It was a startled couple that we found when we reached the
conservatory. As we made our hasty explanation, Carton overwhelmed
us with thanks for the prompt and effective manner in which
Kennedy had saved him from the machinations of the defeated
gangsters.
Miss Ashton, who would have kept her nerves under control
throughout any emergency, actually turned pale as she learned of
the danger that had been so narrowly averted. I am sure that her
feelings, which she made no effort to conceal, must have been such
as to reassure Carton if he had still any doubt on that score.
The delay in his coming out, however, had been just enough to
arouse suspicion, and by the time that we reached the side
entrance to the house both Ike and the night-hawk taxicab which
had evidently been drafted into service had disappeared, leaving
no clue.
The result of the discovery over the vocaphone was that none of us
left Miss Ashton's until much later than we had expected.
Langhorne, apparently, had gone shortly after he left the
conservatory the last time, and Mrs. Ogleby had preceded him. When
at last we managed to convince Miss Ashton that it was perfectly
safe for Carton to go, nothing would suffice except that we should
accompany him as a sort of bodyguard to his home. We did so,
without encountering any adventure more thrilling than seeing an
argument between a policeman and a late reveller.
"I can't thank you fellows too much," complimented Carton as we
left him. "I was hunting around for you, but I thought you had
found a suffrage meeting too slow and had gone."
"On the contrary," returned Kennedy, equivocally, "we found it far
from slow."
Carton did not appreciate the tenor of the remark and Craig was
not disposed to enlighten him.
"What do you suppose Mrs. Ogleby meant in her references to
Carton?" mused Kennedy when we reached our own apartment.
"I can't say," I replied, "unless before he came to really know
Miss Ashton, they were intimate."
Kennedy shook his head. "Why will men in a public capacity get
mixed up with women of the adventuress type like that, even
innocently?" he ruminated. "Mark my words, she or someone else
will make trouble for him before we get through."
It was a thought that had lately been in my own mind, for we had
had several hints of that nature.
Kennedy said no more, but he had started my mind on a train of
speculative thought. I could not imagine that a woman of Mrs.
Ogleby's type could ever have really appealed to Carton, but that
did not preclude the possibility that some unscrupulous person
might make use of the intimacy for base purposes. Then, too, there
was the threat that I had heard agreed on by both Langhorne and
herself over the vocaphone.
What would be the next step of the organization now in its sworn
warfare on Carton, I could not imagine. But we did not have long
to wait. Early the following forenoon an urgent message came to
Kennedy from Carton to meet him at his office.
"Kennedy," he said, "I don't know how to thank you for the many
times you have pulled me through, and I'm almost ashamed to keep
on calling on you."
"It's a big fight," hastened Craig. "You have opponents who know
the game in its every crooked turn. If I can be only a small cog
on a wheel that crushes them, I shall be only too glad. Your face
tells me that something particularly unpleasant has happened."
"It has," admitted Carton, smoothing out some of the wrinkles at
the mere sight of Craig.
He paused a moment, as if he were himself in doubt as to just what
the trouble was.
"Someone has been impersonating me over the telephone," he began.
"All day long there have been reports coming into my office asking
me whether it was true that I had agreed to accept the offer of
Dorgan that Murtha made, you know,--that is, practically to let up
on the organization if they would let up on me."
"Yes," prompted Kennedy, "but, impersonation--what do you mean by
that?"
"Why, early to-day someone called me up, said he was Dorgan, and
asked if I would have any objection to meeting him. I said I would
meet him--only it would do no good. Then, apparently, the same
person called up Dorgan and said he was myself, asking if he had
any objection to meeting me. Dorgan said he'd see. Whoever it was,
he almost succeeded in bringing about the fool thing--would have
done it, if I hadn't got wise to the fact that there was something
funny about it. I called up Dorgan. He said he'd meet me, as long
as I had approached him first. I said I hadn't. We swore a little
and called the fake meeting off. But it was too late. It got into
the papers. Now, you'd think it wouldn't make any difference to
either of us. It doesn't to him. People will think he tried to
slip one over on me. But it does make a difference to me. People
will think I'm trying to sell out."
"The old scheme!" exclaimed Kennedy. "That's the plan that has
been used by a man down in Wall Street that they call, 'the Wolf.'
He is a star impersonator--will call up two sworn enemies and put
over something on them that double-crosses both."
"Wall Street," mused Carton. "That reminds me of another batch of
rumours that have been flying around. They were that I had made a
deal with Langhorne by which I agreed to support him in his fight
to get something in the contracts of the new city planning scheme
in return for his support of the part of the organization he could
swing to me in the election,--another lie."
"It might have been Langhorne himself, playing the wolf," I
suggested.
Kennedy had reached for the telephone book. "Also, it might have
been Kahn," he added. "I see he has an office in Wall Street, too.
He has been the legal beneficiary of several shady transactions
down there."
"Oh," put in Carton, "it might have been any of them--they're all
capable of it from Dorgan down. If Murtha was only out, I'd be
inclined to suspect him."
He tossed over a typewritten sheet of paper. "That's the statement
I gave out to the press," he explained.
It read: "My attention has been called to the alleged activities
of some person or persons who through telephone calls and
underground methods are seeking to undermine confidence in my
integrity. A more despicable method of attempting to arouse
distrust I cannot imagine. It is criminal and if anyone can assist
me in placing the responsibility where it belongs I shall be glad
to prosecute to the limit."
"That's all right," assented Kennedy, "but I don't think it will
have any effect. You see, this sort of thing is too easy for
anyone to be scared off from. All he has to do is to go to a pay
station and call up there. You couldn't very well trace that."
He stopped abruptly and his face puckered with thought.
"There ought to be some way, though," I murmured, without knowing
just what the way might be, "to tell whether it is Dorgan and the
organization crowd, or Langhorne and his pool, or Kahn and the
other shysters."
"Thereis a way," cried Kennedy at last. "You fellows wait here
while I make a flying trip up to the laboratory. If anyone calls
us, just put him off--tell him to call up later."
Carton continued to direct the work of his office, of which there
had been no interruptions even during the stress of the campaign.
Now and then the telephone rang and each time Carton would motion
to me, and say, "You take it, Jameson. If it seems perfectly
regular then pass it over to me."
Several routine calls came in, this way, followed by one from Miss
Ashton, which Carton prolonged much beyond the mere time needed to
discuss a phase of the Reform League campaign.
He had scarcely hung up the receiver, when the bell tinkled
insistently, as though central had had an urgent call which the
last conversation had held up.
I took down the receiver, and almost before I could answer the
inquiry, a voice began, "This is the editor of the Wall Street
Record, Mr. Carton. Have you heard anything of the rumours about
Hartley Langhorne and his pool being insolvent? The Street has
been flooded with stories--"
"One moment," I managed to interrupt. "This is not Mr. Carton,
although this is his office. No--he's out. Yes, he'll certainly be
back in half an hour. Ring up then."
I repeated the scrap of gossip that had filtered through to me,
which Carton received in quite as much perplexity as I had.
"Seems as if everybody was getting knocked," he commented.
He nodded. I think we both realized how helpless we were when
Kennedy was away. In fact we made even our guesses with a sort of
lack of confidence.
It was therefore with a sense of relief that we welcomed him a few
minutes later as he hurried into the office, almost breathless
from his trip uptown and back.
"Has anyone called up?" he inquired unceremoniously, unwrapping a
small parcel which he carried.
I told him as briefly as I could what had happened. He nodded,
without making any audible comment, but in a manner that seemed to
show no surprise.
"I want to get this thing installed before anyone else calls," he
explained, setting to work immediately.
"What is it?" I asked, regarding the affair, which included
something that looked like a phonograph cylinder.
"An invention that has just been perfected," he replied without
delaying his preparations, "by which it is possible for messages
to be sent over the telephone and automatically registered, even
in the absence of anyone at the receiving end. Up to the present
it has been practicable to take phonograph records only by the
direct action of the human voice upon the diaphragm of the
instrument. Not long ago there was submitted to the French Academy
of Sciences an apparatus by which the receiver of the telephone
can be put into communication with a phonograph and a perfect
record obtained of the voice of the speaker at the other end of
the wire, his message being reproduced at will by merely pressing
a button."
"Wouldn't the telegraphone do?" I asked, remembering our use of
that instrument in other cases.
"It would record," he replied, "but I want a phonograph record.
Nothing else will do in this case. You'll see why, before I get
through. Besides, this apparatus isn't complicated. Between the
diaphragm of the telephone receiver and that of the phonographic
microphone is fitted an air chamber of adjustable size, open to
the outer atmosphere by a small hole to prevent compression. I
think," he added with a smile, "it will afford a pretty good means
of collecting souvenirs of friends by preserving the sound of
their voices through the telephone." For several minutes we
waited.
"I don't think I ever heard of such effrontery, such open, bare-
faced chicanery," fumed Carton impatiently.
"We'll catch the fellow yet," replied Kennedy confidently. "And I
think we'll find him a bad lot."