"The picture clarifies," he said. "The fantastic images are gradually taking on the aspect of hideous realities. I've substantiated several points, but a few facts still need corroboration."
"To vindicate your hypothesis?"
"No, not that. The hypothesis is self-proving. There's no doubt as to the truth. But--dash it all, Markham! I refuse to accept it until every scrap of evidence has been incontestably sustained."
"Is the evidence of such a nature that I can use it in a court of law?"
"That is something I refuse even to consider. Criminal proceedings seem utterly irrelevant in the present case. But I suppose society must have its pound of flesh, and you--the duly elected Shylock of God's great common people--will no doubt wield the knife. However, I assure you I shall not be present at the butchery."
Markham studied him curiously.
"Your words sound rather ominous. But if, as you say, you have discovered the perpetrator of these crimes, why shouldn't society exact punishment?"
"If society were omniscient, Markham, it would have a right to sit in judgment. But society is ignorant and venomous, devoid of any trace of insight or understanding. It exalts knavery, and worships stupidity. It crucifies the intelligent, and puts the diseased in dungeons. And, withal, it arrogates to itself the right and ability to analyze the subtle sources of what it calls 'crime,' and to condemn to death all persons whose inborn and irresistible impulses it does not like. That's your sweet society, Markham--a pack of wolves watering at the mouth for victims on whom to vent its organized lust to kill and flay."
Markham regarded him with some astonishment and considerable concern.
"Perhaps you are preparing to let the criminal escape in the present case," he said with the irony of resentment.
"Oh, no," Vance assured him. "I shall turn your victim over to you. The Greene murderer is of a particularly vicious type, and should be rendered impotent. I was merely trying to suggest that the electric chair--that touchin' device of your beloved society--is not quite the correct method of dealing with this culprit."
"You admit, however, that he is a menace to society."
"Undoubtedly. And the hideous thing about it is that this tournament of crime at the Greene mansion will continue unless we can put a stop to it. That's why I am being so careful. As the case now stands, I doubt if you could even make an arrest."
When tea was over Vance got up and stretched himself.
"By the by, Markham," he said off-handedly, "have you received any report on Sibella's activities?"
"Nothing important. She's still in Atlantic City, and evidently intends to stay there for some time. She phoned Sproot yesterday to send down another trunkful of her clothes."
"Did she, now? That's very gratifyin'." Vance walked to the door with sudden resolution. "I think I'll run out to the Greenes' for a little while. I shan't be gone over an hour: Wait for me here, Markham--there's a good fellow; I don't want my visit to have an official flavour. There's a new Simplicissimus on the table to amuse you till I return. Con it and thank your own special gods that you have no Thony or Gulbranssen in this country to caricature your Gladstonian features."
As he spoke he beckoned to me, and, before Markham could question him, we passed out into the hall and down the stairs. Fifteen minutes later a taxicab set us down before the Greene mansion.
Sproot opened the door for us, and Vance, with only a curt greeting, led him into the drawing-room.
"I understand," he said, "that Miss Sibella phoned you yesterday from Atlantic City and asked to have a trunk shipped to her."
Sproot bowed. "Yes, sir. I sent the trunk off last night."
"What did Miss Sibella say to you over the phone?" "Very little, sir--the connection was not good. She said merely that she had no intention of returning to New York for a considerable time and needed more clothes than she had taken with her."
"Did she ask how things were going at the house here?"
"Only in the most casual way, sir."
"Then she didn't seem apprehensive about what might happen here while she was away?"
"No, sir. In fact--if I may say so without disloyalty--her tone of voice was quite indifferent, sir."
"Judging from her remarks about the trunk, how long would you say she intends to be away?"
Sproot considered the matter.
"That's difficult to say, sir. But I would go so far as to venture the opinion that Miss Sibella intends to remain in Atlantic City for a month or more."
Vance nodded with satisfaction.
"And now, Sproot," he said, "I have a particularly important question to ask you. When you first went into Miss Ada's room on the night she was shot and found her on the floor before the dressing-table, was the window open? Think! I want a positive answer. You know the window is just beside the dressing-table and overlooks the steps leading to the stone balcony. Was it open or shut?"
Sproot contracted his brows and appeared to be recalling the scene. Finally he spoke, and there was no doubt in his voice.
"The window was open, sir. I recall it now quite distinctly. After Mr. Chester and I had lifted Miss Ada to the bed, I closed it at once for fear she would catch cold."
"How far open was the window?" asked Vance with eager impatience.
"Eight or nine inches, sir, I should say. Perhaps a foot." "Thank you, Sproot. That will be all. Now please tell the cook I want to see her."
Mrs. Mannheim came in a few minutes later, and Vance indicated a chair near the desk-light. When the woman had seated herself he stood before her and fixed her with a stern, implacable gaze.
"Frau Mannheim, the time for truth-telling has come. I am here to ask you a few questions, and unless I receive a straight answer to them I shall report you to the police. You will, I assure you, receive no consideration at their hands."
The woman tightened her lips stubbornly and shifted her eyes, unable to meet Vance's penetrating stare.
"You told me once that your husband died in New Orleans thirteen years ago. Is that correct?"
Vance's question seemed to relieve her mind, and she answered readily.
"Yes, yes. Thirteen years ago."
"What month?"
"In October."
"Had he been ill long?"
"About a year."
"What was the nature of his illness?"
Now a look of fright came into her eyes.
"I--don't know--exactly," she stammered. "The doctors didn't let me see him."
"He was in a hospital?"
She nodded several times rapidly. "Yes--a hospital."
"And I believe you told me, Frau Mannheim, that you saw Mr. Tobias Greene a year before your husband's death. That would have been about the time your husband entered the hospital--fourteen years ago."
She looked vaguely at Vance, but made no reply.
"And it was exactly fourteen years ago that Mr. Greene adopted Ada."
The woman caught her breath sharply. A look of panic contorted her face.
"So when your husband died," continued Vance, "you came to Mr. Greene, knowing he would give you a position."
He went up to her and touched her filially on the shoulder.
"I have suspected for some time, Frau Mannheim," he said kindly, "that Ada is your daughter. It's true, isn't it?"
With a convulsive sob the woman hid her face in her apron.
"I gave Mr. Greene my word," she confessed brokenly, "that I wouldn't tell anyone--not even Ada--if he let me stay here--to be near her."
"You haven't told anyone," Vance consoled her. "It was not your fault that I guessed it."
When Mrs. Mannheim left us a little later Vance had succeeded in allaying her apprehension and distress. He then sent for Ada.
As she entered the drawing-room the troubled look in her eyes and the pallor of her cheeks told clearly of the strain she was under. Her first question voiced the fear uppermost in her mind.
"Have you found out anything, Mr. Vance?" She spoke with an a
ir of pitiful discouragement. "It's terrible alone here in this big house-- especially at night. Every sound I hear..."
"You mustn't let your imagination get the best of you, Ada," Vance counselled her. Then he added: "We know a lot more now than we did, and before long, I hope, all your fears will be done away with. In fact, it's in regard to what we've found out that I've come here to-day. I thought perhaps you could help me again."
"If only I could! But I've thought and thought..."
Vance smiled.
"Let us do the thinking, Ada.--What I wanted to ask you is this: do you know if Sibella speaks German well?" The girl appeared surprised.
"Why, yes. And so did Julia and Chester and Rex. Father insisted on their learning it. And he spoke it too--almost as well as he spoke English. As for Sibella, I've often heard her and Doctor Von Blon talking in German."
"But she spoke with an accent, I suppose."
"A slight accent--she'd never been long in Germany. But she spoke German very well."
"That's what I wanted to be sure of."
"Then you do know something!" Her voice quavered with eagerness. "Oh, how long before this awful suspense will be over? Every night for weeks I've been afraid to turn out my lights and go to sleep."
"You needn't be afraid to turn out your lights now," Vance assured her. "There won't be any more attempts on your life, Ada."
She looked at him for a moment searchingly, and something in his manner seemed to hearten her. When we took our leave the colour had come back to her cheeks.
Markham was pacing the library restlessly when we arrived home.
"I've checked several more points," Vance announced. "But I've missed the important one--the one, that would explain the unbelievable hideousness of the thing I've unearthed."
He went directly into the den, and we could hear him telephoning. Returning a few minutes later, he looked anxiously at his watch. Then he rang for Currie and ordered his bag packed for a week's trip.
"I'm going away, Markham," he said. "I'm going to travel--they say it broadens the mind. My train departs in less than an hour; and I'll be away a week. Can you bear to be without me for so long? However, nothing will happen in connection with the Greene case during my absence. In fact, I'd advise you to shelve it temporarily."
He would say no more, and in half an hour he was ready to go.
"There's one thing you can do for me while I'm away," he told Markham, as he slipped into his overcoat. "Please have drawn up for me a complete and detailed weather report from the day preceding Julia's death to the day following Rex's murder."
He would not let either Markham or me accompany him to the station, and we were left in ignorance of even the direction in which his mysterious trip was to take him.
CHAPTER XXV
THE CAPTURE
(Monday, December 13th; 4 p.m.)
IT was eight days before Vance returned to New York. He arrived on the afternoon of Monday, December 13th, and, after he had had his tub and changed his clothes, he telephoned Markham to expect him in half an hour. He then ordered his Hispano-Suiza from the garage; and by this sign I knew he was under a nervous strain. In fact, he had spoken scarcely a dozen words to me since his return, and as he picked his way down-town through the late afternoon traffic he was gloomy and preoccupied. Once I ventured to ask him if his trip had been successful, and he had merely nodded. But when we turned into Centre Street he relented a little, and said:
"There was never any doubt as to the success of my trip, Van. I knew what I'd find. But I didn't dare trust my reason; I had to see the records with my own eyes before I'd capitulate unreservedly to the conclusion I'd formed."
Both Markham and Heath were waiting for us in the District Attorney's office. It was just four o'clock, and, the sun had already dropped below the New York Life Building which towered about the old Criminal Courts structure a block to the south-west.
"I took it for granted you had something important to tell me," said Markham; "so I asked the sergeant to come here."
"Yes, I've much to tell." Vance had thrown himself into a chair, and was lighting a cigarette. "But first I want to know if anything has happened in my absence."
"Nothing. Your prognostication was quite accurate. Things have been quiet and apparently normal at the Greene mansion."
"Anyhow," interposed Heath, "we may have a little better chance this week of getting hold of something to work on. Sibella returned from Atlantic City yesterday, and Von Blon's been hanging round the house ever since."
"Sibella back?" Vance sat up, and his eyes became intent.
"At six o'clock yesterday evening," said Markham. "The newspaper man at the beach ferreted her out and ran a sensational story about her. After that the poor girl didn't have an hour's peace; so yesterday she packed up and came back. We got word of the move through the men the sergeant had set to watch her. I ran out to see her this morning, and advised her to go away again. But she was pretty thoroughly disgusted, and stubbornly refused to quit the Greene house--said death was preferable to being hounded by reporters and scandal-mongers."
Vance had risen and moved to the window, where he stood scanning the grey skyline.
"Sibella's back, eh?" he murmured. Then he turned round. "Let me see that weather report I asked you to prepare for me."
Markham reached into a drawer and handed him a typewritten sheet of paper.
After perusing it, he tossed it back on the desk.
"Keep that, Markham. You'll need it when you face your twelve good men and true."
"What is it you have to tell us, Mr. Vance?" The sergeant's voice was impatient despite his effort to control it. "Mr. Markham said you had a line on the case. For God's sake, sir, if you've got any evidence against any one, slip it to me and let me make an arrest. I'm getting thin worrying over this damn business."
Vance drew himself together.
"Yes, I know who the murderer is, Sergeant; and I have the evidence-- though it wasn't my plan to tell you just yet. However"--he went to the door with grim resolution--"we can't delay matters any longer now. Our hand has been forced.--Get into your coat, Sergeant--and you, too, Markham. We'd better get out to the Greene house before dark."
"But, damn it all, Vance!" Markham expostulated. "Why don't you tell us what's in your mind?"
"I can't explain now--you'll understand why later--"
"If you know so much, Mr. Vance," broke in Heath, "what's keeping us from making an arrest?"
"You're going to make your arrest, Sergeant--inside of an hour." Though he gave the promise without enthusiasm, it acted electrically on both Heath and Markham.
Five minutes later the four of us were driving up West Broadway in Vance's car.
Sproot as usual admitted us without the faintest show of interest, and stood aside respectfully for us to enter.
"We wish to see Miss Sibella," said Vance. "Please tell her to come to the drawing-room--alone."
"I'm sorry, sir, but Miss Sibella is out."
"Then tell Miss Ada we want to see her."
"Miss Ada is out also, sir." The butler's unemotional tone sounded strangely incongruous in the tense atmosphere we had brought with us.
"When do you expect them back?
"I couldn't say, sir. They went out motoring together. They probably won't be gone long. Would you gentlemen care to wait?"
Vance hesitated.
"Yes, we'll wait," he decided, and walked toward the drawing-room.
But he had barely reached the archway when he turned suddenly and called to Sproot, who was retreating slowly toward the rear of the hall.
"You say Miss Sibella and Miss Ada went motoring together? How long ago?"
"About fifteen minutes--maybe twenty, sir." A barely perceptible lift of the man's eyebrows indicated that he was greatly astonished by Vance's sudden change of manner.
"Whose car did they go in?"
"In Doctor Von Blon's. He was here to tea--" And who suggested the ride, Sproot?"
"I really couldn't say, sir. They were sort of debating about it when I came in to clear away the tea things."
"Repeat everything you heard!" Vance spoke rapidly and with more than a trace of excitement.
"When I entered the room the doctor was saying as how he thought it would be a good thing for the young ladies to get some fresh air; and Miss Sibella said she'd had enough fresh air."
"And Miss Ada?"
"I don't remember her saying anything, sir."
"And they went out to the car while you were here?"
"Yes, sir. I opened the door for them."
"And did Doctor Von Blon go in the car with them?"
"Yes. But I believe they were to drop him at Mrs. Riglander's, where he had a professional call to make. From what he said as he went out I gathered that the young ladies were then to take a drive, and that he was to call here for the car after dinner."
"What!" Vance stiffened, and his eyes burned upon the old butler. "Quick, Sproot! Do you know where Mrs. Riglander lives?"
"On Madison Avenue in the Sixties, I believe."
"Get her on the phone--find out if the doctor has arrived."
I could not help marvelling at the impassive way in which the man went to the telephone to comply with this astonishing and seemingly incomprehensible request. When he returned his face was expressionless.
"The doctor has not arrived at Mrs. Riglander's, sir," he reported.
"He's certainly had time," Vance commented, half to himself. Then: "Who drove the car when it left here, Sproot?"
I couldn't say for certain, sir. I didn't notice particularly. But it's my impression that Miss Sibella entered the car first as though she intended to drive--"
"Come, Markham!" Vance started for the door. "I don't like this at all. There's a mad idea in my head... Hurry, man! If something devilish should happen..."
We had reached the car, and Vance sprang to the wheel. Heath and Markham, in a daze of incomprehension but swept along by the other's ominous insistence, took their places in the tonneau; and I sat beside the driver's seat.
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