<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</SPAN></span>
<h2 class="nobreak">II<br/> THE PATHS OF JUDGMENT</h2></div>
<p class="drop-cap">JACK LANAGAN had a Sunday off, the first in
weeks. A man of whim and caprice in his
leisure moments, he had made no plans. This Sunday
morning, after idly reading the morning papers,
rolling and consuming innumerable brown paper
cigarettes meanwhile, he finally sallied forth in his
ill-fitting clothes toward the Palace grill and breakfast.
And this being luxuriously ended, he was
laved and shaved to his heart’s content. Then, perfumed
like a boulevardier, he issued forth into Market
Street to join that morning throng drifting down
toward the ferry building for the institutional Sunday
outing across the bay. He permitted himself
to drift with the current, perfectly and vastly at
ease with all the world. He had switched from
cigarettes to an evil Manila, poisoning the air cheerfully
for yards around him. Lanagan rather enjoyed
the exclusiveness given him by his noisome
cigars.</p>
<p>Rourke, Fleming, and little Johnny O’Grady of
the <i>Herald</i>, with a camera man, whirled out of Market
Street in an automobile, and Lanagan jerked
alertly round to watch them out of sight, speculating<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</SPAN></span>
as to what the story might be. He had half
determined to drift over to the office, when Truck
One swung into Market Street from O’Farrell.
Other fire apparatus was swinging into and out of
Market Street, clanging stridently, and Lanagan
turned again to the ferry. Fires interested him but
little. Always the chance, he remarked once to me
fastidiously, of some chump of a fireman squirting
water all over you, which spoiled your clothes. I
never knew whether Lanagan was having a quiet
joke in that or not. His entire wardrobe would
have been scorned by a rag picker.</p>
<p>He had been puffing his oakum industriously, and
now was attracted by the spectacle of a man beside
him nearly doubled over with a fit of coughing. He
was shaking and beating at his breast with large,
bony hands, and Lanagan noted professionally the
rheumatic knuckles and the nails like claws, yellow
and dirty. His breath came in sharp whistles,
short and staccato, and he was taking possibly a
third of a normal respiration at a time.</p>
<p>A particularly violent paroxysm, followed by all
evidences of entire suspension of breath, brought
Lanagan to the man’s side with a leap. He swung
the huddled form against a hydrant.</p>
<p>“Here you!” he called, to a passer-by, “call
Douglas 20 and tell them to shoot the harbour ambulance
up here.” To himself he said: “This man
is sick. He needs attention and needs it quick.”</p>
<p>But at the words the hunched, choking figure<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</SPAN></span>
straightened spasmodically, flashing a look upon
Lanagan that Lanagan, used to malevolence in all
its forms expressed upon features the most evil, had
not seen quite equalled. Accustomed to the ill-featured
and repulsive as they strain through the bars
at the city prison, yet even Lanagan started back
momentarily in revulsion.</p>
<p>“I have seen misers,” thought Lanagan, “but
this is the real miser of all fact and all fiction. I
would know him in a million. Fellow I used to see
in my dreams when I was a youngster. Pneumonia
sure. About six hours for him and then six feet.”</p>
<p>Thus lightly diagnosing and disposing of the man
and his case, Lanagan motioned the citizen, who
had meantime stopped, to go on with the call. But
the strange, gnomelike figure, flashing another look,
a singular blend of loathing, hate, fear, and timidity,
upon the newspaper man, started to hobble away.
Lanagan dropped his hand on the man’s shoulder to
restrain him. But the harsh features turned a look
so glowering and repellent upon him that he withdrew
the restraining hand. The coughing had
ceased. The little old man was still breathing
sibilantly and swiftly, rather like a panting dog or
cat, which he suggested, but by extraordinary effort
of will had fought away the more violent exhibition
of his seizure. He commenced to shuffle down the
street, with one furtive, fearful, backward look that
went on past Lanagan and up Market Street.</p>
<p>“You need a hospital, man,” said Lanagan<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</SPAN></span>
curtly, “and I’m going to take you there. Wait.”
He placed his hand again on the man’s shoulder.
But the manikin-like creature flung the hand viciously
from him and again flashed that strange look
of blended hate, fear, and timidity upon the newspaper
man.</p>
<p>“Let be!” he grated. “Let be!”</p>
<p>A car clanged to the safety station. The grotesque
figure, still half-hunched over at the paroxysm
from Lanagan’s Manila, started for it and Lanagan
made no further effort at detention. He climbed
laboriously to the platform, and Lanagan shrugged
his shoulders.</p>
<p>“I certainly am not going to dry-nurse you, old
man, but I ought to at that. If I ever saw a man
marked for death, you’re that man.”</p>
<p>Despite a long afternoon idled away beneath
mine host Pastori’s shade trees and the somnolent
influence of cobwebbed Chianti, Lanagan found his
miser’s features constantly before him.</p>
<p>“He’s my miser, too,” he mused, in the vernacular
of childhood. “I shouldn’t have let him escape
me after finding him.”</p>
<p>Returning late, Lanagan for once in his life went
to his room without his inevitable last call at police
headquarters. Consequently he was several hours
late in the morning on the news of a very fine police
story when he awakened to find his miser—Thaddeus
Miller of Oakland—pictured on the front
pages of all the morning papers. There was no<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</SPAN></span>
mistaking that face. It was his miser. He had
been murdered in his cabin, a clumsy attempt having
been made to fire the cabin to destroy the crime and
its evidence.</p>
<p>A young clerk, a neighbour to the miser, was under
arrest. It appeared that the clerk, James Watson,
was found named in the will as sole legatee to
an estate valued at close to a quarter of a million
dollars. Upon the Watson porch had been found
a hammer, freshly washed, the handle not yet dry.
But clinging to the claws, unobserved by whoever
had washed the blood from the hammer, were two
strands of white hair that brought the hammer
home to the crime in the cabin. Watson, the stories
related, had only known Miller for a few months.
He had been seen leaving the cottage shortly before
eight o’clock. The fire was discovered
smouldering at nine-thirty o’clock, extinguished, and
Miller found with his skull crushed, lying on a
kerosene-soaked bunk, to which, fortunately, the
clumsily started fire had not yet communicated.</p>
<p>Watson had made a bad case out for himself initially
by denying that he had seen Miller at all that
day or knowing that he was named in the will.
When confronted by neighbours who had seen him
leaving the cottage and one neighbour who had
heard his wife speak of the will, he took refuge in
protestations that he had denied everything through
fear and terror. He then admitted owning the
hammer, but professed himself at a loss to account<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</SPAN></span>
for the fact of its having been freshly washed and
of the strands of gray hair.</p>
<p>Raving his innocence, he had come to the verge
of physical collapse. He repeated constantly the
name of his wife and begged the police to bring her
to him. But he was being held in strict “detinue,”
the papers said, until the third degree was given him.
At the time of going to press confession was expected
momentarily.</p>
<p>Mrs. Watson, after a police examination, had
been permitted to return to her home. Her story
was that both she and her husband had befriended
Miller on different occasions, out of pity for his
forlorn and miserable condition. She admitted
that on one occasion he had jocularly remarked that
he would not forget her husband in his will, but had
attached no importance to his remark. She had
never heard him speak of any person that he feared.
She admitted that her husband had visited Watson
at his cabin in the evening, but that the circumstance
was not unusual. He had remained but a moment,
Miller being in an unusually morose mood—had
been so, in fact, for three or four days. She was
at a loss to account for the condition of the hammer.</p>
<p>“And yet,” growled Lanagan, “I’m eternally
doomed if I think either of them did it. That fellow
gave me a look that spelled fear; abject, abnormal
fear; it was the concentration of the fear of a
lifetime of a hare who runs with the dogs always<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</SPAN></span>
at his heels. And it was not fear of the Watsons
either.”</p>
<p>Lanagan, stopping at the office only long enough
to receive instructions, made the narrow-gauge
ferry by bowling over an obstreperous ticket-taker
who tried to shut the gate in his face. Not that
there was any particular need for such spectacular
haste; it was merely Lanagan’s way; Lanagan
“showing off,” as some of his professional brothers
would invidiously have it. But I, who knew him
better than any news writer in the business, say not.
Lanagan was a genuine eccentric. And in this particular
case he was fighting for time. Bitter experience
had taught him the value of minutes. Indeed,
a cardinal rule of his business that Lanagan
sought to drive into my slower newspaper intelligence
was to get on the ground first.</p>
<p>Lanagan knew of old that every city editor in
town would be accepting the very plausible police
version, and would be awaiting the expected confession
from Watson. Watson might confess, but,
Lanagan had a sullen “hunch” that he wouldn’t.</p>
<p>Lanagan moved most of the time by “hunches,”
as many successful newspaper men—to say nothing
of detectives—do. Hunches and luck may
be called by such fancy brands as inductive or deductive,
intensive or extensive analytical capacity;
but in the long run most crimes are solved on luck,
hunches, and through the invaluable aid of police
“stool pigeons,” more politely known as “sources.”<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</SPAN></span>
An intuitive judgment of men is about as good an
asset as a reporter or detective can have, coupled
with a faculty for quick decision and personal
bravery.</p>
<p>More than any one thing, it was possibly this
faculty for swift intuitive analysis that carried
Lanagan to his high degree of success. However,
man and man’s judgments are fallible; it was so
ordered in the original scheme of things, for very
obvious reasons.</p>
<p>Lanagan went directly to the Watson cottage.
The brilliant American police system had permitted
some scores of curious and morbid persons to
trample over every inch of ground within a hundred
yards of the Miller hut. Privileged friends
of the patrolman on guard there, after the traditional
American custom also, had been permitted
to slip inside and paw over the belongings and stare
to their hearts’ content. Lanagan knew of old
what the situation there would be. That could
wait. He was more concerned with having the first
meeting of the day with Mrs. Watson.</p>
<p>It was a modest little “bungalow style” of home
that he approached, much like that of any one of
thousands of small-salaried men in the transbay
suburban sections. An air of good taste, neatness,
and care in the trim little lawn, the cleanliness of
the walks, stairs and porch, and the precision with
which all of the shades were drawn against the
morning sun, marked it possibly a bit more individual<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</SPAN></span>
than many of its kind. Mrs. Watson herself
opened the door to his ring. She bore the outward
evidence of grief. Her eyes were red and
swollen, her cheeks hectic, her hair disheveled. She
was blond, with large blue eyes, set possibly a line
too closely together, chiseled nose, delicate, shapely
ears, saving the lobe was not quite as free as an
exact taste would require, and a well-moulded chin.</p>
<p>“I am Mr. Lanagan of the <i>Enquirer</i>,” he said,
adding some words of apology. He had a way with
women—and with men as well—when he so desired,
that was singularly ingratiating; a soft trick
of speech, an ingenuousness of manner, a certain
dignity that seemed to lift him from the mean atmosphere
of his ill-fitting clothes and marked him
with personality.</p>
<p>“You may come in,” said Mrs. Watson.</p>
<p>As he followed her to the parlour and she lifted
the shades, he noticed that she was of good figure,
rather lithe in her movements, laced well in for a
housewife unappareled for the street, not more than
three-and-twenty, and that she walked with that
scarcely perceptible lift of the shoulders and swing
of the hips that denotes a woman not entirely unconscious,
even in the stress of melancholy circumstances,
of the gaze of a man; a suggestion of affectation,
the unmistakable mark of a woman inclined
by temperament to be naturally frivolous; or even,
upon occasion, reckless. He noticed, too, that she
wore French heels.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</SPAN></span>“Curious type certainly,” commented Lanagan
mentally. “Sort of a domesticated coryphée; with
the homing instinct implanted where the wanderlust
was planted in her sisters. One who has settled
into marriage where her like settle, with as little
concern, into the round circle of the night lights.
Everything different except that generic vanity.
Rather an odd mating for a clerk, and a plodder
at that, to judge from his picture,” thought Lanagan.</p>
<p>Lanagan sat with his back to the window, putting
Mrs. Watson in the full light.</p>
<p>“Is there anything you can say, Mrs. Watson,
that could throw any light upon this affair? Any
enemies that Miller ever spoke about? Any visitors
that he has had of late? Any letters or other messages
that he received? Any threats?”</p>
<p>She threw both hands forth with a despairing
gesture.</p>
<p>“Nothing, nothing!” she moaned, as tears came.
“It is terrible, terrible! He is innocent, innocent
I say! I know he is innocent! I know it!”</p>
<p>She sobbed for a moment, and then, with a sudden
gesture of determination, straightened up, dried
her eyes, and composed herself.</p>
<p>Lanagan had been watching her with eyes that
seemed to narrow and lessen to little black beads.
His ears, gifted with abnormal power for receiving
and disintegrating into each component shade of
meaning or emotion the tones of the human voice,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</SPAN></span>
drank in every word that she uttered, marked each
sob that shook her form.</p>
<p>“You do not believe your husband guilty, do
you?”</p>
<p>Her lips parted in an exclamation of protest, and
Lanagan for the first time caught the upper lip;
a lip as thin as a paper cutter, that drew tautly and
white across the perfect teeth. It suggested a knife
to Lanagan.</p>
<p>“She holds true to the type,” he commented to
himself grimly. “A curious type, surely, for a
prosaic clerk!”</p>
<p>Lanagan’s brain was churning. His beady eyes
gleamed as though touched with phosphorescence.
Under the concentration of his gaze, the woman unconsciously
shrank. Rising from his chair with a
movement almost tigerish, he strode before her, upturned
her face so that her eyes looked straight up
into his, and then, his voice terrific in its tension,
and yet scarcely louder than a whisper, said:</p>
<p>“Did <i>you</i> wheedle Thaddeus Miller into making
a will in your favour and then murder him?”</p>
<p>So quickly that her act seemed rather involuntary
than by any conscious impulse, she leaped to her feet,
her breast rising and falling tumultuously. She
struggled inarticulately for speech, raised her hand
as though to strike him in the face, and collapsed in
a swoon at his feet.</p>
<p>Lanagan gazed coldly down upon her without
qualm. He was impersonal now; the incarnation<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</SPAN></span>
of newspaper truth. He only regretted that she
had balked him by swooning. Swiftly he straightened
her out, loosed her collar, and was busily engaged
chafing her hands when heavy footfalls
sounded from the porch, and the bell rang loudly.</p>
<p>“By the brogans and the ring, our friends of the
upper office,” commented Lanagan cynically as he
opened the door. Quinlan and Pryor from the
Oakland department entered, viewing Lanagan suspiciously
as they beheld the still form upon the
floor.</p>
<p>“She’s in better shape for the hospital than your
third degree in the detinue cells,” remarked Lanagan,
vouchsafing no explanations. “Went out just
this minute as I was interviewing her.”</p>
<p>Quinlan and Pryor settled themselves heavily, lit
fresh cigars, made laboured notes of the circumstances,
and, when Lanagan finally restored the woman,
gave her some breathing space and then informed
her that she was to be taken to see her husband.
To Lanagan she directed no look—addressed
no word. She moved as one in a trance.</p>
<p>The detectives and their prisoner departed and
Lanagan turned for the Miller cottage.</p>
<p>“That was a pure soul’s denial or it was a guilty
soul’s defiance,” thought Lanagan. “But which?”</p>
<p>Long he turned that over.</p>
<p>“Frankly, on type I mistrust her; but what about
that look in Miller’s eyes?”</p>
<p>Lanagan seldom went back on a “hunch.” At<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</SPAN></span>
first flash he had declared the Watsons innocent.
He was not yet ready to abandon that; and yet the
circumstances were certainly trending toward them.</p>
<p>“But,” he concluded, “there’s a nigger in this
woodpile somewhere that I haven’t located.”</p>
<p>The cottage had nothing to offer. Police, curio
hunters, and shoals of newspaper men had combed
it Lanagan hurried to the Oakland police headquarters
and cocked his feet on Inspector Henley’s
desk while that astute individual detailed to him
the various steps taken by the police in fixing the
crime on Watson. Lanagan was nettled. It
sounded highly convincing.</p>
<p>“You’re sure of Watson?” he finally asked,
quizzically, helping himself to a fist-full of Henley’s
cigars.</p>
<p>“Clearest case I have ever handled,” said Henley,
moving the cigar box out of reach. “Every link
is complete. Further: the woman is in on it and
we’ll have her within twenty-four hours. We’ll get
the case before Baxter and they’ll swing inside of
three months.”</p>
<p>“Well,” drawled Lanagan, “you’re wrong again,
Henley.”</p>
<p>The inspector flushed. He had a lively recollection
of how Lanagan had “trimmed” him on the
Stockslager murder and he didn’t take kindly to the
“again.”</p>
<p>“We’ve got the motive, the property; and the
means, the hammer. What more do you want?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</SPAN></span>“Well, to complete the alliteration, I suppose you
want the murderer,” said Lanagan with a faint
laugh. “And you haven’t got him. Pretty good
smokes. Just slip back that box. I don’t get over
your way very often. You act as though you had
paid for those cigars yourself. Can I see Watson?”</p>
<p>“No,” said Henley, surlily. He never cared to
argue the little matters such as Lanagan was fond
of nagging him with; some way he had a feeling
that Lanagan always knew just a trifle more than
he told. He passed back the box. “But it’s an
even break. Nobody’s seen him. Here’s his picture.”</p>
<p>Lanagan studied the front and profile of a young
man of twenty-six, a face of surprising frankness
and honesty. Every line held to Lanagan’s critical
eye the lie to the number striped across his breast;
another feature of our brilliant American police system
that puts the rogue’s gallery blazon on a man
before he is tried.</p>
<p>As Lanagan passed out, his eye fell on the bulletin
board in the detectives’ room. The last discharge
slip from San Quentin was pasted upon it,
the slip by which all police stations are supposed
to keep in touch with prisoners discharged during
the past month. But through long familiarity few
of the detectives stop to read carefully. More from
habit than anything else, Lanagan read those sheets
as a preacher reads the book—he scanned it.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</SPAN></span>The fifth name on the list caught his eye:
Ephraim Miller, alias Thad Miller, alias Thornton
Miles, alias Iowa Slim; assault to murder; twenty-five
years. The slip was dated the first—five days
back. There was little chance of its being read
now. Swift as a lightning flash Lanagan had
formed his theory. His mind leaped back to the
meeting with Miller in front of the Palace.
Ephraim and Thaddeus; they were old-fashioned
names. Then there was the “Thad.”</p>
<p>Miller had been from San Quentin but four days:
Miser Miller’s fear had been on him but a few days.
Possibly this was a wayward son, some unrecognised
offspring, some family skeleton recrudescent;
perhaps it was this convict who had brought that
fear into the eyes of Thaddeus Miller!</p>
<p>It was a long, fine chance; but the most brilliant
of newspaper successes are scored on long, fine
chances. Lanagan determined to take it. He
“rapped” to the hunch, as he used to style it; under
the impulse of his new idea he was a human dynamo.</p>
<p>He was back in San Francisco within an hour,
and headed straight for Billy Connors’ Buckets of
Blood, that famed rendezvous within a stone’s
throw of the Hall of Justice, where the leaders of
the thieves’ clans foregathered. There he waited
an hour until “Kid” Monahan, popularly designated
as King of the Pick-pockets, came in. The
Kid was now a fence. He had retired from the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</SPAN></span>
active practice of his profession after doing time
twice. “Ain’t there with the touch any more,”
he remarked sadly to Lanagan one day. He
was, moreover, credited with being the man for
an outsider to “see” who wanted to operate locally.</p>
<p>“Kid,” said Lanagan, “I want you to find me
Ephraim Miller, alias Thad Mills, alias Thornton
Miles, alias Iowa Slim. Just out of San Quentin
where he did twenty-five years for assault to murder.”</p>
<p>“We don’t keep no line on these old ones,” retorted
the “King” professionally. “But if he’s
goin’ to report here he reports to me. It’s pretty
hard on us native sons with that reform bunch on
the Police Commission and the sky pilots stuffing
you guys on the papers full of knocks. There ain’t
no touch-off work bein’ done around here by any
travellers that we can help. When do you want
him?”</p>
<p>“Meet me here to-night at ten. I must have
him located by then.”</p>
<p>Lanagan had befriended the “King” once, and
he held that illustrious gentleman’s absolute loyalty.
He knew the “King” would have a dozen men out
in as many minutes.</p>
<p>Lanagan headed back for Oakland to round up
the loose ends of the story. He found police headquarters
jammed with newspaper men and the smell
of many flash powders heavy on the air.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</SPAN></span>“All right, Mr. Lanagan of the <i>Enquirer</i>,” quoth
Henley. “You can talk to Watson now.” His
tone was triumph.</p>
<p>Watson had confessed. He was sitting in a
chair in the Inspector’s room, a huddled figure of
misery. The mantle of age seemed to have settled
on him overnight.</p>
<p>Lanagan was a hard loser. He stepped over to
the huddled man.</p>
<p>“Do you mean to tell me, Watson,” he said so
low that no one but Watson heard him; “do you
mean to tell me that you are not lying, putting your
neck in the noose—to save your wife?”</p>
<p>“No! No!” the denial was a shriek. “I killed
him! I killed him for his money, I tell you!”
He fell back, shivering.</p>
<p>Lanagan drove in on him. “You lie, I tell you,”
he hissed. “You lie! You fool! It’s bound to
come out! Tell the truth!”</p>
<p>“No, no,” moaned Watson. “I did it alone.
God! I can feel his skull crunching yet!”</p>
<p>“You’ve got more imagination than I credited
you with,” sneered Lanagan savagely. “That last
was a good touch.”</p>
<p>There was a hustle as Quinlan and Pryor came
through the prison gates from the detinue cells surrounded
by an eager coterie of newspaper men.</p>
<p>“We’ve got her, Inspector!” cried Quinlan with
unprofessional feeling. “She’s ‘spilled.’ Killed
him herself, and says her husband is lying if he says<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</SPAN></span>
he did it. They’re both in it. We will have the
whole thing now.”</p>
<p>The woman was then brought out after her
official statement had been taken. Nothing that the
newspaper men could do could shake her story. In
substance she said that she had worked on the old
man for months to have the will made out in her
husband’s favour. Knowing her husband was
above such a deed, she planned and executed it
alone. She had not had an opportunity to wash
the hammer after she returned home, and only did
so when the furor commenced. That was why it
was still damp and why she had overlooked the two
strands of incriminating gray hair.</p>
<p>The newspaper camera men snapped and exploded
flashes; the inquisitorial circle broke up, and Watson
having been removed, the room was cleared of
all save Henley, Mrs. Watson, and Lanagan.</p>
<p>“Through?” asked Henley sarcastically.</p>
<p>“No,” snapped Lanagan. “You say you killed
this man. I say, Mrs. Watson, you’re a liar. You
no more killed that man than I did. You are lying
to save your husband!”</p>
<p>His voice had risen; his aspect was fairly ferocious;
his sallow face flushed to an unwholesome
grey-blue; his eyes glowing again with that catlike
phosphorescence that she had seen and quailed at
once before.</p>
<p>But again he was doomed to disappointment at a
breakdown, for again under the shock she collapsed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</SPAN></span>
after half rising to her feet with evident purpose
to give him the lie as violently as he gave it to her.</p>
<p>Women, Lanagan reflected, are like electric wires.
They are drawn to carry just so much voltage. A
little overplus and they burn out. Each time he had
bullied the woman just as her nerves were at the
breaking point.</p>
<p>The matron bustled in with a side compliment on
Lanagan for his brutality, and lifted the limp form.
Lanagan, bitterly chagrined at the events of the day,
turned on his heel to return to San Francisco. On
the ferry he broke a vow of six months and fell
back on absinthe. He reached the office at seven
o’clock, wrote steadily for two hours a story identical
as he knew it would be with all the morning
papers, and then went out.</p>
<p>The word was passed swiftly that Lanagan was
drinking again, and I was released for the night to
round him up and get him home—my usual assignment
under the circumstances.</p>
<p>On the chance that some of the choice spirits that
foregather at Connors’ dive might have crossed his
path, I dropped in there, and, to my unbounded relief,
saw Lanagan himself at a table in deep conversation
with “Kid” Monahan. I went over to
his table, the “King” slipping out the side door.
I had not Lanagan’s penchant for camaraderie with
that breed, and took little pains not to let him know
it.</p>
<p>The old wild, reckless light shone from Lanagan’s<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</SPAN></span>
eyes, and I knew there was no measuring his stride
that night, making pace or keeping it.</p>
<p>He laughed aloud. “Art there, old truepenny?”
and slapped my shoulder. He was in high
feather with himself, that was clear. “Come.
Have you got your gun?” I nodded.</p>
<p>“That’s fine. Now for the grand ‘feenale,’ as
Cæsar says about his <i>ponce à la toscana</i>. And success
to all hunches!” There was something besides
absinthe burning back in those eyes.</p>
<p>Questions were useless, so I trailed along. At
Macnamara’s corner we picked up Brady and Wilson,
two of Chief Leslie’s trustiest men.</p>
<p>“Did the chief instruct you?” asked Lanagan.</p>
<p>“He said to report to you and keep our heads
shut or tend daisies,” replied Brady, the senior of
the pair, and a cool and heady thief-taker; also the
champion pistol shot of the department.</p>
<p>“My man is Iowa Slim, wanted for murder. Is
heavily armed and desperate. He’s in the Tokio—Jap
lodging house at Dupont and Clay. It looks
like break the door and rush. Wilson, Norton, and
I will take the door, and you, Brady, stand free of
the rush and be ready to drop him if he shows fight.
That is, Norton will—” turning to me in his quizzical,
bantering way, “—if he relishes the job!”</p>
<p>I didn’t relish the job. But, as usual, when he
spoke to me in that superior, teasing way I blundered
in valiantly where my native caution would
have feared to tread. I am free to admit that I am<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</SPAN></span>
of that branch of the profession that believes a reporter
full of lead in peace or war is of very little
use on earth, and certainly not elsewhere, to the
paper that employs him.</p>
<p>In the shadows the detectives nonchalantly slipped
their revolvers into their side coat pockets. Neither
was cumbered by an overcoat; double-line your sack
coat, the old-timers will tell you, but keep away from
excess encumbrances where possible. One gallant
officer in my time lost his life because he was two
seconds delayed unbuttoning an overcoat for his
gun.</p>
<p>Fifteen minutes later we assembled, one by one,
at convenient corners to the Tokio, a foul-smelling,
ramshackle affair. One by one we drifted in,
slipped off our shoes and tiptoed up the stairs, Lanagan
in the lead, Norton bringing up the rear.</p>
<p>Lanagan paused before a corner door. He and
Wilson braced against it. My bulk backed Wilson.
Brady towered above us, standing free to have a
clear sweep with both guns. He turned the light
on full, taking every chance of making targets of
us all for the one chance of getting a drop on Slim
without bloodshed.</p>
<p>From an adjacent room a clock ticked loudly;
somebody rolled over in bed, and the sounds came
so clearly that it seemed my heart must have beat
as loudly as a trip hammer. Yet it was not exactly
fear, as I recall it; it was a sort of nervous tension
to have it over with if it had to come.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</SPAN></span>“Slim! Slim!” It was a soft, sibilant whisper,
and I could scarcely believe my ears. It was Lanagan
at the keyhole. Then he rapped four times in
quick, soft staccato, and then four times more.
It was some code he had learned, possibly from
Monahan.</p>
<p>There was a prolonged pause, and the sound of
someone from within turning in bed, and another
long pause. The strain on me was terrific. From
the corner of my eye I caught the black muzzle of
Brady’s left-hand gun. It was as steady as though
held in a vise, and I had time to marvel.</p>
<p>“Slim! Slim! They’re after me! It’s Larry
Bowman’s pal, Shorty!”</p>
<p>Another nerve-racking pause, and then at the very
keyhole came through a soft, throaty whisper:</p>
<p>“Who?”</p>
<p>“Shorty Davis. Larry said you’d take me in.
Quick, Slim, they’re after me!”</p>
<p>A key grated, the knob turned.</p>
<p>“Now!” hissed Lanagan, and with one mighty
lurch we burst pell-mell into the room. I caught a
flashing look at a slender, flannel-shirted figure with
a week’s growth of beard as Slim whirled a foot
ahead of us and with one leap cleared the room and
swung with a murderous long-barrelled Colt in his
hand.</p>
<p>His leap was quicker than the spring of a cat.
He shot from the hip, but Brady, posted to do just
the trick he did, spoiled the shot. Slim’s bullet<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</SPAN></span>
ripped a two-inch hole through the floor as he crumpled
down in a heap.</p>
<p>We stretched him upon the bed. He had got it
in the lungs. Wilson started for the doctor.</p>
<p>“Remember,” said Lanagan, “the chief’s orders.
You are not to talk. If it gets out, tell all reporters
it’s a detinue case. I’ll answer for the rest.”</p>
<p>A few gnomelike, corpselike, yellow faces peered
from doors, but a flash from Brady’s star sent them
scurrying back. The shot was apparently not heard
in the street, for no one came.</p>
<p>Lanagan turned to Slim, who was choking.</p>
<p>“You know what you were wanted for, Slim?”
he asked in as cool a voice as a surgeon might ask
for your pulse.</p>
<p>“That Oakland job, I suppose,” he gasped.
“Well, boys, you did me a good turn croaking me.
I never wanted to go back to that hell hole again.
I did what I came out to do, what I’ve waited
twenty-five years to do, and I’m ready to take my
judgment. He sent me up there twenty-five years
ago, and he murdered my father as surely as there
is a God, who will some day dope it all out right
according to a different scheme than they do here.”</p>
<p>Gasping, with many halts, he told his story. The
surgeon came, shook his head, and devoted himself
to keeping life until the story was taken down.</p>
<p>His father, a wealthy Iowan, had come to Thaddeus
Miller’s ranch thirty years ago, bringing with
him his entire fortune for investment. The son<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</SPAN></span>
Ephraim remained at school back home. At Miller’s
ranch the boy’s father had been found in the
well one day, drowned. A whiskey bottle floated
on the water beside him. His entire estate had been
willed to Thaddeus Miller. In a sparsely settled
community Thaddeus Miller’s story had been accepted—that
the brother, in drink, had stumbled
into the well. The son had journeyed across the
continent to find himself disinherited. He had always
been told he was to be his father’s heir. His
father in Iowa had been a strict abstainer. So far
as the son knew, he had never touched liquor. But
his charge, that Thaddeus had in some fashion gotten
his father intoxicated, forced him to sign a will,
and then pitched him into the well with the bottle,
while it created some natural excitement, could never
be proved, and in the course of time became forgotten.
In spite of a contest, the will stood.</p>
<p>Ephraim took to drink and fell in with evil companions.
For petty offences he was sentenced and
earned his name of Iowa Slim. One night in
liquor, fired with his wrongs, he determined to ransack
Miller’s house. He knew the old man kept a
large amount of money concealed there. It was his,
he believed, and he determined to have it. Miller
had caught him. In the scuffle he beat his uncle
and left him for dead, and in the stovepipe he had
found a bag of gold. But as he was leaving the
grounds, neighbours, driving along on the lonely
country road, who had heard the first screams of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</SPAN></span>
old man, surrounded him. The uncle prosecuted
him with all the wealth and influence at his command,
and the son, at the age of eighteen years, was
sentenced to San Quentin for twenty-five years
for assault to murder.</p>
<p>As sentence was pronounced he had turned on his
uncle and warned him that the day he was freed
from prison he would come back and kill him.
From time to time he had managed to send threats
by discharged convicts, who carried the word with
the unfailing obligation of the convict brotherhood.
He had driven the old man from place to
place.</p>
<p>He had lost track of him for an entire year, and
was planning how best to locate him again when he
unexpectedly met him face to face on the streets of
San Francisco, followed him to his home, waited
until the neighbourhood was quiet, and then had
stolen in, wakened the old man from sleep, and
asked about his father’s property.</p>
<p>Under the fear of death Miller had made a promise
of restitution, but in an unguarded moment he
said he “would make a new will.” Slim demanded
what he meant by a new will, and the uncle had confessed
the will to the Watsons merely to cheat the
nephew in case he had come back and fulfilled his
courtroom threat. The uncle had kept count and
knew to a day when Slim was to be released. Enraged
beyond endurance at that, Slim had seized up
the hammer and crushed the old man’s head.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</SPAN></span>“But as I live,” he breathed hoarsely, “the man
was as good as dead before I hit him.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” Lanagan interrupted, “I know that,
Slim.”</p>
<p>Slim looked at Lanagan with dull curiosity, but
was too far gone to ask explanations, and he continued
with his story, telling of sprinkling kerosene
and touching it with a match. He then had gone
to the Watson cottage, carrying the hammer, intending
if the couple were not in to locate and destroy
the will; and if they were to do double murder if
necessary to get it. Miller had said they had it, an
untruth, told evidently in the childish hope that Slim
might leave him and search for it. While still waiting
for an opportunity of entering the house, the
smouldering fire had been discovered at the Miller
cottage, and he had fled, the thought coming to him
to leave the hammer on the Watson porch, not
knowing the hammer belonged to them and had
been borrowed by Miller. The arrest of the
two for murder might pave the way for him to
have his property restored as the next of kin to
Miller.</p>
<p>He signed the confession laboriously, and the
story was done.</p>
<p>“It’s all right, cull,” he said to Brady, dropping
back to the vernacular. “You did me a good trick
not sending me back. There ain’t no hard feelings
on my part.”</p>
<p>He raised himself by a sudden effort, his eyes<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</SPAN></span>
peering far, far away and beyond the sordid scene
of his dissolution.</p>
<p>“I squared—all—accounts—dad—I
squ’—”</p>
<p>He dropped back on the pillow. The surgeon
bent his head to Slim’s breast, then slowly straightened
up and drew the sheet over his face.</p>
<p>“Poor lad!” said Lanagan softly. “They will
judge you differently there!”</p>
<p>Then again the newspaper mind curtly:</p>
<p>“Brady, you and Wilson stay here until I come
back. Nobody gets in. Nobody, understand?
Doc, we’ll have to impound you, too, until three.
Understand, Brady?” Brady nodded.</p>
<p>“Now, Norrie,” snapped Lanagan incisively,
“beat it, boy, beat it!”</p>
<p>For two hours Lanagan and I fed paper into our
typewriters, with Sampson himself whisking the
sheets away as they came from the platens. The
M. E. even came in once or twice and tried to preserve
his dignity while he scanned the copy hot from
the typewriter.</p>
<p>The thrill of Lanagan’s great exclusive was
throughout the entire plant. Not a half-dozen people
in the office knew just what the story was, but
each knew by the subtle instinct of communication
that the big scoop of the year was shooting down
the pneumatic to the composing room.</p>
<p>Not until we had the first papers, sticky and inky
and fragrant, in our eager fingers, did we stir from<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</SPAN></span>
our desks. Then followed the usual jubilation as
the scouts ran in with the <i>Times</i> and the <i>Herald</i>
with the “Watsons Confess” scareheads.</p>
<p>Ah, that is life, that exaltation of the “exclusive”!</p>
<p>We wandered leisurely down to the Tokio. The
story was wide open now. We were through. The
morgue notified, Brady and Wilson stayed to attend
to the routine, and Lanagan announced that he was
going to Oakland.</p>
<p>We caught the paper boat, riding luxuriously on
heaps of <i>Enquirers</i>. Thus it happened that we were
at police headquarters there with the copies of our
own paper before the route carriers had made their
deliveries. Lanagan stepped to the ’phone and rang
up Henley.</p>
<p>“Feel like buying a drink?” asked Lanagan.</p>
<p>Over the wire came back some hearty and measured
compliments. “You’re sure in an amiable humour.
Well, come down. You’ve got two prisoners
to free. If conditions at your jail weren’t so
rotten I wouldn’t say anything till morning. But I
need a drink, which is on you, and the Watsons need
a breath of fresh air.” In fifteen minutes Henley
was with us.</p>
<p>He was a gallant officer, that Henley. When
he had finished he wrung Lanagan’s hand until I
thought he never would let go.</p>
<p>“Bring in the Watsons,” he ordered.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</SPAN></span>In a moment they came in, a weary, worn, misery-marked
couple. It was their first meeting since
their imprisonment. With a sob, asking no why
or wherefore, Mrs. Watson fell into her husband’s
arms and mingled her tears with his. Her sobs—weary,
worn, tired little sobs—echoed softly under
the vaulted ceiling.</p>
<p>“I am pleased to inform you,” Henley said
grandly, “that through the efforts of our brilliant
young friend of the <i>Enquirer</i>, the murderer of Miller
has been located. You are free.”</p>
<p>Then followed such a scene of hysterical gladness
and tearful, joyous explanations as Henley’s room,
that had beheld many strange and unusual scenes,
had never witnessed.</p>
<p>Of course Watson, when arrested, confronted
with the hammer and told that his wife had confessed,
had yielded to the third degree and, unable
to accept the full horror of it, yet had swiftly formed
his plan to confess to save the woman he loved, even
though she might have done the deed.</p>
<p>She, on her part, told a similar story, had
formed her plan, for it appeared that when the
furor was raised after the murder was discovered
she had found the hammer on her porch with
fresh blood stains; knew it had been in Miller’s
cottage, and had washed it hurriedly, not knowing
in her excitement just what to do, her husband even
then having been taken to the scene of the crime by
the police.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</SPAN></span>In face of his confession and her own hammer
found stained in such manner, she had actually believed
that he had committed the crime.</p>
<p>The police automobile drove up and the Watsons
were escorted to it.</p>
<p>For the twentieth time, her eyes still tear-filled,
Mrs. Watson said: “What can we ever do to thank
you, Mr. Lanagan?”</p>
<p>“Forgive me certain brutal conduct,” laughed
that individual. “As I hope the Lord will forgive
me,” he added <i>sotto voce</i>, “for misjudging you.”</p>
<p>As the automobile sped away to return a very
happy couple to their home, Lanagan, hat doffed and
in hand, bowed profoundly after the retreating machine,
and remarked with veneration to the world
at large:</p>
<p>“The tenth woman, gentlemen, the tenth woman.”</p>
<p>Then to Henley: “Inspector, I believe you said
something about buying?”</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="ph2">III<br/>
THE CONSPIRACY OF ONE</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr class="tb" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />