THE ONE WHO CREPT IN THE PRIVATE STAIRCASE
The odd, mournful crying lost itself
in the restless lament of the wind. The thicket
from which it had seemed to issue assumed in the pallid
moonlight a new unfriendliness. Instinctively
the six men moved closer together. The coroner’s
thin tones expressed his alarm:
“What the devil was that?
I don’t really believe there could be a woman
around here.”
“A queer one!” the detective grunted.
The district attorney questioned Bobby and Graham.
“That’s the voice you heard from the house?”
Graham nodded.
“Perhaps not so far away.”
Doctor Groom, hitherto more captured
than any of them by the imminence of a spiritual responsibility
for the mystery of the Cedars, was the first now to
reach for a rational explanation of this new phase.
“We mustn’t let our fancies
run away with us. The coroner’s right for
once. No excuse for a woman hiding in that thicket.
A bird, maybe, or some animal-”
“Sounded more like a human being,” Robinson
objected.
The detective reasoned in a steady
unmoved voice: “Only a mad woman would
wander through the woods, crying like that without
a special purpose. This man Paredes has left
the house and come through here. I’d guess
it was a signal.”
“Graham and I had thought of that,” Bobby
said.
“Howells was a sharp one,”
Robinson mused, “but he must have gone wrong
on this fellow. He ’phoned me the man knew
nothing. Spoke of him as a foreigner who lolled
around smoking cigarettes and trying to make a fool
of him with a lot of talk about ghosts.”
“Howells,” Graham said,
“misjudged the case from the start. He wasn’t
to blame, but his mistake cost him his life.”
Robinson didn’t answer.
Bobby saw that the man had discarded his intolerant
temper. From that change he drew a new hope.
He accepted it as the beginning of fulfilment of his
prophecy last night that an accident to Howells and
the entrance of a new man into the case would give
him a fighting chance. It was clearly Paredes
at the moment who filled the district attorney’s
mind.
“Go after him,” he said
shortly to Rawlins. “If you can get away
with it bring him back and whoever you find with him.”
Rawlins hesitated.
“I’m no coward, but I
know what’s happened to Howells. This isn’t
an ordinary case. I don’t want to walk
into an ambush. It would be safer not to run
him down alone.”
“All right,” Robinson
agreed, “I don’t care to leave the Cedars
for the present. Perhaps Mr. Graham-”
But Graham wasn’t enthusiastic.
It never occurred to Bobby that he was afraid.
Graham, he guessed, desired to remain near Katherine.
“I’ll go, if you like,” Doctor Groom
rumbled.
It was probable that Graham’s
instinct to stay had sprung from service rather than
sentiment. The man, it was reasonable, sought
to protect Katherine from the Cedars itself and from
Robinson’s too direct methods of examination.
As an antidote for his unwelcome jealousy Bobby offered
himself to Rawlins.
“Would you mind if I came, too?
I’ve known Paredes a long time.”
Robinson sneered.
“What do you think of that, Rawlins?”
But the detective stepped close and
whispered in the district attorney’s ear.
“All right,” Robinson said. “Go
with ’em, if you want, Mr. Blackburn.”
And Bobby knew that he would go, not to help, but
to be watched.
The others strayed toward the house.
The three men faced the entrance of the path alone.
“No more loud talk now,”
the detective warned. “If he went on tiptoe
so can we.”
Even with this company Bobby shrank
from the dark and restless forest. With a smooth
skill the detective followed the unfamiliar path.
From time to time he stooped close to the ground,
shaded his lamp with his hand, and pressed the control.
Always the light verified the presence of Paredes
ahead of them. Bobby knew they were near the stagnant
lake. The underbrush was thicker. They went
with more care to limit the sound of their passage
among the trees. And each moment the physical
surroundings of the pursuit increased Bobby’s
doubt of Paredes. No ordinary impulse would bring
a man to such a place in this black hour before the
dawn-particularly Paredes, who spoke constantly
of his superstitious nature, who advertised a thorough-paced
fear of the Cedars. The Panamanian’s decision
to remain, his lack of emotion before the tragic succession
of events at the house, his attempt to enter the corridor
just before Bobby had gone himself to the old room
for the evidence, his desire to direct suspicion against
Katherine, finally this excursion in response to the
eerie crying, all suggested a definite, perhaps a
dangerous, purpose in the brain of the serene and inscrutable
man.
They slipped to the open space about
the lake. The moon barely distinguished for them
the flat, melancholy stretch of water. They listened
breathlessly. There was no sound beyond the normal
stirrings of the forest. Bobby had a feeling,
similar to the afternoon’s, that he was watched.
He tried unsuccessfully to penetrate the darkness across
the lake where he had fancied the woman skulking.
The detective’s keen senses were satisfied.
“Dollars to doughnuts they’re
not here. They’ve probably gone on.
I’ll have to take a chance and show the light
again.”
Fresh footprints were revealed in
the narrow circle of illumination. Testifying
to Paredes’s continued stealth, they made a straight
line to the water’s edge. Rawlins exclaimed:
“He stepped into the lake. How deep is
it?”
The black surface of the water seemed
to Bobby like an opaque glass, hiding sinister things.
Suppose Paredes, instead of coming to a rendezvous,
had been led?
“It’s deep enough in the centre,”
he answered.
“Shallow around the edges?”
“Quite.”
“Then he knew we were after him,” Groom
said.
Rawlins nodded and ran his light along
the shore. A few yards to the right a ledge of
smooth rock stretched from the water to a grove of
pine trees. The detective arose and turned off
his light.
“He’s blocked us,”
he said. “He knew he wouldn’t leave
his marks on the rocks or the pine needles. No
way to guess his direction now.”
Doctor Groom cleared his throat.
With a hesitant manner he recited the discovery of
the queer light in the deserted house, its unaccountable
disappearances their failure to find its source.
“I was thinking,” he explained,
“that Paredes alone saw the light give out.
It was his suggestion that he go to the front of the
house to investigate. This path might be used
as a short cut to the deserted house. The rendezvous
may have been there.”
Rawlins was interested again.
“How far is it?”
“Not much more than a mile,” Groom answered.
“Then we’ll go,” the detective decided.
“Show the way.”
Groom in the lead, they struck off
through the woods. Bobby, who walked last, noticed
the faint messengers of dawn behind the trees in the
east. He was glad. The night cloaked too
much in this neighbourhood. By daylight the empty
house would guard its secret less easily. Suddenly
he paused and stood quite still. He wanted to
call to the others, to point out what he had seen.
There was no question. By chance he had accomplished
the task that had seemed so hopeless yesterday.
He had found the spot where his consciousness had
come back momentarily to record a wet moon, trees
straining in the wind like puny men, and a figure in
a mask which he had called his conscience. He
gazed, his hope retreating before an unforeseen disappointment,
for with the paling moon and the bent trees survived
that very figure on the discovery of whose nature he
had built so vital a hope; and in this bad light it
conveyed to him an appearance nearly human. Through
the underbrush the trunk of a tree shattered by some
violent storm mocked him with its illusion. The
dead leaves at the top were like cloth across a face.
Therefore, he argued, there had been no conspiracy
against him. Paredes was clean as far as that
was concerned. He had wandered about the Cedars
alone. He had opened his eyes at a point between
the court and the deserted house.
Rawlins turned back suspiciously,
asking why he loitered. He continued almost indifferently.
He still wanted to know Paredes’s goal, but his
disappointment and its meaning obsessed him.
When they crept up the growing light
exposed the scars of the deserted house. Everything
was as Bobby remembered it. At the front there
was no decayed wood or vegetation to strengthen the
doctor’s half-hearted theory of a phosphorescent
emanation.
The tangle of footsteps near the rear
door was confusing and it was some time before the
three men straightened and glanced at each other, knowing
that the doctor’s wisdom was proved. For
Paredes had been there recently; for that matter,
might still be in the house. Moreover, he hadn’t
hidden his tracks, as he could have done, in the thick
grass. Instead he had come in a straight line
from the woods across a piece of sandy ground which
contained the record of his direction and his continued
stealth. But inside they found nothing except
burnt-out matches strewn across the floor, testimony
of their earlier search. The fugitive had evidently
left more carefully than he had come. The chill
emptiness of the deserted house had drawn and released
him ahead of the chase.
“I guess he knew what the light
meant,” the detective said, “as well as
he did that queer calling. It complicates matters
that I can’t find a woman’s footprints
around here. She may have kept to the grass and
this marked-up path, for, since I don’t believe
in banshees, I’ll swear there’s been a
woman around, either a crazy woman, wandering at large,
who might be connected with the murders, or else a
sane one who signalled the foreigner. Let’s
get back and see what the district attorney makes
of it.”
“It might be wiser not to dismiss
the banshees, as you call them, too hurriedly,”
Doctor Groom rumbled.
As they returned along the road in
the growing light Bobby lost the feeling he had had
of being spied upon. The memory of such an adventure
was bound to breed something like confidence among
its actors. Rawlins, Bobby hoped, would be less
unfriendly. The detective, in fact, talked as
much to him as to the doctor. He assured them
that Robinson would get the Panamanian unless he proved
miraculously clever.
“He’s shown us that he
knows something,” he went on. “I don’t
say how much, because I can’t get a motive to
make it worth his while to commit such crimes.”
The man smiled blandly at Bobby.
“While in your case there’s a motive at
least-the money.”
He chuckled.
“That’s the easiest motive
to understand in the world. It’s stronger
than love.”
Bobby wondered. Love had been
the impulse for the last few months’ folly that
had led him into his present situation. Graham,
over his stern principles of right, had already stepped
outside the law in backing Katherine’s efforts
to save Bobby. So he wondered how much Graham
would risk, how far he was capable of going himself,
at the inspiration of such a motive.
The sun was up when they reached the
Cedars. Katherine had gone to her room.
The coroner had left. Robinson and Graham had
built a fresh fire in the hall. They sat there,
talking.
“Where you been?” Robinson
demanded. “We’d about decided the
spooks had done for you.”
The detective outlined their failure.
The district attorney listened with a frown.
At the end he arose and, without saying anything, walked
to the telephone. When he returned he appeared
better satisfied.
“Mr. Paredes,” he said,
“will have to be a slick article to make a clean
getaway. And I’m bringing another man to
keep reporters out. They’ll know from Howells’s
murder that Mr. Blackburn didn’t die a natural
death. If reporters get in don’t talk to
them. I don’t want that damned foreigner
reading in the papers what’s going on here.
I’d give my job to have him in that chair for
five minutes now.”
Graham cleared his throat.
“I scarcely know how to suggest
this, since it is sufficiently clear, because of Howells’s
suspicions, that you have Mr. Blackburn under close
observation. But he has a fair idea of Paredes’s
habits, his haunts, and his friends in New York.
He might be able to learn things the police couldn’t.
I’ve one or two matters to take me to town.
I would make myself personally responsible for his
return-”
The district attorney interrupted.
“I see what you mean. Wait a minute.”
He clasped his hands and rolled his
fat thumbs one around the other. The little eyes,
surrounded by puffy flesh, became enigmatic. All
at once he glanced up with a genial smile.
“Why not? I haven’t
said anything about holding Mr. Blackburn as more
than a witness.”
His tone chilled Bobby as thoroughly
as a direct accusation would have done.
“And,” Robinson went on,
“the sooner you go the better. The sooner
you get back the better.”
Graham was visibly puzzled by this
prompt acquiescence. He started for the stairs,
but the district attorney waved him aside.
“Coats and hats are downstairs. No need
wasting time.”
Graham turned to Doctor Groom.
“You’ll tell Miss Perrine, Doctor?”
The doctor showed that he understood the warning Graham
wished to convey.
The district attorney made a point
of walking to the stable to see them off. Graham
gestured angrily as they drove away.
“It’s plain as the nose
on your face. I was too anxious to test their
attitude toward you, Bobby. He jumped at the chance
to run us out of the house. He’ll have
several hours during which to turn the place upside
down, to give Katherine the third degree. And
we can’t go back. We’ll have to see
it through.”
“Why should he give me a chance to slip away?”
Bobby asked.
But before long he realized that Robinson
was taking no chances. At the junction of the
road from Smithtown a car picked them up and clung
to their heels all the way to the city.
“Rawlins must have telephoned,”
Graham said, “while we went to the stable.
They’re still playing Howells’s game.
They’ll give you plenty of rope.”
He drove straight to Bobby’s
apartment. The elevator man verified their suspicions.
Robinson had telephoned the New York police for a search.
A familiar type of metropolitan detective met them
in the hall outside Bobby’s door.
“I’m through, gentlemen,” he greeted
them impudently.
Graham faced him in a burst of temper.
“The city may have to pay for this outrage.”
The man grinned.
“I should get gray hairs about that.”
He went on downstairs. They entered
the apartment to find confusion in each room.
Bureau drawers had been turned upside down. The
desk had been examined with a reckless thoroughness.
Graham was frankly worried.
“I wonder if he found anything. If he did
you won’t get out of town.”
“What could he find?” Bobby asked.
“If the court was planted,”
Graham answered, “why shouldn’t these rooms
have been?”
“After last night I don’t believe the
court was planted,” Bobby said.
In the lower hall the elevator man
handed Bobby the mail that had come since the night
of his grandfather’s murder. In the car
again he glanced over the envelopes. He tore
one open with a surprised haste.
“This is Maria’s handwriting,” he
told Graham.
He read the hastily scrawled note
aloud with a tone that failed toward the end.
“Dear Bobby;
“You must not, as you say, think
me a bad sport. You were very wicked last night.
Maybe you were so because of too many of those naughty
little cocktails. Why should you threaten poor
Maria? And you boasted you were going out to
the Cedars to kill your grandfather because you didn’t
like him any more. So I told Carlos to take you
home. I was afraid of a scene in public.
Come around. Have tea with me. Tell me you
forgive me. Tell me what was the matter with
you.”
“She must have written that
yesterday morning,” Bobby muttered. “Good
Lord, Hartley! Then it was in my mind!”
“Unless that letter’s
a plant, too,” Graham said. “Yet how
could she know there’d be a search? Why
shouldn’t she have addressed it to the Cedars
where there was a fair chance of its being opened and
read by the police? Why hasn’t my man made
any report on her? We’ve a number of questions
to ask Maria.”
But word came down from the dancer’s
apartment that Maria wasn’t at home.
“When did she go out?” Graham asked the
hall man.
“Not since I came on duty at six o’clock.”
Graham slipped a bill in the man’s hand.
“We’ve an important message for her.
We’d better leave it with the maid.”
When they were alone in the upper hall he explained
his purpose to Bobby.
“We must know whether she’s
actually here. If she isn’t, if she hasn’t
been back for the last twenty-four hours-don’t
you see? It was yesterday afternoon you thought
you saw a woman at the lake, and last night a woman
cried about the Cedars-”
“That’s going pretty far, Hartley.”
“It’s a chance. A physical one.”
A pretty maid opened the door.
Her face was troubled. She studied them with
frank disappointment.
“I thought-” she began.
“That your mistress was coming back?”
Graham flashed.
There was no concealment in the girl’s
manner. It was certain that Maria was not in
the apartment.
“You remember me?” Bobby asked.
“Yes. You have been here.
You are a friend of mademoiselle’s. You
can, perhaps, tell me where she is.”
Bobby shook his head. The girl spread her hands.
She burst out excitedly:
“What is one to do? I have
telephoned the theatre. There was no one there
who knew anything at all, except that mademoiselle
had not appeared at the performance last night.”
Graham glanced at Bobby.
“When,” he asked, “did you see her
last?”
“It was before luncheon yesterday.”
“Did she leave no instructions? Didn’t
she say when she would be back?”
The girl nodded.
“That’s what worries me,
for she said she would be back after the performance
last night.”
“She left no instructions?” Graham repeated.
“Only that if any one called
or telephoned I was to make no appointments.
What am I to do? Perhaps I shouldn’t be
talking to you. She would never forgive me for
an indiscretion.”
“For the present I advise you
to do nothing,” Graham said. “You
can safely leave all that to her managers. I
am going to see them now. I will tell them what
you have said.”
The girl’s eyes moistened.
“Thank you, sir. I have been at my wits’
end.”
Apparently she withheld nothing.
She played no part to confuse the dancer’s friends.
On the way to the managers’
office, with the trailing car behind them, Graham
reasoned excitedly:
“For the first time we seem
to be actually on the track. Here’s a tangible
clue that may lead to the heart of the case. Maria
pulled the wool over the maid’s eyes, too.
She didn’t want her to know her plans, but her
instructions show that she had no intention of returning
last night. She probably made a bee line for
the Cedars. It was probably she that you saw
at the lake, probably she who cried last night.
If only she hadn’t written that note! I
can’t get the meaning of it. It’s
up to her managers now. If they haven’t
heard from her it’s a safe guess she’s
playing a deep game, connected with the crying, and
the light at the deserted house, and the disappearance
of Paredes before dawn. You must realize the
connection between that and your condition the other
evening after you had left them.”
Bobby nodded. He began to hope
that at the managers’ office they would receive
no explanation of Maria’s absence destructive
to Graham’s theory. Early as it was they
found a bald-headed man in his shirt sleeves pacing
with an air of panic a blantantly furnished office.
“Well!” he burst out as
they entered. “My secretary tells me you’ve
come about this temperamental Carmen of mine.
Tell me where she is. Quick!”
Graham smiled at Bobby. The manager
ran his fingers across his bald and shining forehead.
“It’s no laughing matter.”
“Then she has definitely disappeared?”
Graham said.
“Disappeared! Why did I
come down at this ungodly hour except on the chance
of getting some word? She didn’t even telephone
last night. I had to show myself in front of
the curtain and give them a spiel about a sudden indisposition.
And believe me, gentlemen, audiences ain’t what
they used to be. Did these ginks sit back and
take the show for what it was worth? Not by a
darn sight. Flocked to the box office and howled
for their money back. If she doesn’t appear
to-night I might as well close the house. I’ll
be ruined.”
“Unless,” Graham suggested,
“you get your press agent to make capital out
of her absence. The papers would publish her picture
and thousands of people would look her up for you.”
The manager ceased his perplexed massage
of his forehead. He shook hands genially.
“I’d thought of that with
some frills. ’Has beautiful dancer met foul
play? Millions in jewels on her person when last
seen.’ Old stuff, but they rise to it.”
“That will help,” Graham
said to Bobby when they were in the car again.
“The reporters will find Maria quicker than any
detective I can put my hand on. My man evidently
fell down because she had gone before I got him on
the case.” At his office they learned that
was the fact. The private detective had been
able to get no slightest clue as to Maria’s
whereabouts. Moreover, Bobby’s description
of the stranger who had entered the cafe with her
merely suggested a type familiar to the Tenderloin.
For purposes of identification it was worthless.
Always followed by the car from Smithtown, they went
to the hotel where Paredes had lived, to a number
of his haunts. Bobby talked with men who knew
him, but he learned nothing. Paredes’s
friends had had no word since the man’s departure
for the Cedars the day before. So they turned
their backs on the city, elated by the significance
of Maria’s absence, yet worried by the search
and the watchful car which never lost sight of them.
When they were in the country Graham sighed his relief.
“You haven’t been stopped. Therefore,
nothing was found at your apartment, but if that wasn’t
planted why should Maria have sent an incriminating
note there?” “Unless,” Bobby answered,
“she told the truth. Unless she was sincere
when she mailed it. Unless she learned something
important between the time she wrote it and her disappearance
from her home.”
“Frankly, Bobby,” Graham
said, “the note and the circumstances under
which it came to you are as damaging as the footprints
and the handkerchief, but it doesn’t tell us
how any human being could have entered that room to
commit the murders and disturb the bodies. At
least we’ve got one physical fact, and I’m
going to work on that.”
“If it is Maria prowling around
the Cedars,” Bobby said, “she’s amazingly
slippery, and with Paredes gone what are you going
to do with your physical fact? And how does it
explain the friendly influence that wiped out my footprints?
Is it a friendly or an evil influence that snatched
away the evidence and that keeps it secreted?”
“We’ll see,” Graham
said. “I’m going after a flesh-and-blood
criminal who isn’t you. I’m going
to try to find out what your grandfather was afraid
of the night of his murder.”
After a time he glanced up.
“You’ve known Paredes
for a long time, Bobby, but I don’t think you’ve
ever told me how you met him.”
“A couple of years ago I should
think,” Bobby answered. “Somebody
brought him to the club. I’ve forgotten
who. Carlos was working for a big Panama importing
firm. He was trying to interest this chap in the
New York end. I saw him off and on after that
and got to like him for his quiet manner and a queer,
dry wit he had in those days. Two or three months
ago he-he seemed to fit into my humour,
and we became pretty chummy as you know. Even
after last night I hate to believe he’s my enemy.”
“He’s your enemy,”
Graham answered, “and last night’s the
weak joint in his armour. I wonder if Robinson
didn’t scare him away by threatening to question
him. Paredes isn’t connected with that company
now, is he? I gather he has no regular position.”
“No. He’s picked
up one or two temporary things with the fruit companies.
More than his running away, the thing that worries
me about Carlos is his ridiculous suspicion of Katherine.”
He told Graham in detail of that conversation.
Graham frowned. He opened the throttle wider.
Their anxiety increased to know what had happened at
the Cedars since their departure. The outposts
of the forest imposed silence, closed eagerly about
them, seemed to welcome them to its dead loneliness.
There was a man on guard at the gate. They hurried
past. The house showed no sign of life, but when
they entered the court Bobby saw Katherine at her
window, doubtless attracted by the sounds of their
arrival. Her face brightened, but she raised her
arms in a gesture suggestive of despair.
“Does she mean the evidence has been found?”
Bobby asked.
Graham made no attempt to conceal
his real interest, the impulse at the back of all
his efforts in Bobby’s behalf.
“More likely Robinson has worried
the life out of her since we’ve been gone.
I oughtn’t to have left her. I set the trap
myself.”
When they were in the house their
halting curiosity was lost in a vast surprise.
The hall was empty but they heard voices in the library.
They hurried across the dining room, pausing in the
doorway, staring with unbelieving eyes at the accustomed
picture they had least expected to see.
Paredes lounged on the divan, smoking
with easy indifference. His clothing and his
shoes were spotless. He had shaved, and his beard
had been freshly trimmed. Rawlins and the district
attorney stood in front of the fireplace, studying
him with perplexed eyes. The persistence of their
regard even after Bobby’s entrance suggested
to him that the evidence remained secreted, that the
officers, under the circumstances, were scarcely interested
in his return. He was swept himself into an explosive
amazement:
“Carlos! What the deuce are you doing here?”
The Panamanian expelled a cloud of smoke. He
smiled.
“Resting after a fatiguing walk.”
In his unexpected presence Bobby fancied
a demolition of the hope Graham and he had brought
back from the city. He couldn’t imagine
guilt lurking behind that serene manner.
“Where did you come from? What were you
up to last night?”
There was no accounting for Paredes’s
daring, he told himself, no accounting for his easy
gesture now as he drew again at his cigarette and
tossed it in the fireplace.
“These gentlemen,” he
said, “have been asking just that question.
I’m honoured. I had no idea my movements
were of such interest. I’ve told them that
I took a stroll. The night was over. There
was no point in going to bed, and all day I had been
without exercise.”
“Yet,” Graham said harshly,
“you have had practically no sleep since you
came here.”
Paredes nodded.
“Very distressing, isn’t it?”
“Maybe,” Rawlins sneered,
“you’ll tell us why you went on tiptoe,
and I suppose you didn’t hear a woman crying
in the woods?”
“That’s just it,”
Paredes answered. “I did hear something
like that, and it occurred to me to follow such a
curious sound. So I went on tiptoe, as you call
it.”
“Why,” Robinson exclaimed
angrily, “you walked in the lake to hide your
tracks!”
Paredes smiled.
“It was very dark. That was chance.
Quite silly of me. My feet got wet.”
“I gather,” Rawlins said,
“it was chance that took you to the deserted
house.”
Paredes shook his head.
“Don’t you think I was
as much puzzled as the rest by that strange, disappearing
light? It was as good a place to walk as any.”
“Where have you been since?” Graham asked.
“When I had got there I was
tired,” Paredes answered. “Since it
wasn’t far to the station I thought I’d
go on into Smithtown and have a bath and rest.
But I assure you I’ve trudged back from the station
just now.”
Suddenly he repeated the apparently
absurd formula he had used with Howells.
“You know the court seems full
of unfriendly things-what the ignorant
would call ghosts. I’m Spanish and I know.”
After a moment he added: “The woods, too.
I shouldn’t care to wander through them too much
after dark.”
Robinson stared, but Rawlins brushed the question
aside.
“What hotel did you go to in Smithtown?”
“It’s called the ‘New.’
Nothing could be farther from the fact.”
“Shall I see if that’s straight, sir?”
The district attorney agreed, and Rawlins left the
room. Paredes laughed.
“How interesting! I’m
under suspicion. It would be something, wouldn’t
it, to commit crimes with the devilish ingenuity of
these? No, no, Mr. District Attorney, look to
the ghosts. They alone are sufficiently clever.
But I might say, since you take this attitude, that
I don’t care to answer any more questions until
you discover something that might give you the right
to ask them.”
He lay back on the divan, languidly
lighting another cigarette. Graham beckoned Robinson.
Bobby followed them out, suspecting Graham’s
purpose, unwilling that action should be taken too
hastily against the Panamanian; for even now guilty
knowledge seemed incompatible with Paredes’s
polished reserve. When he joined the others,
indeed, Graham with an aggressive air was demanding
the district attorney’s intentions.
“If he could elude you so easily
last night, it’s common sense to put him where
you can find him in case of need. He’s given
you excuse enough.”
“The man’s got me guessing,”
Robinson mused, “but there are other elements.”
“What’s happened since
we left?” Graham asked quickly. “Have
you got any trace of Howells’s evidence?”
Robinson smiled enigmatically, but
his failure was apparent.
“I’m like Howells,”
he said. “I’d risk nearly anything
myself to learn how the room was entered, how the
crimes were committed, how those poor devils were
made to alter their positions.”
“So,” Bobby said, “you
had my rooms in New York searched. You had me
followed to-day. It’s ridiculous.”
Robinson ignored him. He stepped
to the front door, opened it, and looked around the
court.
“What did the sphinx mean about ghosts in the
court?”
They walked out, gazing helplessly
at the trampled grass about the fountain, at the melancholy
walls, at the partly opened window of the room of
mystery.
“He knows something,”
Robinson mused. “Maybe you’re right,
Mr. Graham, but I wonder if I oughtn’t to go
farther and take you all.”
Graham smiled uncomfortably, but Bobby
knew why the official failed to follow that radical
course. Like Howells, he hesitated to remove from
the Cedars the person most likely to solve its mystery.
As long as a chance remained that Howells had been
right about Bobby he would give Silas Blackburn’s
grandson his head, merely making sure, as he had done
this morning, that there should be no escape.
He glanced up.
“I wonder if our foreigner’s laughing
at me now.”
Graham made a movement toward the door.
“We might,” he said significantly,
“find that out without disturbing him.”
Robinson nodded and led the way silently
back to the house. Such a method was repugnant
to Bobby, and he followed at a distance. Then
he saw from the movements of the two men ahead that
the library had again offered the unexpected, and
he entered. Paredes was no longer in the room.
Bobby was about to speak, but Robinson shook his head
angrily, raising his hand in a gesture of warning.
All three strained forward, listening, and Bobby caught
the sound that had arrested the others-a
stealthy scraping that would have been inaudible except
through such a brooding silence as pervaded the old
house.
Bobby’s interest quickened at
this confirmation of Graham’s theory. There
was a projection of cold fear, moreover, in its sly
allusion. It gave to his memory of Paredes, with
his tall, graceful figure, his lack of emotion, his
inscrutable eyes, and his pointed beard, a suggestion
nearly satanic. For the stealthy scraping had
come from behind the closed door of the private staircase.
Howells had gone up that staircase. None of them
could forget for a moment that it led to the private
hall outside the room in which the murders had been
committed.
It occurred to Bobby that the triumph
Graham’s face expressed was out of keeping with
the man. It disturbed him nearly as thoroughly
as Paredes’s stealthy presence in that place.
“We’ve got him,” Graham whispered.
Robinson’s bulky figure moved
cautiously toward the door. He grasped the knob,
swung the door open, and stepped back, smiling his
satisfaction.
Half way down the staircase Paredes
leaned against the wall, one foot raised and outstretched,
as though an infinitely quiet descent had been interrupted.
The exposure had been too quick for his habit.
His face failed to hide its discomfiture. His
laugh rang false.
“Hello!”
“I’m afraid we’ve
caught you, Paredes,” Graham said, and the triumph
blazed now in his voice.
What Paredes did then was more startling,
more out of key than any of his recent actions.
He came precipitately down. His eyes were dangerous.
As Bobby watched the face whose quiet had at last
been tempestuously destroyed, he felt that the man
was capable of anything under sufficient provocation.
“Got me for what?” he snarled.
“Tell us why you were sneaking
up there. In connection with your little excursion
before dawn it suggests a guilty knowledge.”
Paredes straightened. He shrugged
his shoulders. With an admirable effort of the
will he smoothed the rage from his face, but for Bobby
the satanic suggestion lingered.
“Why do you suppose I’m
here?” he said in a restrained voice that scarcely
rose above a whisper. “To help Bobby.
I was simply looking around for Bobby’s sake.”
That angered Bobby. He wanted
to cry out against the supposed friend who had at
last shown his teeth.
“That,” Graham laughed,
“is why you sneaked, why you didn’t make
any noise, why you lost your temper when we caught
you at it? What about it, Mr. District Attorney?”
Robinson stepped forward.
“Nothing else to do, Mr. Graham.
He’s too slippery. I’ll put him in
a safe place.”
“You mean,” Paredes cried, “that
you’ll arrest me?”
“You’ve guessed it. I’ll lock
you up as a material witness.”
Paredes swung on Bobby.
“You’ll permit this, Bobby?
You’ll forget that I am a guest in your house?”
Bobby flushed.
“Why have you stayed? What
were you doing up there? Answer those questions.
Tell me what you want.”
Paredes turned away. He took
a cigarette from his pocket and lighted it. His
fingers were not steady. For the first time, it
became evident to Bobby, Paredes was afraid.
Rawlins came back from the telephone. He took
in the tableau.
“What’s the rumpus?”
“Run this man to Smithtown,”
Robinson directed. “Lock him up, and tell
the judge, when he’s arraigned in the morning,
that I want him held as a material witness.”
“He was at the hotel in Smithtown
all right,” Rawlins said.
He tapped Paredes’s arm.
“You coming on this little joy
ride like a lamb or a lion? Say, you’ll
find the jail about as comfortable as the New Hotel.”
Paredes smiled. The evil and
dangerous light died in his eyes. He became all
at once easy and impervious again.
“Like a lamb. How else?”
“I’m sorry, Carlos,”
Bobby muttered. “If you’d only say
something! If you’d only explain your movements!
If you’d only really help!”
Again Paredes shrugged his shoulders.
“Handcuffs?” he asked Rawlins.
Rawlins ran his hands deftly over the Panamanian’s
clothing.
“No armed neutrality for me,”
he grinned. “All right. We’ll
forget the bracelets since you haven’t a gun.”
Puffing at his cigarette, Paredes
got his coat and hat and followed the detective from
the house.
Robinson and Graham climbed the private
staircase to commence another systematic search of
the hall, to discover, if they could, the motive for
Paredes’s stealthy presence there. Bobby
accepted greedily this opportunity to find Katherine,
to learn from her, undisturbed, what had happened
in the house that morning, the meaning, perhaps, of
her despairing gesture. When, in response to
his knock, she opened her door and stepped into the
corridor he guessed her despair had been an expression
of the increased strain, of her helplessness in face
of Robinson’s harsh determination.
“He questioned me for an hour,”
she said, “principally about the heel mark in
the court. They cling to that, because I don’t
think they’ve found anything new at the lake.”
“You don’t know anything
about it, do you, Katherine? You weren’t
there? You didn’t do that for me?”
“I wasn’t there, Bobby.
I honestly don’t know any more about it than
you do.”
“Carlos was in the court,”
he mused. “Did you know they’d taken
him? We found him creeping down the private stairway.”
There was a hard quality about her gratitude.
“I am glad, Bobby. The
man makes me shudder, and all morning they seemed
more interested in you than in him. They’ve
rummaged every room-even mine.”
She laughed feverishly.
“That’s why I’ve
been so upset. They seemed-”
She broke off. She picked at her handkerchief.
After a moment she looked him frankly in the eyes
and continued: “They seemed almost as doubtful
of me as of you.”
He recalled Paredes’s suspicion of the girl.
“It’s nonsense, Katherine. And I’m
to blame for that, too.”
She put her finger to her lips. Her smile was
wistful.
“Hush! You mustn’t blame yourself.
You mustn’t think of that.”
Again her solicitude, their isolation
in a darkened place, tempted him, aroused impulses
nearly irresistible. Her slender figure, the pretty
face, grown familiar and more desirable through all
these years, swept him to a harsher revolt than he
had conquered in the library. In the face of
Graham, in spite of his own intolerable position he
knew he couldn’t fight that truth eternally.
She must have noticed his struggle without grasping
its cause, for she touched his hand, and the wistfulness
of her expression increased.
“I wish you wouldn’t think of me, Bobby.
It’s you we must all think of.”
He accepted with a cold dismay the
sisterly anxiety of her attitude. It made his
renunciation easier. He walked away.
“Why do you go?” she called after him.
He gestured vaguely, without turning.
He didn’t see her again until
dinner time. She was as silent then as she had
been the night before when Howells had sat with them,
his moroseness veiling a sharp interest in the plan
that was to lead to his death. Robinson’s
mood was very different. He talked a great deal,
making no effort to hide his irritation. His
failure to find any clue in the private staircase
after Paredes’s arrest had clearly stimulated
his interest in Bobby. The sharp little eyes,
surrounded by puffy flesh, held a threat for him.
Bobby was glad when the meal ended.
Howells’s body was taken away
that night. It was a relief for all of them to
know that the old room was empty again.
“I daresay you won’t sleep
there,” Graham said to Robinson.
Robinson glanced at Bobby.
“Not as things stand,”
he answered. “The library lounge is plenty
good enough for me tonight.”
Graham went upstairs with Bobby.
There was no question about his purpose. He wouldn’t
repeat last night’s mistake.
“At least,” he said, when
the door was closed behind them, “I can see if
you do get up and wander about in your sleep.
I’d bet a good deal that you won’t.”
“If I did it would be an indication?”
“Granted it’s your custom, what is there
to tempt you to-night?”
Bobby answered, half jesting:
“You’ve not forgotten
Robinson on the library sofa. The man isn’t
exactly working for me. Tonight he seems almost
as unfriendly as Howells was.”
He yawned.
“I ought to sleep now if ever.
I’ve seldom been so tired. Two such nights!”
He hesitated.
“But I am glad you’re
here, Hartley. I can go to sleep with a more
comfortable feeling.”
“Don’t worry,” Graham
said. “You’ll sleep quietly enough,
and we’ll all be better for a good rest.”
For only a little while they talked
of the mystery. While Graham regretted his failure
to find any trace of Maria, their voices dwindled
sleepily. Bobby recalled his last thought before
losing himself last night. He tried to force
from his mind now the threat in Robinson’s eyes.
He told himself again and again that the man wasn’t
actually unfriendly. Then the blackness encircled
him. He slept.
Almost at once, it seemed to him,
he was fighting away, demanding drowsily:
“What’s the matter? Leave me alone.”
He heard Graham’s voice, unnaturally subdued
and anxious.
“What are you doing, Bobby?”
Then Bobby knew he was no longer in
his bed, that he stood instead in a cold place; and
the meaning of his position came with a rush of sick
terror.
“Get hold of yourself,” Graham said.
“Come back.”
Bobby opened his eyes. He was
in the upper hall at the head of the stairs.
Unconsciously he had been about to creep quietly down,
perhaps to the library. Graham had awakened him.
It seemed to offer the answer to everything.
It seemed to give outline to a monstrous familiar that
drowned his real self in the black pit while it conducted
his body to the commission of unspeakable crimes.
He lurched into the bedroom and sat
shivering on the bed. Graham entered and quietly
closed the door.
“What time is it?” Bobby asked hoarsely.
“Half-past two. I don’t think Robinson
was aroused.”
The damp moon gave an ominous unreality to the room.
“What did I do?” Bobby whispered.
“Got softly out of bed and went
to the hall. It was uncanny. You were like
an automaton. I didn’t wake you at once.
You see, I-I thought you might go to the
old room.”
Bobby shook again. He drew a blanket about his
shoulders.
“And you believed I’d
show the way in and out, but the room was empty, so
I was going downstairs-”
He shuddered.
“Good God! Then it’s
all true. I did it for the money. I put Howells
out to protect myself. I was going after Robinson.
It’s true. Hartley! Tell me.
Do you think it’s true?”
Graham turned away.
“Don’t ask me to say anything
to help you just now,” he answered huskily,
“for after this I don’t dare, Bobby.
I don’t dare.”