<SPAN name="chap03"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER III </h3>
<h3> COVERING THE TRACKS </h3>
<p>I thought quickly, and my consciousness seemed to embrace all the
details of the situation with a keenness foreign to my nature.</p>
<p>Once, I believe, I had been able to play an active part among the men
who were my associates in that adventurous life that lay so far behind
me. But eight years of clerkship had reduced me to the condition of
one who waits on the command of others. Now my irresolution vanished
for the time, and I was my old self once more.</p>
<p>The first task was the disposal of the body in such a way that
suspicion would not attach itself to me after I had vacated the rooms
next morning.</p>
<p>There was a fire-escape running up to the floor of that room on the
outside of the house, though there was no egress to it. It had been
put up by the landlord to satisfy the requirements of some new law; but
had never been meant for use, and it was constructed of the flimsiest
and cheapest ironwork. I saw that it would be possible by standing on
a chair to swing myself up to the hole in the wall and reach down to
the iron stairs up which, I assumed, the dead man had crept after I had
given him the hint of Jacqueline's abode by emerging from the front
door.</p>
<p>I raised the dead man in my arms, looking apprehensively toward the
bed. I was afraid Jacqueline would awaken, but she slept in heavy
peace, undisturbed by the harsh creaking of the sagging floor beneath
its double burden. I put the fur cap on the grotesque, nodding dead
head, and, pushing a chair toward the wall with my foot, mounted it and
managed with a great effort to squeeze through the hole, pulling up the
body with me as I did so.</p>
<p>Then I felt with my foot for the little platform at the top of the iron
stairs outside, found it, and dropped. Afterward I dragged the
dreadful burden down from the hole.</p>
<p>I had not known that I was strong before, and I do not understand now
how I managed to accomplish my wretched task.</p>
<p>I carried the dead man all the way down the fire-escape, clinging and
straining against the rotting, rusting bars, which bent and cracked
beneath my weight and seemed about to break and drag down the entire
structure from the wall.</p>
<p>I hardly paused at the platforms outside the successive stories. The
weather was growing very cold, a storm was coming up, and the wind
soughed and whined dismally around the eaves.</p>
<p>I reached the bottom at last and rested for a moment.</p>
<p>At the back of the house was a little vacant space, filled with heaps
of débris from the demolished portions of the building and with refuse
which had been dumped there by tenants who had left and had never been
removed. This yard was separated only by a rotting fence with a single
wooden rail from a small blind alley.</p>
<p>The alley had run between rows of stables in former days when this was
a fashionable quarter, but now these were mostly unoccupied, save for a
few more pretentious ones at the lower end, which were being converted
into garages.</p>
<p>Everywhere were heaps of brick, piles of rain-rotted wood, and
rubbish-heaps.</p>
<p>I took up my burden and placed it at the end of the alley, covering it
roughly with some old burlap bags which lay there. I thought it safe
to assume that the police would look upon the dead man as the victim of
some footpad. It was only remotely possible that suspicion would be
directed against any occupant of any of the houses bordering on the
<i>cul-de-sac</i>.</p>
<p>I did not search the dead man's pockets. I cared nothing who he was,
and did not want to know. My sole desire was to acquit Jacqueline of
his death in the world's eyes.</p>
<p>That he had come deservedly by it I was positive. I was her sole
protector now, and I felt a furious resolve that no one should rob me
of her.</p>
<p>The ground was as hard as iron, and I was satisfied that my footsteps
had left no track; there would be snow before morning, and if my feet
had left any traces these would be covered effectively.</p>
<p>Four o'clock was striking while I was climbing back into the room
again. Jacqueline lay on the bed in the same position; she had not
stirred during that hour. While she slept I set about the completion
of my task.</p>
<p>I took the knife from the floor where I had flung it, scrubbed it, and
placed it in my suit-case. Then I scrubbed the floor clean, afterward
rubbing it with a soiled rag to make its appearance uniform.</p>
<p>I washed my hands, and thought I had finally removed all traces of the
affair; but, coming back, I perceived something upon the floor which
had escaped my notice. It was the leather collar of the Eskimo dog,
with its big silver studs and the maker's silver name-plate.</p>
<p>All this while the animal had remained perfectly quiet in the room
crouching at Jacqueline's feet and beside the bed. It had not
attempted to molest me, as I had feared might be the case during the
course of my gruesome work.</p>
<p>I came to the conclusion that there might have been a struggle; that it
had run to its mistress's assistance, and that the collar had been torn
from it by the dead man.</p>
<p>My first thought was to put the collar back upon the creature's neck;
but then I came to the conclusion that this might possibly serve as a
means of identification. And it was essential that no one should be
able to identify the dog.</p>
<p>So I picked the collar up and carried it into the next room and held it
under the light of the incandescent gas-mantle. The letters of the
maker's name were almost obliterated, but after a careful study I was
able to make them out. The name was Maclay & Robitaille, and the place
of manufacture Quebec. This confirmed my belief concerning
Jacqueline's nativity.</p>
<p>I pried the plate from the leather and slipped it into my pocket. I
put the broken collar into my suitcase, together with the dagger, and
then I set about packing my things for the journey which we were to
undertake.</p>
<p>I had always accustomed myself to travel with a minimum of baggage, and
the suit-case, which was a roomy one, held all that I should need at
any time. When I had finished packing I went back to Jacqueline and
sat beside her while she slept. As I sat dawn I heard a city clock
strike five.</p>
<p>In a little while it would begin to lighten, and the advent of the day
filled me with a sort of terror.</p>
<p>I watched the sleeping girl. Who was she? How could she sleep calmly
after that night's deed? The mystery seemed unfathomable; the girl
alone in the city, the robbers, the dog, the dead man, and the one who
had escaped me.</p>
<p>Jacqueline's bag lay on the bureau and disgorging bills. There were
rolls and rolls of them—eight thousand dollars did not seem too much.</p>
<p>Besides these, the bag contained the usual feminine properties: a
handkerchief, sachet-bag, a pocket mirror, and some thin papers, coated
with rice-powder.</p>
<p>The thought crossed my mind that the bills might be counterfeit, and I
picked one up and looked carefully at it, comparing it with one from my
own pocketbook. But I was soon satisfied that they were real. Well—I
turned back to Jacqueline, ashamed of the suspicion that had crossed my
mind.</p>
<p>Her soft brown hair streamed over the pillow and hung down toward the
floor, a heavy mass, uncoiled from the wound braids upon her neck. Her
breast rose and fell evenly with her breathing. She looked even
younger than on the preceding evening. I was sure now that she was
innocent of evil, and my unworthy thoughts made me ashamed. Her
outstretched arm was extended beyond the edge of the bed.</p>
<p>I raised her hand and held in it my own, and I sat thus until the room
began to lighten, watching her all the while.</p>
<p>It was strange that as I sat there I began to grow comforted. I looked
on her as mine. When I had kissed her hands I had forgotten the ring
upon her finger; and now, holding that hand in mine and running my
fingers round and round the circlet of gold, I was not troubled at all.
I could not think of her as any other man's. She was mine—Jacqueline.</p>
<p>Presently she stirred, her eyes opened, and she sat up. I placed a
pillow at her back. She gazed at me with apathy, but there was also
recognition in her look.</p>
<p>"Do you know me, Jacqueline?" I asked.</p>
<p>"Yes, Paul," she answered.</p>
<p>"Your friend?"</p>
<p>"My friend, Paul."</p>
<p>"Jacqueline, I am going to take you home," I said, hoping that she
would tell me something, but I dared ask her no more. I meant to take
her to Quebec and make inquiries there. Thus I hoped to learn
something of her, even if the sight of the town did not awaken her
memories.</p>
<p>"I am going to take you home, Jacqueline," I repeated.</p>
<p>"Yes, Paul," she answered in that docile manner of hers.</p>
<p>"It is lucky you have your furs, because the winter is cold where your
home is."</p>
<p>"Yes, Paul," she repeated as before, and a few more probings on my part
convinced me that she remembered nothing at all. Her mind was like a
person's newly awakened in a strange land. But this state brought with
it no fear, only a peaceful quietude and faith which was very touching.</p>
<p>"We have forgotten a lot of things that troubled us, haven't we, Paul?"
she asked me presently. "But we shall not care, since we have each
other for friends. And afterwards perhaps we shall pick them up again.
Do you not think so, Paul?"</p>
<p>"Yes, Jacqueline," I answered.</p>
<p>"If we remembered now the memory of them might make us unhappy," she
continued wistfully. "Do you not think so, Paul?"</p>
<p>"Yes, Jacqueline."</p>
<p>There was a faint and vague alarm in her eyes which made me glad for
her sake that she did not know.</p>
<p>"Now, Jacqueline," I said, "we shall have to begin to make ready for
our journey."</p>
<p>I had just remembered that the storage company which was to warehouse
my few belongings was to call that day. The van would probably be at
the house early in the morning, and it was essential that we should be
gone before it arrived.</p>
<p>Fortunately I had arranged to leave the door unlocked in case my
arrangements necessitated my early departure, and this was understood,
so that my absence would cause no surprise.</p>
<p>I showed Jacqueline the bathroom and drew the curtains. Then I went
into the kitchenette and made coffee on the gas range, and, since it
was too early for the arrival of my morning loaf, which was placed just
within the street door by the baker's boy every day, I made some toast
and buttered it.</p>
<p>I remember reflecting, with a relic of my old forced economy, how
fortunate it was that my pound of butter had just lasted until the
morning when I was to break up housekeeping.</p>
<p>When I took in the breakfast Jacqueline was waiting for me, looking
very dainty and charming. She was hungry, too, also a good sign.</p>
<p>She did not seem to understand that there was anything strange in the
situation in which we found ourselves. I did not know whether this was
due to her mental state or to that strange unsophistication which I had
already observed in her. At any rate, we ate our breakfast together as
naturally as though we were a married couple of long standing.</p>
<p>After the meal was ended, and we had fed the dog, Jacqueline insisted
on washing the dishes, and I showed her the kitchenette and let her do
so, though I should never have need for the cheap plates and cups again.</p>
<p>"Now, Jacqueline, we must go," I said.</p>
<p>I placed her neckpiece about her. I closed her bag, stuffing the bills
inside, and hung it on her arm. I could not resist a smile to see the
little pad covered with its maze of figures among the rolls of money.
I was afraid that the sight of it would awaken her memories, but she
only looked quietly at it and put it away.</p>
<p>I wanted her to let me bank her money for her, but did not like to ask
her. However, of her own account she took out the bills and handed
them to me.</p>
<p>"What a lot of money I have," she said. "I hardly thought there was so
much money in the world, Paul."</p>
<p>It was past eight when we left the house. I carried my suit-case and,
stopping at a neighbouring express office, had it sent to the Grand
Central station. And then I decided to take the dog to the animal's
home.</p>
<p>I did not like to do so, but was afraid, in the necessity of protecting
Jacqueline, that its presence might possibly prove embarrassing, so I
took it there and left it, with instructions that it was to be kept
until I sent for it. I paid a small sum of money and we departed,
Jacqueline apparently indifferent to what I had done, though the
animal's distress at being parted from her disturbed my conscience a
good deal.</p>
<p>Still it seemed the only thing to do under our circumstances.</p>
<p>Quebec, then, was my objective, and with no further clue than the
dog-collar. There were two trains, I found, at three and at nine. The
first, which I proposed to take, would bring us to our destination soon
after nine the next day, but our morning was to be a busy one, and it
would be necessary to make our preparations quickly.</p>
<p>A little snow was on the ground, but the sun shone brightly, and I felt
that the shadows of the night lay behind us.</p>
<br/><br/><br/>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />