Waiting in anticipation of hearing
good news, Sidney Prale paced the floor of the living
room of his hotel suite until noon the following day,
expecting Jim Farland to put in an appearance at any
time and make his report.
Murk, having done all the work that
there was to do, spent the most of his time looking
from the window at the busy, fashionable avenue, and
glancing now and then at Prale as if wishing to anticipate
his wishes and save him the trouble of voicing them.
Prale had luncheon served in the suite,
and then he stepped to the telephone and called Jim
Farland’s office. Farland’s stenographer
informed him that the detective had not been there
during the morning, though there was some business
that needed his attention.
Then Prale got Farland’s residence
on the telephone, and the detective’s wife answered
the call. Prale gave his name, and asked where
Jim could be found.
“That is more than I can tell,
Mr. Prale,” Mrs. Farland said. “He
got a telephone call last evening, and from what I
overheard I think he went some place to meet a man.
He left soon after he received the call, and I have
not heard from him since. That is peculiar, too.
When he is obliged to remain away, he generally finds
time to telephone and let me know.”
This conversation bothered Sidney
Prale, but he tried to tell himself that Farland was
following a hot trail, and that perhaps it had led
him some distance away, or that he was in a locality
where he did not care to telephone.
He did not want to miss Farland if
he did call, and so he remained at the hotel during
the afternoon and kept Murk there also.
“I have a hunch that something
is going to happen soon,” Prale said to his
valet.
“A little action wouldn’t
make me mad any!” Murk declared. “I’m
spoilin’ to mix with the enemy, Mr. Prale.
Most of all, I’d like to meet up with them two
thugs that got gay with us. You’re sure
about that Jim Farland, boss?”
“I’ve told you a hundred
times, Murk, that Jim Farland is my friend and as
square a man as you can find anywhere. He has
not deserted us, if that is the thought in your head.”
“I’m beginnin’ to
like him a bit myself,” said Murk. “Ain’t
you got any idea, boss, who’s engineerin’
this deal against you?”
“Once more, Murk, old boy, allow
me to state that I haven’t the faintest idea
who my enemies are, or why they are trying so hard
to make life miserable for me. If I knew where
to start to round them up, I wouldn’t be standing
in this room talking to you I’d be
out rounding them up!”
“Well, if you ask me, I think
it’s about time that Farland settled that murder
case,” Murk said. “If he don’t
get busy pretty quick, I’ll tackle it myself.
I’ve got an idea ”
The ringing of the telephone bell
cut his sentence off. Sidney Prale was near the
instrument, and he answered the call.
“Mr. Prale?” asked a man’s voice.
“Talking.”
“I just wanted to inform you
that you needn’t depend on Detective Jim Farland
any more. We’ve got him and we’ll
get anybody else you engage. And we’ll
get you, too, Mr. Prale, before very long. Don’t
think we’ll not!”
The man at the other end of the wire
hung up his receiver. Prale paced the floor and
told Murk of the conversation.
“They’ve got Farland!”
Prale exclaimed. “They probably got him
last night, decoyed him in some way. Well, Murk,
if that is the truth, and I imagine that it is, we’ll
have to do our sleuthing ourselves.”
“Suits me!” Murk said.
“I’m ready to start out right now and sleuth
until it’s settled. Let’s get in action,
boss!”
“We are in the same old quandary,
Murk. We don’t know where to start,”
Sidney Prale said. “If our foes would come
out in the open, instead of fighting from the dark,
we might have a chance. This is some city, Murk,
and there are several million persons in it and around
it. Starting right in such a maze isn’t
the easiest thing in the world, you know.”
For the second time that afternoon,
Murk was interrupted by the ringing of the telephone
bell, and once more Sidney Prale happened to be near
and answered the call.
“Send them up at once!” Murk heard him
say.
And then Sidney Prale hung up the
receiver and whirled around with a puzzled expression
on his face.
“Murk,” he said, “Miss
Kate Gilbert is coming up here with that big maid
of hers coming to see me. What she
wants is more than I can guess, remembering what happened
the last time I talked with her. It may be good
news, Murk!”
They waited impatiently for the ring
at the door. Murk opened it and ushered them
in.
He grinned at the gigantic Marie,
but she did not return the compliment. There
was a serious expression in her face, and Murk looked
past her at Kate Gilbert, who was being greeted by
Sidney Prale.
Something important had happened,
Murk told himself immediately. Kate Gilbert did
not look frightened exactly or sorrowful or triumphant.
There was a peculiar expression about her mouth, and
her face seemed pale.
“I felt that I had to come,
Mr. Prale, and have this talk with you,” Kate
Gilbert said, when she was seated near the window.
“I wanted to speak to you here instead of in
some public place, and so I brought Marie and came
to your suite.”
“You are welcome, Miss Gilbert,
I am sure,” Prale said. “If you wish
to speak in private, Marie and Murk can step into
the adjoining room.”
“Please,” she said softly.
Murk opened the door, and the maid
stepped in. Then he followed and closed the door
again. Prale sat down near Kate Gilbert and turned
toward her.
“Now, Miss Gilbert,” he prompted.
She met his eyes squarely as she spoke,
but her lips trembled at times as if she were undergoing
an ordeal.
“Mr. Prale,” she said,
“as you know, I have been associated with others
in an attempt to bring retribution home to you.
When I became associated with them, it was understood
between us that there was to be no violence, nothing
outside the law. We were simply to attack you
from every angle, cause you trouble and annoyance,
take away your money if we could, break you in every
way.”
“Pardon me, but ”
“Please say nothing until I
am finished, Mr. Prale. We began at once to gather
all the information we could about you and your affairs.
We began to plan for your downfall. We found
that we could do nothing that amounted to anything
while you were in Honduras, where you were a powerful
man. But we were about to try, even there, when
we learned that you were selling out your properties
and preparing to return to New York.
“You may know how that struck
us. You had gone away and made your fortune,
and you were coming home, possibly with the hope that
the past had been forgotten. We intended showing
you that it had not been forgotten, that you could
not return and enjoy the fortune whose foundation
was But enough of that!
“I had been in Honduras spying
upon you. I was sent because you did not know
me, and would not be on guard, as you might have been,
had some man gone down there. We did not care
to send an ordinary detective, of course. I kept
the people here informed of all your movements.
I began the punishment by leaving that note in your
stateroom and pasting the other on your suit case,
began it by reminding you that the past lived in the
minds of some persons.
“You know the rest. We
began our work. We caused you annoyance from the
first, with the banker, the hotel manager, and all
that. Before we could do any more, you were accused
of murder. That pleased us, of course. We
did not believe you guilty, but we were glad to see
that you were being caused some trouble, that your
name was being stained. Some of us even began
to think that the law of retribution was at work itself,
without our poor help.
“We went ahead with our plans,
however. You engaged a prominent attorney, and
finally we induced him to leave you. But some
who were handling the affair went too far. You
were assaulted in Central Park. Your valet was
knocked on the head and kidnaped, and an attempt made
to get him to take payment and spy upon you.
At that time I told a certain man who had the handling
of the affair that there could be no more violence.
“We should not break a law to
undo you, I declared. If we did that, we were
as bad as you. I said that, if there was any more
violence, I should cease having anything to do with
the affair, and would come to you and tell you so.
An hour ago, I found out that Detective Farland, a
man in your employ, had been seized and treated with
violence and was being held prisoner because he insisted
upon remaining loyal to you. So I am here!”
“This is amazing, Miss Gilbert!”
Sidney Prale told her. “The whole thing
has been amazing. Somebody has tried to connect
me with that murder. Somebody tried to smash
my alibi. The little annoyances were bad enough,
and the knowledge that I had unknown foes who fought
in the dark; but the murder charge was the worst of
all, for it placed me in a position where I had to
clear myself absolutely or remain forever suspected
by many persons.”
“I understand that,” Kate Gilbert said.
“And now you have come to me
to say that you are no longer associated with my enemies?”
“For what you did, there can
be no forgiveness, Mr. Prale. I want to see you
punished. But I will not be a party to violence.
It seems to me that the man who has been managing
this affair has gone beyond proper bounds. For
some reason, he is particularly vindictive, though
he did not suffer at all, as did some of the others.
I cannot forgive you for what you did, Sidney Prale.
But I can wash my hands of the entire affair and try
to forget you entirely and hope that there is a law
of retribution that will take vengeance for me.
That is all, Mr. Prale. Only please remember
that, from this hour, I am not concerned with the others
in this affair.”
She started to rise, but Prale motioned
for her to retain her seat. He bent forward and
looked at her searchingly.
“I am very glad that you have
come here and spoken to me in this way, Miss Gilbert,”
he said. “I scarcely know how to express
what I feel that I must tell you. I have listened
to you patiently, without interruption. Will
you be kind enough to listen to me for a moment now?”
“I’ll listen, though it will be useless,”
she said.
“When I left Honduras, Miss
Gilbert, I was a happy man. I had made my pile
and was coming home. I had left ten years before
because a selfish woman, whom I imagined I loved,
jilted me for a wealthier man. That wound had
healed, and when I left Honduras, I did not think that
I had an enemy in the world, unless it was some poor
devil of a disgruntled native workman I had been forced
to discharge, or somebody like that.
“I believed those notes on the
ship to be in the nature of a jest, or else that somebody
was making a mistake. Then troubles began, and
I was at a loss to understand them. Next came
the murder charge! We will put that aside for
the moment, for it seems to be the result of circumstantial
evidence and probably has nothing to do with the other
affair merely a coincidence.
“Miss Gilbert, look at me!
I want you to believe what I am going to say.
You must believe it! In the name of everything
I hold sacred, I swear to you that I do not know these
foes of mine, or the reason for their enmity!”
“How can I believe that?”
she cried. “Why should you ask me to believe
such a statement?”
“Because I want some light on
this subject, Miss Gilbert, and I am determined to
get it. There is some terrible mistake. I
am being punished for the fault of some other person.”
“Can you not remember back ten years?”
she asked.
“Easily. I can live over
again the last day I spent in New York ten years ago.”
“And the few days before that time?”
“Certainly, Miss Gilbert.”
“And yet you ask why others
should seek to punish you? Perhaps you are one
of those men whose natures are so dishonorable that
you think you did nothing wrong at that time.”
“So it was then that I was supposed
to have done this terrible thing whatever
it was?”
“As you know, Mr. Prale.”
“But I do not know, Miss Gilbert.
To the best of my recollection I left New York without
having done anything in the least dishonorable; and
certainly I did nothing to merit a band of enemies
working against me.”
“What is it that you wish me to do?” she
asked.
“Be fair with me, Miss Gilbert.
I tell you that there is some terrible mistake!
If I am supposed to know all about this, what harm
can there be in your repeating the details to me?
Tell me what crime I am supposed to have committed
to merit this attack. Give me a chance to prove
my innocence! The common thug gets that chance
in a court of law, you know.”
“But this is ridiculous!”
she exclaimed. “There can be no question
of it! The whole thing came out at the time.”
“Then you do not wish to be fair?” Prale
asked.
“I cannot allow you to say that.
I will tell the story to you, Mr. Prale, tell exactly
what you did as you know very well if
that will be any satisfaction to you. But it
will do you no good to deny it!”
“Tell me!” Sidney Prale said.