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<h2> IX. THE INCIDENT OF THE PARTLY LIFTED SHADE </h2>
<p>The fellow had a way with him, hard to resist. Cold as George was and
exhausted by an excitement of a kind to which he was wholly unaccustomed,
he found himself acceding to the detective's request; and after a quick
lunch and a huge cup of coffee in a restaurant which I wish I had time to
describe, the two took a car which eventually brought them into one of the
oldest quarters of the Borough of Brooklyn. The sleet which had stung
their faces in the streets of New York had been left behind them somewhere
on the bridge, but the chill was not gone from the air, and George felt
greatly relieved when Sweetwater paused in the middle of a long block
before a lofty tenement house of mean appearance, and signified that here
they were to stop, and that from now on, mum was to be their watchword.</p>
<p>George was relieved I say, but he was also more astonished than ever. What
kind of haunts were these for the cultured gentleman who spent his
evenings at the Clermont? It was easy enough in these days of extravagant
sympathies, to understand such a man addressing the uneasy spirits of
lower New York—he had been called an enthusiast, and an enthusiast
is very often a social agitator—but to trace him afterwards to a
place like this was certainly a surprise. A tenement—such a tenement
as this—meant home—home for himself or for those he counted
his friends, and such a supposition seemed inconceivable to my poor
husband, with the memory of the gorgeous parlour of the Clermont in his
mind. Indeed, he hinted something of the kind to his affable but strangely
reticent companion, but all the answer he got was a peculiar smile whose
humorous twist he could barely discern in the semi-darkness of the open
doorway into which they had just plunged.</p>
<p>"An adventure! certainly an adventure!" flashed through poor George's
mind, as he peered, in great curiosity down the long hall before him, into
a dismal rear, opening into a still more dismal court. It was truly a
novel experience for a business man whose philanthropy was carried on
entirely by proxy—that is, by his wife. Should he be expected to
penetrate into those dark, ill-smelling recesses, or would he be led up
the long flights of naked stairs, so feebly illuminated that they gave the
impression of extending indefinitely into dimmer and dimmer heights of
decay and desolation?</p>
<p>Sweetwater seemed to decide for the rear, for leaving George, he stepped
down the hall into the court beyond, where George could see him casting
inquiring glances up at the walls above him. Another tenement, similar to
the one whose rear end he was contemplating, towered behind but he paid no
attention to that. He was satisfied with the look he had given and came
quickly back, joining George at the foot of the staircase, up which he
silently led the way.</p>
<p>It was a rude, none-too-well-cared-for building, but it seemed respectable
enough and very quiet, considering the mass of people it accommodated.
There were marks of poverty everywhere, but no squalor. One flight—two
flights—three—and then George's guide stopped, and, looking
back at him, made a gesture. It appeared to be one of caution, but when
the two came together at the top of the staircase, Sweetwater spoke quite
naturally as he pointed out a door in their rear:</p>
<p>"That's the room. We'll keep a sharp watch and when any man, no matter
what his dress or appearance comes up these stairs and turns that way,
give him a sharp look. You understand?"</p>
<p>"Yes; but-"</p>
<p>"Oh, he hasn't come in yet. I took pains to find that out. You saw me go
into the court and look up. That was to see if his window was lighted.
Well, it wasn't."</p>
<p>George felt non-plussed.</p>
<p>"But surely," said he, "the gentleman named Brotherson doesn't live here."</p>
<p>"The inventor does."</p>
<p>"Oh!"</p>
<p>"And—but I will explain later."</p>
<p>The suppressed excitement contained in these words made George stare.
Indeed, he had been wondering for some time at the manner of the detective
which showed a curious mixture of several opposing emotions. Now, the
fellow was actually in a tremble of hope or impatience;—and, not
content with listening, he peered every few minutes down the well of the
staircase, and when he was not doing that, tramped from end to end of the
narrow passage-way separating the head of the stairs from the door he had
pointed out, like one to whom minutes were hours. All this time he seemed
to forget George who certainly had as much reason as himself for finding
the time long. But when, after some half hour of this tedium and suspense,
there rose from below the faint clatter of ascending footsteps, he
remembered his meek companion and beckoning him to one side, began a
studied conversation with him, showing him a note-book in which he had
written such phrases as these:</p>
<p>Don't look up till he is fairly in range with the light.</p>
<p>There's nothing to fear; he doesn't know either of us.</p>
<p>If it is a face you have seen before;—if it is the one we are
expecting to see, pull your necktie straight. It's a little on one side.</p>
<p>These rather startling injunctions were read by George, with no very
perceptible diminution of the uneasiness which it was only natural for him
to feel at the oddity of his position. But only the demand last made
produced any impression on him. The man they were waiting for was no
further up than the second floor, but instinctively George's hand had
flown to his necktie, and he was only stopped from its premature
re-arrangement by a warning look from Sweetwater.</p>
<p>"Not unless you know him," whispered the detective; and immediately
launched out into an easy talk about some totally different business which
George neither understood, nor was expected to, I dare say.</p>
<p>Suddenly the steps below paused, and George heard Sweetwater draw in his
breath in irrepressible dismay. But they were immediately resumed, and
presently the head and shoulders of a workingman of uncommon proportions
appeared in sight on the stairway.</p>
<p>George cast him a keen look, and his hand rose doubtfully to his neck and
then fell back again. The approaching man was tall, very well-proportioned
and easy of carriage; but the face—such of it as could be seen
between his cap and the high collar he had pulled up about his ears,
conveyed no exact impression to George's mind, and he did not dare to give
the signal Sweetwater expected from him. Yet as the man went by with a
dark and sidelong glance at them both, he felt his hand rise again, though
he did not complete the action, much to his own disgust and to the evident
disappointment of the watchful detective.</p>
<p>"You're not sure?" he now heard, oddly interpolated in the stream of
half-whispered talk with which the other endeavoured to carry off the
situation.</p>
<p>George shook his head. He could not rid himself of the old impression he
had formed of the man in the snow.</p>
<p>"Mr. Dunn, a word with you," suddenly spoke up Sweetwater, to the man who
had just passed them. "That's your name, isn't it?"</p>
<p>"Yes, that is my name," was the quiet response, in a voice which was at
once rich and resonant; a voice which George knew—the voice of the
impassioned speaker he had heard resounding through the sleet as he
cowered within hearing in the shed behind the Avenue A tenement. "Who are
you who wish to speak to me at so late an hour?"</p>
<p>He was returning to them from the door he had unlocked and left slightly
ajar.</p>
<p>"Well, we are—You know what," smiled the ready detective, advancing
half-way to greet him. "We're not members of the Associated Brotherhood,
but possibly have hopes of being so. At all events, we should like to talk
the matter over, if, as you say, it's not too late."</p>
<p>"I have nothing to do with the club—"</p>
<p>"But you spoke before it."</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"Then you can give us some sort of an idea how we are to apply for
membership."</p>
<p>Mr. Dunn met the concentrated gaze of his two evidently unwelcome visitors
with a frankness which dashed George's confidence in himself, but made
little visible impression upon his daring companion.</p>
<p>"I should rather see you at another time," said he. "But—" his
hesitation was inappreciable save to the nicest ear—"if you will
allow me to be brief, I will tell you what I know—which is very
little."</p>
<p>Sweetwater was greatly taken aback. All he had looked for, as he was
careful to tell my husband later, was a sufficiently prolonged
conversation to enable George to mark and study the workings of the face
he was not yet sure of. Nor did the detective feel quite easy at the
readiness of his reception; nor any too well pleased to accept the
invitation which this man now gave them to enter his room.</p>
<p>But he suffered no betrayal of his misgivings to escape him, though he was
careful to intimate to George, as they waited in the doorway for the other
to light up, that he should not be displeased at his refusal to accompany
him further in this adventure, and even advised him to remain in the hall
till he received his summons to enter.</p>
<p>But George had not come as far as this to back out now, and as soon as he
saw Sweetwater advance into the now well-lighted interior, he advanced too
and began to look around him.</p>
<p>The room, like many others in these old-fashioned tenements, had a jog
just where the door was, so that on entering they had to take several
steps before they could get a full glimpse of its four walls. When they
did, both showed surprise. Comfort, if not elegance, confronted them,
which impression, however, was immediately lost in the evidences of work,
manual, as well as intellectual, which were everywhere scattered about.</p>
<p>The man who lived here was not only a student, as was evinced by a long
wall full of books, but he was an art-lover, a musician, an inventor and
an athlete.</p>
<p>So much could be learned from the most cursory glance. A more careful one
picked up other facts fully as startling and impressive. The books were
choice; the invention to all appearance a practical one; the art of a high
order and the music, such as was in view, of a character of which the
nicest taste need not be ashamed. George began to feel quite conscious of
the intrusion of which they had been guilty, and was amazed at the ease
with which the detective carried himself in the presence of such
manifestations of culture and good, hard work. He was trying to recall the
exact appearance of the figure he had seen stooping in the snowy street
two nights before, when he found himself staring at the occupant of the
room, who had taken up his stand before them and was regarding them while
they were regarding the room.</p>
<p>He had thrown aside his hat and rid himself of his overcoat, and the
fearlessness of his aspect seemed to daunt the hitherto dauntless
Sweetwater, who, for the first time in his life, perhaps, hunted in vain
for words with which to start conversation.</p>
<p>Had he made an awful mistake? Was this Mr. Dunn what he seemed an unknown
and careful genius, battling with great odds in his honest struggle to
give the world something of value in return for what it had given him? The
quick, almost deprecatory glance he darted at George betrayed his dismay;
a dismay which George had begun to share, notwithstanding his growing
belief that the man's face was not wholly unknown to him even if he could
not recognise it as the one he had seen outside the Clermont.</p>
<p>"You seem to have forgotten your errand," came in quiet, if not
good-natured, sarcasm from their patiently waiting host.</p>
<p>"It's the room," muttered Sweetwater, with an attempt at his old-time ease
which was not as fully successful as usual. "What an all-fired genius you
must be. I never saw the like. And in a tenement house too! You ought to
be in one of those big new studio buildings in New York where artists be
and everything you see is beautiful. You'd appreciate it, you would."</p>
<p>The detective started, George started, at the gleam which answered him
from a very uncommon eye. It was a temporary flash, however, and quickly
veiled, and the tone in which this Dunn now spoke was anything but an
encouraging one.</p>
<p>"I thought you were desirous of joining a socialistic fraternity," said
he; "a true aspirant for such honours don't care for beautiful things
unless all can have them. I prefer my tenement. How is it with you,
friends?"</p>
<p>Sweetwater found some sort of a reply, though the thing which this man now
did must have startled him, as it certainly did George. They were so
grouped that a table quite full of anomalous objects stood at the back of
their host, and consequently quite beyond their own reach. As Sweetwater
began to speak, he whom he had addressed by the name of Dunn, drew a
pistol from his breast pocket and laid it down barrel towards them on this
table top. Then he looked up courteously enough, and listened till
Sweetwater was done. A very handsome man, but one not to be trifled with
in the slightest degree. Both recognised this fact, and George, for one,
began to edge towards the door.</p>
<p>"Now I feel easier," remarked the giant, swelling out his chest. He was
unusually tall, as well as unusually muscular. "I never like to carry
arms; but sometimes it is unavoidable. Damn it, what hands!" He was
looking at his own, which certainly showed soil. "Will you pardon me?" he
pleasantly apologised, stepping towards a washstand and plunging his hands
into the basin. "I cannot think with dirt on me like that. Humph, hey! did
you speak?"</p>
<p>He turned quickly on George who had certainly uttered an ejaculation, but
receiving no reply, went on with his task, completing it with a care and a
disregard of their presence which showed him up in still another light.</p>
<p>But even his hardihood showed shock, when, upon turning round with a
brisk, "Now I'm ready to talk," he encountered again the clear eye of
Sweetwater. For, in the person of this none too welcome intruder, he saw a
very different man from the one upon whom he had just turned his back with
so little ceremony; and there appeared to be no good reason for the
change. He had not noted in his preoccupation, how George, at sight of his
stooping figure, had made a sudden significant movement, and if he had,
the pulling of a necktie straight, would have meant nothing to him. But to
Sweetwater it meant every thing, and it was in the tone of one fully at
ease with himself that he now dryly remarked: "Mr. Brotherson, if you feel
quite clean; and if you have sufficiently warmed yourself, I would suggest
that we start out at once, unless you prefer to have me share this room
with you till the morning."</p>
<p>There was silence. Mr. Dunn thus addressed attempted no answer; not for a
full minute. The two men were measuring each other—George felt that
he did not count at all—and they were quite too much occupied with
this task to heed the passage of time. To George, who knew little, if
anything, of what this silent struggle meant to either, it seemed that the
detective stood no show before this Samson of physical strength and
intellectual power, backed by a pistol just within reach of his hand. But
as George continued to look and saw the figure of the smaller man
gradually dilate, while that of the larger, the more potent and the better
guarded, gave unmistakable signs of secret wavering, he slowly changed his
mind and, ranging himself with the detective, waited for the word or words
which should explain this situation and render intelligible the triumph
gradually becoming visible in the young detective's eyes.</p>
<p>But he was not destined to have his curiosity satisfied so far. He might
witness and hear, but it was long before he understood.</p>
<p>"Brotherson?" repeated their host, after the silence had lasted to the
breaking-point. "Why do you call me that?"</p>
<p>"Because it is your name."</p>
<p>"You called me Dunn a minute ago."</p>
<p>"That is true."</p>
<p>"Why Dunn if Brotherson is my name?"</p>
<p>"Because you spoke under the name of Dunn at the meeting to-night, and if
I don't mistake, that is the name by which you are known here."</p>
<p>"And you? By what name are you known?"</p>
<p>"It is late to ask, isn't it? But I'm willing to speak it now, and I might
not have been so a little earlier in our conversation. I am Detective
Sweetwater of the New York Department of Police, and my errand here is a
very simple one. Some letters signed by you have been found among the
papers of the lady whose mysterious death at the hotel Clermont is just
now occupying the attention of the New York authorities. If you have any
information to give which will in any way explain that death, your
presence will be welcome at Coroner Heath's office in New York. If you
have not, your presence will still be welcome. At all events, I was told
to bring you. You will be on hand to accompany me in the morning, I am
quite sure, pardoning the unconventional means I have taken to make sure
of my man?"</p>
<p>The humour with which this was said seemed to rob it of anything like
attack, and Mr. Brotherson, as we shall hereafter call him, smiled with an
odd acceptance of the same, as he responded:</p>
<p>"I will go before the police certainly. I haven't much to tell, but what I
have is at their service. It will not help you, but I have no secrets.
What are you doing?"</p>
<p>He bounded towards Sweetwater, who had simply stepped to the window,
lifted the shade and looked across at the opposing tenement.</p>
<p>"I wanted to see if it was still snowing," explained the detective, with a
smile, which seemed to strike the other like a blow. "If it was a liberty,
please pardon it."</p>
<p>Mr. Brotherson drew back. The cold air of self-possession which he now
assumed, presented such a contrast to the unwarranted heat of the moment
before that George wondered greatly over it, and later, when he
recapitulated to me the whole story of this night, it was this incident of
the lifted shade, together with the emotion it had caused, which he
acknowledged as being for him the most inexplicable event of the evening
and the one he was most anxious to hear explained.</p>
<p>As this ends our connection with this affair, I will bid you my personal
farewell. I have often wished that circumstances had made it possible for
me to accompany you through the remaining intricacies of this remarkable
case.</p>
<p>But you will not lack a suitable guide.</p>
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