THE CRYING THROUGH THE WOODS
Bobby’s inability to cry out
alone prevented his alarming the others and announcing
to Paredes and Doctor Groom his unlawful presence in
the room. During the moment that the shock held
him, silent, motionless, bent in the darkness above
the bed, he understood there could have been no ambiguity
about his ghastly and loathsome experience. The
dead detective had altered his position as Silas Blackburn
had done, and this time someone had been in the room
and suffered the appalling change. Bobby’s
fingers still responded to the charnel feeling of cold,
inactive flesh suddenly become alive and potent beneath
his touch. And a reason for the apparent miracle
offered itself. Between the extinction of his
candle and the commencement of that movement!-only
a second or so-the evidence had disappeared
from the detective’s pocket.
Bobby relaxed. He stumbled across
the room and into the corridor. He went with
hands outstretched through the blackness, for no candle
burned in the upper hall, but he knew that Katherine
was on guard there. When he left the passage
he saw her, an unnatural figure herself, in the yellowish,
unhealthy twilight which sifted through the stair well
from the lamp in the hall below.
She must have sensed something out
of the way immediately, for she hurried to meet him
and her whisper held no assurance.
“You got the cast and the handkerchief, Bobby?”
And when he didn’t answer at once she asked
with a sharp rush of fear:
“What’s the matter? What’s
happened?”
He shuddered. At last he managed to speak.
“Katherine! I have felt death cease to
be death.”
Later he was to recall that phrase
with a sicker horror than he experienced now.
“You saw something!” she
said. “But your candle is out. There
is no light in the room.”
He took her hand. He pressed it.
“You’re real!” he
said with a nervous laugh. “Something I
can understand. Everything is unreal. This
light-”
He strode to the table, found a match,
and lighted his candle. Katherine, as she saw
his face, drew back.
“Bobby!”
“My candle went out,”
he said dully, “and he moved through the darkness.
I tell you he moved beneath my hand.”
She drew farther away, staring at him.
“You were frightened-”
“No. If we go there with
a light now,” he said with the same dull conviction,
“we will find him as we found my grandfather
this afternoon.”
The monotonous voices of the three
men in the lower hall weaved a background for their
whispers. The normal, familiar sound was like
a tonic. Bobby straightened. Katherine threw
off the spell of his announcement.
“But the evidence! You got-”
She stared at his empty hands.
He fancied that he saw contempt in her eyes.
“In spite of everything you
must go back. You must get that.”
“Even if I had the courage,”
he said wearily, “it would be no use, for the
evidence is gone.”
“But I saw it. At least I saw his pocket-”
“It was there,” he answered,
“when my light went out. I did put my hand
in his pocket. In that second it had gone.”
“There was no one there,”
she said, “no one but you, because I watched.”
He leaned heavily against the wall.
“Good God, Katherine! It’s too big.
Whatever it is, we can’t fight it.”
She looked for some time down the
corridor at the black entrance of the sinister room.
At last she turned and walked to the banister.
She called:
“Hartley! Will you come up?”
Bobby wondered at the steadiness of
her voice. The murmuring below ceased. Graham
ran up the stairs. Her summons had been warning
enough. Their attitudes, as Graham reached the
upper hall, were eloquent of Bobby’s failure.
“You didn’t get the cast and the handkerchief?”
he said.
Bobby told briefly what had happened.
“What is one to do?” he ended. “Even
the dead are against me.”
“It’s beyond belief,” Graham said
roughly.
He snatched up the candle and entered
the corridor. Uncertainly Katherine and Bobby
followed him. He went straight to the bed and
thrust the candle beneath the canopy. The others
could see from the door the change that had taken
place. The body of Howells was turned awkwardly
on its side. The coat pocket was, as Bobby had
described it, flat and empty.
Katherine turned and went back to
the hall. Graham’s hand shook as Bobby’s
had shaken.
“No tricks, Bobby?”
Bobby couldn’t resent the suspicion
which appeared to offer the only explanation of what
had happened. The candle flickered in the draft.
“Look out!” Bobby warned.
The misshapen shadows danced with
a multiple vivacity across the walls. Graham
shaded the candle flame, and the shadows became like
morbid decorations, gargantuan and motionless.
“It’s madness,”
Graham said. “There’s no explanation
of this that we can understand.”
Howells’s straight smile mocked
them. As if in answer to Graham a voice sighed
through the room. Its quality was one with the
shadows, unsubstantial and shapeless. Bobby grasped
one of the bed posts and braced himself, listening.
The candle in Graham’s hand commenced to flicker
again, and Bobby knew that it hadn’t been his
fancy, for Graham listened, too.
It shook again through the heavy,
oppressive night, merely accentuated by the candle-a
faint ululation barely detaching itself from silence,
straying after a time into the silence again.
At first it was like the grief of a woman heard at
a great distance. But the sound, while it gained
no strength, forced on them more and more an abhorrent
sense of intimacy. This crying from an infinite
distance filled the room, seemed finally to have its
source in the room itself. After it had sobbed
thinly into nothing, its pulsations continued to sigh
in Bobby’s ears. They seemed timed to the
renewed and eccentric dancing of the amorphous shadows.
Graham straightened and placed the
candle on the bureau. He seemed more startled
than he had been at the unbelievable secretiveness
of a dead man.
“You heard it?” Bobby breathed.
Graham nodded.
“What was it? Where did
you think it came from?” Bobby demanded.
“It was like someone mourning for this-this
poor devil.”
Graham couldn’t disguise his
effort to elude the sombre spell of the room, to drive
from his brain the illusion of that unearthly moaning.
“It must have come from outside
the house,” he answered “There’s
no use giving way to fancies where there’s a
possible explanation. It must have come from
outside-from some woman in great agony of
mind.”
Bobby recalled his perception of a
woman moving with a curious absence of sound about
the edges of the stagnant lake. He spoke of it
to Graham.
“I couldn’t be sure it
was a woman, but there’s no house within two
miles. What would a woman be doing wandering around
the Cedars?”
“At any rate, there are three
women in the house,” Graham said, “Katherine
and the two servants, Ella and Jane. The maids
are badly frightened. It may have come from the
servants’ quarters. It must have been one
of them.”
But Bobby saw that Graham didn’t
believe either of the maids had released that poignant
suffering.
“It didn’t sound like a living voice,”
he said simply.
“Then how are we to take it?”
Graham persisted angrily. “I shall question
Katherine and the two maids.”
He took up the candle with a stubborn
effort to recapture his old forcefulness, but as they
left the room the shadows thronged thickly after them
in ominous pursuit; and it wasn’t necessary to
question Katherine. She stood in the corridor,
her lips parted, her face white and shocked.
“What was it?” she said. “That
nearly silent grief?”
She put her hands to her ears, lowering them helplessly
after a moment.
“Where did you think it came from?” Graham
asked.
“From a long ways off,”
she answered. “Then I-I thought
it must be in the room with you, and I wondered if
you saw-”
Graham shook his head.
“We saw nothing. It was
probably Ella or Jane. They’ve been badly
frightened. Perhaps a nightmare, or they’ve
heard us moving around the front part of the house.
I am going to see.”
Katherine and Bobby followed him downstairs.
Doctor Groom and Paredes stood in front of the fireplace,
questioningly looking upward. Paredes didn’t
speak at first, but Doctor Groom burst out in his grumbling,
bass voice:
“What’s been going on up there?”
“Did you hear just now a queer crying?”
Graham asked.
“No.”
“You, Paredes?”
“I’ve heard nothing,”
Paredes answered, “except Doctor Groom’s
disquieting theories. It’s an uncanny hour
for such talk. What kind of a cry-may
I ask?”
“Like a woman moaning,”
Bobby said, “and, Doctor, Howells has changed
his position.”
“What are you talking about?” the doctor
cried.
“He has turned on his side as Mr. Blackburn
did,” Graham told him.
Paredes glanced at Bobby.
“And how was this new mystery discovered?”
Bobby caught the implication.
Then the Panamanian clung to his slyly expressed doubt
of Katherine which might, after all, have had its impulse
in an instinct of self-preservation. Bobby knew
that Graham and Katherine would guard the fashion
in which the startling discovery had been made.
Before he could speak for himself, indeed, Graham was
answering Paredes:
“This crying seemed after a time to come from
the room. We entered.”
“But Miss Katherine called you
up,” Paredes said. “I supposed she
had heard again movements in the room.”
Bobby managed a smile.
“You see, Carlos, nothing is consistent in this
case.”
Paredes bowed gravely.
“It is very curious a woman should cry about
the house.”
“The servants may make it seem
natural enough,” Graham said. “Will
you come, Bobby?”
As they crossed the dining room they
heard a stirring in the kitchen. Graham threw
open the door. Jenkins stood at the foot of the
servants’ stairs. The old butler had lighted
a candle and placed it on the mantel. The disorder
of his clothing suggested the haste with which he had
left his bed and come downstairs. His wrinkled,
sunken face had aged perceptibly. He advanced
with an expression of obvious relief.
“I was just coming to find you, Mr. Robert.”
“What’s up?” Bobby
asked. “A little while ago I thought you
were all asleep back here.”
“One of the women awakened him,” Graham
said. “It’s just as I thought.”
“Was that it?” the old
butler asked with a quick relief. But immediately
he shook his head. “It couldn’t have
been that, Mr. Graham, for I stopped at Ella’s
and Jane’s doors, and there was no sound.
They seemed to be asleep. And it wasn’t
like that.”
“You mean,” Bobby said, “that you
heard a woman crying?”
Jenkins nodded. “It woke me up.”
“If you didn’t think it
was one of the maids,” Graham asked, “what
did you make of it?”
“I thought it came from outside.
I thought it was a woman prowling around the house.
Then I said to myself, why should a woman prowl around
the Cedars? And it was too unearthly, sir, and
I remembered the way Mr. Silas was murdered, and the
awful thing that happened to his body this afternoon,
and I-you won’t think me foolish,
sirs?-I doubted if it was a human voice
I had heard.”
“No,” Graham said dryly, “we won’t
think you foolish.”
“So I thought I’d better wake you up and
tell you.”
Graham turned to Bobby.
“Katherine and you and I,”
he said, “fancied the crying was in the room
with us. Jenkins is sure it came from outside
the house. That is significant.”
“Wherever it came from,”
Bobby said softly, “it was like some one mourning
for Howells.”
Jenkins started.
“The policeman!”
Bobby remembered that Jenkins hadn’t
been aroused by the discovery of Howells’s murder.
“You’d know in a few minutes
anyway,” he said. “Howells has been
killed as my grandfather was.”
Jenkins moved back, a look of unbelief
and awe in his wrinkled face.
“He boasted he was going to
sleep in that room,” he whispered.
Bobby studied Jenkins, not knowing
what to make of the old man, for into the awe of the
wrinkled face had stolen a positive relief, an emotion
that bordered on the triumphant.
“It’s terrible,” Jenkins whispered.
Graham grasped his shoulder.
“What’s the matter with you, Jenkins?
One would say you were glad.”
“No. Oh, no, sir.
It is terrible. I was only wondering about the
policeman’s report.”
“What do you know about his report?” Bobby
cried.
“Only that-that he
gave it to me to mail just before he went up to the
old room.”
“You mailed it?” Graham snapped.
Jenkins hesitated. When he answered his voice
was self-accusing.
“I’m an old coward, Mr.
Robert. The policeman told me the letter was very
important, and if anything happened to it I would get
in trouble. He couldn’t afford to leave
the house himself, he said. But, as I say, I’m
a coward, and I didn’t want to walk through
the woods to the box by the gate. I figured it
all out. It wouldn’t be taken up until early
in the morning, and if I waited until daylight it
would only be delayed one collection. So I made
up my mind I’d sleep on it, because I knew he
had it in for you, Mr. Robert. I supposed I’d
mail it in the morning, but I decided I’d think
it over anyway and not harrow myself walking through
the woods.”
“You’ve done a good job,”
Graham said excitedly. “Where is the report
now?”
“In my room. Shall I fetch it, sir?”
Graham nodded, and Jenkins shuffled up the stairs.
“What luck!” Graham said.
“Howells must have telephoned his suspicions
to the district attorney. He must have mentioned
the evidence, but what does that amount to since it’s
disappeared along with the duplicate of the report,
if Howells made one?”
“I can fight with a clear conscience,”
Bobby cried. “I wasn’t asleep when
Howells’s body altered its position. Do
you realize what that means to me? For once I
was wide awake when the old room was at its tricks.”
“If Howells were alive,”
Graham answered shortly, “he would look on the
fact that you were awake and alone with the body as
the worst possible evidence against you.”
Bobby’s elation died.
“There is always something to
tangle me in the eyes of the law with these mysteries.
But I know, and I’ll fight. Can you find
any trace of a conspiracy against me in this last
ghastly adventure?”
“It complicates everything,” Graham admitted.
“It’s beyond sounding,”
Bobby said, “for my grandfather’s death
last night and the disturbance of his body this afternoon
seemed calculated to condemn me absolutely, yet Howells’s
murder and the movement of his body, with the disappearance
of the cast and the handkerchief, seem designed to
save me. Are there two influences at work in this
house-one for me, one against me?”
“Let’s think of the human
elements,” Graham answered with a frown.
“I have no faith in Paredes. My man has
failed to report on Maria. That’s queer.
You fancy a woman in black slipping through the woods,
and we hear a woman cry. I want to account for
those things before I give in to Groom’s spirits.
I confess at times they seem the only logical explanation.
Here’s Jenkins.”
“If trouble comes of his withholding
the report I’ll take the blame,” Bobby
said.
Graham snatched the long envelope
from Jenkins’ hand. It was addressed in
a firm hand to the district attorney at the county
seat.
“There’s no question,”
Graham said. “That’s it. We mustn’t
open it. We’d better not destroy it.
Put it where it won’t be easily found, Jenkins.
If you are questioned you have no recollection of
Howells having given it to you. Mr. Blackburn
promises he will see you get in no trouble.”
The old man smiled.
“Trouble!” he scoffed.
“Mr. Blackburn needn’t fret himself about
me. He’s the last of this family-that
is Miss Katherine and he. I’m old and about
done for. I don’t mind trouble. Not
a bit, sir.”
Bobby pressed his hand. His voice
was a little husky: “I didn’t think
you’d go that far in my service, Jenkins.”
The old butler smiled slyly:
“I’d go a lot further than that, sir.”
“We’d better get back,”
Graham said. “The blood hounds ought to
be here, and they’ll sniff at the case harder
than ever because it’s done for Howells.”
They watched Jenkins go upstairs with the report.
“We’re taking long chances,”
Graham said, “desperately long chances, but
you’re in a desperately dangerous position.
It’s the only way. You’ll be accused
of stealing the evidence; but remember, when they question
you, they can prove nothing unless the cast and the
handkerchief turn up. If they’ve been taken
by an enemy in some magical fashion to be produced
at the proper moment, there’s no hope.
Meantime play the game, and Katherine and I will help
you all we can. The doctor, too, is friendly.
There’s no doubt of him. Come, now.
Let’s face the music.”
Bobby followed Graham to the hall,
trying to strengthen his nerves for the ordeal.
Even now he was more appalled by the apparently supernatural
background of the case than he was by the material
details which pointed to his guilt. More than
the report and the cast and the handkerchief, the
remembrance of that impossible moment in the blackness
of the old room filled his mind, and the unearthly
and remote crying still throbbed in his ears.
Katherine, Graham, and the doctor
waited by the fireplace. They had heard nothing
from the authorities.
“But they must be here soon,” Doctor Groom
said.
“Did you learn anything back there, Hartley?”
Katherine asked.
“It wasn’t the servants,”
he said. “Jenkins heard the crying.
He’s certain it came from outside the house.”
Paredes looked up.
“Extraordinary!” he said.
“I wish I had heard it,” Doctor Groom
grumbled.
Paredes laughed.
“Thank the good Lord I didn’t.
Perpetually, Bobby, your house reminds me that I’ve
nerves sensitive to the unknown world. I will
go further than the doctor. I will say that this
house is crowded with the supernatural.
It shelters things that we cannot understand, that
we will never understand. When I was a child
in Panama I had a nurse who, unfortunately, developed
too strongly my native superstition. How she
frightened me with her bedtime stories! They were
all of men murdered or dead of fevers, crossing the
trail, or building the railroad, or digging insufficient
ditches for De Lesseps. Some of her best went
farther back than that. They were thick with
the ghosts of old Spaniards and the crimson hands
of Morgan’s buccaneers. Really that tiny
strip across the isthmus is crowded with souls snatched
too quickly from torn and tortured bodies. If
you are sensitive you feel they are still there.”
“What has all this to do with the Cedars?”
Doctor Groom grumbled.
“It explains my ability to sense
strange elements in this old house. There are
in Panama-if you don’t mind, doctor-improvised
graveyards, tangled by the jungle, that give you a
feeling of an active, unseen population precisely
as this house does.”
He arose and strolled with a cat-like
lack of sound about the hall. When he spoke again
his voice was scarcely audible. It was the voice
of a man who thinks aloud, and the doctor failed to
interrupt him again.
“I have felt less spiritually
alarmed in those places of grinning skulls, which
always seem trying to recite agonies beyond expression,
than I feel in this house. For here the woods
are more desolate than the jungle, and the walls of
houses as old as this make a prison for suffering.”
A vague discomfort stole through Bobby’s
surprise. He had never heard Paredes speak so
seriously. In spite of the man’s unruffled
manner there was nothing of mockery about his words.
What, then, was their intention?
Paredes said no more, but for several
minutes he paced up and down the hall, glancing often
with languid eyes toward the stairs. He had the
appearance of one who expects and waits.
Katherine, Graham, and the doctor,
Bobby could see, had been made as uneasy as himself
by the change in the Panamanian. The doctor cleared
his throat. His voice broke the silence tentatively:
“If this house makes you so
unhappy, young man, why do you stay?”
Paredes paused in his walk. His
thin lips twitched. He indicated Bobby.
“For the sake of my very good
friend. What are a man’s personal fears
and desires if he can help his friends?”
Graham’s distaste was evident.
Paredes recognized it with a smile. Bobby watched
him curiously, realizing more and more that Graham
was right to this extent: they must somehow learn
the real purpose of the Panamanian’s continued
presence here.
Paredes resumed his walk. He
still had that air of expectancy. He seemed to
listen. This feeling of imminence reached Bobby;
increased his restlessness. He thought he heard
an automobile horn outside. He sprang up, went
to the door, opened it, and stood gazing through the
damp and narrow court. Yet, he confessed, he
listened for a repetition of that unearthly crying
through the thicket rather than for the approach of
those who would try to condemn him for two murders.
Paredes was right. The place was unhealthy.
Its dark walls seemed to draw closer. They had
a desolate and unfriendly secretiveness. They
might hide anything.
The whirring of a motor reached him.
Headlights flung gigantic, distorted shadows of trees
across the walls of the old wing. Bobby faced
the others.
“They’re coming,”
he said, and his voice was sufficiently apprehensive
now.
Graham joined him at the door.
“Yes,” he said. “There will
be another inquisition. You all know that Howells
for some absurd reason suspected Bobby. Bobby,
it goes without saying, knows no more about the crimes
than any of us. I dare say you’ll keep
that in mind if they try to confuse you. After
all, there’s very little any of us can tell them.”
“Except,” Paredes said
with a yawn, “what went on upstairs when the
woman cried and Howells’s body moved. Of
course I know nothing about that.”
Graham glanced at him sharply.
“I don’t know what you
mean, but you have told us all that you are Bobby’s
friend.”
“Quite so. And I am not a spy.”
He moved his head in his grave and dignified bow.
The automobile stopped at the entrance
to the court. Three men stepped out and hurried
up the path. As they entered the hall Bobby recognized
the sallow, wizened features of the coroner. One
of the others was short and thick set. His round
and florid face, one felt, should have expressed friendliness
and good-humour rather than the intolerant anger that
marked it now. The third was a lank, bald-headed
man, whose sharp face released more determination
than intelligence.
“I am Robinson, the district
attorney,” the stout one announced, “and
this is Jack Rawlins, the best detective I’ve
got now that Howells is gone. Jack was a close
friend of Howells, so he’ll make a good job of
it, but I thought it was time I came myself to see
what the devil’s going on in this house.”
The lank man nodded.
“You’re right, Mr. Robinson.
There’ll be no more nonsense about the case.
If Howells had made an arrest he might be alive this
minute.”
Bobby’s heart sank. These
men would act from a primary instinct of revenge.
They wanted the man who had killed Silas Blackburn
principally because it was certain he had also killed
their friend. Rawlins’s words, moreover,
suggested that Howells must have telephoned a pretty
clear outline of the case. Robinson stared at
them insolently.
“This is Doctor Groom, I know.
Which is young Mr. Blackburn?”
Bobby stepped forward. The sharp
eyes, surrounded by puffy flesh, studied him aggressively.
Bobby forced himself to meet that unfriendly gaze.
Would Robinson accuse him now, before he had gone into
the case for himself? At least he could prove
nothing. After a moment the man turned away.
“Who is this?” he asked, indicating Graham.
“A very good friend-my lawyer, Mr.
Graham,” Bobby answered.
Robinson walked over to Paredes.
“Another lawyer?” he sneered.
“Another friend,” Paredes answered easily.
Robinson glanced at Katherine.
“Of course you are Miss Perrine.
Good. Coroner, these are all that were in the
front part of the house when you were here before?”
“The same lot,” the coroner squeaked.
“There are three servants, a
man and two women,” Robinson went on. “Account
for them, Rawlins, and see what they have to say.
Come upstairs when you’re through. All
right, Coroner.”
But he paused at the foot of the steps.
“For the present no one will
leave the house without my permission. If you
care to come upstairs with me, Mr. Blackburn, you might
be useful.”
Bobby shrank from the thought of returning
to the old room even with this determined company.
He didn’t hesitate, however, for Robinson’s
purpose was clear. He wanted Bobby where he could
watch him. Graham prepared to accompany them.
“If you need me,” the
doctor said. “I looked at the body-”
“Oh, yes,” Robinson sneered.
“I’d like to know exactly what time you
found the body.”
Graham flushed, but Katherine answered easily:
“About half-past two-the hour at
which Mr. Blackburn was killed.”
“And I,” Robinson sneered,
“was aroused at three-thirty. An hour during
which the police were left out of the case!”
“We thought it wise to get a physician first
of all,” Graham said.
“You knew Howells never had
a chance. You knew he had been murdered the moment
you looked at him,” Robinson burst out.
“We acted for the best,” Graham answered.
His manner impressed silence on Katherine and Bobby.
“We’ll see about that
later,” Robinson said with a clear threat.
“If it doesn’t inconvenience you too much
we’ll go up now.”
In the upper hall he snatched the candle from the
table.
“Which way?”
Katherine nodded to the old corridor
and slipped to her room. Robinson stepped forward
with the coroner at his heels. Bobby, Graham,
and the doctor followed. Inside the narrow, choking
passage Bobby saw the district attorney hesitate.
“What’s the matter?” the doctor
rumbled.
The district attorney went on without
answering. He glanced at the broken lock.
“So you had to smash your way in?”
He walked to the bed and looked down at Howells.
“Poor devil!” he murmured.
“Howells wasn’t the man to get caught
unawares. It’s beyond me how any one could
have come close enough to make that wound without
putting him on his guard.”
“It’s beyond us, as it
was beyond him,” Graham answered, “how
any one got into the room at all.”
In response to Robinson’s questions
he told in detail about the discovery of both murders.
Robinson pondered for some time.
“Then you and Mr. Blackburn
were asleep,” he said. “Miss Perrine
aroused you. This foreigner Paredes was awake
and dressed and in the lower hall.”
“I think he was in the court
as we went by the stair-well,” Graham corrected
him.
“I shall want to talk to your
foreigner,” Robinson said. He shivered.
“This room is like a charnel house. Why
did Howells want to sleep here?”
“I don’t think he intended
to sleep,” Graham said. “From the
start Howells was bound to solve the mystery of the
entrance of the room. He came here, hoping that
the criminal would make just such an attempt as he
did. He was confident he could take care of himself,
get his man, and clear up the last details of the
case.”
Robinson looked straight at Bobby.
“Then Howells knew the criminal was in the house.”
“Howells, I daresay,”
Graham said, “telephoned you something of his
suspicions.” Robinson nodded.
“He was on the wrong line,”
Graham argued, “or he wouldn’t have been
so easily overcome. You can see for yourself.
Locked doors, a wound that suggests the assailant
was close to him, yet he must have been awake and
watchful; and if there had been a physical attack before
the sharp instrument was driven into his brain he
would have cried out, yet Miss Perrine was aroused
by nothing of the sort, and the coroner, I daresay,
will find no marks of a struggle about the body.”
The coroner who had been busy at the bed glanced up.
“No mark at all. If Howells
wasn’t asleep, his murderer must have been invisible
as well as noiseless.”
Doctor Groom smiled. The coroner glared at him.
“I suggest, Mr. District Attorney,”
he squeaked, “that the ordinary layman wouldn’t
know that this type of wound would cause immediate
death.”
“Nor would any man,” the
doctor answered angrily, “be able to make such
a wound with his victim lying on his back.”
“On his back!” Robinson
echoed. “But he isn’t on his back.”
The doctor told of the amazing alteration
in the positions of both victims. Bobby regretted
with all his heart that he had made the attempt to
get the evidence. Already complete frankness was
impossible for him. Already a feeling of guilt
sprang from the necessity of withholding the first-hand
testimony which he alone could give.
“And a woman cried!” Robinson
said, bewildered. “All this sounds like
a ghost story.”
“You’ve more sense than
I thought,” Doctor Groom said dryly. “I
never could get Howells to see it that way.”
“What are you driving at?” Robinson snapped.
“These crimes,” the doctor
answered, “have all the elements of a ghostly
impulse.”
Robinson’s laugh was a little uncomfortable.
“The Cedars is a nice place
for spooks, but it won’t do. I’ll
be frank. Howells telephoned me. He had
found plenty of evidence of human interference.
It’s evident in both cases that the murderer
came back and disturbed the bodies for some special
purpose. I don’t know what it was the first
time, but it’s simple to understand the last.
The murderer came for evidence Howells had on his
person.”
Bobby couldn’t meet the sharp,
puffy eyes. He alone was capable of testifying
that the evidence had been removed as if to secrete
it from his unlawful hand. Yet if he spoke he
would prove the district attorney’s point.
He would condemn himself.
“Curious,” Graham said
slowly, “that the murderer didn’t take
the evidence when he killed his man.”
“I don’t know about that,”
Robinson said, “but I know Howells had evidence
on his person. You through, Coroner? Then
we’ll have a look, although it’s little
use.”
He walked to the bed and searched Howells’s
pockets.
“Just as I thought. Nothing.
He told me he was preparing a report. If he didn’t
mail it, that was stolen with the rest of the stuff.
Rawlins’s right. He waited too long to
make his arrest.”
Again Bobby wondered if the man would
bring matters to a head now. He could appreciate,
however, that Robinson, with nothing to go on but
Howells’s telephoned suspicions, might spoil
his chances of a solution by acting too hastily.
Rawlins strolled in.
“The two women were asleep,”
he said. “The old man knows nothing beyond
the fact that he heard a woman crying outside a little
while ago.”
“I don’t think we need
bother about the back part of the house for the present,”
Robinson said. “Howells’s evidence
has been stolen. It’s your job to find
it unless it’s been destroyed. Your other
job is to discover the instrument that caused death
in both cases. Then maybe our worthy doctor will
desert his ghosts. Mr. Blackburn, if you will
come with me there’s a slight possibility of
checking up some of the evidence of which Howells
spoke. Our fine fellow may have made a slip in
the court.”
Bobby understood and was afraid-more
afraid than he had been at any time since he had overheard
Howells catalogue his case to Graham in the library.
Why, even in so much confusion, had Graham and he failed
to think of those tell-tale marks in the court?
They had been intact when he had stood there just
before dark. It was unlikely any one had walked
across the grass since. He saw Graham’s
elaborate precautions demolished, the case against
him stronger than it had been before Howells’s
murder. Graham’s face revealed the same
helpless comprehension. They followed Robinson
downstairs. Graham made a gesture of surrender.
Bobby glanced at Paredes who alone had remained below.
The Panamanian smoked and lounged in the easy chair.
His eyes seemed restless.
“I shall wish to ask you some
questions in a few minutes, Mr. Paredes,” the
district attorney said.
“At your service, I’m sure,” Paredes
drawled.
He watched them until they had entered
the court and closed the door. The chill dampness
of the court infected Bobby as it had always done.
It was a proper setting for his accusation and arrest.
For Robinson, he knew, wouldn’t wait as Howells
had done to solve the mystery of the locked doors.
Robinson, while the others grouped
themselves about him, took a flashlight from his pocket
and pressed the control. The brilliant cylinder
of light illuminated the grass, making it seem unnaturally
green. Bobby braced himself for the inevitable
denouement. Then, while Robinson exclaimed angrily,
his eyes widened, his heart beat rapidly with a vast
and wondering relief. For the marks he remembered
so clearly had been obliterated with painstaking thoroughness,
and at first the slate seemed perfectly clean.
He was sure his unknown friend had avoided leaving
any trace of his own. Each step in the grass had
been carefully scraped out. In the confusion of
the path there was nothing to be learned.
The genuine surprise of Bobby’s
exclamation turned Robinson to him with a look of
doubt.
“You acknowledge these footmarks
were here, Mr. Blackburn?”
“Certainly,” Bobby answered.
“I saw them myself just before dark. I knew
Howells ridiculously connected them with the murderer.”
“You made a good job of it when
you trampled, them out,” Robinson hazarded.
But it was clear Bobby’s amazement
had not been lost on him.
“Or,” he went on, “this
foreigner who advertises himself as your friend!
He was in the court tonight. We know that.”
Suddenly he stooped, and Bobby got
on his knees beside him. The cylinder of light
held in its centre one mark, clear and distinct in
the trampled grass, and with a warm gratitude, a swift
apprehension, Bobby thought of Katherine. For
the mark in the grass had been made by the heel of
a woman’s shoe.
“Not the foreigner then,”
Robinson mused, “not yourself, Blackburn, but
a woman, a devoted woman. That’s something
to get after.”
“And if she lies, the impression
of the heel will give her away,” the coroner
suggested.
Robinson grinned.
“You’d make a rotten detective,
Coroner. Women’s heels are cut to a pattern.
There are thousands of shoes whose heels would fit
this impression. We need the sole for identification,
and that she hasn’t left us. But she’s
done one favour. She’s advertised herself
as a woman, and there are just three women in the
house. One of those committed this serious offence,
and the inference is obvious.”
Before Bobby could protest, the doctor
broke in with his throaty rumble: “One
of those, or the woman who cried about the house.”
Bobby started. The memory of
that eerie grief was still uncomfortable in his brain.
Could there have been actually a woman at the stagnant
lake that afternoon and close to the house to-night-some
mysterious friend who assumed grave risks in his service?
He recognized Robinson’s logic. Unless
there were something in that far-fetched theory, Katherine
faced a situation nearly as serious as his own.
Robinson straightened. At the same moment the
scraping of a window reached them. Bobby glanced
at the newer wing. Katherine leaned from her
window. The coincidence disturbed him. In
Robinson’s mind, he knew, her anxiety would assume
a colour of guilt. Her voice, moreover, was too
uncertain, too full of misgivings:
“What is going on down there?
There have been no-no more tragedies?”
“Would you mind joining us for a moment?”
Robinson asked.
She drew back. The curtain fell
over her lighted window. The darkness of the
court was disturbed again only by the limited radiance
of the flashlight. She came hurriedly from the
front door.
“I saw you gathered here.
I heard you talking. I wondered.”
“You knew there were footprints
in this court,” Robinson said harshly, “that
Howells connected them with the murderer of your uncle.”
“Yes,” she answered simply.
“Why then,” he asked, “did you attempt
to obliterate them?”
She laughed.
“What do you mean? I didn’t.
I haven’t been out of the house since just after
luncheon.”
“Can you prove that?”
“It needs no proof. I tell you so.”
The flashlight exposed the ugly confidence of Robinson’s
smile.
“I am sorry to suggest the need of corroboration.”
“You doubt my word?” she flashed.
“A woman,” he answered,
“has obliterated valuable testimony, I shall
make it my business to punish her.”
She laughed again. Without another
word she turned and reentered the house. Robinson’s
oath was audible to the others.
“We can’t put up with that sort of thing,
sir,” Rawlins said.
“I ought to place this entire household under
arrest,” Robinson muttered.
“As a lawyer,” Graham
said easily, “I should think with your lack of
evidence it might be asking for trouble. There
is Paredes who acknowledges he was in the court.”
“All right. I’ll see what he’s
got to say.”
He started for the house. Bobby lingered for
a moment with Graham.
“Do you know anything about this, Hartley?”
“Nothing,” Graham whispered.
“Then you don’t think Katherine-”
“If she’d done it she’d
have taken good care not to be so curious. I
doubt if it was Katherine.”
They followed the others into the
hall. Bobby, scarcely appreciating why at first,
realized there had been a change there. Then he
understood: Robinson faced an empty chair.
The hall was pungent with cigarette smoke, but Paredes
had gone.
Robinson pointed to the stairs.
“Get him down,” he said to Rawlins.
“He wouldn’t have gone
to bed,” Graham suggested. “Suppose
he’s in the old room where Howells lies?”
But Rawlins found him nowhere upstairs.
With an increasing excitement Robinson joined the
search. They went through the entire house.
Paredes was no longer there. He had, to all appearances,
put a period to his unwelcome visit. He had definitely
disappeared from the Cedars.
His most likely exit was through the
kitchen door which was unlocked, but Jenkins who had
returned to his room had heard no one. With their
electric lamps Robinson and Rawlins ferreted about
the rear entrance for traces. The path there
was as trampled and useless as the one in front.
Rawlins, who had gone some distance from the house,
straightened with a satisfied exclamation. The
others joined him.
“Here’s where he left
the path right enough,” he said. “And
our foreigner wasn’t making any more noise than
he had to.”
He flashed his lamp on a fresh footprint
in the soft soil at the side of the path. The
mark of the toe was deep and firm. The impression
of the heel was very light. Paredes, it was clear,
had walked from the house on tiptoe.
“Follow on,” Robinson
commanded. “I told this fellow I wanted
to question him. I’ve scared him off.”
Keeping his light on the ground, Rawlins
led the way across the clearing. The trail was
simple enough to follow. Each of the Panamanian’s
footprints was distinct. Each had that peculiarity
that suggested the stealth of his progress.
As they continued Bobby responded
to an excited premonition. He sensed the destination
of the chase. He could picture Paredes now in
the loneliest portion of the woods, for the trail
unquestionably pointed to the path he had taken that
afternoon toward the stagnant lake.
“Hartley!” he said.
“Paredes left the house to go to the stagnant
lake where I fancied I saw a woman in black.
Do you see? And he didn’t hear the crying
of a woman a little while ago, and when we told him
he became restless. He wandered about the hall
talking of ghosts.”
“A rendezvous!” Graham
answered. “He may have been waiting for
just that. The crying may have been a signal.
Perhaps you’ll believe now, Bobby, that the
man has had an underhanded purpose in staying here.”
“I’ve made too many hasty
judgments in my life, Hartley. I’ll go slow
on this. I’ll wait until we see what we
find at the lake.”
Rawlins snapped off his light.
The little party paused at the black entrance of the
path into the thicket.
“He’s buried himself in the woods,”
Rawlins said.
They crowded instinctively closer
in the sudden darkness. A brisk wind had sprung
up. It rattled among the trees, and set the dead
leaves in gentle, rustling motion. It suggested
to Bobby the picture which had been forced into his
brain the night of his grandfather’s death.
The moon now possessed less light, but it reminded
him again of a drowning face, and through the darkness
he could fancy the trees straining in the wind like
puny men. Abruptly the thought of penetrating
the forest became frightening. The silent loneliness
of the stagnant lake seemed as unfriendly and threatening
as the melancholy of the old room.
“There are too many of us,”
Robinson was saying. “You’d better
go on alone, Rawlins, and don’t take any chances.
I’ve got to have this man. You understand?
I think he knows things worth while.”
The rising wind laughed at his whisper.
The detective flashed his lamp once, shut it off again,
and stepped into the close embrace of the thicket.
Suddenly Bobby grasped Graham’s
arm. The little group became tense, breathless.
For across the wind with a diffused quality, a lack
of direction, vibrated to them again the faint and
mournful grief of a woman.