<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</SPAN></span>
<h2 class="nobreak">VI<br/> WHATSOEVER A MAN SOWETH</h2></div>
<p class="drop-cap">SAMPSON, city editor of the San Francisco <i>Enquirer</i>,
sat scowling over the <i>Times</i> and the
<i>Herald</i>. Stripped blackly across the front pages
of those rival morning papers was the unaccustomed
seven-column head:</p>
<blockquote>
<p class="center">SUSPECT JAILED FOR MONTEAGLE MURDER!</p>
</blockquote>
<p>“<i>Norton!</i>”</p>
<p>It was Sampson’s voice. When Sampson shot
that curt call in his ugly voice through the swinging
doors of his office I felt as though the warden
was calling me from the condemned cell for the
drop. Only the able-bodied newspaper man who
has been trimmed hard by the men of the opposition
papers can understand the sensation. It belongs
in its exquisite misery solely to such as speak
the language of the tribe. For the head in the
<i>Enquirer</i>—my story—had been only a three-column:</p>
<blockquote>
<p class="center">POLICE ARE BAFFLED IN MONTEAGLE MYSTERY!</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Sampson contemplated me coldly and long; he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</SPAN></span>
fairly brooded over me. But there was no outburst,
and that, after all, hurt worse than if he had
put me on the irons for a broiling.</p>
<p>Ralph Monteagle, broker, millionaire, well-known,
popular, and engaged to the equally well-known
and popular Helen Dennison, had been
found in his office on the fourth floor of the Sutton
Building, stabbed to death. No weapon was
found, the door was locked, the window shut.
Neither money nor valuables were taken. The
knife, curiously, had been sliced once across each
cheek, evidently done after death, with deliberate
intent to mar the features. Monteagle had entered
his offices at 9:15 o’clock on Monday evening. The
watchman had discovered the crime at midnight.
The system in the Sutton Building permitted an
absolute check on all persons entering the building
after 8 o’clock, when the outer doors were locked.
Any person coming in after that hour was admitted
by the watchman, Murray, who until 12 o’clock was
stationed in the lobby. The night elevator man
kept a record of each person entering the building
and to which room he went. It was a building
given over to brokers, capitalists, and large law
firms, and several robberies of magnitude had
brought about this particular system of keeping a
check on all persons in the building after night.</p>
<p>The elevator man, on going off duty at midnight,
turned his book over to the watchman, who thereupon
made the rounds of each of the offices where<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</SPAN></span>
there were still tenants or visitors. It was in this
manner that the crime had been discovered after
Murray had rapped repeatedly on Monteagle’s door
and had finally admitted himself with his master’s
key.</p>
<p>Only three other tenants had been in the building
during the evening, and they were able to clear
themselves of all suspicion. The police turned their
attention to the attachés of the building. Suspicion
fell on a janitor, Stromberg, who had the
fourth and fifth floors. Apparently clinching proof
of the police suspicions had been afforded when
Stromberg’s jumper, blood stained, was located at
his laundry. It was in the arrest of Stromberg,
which had taken place late the night before, that I
had been “scooped” through my zealousness in
leaving the detectives uncovered while I followed
a lead that subsequently proved entirely wrong.</p>
<p>Stromberg claimed to have cut his hand with a
scraper while cleaning the mosaic tiling, and had a
deep gash on the ball of his thumb. The police
theory was that he had gashed himself purposely,
and in answer to his defence that it would have
been an insane thing for him to have sent his jumper
to the laundry if he had committed the crime,
held to the theory that he had taken precisely that
method, in combination with the self-imposed gash
on his hand, to divert suspicion by seeming frankness.</p>
<p>With the commendable faculty of the American<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</SPAN></span>
police in usually working to fasten the crime upon
whomsoever they may happen to have in custody,
the officers were devoting their energies to “cinching”
their case on Stromberg.</p>
<p>When Sampson had completed his disquieting survey
of me, he finally said:</p>
<p>“I am giving this story to Ransom and Dickson
to handle to-day.” I could see that he had it all
figured out in his cold-blooded way; that nothing
else was to be expected of me than to be scooped,
and that any remarks would be superfluous. But
it ground me. “What I want you to do,” he continued
nastily, “is to find Lanagan. Possibly you
can succeed in that at least. I wouldn’t be sorry at
that if some more of you fellows drank the brand of
liquor Lanagan drinks once in a while. I might
get a story out of the bunch of you occasionally.
Instead, the <i>Times</i> and the <i>Herald</i> give it to us on
the features of this story three days running—<i>three
days</i>. It’s the worst beating I’ve had in a
year. You find Lanagan and tell him I want him
to jump into the story independent of Ransom and
Dickson. I would like to get the tail feathers out
of this thing, anyhow.”</p>
<p>Ransom and Dickson had no relish for the story,
three days old.</p>
<p>“Might as well try to galvanise a corpse,” grumbled
Ransom. I turned over to them what matters
I had that might bear watching, and was about to
leave the office when the ’phone rang for me. Very<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</SPAN></span>
fortunately, it was Lanagan; and I couldn’t forbear
a sort of gulp, because I felt instinctively that he
had wakened up somewhere out of his ten days’
lapse, with the knowledge that I was handling the
Monteagle story and was getting badly beaten on it.
I was right in that, too.</p>
<p>“Thought I would catch you before you left,”
he said. His voice was throaty, and I judged that
he had been seeing some hard days and nights.
“Suppose that pickled jellyfish of a Sampson has
been lacing you? You should be laced. Met
Brady a few minutes ago and he said you were
handling—or mishandling—the story. You
ought to get a month’s lay-off for letting that
crowd of two-by-four dubs, on the <i>Times</i> at least,
get the best of you. Come on down. I want to
talk things over.”</p>
<p>He was at Billy Connors’ “Buckets of Blood,”
that famed barroom rendezvous by the Hall of
Justice, where the thieves’ clans were wont to forgather.
There was nothing of particular coincidence
in his ringing me up just when he did; it was
shortly after 1 o’clock, the hour when the local staff
reported on, and he would be sure of finding me in.</p>
<p>He sat at the rear alcove table with “King” Monahan.
“You know my friend the King, of
course?” was his greeting. Monahan, one-time
designated King of the Pick-pockets, after serving
two terms, had retired from the active practice of
that profession to establish himself, it was generally<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</SPAN></span>
believed, not only as a “fence,” handling exclusively
the precious stones, but also as a sort of
local organiser, to whom any outside gang must
report on or before beginning operations in San
Francisco. There is system in crime these days
as in all things else.</p>
<p>“Kind of stuck it in and broke it off, didn’t
they?” he continued.</p>
<p>“I’ve stood one panning from Sampson; I don’t
want another from you,” I retorted savagely.</p>
<p>“Norrie,” he said, “you overlooked a very vital
point. The King and I have been talking it over,”—he
had the three morning papers spread out before
him—“and we have concluded that there was
a woman in the case. And when two eminent criminologists,
like Kid Monahan and Jack Lanagan,
agree that there is a woman in a case, it at least is
worthy of consideration.”</p>
<p>“A moll, sure,” vouchsafed Monahan in his diffident
way. He had a manner as timorous as a
girl, which possibly accounted for the success that
he enjoyed while practising his profession. He was
not one, on the crowded platform of a trolley car,
who would be immediately suspected when some
proletarian raised a cry of sneak thief and sought
in vain for a stick pin, watch, or wallet.</p>
<p>“Stromberg may or may not be guilty,” said
Lanagan, “but I don’t think much of the case the
police have made against him. It, at least, doesn’t
bar us from another line of speculation.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</SPAN></span>“Tell me, for instance, why in the name of the
Seven Suns, didn’t some of you sleuths go off on
the theory that whoever committed that crime got
into the office earlier in the evening and remained
concealed in the closet until Monteagle came in?
It would have been the easiest thing in the world
to have decoyed Monteagle to his office even if it
wasn’t known that he was working nights to make
up for the lunches and bachelor dinners and afternoon
teas that he’s been going to on account of his
coming marriage.</p>
<p>“And as for whoever committed the murder getting
out, you have been on the scene of too many
murders not to know the hysteria that comes over
a bunch of yaps like that. It’s a safe bet they all
ran for a regular policeman, and that whoever was
in that room—provided he was still there, or she—when
the crime was discovered could have
walked out of that building with a fair way as wide
as Market Street.”</p>
<p>“Murray ran for a policeman,” I admitted, “and
some of the janitors with him.”</p>
<p>“That’s what special cops usually do,” was Lanagan’s
comment. “And it’s a safe bet that those
square-head janitors all ran with him. They didn’t
stay around those corridors alone after that crime
was discovered until a regular copper came along.
I’ve seen the thing happen and so has every police
reporter in the business.”</p>
<p>Lanagan paused, pushed back a half-drained<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</SPAN></span>
suisses and called for a sweet soda—his curious
habit when breaking off a “lapse.”</p>
<p>“Whoever killed Monteagle,” he continued,
“was in that room when he entered—always assuming,
of course, that it was not Stromberg.</p>
<p>“Now I have something additional, through the
King and his invaluable sources of information on
men and affairs. It is this: Monteagle is known to
certain portions of the night life. He was a two-faced
society blatherskite, with a broad streak of
primal vulgarity, who drank tea in swagger drawing-rooms
with his fiancée and her friends in the
afternoon and champagne with an entirely different
social set after midnight. You know the kind.
Was rather keen about women in an underhanded,
quiet way. It is not difficult for a man of his means
to do a lot of things behind the unassailable French
restaurant walls and get by with it.</p>
<p>“You recall the knife was drawn neatly across
both cheeks. I see you indulged in a theory that
he possibly was the victim of some blackmail brotherhood.
You even hinted at the Mafia. I am surprised
at you. You ought to let that exaggerated
institution rest for a while. I have a little theory
of my own on that knifing business, which, I think,
we will now work upon. ’Phone Sampson when
you get a chance that it pleases Lanagan to go to
work for his sweat-shop wages again.”</p>
<p>We parted company with Monahan after he had
promised Lanagan to drift through his particular<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</SPAN></span>
world—or that portion of it which was then up—and
endeavour to learn something of the identity
of any of Monteagle’s affiliations under the rose.</p>
<p>We headed for the Sutton Building, and in the
lobby found Murray, just coming on duty.</p>
<p>“Do you think anyone could have gotten out of
that room in the excitement after you found the
body?” asked Lanagan.</p>
<p>“No, sir,” said Murray, with aged preciseness.
“I locked the door on the outside when I went for
an officer, and it could not have been opened, because
in my hurry I left my master’s key turned in
the lock when I went for a policeman.”</p>
<p>So much for Lanagan’s very plausible theory of
the “get-away.” He came up from it as suave as
ever and asked:</p>
<p>“Could anyone have been in that room before
Monteagle came in, do you suppose?”</p>
<p>“No, sir,” said Murray, with the didacticism of
the aged again. “No, sir. There was nobody in
that room. I know because the elevator boy, Denny,
heard the telephone bell ringing for eight or ten
times, and finally let himself in and answered it,
but the party hung up. Mr. Monteagle was very
free and easy with us men, which accounts for
Denny taking the liberty. There was nobody in
that room when Denny was in there, and that was
well after eight o’clock, after I came on duty. It
all gets me, sir, how that knife sticker got into that
room or how he got out after he got there. I don’t<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</SPAN></span>
like to think Ole Stromberg had a hand in it, but
it looks a leetle black for Ole, according to the papers.
I know my skirts are clear.”</p>
<p>We went on up to the room. The Public Administrator,
with Monteagle’s lawyer and his stenographer,
was there. The lawyer was inclined to
get forward, but the Administrator was a good programer
for a newspaper man and smoothed matters
over. Lanagan was studying the stenographer:
intelligent of feature, stylishly but plainly dressed,
and bearing about her eyes and mouth very plain
indications of the nervous tension under which she
must have laboured during the last three days. She
was one of that type of well-poised secretary-stenographers
found in most large offices.</p>
<p>Lanagan made an opportunity of asking her:</p>
<p>“Did Mr. Monteagle have any enemies that you
know of? Persons who have threatened him personally,
by letter or over the ’phone?”</p>
<p>“None that I know of,” she replied quietly.</p>
<p>“Do you think,” asked Lanagan quickly, eying
the girl narrowly with those singularly penetrating
eyes of his, “do you think it could have been possible
that a person might have been concealed in that
closet when you locked the office door for the
night?”</p>
<p>“Oh, no, no,” she answered quickly, but her eyes
involuntarily swept first to the closet and then to
Lanagan’s face as though in secret, anxious questioning.
“Why, it makes me shiver even to think<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</SPAN></span>
such a thing could have happened,” she added, and
she unmistakably shivered a little.</p>
<p>There was more conversation, and Lanagan fell
to examining the room. He first examined the
closet. Then he opened the window and scrutinised
the sill for a long time. He got down on his
knees and peered beneath the heat radiator of coiled
pipes. He lit a match, the space between the bottom
of the radiator and the floor being so slight
that he could not examine it as closely as he seemed
to want to.</p>
<p>“Expect your man to get into the room through
that?” asked the Public Administrator with heavy
facetiousness.</p>
<p>“Oh, no,” replied Lanagan smoothly; “it’s just
possible he got out of the room through it, though,”
and continued with his minute examination.</p>
<p>The stenographer, Grace Northrup by name, although
assisting the other two sorting out papers,
found time each moment to flash a quick glance at
Lanagan. Whether it was merely active feminine
curiosity I could not determine. As for me, I had
been over the room half a dozen times already.
It held nothing further for me; but I never could
even guess at the clues Lanagan might turn up on
a trail that a dozen men had tramped over, so I remained
to see him work with keen interest. When
Lanagan had finished we left.</p>
<p>“Now, Norrie, my boy, to the Bush Street office
of the telephone company,” he said with as much<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</SPAN></span>
enthusiasm as I ever saw him exhibit. “You are
a fine old blunderbuss for fair! But the others
aren’t any better. Plain as the nose on your face!
Lord, Lord!” He stopped and looked at me,
laughing immoderately. I was inclined to be a
trifle sulky; he made me feel like a six-dollar cub.</p>
<p>“Only,” he continued, “it’s a three days’ trail
that I have taken up, and that dirk wielder has got
just that much of a start—always assuming, for
the sake of the argument, that it was not Stromberg.”</p>
<p>I didn’t ask him what he was going to the telephone
office for; it came to me with a sting that I
had heard that same bit of information about the
telephoning dropped during the last two or three
days, and, in the press of clues that I considered
more important, had dismissed it. Which was the
difference between Jack Lanagan and the rest of us;
he had that intuitive faculty of eliminating the superfluous
and driving at the main fact. It is, after
all, a faculty found in all successful men of whatever
occupation.</p>
<p>We both knew Lamb, traffic manager of the
’phone company. Lanagan asked for permission
to talk with the girl who on Monday night handled
the board having Bush 1243—Monteagle’s number.
Lamb was a substantial chap, and promised
to keep our visit in confidence. It was just before
4 o’clock, and the 4 to 10 shift of girls was coming
on. In a few moments a young girl of sensible,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</SPAN></span>
pleasant demeanour was shown to the room, and
Lamb retired after requesting that she give us all
the information she might have on whatever subjects
we discussed.</p>
<p>“You will be performing a service that will be
appreciated,” said Lanagan, “if you could recall
whether on Monday evening, along about 8 o’clock,
you had several calls for Bush 1243?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir, I do,” she instantly answered. “It
was not a busy night and I was handling three positions.
The call came from the east office. We
do not talk to the party direct on an outside call,
and east supervisor came on the line several times
to instruct me to try and raise the number. That
is how I recall it so distinctly.”</p>
<p>“I may tell you that that is the telephone number
of the office of Mr. Monteagle, who was murdered,”
said Lanagan. “I don’t suppose you ever got a
line on whom his telephone calls might be from as
a general thing, did you?”</p>
<p>“No, sir,” she answered primly. “I pay no attention
to whom is on a line.”</p>
<p>“Thank you,” said Lanagan. “I think you can
be trusted not to say anything about our visit or
questions?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” she said.</p>
<p>We got a card of introduction from Lamb to
Adams, manager of east office, and hurried there.</p>
<p>“Wasn’t that rather an indiscreet thing to do,
tell her Monteagle’s number?” I suggested. Lanagan<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</SPAN></span>
laughed and slapped me on the back. It was
evident he was in high feather with himself. I
was trundling along, absolutely in the dark.</p>
<p>“My dear Norrie, when you meet a girl like that
take her into your confidence. Did you get that
‘to whom’? She smelt a rat and would have
looked the number up and blown the glad tidings
all over the office that a couple of detectives or
newspaper men had been interviewing her on the
murder. Recollect, too, that the telephone from
the reporters’ room at police headquarters comes
in on this exchange. It’s just possible that some
of those gay young blades on night police have affiliations
with some of these gay young blondes. I
have got many a story through ’phone girls—and
have occasionally lost a story through the same medium.
Get me? As it stands, she is all puffed up
with her own importance and pat with us. There
are times when you have got to take a chance at
spilling your hand. This was one of them.” I
subsided, humbled.</p>
<p>Not to occupy too much space with the merely
routine details of working out the clue, we met
Adams, another substantial chap. The chief operator
recalled distinctly the number, more particularly
because the woman calling it had been nervous
and irritable. The call came, she said, from the
public booth at Shumate’s pharmacy. It was only
a couple of blocks away, and we went there.</p>
<p>It was a large establishment with half a dozen<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</SPAN></span>
clerks. We worked down the list. The fourth
man had been on duty Monday night and recalled
a young woman who had entered the booth repeatedly
on that evening. She lived some place in the
vicinity, he said, and usually got off the Sutter
Street car shortly after 5.30 o’clock. The car
stopped directly in front of the door, and if we
would wait he would point her out to us if she
came that way this evening.</p>
<p>I took a position outside to signal in when a car
approached and Lanagan remained inside. It was
then just after five.</p>
<p>Among the passengers from one car I noticed
Miss Northrup, and was about to step forward and
speak to her on a chance of her dropping something
additional when I caught a glimpse out of the tail
of my eye of Lanagan signaling me with a swift
gesture. I dodged around the corner before she
saw me. She passed on up Sutter Street, and in a
few moments Lanagan picked me up, his sallow
face taking on a tinge of colour and his dark eyes
sparkling.</p>
<p>“Pretty near scrambled the eggs that time, didn’t
you?” he chuckled. “<i>That’s the woman who did
the telephoning.</i>”</p>
<p>I stared.</p>
<p>“Do you recall that furtive look with which
she followed me at the office? She lives just up
there, where we will let her rest for a time with
her troubles. And I fancy she has them. Let us<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</SPAN></span>
go back to Connors’. I am to meet Monahan
there.”</p>
<p>The King was waiting for us. He took Lanagan
to one side. All I could hear was Lanagan’s
“Good!” once, and then the King had slipped out
the side door.</p>
<p>“Best single asset the police have is Monahan,”
said Lanagan, apropos of nothing in particular.
“Knows more about the night life of this city than
any four men in it. But he tips nothing that might
hurt his own game or his own people. In a way
he preserves a certain code even while acting as a
police ‘stool.’ In this matter, however, the invaluable
Mr. Monahan is working for Jack Lanagan;
and the police are consequently about three
laps behind.</p>
<p>“I see nothing in sight for some hours. We
will eat our dinner and take in a show for a few
moments. I rather anticipate a climax later and
some rapid-fire work for us both on the typewriter.
I need a little stimulus—that hasn’t got wormwood
in it.”</p>
<p>He would give me absolutely not a line on his
“lay.” He could be a baffling, enigmatic, impersonal
proposition when he took the humour.</p>
<p>We headed for the Oyster Loaf, and I groaned
for the four and a half that was between me and
pay day as Lanagan methodically disposed of an
onion soup, special; French mushrooms on toast,
a New York cut, Gorgonzola, and a two-bit cigar.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</SPAN></span>
He drank three glasses of ice water, but that didn’t
cost anything.</p>
<p>“A man’s meal,” he said with vast creature content.
“Now give me that other half you have
left. I want a shave. You go up and touch Dan
for a five-spot. We may need expenses later. I’ll
meet you at Dan’s at nine o’clock. I want to pick
Monahan up again before I see you, and also see
Leslie.”</p>
<p>At the time appointed we met. “Let’s take a
ten-twenty-thirty,” suggested Lanagan. “By half-past
ten we will have to get busy. There’s a singer
over at the Continental that some of the dramatic
critics say has real fire. La Pattini, I think she is
called.”</p>
<p>So we drifted into the Continental and caught
part of the performance. There were trained birds
of more than ordinary sagacity; the stereotyped
and fearful cornet soloist; the girl singer, La Pattini,
with a wonderful mezzo, remarkable beauty,
an undoubted future, and an ability to sing the
“Rosary” in a manner to bring tears. Then came
a slap-stick tumbling act that was impossible, and
we left.</p>
<p>Lanagan had suddenly become thoughtful. “Do
you know what I think?” he said. “I think the
world would actually do better to sweep away every
vestige of law and ordinance and make a clean start
again. Our system of punishment is all wrong.
Take one heinous class of crimes; we punish the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</SPAN></span>
individual who takes upon herself to punish. We
say the State has the power of punishment and the
prerogative; and yet in the very crimes that are the
most damnable, the State can never interfere because
the injured party must suffer in silence. You
might as well expect children to learn English
through hieroglyphics as to make applicable to present-day
conditions the antiquated penal code to
which society is harnessed. That’s about enough
of the sermon stuff. It’s not in my line.”</p>
<p>Lanagan was taking the lead, but I was not altogether
surprised when we finally found ourselves
in the neighbourhood of the Northrup home. Nor
was I altogether surprised when Chief Leslie, that
shrewd and veteran thief-taker, suddenly stepped
from a doorway. My mind shot ahead to the
Northrup home, a few doors away, and I could not
bring myself to believe it could be possible that
she was a principal.</p>
<p>“Brady is above,” said Leslie. “He says she
came in about twenty minutes ago. We had better
move on her.”</p>
<p>“Immediately,” said Lanagan, and in a moment
more we were all three before the door to a lower
flat of the old-fashioned sort, with a bell jangling
noisily as Lanagan pulled out the handle.</p>
<p>It was Miss Northrup who answered the ring.
She had on a dressing gown, and her hair, I could
see, had been taken down for retiring and then
gathered in a loose coil on her head, probably when<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</SPAN></span>
the bell rang. She opened the door but a few
inches.</p>
<p>“We would like to speak with you a moment,
Miss Northrup,” said Lanagan. He indicated the
chief. “This is Chief Leslie.”</p>
<p>“Kindly permit us to enter,” said the chief.
There was a shadow of authority in his tone, and
I knew that Lanagan and the chief were planning
a drive on the girl and that something would be
stirring in this old-fashioned flat before long. She
hesitated a moment and then threw the door wide
open and motioned us into the parlour. In the hall
a gas jet burned dimly, as though for some member
of the family who was not yet home.</p>
<p>She reached up and turned on the parlour light,
and as she did so her loosely coiled hair tumbled
about her shoulders. As the light struck down
upon her features they had an appearance almost
tragic.</p>
<p>“Be seated,” she said; it needed no expert eye
to detect in her drawn lips the evidence of nervous
tension.</p>
<p>“Madam,” said Leslie abruptly, snapping his
jaws like a trap—and I knew this twenty-year-old
girl was in for the third degree—“unless you at
this time make a clean breast of all that you know
concerning the murder of your employer, Ralph
Monteagle, it will be necessary for me to book you
for murder as an accessory before the fact.”</p>
<p>She started violently; her bosom began to rise<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</SPAN></span>
and fall quickly; it was evident a breakdown was
imminent, but she managed to say with considerable
smoothness:</p>
<p>“I know nothing more than I have already told
the police and the reporters.”</p>
<p>Lanagan, fierce eagerness glittering in his eyes,
stepped before her.</p>
<p>“Nevertheless, possibly you know,” he said, biting
each word off short, “how many persons beside
yourself and Bartlett, Monteagle’s former chauffeur,
who bought it, knew of the rope in his closet;
knew that Monteagle had a morbid fear of being
trapped in that building at night by fire; that he
had had that fear since his friend Mervin was
burned to death in the Baldwin Hotel fire; that he
let no one know about the rope for fear of being
ridiculed? How many persons, I say, besides yourself
and Bartlett, knew the rope was there? <i>And
when you knew that that rope had disappeared, as
you must have known it, why didn’t you tell the
police? Why did you permit a man to lie in prison
whom you in your heart feel is innocent?</i>”</p>
<p>She sprang to her feet and threw both hands
towards him as though warding off physical blows.
She was trembling in intense agitation.</p>
<p>“Don’t! Don’t! for God’s sake, don’t!”</p>
<p>She sank back again into her chair, her face buried
in her hands, rocking and moaning, with Lanagan
standing over her, inexorable as Nemesis.</p>
<p>There was the sound of quick, light running up<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</SPAN></span>
the front stairs, a key was turned in the lock, the
front door swung open, and the girl in the chair,
startled from her huddled misery, sprang to her
feet and fairly leaped to meet the newcomer. She
cried out, but whether in warning or in the joy of
greeting could not be said, for her voice was half-smothered
in a sob.</p>
<p>“Sister!” she said at last falteringly. “Sister,
please go to your room. It is only some more policemen
about Mr. Monteagle!” The words came
chokingly. The other had not as yet come into our
sight, but now she stepped into the light that
streamed from the parlour into the hall—and I
heard Lanagan’s swift, involuntary ejaculation:</p>
<p>“<i>La Pattini! Her sister!</i>”</p>
<p>Leslie, swift as thought, was half-across the parlour
floor to the hall, yielding to a natural police impulse,
but the newcomer, the other girl clinging to
her, stepped fully into the doorway to the parlour.</p>
<p>“Yes,” she said in a voice that had no tremour of
emotion, “La Pattini. Her sister. Why?”</p>
<p>“Why?” said Leslie, grimly. “Because we
were just going to book her for murder as an accessory
before the fact. We will switch the cut
now and book you as the principal.”</p>
<p>At the feet of the queenly Pattini the harassed
sister swooned. Lanagan pulled shut the door
leading to the hall so that no one might by any
mischance disturb us, and I fell to chafing the
wrists of the senseless girl.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</SPAN></span>La Pattini sank wearily to a chair, stooping so
that she could stroke her sister’s temples.</p>
<p>“I am glad it is over,” she said, apathetically.
“I have only wondered that it did not come sooner.
I have expected it hourly.”</p>
<p>The story was soon told: simple, age-old, but
ever new, sordid possibly to a slight degree, but
profoundly sad. She who was now known as La
Pattini met Monteagle while visiting her sister at
his office. He had found means to extend the acquaintance,
had aided her in a secret way in her
ambitions for the stage, securing the engagement
at the Continental for her, and as a result of the
clandestine relation there had been a promise of
marriage. Then had come the engagement announcement
of the Dennison-Monteagle marriage
and the awakening of the dupe. But this was not
the dupe of Monteagle’s many experiences. The
picture of Miss Dennison, staring at her from the
society columns, had fired a sinister jealousy.</p>
<p>A confession had been made to the younger sister
when La Pattini sought an opportunity of pleading
once again alone with Monteagle, who had
finally repudiated her. The sister had admitted
her to the office after Monteagle left for the afternoon,
knowing he was to return in the evening.
She concealed herself in the closet.</p>
<p>Before she entered the office her plan had been
formed. Either Monteagle would marry her or he
should die. At that time she had no thought of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</SPAN></span>
escaping. She had heard the telephone ringing repeatedly;
heard the elevator boy enter the room
just too late to get the party calling.</p>
<p>Finally Monteagle had arrived and she had discovered
herself. What happened was quickly
over. The quarrel was of few words, and he had
struck her with his fist. She stabbed him to the
heart, and then with a vindictiveness that she could
not now understand and shuddered at recalling had
marred his features with the knife. Her first
thought had been to give herself up. Then she
wondered why she should do that. The brief
words of their quarrel had not been heard; the
janitor she could hear on the floor above. After
all, she had done no more than kill a snake.</p>
<p>The thought of the rope came to her. She knew
about it, because once when she was in the office
as Monteagle worked late she had expressed
anxiety at being seen coming from the building
with him, and he had showed her the rope and
jokingly offered to let her down from the window,
which opened upon a divisional alley in the rear
of the Sutton building.</p>
<p>The rope was of great length. Seeking for a
place to tie it, she naturally turned to the radiator.
The thought occurred to her with a flash her means
of escape from the room might never be known
if the rope was long enough to run under the radiator,
letting both ends to the ground. She could
then draw it down after she reached the ground<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</SPAN></span>
by pulling on one end and letting it run under the
radiator like a pulley. She tried the length, the
light from the windows of the elevator shaft, opening
into the areaway, giving sufficient brightness.</p>
<p>“As part of the preparation for the future on
the stage that Mr. Monteagle was to help me get,”
she said, dispassionately, “I have taken gymnasium
work to build up my system. You can see it
was no extraordinary thing for me to let myself
down by the double rope, pulling the window shut
after I climbed out. I left it open enough so that
the rope could run free when I pulled it after me.
I threw the rope in a street garbage tin. I was
at the theatre, remarkable as it may seem, in time
for my act at ten o’clock, although I missed the
first show. I have been in a daze since; I was in
a trance after I did the stabbing. I have known
I must be found out. I am glad that it is all over.
I have made no attempt to escape. I am absolutely
indifferent to my fate.”</p>
<p>The sister, recovered from her swoon, was weeping
softly, her head bowed in the other’s lap.</p>
<p>“Tell me,” said Lanagan curiously to her,
“why did you telephone to Monteagle?”</p>
<p>She gasped, and it appeared for the moment that
she was about to swoon again. Finally she faltered,
while her own sister looked at her strangely:</p>
<p>“I—was afraid sister meant him harm—I<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</SPAN></span>
didn’t think of it until I got home—and then
something about her face came back to me—I
wanted to warn Mr. Monteagle not to arouse her—I
finally succeeded in getting him at his club
before he left for his office and—he only
laughed—”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said La Pattini bitterly, “he told me
so—and laughed—and snapped his fingers when
he spoke about you—that was just before he
struck me ... and then I killed him.”</p>
<p>The sudden fresh sobs of the younger girl,
smothered as they were in her sister’s lap, seemed
to wrench her very being. Lanagan glanced at
Leslie; Leslie averted his eyes. There was a prolonged
pause, broken only by the agonised, stifled
sobbing, while she of crime threw her arms shelteringly
around the weaker vessel. But her own
deathly calm she preserved.</p>
<p>Finally Leslie arose slowly and said simply:</p>
<p>“I am sorry. I have no recourse. My duty is
clear.”</p>
<p>“So is mine,” said Lanagan quickly, “and it is
this: I will guarantee you, Miss Northrup, the support
of the <i>Enquirer</i>, and I will secure for you as
counsel my personal friend, Mr. William Hadden,
the ablest man in the West, to present your case to
a jury in the proper manner to secure the acquittal
that you are entitled to.”</p>
<p>It was then after one o’clock. We left Leslie
at the house to bring the girl to the city prison after
she had an opportunity of parting from her family.
Leslie was to contrive not to book her before half-past<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</SPAN></span>
two to save our “exclusive.” By that time
the <i>Times</i> and the <i>Herald</i> would be gone to press.</p>
<p>On our hurried trip to the office—where I took
vast delight marching in on Sampson with a grin—Lanagan
supplied me with the missing links.
He spoke of finding a few strands from a manila
rope sticking beneath the radiator and of his instant
surmise as to the precise way in which the
escape had been made. Monahan located Bartlett,
Monteagle’s former chauffeur, who had taken a
public stand, and from him learned of the rope
that Monteagle had in his closet which Bartlett had
bought. Lanagan knew from his careful search
that the rope was not in the closet when he made
his examination, and he promptly concluded that
Miss Grace Northrup must have known who committed
the crime. She knew the rope was there,
according to Bartlett, and Lanagan rightly surmised
that she must have known of its disappearance.</p>
<p>Robbery not having been the motive, Lanagan
had “rapped” to the theory of a jealous or vengeful
woman who had deliberately marred the features
after death. His police experience had included
a case or two where somewhat similar conditions
had been present.</p>
<p>It was from Bartlett that the first tip came on
La Pattini, although he did not know, and neither
did Lanagan at that time, that she was the sister
of Monteagle’s stenographer. All he knew was
that until he left Monteagle’s employ she seemed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</SPAN></span>
to be the favoured of the alliances that the broker
secretly maintained.</p>
<p>Lanagan had discovered that La Pattini had
missed her first show on Monday night, and the
circumstance was sufficient to stir his suspicions,
although it must be confessed that until the development
at the home, where her relationship to
Miss Northrup was disclosed, nothing positive had
been secured against her. The moment the relationship
was made clear, both Lanagan and the
chief had instantly reached the same conclusion.
The “drive” had been made and the confession
followed.</p>
<p>“Great, Jack, great,” said Sampson with as much
enthusiasm as his thin blood could support. “Gad!
What a whaling we gave them! What a whaling!”</p>
<p>The <i>Enquirer</i> had smeared the story over three
pages, breaking all make-up rules on type display.
It was a clean exclusive in every detail.</p>
<p>“Well, Sampson,” replied Lanagan, “it isn’t
much to be proud of at that. Only it’s all in our
game. But I’ve given my promise and we’ve got
to get that girl acquitted.”</p>
<p>“That’s up to you,” said Sampson. “The
paper’s yours.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="ph2">VII<br/>
THE PENDELTON LEGACY</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr class="tb" />
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