THE SEARCH
Henry Blaine, the man of decision,
wasted no time in vain thought. Instantly, upon
his discovery that the signature of Pennington Lawton
had been forged, and that it had been done by an old
and well-known offender, he touched the bell on his
desk, which brought his confidential secretary.
“Has Guy Morrow returned yet
from that blackmail case in Denver?”
“Yes, sir. He’s in
his private office now, making out his report to you.”
A moment later, there entered a tall,
dark young man, strong and muscular in build, but
not apparently heavy, with a smooth face and firm-set
jaw.
“I haven’t finished my report yet, sir
“The report can wait. You remember James
Brunell, the forger?”
“James Brunell?” Morrow
repeated. “He was before my time, of course,
but I’ve heard of him and his exploits.
Pretty slick article, wasn’t he! I understand
he has been dead for years at least nothing
has been heard of his activities since I have been
in the sleuth game.”
“Did you ever hear of any of his associates?”
“I can’t say that I have,
sir, except Crimmins and Dolan; Crimmins died in San
Quentin before his time was up; Dolan after his release
went to Japan.”
“I want to find Brunell.
His closest associate was Walter Pennold. I think
Pennold is living somewhere in Brooklyn, and through
him you may be able to locate Brunell
Morrow shrugged his shoulders.
“A retired crook in the suburbs. That’s
going to take time.”
“Not the way we’ll work it. Listen.”
The next morning, a tall, dark young
man, strong and muscular in build, with a smooth face
and firm-set jaw, appeared at the Bank of Brooklyn
& Queens, and was immediately installed as a clerk,
after a private interview with the vice-president.
His fellow clerks looked at him askance
at first, for they knew there had been no vacancy,
and there was a long waiting list ahead of him, but
the young man bore himself with such a quiet, modest
air of camaraderie about him that by the noon
hour they had quite accepted him as one of themselves.
During the morning a package came
to the bank and a letter which read in part:
... I am returning these securities
to you in the hope that you may be able to place
them in the possession of Jimmy Brunell.
They belong to him, and my conscience is responsible
for their return. I don’t know where
to find him. I do know that at one time he
did some banking at the Brooklyn & Queens Institution.
If he does not do so now, kindly hold these securities
for Jimmy Brunell until called for, and in the meantime
see Walter Pennold of Brooklyn.
With the package and letter came a
request from Henry Blaine which those in power at
the Brooklyn & Queens Bank were only too glad to accede
to, in order to ingratiate themselves with the great
investigator.
In accordance with this request, therefore,
the affair was made known by the bank-officials to
the clerks as a matter of long standing which had
only just been rediscovered in an old vault, and the
subordinates discussed it among themselves with the
gusto of those whose lives were bounded by gilt cages,
and circumscribed by rules of silence. It was
not unusual, therefore, that the new clerk, Alfred
Hicks, should have heard of it, but it was unusual
that he should find it expedient to make a detour
on his way to work the next morning which would take
him to the gate of Walter Pennold’s modest home.
Perhaps the fact that Alfred Hicks’ real name
was Guy Morrow and that a letter received early that
morning from Henry Blaine’s office, giving Pennold’s
address and a single line of instruction may have had
much to do with his matutinal visit.
Be that as it may, Morrow, the dapper
young bank-clerk, found in the Pennold household a
grizzled, middle-aged man, with shifty, suspicious
eyes and a moist hand-clasp; behind him appeared a
shrewish, thin-haired wife who eyed the intruder from
the first with ill-concealed animosity.
He smiled that frank, winning
smile which had helped to land more men behind the
bars than the astuteness of many of his seniors and
said: “I’m a clerk in the Brooklyn
& Queens Bank, Mr. Pennold, and we have a box of securities
there evidently belonging to one Jimmy Brunell.
No one knows anything about it and no note came with
it except a line which read: ‘Hold for
Jim Brunell. See Walter Pennold of Brooklyn.’
Now you’re the only Walter Pennold who banks
with the B. & Q. and I thought you might like to know
about it. There are over two hundred thousand
dollars in securities and they have evidently been
left there by somebody as conscience-money. You
can go to the bank and see the people about it, of
course. In fact, I understand they are going to
write you a letter concerning it, but I thought you
might like to know of it in advance. In case
this Mr. Brunell is alive, they will pay him the money
on demand, or if dead, to his heirs after him.”
The middle-aged man with the shifty
eyes spat cautiously, and then, rubbing his stubby
chin with a hairy, freckled hand, observed:
“Well, young man, I’m
Pennold, all right. I do some business with the
Brooklyn & Queens people small business,
of course, for we poor honest folk haven’t the
money to put in finance that the big stock-holders
have. I don’t know where you can find this
man Brunell, haven’t heard of him in years,
but I understand he went wrong. Ain’t that
so, Mame?”
The hatchet-faced woman nodded her
head in slow and non-committal thought.
Pennold edged a little nearer his
unknown guest and asked in a tone of would-be heartiness.
“And what might your name be? You’re
a bright-looking feller to be a bank-clerk not
the stolid, plodding kind.”
Morrow chuckled again.
“My name is Hicks. I live
at 46 Jefferson Place. It’s only a little
way from here, you know.” He swung his lunch-box
nonchalantly. “Of course, bank-clerking
don’t get you anywhere, but it’s steady,
such as it is, and I go out with the boys a lot.”
He added confidentially: “The ponies are
still running, you know, even if the betting-ring is
closed and there are other ways ”
He paused significantly.
“I see, a sport, eh?”
Pennold darted a quick glance at his wife. “Well,
don’t let it get the best of you, young feller.
Remember what I told you about Jimmy Brunell at
least, what the report of him was. If I hear
anything of where he is, I’ll let the bank know.”
“I’ll be getting on; I’m
late now ” Morrow paused on the bottom
step of the little porch and turned. “See
you again, Mr. Pennold, and your wife, if you’ll
let me. I pass by here often I’ve
been boarding with Mrs. Lindsay, on Jefferson Place,
for some time now. By the way, have you seen
the sporting page of the Gazette this morning?
Al Goetz edits it, you know, and he gives you the
straight dope. There’ll be nothing to that
fight they’re pulling off Saturday night at the
Zucker Athletic Club Hennessey’ll
put it all over Schnabel in the first round.
Good-by! If you hear anything of this Brunell,
be sure you let me or the bank know!”
For a long moment after his buoyant
stride had carried him out of sight around the corner,
Walter Pennold and his wife sat in thoughtful silence.
Then the woman spoke.
“What d’ye think of it all, Wally?”
“Dunno.” The gentleman
addressed drew from his pocket a blackened, odoriferous
pipe and sucked upon it. “Must be some lay,
of course. I’ll go up to the bank and find
out what I can, but I don’t think that young
feller, Hicks, is in on it. I’ve been in
the game for forty years, and if I’m a judge,
he’s no ‘tec. Fool kid spendin’
more’n he earns and out for what coin he can
grab. I’ll look up that landlady of his,
too, Mame; and if he’s on the level there, and
at the bank
“And if those securities are
at the bank, he ought to be willin’ to come
in with us on a share,” the wife supplemented
shrewdly. “But it seems like some kind
of a gag to me. You knew all Jimmy Brunell’s
jobs till he got religion or somethin’, and
turned honest I can’t think of any
old crook who’d turn over that money to him,
two hundred thousand cold, because his conscience
hurt him, can you? You know, too, how decent
and respectable Jimmy’s been livin’ all
these years, putting up a front for the sake of that
daughter of his; suppose this was a put-up game to
catch him what do the bulls want him for?”
“I ain’t no mind-reader.
I’ll look up this business of securities, and
then if the young feller’s talked straight, we’ll
try to work it through him, if we can get to him,
and I guess we can, so long as I ain’t lost
the gift of the gab in twenty years. We’ll
be as good, sorrowing heirs as ever Jimmy Brunell
could find anywheres.”
Before Walter Pennold could reach
the bank, however, an unimpeachably official letter
arrived from that institution, confirming the news
imparted by the bank-clerk concerning the securities
left for James Brunell. Pennold, going to the
bank ostensibly to assure those in authority there
of his cordial willingness to assist in the search
for the heir, incidentally assured himself of Alfred
Hicks’ seemingly legitimate occupation.
A later visit to Mrs. Lindsay of 46 Jefferson Place
convinced him that the young man had lived there for
some months and was as generous, open-handed, easy-going
a boarder as that excellent woman had ever taken into
her house. Just what price was paid by Henry
Blaine to Mrs. Lindsay for that statement is immaterial
to this narrative, but it suffices that Walter Pennold
returned to the sharp-tongued wife of his bosom with
only one obstacle in his thoughts between himself
and a goodly share of the coveted two hundred thousand
dollars.
That obstacle was an extremely healthy
fear of Jimmy Brunell. It was true that there
had been no connection between them in years, but he
remembered Jimmy’s attitude toward the “snitcher,”
as well as toward the man who “held out”
on his pals; and behind his cupidity was a lurking
caution which was made manifest when he walked into
the kitchen and found Mrs. Pennold with her shriveled
arms immersed in the washtub.
“Say, Mame, the young feller,
Hicks, is all right, and so is the bank; but how about
Jimmy himself? If I can fix the young feller,
and we can pull it off with the bank, that’s
all well and good. But s’pose Jimmy should
hear of it? Know what would happen to us, don’t
you?”
“If he ain’t heard of
them securities all this time they’ve been lyin’
forgotten in the bank, it’s safe he won’t
hear of ’em now unless you tell him,”
retorted his shrewder half, dryly. “Of course,
if he’s lived straight, as he has for near twenty
years as far as we know, and he finds it out, he’ll
grab everything for himself. Why shouldn’t
he? But s’pose the bulls are after him
for somethin’, and the bank’s hood-winked
as well as us, where are we if we mix up in this?
Tell me that!”
“There’s another side of it, too, Mame.”
Pennold walked to the window, and
regarded the sordid lines of washed clothes contemplatively.
“What if Jimmy has been up to somethin’
on the quiet, that the bulls ain’t on to, and
this bunch of securities is on the level? If
I went to him on the square, and offered him a percentage
to play dead, wouldn’t he be ready and willin’
to divide?”
“Of course he would; he’s
no fool,” returned Mrs. Pennold shortly.
“But let me tell you, Wally, I don’t like
the look of that ’See Walter Pennold of Brooklyn,’
on the note in the bank. S’pose they was
trying to trace him through us?”
“You’re talkin’
like a blame’ fool, Mame. Them securities
has been there for years, forgotten. Everybody
knows that me and Brunell was pals in the old days,
but no one’s got nothin’ on us now, and
he give up the game years ago.”
“How d’you know he did?”
persisted his wife doggedly. “That’s
what you better find out, but you’ve gotter
be careful about it, in case this whole thing should
be a plant.”
“You don’t have to tell
me!” Pennold grumbled. “I’ll
write him first and then wait a few days, and if anyone’s
tailing me in the meantime, they’ll have a run
for their money.”
“Write him!”
“Of course. You may have
forgotten the old cipher, but I haven’t.
You know yourself we invented it, Jimmy and me, and
the police tried their level best to get on to it,
but failed.”
“You can’t address it
in cipher, and if you’re tailed you won’t
get a chance to mail it, Wally. Better wait and
try to see him without writing.”
For answer Pennold opened a drawer
in the table, drew forth a grimy sheet of paper and
an envelope, and bent laboriously to his task.
It was long past dusk when he had finished, and tossed
the paper across the table for his wife’s perusal.
This is what she saw:
When she had gazed long at the characters,
she shook her head at him, and a slow smile came over
her face.
“You’ve forgotten a little
yourself, Wally. You made a mistake in the k.”
He glanced half-incredulously at it,
and then laid his huge, rough hand on her thin hair
in the first caress he had given her in years.
“By God, old girl, you’re
a smart one! You’re right. Now listen.
You’ve got to do the rest for me, the hardest
part. Mail it.”
“How? If we’re tailed
“There’ll be only one
on the job, if we are, and I’ll keep him busy
to-morrow morning. You go to the market as usual,
then go into that big department store, Ahearn & McManus’.
There’s a mail chute there, next the notion
counter on the ground floor. Buy a spool of thread
or somethin’, and while you’re waitin’
for change, drop the letter in the box. You used
to be pretty slick in department stores, Mame
“Smoothest shoplifter in New
York until I got palsy!” she interrupted proudly,
an unaccustomed glow on her sallow face. “I’ll
do it, Wally; I know I can!”
The next morning Alfred Hicks was
a little late in getting to his work at the bank so
late, in fact, that he had only time to wave a cordial
greeting to his new friends in their cages as he passed.
He paused, however, that evening, with a pot of flowering
bloom for Mrs. Pennold’s dingy, not over-clean
window-sill, and a packet of tobacco which he shared
generously with his host. He talked much, with
the garrulous self-confidence of youth, but did not
mention the matter of the securities, and left the
crafty couple completely disarmed.
Neither on entering nor leaving did
Hicks appear to notice a short, swarthy figure loitering
in the shadow of a dejected-looking ailanthus tree
near the corner. It would have appeared curious,
therefore, that the lurking figure followed the bank-clerk
almost to his lodgings, had it not been for the fact
that just before Jefferson Place was reached the figure
sidled up to Hicks’ side and whispered:
“No news yet, Morrow. Pennold
went this morning to old Loui the Grabber and tried
to borrow money from him, but didn’t get it.
I heard the whole talk. Then he went to Tanbark
Pete’s and got a ten-spot. After that,
he divided his time between two saloons, where he played
dominoes and pinochle, and his own house. I’ve
got to report to H. B. when I’m sure the subject
is safe for the night. Have you found anything
yet?”
“Only that I’ve got him
on the run. If he knows where our man is, Suraci,
he’ll go after him in a day or two. Meantime,
tell H. B., in case I don’t get a chance to
let him know, that the securities stunt went, all
right, and my end of it is O. K.”
The next day, and the following, Pennold
did indeed set for the young Italian detective a swift
pace. He departed upon long rambles, which started
briskly and ended aimlessly; he called upon harmless
and tedious acquaintances, from Jamaica to Fordham;
he went apparently and ostentatiously to
look for a position as janitor to many
office-buildings in lower Manhattan, which he invariably
entered and left by different doors. In the evenings
he sat blandly upon his own stoop, smoking and chatting
amiably if monosyllabically with his wife and their
new-found friend, Alfred Hicks, while his indefatigable
shadow glowered apparently unnoticed from the gloom
of the ailanthus tree.
On Thursday morning, however, Pennold
betook himself leisurely to the nearest subway station,
and there the real trial of strength between him and
his unseen antagonist began. From the Brooklyn
Bridge station he rode to the Grand Central; then
with a speed which belied his physical appearance,
he raced across the bridge to the downtown platform,
and caught a train for Fourteenth Street. There
he swiftly turned north to Seventy-second Street then
to the Grand Central, again to Ninety-sixth, and so
on, doubling from station to station until finally
he felt that he must be entirely secure from pursuit.
He alighted at length at a station
far up in the Bronx, and after looking carefully about
he started off toward the west, where the mushroom
growth of the new city sprang up in rows of rococo
brick and stone houses with oases of green fields
and open lots between. He turned up a little
lane of tiny frame houses, each set in its trim garden,
and stopped at the fourth cottage.
With a last furtive backward glance,
Pennold mounted the steps and rang the bell nervously.
The door was opened from within so suddenly that it
seemed as if the man who faced his visitor on the threshold
must have been awaiting the summons. He stepped
quickly out, shutting the door behind him, and for
a short space the two stood talking in low tones Pennold
eagerly, insistently, the other man evasively, slowly,
as if choosing his words with care. He was as
erect as Pennold was shambling and stoop-shouldered,
and although gray and lined of features, his eyes
were clear and more steady, his chin more firm, his
whole bearing more elastic and forceful.
He did not invite his visitor to enter,
and the colloquy between them was brief. It was
significant that they did not shake hands, but parted
with a brief though not unfriendly nod. The tall
man turned and re-entered his house, closing the door
again behind him, while Pennold scuttled away, without
a farewell glance. It might have been well had
he looked once more over his shoulder, for there, crouching
against the veranda rail where he had managed to overhear
the last of the conversation, was that short, swarthy
figure which had followed so indefatigably on his
trail for three days which had clung to
him, closely but unseen, through all his devious journey
of that morning. Suraci had not failed.
He tailed Pennold to his home, then
went in person with his report to the great Blaine
himself, who heard him through in silence, and then
brought his mighty fist down upon his desk with a blow
which made the massive bronze ink-well quiver.
“That’s our man!
You’ve got him, Suraci. Good work!
Now wait a little; I want you to take some instructions
yourself over to Morrow.”
The next day the Pennolds missed the
cheery greeting of their new friend, the bank-clerk.
Since the acquaintanceship had been so recently formed,
it was odd that they should have been as deeply concerned
over his defection as they were. They said little
that evening, but when his absence continued the second
day, Pennold himself ambled down to the Brooklyn &
Queens Bank and reluctantly deposited twenty dollars,
merely for the pleasure of a chat with young Hicks.
The latter’s cheery face failed to greet him,
however, within its portals, and a craftily worded
inquiry merely elicited the information that he was
no longer connected with that institution.
“What do you make of it, Mame?”
he asked anxiously of his wife when he reached home.
His step was more shambling than ever, and his hands,
clutching his hat-brim, trembled more than her gnarled,
palsied ones.
“I’ll tell you what I
think when I’ve been around to Mrs. Lindsay’s
this afternoon to 46 Jefferson Place.”
“What’re you goin’
to do there? You can’t ask for him, very
well,” objected her spouse.
“Do?” she retorted tartly.
“What would I do in a boarding-house? Look
for rooms for us, of course, and inquire about the
other lodgers to be sure it’s respectable for
a decent, middle-aged, married couple. Do you
think I’m goin’ lookin’ for a long-lost
son? The life must be gettin’ you at last,
Wally! Your head ain’t what it used to be.”
But Mrs. Pennold’s vaunted astuteness
gained her little knowledge which could be of value
to her in their late acquaintance. Mrs. Lindsay
was a beetle-browed, enormously stout old lady, with
a stern eye and commanding presence, who looked as
if in her younger days she might well have been a
police-matron as indeed she had been.
She had two double rooms and a single hall bedroom
to show for inspection, and she waxed surprisingly
voluble concerning the vacancy of the latter, at the
first tentative mention of her other lodgers, by her
visitor.
“As nice a young man as ever
you’d wish to see, ma’am. I don’t
have none but the most refined people in my house.
Lived with me a year and a half, Mr. Hicks did, except
for his vacation regular as clockwork in
his bills, and free and open-handed with his tips to
Delia. Of course, he wasn’t just what you
might call steady in his goings-out and comings-in,
but there never was nothin’ objectionable in
his habits. You know what young men is!
He had a fine position in a bank here in Brooklyn,
but I don’t think the company he kep’ was
all that it might have been. Kind of flashy and
sporty, his friends was, and I guess that’s
what got him into trouble. For trouble he was
in, ma’am, when he paid me yesterday in full
even to the shavin’ mug which I’d bought
for his dresser, and meant him to keep for a present and
picked up bag and baggage and left. I always did
think Friday was an unlucky day! He stood in
the vestibule and shook both my hands, and there wasn’t
a dry eye in his head or mine!
“‘Mis’ Lindsay!’
he says to me, just like I’m tellin’ it
to you. ‘Mis’ Lindsay, I can’t
stay here no longer. I wisht to heavings I could,
for you’ve given me a real home,’ he says,
’but I’m not at the bank no more, and
I’m going away. I’m in trouble!’
he says. ’I needn’t tell you where
I’m goin’ for I ain’t got a friend
who’ll ask after me or care, but I just want
to thank you for all your kindness to me, an’
to ask you to accept this present, and give this dollar-bill
to Delia, when she comes in from the fish-store.’
“This is what he give me as
a present, ma’am!” Mrs. Lindsay pointed
dramatically to a German silver brooch set with a doubtful
garnet, at her throat. “And I was so broke
up over it all, that I forgot and give Delia the whole
dollar, instead of just a quarter, like I should’ve
done. I s’pose I’d ought to write
to his folks, but I don’t know where they are.
He comes from up-State somewheres, and I never was
one to pry in a boarder’s letters or bureau-drawers.
I’m just worried sick about it all!”
Mrs. Lindsay would have made a superb actress.
When the interview was at an end and
Mrs. Pennold had rejoined her husband, they discussed
the disappearance of Alfred Hicks from every standpoint
and came finally to the conclusion that the young
bank-clerk’s sporting proclivities had brought
him to ruin.
Meanwhile, in a modest cottage in
Meadow Lane, in the Bronx, a small card reading “Room
to Let” had been removed from the bay window,
and just behind its curtains a young man sat, his
eyes fastened upon the house across the way the
fourth from the end of the line. He was a tall,
dark young man with a smooth face and firm-set jaw,
and his new land-lady knew him as Guy Morrow.
All at once, as he sat watching, the
door of the cottage opened, and a girl came out.
There was nothing remarkable about her; she was quite
a common type of girl: slender, not too tall,
with a wealth of red-brown hair and soft hazel eyes;
yet there was something about her which made Guy Morrow
catch his breath; and throwing caution to the winds,
he parted the curtains and leaned forward, looking
down upon her. As she reached the gate, his gaze
drew hers, and she lifted her gentle eyes and looked
into his.
Then her lids drooped swiftly; a faint
flush tinged her delicate face, and with lowered head
she walked quickly on.
Guy Morrow sank back in his chair,
and after the warm glow which had surged up so suddenly
within him, a chill crept about his heart. What
could that slender, brown-haired, clear-eyed girl be
to the man he had been sent to spy upon to
Jimmy Brunell, the forger?