THE CEDARS IS LEFT TO ITS SHADOWS
Straightway Bobby repented the alarm
he had, perhaps too impulsively, given. For the
hand protruding from the wall was, indeed, flesh and
blood, and with the knowledge came back his fear for
Katherine, conquering his first relief. A sick
revulsion swept him. He remembered the evidence
found in Katherine’s room, and her refusal to
answer questions. Could Paredes and the officers
have been right? Was it conceivably her hand
struggling weakly in his grasp?
The door from the corridor crashed
open. Rawlins burst through. Graham ran
after him. From the private stairway arose the
sound of the district attorney’s hurrying footsteps.
“What is it? What have you got?”
Rawlins shouted.
Graham cried out:
“You’re all right, Bobby?”
The candle which the detective carried
gleamed on the slender fingers, showing Bobby that
they had been inserted through an opening in the wall.
He couldn’t understand, for time after time each
one of the panels had been sounded and examined.
Beyond, he could see dimly the dark clothing of the
person who, with a stealth in itself suggestive of
abnormal crime, had made use of such a device.
As Rawlins hurried up he wondered if it wouldn’t
be the better course to free his prisoner, to cry
out, urging an escape.
Already it was too late. The
detective and Graham had seen, and clearly they had
no doubt that he held the one responsible for two brutal
murders and for the confusing mysteries that had capped
them.
“Looks like a lady’s hand,”
Rawlins called. “Don’t let go, young
fellow.”
He unlocked the door to the private
hallway. Graham and he dashed out. In Bobby’s
uncertain grasp the hand twitched.
Robinson’s voice reached him through the opening.
“Let go, Mr. Blackburn.
You’ve done your share, the Lord knows.
You’ve caught the beast with the goods.”
Bobby released the slender fingers.
He saw them vanish through the opening. He left
the bed and reluctantly approached the door to the
private hall. Excited phrases roared in his ears.
He scarcely dared listen because of their possible
confirmation of his doubt. The fingers, he repeated
to himself, had been too slender. The moment that
had freed him from fear of his own guilt had constructed
in its place an uncertainty harder to face. Yet
there was nothing to be gained by waiting. Sooner
or later he must learn whether Katherine had hidden
the evidence, whether she had used the stout and deadly
hatpin, whether she struggled now in the grasp of
vindictive men.
A voice from the corridor arrested him.
“Bobby!”
With a glad cry he swung around.
Katherine stood in the opposite doorway. Her
presence there, beyond a doubt, was her exculpation.
He crossed the sombre room. He grasped her hands.
He smiled happily. After all, the hand he had
held was not as slender as hers.
“Thank heavens you’re here.”
In a word he recited the result of his vigil.
“It clears you,” she said. “Quick!
We must see who it is.”
But he lingered, for he wanted that ugly fear done
with once for all.
“You can tell me now how the evidence got in
your room.”
“I can’t,” she said. “I
don’t know.”
The truth of her reply impressed him.
He looked at her and wondered that she should be fully
dressed.
“Why are you dressed?” he asked.
She was puzzled.
“Why not? I don’t think any one had
gone to bed.”
“But it must be very late.
I supposed it was the same time-half-past
two.”
She started to cross the room. She laughed nervously.
“It isn’t eleven.”
He recalled his interminable anticipation
among the shadows of the old room.
“I’ve watched there only a little more
than an hour!”
“Not much more than that, Bobby.”
“What a coward! I’d have sworn it
was nearly daylight.”
She pressed his hand.
“No. Very brave,” she whispered.
“Let us see if it was worth it.”
They stepped through the doorway.
Half way down the hall Robinson, Graham, and Rawlins
held a fourth, who had ceased struggling. Bobby
paused, yet, since seeing Katherine step from the corridor,
his reason had taught him to expect just this.
The fourth man was Paredes, nearly effeminate, slender-fingered.
“Carlos!” Bobby cried. “You
can’t have done these unspeakable things!”
The Panamanian stared without answering.
Evidently he had had time to control his chagrin,
to smother his revolt from the future; for the thin
face was bare of emotion. The depths of the eyes
as usual turned back scrutiny. The man disclosed
neither guilt nor the outrage of an assumed innocence;
neither confession nor denial. He simply stared,
straining a trifle against the eager hands of his
captors.
Rawlins grinned joyously.
“You ought to have a medal for
getting away with this, young fellow. Things
didn’t look so happy for you an hour or so ago.”
“And I had half a mind,”
Robinson confessed, “to refuse you the chance.
Glad I didn’t. Glad as I can be you made
good.”
With the egotism any man is likely
to draw from his efforts in the detection of crime
he added easily:
“Of course I’ve suspected
this spigotty all along. I don’t have to
remind you of that.”
“Sure,” Rawlins said.
“And didn’t I put it up to him strong enough
to-night?”
Paredes laughed lightly.
“All credit where it is due. You also put
it up to Miss Perrine.”
“The details will straighten
all that out,” Robinson said. “I don’t
pretend to have them yet.”
“I gather not,” Paredes
mused, “with old Blackburn’s ghost still
in the offing.”
“That talk,” Rawlins said,
“won’t go down from you any more.
I daresay you’ve got most of the details in
your head.”
“I daresay,” Paredes answered dryly.
He fought farther back against the detaining hands.
“Is there any necessity for
this exhibition of brute strength? You must find
it very exhausting. You may think me dangerous,
and I thank you; but I have no gun, and I’m
no match for four men and a woman. Besides, you
hurt my arm. Bobby was none too tender with that.
I ought to have used my good arm. You’ll
get no details from me unless you take your hands off.”
Robinson’s hesitation was easily
comprehensible. If Paredes were responsible for
the abnormalities they had experienced at the Cedars
he might find it simple enough to trick them now,
but the man’s mocking smile brought the anger
to Robinson’s face.
“Of course he can’t get
away. See if there’s anything on his clothes,
Rawlins. He ought to have the hatpin. Then
let him go.”
The detective, however, failed to
find the hatpin or any other weapon.
“You see,” Paredes smiled.
“That’s something in my favour.”
He stepped back, brushing his clothing
with his uninjured hand. He lighted a cigarette.
He drew back the coat sleeve of his left arm and readjusted
the bandage. He glanced up as heavy footsteps
heralded Doctor Groom.
“Hello, Doctor,” he called
cheerily. “I was afraid you’d nap
through the show. It seems the bloodhounds of
the law left us out of their confidence.”
“What’s all this?” the doctor rumbled.
Paredes waved his hand.
“I am a prisoner.”
The doctor gaped.
“You mean you-”
“Young Blackburn caught him,”
Robinson explained. “He was in a position
to finish him just as he did Howells.”
“Except that I had no hatpin,” Paredes
yawned.
The doctor’s uneasy glance sought the opening
in the wall.
“I thought you had examined
all these walls,” he grumbled. “How
did you miss this?”
Robinson ran his fingers through his hair.
“That’s what I’ve
been asking myself,” he said. “I went
over that panelling a dozen times myself.”
Bobby and Katherine went closer.
Bobby had been from the first puzzled by Paredes’s
easy manner. He had a quick hope. He saw
the man watch with an amused tolerance while the district
attorney bent over, examining the face of the panel.
“An entire section,” Robinson
said-“the thickness of the wall-has
been shifted to one side. No wonder we didn’t
see any joints or get a hollow sound from this panel
any more than from the others. But why didn’t
we stumble on the mechanism? Maybe you’ll
tell us that, Paredes.”
The Panamanian blew a wreath of smoke
against the ancient wall.
“Gladly, but you will find it
humiliating. I have experienced humility in this
hall myself. The reason you didn’t find
any mechanism is that there wasn’t any.
You looked for something most cautiously concealed,
not realizing that the best concealment is no concealment
at all. It’s fundamental. I don’t
know how it slipped my own mind. No grooves show
because the door is an entire panel. There isn’t
even a latch. You merely push hard against its
face. Such arrangements are common enough in
colonial houses, and there was more than the nature
of the crimes to tell you there was some such thing
here. I mean if you will examine the farther
door closer than you have done you will find that it
has fewer coats of paint than the one leading to the
corridor, that its frame is of newer wood. In
other words, it was cut through after the wing was
built. This panel was the original door, designed,
with the private stairway and the hall, for the exclusive
use of the master of the house. Try it.”
Robinson braced himself and shoved
against the panel. It moved in its grooves with
a vibrant stirring.
“Rusty,” he said.
Katherine started.
“That’s what I heard each time,”
she cried.
Above his heavy black beard the doctor’s
cheeks whitened. Robinson made a gesture of revulsion.
“That gives the nasty game away.”
“Naturally,” Paredes said,
“and you must admit the game is as beautifully
simple as the panel. The instrument of death wasn’t
inserted through the bedding as you thought inevitable,
Doctor. Suppose you were lying in that bed, asleep,
or half asleep, and you were aroused by such a sound
as that in the wall behind you? What would you
do? What would any man do first of all?”
Robinson nodded.
“I see what you mean. I’d
get up on my elbow. I’d look around as quickly
as I could to see what it was. I’d expose
myself to a clean thrust. I’d drop back
on the bed, more thoroughly out of it than though I’d
been struck through the heart.”
“Exactly,” Paredes said, with the familiar
shrug of his shoulders.
“You’re sensible to give
up this way,” Robinson said. “It’s
the best plan for you. What about Mr. Blackburn?”
Graham interfered.
“After all,” he said thoughtfully.
“I’m a lawyer, and it isn’t fair,
Robinson. It’s only decent to tell him that
anything he says may be used against him.”
“Keep your mouth shut,” Robinson shouted.
But Paredes smiled at Graham.
“It’s very good of you,
but I agree with the district attorney. There’s
no point in being a clam now.”
“Can you account for Silas Blackburn’s
return?” the doctor asked eagerly.
“That’s right, Doctor,”
Paredes said. “Stick to the ghosts.
I fancy there are plenty in this house. I’m
afraid we must look on Silas Blackburn as dead.”
“You don’t mean we’ve been talking
to a dead man?” Katherine whispered.
“Before I answer,” Paredes
said, “I want to have one or two things straight.
These men, Bobby, I really believe, think me capable
of the crimes in this house. I want to know if
you accept such a theory. Do you think I had
any idea of killing you?”
Bobby studied the reserved face which even now was
without emotion.
“I can’t think anything of the kind,”
he said softly.
“That’s very nice,”
Paredes said. “If you had answered differently
I’d have let these clever policemen lay their
own ghosts.”
He turned to Robinson.
“Even you must begin to see
that I’m not guilty. Your common sense will
tell you so. If I had been planning to kill Bobby,
why didn’t I bring the weapon? Why did
I put my hand through the opening before I was ready
to strike? Why did I use my left hand-my
injured hand? I was like Howells. I couldn’t
consider the case finished until I had solved the
mystery of the locked doors. I supposed the room
was empty. When I found the secret to-night,
I reached through to see how far my hand would be
from the pillow.”
Bobby’s assurance of Paredes’s
innocence clouded his own situation; made it, in a
sense, more dangerous than it had ever been. His
wanderings about the Cedars remained unexplained,
and they knew now it had never been necessary for
the murderer to enter the room, Katherine, too, evidently
realized the menace.
“Do you think I-” she began.
Paredes bowed.
“You dislike me, Miss Katherine,
but don’t be afraid for yourself or Bobby.
I think I can tell you how the evidence got in your
room. I can answer nearly everything. There’s
one point-”
He broke off, glancing at his watch.
“Extraordinary courage!”
he mused enigmatically. “I scarcely understand
it.”
Rawlins looked at him suspiciously.
“All this explaining may be a trick, Mr. Robinson.
The man’s slippery.”
“I’ve had to be slippery
to work under your noses,” Paredes laughed.
“By the way, Bobby, did you hear a woman crying
about the time I opened this door?”
“Yes. It sounded like the voice we heard
at the grave.”
“I thought I heard it from the
library,” Robinson put in. “Then the
rumpus up here started, and I forgot about it.”
“The woman in black is very
brave,” Paredes mused. “We should
have had a visit from her long before this.”
“Do you know who she is?”
Robinson asked. “And as Rawlins says, no
tricks. We haven’t let you go yet.”
“I thought,” Paredes mocked,
“that you had identified the woman in black
as Miss Katherine. She hasn’t had anything
to do with the mystery directly. Neither has
Bobby. Neither have I.”
“Then what the devil have you
been doing here?” Robinson snapped.
“Seeing your job through,”
Paredes answered, “for Bobby’s sake.”
With a warm gratitude Bobby knew that
Paredes had told the truth. Then he had told
it in the library yesterday when they had caught him
prowling in the private staircase. All along
he had told it while they had tried to convict him
of under-handed and unfriendly intentions.
“I saw,” Paredes was saying,
“that Howells wouldn’t succeed, and it
was obvious you and Rawlins would do worse, while
Graham’s blundering from the start left no hope.
Somebody had to rescue Bobby.”
“Then why did you give us the
impression,” Graham asked, “that you were
not a friend?”
Paredes held up his hand.
“That’s going rather far,
Mr. Graham. Never once have I given such an impression.
I have time after time stated the fact that I was here
in Bobby’s service. That has been the trouble
with all of you. As most detectives do, you have
denied facts, searching always for something more
subtle. You have asked for impossibilities while
you blustered that they couldn’t exist.
Still every one is prone to do that when he fancies
himself in the presence of the supernatural. The
facts of this case have been within your reach as
well as mine. The motive has been an easy one
to understand. Money! And you have consistently
turned your back.”
Robinson spread his hands.
“All right. Prove that I’m a fool
and I’ll acknowledge it.”
Doctor Groom interrupted sharply.
“What was that?”
They bent forward, listening.
Even with Paredes offering them a physical explanation
they shrank from the keening that barely survived the
heavy atmosphere of the old house.
“You see the woman in black isn’t Miss
Perrine,” Paredes said.
He ran down the stairs. They
followed, responding to an excited sense of imminence.
Even in the private staircase the pounding that had
followed the cry reached them with harsh reverberations.
Its echoes filled the house as they dashed across
the library and the dining room. In the hall
they realized that it came from the front door.
It had attained a feverish, a desperate insistence.
Paredes walked to the fireplace.
“Open the door,” he directed Rawlins.
Rawlins stepped to the door, unlocked it, and flung
it wide.
“The woman!” Katherine breathed.
A feminine figure, white with snow,
stumbled in, as if she had stood braced against the
door. Rawlins caught her and held her upright.
The flakes whirled from the court in vicious pursuit.
Bobby slammed the door shut.
“Maria!” he cried. “You were
right, Hartley!”
Yet at first he could scarcely accept
this pitiful creature as the brilliant and exotic
dancer with whom he had dined the night of the first
murder. As he stared at her, her features twisted.
She burst into retching sobs. She staggered toward
Paredes. As she went the snow melted from her
hat and cloak. She became a black figure again.
With an appearance of having been immersed in water
she sank on the hearth, swaying back and forth, reaching
blindly for Paredes’s hand.
“Do what you please with me,
Carlos,” she whimpered with her slight accent
from which all the music had fled. “I couldn’t
stand it another minute. I couldn’t get
to the station, and I-I wanted to know
which-which-”
Paredes watched her curiously.
“Get Jenkins,” he said softly to Rawlins.
He faced Maria again.
“I could have told you, I think,
when you fought me away out there. No one wants
to arrest you. Jenkins will verify my own knowledge.”
“This is dangerous,” the
doctor rumbled. “This woman shouldn’t
wait here. She should have dry clothing at once.”
Maria shrank from him. For the
first time her wet skirt exposed her feet, encased
in torn stockings. The dancer wore no shoes, and
Bobby guessed why she had been so elusive, why she
had left so few traces.
“I won’t go,” she cried, “until
he tells me.”
Katherine got a cloak and threw it
across the woman’s shoulders. Maria looked
up at her with a dumb gratitude. Then Rawlins
came back with Jenkins. The butler was bent and
haggard. His surrender to fear was more pronounced
than it had been at the grave or when they had last
seen him in the kitchen. He grasped a chair and,
breathing heavily, looked from one to the other, moistening
his lips.
Paredes faced the man, completely
master of the situation. Through the old butler,
it became clear, he would make his revelation and announce
that simple fact they all had missed.
“It was Mr. Silas, of course, who came back?”
“Oh my God!” the butler moaned, “What
do you mean?”
“I know everything, Jenkins,” Paredes
said evenly.
The butler collapsed against the chair. Paredes
grasped his arm.
“Pull yourself together, man.
They won’t want you as more than an accessory.”
Maria started to rise. She shrank
back again, shivering close to the fire.
“Is your master hiding,” Paredes asked,
“or has he left the house?”
Jenkins’s answer came through trembling lips.
“He’s gone! Mr. Silas
is gone! How did you find out? My God!
How did you find out?”
“He said nothing to you?” Paredes asked.
Jenkins shook his head.
“Tell me how he was dressed.”
The old servant covered his face.
“Mr. Silas stumbled through
the kitchen,” he answered hoarsely. “I
tried to stop him, but he pushed me away and ran out.”
His voice rose. “I tell you he ran without
a coat or a hat into the storm.”
Paredes sighed.
“The Cedars’s final tragedy,
yet it was the most graceful exit he could have made.”
Maria struggled to her feet.
Her eyes were the eyes of a person without reason.
That familiar, hysterical quality which they had heard
before at a distance vibrated in her voice.
“Then he was the one! I
wanted to kill him, I couldn’t kill him because
I never was sure.”
“Did you see him go out an hour
or so ago?” Paredes asked.
“I saw him,” she cried
feverishly, “run from the back of the house and
down the path to the lake. I-I tried
to catch him, but my feet were frozen, and the snow
was slippery, and I couldn’t find my shoes.
But I called and he wouldn’t stop. I had
to know, because I wanted to kill him if it was Silas
Blackburn. And I saw him run to the lake and splash
in until the water was over his head.”
She flung her clenched hands out.
Her voice became a scream, shot with all her suffering,
all her doubt, all her fury.
“You don’t understand.
He can’t be punished. I tell you he’s
at the bottom of the lake with the man he murdered.
And I can’t pay him. I tried to go after
him, but it-it was too cold.”
She sank in one of the chairs, shaking and sobbing.
“Unless we want another tragedy,”
the doctor said, “this woman must be put to
bed and taken care of. She has been terribly exposed.
You’ve heard her. She’s delirious.”
“Not so delirious that she hasn’t
told the truth,” Paredes said.
The doctor lifted her in his arms
and with Rawlins’s help carried her upstairs.
Katherine went with them. Almost immediately the
doctor and Rawlins hurried down.
“I have told Katherine what
to do,” Doctor Groom said. “The woman
may be all right in the morning. What’s
she been up to here?”
“Then,” Bobby cried, “there
was a connection between the dinner party and the
murders. But what about my coming here unconscious?
What about my handkerchief?”
“I can see no answer yet,” Graham said.
Paredes smiled.
“Not when you’ve had the
answer to everything? I have shown you that Silas
Blackburn was the murderer. The fact stared you
in the face. Everything that has happened at
the Cedars has pointed to his guilt.”
“Except,” the doctor said,
“his own apparent murder which made his guilt
seem impossible. And I’m not sure you’re
right now, for there is no other Blackburn he could
have murdered, and Blackburns look alike. You
wouldn’t mistake another man for one of them.”
“This house,” Paredes
smiled, “has all along been full of the presence
of the other Blackburn. There has been evidence
enough for you all to have known he was here.”
He stretched himself in an easy chair.
He lighted a cigarette and blew the smoke toward the
ceiling.
“I shall tell you the simple
facts, if only to save my skin from this blood-thirsty
district attorney.”
“Rub it in,” Robinson grinned. “I’ll
take my medicine.”
They gathered closer about the Panamanian.
Jenkins sidled to the back of his chair.
“I don’t see how you found it out,”
he muttered.
“I had only one advantage over
you or the police, Graham,” Paredes began, “and
you were in a position to overcome that. Maria
did telephone me the afternoon of that ghastly dinner.
She asked me to get hold of Bobby. She was plainly
anxious to keep him in New York that night, and, to
be frank, I was glad enough to help her when you turned
up, trying to impress us with your puritan watchfulness.
Even you guessed that she had drugged Bobby.
I suspected it when I saw him go to pieces in the cafe.
He gave me the slip, as I told you, in the coat room
when I was trying to get him home, so I went back
and asked Maria what her idea was. She laughed
in my face, denying everything. I, too, suspected
the stranger, but I’ve convinced myself that
he simply happened along by chance.
“Now here’s the first
significant point: Maria by drugging Bobby defeated
her own purpose. He had been drinking more than
the Band of Hope would approve of, and on top of that
he got an overdose of a powerful drug. The doctor
can tell you better than I of the likely effect of
such a combination.”
“What I told you in the court,
Bobby,” the doctor answered, “much the
same symptoms as genuine aphasia. Your brain was
unquestionably dulled by an overdose on top of all
that alcohol, while your mechanical reflexes were
stimulated. Automatically you followed your ruling
impulse. Automatically at the last minute you
revolted from exposing yourself in such a condition
to your cousin and your grandfather. Your lucid
period in the woods just before you reached the deserted
house and went to sleep showed that your exercise
was overcoming the effect of the drug. That moment,
you’ll remember, was coloured by the fanciful
ideas such a drug would induce.”
“So, Bobby,” Paredes said,
“although you were asleep when the body moved
and when Howells was murdered, you can be sure you
weren’t anywhere near the old room.”
“But I walked in my sleep last
night,” Bobby reminded him.
The doctor slapped his knee.
“I understand. It was only
when we thought that was your habit that it frightened
us. It’s plain. This sleep-walking
had been suggested to you and you had brooded upon
the suggestion until you were bound to respond.
Graham’s presence in your room, watching for
just that reaction, was a perpetual, an unescapable
stimulation. It would have been a miracle in
itself if your brain had failed to carry it out.”
Bobby made a swift gesture of distaste.
“If you hadn’t come, Carlos, where would
I have been?”
“Why did you come?” Graham asked.
“Bobby was my friend,”
the Panamanian answered. “He had been very
good to me. When I read of his grandfather’s
death I wondered why Maria had drugged him to keep
him in New York. In the coincidence lurked an
element of trouble for him. At first I suspected
some kind of an understanding between her and old
Blackburn-perhaps she had engaged to keep
Bobby away from the Cedars until the new will had
been made. But here was Blackburn murdered, and
it was manifest she hadn’t tried to throw suspicion
on Bobby, and the points that made Howells’s
case incomplete assured me of his innocence.
Who, then, had killed his grandfather? Not Maria,
for I had dropped her at her apartment that night
too late for her to get out here by the hour of the
murder. Still, as you suspected, Maria was the
key, and I began to speculate about her.
“She had told me something of
her history. You might have had as much from
her press agent. Although she had lived in Spain
since she was a child, she was born in Panama, my
own country, of a Spanish mother and an American father.
Right away I wondered if Blackburn had ever been in
Panama or Spain. I began to seek the inception
of the possible understanding between them. Since
I found no illuminating documents about Blackburn’s
past in the library, I concluded, if such papers existed,
they would be locked up in the desk in his room.
I searched there a number of times, giving you every
excuse I could think of to get upstairs. The
other night, after I had suspected her of knowing
something, Miss Katherine nearly caught me. But
I found what I wanted-a carefully hidden
packet of accounts and letters and newspaper clippings.
They’re at your service, Mr. District Attorney.
They told me that Silas Blackburn had been in Panama.
They proved that Maria, instead of ever having been
his accomplice, was his enemy. They explained
the source of his wealth and the foundation of that
enmity. Certainly you remember the doctor told
us Silas Blackburn started life with nothing; and hadn’t
you ever wondered why with all his money he buried
himself in this lonely hole?”
“He returned from South America,
rich, more than twenty-five years ago,” the
doctor said. “Why should we bother about
his money?”
“I wish you had bothered about
several things besides your ghosts,” Paredes
said. “You’d have found it significant
that Blackburn laid the foundation of his fortune
in Panama during the hideous scandals of the old French
canal company. We knew he was a selfish tyrant.
That discovery showed me how selfish, how merciless
he was, for to succeed in Panama during those days
required an utter contempt for all the standards of
law and decency. The men who got along held life
cheaper than a handful of coppers. That’s
what I meant when I walked around the hall talking
of the ghosts of Panama. For I was beginning
to see. Silas Blackburn’s fear, his trip
to Smithtown, were the first indications of the presence
of the other Blackburn. The papers outlined him
more clearly. Why had it been forgotten here,
Doctor, that Silas Blackburn had a brother-his
partner in those wretched and profitable contract
scandals?”
“You mean,” the doctor
answered, “Robert Blackburn. He was a year
younger than Silas. This boy was named in memory
of him. Why should any one have remembered?
He died in South America more than a quarter of a century
ago, before these children were born.”
“That’s what Silas Blackburn
told you when he came back,” Paredes said.
“He may have believed it at first or he may not
have. I daresay he wanted to, for he came back
with his brother’s money as well as his own-the
cash and the easily convertible securities that were
all men would handle in that hell. But he never
forgot that his brother’s wife was alive, and
when he ran from Panama he knew she was about to become
a mother.
“That brings me to the other
feature that made me wander around here like a restless
spirit myself that night. You had just told your
story about the woman crying. If there was a
strange woman around here it was almost certainly
Maria. As Rawlins deduced, she must either be
hysterical or signalling some one. Why should
she come unless something had gone wrong the night
she drugged Bobby to keep him in New York? She
wasn’t his enemy, because that very night she
did him a good turn by trampling out his tracks in
the court.”
Bobby took Maria’s letter from
his pocket and handed it to Paredes.
“Then how would you account for this?”
The Panamanian read the letter.
“Her way of covering herself,”
he explained, “in case you suspected she had
made you drink too much or had drugged you. She
really wanted you to come to tea that afternoon.
It was after writing that that she found out what
had gone wrong. In other words, she read in the
paper of Silas Blackburn’s death, and in a panic
she put on plain clothes and hurried out to see what
had happened. The fact that she forgot her managers,
her professional reputation, everything, testified
to her anxiety, and I began to sense the truth.
She had been born in Panama of a Spanish mother and
an American father. She had some stealthy interest
in the Cedars and the Blackburns. She was about
the right age. Ten to one she was Silas Blackburn’s
niece. So for me, many hours before Silas Blackburn
walked in here, the presence of the other Blackburn
about the Cedars became a tragic and threatening inevitability.
Had Silas Blackburn been murdered or had his brother?
Where was the survivor who had committed that brutal
murder? Maria had come here hysterically to answer
those questions. She might know. The light
in the deserted house! She might be hiding him
and taking food to him there. But her crying
suggested a signal which he never answered. At
any rate, I had to find Maria. So I slipped out.
I thought I heard her at the lake. She wasn’t
there. I was sure I would trap her at the deserted
house, for the diffused glow of the light we had seen
proved that it had come through the cobwebbed windows
of the cellar, which are set in little wells below
the level of the ground. The cellar explained
also how she had turned her flashlight off and slipped
through the hall and out while we searched the rooms.
She hadn’t gone back. I couldn’t
find her. So I went on into Smithtown and sent
a costly cable to my father. His answer came
to-night just before Silas Blackburn walked in.
He had talked with several of the survivors of those
evil days. He gave me a confirmation of everything
I had gathered from the papers. The Blackburns
had quarrelled over a contract. Robert had been
struck over the head. He wandered about the isthmus,
half-witted, forgetting his name, nursing one idea.
Someone had robbed him, and he wanted his money back
or a different kind of payment, but he couldn’t
remember who, and he took it out in angry talk.
Then he disappeared, and people said he had gone to
Spain. Of course his wife suspected a good deal.
In Blackburn’s desk are pitiful and threatening
letters from her which he ignored. Then she died,
and Blackburn thought he was safe. But he took
no chances. Some survivor of those days might
turn up and try blackmail. It was safer to bury
himself here.”
“Then,” Bobby said, “Maria
must have brought her father with her when she came
from Spain last summer.”
“Brought him or sent for him,”
Paredes answered. “She’s made most
of her money on this side, you know. And she’s
as loyal and generous as she is impulsive. Undoubtedly
she had the doctors do what they could for her father,
and when she got track of Silas Blackburn through you,
Bobby, she nursed in the warped brain that dominant
idea with her own Latin desire for justice and payment.”
“Then,” Graham said, “that’s
what Silas Blackburn was afraid of instead of Bobby,
as he tried to convince us to-night to cover himself.”
“One minute, Mr. Paredes,”
Robinson broke in. “Why did you maintain
this extraordinary secrecy? Nobody would have
hurt you if you had put us on the right track and
asked for a little help. Why did you throw sand
in our eyes? Why did you talk all the time about
ghosts?”
“I had to go on tiptoe,”
Paredes smiled. “I suspected there was at
least one spy in the house. So I gave the doctor’s
ghost talk all the impetus I could. I was like
Howells, as I’ve told you, in believing the case
couldn’t be complete without the discovery of
the secret entrance of the room of death. My
belief in the existence of such a thing made me lean
from the first to Silas Blackburn rather than Robert.
It’s a tradition in many families to hand such
things down to the head of each generation. Silas
Blackburn was the one most likely to know. Such
a secret door had never been mentioned to you, had
it, Bobby?”
Bobby shook his head. Paredes
turned and smiled at the haggard butler.
“I’m right so far, am I not, Jenkins?”
Jenkins bobbed his head jerkily.
“Then,” Paredes went on,
“you might answer one or two questions.
When did the first letter that frightened your master
come?”
“The day he went to Smithtown
and talked to the detective,” the butler quavered.
“You can understand his reflections,”
Paredes mused. “Money was his god.
He distrusted and hated his own flesh and blood because
he thought they coveted it. He was prepared to
punish them by leaving it to a public charity.
Now arises this apparition from the past with no claim
in a court of law, with an intention simply to ask,
and, in case of a refusal, to punish. The conclusion
reached by that selfish and merciless mind was inevitable.
He probably knew nothing whatever about Maria.
If all the world thought his brother dead, his brother’s
murder now wouldn’t alter anything. I’ll
wager, Doctor, that at that time he talked over wounds
at the base of the brain with you.”
The doctor moved restlessly.
“Yes. But he was very superstitious.
We talked about it in connection with his ancestors
who had died of such wounds in that room.”
“Everything was ready when he
made the rendezvous here,” Paredes went on.
“He expected to have Bobby at hand in case his
plan failed and he had to defend himself. But
Maria had made sure that there should be no help for
him. When the man came did you take him upstairs,
Jenkins?”
“No, sir. I watched that
Miss Katherine didn’t leave the library, but
I think she must have caught Mr. Silas in the upper
hall after he had pretended to give up and had persuaded
his brother to spend the night.”
Paredes smiled whimsically. He
took two faded photographs from his pocket. They
were of young men, after the fashion of Blackburns,
remarkably alike even without the gray, obliterating
marks of old age.
“I found these in the family album,” he
said.
“We should have known the difference
just the same,” the doctor grumbled. “Why
didn’t we know the difference?”
“I’ve complained often
enough,” Paredes smiled, “of the necessity
of using candles in this house. There was never
more than one candle in the old bedroom. There
were only two when we looked at the murdered man in
his coffin. And in death there are no familiar
facial expressions, no eccentricities of speech.
So you can imagine my feelings when I tried to picture
the drama that had gone on in that room. You can
imagine poor Maria’s. Which one? And
Maria didn’t know about the panel, or the use
of Miss Katherine’s hat-pin, or the handkerchief.
All of those details indicated Silas Blackburn.”
“How could my handkerchief indicate
anything of the kind?” Bobby asked, “How
did it come there?”
“What,” Paredes said,
“is the commonest form of borrowing in the world,
particularly in a climate where people have frequent
colds? I found a number of your handkerchiefs
in your grandfather’s bureau. The handkerchief
furnished me with an important clue. It explains,
I think, Jenkins will tell you, the moving of the
body. It was obviously the cause of Howells’s
death.”
“Yes, sir,” Jenkins quavered.
“Mr. Silas thought he had dropped his own handkerchief
in the room with the body. I don’t know
how you’ve found these things out.”
“By adding two and two,”
Paredes laughed. “In the first place, you
must all realize that we might have had no mystery
at all if it hadn’t been for Miss Katherine.
For I don’t know that Maria could have done much
in a legal way. Silas Blackburn had intended
to dispose of the body immediately, but Miss Katherine
heard the panel move and ran to the corridor.
She made Jenkins break down the door, and she sent
for the police. Silas Blackburn was helpless.
He was beaten at that moment, but he did the best
he could. He went to Waters, hoping, at the worst,
to establish an alibi through the book-worm who probably
wouldn’t remember the exact hour of his arrival.
Waters’s house offered him, too, a strategic
advantage. You heard him say the spare room was
on the ground floor. You heard him add that he
refused to open his door, either asking to be left
alone or failing to answer at all. And he had
to return to the Cedars the next day, for he missed
his handkerchief, and he pictured himself, since he
thought it was his own, in the electric chair.
I’m right, Jenkins?”
“Yes, sir. I kept him hidden
and gave him his chance along in the afternoon.
He wanted me to try to find the handkerchief, but I
didn’t have the courage. He couldn’t
find it. He searched through the panel all about
the body and the bed.”
“That was when Katherine heard,”
Bobby said, “when we found the body had been
moved.”
“It put him in a dreadful way,”
Jenkins mumbled, “for no one had bothered to
tell me it was young Mr. Robert the detective suspected,
and when Mr. Silas heard the detective boast that
he knew everything and would make an arrest in the
morning, he thought about the handkerchief and knew
he was done for unless he took Howells up. And
the man did ask for trouble, sir. Well!
Mr. Silas gave it to him to save himself.”
“I’ve never been able
to understand,” Paredes said, “why he didn’t
take the evidence when he killed Howells.”
“Didn’t you know you prevented
that, sir?” Jenkins asked. “I heard
you come in from the court. I thought you’d
been listening. I signalled Mr. Silas there was
danger and to get out of the private stairway before
you could trap him. And I couldn’t give
him another chance for a long time. Some of you
were in the room after that, or Miss Katherine and
Mr. Graham were sitting in the corridor watching the
body until just before Mr. Robert tried to get the
evidence for himself. Mr. Silas had to act then.
It was his last chance, for he thought Mr. Robert would
be glad enough to turn him over to the law.”
“Why did you ever hide that
stuff in Miss Katherine’s room?” Bobby
asked.
Jenkins flung up his hands.
“Oh, he was angry, sir, when
he knew the truth and learned what a mistake he’d
made. Howells didn’t give me that report
I showed you. It was in his pocket with the other
things. We got it open without tearing the envelope
and Mr. Silas read it. He wouldn’t destroy
anything. He never dreamed of anybody’s
suspecting Miss Katherine, so he told me to hide the
things in her bureau. I think he figured on using
the evidence to put the blame on Mr. Robert in case
it was the only way to save himself.”
“Why did you show the report to me?” Bobby
asked.
“I-I was afraid to
take all that responsibility,” the butler quavered.
“I figured if you were partly to blame it might
go easier with me.”
Paredes shrugged his shoulders.
“You were a good mate for Silas Blackburn,”
he sneered.
“Even now I don’t see
how that old scoundrel had the courage to show himself
to-night,” Rawlins said.
“That’s the beautiful
justice of the whole thing,” Paredes answered,
“for there was nothing else whatever for him
to do. There never had been anything else for
him to do since Miss Katherine had spoiled his scheme,
since you all believed that it was he who had been
murdered. He had to hide the truth or face the
electric chair. If he disappeared he was infinitely
worse off than though he had settled with his brother-a
man without a home, without a name, without a penny.”
Jenkins nodded.
“He had to come back,”
he said slowly, “and he knew how scared you were
of the old room.”
“The funeral and the snow,”
Paredes said, “gave him his chance. Jenkins
will doubtless tell you how they uncovered the grave
late this afternoon, took that poor devil’s
body, and threw it in the lake, then fastened the
coffin and covered it again. Of course the snow
effaced every one of their tracks. He came in,
naturally scared to death, and told us that story
based on the legends of the Cedars and the doctor’s
supernatural theories. And you must admit that
he might, as you call it, have got away with it.
He did create a mystification. The body of the
murdered man had disappeared. There was no murdered
Blackburn as far as you could tell. Heaven knows
how long you might have struggled with the case of
Howells.”
He glanced up.
“Here is Miss Katherine.”
She stood at the head of the stairs.
“I think she’s all right,”
she said to the doctor. “She’s asleep.
She went to sleep crying. May I come down?”
The doctor nodded. She walked
down, glancing from one to the other questioningly.
“Poor Maria!” Paredes
mused. “She’s the one I pity most.
She’s been at times, I think, what Rawlins suspected-an
insane woman, wandering and crying through the woods.
Assuredly she was out of her head to-night, when I
found her finally at the grave. I tried to tell
her that her father was dead. I begged her to
come in. I told her we were friends. But
she fought. She wouldn’t answer my questions.
She struck me finally when I tried to force her to
come out of the storm. Robinson, I want you to
listen to me for a moment. I honestly believe,
for everybody’s sake, I did a good thing when
I asked Silas Blackburn just before he disappeared
why he had thrown his brother’s body in the lake.
I’d hoped it would simply make him run for it.
I prayed that we would never hear from him again,
and that Miss Katherine and Bobby could be spared the
ugly scandal. Doesn’t this do as well?
Can’t we get along without much publicity?”
“You’ve about earned the
right to dictate,” Robinson said gruffly.
“Thanks.”
“For everybody’s sake!”
Bobby echoed. “You’re right, Carlos.
Maria must be considered now. She shall have
what was taken from her father, with interest.
I know Katherine will agree.”
Katherine nodded.
“I doubt if Maria will want
it or take it,” Paredes said simply. “She
has plenty of her own. It isn’t fair to
think it was greed that urged her. You must understand
that it was a bigger impulse than greed. It was
a thing of which we of Spanish blood are rather proud-a
desire for justice, for something that has no softer
name than revenge.”
Suddenly Rawlins stooped and took the Panamanian’s
hand.
“Say! We’ve been
giving you the raw end of a lot of snap judgments.
We’ve never got acquainted until to-night.”
“Glad to meet you, too,” Robinson grinned.
Rawlins patted the Panamanian’s shoulder.
“At that, you’d make a first-class detective.”
Paredes yawned.
“I disagree with you thoroughly.
I have no equipment beyond my eyes and my common sense.”
He yawned again. He arranged
the card table in front of the fire. He got the
cards and piled them in neat packs on the green cloth.
He placed a box of cigarettes convenient to his right
hand. He smoked.
“I’m very sleepy, but
I’ve been so stupid over this solitaire since
I’ve been at the Cedars that I must solve it
in the interest of my self-respect before I go to
bed.”
Bobby went to him impulsively.
“I’m ashamed, Carlos.
I don’t know what to say. How can I say
anything? How can I begin to thank you?”
“If you ever tell me I saved
your life,” Paredes yawned, “I shall have
to disappear because then you’d have a claim
on me.”
Katherine touched his hand. There
were tears in her eyes. It wasn’t necessary
for her to speak. Paredes indicated two chairs.
“If you aren’t too tired,
sit here and help me for a while. Perhaps between
us we’ll get somewhere. I wonder why I have
been so stupid with the thing.”
After a time, as he manipulated the
cards, he laughed lightly.
“The same thing-the
thing I’ve been scolding you all for. With
a perfectly simple play staring me in the face I nearly
made the mistake of choosing a difficult one.
That would have got me in trouble while the simple
one gives me the game. Why are people like that?”
As he moved the cards with a deft
assurance to their desired combination he smiled drolly
at Graham, Rawlins, and Robinson.
“I guess it must be human nature.
Don’t you think so, Mr. District Attorney?”
The condition Paredes had more than
once foreseen was about to shroud the Cedars in loneliness
and abandonment. After the hasty double burial
in the old graveyard the few things Bobby and Katherine
wanted from the house had been packed and taken to
the station. At Katherine’s suggestion
they had decided to leave last of all and to walk.
Paredes with a tender solicitude had helped Maria
to the waiting automobile. He came back, trying
to colour his good-bye with cheerfulness.
“After all, you may open the
place again and let me visit you.”
“You will visit us perpetually,”
Bobby said, while Katherine pressed the Panamanian’s
hand, “but never here again. We will leave
it to its ghosts, as you have often prophesied.”
“I am not sure,” Paredes
said thoughtfully, “that the ghosts aren’t
here.”
It was evident that Graham wished
to speak to Bobby and Katherine alone, so the Panamanian
strolled back to the automobile. Graham’s
embarrassment made them all uncomfortable.
“You have not said much to me,
Katherine,” he began. “Is it because
I practically lied to Bobby, trying to keep you apart?”
She tried to smile.
“I, too, must ask forgiveness.
I shouldn’t have spoken to you as I did the
other night in the hall, but I thought, because you
saw Bobby and I had come together, that you had spied
on me, had deliberately tricked me, knowing the evidence
was in my room. Of course you did try to help
Bobby.”
“Yes,” he said, “and
I tried to help you that night. I was sure you
were innocent. I believed the best way to prove
it to them was to let them search. The two of
you have nothing worse than jealousy to reproach me
with.”
In a sense it pleased Bobby that Graham,
who had always made him feel unworthy in Katherine’s
presence, should confess himself not beyond reproach.
“Come, Hartley,” he cried,
“I was beginning to think you were perfect.
We’ll get along all the better, the three of
us, for having had it out.”
Graham murmured his thanks. He
joined Paredes and Maria in the automobile. As
they drove off Paredes turned. His face, as he
waved a languid farewell, was quite without expression.
Bobby and Katherine were left alone
to the thicket and the old house. After a time
they walked through the court and from the shadow of
the time-stained, melancholy walls. At the curve
of the driveway they paused and looked back.
The shroud of loneliness and abandonment descending
upon the Cedars became for them nearly ponderable.
So they turned from that brooding picture, and hand
in hand walked out of the forest into the friendly
and welcoming sunlight.