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Who, indeed!
CHAPTER XXIII
BURKE UNBOSOMS
Eight o'clock Thursday morning: an hour before, Fanshawe had heard with a sigh of relief that I would take his place that morning. I had since been kicking my heels opposite the rooming house where Alexander Burke had his lodgings.
At the hour mentioned Burke appeared. I retreated into a sheltering doorway, and watched him.
He stood for a moment upon the top step, darting quick glances up and down the street, and intently scanning the few pedestrians who were abroad at the time. Then he came rapidly down the steps, and turned toward the city.
The snow m.u.f.fled my tread, and he did n't hear my approach--did n't know of my presence until I tapped him upon the shoulder.
"Mr. Burke," said I, "I want you."
With a quick intake of breath, which sounded like the hiss of a snake, he slewed round and fixed me with his expressionless eyes. Also--to complete the simile--his head reared back, like a snake's when it is about to strike. I don't believe that I ever before found such a keen pleasure in arresting a man.
"Want me!" he gasped. "What for?"
"Yes, you." I could not entirely hide my satisfaction. "And because you have reached the end of your rope. I don't intend to stand here and argue about it, either."
In a moment the man was calm--all except his gloved hands. A man's hands will, nine times out of ten, betray him in spite of himself.
Burke's fingers were twitching, and folding and unfolding without cessation.
"Swift," he whispered vindictively, "you 'll regret this--so help me G.o.d, you will. Curse you! Why do you persecute me? I 'll go with you--of course I shall; how can I help myself when I 'm at the mercy of a brute of a giant, like you?"
"Then shut up, and come along. I 'll just keep a hand under your arm until we get to headquarters. . . . Never mind!" as he made a move to unb.u.t.ton his overcoat. "It's cold enough to keep covered." I had struck down the stealthy hand with considerable vigor, and he winced with pain. The pale eyes flashed a malignant look at me, and straightway became inscrutable again.
Not another word was said until we stood before the clerk at the Central Office. The matter-of-fact way in which he picked up a pen and poised it over the police docket, the callous indifference with which he inquired the prisoner's name and the nature of the charge, made Burke flinch for the first time.
"Wait, Johnson!" I said suddenly to the clerk, as if on second thought.
"I don't believe I 'll docket this man yet; I want to keep the pinch quiet for a while."
The game was familiar to Johnson; he laid aside the pen as indifferently as he had taken it up, and returned to his interrupted perusal of the morning paper.
"You come with me," I said to Burke.
I conducted him to the little room behind the Captain's private office--scene of many a heart-to-heart conference--and pushed him toward one of the two chairs which const.i.tuted the room's sole furnis.h.i.+ng. It was a dim, silent, disheartening place, and I was resolved to have no mercy upon the man whom at last I had succeeded in getting into a position where I could handle him.
"Burke," I began, "I 'm not going to mince matters or stand for any quibbling or lying. I have _you_ right where I want you, and whatever leniency you may receive will depend entirely upon your frankness.
This is your chance--the last one."
No doubt my expression and manner were grim, I meant them to be and there was no doubt that my obvious confidence in my position impressed the ex-secretary; for the fingers grew more agile, and he licked his dry lips again and again.
"What am I charged with?" he demanded, in a shaking voice.
"Nothing, as yet," I returned cheerfully. "You doubtless noticed that I dispensed with that little formality. Do you know what that means?
Just this: no one knows you are here; there is a certain small cell below stairs, dark as Egypt, provided expressly for recalcitrant individuals. You could lie there for a year, and n.o.body be a whit the wiser. I, for one, wouldn't care how long you stayed."
"Swift," the fellow stammered, "this--this is outrageous!"
"Perhaps," agreed I, carelessly, surveying him with a narrowed look.
"I 'm not here to excuse police methods; they 're not very gentle, I 'll admit; but when we deal with crooks we 're obliged to hand them the only treatment they 're amenable to.
"Burke, you can't excite one bit of pity or sympathy in me for you, for I know you to be a cold-blooded, treacherous scoundrel, and whatever you have coming to you is only what you deserve. I 'm fixed to put you through as a princ.i.p.al in the murder of Page--sit down!" I thundered at him, for he had started to rise from his seat. He dropped back limply.
"You wait till I 'm through. Your chance is coming in just about a minute. I promise not to interrupt--as long as you tell a straightforward story.
"As I said," I went on, "I 'm prepared to put you through as one of the princ.i.p.als; the bare fact of your arrest should be enough to convince you of my readiness.
"However, while I have n't any desire to spare you, we are in the habit of trading leniency to a rascal who is willing to turn State's evidence. It's a plain business proposition."
I imagined that he perked up a bit at this.
"Ah, then you are not so sure," he seemed to muse; "you would have me convict myself for your precious benefit."
"Maybe you can judge better before I have finished," returned I, unmoved. "You need not tell me anything about yourself, but I do need a few facts to complete my case against the others who were involved in this crime. It's up to you."
I retreated a step, folded my arms, and stood watching him--and waiting. I knew that he could n't tell the truth without filling in the gaps in his own case. I never am deterred by any compunction over the methods I am sometimes obliged to use to make an individual, whom I know deserves no consideration, speak. With a knave like Burke I would as lief resort to thumb-screws, the boot, the rack, or even to choking the words from him, as to trust to persuasion alone. To tell the truth, my preference lies with the means first enumerated: they are much more prompt and direct. The worst indictment that one may bring against the old-time torture is that it was not applied with judgment and discrimination, nor always confined to legitimate ends. I fear that I shock you. But I am not by any means a cruel, blood-thirsty person. I merely speak from long years of experience. Whenever I hear a misguided soul deploring the so-called "third degree"--why, I have something in pickle for _him_.
This, however, is not the place to open the pickle-jar.
Perhaps, though, Burke's suffering was as poignant as if his ordeal were physical. How restlessly the man's slender, bloodless fingers curled and uncurled! Still, his self-control was wonderful; his white face remained indecipherable, the pale eyes stared at me unblinkingly and without mirroring a single emotion that I could discern. Then the change came so quickly that it almost caught me off my guard.
One hand shot to his bosom. When it re-appeared something flashed dully in the dim light. At the same time, with a cat-like spring, he was out of his chair and upon me.
I concentrated all my attention upon the hand that held the murderous knife. I caught it as it lunged at me; then, with a quick twist, I bent it backward and behind him, until he groaned with pain. The long-bladed knife clattered to the floor, and I shoved him roughly away from me. Then I picked up the weapon.
The fellow acted for all the world like a whipped and cowed panther.
He brought up violently against the wall, where, in a stooping posture, he commenced running to and fro the width of the room, spitting and snarling venomously. The pale eyes were no longer blank. The pupils had widened, and the look of them was deadly.
I smiled with quiet satisfaction, for I knew that Burke was--as we specify it in police parlance--"coming through."
After a while he quieted, and at last stood panting in the corner farthest away from me. I pointed to the chair.
"Sit down," I said, precisely as if he had n't tried his best to murder me but a minute before.
He moved slowly--fearfully--toward the chair, and sank into it. His head was dropped forward, his shoulders were bowed, and the fingers were no longer restless. All the man's defences were at last down.
"Now, then, Burke," I went on calmly, "I suppose we are ready to get down to business?"
He muttered inaudibly, without raising his head.
"What's that?"--sharply,
"You devil!" he whispered.