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Yet this was the man who had brought death to Henry Wilton, and had twice sought my life in the effort to wrest from me a packet of information I did not have. This was the man whose face had gleamed fierce and hateful in the lantern's flash in the alley. This was the man I had sworn to bring to the gallows for a brutal crime. And now I was his trusted agent, with control, however limited, of millions.
It was a puzzle too deep for me. I was near coming to Mother Borton's view that there was something uncanny about Doddridge Knapp. Did two spirits animate that body? What was the thread that should join all parts of the mystery into one harmonious whole?
I wondered idly who Doddridge Knapp's visitor might be, but as I could see no way of finding out, and felt no special concern over his ident.i.ty or purposes, I rose and left the office. As I stepped into the hall I discovered that somebody had a deeper curiosity than I. A man was stooping to the keyhole of Doddridge Knapp's room in the endeavor to see or hear. As he heard the sound of my opening door he started up, and with a bound, was around the turn of the hall and pattering down the stairs.
In another bound I was after him. I had seen his form for but a second, and his face not at all. But in that second I knew him for Tim Terrill of the snake-eyes and the murderous purpose.
When I reached the head of the stairs he was nowhere to be seen, but I heard the patter of his feet below and plunged down three steps at a time and into Clay street, nearly upsetting a stout gentleman in my haste. The street was busy with people, but no sign of the snake-eyed man greeted me.
Much disturbed in mind at this apparition of my enemy, I sought in vain for some explanation of his presence. Was he spying on Doddridge Knapp?
Did he not stand on a better footing with his employer than this? He was, I must suppose, trusted with the most secret and evil purposes of that strange man, and should be able to speak with him on even terms.
Yet here he was, doing the work of the merest spy. What wickedness was he planning? What treachery was he shaping in his designs on the man whose bread he was eating and whose plans of crime he was the chief agent to a.s.sist or execute?
I must have stood gaping in the street like a countryman at a fair as I revolved these questions in my mind without getting an answer to them, for I was roused by a man b.u.mping into me roughly.
I suspected that he had done it on purpose, but I begged his pardon and felt for my watch. I could find none of my personal property missing, but I noticed the fellow reeling back toward me, and doubled my fist with something of an intention to commit a breach of the peace if he repeated his trick. I thought better of it, and started by him briskly, when he spoke in a low tone:
"You'd better go to your room, Mr. Wilton." He said something more that I did not catch, and, reeling on, disappeared in the crowd before I could turn to mark or question him.
I thought at first that he meant the room I had just left. Then it occurred to me that it was the room Henry had occupied--the room in which I had spent my first dreadful night in San Francisco, and had not revisited in the thirty hours since I had left it.
The advice suited my inclination, and in a few minutes I was entering the dingy building and climbing the worn and creaking stairs. The place lost its air of mystery in the broad suns.h.i.+ne and penetrating daylight, and though its interior was as gloomy as ever, it lacked the haunting suggestions it had borrowed from darkness and the night.
Slipped under the door I found two notes. One was from Detective Coogan, and read:
"Inquest this afternoon. Don't want you. Have another story. Do you want the body?"
The other was in a woman's hand, and the faint perfume of the first note I had received rose from the sheet. It read:
"I do not understand your silence. The money is ready. What is the matter?"
The officer's note was easy enough to answer. I found paper, and, a.s.suring Detective Coogan of my grat.i.tude at escaping the inquest, I asked him to turn the body over to the undertaker to be buried at my order.
The other note was more perplexing. I could make nothing of it. It was evidently from my unknown employer, and her anxiety was plain to see.
But I was no nearer to finding her than before, and if I knew how to reach her I knew not what to say. As I was contemplating this state of affairs with some dejection, and sealing my melancholy note to Detective Coogan, there was a quick step in the hall and a rap at the panel. It was a single person, so I had no hesitation in opening the door, but it gave me a pa.s.sing satisfaction to have my hand on the revolver in my pocket as I turned the k.n.o.b.
It was a boy, who thrust a letter into my hand.
"Yer name Wilton?" he inquired, still holding on to the envelope.
"Yes."
"That's yourn, then." And he was prepared to make a bolt.
"Hold on," I said. "Maybe there's an answer."
"No, there ain't. The bloke as gave it to me said there weren't."
"Well, here's something I want you to deliver," said I, taking up my note to Detective Coogan. "Do you know where the City Hall is?"
"Does I know--what are yer givin' us?" said the boy with infinite scorn in his voice.
"A quarter," I returned with a laugh, tossing him the coin. "Wait a minute."
"Yer ain't bad stuff," said the boy with a grin. I tore open the envelope and read on the sheet that came from it:
"Sell everything you bought--never mind the price. Other orders off. D.
K."
I gasped with amazement. Had Doddridge Knapp gone mad? To sell twelve thousand five hundred shares of Omega was sure to smash the market, and the half-million dollars that had been put into them would probably shrink by two hundred thousand or more if the order was carried out.
I read the note again.
Then a suspicion large enough to overshadow the universe grew up in my brain. I recalled that Doddridge Knapp had given me a cipher with which he would communicate with me, and I believed, moreover, that he had no idea where I might be at the present moment.
"It's all right, sonny," I said. "Trot along."
"Where's yer letter?" asked the boy, loyally anxious to earn his quarter.
"It won't have to go now," I said coolly. I believed that the boy meant no harm to me, but I was not taking any risks.
The boy sauntered down the hall, singing _My Name Is Hildebrandt Montrose_, and I was left gazing at the letter with a melancholy smile.
"Well, I must look like a sucker if they think I can be taken in by a trick like that," was my mental comment. I charged the scheme up to my snake-eyed friend and had a poorer opinion of his intelligence than I had hitherto entertained. Yet I was astonished that he should, even with the most hearty wish to bring about my downfall, contrive a plan that would inflict a heavy loss on his employer and possibly ruin him altogether. There was more beneath than I could fathom. My brain refused to work in the maze of contradictions and mysteries, plots and counterplots, in which I was involved.
I took my way at last toward the market, and, hailing a boy to whom I intrusted my letter to Detective Coogan, walked briskly to Pine Street.
CHAPTER XI
THE DEN OF THE WOLF
The street had changed its appearance in the two or three hours since I had made my way from the Exchange through the pallid, panic-stricken mob. There were still thousands of people between the corner of Montgomery Street and Leidesdorff, and the little alley itself was packed full of shouting, struggling traders. The thousands were broken into hundreds of groups, and men were noisily buying and selling, or discussing the chances of the market when the "big Board" should open once more. But there was an air of confidence, almost of buoyancy, in place of the gloom and terror that had lowered over the street at noon.
Plainly the panic was over, and men were inspirited by a belief that "stocks were going up."
I made a few dispositions accordingly. Taking Doddridge Knapp's hint, I engaged another broker as a relief to Eppner, a short fat man, with the baldest head I ever saw, a black beard and a hook-nose, whose remarkable activity and scattering charges had attracted my attention in the morning session.
Wallbridge was his name, I found, and he proved to be as intelligent as I could wish--a merry little man, with a joke for all things, and a flow of words that was almost overwhelming.
"Omega? Yes," chuckled the stout little broker, after he had a.s.sured himself of my financial standing. "But you ought to have bought this morning, if that's what you want. It was h.e.l.l popping and the roof giving 'way all at once." The little man had an abundant stock of profanity which he used unconsciously and with such original variations that one almost forgot the blasphemy of it while listening to him. "You ought to have been there," he continued, "and watched the boys sh.e.l.l 'em out!"
"Yes, I heard you had lively times."
"Boiling," he said, with coruscating additions in the way of speech and gesture. "If it hadn't been for Decker and some fellow we haven't had a chance to make out yet the bottom of the market would have been resting on the roof of the lower regions." The little man's remark was slightly more direct and forcible, but this will do for a revised version.