<h2 class="newchapter"><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXVII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXVII.</h2>
<h3>THE GLARE OF A MATCH.</h3>
<p>When the bartender had taken his departure, Nick found a cigar in one of
his pockets, and seated himself to smoke quietly until Phil should
return. But when more than half an hour later the cigar was consumed,
and he had thrown it aside, he began to feel a sense of uneasiness that
the man should be gone so long a time.</p>
<p>However, he realized that it was no easy task that Phil had undertaken,
and that he might well occupy an hour or more in accomplishing it.</p>
<p>He had no more cigars to smoke, but he seated himself resolutely in a
chair, determined to wait with patience until his messenger should
return.</p>
<p>There was a small clock, ticking away merrily on the mantel, at the far
end of the room, and the detective watched it while the minute hand
worked its way slowly around the dial, until an hour, then an hour and a
quarter, and, finally, an hour and twenty minutes had elapsed since the
departure of the bartender.</p>
<p>His impatience was now so great, and his natural distrust of the
confederate he had employed was so prominent in his mind that he left
his chair, having<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</SPAN></span> first extinguished the light, and, going to the door,
opened it softly and peered outside.</p>
<p>The hallway was in utter darkness, the same as when he was there last,
and, although he listened intently, he could not hear the suggestion of
a sound from the lower regions of the house. After waiting a few moments
longer, he tiptoed forward cautiously to the stairs, and descended them,
being careful to step as closely as possible to the spindles of the
balustrade, in order that they might not creak beneath his weight, and
thus alarm others in the house. In this way he gained the lower floor.</p>
<p>Nick was somewhat handicapped without his flash light, but he remembered
quite distinctly the location of the sound he had heard two hours
earlier, when the party from the laundry had followed him in, and passed
through the hallway to a rear door. Now he sought that door by following
carefully along the wall until he came to it.</p>
<p>But, although he searched diligently for many minutes, he could not find
so much as a suggestion of a door anywhere.</p>
<p>He remembered then that in all probability there was no perceptible door
at all; that the door which was there somewhere was concealed in the
wainscoting in some way, or otherwise hidden from casual observation. To
have maintained a door of entrance to the saloon from that hallway would
have rendered it<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</SPAN></span> entirely unnecessary for Grinnel to keep up his
private entrance to the saloon from the other street. Nick's only method
of finding it now was to light a match, and this he hesitated to do, not
knowing what warning its glare might convey to others.</p>
<p>But there was no alternative, and presently he began his search by
lighting matches one after another, permitting them to flare up
sufficiently for a moment's vision, and then throwing them quickly to
the floor, after the manner adopted by burglars when they were engaged
in robbing a house before the pocket flash light was invented.</p>
<p>He was not long in discovering the entrance he sought. The walls along
the hallway were not plastered; they were merely built up with matched
boards, which had stood there unpainted for so long a time that they had
achieved a veneer of filth and dirt which made them look, in the flare
of the match, like mahogany.</p>
<p>But he could easily see where there was a keyhole cut into one of these
boards, and, although around it there was no other evidence of a door,
he knew that if he could turn the tumblers in that lock it would be
revealed to him.</p>
<p>He went to work with his picklock, and, as he supposed, the instant the
bolt of the lock was shot back the door opened easily and noiselessly in
his grasp, and from beyond it he could at once hear the murmur<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</SPAN></span> of
distant voices; also very far ahead of him, and beneath what was
evidently another door, he could perceive a gleam of light.</p>
<p>He stepped through, and closed it after him, but, realizing that it was
more than likely that he might wish to leave in a hurry, he left it
unlocked.</p>
<p>And now he tiptoed forward to the door beneath which the light shone,
and, getting upon his hands and knees, held his ear down where he could
hear with more distinctness.</p>
<p>The effect was almost the same as if he were inside the saloon.
Strangely enough, also, it was Madge's voice that came to him first, for
it appeared that she was seated near that very door, and by the answers
that were returned to her, Nick knew that no less a person than Mike
Grinnel himself was her companion. And they were speaking in low tones,
but, nevertheless, every word they uttered could be heard distinctly by
the detective.</p>
<p>It was in the midst of their conversation, evidently, that Nick began to
listen, and Madge was saying:</p>
<p>"I swore then, Mike, that I would be even with him, and that if I ever
succeeded in getting out of that prison where he put me I would never
rest another minute until Nick Carter was placed beyond the power of
injuring anybody."</p>
<p>"You bit off a little more than you could chew,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</SPAN></span> didn't you, Madge?"
asked Mike Grinnel, in his slow, even voice, in which he never permitted
a sign of emotion.</p>
<p>"No, I didn't," she retorted. "I made some mistakes, maybe. I shouldn't,
for instance, have written him the letter I did."</p>
<p>"What was the letter, Madge?"</p>
<p>"Like a fool I wrote him a threatening letter, in which I told him to
look out for me. That was my vanity, I suppose. I wanted him to know
that I was on his track. I wanted to worry him; to give him something to
think of, and a lot of things to look out for."</p>
<p>"Well, what then, Madge?"</p>
<p>"It was then, Mike, that I began to get the guns together, Slippery Al,
and Gentleman Jim, and the others, and, of course, I made this place our
headquarters."</p>
<p>"That, Madge, is just what you shouldn't have done. That's what I'm
finding fault with you about now.</p>
<p>"Well," she said, "it's done, and it can't be helped; and Nick Carter
has been here, and he's gotten away again; but, all the same, we've got
Chick in our power, and if I do to him as I feel like doing now, he will
regret the day that he ever took my trail."</p>
<p>"If you leave him where he is now, Madge, he'll do that," said Grinnel,
laughing softly.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</SPAN></span>"Why, what would happen to him there?" she demanded quickly.</p>
<p>"For one thing the rats would probably eat him up before very long, and
it wouldn't be the first meal of that kind they've had down there,
either."</p>
<p>"You didn't tell me where you put him," said Madge.</p>
<p>"I don't tell anybody exactly where that place is, Madge. It's a little
hole that I've dug out underneath the cellar of this house; if it was
anywhere in the old country it would be called a dungeon; as it is, I
call it the grave—people who go there have a habit of never coming out
again."</p>
<p>The detective was anxious to know what had become of Phil, the
bartender. It was evident that the man had done nothing to betray the
detective, since these two were talking so quietly just inside the door
where Nick was listening.</p>
<p>The next words, while they did not exactly reassure him, made him think
that, after all, the bartender might be carrying out his contract by
attempting to set Chick at liberty himself.</p>
<p>"Is that where you sent Phil a few moments ago?" she asked. "Down there
to the dungeon where you put Chick?"</p>
<p>The detective could hear Grinnel chuckle and then reply:</p>
<p>"Yes, Madge, I sent him down there to fasten the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</SPAN></span> young fellow up, so
that there would be no chance of his getting loose. You see, he was
senseless when we chucked him in there, and I forgot to make him fast,
as a sailor would say, but there are staples in the wall down there, and
there are chains fastened to those staples, and there are nice little
steel bracelets at the end of those chains, that fit beautifully around
a man's ankles. I sent Phil down to lock them fast."</p>
<p>"I thought nobody knew where that place was except yourself," said Madge
quickly.</p>
<p>"Oh, Phil's all right. I have to have some confidence in my men here, or
I couldn't run the place."</p>
<p>"All the same," the detective heard her murmur, "I'd rather you had left
Chick to me. They're a slippery lot, those detectives, and I shall be
uneasy——"</p>
<p>The detective heard no more of what was said, for at that instant he was
greatly startled by hearing a sound behind him, and evidently beneath
him, the consequence being that he paid no further attention to the
conversation beyond the door.</p>
<p>Indeed, he drew back away from it, and softly rose to his feet, in order
that he might be thoroughly prepared for anything that should happen;
and while he stood there he was conscious of a cold, damp draught of air
blown into his face—air that smelled as if it might come from the
cellar—and he was somehow conscious that a trapdoor had been lifted,
while the next<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</SPAN></span> moment he was aware that somebody was climbing through
it into that narrow hallway—somebody who was not more than ten or
twelve feet away from him. How he had wished for his little flash light
then.</p>
<p>Once he imagined that he could hear a faint whisper, and a sharp,
warning hiss for silence immediately following it.</p>
<p>Then it came back to him suddenly, all that he had heard Mike Grinnel
say to Madge about the dungeon in the house, and the bartender's errand
to it.</p>
<p>He thought then that the people who had raised themselves through the
trap—and he was sure that there were two of them—must be Phil and
Chick, the latter having been liberated by the former; and, acting upon
the impulse of the moment, he struck a match and held it into the faces
of the two men. The glare of the match shone directly into the face of
Chick.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</SPAN></span></p>
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