Disarming Suspicion
From the house across the street Caroline
Smith slipped out upon the pavement and glanced warily
about her. The street was empty, quieter and
more villagelike than ever, yet she knew perfectly
well that John Mark had not allowed her to be gone
so long without keeping watch over her. Somewhere
from the blank faces of those houses across the street
his spies kept guard over her movements. Here
she glanced sharply over her shoulder, and it seemed
to her that a shadow flitted into the door of a basement,
farther up the street.
At that she fled and did not stop
running until she was at the door of the house of
Mark. Since all was quiet, up and down the street,
she paused again, her hand upon the knob. To
enter meant to step back into the life which she hated.
There had been a time when she had almost loved the
life to which John Mark introduced her; there had been
a time when she had rejoiced in the nimbleness of
her fingers which had enabled her to become an adept
as a thief. And, by so doing, she had kept the
life of her brother from danger, she verily believed.
She was still saving him, and, so long as she worked
for John Mark, she knew that her brother was safe,
yet she hesitated long at the door.
It would be only the work of a moment
to flee back to the man she loved, tell him that she
could not and dared not stay longer with the master
criminal, and beg him to take her West to a clean life.
Her hand fell from the knob, but she raised it again
immediately.
It would not do to flee, so long as
John Mark had power of life or death over her brother.
If Ronicky Doone, as he promised, was able to inspire
her brother with the courage to flee from New York,
give up his sporting life and seek refuge in some
far-off place, then, indeed, she would go with Bill
Gregg to the ends of the earth and mock the cunning
fiend who had controlled her life so long.
The important thing now was to disarm
him of all suspicion, make him feel that she had only
visited Bill Gregg in order to say farewell to him.
With this in her mind she opened the front door and
stepped into the hall, always lighted with ominous
dimness. That gloom fell about her like the visible
presence of John Mark.
A squat, powerful figure glided out
of the doorway to the right. It was Harry Morgan,
and the side of his face was swathed in bandages, so
that he had to twist his mouth violently in order
to speak.
“The chief,” he said abruptly.
“Beat it quick to his room. He wants you.”
“Why?” asked Caroline,
hoping to extract some grain or two of information
from the henchman.
“Listen, kid,” said the
sullen criminal. “D’you think I’m
a nut to blow what I know? You beat it, and he’ll
tell you what he wants.”
The violence of this language, however,
had given her clues enough to the workings of the
chief’s mind. She had always been a favored
member of the gang, and the men had whistled attendance
on her hardly less than upon Ruth Tolliver herself.
This sudden harshness in the language of Harry Morgan
told her that too much was known, or guessed.
A sudden weakness came over her.
“I’m going out,” she said, turning
to Harry Morgan who had sauntered over to the front
door.
“Are you?” he asked.
“I’m going to take one
turn more up the block. I’m not sleepy yet,”
she repeated and put her hand on the knob of the door.
“Not so you could notice it,
you ain’t,” retorted Morgan. “We’ve
taken lip enough from you, kid. Your day’s
over. Go up and see what the chief has to say,
but you ain’t going through this door unless
you walk over me.”
“Those are orders?” she
asked, stepping back, with her heart turning cold.
“Think I’m doing this on my own hook?”
She turned slowly to the stairs.
With her hand on the balustrade she decided to try
the effect of one personal appeal. Nerving herself
she whirled and ran to Harry Morgan. “Harry,”
she whispered, “let me go out till I’ve
worked up my courage. You know he’s terrible
to face when he’s angry. And I’m
afraid, Harry—I’m terribly afraid!”
“Are you?” asked Morgan.
“Well, you ain’t the first. Go and
take your medicine like the rest of us have done,
time and time running.”
There was no help for it. She
went wearily up the stairs to the room of the master
thief. There she gave the accustomed rap with
the proper intervals. Instantly the cold, soft
voice, which she knew and hated so, called to her
to enter.
She found him in the act of putting
aside his book. He was seated in a deep easy-chair;
a dressing gown of silk and a pair of horn-rimmed
spectacles gave him a look of owlish wisdom, with a
touch of the owl’s futility of expression, likewise.
He rose, as usual, with all his courtesy. She
thought at first, as he showed her to a chair, that
he was going to take his usual damnable tack of pretended
ignorance in order to see how much she would confess.
However, tonight this was not his plan of battle.
The moment she was seated, he removed
his spectacles, drew a chair close to hers and sat
down, leaning far forward. “Now, my dear,
foolish girl,” said the master thief, smiling
benevolently upon her, “what have you been doing
tonight to make us all miserable?”
She knew at once that he was aware
of every move she had made, from the first to the
last. It gave her firmness to tell the lie with
suavity. “It’s a queer yarn, John,”
she said.
“I’m used to queer yarns,”
he answered. “But where have you been all
this time? It was only to take five minutes, I
thought.”
She made herself laugh. “That’s
because you don’t know Ronicky Doone, John.”
“I’m getting to know him,
however,” said the master. “And, before
I’m done, I hope to know him very well indeed.”
“Well, he has a persuasive tongue.”
“I think I noticed that for myself.”
“And, when he told me how poor
Bill Gregg had come clear across the continent—”
“No wonder you were touched,
my dear. New Yorkers won’t travel so far,
will they? Not for a girl, I mean.”
“Hardly! But Ronicky Doone
made it such a sad affair that I promised I’d
go across and see Bill Gregg.”
“Not in his room?”
“I knew you wouldn’t let him come to see
me here.”
“Never presuppose what I’ll
do. But go on—I’m interested—very.
Just as much as if Ronicky Doone himself were telling
me.”
She eyed him shrewdly, but, if there
were any deception in him, he hid it well. She
could not find the double meaning that must have been
behind his words. “I went there, however,”
she said, “because I was sorry for him, John.
If you had seen you’d have been sorry, too, or
else you would have laughed; I could hardly keep from
it at first.”
“I suppose he took you in his arms at once?”
“I think he wanted to.
Then, of course, I told him at once why I had come.”
“Which was?”
“Simply that it was absurd for
him to stay about and persecute me; that the letters
I wrote him were simply written for fun, when I was
doing some of my cousin’s work at the correspondence
schools; that the best thing he could do would be
to take my regrets and go back to the West.”
“Did you tell him all that?”
asked John Mark in a rather changed voice.
“Yes; but not quite so bluntly.”
“Naturally not; you’re
a gentle girl, Caroline. I suppose he took it
very hard.”
“Very, but in a silly way.
He’s full of pride, you see. He drew himself
up and gave me a lecture about deceiving men.”
“Well, since you have lost interest
in him, it makes no difference.”
“But in a way,” she said
faintly, rising slowly from her chair, “I can’t
help feeling some interest.”
“Naturally not. But, you
see, I was worried so much about you and this foolish
fellow that I gave orders for him to be put out of
the way, as soon as you left him.”
Caroline Smith stood for a moment
stunned and then ran to him.
“No, no!” she declared.
“In the name of the dear mercy of Heaven, John,
you haven’t done that?”
“I’m sorry.”
“Then call him back—the
one you sent. Call him back, John, and I’ll
serve you the rest of my life without question.
I’ll never fail you, John, but for your own
sake and mine, for the sake of everything fair in
the world, call him back!”
He pushed away her hands, but without
violence. “I thought it would be this way,”
he said coldly. “You told a very good lie,
Caroline. I suppose clever Ronicky Doone rehearsed
you in it, but it needed only the oldest trick in
the world to expose you.”
She recoiled from him. “It
was only a joke, then? You didn’t mean it,
John? Thank Heaven for that!”
A savagery which, though generally
concealed, was never far from the surface, now broke
out in him, making the muscles of his face tense and
his voice metallic. “Get to your room,”
he said fiercely, “get to your room. I’ve
wasted time enough on you and your brat of a brother,
and now a Western lout is to spoil what I’ve
done? I’ve a mind to wash my hands of all
of you—and sink you. Get to your room,
and stay there, while I make up my mind which of the
two I shall do.”
She went, cringing like one beaten,
to the door, and he followed her, trembling with rage.
“Or have you a choice?”
he asked. “Brother or lover, which shall
it be?”
She turned and stretched out her hands
to him, unable to speak; but the man of the sneer
struck down her arms and laughed in her face.
In mute terror she fled to her room.