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"Certainly not," I said with a s.h.i.+ver, half at the grim suggestion of murder and half at the chill of the fog and the cutting wind that blew the cold vapor through to the skin.
"You've no overcoat," said Corson. "We'll stop and get one. I'll have mine from the station."
The silence of the house of mystery was no less threatening now than on the night when Henry Wilton was walking through the halls on the way to his death. But the stout-hearted policeman by my side gave me confidence, and no sign showed the presence of an enemy as I secured Henry's heavy overcoat and the large revolver he had given me, and we took our way down the stairs.
A short visit to the grimy, foul-smelling bas.e.m.e.nt of the City Hall, where a few policemen looked at me wonderingly, a brisk walk with the cutting wind at our backs and the fog currents hurrying and whirling in eddies toward the bay, and I felt rather than saw that we were in the neighborhood of the scene of my adventures of a night that had come so near costing me my life. I could not be certain of my bearings, but I trusted to the unconscious guidance of Corson, with a confused idea that we were bearing away from the place. Then with relief combined with bewilderment, I saw the lantern sign give forth its promise of the varied entertainment that could be had at Borton's.
"Here we are," said Corson.
We pushed open the door and entered. The place had the same appearance as the one to which I had been taken by d.i.c.ky Nahl.
"A fine night, Mother Borton," said Corson cheerily, as he was the first to enter, and then added under his breath, "--for the divil's business."
Mother Borton stared at him with a black look and muttered a curse.
"Good evening," I hastened to say. "I took the liberty to bring a friend; he doesn't come as an officer to-night."
The effect on the hag's features was marvelous. The black scowl lightened, the tight-drawn lips relaxed, and there was a sign of pleasure in the bright eyes that had flashed hatred at the policeman.
"Ah, it's you, is it?" she said sharply, but with a tone of kindness in her greeting. "I didn't see ye. Now sit down and find a table, and I'll be with ye after a bit."
"We want a dinner, and a good one. I'm half-starved."
"Are ye, honey?" said the woman with delight.
"Then it's the best dinner in town ye shall have. Here, Jim! Put these gentlemen over there at the corner table."
And if the cooking was not what we could have had at the Maison Doree and the service was a little off color, neither of us was disposed to be critical.
"It's not the aristocracy of stoile ye get here," said Corson, lighting his pipe after the coffee, "but it's prime eating."
I nodded in lazy contentment, and then started up in remembrance of the occasion of our being in this place as the shadow of Mother Borton fell across the table. Her keen eyes fixed on me and her sharp beak nodding toward me gave her the uncanny aspect of a bird of prey, and I felt a sinking of courage as I met her glance.
"If you will go upstairs," she said sourly. "You know the way. I guess your friend can spare you."
"Is there anything that can't be told before him?" I asked.
The features of the old woman hardened.
"You'll be safer in my care than in his," she said, with warning in her tone.
"Yes, yes, I know I am safe here, but how is it with my friend if I leave him here? We came together and we'll go together."
The crone nodded with a laugh that ended in a snarl.
"If the gang knew he was here there would be more fun than you saw the other night."
"Don't worry about me, Mr. Wilton," said Corson with a grin. "I've stood her crowd off before, and I can do it again if the need comes. But I'd rather smoke a poipe in peace."
"You can smoke in peace, but it's not yourself you can thank for it,"
said Mother Borton sharply. "There'll be no trouble here to-night. Come along." And the old woman started for the door.
"Are you sure you're all right?" asked Corson in a low voice. "There's men gone up those stairs that came down with a sheet over them."
"It's all right--that is, unless there's any danger to you in leaving you here."
"No. Go ahead. I'll wait for ye. I'd as lief sit here as anywheres."
I hastened after Mother Borton, who was glowering at me from the doorway, and followed her footsteps in silence to the floor above. There was a dim light and a foul smell in the upper hall, both of which came from a lamp that burned with a low flame on a bracket by the forward stair. There were perhaps a dozen doors to be seen, all closed, but all giving the discomforting suggestion that they had eyes to mark my coming.
Mother Borton walked the pa.s.sage cautiously and in silence, and I followed her example until she pushed open a door and was swallowed up in the blackness. Then I paused on the threshold while she lighted a candle; and as I entered, she swiftly closed and locked the door behind me.
"Sit down," she said in a harsh voice, motioning me to a chair by the stand that held the candle. Then this strange creature seated herself in front of me, and looked steadily and sternly in my face for a full minute. The gaze of the piercing, deep-sunken eyes of the old hag, the evil lines that marked the lean, sharp features, gaining a still more sinister meaning from the wavering, flickering light thrown upon her face by the candle, gave me a feeling of anything but ease in my position.
"What have you done that I should help you?" she broke forth in a harsh voice, her eyes still fixed on my face.
"I really couldn't say," I replied politely. "You have done me one or two services already. That's the best reason I know why you should do me another."
The hard lines on the face before me relaxed at the sound of my voice, and the old woman nodded approvingly.
"Ay, reason enough, I guess. Them as wants better can find it themselves. But why did you sneak out of the house the other night like a cop in plain clothes? Didn't I go bail you were safe? Do you want any better word than mine?" she had begun almost softly, but the voice grew higher and harsher as she went on.
"Why," I said, bewildered again, "the house sneaked away from me--or, at least you left me alone in it."
"How was that?" she asked grimly. And I described graphically my experience in the deserted building.
As I proceeded with my tale an amused look replaced the harsh lines of suspicion on Mother Borton's face.
"Oh, my lud!" she cried with a chuckle. "Oh, my lud! how very green you are, my boy. Oh ho! oh ho!" And then she laughed an inward, self-consuming laugh that called up anything but the feeling of sympathetic mirth.
"I'm glad it amuses you," I said with injured dignity.
"Oh, my liver! Don't you see it yet? Don't you see that you climbed into the next house back, and went through on to the other street?" And she relapsed into her state of silent merriment.
I felt foolish enough as the truth flashed over me. I had lost my sense of direction in the strange house, and had been deceived by the resemblance of the ground plan of the two buildings.
"But what about the plot?" I asked. "I got your note. It's very interesting. What about it?"
"What plot?"
"Why, I don't know. The one you wrote me about."
Mother Borton bent forward and searched my face with her keen glance.
"Oh," she said at last, "the one I wrote you about. I'd forgotten it."
This was disheartening. How could I depend on one whose memory was thus capricious?
"Yes," said I gloomily; "I supposed you might know something about it."