The Man in Lower Ten (14 page)

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Authors: Mary Roberts Rinehart

Tags: #Language Arts & Disciplines, #Composition & Creative Writing, #Linguistics, #General

BOOK: The Man in Lower Ten
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      We opened the front gate of the Carter place and went slowly up the walk. Two ragged youngsters, alike even to freckles and squints, were playing in the yard.

 

      "Is your mother around?" I asked.

 

      "In the front room. Walk in," they answered in identical tones.

 

      As we got to the porch we heard voices, and stopped. I knocked, but the people within, engaged in animated, rather one-sided conversation, did not answer.

 

      "'In the front room. Walk in,'" quoted McKnight, and did so.

 

      In the stuffy farm parlor two people were sitting. One, a pleasant-faced woman with a checked apron, rose, somewhat embarrassed, to meet us. She did not know me, and I was thankful. But our attention was riveted on a little man who was sitting before a table, writing busily. It was Hotchkiss!

 

      He got up when he saw us, and had the grace to look uncomfortable.

 

      "Such an interesting case," he said nervously, "I took the liberty - "

 

      "Look here," said McKnight suddenly, "did you make any inquiries at the station?"

 

      "A few," he confessed. "I went to the theater last night - I felt the need of a little relaxation - and the sight of a picture there, a cinematograph affair, started a new line of thought. Probably the same clue brought you gentlemen. I learned a good bit from the station agent."

 

      "The son-of-a-gun," said McKnight. "And you paid him, I suppose?"

 

      "I gave him five dollars," was the apologetic answer. Mrs. Carter, hearing sounds of strife in the yard, went out, and Hotchkiss folded up his papers.

 

      "I think the identity of the man is established," he said. "What number of hat do you wear, Mr. Blakeley?"

 

      "Seven and a quarter," I replied.

 

      "Well, it's only piling up evidence," he said cheerfully. "On the night of the murder you wore light gray silk underclothing, with the second button of the shirt missing. Your hat had 'L. B.' in gilt letters inside, and there was a very minute hole in the toe of one black sock."

 

      "Hush," McKnight protested. "If word gets to Mrs. Klopton that Mr. Blakeley was wrecked, or robbed, or whatever it was, with a button missing and a hole in one sock, she'll retire to the Old Ladies' Home. I've heard her threaten it."

 

      Mr. Hotchkiss was without a sense of humor. He regarded McKnight gravely and went on:

 

      "I've been up in the room where the man lay while he was unable to get away, and there is nothing there. But I found what may be a possible clue in the dust heap.

 

      "Mrs. Carter tells me that in unpacking his grip the other day she took out of the coat of the pajamas some pieces of a telegram. As I figure it, the pajamas were his own. He probably had them on when he effected the exchange."

 

      I nodded assent. All I had retained of my own clothing was the suit of pajamas I was wearing and my bath-robe.

 

      "Therefore the telegram was his, not yours. I have pieces here, but some are missing. I am not discouraged, however."

 

      He spread out some bits of yellow paper, and we bent over them curiously. It was something like this:

 

      Man with p- Get- Br-

 

      We spelled it out slowly.

 

      "Now," Hotchkiss announced, "I make it something like this: The 'p.-' is one of two things, pistol - you remember the little pearl-handled affair belonging to the murdered man - or it is pocket-book. I am inclined to the latter view, as the pocket-book had been disturbed and the pistol had not."

 

      I took the piece of paper from the table and scrawled four words on it.

 

      "Now," I said, rearranging them, "it happens, Mr. Hotchkiss, that I found one of these pieces of the telegram on the train. I thought it had been dropped by some one else, you see, but that's immaterial.

 

      Arranged this way it almost makes sense. Fill out that 'p.-' with the rest of the word, as I imagine it, and it makes 'papers,' and add this scrap and you have:

 

      "'Man with papers (in) lower ten, car seven. Get (them).'

 

      McKnight slapped Hotchkiss on the back. "You're a trump," he said. "Br- is Bronson, of course. It's almost too easy. You see, Mr. Blakeley here engaged lower ten, but found it occupied by the man who was later murdered there. The man who did the thing was a friend of Bronson's, evidently, and in trying to get the papers we have the motive for the crime."

 

      "There are still some things to be explained." Mr. Hotchkiss wiped his glasses and put them on. "For one thing, Mr. Blakeley, I am puzzled by that bit of chain."

 

      I did not glance at McKnight. I felt that the hand, with which I was gathering up the bits of torn paper were shaking. It seemed to me that this astute little man was going to drag in the girl in spite of me.

 

     

 

     

 

     
CHAPTER XVIII A NEW WORLD

 

 

     

 

      Hotchkiss jotted down the bits of telegram and rose.

 

      "Well," he said, "we've done something. We've found where the murderer left the train, we know what day he went to Baltimore, and, most important of all, we have a motive for the crime.

 

      "It seems the irony of fate," said McKnight, getting up, "that a man should kill another man for certain papers he is supposed to be carrying, find he hasn't got them after all, decide to throw suspicion on another man by changing berths and getting out, bag and baggage, and then, by the merest fluke of chance, take with him, in the valise he changed for his own, the very notes he was after. It was a bit of luck for him."

 

      "Then why," put in Hotchkiss doubtfully, "why did he collapse when he heard of the wreck? And what about the telephone message the station agent sent? You remember they tried to countermand it, and with some excitement."

 

      "We will ask him those questions when we get him," McKnight said. We were on the unrailed front porch by that time, and Hotchkiss had put away his notebook. The mother of the twins followed us to the steps.

 

      "Dear me," she exclaimed volubly, "and to think I was forgetting to tell you! I put the young man to bed with a spice poultice on his ankle: my mother always was a firm believer in spice poultices. It's wonderful what they will do in croup! And then I took the children and went down to see the wreck. It was Sunday, and the mister had gone to church; hasn't missed a day since he took the pledge nine years ago. And on the way I met two people, a man and a woman. They looked half dead, so I sent them right here for breakfast and some soap and water. I always say soap is better than liquor after a shock."

 

      Hotchkiss was listening absently: McKnight was whistling under his breath, staring down across the field to where a break in the woods showed a half dozen telegraph poles, the line of the railroad.

 

      "It must have been twelve o'clock when we got back; I wanted the children to see everything, because it isn't likely they'll ever see another wreck like that. Rows of - "

 

      "About twelve o'clock," I broke in, "and what then?"

 

      "The young man up-stairs was awake," she went on, "and hammering at his door like all possessed. And it was locked on the outside!" She paused to enjoy her sensation.

 

      "I would like to see that lock," Hotchkiss said promptly, but for some reason the woman demurred.

 

      "I will bring the key down," she said and disappeared. When she returned she held out an ordinary door key of the cheapest variety.

 

      "We had to break the lock," she volunteered, "and the key didn't turn up for two days. Then one of the twins found the turkey gobbler trying to swallow it. It has been washed since," she hastened to assure Hotchkiss, who showed an inclination to drop it.

 

      "You don't think he locked the door himself and threw the key out of the window?" the little man asked.

 

      "The windows are covered with mosquito netting, nailed on. The mister blamed it on the children, and it might have been Obadiah. He's the quiet kind, and you never know what he's about."

 

      "He's about to strangle, isn't he," McKnight remarked lazily, "or is that Obadiah?"

 

      Mrs. Carter picked the boy up and inverted him, talking amiably all the time. "He's always doing it," she said, giving him a shake. "Whenever we miss anything we look to see if Obadiah's black in the face." She gave him another shake, and the quarter I had given him shot out as if blown from a gun. Then we prepared to go back to the station.

 

      >From where I stood I could look into the cheery farm kitchen, where Alison West and I had eaten our al fresco breakfast. I looked at the table with mixed emotions, and then, gradually, the meaning of something on it penetrated my mind. Still in its papers, evidently just opened, was a hat box, and protruding over the edge of the box was a streamer of vivid green ribbon.

 

      On the plea that I wished to ask Mrs. Carter a few more questions, I let the others go on. I watched them down the flagstone walk; saw McKnight stop and examine the gate-posts and saw, too, the quick glance he threw back at the house. Then I turned to Mrs. Carter.

 

      "I would like to speak to the young lady up-stairs," I said.

 

      She threw up her hands with a quick gesture of surrender. "I've done all I could," she exclaimed. "She won't like it very well, but - she's in the room over the parlor."

 

      I went eagerly up the ladder-like stairs, to the rag-carpeted hall. Two doors were open, showing interiors of four poster beds and high bureaus. The door of the room over the parlor was almost closed. I hesitated in the hallway: after all, what right had I to intrude on her? But she settled my difficulty by throwing open the door and facing me.

 

      "I - I beg your pardon, Miss West," I stammered. "It has just occurred to me that I am unpardonably rude. I saw the hat down-stairs and I - I guessed - "

 

      "The hat!" she said. "I might have known. Does Richey know I am here?"

 

      "I don't think so." I turned to go down the stairs again. Then I halted. "The fact is," I said, in an attempt at justification, "I'm in rather a mess these days, and I'm apt to do irresponsible things. It is not impossible that I shall be arrested, in a day or so, for the murder of Simon Harrington."

 

      She drew her breath in sharply. "Murder!" she echoed. "Then they have found you after all!"

 

      "I don't regard it as anything more than - er - inconvenient," I lied. "They can't convict me, you know. Almost all the witnesses are dead."

 

      She was not deceived for a moment. She came over to me and stood, both hands on the rail of the stair. "I know just how grave it is," she said quietly. "My grandfather will not leave one stone unturned, and he can be terrible - terrible. But" - she looked directly into my eyes as I stood below her on the stairs - "the time may come - soon - when I can help you. I'm afraid I shall not want to; I'm a dreadful coward, Mr. Blakeley. But - I will." She tried to smile.

 

      "I wish you would let me help you," I said unsteadily. "Let us make it a bargain: each help the other!"

 

      The girl shook her head with a sad little smile. "I am only as unhappy as I deserve to be," she said. And when I protested and took a step toward her she retreated, with her hands out before her.

 

      "Why don't you ask me all the questions you are thinking?" she demanded, with a catch in her voice. "Oh, I know them. Or are you afraid to ask?"

 

      I looked at her, at the lines around her eyes, at the drawn look about her mouth. Then I held out my hand. "Afraid!" I said, as she gave me hers. "There is nothing in God's green earth I am afraid of, save of trouble for you. To ask questions would be to imply a lack of faith. I ask you nothing. Some day, perhaps, you will come to me yourself and let me help you."

 

      The next moment I was out in the golden sunshine: the birds were singing carols of joy: I walked dizzily through rainbow-colored clouds, past the twins, cherubs now, swinging on the gate. It was a new world into which I stepped from the Carter farm-house that morning, for - I had kissed her !

 

     

 

     

 

     
CHAPTER XIX AT THE TABLE NEXT

 

 

     

 

      McKnight and Hotchkiss were sauntering slowly down the road as I caught up with them. As usual, the little man was busy with some abstruse mental problem.

 

      "The idea is this," he was saying, his brows knitted in thought, "if a left-handed man, standing in the position of the man in the picture, should jump from a car, would he be likely to sprain his right ankle? When a right-handed man prepares for a leap of that kind, my theory is that he would hold on with his right hand, and alight at the proper time, on his right foot. Of course - "

 

      "I imagine, although I don't know," interrupted McKnight, "that a man either ambidextrous or one-armed, jumping from the Washington Flier, would be more likely to land on his head."

 

      "Anyhow," I interposed, "what difference does it make whether Sullivan used one hand or the other? One pair of handcuffs will put both hands out of commission.

 

      As usual when one of his pet theories was attacked, Hotchkiss looked aggrieved.

 

      "My dear sir," he expostulated, "don't you understand what bearing this has on the case? How was the murdered man lying when he was found?"

 

      "On his back," I said promptly, "head toward the engine."

 

      "Very well," he retorted, "and what then? Your heart lies under your fifth intercostal space, and to reach it a right-handed blow would have struck either down or directly in.

 

      "But, gentleman, the point of entrance for the stiletto was below the heart, striking up! As Harrington lay with his head toward the engine, a person in the aisle must have used the left hand."

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