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My preoccupation was broken in upon by the arrival of the undertaker's men. It would not do--if the ruby was really beneath this roof--to grant any strangers unrestricted privileges of the house; at least not without keeping a heedful eye upon their movements. Alexander Burke, I shrewdly suspected, was equal to any subterfuge or ruse to obtain the jewel, and I did not mean to be caught napping.
No small responsibility is involved in safeguarding $500,000--the amount Maillot declared his uncle had paid for the ruby--particularly when the guardian himself does not know precisely where the treasure lies. It would not do to take any chances. Otherwise, if the amount had been materially less, or had been in a form not so easily disposed of about the person or by thrusting it into a convenient cranny, or, perhaps, even tossing it unseen through a window to a waiting confederate on the outside, my wisest course might have been to permit Burke, or whoever knew where the jewel was, to lead me to its hiding-place. But I must be vigilant, always alert; there would be little sleep for me until I had this extraordinary gem safe in my hands.
So I remained with the undertaker's men until they departed with the body.
As I turned to reenter the house Stodger's portly form hove into view.
He dropped into one of the library's big easy-chairs.
"Whew!" he gasped. "I'm a peach of a shadow, ain't I? Nice work for one of my build. Say! That fellow Burke--Alexander Stilwell--he 's the--you know--most restless party I ever saw. If Fanshawe had n't relieved me when he did I 'd be worked down to about middle-weight by this time."
"Anything particular?" I inquired.
"Er--no. You know he came back here. Rest o' the time he spent dodging in and out of old Page's offices at the Drovers' National.
Walk like a house afire for--m'm-m--maybe a block; next time maybe six blocks."
"Well?"
"Then he 'd--ah--he 'd turn round and walk back again."
"Not very interesting for you. But we know one thing for certain: he 's uneasy. I have a far lighter task for you, though, than following the erratic movements of Mr. Alexander Burke."
And then I recounted for his benefit all that I knew respecting the ruby, declared my belief that it lay somewhere in the house, and, finally, outlined my plans for the immediate future.
"We 'll divide the vigil between us, Stodger; you and I shall camp right here until that costly bauble comes to light. We 'll have to keep our eyes open and our wits about us, too; I wouldn't be surprised at some tricky attempt to recover it at any time--especially during darkness."
After showing him the cipher and requesting that he be observant to find the counterpart of the two peculiar designs, I left him in charge of the house. Next I arranged that our meals be brought to us, after which I returned to town and held a long conference with my chief.
This proved to be eminently satisfactory, inasmuch as he left the Page affair entirely in my hands.
Although I hoped that some new development would require another interview with Miss Cooper, absolutely nothing transpired until the next morning. During the rest of Wednesday afternoon--perhaps I forgot to mention that the murder was committed at about midnight Tuesday--and until late Wednesday night, Stodger and I prosecuted a diligent and systematic search for the ruby, the original of the design on the cipher, and for anything else that might bear upon the crime, but found nothing to reward our efforts. At a late hour we knocked off and sought the library's easy-chairs. After a while Stodger asked me for the cipher. When I dropped off to sleep he was industriously digging away at it, with many gasps and inarticulate exclamations.
Concerning the cipher, it is perhaps well to mention that I applied it to the door of the hidden safe on the chance that the opposed arrows indicated the different movements of the dial; but I discovered the combination to be much simpler. In fact, there were not sufficient tumblers in the dial to allow for so complicated a combination at all.
There remained the possibility that the numerals belonged to some other safe, though I did not think so: those two odd crenellated figures could have nothing in common with any permutation-lock. I had seen them; they were tantalizingly familiar; but where? And what meaning did those two figure "10's" bear? Here was a riddle for Oedipus.
The next morning--Thursday--Dr. De Breen conducted the inquest in the library. I mention this hearing solely because of a number of circ.u.mstances which occurred during the proceedings--although unrelated to them--and which have a bearing upon the story. As for the testimony itself, it was about as satisfactory as in most instances where little respecting the crime is definitely known.
Stodger and I had the burden of additional watchfulness imposed upon us; a number of people would be brought upon the scene, and each of us had to be present at some time during the hearing without leaving the house unguarded for a second.
"Looky here, Swift," Dr. De Breen b.u.t.tonholed me, grabbing at his gla.s.ses, "what's in this case, anyhow? Have you got the man? 'T isn't a woman, is it?" He c.o.c.ked his head on one side, and favored me with a squinting regard.
"No, I have n't," I emphatically returned. "And what's more, I don't think you 're going to hit upon him to-day. It is n't a woman, either."
"Don't say! But what have you?"
I displayed the cipher, at which he scowled ferociously for a second.
"It's a combination," he announced decisively; "bet the cigars it's a combination--or direction of some sort."
"Sure thing. Perhaps, too, you 'll tell me where I can try it out."
Holding his gla.s.ses with one hand, he stared through them at the bit of paper.
"What are those fluted affairs at each end with figure '10's' in 'em?"
I shook my head. "You can search me. I thought you might tell me something; I can ask more questions about it myself right now than I can answer."
But I added my conviction that they were facsimiles of some detail of ornamentation I had seen in the house. I also told him where the cipher had been discovered--but not who had discovered it--and, in short, gave him a summary of the entire case. Before I was through he was grinning at me in a very superior and knowing way.
"Nice, bright sleuth, you," commented he, mockingly; "can't you see through a grindstone when there's a hole in it? Now looky here, Swift: old Page kept the replica in the box as a blind; this cryptogram tells where the real ruby is."
I shrugged my shoulders; the idea was by no means novel. But it did not make matters any clearer.
"It must have been the ruby which he showed Maillot," I insisted.
"That young man may not be much of a gem expert, but I don't think any mere paste imitation of a ruby would have inspired him to such a flight of vivid description as he indulged in when he talked with me yesterday morning. Guess again."
He jammed his gla.s.ses down combatively astride his hawk-like nose, and squared his shoulders.
"I won't guess at all. Looky here: old Page switched 'em. That's what he did--switched 'em to show Maillot the real thing. Every time I converse with you, Swift, my theory about the equality of mind and matter receives a jolt: you have more brawn than brain, old sport."
Squinting at each newcomer, he bustled away before I had time to get back at him. I was rather touchy about my size; I could n't help being a giant, and the little ferret of a sawbones knew it. I had only one means of revenge. He was a great stickler for maintaining the dignity of his profession, and I always called him "Doc."
While De Breen was getting his jurors in line, I disposed the two patrolmen who had accompanied him--one in the hall, to direct those who had business here this morning straight to the library, and to allow n.o.body, under whatever pretext, to wander to any other part of the house; the second was stationed just inside the library door. Stodger was to remain up-stairs until called for, when I would relieve him during the brief period required for his testimony.
Burke and Maillot arrived while I was thus engaged, and before I had time to enter the library the front door opened to admit a party of three--Miss Cooper and Miss Fluette, who were accompanied by a handsome, dignified man with white hair and a closely trimmed beard which he wore parted in the middle and brushed straight back.
Instinctively I knew this man to be Alfred Fluette. And as soon would I have expected the attendance of the Caliph of Bagdad. I fell to watching him narrowly.
His features were not familiar to me, but certain details of his appearance were so striking that I could scarcely do otherwise than conclude that his bearing and countenance had quite recently undergone a marked change. He was a man, I imagined, who could hide his feelings with eminent success; yet, his upstanding figure, without being precisely bent, expressed an idea of drooping. The lines of his face gave it a haggard expression, while his eyes wore a furtive, hunted look at certain periods when he forgot to keep himself in hand. All these details taken together gave me food for sober reflection.
With the wax impression on the iron candlestick in mind, I bent my glance to his hands--to the right hand--but he wore gloves, and moreover, the long sleeves of his heavy overcoat came well down over his knuckles. A stirring of the library fire might persuade him to remove his wraps later on.
But something happened that banished everything else temporarily from my mind. The instant he stepped across the front door-sill his eyes sought the upper regions of the house--the balcony or the second story hall. The glance was feverishly eager. He looked away again quickly; but I could not help a.s.sociating this brief episode with Burke's wistful look in the same direction the afternoon before.
CHAPTER XV
A WOMAN'S SCREAM
I turned from Alfred Fluette to encounter a sober, questioning look from Genevieve. Her sweet face was pale and still troubled, and while nothing would have pleased me better than to hasten to her side, I was obliged--for the present only, I made mental qualification--to content myself with a smile and a rea.s.suring nod. Her cousin Belle's demeanor was haughty, even supercilious, and she quite frankly ignored everybody excepting her father, her cousin, and Maillot.
Nothing occurred to r.e.t.a.r.d the inquest, which I shall refer to only as is necessary to keep bound together the thread of my narrative.
After Stodger had given his brief testimony and returned to his post in the upper hall, I descended to the library and took a seat beside Dr.
De Breen at one end of the big library table. As I did so I observed that Mr. Fluette was taking stock of me with a keen sidewise look. I recognized in his regard, surrept.i.tious as it was, that quality which is accustomed to estimating and judging the characters of other men,--usually with unerring exactness, I fancied,--but I affected to appear unconscious of the fact that he was noticing me at all.
Alexander Burke was the second witness. His testimony did not vary from his already familiar story, and after the deputy-coroner had put all the interrogations he could think of, I began to prompt the energetic and shrewd examiner. Thenceforward the whilom secretary's examination proceeded as follows: