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<h2> IX. ROOM NUMBER ELEVEN </h2>
<p>Another five minutes, and in her own personality now, a slim, trim figure,
neatly gloved, the heavy veil affording ample protection to her features,
Rhoda Gray emerged from the shed and the lane, and started rapidly toward
lower Sixth Avenue. And as she walked, her mind, released for the moment
from the consideration of her immediate venture, began again, as it had so
many times in the last three days, its striving and its searching after
some loophole of escape from her own desperate situation. But only, as it
ever did, confusion came—a chaos of things, contributory things and
circumstances, and the personalities of those with whom this impossible
existence had thrown her into contact. Little by little she was becoming
acquainted with the personnel of the gang—in an impersonal way,
mostly. Apart from Danglar, there was Shluker, who must of necessity be
one of them; and Skeeny, the man who had been with Danglar in Shluker's
room; and the Cricket, whom she had never seen; and besides these, there
were those who were mentioned in the cipher message to-night, and detailed
to the performance of the various acts and scenes that were to lead up to
the final climax—which, she supposed, was the object and reason for
the cipher message, in order that even those not actually employed might
be thoroughly conversant with the entire plan, and ready to act
intelligently if called upon. For there were others, of course, as witness
herself, or, rather, Gypsy Nan, whose personality she had so unwillingly
usurped.</p>
<p>It was vital, necessary, that she should know them all, and more than in
that impersonal way, if she counted upon ever freeing herself of the guilt
attributed to her. For she could see no other way but one—that of
exposing and proving the guilt of this vile clique who now surrounded her,
and who had actually instigated and planned the crime of which she was
accused. And it was not an easy task!</p>
<p>And then there were those outside this unholy circle who kept forcing
their existence upon her consciousness, because they, too, played an
intimate part in the sordid drama which revolved around her, and whose end
she could not foresee. There was, for instance—the Adventurer. She
drew in her breath quickly. She felt the color creep slowly upward, and
tinge her throat and cheeks—and then the little chin, strong and
firm, was lifted in a sort of self-defiant challenge. True, the man had
been a great deal in her thoughts, but that was only because her curiosity
was piqued, and because on two occasions now she had had very real cause
for gratitude to him. If it had not been for the Adventurer, she would
even now be behind prison bars. Why shouldn't she think of him? She was
not an ingrate! Why shouldn't she be interested? There was something
piquantly mysterious about the man—who called himself an adventurer.
She would even have given a good deal to know who he really was, and how
he, too, came to be so conversant with Danglar's plans as fast as they
were matured, and why, on those two particular occasions, he had not only
gone out of his way to be of service to her, but had done so at very grave
risk to himself. Of course, she was interested in him—in that way.
How could she help it? But in any other way—the little chin was
still tilted defiantly upward—even the suggestion was absurd. The
man might be chivalrous, courageous, yes, outwardly, even a gentleman in
both manner and appearance; he might be all those things, and, indeed, was—but
he was a thief, a professional thief and crook. It seemed very strange, of
course; but she was judging him, not alone from the circumstances under
which they had met and been together, but from what he had given her to
understand about himself.</p>
<p>The defiance went suddenly from her face; and, for a moment, her lips
quivered a little helplessly. It was all so very strange, and so
forbidding, and—and, perhaps she hadn't the stout heart that a man
would have—but she did not understand, and she could not see her way
through the darkness that was like a pall wrapped about her—and it
was hard just to grope out amidst surroundings that revolted her and made
her soul sick. It was hard to do this and—and still keep her courage
and her faith.</p>
<p>She shook her head presently as she went along, shook it reprovingly at
herself, and the little shoulders squared resolutely back. There must be,
and there would be, a way out of it all, and meanwhile her position, bad
as it was, was not without, at least, a certain compensation. There had
been the Sparrow the other night whom she had been able to save, and
to-night there was Nicky Viner. She could not be blind to that. Who knew!
It might be for just such very purposes that her life had been turned into
these new channels!</p>
<p>She looked around her sharply now. She had reached the lower section of
Sixth Avenue. Perlmer's office, according to the address given, was still
a little farther on. She walked briskly. It was very different to-night,
thanks to her veil! It had been horrible that other night, when she had
ventured out as the White Moll and had been forced to keep to the dark
alleyways and lanes, and the unfrequented streets!</p>
<p>And now, through a jeweler's window, she noted the time, and knew a
further sense of relief. It was even earlier than she had imagined. It was
not quite ten o'clock; she would, at least, be close on the heels of
Perlmer's departure from his office, if not actually ahead of time, and
therefore she would be first on the scene, and—yes, this was the
place; here was Perlmer's name amongst those on the name-plate at the
street entrance of a small three-story building.</p>
<p>She entered the hallway, and found it deserted. It was a rather dirty and
unkempt place, and very poorly lighted—a single incandescent alone
burned in the hall. Perlmer's room, so the name-plate indicated, was
Number Eleven, and on the next floor.</p>
<p>She mounted the stairs, and paused on the landing to look around her
again. Here, too, the hallway was lighted by but a single lamp; and here,
too, an air of desertion was in evidence. The office tenants, it was
fairly obvious, were not habitual night workers, for not a ray of light
came from any of the glass-paneled doors that flanked both sides of the
passage. She nodded her head sharply in satisfaction. It was equally
obvious that Perlmer had already gone. It would take her but a moment,
then, unless the skeleton keys gave her trouble. She had never used a key
of that sort, but—She moved quietly down the hallway, and, looking
quickly about her to assure herself again that she was not observed,
stopped before the door of Room Number Eleven.</p>
<p>A moment she hung there, listening; then she slipped the skeleton keys
from her pocket, and, in the act of inserting one of them tentatively into
the keyhole, she tried the door—and with a little gasp of surprise
returned the keys hurriedly to her pocket. The door was unlocked; it had
even opened an inch already under her hand.</p>
<p>Again she looked around her, a little startled now; and instinctively her
hand in her pocket exchanged the keys for her revolver. But she saw
nothing, heard nothing; and it was certainly dark inside there, and
therefore only logical to conclude that the room was unoccupied.</p>
<p>Reassured, she pushed the door cautiously and noiselessly open, and
stepped inside, and closed the door behind her. She stood still for an
instant, and then the round, white ray of her flashlight went dancing
inquisitively around the office. It was a medium-sized room, far from
ornate in its appointments, bare floored, the furniture of the cheapest—Perlmer's
clientele did not insist on oriental rugs and mahogany!</p>
<p>Her appraisal of the room, however, was but cursory. She was interested
only in the flat-topped desk in front of her. She stepped quickly around
it—and stopped-and a low cry of dismay came from her as she stared
at the floor. The lower drawer had been completely removed, and now lay
upturned beside the swivel chair, its contents strewn around in all
directions.</p>
<p>And for a moment she stared at the scene, nonplused, discomfited. She had
been so sure that she would be first—and she had not been first.
There was no need to search amongst those papers on the floor. They told
their own story. The ones she wanted were already gone.</p>
<p>In a numbed way, mechanically, she retreated to the door; and, with the
flashlight playing upon it, she noticed for the first time that the lock
had been roughly forced. It was but corroborative of the despoiled drawer;
and, at the same time, the obvious reason why the door had not been
relocked when whoever had come here had gone out again.</p>
<p>Whoever had come here! She could have laughed out hysterically. Was there
any doubt as to who it was? One of Danglar's emissaries; the Cricket,
perhaps-or perhaps even Danglar himself! They had seen to it that lack of
prompt action, at least, would not be the cause of marring their plans.</p>
<p>A little dazed, overwrought, confused at the ground being cut from under
her where she had been so confident of a sure footing, she made her way
out of the building, and to the street—and for a block walked almost
aimlessly along. And then suddenly she turned hurriedly into a cross
street, and headed over toward the East Side. The experience had not been
a pleasant one, and it had upset most thoroughly all her calculations; but
it was very far, after all, from being disastrous. It meant simply that
she must now find Nicky Viner himself and warn the man, and there was
ample time in which to do that. The code message specifically stated
midnight as the hour at which they proposed to favor old Viner with their
unhallowed attentions, and as it was but a little after ten now, she had
nearly a full two hours in which to accomplish what should not take her
more than a few minutes.</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray's lips tightened a little, as she hurried along. Old Nicky
Viner still lived in the same disreputable tenement in which he had lived
on the night of that murder two years ago, and she could not ward off the
thought that it had been—yes, and was—an ideal place for a
murder, from the murderer's standpoint! The neighborhood was one of the
toughest in New York, and the tenement itself was frankly nothing more
than a den of crooks. True, she had visited there more than once, had
visited Nicky Viner there; but she had gone there then as the White Moll,
to whom even the most abandoned would have touched his cap. To-night it
was very different—she went there as a woman. And yet, after all—she
amended her own thoughts, smiling a little seriously—surely she
could disclose herself as the White Moll there again to-night if the
actual necessity arose, for surely crooks, pokegetters, shillabers and
lags though they were, and though the place teemed with the dregs of the
underworld, no one of them, even for the reward that might be offered,
would inform against her to the police! And yet—again the mental
pendulum swung the other way—she was not so confident of that as she
would like to be. In a general way there could be no question but that she
could count on the loyalty of those who lived there; but there were always
those upon whom one could never count, those who were dead to all sense of
loyalty, and alive only to selfish gain and interest—a human trait
that, all too unfortunately, was not confined to those alone who lived in
that shadowland outside the law. Her face, beneath the thick veil, relaxed
a little. Well, she certainly did not intend to make a test case of it and
disclose herself there as the White Moll, if she could help it! She would
enter the tenement unnoticed if she could, and make her way to Nicky
Viner's two miserable rooms on the second floor as secretively as she
could. And, knowing the place as she did, she was quite satisfied that, if
she were careful enough and cautious enough, she could both enter and
leave without being seen by any one except, of course, Nicky Viner.</p>
<p>She walked on quickly. Five minutes, ten minutes passed; and now, in a
narrow street, lighted mostly by the dull, yellow glow that seeped up from
the sidewalk through basement entrances, queer and forbidding portals to
sinister interiors, or filtered through the dirty windows of uninviting
little shops that ran the gamut from Chinese laundries to oyster dens, she
halted, drawn back in the shadows of a doorway, and studied a tenement
building that was just ahead of her. That was where old Nicky Viner lived.
A smile of grim whimsicality touched her lips. Not a light showed in the
place from top to bottom. From its exterior it might have been
uninhabited, even long deserted. But to one who knew, it was quite the
normal condition, quite what one would expect. Those who lived there
confined their activities mostly to the night; and their exodus to their
labors began when the labors of the world at large ended—with the
fall of darkness.</p>
<p>For a little while she watched the place, and kept glancing up and down
the street; and then, seizing her opportunity when for half a block or
more the street was free of pedestrians, she stole forward and reached the
tenement door. It was half open, and she slipped quickly inside into the
hall.</p>
<p>She stood here for a moment motionless; listening, striving to accommodate
her eyes to the darkness, and instinctively her hand went to her pocket
for the reassuring touch of her revolver. It was black back there in the
hallway of Gypsy Nan's lodging; she had not thought that any greater
degree of blackness could exist; but it was blacker here. Only the sense
of touch promised to be of any avail. If one could have moved as
noiselessly as a shadow moves, one could have passed another within
arm's-length unseen. And so she listened, listened intently. And there was
very little sound. Once she detected a footstep from the interior of some
room as it moved across a bare floor; once she heard a door creak
somewhere upstairs; and once, from some indeterminate direction, she
thought she heard voices whispering together for a moment.</p>
<p>She moved suddenly then, abruptly, almost impulsively, but careful not to
make the slightest noise. She dared not remain another instant inactive.
It was what she had expected, what she had counted upon as an ally, this
darkness, but she was not one who laughed, even in daylight, at its
psychology. It was beginning to attack her now; her imagination to magnify
even the actual dangers that she knew to be around her. And she must fight
it off before it got a hold upon her, and before panic voices out of the
blackness began to shriek and clamor in her ears, as she knew they would
do with pitifully little provocation, urging her to turn and flee
incontinently.</p>
<p>The staircase, she remembered, was at her right; and feeling out before
her with her hands, she reached the stairs, and began to mount them. She
went slowly, very slowly. They were bare, the stairs, and unless one were
extremely careful they would creak out through the silence with a noise
that could be heard from top to bottom of the tenement. But she was not
making any noise; she dared not make any noise.</p>
<p>Halfway up she halted and pressed her body close against the wall. Was
that somebody coming? She held her breath in expectation. There wasn't a
sound now, but she could have sworn she had heard a footstep on the
hallway above, or on the upper stairs. She bit her lips in vexation. Panic
noises! That's what they were! That, and the thumping of her heart! Why
was it that alarms and exaggerated fancies came and tried to unnerve her?
What, after all, was there really to be afraid of? She had almost a clear
two hours before she need even anticipate any actual danger here, and, if
Nicky Viner were in, she would be away from the tenement again in another
fifteen minutes at the latest.</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray went on again, and gaining the landing, halted once more. And
here she smiled at herself with the tolerant chiding she would have
accorded a child that was frightened without warrant. She could account
for those whisperings and that footstep now. The door to the left, the one
next to Nicky Viner's squalid, two-room apartment, was evidently partially
open, and occasionally some one moved within; and the voices came from
there too, and, low-toned to begin with, were naturally muffled into
whispers by the time they reached her.</p>
<p>She had only, then, to step the five or six feet across the narrow hall in
order to reach Nicky Viner's door, and unless by some unfortunate chance
whoever was in that room happened to come out into the hall at the same
moment, she would—Yes, it was all right! She was trying Nicky
Viner's door now. It was unlocked, and as she opened it for the space of a
crack, there showed a tiny chink of light, so faint and meager that it
seemed to shrink timorously back again as though put to rout by the massed
blackness—but it was enough to evidence the fact that Nicky Viner
was at home. It was all simple enough now. Old Viner would undoubtedly
make some exclamation at her sudden and stealthy entrance, but once she
was inside without those in the next room either having heard or seen her,
it would not matter.</p>
<p>Another inch she pushed the door open, another—and then another. And
then quickly, silently, she tip-toed over the threshold and closed the
door softly behind her. The light came from the inner room and shone
through the connecting door, which was open, and there was movement from
within, and a low, growling voice, petulant, whining, as though an old man
were mumbling complainingly to himself. She smiled coldly. It was very
like Nicky Viner—it was a habit of his to talk to himself, she
remembered. And, also, she had never heard Nicky Viner do anything else
but grumble and complain.</p>
<p>But she could not see fully into the other room, only into a corner of it,
for the two doors were located diagonally across from one another, and her
hand, in a startled way, went suddenly to her lips, as though mechanically
to help choke back and stifle the almost overpowering impulse to cry out
that arose within her. Nicky Viner was not alone in there! A figure had
come into her line of vision in that other room, not Nicky Viner, not any
of the gang—and she stared now in incredulous amazement, scarcely
able to believe her eyes. And then, suddenly cool and self-possessed
again, relieved in a curious way because the element of personal danger
was as a consequence eliminated, she began to understand why she had been
forestalled in her efforts at Perlmer's office when she had been so sure
that she would be first upon the scene. It was not Danglar, or the
Cricket, or Skeeny, or any of the band who had forestalled her—it
was the Adventurer. That was the Adventurer standing in there now, side
face to her, in Nicky Viner's inner room!</p>
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