
-
-"Yes," said Hawkins. "I heard him talking about it in the back room.
-They didn't know I was there. He said there was something the matter
-with the engines."
-
-Crang back! John Bruce's face was set as chiselled marble.
-
-"Do you know what you are saying, Hawkins?" he demanded fiercely, as
-though to trample down and sweep aside by the brute force of his own
-incredulity the other's assertion. "Do you know what you are saying--_do
-you?"'_
-
-"Yes, I know," said Hawkins helplessly. "He said you nearly killed him
-to-day, and----"
-
-John Bruce's laugh, with a savagery that had him now at its mercy and in
-its grip, rang suddenly through the room.
-
-"Then, for once, he told the truth!" he cried. "He tricked me cold with
-that old bus last night, and trapped me in the rats' hole where his gang
-holds out, but----"
-
-Hawkins stumbled to his feet. His face seemed to have grown grayer
-still, more haggard and full of abject misery.
-
-"That's it, then!" he whispered. "I--I understand now. I was drunk last
-night. Oh, my God, I'm to blame for this, too!"
-
-John Bruce pushed Hawkins almost roughly back into his chair. Last night
-was gone. It was of no significance any more.
-
-"Never mind about that!" he said between his teeth. "It doesn't matter
-now. Nothing matters now except Claire. Go on, tell me! What does
-it mean? To-morrow morning, you said. Why this sudden decision about
-to-morrow morning?"
-
-Hawkins' lips seemed dry. He circled them again and again with his
-tongue.
-
-"He said you nearly killed him to-day, as I--I told you," said Hawkins,
-fumbling for his words. "And he said that you had been lovers before
-that night when you were stabbed, and that he wasn't going to stand for
-it any longer, and--and"--Hawkins' voice broke--"and that she belonged
-to him. And he said she was the only one who could stop this trouble
-between you and him before it was too late, and that was by marrying him
-at once. And--and Claire said she would."
-
-Hawkins stopped. His old felt hat was on his knees, and he twisted at it
-aimlessly with shaking fingers.
-
-John Bruce stood motionless.
-
-"Go on!" he bit off his words.
-
-"That's all," said Hawkins, "except he made her promise not to let
-you know anything about it. They're going to leave the house to-morrow
-morning, and are going down to Staten Island to get married because
-there's some minister down there he knows, Crang said. And I'm to take
-Crang, and--and"--the old man turned away his face--"I--I'm to be best
-man. That--that's what he said--best man."
-
-John Bruce walked abruptly to the window, and stared blindly out into
-the night. His brain seemed afire.
-
-For a time neither man spoke.
-
-"You said you loved her," said Hawkins at last. "I came to you. There
-wasn't any other place to go. Paul Veniza can't do anything."
-
-John Bruce turned from the window, and walking to
-
-Hawkins, laid his two hands on the other's shoulders. He was calmer now.
-
-"Yes, I love her," he said huskily. "And I think--I am not sure--but I
-think now there is a chance that she can be made to change her mind even
-here at the last minute. But that means I must see her; or, rather, that
-she must see me."
-
-Hawkins paused in the twisting of his felt hat to raise bewildered eyes.
-
-"I've got the car here," he said. "I'll take you down."
-
-"The car!" exclaimed John Bruce quickly. "Yes, I never thought of that!
-Listen, Hawkins! Claire refused to see me this afternoon, or even to
-talk to me over the telephone. I am not quite sure why. But no matter
-what her reason was, I must see her now at once. I have something to
-tell her that I hope will persuade her not to go on with this to-morrow
-morning--or ever." His voice was growing grave and hard. "I hope you
-understand, Hawkins. I believe it may succeed. If it fails, then neither
-you nor I, nor any soul on earth can alter her decision. That's all that
-I can tell you now."
-
-Hawkins nodded his head. A little color, eagerness, hope, had come into
-his face.
-
-"That's enough," he said tremulously, "as long as you--you think there
-is a chance even yet. And--and you do, don't you?"
-
-"Yes," said John Bruce, "I think there is more than a chance--if I can
-see her alone and make her listen to me. The car will be just the thing.
-But she would refuse to come out, if she knew I were in it. I depend
-on you for that. We'll drive down there, and you will have to make some
-excuse to get her to come with you. After that you can keep on driving
-us around the block until I either win or lose."
-
-Hawkins rose hurriedly to his feet.
-
-"Let us go, John Bruce! For God's sake, let us go!" he cried eagerly.
-"I'll--I'll tell her Mrs. Hedges--that's my landlady--has got to see her
-at once. She'll come quick enough."
-
-John Bruce put on his hat and coat, and without a word led the way
-to the door--but at the door he paused for an instant. There was
-Larmon--and Crang was back. And then he shook his head in quick
-decision. There was time enough later. It would serve no purpose to tell
-Larmon now, other than the thankless one of giving Larmon a restless
-night.
-
-John Bruce went on. He did not speak again until, outside the hotel, he
-stepped into the traveling pawnshop as Hawkins opened the car door for
-him.
-
-"You will have to make sure that Crang has gone," he said quietly.
-"Don't stop in front of the house, Hawkins."
-
-"I'll make sure," whispered Hawkins, as he climbed to his seat. "Oh, my
-God, my little girl!"
-
-The old car jolted forward. John Bruce's face was set again in hard,
-chiselled lines. He tried to think--but now his brain seemed curiously
-impotent, as though it groped through chaos and through turmoil only to
-stagger back bewildered, defeated, a wounded thing. And for a time it
-was like that, as he sat there swaying with the lurch of the speeding
-car, one thought impinging fast upon another only to be swallowed up so
-quickly in turn by still another that he could correlate-no one of them.
-
-And then, after a little time again, out of this strange mental strife
-images began to take form, as sharply defined and distinct one from
-the other as before they had been mingled in hopeless confusion--and he
-cried out aloud in sudden agony of soul. It was to save his life that
-this had happened. He had wrung that knowledge from Crang. That was the
-lever he meant to use with Claire now, and it _must_ succeed. He must
-make it succeed! It seemed to drive him mad now, that thought--that
-to-morrow morning she should die for him. Not physical death--worse than
-that! God! It was unthinkable, horrible, abominable. It seemed to flaunt
-and mock with ruthless, hell-born sacrilege what was holiest in his
-heart. It stirred him to a fury that brought him to his feet, his fists
-clenched. Claire in her purity--at the mercy of a degenerate beast!
-
-He dropped back on the seat. He battled for calmness. In a little while
-Claire would be here beside him--_for a little while_. He shook his
-head. This was not real, nothing of his life had been real since that
-moon-mad night on the sands of Apia. No; that was not true! Soul,
-mind and body rose up in fierce denial. His love was real, a living,
-breathing, actual reality, Claire----
-
-John Bruce sank his face in his hands. Hours seemed to pass. And then he
-was conscious that the car had stopped. He roused himself, and drawing
-the window curtain slightly, looked out. Hawkins had stopped a few
-houses down past the one-time pawnshop.
-
-John Bruce rose suddenly and changed his seat to the one in the far
-opposite corner, his back to the front of the car. The time seemed
-interminable. Then he heard a light footstep ring on the pavement, and
-he heard Hawkins' voice. The car door was opened, a dark form entered,
-sat down, the door closed, and the car started forward.
-
-It was strange! It was like that, here in this car, that he had stepped
-in one night and found Claire--as she would now find him. That was
-so long ago! And it seemed so long too since even he had last seen
-her--since that night when, piqued so unwarrantably, he had left Paul
-Veniza's house. He felt his hands tremble. He steadied himself. He did
-not want to frighten or startle her now.
-
-"Claire!" he said softly.
-
-He heard a slight, quick rustle of garments--and then the light in the
-car was flashed on.
-
-She was leaning tensely forward, a little figure with loose cloak flung
-over her shoulders, without hat, a wondrous sheen from the light on the
-dark, silken hair, her eyes wide, her finger still on the electric-light
-button.
-
-"You!" she cried sharply. "And Hawkins, too, in this!"
-
-She reached for the door handle; but John Bruce caught her hand.
-
-"Claire!" he pleaded hoarsely. "Wait! If it is a trick, at least you
-know that with Hawkins and me you will come to no harm. What else could
-I do? You would not speak to me this afternoon, you would not let me see
-you, and I must talk to you to-night."
-
-She looked at him steadily.
-
-_"Must?"_ she repeated coldly. "And to-night? Why to-night?"
-
-"Because," John Bruce answered quickly, "to-morrow would be too late. I
-know about to-morrow morning. Hawkins told me. He was outside the door
-of that room when Crang was talking to you to-night." She sank back
-in her seat with a little cry. Her face had gone white--but again she
-steadied herself.
-
-"And--and do you think that is any reason why you should have inveigled
-me into this car?" she asked dully. "Do you think that anything you can
-say will alter--to-morrow morning?"
-
-"Yes; I do!" said John Bruce earnestly. "But"--he smiled a little
-bitterly--"I am afraid, too, that it will be hopeless enough if first
-you will not tell me what has so suddenly come between us. Claire, what
-is it?"
-
-The dark eyes lighted with a glint, half angry, half ironical.
-
-"Is _that_ what you brought me here for?"
-
-"No," he said quietly.
-
-"Then," she said coolly, "if you do not know, I will tell you. I read
-a letter that you wrote to a certain Mr. Larmon."
-
-It was a long minute before he spoke.
-
-"I--I thought it might be that," he said slowly. "I knew you had
-seen it. Crang told me so. And--and I was afraid you might believe
-it--Claire."
-
-"Believe it!" she returned monotonously. "Had I any choice? Have I any
-now? I knew you were in danger. I knew it was written to save your life.
-I knew it was your handwriting. I knew you wrote it." She turned away
-her head. "It was so miserable a lie, so cowardly a betrayal--to save
-your life."
-
-"But so hard to believe, and so bitter a thing to believe"--there was a
-sudden eager thrill in John Bruce's voice--"that you wept upon it. Look,
-Claire!" he cried. "I have that letter here--and this, that I took from
-Crang to-day when I turned the tables on him. See! Read them both!" He
-took from his pocket the letter and the slip cut from the bottom of the
-sheet, and laid them in her lap. "The bottom was written in invisible
-ink--the way always communicated privately with Larmon. Salt brings it
-out. I knew Larmon would subject it to the test, so I was willing to
-write anything that Crang dictated. I wrote that secret message on the
-bottom of the paper while Crang was out of the room where he had me a
-prisoner. Oh, don't you see now, Claire? When your tears fell on the
-paper faint traces of the secret writing began to appear. That gave
-Crang the clew, and he worked at it until he had brought out the
-message, and then he cut off the bottom before delivering the letter to
-Larmon, and----"
-
-John Bruce stopped. Claire's face was buried in the cushions, and,
-huddled in the corner of the car, she was sobbing bitterly.
-
-"Don't! Don't cry, Claire!" John Bruce whispered, and laid his hand over
-hers where it crushed the letter in her lap.
-
-"I believed it," she said. "I did you that wrong. There is no
-forgiveness for such meanness of soul as that."
-
-"No," John Bruce answered gently, "there is no forgiveness--because
-there is nothing to forgive. It was only another piece of that miserable
-hound's cunning that tricked us both. I did not appreciate what he was
-after in that reference to you; I thought he was only trying to make the
-letter bullet-proof in its plausibility for Larmon's benefit--I never
-thought that he would show it to you."
-
-She had not drawn her hand away, but her face was still hidden; and for
-a moment there was silence between them.
-
-"Claire," John Bruce said in a low voice, "the night I left your house
-you said that, rather than regretting your promise to marry Crang, you
-had come to be glad you had made it. Can you still say that?"
-
-She lifted her face now, tear-stained, the brown eyes strangely radiant
-through the wet lashes.
-
-"Yes," she said. "I am glad. So glad--because I know now that it was
-worth it all so many, many times over."
-
-"Claire"--his voice was lower still--"I left your house that night,
-angry, jealous, misjudging you because you had said that. You asked for
-forgiveness a minute ago when there was nothing to forgive; I asked for
-forgiveness from you after that night, but even then I did not know how
-far beyond the right to forgiveness I had gone."
-
-She stared at him in a startled way.
-
-"What--what do you mean?" she breathed.
-
-And now John Bruce's face was alight.
-
-"You have confessed your love, Claire!" he cried passionately. "It was
-not fair, perhaps, but I am past all that now--and you would not have
-confessed it in any other way. Glad! I was a stranger that night when
-you bought my life--and to-night you are glad, not because my life is
-now or ever could be worth such a sacrifice as yours, but because love
-has come to make you think so, sweetheart, and you care--you care for
-me."
-
-"You know!" Her face was deathly white. "You know about--about that
-night?" she faltered.
-
-John Bruce had both her hands imprisoned now.
-
-"Yes; I know!" He laughed with a strange buoyancy; passion, triumph,
-were vibrant in his voice. "Did Crang not tell you how near to death he
-came to-day? I choked the truth out of him. Yes; I know! I know that it
-was to save my life you made that promise, that you sold everything you
-held dear in life for me--but it is over now!"
-
-He was beside her. He raised her two hands to draw her arms around his
-neck.
-
-She struggled back.
-
-"No, no!" she cried wildly. "Oh, you must not--you must not!"
-
-"Must not!" His voice rang his challenge to the world. The blood was
-pounding in mad abandon through his veins. His soul itself seemed
-aflame. Closer, closer he drew her to him. "Must not! There is only you
-and me--and our love--on all the earth!"
-
-But still she struggled---and then suddenly the tears came.
-
-"Oh, you are so strong--so strong," she sobbed--and like some weary
-child finding rest her head dropped upon his shoulder and lay hidden
-there.
-
-"Claire! Claire!" It was his soul that spoke.
-
-He kissed the silken hair, and fondled it; and kissed the tear-wet eyes;
-and his cheek lay against hers; and she was in his arms, and he held her
-there tight-clasped so that she might never go again.
-
-And after a time she sobbed no more; and her hand, lifting, found his
-face and touched it gently, and creeping upward, brushed the hair back
-from his forehead--and then suddenly she clung to him with all her
-strength and drew his head down until her lips met his.
-
-And there was no world about them, and time was non-existent, and only
-they two lived.
-
-It was Claire at last who put his arms from her in a wistful, lingering
-way.
-
-"We have been mad for a little while," she whispered. "Take me back home
-now, John--and--and you must never try to see me again."
-
-And something seemed to grow chill and cold within John Bruce's heart.
-
-"Not that, Claire!" he cried out. "You do not mean that--that, after
-this, you will go on with--with tomorrow morning!"
-
-A brave little effort at a smile quivered on her lips.
-
-"We have had our hour, John," she said; "yours and mine. It can never be
-taken from us, and I shall live in it all my life; but it is over now.
-Yes; I shall go through with it to-morrow morning. There is no other
-way. I must keep my promise."
-
-"No!" he cried out again. "It shall never be! Claire, you cannot
-mean what you are saying! A promise like that! It was forced upon you
-inhumanly, horribly. He would have murdered me."
-
-"But to-night you are alive," she answered quietly.
-
-"Alive! Yes!" he said fiercely. "I am alive, and----"
-
-"It is because you are alive that I promised," she broke in gently. "He
-kept his word. I cannot break mine."
-
-"Alive!" John Bruce laughed now in sudden, bitter agony. "Alive--yes!
-And do you think that I can walk about the streets, and talk, and
-smile, and suck the honey out of life, while you have paid for it with a
-tortured soul? Claire, you shall not! That man is---- No, wait! There is
-myself. He called me a snivelling hypocrite. You shall know the worst of
-me before you know the worst of him. There is not much to tell--because
-he has told you. I am a gambler. All my life I've gambled. As far back
-as I can remember I've been a rolling stone. My life has been useless,
-utterly worthless. But I was never ashamed of it; I never saw any reason
-to be ashamed until you came into my life. It hasn't been the same since
-then '--and it will never be the same again. You have given me something
-to live for now, Claire."
-
-She shook her head. "You do not argue well," she said softly. "If I have
-brought this to you, John, I am so glad--so glad for this, too. Oh, I
-cannot tell you how glad I am, for, because I loved you, the knowledge
-of what your life was hurt me. But I had faith in you, John, as I always
-shall have. So don't you see"--the brave little smile came again--"that
-this is a reward, something tangible and great, to make still more worth
-while the promise that I made?"
-
-He stared at her. He swept his hand across his eyes. She seemed--she
-seemed to be slipping away from him--beyond--beyond his reach.
-
-"That man!" he said desperately. "You said you knew him--but you do not
-know him. He is the head and front and brains of a gang of crooks.
-I know! He held me a prisoner in their dirty lair, a hidden place, a
-cellar over in the slums--like rats they were. He is a criminal, and a
-dangerous one--while he masquerades with his medicine. God alone knows
-the crimes, if there are any, that he has not committed. He is a foul,
-unclean and filthy thing, debauched and dissolute, a moral leper.
-Claire, do you understand all this--that his life is pollution and
-defilement, that love to him is lust, that your innocence----"
-
-With a broken, piteous cry, Claire stopped him.
-
-And again he stared at her. She did not speak, but in her eyes he read
-the torment of a far greater and fuller appreciation of the price than
-he, he knew, though it turned his soul sick within him, could ever have.
-
-And suddenly he covered his face with his hands.
-
-"Bought!" he said brokenly in his agony. "Oh, my God, this has bought
-me!"
-
-He felt his hands drawn away, and her two palms laid upon his cheeks. He
-looked at her. How white she was!
-
-"Help me, John," she said steadily. "Don't--don't make it harder."
-
-She reached out and touched the bell button beside the seat. In a
-subconscious way he remembered that was the signal for Hawkins to bring
-the traveling pawn-shop to the end of its circuit around the block in
-its old-time trips to Persia. He made no effort to stop her. There
-was something of ultimate finality in her face and eyes that answered,
-before it was uttered, the question that stumbled on his lips.
-
-"Claire! Claire!" he pleaded wildly. "Will nothing change you?"
-
-"There is no other way," she said.
-
-He stretched out his arms to draw her to him again, to lay her head once
-more upon his shoulder--but now she held him back.
-
-"No!" she whispered. "Be merciful now, John--my strength is almost
-gone."
-
-And there was something in her voice that held him from the act.
-
-The car stopped.
-
-And then, as the door was opened and she stood up, suddenly she leaned
-swiftly forward and pressed her lips to his--and springing from the car,
-was gone.
-
-John Bruce groped his way out of the car. Across the sidewalk the
-door of Paul Veniza's house closed. Hawkins, standing by the car door,
-clutched at his arm. And Hawkins' hand was trembling violently. Slowly
-his eyes met Hawkins'.
-
-He shook his head.
-
-The old lined face seemed to gray even in the murky light of a distant
-street lamp.
-
-"I'd rather see her dead," said the old cab driver brokenly.
-
-John Bruce made no answer.
-
-Then Hawkins, gulping his words, spoke again:
-
-"I--where'll I drive you?"
-
-John Bruce started blindly on past Hawkins down the street.
-
-"Nowhere," he said.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO--THROUGH THE NIGHT
-
-|A GAUNT and haggard figure stalked through the night; around him only
-shuttered windows, darkened houses, and deserted streets. The pavements
-rang hollow to the impact of his boot-heels. Where the way lay open
-he went. But always he walked, walked incessantly, without pause,
-hurrying--nowhere.
-
-There was a raw, biting chill in the air, and his hands, ungloved, as
-they swung at his sides, were blue with cold. But sweat in great beads
-stood out upon his forehead. At times his lips moved and he spoke aloud.
-It was a hoarse sound.
-
-"Or him!" he said. "Or him!"
-
-On! Always on! There was no rest. It was ceaseless. The gray came into
-the East.
-
-And then at last the figure halted.
-
-There was a large window with wire grating, and a light burned within.
-In the window was a plate mirror, and a time-piece. It was a jeweler's
-window.
-
-The man looked at the time-piece. It was five o'clock. He looked at the
-mirror. It reflected the face of a young man grown old. The eyes burned
-deep in their sockets; the lines were hard, without softness; the skin
-was tightly drawn across the cheek bones, and was colorless. And he
-stared at the face, stared for a time without recognition. And then
-as he smiled and the face in the mirror smiled with him in a distorted
-movement of the lips, he swept his hand across his eyes.
-
-"John Bruce," he said.
-
-It seemed to arouse him from some mental absorption in which his
-physical entity had been lost. It was five o'clock, and he was John
-Bruce. At eleven o'clock--or was it twelve?--last night he had left
-Hawkins standing by the door of the traveling pawn-shop, and since
-then----
-
-He stared around him. He was somewhere downtown. He did not know where.
-He began to walk in an uptown direction.
-
-Something had been born in those hours. Something cataclysmic. What was
-it?
-
-"Or him!" The words came again--aloud--without apparent volition.
-
-What did that mean? It had something to do with Hawkins; with what
-Hawkins had said, standing there by the traveling pawn-shop. What was it
-Hawkins had said? Yes; he remembered: "I'd rather see her dead."
-
-"Or him!"
-
-With cold judicial precision now the hours unrolled themselves before
-him.
-
-"Or him!"
-
-He was going to kill Crang.
-
-The hours of mental strife, of torment through which he had just passed,
-were as the memory of some rack upon which his soul had been put to
-torture. They came back vividly now, those hours--every minute of them a
-living eternity. His soul had shrunk back aghast at first, and called it
-murder; but it was not murder, or, if it was, it was imperative. It was
-the life of a foul viper--or Claire's. It was the life of an unclean
-thing that mocked and desecrated all decency, that flung its sordid
-challenge at every law, both human and divine--or the life of a pure,
-clean soul made the plaything of this beast, and dragged into a mire
-of unutterable abomination to suffocate and strangle in its noxious
-surroundings and die.
-
-And that soul was in jeopardy because at this moment he, John Bruce, had
-the power of movement in his limbs, the sense of sight, the ability to
-stretch out his hand and feel it touch that lamp-post there, and, if
-he would, to speak aloud and designate that object for what it was--a
-lamp-post. She had bought him these things with her life. Should she
-die--and he live?
-
-And he remembered back through those hours since midnight, when his soul
-had still faltered before the taking of human life, how it had sought
-some other way, some alternative, _any_ alternative. A jail sentence
-for Crang. There was enough, more than enough now with the evidence of
-Crang's double life, to convict the man for the robbery of that safe.
-But Claire had answered that in the long ago: "I will marry him when he
-comes out." Or, then, to get Crang away again like this afternoon--no,
-_yesterday_ afternoon. It was _this_ morning, in a few hours, that they
-were to be married. There was no time left in which to attempt anything
-like that; but, even if there were, he knew now, that it but postponed
-the day of reckoning. Claire would wait. Crang would come back.
-
-He was going to kill Crang.
-
-If he didn't, Crang would kill him. He knew that, too. But his
-decision was not actuated, or even swayed, by any consideration of
-self-preservation. He had no thought of his future or his safety. That
-was already settled. With his decision was irrevocably coupled the
-forfeiting of his own life. Not his own life! It belonged to Claire.
-Claire had bought it. He was only giving it back that the abysmal price
-she had agreed to pay should not be extorted from her. Once he had
-accomplished his purpose, he would give himself up to the police.
-
-He was going to kill Crang.
-
-That was what had been born out of the travail of those hours of the
-night. But there were other things to do first. He walked briskly now.
-The decision in itself no longer occupied his thoughts. The decision
-was absolute; it was final. It was those "other things" that he must
-consider now. There was Larmon. He could not tell Larmon what he, John
-Bruce, was going to do, but he must warn Larmon to be on his guard
-against any past or present connection with John Bruce coming to light.
-Fortunately Larmon had come to New York and registered as Peters. He
-must make Larmon understand that Larmon and John Bruce had never met,
-even if he could not give Larmon any specific reason or explanation.
-Larmon would probably refuse at first, and attribute it as an attempt to
-break, for some ulterior reason, the bond they had signed together that
-night on the beach at Apia.
-
-John Bruce smiled gravely. The bond would be broken in any case.
-Faustus was at the end of the play. A few months in prison, the electric
-chair--how apt had been his whistling of that aria _in his youth!_
-
-Youth! Yes, he was old now; he had been young that night on the beach at
-Apia.
-
-He took off his hat and let the sharp air sweep his head. He was not
-thinking clearly. All this did not express what he meant. There was
-Larmon's safety. He must take care of that; see to it, first of all,
-that Larmon could not be implicated, held by law as an accomplice
-through foreknowledge of what was to happen; then, almost of as great
-importance for Larmon's sake and future, the intimacy between them,
-their business relations of the past, must never be subjected to the
-probe of the trial that was to come.
-
-John Bruce nodded his head sharply. Yes, that was better! But there was
-still something else--that bond. He knew to-night, even if prison
-walls and a death penalty were not about to nullify that bond far more
-effectively than either he or Larmon ever could, that the one thing
-he wanted now, while yet he was a free agent, while yet it was not
-arbitrarily his choice, was to cancel that agreement which was so
-typical of what his life up to the present time had always stood for;
-and in its cancellation, for what little time was left, to have it
-typify, instead, a finer manhood. The future, premonitive, grim in its
-promise, seemed to hold up before him as in a mirror where no lines were
-softened, where only the blunt, brutal truth was reflected, the waste
-and worthlessness of the past. He had no wish to evade it, or temporize
-with it, or seek to palliate it. He knew only a vain and bitter regret;
-knew only the desire now at the end, in so far as he could, to face
-death a changed man.
-
-He walked on and on. He was getting into the uptown section now. How
-many miles he must have covered since he had left Hawkins, and since
-the door of the one-time pawn-shop had closed on that little bare-headed
-figure with the loose cloak clutched about her throat--the last sight
-he had had of Claire! How many miles? He did not know. It must have been
-many, very many. But he felt no weariness. It was strange! It was
-as though his vitality and energy flowed into him from some wholly
-extraneous source; and as though physically he were non-existent.
-
-He wondered what Larmon would say. Larmon alone had the right to cancel
-the bond. That was the way it had been written. Would Larmon refuse? He
-hoped not, because he wanted to part with Larmon as a friend. He hoped
-not, though in the final analysis, in a practical way, Larmon's refusal
-must be so futile a thing. Would Larmon laugh at him, and, not knowing,
-call him a fool? He shook his head. He did not know. At least Larmon
-would not be surprised. The conversation of last evening----
-
-John Bruce looked up. He was at the entrance to the Bayne-Miloy Hotel.
-He entered, nodded mechanically to the night clerk, stepped into the
-elevator, and went up to his room. There was his revolver to be got.
-Afterward he would go down to Larmon's room. Somehow, even in the face
-of that other thing which he was to do, this interview which was to
-come with Larmon obsessed him. It seemed to signify some vital line of
-demarcation between the old life and the new.
-
-The new I He smiled grimly, without mirth, as, entering his room,
-he switched on the light, stepped quickly to his desk, pulled open a
-drawer, and took out his revolver. The new! There would be very little
-of the new! He laughed now in a low, raucous way, as he slipped the
-weapon into his pocket. The new! A few weeks, a few months of a prison
-cell, and then---- His laugh died away, and a half startled, half
-perplexed look settled on his face. For the first time he noticed that
-a letter, most obviously placed to attract his attention, lay on the
-center of the desk pad. Strange, he had not seen it instantly!
-
-He stared at it now. It was a plain envelope, unstamped, and addressed
-to him. The writing was familiar too! Larmon's! He picked it up, opened
-it--and from the folds of the letter, as he drew it from the envelope,
-four torn pieces of paper fluttered to the desk. And for a long time,
-in a dazed way, he gazed at them. The letter dropped from his hand.
-Then mechanically he pieced the four scraps together. It was one of the
-leaves torn from Larmon's notebook that night in Apia--and here was the
-heavy scrawl where he, John Bruce, had signed with the quill toothpick.
-It was Larmon's copy of the bond.
-
-And again for a long time he stared at it, then he picked up the letter
-again. He read it slowly, for somehow his brain seemed only able to
-absorb the words in a stunned way. Then he read it again:
-
-Dear Bruce:--11 P. M.
-
-Something has come into your life that was not there on a night you will
-remember in the Southern Seas, and I know of no other way to repay you
-for what you did for me to-day than to hand you this. I knew from what
-you said to-night, or, rather perhaps, from what you did not say, that
-this was in your heart. And if I were young again, and the love of a
-good woman had come to me, I too should try--and fail, I fear, where you
-will succeed--to play a man's part in life.
-
-And so I bid you good-by, for when you read this I shall be on my way
-back West. What I lose another will gain. Amongst even my friends are
-men of honorable callings and wide interests who need a John Bruce. You
-will hear from one of them. Godspeed to you, for you are too good and
-clean a man to end your days as I shall end mine--a gambler.
-
-Yours,
-
-Gilbert Larmon.
-
-The love of a good woman--and young again! John Bruce's face was white.
-A thousand conflicting emotions seemed to surge upon him. There was
-something fine and big in what Larmon had done, like the Larmon whose
-real self he had come to glimpse for the first time last night; and
-something that was almost ghastly in the unconscious irony that lay
-behind it all. And for a little while he stood there motionless, holding
-the letter in his hand; then with a quick, abrupt return to action, he
-began to tear the letter into little shreds, and from his pocket he
-took his own copy of the bond and tore that up, and the four pieces of
-Larmon's copy he tore into still smaller fragments, and gathering all
-these up in his hands, he walked to the window and let them flutter out
-into the night.
-
-The way was clear. There was nothing to connect Gilbert Larmon with the
-man who to-morrow--no, _to-day_--would be in the hands of the police
-charged with murder. Nothing to bring to light Larmon's private affairs,
-for nothing bearing Larmon's signature had ever been kept; it was always
-destroyed. Larmon was safe--for, at least, they could never make John
-Bruce _talk_.
-
-There was a strange relief upon him, a strange uplift; not only for
-Larmon's sake, but for his own. The link that had bound him to the past
-was gone, broken, dissolved. He stood free--for the little time that was
-left; he stood free--to make a fresh start in the narrow confines of a
-prison cell. He smiled grimly. There was no irony here where it seemed
-all of irony. It meant everything--all. It was the only atonement he
-could make.
-
-He switched off the light, left his room, and went down to the desk.
-Here he consulted the directory. He requested the clerk to procure a
-taxi for him.
-
-It was five minutes after six by the clock over the desk.
-
-He entered the taxi and gave the chauffeur the address. He was
-unconscious of emotion now. He knew only a cold, fixed, merciless
-purpose.
-
-He was going to kill Crang.
-
-The taxi stopped in front of a frame house that bore a dirty brass
-name-plate. He dismissed the taxi, and mounted the steps. His right
-hand was in the pocket of his coat. He rang the bell, and obtaining no
-response, rang again--and after that insistently.
-
-The door was finally opened by an old woman, evidently aroused from bed,
-for she clutched tightly at a dressing gown that was flung around her
-shoulders.
-
-"I want to see Doctor Crang," said John Bruce.
-
-She shook her head.
-
-"The doctor isn't in," she answered.
-
-"I will wait for him," said John Bruce.
-
-Again she shook her head.
-
-"I don't know when he will be back. He hasn't been here since yesterday
-morning."
-
-"I will wait for him," said John Bruce monotonously.
-
-"But----"
-
-John Bruce brushed his way past her into the hall.
-
-"I will wait for him," he repeated.
-
-A door was open off the hallway. John Bruce looked in. It was obviously
-Crang's office. He went in and sat down by the window.
-
-The woman stood for a long time in the doorway watching him. Finally she
-went away.
-
-John Bruce's mind was coldly logical. Crang was not aware that his
-escape was known to any one except Claire, and he had been cunning
-enough to keep under cover. That was why he had not been home. But he
-would be home before he went out to be married. Even a man like Crang
-would have a few preparations to make.
-
-John Bruce sat by the window. Occasionally the old woman came and stood
-in the doorway--and went away again.
-
-There was no sign of Crang.
-
-At fifteen minutes of eight John Bruce rose from his chair and left the
-house.
-
-"He was to be at Paul Veniza's at eight," said John Bruce to himself
-with cool precision.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER TWENTY-THREE--THE BEST MAN
-
-|HAWKINS sat at the table in his room, and twined and twined one old
-storm-beaten hand over the other. For hours he had sat like that. It was
-light in the room now, for it was long after seven o'clock. His bed had
-not been slept in. He was dressed in his shiny best suit; he wore his
-frayed black cravat. He had been dressed like that since midnight; since
-he had returned home after Claire had fled into her house, and John
-Bruce had strode by him on the sidewalk with set, stony face and
-unseeing eyes; since, on reaching his room here, he had found a note
-whose signature was false because it read "Paul Veniza," when he knew
-that it came from Crang. Crang was taking precautions that his return
-should not leak out! The note only corroborated what he had heard
-through the door. He was to be at Paul Veniza's at eight o'clock with
-the traveling pawn-shop..
-
-The note had said nothing about any marriage; but, then, he knew! He
-was to be the best man. And so he had dressed himself. After that he had
-waited. He was waiting now.
-
-"The first," said Hawkins, with grave confidence to the cracked mirror.
-"Yes, that's it--the first in line, because I _am_ her old father, and
-there ain't nothing can change that."
-
-His own voice seemed to arouse him. He stared around the shabby room
-that was his home, his eyes lingering with strange wistfulness on
-each old battered, and long familiar object--and then suddenly, with a
-choking cry, his head went down, buried in his arms outflung across the
-table.
-
-"Pawned!" the old man cried brokenly. "It's twenty years ago, I pawned
-her--twenty years ago. And it's come to this because--because I
-ain't never redeemed her--but, oh God, I love her--I love my little
-girl--and--and she ain't never going to know how much."
-
-His voice died away. In its place the asthmatic gas-jet spat venomous
-defiance at the daylight that was so contumaciously deriding its puny
-flame.
-
-And after a little while, Hawkins raised his head. He looked at his
-watch.
-
-"It's time to go," said Hawkins--and cleared his throat.
-
-Hawkins picked up his hat and brushed it carefully with his coat sleeve;
-his shoulders, and such of his attire as he could reach, he brushed
-with his hands; he readjusted his frayed black cravat before the cracked
-mirror.
-
-"I'm the best man," said Hawkins.
-
-Oblivious to the chattering gas-jet, he descended the stairs, and went
-out to the shed in the rear that housed the traveling pawn-shop.
-
-"The first in line," said the old cab driver, as he climbed into the
-seat.
-
-Five minutes later, he drew up in front of the onetime pawn-shop. He
-consulted his watch as he got down from his seat and entered the house.
-It was twenty-five minutes of eight.
-
-He twisted his hat awkwardly in his hands, as he entered the rear room.
-He felt a sudden, wild rush of hope spring up within him because
-there was no sign of Crang. And then the hope died. He was early; and,
-besides, Claire had her hat on and was dressed to go out. Paul Veniza,
-also dressed, lay on the cot.
-
-No one spoke.
-
-Then Paul Veniza's frame was racked with a fit of coughing, and out of a
-face ashen in pallor his eyes met Hawkins' in silent agony--and then he
-turned his head away.
-
-Hawkins twisted at his hat.
-
-"I came a little early;" he said wistfully, "because I thought mabbe
-you might--that mabbe there might be some change--that mabbe you might
-not----"
-
-He stopped. He was looking at Claire. Her face was very white too. Her
-smile seemed to cut at his heart like a knife.
-
-"No, Hawkins," she said in a low voice; "there is no change. We
-are going to Staten Island. You will drive Doctor Crang. There is a
-limousine coming for father and me, that will be more comfortable for
-father."
-
-Hawkins' eyes went to the floor.
-
-"I--I didn't mean that kind of a change," he said.
-
-"I know you didn't, Hawkins. But--but I am trying to be practical." Her
-voice broke a little in spite of herself. "Doctor Crang doesn't know
-that you overheard anything last night, or that you know anything about
-the arrangements, so--so I am explaining them to you now."
-
-Hawkins' eyes were still on the floor.
-
-"Ain't there nothing"--his voice was thick and husky--"ain't there
-nothing in all the world that any of us can do to make you change your
-mind? Claire, ain't there nothing, nothing at all? John Bruce said there
-wasn't, and you love John Bruce, but----"
-
-"Don't, Hawkins!" she cried out pitifully.
-
-The old shoulders came slowly up, and the old head; and the old blue
-eyes were of a sudden strangely flints like.
-
-"I've got to know," said Hawkins, in a dead, stubborn way.
-
-"There is nothing," she answered.
-
-Hawkins' eyes reverted to the floor. He spoke now without lifting them.
-
-"Then--then it's--it's like saying good-by," he said, and the broken
-note was back again in his voice. "It's--it's so many years that mabbe
-you've forgotten, but when you were a little girl, and before you grew
-up, and--and were too big for that, I--I used to hold you in my arms,
-and you used to put your little arms around my neck, and kiss me,
-and--and you used to say that--Hawkins would never let the bugaboos get
-you, and--and I wonder if--if----"
-
-"Oh, Hawkins!" Claire's eyes were full of tears. "I remember. Dear, dear
-Hawkins! And I used to call you Daddy Hawkins. Do _you_ remember?"
-
-A tear found a furrow and trickled down the old weather-beaten face
-unchecked, as Hawkins raised his head.
-
-"Claire! Claire!" His voice trembled in its yearning. "Will--will you
-say that again, Claire?"
-
-"Dear Daddy Hawkins," she whispered.
-
-His arms stretched out to her, and she came to them smiling through her
-tears.
-
-"You've been so good to me," she whispered again. "You _are_ so good to
-me--dear, dear Daddy Hawkins."
-
-A wondrous light was in the old cabman's face. He held the slight form
-to him, trying to be so tenderly careful that he should not hurt her
-in his strength. He kissed her, and patted her head, and his fingers
-lingered as they smoothed the hair back from where it made a tiny curl
-about her ear.
-
-And then he felt her drawing him toward the couch--and he became
-conscious that Paul Veniza was holding out his hands to them both.
-
-And Claire knelt at the side of the couch and took one of Paul Veniza's
-hands, and Hawkins took the other. And no one of them looked into the
-other's face.
-
-The outer door opened, and Doctor Crang came in. He stood for an instant
-surveying the scene, a half angry, half sarcastic smile spreading over
-his sallow face, and then he shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"Ah, you're here, like me, ahead of time, Hawkins, I see!" he said
-shortly. "You're going to drive me to Staten Island where----"
-
-Claire rose to her feet.
-
-"I have told Hawkins," she said quietly.
-
-Hawkins' hand tightened over Paul Veniza's for a moment, and then he
-turned away.
-
-"I--I'll wait outside," said Hawkins--and brushed has hand across his
-eyes as he went through the doorway.
-
-Paul Veniza was racked with a sudden fit of cough ing again. Doctor
-Crang walked quickly to the couch and looked at the other sharply. After
-a moment he turned to Claire.
-
-"Are you ready to go?" he asked crisply.
-
-"Yes; I am ready," she answered steadily.
-
-"Very well, then," said Crang, "you had better go out and get into the
-old bus. You can go with Hawkins and me."
-
-"But"--Claire looked in a bewildered way at Paul Veniza--"but you
-said----"
-
-"I know I did," Crang interrupted brusquely, "but we're all here a
-little early and there's lots of time to countermand the other car." He
-indicated Paul Veniza with a jerk of his head. "He's far from as well as
-he was last night. At least you'll admit that I'm a _good_ doctor, and
-when I tell you he is not fit to go this morning that ought to be enough
-for both of you. I'll phone and tell them not to send the limousine."
-
-Still Claire hesitated. Paul Veniza had closed his eyes.
-
-Crang shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"You can do as you like, but I don't imagine"--a snarl crept into his
-voice--"that it will give him any joy to witness the ceremony, or you to
-have him. Suit yourselves; but I won't answer for the consequences."
-
-"I'll go," said Claire simply--and as Paul Veniza lifted himself up
-suddenly in protest, she forced him gently back upon the couch again.
-"It's better that way," she said, and for a moment talked to him in low,
-earnest tones, then kissed him, and rose, and walked out from the room.
-
-Crang, with a grunt of approval, started toward the telephone.
-
-"Wait!" Paul Veniza had raised himself on his elbow.
-
-Crang turned and faced the other with darkened face.
-
-"It is not too late even now at the last moment!" Paul Veniza's face was
-drawn with agony. "I know you for what you are, and in the name of God
-I charge you not to do this thing. It is foul and loathsome, the basest
-passion--and whatever crimes lay at your door, even if murder be among
-them, no one of them is comparable with this, for you do more than take
-a human life, you desecrate a soul pure as the day God gave it life,
-and----"
-
-The red surged into Crang's face, and changed to mottled purple.
-
-"Damn you!" he flung out hoarsely. "Hold your cackling tongue! This is
-my wedding morning--understand?" He laughed out raucously. "My wedding
-morning--and I'm in a hurry!"
-
-Paul Veniza raised himself a little higher. White his face was--white as
-death.
-
-"Then God have mercy on your soul!" he cried.
-
-And Crang stared for a moment, then turned on his heel--and laughed.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR--THE RIDE
-
-|JOHN BRUCE turned the corner, and, on the opposite side of the street,
-drew back under the shelter of a door porch where he could command
-a view of the entrance to Paul Veniza's house. And now he stood
-motionless, waiting with cold patience, his eyes fixed on the doorway
-across the street. He was there because Crang was either at the present
-moment within the house, or presently would come to the house. It was
-nearly eight o'clock. The old traveling pawn-shop was drawn up before
-the door.
-
-He had no definite plan now. No plan was needed. He was simply waiting
-for Crang.
-
-His eyes had not left the doorway. Suddenly, tense, he leaned a little
-forward. The door opened. No; it was only Hawkins! He relaxed again.
-
-Only Hawkins! John Bruce's face grew a little sterner, his lips a little
-more tightly compressed. Only Hawkins--only an old man who swayed there
-outside the door, and whose face was covered with his hands.
-
-He watched Hawkins. The old cabman moved blindly along the sidewalk for
-the few steps that took him to the corner, and turning the corner, out
-of sight of the house, sat down on the edge of the curb, and with his
-shoulders sunk forward, buried his face in his hands again.
-
-And John Bruce understood; and his fingers, in his pocket, snuggled
-curiously around the revolver that was hidden there. He wanted to go to
-that old bent figure there in its misery and despair, who was fighting
-now so obviously to get a grip upon himself. But he did not move. He
-could not tell Hawkins what he meant to do.
-
-Were they minutes or were they hours that passed? Again the front door
-of Paul Veniza's house opened, and again John Bruce leaned tensely
-forward. But this time he did not relax. Claire! His eyes drank in the
-slim, little, dark-garbed figure, greedy that no smallest gesture,
-no movement, no single line of face or form should escape him. It was
-perhaps the last time that he would see her. He would not see her in his
-prison cell--he would not let her go there.
-
-A queer sound issued from his throat, a strange and broken little cry.
-She was gone now. She had crossed the sidewalk and entered the traveling
-pawn-shop. The curtains were down, and she was hidden from sight. And
-for a moment there seemed a blur and mist before John Bruce's eyes--then
-Hawkins, still around the corner, still with crouched shoulders, still
-with his face hidden in his hands, took form and grew distinct again.
-And then after a little while, Hawkins rose slowly, and came back
-along the street, and climbed into the driver's seat of the traveling
-pawnshop, and sat fumbling at the wheel with his hands.
-
-The door of Paul Veniza's house opened for the third time--and now John
-Bruce laughed in a low, grim 'way, and his hand, hugging the revolver in
-his pocket, tightened and grew vise-like in its grip upon the weapon. It
-was Crang at last!
-
-And then John Bruce's hand came out from his pocket--empty.
-
-_Not in front of Claire!_
-
-He swept his hand across his forehead. It was as though a sudden shock
-had aroused him to some stark reality to which he had been strangely
-oblivious. Not in front of Claire! Claire was in the car there. He felt
-himself bewildered for a moment. Hawkins had said nothing about driving
-Claire too.
-
-Crang's voice reached him from across the street:
-
-"All right, Hawkins! Go ahead!"
-
-Where was Paul Veniza? Crang had got into the car, and the car was
-moving forward. Wasn't Paul Veniza going too?
-
-Well, it did not matter, did it? Crang was there. And it was a long way
-to Staten Island, and before then a chance would come, _must_ come; he
-would make one somehow, and-----
-
-John Bruce ran swiftly out into the street, and, as the car turned the
-corner, swung himself lightly and silently in beside Hawkins. Crang
-would not know. The curtained panel at the back of the driver's seat hid
-the interior of the car from view.
-
-Hawkins turned his head, stared into John Bruce's face for an instant,
-half in a startled, half in a curiously perplexed way, made as though to
-speak--and then, without a word, gave his attention to the wheel again.
-
-The car rattled on down the block.
-
-John Bruce, as silent as Hawkins, stared ahead. On the ferry! Yes, that
-was it! It was a long way to Staten Island. Claire would not stay cooped
-up in a closed car below; she would go up on deck to get the air. And
-even if Crang accompanied her, it would not prove very difficult to
-separate them.
-
-He looked around suddenly and intercepted a furtive, puzzled glance cast
-at him by Hawkins.
-
-And then Hawkins spoke for the first time.
-
-"You'd better get off, John Bruce," he said in a choked voice. "You've
-done all you could, and God bless you over and over again for it, but
-you can't do anything more now, and it won't do you any good to come any
-further."
-
-"No," said John Bruce, "I'm going all the way, Hawkins."
-
-Hawkins relapsed into silence. They were near the Battery when he spoke
-again.
-
-"All the way," Hawkins repeated then, as though it were but a moment
-gone since John Bruce had spoken. "All the way. Yes, that's it--after
-twenty years. That's when I pawned her--twenty years ago. And I couldn't
-never redeem her the way Paul Veniza said. And she ain't never known,
-and thank God she ain't never going to know, that I--that I----"
-A tear trickled down the old face, and splashed upon the wrinkled skin
-of the hand upon the wheel. And then old Hawkins smiled suddenly, and
-nodded toward the clock on the cowl-board--and the speed of the car
-increased. "I looked up the ferry time," said Hawkins.
-
-They swung out in front of the ferry house, and the car stopped. A
-ferry, just berthing, was beginning to disgorge its stream of motors and
-pedestrians.
-
-"We're first in line," said Hawkins, nodding his head. "We'll have to
-wait a minute or two."
-
-John Bruce nodded back indifferently. His eyes were fixed on the ferry
-that he could just see through the ferry house. Certainly, Claire would
-not stay down in the confined space of the ferry's run-way all the trip;
-or if she did, Crang wouldn't. His face set. Quite unconsciously his
-hand had gone to his pocket, and he found his fingers now snuggling
-again around the weapon that lay there.
-
-And then he looked at Hawkins--and stared again at the other, startled.
-Strange, he had not noticed it before! The smile on Hawkins' face did
-not hide it. The man seemed to have aged a thousand years; the old face
-was pinched and worn, and deep in the faded, watery blue eyes were hurt
-and agony. And a great sympathy for the man surged upon John Bruce. He
-could not tell Hawkins, but---- He reached out, and laid his hand on the
-other's arm.
-
-"Don't take it too hard, Hawkins," he said gently. "I--perhaps--perhaps,
-well, there's always a last chance that something may happen."
-
-"Me?" said Hawkins, and bent down over his gears as he got the signal to
-move forward. "Do I look like that? I--I thought it all out last night,
-and I don't feel that way. I'll tell you what I was thinking about. I
-was just thinking that I did something to-day when I left my room that I
-haven't done before--in twenty years. I've left the light burning."
-
-John Bruce stared a little helplessly.
-
-"Yes," said Hawkins. He smiled at John Bruce. "Don't you worry about
-me. Mabbe you don't understand, but that's all I've been thinking about
-since we've been waiting here. I've left the light burning."
-
-Sick at heart, John Bruce turned his head away. He made no response.
-
-Hawkins paid the fare, ran the car through the ferry house, and aboard
-the ferry itself. He was fumbling with a catch of some kind behind his
-seat, as he proceeded slowly up the run-way.
-
-"He'll want a little air in there," said Hawkins, "because it's close
-down here. It opens back, you know--the whole panel. I had it made that
-way when the car was turned into a traveling pawn-shop--didn't know what
-tough kind of a customer Paul might run into sometime, and I'd want to
-get in beside him quick to help, and I----" The old cabman straightened
-up.
-
-The car was at the extreme forward end of the ferry--and suddenly it
-leaped forward. "Jump, John Bruce! Jump clear!" old Hawkins cried.
-"There's only two of us going all the way--and that's Crang and me!
-Claire and Paul 'll be along in another car--tell them it was an
-accident, and----"
-
-John Bruce was on his feet--too late. There was a crash, and the
-collapsible steel gates went down before the plunging car, and the guard
-chain beyond was swept from its sockets. He reeled and lost his balance
-as something, a piece of wreckage from the gates or chain posts, struck
-him. He felt the hot blood spurt from shoulder and arm. And then, as the
-car shot out in mid-air, diving madly for the water below, and he
-was thrown from his feet, he found himself clinging to the footboard,
-fighting wildly to reach the door handle. Claire was in there! Claire
-was in there!
-
-There was a terrific splash. A mighty rush of water closed over him.
-Horror, fear, madness possessed his soul. Claire was in there! Claire
-was in there--and somehow Hawkins had not known! Yes, he had the door
-handle now! He wrenched and tore at the door. The pressure of the water
-seemed to pit itself against his strength. He worked like a maniac. It
-opened. He had it now! It opened. He could scarcely see in the murky
-water--only the indistinct outlines of two forms undulating grotesquely,
-the hands of one gripped around the throat of the other--only that, and
-floating within his reach a woman's dress. He snatched at the dress. His
-lungs were bursting. Claire! It was Claire! She was in his arms--then
-blackness--then sunlight again--and then, faintly, he heard a cheer.
-
-He held her head above the water. She was motionless, inert.
-
-"Claire! Claire!" he cried. Fear, cold, horrible, seized upon him. He
-swam in mad haste for the iron ladder rungs at the side of the slip.
-
-Faces, a multitude of them, seemed to peer at him from above, from the
-brink of this abyss in which he was struggling. He heard a cheer again.
-Why were they cheering? Were they cheering because two men were locked
-in a death grip deep down there in the water below?
-
-"Claire!" he cried out again.
-
-And then, as his hand grasped the lower rung, she opened her eyes
-slowly, and a tremor ran through her frame.
-
-She lived! Was he weak with the sudden revulsion that swept upon him
-now? Was that it? He tried to carry her up--and found that it was beyond
-his strength. And he could only cling there and wait for assistance from
-above, thankful even for the support the water gave his weight. It was
-strange! What were those red stains that spread out and tinged the water
-around him? His arm! Yes, he remembered now! His shoulder and arm! It
-was the loss of blood that must have sapped his strength, that must be
-sapping it now so that---
-
-"John!" Claire whispered. "You--John!"
-
-He buried his face in the great wet masses of hair that fell around her.
-Weak? No, he was not weak! He could hold her here always--always.
-
-He felt her clutch spasmodically at his arm.
-
-"And--and Hawkins, John?" she faltered.
-
-He lifted his head and stared at the water. Little waves rippled across
-its surface, gamboling inconsequentially--at play. There wasn't anything
-else there. There never would be. He made no answer.
-
-A sob shook her shoulders.
-
-"How--how did it happen?" she whispered again.
-
-"I think a--a gear jammed, or something," he said huskily.
-
-He heard her speak again, but her voice was very low. He bent his head
-until it rested upon hers to catch the words.
-
-She was crying softly.
-
-"Dear, dear Hawkins--dear Daddy Hawkins," she said.
-
-A great mist seemed to gather before John Bruce's eyes. A voice seemed
-to come again, Hawkins' voice; and words that he understood now,
-Hawkins' words:
-
-"I've left the light burning."
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Pawned, by Frank L. Packard
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