A Bold Venture
But how to reach that man of the smile
and the sneer, how, above all, to make sure that he
was really the power controlling Caroline Smith, were
problems which could not be solved in a moment.
Bill Gregg contributed one helpful
idea. “We’ve waited a week to see
her; now that we’ve seen her let’s keep
on waiting,” he said, and Ronicky agreed.
They resumed the vigil, but it had
already been prolonged for such a length of time that
it was impossible to keep it as strictly as it had
been observed before. Bill Gregg, outworn by the
strain of the long watching and the shock of the disappointment
of that day, went completely to pieces and in the
early evening fell asleep. But Ronicky Doone
went out for a light dinner and came back after dark,
refreshed and eager for action, only to find that
Bill Gregg was incapable of being roused. He
slept like a dead man.
Ronicky went to the window and sat
alone. Few of the roomers were home in the house
opposite. They were out for the evening, or for
dinner, at least, and the face of the building was
dark and cold, the light from the street lamp glinting
unevenly on the windowpanes. He had sat there
staring at the old house so many hours in the past
that it was beginning to be like a face to him, to
be studied as one might study a human being.
And the people it sheltered, the old hag who kept the
door, the sneering man and Caroline Smith, were to
the house like the thoughts behind a man’s face,
an inscrutable face. But, if one cannot pry behind
the mask of the human, at least it is possible to enter
a house and find—
At this point in his thoughts Ronicky
Doone rose with a quickening pulse. Suppose he,
alone, entered that house tonight by stealth, like
a burglar, and found what he could find?
He brushed the idea away. Instantly
it returned to him. The danger of the thing,
and danger there certainly would be in the vicinity
of him of the sardonic profile, appealed to him more
and more keenly. Moreover, he must go alone.
The heavy-footed Gregg would be a poor helpmate on
such an errand of stealth.
Ronicky turned away from the window,
turned back to it and looked once more at the tall
front of the building opposite; then he started to
get ready for the expedition.
The preparations were simple.
He put on a pair of low shoes, very light and with
rubber heels. In them he could move with the softness
and the speed of a cat. Next he dressed in a dark-gray
suit, knowing that this is the color hardest to see
at night. His old felt hat he had discarded long
before in favor of the prevailing style of the average
New Yorker. For this night expedition he put on
a cap which drew easily over his ears and had a long
visor, shadowing the upper part of his face.
Since it might be necessary to remain as invisible
as possible, he obscured the last bit of white that
showed in his costume, with a black neck scarf.
Then he looked in the glass.
A lean face looked back at him, the eyes obscured
under the cap, a stern, resolute face, with a distinct
threat about it. He hardly recognized himself
in the face in the glass.
He went to his suit case and brought
out his favorite revolver. It was a long and
ponderous weapon to be hidden beneath his clothes,
but to Ronicky Doone that gun was a friend well tried
in many an adventure. His fingers went deftly
over it. It literally fell to pieces at his touch,
and he examined it cautiously and carefully in all
its parts, looking to the cartridges before he assembled
the weapon again. For, if it became necessary
to shoot this evening, it would be necessary to shoot
to kill.
He then strolled down the street,
passing the house opposite, with a close scrutiny.
A narrow, paved sidewalk ran between it and the house
on its right, and all the windows opening on this small
court were dark. Moreover, the house which was
his quarry was set back several feet from the street,
an indentation which would completely hide him from
anyone who looked from the street. Ronicky made
up his mind at once. He went to the end of the
block, crossed over and, turning back on the far side
of the street, slipped into the opening between the
houses.
Instantly he was in a dense darkness.
For five stories above him the two buildings towered,
shutting out the starlight. Looking straight up
he found only a faint reflection of the glow of the
city lights in the sky.
At last he found a cellar window.
He tried it and found it locked, but a little maneuvering
with his knife enabled him to turn the catch at the
top of the lower sash. Then he raised it slowly
and leaned into the blackness. Something incredibly
soft, tenuous, clinging, pressed at once against his
face. He started back with a shudder and brushed
away the remnants of a big spider web.
Then he leaned in again. It was
an intense blackness. The moment his head was
in the opening the sense of listening, which is ever
in a house, came to him. There were the strange,
musty, underground odors which go with cellars and
make men think of death.
However, he must not stay here indefinitely.
To be seen leaning in at this window was as bad as
to be seen in the house itself. He slipped through
the opening at once, and beneath his feet there was
a soft crunching of coal. He had come directly
into the bin. Turning, he closed the window,
for that would be a definite clue to any one who might
pass down the alley.
As he stood surrounded by that hostile
silence, that evil darkness, he grew somewhat accustomed
to the dimness, and he could make out not definite
objects, but ghostly outlines. Presently he took
out the small electric torch which he carried and
examined his surroundings.
The bin had not yet received the supply
of winter coal and was almost empty. He stepped
out of it into a part of the basement which had been
used apparently for storing articles not worth keeping,
but too good to be thrown away—an American
habit of thrift. Several decrepit chairs and
rickety cabinets and old console tables were piled
together in a tangled mass. Ronicky looked at
them with an unaccountable shudder, as if he read
in them the history of the ruin and fall and death
of many an old inhabitant of this house. It seemed
to his excited imagination that the man with the sneer
had been the cause of all the destruction and would
be the cause of more.
He passed back through the basement
quickly, eager to be out of the musty odors and his
gloomy thoughts. He found the storerooms, reached
the kitchen stairs and ascended at once. Halfway
up the stairs, the door above him suddenly opened
and light poured down at him. He saw the flying
figure of a cat, a broom behind it, a woman behind
the broom.
“Whisht! Out of here, dirty beast!”
The cat thudded against Ronicky’s
knee, screeched and disappeared below; the woman of
the broom shaded her eyes and peered down the steps.
“A queer cat!” she muttered, then slammed
the door.
It seemed certain to Ronicky that
she must have seen him, yet he knew that the blackness
of the cellar had probably half blinded her.
Besides, he had drawn as far as possible to one side
of the steps, and in this way she might easily have
overlooked him.
In the meantime it seemed that this
way of entering the house was definitely blocked.
He paused a moment to consider other plans, but, while
he stayed there in thought, he heard the rattle of
pans. It decided him to stay a while longer.
Apparently she was washing the cooking utensils, and
that meant that she was near the close of her work
for the evening. In fact, the rim of light, which
showed between the door frame and the door, suddenly
snapped out, and he heard her footsteps retreating.
Still he delayed a moment or two,
for fear she might return to take something which
she had forgotten. But the silence deepened above
him, and voices were faintly audible toward the front
of the house.
That decided Ronicky. He opened
the door, blessing the well-oiled hinges which kept
it from making any noise, and let a shaft from his
pocket lantern flicker across the kitchen floor.
The light glimmered on the newly scrubbed surface
and showed him a door to his right, opening into the
main part of the house.
He passed through it at once and sighed
with relief when his foot touched the carpet on the
hall beyond. He noted, too, that there was no
sign of a creak from the boards beneath his tread.
However old that house might be, he was a noble carpenter
who laid the flooring, Ronicky thought, as he slipped
through the semi-gloom. For there was a small
hall light toward the front, and it gave him an uncertain
illumination, even at the rear of the passage.
Now that he was definitely committed
to the adventure he wondered more and more what he
could possibly gain by it. But still he went on,
and, in spite of the danger, it is doubtful if Ronicky
would have willingly changed places with any man in
the world at that moment.
At least there was not the slightest
sense in remaining on the lower floor of the house.
He slipped down the shadow of the main stairs, swiftly
circled through the danger of the light of the lower
hall lamp and started his ascent. Still the carpet
muffled every sound which he made in climbing, and
the solid construction of the house did not betray
him with a single creaking noise.
He reached the first hall. This,
beyond doubt, was where he would find the room of
the man who sneered—the archenemy, as Ronicky
Doone was beginning to think of him. A shiver
passed through his lithe, muscular body at the thought
of that meeting.
He opened the first door to his left.
It was a small closet for brooms and dust cloths and
such things. Determining to be methodical he went
to the extreme end of the hall and tried that door.
It was locked, but, while his hand was still on the
knob, turning it in disappointment, a door, higher
up in the house, opened and a hum of voices passed
out to him. They grew louder, they turned to the
staircase from the floor above and commenced to descend
at a running pace. Three or four men at least,
there must be, by the sound, and perhaps more!
Ronicky started for the head of the
stairs to make his retreat, but, just as he reached
there, the party turned into the hall and confronted
him.