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Title: Jimmie Dale and the Phantom Clue
Author: Packard, Frank Lucius (1877-1942)
Date of first publication: 1922 [U.S. copyright date]
Edition used as base for this ebook:
   Toronto: Copp, Clark.
   Undated, but printed in the U.S.
   and states 1922 copyright by George H. Doran Company
Date first posted: 12 May 2009
Date last updated: 12 May 2009
Project Gutenberg Canada ebook #316

This ebook was produced by:
Iona Vaughan, Marcia Brooks
& the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
at http://www.pgdpcanada.net

This file was produced from images generously made available
by the Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries




JIMMIE DALE AND THE
PHANTOM CLUE

FRANK L. PACKARD




JIMMIE DALE AND
THE PHANTOM CLUE

BY

FRANK L. PACKARD

AUTHOR OF "DOORS OF THE NIGHT," "PAWNED,"
"FROM NOW ON," "THE FURTHER ADVENTURES
OF JIMMIE DALE," ETC.


THE COPP, CLARK CO., LIMITED
TORONTO


COPYRIGHT, 1922,
BY GEORGE H. DORAN COMPANY.

JIMMIE DALE AND THE PHANTOM CLUE.

PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA




CONTENTS


CHAPTER                                           PAGE

       I  THE TOCSIN                                 9

      II  THE GRAY SEAL                             17

     III  ONE ISAAC SHIFTEL                         34

      IV  THREADS                                   43

       V  MOTHER MARGOT                             52

      VI  THE MAN WITH THE RUBBER-TIPPED CANE       65

     VII  THE MESSAGE                               73

    VIII  JIMMIE DALE PAYS A VISIT                  84

      IX  THE HOUSE WITH THE BROKEN STAIRS          92

       X  BEGGAR PETE                              102

      XI  THE PANELLED WALL                        114

     XII  LITTLE SWEENEY                           127

    XIII  THE LESSER BREED                         140

     XIV  THE CAT'S-PAW                            148

      XV  BEHIND THE DOORS OF THE UNDERWORLD       157

     XVI  ENGLISH STEVE                            168

    XVII  A DEVIL'S ALIBI                          176

   XVIII  THE VOICE                                189

     XIX  JACKALS                                  197

      XX  AT A QUARTER TO THREE                    208

     XXI  THE CALL OF THE NIGHT                    217

    XXII  A TAPPED WIRE                            228

   XXIII  THE PIECES OF A PUZZLE                   235

    XXIV  THE BLACK BOX                            246

     XXV  IN THE SANCTUARY                         256

    XXVI  AT "THE WHITE RAT"                       270

   XXVII  THE LAIR                                 278

  XXVIII  BLIND PETER'S                            288

    XXIX  THE PORT OF DAWN                         297




JIMMIE DALE AND THE
PHANTOM CLUE




--I--

THE TOCSIN


The boat drifted on. In the distance a ferry churned its way across the
river. From the farther shore the myriad lights of Brooklyn flung a soft
glow into the sky, like a canopy between the city and the night.

And in the boat two figures merged as one in the darkness.

"Marie!" Jimmie Dale whispered. His arms tightened about her. "Marie!"

She made answer by a little pressure of her hand.

He looked behind him--in toward the nearer shore. Somewhere back there,
somewhere amongst those irregular outlines that thrust out points of
deeper darkness into the black, mirror-like surface of the water, was
the old pier from beneath which they had escaped, and, above the pier,
the shed where but a little while ago--or was it hours, or a lifetime
ago?--Clarke, alias Wizard Marre, alias Hunchback Joe, had played his
last card, and lost.

A grim smile touched Jimmie Dale's lips. Inside that shed the secret
service men had found their quarry--dead. They were there now. In their
hands lay the evidence that solved the murder of Jathan Lane; and in
their hands, too, was the murderer himself--only Wizard Marre had taken
the easier way, and was dead.

Jimmie Dale's smile softened. Inside that shed at the present moment
there was commotion enough and light enough; but he could hear nothing,
and he could see no light. The Tocsin here and himself were too far
away. Too far away! Yes, that was it--at last! Too far away from the old
life--forever. The road of fear lay behind them, and she was free, free
to come out into the sunlight again. She had said so herself in that
letter he had read at the club only a few hours ago. Free! Life lay
before them now--and love. With the death of Wizard Marre there could
now be an end of his, Jimmie Dale's, own rles of the Gray Seal, and
Larry the Bat, and Smarlinghue, and--no, not hers as the Tocsin, that
could never change or terminate, for she would always be the Tocsin to
him.

The Tocsin! Memory came surging upon him. That night in the long ago,
before he had ever seen her, when he had known her only as the woman who
addressed him as "Dear Philanthropic Crook" in those mysterious notes of
hers that, supplying the data on which he had acted, the data for those
"crimes," where no crime save that of rendering abortive the crimes of
others had ever been, had made the name of the Gray Seal anathema to
police and underworld alike; that night when, besides a note, he had
also found a gold seal ring of hers, a dainty thing that bore a crest, a
bell surmounted by a bishop's mitre, and underneath, in the scroll, a
motto in French: _Sonnez le Tocsin!_ It had seemed so apt! Ring the
Tocsin! Sound the alarm! Always her notes had done that--calling the
Gray Seal to arms that some one else might be the better or the happier
for what she bade him do. The Tocsin! The word had seemed to visualise
her then, and, knowing her by no other name, he had called her--the
Tocsin.

She stirred a little in his arms.

"What time is it, Jimmie?" she asked.

He shook his head. Time! What did time matter now? To Marie LaSalle, who
once had lived in hourly peril of her life as Silver Mag in the days of
the old Crime Club, and later, yes even until to-night, had again been
forced to live under cover of some rle which she had never divulged to
him and which he had never penetrated; and to him, Jimmie Dale, in
whose ears need never sound again that slogan of the underworld, "Death
to the Gray Seal!" that reached to every nook and corner of the Bad
Lands--to her and to him what did time count for now, save as a great,
illimitable mine of happiness, a wealth beyond all telling that they
were to spend _together_!

She spoke again:

"What time is it, Jimmie?"

And now he answered her.

"I don't know," he said happily. "It was just midnight when the shed
back there was raided. Since then there hasn't been any such thing as
time, Marie."

"Listen!" she said.

From somewhere across the water, faintly, a tower clock struck the hour.

"One o'clock!" she exclaimed, as though in dismay. "We must be getting
ashore. I--I did not think it was so late. And please, Jimmie, I'd like
to row the boat. I--I feel quite--quite cold."

He felt her shiver a little in his arms.

"Cold!" he echoed anxiously; and then, as he released her: "All right,
if you really want to. It isn't very far. And I guess it's safe now.
Pull in and skirt along the shore until we can find some good place to
land."

She nodded as she picked up the oars, then turned the boat's head in
toward the shore and began to row.

Jimmie Dale moved back into the stern of the boat and settled himself in
his seat. He watched her, drinking in the lithe, graceful swing of her
body, the rhythmic stroke of the heavy oars. He could not see her face
for the night shadows hid it, but he could see the poise of her head and
the contour of the full, perfect throat. And he clasped his hand behind
his head, and a great happiness and a great peace fell upon him.

It seemed somehow as though the voyage of this little boat in which they
had fled out here into the night for safety epitomised a voyage of great
immensity that had begun in the very long ago, a voyage of interminable
night through which his eyes had been straining and his soul had been
yearning for a glimpse of the beacon light that should signal the
approach to a wondrous Port of Dawn. And now the voyage was almost at an
end. Marie there at the oars, and the peace and quiet around them, was
the beacon light at last; and they could no more lose their way because
the way was charted now to that Port of Dawn where there was no more any
strife and peril and sordid crime, and where only love was.

He smiled at his fancy, and suddenly laughed out into the night.

"Keep in a little to the right, Marie," he called. "There's something
that looks like a low wharf ahead that ought to do."

"Yes; I see it," she answered.

Jimmie Dale sat abruptly upright in his seat. Perhaps it was only the
rasp and creak of the oars in the rowlocks, but it had sounded so
_human_--like a short, quick, suppressed sob. He leaned forward.

"Was that you, Marie?" he asked quickly. "What is it?"

He could not see her face. Her voice came back to him steady and
untroubled:

"Nothing, Jimmie."

Across the night, far up above them and in the distance, a great bridge
stretched from shore to shore, its arc of sparkling lights like a tiara
crowning the brow of the heavens. Faintly there came the roar of
traffic, ever restless, ever sleepless. A trolley clanged its way unseen
somewhere near the shore which the boat was now rapidly approaching; and
here, where the lights showed but sparsely, many buildings, small and
large, loomed out in queer, grotesque and fanciful shapes.

Jimmie Dale's dark eyes lighted. All this was as it always was and
always had been--only it was _changed_. It held a promise now that it
had never held before. He felt his pulse beat quicken.

The Port of Dawn!

"Here we are, Marie!" he cried.

The bow of the boat touched the edge of a low wharf--and then Jimmie
Dale, like a man stunned, bewildered, his mind and brain in turmoil and
riot, was standing up in the stern of the boat. Quick, like a flash, the
Tocsin had lifted the oars from the rowlocks, flung them away in the
water, and, springing to the string-piece of the wharf, had pushed the
boat out again.

"Jimmie! Oh, Jimmie!" Her voice reached him in a low, broken sob. "There
was no other way. It's in your pocket, Jimmie. I put it there when--when
you were--were holding me."

"Marie!" he cried out wildly. "In God's name, what are you doing,
Marie!" He flung himself upon his knees and began to paddle furiously
with his hands. "Marie!" he cried again.

A shadow flitted swiftly along the wharf shorewards; it grew filmy and
mingled with a thousand other shadows--and was lost.

She was gone! The Tocsin was gone--as she had gone so many times before.
He paddled on with his hands, but the act was purely mechanical. Gone! A
cold chill was at his heart; an agony of fear seized upon him.
Gone--when life in all its fulness....Gone! Why? An abyss seemed to
yawn before him.

After a time the boat bumped against the wharf. He sprang out and ran
madly to the shore. He found himself groping like a blind man amongst
buildings, in alleys, along dimly lighted streets. And then suddenly he
stood still with the consciousness of stark futility upon him. Had he
learned no lesson from the past? It was useless to search for her. He
might have known that from the first! He _had_ known it, only--only
things had seemed so _changed_ to-night.

Fear took its toll of him again. It brought the sweat beads out upon his
forehead. _Fear for her._ Subconsciously he realised now that something,
somewhere, had, after all, gone wrong to-night; that she was still in
danger, a danger that she still meant he should not share. No other
reason save that brave, unselfish love of hers would have prompted her
to this.

"It's in your pocket, Jimmie." Her words came back to him.

He searched quickly, and with a sharp little cry of pain drew out a
sealed envelope. Under a street lamp in a deserted street, he tore it
open. Words that he had never thought to see again danced unsteadily
before his eyes.

     "Dear Philanthropic Crook--since you _must_ be that again," he
     read. "I do not know under what circumstances you will receive
     this. I only know that before the night is over I shall be with
     you, and we will be together--for a little while. And, Jimmie, I am
     writing this instead of telling you what I must say, because I am
     afraid of myself and our love, afraid that I would not be strong
     enough to hold out against the plea of our hearts that at all costs
     we should remain together, and against your arguments, and perhaps
     against your physical restraint--for you _are_ masterful, Jimmie. I
     cannot bring you any more into the shadows in which I know now I
     must live again. I must not, Jimmie; for it might only too well
     mean your certain destruction, the certain revelation to both the
     police and the underworld that the Gray Seal and Larry the Bat and
     Smarlinghue are none other than Jimmie Dale, the Riverside Drive
     millionaire and clubman. You see, I am writing without reserve,
     putting upon paper what has never been put upon paper before,
     because I know that in some way I shall personally place this
     letter in your possession, and that no other hands shall touch it
     and no other eyes shall see it save yours and mine.

     "I am writing this half an hour before midnight, while I am waiting
     for midnight to come with its disclosure at the old junk-shop on
     the East River that Hunchback Joe is Wizard Marre--and Clarke. And
     only a day or so ago, Jimmie, I wrote you another letter telling
     you that once Clarke was in the hands of the police I would be safe
     for always. And Clarke _will_ be caught to-night, and you will
     believe that a new world stretches before us, and that all our
     hopes and aspirations are to come true at last, and you will be
     happier perhaps in that moment than you have ever been before. Oh,
     Jimmie, it is so hard even to _write_ this, for I love you so; but
     it is because I do love you with all my heart and soul and life
     that I will not, shall not, must not let a breath of suspicion
     exist that there is anything between Marie LaSalle and Jimmie Dale.
     God keep and guard you! I shall pray always and always for that.
     And some day, some time perhaps--no, not perhaps, but surely,
     surely....

     "Jimmie, I did not mean to write like this. Listen! You know,
     through the letter to which I referred above, why during all these
     past months I have 'disappeared.' You know that I was the _only_
     one who could identify Clarke as one of the leaders of the old
     Crime Club, and that it was a question of my life or his. You know
     that he went into hiding, and that there followed attempt after
     attempt upon my life. And then I 'left the city for an extended
     trip,' as my bankers informed you. And while you sought to find me,
     which, for the same reasons that still exist to-night, I could not
     let you do, I fought Clarke under cover with his own weapons. A few
     days ago I believed I had won; it seemed only a question of hours.
     I had placed Clarke in his true person as Marre, the shyster
     lawyer, and in his other alias as Hunchback Joe. And then suddenly,
     as though he had never existed, I lost him.

     "You now know why. He and some of his band were at work under the
     bank making that opening into the president's private office that
     resulted this afternoon in the murder of Jathan Lane. I was too
     late to prevent that, but almost immediately afterwards I picked up
     Clarke's trail again. I found out that in some way, to cover their
     own tracks, to end all investigation, false evidence was somehow to
     be planted, and that to bear this out another murder was to be
     added to that of the bank president. Jimmie, what could I do? I
     could not stand passively aside, even when by so doing my own
     victory was assured. I had to go on. It was to save a man's life.
     There was a way to get the information necessary to forestall them,
     though it involved a risk that I would otherwise never have taken.
     In a measure I succeeded; I learned how the papers and money, and
     the black-jack with which the murder was committed, were to be
     placed in Klanner's, the bank janitor's, trunk in his boarding
     house, and that the man was to be lured into Baldy Jack's dance
     hall, where, in a riot staged for the occasion, their victim,
     apparently an innocent bystander, but with his reputation further
     blasted by being found in that unsavory resort, was to be shot. A
     dead man could refute no false evidence! I managed to get word to
     you, and, thank God, in time. But _I_ was caught--and in my own
     character of Marie LaSalle. I was carried to one of Clarke's lairs,
     and left there a prisoner. They meant to finish me when the rest of
     the night's work was over.

     "But I must hurry on, Jimmie. It is getting late.

     "As I shall have been with you for a little while before you will
     have read this, you will know of course that I escaped. I have no
     time now to tell you how. The details do not matter. What matters
     is this: That while, before, Clarke was the only one who had any
     concern in putting me out of the way, and that for his own personal
     safety, that enmity is now transferred to an even more formidable
     enemy--those, and particularly one, who during the last year have
     been associated with Clarke. They will be actuated by two motives.
     First, revenge for the trap that will place Clarke in the hands of
     the police for the murder of Jathan Lane, and revenge for my
     interference in their attempt upon Klanner; and, second, the
     fear--a much more potent motive--that I know far more about them
     and who they are than I really do, the fear that I am in possession
     of all the knowledge needed to place them too behind the bars of
     the death house in Sing Sing. I do not know them, Jimmie--except
     one man, and that man I am not sure of at all. He is a bigger,
     brainier, far more crafty man than ever Clarke was, and far more
     powerful. There are times when I think I know him, and times when I
     am equally sure that I do not. I have come to call him the Phantom.
     If I am right, he has a score of aliases, a score of domiciles, and
     possesses the facility of appearing convincingly in each one of a
     bewildering number of different characters. I said that they had
     caught me in my own person. I do not need to tell you now, Jimmie,
     that if I were to go back to New York and resume my life as Marie
     LaSalle it would but be going to certain death.

     "Just one thing more. I do not believe that the bank's papers,
     valuable as they were, that they took from Jathan Lane in his
     office, were the sole motive for his murder; indeed, I am not sure
     that they were the _real_ motive. I do not know, of course. But I
     overheard snatches of something about a safe at Jathan Lane's house
     to-night at two o'clock, something that was to have its fulfilment
     later in a rendezvous at half-past three with an old acquaintance
     of yours, one Gentleman Laroque. I may be quite wrong; it may be
     that, even if I am right, my escape and Clarke's capture would
     effectually put a stop to anything further they might have schemed
     to do; but if there _is_ anything in it, and if they go on, there
     will be others at Gentleman Laroque's who are not expected--the
     police. I will see to that. And so, perhaps, Jimmie, even to-night,
     after all, something may happen that will point the way to this
     Phantom and those with him--and to happiness for us.

     "And now you must not be too anxious, Jimmie. In a measure I am
     safe. They have never penetrated the rle which I have been
     playing, and I do not think they ever will. And you are going to
     help me, too, Jimmie, whenever--oh, Jimmie, those old
     days!--whenever I can 'sound the Tocsin' without allying you with
     me in the eyes of those upon whom Clarke's mantle has fallen."

Jimmie Dale raised haggard eyes. The signature seemed somehow blurred.
"Marie...Marie...!"




--II--

THE GRAY SEAL


For a time Jimmie Dale stood motionless under the light, then he started
automatically on along the street. He tore the letter into small
fragments and the fragments into tiny shreds as he went along. The world
seemed a void. No, not that! It was more as though fate jeered at him
ironically. He was exactly, in respect of the Tocsin and in respect of
the fulfilment of his hopes and plans, where he had been yesterday and a
thousand yesterdays ago.

He walked on. The tiny shreds of paper, a few at a time, fluttered from
his fingers and were lost. Mechanically he found himself boarding a
street car. Thereafter he sat, his strong jaw clamped and hard, staring
out through the window.

Who was the Phantom?

Twice, at long intervals, he changed cars. Finally, far uptown, he
alighted, and, traversing several blocks, paused in front of a large
corner house in a most select and exclusive neighbourhood. Ostensibly,
had any one been observing his movements, he had paused in order that,
under the street lamp, he might consult his watch. It was a quarter of
two. A smile, half grim, half whimsical, as though he were suddenly
aroused from some deep reverie to actual physical reality, flickered
across his lips. The house on the corner was the residence of Jathan
Lane, the bank president, who had been murdered that afternoon.

Jimmie Dale replaced his watch, and nonchalantly turned the corner; but
the dark, steady eyes were alight now, sweeping the side street in every
direction. His glance detected and held for a bare instant on the black
mouth of a lane that showed at the rear of Jathan Lane's house. Jimmie
Dale edged toward the inner side of the pavement, still walking
nonchalantly. And then, gradually merging more and more with the shadow
of the house itself, he came abreast of the lane--and the street was
empty. A moment more, and lithe, active, silent as a cat in his
movements, he had swung himself over a fence; still another moment, and
lost utterly in the shadows of the porch, he was crouching at the
basement door of the house.

It was Jimmie Dale, the Gray Seal again, in action now. From under his
vest, from one of the multitudinous little upright pockets of that
leather girdle where nestled an array of vicious blued-steel implements,
a compact burglar's kit, he selected a pick-lock. From another pocket
came a black silk mask. Jimmie Dale slipped the mask over his face, and
leaned closer to the door. For perhaps five seconds the slim, sensitive
fingers were at work, then the door opened noiselessly, and closed
again, and was locked behind him.

He stood silent, motionless--listening. There was no sound. Apart from
the staff, there should be no one in the house. The papers had
overlooked few details in their account of the murder that afternoon.
Mrs. Lane was away in Europe, and they had taken the body of Jathan Lane
to the house of his married daughter. Under the mask there came again
that grim flicker to Jimmie Dale's lips. There were only the servants
then--since it was not yet _two o'clock_!

The round, white ray of a flashlight stabbed through the blackness,
vanished, and blackness fell again.

"Stairs ahead and to the right," Jimmie Dale confided to himself.
"Servants' quarters on top floor probably; only the cellar and storage
here."

The flashlight played steadily, impudently now, pointing the way
upstairs; and, as silent as the ray itself, Jimmie Dale followed. As he
reached the head of the stairs he found a closed door before him. The
light went out. He listened again; then, in the darkness, he opened the
door and stepped through. Again he listened. Still there was no sound.
The flashlight winked once inquisitively--then darkness again. He was
standing at the rear of the hall. The basement stairs came up under what
was evidently the main staircase.

And now a shadow flitted with incredible swiftness here and there; and
doors opened, and some were closed again, and some were left open--and
there was no sound. And presently Jimmie Dale stood again at the rear of
the hall. He could command the open door that led to the basement
stairs; and along the hall, where a slight rift in the blackness made by
the plate glass panels was distinguishable, he could command the front
doors.

He nodded in quiet satisfaction to himself. Jathan Lane's safe was in a
sort of private den or office that opened off the rear of the library,
and portires hung between the two rooms; each room had a door opening
off the hall, and both doors stood open now. A clock struck somewhere in
the house. His lips tightened. It was two o'clock.

Alert, tense, he listened--listened until the silence itself throbbed
and beat at the ear drums, and palpitated, and made noises of its own.

There wasn't much chance. He knew that. After what had happened that
night, unless under extraordinary conditions, Jathan Lane's safe should
be the most inviolate piece of property to be found anywhere in New
York. And even if any one came, the corollary of whatever held its
premise in that safe was to be found at Gentleman Laroque's, and the
Tocsin had said that the police would be warned in time. Yes, he
understood. She had obviously made no effort to render anything abortive
here at the source, for the very reason that she hoped it would but lead
to the trap she would have prepared at Gentleman Laroque's. Her attitude
had been quite logical, quite plausible. So why was _he_ here?

Jimmie Dale's hands clenched at his sides. The answer was simple enough,
and yet, too, in its very self seemed to hold a world of mockery and,
yes, even futility. He was here to pick up the threads of yesterday and
of those thousand yesterdays gone--anything--the grasping at any straw
that might bring him into that arena where she was battling for her
life, and from which, striving to shield him, she sought to bar him out.

He could not very well pick up those threads at Gentleman Laroque's, if
indeed there were any threads _to_ pick up, for the simple reason that
the police would be there! And so he was _here_.

Gentleman Laroque! His brow furrowed. Yes, he remembered Gentleman
Laroque--and Niccolo Sonnino--and a certain night that had so nearly
cost young Clarie Archman his life. So Gentleman Laroque was in this new
combine! Gentleman Laroque had played the rle of safe-breaker that
other night--but Gentleman Laroque had missed his calling, whether as a
safe-breaker or as the gang leader that he was. He would have made an
infinitely better confidence man, for he was educated, suave, and, when
it suited him, polished to a degree; he possessed all the requisites,
and, in abundance, the prime requisite of all--a cunning that was the
cunning of a fox. Also he, Jimmie Dale, remembered something else about
Gentleman Laroque; he remembered Gentleman Laroque's last words to the
Gray Seal on that night in question, and now here in the darkness,
waiting for he knew not what, with Laroque emerging so unexpectedly from
the past, those words, hoarse in their rage and elemental fury, seemed
to ring again with strange significance in his ears: "You win to-night,
but we'll get you yet! Some day we'll get you, you cursed snitch,
you----"

_What was that?_

The sound came neither from below through the open door of the basement
staircase, nor yet from the front doors along the hall. The sound
persisted. It was like the gnawing of a rat. And then Jimmie Dale placed
its general location. It seemed to come from outside the house, and in
direction from the little den or office at his right that contained the
safe. He moved stealthily to the doorway, and, still in the hall,
protected by the door jamb, peered into the darkness of the room. He
could see nothing.

But now the sound was still more clearly defined, and he placed it
exactly. Rather than a gnawing, it was a scratching at the wall outside
and below the window; and as it continued it seemed at times to grow
almost human with impatience and irritability as it quickened its tempo.

And then suddenly Jimmie Dale turned his head. Imagination? No, there
was another sound--and it, too, now repeated itself, low, cautious,
stealthy. Some one was creeping down the third story stairs from the top
of the house.

For an instant Jimmie Dale stood without movement, then a hard, quick
smile compressed his lips. That scratching sound outside the window,
which still persisted, had not been loud enough to _awaken_ anybody. It
was rather curious, rather singular! His ears, acute, trained to the
slightest sound, caught the footfalls coming now along the upper hall,
still low, still cautious and stealthy--and Jimmie Dale slipped across
the threshold, and in an instant had passed into the library and was
crouched behind the portires that hung between the two rooms.

A minute passed. A tread creaked softly on the main staircase; then a
form bulked in irregular outline in the doorway of the little den,
paused for the fraction of a second, came into the room, closed the
door, and glided swiftly to the window. The window was cautiously
opened. There was the soft _pad_ of feet as a man crawled through and
dropped to the floor. A hoarse whisper vibrated through the room.

"Damn it, why didn't you keep me there all night?" a voice demanded
angrily. "You didn't go to _sleep_, did you, or _forget_ to leave the
window of your room open so's you could _hear_?"

Another voice answered. The words came in a choked, broken way, as
though with great effort:

"No; I--I didn't go to sleep. Not likely! I heard you the minute you
came, but--but I couldn't help it. I had a--a bit of a turn. I came as
soon as I could. I--I was sick."

A ray of a flashlight lanced through the blackness. It played on the
tall, gaunt figure of an old, gray-haired man arrayed in a dressing
gown, and on a face that was drawn and pallor-like in colour.

Then darkness again.

Behind the portire, Jimmie Dale's face suddenly hardened. There were
little gray "mutton-chop" side whiskers, that was the only change. He
recognised the man in an instant. It was the "Minister," alias Patrick
Denton, one of the cleverest "inside" crooks that had ever infested New
York. The man, pronounced an incurable heart case, and even then
supposed to be in a dying condition, had been pardoned two years ago
while serving a sentence in Sing Sing. Since then he had dropped out of
sight; and indeed, generally, was supposed to be dead.

There was a callous grunt from the man at the window.

"Well, you look it!" said the man. "And that's no lie!" He laughed
shortly. "And maybe it's a good thing. You could get away with the
faithful-butler-mourning-for-his-dead-master stuff without batting an
eyelid, if you had to."

There was no answer.

Jimmie Dale's hand slipped into his pocket and came out again with his
automatic. So that was it! He began to understand. The Minister was back
at his old inside game again--this time in the rle of Jathan Lane's
butler!

The man who had crawled in through the window spoke again--sharply now:

"Well, let's get busy! We've lost too much time as it is. If a light's
safe, shoot her on; we can work quicker that way."

"Yes," said the Minister. "It's--it's safe enough." He stifled a cough.
"The rest are all asleep; and on account of what happened this
afternoon, I had every shade in the house drawn. I----" He broke off
with a quick gasp, as coincident with the faint click of an
electric-light switch, a single, shaded incandescent on the desk in
front of the safe went on. "You!" he exclaimed. "I--I thought it was to
be Hunchback Joe."

The fold of the portire in Jimmie Dale's hand drew closer in against
the edge of the wall projection until there was left but the veriest
crack. A pucker came and nested in little wrinkles at the corners of his
eyes. He was not so sure, after all, that he had begun to understand.
In view of the Tocsin's letter, he did not understand at all. The man
who stood there in the room beside the Minister, the man with the cool,
contemptuous black eyes, the thin, cunning lips parted in a grim smile,
was Gentleman Laroque.

"So it was," said Laroque coolly. "You've got it straight. Hunchback Joe
was to come here for the sparklers, smear the trail by bringing them
back to me, and then I was going to slip them to old Isaac Shiftel. But
Hunchback Joe couldn't come, and as it's a rather fussy job I didn't
dare trust any one else, so I came myself. I'll take them direct from
here to Shiftel's."

The pucker cleared from Jimmie Dale's eyes. Shiftel--old Isaac
Shiftel--the fence! The man was an outstanding figure in the underworld!
Yes, he _did_ begin to understand. But for once, for the first time
since those days in the years gone by when the Tocsin had begun to sound
those "calls to arms," the Tocsin was astray. It was not her fault. It
was nothing that she could by any possibility have foreseen. Only as
matters now stood the police trap at Laroque's would be abortive--it
should have been at Isaac Shiftel's! Jimmie Dale's lips pressed
together. Well, he knew where Isaac Shiftel lived, and instead of the
police, it would perhaps be----

Jimmie Dale's mental soliloquy ended abruptly. The Minister was walking
with weak, unsteady steps across the room, groping at the desk for
support, and speaking as he went.

"There isn't anything the matter, is there?" he asked anxiously. "I mean
nothing's gone wrong with that other thing to keep Hunchback Joe away?
He's safe, isn't he?"

An oath fell softly from Gentleman Laroque's lips. He still smiled; but
the cool contempt had gone from his eyes, and in its place was a
smouldering passion.

"Wrong?" he echoed. "No; nothing's gone wrong, except that the whole
plant is blown, the papers pinched by the police, and Hunchback Joe is
dead."

"What's that, you say?" The old man swayed on his feet, his face a
ghastly white. "Dead! You said--dead? I----"

Jimmie Dale straightened up involuntarily. The old man was undeniably
ill, desperately ill. He had reeled and would have fallen had not
Laroque caught him and placed him in a chair.

"Brandy!" the old man gasped. "Over there--on--on that cabinet."

Laroque procured the stimulant. The Minister gulped it down eagerly. It
seemed to revive him. He stared anxiously at Laroque.

"How--what--what happened?" he whispered hoarsely.

"The police were tipped off by some one you don't know, and by some one
you do," said Laroque between his teeth. "The some one you know was--the
Gray Seal."

"My God!" The white face was set with fear. "The police--and--Hunchback
Joe dead! We--we can't go on with this--we'd----"

"We couldn't if Joe _weren't_ either trapped or dead," Laroque broke in
sharply. "Pull yourself together! We've no time to waste. Don't you
understand? It's _safer_ than ever it was! If Klanner, the bank janitor,
had got his, and the fake evidence had been found the way we planted it,
this little deal here to-night was all tucked away neat enough. But
Klanner's skin was saved, by luck as we thought then, though we know
better now, and that put everything up in the air as far as _this_ was
concerned--until the police copped Joe with the goods, and Joe snuffed
out. That gave them the motive again for the murder this afternoon, and
gave them the man who did it. The case is closed now tighter than we
figured it could be sewed up even in the first place. Get me?"

The old man shook his head. He looked furtively around him.

"I'm afraid," he said huskily. "If the Gray Seal's in this, it--it ain't
safe."

"But I tell you the Gray Seal isn't in this," snapped Laroque
impatiently. "That's what I'm trying to get through your thick head! He
and every one else will think the curtain rolled down on the _last_ act
when they got Hunchback Joe. It's safe enough! It's so safe there isn't
anything to it, if _your_ end is safe. And you ought to know about
that--you've been a year getting the dope."

"I--I ain't afraid of that," said the old man. "There's no one in the
world knows how many he had. The family knew he had a lot, of course,
and knew it was his hobby, and that he kept 'em here where he could look
at 'em instead of in a safety deposit vault--though I guess he figured
no safety deposit vault had anything on his--but they just knew he had a
lot, they didn't know how many."

A strange light came dawning suddenly in Jimmie Dale's eyes. Had the
Tocsin been right in this respect? Was this the _real_ motive for the
murder--not the bank's papers? Jathan Lane's hobby! It was no secret.
Jathan Lane was a fellow member of that most exclusive organization, the
St. James Club. Dimly there came back to memory a conversation one
afternoon when four or five members, Jathan Lane and himself amongst
them, were gathered around one of the smoking room tables, and----

"Sure!" said Gentleman Laroque brusquely. "Well, then, what's the matter
with you? There's no sign of any robbery; no sign of any entry into the
house, not so much as an unlocked door or a scratch on a window sill;
and Jathan Lane, the only man who could know that anything had been
taken--is dead. And his death"--Laroque grinned--"occurred in such a way
as to make what's done here secure from even suspicion. The bank game's
a blind. This is what we've been after, and now it's open and shut. And
your share is the biggest haul you ever made in your life."

The old man stared around him. Colour crept into his cheeks and glowed
in hectic spots. His eyes, deep in their sockets, began to burn with a
feverish light. He pulled himself up to his feet.

"Yes, yes!" he mumbled fiercely. "Rich--ha, ha!--rich! It cannot fail; I
am a fool"--he caught his breath, and swayed again on his feet. "Come
on! Come on! Hurry!" he choked out.

Jimmie Dale watched them, his lips suddenly tight. They had _passed by_
the safe, and were coming directly toward where he stood. Another yard
and they would reach the portires. His automatic swung silently upward
in his hand. And then the old man halted in front of an oil painting
that hung from the wall a little less than shoulder high.

For an instant the man stood there breathing heavily, as though even the
exertion of crossing the room had taxed him beyond his strength; and
then with a quick movement he jerked at the edge of the frame, and the
painting itself, as though it were the grooved cover of a box, slid to
one side, exposing the wall, which was as bare and as innocent in
appearance behind, or, rather, through the frame, as anywhere else in
the room.

"Jathan Lane's safe deposit vault," coughed the Minister. He laughed.
His cheeks were burning; his eyes were brighter. He leaned suddenly down
toward the floor. "This knot in the wainscoting--see?"

Behind the empty frame, a door in the wall swung open--and the light
from the room fell upon the nickel dial of a safe.

"That's the boy!" applauded Gentleman Laroque.

"Yes, yes!" whispered the old man. "I'll open it! Wait! A--a long time
it took to get the combination, but--but I got it"--his fingers were
working at the dial--"there--there it is!"

"Just a second!" said Laroque coolly, as the door of the little wall
safe swung open. He glanced around him, then darted across the room to a
small, square table on which stood a heavy bronze vase. "Here, this will
do!" he said, and laying the vase on the floor, came back with the
table. "Shoot the stuff out on this!"

It took a minute, perhaps two; and then upon the table there lay a
number of jewellers' cases in both plush and leather, and a dozen or
more little chamois bags. Laroque was rapidly opening and shutting the
cases, and as he did so the contents of each in its turn, pendants,
brooches, ornaments of many designs, all of them set with diamonds,
seemed to leap thirstily at the light and hail it with eager
scintillating flashes before the covers could be shut down upon them
again.

"That all that's in there?" demanded Laroque.

"Yes," breathed the old man. "Yes"--he rubbed his hands rapaciously
together--"all except the tray he uses to paw 'em over on."

"That's thoughtful of him!" grunted Gentleman Laroque. "Let's have it."

From the bottom of the safe the Minister pulled out and laid upon the
table an oblong, plush-covered tray with raised edges.

"Now!" grunted Laroque again. "Open the bags, and dump the whities into
the tray."

Jimmie Dale drew in his breath. It seemed as though little rivers of
fire had begun to stream from the mouths of the bags. The men were
working fast now; Laroque with almost cynical composure; the old man,
wrought up, clumsy in his greed, his hands trembling, mumbling, crooning
to himself.

Diamonds, unset stones, of all sizes, poured into the tray; they filled
it, heaped it to its edges. An inch deep they lay. It was a fortune
whose value Jimmie Dale did not dare attempt to compute--a pool of
immortal beauty, restless with vitality, flashing, limpid, shifting,
iridescent. Here the facet of a stone struck back at the light, fiery,
passionate in its challenge; there another lay, soft in its radiance,
glowing, pulsing, breathing, alive.

Laroque drew a cloth bag from his pocket and unfolded it. He ran his
finger through the stones, separating them into two almost equal
portions; the portion nearer him he began to put into his little sack.

"Slip the rest of them into the chamois bags again, and put 'em back in
the safe," he directed tersely. "Divide 'em amongst the bags as equally
as you can. And those gew-gaws in the cases, too, of course--put them
back. We can't afford to monkey with anything but the unset stones; any
one of those ornaments might happen to be just the one that somebody in
the family would remember--and miss."

But now the Minister hesitated. The hectic colour had fled from his
cheeks, only to enhance, it seemed, the fever fire in his eyes; the
muscles of his face twitched; his hands, trembling before, shook now as
with the ague.

"_All!_" he whispered fiercely, and touched his lips with the tip of his
tongue. "Look at 'em! My God, look at 'em! We've got 'em all here! Take
'em! Take 'em! Let's take 'em all--all the unset stones anyhow! I'll
make my get-away with you. Can't we take 'em all?"

Gentleman Laroque continued his work without looking up.

"_I've_ never been in Sing Sing," he said, with a thin smile. "That's
why I came here myself to-night. I couldn't trust you or anybody else,
except Hunchback Joe, to stand up against the temptation of making the
bum play that would land us there. All! That's what Sing Sing is full
of! You poor fool, aren't you satisfied with a _sure_ thing when the
sure thing is a fortune? That's what the half we're taking is--a
fortune. And nobody to know that any job has been pulled; and Shiftel
with a free hand to dispose of the stones at market value! Would you
rather pinch them all, make it next to impossible to sell them for
anything like what they're worth, and on top of that dodge the police
for the rest of your life? You'd have a rosy chance making your
get-away--Mr. Jathan Lane's vanishing butler, alias the Minister, alias
Patrick Denton, late of Sing Sing!" His voice hardened suddenly. "As I
said, _I've_ never been in Sing Sing. Hurry up, now! Put the rest of
those stones and all the ornaments back in the safe."

The old man swept his hand across his eyes.

"Sure," he said thickly; "you're right, and I----" A spasm of pain
contorted his features, and he clutched at his side and staggered; but
as Laroque, with a sharp exclamation, reached out a steadying hand, the
Minister shook his head. "I'm all right," he said--and began to return
the diamonds Laroque had left on the tray to the little chamois bags.

A strange smile crossed Jimmie Dale's lips. Laroque was right--quite
right. And from Laroque's standpoint--safe. The scene of the two men at
work there beyond the portire seemed suddenly to shift, and he, Jimmie
Dale, was again one of that afternoon group gathered around the table in
the smoking room of the St. James Club. Jathan Lane, one of the richest
men in America, and his hobby! It had been pure pleasantry, the twitting
to which they had subjected the multimillionaire. But the banker had
answered seriously. "How many stones have I? What are they worth?" he
had said in reply to a question. "I am sure I do not know myself, but I
am equally sure there are no finer unset diamonds, in mass you
understand, in America. I have been buying them, one, two, half a dozen
at a time, for years. I love them; I take a pure delight in them; and I
indulge myself without stint, since, after all, my hobby is by no means
a bad one even in a business sense. At least, and what can hardly be
said of most hobbies, the value is always there." "But your family?" the
questioner had persisted. "I should think Mrs. Lane and your daughter
would be raiding you all the time!" And then Jathan Lane had laughed.
"Familiarity and contempt, you know," he had said. "A boy and his bag of
marbles. They haven't looked at them for years."

Gentleman Laroque was speaking again.

"That's the idea!" he said more pleasantly. "They may be a little
_disappointed_, perhaps even a little surprised that there aren't more,
but that's where it ends so far as the family is concerned. No suspicion
that everything isn't just as old man Lane left it; no suspicion that
anything has been _taken_. And, speaking professionally, therein lies
the difference between an artist and a hog!" He tucked the small cloth
bag under his coat. The table was clear. "Close her up nice and tidy,"
he smiled, "and I'll beat it for Shiftel's."

The old man closed the wall safe, and slid the painting back in its
grooved frame.

"Fine!" approved Gentleman Laroque. "I'll leave you to put the table
back. Come on now, and lock the window behind me."

Jimmie Dale did not move; only his face set a little more grimly as he
watched Gentleman Laroque climb through the window and disappear. It
would be a pity to let Shiftel get out of this scot-free! His mind,
alert, incisive, was sifting, weighing, formulating the details of a
plan whose germ had taken root there, it seemed, almost from the moment
he had begun to watch the men at work. Neither Gentleman Laroque nor the
Minister would eventually escape, for they could be found anytime....
Shiftel was another member of the gang, an oily, craven little rat, and
Shiftel in a corner with his own skin in danger was far more likely to
_talk_ than either of the other two...the Tocsin's letter and the
Phantom...what Shiftel knew he could be made to tell...the _evidence_
of this robbery here must be taken care of as soon as the Minister there
had gone upstairs again to----

There came a low, dull thud; a broken cry:

"Brandy--I----"

With a sudden sweep of his arm Jimmie Dale brushed aside the portire
and leaped forward--too late. The heavy bronze vase, fallen from
nerveless fingers that had striven to lift it back on the table, was
still rolling across the floor, as the old man, with arms outflung,
pitched forward beside it, and lay still.

In an instant Jimmie Dale had reached the cabinet and procured the
stimulant, and in another was kneeling beside the prostrate figure--and
then, after a moment, in a strangely quiet and deliberate way Jimmie
Dale laid the brandy aside.

It was very still in the house, still as the form stretched out there on
the rug before him, still as the old, white, upturned face. The man was
dead.

The grim, sharp lines that drooped the corners of Jimmie Dale's lips
faded away, and something seemed to soften the hard, set immobility of
his face as he rose finally to his feet. It was just a crook, just the
Minister, alias Patrick Denton, just the end of a vicious, miserable
career of crime--but it was also the end of a human life. And life even
to this warped soul was as sweet, wasn't it, as to another?--more so
perhaps for the very fact that death must have stood with beckoning
finger for so long now at the other's elbow! Jimmie Dale turned slowly
away and walked across the room. Mechanically he slid the painting out
along its grooves; mechanically he stooped and found the knot in the
wainscoting. Perhaps it was as well, perhaps infinitely better this way,
better that the end should come here than behind the steel bars and the
gray stone walls where once it had so nearly come. They would not have
pardoned the Minister _twice_.

The little door in the wall had swung open, the nickel dial of the safe
glittered in the light--and suddenly Jimmie Dale's shoulders
straightened, and for an instant his dark eyes studied the closed steel
door. Then he leaned forward, his ear pressed against the face of the
safe for the tumblers' fall, and the slim, sensitive fingers, the nerves
throbbing at the tips, those magical masters of bolts and locks, were at
work.

The minutes passed. There was no sound, save at times the faint, musical
whir of the dial; then, abruptly, a deep breathed exclamation:

"All thumbs to-night!"

Again the minutes passed; again the dial moved, now with its musical
whir, now slowly, with infinite care; and then a sound, so low as to be
scarcely audible--the soft thud, muffled within the steel walls, of
metal meeting metal, the bolts sliding in their sockets.

The door of the safe stood open.

Jimmie Dale swung around and stared about the room. He was provided with
no little cloth sack such as Gentleman Laroque had had; true he had,
instead, those little chamois bags, and his pockets might hold them all,
but--With a quick stride he crossed the room to the desk, and picked up
a black leather portfolio. It was quite large enough, and, used for
carrying documents, its flap was fitted with a clasp. He opened it,
dumped the papers it contained out on the desk, and returned to the wall
safe.

Jimmie Dale was working with lightning speed now. The little chamois
bags were tucked into the bottom of the portfolio; the small plush and
leather jewellers' cases were opened in quick succession, their
contents following the chamois bags, the cases themselves being tossed
helter-skelter upon the floor.

The safe was empty.

Jimmie Dale closed the portfolio, and cast a sharp, critical glance
around the room. He nodded grimly to himself. There was ample evidence
now that there had been a robbery, quite ample--everybody knew that
there had been _something_ in the now empty safe--and it would not
therefore be, as Gentleman Laroque expected, so blind a trail now that
led to the source of the diamonds with which Isaac Shiftel was to be
endowed! Also, for good measure in this respect, some of the ornaments,
that were certainly the property of Mrs. Lane, and which Gentleman
Laroque had been wise enough to leave alone, would not lack for a speedy
identification! And, again, there was the yawning door of the wall safe,
and the painting that still protruded so eloquently from its frame!

His eyes softened in their expression as they held now for an instant
again on the form that lay upon the floor. Then he shook his head in
quick decision. He needed time now before an alarm was sounded that
might by any chance reach the ears of Gentleman Laroque, or, more
particularly, one Isaac Shiftel!

Jimmie Dale consulted his watch. It was five minutes of three. The
electric-light switch clicked under his fingers. The room was in
darkness.

Then silence through the house.

And presently a figure crouched again in the shadows of the basement
porch, and crossed the yard, and swung itself silently over the fence
into the lane--and from here, slipping the black silk mask from his
face, Jimmie Dale emerged on the street.

But now Jimmie Dale seemed to be no longer in haste. It was a long way
from Jathan Lane's mansion to Mr. Isaac Shiftel's unsavory abode, which
was now Jimmie Dale's destination, and the subway would be the quicker,
but, instead, Jimmie Dale hailed a belated taxi as it passed him. He was
interested in reaching Isaac Shiftel's only _after_ Gentleman Laroque
had been there and gone. He gave the chauffeur an address on the Bowery
that would bring him within a block of the tenement that Isaac Shiftel
had chosen as his lair, and stepped into the taxi.




--III--

ONE ISAAC SHIFTEL


The taxi rolled and swayed its way along. Jimmie Dale sat staring at the
portfolio that bumped with the motion of the car upon his knees. In some
thirty-odd minutes, at half-past three to be exact, the police would be
paying a visit to Laroque's quarters, and even if the man were not back
there by then, the police were patient and would wait! They would get
Laroque--but not the evidence. They might even let the man go
again--temporarily. It would not matter. Laroque's freedom, if obtained
at all, would be of very short duration. The evidence lacking at
Gentleman Laroque's would be found within the hour and in abundant
measure, together with Mr. Isaac Shiftel himself, at--Isaac Shiftel's!

But that was not all; nor, indeed, that which most vitally interested
him. Despite the Tocsin's efforts to keep him out of those shadows, as
she had termed it, that seemed to have closed down upon her blacker and
more ominous even than before, the night's work had already brought him
greater returns than he had ever dared to hope for or expect. He knew
three of the pawns who moved at the criminal will of the unknown leader
whom she had styled the Phantom. One of the three was dead, but there
remained two; and of the two, one was Laroque, and the other was a
miserable little rat-like creature, who, under _persuasion_, was not
likely to prove over-secretive. And Shiftel's tongue, once made to wag,
held promise of almost anything, even the "Open Sesame" to what was now
his, Jimmie Dale's, ultimate goal--the Phantom.

Jimmie Dale's eyes travelled to the window, held there for a few minutes
noting the taxi's progress, and then fixed introspectively again on the
portfolio.

Shiftel! He knew Shiftel as only the _initiated_ knew him, as only those
knew him whose ears were attune to the whispered confidences of the
underworld's exchanges in the dens and dives hidden away from the light
of day, where he, Jimmie Dale, once as Larry the Bat, and now in the
present day as Smarlinghue, the broken-down artist and hop-fighter, was
welcomed as one of the lite of that inglorious realm. He had even seen
Shiftel on one or two occasions--an unkempt, bearded, spectacled
foreigner of uncertain age, a cringing little beast, hideously cunning,
a master in his own peculiar line of deviltry. Shiftel ostensibly, for
the benefit of the police should they ever prove inquisitive, made his
living in his two-room, dirty, bachelor apartment, by working on
garments which he brought from various sweat shops. If he were rarely at
home and too lazy to work much, that was his misfortune, his loss, and
his sole personal affair! But the underworld held him in quite other
regard--as a "fence," a "shover of stolen goods," who was safe, and in
cleverness without an equal. There were few crooks in the Bad Lands but
were hungry for Isaac Shiftel's services, but Shiftel was not
approachable to all; it was understood, and perforce had regretfully
come to be accepted as a fact, that he dealt only with a small and
select clientele of his own choosing, whose personnel was more guessed
at than known; and that to break into the charmed circle was a feat
attempted by many but accomplished by few. And as far back as Jimmie
Dale could remember, as far back as he could remember even Gentleman
Laroque, Shiftel had lived in the same miserable rooms in the same
miserable tenement.

The taxi rattled on. At intervals Jimmie Dale kept glancing out of the
window. And then, as the taxi turned at last into the Bowery, he smiled
suddenly, laid his handkerchief on the portfolio, and reached into one
of the pockets of the leather girdle under his vest. Shiftel! He took
out a thin metal case, like a cigarette case, and from the case, with a
pair of tiny tweezers that mocked at finger-prints, he lifted out a
diamond-shaped gray paper seal that was adhesive on one side, and
dropped it on the handkerchief. He returned the metal case to its hiding
place, folded the handkerchief carefully, and replaced it in his pocket.

A moment later the taxi stopped. Jimmie Dale alighted, paid and
dismissed the chauffeur, and as he swung around the corner, walking east
from the Bowery, he looked at his watch. It was twenty minutes past
three. It became now simply a question whether Laroque was still with
Shiftel, or had gone home.

The street, one of the most shabby of East Side streets, was dark,
poorly lighted, and free of pedestrians. Jimmie Dale passed by a
tenement whose shabbiness was quite in keeping with its surroundings,
passed by a narrow areaway which separated the tenement from another
which might have been a duplicate of the first--and halted before the
entrance of the second tenement.

The outer door was unlocked. In a moment he was inside the hallway, and
in utter blackness now stood motionless, listening. Then again the black
silk mask was slipped over his face, and again it was as though a shadow
moved. Shiftel's apartment was the middle one on the ground floor facing
the other tenement across the areaway.

Jimmie Dale passed down the length of the hall, counting the doors on
his right by the sense of touch, and, returning, crouched with his ear
against the panel of the door he had selected. From within, so faintly
as to be indefinable in any concrete way, there came the sound of
movement. Still Jimmie Dale listened, even while his fingers worked
silently at doorknob and lock. He nodded his head as he completed his
work. There had been no sound of voices. Gentleman Laroque had evidently
been and gone. Isaac Shiftel was alone.

And then suddenly Jimmie Dale was on his feet, and in a flash was in the
room, the door closed and locked behind him. Through the doorway of a
connecting room ahead of him he could see the unkempt, bearded figure of
Shiftel as the man, with a cry, sprang wildly to his feet from the
chair in which he had been seated, clawing, even as he sprang, at the
white, glittering array of diamonds strewn upon the table-top before
him.

"Who's that? Who's there?" the man called out hoarsely.

Jimmie Dale's automatic covered the other as he moved swiftly forward to
Shiftel's side.

"Quite an elaborate collection you've got here, Isaac," he said softly.
"First water stones of course, or _you_ wouldn't be handling them. And
please don't wriggle, Isaac, until I--ah, thanks!" He had laid the
portfolio down on the table, and his fingers passing deftly over
Shiftel's clothing had whipped out a revolver from the other's pocket
and transferred it to his own.

But now Shiftel seemed to have got a sudden grip upon himself. He leaned
forward, peering sharply from behind his spectacles at Jimmie Dale's
masked face.

"No," he said with a snarl, "I don't know you, because I don't know
_your_ kind. But you evidently don't know Isaac Shiftel. Those stones,
eh? That's it, is it? Well, you may get out of here with them, but
afterwards--eh?--do you think Isaac Shiftel's arm is so short as that?"

Jimmie Dale made no answer. He retreated a step, and with his free hand
began to unfasten the portfolio.

Shiftel shook his fist virulently now. The first shock once over, he
was, through familiarity, apparently quite at his ease again in dealing
with--a crook.

"How'd you get wise to this, eh?" he demanded fiercely. "How'd you----"
His glance had travelled to the window that opened on the areaway. "Ah!"
he exclaimed. "That's it, eh? The shade's down, but like a fool I left
the window open. You had the luck to sneak into that areaway." He peered
again into Jimmie Dale's face, and abruptly his tone and manner changed.
He rubbed his hands together ingratiatingly. "I said you didn't know
Isaac Shiftel," he said smoothly; "but you do--everybody in your line of
business knows Isaac Shiftel. I'll make a deal with you--a fair
share--eh? You don't want Isaac Shiftel as an enemy. I'll give you----"

"You're getting in ahead of me, Isaac," interrupted Jimmie Dale
plaintively. He coughed slightly--and politely pressed his handkerchief
to his moistened lips. "_I_ meant to be the first to offer something."
With a quick jerk of his revolver hand, he plucked a diamond necklace
from the top of the portfolio, and tossed it upon the table. "That, for
instance--Isaac."

The ornament seemed to fascinate Shiftel. As if drawn to it against his
will, he leaned forward staring at it; and then, as though actuated by a
sort of frightened incredulity, he reached out a hand toward it--but
Jimmie Dale's hand that still held the handkerchief was the quicker. It
fell and gripped like a vise upon the back of Shiftel's hand.

"Just a moment, Isaac," said Jimmie Dale coolly. "There is something
else that I want you to have--as a little memento of the occasion."

There came a startled cry from Shiftel. Jimmie Dale had withdrawn his
hand, and Shiftel was staring now, not at the diamond necklace, but at a
diamond-shaped gray paper seal that was pasted on the back of his hand.

"I'll say it for you!" Jimmie Dale's smile was not inviting. "The Gray
Seal! I apologise for the melodrama, but I think it will aid you, Isaac,
to see things in a clearer light. You've got a little information that I
want, and I imagine it will help to quicken your memory and loosen your
tongue to know _who_ wants it."

There was no answer. The man, his lips twitching, was still staring at
the back of his hand.

With a sudden movement, Jimmie Dale emptied the contents of the
portfolio upon the table. He brushed them into a heap with the diamonds
already there.

"They belong together," said Jimmie Dale, in a curious monotone, "and I
couldn't bear to see them left behind. They'll be _found_ together too,
Isaac, for I am afraid it will be impossible to make any one believe now
that Jathan Lane's safe has never been disturbed." His voice hardened
suddenly. "You're going up for this, Isaac. I make no bargain with you.
The police are going to be tipped off over the phone, and they are going
to find you here trussed up in that chair with the diamonds in front of
you. But before the police get you, you are going to deal with me. I
want to know who the man is you, and those with you, take your orders
from. And before we are _through_ you are going to tell me, Isaac--all
you know."

Shiftel's tongue was circling his lips. He shook his head. He was
cringing now, supplicating with his hands.

"I don't know anything," he protested wildly. "You're all wrong. You're
all wrong about everything. I don't know anything about Jathan Lane. I
don't know where the diamonds came from. I never ask questions in my
business. They were brought in here for me to shove, and----"

"That's enough, Isaac!" snapped Jimmie Dale. "The game is up! Your
friend, Patrick Denton, alias the Minister, is dead up there on the
floor of Jathan Lane's private library, where he----"

"Dead!" Shiftel's hands had ceased their movements. The man stood rigid.
Something stronger than himself seemed to have stripped him of further
power to dissimulate. "Dead! You--you killed him?"

"Never mind about that!" Jimmie Dale bit off his words. "It's enough for
you to know for the present that he is dead. You're not quite so
innocent as you were--are you, Isaac? And as for the man who brought
those stones here, a friend of mine has kindly arranged to have the
police pay a little visit at Gentleman Laroque's at just about this
time; to be precise"--he drew his watch from his pocket--"at----"

Jimmie Dale's words ended abruptly. He, too, was suddenly standing tense
and rigid. A footstep, guarded, cautious, was coming along the areaway
out there. It was coming nearer to the open window--the drawn shade did
not _hide_ the sound. Instinctively his eyes sought the dial of his
watch.

_It was half past three._

"At Laroque's!" Shiftel, his ears strained toward the window, was
whispering the words. "The police--at Laroque's!" And then he raised
both fists in fury and shook them above his head. "You snitch, you
cursed snitch"--the low, whispered words seemed but to accentuate the
man's sudden flood of passion--"we'll get you yet for this!"

For an instant Jimmie Dale's brain seemed to reel in turmoil and chaos.
That voice was no longer Shiftel's. Those words! Once he had heard those
exact words before, and--with a quick step forward, his hand reached
out, tearing beard and spectacles from the other's face.

"Gentleman Laroque!"

"Yes, you fool!" said Laroque, still whispering. "So you've tripped at
last, eh? You didn't know, and you've brought the police _here_. Well,
take the consequences! It's you who's trapped!" He was backing slowly
away from both table and window toward the inner wall of the room.
"Perhaps _you'll_ explain the possession of those stones! You fool, you
and that woman with you, you don't know what you're up against, but----"

"Don't move!" ordered Jimmie Dale grimly.

"Just this far," smiled Laroque. "I hear them coming along the hall
inside now. Don't forget there's one of your police on guard outside the
window, and----"

The room was in instant darkness. The bare fraction of a second passed,
not more; there was a faint scraping sound from the direction where
Laroque had been standing--and Jimmie Dale's flashlight, whipped from
his pocket, was sweeping around him.

_The room was empty!_

Jimmie Dale's face was set like chiselled marble. Empty! Gone! The man
was gone! But that was not all! Voices were ringing that slogan of the
old days in his ears again: "Death to the Gray Seal!" He did not need to
be told what it meant to be caught by either police or underworld. He,
too, heard those guarded footsteps inside the tenement and coming now
along the hall. His mind, alert, virile, was working with lightning
speed. The doorway was behind him, and Laroque could not have gone that
way--nor by the window guarded by the police. There must be some secret
exit from the room. If so, given but a second, while he, Jimmie Dale,
was attempting an escape, Laroque could get back again and secure the
diamonds that lay upon the table. And he, Jimmie Dale, was _responsible_
for them now!

And now Jimmie Dale in action was swift as his racing thoughts. Whether
he could save himself or not, there was at least a way to save the
stones. With the flashlight switched on, he propped it on the end of the
table, its ray streaming over the gems and playing in the opposite
direction from the connecting door.

"If you can hear me, Laroque," he whispered, "I warn you--don't try it!
All you'll get off that table will be a bullet, whether I'm caught or
not!"

It was utter blackness behind him. He backed swiftly, silently through
the connecting door, and across the outer room to the door that led into
the hall. His automatic held a line on the table top. He crouched at the
far side of the door casing. They were here now. He heard a whispered
consultation outside, as his fingers, closing on the key, silently
unlocked the door. Queer! His brain was racing again. A queer sight! All
blackness back here--and, through the connecting doorway, a light,
apparently coming from nowhere, streamed over a shimmering,
scintillating mass of diamonds, and ended by imposing itself in a white,
luminous circle on a dirty, greasy wall behind! His eyes never left the
table; his automatic never wavered in its line. Queer! The Phantom!
Gentleman Laroque--Isaac Shiftel! Could it be? Was that a partial answer
to the Tocsin's "score of aliases and score of domiciles"? Was Gentleman
Laroque the Phantom? Yet how had she taken this for Laroque's home if
she hadn't known the two men were one? And she hadn't known. She had
said so. But--yes, it was not unexplainable. It might easily have
been--just as it had been with him, Jimmie Dale, as Larry the Bat, or as
Smarlinghue. She might have seen Laroque come here some evening--and
Shiftel might have come out--while she thought Laroque remained _at
home_. It might easily be that she did not know Shiftel, and so----

"Bust it in!" The words came sharp, incisive, from the hall; then a
quick exclamation: "Blamed if the door ain't unlocked! Come on!"

The door was flung violently open. A man swung forward into the
room--and halted abruptly, staring toward the connecting doorway.

"For Heaven's sake, sergeant, look at that!" he burst out.

A man behind pushed eagerly forward. And Jimmie Dale, crouching low by
the baseboard in the blackness, slipped through the doorway behind the
other without a sound, and in a moment was outside the tenement and
walking quietly along the street--in a direction that ignored the
areaway.

Half an hour later Jimmie Dale mounted the steps of a palatial residence
on Riverside Drive. He smiled softly as he stumbled and shuffled so
noisily that before he had gained the topmost step the door was opened
for him by the white-haired old butler, who had been butler to Jimmie
Dale's father before him, and whose proudest boast was that he had
dandled his Master Jim upon his knee. It would have been so easy to have
slipped in, and passed the old man, and gone upstairs to bed--and broken
the old man's heart to have been found out _asleep_ at his
self-appointed post.

"What!" said Jimmie Dale severely--and used identically the same words
he had used on a hundred similar occasions: "Sitting up again for me,
Jason? How many times am I to tell you that I won't have it? Jason, go
to bed at once!"

"Yes, sir," said Jason. "Thank you, sir. Thank you, Master Jim, sir--I
will."




--IV--

THREADS


Two weeks had passed.

It was evening; and Jimmie Dale, as Smarlinghue now, the seedy,
down-at-the-heels artist, better known as Smarly in the Bad Lands, and
still better known again in the ultra-exclusive dens and dives, where
the first citizens of New York's crimeland foregathered, as a dope fiend
shattered beyond repair, a character shady enough from any angle to
entitle him to homage even in that unhallowed circle of the lite,
slouched along an East Side street--but the slouching gait was strangely
and incredibly swift. He skulked in the night shadows of the buildings
like some evil thing that sought darkness as kindred to itself. But at
intervals, as he moved along with that strange illusive swiftness, the
rays of a street lamp, as though in ironic mockery at his inability to
evade them, brought out into sharp relief the disreputable figure whose
coat was a size too small for him, and from the short sleeves of which
protruded blatantly the frayed and soiled wristbands of his shirt, whose
shoulders were stooped, and whose face, what could be seen of it under a
battered felt hat, was hollow cheeked, and gaunt with a half starved
look.

And now he entered a house that made the corner of a lane, a house that
was as disreputable as himself, a dwelling of some old-time pretentions,
but with the city's onward march a derelict now, metamorphosed into a
mean and squalid tenement. He passed along the dark, musty hallway to
the rear room on the ground floor, and, opening the door, stepped
inside. He closed the door, locked it behind him, and for an instant
stood still, his glance seeming to search into the very shadows
themselves where they lay heaviest in the far corners of the room.

It was the Sanctuary that for a year now--or was it two?--had housed the
character of Smarlinghue, as, in the days gone by, the old Sanctuary,
before the fire had destroyed it, had housed the character of Larry the
Bat. Through a top-light high up near the ceiling above the French
window, which latter, a relic of past glory, opened on a level with the
floor, the moonlight flickered in. It disclosed in nebulous outline a
battered easel in one corner of the room, and near it, against the wall
and strewn upon the floor, a number of canvases of different sizes. A
cot bed, its covers in disorder, occupied the wall space opposite the
door. For the rest, there were a filthy, threadbare rag of carpet upon
the floor, a battered table, a rickety washstand, and two disabled
chairs.

Satisfied that the moonlight was the sole intruder, Jimmie Dale nodded
shortly to himself, and stepping abruptly forward examined the drawn
roller shade on the French window, and particularly a rent therein that
was fastened together with a pin. Again he nodded. Then a diminutive
gas-jet, choked with air, hissed and spluttered under his match, and
supplanting the moonlight, threw a sickly yellow glow about the room. He
crossed then to the corner near the door, knelt down on the floor, and
after an instant's work removed an ingeniously fitted section of the
baseboard. From the aperture he took out the carefully folded dinner
suit which he had been wearing on the evening when he had last left his
residence on Riverside Drive.

He began to cast off the shabby, disreputable garments of Smarlinghue.
He worked swiftly. With the clothes discarded, there came another
change. The hollow cheeks, the thin, extended lips, the widened nostrils
disappeared as little distorting pieces of wax were removed. Before a
cracked mirror propped up on the rickety washstand, he washed away the
stain that previously had given a jaundiced, unhealthy hue to his face
and hands--and with minutest care took stock of the result in the
mirror.

And then the light went out. The rest could be completed in the
darkness. Smarlinghue was no longer at home.

It was like a shadow now flitting soundlessly here and there in the
streak of moonlight. A minute, perhaps two, passed; and then the pin
that held together the rent in the window shade was removed, and Jimmie
Dale peered cautiously out into the narrow, squalid, moonlit courtyard
beyond. Another instant, and the French window opened noiselessly on its
carefully oiled hinges, and closed again. A figure, close hugged against
the wall of the building, stole along the few intervening feet to the
fence that divided the courtyard from the lane. Here, next to the wall,
a loosened plank swung outward. The figure slipped through into the
lane--and Jimmie Dale, immaculate and faultlessly attired, emerged upon
the street from which, but a few minutes before, Smarlinghue, the dope
fiend, had vanished.

He walked rapidly now, heading over toward the Bowery, and crossing that
thoroughfare, innocuous now in the early evening hours, continued on
deeper into the East Side. A half grim, half whimsical smile was on his
lips. His objective was a little two-story, tumble-down house where an
old widow by the name of Mrs. Kinsey still kept, as she had kept for
more years than the East Side could remember, a small and woefully
unpretentious confectionery store. It did not further the one interest
he had in life now, this objective of his to-night; it would bring him
no nearer to his goal, so far as he could see, though it held a logical
and even intimate connection therewith. It was no "call to arms" from
the Tocsin that he----

His pace slackened involuntarily, and there was a sudden droop to the
broad shoulders that were usually so straight. The Tocsin! Where was
she--while he, seeking to reach her, groped and groped in pitiful
failure, a blind man, a child in strength, a fool in intellect! He
clenched his hands. One of those black moments again! One more added to
the thousand through which he had lived in the past two weeks. Was she
still _alive_?

He choked back a cry of bitter agony, and quickened his pace again; but
though his shoulders were once more thrown back, a whiteness had been
born into his face.

It was two weeks since she had left him that night in the little boat on
the East River, two weeks since the night Gentleman Laroque, alias Isaac
Shiftel, had so mysteriously disappeared from that tenement room, and
she had begun again to battle alone for her existence, pitting her wits
against that unknown super-fiend of the underworld whom she had styled
the Phantom. And since that night Gentleman Laroque, both in that
character and in the character of Isaac Shiftel, had vanished as
effectually as though he had never existed; and there had been no word
or sign from her, save a short note that he had found, as once before in
the old days he had found one, hidden behind the movable section of the
baseboard in the Sanctuary--and that was now a week ago. He had
destroyed it, torn it for safety's sake into the same minute fragments
that he always tore her notes; but it still remained intact, for it had
seared itself word for word indelibly upon his brain.

     "Dear Philanthropic Crook," she had written. "Oh, why _will_ you do
     it! You do not know your own danger. Apart from the police, there
     is only one man who could be interested in the secret of Shiftel's
     room. That's you, Jimmie. They know that. Keep away from the place.
     They expect you sooner or later. Oh, I beg of you to keep away! It
     is a trap. Mother Margot, the new tenant, is one of them. She is
     only there to throw dust in your eyes, and in the eyes of the
     police.

     "As for myself, I am safe so far, Jimmie; but I do not know how
     much progress I have made. Sometimes I think I have already come
     far along the road--and sometimes I seem lost again. Yesterday I
     was sure of the Phantom's identity; to-day I am sure I was wrong;
     to-morrow I shall be sure again--but it will be of a totally
     different personality. You think, no doubt, that it is Shiftel,
     alias Laroque. Well, perhaps, it is; but unless you and I are both
     swept out of the road, neither in the one character nor the other
     will that man probably ever be heard of again. And so, oh, Jimmie,
     be careful--_and remember the trap_. Marie."

The last phrase was heavily underscored. The trap! It brought a grim
twist to his lips. He had already been in and out of the trap--and,
from what she had said in her note, at perhaps the only time when it had
been safe so far as he was concerned, paradoxical though that seemed,
for he had visited Shiftel's rooms again the night after the murder, and
while the police had, so fortunately it now appeared, obligingly done
unconscious picket duty for him without. The diamonds found in Shiftel's
room had, thanks to the set pieces, been almost immediately identified;
and these, coupled with their owner's murder, and the dead butler's
identification as an ex-Sing Sing convict, had aroused a veritable furor
in the papers. The police had wanted, and still wanted, Shiftel very
badly indeed, and so plain-clothesmen for a week had unostentatiously
watched the tenement day and night on the chance that Shiftel would
return. But he, Jimmie Dale, had been even more interested in Shiftel's
erstwhile domicile than had the police; therefore he had examined it,
not entirely to his ultimate satisfaction, but certainly unknown to the
headquarters men, whom, not being Shiftel, he had had little difficulty
in eluding. The result had been--nothing.

Then, again unknown to the police, he had joined forces with them, and
he, too, had watched the tenement. On the first of the month, a week
after Shiftel's disappearance, the agent had re-rented the two miserable
rooms to an old hag-like creature known as Mother Margot. He had been
aware of that before the Tocsin's note had reached him. But prior to
that again Mother Margot had passed muster with the police, who had
thereupon withdrawn their forces, considering further surveillance of
the premises unnecessary and their hopes from that quarter at an end.
But Mother Margot had not passed muster with him, in spite of the fact
that his own investigation of the woman had resulted in the discovery
that she was, and had been for a year, a licensed pushcart vendor, a
sort of travelling dry goods emporium, who hawked her wares in that
ultra-foreign quarter on Thompson Street, just off West Broadway, where
she with a hundred others of her ilk cluttered the narrow street until
it was well nigh impassable. He knew what the police did not know. He
knew that Shiftel's rooms held a secret that the man whom he, as well as
the Tocsin, had now come to call the Phantom would strive his utmost to
protect by one means or another. And so he had watched Mother Margot
because logic would not down. The Tocsin's note had but confirmed his
suspicions; and though her warning had not gone utterly unheeded, and he
had thereafter evaded the "trap," he had kept even a still closer watch
upon Mother Margot herself. For days at a stretch now he had lived as
Smarlinghue--and that had brought him here to his errand to-night.

Jimmie Dale's face hardened suddenly. His errand! It was dirty,
miserable, pitiful work that he had partially uncovered. Sooner or
later, he had made sure that Mother Margot would bring him into touch
with others of the same breed who owned allegiance to the Phantom. And
she had at last, to-night--for it was neither probable nor tenable to
imagine that, serving the Phantom, she was allied with any other band,
or permitted a divided interest. An hour ago he had followed her to the
Wistaria Caf, one of the lowest type of dance halls in the Bad Lands,
where she had joined two men; one named Little Sweeney, a
smooth-tongued, oily little rat, fastidious in his dress, and whom he,
Jimmie Dale, already knew in the same sense as he knew by sight and name
a hundred other crooks of greater or less degree; the other, whom they
had addressed not inaptly as Limpy Mack, a stoop-shouldered, bent-over
figure in peaked cap, with unkempt gray hair and moustache, who walked
with a distinct limp and by the aid of a cane whose tip was heavily
rubber-capped like a crutch, he did not know at all. From the dance hall
proper the three had adjourned to a private room in the rear; and
anticipating their arrival there by the matter of a few seconds, he,
Jimmie Dale, as Smarlinghue then, had adjourned to the alleyway without,
and the window raised an imperceptible crack, the roller shade raised an
equally imperceptible space above the sill, had afforded both sight and
hearing--that is, within limitations, in so far as hearing went. He had
seen Little Sweeney hand the man who limped a paper which the latter
had carefully tucked away in his pocket; and then, as a waiter came in
and left a tray of glasses, the three had got their heads together
around a table.

Jimmie Dale's brows furrowed now as he hurried along. Again and again
the blare of the jazz band had drowned out their low tones. In the ten
minutes during which he had crouched there outside the window, he had
caught no more than snatches of their conversation; but those snatches
had been viciously significant. His mind mulled them over again now; a
half completed sentence from one, an interjection from another. It had
begun with Mother Margot.

"Mabbe dis Mrs. Kinsey person wid her tin-horn shop ain't got so much!"
she had cackled. "Mabbe youse'll lose yer hundred!"

After that a jumble of words from one or other of the three:

"...Forget it!...Never banked a cent in her life....Up in the
thousands, that's what; else where's the insurance alone that was a
couple of thousand when the old man bumped off two years ago?...The
Chief never pulls a bone....The old girl's as deaf as a church
congregation....She'll lead us to it....Cop the sale to-night....
Sure, about bedtime....No night-hawk, though....You watch downstairs,
I'll watch up...."

In actual detail he had learned little; but in general he had learned
enough to know that old Mrs. Kinsey was supposed to possess a hidden
store of savings, whose hiding place they in some way expected to trick
her into disclosing. The thought of the police had come to him; that he
might in some way with safety and without involving his own personality
warn the police, instead of playing a lone hand in this himself. He
smiled a little wanly. There was one very good reason why he should not
communicate with the police. This Little Sweeney and the man who limped
offered new fields for investigation, widened his range of action, and
were, indeed, a reward for the days and nights that he had hung upon
Mother Margot's trail. They might, or they might not, lead to something
tangible; but certainly, for the moment, he could not afford to see
them in the toils of the police. The alternative was stark enough. He
could not stand by inactive and see this miserable, sordid tragedy
played out.

And so he had left the three in the back room of the Wistaria Caf, and
had hurried to the Sanctuary--and Smarlinghue had become Jimmie Dale.
That was all. That was why he was here now, why he was approaching that
little store on the corner ahead, which, early as the evening was, not
more than nine o'clock, had its modest show window already darkened for
the night--he had not dared risk "Smarlinghue" here; Smarlinghue, whose
position in the underworld, that had literally come to mean life and
death to him again, would crumble to dust before the slightest breath of
suspicion.

But his visit to the Sanctuary, imperative though it had been, had
nevertheless taken time. Against this, however, was the fact that the
Sanctuary was not hopelessly out of the direct road between the dance
hall and Mrs. Kinsey's little shop; and, besides, he had hurried. He
smiled a little grimly. They might, or they might not, have arrived
before him; but, in any case, there would not have been time enough for
them to have reached here, played out their game, and made their
get-away. In that latter respect, at least, it was quite certain--the
grim smile deepened--that he could not possibly be too late.

He had halted now on the edge of the curb, the intersecting side street
between himself and the small, two-story frame house, where Mrs. Kinsey
both lived and transacted her daily business. The house was in darkness,
save for a lighted window in a lower, rear room that opened on the cross
street. And for a moment he stood here, then suddenly he moved forward
again--but this time along and across the side street itself until he
stood directly beneath the lighted window. His question had been
answered. Even from across the street, and muffled though it necessarily
had been, his ear had caught the sound of a voice raised to an abnormal
degree from the interior of the house; and now through the curtains of
what was a small, plainly-furnished sitting room, he caught a glimpse of
a faded little old white-haired woman, in a faded little old black
dress, whose wrinkled face was strained in earnest attention as she
strove to hear through a huge ear-trumpet. Little Sweeney was standing
in front of her, his lips to the mouth of the trumpet.

"I said you were never looking better, Mrs. Kinsey!" bawled Little
Sweeney.

And then Jimmie Dale was gone.

A moment more, and he was standing nonchalantly at the door of the
little shop. There was apparently no other entrance to the house, and if
Mrs. Kinsey had admitted Little Sweeney as a caller, as appeared
obvious, it must have been through the shop, and the door therefore, in
spite of the shop itself being in darkness, should logically be
unlocked. And being unlocked it would also have given entrance to one
Limpy Mack and Mother Margot, who were both at the present moment
undoubtedly hidden in the house.

"I'll watch upstairs, you watch down," repeated Jimmie Dale softly to
himself.

It was possible, though scarcely probable in view of the fact that Mrs.
Kinsey's deafness practically offered the freedom of the house, that he
might run into that _downstairs_ watcher skulking here just inside the
shop itself. Well, in that case--he glanced sharply up and down the
street that for the moment held no near-by pedestrians--the play would
come to a very sudden and abrupt end!

His back was turned to the street now. From a pocket in that curious
leather girdle around his waist and under his outer garments he took out
a black silk mask and adjusted it over his face. And now the slim,
sensitive fingers pressed down the door latch without a sound. His logic
had not been at fault. The door was unlocked. It began to open. Still
there was no sound. And then Jimmie Dale, his hand snuggled over his
automatic in the side pocket of his dinner coat, stood inside the shop
with the door closed behind him.




--V--

MOTHER MARGOT


No challenge questioned Jimmie Dale's entry--there was only the strident
voice of Little Sweeney from the rear room. The shop itself, as he had
expected, was not the vantage point chosen by either of Little Sweeney's
two confederates.

Jimmie Dale stole forward to the rear of the shop, where through an open
door there showed a glimmer of light, which, though it seemed to be
strangely obstructed, evidently came from some sort of passage that
connected the living quarters of the house with the shop; and here,
slipping in behind the single counter that the shop boasted, he
listened. Little Sweeney was still bawling at the top of his voice.

"I've been thinking it over for the last few days," said Little Sweeney.

"Please speak a little louder." Mrs. Kinsey's voice came plaintively
through the darkness.

"Damn it!" said Little Sweeney in low and fervent tones; and then in a
veritable yell: "I said I'd been thinking it over! THINKING IT OVER! Our
little talk, you know, of a few days ago, about buying out your
confectionery business. I promised to come back and let you know what I
was going to do about it."

"Yes," said Mrs. Kinsey.

"Well," shouted Little Sweeney, "I've decided to take a chance and buy
it, and I've brought you a hundred dollars to bind the bargain."

"But I couldn't think of selling it for a hundred dollars," protested
Mrs. Kinsey feebly.

"Not SELLING it, just to bind the bargain," screamed Little Sweeney.
"I'll give you the rest of the thousand when we sign the papers."

"Would you please speak a little louder," said Mrs. Kinsey anxiously.
"Sometimes my hearing ain't quite so good as it used to be."

"I'll keep your secret!" gritted Little Sweeney in a hoarse whisper;
then full-lunged again: "Here's a hundred-dollar bill. You don't even
need to give me any receipt for it. I'll come across with the rest
before the week's out. It's just to show that I'm in earnest, and to
keep anybody else from buying the business."

"I don't think anybody else would buy it," said the old lady
ingenuously.

"You've said a mouthful!" was Little Sweeney's _sotto voce_ retort.

"But I'm so glad," said Mrs. Kinsey wistfully. "I'll be so glad, because
I can't move around as spry as once I could. And I was afraid I'd--I
wouldn't be able to go on with it much longer."

"That's all right, Mrs. Kinsey," bellowed Little Sweeney cordially. "I
guess we're both satisfied with our bargain. Here's the money. And I
guess I'll be moving along. I'll see you again in a day or so with the
papers."

"Thank you very much indeed," said Mrs. Kinsey earnestly. "And I do so
hope that you'll do well with it, and that you won't lose anything."

A chair scraped. Footsteps came from the back passageway, which, as
Jimmie Dale crouched lower behind the counter, suddenly grew light. A
moment more and Little Sweeney stepped into the shop, making for the
front door; behind him followed Mrs. Kinsey, carrying in one hand a
lamp, and clutched in the other her ear-trumpet and a hundred-dollar
bill.

Jimmie Dale's lips set grimly. Back in the corridor that was now
darkened again he thought he saw a shadow move; he distinctly caught the
sound of a footstep. The downstairs watcher--and Mrs. Kinsey's
hundred-dollar bill! It was quite clear now, the whole mean, sordid,
contemptible business. The bait was cunning enough in a low, vicious
way; amply cunning enough to succeed with a trusting, simple old woman
already on the verge of her dotage. Where Mrs. Kinsey, who distrusted
banks, had secreted her savings of years, she would secret a
_hundred-dollar_ bill.

Little Sweeney--in lieu, no doubt, of shouting on the street--bowed
himself out politely.

"Good-night," said Mrs. Kinsey. "And thank you again."

She closed and locked the door, and came back through the shop, passing
again into the rear hallway.

As the light receded, Jimmie Dale rose cautiously. Mrs. Kinsey's lamp,
as she had passed, disclosed the fact that just beyond the rear door of
the shop, the passageway made a jut at right angles. He nodded tersely
to himself as he gained this with the trained step, so silent as to be
almost uncanny, that had mocked at even the creaky boards of the old
Sanctuary, and, in the shadows himself now, he peered along the hallway
proper.

Steep, narrow stairs, to the left and a little way down the hall, led to
the upper story. Mrs. Kinsey, still carrying her lamp, still clutching
at her ear-trumpet and the hundred-dollar bill, was already near the
top. The lower portion of the stairs and the hall itself, since her body
shaded the lamp, were in almost complete darkness.

And then from somewhere above there came a sharp, whispered
interrogation:

"Well?"

From along the lower hall, her figure shrouded in the blackness, a
woman's voice answered:

"She's still got it. Watch her."

Mother Margot! Limpy Mack, then, was the upstairs watcher. There seemed
something incongruous in this passage of words between the two, like a
stage aside that was not supposed to be heard by the intervening figure
of the old woman who was climbing the stairs; but it was not the
incongruity in itself, it was the callous brutality, the vulture-like
preying upon helpless infirmity, that hardened Jimmie Dale's face now in
a sort of merciless intentness.

Mrs. Kinsey's light disappeared around the landing at the head of the
stairs, and then, contemptuous of any exaggerated attempt at silence,
another footstep sounded on the stair treads. Jimmie Dale could not see,
it was pitch black in the lower hall now, but it was not necessary to
_see_ the obvious. Mother Margot was following Mrs. Kinsey upstairs.

And now there came the sound as of some one walking about in a room
overhead for a moment or so, and then silence.

Jimmie Dale moved toward the stairs, and without a sound began to make
his way upward. Halfway up he paused, and stood tight-pressed against
the wall. He could just detect a glow of light filtering into the upper
hallway, as though the door of a lighted room, almost directly above his
head, stood open into the hall. Then a footstep and still another,
starting from a position further back along the hall, moved toward the
lighted doorway. Came then the sound as of a piece of furniture being
moved on squeaky casters; and then a low-breathed, exultant oath in a
man's voice, followed by a woman's vicious chuckle. He could almost
discern the outlines of two figures there--Mother Margot and Limpy Mack.

"Pipe de lay!" chuckled Mother Margot. "Dere goes Little Sweeney's
century buck. Look at her saltin' it!"

"Close your trap!" ordered Limpy Mack sharply. "Maybe she can't hear,
but that's no reason for taking a chance of spilling the beans now we
know where they are."

"Aw, forget it! Youse gives me a pain!" retorted Mother Margot acidly,
but in a nevertheless more subdued tone. "Youse'd have to write her a
letter to tell her youse was makin' a noise before she'd be wise to it,
an' mabbe den she wouldn't believe youse!"

"Shut your face!" said Limpy Mack tersely.

The sound of what had seemed to Jimmie Dale like squeaky casters came
again, then a footstep traversed the lighted room, a door--obviously one
connecting with an adjoining room--opened and closed again, and the
light was gone.

"Come on!" prompted Mother Margot's voice. "Dat's her bedroom she's gone
into. It's all clear now. Wot're youse waitin' for?"

"I'm waiting till the old bird's tucked away in bed," Limpy Mack's voice
answered out of the darkness. "I'm waiting till there isn't any chance
of her moseying out for anything just as we're tapping the crib. I
haven't noticed that there was anything the matter with her _eyes_; and
she's not so _dumb_ but that she might start something in the
neighbourhood. I don't play the fool when I can play safe."

"Safe!" echoed Mother Margot sarcastically. "Wot's safer dan dis de way
it is now? I wanter get home. Youse ought to go down to an antique dump
an' buy yerself a suit of armour, an' walk around in dat. Youse'd look
fine--an' youse'd always be safe. De pip, dat's wot I'm contractin' from
youse!"

There was no answer.

Mother Margot grunted contemptuously, and relapsed into silence.

The minutes passed. There was utter silence now in the house, save for
an occasional uneasy movement of one or other of the two watchers in the
hall above Jimmie Dale's head.

Jimmie Dale stood in grim patience, close against the wall, still on the
stairs, an integral part of the shadows around him. The time dragged
interminably, the minutes seeming to expand into endless hours. And then
suddenly Limpy Mack's voice broke the silence in a tense undertone:

"All right! Her light's out. Come on!"

There came then the sound of footsteps receding from the hall; and
Jimmie Dale in an instant silently gained the head of the stairs, and
lay there crouched, half on the landing and half on the topmost treads.
From his position, slightly diagonal though it was from where he had
placed the door, he had calculated he would be able to see clearly
enough into the room that Mother Margot and her companion had obviously
just entered. He nodded now in quick self-corroboration. Out of the
darkness of the room, lancing it in a little white shaft of light, there
came the ray of an electric torch, and two figures were outlined as they
bent over a piece of furniture that stood against the far wall, and that
looked like an old chest of drawers. But there was no squeak of casters
now. Jimmie Dale smiled uninvitingly. They were becoming unduly
cautious! The piece of furniture was being lifted, not rolled, until it
stood out from the wall, the back of it exposed.

For a moment the two figures leaned over it, the flashlight playing on
the back of the dresser; and then from its extreme edge, what looked
like a very narrow drawer, its depth almost half of the dresser itself,
was pulled out.

"S'help me!" Mother Margot's voice quivered in curious, sibilant
excitement. "Say, de old skirt's rich!"

"_Was_," corrected Limpy Mack's voice curtly. "Keep your paws off! We'll
make the split to-morrow. In the meantime I'll take care of it. See?
Hold the flashlight."

"Sure!" sniffed Mother Margot. "Youse're de only honest one in de bunch.
I know 'cause Little Sweeney told me!"

A man's hand dipped into the projecting drawer, disappeared nearly up to
the elbow, and came out again with a fistful of banknotes which he
stuffed into his pocket. Again the man plunged in his hand. Jimmie Dale
rose to his feet, took a step forward--and halted abruptly, as Mother
Margot's voice suddenly shrilled out tensely through the silence:

"My Gawd! Listen! Wot's dat? Over by de door!"

Jimmie Dale's jaws clamped together, as his automatic swung up into
line. Strange! He could have sworn he had not made the slightest sound.
He saw Limpy Mack step forward a pace and stand facing the doorway,
listening intently. And then Jimmie Dale's face relaxed. Behind Limpy
Mack's back Mother Margot's hand shot stealthily into the drawer, and a
wad of bills disappeared stealthily inside her blouse. Once more she
helped herself.

With a queer, grim droop to the corners of his mouth, Jimmie Dale
retreated suddenly back along the hall, and a little beyond the head of
the stairs. Mother Margot! The gods were good! There would be more in
the night after all than the mere salvaging of old Mrs. Kinsey's
savings. He had no intention now of interrupting the two at their work!
Mother Margot had wrought a very drastic change in his plans!

"I don't hear anything!" Limpy Mack's voice growled after a moment.
"What's the matter with you?"

"I guess I'm gettin' de creeps," Mother Margot's voice replied. "I
t'ought I heard somethin' creak, but I guess it was de wind. Hurry up,
Limpy! I wanter get out of dis. I'm gettin' de creeps, dat's wot's de
matter wid me."

Perhaps another two minutes passed, and then Jimmie Dale, far back along
the hall now, heard the footsteps of the two coming from the room. At
the head of the stairs they paused, and Limpy Mack spoke gruffly:

"We don't want to take the chance of being seen leaving here together.
You're safe enough, because if any one saw you, they'd think you were
just a friend of the old dame. You wait here, give me five minutes, then
beat it yourself. And you go straight home! You'll get what's coming to
you to-morrow after the Chief's made the split. We don't meet again
to-night unless something breaks, and in that case you know where to
find me. Understand?"

Jimmie Dale smiled quietly in the darkness. He owed Limpy Mack thanks
for that, at least--it would save him from following Mother Margot.

"Sure!" mocked Mother Margot. "Cookin' a pill in yer dump under Sen
Yat's! Why don't youse come across wid de price of a bunk, an' give de
Chink a chance once in a while?"

Limpy Mack, without answer, descended the stairs. From the lower hall,
faintly, there came the soft _tap-tap_ of his rubber-tipped cane.
Presently the shop door opened and closed gently.

Jimmie Dale moved silently forward. He could just distinguish Mother
Margot's figure as a dark blur at the head of the stairs. She, too, now
began to descend.

And then Jimmie Dale spoke.

"I'll keep you company downstairs, Mother Margot," he said softly--and
the flashlight in his hand, stabbing suddenly through the darkness,
played its ray upon her.

She whirled with a low, terrified cry, and put her hands before her
blinking eyes as though to ward off a blow.

"Who's dat? Who're youse?" she cried out.

"Go on, Mother Margot--downstairs," Jimmie Dale prompted more brusquely.

She obeyed in a stumbling, uncertain way.

"My Gawd! My Gawd!" she mumbled wildly. "Who're youse? A dick? I ain't
done nothin'! I swear to Gawd, I ain't! I swear----"

"Quite so!" interrupted Jimmie Dale coolly, as they reached the lower
hall. "But perhaps you will come across just the same."

She stared at the hand which he had extended significantly in the
flashlight's glow, and from under a bedraggled hat whose brim flapped
over her straggling gray hair and fell into her eyes, she blinked again;
she drew the old threadbare black shawl she wore closer around her
shoulders, and clutched at it where it met at her neck.

"I dunno wot youse mean," she croaked hoarsely. "Come across wid wot?"

"With what Limpy Mack _didn't get_." Jimmie Dale was biting off his
words now. "There _was_ somebody at the door, even if you didn't hear
him. I can use that money myself that you put inside your blouse. And
I'm waiting--also I'm in a hurry!"

"Youse ain't a dick, den!" She seemed relieved in the sense that rage
and fury now supplanted fear. She snarled at him. "Why didn't youse
touch Limpy? I only got a dollar or two."

"I haven't forgotten Limpy," Jimmie Dale answered evenly. His hand was
still extended. "Quick!" he snapped suddenly.

For an instant she hesitated, then snarling again, she felt inside her
blouse and brought out a few crumpled banknotes.

Jimmie Dale thrust the money into his pocket--and extended his hand
again.

"Dat's all!" she announced tartly. "Wot d'youse expect? I didn't have no
chance!"

Jimmie Dale smiled thinly.

"Loosen the waistband of your blouse!" he ordered sharply.

She glared at him fiercely.

"I won't," she shrilled out. "Youse can go to blazes! I told youse dat
was all. I won't!"

"Oh, yes; I think you will," returned Jimmie Dale grimly. "When I leave
you I am going to call on your friend Limpy Mack, and if I explain the
double cross you put over on him, I imagine----"

She changed front instantly. Fear seemed to have her in its grip again.

"Youse won't do dat!" She was whimpering suddenly. "My Gawd, youse won't
do dat!"

"It depends," said Jimmie Dale.

"Den take it!" she mumbled in a frenzied way--and from the loosened
blouse a small shower of banknotes fluttered to the floor.

Jimmie Dale stooped and gathered them up.

"That's better!" he observed coolly. "And now we'll go a little further,
Mother Margot. I want quite a lot of information. First, this Limpy
Mack's dump, as you called it on the stairs. Does he live there alone?"

"Oh, my Gawd!" She was wringing her hands together in terror. "Youse
ain't still goin' dere, are youse? Youse ain't goin' to tell him, are
youse? He'd pass de word along, an' if de Chief got wise dey'd bump me
off for dis. I--dey'd clean me up before de mornin'!"

"So I imagined," said Jimmie Dale calmly. "That's why I refrained from
any interference upstairs. You see, Mother Margot, I rather think we
have become indispensable to each other."

"I dunno wot youse mean," she faltered.

"I mean this," said Jimmie Dale coldly, "that if you play straight with
me, you are safe in so far as what you put over on your precious pals is
concerned. Otherwise--" He shrugged his shoulders. "Is it quite plain?"

Mother Margot licked her lips feverishly.

"Dey'd cut me t'roat!" she whispered. "Dat's wot dey'd do. Wot do youse
want? I--I ain't got no chance, have I?"

"We started with Limpy Mack, and we'll finish with him first," said
Jimmie Dale tersely; "though you've just mentioned something much more
important. Well, does he live alone?"

"Sure, he lives alone," Mother Margot answered. "He's got de
basement----"

"Under Sen Yat's," completed Jimmie Dale smoothly. "All right! Now, the
really important matter. This Chief you mentioned--who is he?"

Mother Margot shook her head.

"I dunno," she said.

"You don't know!" Jimmie Dale's voice hardened. "That won't do, Mother
Margot! I wouldn't advise you to try another trick to-night."

"I ain't!" she protested wildly. "Honest to Gawd, I ain't! I dunno!"
She was wringing her hands together again. "He ain't nobody,
he's"--she glanced furtively around her, the act seemingly almost
subconscious--"he's--he's just a voice."

Jimmie Dale studied her for a moment. The woman was evidently too
frightened to be anything but truthful.

"Well, go on!" he prodded.

"Dat's all I knows about him," said Mother Margot fearfully. "Just a
voice over de telephone dat youse're always wise to 'cause it's a kind
of a queer, thick voice."

"Is that the way you get your orders, then?"

Mother Margot nodded assent.

"But there isn't any telephone in your room," said Jimmie Dale sharply.
"I happen to know that you've just moved in where another pal of yours,
Mr. Isaac Shiftel, used to live."

Mother Margot swallowed hard. She drew back a little.

"How'd youse know?" she stammered.

"Never mind! How about that telephone?"

"It ain't done in de room," she said tremulously. "I didn't know
anythin' about to-night at all. Den dis afternoon w'en I was wid my
pushcart down on Thompson Street I'm called into a store to de
telephone, an'----"

"What store? Where is this telephone?" Jimmie Dale interrupted tersely.

She hesitated.

"Aw, it's in a booth in de back room of Mezzo's second-hand store, if
youse've got to know," she blurted out.

"All right," said Jimmie Dale. "Go on!"

"Well, I was called to de telephone," she said, "an' told to go to de
Wistaria Caf to-night an' meet Limpy Mack."

"And Little Sweeney," added Jimmie Dale quietly; then abruptly: "Who
else is in this gang?"

Again Mother Margot shook her head.

"I dunno dem all," she said. "I guess we don't all know each other
neither. I only know Limpy Mack an' Shiftel, an' a man named Laroque;
but I ain't seen neither of dem last two for weeks, an' I dunno where
dey've gone. Little Sweeney was a new one on me to-night."

"H'm!" observed Jimmie Dale curtly. "Then who fixed it for you to move
into Shiftel's rooms?"

"The Voice," she replied readily. "I was told to go an' hand de agent de
rent in advance."

"Good!" said Jimmie Dale pleasantly. "We're getting on, Mother Margot;
and since you and I have become such friends, I'm going to take the
liberty of calling on you in a day or so--unless perhaps you can tell me
how, well, say, a man like Shiftel can get in or out of those rooms
without bothering himself with either doors or windows?"

She drew still farther back, a startled look and a new terror in her
face.

"I know who youse are now," she gasped. "Little Sweeney an' Limpy was
talkin' about youse. Youse are de Gray Seal! My Gawd!" She wrung her
hands. "Don't youse come dere! I'm playin' straight wid youse. I don't
know why, an' I don't know nothin' phoney about de rooms, but I knows
dat's wot dey wants youse to do."

Again Jimmie Dale studied the dishevelled and distraught creature.

"Yes," he said quietly, "so I believe, and I believe you are playing
straight. Well, we'll leave the rooms in abeyance for the time being. I
shall always know where to find you--on Thompson Street. You may be
called to the phone by _another_ voice. Now, one thing more, Mother
Margot--I don't want to keep Limpy Mack waiting! What was that paper
Little Sweeney gave Limpy Mack in the back room of the Wistaria
to-night?"

"Youse--youse know about dat, too?" She stared at him in terrified
amazement.

"What was it?" repeated Jimmie Dale.

"Dey didn't let me see it," she said. "Some sort of dope about de gang,
I guess, 'cause Little Sweeney was a new man. Little Sweeney just says,
'I got it pat,' he says, w'en he hands it over. I dunno wot was in it;
dey didn't let me see it."

"Perhaps Limpy will be more considerate with me," observed Jimmie Dale
dryly. He motioned along the hall, switched off the flashlight, and
taking Mother Margot's arm, led her into the shop. "You go home now," he
ordered.

She hesitated. His hand still on her arm, he felt her shiver.

"If youse--youse're goin' to Limpy Mack's," she quavered, "youse--youse
won't split on me? Swear youse won't! Dey--dey'd kill me before de
mornin'!"

"You needn't worry," said Jimmie Dale gruffly. "As long as you play
straight with me, it's as much to my interest as yours to see that no
harm comes to you. You're out of this. The only person I know is Limpy
Mack, whom I saw come out of here alone--understand?--and I followed him
because I thought perhaps he had made a little haul that--since you've
saved me introducing myself--the Gray Seal could use himself."

"My Gawd!" She was whimpering again. "I--I'm afraid. Youse swear it?"

Jimmie Dale opened the door, and with a precautionary glance up and down
the street, pushed her not ungently out into the night.

"I swear it," he said. "Good-night, Mother Margot."




--VI--

THE MAN WITH THE RUBBER-TIPPED CANE


The black silk mask gone from his face, Jimmie Dale too stepped out of
Mrs. Kinsey's little shop, and hurried away--but in an opposite
direction to that taken by Mother Margot. And now he smiled as he went
along. To-morrow, if he had luck, Mrs. Kinsey would get her money back,
all of it, say by registered mail, and accompanied by a suggestion that
she would be better advised to use a bank hereafter; a suggestion which
fright at the discovery of her loss would probably have the salutary
effect of causing her to act upon without loss of time!

He hurried on--and ten minutes later, deep in the Chinese quarter, in
the neighbourhood of Chatham Square, in a narrow, crooked,
evil-smelling, little street, in fact more an alleyway than a
thoroughfare, he was strolling past the entrance of a shuttered tea
store that bore the sign: SEN YAT. Again he smiled a little to
himself--but now from a different cause. It was quite true that Sen Yat
dealt in tea; but it was equally true that upstairs behind the shutters
Sen Yat also specialised in another commodity of the East, and to those
who had the price and were "safe" the sorry solace of the poppy was
always at instant command.

An old and unkempt woman, mumbling to herself, shuffled by. A Chinaman,
like a rat taking to its hole, disappeared down a basement entrance from
the sidewalk a few yards away. Jimmie Dale turned suddenly. The street
for the moment was clear. He retraced his steps to another basement
entrance, the one below Sen Yat's, and out of the darkness of which, as
he had previously passed by, a crack of light seeping from under the
door sill had already informed him that Limpy Mack had returned home.

And then Jimmie Dale was gone from the street--and down the half dozen
steps was crouching in the blackness below the sidewalk at Limpy Mack's
door. Again the silk mask was slipped over his face; again his fingers
sought a pocket in the little leather girdle--and the next instant were
silently and deftly at work with a pick-lock.

Perhaps a minute passed. Then Jimmie Dale straightened up, swung the
door open, and like a flash was inside the room with the door closed
behind him.

A startled oath greeted his entrance. Limpy Mack, peaked cap drawn over
his eyes, was seated at a table on which burned an oil lamp. His heavy,
rubber-tipped cane also lay across the table. He snatched at this now in
lieu of a sheaf of banknotes which he let fall from his hands, and which
he had evidently been engaged in counting--and rose, half threateningly,
half defensively, to his feet.

"Good evening!" said Jimmie Dale pleasantly. "I seem to be in luck
to-night."

His automatic indicated the sheaf of notes, and then held on Limpy Mack.
Jimmie Dale's glance swept swiftly, critically around the place. Its
furnishings were few and of the crudest; a bed in one corner, near a
second door that conveniently opened on the back yard no doubt; a
washstand minus one leg, and therefore askew, that boasted a streaked
and badly blistered mirror; the table and chair in front of the
washstand; a dirty, unswept floor, bare of carpet--and that was all. The
place reeked with filth.

"Nice quiet little resort you've got here," smiled Jimmie Dale. His eyes
were apparently roving again about the cellar-like room, apparently
everywhere save on Limpy Mack. "I'm sure you--_drop that_!"

A revolver, almost free from Limpy Mack's pocket, fell with a clatter to
the floor. The man screamed out in rage.

"Why, Limpy, that's raw," said Jimmie Dale in a pained way. "I didn't
think you'd fall for it. All I wanted was your gun." He advanced to the
table, and kicked the weapon across the floor under the bed.

There was a sudden _swish_ through the air, as, quick without warning,
Limpy Mack aimed a blow with his cane at Jimmie Dale's wrist and
automatic. It missed. Again the man screamed out in fury.

Jimmie Dale's face set.

"Don't raise your voice again like that," he said in flat tones. "Sit
down!" His automatic swung to the level of the other's eyes.

With a snarl, Limpy Mack subsided into the chair. He scowled at Jimmie
Dale.

"Who are you, anyway, you damned thug?" he demanded thickly.

"I'll tell you," said Jimmie Dale. He was smiling whimsically now--not
at Limpy Mack, but at the somewhat exacting demands of the situation in
which he found himself. Mother Margot must in no way appear in this;
and, besides that money on the table, there was the paper that Little
Sweeney had given to Limpy Mack in Mother Margot's presence--a paper, in
reference to the contents of which, he, Jimmie Dale, had acquired an
intense curiosity. Ostensibly, therefore, he must appear--in order that
no thought of Mother Margot might by any chance enter the other's
mind--to be ignorant of even the existence of the paper, and yet, at the
same time, get hold of it. "I'll tell you," said Jimmie Dale. "I was
walking down a certain street to-night, and I saw you sneak out of a
little confectionery store that looked as though it had all been closed
up for the night, and I said to myself: 'That's funny, because Limpy
Mack never plays for chicken feed.' And then I went and read the sign on
the window, and I remembered that everybody said Mrs. Kinsey had a
well-filled stocking hidden away somewhere. So I just took a chance,
Limpy, thinking that maybe you'd found it, and I followed you. And as I
said before, I seem to have played in luck."

"It's a lie!" growled Limpy Mack. "That ain't Mrs. Kinsey's, or anybody
else's money. It's mine."

"I'm delighted to know it," murmured Jimmie Dale. "But even so, I still
insist that I am in luck to-night. There must be quite a few thousand
here." He began to thrust the bills into his pockets.

Limpy Mack sat crouched down in his chair, the posture seeming to
accentuate almost to deformity his stooped shoulders.

"Damn you!" he shrieked out. He gnawed at his unkempt gray moustache,
and flung another oath at Jimmie Dale.

Jimmie Dale swept the table clean. It was obviously all that Limpy Mack
had stolen from Mrs. Kinsey, for he would obviously have had it _all_
out to count it--but there was still a certain paper in Limpy Mack's
pocket.

"I wonder--since you say it was yours--if you haven't got some more,"
suggested Jimmie Dale invitingly. "I'm afraid I'll have to trouble you
to turn your pockets out, Limpy. Stand up!"

"I--I ain't got any more." The man seemed suddenly cowed. He crouched
still lower in his chair.

"Stand up!" repeated Jimmie Dale sternly. "Now I'm quite sure you have!"

"No!" Limpy Mack was whining now. "I--I'll tell you the truth. I got it
where you said. But that's all--all of it was on the table. Say, you
believe me, don't you? I'd come across if I had any more, wouldn't I? I
couldn't help myself."

The man was blatantly stalling now. The paper was--_no, it wasn't on
account of the paper_. Behind Limpy Mack's back something showed in the
blistered mirror--the head and shoulders of Little Sweeney protruding
through the rear doorway, and in Little Sweeney's hand a levelled
revolver. Limpy Mack's voice had drowned out any sound made by the
opening of the door, if, indeed, there had been any sound at all.

Jimmie Dale's brain was working in lightning flashes now, but not a
muscle of his face moved. His automatic dangling in his hand was
useless. To swing it on the door with only a chance aim would be but the
signal for Little Sweeney to fire.

"All right, Limpy," said Jimmie Dale, and leaned slightly toward the end
of the table. "I'll take your word for it that----"

And then Jimmie Dale was in action. With a sweep of his hand he sent the
lamp crashing from the table to the floor, and ducked instantly to one
side.

There was a yell from Limpy Mack; and, in the sudden darkness as the
lamp went out, from the doorway came the tongue-flame of Little
Sweeney's revolver and the roar of the report. Then a rush of feet, the
flash and roar of the revolver again, and the next instant Jimmie Dale
was locked in a hand to hand struggle with Little Sweeney. Here and
there they swayed, the breath of one, panting, hard, on the other's
cheek; the table toppled to the floor, carrying the chair with it; their
feet crunched on the splintered glass from the lamp and chimney--and
then suddenly Jimmie Dale reeled from a terrific blow across the head.

"I got him!" screamed Limpy Mack's voice exultantly. "I got him,
Sweeney! I beaned him with the loaded handle of my cane."

But though dazed, lurching, scarcely able to keep his feet, Jimmie Dale
was still fighting like a wildcat. Twice since Little Sweeney had
grappled with him, he had managed to strike the other with the butt of
his automatic. He had only one chance now--to end it quickly--he was too
nearly gone himself. He wrenched himself suddenly free, and swung again
with all his strength. A gurgling voice--Little Sweeney's--answered the
blow:

"Look out--Limpy--beat it--you know why--that paper--beat it--I----"

Again and again Jimmie Dale brushed his hand across his eyes. He fought
desperately to clear his brain. His head was sick and dizzy. What was
that sound, that strange, queer sound? _Tap, tap, tap!_ Little
Sweeney--that black outline on the floor was Little Sweeney--Little
Sweeney wouldn't trouble any one for an hour or so--but that _tap, tap,
tap_--it sounded from the direction of the rear door. And now it was
gone, and there was silence--just silence. But the silence, as nothing
else had done, seemed now to penetrate Jimmie Dale's swimming head, and
seemed to bring with it a sudden, swift significance.

Fool! He stumbled madly toward the rear door. Limpy Mack was gone--gone
with the _tap, tap, tapping_ of his cane. That paper! A clue to that
super-crook perhaps, that the Tocsin called the Phantom, and Mother
Margot called the Voice!

He was outside now. No, not too late! That was Limpy Mack there, wasn't
it? That figure running, running! God, how his brain swam! His knees
seemed weak under him, as though they were going to double up like the
blades of a knife--but he was running too. His surroundings seemed
mechanically, subconsciously, to be absorbed--just a back yard that
ended in the black, irregular outline of the rear of what was evidently
a three or four-story tenement.

On Jimmie Dale stumbled. He could not be more than ten or fifteen yards
behind that figure ahead, which, to his whirling brain, seemed to take
on the aspect of some grotesque jumping-jack, bobbing up and down in the
darkness, until suddenly it disappeared through the back door of the
tenement.

Jimmie Dale prodded himself into a spurt, reached the tenement door,
found it open, and reeled inside. His faculties seemed miserably
unreliable. Couldn't he _think_ any more! He stood stock still, and
again his hand swept fiercely across his eyes. The man couldn't have
gone out of the front door, nor have gained the landing above, because
he, Jimmie Dale, had been too close at the other's heels, and would have
heard him, would be hearing him now. And there was not a sound--nothing
but pitch, inky blackness. Therefore Limpy Mack must be somewhere here
in the blackness.

That was better! At least his brain was striving to fight its way back
to normal. But his eyes ached brutally. He bit his lips to keep back a
groan of pain, and leaned against the wall for support. One of them, he
or Limpy Mack, must sooner or later make a move. He forced a twisted
smile. If the blow from the loaded cane had not proved too much for him
after all, it would not be he who made that move!

And now, after a time, where he had heard no sound before, he became
conscious of many sounds--the low indistinct sound of muffled things,
the night sounds of a tenanted building filtering vaguely out from
behind closed doors only to integrate themselves in a queer, throbbing
way into the very silence itself. How long had he been standing here?
Once he clutched frantically, but noiselessly, at the wall to keep
himself erect. Perhaps it would not be Limpy Mack who moved first! His
brain was swimming in that sick, nauseating way again. Perhaps it would
be----

A door began to open cautiously a few yards along the hall. And then a
man's head and shoulders, a man with a clean shaven face and slouch hat
showing quite distinctly in the lighted doorway, was thrust out. The man
peered around; then from the threshold he whispered back into the room:

"It's a cinch he thought you beat it straight out through the front
door, and went out after you. I'll take a look, and if he's still
hanging around outside I'll spot him. You keep under cover, Limpy.
You're safe here anyway. I'll be back in ten minutes. Savvy?"

The man, a broad-shouldered, well set-up fellow, stepped out into the
hall, and closed the door behind him. His footsteps echoed back as he
walked rapidly toward the front of the tenement; then the front door
opened and closed again; the footsteps rang faintly from the pavement
without, died away--and Jimmie Dale was standing before the door of the
room.

He had not heard the door being locked. He was sure of that, in spite of
the fact that his head was whirling like a top. His fingers closed
silently on the doorknob--and with a swift movement, standing in the
hall, his automatic thrown forward, he flung the door wide open.

And then for a moment he stood there like a man stunned. The room was
empty. No, not empty! Dangling from the gas-jet hung Limpy Mack's
rubber-tipped cane; and stuck upon the cane, flaunting itself in grim,
ironical, mocking challenge--_was a diamond-shaped gray paper seal_.

A smile of understanding, bitter in its chagrin, flickered across Jimmie
Dale's lips. He had stuck a gray seal on the back of Shiftel's hand that
night two weeks ago. This one, he was sure, could have come from nowhere
else; and, if that were so, then Shiftel, and Gentleman Laroque, and
Limpy Mack, and Limpy Mack in still another guise, in the guise of the
man who had just tricked him so neatly, were all one. And from that
encounter in Shiftel's rooms, and one other encounter long before that
at Niccolo Sonnino's place, Gentleman Laroque, alias Isaac Shiftel, in
the character of Limpy Mack to-night, had known that he was dealing with
the Gray Seal from the moment his room under Sen Yat's had been
entered--could not help but have known it. And at the last here, the
man, being then disarmed, had had no choice but to resort to his wits as
the only means of escape. Yes, he, Jimmie Dale, quite understood!

He had sought, and found, and lost again--the Phantom.




--VII--

THE MESSAGE


Days of searching! Days of futility! Days that had brought no reward!
Since the night of Limpy Mack's disappearance there had been only
failure. Nowhere had he been able to pick up again a thread or clue that
would set him once more upon the Phantom's trail--until to-night. And
to-night? Jimmie Dale shook his head. He was at sea, troubled--about
to-night.

Threadbare, gaunt-cheeked, dissolute in appearance, his battered old
felt hat pulled down over his eyes, he was slouching now, as
Smarlinghue, with apparent aimlessness along the street. Past him, going
to and fro, other figures shuffled by--for the most part Chinamen, their
crossed hands tucked in the sleeves of their blouses. A slumming party
from a "gape-wagon" disembarked its load of candidates for initiation
into those most dark, drear, shivery and hidden things of Chinatown,
whose storied mysteries in this more enlightened generation were now
within the reach of all--for the insignificant sum of one dollar a
ticket!

A twisted smile flickered across Jimmie Dale's lips. This jostling
little crowd that was being herded into line now by the stentorian
voiced barker would see many things, for the stage was always set. They
would see most fearsome opium dens that reeked with the sickly sweetish
smell of poppy, where no poppy was; they would see the worshippers at
the Shrine of the Thousandth Ancestor; they would see the council
chambers where the Tong wars were declared, and most ghastly murders
hatched; they would see the Chinamen at their fan-tan; and--Jimmie Dale
shrugged his shoulders--they would undeniably get their money's worth.
It was quite innocent, and everybody would be satisfied; but into Hip
Foo's, for instance, where he was going now, from whose tortuous,
bunk-lined, connecting sub-cellars there were two exits separated one
from the other by almost a block, and again from the entrance by an
entirely different street, their tickets would not take them. Hip Foo
made no money from the gape-wagons!

The scene, though it was still before him, was gone from his
consciousness as quickly as the train of thought that had obtruded
itself upon him, and his mind was instantly back again now on the note
that had been laid beside his plate by one of the attendants at the St.
James Club, where he had been dining but little more than half an hour
ago. The note had contained a single sentence--in the Tocsin's writing:

     "Watch Mother Margot--at Hip Foo's to-night."

His lips closed tightly. Was there anything beneath the surface of that
one sentence, anything more than its actual wording, anything of a
_personal_ nature? He had been turning it over and over in his mind from
the moment he had received it, even while he had hurried to the
Sanctuary and from a millionaire clubman had become the drug-wrecked
Smarlinghue, even now again as he walked here along this none too well
lighted and unsavory street in the heart of New York's Chinatown. The
note was like none he had ever received from her before. Here there was
no detailed plan laid out, no evident foreknowledge of what was afoot.
It seemed almost a call for help where she herself was helpless, and
so--it brought the blood pounding in quicker tempo through his veins--it
might well be she had realised and was prepared at last to accept as
inevitable the fact that, whether she would or no, he meant to force his
way if it were humanly within his power into those shadows, as she
termed them, with which the Phantom had surrounded her. Well, why not?
She must know that he had already been in perhaps closer, more intimate
touch than even herself with this master criminal of a score of aliases
and a score of domiciles, first as Gentleman Laroque, then as Isaac
Shiftel, and again as Limpy Mack. And besides there was her promise
that--no! He shook his head a little bitterly. Why should he try to
blind his own eyes? Her promise to call upon him for aid had contained
the proviso that it would not identify him as an ally of hers in the
Phantom's eyes.

It was a foolish hope fathered only by desire! A hope that out of this
watching of Mother Margot to-night at Hip Foo's he and the woman that he
loved would come together again, that he would see her, hear her voice,
and after that--Yes, she knew that, too! She had said so in the letter
she had slipped into the pocket of his coat when she had left him that
night on the old East River wharf. She knew that once he found her again
no legion of Phantoms, no pleading on her part, could keep him from her
side until the end, whatever that end might be. He might shake his head
if he chose, he might argue speciously with himself as his love prompted
him to do, but in his heart he knew that her note to-night would not
bring her and himself together unless--yes, that was it!--to-night saw
the end of the Phantom's career.

The end! That brought still another angle into the Tocsin's message, an
angle that was represented by this Mother Margot. His eyes grew grimly
thoughtful as he walked along. How far was the old hag to be trusted?
How much to be depended upon was the hold he had on her through having
caught her in the act of purloining an extra share of the loot from one
of her own confederates, who though she evidently did not know it
herself, had been the Phantom in the guise of Limpy Mack that night at
old Mrs. Kinsey's? His hands had been tied in a measure in respect of
Mother Margot. True, since that night he had never lost track of her,
but his means of communication had been restricted to the same means
that the "Voice," as she called the Phantom, had employed--of calling
her from her pushcart in Thompson Street to that telephone booth she had
spoken of in Mezzo's second-hand store, and questioning her. This he
had done each day, sometimes more than once; but the result had always
been the same. Each time she had sworn that she had heard nothing
further from the Voice. And yet to-night she was to be watched at Hip
Foo's!

Was she playing fast and loose? He had not been in personal touch with
her--that was where the weakness of his position lay. She knew him to be
the Gray Seal, but she knew him only as a man with a mask on his face.
He could not stand beside her pushcart on Thompson Street, and, wearing
a mask, talk to her. He could not go to her as Smarlinghue and risk even
the suspicion that Smarlinghue had any connection with the Gray Seal,
let alone being the Gray Seal himself! A word from her, if that thought
ever entered her mind, or anybody else's for that matter, and underworld
and police would join hands in the one cause that could ever be common
to both, and fight as only two packs of wolves might fight for the prey
that only one could have.

It was not a pleasant thought!

He withdrew his hands suddenly from his ragged pockets, and, stooping
down, picked up a crumpled newspaper from the gutter, as the flaring red
type of a headline caught his eye. He glanced at it, and pitched it away
again almost immediately. He had been interested to know if it were a
special edition announcing some new development in the case of one
Connie Pfeffer, alias the Mole. It did not. It was just re-hash.

He smiled wryly. The Gray Seal, "that depraved and degenerate glutton
who feasted and lived like some ghoul upon his foul notoriety, and who,
with inhuman boastfulness, left his diamond-shaped gray seal upon the
scene of every one of his fiendish crimes," the usual stand-by of the
sensational headliners, had of late been relegated to obscurity by the
newspapers. It was a relief! For the time being the crime that held the
public attention was that in which this Connie Pfeffer was involved, but
this was more, as a matter of fact, because of the opportunity it
afforded for a jeer at the police rather than on account of the actual
crime itself. For two days the journals had been full of the Levenson
Bank robbery, a private bank in the Wall Street district, where a
customer, having just drawn out ten thousand dollars in twenty
five-hundred-dollar bills, had been held up almost in front of the
teller's wicket at the point of a revolver and relieved of his cash.
Connie Pfeffer, alias the Mole, who had answered to the description of
the robber, had been apprehended within an hour of the crime by the
police, released again for lack of evidence against him--and then had
promptly disappeared. New evidence establishing the fact that Connie
Pfeffer was the man who had entered the bank had almost immediately come
to light, but Connie Pfeffer was no longer to be found, and the
police----

Jimmie Dale swung sharply around. Some one was plucking at his sleeve--a
tattered and stoop-shouldered old man, who had a tray slung around his
neck upon which was displayed a pitiful array of cheap collar buttons.

"Hello, Smarly!" The man spoke low, out of the corner of his mouth.
"Say, Smarly, I wanter ask youse somethin'."

For an instant Jimmie Dale surveyed the other. It was Pedler Joe, and
Pedler Joe lived just around the corner from the Sanctuary and was
therefore in the category of an old acquaintance and neighbour; but his,
Jimmie Dale's, business to-night was at Hip Foo's, and he had no time to
waste.

"Hello, Joe!" he returned a little ungraciously. "Didn't know you went
in for night work. There's a gape-bus back there, and the bunch have
gone into Charlie Wong's lay-out. If you stick around when they come you
may get away with something."

"I ain't out for business--not dat kind," the man whispered--and still
holding Jimmie Dale's coat sleeve, edged out to the curb and halted.
"I'm lookin' for some one. Everybody says youse're on de level, Smarly.
Youse bats around a lot in places dey won't let me into, so hand it to
me straight. Have youse seen Connie anywhere, youse knows who I mean, de
Mole?"

Jimmie Dale stared. It was rather curious, rather much of a
coincidence! He had been thinking of Connie Pfeffer, alias the Mole, at
the moment Pedler Joe had accosted him. And coincidences in the Bad
Lands were not always--coincidences!

It was Smarlinghue of the underworld, not Jimmie Dale the millionaire
clubman, who spoke.

"What's the lay?" His tones pointed the inquiry with almost exaggerated
suspicion.

"Aw, it's straight!" the old man answered. "I'm askin' youse just dat.
Have youse seen him, or heard anythin' about him?"

Jimmie Dale still parried the question.

"Sounds like you'd shoved your stake in with the bulls," he scowled.
"Did they give you a badge to pin inside your vest? What have you got to
do with Connie?"

The old man's face was haggard; he evidently had not shaved for several
days, and the short white bristles seemed to accentuate a general
woe-begone aspect and feebleness that age and the thin, stooped
shoulders already proclaimed loudly enough.

"I got a lot to do wid him," the old man said hoarsely. "He's like my
own kid, dat's wot he is. I ain't done much for him mabbe, but I done
wot I could to keep him straight, an'----"

"You!" Jimmie Dale laughed outright. Pedler Joe's life history was
written on the police blotters! The man had served at least a half dozen
sentences in prison. True, Pedler Joe in his declining years--he must be
verging on the seventies now--had, outwardly at least, reformed to the
extent of earning his living as a legalised mendicant, as witness the
collar buttons. But as a guardian and sponsor for young morals--Jimmie
Dale, as Smarlinghue, grinned viciously. "Say, it's no wonder he pulled
that bank job! He comes by it honestly! Say, what's the----"

Jimmie Dale's grin had died away. Something was wrong here; there was
something deeper than appeared on the surface, something that he did not
understand. The tears had come suddenly into the faded old eyes, and
were trickling now down the wrinkled cheeks.

"Forget it, Joe!" Jimmie Dale laid his hand in quick sympathy on the
other's shoulder. "I didn't mean to hand you nothing. Spill the story,
Joe--only hurry, 'cause I got a date."

"I picked him outer de gutter w'en he could hardly walk," said Pedler
Joe. "An' w'en I wasn't doin' spaces up de river, I kept my eye on him.
Sounds like hell from an old lag, don't it? But it's true, Smarly, so
help me Gawd, it's true! I wasn't runnin' straight myself, but wot
chance I got I tried to show de kid my line wasn't any good. Only I was
away a lot, an' I let him down, so it ain't all his fault. Dere wasn't
no one to keep him from goin' wild w'en I was doin' time--see? He ain't
lived wid me for years, but dat didn't keep him from comin' frequent to
see me, I'll say dat for him. An' den dis bank job happened. If youse
read de papers youse know he was pinched in my place dat afternoon. He
blew in to get a little stake from me, an'----"

"From you!" Jimmie Dale interrupted. "I didn't know you had loose change
to----"

"Some days," said the old man simply, "I pick up more'n youse'd t'ink.
But dat ain't nothin' to do wid it. Dere was always a few dollars for
Connie w'en he was on his uppers. Well, youse know dey didn't have
anythin' on him to hold him for de job, an' dey let him go."

"And he beat it, and he ain't been seen since," commented Jimmie Dale
judicially in his rle of Smarlinghue. "And now some one else comes
along and swears too it was him at the bank. It's open and shut now that
he pulled the job all right, and ducked with the cash. That's why
they're laughing at the police. You're wasting your time looking for
him. He's gone."

"Yes," said Pedler Joe; "he's gone--dat's wot's de matter." He glanced
furtively about him. "But he ain't gone de way youse t'ink. I don't say
now he didn't pull de job, though I didn't t'ink so until last night;
an' I was handin' de police straight goods w'en dey was puttin' me
through down at de Chief's de afternoon dey put de nippers on Connie at
my place. He's gone--but he ain't gone de way youse t'ink. Dere's
somethin' else bein' pulled besides dat. Take a look at dis!"

Jimmie Dale leaned forward. Pedler Joe had loosened his collar. The
man's neck and throat were a mass of ugly bruises, discolored, swollen,
finger-printed in angry, purplish blotches.

"Good God!" muttered Jimmie Dale. "How'd you get that?"

"It was last night"--Pedler Joe again glanced furtively around him, as
he rearranged his collar--"dey nearly bumped me off before dey was
satisfied dat I didn't know any more'n wot I'd told de police. Dey
wanted to know where de cash was, de ten t'ousand bucks dat Connie
stole. Dat's wot dey did to _me_, an' dat's why I'm askin' youse if
youse have seen or heard anythin' of Connie."

Jimmie Dale's lips had tightened.

"You think," he said slowly, "they had tried the same game with Connie,
and that's why he's--_disappeared_? You mean you've doped it out that
they hadn't been able to make him talk up to last night, and that they
tried you then on a chance?"

The old man nodded.

"Sure, dey got him," he said miserably. "Dey got him cold. Dat's wot
makes me t'ink now dat Connie pulled de job all right, 'cause dey're
wise to him."

"Yes," said Jimmie Dale; "but who was it that laid you out?"

"I ain't dead sure," said Pedler Joe. "I woke up last night in bed wid a
pair of hands around my t'roat, chokin' me. It was pretty dark in the
room. Dere was two of 'em, an' I wasn't sure, an' I ain't sure now, but
I thought one of 'em, the little fellow, was Bunty Myers, who used to
travel wid Gentleman Laroque's gang."

Gentleman Laroque! _The Phantom!_ Jimmie Dale was fumbling aimlessly
with the brim of his battered old felt hat. Mother Margot, Hip Foo's,
the Phantom--and Connie Pfeffer, alias the Mole! Was this what was at
the bottom of the Tocsin's note? Intuitively he was instantly sure of
it. It dovetailed perfectly. The Phantom was not likely to be playing
_two_ games to-night, therefore----

Pedler Joe was whispering hoarsely again:

"Youse're on de level, Smarly, an' on de inside everywhere. I--I thought
mabbe youse'd help me. An' if youse heard anythin' or saw anythin'
youse'd tip me off."

Jimmie Dale held out his hand.

"Sure, I will, Joe!" he said. He leaned closer to the other. "You keep
your map closed about having spoken to me--see? I know Bunty Myers. I'll
do my best for you."

"T'anks, Smarly," said the old man gratefully. "I knew youse would."

"Sure!" said Jimmie Dale again. "Well, that goes--and so-long, Joe."

He turned and slouched on again down the street. His face was impassive,
but his hands in his pockets were clenched now. So the Phantom's hand
was in this, too, was it? And the old broken figure with the tray of
collar buttons slung around his neck was one of the victims! It brought
the hot anger surging upon him. There was something that struck deep to
the root of his sympathy, something pathetic in the queer, strange
loyalty, the curious love that old Pedler Joe, himself a thief by
profession in the days gone by, held for the gutter snipe that he had
tried--and failed--to bring up in the paths of virtue! The Phantom!
Well, perhaps, to-night, if at Hip Foo's there was----

Jimmie Dale turned the corner, and halted suddenly in a dazed, stunned
way. As at the door of Charlie Wong's back there on the other street, a
wagon was drawn up here at the curb in front of Hip Foo's, and a little
crowd was disembarking from the wagon and was being marshalled into
line, but it was not a gape-wagon that stood at Hip Foo's front door; it
was a wagon of quite a very different sort--a police van. And then in an
instant, his wits at work again after the first shock of surprise,
Jimmie Dale slouched back out of sight around the corner again. Here he
broke into a run. A raid! Hip Foo's was being raided.

Jimmie Dale ran on at top speed. His chances were just even--that was
all. There were _two_ exits a block apart. He could not watch both at
once. Which one would Mother Margot use? The police would not get her,
nor any of those with her. The police would gather in a few Chinese
attendants who would be as phlegmatic and informative as so many cows;
the police would collect a little opium-smoking paraphernalia, and Hip
Foo would be fined--but that would be all. Before the first blue-coat
crossed the threshold of the entrance, the exodus through the
sub-cellars would have begun.

And now Jimmie Dale drew into the shadows at the mouth of a dark and
narrow lane. It was the toss of a coin. This one or the other! Yes--here
they came now, like rats running from a sinking ship. He crouched
against the wall unnoticed, or if noticed accepted as one of their own
ilk, and watched them. Man after man, woman after woman, passed out into
the street. The procession dwindled to a few belated stragglers--and
ceased. He waited a minute longer. There was no one else.

Tight-lipped then, Jimmie Dale turned away. Mother Margot had not been
amongst them. He had lost the toss, that was all. She had gone out the
other way.

He walked rapidly now. There was only one thing left to do, one way left
open to him. It would not be very difficult to find Mother Margot--at
her home--in those rooms from which, on that first night, the Phantom
had so mysteriously disappeared. He had even promised her a visit!

He smiled a little grimly. His promise so far had been unfulfilled. Not
because the Tocsin had warned him that the place was a trap, and even
Mother Margot, evidently terror-stricken that night at Mrs. Kinsey's,
had done likewise; but because, prior to that warning and prior to
Mother Margot's occupancy of the rooms, he had already searched the
premises and found nothing; and because, until now, it had not seemed
that there was anything to be gained by a move which might result in
warning the Phantom that he, Jimmie Dale, had been in communication with
Mother Margot.

But to-night there was no choice but to go there--unless perhaps she had
gone back to her pushcart in Thompson Street. He would try that first,
and if she were there call her to the phone as he always did, and
arrange a meeting somewhere under conditions such that she would
discover no more of his actual identity than that of the man in the mask
whom she already knew as the Gray Seal.

He was hurrying now. Time, as measured in minutes, might or might not be
precious. He did not know. What had taken place at Hip Foo's, whether
for instance the rendezvous that Mother Margot had presumably had there
had been prematurely interrupted by the raid, or what were the details
of the scheme the Phantom was hatching, he did not know. But in any
case, one thing was vital, not only to himself but to the Tocsin, vital
to all he hoped for--that the _character_ of Smarlinghue should not be
endangered. And this, not only because it was in itself the key that
opened for him the innermost portals of the underworld, that again and
again had alone stood between him and recognition as the Gray Seal, but
because to-night he must meet Mother Margot, not as Smarlinghue, but in
the only character that she would recognise, and, yes--the grim smile
came again--_obey_. And so, first of all, must come the Sanctuary; after
that--his shoulders under the ragged coat lifted in a queer, almost
fatalistic little shrug--who knew!




--VIII--

JIMMIE DALE PAYS A VISIT


It was Smarlinghue, the drug-wrecked artist, who, ten minutes later, by
the street entrance, inviting even the nods of recognition from some of
the loungers round about, entered the dingy tenement and scuffled along
the musty, dark, unlighted hallway to the squalid rear room on the
ground floor--the Sanctuary; it was Jimmie Dale, in dinner jacket, the
millionaire clubman, who stealthily gained the street again by way of
the old French window, the refuse-strewn courtyard, the board in the
high fence that swung aside at a touch, and finally the lane.

Another ten minutes, and he was sauntering nonchalantly along a narrow
crowded street, whose curbs were lined with pushcarts, whose sidewalks
were thronged with shawled women and coatless, swarthy men, whose
gutters were the playground for almost naked children. Thompson Street
was in the heart of New York, just off West Broadway, not far from the
homes of the old-time aristocracy of Washington Square, but it was also
in a foreign land!

But Mother Margot with her pushcart was not here to-night. He had hardly
expected she would be. His face was set as he made his way back now to
the Bowery, and from there headed still deeper into the East Side. There
was nothing for it now but Mother Margot's rooms.

A few blocks farther brought him within sight of the tenement that was
his destination, and his pace slowed as he passed the narrow alleyway
over which the police had kept abortive guard on the night they had
pounded at Isaac Shiftel's door inside. There was a light in the window,
the same window through which he and the Phantom, alias Isaac Shiftel,
or perhaps better on that occasion, alias Gentleman Laroque, had first
had warning that the police were without. Mother Margot, then, had
presumably returned home.

He was opposite the tenement door now. He halted abruptly, ostensibly to
watch the efforts of a man across the road who was attempting to start
an old car that was back-firing viciously, in reality to allow some
near-by pedestrians to pass by--and then suddenly Jimmie Dale had
disappeared from the street, and in another instant, in the dark, murky
hall, was standing before Mother Margot's door.

From one of the pockets in the leather girdle beneath his outer
garments, that harboured too its little blued-steel burglar's kit, he
took out his black silk mask and slipped it over his face. His lips
tightened a little, as his right hand closed over the automatic in the
side pocket of his dinner jacket. Who knew! There was a light in there,
it was true; but he was not necessarily _sure_ that it was Mother
Margot--or that Mother Margot was alone.

He knocked upon the door. There was no answer. He knocked again. This
time there came the sound of a shuffling footstep crossing the floor
within, and then the door was cautiously opened, and Mother Margot,
holding a candle above her head, peered out into the hallway.

"My Gawd--youse!" she whispered hoarsely. "Wot're youse doin' here?"

Jimmie Dale smiled beneath his mask.

"Have you forgotten, Mother Margot?" he said softly. "I promised you a
visit, you know."

He stepped forward, but she blocked his way at the threshold.

"Go away! Go away from here!" she breathed wildly.

"I don't see why I should--just yet," said Jimmie Dale quietly. "And
wouldn't it be better if we had our interview _inside_ instead of out
here? It wouldn't be quite so public."

"No!" she said frantically. She kept glancing behind her, over her
shoulder in a terrified way. "Aw, go away! For the love of Gawd, go away
before we'se gets caught!"

"Who's in there, then?" demanded Jimmie Dale sharply.

"No one!" she answered. "Dere ain't no one dere--at least I don't know
whether dere is or not."

Jimmie Dale stared at the old hag for a moment speculatively.

"You don't know!" He injected a caustic note into his voice. "What do
you mean by that?"

"Didn't I tell youse de other night!" She was still whispering hoarsely.
"Didn't I tell youse wot dey said--dat dey was figurin' on youse comin'
here sometime. Dat's wot I means. I ain't never seen no one in here but
me, but sometimes I'm scared. Sometimes I'm sure some one is watchin'
me--an'--an' I can't _see_ no one. Don't youse see I'm playin' straight
wid youse. If I wasn't, I'd let youse in, an'--aw, my Gawd, get away
from here! If I'm caught tippin' youse off dey'd put a knife into me,
dat's wot dey'd do!"

"We'll be less likely to be seen or caught without that light, then,"
said Jimmie Dale coolly. He leaned forward suddenly, caught her arm, and
blew the candle out. "Now, don't move!" He was past her in an instant,
and with quick, silent tread, his step as noiseless as though he
possessed the padded paws of a cat, he made the circuit of the two
rooms. And then he was back again beside her at the threshold. The
rooms, so far as any outward and visible evidence of human presence was
concerned, were empty. Nevertheless, he drew Mother Margot out into the
dark hallway now, and closed the door silently behind them.

"Wot is it?" she faltered. "Wot is it youse wants?"

"A little information--perhaps a little more than information," said
Jimmie Dale evenly. "You said something a minute ago about playing
straight with me. I'm not so sure about you, Mother Margot. That's why
I'm here. I telephoned you this morning, and you swore you had not heard
from the Voice since that night at Mrs. Kinsey's."

"It was de truth," she said quickly.

"I'm so glad you always tell the truth," he said tersely, "because then,
of course, you'll tell me now all about Hip Foo's to-night."

She drew in her breath sharply.

"My Gawd!" she stammered. "Youse--youse knows about dat?"

"Go on, Mother Margot!" Jimmie Dale prompted curtly.

"Dere--dere ain't nothin' to tell." She was obviously groping for
inspiration. "De bulls raided de place almost as soon as I got dere, an'
I beat it on de jump for home."

"Don't lie!" snapped Jimmie Dale sternly. "There is a good deal to tell!
Shall I help your memory?" He was quite sure of his ground. Pedler Joe's
story made the Phantom's and Bunty Myers' connection with the night's
work a practical certainty. "Don't you think Bunty Myers, and Connie
Pfeffer's ten thousand is worth telling about--Mother Margot?"

The shot went home. The old hag shrank back against the wall. He heard
her mumbling incoherently.

"I'm waiting!" said Jimmie Dale coldly.

"I--I can't!" she burst out. "I--I daresn't!"

"I think you can," Jimmie Dale answered sharply. "And I am sure that it
will be much the _safer_ thing for you to do. As a last resort, for
instance, if you forced my hand, the police might be very much
interested to learn that Mother Margot knew something about the Levenson
Bank robbery, and----"

"I--I'll tell youse!" she broke in. "My Gawd, wot can I do? Wot else can
I do? I--I'll come across. Wen youse telephoned me to-day I hadn't heard
nothin'. It was only about six o'clock dat de Voice told me to take de
message over to Hip Foo's, an' be dere by half past eight. See? Dere
wasn't no way I could tell youse, was dere? I ain't de only one dat
don't know where de Gray Seal lives, am I?"

"No," said Jimmie Dale evenly; "and we'll dispense with any discussion
as to what you would have done if you had known. Go on!"

"It was to meet Bunty Myers an' another of Gentleman Laroque's gang
named Muller." Mother Margot's whisper was scarcely audible. "An'--an'
it was about Connie Pfeffer, all right. I was to tell 'em dat Connie had
seen de error of his ways an' opened up, an' dat de coin was in de
house wid de broken stairs, an' shoved in under one of dem."

She paused, and in the semi-darkness Jimmie Dale could see her jerking
her head in a queer birdlike way furtively about her.

"What's its other name?" demanded Jimmie Dale shortly.

She looked at him puzzled.

"De other name of wot?"

"The house with the broken stairs." Jimmie Dale's tones were
uncompromising.

"Why, it's Pedler Joe's, of course!" she answered. "Youse knows where
dat is. Everybody does."

Pedler Joe! For a moment Jimmie Dale stared at her. Was Pedler Joe, too,
playing a game? The figure of the old man, full of misery from what
seemed genuine distress and fear, rose before him. But against this was
Pedler Joe's record. Was this the way he had brought up his young
protg--to play in with him hand and glove? And yet those bruises on
the man's neck and throat--_they_ were genuine enough.

Again Jimmie Dale lunged in the dark, and won.

"Pedler Joe had nothing to do with it!" he snapped. "Don't try any
holding out on me, Mother Margot!"

"I ain't holdin' out nothin' on youse," she protested. "I didn't say
Pedler Joe was in it. Connie beat it for Joe's after pullin' de robbery
at de bank dat day, so's to work up an alibi--see? But de bulls pinched
him quicker'n he figured. He hears dem comin' while he's dere--see?--an'
w'en Pedler Joe ain't lookin' he shoves de envelope wid de cash in under
one of de broken stairs, an' w'en de bulls bust in dey don't find
nothin', an' dey ain't got nothin' on Connie, an' after puttin' him
through for a few hours down at headquarters dey has to let him go."

Jimmie Dale nodded.

"Exactly!" he said tersely. "And the reason he didn't go back for the
money was because he never got a chance. Your gang got him, and started
in to apply less humane but evidently more effective measures to make
him talk than the police did."

Mother Margot drew in her breath.

"I guess youse knows de whole lay. My Gawd, youse ain't human, are
youse?"

"There's Hip Foo's," suggested Jimmie Dale grimly.

"Yes," she mumbled. "But dere ain't nothin' much to dat: now youse knows
de rest. I had just give 'em de message w'en de bulls started de raid,
an' we beat it. Dey're to go down dere after Pedler Joe gets to sleep,
an' pinch de dough--dat's all."

"Not quite!" said Jimmie Dale. "There's Connie Pfeffer. Did they go the
limit with him? Is he dead?"

Mother Margot shook her head.

"No, he ain't--not quite. He'll be all right after a while, but I guess
he just come through wid de dope in time. Him an' one of Laroque's men,
dat's supposed to be a man-nurse in charge of an invalid--see?--is on
deir way west for somewhere now. Dat gets Connie outer here so's he
don't get a chance to butt in an' spill anythin' to Pedler Joe or some
other pal dat'd help him out, an' besides it's a kind of a stake dey're
givin' him so's de bulls won't bother him no more."

Again Jimmie Dale was silent for a moment. It was clear-cut, wasn't it,
the work that was ahead now? There was no choice, was there? There was
only one thing to do. He could not go to a telephone, say, and tip the
police off to the hiding place of the money; for the fact that it would
be found in Pedler Joe's would convict Pedler Joe as an accomplice. The
man, innocent though he was, would not have a chance. His known intimacy
with the Mole, and the fact that Connie Pfeffer had been found there
shortly after the robbery, both of which reasons had already resulted in
a grilling for the old man from the authorities, and above all Pedler
Joe's own record would----

"All right!" said Jimmie Dale abruptly. "Let's go!"

"Go!" Mother Margot crouched back against the wall. "Go where?"

"To Pedler Joe's," said Jimmie Dale curtly.

"Me!" She flung out her arms wildly. "Me--go dere! Aw, my Gawd, not dat!
If dey caught me dey'd--dey'd croak me. I don't dare! My Gawd, I don't
dare! Dey'd kill me. I've told youse all I knows. Youse ain't got no use
for me dere."

"Oh, yes, I think I have," said Jimmie Dale coolly. "I'd feel a little
more comfortable if I knew where Mother Margot was and what she was
doing during the next half hour."

"But--but youse can trust me," she faltered.

"Possibly!" admitted Jimmie Dale evenly. "But not to the extent of
staking my life on it. It would be rather awkward for me if you
communicated with the Voice, say, while I was----"

"No, no; I swear I won't!" she whispered frantically. "Aw, for Gawd's
sake, don't make me do dat! If dey sees me, if dey catches me dey'll
know I snitched, an' dey'll twist me t'roat or put a knife into me."

It was quite true. If caught under any such circumstances Mother
Margot's life would not be worth a moment's purchase. But then Mother
Margot would not be caught. Bunty Myers and whoever was to accompany him
were not to go there until late to-night, not until they would expect
Pedler Joe to be in bed and asleep; and at the present moment Pedler Joe
was out roaming miserably about the streets in his hopeless search. The
place would be empty. There would be no risk for Mother Margot--and he,
Jimmie Dale, was certainly by no means sure enough of her to leave her
free to communicate with her confederates and trap him like a rat if she
chose to do so.

"They won't catch you." His tones were peremptory now. "You go ahead.
I'll follow--where I can keep my eye on you. I can't very well walk
through the streets with a mask on my face, and I would a little rather
prefer, Mother Margot, that all _you_ saw was--a mask. And, besides, it
might be just as well for your sake that you should not be seen in
company with any one. You say you know Pedler Joe's place. Well, so do
I. When you turn into the wagon drive I'll join you. Now then!"

Again she shrank back.

"No, no!" she pleaded. "I--I'm scared. Youse don't know wot youse're
doin'. Youse're goin' to get me killed, dat's wot it means."

"I don't want to make any noise that might be heard back there in your
room by the unseen watcher that you appear to be so much afraid of," he
said coldly; "but you are either going with me, or it is going to be a
showdown right here, Mother Margot. You understand?" He caught her by
the arm, and pushed her toward the front door. "Now go!"

She moved forward along the hall. He could see her wringing her hands.

"My Gawd!" she whispered; and again: "My Gawd!"




--IX--

THE HOUSE WITH THE BROKEN STAIRS


Mother Margot passed out through the door. Jimmie Dale, a few paces
behind, removed his mask as he stepped out to the sidewalk. He crossed
instantly to the other side of the road, and, keeping pace with her,
followed her as she shuffled down the street.

He was smiling grimly now. The Phantom apparently was becoming
cautious--in a personal sense. As Gentleman Laroque, as Isaac Shiftel,
as Limpy Mack, the man had but narrowly escaped; to-night, it seemed
fairly obvious, he was playing a safer game by delegating the actual
work to the members of his old gang over whom he evidently still
preserved his authority. Jimmie Dale's smile gave place to tight, set
lips. It was a compliment in a way, and a very genuine compliment, to
him, Jimmie Dale; but if there was no Phantom to-night, no chance at the
man in that personal way, then, equally, there would be no Tocsin
to-night either at the end of the quest!

He went on down the street, following the shawled figure of the old hag.
Why dwell on that? What good would it do? What would it bring him? Some
night, some time, it would be the last night and the last time, and
there would be--the end. Meanwhile to-night, at least, he could
check-mate the Phantom's game.

His thoughts swept back to the immediate present. Something struck him
for the moment as incongruous, out of keeping, a little illogical, in
view of the open brutality they had dealt out to Pedler Joe last night
when they had not hesitated to break into the old man's house, that
to-night the Phantom had switched his tactics to those of almost
exaggerated stealth. And then he shook his head. No--it was far from
illogical. He saw it now. He owed the Phantom a compliment in return.
Mentally he paid it. The man had a sort of super cunning and cleverness
cradled in his devil's brain! Pedler Joe knew nothing; Pedler Joe would
continue to know nothing. Connie Pfeffer's lips were sealed unless to
confess his own guilt. And so the disappearance of the money would
remain a mystery--that was all!

The shawled figure on the opposite side shuffled on. It was not far now
to Pedler Joe's. He followed her across the Bowery, down a side street
again, past the Sanctuary, and around the next corner. Here he closed
the gap between them, crossing to her side of the street--and as she
disappeared into the blackness of a sort of arched driveway, he joined
her.

He slipped the mask over his face again, and took her arm.

"Come on!" he whispered.

The driveway was a wretched, dirty place, once used no doubt for a
delivery wagon when the store in front had been in its prime; now it was
Pedler Joe's entrance to his domain, which, in turn, had once been an
outhouse of some kind, perhaps even the stable, or wagon shed, a
miserable little wooden shack, neglected now and in hopeless disrepair.

Jimmie Dale, still holding Mother Margot's arm, emerged from the
driveway, crossed the small yard beyond, and halted at the door of the
hovel.

It was dark here; nothing showed but the looming shadows of the
surrounding buildings. Mother Margot was whimpering again:

"Pedler Joe! Pedler Joe'll see me, an' den----"

"Pedler Joe is out," said Jimmie Dale crisply. "There's no one inside.
You won't get into any trouble, Mother Margot, unless you make it
yourself. I'll see to that!"

The door was locked. From the leather girdle Jimmie Dale selected a
pick-lock. A moment, two, passed. The slim, sensitive fingers of Jimmie
Dale, that mocked at even the intricate locks and bolts devised by
modern ingenuity, were working quickly, almost contemptuously now, at
Pedler Joe's cheap, flimsy fastening. The door swung open. Jimmie Dale
motioned Mother Margot to enter, and, following, closed and locked the
door again behind them.

For an instant he stood motionless, then his flashlight swept the
interior, lancing the blackness with its round, white ray. The place was
one of utter, poverty-stricken desolation. There was but a single room,
with no furniture in it save an old table and chair; the floor sagged
and had rotted away in places; even a window was lacking, for where one
once had been, it was now, in lieu of broken panes no doubt, nailed up
with boards.

And now the flashlight focussed and held on a flight of stairs obliquely
across from the door and on the far side of the room. Mother Margot had
called the place "the house with the broken stairs," and it was well
named! Half a dozen of the treads at least were broken away and were
little more now than so many gaping holes; and for the rest, the whole
staircase leaned drunkenly to one side as though scarcely able any
longer to sustain its own weight, let alone the added burden of any one
desirous of reaching the floor above.

"Whereabouts in the stairs is it?" Jimmie Dale demanded abruptly.

Mother Margot was crouched close against the door in a frightened
attitude. She shook her head.

"I dunno," she answered. "I wish to Gawd I did, so's we could get outer
here quick. It's in one of dem holes in de stairs. Connie said he didn't
remember which one 'cause he had to act on de jump. He heard de bulls
comin', an' Pedler Joe was upstairs, an' he said he hadn't time to
figure anythin' except to get de cash outer sight."

"All right!" said Jimmie Dale quietly. "It doesn't much matter. We'll
begin at the beginning."

He moved across the room, and with his flashlight began his search under
the broken stair treads. But it was not until the fourth attempt that
his hand, in under a tread up to the elbow, encountered a sealed
envelope. He drew it out quickly, and tore the end open. Yes, here it
was! He took out the money and counted it rapidly--twenty
five-hundred-dollar banknotes. It was all here--ten thousand dollars. He
thrust the money into his pocket, and laid the empty envelope on the
stair beside him.

"It's all right, Mother Margot!" he called softly. "We'll go in a
minute."

From another pocket in the leather girdle he drew out now the thin
metallic case that contained its store of diamond-shaped, gray-paper
seals, and with the tiny tweezers--that there might be no tell-tale
finger prints--lifted out one of the seals and moistened the adhesive
side with his lips. There was Pedler Joe to be considered. Pedler Joe
must not be held accountable by the Phantom, any more than by the
police. He picked up the empty envelope and pressed the gray seal firmly
down upon it. When Bunty Myers and his fellow thugs arrived and found
the money gone, Pedler Joe would naturally be the first one they would
think of, and their former suspicions that the old man knew more than he
pretended would be aroused again with disastrous results for Pedler Joe.
But the gray seal here on the envelope would square Pedler Joe and
settle all doubts on that score. The Phantom, for instance, was
fully----

Mother Margot's whisper cut tensely, suddenly through the room:

"Dey're comin'! Dey're comin'! Aw, for Gawd's sake, dey're comin', an'
dere ain't no way to get out!"

In an instant Jimmie Dale was across the room beside her. He caught her
wrist fiercely.

"I told youse so!" She was crooning in a queer, low way. "Dey'll kill me
for dis!"

"Keep quiet!" breathed Jimmie Dale.

Cool, possessed, motionless, he stood there. Mother Margot was right. He
could hear the footsteps of three or four men close to the door outside.
There was no way out. They were trapped, and Mother Margot----

The door rattled as it was tried. A voice in a low callous laugh reached
him through the panels:

"It's a good thing youse piped old Pedler down de line, Bunty; it's
saved us wastin' de night hangin' round waitin' for him to hit de hay!"

And then another voice, impatiently:

"Aw, get de door open! Wot's de use playin' wid de lock? Bust it in, an'
strike a light! Youse don't have to be careful of de noise when Pedler
ain't dere."

Mother Margot! There was a chance. Just one. Not for both of them
perhaps, but for Mother Margot. He owed it to her. He had brought her
here--to her death--if the chance failed.

He leaned toward her, his lips close against her ear.

"Flatten back here against the wall. The door opens away from you. Don't
move till they make a rush, then slip through the door behind them, and
get to the street. I'll guarantee at least that no one will _follow_
you, and with a little luck you won't be seen at all."

"But youse"--a strange note had come suddenly into her voice--"but
youse--youse mean dat----"

"Never mind what I mean," said Jimmie Dale between set teeth. "Do as I
tell you, or _neither_ of us'll get out!"

The door lock yielded with a little snap--but Jimmie Dale was no longer
there. Silent as a shadow in his movements, he was already halfway up
the stairs.

He halted here. He was still holding the envelope with its gray seal,
but instead of his flashlight his automatic now was in his other hand.

And then for the first time Jimmie Dale made a sound--at the moment that
the door swung open. It was as though, suddenly alarmed, he had tripped
and fallen upon the rickety stairs. There was a chorus of startled
oaths, a rush of feet across the floor in his direction, the white gleam
of a flashlight thrown upon him, the chorused shouts again--and he
turned, dropping the envelope from his hand, and as it fluttered
downward to the floor, he dashed madly up the stairs.

Came the crash and roar of a revolver shot, the spurt of flame, the ugly
_spat_ of a bullet as it embedded itself in the woodwork somewhere above
his head, another, and still another--but Jimmie Dale did not fire in
return. There was Mother Margot. They had not noticed her and she
should be gone by now, but he could not see. He dared not take the
chance of any of them running back for cover in the direction of the
door. Just a few seconds more, and then--he flung himself over the
topmost stair--yes, it was safe now surely to check their rush if he
could. He fired--his shot directed high over their heads. Snarls and
curses answered him. The flashlights, more than one of them now, made
almost daylight of the place. And suddenly a new shout went up. Some one
had picked up the envelope!

"_The Gray Seal!_"

A hail of lead came up the staircase--and a concerted rush of dark,
swarming figures. He could not tell how many--three or four--but it
seemed as though there were a dozen.

The window! There must be a window here. He remembered that Pedler Joe
had spoken of a window. Yes, there it was just across from the
stairhead. He hurled himself toward it, flung it open, and swung out
over the sill. It could not be very high. In any case it was the only
chance. A flashlight's ray caught him now from the head of the stairs,
and was accompanied almost simultaneously by an oath and the tongue
flame of a revolver.

He let go his hold and dropped. Something, a heap of rubbish, an uneven
surface, threw him violently upon his face as he landed, but in an
instant he was on his feet again. There was no way out of the place
except across the yard and through the archway, and he raced in that
direction. He heard a shout signalling his whereabouts from the window.
It was echoed by shouts from within.

If he could but gain the street before they poured out of the shack in
pursuit! No--here they came now! Over his shoulder he caught a glimpse
of shadowy forms behind him.

He had a start of ten yards, perhaps fifteen at the outside. He swerved
out into the street. Strange the commotion back there had not aroused
the neighbourhood! But it would not take long to do so now if the chase
remained in the open!

"The Gray Seal! Get him! Stop him!"

The shouts, the pound of feet rang from behind him. But now a queer,
half choked, panting laugh came grimly from Jimmie Dale as a dark
shawled figure peered suddenly out from a doorway and drew back again as
he dashed by. Mother Margot! Well, at least, he had kept his promise to
Mother Margot.

And now windows began to open; people to emerge from the houses. The
pound of feet, the shouts seemed to grow even nearer. Jimmie Dale was
straining every muscle now, running like a deer. Another few minutes of
this in the open and it would be the end. Thank God, the Sanctuary was
just around the corner! If he had ever needed it in his life, he needed
it now. They might see him enter the tenement; but by the time they had
been able to search the place even cursorily the Gray Seal would have
vanished, and only Smarlinghue of the underworld, the drug-wrecked peer
of that inglorious realm to which they themselves belonged, would be
found.

He turned the corner, ran on the few yards up the block to the
Sanctuary, and as he flung himself inside the tenement door he saw them
swing into the street behind him, and heard them like a pack of
bloodhounds give tongue again at sight of their quarry. But in a second
now he was along the dark hallway and inside the Sanctuary itself, the
door locked behind him.

And now he worked with lightning speed. He could have run on out through
the French window, and by the lane perhaps might have had a fair chance
of getting away--but almost as important as his life was the vital
necessity of protecting the character of Smarlinghue from suspicion, and
the Gray Seal making straight for Smarlinghue's room and disappearing
thereby, marked an intimacy in time of stress with Smarlinghue's
habitation too significant to go unchallenged. He tore off his evening
clothes, wrenched open the movable section of the baseboard, brought out
the seedy, tattered garments of Smarlinghue, and put them on.

He needed no light--only a few more precious seconds. They were
stumbling around outside in the hall now; and now he could hear them
break into one of the other rooms. Just a few more seconds--that was all
he needed. There were still the little pieces of wax that distorted lips
and nostrils, that gave a peculiar set to cheeks and ears; still the
facial solution to give the gaunt, pallor-like effect that
Smarlinghue--Cold beads of sweat stood out suddenly on Jimmie Dale's
forehead. His mask as he pulled it off was sticky; his hand as he put it
to his face came away _wet_. No, there was no need for light. He knew!
It was blood. His face had been bruised and cut when he had fallen from
the window. No make-up, no clothes, no "Smarlinghue" would explain that!

They were coming to his door now, weren't they? His wits--if he had ever
possessed any! A chance for his life--and Smarlinghue's! The wax went
into the nostrils, under the lips, behind the ears, inside the
cheeks--there was no need for pallor on blood-stained skin--and the mask
was over his face again.

A footstep was almost at the door.

And then, not Jimmie Dale, but Smarlinghue spoke.

"Help! Help!" he cried in a strange, gurgling, strangled voice. "Help!
Let me alone! Help!"

He loosened the catch on the inside of the French window, but without
opening the window itself; then, seizing a chair, he hurled it over his
head in the direction of the easels and canvases that stood against the
far wall. There was an answering crash. He scuffled with his feet, as he
flung the evening clothes he had just taken off--saving out only his
hat, which he put on--into the hiding place, and put back the movable
section of the baseboard again. Another instant, and he had sent the
table in the centre of the room hurtling to the floor, and had
sprung--silently now--to the door.

They were pounding upon it, flinging themselves against it in an effort
to break it in. In the darkness of the hall they would not be able to
distinguish clothes. If they followed him, then, with luck, he might
still save both himself and Smarlinghue; if they didn't, then--well, it
was the end.

He turned the key with a sudden twist of his fingers, and swept the door
open. Dark forms loomed before him. He struck right and left with all
his body weight behind his blows, cleaving a passage for himself as he
plunged forward.

A volley of furious oaths greeted the unexpected attack. Hands snatched
at him. He broke from their clutches as they tried to grasp him, and
sped down the hall. Yes, they were following! Thank God, they were
following!

It was only a step from the street door to the lane, and in barely the
fraction of a second he had gained the latter, leaving his hat behind
him on the sidewalk as though it had been swept from his head in his
flight; in another second he was through the board in the fence that
swung aside at a touch of his hand, and was creeping along the rear of
the tenement to the French window of the Sanctuary. An instant here he
listened as he slipped the mask from his face, then the French window
opened and closed silently again--and Smarlinghue, with battered,
blood-stained face lay prone and motionless upon the floor amidst the
dbris and ruin of his squalid room.

A minute passed--two. Fellow tenants began to gather at the doorway, and
finally to crowd into the room. The poverty-stricken gas-jet hissed as
some one lighted it, and threw a pale, yellow, inadequate light over the
surroundings. Jimmie Dale felt some one grasp him by the shoulders and
lift him to a sitting posture. He rubbed his hand across his eyes, and
stared dazedly around him. Then suddenly he seemed to rouse himself. He
shook his fist wildly.

"Get the police!" he croaked hoarsely, as he recognised as Bunty Myers a
man who was elbowing his way forward. "Get the police! I want the
police! Some one bust in here and said if I made a peep he'd lay me out.
I--I was scared for a minute, mabbe two, and then I--I started
something."

"Sure! You look it!" snapped Bunty Myers. He swung fiercely on the
little crowd and brushed them back to the doorway. "Get outer here!" he
snarled. "Dis ain't yer hunt!" He turned again to Jimmie Dale. "Blast
youse, Smarly!" he swore. "I ain't blamin' youse, but if youse'd kept
quiet we'd have had him cornered cold. He's got away now down the lane."
He lowered his voice. "Wot I come back for was to find out if youse'd
got a better look at him dan some of de boys wid me on account of his
mask, an' if youse'd know him again if youse saw him?"

Jimmie Dale shook his head.

"No, I didn't get no look at him," he said viciously. "But I'll have the
police on him, and----"

"De police!" Bunty Myers' laugh was forced, unmirthful. "De police'll be
a long time findin' dat bird, youse can take it from me! Say, youse give
me de pip, Smarly! Dat was de Gray Seal!"

Jimmie Dale's jaw dropped. He stared helplessly.

"My God!" gasped Jimmie Dale. "The Gray Seal! Him!"

And he was still staring in a dazed and helpless way about him as Bunty
Myers swung hurriedly from the room again, presumably to join his
companions in their search along the lane.




--X--

BEGGAR PETE


The street lights showed mistily, like vague, filmy patches in the
darkness. It was raining in torrents, pitilessly. The water dripped from
the brim of Smarlinghue's old felt hat, and beating into his face soaked
the bandage around his cheek, threatening to displace it. He smiled
grimly in reminiscence, as he raised his hand and tightened the dressing
a little in its place.

It was four nights ago now since his accident when he had made his
escape from Pedler Joe's window, and subsequently had saved himself by
playing the dual rle in the imaginary fight he had staged between
Smarlinghue and the Gray Seal in the Sanctuary; and since then the
character of Smarlinghue had virtually been a little Old Man of the Sea
that had clung with almost sinister tenacity to him, and that he had not
been able to shake off and discard as before at will. It was strange! A
queer trick of fate, perhaps; and not an over-kindly one, for it had
tied his hands, and for the moment had left him seriously crippled in
his efforts to pick up the clues, already found and lost so many times,
that must eventually, if there were ever to be life and freedom for the
Tocsin, happiness for himself and the woman that he loved, lead to--the
Phantom.

Jimmie Dale's face grew hard, anxious, perturbed. Things had not gone
well in those four days. Smarlinghue, if such a thing were possible when
his life itself had been the stake, had played his part too well that
night in the Sanctuary! Already one of the acknowledged aristocracy of
the underworld, he had been suddenly elevated to the status of little
less than demi-god. Smarlinghue had been in actual, physical combat
with the Gray Seal! Smarlinghue had become the idol of a morbid awe and
curiosity! It was subsiding now, but while it lasted it had made the
"disappearance" of Smarlinghue, even for a few hours, far too dangerous
a move to consider; he had been too much the attraction, too much on
exhibition, as it were. But even if this had not been so, there was
still another and perhaps even stronger reason that had temporarily
chained him to the rle of the drug-wrecked artist and to the
environment of the Sanctuary. The underworld had eyes and ears, and so
too had the police; while, still more to be feared as one who seemed to
reach out with cunning versatility into so many different spheres, as
one who, of all others, would have his suspicions the most quickly
aroused, there was the Phantom. Jimmie Dale, if he had returned to his
ordinary life, would have had to do so with a bandaged face curiously
like Smarlinghue's! It invited far too much! And so he had telephoned to
Jason, that peer of butlers, that he had been called out of town for a
few days; and whatever personal fears the old man might have entertained
for the safety of his young master, whom, as he was wont to say, he had
dandled on his knee as a child, Jason could be trusted to account, both
ingeniously and to the entire satisfaction of any one interested, for
the temporary absence of Jimmie Dale from his usual haunts.

In a personal sense, therefore, there had been no serious cause for
anxiety; but in those four days it seemed, somehow, as though a wall,
impenetrable, thick, had been reared across his path, halting him, and
shutting out from both sight and hearing those things that concerned him
far more than the consideration of his own security. There had been no
word from the Tocsin, no note, no sign, no straw of evidence out of the
whispered confidences in the hidden places of the underworld that he
could grasp at as indicative of even her continued existence. The old
question gnawed at his heart. Was she still alive to-night? What move
had the Phantom made in those four days, and if any, had the man with
his hell-born cunning been at last successful?

The days had been as a blank. Even Mother Margot had been denied him,
for no mask could have hidden the bandages from her eyes. But yet, after
all, he had not been idle. He had done what he could. The wave of
notoriety that for the moment had swept him to a pinnacle high above his
fellows of the underworld had seemed to present the only opportunity for
activity left open to him, and he had seized upon it to cultivate the
very men who were unconsciously responsible for the ruse to which he had
been forced to resort that night in the Sanctuary to save his life, the
men who had hammered at his door, voicing for the moment the one
rallying cry that alone could unite the myriad, vicious interests of
gangland in one common bond, "Death to the Gray Seal!" And in a measure
he had been successful, though, as far as results had gone, he might, it
seemed, have saved himself the effort. Bunty Myers, Muller and the
rest--Gentleman Laroque's, alias the Phantom's, gang--had admitted him,
rather pleased to bask in his reflected glory, to their hang-out in the
upstairs rear room of Wally Kerrigan's ill-favoured "club," which was
half restaurant, half gambling den, and the resort of the worst in the
Bad Lands, but he had learned nothing. They had loafed and smoked and
played cards and drunk an amazing quantity of liquor, but that was all.
There had always been Bunty Myers and Muller, and at times as many as
three or four more, but had he, Jimmie Dale, not known that back of it
all Gentleman Laroque, unseen, held these men in allegiance, he never
would have discovered it there!

He had learned nothing; but though to-night, for perhaps the first time,
he could have dispensed with the bandages to the extent of at least
being able to use the black silk mask without the risk of Mother Margot
suspecting the tell-tale hurt that lay beneath, he was on his way now to
Kerrigan's again as the first part of his night's work. Afterwards--He
shrugged his shoulders. Afterwards he would see! Certainly there was
always a chance at Kerrigan's. He felt that he had already worked
himself into an intimacy that was not far from breeding confidences.
Their apparent inaction was also not without its measure of
satisfaction, and this in itself alone was worth knowing. It might very
well, and probably did, augur that the Phantom too was for the moment
inactive, that there was a momentary stagnation, as it were, in that
master crook's field of endeavour, and----

Jimmie Dale stopped short. He was opposite the swinging doors of a
saloon, run by one Gypsy Dan, from which there emanated a
stentorian-lunged voice high-pitched in song, accompanied by the
thumping of many fists evidently upon the bar, and the stamping of many
feet obviously upon the floor. Subconsciously, he was now aware, he had
heard the row half a block away. It was not by any means a select and
exclusive neighbourhood; it was one more of squalor than anything else
and accustomed to disturbances more strenuous and decidedly more vicious
than this, but it was at least within the purlieus of the city and
supposedly under the domination of law and order. And now from the
opposite corner ahead he caught the ray of a street lamp glinting on the
rubber-cloaked shoulders of an officer, as the man crossed the street
and headed for the saloon.

Jimmie Dale, as Smarlinghue, smiled thinly. Whoever they were in there,
they were friends of Smarlinghue, the riff-raff, the rank and file of
the citizenry of that sordid fatherland of the underworld in which he
held so high a station! The character of Gypsy Dan's saloon guaranteed
that. He turned quickly, pushed the swinging doors open, and stepped to
the side of the ragged, unkempt figure at the bar who was yelling at the
top of his voice.

"Forget it!" said Smarlinghue roughly. "There's a harness bull on the
move out there."

The man, too immersed in his vocal efforts and the liquor he had
imbibed, paid no attention; but the barkeeper was alert in an instant.

"T'anks, Smarly!" he grunted. He leaned across the bar and clapped his
hand over the singer's mouth, effectually shutting off the flow of song.
"Close yer face!" he ordered peremptorily. "Dat'll be Riley out dere,
an' he's all to de good if youse'll give him half a chance. D'ye hear?
Dat goes for de whole of youse!"

The half dozen loungers around the bar subsided. Comparative silence
reigned for a moment, then a slow, measured step sounded outside, a
night-stick rattled softly on the swinging doors, as though both in
warning and in acknowledgment that the amenities had been observed, and
the step died away.

"T'anks, Smarly!" said the barkeeper again, as he once more leaned back
against the far side of the bar.

The erstwhile singer blinked.

"Have a drink," he invited cordially; and digging into his pocket, he
produced a fistful of bills which he waved with a lordly, inebriated air
about him.

Jimmie Dale stared. A moniker in the Bad Lands was always apt and
incisive, and it had been particularly so in this instance. He knew the
ragged, down-at-the-heels vagrant, as everybody else in the East Side
knew the man. _Beggar_ Pete! The man was known at times to do odd jobs
perhaps if pushed to extremity for food and particularly for drink, but
otherwise he lived a miserable, poverty-stricken existence--not
criminal, perhaps, just a drifter, lost to all sense of responsibility
and self-respect.

"Hello!" said Jimmie Dale, half seriously, half facetiously. "Who stuck
you in his will, Pete?"

Some one at the bar guffawed.

"A nice old geezer wid gold spectacles dat Pete croaked wid a
black-jack," said the man. "Dere wasn't no one else to inherit wot was
in de stiff's pocket!"

Beggar Pete swung suddenly upon the speaker.

"Dat's a damn lie!" he shouted furiously. "Youse t'inks youse're funny,
don't youse? Well, mabbe youse won't laugh so loud wid a bust
face--see?"

Jimmie Dale edged in between the two men. Beggar Pete was huge-framed
and, in spite of dissipation, muscular, and his face, working with rage,
was indicative of a row that would bring more than Riley rapping softly
in admonition with his night-stick on the swinging doors.

"Sure, I'll have a drink," said Jimmie Dale, diplomatically. He nodded
to the barkeeper. "Suds for mine!" Then to Beggar Pete: "Here's how,
Pete!"

Beggar Pete's scowl gradually subsided.

"Youse're all right, Smarly!" he said. He grew suddenly confidential.
"Say, it came my way all right, an' 'twasn't more'n half an hour ago,
neither. I'll tell youse. I was walkin' along an' broke for fair, an' an
old gent goes brushin' by in a hurry in de rain. De Mouser t'inks he's
funny, but de old geezer did have gold spectacles 'cause just after he
gets by me he stops an' reaches into his pocket for a box of matches,
an' I sees his face under de umbrella as he lights his cigar. Den he
goes on again, an' as he puts de box of matches back in his pocket I
sees somet'ing drop out on de sidewalk. I slips along an' grabs it up."
Beggar Pete licked his lips, and scowled again at the little crowd.
"It's his purse, dat's wot it is, an' a fat one. I ain't no saint, an'
jest den I t'ought me luck was out, 'cause I t'ought he looked 'round
an' saw me pickin' it up, so I runs after him an' hands it back. Say, he
slips me wot I t'ought was one buck, an' wot I guess he t'ought was only
one too, but w'en I gets into Kelly's place dat was near dere an' had a
snifter it took all de money in de cash register to make change--see?
Fifty, dat's wot it was--a fifty-dollar bill."

"Well, den," suggested one of the crowd to whom the story had evidently
been retailed before, "set 'em up again, Pete--youse must be dry talkin'
about it."

Jimmie Dale, included in the invitation which Beggar Pete promptly
accorded, shook his head and left the place.

He smiled a little curiously to himself as he went on again through the
rain. It was an incident, that was all; an incident that could have no
bearing on him in a personal way, that could carry with it no
significance so far as he was concerned, save that it was one of the
many little cross-sections of life, queer, bizarre, a scratch under the
surface of things, here in the Bad Lands. Yet, naturally enough, it
remained uppermost in his thoughts for a few moments as he walked
along.

He knew Beggar Pete, and he was not at all convinced by Beggar Pete's
story. Benevolent, gold-spectacled gentlemen were not in the habit of
handing out fifty-dollar bills--even on a dark and rainy night! There
would always be a street lamp within a few paces under whose light the
award could be made without any mistake on the donor's part. A
five-dollar bill for the service Beggar Pete had rendered--yes; a
fifty-dollar bill--no. He found himself growing more and more skeptical.
Indeed, he was not sure, for instance, that the gibe the lounger at the
bar had flung at Beggar Pete had not more nearly hit the truth, to the
extent at least that Beggar Pete had come by the money by methods that
would not stand any very close scrutiny.

Jimmie Dale shrugged his shoulders. One thing at least seemed certain.
Beggar Pete would sooner or later come to grief, and perhaps the sooner
the better. There were too many Beggar Petes who had drifted on the
reefs to become broken hulks, worthless to themselves and a menace to
others!

He drew his coat collar closer around his throat. What a beastly night!
Head down against the storm, he ploughed along. Thank Heaven, he was not
far from Kerrigan's now--just around the next corner. For all its
evil-smelling, reeking atmosphere, where about the only air there was
stole in like a sneak thief through the broken window pane that was
covered with cardboard, there would be even_ physical_ comfort to-night
in the company of Bunty Myers and his fellow gangsters in that upstairs
back room! There would even be a sort of compensation in the fact that
he was under cover and in shelter should the real object of his visit,
as it probably would, prove as futile to-night as it had in the past.
His face hardened suddenly. What was the matter with him? Was he growing
childish, his thoughts feeble-minded and astray? Shelter! A bit of a
rain storm! Where was the Tocsin to-night? Where was she? What was
_sheltering_ her from a storm, not of pattering rain drops, but from one
where every moment her life itself stood in peril, where her----

He raised his head. Along the street, through the murk, he noticed a
shadowy form, the only other pedestrian in sight. It was too far off in
the storm to distinguish even whether it was a woman, or a man wearing
what might be a long raincoat, but strangely enough, unaccountably
enough, yet nevertheless existent in his mind was the consciousness of
something familiar about the figure. And then, almost the next moment,
his impression was verified in a measure that brought every faculty,
alert and tense now, into instant action. The figure was turning the
corner, passing under the street lamp. It was Mother Margot!

He did not quicken his pace. He was Smarlinghue! His lips tightened
grimly. Mother Margot owed the man she knew as the Gray Seal her life,
but how far her gratitude extended he did not know--perhaps not at all
in view of the fact that her life would not have been in jeopardy if the
Gray Seal had not literally forced her into the situation that had so
nearly proved fatal to her that night at Pedler Joe's! In any case, it
would be trusting her very far, too far, farther than he would ever
dream of doing, if he risked the consequences of handing himself over
utterly to her mercy in allowing even a suspicion to arise in her mind
that the Gray Seal and Smarlinghue were one! A word of that, a hint, and
Smarlinghue, the idol now of the underworld, would know instead a hatred
and a vengeance that would not only bring exposure and disgrace to the
name of Jimmie Dale, not only play into the Phantom's hands and leave
the Tocsin to stand alone, as prompted by that brave, unselfish love of
hers she sought to do, but would cost him his life as well. And so, as
Smarlinghue, though that was Mother Margot there, he could make no move
to intercept her.

But in a moment more he reached the corner. Mother Margot had
disappeared. He nodded his head. She had gone in through Wally
Kerrigan's side entrance, her objective beyond question of doubt that
upstairs room at the back.

Jimmie Dale moved swiftly now. At last, then, there was something afoot
again. Mother Margot was the mouthpiece of the "Voice," as she called
the Phantom. For a moment he experienced a sense of chagrin that he
should have lost those few minutes in Gypsy Dan's saloon, for otherwise
he would have been upstairs with Bunty Myers and the rest on Mother
Margot's arrival, and Smarlinghue would have been introduced to Mother
Margot, and--He shook his head again. No! He had lost nothing. His
intimacy had not _quite_ reached the point where they would talk before
him. They would more likely have kicked him out. It was much better as
it was; better that Smarlinghue should not have been in evidence at all
if the aftermath of this visit of Mother Margot meant anything that
would bring him into any game that might be played to-night.

And now he smiled with grim whimsicality as his thought of _shelter_
came back to him. Instead of the back room upstairs, if he was to have
any part in the proceedings whatever, he was much more likely to be a
silent and unobtrusive occupant of the fire escape outside the window,
than which he could imagine no place less sheltered or more
uncomfortable in New York that night!

The door of Wally Kerrigan's side entrance closed silently behind Jimmie
Dale. It was utterly dark here. The clientele that favored Kerrigan with
its patronage, in so far as this portion of his premises was concerned,
made no demand for any such extravagance as light! A footstep sounded
from above, a woman's footstep; it died away, and a door closed. Mother
Margot had run true to form!

Jimmie Dale moved forward as a shadow moves, and began to mount the
narrow stairway with which he was already so well acquainted. There was
no sound. It was the silence learned in the days of the old Sanctuary on
the creaky, rickety stairs there, where an untrained step would have
sounded the alarm from top to bottom of the tenement.

He gained the landing. There were three or four rooms here, he knew, but
save for a tiny thread of light that seeped out under the threshold of
the rear room, which was the rendezvous of Laroque's gang, everything
was in darkness. It was early yet, which might be one reason, and the
stormy night another, why the other rooms were as yet evidently
unoccupied.

And now he was crouching against the door itself, his ear pressed
against the panel. It was a possibility, that was all--a possible
alternative to the uninviting fire escape. Again he shook his head, then
turned swiftly to the window almost at his elbow that gave on the rear
of the little hall. He had caught the sound of movement through the
panels, even the sound of voices, but the words had been hopelessly
indistinguishable.

Cautiously he opened the window, slipped out on the fire escape, and,
against the possibility of any of the occupants of the room stepping out
into the hall to notice an opened window, he closed it again behind him.
Another moment, and, flat on his face, he had crept along the iron
platform until he lay beneath the window of the rear room. He would be
able to hear now. He had taken no chances on that score. Open or closed,
the window above him with its square of cardboard tacked over the broken
pane could hardly be improved upon for his purpose. And now, keeping a
little back from the wall, he raised himself up and peered in. Mother
Margot was talking excitedly, gesticulating with her hands, while
gathered around her at the table were Muller, Bunty Myers, and two men
he had met there before, who, leaving aside a score of aliases, were
known as the Kitten and Spud MacGuire.

A pretty quartette! Jimmie Dale's lips thinned, as, the sense of sight
gratified, he shifted his position, placing his ear as close to the edge
of the window casing as he dared without exposing himself to the risk of
being seen. Yes, he could hear now, but--a dismayed frown furrowed his
forehead--Mother Margot appeared already to have imparted whatever
information had brought her there.

"...Youse understand, don't youse?" she was saying. "'Cause if youse
have got it straight, I'm goin' to beat it outer dis, an' get home an'
get dry."

"It kinder took de wind outer us, dat's all!" Bunty Myers' voice
responded in a puzzled growl. "I t'ought de whole works was blown up an'
we was done!"

"I told youse once," snapped Mother Margot. "It's de panel in de wall."

"Sure!" said Bunty Myers. "We ain't deef, an' we got dat, all right--de
middle one at de back of de room. But, den, wot's de use of waitin'?" He
broke into a coarse, unpleasant laugh. "I guess old Miser Scroff ain't
at home to queer anythin'!"

"De use of waitin'," returned Mother Margot tartly, "is 'cause de Chief
says so, an' 'cause some of youse pulled a bum play dat he's got to make
good, an' I wouldn't like to be de one dat done it 'cause de Chief is
seein' red. Anyway, don't youse make no mistakes again. Youse ain't to
make a move until as near ten as'll give youse time to get away wid it,
but youse're to be through by den, 'cause at ten de bulls get tipped
off."

"All right," agreed Bunty Myers. And then abruptly, as Mother Margot
evidently started to leave the room: "Say, wait a minute, mother! Mabbe
youse have got de answer to somethin' we'se can't figure out. Wot's de
big idea behind de Chief's keepin' under cover? We ain't seen him for
weeks--nothin' but telephones an' messages. Where is he?"

"Why don't youse ask him?" suggested Mother Margot acidly.

"Ask him!" echoed Bunty Myers helplessly. "How de hell can I, w'en I
don't know where----"

"Dat's de answer!" Mother Margot's interruption was a cackling laugh.
"Youse knows all I knows. Do youse t'ink me an' de Chief goes to a
picture show every evenin', an' den spends de rest of de night together
eatin' hot frankfurters an' stewed ice cream? Say, youse give me a pain!
Good-night!"

The door in the hall closed.

For an instant Jimmie Dale stood motionless, then he turned, and, in
lieu of an exit via the hall window, began to make his way down the fire
escape. And now what? Go to Mother Margot as the Gray Seal and force a
detailed explanation from her as he had the other night? He shook his
head. It wasn't necessary to-night, was it? He had learned enough,
hadn't he?

His mind was working swiftly, in a precise, virile way, as he descended
the wet, dripping iron treads. The middle panel at the back of old Miser
Scroff's room--and old Miser Scroff was not at home. That was clear
enough. And there was no question but that Miser Scroff had money hidden
away somewhere. It was only a wonder that it had not been taken from him
before. The old man was almost senile. It was common property on the
East Side that he had been caught fondling and crooning over packages of
banknotes in his room on more than one occasion. For more years than any
one could remember the man, already old, had just kept on growing older
in a solitary life in his sordid surroundings. He was supposed to have a
small income from some source, but however small it might have been it
was certain he saved on it for he never spent a cent save to keep
absolute famine from his door. Undoubtedly he had money. Robbery,
therefore, as the motive, was equally clear. And at ten o'clock, for
some reason, the police were to be notified of the crime by the actual
perpetrators themselves. Ten o'clock. It could not be much after nine
yet. There should be at least half an hour then before Bunty Myers need
be considered as a factor. Meanwhile the Phantom was at work in an
effort to rectify some misplay made by his underlings. Was it at Miser
Scroff's that the Phantom in person would be employed prior to the
arrival of Bunty Myers and his confederates? Was it luck like that? Luck
at last! If so, then----

Jimmie Dale dropped from the bottom of the fire escape to the ground.
And then, in the shelter of the lane where the fire escape had landed
him, he broke instantly into a run.

"Not as Smarlinghue," confided Jimmie Dale grimly to himself as he ran.
"I can't risk Smarlinghue--it's got to be the other way in spite of a
patched face."




--XI--

THE PANELLED WALL


Jimmie Dale, a long coat, sodden with rain, covering his evening
clothes, crept up the narrow tenement stairs, crept along a bare and
dirty hallway, and halted before a closed door. Softly, cautiously, he
tried the door. It was locked. His fingers reached in under his outer
garments, and then shot swiftly to the door again. There was a moment of
utter silence, then a faint _snip_, and the door began to open
guardedly, the fraction of an inch at a time. Another instant and Jimmie
Dale stood inside the room.

The door closed behind him. A minute he listened, then the round, white
ray from his flashlight lanced through the blackness, swept its
surroundings in a swift, comprehensive circle--and a low, startled
exclamation, involuntary, before it could be checked, came from Jimmie
Dale's lips. This was old Miser Scroff's squalid, hovel-like abode,
niggardly alike in its furnishings and its cleanliness, since even
cleanliness cost money--but--but--it was strange! He did not understand!
He had not been very long on his trip to the Sanctuary and back. It had
not taken him long. Certainly it could not even yet be half-past nine.
And yet it seemed as though, in spite of that, he was already too late.

The flashlight circled again, but more slowly this time, as though
puzzled and nonplussed itself. The small room was in dire confusion. The
bedding from the cheap cot was flung here and there on the floor; the
drawers of an old desk had been pulled out and their contents strewn
about, and the desk itself had been hacked to pieces as though on the
chance that it might have possessed a hidden receptacle; while even the
ragged strip of oilcloth, that was the sole floor covering, had been
ripped up and flung into a corner. Where a hiding place might have
existed before, there existed now nothing but a pitiful state of
wreckage!

Jimmie Dale's mind seemed to echo the confusion. It did not seem
possible that Bunty Myers and his companions could already have been
here. And besides--the flashlight's ray shot suddenly to the rear of the
room--what had all this to do with the panelled wall?

An ironic smile tinged his lips now. Yes, it might by a stretch of
imagination be called panelled, but it was simply an extra height of
boarding that ran up to meet the plaster all around the room some three
or four feet from the flooring. He stepped quickly across the room, and
knelt, as nearly as he could judge his position by the flashlight, in
front of the middle boards. He nodded grimly. These were at least intact
if nothing else in the room was! From a pocket in the leather girdle
around his waist he drew out now a small, but incredibly strong and
powerful "jimmy." It would have been a useless waste of time to seek for
any secret spring that, while it probably existed, was also certainly
well and cleverly hidden.

He was working rapidly now, the point of the "jimmy" prying tentatively
into, and up and down, the joints of the boards. A low-breathed
exclamation of satisfaction came almost instantly from his lips. The
"jimmy" had slipped through one of the cracks into an open space behind.
It was here, then, the hiding place of old Miser Scroff's hoard that
Bunty Myers----

Jimmie Dale stood suddenly erect, tense, every muscle rigid, listening.
A footstep, low and stealthy though it was, had caught his ear from the
hall outside. It was not another lodger, it was too cautious for that,
too guarded; and for the same reason it could not be Miser Scroff. It
was not Bunty Myers and his confederates, because there was only one
footstep. The Phantom, then! The Phantom had required time for something
somewhere. And he, Jimmie Dale, had dared to hope that it might be here.
Luck! If he was in luck at last, he would play it to the full. He was
crossing the room swiftly, without a sound. There would be a settlement
this time from which there would be no escape! It was almost at the door
now, that footstep; but he, too, was at the door--on the inside,
crouched against the wall.

A grim smile twisted his lips as he stood there, his automatic flung
forward, his flashlight ready in his left hand. Here was a good place
for that settlement, here in old Miser Scroff's room, here on the scene
of one of the Phantom's hell-hatched crimes--there could be no better
place for that _final_ reckoning!

The doorknob turned, the door began to open slowly. A form, shadowy, a
little blacker than the surrounding blackness, bulked in the opening,
then stole across the threshold, and the door closed.

And then Jimmie Dale spoke in a cold, merciless whisper, as the stream
of his flashlight cut through the black, and his automatic lifted to a
level with the line of light:

"Put up your----"

The sentence died on his lips. It seemed to Jimmie Dale that the room
was whirling around him, that he was robbed of all power of movement,
that his brain had lost the faculty of reason. The light was boring into
a pair of brown eyes, startled, it was true, but brave, calm,
self-reliant brown eyes that looked out from a wondrously glorious face,
the only face in all the world. And then his pulses leaped, and the
blood in a furious tide went whipping through his veins. The Tocsin! The
Tocsin! Was he mad? Could it be true? The Tocsin!

"Marie!" he cried out hoarsely.

"Jimmie! Is it you? I could not see with the light in my eyes. Oh,
Jimmie!" Her voice faltered. Relief was there, but relief was not the
note he caught; it was love, yearning, the woman's soul that was in her
tones.

The flashlight, the automatic, were thrust into his pockets. She was in
his arms. He held her close. Years had gone since he had held her there
before! He had fought for this, risked all and everything for this,
hoped for it when hope itself seemed dead, and now she was here, close
to him, clinging to him--and it was not just for the moment, not just a
stolen, pitiful instant out of all eternity, but for always, for all
time. He had her now. She would never go again. There was no power on
earth would keep him from her side now!

Half laughing, half crying, she struggled to free herself a little.

"Jimmie," she breathed, "don't you know that you are terribly _strong_,
dear?"

He released her a little, grudgingly, but still he held her close. His
lips found hers, her eyes, her hair--the dark silken strands that,
playing truant from under her hat, swept his face.

Her hand had crept up and found his mask, slipped under it, and was
resting gently against the strips of plaster on his cheek.

"I--I know of course about the night when--when you got this," she said
brokenly. "All the underworld has been talking about Smarlinghue. They
very nearly caught you, Jimmie. Oh, Jimmie, why will you do it? I have
begged you so, done all I could to keep you out of this. And now
to-night again! What are you doing here? What brought you here?"

His arms tightened about her again.

"To find you," he said.

She drew away in amazement, her hands on his shoulders now, holding him
at arms'-length.

"To find me!" she echoed helplessly. "But how could you have expected to
find me here? You did not know. I sent you no note, no word, for after I
heard about that night at Pedler Joe's and what happened later in the
Sanctuary, I made up my mind not to----"

He laid his hand softly across her lips.

"I have not been anywhere, done anything, since that night on the East
River, Marie," he said quietly, "except with the one end in view of
finding you. And had I not found you again now I should still have kept
on in the same way. I'm quite sure you know every move that Smarlinghue
has made, and you therefore ought to know that I have already gone too
far, that I've already been too close to the Phantom more than once to
have let anything you did keep me out of this, Marie. The fewer the
notes, the more I should have worried, and the harder I should have
worked. But that's all at an end now, thank God! There'll be no more
separation. We'll work together from now on until we've found the
Phantom."

For a moment she did not answer, then she turned her head away.

"No, Jimmie!" she said firmly. "I cannot! I will not! Nothing has been
changed since that night on the East River. I cannot prevent you from
doing as you have been doing, but there is a great difference between
your actions as the Gray Seal and as one who is known to be working hand
in glove with Marie LaSalle. It--it would make it almost impossible for
me to go on, for I--I could not do anything then without the fear of
putting your life in danger. Oh, Jimmie, you do not know, you do not
understand, and--and I cannot tell you!" She turned quickly toward him
again. "Go, Jimmie, please--at once. There is something that I must do
here."

Jimmie Dale reached out for the door.

"We'll go together, Marie--now," he said calmly. "I heard Mother Margot
talking about Scroff's panel here. I was on the fire escape outside
Kerrigan's place. That's what you mean, isn't it? But _you_ are what _I_
came for, so we'll go, for there is nothing else that counts here now
against the risk of you being caught by Bunty Myers and his crowd, to
say nothing of old Miser Scroff himself turning up any minute to----"

"Miser Scroff is dead," she interrupted dully.

"Dead!" he repeated in a startled way.

"Murdered," she said. And then her voice broke again. "Oh, Jimmie, I
have failed miserably to-night. I--I have cost a man his life, I am
afraid. The least I can do now is to keep them from getting the
money--it's in an old leather bag behind the panel--but that I must do.
You--you must let me work this out, Jimmie. I have no choice. If you
force me out of here, or if you insist on staying to help me, then in an
hour, two hours, somehow, Jimmie, I warn you frankly that I will get
away from you again."

"I don't think you will--not this time, Marie!" said Jimmie Dale grimly.
"I've got you now, and I'm going to keep you no matter what happens."

She smiled at him wanly.

"Very well, Jimmie, if you think so," she said quietly. "Only remember
what I have said. Meanwhile there is the panel. _I_ can't go until I
have got the money."

She started across the room, only to stumble over the broken desk. And
then Jimmie Dale's flashlight was in play again, and he followed her.

"Murdered, you said!" He spoke quickly. "Why? I don't understand. And I
don't understand what has happened here. The place has been turned
inside out."

"The panel, Jimmie!" she answered. "It's near the middle. Get it open!
I'll tell you while you work."

"I had already found it before you came in," said Jimmie Dale coolly. He
was kneeling by the wall, the "jimmy" in his hand again. "Go on, Marie!"

A joint in the wood gave with a low, rending, creaking sound. She stood
at his shoulder, whispering swiftly:

"Some of the gang under the Phantom's orders inveigled Miser Scroff down
somewhere in the neighbourhood of that old junk yard near Kelly's
saloon, with the intention of keeping him out of the way for an hour or
two while the rest of them came here and searched for his money. But
Scroff was an old man, and the blow he was hit by the black-jack killed
him; and the search here resulted in nothing."

The "jimmy" pried away a narrow board from top to bottom. Jimmie Dale
reached in his hand. Yes, there was something in here, a bag of some
kind.

"How do you know all this?" he demanded. "And if you know it, where was
the Phantom all this time?"

"Under cover," she answered. "I told you long ago that he was a man with
a score of domiciles and a score of aliases. Lately he has been driven
from one to another--and robbed of some of them by the Gray Seal."

"I thought so!" said Jimmie Dale swiftly. "Well, you've lost your case,
now, Marie. It would appear, then, that the Gray Seal has been of
service, so why should you attempt to keep him at a distance?"

Her hand found and touched his shoulder.

"It's no good, Jimmie," she said softly. "Shall we call it a woman's
inconsistency? I cannot give you any other answer."

Another board came loose. Jimmie Dale frowned. What was the matter? He
was not working with his usual deftness and silence. It seemed as though
the creaking of the board could be heard throughout the building.

"You said you had failed miserably to-night, and that you were afraid
you had cost a man his life," he said. "You mean Miser Scroff?"

"No," she said heavily. "I did not know anything about to-night until
after Miser Scroff was killed. That brought the Phantom into it in a
personal way. There had been no murder intended, and failure to find
anything here would otherwise have ended the matter; but in old Miser
Scroff's pocket they found, besides some stock certificates made out in
his name, a dirty old piece of paper with a tracing of his room upon it,
and a position on the rear wall marked with an arrow, so they knew then
where the money was. But this was after the first search had been made
and the room torn to pieces as you see it, and though they knew then
where the money was, there was a _murder_ that had to be covered up."

Jimmie Dale drew out a worn yellow leather bag from the aperture. He
opened it, and uttered a sharp exclamation. It was crammed full of loose
banknotes.

"How do you know all this?" he asked for the second time, as he shut the
bag.

The Tocsin shook her head.

"It is useless to ask me, Jimmie," she said steadily. "If I told you, I
might as well enter into the partnership with you that you are so
insistent upon--it would amount to the same thing. I cannot tell you. I
can only tell you that I know the Phantom means to plant the crime on
some outsider's shoulders, some one he has picked out as _suitable_, a
seedy character who--it's horrible, Jimmie!--will not have a chance for
his life. The securities with Scroff's name on them are to be placed
under the innocent victim's mattress; then, with the panel rifled here,
the police are to be tipped off about the murder, and where to find the
'murderer' and the evidence. I did my best; I did all I could, but--but
I lost the trail, and so I came here to save at least the money, and as
a sort of last hope that somehow I might pick up the clue again. The
only thing I am sure of is that the Phantom was playing the part of an
old gentleman with gold spectacles to-night, and----"

Jimmie Dale had taken the Tocsin's arm, and, carrying the bag, had
started back for the door; but now he halted suddenly as though rooted
to the spot, and stared at her.

"An old gentleman with gold spectacles!" he ejaculated sharply.

She caught at his sleeve.

"Jimmie!" she whispered tensely. "You--you know something about it!
You--you've seen him! You know who it is they mean to railroad to his
death for this?"

The room, his surroundings, even the Tocsin, had fled from Jimmie Dale's
consciousness for the moment; instead, there came again the scene in
Gypsy Dan's saloon, when Beggar Pete had told his story, which he,
Jimmie Dale, had but so short a time ago dismissed almost summarily from
his mind as having no personal significance for him. Beggar Pete and the
gentleman with the gold spectacles! Beggar Pete and his sudden
affluence! He had not believed Beggar Pete then, but he believed him
now. There was no shadow of doubt but that Beggar Pete was the Phantom's
intended cat's-paw, and that the snare was the low, viciously-cunning
handiwork of the Phantom. Beggar Pete's story, once those securities
were found beneath his mattress, would, out of its own improbability,
only _assure_ the man's conviction. Nobody knew how much or how little
cash Miser Scroff had had! So this was what the Phantom wanted that
extra time for--to plant those securities. God, if he could _catch_ the
Phantom at Beggar Pete's! No! There was the Tocsin here--he had her
now--he would never leave her again. And besides it was too late now. He
knew where Beggar Pete lived because of late it had been almost a source
of gossip on the East Side, for the simple reason that, for perhaps the
first time in his life, Beggar Pete now had a _permanent_ address--the
cellar of a somewhat questionable lodging house run by a yegg named
Harry the Dip--and this in return for the more than questionable
agreement on Beggar Pete's part to make himself generally useful when
called upon to do so! It was a long way to Beggar Pete's--almost across
the whole of the East Side. The Phantom would have completed his work by
now, or at least long before he, Jimmie Dale, could reach Beggar Pete's
lodging, and that would----

"You _know_! Oh, thank God!" she cried tremulously. "And I--I was so
afraid!"

"It is Beggar Pete," he answered mechanically.

"Then quick, Jimmie!" she pleaded. "There is not an instant to lose. You
must get those securities before the police do!"

He did not move.

She shook frantically at his sleeve.

"You see that, don't you, Jimmie?" she cried again. "Oh, there's not an
instant, not a second to spare--and besides, the rest of them will be
here any minute."

He looked at her.

"And you?" he said.

"I'll take the bag of money and see that it reaches the authorities,"
she replied quickly. "You can't be hampered with that. It will be all
you can do to win the race against the police."

"No!" he said fiercely. "Let you get away out of my life again? Not for
a dozen Beggar Petes!"

A strange smile, wistful, drooped her lips; and suddenly her eyes were
wet; and as suddenly she reached up and drew his face to hers and kissed
him.

"You are too big a man for that, Jimmie," she whispered. "And there is
no other way, and--and, besides, you know what I have told you. You are
too big a man for that, Jimmie, and that--that is why I love you."

He held her close.

"It's no use!" he said hoarsely. "There's been more planted on him than
you know anything about; enough so that the robbery here would almost
cast suspicion on Beggar Pete without the securities being found at all.
He has been spending more money in the saloons to-night than he ever had
in all his life before; and he is accounting for its possession in a
manner that no one would believe."

"But there's a way out of that," she answered quickly. "A way that the
Gray Seal has taken before. Take it again now, Jimmie--because it's a
man's way, _my_ man's way."

He knew what she meant, but he did not answer. She was gathered in his
arms. He could not let her go. He had given his all to find her--he
could not let her go.

"Jimmie," she said, steadying her voice with an effort, "every second
that we stand here may mean that it has cost a man his life."

With a low cry that seemed wrenched from him in agony, Jimmie Dale's
hands dropped to his sides. Through the darkness, that was now a strange
mist before his eyes, he saw her pick up the leather bag. And then her
whisper came to him:

"Thank God for you, Jimmie! I'll stand guard at the door until you're
through."

He found himself at the rear of the room again, working with frantic
speed in front of the broken panelling. He knew what she meant; it must
be his mind, of course, that was functioning, governing him, and yet his
actions seemed purely mechanical. From the leather girdle he drew out
the thin metallic case; and from the case, with the tiny tweezers, he
lifted out a diamond-shaped, gray-paper seal. If he succeeded in getting
the securities before the police did, and if the police found here on
the scene of the robbery the insignia of the Gray Seal that they knew so
well, then Beggar Pete, a worthless, broken hulk, would go free, and----

Her whisper, from the door now, reached him again:

"Quick, Jimmie! They're coming now. I hear them downstairs. Quick,
Jimmie, and--and--good-bye!"

It took an instant, no more, to moisten the adhesive side of the paper
seal, and stick it into place on the edge of the broken panelling; and
then Jimmie Dale was across the room, and, the door closed behind him,
was standing in the blackness of the hallway.

She was gone! His face was set and rigid. Perhaps she was still
somewhere here in the hall; but he could not see, and he did not dare
call out. The stealthy tread of two or three men was distinctly audible
coming up the stairs. He drew farther back along the hall and crouched
there in the darkness. Low whisperings reached him; indistinct forms
clustered around the door of Miser Scroff's room--and then the door
opened and closed again, and the hall was empty. Empty! Where was she?
Still here--still within touch perhaps? A bitter smile curved his lips.
He was beaten--beaten by a worthless, broken hulk that had drifted on
the reefs--a human wreck!

He was crouched outside the door again, and now silently, quickly, with
the little steel pick-lock, he locked the men inside. If she were still
in the hall here, she too would have her chance, enough time to get away
before they discovered that gray seal in there and came pouring out of
the room again!

And then he went down the stairs, and in another instant, the mask
removed from his face, was outside the tenement, and racing madly
through the night. And as he went he looked about him. He had hoped for
a passing taxi or a vehicle of some sort, but there was only the
torrential rain. And so he could but run. Time! It would take him all of
twenty minutes, and it must be later than twenty minutes of ten now,
and--he paused for a second under a street lamp to consult his
watch--yes, it was a quarter to ten. At ten the Phantom would notify
the police--in some anonymous way, of course. But there was still a
little leeway. Perhaps ten minutes. The time it would take the police to
get to Beggar Pete's _after_ ten o'clock.

He ran on and on. Still no taxis, no vehicles--only deserted streets. It
seemed as though he had run for hours. He did not stop to look at his
watch again. He heard a clock from somewhere boom out the hour.

Was he in time? He glanced up and down the street now, as he halted
finally before a small, tumble-down, shabby dwelling house. He did not
know. At least there was no one in sight.

Harry the Dip's door was never locked! His lodgers kept hours too
uncertain and varied! Jimmie Dale smiled grimly, as slipping suddenly
into the shadows of the doorway, he stepped silently inside the place.
Another item, this choice of lodging, even if it were the choice of
necessity, that would not help Beggar Pete's reputation in a jury's
eyes!

The cellar entrance! Where was it? It was dark in here--but not silent.
From upstairs he could hear talking and the sound of movement. And then
his ear caught another sound--the sound of loud, heavy, stertorous
breathing that seemed to come from a direction ahead of him. He risked
his flashlight. He was in a short and narrow hall. And now he advanced
cautiously. Yes, here it was; and here, too, was the explanation of
those laboured, stertorous sounds. Under the stairs at the back of the
hall, a door stood half open.

The flashlight's ray played down a flight of bare, ladder-like
steps--and coincidentally Jimmie Dale's face set in hard, bitter lines.
At the bottom of the steps, a little to one side, in a filthy cellar,
sprawled on a torn and filthy mattress from which wisps of mildewed
straw protruded blatantly, Beggar Pete lay in a drunken stupor. The man
had already been pretty well along at Gypsy Dan's, and in the hour since
then it was obvious that he had lost no time!

Jimmie Dale's hand clenched. The sight seemed to fan a latent fury, a
merciless passion into flame. It was for this, to save _this_, a
vagrant, a bum, a drunken sot, a beast, that he had lost all that was
most dear to him in life to-night; it was for this that he had done what
he had never thought to do under any circumstances, under any pressure,
while life remained to him--lose the Tocsin again if once he ever found
her! It seemed to plumb the depths of irony; it seemed as though he
could _wish_ for nothing better than that this besotted beast should
experience exactly what the Phantom had prepared for him!

And yet, mechanically, Jimmie Dale went down the cellar stairs. He
stooped over the man. There was no danger of _disturbing_ Beggar Pete!
He pulled the man aside, and overturned the mattress. A little bundle of
stock certificates, held together by a rubber band, lay there. He picked
them up. They were made out in the name of Heinrich Scroff.

For an instant he stood staring from the certificates in his hand to the
sprawled form upon the floor--and slowly, gradually, the hard,
embittered look on Jimmie Dale's face softened. Was he so sure after all
that he had paid too much? In his hand he held the death warrant of an
_innocent_ man, a fellow creature, sunken, low, it was true, but a human
being with hopes and fears like his own perhaps, though one, unlike
himself, who had had only the rougher road to travel, where plenty was
unknown and life's sunshine meagre.

He stooped again, and replaced the mattress, and laid Beggar Pete upon
it. He was smiling now softly, as sometimes a woman smiles when her lips
mirror her heart. And somehow he was glad.

And then Jimmie Dale turned away and went out into the storm again.
To-morrow the city would awake to find that the Gray Seal had committed
another crime!




--XII--

LITTLE SWEENEY


The air was heavy with drifting layers of smoke, as it always was in
this back, upstairs room of Wally Kerrigan's "club," that was the
hang-out of Gentleman Laroque's, alias the Phantom's, gang. Four men sat
at the table playing stud, and Jimmie Dale, as Smarlinghue, seated a
little apart, watched them now as he fumbled with the dirty, frayed
sleeves and wristbands of his coat and shirt, and, fumbling then in his
pocket, drew out a hypodermic syringe, its nickel-plating worn and
brassy, its general appearance as disreputable as himself.

How many nights had he come to this room, as he had come to-night,
playing a game, that was not a game of cards, with Bunty Myers here, and
the Kitten, and Muller, and Spud MacGuire! How many nights? He had
almost lost track of time. The wound in his cheek had healed. He had
even resumed, in so far as an occasional appearance at the St. James
Club, and here and there a social function went, his normal life as
Jimmie Dale. He must have been coming here for many nights!

Through half closed, apparently drug-drowsed eyes, he watched the
players at the table. Yes, it must have been for many nights. It was
over a week since--his fingers tightened involuntarily in a fierce,
spasmodic grip upon the hypodermic--since that night when he had held
the Tocsin once again in his arms in old Miser Scroff's room, and had
lost her again. Since then he had continued to cultivate these men. They
were only pawns, they moved only at the will of that unseen yet ever
present spirit of evil, the Phantom; but to be one of them opened the
Avenue of a Thousand Chances that might lead to the Phantom himself. He
had had no other clue to follow.

But so far nothing had come of it. They did not distrust him--who in the
underworld would distrust Smarlinghue, who had the entre
everywhere!--but they had made no advances toward offering him full
membership in that unhallowed fraternity to which he knew they belonged.
At times he had believed they had been on the verge of doing so, and
that applied especially to Bunty Myers, who was the Phantom's apparent
chief of staff; but there had been nothing definite, nothing concrete,
nothing tangible.

And yet, even in a negative sense, the nights he had spent here of late
had not been futile. He was in possession of the fact that there had
been _inactivity_. And that meant that the Phantom, whatever might be
germinating in that master mind of crime, had for the time being been
quiescent; and, as a corollary to that, the almost certain deduction
that no further blow had been struck at the Tocsin--that she was still
safe. And this had been borne out by Mother Margot, who, so far, had
always been the Phantom's mouthpiece. As the Gray Seal, and through the
hold that, as the Gray Seal, he had upon her, he had continued to call
her daily from her pushcart to the telephone and question her. But she
had still protested vehemently each time that she had had no further
word of any move, and he was satisfied that she was telling the truth
for the simple reason that he did not believe she would dare do anything
else. But, even so, unknown to her, he had still maintained, in so far
as he could, a personal surveillance over her movements, and there had
been nothing to disprove her statements. She still tended her pushcart
in Thompson Street; she still lived in those rooms from which the
Phantom, in the dual guise of Shiftel, the fence, and Gentleman Laroque,
who once had openly led this very gang here, had so mysteriously
disappeared.

Smarlinghue's face was vapid, but into the dark eyes behind the creeping
eyelids there came a troubled gleam. Those rooms where the Voice, as
Mother Margot called the Phantom, had installed the old hag! What was
the secret that they held? He was certain that Mother Margot did not
know. And twice again, of late, in Mother Margot's absence, and despite
the Tocsin's warning that they were a trap for himself, he had explored
them, searched them--and found nothing.

And now the men around the table, the room itself, his immediate
surroundings, existed only in a subconscious way in Jimmie Dale's mind.
That was the negative side of the week just past. There was equally the
positive side.

_Shiftel had returned to the underworld._

Not openly. Not to his old quarters. At first the rumour had flown from
mouth to mouth through the underground exchanges of the Bad Lands that
Shiftel was back; that he had been seen a dozen times in the hidden
places, the lairs, the hang-outs, the breeding dens of vice: that crooks
of his old, exclusive clientele had talked with him, done business with
him. And at first, he, Jimmie Dale, had not believed it; and then he had
seen the man himself. He was sure of it. Shiftel! Isaac Shiftel, alias
Gentleman Laroque, alias Limpy Mack, alias the Gentleman with the Gold
Spectacles--the Phantom! The man that the Tocsin had so truly said
possessed a score of domiciles and, yes--entities--there was no better
word, for in each of his disguises the man seemed to have established
himself as a known and breathing entity in the life and surroundings of
the particular character which for the moment he might have assumed. As
witness Shiftel, the fence, known far and wide in the underworld: as
witness Gentleman Laroque, long the leader of this band here, long the
most notorious gangster in the Bad Lands.

He had seen Shiftel three nights ago in the Green Dragon, a dance hall
of unsavoury repute. And Shiftel, the man who was the cause of his,
Jimmie Dale's, return to the life of Smarlinghue and the squalor of the
Sanctuary, the man who sought the Tocsin's life, the one man that he,
Jimmie Dale, would gladly have sacrificed his all to bring to a final
reckoning and account, had escaped him that night in the Green Dragon.

He shook his head, mumbling to himself, almost mechanically continuing
to play his part in the presence of these underlings around the table
even while his mind was far away. It was not his fault that Shiftel,
once seen, had got away. He could not in any fairness hold himself to
blame. He had caught but a glimpse of the man far across the hall, as in
the swirl of the bunny-hug the dancers on the polished centre of the
floor had opened for a moment and closed again. When he had reached the
other end of the room Shiftel had disappeared. That was all.

It was strange! What was the game? What was the meaning of this
reappearance? The man was running a tremendous risk, and the motive must
certainly be commensurate with the danger. What was that motive? Shiftel
was wanted, and wanted badly, by the police for his connection with the
diamonds stolen from Jathan Lane, the murdered banker. There was no such
person, of course, as Shiftel--it was the Phantom. Shiftel was only one
of the Phantom's disguises to be put on or off at will. But it was the
known character of Shiftel that the police sought. Why had the man shown
himself in that character, lived it again? He need only have discarded
it utterly, never returned to it, and as far as "Shiftel" was concerned
he could have laughed at the police until the day he died.

What was it? What was at the back of that crafty brain whose evil genius
had prompted this move? No little thing! Had the Tocsin's note that he,
Jimmie Dale, had found amongst the mail Jason had handed him when he had
appeared at home for his lunch yesterday, any bearing on the Phantom's
motive? He did not think so; rather, out of the ruck of explanations
that had suggested themselves, and which were for the most part
hopelessly untenable, there had finally come one that he was almost
ready to accept.

Smarlinghue's lips twisted in a grin--apparently one inspired by Spud
MacGuire as the man scooped a pot on a bare-faced bluff. Well, why not?
Even if it was a back-handed compliment to himself! The Phantom was shy
of funds. Time after time of late he, Jimmie Dale, as the Gray Seal, had
forestalled the other, and snatched away the fruits of the man's
criminal schemes. Where, in the past few weeks, the Phantom had counted
upon thousands, many of them, and had even spent lavishly to pave the
way to the expected profits, he had received instead not a single penny.
The Phantom, therefore, unless he possessed the reserve wealth of a
Croesus, was certainly shy of funds. Yes, that was it. It _must_ be it.
And as almost irrefutable evidence of this was the fact that the
Phantom, as Shiftel, was said to be in communication again with some of
those who composed that carefully selected circle of crooks who had been
tried and successful business associates in the past; and that was why,
too, it was as _Shiftel_, and not as Limpy Mack, not as Gentleman
Laroque, or any one of his other aliases, that the Phantom had ventured,
cautiously it was true, but nevertheless had ventured out into the
underworld again.

The Tocsin's note! It came uppermost into his mind now. It was the first
sign of existence she had given since that night at old Miser Scroff's.

His lips were still twisted in a smile, but there was something cold,
forbidding, far removed from smiles, that seemed suddenly now to weigh
upon his spirits. She had written; but it had only been to accentuate,
as it were, her decision, what she had said that night when he had been
so sure of taking his place again beside her. Alone! That was it--alone!
It was her love, of course, her great unselfish love, that prompted her
to try to keep him out of the "shadows," out of _her_ dangers. The note
reiterated it; he knew it word for word:

     "Dear Philanthropic Crook:--I see that you are incorrigible. If I
     thought that it would do any good I would implore you again--oh,
     Jimmie, I _do_ implore you to leave all this to me, and to go back
     at once to your own life. I am half mad with fear for you. There is
     something, some trap being laid, and I cannot find out what it is.
     I only know that the Phantom has become suspicious that behind the
     Gray Seal's repeated blows there is more than a mere desire to reap
     where the Phantom has sown. I only know that the Phantom is
     convinced that he himself is the Gray Seal's one and only object;
     and, in turn, the Phantom means to move heaven and earth now to get
     the Gray Seal--first. Oh, I know you won't do as I ask you! I know
     you too well. I know that, if anything, this hint of danger will
     perhaps even urge you on. But I had to write. I had to warn you
     because I am afraid, and because I know that in some way, with all
     his hideous cunning behind it, the Phantom is laying a trap for you
     that----"

Bunty Myers swung around in his chair, and made a grimace at the
hypodermic syringe with whose needle Jimmie Dale was now pricking the
skin of his forearm.

"Say, can dat, Smarly!" he complained. "Youse give me nerves. Youse've
been monkeyin' wid dat squirt gun for de last half hour. If it won't
work, for Gawd's sake go down to de Chink's, or somewhere else, and hit
a pipe."

The door opened.

Mechanically Jimmie Dale restored the hypodermic to his pocket. He was
staring at the doorway. It was not the sudden appearance of that
hag-like, black-shawled figure that set his brains at work in swift,
lightning flashes, and brought every faculty he possessed into play to
preserve the indifference, even apathy, that became the supposedly
drug-dulled Smarlinghue, for Mother Margot, he knew, was a frequent
visitor here. It was not Mother Margot who caused his pulse to stir now;
it was the man who had stepped into the room behind her--Little Sweeney.

It seemed somehow to dovetail and fit most curiously into his thoughts
of Shiftel of a few moments gone. His hand, inside his pocket, as it
released the hypodermic closed instead upon his automatic. He kept
staring at the door--behind Little Sweeney. Was there still _some one_
else? The last time these two had been together there had been another
with them. That night at Mrs. Kinsey's, when they had tried to rob the
old deaf woman of her savings! There had been another with them
then--Limpy Mack. But Limpy Mack was also Shiftel, also Gentleman
Laroque; in a word, the Phantom. Was Shiftel, or the Phantom in whatever
guise he chose to assume, there behind these two to-night? Little
Sweeney had not been heard of or seen since that night. This was Little
Sweeney's first appearance, and----

The door closed.

Little Sweeney, with a nod that embraced everybody, leaned nonchalantly
back against the door and lighted a cigarette. Mother Margot stared
around the room, and then her eyes fixed on Jimmie Dale. He saw her
glance swiftly then, interrogatively, at Bunty Myers.

Bunty Myers waved his hand.

"Smarly, meet Mother Margot," he said off-handedly. "Mabbe youse knows
Little Sweeney."

Meet Mother Margot! There was something exquisitely ironical in this,
wasn't there? If Mother Margot but knew how many times and under what
circumstances they had met before!

Mother Margot loosened her shawl, and slumped down in a chair.

"Everybody knows Smarlinghue," she grunted.

"Sure," said Little Sweeney from the door.

"Glad to meet you both," said Smarlinghue cordially.

There was silence for a moment. Mother Margot folded her hands patiently
in her lap. The silence, prolonged, grew embarrassed. Bunty Myers broke
it.

"Beat it!" he suggested uncompromisingly to Jimmie Dale.

Jimmie Dale, as Smarlinghue, vacant eyed as he looked around the room,
rose from his chair. It was a little awkward--a little awkward to carry
it off as though it were quite a matter of course. He grinned around the
circle.

"See you all again," said Smarlinghue pleasantly.

Little Sweeney opened the door.

"Damned thick in here, this smoke," said Little Sweeney, as Smarlinghue
shuffled through. "I'll leave it open till the room clears out a bit.
'Night, Smarly!"

"Good-night!" said Jimmie Dale still pleasantly; but out in the hall,
and as he turned and went down the stairs, his lips tightened into a
straight line.

Little Sweeney was no fool! The fire escape, just within reach, just
outside the window of the room where the broken pane mended with
cardboard had once before supplied him, Jimmie Dale, with a vantage
point from which he could both see and hear all that went on within, was
barred to him now by the open door; also the open door, with Little
Sweeney standing there, offered no alternative to a prompt and
unhesitating exit via the stairs from even the building itself!

Jimmie Dale's lips drew still tighter together as he went on down the
stairs. In spite of Smarlinghue's high station in the underworld, he had
been treated with scant ceremony! But it was not the hurt of pride in
that, as one of the lite of gangland, the honour and deference that was
his due had been withheld from him, that brought the grim, set
expression to his face now; it was the consciousness of defeat where he
had foreseen victory. He had counted too much on the intimacy that he
had first cultivated and then believed he had established with Bunty
Myers and his fellow gangsters. He had believed and hoped that he was
not far from being upon the verge of initiation into their unholy fold,
of being invited, in plain words, to become one of them.

He shrugged his shoulders as he stepped out on the street. Well, he had
lost on that score for the time being, at least. He was wrong, that was
all. But he had burned no bridges behind him. To-morrow night
Smarlinghue could still go back there, and be welcome. And as for
to-night--well, he was not yet through with to-night! There was
something undoubtedly afoot again. What was it? He crossed to the other
side of the street, and just opposite the side door of Wally Kerrigan's
"club," where he could watch that door unseen, he slipped, unnoticed,
into the shadows of a high flight of dwelling house steps.

What was it? He could not, as Smarlinghue, accost Mother Margot when she
came out; and by the time he had gone to the Sanctuary and become the
man in the evening clothes that she knew as the Gray Seal, she would as
likely as not have left Kerrigan's and have disappeared. Queer! Somehow,
he was not interested in _what_ was afoot to-night in so far as its
specific nature was an essential feature. He was more interested in this
sudden appearance of Little Sweeney in conjunction with the fact that
Shiftel, too, had broken cover. It was the Phantom that interested
him--and Shiftel was the Phantom. Was there any connection between this
return of both Little Sweeney and Isaac Shiftel to activity? He meant to
see! The two had been very closely allied that night at Mrs. Kinsey's,
and particularly later on that same night in Limpy Mack's hang-out under
Sen Yat's "tea shop."

And so, somehow--he smiled grimly--he was more concerned with Little
Sweeney than with Mother Margot to-night. Little Sweeney _might_ lead
him to Shiftel; Mother Margot he had already tried too often to have any
hopeful expectations raised on that score. To reach the Phantom, in the
guise of Shiftel, or any other, was the one thing in life that he
sought; to meet the man once again face to face was why he was here now,
why night after night, and day after day, he still risked his life
playing this precarious rle of Smarlinghue in the underworld. Even a
_chance_ was worth while. It was rather curious that Little Sweeney and
Shiftel, both of whom had dropped completely out of sight for so long a
time, should both now have made their appearance again! And so, at the
present moment, he was exceedingly interested in Little Sweeney!

Jimmie Dale crouched there in the shadows. Pedestrians passed up and
down. Perhaps a quarter of an hour went by. Then the side door of
Kerrigan's opened, and a shawled figure stepped out and scurried away.
Mother Margot! And then presently the door opened again, and Little
Sweeney and Bunty Myers came out together.

Jimmie Dale slipped out on the street, and, on the opposite side,
followed the two men as they went down the block. At the corner they
separated, and Jimmie Dale took up Little Sweeney's trail.

Block after block the man traversed. Jimmie Dale, hugging the shadows of
the buildings, kept a position as nearly opposite the man across the
street as he dared, wary always of a corner around which the man might
turn, and, with too great a distance separating them, disappear into
some place--should that be his objective--before he, Jimmie Dale, could
round the corner and pick up the trail again.

Little Sweeney walked fast, obviously unconscious of pursuit, and
obviously with some set and fixed destination in view. The chase headed
down toward the water front. The quarter now was one of small stores and
dwellings, dark for the most part, save for the saloons. Jimmie Dale's
face set grimly. It was not an over-inviting neighbourhood.

And then suddenly Little Sweeney swung around a corner.

Jimmie Dale quickened his step, and reached the corner himself in time
to see the other, after skirting a fence that enclosed either a vacant
lot or a store yard of some sort, turn abruptly at the end of the fence
and disappear. In an instant, Jimmie Dale, silent in his movements,
though he was running now, crossed the street, and in turn was skirting
the fence. There was a lane beyond, of course--that was it! Little
Sweeney had not entered any house; he had just turned around the far
corner of the fence, and--Jimmie Dale stood suddenly stock still. Out
from the corner of the fence, flooding the sidewalk, came streaming a
powerful ray of light.

And then Little Sweeney's voice, rasping:

"Of course, it's me! Shut off them damned lights!"

The light disappeared as quickly as it had come. Footsteps crunched
faintly in the lane, receding. Jimmie Dale edged quickly forward to the
corner of the fence, and peered cautiously around it.

It was quite clear now; there was nothing mysterious about the light
that had flung its beams across the sidewalk; it was even commonplace.
From a rickety-looking metal garage, which was perhaps twenty-five yards
back from the street and in which there stood an automobile, some one
had sent the headlights playing along the lane.

For a moment Jimmie Dale stood there watching. There was a single
incandescent light burning in the garage which illuminated the place
dimly, and, aside from Little Sweeney who was just stepping inside, he
could make out the forms of two men standing beside the car. He dared
not enter the lane, of course. It would be the act of a fool! A chance
sound, those headlights switched upon him, and----

The slouching, bent, almost decrepit figure of Smarlinghue drew back;
and the next instant, after a swift glance around him to make sure that
he was unobserved, with a spring, lithe and agile as a cat, he swung
himself over the fence from the sidewalk, and dropped without a sound to
the yard on the other side. He began to move noiselessly along the
section of the fence which flanked the lane. It ran straight to the edge
of the garage, he had observed from the street, and--yes, it ended
there! He was in luck! He was crouched now against the wall of the
garage itself, which obviously, though it was too dark to see, served to
complete the enclosure, in lieu of fence, at this corner of the yard.

He could hear them talking now as plainly as though he were inside, for
he was separated from them only by the thin metal sheeting of the
garage; and, furthermore, just above his head, shoulder high, where a
faint light seeped out, the window was open.

"This is a sweet, juicy place for a meeting!" Little Sweeney's voice
grumbled.

"Wot's de matter wid it?" another voice demanded, with a hint of
truculency. "It's as good as anywhere else, I guess, an' a blamed sight
better'n most. I told youse I had to make a trip first with some swag
for a friend of mine."

"Oh, all right, Goldie!" said Little Sweeney placatingly. "All right! I
know you did. Forget it!"

Jimmie Dale raised himself cautiously, and, back at an angle from the
window sash that precluded the possibility of being seen, looked inside.
His lips tightened suddenly. The other two were no strangers, either to
any one in the underworld or to the police. Goldie Kline and the Weasel!
Goldie Kline was one of the cleverest box-workers in the business; the
Weasel, a shrivelled little runt, was without a peer as a second-story
man.

It was the Weasel now who spoke.

"Me," he said, "I tell youse straight I wouldn't touch dem stones on a
bet if any one but old Shiftel was goin' to fence 'em, 'cause dere ain't
no one else could get away wid 'em. De Melville-Dane emerald necklace!
Swipe me! Dere ain't a stone in de bunch dat ain't known all over de
lot, an' it'll take _some_ shovin', even by Shiftel, to cash in on 'em.
De lady wid de name parted in de middle'll be----"

"Close your face!" said Little Sweeney politely. "You've seen Shiftel,
haven't you, and he's settled that to your satisfaction? All you fellows
have to do is get the stones to-night, and leave the rest to him."

"Sure!" said the Weasel blithely. "I ain't kickin'! I'm only sayin' dat
I wouldn't go in on de deal wid nobody else but Shiftel. Well, spill de
rest of it! We're to slip him de stones as soon as we pinches 'em. Dat's
understood. An' youse have come down here to tell us where he's layin'
low to-night, an' where we're goin' to find him; so let's have it."

Jimmie Dale leaned forward a little in strained attention. Shiftel! The
one man he would risk, that he _had_ risked, limb and life and liberty
to reach! He had made no mistake in following Little Sweeney!

And then a blank look, that changed swiftly to one of bitter dismay,
settled on Jimmie Dale's face. The roar of the engine starting up had
suddenly drowned out all other sound. No--it was subsiding a little now.
He caught Goldie Kline's voice:

"Aw, we can talk in de car. I gotta get dat job I was tellin' youse
about done before ten o'clock. Dat's de only t'ing dere's any hurry
about. De necklace job don't come off till de early mornin' when de
dame's gone bye-bye. Jump in, Sweeney; we'll drop youse anywhere youse
like."

They were gone--the car, Little Sweeney, the Weasel, Goldie Kline!
Jimmie Dale stood there alone in the blackness of the yard. He could not
follow them. They were gone. It had seemed that success at last had been
actually within his grasp. It numbed him now somehow that it had been so
swiftly and unexpectedly snatched away. He had little or no chance of
finding Little Sweeney again to-night; he _might_, with luck, pick up
the trail of Goldie Kline or the Weasel somewhere in the underworld,
but--He had turned away from the garage, making his way back toward the
street, and now he halted abruptly, staring into the darkness.

Had he lost his wits? What was this that his subconscious mind had kept
whispering over and over to him as the key-note of everything from the
moment the name had been mentioned? Melville-Dane! Melville-Dane! That
was in his _own_ world, wasn't it? They were his own friends. Strange!
Curious! Yes, he remembered now. Soon after he had ventured home again
following his "absence" from the city, due to that night at Pedler
Joe's, he had found an invitation to some affair, a reception, if he
were not mistaken, at the Melville-Danes' for to-night. He had sent his
regrets, it was true; but he was on too intimate a footing with them to
have that make any difference.

And now Jimmie Dale moved on again, reached the fence, and gained the
sidewalk on the other side. He was also well acquainted with that
emerald necklace--a priceless thing that seldom left the shelter of its
safe deposit vault. Mrs. Melville-Dane was evidently wearing it to-night
at the reception!

He started on along the street. A word of warning, then, to the
Melville-Danes--or the police? He shook his head. By the time Goldie
Kline and the Weasel attempted the proposed robbery in the Melville-Dane
home, they would be in possession of something far more valuable to him,
Jimmie Dale, than all the emeralds in existence--_they would know where
Shiftel could be found to-night_.

"And I think," said Jimmie Dale softly to himself, as he quickened his
pace, "I think, Smarlinghue, that we'll leave you at the Sanctuary for
the rest of the night!"




--XIII--

THE LESSER BREED


From somewhere in the darkness there came a faint musical purr as of
metal whirring swiftly upon metal. It stopped; began again; and stopped
again. Then utter silence reigned; then there came a low, deep-breathed
exclamation, and simultaneously the ray of a flashlight cut through the
black, flooded the interior of a small safe, and reflected back upon a
masked figure in evening dress.

"One of the X--38 type," murmured Jimmie Dale to himself; "and, as per
catalogue, especially adapted for private residences. Tough little nuts
to crack! I haven't seen one since the old days at the plant when dad
used to turn them out by the gross!"

He reached inside the safe, lifted out a morocco-leather jewel case, and
opened it. For an instant he held it under the light, staring at a
magnificent emerald necklace of flawless, matched stones. The Weasel had
been quite right! Stones such as these must have been garnered and
selected from the markets of more than one continent. They would be,
through the usual underworld channels, extremely hard to "fence"; for a
small and ordinary emerald was not of any great value, and to "cut" one
of these and so disguise it, would instantly rob it of the great part of
its worth. It was certainly a job for Shiftel! It quite accounted for
Shiftel's reappearance!

Jimmie Dale laid the jewel case, still open, on the top of the safe, and
from the leather girdle hidden beneath his vest drew out the thin metal
box that was stocked with its little gray, adhesive, diamond-shaped
seals. He moistened one of these, lifting it with the tweezers, and
stuck it on the inside of the jewel case; then he replaced the metal
box in his girdle, and slipped the morocco-leather jewel case into his
pocket.

And now the light bored into the safe again. There was nothing else
there of value from a thief's standpoint. It contained what were
evidently some of Mr. Melville-Dane's private papers; it had only been a
temporary refuge for the emerald necklace, in lieu of the safe deposit
vault from which it had been removed to grace the evening's reception.
Satisfied on this point, Jimmie Dale closed and locked the safe again.

He drew back now across the room, and, smiling curiously, arranged two
low-backed chairs side by side before the library table. Then his
flashlight played for a moment on the wall, locating precisely the
electric-light switch just beside a little alcove that was hung with
heavy portires; and then the room was in darkness, and Jimmie Dale sat
stretched at ease in a lounging chair in the alcove behind the hangings.

His lips twitched grimly now. It was quite a transition from Smarlinghue
and the back room of Wally Kerrigan's "club!" It was somewhat different,
too, in another way. At Wally Kerrigan's, night after night, he had
waited and watched for something, anything, that would open the road to
the goal he had set himself--the Phantom; to-night he waited and watched
here, quite sure in his own mind as to the exact nature of what would
happen, and with no misgivings any longer but that his goal was in
sight! In an hour, two hours, at any rate some time before dawn, he
would have run Shiftel, alias the Phantom, to earth. It was the end in
sight at last; life, happiness, for the Tocsin and himself.

It was very dark, very still in the library of the Melville-Dane mansion
here. Again the twisted smile crossed his lips. Here too was quite a
transition from the brilliant assembly of but an hour before when he had
been one of the guests at a social function that had been, from a
society point of view, one of the events of the season. His smile became
a little whimsical. Mrs. Melville-Dane had been superb in that emerald
necklace. He had paid her almost marked attention throughout the entire
evening! Not once had she been out of his sight, even up to the time
when she had taken off the necklace and had handed it to her husband to
be placed in the safe here in the library. It had been quite simple. He
had bidden his host and hostess good-night--and in the confusion of the
departing guests, instead of departing himself, had secreted himself in
the house.

He shrugged his shoulders. His attentions had been quite wholly
unnecessary perhaps. He had not expected the Weasel and Goldie Kline to
make any attempt upon the necklace until, say--_now_. It was highly
improbable that they would have attempted to stage anything with the
house full of people; and yet, if the Phantom's brain was behind the
scheme, such an attempt had always remained a possibility. And since he,
Jimmie Dale, for his own ends, to pick up the final clue that would
bring him face to face with the Phantom, had elected to give no warning
either to the Melville-Danes or to the police, then, of necessity, the
moral responsibility for the safety of the necklace was his alone--and
so he had taken no chances.

The minutes, the quarter hours dragged by. A clock struck through the
silence with a clashing, resonant sound. That would be half past two. It
was time now surely for the Weasel and Goldie Kline, for they had
already allowed ample leeway for the household to retire and settle down
for the night.

He stared into the dark. His brain seemed strangely, abnormally active
to-night. It was due, wasn't it, to a sort of exhilaration, an uplift,
that was upon him? The promise of the end! The Tocsin might be quite
right, and probably was, in her belief that the Phantom was planning a
trap for him, Jimmie Dale, for the Gray Seal. But her fears now were
groundless. It was a plot that, however cunning, however clever it might
be, would never come to maturity. It would not be the Phantom now who
struck the _first_ blow. After to-night she need never fear the Phantom
again.

A faint sound, the sound of a cautious, guarded footstep, caught his
ear. He stood up silently, his automatic in his hand. The door at the
far end of the library creaked slightly; and then, through the parting
of the hangings in front of him, Jimmie Dale saw the white gleam of an
electric torch flash around the room.

Low whisperings reached him now. He parted the hangings another half
inch. The flashlight was playing on the safe; two dark forms were moving
quickly toward it; and now one of the two knelt before the safe and
began to manipulate the dial, while the other held the light over the
kneeling man's shoulder.

Jimmie Dale stepped noiselessly from behind the portires. His hand
reached upward, there was a faint _click_ as his fingers closed on the
electric-light switch, and the room was ablaze with light. A smothered
oath came from the kneeling man as he sprang to his feet; the other,
startled, dropped his electric torch to the floor. And then silence, an
absence of all movement, save that, in obedience to an eloquent gesture
from the muzzle of Jimmie Dale's automatic into which they stared, the
two men slowly raised their hands above their heads.

"Hello, Goldie! Hello, Weasel!" said Jimmie Dale softly from behind his
mask. "I was almost beginning to think you weren't coming." He waved his
hand toward the two chairs by the table. "I've been waiting for you, you
see. Sit down, won't you?"

The Weasel, licking at his lips, his shrivelled little face working,
swore under his breath.

"Who--who are youse?" he demanded shakily.

"We'll talk about that presently, Weasel," Jimmie Dale answered coolly.
"In the meantime"--his voice hardened suddenly, rasping, cold--"go over
there and sit down!"

Truculently, hesitatingly, their hands still above their heads, the two
men moved forward and sat down in the chairs.

"Now"--Jimmie Dale was biting off his words, as he stepped swiftly
behind them--"one at a time. You first, Goldie. Put your hands around
the back of the chair, palms together." And then as the man obeyed,
Jimmie Dale thrust his left hand into the tail pocket of his evening
coat, produced a small coil of stout cord, and shook it out to its full
length. It had two loops near the centre in the form of slip knots. He
slipped one of the loops over Goldie Kline's wrists, and tightened it.
"Now you, Weasel!"

The other loop closed upon the Weasel's wrists. A moment more, and the
respective ends of the cord were lashed to the respective chairs, and
Jimmie Dale stepped around to the other side of the table to face the
two men.

He smiled at them for a moment speculatively.

Goldie Kline burst suddenly into a torrent of blasphemy.

Jimmie Dale's smile became plaintive.

"That's rather foolish of you, Goldie," he said. "You are making quite a
little noise, and from your standpoint I should say that was the one
thing to avoid."

The Weasel squirmed in his chair.

"Who are youse?" he demanded hoarsely again. "Wot's de lay? Youse're no
dick wid dat mask on yer map."

"You are quite right," said Jimmie Dale calmly. "As a matter of fact, I
am afraid I am in the same category as yourselves to-night. Shall we
say--fellow thieves? The only difference being that I have got what I
came for, and you haven't."

The Weasel's rat-like little eyes narrowed. He leaned forward.

"Wot do youse mean?" he snarled.

Jimmie Dale took the morocco-leather jewel case from his pocket, opened
it, and laid it down on the table in front of the two men.

"This!" he said tersely.

The men bent forward, staring. It was a minute before either spoke.
Goldie Kline raised his eyes and cast a furtive, fear-startled glance at
Jimmie Dale. The Weasel licked his lips again.

"My Gawd!" whispered the Weasel thickly. "It's de Gray Seal!"

Jimmie Dale made no answer.

It was Goldie Kline who spoke now. The man seemed to have pulled himself
together, and in his tones was a sort of blustering bravado.

"So youse're de Gray Seal, are youse? Well, den, I don't get youse!
Youse've beat us to it an' pinched de goods, damn youse! I can see dat!
But wot's de big idea in hangin' around after youse've got de swag, an'
stickin' up de Weasel an' me?"

Jimmie Dale closed the jewel case, and returned it to his pocket.

"That's a fair question, Goldie," he said pleasantly; "and I'll answer
it. It's no cinch to shove that necklace. There's only one man who would
have much chance--and that's old Isaac Shiftel." He smiled at them
engagingly. "I'm sure you'll agree with me, because--the source of my
information is really of no consequence at the moment--I happen to know
that it was mainly, if not wholly, because Shiftel agreed to dispose of
the stones that you figured the job of getting them would pay. Well, I
am in exactly the same position." Jimmie Dale's smile broadened a
little. "Without Shiftel the stones wouldn't pay me. I think this
answers your question. I have the necklace, and you haven't; but you
know where Shiftel, who seems to be extremely difficult of late to
locate, can be found to-night, and I don't. And so I waited for you,
because I was sure you would be kind enough to give me his address."

Goldie Kline's jaw had dropped. He shut it now with a snap.

"Well, by Gawd!" he burst out furiously. "Can youse beat dat! Say,
youse've got yer nerve! Youse grabs de stuff from under our noses, an'
den youse has de gall to ask us to wise youse up so's youse can get rid
of it! Say, we'll see youse in hell first, won't we, Weasel?"

"Youse have said somethin', Goldie!" agreed the Weasel earnestly. "We
sure will!"

"I'm so sorry," said Jimmie Dale patiently. "I really thought you would
help me out. In fact, I actually counted on it."

"Youse don't say!" The Weasel was quite at his ease now, sneering
broadly.

And then Jimmie Dale leaned suddenly across the table. All trace of
facetiousness was gone from both voice and manner now. He drew his watch
from his pocket.

"Listen, you two--and listen _hard!_" he said evenly. "I'm going to give
you two minutes to come across. It might be compounding a felony to let
you get away from here, but you didn't steal anything--though that's not
your fault--and I'm thinking of the long terms you would get, even for
'breaking and entering,' with your records behind you. Am I making
myself clear? A little noise down here will bring the family and
servants about your ears in short order--while I go out the way you came
in. If they find you here, even trussed up as you are, I imagine you
will find it rather difficult to explain to the police how you came to
visit Mr. Melville-Dane at half past two o'clock in the morning. On the
other hand, an earnest half-hour's work--the time I should like to feel
I was guaranteed against any interference on your part--will free you
from that cord, and once free you can walk out of here. I still hope I
am making myself clear." He glanced at his watch. "One minute has
already gone. Where were you to meet Shiftel?"

A whitish tinge had crept into Goldie Kline's face.

"Damn youse!" he whispered fervently.

The Weasel squirmed again in his chair. He looked at Goldie Kline.

"I ain't for goin' up for nothin'!" There was a sudden nerveless whine
in his voice. "He's got de goods anyhow. We ain't goin' to _lose_
nothin' by tellin'. Wot--wot d'youse say, Goldie?"

Goldie Kline gnawed at his lips.

"All right," he muttered after a moment. "Spill it. I guess dere ain't
nothing else to do."

"Just a minute," said Jimmie Dale coolly. He replaced his watch in his
pocket. "It would be unfortunate if there were a _mistake_ in the
address. I am sure your memories are good enough to recall certain
instances in the underworld that will reassure on the point that the
Gray Seal always pays his _debts_. I mention this simply in passing. And
now--where is Shiftel waiting for you?"

It was the Weasel who answered.

"He's in de room off de back yard, down at Morley's dope joint," he said
sullenly.

"Thank you!" said Jimmie Dale grimly. "I know where that is." He moved
away from the table and toward the door. Here he paused for a moment.
The two men were already tugging and struggling with their bonds. "I
forgot to say," he said quietly, "that there is nothing of any value
left in the safe! Good-night!"

And then Jimmie Dale was gone.




--XIV--

THE CAT'S-PAW


Five minutes later, Jimmie Dale climbed into the light runabout that,
prior to the reception, he had unobtrusively parked in an alleyway a
block from the Melville-Dane residence. He replaced his silk hat with a
peaked cap which he drew out from under the seat--and the car shot
forward into the street.

He drove fast now. He had no thought of speed laws. Shiftel--the
Phantom--the end in sight! He had no thought for anything but that; he
asked for nothing more than just this, which was at last to be granted
him, of playing out the final hand with this inhuman fiend to whom
murder was a trade, and crime of the basest sort a pastime. There was
room now for only one of them--the Phantom or himself--in this world.
The debt that lay between them was too abysmal to be plumbed or spanned
in any other way.

And yet the man should have his chance; a chance to fight for his life.
He was not entitled to it; he, the Phantom, under the same conditions
would have struck as quickly and murderously as he could. In fact, if
the Tocsin was right, as no doubt she was, the Phantom even now was
preparing a trap which, to-morrow, the next day, or the day after, was
intended to be sprung in the hope of snaring him, Jimmie Dale, the Gray
Seal; and that trap once sprung successfully he, Jimmie Dale, would go
out with no more chance for life than the flame of a candle flung to the
storm! But there would be no to-morrow, or the next day, or the day
after, for the Phantom and his trap; to-night, now, within the next few
minutes, there would be no longer need for the Phantom to cudgel his
brain for tricks and devices to lure the Gray Seal into his web!

The streets were deserted. A strange, queer silence seemed to reign over
the city. Somehow it seemed sinister, premonitive--aptly so. Still
Jimmie Dale drove fast. And then finally, far over on the East Side,
deep in a neighbourhood as vicious and abandoned as New York had to
offer, he parked his car again in a lane, sprang out, and started at a
brisk walk along the block.

There was a grim, set look on his face now, as his hand, slipping into
his pocket for his automatic, encountered the morocco-leather jewel
case. Shiftel was waiting for the necklace! Well, Shiftel should have
it--for a moment. But, at that, its safety was nowhere nearly so greatly
imperilled as if it had been left as a temptation for Goldie Kline and
the Weasel! To-morrow, in some way, it would be back in the
Melville-Danes' possession again.

Jimmie Dale swerved sharply into a cross street, and from there into an
alleyway. His pace slackened, became guarded, cautious. He knew Morley's
opium den by more than hearsay. As Smarlinghue, he had been a supposed
client more than once. Yes, here it was--the back of it, anyway, over
this fence here, and across the yard. Well, it was the back of it he
sought, wasn't it? That was what the Weasel had said--the room off the
back yard.

He drew himself up to the top of the fence, dropped silently to the
other side, and suddenly his pulse beat fast. Across the yard was an
open, lighted window, almost on a level with the ground. Unbridled now,
almost overwhelming, that sense of exhilaration was upon him again. The
end of the chase! What did it not mean--for the Tocsin--for himself!

Jimmie Dale moved forward quietly, noiselessly--ten yards--another ten.
He was not far from the window now, not more than another five yards.
And now he could see inside. Shiftel! And now he knew another
emotion--something cold, merciless, primitive in its naked thirst for
retribution. The Weasel had made no "mistake!" Shiftel was there! He
could see the bent form in its greasy black coat; he could see the
bearded face of the old "fence" bending over a table, as he had seen it
once before on a night when he had thought he had run the man to earth
in the rooms old Mother Margot lived in now.

A yard more! Yes, the window was not more than a couple of feet above
the ground. His automatic was in his hand now, his face masked again.
Another yard--and then Jimmie Dale whirled sharply around, his face
drawn suddenly in hard, tense lines. Out of the darkness, out of the
nowhere, came a voice, ugly in its menace, a voice he recognised--Bunty
Myers':

"There he is! Get him! The Gray Seal!"

Out of the darkness, out of the nowhere, a circle of flying shadows
seemed to arise and converge upon him.

_The trap!_

Like lightning his brain worked; like lightning he moved now. The trap!
In a flash, out of a strange bewilderment, he grasped the fact that
somehow the trap of which the Tocsin had so earnestly warned him, the
trap that he had so self-confidently thought he would nip in the making,
was even now being sprung upon him; that his own confident plan of
reaching Shiftel was in fact the very trap that had been laid for him.

The trap! And the jaws of it were that open window! And there was no
other way to turn. Those on-rushing shadows, that were snarling, cursing
men now, were almost upon him, blocking his retreat.

Retreat! He had no mind to retreat. It would be the end without a doubt
to-night now; he had at least been right in that. But it would not be
his end alone. Inside there, in through the jaws of the trap--was
Shiftel!

The brain works fast. In the winking of an eye Jimmie Dale had leaped
forward, and had sprung for the window sill. It was intuition perhaps
that prompted him. The figure at the table, at a slight angle away from
the direct line of the window, had risen, revolver levelled. Jimmie Dale
plunged forward, as a man plunges in a long, low dive, over the sill and
to the floor. And as he plunged, like a machine gun in action behind
him, came the roar and flash of what seemed a myriad revolver shots.

It happened quick--quicker almost than the brain could grasp. The
bearded, greasy old figure, intent evidently upon his victim alone, had
overstepped the zone of safety, stepped a little forward into the line
of the window; and now, with a wild cry, with suddenly upflung arms, as
the hail of lead swept in, had pitched face forward to the floor.

And something in Jimmie Dale's soul, amidst the turmoil that was raging
physically about him, gave quiet, fervent thanks. Not for a man's
death--but that the burden and guilt, if it should be termed guilt to
destroy such a one as this, one that, to save the life of the woman he
loved, he _must_ have destroyed if he could before his own end came, had
been lifted from his shoulders. Shiftel was dead!

Jimmie Dale had wriggled around on the floor. He was facing the window
now, firing in turn with his automatic. The low sill afforded a measure
of protection. He fired from the floor over it. Shouts, yells, curses
answered him; but the rush was checked, though the shots still poured in
from without.

And now pandemonium seemed loosed! He glanced around him quickly. The
door of the room was locked. That was obvious because they were pounding
upon it now, trying to burst it in; and it had been locked, quite
obviously and quite logically, in preparation for his entry into the
trap, and against the possibility of any escape through what was the
only means of exit he could see--except the window with its hail of
bullets!

It was the end! He slipped a fresh clip of cartridges into his
automatic. But now he fired with more restraint. True, it was the end,
but he must be careful of his ammunition now; he would need it even more
when that door gave!

It was an even break. Himself for Shiftel! It was worth it; it had been
worth it--for her sake. Shiftel, the Phantom, was----

Was he mad? Had this scene from the pit of the inferno, that bursting
door, these shots that hummed with hell's venom above his head, this
smoke-filled, acrid-stinking room, turned his brain? Shiftel! That was
not Shiftel there! Nor Gentleman Laroque! He was staring now for the
first time at the still, motionless figure on the floor. The beard on
the upturned face hung awry. He reached for it, and snatched it off. A
thousand noises, a thousand sounds pounded at his eardrums and made
mockery of the crashing blows upon the door, the vicious _spat_ of
bullets, the hideous yowling of those human wolves who had the Gray Seal
trapped at last. This man on the floor here dead was not Shiftel, nor
the Phantom in the guise of Shiftel, nor the Phantom in any other guise.
_It was Little Sweeney!_

The door was yielding now. And somehow--he did not understand why or how
for his brain seemed stunned--the noise and the shouts without seemed to
increase in intensity. He wriggled back a little way across the room
where he could best command both window and door. He had still one clip
of cartridges left. He had only one hope now--that he could use them to
the last one. In another minute the door would give, and----

"_Jimmie!_"

Yes, he was mad! Reason at the last had fled from him. That was her
voice, the Tocsin's voice. As those shadows outside the window had
suddenly closed in upon him out of the nowhere, so this voice, the voice
he loved, came suddenly to him now out of the nowhere.

_"Jimmie!"_

His eyes strained over in the direction of the desk. He could see
nothing. There was nothing there, unless--yes, yes, the floor seemed to
have risen up a few inches above the surrounding level. A trap door!

"You!" he cried.

"Yes! Quick! Quick, Jimmie, quick!" her voice answered from below.

He flung himself forward, and wrenched the trap door wide open. It was
pitch black below; he could see nothing.

"Drop, Jimmie; it's only a few feet," she called up to him. "Bolt the
trap door behind you. And, oh, hurry, Jimmie, hurry!"

He swung himself through the opening, and dropped; then reached upward
behind him and closed the trap door. His fingers searched for the bolt,
found it, and shot it home. He could not stand upright; he had to stoop,
the opening was so low. And it was so dark he could not see his hand
before his face.

"Where are you?" he cried out. "Marie, thank God for you! Marie, where
are you?"

"Here," her voice replied. "Follow me; come this way."

"I can't see you--I can't see anything," he said; then quickly: "Wait!
I've got a flashlight."

"No!" Her voice came back instantly. "You mustn't show a light here
under any circumstances. Keep your head down, and feel your way. You can
touch the walls on each side of you."

"All right!" he answered.

He could hear her moving ahead of him. Half bent over, he followed. Soft
earth was under foot. It was a low, narrow tunnel of some sort, that was
evident. An underground passage, of course. Morley's drug-den was well
equipped!

His brain was in chaos. Shiftel, Bunty Myers, the emerald necklace,
Little Sweeney! And the Tocsin here!

"Marie, I don't understand!" he burst out.

"It was the trap I warned you about," she answered back.

"Yes; I know that now," he said. "But Shiftel! That wasn't Shiftel up
there. It was Little Sweeney."

"He was the cat's-paw," she said.

He stumbled on. Where did this passage lead to? Was there no end to it?

"Hold on a minute, Marie! Stop!" he pleaded suddenly. "You----"

"There is no time; there is not an instant to lose," she broke in
swiftly "I--I--but never mind that. I can tell you in a few words what
you do not understand as we go on. Are you listening, Jimmie?"

Listening! Listening to _her_, to her voice!

"Yes," he said; "since you will not wait."

"Well, then," she said rapidly, "the Phantom was not fool enough to
close his eyes to what looked as though there were a leak somewhere on
the inside. The Gray Seal had put in an appearance with too great
_regularity_. He thought, too, at last, as I wrote you, that you were
after him in a personal way. Therefore he meant to strike first. And so
for to-night's work he sent out his orders and his plans through the
_usual_ channels. Is that clear?"

"Yes," said Jimmie Dale, as he groped his way along.

"If, then, there was a leak," she went on, "the plan for the night's
work would reach the Gray Seal also as usual. But though the Phantom
inclined strongly to the belief that _he_ was the one you were after,
and that the spoils of the various affairs in which you had intervened
were a secondary matter, he was still not absolutely sure of it--and
therefore, whether he was right or wrong, and while he hoped to get you
by offering what you would believe to be himself as a bait, it was not
his intention to take any chances with that emerald necklace to-night,
and--" She broke off suddenly. "I don't see how you found that out!"

Jimmie Dale brought up abruptly against a sharp turning in the tunnel.
He bit his lips in chagrin. In the utter darkness, in spite of the
cramped posture he was forced to assume, he had tried to catch up with
her, reach her.

"I followed Little Sweeney from Kerrigan's," he said. "He met Goldie
Kline and the Weasel, and I overheard enough to know what was going on
before I lost Little Sweeney again. They got away in an automobile."

"I see." Her voice floated back. "Well, that part of the plan was _not_
passed out through the usual channels. All that was given out to the
gang was that Shiftel would be here at Morley's to-night to receive some
swag; but it was not until the last minute, not until an hour ago that
the gang themselves were ordered to be on hand to get you if you came.
After that they were kept _together_ so that a leak _then_, when a leak
would no longer be a lure but a warning, was impossible. If you were
only after spoils, you would know nothing about the necklace, and so
would not get it; but if you were after _him_ you would come here, and
he would get _you_! Do you still understand, Jimmie?"

"Yes," he answered; "all but Little Sweeney's part."

"It was risky business playing the part of Shiftel--something might go
wrong," she said bitterly. "And the Phantom takes no risks--when he can
let some one else assume them! That is why he had some one play the part
of Shiftel. Little Sweeney received his orders through Limpy Mack with
whom, as you know, he had worked before, not knowing that Limpy Mack and
Shiftel and the unknown 'Chief' were one; and Little Sweeney of course
thought it was a clever way to induce two crooks to steal the jewels,
for Little Sweeney was made to believe that Shiftel had left the country
for good. Limpy Mack supplied the disguise, which was actually of course
the one worn by himself when he masqueraded as Shiftel."

"Good God!" gasped Jimmie Dale. "I see now!"

"Yes!" she said. "There is not much more. Little Sweeney was chosen
because he had been away during your later appearances, and was
therefore free from suspicion that any leak had come through him; and
Goldie Kline and the Weasel were chosen for the same reason--they were
wholly _outsiders_. That's all--except my share. _I_ had sent you no
word, no note. I didn't think you could possibly know anything about
to-night; and so I didn't expect you would come here, and in that
respect I thought the Phantom would fail. But I knew that Shiftel was to
be here at this hour--for I believed then that it was actually Shiftel
himself--and so I notified the police. If they got Shiftel, then that
was the end of our troubles. They--they are there now. They came just as
I reached the trap door--but"--her voice seemed to dull a little--"they
haven't got the Phantom."

Jimmie Dale made no answer. His lips were tight and grimly set. The
Phantom was still alive, still at liberty, still free to carry on his
fiendish machinations! But--Jimmie Dale's face relaxed a little the next
instant--it was not all utter failure and defeat. _She_ was here! The
Tocsin was here with him. And he, Jimmie Dale, was alive, where but a
few minutes before he had seen no chance of life. They were
together--Marie and himself. In a moment more now the tunnel must end,
and she----

Her voice, suddenly low and guarded, reached him.

"Wait!" she whispered. "Stay where you are. I'll see if the way is
clear."

He stood still.

A minute passed, and then she called again:

"It's all right. Come on!"

His hands still groped out before him as he moved forward again, and,
groping, discovered that the tunnel here took an abrupt right-angled
bend. And then as he turned the corner, and a cool, fresh current of air
fanned his face, he found himself on a flight of steps, and he could
straighten up and there was head room as he mounted them.

And then he was standing outside a doorway on a dark and deserted
street. He could hear the sound of shouts, of revolver shots, but the
sounds came faintly from the distance. They were safe now, quite safe,
the Tocsin and himself. He looked quickly, eagerly around him. He called
her softly.

But there was no answer--and of the Tocsin there was no sign.




--XV--

BEHIND THE DOORS OF THE UNDERWORLD


Jimmie Dale turned softly, without sound, upon the bunk, easing his
position. Around him were whisperings, murmurings, the stir of humans in
troubled sleep, a hundred conglomerate, sinister sounds; and everywhere
the sickly sweetish smell of opium.

His face was haggard, worn, drawn, in sharp, pinched lines, and there
was a dull, weary look about the eyes that no "make-up" could have
supplied, as a smile, grim, unbidden, settled now upon his lips. Was
this reality? Perhaps it was all a dream--a dream such as the poppy
brought to these dregs and lees of the underworld who stole in here,
where no daylight had ever shone, to burn their suicidal incense to the
God of Gray Things!

Reality! Could even his existence in itself be reality? Was it any more
reality than he, as Smarlinghue, as one known far and wide throughout
the underworld as a hopelessly confirmed dope fiend, represented
reality? He was not Smarlinghue. There was no such person as
Smarlinghue. And yet in that very character which he had created,
unkempt and ragged, he lay here now in one of Hip Foo's "private" rooms,
hidden deep down in the chain of sub-cellars that housed perhaps the
most infamous opium joint in all New York! He was not a dope fiend.
Neither taste nor drop of the drug had he ever known. And yet he had
burned a thousand "pills," he had toyed with a hypodermic syringe a
thousand times, and before him even now lay the pipe that the Chinese
attendant had brought him but a few moments since! Was it then reality,
or but a dream, ceaseless, unending, whose vividness was so acute that
it aped reality? Was it a dream that somewhere, always elusive, always
just beyond his reach, always just evading him, a _phantom_, evil as no
other human being was evil, cunning as only one from the fiend's pit
itself was cunning, diced with him out of the shadows for his life--and
hers, the Tocsin's?

Jimmie Dale's eyes closed. He was conscious of great fatigue; not
physical--mental. Days of striving, days of utter failure, of futility,
nights of unceasing, sleepless effort lay behind him. Reality! The
question answered itself. He had but to listen for an instant through
these thin, flimsy partitions to know that it was not only reality, but
a reality stripped of all glamour, ugly in its nakedness and its menace.
It was only his brain voicing its plea for rest, giving warning that it
was nearing the breaking point and that the lash could be applied too
often to the slave, that had prompted the groping question.

He listened now for a moment almost involuntarily. Here was one of those
underground exchanges where the secrets of the underworld passed from
mouth to mouth; where the gossip of the Bad Lands circulated; where
crimes were born; where he had even heard his own death, the death of
the Gray Seal, decreed a score of times.

Whispers reached him. Two yeggs of the lesser breed, whose names he did
not know, were in there. Their conversation was snatchy, desultory, due
presumably to the fact that the opium was beginning to get in its work.
There was a reference to an uptown "job" of a week ago; a dance hall
fracas that had ended in a murder; the approval of the sentence passed
upon one English Steve by the fellow members of his gang, and the
speculation as to how many of the gang English Steve would succeed in
"bumping off" before in turn English Steve finally received his own
quietus.

Again Jimmie Dale turned noiselessly on his bunk. He was not interested.
Ten minutes before he had made a tour of the sub-cellar here; and then,
playing his part as Smarlinghue, he had flung himself down on this bunk
and given his order. Neither Bunty Myers nor any other of the Phantom's
underlings were in evidence. He had not actually expected to find them
already here, he did not even expect them later on; but in half an hour,
or an hour, luck might change, and they _might_ come. He had simply made
Hip Foo's his first stopping place night after night of late because it
had once been the rendezvous of the men he wanted, because it was here
that some of them had met on the night the place had been raided, and
because, since the night that the Phantom had laid the trap for him at
Morley's, Bunty Myers and the Kitten and Spud MacGuire and Muller no
longer met in the back, upstairs room of Wally Kerrigan's "club."
Perhaps they would again in the future--some of them--perhaps not!

Jimmie Dale's lips tightened. It had gone very badly with the Phantom's
plans that night. Apart from Little Sweeney, Spud MacGuire and Muller,
in the subsequent fight with the police, had both been killed. Also, it
had apparently forced Bunty Myers and the Kitten into hiding. Certainly,
since that night, he, Jimmie Dale, had not been able to pick up the
slightest trace of either of them.

He swept his hand heavily across his eyes. He was not so sure that he
could wholly glory in the outcome of that night. If the Phantom had
received a blow, he, Jimmie Dale, had perhaps received one that was even
more disastrous. The Phantom was still at large, still free to pursue
his heinous activities, but with the abandonment of Wally Kerrigan's
back room, even if only temporarily, by Bunty Myers and the rest of his
associates who hung on the Phantom's orders, he, Jimmie Dale, had lost
touch with everything and every one connected with the Phantom--except
Mother Margot!

Mother Margot! His lips twisted in a weary smile. She had been of little
service to him! So far as any information he had been able to obtain
from her was concerned, she might as well have been non-existent. Not
that she had attempted to mislead or lie to him; he was satisfied on
that score because, being the sole connecting link with the Phantom that
was left to him, he had naturally watched her more carefully than ever
before. As the man in the black silk mask, the man she knew as the Gray
Seal, he had held her closely to account; but he was convinced that of
the Phantom's plans and movements since that night at Morley's, she was
as ignorant as he was himself. Where before she had been the mouthpiece
of the "Voice," as she called the Phantom, her office now had apparently
become a sinecure. It was as though the Phantom, failing in the supreme
effort he had made to find the "leak" among his trusted subordinates,
and afraid perhaps to place further trust anywhere, had withdrawn
himself completely from every one of those that formerly he had moved as
pawns upon his miserable chess-board of crime.

But that did not mean the Tocsin's safety. The Phantom, as she had so
well named him, master of impersonation, the Phantom alias Gentleman
Laroque, alias Shiftel, alias Limpy Mack, alias heaven alone knew what
else, the Phantom with his score of domiciles, if he meant now to play a
lone hand, was a far more dangerous antagonist than ever before; one far
harder to come at, more elusive, more safely and deeply entrenched
behind----

Jimmie Dale's hand reached swiftly out for the opium pipe that lay on
the stand beside the bunk. A footstep, one accompanied by a low, soft
swish, was coming along the boarded corridor outside. It was probably
one of the Chinese attendants, and the swish was the usual swish of the
slippered feet; but if there was any one den or dive in the Bad Lands
more than another where it meant literally life and death to preserve
the character of Smarlinghue from all suspicion, it was here in Hip
Foo's where a whisper was alone sufficient to bring down upon him,
darting from its every corner and crevice, the drug crazed rat-horde of
the underworld that infested the place.

The step came nearer. Jimmie Dale, the pipe apparently at his lips, lay
back again upon the bunk. If the Phantom were playing a lone hand now,
if he had sloughed off, as dangerous and unfit, the tools he had
formerly employed, then he, Jimmie Dale, since the Tocsin was obviously
steadfast in her determination to afford him no opportunity of picking
up any further clue, was facing a blank wall. If, however, the veil
that had shrouded the movements of the Phantom and all those who had
been connected with him since that night at Morley's was simply the
natural caution inspired by what had so nearly been complete disaster,
then certainly, sooner or later, he, Jimmie Dale, would pick up the
trail again of those, such as were left of them, who once had
congregated at Wally Kerrigan's. That was why he was here in Hip Foo's
to-night--on the chance that, either through their appearance in person,
or through the mumbled gossip which was the freer in dens like this
where the incense burned to the God of Poppy loosened men's and women's
tongues, he might find the lost threads again.

He asked no more than that--only to go on to the end while there was yet
time. And he was afraid to-night, afraid with a great fear. How did he
even know that it was not already too late? How did he know that in her
battle of wits with the Phantom which she insisted in waging alone,
unaided, with her life at stake, the Tocsin, brave, resourceful, clever
though she was, had not already----

Through half-closed eyes Jimmie Dale watched the curtain that hung
across the doorway. Yes, undoubtedly, the footstep was no longer in
evidence, and undoubtedly the curtain was being drawn stealthily aside.
He made no movement. The opening widened, widened still further--and
suddenly the blood went whipping through Jimmie Dale's veins in a mad,
elated tide, and weariness was gone.

Reward! The light was dim, low, flickering, but he could see well
enough. It was not one of the Chinese attendants. It was the shawled
head of an old hag that was peering in there. Mother Margot!

Still Jimmie Dale gave no sign that he was aware of the other's
presence. It was a reward at last for the days and nights that were
gone! Once before she had come here to meet Bunty Myers, once before
this had been the rendezvous--what else would she be here for to-night?
He had evidently been right then in hoping more from Hip Foo's than from
any other place. And it did not mean that she had lied to him as the
Gray Seal either. It might very well be, and probably was, that, since
last he had communicated with her, the Phantom had suddenly broken
silence and through her was issuing his orders again.

She stood there on the threshold now, peering toward the bunk, shading
her eyes with her hand as though, even in the dim light, it helped her
the better to distinguish objects. And for a moment she hesitated, then
she came slowly through the doorway and let the curtain fall behind her.

"Dat's youse, ain't it, Smarly?" she whispered.

Jimmie Dale sat up on the bunk, and blinked at her. There was something
of grim, sardonic humour in the situation. They had been formally
"introduced" that night at Wally Kerrigan's, and she knew
Smarlinghue--as _Smarlinghue_. But between Smarlinghue and the man she
knew, yes, and _obeyed_, as the Gray Seal, there was a gulf that she had
never crossed. The trumps were very much in his hands!

Jimmie Dale blinked again, rubbed his eyes, and stared at her.

"Oh, hello!" he said, a little ungraciously. "It's Mother Margot, eh?"

She nodded without speaking.

"Well?" It was Smarlinghue who spoke. "What's the idea? I ain't standing
any free rides to dreamland--the price has gone up."

Mother Margot shook her head.

"Nobody's askin' youse to," she replied a little tartly. "I ain't never
been on dat kind of stuff, t'ank Gawd! I'm lookin' for some one, dat's
wot I'm here for."

Jimmie Dale permitted a slightly malicious grin to flicker across his
lips.

"You didn't seem to fall in love with me the night I got shown out at
Wally's," he observed, "so I guess it ain't me. Try next door!"

She came a little closer, and lowered her voice.

"No, it ain't for youse," she said; "but mabbe youse'll do, if youse
ain't too stewed on coke."

Jimmie Dale did not answer for a moment. Was the entre into the
Phantom's circle here at last, an entre in the sense that, if only in
a minor way, he was to be offered the opportunity of participating in
the activities of Gentleman Laroque's, alias the Phantom's, gang? She
was looking for some one. Who? She was, he knew, the one through whom
the Phantom, always invisible himself, issued all his orders. Who, then,
would she be searching for to-night save the very men that he himself
would willingly pay any price to find--Bunty Myers for one, the Kitten
for another!

"I ain't been here long enough, without being butted in on, to get
stewed," said Jimmie Dale caustically.

She came still closer, peering at him through her spectacles, drawing
her shawl with quick nervous little clutches tighter around her
shoulders and throat. And then suddenly her whole manner changed; she
seemed frightened, almost in despair.

"Yes, youse're all right, I can see dat now," she burst out in a hoarse,
shaken whisper. "Dat was de only thing I was scared of w'en I sees youse
in here--dat youse'd be stewed. Listen, Smarly, I got to get some help.
An' I want youse to help me. Dere ain't no one on de whole East Side
could do it de way youse could, if youse only will."

Jimmie Dale lounged back on the bunk. Mother Margot would at least not
find him _eager_.

"Thanks for the bouquet!" he grinned. "The last time all you handed me
was a frozen mitt."

"Aw, forget it!" she whispered passionately. "For Gawd's sake forget
dat, Smarly. I ain't handin' youse no jolly. Everybody knows
Smarlinghue; an' everybody knows dere ain't a dump in de Bad Lands dat
he ain't wise to, an' where he don't get de glad hand. An'--an'
everybody knows dey can trust Smarlinghue. _I'm_ trustin' youse now.
Say, give me yer word youse'll keep yer trap closed about me whether
youse sits in de game or not, an' I'll come across."

"Sure!" said Jimmie Dale. "That don't cost nothing. I've never seen you
to-night, if that suits you. Go ahead! Spill it!"

Mother Margot glanced furtively around her. She listened for a moment to
the voices, grown thicker now and almost inaudible, coming through the
partition, then she leaned close to Jimmie Dale. Her lips scarcely
moved.

"I'll get mine if I'm heard, or youse snitches on me," she breathed in a
frightened, jerky way. "But I got to do it. I got to do it. I've been
lookin' for hours, ever since early in de afternoon, an' it ain't no
good. I've looked everywhere, an' I can't find him, an'--an' I didn't
darst get too nosey wid questions. Youse understand, Smarly? It's
English Steve. I got to get a message to English Steve, an' if I don't
he goes out. My Gawd, Smarly, youse gets dat, don't youse? He goes out."

Jimmie Dale stared at her. He experienced a sudden loss of the elation,
the uplift, that he had known but a moment before in such full measure.
English Steve! All the underworld knew about English Steve! It was no
secret. Even those two hop-fighters in the next room, who ranked little
higher than stalls and steerers in the citizenry of the Bad Lands, knew
all about English Steve and his gang troubles. He, Jimmie Dale, knew all
about it. As Larry the Bat he had even been personally acquainted with
English Steve in the olden days. Therefore he also knew--which was the
one thing that concerned him now--that English Steve had nothing to do
with Bunty Myers. And it was of Bunty Myers, as the first step toward
picking up again the Phantom's trail, that he had expected Mother Margot
to unburden herself.

His eyes shifted to the ragged sleeve of his coat, to the dirty, frayed,
protruding wristband of his shirt. He had hoped for too much evidently.
Perhaps he should have known better, but that did not lessen the
disappointment. True, he had called this woman from her pushcart on
Thompson Street only that morning, and had talked to her as the Gray
Seal over the telephone, and he had been thoroughly satisfied then that
she was as ignorant as he was of either Bunty Myers' or the Phantom's
movements; but until a moment ago, in view of her appearance here, he
had thought that in the meantime the Phantom had communicated with her.
Well, he had been wrong, it seemed, and to-night was to be only another
night of hollow results added to the nights that had gone before. He had
lost track of how many! It didn't matter. He had hoped for too much,
that was all.

She clutched at his sleeve frantically, in pitiful pleading.

"Youse ain't afraid, are youse, Smarly?" she quavered. "Youse don't have
to get in between. All I'm askin' youse is to help me find him, an' if
youse finds him first to slip him a message. Youse don't have to do
nothin' else."

"What's the message?" inquired Jimmie Dale, a little gruffly.

"Just tell him to duck his nut out of New York to-night, dat's all. Just
tell him dat."

Jimmie Dale as Smarlinghue shook his head critically.

"He ain't that kind," he said. "I suppose you're talking about him and
his gang, but everybody that ain't deaf knows he swore he'd get every
last one of the outfit he used to work with before they got him, if they
tried any funny business. What's the use of handing him any steer like
that?"

"Never youse mind about dat," said Mother Margot quickly. "He'll go if
youse tells him it was me sent de word. He ain't for runnin' into a
trap, is he? Nobody but a fool 'ud do dat."

Jimmie Dale appeared to ponder the matter.

"What's the trap?" he demanded after a moment.

"I don't know," she answered miserably.

"Well then," prodded Jimmie Dale, "if you don't know that, how do you
know it's to-night they're laying for him, and where do you come in? He
ain't a long lost son you've discovered, is he?"

She wrung her hands suddenly.

"Oh, my Gawd, Smarly," she whispered wildly, "we're losin' time,
an'--an' I'm afraid. Mabbe it's too late even now. Dere ain't no use
askin' me questions dat I can't answer. I don't know how, an' I don't
know where, but I knows English Steve gets his to-night if he ain't
tipped off in time. For Gawd's sake don't ask me nothin' more. I owe it
to English Steve to wise him up. I got to do it if I can, an' I'm askin'
youse to help me. Youse will, won't youse, Smarly? Aw, for Gawd's sake,
say youse will! Youse won't be sorry. I--I'll make it up to youse.
Mother Margot don't never forget."

Jimmie Dale swung his leg slowly over the edge of the bunk. Well, why
not? Mother Margot's advent had brought him anything but what he had
hoped for, but he was certainly no worse off than he had been before her
arrival. English Steve and his gang affairs were too well known, too
public, to warrant any suspicion that there was any ulterior object in
Mother Margot's actions. He had not the slightest doubt but that the
gang had laid their plans for the removal of English Steve to-night. It
was quite on the cards. In some way Mother Margot had got an inkling of
this. She probably owed English Steve a debt of some kind, due, as
probably, to some crooked work in the past in which they had been
engaged together. That, too, was quite on the cards. Well, why not? He
had no particular interest in English Steve, but certainly he had no
desire to stand by and allow a murder, even the murder of a crook, to be
committed if he could prevent it. And then, too, there was another angle
to the affair. Mother Margot as a _friend_ of Smarlinghue might well
mean far more than Mother Margot constrained by fear to be the unwilling
ally of the Gray Seal. And, besides, from now until dawn his own search
would be continued through the underworld anyhow; and where he looked
for Bunty Myers or the Kitten, he would, as naturally as though that
were his sole quest, look for English Steve.

"All right," said Jimmie Dale abruptly, as he stood up. "I'll help you
if I can. I guess I know a few dumps you don't, but you keep on going
yourself. We'll cover more ground that way, and get on quicker. And it
wouldn't do either of us any good to be seen hunting together, neither.
Beat it!"

Mother Margot caught his hand impulsively.

"I knew youse would, Smarly! I knew youse would!" she whispered in a
choked voice. "Gawd bless youse, Smarly, youse're----"

It was Smarlinghue who grinned a little sheepishly, and Smarlinghue who
spoke.

"Aw, forget it!" he said. "I thought you said we was losing time." He
brushed past her toward the doorway. "I'll go out by the lane, you go
out the other way. See?"

"Yes," she answered; "but----"

"So long!" said Smarlinghue, alias Jimmie Dale--and vanished through the
doorway.




--XVI--

ENGLISH STEVE


It was growing late, near midnight. Through the murk of an uninviting,
almost ominous-looking basement entrance, whose light, such as it was,
seeped upward to the sidewalk, Jimmie Dale emerged, and stood for a
moment staring up and down the dirty, shabby street.

A grim smile was playing on his lips. Behind him, down those few dark,
rickety steps up which he had just come, and thence through an
ill-lighted little cobbler's shop, where a cobbler, who was a cobbler in
but little more than name, held an inner door against the invasion of
undesirables and the law, was a thug's den than which New York knew no
worse. Debauchery and crime, unbridled and unlicensed, held sway there.
None entered save the initiated--or those the initiated lured there to
fleece and work their will upon. Likewise, it was a refuge from the law,
and, as a refuge, was without its peer. Mickey the Cobbler might not be
a very good cobbler or a past master of his art, but he was a cheery
sort and always paid his bills, and never overcharged the
poverty-stricken neighbourhood that innocently believed it supported him
with its patronage! So why should it not be safe? Mickey the Cobbler
stood high in the estimation of the community, and therefore brought no
suspicion upon himself from the police.

Jimmie Dale shrugged his shoulders. What did it matter? There were
dozens of places like that--and he had been in and out of dozens of them
since he had left Mother Margot at Hip Foo's a few hours ago. What did
it matter the degree of pest hole from which he had just come? In so far
as he was concerned it had yielded him nothing, and in that respect it
was like all the rest. His search to-night had been doubly fruitless
because he had had a double errand. He had found no trace of Bunty Myers
on his own account, or of English Steve on Mother Margot's.

Again he shrugged his shoulders. He had about given the latter up. As a
matter of fact, it had only been secondary in any case. And yet he had
kept faith with Mother Margot. He had visited English Steve's lodging
house, and he had visited the known haunts of the gang that now held
English Steve's life forfeit--and all this before even he had widened
his search to embrace the secret pest holes of Crimeland such as the one
he had just left. And he had been rewarded only by failure everywhere.

He could go on, of course, and he would go on until dawn broke, prompted
by the prime urge to find Bunty Myers; but now, for the moment, the
weariness of it all seemed to be creeping back upon him again, and this
time not without its physical as well as its mental demands for at least
a measure of consideration. His eyes roved down the street. At the
corner, drawn up to the curb, there was a lunch wagon. He was tired and
hungry. A queer, whimsical little smile touched his lips. What could be
better? A lunch wagon and Smarlinghue, unkempt, ragged, dissolute in
appearance, went well and in perfect harmony one with the other!

Jimmie Dale turned abruptly, and walked to the corner. Here he climbed
the three wooden, abbreviated steps that permitted entrance to the
antiquated vehicle, and sidled up to the counter.

The lunch wagon for the moment was without customers. The proprietor,
rousing himself from a doze, laid a mug of hot coffee and a sandwich on
the counter at Jimmie Dale's mumbled request, slid a pot of mustard in
the general direction of the sandwich, and subsided again into
semi-unconsciousness upon some amazingly existent resting place in the
crowded space behind the counter.

Jimmie Dale stared around him, and, as he ate, a sort of ironic
facetiousness settled upon him. A picture of the St. James Club, with
its polished silver and its snowy napery, rose before his mind's eye.
Here he was Smarlinghue; there he was Jimmie Dale, the millionaire. He
was almost beginning to wonder which of the two was his real, actual
entity. Jimmie Dale; Smarlinghue--the Gray Seal! If it were ever known!
His eyes fastened on the ungraceful proprietor, whose white coat was
long overdue at the washtub, and whose white cook's hat was limp and
grease spotted. It seemed a far cry to the white-haired, immaculate,
perfectly trained Jason, his own butler, who, too, sometimes served him
with coffee and sandwiches!

His mind mulled on. He kept staring about him. It was strange! The place
somehow seemed familiar. Well, why shouldn't it? He had been in a lunch
wagon before. Not this one probably, but there wasn't much difference in
the genus lunch wagon, was there? No, that wasn't it! It seemed rather
to be striving to revive a memory that somehow had to do with----

Yes, he had it now! English Steve! But that was years ago--back in the
days when he, Jimmie Dale, was Larry the Bat in the underworld instead
of the Smarlinghue of to-day. It was in a lunch wagon just like this.
English Steve had been there, and two or three others of like ilk. They
had adjourned to English Steve's room for a game of cards, and he,
Jimmie Dale, as Larry the Bat, had accepted the invitation to join them.
Well, what of it? That wasn't where English Steve lived now. English
Steve had gone up in his profession since he had lived in what was
little better than a shed behind old Michael's ship-chandler's shop. And
he, Jimmie Dale, had already been to English Steve's more pretentious,
if still seedy, quarters of to-day.

Strange, the stirring of that memory! What was it trying to suggest?
That English Steve still--It was absurd, of course! That was years ago.
It was the last place in all New York that any one would look for
English Steve to-day. The last place that any one would----

Jimmie Dale's fingers fumbled in his pockets, and extracted a coin. He
laid it on the counter, mumbled again at the proprietor--this time, a
good-night--and shuffled his way out to the street.

The _last_ place! The phrase battered at his mind now. If that were so,
it was the _one_ place to look! And why was it so absurd? There was more
than one man in New York who maintained two establishments, and on a far
more extensive scale, without publishing the fact broadcast! English
Steve was a crook of no mean order, and such an arrangement might well
have stood him in good stead more than once in respect of the police,
and, for that matter, with his erstwhile associates--as it perhaps was
serving him now at this minute. With his increasing prominence, his rise
in the sordid realm of crime, English Steve had publicly moved into a
more "exclusive" neighbourhood among the lite of Crimeland; but it
might well be that he had continued to pay rent for his former
lodging--without any one being the wiser for it save old Michael, his
landlord, whose shop was stocked with merchandise which consisted mainly
of ships' stores and fittings purloined by the wharf rats along the
river front! Birds of a feather!

It was worth putting to the test, at least. Certainly it was a tangible,
definite objective--something he had not had before all night. He
hurried now, twisting and turning through alleyways and narrow, darkened
streets, until finally he had worked his way into a neighbourhood down
near the East River shore.

The buildings were fewer here, more scattered; there was a generous
sprinkling of vacant lots; few lights, and no pedestrians. He halted at
last in front of a low, squat, dingy building, with large double doors
and a grimy, unwashed show window, through which latter, from the rays
of a distant street lamp, was just discernible a display of
miscellaneous second-hand ships' fittings--a heap of tarpaulin, ropes,
blocks, tackles and other articles of like nature. This was old
Michael's. If the man had another name, he, Jimmie Dale, did not know
what it was. There was only one old Michael on the East Side, and that
was enough.

The place was in darkness. It stood detached, unprotected by either
fence or enclosure, and Jimmie Dale now made his way rapidly around to
the rear. Here a sort of extension, in the shape of an exaggerated
lean-to, projected out from the back of the building. It was here that
in the days gone by, a miserable, barely weather-proof hole, English
Steve had made his home. And here, too, as in front, the place was in
utter darkness.

Jimmie Dale stepped to the door, and knocked softly upon it. There was
no answer. He knocked louder, insistently. There was still no response.
And then he smiled a little ironically at himself. He had come quite a
long way--and quite probably on a fool's errand. Certainly English Steve
did not appear either to be at home or in hiding here!

He stood at the door for a moment frowning. He had begun to doubt very
much now that English Steve had ever cast eyes on the place again from
the day he had taken up his quarters nearer the Bowery; but mere doubt
did not in any way disprove the theory that, somehow, back there in the
lunch wagon, had suddenly taken possession of him. English Steve might
very well be absent at this precise moment--and might very well at the
same time still be old Michael's tenant.

Jimmie Dale's jaws snapped suddenly together. He had come quite far
enough to make it worth while to find out that much anyhow! He tried the
door. It was locked, of course.

From one of the upright pockets in the leather girdle beneath his
threadbare vest, Jimmie Dale drew out a little blued-steel pick-lock,
and from another a diminutive, though none the less powerful,
flashlight. For a moment the trained fingers worked swiftly at the lock,
then the door swung open, and Jimmie Dale stepped inside.

He closed the door quietly behind him, and for an instant stood still,
listening; then the white ray of the flashlight lanced suddenly through
the blackness, darting here and there over walls and floor.

A smile crept grimly to Jimmie Dale's lips. English Steve for the moment
might not be at home; but he, Jimmie Dale, or his intuition, or what had
seemed perhaps a far-fetched deduction from a memory of years gone by,
or whatever else one might call it, had after all not been at fault.
English Steve still lived here--when it suited English Steve to do so!

The room was in no way changed since the night he had played cards here
with English Steve. Even the man's clothes were strewn about, here
across a chair, there even on the floor. An empty beer bottle, and
beside it a slab of cheese and a portion of a loaf of bread, stood upon
the table. But it was not these proofs of occupancy that caused Jimmie
Dale's smile to tighten now. _They_ might belong to anybody. The
flashlight was holding steadily on a large, half-page photograph, cut
from a Sunday supplement, that was tacked on the wall. He remembered it
very well because English Steve while still sober that night had pointed
it out with pride, and thereafter when not so sober had pointed it out
another dozen times. It was a treasured possession of English Steve, and
whatever else English Steve might have left behind him had he vacated
the place for good, he most certainly would not have left that. It did
not amount to much; it was utterly valueless; but to English Steve it
had been, and still was obviously, a source of intense, if somewhat
childish, gratification. It was a photograph intended to demonstrate the
extent of a record crowd at a race course somewhere, and in the
foreground, perhaps the most prominent figure of all, the photographer
by chance had snapped the heavy black-moustached, rather rakish-looking
figure of English Steve.

Jimmie Dale leaned back against the table in the centre of the room.
Well, that was settled, and for such satisfaction as the establishment
of his theory afforded him his trip had had its reward. But what was he
to do now? Wait here for English Steve's return? English Steve might
return in an hour, or in two days from now--or _never_, if Mother Margot
was right, and English Steve fell into whatever trap was set for him
to-night! On the other hand, to resume a blind search through the
underworld again seemed to offer no greater likelihood of finding the
man than was presented by the possibility of English Steve returning
here. Indeed if the man were keeping under cover, as seemed more than
probable, since, after hours of search, he, Jimmie Dale, had been able
to find not a single trace of the other, then the chance that right here
was where English Steve might be met with sooner than anywhere else was
not without its logical argument. And yet----

The flashlight was still circling inquisitively about the room. Jimmie
Dale's eyes followed the ray abstractedly. It passed across the open
doorway of an inner room. There had been a cot in there, he
remembered--English Steve's bedroom.

Mechanically he moved forward in that direction from the table; and then
suddenly, with a low, sharp cry, as the flashlight shot forward into the
inner room, he halted, hard-faced, staring ahead of him across the
threshold. He had been right in his theory, doubly right, for the search
ended here; and Mother Margot had been right, and her fears had been
only too well justified! Sprawled across the floor, his head in a dark,
crimson pool, lay the body of English Steve.

For the fraction of a second, no more, Jimmie Dale remained motionless,
and then he was across the threshold and on his knees beside the other.
Yes, the man was dead. Jimmie Dale turned a little then, and the
flashlight circled swiftly in all directions about him. There was no
weapon--only the bullet hole in English Steve's right temple. The end of
the search, the warning that Mother Margot had tried to give, had come
too late. English Steve had been murdered.

So the gang had had their way, had they? It was dirty, miserable work,
crook though English Steve might be! Jimmie Dale's jaws were clamped
now, as he leaned forward again and drew a paper, already protruding as
though it had half dropped out when the man had fallen, from the inside
pocket of English Steve's coat. It was a folded sheet of foolscap size.
He opened it out, his flashlight playing upon it. In the folds was a
small newspaper clipping; while the paper itself was covered with a
rough design, or plan, as of some interior.

He stared in a perplexed way at the clipping for a moment. It had been
cut from the middle of a paragraph, and contained only one complete
sentence; but from the sentence itself, and the fragments of context
that preceded and followed, it was obviously the report of some
jewellery auction. He read it once--and again:

     unusually good value. The pendant was finally knocked down to Mr.
     Max Linesthal after spirited bidding for four thousand, three
     hundred and eighty-five dollars. A cluster ring set with the

From the clipping Jimmie Dale looked again at the roughly drawn sketch,
then his eyes reverted to the still form on the floor. A minute, two,
passed as he stood there. Something seemed to tighten in Jimmie Dale's
throat.

"Poor devil!" he whispered--and thrust the clipping and paper abruptly
into his own pocket.

He turned away then, and began a rapid search of the two rooms.

Still another ten minutes passed, and then Jimmie Dale stepped out into
the night again, locked the door behind him, and, hurrying now, headed
back into the East Side.




--XVII--

A DEVIL'S ALIBI


Jimmie Dale's face was drawn in sharp, set lines, as he went swiftly
along. In a sense the brutal, sordid affair was clear enough. The
clipping spoke for itself; there had been an auction sale of jewellery,
and Max Linesthal had brought in a pendant worth roughly four thousand
dollars. The drawing was probably a sketch of old man Linesthal's place.
Jimmie Dale nodded his head sharply. Everybody knew Linesthal. Max
Linesthal was a prominent, if somewhat eccentric figure on the East
Side, who lived alone in a combined office and dwelling that consisted
of the ground floor of a small, two-story house on a cross street within
a block of the Bowery. The old man, sometimes on his own account,
sometimes acting for private interests on commission, or even for the
bigger jewellers who for very justifiable business reasons did not wish
to appear at the auctions, was a large and well-known buyer of
second-hand jewellery of the better sort.

This was quite plain, and the inference from it seemed equally so.
English Steve had seen the account of the auction, knew that a valuable
pendant was in Linesthal's possession, and had in some way managed to
obtain the information that had enabled him to make a rough, working
sketch of the old jeweller's flat. Following out the inference to its
logical conclusion, therefore, English Steve either had already robbed
Max Linesthal of the pendant, or had proposed to do so before the night
was out.

A puzzled light for an instant crept into Jimmie Dale's dark eyes. What
was the _date_ of the clipping? It might be a week old; the auction
might have been held days ago! He shook his head impatiently, as though
irritated at his own momentary stupidity. It was nothing of the sort;
or, if it was, then what he had found in English Steve's pocket meant
nothing at all. No robbery of any such nature as that could be committed
without its being known everywhere in the underworld at least within a
short time after the police were on the scene. Therefore, unless the
robbery had been committed yesterday, or the day before, or a week ago,
which it most certainly had not, since nothing was known of it in the
underworld, the clipping, to have any present significance, must almost
certainly have been cut from a paper of very recent date, for English
Steve would realise that there was no guarantee, rather the opposite in
fact, that Max Linesthal would keep the pendant in his possession for
any length of time before he disposed of it again.

The whole thing narrowed down then to two suppositions: English Steve
had not yet carried out his plans when he was shot down, presumably, by
the gang; or he had already committed the robbery just previous to his
murder and the pendant was then, at that time, either in his immediate
possession or hidden somewhere, probably in his rooms. But he, Jimmie
Dale, had searched and had found nothing. It might still be there, still
craftily hidden, of course; but if not, and the robbery _had_ been
committed, then the alternative seemed blatantly obvious. The gang,
sworn to English Steve's destruction, had found the pendant in their
victim's possession, and taken it--that was all.

Jimmie Dale went on, traversing block after block. And now a queer,
whimsical smile brought a softer expression to his face. Those papers
were damning evidence, and he had appropriated them without right or
reason! He shrugged his shoulders. Perhaps! It had been impulse. He
admitted that; but it was not an impulse that he regretted, or would
undo now if he could. If it had been only an _intended_ robbery, one
that had not known fruition, there was sorrow and shame enough for some
one--perhaps a mother; perhaps an old father; certainly some one who
loved even English Steve--without needlessly adding to a measure already
so miserably full. There would be time enough for those papers to come
into the hands of the police if they were needed to point the way to a
more thorough search of English Steve's rooms than he, Jimmie Dale, had
made; or failing that, to English Steve's erstwhile gang and present
murderers in whose possession the pendant then must be.

The softer expression vanished, and there came again a troubled look
into Jimmie Dale's face. There was still another angle to the affair,
one he did not like. If the robbery _had_ been committed, it must have
taken place, say, quite a little while before midnight in order to have
allowed English Steve time enough for its actual accomplishment, the
time to get back from Max Linesthal's to old Michael's, and, on top of
that, the time to account for what had then occurred in his own rooms.
That, then, would be long before he, Jimmie Dale, had started out from
the lunch wagon, and had anything come to the ears of the police up to
that time, it would as certainly have been known in the resorts. And
there had been not even a whisper of it. Why then had not Max Linesthal
sent out an alarm, or, rather--_what had happened to Max Linesthal_?
Jimmie Dale shook his head again. No; that was putting it in its worst
phase. English Steve would not have hesitated at anything in the nature
of violence perhaps, if, for instance, he had been caught in the act;
but it was far more likely that his work would have been done so
secretly and successfully that it had not even now been discovered. And
yet, at a fairly early hour of night, before possibly the old jeweller
had even gone to bed, to break in, blow a safe, and----

Jimmie Dale shrugged his shoulders. The answer lay at Max Linesthal's.
He was going there now--he smiled grimly to himself--via the lane and
the back door, secretively, like a thief himself. It would hardly do for
Smarlinghue to present himself at the front door, and, if Max Linesthal
responded to the summons, inquire if a robbery had been perpetrated! It
would be even worse, if a robbery and perhaps violence to Max Linesthal
had taken place, should Smarlinghue have been seen in or near the house.
And that was the vital question. He could not morally side-step it. The
old jeweller lived alone. Had Max Linesthal come to any harm?

Jimmie Dale's pace slowed now suddenly to one of almost hesitancy. He
was very near the place now; it was just around the corner. Perhaps it
would be safer if, even by the back door, instead of Smarlinghue, it was
Jimmie Dale who went! But it was quite a little distance from here to
the Sanctuary where through one door Smarlinghue could enter, and
through the French window on the squalid courtyard, and thence to the
lane, Jimmie Dale could emerge. No! It would take too much time to go to
the Sanctuary; and, besides, it could serve no real purpose. He did not
propose to be seen--or heard. If nothing had happened in Max Linesthal's
place yet, nothing would happen now since English Steve was dead, and
he, Jimmie Dale, would leave as unostentatiously as he entered; if, on
the other hand, the break had been made, he would leave with equal
unostentatiousness and the police in some way, anonymously, could be
notified. Even as Smarlinghue then, well known as Smarlinghue was in
that neighbourhood, he was quite safe.

He slipped suddenly into the mouth of a lane that opened beside him. The
slouching gait was gone now. He was running swiftly, silently, in the
darkness. There was no question of locating Max Linesthal's back yard.
His years of Larry the Bat in the old Sanctuary, of Smarlinghue in the
new, where his life had literally depended upon it, had taught him every
inch of the network of lanes and alleyways in this section of the East
Side.

And now, with a lithe spring Jimmie Dale was over a fence, and in
another instant, running across the yard, was crouched before a door
that opened almost on a level with the ground. There was no light
anywhere. He could hear no sound--save the distant rumble of the
elevated from the direction of the Bowery. And then the slim, sensitive
fingers of Jimmie Dale, no less deft or agile for the grime and
uncared-for appearance that was theirs as an integral part of
Smarlinghue, were at work again with the little pick-lock.

The door opened, closed--without a sound. Jimmie Dale stood inside. It
was as though a shadow of but a moment ago outside in the darkness and
silence had moved--and vanished.

But it was not dark here in the narrow hallway. A little ahead, a faint
light showed through from a partially open doorway. Nor was it silent.
Voices reached him, though the words themselves were not
distinguishable.

Jimmie Dale stood for an instant motionless. What did it mean? A mare's
nest? A late visitor? Something equally commonplace? The sketch in his
pocket reproduced itself in a mental picture before his eyes. The four
rooms from front to rear each had a door opening into the one next to
it, and each had a door opening on this narrow passage here. The room
ahead from which the light came was the second one from the front, the
room that showed the safe marked on the plan. There had been no light
showing as he had come along the lane, of course, because the rooms were
on the opposite side of the house, and there were apparently no windows
in the hallway here.

What did it mean? If nothing had happened, nothing would happen since
English Steve was dead. His mind insisted on reiterating that statement.
What was it, then? An ordinary, perhaps business, visitor; or the
aftermath of the robbery in the shape of the presence of the police?

He stole forward cautiously, without sound, hugging the wall. The voices
grew more distinct. And then, back against the wall, himself unseen,
protected both by the angle at which he stood and the angle of the
partially opened door, he stood staring into the lighted room.

Reality! Strange how that thought had obsessed him all night. Well, at
least, this wasn't reality--or else his reason was in collapse, his
sanity a gibing mockery. The room was evidently used by Max Linesthal as
a bedroom, even though he kept his safe there, for the bed was there
too, and Max Linesthal in his nightclothes sat lashed, a prisoner in a
chair. He could understand that; but after that he was either mad or it
was all a myth. A man was kneeling at the safe. He knew the man; he knew
him quite well. He had even been with him that evening, had even left
him not more than half an hour ago--only he had left the man lying dead
upon the floor of a miserable shack with a bullet hole through his right
temple, and it was the dead man who was kneeling there now at the safe.
The man at the safe was English Steve.

Brain and vision now both seemed blurred. Jimmie Dale hung there. He was
trying to fight his way out of some mental morass, wasn't he? The man
was dead, and he was lying in a pool of blood miles away, and yet he was
here, moving, yes, and speaking, just as though he were alive.

"Come on, now! Come across!" the man snapped at the bound figure in the
chair. "You know what'll happen if you don't! You know me, don't you?
You've seen me often enough around these parts."

"Yes, I--I know you." Max Linesthal was an old man; and it was perhaps
only the cords that held him from collapsing in his chair, for his face
was deathlike in its fear. "You--you're English Steve."

"Bull's-eye!" snapped the man at the safe again. "Well, that ought to be
enough to teach you what's good for your health. You get just one
minute. Take your choice. If I have to blow the safe, I might as well
set you up against it for the pad! Get me? Now then, what's the
combination? Quick!" He reached out and gave a sudden, vicious wrench at
the leg of the chair.

"I--I'll tell you," the old man cried out hoarsely. "Wait! I--I'll tell
you. It's twenty-eight and a half left, nineteen----"

Jimmie Dale was not listening. Was he _really_ mad? Yes, perhaps; but
whether the man was dead or not, he was robbing the safe. And he, Jimmie
Dale, could do nothing! He was Smarlinghue. To interfere with any
crook's work was to bring the enmity of the underworld down upon the
offender. It was the law of the underworld. It would destroy
Smarlinghue. Better that Linesthal should lose his jewels--a thousand
times better. Smarlinghue was the one chance he, Jimmie Dale, had to
find the Phantom, the one chance he had to stand between the woman that
he loved and the death that threatened her. With the doors of the
underworld once closed against Smarlinghue, there was no----

Slowly, as though the act were almost subconscious, his hand crept now
toward his pocket, crept into it, snuggled around the butt of his
automatic, and, snuggling, tightened suddenly in a fierce, convulsive
grip. The safe was open now, and the man kneeling there had his back to
Linesthal in the chair, his side face to the door. He was ransacking the
interior of the safe. Books and papers were being flung on the floor. A
diamond pendant glistened in the light. It was laid on the table beside
the safe. There were other jewels. They began to make a glittering
little heap. But it was curious, strangely curious that the heavy black
moustache should suddenly have seemed to sag down at one side; strange
that the man should be taking the time now to pause in his work to twirl
at it like some sophisticated dandy! No--it was off! And now the man was
carefully readjusting it.

Through Jimmie Dale's veins, as though some floodgates were suddenly
rent asunder, his blood was racing now in a wild, mad, surging tide.
Laroque! It was Gentleman Laroque, alias _the Phantom!_ The master of
impersonation! Yes, he understood now! There was no madness in his
brain. He understood! It was hellish in its cunning--a devil's alibi.
The Phantom, if he were not entirely playing a lone hand through lack of
trust in his erstwhile tools and pawns, was at least playing the major
rle. A safe rle! _His alibi was a dead man!_

Swift as lightning flashes Jimmie Dale's mind worked now. Yes, he
understood. It was the Phantom, not the gang, who had murdered English
Steve. It was the Phantom, not English Steve, who had taken that
clipping from the paper, made that sketch, and placed them in the dead
man's pocket. Max Linesthal would be robbed, and would swear that it was
English Steve--the Phantom had but a moment gone taken care to make
doubly sure of that point--then English Steve would be found murdered;
the police would attribute the murder without an instant's hesitation to
the gang who had boasted everywhere that they would take English Steve's
life; and to the gang, too, having failed to find the jewels elsewhere,
would be attributed, even as he, Jimmie Dale, had thought might be the
case, the possession of the proceeds of the robbery from Max Linesthal's
safe. That was why the robbery was being pulled here now in so open and
bare-faced a manner, intentionally so, as part of the plan, an integral,
vital part of the plan--to establish the alibi that English Steve could
never now refute!

The room seemed to swim before Jimmie Dale's eyes--_red_. Smarlinghue!
What did it matter now if Smarlinghue were seen, if Smarlinghue lived or
died, so that this inhuman fiend found his end too at the same time!
That was what Smarlinghue existed for--the final reckoning--the end. And
it was here now. There was the man he had sought through days and nights
of ceaseless, torturing effort. The Phantom! Primal, elemental, his soul
itself seemed stripped of all else but a blind, savage----

What was that? The doorbell, wasn't it? The doorbell in two quick, short
rings! Jimmie Dale, about to step forward into the other room, his
automatic already flung forward, instinctively held motionless for an
instant--and in that instant he saw the Phantom leap to his feet, and
whirl to the electric-light switch just beside the safe. There was a
_click_. The house was in utter blackness.

But Jimmie Dale was in action now. A signal, of course, those two rings!
Why? From whom? But it didn't matter now. Nothing mattered save to come
to grips with the Phantom in there. It was pitch black, but he knew what
the other's next move would be as well as though the room were still
alight.

With a bound, Jimmie Dale was through the doorway and into the room. The
table--those jewels! They were what the Phantom had come here for--and
signal or no signal, be its meaning what it might, the Phantom would not
leave without them if he could help it.

Jimmie Dale brought up against the table with a crash. His hand swept
swiftly across its top, and as he brushed the jewels to the floor, to
safety, a hand, groping it seemed, touched his--and was instantly drawn
away before he could grasp it.

A snarl came out of the darkness on the other side of the table. A cry
of terror rang out from the old man lashed in the chair. And then a
blinding flash, the roar of a revolver shot, as the Phantom fired--and
missed.

And Jimmie Dale laughed now, laughed with the tongue flame of the shot
still hot upon his cheek, and, hurling the table out of the way, he
flung himself forward again. He could not see. He could only spring
straight for the spot where the shot had come from. He could not fire in
return--he might hit the old man in the chair.

His fingers closed, gripped at a sleeve, tightened, and his other hand,
with clubbed automatic, swung upward in a fierce, short-arm jab. And his
soul cried out in joy as he felt the blow go home.

There was a sharp cry of pain; then a sudden, furious wrench that tore
the sleeve from Jimmie Dale's grasp--and then the sound, deadened now,
almost lost in Max Linesthal's terrified cries, of a step racing across
the floor.

Jimmie Dale's jaws clamped hard together. To use his flashlight was to
offer himself as a target that would not be missed a second time. But
the man was making for the door, of course. Jimmie Dale leaped back in
the darkness across the room--too late! The door slammed. He heard it
locked. He heard the footsteps racing down the little hallway toward the
back entrance.

But if there was no time to unlock this one, there was still another
door--the connecting door from this room into the next, and from there
into the hall. His flashlight now! It gleamed as he wrenched it from his
pocket and ran to the connecting door. Was this, too, locked! Strange,
those scattered jewels on the floor; that uncouth creature in a
nightgown lashed in a chair and screaming in fright! He wrenched again
at the door. No, it was not locked; but it was badly warped, and it
stuck. His shoulder, all his body weight, went against it. It gave now,
almost bursting from its hinges.

Jimmie Dale lunged through. It had cost him time; time enough, he was
afraid, to allow the Phantom to get away across the yard, and----Yes! He
had gained the rear door himself now. No one was in sight. But it was
dark, damnably dark, and----What was that noise? It seemed to be a
commotion of some sort going on in the street out in front of the house.
The neighbours must have heard the old jeweller's screams. He was still
screaming. Well, it didn't matter what it was! There was still a chance.
The Phantom could not yet be very far away, and he must have gone by the
lane.

Jimmie Dale was running now. In an instant he had crossed the yard; and
then, as he poised to swing himself over the fence, he drew suddenly
back instead, and crouched down in the shadows. Some one was climbing
over the fence _from_ the lane not ten yards away from where he stood. A
voice, muffled, gruff, reached him:

"Look out for that damned nail, sergeant!"

The police! A form, silhouetted against the night, showed on the top of
the fence for a moment, then dropped to the ground. It was followed by
another. Jimmie Dale crouched closer in against the fence in the
shadows. He gnawed his lip now in bitter chagrin. He was not afraid of
being discovered, it was far too dark for that; but he knew that with
this further delay any hope of finding the Phantom again was definitely
at an end.

The two men were joined by a third. They crossed the yard, and
disappeared inside the house.

Cautiously now, Jimmie Dale moved farther on along the side of the fence
away from the house. With the Phantom gone, it became purely a question
of self-preservation now. Smarlinghue found here by the police and
subjected to a search, held perhaps until the make-up, worn off in a
police cell, disclosed Jimmie Dale, was but little more pleasant to
contemplate than was the present realisation of the Phantom's escape!

Well, it should be safe enough here. He was at the far end of the yard
now; and silently, quickly, he swung himself over the fence into the
lane. He broke into a run, swerved into an alleyway that crossed the
lane some fifty yards farther on, and, following this, finally emerged
on a cross street a block away from the old jeweller's house.

There was a certain strange, abnormally cold composure upon him now; a
sort of philosophical acceptance of the fact that the Phantom had got
away. But his mind was probing, sifting, searching for the answer that
would explain the direct cause of the Phantom's escape, leaving him,
Jimmie Dale, victor only to the extent of having saved for the old
jeweller the contents of his safe. Who was it who had given that signal,
which, so evidently now, had been a warning that the police were at
hand? And how did it happen that the police had known anything about
what was going on in Max Linesthal's? It wasn't the shot or Max
Linesthal's screams--there hadn't been any disturbance up to the time
the doorbell had rung!

Jimmie Dale, shuffling along, as Smarlinghue always shuffled, went up
the block, turned the corner of the street on which Max Linesthal's
house stood--and as though suddenly attracted by the little crowd that
had gathered in front of the old jeweller's, made his way forward in
that direction. He reached the fringe of the crowd as a man in the
uniform of a police lieutenant, jumping from a car, pushed his way
unceremoniously through the rather tough-looking aggregation on the
sidewalk, and halted before a policeman who stood on duty at the door.
Jimmie Dale's eyes narrowed for an instant. That was Klinger, a
lieutenant in the precinct. It might be worth while!

Jimmie Dale, as Smarlinghue, was apparently actuated now by no other
motive than an ill-mannered, morbid curiosity that prompted him to
secure the best vantage point that he could, for, as he wormed and
elbowed his way nearer the lieutenant, his mouth was agape, breathless
with interest, in a sort of senile way.

He caught the lieutenant's quick flung question to the officer at the
door:

"Did you get him, Lynch?"

"No, sir," the man answered.

"You didn't! How's that? That woman, whoever she was, handed us a fake
tip over the phone, then?"

Smarlinghue's ragged form edged still closer to the two officers, as
though his curiosity were now beyond the bounds of restraint, as though
he were not only utterly oblivious to, but quite innocent of the
impropriety of standing there with blear, blinking eyes and gaping
mouth, greedily drinking in a conversation by no means intended for his
ears. The woman, whoever she was! It was the Tocsin, then, who had sent
the warning to the police. It couldn't have been any one else.

"No, sir," the man addressed as Lynch answered. "It was straight enough,
only there was an outside worker on the job, I guess. Anyway, just as we
got to the corner over there and started to cross the street, a man ran
up to Linesthal's door here, and then beat it like blazes down the
street, and got away."

"Did you get a look at him? Know who he was?"

"We aren't sure," Lynch replied. "But O'Grady said he thought it looked
like the Kitten."

The Kitten! Jimmie Dale was fumbling with his battered hat. The crowd,
as it jostled, had suddenly pushed him none too gently against the
police lieutenant's elbow.

Lieutenant Klinger swung sharply around.

"Send this damned mob about their business!" he snapped at the
policeman. "And maybe it wouldn't be a bad idea to run in one or two of
them while you're at it. Some of 'em look as though they were due for
it!" He stared suddenly into Jimmie Dale's face. "You, eh, Smarlinghue?
Hop-fighting, I suppose! What the hell are you doing around here?"

"Me?" Smarlinghue circled his lips with his tongue. "I--I ain't doing
nothing," he mumbled--and shrinking back through the crowd, and casting
furtive glances over his shoulder in the direction of the police
lieutenant while the crowd laughed, Smarlinghue scurried hurriedly down
the street.




--XVIII--

THE VOICE


It was like the glow of a firefly. It flitted here and there, lancing
its tiny stabs of light indefatigably through the darkness. From
somewhere without, in the distance, muffled, there came faintly the
rumbling of wheels, the clatter of a horse's hoofs on the pavement.
There was no other sound.

Jimmie Dale rose from his hands and knees, and, with the diminutive
flashlight switched off now, stood staring around him in the darkness.
Under the black silk mask his forehead furrowed. This was one of Mother
Margot's rooms--the room from which the Phantom had so mysteriously
disappeared on that first night. He had searched here before--more than
once--in an effort to discover the secret of the Phantom's
disappearance. But he had never found anything. To-night, because he had
never been satisfied with his previous efforts, and because he had now
been afforded a better opportunity of searching the place than ever
before, he had returned to it again. He had been at it for two hours
now. And still he had found nothing.

Both Mother Margot and the Tocsin had warned him to beware of the
place--that it was a trap. Both had warned him that the Phantom asked
nothing better than to lure him here. He shook his head. That might well
have been true of a month ago, when, in the guise of Isaac Shiftel,
alias Gentleman Laroque, the Phantom's unaccountable disappearance from
this room before his, Jimmie Dale's, eyes, might naturally have been
relied upon to bring him back without loss of time in the hope of
getting at the bottom of the mystery. But not to-day. It was too long
ago now. If, as a trap, it had not proved effective almost immediately
after it was baited, the Phantom, from the standpoint of pure logic,
must long since have given over any hope of it ever proving effective as
a trap at all.

Jimmie Dale smiled grimly. He had, in spite of warnings, invaded the
place almost immediately after that night--and he had not been able to
find even a trap, let alone the secret of the Phantom's disappearance!
Nor was Mother Margot in the secret. He was convinced of that. True, she
had been installed here by the Phantom when the latter had been forced
to vacate the premises after the police raid, and she had obviously been
installed here for the purpose of keeping any stranger from renting the
rooms, and therefore, by her occupancy, of safeguarding that secret for
the Phantom, but of its nature he was sure she was ignorant. He doubted,
indeed, if the Phantom trusted any one to that extent!

But, in any case, Mother Margot was away to-night. And so to-night's
conditions offered him the opportunity for a search that, prolong it as
he chose, was almost guaranteed against any interruption, or, as he felt
confident now, any risk of the place proving a trap. Mother Margot was
away. He did not know where she was. It did not matter. Presumably there
was devil's work afoot again to-night, and she was engaged in her share
of it. He only knew that for the first time since she had succeeded the
Phantom as the tenant of these rooms, she had absented herself from her
usual haunts. As Smarlinghue, who at her request had haunted the dens
and dives of the underworld for one English Steve last night, he had
been free, without risk of bringing any suspicion upon the character of
"Smarlinghue," to seek her out openly at her pushcart--which covered her
real activities--on Thompson Street that morning. But she had not been
there. She had, however, in view of what had transpired the previous
night, obviously expected him, for he had found a message waiting for
him with an old Italian who had his cart next to hers.

"You Smarly?" the old Italian had said. "Margot go away one, two
day--come back."

Through the darkness Jimmie Dale stared around him, his brows still
knitted. The best opportunity he had ever had of searching these rooms
had been his to-night, and he had seized it, but was there any use in
continuing the search? He had the rest of the night before him, for that
matter, if he chose to devote it to that purpose--but was it worth
while? He had covered every inch of the floor, every inch of the walls
up to a reasonable height, and his search had gone utterly unrewarded.
He had been minute, painstaking, exact, thorough to a degree, and he had
found nothing. Was there any use in going all over it again?

He half turned away toward the door, but halted again. There was a
secret here--even if he had never been able to find it. There was a clue
here--even if so far it had proved but a phantom clue. That fact would
not down. He hesitated an instant, and then, with a shrug of his
shoulders, moved softly halfway across the room. Well, once more, then!

He began to reconstruct again the scene of that first night--here in
this room, the inner one of the two that Mother Margot now occupied. It
was exactly here he had stood when Isaac Shiftel, stripped of his
disguise, had suddenly turned off the light and in the ensuing darkness
had vanished, as that trite saying had it, into thin air. The man could
not have gone by the door, because there was only one door, and he,
Jimmie Dale, had been blocking the doorway; nor could the man have gone
by the single window, because at that time the police had been on guard
in the alleyway outside. Through the wall or the floor then? Yes. But
how? Where? Neither wall nor floor showed any----

Out of the darkness, without warning, there came suddenly a low, ugly
laugh.

"The Gray Seal!" said a voice.

In an instant, strained and tense, his automatic whipped from his pocket
and outflung before him, Jimmie Dale drew back against the wall. A trap
after all! The trap he had so logically proven to have outlived its
usefulness! He strained his eyes through the blackness. Nothing! He
could see nothing. Nor was there any further sound. A minute passed.
Was it a minute--or some vast, immeasurable on of time? He stood rigid,
motionless--waiting.

"Where?" said a voice abruptly.

Jimmie Dale turned his head; his automatic swung swiftly. The voice
seemed to have come almost from his elbow. Then his jaws locked hard
together. No; it was not from there! They were playing with him, were
they? A cat-and-mouse game! Well then, he----

A voice spoke again:

"Worth anywhere from thirty to fifty thousand. Easy money."

Jimmie Dale pushed back his hat, and above his mask flirted away a bead
of sweat from his forehead. He understood now. There wasn't any one in
the room save himself. It wasn't a trap. It was only uncanny. He was
simply listening to snatches of a conversation that came from the
nowhere, out of the darkness.

He leaned forward a little, striving to the utmost to _place_ the
direction of the sounds. The voices, he realised now, while quite
distinct, had been curiously heavy and uneven. He nodded sharply to
himself. A pipe, a hollow space, almost anything might act as a
conductor for the sound waves, and bring them here from no little
distance at that!

Once more a voice broke through the stillness:

"Easy money, yes; but old Twisty Munn's no fool, and neither is Kid
Gregg. The stuff will be pinched by now, but we've plenty of time
left--enough to see that there are no mistakes made."

Again there came the low, ugly laugh.

"There won't be any! One o'clock at Twisty's----"

The voice ended as abruptly as though, if speaking over a telephone, the
wire had been suddenly cut. There seemed to Jimmie Dale no other way to
describe it. He stared around him in a queer, helpless way. Now the
voices had seemed to come from here, now from there. His lips twisted in
grim self-mockery. The longer he had listened the more confusing it had
become. The voices simply came from _everywhere_ in the room.

Had they ended now?

The tiny glow of the flashlight played for an instant on the crystal of
his watch. It was fourteen minutes past twelve.

Noiselessly now Jimmie Dale moved across the room to a chair. The sort
of finality with which that last sentence had been broken off held out
little hope, he felt intuitively, of his hearing anything more. But
there was a chance. He sat down quietly. Strange! Where had the voices
come from? From below, above--where? He did not know. He knew only that
_one_ of those voices must be the Phantom's. It did not require proof.
It was axiomatic. He could not locate the direction from which the
voices had come, but the opening through which the Phantom had once
vanished from this room was obviously the medium through which the
voices entered. How cleverly deduced! He snapped at himself mentally.
The only trouble was that after prolonged and laborious search he had
not been able to locate that opening either!

His fingers played softly in a curiously caressing way over his
automatic. It hadn't been any trap. The allusion to the Gray Seal that
had so startled him had been only a snatch of the conversation which had
at first, through some cause or other that he was unable to define,
reached him only in broken fragments. Or perhaps, after all, it was a
trap--the other way around. A trap for the trapper! If he could not
locate the voices here, it might not possibly be so difficult to do so
at, say, one Twisty Munn's--at one o'clock!

He sat there in the darkness listening, his mind at work. One of the
voices had been the Phantom's, that was beyond question or doubt; but
which one of the two it was he did not know. He could, he was certain,
have recognised Gentleman Laroque's, alias the Phantom's, voice anywhere
under ordinary circumstances, but here, due unquestionably to the
mysterious way in which the sound waves had been transmitted, all sense
of inflexion had been lost. Nor did the conversation itself, as he went
over it again in his mind, help to differentiate in that respect one
speaker from the other. Either one of the two, from what had been said,
might have been the Phantom.

Twisty Munn's at one o'clock! He smiled grimly. One of the two voices at
least, possibly both of them, would be at Twisty Munn's at one o'clock.
Well, if nothing further eventuated here, he, too, would be at Twisty
Munn's at that hour. His search, the hours he had spent here, had
perhaps not been so fruitless after all! It was an even chance at least
that, in spite of the continued silence in this room now, he would hear
_the_ voice again to-night. And if he did----

His face hardened suddenly. Last night he had held the Phantom at his
mercy, last night he could have shot to kill before the man had even
been aware of his presence; and last night, because he had failed to
realise that it was a Thing blood-flecked with murder, a Thing that
preyed upon every decency in life, and not a human being, the Phantom
had escaped. Last night this had happened. _There would be no second
time._ There was another life at stake--hers--the Tocsin's. Last night
he had jeopardised that life because he had not fought the Phantom with
the Phantom's own weapons, but all that was now at an end.

And as he sat there listening, and there was still no further sound, he
found himself strangely, abnormally calm, strangely callous even, as
though this decision were but commonplace and one of everyday
occurrence. He asked now only for one more meeting with the Phantom.
Where, or how, it did not matter. Just once more!

The minutes passed. The tiny flashlight winked again through the
darkness and lighted up the dial of Jimmie Dale's watch.

It was twenty-five minutes of one.

Jimmie Dale stood up. There was evidently nothing more to be heard here,
or if there was, and he waited any longer, then the chance of hearing
anything at Twisty Munn's must go by the board--and as a choice between
the two he very much inclined toward Twisty Munn's now. He moved softly
through the connecting doorway, and traversed the adjoining room that
opened on the hall. Here, the door opened and closed silently behind
him, and Jimmie Dale, lost in the darkness of the unlighted hallway,
reached the rear door of the tenement, and stepped out into a small back
yard. A moment more, and he was over the fence, and, slipping his mask
from his face, was running noiselessly along a lane.

Two blocks away he emerged upon a dingy, ill-lighted and uninviting
street. He smiled a little whimsically, as he pulled his soft felt hat
somewhat rakishly to one side and well down over his eyes, and, hunching
the perfectly fitting dinner coat at one of the shoulders, turned up the
collar around his neck. True, the costume was hardly _de rigueur_ in the
East Side, but he was Jimmie Dale, not Smarlinghue, to-night. He
shrugged his shoulders. Well, did it matter? He was not on his way to
attend any _public_ function, and as for the streets there were always
the shadows of the buildings to hug a little closer, always a loose,
slouching gait to assume.

Twisty Munn! Kid Gregg! What was the game these two were playing
to-night? He shook his head impatiently. That did not matter either. It
mattered only that the Phantom was concerned in their movements. It was
common knowledge in the underworld that Twisty Munn was a "buyer" for a
certain class of apparently honest establishments, where, if the alibi
were good enough, stolen goods, disguised of course, were offered over
the counters to the public at prices well in excess of what could be
obtained through the underground channels employed by the regular
"fences." It was profitable for all concerned, even taking into account
the commission charged by the crafty Twisty Munn, who lived
apparently--for the benefit of the police--in a condition approaching
almost abject poverty in a squalid, ill-furnished room at the top of a
seedy and somewhat questionable tenement over in the direction of the
East River. Kid Gregg, less known save by the inner circle of the
underworld, which latter had already marked him for preferment, was a
young and budding crook, still outside the ken of the police, who showed
exceeding promise in the profession he had chosen. In a word, neither
of them had ever had any dealings or were in any way connected with
Gentleman Laroque's, alias the Phantom's gang.

Jimmie Dale's dark eyes narrowed grimly as he went along. The conclusion
was somewhat obvious. The Phantom was by no means averse to plucking the
plums ripened by some one else, and it was fairly evident that in some
way or another he had got wind of one that had been ripened by Twisty
Munn and Kid Gregg. It looked very much therefore as though the night
were likely to develop into a three-cornered game, counting in himself,
Jimmie Dale, with the added possibility that the trumps perhaps might be
in the hand that neither Twisty Munn nor Kid Gregg in the first place,
nor the Phantom in the second, suspected!

Jimmie Dale covered block after block at a swinging stride. His mind
reverted to Mother Margot's rooms. It was strange where those voices had
come from! He could not tear the building down to find out. He had
already known there was a secret exit from that room. The voices in that
respect had not proved anything further. His mind mulled on. A search of
the rooms adjacent to Mother Margot's offered no prospect of help in the
solution of the problem. If the room itself, where he _knew_ the secret
exit to be, was so apparently search proof, what better chance would any
other room offer? Or why, as a matter of fact, should the secret exit
even lead into any other room? Well, the cellar then, for the Phantom
could not have gone up through the roof! There was no cellar! The ground
floor was a sort of basement in itself! Those voices----

Cycles! He was beginning all over again. He shook his head in
self-exasperation, and with a mental effort dismissed these thoughts
from his mind. He had almost reached his destination, and the immediate
present demanded his full attention.

Under a street lamp he looked at his watch. Twelve minutes to one. He
nodded. He was well on time. Just ahead of him was the three-story
tenement where Twisty Munn made his home.




--XIX--

JACKALS


The street was deserted. The tenement itself was dark. Not a light
showed from any window. But Twisty Munn lived in an upstairs room at the
rear, therefore the fact that no light could be seen from the street had
no bearing whatever on Twisty Munn.

Jimmie Dale stepped suddenly into the doorway. The door itself, the
entrance common to heaven alone knew how many who hived in wretchedness
and squalor within, and to whom a latchkey would have been not far
removed from mockery, was unlocked as he had expected. He moved
noiselessly into the hall. The place was close and dank to the nostrils;
also it reeked with the odour of garlic. It was dark, too; but through
the murk he could just make out the stairs ahead of him and to the left.

There was a curious tightening of Jimmie Dale's lips as he moved forward
and tested the tread of the first stair cautiously. Yes, he knew the
breed! Old and in disrepair, the stairs would certainly shriek their
protest to high heaven if any liberty were taken with them. But it was
Jimmie Dale of the old days, Jimmie Dale of the days of Larry the Bat
and the rickety stairs of the old Sanctuary, worse even than these
stairs were, where his life had literally depended upon his silence a
score of times, as he went upward now.

He gained the first landing. There were doors around him here, and,
because they were flimsy doors and flimsy partitions, from behind them
the night sounds reached him--the restless movement of a sleeper, the
sick, querulous cry of a child, a stertorous snore.

Twelve minutes of one! Ten now, wasn't it?

There were three flights. At the third landing Jimmie Dale paused for an
instant to adjust the black silk mask over his face again, then stole
forward, feeling out with his hand along the wall, toward a thin,
irregular thread of light that seeped out from under the ill-fitting
threshold of a door at the rear end of the hall. Twisty Munn, at least,
was evidently keeping the rendezvous!

Faintly, no more than a murmur, voices reached Jimmie Dale from the
other side of the door now as he stood before it. And now a pick-lock in
his hand was silently at work. Perhaps half a minute passed. Then, by
the barest fraction of an inch at a time, the doorknob turned without
sound under the slim, trained, sensitive fingers, and the door opened by
a crack. The murmur from within became distinct, disintegrated itself
into words and sentences.

"...Sure, de goods is all right, but wot about de rest of it? De guys I
have to slip dese over to ain't takin' chances, not if youse handed 'em
de stuff for nothin' an' paid 'em for takin' it."

The door opened another crack. Twisty Munn and Kid Gregg! Yes, that was
what the voice in Mother Margot's room had said. Jimmie Dale could just
see the two. They were at a table in the upper corner of the room. His
eyes narrowed. There was what looked like a small fortune in the shape
of jewellery on the table between them. Twisty Munn! The
stoop-shouldered, almost hunch-backed form of the shabby old man was
bent forward over the table, while his thin, hooked fingers clawed at
the jewels, picking up one after the other to hold it close to
short-sighted, squinting eyes. And opposite him Kid Gregg, young, in an
over-loud checked suit, a peaked cap pulled so low over his forehead as
almost to hide the small, roving black eyes, scowled in evident
impatience.

"Aw, it's sewed up--tight!" the latter snapped. "Ain't I told youse
dat?"

"Sure, youse told me dat," agreed the old man sharply. "Two days ago
youse told me youse had it all fixed for to-night, an' dat everythin'
was safe, an' dat youse'd bring me de sparklers. Well, dat's all right,
youse've brought 'em, an' _dey're_ all right; but I ain't heard yet how
safe dey are, an' dat's wot puts de deal across wid de crowd I works
for. See?"

A cigarette dangled from Kid Gregg's upper lip. With the tip of his
tongue he deftly transferred it to the corner of his mouth.

"Well, den, listen!" he grinned complacently. "Some job, Twisty; an' all
me own--see? I used to know a guy dat worked for old Froomes up on de
Avenue, an' he was forever shootin' off his face about de sparklers de
family wore. Well, a month ago I gets a job dere myself--taken on
regular. Get me? Polishin' de hardwood floors, an' keepin' de windows of
de mansion washed. Ah, say, it was soft! I hadn't been dere a week
before I knew where de combination of de safe was kept in a drawer in de
library right alongside de safe itself--so's Mrs. Froomes wouldn't have
to walk far to get it!"

Kid Gregg chuckled, and sucking at his cigarette only to find it out,
began to search through his pockets for a match.

Jimmie Dale stared. Froomes! It was Martin K. Froomes, of course, the
retired broker. He knew Froomes very well indeed, and on several "stag"
occasions had been in Froomes' house; and Froomes knew him--as Jimmie
Dale, a fellow member of the St. James Club. So that was where that haul
of jewellery on the table there had come from! What was it the voice in
Mother Margot's room had said?--"anywhere from thirty to fifty
thousand." He could well believe it. Froomes was an exceedingly wealthy
man, and, besides a wife, had two daughters who moved constantly in
society.

"Go on!" prompted Twisty Munn impatiently.

"Watch me!" boasted Kid Gregg. "I could have made de pinch anytime, but
den I'd have had to make me get-away, an' duck outer little old New
York. I wasn't for dat--not some! I've still got me job polishin' de
floors, an' to-morrow mornin' I'll be polishin' 'em de same as though
nothin' had happened. See? Some day de bulls may write up me
autobeeography an' keep me photograph handy to look at w'en dey wants
to see somethin' handsome--but not if I sees 'em first! Nix on dat
stuff! So far I'm a nice, quiet, hard-working young man. Get me? Well,
dere ain't no hurry, an' I sits tight, keepin' me lamps open lookin' for
goats. An' I don't have to wait long, neither. One day I was out on a
window sill washin' de window, an' I hears de boss in de next room
handin' out a Sunday school spiel like he was talkin' to a naughty son.
'From a business standpoint,' says de old man, 'dis has nearly lost
youse yer job here, an' no man ever made anythin' out of himself on that
basis. An' from a moral standpoint,' he says, 'it's simply de road dat
leads from bad to worse.'"

Jimmie Dale, an ominous droop at the corners of his mouth, dared another
half inch of door space, as Kid Gregg paused for a moment to drag on his
cigarette. Was there a wall switch for that single, dangling
incandescent that lighted the room? Yes, there it was--just inside the
door. He could almost have reached in and touched it from where he
stood.

"Well, dat's all I heard," went on Kid Gregg; "but, take it from me, I
watches to see who comes outer dat room. Say, can youse beat it! It's a
little red-headed dude named Culver, dat's a typewriter, or secretary,
or somethin' like dat to de boss. After dat, dere's nothin' to it.
Culver's de bird I'm after, an' I gets his number for fair. Some
high-roller wid his dinkey shirts an' his imitation diamond shirt studs!
He don't live dere wid de boss, y'understand, but he dresses up every
night like he owned a bank, an' hits de high spots on de first speed.
Youse knows de kind, don't youse?"

Twisty Munn was twining the long, bony fingers of his hands in and out
of the heap of brooches, pins, rings and pendants in front of him,
seemingly fascinated by the fiery little gleams of light that he made to
flash from their countless facets.

"Up de river," observed Twisty Munn, "dere's a whole cageful of dem
birds dat dress up _all_ de time--only dey don't sport de shirt studs
any more. I get youse! Wot did youse do wid _Mister_ Culver?"

Kid Gregg indulged in a fresh cigarette. There was a smirk of unabashed
conceit upon his face, as he blew a smoke ring in the air.

"Him? He's down at Hoy Loo's."

Twisty Munn leaned suddenly across the table.

"Wot's dat?" he demanded tensely. "Hoy Loo's?"

"Youse said it!" nodded Kid Gregg complacently. "He's gone bye-bye down
at Hoy Loo's wid a nice little pipe of coke laid out beside de bunk."

Twisty Munn squinted blear eyes at the other.

"I don't get youse!" he grunted after a moment. "Dat don't stick nothin'
on him. I don't get youse!"

Kid Gregg smiled pityingly.

"Dat's why youse won't never be nothin' more dan youse are to-day,
Twisty," he murmured; "just runnin' around an' doin' de dirty work. It's
de bean dat counts."

"Youse close yer face!" snapped Twisty Munn. "Go on, an' spill de rest
of it."

"All right," grinned Kid Gregg. "I fixed it up for to-night, after I'd
tipped off another guy I knows to make up wid Culver about a week ago.
Me pal plays de game. Savvy? He chums up wid Culver, an' promises to
show Culver some of de _real_ goods around town. Youse gets it now,
don't youse? To-night de two of dem goes to Hoy Loo's, an' dey starts in
wid a drink, an' Culver gets a pill slipped into his, an' den he's laid
out peaceful on a bunk just as though he'd got stewed on too many pipes.
Soft, eh? He'll be dere to-morrow mornin'. He don't know who me pal is
because somehow me pal ain't got a good memory even for his own name;
an' besides, bein' dolled up for de occasion wid a little waxed
moustache an' a cute little beard, youse'd have taken him for a French
Count--which he ain't. Well, de bulls get Mister Culver dere in de
mornin'--an' Hoy Loo gets a piece of de money youse're goin' to hand out
'cause he's got to stand for a police fine."

Kid Gregg paused and grinned at Twisty Munn, as the latter puckered the
leathery skin of his forehead into wrinkles.

"Never mind about de bean stuff dis time," said Twisty Munn gruffly. "I
ain't wise yet, but I'll say it begins to listen good. How'd youse hang
it onto him?"

"De easiest thing youse know," said the Kid cheerfully. "A letter--dat's
wot. Dere's a letter in de mail now dat de police gets in de mornin',
just about de same time dat de family on de Avenue wakes up an' t'rows a
fit w'en dey finds de safe open an' de sparklers gone. De letter just
says dat mabbe de police'd like to know dat a guy blew into Hoy Foo's
to-night, an' got stewed to de eyes hittin' de pipe, an' got frisked of
a bagful of rings an' jewels an' stuff by some yeggs dat was floatin'
around dere. An' it's signed: 'A Friend.' I guess dat's all to de
mustard, ain't it? Dat takes care of de missin' goods! De bulls slip
over dere, an' dey finds it's me red-headed friend Culver, de typewriter
expert for Mr. Froomes dat owns de safe dat's been cracked."

Twisty Munn blinked.

"Dat's all right," he said judicially; "but it don't actually prove he
pulled de job. If he was frisked, which he wasn't, den----"

"Sure, he was frisked!" said Kid Gregg with a vicious grin. "All dis
happened before I went up to de nabob's house an hour ago. Dat was
midnight, y'understand, an' de Froomes bunch was all in bed. I wasn't
takin' no chances. He was frisked, all right!" The Kid with studied
effect blew another smoke ring in the air. "I frisked him--of one of
dose near-diamond shirt studs of his dat youse can buy from de hawkers
at three for a nickel!"

Enlightenment was dawning on Twisty Munn's wily countenance.

"Say dat again!" he whispered hoarsely.

"Sure!" said Kid Gregg. "Dat's wot! D'youse know of anythin' dat's
easier to lose widout youse bein' wise to it dan a shirt stud dat falls
out w'en youse're pawin' over de stuff in a safe youse've cracked? Dat's
where it is now--on de floor up dere in de Froomes' library under some
papers dat was yanked out of de safe."

For a moment Twisty Munn stared at his companion, then his long, bony
hand shot out across the table.

"Youse'll go a long way, Kid! Shake!" he cackled admiringly. "Take it
from me, youse will--a long way!"

"Youse bet yer life--an' nothin' but dust behind me!" agreed Kid Gregg
boastfully. "Youse said somethin', Twisty!"

"S'help me!" gulped Twisty Munn. His fingers clawed the jewels on the
table again. "As sweet a haul as ever I've seen, an' open an' shut--open
an' shut!" He pushed the heap suddenly toward Kid Gregg. "Put 'em back
in dat little sack," he gloated. "I'll take 'em, Kid--dere's big money
in dis all round."

Under his mask a dull red had suffused Jimmie Dale's cheeks;
subconsciously almost his hand had crept into his pocket, and his
fingers had closed around the stock of his automatic. It was brutal
work; miserable, inhuman work. A shirt stud, three for a nickel--and
five, ten, fifteen years, the best of a man's life, behind the drear
walls and the steel bars of Sing Sing. Was it possible that men like
these two lived, festering God's green earth! His automatic came from
his pocket. They were stuffing the jewels into a small canvas bag now.
Well, the game wasn't finished yet; there was still another hand to
play! The little sack would prove a convenient receptacle. It ought not
to take but a moment more before _all_ the jewels were inside, and----

Jimmie Dale drew suddenly back from the doorway. Had he _forgotten?_ In
the natural sweep of anger, in the hot-blooded fury that the scene in
there had brought him, had he forgotten--those voices in Mother Margot's
rooms! What was that now? A creak upon the stairs? Yes, he was sure of
it! Another! One o'clock! It must be after one o'clock. Some one was
coming!

Every faculty alert, he crouched back now--farther back, away from the
door, where he was lost in the darkness of the hall. Yes, there was some
one almost at the head of the stairs now, coming stealthily, almost
without sound--only once in a while a faint, protesting squeak from a
stair tread that would not be audible inside Twisty Munn's room. Those
jewels, Twisty Munn, Kid Gregg were the lesser issue now. It was the
Phantom who had brought him here, the hope that the Phantom would come
himself in person.

Tense, silent, Jimmie Dale crouched there. The Phantom! If it were the
Phantom in any one of the characters that he, Jimmie Dale, could
recognise, there would be no failure this time such as there had been
last night! Whoever passed from the hall into that room would stand out,
if only for an instant, clearly defined in the lighted doorway--and an
instant would be enough!

A second passed--still another. A dark form bulked at the head of the
stairs. It was joined by another. Two of them, then! And now there was
no sound--yet the two dark forms there moved. They came on down the hall
like queer, wavering, intangible shapes that seemed almost like brain
hallucinations in the darkness.

Outflung before him, Jimmie Dale's automatic held a bead on the doorway.
They had stopped there now, stopped in that thin crack of light that
seeped out through the inch of open door that he himself had left. And
the face of one came into the light. Bunty Myers! It was not the
Phantom; it was Bunty Myers, the Phantom's unholy chief-of-staff! But
_both_ of the men could not be the Phantom. The other! Who was the
other?

A whisper came. A revolver barrel glinted in the light-thread. Jimmie
Dale strained forward. The other! Just a glimpse of the man's face!
There could be no disguise that would blind his eyes to Gentleman
Laroque, the _real_ man, any longer; no disguise however clever that
could----

The door crashed inward, a wave of light flooded out into the hall, and
the two forms at the door leaped forward into the room. But, for the
single instant Jimmie Dale had asked, the light had shone on the second
man's face--and upon Jimmie Dale there surged a sense of bitter
disappointment that seemed to engulf him, seemed to hold him
momentarily stunned. Neither was the second man the Phantom; it was only
the Kitten, one of the gang that used to rendezvous in the back upstairs
room of Wally Kerrigan's "club." The Kitten who only last night
had--Well, he might have known! It was the Phantom's way. It was the
Phantom and Bunty Myers he had heard talking--he knew that now--but the
Phantom had left the actual work, as he had done a score of times
before, to his tools and pawns.

His mind seemed strangely numbed. He stared into the room. Two men had
just leaped through that lighted doorway. It was like some scene
flashing upon a cinema screen, wasn't it? Shirt studs, three for a
nickel--and the best of a man's life behind the bars of Sing Sing! He
shook himself free as from some clogging mental weight. Yes, that was
what it meant, whether Bunty Myers or Kid Gregg came off the victor--and
there wasn't any other issue now because the Phantom wasn't here.

He crept forward to the door. Old Twisty Munn was cringing in a corner,
twining his claw-like fingers in and out of each other, licking at his
lips, his face gray with fear. On the table stood the little canvas bag,
tied now with a string at the top--and behind the table, Kid Gregg, a
cigarette still dangling from his upper lip, had risen from his chair,
and was staring with a queer, inane smile into the muzzle of Bunty
Myers' revolver a yard or so away.

"Put up your hands!" snarled Bunty Myers.

"Sure!" smiled Kid Gregg; and--the revolver in his hand previously
hidden by the edge of the table--whipped up the weapon and fired.

It was answered by almost simultaneous reports as Bunty Myers and the
Kitten fired together; it was answered by a scream of terror from Twisty
Munn--and then the crash of the overturned table as Kid Gregg spun half
around like a spent top and pitched against it.

But Jimmie Dale, too, was in action now. From the edge of the door jamb
his hand shot forward, closed upon the electric-light switch, and the
room was in darkness. And the next instant he had flung himself forward
across the room. The little canvas bag! He had marked the exact spot on
the floor where it had fallen from the table. Queer, this scuffling of
feet around him; savage oaths; snarls of confusion; doors opening
somewhere below in the tenement; the creak of stairs, and--Yes, here it
was! His hand closed upon the bag and thrust it into his pocket. He
turned and sprang for the doorway again. Something blocked his way,
struck at him viciously, clutched at his clothing. He struck back with a
short-arm jab, tore himself free, and lunged forward again.

A revolver flash lanced through the blackness behind him--another.
Twisty Munn still screamed in terror. And a bedlam seemed loosed now
throughout the tenement. But Jimmie Dale had gained the door.

He slammed it shut behind him, and, springing for the stairs, took them
three and four at a jump. A man holding a candle, peering upward from
the landing below, blocked his way for an instant--and went down before
Jimmie Dale's rush.

Two more flights to go! Doors opened. Frightened faces were thrust out.
There came the cries of children--and then from above the pound of feet,
racing as madly as his own down the upper stairs.

Jimmie Dale laughed strangely to himself. That would be Bunty Myers and
the Kitten, but they mattered nothing now. There had been murder above,
Kid Gregg was dead, and their one concern would be to hunt cover without
loss of time, because if they were known to Twisty Munn they were in
desperate case indeed!

He was not concerned with any pursuit from Bunty Myers or the Kitten. It
was a question only of what margin he himself had before the uproar here
would have brought the police upon the scene. It was the shouts and
yells that pursued him from the awakened and terrified occupants of the
tenement wherein lay his real source of danger.

A minute! That was all he asked. The margin of a minute! He risked a
leap of almost half the length of the lower stairs, stumbled at the
bottom, recovered himself, jumped for the front door, wrenched it open
and dashed out. The street was still empty. Thank God! He ran like a
deer for the corner, gained it, doubled at the next one, and then
dropped into an nonchalant walk.




--XX--

AT A QUARTER TO THREE


He was safe now. He laughed shortly, without mirth. Safe! Yes, for the
moment--but the night wasn't ended yet. He laboured under no delusions
on that score. The rendezvous at Twisty's, instead of the hoped-for
meeting with the Phantom, had left him with the heritage of a little
canvas bag whose physical contents became but a handful of miserable,
worthless baubles compared with the potentialities it held for a
long-term penitentiary sentence for an innocent man. Nothing that had
transpired at Twisty Munn's had changed by one iota the vile, low,
cunning trap that Kid Gregg had laid for his victim--and had now paid
for with his own life. The police would receive the letter; the police
would find that shirt stud at the scene of the robbery, find this young
fool Culver at Hoy Loo's, and find in Culver's shirt that a stud was
missing from amongst its fellows.

Jimmie Dale's face darkened now, as he turned at the next street and
headed over in the direction of the Bowery. Young fool! Yes, that was
it! Why should he take any further risk? He did not know Culver. He knew
nothing about Culver except that he had a red head, and was evidently
somewhat of a bounder who probably very richly deserved what--No; he
knew more than that. He knew that Culver was _innocent_.

And then a smile came to Jimmie Dale's lips, a half whimsical, half
troubled smile. Yes, of course! It was inevitable! He knew that. He had
known it all along. Why else had he taken the risk of snatching up that
little bag in Twisty Munn's room? Well, then?

Hoy Loo's? He shook his head. He would find nothing there but a limp,
red-headed boy, drugged into unconsciousness. He could do nothing with
Culver; for, even if he managed to get Culver out of and away from the
dope joint, there still remained the one outstanding, damning piece of
evidence in the shape of that shirt stud in the library of the Froomes'
home. Neither would Culver's removal from Hoy Loo's offset the letter
that the police would receive simply because they did not find the boy
there, for they would find that Culver _had_ been there, had spent most
of the night there. Equally, there were no means of intercepting that
letter.

There was only one alternative. Jimmie Dale shrugged his shoulders, and
again the whimsical smile broke across his lips. It was perhaps a
fortunate thing for Culver that he, Jimmie Dale, was not red-headed too!

He hurried on now, breaking at times almost into a run. There was only
one way, and--yes--he saw that way clearly enough now. It remained
merely a question of whether by any chance the robbery at the Froomes'
mansion would be discovered before he could act. It was not likely,
since Kid Gregg had said the household had all retired by midnight; but
it nevertheless left the matter of time an unknown factor whose latent
possibilities were by no means to be ignored. Well, he would lose no
time!

Near the Bowery, in an all-night caf, he entered the telephone booth.
He gave the number of his residence on Riverside Drive, and as he waited
for the connection into his dark eyes, strangely, there crept a softer
light. Old Jason would answer the phone. Faithful old Jason, butler to
the father, more than butler to the son! Despite injunctions, despite
the nights, many and many of them, when he, Jimmie Dale, did not return
at all, Jason would even now probably be maintaining his self-appointed
vigil in the arm-chair in the vestibule waiting for his Master Jim--and
almost certainly asleep! Jason was an old man, and nature was stronger
than the flesh. Well, it was Jason's way, a rather splendid way, a way
of great devotion. Strange? No--not strange! It was just Jason. Jason
knew perhaps too little or too much; enough, in any case, so that the
old man lived in constant anxiety anent the safety of his Master Jim,
and----

"Yes! Hello! That you, Jason?" said Jimmie Dale quickly.

"Yes, sir--Master Jim, sir," the old man answered.

"Listen, Jason!" said Jimmie Dale. "Rouse up Benson, and send him down
here with the light car as fast as he can make it. Tell him the
Palace--he knows where that is."

"Yes, sir; at once," Jason replied; and then, a curious hesitancy, a
curious yearning, in his voice: "Is there any--anything else, Master
Jim, sir?"

"Yes!" said Jimmie Dale sharply. "You've been sitting up again, Jason!"
Jimmie Dale's smile belied the severity of his tone. How many times had
he used exactly the same words to Jason--and with probably the same
effect! "Go to bed, Jason! Good-night!"

"Yes, sir, Master Jim," said Jason. "Good-night, sir."

Jimmie Dale hung up the receiver and went out into the street again,
making for the Bowery now, and walking in an uptown direction. It would
save time to meet Benson by part of the way. By the time he walked to
the Palace Saloon, Benson should have about reached there too.

He began a mental calculation as he went along. Say, twenty-five minutes
for Benson to get downtown, then another twenty for himself, Jimmie
Dale, to reach his objective on Fifth Avenue, still another twenty for
the work there was to do, and, yes, that was pretty close figuring,
though it gave Benson, who was far safer away from the car and would
have to walk, a leeway of twenty minutes. Allow an extra ten minutes,
then, as a factor of safety. That made seventy-five minutes--an hour and
a quarter. He looked at his watch. It was exactly half-past one. That
would bring it, then, to a quarter to three.

He nodded. A quarter to three! He could depend on Benson literally to
the extent of his life, and indeed had done so on more than one
occasion; Benson as a chauffeur was almost on the same plane with Jason
as a butler. As he had remarked many times before, there was perhaps no
man in New York who was served as he was--and it was not a service of
money. Rare thing? Yes! But it was true. It _did_ exist in the world.
Thank God for it!

Jimmie Dale walked briskly. He reached the corner in front of the Palace
Saloon that he had given his chauffeur as a rendezvous. Benson had not
yet arrived. Consulting his watch, Jimmie Dale waited a minute, and then
taking out a little notebook began to write rapidly under the rays of
the street lamp. This, too, would save time--or, at least, preserve the
schedule. It would save the two or three minutes necessary to give
Benson verbal instructions, though he could, of course, have taken Benson
along with him in the car since their roads would lie in the same
direction for part of the way, but he had definitely decided against
that. If anything went amiss, it would be infinitely better for Benson
that there should be no possibility of the two of them having been seen
_together_ in the car. He owed that to Benson. It was quite another
matter that Benson, obeying orders, should have turned the car over to
his employer here where he had been instructed to do so.

He tore the leaf from his notebook and folded it carefully. There was
one minute left for Benson to make the rendezvous on the timetable set
for--Yes, here he was now!

A car drew up at the curb. Benson's clean-cut, strong young face showed
in the light as he touched his cap.

"Good work, Benson!" said Jimmie Dale approvingly. "What time is it?"

Benson leaned forward to consult the car's clock.

"By your _watch_, Benson," said Jimmie Dale. He held his own in his
hand.

Benson looked at his wrist watch.

"Five minutes of two, sir," he said.

"Right!" said Jimmie Dale. He motioned Benson from the car. "I'll take
the car, Benson." And then, as he swung into the driver's seat, he
leaned out and handed Benson the folded note. "Follow these instructions
to the letter, Benson," he said quietly. "And _destroy_ that note.
Good-night."

The car turned and headed uptown. Jimmie Dale drove fast. The streets
were deserted. The minutes passed--ten, fifteen, eighteen. He kept
glancing at the time--and nodded as he finally parked his car on a side
street within half a block of one of the most exclusive residential
sections of Fifth Avenue. He had taken nineteen minutes from the Palace
Saloon.

The black silk mask covered his face again, as he stole forward now and
slipped into an areaway that ran in the rear of the corner house on the
Avenue. The rest would be slower work. This was Martin K. Froomes'
residence.

It was moonlight; light enough to see. There was a high fence here that
flanked both sides of what was evidently a garage. Jimmie Dale swung
himself over the fence, and alighted in a small, cement-floored
courtyard. He was across this in an instant, and in another was lost in
the shadows of a basement entrance.

Again the little steel pick-lock was at work. The door opened and
closed--silently. Jimmie Dale stood inside. For a moment he listened;
and then, the diminutive flashlight in service again, darting its tiny
gleams before him, Jimmie Dale moved forward once more, and, locating
the stairs, began to climb them--and a moment later found himself
standing in the main hall of the house.

So far, all was well! The library now--no, first, the telephone! He must
make sure that his memory had served him right on that score. He had
been here once or twice before--under quite different auspices!--as a
guest. The flashlight's ray played down the hall. Yes, it was all right!
It was there on a little stand in an alcove near the foot of the central
staircase. He could hardly have forgotten that rather unique door,
shaped in a half circle, which at will could transform the alcove into a
booth!

Jimmie Dale turned now. He was not quite so sure of the library, but the
impression was strong that it was here at the rear. He tried a door on
his right. The dining room. He stepped back then into the hall, and
opened a door on the opposite side. The flashlight circled the interior,
went out--and Jimmie Dale closed the door softly behind him.

His lips, beneath the mask, tightened now, as the flashlight, playing
again through the darkness, focused on an open safe near the window at
the rear of the room, and upon what had evidently been a very large
proportion of the contents of the safe which were now strewn about on
the floor in front of it. He stepped forward quickly, and kneeling on
the floor began to search carefully beneath the litter of documents,
papers and books. A minute, two, three, went by--and then Jimmie Dale
stood up again. Between his fingers he held a cheap and tawdry shirt
stud.

He stood looking at it for a moment, balancing it now in his hand. And a
softer light crept into his eyes, and a strange smile tempered the
grimness of his tightened lips. No, it wasn't worth much, just a
rhinestone--just ten years in the penitentiary, that was all!

And then Jimmie Dale shrugged his shoulders. The margin of time was
narrowing. He slipped the shirt stud into his pocket, and sent the
flashlight's ray playing inquisitively around the room. There was still
the letter that the police would receive in the morning, and which must
be made to disprove even itself, be made to stand out so glaringly as a
plant to saddle a crime on an innocent man's shoulders that none could
mistake it for what it was. And there was only one way to accomplish
that!

His eyes followed the ray of the flashlight. Yes, that single bracket
light over there would do when the time came. He could not afford to be
too generous! And now the window. He walked over to it and raised the
drawn shade. It looked out on the courtyard. Silently, cautiously, he
opened the window wide. Ten feet to the ground. Well, it might be worse!

At a quarter to three! He returned to the centre of the room, and
consulted his watch. He had not needed all of that extra ten minutes. He
was four minutes to the good.

He stood there in the darkness. It was very silent in the house, and yet
it was strange what queer noises even silence possessed if one listened
for them. They began very low and grew louder, but always in a
palpitating sort of way, and finally beat with almost thunderous clamour
at the ear drums.

The flashlight was on the dial of the watch again. Seventeen minutes to
three. Benson would be at work now. It would take a minute or two, of
course. He smiled with grim whimsicality. It always did! He had allowed
for that.

The flashlight held on the dial of the watch--and suddenly went out.

_A quarter to three._

Faintly, from the front of the house, the telephone rang--and Jimmie
Dale was in action. The side light went on, filling the room with a soft
mellow glow. He stepped silently to the closed door, and with his ear to
the panel listened. The telephone rang again--and still again. And then,
barely audible on the thickly carpeted stairs, he caught the sound of a
footstep descending.

And presently Jimmie Dale's lips twisted again in a grim smile. He could
not hear, he did not have the receiver at his ear, but it was Benson
speaking from a slot booth in the Grand Central station where, though
they might eventually trace the call, they would never trace Benson. It
was Benson speaking, but the words were his, Jimmie Dale's:

"I don't want to appear in this, so never mind who I am. I couldn't find
a phone any nearer, so it's about ten minutes ago that I saw a man climb
over your back fence and steal into your house. I guess if you've got
such a thing as a safe there, you'll know where to find him; and if
you're quiet enough about it you ought to get him yet."

That was what Benson was saying! It was quite all right. The call
_would_ be traced--but it would "hold water." The Grand Central was just
about within a ten-minute range of the Froomes' residence.

Jimmie Dale's ear was still pressed against the door panel. The footstep
was mounting the stairs now--but evidently with extreme caution, for
Jimmie Dale could scarcely catch a sound. It was probably the butler.
Reinforcements! He would return with Mr. Froomes, perhaps, and an added
footman or two!

A minute--two! The cautious tread was coming _down_ the stairs again.

Jimmie Dale retreated across the room to the open door of the safe. He
crouched there, tense, his muscles rigid. In his hand now he held the
little canvas sack of jewels, the string at the top untied. They were
almost at the door there. And now----

The door burst open.

With a well simulated startled cry of alarm, Jimmie Dale jumped to the
window side of the safe--and as he jumped he allowed his arm apparently
to hit sharply against the top of the safe door and knock the canvas bag
from his grasp, strewing the floor with a sparkling heap of gems. He was
darting for the window now. A voice roared out to him to halt. Froomes!
Froomes himself in dressing gown, and behind Froomes two other men. And
for a bare instant Jimmie Dale faced them, then he vaulted for the
window sill. They had seen him, hadn't they--quite plainly--seen that he
wasn't Culver!

"Stop! Stop, or I'll fire!" Froomes yelled out.

But Jimmie Dale was astride the window sill now, and--a vivid flash like
a fork of lightning seemed to leap toward him to sting and blister and
bring him agony, and the room seemed to swirl and be full of deafening,
racketing reports. He dropped to the ground outside, staggered, steadied
himself, leaped across the courtyard, and swung the fence, as a
fusillade of shots followed him from the window.

He was racing along the areaway now. Another instant, and he had flung
himself into his car. It shot forward with a bound. He whipped off his
mask, as he bent over the wheel. He was gnawing at his lips now until
the blood came.

The car swung the corner and tore uptown. But it wouldn't steer
properly. It swayed from side to side. No, it wasn't the car, it was
himself. Something in his side tortured him, and something hot, sticky
hot, was running down his leg. His head swam. Nausea strove to set its
grip upon him. He fought it off. He had been hit, of course, but it
wasn't far to go--not far to go--not far to go--and--queer sing-song
brain--what--what was the matter? Everything was all right, wasn't it?
They had seen the man who had tried to rob the safe and had left the
jewels on the floor, hadn't they; and they knew it wasn't Culver
because--it was extremely funny, wasn't it?--because Culver had a red
head.

Giddiness, nausea, hot and cold flashes! Jimmie Dale fought frantically
for his senses. He drove clinging to the wheel. It wasn't far. There
wasn't any pursuit; they'd never find him--if--if he could hold out just
a little longer.

A sort of mental fog settled upon him that blotted out time and
distance; and action was purely mechanical--and then he found himself
staggering up the steps of his home on Riverside Drive. And at the top
of the steps the door opened. He brushed his hand across his eyes. That
was Jason, wasn't it? Jason had been sitting up again!

"Go to bed, Jason!" said Jimmie Dale severely.

The old man's face was ashen.

"My God, Master Jim, sir, what's the matter?" he cried out wildly.

Jimmie Dale lunged through the doorway.

"Nothing," said Jimmie Dale. "I--I was just looking for a shirt stud.
You know the kind, Jason, three for a nickel and----"

Jimmie Dale pitched forward unconscious to the floor.




--XXI--

THE CALL OF THE NIGHT


A night light on the stand beside the bed glowed dimly, throwing curious
little shadowy patterns on walls and ceilings. Jimmie Dale turned
restlessly in the bed. His hand stole beneath his pajamas and
mechanically, in a sort of tentative way, felt over his tightly bandaged
side. There was a nervous disquiet upon him, growing with the minutes,
obsessing him. He reached out to the bed table for his watch. Half past
nine.

For a moment he lay still, tracing with his eyes the shadows' fanciful
shapes on the ceiling; and then suddenly he flung the covers from him,
got out of bed, snatched up a dressing gown, and crossed the room to an
easy chair by the window. He sat down and stared out into the night.

Rest! Quiet! He could no longer rest, because his mind would no longer
remain quiet but ground on and on like the turning of a mill wheel that
never ceased. The first night--when he had been wounded and the loss of
blood had weakened him--yes. But not now! Thank God, he had regained
consciousness in time that night to prevent Jason telephoning for a
doctor! With the papers full of the burglar in evening clothes who was
believed to have been hit by a shot as he had leaped through the library
window of the Froomes' mansion on Fifth Avenue, it would have been
perhaps a little awkward for Jimmie Dale to explain a bullet wound in
his side even to a trusted physician! It had been only a flesh wound.
Jason and Benson between them had done famously with him here at home.
It was healing now. That was three nights ago. It was still sore and
stiff--he gritted his teeth as a twinge of pain caught him suddenly--but
it was healing nicely.

He had not stayed in bed any more than he could help after the first
day--when he could elude Jason's watchfulness. He had been afraid of
that, more afraid of doing that than of the wound itself. One got weak
staying in bed. One's legs needed exercise--and there had been the
combined lengths of the dressing room and bedroom for surreptitious
constitutionals!

Well, he had been well repaid for the wound; not merely in the sense
that young Culver was probably walking the streets to-night a free man,
but in the sense that there had come into his hands another clue,
another instrument through which his chances of running the Phantom to
earth became at once now definite, tangible and concrete. Bunty Myers,
the rat-faced underling, the chief tool of the Phantom! It was Bunty
Myers who had been talking to the Phantom that night when he, Jimmie
Dale, had heard those voices which had seemed to come out of the nowhere
in Mother Margot's room. Therefore Bunty Myers knew _where_ that
conversation had taken place; and therefore, whether the man himself
realised the full significance of it or not, Bunty Myers held the secret
of the phantom clue to the lair where his master hatched his devil's
work.

Jimmie Dale nodded to himself. It was a decided, even drastic change
from the Phantom's accustomed line of action. From the time the Phantom
had physically disappeared as Gentleman Laroque, the man had drawn a
veil of secrecy and seclusion about himself that had rarely been
broken--certainly never to the extent of admitting any one into the
secret of his actual retreat before. True, he had many domiciles, many
aliases. That was why the Tocsin had first called him the Phantom. But
this was the _centre of the web_, the one place that he, Jimmie Dale,
had sought and struggled vainly with every resource at his command to
find. And now Bunty Myers had been admitted, if not into the secret
itself, at least into the precincts of the hidden refuge. Why? Did it
evidence weakness? The first cracking of the line of defence? It was
certain that the Phantom's ranks had become sadly thinned. Little
Sweeney, perhaps the most versatile and cunning of the Phantom
satellites, was dead; and two out of the four trusted pawns who had had
their rendezvous in the back upstairs room at Wally Kerrigan's "club,"
Spud MacGuire and Muller, were dead. The percentage was very heavy!
There remained only Bunty Myers, the Kitten, and Mother Margot. The
circle was narrowing. Was that why, where previously Mother Margot had
always been called from the pushcart on Thompson Street to the telephone
in the rear of that malodorous little second-hand store to act as the
mouthpiece of the "Voice," where previously all communications had
passed through her, the Phantom had now changed his tactics and admitted
his tools to personal interviews?

A frown, half of perplexity, half of annoyance, gathered on Jimmie
Dale's forehead. This might or might not be the reason. Very much more
likely not! He had forgotten for the moment that Mother Margot had been
away that night.

He brushed his hand across his eyes, as he winced suddenly again with
pain. He wondered if Mother Margot were back yet. That was a curious
telephone booth at the back of the second-hand store where she received
her messages! A side door that opened on the lane--and the booth in a
sort of back storeroom! He had, of course, investigated the place almost
immediately after that night at Mrs. Kinsey's when Mother Margot had
imparted her unwilling information about it, and the result of that
investigation had been to make it plain that the telephone itself was
purely a part, just as Mother Margot's rooms were, of the Phantom's
equipment, and that Mezzo himself, who was a doddering, almost senile
old man, was not even a pawn--merely a convenience. The old Italian,
whose hearing was probably just good enough and no more to distinguish
the ringing of the bell, whose trade was among a clientele far removed
from such luxuries, could have no possible use for a telephone, let
alone one in a booth, and less possible excuse for the expense that one
involved. He was simply paid to keep it there. That was obvious. Well,
it had served still another purpose--since he, Jimmie Dale, had not
infrequently used it himself! The Phantom was not the only one who
called Mother Margot to the phone, or the only one to whom the old hag
paid allegiance! He smiled grimly. Perhaps he counted too much on that!
Because he, Jimmie Dale, as the Gray Seal, had once caught Mother Margot
in the act of double-crossing her own pals, it was no guarantee that,
though he might hold her in a sort of allegiance therefrom, she would be
above double-crossing him too!

He shook his head. No! He had watched her too closely. He was not
prepared to say what she might do if she got the chance, but so far he
was satisfied that she had played straight with him--only, so far, the
little information she had had to give had not brought him much nearer
to his goal.

His mind reverted to Bunty Myers. Bunty Myers had come out of the affair
that night at Twisty Munn's when he had shot Kid Gregg without a breath
of suspicion attaching to him. Again Jimmie Dale smiled grimly. He
remembered that, as he had run down the stairs with the awakened
tenement howling about his ears, the thought had flashed through his
mind that if Twisty Munn had recognised Bunty Myers the latter would
have the police drag-net sweeping the city, yes, and the country, for
him, and he would be hard put to it to find cover. But, as it had turned
out, whether Twisty Munn had really recognised Bunty Myers or not,
Twisty Munn had remained silent on the subject. Yesterday's papers had
been full of the affair. Twisty Munn was by nature an ingenious and
versatile liar, and he had run true to form. Himself in the very act of
receiving the stolen contents of Martin K. Froomes' safe when the
shooting occurred, Twisty Munn had, of course, as an incentive for
remaining silent the undesirability of implicating himself in a criminal
transaction; and again, he might not actually have known who Bunty Myers
was, or, if he had, the fear of reprisals if he snitched might also very
logically account for his reticence. Twisty Munn, so Twisty Munn swore,
knew absolutely nothing about the matter, except that he and Kid Gregg
had been sitting in his room talking when the door had burst open and a
couple of men he had never seen before had entered. Kid Gregg had
jumped to his feet and pulled his gun, and just as he fired one of the
others had dropped him. He, Twisty Munn, didn't know what it was all
about, s'help him God! but he had a hunch it was a personal row between
Kid Gregg and one of the other men over some moll or other.

Quite so! Into Jimmie Dale's dark eyes there came an ironical gleam.
There was nothing to disprove it. Twisty Munn's story fitted into the
balance of the night as perfectly as though it were the truth! Well,
that left Bunty Myers free! That was what counted. It would be easier to
find Bunty Myers now than if he had taken to cover from the police. And
it was Bunty Myers that he, Jimmie Dale, wanted now!

And then Jimmie Dale shook his head again--in sudden irritation now. Had
he forgotten too that since the night Little Sweeney had masqueraded as
Isaac Shiftel and paid for it with his life, Bunty Myers had already
sought cover, perhaps more as a precautionary measure than because he
was actually "wanted" for that affair, but nevertheless had completely
forsaken his usual haunts; and had he also forgotten a night not long
ago when, as Smarlinghue, he had searched vainly through the length and
breadth and in the most hidden places of the underworld for the man? He
had wanted Bunty Myers then, hadn't he? And he had not found him.

The strong, square jaws locked with a snap. Yes! That was true! But he
wanted the man _more_ now, wanted him vitally. He would find him, that
was all!

And then, what?

Jimmie Dale's laugh, short, hard, mirthless, rang low through the room.
And then, what? The answer to that was simple. The buttons were off the
foils. What Bunty Myers knew he would be _made_ to tell. Bunty Myers
wasn't tired of life, and if he found himself cornered by, say, the Gray
Seal, and given the choice of telling where he had had that conversation
with the Phantom or of paying the price of silence with his life, there
was very little question as to what the man would do, for out of his own
experience Bunty Myers would not credit the Gray Seal with trifling!
Nor would there be any trifling. The knowledge Bunty Myers now possessed
meant that the Phantom at last could be trapped; it meant that at last
_her_ life, the Tocsin's, could be made safe; that the nightmare of
horror which must even now be turning her soul sick within her could be
brought to an end; that sunshine could come, and love and the joy of
living could be hers once more, and----

With a low cry, Jimmie Dale leaned suddenly with his elbows on the
window sill, staring out into the blackness of the night. It seemed to
be beckoning, calling to him.

_She was out there somewhere._

Was she? Was he even certain that she was still alive? Something cold,
an icy grip, seemed to clutch at his heart. Since the night at Miser
Scroff's, true to her stated determination to keep him out of the
shadows, as she called them, that enveloped her, that held her life in
peril, he had had no word from her.

Jimmie Dale was gnawing at his lips now; his arms fell from the window
sill, and his hands clenched at his sides. She had simply kept her word.
That was what she had said she would do. Why then this sudden access
that verged on panic? He laughed out shortly again. It wasn't sudden. It
wasn't a new phase. It hadn't just at this moment germinated in his
brain. It was what had been growing there ever since he had lain wounded
in bed. It was the seat of that constant disquiet and restlessness that
was culminating now in--What?

He was on his feet; and now he began to pace the room. To protect her
life she had arrayed herself against the merciless cunning of the
Phantom--not a man; a monster. There was no middle course between them.
There was but one end. One of the two must fall. And the Phantom was
still safe, still secure, still at his hell-born deviltries.

And she?

A bead of moisture oozed out on Jimmie Dale's forehead. He flirted it
away with a sweep of his hand. It meant little that her silence was
exactly in accordance with what she herself had stated was her proposed
line of action. There was something that meant infinitely more. She
might propose, but immeasurably true was the trite old saying applied to
her that she could not always dispose! He, as Smarlinghue, as the Gray
Seal, excluded from working in conjunction with her, had worked
nevertheless in the days and weeks that were gone with identically the
same end in view as she, working independently, had had--the unearthing
of the Phantom. Why had their paths then, in spite of herself, not
crossed since that night in Miser Scroff's room, save perhaps on the one
occasion when he had _presumed_ that the tip to the police in reference
to the jewel robbery at Linesthal's had come from her? _He_ had been in
touch with the Phantom, with the Phantom's criminal efforts since then.
And if she were still free, still alive, and making progress in her
fight, how was it that she and he had not inevitably been brought into
contact with each other?

His hands clenched tighter. And there was more even than that; one
outstanding brutal thing, ugly in its promise, that brought him a deadly
fear. She _had_ made progress while she had been mistress of her
actions; she had said so in her notes up to the time when those notes
had ceased; her appearance at Miser Scroff's that night had proved that
she had penetrated the Phantom's outer defences, and had had a certain
foreknowledge of the man's proposed coups. Therefore the presumption was
that, had all still been well with her, she would have had knowledge of
what had happened three nights ago, and she would have known that he,
Jimmie Dale, had been shot.

His brain seemed to whirl; the blood to pound in hammer beats at his
temples. Not a sign had come from her, not a word over the telephone,
not a message of any kind, direct or indirect. His mind, his soul,
seemed to falter now before the ugly deduction that flung itself
pitilessly at him. She loved him, as he loved her. He knew that. She
loved him with a love so great and unselfish that daily, hourly she had
faced alone the peril that menaced her so that he might not also be in
danger, so that he might be sheltered from it. Would she then, if she
knew he had been shot, and if she were able even with her last effort to
communicate with him, have remained silent, made no attempt to discover
how serious was his condition, or whether indeed he were alive or dead?

Alive or dead! The phrase battered at his brain. It applied to her.
White-faced he stood at the window again, and stared out into the
darkness. It was black! How black it was! And she was out there in the
night somewhere--somewhere--alive or dead.

Inactive! His wound as an excuse! He swore savagely now in his emotion.
What was he--a weakling! Too long he had stayed here now inactive when
she--she was out there somewhere--perhaps dead. Something caught in his
throat. His hands raised above his head and clenched until under the
tightened skin the knuckles showed like knobs, bloodless, white.

If she were dead! He laughed! It was a merciless sound. He swung from
the window and went into the dressing room. He began to dress. How
should he dress? Tweeds or dinner clothes? That sounded queer--as though
his brain were unhinged. He wasn't going to a party! Foolish word
that--party!

He began to get into his dinner clothes. He knew what he was doing now.
There had been what Jason would have called a rush of blood to the head
for an instant, blurring him a bit, as it were. His side wasn't so
bad--a twinge or two--nothing to speak of. There was something else out
there in the night--a clue to pick up somewhere. He didn't know how--or
where. It might be as Smarlinghue, somewhere in one of the hidden
sink-holes of the underworld, that he would pick up the trail of Bunty
Myers, or Bunty Myers' pal, the Kitten; or, if Mother Margot were
back----Well, it was as a man in a dinner coat and mask that Mother
Margot knew the Gray Seal. He was dressing for Mother Margot. Quite the
thing, wasn't it--to dress for the ladies?

Damn it! He must hold himself in! He stepped to the liqueur stand and
poured himself out a little brandy, and drank it. He responded
instantly to the stimulant. It steadied him. Over his underclothes he
strapped on the leather girdle with its kit of blued-steel implements
nestling in the little upright pockets, and where nestled, too, the thin
metal case that contained the diamond-shaped, gray-paper, adhesive
seals, the insignia of the Gray Seal. He put on his shirt, his waistcoat
and jacket, and into the side pocket of his jacket he slipped his
automatic. He was dressed now.

He stared at himself in the glass. Jason would have to be told. It
wasn't fair to the faithful old man to slip out without a word. Jason
would be mad with anxiety if he found him gone. Jimmie Dale rang the
bell.

The reflection in the mirror returned him a twisted contortion of the
lips. The damned thing was trying to ape a smile, wasn't it? It looked
like a death's-head, gaunt and pasty-white, with lines like an old
man's. Well, what of it? He felt all right, except that the bandage was
infernally tight.

A knock sounded at the door.

"Come in," said Jimmie Dale.

Jason's white head appeared in the doorway--and then the door was shut
with nervous haste, and the old butler came hurriedly forward across the
room.

"Master Jim, sir!" he gasped. "Master Jim, what--what are you doing,
sir?"

Jimmie Dale smiled.

"I'm going out, Jason," he said.

The old man cast an anxiously suspicious glance at his master.

"Yes, of course, Master Jim, sir," he said soothingly. "But the exertion
of dressing, sir--if you'll just sit down for a little while now, Master
Jim, then by and by----"

"Jason," said Jimmie Dale, whimsically, "you couldn't be a fraud even in
a minor degree--you're too transparent. I'm quite myself. I'm not in
delirium. I'm simply going out."

The old man's face grew a little white.

"You can't mean it, Master Jim," he faltered. "In the state you're in,
sir, it's likely to cost you your life to go out."

"It's likely to cost me more than that to stay in," said Jimmie Dale,
quietly.

The old man twisted his hands together; he coughed in a sort of helpless
way.

"I'm an old man, Master Jim, sir"--the tears were welling into Jason's
eyes--"and you'll pardon me, Master Jim, for taking liberties, but when
you were a baby I dandled you, Master Jim, on my knee, and--and I know
there's something strange and--and danger--that's come into your
life--and it isn't my place to ask what it is, but--but for God's sake,
Master Jim, sir, don't you go out until you're well enough."

Jimmie Dale stepped toward the old man, and laid both hands on the
other's shoulders--gently.

"Jason," he said, steadily, "get me an overcoat, light weight, dark
color--and a slouch hat. Tell Benson I'm waiting for him--and to pamper
my infirmities we'll take the limousine to-night." He turned Jason
around, and pushed the old man quietly toward the door. "Look sharp,
please, Jason," he said.

The door closed behind the old butler. For an instant Jimmie Dale stood
staring at the door, his face softened, almost a mistiness in the dark,
steady eyes; then he turned abruptly to the liqueur stand again.

"I guess perhaps I'll need it," he muttered.

He took out a small silver flask, filled it with brandy, and slipped it
into his pocket. He went out then, closing the door behind him. As he
descended the stairs he caught the sound of the car on the driveway
coming from the garage at the rear of the house. That was
Benson--another Jason! He felt suddenly humbled. Benson young, Jason
old--at the extremes of life--and each without an instant's hesitation
would give their all for him. It was a strange, strange thing, the love
of men one for another--the love of these two for him. He had accepted
it all too matter-of-factly perhaps in the past, not stopping to
appraise it always for its immeasurable worth, or, when he thought of
it, perhaps priding himself on it only as a possession that other men
did not have, like a suit of clothes perhaps made by an exclusive
tailor where the same pattern was not supplied to any one else. He did
not know how he had won it.

He took his coat and hat from Jason in the hallway. The old man's lips
were twitching.

"God bless you, Jason!" said Jimmie Dale suddenly, and swung through the
door.

At the curb Benson, the chauffeur, touched his cap, as he reached out to
open the door of the big closed car--then hesitated.

"You'll excuse me, Mr. Dale," he stammered, "but--but I----"

Jimmie Dale smiled.

"It's a wonderful night, isn't it, Benson--for a drive?" he said. "West
Broadway, Benson--and, oh, yes, stop anywhere within a block of Thompson
Street."

"Yes, sir," said Benson mechanically--and opened the door.

Jimmie Dale stepped into the car. The door closed. He saw Benson, in the
act of swinging into his seat, turn and face for an instant the open
doorway of the lighted vestibule where Jason stood. Benson's shoulders
lifted in a helpless gesture.

"What the hell can I do?" said Benson's shoulders eloquently.




--XXII--

A TAPPED WIRE


Jimmie Dale settled back in his seat. The car moved swiftly, smoothly
downtown. It wasn't so bad; not so very much worse than being in bed. He
was quite all right.

He stared out of the windows. He had no plans--no definite plans. How
could he have? Somewhere, somehow, he must pick up the trail of the
Phantom's associates. That was all. And Mother Margot offered by far the
best and surest way--if she were back. Obviously, therefore, the first
move was to find out if Mother Margot had returned, and he would know
that in a few minutes now.

And if she were still away?

His lips tightened grimly. The Sanctuary--Smarlinghue--a spectre
haunting the Bad Lands through the night! Perhaps hopelessly! He had
done that on so many nights before. What other way was there--to find
Bunty Myers?

He lighted a cigarette. Occasionally he shifted his position. He told
himself that it was only because the bandage was so tight that he was
beginning to experience a little discomfort.

The car circled around Washington Square, and made its way into West
Broadway. Presently it stopped. Jimmie Dale got out.

"Wait half an hour for me, Benson," he said quietly. "No more. If I'm
not here by then take the car back home."

He did not wait for a reply. Half a block ahead was Thompson Street. He
started toward it. His coat was tightly buttoned around his throat, his
collar turned up, his slouch hat pulled toughly down over his eyes.

He swung around the corner, walking with his hands in his pockets. The
narrow street seethed with its usual night life. Half naked children
tumbled in the gutters, and played beneath the wheels of the pushcarts
that flanked the sidewalks on both sides of the road. Banjo torches
spluttered and flung out fantastic flares; shawled women, dark, swarthy,
elbowed about the carts; men who wore earrings and chattered in strange
tongues lounged on the sidewalk or jostled their way along in a sort of
aimless fashion. The place was a din, a hubbub. The hawkers cried their
wares.

Jimmie Dale made his way along with studied carelessness, and suddenly,
nodding sharply to himself in satisfaction, he edged out to the curb.
Mother Margot was back! True, the old hag herself was nowhere in sight,
but this was her pushcart here laden with its miscellany of small
articles like the notion counter of a department store. He picked up a
cheap, gaudy, colored kerchief and pretended to examine it. At the next
cart was the old Italian whom he, Jimmie Dale, as Smarlinghue then, had
accosted three days before when, as now, he had been in search of Mother
Margot.

"How much?" he demanded, holding up the kerchief.

The Italian shrugged his shoulders.

"Wait-a da minute," he said. "She just gone-a da telephone. She come-a
right back."

Jimmie Dale put down the kerchief.

"I don't want it bad enough to wait," he said indifferently--and drew
back into the throng on the sidewalk. But the next instant he had sidled
out of the crowd again into a dark, narrow and dirty little alleyway
that made the side of an equally dirty and uninviting second-hand shop,
on whose unwashed window painted letters, that had once been white,
announced that its proprietor was one Antonio Mezzo.

The telephone! Luck! He felt his pulses quicken. There were only two
persons who ever called Mother Margot to this telephone here, himself
and--the Phantom. His fingers had crept to a pocket in the leather
girdle. They came out with his mask. He slipped it quickly over his
face. Mother Margot would have news to-night, then! He was at the side
door now. It was slightly ajar; and, yes, he could just catch the old
hag's miserable jargon, the shrill, complaining voice, muffled, of
course, by the telephone booth itself that stood just within beside the
door:

"I can't hear youse. De buzzin's got me feazed."

Jimmie Dale's lips straightened suddenly. It wasn't Mother Margot he
wanted to hear. Why trust her? He had never caught her at the phone
before! He could make her talk, but he had no guarantee that it would be
the whole truth. He pushed the door open softly and stepped inside.
There was a dim light coming from a blackened, nearly burned-out
incandescent that dangled from the ceiling. The back room here, littered
with old junk and broken furniture, was cut off from the front by a
closed door. Being inside the booth, she had not seen him. She was still
reiterating the fact that she could not hear distinctly.

Jimmie Dale crept a step forward, another--then with a swift movement he
jerked the door of the booth open, and leaning forward clapped his hand
firmly over the mouthpiece of the telephone.

There was a startled cry from the old hag, as she shrank back. The side
of the booth creaked with her weight.

"My Gawd!" she whispered wildly. "De--de Gray Seal!"

"Yes!" said Jimmie Dale grimly. "Give me that receiver. Quick! You
answer as I tell you."

He put the receiver to his ear.

"What's the matter?" demanded a voice imperatively. "What's that noise?"

"Tell him it's Mezzo moving some furniture about," ordered Jimmie Dale
swiftly.

He took his hand from the transmitter.

"It's de old dago shovin' some of his junk around," said Mother Margot
into the phone.

Again Jimmie Dale's hand closed over the transmitter.

"All right!" snapped the voice. "Can you hear now?"

"Tell him you can hear now," breathed Jimmie Dale.

"Sure," obeyed Mother Margot. "Sure--I gets youse now."

"Go to the Crescent as I told you, then," said the voice, "and give
Curley this message: _The black box, Sadie Foy's at eleven o'clock._
Understand?"

Jimmie Dale nudged Mother Margot significantly as he nodded his head
affirmatively, and again removed his hand from the phone.

"Sure!" said Mother Margot.

"Hurry!" said the voice, curtly.

The receiver at the other end of the wire was hung up.

"Let's get out of here," said Jimmie Dale, coolly.

Mother Margot stumbled out of the booth. She was twisting her hands
together, casting frightened, hurried glances toward the closed door
that led into the second-hand shop in front, glancing furtively, too, at
Jimmie Dale from under her hooded shawl.

"My Gawd!" she mumbled thickly. "My Gawd!"

Outside in the lane, the side door closed, Jimmie Dale drew the old
woman against the wall of the building, and for a moment stood staring
at her speculatively in the darkness.

Suddenly she reached out, and clawed at his sleeve.

"Wot youse goin' to do?" she whispered wildly. "My Gawd! De Gray Seal!
Wot youse goin' to do?"

Jimmie Dale ignored her question. He spoke sharply.

"So Curley down at the Crescent Saloon is one of the gang too, is he?"
he demanded.

"No; he ain't!" She shook her head vehemently. "Not de way youse means,
he ain't."

"I suppose that is why a message is sent to him, then," observed Jimmie
Dale caustically.

"He gets lot of 'em," she said quickly; "but he don't know wot any of
'em means, an' he don't know where any of 'em goes to. I watched him
once. Some one calls him up on de phone, an' he just says de message
over, dat's all."

"Quite so!" said Jimmie Dale softly. "But in that case, did it ever
strike you that the Voice, as you call him, would save quite a little
time, to say nothing of making you trudge around town, by phoning Curley
direct?"

Mother Margot was twisting her hands again.

"Youse don't believe me!" she cried out hoarsely. "Youse t'ink I'm
stringin' youse. I ain't! Honest to Gawd, I ain't! I'm handin' youse de
straight goods. Dat's why no one gets next to de Voice unless he wants
'em to. De trail's gummed up. See? He don't trust no one. He was gettin'
leery of me. Dat's why he sent me away. See? Dere's been a lot of leaks.
He sent me away for three days on a fake lay. An' w'en I was away one of
his games gets a hole all bust in it again, an' I guess it was youse did
it. So he's sure it ain't me dat's spillin' any of de beans. Youse see,
don't youse? Say, for God's sake, youse see, don't youse, dat I ain't
stringin' youse?"

The old hag's voice was full of nervous anxiety. She kept wringing her
hands together. Jimmie Dale nodded. She was undoubtedly telling the
truth. He could quite understand now why she had been away--and could
understand, perhaps better than she could, the Phantom's dire need of
looking to his fences.

"But the phone?" he suggested.

"Well, dat's de answer, ain't it?" she said. "It ain't so much of a
trick to trace a telephone call, is it? Not if de dicks want to do it.
Dat's why he don't telephone dat sort of stuff nowhere except here, an'
not to nobody except me. An'--an' if he was wise to wot happened in dere
just now he'd--he'd--my Gawd, youse know wot he'd do! Say, youse ain't
goin' to stop me, are youse? Youse're goin' to tell me wot dat message
is, ain't youse, an' let me put it acrost?" She was clawing pitifully,
frantically at Jimmie Dale's sleeve again. "If youse don't, an' I don't
give Curley dat message, dey'll kill me. Mabbe youse got away wid it
bein' de dago bumpin' furniture dat made de row in de booth, but if de
message don't go, dat don't go neither, an'--an' dey'll slit me troat.
Aw, for Gawd's sake! Youse knows dat! Dat's wot dey'll do!"

It was literally true. The failure of Mother Margot to deliver the
message was exactly equivalent to her death sentence. Jimmie Dale's lips
were a straight line. There was no quibbling on that point. The
Phantom's trade was murder. He would strike without an instant's
hesitation at the slightest indication that the old hag had played him
false. On the other hand if he, Jimmie Dale, allowed Mother Margot to
deliver the message he delivered himself without reservation into her
hands--either that, or go back home to bed and leave Sadie Foy's alone.
But again, if the message were delivered it promised almost to a
certainty that at Sadie Foy's he would pick up the trail he had come out
to-night to find. The Crescent Saloon and Curley did not interest him.
That was only a relaying station. The rendezvous was at Sadie Foy's.
Suppose he refused to give Mother Margot the message? Would it stop the
projected devilry that was obviously afoot? And on that basis alone
ought he to refuse? If he did, it would cost the woman her life. There
was no supposition about that. That was fact. He couldn't do that, could
he? And yet, since he must then assume the moral responsibility, and if
for no other reason than that play a hand at Sadie Foy's, his own life
very probably hung on whether Mother Margot would keep faith with him or
not.

"Dey'll kill me!" Mother Margot whispered hoarsely. She pulled at his
sleeve, clung to it; she was rocking queerly on her feet.

"Yes," said Jimmie Dale calmly, "they'd kill you; and they would equally
kill me if, once out of my sight, you added to the message the
information that I was in this game again to-night. And so you see it's
a case of you being killed to a certainty, or the _chance_, depending on
you, of the same thing happening to me." He smiled suddenly,
whimsically. "I haven't very much choice, have I? I can't send you to
your death. The message? Oh, yes! It's this: The black box. Sadie Foy's
at eleven o'clock. That's all."

She drew in her breath suddenly.

"My Gawd, youse're _white_!" she said in a low, catchy way. "I gets
youse. Youse're goin' to be at Sadie Foy's, an' youse're takin' de
chance of me splittin' on youse. Well, youse needn't worry, an' I'll
tell youse why. I ain't forgot de night at Pedler Joe's. Youse made me
go dere, I knows; but youse risked yer life to get me out of it, an' I
ain't forgot."

"I've wondered about that," said Jimmie Dale, half to himself; then,
briskly: "Do you know anything about this black box or what the message
means?"

She shook her head.

"Do you know where Bunty Myers is?"

Again she shook her head.

"I ain't heard anythin' for three days until in dere to-night," she said
earnestly. "I only just got back."

"All right," said Jimmie Dale quietly. "You'd better go now. And
hurry--in case there's a check on the time when you should be at
Curley's."

She hesitated an instant. Then she brushed a hand quickly across her
eyes.

"My Gawd, youse're white," she said again, huskily--and turned, and
shuffled hurriedly down the alleyway toward the street.

Jimmie Dale watched her until she had disappeared.

"Perhaps!" said Jimmie Dale grimly. "And perhaps I am--a fool!"




--XXIII--

THE PIECES OF A PUZZLE


Five minutes later Jimmie Dale was staring at Benson's back through the
plate glass, as the big limousine, continuing its progress in a downtown
direction, rolled rapidly along.

He was frowning heavily. He did not like this! He did not like having
Benson along like this. Not because Benson could not be trusted to the
uttermost, but for Benson's own sake. There wasn't much risk for Benson,
of course; in fact there wasn't any, as far as he could see, but he
would have felt easier in his mind had he been alone. They were going
ostensibly now to the Silver Dragon, a famous resort of slumming parties
in Chinatown, and Benson would park outside where other cars were
parked, and simply wait. But for all that, there was----

He shrugged his shoulders. What else could he do? His side was behaving
very nicely so far, better than he had hoped for, in fact, but that
condition was dependent, he knew very well, on saving himself all he
could. That was why, for example, he had not gone to the Sanctuary, and,
as Smarlinghue then, gone alone to Sadie Foy's. There would have been
time--ample time. But he wasn't fit to play the rle of Smarlinghue
to-night.

He dismissed the subject from his mind. He had done what had seemed the
wisest and best thing. The rest was in the lap of the gods. He began a
little mental calculation as he took out his watch. It was twenty
minutes to eleven now. It was roughly about ten minutes ago when Mother
Margot had started on her errand. She should be at Curley's by now. That
left a leeway of twenty minutes for somebody to telephone Curley and,
presumably, make the rendezvous at Sadie Foy's at eleven o'clock.

Jimmie Dale replaced the watch in his pocket--and stared again at the
back of Benson's head. The black box! Sadie Foy's! He shook his head.
The combination meant nothing to him, of course. But Sadie Foy herself
was quite a different matter. In Chinatown Sadie Foy was a celebrity--a
very shady and notorious celebrity. She was seldom sober. She was a
white woman, old now, who had married a Chinaman. But Charley Foy, her
husband, had perished in a Tong feud. That was many years ago. Since
then she had lived in a little rat-hole of a place as dissolute as
herself, a few blocks from Chatham Square, supported, according to the
police, by a pension from the Tong for which her lamented Charlie Foy
had given up his life.

A queer smile flickered across Jimmie Dale's lips. As Larry the Bat in
the days of old, as Smarlinghue of to-day, he was in this particular
very much better informed than the police. There was no question
whatever about the pension; but the pension was not based on purely
philanthropic motives, or due to a deep-seated sorrow for Charlie Foy's
untimely and violent decease. It satisfied the police. Actually, Sadie
Foy drove a lively trade in bulk opium, or in anything else of an
illicit character that promised her a profit. The bulk opium accounted
for the pension; an innate evilness and cunning accounted for her
general depravity. It was a choice place for a rendezvous of any
questionable sort, or for any purpose!

The minutes passed as the car sped along. Jimmie Dale half closed his
eyes. Sadie Foy, or for that matter her iniquities, meant nothing--it
was the trail now that so obviously led to Sadie Foy's door. The Phantom
was interested in something at Sadie Foy's at eleven o'clock. Would the
trail broaden--or break? What did the night hold? A final reckoning with
the Phantom? Freedom for _her_--if she still lived? Success, partial or
whole? Failure? What?

The car slowed, and stopped. Jimmie Dale stepped to the sidewalk.

"We'll raise the limit a little this time, Benson," he said. "Wait an
hour."

Jimmie Dale mounted the steps of the garishly lighted restaurant before
which the car had stopped, and passed inside. The place was a riot of
noise; the clatter of dishes, laughter, song, the never ceasing hum of
numberless voices from numberless tables where the diners sat. He walked
leisurely from room to room, making for the rear of the
establishment--and here nonchalantly walked out into the cross street
behind. The Silver Dragon was blest with two entrances.

And now Jimmie Dale quickened his step. He was in a narrow, twisting,
ill-lighted little street in the heart of Chinatown. Shuttered windows
threw out stealthy gleams of light from their interstices; scuffling
figures sidled by him. He passed a small frame house, mouldy and in
decay, weather-streaked, which paint had not touched in years. It was in
complete darkness; not a light showed from it anywhere. And then in
another minute he had slipped into the adjacent lane, and in still
another was creeping cautiously across a filthy back yard--with the rear
of the small house that was mouldy and in decay looming up before him.
This was Sadie Foy's.

His eyes narrowed now a little grimly. It was black here all around him,
but the house itself was not quite so dark at the rear as it had been in
front! From a lower window just ahead of him little undulating threads
of light seeped out from behind the edges of a drawn shade. It was the
air did that, of course--made the shade sway slightly. Therefore the
window must be open.

Voices, in what seemed like low, guttural undertones, began to reach
him. He stole cautiously forward. There was refuse in the yard, and it
was pitch black. It was not easy to assure silence even from step to
step. A tin can became an object of dire menace. A minute, two,
passed--and then Jimmie Dale, from a stooping position, stood upright.
His head was just on a level with the window sill. He could hear now
distinctly.

"Well, we're gettin' fed up waitin'!" said a silky voice. "It's eleven
o'clock, and we've been patient for about a couple of hours. If youse
ain't comin' across nice an' pleasant, mabbe we can help yer memory a
little more de other way. Sadie's got everything locked up nice for de
night in front, an' nobody'll disturb us. Ain't youse, Sadie?"

Jimmie Dale's dark eyes lighted with a sudden gleam. He could see
little, scarcely more than a group of shadows on the shade, but he had
recognised the purring voice. The trail was here! It was the Kitten's
voice--and with the Kitten at work, hand in glove with him somewhere
should be the Phantom and Bunty Myers. If the light breeze would only
stir that shade a little more--just half an inch!

A woman cackled hoarsely.

"Sure! I'll take care of dat! Don't youse worry!"

"D'ye hear?" It was the Kitten's voice again. "We've let youse off easy
so far, but we're gettin' fed up. I ask youse for de last time before
youse gets hurt some more, where's de black box? Yer brother didn't take
it up de river wid him; an' de mob of boobs youse played for suckers
ain't got it, 'cause dey're mostly on de street now wid de kids pickin'
up deir free lunches in de gutters; an' it wasn't left around loose in
de crib w'en yer sweet little Banco Santos was pinched; an' youse've
been hidin' all de time--so where is it?"

There was no answer. In the silence Jimmie Dale, almost involuntarily,
startled, had drawn back a little. The Banco Santos! He did not need to
see in there. He knew what the black box was now! The trial was scarcely
a week old. The papers had been full of it. Two brothers, two
Portuguese, Georges and Manuel Santos, had run a private bank, garnering
in the savings of, for the most part, the poorer element among the
foreign class, the tenement dwellers. They had played the game craftily,
with vicious patience, for nearly two years, piling up the savings of
the poor--only the final coup had been disrupted a little by a sudden
suspicion that had arisen in the minds of the authorities. And one
evening, as the latter had descended on the place, the two brothers had
decamped by the back window, one of them carrying under his arm a black,
oblong security box. One of the brothers, as likewise the black box, had
not been seen or heard of since. The other brother, Georges, had been
caught, and only a few days ago had started to serve a fifteen-years'
sentence in Sing Sing. The missing funds were estimated at between
twenty-five and thirty thousand dollars.

The Kitten purred again:

"Ain't it too bad he's lost his voice as well as his memory! An' we
ain't done hardly anythin' but be civil to him since we runs into him
back dere in Mickey de Cobbler's dump. Mabbe he's sore 'cause we didn't
go right up an' shake hands wid him den! But youse see we was just
sittin' around havin' a drink, an' thought mabbe we'd had one too many
an' was seein' things w'en de cellar door opens, an' one of dese guys
here says he'll bet a million bucks dat it was Manuel Santos, an' by de
time we gets our breaths back he's slipped out. We hadn't never
travelled together none of us before, but dis looked like we all had
tickets for de same place. So we follows him. An' over he sneaks to
Sadie's here to buy some coke, an' we trails in, an' sure enough w'en we
gets a real good look at him Steenie's right an' it's Manuel Santos.
Only he ain't got de black box dat dey talked about in de papers wid
him." He laughed a little, low, viciously. "I'm sick of askin' him.
Youse ask him, Steenie, same as youse did before--only a little harder."

There was a sudden blurred movement of the figures on the shade--a
sudden low, throttled cry of pain and fear.

Jimmie Dale's fingers touched the lower edge of the shade. They were not
occupied in there with the window now! And it might even have been but
the stirring of the night breeze. The shade swayed gently inward an
inch, two--and floated almost imperceptibly back into place again.

Jimmie Dale's face was hard and strained. It was not difficult to pick
out Manuel Santos from the group! The man's hands were tied, and he
drooped over the table as though in a half swoon; his face was battered
ferociously, and blood trickled in two or three little streams from his
cheeks. Behind him stood the Kitten. In a corner Sadie Foy cackled
applause, and rubbed skinny hands together joyously. There were four
other men--dregs, rats, jacks-of-all-trades in the underworld. He knew
three of them by name: Steenie Klotz; Red Jack; the Bummer. Nice names!
But in the underworld the monikers were apt!

There came the sound of a blow, another, and another--and then a cry
again. A voice gasped out weakly:

"Stop! For God's sake, stop! I--I'll tell."

"Blamed if youse ain't a great memory worker, Steenie!" purred the
Kitten's voice. "He's goin' to tell. Well, Manuel, where is it?"

"It--it's at the camp." The man's words came painfully.

"Where's dat?" demanded the Kitten.

"It's on the Sound. It--it's just this side of the Martin-Holmes place."

Jimmie Dale's brows contracted suddenly. The Martin-Holmes had nothing
to do with this, of course; but he remembered now----

"Youse mean dat summer shack youse an' yer brother had?" inquired the
Kitten softly.

"Yes," the man answered.

"Nix on dat!" The Kitten jeered suddenly. "De bulls lived dere for about
two weeks pawin' it over. Don't youse try any of dat stuff, my bucko! If
it'd been in de house dey'd have found it. I heard dey even pulled de
floors up. Say, Steenie, _youse'd_ better try again!"

"No, no!" Manuel Santos' voice rose shrilly. "It's true! I'm telling you
the truth. The police could never find it, but it's there."

"All right," said the Kitten evenly. "Tell us about it, den."

"It ain't really in the house, it--it's outside the attic window." The
words came slowly in a mumbling sort of way. "It looks as though the
eaves were all boarded in around the house, but you can move one of them
above the window. There--there's only one window. It--it's there."

There was a low, muttered chorus of exultant oaths; and then the
Kitten's voice:

"Dat sounds good enough to be true." He was purring again. "I'll get a
closed car, an' we'll hike along out dere, an' youse'll come too,
Manuel, so's dere won't be no tricks. Youse ain't such a fool after all,
Manuel! A little trip to South America where youse'll be out of
everybody's road, an' a lot safer yourself dan youse have been for de
last six weeks tryin' to hide yerself away, is better'n takin' a last
ride in a wooden box where youse can't look at de scenery! Youse're
among friends, Manuel, if youse only knew it. Dere's some----"

Jimmie Dale was retreating from the window. A moment more, and he had
gained the street; and, hurrying now, returning by the same way he had
come, he reached his car in front of the Silver Dragon.

"Benson," he said quietly, "we seem fated to make quite a night of it.
Off and on, you've driven me a number of times to Mr. Martin-Holmes'
summer residence out on the Sound. I know it's closed now for the
season, but do you remember just exactly where it is?"

"Perfectly, sir," said Benson.

"Good!" nodded Jimmie Dale. "Drive there now--that is to within, say,
half a mile this side of the place. If I remember correctly, it's quite
thickly wooded there. I leave it entirely to you to find a convenient
spot in about that neighbourhood to run the car off the road and park it
where it will not be seen."

Benson stared, a hesitant, anxious expression creeping into his face.

Jimmie Dale smiled.

"I'm still quite all right, Benson," he said.

"Yes, sir," said Benson mechanically.

"And, by the way"--Jimmie Dale paused in the act of stepping into the
car--"I might say that I am in a very great hurry, Benson."

"Yes, sir," said Benson heavily.

For a moment, as he settled back on the cushions and the car started
forward, the smile held on Jimmie Dale's lips. Benson, like Jason, was
comparable to a hen with her chick. Benson at this precise instant
probably--to mix metaphors--was inwardly wriggling like an eel. He was
probably debating with himself whether he should not drive directly
home, and there, by brute force if necessary, with the assistance of
Jason, put him, Jimmie Dale, back to bed again--even if he got fired for
it! Benson, however, in the last analysis wouldn't do anything of the
kind--he would play the game.

The smile faded now from Jimmie Dale's lips, and a puzzled, anxious look
settled on his face as he dismissed Benson from his mind. He had acted
quickly back there at Sadie Foy's because he had realised that there was
no time to lose; and though, even then, he had realised too that the
pieces of the puzzle seemed somehow strangely mismated, he had also
realised that the final act in any case would be played out where he was
going now--at the Santos' camp. Further, there was the moral
responsibility to save that money, and nothing would have induced him to
shift that responsibility to, say, the police, when instinctively he
sensed, as he did, that the Phantom had still a card to play, a card
that also must be played out at the same place. But what was that card?
If it were only the Kitten who was involved, he could pick up the
Kitten's trail again at the Santos camp; but it was more than the Kitten
that he wanted, more than the Kitten that he still hoped for, and in
which hope intuition told him he was justified. He wanted the
Phantom--or Bunty Myers.

He had time now to solve the puzzle--if he could. But the pieces on
closer examination only seemed the more mismated. They contradicted even
the sense of intuition that was so strong upon him. Where was the
Phantom's hand in this? The Kitten? Well, then, why that
message?--"Sadie Foy's at eleven o'clock." The Kitten had said himself
he had been there long _before_ eleven. The Kitten was therefore
_already_ at Sadie Foy's when the message was delivered to Curley at the
Crescent Saloon. And then, again, the four men who were with the
Kitten, he was absolutely certain, had no intimate connection with the
Phantom; they were not the kind the Phantom gathered around him; they
were simply apaches, buzzards of the underworld, mentally the lowest
type of criminal, whose only knowledge of finesse was embodied in the
use of a black-jack, a knife, or a revolver. They did not belong!
Suppose then they had been hired for this special occasion? In that case
the Kitten was already fully equipped to carry through the night's work.
Why, then, the message?

The miles flew by; the minutes passed into quarter hours. They had long
since been out on a country road.

What did it mean?

Jimmie Dale, save that at long intervals he subconsciously eased his
position, sat motionless, staring introspectively at the window.

What did it mean?

And then suddenly Jimmie Dale sat erect. He had it! It had come like a
flash. It dovetailed; it fitted in its minutest part. It postulated only
that the Kitten had a means of ready communication with his unhallowed
master, the Phantom, which in itself was axiomatic. The Kitten had
haphazardly been in the company of the four apaches when one of the
four, this Steenie, had recognised the fugitive, Manuel Santos. It was a
"find" worth thirty thousand dollars--which the Kitten did not propose
the other four should share. It was very simple! The Kitten had taken
the leadership, and in the early stages at Sadie Foy's had undoubtedly
gone out on some excuse and sent the Phantom word of what was afoot,
stating probably that he was sure they could make Manuel Santos talk,
and if so he would somehow stall on any move being made until the
Phantom had time to act, setting that time at eleven o'clock. Obviously,
then, some one would be on hand at that time to receive from the Kitten
the information as to where the black box was hidden, if that
information had been obtained, and the "some one" would then arrive
first at the hiding place, while the Kitten and the four thugs would
arrive later only to find a rifled nest! And the Kitten would be secure
from any complicity in the eyes of the four thugs--wherein the Kitten
was very wise!

Jimmie Dale stooped suddenly forward and picked up the speaking tube. He
wasn't racing any more then against the Kitten on whom he had a known
start. He was racing against "some one" else, some one who would race
like mad so as to keep the Kitten in countenance and not force his
stalling to become apparent through lingering on the road when his
hungry dupes would be urging speed.

"Faster, Benson!" he said sharply. "All you've got the rest of the way!"

He leaned back in his seat again. It was clear enough now. But who was
this "some one?" It wasn't the Phantom himself, for the Phantom had sent
the message. Who, then, was the Phantom's delegate? Jimmie Dale's lips
drooped curiously until grim little lines formed at the corners of his
mouth. It was more likely than any one else to be the man he had started
out to find--Bunty Myers. He frowned quickly. Had he made a mistake?
Should he have remained at Sadie Foy's? This delegate must have been
there somewhere at eleven--when the Kitten was going out again with the
excuse of getting a closed car. And then he shook his head impatiently.
Perhaps! If he had known what he was so sure of now, he might have acted
differently--perhaps not. This, after all, was the surer way, both of
finding that delegate, and securing possession of the black box.

The car was eating up the miles now, keeping check almost with the
minutes as they passed.

He ran his hand through his hair. Dog eat dog! It was dirty, miserable
work all the way through, beginning with Manuel Santos, who was perhaps
the most despicable of the lot. His hands clenched suddenly. If nothing
else came of it, getting that money back to those to whom it meant their
all was worth whatever it might cost him to-night. Thirty thousand
dollars! There was something fiendish, damnable, in the vicious
premeditation, the vicious patience with which the two Portuguese had
worked! He remembered in the account of the trial it had come out in
evidence that the authorities had not been lax. Always on demand
securities in the shape of bonds had been produced to make the balances.
Of course! And of a sudden those bonds had been transferred into cash,
and--presto!--the squalid little bank was no more! He smiled grimly. It
was probably the steady demand for so many bills of large denominations
during the two or three days prior to the end that had first aroused the
suspicions of the authorities, and----

The car was slowing down. And now it jolted over rough ground. A branch
slapped smartly against the window pane. The headlights, streaming out,
threw tree trunks into spectral relief against a background of utter
blackness. And then the headlights went off, and the car stopped.

Jimmie Dale stepped out.

"You're sure of the place, Benson, and that you're hidden from the
road?" he asked crisply.

"Yes, sir," Benson answered. "Quite sure, sir."

"Very well!" said Jimmie Dale. "Keep your lights off, wait for me, and
don't leave the car under any circumstances." He sensed a protest anent
himself rising to Benson's lips, and he turned quickly away. "I'll be
back in a few minutes, Benson," he said.




--XXIV--

THE BLACK BOX


Jimmie Dale moved forward through the trees. It could not be far, not
more than three or four hundred yards, for the Santos house lay between
himself and the Martin-Holmes estate. That was why he had told Benson to
stop half a mile this side of the latter place. The general direction,
he knew, was a diagonal one--toward the Martin-Holmes' residence, and
toward the shore, away from the road. He smiled a little queerly to
himself as he went along. He remembered that during a week-end visit to
Holmes a year or so ago, the latter had expressed his annoyance at what
he had called an unsightly shack that two Portuguese had put up on the
beach close to his place. He, Jimmie Dale, had not been very much
interested then; he was vitally interested in that so-called shack now!

He frowned suddenly. He had been making fair progress, and should have
reached his destination by now; but, instead, he was still in the woods
and the ground was growing wet and soggy underfoot. He edged off in the
direction of the shore--the house was at the water's edge, Holmes had
said--and went on for another hundred yards. It grew worse. He could
hear now the lapping of the waves. The trees grew fewer, and began to be
replaced by a reedy growth--and then of a sudden Jimmie Dale halted. A
glimmer of moonlight flickered on water and waving marsh grass. It was
impassable--it reached out into the Sound itself.

It was disaster! He felt his face whiten. He must already have been ten
minutes on the way--and ten minutes was the utmost limit of margin he
had any right to count upon. Ten minutes! It was far worse than that! It
would take that much more to retrace his steps and circle around the
other way before he could get started again.

He gnawed at his lips now as he turned and began to run. It was almost
certain disaster; disaster to the moral responsibility he had assumed,
disaster to the hope he had cherished that to-night--He stumbled. He
could not be careful of his footing now. Defeat, yes, perhaps--but he
would not accept it. He ran doggedly. Again he stumbled, and again. And
now he winced with pain. This hurt his side brutally. It wasn't like
riding on the cushions of a luxurious limousine, or even of walking when
no unusual effort was required.

He went on. His breath came hard. He swept beads of moisture away from
his forehead--and then once he reeled. It was hours, wasn't it, since he
had started over again? There wasn't much chance--one perhaps in a
thousand--not that much! His jaws clamped hard together. He was making a
mess of it with that cursed side, and----

Jimmie Dale came suddenly out of the edge of the woods. Well, at least,
this was better! Fifty yards away across a clearing a house loomed
shadowy out of the darkness. He listened intently. There was no sound.
He darted silently across the clearing and gained the house. It was a
small place so close to the shore that, as he crept now noiselessly up
the steps of a verandah that apparently ran all around the house, he
could make out a little wharf and what looked like an old, neglected
boat drawn up on the beach. Certainly, there was no mistaking the house
for there was no other of this description, he knew, in the
neighbourhood.

A pick-lock came from a pocket in the leather girdle, and with it again
the black silk mask. A moment more, and Jimmie Dale stood inside the
house. And now he listened again, straining his ears for the slightest
sound. Nothing! His face was white and haggard. There was only one
answer of course--the Phantom's delegate had been and gone. There had
been time enough--so much and to spare that even the Kitten was due now.

He took out a flashlight and circled it around him. The place was crude,
to a certain extent unfinished; exactly what Manuel Santos himself had
called it--a camp. It seemed to be divided into several rooms by thin,
unpainted partitions. Here at his right, steps led upward. Well, he had
come this far, and even if the chances now were all against him, he was
still going up there, but he had to think of the Kitten now--the
possibility of being trapped himself by the Kitten and his thugs. There
was time enough now to take the precaution of arming himself with a
knowledge of the general plan of the place. He stepped hurriedly through
the several rooms that made the depth of the house. He nodded in quick
understanding. The "camp" was of uniform design. One took his choice as
to which was the rear and which was the front. Here, where he stood now,
a door opened on the verandah; and here, too, a rough staircase led to
the upper story, or attic, as Manuel Santos had called it.

Well, the attic now! That window! He went quickly up the stairs. At the
top, his flashlight disclosed a broad landing and a closed door. The
door was unlocked, and he stepped forward over the threshold. The
flashlight circled the interior. Again he nodded. It was an attic,
nothing more or less, without partitions, that reached from one end of
the house to the other. There was a single window, halfway down one
side--the right-hand side from where he stood now facing the Sound.

He was at the window now. He opened it, and stood up on the sill--and
suddenly, poised there, he remained motionless. From the direction of
the road he thought he had caught the sound of a motor. It was gone now.
Perhaps he had been mistaken. The road was, as nearly as he could
calculate it, a good hundred and fifty yards back from the water.

He felt swiftly up above his head outside the window. He did not dare
use the flashlight now. Whether he was mistaken about the motor or not,
the Kitten was already due, and a light would show a long way through
the darkness. And, besides, there was partial moonlight, and he could
see a little. His fingers were feeling, searching, prying over the rough
boarding. It was very ingenious, this--the eaves boarded in to meet the
wall of the house--only he could not find any section of it that seemed
at all loose or movable. It would be craftily done, of course; he would
hardly expect anything else, but----It was strange! Very strange! The
Kitten had been able to pass on no more detailed information about this
than he, Jimmie Dale, had overheard; and if he, Jimmie Dale, could not
open it, how could the Kitten's confederate have done so? Just luck? A
stumbling on the trick of it? It was rather strange!

Jimmie Dale became motionless again, intent, alert. There could be no
question about it now. There was the unmistakable crunch of _several_
footsteps approaching the house from the direction of the road. The
Kitten was coming!

In a flash Jimmie Dale reached into the leather girdle, and a powerful
little blued-steel jimmy was in his hand. It was very strange! So
strange that he meant to see inside there, Kitten or no Kitten! The
jimmy ripped into a board above his head, and pried one end of it loose.
He felt quickly inside. It was naturally hollow here, and he reached in
as far as he could, feeling in both directions. Nothing! He tore the
board completely away now, and moving a little along the sill, reached
in from the other end. _It was here!_ He was wrenching out an oblong
shaped, black metal box of the style generally used in the safe deposit
vaults. It was here! His brain seemed stunned for a moment. He did not
understand. He could not understand--except that he had been
wrong--wrong in his deduction from that scene at Sadie Foy's, wrong in
his theory of the meaning of that message. And yet it had been so
logical, so surely the truth! And yet, just as logically now, he was
forced to the conclusion that he had been wrong. There had seemed, still
seemed, to be no other possible explanation of that message, and
yet--and yet he must have been wrong. Nobody--no Phantom's delegate--had
been here. And the Kitten himself was coming now--because those were the
footsteps of four or five men. Perhaps the--He pried the box itself
hurriedly open. No; the contents had not been taken and the box left!
The faint light disclosed package after package of banknotes.

The crunch of footsteps came again, still nearer to the house. Jimmie
Dale lowered himself from the sill, and, carrying the box, retreated
quickly across the attic to the door opposite to that by which he had
entered--the door that faced the Sound. He opened it silently, stepped
out on the landing--and the next instant crouched quickly back in the
angle between the door jamb and the wall, on the side of the jamb away
from the stairs. Too late! He had not thought they were so _near_. There
was a footstep below. One of them was coming up this way--was even on
the stairs now. He could not see, he could only _hear_. His automatic
swung forward. Some one was close to him now. His jaws clamped. No, he
had not been seen, either. The footstep passed the threshold of the
door, entered the attic, and was crossing it now in the direction of the
window. And now through the open door Jimmie Dale could make out a
figure, little more than a shadowy outline, in the faint ray of
moonlight from the window.

And then Jimmie Dale hung there riveted to the spot. It was quick--quick
as the winking of an eye. The figure, at the window now, halted
abruptly, and swung sharply around to face the opposite doorway. And,
coincidently, it seemed, the door opened, and as a flashlight streamed
in and fell full upon the figure, and Jimmie Dale saw the man's face,
there was a chorus of savage oaths, and almost simultaneously the flash
and roar of a revolver shot. And the figure turned and ran toward the
doorway near which Jimmie Dale stood.

_It was Bunty Myers._

A voice screamed out in rage:

"Blast youse, Kitten, if youse hadn't bumped against my arm I'd have got
him, an' got him good!"

Jimmie Dale's face was set, drawn, rigid, a queer tightness about the
corner of his lips. He had been right, a thousand times right! It was
not he who had been wrong, nor his intuition, nor his logic at fault. It
was Bunty Myers who had been wrong--something had gone wrong with the
man's plans, something had----

A fusillade of shots poured into the room after the flying figure.
Bunty Myers stumbled, recovered himself, came on again, staggered
through the doorway, and stumbled again--this time dropping to the
floor.

And then Jimmie Dale was at work. He slammed the door shut, and
snatching out his pick-lock, locked it. Bunty Myers! _He_ wanted Bunty
Myers! This was the man he had set out to find to-night, and--No, it
wasn't only that! Thank God, he wasn't quite so raw as that! Those thugs
in there, those apaches, would kill the man like a dog, as they had
already tried to do, for interfering with their meat. And the more so
now that they would find that meat gone! The Kitten couldn't stop them
without giving himself away. It wasn't Bunty Myers, it was a man's life
now--if the man were not already too far gone.

He held the box under his left arm, as he bent forward to the huddled
form on the floor.

"Quick!" he whispered. "Put your arm around my neck. Do you hear? Make
an effort! It's your only chance."

The man, with Jimmie Dale's assistance, lurched to his feet. They
staggered, half fell down the stairs together. Bunty Myers was mumbling
almost incoherently:

"I--I had a breakdown on the way--out--Kitten. Damn fool, Kitten, why
couldn't youse hold--back--eh?--only a--a little late--youse----"

A sweat of agony was standing out on Jimmie Dale's forehead. He was half
carrying the man. His side was torturing him.

"My God!" whispered Jimmie Dale between drawn lips.

Behind, upstairs, they were smashing at the locked door. They would
either have to break it down or come around the other way through the
house. It was worth a couple of minutes' start--and there was the boat
there now on the shore just a few yards away.

He plunged on, staggering. Bunty Myers had become almost a dead weight.
Well, he couldn't leave the man to be _killed_, could he? The man kept
muttering now, muttering, muttering:

"...Up an' down--see?--'ell of a note--up an' down--up an' down----"

Bunty Myers collapsed a limp heap in the bottom of the boat. Jimmie Dale
shoved it off, and jumped in. There were no oars, save a broken one. He
seized it, and began to paddle. Footsteps pounded on the verandah,
racing around the house. A yell went up:

"Dere he is! Dere he is--in de boat!"

There was the crash and flame spurt of shots, the spat of lead on the
water. Jimmie Dale threw himself flat in the boat beside Bunty Myers.
With the initial push, and the few strokes he had managed, the boat was
quite a little distance from the shore, and what breeze there was was
carrying it still farther out and also in the direction of the marshy
tract through which he had first tried to reach the house. They could
not, therefore, follow him along the shore.

A medley of voices from the shore, punctuated by oaths, reached him:

"Get a boat....Dere'll be one up at dat swell ranch even if it is
closed for de summer....Sure! Bust de boathouse in....Beat it
quick....He's good an' hurt, an' he won't get far....He was winged
upstairs in de attic w'en he fell----"

Jimmie Dale wrenched his flask from his pocket. They had only seen _one_
man. Of course! His head was swimming crazily. He gulped down some
brandy, and then felt for Bunty Myers' lips.

"Drink this!" he said hoarsely.

The liquor gurgled queerly. He felt it run down the man's chin--but
Bunty Myers must have swallowed some of it, for he began to mutter
again, obviously in delirium now.

"Up an' down, I tell youse!" mumbled Bunty Myers. "It's honest to Gawd's
truth. She don't know it, 'cause it's in de next house. It goes up an'
down, I tell youse. I saw it. Up an'--" His voice trailed off.

What did the man mean? Jimmie Dale swept his hand across his eyes. It
encountered his mask. He pulled it off and put it in his pocket. They
were both delirious, weren't they--he and Bunty Myers? This was the man
he had come to find, and from whose lips he had sworn he would tear the
Phantom's secret, and all the man did was to croak, "Up and down, up and
down!" Why didn't he say, "See-saw, Marjorie Daw!"

He gulped down another mouthful of brandy. Yes, that was better now. He
raised his head. The shore was indistinct; not so much through distance,
but because what little moonlight there had been was gone now--under a
cloud. They would have a boat after him pretty soon. He must paddle
now--risk a shot--he wouldn't be very distinct, either.

He dipped in the broken oar. It brought a moan of agony from his lips.
The shots he had invited from the shore came--and missed. He _must_
paddle--if it tore his side to pieces.

Only _one_ man in the boat. That's what they thought. Well, then, why
not? He could easily save himself. Drop overboard and swim ashore
somewhere in the marshy tract. He had strength enough for that. They'd
find the boat--and find a man in it! But there was some reason why he
couldn't do that. He shook his head fiercely as though to clear his
brain. Yes, of course! He couldn't leave that huddled figure there at
his feet to be killed, could he? So it would have to be a fight, unless
he could evade them in the darkness. And--and there wasn't much chance
of that. He listened. That sounded like a boat coming from somewhere far
behind now. But there weren't any more shots from the shore. Naturally!
He must be opposite the marsh now, and they couldn't follow him any more
on the land.

He couldn't leave the man to be killed--and that's what they'd do, kill
the man. The Kitten couldn't prevent it without the others understanding
the whole game and turning on the Kitten too. The Kitten had done all he
could when he had bumped against the arm of the man who had fired that
first shot. Funny, that Bunty Myers should be here! No, it was clear,
quite clear! Bunty Myers had started out all right for the box, but a
breakdown had made him late, so late that he----

A shout came from the shore behind. It was answered from the water.
There was no further question but that they had secured a boat, though
it was still a good way off. His broken oar suddenly touched bottom as
he made a stroke. It wasn't the shore--it was just shallow water here
fronting the marshland. Well, it didn't matter! He couldn't paddle much
more, and not fast enough anyway to escape them, nor run fast enough
with a wounded man even if he were ashore to get away from them. He
laughed a little harshly. It was a case of fight for it, then. Perhaps
Bunty Myers might be roused, propped up against a seat to help. It would
be ironical if Bunty Myers hit the Kitten!

He stopped paddling, and leaned forward with his flask once more.

"Here! Quick! Take some more of this!" he said.

There was no answer. The head he lifted slid from his grasp, and thudded
with a dull, ugly sound against the side of the boat. And for an instant
Jimmie Dale stared at the limp, huddled form. And then, with a low,
quick cry, he reached for the other's wrist, searching for the
pulse--and then for the man's heart beat. There was none. He drew his
breath in sharply. The man was dead.

The splash of oars mingled with the growl and snarl of voices came
distinctly now across the water. _Bunty Myers was dead._ It was queer!
Strange! It seemed to carry with it some significance beyond the mere
fact of death. What was it? He had started out to find Bunty Myers for
something or other. His head was swimming miserably again. It had
nothing to do with that black box there on the floor of the boat.
Nothing to do with----

He spurred himself to action. One man in the boat. There need be only
_one_ man in the boat now! He looked behind him, straining his eyes
through the darkness. He could not see the other boat. Therefore they
could not see him. He picked up the black box, and slipped over the
side. The water could not be very deep since his oar had touched the
bottom--no--it was less than waist high. He began to wade as quickly as
he could, and still avoid making any splash, toward the shore.

The sounds from the oncoming boat grew louder, the voices more distinct.
And then Jimmie Dale, reeling a little, stepped from the water's edge,
and began to make his way silently through the woods. He knew the way.
There was no danger of losing it. He was on the same side of the marshy
tract that Benson was. He had only to keep straight ahead toward the
road. And it wasn't far.

Curious, how heavy the black box was! He smiled grimly. Back there they
would think Bunty Myers must have let it drop overboard. What else could
they think? But to-morrow the police would get it--with the compliments
of the Gray Seal. And the Phantom--no, Bunty Myers! His head was
swirling again, but his brain seemed to be fighting desperately to tell
him that what Bunty Myers had said about "up and down" and a "next
house" somewhere was something he should understand, because he was to
make Bunty Myers tell him something if Bunty Myers died for it, and he
knew very well that Bunty Myers had died.

He gnawed at his lips. His head was very bad--very bad. He couldn't
think any more. Not now! Not to-night! But he had no need to think any
more now, had he? There was Benson and the car looming up just ahead of
him. The rest was for to-morrow, and the to-morrows.

The to-morrows....




--XXV--

IN THE SANCTUARY


A door opened and closed softly. A shadow moved in the darkness. Came
then the crackle of a match, and a gas jet, air-choked, wheezing in
protest, emitted a thin blue flame, grew yellow, and cast a meagre glow
over its immediate surroundings. Unkempt, disreputable in his ragged,
threadbare attire as Smarlinghue, Jimmie Dale stood for an instant
staring around him at the squalid appointments of the place, and then
moving abruptly to the far end of the room, flung himself down upon the
already crumpled coverings of the dilapidated cot bed against the wall.

This was the Sanctuary. He half closed his eyes, staring at the
asthmatic, stuttering gas jet. Well, it would be in every verity a
sanctuary for another hour or so; a retreat where he could strive
quietly to bring mental order out of chaos, and, yes, physically rest
for a little while until it was time to carry out the plan that he
proposed to put into execution before another morning came.

Since last night, all through the day, those mumbled words of Bunty
Myers, the dying gangster, had been ringing in his ears. They had become
an obsession. He could not rid his mind of them--or of the insistently
growing intuition that they were the key to the Phantom's lair if he
could only make head or tail of them. "Up an' down, I tell youse....She
don't know it, 'cause it's in de next house....It goes up an' down, I
tell youse...."

Who was "she"? He could not actually deduce it logically, but he was
nevertheless sure that "she" was Mother Margot. The voices he had heard
in her room but could not locate, the certainty that the clue, the
phantom clue as he came to call it, was to be found in Mother Margot's
rooms, was of course the basis for this interpretation; but it was the
"next house" that bothered him. What did that mean? If he were right,
and it was Mother Margot who did not know "'cause it's in de next
house," where was this "next house"? There was nothing there but another
tenement across the narrow areaway.

He frowned suddenly, impatiently. His mind was simply beginning to go
over again, vainly, ineffectually, what it had already gone over a
thousand times, it seemed, since last night. He had already made a
decision--hours ago. He would know to-night whether he was right or not;
he would know before he slept whether Bunty Myers' dying words linked up
the Phantom's secret with Mother Margot's rooms or not. To-night,
finally, the phantom clue that _was_ in any case connected with the old
hag's rooms would be a mystery no longer if he literally had to wreck
the place to unearth it.

Jimmie Dale nodded grimly to himself. _To-night!_ In a little while--it
was too early yet. Just ten o'clock.

His lips tightened. Yes; wreck it! His was a single purpose now--that
to-night he would strike with all his might; strike without counting the
personal cost; and, above all, strike while for once he possessed the
certainty that it would not be too late in the sense that even success
in the unearthing of the Phantom and in a final reckoning with the man
might only hold a bitter emptiness because she, the Tocsin, the woman he
loved, would already have been beyond all aid.

There would be no thought of that. He was lighter of heart on that score
than he had been for many days. She was alive; yes, and well, and safe.
He knew that to-night. The torment, the fear for her safety that,
finding no trace of her, he had known yesterday, and for so many
yesterdays before, was gone now. She was alive; and, so far, she was
safe. His lips moved silently. Thank God for that! And now he asked only
that, whatever the outcome to himself in what he was about to do, she
might after to-night be safe for always.

He shook his head a little grimly. Suppose, instead of success, he
failed? Too often the Phantom had slipped from his grasp; and he was
only too well aware that to-night he was almost literally going up
against a stacked hand held by the other. Mother Margot had warned him
that her rooms were a trap for the Gray Seal; the Tocsin had warned him.
He had never doubted this simply because more than once he had ventured
into those rooms and emerged unscathed. And, though it might well be, as
he had argued with himself on his last visit there, that it was now so
long ago since the trap had been baited that the Phantom no longer built
any hopes upon it as a means of snaring his prey, that argument, however
well founded, did not apply to-night. He could not very well expect to
attack the trap itself and proceed to demolish it without _inviting_ the
attention of the trapper, which was, indeed, his prime intention.

A fool? Perhaps! But there was no other way of getting to grips with the
Phantom. And to-night she was alive and safe; and there might be no
to-morrow night. And, besides, if the worst happened, he would not go
out _alone_--the Phantom would go with him. He was somehow sure of that;
it was like a deep-seated consciousness, a strange reassuring certainty.
And if that were so, he had no quarrel with the price, whatever it might
be!

His fingers, fumbling in the pocket of his ragged jacket, found and drew
out an envelope. He stared at it for a long time. Hers! The Tocsin's!
The first word he had had from her for so many days! His eyes softened.
Alive! And he had known so great a fear--a fear that had grown day after
day into an almost hopeless agony of dread. She who loved him, and had
made no effort to communicate with him after he had been wounded that
other night--no effort when he knew that under ordinary conditions she
would have moved heaven and earth to do so. That was why, last night, in
spite of Jason, in spite of his wound, he had tried to pick up the
Phantom's trail again through Bunty Myers--and in a measure had
succeeded. He had found Bunty Myers, but Bunty Myers was dead now.

A strange, grim light crept into Jimmie Dale's half-closed eyes. The
circle had indeed narrowed. Of the Phantom's satellites, of all those
who once had gathered in that back, upstairs room of Wally Kerrigan's
"club," there were left now only two--the Kitten and Mother Margot.
Those two--and somewhere in his hidden lair the Phantom. Well, to-night
then----

He nodded quickly to himself. He was only waiting until it was a little
later. He turned impatiently on the cot. Time seemed to drag
interminably. The stage was already set. He had warned Mother Margot to
keep away from her rooms to-night; to find an alibi for herself. It was
a little quixotic, perhaps, a little of added danger to himself; but
again, as it had been last night, her life, if things went wrong, might
very well pay part of the forfeit, and even Mother Margot was entitled
to her life. What else could he have done? It was true that, at best, he
could consider her but an unwilling sort of ally; but nevertheless, even
though it might have been but through fear, she had, he was sure, always
played straight with him. And so to-night he could have done no less
than to have given her her chance again.

Jimmie Dale rose abruptly from the cot, and, with the envelope in his
hand, stepped back across the room again to a position under the gas
jet. He had found the note here in the usual place behind the movable
section of the baseboard when, late that afternoon, after having
previously called Mother Margot from her pushcart on Thompson Street to
that rather singularly-placed telephone in the rear of Antonio Mezzo's
shop and had given her her warning, he had come to the Sanctuary for the
purpose of assuming the rle of Smarlinghue, and of spending at least a
portion of the waiting hours in the underworld's inner circles which
were always pregnant with the possibility of affording an additional
thread or clue that might lend strength to his intended stroke against
the Phantom. He read the note again. It was dated that afternoon:

     Dear Philanthropic Crook:--What have you been thinking? With you
     wounded, and believing I would be in a position to know of it, and
     no word from me, it could only have been one of two things. Either
     I was heartless, or--or what you had feared so greatly had
     happened. It could not be the former, and so I know that in your
     love you must have been, as I would have been, mad with anxiety.

     I said I would not write to you or communicate with you until the
     shadows had all gone out of our lives again, but this afternoon I
     would indeed be heartless if I did not send you this word. I am
     well; and I am safe. Through circumstances that I shall not enter
     into, I did not know that you were wounded until last night, and
     then, almost coincidently, I also knew that from last night's
     activities your wound could not have been serious, and so _my_
     anxiety was relieved.

     Just one word more. Once before, long, long ago, so long ago that
     it seems now it were in some other age, I wrote you that it was
     near the end, that I had all but won, that victory was in sight,
     and--and, Jimmie, only disaster came. And so now I hesitate to say
     anything but just this: Things are going very well, and it may be,
     Jimmie--oh, I can not help but say it--only _hours_ before the
     shadows will have gone forever.

                                        MARIE.

Jimmie Dale replaced the note in his pocket. Somehow, he could not bring
himself to destroy it, as he had always done before. It had been so long
since he had heard from her; it was physical, tangible evidence that she
was _alive_. He swept his hand across his eyes. Those fears of last
night--that had driven him, wounded, from his bed! It was as though she
had almost read his mind, read the argument he had followed and from
which he had deduced the worst. It was strange, though, that she had not
known--if things were going so very well! Circumstances! What
circumstances?

He began to pace up and down the squalid room; and then, as abruptly as
he had left it, he went and flung himself down on the cot again. He was
restless. It was not his wound. His wound was all right, and was none
the worse for last night's experiences. His side was sore and stiff, of
course, and in that sense caused him a certain discomfort, but otherwise
he was quite normal.

It was not his wound that caused his restlessness; it was this dragging
of time, this waiting for the moment to arrive when he could supplant
inaction with activity. Perhaps he would have done better to have
remained longer in those various hidden places of the inner circles of
the underworld that he had visited after he had received the Tocsin's
note? He shrugged his shoulders. No; he was better here. He had learned
all that he could have hoped to learn--yes, and more! No; that was not
quite true. He had, rather, only substantiated beyond question what he
had already decided in his own mind could be the only logical conclusion
to the affair of last night when the Kitten and Bunty Myers, playing
Steenie Klotz and his companion apaches for dupes, had attempted to
secure the stolen funds of the defunct Banco Santos.

His jaws closed with a snap. Whisperings! How many times before had he
listened to the voice of the underworld breathing its secrets through
the underground exchanges where none save those of the aristocracy might
find entrance, and where the peers of that abandoned realm of Crimeland
kept their fingers on the pulse of a seething, disturbed and moiling
citizenry! And to-night the underworld was in a sort of tense ferment,
watching in unholy anticipation a game of life and death that was being
played out behind its guarded doors that were so effectually closed to
the outer world.

Jimmie Dale smiled suddenly, grimly now. He had found the underworld
viciously agog, intent with gluttonous eagerness upon a drama whose
dnouement promised to be blood-thirsty and murderous enough to satisfy
even its unbridled lusts! Steenie Klotz, Red Jack and their companions
had been played for dupes by Bunty Myers and the Kitten, but the dupes
were not altogether fools, nor their intellects fallen to so low an
estate that they had failed to absorb the fact that one plus one made
two! The Kitten, and very certainly indeed Bunty Myers, had not expected
that the night would end with the dupes finding Bunty Myers dead at
their hands in that boat on the shore of the Sound! And of the two now
Bunty Myers was perhaps in the better case! The Kitten, it transpired,
had had sense enough not to stand on the order of his going, and had
incontinently fled for his life. He had not been heard of since last
night.

Again Jimmie Dale smiled grimly. It was the logical conclusion--and it
was very simple. Bunty Myers and the Kitten for years had been well
known characters in the underworld; and for years they had been known to
work _together_ in Gentleman Laroque's gang. And one and one made two,
that was all!

Whisperings! Whisperings, as ghouls might whisper in hideous enthusiasm
at the promise of some abominable feast to come, whisperings everywhere
through the underground exchanges of Gangland! Of the passing of Bunty
Myers the police as yet were apparently in ignorance; but Steenie Klotz
and his outraged apaches had not hesitated in "safe" quarters to spread
the story and make known the sentence they had passed upon their
betrayer. And the underworld in its blood lust waited. It was the law.
The Kitten was being hunted mercilessly to his death. But so far they
had not found the Kitten.

Jimmie Dale nodded at the gas jet. That was what he had learned in the
underworld's inner circles; and then he had returned here to the
Sanctuary, for it was not as Smarlinghue but as the Gray Seal that he
meant to play out the night. And now time dragged. He could not even
begin to strip off these rags and discard the character of the
drug-broken, dissolute artist until the moment arrived when he was ready
to leave. It was too dangerous, for in the meantime some one, any one, a
lodger even in the same tenement here, might come, and----

He sat up suddenly erect on the cot. Some one _was_ coming. He listened.
A footstep shuffled along in the hall outside and reached the door; and
then some one knocked guardedly upon the panel.

It was Smarlinghue, not Jimmie Dale, who spoke.

"Who's there?" he demanded ungraciously.

"It's me," a voice croaked hurriedly. "Let me in, Smarly. It's Mother
Margot."

Mother Margot! A queer smile flickered across Jimmie Dale's lips, as he
rose from the cot and started across the room toward the door. Mother
Margot who _obeyed_ him as the Gray Seal, when she couldn't help it
perhaps; Mother Margot who accepted Smarlinghue as one of her own ilk,
and, on one occasion at least, as a source of assistance and an ally in
her turbulent life! What did Mother Margot want with Smarlinghue
to-night? He opened the door, and, as the old hag, her shawl drawn
closely around her head, entered, he closed it again behind her.

"Hello, Mother!" said Jimmie Dale facetiously. "Ain't business good down
on Thompson Street to-night?"

She glanced around her furtively.

"Dere ain't no one here, is dere?" she asked anxiously.

Jimmie Dale shook his head.

"Spill it!" he invited. "What's the matter?"

Again she glanced around her, and it was almost a minute before she
spoke. She twisted her hands nervously together.

"Youse helped me once before, Smarly," she whispered finally. "I--I
ain't got no one else to ask, an'--an' to-night I'm in bad.
Youse--youse'll help me again, won't youse, Smarly?"

Jimmie Dale pushed one of the two rickety chairs the Sanctuary possessed
toward her.

"How do I know?" he countered cautiously. "I ain't making promises on
the blind. Help yourself to the chair, and I'll listen."

Mother Margot shook her head quickly.

"I ain't got no time to sit down. An' I ain't got no chance for anythin'
only mabbe to get croaked to-night if youse won't help me. I ran all de
way over here, an'--an' I was scared youse wouldn't be here." She was
wringing her hands together again in evident terror and nervousness.
"Oh, my Gawd, if youse hadn't been here, Smarly, I----" Her voice broke
and ended in a choked sob.

Jimmie Dale's eyes, from the crouching, dishevelled shawled and
spectacled old creature, sought the shadows cast by the flickering gas
jet that played along the edge of the threadbare strip of carpet at his
feet. He did not question the genuineness of her distress. He had very
good reason to believe in it most thoroughly. He was even vitally,
personally, intimately concerned in it; for, back of it, where Mother
Margot was involved, must be the Phantom's hand. He smiled queerly to
himself. What it was that had brought her here he, as Jimmie Dale,
_must_ know; but that knowledge could only be obtained through
Smarlinghue, and Smarlinghue was--well, Smarlinghue was Smarlinghue.

"Well, don't lose your nerve," said Smarlinghue a little sharply, "or
maybe you'll get me scared too, and the deal'll be off before it's
started. The time before you got me to go hunting for English Steve, and
I found him--murdered. What is it this time?"

"I--I've got to try an' get a message to some one," she said anxiously.

"That's what you said when it was English Steve," observed Smarlinghue
judicially. "Well, shoot! Who is it to-night?"

Again she did not answer immediately; again she glanced furtively around
her. And then she spoke, her voice scarcely audible:

"De Gray Seal."

"The Gray Seal!" Involuntarily Jimmie Dale gasped. He stared at her. He
could quite understand that she might seek the Gray Seal; but this was
irony in its sublimest form, wasn't it? And then suddenly he remembered.
The night he had saved himself here by playing his dual rle! The new
heights to which Smarlinghue had risen in the underworld through that
supposed encounter! It had almost secured him initiation into the
confidences of Bunty Myers, and the rest of the Phantom's followers, of
which Mother Margot here was one. That was it! Because he had _once_
been known to have been in actual, physical touch with the Gray Seal,
and would therefore perhaps be able to recognise him again! And she had
come to the Gray Seal himself! It was exquisite!

He felt her eyes boring into him from behind her heavy-lensed
spectacles. He smiled with exaggerated derision. But mentally now he
knew no mirth. That was only one side of it, the strange irony of it.
There must be something of no ordinary importance that could have
prompted her to act like this. What was it? She who, again and again,
had been compelled to act under the Gray Seal's orders, under _his_
orders; who, only that afternoon, had received her instructions, or,
perhaps better, warning from him over the telephone!

"It's too easy!" scoffed Smarlinghue, and grinned broadly. "All
anybody's got to do that wants the Gray Seal is to go out on the corner
and whistle for him."

"My Gawd!" The exclamation came piteously. She wrung her hands the
harder together.

"Well," said Jimmie Dale, still facetiously, "what's the idea, then? Do
you think just because he rough-housed me here one night that he left
his calling card, and wrote his address on it before he went away? Or
maybe you think he took his mask off, and says: 'Smarly, drop around any
afternoon for a cup of tea; I'll always be at home--to you!' Well, he
didn't! There ain't a bull or a lag that ain't been hunting him for
years--and they're still hunting! How'd you expect me to find him?"

She seemed hardly to be paying any attention. Her fingers were working
nervously with her shawl, now loosening it, now tightening it around her
throat; and she still kept on glancing in all directions furtively
around her.

"Smarly, for Gawd's sake, listen!" she burst out wildly. "I ain't askin'
youse to find him. I'm askin' youse to help me. I got to have some one I
can trust. Mabbe youse won't have to do nothin' at all. Youse won't see
him; it'll only be on de telephone. I--I've been workin' wid him for
weeks now."

It was exquisite! There was humour here for Jimmie Dale--but
Smarlinghue's jaw dropped helplessly.

"The Gray Seal--and _you_!" He gulped, swallowing hard.

She nodded her head in a sort of helpless way.

"Yes," she said. "My Gawd, I'm handin' it to youse straight, an'--an'
I'm in bad to-night. Youse helped me once, an' dere ain't no one else I
dares go to. An' youse _will_ help me, won't youse, Smarly, if I swear
to youse dat dere ain't no risk or nothin' like dat for youse, an' dat
dere ain't no one goin' to know youse was in it at all?"

Jimmie Dale, as Smarlinghue, examined meditatively the ragged, frayed
sleeve of his coat.

"All right," said Jimmie Dale cautiously. "If I'm as safe as that, I
won't see you stuck. But you've got to show me first. What do you want
me to do?"

She reached out and caught his hand impulsively, and wrung it hard.

"Gawd bless youse, Smarly!" There was a world of relief in her voice,
husky and broken though it was. "I knew youse would, Smarly; I knew
youse would. Listen! Youse knows where my pushcart is on Thompson
Street. Well, just near it is Mezzo's second-hand shop, an' dere's a
side door to dat--up de lane. Dat door ain't locked, an' old Mezzo's
away to-night, an' de shop is shut up. Dere's a telephone in dere in de
back storeroom. It's kept dere on de quiet--see? All youse've got to do,
Smarly, is go in dere an' wait, an' answer de telephone if it rings.
Dere ain't nobody goin' to see youse, an' dere ain't nobody goin' to
know youse're dere. If it rings it'll be de Gray Seal, an' youse'll give
him a message from me."

Jimmie Dale, as Smarlinghue, whistled a little dubiously under his
breath.

"And they said he always worked alone!" he observed plaintively. "Say,
you'd get bumped off for this if any of the fleets knew about it! You're
pretty thick, ain't you? He puts in a telephone for you, and----"

"No, he didn't!" She shook her head vigorously. "He had nothin' to do
wid it. It's--it's another crowd. He got wise to it, dat's all, an' one
night he caught me cold in--oh, my Gawd, Smarly, never mind about dat!
I--I'm in wrong wid de whole works. I--I got to get a message to him
to-night if I can."

"Well, why don't you go and find him then, and can the telephone stuff?"
inquired Jimmie Dale, in his rle of Smarlinghue.

"'Cause I don't know where he is, an' no more about him dan youse does,"
she said almost hysterically. "Don't youse understand, Smarly? He calls
me to de phone when he wants me, an' de times he's shown himself was
when he was wearin' a mask like he had de night he bust in on youse
here."

"Well, then," prodded Jimmie Dale, "why don't you stick around and
listen for the telephone yourself to-night?"

Mother Margot was wringing her hands again.

"D'youse t'ink I'd have come here an' put youse wise to wot I have, if I
could've done dat?" she cried wildly. "Dat's wot's de matter. It--it's
de other crowd dat's pullin' somethin' to-night, an'--an' I got to go
an' do somethin' dey's told me to do. I got to go. I don't dare not to
go. Dey--dey'd cut me t'roat if I didn't--an'--an' it's somethin' de
Gray Seal's got to know about, or else he--oh, my Gawd, Smarly, can't
youse understand?--he'd put me in wrong, an' I'd get finished anyway.
He's pullin' somethin' himself to-night, but it's no good now, 'cause
somethin' else is goin' to happen, an' he'd know afterwards dat I knew,
an' if I didn't wise him up dat's my finish too."

Smarlinghue circled his lips with the tip of his tongue, and scowled
unhappily.

"Say," he said heavily, "you're in nice, ain't you? How do you know it
won't be the other crowd you're talking about, the bunch that you said
put the phone in there, that rings up--and then I'd get stung too?"

"'Cause dey knows I ain't goin' to be dere. Ain't I tellin' youse dat?"
Mother Margot answered miserably. "If de phone rings, it'll be de Gray
Seal. Dere's no one else'd ask for Mother Margot."

"And suppose he don't ring up at all?" inquired Smarlinghue.

"I dunno!" Mother Margot's face seemed to whiten a little. "My Gawd,
Smarly, I dunno--dat's wot's got me so scared. I ain't even sayin' he
will; I--I'm only hopin'. It's de only chance I got. I know mabbe where
I could find him a couple of hours from now, but it'll be too late den.
I--I can't do nothin' more, Smarly, can I? I can't do nothin' more. If
he don't telephone, de only chance I got is to try an' make him believe
I did me best--dat's all! An' if he don't believe me, I--I guess I goes
out for keeps."

Jimmie Dale for a moment appeared to consider the matter.

"I ain't quite sure I get you," he said slowly at last, "except that it
looks to me like, between the two of them, it don't make much difference
whether you're coming or going. And this telephone stunt looks like a
long shot to me. But I don't see where I get hurt any, and if it's going
to ease your mind I'll stand in. So what's the message I'm to give if he
telephones?"

Mother Margot's face brightened.

"T'ank God for youse, Smarly!" she faltered. "Youse're as white as dey
makes 'em. Youse just say dat de message is from me, an' dat de Voice is
goin' to pull de big bump to-night, an' to watch French Jeff down at de
White Rat. Y'understand, Smarly?"

Jimmie Dale shook his head.

"No; I don't," he said. "But if he does, it's all right, I suppose. I'm
satisfied. I'm not for mixing in and getting my hair singed. But if he
asks me what the bump is, and what time it's going to bust loose, what
do I say?"

"Nothin'," said Mother Margot. "Dere ain't nothin' more to tell him,
'cause dat's all I knows myself; but I knows it's de big showdown all
right, an' de dope is straight. He won't need nothin' more, I guess, if
he wants to butt in."

Jimmie Dale nodded indifferently. It was precisely what he wanted to
know--the exact extent of the old hag's information.

Mother Margot shuffled her feet nervously.

"I got to go, Smarly," she said anxiously. "De Dago's runnin' me
pushcart for me for de rest of de night, but he don't know nothin' about
dis, so don't youse give him de high sign. Youse understand about de
side door in de lane?"

"Sure!" said Smarlinghue. "And while we're standing here talking maybe
he's telephoned already and pulled a bone."

Mother Margot shook her head.

"Dat don't matter," she said. "He knows Mezzo don't always hear, an'
sometimes it's hard to get an answer. If he was tryin' to get me, he'll
try again until he does." She hesitated, drew her shawl tightly about
her head again, took a step toward the door, and once more hesitated.
"Gawd bless youse, Smarly!" she said brokenly. "Mabbe youse t'inks youse
does, but youse don't know wot youse're doin' for me to-night. Mabbe
I'll pull out of dis alive, an' mabbe I won't, but don't youse ever
forget, Smarly, if youse never sees me again, dat dere ain't no one in
dis world means anythin' to Mother Margot like youse does, Smarly.
An'--an'----" Her voice broke.

She was crying. Jimmie Dale started forward impulsively as he saw the
old shoulders shake, and a tear, followed by another, trickle unchecked
down her cheek. But she turned her head quickly away, and scuffled
hurriedly toward the door before he had reached her.

But at the door she turned again.

"Gawd bless youse, Smarly!" she called again--and closed the door behind
her.




--XXVI--

AT "THE WHITE RAT"


Mother Margot's footsteps, shuffling, receded along the hall, and died
away with the opening and closing of the street door.

Jimmie Dale stood staring across the empty room. He had not fully
realised before how secure was the hold that he, as the Gray Seal, had
upon the old hag! She was afraid of the Phantom, or the Voice, as she
called the man; but she was equally afraid of the Gray Seal, it now
appeared--and between the two, unable to steer any middle course
to-night, she was in mortal terror.

He frowned. He might have eased her mind a little in some way, perhaps.
No! He shook his head decisively. Her coming, the story she had told,
changed materially, and of necessity, his own plans for to-night--at
least for the next few hours. Mother Margot's rooms had interested him
only because of the probability that they were the outer portal to the
Phantom's sanctum; but if the Phantom's movements to-night centred
around French Jeff and "The White Rat," it was French Jeff and The White
Rat that automatically and at once became the centre of attraction for
him as well. And particularly so since, deprived of the Kitten's
assistance, practically the one remaining satellite, any play that the
Phantom made must, leaving Mother Margot out, be made in _person_. It
was the Phantom that he sought!

Jimmie Dale stepped swiftly across the room and locked the door, then
kneeling on the floor near by lifted aside the movable section of the
baseboard. He could no more have afforded to risk the character of
Smarlinghue by some well-meaning but ill-advised word in an effort to
calm her fears, than he could afford, after what she had said, to go to
The White Rat _as_ Smarlinghue. She was as likely to be there as not. If
she saw Smarlinghue there it would be--Well, she would never again after
that have need to fear the Gray Seal! A hint that Smarlinghue was not
what he seemed would be the end, swift and inevitable, of the Gray Seal
and Jimmie Dale!

He nodded sharply to himself as he stripped off his ragged attire, and,
quickly now, removing the little pieces of wax from nostrils and from
beneath the lips, that distorted the contour of his face, and removing,
too, the stain of make-up, began to dress again as Jimmie Dale in the
carefully folded suit which he took from the hiding place behind the
baseboard. Again he nodded to himself. Tweeds to-night. It was
fortunate! He had naturally been wearing tweeds that afternoon when he
had left his house. The White Rat was not usually frequented by
gentlemen in evening dress!

A minute, two, three passed. The gas jet, spitting like an angry cat,
became suddenly silent. The room was in darkness, save for a queer,
nebulous shaft of night light that came in through the top-light high up
over the French doors that opened on the small, ill-kept courtyard
without. And now a shadow moved and bulked itself against the French
doors, and one of the French doors opened without sound and closed
again, and the shadow crept along the wall of the building, and
strangely, like an apparition, disappeared through the fence that
bordered the lane.

A moment more, and Jimmie Dale, as though Smarlinghue had never existed,
was walking quietly along the street. His mind was working now with
cool, judicial precision, sifting, weighing, appraising the factors of
the problem before him. Mother Margot would not be near Thompson Street
again to-night. If the Gray Seal's hand appeared to-night, it would be
no more than she expected. Whether it was as the Gray Seal or as
Smarlinghue that first he next saw Mother Margot, the statement that the
Gray Seal had phoned and received his information was wholly in accord
with the old hag's own suggestion. He, Jimmie Dale, was free to go at
once to The White Rat. He was not even abusing the trust that she had
reposed in Smarlinghue! There was something ironical in that!

Her distress had been genuine enough, and her story was beyond doubt or
question. Who should know better than himself? She had said that later
on she might have known where to find the Gray Seal, but that it would
be too late then. She had meant, of course, her own rooms that he had,
that afternoon, warned her to keep away from. That statement alone
stamped her story with the ring of truth. But why bring distrust of
Mother Margot even into question! She had never yet played him false;
and to-night it was glaringly obvious that, voluntarily, in the only way
she could, though that way depended purely on chance, she had done her
utmost to keep her pact with him.

He shrugged his shoulders. Mother Margot, as a factor in the problem
to-night, could from now on be eliminated. French Jeff and The White
Rat, then! What was the game that the Phantom was playing, the key to
which, which was all the information that Mother Margot had possessed,
was French Jeff and The White Rat?

Jimmie Dale was walking more quickly now, threading his way through the
more unfrequented streets, as he worked deeper into the lower East Side.
French Jeff and The White Rat were equally notorious; the one as a sort
of plenipotentiary of crookdom from the other side of the water, and the
other as the favourite hostelry of foreign visitors whose credentials
were properly visd. This was the understanding that the New York
underworld had of French Jeff and The White Rat; ostensibly, however, to
the police, and to the public at large, the man was but the quiet,
law-abiding proprietor of a small establishment that, while it could not
be dignified by the name of hotel, yet, nevertheless, embodied in itself
a bar, a restaurant, and a few rooms for guests--which latter, to the
public, were always "engaged."

Quite so! In the enormously fat little Frenchman and his White Rat lay
potentialities for evil that were limitless. Suave, cunning in his
international affiliations, the man was credited with playing big games
for big stakes. That he was successful was evidenced by the fact that
for years now he had carried on business without coming under the ban of
the police.

Jimmie Dale frowned. He, like the rest of the underworld, for his eyes
were Smarlinghue's now, could only view the man in the large; there were
no details to the picture. And this was so, naturally enough, because
French Jeff confined himself strictly to his own foreign connections,
and stood wholly aloof from local entanglements no matter how alluring
the promise of their reward might be. What then was the Phantom's
interest in this man to-night? Had French Jeff at last broken his rule
and gone in on some deal, working hand in glove with the Phantom; or was
the Phantom preparing, as he so often did, to pick the ripened plums
from another's tree? Or was it----

Jimmie Dale had halted before an uninviting three-story frame building
on the corner of an equally uninviting street. A sign, somewhat battered
and aping the Continental style, swung in the breeze over the front
door. It bore the design of an animal, its species none too easily
recognisable, done in white on a green background; the lettering,
however, below this inartistic effort was informative: THE WHITE RAT.

Within, as could be seen from the street, the ground floor was a sort of
combination restaurant and bar. A few customers occupied tables; a few
more were at the bar. Jimmie Dale's slouch hat was pulled rakishly down
over his eyes, his cravat flashily tucked into the bosom of his shirt,
as he stepped now inside, and, walking up to the bar, ordered a drink.
He glanced around him nonchalantly. He had never been in the place
before, but in common with everybody else in the underworld he knew the
fat proprietor by sight. French Jeff was not in evidence.

"Ain't the boss around?" inquired Jimmie Dale casually out of the corner
of his mouth, as the barkeeper slid a glass toward him across the bar.

"Sure! He's upstairs on de office," replied the man, evidently, too, a
Frenchman, in broken English. "You want to see him?"

Jimmie Dale shook his head.

"Nope!" he said indifferently. "Not hard enough to bring him down. I'd
have said hello to him if he'd been handy, that's all."

Jimmie Dale set his now empty glass back on the bar, and with a wave of
his hand to the barkeeper, went out again to the street. French Jeff was
"upstairs on de office." He went on around the corner. The White Rat, if
it were efficient along the lines upon which it was supposed to run,
would certainly possess a side entrance for the benefit of those who,
with the necessary credentials, were privileged to occupy rooms there.
Yes, here it was.

Jimmie Dale opened the door quietly and stepped inside. Even if seen, it
meant only that he must then find some other means of getting into
proximity with French Jeff. The glib excuse that he thought this was but
another entrance to the restaurant, as indeed it might well be also,
would be quite sufficient to guarantee an orderly retreat on his part.
And then he flung a mental gibe at himself. He was borrowing trouble,
whereas, as a matter of fact, he appeared to be playing in wholesale
luck.

He found himself standing in a dimly lighted hall, rather seedily
furnished, and quite deserted. The only sounds were those that sifted
through from the restaurant in the front of the establishment, the
clatter of dishes, the muffled voices of those at the tables and at the
bar. No; he was wrong! From above him, up the stairs that were directly
in front of him, his ear caught now a curious, irregular rasping sound.
He could not at once definite it as he began quickly and silently to
mount the stairs, but halfway up the sound took on a concrete meaning,
and a smile broadened his lips. The sound had resolved itself into
nothing more than a series of well defined snores!

And now at the top of the landing, he placed the direction of the sound.
Doors here opened off on each side of the hall, and at the far end the
light streamed out through one that was open, and disclosed, facing it,
the door on the opposite side of the hall to be ajar. It was from the
lighted room that the snores emanated.

Jimmie Dale moved softly along the hall, keeping close against the wall
on the opposite side from the lighted door, and finally paused. From
where he stood now, he could just see at an angle into the lighted room.
For an instant he stood listening, then he slipped through the already
partially opened door beside him that faced the lighted doorway. He was
playing in luck, in unbounded luck! Here was a vacant room, and across
the hall, the door wide open, French Jeff and his "office" were in plain
view. Perhaps it was almost too much luck! This room here might be
occupied after all, the "guest" out only temporarily, and likely to
return at any minute.

He glanced critically around him. There was light enough from across the
hall to see. No; it was quite all right. There was no sign of occupancy,
no clothing, no belongings of any kind in evidence. And if by any chance
a new arrival should be allotted the room, it would certainly not be
until French Jeff in there had been advised and had passed upon the
applicant's desirability, and there would be time enough then to
consider a means of retreat.

Jimmie Dale, leaving the door no more ajar than would enable him to see
readily into the opposite room, drew up a chair and coolly seated
himself for his vigil. The fat little French crook was sprawled back in
his desk chair, his hands folded over an ample and undulating paunch,
his feet up and resting on a black handbag that in turn occupied the
seat of a second chair. The man was fast asleep.

What was it? What was the game? Had that black handbag, guarded by the
other's feet, anything to do with it? "Watch French Jeff at The White
Rat." That was all Mother Margot had known.

The minutes passed, became quarter hours, a half hour--more.
Occasionally French Jeff stirred uneasily, awakened, settled himself
drowsily, and went to sleep again; occasionally Jimmie Dale silently
changed his own position.

What time was it? It had been well after ten o'clock when Mother Margot
had come to the Sanctuary; it must be long after eleven now. He began to
know not so much a sense of impatience as one of disquiet. It was still
early yet, of course, and the hours, most likely of all the twenty-four
for criminal activities, were still to come, but somehow the pig-like
serenity of the fat Frenchman disturbed him.

Still the minutes dragged by. Another quarter of an hour passed. And
then Jimmie Dale suddenly straightened up alertly. There was a footstep
now on the stairs; and now it came along the hall. Jimmie Dale retreated
a little from the door, his automatic in his hand.

It was one of the waiters from downstairs. The man passed into the other
room.

"It's time to go, monsieur," he heard the waiter say in French.

French Jeff, with a grunt, roused himself.

"All right, Emile," he said shortly.

The waiter left the room and went downstairs again.

French Jeff spent a moment at his desk, then closed it down, picked up
the black handbag from the chair, extinguished the light, and left the
room.

Jimmie Dale stole out into the darkened corridor. French Jeff descended
the stairs, and went out through the side door. Another minute and
Jimmie Dale, too, had gained the street, and crossing to the opposite
side took up the fat proprietor's trail.

It led to the nearest subway station, and an uptown train. French Jeff
got off at the Grand Central Station, and Jimmie Dale followed. At a
ticket window, French Jeff bought a ticket and berth on the midnight
train for Boston. Jimmie Dale, for the first time in evidence, and now
at the other's elbow, made exactly the same purchase--but on Jimmie
Dale's lips now there was a smile of almost self-pity.

"If I'm going where I think I am," confided Jimmie Dale softly to
himself, as he followed the other through the gates and to the Pullman,
"it'll be a rather expensive ride for the mileage--but the gatemen are
inviolable and the porter might not have stood for a bribe."

The berths in the car were all made up. The fat little Frenchman swished
down the aisle, waddling after the porter. Jimmie Dale, finding his
berth to be opposite that of French Jeff, sat down on the edge of it,
and drew the curtains together in front of him. A few minutes passed.
The train pulled out. A wry smile began to settle on Jimmie Dale's
lips--and at 125th Street it had hardened into lines of grim, unmirthful
chagrin.

French Jeff had undressed and gone to bed, and the car was already
reverberating to the fat man's snores.

Jimmie Dale got off the train.




--XXVII--

THE LAIR


Tight-lipped, Jimmie Dale stared out at the black, flying walls as the
subway train roared its way back to lower New York. He had been properly
done! There could be no question about that. But by whom? And why? What
did it mean? Intuition, even back there in The White Rat, had warned him
that something was wrong, but he would in no way have been justified in
being swayed wholly by intuition. He could not in justice blame himself
for that. What was it? What was the meaning of it? Something _had_
happened somewhere--but not at The White Rat. And he had been very
neatly side-tracked. All that was obvious.

Was it Mother Margot? He shook his head. She had never yet
double-crossed him, and he did not believe that she would dare to do so.
Even her visit to the Sanctuary to-night, and her very evident wholesome
respect for the Gray Seal, not to say fear, was almost proof in itself,
it would seem, that she had not deliberately tried to mislead him.

What, then? There seemed to be only one logical explanation left. The
Phantom. It would not have been altogether a new move on the Phantom's
part, for, while not wholly analogous, the man had in a way tried the
same game before. The Phantom knew only too well, and to his cost, that
there had been a leak somewhere in his entourage, a leak that had
brought the Gray Seal very inopportunely on his heels more than once.
But to-night that entourage, in view of the fact that the rest were dead
and that the Kitten was being hunted mercilessly by his own fellow
crooks of the underworld, was reduced now to Mother Margot alone.
Therefore, if the leak still existed, it must exist in the person of
Mother Margot, and therefore, as a precautionary measure if nothing
more, should the Phantom be up to some play to-night in which he
particularly wanted to guard against any interference, he would
logically turn the possibility that the leak still existed to his own
advantage, and at the same time, perhaps, test out, and even trap,
Mother Margot.

"Yes," said Jimmie Dale grimly to himself. "I guess that's it."

He nodded sharply. He had been side-tracked from his original plan
to-night, but the night was not yet ended, and if he had the Phantom to
thank for the bubble he had been chasing, the Phantom might yet have
reason to remember to-night from another cause very different indeed!
The phantom clue at Mother Margot's rooms was again his goal. The delay
had mattered little. What he had meant to do as he had lain there on the
cot in the Sanctuary, he meant to do now.

Jimmie Dale looked at his watch, as he left the subway at Astor Place
and headed into the Bowery. It was ten minutes to one. He walked quickly
now. It was not far to those two tenements with the narrow areaway
between, in one of which Mother Margot had lived since Gentleman
Laroque, alias Isaac Shiftel, alias the Phantom, had so mysteriously
made his escape from the room which the old hag now occupied; just a
little lower down, a little off the Bowery, in one of the East Side's
most unenviable neighbourhoods.

Five minutes brought him to his destination. It was quiet here, save for
the distant sounds of night life from the Bowery, dark, deserted. A
light showed sparsely here and there from a window--that was all. He
passed the areaway between the two tenements, smiled grimly at the
recollection of the officer who had stood guard therein beneath the
window on the night the Phantom had escaped and he, Jimmie Dale, had
been so nearly trapped, and slipped unobtrusively into the dark hallway
of the further tenement.

A moment more and, masked, he stood listening, at the door of Mother
Margot's rooms. There was no sound from within. Why should there be?
Even if Mother Margot, according to her own story, had not been ordered
somewhere else by the Phantom, she would not be here since he, Jimmie
Dale, had warned her to keep away. There was no sound, but--the slim,
sensitive fingers were working tentatively at the doorknob--this was a
little strange. The door was unlocked!

It swung open now silently, an inch at a time, under his hand. He
stepped inside and, as silently, closed the door behind him. It was
black in here. He could not see a yard in front of him. But he was
familiar, a little more than familiar, with his surroundings! He stole
forward to the doorway connecting with the inner room, moving without
sound, as Larry the Bat in the days of old in the old Sanctuary had
moved, and paused on the threshold. It was from here those voices that
other night had come; here was the _mise en scne_ of the phantom clue.

Again he listened. There was still no sound. Jimmie Dale's automatic was
already in his hand, and now from his pocket he took out a flashlight.
Still he waited another instant, listening; and then, the round, white
ray stabbing through the blackness, Jimmie Dale, his face set hard and
grim, his lips a straight line, stood staring at the wall opposite him.

The phantom clue was a phantom clue no longer. It lay there clothed in
tangible, yes, even mocking, form, so blatantly did it flaunt now the
disclosal of its own existence! The flashlight was boring into a great
oblong-shaped opening through the wall.

Still Jimmie Dale stood motionless. Through his mind in swift, lightning
flashes swept the oft-repeated admonition of both the Tocsin and Mother
Margot. A trap. He had been told the place was a trap for him. Was the
door of the trap open now--a little _too_ invitingly open--the door he
had never been able to find before, patiently and thoroughly though he
had searched? Had this anything to do with what had gone before
to-night, with the fool's errand upon which he had run to French Jeff
and The White Rat? How could it have? And yet----

His eyes swept the opening, and the wall adjacent to it, above and on
both sides. He understood now, of course. And it brought no sense of
self-reproof that, though knowing it had existed somewhere here, he had
not, in the times he had searched before, been able to find it. It was
clever, ingenious, a replica almost of the old Crime Club with its
false, movable walls, though here not nearly so elaborate--but perhaps
even built by the same men, at that, as one of their outposts, since
Clarke, alias Wizard Marre, who had been the Phantom's confederate in
the murder of Jason Lane, had been a member of that original
organisation. A dado of cheap, painted burlap at the height of some five
feet ran around the room; this was surmounted by a wide moulding, and
the whole divided into oblong panels by vertical, though narrower,
strips of moulding again. It was one of these oblong sections that now
had disappeared into the floor, disclosing an inner wall, that was
obviously the real wall of the room, set back perhaps slightly more than
two feet from the false wall with the dado. This made a little
passageway within, so that while he, Jimmie Dale, might have tapped the
entire length of the wall in an effort to discover the opening by the
sense of sound, in no place would it have sounded _more_ hollow than in
any other; and, again, the mouldings covered the joints, and the section
slid up and down behind them, so that unless they had been ripped off
bodily it would have been impossible to----

His face grew harder. That was what he had meant to do to-night, _wreck_
the room if necessary, throw the caution that before had actuated him to
the winds; but to-night all lay there _open_ before him, starkly,
vauntingly open. It was obvious enough now. The section slid up and down
through the floor and--_Up and down!_ That was what Bunty Myers had
said. But Bunty Myers had said too that _she_ didn't know because it was
in the next house. That passage there! Invitingly open now! It could
only lead to one place then--the next house--and there was only one
next house on this side. The other tenement! A trap! Well, he had come
for this, hadn't he?--to find the trap, no matter what the consequences,
no matter what the cost, if it would but bring him into touch with the
Phantom.

He stepped forward now silently across the room, and, with his
flashlight switched off, knelt down at the opening. The passage in there
was very narrow, certainly quite long, and certainly inky black. One
could therefore fairly expect that somewhere in the passage between here
and the other tenement there would be a light; and if so, and if it were
lighted now, it would disclose for the benefit of the "quarry" any
"trapper" who might be lurking there. Also if there were a light it
would naturally be readily accessible from the entrance here.

Half crouched, he leaned forward into the opening, and felt inside, up
and down along the edges of the wall. His fingers encountered a switch
button. He pressed it now--but instead of a light showing anywhere, the
movable section of the wall under him began to rise. He jabbed at the
switch quickly again, even as he flung himself clear of the opening, and
then found that the section had receded once more to its original
position below the level of the baseboard.

Jimmie Dale drew in his breath sharply. So that was it! The thing was
electrically controlled. That was plain enough, and from the _inside_
there was no concealment of how it was set in motion; but how was it
operated from within the room? He might not have been able in his
several previous searches to have located the position of the opening,
but he was quite certain that had there been a concealed switch, say,
anywhere along the wall under the dado, or at the edges of the
mouldings, he would have found it, for his fingers had felt over every
inch of that space.

He shrugged his shoulders. Well, it didn't matter now, did it, since
some one else had supplied the "open sesame!" And since there was no
other light----

His body well back from the opening, he reached his hand inside, and,
pointing his flashlight parallel with the passage in the direction of
the other tenement, flung a beam of light along it. It brought no
response; no answering shot, for example, that he had half expected. He
risked more now. Flat on the floor, with head and shoulders this time
inside the opening, the flashlight's ray shot out again. But this time
he could see. What was at the other end he could not tell, but
immediately in front of him the way was clear. A series of steps led
downward, then seemed to reach a level, until, in perspective, from
where he lay, the roof and the base of the passage merged together.

The passage, then, beyond surmise, led down under the narrow alleyway to
the "next house"--the tenement which was the counterpart of this one
here. He rose to his feet, and cautiously, without sound, moved forward,
descending the steps. The passage was extremely narrow, his shoulders
kept brushing the walls on either side.

At every few steps he stopped to listen. His flashlight was out now.
When he moved it was the sense of touch alone that guided him. He
reached a level. This would be the section of the tunnel directly under
the areaway, of course. And now, as the series of steps began again,
this time leading upward, a faint glow of light showed through the
darkness, and for the first time his ear caught a sound--it was like a
low, strange moaning.

Jimmie Dale went down on his hands and knees now as he crawled upward.
He would be less a target in that position, for it was obvious that the
other end of the secret passage was open, and that the room or the space
into which it opened was lighted--_and occupied_. Also, it was no longer
a mystery where the voices had come from that had been heard in Mother
Margot's rooms!

Noiselessly he reached the top step. Here the arrangement was the exact
duplicate of the other end of the passage. A wall section was open, a
lighted room beyond. The moaning, naturally more distinct now, continued
unabated.

Cautiously Jimmie Dale edged forward until he could see into the
room--and then, in an instant, he was on his feet and through the
opening, and running toward a man's form that was stretched out on the
floor.

_The Kitten!_

The man's face was gray with the pallor of approaching death, and there
was a great crimson blotch over the left side of his shirt where the
vest had been torn open, but he roused himself now with almost
superhuman energy, staring in most strange eagerness and excitement at
Jimmie Dale.

"Who are youse?" he cried out. "Who in 'ell are youse wid dat mask on?"

"It doesn't matter," said Jimmie Dale gently. The man was dying; it
needed no professional eye to discern that fact. The Kitten! Well, even
the Kitten was a fellow-human. "It doesn't matter," he said again; "let
me try and make you more comfortable, and----"

"It does matter!" There was fierce insistence, so fierce that it was
almost bizarre, in the man's gasping words. "It matters more'n anythin'
else whether a guy dat wears a mask is a friend of Laroque's or ain't.
Youse can't do anythin' for me. I--I ain't got but a few minutes left.
If youse're a friend of Laroque's beat it out of here an' leave me
alone; if youse ain't, I got somethin' to tell youse. Quick! Who are
youse?"

Gentleman Laroque, alias the Phantom! The Kitten the last remaining
satellite! What did this mean? The man's mind was wandering,
perhaps--and yet he seemed coherent enough.

"I think you'd know me best," said Jimmie Dale simply, "as the Gray
Seal."

The Kitten struggled to his elbow.

"De Gray Seal! Prove it! Prove it for de love of Gawd!" he cried out
wildly. "Mabbe dey've got him, but if dey ain't, youse will--if youse
_are_ de Gray Seal. Prove it!"

There was something of vital, paramount moment here. The man seemed
possessed of a hatred and fury that had given him, in his dying
condition, an unnatural strength. From the leather girdle Jimmie Dale
took out the thin, metallic case that was the receptacle of those
diamond-shaped, gray-paper seals that had given him his name, and,
lifting one out, held it up before the Kitten's eyes.

The man laughed. It seemed to carry a shudder in its depths. It echoed
around the room in a strangled, horrible way.

"Dat's enough!" screamed the Kitten. "Youse're de guy dat's been after
him for weeks. Youse're de guy he's afraid of. Mabbe dey've got him, but
I ain't takin' no chances, for if dey ain't, youse will. Damn him! It
was Laroque dat give me dis--in dere--in de passage. It was Laroque dat
plugged me cold, an--" He caught at his throat, choking, struggling for
breath.

"Laroque!" exclaimed Jimmie Dale tensely. "Do you know what you are
saying--that it was Gentleman Laroque who shot you?"

The Kitten clutched at Jimmie Dale's arm, dragging himself up again.

"Yes, I know wot I'm sayin'." He was whispering hoarsely now. "Listen!
Mabbe youse heard I was up against it wid a gang dat was after me, mabbe
youse didn't--it doesn't matter. I hid since yesterday. To-night dey
nosed me out, an'--an' I had to beat it for me life. I didn't have much
start. I pinched a car, but dey got another--see? I didn't have nowheres
to go but here, den--I thought Laroque'd hide me--it was de only chance
I had."

He fought for his breath, paused, and struggled on again, his words
coming more thickly and with greater effort.

"I left de car around de corner, an' came in here. Laroque an' Mother
Margot was here. I--I was tellin' 'em about it. I thought I'd given de
gang de slip. But I hadn't. Dey came smashin' at de door. Laroque didn't
say nothin', only he looked wicked when he jumped for de electric wall
bracket an' gave dat brass fittin' against de wall a twist. Dat opened
de door in de wall--see? 'Come on!' he says den to Mother Margot an' me.
'De two of youse! Quick!'

"De gang was bustin' in de door of de room by now, an' dey saw us. We
followed Laroque through de wall, an' he pushes de switch inside an' de
wall closes up. It--it was black in dere. My Gawd, it was black! An'
Laroque kind of laughs. 'Dat was a close squeak, an' mabbe we ain't
safe yet,' he says. 'Mother, youse an' me'll go down to Blind Peter's,
since de Kitten's been thoughtful enough to bring us a car; an' youse,
Kitten, youse'll go where youse deserves to go for takin' any chance on
givin' me away.' Just like dat he said it, an' he was laughin'. My Gawd,
he was _laughin'_ all de time. 'Youse overrated de value of yer life,
Kitten,' he says, an'--an' shot me--cold."

The man with a nervous grip that locked like a vise around Jimmie Dale's
arm and shoulder, had heaved himself up into a sitting posture. His lips
and face were working.

"D'ye understand?" he choked.

"Yes," said Jimmie Dale through tight lips.

"Quick!" gasped the Kitten. "Listen! I--I ain't got much more time. He
thought he'd finished me. I--I guess I lost consciousness. Den I heard
de gang in here poundin' at de wall. Dey couldn't do me no more harm. I
knew Laroque had put me out for keeps, an'--an' he was goin' to pay for
it--see?--pay for it--pay for it. I crawled to de switch an' opened de
wall. Dey made a rush for me, but I gets a chance to speak. Dey thought
I'd got away wid some money last night--a--a black box--Banco
Santos--but I hadn't--I don't know no more'n youse where it is--see?"

The Kitten's voice was growing weaker; his grip was loosening, the
strength ebbing from his fingers.

"I told 'em it was Laroque an' de woman put up de whole plant, an'--an'
dat dey had de money, an' dat I'd only done wot Laroque told me--an' de
proof Laroque an' Margot was in de game was dis hole in de wall an' de
passage--an' dat dey was runnin' for Blind Peter's." He caught at his
throat. "De gang went through de hole dere after Laroque--ten minutes
ago--Blind Peter's--understand? Double chance--de Gray Seal'll get 'em
if Steenie don't--de Gray----"

Jimmie Dale stood up. The Kitten was dead. For an instant he looked
around him. He seemed most curiously to be possessed of two
entities--one that rejoiced fiercely over what now seemed a certainty
that the Phantom, either at the hands of the apaches that the Kitten in
his dying vengeance had set upon the other, or, failing that, through
himself, Jimmie Dale, would be finally and irrevocably trapped to-night;
the other that looked out as through a strange veil of unreality upon
his immediate surroundings. This was the Phantom's lair at the end of
the phantom trail.




--XXVIII--

BLIND PETER'S


Jimmie Dale stepped swiftly across the room, and with a small steel
jimmy which he took from his leather girdle, ripped aside, from where it
fitted close against the wall, the round brass plaque or fitting,
technically called the canopy, of the electric-light fixture. There was
no time to lose, but he could spare an instant for this! Yes, it was as
the Kitten had said. It concealed an electrical connection quite apart
from the electric light itself; and by giving the canopy a half turn the
contact could be made.

He nodded, as he turned now in a flash toward the window. He was
satisfied. That was how the movable section of the wall was manipulated
from within. And the window here, unless his calculations were
hopelessly at fault, faced, exactly across the areaway, the window in
Mother Margot's room. He raised the shade--and suddenly, with a low,
suppressed cry, wrenched it down again, and leaped for the opening in
the wall. In an instant he was inside, and, pressing the switch, the
movable section had closed behind him.

The police! The window _did_ face Mother Margot's, and, as there had
been on the first night that he had come here, so too to-night an
officer was lurking outside there now in the alleyway. The light
streaming out from the window with the lifting shade had disclosed a man
in uniform crouched against the wall. And also, even as he had wrenched
back the shade, his ear had caught the muffled tread of several men in
the hall outside the room. And that, too, was as it had been on the
first occasion!

He ran now, his flashlight streaming ahead of him, through the tunnel,
gained Mother Margot's room, and, indifferent now as to whether the
movable section here was left closed or not, since it could in no way
affect his own movements, and since the tunnel was now an open secret
through its discovery by the apaches, he made no attempt to close it
behind him; and, as he had done before when wary of the police here, he
slipped out at the rear of the tenement, sped silently across the
backyard in the darkness, and disappeared in the lane behind. And
thereafter, keeping always when he could to the lanes and alleyways,
grudging the sedate though crisp walk when forced out into the open, he
went on at top speed.

But swiftly as he went, his mind ran the swifter. The police--not at
Mother Margot's, but at that _other_ tenement! His own escape had been a
sinecure, thanks to the Phantom's secret passage. It would take the
police some time to find that movable section in the room where the
Kitten lay! But he did not understand. Why were the police there at all?
They had not followed on the heels of the Kitten and the apaches, for in
that case they would have been there much _sooner_. It was not the sound
of the shot that the Phantom had fired, for that had been deadened
inside the walls of the passage; nor did it seem possible that any other
disturbance made there had been reported to them, say, by the inmates of
the tenement, for in that case there would have been commotion amongst
the tenants themselves, who would have been swarming about like bees. It
was strange! The whole night was strange! He did not understand.

He ran on. The point was not vital. It was vital only that he should
reach Blind Peter's without delay. Thank God, it wasn't far! But they
had had ten minutes' start, and it was almost certain that neither the
Phantom nor the apaches had gone on foot. Blind Peter's! He was not so
sure after all that men like Steenie Klotz and Red Jack would be able to
trap the Phantom there. It was the _safest_ place in the underworld if
one knew its secrets, and on that score the Phantom had made no mistake.
But Steenie Klotz and his followers were of the lesser breed, the
hangers-on, the purely thug element, not of the lite, not of the
initiated, and Blind Peter's might well be to them but a name, a place
whose mysteries were reserved for the upper strata of the criminal
realm from which they themselves were far removed. It might well be--but
against this was the fact that the underworld, its aristocracy and its
proletariate alike, were behind Steenie Klotz and his companions in
their determination to wreak vengeance upon the Kitten, and with the
explanation made of why it was Gentleman Laroque now instead of the
Kitten who was the object of this vengeance, the Phantom might find far
else but sanctuary at Blind Peter's.

He did not know. He knew only that if he were in time the Phantom would
not only find no safety there, but, forced to attempt flight again,
would find no escape. And he would be in time! He _must_ be!

It was the end! The end! The end! The words pounded over and over again
at his brain, as he ran on. In either case, it was the end to-night.
What Steenie Klotz and his pack might not know of Blind Peter's, he,
Jimmie Dale, knew as perhaps few outside Blind Peter himself knew. It
was the years of Larry the Bat, the years of Smarlinghue, the knowledge
he had thus garnered, the height to which those alter ego characters of
his had risen in the inner circles of Crimeland, that were bearing fruit
now.

Yes, he knew Blind Peter's! Blind Peter was a very old and wizened
little man of dark-skinned, doubtful origin, who wore spectacles with
lenses that were coloured and that were of the thickness of heavy
plate-glass, and who groped out with hands and stick when he walked--and
who was not blind. He ran, supposedly, a small general store in one of a
block of four houses in a neighbourhood that, to speak mildly, was
unsavory at best. The other three houses were, supposedly again, lodging
houses, and in a sense they were lodging houses, just as in a sense they
were anything else one wished to call them. But Blind Peter owned them,
and they had made Blind Peter rich--or, rather, a maze-like cavern of
vice beneath their cellars had. Here, where sound never reached to the
outer air, where the cellars above, rubbish-filled, were a benign and
protecting mantle, toll from the lusts of the gaming table, toll from
the overlords of crime who rented council chambers there, toll from the
fear-stricken who had fled from daylight and the law, toll from every
human weakness, was paid to Blind Peter. And, discreet beyond any of his
ilk in the selection of his clientele, Blind Peter's place was safe.
There was but one entrance and one exit--through the back of Blind
Peter's store, where none might enter or depart except under the closest
scrutiny.

Jimmie Dale had halted. A queer smile twisted his lips. Was there? Well,
in the old days there had been another entrance, guessed at by many, but
known only to a few, of which he, as Larry the Bat then, had been
one--and it was here. He was crouched in the darkness before a low
basement door, that of the house in the block farthest away from Blind
Peter's store. Behind him was a small backyard, and behind that again
the lane. The door was locked of course. But his pick-lock was at work
now; and now the door opened slowly, gradually, wary of a protesting
creak.

Jimmie Dale closed the door behind him without locking it, and
descending a short flight of steps, stood still to listen. He was in the
cellar now. He could hear nothing either from above or _below_. There
would be no guard here. This entrance was for emergency only, a reserve
margin of safety that Blind Peter held up his sleeve for himself and his
intimates; it probably had not been used in months, and naturally any
one using it at all was, in the very fact that the secret was in his
possession, beyond the necessity of challenge. Besides, a guard of any
kind would but scream out aloud to Blind Peter's entire clientele the
fact that this entrance, or exit, existed. Nor would one entering by
this means, if he took but ordinary precautions, blazon the existence of
the entrance to those already below. Blind Peter was far, very far, from
being a fool! Here in this cellar the entrance was craftily hidden; but
below it was still more so.

Jimmie Dale's flashlight winked through the blackness. He moved quickly
forward to the far corner of the cellar. Rubbish, an untidy heap of
kindling wood, the flotsam and jetsam of broken and discarded household
effects littered the place. He worked rapidly now, brushing aside a
thin, scattered layer of the kindling wood at the edge of the pile--and
lifted up a small trap door.

It was black below, intensely black. The flashlight sent its ray
streaming down a steep flight of steps--and went out. Jimmie Dale nodded
sharply to himself. It was as it had always been. These steps led to the
rear wooden wall--of a coal bin. But the coal bin would not be
inconveniently full, and the front of it was quite open, and in the back
of it a board or two could at a touch be moved aside.

He began to descend the steps cautiously. Across the narrow little
chamber that contained the coal bin was a door leading into Blind
Peter's unholy nest. And since that door must exist in order to make
this exclusive entrance of any practical avail, a door the existence of
which must almost of necessity be a matter of common knowledge to all
who frequented Blind Peter's, that door itself must excite no suspicion.
Therefore when it was opened it exhibited to all but the initiated in
Blind Peter's nothing more than an apparently essential adjunct to the
establishment--a storeroom that contained boxes of supplies, many of
them, and a coal bin!

Almost down the steps now, Jimmie Dale paused suddenly--and as suddenly
took the remaining ones at a leap. Dull, muffled, the report of a
revolver shot had reached his ears. It was echoed by another--still
another. The flashlight was in play again. Those boards! Yes, here they
were! He moved them aside--and stepped through into the coal bin, so
innocently almost empty.

The coal rattled a little under his feet, but the sound was drowned out
now by shouts that added their quota of muffled uproar to the quickened
reports of the revolver shots--and the sounds were coming nearer, nearer
to that door there that opened into this supposed storeroom. The Phantom
and the apaches! It could be nothing else! Steenie Klotz had gained
admittance--the law of the underworld was at work. Blind Peter had
evidently not dared oppose it. Did the Phantom know of the existence of
this exit? A trapped rat, was he fighting for escape this way?

Jimmie Dale's lips were a thin line. Well, the Phantom would _not_
escape this way! Whatever the penalty that he, Jimmie Dale, might pay,
the Phantom's career ended to-night. That was what he was here for. No
matter what happened to himself, the price would be a small and pitiful
thing to pay. To-morrow, no, to-night, the Tocsin, the woman he loved,
she who in her great unselfish courage, aye and her love, had chosen to
risk death alone, to fight out her fight alone that he too might not be
sacrificed, would be free, free from peril, free to live in God's
sunshine as----

He was at the door now. The sounds from the other side had risen into
almost riot noise. The panel here--it used to move a little so that one
intending entrance might first satisfy himself that he was not observed.
Yes, it still moved--the space of a few inches.

He could see through--into a small room, garishly appointed, its roof
supported by ornamental rafters from which hung several lanterns of
curious, antique design, its walls draped with oriental hangings, the
whole furnished in a sort of barbaric luxury. It was Blind Peter's
private retreat--and naturally again offered a further bulwark and
protection against the detection of the hidden entrance.

The door opening out on the other side of this room and directly
opposite the one behind which Jimmie Dale stood was closed, but now
suddenly it burst open. Shots, yells, curses, rose crescendo in a
hideous uproar. A figure reeled in, stumbled, fell upon its knees, and
began to drag itself away from the threshold. The old hag! Mother
Margot! But Jimmie Dale's eyes rested for but an instant on her. There
was another figure, the figure of a man, on the threshold itself now, a
man at bay, fighting, pumping his shots from his automatic, cursing as
he fought--Gentleman Laroque, alias Isaac Shiftel, alias Limpy Mack,
alias the Phantom!

Outside, beyond that door, Jimmie Dale could not see. He could only
hear--above the shots--the oaths and yells from, it seemed, a multitude
of throats, like the screech of beasts, like animals giving tongue to a
blood lust that was upon them.

It was very plain! They had dug the Phantom out of wherever he had been
in hiding in Blind Peter's here, and had driven him in a running fight
to the end of the chain of underground rooms and passages. It was the
end! The Phantom could go no further--_save through the door behind
which he, Jimmie Dale, stood_. And through that door the Phantom, for
the Tocsin's sake, would never pass while he, Jimmie Dale, lived!

The end! Yes--but it was ending there on the threshold now. The Phantom
half spun around, and screamed as a bullet struck him, made a desperate
effort to slam shut the door and, instead, crumpled to the floor.

A strange, queer look was on Jimmie Dale's face. His jaws were clamped,
his features set like iron. The end! Well, he could go now. Go the way
he had come--unseen. It was over! The Tocsin was free. And _he_ too was
free, free of hurt or harm, free to the years that stretched ahead where
only love and happiness should hold sway, and the----

"Kill 'em!...Bump 'em both off!...The cursed snitches...."

Shots seemed to be still pouring a leaden hail into the prostrate form
of the Phantom on the threshold, as he lay there, sprawled out, a dead
thing now. Then a rush! Faces appeared at the doorway--Steenie's! The
man levelled his revolver at the old hag on the floor as she crawled for
protection toward the end of a sort of divan at the side of the room.

The mind works swiftly, swift beyond all measure of time. She was only
an old hag, an abandoned thing steeped in her crimes, the last of the
Phantom's satellites--all the rest had gone--it was justice that she
should go too. What had he to do with it? The road to life and happiness
lay the other way. Suppose she was a woman, suppose it _was_ murder that
would be done in the next second, what had he to do with it! What
had----

Through the opening in the panel Jimmie Dale fired. The revolver in
Steenie Klotz's outstretched hand clattered to the floor, and the man
with a yell of mingled pain, fury and surprise leaped back from the open
doorway--and with him, from this new attack, the others took hasty
cover, leaving the doorway clear again.

"Quick! This way, Mother Margot." Jimmie Dale called out sharply. "Don't
stand up! Crawl!"

He fired steadily, coolly, sweeping the opposite doorway with his
bullets--working with pick-lock in his other hand at the door behind
which he stood. The old hag came crawling, weakly it seemed, across the
floor, nearer and nearer to him. The shots were pouring into the room
again--but they were coming at an angle. He laughed a little--without
mirth. Steenie Klotz and his men were crouched on both sides of the door
casing out there beyond, of course, and they could not fire in a direct
line now without exposing themselves. But how much could they see? The
danger would come when he opened the door for Mother Margot, and when he
could not for the moment command the other doorway.

It would be a race for it then--nothing else.

"You fool!" an inner voice snarled at him. "Don't you know the Phantom
is dead! You fool, to have risked this now! You poor, feeble, quixotic
fool!"

The old hag was close to the door now. He called to her again.

"When I open the door, jump for it!" he said grimly. "Are you ready?"

He caught a faint, affirmative reply. He fired at the opposite doorway
again, then closed the panel; and then with a sudden wrench pulled the
door before him halfway open; and, as Mother Margot scurried through, he
flung it shut again, locked it, and reaching out in the darkness for the
old hag, jerked her forward, making for the rear of the coal bin. She
staggered weakly, making a strange, half crooning noise. If he could win
behind the bin to the stairs, there would be comparative safety, time
enough at least to get to the lane above. Blind Peter, if he, Jimmie
Dale, knew the man at all, having profound respect for his own skin,
would not be taking a _personal_ part in the fight, and those apaches
back there would certainly never find the opening until they had gone
for Blind Peter and had either persuaded or forced him to disclose it.

An age of time seemed to have passed, though he had reached the rear of
the bin now. And now the boards swung back--but they were smashing at
the door behind, battering at it, raining blows upon it. Just an instant
more--if the door would hold for but an instant more, so that when the
light poured in they would not _see_!

She was slow--God, how slow she was! He pushed her roughly through the
opening, and sprang quickly after her. And as he swung the boards back
into place, he heard the door crash open. But he was safe now--safe for
a moment anyhow.

"Quick! The stairs! Right ahead of you!" he whispered.

But there was no answer. He stretched out his hand, groping down and
around him. Mother Margot lay an inert heap at his feet. His jaws shut
with a snap. Where was his margin of safety now? She was either hurt or
wounded, or had fainted, and----

"You fool!" snarled that inner voice again, as he picked the old hag up
in his arms, and began to climb the stairs.




--XXIX--

THE PORT OF DAWN


Muffled voices reached Jimmie Dale's ears from below. He staggered on
upward, making what speed he could. It was not easy with this burden in
his arms. In the darkness he gained the cellar; and from the cellar
emerged on the small backyard, and thence on the lane.

Here, he drew a great, gasping breath of relief. He was safe so far, but
he had still to get away from the immediate vicinity of that cellar
entranceway. Blind Peter, at any moment, might solve the problem for
Steenie Klotz and his pack!

He went on again, running heavily, lurching under his load. Thank God
for the darkness! He looked, as he ran, for some place of shelter or
hiding. He could not go out into the open street with Mother Margot
unconscious in his arms--certainly not anywhere in _this_ neighbourhood;
nor could he run on indefinitely like this, whether by lane or street.

Fifty yards, a hundred he covered. There were no sounds of pursuit, and
now he had no further anxiety on that score, for he was already too far
away for them to pick up the trail if he could only find temporary cover
somewhere until Mother Margot's condition, which must necessarily govern
his future movements, could be----

She was stirring in his arms now uneasily, commencing to mutter
incoherent words. He kept straining his eyes to right and left as he
ran--and suddenly swerved close up against the left-hand side of the
fence. This would do admirably. He could ask for nothing better. There
was a shed here, or an outhouse of some kind. He laid Mother Margot
down, worked swiftly for a moment with the door lock, then picking her
up again carried her inside and laid her upon the floor.

But now, her senses evidently almost fully back, she raised herself
quickly to her elbow, and tried to struggle to her feet.

"It's all right!" said Jimmie Dale reassuringly. "We're safe now. Are
you badly hurt? Let me see."

He bent down and played his flashlight upon her--and like a man dazed
and stunned then stood swaying on his feet. The flashlight trembled in
his hand, throwing wavering beams across the floor. And then he was on
his knees, and with a great cry he had gathered her into his arms, and
was calling out hoarsely, calling her name over and over, a man
unhinged, almost, with the mad uplift that had surged upon him.

"Marie--it's you! The Tocsin! Marie! Marie!"

The hooded shawl had fallen from her, the gray, tangled wig was awry.
The Tocsin! Marie! And he had not known--he had known only that in some
character here in the underworld she had been bravely striving to fight
out her battle alone--just as she once had as Silver Mag. Silver Mag!
Mother Margot! And he had thought that Smarlinghue was unknown to Mother
Margot!

She was crying softly.

"Jimmie," she whispered, "dear Jimmie, I--I was afraid that I was saying
good-by to you for--for always in the Sanctuary to-night."

He held her closely. His face was buried in her hair. His shoulders
heaved--as though a strong man sobbed. It was a long while before he
answered her.

"I know. I know now," he said at last. "I didn't understand then. How
could I? I had investigated Mother Margot and she had been in existence
long before you left me that night in the boat on the East River. If it
hadn't been for that I might----"

She stroked his face with her hand, very gently, very tenderly.

"Yes," she said; "but I was always Mother Margot--after Silver Mag. I
was Mother Margot when they forced me into hiding the time before this.
Don't you remember in the boat, Jimmie, that I would not tell you even
then, even when Clarke was dead and you thought everything was all right
again, how or where I had lived all through that time?"

"Yes, I remember," said Jimmie Dale; and then, with a quick, anxious
cry: "And I remember now that you've been hurt, wounded, I am afraid,
and need----"

"No," she said, and shook her head. "It is true that I was hit with
something, a heavy stool that one of those gangsters threw when the
fight first started at the upper end of Blind Peter's cellars, and it
made me a little dizzy and giddy perhaps. But I am not hurt. I am afraid
I only fainted, Jimmie, just--just like a woman." She laughed a little,
bravely, tremulously, as she looked around her. "I know you said we were
safe now, and I know that the Phantom is dead, but I'm all right again,
and I'm able to go on. We can't be very far away from----"

"We're safer here just now, quite safe," Jimmie Dale answered. "If we
went out we might only invite a chase and have to run for it, and you
haven't got your strength back yet. And"--he too laughed a little
tremulously now--"besides I want you--like this, Marie--like this for a
little while."

Her head was on his shoulder now. He brushed back the hair from her
forehead, and kissed her, and laid his face against hers.

"Like this." Her voice broke a little. "God is very good, Jimmie. I--I
did not dare to hope that it would be like this when I sent you to The
White Rat to-night."

"That was a plant!" said Jimmie Dale a little ruefully. "Why did you
send me there?"

She drew slightly away from him so that she could lift her hands and
clasp and hold his face between them.

"What else could I do, Jimmie?" she said with a catch in her voice.
"You--you were so persistent. I had to get rid of you. I knew you were
going to those rooms to-night--you had told me so. Well, the Phantom,
or the Voice, had ordered me to be in the hallway of the _other_
tenement at half past twelve. I knew then that there must be some
connection between the two tenements, which would account for the voices
that I had heard when I had been alone in the rooms where I was supposed
to live. But I didn't know how, or where. It was certain, though, that
if the Phantom brought me that far to-night, he would bring me all the
way--you see, he was at the end of his rope nearly; there were only the
Kitten and myself left. Well, I meant to end it to-night with the help
of the police, and----"

"The police!" Jimmie Dale smiled strangely. "It was you, then, who were
accountable for the police!"

"Yes," she said. "But I had first to get you out of the road, or you
would almost certainly have been trapped in those rooms either by the
Phantom or the police. I hadn't the least idea of what French Jeff might
be doing to-night, but his reputation made him a likely subject for
_anything_, and I felt sure that once set on his trail with the idea
that the Phantom was mixed up in it too, you would watch him until
something happened--which, since I expected nothing to happen, would
mean all night. I don't see why you didn't."

"He went to bed on the midnight train to Boston," said Jimmie Dale
grimly.

She laughed a little now, still holding his face captive with her hands;
and then abruptly her voice was grave and serious again.

"Just before going to the other tenement at half past twelve," she said,
"I notified the police to be there at one o'clock--if they wanted Isaac
Shiftel; and that if they came before they would only ruin their one
chance of getting their man. I needed that half hour to find out all I
could, to get to the bottom of the Phantom's secret, or to make sure at
least of where he lived in that other tenement, so that there could be
no possible means of escape for him; and I wanted that much time in case
he was late in keeping his appointment, and so that I would be sure to
be with him and make sure that he did _not_ escape. I--I am not sure
that I expected to--to live through it myself. If he had any suspicion
aroused it--" Her voice broke suddenly. "But--but he hadn't, Jimmie,
and--and you must know what happened afterward since you, too, went to
Blind Peter's."

"Yes," said Jimmie Dale simply. "I know. And I know a great deal more
now. I know now that the night I caught you, as I thought,
double-crossing Limpy Mack, you were trying to save what you could of
old Mrs. Kinsey's money. And I understand now that the reason you did
not know when I was wounded was because it happened at the time when
you, as Mother Margot, were away. And that night in the tunnel at
Morley's place, when you wouldn't let me show any light or come near
you, you were Mother Margot, weren't you?"

"Yes, Jimmie," she whispered.

For a moment he was silent, and then suddenly he cried out, and in his
voice was the yearning of the days and weeks when it had seemed this
moment could never be:

"Marie!...Marie!...Marie!..."

He was holding her close to him again, his arms around her, her face
against his own. And neither spoke now. Here in the shed it was very
dark and very silent; but radiant in their souls was the glad sunrise of
a new life, and in their hearts was song, like the song of springtime, a
song of great joy, and of peace.

For they had come at last to the Port of Dawn.

THE END


Transcriber's Notes: Discrepancies in spelling have been left as in
the original with the exception of the following.

Page 35--Correction--"clientle" changed to clientele.

Page 48--"And so he had watched Mother Margot because logic would
not [missing word(s)] down."--As I could not determine which word
is missing, I've left it as in the original.

Page 94--Unclear in the image--comma added "...broken panes no doubt,".

Page 108--Correction--"For all it's...." changed to its.

Page 111--Correction--"He had taken no changes...." changed to "He had
taken no chances".

Page 118--Missing word(s)--Added "I and removed the extra " in the next
sentence.

Page 124--Correction--"Jimmy" changed to Jimmie.

Page 131--Correction--"cautionsly" changed to cautiously.

Page 144--Correction--"Jimmy" changed to Jimmie.

Page 176--Correction--"bought" changed to brought.

Page 199--Correction--"impatiendy" changed to impatiently.

Page 211--Missing word--Added "have" to "he could, of course,
=have= taken Benson"

Page 214--Correction--"gain" changed to again.

Page 215--Correction--"fusilade" changed to fusillade. Fusilade is a
herb, while fusillade is a volley of shots in rapid succession.

Page 224--Correction--"masked" changed to mask.

Page 236--Inconsistent spelling--Charley should read Charlie, and I left
it as in the original.

Page 248--Correction--"Manued" changed to Manuel.

Page 289--Correction--"Phanton" corrected to Phantom.

There are instances where a space was left by the printer after several
en-dashes and em-dashes. They have been removed for consistency.

I could not find a reference for "disclosal". I cannot safely assume
the author meant disclosure, which would make the most sense, and
therefore I've left it as in the original.

I made slight changes to some hyphenated words to make them all
consistent.




[End of _Jimmie Dale and the Phantom Clue_ by Frank L. Packard]
