GUY MORROW FACES A PROBLEM
Morrow, meanwhile, had slowly become
aware that he had a problem of his own to face, the
biggest of his life. Should he go on with his
work? In the event that James Brunell proved,
indeed, to be guilty of the forgeries of which he
was suspected by the Master Mind, it would mean that
he, Morrow, would have betrayed the father of the girl
he felt himself beginning to care for. Dared
he face such a tremendous issue?
His acquaintance with Emily Brunell
had progressed rapidly in the few days since his subterfuge
had permitted him to speak to her. He had met
her father and found himself liking the tall, silent
man who went about the simple affairs of his life
with such compelling dignity and courteous aloofness.
Brunell had even invited him to his little shop and
shown him with unsuspecting enthusiasm his process
for making the maps which were sold to the public
schools.
Morrow had seen no evidence of anything
wrong, either in the little shop or the home life
of the father and daughter; nor had he observed Paddington who
was well known to him in the neighborhood.
Even in these few mornings it had
become a habit with him to watch for Emily and walk
with her to her subway station, and as frequently as
he dared, he would await her arrival in the evening.
After his last telephone conversation with Blaine,
he called upon the two in the little house across
the way, determined to find out, if possible, if the
man Paddington had come into their lives. He felt
instinctively that James Brunell would prove a difficult
subject to cross-examine. The man seemed to be
complete master of himself, and were he guilty, could
never be led into an admission, unless some influence
more powerful than force could be brought to bear
upon him.
But the girl, with her clear eyes
and unsuspecting, inexperienced mind, could easily
be led to disclose whatever knowledge she possessed,
particularly if her interest or affections were aroused.
It seemed cowardly, in view of his newly awakened
feelings toward her, but he had committed far more
unscrupulous acts without a qualm, in the course of
his professional work.
Brunell was out when he called, but
Emily led him into the little sitting-room, and for
a time they talked in a desultory fashion. Morrow,
who had brought so many malefactors to justice by the
winning snare of his personality, felt for once at
a loss as to how to commence his questioning.
But the girl herself, guilelessly,
gave him a lead by beginning, quite of her own accord,
to talk of her early life.
“It seems so strange,”
she remarked, confidingly, “to have been so
completely alone all of my life except for
Daddy, of course.”
“You have no brothers or sisters,
Miss Brunell?” asked the detective.
“None and I never
knew my mother. She died when I was born.”
Morrow sighed, and involuntarily his
hand reached forward in an expression of complete
sympathy.
“Daddy has been mother and father
to me,” the girl went on impulsively. “We
have always lived in this neighborhood, ever since
I can remember, and of course we know everyone around
here. But with my downtown position and Father’s
work in the shop, we’ve had no time to make
real friends and we haven’t even cared to before.”
“Before when?” he asked
with a kindly intonation not at all in keeping with
the purpose which had actuated him in seeking her friendship.
“Before you brought my kitten
back to me.” She paused, suddenly confused
and shy, then added hurriedly, “We have so few
guests, you know. Daddy, somehow, doesn’t
care for people as a rule, that is.
I’m awfully glad that he has made an exception
with you.”
“But surely you have other friends for
instance, that young fellow I’ve noticed now
and again when he called upon you.”
Morrow’s thoughts had suddenly
turned to that unknown visitor toward whom he had
taken such an unaccountable dislike.
“Young fellow what
young fellow?” Emily Brunell’s voice had
changed, slightly, and a reserved little note intruded
itself which reminded Morrow all at once of her father.
“I don’t know who he is I’m
such a newcomer in the neighborhood, you know; but
I happened to see him from my window across the way a
short, dapper-looking young chap with a small, dark
mustache.”
“Oh! that man.”
Her lip curled disdainfully. “That’s
Charley Pennold. He’s no friend of mine.
He just comes to see Father now and again on business.
I don’t bother to talk to him. I don’t
think Daddy likes him very much, either.”
She caught her breath in sharply as
she spoke, and looked away from Morrow in sudden reserve.
He felt a quick start of suspicion, and searched her
averted face with a keen, penetrating glance.
If this Charley Pennold, whoever he
might be, wished to see James Brunell on legitimate
business, why did he not go to his shop openly and
above-board in the day-time? Could he be an emissary
from some one whom the old forger had reason to evade?
If he were, did Emily know for what purpose he came,
and was she annoyed at her own error in involuntarily
disclosing his name?
“He is a map-maker, too?” leaped from
Morrow’s lips.
“He is interested in maps he
gives Daddy large orders for them, I believe.”
Emily spoke too hurriedly, and her
tones lacked the ring of sincerity which was habitual
with them.
The trained ear of the detective instantly
sensed the difference, and his heart sank.
So she had lied to him deliberately,
and her womanly instinct told her that he knew it.
She began to talk confusedly of trivialities;
and Morrow, seeing that it would be hopeless to attempt
to draw her back to her unguarded mood, left her soon
after heartsick and dejected.
Should he continue with his investigations,
or go to Henry Blaine and confess that he had failed
him? Was this girl, charming and innocent as
she appeared, worth the price of his career this
girl with the blood of criminals in her veins, who
would stoop to lies and deceit to protect them?
Yet had not he been seeking deliberately to betray
her and those she loved, under the guise of friendship?
Was he any better than she or her father?
Then, too, another thought came to
him. Might she not be the tool, consciously or
unconsciously, of a nefarious plot?
He felt that he could not rest until
he had brought his investigations to a conclusion
which would be satisfactory to himself, even if he
decided in the end, for her sake, never to divulge
to Henry Blaine the discoveries he might make.
A few days later, however, Morrow
received instructions from Blaine himself, which forced
his hand. The time had come for him to use the
skeleton-key which he had had made. He must proceed
that night to investigate the little shop of the map-maker
and look there for the evidence which would incriminate
him the photographic and electrotyping
apparatus.
Early in the evening he heard Emily’s
soft voice as she called across the street in pleasant
greeting to Miss Quinlan, but he could not bring himself
to go out upon the little porch and speak to her,
although he did not doubt his welcome.
He waited until all was dark and still
before he started upon his distasteful errand.
It was very cold, and the streets were deserted.
A fine dry snow was falling, which obliterated his
footprints almost as soon as he made them, and he
reached the now familiar door of the little shop without
meeting a soul abroad save a lonely policeman dozing
in a doorway. He let himself into the shop with
his key and flashed his pocket lamp about. All
appeared the same as in the day-time. The maps
were rolled in neat cases or fastened upon the wall.
The table, the press, the binder were each in their
proper place.
Morrow went carefully over every inch
of the room and the curtained recess back of it, but
could find no evidence such as he sought. At
length, however, just before the little desk in the
corner where James Brunell kept his modest accounts,
the detective’s foot touched a metal ring in
the floor. Stepping back from it, he seized the
ring and pulled it. A small square section of
the flooring yielded, and the raising of the narrow
trap-door disclosed a worn, sanded stone stairway
leading down into the cellar beneath.
Blaine’s operative listened
carefully but no sound came from the depths below
him; so after a time, with his light carefully shielded,
he essayed a gingerly descent. On the bottom step
he paused. There was small need for him to go
further. He had found what he sought. Emily
Brunell’s father was a forger indeed!