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"Sure thing! Last night I insulted a perfectly nice gentleman just to provoke a quarrel. I'd never seen him before, and ordinarily I hesitate to accost strangers; but I felt as if I'd have hysterics if I couldn't lick somebody; so I walked up to this person and told him his necktie was in rotten taste."
"What did he say?"
"He offered to go home and change it. I was so chagrined that I-- cursed him fearfully."
"Bernie!"
Dreux nodded with an expression of the keenest satisfaction. "I could have cried. I called him a worm, a bug, a boll-weevil; but he said he had a family and didn't intend to be shot up by some well-dressed desperado."
"I suppose it's the blood of your ancestors."
"I suppose it is. Now let's go get this dago boy. I'm loaded for grizzlies, and if the Mafia cuts in I'll croak somebody." He drew a huge rusty military revolver from somewhere inside his clothes and flourished it so recklessly that his companion recoiled.
Together the two set out for St. Phillip Street. Blake, whose reputation for bravery had become proverbial, went reluctantly, preyed upon by misgivings; Dreux, the decadent, overbred dandy, went gladly, as if thirsting for the fray.
XIV
THE NET TIGHTENS
Number 93 1/2 St. Phillip Street proved to be a hovel, in the front portion of which an old woman sold charcoal and kindling. Leaving Bernie on guard, Blake penetrated swiftly to the rooms behind, paying no heed to the crone's protestations. In one corner a slender, dark-eyed boy was cowering, whom he recognized at once as the lad he had seen on the night of Donnelly's death.
"You are Gino Cressi," he said, quietly.
The boy shook his head.
"Oh, yes, you are, and you must come with me, Gino."
The little fellow recoiled. "You have come to kill me," he quavered.
"No, no, my little man. Why should I wish to do that?"
"I am a Sicilian; you hate me."
"That is not true. We hate only bad Sicilians, and you are a good boy."
"I did not kill the Chief."
"True. You did not even know that those other men intended to kill him. You were merely told to wait at the corner until you saw him come home. Am I right?"
"I do not know anything about the Chief," Gino mumbled.
But it was plain that some of his fear was vanishing under this unexpected kindness. Blake had a voice which won dumb animals, and a smile which made friends of children. At last the young Sicilian came forward and put his hand into the stranger's.
"They told me to hide or the Americans would kill me. Madonna mia! I am no Mafioso! I--I wish to see my father."
"I will take you to him now."
"You will not harm me?"
"No. You are perfectly safe."
But the boy still hung back, stammering:
"I--am afraid, Si'or. After all, you see, I know nothing. Perhaps I had better wait here."
"But you will come, to please me, will you not? Then when you find that the policemen will not hurt you, you will tell us all about it, eh, carino?"
He led his shrinking captive out through the front of the house, whence the crone had fled to spread the alarm, and lifted him into the waiting cab. But Bernie Dreux was loath to acknowledge such a tame conclusion to an adventure upon which he had built high hopes.
"L-let's stick round," he shivered. "It's just getting g-g-good."
"Come on, you idiot." Blake fairly dragged him in and commanded the driver to whip up. "That old woman will rouse the neighborhood, and we'll have a mob heaving bricks at us in another minute."
"That'll be fine!" Dreux declared, his pride revolting at what he considered a cowardly retreat. He had come along in the hope of doing deeds that would add l.u.s.ter to his name, and he did not intend to be disappointed. It required a vigorous muscular effort to keep him from clambering out of the carriage.
"I don't understand you at all," said Norvin, with one hand firmly gripping his coat collar, "but I understand the value of discretion at this moment, and I don't intend to take any chances on losing our little friend Gino before he has turned State's evidence."
Dreux sank back, gloomily enough, continuing for the rest of the journey to declaim against the fate that had condemned him to a life of insipid peace; but it was not until they had turned out of the narrow streets of the foreign quarter into the wide, clean stretch of Ca.n.a.l Street that Blake felt secure.
Little Gino Cressi was badly frightened. His wan, pinched face was ashen and he shivered wretchedly. Yet he strove to play the man, and his pitiful attempt at self-control roused something tender and protective in his captor. Laying a rea.s.suring hand upon his shoulder, Blake said, gently:
"Coraggio! No harm shall befall you."
"I--do not wish to die, Excellency."
"You will not die. Speak the truth, figlio mio, and the police will be very kind to you. I promise."
"I know nothing," quavered the child. "My father is a good man. They told me the Chief was dead, but I did not kill him. I only hid."
"Who told you the Chief was dead?"
"I--do not remember."
"Who told you to hide?"
"I do not remember, Si'or." Gino's eyes were like those of a hunted deer, and he trembled as if dreadfully cold.
It was a wretched, stricken child whom Blake led into O'Neil's office, and for a long time young Cressi's lips were glued; but eventually he yielded to the kind-faced men who were so patient with him and his lies, and told them all he knew.
On the following morning the papers announced three new arrests in the Donnelly case, resulting from a confession by Gino Cressi. On the afternoon of the same day the friendly and influential Caesar Maruffi called upon Blake with a protest.
"Signore, my friend," he began, "you and your Committee are doing a great injustice to the Italians of this city."
"How so?"