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<h2> XI </h2>
<p>Bassett lounged outside the neat privet hedge which it was Harrison
Miller's custom to clip with his own bachelor hands, and waited. And as he
waited he tried to imagine what was going on inside, behind the neatly
curtained windows of the old brick house.</p>
<p>He was tempted to ring the bell again, pretend to have forgotten
something, and perhaps happen in on what might be drama of a rather high
order; what, supposing the man was Clark after all, was fairly sure to be
drama. He discarded the idea, however, and began again his interested
survey of the premises. Whoever conceived this sort of haven for Clark, if
it were Clark, had shown considerable shrewdness. The town fairly smelt of
respectability; the tree-shaded streets, the children in socks and small
crisp-laundered garments, the houses set back, each in its square of
shaved lawn, all peaceful, middle class and unexciting. The last town in
the world for Judson Clark, the last profession, the last house, this
shabby old brick before him.</p>
<p>He smiled rather grimly as he reflected that if Gregory had been right in
his identification, he was, beyond those windows at that moment, very
possibly warning Clark against himself. Gregory would know his type, that
he never let go. He drew himself up a little.</p>
<p>The house door opened, and Gregory came out, turning toward the station.
Bassett caught up with him and put a hand on his arm.</p>
<p>"Well?" he said cheerfully. "It was, wasn't it?"</p>
<p>Gregory stopped dead and stared at him. Then:</p>
<p>"Old dog Tray!" he said sneeringly. "If your brain was as good as your
nose, Bassett, you'd be a whale of a newspaper man."</p>
<p>"Don't bother about my brain. It's working fine to-day, anyhow. Well, what
had he to say for himself?"</p>
<p>Gregory's mind was busy, and he had had a moment to pull himself together.</p>
<p>"We both get off together," he said, more amiably. "That fellow isn't Jud
Clark and never was. He's a doctor, and the nephew of the old doctor
there. They're in practice together."</p>
<p>"Did you see them both?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>Bassett eyed him. Either Gregory was a good actor, or the whole trail
ended there after all. He himself had felt, after his interview, with
Dick, that the scent was false. And there was this to be said: Gregory had
been in the house scarcely ten minutes. Long enough to acknowledge a
mistake, but hardly long enough for any dramatic identification. He was
keenly disappointed, but he had had long experience of disappointment, and
after a moment he only said:</p>
<p>"Well, that's that. He certainly looked like Clark to me."</p>
<p>"I'll say he did."</p>
<p>"Rather surprised him, didn't you?"</p>
<p>"Oh, he was all right," Gregory said. "I didn't tell him anything, of
course."</p>
<p>Bassett looked at his watch.</p>
<p>"I was after you, all right," he said, cheerfully. "But if I was barking
up the wrong tree, I'm done. I don't have to be hit on the head to make me
stop. Come and have a soda-water on me," he finished amiably. "There's no
train until seven."</p>
<p>But Gregory refused.</p>
<p>"No, thanks. I'll wander on down to the station and get a paper."</p>
<p>The reporter smiled. Gregory was holding a grudge against him, for a bad
night and a bad day.</p>
<p>"All right," he said affably. "I'll see you at the train. I'll walk about
a bit."</p>
<p>He turned and started back up the street again, walking idly. His chagrin
was very real. He hated to be fooled, and fooled he had been. Gregory was
not the only one who had lost a night's sleep. Then, unexpectedly, he was
hailed from the curbstone, and he saw with amazement that it was Dick
Livingstone.</p>
<p>"Take you anywhere?" Dick asked. "How's the headache?"</p>
<p>"Better, thanks." Bassett stared at him. "No, I'm just walking around
until train-time. Are you starting out or going home, at this hour?"</p>
<p>"Going home. Well, glad the head's better."</p>
<p>He drove on, leaving the reporter gazing after him. So Gregory had been
lying. He hadn't seen this chap at all. Then why—? He walked on,
turning this new phase of the situation over in his mind. Why this
elaborate fiction, if Gregory had merely gone in, waited for ten minutes,
and come out again?</p>
<p>It wasn't reasonable. It wasn't logical. Something had happened inside the
house to convince Gregory that he was right. He had seen somebody, or
something. He hadn't needed to lie. He could have said frankly that he had
seen no one. But no, he had built up a fabric carefully calculated to
throw Bassett off the scent.</p>
<p>He saw Dick stop in front of the house, get out and enter. And coming to a
decision, he followed him and rang the doorbell. For a long time no one
answered. Then the maid of the afternoon opened the door, her eyes red
with crying, and looked at him with hostility.</p>
<p>"Doctor Richard Livingstone?"</p>
<p>"You can't see him."</p>
<p>"It's important."</p>
<p>"Well, you can't see him. Doctor David has just had a stroke. He's in the
office now, on the floor."</p>
<p>She closed the door on him, and he turned and went away. It was all clear
to him; Gregory had seen, not Clark, but the older man; had told him and
gone away. And under the shock the older man had collapsed. That was sad.
It was very sad. But it was also extremely convincing.</p>
<p>He sat up late that night again, running over the entries in his notebook.
The old story, as he pieced it out, ran like this:</p>
<p>It had been twelve years ago, when, according to the old files, Clark had
financed Beverly Carlysle's first starring venture. He had, apparently,
started out in the beginning only to give her the publicity she needed. In
devising it, however, he had shown a sort of boyish recklessness and
ingenuity that had caught the interest of the press, and set newspaper men
to chuckling wherever they got together.</p>
<p>He had got together a dozen or so of young men like himself, wealthy, idle
and reckless with youth, and, headed by him, they had made the
exploitation of the young star an occupation. The newspapers referred to
the star and her constellation as Beverly Carlysle and her Broadway
Beauties. It had been unvicious, young, and highly entertaining, and it
had cost Judson Clark his membership in his father's conservative old
clubs.</p>
<p>For a time it livened the theatrical world with escapades that were
harmless enough, if sensational. Then, after a time, newspaper row began
to whisper that young Clark was in love with the girl. The Broadway
Beauties broke up, after a wild farewell dinner. The audiences ceased to
expect a row of a dozen youths, all dressed alike with gardenias in their
buttonholes and perhaps red neckties with their evening suits, to rise in
their boxes on the star's appearance and solemnly bow. And the star
herself lost a little of the anxious look she frequently wore.</p>
<p>The story went, after a while, that Judson Clark had been refused, and was
taking his refusal badly. Reporters saw him, carelessly dressed, outside
the stage door waiting, and the story went that the girl had thrown him
over, money and all, for her leading man. One thing was clear; Clark, not
a drinker before, had taken to drinking hard, and after a time, and some
unpleasant scenes probably, she refused to see him any more.</p>
<p>When the play closed, in June, 1911, she married Howard Lucas, her leading
man; his third wife. Lucas had been not a bad chap, a good-looking, rather
negligible man, given to all-day Sunday poker, carefully valeted, not very
keen mentally, but amiable. They had bought a house on East Fifty-sixth
Street, and were looking for a new play with Lucas as co-star, when he
unaccountably went to pieces nervously, stopped sleeping, and developed a
slight twitching of his handsome, rather vacuous face.</p>
<p>Judson Clark had taken his yacht and gone to Europe, and was reported from
here and there not too favorably. But when he came back, in early
September, he had apparently recovered from his infatuation, was his old,
carefully dressed self again, and when interviewed declared his intention
of spending the winter on his Wyoming ranch.</p>
<p>Of course he must have heard of Lucas's breakdown, and equally, of course,
he must have seen them both. What happened at that interview, by what
casual attitude he allayed Lucas's probable jealousy and the girl's own
nervousness, Bassett had no way of discovering. It was clear that he
convinced them both of his good faith, for the next note in the reporter's
book was simply a date, September 12, 1911.</p>
<p>That was the day they had all started West together, traveling in Clark's
private car, with Lucas, twitching slightly, smiling and waving farewell
from a window.</p>
<p>The big smash did not come until the middle of October.</p>
<p>Bassett sat back and considered. He had a fairly clear idea of the
conditions at the ranch; daily riding, some little reading, and a great
deal too much of each other. A sick man, too, unhappy in his exile,
chafing against his restrictions, lonely and irritable. The girl, early
seeing her mistake, and Clark's jealousy of her husband. The door into
their apartment closing, the thousand and one unconscious intimacies
between man and wife, the breakfast for two going up the stairs, and below
that hot-eyed boy, agonized and passionately jealous, yet meeting them and
looking after them, their host and a gentleman.</p>
<p>Lucas took to drinking, after a time, to allay his sheer boredom. And Jud
Clark drank with him. At the end of three weeks they were both drinking
heavily, and were politely quarrelsome. Bassett could fill that in also.
He could see the girl protesting, watching, increasingly anxious as she
saw that Clark's jealousy was matched by her husband's.</p>
<p>A queer picture, he reflected, the three of them shut away on the great
ranch, and every day some new tension, some new strain.</p>
<p>Then, one night at dinner, they quarreled, and Beverly left the table. She
was going to pack her things and go back to New York. She had felt,
probably, that something was bound to snap. And while she was upstairs
Clark had shot and killed Howard Lucas, and himself disappeared.</p>
<p>He had run, testimony at the inquest revealed, to the corral, and saddled
a horse. Although it was only October, it was snowing hard, but in spite
of that he had turned his horse toward the mountains. By midnight a posse
from Norada had started out, and another up the Dry River Canyon, but the
storm turned into a blizzard in the mountains, and they were obliged to
turn back. A few inches more snow, and they could not have got their
horses out. A week or so later, with a crust of ice over it, a few of them
began again, with no expectation, however, of finding Clark alive. They
came across his horse on the second day, but they did not find him, and
there were some among them who felt that, after all, old Elihu Clark's boy
had chosen the better way.</p>
<p>Bassett closed his notebook and lighted a cigar.</p>
<p>There was a big story to be had for the seeking, a whale of a story. He
could go to the office, give them a hint, draw expense money and start for
Norada the next night. He knew well enough that he would have to begin
there, and that it would not be easy. Witnesses of the affair at the ranch
would be missing now, or when found the first accuracy of their statements
would either be dulled by time or have been added to with the passing
years. The ranch itself might have passed into other hands. To reconstruct
the events of ten years ago might be impossible, or nearly so. But that
was not his problem. He would have to connect Norada with Haverly, Clark
with Livingstone. One thing only was simple. If he found Livingstone's
story was correct, that he had lived on a ranch near Norada before the
crime and as Livingstone, then he would acknowledge that two men could
look precisely alike and come from the same place, and yet not be the
same. If not—</p>
<p>But, after he had turned out his light and got into bed, he began to feel
a certain distaste for his self-appointed task. If Livingstone were Clark,
if after years of effort he had pulled himself up by his own boot-straps,
had made himself a man out of the reckless boy he had been, a decent and
useful citizen, why pull him down? After all, the world hadn't lost much
in Lucas; a sleek, not over-intelligent big animal, that had been Howard
Lucas.</p>
<p>He decided to sleep over it, and by morning he found himself not only
disinclined to the business, but firmly resolved to let it drop. Things
were well enough as they were. The woman in the case was making good. Jud
was making good. And nothing would restore Howard Lucas to that small
theatrical world of his which had waved him good-bye at the station so
long ago.</p>
<p>He shaved and dressed, his resolution still holding. He had indeed almost
a conscious glow of virtue, for he was making one of those inglorious and
unsung sacrifices which ought to bring a man credit in the next world,
because they certainly got him nowhere in this. He was quite affable to
the colored waiter who served his breakfasts in the bachelor apartment
house, and increased his weekly tip to a dollar and a half. Then he sat
down and opened the Times-Republican, skimming over it after his habit for
his own space, and frowning over a row of exclamation and interrogation
points unwittingly set behind the name of the mayor.</p>
<p>On the second page, however, he stopped, coffee cup in air. "Is Judson
Clark alive? Wife of former ranch manager makes confession."</p>
<p>A woman named Margaret Donaldson, it appeared, fatally injured by an
automobile near the town of Norada, Wyoming, had made a confession on her
deathbed. In it she stated that, afraid to die without shriving her soul,
she had sent for the sheriff of Dallas County and had made the following
confession:</p>
<p>That following the tragedy at the Clark ranch her husband, John Donaldson,
since dead, had immediately following the inquest, where he testified,
started out into the mountains in the hope of finding Clark alive, as he
knew of a deserted ranger's cabin where Clark sometimes camped when
hunting. It was his intention to search for Clark at this cabin and effect
his escape. He carried with him food and brandy.</p>
<p>That, owing to the blizzard, he was very nearly frozen; that he was
obliged to abandon his horse, shooting it before he did so, and that,
close to death himself, he finally reached the cabin and there found
Judson Clark, the fugitive, who was very ill.</p>
<p>She further testified that her husband cared for Clark for four days,
Clark being delirious at the time, and that on the fifth day he started
back on foot for the Clark ranch, having left Clark locked in the cabin,
and that on the following night he took three horses, two saddled, and one
packed with food and supplies. That accompanied by herself they went back
to the cabin in the mountains and that she remained there to care for
Clark, while her husband returned to the ranch, to prevent suspicion.</p>
<p>That, a day or so later, looking out of her window, she had perceived a
man outside in the snow coming toward the cabin, and that she had thought
it one of the searching party. That her first instinct had been to lock
him outside, but that she had finally admitted him, and that thereafter he
had remained and had helped her to care for the sick man.</p>
<p>Unfortunately for the rest of the narrative it appeared that the injured
woman had here lapsed into a coma, and had subsequently died, carrying her
further knowledge with her.</p>
<p>But, the article went on, the story opened a field of infinite surmise. In
all probability Judson Clark was still alive, living under some assumed
identity, free of punishment, outwardly respectable. Three years before he
had been adjudged legally dead, and the estate divided, under bond of the
legatees.</p>
<p>Close to a hundred million dollars had gone to charities, and Judson
Clark, wherever he was, would be dependent on his own efforts for
existence. He could have summoned all the legal talent in the country to
his defense, but instead he had chosen to disappear.</p>
<p>The whole situation turned on the deposition of Mrs. Donaldson, now dead.
The local authorities at Norada maintained that the woman had not been
sane for several years. On the other hand, the cabin to which she referred
was well known, and no search of it had been made at the time. Clark's
horse had been found not ten miles from the town, and the cabin was buried
in snow twenty miles further away. If Clark had made that journey on foot
he had accomplished the impossible.</p>
<p>Certain facts, according to the local correspondent, bore out Margaret
Donaldson's confession. Inquiry showed that she was supposed to have spent
the winter following Judson Clark's crime with relatives in Omaha. She had
returned to the ranch the following spring.</p>
<p>A detailed description of Judson Clark, and a photograph of him
accompanied the story. Bassett re-read the article carefully, and swore a
little, under his breath. If he had needed confirmation of his suspicions,
it lay to his hand. But the situation had changed over night. There would
be a search for Clark now, as wide as the knowledge of his disappearance.
Local police authorities would turn him up in every city from Maine to the
Pacific coast. Even Europe would be on the lookout and South America.</p>
<p>But it was not the police he feared so much as the press. Not all of the
papers, but some of them, would go after that story, and send their best
men on it. It offered not so much a chance of solution as an opportunity
to revive the old dramatic story. He could see, when he closed his eyes,
the local photographers climbing to that cabin and later sending its
pictures broadcast, and divers gentlemen of the press, eager to pit their
wits against ten years of time and the ability of a once conspicuous man
to hide from the law, packing their suitcases for Norada.</p>
<p>No, he couldn't stop now. He would go on, like the others, and with this
advantage, that he was morally certain he could lay his hands on Clark at
any time. But he would have to prove his case, connect it. Who, for
instance, was the other man in the cabin? He must have known who the boy
was who lay in that rough bunk, delirious. Must have suspected anyhow.
That made him, like the Donaldsons, accessory after the fact, and
criminally liable. Small chance of him coming out with any confession. Yet
he was the connecting link. Must be.</p>
<p>On his third reading the reporter began to visualize the human elements of
the fight to save the boy; he saw moving before him the whole pitiful
struggle; the indomitable ranch manager, his heart-breaking struggle with
the blizzard, the shooting of his horse, the careful disarming of
suspicion, and later the intrepid woman, daring that night ride through
snow that had sent the posse back to its firesides to the boy, locked in
the cabin and raving.</p>
<p>His mind was busy as he packed his suitcase. Already he had forgotten his
compunctions of the early morning; he moved about methodically,
calculating roughly what expense money he would need, and the line of
attack, if any, required at the office. Between Norada and that old brick
house at Haverly lay his story. Ten years of it. He was closing his bag
when he remembered the little girl in the blue dress, at the theater. He
straightened and scowled. After a moment he snapped the bag shut. Damn it
all, if Clark had chosen to tie up with a girl, that was on Clark's
conscience, not his.</p>
<p>But he was vaguely uncomfortable.</p>
<p>"It's a queer world, Joe," he observed to the waiter, who had come in for
the breakfast dishes.</p>
<p>"Yes, sir. It is that," said Joe.</p>
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