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Larubio's gaze roved uncertainly about the squalid quarters; but he shook his head, mumbling:
"G.o.d will protect the innocent. I know nothing, your Excellency."
They dragged him, still protesting, from his den as dogs drag an animal from its burrow. But Norvin had learned something. That momentary wavering glance, that flitting light of doubt and fear, had told him that to the cobbler the name of Cardi meant something real and terrible.
Back at headquarters O'Neil had further information for him.
"We've got Larubio's brother-in-law, Caspardo Cressi. It was his son, no doubt, whom you saw waiting at the corner."
"Have you found the boy?"
"No, he's gone."
"Then make haste before they have time to spirit him away. These men won't talk, but we might squeeze something out of the boy. He's the weakest link in the chain, so you _must_ find him."
The morning papers were on the street when Norvin went home. New Orleans had awakened to the outrage against her good name. Men were grouped upon corners, women were gossiping from house to house, the air was surcharged with a great excitement. It was as if a public enemy had been discovered at the gates, as if an alien foe had struck while the city slept. That unformed foreign prejudice which had been slowly growing had crystallized in a single night.
To Norvin the popular clamor, which rose high during the next few days, had a sickening familiarity. At the time of Martel Savigno's murder he had looked upon justice as a thing inevitable, he had felt that the public wrath, once aroused, was an irresistible force; yet he had seen how ineffectually such a force could spend itself. And the New Orleans police seemed likely to accomplish little more than the Italian soldiers. Although more than a hundred arrests were made, it was doubtful if, with the exception of Larubio and Cressi, any of the real culprits had been caught. He turned the matter over in his mind incessantly, consulted with O'Neil as to ways and means, conferred with the Mayor, sounded his friends. Then one morning he awoke to find himself at the head of a Committee of Justice, composed of fifty leading business men of the city, armed with powers somewhat vaguely defined, but in reality extremely wide. He set himself diligently to his task.
There followed through the newspapers an appeal to the Italian population for a.s.sistance, and offers of tremendous rewards. This resulted in a flood of letters, some signed, but mostly anonymous, a mult.i.tude of shadowy clues, of wild accusations. But no sooner was a promising trail uncovered than the witness disappeared or became inspired with a terror which sealed his lips. It began to appear that there was really no evidence to be had beyond what Norvin's eyes had photographed. And this, he knew, was not enough to convict even Larubio and his brother-in-law.
While thus baffled and groping for the faintest clue, he received a letter which brought him at least a ray of suns.h.i.+ne. He had opened perhaps half of his morning's mail one day when he came upon a truly remarkable missive. It was headed with an amateurish drawing or a skull; at the bottom of the sheet was a dagger, and over all, in bright red, was the life-size imprint of a small, plump hand.
In round, school-girl characters he read as follows:
"Beware! You are a traitor and a deserter, therefore you are doomed.
Escape is impossible unless you heed this warning. Meet me at the old house on St. Charles Street, and bring your ransom.
"THE AVENGER."
At the lower left-hand corner, in microscopic characters, was written:
"I love chocolate nougat best."
Norvin laughed as he re-read this sanguinary epistle, for he had to admit that it had given him a slight start. Being a man of action, he walked to the telephone and called a number which had long since become familiar.
"Is this the Creole Candy Kitchen? Send ten pounds of your best chocolate nougat to Miss Myra Nell Warren at once. This is Blake speaking. Wait! I have enough on my conscience without adding another sin. Perhaps you'd better make it five pounds now and five pounds a week hereafter. Put it in your fanciest basket, with lots of blue ribbon, and label it 'Ransom!'"
Next he called the girl himself, and after an interminable wait heard a breathless voice say:
"h.e.l.lo, Norvin! I've been out in the kitchen making cake, so I couldn't get away. It's in the oven now, cooking like mad."
"I've just received a threatening letter," he told her.
"Who in the world could have sent it?"
"Evidently some blackmailing wretch. It demands a ransom."
"Heavens! You won't be cowardly enough to yield?"
"Certainly. I daren't refuse."
He heard her laughing softly. "Why don't you tell the police?"
"Indeed! There's an army of men besieging the place now."
"Then you must expect to catch the writer?"
"I've been trying to for a long time."
"I'm sure I don't know what you are talking about," she said, innocently.
"Could I have sent the ransom to the wrong address?"
He pretended to be seized with doubt, whereupon Myra Nell exclaimed, quickly:
"Oh, not necessarily." Then, after a pause, "Norvin, how does a person get red ink off of her hands?"
"Use a cotton broker. Let him hold it this evening."
"I'd love to, but Bernie wouldn't allow it. It was his ink, you know, and I spilled it all over his desk. Norvin--is it really nougat?"
"It is, the most unhealthy, the most indigestible--"
"You _duck_! You _may_ hold my gory hand for--Wait!" Blake heard a faint shriek. "Don't ring off. Something terrible--" Then the wire was dead.
"h.e.l.lo! h.e.l.lo!" he called. "What's wrong, Myra Nell?" He rattled the receiver violently, and getting no response, applied to Central. After some moments he heard her explaining in a relieved tone:
"Oh, _such_ a fright as I had."
"What was it? For Heaven's--"
"The cake!"
"You frightened me. I thought--"
"It's four stories high and pasted together with caramel."
"You should never leave a 'phone in that way without--"
"Bernie detests caramel; but I'm expecting a 'certain party' to call on me to-night. Norvin, do you think red ink would hurt a cake?"
"Myra Nell," he said, severely, "didn't you wash your hands before mixing that dough?"
"Of course."
"I have my doubts. Will you really be at liberty this evening?"
"That depends entirely upon you. If I am, I shall exact another ransom--flowers, perhaps."