<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></SPAN>CHAPTER XI</h2>
<h3>THE MISSING DIARY</h3>
<p>My experience as a detective has convinced me
that the evident is usually true; that in a great
majority of cases crime leaves a straight trail, and ambiguities
are more often due to the inability of the
trailer than to the cunning of the trailed. Such
reputation as I have established is due to acceptance of
and earnest adherence to the obvious.</p>
<p>In this affair of Thomas Gilbert's death, everything
so far pointed one way. The body had been found
in a bolted room, revolver in hand; on the wall over
the mantel hung the empty holster; Worth assured me
the gun was kept always loaded; and there might be
motive enough for suicide in the quarrel last night
between father and son.</p>
<p>Because of that flitting shadow I had seen, I knew
this place was not impervious. Some one person, at
least, could enter and leave the room easily, quickly,
while its doors were locked. But that might be
Hughes—or even Worth—with some reason for doing
so not willingly explained, and some means not readily
seen. It probably had nothing to do with Thomas
Gilbert's sudden death, could not offset in my mind the
conviction of Thomas Gilbert's stiffened fingers about
the pistol's butt. That I made a second thorough investigation
of the study interior was not because I
questioned the manner of the death.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</SPAN></span>I began taking down books from the shelves at
regular intervals, sounding the thick dead-wall, in
search of a secreted entrance. I came on a row of
volumes whose red morocco backs carried nothing but
dates.</p>
<p>"Account books?" I asked.</p>
<p>Worth turned his head to look, and the bleakest
thing that could be called a smile twisted his lips a
little, as he said,</p>
<p>"My father's diaries."</p>
<p>"Quite a lot of them."</p>
<p>"Yes. He'd kept diaries for thirty years."</p>
<p>"But he seems to have dropped the habit. There is
no 1920 book."</p>
<p>"Oh, yes there is," very definitely. "He never gave
up setting down the sins of his family and neighbors
while his eyes had sight to see them, and his hand the
cunning to write." He spoke with extraordinary
bitterness, finishing, "He would have had it on the
desk there. The current book was always kept convenient
to his hand."</p>
<p>An idea occurred to me.</p>
<p>"Worth," I asked, "did you see that 1920 volume
when you were here last night?"</p>
<p>He looked a little startled, and I prompted,</p>
<p>"Were you too excited to have noticed a detail like
that?"</p>
<p>"I wasn't excited; not in the sense of being confused,"
he spoke slowly. "The book was there; he'd
been writing in it. I remember looking at it and thinking
that as soon as I was gone, he'd sit down in his
chair and put every damn' word of our row into it.
That was his way. The seamy side of Santa Ysobel<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</SPAN></span>
life's recorded in those books. I always understood
they amounted to a pack of neighborhood dynamite."</p>
<p>"Got to find that last book," I said.</p>
<p>He nodded listlessly. I went to it, giving that room
such a searching as would have turned out a bent pin,
had one been mislaid in it. I even took down from the
shelves books of similar size to see if the lost volume
had been slipped into a camouflaging cover—all to no
good. It wasn't there. And when I had finished I
was positive of two things; the study had no other
entrance than the apparent ones, and the diary of 1920
had been removed from the room since Worth saw it
there the night before. I reached for one of the other
volumes. Worth spoke again in a sort of dragging
voice,</p>
<p>"What do you want to look at them for, Jerry?"</p>
<p>"It's not idle curiosity," I told him, a bit pricked.</p>
<p>"I know it's not that." The old, affectionate tone
went right to my heart. "But if you're thinking you'll
find in them any explanation of my father's taking his
own life, I'm here to tell you you're mistaken. Plenty
there, no doubt, to have driven a tender hearted man
off the earth.... He was different." Eyeing the
book in my hand, the boy blurted with sudden heat,
"Those damn' diaries have been wife and child and
meat and drink to him. They were his reason for
living—not dying!"</p>
<p>"Start me right in regard to your father, Worth,"
I urged anxiously. "It's important."</p>
<p>The boy gave me his shoulder and continued to
stare down into the fire, as he said at last, slowly,</p>
<p>"I would rather leave him alone, Jerry."</p>
<p>I knew it would be useless to insist. Never then or<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</SPAN></span>
thereafter did I hear him say more of his father's
character. At that, he could hardly have told more
in an hour's talk.</p>
<p>At random, I took the volume that covered the year
in which, as I remembered, Thomas Gilbert's wife had
secured her divorce from him. Neatly and carefully
written in a script as readable as type, the books, if I
am a judge, had literary style. They were much more
than mere diaries. True, each entry began with a note
of the day's weather, and certain small records of the
writer's personal affairs; but these went oddly enough
with what followed; a biting analysis of the inner life,
the estimated intentions and emotions, of the beings
nearest to him. It was inhuman stuff. But Worth
was right; there was no soil for suicide in this matter
written by a hand guided by a harsh, censorious mind;
too much egotism here to willingly give over the rôle
of conscience for his friends. Friends?—could a man
have friends who regarded humanity through such unkindly,
wide open, all-seeing eyes?</p>
<p>Worth, seated across from me on the other side of
the fire, stared straight into the leaping blaze; but I
doubted if that was what he saw. On his face was
the look which I had come to know, of the dignified
householder who had gone in and shut the door on
whatever of dismay and confusion might be in his
private affairs. I began to read his father's version
of the separation from his mother, with its ironic references
to her most intimate friend.</p>
<p>"Marion would like to see Laura Bowman ship Tony
and marry Jim Edwards. I swear the modern woman
has played bridge so long that her idea of the most
serious obligation in life—the marriage vow—is,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</SPAN></span>
'Never mind. If you don't like the hand you have got,
shuffle, cut, and deal again!'"</p>
<p>I dropped the book to my knee and looked over at
Worth, asking,</p>
<p>"This Mrs. Dr. Bowman that we met last night at
Tait's—she was a special friend of your mother's?"</p>
<p>"They were like sisters—in more than one way." I
knew without his telling it that he alluded to their
common misfortune of being both unhappily married.
His mother, a woman of more force than the other,
had gained her freedom.</p>
<p>"<i>Femina Priores.</i>" I came on an entry standing
oddly alone. "Marion is to secure the divorce—at my
suggestion. I have demanded that our son share his
time between us."</p>
<p>Again I let the book down on my knee and looked
across at the silent fellow there. And I had heard him
compassionate Barbara Wallace for having painful
memories of her childhood! I believe he was at that
moment more at peace with his father than he had ever
been in his life—and that he grieved that this was so.
I knew, too, that the forgiveness and forgetting would
not extend to these pitiless records. Without disturbing
him, I laid the book I held down and scouted
forward for things more recent.</p>
<p>"Laura Bowman"—through one entry after another
Gilbert kicked that poor woman's name like a football.
Very fine and righteous and high-minded in what he
said, but writing it out in full and calling her painful
difficulties—the writhing of a sensitive, high-strung
woman, mismated with a tyrant—an example notably
stupid and unoriginal, of the eternal matrimonial triangle.
Bowman evidently kept his sympathy, so far<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</SPAN></span>
as such a nature can be said to entertain that gentle
emotion.</p>
<p>I ran through other volumes, merciless recitals, now
and again, of the shortcomings of his associates or
servants; a cold blooded misrepresentation of his son;
a sneer for the affair with Ina Thornhill, with the dictum,
sound enough no doubt, that the girl herself did
the courting, and that she had no conscience—"The
extreme society type of parasite," he put it. And then
the account of his break with Edwards.</p>
<p>Dr. Bowman, it seems, had come to Gilbert in confidence
for help, saying that his wife had left his house
in the small hours the previous night, nothing but an
evening wrap pulled over her night wear, and that he
guessed where she could be found, since she hadn't
gone to her mother's. He asked Gilbert to be his
ambassador with messages of pardon. Didn't want
to go himself, because that would mean a row, and he
was determined, if possible, to keep the thing private,
giving a generous reason: that he wasn't willing to
disgrace the woman. All of which, after he'd written
it down, the diarist discredited with his brief comment
to the effect that Tony Bowman shunned publicity
because scandal of the sort would hurt his practice,
and his pride as well, and that he didn't go out to
Jim Edwards's ranch because, under these circumstances,
he would be afraid of Jim.</p>
<p>Thomas Gilbert did the doctor's errand for him.
The entry concerning it occupied the next day. I read
between the lines how much he enjoyed his position
of god from the machine, swooping down on the two
he found out there, estimating their situation and
behavior in his usual hair-splitting fashion, sitting as<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</SPAN></span>
a court of last appeal. It was of no use for Edwards
to explain to him that Laura Bowman was practically
crazy when she walked out of her husband's house as
the culmination of a miserable scene—the sort that
had been more and more frequent there of late—carrying
black-and-blue marks where he had grabbed
and shaken her. The statement that it was by mere
chance she encountered Jim seemed to have made Gilbert
smile, and Jim's taking of her out to the ranch,
the assertion that it was the only thing to do, that she
was sick and delirious, had inspired Gilbert to say to
him, quite neatly, "You weren't delirious, I take it—not
more than usual."</p>
<p>Then he demanded that Laura go with him, at once,
back to her husband, or out to her mother's. She
considered the matter and chose to go back to Bowman,
saying bitterly that her mother made the match
in the first place, and stood always against her daughter
and with her son-in-law whatever he did. Plainly
it took all of Laura's persuasions to prevent actual
blows between Gilbert and Edwards. Also, she would
only promise to go back and live under Bowman's
roof, but not as his wife—and the whole situation was
much aggravated.</p>
<p>I followed Mr. Thomas Gilbert's observation of this
affair: his amused understanding of how much Jim
Edwards and Laura hated him; his private contempt
for Bowman, to whom he continued to give countenance
and moral support; his setting down of the quarrels,
intimate, disastrous, between Bowman and his
wife, as the doctor retailed them to him, the woman
dragging herself on her knees to beg for her freedom,
and his callous refusals; backed by threat of the wide<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</SPAN></span>
publicity of a scandalous divorce suit, with Thomas
Gilbert as main witness. I turned to Worth and asked,</p>
<p>"When will Edwards be here?"</p>
<p>"Any minute now." Worth looked at me queerly,
but I went on,</p>
<p>"You said he phoned from the ranch. Did he answer
you in person—from out there?"</p>
<p>"That's what I told you, Jerry."</p>
<p>My searching gaze made nothing of the boy's impassive
face; I plunged again into the diaries, running
down a page, getting the heading of a sentence, not
delaying to go further unless I struck something which
seemed to me important, and each minute thinking of
the strangeness of a man like this killing himself.
It was in the 1916 volume, that I made a discovery
which surprised an exclamation from me.</p>
<p>"What would you call this, Worth? Your father's
way of making corrections?"</p>
<p>"Corrections?" Worth spoke without looking
around. "My father never made corrections—in anything."
It was said without animus—a simple statement
of fact.</p>
<p>"But look here." I held toward him the book.
There were three leaves gone; that meant six pages,
and the entries covered May 31 and June 1. I had
verified that before I spoke to him, noticing that the
statement of the weather for May 31 remained at the
foot of the last page left, while a run-over on the
page beyond the missing ones had been marked out.
It had nothing to do with the weather. As nearly
as I could make out with the reading glass I held over
it, the words were, "take the woman for no other than
she appears."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</SPAN></span>"Worth," I urged, "give me your attention for a
minute here. You say your father did not make corrections,
but one of the diaries is cut. The records
of two days are gone. Were those pages stolen?"</p>
<p>"How should I know?" said Worth, and added,
helpfully, "Pity they didn't steal the whole lot. That
would have been a relief."</p>
<p>There were voices and the sound of steps outside.
I shoved the diary back into its place on the shelf, and
turned to see Barbara at the broken door with Jim
Edwards. She came in, her clear eyes a little wide,
but the whole young personality of her quite composed.
Edwards halted at the door, a haggard eye roving
over the room, until it encountered the blood-stain on
the rug, when it sheered abruptly, and fixed itself on
Worth, who crossed to shake hands, with a quiet,</p>
<p>"Come in, won't you, Jim? Or would you rather
go up to the house?"</p>
<p>Keenly I watched the man as he stood there struggling
for words. There was color on his thin cheeks,
high under the dark eyes; it made him look wild. The
chill of the drive, or pure nervousness, had him shaking.</p>
<p>"Thank you—the house, I think," he said rather
incoherently. Yet he lingered. "Barbara's been telling
me," he said in that deep voice of his with the air
of one who utters at random. "Worth,—had you
thought that it might have been happening down here,
right at the time we all sat at Tait's together?"</p>
<p>He was in a condition to spill anything. A moment
more and we should have heard what it was that
had him in such a grip of horror. But as I glanced at
Worth, I saw him reply to the older man's question<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</SPAN></span>
with a very slight but very perceptible shake of the head.
It had nothing to do with what had been asked him;
to any eye it said more plainly than words, "Don't
talk; pull yourself together." I whirled to see how
Edwards responded to this, and found our group had
a new member. In the door stood a decent looking,
round faced Chinaman. Edwards had drawn a little
inside the threshold for him, but very little, and waited,
still shaken, perturbed, hat in hand, apparently ready
to leave as soon as the Oriental got out of his way.</p>
<p>"Hello," the yellow man saluted us.</p>
<p>"Hello, Chung," Worth rejoined, and added, "Looks
good to see you again."</p>
<p>I was relieved to hear that. It showed me that the
cook, anyhow, had not seen Worth last night in Santa
Ysobel.</p>
<p>"Just now I hea' 'bout Boss." Chung's eye went
straight to the stain on the rug, exactly as Edwards'
had done, but it stopped there, and his Oriental impassiveness
was unmoved. "Too bad," he concluded,
thrust the fingers of one hand up the sleeve of the
other and waited.</p>
<p>"Where you been all day?" I said quickly.</p>
<p>"My cousin' ranch."</p>
<p>"His cousin's got a truck farm over by Medlow—or
used to have," Worth supplied, and Chung looked
to him, instantly.</p>
<p>"You sabbee," he said hopefully. "I go iss mo'ning—all
same any day—not find out 'bout Boss. Too
bad. Too velly much bad." A pause, then, looking
around at the four of us, "I get dinner?"</p>
<p>"We've all had something to eat, Chung," Worth
said. "You go now fix room. Make bed. To-night,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</SPAN></span>
I stay; Mr. Boyne here stay; Mr. Edwards stay. Fix
three rooms. Good fire."</p>
<p>"All 'ite," the chink would have ducked out then,
Jim Edwards after him, but I stopped the proceedings
with,</p>
<p>"Hold on a minute—while we're all together—tell
us about that visitor Mr. Gilbert had last night." I
was throwing a rock in the brush-pile in the chance of
scaring out a rabbit. I was shooting the question at
Chung, but my eye was on Edwards. He glared back
at me for a moment, then couldn't stand the strain
and looked away. At last the Chinaman spoke.</p>
<p>"Not see um. I go fix bed now."</p>
<p>"Hold on," again I stopped him. "Worth, tell him
those beds can wait. Tell him it's all right to answer
my questions."</p>
<p>"'S all 'ite?" Chung studied us in turn. I was
keeping an inconspicuous eye on Edwards as I reassured
him. "'S all 'ite," he repeated with a falling
inflection this time, and finished placidly, "You want
know 'bout lady?"</p>
<p>"What's all this?" Edwards spoke low.</p>
<p>"About a lady who came to see Mr. Gilbert last
night," I explained shortly; then, "Who was she,
Chung?"</p>
<p>"Not see um good." The Chinaman shook his
head gravely.</p>
<p>"Did she come here—to the study?" I asked. He
nodded. Worth moved impatiently, and the Chinaman
caught it. He fixed his eyes on Worth. I
stepped between them. "Chung," I said sharply.
"You knew the lady. Who was she?"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</SPAN></span>"Not see um good," he repeated, plainly reluctant.
"She hold hand by face—cly, I think."</p>
<p>"Good God!" Edwards broke out startlingly. "If
we're going to hear an account of all the women that
Tom lectured and made cry—leave me out of it."</p>
<p>"One woman will do, for this time," I said to him
drily, "if it's the right one," and he subsided, turning
away. But he did not go. With burning eyes, he
stood and listened while I cross-examined the unwilling
Chung and got apparently a straight story showing
that some woman had come to the side door of his
master's house shortly after dinner Saturday night,
walked to the study with that master, weeping, and
that her voice when he heard it, sounded like that of
some one he knew. I tried every way in the world to
get him to be specific about this voice; did it sound
like that of a young lady? an old lady? did he think
it was some one he knew well, or only a little? had he
been hearing it much lately? All the usual tactics;
but Chung's placid obstinacy was proof against them.
He kept shaking his head and saying over and over,</p>
<p>"No hear um good," until Barbara, standing watchfully
by, said,</p>
<p>"Chung, you think that lady talk like this?"</p>
<p>As she spoke, after the first word, a change had
come into her voice; it was lighter, higher, with a
something in its character faintly reminiscent to my
ear. And Chung bobbed his head quickly, nodding
assent. In her mimicry he had recognized the tones
of the visitor. I glanced at Edwards: he looked
positively relieved.</p>
<p>"I'll go to the house, Worth," he said with more<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</SPAN></span>
composure in his tone than I would have thought a
few moments ago he could in any way summon.
"You'll find me there." And he followed the Chinaman
up the moonlit path.</p>
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