<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0018" id="link2H_4_0018"></SPAN></p>
<h2> XVIII. THE OLD SHED </h2>
<p>Rhoda Gray opened her eyes, and, from the cot upon which she lay, stared
with drowsy curiosity around the garret—and in another instant was
sitting bolt upright, alert and tense, as the full flood of memory swept
upon her.</p>
<p>There was still a meager light creeping in through the small, grimy window
panes, but it was the light of waning day. She must have slept, then, all
through the morning and the afternoon, slept the dead, heavy sleep of
exhaustion from the moment she had flung herself down here a few hours
before daybreak.</p>
<p>She rose impulsively to her feet. It was strange that she had not been
disturbed, that no one had come to the garret! The recollection of the
events of the night before were crowding themselves upon her now. In view
of last night, in view of her failure to keep that appointment in the role
of Danglar's wife, it was very strange indeed that she had been left undisturbed!</p>
<p>Subconsciously she was aware that she was hungry, that it was long since
she had eaten, and, almost mechanically, she prepared herself something
now from the store the garret possessed; but, even as she ate, her mind
was far from thoughts of food. From the first night she had come here and
self-preservation had thrust this miserable role of Gypsy Nan upon her,
from that first night and from the following night when, to save the
Sparrow, she had been whirled into the vortex of the gang's criminal
activities, her mind raced on through the sequence of events that seemed
to have spanned some vast, immeasurable space of time until they had
brought her to—last night.</p>
<p>Last night! She had thought it was the end last night, but instead—The
dark eyes grew suddenly hard and intent. Yes, she had counted upon last
night, when, with the necessary proof in her possession with which to
confront Danglar with the crime of murder, she could wring from the man
all that now remained necessary to substantiate her own story and clear
herself in the eyes of the law of that robbery at Skarbolov's antique
store of which she was held guilty—and instead she had barely
escaped with her life. That was the story of last night.</p>
<p>Her eyes grew harder. Well, the way was still open, wasn't it? Last night
had changed nothing in that respect. To-night, as the White Moll, she had
only to find and corner Danglar as she had planned to do last night. She
had still only to get the man alone somewhere.</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray's hands clenched tightly. That was all that was necessary—just
the substantiation of her own story that the plot to rob Skarbolov lay at
the door of Danglar and his gang; or, rather, perhaps, that the plot was
in existence before she had ever heard of Skarbolov. It would prove her
own statement of what the dying woman had said. It would exonerate her
from guilt; it would prove that, rather than having any intention of
committing crime, she had taken the only means within her power of
preventing one. The real Gypsy Nan, Danglar's wife, who had died that
night, bad, even in eleventh-hour penitence, refused to implicate her
criminal associates. There was a crime projected which, unless she, Rhoda
Gray, would agree to forestall it in person and would give her oath not to
warn the police about it and so put the actual criminals in jeopardy,
would go on to its fulfillment!</p>
<p>She remembered that night in the hospital. The scene came vividly before
her now. The woman's pleading, the woman's grim loyalty even in death to
her pals. She, Rhoda Gray, had given her oath.</p>
<p>It became necessary only to substantiate those facts. Danglar could be
made to do it. She had now in her possession the evidence that would
convict him of complicity in the murder of Deemer, and for which murder
the original Gypsy Nan had gone into hiding; she even had in her
possession the missing jewels that had prompted that murder; she had, too,
the evidence now to bring the entire gang to justice for their myriad
depredations; she knew where their secret hoard of ill-gotten gains was
hidden—here in this attic, behind that ingeniously contrived
trap-door in the ceiling. She knew all this; and this information placed
before the police, providing only it was backed by the proof that the
scheme to rob Skarbolov was to be carried out by the gang, as she, Rhoda
Gray, would say the dying woman had informed her, would be more than
enough to clear her. She had not had this proof on that first night when
she had snatched at the mantle of Gypsy Nan as the sole means of escape
from Rough Rorke, of headquarters; she did not have it now—but she
would have it, stake all and everything in life she had to have it, for
it, in itself, literally meant everything and all—and Danglar would
make a written confession, or else—or else—She smiled
mirthlessly. That was all! Last night she had failed. To-night she would
not fail. Before morning came, if it were humanly within her power, she
and Danglar would have played out their game—to the end.</p>
<p>And now a pucker came and gathered her forehead into little furrows, and
anxiety and perplexity crept into her eyes. Another thought tormented her.
In the exposure that was to come the Adventurer, alias the Pug, was
involved. Was there any way to save the man to whom she owed so much, the
splendidly chivalrous, high-couraged gentleman she loved, the thief she
abhorred?</p>
<p>She pushed the remains of her frugal meal away from her, stood up abruptly
from the rickety washstand at which she had been seated, and commenced to
pace nervously up and down the stark, bare garret. Where was the line of
demarcation between right and wrong? Was it a grievous sin, or an
infinitely human thing to do, to warn the man she loved, and give him a
chance to escape the net she meant to furnish the police? He was a thief,
even a member of the gang—though he used the gang as his puppets.
Did ethics count when one who had stood again and again between her and
peril was himself in danger now? Would it be a righteous thing, or an act
of despicable ingratitude, to trap him with the rest?</p>
<p>She laughed out shortly. Warn him! Of course, she would warn him! But then—what?
She shivered a little, and her face grew drawn and tired. It was the old,
old story of the pitcher and the well. It was almost inevitable that
sooner or later, for some crime or another, the man she loved would be
caught at last, and would spend the greater portion of his days behind
prison bars. That was what the love that had come into her life held as
its promise to her! It was terrible enough without her agency being the
means of placing him there!</p>
<p>She did not want to think about it. She forced her mind into other
channels, though they were scarcely less disquieting. Why was it that
during the day just past there had been not a sign from Danglar or any one
of the gang, when every plan of theirs had gone awry last night, and she
had failed to keep her appointment in the role of Danglar's wife? Why was
it? What did it mean? Surely Danglar would never allow what had happened
to pass unchallenged, and—was that some one now?</p>
<p>She halted suddenly by the door to listen, her hand going instinctively to
the wide, voluminous pocket of her greasy skirt for her revolver. Yes,
there was a footstep in the hall below, but it was descending now to the
ground floor, not coming up. She even heard the street door close, but
still she hung there in a strained, tense way, and into her face there
came creeping a gray dismay. Her pocket was empty.</p>
<p>The revolver was gone! Its loss, pregnant with a hundred ominous
possibilities, seemed to bring a panic fear upon her, holding her for a
moment inert—and then she rushed frantically to the cot. Perhaps it
had fallen out of her pocket during the hours she had lain there asleep.
She searched the folds of the soiled and crumpled blanket, that was the
cot's sole covering, then snatched the blanket completely off the cot and
shook it; and then, down on her knees, she searched the floor under the
cot. There was no sign of the revolver.</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray stood up, and stared in a stunned way about her. Was this,
then, the explanation of her having seemingly been left undisturbed here
all through the day? Had some one, after all, been here, and—? She
shook her head suddenly with a quick, emphatic gesture of dissent. The
door was still locked, she could see the key on the inside; and, besides,
as a theory, it wasn't logical. They wouldn't have taken her revolver and
left her placidly asleep!</p>
<p>The loss of the revolver was a vital matter. It was her one safeguard; the
one means by which she could first gain and afterwards hold the whip-hand
over Danglar in the interview she proposed to have with him; the one means
of escape, the last resort, if she herself were cornered and fell into his
power. It had sustained her more than once, that resolution to turn it
against herself if she were in extremity. It meant everything to her, that
weapon, and it was gone now; but the panic that had seized upon her was
gone too, and she could think rationally and collectively again.</p>
<p>Last night, or rather this morning, when she had made her way back to the
shed out there in the lane behind the garret, she had been in a state of
almost utter exhaustion. She had changed from the clothes of the White
Moll to those of Gypsy Nan, but she must have done so almost mechanically
for she had no concrete recollection of it. It was quite likely then, even
more than probable, that she had left the revolver in the pocket of her
other clothes; for she had certainly had, not only her revolver, but her
flashlight and her skeleton keys with her when she had visited old
Luertz's place last night, and later on too, when she had jumped into that
automobile in front of the Silver Sphinx, she had had her revolver, for
she had used it to force the chauffeur out of the car—and she had no
one of those articles now.</p>
<p>Of course! That was it! She stepped impulsively to the door, and, opening
it, made her way quickly down the stairs to the street. The revolver was
undoubtedly in the pocket of her other skirt, and she felt a surge of
relief sweep upon her; but a sense of relief was far from enough. She
would not feel safe until the weapon was again in her possession, and
intuitively she felt that she had no time to lose in securing it. She had
already been left too long alone not to make a break in that unaccountable
isolation they had accorded her as something to be expected at any moment.
She hurried now down the street to the lane that intervened between Gypsy
Nan's house and the next corner, glanced quickly about her, and, seeing no
one in her immediate vicinity, slipped into the lane. She gained the
deserted shed some fifty yards along the lane, entered through the broken
door that hung, half open, on sagging hinges, and, dropping on her knees,
reached in under the decayed and rotting flooring. She pushed aside
impatiently the package of jewels, at whose magnificence she had gazed
awe-struck and bewildered the night before, and drew out the bundle that
comprised her own clothing. Her hand sought the pocket eagerly. Yes, it
was here—at least the flashlight was, and so were the skeleton keys.
That was what had happened! She had been near utter collapse last night,
and she had forgotten, and—Rhoda Gray, unconscious even that she
still held the clothing in her hands, rose mechanically to her feet. There
was a sudden weariness in her eyes as she stared unseeingly about her.
Yes, the flashlight and the keys were here—but the revolver was not!
Her brain harked back in lightning flashes over the events of the
preceding night. She must have lost it somewhere, then. Where? She had had
it in the automobile, that she knew positively; but after that she did not
remember, unless—yes, it must have been that! When she had jumped
from the car and flung herself down at the roadside! It must have fallen
out of her pocket then.</p>
<p>Her heart seemed to stand still. Suppose they had found it! They would
certainly recognize it as belonging to Gypsy Nan! They were not fools. The
deduction would be obvious—the identity of the White Moll would be
solved. Was that why no one had apparently come near her? Were they
playing at cat-and-mouse, watching her before they struck, so that she
would lead them to those jewels under the flooring here that were worth a
king's ransom? They certainly believed that the White Moll had them. The
Adventurer's note, so ironically true, that he had intended as an alibi
for himself, and which he had exchanged for the package in old Luertz's
place, would have left no doubt in their minds but that the stones were in
her possession. Was that it? Were they—She held her breath. It
seemed as though suddenly her limbs were refusing to support her weight.
In the soft earth outside she had heard no step, but she saw now a shadow
fall athwart the half-open door-way. There was no time to move, even had
she been capable of action. It seemed as though even her soul had turned
to stone, and, with the White Moll's clothes in her hands, she stood there
staring at the doorway, and something that was greater than fear, because
it mingled horror, ugly and forbidding, fell upon her. It was still just
light enough to see. The shadow moved forward and came inside. She wanted
to scream, to rush madly in retreat to the farthest corner of the shed;
but she could not move. It was Danglar who was standing there. He seemed
to sway a little on his feet, and the dark, sinister face seemed blotched,
and he seemed to smile as though possessed of some unholy and perverted
sense of humor.</p>
<p>She was helpless, at his mercy, unarmed, saved for her wits. Her wits!
Were wits any longer of avail? She could believe nothing else now except
that he had been watching her—before he struck.</p>
<p>"What are you doing here, and what are those clothes you've got in your
hands?" he rasped out.</p>
<p>She could only fence for time in the meager hope that some loophole would
present itself. She forced an assumed defiance into her tones and manner,
that was in keeping with the sort of armed truce, which, from her first
meeting with Danglar, she had inaugurated as a barrier between them.</p>
<p>"You have asked me two questions," she said tartly. "Which one do you want
me to answer first?"</p>
<p>"Look here," he snapped, "you cut that out! There's one or two things need
explaining—see? What are those clothes?"</p>
<p>Her wits! Perhaps he did not know as much as she was afraid he did! She
seemed to have become abnormally contained, her mind abnormally acute and
active. It was not likely that the woman, his wife, whom he believed she
was, had worn her own clothes in his presence since the day, some two
years ago, when she had adopted the disguise of Gypsy Nan; and she, Rhoda
Gray, remembered that on the night Gypsy Nan, re-assuming her true
personality, had gone to the hospital, the woman's clothes, like these she
held now, had been of dark material. It was not likely that a man would be
able to differentiate between those clothes and the clothes of the White
Moll, especially as the latter hung folded in her hands now, and even
though he had seen them on her at the Silver Sphinx last night.</p>
<p>"What clothes do you suppose they are but my own?—though I haven't
had a chance to wear them much lately!" she countered crisply.</p>
<p>He scowled at her speculatively.</p>
<p>"What are you doing with them out here in this hole, then?" he demanded.</p>
<p>"I had to wear them last night, hadn't I?" she retorted. "I'd have looked
well coming out of Gypsy Nan's garret dressed as myself if any one had
seen me!" She scowled at him in turn. She was beginning to believe that he
had not even an inkling of her identity. Her safest play was to stake
everything on that belief. "Say, what's the matter with you?" she inquired
disdainfully. "I came out here and changed last night; and I changed into
these rags I'm wearing now when I got back again; and I left my own
clothes here because I was expecting to get word that I could put them on
again soon for keeps—though I might have known from past experience
that something would queer the fine promises you made at Matty's last
night! And the reason I'm out here now is because I left some things in
the pocket, amongst them"—she stared at him mockingly—"my
marriage certificate."</p>
<p>Danglar's face blackened.</p>
<p>"Curse you!" he burst out angrily. "When you get your tantrums on, you've
got a tongue, haven't you! You'd have been wearing your clothes now, if
you'd have done as you were told. You're the one that queered things last
night." His voice was rising; he was rocking even more unsteadily upon his
feet. "Why in hell weren't you at the Silver Sphinx?"</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray squinted at him through Gypsy Nan's spectacles. She knew an
hysterical impulse to laugh outright in the sure consciousness of
supremacy over him now. The man had been drinking. He was by no means
drunk; but, on the other hand, he was by no means sober—and she was
certain now that, though she did not know how he had found her here in the
shed, not the slightest suspicion of her had entered his mind.</p>
<p>"I was at the Silver Sphinx," she announced coolly.</p>
<p>"You lie!" he said hoarsely. "You weren't! I told you to be there at
eleven, and you weren't. You lie! What are you lying to me for—eh?
I'll find out, you—you—"</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray dashed the clothes down on the floor at her feet, and faced the
man as though suddenly overcome in turn herself with passion, shaking both
closed fists at him.</p>
<p>"Don't you talk to me like that, Pierre Danglar!" she shrilled. "I lie, do
I? Well, I'll prove to you I don't! You said you were going to have supper
with Cloran at about eleven o'clock, and perhaps I was a few minutes after
that, but maybe you think it's easy to get all this Gypsy Nan stuff off me
face and all, and rig up in my own clothes that I haven't seen for so long
it's a wonder they hold together at all. I lie, do I? Well, just as I got
to the Silver Sphinx, I saw a woman breaking her neck to get down the
steps with you after her. She jumped into the automobile it was doped out
I was to take, and you jumped into the other one, and both beat it down
the street. I thought you'd gone crazy. I was afraid that Cloran would
come out and recognize me, so I turned and ran, too. The safest thing I
could do was to get back into the Gypsy Nan game again, and that's what I
did. And I've been lying low ever since, waiting to get word from some of
you, and not a soul came near me. You're a nice lot, you are! And now you
come sneaking here and call me a liar! How'd you get to this shed,
anyway?"</p>
<p>Danglar pushed his hand in a heavy, confused way across his eyes.</p>
<p>"My God!" he said heavily. "So that's it, is it?" His voice became
suddenly conciliating in its tones. "Look here, Bertha, old girl, don't
get sore. I didn't understand, see? And there was a whole lot that looked
queer. We even lost the jewels at old Luertz's last night. Do you know who
that woman was? It was the White Moll! She led us a chase all over Long
Island, and—"</p>
<p>"The White Moll!" ejaculated Rhoda Gray. And then her laugh, short and
jeering, rang out. The tables were turned. She had him on the defensive
now. "You needn't tell me I She got away again, of course! Why don't you
hire a detective to help you? You make me weary! So, it was the White
Moll, was it? Well, I'm listening—only I'd like to know first how
you got here to this shed."</p>
<p>"There's nothing in that!" he answered impatiently. "There's something
more important to talk about. I was coming over to the garret, and just as
I reached the corner I saw you go into the lane. I followed you; that's
all there is to that."</p>
<p>"Oh!" she sniffed. She stared at him for a moment. There was something in
which there was the uttermost of irony now, it seemed, in this meeting
between them. Last night she had striven to meet him alone, and she had
meant to devote to-night to the same purpose; and she was here with him
now, and in a place than which, in her wildest hopes, she could have
imagined one no better suited to the reckoning she would have demanded and
forced. And she was helpless, powerless to make use of it. She was
unarmed. Her revolver was gone. Without that to protect her, at an
intimation that she was the White Moll she would never leave the shed
alive. The spot would be quite as ideal under those circumstances for him,
as it would have been under other circumstances for her. She shrugged her
shoulders. Danglar's continued silence evidently invited further comment
on her part. "Oh!" she sniffed again. "And I suppose, then, that you have
been chasing the White Moll ever since last night at eleven, and that's
why you didn't get around sooner to allay my fears, even though you knew I
must be half mad with anxiety at the way things broke last night. She'll
have us down and out for keeps if you haven't got brains enough to beat
her. How much longer is this thing going on?"</p>
<p>Danglar's little black eyes narrowed. She caught a sudden glint of triumph
in them. It was Danglar now who laughed.</p>
<p>"Not much longer!" His voice was arrogant with malicious satisfaction.
"The luck had to turn, hadn't it? Well, it's turned! I've got the White
Moll at last!"</p>
<p>She felt the color leave her face. It seemed as though something had
closed with an icy clutch upon her heart. She had heard aright, hadn't
she?—that he had said he had got the White Moll at last. And there
was no mistaking the mans s sinister delight in making that announcement.
Had she been premature, terribly premature, in assuring herself that her
identity was still safe as far as he was concerned? Did it mean that,
after all, he had been playing at cat-and-mouse with her, as she had at
first feared?</p>
<p>"You—you've got the White Moll?" She forced the words from her lips,
striving to keep her voice steady and in control, and to infuse into it an
ironical incredulity.</p>
<p>"Sure!" he said complacently. "The showdown comes to-night. In another
hour or so we'll have her where we want her, and—"</p>
<p>"Oh!" She laughed almost hysterically in relief. "I thought so! You
haven't got her yet. You're only going to get her—in another hour or
so! You make me tired! It's always in 'another hour or so' with you—and
it never comes off!"</p>
<p>Danglar scowled at her under the taunt.</p>
<p>"It'll come off this time!" he snarled in savage menace. "You hold that
tongue of yours! Yes, it'll come off! And when it does"—a sweep of
fury sent the red into his working face—"I'll keep the promise I
made her once—that she'd wish she had never been born! D'ye hear,
Bertha?"</p>
<p>"I hear," she said indifferently. "But would you mind telling me how you
are going to do it? I might believe you then—perhaps!"</p>
<p>"Damn you, Bertha!" he exploded. "Sometimes I'd like to wring that pretty
neck of yours; and sometimes!"—he moved suddenly toward her—"I
would sell my soul for you, and—"</p>
<p>She retreated from him coolly.</p>
<p>"Never mind about that! This isn't a love scene!" she purred caustically.
"And as for the other, save it for the White Moll. What makes you think
you've got her at last?"</p>
<p>"I don't think—I know." He stood gnawing at his lips, eying her
uncertainly, half angrily, half hungrily. And then he shrugged his
shoulders. "Listen!" he said. "I've got some one else, too! And I know now
where the leak that's queered every one of our games and put the White
Moll wise to every one of our plans beforehand has come from. I guess
you'll believe me now, won't you? We've got that dude pal of hers fastened
up tighter than the night he fastened me with his cursed handcuffs! Do you
know who that same dude pal is?" He laughed in an ugly, immoderate way.
"You don't, of course, so I'll tell you. It's the Pug!" Rhoda Gray did not
answer. It was growing dark here in the shed now—perhaps that was
why the man's form blended suddenly into the doorway and wall, and blurred
before her. She tried to think, but there seemed to have fallen upon her a
numbed and agonized stupefaction. There was no confusing this issue.
Danglar had found out that the Adventurer was the Pug. And it meant—oh,
what did it mean? They would kill him. Of course, they would kill him! The
Adventurer, discovered, would be safer at the mercy of a pack of starved
pumas, and...</p>
<p>"I thought that would hold you!" said Danglar with brutal serenity.
"That's why I didn't get around till now. I didn't get back from that
chase until daylight—the she-fiend stole our car—and then I
went to bed to get a little sleep. About three o'clock this afternoon
Pinkie Bonn woke me up. He was half batty with excitement. He said he was
over in the tenement in the Pug's room. The Pug wasn't in, and Pinkie was
waiting for him, and then all of a sudden he heard a woman screaming like
mad from somewhere. He went to the door and looked out, and saw a man dash
out of a room across the hall, and burst in the door of the next room.
There was a woman in there with her clothes on fire. She'd upset a
coal-oil stove, or something. The man Pinkie had seen beats the fire out,
and everybody in the tenement begins to collect around the door. And then
Pinkie goes pop-eyed. The man's face was the face of the White Moll's dude
pal—but he had on the Pug's clothes. Pinkie's a wise guy. He slips
away to me without getting himself in the limelight or spilling any beans.
And I didn't ask him if he'd been punching the needle again overtime,
either. It fitted like a glove with what happened at old Luertz's last
night. You don't know about that. Pinkie and this double-crossing snitch
went there—and only found a note from the White Moll. He'd tipped
her off before, of course, and the note made a nice little play so's he'd
be safe himself with us. Well, that's about all. We had to get him—where
we wanted him—and we got him. We waited until he showed up again as
the Pug, and then we put over a frame-up deal on him that got him to go
over to that old iron plant in Harlem, you know, behind Jake Malley's
saloon, where we had it fixed to hand Cloran his last night—and the
Pug's there now. He's nicely gagged, and tied, and quite safe. The plant's
been shut down for the last two months, and there's only the watchman
there, and he's 'squared.' We gave the Pug two hours of solitary
confinement to think it over and come across. We just asked him for the
White Moll's address, so's we could get her and the sparklers she swiped
at Old Luertz's place last night."</p>
<p>Still Rhoda Gray did not speak for a moment. She seemed to be held in
thrall by both terror and a sickening dismay. It did not seem real, her
surroundings here, this man, and the voice that was gloatingly pronouncing
the death sentence upon the man who had come unbidden into her life, and
into her heart, the man she loved. Yes, she understood! Danglar's words
had been plain enough. The Adventurer had been trapped—not through
Danglar's cunning, or lack of cunning on the Adventurer's own part, but
through force of circumstances that had caused him to fling all thought of
self-consideration to the winds in an effort to save another's life. Her
hands, hidden in the folds of her skirt, clenched until they hurt. And it
was another self, it seemed, subconsciously enacting the role of Gypsy
Nan, alias Danglar's wife, who spoke at last.</p>
<p>"You are a fool! You are all fools!" she cried tempestuously. "What do you
expect to gain by that? Do you imagine you can make the Pug come across
with any information by a threat to kill him if he doesn't? You tried that
once. You had him cold, or at least you thought you had, and so did he,
that night in old Nicky Viner's room, and he laughed at you even when he
expected you to fire the next second. He's not likely to have changed any
since then, is he?"</p>
<p>"No," said Danglar, with a vicious chuckle; "and that's why I'm not trying
the same game twice. That's why we've got him over in the old iron plant
now."</p>
<p>There was something she did not like in Danglar's voice, something of
ominous assurance, something that startled her.</p>
<p>"What do you mean?" she demanded sharply.</p>
<p>"It's a lonely place," said Danglar complacently. "There's no one around
but the watchman, and he's an old friend of Shluker's; and it's so roomy
over there that no one could expect him to be everywhere at once. See?
That let's him out. He's been well greased, and he won't know anything.
Don't you worry, old girl! That's what I came here for—to tell you
that everything is all right, after all. The Pug will talk. Maybe he
wouldn't if he just had his choice between that and the quick, painless
end that a bullet would bring; but there are some things that a man can't
stand. Get me? We'll try a few of those on the Pug, and, believe me,
before we're through, there won't be any secrets wrapped up in his bosom."</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray stood motionless. Thank God it had grown dark—dark enough
to hide the whiteness that she knew had crept over her face, and the
horror that had crept into her eyes. "You mean"—her voice was very
low—"you mean you're going to torture him into talking?"</p>
<p>"Sure!" said Danglar. "What do you think!"</p>
<p>"And after that?"</p>
<p>"We bump him off, of course," said Danglar callously. "He knows all about
us, don't he? And I guess we'll square up on what's coming to him! He's
put the crimp into us for the last time!" Danglar's voice pitched suddenly
hoarse in fury. "That's a hell of a question to ask! What do you think
we'd do with a yellow cur that's double-crossed us like that?"</p>
<p>Plead for the Adventurer's life? It was useless; it was worse than useless—it
would only arouse suspicion toward herself. From the standpoint of any one
of the gang, the Adventurer's life was forfeit. Her mind was swift,
cruelly swift, in its workings now. There came the prompting to disclose
her own identity to tell Danglar that he need not go to the Adventurer to
discover the whereabouts of the White Moll, that she was here now before
him; there came the prompting to offer herself in lieu of the man she
loved. But that, too, was useless, and worse than useless; they would
still do away with the Adventurer because he had been the Pug, and the
only chance he now had, as represented by whatever she might be able to
do, would be gone, since she would but have delivered herself into their
hands.</p>
<p>She drew back suddenly. Danglar had stepped toward her. She was unable to
avoid him, and his arm encircled her waist. She shivered as the pressure
of his arm tightened.</p>
<p>"It's all right, old girl!" he said exuberantly. "You've been through
hell, you have; but it's all right at last. You leave it to me! Your
husband's got a kiss to make up for every drop of that grease you've had
to put on the prettiest face in New York."</p>
<p>It seemed as though she must scream out. It was hideous. She could not
force herself to endure it another instant even for safety's safe. She
pushed him away. It was unbearable—at any risk, cost what it might.
Mind, soul and body recoiled from the embrace.</p>
<p>"Leave me alone!" she panted. "You've been drinking. Leave me alone!"</p>
<p>He drew back, and laughed.</p>
<p>"Not very much," he said. "The celebration hasn't started yet, and you'll
be in on that. I guess your nerves have been getting shaky lately, haven't
they? Well, you can figure on the swellest rest-cure you ever heard of,
Bertha. Take it from me! We're going down to keep the Pug company
presently. You blow around to Matty's about midnight and get the election
returns. We'll finish the job after that by getting Cloran out of the road
some way before morning, and that will let you out for keeps—there
won't be any one left to recognize the woman who was with Deemer the night
he shuffled out." He backed to the doorway. "Get me? Come over to Matty's
and see the rajah's sparklers about midnight. We'll have 'em then—and
the she-fiend, too. So long, Bertha!"</p>
<p>She scarcely heard him; she answered mechanically.</p>
<p>"Good-night," she said.</p>
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