He dreamed of her all night but
not as a sister it is to be feared. In his dream
she was running through the springtime woods with the
glorious hair flying, and he was running after her,
an endless race without his ever drawing nearer, while
the sun shone and the little young leaves twinkled
as if in laughter.
He was awake at six and sprang out
of bed to see what kind of day it was. The sun
was already high over the tops of the buildings to
the east, the sky was fleckless, and the empty Park
was beaming. His anxiety was relieved.
He dressed as slowly as possible in order to kill
time, taking care to make no sound that might awaken
Charley in the next room.
He was not prepared to make explanations just then.
Notwithstanding all his care he was
ready a whole hour too soon, an hour that promised
to be endless, for he was completely at a loss what
to do with himself; couldn’t apply his mind to
anything; couldn’t sit still. Finally
he stole down-stairs, sending his love silently through
her door as he passed, and started circumnavigating
the Park.
He was subconsciously aware of the
splendour of the morning, but saw little of what actually
met his eyes. He was too busy with the happenings
of the night before. A nasty little doubt tormented
him. He knew he was slightly insane; it was not
that; he gloried in his state and pitied the dull
clods who had not fire in their breasts to drive them
mad. But here was the rub; would not these same
clods have laughed at him had they known of the oath
he had taken would not he have laughed
himself yesterday?
It was carried on inside him like
an argument; on the one hand the enamoured young man
who insisted that the relationship between brother
and sister was a holy and beautiful one, on the other
hand the matter-of-fact one who said it was all damn
nonsense; that a man and woman, free, unattached and
not bound by the ties of consanguinity were not intended
to be brother and sister. Such arguments have
no end. The thought of Charley troubled him most;
he had always taken a slightly superior attitude towards
Charley’s sentimentality. What a chance
for Charley to get back at him if he learned of this!
At five minutes to eight, having looked
at his watch fifty times or so, he ventured back into
the house, and tapped at Corinna’s door.
“She’s bound to be late anyhow,”
he thought, “no harm to hurry her up a little.”
But no, she was hatted, gloved and
waiting just inside the door. This little fact
won his gratitude surprisingly; a man does not expect
it of a woman. In the sunlight they took in
each other anew. What Corinna thought did not
appear, but Evan was freshly delighted. She was
an out-of-doors girl it appeared; the morning became
her like a shining garment. He forgot the argument;
it was sufficient to be with her, to laugh with her,
to be ravished by the dusky, velvety tones of her voice.
Of the hours that followed it is unnecessary
to speak in detail. It was one long rhapsody,
and rhapsodies are apt to be a little tiresome
to those other than the rhapsodists. Everybody
has known such hours for themselves or
if they have not they are unfortunate. They
breakfasted frugally there is a delicious
intimacy in breakfast no other meal knows, and then
decided on Staten Island. Half an hour later
they were voyaging down the bay, and in an hour were
in the woods.
Corinna was inexorable on the question
of eleven o’clock, and to Evan it seemed as
if they had no sooner got there than they had to turn
back again. Evan got sore, and the pleasure
of the return journey was a little dimmed, though
there is a kind of sweetness in these little tiffs
too. Anybody seeing their eyes on each other,
Corinna’s as well as Evan’s, would have
known they were no brother and sister, but they still
kept up the fiction.
As they neared home she said:
“Do you mind if I go in alone?”
“Are you ashamed to be seen
with me?” demanded Evan scowling.
“Silly! Didn’t I
propose this trip? The reason is very simple.
Your ridiculous landlady looks on every man in the
house as her property. I don’t want to
excite her ill-will, that’s all.”
Evan could not deny the truth of this
characterisation of Carmen. “Go on ahead,”
he said. “I’ll hang around in the
Park for a while. See you to-night.”
She stopped, and gave him an inscrutable
look. “Oh, I’m sorry, I shan’t
be home to-night.”
With this the ugly head of Corinna’s
mystery popped up again. It had been tormenting
Evan all morning, but with a lover’s pride he
would not question her, and she volunteered no information.
“Oh!” said Evan flatly, and waited for
her to say more.
But she seemed not to be aware that
anything more was required and his brow darkened.
“If it was me,” he thought, “how
eager I would be to explain what was taking me away
from her, but she is mum!”
“Come to-morrow night,” she said.
He bowed stiffly.
She hesitated a moment as if about
to explain, then thought better of it, and hurried
away, leaving Evan inwardly fuming.
He plumped down on a bench across
the square from 45A, and thrusting his hands deep
in his pockets, stretched out his legs and scowled
at the pavement. A “platonic friendship”
had no charms for him then. “I’m
a fool!” he said to himself. “Her
brother!” a bitter note of laughter
escaped him, “when I’m out of my mind with
wanting her! What a fool I was to stand for
it! She’s just playing the regular girl’s
game no blame to her of course, it’s
their instinct to keep a man at arm’s length
as long as they can. It pleases them to have
us on the grill. And I fell for it! I’m
on my way to make a precious fool of myself.
If I can’t find out where she’s going
to-night, I’ll be clean off my nut before morning.
But I wouldn’t ask her! And if she’s
going out with another man ! Lord! which
is worse, to know or not to know?”
When he let himself in the door of
45A, Miss Sisson, according to her custom, poked her
head out into the hall to see who it was. She
came out.
“Oh, Mr. Weir,” she said
importantly, “where have you been?”
“Out,” said Evan stiffly.
She was too much excited to perceive
the snub. “There’s been a man here
for you half a dozen times I guess.”
“What did he want?”
“I don’t know. Says it’s most
important.”
“Who was he?”
“Wouldn’t give his name. Acted most
mysterious.”
“What sort of looking man?”
“A young fellow about your age,
but scarcely a friend of yours I should say.
A mean-like face.”
This meant nothing to Evan. He looked blank.
“The last time he was here he
said he’d wait,” Miss Sisson went on,
“but I said there was no place inside, because
I didn’t like his looks, so he said he’d
wait in the Square and ”
The sound of the door-bell interrupted her.
“Here he is now!”
Evan opened the door and discovered
Alfred, the Deaves’ second man, on the step.
Alfred smiled insinuatingly, but with a difference
from their first meeting, more warily. Miss
Sisson pressed forward to hear what he had to say.
“Can I see you a moment?” he said to Evan
meaningly.
Evan looked at Miss Sisson, who forthwith
retired with a chagrined flirt of her skirts.
“They sent me for you,” said Alfred.
Evan’s eyebrows went up. “What do
they want?” he asked coolly.
“Search me!” said Alfred shrugging.
“They’re in a way about something.”
“Anything new?”
“Uh-huh. Hilton says they got another
letter from the blackmailers.”
Evan being human, could not but feel
certain stirrings of curiosity. “Very well,
I’ll come with you,” he said.
They left a furiously unsatisfied Miss Sisson behind
them.
Evan and Alfred rode up-town together
on the bus. Alfred was no less silky and insinuating
than in the beginning, but whereas at first he had
been genuinely candid, he now only made believe to
be.
“He’s been warned off me,” thought
Evan.
The conversation on Alfred’s
side consisted of a subtle attempt to elicit from
Evan what had happened the day before, and on Evan’s
side a determination to balk his curiosity without
appearing to be aware of what he was after.
The Deaveses, father and son, were
in the library. Before he was well inside the
room the latter flung out at him:
“Where have you been all morning?”
Evan instantly felt his collar tighten.
His jaw stuck out. “I don’t know
as that is anybody’s business but my own,”
he said.
They both opened up on him then.
Evan could not make out what it was all about.
But his conscience was easy. He could afford
to smile at the racket. Finally George Deaves
got the floor.
“Will you or will you not describe
your movements this morning?” he demanded.
“I will not,” said Evan coolly.
“What did I tell you?
What did I tell you?” burst out the old man.
“Send for the police!”
Evan’s temper had already been
put to a strain that morning. It gave way now.
“Yes, send for the police!” he cried.
“I’m sick of these silly accusations.
I owe you nothing, neither of you. My life is
as open as a book. I make a few dollars a week
by honest work, and that’s every cent I possess
in the world. Satisfy yourselves of that, and
then let me alone!”
“Papa, be quiet!” said
George Deaves severely. “I will handle
this.” To Evan he said soothingly:
“There’s no need for you to excite yourself.
I’ve no intention of sending for the police yet.”
“Well, if you don’t, I
will!” said Evan. “I’ll tell
them the whole story and insist on an investigation!”
George Deaves wilted at the threat
of publicity. Evan, in the midst of his anger
thought: “Lord, if I were guilty
this is exactly the way I would talk! How easy
it would be to bluff them!”
George Deaves said: “I
hope you won’t do anything so foolish as that.”
“Well, it’s a bit too
much to be dragged all the way up-town just to listen
to a re-hash of yesterday’s row,” said
Evan.
“The situation is entirely changed,”
said George Deaves mysteriously.
“Well, I don’t know anything about that!”
Deaves shoved a letter across his desk towards Evan.
Evan read:
“Mrs. George Deaves:
Dear Madam:
I beg to return herewith the $5,000
in marked bills that your husband left for us yesterday.
We are too old birds to be caught with such chaff.
The story, a copy of which I sent Mr. Deaves yesterday,
goes to the Clarion at eleven A.M. to-day for
publication in this evening’s edition.
If you wish to stop it you must persuade Mr. Deaves
to find a similar sum in clean straight money before
that hour. These bills must be put in an envelope
and addressed to Mr. Carlton Hassell at the Barbizon
Club, Fifth avenue near Ninth street. Your messenger
must simply hand it in at the door and leave.
If there is any departure from these instructions
the money will not be touched, and the story goes
through.
With best wishes,
Yours most sincerely,
THE IKUNAHKATSI.”
“Good Heavens!” cried
Evan amazed. “Do you mean to say the money
was returned?”
George Deaves nodded.
“And addressed to your wife?
What a colossal nerve! What have you done?
You haven’t sent fresh bills?”
Another nod answered him, a somewhat sheepish nod.
“Maud made him,” snarled
the old man. “Insisted on taking the money
down herself and sent it in by the chauffeur.”
“But you’ve communicated with Mr. Hassell?”
“Do you know him?” demanded George Deaves
sharply.
“Why of course, as everybody
knows him. The most famous landscape painter
in America or at least the most popular.
His pictures bring thousands!”
“What good to communicate with
him?” said Deaves sullenly. “I might
better have him arrested.”
“But don’t you see,”
urged Evan, “Hassell couldn’t have had
anything to do with this, not with the money he makes
and his reputation? Not unless he were crazy,
and he’s the sanest of men! It’s
as clear as day. They’re just using his
name. Easy enough for somebody else to get the
letter at the club.”
“Is this a trick?” muttered George Deaves
scowling.
Evan laughed in exasperation.
“Why sure! if you want it that way. It’s
nothing to me one way or the other.” He
turned to go.
“Wait a minute,” said
Deaves. “Why wouldn’t it be better
to call up the club?”
Evan shook his head. “A
man’s club is his castle. Club servants
are always instructed not to give out information,
particularly not over the telephone. Telephone
Hassell. You should have telephoned him before
sending the money. Or better still go to him.
It’s his interest to get to the bottom of this.”
“Will you go with me?”
asked Deaves stabbing his blotter.
Evan smiled. “A minute
ago you implied that I was behind the scheme.”
“I might have been mistaken.
Anyway, if you had nothing to do with it, you ought
to be glad to help me clear the matter up.”
“I’ll go with you,”
said Evan, “not because I’ll feel any necessity
for clearing myself, but because it’s the most
interesting game I’ve ever been up against!”
“Interesting!” shrilled
the old man indignantly, “Interesting!
If you were being bled white, you wouldn’t
find it so interesting! I’ll go too.”
“You’ll stay right here,
Papa,” commanded George Deaves. “And
don’t you go out until I come back! You’ve
brought trouble enough on me!”
“Well, you needn’t bite
off my head!” grumbled the old man.
The Deaves limousine was available,
and a few minutes later George Deaves and Evan were
being shown into the reception room of a magnificent
studio apartment on Art’s most fashionable street.
George Deaves was visibly impressed by the magnificence.
It was rather an unusual hour to pay a call perhaps,
but the Deaves name was an open sesame. A millionaire
and a potential picture-buyer! the great man himself
came hurrying to greet them. He was a handsome
man of middle age with a lion-like head, and the affable,
assured manner of a citizen of the world.
He showed them into the studio, a
superb room, but severe and workmanlike according
to the modern usage. Before they were well-seated,
an attendant, knowing his duty well, began to pull
out canvases.
“I I didn’t
come to talk to you about pictures,” stammered
George Deaves.
At a sign from his master the man
left the room. Mr. Hassell waited politely to
be enlightened.
Poor George Deaves floundered about.
“It’s such a delicate matter I’m
sure I don’t know what you will think I
scarcely know how to tell you ”
Hassell began to look alarmed.
He said: “Mr. Deaves, I beg you will be
plain with me.”
Deaves turned hopelessly to Evan. “You
tell him.”
“Better show him the letter,” said Evan.
“The letter?” said Deaves
in a panic, “what letter? I don’t
understand you.”
“We came to tell him,” said Evan.
“We’ve either got to tell him or go.”
Deaves wiped his face. “Mr.
Hassell, I hope I can rely on your discretion.
You will receive what I am about to tell you in absolute
confidence?”
“My dear sir,” returned
the painter a little testily, “you come to me
in this state of agitation about I don’t know
what. Whatever it is, I hope I will comport
myself like a man of honour!”
George Deaves handed over the letter
in a hand that trembled. Hassell’s face
was a study as he read it.
“This is blackmail!” he cried. “And
in my name!”
“That’s why we came to
you,” said Deaves a little unnecessarily
it might be thought.
“You surely don’t suspect ”
“Certainly not,” said
Evan quickly there was no knowing what break
Deaves might have made. “But you can help
us.”
“Of course! This letter
names eleven o’clock as the hour.”
Hassell glanced at his watch. “It’s
nearly twelve now. Why didn’t you come
to me earlier or phone?”
“Well, I didn’t know it
didn’t occur to me,” began Deaves, and
stopped with an appealing glance at Evan.
Evan said bluntly: “Mr.
Deaves was not acquainted with your name and your
work until I told him.”
The great painter looked a little
astonished at such ignorance. “Has the
money been sent to the club?” he asked.
Deaves nodded shamefacedly.
Mr. Hassell immediately got busy.
“I’ll taxi down there at once. I
rarely use the Barbizon club nowadays. Haven’t
been there in a month.”
“Shall we go with you?” asked Delves.
“No. They may have spies
posted who would see you even if you remained in the
cab. If you’ll be good enough to wait here,
I’ll be back inside half an hour.”
Even in his bustle he did not neglect
business. As soon as he had gone the servant
appeared again, and began to show his pictures.
Deaves goggled at them indifferently, but Evan was
keenly interested. He studied them with the
mixture of scorn and envy that is characteristic of
the attitude of poor young artists towards rich old
ones.
Within a few minutes of his half hour
Hassell was back again. “Not much to report,”
he said deprecatingly. “The envelope addressed
to me was delivered just before eleven o’clock,
and put in the H box of the letter rack. It
was gone when I looked, of course, but who took it
remains to be discovered. About thirty members
had gone in and out. Practically everybody stops
at the letter rack. I have a list of those who
passed in and out as well as the doorkeeper could make
it out from memory.”
“How about the door-keeper?” asked Deaves.
“Above suspicion, I should say.
Has been with the club for twenty years. A
simple soul hardly capable of acting a part.
He would hardly have told me that he put my letter
in the rack himself.”
“Other servants then?”
“There were several boys on
duty in the hall, but they are not supposed to go
to the letter-rack without orders. If one of
them had looked over the letters it could scarcely
have escaped notice. No, unpleasant as it is
to think so, I am afraid it was one of the members someone
who was counting on the fact that I never appear at
the club except for an important meeting or a dinner.
I looked over the members in the clubhouse, honest-looking
men but who can tell?”
“No doubt the one who got the
money left immediately,” suggested Evan.
Hassell said to Deaves: “With
your permission I should like to take the matter up
with the Board of Governors.”
“No, no, if you please,”
said Deaves nervously. “No publicity.”
“Then allow me to put this list
in the hands of a first-class detective agency.
Those fellows are secret enough.”
“Let me attend to it if you please.”
Hassell handed over the list with
manifest reluctance; “If anyone uses my name
again I trust you will let me know promptly.”
“You may depend on it,”
said Deaves, making for the door.
“By the way, how did you like my pictures?”
“Very pretty, very pretty,”
said Deaves uneasily. “I don’t know
anything about such things. My wife buys everything
for the home.”
“Ah!” said Hassell with ironical eyebrows.
“I will tell her about them.”
“Thank you,” said Hassell, bowing them
out.
George Deaves didn’t say much
on the way home, but Evan was aware that his attitude
had changed. There were no more accusations.
Clearly Deaves had been impressed by the fact that
the interview with Hassell had turned out exactly
as Evan had foretold.
Simeon Deaves was still shuffling around the library
in his slippers.
“Well?” he demanded.
His son briefly told him what had occurred.
The old man was in a very bad temper.
“Yah! let him pull wool over your eyes!”
he cried. “All a pack of thieves together!
Artists never have any money! And this one
knows more than he lets on. He’s too smart
by half! You mark my words!”
“Please go outside,” the
much-tried George said to Evan. “Wait in
the hall.”
Evan obeyed with a shrug. Outside
the softly-stepping Alfred was loitering suspiciously.
He approached Evan.
“Something doing to-day, eh?”
he said with his obsequious-impudent leer. “Where
did you two go?”
Evan’s gorge rose at the man.
He saw nothing to be gained now by hiding his feelings.
“You damn sneak!” he said quietly.
“Keep away from me, or I’ll hurt you!”
Alfred, with a scared and venomous
look, slunk down-stairs. Evan felt better.
Presently George Deaves called him
back into the library. At what had taken place
between father and son he could only guess. The
old man’s attitude had changed; he was disposed
to be friendly. Divided between their fears
and their suspicions father and son were continually
making these face-abouts.
George Deaves said in his pompous
way: “My father has re-considered his decision
not to employ you further. He will be glad to
have you stay according to the original arrangement.”
“That’s right,”
added the old man. “I just spoke a little
hasty. I always said you were a good boy.”
Evan’s face hardened.
“I’m not sure that I want the job,”
he said.
“Forty dollars a week’s
a fine salary,” said Simeon Deaves.
“I’ll stay for fifty,” said Evan
coolly.
They both gasped. “Are you trying to hold
us up?” cried George Deaves.
“If that’s what you want
to call it,” said Evan. “You force
me to. If I appear anxious for the job, you
will soon be accusing me again of being in the gang.
As a matter of fact I don’t care whether I stay
or not.”
“Well, I’ll pay it,”
said George Deaves with a sour face, “provided
you’ll agree to investigate the list Hassell
gave us in your spare time.”
“I’ll do it,” said
Evan. “I’m interested. You’d
better discharge Alfred who is certainly a spy, and
get a detective in his place to keep a watch on the
other servants.”
“Those fellows cost ten dollars
a day!” cried Simeon Deaves.
“The blackmailers are getting
five thousand out of you every fortnight,” retorted
Evan.
“I do not see the necessity
for a detective,” said George Deaves loftily.
“As long as I’m paying you all this money.
You can look out for that side of the case as well.”
“Just as you like,” said
Evan smiling. It was hopeless to try to argue
with these people.
Alfred entered, and giving Evan a
wide berth laid a long envelope on George Deaves’
desk. “Brought by messenger,” he
said. “No answer.” He left
the room.
Deaves paled as his eyes fell on the superscription.
“The same handwriting!” he murmured.
He nervously tore open the envelope.
It contained some typewritten sheets, and a slip
with writing upon it. George Deaves read the
letter with a perplexed expression, and handed it
over to Evan.
“What do you make of that?” he asked.
Evan read: “Received of
George Deaves the sum of five thousand dollars in
full payment of the story entitled: ‘Simeon
Deaves Goes Shopping,’ including all rights.
All existing copies of the manuscript enclosed.
Many thanks. The Ikunahkatsi.”
“Same old impudence!”
said Evan smiling grimly. “This crook is
something of a character it seems. Affects a
kind of honesty in his dealings.”
“Oh, he’s kept a copy of the story,”
said George Deaves.
“Possibly. But why should
he go to the trouble of making believe that he has
not? and send a receipt? Criminal
psychology is queer. This is something out of
the common that we are up against!”