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Authors: Jacques Futrelle

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CHAPTER VIII

Alone in her room, with the key turned in the lock, Miss Dollie Meredith had a perfectly delightful time. She wept and laughed and sobbed and shuddered; she was pensive and doleful and happy and melancholy; she dreamed dreams of the future, past and present; she sang foolish little ecstatic songs—just a few words of each—and cried again copiously. Her father had sent her to her room with a stern reprimand, and she giggled joyously as she remembered it.

“After all, it wasn't anything,” she assured herself. “It was silly for him to—to take the stuff, of course, but it's back now, and he told me the truth, and he intended to return it, anyway.” In her present mood she would have justified anything. “And he's not a thief or anything. I don't suppose father will ever give his consent, so, after all, we'll have to elope, and that will be—perfectly delightful. Papa will go on dreadfully and then he'll be all right.”

After a while Dollie snuggled down in the sheets and lay quite still in the dark until sleep overtook her. Silence reigned in the house. It was about two o'clock in the morning when she sat up suddenly in bed with startled eyes. She had heard something—or rather in her sleep she had received the impression of hearing something. She listened intently as she peered about.

Finally she
did
hear something—something tap sharply on the window once. Then came silence again. A frightened chill ran all the way down to Dollie's curling pink toes. There was a pause, and then again came the sharp click on the window, whereupon Dollie pattered out of bed in her bare feet and ran to the window, which was open a few inches.

With the greatest caution she peered out. Vaguely skulking in the shadows below she made out the figure of a man. As she looked it seemed to draw up into a knot, then straighten out quickly. Involuntarily she dodged. There came another sharp click at the window. The man below was tossing pebbles against the pane with the obvious purpose of attracting her attention.

“Dick, is that you?” she called cautiously.

“Sh-h-h-h!” came the answer. “Here's a note for you. Open the window so I may throw it in.”

“Is it really and truly you?” Dollie insisted.

“Yes,” came the hurried, whispered answer. “Quick, someone is coming!”

Dollie threw the sash up and stepped back. A whirling, white object came through and fell noiselessly on the carpet. Dollie seized upon it eagerly and ran to the window again. Below she saw the retreating figure of a man. Other footsteps materialised in a bulky policeman, who strolled by seeking, perhaps, a quiet spot for a nap.

Shivering with excitement, Dollie closed the window and pulled down the shade, after which she lighted the gas. She opened the note eagerly and sat down upon the floor to read it. Now a large part of this note was extraneous verbiage of a superlative emotional nature—its vital importance was an outline of a new plan of elopement, to take place on Wednesday in time for them to catch a European-bound steamer at half-past two in the afternoon.

Dollie read and reread the crumpled sheet many times, and when finally its wording had been indelibly fixed in her mind she wasted an unbelievable number of kisses on it. Of course this was sheer extravagance, but—girls are wonderful creatures.

“He's the dearest thing in the world!” she declared at last.

She burned the note reluctantly and carefully disposed of the ashes by throwing them out of the window, after which she returned to her bed. On the following morning, Monday, father glared at daughter sternly as she demurely entered the breakfast-room. He was seeking to read that which no man has ever been able to read—a woman's face. Dollie smiled upon him charmingly.

After breakfast father and daughter had a little talk in a sunny corner of the library.

“I have planned for us to return to Baltimore on next Thursday,” he informed her.

“Oh, isn't that delightful?” beamed Dollie.

“In view of everything and your broken promise to me—the promise not to see Herbert again—I think it wisest,” he continued.

“Perhaps it is,” she mused.

“Why did you see him?” he demanded.

“I consented to see him only to bid him good-by,” replied Dollie demurely, “and to make perfectly clear to him my position in this matter.”

Oh, woman! Perfidious, insincere, loyal, charming woman! All the tangled skeins of life are the work of your dainty fingers. All the sins and sorrows are your doing!

Mr. Meredith rubbed his chin thoughtfully.

“You may take it as my wish—my order even,” he said as he cleared his throat—for giving orders to Dollie was a dangerous experiment, “that you must not attempt to communicate in any way with Mr. Herbert again—by letter or otherwise.”

“Yes, papa.”

Mr. Meredith was somewhat surprised at the ease with which he got away with this. Had he been blessed with a little more wisdom in the ways of women he would have been suspicious.

“You really do not love him, anyway,” he ventured at last. “It was only a girlish infatuation.”

“I told him yesterday just what I thought of him,” she replied truthfully enough.

And thus the interview ended.

It was about noon that day when Hutchinson Hatch called on Dick Herbert.

“Well, what did you find out?” he inquired.

“Really, old man,” said Dick kindly, “I have decided that there is nothing I can say to you about the matter. It's a private affair, after all.”

“Yes, I know that and you know that, but the police don't know it,” commented the reporter grimly.

“The police!” Dick smiled.

“Did you see her?” Hatch asked.

“Yes, I saw her—and her father, too.”

Hatch saw the one door by which he had hoped to solve the riddle closing on him.

“Was Miss Meredith the girl in the automobile?” he asked bluntly.

“Really, I won't answer that.”

“Are you the man who stole the gold plate?”

“I won't answer that, either,” replied Dick smilingly. “Now, look here, Hatch, you're a good fellow. I like you. It is your business to find out things, but, in this particular affair, I'm going to make it my business to keep you from finding out things. I'll risk the police end of it.” He went over and shook hands with the reporter cordially. “Believe me, if I told you the absolute truth—all of it—you couldn't print it unless—unless I was arrested, and I don't intend that that shall happen.”

Hatch went away.

That night the Randolph gold plate was stolen for the second time. Thirty-six hours later Detective Mallory arrested Richard Herbert with the stolen plate in his possession. Dick burst out laughing when the detective walked in on him.

PART III

THE THINKING MACHINE

CHAPTER I

Professor Augustus S. F. X. Van Dusen, Ph. D., LL. D., F. R. S., M. D., etc., etc., was the Court of Last Appeal in the sciences. He was five feet two inches tall, weighed 107 pounds, that being slightly above normal, and wore a number eight hat. Bushy, yellow hair straggled down about his ears and partially framed a clean-shaven, wizened face in which were combined the paradoxical qualities of extreme aggressiveness and childish petulance. The mouth drooped a little at the corners, being otherwise a straight line; the eyes were mere slits of blue, squinting eternally through thick spectacles. His brow rose straight up, domelike, majestic even, and added a whimsical grotesqueness to his appearance.

The Professor's idea of light literature, for rare moments of recreation, was page after page of encyclopædic discussion on “ologies” and “isms” with lots of figures in 'em. Sometimes he wrote these discussions himself, and frequently held them up to annihilation. His usual speaking tone was one of deep annoyance, and he had an unwavering glare that went straight through one. He was the son of the son of the son of an eminent German scientist, the logical production of a house that had borne a distinguished name in the sciences for generations.

Thirty-five of his fifty years had been devoted to logic, study, analysis of cause and effect, mental, material, and psychological. By his personal efforts he had mercilessly flattened out and readjusted at least two of the exact sciences and had added immeasurably to the world's sum of knowledge in others. Once he had held the chair of philosophy in a great university, but casually one day he promulgated a thesis that knocked the faculty's eye out, and he was invited to vacate. It was a dozen years later that that university had openly resorted to influence and diplomacy to induce him to accept its LL. D.

For years, foreign and American institutions, educational, scientific, and otherwise, crowded degrees upon him. He didn't care. He started fires with the elaborately formal notifications of these unsought honours and turned again to his work in the small laboratory, which was a part of his modest home. There he lived, practically a recluse, his simple wants being attended to by one aged servant, Martha.

This, then, was The Thinking Machine. This last title, The Thinking Machine, perhaps more expressive of the real man than a yard of honorary initials, was coined by Hutchinson Hatch at the time of the scientist's defeat of a chess champion after a single morning's instruction in the game. The Thinking Machine had asserted that logic was inevitable, and that game had proven his assertion. Afterward there had grown up a strange sort of friendship between the crabbed scientist and the reporter. Hatch, to the scientist, represented the great, whirling outside world; to the reporter the scientist was merely a brain—a marvellously keen, penetrating, infallible guide through material muddles far removed from the delicately precise labours of the laboratory.

Now The Thinking Machine sat in a huge chair in his reception-room with long, slender fingers pressed tip to tip and squint eyes turned upward. Hatch was talking, had been talking for more than an hour with infrequent interruptions. In that time he had laid bare the facts as he and the police knew them from the incidents of the masked ball at Seven Oaks to the return of Dollie Meredith.

“Now, Mr. Hatch,” asked The Thinking Machine, “just what is known of this second theft of the gold plate?”

“It's simple enough,” explained the reporter. “It was plain burglary. Some person entered the Randolph house on Monday night by cutting out a pane of glass and unfastening a window-latch. Whoever it was took the plate and escaped. That's all anyone knows of it.”

“Left no clew, of course?”

“No, so far as has been found.”

“I presume that, on its return by express, Mr. Randolph ordered the plate placed in the small room as before?”

“Yes.”

“He's a fool.”

“Yes.”

“Please go on.”

“Now the police absolutely decline to say as yet just what evidence they have against Herbert beyond the finding of the plate in his possession,” the reporter resumed, “though, of course, that's enough and to spare. They will not say, either, how they first came to connect him with the affair. Detective Mallory doesn't—”

“When and where was Mr. Herbert arrested?”

“Yesterday, Tuesday, afternoon in his rooms. Fourteen pieces of the gold plate were on the table.”

The Thinking Machine dropped his eyes a moment to squint at the reporter.

“Only eleven pieces of the plate were first stolen, you said?”

“Only eleven, yes.”

“And I think you said two shots were fired at the thief?”

“Yes.”

“Who fired them, please?”

“One of the detectives—Cunningham, I think.”

“It was a detective—you know that?”

“Yes, I know that.”

“Yes, yes. Please go on.”

“The plate was all spread out—there was no attempt to conceal it,” Hatch resumed. “There was a box on the floor and Herbert was about to pack the stuff in it when Detective Mallory and two of his men entered. Herbert's servant, Blair, was away from the house at the time. His people are up in Nova Scotia, so he was alone.”

“Nothing but the gold plate was found?”

“Oh, yes!” exclaimed the reporter. “There was a lot of jewelry in a case and fifteen or twenty odd pieces—fifty thousand dollars' worth of stuff, at least. The police took it to find the owners.”

“Dear me! Dear me!” exclaimed The Thinking Machine. “Why didn't you mention the jewelry at first? Wait a minute.”

Hatch was silent while the scientist continued to squint at the ceiling. He wriggled in his chair uncomfortably and smoked a couple of cigarettes before The Thinking Machine turned to him and nodded.

“That's all I know,” said Hatch.

“Did Mr. Herbert say anything when arrested?”

“No, he only laughed. I don't know why. I don't imagine it would have been at all funny to me.”

“Has he said anything since?”

“No, nothing to me or anybody else. He was arraigned at a preliminary hearing, pleaded not guilty, and was released on twenty thousand dollars bail. Some of his rich friends furnished it.”

“Did he give any reason for his refusal to say anything?” insisted The Thinking Machine testily.

“He remarked to me that he wouldn't say anything, because, even if he told the truth, no one would believe him.”

“If it should have been a protestation of innocence I'm afraid nobody
would
have believed him,” commented the scientist enigmatically. He was silent for several minutes. “It could have been a brother, of course,” he mused.

“A brother?” asked Hatch quickly. “Whose brother? What brother?”

“As I understand it,” the scientist went on, not heeding the question, “you did not believe Herbert guilty of the first theft?”

“Why, I couldn't,” Hatch protested. “I couldn't,” he repeated.

“Why?”

“Well, because—because he's not that sort of man,” explained the reporter. “I've known him for years, personally and by reputation.”

“Was he a particular friend of yours in college?”

“No, not an intimate, but he was in my class—and he's a whacking, jam-up, ace-high football player.” That squared everything.

“Do you now believe him guilty?” insisted the scientist.

“I can't believe anything else—and yet I'd stake my life on his honesty.”

“And Miss Meredith?”

The reporter was reaching the explosive point. He had seen and talked to Miss Meredith, you know.

“It's perfectly asinine to suppose that
she
had anything to do with either theft, don't you think?”

The Thinking Machine was silent on that point.

“Well, Mr. Hatch,” he said finally, “the problem comes down to this: Did a man, and perhaps a woman, who are circumstantially proven guilty of stealing the gold plate,
actually
steal it? We have the stained cushion of the automobile in which the thieves escaped to indicate that one of them was wounded; we have Mr. Herbert with an injured right shoulder—a hurt received that night on his own statement, though he won't say how. We have, then, the second theft and the finding of the stolen property in his possession along with another lot of stolen stuff—jewels. It is apparently a settled case now without going further.”

“But—” Hatch started to protest.

“But suppose we do go a little further,” The Thinking Machine went on. “I can prove definitely, conclusively, and finally by settling only two points whether or not Mr. Herbert was wounded while in the automobile. If he was wounded while in that automobile, he was the first thief; if not, he wasn't. If he was the first thief, he was probably the second, but even if he were not the first thief, there is, of course, a possibility that he was the second.”

Hatch was listening with mouth open.

“Suppose we begin now,” continued The Thinking Machine, “by finding out the name of the physician who treated Mr. Herbert's wound last Thursday night. Mr. Herbert may have a reason for keeping the identity of this physician secret, but, perhaps—wait a minute,” and the scientist disappeared into the next room. He was gone for five minutes. “See if the physician who treated the wound wasn't Dr. Clarence Walpole.”

The reporter blinked a little.

“Right,” he said. “What next?”

“Ask him something about the nature of the wound and all the usual questions.”

Hatch nodded.

“Then,” resumed The Thinking Machine casually, “bring me some of Mr. Herbert's blood.”

The reporter blinked a good deal, and gulped twice.

“How much?” he inquired briskly.

“A single drop on a small piece of glass will do very nicely,” replied the scientist.

BOOK: The Chase of the Golden Plate
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