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"Yes, for me, or for anybody. He's got a perfect alibi."
"Always distrust the 'perfect alibi.' That's one of the first things you taught me, Mr. Stone."
"I know it, Fibs, but this alibi is unimpeachable."
"A peach of an alibi, hey?"
"That, indeed! You remember Joe Young, over at East Fallville?"
"Yes, sir, I do."
"Well, he says that his brother, Charlie Young, was at his house to dinner on that Sunday that Mrs. Pell was killed. He says Charlie arrived about half-past twelve, and he staid there until after four o'clock.
Says they were together all that time. Now, that man Joe Young, is, I am sure, an honest man. Besides, his story is verified by his wife. Of course, Charlie Young declares he was at his brother's during those hours, and in the face of all the corroboration I can't disbelieve it.
But, granting that alibi, who is left to suspect but Winston Bannard?"
"How'd Young catch onto all the pin and dime and receipt business, anyway?" asked Fibsy, with seeming irrelevance.
"I don't know, I'm sure."
"There's something back of that," and Fibsy wagged a sagacious nod.
"Maybe. But whatever's back of it may incriminate Young to the extent of trying to get the pin from Miss Clyde, perhaps even having stolen the receipt from Bannard, but it positively lets him out of any implication in the murder."
"Oh--I don't know."
"Why, child, if he was really at Joe Young's house from noon till four o'clock, how could he have been here at the time Mrs. Pell was killed?"
"He couldn't." Fibsy was taciturn, but his knitted brow told of deep thought.
"I got a hunch, Mr. Stone, that's all I can say for the minute--it mayn't be right, and then again it may, but--I got a hunch!"
"All right, Fibs, work it out your own way. But remember, that alibi stands. I can see a leak in a story as quickly as the next man, but that Joe Young is honest as the day, and his wife is too. And when they a.s.sert--we telephoned them, you know--when they a.s.sert that Charlie Young was there at that time, I believe he was."
"I believe it, too, Mr. Stone. Now, what about that dime?"
Fleming Stone took his strong magnifying-gla.s.s and studied the coin.
"Nothing on it, Fibs, except what belongs there. It might have been, as I hoped, that the keyword was one of these words that are stamped on, but I tried them all, any dime was all right for that. This particular ten-cent piece has no distinguis.h.i.+ng characteristics that I can see.
The date is of no help, I think, for unless I'm altogether wrong as to the type of cipher, figures are not usable. But I'll keep it safe until I'm sure it's no good."
"All right, Mr. Stone. Now, I guess I'll work on my hunch! Wanta help?"
"Yes, if it isn't beyond my power."
"Oh, come now," and Fibsy blushed scarlet at the realization that he had seemed to plume himself on his own cleverness, "but here's the way I'm goin' about it. Say I'm the murderer. Say that door's locked on this side." They were alone in Mrs. Pell's sitting room.
"Let's lock it, to help along the local color," suggested Stone, and he did so.
"Yes, sir. Now--but say, Mr. Stone, wait a minute. What became of those ropes?"
"Ropes?"
"Yes, that the murderer bound her ankles with and her wrists. Weren't we told that there were marks on her wrists and ankles where she'd been bound with ropes?"
"Yes, well, the murderer took those away with him."
"Did he 'bring 'em with him?"
"Probably."
"Then it wasn't Mr. Bannard. If he killed his aunt, which he didn't, he never came up here with a load of ropes and things! But never mind that, now. Say I'm the murderer. I've attacked the old lady and I've got the paper I wanted, and all that. Now, how do I get out!"
Fleming Stone watched the boy, fascinated. Absorbed in the spirit of his imagined predicament, Fibsy stood, his bright eyes darting about the room, as if really in search of a means of exit.
CHAPTER XVIII
SOLUTION AT LAST
"I am here," he muttered, "I have killed her, or, at least, she is dying--lying there on the floor, dying--I have to get out before the servants break in--I can't get out, there's no way I can get out. Mr.
Stone, he _didn't_ get out, because----"
"Because he wasn't in!" interrupted Fleming Stone, excitedly. "Oh, Fibs, do _you_ see it that way too?"
"Sure I do! Fancy anybody untyin' a lot o' ropes, and freein' the lady and makin' a getaway, ropes and all, in two or three minutes, and besides, he _couldn't_ get out!"
Fibsy stated this as triumphantly as if it were a new proposition. "The upset table," he went on, "the smashed lamp, with its long, green cord, the poor lady's dress open at the throat----"
"Yes," Stone nodded, eagerly, "yes,--and I daresay she had lace frills at her wrists and neck----"
"Of course she did! Oh, the plucky one!"
And then the two investigators put their heads together and reconstructed to their own satisfaction the whole scene of Mrs. Pell's tragic death.
"I'll go right over to see Young again," Stone said, at last, "and you skip around to see Mrs. Bowen; she'll tell you more than Miss Clyde can."
"Of course she will, and the dominie, too."
After a long argument, Fleming Stone persuaded Young that it would really be better for him to tell the truth, as to his movements on that fatal Sunday, than to persist in his falsehoods.
Stone did not tell the prisoner of his brother's confirmation of his unimpeachable alibi, but he told him that he was sure he did not murder Mrs. Pell.
"However," Stone said, "unless you tell the truth about her death, you will not only be suspected but convicted." And, finally, seeing it was his best hope, Young told his story.
"I went to the house about half-past eleven Sunday morning," he stated, "everybody had gone to church, and the old lady was there alone."