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"Why did you go there?"
"I was angry and excited and it was a place where I could be quiet."
Asked how long he had been in the bungalow he said he wasn't sure-it might have been an hour or two. He had lit the fire and sat in front of it thinking and smoking cigarettes.
"Didn't you hunt in the desk for something?"
He answered with a sort of shrug as if he'd forgotten.
"Oh, yes-I was hunting for a bill I thought I left there."
To the questions about Sylvia-whether she had been there with him-he answered almost violently that she had not, that he had not seen her there or anywhere else that night.
"Did you notice any footprints in the mud when you came?"
"I did not."
"There were no evidences on the wharf or in the house of anyone having been there before you?"
"None. The bungalow was locked and undisturbed."
Then they switched off on to the gasoline drum and asked him if he had filled the tank there and he said he might have but he didn't remember.
"Was it dark when you left the place?"
"No-very bright moonlight."
"You remember that?"
"Yes. I recollect thinking the ride back would be easier than the ride up in the dark."
"Why did you say at the inquest that you filled the tank somewhere on the turnpike?"
"I suppose I thought I had. In the angry and excited state I was in small things made no impression on me. I had no clear memory of where I'd done it."
All the papers agreed that his testimony was unsatisfactory and made much of his manner, which, under an effort to be calm, showed a spasmodic, nervous violence.
A day later he was arrested at Firehill and taken to Bloomington jail to await indictment by the Grand Jury.
[Ill.u.s.tration: _A day later he was arrested at Firehill and taken to Bloomington jail_]
That night-shall I ever forget it! I heard the sounds in the street dying away and then the silence, the deep, lovely silence that comes over the village at midnight. And in it I could hear my heart beating, and as I lay with my eyes wide open, I could see on the darkness like a picture drawn in fire, Jack Reddy in the electric chair.
XI
Looking back now I can remember dressing the next morning, all trembly and with my hands damp, and my face in the gla.s.s, white and pinched like an East Side baby's in a hot wave. But there wasn't anything trembly about the thinking part of me. That was working better than it had ever worked before. It seemed to be made of steel springs going swift and sure like an engine that went independent of the rest of my machinery.
And, thank G.o.d, it did work that way, for it had thought of something!
The idea came on me in the second part of the night, flashed out of the dark like a wireless. I'd been wondering about the man who made the telephone date with Sylvia-the Unknown Voice they'd got to calling him.
People thought as Jasper had said, that Reddy had found her with this man and there had been a terrible scene. But whatever had happened the Unknown Voice was the clew to the mystery. The police had tried to locate him, tried and failed. Now _I_ was going to hunt for him.
My plan was perfectly simple. From what I had seen myself and heard from Anne Hennessey I was sure I knew every lover that Sylvia had had. I was going to call each one of them up on the phone and listen to their voices, and I wasn't going to tell a soul about it. Everybody would say-just as you say as you read this-"but all those men gave satisfactory alibis." I knew that as well as anyone, but it didn't cut any ice with me, I didn't care what they'd proved. I was going to hear their voices and see for myself. If I was successful, then I'd tell Babbitts and have him advise me what to do. I'd heard Jack Reddy had retained Mr. Wilbur Whitney, the great criminal lawyer, but I wouldn't have known whether to go to him or the police or the District Attorney and if I did it at all I wanted to do it right.
Now that there were three of us in the Exchange my holiday had been changed to Monday, and I made up my mind not to put my plan into execution till that day. I didn't want to be hurried, or confused, by possible interruptions, and also I wanted to hear the voices at short range and could do that better from the city. I telephoned over to Babbitts that I'd be in town Monday to do some shopping, and he made a date to meet me at the entrance of the Knickerbocker Hotel and dine with me at some joint near Times Square.
Monday morning I was up bright and early and dressed myself in my best clothes. From the telephone book I got the numbers of the four men who were known to have been Sylvia's lovers and admirers-Carisbrook, Robinson, Dunham and c.o.kesbury. I had found out from Anne what their businesses were and I had no trouble in locating them. With the slip of paper in my purse I took the ten-twenty train and was in town before midday.
On the way over I worked out what I'd say to each of them. I was going to ask Carisbrook, who was a soft, dressed-up guy, if he knew where Mazie Lorraine, a manicure who'd once been in the Waldorf, had moved to.
It was nervy but I wanted to give him a dig, he having put on airs and treated me like a doormat. Robinson was easy-he had a common name and I'd got the wrong man. Excuse _me_, please, awful sorry. Dunham was a lawyer and I was a dressmaker that a customer wouldn't pay. And c.o.kesbury was easy, too-I'd heard c.o.kesbury Lodge was for rent and was looking for a country place.
I got Carisbrook first and he was as mad as a hornet.
"I don't know what you're talking about. _Manicure_? I don't know any manicure called Lorraine or anything else. I've never been manicured in the Waldorf-or any other hotel-in the city. The woman is a liar--" and so forth and so on, sputtering and fizzing along the wire. I had hard work not to laugh and in the middle of it I hung up, for he had a thin, high squeak on him like an old maid scared by a mouse.
Robinson was a sport, I liked _him_ fine:
"Don't apologize. It's the penalty of being called Robinson. Still there's a bright side to every cloud. It might have been Smith, you know."
It wasn't Robinson. He talked with a dialect that sounded like Jasper's, English, I guess.
Dunham was very smooth and awful hard to get rid of. He kept on asking questions and I had to think quick and speak unnaturally intelligent. In the middle of it-I'd got what I wanted-I said it was too complicated to tell over the phone and I'd be in to-morrow at two and my name was Mrs.
Pendleton.
It wasn't Dunham.
When I tackled c.o.kesbury I ran into the first snag. I tried his office and a real pleasant young man (you get to know a young voice from an old one) asked me what I wanted. I said business, and he answered:
"What is the nature of your business, Madam?"
"I'd rather tell that to Mr. c.o.kesbury," I said.
"Mr. c.o.kesbury doesn't like to be interrupted in the office. If you'll tell me what you want to see him about--"
"Say, young feller," said I, in a cool, cla.s.sy way, "suppose we stop this pleasant little talk, and you trot into Mr. c.o.kesbury and say a lady's waiting on the wire."
"Very well," he answered, calm and cheerful, "I'll do just as you say."
There was a wait and then he was back.
"Mr. c.o.kesbury says it's impossible for him to come to the phone and will you kindly tell me what your business is."
"I guess I'll have to wait till he's not so busy," I answered, languid, like I've heard ladies when they're mad and don't want to show it, and I hung up.