<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</SPAN></span>
<h2 class="nobreak">IX<br/> THE DOMINANT STRAIN</h2></div>
<p class="drop-cap">“SAMPSON,” said Lanagan, “there’s something
queer about that Robbins case. Professional
second story men aren’t returning to the
scene of a $10,000 burglary and sending by messenger
a written proposition to return the property
for a cash settlement. They know how and where
to negotiate the stuff and they take no chances; particularly
not with one of their number under arrest—assuming
the Ward boy is one of them. And
that is another queer angle: seasoned crooks don’t
operate with sixteen-year-old boys.”</p>
<p>“How do you account for the ring found on
him?”</p>
<p>“I don’t—yet.”</p>
<p>“What’s your theory?”</p>
<p>“Haven’t any. But ten ‘second-story’ cases in
three months in one district winding up with a $10,000
job is against all form.”</p>
<p>“Dig into it then. Here, see who this is as you
go out. May be about the suspect. Same name.”</p>
<p>He handed Lanagan a visitor’s card. Scrawled
across it in a nervous hand was: “Jennie Ward.
Important.”</p>
<p>In the ante-room a girl with a crutch arose to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</SPAN></span>
meet him, but he motioned her back to her seat.
She had the pinched face and the wistful sadness
of those condemned to life but half-whole. It was
evident before she spoke a dozen words that she
came as so many others come to the newspaper ante-room:
in futile, uncomprehending protest at the entire
system of News.</p>
<p>It was her brother, Jimmy, who was under arrest,
and she said he was innocent. Jimmy told her he
found the ring, therefore he did find it, because
Jimmy never told her a lie. She did not see why
papers should print such things, even if he had been
arrested, and why they did not try to prove a boy
innocent rather than aid the police in trying to prove
him guilty.</p>
<p>Lanagan listened patiently at first, with an occasional
question; and then he listened with a deepening
interest as the girl’s fervour grew.</p>
<p>“It is only the rich whose wrongs you right!”
she exclaimed at last passionately. “What rights
have we poor? I cannot afford even a lawyer.
Mamma does washing. She is old and timid, and she
was afraid to come to the papers. I mostly educated
myself, sir; I had to. I have learned the piano at
the Sunday school. I have a little class of pupils
there. The teacher helps me get them. I just
teach the first lessons, you know. I make $4.25
a week. Mamma makes about $7 when she is not
sick. Jimmy has been making $8, with a raise to
$9.50 coming the first. So you see we manage to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</SPAN></span>
make out, all of us together, and send my three little
brothers to school.</p>
<p>“And now—now—all the people on the street
are talking about us and my little brothers won’t go
to school—the others call them names—everyone
saw Jimmy’s picture in your paper to-day—</p>
<p>“Won’t you please help us? We haven’t any
men folks to fight for us now with Jimmy locked
up. Please, sir, help us get Jimmy out!</p>
<p>“I went to police headquarters and waited
hours and hours to see Jimmy—and then—and
then finally the detectives—they took me and said
I would see Jimmy—but they took me to a room
and shut the door—and they swore at me—</p>
<p>“They said I—better tell everything or go to—jail—why—why
they talked like <i>I</i>—knew about
the robbery and they were—going—to arrest—me—”</p>
<p>She fainted; just drooped quietly back into the
chair, wearily, hopelessly, woefully, without so much
as a sigh. Lanagan breathed quickly as he ministered
to her.</p>
<p>“Poor little sis!” he said, softly. “Plucky little
mother of the tenements! Taking a full-grown
man’s place! But what a handicap!”</p>
<p>Her eyes opened. “Oh,” she fluttered, her thin,
sensitive lips quivering in apology, “I fainted, didn’t
I? How queer. I never fainted before. I cannot
afford to give way like that. Sometimes, though!
Oh, sometimes I wish I could! I wanted to in front<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</SPAN></span>
of the detectives—my brain whirled and whirled
and whirled with fire like pinwheels but I wouldn’t—I
wouldn’t give them the satisfaction!” Her
slight hands with their long fingers clenched; her
eyes sparkled. “Harrigan. That is his name.
He was the worst. The brute! oh, if I were a man!
I would kill him for what he said to me!”</p>
<p>“Never mind Harrigan. Leave him to me,” said
Lanagan. “You are only exciting yourself. Go
home now and try not to worry. We are going to
look into your brother’s case.”</p>
<p>“Thank you,” she said, with shining eyes. There
were at no time any tears. She had been trained in
a life where tears are inadequate.</p>
<p>Lanagan watched her as she hobbled on her one
crutch down the hall to the elevator, her useless limb
swinging loosely. She was a pathetic little figure,
with her man’s brain, her grown woman’s pride, and
her little misshapen body; a fourteen year old girl,
wearing “long clothes” in grim earnest. A quick
pang shot through him; cripples always saddened
him. They have infinitely so much less than the
meanest wastrel who has health.</p>
<p>“The judgment of a cold-blooded detective
against the judgment of a loyal sister,” mused Lanagan.
“Which is it?”</p>
<p>An hour’s study at police headquarters of the reports
on all ten of the burglaries established in
Lanagan’s mind one settled conviction: they were
all committed by the same author, and whoever it<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</SPAN></span>
was—whether an individual or a gang—had first
become reasonably familiar with the interior arrangements
of the houses entered, and with the daily
routine of the households.</p>
<p>In the Robbins case, for instance, from the time
the last member of the household left the bedroom,
or second floor, to go down to the dining-room on
the first floor for dinner, until a member of the
household returning upstairs found the evidences of
the burglary, only twenty-five minutes had passed;
and yet in that time the thief or thieves had entered
the house and had left it after cleanly ransacking
three bedrooms. An open bathroom window and
the drain pipe to the ground gave mute evidence of
the burglar’s route.</p>
<p>In all of the cases only precious stones were taken:
nothing monogrammed was touched, nor watches,
silverware, trinkets or bric-à-brac. But this was of
no particular consequence. The average expert
thief prefers the precious stones. Removed from
their settings they are difficult to identify and easy
to negotiate.</p>
<p>“Professional work, all of it,” muttered Lanagan,
arguing to himself. “But what about that
message?”</p>
<p>The extraordinary boldness that had marked all
the crimes culminated in the Robbins case when a
man, with smoked glasses, heavy moustache, soft
hat pulled down and ulster turned up, gave a small
boy ten cents to carry an envelope to the Robbins<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</SPAN></span>
home, but a block from where the man stood. Enclosed
in the message, which offered to return the
jewelry for $5,000 cash, was a brooch that had been
among the articles stolen. It was sent as proof that
the offer was genuine. The message said the police
were not to be notified. If the family desired to
negotiate, they were to send the boy back with the
single word, “Yes,” and they would be communicated
with later.</p>
<p>In the excitement of receiving the message under
such singular circumstances a member of the family,
forgetting or disregarding the caution, telephoned
the police, holding the boy in the house.
The police misunderstood the call, and a patrol
wagon load of reserves clattered up to the door
within ten minutes, under the impression murder
was being done.</p>
<p>Naturally, the man on the corner had ample time
to escape. No further offers to negotiate came to
the family. On the second day the police placed
under arrest the Ward boy. He was employed as a
helper with the Phoenix Vacuum Cleaning Company,
which had been engaged a few days before at the
Robbins home.</p>
<p>“And at the start he made a bad case, superficially,
by his contradictions,” reflected Lanagan, reviewing
the case.</p>
<p>In their investigations the detectives, examining
the two men and the helper, Jimmie Ward, who had
operated the cleaning apparatus at the Robbins<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</SPAN></span>
house, learned that the boy had been noticed that
morning examining a diamond ring. Asked where
he got it, he had replied he found it on the floor of
the washroom at the establishment. No one claimed
the ring. The matter was called to the attention of
Cutting, the proprietor and manager of the company,
but he knew of no customer having reported
such a loss.</p>
<p>The detectives—Harrigan and Thomas—took
the boy to headquarters for further questioning, and
he had there said he found the ring on the sidewalk.
On that contradiction he was placed under arrest
and locked up in detinue.</p>
<p>Further, the police regarded as damaging the fact
that a robbery a week previous had been committed
in the same neighbourhood in a home where the
cleaning apparatus had been engaged, the Ward boy
serving as the helper in that house also. He had
worked with a different crew of men than had been
on the Robbins house, and this fact, in the police
theory, eliminated the remaining employees of the
company as it was highly improbable that they were
all in a “second story” ring. They redoubled their
efforts to find the supposed connections of Ward on
the theory that he operated with an outside gang.</p>
<p>“‘Jimmy said he found the ring and if he said he
found it he did find it,’” said Lanagan, repeating the
sister’s earnest declaration. “Well, for her sake—I
hope he did.”</p>
<p>Hour after hour Lanagan, tirelessly, kept at his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</SPAN></span>
rounds, visiting in turn each of the ten homes in the
western addition that had been robbed during the
last three months.</p>
<p>Long before he reached the Robbins home, the
last of the ten, he had formed his startling theory.
In nine of the cases he had discovered that which
he set out in search of: a constant condition present
in them all. There was just one question that he
wanted to ask at the Robbins home.</p>
<p>He found the home in a flurry of excitement.
Police headquarters had rung up and asked that a
member of the household come at once to the detective
bureau to identify if possible a bracelet that
it was believed had been among the stolen articles
and that had been recovered.</p>
<p>Lanagan, arriving just as the senior Robbins was
leaving in his automobile, was invited to accompany
him. He did so; but first he had asked and had had
answered the one question he came to ask.</p>
<p>In the office of O’Rourke, night captain of detectives,
they found O’Rourke, Harrigan and
Thomas grouped around a woman, huddled down on
a chair. Lanagan caught a low sob, a helpless, forlorn,
frightened sob, that sent a curious sensation of
nausea through him. He stepped quickly forward
to gaze down upon the misery-racked form of the
cripple, Jennie Ward.</p>
<p>“I don’t know anything! Oh, I don’t know anything!”
she wailed. “I found it on the door step!”</p>
<p>O’Rourke had turned as they entered. He<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</SPAN></span>
stepped to his own desk, holding the bracelet toward
Robbins.</p>
<p>“That is my daughter’s bracelet, sir,” Robbins
said. “It was my Christmas present to her.”</p>
<p>Harrigan, listening, nodded in satisfaction.</p>
<p>“I knew it,” he said. “I guess we had better
throw the little gutter snipe in, cap; a little pressure
now and she’s bound to squeal.”</p>
<p>“Oh, oh, oh!” Sobs were shuddering from the
girl.</p>
<p>“<i>Squeal!</i> You damned clodhopper! Give her a
bullet and kill her now if you are trying to! You
don’t throw her in!”</p>
<p>It was Lanagan. He had whirled from the huddled
form to send the words cutting through the
air at Harrigan like a whiplash. The girl flung up
a white face in a swift look of wild hope.</p>
<p>“<i>I don’t know anything, Mr. Lanagan! Don’t
let them put me in jail!</i>”</p>
<p>She threw herself from her chair in an attempt to
clasp his arm but her withered and shrunken limb
crumpled under her and she sank to the floor with a
sharp cry of pain. Lanagan leaned and lifted her
to the chair.</p>
<p>Harrigan had an ugly look as he measured the distance
from himself to Lanagan.</p>
<p>“Yes, Harrigan; you rotten thief. Clodhopper
is too mild for you!”</p>
<p>“You bum,” said Harrigan, with deadly levelness.
“You drunken bum.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</SPAN></span>Lanagan’s leap was catlike. It took all the mighty
O’Rourke’s strength to tear his fingers free. Lanagan
was not a Queensbury fighter when tackling two
hundred pounds of policeman. O’Rourke had Harrigan
by the arms. Thomas had Lanagan. For a
second or two there was not a sound but the panting
of grappling men. Then discipline told. Harrigan’s
arms relaxed.</p>
<p>“You are relieved from duty, Officer Harrigan,”
said O’Rourke. “Until I lay the matter of your
insubordination before the Chief.”</p>
<p>The detective turned on his heel and walked from
the room, stopping at the door. “I’ll get you, Lanagan,”
he said. Lanagan ignored him.</p>
<p>“Now, Jack,” said O’Rourke, grimly, as Thomas
freed the reporter. “Why won’t we throw this girl
in?”</p>
<p>“Because,” said Lanagan, still breathing heavily,
“she is innocent.”</p>
<p>“How do you know?”</p>
<p>“I know. That is enough. If you won’t take
my word ring up the Chief and he will.”</p>
<p>O’Rourke knew the close friendship between Lanagan
and Chief Leslie and the confidence the chief
had in his judgment. He gazed doubtfully at the
girl and then at Robbins. Secretly, he respected
Lanagan also and he was impressed by Lanagan’s assurance.</p>
<p>“We aren’t justified in holding the girl,” he said<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</SPAN></span>
to Robbins. Then to Lanagan: “All right. You
win.”</p>
<p>But as Lanagan left the room with the girl to send
her home in the police automobile, O’Rourke had an
afterthought. He turned to Thomas.</p>
<p>“We might just as well cover up. Watch the
house to-night. There’s something queer about this
whole business that I don’t get yet.”</p>
<p>“Whatever happens keep calm until I see you
again,” was Lanagan’s last counsel to the girl.
Through the scene in O’Rourke’s office she had kept
crouched down in her chair, watching with wide
eyes; save for one quickly shrilled: “<i>Give it to
him!</i>” as Lanagan’s sinewy fingers twined around
Harrigan’s throat.</p>
<p>“It was terrible of me to say that, wasn’t it?”
she asked. “But I couldn’t help it! He is a bad
man! I feel it!”</p>
<p>“He’s what we call a ‘wrong’ detective,” said
Lanagan, drily. “Don’t think about him any
more.”</p>
<p>“Let me have Norton,” he said, some moments
later to Sampson, and to me he said:</p>
<p>“I want you to cover 211 Clementina Street.
Don’t bother anybody. Just see who goes in or out
or hangs around there. I’ll pick you up later down
there. Wait for me no matter what happens.”</p>
<p>He jumped into a taxicab at the curbing and
whirled away out Market Street. I hastened to my<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</SPAN></span>
station, in that gloomy, narrow street of rookeries.
Almost opposite 211 was a deep doorway. I flattened
back in the shadows, trusting to luck that the
occupants were all in bed and that no one would
walk up on me. I was not bothered. An hour
passed and another. I heard someone come out of
a house a few doors above me and saunter down the
street toward me. I huddled back. The figure
passed within six feet of me. By the dim rays of
the gas lamp on the corner, throwing its feeble area
of light a dozen yards, I recognised Detective
Thomas.</p>
<p>He slipped into the side door of the corner saloon.
“Off his job, whatever it is,” I said to myself.
“Something should happen now. It usually does
in such cases.”</p>
<p>It did. Noiselessly on the opposite sidewalk passed
a figure in a heavy black overcoat with a high collar
turned up around the ears and a soft hat pulled
down. In front of 211 the figure stopped for a fraction
of a second, it may have been to look for something
that had been dropped; but it appeared to me
to fumble an instant by the steps. The figure then
passed rapidly on.</p>
<p>Thomas, a fresh cigar between his teeth, sauntered
back to his post. The figure that had stopped at
211 had disappeared around the corner at Seventh
Street. Thomas had certainly missed the episode
entirely.</p>
<p>There was a long interval. The door at 211<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</SPAN></span>
opened, slowly. A girl came out, finally; a girl
with a crutch. She came down the three steps,
looked up and down and across the street, and suddenly
dropped down and I could see that she was
rummaging in the space under the stairs.</p>
<p>Stepping easily, I saw Thomas, his cigar still puffing
leisurely, cross the street. He was almost beside
the girl before she saw him. There came a faint
cry of alarm, quickly smothered, as she straightened
up, her back to the house. I walked quickly to them
in time to hear Thomas’s voice:</p>
<p>“Well, miss, find any presents? Little late for
Santa Claus, isn’t it? But let’s see. Let’s just see
what you were looking for under those stairs.”</p>
<p>He dropped to his knees, threw his pocket flash
about, and arose, a small package wrapped in a newspaper
in his hand. The girl was staring with
startled, wide eyes. She was breathing quickly, her
thin bosom rising and falling. Thomas wheeled on
me, was about to snap at me, thought better of it,
and remarked:</p>
<p>“Oh, well, you’re dropped to me. I might as well
let you in.”</p>
<p>He tore off the paper wrapping from the package
and in the flash of his pocket light I saw the glitter
of a pair of diamond ear drops.</p>
<p>“Do you make them?” he asked, triumphantly.
I nodded. The jewels unquestionably answered the
description of those stolen from the Robbins home.
It came to me like a physical blow, the shock that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</SPAN></span>
such a frail, broken bit of humanity as the little
back alley waif before me was entangled in a thieves’
gang. I knew she was the suspect’s sister. She still
held her defiant place against the house.</p>
<p>“I guess this time, young lady, you will go in,”
said Thomas, tersely. “Do you want anything
from the house? Got any thing to say? You are
going to jail.”</p>
<p>She began to tremble violently, but her lips were
still compressed.</p>
<p>“No,” she managed to say at last. “No! I
was watching! I know now! I know! But I will
not talk to you! Please don’t waken my mamma or
my little brothers—let us go—now—if I must.”
She started to hobble away in feverish haste, shaken
with sobs that she would not permit to escape her
lips. Seldom have I been affected with such a sense
of sadness as came over me then: all of the tragedy
that would have been in the situation with even a
whole girl under such circumstances was doubled by
her condition.</p>
<p>“Got her dead to rights that time,” chuckled
Thomas to me. “She’ll spill now sure. The rest
of the stuff must be cached around here somewhere.”</p>
<p>“You think there is no question about the Ward
boy?” I asked.</p>
<p>“Not the slightest. And she is in and is covering
up. They’re all crooked, these back alley rats.
There’s more in the gang, of course. That stuff
was put there, I suppose, to-night, for her to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</SPAN></span>
‘shove.’ Probably she peddles it. You never can
tell how these gangs operate.”</p>
<p>I glanced again at the pitiable little misshapen
thing dragged away from her home to a cell and an
iron bed at the city prison and I couldn’t trust myself
to reply to Thomas.</p>
<p>By a curious change that is gradually making me
less valuable as a newspaper man the older I become
in the business, I find myself unconsciously taking
sides against my paper with fellow beings whose
frailties or sorrows make them grist for the newspaper
mill. I felt so toward this poor girl now, a
victim of congenital influence in all likelihood; obviously
a product of the malnutrition of the under
classes.</p>
<p>Thomas took his prisoner away in a taxi and I
hurried to a telephone and gave the story to Sampson
in that fashion. I then hastened back to Clementina
Street, where to my great relief, I was picked up by
Lanagan within a few moments.</p>
<p>I related everything to him. When I had finished
his eyes shone more brightly than the gas jet over
our heads. Never had I beheld him so far from the
composure for which he was noted. For a minute
or two he anathematised O’Rourke by all the carded
oaths and a few that he invented.</p>
<p>“Back, back in jail, is she! So, O’Rourke
couldn’t take my word! We’ll see, oh, we’ll see!
Wait.”</p>
<p>He ran up the steps to 211. After a long period,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</SPAN></span>
the door opened. It was the mother. Briefly Lanagan
explained what had happened. The poor old
toothless soul was about past being shocked further.
But quickly Lanagan, in that compelling way of
his, calmed her fears. He promised that she would
have her son and daughter back—before daylight.</p>
<p><i>Before daylight!</i> It fairly took my breath away.</p>
<p>“What is it, Jack? Give me a line,” I demanded
in excitement. “Heavens, man, it’s quarter to two!
How are you going to get a story in the paper to-night
now? You’ll only break it for all the papers.”</p>
<p>Lanagan stopped short in his rapid walk and laid
his hand on my shoulders.</p>
<p>“I’ve been in this game fifteen years, Norrie,” he
said, with a solemnity new in him. “Let me tell
you something, and I say it who have the right:
there comes a time just once every so often when a
newspaper man puts humanity above his paper. Remember
that. You are betraying no trust with your
paper when you do; you are betraying your trust
with yourself, with your fellow man, and with your
conscience when you do not. This is one of them.”</p>
<p>That was all. But many times in the years that
have whirled by since then and since that strange,
marvellous man passed out of the newspaper life of
the west, have those words come back out of the
dark of a back alley, to guide me.</p>
<p>He was not working for an “exclusive” now; he
was working to free a mite of a cripple girl and her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</SPAN></span>
stunned and misused brother from the inner tier of
cells at the city prison.</p>
<p>He said no more. At Market Street he flung
open a taxicab door and we jumped in. He called
an address to the driver. It was Chief Leslie’s
home. We were there within fifteen minutes.
Lanagan held his finger on the button until the door
swung open and the Chief himself appeared,
wrapped in a lounging robe, his hair tousled, his
beard rumpled, but his grey eyes wide and alert.
Lanagan brushed in and I after him. He sat the
Chief down on a settee and for ten minutes he hammered
away. At last Leslie’s fist banged the settee
arm.</p>
<p>“By the Lord Harry, you’re right! And I want
to flash that bird again! It all comes back to me
now; I couldn’t make out the other day where I had
seen him before. Little stouter, but same man or
I’ll cut my throat!”</p>
<p>He took the stairs to the next floor three at a time.
Within five minutes he was back, fully dressed.</p>
<p>“Got your machine out here yet?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Lanagan. “But don’t forget the
Wards.”</p>
<p>Leslie stepped to the telephone stand and to his
private line to headquarters.</p>
<p>“Prison,” he said, shortly. “Prison? Give me
the matron. Mrs. Conness? Take that Ward girl
into your room and give her the best you have until<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</SPAN></span>
I get down. Give me Andrews. Sergeant Andrews?
Take that Ward boy to the matron’s room
and give him the best you have until I get down
there.” He hung up the receiver. “Come on.
We’ll pick up Brady. He lives just around the
corner. We better get Maloney, too; he’s not far
away. If this is the bird I think it is, we’ll take no
chances. Known as the ‘Swallow.’ Two timer,
Moyomemsing prison. Porch climber. Came out
here about fifteen years ago and reported on, saying
he wanted a chance to make good. We kept track
of him for a couple of years. He was clerking and
doing the right thing. Then we lost him.”</p>
<p>“I didn’t identify him that closely,” said Lanagan.
“But he’s the man who did this trick and the other
nine.”</p>
<p>Within twenty-five minutes Brady and Maloney
were crowded into the machine with us. Lanagan
gave a direction. At Pacific Avenue and Octavia
Street we stopped, in the heart of the fashionable
western addition. With Lanagan and Leslie in the
lead, Brady and I next and Maloney bringing up
the rear, we straggled along for several blocks.</p>
<p>At Washington and Buchanan Streets the Chief
and Lanagan had stepped back and signalled us.
We closed up. From the middle of the block on
Washington Street came the sound of a taxicab
starting. Leslie looked around the corner as the
machine came towards us, and stepped to the street,
flashing his shield. The machine stopped. The<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</SPAN></span>
door opened. A head appeared. A familiar voice
came.</p>
<p>“Hello, Chief! What’s up?”</p>
<p>Detective Harrigan stepped out.</p>
<p>“You’re up,” said Leslie, with a bitter oath.
“You are under arrest. Brady, search the prisoner.”</p>
<p>Quick as a knife blade springs back Harrigan’s
hand went to his hip; but as quick as he was, Leslie
was quicker. There was a click, click and Harrigan
stood before his superior officer and his brother detectives,
manacled. With practised fingers Brady
was running through his clothes. He passed over
Harrigan’s revolver, handcuffs and billy. He
brought forth a leather wallet. Leslie tore it open.
It held an assortment of jewelry, jumbled together.</p>
<p>“So!” he said, his voice shaking with rage, “you
knew it was the Swallow, did you? And you have
been shaking him down for half the loot? Well,
Officer Harrigan, you and the Swallow will be
splitting cobble stones inside of a month. You
dirty, rotten, gutter scut! You were framing to
send two little kids to prison, were you? I wish I
had let you pull that gun! We’d have saved the
county the expense of a trial!”</p>
<p>He tore Harrigan’s coat back and ripped his star
from his breast. He ground it under his heel until
the number it held was obliterated, and then he
hurled it spinning into the air and over the corner
house. It landed faintly on a distant roof.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</SPAN></span>Harrigan noticed Lanagan for the first time and
sprang for him, raising his manacled hands. But
Leslie stopped him with a drive to the jaw that sent
him staggering back against the machine.</p>
<p>“Take him in, Maloney,” ordered the Chief.
“I’ve seen enough of him. We’ll get along without
you now.”</p>
<p>Harrigan said not a word. He stumbled into the
machine, Maloney following. It drove away.</p>
<p>“Jack Lanagan,” said Leslie, “I wish you were
on my staff. You could have O’Rourke’s job to-night.”</p>
<p>“Thanks, Chief, I’ll be satisfied if you send
O’Rourke to the fog belt,” replied Lanagan, sardonically.
“Put a man like Royan in his place and
you’ll have the kind of head the bureau needs.”</p>
<p>“Royan goes,” said the Chief. “You’re entitled
to something on this night’s work.”</p>
<p>“We’ve got to hurry. Our man may have
noticed that taxi incident.”</p>
<p>“I don’t think so. Harrigan came out of the
house.” We walked up the street. “Take the rear,
Brady,” said Leslie, and the detective stepped quietly
down the cement path at the side of a fairly pretentious
home. Leslie, Lanagan and I tiptoed up
the front steps. We stood to one side, while Lanagan
took the door. He rang twice. Footsteps
came. It was evident Harrigan’s host had not yet
retired.</p>
<p>“That you, Harrigan?” the voice came from<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</SPAN></span>
inside before the door opened. Lanagan mumbled
a yes. The door swung back and Donald Cutting,
Esq., proprietor and general manager of the Phœnix
Vacuum Cleaning Company stood staring at Lanagan
from the brilliantly lighted hallway. For an
instant he was speechless. Then he shouted:</p>
<p>“Well, what the devil do <i>you</i> want around here
at this hour of the morning? What gets into you
reporters, anyhow? Has a citizen got any rights
in his own home at all?”</p>
<p>“There aren’t many that you have.” It was
Leslie. He had swung to the door directly before
Cutting.</p>
<p>His revolver was at Cutting’s waist.</p>
<p>“Just keep your hands a little higher, Cutting:
you’re pretty nifty with those digits of yours. Now
back in there, so we can all sit down and talk.”</p>
<p>Cutting stood an instant as though frozen, and
then mechanically stepped back. We all walked in.
The door was closed.</p>
<p>“‘Swallow,’” said the Chief, “you’re through.
We’ve got Harrigan with the goods. Where’s the
rest of the loot? I mean outside the Robbins stuff.
We’ve got that located.”</p>
<p>Cutting’s head dropped to his hands. He sat in
silence, bowed.</p>
<p>“Donald, what is it? Is there any trouble?”
A woman’s voice came over the balustrade. He
straightened up, as though an electric current had
shot through him.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</SPAN></span>“Nothing, Molly,” he said. “Just some old
friends dropped in on me. I will be at liberty soon.”</p>
<p>“Your wife?” asked Leslie. “My wife,” replied
Cutting.</p>
<p>In another moment she was sweeping from the
broad stairway in a silken kimono, her hair flowing
loosely, and stood before us.</p>
<p>Cutting looked directly at her, and in her eyes
there was a light of questioning. “I must leave
you, Molly,” he said. Still looking at him in that
singular way, she asked: “For how long?”</p>
<p>“It is not in my power to say. These men are
police officers. They knew me from the east.
They want me to go down to the jail with them.”</p>
<p>“Will you be there long?”</p>
<p>“If I could help myself, I would not go at all.”</p>
<p>“Oh,” she said, with a nervous laugh. “I understand.
Something possibly about that poor boy
in your employ and that robbery.”</p>
<p>Lanagan’s black eyes were studying the woman
intently; Leslie was watching Cutting. Both, I
could see, were puzzled. Even I, with my duller
perceptions, was sensible that there was some subtle
undercurrent in this conversation; something cryptic
that I could not solve.</p>
<p>“You will need your hat,” she said, and turned to
the hat rack in the rear of the hall.</p>
<p>“It’s all right, Chief,” said Cutting, in an aside,
arising, “you’ve got me. Please don’t make any
scene before her.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</SPAN></span>She returned with the hat. He fumbled with it.</p>
<p>“Kiss me,” he said. She did so; left his arms,
but came back to them, a gush of tears starting as she
clung to him in a passionate embrace.</p>
<p>“Go,” he said, faintly, his voice breaking. She
turned and stumbled for the stairs. A quick look
flashed from Lanagan to the Chief.</p>
<p>“One minute, madam,” said Leslie, sternly.
“You had better come along, too.”</p>
<p>“<i>No!</i>” cried Cutting. “Never, Chief, as you
are a man! Never in a million years! She has
never known of my work out here; she knew me
before Moyomemsing; she stuck by me during it all;
she married me and we came out here. She knows
nothing; nothing. She may have suspected, but she
knew nothing. The old call claimed me, going
through those houses making estimates on cleaning;
why, it’s a disease, that’s all, Chief! I got pressed
for money. I undertook too much in my business.
I couldn’t handle it. I had notes to meet. I just
fell naturally back to the old easy way. That’s all.
Just went back to it because that’s the way I was
born, I suppose; crooked.”</p>
<p>“Humph. Where did you send the stuff?”</p>
<p>“East. Except the Robbins. Needed money
bad, didn’t want to take a chance handling it here, so
I tried the message. What Harrigan didn’t get is
down at the office in the safe.”</p>
<p>“We suspected that,” said Leslie. “How long
has Harrigan been cutting with you?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</SPAN></span>“Oh, well, don’t ask me that. Some time. He’s
a wolf. I am a crook, but he’s got me lashed to
the mast. The kid stuff was none of mine. I did
lose one ring at the office. The boy found it. He
got scared and contradicted himself. Harrigan
framed the other thing about the house.”</p>
<p>“I guess it’s pretty nearly an even break,” said
Leslie. He stepped forward to put on the wrist
nippers. As he did so Cutting raised his hat to his
head; his hand, coming down, stopped for a fraction
of a second at his lips.</p>
<p>“Better this,” he said, rapidly, backing away, “I
couldn’t go back. I’m a pretty old man, you know.”</p>
<p>As though he had been shot through the heart he
dropped in a heap. Lanagan leaped for him. The
Chief bent over him. They arose together. Lanagan
picked up the hat and turned back the sweat
band. Inside was a little envelope, pasted to the
felt. It was half filled with white powder.</p>
<p>“Cyanide,” said Lanagan.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Such was the passing of the Swallow.</p>
<p>Lanagan, in his search for similar conditions in
the ten burglaries found but one: that Cutting had
personally visited each house to make the estimates
of cost. That fact, coupled with the ring found at
his establishment, convinced Lanagan that he and
he alone was the man. Cutting worked four machines,
each with its separate crew, and no other<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</SPAN></span>
employee had worked in more than three out of the
ten houses.</p>
<p>Anxious to keep track of Cutting after his theory
began to impress him, he had learned that he was at
the theatre. He had picked him up after the show,
trailed him to a café, followed him in a taxicab as he
took his wife home, and kept at his tail lights when
he returned after one o’clock to discharge the machine
and walk to a saloon well south of Market
Street where he had met Harrigan. That was Lanagan’s
first definite information that Harrigan and
Cutting were involved.</p>
<p>Cutting and Harrigan had separated, Lanagan
following Cutting to his establishment. He remained
there some time, busied about his safe, and
had then apparently gone directly home.</p>
<p>It was then that Lanagan picked me up.</p>
<p>Harrigan, of course, was the man who had passed
through the alley. He then had gone on out to Cutting’s
house, for a final distribution of the spoils,
Cutting having evidently taken Harrigan’s share
from the safe.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Late that same afternoon Lanagan sat in Leslie’s
office with Robbins, who had just received his
jewelry. Robbins drew out his check book.</p>
<p>“If you will permit me?” he said, to Lanagan.
He had filled in “$250.” “How do you spell your
name?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</SPAN></span>Lanagan laughed. “Make it out to the Adams
Piano Company,” he said.</p>
<p>Robbins looked politely inquisitive, but asked no
questions. He wrote in the name. But Leslie was
not so polite.</p>
<p>“What in the name of Sam Hill are you going to
do with a piano?”</p>
<p>“Nothing, myself. I wouldn’t take it any more
than I would take the money. You know that.
But there is a girl I know who can use that piano
and use it to very good advantage. And what’s
more, she’s entitled to it.”</p>
<p>He picked up the check and carefully folded it,
placing it in his pocket.</p>
<p>“I’m going over now and pick out the best piano
the money will buy,” he said, “and I’m going to
send it, with the compliments of Mr. Robbins, Chief
Leslie and Jack Lanagan to a little home at 211
Clementina Street, Miss Ward is the name.”</p>
<div class="figcenter"><ANTIMG src="images/i273.jpg" alt="" /></div>
<p class="caption">“He lit a match.”</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="ph2">X<br/>
OUT OF THE DEPTHS</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr class="tb" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />