<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</SPAN></span>
<h2 class="nobreak">IV<br/> WHOM THE GODS DESTROY</h2></div>
<p class="drop-cap2">AT Riordan’s, much frequented by policemen
and reporters, Jack Lanagan sat with Leslie,
that greatest chief of his time, discussing one of
Dan’s delectable Bismarck herrings and a “steam.”
It was not above the very human Leslie to mingle
in the free democracy of Dan’s back room, where
the gentlemen of the Fourth Estate foregathered
to settle in seasoned nonchalance the problems of
the world.</p>
<p>Leslie was speaking.</p>
<p>“You haven’t lost out, Jack,” he was saying.
“But if that narrow-gauge Sampson elects to fire
you—which I know he won’t—I’ll give you work
if I’ve got to pay you out of my contingent fund.
Get off that suisses diet and report. The <i>Enquirer</i>
can’t afford to lose you.”</p>
<p>Lanagan, unshaven for a week, looked otherwise
disreputable.</p>
<p>“The <i>Enquirer</i>,” he reported judicially, “can
afford to lose anybody. It’s a sweat-shop life, reporting;
and they fill your place just as easily as
Schwartz, down there on Stevenson Street, fills a
place at one of his shirt machines. Nothing is as
dead as a yesterday’s paper—excepting it has a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</SPAN></span>
libel in it; and nothing is so perishable as a reporter’s
reputation. The slate is swabbed clean
once every twenty-four hours. Your job is precisely
that long.”</p>
<p>“Rats. You’re in a beautiful humour. They
can’t forget that Iowa Slim exclusive very soon.”</p>
<p>“No; but only because of the fact that I haven’t
shown up for work since. They had given me
warning before then. I’m through unless they send
for me, and they don’t seem to be doing that. As
a matter of cold-blooded fact, the <i>Enquirer</i> likes
my work but not my weakness. My type don’t get
much sympathy these times. I belong to the generation
of the tramp printer; the days of a real
ethical code in the profession. We old-timers are
taking the gad—what few of us there are left—three
times over for an even break with these peg-topped
trouser boys at ten a week who once wrote
a class farce.</p>
<p>“No, chief,” concluded Lanagan dispassionately
and deliberately, “I guess I’ve shot my bolt in San
Francisco. I’ll ship on a banana boat and flag it on
to Panama. Maybe when I get there I will tangle
up in some big complication and another Davis will
come along to chronicle me with that other Derelict;
a grand story, by the way, chief—a newspaper
epic. You should read it.”</p>
<p>Leslie ignored the morose mood of the reporter.
“Shot nothing,” he said in disgust. “Take a Turkish<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</SPAN></span>
bath and sweat that grouch out of your system.
Here, take this ten. I want you to get back to your
paper. You’re too valuable a man to be out of
work in this town.”</p>
<p>Lanagan rejected the proffered money, and Leslie
was attempting to force it on him—there was a
warm bond of friendship between the two men and
a mutual admiration for the abilities of each other—when
when Brady from the upper office stuck his head
through the door. He saluted.</p>
<p>“Captain Cook sent me over to say that it looks
now like that Hemingway case was not a suicide
after all. There are no powder burns on the face.
The revolver must have been put in her hand after
she was shot.”</p>
<p>Cook was night captain of detectives. Leslie
jumped to his feet and swung Lanagan to his.</p>
<p>“Here! This will put you on your mettle. I
didn’t like the looks of that case from the start.
I am going out and take hold of it personally.
Come along. Maybe you can turn up something
that the <i>Enquirer</i> will be glad to hear from you on.
Come along, Brady.”</p>
<p>They jumped into the police machine and were
whirled out to a fashionable home on Pacific Avenue.
It was 9:30 o’clock. Less than an hour before
a report had been received of the suicide of
the daughter of the house, a débutante whose coming-out
party had been an event of the spring before<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</SPAN></span>
and whose engagement to a broker, Oliver
Macondray, had just been announced.</p>
<p>Wilson, accounted one of Leslie’s shrewdest
upper office men, was already in the room when
Leslie, Lanagan, and Brady arrived. There were
there also a shoal of newspaper men and photographers,
and the smell of flash powders was heavy
on the air. On the first report from police headquarters
I had been sent out by Sampson and had already
been in the house for half an hour. But I
was glad to surrender the story promptly to Lanagan
when he entered, although he did not then say
that he intended going to work.</p>
<p>It was Wilson, as I recall it, who had raised a
doubt of the suicide theory by pointing out the absence
of powder burns, although the bullet wound
was in the right temple and the revolver clasped
tightly in the right hand. A girl with her frail
wrist must have pressed the revolver close before
firing. It was clear the revolver had been placed
in her hand after the shooting. It was an English
bulldog of old pattern, one of those “family”
pistols found in most homes.</p>
<div class="figcenter"><ANTIMG src="images/i107.jpg" alt="" /></div>
<p class="caption">“Then Lanagan took his leisurely turn, drawing up an easy chair.”</p>
<p>“If you can’t be first on the ground, be last,”
was an axiom of the newspaper business that Lanagan
often tried to impress upon me. He proceeded
to act upon his theory now by rolling and lighting
a cigarette to give all in the room ample time to
finish their investigation. Finally the room was<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</SPAN></span>
cleared of all save, Leslie, Lanagan, Brady, Wilson,
and myself.</p>
<p>The room had one set of French windows giving
out upon a wide porch and a heavily matted lawn.
It would be next to impossible to say whether a person
had escaped over the lawn by way of the veranda.
The bedroom door was open when a maid,
attracted by the shot, had overcome her terror and
run to the room.</p>
<p>At the time of death the only persons in the
house were the mother, daughter, and the maid,
Marie. The maid was in a state bordering on
collapse after the first siege with the detectives and
newspaper men, and Leslie ordered her kept quiet
for an hour. The occasional hysterical cries of the
mother, prostrated in her own room, could be heard.</p>
<p>Leslie examined the body with minute care. The
rest of us had completed our investigations. Then
Lanagan took his leisurely turn, drawing up an
easy chair. Leslie, Brady, and Wilson had stepped
through the window and were examining the porch
and the lawn carefully with their pocket lights.
Lanagan had taken one of the girl’s hands up in
his. He was examining an old-fashioned bracelet
critically, very critically, it seemed to me. He
flashed a sudden quick glance toward the window;
the chief and the detectives were still busy outside.</p>
<p>“Stand at the door, Norrie!” he shot at me
electrically.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</SPAN></span>I sprang to put my back to it, to give him a moment’s
delay in case any of the other newspaper
men should drift back to the room. I had not the
slightest idea what he was after, but I caught a
glitter of fierce interest in his eyes, and I knew him
better than to disobey. I did not see what he did
then, save that he quickly placed something within
his pocketbook, something that didn’t have much
substance, for he had to rub his thumb and forefinger
to drop it into a piece of paper. Some of
the newspaper men trooped back into the room;
Leslie entered again, frowning in perplexity.</p>
<p>“Singular, Jack,” he said. “What’s your
idea?”</p>
<p>“I think,” drawled Lanagan, “I’ll save my ideas
for the <i>Enquirer</i>, Chief. I’ve concluded to go back
to work.”</p>
<p>Leslie stared. “You’ve got something,” he
finally said testily. “What is it?”</p>
<p>“Something that may save me being driven from
town like a beaten dog, Chief, that’s all. You
didn’t want that, you said.”</p>
<p>“Confound you anyhow. You’re too infernally
clever. Go in and win,” said the grizzled chief,
but his tone was nettled and there was a natural
trace, possibly, of professional jealousy that he
could not conceal. It had never before happened
that he and Lanagan had started off on an absolutely
even break where it was a straight open-and-shut
proposition of the best detective winning; and he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</SPAN></span>
felt that Lanagan had found a clue in that room
that he had overlooked. He was a hard loser. He
went over the room again; he examined the body;
he used his magnifying glass and he scanned the
walls, the carpet, the clothing, inch by inch.</p>
<p>He was still reluctant to give up when the coroner’s
deputies finally arrived to discharge their
melancholy functions. The mother was still in
hysteria. The maid had calmed somewhat, and
Leslie went to examine her with Wilson and Brady.
Lanagan had drifted out and was sitting on the
moonlit porch, to which the electroliers gave added
brightness.</p>
<p>“When all those blunderbusses get through with
their heavy work, Norrie, we’ll have a run in with
the maid,” said he. “I seem to be the last man on
the job. Meantime find out for me how many red-haired
people there are about this house or among
the immediate circle of the girl’s friends. It is a
matter of some importance, because—” he carefully
opened the pocketbook, extracted the folded
piece of note paper, and, first assuring himself that
no one was about, pointed—“because here are two
broken, half-inch bits of red hair that I take it are
going to play an important part in this case. Remember
the Deveraux case? These were wedged
back of the cameo on her bracelet, and they
got there in her last struggle with whoever shot her.
For the time being at least, then, we will eliminate
all but red-haired people.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</SPAN></span>“Maybe it’s a dog’s hair,” I suggested hopefully.</p>
<p>Lanagan was on the point of retorting with his
finished sarcasm when the Hemingway limousine,
evidently bringing other members of the family or
relations summoned by word of the mournful occurrence,
rolled up to the brilliantly lighted porte-cochère.
Lanagan’s eye had travelled swiftly and
fixed upon some object of interest. I followed his
intense gaze.</p>
<p>The chauffeur’s hair was as flaming as a firebrand.</p>
<p>Lanagan’s eyes seemed to be boring straight
through the man as the machine came to a stop
almost where we sat. The chauffeur’s face was
pale, extraordinarily pale, it appeared to me; as he
stopped his machine and shut down the gears, there
was a perceptible evidence of nervousness in his
manner that was possibly entirely natural in view
of the shocking happening of a few hours before
that had taken the life of his young mistress.</p>
<p>The first to leave the motor was a trim, well-groomed
young man, whom we at once recognised,
from the descriptions we had heard, as Macondray.
As he held the door open for the other two persons
to leave the machine, he removed his hat, holding
it in his hand.</p>
<p>Simultaneously our eyes rested on his uncovered
hair.</p>
<p>His hair, if anything, was a shade more auburn
than that of the chauffeur! His swollen eyes and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</SPAN></span>
pale face were natural under the circumstances,
with his marriage hopes thus painfully blasted.
They walked within, and Lanagan said:</p>
<p>“Come on. We’ll get first crack at this fellow
anyhow. Let’s meet him back at the garage in
the rear.”</p>
<p>We had started to walk back to the garage as the
chauffeur cranked his machine when from the same
low window Leslie and Brady stepped alertly.
Leslie held up his hand to the chauffeur. The two
officers were beside him in a moment. I knew
what was coming even before they laid a hand on
him. I had seen too many arrests made not to
know what was meant by that brusque, cool manner,
that quick step, that wary eye even before there
came that familiar terse, short snap of the professional
thief-taker:</p>
<p>“<i>We want you!</i>”</p>
<p>“The maid has spilled!” was Lanagan’s ejaculation
as we stepped up to the trio. Leslie could not
forbear a pleased lighting of the eyes as he glanced
at Lanagan.</p>
<p>“What have you got, Chief?” asked Lanagan
easily.</p>
<p>“The maid, Marie, broke down and admitted
that she let this man Martin into the house and into
the girl’s room at the girl’s orders at 8.30 o’clock.
Possibly ten minutes later, she says, she heard the
shot. When she could summon courage to go to
her mistress’s room she found her lying on the floor<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</SPAN></span>
dead, the revolver in her hand. What have you
to say, Martin?”</p>
<p>“Nothing, sir,” said Martin levelly. “I have
nothing at all to say, sir.”</p>
<p>He was a man of about thirty. Lanagan’s subsequent
investigations disclosed that he had been
with the Hemingways for many years, formerly
working as a stable boy. When automobiles came
into vogue, he had taken a place as chauffeur. He
was a probation court boy when the Hemingways
took him into their employ and “made a man of
him,” as he used to express it.</p>
<p>“Nothing?” snapped Leslie. “Well, we’ll see.
I guess we’ll take him in, Brady, and give him the
dark cell.”</p>
<p>Leslie swung on his heel, and Brady, giving the
chauffeur only time enough to run his machine to
the garage, took him to the city prison and locked
him up. But first I had noticed Lanagan pick up
Martin’s cap from the seat of the machine while
the brief conference was going on and deftly extract
something from it. The “something” proved
later to be one or two of Martin’s red hairs.</p>
<p>Other newspaper men emerging from the house
had been informed by Leslie of the arrest. It was
11.30 o’clock by that time, and, with the arrest of
Martin as their sensation, the morning paper men
of one accord shoaled back to their offices. Leslie
turned whatever ends might come up over to Wilson,
with instructions to keep an eye on the maid,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</SPAN></span>
Marie, and went back to headquarters satisfied that
if Martin was not the murderer he at least could
clear up the mystery. Lanagan started back with
the rest, but dropped off the car unobserved and
returned to the house. He was not yet satisfied
that all that the inmates knew there had been told.</p>
<p>“You go in and write the story,” he had told
me. “That chauffeur isn’t the type who is rendezvousing
with the daughter of the house; and she
isn’t the type to engage in an alliance with a chauffeur.
There is a nigger in this woodpile some
place—and a red-headed nigger at that. Go off
with your story if you don’t hear from me by press
time, but keep my red hairs out of your story unless
you hear from me further.”</p>
<p>I had gathered in my camera man and artist and
hurried back to the office to write a story that I
knew would be exactly similar in its facts with those
in the other morning papers, leading off naturally
with the arrest of the chauffeur.</p>
<p>There were still quite a number of relatives and
family friends at the house when Lanagan returned.
The reception hall was brilliantly lighted, and he
hung up his hat. As he did so he examined Macondray’s
topcoat carefully and quickly. On the collar
was one hair. It was tucked away, labeled, in
a separate package in the pocketbook.</p>
<p>He went to the room of the murder to find Wilson
there “sweating” Macondray. The broker
was bent over a table, sobbing. The intermittent,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</SPAN></span>
hysterical cries of the mother, hoarser and fainter
as exhaustion came upon her, still punctuated the
air. Wilson was reading a letter. He passed it to
Lanagan.</p>
<p>Lanagan read, then, a startling few lines written
by Miss Hemingway the day before to Macondray,
breaking their engagement with the single
explanation: <i>I love another. You surely could not
want to marry a woman who had discovered she
loved another.</i></p>
<p>Lanagan passed the letter back. He was anxious
to make a microscopic examination of the hair, but
he wanted also to put Macondray through a mill.
He signalled Wilson to “jam,” and the detective
touched Macondray on the shoulder.</p>
<p>“Get together,” he said brusquely. “We want
you to answer a few questions.”</p>
<p>“We aren’t getting any place in this fashion,”
added Lanagan curtly.</p>
<p>“Tell me, Macondray, when did you get that letter?”</p>
<p>Macondray straightened up, wiping his eyes.</p>
<p>“This afternoon at 5 o’clock,” he said.</p>
<p>“When did you see Miss Hemingway last?”</p>
<p>There was a long pause while Macondray gazed
fixedly first at Lanagan and then at Wilson, as
though trying to read their minds to learn what
they knew.</p>
<p>“Because you did see her after the letter, you
know,” said Lanagan quietly. It was entirely a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</SPAN></span>
random shot, but it went home. Macondray
studied the matter over again for some moments.</p>
<p>“Well,” he said at last slowly, “I suppose it is
best that I tell all I know. I saw her last—at half-past
eight o’clock to-night.”</p>
<p>His head dropped to his breast and dry sobs
shook him again for a minute.</p>
<p>“But as to her death I can offer no explanation.
Only—you have Martin in custody, and I saw
Martin in her room at that time. My God!” he
burst out, “that Elvira could have sunk so low!
A menial, a lackey—a chauffeur!”</p>
<p>“We don’t want a dissertation on caste,” said
Lanagan with cold brutality. “What we want of
you, Macondray, either here or at the city prison—”
Macondray started, realising for the first time
that suspicion was pointing his way—“is a simple
statement of how you happened to see Miss Hemingway
in this room with Martin and what happened
after that?”</p>
<p>“I received her note by messenger at five o’clock.
At half-past seven I called, but she was not in. I
wanted a personal explanation. I called again in
an hour. She was home, Marie said, and had gone
to her room for the night and under no circumstances
was to be disturbed. I determined to see
her at any cost. I knew the position of her room
here, fronting on the veranda. I went from the
house by the front door and walked around here to
the lawn. I intended only to attract her attention<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</SPAN></span>
by throwing a pebble against the window and compelling
her to speak with me. But while I stood
there on the lawn, searching for a pebble, an automobile
drove slowly down Buchanan Street and
stopped just beyond the Hemingway drive behind
the pepper tree. There were two men in it. One
remained while the other, whom I recognised as
Martin, came to the house, entering by the kitchen
door. Of course, then I would not risk attracting
Elvira’s attention.</p>
<p>“While I was just turning to go, Elvira’s curtain
suddenly was raised, and I saw her peering out
down Buchanan Street toward the place where the
motor car was. Just when that tableau was being
presented her chamber door opened quickly, and
Martin entered. She seemed to be glad to see him,
and extended both her hands to him.</p>
<p>“I could witness no more. It broke my heart.
Sick and miserable that I had discovered so fine
a girl, the girl whom I loved sincerely, in a meeting
with her chauffeur, I turned and came away.
That is all I know. Later I received a telephone
message of the tragedy. They sent the car for
me. I could not understand it then; I cannot
now.”</p>
<p>He was sobbing again with his arms on the table.</p>
<p>Wilson stepped over to him.</p>
<p>“Brace up,” he said shortly, “I want you to
come with me. The chief will want to keep you
where he can see you for a day or two.” His<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</SPAN></span>
heavy hand descended professionally upon Macondray’s
shoulder. But Lanagan interrupted.</p>
<p>“Not a chance, Jim,” he said, shaking his head.
“I don’t want to interfere with your duty, but I
believe that chap is telling the truth absolutely.
What we want to do now is to clear up the mystery
of the man in the automobile. Martin must be
made to talk. And, by the way, have you come
across any red-haired people in this case outside
Martin and Macondray? It struck me as a good
little feature story. Here’s a red-haired chauffeur
and a red-haired fiancée. It’s a combination that
don’t often occur.”</p>
<p>“Humph,” replied Wilson. “That’s curious.
The chief and I only saw Mrs. Hemingway for a
moment, she was so unstrung, but she most certainly
has the finest head of red hair for a woman
of forty-four or five you want to see. Seems to
be her own, too. Funny proposition, the three of
them at that.”</p>
<p>Lanagan was staring, for once taken completely
by surprise, so pat did the circumstance fit his theories.
He glanced at his watch. His eyes were dancing
with excitement. “That will be all, Mr. Macondray,
unless Wilson wants you for anything,”
he said. Wilson said he was through, and Macondray
left the room. “Now, Jim, let’s see Marie
again. I’m collecting red hair; it’s a fad I have
acquired, and I want one or two of Mrs. Hemingway’s.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</SPAN></span>“I was never more serious in my life,” said Wilson,
summoning the maid. He sent her for a brush
containing combings of her mistress’s hair. She
asked no questions, but did as ordered. The maid
acted like a person in a trance.</p>
<p>“Holding up to a certain point, and then she will
drop like a plummet,” thought Lanagan, then aloud:
“I guess we are all through here, Jim, except one
last fling with the mother.”</p>
<p>But there was no “last fling” with the mother.
She had been given a hypodermic, the nurse said,
and was sleeping.</p>
<p>From a neighbourhood bar Wilson telephoned to
Leslie, still waiting at police headquarters to get
a last word from his men. The detective was still
half decided to lock up both Marie and Macondray,
but Leslie said no. Lanagan had borrowed Wilson’s
magnifying glass and had spread out upon the
bar the different pieces of red hair. He was so
deeply engrossed in making comparisons that he
failed to follow the startling one-sided conversation
going on between Wilson and the chief. Wilson
whirled around from the receiver as Lanagan,
profoundly stirred, carefully tucked away his collection.</p>
<p>“A child could see it,” he muttered to himself as
Wilson called out:</p>
<p>“Martin has spilled! Says he tricked the maid,
who, by the way, is in love with him, into letting
him into Elvira’s room. There he declared his love<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</SPAN></span>
for her, demanded that she fly with him, and when
she refused seized up the family revolver and shot
her down, maddened by her command that he
realise his place and return to the stables where he
belonged. He escaped through the window after
placing the revolver in her hand. They are going
to book him now for murder.”</p>
<p>Lanagan took a long time to digest this bit of
surprising information. He made no comment
other than to say:</p>
<p>“You’re through for the night now, aren’t you,
Jim? With Leslie vouching for Martin as the
man?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” replied Jim, “and now I’m off.”</p>
<p>A moment after he had been left alone Lanagan
had Leslie on the telephone.</p>
<p>“Chief? Lanagan. Hop into your car and
meet me at Farrelly’s. Bring Martin along. It’s
quarter to one. Make time. And this is something
absolutely between you and me; me and the
<i>Enquirer</i>. Scoot now, Chief. I’ve something to
interest you.”</p>
<p>Since the incident in the room earlier in the evening
Leslie had been restless about Lanagan. Within
ten minutes the police automobile stopped at
Farrelly’s. Leslie and Brady, with Martin walking
between them, entered.</p>
<p>Lanagan quickly led the way to the side room.</p>
<p>One grimed incandescent lit the room pallidly.
Around a beer-stained table the four men sat, Martin<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</SPAN></span>
farthest from the door. Lanagan’s eyes were
fairly snapping as he opened his pocketbook and
spread it out upon the table. From it he extracted
his little papers, each containing a piece or two of
red hair. He laid each separate hair slowly, deliberately,
before them all upon the table. Martin was
watching the performance with eyes that glistened in
the intensity of his interest. Equally absorbed were
Leslie and Brady. Deliberately, precisely, Lanagan
laid out the hairs—two from the brush of
Mrs. Hemingway, one from the coat collar of Macondray,
two from Martin’s cap, and the two short
bits from the bracelet of Elvira.</p>
<p>Leslie had understood the pantomime the moment
Lanagan opened his pocketbook and disclosed
the collection of hair. He knew what it was now
that he had overlooked; and, chagrined but alert,
he watched each move that Lanagan made, for the
solution had not yet come. Was it to be Martin?
Leslie hoped professionally, for the sake of his
reputation, that it would be.</p>
<p>“Martin,” said Lanagan, flashing the word out
like a dirk might flash in the sun, “what did Mrs.
Hemingway ever do to earn your loyalty—even to
death?”</p>
<p>Martin paled, visibly, even beneath the sick light
of the weak incandescent.</p>
<p>“She has been very good to me, sir. She took
me out of the court’s custody and gave me a good
home and a good salary. She made a man of me<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</SPAN></span>
when I might have become a jailbird. She has been
a good mistress, sir.”</p>
<p>“Yes, a good mistress,” came through Lanagan’s
teeth. “You’re loyal. The type of loyal retainer.
You’re not the type that falls in love with the
daughter of the house. You never loved Elvira;
you never murdered Elvira; and you are concealing
now the name of the murderer, telling a poor weak
lie that could not have stood at the outside for
twenty-four hours! <i>Who killed Elvira?</i>”</p>
<p>Lanagan had arisen and glowered above the
ashen Martin. Leslie was leaning forward, his
eyes, gimletlike, boring into Martin’s. Brady
swung around, too, to face him, caught as well under
the spell of fierce magnetism of the newspaper
man.</p>
<p>“<i>Tell me</i>,” Lanagan snarled, “<i>who was in that
automobile with you last night</i>?”</p>
<p>Martin’s heavy lips dropped apart while he continued
to stare affrightedly upon the newspaper man.</p>
<p>“<i>The mother of that girl found you in Elvira’s
room with her, making preparations for flight with
whoever was in that machine!</i></p>
<p>“I will tell you,” continued Lanagan, hammering
each word home; “I will tell you who killed Elvira
Hemingway!” He leaned swiftly across the table,
bending down and breathing a word into the ear
of Martin. The effect was electrical.</p>
<p>“No! No! No—no—no! It was I, I tell you;
I and no other! I shot her in my fit of madness!”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</SPAN></span>He collapsed suddenly, his head sinking on his
breast, still gasping huskily forth his protestations.</p>
<p>“Look here, then,” said Lanagan. He held
Brady’s magnifying glass over the hair—over the
two hairs from the bracelet and then over the other
specimens. The difference in the texture of the
hair and a difference in colour were apparent under
the microscope even in the ill-lighted room. That
one of the three specimens was similar hair to that
from the bracelet was apparent almost to the naked
eye. Leslie’s face grew grave. Brady had absolute
unbelief written in his eyes. Martin took
one peering look furtively.</p>
<p>“That hair,” said Lanagan, indicating, “came
from Elvira Hemingway’s bracelet. It lodged
there in her last struggle with whoever killed her.
This is your hair, Martin; compare it. This is
Macondray’s; compare it. This is from the
mother’s head; compare it. A red-haired person
killed Elvira. It was not you—it was not—”</p>
<p>But Martin had sunk his head into his arms on
the table with a groan. Lanagan waited; Leslie
waited; Brady waited—experts all at the third degree.
Mind was mauling matter—and mind was
winning.</p>
<p>“It was not you,” continued Lanagan pitilessly
as Martin lifted his haggard face with the look of
pleading of an animal in his eyes. “It was not
you—”</p>
<p>“<i>But it was not she—not my mistress! It was</i><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</SPAN></span>
<i>me! Me!</i>” The last words were a shriek; but
the tax on his self-control had been too great. He
fainted.</p>
<p>They threw water on Martin then and forced
whiskey down his throat. He came to, staring in
confusion from one face to the other.</p>
<p>“You have admitted the mother shot her own
child,” said Lanagan rapidly, giving Martin no opportunity
to recover his composure. “Now tell us
the circumstances of this unnatural crime.”</p>
<p>Martin’s breakdown was complete.</p>
<p>Elvira Hemingway, practically forced into an
engagement with Macondray largely through
propinquity—he was her brother’s partner and a
regular family guest—and through the wishes of
her mother, inordinately ambitious socially to ally
her daughter with the Macondrays, had finally jilted
Macondray for a struggling young doctor, Stanton,
a classmate at college. They were to have eloped,
so greatly did the girl dread the scene that she knew
would follow when her mother learned of her dismissal
of Macondray. Martin, loyal, as he had
said, to his mistress, but still more so to the daughter
of the house, was party to the elopement. He
had come to her room by prearrangement to help
her out with a grip or two in order that no suspicion
would attach should she be discovered in the
room, on the porch, or crossing the lawn. The machine—the
same that Macondray saw—was waiting
at the pepper tree. But while Martin was in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</SPAN></span>
the room the mother, on some slight errand, had unexpectedly
gone to her daughter’s room.</p>
<p>There she found her daughter fully attired, the
French window wide open, and caught a flashing
glimpse of a figure disappearing through the French
window, that she recognised as Martin. At first
flush she accepted the incident as an interrupted
rendezvous of some sort between her daughter and
her chauffeur, and one hot word of charge had
brought a swift retort from the daughter, and a
quarrel had arisen.</p>
<p>Martin, sneaking back to report progress in the
room to Stanton, heard the rising voices in anger,
and learned enough to know that the girl, under
stress of her excitement, had revealed the plan for
the elopement. He counselled with Stanton, and
both agreed that Stanton had best retire and await
developments, Martin to keep Stanton posted by
telephone. In the grief and excitement of the final
tragedy he did not do so, and the lover, worn by
a sleepless night, received his great blow when he
opened his morning paper. But this is not a tale
of love or lovers, except insofar as they concern
the solution of a crime, and Stanton therefore, with
his blighted life, passes out of the story.</p>
<p>Martin, determined to intercede in hope of softening
the lot of the daughter, taking all blame to himself
as the messenger of the secret lovers, hurried
then, back to the house.</p>
<p>Some primal strain of vulgarity, some poignant<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</SPAN></span>
pang of disappointed motherly ambitions, or possibly
some pang of personal ambitions thwarted,
led to the utterance of one malediction sharper than
all the others by the mother. In a moment of sudden
hysteria the old-fashioned revolver that had
been on her mantelpiece for years had been seized
by the daughter in a wild threat of suicide.</p>
<p>The mother seized her wrist. A violent physical
struggle for the weapon followed. This was occurring
just as Martin was making his way back
through the house to the room, taking along with
him the maid, Marie, huddled, frightened, against
the hall wall at sound of the unseemly family quarrel.</p>
<p>There was a flash and a report in his very eyes
as Martin opened the door. The revolver, he said,
was unmistakably in the mother’s hands; but
whether the discharge was accidental or intentional
in heat of passion, Martin could not say.</p>
<p>And that angle of the story never was cleared up.</p>
<p>The mother had swooned. When it was clear
to the frightened servants that the girl was dead,
they had carried the mother to her room.</p>
<p>The plan of the two was quickly formed. In
their clumsy way they concluded it would be
best for all concerned if the revolver should be
placed in the girl’s hand to indicate suicide. Martin
placed it there, while Marie laboured with
the hysterical mother, trying to instil in her mind,
in which the entire terrible scene was a whirl,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</SPAN></span>
the idea that Elvira had, in fact, committed suicide.</p>
<p>As for the confession:</p>
<p>“I feel I was to blame in a way, sir,” concluded
Martin, wiping his eyes. “After all I would have
been a jailbird anyway if she hadn’t saved me, most
like. I thought I could protect her, too, sir, by confessing.
I supposed if I said I committed the murder
that would settle it.”</p>
<p>Lanagan glanced at his watch. It was half-past
one.</p>
<p>“There’s one more move yet, Chief,” he said,
“and I go to press in thirty minutes.”</p>
<p>In a moment or two they had all reached the
Hemingway home again, surprised to find it brilliantly
lighted. Servants were running about
frantically. An excited voice was at the telephone
as the quartet walked through the door. It was the
butler.</p>
<p>“Hurry! Hurry!” he was crying. “Hemingway’s!
Pacific Avenue! For God’s sake hurry!”</p>
<p>“What is it?” demanded Lanagan.</p>
<p>“Carbolic, I think,” replied the butler. “She
escaped from the nurse and got to the bathroom.
She had been raving for an hour entirely out of
her head crying to Elvira to forgive her—that
she—” he stopped suddenly, his lips coming together
in a taut line. “Another loyal family retainer,”
thought Lanagan as he and the chief exchanged<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</SPAN></span>
quick glances. “Only this one can keep
his secret for all of me.”</p>
<p>They hurried to render first aid, but one look convinced
the reporter and the policeman, used to
deaths in violent form, that the troubled and frightfully
burdened mother’s soul had gone to a higher
court for judgment.</p>
<p>Lanagan raced back downstairs for the telephone.
It was five minutes to two. By the accident of
being on the ground he would have at least that
tremendous exclusive of the mother’s suicide.</p>
<p>And that—good story as it was—was all the
<i>Enquirer</i> printed, for it was all that I finally got
from Lanagan just before the clock struck two.</p>
<p>Leslie, standing by the telephone, said, tentatively
and curiously, when the receiver was hung up:</p>
<p>“What about the real story? Saving that for
to-morrow?”</p>
<p>“No, Chief,” drawled Lanagan, full brother in
the Fourth Estate. “No, Chief, that’s <i>all</i> the story.
She’s dead, isn’t she? They have had about
enough trouble, this family.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="ph2">V<br/>
THE AMBASSADOR’S STICK-PIN</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr class="tb" />
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