CIRCUMSTANTIAL evidence.
At first Jimmy thought they were the
perpetrators of the deed, but almost immediately he
recognized one of them as O’Donnell, the erstwhile
traffic officer who had been promoted to a detective
sergeancy since Jimmy had first met him.
“Compton has been murdered,”
said Jimmy dully. “He is dead.”
“Put up your hands,” snapped
O’Donnell for the second time, “and be
quick about it!”
It was then for the first time that
Jimmy realized the meaning that might be put upon
his presence alone in the office with his dead employer.
O’Donnell’s partner searched him, but found
no weapon upon him.
“Where’s the gat?” he asked.
“Whoever did this probably took
it with him.” said Jimmy. “Find the
watchman.”
They made Jimmy sit down in a corner,
and while one of them guarded him the other called
up central, made his report, and asked for an ambulance
and the wagon. Then O’Donnell commenced
to examine the room. A moment later he found
an automatic behind the door across the room from where
Compton’s body lay.
“Ever see this before?”
asked O’Donnell, holding the pistol up to Jimmy.
“If you’re asking me if
it’s mine, no,” said Jimmy. “I
have a gun, but it’s home. I never carry
it. I didn’t do this, O’Donnell.”
he continued. “There was no reason why
I should do it, so instead of wasting your time on
me while the murderer escapes you’d better get
busy on some other theory, too. It won’t
do any harm, anyway.”
The wagon came and took Jimmy to the
station, and later he was questioned by the lieutenant
in charge.
“You say this is not your pistol?”
asked the police officer.
“It is not,” replied Jimmy.
“You never saw it before?”
“No, I have not.”
The lieutenant turned to one of his
men, who went to the door, and, opening it, returned
almost immediately with Bince.
“Do you know this man, Mr. Bince?” asked
the lieutenant.
“I certainly do,” said Bince.
“Did you ever see this pistol before?”
Bince took the weapon and examined it.
“Yes,” he said.
“Under what circumstances?” asked the
lieutenant.
“It was one of two that Mr.
Compton had in his desk. This one he loaned
to Torrance two or three weeks ago. I was in the
office at the time.”
The officer turned toward Jimmy.
“Now do you recognize it?” he asked.
“I haven’t denied,”
said Jimmy, “that Mr. Compton had loaned me a
pistol. As a matter of fact, I had forgotten all
about it. I do not particularly recognize this
one as the weapon he loaned me, though it is of the
same type. There is no way that I could identify
the particular weapon he handed me.”
“But you admit he loaned you one?”
“Yes,” said Jimmy.
“What did you do with it?” asked the policeman.
“I put it in my desk within
five minutes after he gave it to me, and I haven’t
seen it since.”
“You say you couldn’t identify the pistol?”
said the officer.
Jimmy nodded.
“Well, we can, and have.
The number of this pistol was recorded when Mr. Compton
bought it, as was the number of the other one which
is still in his desk. They were the only two
pistols he ever bought, according to Mr. Bince, and
his daughter, aside from one which he had at home,
which has also been accounted for. The drawer
in which Mr. Bince saw you place this pistol we found
open and the pistol gone. It looks pretty bad
for you, young fellow, and if you want a chance to
dodge the rope you’d better plead guilty and
tell us why you did it.”
Jimmy was given little opportunity
for sleep that night. A half-dozen times he
was called back to the lieutenant’s office for
further questioning. He commenced to realize
that the circumstantial evidence was strongly against
him, and now, as the girl had warned him, his entirely
innocent past was brought up against him simply because
his existence had been called to the attention of
a policeman, and the same policeman an inscrutable
Fate had ordained should discover him alone with a
murdered man.
O’Donnell made the most of his
meager knowledge of Jimmy. He told the lieutenant
with embellishments of Jimmy’s association with
such characters as the Lizard and Little Eva; but
the police were still at a loss to discover a motive.
This, however, was furnished the next
morning, when Elizabeth Compton, white and heavy-eyed,
was brought to the station to identify Jimmy.
There was deep compassion in the young man’s
face as he was ushered into the presence of the stricken
girl, while at sight of him her’s mirrored horror,
contempt, and hatred.
“You know this man?” asked the lieutenant.
“Yes,” she replied.
“His name is Torrance. I have seen him
a number of times in the past year. He worked
as a clerk in a store, in the hosiery department,
and waited on me there. Later I “—she
hesitated—” I saw him in a place
called Feinheimer’s. He was a waiter.
Then he was a sparring partner, I think they call
it, for a prizefighter. Some of my friends took
me to a gymnasium to see the fighter training, and
I recognized this man.
“I saw him again when he was
driving a milk-wagon. He delivered milk at
a friend’s house where I chanced to be.
The last time I saw him was at my father’s home.
He had obtained employment in my father’s plant
as an efficiency expert. He seemed to exercise
some strange power over father, who believed implicitly
in him, until recently, when he evidently commenced
to have doubts; for the night that the man was at
our house I was sitting in the music-room when they
passed through the hallway, and I heard father discharge
him. But the fellow pleaded to be retained, and
finally father promised to keep him for a while longer,
as I recall it, at least until certain work was completed
at the plant. This work was completed yesterday.
That’s all I know. I do not know whether
father discharged him again or not.”
Harriet Holden had accompanied her
friend to the police station, and was sitting close
beside her during the examination, her eyes almost
constantly upon the face of the prisoner. She
saw no fear there, only an expression of deep-seated
sorrow for her friend.
The lieutenant was still asking questions
when there came a knock at the door, which was immediately
opened, revealing O’Donnell with a young woman,
whom he brought inside.
“I guess we’re getting
to the bottom of it,” announced the sergeant.
“Look who I found workin’ over there as
Compton’s stenographer.”
“Well, who is she?” demanded the lieutenant.
“A jane who used to hang out
at Feinheimer’s. She has been runnin’
around with this bird. They tell me over there
that Compton hired her on this fellow’s recommendation.
Get hold of the Lizard now, and you’ll have
the whole bunch.”
Thus did Sergeant Patrick O’Donnell
solve the entire mystery with Sherlockian ease and
despatch.
At Jimmy’s preliminary hearing
he was held to the grand jury, and on the strength
of the circumstantial evidence against him that body
voted a true bill. Edith Hudson, against whom
there was no evidence of any nature, was held as a
witness for the State, and a net was thrown out for
the Lizard which dragged in nearly every pickpocket
in town except the man they sought.
Jimmy had been in jail for about a
week when he received a visitor. A turnkey brought
her to his cell. It was Harriet Holden. She
greeted him seriously but pleasantly, and then she
asked the turnkey if she might go inside.
“It’s against the rules,
miss,” he said “but I guess it will be
all right.” He recalled that the sheriff
had said that the girl’s father was a friend
of his, and so assumed that it would be safe to relax
the rules in her behalf. He had been too long
an employee of the county not to know that rules are
often elastic to the proper pressure.
“I have been wanting to talk
to you,” said the girl to Jimmy, “ever
since this terrible thing happened. Somehow I
can not believe that you are guilty, and there must
be some way in which you can prove your innocence.”
“I have been trying to think
out how I might,” said Jimmy,” but the
more I think about it the more damning the circumstantial
evidence against me appears.”
“There must always be a motive
for a crime like that,” said Harriet. “I
cannot believe that a simple fear of his discharge
would be sufficient motive for any man to kill his
employer.”
“Not to kill a man who had been
as good to me as Mr. Compton was,” said Jimmy,
“or a man whom I admired so much as I did him.
As a matter of fact, he was not going to discharge
me, Miss Holden, and I had an opportunity there for
a very successful future; but now that he is dead
there is no one who could verify such a statement on
my part.”
“Who could there be, then, who
might wish to kill him, and what could the motive
be?”
“I can only think,” said
Jimmy, “of one man; and even in his case the
idea is too horrible—too preposterous to
be entertained.”
Harriet Holden looked up at him quickly,
a sudden light in her eyes, and an expression of almost
horrified incredulity upon her face. “You
don’t mean—” she started.
“I wouldn’t even use his
name in connection with the thought,” Jimmy
interrupted; “but he is the only man of whom
I know who could have profited by Mr. Compton’s
death, and, on the other hand, whose entire future
would have been blasted possibly had Mr. Compton lived
until the following morning.”
The girl remained for half an hour
longer, and when she left she went directly to the
home of Elizabeth Compton.
“I told you, Elizabeth,”
she said, “that I was going to see Mr. Torrance.
You dissuaded me for some time, but I finally went
today, and I am glad that I went. No one except
yourself could have loved your father more than I,
or have been more horrified or grieved at his death;
but that is no reason why you should aid in the punishment
of an innocent man, as I am confident that this man
Torrance is, and I tell you Elizabeth if you were
not prejudiced you would agree with me.
“I have talked with Torrance
for over half an hour to-day, and since then nothing
can ever make me believe that that man could commit
a cold-blooded murder. Harold has always hated
him—you admit that yourself—and
now you are permitting him to prejudice you against
the man purely on the strength of that dislike.
I am going to help him. I’m going to do
it, not only to obtain justice for him, but to assist
in detecting and punishing the true murderer.”
“I don’t see, Harriet,
how you can take any interest in such a creature,”
said Elizabeth. “You know from the circumstances
under which we saw him before father employed him
what type of man he is, and it was further exemplified
by the evidence of his relationship with that common
woman of the streets.”
“He told me about her to-day,”
replied Harriet. “He had only known her
very casually, but she helped him once—loaned
him some money when he needed it—–and
when he found that she had been a stenographer and
wanted to give up the life she had been leading and
be straight again, he helped her.
“I asked Sergeant O’Donnell
particularly about that, and even he had to admit
that there was no evidence whatever to implicate the
girl or show that the relations between her and Mr.
Torrance had been anything that was not right; and
you know yourself how anxious O’Donnell has been
to dig up evidence of any kind derogatory to either
of them.”
“How are you going to help him?”
asked Elizabeth. “Take flowers and cake
to him in jail?”
There was a sneer on her face and
on her lips. “If he cares for flowers and
cakes,” replied Harriet, “I probably shall;
but I have another plan which will probably be more
practical.”