Grace Duvall, on being left at the
hotel by her husband, spent a long and very tiresome
afternoon. She had expected Richard back long
before, with news, perhaps, of a successful investigation
of the woman, Marcia Ford, whose address was so near
that of the Mortons. But when six o’clock
came, and went, with no news of her husband, Grace
came to the conclusion that he had probably struck
a long trail, and being a normally healthy person,
with an excellent appetite, she went to the dining
room and ordered dinner, leaving word at the desk where
she would be, in case Richard returned.
Her lonely meal was over by seven,
and, not knowing what to do next, Grace went out on
the sidewalk, with the intention of looking for her
friend of the evening before, the taxicab driver, Leary.
It was possible that the man might have something
more to report. As she reached the door, she
saw him descend from his cab. He came forward
at once, tipping his cap.
“Taxi, ma’am,” he asked.
“No, I don’t think so, Leary. Anything
new?”
“Not a thing, ma’am.
Haven’t seen that party since. Can’t
I take you for a drive, ma’am?”
Grace was on the point of refusing,
when a sudden idea came to her. She hastily opened
her pocketbook, tore out the pieces of the visiting
card that Duvall had left upon the table, and fitted
them together.
“Drive me to 162 th Street,”
she directed, and stepped into the cab.
Leary touched his cap, and in a few
moments they were speeding up the Avenue.
“Don’t go right up to
the address,” Grace told him through the speaking
tube. “Stop a little below, but in a place
where I can see the door.”
The man nodded, and a little later
they turned into 57th Street and drew up alongside
the curb.
“Do you think you would recognize
the woman who gave you the card, last night?”
Grace asked.
“Yes, ma’am. I think I should, ma’am.”
“Very well. Watch the doorway
of number 162. If she goes in let me know.
If she comes out, follow her. I shall probably
recognize her myself, if she is the woman I think.
I saw her for a few moments at the Grand Theater last
night. But she may not be the same one. We’ll
know that later.”
Leary nodded, and they began a long
wait. After what seemed to Grace an interminable
time, they saw a taxicab come rapidly down the street,
execute a turn, and draw up before the door of number
162.
Grace, as soon as she realized the
cab’s destination, sprang to the sidewalk and
strolled carelessly along in the direction of the house.
The cab came to a standstill just before she reached
it, and two women got out. One of them Grace
had never seen before. The other she recognized
at once. It was the woman who had fainted in the
theater the previous night.
Neither of the women paid any attention
to her, but directing the cabman to wait, passed quickly
into the house.
Grace went back to her cab and got in.
“The woman I am looking for
has just driven up in that cab,” she said.
“She has gone into the house. The cab is
to wait. When she comes out again, follow her.”
Leary nodded, and the two of them settled down for
what they supposed would be a long wait. To their
surprise, scarcely ten minutes had passed before the
door of N was suddenly opened, and the woman
whom Grace had recognized dashed down the steps and
sprang into the waiting cab. At almost the same
moment Grace saw her husband start forward from the
direction of the apartment building, as though in
pursuit of her.
There was no time, however, to wait
for him. The cab ahead had already started off,
and Leary, true to his instructions, was speeding after
it. In a moment both vehicles had turned into
Seventh Avenue and were driving rapidly uptown.
As minute after minute sped by, Grace
began to realize that the chase might prove a long
one. They had already crossed to Central Park
West, and were now speeding northward again in the
neighborhood of 72nd Street. Then, to Grace’s
surprise, the cab ahead swerved into a side street,
and drew up before the entrance of the hotel at which
Ruth Morton and her mother were stopping. The
cab had no sooner stopped than the woman sprang out
and entered the lobby.
Grace followed her without a moment’s
hesitation, ordering Leary to wait. The woman
hurried up to the desk and, taking a blank card from
it, scribbled a few words upon it in pencil, and handed
it to the clerk. Grace was unable to hear what
she said to him, but the man nodded, and handed the
card to a bellboy. The woman sat down in a nearby
chair.
Grace, having nothing else to do,
and being somewhat afraid that the woman might recognize
her, crossed at once to the opposite side of the lobby
and, going to the news stand, spent some time in selecting
and purchasing a magazine. She stood with her
back to the woman, screened by a large palm, but at
the same time managed to keep a fairly close watch
upon her.
It was several minutes before anything
happened. Then an elderly lady emerged from one
of the elevators, and under the guidance of a bellboy
approached the woman Grace had been following.
Grace did not remember having ever seen the older
woman before, but she had a distinct impression that
it might be Mrs. Morton. She strolled over to
the desk, and addressed the clerk in a low voice.
“Is that Mrs. Morton the
elderly lady in black?” she asked. The clerk
stared at her, but his reserve melted before her charming
smile.
“No, Miss,” he said. “That
is Mrs. Bradley.”
“Thank you.” Grace gave a sigh of
relief, and turned away.
Looking once more toward the two women,
she saw that the older one was addressing her companion
with something of reserve, as though she had never
met her before. The younger woman spoke quickly,
smilingly, for a few moments, shook hands with her
companion, and turned away. Grace saw that she
was about to leave, and at once followed her, although
at a little distance, so as not to excite her suspicions.
When she reached the sidewalk the other woman had
already entered her cab, and seemed about to drive
off.
The cab, however, merely moved to
a position a little further down the street, and by
the time Grace had entered her own vehicle the other
had again become stationary.
This maneuver struck Grace as extremely
peculiar. She told Leary to remain where he was,
and with some misgivings, awaited the woman’s
next move.
After a time she saw Mrs. Bradley,
who had gone toward the elevators as Grace left the
lobby, come out, signal for a taxicab, and drive quickly
off. Leary was obliged to draw up with his machine,
in order to leave a clear space before the door.
A few seconds later Grace saw the
woman she had been following spring from her cab,
come rapidly along the sidewalk, and once more enter
the lobby. Grace again followed her, just in
time to see that instead of applying at the desk,
as before, she went directly to one of the elevators,
entered, and was whisked out of sight.
Grace’s heart almost stood still
with fear. She had not appreciated the meaning
of the woman’s actions before. Now they
were only too clear. She had evidently gotten
Mrs. Morton, whom Grace suddenly remembered had been
registered under an assumed name, out of the way on
some pretext or other, and had gone to Ruth’s
room, with the intention, no doubt, of carrying out
her previous threats. The situation was frightful.
It would admit of no delay. Grace dashed to the
desk and began to speak rapidly, in a frightened voice,
to the clerk.
“That woman” she
exclaimed “the one who just went up
in the elevator she is going to Miss Ruth
Morton’s room you must stop her there
is no telling what she may not do send up,
quick quick! Miss Morton is in the
greatest danger.”
The clerk looked at her, his mouth
half open with surprise.
“I what do you mean,
Miss? I don’t understand you. We have
no Miss Morton here.” He regarded Grace
apprehensively, and out of the corner of his eye looked
toward the cashier, as though he contemplated calling
on him for assistance in case this apparently mad
woman became violent.
Grace gave a groan of despair.
“The daughter of the elderly
lady, about whom I asked you before. Her name
is Morton. Her daughter Ruth is staying here under
an assumed name Bradley, you say it is.
Oh please be quick. I know what I am
talking about. That woman who came here a while
ago is a dangerous character. She gave Mrs. Morton
some message or other to get her out of the way, and
as soon as she had gone came back into the hotel and
went upstairs in the elevator. Didn’t you
see her?”
“Yes, Miss, I saw her.
She was a friend of Mrs. Bradley’s, she said,
and I supposed Mrs. Bradley had told her to go upstairs.”
“I tell you, that woman who
just went upstairs means harm terrible
harm, to Miss Bradley Miss Morton.
Oh don’t stand there wasting time.
Come up with me at once, and you will see that I am
right ”
“But who are you,
Miss? What have you to do with the matter?”
“What difference does that make,
if what I say is true? If you must know, I am
a detective employed by Mrs. Morton ”
“Employed by Mrs. Morton!
And yet you didn’t know her when you saw her!
My dear woman, your story does not hang together ”
“It is my husband, Mr. Duvall,
who is employed by her. He was registered here
under the name of Bradley, too. I am trying to
help him.”
“Oh!” The clerk seemed
somewhat more inclined to accord her serious attention.
“Very well. I will go to the room with you,
and see if everything is all right.”
“And hurry, please hurry.”
Grace started toward the elevators.
Then a sudden thought came to her.
Suppose the woman was to make her escape, coming down
in one of the elevators, while she and the clerk were
going up in another. There had been ample time,
she knew, for her to have murdered Ruth, were that
her plan, and have already left the room.
“Wait just a moment,”
she cried to the clerk, who had said a few words to
one of his assistants and was leaving the desk to join
her. “I must speak to my cabman, but I’ll
be back in a moment.” She dashed through
the entrance doors and hurried to the point where Leary
sat at his steering wheel.
“Wait here,” she whispered
to him, “until I come back, unless the woman
we have been following comes out. If she does
come out, and drive away, follow her, and find out
where she goes. Then telephone me here. I
will leave my name at the desk, and wait until I hear
from you.”
Leary nodded, and Grace quickly re-entered
the lobby and joined the waiting clerk.
“Instruct your telephone operators,”
she said to him, “to let me know, in case anyone
calls up Mrs. Duvall.”
The clerk gave the necessary instructions,
and the two then entered one of the elevators and
quickly made their way to the seventh floor, upon
which Mrs. Morton’s apartment was located.
There was no one in the corridor when
they left the elevator, and the clerk, who knew the
location of the suite, hastened to it at once.
They reached the door. Grace
was conscious of a feeling of apprehension, a sense
of impending disaster. Her heart pounded violently
as she waited for the answer to the clerk’s
knocks. She waited in vain. Only silence,
grim, terrible, rewarded his efforts.
“Something has happened,”
Grace whispered, as the clerk again rapped upon the
door, this time more loudly than before.
Again there was no reply, no evidence
of the presence of anyone in the girl’s rooms.
“Open the door!” Grace
cried. “Something terrible must have occurred!”
The clerk took the pass key with which
he had provided himself, and inserted it in the lock.
A moment later the door swung open, and the two of
them entered the room.
It was in total darkness. Grace
clutched at her heart, fearing what she believed the
switching on of the lights would reveal. The clerk,
without loss of time, pressed the push button near
the door. The room was at once flooded with light.
Grace glanced about, then gave a momentary
sigh of relief. The room, the small parlor of
the suite, was quite vacant. At its further end
the door to Ruth Morton’s bedroom stood ajar.
With the clerk beside her, Grace hurriedly
crossed the room. With a prayer in her heart
she pushed open the bedroom door. Her companion
at the same moment felt along the door-jamb for the
electric switch. In an instant the bedroom lights
were turned on.
Then Grace saw that her fears had
been fully justified. On the floor, halfway between
the door and the bed, lay Ruth Morton, apparently
lifeless. Her face was the color of chalk, her
eyes were closed. With a cry, Grace fell on her
knees beside the unconscious girl and with trembling
fingers felt her heart. The clerk, a weak-faced
young man, stood gazing at the scene before him in
amazed horror.
“She isn’t dead!”
Grace exclaimed, turning an excited face to him.
“Her heart is still beating. Send for a
doctor, quick!” Then, taking the unconscious
girl in her arms, she lifted her to the bed.