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"Please! You must go now. I will show you a way. So long as Cardi is at liberty you must not return; the risks are too great for all of us.
As Oliveta learns the truth I shall advise you. Poor girl, she needs me tonight. Come!"
She led him through the house, down a stairway into the courtyard, and directed him into a narrow pa.s.sageway which led out to the street behind. "Even this is not safe, for they may be waiting." She laid her hand upon his arm and said, earnestly, "You will be careful?"
"I will."
He fought down the wild impulse to take her in his arms. As he skulked through the gloom, searching the darkest shadows like a criminal, his fear was gone, and in his heart was something singing joyously.
XIX
FELICITE
"You're just the man I'm looking for," Bernie Dreux told Norvin, whom he chanced to meet on the following morning. "I've made a discovery."
"Indeed! What is it?"
"Hist! The walls have ears." Bernie cast a glance over his shoulder at the busy, sunlit street and the hurrying crowds. "Come!" With a melodramatic air he led Blake into a coffee-house near by. "You can't guess it!" he exclaimed, when they were seated.
"And what's more, I won't try. You're getting too mysterious, Bernie."
"I've found him."
"Whom?"
"The bell-cow; the boss dago; the chief head-hunter; Belisario Cardi!"
Blake started and the smile died from his lips. Dreux ran on with some heat:
"Oh, don't look so skeptical. Any man with intelligence and courage can become as good a detective as I am. I've found your Capo-Mafia, that's all."
"Who is he?"
"You won't believe me; but he's well thought of. You know him; O'Neil knows him. He's generally trusted."
Norvin began to suspect that by some freak of fortune his little friend had indeed stumbled upon the truth. Dreux was leaning back in his chair and beaming triumphantly.
"Come, come! What's his name?"
"Joe Poggi."
"Poggi? He's the owner of that fruit-stand you've been watching."
"Exactly! Chief Donnelly suspected him."
"Nonsense!" Norvin's face was twitching once more. "Poggi is on the force; he's a detective, like you."
"Come off!" Bernie was shocked and incredulous.
"Have you shadowed him for months without learning that he's an officer?"
"I--I--He's the fellow, just the same."
"Oh, Bernie, you'd better stick to the antique business."
Mr. Dreux flushed angrily. "If he isn't one of the gang," he cried, "what was he doing with Salvatore di Marco and Frank Garcia the night after Donnelly's murder? What's he doing now with Caesar Maruffi if he isn't after him for money?"
Blake's amus.e.m.e.nt suddenly gave place to eagerness.
"Maruffi!" he exclaimed. "What's this?"
"Joe Poggi is blackmailing Caesar Maruffi out of the money to defend his friends. He was at di Marco's house an hour before Salvatore's arrest. I saw him with Garcia and Bolla and Cardoni more than once."
"Why didn't you tell this to O'Neil?"
"I tried to, but he wouldn't listen. When I said I was a detective he laughed in my face, and we had a scene. He told me I couldn't find a ham at a Hebrew picnic. Since then I've been working alone. Poggi has been lying low lately, but--" Bernie hesitated, and a slight flush stole into his cheeks. "I've become acquainted with his wife--we're good friends."
"And what have you learned from her?"
"Nothing directly; but I think she's acting as her husband's agent, collecting blackmail to hire lawyers for the defense. Poor Caesar!
he's rich, and Poggi is bleeding him. Since Joe is on the police force he knows every thing that goes on. No wonder you can't break up the Mafia!"
"By Jove!" said Norvin. "I was warned of a leak in the department. But it couldn't be Poggi!"
He began to question Bernie with a peremptoriness and rapidity that made the little man blink. Mingled with much that was grotesque and irrelevant, he drew out a fairly credible story of nocturnal meetings between the Italian detective and Caesar Maruffi, which, taken in connection with what he already knew, was most disturbing.
"How did you come to meet Mrs. Poggi?" he inquired, at last.
The question brought that same flush to Mr. Dreux's cheeks.
"She found I was following her one day," he explained, "so I told her I was smitten by her beauty. I got away with it, too. Rather clever, for an amateur, eh?"
"Is she good-looking?"
Bernie nodded. "She's an outrageous flirt, though, and--oh, what a temper!" He shuddered nervously. "Why, she'd stick a knife into me or bite my ears off if she suspected. She's insanely jealous."
"It's not a nice position for you."
"No. But I've something far worse than her on my hands--Felicite.
She's more to be feared than the Mafia."
"Surely Miss Delord isn't dangerous."
"Isn't she?" mocked the bachelor. "You ought to see--" He started, his eyes fixed themselves upon the entrance to the cafe with a look of horror, he paled and cast a hurried glance around as if in search of a means of escape. "Here she is now!"