<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015"></SPAN></p>
<h2> XV. IN THE COUNCIL CHAMBER </h2>
<p>The man with the withered hand had passed through into the other room. She
heard them talking together, as she followed. She forced herself to walk
with as nearly a leisurely defiant air as she could. The last time she had
been with Danglar—as Gypsy Nan—she had, in self-protection,
forbidding intimacy, played up what he called her "grouch" at his neglect
of her.</p>
<p>She paused in the doorway. Halfway across the room, at the table,
Danglar's gaunt, swarthy face showed under the rays of a shaded oil lamp.
Behind her spectacles, she met his small, black ferret eyes steadily.</p>
<p>"Hello, Bertha!" he called out cheerily. "How's the old girl to-night?" He
rose from his seat to come toward her. "And how's the cold?"</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray scowled at him.</p>
<p>"Worse!" she said curtly-and hoarsely. "And a lot you care! I could have
died in that hole, for all you knew!" She pushed him irritably away, as he
came near her. "Yes, that's what I said! And you needn't start any cooing
game now! Get down to cases!" She jerked her hand toward the twisted
figure that had slouched into a chair beside the table. "He says you've
got it doped out to pull something that will let me out of this Gypsy Nan
stunt. Another bubble, I suppose!" She shrugged her shoulders, glanced
around her, and, locating a chair—not too near the table—seated
herself indifferently. "I'm getting sick of bubbles!" she announced
insolently. "What's this one?"</p>
<p>He stood there for a moment biting at his lips, hesitant between anger and
tolerant amusement; and then, the latter evidently gaining the ascendency,
he too shrugged his shoulders, and with a laugh returned to his chair.</p>
<p>"You're a rare one, Bertha!" he said coolly. "I thought you'd be wild with
delight. I guess you're sick, all right—because usually you're
pretty sensible. I've tried to tell you that it wasn't my fault I couldn't
go near you, and that I had to keep away from—"</p>
<p>"What's the use of going over all that again?" she interrupted tartly. "I
guess I—"</p>
<p>"Oh, all right!" said Danglar hurriedly. "Don't start a row! After
to-night I've an idea you'll be sweet enough to your husband, and I'm
willing to wait. Matty maybe hasn't told you the whole of it."</p>
<p>Matty! So that was the deformed creature's name. She glanced at him. He
was grinning broadly. A family squabble seemed to afford him amusement.
Her eyes shifted and made a circuit of the room. It was poverty-stricken
in appearance, bare-floored, with the scantiest and cheapest of
furnishings, its one window tightly shuttered.</p>
<p>"Maybe not," she said carelessly.</p>
<p>"Well, then, listen, Bertha!" Danglar's voice was lowered earnestly.
"We've uncovered the Nabob's stuff! Do you get me? Every last one of the
sparklers!"</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray's eyes went back to the deformed creature at Danglar's side, as
the man laughed out abruptly.</p>
<p>"Yes," grinned Matty Danglar, "and they weren't in the empty money-belt
that you beat it with like a scared cat after croaking Deemer!"</p>
<p>How queer and dim the light seemed to go suddenly—or was it a blur
before her own eyes? She said nothing. Her mind seemed to be groping its
way out of darkness toward some faint gleam of light showing in the far
distance. She heard Danglar order his brother savagely to hold his tongue.
That was curious, too, because she was grateful for the man's gibe. Gypsy
Nan, in her proper person, had murdered a man named Deemer in an effort to
secure—Danglar's voice came again:</p>
<p>"Well, to-night we'll get that stuff, all of it—it's worth a cool
half million; and to-night we'll get Mr. House-Detective Cloran for keeps—bump
him off. That cleans everything up. How does that strike you, Bertha?"</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray's hands under her shawl locked tightly together. Her
premonition had not betrayed her. She was face to face to-night with the
beginning of the end.</p>
<p>"It sounds fine!" she said derisively.</p>
<p>Danglar's eyes narrowed for an instant; and then he laughed.</p>
<p>"You're a rare one, Bertha!" he ejaculated again. "You don't seem to put
much stock in your husband lately."</p>
<p>"Why should I?" she inquired imperturbably. "Things have been breaking
fine, haven't they?—only not for us!" She cleared her throat as
though it were an effort to talk. "I'm not going crazy with joy till I've
been shown."</p>
<p>Danglar leaned suddenly over the table.</p>
<p>"Well, come and look at the cards, then," he said impressively. "Pull your
chair up to the table, and I'll tell you."</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray tilted her chair, instead, nonchalantly back against the wall—it
was quite light enough where she was!</p>
<p>"I can hear you from here," she said coolly. "I'm not deaf, and I guess
Matty's suite is safe enough so that you won't have to whisper all the
time!"</p>
<p>The deformed creature at the table chortled again.</p>
<p>Danglar scowled.</p>
<p>"Damn you, Bertha!" he flung out savagely. "I could wring that neck of
yours sometimes, and—"</p>
<p>"I know you could, Pierre," she interposed sweetly. "That's what I like
about you—you're so considerate of me! But suppose you get down to
cases. What's the story about those sparklers? And what's the game that's
going to let me shed this Gypsy Nan stuff for keeps?"</p>
<p>"I'll tell her, Pierre," grinned the deformed one. "It'll keep you two
from spitting at one another; and neither of you have got all night to
stick around here." He swung his withered hand suddenly across the table,
and as suddenly all facetiousness was gone both from his voice and manner.
"Say, you listen hard, Bertha! What Pierre's telling you is straight. You
and him can kiss and make up to-morrow or the next day, or whenever you
damned please; but to-night there ain't any more time for scrapping. Now,
listen! I handed you a rap about beating it with the empty money-belt the
night you croaked Deemer with an overdose of knockout drops in the private
dining-room up at the Hotel Marwitz, but you forget that! I ain't for
starting any argument about that. None of us blames you. We thought the
stuff was in the belt, too. And none of us blames you for making a mistake
and going too strong with the drops, either; anybody might do that. And
I'll say now that I take my hat off to you for the way you locked Cloran
into the room with the dead man, and made your escape when Cloran had you
dead to rights for the murder; and I'll say, too, that the way you've
played Gypsy Nan and saved your skin, and ours too, is as slick a piece of
work as has ever been pulled in the underworld. That puts us straight, you
and me, don't it, Bertha?"</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray blinked at the man through her spectacles; her brain was
whirling in a mad turmoil. "I always liked you, Matty," she whispered
softly.</p>
<p>Danglar was lolling back in his chair, blowing smoke rings into the air.
She caught his eyes fixed quizzically upon her.</p>
<p>"Go on, Matty!" he prompted. "You'll have her in a good humor, if you're
not careful!"</p>
<p>"We were playing more or less blind after that." The withered hand traced
an aimless pattern on the table with its crooked and half-closed fingers,
and the man's face was puckered into a shrewd, reminiscent scowl. "The
papers couldn't get a lead on the motive for the murder, and the police
weren't talking for publication. Not a word about the Rajah's jewels.
Washington saw to that! A young potentate's son, practically the guest of
the country, touring about in a special for the sake of his education, and
dashed near 'ending it in the river out West if it hadn't been for the
rescue you know about, wouldn't look well in print; so there wasn't
anything said about the slather of gems that was the reward of heroism
from a grateful nabob, and we didn't get any help that way. All we knew
was that Deemer came East with the jewels, presumably to cash in on them,
and it looked as though Deemer were pretty clever; that he wore the
money-belt for a stall, and that he had the sparklers safe somewhere else
all the time. And I guess we all got to figuring it that way, because the
fact that nothing was said about any theft was strictly along the lines
the police were working anyway, and a was a toss-up that they hadn't found
the stuff among his effects. Get me?"</p>
<p>Get him! This wasn't real, was it, this room here; those two figures
sitting there under that shaded lamp? Something cold, an icy grip, seemed
to seize at her heart, as in a surge there swept upon her the full
appreciation of her peril through these confidences to which she was
listening. A word, in act, some slightest thing, might so easily betray
her; and then—Her fingers under the shawl and inside the wide pocket
of her greasy skirt, clutched at her revolver. Thank God for that! It
would at least be merciful! She nodded her head mechanically.</p>
<p>"But the police didn't find the jewels—because they weren't there to
be found. Somebody got in ahead of us. Pinched 'em, understand, may be
only a few hours before you got in your last play, and, from the way you
say Deemer acted, before he was wise to the fact that he'd been robbed."</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray let her chair come sharply down to the floor. She must play her
role of "Bertha" now as she never had before. Here was a question that she
could not only ask with safety, but one that was obviously expected.</p>
<p>"Who was it?" she demanded breathlessly.</p>
<p>"She's coming to life!" murmured Danglar, through a haze of cigarette
smoke. "I thought you'd wake up after a while, Bertha. This is the big
night, old girl, as you'll find out before we're through."</p>
<p>"Who was it?" she repeated with well-simulated impatience.</p>
<p>"I guess she'll listen to me now," said Danglar, with a little chuckle.
"Don't over-tax yourself any more, Matty. I'll tell you, Bertha; and it
will perhaps make you feel better to know it took the slickest dip New
York ever knew to beat you to the tape. It was Angel Jack, alias the
Gimp."</p>
<p>"How do you know?" Rhoda Gray demanded.</p>
<p>"Because," said Danglar, and lighted another cigarette, "he died yesterday
afternoon up in Sing Sing."</p>
<p>She could afford to show her frank bewilderment. Her brows knitted into
furrows, as she stared at Danglar.</p>
<p>"You—you mean he confessed?" she said.</p>
<p>"The Angel? Never!" Danglar laughed grimly, and shook his head. "Nothing
like that! It was a question of playing one 'fence' against another. You
know that Witzer, who's handled all our jewelry for us, has been on the
look-out for any stones that might have come from that collection. Well,
this afternoon he passed the word to me that he'd been offered the finest
unset emerald he'd ever seen, and that it had come to him through old Jake
Luertz's runner, a very innocent-faced young man who is known to the trade
as the Crab."</p>
<p>Danglar paused—and laughed again. Unconsciously Rhoda Gray drew her
shawl a little closer about her shoulders. It seemed to bring a chill into
the room, that laugh. Once before, on another night, Danglar had laughed,
and, with his parted lips, she had likened him to a beast showing its
fangs. He looked it now more than ever. For all his ease of voice and
manner, he was in deadly earnest; and if there was merriment in his laugh,
it but seemed to enhance the menace and the promise of unholy purpose that
lurked in the cold glitter of his small, black eyes.</p>
<p>"It didn't take long to get hold of the Crab"—Danglar was rubbing
his hands together softly—"and the emerald with him. We got him
where we could put the screws on without arousing the neighborhood."</p>
<p>"Another murder, I suppose!" Rhoda Gray flung out the words crossly.</p>
<p>"Oh, no," said Danglar pleasantly. "He squealed before it came to that.
He's none the worse for wear, and he'll be turned loose in another hour or
so, as soon as we're through at old Jake Luertz's. He's no more good to
us. He came across all right—after he was properly frightened. He's
been with old Jake as a sort of familiar for the last six years, and—"</p>
<p>"He'd have sold his soul out, he was so scared!" The withered hand on the
table twitched; the deformed creature's face was twisted into a grimace;
and the man was chuckling with unhallowed mirth, as though unable to
contain himself at, presumably, the recollection of a scene which he had
witnessed himself. "He was down on his knees and clawing out with his
hands for mercy, and he squealed like a rat. 'It's the sixth panel in the
bedroom upstairs,' he says; 'it's all there. But for God's sake don't tell
Jake I told. It's the sixth panel. Press the knot in the sixth panel that—'"
He stopped abruptly.</p>
<p>Danglar had pulled out his watch and with exaggerated patience was
circling the crystal with his thumb.</p>
<p>"Are you all through, Matty?" he inquired monotonously. "I think you said
something a little while ago about wasting time. Bertha's looking bored;
and, besides, she's got a little job of her own on for to-night." He
jerked his watch back into his pocket, and turned to Rhoda Gray again.
"The only one who knew all the details Angel Jack, and he'll never tell
now because he's dead. Whether he came down from the West with Deemer or
not, or how he got wise to the stones, I don't know. But he got the
stones, all right. And then he tumbled to the fact that the police were
pushing him hard for another job he was 'wanted' for, and he had to get
those stones out of sight in a hurry. He made a package of them and
slipped them to old Luertz, who had always done his business for him, to
keep for him; and before he could duck, the bulls had him for that other
job. Angel Jack went up the river. See? Old Jake didn't know what was in
that package; but he knew better than to monkey with it, because he always
thought something of his own skin. He knew Angel Jack, and he knew what
would happen if he didn't have that package ready to hand back the day
Angel Jack got out of Sing Sing. Understand? But yesterday Angel Jack
died-without a will; and old Jake appointed himself sole executor-without
bonds! He opened that package, figured he'd begin turning it into money—and
that's how we get our own back again. Old Jake will get a fake message
to-night calling him out of the house on an errand uptown; and about ten
o'clock Pinkie Bonn and the Pug will pay a visit there in his absence, and—well,
it looks good, don't it, Bertha, after two years?"</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray was crouched down in her chair. She shrugged her shoulders now,
and infused a sullen note into her voice.</p>
<p>"Yes, it's fine!" she sniffed. "I'll be rolling in wealth in my garret—which
will do me a lot of good! That doesn't separate me from these rags, and
the hell I've lived, does it—after two years?"</p>
<p>"I'm coming to that," said Danglar, with his short, grating laugh. "We've
as good as got the stones now, and we're going through to-night for a
clean-up of all that old mess. We stake the whole thing. Get me, Bertha—the
whole thing! I'm showing my hand for the first time. Cloran's the man
that's making you wear those clothes; Cloran's the only one who could go
into the witness box and swear that you were the woman who murdered
Deemer; and Cloran's the man who has been working his head off for two
years to find you. We've tried a dozen times to bump him off in a way that
would make his death appear to be due purely to an accident, and we didn't
get away with it; but we can afford to leave the 'accident' out of it
to-night, and go through for keeps—and that's what we're going to
do. And once he's out of the way—by midnight—you can heave
Gypsy Nan into the discard."</p>
<p>It seemed to Rhoda Gray that horror had suddenly taken a numbing hold upon
her sensibilities. Danglar was talking about murdering some man, wasn't
he, so that she could resume again the personality of a woman who was
dead? Hysterical laughter rose to her lips. It was only by a frantic
effort of will that she controlled herself. She seemed to speak
involuntarily, doubtful almost that it was her own voice she heard.</p>
<p>"I'm listening," she said; "but I wouldn't be too sure. Cloran's a wary
bird, and there's the White Moll."</p>
<p>She caught her breath. What suicidal inspiration had prompted her to say
that! Had what she had been listening to here, the horror of it, indeed
turned her brain and robbed her of her wits to the extent that she should
invite exposure? Danglar's face had gone a mottled purple; the misshapen
thing at Danglar's side was leering at her most curiously.</p>
<p>It was a moment before Danglar spoke; and then his hand, clenched until
the white of the knuckles showed, pounded upon the table to punctuate his
words.</p>
<p>"Not to-night!" he rasped out with an oath. "There's not a chance that
she's in on this to-night—the she-devil! But she's next! With this
cleaned up, she's next! If it takes the last dollar of to-night's haul,
and five years to do it, I'll get her, and get—"</p>
<p>"Sure!" mumbled Rhoda Gray hurriedly. "But you needn't get excited! I was
only thinking of her because she's queered us till I've got my fingers
crossed, that's all. Go on about Cloran."</p>
<p>Danglar's composure did not return on the instant. He gnawed at his lips
for a moment before he spoke.</p>
<p>"All right!" he jerked out finally. "Let it go at that! I told you the
other night in the garret that things were beginning to break our way, and
that you wouldn't have to stay there much longer, but I didn't tell you
how or why—you wouldn't give me a chance. I'll tell you now; and
it's the main reason why I've kept away from you lately. I couldn't take a
chance of Cloran getting wise to that garret and Gypsy Nan." He grinned
suddenly. "I've been cultivating Cloran myself for the last two weeks.
We're quite pals! I'm for playing the luck every time! When the jewels
showed up to-day, I figured that to-night's the night—see? Cloran
and I are going to supper together at the Silver Sphinx at about eleven
o'clock—and this is where you shed the Gypsy Nan stuff, and show up
as your own sweet self. Cloran'll be glad to meet you!"</p>
<p>She stared at him in genuine perplexity and amazement.</p>
<p>"Show myself to Cloran!" she ejaculated heavily. "I don't get you!"</p>
<p>"You will in a minute," said Danglar softly. "You're the bait—see?
Cloran and I will be at supper and watching the fox-trotters. You blow in
and show yourself—I don't need to tell you how, you're clever enough
at that sort of thing yourself—and the minute he recognizes you as
the woman he's been looking for that murdered Deemer, you pretend to
recognize him for the first time too, and then you beat it like you had
the scare of your life for the door. He'll follow you on the jump. I don't
know what it's all about, and I sit tight, and that lets me out. And now
get this! There'll be two taxicabs outside. If there's more than two, it's
the first two I'm talking about. You jump into the one at the head of the
line. Cloran won't need any invitation to grab the second one and follow
you. That's all! It's the last ride he'll take. It'll be our boys, and not
chauffeurs, who'll be driving those cars to-night, and they've got their
orders where to go. Cloran won't come back. Understand, Bertha'?"</p>
<p>There was only one answer to make, only one answer that she dared make.
She made it mechanically, though her brain reeled. A man named Cloran was
to be murdered; and she was to show herself as this—this Bertha—and...</p>
<p>"Yes," she said.</p>
<p>"Good!" said Danglar. He pulled out his watch again. "All right, then!
We've been here long enough." He rose briskly. "It's time to make a move.
You hop it back to the garret, and get rid of that fancy dress. I've got
to meet Cloran uptown first. Come on, Matty, let us out."</p>
<p>The place stifled her. She got up and moved quickly through the
intervening room. She heard Danglar and his crippled brother talking
earnestly together as they followed her. And then the cripple brushed by
her in the darkness, and opened the front door—and Danglar had drawn
her to him in a quick embrace. She did not struggle; she dared not. Her
heart seemed to stand still. Danglar was whispering in her ear:</p>
<p>"I promised I'd make it up to you, Bertha, old girl. You'll see—after
to-night. We'll have another honey-moon. You go on ahead now—I can't
be seen with Gypsy Nan. And don't be late—the Silver Sphinx at
eleven."</p>
<p>She ran out on the street. Her fingers mechanically clutched at her shawl
to loosen it around her throat. It seemed as though she were choking, that
she could not breathe. The man's touch upon her had seemed like contact
with some foul and loathsome thing; the scene in that room back there like
some nightmare of horror from which she could not awake.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />