The First Clue
They did not refer to the incidents
of that odd reception in New York until they had located
a small hotel for themselves, not three blocks away.
It was no cheaper, but they found a pleasant room,
clean and with electric lights. It was not until
they had bathed and were propped up in their beds
for a good-night smoke, which cow-punchers love, that
Bill Gregg asked: “And what gave you the
tip, Ronicky?”
“I dunno. In my business
you got to learn to watch faces, Bill. Suppose
you sit in at a five-handed game of poker. One
gent says everything with his face, while he’s
picking up his cards. Another gent don’t
say a thing, but he shows what he’s got by the
way he moves in his chair, or the way he opens and
shuts his hands. When you said something about
our wad I seen the taxi driver blink. Right after
that he got terrible friendly and said he could steer
us to a friend of his that could put us up for the
night pretty comfortable. Well, it wasn’t
hard to put two and two together. Not that I figured
anything out. Just was walking on my toes, ready
to jump in any direction.”
As for Bill Gregg, he brooded for
a time on what he had heard, then he shook his head
and sighed. “I’d be a mighty helpless
kid in this here town if I didn’t have you along,
Ronicky,” he said.
“Nope,” insisted Ronicky.
“Long as you use another gent for a sort of
guide you feel kind of helpless. But, when you
step off for yourself, everything is pretty easy.
You just were waiting for me to take the lead, or
you’d have done just as much by yourself.”
Again Bill Gregg sighed, as he shook
his head. “If this is what New York is
like,” he said, “we’re in for a pretty
bad time. And this is what they call a civilized
town? Great guns, they need martial law and a
thousand policemen to the block to keep a gent’s
life and pocketbook safe in this town! First
gent we meet tries to bump us off or get our wad.
Don’t look like we’re going to have much
luck, Ronicky.”
“We saved our hides, I guess.”
“That’s about all.”
“And we learned something.”
“Sure.”
“Then I figure it was a pretty good night.
“Another thing, Bill. I
got an idea from that taxi gent. I figure that
whole gang of taxi men are pretty sharp in the eye.
What I mean is that we can tramp up and down along
this here East River, and now and then we’ll
talk to some taxi men that do most of their work from
stands in them parts of the town. Maybe we can
get on her trail that way. Anyways, it’s
an opening.”
“Maybe,” said Bill Gregg
dubiously. He reached under his pillow. “But
I’m sure going to sleep with a gun under my head
in this town!” With this remark he settled himself
for repose and presently was snoring loudly.
Ronicky presented a brave face to
the morning and at once started with Bill Gregg to
tour along the East River. That first day Ronicky
insisted that they simply walk over the whole ground,
so as to become fairly familiar with the scale of
their task. They managed to make the trip before
night and returned to the hotel, footsore from the
hard, hot pavements. There was something unkindly
and ungenerous in those pavements, it seemed to Ronicky.
He was discovering to his great amazement that the
loneliness of the mountain desert is nothing at all
compared to the loneliness of the Manhattan crowd.
Two very gloomy and silent cow-punchers
ate their dinner that night and went to bed early.
But in the morning they began the actual work of their
campaign. It was an arduous labor. It meant
interviewing in every district one or two storekeepers,
and asking the mail carriers for “Caroline Smith,”
and showing the picture to taxi drivers. These
latter were the men, insisted Ronicky, who would eventually
bring them to Caroline Smith. “Because,
if they’ve ever drove a girl as pretty as that,
they’ll remember for quite a while.”
“But half of these gents ain’t
going to talk to us, even if they know,” Bill
Gregg protested, after he had been gruffly refused
an answer a dozen times in the first morning.
“Some of ’em won’t
talk,” admitted Ronicky, “but that’s
probably because they don’t know. Take
’em by and large, most gents like to tell everything
they know, and then some!”
As a matter of fact they met with
rather more help than they wanted. In spite of
all their efforts to appear casual there was something
too romantic in this search for a girl to remain entirely
unnoticed. People whom they asked became excited
and offered them a thousand suggestions. Everybody,
it seemed, had, somewhere, somehow, heard of a Caroline
Smith living in his own block, and every one remembered
dimly having passed a girl on the street who looked
exactly like Caroline Smith. But they went resolutely
on, running down a thousand false clues and finding
at the end of each something more ludicrous than what
had gone before. Maiden ladies with many teeth
and big glasses they found; and they discovered, at
the ends of the trails on which they were advised
to go, young women and old, ugly girls and pretty
ones, but never any one who in the slightest degree
resembled Caroline Smith.
In the meantime they were working
back and forth, in their progress along the East River,
from the slums to the better residence districts.
They bought newspapers at little stationery stores
and worked up chance conversations with the clerks,
particularly girl clerks, whenever they could find
them.
“Because women have the eye
for faces,” Ronicky would say, “and, if
a girl like Caroline Smith came into the shop, she’d
be remembered for a while.”
But for ten days they labored without
a ghost of a success. Then they noticed the taxi
stands along the East Side and worked them as carefully
as they could, and it was on the evening of the eleventh
day of the search that they reached the first clue.
They had found a taxi drawn up before
a saloon, converted into an eating place, and when
they went inside they found the driver alone in the
restaurant. They worked up the conversation, as
they had done a hundred times before. Gregg produced
the picture and began showing it to Ronicky.
“Maybe the lady’s around
here,” said Ronicky, “but I’m new
in this part of town.” He took the picture
and turned to the taxi driver. “Maybe you’ve
been around this part of town and know the folks here.
Ever see this girl around?” And he passed the
picture to the other.
The taxi driver bowed his head over
it in a close scrutiny. When he looked up his
face was a blank.
“I don’t know. Lemme
see. I think I seen a girl like her the other
day, waiting for the traffic to pass at Seventy-second
and Broadway. Yep, she sure was a ringer for
this picture.” He passed the picture back,
and a moment later he finished his meal, paid his check
and went sauntering through the door.
“Quick!” said Ronicky,
the moment the chauffeur had disappeared. “Pay
the check and come along. That fellow knows something.”
Bill Gregg, greatly excited, obeyed,
and they hurried to the door of the place. They
were in time to see the taxicab lurch away from the
curb and go humming down the street, while the driver
leaned out to the side and looked back.
“He didn’t see us,” said Ronicky
confidently.
“But what did he leave for?”
“He’s gone to tell somebody,
somewhere, that we’re looking for Caroline Smith.
Come on!” He stepped out to the curb and stopped
a passing taxi. “Follow that machine and
keep a block away from it,” he ordered.
“Bootlegger?” asked the taxi driver cheerily.
“I don’t know, but just
drift along behind him till he stops. Can you
do that?”
“Watch me!”
And, with Ronicky and Bill Gregg installed
in his machine, he started smoothly on the trail.
Straight down the cross street, under
the roaring elevated tracks of Second and Third Avenues,
they passed, and on First Avenue they turned and darted
sharply south for a round dozen blocks, then went due
east and came, to a halt after a brief run.
“He’s stopped in Beekman
Place,” said the driver, jerking open the door.
“If I run in there he’ll see me.”
Ronicky stepped from the machine,
paid him and dismissed him with a word of praise for
his fine trailing. Then he stepped around the
corner.
What he saw was a little street closed
at both ends and only two or three blocks long.
It had the serene, detached air of a village a thousand
miles from any great city, with its grave rows of homely
houses standing solemnly face to face. Well to
the left, the Fifty-ninth Street Bridge swung its
great arch across the river, and it led, Ronicky knew,
to Long Island City beyond, but here everything was
cupped in the village quiet.
The machine which they had been pursuing
was drawn up on the right-hand side of the street,
looking south, and, even as Ronicky glanced around
the corner, he saw the driver leave his seat, dart
up a flight of steps and ring the bell.
Ronicky could not see who opened the
door, but, after a moment of talk, the chauffeur from
the car they had pursued was allowed to enter.
And, as he stepped across the threshold, he drew off
his cap with a touch of reverence which seemed totally
out of keeping with his character as Ronicky had seen
it.
“Bill,” he said to Gregg,
“we’ve got something. You seen him
go up those steps to that house?”
“Sure.”
Bill Gregg’s eyes were flashing
with the excitement. “That house has somebody
in it who knows Caroline Smith, and that somebody is
excited because we’re hunting for her,”
said Bill. “Maybe it holds Caroline herself.
Who can tell that? Let’s go see.”
“Wait till that taxi driver
goes. If he’d wanted us to know about Caroline
he’d of told us. He doesn’t want us
to know and he’d maybe take it pretty much to
heart if he knew we’d followed him.”
“What he thinks don’t
worry me none. I can tend to three like him.”
“Maybe, but you couldn’t
handle thirty, and coyotes like him hunt in packs,
always. The best fighting pair of coyotes that
ever stepped wouldn’t have no chance against
a lofer wolf, but no lofer wolf could stand off a
dozen or so of the little devils. So keep clear
of these little rat-faced gents, Bill. They hunt
in crowds.”
Presently they saw the chauffeur coming
down the steps. Even at that distance it could
be seen that he was smiling broadly, and that he was
intensely pleased with himself and the rest of the
world.
Starting up his machine, he swung
it around dexterously, as only New York taxi drivers
can, and sped down the street by the way he had come,
passing Gregg and Ronicky, who had flattened themselves
against the fence to keep from being seen. They
observed that, while he controlled the car with one
hand, with the other he was examining the contents
of his wallet.
“Money for him!” exclaimed
Ronicky, as soon as the car was out of sight around
the corner. “This begins to look pretty
thick, Bill. Because he goes and tells them that
he’s taken us off the trail they not only thank
him, but they pay him for it. And, by the face
of him, as he went by, they pay him pretty high.
Bill, it’s easy to figure that they don’t
want any friend near Caroline Smith, and most like
they don’t even want us near that house.”
“I only want to go near once,”
said Bill Gregg. “I just want to find out
if the girl is there.”
“Go break in on ’em?”
“Break in! Ronicky, that’s burglary!”
“Sure it is.”
“Ill just ask for Caroline Smith at the door.”
“Try it.”
The irony made Bill Gregg stop in
the very act of leaving and glance back. But
he went on again resolutely and stamped up the steps
to the front door of the house.
It was opened to him almost at once
by a woman, for Bill’s hat come off. For
a moment he was explaining. Then there was a pause
in his gestures, as she made the reply. Finally
he spoke again, but was cut short by the loud banging
of the door.
Bill Gregg drew himself up rigidly
and slowly replaced the hat on his head. If a
man had turned that trick on him, a .45-caliber slug
would have gone crashing through the door in search
of him to teach him a Westerner’s opinion of
such manners.
Ronicky Doone could not help smiling
to himself, as he saw Bill Gregg stump stiffly down
the stairs, limping a little on his wounded leg, and
come back with a grave dignity to the starting point.
He was still crimson to the roots of his hair.
“Let’s start,” he
said. “If that happens again I’ll
be doing a couple of murders in this here little town
and getting myself hung.”
“What happened?”
“An old hag jerked open the
door after I rang the bell. I asked her nice
and polite if a lady named Caroline Smith was in the
house? ‘No,’ says she, ‘and
if she was, what’s that to you?’ I told
her I’d come a long ways to see Caroline.
’Then go a long ways back without seeing Caroline,’
says this withered old witch, and she banged the door
right in my face. Man, I’m still seeing
red. Them words of the old woman were whips,
and every one of them sure took off the hide.
I used to think that old lady Moore in Martindale
was a pretty nasty talker, but this one laid over
her a mile. But we’re beat, Ronicky.
You couldn’t get by that old woman with a thousand
men.”
“Maybe not,” said Ronicky
Doone, “but we’re going to try. Did
you look across the street and see a sign a while
ago?”
“Which side?”
“Side right opposite Caroline’s house.”
“Sure. ‘Room To Rent.’”
“I thought so. Then that’s our room.”
“Eh?”
“That’s our room, partner,
and right at the front window over the street one
of us is going to keep watch day and night, till we
make sure that Caroline Smith don’t live in
that house. Is that right?”
“That’s a great idea!” He started
away from the fence.
“Wait!” Ronicky caught
him by the shoulder and held him back. “We’ll
wait till night and then go and get that room.
If Caroline is in the house yonder, and they know
we’re looking for her, it’s easy that she
won’t be allowed to come out the front of the
house so long as we’re perched up at the window,
waiting to see her. We’ll come back tonight
and start waiting.”