Duvall, upon discovering that the
address of Miss Marcia Ford was on West 57th Street,
but two doors from the building in which the Morton
apartment was located, began to feel that he was on
the right track. He had known, ever since his
first day upon the case, that the mysterious messages
found in Ruth Morton’s bedroom had been placed
there by some ingenious but perfectly natural means.
The apparition that had so startled the girl upon
her last night at the flat was capable, of course,
of some reasonable explanation. When he left Mr.
Baker in the morning his plan had been to go to Mrs.
Morton’s apartment and once more investigate
all possible means of entrance, hoping that, by finding
out how the messages were delivered, he might also
be able to find out by whom. It was for this
reason that he had asked Mrs. Morton for the key to
the apartment.
Now the question seemed in a fair
way to being answered for him. The fact that
this girl’s room was located so near to the Mortons’
apartment could not be a mere coincidence. There
must be, between her room and the Morton flat some
means of communication, although of what nature he
could not now surmise. Fully convinced, however,
that he might very soon find out, he hurried up to
Fifty-seventh Street and walked along until he reached
N.
The house was, like that which immediately
adjoined the apartment building, an old-fashioned
one, of brown stone, with a high front stoop.
It presented an appearance which, if not exactly dilapidated,
was yet in strong contrast to the neat appearance
of its neighbors. A printed card in one of the
lower front windows indicated that roomers were wanted.
It was just the sort of place that
Duvall had expected to find just the sort
of place in which a working girl like Marcia Ford would
live. Located in a very excellent neighborhood,
surrounded by apartment buildings and houses of the
best type, it still could afford to rent rooms at
the moderate figure that one of her class could pay.
He went up the front steps and rang the bell.
“Is Miss Ford in? Miss Marcia Ford?”
he asked.
The servant who came to the door,
a neatly dressed German girl, shook her head.
“No, Miss Ford is not in.
She usually gets back about half past six.”
Duvall glanced at his watch.
It was not yet three o’clock. He realized
that he had a long wait before him.
“Will you leave any message?” the girl
asked.
“No. It is not important.
I will come back.” Descending the steps
he walked slowly in the direction of the apartment
building, two doors away.
Entering, he made his way to Mrs.
Morton’s apartment. The place was just
as they had left it, two days before. The windows
had all been tightly closed and fastened, and there
were no further mysterious messages lying about.
Once more Duvall went to Ruth Morton’s room,
and opening the two windows looked out.
His investigations, however, told
him no more than he had learned before. The three
dormer windows in the home next door gazed vacantly
down at him, their windows covered with cobwebs and
dust. The impossibility of anyone making their
way from even the nearest of them, to the window where
he stood, was manifest. And that a long rod or
pole could have been utilized to introduce the letters
into the girl’s room was even more impossible.
He shook his head, then turned to the other window,
that facing upon the fire escape.
Here, as on the occasion of his previous
examination, the smooth glossy surface of the freshly
dried paint showed no marks, except those he had himself
made during his former visit. And yet, as his
eyes searched the grated surface, he saw that there
was something there, something that had not been there
before. He reached out and picked it up.
It was a woman’s handkerchief,
a tiny square of lace-edged linen, of an inexpensive
variety. But it was not the mere presence of the
handkerchief that so interested him. It might
readily have belonged to Miss Morton herself, and
have been accidentally dropped from the window.
There were two things about this particular handkerchief,
however, that marked it as a clue of the utmost value.
One was the fact that in its corner was embroidered
an initial, the letter “F.” The other
was that two of the corners of the handkerchief were
knotted together, as though it had been tied about
someone’s wrist, for what reason, he could not
imagine.
The latter feature puzzled the detective
greatly. He could not form any hypothesis to
account for it. If the Ford woman, as indicated
by the presence of the handkerchief, marked with an
“F,” had been on the fire-escape, why
were there no tell-tale marks to indicate it?
And if she had not been there, why was her handkerchief
found there, knotted in this peculiar way? Had
it formed part of some apparatus, some device, made
of a pole and a cord, for inserting the threatening
letters through the window? If so, it might,
of course, have become detached while the device was
being used. Duvall remembered that he had not
examined the fire escape on the night when the astonishing
apparition had appeared beside Ruth Morton’s
bed, because the window opening on the fire escape
had been closed and locked. Had the handkerchief
been left there then? He sat for a long time
in the deserted library, trying to hit upon some reasonable
theory to explain the matter, but his efforts resulted
in failure. Not the least confusing feature of
the affair was the fact that the woman, Marcia Ford,
was not the woman he was seeking. He had
seen her at the studio that morning, and knew that
she was not the one who had escaped from the cab the
night before. Were there then two working together?
If so, he would, through the Ford girl, in all probability
be able to trace her confederate. He waited patiently
until the waning afternoon light told him that it
was time to begin his watch before the house at number
162.
Across the street a residence, closed
for the summer, its front entrance boarded up, afforded
him a convenient place to wait. He sat down upon
the steps, and pretended to be occupied with a newspaper.
His eyes, however, sought constantly the doorway opposite.
A number of persons entered the place,
during the next two hours, but Marcia Ford was not
amongst them. As the darkness began to approach,
and lights in the streets and houses flared up, Duvall
rose, crossed the street, and stationed himself at
a nearer point, from which he might the more certainly
identify anyone entering the house. Miss Ford,
however, failed to appear.
From the sign in the window, to the
effect that roomers were wanted, Duvall concluded
that the Ford girl did not take her meals in the house.
His watch showed him that it was nearly seven.
Doubtless she had arranged to dine before returning
home. In a flash it came to him that his opportunity
to make an examination of her room was now at hand.
To secure entrance to the room by
the usual channels was clearly out of the question.
The people at the boarding house would, of course,
not permit it. But could he discover the means
of communication, whatever they were, between Miss
Morton’s apartment and the girl’s room,
he might be able to enter the latter unknown and unobserved.
He had thought of attempting this during the afternoon,
but realized that he could not hope to accomplish
it, in broad daylight, without being seen by the occupants
of the neighboring buildings, and perhaps arrested
as a burglar or sneak thief.
With a last glance down the street,
he hastened back to the apartment building and made
his way to Mrs. Morton’s flat. Passing quickly
through Ruth Morton’s bedroom, he climbed out
upon the fire escape and looked about.
Below him were the rear yards of the
houses fronting on the next street. To the right
he could see the bulk of the apartment building, blocking
his view of the avenue beyond. To the left were
the rear buildings of the adjoining houses. It
was quite dark, the sky was starless, but all about
him gleamed the lights in the windows of the neighboring
buildings.
Neither to the right, nor to the left
was there any possible way by which access to the
point where he now stood could be gained. From
below, it was possible, although his previous examination
had showed him both the fact that the newly painted
surface of the fire escape was unmarred, and that
the ladder at the lower floor was drawn up some nine
or ten feet from the ground. He felt certain that
Miss Ford had not reached Ruth’s room in that
way.
He glanced upward. The fire escaped
stopped at the level of the floor above. To ascend
from it to the roof was impossible.
Remembering that the top apartment
was vacant, Duvall re-entered the building and hunting
up the janitor, told him that he desired to get out
on the roof.
The man remembered him, from his first
visit, and the inquiries he had then made about the
tenants of the apartment above.
“I am making some special inquiries
on Mrs. Morton’s behalf,” he explained.
“You can go with me, if you like, to see that
I do nothing I shouldn’t.”
The janitor joined in his laugh.
“I’m not worrying,”
he rejoined, “but I’ll go along, just the
same, to show you the way.” He led the
detective up one flight of stairs and, going to the
end of the outer hall, unlocked and opened a small
door beside the elevator shaft. A short spiral
staircase was disclosed.
Snapping on an electric light, the
man ascended the steps, and, after fumbling for a
moment with the catch, threw open a trapdoor leading
to the roof. In a moment both he and Duvall had
climbed out upon the tiled surface. Duvall went
to the edge which overlooked the house adjoining,
and peered down. He at once saw something that
interested him.
The house with the dormer windows
consisted, as has been previously mentioned, of four
stories and an attic. Its roof rose several feet
above the level of the window of Ruth’s room,
which was on the fourth floor of the apartment building.
But Duvall saw at once that this elevation of the
adjoining house did not extend all the way back, but,
in fact, stopped a little beyond the point where it
joined the apartment. From here to the rear of
the lot the building had no attic, its rear extension
being but four stories high. In this position
on the apartment-house roof, the roof of the back
building was at least fifteen feet below him.
Another thing that he noticed at once
was the fact that the second house, N, was of
almost the same design as the first, that is, it consisted
of a main building with an attic, and a rear extension,
reaching to the same level as that of the house between.
It was clear that if anyone living in the second house
could obtain access to the roof of the back building,
he would be able to walk across that of the first
or adjoining house, and reach a point directly beneath
where he stood.
But, granting the possibility of this,
of what use would it be? A person on the roof
below him would in no conceivable way be able to reach
either of the windows of Ruth Morton’s room.
Was it possible that an opening had been made through
the wall of the apartment building itself? He
thought it unlikely, but determined to investigate.
“I must get down on that roof
below,” he informed his companion. The
janitor grinned.
“How are you going to do it?” he asked.
“Haven’t you a ladder a rope?”
The man thought a moment.
“I’ve got a short ladder
in the cellar, only about eight feet long, I guess.
I’m afraid it would not do.”
“Yes it would,” replied
Duvall, pointing to the roof of the attic portion
of the house below. “I’ll get down
to the roof of the main part of the house first, and
from there to the roof of the back building. An
eight-foot ladder will be long enough for that.
Bring it up, will you?”
The man hesitated.
“I don’t just like this idea of going
on other people’s roofs,” he said.
“You don’t need to go.
I’ve got to. I’m a detective, and
I’m working for Mrs. Morton on a most important
case.” As he spoke, he took a bill from
his pocket and pressed it into the man’s hand.
The janitor responded at once.
“I’ll fetch it up, sir,” he said.
“Wait for me here.”
Duvall occupied the few moments consumed
by the janitor’s absence in examining, by means
of his pocket electric torch, the surface of the roof
on which he stood. The smooth flat terra
cotta tiles showed no distinguishing marks. Here
and there spots of paint, marred by footprints, indicated
where the painters at work on the building had set
their buckets, no doubt while painting the wooden portions
of the trapdoor, and the metal chimney-pots on the
roof.
The man returned in a few moments
with the ladder, and Duvall, lowering it to the level
of the main portion of the adjoining house, saw that
it was of sufficient length to permit his descent.
In a moment he had slipped off his shoes, and was
cautiously descending the ladder.
Once on the surface of the main roof
of the house, he had intended to take down the ladder
and, by means of it, descend the remaining six or
seven feet to the roof of the back building, but he
found that means for this descent already existed.
A rough but permanent wooden ladder led from the higher
level to the lower. Duvall judged that it had
been placed there to provide easy communication between
the upper roof and the lower. Leaving the ladder
where it stood, he made his way down to the roof of
the back building. It was covered with tin, and
he walked softly in his stockinged feet to avoid being
overheard.
His first act was to go to the wall
of the apartment house which faced him, and make a
thorough examination of it by the light of his electric
torch. He judged that in the position in which
he now stood he was about on a level with the floor
of Ruth’s room. The brick wall of the apartment
building facing him was blank, that is, it contained
no windows. After a minute examination, Duvall
was forced to the conclusion that no entrance to the
girl’s bedroom had been made through it.
The bricks were solid, immovable, the cemented joints
firm and unbroken. A moment later he turned to
the left.
Here the rising wall of the attic
story of the house faced him, reaching to a point
above his head. Two dusty and long unopened dormer
windows, similar to those facing on the court, confronted
him. He remembered that the servant of the house
next door had informed him, earlier in the week, that
the attic was, and long had been, unoccupied.
Whether the attic was tenanted or
not, however, had no bearing on the problem which
confronted him. The windows might serve as a means
whereby anyone could reach the roof of the back building
from the house proper, but they did not suggest any
means whereby anyone might reach the windows of Ruth’s
bedroom. And by ascending to the point on the
attic roof where his ladder stood, the problem was
no nearer a solution, for a person standing there
was on the edge of the court between the buildings,
seven feet or more above the girl’s bedroom window,
and as many away from it. He turned away, and
approaching the rear edge of the back building, looked
over.
To his left, some eight feet away,
was the fire escape before the rear window of the
girl’s bedroom. Standing on that sharp edge,
he realized that in no way could he reach the railing
of the fire escape, except by jumping, a feat that
an expert gymnast might have hesitated to attempt,
at that height above the ground. And could it
be done successfully, what about the crash, the noise
which must inevitably result from such a performance?
What about the damage to the paint upon the fire escape’s
iron surface? And yet it would seem that a young
girl had accomplished this feat, without noise, without
making the least mark to register her passage.
He thought of the tell-tale handkerchief, which he
had found on the fire escape earlier in the evening,
then turned back with a feeling of annoyance.
The thing was, he realized, an impossibility.
A sudden sense of the passage of time
made him hurry to the roof of the rear building of
the house at N. Like its neighbor, it was
built with an attic story, and in the rear were two
dormer windows opening in the same way upon the lower
roof. Could these windows, by any chance, be
those of the room of Marcia Ford? It seemed highly
probable, since, if she had operated from the roof,
they could afford an easy way to reach it. Very
cautiously he crept up to the nearer of the two windows
and looked in.
The room before him was in total darkness,
and the very faint radiance from without was not sufficient
to enable him to distinguish anything within it.
The window, however, he saw to his delight was open,
and the opening, although small, was quite large enough
to enable him to crawl in. Holding his electric
torch in one hand, he crept into the room.
The beam of light from his torch,
although powerful, was, of course, very concentrated.
He swept it about the room, to make sure that it was
unoccupied. It was a small room, long and narrow,
with the single dormer window, by which he had just
entered, at one end, and a similar one at the side,
in the slanting mansard roof. It contained a small
bed, a chiffonier and dresser, a table, some chairs
and a trunk. It was a woman’s room; one
glance at the dresser told him that, and a handkerchief
lying crumpled on the latter’s top proved to
be identical with the one he had found on the fire
escape, both in its general character, and in the
initial “F” in one of its borders.
Beyond any doubt, he was now in Marcia Ford’s
room.
Had he been inclined to doubt it,
two photographs upon the wall would have convinced
him. One was a picture of the Ford girl herself.
The other was a portrait of the woman of the cab,
the one that Duvall fully believed to be the author
of the attacks upon Ruth Morton.
He examined the various articles about
the room with the utmost care, but nothing of any
interest rewarded his search. It had been his
hope that he might find something of definite value the
typewriter, perhaps, upon which the threatening letters
had been written, the black sealing wax, used in making
the death’s-head seals, the paper employed by
the writer. None of these things was in evidence;
there was no typewriter, the table contained a small
bottle of ink, a couple of pens, and some cheap envelopes
and a writing tablet of linen paper quite different
from that upon which the warning letters had been
written. There was nothing, absolutely nothing,
in the place to connect its occupant with the sending
of the letters, except the room’s location, in
such close proximity to that of Ruth Morton, and the
photograph of the woman of the cab, hanging upon the
wall.
Duvall, greatly disappointed, was
about to take his departure, when he observed at the
far end of the room a door. Whether it led to
another room, or to a bathroom, or merely to a closet,
he did not, of course, know. There was danger,
he fully realized, that Marcia Ford might return at
any moment. There was equal danger that, upon
opening the door, he might find himself in another
room, possibly an occupied one. He thought at
one time that he heard sounds on the far side of the
door, but when he paused and stood listening he could
distinguish nothing, and concluded that he had been
mistaken. Shutting off the light of his pocket
torch for the moment, in order that, should the entrance
lead to another room, its rays might not betray his
presence, Duvall grabbed the door knob, and, turning
it softly, opened the door.
For a moment he had a glimpse of a
black cavern, and then, with incredible swiftness,
something struck him a heavy blow in the face.
What it was he was too much surprised and stunned to
realize. His electric lamp fell from his hand,
and clattered to the floor.
Realizing his helplessness in the
almost total darkness, he bent down, groping about
in an unsuccessful effort to recover the searchlight.
And then, with a loud cry, a heavy body projected
itself upon him, grasping wildly at his hair.
An arm, clothed in some silken material, encircled
his throat. He felt himself choking. And
at the same moment a strange and irrational terror
seized him. He seemed in the grasp of something
uncanny, something inhuman, in spite of its very human
cries. With a shudder he sprang to his feet,
unable to locate the missing electric torch, and shaking
the shrieking figure from him, plunged toward the
window by which he had entered. It was not alone
the surprise, the nameless terror of the thing, that
sent Duvall headlong from the room. He fully
realized that the noise of the encounter, the shrieks
of his assailant, would quickly bring the other inmates
of the house to the room. He had no wish to be
discovered there his entrance had been too
irregular, too illegal, for that. With extraordinary
rapidity he flung himself through the window and without
waiting to observe the results of his intrusion, sped
swiftly across the roofs of the two buildings, up
the steps to the attic roof, and from there, by means
of the ladder, to the roof of the apartment building.
The janitor sat where he had left him, smoking a pipe.
Duvall looked back. Lights were visible in the
room he had just left. He saw a figure, one that
closely resembled Marcia Ford, cross the lighted area
of the window. There was a second figure with
her smaller, shorter, he thought. Who what
was it that had attacked him? He stood in a daze,
unable to grasp the meaning of the experience through
which he had just passed.
The janitor took his pipe from his mouth and rose.
“Find what you were looking
for?” he asked with a grin. Duvall shook
his head.
“No,” he said. “Not exactly.
But I’m on the track of it.”
“Want the ladder any more?”
“No, not to-night.” He assisted the
man to draw it up to the roof.
A few moments later he had reached
the sidewalk. He glanced at his watch. It
was just eight o’clock. As he walked toward
the entrance of the house at N, the front door
opened, and a woman came out.
Duvall quickened his pace, but the
woman was also apparently in a great hurry. She
ran swiftly across the sidewalk, and sprang into a
cab which stood beside the curb. Duvall was able
to get but a fleeting glance at her, but that glance
was enough to convince him that she was the mysterious
prisoner who had so neatly given him the slip while
in the cab the night before. He sprang forward
with a cry, but before he had come within ten feet
of the cab, the vehicle dashed off and proceeded at
a rapid rate up the street.
A second cab came along at almost
the same moment. Duvall hailed it, but the driver
shook his head, indicating that he had a fare.
In a moment the second cab had passed, apparently
in hot pursuit of the first. There were no other
cabs in sight. With a growl of anger and annoyance
Duvall turned back to the door of N.
Should he ring the bell and ask for
Miss Ford? he wondered. Of what use would it
be, to request an interview? Yet there seemed
to be nothing else that he could do. Miss Ford
had not left the house, although the other woman,
apparently her confederate, had done so. He stood
in the shadow of the apartment building, trying to
decide what move he should make next.