“The only friends he has.”
So it befell that the next day a well-known
criminal attorney called on Jimmy Torrance at the
county jail. “I understand,” he said
to Jimmy, “that you have retained no attorney.
I have been instructed by one of my clients to take
your case.”
Jimmy looked at him in silence for a moment.
“Who is going to pay you?”
he asked with a smile. “I understand attorneys
expect to be paid.”
“That needn’t worry you?” replied
the lawyer.
“You mean that your client is
going to pay for my defense? What’s his
name?”
“That I am not permitted to
tell you,” replied the lawyer.
“Very well. Tell your
client that I appreciate his kindness, but I cannot
accept it.”
“Don’t be a fool,”
said the attorney. “This client of mine
can well afford the expense, and anyway, my instructions
are to defend you whether you want me to or not, so
I guess you can’t help yourself.”
Jimmy laughed with the lawyer.
“All right,” he said. “The first
thing I wish you’d do is to get Miss Hudson
out of jail. There is doubtless some reason for
suspicion attaching to me because I was found alone
with Mr. Compton’s body, and the pistol with
which he was shot was one that had been given to me
and which I kept in my desk, but there is no earthly
reason why she should be detained. She could have
had absolutely nothing to do with it.”
“I will see what can be done,”
replied the attorney, “although I had no instructions
to defend her also.”
“I will make that one of the
conditions under which I will accept your services,”
said Jimmy.
The result was that within a few days
Edith was released. From the moment that she
left the jail she was aware that she was being shadowed.
“I suppose,” she thought,
“that they expect to open up a fund of new clues
through me,” but she was disturbed nevertheless,
because she realized that it was going to make difficult
a thing that she had been trying to find some means
to accomplish ever since she had been arrested.
She went directly to her apartment
and presently took down the telephone-receiver, and
after calling a public phone in a building down-town,
she listened intently while the operator was getting
her connection, and before the connection was made
she hung up the receiver with a smile, for she had
distinctly heard the sound of a man’s breathing
over the line, and she knew that in all probability
O’Donnell had tapped in immediately on learning
that she had been released from jail.
That evening she attended a local
motion-picture theater which she often frequented.
It was one of those small affairs, the width of a city
block, with a narrow aisle running down either side
and all emergency exit upon the alley at the far end
of each aisle. The theater was darkened when
she entered and, a quick glance apprizing her that
no one followed her in immediately, she continued
on down one of the side aisles and passed through
the doorway into the alley.
Five minutes later she was in a telephone-booth
in a drug-store two blocks away.
“Is this Feinheimer’s?”
she asked after she had got her connection. “I
want to talk to Carl.” She asked for Carl
because she knew that this man who had been head-waiter
at Feinheimer’s for years would know her voice.
“Is that you, Carl?” she
asked as a man’s voice finally answered the
telephone. “This is Little Eva.”
“Oh, hello!” said the
man. “I thought you were over at the county
jail.”
“I was released to-day,”
she explained. “Well, listen, Carl; I’ve
got to see the Lizard. I’ve simply got
to see him to-night. I was being shadowed, but
I got away from them. Do you know where he is?”
“I guess I could find him,”
said Carl in a low voice. “You go out to
Mother Kruger’s. I’ll tell him you’ll
be there in about an hour.”
“I’ll be waiting in a taxi outside,”
said the girl.
“Good,” said Carl.
“If he isn’t there in an hour you can know
that he was afraid to come. He’s layin’
pretty low.”
“All right,” said the
girl, “I’ll be there. You tell him
that he simply must come.” She hung up
the receiver and then called a taxi. She gave
a number on a side street about a half block away,
where she knew it would be reasonably dark, and consequently
less danger of detection.
Three-quarters of an hour later her
taxi drew up beside Mother Kruger’s, but the
girl did not alight. She had waited but a short
time when another taxi swung in beside the road-house,
turned around and backed up alongside hers. A
man stepped out and peered through the glass of her
machine. It was the Lizard.
Recognizing the girl he opened the
door and took a seat beside her. “Well,”
inquired the Lizard, “What’s on your mind?”
“Jimmy,” replied the girl.
“I thought so,” returned
the Lizard. “It looks pretty bad for him,
don’t it? I wish there was some way to help
him.”
“He did not do it.” said the girl.
“It didn’t seem like him.”
said the Lizard, “but I got it straight from
a guy who knows that he done it all right.”
“Who?” asked Edith.
“Murray.”
“I thought he knew a lot about
it,” said the girl. “That’s
why I sent for you. You haven’t got any
love for Murray, have you?”
“No,” replied the Lizard; “not so
you could notice it.”
“I think Murray knows a lot
about that job. If you want to help Jimmy I
know where you can get the dope that will start something,
anyway.”
“What is it?” asked the Lizard.
“This fellow Bince, who is assistant
general manager for Compton, got a letter from Murray
two or three weeks before Compton was killed.
Murray enclosed a threat signed I.W.W., and his letter
instructed Bince to show the threat to Compton.
I haven’t got all the dope on it, but I’ve
got a hunch that in some way it is connected with
this job. Anyway, I’ve got both Murray’s
letter and the threat he enclosed. They’re
hidden in my desk at the plant. I can’t
get them, of course; they wouldn’t let me in
the place now, and Murray’s so strong with the
police that I wouldn’t trust them, so I haven’t
told any one. What I want is for you to go there
to-night and get them.”
The Lizard was thinking fast.
The girl knew nothing of his connection with the
job. She did not know that he had entered Compton’s
office and had been first to find his dead body; in
fact, no one knew that. Even Murray did not know
that the Lizard had succeeded in entering the plant,
as the latter had told him that he was delayed, and
that when he reached there a patrol and ambulance
were already backed up in front of the building.
He felt that he had enough knowledge, however, to make
the conviction of Jimmy a very difficult proposition,
but if he divulged the knowledge he had and explained
how he came by it he could readily see that suspicion
would be at once transferred from Jimmy to himself.
The Lizard therefore was in a quandary.
Of course, if Murray’s connection was ever
discovered the Lizard might then be drawn into it,
but if he could keep Murray out the Lizard would be
reasonably safe from suspicion, and now the girl had
shown him how he might remove a damaging piece of
evidence against Murray.
“You will get it, won’t you?” asked
the girl.
“Where are these papers?” he asked.
“They are in the outer office
which adjoins Mr. Compton’s. My desk stands
at the right of the door as you enter from the main
office. Remove the right-hand lower drawer and
you will find the papers lying on the little wooden
partition directly underneath the drawer.”
“All right,” said the Lizard; “I’ll
get them.”
“Bless you, Lizard,” cried
the girl. “I knew you would help. You
and I are the only friends he has. If we went
back on him he’d be sent up, for there’s
lots of money being used against him. He might
even be hanged. I know from what I have heard
that the prosecuting attorney intends to ask for the
death penalty.”
The Lizard made no reply as he started to leave the
taxi.
“Take them to his attorney,”
said the girl, and she gave him the name and address.
The Lizard grunted and entered his
own cab. As he did so a man on a motorcycle
drew up on the opposite side and peered through the
window. The driver had started his motor as the
newcomer approached. From her cab the girl saw
the Lizard and the man on the motorcycle look into
each other’s face for a moment, then she heard
the Lizard’s quick admonition to his driver,
“Beat it, bo!”
A sharp “Halt!” came from
the man on the motorcycle, but the taxicab leaped
forward, and, accelerating rapidly, turned to the left
into the road toward the city. The girl had guessed
at the first glance that the man on the motorcycle
was a police officer. As the Lizard’s taxi
raced away the officer circled quickly and started
in pursuit. “No chance,” thought
the girl. “He’ll get caught sure.”
She could hear the staccato reports from the open
exhaust of the motorcycle diminishing rapidly in the
distance, indicating the speed of the pursued and the
pursuer.
And then from the distance came a
shot and then another and another. She leaned
forward and spoke to her own driver. “Go
on to Elmhurst,” she said, “and then come
back to the city on the St. Charles Road.”
It was after two o’clock in
the morning when the Lizard entered an apartment on
Ashland Avenue which he had for several years used
as a hiding-place when the police were hot upon his
trail. The people from whom he rented the room
were eminently respectable Jews who thought their
occasional roomer what he represented himself to be,
a special agent for one of the federal departments,
a vocation which naturally explained the Lizard’s
long absences and unusual hours.
Once within his room the Lizard sank
into a chair and wiped the perspiration from his forehead,
although it was by no means a warm night. He
drew a folded paper from his inside pocket, which,
when opened, revealed a small piece of wrapping paper
within. They were Murray’s letter to Bince
and the enclosure.
“Believe me,” muttered
the Lizard, “that was the toughest job I ever
pulled off and all I gets is two pieces of paper, but
I don’t know but what they’re worth it.”
He sat for a long time looking at
the papers in his hand, but he did not see them.
He was thinking of other things: of prison walls
that he had eluded so far through years of crime;
of O’Donnell, whom he knew to be working on
the Compton case and whose boast it had been that sooner
or later he would get the Lizard; of what might naturally
be expected were the papers in his hands to fall into
the possession of Torrance’s attorney.
It would mean that Murray would be immediately placed
in jeopardy, and the Lizard knew Murray well enough
to know that he would sacrifice his best friend to
save himself, and the Lizard was by no means Murray’s
best friend.
He realized that he knew more about
the Compton murder case than any one else. He
was of the opinion that be could clear it up if he
were almost any one other than the Lizard, but with
the record of his past life against him, would any
one believe him? In order to prove his assertion
it would be necessary to make admissions that might
incriminate himself, and there would be Murray and
the Compton millions against him; and as he pondered
these things there ran always through his mind the
words of the girl, “You and I are the only friends
he has.”
“Hell,” ejaculated the
Lizard as he rose from his chair and prepared for
bed.