We stared at each other in blank awe, at the various parts, so
innocent looking in the heaps on the table, now safely separated,
but together a combination ticket to perdition.
"Who do you suppose could have sent it?" I blurted out when I
found my voice, then, suddenly recollecting the political and
legal fight that Carton was engaged in at the time, I added, "The
white slavers?"
"Not a doubt," he returned laconically. "And," he exclaimed,
bringing down both hands vigorously in characteristic emphasis on
the arms of his office chair, "I've got to win this fight against
the vice trust, as I call it, or the whole work of the district
attorney's office in clearing up the city will be discredited--to
say nothing of the risk the present incumbent runs at having such
grateful friends about the city send marks of their affection and
esteem like this."
I knew something already of the situation, and Carton continued
thoughtfully: "All the powers of vice are fighting a last-ditch
battle against me now. I think I am on the trail of the man or men
higher up in this commercialised-vice business--and it is a
business, big business, too. You know, I suppose, that they seem
to have a string of hotels in the city, of the worst character.
There is nothing that they will stop at to protect themselves.
Why, they are using gangs of thugs to terrorise any one who
informs on them. The gunmen, of course, hate a snitch worse than
poison. There have been bomb outrages, too--nearly a bomb a day
lately--against some of those who look shaky and seem to be likely
to do business with my office. But I'm getting closer all the
time."
"Well, one of the best witnesses, if I can break him down by
pressure and promises, ought to be a man named Haddon, who is
running a place in the Fifties, known as the Mayfair. Haddon knows
all these people. I can get him in half an hour if you think it
worth while--not here, but somewhere uptown, say at the Prince
Henry."
Kennedy nodded. We had heard of Haddon before, a notorious
character in the white-light district. A moment later Carton had
telephoned to the Mayfair and had found Haddon.
"How did you get him so that he is even considering turning
state's evidence?" asked Craig.
"Well," answered Carton slowly, "I suppose it was partly through a
cabaret singer and dancer, Loraine Keith, at the Mayfair. You know
you never get the truth about things in the underworld except in
pieces. As much as any one, I think we have been able to use her
to weave a web about him. Besides, she seems to think that Haddon
has treated her shamefully. According to her story, he seems to
have been lavishing everything on her, but lately, for some
reason, has deserted her. Still, even in her jealousy she does not
accuse any other woman of winning him away."
"Perhaps it is the opposite--another man winning her," suggested
Craig dryly.
"It's a peculiar situation," shrugged Carton. "There is another
man. As nearly as I can make out there is a fellow named Brodie
who does a dance with her. But he seems to annoy her, yet at the
same time exercises a sort of fascination over her."
"Then she is dancing at the Mayfair yet?" hastily asked Craig.
"Yes. I told her to stay, not to excite suspicion."
"Oh, no. But she has told us enough about him already so that we
can worry him, apparently, just as what he can tell us would worry
the others interested in the hotels. To tell the truth, I think
she is a drug fiend. Why, my men tell me that they have seen her
take just a sniff of something and change instantly--become a
willing tool."
"Now, I'll go up there and meet Haddon," resumed Carton. "After I
have been with him long enough to get into his confidence, suppose
you two just happen along."
Half an hour later Kennedy and I sauntered into the Prince Henry,
where Carton had made the appointment in order to avoid suspicion
that might arise if he were seen with Haddon at the Mayfair.
The two men were waiting for us--Haddon, by contrast with Carton,
a weak-faced, nervous man, with bulgy eyes.
"Mr. Haddon," introduced Carton, "let me present a couple of
reporters from the Star--off duty, so that we can talk freely
before them, I can assure you. Good fellows, too, Haddon."
The hotel and cabaret keeper smiled a sickly smile and greeted us
with a covert, questioning glance.
"This attack on Mr. Carton has unnerved me," he shivered. "If any
one dares to do that to him, what will they do to me?"
"Don't get cold feet, Haddon," urged Carton. "You'll be all right.
I'll swing it for you."
Haddon made no reply. At length he remarked: "You'll excuse me for
a moment. I must telephone to my hotel."
He entered a booth in the shadow of the back of the cafe, where
there was a slot-machine pay-station. "I think Haddon has his
suspicions," remarked Carton, "although he is too prudent to say
anything yet."
A moment later he returned. Something seemed to have happened. He
looked less nervous. His face was brighter and his eyes clearer.
What was it, I wondered? Could it be that he was playing a game
with Carton and had given him a double cross? I was quite
surprised at his next remark.
Haddon and Carton were still talking earnestly. It was evident
that, for some reason, Haddon had lost his former halting manner.
Perhaps, I reasoned, the bomb episode had, after all, thrown a
scare into him, and he felt that he needed protection against his
own associates, who were quick to discover such dealings as Carton
had forced him into. I rose and lounged back to the booth and
Kennedy.
"Whom did he call?" I whispered, when Craig emerged perspiring
from the booth, for I knew that that was his purpose.
Craig glanced at Haddon, who now seemed absorbed in talking to
Carton. "No one," he answered quickly. "Central told me there had
not been a call from this pay-station for half an hour."
"No one?" I echoed almost incredulously. "Then what did he do?
Something happened, all right."
Kennedy was evidently engrossed in his own thoughts, for he said
nothing.
"Haddon says he wants to do some scouting about," announced
Carton, when we rejoined them. "There are several people whom he
says he might suspect. I've arranged to meet him this afternoon to
get the first part of this story about the inside working of the
vice trust, and he will let me know if anything develops then. You
will be at your office?"
"Yes, one or the other of us," returned Craig, in a tone which
Haddon could not hear.
In the meantime we took occasion to make some inquiries of our own
about Haddon and Loraine Keith. They were evidently well known in
the select circle in which they travelled. Haddon had many curious
characteristics, chief of which to interest Kennedy was his speed
mania. Time and again he had been arrested for exceeding the speed
limit in taxicabs and in a car of his own, often in the past with
Loraine Keith, but lately alone.
It was toward the close of the afternoon that Carton called up
hurriedly. As Kennedy hung up the receiver, I read on his face
that something had gone wrong.
"Haddon has disappeared," he announced, "mysteriously and
suddenly, without leaving so much as a clue. It seems that he
found in his office a package exactly like that which was sent to
Carton earlier in the day. He didn't wait to say anything about
it, but left. Carton is bringing it over here."
Perhaps a quarter of an hour later, Carton himself deposited the
package on the laboratory table with an air of relief. We looked
eagerly. It was addressed to Haddon at the Mayfair in the same
disguised handwriting and was done up in precisely the same
fashion.
"Lots of bombs are just scare bombs," observed Craig. "But you
never can tell."
"Ah," he went on, "this is the real thing, though, only a little
different from the other. A dry battery gives a spark when the lid
is slipped back. See, the explosive is in a steel pipe. Sliding
the lid off is supposed to explode it. Why, there is enough
explosive in this to have silenced a dozen Haddons."
"Do you think he could have been kidnapped or murdered?" I asked.
"What is this, anyhow--gang-war?"
"I can't say," ruminated Kennedy. "But I can say this: that there
is at large in this city a man of great mechanical skill and
practical knowledge of electricity and explosives. He is trying to
make sure of hiding something from exposure. We must find him."
"And especially Haddon," Carton added quickly. "He is the missing
link. His testimony is absolutely essential to the case I am
building up."
"I think I shall want to observe Loraine Keith without being
observed," planned Kennedy, with a hasty glance at his watch. "I
think I'll drop around at this Mayfair I have heard so much about.
Will you come?"
"I'd better not," refused Carton. "You know they all know me, and
everything quits wherever I go. I'll see you soon."
As we drove in a cab over to the Mayfair, Kennedy said nothing. I
wondered how and where Haddon had disappeared. Had the powers of
evil in the city learned that he was weakening and hurried him out
of the way at the last moment? Just what had Loraine Keith to do
with it? Was she in any way responsible? I felt that there were,
indeed, no bounds to what a jealous woman might dare.
Beside the ornate grilled doorway of the carriage entrance of the
Mayfair stood a gilt-and-black easel with the words, "Tango Tea at
Four." Although it was considerably after that time, there was a
line of taxi-cabs before the place and, inside, a brave array of
late-afternoon and early-evening revellers. The public dancing had
ceased, and a cabaret had taken its place.
We entered and sat down at one of the more inconspicuous of the
little round tables. On a stage, at one side, a girl was singing
one of the latest syncopated airs.
"We'll just stick around a while, Walter," whispered Craig.
"Perhaps this Loraine Keith will come in."
Behind us, protected both by the music and the rustle of people
coming and going, a couple talked in low tones. Now and then a
word floated over to me in a language which was English, sure
enough, but not of a kind that I could understand.
"Dropped by a flatty," I caught once, then something about a
"mouthpiece," and the "bulls," and "making a plant."
"A dip--pickpocket--and his girl, or gun-moll, as they call them,"
translated Kennedy. "One of their number has evidently been picked
up by a detective and he looks to them for a good lawyer, or
mouth-piece."
Besides these two there were innumerable other interesting
glimpses into the life of this meeting-place for the half-and
underworlds. A motion in the audience attracted me, as if some
favourite performer were about to appear, and I heard the "gun-
moll" whisper, "Loraine Keith."
There she was, a petite, dark-haired, snappy-eyed girl, chic, well
groomed, and gowned so daringly that every woman in the audience
envied and every man craned his neck to see her better. Loraine
wore a tight-fitting black dress, slashed to the knee. In fact,
everything was calculated to set her off at best advantage, and on
the stage, at least, there was something recherche about her. Yet,
there was also something gross about her, too.
Accompanying her was a nervous-looking fellow whose washed-out
face was particularly unattractive. It seemed as if the bone in
his nose was going, due to the shrinkage of the blood-vessels.
Once, just before the dance began, I saw him rub something on the
back of his hand, raise it to his nose, and sniff. Then he took a
sip of a liqueur.
The dance began, wild from the first step, and as it developed,
Kennedy leaned over and whispered, "The danse des Apaches."
It was acrobatic. The man expressed brutish passion and jealousy;
the woman, affection and fear. It seemed to tell a story--the
struggle of love, the love of the woman against the brutal
instincts of the thug, her lover. She was terrified as well as
fascinated by him in his mad temper and tremendous superhuman
strength. I wondered if the dance portrayed the fact.
The music was a popular air with many rapid changes, but through
all there was a constant rhythm which accorded well with the
abandon of the swaying dance. Indeed, I could think of nothing so
much as of Bill Sykes and Nancy as I watched these two.
It was the fight of two frenzied young animals. He would approach
stealthily, seize her, and whirl her about, lifting her to his
shoulder. She was agile, docile, and fearful. He untied a scarf
and passed it about her; she leaned against it, and they whirled
giddily about. Suddenly, it seemed that he became jealous. She
would run; he follow and catch her. She would try to pacify him;
he would become more enraged. The dance became faster and more
furious. His violent efforts seemed to be to throw her to the
floor, and her streaming hair now made it seem more like a fight
than a dance. The audience hung breathless. It ended with her
dropping exhausted, a proper finale to this lowest and most brutal
dance.
Panting, flushed, with an unnatural light in their eyes, they
descended to the audience and, scorning the roar of applause to
repeat the performance, sat at a little table.
"Give us a deck, Coke," said one, in a harsh voice.
He nodded. A silver quarter gleamed momentarily from hand to hand,
and he passed to one girl stealthily a small white-paper packet.
Others came to him, both men and women. It seemed to be an
established thing.
"Who is that?" asked Kennedy, in a low tone, of the pickpocket
back of us.
"No one knows, I suppose," Kennedy commented to me. "But he gets
it in spite of the added restrictions and peddles it in little
packets, adulterated, and at a fabulous price for such cheap
stuff. The habit is spreading like wildfire. It is a fertile means
of recruiting the inmates in the vice-trust hotels. A veritable
epidemic it is, too. Cocaine is one of the most harmful of all
habit-forming drugs. It used to be a habit of the underworld, but
now it is creeping up, and gradually and surely reaching the
higher strata of society. One thing that causes its spread is the
ease with which it can be taken. It requires no smoking-dens, no
syringe, no paraphernalia--only the drug itself."
Another singer had taken the place of the dancers. Kennedy leaned
over and whispered to the dip.
"Say, do you and your gun-moll want to pick up a piece of change
to get that mouthpiece I heard you talking about?"
"Oh, don't worry; I'm all right," laughed Craig. "You see that
fellow, Coke Brodie? I want to get something on him. If you will
frame that sucker to get away with a whole front, there's a fifty
in it."
The dip looked, rather than spoke, his amazement. Apparently
Kennedy satisfied his suspicions.
"I'm on," he said quickly. "When he goes, I'll follow him. You
keep behind us, and we'll deliver the goods."
"Why," he answered, "I want to get Brodie, only I don't want to
figure in the thing so that he will know me or suspect anything
but a plain hold-up. They will get him; take everything he has.
There must be something on that man that will help us."
Several performers had done their turns, and the supply of the
drug seemed to have been exhausted. Brodie rose and, with a nod to
Loraine, went out, unsteadily, now that the effect of the cocaine
had worn off. One wondered how this shuffling person could ever
have carried through the wild dance. It was not Brodie who danced.
It was the drug.
The dip slipped out after him, followed by the woman. We rose and
followed also. Across the city Brodie slouched his way, with an
evident purpose, it seemed, of replenishing his supply and
continuing his round of peddling the stuff.
He stopped under the brow of a thickly populated tenement row on
the upper East Side, as though this was his destination. There he
stood at the gate that led down to a cellar, looking up and down
as if wondering whether he was observed. We had slunk into a
doorway.
A woman coming down the street, swinging a chatelaine, walked
close to him, spoke, and for a moment they talked.
"It's the gun-moll," remarked Kennedy. "She's getting Brodie off
his guard. This must be the root of that grapevine system, as they
call it."
Suddenly from the shadow of the next house a stealthy figure
sprang out on Brodie. It was our dip, a dip no longer but a
regular stick-up man, with a gun jammed into the face of his
victim and a broad hand over his mouth. Skilfully the woman went
through Brodie's pockets, her nimble fingers missing not a thing.
"Now--beat it," we heard the dip whisper hoarsely, "and if you
raise a holler, we'll get you right, next time."
Brodie fled as fast as his weakened nerves would permit his shaky
limbs to move. As he disappeared, the dip sent something dark
hurtling over the roof of the house across the street and hurried
toward us.
"I think it was the pistol on the end of a stout cord. That is a
favourite trick of the gunmen after a job. It destroys at least a
part of the evidence. You can't throw a gun very far alone, you
know. But with it at the end of a string you can lift it up over
the roof of a tenement. If Brodie squeals to a copper and these
people are caught, they can't hold them under the pistol law,
anyhow."
The dip had caught sight of us, with his ferret eyes in the
doorway. Quickly Kennedy passed over the money in return for the
motley array of objects taken from Brodie. The dip and his gun-
moll disappeared into the darkness as quickly as they had emerged.
There was a curious assortment--the paraphernalia of a drug fiend,
old letters, a key, and several other useless articles. The
pickpocket had retained the money from the sale of the dope as his
own particular honorarium.
"Brodie has led us up to the source of his supply," remarked
Kennedy, thoughtfully regarding the stuff. "And the dip has given
us the key to it. Are you game to go in?"
A glance up and down the street showed it still deserted. We
wormed our way in the shadow to the cellar before which Brodie had
stood. The outside door was open. We entered, and Craig stealthily
struck a match, shading it in his hands.
At one end we were confronted by a little door of mystery, barred
with iron and held by an innocent enough looking padlock. It was
this lock, evidently, to which the key fitted, opening the way
into the subterranean vault of brick and stone.
Kennedy opened it and pushed back the door. There was a little
square compartment, dark as pitch and delightfully cool and damp.
He lighted a match, then hastily blew it out and switched on an
electric bulb which it disclosed.
"Can't afford risks like that here," he exclaimed, carefully
disposing of the match, as our eyes became accustomed to the
light.
On every side were pieces of gas-pipe, boxes, and paper, and on
shelves were jars of various materials. There was a work-table
littered with tools, pieces of wire, boxes, and scraps of metal.
"My word!" exclaimed Kennedy, as he surveyed the curious scene
before us, "this is a regular bomb factory--one of the most
amazing exhibits that the history of crime has ever produced."