The shock of astonishment unmanned
Evan. His pistol arm dropped weakly at his side,
his mouth hung open, he stared like an idiot.
To have crept into the house heart in mouth and pistol
in hand, to have nerved himself to meet and overcome
a desperate criminal and then to find this!
The violence of the reaction threw all his machinery
out of gear; he stalled. He felt inclined to
laugh weakly.
Corinna could not see him clearly,
though presumably she was aware of a figure standing
in the hall. She was very much affronted by the
violence of the intrusion, and not in the least afraid.
She sat up with her glorious hair a little tousled,
and her eyes flashing like a diminutive empress’s.
“Mr. Straiker, is it you?
What does this mean?” she demanded.
Evan could not readily find his tongue.
Amazement broke over him in succeeding waves like
a surf. Corinna! Corinna here! Corinna
a member of the blackmailing gang! Corinna,
the chief! Oh, impossible! He was in a
nightmare!
“Mr. Straiker!” repeated
Corinna more sharply. “Come in at once!”
She was on her feet now.
Evan’s faculties began to work
again. In anticipation he tasted the sweets
of perfect revenge. This little creature had
put an intolerable humiliation upon him. Very
well, here she was absolutely in his power! Dropping
the gun in his pocket, he stepped into the room smiling.
At sight of him Corinna did not cry
out, but the shock she received was dreadfully evident
in her eyes. She went back a step, one hand went
to her breast, her lips formed the syllable “You!” but
no sound came from them. Every vestige of color
faded from her face.
Evan’s gaze burned her up; she
was so beautiful, and she had injured him so!
“So you’re a member of the gang!”
he said mockingly.
Corinna quickly recovered her forces.
She shrugged disdainfully.
“And even the chief, it seems!”
“So it seems.”
Amazement overcame him afresh.
“You you little thing!” he
cried. “I cannot believe it!”
Corinna affected to look bored.
“So this was the real work of
the brotherhood!” Evan went on. “Blackmail.
This was why you couldn’t fire them when they
threatened you. A new way to raise money for
philanthropic purposes, I swear! To hold up
a usurer with one hand, and feed poor children with
the other!”
“A usurer, yes,” said Corinna contemptuously.
“Your master!”
“That doesn’t get under
my skin,” retorted Evan coolly. “No
man is my master a day longer than I choose.”
He dissolved in amazement again. “But
you! To think up such a scheme! To carry
it out!”
“Oh, spare me your bleating!”
said Corinna impatiently. “What are you
going to do about it?”
“Turn you over to the police,” he said
promptly.
“Three of my friends are sleeping across the
hall,” she said.
So perfect was her aplomb that Evan
was taken aback. He half turned, uncertainly.
But as he did so, out of the tail of his eye he saw
Corinna’s hand go to her bosom. He whirled
back with the gun in his hand again. A woman
is at a serious disadvantage in drawing.
“Put your gun on the box,” commanded Evan.
“I have no gun!” she cried. “I
will not be spoken to so.”
Evan took a step nearer her.
His eyes glittered. “Put your gun on the
box. Don’t oblige me to use force.
I should enjoy it far too well!”
With a sob of rage, she drew a little
pistol from her dress and threw it on the box.
Evan possessed himself of it.
“Now we’ll see about the
three friends across the hall,” he said mockingly.
He backed out of the room. Corinna
followed to the door. In her eye he read her
purpose to make a dash for liberty down the stairs,
and he took care to give her no opening. He
flung open the door opposite and flashed his light
inside the room. It was empty of course.
He returned across the hall, and Corinna backed into
the lighted room before him.
“They have stepped out, it seems,” he
said mockingly.
Corinna disdained to reply.
Like a child, she was not in the least abashed when
her bluff was called, but immediately set her wits
to work to think of another.
“How do you purpose taking me
to the police?” she asked scornfully.
“I’m not going to take you. They’re
coming here.”
Corinna changed color. She studied
his face narrowly. Evidently she decided that
he was bluffing now, for she tossed her head.
“Go and sit down on the cot,”
he said coolly, “so we can talk quietly.”
“I will not!” cried Corinna.
“How dare you speak to me so!”
He was delighted with the spirit she
showed. “It’s too bad no one did
it long ago,” he said provokingly.
He approached her, and his eyes glittered
again. Corinna, seething with rage, retreated,
and plumped herself down on the cot.
“That’s better,”
he said indulgently. He took the small box and,
placing it against the wall, sat down and leaned back.
Producing his pipe he filled it in leisurely style,
affecting to be unconscious of her. Corinna’s
eyes blazed on him.
“Well, what have you to say
for yourself?” he drawled at last. “You
pretty little blackmailer!”
“You needn’t insult me!”
cried Corinna. Her eyes filled with angry tears.
But Evan’s heart was hard.
“Insult you!” he cried. “I
like that! What have you been doing to me lately?”
“If you were capable of thinking,
you would see that I could not have acted otherwise!”
she said.
“You have me there,” said
Evan coolly. “For I don’t see the
necessity of being a blackmailer.”
Corinna jumped up and stamped her
foot. Her face reddened, and two large tears
rolled down her cheeks. “Don’t you
dare to use that word to me again, you fool!”
Evan laughed delightedly. “Why
shy at the word and commit the deed?”
“You know nothing of the circumstances!”
she stormed. “You have neither sense nor
feeling! You take all your ideas ready made from
others. You are as empty as a drum!”
“Bravo!” he cried.
“Keep it up if it makes you feel any better!”
“If it is a crime to extort
money from a foul old robber and give it to the poor,
all right, I’m a criminal! I glory in it!
I would do it all over again!”
“I don’t deny one has
a sneaking sympathy with a life of crime,” Evan
said, affecting a judicial air. “But after
all, law is law. You have to make your choice.
I chose to stay inside the law, and naturally I have
to uphold it like everybody on my side.”
“You’re a nice upholder
of the law!” she cried. “You’re
just trying to get back at me!”
Evan grinned. “You’re
so frank, Corinna. But after all, being on the
side of the law gives me an advantage now, doesn’t
it?”
“Yes, if you want to take the
pay of a scoundrel like Deaves.”
“Oh, I was fired some days ago.
I’m working on my own now.”
“You’re just angry and jealous!”
“I dare say. I admit I
don’t mind your blackmailing operations half
as much as the other thing.”
“What other thing?”
“Those fellows on the Ernestina;
to take advantage of their wanting you, and use them
for your own ends.”
“Everything was understood between
us. Everything was open and aboveboard.”
“Of course. But they were
already enslaved, you see. And you forced them
to serve your pride and arrogance. You queened
it over them. That makes me more indignant than
blackmailing a usurer, for the other thing’s
a crime against a man’s best feelings, and I’m
a man myself.”
“You’re only jealous!”
“Why should I be. I
wouldn’t stand for the brotherhood. I know
you gave me or I took more than
you ever gave them.”
“You’re a brute!”
“Why sure!”
There was a silence. Corinna
kept her eyes down. It was impossible to say
of what she was thinking. But her passion of
anger visibly subsided. She murmured at last:
“If, as you say, you sympathise
with me for getting money out of Simeon Deaves ”
“I didn’t quite say that,”
interrupted Evan. “But it’s near
enough, go on!”
“Why do you want to hand me over to the police?”
It was fun to torment Corinna, and
it satisfied his deep need for vengeance. But
the sight of her quiet, with the curved lashes lying
on her cheeks, and the soft lips drooping, went to
his breast like a knife. Vengeance was suddenly
appeased. Such a gallant little crook!
He realised that not for a moment had he really intended
to hand her over. He jumped up.
“I’m not going to send
you to jail,” he said. “You’re
going to make restitution.”
Corinna stared.
“What do you mean?”
“Give me an order on Dordess
for the bonds if it is Dordess who has
them, and give me your word that you will lead an honest
life hereafter.” He was smiling.
Corinna blazed up afresh. “Never!”
she cried. “I’d die rather!”
“You must do it!”
“Why must I?”
“Because you’re going
to marry me, and naturally I want an honest woman
to wife.”
Corinna laughed a peal. “I’d die
rather! And you know it now!”
Indeed in his heart he was not at
all sure but that her Satanic pride might break her
before she would give in, but he bluffed it out.
“Come on!” he said.
“There’s no time to lose. I have
sent for the police though you make out not to believe
it. I see you’ve been writing on the table.
Sit down and write me an order for the bonds.”
“Break up our organisation on your say-so?
Never!”
“If you don’t the police
will. Come now, whatever happens you can’t
go on using those infatuated boys to further your
own ends. That’s low, Corinna; that’s
like offering a starving man husks.”
“You have your gun in your pocket,”
she cried passionately. “Use it, for you’ll
never break my will!”
“It’s not a bullet that
waits you, but jail,” said Evan grimly.
“No grand-stand finish, but endless dragging
days in a four-by-ten cell! Come on, give up
the loot. You’ll have to anyhow, and go
to jail in the bargain!”
“It’s not loot!”
she cried. “It’s mine! By every
rule of justice and right, it’s mine.
Simeon Deaves robbed my father. Beggared him
and brought him to his grave!”
“Ha!” cried Evan, “I
might have guessed there was something personal here!
But someone has to lose in the warfare of business.”
“This was not the chance of
warfare. This was malice, cold and calculated.
I’ll tell you. It spoiled my childhood.
Deaves and my father were workers in the same church.
You didn’t know, did you, that Deaves was a
religious man. Oh, yes, always a pillar of some
church until his avarice grew so upon him that he
could no longer bring himself to subscribe.
My father learned that he was using his position in
our church to lend money to other members at usurious
interest, and to collect it under threats of exposure.
My father showed him up, and Deaves was put out of
the church. He set about a cold and patient
scheme of revenge, but we didn’t learn this until
the crash came a couple of years afterwards.
He bought up, what do you call it? all
my father’s paper, the notes every merchant has
to give to carry on his business. At last he
presented all my father’s outstanding indebtedness
at once with a demand for instant payment, and when
my father couldn’t meet it, Deaves sold him
out, and we were ruined. It killed my father
and embittered my mother’s few remaining years.
“That was what I grew up with.
I don’t know when it started, but the determination
to punish him grew and grew in my mind until it crowded
out every other thought. I planned for years
before I did anything. I followed him.
I learned all about him. His avarice went to
such lengths at last that I began to see my chance
to show him up. I met Dordess and the others,
and the idea of the Avengers slowly took shape.
There was something fine to us in the idea of making
him pay to bring pleasure and health to the poor.
None of us would spend a cent of his filthy money
on ourselves. What have I done to Deaves to repay
the crushing blows he dealt to me and mine? a
few pin-pricks, that’s all. Well, it is
my life. I cannot change it now.”
Evan was more softened than he cared
to show. “I understand,” he said.
“It excuses your heart, but not your head.
It was so foolish to try to buck the law!”
“I can’t help it,”
she said. “I would rather die than return
what I have made that old robber disgorge. I
have worked too long for this!”
Evan inwardly groaned. To reason
with her seemed so hopeless. “You can’t
live outside the pale of the law,” he said.
“No man can, let alone a woman. Only
wretchedness can come of it!”
“I’ll take my chance,”
she said with curling lip. “Thank God,
I have friends who are not so timid.”
Evan changed his tone. “Well,
never mind the right and the wrong of it,” he
said earnestly. “Do it because I love you.
I love you with all my heart. We quarrel, but
my heart speaks to yours. You must hear it.
I have endured from you what I believe no man ever
forgave a woman. But I forgive you. If
you go to jail my life will be a desert. But
go to jail you shall, unless you make restitution!”
Corinna laughed mirthlessly.
“Funny kind of love!” she said.
“It is the best kind of love.
I have sense enough left to realise that if I give
in to you on a clear question of right it would ruin
us both. We would despise each other.”
“I have promised to trouble
the Deaves no further,” she said. “They’re
satisfied.”
“The bonds must go back.”
“I had already decided to break
up the Avengers, too. Isn’t that enough?”
He shook his head.
She turned away. “You ask the impossible,”
she said. “I’d rather die!”
“But to go to jail,” he
said relentlessly, “to have your beautiful hair
cut off” (he was not at all sure of this, but
he supposed she was not either), “to wear the
hideous prison dress, to have the sickly prison pallor
in your clear cheeks, and your eyes dimmed. Your
best years, Corinna!”
This went home. She paled; her
breath came unevenly. “You say you love
me,” she murmured, “and you’d hand
me over to that.”
“I must!”
Corinna said very low: “I
love you. Isn’t that enough? Costs
me something to say it. Costs me my pride.
It would have been more merciful to beat me with
a club. I cannot entreat you. I never
learned how. But but I am entreating
you. Love me, Evan. Let us begin from
now. Let the past be past.”
Evan was tempted then. His senses
reeled. But something held fast. “I
can’t!” he said.
She shrank sharply. “It
is useless, then,” she muttered. “I
will not be a repentant sinner!”
“For the sake of our love, Corinna!”
“You do not love me. You want to master
me.”
He groaned in his helplessness.
Suddenly an ominous peremptory knock
on the front door rang through the empty house.
“The police!” gasped Evan.
“Then it’s over!” said Corinna,
desperately calm.
“No!” he cried. “Quick!
Write! I’ll get you out!”
She dragged him towards the door. “Ah,
come! come!” she beseeched him.
The very heart was dragged out of his breast, but
he resisted her.
“Choose!” he whispered. “A
living death or happiness!”
For an instant their desperate eyes
contended. Corinna read in his that he would
never give in. She ran to the box and scribbled
three lines. The knock was repeated below.
She handed him the sheet with averted
head. Evan blew out the lamp. Hand in hand
they ran softly down-stairs. The knock was repeated
for the third time and a gruff voice commanded:
“Open the door or we’ll break it down!”
Aunt Liza was in the lower hall whimpering:
“Lawsy! What you gwine do, Miss?”
And behind her they heard Simeon Deaves muttering
confusedly: “What’s the matter?
What’s the matter?”
Evan breathed in Corinna’s ear.
“The cellar door under the stairs. You
lead the woman.”
He felt for Simeon Deaves, and got
his hand. “Follow me,” he whispered.
“I’ll save you.”
Deaves came unresistingly, his old
wits in a daze. As Evan got the cellar door
open the blows were falling on the front door.
He flashed his light to show his little party the
way down. He came last and closed the door.
As he did so the front door went in with a crash.
Joining the others, Evan whispered:
“Take it easy. They’ll search the
rooms first.”
The old man whispered tremulously:
“What’s the matter? I don’t
understand.”
“Be very quiet,” returned
Evan. “We’re taking you home now.
Be quiet and there will be no publicity.”
It was a magical suggestion.
They heard no more from Deaves.
Meanwhile heavy feet were tramping
overhead. Doors were flung open. One man
ran up-stairs. There were at least three men.
Evan did not think it possible they had come in sufficient
force to completely surround the house. It was
safe enough to flash his light in the depths of the
cellar. He led the way to the foot of the stone
steps. The stars showed through the broken door
overhead.
Making them wait behind him, he cautiously
parted the thick screen of bushes and looked out.
Nothing was stirring on this side of the house.
The grass and weeds were waist high down to the edge
of the woods. It was less than fifty yards to
shelter. Evan whispered to his little party:
“Hands and knees through the
grass. Take it slow. Each one keep a hand
on the ankle of the one in front. Corinna, you
go first.”
It was done as he ordered. Surely
a more oddly-assorted party of fugitives never acted
in concert to escape the law: girl, negress,
multi-millionaire, and artist. Like a snake with
four articulations, they wound through the grass.
In the most sophisticated man lingers a wild strain;
the stiff-jointed millionaire took to this means of
locomotion as naturally as the negress.
As they left the house behind them
they came more within the range of vision of those
who were presumably watching the front and back.
At any rate, while they were still fifty feet from
the trees, a hoarse voice was raised from the front:
“There they go!” And an answering shout
came from the rear.
The four fugitives of one accord rose
to their feet and dashed for the trees. Gaining
the shadows, Corinna whispered:
“We must separate. You take Deaves.”
Evan pressed her own revolver back
in her hand, whispering: “Fire it off if
you are in danger.”
Seizing Deaves’ hand, Evan pulled
him away to the right. Corinna and Aunt Liza
melted in the other direction. The old man came
through the underbrush like a reaping machine, and
of course the police took after them. For a
moment Evan considered abandoning him. He would
come to no harm, of course. But on the other
hand, Evan now ardently desired to have the whole
affair hushed up. He got Deaves across the rough
road in safety, and on the other side, coming to an
immense spruce tree with drooping branches, he dragged
him under it, and they sank down on a fragrant bed
of needles.
The pursuing policemen, coming to
the road, instinctively turned off upon it, and Evan
knew they were safe for the moment. Presently
they came back, aimlessly threshing the woods and
flashing their lights, but they had lost the trail
now. They were looking for a needle in a hay-stack.
Evan’s only fear was that they might stumble
on Charley, but he heard no sounds from that direction
that indicated they had done so. The sounds
of searching moved off to the other side of the road,
and Evan determined to go to Charley himself.
Leaving the old man with a whispered
admonition to silence, Evan set off. He found
Charley where he had left him under the leafy bush.
Evan whispered in his ear:
“I found her. I am on
your side now. The police are all around us.
Make no sound!”
He unbound Charley. The latter
sat up and rubbed his ankles. Whatever he thought
of the new turn of affairs, he said nothing.
Evan said: “I have Deaves back here.
Follow me.”
Foot by foot they crept back in a
course parallel to the rough road. Hearing footsteps
approach, they hugged the earth. Two men passed
in the road. One was saying:
“Send Wilson back in the car
to the road house to telephone for enough men to surround
this patch of woods. You patrol the road outside.”
Evan and Charley crept away through
the underbrush like foxes at the sight of the hunter.
They reached the big spruce tree without
further accident. The old man greeted them with
a moan of relief. Evan and Charley drew away
from him a little while they consulted.
Evan said: “Corinna and
Aunt Liza are somewhere in the woods across the road.
We had to separate. How can we get in touch
with them?”
“They’ll be all right,”
muttered Charley. “Corinna knows this place.
They’re safer than we are.”
“I can’t leave here until
I am more sure,” said Evan. “Will
you take the old man and put him on the way home?”
“All right.”
“How will you go? I’ll have to follow
you later.”
“The Lafayette trolley line
will be watched, and the Yonkers line stops at one
o’clock. We’ll have to walk to Yonkers.
Follow the road through the woods in the other direction,
and it will put you on a regular road. Keep
going in a westerly direction.”
“I get you,” said Evan. “Where
does Corinna live?”
“What do you want to know for?” growled
Charley.
“If I hear nothing from her
here, I want to go to make sure she got home all right.”
“Well, I won’t tell you.”
“Everything is changed now. I am on your
side and hers.”
“I hear you say it,” Charley said sullenly.
Evan’s sense of justice forced
him to admit that Charley was justified. “Well,
will you do this?” he said. “When
you’ve got the old man off your hands, go to
her place yourself, and then come to me and tell me
if she’s all right.”
“I’ll do it if she wants me to,”
Charley said.
“Here’s your flashlight,”
said Evan. “I’ll keep the gun a little
while, in case Corinna calls for my help.”
Charley pocketed the light in silence
and led the old man forth from under the tree.
Simeon Deaves that night was like a pet dog on a
leader, passed impatiently from hand to hand.
Evan, fancying that the thick branches
hindered him from hearing, crept out and lay down
on the grass. The woods were not so thick in
this place. This had evidently been part of
the grounds surrounding the old house in its palmy
days, and the spruce was a relic of those times.
He heard an automobile approach in the highway, and
stop at the end of the woods track. This would
be the man returning from having telephoned.
All sounds of the search through the woods had ceased.
Evidently they had decided that the better way was
to watch all outlets.
No sound from any quarter betrayed
the whereabouts of Corinna and the old negress.
They were swallowed up as completely as if they had
taken to their burrows like rabbits. Evan’s
heart was with her, wherever she was. He had
not the same anxious solicitude for her that one would
have for an ordinary woman hunted in the dark woods,
for he was well assured that Corinna was not a prey
to imaginary terrors. She would be no less at
home in the woods at night than he was. Still
no sound came from her. He was not at all sure
that she would summon him if hard pressed, but they
could not take her without his hearing it.
In the end the greying sky in the
East bade him consider his own retreat if he wished
to avoid capture. He had committed no crime,
of course, but he was very sensible of the awkwardness
of trying to explain his own share in the night’s
doings, should he be taken. He had good hopes
that Corinna had escaped by now. He started to
make his way westward.
He made a wide detour around the house
and struck into the rough track on the other side,
travelling softly, and keeping his ears open.
He had heard no searchers on this side. After
a half mile or so he saw light through the trees ahead.
He saw a road bounding the woods on this side, and
open fields beyond.
He struck into the woods again, and
took a cautious reconnaisance of the road from the
underbrush before venturing upon it the
world was filled with ghostly light now. It
was well that he did so, for he saw a burly individual
loafing in the highway, with his eye on the end of
the wood track. He wore civilian clothes, but
“policeman” was written all over him.
Evan had to get across that road somehow,
but it was so straight the watcher could see half
a mile in either direction. And on the other
side there was no cover, only cultivated fields.
There was one spot some hundreds of yards north where
the road dipped into a hollow and was lost to view
for a short space. Evan, keeping well within
the woods, made for that.
There was a stream with a bridge over
it. By hugging the edge of the stream and ducking
under the bridge he made the other side of the road.
A field of growing corn received him.
That was his last serious hazard.
In the sweet coolness of the dawn he made his way
over field after field, keeping the sunrise at his
back. He crossed the roads circumspectly and
gave the villages a wide berth. Finally he climbed
a wooded hill, and from the other side looked down
into the city of Yonkers. Here he ventured to
show himself openly, took a car for town, and an hour
and a half later was climbing the stairs to his own
room. His heart was heavy with anxiety.
When he entered he saw Charley sitting
at his table with his head on his arms, asleep.
Evan’s heart leaped. He shook the sleeper.
“Is she all right?” he cried.
Charley lifted a sullen and resentful
face. “She got home all right,”
he muttered, and immediately started for the door,
still swaying with sleep.
“Wait a minute,” said Evan. “Here’s
your gun.”
Charley held out his hand for it without looking at
the other.
Evan no longer blamed Charley for
what had seemed like treachery. Indeed, his heart
was warm now towards his old friend. “Don’t
you want to stop and talk things over?” he said.
“I have nothing to say to you,” Charley
said sorely, and went on out.
Evan, with a sigh, turned bedwards.