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CHAPTER XII
HOME AGAIN
The two dark figures, giving a glance through the rain in either direction, stole down beneath the stately marble steps of No. 13 Washington Square, and Matilda unlocked the servants' door. They slipped inside; the door was cautiously relocked. Breathless, they stood listening. A vast, n.o.ble silence pervaded the great house. They flung their arms about each other, and thus embraced tottered against the wall; and Mrs. De Peyster relaxed in an unspeakable relief.
[Ill.u.s.tration: MATILDA UNLOCKED THE SERVANTS' DOOR]
Home again! Her own home! Odorless of pot-roasts and frying batter-cakes. The phrase was rather common and sentimental--but, in truth, this was "home, sweet home."
And free of that unthinkable Mr. Pyecroft!
While Mrs. De Peyster leaned there in the blackness, gathering strength, her mind mounted in sweet expectancy to her suite. Only a few minutes of soft treading of stairways--certainly they could avoid arousing Jack--and she would be locked in her comfortable rooms. A cautious bath! Clean clothes! Her own bed! All of the luxuries she had been so long denied!
Cautiously they crept through the bas.e.m.e.nt hallway; cautiously crept up the butler's stairs and turned off through the door into the great hall of the first floor; cautiously they crept up to the drawing-room floor and trod ever so softly over woven treasures of the Orient, through the s.p.a.cious ducal gloom. One more flight, then peace, security. With unbreathing care, Mrs. De Peyster set foot upon the first step of her journey's end.
And then, suddenly, the servants' bell burst into ringing. And there was a terrific hammering against the servants' door and also against the door in the boarding.
"Matilda--what's that?" breathed Mrs. De Peyster.
"M--maybe the police saw us come in," breathed Matilda.
They did not pause for discussion. Discarding caution, they plunged frantically and noisily up the stairs; until from out of the overhead blackness descended a voice:--
"Stop! Or I'll shoot!"
It was Jack's voice.
They stopped.
"Who are you?" the voice demanded.
They clung to each other, wordless.
"Who are you?" repeated Jack.
Their voices were still palsied. They heard his feet begin determinedly to descend. Mrs. De Peyster loosed her grip on Matilda's arm and vanished noiselessly downward.
"Speak up there," commanded Jack, "or I'll fire on the chance of getting you in the dark."
"It's only me, Mr. Jack," trembled Matilda.
"What, Matilda!" cried Jack; and from above, like an echo transposed an octave higher, sounded another, "What, Matilda!"
"Yes, Mr. Jack. Yes, ma'a--yes, Mary."
"But where the devil have you been?" exclaimed Jack, coming to her side.
Mary had also hurried down to her. "Matilda, the way you ran away from us!"
"I got a--er--sudden message. There was no time--"
"Never mind about explaining now," interrupted Jack. "Go down and stop that racket before they break in the doors. And thank G.o.d you're here just in time, Matilda! You're just the person to do it: housekeeper, caretaker. But be careful if they're reporters. Now, hurry."
Jack and Mary scuttled back to the haven of upstairs, and Matilda shivered down through the blackness. As she pa.s.sed through the lower hall, a hand reached out of the dark and touched her. She managed not to cry out.
"Don't let them know about me!" implored Mrs. De Peyster.
"I'll--I'll do my best, ma'am," quavered Matilda, and glided weakly on.
When she opened the servants' door, a dripping policeman caught her arm. "Down here, Bill," he called to the man battering at the door above; and a minute later two officers were inside, and the door was closed, and a light was flashing in Matilda's face.
"Now, old girl," said the first officer, tightly gripping her arm and giving it that twist which if a policeman does not give an arm he is no policeman, "what's your little game, eh?"
"I--I live here, sir. I'm the housekeeper."
"Now don't try to put that over on us. You know you ain't."
"You must be new policemen, in this neighborhood," trembled Matilda, "or you'd know I am."
"We may be new cops, but we don't fall for old stuff like that. I was talkin' to Mrs. De Peyster's coachman only yesterday. He told me the housekeeper wasn't here no more. So better change your line o' dope.
Where's the other one?"
"Wha--what other one?"
"The one what come in here with you."
"I'm the only person in the house," Matilda tried to declare valiantly.
"Drop it!" said the officer. "Didn't the boss tell us to keep our eyes on these here millionaires' closed houses; all kinds o' slick crooks likely to clean 'em out. An' didn't we see two women come in this house,--hey, Bill?"
"Sure--I was a block off, but I seen 'em plain as day," said Bill.
"So I guess," again the twist that proved him a policeman, "you'd better lead us to your pal."
He pushed her before him, lighting the way with his flash-lantern, up stairways and back into the dining-room, where she turned on the one shaded electric bulb that had been left connected. In Matilda all hope was gone; resistance was useless; fate had conquered. And when the officer again demanded that she bring forth her accomplice, she dumbly and obediently made search; and finally brought Mrs. De Peyster forth from the china closet.
The officer pulled up Mrs. De Peyster's veil, and closely scanned her features; which, to be just to the officer, were so distorted that they bore little semblance to the Mrs. De Peyster of her portraits.
"Recognize her, Bill?" he queried.
"Looks a bit like the pictures of Chicago Sal," said Bill. "But I ain't ever handled her. I guess she ain't worked none around New York."
"Well, now," said the officer, with policial jocularity, "since you two ladies already got your hats on, I guess we'll just offer you our arms to the station."
Mrs. De Peyster gave Matilda a look of frenzied appeal. But Matilda needed not the spur of another's desperation. For herself she saw a prison cell agape.
"But I tell you I'm Matilda Simpson, Mrs. De Peyster's housekeeper!"