<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</SPAN></span>
<h2 class="nobreak">III<br/> THE CONSPIRACY OF ONE</h2></div>
<p class="drop-cap">“KIND of caught you fellows off base, Norrie.”</p>
<p>Bradley, star man for the <i>Herald</i>, drawled it at
me invidiously as I entered the police reporters’
room at the Hall of Justice. Merriman of the
<i>Times</i> and a half-dozen morning paper men, their
copy turned in, had drifted down to the room to
await any late developments. The Ratto story had
been on for three days and the <i>Herald</i> and the
<i>Times</i> had “put over” the arrest of Bernardo Tosci,
Camorrist, at the expense of Lanagan and myself.</p>
<p>“Better shoot a few absinthe drips into Lanagan,”
continued Bradley, “and then maybe you’ll land
something. He’s been sober so long he’s lost his
grip.”</p>
<p>Bradley had fared hardly at the expense of Lanagan
on more than one occasion. I was about to
fling it back at him when Lanagan’s voice interrupted
me. He had entered the room unfortunately
just in time to hear Bradley’s words.</p>
<p>“Possibly,” he said.</p>
<p>There was an embarrassed pause. Lanagan had
a caustic tip to his tongue and they awaited it now.
He studied Bradley without expression, leaning<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</SPAN></span>
against the door sill. But, curiously enough, there
was no outburst. It was always difficult to foresay
just what form Lanagan’s humour would take.</p>
<p>“Charley,” he said at last to Bradley, and there
shaded into his voice a subtle colouring of unconscious
pathos, “What have I ever done to you? I
have never done you dirt; nor any man in the business
dirt. I have played the game square. Why
is it that I am always singled out like that? Have
I ever betrayed my paper or my friends? Have I
ever brought dishonour to the name of the newspaperman?
If I have drunk, it has been out of the
public sight.</p>
<p>“I have fought hard, Charley; fought hard to
break the habit. It belongs to a past day in our
game. And irrespective of that I may wish to be
remembered around here some day as something
other than drunken Jack Lanagan. I can’t help it
if I have a knack of landing stories. I’ve got to
play the game right with my paper, haven’t I?
And here in this reporters’ room of all places I
thought for a little lift and a hand along and you
are trying to shove me down.”</p>
<p>His voice hardened in bitterness:</p>
<p>“I’ve played a lone hand all my life, though,
Charley; it seems to be in the cards that I keep it
up.”</p>
<p>My eyes blurred because I alone knew how hard
he had fought that battle. Beneath his cynical exterior
he had a soul as sensitive to slights as a girl.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</SPAN></span>
Boyishly I made a lunge at Bradley, but Lanagan,
with a swift move, had my arm in that lean, powerful
hand of his.</p>
<p>“It don’t go,” he said, softly. “We are full
grown men.”</p>
<p>There was an awkward pause. Then Merriman,
of few words, said sententiously:</p>
<p>“It’s your move, Charley.”</p>
<p>And Bradley put out his hand, which Lanagan
took.</p>
<p>“Jack,” said the <i>Herald</i> man, “I’m a cad. There
isn’t a righter man in the game than you.”</p>
<p>“Forget it then,” said Lanagan. “I have.”</p>
<p>But as we left the reporters’ room together I noticed
that the whiteness that had come over Lanagan’s
face remained there.</p>
<p>“Don’t let it worry you, Jack,” I said anxiously.</p>
<p>“Don’t you bother, laddie. He did me more
good than liquor, and I never felt the dragging for
the stuff worse than to-night. I’m going into this
story now for fair, and I’m going in to smash the
<i>Times</i> and the <i>Herald</i> flatter than a matrix.”</p>
<p>The Ratto case was one that occupied considerable
public attention several years ago, interest arising
in the first instance through the peculiar manner
in which the crime was disclosed. Ratto, a wealthy
Italian commission merchant, had disappeared, no
great commotion being raised for the first few days.
The police made the customary desultory “search”—the
“search” consisting mainly of the name and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</SPAN></span>
description of Ratto being read out at the watches
in the various station-houses. The mystery in the
disappearance might have remained unsolved for
weeks had it not been for a lineman, Waters, who,
perched on the cross-tree of a telegraph pole commanding
a view of the windows of a room in the
vacant house where Ratto’s dead body lay, made
the discovery. No policeman being in the vicinity,
Waters, with residents of the vicinity, entered the
house.</p>
<p>There had followed much newspaper speculation
and police deduction. The Mafia and the Camorra
came in for attention, the latter organisation being
one that was at that time—long before the Viterbo
trials—just coming to the attention of the American
regular police and the secret service, as counterfeiting
of American currency formed one of the
Camorra accomplishments.</p>
<p>The peculiar interest in the manner in which the
Ratto killing was discovered was this: three months
previously a crime had been discovered under almost
identical circumstances by the same lineman,
Waters. In that case Rosendorn, a Jewish tailor,
was found after a several days’ disappearance by
Waters, at work on the lines, who happened to see
the body as he glanced through the window of a
vacant house from his elevated perch. Following
the discovery of the body by Waters the case had
been speedily cleared up by the police and proved to
be an affair arising from conjugal jealousy.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</SPAN></span>Waters was a man well advanced in years. The
strain of the appearance at the coroner’s jury and
the preliminary hearings in the police court appeared
slightly to unbalance his mind. The spectacle of
the murdered man that he beheld through the windows
of the vacant house was constantly before him.
He was a man who had gone through a placid life
and never figured in any scene of shocking violence
or of murder.</p>
<p>After the disposal of the Rosendorn case Waters
became possessed of a mania for climbing telegraph
poles commanding the windows of vacant houses.
Here and there and everywhere about the city he
might be seen spiking himself up a pole, peering
intently, and scuttling down. He was a familiar
figure to all policemen and many citizens. He made
a practice of haunting police headquarters, and, his
imagination beginning evidently to visualise the first
scene, once or twice led futile parties into vacant
houses with the declaration that he had discovered a
body. The police reporters humoured him and he
came to know the most of them, particularly Lanagan,
who found Waters’ case was of profound interest.
Several stories were written about him and
his self-appointed cross-beam task of discovering
murdered people in vacant houses.</p>
<p>And then—he “made good.” Weeks of poking
and prying and shinning up and down telegraph
poles brought their reward and Waters discovered
another crime: that of Ratto. He had been slain<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</SPAN></span>
with an ordinary blackjack, which was found by
the body.</p>
<p>During the three days of excitement following
the discovery of the commission merchant’s body
Waters thrived upon the publicity that he received.
He carried bundles of papers containing accounts
of his “find” and with his picture taken in many
ways: climbing up telegraph poles, peering into a
window from a cross-tree—a camera man nearly
lost his life slipping on a cross beam taking this
picture, and as he looked ten years ago, his last
“gallery” picture unearthed “exclusively” by a
proud “cub” reporter. He was as tickled as a boy,
and it was confidently predicted around police headquarters
that he would find an end in an insane
asylum from pure joy in a month.</p>
<p>But the Ratto case did not clear up quite as easily
as had the Rosendorn case. It will be recalled in
San Francisco that a swift night ride in the police
launch to Black Diamond had resulted in the arrest
of Bernardo Tosci, claimed by the police to be the
leader of the Camorra in the west. A police theory
of attempted blackmail by that organisation seemed
to have been well bolstered up. The local ramifications
of the Camorra were proved beyond all
doubt. Mysterious persons, suspected of being Camorra
agents, who had been seen talking to Ratto
shortly before his disappearance, were being diligently
sought. The fear of the Camorra by the
residents of the Latin quarter seriously hindered<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</SPAN></span>
the police and newspaper men in their work, even
the native-speaking Italian detail of upper officemen
making little progress against the terror that the
shadow of the Camorra threw upon the quarter.
Police and newspaper judgment were slowly settling
that Ratto’s death was due to one of those far-reaching
conspiracies of the Camorra chieftain and
his minions.</p>
<p>Such was the situation at midnight when Lanagan
and I dropped out of the reporters’ room. The
arrest of Tosci—that we had been “scooped” on—had
been made shortly after midnight the night
before. A sullen “hunch” on Lanagan’s part that
the crime was in no way reminiscent of the methods
of the Camorra, as he understood those methods
from a mass of inquiry and first-hand reading, had
led us away from the police headquarters just a few
moments before Tosci had been slipped up the back
elevator and placed in detinue. The man regularly
assigned to the night police detail at the Hall of Justice,
a new man on the “beat,” had missed the arrest,
working against seasoned men on the <i>Times</i>
and the <i>Herald</i> with their inside sources of prison
information. However, we were supposed to be
doing the “heavy” work on the story, so the burden
of the “trimming” fell upon us.</p>
<p>Lanagan was morose. He had nothing more to
say as we walked down Kearney street and turned
up Broadway. I thought he was going to Cæsar’s—the
original Cæsar’s with the two tables and the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</SPAN></span>
marvellous cuisine that pioneered the way for the
glaring café chantant of to-day’s slumming parties,—but
he walked rapidly past Cæsar’s and on to turn
in at Bresci’s, a short distance up the slope of Telegraph
Hill. It was a dirty little place, one of the
corner “wine joints” sprinkled thickly in out of
the way pockets of the congested Latin quarter. At
Bresci’s, in addition to the bar, there was a little
eating place at the rear, separated from the bar by
dingy curtains. One room further back held a
piano, where on occasion one might hear his ash
man, or the flower vendor from Third and Market
streets, or a waiter off duty from the downtown
cafés, volume forth the Prologue or swing faultlessly
through the Toreador’s song.</p>
<p>“Just got a tip that they are trying to hook mine
host Bresci into the thing as a Camorra leader,” was
all that Lanagan said.</p>
<p>We sat at one of the tables while Lanagan pulled
the faded curtains almost together. Madam Bresci,
she of the famed sauté mêlé, was indisposed, so
the daughter, Bina, would serve us, if agreeable?
Perfectly so, said Lanagan, rather with a note of
satisfaction it struck me, though when I glanced at
his face in some surprise, for he was a man who was
ordinarily unmoved of women, it was expressionless.</p>
<p>Bresci went on to his bar after giving orders at
the kitchen, and we sat there some time in silence;
long enough for Lanagan to send the nicotine of
three evil Manilas to his lungs. I saw that his eyes<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</SPAN></span>
never left the opening through the curtains. Then
his cigar, from his mouth for the moment, was
suspended in air on its travel back and I followed his
sharp glance through the curtain.</p>
<p>Dinoli and Alberta, two plain-clothes men detailed
in the Latin quarter, had entered the saloon. Instantly
the babble from the voices of many volatile
Italians ceased. The saloon on the moment became
quiet, save for the rattling of glasses and one click
of the old-fashioned maplewood cash register. The
detectives passed the time with Bresci, casually
“sized up” the gathering, missing Lanagan and
myself, and left. Instantly there broke forth a riot
of sputtering Italian. The word “Ratto” we
heard and then, obviously at some motion toward
our curtains from Bresci, the babble stopped as suddenly
as it began and within five moments the
throng had idled out and the saloon was still.</p>
<p>“Bresci,” demanded Lanagan suddenly, “what
were they saying out there about Ratto? Were
they Camorrists?”</p>
<p>Bresci’s hand went straight over his head.</p>
<p>“<i>Corpo di Christo! Non! Non!</i>” he exclaimed,
paling. “Oh, never speek such word here! Non!
They say, too bad Ratto he keeled!”</p>
<p>He mopped his brow of its perspiration, suddenly
started, and glanced furtively through the curtains
to see whether anyone had come in and heard the
conversation.</p>
<p>“I think you’re a liar, Bresci,” said Lanagan<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</SPAN></span>
pleasantly. “But as I can’t talk Italian, I can’t
prove it. It’s pretty funny how that pow-wow shut
up the minute those coppers blew through that door.
But you better wipe your streaming brow again and
beat it back to the bar. You’ve got a customer.
Who is—” Lanagan whispered to me as Bresci
left, “no other than Lawrence Morton of the secret
service, just assigned here from Seattle.”</p>
<p>Then he continued, “I met him the other day on
that counterfeiting story at the beach. Just a shade
curious, I should say, the attention Bresci is attracting
to-night from the big and the little hawkshaws.
It bears out my ‘tip.’”</p>
<p>Morton had a drink or two, complained of being
tired, and drifted casually over to the curtains,
opened them, saw us, and was backing easily away
when Lanagan called out from the darkness—he
had turned off the incandescent earlier:</p>
<p>“Come in, Morton. Nothing to get exclusive
over,” switching on the light.</p>
<p>Morton dropped into a chair. If he was perturbed
at being “made” he did not show it. He
was generally reputed one of the two or three cleverest
operators in the government service.</p>
<p>“That was good work you did on Iowa Slim,
from all I hear,” he vouchsafed.</p>
<p>“There’s a better coming up,” replied Lanagan,
indifferently. “What brings you to Bresci’s?”</p>
<p>Morton shrugged his shoulders.</p>
<p>“You know the two rules of our department?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</SPAN></span>“Guard the president and turn up counterfeiters,”
said Lanagan.</p>
<p>“Well, Lanagan, you’ve got the cachet to me
from a good friend. The secret service man loses
his job who talks; but I don’t mind taking a chance
with you and telling you in confidence that in this
particular case I’m not guarding the president; being
as he is, as you know, in Washington.”</p>
<p>“Haven’t been sampling any—er—<i>salami</i>?”
drawled Lanagan.</p>
<p>Morton laughed. “You sure are a clever one at
that. No. I haven’t come across any that suited
my palate. I’m particular.”</p>
<p>We had a <i>café royale</i>—with Lanagan pouring
his thimble-full of cognac in my glass—and Morton
left.</p>
<p>“The Camorra, it develops,” said Lanagan,
“have been shipping to this country from ——
excellent counterfeit American bank notes. They
ship them in <i>salami</i> sausages. Maybe if one has
gone astray we will get a slice of bank note with our
<i>salami</i> and <i>sauté</i>, for here it comes on a tray with
the fair Bina serving.”</p>
<p>Bina, Bresci’s daughter, was an Italian of absolute
beauty; one of those glowing faces and perfect
forms you see in the old Italian masters.</p>
<p>I noticed in a moment that the comely Bina had
much attention to show Lanagan. We finished our
meal and Lanagan led the way to the inner room,
where the piano was located. I had heard him at<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</SPAN></span>
different times sputter out “rag,” but when Nevin’s
“A Day in Venice” suite came breathing softly
beneath his finger tips from out of that wrangly
piano I could but listen in amazement. Man of
mysterious beginnings, he had dropped into the San
Francisco newspaper game over night, been given
his “try-out” by the brotherhood, found to speak
the language of the tribe, and had thereafter been
unconditionally accepted. Such a mess as the Bradley
affair only served to emphasise his leadership.</p>
<p>With the last fine chord of the <i>Buona Notte</i> there
was a stillness broken only by the instant and
ecstatic handclapping of Bina. If I ever saw the
thing called Love shine forth from the human eyes,
it suddenly illuminated those dusky eyes that moment.</p>
<p>“O Madonna! Madonna!” she cried, softly.
“Encore! Encore!”</p>
<p>Lanagan zipped through a lustspeil, to drop back
then to the Last Composition. It was truly remarkable,
the manner in which he brought the encroaching
blindness of the great Beethoven sobbing out of
the misery of the minor base.</p>
<p>“Did a lot of that sort of thing when I was
younger,” he said, apologetically. “Before the
wanderlust hit me.”</p>
<p>He was through. Bina fluttered about him and
Lanagan’s head was close to hers. She was a full-sexed
creature but young; and I balked. I spoke
to Lanagan sharply after a moment or two and we<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</SPAN></span>
departed. She gave him a shy little glance as he
left.</p>
<p>He laughed. “What a Covenanter you are! A
psalm singer gone wrong for fair!”</p>
<p>“I don’t like it,” I said, stubbornly, but with the
best of intentions. “She’s only a child.” I didn’t
yet know all the sides of this man Lanagan.</p>
<p>He whirled on me: and I got a swift sense of the
power that could flash from those dark eyes, and I
felt, with the intimacy of personal experience, how
effective they must be when working upon a guilty
mind.</p>
<p>“Let me tell you, Howard,” he bit out, using my
given name for the first time in our friendship,
“Norrie” being his ordinary salutation, “that I’m
working on the Ratto story. Get me? What do
you take me for, anyhow? I’ve stood one welt
from my own kind to-night and I don’t want another.”</p>
<p>Lanagan received his second apology of the night;
but he didn’t appear to want it at that. His uncanny
faculty of reading men’s minds seemed to tell
him that my remark was in good faith.</p>
<p>“Forget it,” he laughed. “But just for that,
Norrie, I’ll keep to myself for the present the interesting
bit of information that Bina gave me; for
Bresci is a Camorra agent after all, and Bina, who
is all eyes and ears, knows precisely the truth about
Ratto’s death in so far as it pertains to the Camorra.
I guess that will hold you for a while? But what<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</SPAN></span>
a lover of music she is! Let’s call it a day. Don’t
look for me to-morrow. I’m off on a little lay of
my own. Keep in general reach of a telephone so
I can get you in a hurry and give that slavedriver
of a Sampson my distinguished compliments and
tell him I will show up when it pleases me to get
d—— good and ready.”</p>
<p>I hammered away at the routine of the story the
next day—I was just a plain plodder, ordinarily
dependable, but never particularly brilliant—and
neither saw Lanagan nor heard from him. A lively
angle was given to the story when Dinola and Alberti
discovered, concealed in one of Ratto’s game
refrigerators, six choice <i>salami</i> sausages that his
death had evidently prevented him disposing of in
the proper way, for neatly rolled in a half-inch wad
in the dead centre of each, was a roll of ten $100
gold bills of U. S. currency.</p>
<p>The secret service men, apprised, raged at the
information being given to the press, claiming that
they had been working to round up the entire gang
for months, and that the publication would serve as
warning to the others. But Leslie, more concerned
with solving the Ratto mystery, and hanging it on
Tosci than with handling Uncle Sam’s minor details,
and being also a great believer in the assistance intelligent
newspaper publicity could be to the police,
gave the facts out. The facts would appear to link
Ratto indubitably with the Camorra ring engaged in
the importation of counterfeit currency and obviously<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</SPAN></span>
eliminated the Camorra blackmail theory with
respect to his death.</p>
<p>With Ratto now definitely established as a leader
of the slippery Camorra—it was a hard organisation
to get definite proof on—the police were
thrown back on a theory of a fight between Camorra
leaders, possibly over some division of the profits
or some breach of faith. The Camorra history
shows that it was not—nor is not—slow to take
vengeance even on its own people.</p>
<p>Lanagan was missing the next day again, and I
was surprised, in view of the sensational developments.
I was following the police lead and it all
pointed to the Camorra to me. Nor did he appear
for work the third day nor give me word of himself.
And on this day the police had an admission from
Tosci that he had visited Ratto on the evening of
his disappearance!</p>
<p>It may be well to say here, too, that the secret
service men, although working at cross-purposes
with the regular police, had been putting the screws
to Tosci and Morton had finally gotten enough information
to supplement his own investigations, and
in a swift swoop five members of the Tosci gang
were in the federal cells at the Oakland jail charged
with handling counterfeit money.</p>
<p>All in all, the situation was growing highly complex
for a routine plodder, and still no Lanagan! I
had just about made up my mind to go on a still
hunt for him, confident that he must have broken<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</SPAN></span>
his vows of abstinence, when he called me up. His
message was curt:</p>
<p>“Suggest to Sampson to stick personally until he
hears from me. Meet me at once at Hyde and
Lombard.”</p>
<p>Sampson usually left the office at midnight. Lanagan
preferred his dynamic energy on the desk when
a big smash was on; and when he asked for Sampson
personally I knew he had landed. And Sampson
always preferred being at the city desk when
Lanagan was swinging home on the bit.</p>
<p>“Fine work!” was all Sampson said; it was not
in his cold-blooded cosmos to show disinterested
enthusiasm. Possibly it was that characteristic,
coupled with twenty years’ seasoning at the wheel,
that made him the greatest city editor in the West.</p>
<p>Lanagan’s clothes had that peculiarly hand-dog
appearance that the newest suit will get when a man
has slept in it once or twice; and Lanagan’s clothes
were seldom new, so the appearance was emphasised.
He had evidently found no time either to
shave or change his collar. Worn lines were about
his mouth and eyes such as you see in athletes who
have “pulled off” weight in hard training. But
his eyes, those dark, mesmeric eyes, were sparkling
and the old engaging trick of smiling was there.</p>
<p>“Began to think maybe I <i>had</i> ‘lost my grip,’”
he said, with a short laugh. “But I have either
turned up one of the finest police stories in my time
or I have gone plumb crazy. We will soon know.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</SPAN></span>Without more words, he walked quickly several
blocks down over the eastern slope of the hill and
turned into a narrow tradesman’s alley. I noticed
that he was watching keenly before and after us.
He slipped through a gate in a high board fence
and we were in a yard overgrown with shrubbery
and weeds. The house was a corner one and of
that familiar type of old family residence, seen in
most localities, that has gone to seed on a mortgage.
It was vacant. He opened the kitchen door with a
skeleton key and we walked upstairs, turning into
a large room commanding a view of the street. He
kept away from the window, I noticed.</p>
<p>“Draw up the Morris chair,” he said facetiously,
as he squatted on his legs. I sat down against the
wall and pulled out a cigar but he stopped me.</p>
<p>“Can’t take a chance. Smell of smoke might
give the whole thing away. See anything curious
about this room?”</p>
<p>I looked at the bareness of it and shook my head.</p>
<p>“Examine it,” he said. “You haven’t even
looked it over.”</p>
<p>I knew he was not given to joking, so I got up
and went over the room carefully. The door to
the hall was swung back against the wall and I
closed it.</p>
<p>Hanging on the door knob by the leather wrist
thong was a blackjack, a duplicate of the one with
which Ratto was slain. Lanagan was laughing
quietly.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</SPAN></span>“What are your sensations at being in a prospective
death chamber?” he asked.</p>
<p>Visions of being suddenly pocketed in that vast,
out of the way mansion by a ring of Camorrists,
assailed me, and I instinctively felt for my revolver.</p>
<p>“Don’t worry,” said the baffling Lanagan. “The
trap won’t spring for several hours yet. But after
it does spring,” he went on, “and this mess is over,
I’m prepared to present the fair Bina with the biggest
box of French mixed in town. That is,” quizzically,
“if my puritanical Mentor will permit me
to? But seriously, Norrie,”—his next words came
forth rather hurriedly, and much as a shamed school-boy
might make a confession,—“seriously these
Italian girls are mature women at sixteen. And
though you may not think it, I am only thirty-four.”</p>
<p>When it filtered into me what he was driving at
I jumped to my feet and pulled him to his.</p>
<p>“Jack,” I cried delightedly, “you don’t mean—”</p>
<p>“No,” he said, shortly, “I don’t mean anything,
now or any other time, Norrie, until I’ve taken a
seat on this water wagon that I know I can ride for
life.”</p>
<p>My thoughts shot back to that declaration in the
reporters’ room that I had pondered often since
uttered. It was clear enough now. He was a
man’s man, Jack Lanagan; and looking back now
even after the years that have passed since then,
looking back from the content of my own cosy<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</SPAN></span>
home, the tears spring and I stop writing. He did
not marry Bina.</p>
<p>“That’s about enough of that,” he said. “I
wanted you to get the lay of the house by daylight.
Let’s get out of here. I’ve got to see Leslie.”</p>
<p>But we were only as far as the head of the stairs
leading to the lower floor when a key grated in a
lock some place beneath us and Lanagan gripped
my arm, his finger to his lips, his eyes glittering
like a snake’s. We swung back on tiptoes
to a small closet at the end of the hall, pulling the
door almost shut after us. Lanagan dropped, his
eye to the keyhole. He had drawn his revolver and
I drew mine; my heart was beginning to thump
like a big bass drum. There came to my ears the
sound of footfalls up the creaking stairs. At first
it seemed like a dozen men and I concluded for once
that one of Lanagan’s traps was going to spring the
wrong way.</p>
<p>The footfalls disintegrated as they came nearer
and I found there was but one person. Lanagan’s
eye might have been stuck fast to that keyhole, for
his hat brim did not waver the fraction of an inch
as he held his rigid, cramped position for long minute
after minute.</p>
<p>Finally the footfalls sounded back down the stairs.
Lanagan did not move until, to our taut ear drums,
came the sound of the closing rear door.</p>
<p>“Well?” I asked him, wiping the perspiration
from my forehead.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</SPAN></span>All he said was “Fine! Fine! Wait a bit yet,
Norrie! That was merely a scout, taking a last
look to be sure that blackjack hadn’t been removed
by any prospective tenants who might have been
here.”</p>
<p>He glanced at his dollar watch. It was six
o’clock.</p>
<p>“There’ll be two good hours before darkness,”
he said. “We’ll take a chance and leave the house
uncovered while I get hold of the chief. Unless
you want to stay here?” he asked banteringly. I
did not want to stay there, but he had me squarely
in the door, as it were, and I had to say I would if
he wanted it. I sometimes think many a man is
made a hero against his will. Then a great shaft
of illumination struck me and I asked:</p>
<p>“Here, Jack; why should they bring that blackjack
here? They could bring a dozen with them
and nobody be any the wiser.”</p>
<p>But all the satisfaction I got out of that inscrutable,
irritating man was: “How bright the understudy
is becoming! You’ll be tackling high C yourself
next!”</p>
<p>“However,” he went on, “I’m not going to permit
you to remain here. Firstly and mainly, because
I am confident nothing will happen until after
dark, although for a moment I thought my theory
had gone wrong, and in the second place, because
you might scramble the whole platter on me and get
to shooting recklessly.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</SPAN></span>We slipped out of the alley after Lanagan had
reconnoitred long. He had good reason for not
wishing to appear at police headquarters. It was
generally known that he was off on some sort of a
still hunt. He had been seen occasionally by some
of the boys, and it was known, too, that he was not
drinking. His appearance at headquarters in conference
with Leslie therefore might bring a corps
of sharp-eyed newspaper men on our trail.</p>
<p>He got Leslie on the wire, and within thirty minutes
was in deep conversation with that astute thief-taker
in the rear room at Allenberg’s. There were
few sections of the city where Lanagan was not on
intimate terms with saloonmen. There are many
times when they can be valuable to the police reporter,
particularly in the Tenderloin and down
town. The two did not take me into their confidence,
but once I heard Leslie say, explosively:</p>
<p>“Jack, you’re as daffy as a horned toad.”</p>
<p>I caught only part of Lanagan’s answer. He was
talking earnestly.</p>
<p>“I tell you, Chief, my information is correct.
I’ve got the only leak in San Francisco into the
Camorra and neither you nor the secret service have
a man who can tap it. It’s worth a chance, I tell
you. We’ll want Brady, Wilson and Maloney.
We’ve got to cover every point, take no chances of
a murder getting by on us, and smash this thing
right on the nose.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</SPAN></span>Leslie studied Lanagan long and carefully. He
had never been wrong yet.</p>
<p>“Not drinking, Jack?” he asked at last.</p>
<p>“Not a smell in three months,” said Lanagan.</p>
<p>“You’re on,” the chief finally said, decisively.</p>
<p>I grew restive at not being taken “in,” but Lanagan
said I was becoming so very bright that a little
discipline would do me good; harkening back, I suppose,
to that remark about the blackjack. I said
no more. They outlined their plan. Maloney was
to hide in the yard of the house directly across from
the alley gate—in that old-fashioned neighbourhood,
tight board fences and hedgerows are common—and
Wilson across the street where he could command
the window to the room where the blackjack
hung. We three, with Brady, were to take our position
inside the house. The moment anybody entered
the alley gate, or by the front door—Lanagan
considered it likely that that approach might be
taken under cover of darkness—Maloney was to
lift himself to the fence top and strike a match.
Wilson, in turn, as though lighting a cigar, would
strike a match, and one or the other of us, watching
back from the room window of the house, would
know that the trap was set. In addition to watching
for Maloney’s signal, Wilson’s position enabled
him easily to cover the front door. Lanagan, it
appeared, had planned the coup hours before and
had his coverts already selected.</p>
<p>Their vigil ended on the outside, Maloney and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</SPAN></span>
Wilson were then to jump and cover the front and
rear doors, respectively, in case of any miscue inside
that might permit of an escape. “Miscue” was
Lanagan’s word: and I reflected with some apprehension,
that any “miscue” with such nervy officers
as Leslie and Brady that would permit an escape
out of that house would mean that probably all
of us would be candidates for morgue slabs.</p>
<p>Dusk found us all drifting one by one to our stations.
When I finally entered through the alley
door, I could see neither Maloney nor Wilson, and
yet I knew they had both gone before me and were
in position. I was the last one in and Lanagan was
waiting there to lock the kitchen door after me. We
trooped silently upstairs, shoes off and in hand.</p>
<p>It was an unreal situation, waiting there as the
deeper blackness of night settled down and the night
sounds of an empty house assailed us magnified.
Brady was standing the watch at the window for
the signal. The rest of us were lined up in the
broad hall. It was so dark you couldn’t see a man
a foot in front of you. Hours it seemed to me
must have passed, with no conversation save a scattered
whisper or so. We had tried the hall and
room floors and the door to the hall closet and they
gave out no squeaks.</p>
<p>“Psst!”</p>
<p>Softly, sibilantly, came Brady’s signal. We
backed into the closet. Brady in a second was with
us. The door was opened six inches with Lanagan<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</SPAN></span>
and Leslie ready for a spring. I was in some
fashion away back in the rear of the closet.</p>
<p>A key grated in the kitchen lock, and it sounded
through the vast empty house with a peculiarly sinister
harshness. It was a situation certainly unique
in crime! The stairs creaked—there was the
sound of heavy, laboured breathing. But there was
but one set of footfalls! We heard the door open
to the room where the ugly blackjack hung, and as
it did Leslie swung our door out and, silently as so
many black ghosts, we moved to the other door.</p>
<p>Against the window we could see a man’s form
dimly outlined. And then—</p>
<p>There was a flash of blinding brilliance, a report
that crashed in the empty stillness of the abandoned
mansion with the reverberation of a twelve-pound
gun, and under the arcs of the swiftly flashing
pocket lights of Brady and Leslie, we beheld,
stretched almost at our feet as the form toppled
backward and stiffened out—</p>
<p><i>Waters!</i></p>
<p>There was a gushing wound in the temple. Death
had been instantaneous. With an eagerness that
was more animal than human, Lanagan tore back
Waters’ coat, ran his hands swiftly through his
every pocket, and finally, with a “<i>Ha!</i>” of satisfaction
like a snarl, pulled out from an unsealed envelope
in an inside pocket a page of writing:</p>
<p>“Daffy, chief: Daffy, as a horned toad? Well,
here’s the proof!”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</SPAN></span>Written in the hand and phraseology of a fairly
intelligent man, it was as follows:</p>
<p>“<i>I killed Ratto. I guess I have been crazy. I
went crazy looking for murdered people in vacant
houses from telegraph poles. I couldn’t find any
more, and then I thought I would kill somebody. I
told Ratto on the street that I had seen a man’s body
in that house and he went in with me. I had never
seen him before. I had left the door open as I ran
out to him, but he didn’t suspect anything. I killed
him with a blackjack and then found the body in
three days, from the telegraph pole. I had picked
out the place several days ahead. I got everything
ready and came up several times and it was funny
no one saw me. I thought Ratto would say get the
police but he was nervy all right and jumped right
in after me.</i></p>
<p>”<i>The room in this house I discovered in the
same way. It was even better than the flat where
Ratto was killed because the neighbourhood didn’t
have so many people. The blackjack is on the
door knob. I put it there so as I went into the
room first to light a match I could take it off the
inside door knob and hit my man as he followed
me in.</i></p>
<p>“<i>That reporter Lanagan and another man were
hanging around this neighbourhood to-day. He
has been talking to me kind of suspicious lately and
I guess the jig is up. It’s funny the police never
suspected me.</i></p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</SPAN></span>”<i>I guess I have been crazy all right. I would
hang anyhow. But I am all right now and I will
kill myself in the room. It’s all the return I can
make for Ratto. If nobody hears the shot I hope
somebody finds me from a telegraph pole. It will
give the newspapers lots to write about. That’s
what made me crazy. I got too much fame, I
guess.</i></p>
<p class="right">“<i>William Waters</i>”</p>
<p>There was a prolonged pause. Then:</p>
<p>“Humph,” growled Leslie savagely. “The
‘fame’ you got isn’t a marker to the fame that reporter
Lanagan has heaped on me. For the original
ass I’m it. I took that fellow for a loon.
Jack, shake.”</p>
<p>Lanagan could not forbear a soft sarcasm.
That “daffy as a horned toad” rankled:</p>
<p>“Give your men a little class in Kraft-Ebing,
Lombroso, Nordau or some of those specialists and
you will get a better understanding of the pulling
power of crime,” he said, dryly. “I hadn’t figured
quite this kind of a finish,” he went on. “But
the minute he blazed that shot into his brain I was
sure he had left a confession. If he couldn’t get
notoriety in life he would in death.”</p>
<p>Quickly Lanagan told of his suspicions settling
on Waters after Bina, his “leak” to the Camorra,
had told him that the death of Ratto was as much
of a mystery to the Camorrists as it was to the
police. With Bresci a Camorra leader, the wise-eyed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</SPAN></span>
and wise-eared little Bina heard and saw much
that Lanagan in turn was told. On her say-so, he
had absolutely dismissed the Camorra. He set
himself to watch Waters and for three days and
nights scarcely ever let the lineman out of his sight.
From safe vantage points he had watched Waters
at his grisly work of climbing innumerable telegraph
poles. At times he had casually picked him
up and talked with him. It was evident that he
had also aroused Waters’ suspicions. He noticed
him lingering in the neighbourhood of the house
where we now were and finally sneak in by the
alley door. After he left the house Lanagan had
hunted up a locksmith, secured a set of skeleton
keys himself, and let himself into the house, not
knowing exactly what to expect.</p>
<p>He found the blackjack on the door knob, saw the
telegraph pole out of the window and in a flash
had realised the entire plan of the crazed lineman.</p>
<p>Lanagan assumed that Waters would not attempt
to lure his victim in daylight. He had come back
to the house while we were there merely moved by
some insane morbidity to visit again the scene
selected for the crime; picture possibly the slain
man on the floor, himself peering in from the
telegraph pole; and then the columns of newspaper
space. That the room was commanded by a telegraph
pole I had not noticed during the day or even
my sluggish wits might have given me a hint of
the truth.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</SPAN></span>“The shot seems to have raised no stir outside,
Chief,” said Lanagan, briskly, when the recital was
done. “Call in Wilson and Maloney and stick
around and give us two hours lee-way before you
get the morgue. It’s twelve-thirty.</p>
<p>“<i>Now, son, you hit the pike with me for the
Enquirer!</i>”</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</SPAN></span></p>
<p class="ph2">IV<br/>
WHOM THE GODS DESTROY</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr class="tb" />
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