When Orme was aroused by the ringing
of his telephone-bell the next morning and heard the
clerk’s voice, saying over the wire, “Eight
o’clock, sir,” it seemed as if he had been
asleep but a few minutes.
During breakfast he reviewed the events
of the preceding evening. Strange and varied
though they had been, his thoughts chiefly turned to
the girl herself, and he shaped all his plans with
the idea of pleasing her. The work he had set
for himself was to get the envelope and deliver it
to the girl. This plan involved the finding of
the man who had escaped from the tree.
The search was not so nearly blind
as it would have been if Orme had not found that folded
slip of paper in Maku’s pocket. The address,
“three forty-one North Parker Street,”
was unquestionably the destination at which Maku had
expected to meet friends.
To North Parker Street, then, Orme
prepared to go. Much as he longed to see the
girl again, he was glad that they were not to make
this adventure together, for the reputation of North
Parker Street was unsavory.
Orme found his way readily enough.
There was not far to go, and he preferred to walk.
But before he reached his destination he remembered
that he had promised Alcatrante and Poritol to meet
them at his apartment at ten o’clock.
His obligation to the two South Americans
seemed slight, now that the bill had passed from his
hands and that he knew the nature of Poritol’s
actions. Nevertheless, he was a man of his word,
and he hurried back to the Pere Marquette, for the
hour was close to ten. He was influenced to some
extent by the thought that Poritol and Alcatrante,
on learning how he had been robbed of the bill, might
unwittingly give him a further clue.
No one had called for him. He
waited till ten minutes past the hour, before he concluded
that he had fulfilled his part of the bargain with
them. Though he did not understand it, he attached
no especial significance to their failure to appear.
Once again he went to North Parker
Street. Three forty-one proved to be a notion
shop. Through the window he saw a stout woman
reading a newspaper behind the counter. When
he entered she laid the paper aside and arose languidly,
as though customers were rather a nuisance than a blessing.
She was forty, but not fair.
Orme asked to see a set of studs.
She drew a box from a show-case and spread the assortment
before him.
He selected a set and paid her, offering
a ten-dollar bill. She turned to a cash register
and made change which included a five-dollar
bill.
Orme could hardly believe his eyes.
The bill which she placed in his hand bore the written
words: “Remember Person you pay this to.”
He turned it over. In the corner
was a familiar set of abbreviations. There was
no doubt about it. The bill was the same which
had been taken from him, and which he had last seen
in the possession of Maku.
What an insistent piece of green paper
that marked bill was! It had started him on this
remarkable series of adventures. It had introduced
excitable little Poritol and the suave Alcatrante to
his apartment. It had made him the victim of
the attack by the two Japanese. It had brought
the girl into his life. And now it came again
into his possession just at the moment to prove that
he was on the right track in his search for Maku and
the man who had the papers. The queerest coincidence
was that the bill would never have come into his possession
at all, had it not been for his first meeting with
the girl who at that very time was herself
searching for it. The rubbing of his hat against
the wheel of her car on so little thing
as that had hinged the events that followed.
“This is strange,” Orme addressed the
woman.
“It doesn’t hurt it any,” said the
woman, indifferently.
“I know that. But it’s a curious
thing just the same.”
The woman raised her shoulders slightly,
and began to put away the stock she had taken out
for Orme’s benefit.
“Who paid this to you?” persisted Orme.
“How should I remember?
I can’t keep track of all the persons that come
in the store during the day.”
“But I should think that anything
so queer as this” He saw
that he could get nothing from her except by annoying
her.
The woman glared. “What
you a botherin’ about? Why don’t you
leave well enough alone?”
Orme smiled. “Tell me one
thing,” he said, “do you know a Japanese
that lives hereabouts?”
“Oh,” said the woman,
“so you’re one of the gentlemen he was
expectin’, eh? Well, it’s the front
flat, two flights up.”
“Thank you,” said Orme.
He walked out to the street, whence a backward glance
showed him the woman again concealed in her newspaper.
At one side of the shop he found the
entrance to a flight of stairs which led to the floors
above. In the little hallway, just before the
narrow ascent began, was a row of electric buttons
and names, and under each of them a mail-box. “3a”
had a card on which was printed:
“Arima, Teacher
of Original Kano Jiu-Jitsu.”
Should he go boldly up and present
himself as a prospective pupil? If Arima were
the one who had so effectively thrown him the night
before, he would certainly remember the man he had
thrown and would promptly be on his guard. Also,
the woman in the shop had said, “you are one
of the gentlemen he was expectin’.”
Others were coming.
Prudence suggested that he conceal
himself in an entry across the street and keep an
eye out for the persons who were coming to visit Arima.
He assumed that their coming had something to do with
the stolen paper. But he had no way of knowing
who the athlete’s guests would be. There
might be no one among them whom he could recognize.
And even if he saw them all go in, how would his own
purpose be served by merely watching them? In
time, no doubt, they would all come out again, and
one of them would have the papers in his possession,
and Orme would not know which one.
For all he was aware, some of the
guests had already arrived. They might even now
be gathering with eager eyes about the unfolded documents.
No, Orme realized that his place was not on the sidewalk.
By some means he must get where he could discover
what was going on in the front flat on the third floor.
Standing where he now was, there was momentary danger
of being discovered by persons who would guess why
he was there. Maku might come.
Orme looked to see who lived in “4a,”
the flat above the Japanese. The card bore the
name:
“Madame Alia, Clairvoyant
and Trance Medium.”
“I think I will have my fortune
told,” muttered Orme, as he pressed Madame Alia’s
bell and started up the stairs.
At the top of the second flight he
looked to the entrance of the front apartment.
It had a large square of ground glass, with the name
“Arima” in black letters. He continued
upward another flight and presently found himself
before two blank doors one at the front
and one a little at one side. The side door opened
slowly in response to his knock.
Before him stood a blowsy but not
altogether unprepossessing woman of middle years.
She wore a cheap print gown. A gipsy scarf was
thrown over her head and shoulders, and her ears held
loop earrings. Her inquiring glance at Orme was
not unmixed with suspicion.
“Madame Alia?” inquired Orme.
She nodded and stood aside for him
to enter. He passed into a cheap little reception-hall
which looked out on the street, and then, at her silent
direction went through a door at one side and found
himself in the medium’s sanctum.
The one window gave on a dimly lighted
narrow space which apparently had been cut in from
the back of the building. Through the dusty glass
he could see the railing of a fire-escape platform,
and cutting diagonally across the light, part of the
stairs that led to the platform above. There
was a closed door, which apparently opened into the
outer hall. In the room were dirty red hangings,
two chairs, a couch, and a small square center-table.
Madame Alia had already seated herself
at the table and was shuffling a pack of cards.
“Fifty-cent reading?” she asked, as he
took the chair opposite her.
Orme nodded. His thoughts were
on the window and the fire-escape, and he hardly heard
her monotonous sentences, though he obeyed mechanically
her instructions to cut and shuffle.
“You are about to engage in
a new business,” she was saying. “You
will be successful, but there will be some trouble
about a dark man. Look out for him. He
talks fair, but he means mischief. There
is a woman, too. This man will try to prejudice
her against you.” And all the time Orme
was saying to himself, “How can I persuade her
to let me use the fire-escape?”
Suddenly he was conscious that the
woman had ceased speaking and was running the cards
through her fingers and looking at him searchingly.
“You are not listening,” she said, as he
met her gaze.
He smiled apologetically. “I know I
was preoccupied.”
“I can’t help you if you don’t listen.”
Orme inferred that she took pride
in her work. He sighed and looked grave.
“I am afraid,” he said slowly, “that
my case is too serious for the cards.”
She brightened. “You’d ought to have
a trance-reading two dollars.”
“I’d take any kind of
reading that would help me, but I’m afraid the
situation is too difficult.”
“Then why did you come?” Again the look
of suspicion.
“I came because you could help me, but not by
a reading.”
“What do you mean?” Plainly
she was frightened. “I don’t put people
away. That’s out of my line. Honest!”
“Do I look as if I wanted anything crooked done?”
Orme smiled.
“It’s hard to tell what
folks want,” she muttered. “You’re
a fly-cop, aren’t you?”
“What makes you think that?”
“The way you been sizing things
up. You aren’t going to do anything, are
you? I pay regular for my protection every month five
dollars and I work hard to get it, too.”
Orme hesitated. He had known
at the outset that he was of a class different from
the ordinary run of her clients. The difference
undoubtedly had both puzzled and frightened her.
He might disabuse her of the notion that he had anything
to do with the police, but her misapprehension was
an advantage that he was loath to lose. Fearing
him, she might grant any favor.
“Now, listen to me,” he
said at last. “I don’t mean you any
harm, but I want you to answer a few questions.”
She eyed him furtively.
“Do you know the man in the flat below?”
he demanded.
“Mr. Arima? No. He’s
a Jap. I see him in the halls sometimes, but I
don’t do no more than bow, like any neighbor.”
“He’s noisy, isn’t he?”
“Only when he has pupils.
But he goes out to do most of his teaching. Is
he wanted?”
“Not exactly. Now look
here. I believe you’re a well-meaning woman.
Do you make a good thing out of this business?”
“Fair.” She smiled
faintly. “I ain’t been in Chicago
long, and it takes time to work up a good trade.
I got a daughter to bring up. She’s with
friends. She don’t know anything about what
I do for a living.”
“Well,” said Orme, “I’m
going to give you five dollars toward educating your
girl.”
He took a bill from his pocket-book
and handed it to her. She accepted it with a
deprecating glance and a smile that was tinged with
pathetic coquetry. Then she looked at it strangely.
“What’s the writing?” she asked.
Orme started. He had given her
the marked five-dollar bill. “I didn’t
mean to give you that one,” he said, taking it
from her fingers.
She stared at him. “Is it phony?”
“No but I want it.
Here’s another.” As he took a fresh
bill from his pocket-book he discovered to his surprise
that the marked bill, together with the few dollars
in change he had received after his purchase in the
shop below, was all that he now had left in his pocket.
He remembered that he had intended to draw on his
funds that morning. His departure from New York
had been hurried, and he had come away with little
ready cash.
Madame Alia slipped the bill into
her bosom and waited. She knew well enough that
her visitor had some demand to make.
“Now,” said Orme, “I
am going to use your fire-escape for a little while.”
The woman nodded.
“I want you to keep all visitors
out,” he continued. “Don’t answer
the bell. I may want to come back this way quick.”
“This is straight business,
isn’t it? I don’t want to get into
no trouble.”
“Absolutely straight,”
said Orme. “All you have to do is to leave
your window open and keep quiet.”
“You can count on me,”
she said. “Perhaps you know all about the
place down there, but if you don’t, I’ll
tell you that the fire-escape leads into his reception-room.”
Orme smiled. “You seem
to be acquainted with your neighbor, after all.”
“I’ve come up the stairs when his door
was open.”
“Does he seem to be pretty busy with his teaching?”
“Evenings, he is. And some
come in the afternoon. I always know, because
they thud on the floor so when they wrestle.”
“And mornings?”
“He generally seems to be away mornings.”
“I fancy he’s what you’d call a
noisy neighbor,” said Orme.
“Oh, I don’t mind.
There’s more or less noise up here sometimes.”
She smiled frankly. “Spirits can make a
lot of noise. I’ve known them to throw
tables over and drag chairs all around the room.”
“Well” Orme
was not interested in spirits “be
sure you don’t let anybody in here until I come
back.”
Again she nodded. Then she went
into the reception-hall and he heard her push the
bolt of the door. She did not return, but her
steps seemed to move into one of the other rooms.
Orme went to the window, pushed it
up, and climbed out on the fire-escape. He was
glad to see that the wall across the court was windowless.
He might be observed from the buildings that backed
up from the next street, but they apparently belonged
to a large storage loft or factory. There were
no idle folk at the windows.
The window of the room below was open.
This was in one sense an advantage and
Orme blessed the Japanese athletes for their insistence
on fresh air; but on the other hand, it made quietness
essential.
Slowly he let himself through the
opening in the platform and moved a few steps down
the ladder. Then he crouched and peered through
the dingy lace curtains that were swaying in the breeze.
The interior was dim, but Orme succeeded
in distinguishing the furniture. There were straw
mats on the floor and several chairs stood about.
At the opposite side of the room was a closed door.
From his knowledge of Madame Alia’s apartment,
Orme knew that this door opened into the hall of the
building, and the square of ground glass, with its
reversed letters of the athlete’s name, told
him that it was used as the chief entrance. Madame
Alia preferred her clients to enter into another room.
In the farther corner of the interior
Orme saw a large square table. It was covered
with a red print cloth, which hung over the edge, nearly
to the floor. If he could reach that table and
conceal himself beneath it, his position would be
better.
And now he suddenly remembered that
the outline of his head would be visible against the
outer light to anyone within. The room seemed
to be empty, but at that instant he heard
a door open. He drew his head up. Someone
was moving about the room.
The steps went here and there.
Chairs were shifted, to judge from the sound.
But evidently there was only one person, for Orme could
hear no voices. He decided that Arima was preparing
for visitors.
Again he heard a door open and close.
Had Arima gone out, or had some other person entered?
Orme waited a moment, listening; no sound came from
within. He lowered his head and peered. The
room was empty.
Arima might return at any moment,
but the chance had to be taken. Quickly, silently,
Orme descended to the platform, slid over the sill,
and tip-toed over to the table. Another instant
and he was under the cover.