CHAPTER XII
THE BLOOD CRYSTALS
"On your right is the residence of Miss Elaine Dodge, the heiress, whois pursuing the famous master criminal known as the Clutching Hand."
The barker had been grandiloquently pointing out the residences ofnoted New Yorkers as the big sightseeing car lumbered along through thestreets. The car was filled with people and he plied his megaphone asthough he were on intimate terms with all the city's notables.
No one paid any attention to the unobtrusive Chinaman who satinconspicuously in the middle of the car. He was Mr. Long Sin, but noone saw anything particularly mysterious about an oriental visitor moreor less viewing New York City.
Long was of the mandarin type, with drooping mustache, well dressed inAmerican clothes, and conforming to the new customs of anoccidentalized China.
Anyone, however, who had been watching Long Sin would have seen that heshowed much interest whenever any of the wealthy residents of the citywere mentioned. The name of Elaine Dodge seemed particularly to strikehim. He listened with subtle interest to what the barker said andlooked keenly at the Dodge house.
The sight-seeing car had passed the house, when he rose slowly andmotioned that he wanted to be let off. The car stopped, he alighted andslowly rambled away, evidently marvelling greatly at the strangecustoms of these uncouth westerners.
Elaine was going out, when she met Perry Bennett almost on the steps ofthe house.
"I've brought you the watch," remarked Bennett; "thought I'd like togive it to you myself."
He displayed the watch which he himself had bought a couple of daysbefore for her birthday. He had called for it himself at the jeweller'swhere it had now been regulated.
"Oh, thank you," exclaimed Elaine. "Won't you come in?"
They had scarcely greeted each other, when Long Sin strolled along.Neither of them, however, had time to notice the quiet Chinaman whopassed the house, looking at Elaine sharply out of the corner of hiseye. They entered and Long disappeared down the street.
"Isn't it a beauty?" cried Elaine, holding it out from her, as theyentered the library and examining it with great appreciation. "And, oh,do you know, the strangest thing happened yesterday? Sometimes Mr.Kennedy acts too queerly for anything."
She related how Craig had burst in on her and Aunt Josephine and hadalmost torn the other watch off her wrist.
"Another watch?" repeated Bennett, amazed. "It must have been amistake. Kennedy is crazy."
"I don't understand it, myself," murmured Elaine.
Long Sin had continued his placid way, revolving some dark and deviousplan beneath his impassive Oriental countenance. He was no ordinarypersonage. In fact he was astute enough to have no record. He left thatto his tools.
This remarkable criminal had established himself in a hired apartmentdowntown. It was furnished in rather elegant American style, but he hadadded to it some most valuable Oriental curios which gave it afascinating appearance.
Long Sin, now in rich Oriental costume, was reclining on a divansmoking a strange looking pipe and playing with two pet white rats.Each white rat had a gold band around his leg, to which was connected agold chain about a foot in length, and the chains ended in rings whichwere slipped over Long's little fingers. Ordinarily, he carried thepets up the capacious sleeve of each arm.
A servant, also in native costume, entered and bowed deferentially.
"A Miss Mary Carson," she lisped in soft English.
"Let the lady enter," waved Long Sin, with a smile of subtlesatisfaction.
The girl bowed again and silently left the room, returning with ahandsome, very well dressed white woman.
It would be difficult to analyze just what the fascination was thatLong Sin exercised over Mary Carson. But as the servant left the room,Mary bowed almost as deferentially as the little Chinese girl. Longmerely nodded in reply.
After a moment, he slowly rose and took from a drawer a newspaperclipping. Without a word, he handed it to Mary. She looked at it withinterest, as one woman always does at the picture of another prettywoman. It was a newspaper cut of Elaine, under which was:
ELAINE DODGE, THE HEIRESS, WHOSE BATTLE WITH THE CLUTCHING HAND ISCREATING WORLD WIDE INTEREST.
"Now," he began, at last, breaking the silence, "I'll show you justwhat I want you to do."
He went over to the wall and took down a curious long Chinese knifefrom a scabbard which hung there conspicuously.
"See that?" he added, holding it up.
Before she could say a word, he had plunged the knife, apparently, intohis own breast.
"Oh!" cried Mary, startled.
She expected to see him fall. But nothing happened. Long Sin laughed.It was an Oriental trick knife in which the blade telescoped into thehandle.
"Look at it," he added, handing it to her.
Long Sin took a bladder of water from a table nearby and concealed itunder his coat. "Now, you stab me," he directed.
Mary hesitated. But he repeated the command and she plunged the knifegingerly at him. It telescoped. He made her try it over and she stabbedmore resolutely. The water from the bladder poured out.
"Good!" cried Long Sin, much pleased. "Now," he added, seating himselfbeside her, "I want you to lure Elaine here."
Mary looked at him inquiringly as he returned the knife to its scabbardon the wall. "Remember where it is," he continued. "Now, if you willcome into the other room I will show you how to get her."
I had been amusing myself by rigging up a contrivance by which I couldmake it possible to see through or rather over, a door. The idea hadbeen suggested to me by the cystoscope which physicians use in order tolook down one's throat, and I had calculated that by using threemirrors placed at proper angles, I could easily reflect rays down tothe level of my eye.
Kennedy, who had been busy in the other end of the laboratory, happenedto look over in my direction. "What's the big idea, Walter?" he asked.
It was, I admit, a rather cumbersome and clumsy affair.
"Well, you see, Craig," I explained, "you put the top mirror throughthe transom of a door and--"
Kennedy interrupted with a hearty burst of laughter. "But suppose thedoor has no transom?" he asked, pointing to our own door.
I scratched my head, thoughtfully. I had assumed that the door wouldhave a transom. A moment later, Craig went to the cabinet and drew outa tube about as big around as a putty blower and as long.
"Now, here's what I call my detectascope," he remarked. "None of yourmirrors for me."
"I know," I said somewhat nettled, "but what can you see through thatputty blower? A key hole is just as good."
"Do you realize how little you can really see through a key hole?" hereplied confidently. "Try it over there."
I did and to tell the truth I could see merely a little part of thehall. Then Kennedy inserted the detectascope.
"Look through that," he directed.
I put my eye to the eye-piece and gazed through the bulging lens of theother end. I could see almost the whole hall.
"That," he explained, "is what is known as a fish-eye lens--a lens thatlooks through an angle of some 180 degrees, almost twice that of thewidest angle lens I know of."
I said nothing, but tossed my own crude invention into the corner,while Craig went back to work.
Elaine was playing with "Rusty" when Jennings brought in a card onwhich was engraved the name, "Miss Mary Carson," and underneath, inpencil, was written "Belgian Relief Committee."
"How interesting," commented Elaine, rising and accompanying Jenningsback into the drawing room. "I wonder what she wants. Very pleased tomeet you, Miss Carson," she greeted her visitor.
"You see, Miss Dodge," began Mary, "we're getting up this movement tohelp the Belgians and we have splendid backing. Just let me show yousome of the names on our committee."
She handed Elaine a list which read:
BELGIAN RELIEF COMMITTEE
Mrs. Warburton Fish Mrs. Hamilton Beekman Mrs. C. August Iselm
Mrs. Belmont Rivington Mrs. Rupert Solvay.
"I've just been sent to see if I cannot persuade you to join thecommittee and attend a meeting at Mrs. Rivington's," she went on.
"Why, er," considered Elaine thoughtfully, "er--yes. It must be allright with such people in it."
"Can you go with me now?"
"Just as well as later," agreed Elaine.
They went out together, and, as they were leaving the house a man whohad been loitering outside looked at Elaine, then fixedly at hercompanion.
No sooner had they gone than he sped off to a car waiting around thecorner. In the dark depths was a sinister figure, the master criminalhimself. The watcher had been an emissary of the Clutching Hand.
"Chief," he whispered eagerly, "You know Adventuress Mary? Well, she'sgot Elaine Dodge in tow!"
"The deuce!" cried Clutching Hand. "Then we must teach Mary Carson, orwhoever she is working for, a lesson. No one shall interfere with ouraffairs. Follow them!"
Elaine and Mary had gone downtown, talking animatedly, and walked downthe avenue toward Mrs. Rivington's apartment.
Meanwhile, Long Sin, still in his Chinese costume, was explaining tothe servant just what he wished done, pointing out the dagger on thewall and replacing the bladder under his jacket. A box of opium was onthe table, and he was giving most explicit directions. It was into sucha web that Elaine was being unwittingly led by Mary.
Entering the hallway of the apartment, Mary rang the bell.
Long heard it. "Answer it," he directed the servant who hastened to doso, while Long glided like a serpent into a back room.
The servant opened the door and Elaine and Mary entered. He closed thedoor and almost before they knew locked it and was gone into the backroom.
Elaine gazed about in trepidation. But before she could say anything,Mary, with a great show of surprise, exclaimed, "Why, I must have madea mistake. This isn't Mrs. Rivington's apartment. How stupid of me."
They looked at each other a moment. Then each laughed nervously, astogether they started to go out of the door. It was locked!
Quickly they ran to another door. It was locked, also.
Then they went to the windows. Behind the curtains they were barred andlooked out on a blank brick wall in a little court.
"Oh," cried Mary wringing her hands, stricken in mock panic, "oh, I'mso frightened. This may be the den of Chinese white slavers!"
She had picked up some Chinese articles on a table, including the boxthat Long had left there. It had a peculiar odor.
"Opium!" she whispered, showing it to Elaine.
The two looked at each other, Elaine genuinely worried now.
Just then, the Chinaman entered and stood a moment gazing at them. Theyturned and Elaine recoiled from him. Long bowed.
"Oh sir," cried Mary, "We've made a mistake. Can't you tell us how toget out?"
Long's only answer was to spread out his hands in polite deprecationand shrug his suave shoulders.
"No speke Englis," he said, gliding out again from the room and closingthe door.
Elaine and Mary looked about in despair.
"What shall we do?" asked Elaine.
Mary said nothing, but with a hasty glance discovered on the wall theknife which Long had already told her about. She took it from itsscabbard. As she did so the Chinaman returned with a tray on which werequeer drinks and glasses.
At the sight of Mary with the knife he scowled blackly, laid the traydown, and took a few steps in her direction. She brandished the knifethreateningly, then, as if her nerve failed her, fainted letting theknife fall carefully on the floor so that it struck on the handle andnot on the blade.
Long quickly caught her as she fainted and carried her out of the room,banging shut the door. Elaine followed in a moment, loyally, to protecther supposed friend, but found that the door had a snap lock on theother side.
She looked about wildly and in a moment Long reappeared. As he advancedslowly and insinuatingly, she drew back, pleading. But her words fellon seemingly deaf ears.
She had picked up the knife which Mary had dropped and when at lastLong maneuvred to get her cornered and was about to seize her, shenerved herself up and stabbed him resolutely.
Long staggered back--and fell.
As he did so, he pressed the bladder which he had already placed underhis coat. A dark red fluid, like blood, oozed out all over him and ranin a pool on the floor.
Elaine, too horror-stricken at what had happened even to scream,dropped the knife and bent over him. He did not move. She staggeredback and ran through the now open door. As she did so, Long seemedsuddenly to come to life. He raised himself and looked after her, thenwith a subtle smile sank back into his former assumed posture on thefloor.
When Elaine reached the other room, she found Mary there with theChinese servant who was giving her a glass of water. At the sight ofher, the servant paused, then withdrew into another room further back.Mary, now apparently recovering from her faintness, smiled wanly atElaine.
"It's all right," she murmured. "He is a Chinese prince who thought wewere callers."
At the reassuring nod of Mary toward the front room, Elaine wasovercome.
"I--I killed him!" she managed to gasp.
"What?" cried Mary, starting up and trembling violently. "You killedhim?"
"Yes," sobbed Elaine, "he came at me--I had the knife--I struck athim--"
The two girls ran into the other room. There Mary looked at themotionless body on the floor and recoiled, horrified.
Elaine noticing some spots on her hands and seeing that they werestained by the blood of Long Sin, wiped the spots off on herhankerchief, dropping it on the floor.
"Ugh!" exclaimed a guttural voice behind them.
It was the servant who had come in. Even his ordinarily impassiveOriental face could not conceal the horror and fear at the sight of hismaster lying on the floor in a pool of gore. Elaine was now morefrightened than ever, if that were possible.
"You--kill him--with knife?" insinuated the Chinese.
Elaine was dumb. The servant did not wait for an answer, but hastilyopened the hall door.
To Elaine it seemed that something must be done quickly. A moment andall the house would be in uproar.
Instead, he placed his finger on his lips. "Quick--no word," he said,leading the way to the hall door, "and--you must not leave that--itwill be a clue," he added, picking up the bloody handkerchief andpressing it into Elaine's hand.
They quickly ran out into the hall.
"Go--quick!" he urged again, "and hide the handkerchief in the bag. Letno one see it!"
He shut the door. As they hurried away, Elaine breathed a sigh ofrelief.
"Why did he let us go, though?" she whispered, her head in a whirl.
"I don't know," panted Mary, "but anyhow, thank heaven, we are out ofit. Come," she added, taking Elaine's arm, "not a soul has seen usexcept the servant. Let us get away as quietly as we can."
They had reached the street. Afraid to run, they hurried as fast asthey could until they turned the first corner.
Elaine looked back. No one was pursuing.
"We must separate," added Mary. "Let us go different ways. I will seeyou later. Perhaps they will think some enemy has murdered him."
They pressed each other's hands and parted.
Meanwhile in the front room, Long Sin was on his feet again brushinghimself off and mopping up the blood.
"It worked very well, Sam," he said to the servant.
They were conversing eagerly and laughing and did not hear a noise inthe back room.
A sinister figure had made its way by means of a fire-escape to a rearwindow that was not barred, and silently he had stolen in on them.
Cat-like, he advanced, but instead of striking at them, he quietly tooka seat in a chair close behind them, a magazine revolver in his hand.
They turned at a slight noise and saw him. Genuine fright was now ontheir faces as they looked at him, open mouthed.
&nb
sp; "What's all this?" he growled. "I am known as the Clutching Hand. Iallow no interferences with my affairs. Tell me what you are doing herewith Elaine Dodge."
Their beady almond eyes flashed fear. Clutching Hand moved menacingly.There was nothing for the astute Long Sin to do but to submit. Cowed bythe well-known power of the master criminal, he took Clutching Handinto his confidence.
With a low bow, Long Sin spread out his hands in surrender andsubmission.
"I will tell you, honorable sir," he said at length.
"Go on!" growled the criminal.
Quickly Long rehearsed what had happened, from the moment the idea ofblackmail had entered his head.
"How about Mary Carson?" asked Clutching Hand. "I saw her here."
Long gave a glance of almost superstitious dread at the man, as if hehad an evil eye.
"She will be back--is here now," he added, opening the door at a knockand admitting her.
Adventuress Mary had hurried back to see that all was right. This timeMary was genuinely scared at the forbidding figure of which she hadheard.
"It is all right," pacified Long. "Henceforth we work with thehonorable Clutching Hand."
Clutching Hand continued to emphasize his demands on them, punctuatinghis sentences by flourishes of the gun as he gave them the signs andpasswords which would enable them to work with his own emissaries.
It was a strange initiation.
At home at last, Elaine sank down into a deep library chair and staredstraight ahead. She saw visions of arrest and trial, of the terribleelectric chair with herself in it, bound, and of the giving of thefatal signal for turning on the current.
Were such things as these going to happen to her, without Kennedy'shelp? Why had they quarreled? She buried her face in her hands and wept.
Then she could stand it no longer. She had not taken off her streetclothes. She rose and almost fled from the house.
Kennedy and I were still in the laboratory when a knock sounded at thedoor. I went to the door and opened it. There stood Elaine Dodge.
It was a complete surprise to Craig. There was silence between them fora moment and they merely looked at each other. Elaine was pale andwoebegone.
At last Kennedy took a quick step toward her and led her to a chair.Still he felt a sort of constraint.
"What IS the matter?" he asked at length.
She hesitated, then suddenly burst out, "Craig--I--I am--a murderess!"
I have never seen such a look on Craig's face. I know he wanted tolaugh and say, "YOU--a murderess?" yet he would not have offended evenher self accusation for the world. He managed to do the right thing andsay nothing.
Then she poured forth the story substantially as I have set it down,but without the explanation which at that time was not known to any ofus.
"Oh," expostulated Craig, "there must be some mistake. It'simpossible--impossible."
"No," she asserted. "Look--here's my handkerchief all spotted withblood."
She opened the bag and displayed the blood-spotted handkerchief. Hetook it and examined it carefully.
"Elaine," he said earnestly, not at all displeased, I could see thatsomething had come up that might blot out the past unfortunatemisunderstanding, "there simply must be something wrong here. Leavethis handkerchief with me. I'll do my best."
There was still a little restraint between them. She was almost readyto beg his pardon, for all the coolness there had been between them,yet still hesitated.
"Thank you," she said simply as she left the laboratory.
Craig went to work abruptly without a word. On the laboratory table heplaced his splendid microscope and several cases of slides as well asinnumerable micro-photographs. He had been working for some time whenhe looked up.
"Ever hear of Dr. Edward Reichert of the University of Pennsylvania andhis wonderful discoveries of how blood crystals vary in differentspecies?" he asked.
I had not, but did not admit it.
"Well," he went on, "there is a blood test so delicate that one mightalmost say that he could identify a criminal by the finger prints, soto speak, of his blood crystals. The hemoglobin or red coloring matterforms crystals and the variations of these crystals both in form andmolecular construction are such that they set apart every species ofanimal from every other, and even the races of men--perhaps may evenset apart individuals. Here, Walter, we have sample of human bloodcrystals."
I looked through the microscope as he directed. There I could see thecrystals sharply defined.
"And here," he added, "are the crystals of the blood on Elaine'shandkerchief."
I looked again as he changed the slides. There was a marked differenceand I looked up at him quickly.
"It is dog's blood--not human blood," he said simply.
I looked again at the two sets of slides. There could be no doubt thatthere was a plain difference.
"Wonderful!" I exclaimed.
"Yes--wonderful," he agreed, "but what's the game back of allthis--that's the main question now."
Long after Clutching Hand had left, Long Sin was giving instructions tohis servant and Adventuress Mary just how he had had to change hisplans as a result of the unexpected visit.
"Very well," nodded Mary as she left him, "I will do as you say--trustme."
It was not much later, then, that Elaine received a second visit fromMary.
"Show her in, Jennings," she said to the butler nervously.
Indeed, she felt that every eye must be upon her. Even Jennings wouldknow of her guilt soon.
Anxiously, therefore, Elaine looked at her visitor.
"Do you know why the servant allowed us to leave the apartment?"whispered Mary with a glance about fearfully, as if the walls had ears.
"No--why?" inquired Elaine anxiously.
"He's a tong man who has been chosen to do away with the Prince. Hefollowed me, and says you have done his work for him. If you will givehim ten thousand dollars for expenses, he will attend to hiding thebody."
Here at least was a way out.
"But do you think that is all right? Can he do it?" asked Elaineeagerly.
"Do it? Why those tong men can do anything for money. Only one must becareful not to offend them."
Mary was very convincing.
"Yes, I suppose you are right," agreed Elaine, finally. "I had betterdo as you say. It is the safest way out of the trouble. Yes, I'll doit. I'll stop at the bank now and get the money."
They rose and Mary preceded her, eager to get away from the house. Atthe door, however, Elaine asked her to wait while she ran back on somepretext. In the library she took off the receiver of the telephone andquickly called a number.
Our telephone rang in the middle of our conversation on blood crystalsand Kennedy himself answered it.
It was Elaine asking Craig's advice.
"They have offered to hush the thing up for ten thousand dollars," shesaid, in a muffled voice.
She seemed bent on doing it and no amount of argument from him couldstop her. She simply refused to accept the evidence of the bloodcrystals as better than what her own eyes told her she had seen anddone.
"Then wait for half an hour," he answered, without arguing further."You can do that without exciting suspicion. Go with her to her hoteland hand her over the money."
"All right--I'll do it," she agreed.
"What is the hotel?"
Craig wrote on a slip of paper what she told him--"Room 509, Hotel LaCoste."
"Good--I'm glad you called me. Count on me," he finished as he hung upthe receiver.
Hastily he threw on his street coat. "Go into the back room and get methat brace and bit, Walter," he asked.
I did so. When I returned, I saw that he had placed the detectascopeand some other stuff in a bag. He shoved in the brace and bit also.
"Come on--hurry!" he urged.
We must have made record time in getting to the Coste. It was an ornateplace, where merely to breathe was expensive. We entered and by someexcuse Kennedy contrived to g
et past the vigilant bellhops. We passedthe telephone switchboard and entered the elevator, getting off at thefifth floor.
With a hasty glance up and down the corridor, to make sure no one wasabout, Kennedy came to room 509, then passed to the next, 511, openingthe door with a skeleton key. We entered and Craig locked the doorbehind us. It was an ordinary hotel room, but well-furnished.Fortunately it was unoccupied.
Quietly Craig went to the door which led to the next room. It was, ofcourse, locked also. He listened a moment carefully. Not a sound.Quickly, with an exclamation of satisfaction, he opened that door alsoand went into 509.
This room was much like that in which we had already been. He openedthe hall door.
"Watch here, Walter," he directed, "Let me know at the slightest alarm."
Craig had already taken the brace and bit from the bag and started tobore through the wall into room 511, selecting a spot behind a pictureof a Spanish dancer--a spot directly back of her snapping black eyes.He finished quickly and inserted the detectascope so that the lensfitted as an eye in the picture. The eye piece was in Room 511. Then hestarted to brush up the pieces of plaster on the floor.
"Craig," I whispered hastily as I heard an elevator door, "someone'scoming!"
He hurried to the door and looked. "There they are," he said, as we sawElaine and Mary rounding the corner of the hall.
Across the hall, although we did not know it at the time, in room 540,already, Long Sin had taken up his station, just to be handy. There hehad been with his servant, playing with his two trained white rats.
Long placed them up his capacious sleeves and carefully opened the doorto look out. Unfortunately he, was just in time to see the door of 509open and disclose us.
His subtle glance detected our presence without our knowing it.
Hastily picking up the brace and bit and the rest of the debris, andwith a last look at the detectascope, which was hardly noticeable, evenif one already knew it was there, we hurried into 511 and shut the door.
Kennedy mounted a chair and applied his eye to the detectascope. Justthen Mary and Elaine entered the next room, Mary opening the door witha regular key.
"Won't you step in?" she asked.
Elaine did so and Mary hesitated in the hall. Long Sin had slipped outon noiseless feet and taken refuge behind some curtains. As he saw heralone, he beckoned to Mary.
"There's a stranger in the next room," he whispered. "I don't like him.Take the money and as quickly as possible get out and go to myapartment."
At the news that there was a suspicious stranger about, Mary showedgreat alarm. Everything was so rapid, now, that the slightesthesitation meant disaster. Perhaps, by quickness, even a suspiciousstranger could be fooled, she reasoned. At any rate, Long Sin wasresourceful. She had better trust him.
Mary followed Elaine into the room, where she had seated herselfalready, and locked the door.
"Have you the money there?" she asked.
"Yes," nodded Elaine, taking out the package of bills which she had gotfrom the bank during the half hour delay.
All this we could see by gazing alternately through the detectascope.
Elaine handed Mary the money. Mary counted it slowly. At last shelooked up.
"It's all right," she said. "Now, I'll take this to that tongleader--he's in a room only just across the hall."
She went out.
Kennedy at the detectascope was very excited as this went on. He nowjumped off the chair on which he had been standing and rushed to thedoor to head her off.
To our surprise, in spite of the fact that we could turn the key in thelock, it was impossible to open it!
It was only a moment that Craig paused at the door. The next moment heburst into 509, followed closely by me.
With a scream, Elaine was on her feet in an instant.
There was no time for explanations, however.
He rushed to the door to go out, but it was locked--somehow, on theoutside. The skeleton key would not work, at any rate.
He shot the lock, and dashed out, calling back, "Walter, staythere--with Elaine."
Mary had just succeeded in getting on the elevator as Kennedy hurrieddown the hall. The door was closed and the car descended. He rang thepush bell furiously, but there was no answer.
Had he got so far in the chase, only to be outwitted?
He dashed back to the room, with us, and jerked down the telephonereceiver.
"Hello--hello--hello!" he called.
No answer.
There seemed to be no way to get a connection. What was the matter?
He hurried down the hall again.
No sooner had Elaine and Mary actually gone into the room, than Longand his servant stole out of 540, across the hall. Somewhere they hadobtained a strong but thin rope.
Quickly and silently Long tied the handle of the door 511 in which wewere to the handle of 540 which he was vacating. As both doors openedinward and were opposite, they were virtually locked.
Then Long and his servant hurried down the hallway to the elevator.
Down in the hotel lobby, with his followers, the Chinaman paused beforethe telephone switchboard where two girls were at work.
"You may go," ordered Long, and, as his man left, he moved over closerto the switchboard.
He was listening eagerly and also watching an indicator that told thenumbers of the rooms which called, as they flashed into view.
Just as a call from "509" flashed up, Long slipped the rings off hislittle fingers and loosened the white rats on the telephone switchboarditself.
With a shriek, the telephone system of the Coste went temporarily outof business.
The operators fled to the nearest chairs, drawing their skirts aboutthem.
There was the greatest excitement among all the women in the corridor.Such a display of hosiery was never contemplated by even the mostdaring costumers.
Shouts from the bellboys who sought to catch the rats who scamperedhither and thither in frightened abandon mingled with the shrieks ofthe ladies.
Kennedy had succeeded in finding the alcove of the floor clerk incharge of the fifth floor. There on his desk was an instrument having astylus on the end of two arms, connected to a system of magnets. It wasa telautograph.
Unceremoniously, Craig pushed the clerk out of his seat and sat downhimself. It was a last chance, now that the telephone was out ofcommission.
Downstairs, in the hotel office, where the excitement had not spread toeveryone, was the other end of the electric long distance writer.
It started to write, as Kennedy wrote, upstairs:
"HOUSE DETECTIVE--QUICK--HOLD WOMAN WITH BLUE CHATELAINE BAG, GETTINGOUT OF ELEVATOR."
The clerks downstairs saw it and shouted above the din of therat-baiting.
"McCann--McCann!"
The clerk had torn off the message from the telautograph register, andhanded it to the house man who pushed his way to the desk.
Quickly the detective called to the bell-hops. Together they hurriedafter the well-dressed woman who had just swept out of the elevator.Mary had already passed through the excited lobby and out, and wasabout to cross the street--safe.
McCann and the bell-hops were now in full cry after her. Flight wasuseless. She took refuge in indignation and threats.
But McCann was obdurate. She passed quickly to tears and pleadings. Ithad no effect. They insisted on leading her back. The game was up.
Even an offer of money failed to move their adamantine hearts. Nothingwould do but that she must face her accusers.
In the meantime Long Sin had recovered his precious and useful pets.Life in the Coste had assumed something of its normal aspect, and Craighad succeeded in getting an elevator.
It was just as Mary was led in threatening and pleading by turns thathe stepped off in the lobby.
There was, however, still just enough excitement to cover a littlepantomime. Long Sin had been about to slip out of a side door, thinkingall was well, when he caught sight of Mary be
ing led back. She had alsoseen him, and began to struggle again.
Quickly he shook his head, indicating for her to stop. Then slowly hesecretly made the sign of the Clutching Hand at her. It meant that shemust not snitch.
She obeyed instantly, and he quietly disappeared.
"Here," cried Kennedy, "take her up in the elevator. I'll prove thecase."
With the house detective and Kennedy, Mary was hustled into theelevator and whisked back as she had escaped.
In the meantime I had gathered up what stuff we had in the room we hadentered and had returned with Kennedy's bag.
"Wh--what's it all about?" inquired Elaine excitedly.
I tried to explain.
Just then, out in the hall we could hear loud voices, and that of Maryabove the rest. Kennedy, a man who looked like a detective, and somebell-boys were leading her toward us.
"Now--not a word of who she is in the papers, McCann," Kennedy wassaying, evidently about Elaine. "You know it wouldn't sound well for LaCoste. As for that woman--well, I've got the money back. You can takeher off--make the charge."
As the house man left with Mary, I handed Craig his bag. We movedtoward the door, and as we stood there a moment with Elaine, he quietlyhanded over to her the big roll of bills.
She took it, with surprise still written in her big blue eyes."Oh--thank you--I might have known it was only a blackmail scheme," shecried eagerly.
Craig held out his hand and she took it quickly, gazing into his eyes.Craig bowed politely, not quite knowing what to do under thecircumstances.
If he had been less of a scientist, he might have understood the lookon her face, but, with a nod to me, he turned, and went.
As she looked first at him, then at the paltry ten thousand in herhand, Elaine stamped her little foot in vexation.
"I'm glad I DIDN'T say anything more," she cried. "No--no--he shall begmy pardon first--there!"
The Exploits of Elaine Page 12