In the TOILS.
At the office of the International
Machine Company the work of the C.P.A.’s was
drawing to a close. Their report would soon he
ready to submit to Mr. Compton, and as the time approached
Bince’s nervousness and irritability increased.
Edith noticed that he inquired each day with growing
solicitude as to the reports from the hospital relative
to Jimmy’s condition. She knew that Bince
disliked Jimmy, and yet the man seemed strangely anxious
for his recovery and return to work.
In accordance with Jimmy’s plan,
the C.P.A.’s were to give out no information
to any one, even to Mr. Compton, until their investigation
and report were entirely completed. This plan
had been approved by Mr. Compton, although he professed
to be at considerable loss to understand why it was
necessary. It was, however, in accordance with
Jimmy’s plan to prevent, if possible, any interference
with the work of the auditors until every available
fact in the case had been ascertained and recorded.
In the investigation of the pay-roll
Bince had worked diligently with the accountants.
As a matter of fact, he had never left them a moment
while the pay-roll records were in their hands, and
had gone to much pain to explain in detail every question
arising therefrom.
Although the investigators seemed
to accept his statements at their face value, the
assistant general manager was far from being assured
that their final report would redound to his credit.
On a Thursday they informed him that
they had completed their investigation, and the report
would he submitted to Mr. Compton on Saturday.
When Edith reached the hospital that
evening she found Jimmy in high spirits. He was
dressed for the first time, and assured her that he
was quite able to return to work if the doctor would
let him, but the nurse shook her head. “You
ought to stay here for another week or ten days,”
she admonished him.
“Nothing doing,”’ cried
Jimmy. “I’ll be out of here Monday
at the latest.” But when Edith told him
that the C.P.A.’s had finished, and that their
report would be handed in Saturday, Jimmy announced
that he would leave the hospital the following day.
“But you can’t do it,” said the
nurse.
“Why not?” asked Jimmy.
“The doctor won’t permit it.”
Edith tried to dissuade him, but he
insisted that is was absolutely necessary for him
to be at the office when the C.P.A.’s report
was made.
“I’ll be over there Friday
evening or Saturday morning at the latest,”
he said as she bid him good-bye.
And so it was that, despite the pleas
of his nurse and the orders of his physician, Jimmy
appeared at the plant Friday afternoon. Bince
greeted him almost effusively, and Mr. Compton seemed
glad to see him out again.
That evening Harold Bince met Murray
at Feinheimer’s, and still later the Lizard
received word that Murray wanted to see him.
“Everything’s ready,”
the boss explained to the Lizard. “The whole
thing’s framed for to-morrow night. The
watchman was discharged to-day. Another man is
supposed to have been hired to take the job, but of
course he won’t show up. You meet me here
at seven thirty to-morrow night, and I’ll give
you your final instructions and tell you how to get
to the plant.” The C.P.A.’s were slow
in completing their report. At noon on Saturday
it looked very much to Bince that there would be no
report ready before Monday. He had spent most
of the forenoon pacing his office, and at last, unable
longer to stand the strain, he had announced that
he was going out to his country club for a game of
golf.
He returned to his down-town club
about dinner-time, and at eight o’clock he called
up Elizabeth Compton.
“Come on up,” said the
girl. “I’m all alone this evening.
Father went back to the office to examine some reports
that were just finished up late this afternoon.”
“I’ll be over,”
said Bince, “as soon as I dress.”
If there was any trace of surprise or shock in his
tones the girl failed to notice it.
At ten o’clock that night a
figure moved silently through the dark shadows of
an alleyway in the area of the International Machine
Company’s plant on West Superior Street.
As he moved along he counted the basement windows
silently, and at the fifth window he halted. Just
a casual glance he cast up and down the alley, and
then, kneeling, he raised the sash and slipped quietly
into the darkness of the basement.
At about the same time Jimmy’s
landlady called him to the telephone, where a man’s
voice asked if “this was Mr. Torrance?”
Assured that such was the fact, the voice continued:
“I am the new watchman at the plant. There’s
something wrong here. I can’t get hold of
Mr. Compton. I think you better come down.
I’ll be in Mr. Compton’s office—”
The message ceased as though central had disconnected
them.
“Funny,” thought Jimmy,
“that he should call me up. I wonder what
the trouble can be.” But he lost no time
in getting his hat and starting for the works.
Although the Lizard knew that there
was no danger of detection, yet from long habit he
moved through the plant of the International Machine
Company with the noiselessness of a disembodied spirit.
Occasionally, and just for the briefest instant, he
flashed his lamp ahead of him, but though he had never
been in the place before he found it scarcely necessary,
so minute had been his instructions for reaching the
office from the fifth basement window.
The room he sought was on the second
floor, and the Lizard had mounted the steps from the
basement to the first floor when he was brought to
a sudden stop by a noise from the floor above him.
The Lizard listened intently. No, he could not
be mistaken. Too often had he heard a similar
sound.
Some one was tiptoeing across the
floor above. The Lizard was in the hallway close
beside the stairs when he realized the footsteps were
coming toward the stairway, and a moment later that
they were cautiously descending. The Lizard flattened
himself against the wall, and if he breathed his lungs
gave forth no sound.
If one may interpret footsteps—and
the Lizard, from the fund of a great experience, felt
that he could—those descending the stairway
from above him might have been described as nervous
and repressed; for at least they gave the Lizard the
impression of one who desired to flee in haste and
yet dared not do so, for fear of attracting attention
by the increased noise that greater speed might entail.
At least the Lizard knew that those
were the footsteps of no watchman, but whether it
be guardian of the law or fellow criminal the Lizard
had no wish to be discovered. He wondered what
had gone wrong with Murray’s plans, and, suddenly
imbued with the natural suspicion of the criminal,
it occurred to him that the whole thing might be a
frame-up to get him; and yet why Murray should wish
to get him he could not imagine. He ran over
in his mind a list all those who might feel enmity
toward him, but among them all the Lizard could cast
upon none who might have sufficient against him to
warrant such an elaborate scheme of revenge.
The footsteps passed him and continued
on toward the foot of the stairs where was the main
entrance which opened upon the street. At the
door the footsteps halted, and as the Lizard’s
eyes bored through the darkness in the direction of
the other prowler the latter struck a match upon the
panel of the door and lighted a cigarette, revealing
his features momentarily but distinctly to the watcher
in the shadow of the stairway. Then he opened
the door and passed out into the night.
The Lizard, listening intently for
a few moments to assure himself that there was no
one else above, and that the man who had just departed
was not returning, at last continued his way to the
foot of the stairs, which he ascended to the second
floor. Passing through the outer office, he paused
a moment before the door to Compton’s private
office, and then silently turning the knob he gently
pushed the door open and stepped into the room.
Beyond the threshold he halted and
pressed the button of his flash-lamp. For just
an instant its faint rays illumined the interior of
the room, and then darkness blotted out the scene.
But whatever it was that the little flash-lamp had
revealed was evidently in the nature of a surprise,
and perhaps something of a shock, to the Lizard, for
he drew back with a muttered oath, backed quietly
out of the room, closed the door after him, and, moving
much more swiftly than he had entered, retraced his
steps to the fifth window on the alley, and was gone
from the scene with whatever job he had contemplated
unexecuted.
A half-hour later detective headquarters
at the Central Station received an anonymous tip:
“Send some one to the office of the International
Machine Company, on the second floor of West Superior
Street.”
It was ten thirty when Jimmy reached
the plant. He entered the front door with his
own latchkey, pressed the button which lighted the
stairway and the landing above, and, ascending, went
straight to Mr. Compton’s office, turned the
knob, and opened the door, to find that the interior
was dark.
“Strange,” he thought, “that
after sending for me the fellow didn’t
wait.” As these thoughts passed through
his mind he fumbled on the wall
for the switch, and, finding it, flooded the
office with light.
As he turned again toward the room
he voiced a sudden exclamation of horror, for on the
floor beside his desk lay the body of Mason Compton!
As Jimmy stepped quickly toward Compton’s body
and kneeled beside it a man tiptoed quietly up the
front stairway, while another, having ascended from
the rear, was crossing the outer office with equal
stealth.
Jimmy felt of Compton’s face
and hands. They were warm. And then he
placed his ear close against the man’s breast,
in order to see if he could detect the beating of
the heart. He was in this position when he was
startled by a gruff voice behind him.
“Put ’em up!” it
admonished curtly, and Jimmy turned to see two men
standing in the doorway with pistols leveled at him.