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<h2> VIII. THE CODE MESSAGE </h2>
<p>It was strange! Most strange! Three days had passed, and to Gypsy Nan's
lodging no one had come. The small crack under the partition that had been
impressed into service as a letter-box had remained empty. There had been
no messages—nothing—only a sinister, brooding isolation. Since
the night Rhoda Gray had left Danglar, balked, almost a madman in his
fury, in the little room over Shluker's junk shop, Danglar had not been
seen—nor the Adventurer—nor even Rough Rorke. Her only
visitant since then had been an ugly premonition of impending peril, which
came and stalked like a hideous ghost about the bare and miserable garret,
and which woke her at night with its whispering voice—which was the
voice of intuition.</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray drew her shawl closer around her shoulders and shivered, as
now, from shuffling down the block in the guise of Gypsy Nan, she halted
before the street door of what fate, for the moment, had thrust upon her
as a home; and shivered again, as, with abhorrence, she pushed the door
open and stepped forward into the black, unlighted hallway. Soul, mind and
body were in revolt to-night. Even faith, the simple faith in God that she
had known since childhood, was wavering. There seemed nothing but horror
around her, a mental horror, a physical horror; and the sole means of even
momentary relief and surcease from it had been a pitiful prowling around
the streets, where even the fresh air seemed to be denied to her, for it
was tainted with the smells of squalor that ruled, rampant, in that
neighborhood.</p>
<p>And to-night, stronger than ever, intuition and premonition of approaching
danger lay heavy upon her, and oppressed her with a sense of nearness. She
was not a coward; but she was afraid. Danglar would leave no stone
unturned to get the White Moll. He had said so. She remembered the threat
he had made—it had lived in her woman's soul ever since that night.
Better anything than to fall into Danglar's hands! She caught her breath a
little, and shivered again as she groped her way up the dark stairs. But,
then, she never would fall into Danglar's power. There was always an
alternative. Yes, it was quite as bad as that—death at her own hands
was preferable. Balked, outwitted, the plans of the criminal coterie, of
which Danglar appeared to be the head, rendered again and again abortive,
and believing it all due to the White Moll, all of Danglar's shrewd,
unscrupulous cunning would be centered on the task of running her down;
and if, added to this, he discovered that she was masquerading as Gypsy
Nan, one of their own inner circle, it mean that—She closed her lips
in a hard, tight line. She did not want to think of it. She had fought all
day, and the days before, against thinking about it, but premonition had
crept upon her stronger and stronger, until to-night, now, it seemed as
though her mind could dwell on nothing else.</p>
<p>On the landing, she paused suddenly and listened. The street door had
opened and closed, and now a footstep sounded on the stairs behind her.
She went on again along the hall, feeling her way; and reaching the short,
ladder-like steps to the garret, she began to mount them. Who was it there
behind her? One of the unknown lodgers on the lower floor, or—? She
could not see, of course. It was pitch black. But she could hear. And as
she knelt now on the narrow landing, and felt with her fingers along the
floor for the aperture, where, imitating the custom of Gypsy Nan, she had
left her key when she went out, she heard the footsteps coming steadily
on, passing the doors below her, and making toward the garret ladder. And
then, stifling a startled little cry, her hand closed on the key, and
closed, as it had closed on that first night when she had returned here in
the role of Gypsy Nan, on a piece of paper wrapped around the key. The
days of isolation were ended with climacteric effect; the pendulum had
swung full the other way—to-night there was both a visitor and a
message!</p>
<p>The paper detached from the key and thrust into her bodice, she stood up
quickly. A form, looming up even in the darkness, showed on the garret
stairs. "Who's dere?" she croaked.</p>
<p>"It's all right," a voice answered in low tones. "You were just ahead of
me on the street. I saw you come in. It's Pierre."</p>
<p>Pierre! So that was his name! It was only the voice she recognized. Pierre—Danglar!
She fumbled for the keyhole, found it, and inserted the key. "Well, how's
Bertha to-night?"</p>
<p>There seemed to be a strange exhilaration in the man's voice. He was
standing beside her now, close beside her, and now his hand played with a
curiously caressing motion on her shoulder. The touch seemed to scorch and
burn her. Who was this Danglar, who was Pierre to her, and to whom she was
Bertha? Her breath came quickly in spite of herself; there came, too, a
frenzy of aversion, and impulsively she flung his hand away, and with the
door unlocked now, stepped from him into the garret.</p>
<p>"Feeling a bit off color, eh?" he said with a short laugh, as he followed
her, and shut the door behind him. "Well, I don't know as I blame you.
But, look here, old girl, have a heart! It's not my fault. I know what
you're grouching about—it's because I haven't been around much
lately. But you ought to know well enough that I couldn't help it. Our
game has been crimped lately at every turn by that she-devil, the White
Moll, and that dude pal of hers." He laughed out again—in savage
menace now. "I've been busy. Understand, Bertha? It was either ourselves,
or them. We've got to go under—or they have. And we won't! I promise
you that! Things'll break a little better before long, and I'll make it up
to you."</p>
<p>She could not see him in the blackness of the garret. She breathed a
prayer of gratitude that he could not see her. Her face, in spite of Gipsy
Nan's disguising grime, must be white, white as death itself. It seemed to
plumb some infamous depth from which her soul recoiled, this apology of
his for his neglect of her. And then her hands at her sides curled into
tight-clenched little fists as she strove to control herself. His words,
at least, supplied her with her cue.</p>
<p>"Of course!" she said tartly, but in perfect English—the vernacular
of Gypsy Nan was not for Danglar, for she remembered only too well how
once before it had nearly tripped her up. "But you didn't come here to
apologize! What is it you want?"</p>
<p>"Ah, I say, Bertha!" he said appeasingly. "Cut that out! I couldn't help
being away, I tell you. Of course, I didn't come here to apologize—I
thought you'd understand well enough without that. The gang's out of cash,
and I came to tap the reserves. Let me have a package of the long green,
Bertha."</p>
<p>It was a moment before she spoke. Her woman's instinct prompted her to let
down the bars between them in no single degree, that her protection lay in
playing up to the full what Danglar, jumping at conclusions, had assumed
was a grouch at his neglect. Also, her mind worked quickly. Her own
clothes were no longer in the secret hiding place here in the garret; they
were out there in that old shed in the lane. It was perfectly safe, then,
to let Danglar go to the hiding place himself, assuming that he knew where
it was—which, almost of necessity, he must.</p>
<p>"Oh!" she said ungraciously. "Well, you know where it is, don't you?
Suppose you go and get it yourself!"</p>
<p>"All right!" returned Danglar, a sullenness creeping into his voice. "Have
it your own way, Bertha! I haven't got time to-night to coax you out of
your tantrums. That's what you want, but I haven't got time—to-night."</p>
<p>She did not answer.</p>
<p>A match crackled in Danglar's hand; the flames spurted up through the
darkness. Danglar made his way over to the rickety washstand, found the
candle that was stuck in the neck of the gin bottle, lighted it, held the
candle above his head, and stared around the garret.</p>
<p>"Why the devil don't you get another lamp?" he grumbled—and started
toward the rear of the garret.</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray watched him silently. She did not care to explain that she had
not replaced the lamp for the very simple reason that it gave far too much
light here in the garret to be safe—for her! She watched him, with
her hand in the pocket of her greasy skirt clutched around another legacy
of Gypsy Nan—her revolver. And now she became conscious that from
the moment she had entered the garret, her fingers, hidden in that pocket,
had sought and clung to the weapon. The man filled her with detestation
and fear; and somehow she feared him more now in what he was trying to
make an ingratiating mood, than she had feared him in the full flood of
his rage and anger that other night at Shluker's place.</p>
<p>She drew back a little toward the cot bed against the wall, drew back to
give him free passage to the door when he should return again, her eyes
still holding on the far end of the garret, where, with the slope of the
roof, the ceiling was no more than shoulder high. There seemed something
horribly weird and grotesque in the scene before her. He had pushed the
narrow trap-door in the ceiling upward, and had thrust candle and head
through the opening, and the faint yellow light, seeping back and downward
in flickering, uncertain rays, suggested the impression of a gruesome,
headless figure standing there hazily outlined in the surrounding murk. It
chilled her; she clutched at her shawl, drew it more closely about her,
and edged still nearer to the wall.</p>
<p>And then Danglar closed the trap-door again, and came back with the candle
in one hand, and one of the bulky packages of banknotes from the hiding
place in the other. He set the candle down on the washstand, and began to
distribute the money through his various pockets.</p>
<p>He was smiling with curious complacency.</p>
<p>"It was your job to play the spider to the White Moll if she ever showed
up again here in your parlor," he said. "Maybe somebody tipped her off to
keep away, maybe she was too wily; but, anyway, since you have not sent
out any word, it is evident that our little plans along that line didn't
work, since she has failed to come back to pay a call of gratitude to you.
I don't suppose there's anything to add to that, eh, Bertha? No report to
make?"</p>
<p>"No," said Rhoda Gray shortly. "I haven't any report to make."</p>
<p>"Well, no matter!" said Danglar. He laughed out shortly. "There are other
ways! She's had her fling at our expense; it's her turn to pay now." He
laughed again—and in the laugh now there was something both brutal
in its menace, and sinister in its suggestion of gloating triumph.</p>
<p>"What do you mean?" demanded Rhoda Gray quickly. "What are you going to
do?"</p>
<p>"Get her!" said Danglar. The man's passion flamed up suddenly; he spoke
through his closed teeth. "Get her! I made her a little promise. I'm going
to keep it! Understand?"</p>
<p>"You've been saying that for quite a long time," retorted Rhoda Gray
coolly. "But the 'getting' has been all the other way so far. How are you
going to get her?"</p>
<p>Danglar's little black eyes narrowed, and he thrust his head forward and
out from his shoulders savagely. In the flickering candle light, with
contorted face and snarling lips, he looked again the beast to which she
had once likened him.</p>
<p>"Never mind how I'm going to get her!" he flung out, with an oath. "I told
you I'd been busy. That's enough! You'll see—"</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray, in the semi-darkness, shrugged her shoulders. Was the man,
prompted by rage and fury, simply making wild threats, or had he at last
some definite and perhaps infallible plan that he purposed putting into
operation? She did not know; and, much as it meant to her, she did not
dare take the risk of arousing suspicion by pressing the question.
Failing, then, to obtain any intimation of what he meant to do, the next
thing most to be desired was to get rid of him.</p>
<p>"You've got the money. That's what you came for, wasn't it?" she suggested
coldly.</p>
<p>He stared at her for a moment, and then his face gradually lost its scowl.</p>
<p>"You're a rare one, Bertha!" he exclaimed admiringly. "Yes; I've got the
money—and I'm going. In fact, I'm in a hurry, so don't worry! You
got the dope, like everybody else, for to-night, didn't you? It was sent
out two hours ago."</p>
<p>The dope! It puzzled her for the fraction of a second—and then she
remembered the paper she had thrust into the bodice of her dress. She had
not read it. She lunged a little in the dark.</p>
<p>"Yes," she said curtly.</p>
<p>"All right!" he said-and moved toward the door. "That explains why I'm in
a hurry—and why I can't stop to oil that grouch out of you. But I'll
keep my promise to you, too, old girl. I'll make up the last few days to
you. Have a heart, eh, Bertha! 'Night!"</p>
<p>She did not answer him. It seemed as though an unutterable dread had
suddenly been lifted from her, as he passed out of the door and began to
descend the steps to the hall below. Her "grouch," he had called it. Well,
it had served its purpose! It was just as well that he should think so!
She followed to the door, and deliberately slammed it with a bang. And
from below, his laugh, more an amused chuckle, echoed back and answered
her.</p>
<p>And then, for a long time she stood there by the door, a little weak with
the revulsion of relief upon her, her hands pressed hard against her
temples, staring unseeingly about the garret. He was gone. He filled her
with terror. Every instinct she possessed, every fiber of her being
revolted against him. He was gone. Yes, he was gone—for the time
being. But—but what was the end of all this to be?</p>
<p>She shook her head after a moment, shook it helplessly and wearily, as,
finally, she walked over to the washstand, took the piece of paper from
the bodice of her dress, and spread it out under the candle light. A
glance showed her that it was in cipher. There was the stub of a pencil,
she remembered, in the washstand drawer, and, armed with this, and a piece
of wrapping paper that had once enveloped one of Gypsy Nan's gin bottles,
she took up the candle, crossed the garret, and sat down on the edge of
the cot, placing the candle on the chair in front of her.</p>
<p>If the last three days had been productive of nothing else, they had at
least furnished her with the opportunity of studying the notebook she had
found in the secret hiding place, and of making herself conversant with
the gang's cipher; and she now set to work upon it. It was a numerical
cipher. Each letter of the alphabet in regular rotation was represented by
its corresponding numeral; a zero was employed to set off one letter from
another, and the addition of the numerals between the zeros indicated the
number of the letter involved. Also, there being but twenty-six letters in
the alphabet, it was obvious that the addition of three nines, which was
twenty-seven, could not represent any letter, and the combination of 999
was therefore used to precede any of the arbitrary groups of numerals
which were employed to express phrases and sentences, such as the 739 that
she had found scrawled on the piece of paper around her key on the first
night she had come here, and which, had it been embodied in a message and
not preceded by the 999, would have meant simply the addition of seven,
three and nine, that is, nineteen—and therefore would indicate the
nineteenth letter of the alphabet, S.</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray copied the first line of the message on the piece of wrapping
paper:</p>
<p>321010333203202306663103330111102210444202101112052110761<br/></p>
<p>Adding the numerals between the zeros, and giving to each its
corresponding letter, she set down the result:</p>
<p>6010110505022090405014030509014<br/>
f a k e e v i d e n c e i n<br/></p>
<p>It was then but a matter of grouping the letters into words; and, decoded,
the first line read:</p>
<p>Fake evidence in......<br/></p>
<p>She worked steadily on. It was a lengthy message, and it took her a long
time. It was an hour, perhaps more, after Danglar had gone, before she had
completed her task; and then, after that, she sat for still a long time
staring, not at the paper on the chair before her, but at the flickering
shadows thrown by the candle on the opposite wall.</p>
<p>Queer and strange were the undercurrents and the cross-sections of life
that were to be found, amazingly contradictory, amazingly
incomprehensible, once one scratched beneath the surface of the poverty
and the squalor, and, yes, the crime, amongst the hiving thousands of New
York's East Side! In the days—not so very long ago—when, as
the White Moll, she had worked amongst these classes, she had on one
occasion, when he was sick, even kept old Viner in food. She had not, at
the time, failed to realize that the man was grasping, rapacious, even
unthankful, but she had little dreamed that he was a miser worth fifty
thousand dollars!</p>
<p>Her mind swerved off suddenly at a tangent. The tentacles of this crime
octopus, of which Danglar seemed to be the head, reached far and into most
curious places to fasten and hold and feed on the progeny of human
foibles! She could not help wondering where the lair was from which
emanated the efficiency and system that, as witness this code message
to-night, kept its members, perhaps widely scattered, fully informed of
its every movement.</p>
<p>She shook her head. That was something she had not yet learned; but it was
something she must learn if ever she hoped to obtain the evidence that
would clear her of the crime that circumstances had fastened upon her. And
yet she had made no move in that direction, because—well, because,
so far, it had seemed all she could do to protect and safeguard herself in
her present miserable existence and surroundings, which, abhorrent as they
were, alone stood between her and a prison cell.</p>
<p>Her forehead gathered into little furrows; and, reverting to the code
message, her thoughts harked back to a well-known crime, the authorship of
which still remained a mystery, and which had stirred the East Side some
two years ago. A man—in the vernacular of the underworld a "stage
hand"—by the name of Kroner, credited with having a large amount of
cash, the proceeds of some nefarious transaction, in his possession on the
night in question, was found murdered in his room in an old and
tumble-down tenement of unsavory reputation. The police net had gathered
in some of the co-tenants on suspicion; Nicky Viner, referred to in the
code message, amongst them. But nothing had come of the investigation.
There had been no charge of collusion between the suspects; but Perlmer, a
shyster lawyer, had acted for them all collectively, and, one and all,
they had been discharged. In what degree Perlmer's services had been of
actual value had never been ascertained, for the police, through lack of
evidence, had been obliged to drop the case; but the underworld had
whispered to itself. There was such a thing as suppressing evidence, and
Perlmer was known to have the cunning of a fox, and a code of morals that
never stood in the way, or restricted him in any manner.</p>
<p>The code message threw a new light on all this. Perlmer must have known
that old Nicky Viner had money, for, according to the code message,
Perlmer prepared a fake set of affidavits and forged a chain of fake
evidence with which he had blackmailed Nicky Viner ever since; and Nicky
Viner, known as a dissolute, shady character, innocent enough of the
crime, but afraid because his possession of money if made public would
tell against him, and frightened because he had already been arrested once
on suspicion for that very crime, had whimpered—and paid. And then,
somehow, Danglar and the gang had discovered that the old, seedy,
stoop-shouldered, bearded, down-at-the-heels Nicky Viner was not all that
he seemed; that he was a miser, and had a hoard of fifty thousand dollars—and
Danglar and the gang had set out to find that hoard and appropriate it.
Only they had not succeeded. But in their search they had stumbled upon
Perlmer's trail, and that was the key to the plan they had afoot to-night.
If Perlmer's fake and manufactured affidavits were clever enough and
convincing enough to wring money out of Viner for Perlmer, they were more
than enough to enable Danglar, employed as Danglar would employ them, to
wring from Nicky Viner the secret of where the old miser hid his wealth;
for Viner would understand that Danglar was not hampered by having to
safeguard himself on account of having been originally connected with the
case in a legal capacity, or any capacity, and therefore in demanding all
or nothing, would have no cause for hesitation, failing to get what he
wanted, in turning the evidence over to the police. In other words, where
Perlmer had to play his man cautiously and get what he could, Danglar
could go the limit and get all. As it stood, then, Danglar and the gang
had not found out the location of that hoard; but they had found out where
Perlmer kept his spurious papers—stuffed in at the back of the
bottom drawer of his desk in his office, practically forgotten,
practically useless to Perlmer any more, for, having once shown them to
Viner, there was no occasion to call them into service again unless Viner
showed signs of getting a little out of hand and it became necessary to
apply the screws once more.</p>
<p>For the rest, it was a very simple matter. Perlmer had an office in a
small building on lower Sixth Avenue, and it was his custom to go to his
office in the evenings and remain there until ten o'clock or so. The plan
then, according to the code message, was to loot Perlmer's desk some time
after the man had gone home for the night, and then, at midnight, armed
with the false documents, to beard old Nicky Viner in his miserable
quarters over on the East Side, and extort from the old miser the neat
little sum that Danglar estimated would amount to some fifty thousand
dollars in cash.</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray's face was troubled and serious. She found herself wishing for
a moment that she had never decoded the message. But she shook her head in
sharp self-protest the next instant. True, she would have evaded the
responsibility that the criminal knowledge now in her possession had
brought her; but she would have done so, in that case, deliberately at the
expense of her own self-respect. It would not have excused her in her own
soul to have sat staring at a cipher message that she was satisfied was
some criminal plot, and have refused to decode it simply because she was
afraid a sense of duty would involve her in an effort to frustrate it. To
have sat idly by under those circumstances would have been as
reprehensible—and even more cowardly—than it would be to sit
idly by now that she knew what was to take place. And on that latter score
to-night there was no argument with herself. She found herself accepting
the fact that she would act, and act promptly, as the only natural
corollary to the fact that she was in a position to do so. Perhaps it was
that way to-night, not only because she had on a previous occasion already
fought this principle of duty out with herself, but because to-night,
unlike that other night, the way and the means seemed to present no
insurmountable difficulties, and because she was now far better prepared,
and free from all the perplexing, though enormously vital, little details
that had on the former occasion reared themselves up in mountainous aspect
before her. The purchase of a heavy veil, for instance, the day after the
Hayden-Bond affair, would enable her now to move about the city in the
clothes of the White Moll practically at will and without fear of
detection. And, further, the facilities for making that change, the change
from Gypsy Nan to the White Moll, were now already at hand—in the
little old shed down the lane.</p>
<p>And as far as any actual danger that she might incur to-night was
concerned, it was not great. She was not interested in the fifty thousand
dollars in an intrinsic sense; she was interested only in seeing that old
Nicky Viner, unappealing, yes, and almost repulsive both in personality
and habits as the man was, was not blackmailed out of it; that Danglar,
yes, and hereafter, Perlmer too, should not prey like vultures on the man,
and rob him of what was rightfully his. If, therefore, she secured those
papers from Perlmer's desk, it automatically put an end to Danglar's
scheme to-night; and if, later, she saw to it that those papers came into
Viner's possession, that, too, automatically ended Perlmer's persecutions.
Indeed, there seemed little likelihood of any danger or risk at all. It
could not be quite ten o clock yet; and it was not likely that whoever was
delegated by Danglar to rob Perlmer's office would go there much before
eleven anyway, since they would naturally allow for the possibility that
Perlmer might stay later in his office than usual, a contingency that
doubtless accounted for midnight being set as the hour at which they
proposed to lay old Nicky Viner by the heels. Therefore, it seemed almost
a certainty that she would reach there, not only first, but with ample
time at her disposal to secure the papers and get away again without
interruption. She might even, perhaps, reach the office before Perlmer
himself had left—it was still quite early enough for that—but
in that case she need only remain on watch until the lawyer had locked up
and gone away. Nor need even the fact that the office would be locked
dismay her. In the secret hiding-place here in the garret, among those
many other evidences of criminal activity, was the collection of skeleton
keys, and—she was moving swiftly around the attic now, physically as
active as her thoughts.</p>
<p>It was not like that other night. There were few preparations to make. She
had only to secure the keys and a flashlight, and to take with her the
damp cloth that would remove the grime streaks from her face, and the box
of composition that would enable her to replace them when she came back—and
five minutes later she was on the street, making her way toward the lane,
and, specifically, toward the deserted shed where she had hidden away her
own clothing.</p>
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