CLEARED SKIES
Just as in autumn, the period of Indian
summer brings a reminiscent warmth and sunshine, so
sometimes in late winter a day will come now and then
which is a harbinger of the not far-distant springtide,
like a promise, during present storm and stress, of
better things to come.
Such a day, balmy and gloriously bright,
found four people seated together in the spacious,
sunny morning-room of a great house on Belleair Avenue.
A young man, pale and wan as from a long illness, but
with a new steadiness and clarity born of suffering
in his eyes; a girl, slender and black-robed, her
delicate face flushing with an exquisite, spring-like
color, her eyes soft and misty and spring-like, too,
in their starry fulfillment of love that has been tried
and found all-sufficing; another sable-clad figure,
but clerically frocked and portly; and the last, a
keen-faced, kindly-eyed man approaching middle-age a
man with sandy hair and a mustache just slightly tinged
with gray. He might, from his appearance and bearing,
have been a great teacher, a great philanthropist,
a great statesman. But he was none of these or
rather, let us say, he was all, and more. He was
the greatest factor for good which the age had produced,
because he was the greatest instrument of justice,
the crime-detector of the century.
The pale young man moved a little
in his chair, and the girl laid her hand caressingly
upon his blue-veined one. She was seated close
to him in fact, Anita was never willing,
in these later days, to be so far from Ramon that
she could not reach out and touch him, as if to assure
herself that he was there, that he was safe from the
enemies who had encompassed them both, and that her
ministering care might shield him.
Doctor Franklin noted the movement,
slight as it was, and cleared his throat, importantly.
“Of course, my dear children,”
he began, impressively, “if it is your earnest
desire, I will perform the marriage ceremony for you
here in this room at noon to-morrow. But I trust
you have both given the matter careful thought not,
of course, as to the suitability of your union, but
the I may say, the manner of it! A
ceremony without a social function, without the customary
observances which, although worldly and filled with
pomp and vanity, nevertheless are befitted by usage,
in these mundane days, to those of your station in
life, seems slightly unconventional, almost er unseemly.”
“But we don’t care for
the pomp and vanity, and the social observances, and
all the rest of it, do we, Ramon?” the girl asked.
Ramon Hamilton smiled, and his eyes met and held hers.
“We only want each other,” he said quietly.
“But it seems so very precipitate!”
the clergyman urged, turning as if for moral support
to the impassive figure of Henry Blaine. “So
soon after the shadow of tragedy has crossed this
threshold! What will people say?”
A little vagrant breeze, like a lost,
unseasonable butterfly, came in at the open window
and stirred the filmy curtain, bearing on its soft
breath the odor of narcissus from the bloom-laden window-box.
“Oh, Doctor Franklin!”
cried the girl, impulsively. “Don’t
talk of tragedy just now! Spring is so near,
and we love each other so! If he my
dear, dead father can hear, he will understand,
and wish it to be so!”
“As you will.” The
minister rose. “I gave you your name, Anita.
I consecrated your father’s soul to Heaven,
and his body to the dust, and I will give his daughter
in marriage to the man he chose for her protector,
whenever it is your will. But, Mr. Blaine, what
do you say? You seem to have more influence over
Miss Lawton than I, although I can scarcely understand
it. Don’t you agree with me that the world
will talk?”
“I do!” responded Henry
Blaine fervently. “And I say let
it! It can say of these two children only what
I do bless you, both! Sorrow and suffering
and tragedy have taken their quota of these young lives now
let a little happiness and joy and sunshine and love
in upon the circumspect gloom you would still cast
about them! You ministers are steeped in the
spiritual misery of the world, the doctors in the
physical; but we crime-specialists are forced to drink
of it to its dregs, physical, mental, moral, spiritual!
And there is so much in this tainted, sin-ridden world
of ours that is beautiful and pure and happy and holy,
if we will but give it a chance!”
Doctor Franklin coughed, in a severely
condemnatory fashion.
“Now that I have learned your
opinion, in a broad, general way, Mr. Blaine, I can
understand your point of view in regard to that young
criminal, Charles Pennold, when at the time of the
trial you used your influence to have him paroled
in your custody, instead of being sent to prison,
where he belonged.”
“Exactly.” Blaine’s
tone was dry. “I firmly believe that there
are many more young boys and men in our prisons, who
should in reality be in hospitals, or in sheltering,
uplifting, sympathetic hands, than there are criminals
unpunished. And you, with your broadly, professionally
charitable point of view, Doctor,” he added with
keen enjoyment, “will, I am convinced, be delighted
to know that Charley Pennold is doing splendidly.
He will develop in time into one of my most trusted,
capable operatives, I have no doubt. He has the
instinct, the real nose, for crime, but circumstances
from his birth and even before that, forced him on
the wrong side of the fence. He was, if you will
pardon the vernacular, on the outside, looking in.
Now he’s on the inside, looking out!”
“I sincerely trust so!”
the minister responded frigidly and turned to the
others. “I will leave you now. If it
is your irrevocable desire to have the ceremony at
noon to-morrow, I will make all the necessary arrangements.
In fact, I will telephone you later, when everything
is settled.”
“Oh, thank you, Dr. Franklin!
I knew you wouldn’t fail us!” Anita murmured.
“Don’t forget to tell Mrs. Franklin that
she will hear from me. She must surely come,
you know!”
When the door had closed on the minister’s
broad, retreating back, Ramon Hamilton turned with
a suspicion of a flush in his wan cheeks, to the detective.
“If I’d gone to any Sunday
school he presided over, when I was a kiddie, I’d
have been a train-robber now!” he observed darkly.
“I’m glad you lit into him about young
Pennold, Mr. Blaine. He started it!”
“But think of the others!”
Anita Lawton turned her face for a moment to the spring-like
day outside. “Mr. Mallowe dead in his cell
from apoplexy, Mr. Carlis imprisoned for life, Mac
Alarney and all the rest facing long years behind
gray walls and iron bars oh, I know it is
just; I remember what they did to my father and to
me; and yet somehow in this glorious sunshine and
with all the ages and ages just as bright, spreading
before me, I can find charity and mercy in my heart
for all the world!”
“Charity and mercy,” repeated
Ramon soberly. “Yes, dearest. But not
liberty to continue their crimes to do to
others what they did to us!”
A spasm of pain crossed his face,
and she bent over him solicitously.
“Oh, what is it, Ramon? Speak to me!”
“Nothing, dear, it’s all right now.
Just a twinge of the old pain.”
“Those murdering fiends, who
made you suffer so!” she cried, and added with
feminine illogicality: “I’m not
sorry, after all, that they’re in prison!
I’m glad they’ve got their just deserts.
Oh, Ramon, I’ve been afraid to distress you
by asking you, but did you tell the truth at the trial all
the truth, I mean? Was that really all you remember?”
“Yes, dear,” he replied
a trifle wearily. “When I left Mr. Blaine’s
office that day, I was hurrying along Dalrymple Street,
when just outside the Colossus Building, a boy about
fifteen that one who is in the reformatory
now collided with me. Then he looked
up into my face, and grasped my arm.
“‘You’re Mr. Hamilton,
aren’t you?’ he gasped. ’Oh,
come quick, sir! Mr. Ferrand’s had a stroke
or something, and I was just running to get help.
You don’t remember me, I guess. I’m
Mr. Ferrand’s new office-boy, Frankie Allen.
You was in to see him about ten days ago, don’t
you remember?’
“Well, as I told you, ’Nita
dearest, old Mr. Ferrand was one of my father’s
best friends. His offices were in the Colossus
Building, and I had been in to see him about
ten days before so in spite of Mr. Blaine’s
warning, I was perfectly unsuspecting. Of course,
I didn’t remember his office-boy from Adam,
but that fact never occurred to me, then. I went
right along with the boy, and he talked so volubly
that I didn’t notice we had gotten into the wrong
elevator the express until its
first stop, seven floors above Mr. Ferrand’s.
They must have staged the whole thing pretty well Carlis
and Paddington and their crew for when
I stepped out of the express elevator, there was no
one in sight that I remember but the boy who was with
me. I pressed the button of the local, which was
just beside the express there was a buzz
and whirring hum as if the elevator had ascended,
and the door opened. As I stepped over its threshold,
I felt a violent blow and terrific pain on the back
of my head, and seemed to fall into limitless space.
That was all I knew until I woke up in the hospital
where Mr. Blaine had taken me after discovering and
rescuing me, to see your dear face bending over mine!”
“One of Paddington’s men
was waiting, and hit you on the head with a window-pole,
as you stepped into the open elevator shaft,”
Blaine supplemented. “It was all a plant,
of course. You only fell to the roof of the elevator,
which was on a level with the floor below. There
they carried you into the office of a fake company,
kept you until closing time, and got you out of the
building as a drunkard, conveying you to Mac Alarney’s
retreat in his own machine. Nobody employed in
the building was in their pay but the elevator man,
and he’s got his, along with the rest!
Paddington’s scheme wasn’t bad; if he’d
only been on the square, he might have made a very
brilliant detective!”
“How terrible his death was!”
Anita shuddered. “And how unexplainable!
No one ever found out who stabbed him, there in the
park, did they?”
Blaine did not reply. He knew
that on the day following the discovery of the murdered
man, one Franchette Durand, otherwise Fifine Dechaussee,
had sailed for Havre on the ill-fated La Tourette,
which had gone to the bottom in mid-ocean, with all
on board. He knew also that an hour before the
French girl’s last tragic interview with Paddington,
she had discovered the existence of his wife, for he
himself had seen to it that the knowledge was imparted
to her. Further than that, he preferred not to
conjecture. The Madonna-faced girl had taken
her secret with her to her swiftly retributive grave
in the deep.
Blaine rose, somewhat reluctantly.
Work called him, and yet he loved to be near them
in the rose-tinted high noon of their happiness.
“I’ll be on hand to-morrow,
indeed I will!” he promised heartily, in response
to their eager request.
“To-morrow! Just think!”
Anita buried her glowing face in her lover’s
shoulder for an instant, and then looked up with misty
eyes. “Just think, if it hadn’t been
for you, Mr. Blaine, there wouldn’t be any to-morrow!
I don’t mean about your getting my father’s
money all back for me I’m grateful,
of course, but it doesn’t count beside the greater
thing you have given us! But for you, there would
never have been any to-morrow.”
“That’s true!” The
young man’s arm encircled the girl’s slender
waist as they stood together in the glowing sunlight,
but his other hand gripped the detective’s.
“We owe life, our happiness, the future, everything
to you!”
And so Henry Blaine left them.
At the door he turned and glanced
back, and the sight his eyes beheld was a goodly one
for him to carry away with him into the world a
sight as old as the ages, as new as the hour, as prescient
as the hours and ages to come. Just a man and
a maid, sunshine and happiness, youth and love! that,
and the light of undying gratitude in the eyes they
bent upon him.