formed slowly in Miss Cornelia’s mind, grew more definite.
“Dale, watch that door and warn me if anyone is coming!” she commanded, indicating the door into the hall. Dale obeyed, marveling silently at her aunt’s extraordinary force of character. Most of Miss Cornelia’s contemporaries would have called for a quiet ambulance to take them to a sanatorium some hours ere this – but Miss Cornelia was not merely, comparatively speaking, as fresh as a daisy; her manner bore every evidence of a firm intention to play Sherlock Holmes to the mysteries that surrounded her, in spite of Doctors, detectives, dubious noises, or even the Bat himself.
The last of the Van Gorder spinsters turned to Bailey now.
“Get some soot from that fireplace,” she ordered. “Be quick. Scrape it off with a knife or a piece of paper. Anything.”
Bailey wondered and obeyed. As he was engaged in his grimy task, Miss Cornelia got out a piece of writing paper from a drawer and placed it on the center table, with a lead pencil beside it.
Bailey emerged from the fireplace with a handful of sooty flakes.
“Is this all right?”
“Yes. Now rub it on the handle of that bag.” She indicated the little black bag in which Doctor Wells carried the usual paraphernalia of a country Doctor.
A private suspicion grew in Bailey’s mind as to whether Miss Cornelia’s fine but eccentric brain had not suffered too sorely under the shocks of the night. But he did not dare disobey. He blackened the handle of the Doctor’s bag with painstaking thoroughness and awaited further instructions.
“Somebody’s coming!” Dale whispered, warning from her post by the door.
Bailey quickly went to the fireplace and resumed his pretended labors with the fire. Miss Cornelia moved away from the Doctor’s bag and spoke for the benefit of whoever might be coming.
“We all need sleep,” she began, as if ending a conversation with Dale, “and I think – “
The door opened, admitting Billy.
“Doctor just go upstairs,” he said, and went out again leaving the door open.
A flash passed across Miss Cornelia’s face. She stepped to the door. She called.
“Doctor! Oh, Doctor!”
“Yes?” answered the Doctor’s voice from the main staircase. His steps clattered down the stairs – he entered the room. Perhaps he read something in Miss Cornelia’s manner that demanded an explanation of his action. At any rate, he forestalled her, just as she was about to question him.
“I was about to look around above,” he said. “I don’t like to leave if there is the possibility of some assassin still hidden in the house.”
“That is very considerate of you. But we are well protected now. And besides, why should this person remain in the house? The murder is done, the police are here.”
“True,” he said. “I only thought – “
But a knocking at the terrace door interrupted him. While the attention of the others was turned in that direction Dale, less cynical than her aunt, made a small plea to him and realized before she had finished with it that the Doctor too had his price.
“Doctor – did you get it?” she repeated, drawing the Doctor aside.
The Doctor gave her a look of apparent bewilderment.
“My dear child,” he said softly, “are you sure that you put it there?”
Dale felt as if she had received a blow in the face.
“Why, yes – I – ” she began in tones of utter dismay. Then she stopped. The Doctor’s seeming bewilderment was too pat – too plausible. Of course she was sure – and, though possible, it seemed extremely unlikely that anyone else could have discovered the hiding-place of the blue-print in the few moments that had elapsed between the time when Billy took the tray from the room and the time when the Doctor ostensibly went to find it. A cold wave of distrust swept over her – she turned away from the Doctor silently.
Meanwhile Anderson had entered, slamming the terrace-door behind him.
“I couldn’t find anybody!” he said in an irritated voice. “I think that Jap’s crazy.
The Doctor began to struggle into his topcoat, avoiding any look at Dale.
“Well,” he said, “I believe I’ve fulfilled all the legal requirements – I think I must be going.” He turned toward the door but the detective halted him.
“Doctor,” he said, “did you ever hear Courtleigh Fleming mention a Hidden Room in this house?”
If the Doctor started, the movement passed apparently unnoted by Anderson. And his reply was coolly made.
“No – and I knew him rather well.”
“You don’t think then,” persisted the detective, “that such a room and the money in it could be the motive for this crime?”
The Doctor’s voice grew a little curt.
“I don’t believe Courtleigh Fleming robbed his own bank, if that’s what you mean,” he said with nicely calculated emphasis, real or feigned. He crossed over to get his bag and spoke to Miss Cornelia.
“Well, Miss Van Gorder,” he said, picking up the bag by its blackened handle, “I can’t wish you a comfortable night but I can wish you a quiet one.”
Miss Cornelia watched him silently. As he turned to go, she spoke.
“We’re all of us a little upset, naturally,” she confessed. “Perhaps you could write a prescription – a sleeping-powder or a bromide of some sort.”
“Why, certainly,” agreed the Doctor at once. He turned back. Miss Cornelia seemed pleased.
“I hoped you would,” she said with a little tremble in her voice such as might easily occur in the voice of a nervous old lady. “Oh, yes, here’s paper and a pencil,” as the Doctor fumbled in a pocket.
The Doctor took the sheet of paper she proffered and, using the side of his bag as a pad, began to write out the prescription.
“I don’t generally advise these drugs,” he said, looking up for a moment. “Still – “
He paused. “What time is it?”
Miss Cornelia glanced at the clock. “Half-past eleven.”
“Then I’d better bring you the powders myself,” decided the Doctor. “The pharmacy closes at eleven. I shall have to make them up myself.”
“That seems a lot of trouble.”
“Nothing is any trouble if I can be helpful,” he assured her, smilingly. And Miss Cornelia also smiled, took the piece of paper from his hand, glanced at it once, as if out of idle curiosity about the unfinished prescription, and then laid it down on the table with a careless little gesture. Dale gave her aunt a glance of dumb entreaty. Miss Cornelia read her wish for another moment alone with the Doctor.
“Dale will let you out, Doctor,” said she, giving the girl the key to the front door,
The Doctor approved her watchfulness.
“That’s right,” he said smilingly. “Keep things locked up. Discretion is the better part of valor!”
But Miss Cornelia failed to agree with him.
“I’ve been discreet for sixty-five years,” she said with a sniff, “and sometimes I think it was a mistake!”
The Doctor laughed easily and followed Dale out of the room, with a nod of farewell to the others in passing. The detective, seeking for some object upon whom to vent the growing irritation which seemed to possess him, made Bailey the scapegoat of his wrath.
“I guess we can do without you for the present!” he said, with an angry frown at the latter. Bailey flushed, then remembered himself, and left the room submissively, with the air of a well-trained servant accepting an unmerited rebuke. The detective turned at once to Miss Cornelia.
“Now I want a few words with you!”
“Which means that you mean to do all the talking!” said Miss Cornelia acidly. “Very well! But first I want to show you something. Will you come here, please, Mr. Anderson?”
She started for the alcove.
“I’ve examined that staircase,” said the detective.
“Not with me!” insisted Miss Cornelia. “I have something to show you.
He followed her unwillingly up the stairs, his whole manner seeming to betray a complete lack of confidence in the theories of all amateur sleuths in general and spinster detectives of sixty-five in particular. Their footsteps died away up the alcove stairs. The living-room was left vacant for an instant.
Vacant? Only in seeming. The moment that Miss Cornelia and the detective had passed up the stairs, the crouching, mysterious Unknown, behind the settee, began to move. The French window-door opened – a stealthy figure passed through it silently to be swallowed up in the darkness of the terrace.
And poor Lizzie, entering the room at that moment, saw a hand covered with blood reach back and gropingly, horribly, through the broken pane, refasten the lock.
She shrieked madly.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
HANDCUFFS
Dale had failed with the Doctor. When Lizzie’s screams once more had called the startled household to the living-room, she knew she had failed. She followed in mechanically, watched an irritated Anderson send the Pride of Kerry to bed and. threaten to lock her up, and listened vaguely to the conversation between her aunt and the detective that followed it, without more than casual interest.
Nevertheless, that conversation was to have vital results later on.
“Your point about that thumbprint on the stair rail is very interesting,” Anderson said with a certain respect. “But just what does it prove?”
“It points down,” said Miss Cornelia, still glowing with the memory of the whistle of surprise the detective had given when she had shown him the strange thumbprint on the rail of the alcove stairs.
“It does,” he admitted. “But what then?”
Miss Cornelia tried to put her case as clearly and tersely as possible.
“It shows that somebody stood there for some time, listening to my niece and Richard Fleming in this room below,” she said.
“All right – I’ll grant that to save argument,” retorted the detective. “But the moment that shot was fired the lights came on. If somebody on that staircase shot him, and then came down and took the blue-print, Miss Ogden would have seen him.”
He turned upon Dale.
“Did you?”
She hesitated. Why hadn’t she thought of such an explanation before? But now – it would sound too flimsy!
“No, nobody came down,” she admitted candidly. The detective’s face altered, grew menacing. Miss Cornelia once more had put herself between him and Dale.
“Now, Mr. Anderson – ” she warned.
The detective was obviously trying to keep his temper.
“I’m not hounding this girl!” he said doggedly. “I haven’t said yet that she committed the murder – but she took that blue-print and I want it!”
“You want it to connect her with the murder,” parried Miss Cornelia.
The detective threw up his hands.
“It’s rather reasonable to suppose that I might want to return the funds to the Union Bank, isn’t it?” he queried in tones of heavy sarcasm. “Provided they’re here,” he added doubtfully.
Miss Cornelia resolved upon comparative frankness.
“I see,” she said. “Well, I’ll tell you this much, Mr. Anderson, and I’ll ask you to believe me as a lady. Granting that at one time my niece knew something of that blue-print – at this moment we do not know where it is or who has it.”
Her words had the unmistakable ring of truth. The very oath from the detective that succeeded them showed his recognition of the fact.
“Damnation,” he muttered. “That’s true, is it?”
“That’s true,” said Miss Cornelia firmly. A silence of troubled thoughts fell upon the three. Miss Cornelia took out her knitting.
“Did you ever try knitting when you wanted to think?” she queried sweetly, after a pause in which the detective tramped from one side of the room to the other, brows knotted, eyes bent on the floor.
“No,” grunted the detective. He took out a cigar – bit off the end with a savage snap of teeth – lit it – resumed his pacing.
“You should, sometimes,” continued Miss Cornelia, watching his troubled movements with a faint light of mockery in her eyes. “I find it very helpful.”
“I don’t need knitting to think straight,” rasped Anderson indignantly. Miss Cornelia’s eyes danced.
“I wonder!” she said with caustic affability. “You seem to have so much evidence left over.”
The detective paused and glared at her helplessly.
“Did you ever hear of the man who took a clock apart – and when he put it together a gain, he had enough left over to make another clock?” she twitted.
The detective, ignoring the taunt, crossed quickly to Dale.
“What do you mean by saying that paper isn’t where you put it?” he demanded in tones of extreme severity. Miss Cornelia replied for her niece.
“She hasn’t said that.”
The detective made an impatient movement of his hand and walked away – as if to get out of the reach of the indefatigable spinster’s tongue. But Miss Cornelia had not finished with him yet, by any means.
“Do you believe in circumstantial evidence?” she asked him with seeming ingenuousness.
“It’s my business,” said the detective stolidly. Miss Cornelia smiled.
“While you have been investigating,” she announced, “I, too, have not been idle.”
The detective gave a barking laugh. She let it pass. “To me,” she continued, “it is perfectly obvious that one intelligence has been at work behind many of the things that have occurred in this house.”
Now Anderson observed her with a new respect.
“Who?” he grunted tersely.
Her eyes flashed.
“I’ll ask you that! Some one person who, knowing Courtleigh Fleming well, probably knows of the existence of a Hidden Room in this house and who, finding us in occupation of the house, has tried to get rid of me in two ways. First, by frightening me with anonymous threats – and, second, by urging me to leave. Someone, who very possibly entered this house tonight shortly before the murder and slipped up that staircase!”
The detective had listened to her outburst with unusual thoughtfulness. A certain wonder – perhaps at her shrewdness, perhaps at an unexpected confirmation of certain ideas of his own – grew upon his face. Now he jerked out two words.
“The Doctor?”
Miss Cornelia knitted on as if every movement of her needles added one more link to the strong chain of probabilities she was piecing together.
“When Doctor Wells said he was leaving here earlier in the evening for the Johnsons’ he did not go there,” she observed. “He was not expected to go there. I found that out when I telephoned.”
“The Doctor!” repeated the detective, his eyes narrowing, his head beginning to sway from side to side like the head of some great cat just before a spring.
“As you know,” Miss Cornelia went on, “I had a supplementary bolt placed on that terrace door today.” She nodded toward the door that gave access into the alcove from the terrace. “Earlier this evening Doctor Wells said that he had bolted it, when he had left it open – purposely, as I now realize, in order that he might return later. You may also recall that Doctor Wells took a scrap of paper from Richard Fleming’s hand and tried to conceal it – why did he do that?”
She paused for a second. Then she changed her tone a little.
“May I ask you to look at this?”
She displayed the piece of paper on which Doctor Wells had started to write the prescription for her sleeping-powders – and now her strategy with the doctor’s bag and the soot Jack Bailey had got from the fireplace stood revealed. A sharp, black imprint of a man’s right thumb – the Doctor’s – stood out on the paper below the broken line of writing. The Doctor had not noticed the staining of his hand by the blackened bag handle, or, noticing, had thought nothing of it – but the blackened bag handle had been a trap, and he had left an indelible piece of evidence behind him. It now remained to test the value of this evidence.
Miss Cornelia handed the paper to Anderson silently. But her eyes were bright with pardonable vanity at the success of her little piece of strategy.
“A thumb-print,” muttered Anderson. “Whose is it?”
“Doctor Wells,” said Miss Cornelia with what might have been a little crow of triumph in anyone not a Van Gorder.
Anderson looked thoughtful. Then he felt in his pocket for a magnifying glass, failed to find it, muttered, and took the reading glass Miss Cornelia offered him.
“Try this,” she said. “My whole case hangs on my conviction that that print and the one out there on the stair rail are the same.”
He put down the paper and smiled at her ironically. “Your case!” he said. “You don’t really believe you need a detective at all, do you?”
“I will only say that so far your views and mine have failed to coincide. If I am right about that fingerprint, then you may be right about my private opinion.”
And on that he went out, rather grimly, paper and reading glass in hand, to make his comparison.
It was then that Beresford came in, a new and slightly rigid Beresford, and crossed to her at once.
“Miss Van Gorder,” he said, all the flippancy gone from his voice, “may I ask you to make an excuse and call your gardener here?”
Dale started uncontrollably at the ominous words, but Miss Cornelia betrayed no emotion except in the increased rapidity of her knitting.
“The gardener? Certainly, if you’ll touch that bell,” she said pleasantly.
Beresford stalked to the bell and rang it. The three waited – Dale in an agony of suspense.
The detective re-entered the room by the alcove stairs, his mien unfathomable by any of the anxious glances that sought him out at once.
“It’s no good, Miss Van Gorder,” he said quietly. “The prints are not the same.”
“Not the same!” gasped Miss Cornelia, unwilling to believe her ears.
Anderson laid down the paper and the reading glass with a little gesture of dismissal.
“If you think I’m mistaken, I’ll leave it to any unprejudiced person or your own eyesight. Thumbprints never lie,” he said in a flat, convincing voice. Miss Cornelia stared at him – disappointment written large on her features. He allowed himself a little ironic smile.
“Did you ever try a good cigar when you wanted to think?” he queried suavely, puffing upon his own.
But Miss Cornelia’s spirit was too broken by the collapse of her dearly loved and adroitly managed scheme for her to take up the gauge of battle he offered.
“I still believe it was the Doctor,” she said stubbornly. But her tones were not the tones of utter conviction which she had used before.
“And yet,” said the detective, ruthlessly demolishing another link in her broken chain of evidence, “the doctor was in this room tonight, according to your own statement, when the anonymous letter came through the window.”
Miss Cornelia gazed at him blankly, for the first time in her life at a loss for an appropriately sharp retort. It was true – the Doctor had been here in the room beside her when the stone bearing the last anonymous warning had crashed through the windowpane. And yet –
Billy’s entrance in answer to Beresford’s ring made her mind turn to other matters for the moment. Why had Beresford’s manner changed so, and what was he saying to Billy now?
“Tell the gardener Miss Van Gorder wants him and don’t say we’re all here,” the young lawyer commanded the butler sharply. Billy nodded and disappeared. Miss Cornelia’s back began to stiffen – she didn’t like other people ordering her servants around like that.
The detective, apparently, had somewhat of the same feeling.
“I seem to have plenty of help in this case!” he said with obvious sarcasm, turning to Beresford.
The latter made no reply. Dale rose anxiously from her chair, her lips quivering.
“Why have you sent for the gardener?” she inquired haltingly.
Beresford deigned to answer at last.
“I’ll tell you that in a moment,” he said with a grim tightening of his lips.
There was a fateful pause, for an instant, while Dale roved nervously from one side of the room to the other. Then Jack Bailey came into the room – alone.
He seemed to sense danger in the air. His hands clenched at his sides, but except for that tiny betrayal of emotion, he still kept his servant’s pose.
“You sent for me?” he queried of Miss Cornelia submissively, ignoring the glowering Beresford.
But Beresford would be ignored no longer. He came between them before Miss Cornelia had time to answer.
“How long has this man been in your employ?” he asked brusquely, manner tense.
Miss Cornelia made one final attempt at evasion. “Why should that interest you?” she parried, answering his question with an icy question of her own.
It was too late. Already Bailey had read the truth in Beresford’s eyes.
“I came this evening,” he admitted, still hoping against hope that his cringing posture of the servitor might give Beresford pause for the moment.
But the promptness of his answer only crystallized Beresford’s suspicions.
“Exactly,” he said with terse finality. He turned to the detective.
“I’ve been trying to recall this man’s face ever since I came in tonight – ” he said with grim triumph. “Now, I know who he is.”
“Who is he?”
Bailey straightened up. He had lost his game with Chance – and the loss, coming when it did, seemed bitterer than even he had thought it could be, but before they took him away he would speak his mind.
“It’s all right, Beresford,” he said with a fatigue so deep that it colored his voice like flakes of iron-rust. “I know you think you’re doing your duty – but I wish to God you could have restrained your sense of duty for about three hours more!”
“To let, you get away?” the young lawyer sneered, unconvinced.
“No,” said Bailey with quiet defiance. “To let me finish what I came here to do.”
“Don’t you think you have done enough?” Beresford’s voice flicked him with righteous scorn, no less telling because of its youthfulness. He turned back to the detective soberly enough.
“This man has imposed upon the credulity of these women, I am quite sure without their knowledge,” he said with a trace of his former gallantry. “He is Bailey of the Union Bank, the missing cashier.”
The detective slowly put down his cigar on an ash tray.
“That’s the truth, is it?” he demanded.
Dale’s hand flew to her breast. If Jack would only deny it – even now! But even as she thought this, she realized the uselessness of any such denial.
Bailey realized it, too.
“It’s true, all right,” he admitted hopelessly. He closed his eyes for a moment. Let them come with the handcuffs now and get it over. – every moment the scene dragged out was a moment of unnecessary torture for Dale.
But Beresford had not finished with his indictment. “I accuse him not only of the thing he is wanted for, but of the murder of Richard Fleming!” he said fiercely, glaring at Bailey as if only a youthful horror of making a scene before Dale and Miss Cornelia held him back from striking the latter down where he stood.
Bailey’s eyes snapped open. He took a threatening step toward his accuser. “You lie!” he said in a hoarse, violent voice.
Anderson crossed between them, just as conflict seemed inevitable.
“You knew this?” he queried sharply in Dale’s direction.
Dale set her lips in a line. She did not answer.
He turned to Miss Cornelia.
“Did you?”
“Yes,” admitted the latter quietly, her knitting needles at last at rest. “I knew he was Mr. Bailey if that is all you mean.
The quietness of her answer seemed to infuriate the detective.
“Quite a pretty little conspiracy,” he said. “How in the name of God do you expect me to do anything with the entire household united against me? Tell me that.”
“Exactly,” said Miss Cornelia. “And if we are united against you, why should I have sent for you? You might tell me that, too.”
He turned on Bailey savagely.
“What did you mean by that ‘three hours more’?” he demanded.
“I could have cleared myself in three hours,” said Bailey with calm despair.
Beresford laughed mockingly – a laugh that seemed to sear into Bailey’s consciousness like the touch of a hot iron. Again he turned frenziedly upon the young lawyer – and Anderson was just preparing to hold them away from each other, by force if necessary, when the doorbell rang.
For an instant the ringing of the bell held the various figures of the little scene in the rigid postures of a waxworks tableau – Bailey, one foot advanced toward Beresford, his hands balled up into fists – Beresford already in an attitude of defense – the detective about to step in between them – Miss Cornelia stiff in her chair – Dale over by the fireplace, her hand at her heart. Then they relaxed, but not, at least on the part of Bailey and Beresford, to resume their interrupted conflict. Too many nerve-shaking things had already happened that night for either of the young men not to drop their mutual squabble in the face of a common danger.
“Probably the Doctor,” murmured Miss Cornelia uncertainly as the doorbell rang again. “He was to come back with some sleeping-powders.”
Billy appeared for the key of the front door.
“If that’s Doctor Wells,” warned the detective, “admit him. If it’s anybody else, call me.”
Billy grinned acquiescently and departed. The detective moved nearer to Bailey.
“Have you got a gun on you?”
“No.” Bailey bowed his head.
“Well, I’ll just make sure of that.” The detective’s hands ran swiftly and expertly over Bailey’s form, through his pockets, probing for concealed weapons. Then, slowly drawing a pair of handcuffs from his pocket, he prepared to put them on Bailey’s wrists.
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
THE SIGN OF THE BAT
But Dale could bear it no longer. The sight of her lover, beaten, submissive, his head bowed, waiting obediently like a common criminal for the detective to lock his wrists in steel broke down her last defenses. She rushed into the center of the room, between Bailey and the detective, her eyes wild with terror, her words stumbling over each other in her eagerness to get them out.
“Oh, no! I can’t stand it! I’ll tell you everything!” she cried frenziedly. “He got to the foot of the stair-case – Richard Fleming, I mean,” she was facing the detective now, “and he had the blue-print you’ve been talking about. I had told him Jack Bailey was here as the gardener and he said if I screamed he would tell that. I was desperate. I threatened him with the revolver but he took it from me. Then when I tore the blue-print from him – he was shot – from the stairs – “
“By Bailey!” interjected Beresford angrily.
“I didn’t even know he was in the house!” Bailey’s answer was as instant as it was hot. Meanwhile, the Doctor had entered the room, hardly noticed, in the middle of Dale’s confession, and now stood watching the scene intently from a post by the door.
“What did you do with the blue-print?” The detective’s voice beat at Dale like a whip.
“I put it first in the neck of my dress – ” she faltered. “Then, when I found you were watching me, I hid it somewhere else.”
Her eyes fell on the Doctor. She saw his hand steal out toward the knob of the door. Was he going to run away on some pretext before she could finish her story? She gave a sigh of relief when Billy, re-entering with the key to the front door, blocked any such attempt at escape.
Mechanically she watched Billy cross to the table, lay the key upon it, and return to the hall without so much as a glance at the tense, suspicious circle of faces focused upon herself and her lover.
“I put it – somewhere else,” she repeated, her eyes going back to the Doctor.
“Did you give it to Bailey?”
“No – I hid it – and then I told where it was – to the Doctor – ” Dale swayed on her feet. All turned surprisedly toward the Doctor. Miss Cornelia rose from her chair.
The Doctor bore the battery of eyes unflinchingly. “That’s rather inaccurate,” he said, with a tight little smile. “You told me where you had placed it, but when I went to look for it, it was gone.”
“Are you quite sure of that?” queried Miss Cornelia acidly.
“Absolutely,” he said. He ignored the rest of the party, addressing himself directly to Anderson.
“She said she had hidden it inside one of the rolls that were on the tray on that table,” he continued in tones of easy explanation, approaching the table as he did so, and tapping it with the box of sleeping-powders he had brought for Miss Cornelia.
“She was in such distress that I finally went to look for it. It wasn’t there.”
“Do you realize the significance of this paper?” Anderson boomed at once.
“Nothing, beyond the fact that Miss Ogden was afraid it linked her with the crime.” The Doctor’s voice
was very clear and firm.
Anderson pondered an instant. Then –
“I’d like to have a few minutes with the Doctor alone,” he said somberly.
The group about him dissolved at once. Miss Cornelia, her arm around her niece’s waist, led the latter gently to the door. As the two lovers passed each other a glance flashed between them – a glance, pathetically brief, of longing and love. Dale’s finger tips brushed Bailey’s hand gently in passing.
“Beresford,” commanded the detective, “take Bailey to the library and see that he stays there.”
Beresford tapped his pocket with a significant gesture and motioned Bailey to the door. Then they, too, left the room. The door closed. The Doctor and the detective were alone.
The detective spoke at once – and surprisingly.
“Doctor, I’ll have that blue-print!” he said sternly, his eyes the color of steel.
The Doctor gave him a wary little glance.
“But I’ve just made the statement that I didn’t find the blue-print,” he affirmed flatly.
“I heard you!” Anderson’s voice was very dry. “Now this situation is between you and me, Doctor Wells.” His forefinger sought the Doctor’s chest. “It has nothing to do with that poor fool of a cashier. He hasn’t got either those securities or the money from them and you know it. It’s in this house and you know that, too!”
“In this house?” repeated the Doctor as if stalling for time.
“In this house! Tonight, when you claimed to be making a professional call, you were in this house – and I think you were on that staircase when Richard Fleming was killed!”
“No, Anderson, I’ll swear I was not!” The Doctor might be acting, but if he was, it was incomparable acting. The terror in his voice seemed too real to be feigned.
But Anderson was remorseless.
“I’ll tell you this,” he continued. “Miss Van Gorder very cleverly got a thumbprint of yours tonight. Does that mean anything to you?”
His eyes bored into the Doctor – the eyes of a poker player bluffing on a hidden card. But the Doctor did not flinch.
“Nothing,” he said firmly. “I have not been upstairs in this house in three months.”
The accent of truth in his voice seemed so unmistakable that even Anderson’s shrewd brain was puzzled by it. But he persisted in his attempt to wring a confession from this latest suspect.
“Before Courtleigh Fleming died – did he tell you anything about a Hidden Room in this house?” he queried cannily.
The Doctor’s confident air of honesty lessened, a furtive look appeared in his eyes.
“No,” he insisted, but not as convincingly as he had made his previous denial.
The detective hammered at the point again.
“You haven’t been trying to frighten these women out of here with anonymous letters so you could get in?”
“No. Certainly not.” But again the Doctor’s air had that odd mixture of truth and falsehood in it.
The detective paused for an instant.
“Let me see your key ring!” he ordered. The Doctor passed it over silently. The detective glanced at the keys – then, suddenly, his revolver glittered in his other hand.
The Doctor watched him anxiously. A puff of wind rattled the panes of the French windows. The storm, quieted for a while, was gathering its strength for a fresh unleashing of its dogs of thunder.
The detective stepped to the terrace door, opened it, and then quietly proceeded to try the Doctor’s keys in the lock. Thus located he was out of visual range, and Wells took advantage of it at once. He moved swiftly toward the fireplace, extracting the missing piece of blue-print from an inside pocket as he did so. The secret the blue-print guarded was already graven on his mind in indelible characters – now he would destroy all evidence that it had ever been in his possession and bluff through the rest of the situation as best he might.
He threw the paper toward the flames with a nervous gesture of relief. But for once his cunning failed – the throw was too hurried to be sure and the light scrap of paper wavered and settled to the floor just outside the fireplace. The Doctor swore noiselessly and stooped to pick it up and make sure of its destruction. But he was not quick enough. Through the window the detective had seen the incident, and the next moment the Doctor heard his voice bark behind him. He turned, and stared at the leveled muzzle of Anderson’s revolver.
“Hands up and stand back!” he commanded.
As he did so Anderson picked up the paper and a sardonic smile crossed his face as his eyes took in the significance of the print. He laid his revolver down on the table where he could snatch it up again at a moment’s notice.
“Behind a fireplace, eh?” he muttered. “What fireplace? In what room?”
“I won’t tell you!” The Doctor’s voice was sullen. He inched, gingerly, cautiously, toward the other side of the table.
“All right – I’ll find it, you know.” The detective’s eyes turned swiftly back to the blue-print. Experience should have taught him never to underrate an adversary, even of the Doctor’s caliber, but long familiarity with danger can make the shrewdest careless. For a moment, as he bent over the paper again, he was off guard.
The Doctor seized the moment with a savage promptitude and sprang. There followed a silent, furious struggle between the two. Under normal circumstances Anderson would have been the stronger and quicker, but the Doctor fought with an added strength of despair and his initial leap had pinioned the detective’s arms behind him. Now the detective shook one hand free and snatched at the revolver – in vain – for the Doctor, with a groan of desperation, struck at his hand as its fingers were about to close on the smooth butt and the revolver skidded from the table to the floor. With a sudden terrible movement he pinioned both the detective’s arms behind him again and reached for the telephone. Its heavy base descended on the back of the detective’s head with stunning force. The next moment the battle was ended and the Doctor, panting with exhaustion, held the limp form of an unconscious man in his arms.
He lowered the detective to the floor and straightened up again, listening tensely. So brief and intense had been the struggle that even now he could hardly believe in its reality. It seemed impossible, too, that the struggle had not been heard. Then he realized dully, as a louder roll of thunder smote on his ears, that the elements themselves had played into his hand. The storm, with its wind and fury, had returned just in time to save him and drown out all sounds of conflict from the rest of the house with its giant clamor.
He bent swiftly over Anderson, listening to his heart. Good – the man still breathed; he had enough on his conscience without adding the murder of a detective to the black weight. Now he pocketed the revolver and the blue-print – gagged Anderson rapidly with a knotted handkerchief and proceeded to wrap his own muffler around the detective’s head as an additional silencer. Anderson gave a faint sigh.
The Doctor thought rapidly. Soon or late the detective would return to consciousness – with his hands free he could easily tear out the gag. He looked wildly about the room for a rope, a curtain – ah, he had it – the detective’s own handcuffs! He snapped the cuffs on Anderson’s wrists, then realized that, in his hurry, he had bound the detective’s hands in front of him instead of behind him. Well – it would do for the moment – he did not need much time to carry out his plans. He dragged the limp body, its head lolling, into the billiard room where he deposited it on the floor in the corner farthest from the door.
So far, so good – now to lock the door of the billiard room. Fortunately, the key was there on the inside of the door. He quickly transferred it, locked the billiard room door from the outside, and pocketed the key. For a second he stood by the center table in the living-room, recovering his breath and trying to straighten his rumpled clothing. Then he crossed cautiously into the alcove and started to pad up the alcove stairs, his face white and strained with excitement and hope.
And it was then that there happened one of the most dramatic events of the night. One which was to remain, for the next hour or so, as bewildering as the murder and which, had it come a few moments sooner or a few moments later, would have entirely changed the course of events.
It was preceded by a desperate hammering on the door of the terrace. It halted the Doctor on his way upstairs, drew Beresford on a run into the living-room, and even reached the bedrooms of the women up above.
“My God! What’s that?” Beresford panted.
The Doctor indicated the door. It was too late now. Already he could hear Miss Cornelia’s voice above; it was only a question of a short time until Anderson in the billiard room revived and would try to make his plight known. And in the brief moment of that resumee of his position the knocking came again. But feebler, as though the suppliant outside had exhausted his strength.
As Beresford drew his revolver and moved to the door, Miss Cornelia came in, followed by Lizzie.
“It’s the Bat,” Lizzie announced mournfully. “Good-by, Miss Neily. Good-by, everybody. I saw his hand, all covered with blood. He’s had a good night for sure!”
But they ignored her. And Beresford flung open the door.
Just what they had expected, what figure of horror or of fear they waited for, no one can say. But there was no horror and no fear; only unutterable amazement as an unknown man, in torn and muddied garments, with a streak of dried blood seaming his forehead like a scar, fell through the open doorway into Beresford’s arms,
“Good God!” muttered Beresford, dropping his revolver to catch the strange burden. For a moment the Unknown lay in his arms like a corpse. Then he straightened dizzily, staggered into the room, took a few steps toward the table, and fell prostrate upon his face – at the end of his strength.
“Doctor!” gasped Miss Cornelia dazedly and the Doctor, whatever guilt lay on his conscience, responded at once to the call of his profession.
He bent over the Unknown Man – the physician once more – and made a brief examination.
“He’s fainted!” he said, rising. “Struck on the head, too.”
“But who is he?” faltered Miss Cornelia.
“I never saw him before,” said the Doctor. It was obvious that he spoke the truth. “Does anyone recognize him?”
All crowded about the Unknown, trying to read the riddle of his identity. Miss Cornelia rapidly revised her first impressions of the stranger. When he had first fallen through the doorway into Beresford’s arms she had not known what to think. Now, in the brighter light of the living-room she saw that the still face, beneath its mask of dirt and dried blood, was strong and fairly youthful; if the man were a criminal, he belonged, like the Bat, to the upper fringes of the world of crime. She noted mechanically that his hands and feet had been tied, ends of frayed rope still dangled from his wrists and ankles. And that terrible injury on his head! She shuddered and closed her eyes.
“Does anyone recognize him?” repeated the Doctor but one by one the others shook their heads. Crook, casual tramp, or honest laborer unexpectedly caught in the sinister toils of the Cedarcrest affair – his identity seemed a mystery to one and all.
“Is he badly hurt?” asked Miss Cornelia, shuddering again.
“It’s hard to say,” answered the Doctor. “I think not.” The Unknown stirred feebly – made an effort to sit up. Beresford and the Doctor caught him under the arms and helped him to his feet. He stood there swaying, a blank expression on his face.
“A chair!” said the Doctor quickly. “Ah – ” He helped the strange figure to sit down and bent over him again.
“You’re all right now, my friend,” he said in his best tones of professional cheeriness. “Dizzy a bit, aren’t you?”
The Unknown rubbed his wrists where his bonds had cut them. He made an effort to speak.
“Water!” he said in a low voice.
The Doctor gestured to Billy. “Get some water – or whisky – if there is any – that’d be better.”
“There’s a flask of whisky in my room, Billy,” added Miss Cornelia helpfully.
“Now, my man,” continued the Doctor to the Unknown. “You’re in the hands of friends. Brace up and tell us what happened!”
Beresford had been looking about for the detective, puzzled not to find him, as usual, in charge of affairs. Now, “Where’s Anderson? This is a police matter!” he said, making a movement as if to go in search of him.
The Doctor stopped him quickly.
“He was here a minute ago – he’ll be back presently,” he said, praying to whatever gods he served that Anderson, bound and gagged in the billiard room, had not yet returned to consciousness.
Unobserved by all except Miss Cornelia, the mention of the detective’s name had caused a strange reaction in the Unknown. His eyes had opened – he had started – the haze in his mind had seemed to clear away for a moment. Then, for some reason, his shoulders had slumped again and the look of apathy come back to his face. But, stunned or not, it now seemed possible that he was not quite as dazed as he appeared.
The Doctor gave the slumped shoulders a little shake.
“Rouse yourself, man!” he said. “What has happened to you?”
“I’m dazed!” said the Unknown thickly and slowly. “I can’t remember.” He passed a hand weakly over his forehead.
“What a night!” sighed Miss Cornelia, sinking into a chair. “Richard Fleming murdered in this house – and now – this!”
The Unknown shot her a stealthy glance from beneath lowered eyelids. But when she looked at him, his face was blank again.
“Why doesn’t somebody ask his name?” queried Dale, and, “Where the devil is that detective?” muttered Beresford, almost in the same instant.
Neither question was answered, and Beresford, increasingly uneasy at the continued absence of Anderson, turned toward the hall.
The Doctor took Dale’s suggestion.
“What’s your name?”
Silence from the Unknown – and that blank stare of stupefaction.
“Look at his papers.” It was Miss Cornelia’s voice. The Doctor and Bailey searched the torn trouser pockets, the pockets of the muddied shirt, while the Unknown submitted passively, not seeming to care what happened to him. But search him as they would – it was in vain.
“Not a paper on him,” said Jack Bailey at last, straightening up.
A crash of breaking glass from the head of the alcove Stairs put a period to his sentence. All turned toward the stairs – or all except the Unknown, who, for a moment, half-rose in his chair, his eyes gleaming, his face alert, the mask of bewildered apathy gone from his face.
As they watched, a rigid little figure of horror backed slowly down the alcove stairs and into the room – Billy, the Japanese, his Oriental placidity disturbed at last, incomprehensible terror written in every line of his face.
“Billy!”
“Billy – what is it?”
The diminutive butler made a pitiful attempt at his usual grin.
“It – nothing,” he gasped. The Unknown relapsed in his chair – again the dazed stranger from nowhere.
Beresford took the Japanese by the shoulders.
“Now see here!” he said sharply. “You’ve seen something! What was it!”
Billy trembled like a leaf.
“Ghost! Ghost!” he muttered frantically, his face working.
“He’s concealing something. Look at him!” Miss Cornelia stared at her servant.
“No, no!” insisted Billy in an ague of fright. “No, no!”
But Miss Cornelia was sure of it.
“Brooks, close that door!” she said, pointing at the terrace door in the alcove which still stood ajar after the entrance of the Unknown.
Bailey moved to obey. But just as he reached the alcove the terrace door slammed shut in his face. At the same moment every light in Cedarcrest blinked and went out again.
Bailey fumbled for the doorknob in the sudden darkness.
“The door’s locked!” he said incredulously. The key’s gone too. Where’s your revolver, Beresford?”
“I dropped it in the alcove when I caught that man,” called Beresford, cursing himself for his carelessness.
The illuminated dial of Bailey’s wrist watch flickered in the darkness as he searched for the revolver – as round, glowing spot of phosphorescence.
Lizzie screamed. “The eye! The gleaming eye I saw on the stairs!” she shrieked, pointing at it frenziedly.
“Quick – there’s a candle on the table – light it somebody. Never mind the revolver, I have one!” called Miss Cornelia.
“Righto!” called Beresford cheerily in reply. He found the candle, lit it –
The party blinked at each other for a moment, still unable quite to co-ordinate their thoughts.
Bailey rattled the knob of the door into the hall.
“This door’s locked, too!” he said with increasing puzzlement. A gasp went over the group. They were locked in the room while some devilment was going on in the rest of the house. That they knew. But what it might be, what form it might take, they had not the remotest idea. They were too distracted to notice the injured man, now alert in his chair, or the Doctor’s odd attitude of listening, above the rattle and banging of the storm.
But it was not until Miss Cornelia took the candle and proceeded toward the hall door to examine it that the full horror of the situation burst upon them.
Neatly fastened to the white panel of the door, chest high and hardly more than just dead, was the body of a bat.
Of what happened thereafter no one afterward remembered the details. To be shut in there at the mercy of one who knew no mercy was intolerable. It was left for Miss Cornelia to remember her own revolver, lying unnoticed on the table since the crime earlier in the evening, and to suggest its, use in shattering the lock. Just what they had expected when the door was finally opened they did not know. But the house was quiet and in order; no new horror faced them in the hall; their candle revealed no bloody figure, their ears heard no unearthly sound.
Slowly they began to breathe normally once more. After that they began to search the house. Since no room was apparently immune from danger, the men made no protest when the women insisted on accompanying them. And as time went on and chamber after chamber was discovered empty and undisturbed, gradually the courage of the party began to rise. Lizzie, still whimpering, stuck closely to Miss Cornelia’s heels, but that spirited lady began to make small side excursions of her own.
Of the men, only Bailey, Beresford, and the Doctor could really be said to search at all. Billy had remained below, impassive of face but rolling of eye; the Unknown, after an attempt to depart with them, had sunk back weakly into his chair again, and the detective, Anderson, was still unaccountably missing.
While no one could be said to be grieving over this, still the belief that somehow, somewhere, he had met the Bat and suffered at his hands was strong in all of them except the Doctor. As each door was opened they expected to find him, probably foully murdered; as each door was closed again they breathed with relief.
And as time went on and the silence and peace remained unbroken, the conviction grew on them that the Bat had in this manner achieved his object and departed; had done his work, signed it after his usual fashion, and gone.
And thus were matters when Miss Cornelia, happening on the attic staircase with Lizzie at her heels, decided to look about her up there. And went up.
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
THE HIDDEN ROOM
A few moments later Jack Bailey, seeing a thin glow of candlelight from the attic above and hearing Lizzie’s protesting voice, made his way up there. He found them in the trunk room, a dusty, dingy apartment lined with high closets along the walls – the floor littered with an incongruous assortment of attic objects – two battered trunks, a clothes hamper, an old sewing machine, a broken-backed kitchen chair, two dilapidated suitcases and a shabby satchel that might once have been a woman’s dressing case – in one corner a grimy fireplace in which, obviously, no fire had been lighted for years.
But he also found Miss Cornelia holding her candle to the floor and staring at something there.
“Candle grease!” she said sharply, staring at a line of white spots by the window. She stooped and touched the spots with an exploratory finger.
“Fresh candle grease! Now who do you suppose did that? Do you remember how Mr. Gillette, in Sherlock Holmes, when he – “
Her voice trailed off. She stooped and followed the trail of the candle grease away from the window, ingeniously trying to copy the shrewd, piercing gaze of Mr. Gillette as she remembered him in his most famous role.
“It leads straight to the fireplace!” she murmured in tones of Sherlockian gravity. Bailey repressed an involuntary smile. But her next words gave him genuine food for thought.
She stared at the mantel of the fireplace accusingly. “It’s been going through my mind for the last few minutes that no chimney flue runs up this side of the house!” she said.
Bailey stared. “Then why the fireplace?”
“That’s what I’m going to find out!” said the spin-ter grimly. She started to rap the mantel, testing it for Secret springs.
“Jack! Jack!” It was Dale’s voice, low and cautious, coming from the landing of the stairs.
Bailey stepped to the door of the trunk room.
“Come in,” he called in reply. “And shut the door behind you.”
Dale entered, turning the key in the lock behind her.
“Where are the others?”
“They’re still searching the house. There’s no sign of anybody.”
“They haven’t found – Mr. Anderson?”
Dale shook her head. “Not yet.”
She turned toward her aunt. Miss Cornelia had begun to enjoy herself once more.
Rapping on the mantelpiece, poking and pressing various corners and sections of the mantel itself, she remembered all the detective stories she had ever read and thought, with a sniff of scorn, that she could better them. There were always sliding panels and hidden drawers in detective stories and the detective discovered them by rapping just as she was doing, and listening for a hollow sound in answer. She rapped on the wall above the mantel – exactly – there was the hollow echo she wanted.
“Hollow as Lizzie’s head!” she said triumphantly. The fireplace was obviously not what it seemed, there must be a space behind it unaccounted for in the building plans. Now what was the next step detectives always took? Oh, yes – they looked for panels; panels that moved. And when one shoved them away there was a button or something. She pushed and pressed and finally something did move. It was the mantelpiece itself, false grate and all, which began to swing out into the room, revealing behind a dark, hollow cubbyhole, some six feet by six – the Hidden Room at last!
“Oh, Jack, be careful!” breathed Dale as her lover took Miss Cornelia’s candle and moved toward the dark hiding-place. But her eyes had already caught the outlines of a tall iron safe in the gloom and in spite of her fears, her lips formed a wordless cry of victory.
But Jack Bailey said nothing at all. One glance had shown him that the safe was empty.
The tragic collapse of all their hopes was almost more than they could bear. Coming on top of the nerve-racking events of the night, it left them dazed and directionless. It was, of course, Miss Cornelia who recovered first.
“Even without the money,” she said; “the mere presence of this safe here, hidden away, tells the story. The fact that someone else knew and got here first cannot alter that.”
But she could not cheer them. It was Lizzie who created a diversion. Lizzie who had bolted into the hall at the first motion of the mantelpiece outward and who now, with equal precipitation, came bolting back. She rushed into the room, slamming the door behind her, and collapsed into a heap of moaning terror at her mistress’s feet. At first she was completely inarticulate, but after a time she muttered that she had seen “him” and then fell to groaning again.
The same thought was in all their minds, that in some corner of the upper floor she had come across the body of Anderson. But when Miss Cornelia finally quieted her and asked this, she shook her head.
“It was the Bat I saw,” was her astounding statement. “He dropped through the skylight out there and ran along the hall. I saw him I tell you. He went right by me!”
“Nonsense,” said Miss Cornelia briskly. “How can you say such a thing?”
But Bailey pushed forward and took Lizzie by the shoulder.
“What did he look like?”
“He hadn’t any face. He was all black where his face ought to be.”
“Do you mean he wore a mask?”
“Maybe. I don’t know.”
She collapsed again but when Bailey, followed by Miss Cornelia, made a move toward the door she broke into frantic wailing.
“Don’t go out there!” she shrieked. “He’s there I tell you. I’m not crazy. If you open that door, he’ll shoot.”
But the door was already open and no shot came. With the departure of Bailey and Miss Cornelia, and the resulting darkness due to their taking the candle, Lizzie and Dale were left alone. The girl was faint with disappointment and strain; she sat huddled on a trunk, saying nothing, and after a moment or so Lizzie roused to her condition.
“Not feeling sick, are you?” she asked.
“I feel a little queer.”
“Who wouldn’t in the dark here with that monster loose somewhere near by?” But she stirred herself and got up. “I’d better get the smelling salts,” she said heavily. “God knows I hate to move, but if there’s one place safer in this house than another, I’ve yet to find it.”
She went out, leaving Dale alone. The trunk room was dark, save that now and then as the candle appeared and reappeared the doorway was faintly outlined. On this outline she kept her eyes fixed, by way of comfort, and thus passed the next few moments. She felt weak and dizzy and entirely despairing.
Then – the outline was not so clear. She had heard nothing but there was something in the doorway. It stood there, formless, diabolical, and then she saw what was happening. It was closing the door. Afterward she was mercifully not to remember what came next; the figure was perhaps intent on what was going on outside, or her own movements may have been as silent as its own. That she got into the mantel-room and even partially closed it behind her is certain, and that her description of what followed is fairly accurate is borne out by the facts as known.
The Bat was working rapidly. She heard his quick, nervous movements; apparently he had come back for something and secured it, for now he moved again toward the door. But he was too late; they were returning that way. She heard him mutter something and quickly turn the key in the lock. Then he seemed to run toward the window, and for some reason to recoil from it.
The next instant she realized that he was coming toward the mantel-room, that he intended to hide in it. There was no doubt in her mind as to his identity. It was the Bat, and in a moment more he would be shut in there with her.
She tried to scream and could not, and the next instant, when the Bat leaped into concealment beside her, she was in a dead faint on the floor.
Bailey meanwhile had crawled out on the roof and was carefully searching it. But other things were happening also. A disinterested observer could have seen very soon why the Bat had abandoned the window as a means of egress.
Almost before the mantel had swung to behind the archcriminal, the top of a tall pruning ladder had appeared at the window and by its quivering showed that someone was climbing up, rung by rung. Unsuspiciously enough he came on, pausing at the top to flash a light into the room, and then cautiously swinging a leg over the sill. It was the Doctor. He gave a low whistle but there was no reply, save that, had he seen it, the mantel swung out an inch or two. Perhaps he was never so near death as at that moment but that instant of irresolution on his part saved him, for by coming into the room he had taken himself out of range.
Even then he was very close to destruction, for after a brief pause and a second rather puzzled survey of the room, he started toward the mantel itself. Only the rattle of the doorknob stopped him, and a call from outside.
“Dale!” called Bailey’s voice from the corridor. “Dale!”
“Dale! Dale! The door’s locked!” cried Miss Cornelia.
The Doctor hesitated. The call came again. “Dale! Dale!” and Bailey pounded on the door as if he meant to break it down.
The Doctor made up his mind.
“Wait a moment!” he called. He stepped to the door and unlocked it. Bailey hurled himself into the room, followed by Miss Cornelia with her candle. Lizzie stood in the doorway, timidly, ready to leap for safety at a moment’s notice.
“Why did you lock that door?” said Bailey angrily, threatening the Doctor.
“But I didn’t,” said the latter, truthfully enough. Bailey made a movement of irritation. Then a glance about the room informed him of the amazing, the incredible fact. Dale was not there! She had disappeared!
“You – you,” he stammered at the Doctor. “Where’s Miss Ogden? What have you done with her?”
The Doctor was equally baffled.
“Done with her?” he said indignantly. “I don’t know what you’re talking about, I haven’t seen her!”
“Then you didn’t lock that door?” Bailey menaced him.
The Doctor’s denial was firm.
“Absolutely not. I was coming through the window when I heard your voice at the door!”
Bailey’s eyes leaped to the window – yes – a ladder was there – the Doctor might be speaking the truth after all. But if so, how and why had Dale disappeared?
The Doctor’s admission of his manner of entrance did not make Lizzie any the happier.
“In at the window – just like a bat!” she muttered in shaking tones. She would not have stayed in the doorway if she had not been afraid to move anywhere else.
“I saw lights up here from outside,” continued the Doctor easily. “And I thought – “
Miss Cornelia interrupted him. She had set down her candle and laid the revolver on the top of the clothes hamper and now stood gazing at the mantel-fireplace.
“The mantel’s – closed!” she said.
The Doctor stared. So the secret of the Hidden Room was a secret no longer. He saw ruin gaping before him – a bottomless abyss. “Damnation!” he cursed impotently under his breath.
Bailey turned on him savagely.
“Did you shut that mantel?”
“No!”
“I’ll see whether you shut it or not!” Bailey leaped toward the fireplace. “Dale! Dale!” he called desperately, leaning against the mantel. His fingers groped for the knob that worked the mechanism of the hidden entrance.
The Doctor picked up the single lighted candle from the hamper, as if to throw more light on Bailey’s task. Bailey’s fingers found the knob. He turned it. The mantel began to swing out into the room.
As it did so the Doctor deliberately snuffed out the light of the candle he held, leaving the room in abrupt and obliterating darkness.
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
ANDERSON MAKES AN ARREST
“Doctor, why did you put out that candle?” Miss Cornelia’s voice cut the blackness like a knife.
“I didn’t – I – “
“You did – I saw you do it.”
The brief exchange of accusation and denial took but an instant of time, as the mantel swung wide open. The next instant there was a rush of feet across the floor, from the fireplace – the shock of a collision between two bodies – the sound of a heavy fall.
“What was that?” queried Bailey dazedly, with a feeling as if some great winged creature had brushed at him and passed.
Lizzie answered from the doorway.
“Oh, oh!” she groaned in stricken accents. “Somebody knocked me down and tramped on me!”
“Matches, quick!” commanded Miss Cornelia. “Where’s the candle?”
The Doctor was still trying to explain his curious action of a moment before.
“Awfully sorry, I assure you – it dropped out of the holder – ah, here it is!”
He held it up triumphantly. Bailey struck a match and lighted it. The wavering little flame showed Lizzie prostrate but vocal, in the doorway – and Dale lying on the floor of the Hidden Room, her eyes shut, and her face as drained of color as the face of a marble statue. For one horrible instant Bailey thought she must be dead.
He rushed to her wildly and picked her up in his arms. No – still breathing – thank God! He carried her tenderly to the only chair in the room.
“Doctor!”
The Doctor, once more the physician, knelt at her side and felt for her pulse. And Lizzie, picking herself up from where the collision with some violent body had thrown her, retrieved the smelling salts from the floor. It was onto this picture, the candlelight shining on strained faces, the dramatic figure of Dale, now semi-conscious, the desperate rage of Bailey, that a new actor appeared on the scene.
Anderson, the detective, stood in the doorway, holding a candle – as grim and menacing a figure as a man just arisen from the dead.
“That’s right!” said Lizzie, unappalled for once. “Come in when everything’s over!”
The Doctor glanced up and met the detective’s eyes, cold and menacing.
“You took my revolver from me downstairs,” he said. “I’ll trouble you for it.”
The Doctor got heavily to his feet. The others, their suspicions confirmed at last, looked at him with startled eyes. The detective seemed to enjoy the universal confusion his words had brought.
Slowly, with sullen reluctance, the Doctor yielded up the stolen weapon. The detective examined it casually and replaced it in his hip pocket.
“I’ve something to settle with you pretty soon,” he said through clenched teeth, addressing the Doctor. “And I’ll settle it properly. Now – what’s this?”
He indicated Dale – her face still and waxen – her breath coming so faintly she seemed hardly to breathe at all as Miss Cornelia and Bailey tried to revive her.
“She’s coming to – ” said Miss Cornelia triumphantly, as a first faint flush of color reappeared in the girl’s cheeks. “We found her shut in there, Mr. Anderson,” the spinster added, pointing toward the gaping entrance of the Hidden Room.
A gleam crossed the detective’s face. He went up to examine the secret chamber. As he did so, Doctor Wells, who had been inching surreptitiously toward the door, sought the opportunity of slipping out unobserved.
But Anderson was not to be caught napping again. “Wells!” he barked. The Doctor stopped and turned.
“Where were you when she was locked in this room?”
The Doctor’s eyes sought the floor – the walls – wildly – for any possible loophole of escape.
“I didn’t shut her in if that’s what you mean!” he said defiantly. “There was someone shut in there with her!” He gestured at the Hidden Room. “Ask these people here.”
Miss Cornelia caught him up at once.
“The fact remains, Doctor,” she said, her voice cold with anger, “that we left her here alone. When we came back you were here. The corridor door was locked, and she was in that room – unconscious!”
She moved forward to throw the light of her candle on the Hidden Room as the detective passed into it, gave it a swift professional glance, and stepped out again. But she had not finished her story by any means.
“As we opened that door,” she continued to the detective, tapping the false mantel, “the Doctor deliberately extinguished our only candle!”
“Do you know who was in that room?” queried the detective fiercely, wheeling on the Doctor.
But the latter had evidently made up his mind to cling stubbornly to a policy of complete denial.
“No,” he said sullenly. “I didn’t put out the candle. It fell. And I didn’t lock that door into the hall. I found it locked!”
A sigh of relief from Bailey now centered everyone’s attention on himself and Dale. At last the girl was recovering from the shock of her terrible experience and regaining consciousness. Her eyelids fluttered, closed again, opened once more. She tried to sit up, weakly, clinging to Bailey’s shoulder. The color returned to her cheeks, the stupor left her eyes.
She gave the Hidden Room a hunted little glance and then shuddered violently.
“Please close that awful door,” she said in a tremulous voice. “I don’t want to see it again.”
The detective went silently to close the iron doors. “What happened to you? Can’t you remember?” faltered Bailey, on his knees at her side.
The shadow of an old terror lay on the girl’s face, “I was in here alone in the dark,” she began slowly – “Then, as I looked at the doorway there, I saw there was somebody there. He came in and closed the door. I didn’t know what to do, so I slipped in – there, and after a while I knew he was coming in too, for he couldn’t get out. Then I must have fainted.”
“There was nothing about the figure that you recognized?”
“No. Nothing.”
“But we know it was the Bat,” put in Miss Cornelia. The detective laughed sardonically. The old duel of opposing theories between the two seemed about to recommence.
“Still harping on the Bat!” he said, with a little sneer, Miss Cornelia stuck to her guns.
“I have every reason to believe that the Bat is in this house,” she said.
The detective gave another jarring, mirthless laugh. “And that he took the Union Bank money out of the safe, I suppose?” he jeered. “No, Miss Van Gorder.”
He wheeled on the Doctor now.
“Ask the Doctor who took the Union Bank money out of that safe!” he thundered. “Ask the Doctor who attacked me downstairs in the living-room, knocked me senseless, and locked me in the billiard room!”
There was an astounded silence. The detective added a parting shot to his indictment of the Doctor.
“The next time you put handcuffs on a man be sure to take the key out of his vest pocket,” he said, biting off the words.
Rage and consternation mingled on the Doctor’s countenance – on the faces of the others astonishment was followed by a growing certainty. Only Miss Cornelia clung stubbornly to her original theory.
“Perhaps I’m an obstinate old woman,” she said in tones which obviously showed that if so she was rather proud of it, “but the Doctor and all the rest of us were locked in the living-room not ten minutes ago!”
“By the Bat, I suppose!” mocked Anderson.
“By the Bat!” insisted Miss Cornelia inflexibly. “Who else would have fastened a dead bat to the door downstairs? Who else would have the bravado to do that? Or what you call the imagination?”
In spite of himself Anderson seemed to be impressed.
“The Bat, eh?” he muttered, then, changing his tone, “You knew about this hidden room, Wells?” he shot at the Doctor.
“Yes.” The Doctor bowed his head.
“And you knew the money was in the room?”
“Well, I was wrong, wasn’t I?” parried the Doctor. “You can look for yourself. That safe is empty.”
The detective brushed his evasive answer aside.
“You were up in this room earlier tonight,” he said in tones of apparent certainty.
“No, I couldn’t get up!” the Doctor still insisted, with strange violence for a man who had already admitted such damning knowledge.
The detective’s face was a study in disbelief.
“You know where that money is, Wells, and I’m going to find it!”
This last taunt seemed to goad the Doctor beyond endurance.
“Good God!” he shouted recklessly. “Do you suppose if I knew where it is, I’d be here? I’ve had plenty of chances to get away! No, you can’t pin anything on me, Anderson! It isn’t criminal to have known that room is here.”
He paused, trembling with anger and, curiously enough, with an anger that seemed at least half sincere.
“Oh, don’t be so damned virtuous!” said the detective brutally. “Maybe you haven’t been upstairs but – unless I miss my guess, you know who was!”
The Doctor’s face changed a little.
“What about Richard Fleming?” persisted the detective scornfully.
The Doctor drew himself up.
“I never killed him!” he said so impressively that even Bailey’s faith in his guilt was shaken. “I don’t even own a revolver!”
The detective alone maintained his attitude unchanged.
“You come with me, Wells,” he ordered, with a jerk of his thumb toward the door. “This time I’ll do the locking up.”
The Doctor, head bowed, prepared to obey. The detective took up a candle to light their path. Then he turned to the others for a moment.
“Better get the young lady to bed,” he said with a gruff kindliness of manner. “I think that I can promise you a quiet night from now on.”
“I’m glad you think so, Mr. Anderson!” Miss Cornelia insisted on the last word. The detective ignored the satiric twist of her speech, motioned the Doctor out ahead of him, and followed. The faint glow of his candle flickered a moment and vanished toward the stairs.
It was Bailey who broke the silence.
“I can believe a good bit about Wells,” he said, “but not that he stood on that staircase and killed Dick Fleming.”
Miss Cornelia roused from deep thought.
“Of course not,” she said briskly. “Go down and fix Miss Dale’s bed, Lizzie. And then bring up some wine.”
“Down there, where the Bat is?” Lizzie demanded.
“The Bat has gone.”
“Don’t you believe it. He’s just got his hand in!”
But at last Lizzie went, and, closing the door behind her, Miss Cornelia proceeded more or less to think, out loud.
“Suppose,” she said, “that the Bat, or whoever it was shut in there with you, killed Richard Fleming. Say that he is the one Lizzie saw coming in by the terrace door. Then he knew where the money was for he went directly up the stairs. But that is two hours ago or more. Why didn’t he get the money, if it was here, and get away?”
“He may have had trouble with the combination.”
“Perhaps. Anyhow, he was on the small staircase when Dick Fleming started up, and of course he shot him. That’s clear enough. Then he finally got the safe open, after locking us in below, and my coming up interrupted him. How on earth did he get out on the roof?”
Bailey glanced out the window.
“It would be possible from here. Possible, but not easy.”
“But, if he could do that,” she persisted, “he could have got away, too. There are trellises and porches. Instead of that he came back here to this room.” She stared at the window. “Could a man have done that with one hand?”
“Never in the world.”
Saying nothing, but deeply thoughtful, Miss Cornelia made a fresh progress around the room.
“I know very little about bank-currency,” she said finally. “Could such a sum as was looted from the Union Bank be carried away in a man’s pocket?”
Bailey considered the question.
“Even in bills of large denomination it would make a pretty sizeable bundle,” he said.
But that Miss Cornelia’s deductions were correct, whatever they were, was in question when Lizzie returned with the elderberry wine. Apparently Miss Cornelia was to be like the man who repaired the clock: she still had certain things left over.
For Lizzie announced that the Unknown was ranging the second floor hall. From the time they had escaped from the living-room this man had not been seen or thought of, but that he was a part of the mystery there could be no doubt. It flashed over Miss Cornelia that, although he could not possibly have locked them in, in the darkness that followed he could easily have fastened the bat to the door. For the first time it occurred to her that the archcriminal might not be working alone, and that the entrance of the Unknown might have been a carefully devised ruse to draw them all together and hold them there.
Nor was Beresford’s arrival with the statement that the Unknown was moving through the house below particularly comforting.
He may be dazed, or he may not,” he said. “Personally , this is not a time to trust anybody.”
Beresford knew nothing of what had just occurred, and now seeing Bailey he favored him with an ugly glance.
“In the absence of Anderson, Bailey,” he added, “I don’t propose to trust you too far. I’m making it my business from now on to see that you don’t try to get away. Get that?”
But Bailey heard him without particular resentment.
“All right,” he said. “But I’ll tell you this. Anderson is here and has arrested the Doctor. Keep your eye on me, if you think it’s your duty, but don’t talk to me as if I were a criminal. You don’t know that yet.”
“The Doctor!” Beresford gasped.
But Miss Cornelia’s keen ears had heard a sound outside and her eyes were focused on the door.
“That doorknob is moving,” she said in a hushed voice.
Beresford moved to the door and jerked it violently open.
The butler, Billy, almost pitched into the room.
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
THE BAT STILL FLIES
He stepped back in the doorway, looked out, then turned to them again.
“I come in, please?” he said pathetically, his hands quivering. “I not like to stay in dark.”
Miss Cornelia took pity on him.
“Come in, Billy, of course. What is it? Anything the matter?”
Billy glanced about nervously.
“Man with sore head.”
“What about him?”
“Act very strange.” Again Billy’s slim hands trembled.
Beresford broke in. “The man who fell into the room downstairs?”
Billy nodded.
“Yes. On second floor, walking around.”
Beresford smiled, a bit smugly.
“I told you!” he said to Miss Cornelia. “I didn’t think he was as dazed as he pretended to be.”
Miss Cornelia, too, had been pondering the problem of the Unknown. She reached a swift decision. If he were what he pretended to be – a dazed wanderer, he could do them no harm. If he were not – a little strategy properly employed might unravel the whole mystery.
“Bring him up here, Billy,” she said, turning to the butler.
Billy started to obey. But the darkness of the corridor seemed to appall him anew the moment he took a step toward it.
“You give candle, please?” he asked with a pleading expression. “Don’t like dark.”
Miss Cornelia handed him one of the two precious candles. Then his present terror reminded her of that one other occasion when she had seen him lose completely his stoic Oriental calm.
“Billy,” she queried, “what did you see when you came running down the stairs before we were locked in, down below?”
The candle shook like a reed in Billy’s’s grasp.
“Nothing!” he gasped with obvious untruth, though it did not seem so much as if he wished to conceal what he had seen as that he was trying to convince himself he had seen nothing.
“Nothing!” said Lizzie scornfully. “It was some nothing that would make him drop a bottle of whisky!”
But Billy only backed toward the door, smiling apologetically.
“Thought I saw ghost,” he said, and went out and down the stairs, the candlelight flickering, growing fainter, and finally disappearing. Silence and eerie darkness enveloped them all as they waited. And suddenly out of the blackness came a sound.
Something was flapping and thumping around the room.
“That’s damned odd.” muttered Beresford uneasily. “There is something moving around the room.
“It’s up near the ceiling!” cried Bailey as the sound began again.
Lizzie began a slow wail of doom and disaster.
“Oh – h – h – h – “
“Good God!” cried Beresford abruptly. “It hit me in the face!” He slapped his hands together in a vain attempt to capture the flying intruder.
Lizzie rose.
“I’m going!” she announced. “I don’t know where, but I’m going!”
She took a wild step in the direction of the door. Then the flapping noise was all about her, her nose was bumped by an invisible object and she gave a horrified shriek.
“It’s in my hair!” she screamed madly. “It’s in my hair!”
The next instant Bailey gave a triumphant cry.
“I’ve got it! It’s a bat!”
Lizzie sank to her knees, still moaning, and Bailey carried the cause of the trouble over to the window and threw it out.
But the result of the absurd incident was a further destruction of their morale. Even Beresford, so far calm with the quiet of the virtuous onlooker, was now pallid in the light of the matches they successively lighted. And onto this strained situation came at last Billy and the Unknown.
The Unknown still wore his air of dazed bewilderment, true or feigned, but at least he was now able to walk without support. They stared at him, at his tattered, muddy garments, at the threads of rope still clinging to his ankles – and wondered. He returned their stares vacantly.
“Come in,” began Miss Cornelia. “Sit down.” He obeyed both commands docilely enough.
“Are you better now?”
“Somewhat.” His words still came very slowly.
“Billy – you can go.”
“I stay, please!” said Billy wistfully, making no movement to leave. His gesture toward the darkness of the corridor spoke louder than words.
Bailey watched him, suspicion dawning in his eyes. He could not account for the butler’s inexplicable terror of being left alone.
“Anderson intimated that the Doctor had an accomplice in this house,” he said, crossing to Billy and taking him by the arm. “Why isn’t this the man?” Billy cringed away. “Please, no,” he begged pitifully.
Bailey turned him around so that he faced the Hidden Room.
“Did you know that room was there?” he questioned, his doubts still unquieted.
Billy shook his head.
“No.”
“He couldn’t have locked us in,” said Miss Cornelia. “He was with us.”
Bailey demurred, not to her remark itself, but to its implication of Billy’s entire innocence.