FOR a short time the sounds
of cruel exultation came over from Flanagan’s;
then all was still.
“Sal’s put her mark on
you,” said Norah, looking steadily into Pinky’s
face, and laughing in a cold, half-amused way.
Pinky raised her hand to her swollen
cheek. “Does it look very bad?” she
asked.
“Spoils your beauty some.”
“Will it get black?”
“Shouldn’t wonder.
But what can’t be helped, can’t. You’ll
mind your own business next time, and keep out of
Sal’s way. She’s dangerous.
What’s the matter?”
“Got a sort of chill,”
replied the girl, who from nervous reaction was beginning
to shiver.
“Oh, want something to warm
you up.” Norah brought out a bottle of
spirits. Pinky poured a glass nearly half full,
added some water, and then drank off the fiery mixture.
“None of your common stuff,”
said Norah, with a smile, as Pinky smacked her lips.
The girl drew her handkerchief from her pocket, and
as she did so a piece of paper dropped on the floor.
“Oh, there it is!” she
exclaimed, light flashing into her face. “Going
to make a splendid hit. Just look at them rows.”
Norah threw an indifferent glance on the paper.
“They’re lucky, every
one of them,” said Pinky. “Going to
put half a dollar on each row—sure to make
a hit.”
The queen gave one of her peculiar shrugs.
“Going to break Sam McFaddon,”
continued Pinky, her spirits rising under the influence
of Norah’s treat.
“Soft heads don’t often
break hard rocks,” returned the woman, with
a covert sneer.
“That’s an insult!”
cried Pinky, on whom the liquor she had just taken
was beginning to have a marked effect, “and I
won’t stand an insult from you or anybody else.”
“Well, I wouldn’t if I
was you,” returned Norah, coolly. A hard
expression began settling about her mouth.
“And I don’t mean to.
I’m as good as you are, any day!”
“You may be a great deal better,
for all I care,” answered Norah. “Only
take my advice, and keep a civil tongue in your head.”
There was a threatening undertone in the woman’s
voice. She drew her tall person more erect, and
shook herself like a wild beast aroused from inaction.
Pinky was too blind to see the change
that had come so suddenly. A stinging retort
fell from her lips. But the words had scarcely
died on the air ere she found herself in the grip
of vice-like hands. Resistance was of no more
avail than if she had been a child. In what seemed
but a moment of time she was pushed back through the
door and dropped upon the pavement. Then the door
shut, and she was alone on the outside—no,
not alone, for scores of the denizens who huddle together
in that foul region were abroad, and gathered around
her as quickly as flies about a heap of offal, curious,
insolent and aggressive. As she arose to her
feet she found herself hemmed in by a jeering crowd.
“Ho! it’s Pinky Swett!”
cried a girl, pressing toward her. “Hi,
Pinky! what’s the matter? What’s up?”
“Norah pitched her out!
I saw it!” screamed a boy, one of the young
thieves that harbored in the quarter.
“It’s a lie!” Pinky
answered back as she confronted the crowd.
At this moment another boy, who had
come up behind Pinky, gave her dress so violent a
jerk that she fell over backward on the pavement,
striking her head on a stone and cutting it badly.
She lay there, unable to rise, the crowd laughing
with as much enjoyment as if witnessing a dog-fight.
“Give her a dose of mud!”
shouted one of the boys; and almost as soon as the
words were out of his mouth her face was covered with
a paste of filthy dirt from the gutter. This,
instead of exciting pity, only gave a keener zest
to the show. The street rang with shouts and
peals of merriment, bringing a new and larger crowd
to see the fun. With them came one or two policemen.
Seeing that it was only a drunken
woman, they pushed back the crowd and raised her to
her feet. As they did so the blood streamed from
the back of her head and stained her dress to the waist.
She was taken to the nearest station-house.
At eleven o’clock on the next
morning, punctual to the minute, came Mrs. Dinneford
to the little third-story room in which she had met
Mrs. Bray. She repeated her rap at the door before
it was opened, and noticed that a key was turned in
the lock.
“You have seen the woman?”
she said as she took an offered seat, coming at once
to the object of her visit.
“Yes.”
“Well?”
“I gave her the money.”
“Well?”
Mrs. Bray shook her head:
“Afraid I can’t do much with her.”
“Why?” an anxious expression coming into
Mrs. Dinneford’s face.
“These people suspect everybody;
there is no honor nor truth in them, and they judge
every one by themselves. She half accused me of
getting a larger amount of money from you, and putting
her off with the paltry sum of thirty dollars.”
Mrs. Bray looked exceedingly hurt and annoyed.
“Threatened,” she went
on, “to go to you herself—didn’t
want any go-betweens nor brokers. I expected
to hear you say that she’d been at your house
this morning.”
“Good Gracious! no!” Mrs.
Dinneford’s face was almost distorted with alarm.
“It’s the way with all
these people,” coolly remarked Mrs. Bray.
“You’re never safe with them.”
“Did you hint at her leaving
the city?—going to New Orleans, for instance?”
“Oh dear, no! She isn’t
to be managed in that way—is deeper and
more set than I thought. The fact is, Mrs. Dinneford”—and
Mrs. Bray lowered her voice and looked shocked and
mysterious—“I’m beginning to
suspect her as being connected with a gang.”
“With a gang? What kind
of a gang?” Mrs. Dinneford turned slightly pale.
“A gang of thieves. She
isn’t the right thing; I found that out long
ago. You remember what I said when you gave her
the child. I told you that she was not a good
woman, and that it was a cruel thing to put a helpless,
new-born baby into her hands.”
“Never mind about that.”
Mrs. Dinneford waved her hand impatiently. “The
baby’s out of her hands, so far as that is concerned.
A gang of thieves!”
“Yes, I’m ’most
sure of it. Goes to people’s houses on one
excuse and another, and finds out where the silver
is kept and how to get in. You don’t know
half the wickedness that’s going on. So
you see it’s no use trying to get her away.”
Mrs. Bray was watching the face of
her visitor with covert scrutiny, gauging, as she
did so, by its weak alarms, the measure of her power
over her.
“Dreadful! dreadful!”
ejaculated Mrs. Dinneford, with dismay.
“It’s bad enough,”
said Mrs. Bray, “and I don’t see the end
of it. She’s got you in her power, and
no mistake, and she isn’t one of the kind to
give up so splendid an advantage. I’m only
surprised that she’s kept away so long.”
“What’s to be done about
it?” asked Mrs. Dinneford, her alarm and distress
increasing.
“Ah! that’s more than
I can tell,” coolly returned Mrs. Bray.
“One thing is certain—I don’t
want to have anything more to do with her. It
isn’t safe to let her come here. You’ll
have to manage her yourself.”
“No, no, no, Mrs. Bray!
You mustn’t desert me!” answered Mrs.
Dinneford, her face growing pallid with fear.
“Money is of no account. I’ll pay
’most anything, reasonable or unreasonable, to
have her kept away.”
And she drew out her pocket-book while
speaking. At this moment there came two distinct
raps on the door. It had been locked after Mrs.
Dinneford’s entrance. Mrs. Bray started
and changed countenance, turning her face quickly
from observation. But she was self-possessed
in an instant. Rising, she said in a whisper,
“Go silently into the next room,
and remain perfectly still. I believe that’s
the woman now. I’ll manage her as best I
can.”
Almost as quick as thought, Mrs. Dinneford
vanished through a door that led into an adjoining
room, and closing it noiselessly, turned a key that
stood in the lock, then sat down, trembling with nervous
alarm. The room in which she found herself was
small, and overlooked the street; it was scantily
furnished as a bed-room. In one corner, partly
hid by a curtain that hung from a hoop fastened to
the wall, was an old wooden chest, such as are used
by sailors. Under the bed, and pushed as far
back as possible, was another of the same kind.
The air of the room was close, and she noticed the
stale smell of a cigar.
A murmur of voices from the room she
had left so hastily soon reached her ears; but though
she listened intently, standing close to the door,
she was not able to distinguish a word. Once or
twice she was sure that she heard the sound of a man’s
voice. It was nearly a quarter of an hour by
her watch—it seemed two hours—before
Mrs. Bray’s visitor or visitors retired; then
there came a light rap on the door. She opened
it, and stood face to face again with the dark-eyed
little woman.
“You kept me here a long time,”
said Mrs. Dinneford, with ill-concealed impatience.
“No longer than I could help,”
replied Mrs. Bray. “Affairs of this kind
are not settled in a minute.”
“Then it was that miserable woman?”
“Yes.”
“Well, what did you make out of her?”
“Not much; she’s too greedy.
The taste of blood has sharpened her appetite.”
“What does she want?”
“She wants two hundred dollars
paid into her hand to-day, and says that if the money
isn’t here by sundown, you’ll have a visit
from her in less than an hour afterward.”
“Will that be the end of it?”
A sinister smile curved Mrs. Bray’s lips slightly.
“More than I can say,” she answered.
“Two hundred dollars?”
“Yes. She put the amount
higher, but I told her she’d better not go for
too big a slice or she might get nothing—that
there was such a thing as setting the police after
her. She laughed at this in such a wicked, sneering
way that I felt my flesh creep, and said she knew
the police, and some of their masters, too, and wasn’t
afraid of them. She’s a dreadful woman;”
and Mrs. Bray shivered in a very natural manner.
“If I thought this would be
the last of it!” said Mrs. Dinneford as she
moved about the room in a disturbed way, and with an
anxious look on her face.
“Perhaps,” suggested her
companion, “it would be best for you to grapple
with this thing at the outset—to take our
vampire by the throat and strangle her at once.
The knife is the only remedy for some forms of disease.
If left to grow and prey upon the body, they gradually
suck away its life and destroy it in the end.”
“If I only knew how to do it,”
replied Mrs. Dinneford. “If I could only
get her in my power, I’d make short works of
her.” Her eyes flashed with a cruel light.
“It might be done.”
“How?”
“Mr. Dinneford knows the chief of police.”
The light went out of Mrs. Dinneford’s eyes:
“It can’t be done in that way, and you
know it as well as I do.”
Mrs. Dinneford turned upon Mrs. Bray
sharply, and with a gleam of suspicion in her face.
“I don’t know any other
way, unless you go to the chief yourself,” replied
Mrs. Bray, coolly. “There is no protection
in cases like this except through the law. Without
police interference, you are wholly in this woman’s
power.”
Mrs. Dinneford grew very pale.
“It is always dangerous,”
went on Mrs. Bray, “to have anything to do with
people of this class. A woman who for hire will
take a new-born baby and sell it to a beggar-woman
will not stop at anything. It is very unfortunate
that you are mixed up with her.”
“I’m indebted to you for
the trouble,” replied. Mrs. Dinneford, with
considerable asperity of manner. “You ought
to have known something about the woman before employing
her in a delicate affair of this kind.”
“Saints don’t hire themselves
to put away new-born babies,” retorted Mrs.
Bray, with an ugly gurgle in her throat. “I
told you at the time that she was a bad woman, and
have not forgotten your answer.”
“What did I answer?”
“That she might be the devil for all you cared!”
“You are mistaken.”
“No; I repeat your very words.
They surprised and shocked me at the time, and I have
not forgotten them. People who deal with the devil
usually have the devil to pay; and your case, it seems,
is not to be an exception.”
Mrs. Bray had assumed an air of entire equality with
her visitor.
A long silence followed, during which
Mrs. Dinneford walked the floor with the quick, restless
motions of a caged animal.
“How long do you think two hundred
dollars will satisfy her?” she asked, at length,
pausing and turning to her companion.
“It is impossible for me to
say,” was answered; “not long, unless
you can manage to frighten her off; you must threaten
hard.”
Another silence followed.
“I did not expect to be called
on for so large a sum,” Mrs. Dinneford said
at length, in a husky voice, taking out her pocket-book
as she spoke. “I have only a hundred dollars
with me. Give her that, and put her off until
to-morrow.”
“I will do the best I can with
her,” replied Mrs. Bray, reaching out her hand
for the money, “but I think it will be safer
for you to let me have the balance to-day. She
will, most likely, take it into her head that I have
received the whole sum from you, and think I am trying
to cheat her. In that case she will be as good
as her word, and come down on you.”
“Mrs. Bray!” exclaimed
Mrs. Dinneford, suspicion blazing from her eyes.
“Mrs. Bray!”—and she turned
upon her and caught her by the arms with a fierce
grip—“as I live, you are deceiving
me. There is no woman but yourself. You
are the vampire!”
She held the unresisting little woman
in her vigorous grasp for some moments, gazing at
her in stern and angry accusation.
Mrs. Bray stood very quit and with
scarcely a change of countenance until this outburst
of passion had subsided. She was still holding
the money she had taken from Mrs. Dinneford. As
the latter released her she extended her hand, saying,
in a low resolute voice, in which not the faintest
thrill of anger could be detected,
“Take your money.”
She waited for a moment, and then let the little roll
of bank-bills fall at Mrs. Dinneford’s feet and
turned away.
Mrs. Dinneford had made a mistake,
and she saw it—saw that she was now more
than ever in the power of this woman, whether she was
true or false. If false, more fatally in her
power.
At this dead-lock in the interview
between these women there came a diversion. The
sound of feet was heard on the stairs, then a hurrying
along the narrow passage; a hand was on the door, but
the key had been prudently turned on the inside.
With a quick motion, Mrs. Bray waved
her hand toward the adjoining chamber. Mrs. Dinneford
did not hesitate, but glided in noiselessly, shutting
and locking the door behind her.
“Pinky Swett!” exclaimed
Mrs. Bray, in a low voice, putting her finger to her
lips, as she admitted her visitor, at the same time
giving a warning glance toward the other room.
Eyeing her from head to foot, she added, “Well,
you are an object!”
Pinky had drawn aside a close veil,
exhibiting a bruised and swollen face. A dark
band lay under one of her eyes, and there was a cut
with red, angry margins on the cheek.
“You are an object,” repeated
Mrs. Bray as Pinky moved forward into the room.
“Well, I am, and no mistake,”
answered Pinky, with a light laugh. She had been
drinking enough to overcome the depression and discomfort
of her feelings consequent on the hard usage she had
received and a night in one of the city station-houses.
“Who’s in there?”
Mrs. Bray’s finger went again
to her lips. “No matter,” was replied.
“You must go away until the coast is clear.
Come back in half an hour.”
And she hurried Pinky out of the door,
locking it as the girl retired. When Mrs. Dinneford
came out of the room into which he had gone so hastily,
the roll of bank-notes still lay upon the floor.
Mrs. Bray had prudently slipped them into her pocket
before admitting Pinky, but as soon as she was alone
had thrown them down again.
The face of Mrs. Dinneford was pale,
and exhibited no ordinary signs of discomfiture and
anxiety.
“Who was that?” she asked.
“A friend,” replied Mrs. Bray, in a cold,
self-possessed manner.
A few moments of embarrassed silence
followed. Mrs. Bray crossed the room, touching
with her foot the bank-bills, as if they were of no
account to her.
“I am half beside myself,” said Mrs. Dinneford.
Mrs. Bray made no response, did not even turn toward
her visitor.
“I spoke hastily.”
“A vampire!” Mrs. Bray
swept round upon her fiercely. “A blood-sucker!”
and she ground her teeth in well-feigned passion.
Mrs. Dinneford sat down trembling.
“Take your money and go,”
said Mrs. Bray, and she lifted the bills from the
floor and tossed them into her visitor’s lap.
“I am served right. It was evil work, and
good never comes of evil.”
But Mrs. Dinneford did not stir.
To go away at enmity with this woman was, so far as
she could see, to meet exposure and unutterable disgrace.
Anything but that.
“I shall leave this money, trusting
still to your good offices,” she said, at length,
rising. Her manner was much subdued. “I
spoke hastily, in a sort of blind desperation.
We should not weigh too carefully the words that are
extorted by pain or fear. In less than an hour
I will send you a hundred dollars more.”
Mrs. Dinneford laid the bank-bills
on a table, and then moved to the door, but she dared
not leave in this uncertainty. Looking back, she
said, with an appealing humility of voice and manner
foreign to her character,
“Let us be friends still, Mrs.
Bray; we shall gain nothing by being enemies.
I can serve you, and you can serve me. My suspicions
were ill founded. I felt wild and desperate,
and hardly knew what I was saying.”
She stood anxiously regarding the
little dark-eyed woman, who did not respond by word
or movement.
Taking her hand from the door she
was about opening, Mrs. Dinneford came back into the
room, and stood close to Mrs. Bray:
“Shall I send you the money?”
“You can do as you please,” was replied,
with chilling indifference.
“Are you implacable?”
“I am not used to suspicion,
much less denunciation and assault. A vampire!
Do you know what that means?”
“It meant, as used by me, only
madness. I did not know what I was saying.
It was a cry of pain—nothing more.
Consider how I stand, how much I have at stake, in
what a wretched affair I have become involved.
It is all new to me, and I am bewildered and at fault.
Do not desert me in this crisis. I must have
some one to stand between me and this woman; and if
you step aside, to whom can I go?”
Mrs. Bray relented just a little.
Mrs. Dinneford pleaded and humiliated herself, and
drifted farther into the toils of her confederate.
“You are not rich, Mrs. Bray,”
she said, at parting, “independent in spirit
as you are. I shall add a hundred dollars for
your own use; and if ever you stand in need, you will
know where to find an unfailing friend.”
Mrs. Bray put up her hands, and replied,
“No, no, no; don’t think of such a thing.
I am not mercenary. I never serve a friend for
money.”
But Mrs. Dinneford heard the “yes”
which flushed into the voice that said “no.”
She was not deceived.
A rapid change passed over Mrs. Bray
on the instant her visitor left the room. Her
first act was to lock the door; her next, to take the
roll of bank-bills from the table and put it into her
pocket. Over her face a gleam of evil satisfaction
had swept.
“Got you all right now, my lady!”
fell with a chuckle from her lips. “A vampire,
ha!” The chuckle was changed for a kind of hiss.
“Well, have it so. There is rich blood
in your veins, and it will be no fault of mine if
I do not fatten upon it. As for pity, you shall
have as much of it as you gave to that helpless baby.
Saints don’t work in this kind of business,
and I’m not a saint.”
And she chuckled and hissed and muttered
to herself, with many signs of evil satisfaction.