Kennedy had been engaged for some time in the only work outside of
the Dodge case which he had consented to take for weeks.
Our old friend, Dr. Leslie, the Coroner, had appealed to him to
solve a very ticklish point in a Tong murder case which had set
all Chinatown agog. It was, indeed, a very bewildering case. A
Chinaman named Li Chang, leader of the Chang Wah Tong, had been
poisoned, but so far no one had been able to determine what poison
it was or even to prove that there had been a poison, except for
the fact that the man was dead, and Kennedy had taken the thing up
in a great measure because of the sudden turn in the Dodge case
which had brought us into such close contact with the Chinese.
I had been watching Kennedy with interest, for the Tong wars
always make picturesque newspaper stories, when a knock at the
door announced the arrival of Dr. Leslie, anxious for some result.
"Have you been able to find out anything yet?" he greeted Kennedy
eagerly as Craig looked up from his microscope.
Kennedy turned and nodded. "Your dead man was murdered by means of
aconite, of which, you know, the active principle is the deadly
alkaloid aconitine."
Craig pulled down from the shelf above him one of his well-thumbed
standard works on toxicology. He turned the pages and read:
"Pure aconite is probably the most actively poisonous substance
with which we are acquainted. It does not produce any decidedly
characteristic post-mortem appearances, and, in fact, there is no
reliable chemical test to prove its presence. The chances of its
detection in the body after death are very slight."
Dr. Leslie looked up. "Then there is no test, none?" he asked.
"There is one that is brand new," replied Kennedy slowly. "It is
the new starch-grain test just discovered by Professor Reichert,
of the University of Pennsylvania. The peculiarities of the starch
grains of various plants are quite as great as those of the blood
crystals, which, you will recall, Walter, we used once.
"The starch grains of the poison have remained in the wound. I
have recovered them from the dead man's blood and have studied
them microscopically. They can be definitely recognized. This is
plainly a case of aconite poisoning--probably suggested to the
Oriental mind by the poison arrows of the Ainus of Northern
Japan."
Dr. Leslie and I both looked through the microscope, comparing the
starch grains which Kennedy had discovered with those of scores of
micro-photographs which lay scattered over the table.
"There are several treatments for aconite poisoning," ruminated
Kennedy. "I would say that one of the latest and best is digitalin
given hypodermically." He took down a bottle of digitalin from a
cabinet, adding, "only it was too late in this case."
. . . . . . .
Just what the relations were between Long Sin and the Chong Wah
Tong I have never been able to determine exactly. But one thing
was certain: Long Sin on his arrival in New York had offended the
Tong and now that his master, Wu Fang, was here the offence was
even greater, for the criminal society brooked no rival.
In the dark recesses of a poorly furnished cellar, serving as the
Tong headquarters, the new leader and several of his most trusted
followers were now plotting revenge. Long Sin, they believed, was
responsible for the murder, and, with truly Oriental guile, they
had obtained a hold over Wu Fang's secretary.
Their plan decided on, the Chinamen left the headquarters and made
their way separately up-town. They rejoined one another in the
shelter of a rather poor house, before which was a board fence, in
the vicinity of a fashionable apartment house. A moment's
conference followed, and then the secretary glided away.
. . . . . . .
Wu had taken another apartment up-town in one of the large
apartment houses near a parkway; for he was far too subtle to
operate from his real headquarters back of the squalid exterior of
Chinatown.
There Long Sin was now engaged in making all possible provisions
for the safety of his master. Any one who had been walking along
the boulevard and had happened to glance up at the roof of the
tall apartment building might have seen Long Sin's figure
silhouetted against the sky on the top of the mansard roof near a
flagpole.
He had just finished fastening to the flagpole a stout rope which
stretched taut across an areaway some twenty or thirty feet wide
to the next building, where it was fastened to a chimney. Again
and again he tested it, and finally with a nod of satisfaction
descended from the roof and went to the apartment of Wu.
There, alone, he paused for a few minutes to gaze in wonder at the
cryptic ring which had been the net result so far of his efforts
to find the millions which Bennett, as the Clutching Hand, had
hidden. He wore it, strangely enough, over his index finger, and
as he examined it he shook his head in doubt.
Neither he nor his master had yet been able to fathom the
significance of the ring.
Long Sin thought that he was unobserved. But outside, looking
through the keyhole, was Wu's secretary, who had stolen in on the
mission which had been set for him at the Tong headquarters.
Long Sin went over to a desk and opened a secret box in which Wu
had placed several packages of money with which to bribe those
whom he wished to get into his power. It was Long Sin's mission to
carry out this scheme, so he packed the money into a bag, drew his
coat more closely about him and left the room.
No sooner had he gone than the secretary hurried into the room,
paused a moment to make sure that Long Sin was not coming back,
then hurried over to a closet near-by.
From a secret hiding-place he drew out a small bow and arrow. He
sat down at a table and hastily wrote a few Chinese characters on
a piece of paper, rolling up the note into a thin quill which he
inserted into a prepared place in the arrow.
Then he raised the window and deftly shot the arrow out.
Down the street, back of the board fence, where the final
conference has taken place, was a rather sleepy-looking Chinaman,
taking an occasional puff at a cigarette doped with opium.
He jumped to his feet suddenly. With a thud an arrow had buried
itself quivering in the fence. Quickly he seized it, drew out the
note and read it.
In the Canton vernacular it read briefly: "He goes with much
money."
It was enough. Instantly the startling news overcame the effect of
the dope, and the Chinaman shuffled off quickly to the Tong
headquarters.
They were waiting for him there, and he had scarcely delivered the
message before their plans were made. One by one they left the
headquarters, hiding in doorways, basements and areaways along the
narrow street.
. . . . . . .
Long Sin was making his rounds, visiting all those whom the
glitter of Wu's money could corrupt.
Suddenly from the shadows of a narrow street, lined with the
stores of petty Chinese merchants, half a dozen lithe and
murderous figures leaped out behind Long Sin and seized him. He
struggled, but they easily threw him down.
Any one who has visited Chinatown knows that at every corner and
bend of the crooked streets stands a policeman. It was scarcely a
second before the noise of the scuffle was heard, but it was too
late. The half dozen Tong men had seized the money which Long Sin
carried and had deftly stripped him of everything else of value.
The sound of the approaching policeman now alarmed them. Just as
the new Tong leader had raised an axe to bring it down with
crushing force on Long Sin's skull a shot rang out and the axe
fell from the broken wrist of the Chinaman.
In another moment the policeman had seized him. Then followed a
sharp fight in which the Tong men's knowledge of jiu-jitsu stood
them in good stead. The policeman was hurled aside, the Tong
leader broke away, and one by one his followers disappeared
through dark hallways and alleyways, leaving the policeman with
only two prisoners and Long Sin lying on the sidewalk.
"Are you hurt much?" demanded the burly Irish officer, assisting
Long Sin to his feet, none too gently.
Long Sin was furious over the loss of the precious ring, yet he
knew to involve himself in the white man's law would end only in
disaster both for him and his master. He forced a painful smile,
shook his head and managed to get away down the street muttering.
He made his way up-town and back to the apartment of Wu, and
there, pacing up and down in a fury, attended to his wounds.
His forefinger, from which the ring had been so ruthlessly
snatched, was a constant reminder to him of the loss. Any one who
could have studied the vengefulness of his face would have seen
that it boded ill for some one.
. . . . . . .
It was the day after her return from Aunt Tabby's that Kennedy
called again upon Elaine to find that she and Aunt Josephine were
engaged in the pleasant pastime of arranging an entertainment.
Jennings announced Craig and held back the portieres as he
entered.
"Oh, good!" cried Elaine as she saw him. "You are just in time. I
was going to send you this, but I should much rather give it to
you."
She handed him a tastefully engraved sheet of paper which he read
with interest:
Miss Elaine Dodge
requests the honor of your presence
at an Oriental Reception
on April 6th, at 8 o'clock.
"Very interesting," exclaimed Craig enthusiastically. "I shall be
delighted to come."
He looked about a moment at the library which Elaine was already
rearranging for the entertainment.
"Then you must work," she cried gaily. "You are just in time to
help me buy the decorations. No objections--come along."
"But I have a very important investigation for the Coroner that I
am--"
"No excuses," she cried, laughingly, dragging him out.
Among the many places which Elaine had down on her shopping list
was a small Chinese curio shop on lower Fifth avenue.
They entered and were greeted with a profound bow by the
proprietor. He was the new Tong leader, and this up-town shop was
his cover. In actual fact, he was what might have been called a
Chinese fence for stolen goods.
In their interest in the wealth of strange and curious ornaments
displayed in the shop they did not notice that the Chinaman's
wrist was bound tightly under his flowing sleeve.
Elaine explained what it was she wanted, and with Kennedy's aid
selected a number of Chinese hangings and decorations. They were
about to leave the shop when Elaine's eye was attracted by a
little show case in which were many quaint and valuable Chinese
ornaments in gold and silver and covered ivory.
"What an odd looking thing," she said, pointing out a nobbed ring
which reposed on the black velvet of the case.
The subtle Chinaman stood by the pile of hangings on the counter
which Elaine had bought, overjoyed at such a large sale. Praising
the ring to Elaine, he turned insinuatingly to Kennedy. There was
nothing else for Craig to do--he bought the ring, and the Chinaman
proved again his ability as a merchant.
From the curio shop where Elaine had completed her purchases they
drove to Kennedy's laboratory.
I had been at work on a story for the Star when they entered.
"You will be there, too, Mr. Jameson?" coaxed Elaine, as she told
of their morning's work.
We were in the midst of planning the entertainment when a slight
cough behind me made me start and turn quickly.
There stood Long Sin, the astute Chinaman who had delivered the
bomb to Kennedy and had betrayed Bennett. We had seen very little
of him since then.
Long Sin bowed low and shuffled over closer to Kennedy. I noticed
that Elaine eyed Long Sin sharply. But as yet we had seen no
reason to suspect him, so cleverly had he covered his tracks.
Kennedy, having used him once to capture Bennett, was still not
unwilling to use him in attempting to discover where Bennett's
hidden millions lay.
"I am in great trouble, Professor Kennedy," began Long Sin in a
low tone. "You don't know the Chinese of the city, but if you did
you would know what blackmailers there are among them. I have
refused to pay blackmail to the Chong Wah Tong, and since then it
has been trouble, trouble, trouble."
Kennedy looked up quickly at the name Chong Wah Tong, thinking of
the investigation which the Coroner had asked him to make into the
murder. He and Long Sin moved a few steps away, discussing the
affair.
Elaine and I were still talking over the entertainment.
She happened to place her hand on the desk near Long Sin. My back
was toward him and I did not see him start suddenly and look at
her hand. On it was the ring--the ring which, unknown to us, Long
Sin had found in the passageway under Aunt Tabby's garden, of
which he had been robbed, and which now, by a strange chance, had
come into Elaine's possession.
It was a peculiar situation for Long Sin, although as yet we did
not know it. He could not lay claim to the mystic ring, for then
Kennedy would make him prove his ownership, and the whole affair
of which we still knew nothing would be exposed.
He acted quickly. Long Sin decided to recover the ring by stealth.
Elaine was still talking enthusiastically about her party, when
Long Sin turned from Kennedy and moved toward us with a bow.
"The lady speaks of an Oriental reception," he remarked. "Would
she care to engage a magician?"
Elaine turned to him surprised. "Do you mean that you are a
magician?" she asked, puzzled.
Long Sin smiled quietly. He reached over and took a small bottle
from Kennedy's laboratory table. Holding it in his hand almost
directly before us, he made a few sleight-of-hand passes, and,
presto! the bottle had disappeared. A few more passes, and a test
tube appeared in its place. Before we knew it he had caused the
test tube to disappear and the bottle to reappear. We all
applauded enthusiastically.
"I don't think that is such a bad idea after all," nodded Kennedy
to Elaine.
"Perhaps not," she agreed, a little doubtfully. "I hadn't intended
to have such a thing, but--why, of course, that would interest
everybody."
. . . . . . .
It was the night of the reception. The Dodge library was
transformed. The Oriental hangings which Elaine and Kennedy had
purchased seemed to breathe mysticism. At the far end of the room
a platform had been arranged to form a stage on which Long Sin was
to perform his sleight-of-hand. The drawing-room also was
decorated like the library.
At the other end of the room Elaine and Aunt Josephine, in
picturesque Oriental costume, were greeting the guests. Every one
seemed to be delighted with the novelty of the affair.
We came in just a bit ahead of Long Sin, and Elaine greeted us.
Almost everybody had arrived when Elaine turned to the guests and
introduced Long Sin with a little speech. Long Sin bowed and every
one applauded. He made his way to the platform in the library and
mounted it.
I shall not attempt to describe the amazing series of tricks which
he performed. His hands and fingers seemed to move like lightning.
Among other things, I remember he took up a cover from a table
near-by. He held it up before us. Instantly it seemed that a flock
of pigeons flew out of it around the room. How he did it I don't
know. They were real pigeons, however, and the trick brought down
the house.
Another of his feats which I recall was nothing less than kindling
a fire on a small bit of tin and, as the flames mounted, he
deliberately stepped into them, apparently as unharmed as a
salamander.
So it went from one thing to another. The entertainment was
brilliant in itself, but Long Sin seemed to put the finishing
touch to it. In fact, I suppose that it was a couple of hours that
he continued to amuse us.
He had finished and every one crowded about him to congratulate
him on his skill. His only answer, however, was his inscrutable
smile.
"This is wonderful, wonderful," I repeated as I happened to meet
Elaine alone. We walked into the conservatory while the guests
were crowding around Long Sin. She seated herself for the first
time during the evening.
She thanked me, and I hurried off. As I passed through the
drawing-room I did not notice that Long Sin had managed to escape
further congratulations of the guests. Just then a waiter passed
through with ices on a tray. I called to him and he stopped.
A moment later Long Sin himself took an ice from the tray and
retreated back of the portieres. No one was about, and he hastily
drew a bottle from his pocket. On the bottle was a Chinese label.
He palmed the bottle, and any one who had chanced to see him would
have noticed that he passed it two or three times over the ice,
then, lifting the portieres, entered the drawing-room again.
He had made the circuit of the rooms in such a way as to bring
himself out directly in my path. With a smile he stopped before
me, rubbing both hands together.
By this time several of the guests who were fascinated with Long
Sin gathered about us. Long Sin fluttered open a Chinese fan which
he had used in his tricks, passed it over my hand, and in some
incomprehensible way I felt the plate with the ice literally
disappear from my grasp. My face must have shown my surprise. A
burst of laughter from the other guests greeted me. I looked at
Long Sin, half angry, yet unable to say anything, for the joke was
plainly on me. He smiled, made another pass with the fan, and
instantly the plate with the ice was back in my hand.
There was nothing for me but to take the joke in the spirit in
which the other guests had taken it. I laughed with them and
managed to get away.
Meanwhile Kennedy had been moving from one to another of the
guests seeking Elaine. He had already taken an ice from the waiter
and was going in the direction of the conservatory. There he found
her.
"Won't you take this ice?" he asked, handing it to her.
"It is very kind of you," she said, "but I have already sent
Walter for one."
She had already started to eat it when I appeared in the doorway.
I was rather vexed at Long Sin for having delayed me, and I
mumbled something about it.
Kennedy laughed, rather pleased at having beaten me.
"Never mind, Walter," he said with a smile, "I'll take it. And er-
-I don't think that Elaine will object if you play the host for a
little while with Aunt Josephine," he hinted.
I saw that three was a crowd and I turned to retrace my steps to
the drawing-room.
Kennedy, however, was not alone. Back of the palms in the
conservatory two beady black eyes were eagerly watching. Long Sin
had noted every movement as his cleverly laid plan miscarried.
Chatting with animation, Kennedy tasted the ice. He had taken only
a couple of spoonfuls when a look of wonder and horror seemed to
spread over his face.
He rose quickly. A cold sweat seemed to break out all over him.
His nerves almost refused to respond. His tongue seemed to be
paralyzed and the muscles of his throat seemed to be like steel
bands.
He took only a few steps, began to stagger, and finally sank down
on the floor.
We rushed in from the library and drawing-room. There lay Kennedy
on the floor, his face most terribly contorted. We gathered around
him and he tried to raise himself and speak, but seemed unable to
utter a sound.
He had fallen near the fountain and one hand drooped over into the
water. As he fell back he seemed to have only just enough strength
to withdraw his hand from the fountain. On the stone coping,
slowly and laboriously, he moved his finger.
"What's the matter, old man?" I asked, bending over him.
There was no answer, but he managed to turn his head, and I
followed the direction of his eyes.
With trembling finger he was tracing out, one by one, some
letters. I looked and it flashed over me what he meant. He had
written with the water:
I jumped up and almost without a word dashed out of the
conservatory, down the hall and into the first car waiting
outside.
"To the laboratory," I directed, giving the driver the directions,
"and drive like the deuce!"
Fortunately there was no one to stop us, and I know we broke all
the speed laws of New York. I dashed into the laboratory, almost
broke open the cabinet, and seized the bottle of digitalin and a
hypodermic syringe, then rushed madly out again and into the car.
Meanwhile some of the guests had lifted up Kennedy, too excited to
notice Long Sin in his hiding-place. They had laid Craig down on a
couch and were endeavoring to revive him. Some one had already
sent for a doctor, but the aconite was working quickly on its
victim, and he was slowly stiffening out. Elaine was frantic.
I scarcely waited for the car to stop in front of the house. I
opened the door and rushed in.
Without a word I thrust the antidote and the syringe into the
hands of the doctor and he went to work immediately. We watched
with anxiety. Finally Kennedy's eyes opened and gradually his
breathing seemed to become more normal.
Kennedy was considerably broken up by the narrow escape which he
had had, and, naturally, even the next morning, did not feel like
himself.
In the excitement of leaving Elaine's we had forgotten the bottle
of digitalin. As for myself, I had been so overjoyed at seeing my
old friend restored that I would have forgotten anything.
Kennedy looked rather wan and peaked, but insisted on going to the
laboratory as usual.
"Do you remember what became of the bottle of digitalin?" he
asked, fumbling in the closet.
Mechanically I felt in my own pockets; it was not there. I shook
my head.
"I don't seem to remember what became of it--perhaps we left it
there. In fact, we must have left it there."
"I don't like to have such things lying around loose," remarked
Kennedy, taking up his hat and coat with forced energy. "I think
we had better get it."
Elaine had spent rather a sleepless night after the attempt to
poison her which had miscarried and resulted in poisoning Kennedy.
To keep her mind off the thing, she had already started to take
down the decorations. Jennings and Marie, as well as a couple of
workmen, were restoring the library to its normal condition under
the direction of Aunt Josephine.
The telephone rang and Elaine answered it. Her face showed that
something startling had happened.
"It was Jameson," she cried, almost dropping the receiver,
overcome.
They all hurried to her. "He says that Mr. Kennedy and he were
visiting that Chinaman this morning and Mr. Kennedy suffered a
relapse--is dying there, in the Chinaman's apartment. He wants us
to come quickly and bring that medicine that they used last night.
He says it is on the tabaret in the library. Marie, will you look
for it? And, Jennings, get the car right away."
Jennings hurried from the room, and a moment later Marie had found
the bottle behind some ornaments on the tabaret and came back with
it.
Scarcely knowing what to do, Elaine, followed by Aunt Josephine,
had rushed from the house, hatless and coatless, just as the car
swung around from the garage in the rear. Jennings went out with
the wraps. They seized them and leaped into the car, which started
off swiftly.
It was only a matter of minutes when they pulled up before the
apartment house where Wu had taken the suite from which Long Sin
had telephoned the message in my name. Together Elaine and Aunt
Josephine hurried in.
. . . . . . .
Kennedy went directly from the laboratory to the Dodge house.
I don't think I ever saw such an expression of surprise on
anybody's face as that on Jennings's when he opened the door and
saw us. He was aghast. Back of him we could see Marie. She looked
as if she had seen a ghost.
"Why," explained Jennings, "didn't Mr. Jameson just now telephone
that you had had a relapse in the apartment of that Chinaman, and
for Miss Elaine to hurry over there right away with that bottle of
medicine?" Kennedy waited to hear no more. Seizing me by the arm,
he turned and dashed down the steps and back again into the
taxicab in which we had come.
. . . . . . .
In Wu's apartment Long Sin was giving his secretary and another
Chinaman the most explicit instructions. As he finished each
nodded and showed him a Chinese dirk concealed under his blouse.
Just then a knock sounded at the door. The secretary opened it,
and Aunt Josephine and Elaine almost ran in. Before they knew it,
the secretary had locked the door.
Then, straightening up, he faced the two women squarely.
"You have a ring that means much to me," he said quickly. "The
only way to get it from you was to bring you here."
He was pointing now at the ring on Elaine's finger. She looked at
it a moment in surprise, then at the menacing Chinaman, and turned
quickly. She ran to the door. It was locked.
Long Sin, motionless, smiled. "There is no way to get out," he
murmured.
Aunt Josephine was standing now with her back to the door leading
into another room. She happened to look up and saw the secretary,
who was near her and half turned away. From where she was standing
she could see the murderous dirk up his sleeve.
She acted instantly. Without a word she summoned all her strength
and struck him. The secretary stumbled.
"Elaine," she cried, "look out! they have knives."
Before Elaine knew it Aunt Josephine had taken her by the arm, had
pulled her into the back room, and, although Long Sin and the
others had rushed forward, managed to slam the door and lock it.
The Chinamen set to work immediately to pry it open.
While they were at work on the doer, which was already swaying,
Aunt Josephine and Elaine were running about, trying to find an
outlet from the room.
There seemed to be no way out. Even the windows were locked.
"I don't know why they want the ring," whispered Aunt Josephine,
"but they won't get it. Give it to me, Elaine."
She almost seized the ring, hiding it in her waist. As she did so
the door burst open and Wu, Long Sin and the other Chinamen rushed
in.
A second later they seized Elaine and Aunt Josephine.
. . . . . . .
Kennedy and I dashed up before the apartment house in which we
knew that Long Sin lived, leaped out of the car and hurried in.
It was on the second floor, and we did not wait for the elevator
but took the steps two at a time. Kennedy found the door locked.
Instantly he whipped out his revolver and shot the lock in pieces.
We threw ourselves against the door, the broken lock gave way and
we rushed in through the front room.
No one was there, but in a back room we could hear sounds. It was
Elaine and Aunt Josephine struggling with the Chinamen. Long Sin
and the others had seized Elaine and Aunt Josephine was trying to
help her just as we rushed in. With a blow Kennedy knocked out the
secretary, while I struggled with the other Chinamen who blocked
the way.
Then Kennedy went directly at Long Sin. They struggled furiously.
Long Sin, with his wonderful knowledge of jiu-jitsu, might not
have been a match for six other Chinamen, but he was for one white
man. With a mighty effort he threw Kennedy, rushed for the door
and, as he passed through the outside room, seized a Tong axe from
the wall.
Afraid of the wonderful jiu-jitsu, I had picked up the first thing
handy, which was a tabaret. I literally broke it over the head of
my Chinaman, then turned and dashed out after Long Sin just as
Kennedy picked himself up and followed.
I caught up with the Chinaman and we had a little struggle, but he
managed to break away and raised his axe threateningly. A shout
from Kennedy caused him to turn and run down the flight of stairs,
Kennedy closely behind him.
In the main hall of the apartment house were two elevator shafts
facing the street entrance, some twenty-five or thirty feet away.
Through the street door the janitor and two or three other men
were running in. They had heard the noise of the fighting above.
Escape to the street was cut off. We were behind him on the flight
of stairs.
Long Sin did not hesitate a moment. He ran to the elevator, the
door of which was open, seized the elevator boy and sent him
sprawling on the marble floor. Then he slammed the door and the
elevator shot up.
Kennedy was only a few feet behind, and he took in the situation
at a glance. He leaped into the other elevator, and before the
surprised boy could interfere shot it up only a few feet behind
Long Sin.
Up the two elevators rose, Kennedy firing as best he could at Long
Sin, while the shots reverberated through the elevator shaft like
cannon.
It was a wild race to the roof. Long Sin had the start, and as the
elevator reached the top floor he flung it open, dashed out and
through a door up to the roof itself.
A second later Kennedy's elevator stopped. Craig leaped out and
fired his last shot at the legs of Long Sin as he disappeared at
the top of the flight of stairs to the roof. He flung the revolver
from him and followed.
Without a moment's hesitation Kennedy threw himself at Long Sin.
They struggled with each other. Finally Long Sin managed to wrench
one arm lose and raise the Tong axe over Kennedy's head.
Kennedy dodged back. As he did so he tripped on the very edge of
the roof and went sliding down the slates of the mansard.
Fortunately he was able to catch himself in the gutter.
It was the opportunity that Long Sin wanted. He started across the
rope, which he had stretched from this apartment house to the
building across the court, with all the deftness of the most
expert Chinese acrobat.
By this time I had reached the roof, followed by the janitor and
the elevator boys.
Kennedy was now crawling up the mansard, helping himself as best
he could by some of the ornamental ironwork. I hurried over with
the janitor, and together we pulled him out of danger.
Long Sin had reached the roof on the opposite side as we ran
across in the direction of the taut rope.
A moment later he returned and bowed at us mockingly, then
disappeared behind a skylight.
"You fellows go down to the street and see if you can head him off
that way," he cried. "Stay here, Walter."
Before I knew it he had seized the rope and was going across to
the other building, hand over hand. It was a perilous undertaking,
but his blood was up.
Kennedy had almost reached the other roof when suddenly from
behind the skylight stepped Long Sin. With a wicked leer, he
advanced to the edge of the roof, his axe upraised. I looked
across the yawning chasm, horrified.
Slowly Long Sin raised the axe above his head, gathering all the
strength which he had, waiting for Kennedy to approach closer.
Kennedy stopped. Swiftly the axe descended, slashing the rope at
one blow.
Like the weight of a pendulum Kennedy swung back against our own
building, managing to keep his hold on the rope with superhuman
strength.
I bent far over the edge of the roof, fully expecting to see him
dashed to pieces at the bottom of the court.
The rope had been just long enough to make him strike a window and
he had gone crashing through the glass three floors below.
I dashed down the stairs and into the apartment. Kennedy was lying
on the floor badly cut. I raised him up. He was dazed and
considerably overcome; but as he staggered to his feet with my
help I saw that no bones were broken.
"Help me, quick, Walter," he urged, moving toward the elevators.
Meanwhile Long Sin had quickly dived down into the next building.
A few moments later he had come out on the ground floor at the
rear.
Gazing about to see whether he was followed, he disappeared.
. . . . . . .
Back in the apartment, Elaine and Aunt Josephine were just about
to run out when the two Chinamen who had been knocked out
recovered. One of them threw himself on Elaine. Aunt Josephine
tried to ward him off, but the other one struck her and threw her
down.
With a hasty guttural exclamation they picked her up and ran out.
Instead of going down-stairs they crossed the hallway, slamming
the door behind them.
As Kennedy and I reached the ground floor we saw the janitor and
one of the elevator boys on either side of Aunt Josephine.