“Oh, what a stupendous situation!” cried the beautiful lady, her eyes dancing. “You really are a darling, Mr. Crow—a perfect, old dear. You—”
“None o’ that now—none o’ that!” Mr. Crow warned, taking a step backward. “Won’t do you any good to talk sweet to me. I’ve got the goods on you. A dozen witnesses have heard you plottin’ to murder. Throw up your hands! Up with ’em! Now, keep ’em up! An’ stop laughin’! You’ll soon find out you can’t murder a man in cold blood, even if he is a trespasser on your property. You can’t go around killin’—Say, where is Mrs. Smith? Where’s the lady of the house?”
“I am the lady of the house, Mr. Crow,” said the lady, performing a graceful Delsartian movement with her long bare arms. Mr. Crow and his companions stared upward at her arms as if fascinated. “I am Mrs. Smith—Mrs. John Smith.”
“I guess not,” said Anderson sharply. “She wears a veil, asleep an’ awake. Hold on! Put your hands down! She’s signalin’ somebody, sure as you’re alive,” he burst out, turning to the group of mouth-sagging, eye-roving gentlemen who followed every graceful curve and twist of those ivory arms. “What’s the matter with you, Sim? Didn’t I order you to go in there an’ grab that bloody assassin? What—”
“Not on your life! He’s got a gun,” exclaimed Sim Jackson. “S’pose I’m goin’ in there, an’—Oh, fer gosh sake!”
A man appeared in the door leading to the interior of the house.
“For the love o’ Mike!” issued from the lips of the newcomer. “What in thunder—what’s all this?”
It was Harry Squires.
He gazed open-mouthed, first at the beautiful, convulsed lady, and then at the huddled group of men.
“We are caught red-handed, Mr. Squires,” said the beautiful lady. “Shall we go to the electric chair hand in hand?”
A slow grin began to reach out from the corners of Harry’s mouth as if its intention was to connect with his ears.
“My God, Harry—you ain’t mixed up in this murder?” bleated Anderson.
The old man’s dismay was so genuine, his distress so pitiful, that the heart of Harry Squires was touched. His face sobered at once. Stepping forward, he held out his hand to the Marshal.
“Good old Anderson! It’s all right. Buck up, old top! I’m sorry to say that blood has been shed here tonight. Come with me; I’ll show you the corpse.”
Mr. Crow was not to be caught napping. “Some of you fellers stay here an’ guard this woman. Don’t let her get away.”
* * * *
A few minutes later he stood beside Harry Squires in the cellar below the kitchen. There was a smell of gunpowder on the close, still air. They looked down upon the black, inanimate form of the French poodle.
“There, Mr. Hawkshaw,” said Harry, “there lies all that is mortal of the finest little gentleman that ever wore a collar. Take off your hat, Sim—and you too, Bill—all of you. You are standing in the presence of death. Behold in me the assassin. I am the slayer of yon grisly corpse. Shackle me, Mr. Marshal. Lead me to the gallows. I am the guilty party.”
Marshal Crow took off his hat with the rest—but he did it the better to mop his forehead.
“Do you mean to tell me there ain’t been any man slew in this house?” he inquired slowly.
“Up to the hour of going to press,” said the city editor of the Banner, “no human remains have been unearthed.”
“Then, where in thunder is the feller who’s been foolin’ around Mrs. Smith’s front yard, the—”
“Last I saw of him he was beating it down the street about two hours ago, and you were giving him the run of his life. I don’t believe the rascal will ever dare come around here again. The chances are he’s still running.”
The Marshal muttered something under his breath, and shot a pleading look at Harry.
“Yes, sir,” continued Harry solemnly, “I’ll bet my head he’ll never be seen in these parts again.”
“If he hadn’t got such a start of me,” said Anderson, regaining much of his aplomb, “I’d ‘a nabbed him, sure as you’re alive. He could run like a whitehead. I never seen such—”
“Shall we go upstairs, gentlemen, and relieve the pressure on Miss Hildebrand? She is, I may say, the principal mourner, poor lady.”
“Miss Who?”
“Gentlemen, the lady up there is no other than the celebrated actress, Juliet Hildebrand. The Veiled Lady and she are one and the same. Before we retire from this spot, let me explain that Mr. Snooks, the deceased, was run over by her automobile an hour or so ago. His back was broken. I merely put an end to his suffering. Now come—”
“Mister Snooks?” inquired Anderson quickly. “Well, that solves one of the mysteries that’s been botherin’ me. An’—an’ you say she’s the big actress whose picture we see in the papers every now an’ again?”
“The same, Mr. Crow. She has done me the honour to accept a play that I have been guilty of writing. She came up here to go over it with me before putting it into rehearsal, and incidentally to enjoy a month’s vacation after a long and prosperous season in New York.”
“Do you mean to say you’ve knowed all along who she was?” demanded Anderson. “Been comin’ up here to see her every night or so, I suppose.”
“More or less.”
“That settles it!” said the Marshal sternly. “You are under arrest, sir. Have you got anybody to bail you out, er are you goin’ to spend the night in the lock-up?”
“What’s the charge, Mr. Hawkshaw?” inquired Harry, amiably.
“Practisin’ without a dicense.”
“Practising what?” asked Harry.
“Jokes!” roared Anderson gleefully, and slapped him on the back.
* * * *
Again the Marshal slapped the culprit’s back. “Yes, sir, the joke’s on me. I admit it. I’ll set up the seegars for everybody here. Sim, send a box of them ‘Uncle Tom’ specials round to my office first thing in the mornin’. Yes, sir, Harry, my boy, you certainly caught me nappin’ good and plenty. Tain’t often I git—”
“If you don’t mind, Anderson,” interrupted Elmer K. Pratt, “I’ll take a nickel’s worth of chewin’-tobacco. My wife don’t like me to smoke around the house.”
“Gentlemen,” said Harry Squires, “there are a few bottles of beer in the icebox, and the cook will make all the cheese and ham sandwiches we can eat. I am sure Miss Hildebrand will be happy to have you partake of her—”
“Hold on a minute, Harry,” broke in the Marshal hastily. His face was a study. The painfully created joviality came to a swift and uncomfortable end, and in its place flashed a look of embarrassment. He simply couldn’t face the smiling Miss Hildebrand.
“If it’s all the same to you,” he went on, lowering his voice and glancing furtively over his shoulder at the departing members of his posse, “I guess I’ll go out the back way.” Seeing the surprised look-on Harry’s face, he floundered badly for a moment or two, and then concluded with the perfectly good excuse that it was his duty to lead Alf Reesling, the one-time town drunkard, away from temptation. In support of this resolve, he called out to Alf: “Come here, Alf. None o’ that, now! You come along with me.”
“I ain’t goin’ to touch anything but a ham sandwich,” protested Alf with considerable asperity.
“Never mind! You do what I tell you, or I’ll run you in. Remember, you got a wife an’ daughter, an’—”
“Inasmuch as Alf has been on the water-wagon for twenty-seven years, Mr. Marshal, I think you can trust him—” began Harry, but Anderson checked him with a resolute gesture.
“Can’t take any chances with him. He’s got to come with me.”
“Nonsense!” exclaimed Harry.
“An’ besides,” said Anderson, “a man in my position can’t afford to be seen associatin’ with actresses—an’ you know it, Harry Squires. Come on, Alf!”
THE ASTONISHING ACTS OF ANNA
The case of Loop vs. Loop was docketed for the Septembe
r term in the Bramble County Circuit Court at Boggs City. When it became officially known in Tinkletown, through the columns of the Banner, that Eliphalet Loop had brought suit for divorce against his wife Anna, the town experienced a convulsion that bore symptoms of continuing without abatement until snow fell, and perhaps—depending on the evidence introduced—throughout the entire winter. For Eliphalet, in accusing his wife, was obliged to state in his bill that the identity and whereabouts of “said co-respondent” were at present unknown to complainant. As Mrs. Loop emphatically—some said spitefully—declined to satisfy the curiosity of Mr. Loop, and the whole of Tinkletown as well, speculation took such an impatient attitude toward her that Eliphalet, had he been minded to do so, could have made use of any one of three hundred names in a village boasting an adult male population of three hundred and seventeen. Husbands who had been in the habit of loafing around the village stores for a couple of hours after supper, winter and summer, now felt constrained to remain later than usual for fear that evil-minded persons outstaying them might question the statement that they were going home; and many a wife who was seldom awake after nine stayed up until the man of the house was safely inside, where she could look at him with an intentness so strange that he began to develop a ferocious hatred for Mrs. Loop.
The town marshal, Anderson Crow, encountering the lugubrious Eliphalet in front of Dr. Brown’s office early one morning several weeks after the filing of the complaint, put this question to him:
“See here, Liff, why in thunder don’t you make that wife o’ yourn tell who ‘tis she’s been carryin’ on with?”
Mr. Loop was not offended. He was not even embarrassed.
“’Cause I ain’t speakin’ to her nowadays, that’s why.”
“But you got a right to speak to her, ain’t you? She’s livin’ in the same house with you, ain’t she? An’ it’s your house, ain’t it? Stand up to her. Show her you got a little spunk.”
“I been livin’ out in the barn, Anderson, on the advice of my lawyer. He says as long as she won’t git out, I’ve got to. Been sleepin’ out there for the last three weeks.”
“I’d like to see any woman drive me out of a comfortable bed!”
“I don’t a bit mind sleepin’ in the barn,” said Eliphalet in apology. “It’s kind of a relief to get away from them women. Hosses can’t talk. I don’t know as I’ve ever slept as well as I have—”
“The point is,” broke in Anderson firmly, “this wife of yourn is causin’ a great deal of misery in town, Liff. Somethin’s got to be done about it.”
“I ain’t askin’ anybody to share my misery with me,” said Mr. Loop with some asperity.
“I bet I’ve heard fifty men’s names mentioned in the last twenty-four hours,” said Anderson, compressing his lips. “’Tain’t fair, Liff, an’ you know it.”
“’Tain’t my fault,” said Mr. Loop stubbornly. “I won’t ask her ag’in. You wouldn’t either, if you’d got a wallop over the head with a stove-lid like I did when I asked her the first time.” He removed his weather-worn straw hat. “See that? Doc Brown had to take seven stitches in it, an’ he says if old Hawkins the undertaker had seen it first, I wouldn’t have had to send for a doctor at all. You ask her yourself, if you’re so blamed anxious to know. I seen her out in the back yard just ‘fore I left. She was lookin’ kinder sad and down in the mouth; so I sez to her as gentle as I knowed how—an’ as legally as possible, on the advice of my lawyer: ‘Good mornin’, Mrs. Loop.’ An’ then when I seen her lookin’ around for somethin’ to throw at me, I knowed it wasn’t any use tryin’ to be polite, so I sez: ‘Git out o’ my sight, you old cow!’ And ‘fore you could say scat, she was out o’ my sight. I didn’t know it was possible for me to be so spry at my age. Just as she was gettin’ out o’ my sight by me gettin’ around the corner of the barn, I heard somethin’ go ker-slam ag’inst the side of the barn, but I don’t know what it was. Sounded like a milk-crock.”
Anderson looked at him sorrowfully. “Well, you can’t say I didn’t warn you, Liff.”
“Warn me about what?”
“’Bout advertisin’ fer a wife. I told you no good could come of it. An’ now I guess you’ll agree that I was right.”
“Oh, shucks! Anna was as good a woman as I ever had, Andy Crow, an’ I don’t know as I ever had a better worker around the place. Fer two years she—”
He choked up and began to sniffle.
“There ain’t no denyin’ the fact she lasted longer’n any of ’em,” agreed Anderson. “I don’t just exactly remember how many funerals you’ve had, Liff, but—say, just out o’ curiosity, how many have you had? Me an’ Mrs. Crow had a dispute about it last evenin’.”
“It’s cost me a lot o’ money, Anderson, a turrible lot o’ money,” groaned Eliphalet, “what with doctors’ bills an’ coffins; an’ nothin’—absolutely nothin’—to show fer it! No children, no—nothin’ but mother-in-laws an’ tombstones. By gosh, why is it mother-in-laws last so long? I’ve got five mother-in-laws livin’ this minute, an’ the good Lord knows I never done anything to encourage ’em. I’ve lost four wives an’ not a single mother-in-law. It don’t seem right—now, does it, Anderson?”
“Well, if you’d married somebody nearer your own age, Liff, you might stand some chance of out-livin’ their mothers. But you been marryin’ women anywheres from fifty to sixty years younger’n you are. You must be derned near eighty.”
“If you git ’em too old, they’re allus complainin’ about doin’ the work around the house and garden, an’ then you got to git a hired girl. Specially the washin’!”
“Seems to me it’d be cheaper in the long run to work a hired girl to death rather than a wife,” said Anderson tartly.
“Most generally it is,” agreed Mr. Loop. “But I sorter got into the habit of marryin’ hired girls, figgerin’ they make the best kind of wives. I give ’em a good home, plenty to eat an’—” His eyes roamed aloft, as if searching for some other beneficence, and finally lighting on Dr. Brown’s door-plate, found something to clinch his argument. “An’ as fine a funeral as any woman could ask fer!” he concluded.
“Let’s git back to the main question,” said Anderson unfeelingly. He didn’t have much use for Eliphalet. “What fer sort of lookin’ feller is this man your wife’s been carryin’ on with?”
“Well,” began Mr. Loop, squinting his bleary eyes reflectively, “I ain’t never seen him ’cept when he was runnin’, an’ it was after dark besides. Twice I seen him jump out of one of our back winders when I got home earlier’n usual from lodge-meetin’. First time I made out he was a burglar an’ hustled in to see if he had took anything. You see, I allus keep my pocketbook in a burey drawer in our bedroom; an’ natcherly, as it was our bedroom winder he jumped out of, I—well, natcherly I’d be a little uneasy, wouldn’t I?”
“Specially if you thought your wife might ‘a’ been rendered insensible by the robber,” said Anderson.
“Natcherly,” said Mr. Loop quickly. “Course, I thought of her first of all. Well, after I went to the burey an’ found the pocketbook all safe, I asked Anna if she’d heard anybody tryin’ to get in through the winder. She looked kinder funny-like fer a second er two an’ then said no, she hadn’t. I told her what I’d seen, and she said I must be drunk er somethin’, ’cause she’d been in the room all the time havin’ a bite of somethin’ to eat ‘fore goin’ to bed. I never saw anybody that could eat more’n that woman, Anderson. She’s allus eatin’. Course I believed her that time, ’cause there was a plate o’ cold ham an’ some salt-risin’ biscuits an’, oh, a lot of other victuals on the washstand, with only one knife an’ fork. Her mother was sound asleep in her room upstairs; an’ her sister Gertie,—who come to visit us six months ago an’ is still visitin’ us an’ eatin’ more’n any two hired men you ever saw,—Gertie, she was out in the kitchen readin’ that Swede paper my wife takes. An’ she said she didn’t hear anybody either, an’ up and told Anna she’d be afraid to live w
ith a man that come home drunk every night in the week like I did. She’s the meanest woman I ever see, Anderson. She—”
“I don’t want to hear about that side of your wife’s relations, Eliphalet Loop,” interposed Anderson.
“Well,” said Eliphalet patiently, “I kinder figered I might ‘a’ been mistaken about seein’ him that first time, but when the same thing happened ag’in on the night I went over to set up with Jim Hooper’s corpse, why, I jest natcherly begin to think it was kinder funny. What set me thinkin’ harder’n ever was finding’ a man’s hat in my room, hangin’ on the back of a chair. Thinks I, that’s mighty funny—specially as the hat wasn’t mine.”
“What kind of a hat was it?” questioned Anderson, taking out his notebook and pencil. “Describe it carefully, Liff.”
“It was a grey fewdory,” said Mr. Loop.
“The one you been wearin’ to church lately?”
“Yes. I thought I might as well be wearin’ it, long as nobody claimed it,” explained the ingenuous husband of Anna. “It was a couple of sizes too big fer me, so I stuffed some paper inside the sweat-band. I allus hate to have a hat comin’ down on my ears, don’t you? Kinder spreads ’em out.”
“Well, the first thing we’ve got to do, Liff, is to find some one with a head two sizes bigger’n yours,” said Anderson, giving his whiskers a slow, speculative twist.
“That oughtn’t to be hard to do,” said Eliphalet without hesitation. “I wear a five an’ three-quarters. Most everybody I know wears a bigger hat than I do.”
“That makes it more difficult,” admitted Anderson. “Was it bought in Tinkletown or Boggs City?”
“It had a New York label stamped on the sweat-band.”
“Bring it down to my office, Liff, so’s I c’n examine it carefully. Now, when did you next see this man?”
“’Bout two weeks after the second time—up in our cow-pasture. He was settin’ beside Anna on some rails back of the corn-crib, an’ he had his arm around her—or part way round, anyhow; she’s a turrible thick woman. Been fattenin’ up somethin’ awful in the last two years. I snook up an’ looked at ’em through the blackberry bushes, layin’ flat so’s they couldn’t see me.”
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