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"And the odor of tobacco?"
He got a little vial out of his pocket, uncorked it, and again I caught the sweet and heavy odor of Peter Magnus' cigar.
"An' here's a fine point I'm proud of," said Jemmy. "I had this made from half a dozen of Magnus' cigars I found in a box in his room. So the smell was just right. I thought for a while of showin' some smoke, but didn't dare risk it."
"But the note," I said. "That was the cleverest of all."
Jemmy chuckled and glanced at G.o.dfrey.
"You'll understand that, Jim," he said. "You remember I worked it backward in that National City Bank case."
G.o.dfrey nodded.
"I remember the signature disappeared from old Murgatroyd's check."
"Backward or forward, it don't make no difference. It all depends on the acid."
"What acid?"
"Ah," chuckled Jemmy, "you'd like to know, wouldn't you? You never will. But it all depends on it. If I put the acid in before the salt, the writin' disappears at the end of two hours; if I put the salt in before the acid, the writin' don't appear for the same length of time.
It took me five years to work it out."
"But the writing didn't all appear at once," I objected.
"Of course not," said Jemmy impatiently. "It wasn't all wrote at once, was it? It appeared just like it was wrote."
"How could you time it?"
"Why," answered Jemmy still more impatiently, "I began operations at the same time every night, didn't I? I timed the writin' for eight-forty-five."
"But the chair?" I persisted.
Jemmy shot a disgusted glance at G.o.dfrey.
"Any faker on Sixth Avenue can do that," he said. "A hook on a thread.
Anything else?"
"Yes," I said, "one thing. What horror did you perpetrate last night?"
Jemmy grinned mechanically as he looked at me, and I even fancied he reddened a little.
"Did she tell you about that?" he asked.
"She tried to, but couldn't. What was it?"
"Well, you know," said Jemmy apologetically, "I had to bring matters to a head some way, for the old girl certainly did hate to sh.e.l.l out.
I was sorry to have to scare her, but I couldn't help it."
"But what did you do?"
Jemmy blew a ring, and watched it fade away in front of him.
"I don't think I'll tell," he said at last.
G.o.dfrey had been listening with an amused smile.
"We'll get that detail from Mrs. Magnus," he said. "Accept my compliments, Jemmy. It was cleverly done. I'm almost sorry you didn't get away with it."
"Oh," answered Jemmy, with studied indifference, "that's all in the day's work, you know. But thank you all the same, Jim."
He was flicking the ashes from the end of his cigar as he spoke, and I saw that he didn't meet G.o.dfrey's eyes.
The latter looked at him an instant; then, with a low exclamation, sprang to his feet, and snapped open the bag in which I had stowed the packets Jemmy had given me. He ripped one of them open, and disclosed, not ten thousand dollars in currency, but a neat bundle of blank paper!
Jemmy was looking at him now, and his face was alight with triumph.
"How did you know I was there?" G.o.dfrey demanded.
"I didn't," grinned Jemmy. "But I wasn't takin' any chances."
"Who was your pal?"
"That's tellin'," answered Jemmy easily.
"Did you see any of the servants, Lester?"
"Only one," I said. "I didn't notice anything about her, except that she was rather good-looking, and--oh, yes--the little finger of her left hand was missing."
G.o.dfrey grabbed the telephone, and I heard him call headquarters, and give terse orders to send a detail at once to the Magnus house, to watch all ferries and trains, and to search all the thieves' haunts in the city for Kate Travis--"Lady" Kate. Headquarters seemed to know perfectly whom he meant.
"You won't get her," said Jemmy calmly, as G.o.dfrey hung up the receiver. "She got away as soon as we turned the corner. She's got a good half hour's start."
"Come along," said G.o.dfrey roughly, and snapped the handcuffs on again. I could see that he was deeply chagrined. "Good night, Lester.
I've made a botch of this thing. I've got to catch that woman."
But he hasn't caught her yet, and I suppose, when Jemmy finishes his term, he will find his share of that fifty thousand dollars waiting for him.
I hope so, anyway.
THE EPISODE OF THE BLACK CASQUETTE
BY JOSEPH ERNEST
Yes, I have encountered him at last, the veritable birdman! Almost I had commenced to believe that such an individual did not in effect exist--with the exception, _bien entendu_, of myself. For, as I told them when they offered me a _vin d'honneur_ on the occasion of my decoration with the Cross of the Legion, the recognition was long overdue. Indeed, I a.s.sured them, the only circ.u.mstance that prevented me from flying at the age of three was the fact that messieurs the inventors had not then produced an aeroplane.