GONE!
Guy Morrow, after a sleepless night,
presented himself at Henry Blaine’s office the
next morning. The great detective, observing his
young subordinate with shrewd, kindly eyes, noted in
one swift glance his changed demeanor: his pallor,
and the new lines graven about the firm mouth, which
added strength and maturity to his face. If he
guessed the reason for the metamorphosis, Blaine gave
no sign, but listened without comment until Morrow
had completed his report.
“You obeyed my instructions?”
he asked at length. “When you discovered
the forgery outfit in the cellar of Brunell’s
shop, you left everything just as it had been left
no possible trace of your presence?”
“Yes, sir. There’s
not a sign left to show any one had disturbed the
place. I am sure of that.”
“Not a foot-print in the earth of the cellar
steps?”
“No, sir.”
“And the outfit was there any evidence
it had been used lately?”
“No everything was
dust-covered, and even rusty, as if it had not even
been touched in months, perhaps years. The whole
thing might be merely a relic of Jimmy Brunell’s
past performances, in the life he gave up long ago.”
Morrow spoke almost eagerly, as if
momentarily off his guard, but Blaine shook his head.
“Rather too dangerous a relic
to keep in one’s possession, Guy, simply as
a souvenir a reminder of things the man
is trying to forget, to live down. You can depend
on it: the outfit was there for some more practical
purpose. You say Paddington has not appeared in
the neighborhood, but another man has a
man Brunell’s daughter seems to dislike and
fear?”
“Yes, sir. There’s
one significant fact about him, too his
name. He’s Charley Pennold. It didn’t
occur to me for some time after Miss Brunell let that
slip, that the name is the same as that of the precious
pair of old crooks over in Brooklyn, the ones Suraci
and I traced Brunell by.”
“Charley Pennold!” Blaine
repeated thoughtfully. “I hadn’t thought
of him. He’s old Walter Pennold’s
nephew. The boy was running straight the last
I heard of him, but you never can tell. Guy, I’m
going to take you off the Brunell trail for a while,
and put you on this man Paddington. I’ll
have Suraci look up Charley Pennold and get a line
on him. In the meantime, leave your key to the
map-making shop with me. I may want to have a
look at that forgery outfit myself.”
“You’re going to take
me off the Brunell trail!” Morrow’s astonishment
and obvious distaste for the change of program confronting
him was all-revealing. “But I’ll
have to go back and make some sort of explanation
for leaving so abruptly, won’t I? Will it
pay to arouse their suspicions that is,
sir, unless you’ve got some special reason for
doing so?”
Blaine’s slow smile was very
kindly and sympathetic as he eyed the anxious young
man before him.
“No. You will go back,
of course, and explain that you have obtained a clerkship
which necessitates your moving downtown. Make
your peace with Miss Brunell if you like, but remember,
Guy, don’t mix sentiment and business.
It won’t do. I may have to put you back
on the job there in a few days, and I know I can depend
on you not to lose your head. She’s a young
girl and a pretty one; but don’t forget she’s
the daughter of Jimmy Brunell, the man we’re
trying to get! Pennington Lawton had a daughter,
too; remember that and she’s been
defrauded of everything in the world but her lover
and her faith in her father’s memory.”
His voice had gradually grown deeper and more stern,
and he added in brisk, businesslike tones, far removed
from the personal element. “Now get back
to the Bronx. Come to me to-morrow morning, and
I’ll have the data in the Paddington matter ready
for you.”
The young detective had scarcely taken
his departure, when Ramon Hamilton appeared.
He was in some excitement, and glanced nervously behind
him as he entered, as if almost in fear of possible
pursuit.
“Mr. Blaine,” he began,
“I’m confident that we’re suspected.
Here’s a note that came to me from President
Mallowe this morning. He asks if I inadvertently
carried away with me that letter of Pennington Lawton’s
written from Long Bay two years ago, in which I had
shown such an interest during our interview the other
day. He has been unable to find it since my departure.
That’s a rather broad hint, it seems to me.”
“I should not consider it as
such,” the detective responded. “Guilty
conscience, Mr. Hamilton!”
“That’s not all!”
the young lawyer went on. “He says that
a curious burglary was committed at his offices the
night after my interview with him his watchman
was chloroformed, and the safe in his private office
opened and rifled, yet nothing was taken, with the
possible exception of that letter. Mallowe asks
me, openly, if I knew of an ulterior motive which
any one might have possessed in acquiring it, and
even remarks that he is thinking of putting you, Mr.
Blaine, on the mysterious attempt at robbery.
That would be a joke, wouldn’t it, if it wasn’t
really, in my estimation at least, a covert threat.
Why should he, Mallowe, take me into his confidence
about an affair which took place in his private office?
He did not make the excuse of pretending to retain
me as his attorney. I think he was merely warning
me that he was suspicious of me.”
“Probably a mere coincidence,” Blaine
observed easily.
“I wonder if you’ll think
so when I tell you that twice since yesterday my life
has been attempted.” Ramon spoke quietly
enough, but there was a slight trembling in his tones.
“What!” Blaine started
forward in his chair, then sank back with an incredulous
smile, which none but he could have known was forced.
“Surely you imagine it, Mr. Hamilton. Since
your automobile accident, when you were run down and
so nearly killed on the evening you sent for me to
undertake Miss Lawton’s case, you may well be
nervous.”
As he spoke he glanced at the other’s
broken arm, which was still swathed in bandages.
“But these were no accidents,
Mr. Blaine, and I have always doubted that the first
one was, as you know. Yesterday afternoon, a new
client’s case called me down to the sixth ward,
at four o’clock. In order to reach my client’s
address it was necessary to pass through the street
in which that shooting affray occurred which filled
the papers last evening. Two men darted out of
a house, shot presumably at each other, then turned
and ran in opposite directions without waiting to
see if either of the shots took effect. You know
that isn’t usual with the members of rival gangs
down there. Remember, too, Mr. Blaine, that it
was prearranged for me to walk alone through that
street at just that psychological moment. It seemed
to me that neither man shot at the other, but both
fired point-blank at me. I dismissed the idea
from my mind as absurd, the next minute, and would
have thought no more about it, beyond congratulating
myself on my fortunate escape, had not the second
attempt been made.”
“The sixth ward ”
Blaine remarked, meditatively. “That’s
Timothy Carlis’ stamping ground, of course.
But go on, Mr. Hamilton. What was the second
incident?”
“Late last night, I had a telephone
message from my club that my best friend, Gordon Brooke,
had been taken suddenly ill with a serious attack
of heart-trouble, and wanted me. Brooke has heart-disease
and he might go off with it at any time, so I posted
over immediately. The club is only a few blocks
away from my home, so I didn’t wait to call
my machine or a taxi, but started over. Just a
little way from the club, three men sprang upon me
and attempted to hold me up. I fought them off,
and when they came at me again, three to one, the idea
flashed upon me that this was a fresh attempt to assassinate
me.
“I shouted for help, and then
ran. When I reached the club I found Brooke there,
sitting in a poker game and quite as well as usual.
No telephone message had been sent to me from him.
I tried this morning, before I came to you, to have
the number traced, but without success. Do you
blame me now, Mr. Blaine, for believing, after these
three manifestations, that my life is in actual danger?”
“I do not.” The detective
touched an electric button on his desk. “I
think it will be advisable for you to have a guard,
for the next few days, at least.”
“A guard!” Ramon repeated,
indignantly. “I’m not a coward.
Any man would be disturbed, to put it mildly, over
the conviction that his life was threatened every
hour, but it was of her I was thinking of
Anita! I could not bear to think of leaving her
alone to face the world, penniless and hedged in on
all sides by enemies. But I want no guard!
I can take care of myself as well as the next man.
Look at the perils and dangers you have faced in your
unceasing warfare against malefactors of every grade.
It is common knowledge that you have invariably refused
to be guarded.”
“The years during which I have
been constantly face to face with sudden death have
made me disregard the possibility of it. But I
shall not insist in your case, Mr. Hamilton, if you
do not wish it; and allow me to tell you that I admire
your spirit. However, I should like to have you
leave town for a few days, if your clients can spare
you.”
“Leave town? Run away?”
Ramon started indignantly from his chair, but Blaine
waved him back with a fatherly hand.
“Not at all. On a commission
for me, in Miss Lawton’s interests. Mr.
Hamilton, you have known the Lawtons for several years,
have you not?”
“Ever since I can remember,”
the young lawyer said with renewed eagerness.
“Two years ago, in August, Pennington
Lawton and his daughter were at ‘The Breakers,’
at Long Bay, were they not?”
“Yes. Anita and I were
engaged then, and I ran out myself for the week-end.”
“I want you to run out there
for me now. The hotel will be closed at this
time of year, of course, but a letter which I will
give you to the proprietor, who lives close at hand,
will enable you to look over the register for an hour
or two in private. Turn to the arrivals for August
of that year, and trace the names and home addresses
on each page; then bring it back to me.”
“Is it something in connection
with that forged letter to Mallowe?” asked Ramon
quickly.
“Perhaps,” the detective
admitted. He shrugged, then added leniently,
“I think, before proceeding any further with
that branch of the investigation, it would be well
to know who obtained the notepaper with the hotel
letterhead, and if the paper itself was genuine.
Bring me back some of the hotel stationery, also,
that I may compare it with that used for the letter.”
A discreet knock upon the door heralded
the coming of an operative, in response to Blaine’s
touch upon the bell.
“There has been a slight disturbance
in the outer office, sir,” he announced.
“A man, who appears to be demented, insists upon
seeing you. He isn’t one of the ordinary
cranks, or we would have dealt with him ourselves.
He says that if you will read this, you will be glad
to assent to an interview with him.”
He presented a card, which Blaine
read with every manifestation of surprised interest.
“Tell him I will see him in
five minutes,” he said. When the operative
had withdrawn, the detective turned to Ramon.
“Who do you think is waiting
outside? The man who threatened Pennington Lawton’s
life ten years ago, the man whose name was mentioned
by the unknown visitor to the library on the night
Lawton met his death: Herbert Armstrong!”
“Good heavens!” Ramon
exclaimed. “What brings him here now?
I thought he had disappeared utterly. Do you
think it could have been he in the library that night,
come to take revenge for that fancied wrong, at last?”
“That is what I’m going
to find out,” the detective responded, with a
touch of grimness in his tones.
“But you don’t mean it
isn’t possible that Mr. Lawton was murdered!
That he didn’t die of heart-disease, after all!”
“I traced Armstrong to the town
where he was living in obscurity, and followed his
movements.” Blaine’s reply seemed
to be purposely irrelevant. “I could not,
however, find where he had been on the night of Mr.
Lawton’s death. Now that he has come to
me voluntarily, we shall discover if the voice Miss
Lawton overheard in that moment when she listened
on the stairs, was his or not.... Come back this
afternoon, Mr. Hamilton, and I will give you full information
and instructions about that Long Bay errand.
In the meantime, guard yourself well from a possible
attack, although I do not think another attempt upon
your life will be made so soon. Take this, and
if you have need of it, do not hesitate to use it.
We can afford no half-measures now. Shoot, and
shoot to kill!”
He opened a lower drawer in his massive
desk and, drawing from it a business-like looking
revolver of large caliber, presented it to the lawyer.
With a warm hand-clasp he dismissed him, and, going
to the telephone, called up Anita Lawton’s home.
“I want you to attend carefully,
Miss Lawton. I am speaking from my office.
A man will be here with me in a few minutes, and I
shall seat him close to the transmitter of my ’phone,
leaving the receiver off the hook. Please listen
carefully to his voice. I only wish you to hear
a phrase or two, when I will hang up the receiver,
and call you up later. Try to concentrate with
all your powers, and tell me afterward if you have
ever heard that voice until now; if it is the voice
of the man you did not see, who was in the library
with your father just before he died.”
He heard her give a quick gasp, and
then her voice came to him, low and sweet and steady.
“I will listen carefully, Mr.
Blaine, and do my best to tell you the truth.”
The detective pulled a large leather
chair close to the telephone, and Herbert Armstrong
was ushered in.
The man was pitiful in appearance,
but scarcely demented, as the operative had described
him. He was tall and shabbily clothed, gaunt
almost to the point of emaciation, but with no sign
of dissipation. His eyes, though sunken, were
clear, and they gazed levelly with those of the detective.
“Come in, Mr. Armstrong.”
Blaine waved genially toward the arm-chair. “What
can I do for you?”
The man did not offer to shake hands,
but sank wearily into the chair assigned him.
“Do? You can stop hounding
me, Henry Blaine! You and Pennington Lawton brought
my tragedy upon me as surely as I brought it upon myself,
and now you will not leave me alone with my grief
and ruin, to drag my miserable life out to the end,
but you or your men must dog my every foot-step, spy
upon me, hunt me down like a pack of wolves! And
why? Why?”
The man’s voice had run its
gamut, in the emotion which consumed him, and from
a menacing growl of protest, it had risen to a shrill
wail of weakness and despair.
Henry Blaine was satisfied.
“Excuse me, Mr. Armstrong,”
he said gently. “The receiver is off my
telephone, here at your elbow. It would be unfortunate
if we were overheard. If you will allow me
But he got no further. Quick
as he was, the other man was quicker. He sprang
up furiously, and dashed the telephone off the desk.
“Is this another of your d d
tricks?” he shouted. “If it is, whoever
was listening may hear the rest. You and Pennington
Lawton between you, drove my wife to suicide, but
you’ll not drive me there! I’m
ruined, and broken, and hopeless, but I’ll live
on, live till I’m even, do you hear? Live
till I’m square with the game!”
His violence died out as swiftly as
it had arisen, and he sank down in the chair, his
face buried in his bony hands, his thin shoulders
shaken with sobs.
Blaine quietly replaced the telephone
and receiver, and seated himself.
“Come, man, pull yourself together!”
he said, not unkindly. “I’m not hounding
you; Lawton never harmed you, and now he is dead.
He was my client and I was bound to protect his interests,
but as man to man, the fault was yours and you know
it. I tried to keep you from making a fool of
yourself and wrecking three lives, but I only succeeded
in saving one.”
“But your men are hounding me,
following me, shadowing me! I have come to find
out why!”
“And I would like to find out
where you were on a certain night last month the
ninth, to be exact,” responded Blaine quietly.
“What affair is it of yours?”
the other man asked wearily, adding: “How
should I know, now? One night is like another,
to me.”
“If you hate Pennington Lawton’s
memory as you seem to, the ninth of November should
stand out in your thoughts in letters of fire,”
the detective went on, in even, quiet tone. “That
was the night on which Lawton died.”
“Lawton?” Herbert Armstrong
raised his haggard face. The meaning of Blaine’s
remark utterly failed to pierce his consciousness.
“The date doesn’t mean anything to me,
but I remember the night, if that’s what you
want to know about, although I’m hanged if I
can see what it’s got to do with me! I’ll
never forget that night, because of the news which
reached me in the morning, that my worst enemy on earth
had passed away.”
“Were you in Illington the evening
before?” asked Blaine.
“I was not. I was in New
Harbor, where I live, playing pinochle all night long
with two other down-and-outs like myself, in a cheap
hall bed-room I, Herbert Armstrong, who
used to play for thousands a game, in the best clubs
in Illington! And I never knew that the man who
had brought me to that pass was gasping his life away!
Think of it! We played until dawn, when the extras,
cried in the street below, gave us the news!”
“If you will give me the address
of this boarding-house you mention, and the names
of your two friends, I can promise that you will be
under no further espionage, Mr. Armstrong.”
“I don’t care whether
you know it or not, if that’s all you want!”
The gaunt man shrugged wearily. “I’m
tired of being hounded, and I’m too weak and
too tired to oppose you, even if it did matter.”
He gave the required names and addresses,
and slouched away, his animosity gone, and only a
dull, miserable lethargy sagging upon his worn body.
When the outer door of the offices
had closed upon him, Henry Blaine again called up
Anita Lawton. This time her voice came to him
sharpened by acute distress.
“I did not recognize the tones
of the person’s voice, Mr. Blaine, only I am
quite, quite sure that he was not the man in the library
with my father the night of his death. But oh,
what did he mean by the terrible things he said?
It could not be that my father brought ruin and tragedy
upon any one, much less drove them to suicide.
Won’t you tell me, Mr. Blaine? Ramon won’t,
although I am convinced he knows all about it.
I must know.”
“You shall, Miss Lawton.
I think the time has come when you should no longer
be left in the dark. I will tell Mr. Hamilton
when he comes to me this afternoon for the interview
we have arranged that you must know the whole story.”
But Ramon Hamilton failed to appear
for the promised interview. Henry Blaine called
up his office and his home, but was unable to locate
him. Then Miss Lawton began making anxious inquiries,
and finally the mother of the young lawyer appealed
to the detective, but in vain. Late that night
the truth was established beyond peradventure of a
doubt. Ramon Hamilton had disappeared as if the
earth had opened and engulfed him.