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"What do you want me to do, then?" cried Bromfield, tiny beads of perspiration on his forehead.
"You'll do as I say--beat it outa the country till the thing's over with."
"But Lindsay will talk."
"The b.o.o.b's padlocked his mouth. For some fool reason he's protectin'
you. Get out, an' you're safe."
Bromfield sweated blood as he walked up and down the room looking for a way out of his dilemma. He had come to the parting of the road again.
If he did this thing he would be a yellow cur. It was one thing to destroy Lindsay's influence with Beatrice by giving her a false impression. From his point of view their friends.h.i.+p was pernicious anyhow and ought to be wiped out. At most the cattleman would have gone back unhurt to the Arizona desert he was always talking about.
n.o.body there would care about what had happened to him in New York.
But to leave him, an innocent man, to go to his death because he was too chivalrous to betray his partner in an adventure--this was something that even Bromfield's atrophied conscience revolted at. Clay was standing by him, according to Durand's story. The news of it lifted a weight from his soul. But it left him too under a stronger moral obligation to step out and face the music.
The clubman made the only decision he could, and that was to procrastinate, to put off making any choice for the present.
"I'll think it over. Give me a day to make up my mind," he begged.
Jerry shrugged his heavy shoulders. He knew that every hour counted in his favor, would make it more difficult for the tortured man to come forward and tell the truth. "Sure. Look it over upside and down.
Don't hurry. But, man, what's there to think about? I thought you hated this guy--wanted to get rid of him."
"Not that way. G.o.d, no! Durand, I'll give you any sum in reason to let him go without bringing me into it. You can arrange it."
Jerry slammed down a fist heavily on the table. "I can, but I won't.
Not if you was to go fifty-fifty with me to your last cent. I'm goin'
to get this fellow. See? I'm goin' to get him good. He'll be crawlin' on his hands and knees to me before I'm through with him."
"What good will that do you? I'm offering you cold cash just to let the truth get out--that Collins was trying to kill him when he got hit."
"Nothin' doin'. I've been layin' for this b.o.o.b. I've got him now.
I'm goin' to turn the screws on and listen to him holler."
Bromfield's valet stepped into the room. "Mr. and Miss Whitford to see you, sir."
CHAPTER x.x.xIV
BEATRICE QUALIFIES AS A SHERLOCK HOLMES
Annie Millikan nodded her wise little head. "Jerry's gonna frame him if he can. He's laid the wires for it. That's a lead pipe."
"Sure," agreed Muldoon. "I'll bet he's been busy all night fixin' up his story. Some poor divvies he'll bully-rag into swearin' lies an'
others he'll buy. Trust Jerry for the crooked stuff."
"We've got to get the truth," said Beatrice crisply, pulling on her gloves. "And we'll do it too. A pack of lies can't stand against four of us all looking for the truth."
Annie looked curiously at this golden-haired girl with the fine rapture of untamed youth, so delicate and yet so silken strong. By training and tradition they were miles apart, yet the girl who had lived on the edge of the underworld recognized a certain kins.h.i.+p. She liked the thorough way this young woman threw herself into the business of the day. The wireless telegraphy of the eyes, translated through the medium of her own emotions, told her that no matter whose ring Beatrice Whitford was wearing Clay Lindsay held her happiness in the cup of his strong brown hand.
"You're shoutin', Miss." Annie rose briskly. "I'll get busy doin'
some sleuthin' myself. I liked your friend from the minute he stepped through--from the minute I set me peepers on him. He's one man, if anybody asks you. I'm soitainly for him till the clock strikes twelve.
And say, listen! Jerry's liable not to get away with it. I'm hep to one thing. The gang's sore on him. He rides the boys too hard. Some of 'em will sure t'row him down hard if they think they'll be protected."
"The district attorney will stand by us," said Whitford. "He told me himself Durand was a menace and that his days as boss were numbered.
Another thing, Miss Millikan. If you need to spend any money in a legitimate way, I'm here to foot the bills."
Muldoon, who was on night duty this month and therefore had his days free, guided Whitford and his daughter to Maddock's. As they reached the house an express wagon was being driven away. Automatically the license number registered itself in Tim's memory.
The policeman took a key from his pocket and unlocked the door. The three went up the stairs to the deserted gambling-hall and through it to the rear room.
"From what Lindsay says the bullet holes ought to be about as high as his arm pits," said Whitford.
"'Slim' must 'a' been standin' about here," guessed Muldoon, ill.u.s.trating his theory by taking the position he meant. "The bullets would hit the part.i.tion close to the center, wouldn't they?"
Beatrice had gone straight to the plank wall. "They're not here," she told them.
"Must be. According to Lindsay's story the fellow was aiming straight at it."
"Well, they're not here. See for yourself."
She was right. There was no evidence whatever that any bullets had pa.s.sed through the part.i.tion. They covered every inch of the cross wall in their search.
"Lindsay must have been mistaken," decided Whitford, hiding his keen disappointment. "This man Collins couldn't have been firing in this direction. Of course everything was confusion. No doubt they s.h.i.+fted round in the dark and--"
He stopped, struck by an odd expression on the face of his daughter.
She had stooped and picked up a small fragment of shaving from the floor. Her eyes went from it to a plank in the part.i.tion and then back to the thin crisp of wood.
"What is it, honey?" asked Whitford.
The girl turned to Muldoon, alert in every quivering muscle. "That express wagon--the one leaving the house as we drove up--Did you notice it?"
"Number 714," answered Tim promptly.
"Can you have it stopped and the man arrested? Don't you see? They've rebuilt this part.i.tion. They were taking away in that wagon the planks with the bullet holes."
Muldoon was out of the room and going down the stairs before she had finished speaking. It was a quarter of an hour later when he returned.
Beatrice and her father were not to be seen.
From back of the part.i.tion came an eager, vibrant voice. "Is that you, Mr. Muldoon? Come here quick. We've found one of the bullets in the wall."
The policeman pa.s.sed out of the door through which Bromfield had made his escape and found another small door opening from the pa.s.sage. It took him into the cubby-hole of a room in which were the wires and instruments used to receive news of the races.
"What about the express wagon?" asked Whitford.
"We'll get it. Word is out for those on duty to keep an eye open for it. Where's the bullet?"
Beatrice pointed it out to him. There it was, safely embedded in the plaster, about five feet from the ground.