<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
<h3>SEVEN LOST DAYS</h3>
<p>Instead of driving up to San Francisco with
Worth and Barbara, the next morning, I was
headed south at a high rate of speed. Sitting in the
Pullman smoker, going over what had happened and
what I had made of it, vainly studying a small, blue
blotter with some senseless hieroglyphics reversed upon
it, I wasn't at all sure that this move of mine was
anywhere near the right one. But the thing hit me
so quick, had to be decided in a flash, and my snap
judgment never was good.</p>
<p>We were all at breakfast there at the Gilbert house
when I got the phone that those boobs down in Los
Angeles had let Skeels slip through their fingers. I
could see no way but to go myself. When I went
out to retrieve my hand bag from the roadster, there
was Barbara already in the seat. I delayed a minute
to explain to her. She was full of eager interest; it
seemed to her that Skeels ducking the detectives that
way was more than clever—almost worthy of a
wonder man.</p>
<p>"Slickest thing I ever knew," I grumbled. "You
can gamble I wouldn't be going south after him if
Skeels hadn't shown himself too many for the Hicks
agency—and they're one of the best in the business."</p>
<p>Worth came out and settled himself at the wheel; he
and Edwards exchanged a last, low-toned word; and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</SPAN></span>
they were ready to be off. Barbara leaned towards
me with shining eyes.</p>
<p>"Perhaps," she said, "Skeels might even be Clayte!"
then the roadster whisked her away.</p>
<p>The bulk of Worth Gilbert's fortune was practically
tied up in this affair. Even as the Pullman carried
me Los Angeles-ward, that boy was getting in to
San Francisco, going to the bank, and turning over to
them capital that represented not only his wealth but
his honor. If we failed to trace this money, he was
a discredited fool. Yes, I had done right to come.</p>
<p>So far on that side. Then apprehension began to
mutter within me about the situation at Santa Ysobel.
How long would that coroner's verdict of suicide satisfy
the public? How soon would some seepage of
fact indicate that the death was murder and set the
whole town to looking for a murderer? The minute
this happened, the real criminal would take alarm and
destroy evidence I might have gathered if I had stayed
by the case. I promised myself that it should be
simply "there and back" with me in the Skeels matter.</p>
<p>This is the way it looked to me in the Pullman; then—once
in Los Angeles—I allowed myself to get hot
telling the Hicks people what I thought of them, explaining
how I'd have run the chase, and wound up by
giving seven days to it—seven precious, irreclaimable
days—while everything lay wide open there in the
north, and I couldn't get any satisfactory word from
the office, and none of any sort from Worth.</p>
<p>That Skeels trail kept me to it, with my tongue
hanging out; again and again I seemed to have him;
every time I missed him by an hour or so; and that
convinced me that he was straining every nerve, and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</SPAN></span>
that he probably had the whole of the loot still with
him. At last, I seemed to have him in a perfect trap—Ensenada,
on the Peninsula. You get into and out
of Ensenada by steamboat only, except back to the
mines on foot or donkey. The two days I had to wait
over in San Diego for the boat which would follow
the one Skeels had taken were a mighty uneasy time.
If I'd imagined for a moment that he wasn't on the
dodge—that he was there openly—I'd have wired the
Mexican authorities, and had him waiting for me in
jail. But the Mexican officials are a rotten lot; it
seemed to me best to go it alone.</p>
<p>What I found in Ensenada was that Skeels had been
there, quite publicly, under his own name; he had
come alone and departed with a companion, Hinch
Dial, a drill operator from the mines, a transient, a
pick-up laborer, seemingly as close-mouthed as Silent
Steve himself. Steve had come on one steamer and
the two had left on the next. That north-bound boat
we passed two hours off Point Loma was carrying
Skeels and his pal back to San Diego!</p>
<p>Again two days lost, waiting for the steamer back.
And when I got to San Diego, the trail was stone cold.
I had sent Worth almost daily reports in care of my
office, not wanting them to lie around at Santa Ysobel
during the confusion of the funeral and all; but even
before I went to Ensenada, telegrams from Roberts
had informed me that these reports could not be delivered
as Worth had not been at the office, and telephone
messages to Santa Ysobel and the Palace Hotel
had failed to locate him. When I believed I had
Skeels firmly clasped in the jaws of the Ensenada trap,
I had sent a complete report of my doings up to that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</SPAN></span>
time, and the optimistic outlook then, to Barbara with
instructions for her to get it to Worth. She would
know where he was.</p>
<p>But she hadn't. Her reply, waiting at San Diego
for me, a delicious little note that somehow lightened
the bitterness of my disappointment over Skeels, told
me that she had seen Worth at the funeral, almost
a week ago now, but only for a minute; that she had
supposed he had joined me on the Skeels chase; and
she would now try to hunt him up and deliver my report.
Roberts, too, had a line in one of his reports
that Worth had called for the suitcase on the Monday
I left and had neither returned it nor been in the office
since.</p>
<p>I worried not at all over Worth; if he wanted to
play hide and seek with Dykeman's spotters, he was
thoroughly capable of looking after himself; but in
the Skeels matter, I did then what I should have done
in the first place, of course; turned the work over to
subordinates and headed straight home.</p>
<p>I reached San Francisco pretty well used up. It
was nearly the middle of the forenoon next day when
I got to my desk and found it piled high with mail
that had accumulated in my absence. Roberts had
looked after what he could, and sorted the rest, ready
for me. Everything concerning the Clayte case was
in one basket. As Roberts handed it to me, he explained.</p>
<p>"The Van Ness bank attorney—Cummings—has
been keeping tabs on you tight, Mr. Boyne. Here
every day—sometimes twice. Wants to know the
minute you're back."</p>
<p>I grunted and dived into the letters. Nothing in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</SPAN></span>teresting.
Responses acknowledging receipts of my
early inquiries. Roberts lingered.</p>
<p>"Well?" I shot at him. He moved uneasily as he
asked.</p>
<p>"Did you wire him when you were coming back?"</p>
<p>"Cummings? No. Why?"</p>
<p>"He telephoned in just before you came saying that
he'd be right up to see you. I told him you hadn't
returned. He laughed and hung up."</p>
<p>"All right, Roberts. Send him in when he comes."
I dismissed the secretary. Cummings was keeping
tabs on me with a vengeance. What was on his chest?</p>
<p>I didn't need to wait long to find out. In another
minute he was at my door greeting me in an off-hand,
"Hello, Boyne. Ready to jump into your car and
go around with me to see Dykeman?"</p>
<p>"Just got down to the office, Cummings," I
watched him, trying to figure out where I stood and
where he stood after this week's absence. "Haven't
seen Worth Gilbert yet. What's the rush with Dykeman?"</p>
<p>"You'll find out when you get there."</p>
<p>Not very friendly, seeing that Cummings had been
Worth's lawyer in the matter, and aside from that
queer scene in my office, there'd been no actual break.
He stood now, not really grinning at me, but with an
amused look under that bristly mustache, and suggested,</p>
<p>"So you haven't seen young Gilbert?"</p>
<p>The tone was so significant that I gave him a quick
glance of inquiry as I said,</p>
<p>"No. What about him?"</p>
<p>"Put on your coat and come along. We can talk<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</SPAN></span>
on the way," he replied, and I went with him to the
street, dug little Pete out of the bootblack stand and
herded him into the roadster to drive us. Cummings
gave the order for North Beach, and as we squirmed
through and around congested down-town traffic, headed
for the Stockton Street tunnel, I waited for the lawyer
to begin. When it came, it was another startling question,</p>
<p>"Didn't find Skeels in the south, eh?"</p>
<p>I hadn't thought they'd carry their watching and
trailing of us so far. I answered that question with
another,</p>
<p>"When did you see or hear from Worth Gilbert
last?"</p>
<p>"Not since the funeral," he said promptly, "the
day before the funeral—a week ago to-day, to be exact.
I ran down to make my inventory then; as administrator,
you know."</p>
<p>He looked at me so significantly that I echoed,</p>
<p>"Yes, I know."</p>
<p>"Do you? How much?" His voice was hard and
dry; it didn't sound good to me.</p>
<p>"See here," I put it to him, as my clever little driver
dodged in and out through the narrow lanes between
Pagoda-like shops of Chinatown, avoiding the steep
hill streets by a diagonal through the Italian quarter on
Columbus Avenue. "If there's anything you think
I ought to be told, put me wise. I suppose you raised
that money for Worth—the seventy-two thousand that
was lacking, I mean?"</p>
<p>"I did not."</p>
<p>I turned the situation over and over in my mind,
and at last asked cautiously,</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</SPAN></span>"Worth did get the money to make up the full
amount, didn't he?"</p>
<p>We had swerved again to the north, where the
Powell car-line curves into Bay Street, and were headed
direct for the wharves. Cummings watched me out
of the corners of his eyes, a look that bored in most
unpleasantly, while he cross-examined,</p>
<p>"So you don't know where he raised that money—or
how—or when? You don't even know that he did
raise it? Is that the idea?"</p>
<p>I gave him look for look, but no answer. An indecisive
slackening of the machine, and Little Pete
asked,</p>
<p>"Where now, sir?"</p>
<p>"You can see it," Cummings pointed. "The tall
building. Hit the Embarcadero, then turn to your
right; a block to Mason Street."</p>
<p>So close to the dock that ships lay broadside before
its doors, moored to the piles by steel cables, the Western
Cereal Company plant scattered its mills and warehouses
over two city blocks. Freight trains ran
through arcades into the buildings to fetch and carry
its products; great trucks, some gas driven, some with
four- and six-horse teams, loaded sacks or containers
that shot in endless streams through well worn chutes,
or emptied raw materials that would shortly be breakfast
foods into iron conveyors that sucked it up and
whined for more. It was a place of aggressive activity
among placid surroundings, this plant of Dykeman's,
for its setting was the Italian fisherman's home district;
little frame shacks, before which they mended
their long, brown nets, or stretched them on the sidewalks
to dry; Fisherman's Wharf and its lateen rigged,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</SPAN></span>
gayly painted hulls, was under the factory windows.</p>
<p>We pulled up before the door of a building separate
from any of the mills or warehouses, and I followed
Cummings through a corridor, past many doors of
private offices, to the large general office. Here a
young man at a desk against the rail lent Cummings
respectful attention; the lawyer asked something in a
low tone, and was answered,</p>
<p>"Yes, sir. Waiting for you. Go right through."</p>
<p>Down the long room with its rattling typewriters,
its buzz of clerks and salesmen we went. Cummings
was a little ahead of me, when he checked a moment to
bow to some one over at a desk. I followed his glance.
The girl he had spoken to turned her back almost
instantly after she had returned his greeting; but I
couldn't be mistaken. There might be more than one
figure with that slim, half girlish grace about it, and
other hair as lustrously blue-black, but none could be
wound around a small head quite so shapely, carried
with so blossomlike a toss. It was Barbara Wallace.</p>
<p>So this was where her job was. Strange I had not
known this fact of grave importance. I went on past
her unconscious back, left her working at her loose-leaf
ledgers, beside her adding machine, my mind a
whirl of ugly conjecture. Dykeman's employee; that
would instantly and very painfully clear up a score of
perplexing questions. Dykeman would need no detectives
on my trail to tell him of my lack of success
in the Skeels chase. Lord! I had sent her as concise
a report as I could make—to her, for Worth. I
walked on stupidly. In front of the last door in the
big room, Cummings halted and spoke low.</p>
<p>"Boyne, you and I are both in the employ of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</SPAN></span>
Van Ness Avenue Bank. We're somewhat similarly
situated in another quarter; I'm representing the Gilbert
estate, and you've been retained by Worth Gilbert."</p>
<p>I grunted some sort of assent.</p>
<p>"I brought you here to listen to what the bank
crowd has to say, but when they get done, I've
something to tell you about that young employer of
yours. You listen to them—then you listen to me—and
you'll know where you stand."</p>
<p>"I'll talk with you as soon as I get through here,
Cummings."</p>
<p>"Be sure you do that little thing," significantly, and
we went in.</p>
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