DESPAIRINGLY, Granice gazed up and
down the shabby street. Beside him stood a young
man with bright prominent eyes, a smooth but not too
smoothly-shaven face, and an Irish smile. The
young man’s nimble glance followed Granice’s.
“Sure of the number, are you?” he asked
briskly.
“Oh, yes—it was 104.”
“Well, then, the new building has swallowed
it up—that’s certain.”
He tilted his head back and surveyed
the half-finished front of a brick and limestone flat-house
that reared its flimsy elegance above a row of tottering
tenements and stables.
“Dead sure?” he repeated.
“Yes,” said Granice, discouraged.
“And even if I hadn’t been, I know the
garage was just opposite Leffler’s over there.”
He pointed across the street to a tumble-down stable
with a blotched sign on which the words “Livery
and Boarding” were still faintly discernible.
The young man dashed across to the
opposite pavement. “Well, that’s
something—may get a clue there. Leffler’s—same
name there, anyhow. You remember that name?”
“Yes—distinctly.”
Granice had felt a return of confidence
since he had enlisted the interest of the Explorer’s
“smartest” reporter. If there were
moments when he hardly believed his own story, there
were others when it seemed impossible that every one
should not believe it; and young Peter McCarren, peering,
listening, questioning, jotting down notes, inspired
him with an exquisite sense of security. McCarren
had fastened on the case at once, “like a leech,”
as he phrased it—jumped at it, thrilled
to it, and settled down to “draw the last drop
of fact from it, and had not let go till he had.”
No one else had treated Granice in that way—even
Allonby’s detective had not taken a single note.
And though a week had elapsed since the visit of that
authorized official, nothing had been heard from the
District Attorney’s office: Allonby had
apparently dropped the matter again. But McCarren
wasn’t going to drop it—not he!
He positively hung on Granice’s footsteps.
They had spent the greater part of the previous day
together, and now they were off again, running down
clues.
But at Leffler’s they got none,
after all. Leffler’s was no longer a stable.
It was condemned to demolition, and in the respite
between sentence and execution it had become a vague
place of storage, a hospital for broken-down carriages
and carts, presided over by a blear-eyed old woman
who knew nothing of Flood’s garage across the
way—did not even remember what had stood
there before the new flat-house began to rise.
“Well—we may run
Leffler down somewhere; I’ve seen harder jobs
done,” said McCarren, cheerfully noting down
the name.
As they walked back toward Sixth Avenue
he added, in a less sanguine tone: “I’d
undertake now to put the thing through if you could
only put me on the track of that cyanide.”
Granice’s heart sank. Yes—there
was the weak spot; he had felt it from the first!
But he still hoped to convince McCarren that his case
was strong enough without it; and he urged the reporter
to come back to his rooms and sum up the facts with
him again.
“Sorry, Mr. Granice, but I’m
due at the office now. Besides, it’d be
no use till I get some fresh stuff to work on.
Suppose I call you up tomorrow or next day?”
He plunged into a trolley and left
Granice gazing desolately after him.
Two days later he reappeared at the
apartment, a shade less jaunty in demeanor.
“Well, Mr. Granice, the stars
in their courses are against you, as the bard says.
Can’t get a trace of Flood, or of Leffler either.
And you say you bought the motor through Flood, and
sold it through him, too?”
“Yes,” said Granice wearily.
“Who bought it, do you know?”
Granice wrinkled his brows. “Why,
Flood—yes, Flood himself. I sold it
back to him three months later.”
“Flood? The devil!
And I’ve ransacked the town for Flood. That
kind of business disappears as if the earth had swallowed
it.”
Granice, discouraged, kept silence.
“That brings us back to the
poison,” McCarren continued, his note-book out.
“Just go over that again, will you?”
And Granice went over it again.
It had all been so simple at the time—and
he had been so clever in covering up his traces!
As soon as he decided on poison he looked about for
an acquaintance who manufactured chemicals; and there
was Jim Dawes, a Harvard classmate, in the dyeing
business—just the man. But at the last
moment it occurred to him that suspicion might turn
toward so obvious an opportunity, and he decided on
a more tortuous course. Another friend, Carrick
Venn, a student of medicine whom irremediable ill-health
had kept from the practice of his profession, amused
his leisure with experiments in physics, for the exercise
of which he had set up a simple laboratory. Granice
had the habit of dropping in to smoke a cigar with
him on Sunday afternoons, and the friends generally
sat in Venn’s work-shop, at the back of the
old family house in Stuyvesant Square. Off this
work-shop was the cupboard of supplies, with its row
of deadly bottles. Carrick Venn was an original,
a man of restless curious tastes, and his place, on
a Sunday, was often full of visitors: a cheerful
crowd of journalists, scribblers, painters, experimenters
in divers forms of expression. Coming and going
among so many, it was easy enough to pass unperceived;
and one afternoon Granice, arriving before Venn had
returned home, found himself alone in the work-shop,
and quickly slipping into the cupboard, transferred
the drug to his pocket.
But that had happened ten years ago;
and Venn, poor fellow, was long since dead of his
dragging ailment. His old father was dead, too,
the house in Stuyvesant Square had been turned into
a boarding-house, and the shifting life of New York
had passed its rapid sponge over every trace of their
obscure little history. Even the optimistic McCarren
seemed to acknowledge the hopelessness of seeking
for proof in that direction.
“And there’s the third
door slammed in our faces.” He shut his
note-book, and throwing back his head, rested his bright
inquisitive eyes on Granice’s furrowed face.
“Look here, Mr. Granice—you
see the weak spot, don’t you?”
The other made a despairing motion. “I
see so many!”
“Yes: but the one that
weakens all the others. Why the deuce do you
want this thing known? Why do you want to put
your head into the noose?”
Granice looked at him hopelessly,
trying to take the measure of his quick light irreverent
mind. No one so full of a cheerful animal life
would believe in the craving for death as a sufficient
motive; and Granice racked his brain for one more
convincing. But suddenly he saw the reporter’s
face soften, and melt to a naive sentimentalism.
“Mr. Granice—has
the memory of it always haunted you?”
Granice stared a moment, and then
leapt at the opening. “That’s it—the
memory of it … always …”
McCarren nodded vehemently. “Dogged
your steps, eh? Wouldn’t let you sleep?
The time came when you had to make a clean breast
of it?”
“I had to. Can’t you understand?”
The reporter struck his fist on the
table. “God, sir! I don’t suppose
there’s a human being with a drop of warm blood
in him that can’t picture the deadly horrors
of remorse—”
The Celtic imagination was aflame,
and Granice mutely thanked him for the word.
What neither Ascham nor Denver would accept as a conceivable
motive the Irish reporter seized on as the most adequate;
and, as he said, once one could find a convincing motive,
the difficulties of the case became so many incentives
to effort.
“Remorse—remorse,”
he repeated, rolling the word under his tongue with
an accent that was a clue to the psychology of the
popular drama; and Granice, perversely, said to himself:
“If I could only have struck that note I should
have been running in six theatres at once.”
He saw that from that moment McCarren’s
professional zeal would be fanned by emotional curiosity;
and he profited by the fact to propose that they should
dine together, and go on afterward to some music-hall
or theatre. It was becoming necessary to Granice
to feel himself an object of pre-occupation, to find
himself in another mind. He took a kind of gray
penumbral pleasure in riveting McCarren’s attention
on his case; and to feign the grimaces of moral anguish
became a passionately engrossing game. He had
not entered a theatre for months; but he sat out the
meaningless performance in rigid tolerance, sustained
by the sense of the reporter’s observation.
Between the acts, McCarren amused
him with anecdotes about the audience: he knew
every one by sight, and could lift the curtain from
every physiognomy. Granice listened indulgently.
He had lost all interest in his kind, but he knew
that he was himself the real centre of McCarren’s
attention, and that every word the latter spoke had
an indirect bearing on his own problem.
“See that fellow over there—the
little dried-up man in the third row, pulling his
moustache? His memoirs would be worth publishing,”
McCarren said suddenly in the last entr’acte.
Granice, following his glance, recognized
the detective from Allonby’s office. For
a moment he had the thrilling sense that he was being
shadowed.
“Caesar, if he could
talk—!” McCarren continued. “Know
who he is, of course? Dr. John B. Stell, the
biggest alienist in the country—”
Granice, with a start, bent again
between the heads in front of him. “That
man—the fourth from the aisle? You’re
mistaken. That’s not Dr. Stell.”
McCarren laughed. “Well,
I guess I’ve been in court enough to know Stell
when I see him. He testifies in nearly all the
big cases where they plead insanity.”
A cold shiver ran down Granice’s
spine, but he repeated obstinately: “That’s
not Dr. Stell.”
“Not Stell? Why, man, I
know him. Look—here he comes.
If it isn’t Stell, he won’t speak to me.”
The little dried-up man was moving
slowly up the aisle. As he neared McCarren he
made a slight gesture of recognition.
“How’do, Doctor Stell?
Pretty slim show, ain’t it?” the reporter
cheerfully flung out at him. And Mr. J. B. Hewson,
with a nod of amicable assent, passed on.
Granice sat benumbed. He knew
he had not been mistaken—the man who had
just passed was the same man whom Allonby had sent
to see him: a physician disguised as a detective.
Allonby, then, had thought him insane, like the others—had
regarded his confession as the maundering of a maniac.
The discovery froze Granice with horror—he
seemed to see the mad-house gaping for him.
“Isn’t there a man a good
deal like him—a detective named J. B. Hewson?”
But he knew in advance what McCarren’s
answer would be. “Hewson? J. B. Hewson?
Never heard of him. But that was J. B. Stell fast
enough—I guess he can be trusted to know
himself, and you saw he answered to his name.”