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<h2> V. A SECOND VISITOR </h2>
<p>Mechanically Rhoda Gray thrust the paper into the pocket of her skirt. The
door swung open. A tall man, well dressed, as far as could be seen in the
uncertain light, a slouch hat pulled far down over his eyes, stood on the
threshold, surveying the interior of the garret.</p>
<p>The Adventurer rose composedly to his feet—and moved slightly back
out of the direct radius of the candlelight.</p>
<p>There was silence for a moment, and then the man in the doorway laughed
unpleasantly.</p>
<p>"Hello!" he flung out harshly. "Who's the dude, Nan?"</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray, on the edge of the bed, shrugged her shoulders. The Adventurer
was standing quite at his ease, his soft hat tucked under his right arm,
his hand thrust into the side pocket of his coat. She could no longer see
his face distinctly.</p>
<p>"Well?" There was a snarl in the man's voice as he advanced from the
doorway. "You heard me, didn't you? Who is he?"</p>
<p>"Why don't youse ask him yerself?" inquired Rhoda Gray truculently. "I
dunno."</p>
<p>"You don't, eh?" The man had halted close to where the candle stood on the
floor between himself and the Adventurer. "Well, then, I guess we'll find
out!" He was peering in the Adventurer's direction, and now there came a
sudden savage scowl to his face. "It seems to me I've seen those clothes
somewhere before, and I guess now we'll take a look at your face so that
there won't be any question about recognition the next time we meet."</p>
<p>The Adventurer laughed softly.</p>
<p>"There will be none on my part," he said calmly. "It's Danglar, isn't it?
I am surely not mistaken. Parson Danglar, alias—ah! Please don't do
that!"</p>
<p>It seemed to Rhoda Gray that it happened in the space of time it might
take a watch to tick: The newcomer stooping to the floor, and lifting the
candle with the obvious intention of thrusting it into the Adventurer's
face—a glint of metal, as the Adventurer whipped a revolver from the
side pocket of his coat—and then, how they got there she could not
tell, it was done so adroitly and swiftly, the thumb and forefinger of the
Adventurer's left hand had closed on the candle wick and snuffed it out,
and the garret was in darkness.</p>
<p>There was a savage oath, a snarl of rage from the man whom the Adventurer
had addressed as Danglar; then an instant s silence; and then the
Adventurer's voice—from the doorway:</p>
<p>"I beg of you not to vent your disappointment on the lady—Danglar. I
assure you that she is in no way responsible for my visit here, and, as
far as that goes, never saw me before in her life. Also, it is only fair
to tell you, in case you should consider leaving here too hurriedly, that
I am really not at all a bad shot—even in the dark. I bid you
good-night, Danglar—and you my dear lady!"</p>
<p>Danglar's voice rose again in a flood of profane rage. He stumbled and
moved around in the dark.</p>
<p>"Damn it!" he shouted. "Where are the matches? Where's the lamp? This
cursed candle's put enough to the bad already! Do you hear? Where's the
lamp?"</p>
<p>"It's over dere on de floor, bust to pieces," mumbled Rhoda Gray.
"Youse'll find the matches on de washstand, an—"</p>
<p>"What's the idea?" There was a sudden, steel-like note dominating the
angry tones. "What are you handing me that hog-wash language for? Eh? It's
damned queer! There's been damned queer doings around here ever since last
night! See? What's the idea?"</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray felt her face whiten in the darkness. It was the slip she had
feared; the slip that she had had to take the chance of making, and which,
if it were not retrieved, and instantly retrieved, now that it was made,
meant discovery, and after that—She shivered a little.</p>
<p>"You needn't lose your head, just because you've lost your temper!" she
said tartly, in a guarded whisper. "The door into the hall is still wide
open, isn't it?"</p>
<p>"Oh, all right!" he said, his tones a sort of sullen admission that her
retort was justified. "But even now your voice sounds off color."</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray bridled.</p>
<p>"Does it?" she snapped at him. "I've got a cold. Maybe you'd get one too,
and maybe your voice would be off color, if you had to live in a dump like
this, and—"</p>
<p>"Oh, all right, all right!" he broke in hurriedly. "For Heaven's sake
don't start a row! Forget it! See? Forget it!" He walked over to the door,
peered out, swore savagely to himself, shut the door, held the candle up
to circle the garret, and scowled as its rays fell upon the shattered
pieces of the lamp in the corner then, returning, he set the candle down
upon the chair and began to pace restlessly, three or four steps each way,
up and down in front of the bed.</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray, from the edge of the bed, shifted back until her shoulders
rested against the wall. Danglar, too, was dressed like a gentleman—but
Danglar's face was not appealing. The little round black eyes were shifty,
they seemed to possess no pupils whatever, and they roved constantly;
there was a hard, unyielding thinness about the lips, and the face itself
was thin, almost gaunt, as though the skin had had to accommodate itself
to more than was expected of it, and was elastically stretched over the
cheek-bones.</p>
<p>"Well, I'm listening!" jerked out the man abruptly. "You knew our game at
Skarbolov's was queered. You got the 'seven-three-nine,' didn't you?"</p>
<p>"Yes, of course, I got it," answered Rhoda Gray. "What about it?"</p>
<p>"For two weeks now, yes, more than two weeks"—the man's voice rasped
angrily—"things have been going wrong, and some one has been butting
in and getting away with the goods under our noses. We know now, from last
night, that it must have been the White Moll, for one, though it's not
likely she worked all alone. Skeeny dropped to the fact that the police
were wise about Skarbolov's, and that's why we called it off, and the
'seven-three-nine' went out. They must have got wise through shadowing the
White Moll. See? Then they pinch her, but she makes her get-away, and
comes here, and, if the dope I've got is right, you hand Rough Rorke one,
and help her to beat it again. It looks blamed funny—doesn't it?—when
you come to consider that there's a leak somewhere!"</p>
<p>"Is that so!" Rhoda Gray flashed back. "And did you know before last night
that it was the White Moll who was queering our game?"</p>
<p>"If I had," the man gritted between his teeth, "I'd—"</p>
<p>"Well, then, how did you expect me to know it?" demanded Rhoda Gray
heatedly. "And if the White Moll happens to know Gypsy Nan, as she knows
everybody else through her jellies and custards and fake charity, and
happens to be near here when she gets into trouble, and beats it for here
with the police on her heels, and asks for help, what do you expect Gypsy
Nan's going to do if she wants to stand any chance of sticking around
these parts—as Gypsy Nan?"</p>
<p>The man paused in his walk, and, jerking back his hat, drew his hand
nervously across his forehead.</p>
<p>"You make me tired!" said Rhoda Gray wearily. "Do you think you could find
the door without too much trouble?"</p>
<p>Danglar resumed his pacing back and forth, but more slowly now.</p>
<p>"Oh, I know! I know, Bertha!" he burst out heavily. "I'm talking through
my hat. You've got the roughest job of any of us, old girl. Don't mind
what I'm saying. Something's badly wrong, and I'm half crazy. It's certain
now that the White Moll's the one that's been doing us, and what I really
came down here for to-night was to tell you that your job from now on was
to get the White Moll. You helped her last night. She doesn't know you are
anybody but Gypsy Nan, and so you're the one person in New York she'll
dare try to communicate with sooner or later. Understand? That's what I
came for, not to talk like a fool—but that fellow I found here
started me off. Who is he? What did he want?"</p>
<p>"He wanted the White Moll, too," said Rhoda Gray, with a short laugh.</p>
<p>"Oh, he did, eh!" Danglar's lips twisted into a sudden, merciless smile.
"Well, go on! Who is he?"</p>
<p>"I don't know who he is," Rhoda Gray answered a little impatiently. "He
said he was an adventurer—if you can make anything out of that. He
said he got the White Moll away from Rough Rorke last night, after Rorke
had arrested her; and then he doped the rest out the same as you have—that
he could find the White Moll again through Gypsy Nan. I don't know what he
wanted her for."</p>
<p>"That's better!" snarled Danglar, the merciless smile still on his lips.
"I thought she must have had a pal, and we know now who her pal is. It's
open and shut that she's sitting so tight she hasn't been able to get into
touch with him, and that's what's worrying Mr. Adventurer."</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray, save for a nod of her head, made no answer.</p>
<p>Danglar laughed suddenly, as though in relief; then, coming closer to the
bed, plunged his hand into his coat pocket, and tossed handful of jewelry
carelessly into Rhoda Gray's lap.</p>
<p>"I feel better than I did!" he said, and laughed again. "It's a cinch now
that we'll get them both through you, and it s a cinch that the White Moll
won't cut in to-night. Put those sparklers away with the rest until we get
ready to 'fence' them."</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray did not speak. Mechanically, as though she were living through
some hideous nightmare, she began to scoop up the gems from her lap and
allow them to trickle back through her fingers. They flashed and
scintillated brilliantly, even in the meager light. They seemed alive with
some premonitory, baleful fire.</p>
<p>"Yes, there's some pretty slick stuff there," said Danglar, with an
appraising chuckle; "but there'll be something to-night that'll make all
that bunch look like chicken-feed. The boys are at work now, and we'll
have old Hayden-Bond's necklace in another hour. Skeeny's got the Sparrow
tied up in the old room behind Shluker's place, and once we're sure
there's no back-fire anywhere, the Sparrow will chirp his last chirp." He
laughed out suddenly, and, leaning forward, clapped Rhoda Gray exultantly
on the shoulder. "It was like taking candy from a kid! The Sparrow and the
old man fell for the sick-mother, needing-her-son-all-night stuff without
batting a lid; but the Sparrow hasn't been holding the old lady's hand at
the bedside yet. We took care of that."</p>
<p>Again Rhoda Gray made no comment. She wondered, as she gripped at the
rings and brooches in hand, so fiercely that the settings pricked into the
flesh, if her face mirrored in any way the cold, sick misery that had
suddenly taken possession of her soul. The Sparrow! She knew the Sparrow;
she knew the Sparrow's sick mother. That part of it was true. The Sparrow
did have an old mother who was sick. A fine old lady—finer than the
son—Finch, her name was. Indirectly, she knew old Hayden-Bond, the
millionaire, and—Almost subconsciously she was aware that Danglar
was speaking again.</p>
<p>"I guess luck's breaking our way again," he grinned. "The old boy paid a
hundred thousand cold for that necklace. You know how long we've been
waiting to get our hooks on it, and we've never had our eyes off his house
for two months. Well, it pays to wait, and it pays to do things right. It
broke our way at last to-night, all right, all right! To-day's Saturday—and
the safety deposit vaults aren't open on Sunday. Mrs. Hayden-Bond's been
away all week visiting, but she comes back to-morrow, and there's some
swell society fuss fixed for to-morrow night, and she wants her necklace
to make a splurge, so she writes Mr. H-hyphen-B, and out it comes from the
safety deposit vault, and into the library safe. The old man isn't long on
social stunts, and he's got pretty well set in his habits; one of those
must-have-nine-hours'-sleep bugs, and he's always in bed by ten—when
his wife'll let him. She being away to-night, the boys were able to get to
work early. They ought to be able to crack that box without making any
noise about it in an hour and a half at the outside." He pulled out his
watch-and whistled low under his breath. "It's a quarter after eleven
now," he said hurriedly, and moved abruptly toward the door. "I can't
stick around here any longer. I've got to be on deck where they can slip
me the 'white ones,' and then there's Skeeny waiting for the word to bump
off the Sparrow." He jerked his hand suddenly toward the jewels in her
lap. "Salt those away before any more adventurers blow in!" he said, half
sharply, half jocularly. "And don't let the White Moll slip you—at
any cost. Remember! She's bound to come to you again. Play her—and
send out the call. You understand, don't you? There's never been a yip out
of the police. Our methods are too good for that. Look at the Sparrow
to-night. Where there's no chance taken of suspicion going anywhere except
where we lead it, there's no chance of any trouble—for us! But this
cursed she-fiend's another story. We're not planting plum trees for her to
pick any more of the fruit. Understand?"</p>
<p>She answered him mechanically.</p>
<p>"Yes," she said.</p>
<p>"All right, then; that end of it is up to you," he said significantly.
"You're clever, clever as the devil, Bertha. Use your brains now—we
need 'em. Good-night, old girl. See you later."</p>
<p>"Good-night," said Rhoda Gray dully.</p>
<p>The door closed. The short, ladder-like steps to the hallway below creaked
once, and then all was still. Danglar did have on rubber-soled shoes. She
sat upright, her hands, clenched now, pressed hard against her throbbing
temples. It wasn't true! None of this was true—this hovel of a
place, those jewels glinting like evil eyes in her lap; her existence
itself wasn't true; it was only her brain now, sick like her soul, that
conjured up these ugly phantoms with horrible, plausible ingenuity. And
then an inner voice seemed to answer her with a calmness that was hideous
in its finality. It was true. All of it was true. Those words of Danglar,
and their bald meaning, were true. Men did such things; men made in the
image of their Maker did such things. They were going to kill a man
to-night—an innocent man whom they had made their pawn.</p>
<p>She swept the jewels from her lap to the blanket, and rising, seized the
candle, went to the door, looked out, and, holding the candle high above
her head, peered down the stairs. Yes, he was gone. There was no one
there.</p>
<p>She locked the door again, returned to the bed, set the candle down upon
the chair, and stood there, her face white and drawn, staring with wide,
tormented eyes about her. Murder. Danglar had spoken of it with inhuman
callousness—and had laughed at it. They were going to take a man's
life. And there was only herself, already driven to extremity, already
with her own back against the wall in an effort to save herself, only
herself to carry the burden of the responsibility of doing something-to
save a man's life.</p>
<p>It seemed to plumb the depths of irony and mockery. She could not make a
move as Gypsy Nan. It would only result in their turning upon her, of the
discovery that she was not Gypsy Nan at all, of the almost certainty that
it would cost her her own life without saving the Sparrow's. That way was
closed to her from the start. As the White Moll, then? Outside there in
the great city, every plain-clothes man, every policeman on every beat,
was staring into every woman's face he met—searching for the White
Moll.</p>
<p>She wrung her hands in cruel desperation. Even to her own problem she had
found no solution, though she had wrestled with it all last night, and all
through the day; no solution save the negative one of clinging to this one
refuge that remained to her, such as it was, temporarily. She had found no
solution to that; what solution was there to this! She had thought of
leaving the city as Gypsy Nan, and then somewhere far away, of sloughing
off the character of Gypsy Nan, and of resuming her own personality again
under an assumed name. But that would have meant the loss of everything
she had in life, her little patrimony, the irredeemable stamp of shame
upon the name she once had owned; and also the constant fear and dread
that at any moment the police net, wide as the continent was wide, would
close around her, as, sooner or later, it was almost inevitable that it
would close around her. It had seemed that her only chance was to keep on
striving to play the role of Gypsy Nan, because it was these associates of
Gypsy Nan who were at the bottom of the crime of which she, Rhoda Gray,
was held guilty, and because there was always the hope that in this way,
through confidences to a supposed confederate, she could find the evidence
that would convict those actually guilty, and so prove her own innocence.
But in holding to the role of Gypsy Nan for the purpose of receiving those
criminal confidences, she had not thought of this—that upon her
would rest the moral responsibility of other crimes of which she would
have knowledge, and, least of all, that she should be faced with what lay
before her now, to-night, at the first contact with those who had been
Gypsy Nan's confederates.</p>
<p>What was she to do? Upon her, and upon her alone, depended a man's life,
and, adding to her distraction, she knew the man—the Sparrow, who
had already done time; that was the vile ingenuity of it all. And there
would le corroborative evidence, of course; they would have seen to that.
If the Sparrow disappeared and was never heard of again, even a child
would deduce the assumption that the proceeds of the robbery had
disappeared with him.</p>
<p>Her brain seemed to grow panicky. She was standing here helplessly. And
time, the one precious ally that she possessed, was slipping away from
her. She could not go to the police as Gypsy Nan—and, much less, as
the White Moll! She could not go to the police in any case, for the
"corroborative" evidence, that obviously must exist, unless Danglar and
those with him were fools, would indubitably damn the Sparrow to another
prison term, even supposing that through the intervention of the police
his life were saved. What was she to do?</p>
<p>And then, for a moment, her eyes lighted in relief. The Adventurer! She
thrust her hand into the pocket of her skirt, and drew out the torn piece
of paper, and studied the telephone number upon it—and slowly the
hurt and misery came back into her eyes again. Who was he? He had told
her. An adventurer. He had given her to understand that he, if she had not
been just a few minutes ahead of him, would have taken that money from
Skarbolov's escritoire last night. Therefore he was a crook. Danglar had
said that some one had been getting in ahead of them lately and snatching
the plunder from under their noses; and Danglar now believed that it had
been the White Moll. A wan smile came to her lips. Instead of the White
Moll, it appeared to be quite obvious that it was the Adventurer. It
therefore appeared to be quite as obvious that the man was a professional
thief, and an extremely clever one, at that. She dared not trust him. To
enlist his aid she would have to explain the gang's plot; and while the
Adventurer might go to the Sparrow's assistance, he might also be very
much more interested in the diamond necklace that was involved, and not be
entirely averse to Danglar's plan of using the Sparrow as a pawn, who, in
that case, would make a very convenient scapegoat for the Adventurer—instead
of Danglar! She dared not trust the man. She could not absolve her
conscience by staking another's life on a hazard, on the supposition that
the Adventurer might do this or that. It was not good enough.</p>
<p>She was quick in her movements now. Subconsciously her decision had been
made. There was only one way—only one. She gathered up the jewels
from the bed and thrust them, with the Adventurer's torn piece of paper,
into her pocket. And now she reached for the little notebook that she had
hidden under the blanket. It contained the gang's secret code, and she had
found it in the cash box in Gypsy Nan's strange hiding place that evening.
Half running now, carrying the candle, she started toward the lower end of
the attic, where the roof sloped down to little more than shoulder high.
"Seven-Three-Nine!" Danglar had almost decoded the message word for word
in the course of his conversation. In the little notebook, set against the
figures, were the words: "Danger. The game is off. Make no further move."
It was only one of many, that arbitrary arrangement of figures, each
combination having its own special significance; but, besides these, there
was the key to a complete cipher into which any message might be coded,
and—But why was her brain swerving off at inconsequential tangents?
What did a coder or code book, matter at the present moment?</p>
<p>She was standing under the narrow trap-door in the low ceiling now, and
now she pushed it up, and lifting the candle through the opening, set it
down on the inner surface of the ceiling, which, like some vast shelf,
Gypsy Nan had metamorphosed into that exhaustive storehouse of edibles, of
plunder—a curious and sinister collection that was eloquent of a
gauntlet long flung down against the law. She emptied the pocket of her
skirt, retaining only the revolver, and substituted the articles she had
removed with the tin box that contained the dark compound Gypsy Nan, and
she herself, as Gypsy Nan, had used to rob her face of youthfulness, and
give it the grimy, dissolute and haggard aspect which was so simple and
yet so efficient a disguise.</p>
<p>She worked rapidly now, changing her clothes. She could not go, or act, as
Gypsy Nan; and so she must go in her own character, go as the White Moll—because
that was the lesser danger, the one that held the only promise of success.
There wasn't any other way. She could not very well refuse to risk her
capture by the police, could she, when by so doing she might save
another's life? She could not balance in cowardly selfishness the
possibility of a prison term for herself, hideous as that might be,
against the penalty of death that the Sparrow would pay if she remained
inactive. But she could not leave here as the White Moll. Somewhere,
somewhere out in the night, somewhere away from this garret where all
connection with it was severed, she must complete the transformation from
Gypsy Nan to the White Moll. She could only prepare for that now as best
she could.</p>
<p>And there was not a moment to lose. The thought made her frantic. Over her
own clothes she put on again Gypsy Nan's greasy skirt, and drew on again,
over her own silk ones, Gypsy Nan's coarse stockings. She put on Gypsy
Nan's heavy and disreputable boots, and threw the old shawl again over her
head and shoulders. And then, with her hat—for the small shape of
which she breathed a prayer of thankfulness!—and her own shoes under
her arm and covered by the shawl, she took the candle again, closed the
trap-door, and stepped over to the washstand. Here, she dampened a rag,
that did duty as a facecloth, and thrust it into her pocket; then, blowing
out the candle, she groped her way to the door, locked it behind her, and
without any attempt at secrecy made her way downstairs.</p>
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