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"I had already started to descend when Miss Stella appeared in the library doorway--and in her hand she held," the speaker pointed at the desk, "that candlestick."
Here the old woman paused; and the secret agent, watching her face, saw the yellowish white change to gray.
"Well?" said he.
"She looked along the hall as if afraid of being seen," said the woman; "and all the time her fingers were picking--picking at something in the socket of the candlestick. She was just turning back into the room when she drew something out, looked at it and hid it in her glove. Then the light went out and I heard the bolt being drawn. I rushed down the stairs, but I was too late. The door opened and closed; I turned on the lights, but she was gone."
For a moment Ashton-Kirk stood studying the woman's face; then he stepped quickly to the desk and took up the candlestick. Something in the deep socket of this seemed to attract him and he turned on more lights. Under a cl.u.s.ter of incandescents he bent over the candlestick and examined it minutely; then the magnifying lens came into play as it had upon the broken k.n.o.b of the highboy. One glance through this and he sprang to the street door. The next instant a piercing whistle shattered the quiet of Fordham Road.
CHAPTER XIX
THE TAXI-CAB
For a few moments after the shrill blast of the whistle filled the suburban street, the secret agent waited upon the door-step. Then a thought seemed to occur to him, and with an angry exclamation he went quickly in and closed the door.
In a moment he was at the telephone, and stood with impatiently tapping foot until he was connected with the number called for; then the sleepy, dry voice of Fuller said complainingly in his ear:
"h.e.l.lo, who is it?"
The secret agent made reply; and the aide's voice, now containing an eager note, demanded:
"What's up?"
"Get O'Neill at once. It's too late for a train, but call Dixon to get out the car in a hurry. Then come to Morse's, Fordham Road, with all the speed you can."
"All right," replied Fuller. "I'll get Dixon first, and have O'Neill ready when the machine arrives."
Ashton-Kirk hung up, and then turned to Nanon, who stood but a few yards away, still nervously rubbing her hands with the corner of her ap.r.o.n.
"You saw no one but Miss Corbin a while ago?" he asked.
"No," answered the woman.
"You are sure of that?" His singular eyes searched her face, but she met the look without flinching.
"I am sure," she said. There was a silence; Ashton-Kirk then walked down the hall toward the library door; and as he reached it, he felt her hand touch his shoulder. "You did not see any one?" she asked.
He paused, and turned his head.
"What would you say if I answered--yes?"
The sharp old eyes wavered; she swallowed once or twice spasmodically.
"You did see some one," she said. Then with intense eagerness: "It was not a man?"
He was about to reply when there came heavy footsteps upon the porch and then a loud peal at the bell. Ashton-Kirk smiled.
"A policeman, no doubt," said he. "Let him in."
The woman opened the street door; the hall lights shone upon the b.u.t.tons and s.h.i.+eld of a patrolman.
"I heard the sound of a whistle," said he, with a rich Irish accent. "Is anything the matter?"
Nanon looked toward Ashton-Kirk as though expecting him to answer; he came forward.
"How are you?" said he. "Will you come in?"
The policeman did so. He was a huge-chested and heavy-limbed fellow, and had a head of fiery red hair. He surveyed Ashton-Kirk with a grin upon his good-natured face.
"Oh, h.e.l.lo," said he. "So it's you, is it? I noticed you the other day with Osborne while I was keeping the gate, outside."
"Sure enough," said the secret agent; "so you were."
"I was on the corner beyant, there," went on the red-haired giant, "and divil the thing was I expecting when the blast of the whistle struck me two ears. Sure, there's seldom anything happens in the place; it's like a graveyard, faith; and to have a thing like that go off all of a sudden fair took my breath."
"It was a call for a man whom I thought was close by," explained the secret agent, as the old woman left them together in the library.
The policeman winked with much elaboration.
"I see, I see," said he. "A friend wid a good eye and a careful manner.
Sure, it's meself who's seen him often enough of late; but I thought he was a headquarters man put here by Osborne."
Ashton-Kirk regarded him thoughtfully.
"You say you were standing on the corner when you heard the whistle,"
said he.
"There do be a convenient doorway there," smiled the policeman, "and it's often enough I stop there. Sorra the bit of use is there to go pounding about the edges of such a beat as this. A man might as well make himself quiet and easy."
"How long were you there to-night?"
The policeman considered.
"The best part of a half hour," he ventured, at last.
"Did you notice any one go by in that time?"
"There was one postman," said the officer, "a couple of milkmen going to the depot, McGlone's barkeeper on his way to open up for the early gas-house trade--and--yes, there was a girl."
"What sort of a girl?"
"Rather a nice sort--dressed well and wearing a veil. And it's a hurry she was in, for she turned the corner almost at a run."
"In what direction did she go?"