<SPAN name="CHAPTER_VII_THE_LITTLE_BROWN_JAP" id="CHAPTER_VII_THE_LITTLE_BROWN_JAP"></SPAN>
<h2>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
<h3>THE LITTLE BROWN JAP.</h3>
<p>Patrolman Phelan wrapped his sinewy fist
about the handle of his club with a vicious grip as he
proceeded cautiously up the steps. The heavy bronze
door had been left ajar, and he squeezed through
without opening it further, then paused in the vestibule
and listened. What he heard seemed no more
than the tread of a spider, and the thought rushed
into his head:</p>
<p>“’Tis one of that felt-soled kind. ’Tis tip-toes for
Phelan.”</p>
<p>He had noted that even the inside door was open,
and he swiftly divined from this that the thief had
left it open for his own convenience or for some other
purpose connected with the mysteries of burglar
alarms. Inch by inch the policeman moved across the
vestibule and wriggled through the door into the
richly carpeted hallway.</p>
<p>It was with a distinct sense of relief that he felt
his heavy boots sink noiselessly into the deep ply of
a precious Daghestan rug. One of Phelan’s boots
had a bad creak in it, and he knew that the master
crook who would attempt such a robbery as this would
have an acute sense of hearing.</p>
<p>It was dark as a pocket down the stretch of the
heavily curtained foyer, save for a meagre shaft of
light that came through a slightly parted pair of portières
to the left and not a dozen feet from where he
stood. He strained his ear toward this shaft of light
until there came an unmistakable swish of sound,
whereupon he moved forward in short, gliding steps.</p>
<p>When he reached the break in the portières and
looked in he was astonished to see a short little man
with shiny black hair deftly removing the linen covers
from chairs and tables and statuary. The little
man had his back to Phelan as the policeman stepped
inside, but he turned in a flash and confronted the intruder
with the peculiar glazed grimness of the Japanese.</p>
<p>“Well, what matter?” ripped out the little Jap,
without moving a muscle.</p>
<p>“That’s what I come to find out,” retorted Phelan,
with accusing severity of tone.</p>
<p>“How you get in here?” retorted the Jap in the
same sharp, emotionless tones.</p>
<p>“I saw ye snakin’ in an’ ye didn’t latch the door
after yez,” blurted Phelan, taking a step nearer the
Jap and still watching him with profound suspicion.</p>
<p>“What you want?” asked the Jap with a slight
tremor of apprehension.</p>
<p>“Information!” cried Phelan. “What are yez
doin’ in here?” Phelan’s eye swept the room for
some evidence of an attempt to despoil. Though he
saw none he did not relinquish his attitude of suspicion.
The Jap seemed about to speak and then
stopped. As Phelan continued to glower at him, he
snapped out:</p>
<p>“I no can tell.”</p>
<p>Triumph blazed in Phelan’s eyes. Now he was sure
he had a thief and he determined to handle the situation
with all the majesty of his official person.</p>
<p>“So yez can’t tell what yez’re doin’ in this house,”
he said with fine sarcasm.</p>
<p>The Jap shook his head emphatically and returned
a positive, “No tell!”</p>
<p>Phelan balanced his club for a moment and strode
toward the Jap.</p>
<p>“Yez better come with me,” he said through compressed
lips.</p>
<p>The Jap started back with a frightened exclamation.</p>
<p>“You no take me to jail?” he uttered, while his
yellow features twitched with fear.</p>
<p>“In a minute,” replied the elated officer, “if yez
don’t tell me what yez’re doin’ here. I’ve been lookin’
out for this place while Mr. Gladwin was in foreign
parts, and”–––</p>
<p>“You know Mr. Gladwin?” broke in the Jap, excitedly.</p>
<p>“No, I ain’t never seen him,” said Phelan, “but I
know this is his house an’ I been keepin’ my eye on
it fer him.”</p>
<p>“Mr. Gladwin––he my boss!” and the Jap grinned
from ear to ear.</p>
<p>This solution of the mystery never entered the
policeman’s head and he resented the surprise.</p>
<p>“Do yez mean yez’re his valley?” he asked vindictively,
refusing to relinquish his suspicion.</p>
<p>“Ees!” and again the Jap grinned.</p>
<p>Phelan read the grin as a distinct insult to his intelligence
and he pounced upon the little brown man
in an even more caustic tone:</p>
<p>“If yez’re are Mr. Gladwin’s valley, what are ye
doin’ here an’ him thousands o’ miles away across
the ocean in Agypt an’ Jerusalem an’ the like?”</p>
<p>Now it was Phelan’s turn to grin as he saw the
Jap shrink and turn upon him a pair of wildly alarmed
eyes.</p>
<p>“Come! Come! I’m waitin’ fer an answer,” The
cat had his mouse backed into a corner and mentally
licked his chops.</p>
<p>“I no can tell,” stammered the Jap, desperately.</p>
<p>“That’s enough!” ripped out Officer 666, grabbing
the Jap by the shoulder and yanking him toward the
doorway.</p>
<p>“No––no––wait!” gasped the struggling prisoner.
“You no say if I tell you, plees?”</p>
<p>“Tell me first,” grunted Phelan, releasing his grip.</p>
<p>The Jap ducked his head in every direction as if
fearful that the walls had ears, then said in an impressive
whisper:</p>
<p>“My boss––Mr. Gladwin––home!”</p>
<p>“Misther Gladwin home! Here in New York!”
There was both incredulity and amazement in Phelan’s
voice.</p>
<p>“Ees!” bleated the Jap and his grin returned.</p>
<p>“Well, why didn’t you say so before?” said Phelan
angrily, at which the fidgety little brown son of Nippon
hastened to explain:</p>
<p>“No one should know. He come all in much secret.
He go boat to Boston. No use name. No one
know he Mr. Gladwin. He say, ‘Bateato’––me Bateato––‘Bateato,’
he say, ‘no tell I come home––sure,’
he say, and Bateato he no tell.”</p>
<p>Officer Phelan yielded to the grip of the mystery
and his attitude toward the Jap changed.</p>
<p>“What did he want to snake home that away fer?”</p>
<p>“I no know,” nodded Bateato.</p>
<p>“Yez no know, eh? Well, is he comin’ here?––do
yez no know that?”</p>
<p>“He tell me––come here and wait––feex thees
room––he come here or telephone.”</p>
<p>The straightforward manner of the little Jap had
almost completely disarmed the policeman’s suspicion,
but he surrendered reluctantly.</p>
<p>“Did he give yez a key to get in here?” Phelan
fired as his last shot.</p>
<p>“Ees––he give me all bunch keys––look!” and
Bateato produced a gold key ring with a gold tag
and a number of keys attached. Phelan examined it
and read aloud the name Travers Gladwin engraved
on the tag. Handing them back to the Jap, he addressed
him impressively, gesturing his emphasis with
his baton:</p>
<p>“I guess yez’re all right, but I’ll have me eye on
yez from the outside, mind that––and if yez’re foolin’
me or tryin’ to get away with anythin’”–––</p>
<p>Phelan snapped his lips together and with a mighty
lunge plucked an imaginary prisoner out of the atmosphere
and shook it ferociously. Then stepping back
to the doorway he shut one eye with a fierce wink and
jerked out:</p>
<p>“Are yez wise?”</p>
<p>The profound pantomime was too much for Bateato,
who stared after the vanishing officer in open-mouthed
amazement.</p>
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