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<h1 class="title">THE BLACK STAR</h1>
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<p class="caption">A section of the floor had swung downward with a crash. <em>Frontispiece</em></p>
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<div class="line"><br/></div>
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<div class="line"><span class="x-large">The Black Star</span></div>
<div class="line"><br/></div>
<div class="line"><span class="larger">A Detective Story</span></div>
<div class="line"><br/></div>
<div class="line"><span class="smaller">BY</span></div>
<div class="line">JOHNSTON McCULLEY</div>
<div class="line"><br/></div>
<div class="line"><em>Frontispiece by</em></div>
<div class="line">EDGAR WITTMACK</div>
<div class="line"><br/></div>
<div class="line">CHELSEA HOUSE</div>
<div class="line">79 Seventh Avenue, New York City</div>
<div class="line">1921</div>
<div class="line"><br/></div>
<div class="line"><br/></div>
<div class="line"><br/></div>
<div class="line"><br/></div>
<div class="line">Copyright, 1921</div>
<div class="line">By CHELSEA HOUSE</div>
<div class="line"><br/></div>
<div class="line">The Black Star</div>
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<div class="line">All rights reserved, including that of translation into foreign</div>
<div class="line">languages, including the Scandinavian.</div>
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<p class="topic-title first">CONTENTS</p>
<ul class="simple">
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-ian-aided-escape" id="id1">CHAPTER I—AN AIDED ESCAPE</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-iithe-black-star" id="id2">CHAPTER II—THE BLACK STAR</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-iiiinto-the-pit" id="id3">CHAPTER III—INTO THE PIT</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-ivrogue-for-a-day" id="id4">CHAPTER IV—ROGUE FOR A DAY</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-vmuggs-on-guard" id="id5">CHAPTER V—MUGGS ON GUARD</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-vian-unprofitable-afternoon" id="id6">CHAPTER VI—AN UNPROFITABLE AFTERNOON</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-viiidentical-orders" id="id7">CHAPTER VII—IDENTICAL ORDERS</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-viiithe-police-get-a-tip" id="id8">CHAPTER VIII—THE POLICE GET A TIP</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-ixchickens-come-home-to-roost" id="id9">CHAPTER IX—“CHICKENS COME HOME TO ROOST”</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xcaught-in-a-net" id="id10">CHAPTER X—CAUGHT IN A NET</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xiclose-quarters" id="id11">CHAPTER XI—CLOSE QUARTERS</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xiiat-the-charity-ball" id="id12">CHAPTER XII—AT THE CHARITY BALL</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xiiimuggsgreat-little-man" id="id13">CHAPTER XIII—MUGGS—GREAT LITTLE MAN</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xivunexpected-news" id="id14">CHAPTER XIV—UNEXPECTED NEWS</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xvthe-challenge" id="id15">CHAPTER XV—THE CHALLENGE</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xvia-nocturnal-visit" id="id16">CHAPTER XVI—A NOCTURNAL VISIT</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xviiinterrupted-conversation" id="id17">CHAPTER XVII—INTERRUPTED CONVERSATION</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xviiimysteries" id="id18">CHAPTER XVIII—MYSTERIES</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xixsuspicion" id="id19">CHAPTER XIX—SUSPICION</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xxthe-voice-on-the-wire" id="id20">CHAPTER XX—THE VOICE ON THE WIRE</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xxithe-end-of-the-wire" id="id21">CHAPTER XXI—THE END OF THE WIRE</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xxiion-the-scent" id="id22">CHAPTER XXII—ON THE SCENT</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xxxii-into-the-vault" id="id23">CHAPTER XXXII.—INTO THE VAULT</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xxivhow-it-ended" id="id24">CHAPTER XXIV—HOW IT ENDED</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xxvshadowed-by-three" id="id25">CHAPTER XXV—SHADOWED BY THREE</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xxvia-man-of-mystery" id="id26">CHAPTER XXVI—A MAN OF MYSTERY</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xxviiin-black-stars-hands" id="id27">CHAPTER XXVII—IN BLACK STAR’S HANDS</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xxviiithe-police-launch" id="id28">CHAPTER XXVIII—THE POLICE LAUNCH</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xxixblack-star-takes-a-trick" id="id29">CHAPTER XXIX—BLACK STAR TAKES A TRICK</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xxxmuggs-in-action" id="id30">CHAPTER XXX—MUGGS IN ACTION</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xxxiin-the-bank" id="id31">CHAPTER XXXI—IN THE BANK</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xxxiia-narrow-escape" id="id32">CHAPTER XXXII—A NARROW ESCAPE</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xxxiiipuzzled-police" id="id33">CHAPTER XXXIII—PUZZLED POLICE</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xxxivwhat-happened-to-the-chief" id="id34">CHAPTER XXXIV—WHAT HAPPENED TO THE CHIEF</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xxxvan-unexpected-blow" id="id35">CHAPTER XXXV—AN UNEXPECTED BLOW</SPAN></li>
<li><SPAN class="reference internal" href="#chapter-xxxviin-custody" id="id36">CHAPTER XXXVI—IN CUSTODY</SPAN></li>
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<div class="line"><span class="x-large">THE BLACK STAR</span></div>
</div><div class="section" id="chapter-ian-aided-escape">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id1">CHAPTER I—AN AIDED ESCAPE</SPAN></h1>
<p>Winds whistled up the river, and winds whistled
down from the hills, and they met to swirl and
gather fury and rattle the city’s millions of windowpanes.
They carried a mixture of sleet and fine snow,
the first herald of the winter to come. In the business
district they swung signs madly back and forth,
and roared around the corners of high office buildings,
and swept madly against struggling trolley cars.
They poured through the man-made cañons; they
dashed out the broad boulevards—and so they came
to the attention of Mr. Roger Verbeck, at about the
hour of midnight, as he turned over in his warm bed
and debated whether to rise and lower the window
or take a chance with the rapidly lowering temperature.</p>
<p>“Beastly night!” Verbeck confided to himself, and
put his head beneath the covers.</p>
<p>He slept—and suddenly he awakened. A moment
before he had been in the midst of a pleasant dream;
now every sense was alert, and his right hand, creeping
softly under the cover, reached the side of the
bed and grasped an automatic pistol that hung in a
rack there.</p>
<p>From the adjoining room—his library—there came
no flash of an electric torch, no footfall, no sound
foreign to the apartment, nothing to indicate the presence
of an intruder. Yet Verbeck sensed that an intruder
was there.</p>
<p>He slipped quietly from the bed, shivering a bit
because of the cold wind, put his feet into slippers,
and drew on a dressing gown over his pajamas. Then,
his pistol held ready for use in case of emergency,
he started across the bedroom, taking short steps and
walking on his toes.</p>
<p>A reflection entered the room from the arc light
on the nearest street corner. This uncertain light
was shut off for an instant, and Verbeck whirled
quickly, silently, to find another man slipping up
beside him. It was Muggs—a little, wiry man of
uncertain age, who had been in Verbeck’s employ for
several years, valet at times, comrade in arms at times,
willing adventurer always. Muggs bent forward until
his lips were close to Verbeck’s ear.</p>
<p>“I heard it, too, boss,” he said. “Somebody in the
library!”</p>
<p>Verbeck nodded; they crept nearer the door. Inch
by inch, Verbeck pulled aside one of the curtains,
until they could peer into the other room. A gleam
from the corner arc light penetrated the library, too.
It revealed the interior of the room in a sort of semi-gloom,
causing elusive shadows that flitted here and
there in such fashion that they scarcely could be distinguished
from substance. Also, it revealed an open
window near the fire escape—and it showed the form
of a man standing before Verbeck’s antique desk in
a corner.</p>
<p>Muggs bent beneath his master’s arm to see better.
He felt Verbeck grip his shoulder, and looked up to
find him indicating the open window. Like a shadow,
Muggs, who also held a weapon in his hand, slipped
through the curtains, crept along the wall, and advanced
toward that window to cut off the intruder’s
retreat.</p>
<p>An instant Verbeck waited; then he stepped into
the room, found the electric switch, and snapped
on the lights, and leveled his automatic.</p>
<p>The man before the desk whirled with a snarl
that showed two rows of jagged, uneven, yellow teeth.
He took in the situation at a glance, saw Muggs at
the window, and Verbeck at the door, and knew he
had been caught in a trap. His eyes narrowed and
flashed; he bent forward, giving the appearance of
a rat at bay, and his hand dropped slowly toward
his hip.</p>
<p>“Better not!” There was a certain quality in Verbeck’s
voice that told the burglar the man before
him was neither nervous nor afraid, and would shoot
if necessary. The thief’s hands went above his head
in token of surrender, and the belligerent light that
had been in his eyes faded.</p>
<p>“It appears,” said Verbeck, “that we have discovered
you in a delicate position.”</p>
<p>“Aw, don’t try to be clever! I guess you’ve got
me, all right!”</p>
<p>“Rather unceremonious, this call,” Verbeck went
on. “Why didn’t you send up your card from the
office?”</p>
<p>“Aw——”</p>
<p>“Be seated, please!”</p>
<p>Still holding his hands above his head, the burglar
took the chair Verbeck indicated.</p>
<p>“Now, Muggs——” Verbeck said.</p>
<p>Muggs had been waiting for the word. He sprang
away from the window and took the cords from the
portières. Working swiftly, he bound the burglar’s
hands behind his back, then fastened them to the
chair. Then he assumed the rôle of guard, and Verbeck
lowered his pistol and walked toward the desk.</p>
<p>“I fancy you didn’t find much, my man,” he said.
“This is a bachelor apartment, you know, and there
is little of value in the library unless you seek books
or pictures.”</p>
<p>“Aw——”</p>
<p>“If you had entered the dressing room now—— But,
of course, if you had done that, Muggs probably
would have filled you full of lead first, and made
a complete investigation afterward. It is better for
you that you didn’t enter there. Why you should
crawl into a bachelor’s apartment, when there are so
many pretentious residences where silver and plate
are to be found, not to speak of women’s jewels, is
more than I can fathom. You must be an amateur
at this sort of thing. Um! What is this?”</p>
<p>On the desk was a sealed letter addressed to Mr.
Roger Verbeck, the address having been stamped with
rubber type. In one corner of the envelope had been
pasted a tiny black star. On the polished surface
of the desk other little black stars had been pasted.
There was one also on a vase. There was another
on the glass door of a bookcase.</p>
<p>“The Black Star!” Verbeck exclaimed.</p>
<p>He turned swiftly to scrutinize his prisoner, but
there was no expression on the man’s face to denote
that he showed interest, and he was looking at the
floor. Muggs was watching the bound thief closely,
but his dancing eyes and parted lips showed that Verbeck’s
words had interested him deeply.</p>
<p>“So! We are honored by a visit from the Black
Star, Muggs!” Verbeck said. “Think of that! The
cleverest crook the town ever had to worry over—the
man who got the famous Smith diamonds and cracked
a safe across the street from police headquarters, who
has lifted half the silver in town and stripped society
women of their jewels—and he has paid us a visit.
We must be getting important, Muggs—eh?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” said Muggs.</p>
<p>“Well, well! The man every one is looking for
and cannot find, who has been sending naughty notes
to the police, telling them how dull they are. I understand
he even tips off what he intends doing, and
then does it under their very noses. Very clever chap—for
a crook! Declares all the detectives in the
world can’t catch him! Um! Suppose we see what
is in this letter.”</p>
<p>He grinned at the prisoner and ripped the envelope
open. In it was a single sheet of paper. The letter,
too, was printed, and its uneven lines showed that it
had been stamped one letter at a time. It was similar
in appearance to the letters the newspapers declared
the police had received. Verbeck read it swiftly:</p>
<blockquote>
<p><span class="small-caps">Mr. Roger Verbeck</span>: Last night at a certain
reception people were talking of the Black Star.
You made the remark that the Black Star was not
a crook, but a gang—that the police didn’t catch
him because they had so many cases on which to
work that they couldn’t give their undivided attention
to any particular one. You declared that
any clever man who applied himself to the task
could capture the Black Star and break up his
gang. You boasted that you could do it yourself,
and easily.</p>
<p>To show you how useless it would be for you
to pit your brains and skill against mine, I am
putting this letter on your desk while you sleep
in an adjoining room, and am leaving my sign
on some of your belongings. I am even putting a
black star in your bed within a foot of the spot
where you rest your head while you are sleeping.
After this exhibition, either admit that the Black
Star is clever, or do as you boasted you could do—catch
me.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>“Read it, Muggs,” said Verbeck, guarding the prisoner
himself as Muggs obeyed. “What do you think
of that, eh? Intended us to wake up and find these
things stuck all over the place! Trying to show us
how very clever he is, this naughty Black Star, and
we catch him at it. There’ll be joy at police headquarters
over this. Now you just keep your eyes
on this gentleman, Muggs, while I get into my clothes,
and then we’ll continue the entertainment.”</p>
<p>Verbeck hurried to the dressing room, leaving
Muggs on guard, and dressed as swiftly as possible.
He carried a topcoat and cap to a chair near the door
of the bedroom, and then he hurried over to the bed.</p>
<p>The Black Star had done as he had said. On the
head of the bed was one of the little signs, and whoever
had placed it there had put his hand within six
inches of Verbeck’s head. The man in the other room,
Verbeck decided, had done that first, then gone into
the library to finish his work.</p>
<p>Verbeck hurried back and relieved Muggs.</p>
<p>“Go and get into your clothes,” he ordered, “and
then hurry back here. I’ll try to entertain our guest
while you are gone.”</p>
<p>He drew up a chair and sat down, facing the prisoner,
and less than six feet away. He was humming
a tune, and there was a smile playing about his lips.
Had the prisoner been well acquainted with Roger
Verbeck that smile would have put him on guard.</p>
<p>Verbeck already had formed a plan. He and Muggs
understood each other well, thanks to sundry adventures
in which they had participated in the four corners
of the earth, and he knew that Muggs even now
was reading the note he had scrawled hurriedly and
left on the dressing table, and would act accordingly.</p>
<p>“The Black Star—well, well!” he exclaimed, grinning
at his prisoner again. “And so you are the clever
crook?”</p>
<p>“I’m not saying anything!”</p>
<p>“You decorated the head of my bed with that thing,
I suppose?”</p>
<p>“You can suppose all you like.”</p>
<p>“Thanks! Rather surly, aren’t you?”</p>
<p>“You hand me over to the police, and you’ll get
yours!” said the prisoner.</p>
<p>“Are you, by any chance, trying to frighten me?”</p>
<p>“I’m giving you fair warning. You hand me over
and you won’t live long to gloat about it!”</p>
<p>Roger Verbeck grinned again and resumed his humming.
His eyes never left the prisoner, but he was
thinking deeply. In the first place, the letter from the
Black Star bothered him. The remarks that the Black
Star accused him of making he had made. But the
puzzling part of it was that he had made them to
half a dozen friends when there was no stranger near.
He had spoken them in a drawing-room in the presence
of Faustina Wendell, his fiancée; Howard Wendell,
her brother, and some others concerning whose
integrity there was no question. How, then, had the
Black Star heard of them?</p>
<p>The Black Star had terrorized the city for the past
four months. Whenever a master crime was committed
a tiny black star had been found pasted on
something at the scene of operations. The police had
been unable to get a clew. Each crime seemed bolder
and more daring than the one before, and more highly
successful. The Black Star sent taunting letters to
the newspapers and police, and the public demanded
his arrest and imprisonment with loud voice.</p>
<p>His crimes, too, showed a deep knowledge of private
matters. It appeared that the Black Star knew
the interior arrangements of residences he robbed.
Sometimes he even knew the combinations of safes—for
in two instances a safe had been opened and
looted, and then properly closed again, but with a
tiny black star inside it. He was aware when valuable
jewels were taken from safe-deposit boxes to be
worn at some affair; he knew when members of families
were out of the city, or servants absent. He
had shown in a thousand ways that he possessed
knowledge of great value to a criminal.</p>
<p>Roger Verbeck’s boast had not been an idle one.
He believed sincerely that no crook could be so clever
but what some honest man could match wits with
him and win. He believed, too, that the Black Star
did not work alone, but was the leader of a band.
Not for an instant did Verbeck think the man he had
taken prisoner was the notorious Black Star, but it
pleased him to let the prisoner believe he did.</p>
<p>His first impulse had been to call the police and
hand the man over. But he guessed that such a course
would not insure the capture of the master crook,
and that the prisoner would refuse to talk, take a
sentence for burglary, and thus allow the Black Star
and the others to go free.</p>
<p>It would be clever, Verbeck decided, to allow this
man to escape, to shadow him, and to learn more.
Roger Verbeck had adventured with Muggs scores of
times, and he yearned for an adventure now. Here
was his chance. Besides, the Black Star had issued
the challenge.</p>
<p>Muggs returned fully dressed. For an instant the
eyes of master and man met, and there flashed between
them an understanding.</p>
<p>“Better look at this chap’s bonds, Muggs,” Verbeck
said. “We don’t want him escaping before the police
come.”</p>
<p>Muggs bent behind the prisoner’s chair and fumbled
with the cord, and when he arose his eyes met
those of Verbeck again, and Verbeck knew that
Muggs had obeyed orders.</p>
<p>“Now go down and call the house manager,” he
directed, “and I’ll telephone the police.”</p>
<p>Muggs hurried out into the hall. Verbeck left his
chair and stepped back to the door of the bedroom.</p>
<p>“I fancy you’ll be secure for a moment or so,” he
told the prisoner. “You’ll scarcely get away unless
you carry that chair with you.”</p>
<p>He backed through the curtains, grasped his topcoat
and cap, and crossed the room on his toes and
unlocked the hall door. To cover the sound of the
key turning in the lock, he spoke as if calling a number
on the telephone.</p>
<p>“Hello! Police headquarters?” he asked. “This is
Roger Verbeck speaking. Hurry up here! I’ve just
caught the Black Star trying to loot my rooms. My
old address—yes!”</p>
<p>And while he spoke he opened the door, so that
his voice would drown any squeak the hinges might
give; and then he slipped into the hall and hurried
to the front stairs. He dashed down the three flights
four steps at a time.</p>
<p>The prisoner had tugged desperately at his bonds
and had felt them give. With sudden hope, he had
worked furiously to get free. He was through the
window and descending the fire escape as Verbeck
finished the imaginary telephone message to the police,
exulting at what he fondly thought had been his
close escape.</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-iithe-black-star">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id2">CHAPTER II—THE BLACK STAR</SPAN></h1>
<p>Verbeck found Muggs at the corner of the apartment
house, standing in the shadows and trying
to shield himself from the stinging sleet and biting
cold wind.</p>
<p>“He’s just reaching the ground, boss,” Muggs said.
“See him?”</p>
<p>“I see him. Be careful now, Muggs; we don’t want
to lose him. Thanks for understanding and loosening
his bonds. There he goes!”</p>
<p>The erstwhile prisoner had reached the ground and
was darting through the shadows toward the alley.
Down this he ran for half a block, then crept between
two buildings, and so reached the boulevard near a
corner, with Verbeck and Muggs a hundred feet behind
him. It was difficult trailing the man through
a storm of sleet and fine snow, but Verbeck and
Muggs had trailed men before, sometimes for amusement,
and at other times through necessity.</p>
<p>The man hesitated at the curb a moment, then
struck across the driveway. Verbeck and Muggs followed.
They took opposite sides of the walk and
slipped along over the frozen ground, darting from
shadow to shadow, always watching the elusive
shadow ahead. At the street crossings their quarry
walked across boldly, and they could not follow instantly
for fear of being detected, but they always
picked up their man again, once they were across.</p>
<p>Thus they covered a dozen blocks, and it appeared
that the midnight prowler considered himself safe
now. He hurried down a cross street, his head bent
forward against the cold wind that swept up the
hill. Block after block Muggs trailed him, while
Verbeck shadowed from the other side of the street,
dodging into dark doorways now and then when he
expected his man to look behind.</p>
<p>The quarry stopped at a corner, lighted a cigar,
and stood waiting. Muggs was concealed in a doorway
fifty feet behind him; Verbeck was in another
doorway across the street.</p>
<p>An owl car came along, and their quarry boarded
it. But Verbeck had been expecting that, and for
some time had been watching a taxicab standing before
a drug store on the corner. As the owl car
started up again, Verbeck dashed across the street,
and he had the chauffeur out of the drug store and
into the seat before Muggs reached the spot.</p>
<p>“Follow that owl car,” Verbeck directed. “There’s
a man on it that we’d like to see when he gets off.”</p>
<p>“I’m wise,” the chauffeur cried. “Fly cops, eh?
Get in!”</p>
<p>The cab lurched along the slippery street, keeping
half a block behind the owl car. Whenever the car
stopped, the cab drew up at the curb, and Verbeck put
out his head to watch. But their quarry remained
aboard.</p>
<p>“If this keeps up we’ll clear out of town,” said
Muggs.</p>
<p>“Anxious for action?” Verbeck asked, laughing.
“You may get plenty of it before we are done. Have
a bit of patience, Muggs.”</p>
<p>“I’ve got patience, all right, boss—and I’ve got a
hunch, too.”</p>
<p>“Let’s have it!” At times Verbeck had a great
deal of respect for Muggs’ hunches.</p>
<p>“I’ve got a hunch we’d have done better if we’d
handed that gent over to the police.”</p>
<p>“I gave you credit for understanding the situation,
Muggs.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I understand what you want to do, all right.
It’d be great to clean up this Black Star and his
gang single-handed, hog tie ’em all, then call in the
cops and hand ’em over—especially since he sent you
that sassy note—but I’ve got a hunch we’re going up
against a stiff game. This Black Star ain’t no slouch!”</p>
<p>“Afraid?” snarled Verbeck.</p>
<p>That touched Muggs on a tender spot, and Verbeck
knew it. Muggs turned deliberately and faced his
employer.</p>
<p>“If that’s the way you’re looking at it, boss,” he
said, “trot right along and I’ll be behind you. Go the
limit, and I’m in the first seat on the right-hand side.
But, all the same, I’ve got a hunch.”</p>
<p>The taxicab stopped again. Verbeck put his head
from the window and immediately opened the door.
Their quarry had left the owl car and was starting
down the dark cross street.</p>
<p>Giving a bill to the chauffeur and telling him he
need not wait, Verbeck hurried to the corner, with
Muggs at his heels. Shadowing here was difficult
work, for there was unimproved property, and some
old estates not well kept up, where sidewalks were
bad and the footing uncertain, and where untrimmed
trees and thick underbrush furnished multitudes of
dark spots.</p>
<p>Uphill and downhill, always against the biting cold
wind and sleet, their man led them. Finally he crossed
a vacant lot and made directly for an old house far
back from the street in the midst of a grove of trees
that now were swaying and snapping in the storm.</p>
<p>“So that’s where the Black Star lives!” Verbeck
said.</p>
<p>He and Muggs had small difficulty following their
man now, for there was a low hedge behind which,
by stooping, they could make their way unseen. Their
man reached the side of the house and went along
it until he came to a door. Beside the door there was
a box on the ground. As Verbeck and Muggs watched,
the man they had been following raised the lid of the
box and took something out.</p>
<p>“He’s putting on clothes,” Muggs whispered.</p>
<p>His actions could not be observed well, but it did
appear that he was donning an overcoat or a robe of
some sort.</p>
<p>“And he’s putting on a mask,” said Muggs.
“What’s coming off here?”</p>
<p>“I imagine we are in for an interesting time,” answered
Verbeck. “Watch him now!”</p>
<p>He had stepped up to the door, and they could see
him put out his hand. Through a lull in the storm
there came to Verbeck and Muggs the tinkling of a
bell, then a sharp click, and the door flew open and
their quarry disappeared inside, closing the door after
him.</p>
<p>Verbeck and Muggs hurried around the end of the
hedge and to the house. A few feet from the door
was a window. Verbeck had no more than glanced
at it before Muggs was at work. Verbeck never had
inquired too closely into Muggs’ past, but from what
he had seen from time to time, he had reason to
believe that Muggs knew a thing or two about crooks’
methods, and now he had more evidence of it. In
an instant almost Muggs was sliding that window up
slowly, inch by inch, making no noise, and carefully
pulling aside the curtains behind it.</p>
<p>Another moment, and Verbeck was standing inside
the house, with Muggs beside him. They heard no
voices. Step by step they made their way across
the room to the opposite wall, searching for a door.</p>
<p>Then they saw a streak of light that penetrated
from an adjoining room, where a door sagged in its
casement, leaving a crack through which a man could
see. Verbeck knew this house. For several years
it had been deserted, not kept in repair, the grounds
not kept up. It belonged to an estate in litigation,
and could not be sold, and the heirs had refused to
build a more substantial residence for the rental it
might bring in. He was surprised to find it inhabited,
and he imagined that the Black Star and his band were
making use of it surreptitiously.</p>
<p>But when he applied his eye to the crack in the
door, expecting to see a room almost barren, filled
with dust and cobwebs, two or three boxes, some
burning candles—a typical resort of thugs—he faced
a surprise. He was looking into a room that had
been newly decorated and was furnished lavishly.
Expensive rugs were on the floor; pictures adorned
the walls. There was a massive library table in the
center of the room, an armchair beside it, books and
papers and magazines on it.</p>
<p>On one wall of the room was a small blackboard,
with chalk and an eraser in a box beneath it. Before
this blackboard, standing erect, was their quarry—dressed
in a long black robe that covered every portion
of his body, even his head being enveloped in a
hood, and over his face a black mask.</p>
<p>There was no one else in the room. The man before
the blackboard stood stiffly and silently, like a
soldier at attention. Behind the door, Verbeck and
Muggs waited, scarcely daring to breathe.</p>
<p>Then a door on the other side of the lavishly furnished
room was thrown open, and another man came
into view. He, too, was dressed in a long black robe,
and had a black mask over his face. But he had a
mark that distinguished him from the other, for on
the front of his hood was a black star, formed of jet,
that flashed in the light.</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-iiiinto-the-pit">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id3">CHAPTER III—INTO THE PIT</SPAN></h1>
<p>Instinct and experience told Verbeck that this
sight might prove too much for Muggs and he
gripped the smaller man by the arm to indicate that he
was to maintain quiet. It was well he did so, for subsequent
proceedings were highly unusual and mysterious.</p>
<p>The Black Star nodded to the other man and
stepped across the room, where there was another
small blackboard attached to the wall. When he stood
before it he nodded again, and the other picked up
the chalk and started to write, and thus they conversed,
each writing on his blackboard and erasing
after the other had read.</p>
<p>“Number Six,” the man wrote.</p>
<p>“Countersign?”</p>
<p>“Florida.”</p>
<p>“Report,” wrote the Black Star.</p>
<p>“Carried out your instructions, but was caught by
Verbeck and his valet. Escaped when they went to
call police.”</p>
<p>It seemed that the Black Star grew taller and
straighter as he looked at the other man, and Verbeck
and Muggs could see his eyes glittering through the
black mask. They expected him to roar a rebuke,
a denunciation, but he did not. He faced the blackboard
again and wrote rapidly:</p>
<p>“You are a blunderer. We have no use for the
man who fails.”</p>
<p>“I did not fail,” the other wrote on the board
quickly. “I put a black star on his bed and scattered
others in library. I was putting letter on desk when
they caught me.”</p>
<p>“Did you come straight here?”</p>
<p>“No. I shook them off first. I got away before
they raised an uproar. Came on owl car, got off
several blocks back, and cut down the hill.”</p>
<p>The Black Star motioned for him to erase this last,
and then walked slowly to the table. There was a
pile of letters on one end of it, and the Black Star
picked up one and read it, shook his head, and put
the letter in the pocket of his robe. He pressed
against the end of the table, and a drawer shot open.
Verbeck and Muggs could see that the drawer was
half filled with money and jewels.</p>
<p>The Black Star took out some money and threw
it on the table. He closed the drawer and walked
back to his blackboard, and picked up the chalk to
write again:</p>
<p>“You will not be safe here for some time. Verbeck
or his man might recognize you. Take that
money and catch the first train for Chicago. Return
and report one month from to-night at midnight.”</p>
<p>The other man read and bowed his head. There
was no hesitancy in his manner; he acted like a man
who had received orders that he knew he had to carry
out. He went forward and picked up the money,
and, with it clutched in one hand, he backed to the
door and lifted the other hand in salute to the Black
Star. The Black Star nodded, and the other backed
through the door and closed it.</p>
<p>Muggs hurried across the room to the window
to watch, while Verbeck remained gazing through
the crack in the door at the Black Star, who sat down
in the armchair and began inspecting the letters on
the table. The minutes passed. Muggs returned and
reported that the other man had put the robe and
mask in the box, and had slipped away through the
trees. Still the Black Star sat at the table, and that
for which Verbeck had been waiting did not come
to pass—the master criminal did not remove the mask
from his face.</p>
<p>Another adventure appealed to Verbeck now. He
decided to face the Black Star in his den. He confided
his intention to Muggs in whispers and gave his
orders, and, disregarding Muggs’ mouthings concerning
his “hunch,” slipped across the room to the window
and let himself out.</p>
<p>He found the robe in the box and quickly put it
on, then adjusted the black mask. Beneath the robe,
his hand clutched the butt of his automatic. Searching
the edge of the casement, he found a push button
and touched it with his finger. Inside, a bell tinkled.</p>
<p>A few seconds passed, and then there was a sharp
click and the door flew open. Verbeck entered and
closed the door after him. Before him was a long
corridor, musty, the air in it rank, dust on walls and
ceiling. It appeared that the entire house had not
been renovated, only the one room.</p>
<p>Verbeck slipped along the corridor to where a
streak of light entered it, indicating a door. Holding
the pistol ready beneath his robe, he opened the door
and stepped into the room, and stood beside the blackboard
as the other man had done. The Black Star
was not there.</p>
<p>The seconds seemed hours as he waited, trying to
keep his eyes away from the door behind which he
knew Muggs was watching him, his ears strained to
catch the first sound of the master criminal’s approach.
Then the other door opened, and the Black
Star appeared and walked to his station on the other
side of the room. He nodded his head, and Verbeck
picked up chalk and eraser and turned to the blackboard.</p>
<p>He was playing a dangerous game, and did not
know how soon he would be detected. He felt small
fear, for Muggs was waiting to help him, and he
had heard nothing, seen nothing to indicate that the
Black Star had allies in the house.</p>
<p>“Number Four,” Verbeck wrote on the board.</p>
<p>“Countersign?”</p>
<p>“Florida,” wrote Verbeck.</p>
<p>He turned to find the Black Star’s eyes glittering
straight into his. The flaming jet on the hood seemed
to be dancing in derision. Verbeck wondered whether
he had made a mistake, and he soon found out, for
the Black Star turned to the blackboard and wrote
rapidly:</p>
<p>“Number Four is a woman, and Florida is not
her countersign.”</p>
<p>And then he faced Verbeck again.</p>
<p>The crisis had arrived sooner than Verbeck had
expected. The Black Star knew him for an intruder,
and knew also that he must have observed a great
deal to be able to don robe and mask and start the
blackboard conversation. The master criminal could
be expected to act with dispatch.</p>
<p>Before the Black Star could make a move Verbeck’s
robe parted and his left hand emerged, holding the
pistol ready for instant action. With his other hand
he waved toward the armchair, and then he spoke:</p>
<p>“Sit down! And put your hands flat on the table!”</p>
<p>His eyes still glittering into Verbeck’s, the criminal
obeyed. Standing at the end of the table, Verbeck
confronted him, scarcely knowing what step to take
next. The man before him did not speak, but
those glittering eyes—burning, malevolent, ominous—seemed
to cry out with surprise, hatred, and threats.</p>
<p>“So you are the Black Star?” Verbeck said. “Quite
a comedy you play here, eh? Masks hide faces and
blackboards take the place of spoken words. A very
clever crook—you. But I said a clever man could
find you, and I say it again. This is the best proof
of it, isn’t it? You challenged me—and I have come.
So your man thought he had escaped, did he? If
ever you see him again, tell him that his bonds were
left loose purposely, so that he’d escape and could
be shadowed here. Allow me, sir—Mr. Roger Verbeck,
at your service!”</p>
<p>Verbeck raised a hand and tore off his mask, and
bowed low in irony, meanwhile watching his victim,
for he did not make the mistake of underestimating the
cleverness of the man before him, and he was alert
for tricks. He saw the Black Star’s hands contract
and his arms stiffen, and imagined the master crook
calling down curses on the head of the man who had
led enemies to his stronghold.</p>
<p>Then the Black Star spoke—in a low, penetrating
voice, almost a monotone, obviously disguising his real
tones.</p>
<p>“I suppose you think you are very clever?” he said.</p>
<p>“I don’t advertise my cleverness like some persons,
and then fail to live up to my estimation of myself,”
Verbeck replied.</p>
<p>“You have done something no outsider has done
before—you have seen the Black Star in his workshop.
That is, indeed, a rare privilege. And, of
course, you’ll pay for it in the end.”</p>
<p>“You think so?” Verbeck asked.</p>
<p>“I presume you started out with the intention of
handing me over to your stupid police. The greatest
and most difficult thing, you perhaps thought, would
be to locate me. Well, you have located me—and
your task is but begun.”</p>
<p>“Indeed?”</p>
<p>“It takes evidence to convict.”</p>
<p>“Naturally,” said Verbeck. “Suppose I call the
police now. How about the robe and mask you
wear, that star, these blackboards, those printed letters
identical with ones that have been received by the
police and the newspapers? Evidence? This room
is full of it!”</p>
<p>“But, when you get right down to the point,” said
the Black Star, “you’ll want evidence of theft and
burglary, you know.”</p>
<p>“I never heard of a gang yet where some one
wouldn’t turn state’s evidence.”</p>
<p>The Black Star chuckled, and through the slits in
his mask his eyes seemed to be dancing with delight.</p>
<p>“That is just where my cleverness comes in,” he
said. “To show you how little I fear you, Roger
Verbeck, I’ll tell you things no man knows except
myself. I can tell you, for instance—and it is the
truth—that the Black Star does have a band working
for him, but that not one of them ever saw his face
or heard his voice.”</p>
<p>“Nonsense.”</p>
<p>“Not nonsense, but the truth. So certain am I as to
what is going to happen to you, Roger Verbeck, that
I’ll reveal secrets and show you how useless it would
be to fight me, before you—er—cease to trouble me
further. I say no member of my band ever saw my
face or heard my voice, and it is the truth. I say,
moreover, that I never saw the face of one of my
band or heard his voice, that I know nothing of their
names or identities, and, whenever a crime is committed,
I do not know which person or group does
the work. Can you understand that? Turn state’s
evidence, Mr. Verbeck? Not a man of them knows a
thing to tell, except against himself.”</p>
<p>“Rot!”</p>
<p>“The truth,” said the Black Star. “Attend me
closely. I reveal my methods to you, because you’ll
never pass them on. I began my work years ago. I
have a genuine partner, who is not in this city at
the present time. When I decided to invade this town
he came here. He rented this old house and fixed
up this one room in it. The furnishings were carted
one at a time, and they were unloaded several blocks
away and fetched here at night. When everything
was ready, I came.</p>
<p>“My gang? This one man who knows me got the
gang together. Every one of them is an expert in
his particular time. Each was eager to work under
me, for I am in a position to insure success and big
profits. My organization extends farther than you
dream. Each man was fetched here and taught what
to do. Here he comes to get orders and to report.
There is no conversation except on the blackboard;
and masks are always worn.</p>
<p>“At the first, these men drew numbers out of a
box, and in addition I gave each a countersign. I
issue orders by number, and they report by number.
If I was on the witness stand at this moment and
wanted to betray my men I couldn’t do it. I could
only say that a certain crime was committed by Number
One, for instance—but if all were lined up before
me I couldn’t swear they were members of my band,
because I’d not know. Do you understand that, Mr.
Roger Verbeck? Very clever, eh? We work together,
yet were we to pass on the street we’d not
dream we knew one another. Absolute protection—you
see? Hand me over to the police this minute—if
you can—and it will avail you nothing. No jury
would convict on the evidence that could be presented.
And my organization, in a hundred different ways,
would come to my rescue.”</p>
<p>“I thought none of them knew you,” said Verbeck.</p>
<p>“That is the truth. You do not understand everything
yet. I have a band of men who do the real
work. And I have an organization that collects knowledge
I must have. Every man and woman in that
organization has a very good reason for being loyal
to me——”</p>
<p>“Women?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said the Black Star. “Many women! People
in every walk of life. And, naturally, I have
arranged it so that I could harm them, but they never
could harm me. I heard of your foolish boast of
last night, didn’t I? How do you suppose I knew
that? And I can tell you the combination of the
safe in your dressing room, Mr. Verbeck, if you are
skeptical, and tell you also that there is nothing in
it at the present time that we desire. There is a
bundle of stock certificates and deeds in the upper
right-hand pigeonhole, and a score or more old coins
in a drawer at the bottom.”</p>
<p>“How do you know that?” Verbeck demanded.</p>
<p>“I know a multitude of things, Mr. Verbeck. Get
this idea in your head—I do not know the names or
faces of my real workers, but I do know the identities
of those who gather my information. I know them,
and could punish them—but they do not know me.
Tidy little arrangement? I fancy you’ll not find a
flaw in it.”</p>
<p>“You have deluded yourself into thinking it is perfect,”
replied Verbeck. “Suppose one of your crooks
is captured while committing a crime, and brings the
police down on you to save himself?”</p>
<p>“He would not. If he kept his mouth closed, the
organization would save him. If he played traitor,
the organization would save me and see that he got the
limit. I could convince you if I wished to talk more,
but I do not; I must protect the organization as it
protects me. You have pitted your cleverness against
mine, Mr. Verbeck, and you have been successful in
your first attempt—you have located me. And now
what are you going to do about it?”</p>
<p>“Suppose I hand you over to the police?”</p>
<p>“Even if you could do that—and I am not admitting
it—you’d be laughed at in the end, and I’d probably
conclude by suing you for heavy damages. Believe
me when I say everything has been thought of, and
for every attack there is a defense arranged. Also,
to hand me over to the police would be to warn all
the others, and you’d have a difficult time convicting
me without their testimony. And there is another
thing——”</p>
<p>The Black Star hesitated.</p>
<p>“Say it!” said Verbeck.</p>
<p>“I have said that my organization is far-reaching.
If you meddled in my affairs, the chickens might come
home to roost. You are up against something regarding
the magnitude of which you know very little,
Mr. Verbeck. I have only just begun my organization
in this city, but already it is broad enough to
cause you pain and chagrin, did I put it to work.”</p>
<p>“I suppose,” said Verbeck, “that you imagine you
are going to frighten me by this lot of pointless talk.”</p>
<p>“You may be a very clever man in some things,
Mr. Verbeck, but in this you are no better than a
babe. Did I take the fancy to do so, I could make
you one of my organization, too. But you have gone
too far for that—you have discovered too much.”</p>
<p>“You’d make me join your band of crooks!” exclaimed
Verbeck, laughing.</p>
<p>“I could force you to be a loyal and obedient member,
believe me, if such was my desire. You do not
realize, sir, the strength of the Black Star and his
band. You do not realize how very little you know.
You have heard my voice, that is true, and you have
seen my workshop—but even you, Roger Verbeck,
have not seen my face.”</p>
<p>“And what is to prevent me taking a look at it
now?”</p>
<p>“This,” said the Black Star. “You are standing at
the end of the table with a pistol in your hand. I am
seated, and my hands are on the table before me, so
that you could fill me full of lead before I could get
a weapon from beneath my robe. But the toe of my
left shoe, Mr. Verbeck, is resting on a button in the
floor—a button that works a trigger—and you are
standing over a cement-lined pit twelve feet deep.
Before you could shoot, my toe would press the button—so!
And down you go, Mr. Verbeck, through
the floor and into the pit, and the trapdoor comes up
again—so!—and you are a prisoner in the darkness—you
who tried to match wits with the Black Star!”</p>
<p>It all had happened in a second of time. A section
of the floor had swung downward with a crash, and
Roger Verbeck had been dashed to the bottom of the
pit. The one shot he fired went wild, the bullet burying
itself in the ceiling. The trapdoor closed again—and
the Black Star, standing at the end of the table
now, threw back his head and laughed uproariously.</p>
<p>And the laughter died in his throat as he sank suddenly
to the floor! For Muggs was through the door
as Verbeck shot downward, and the butt of his automatic
had crashed against the Black Star’s head just
behind the left ear.</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-ivrogue-for-a-day">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id4">CHAPTER IV—ROGUE FOR A DAY</SPAN></h1>
<p>Muggs was a product of the slums, and had known
the inside of a prison. Five years before,
Roger Verbeck had picked him up in Paris, at a time
when Muggs was contemplating throwing himself into
the Seine, for misery and crime and poor living had
broken his spirit and made existence a nightmare.
Verbeck had taught him that wits can be used for
honest purposes, had given him a home, and in return
Muggs, in his gratitude, gave Verbeck what services
he could. He was of the type willing to die to
save a benefactor pain.</p>
<p>Muggs had not struck the Black Star a light blow,
and when the master crook fell, Muggs knew he would
remain unconscious for some time to come. He was
sobbing and calling to Verbeck in a low voice as he
put his foot beneath the table and felt for the button.
He could not find it at first, for in his eagerness he
was not methodical. Then he quieted down, and, getting
down on hands and knees, went over the floor,
inch by inch, until he felt a little knob through the
rug.</p>
<p>His hand went out; he pressed the knob. At the
end of the table appeared a yawning chasm, as a section
of the flooring fell back. Muggs was at its side
in an instant.</p>
<p>“Boss! Boss!” he called.</p>
<p>“I’m all right, Muggs! Not even scratched, and not
stunned. Hurry up and get me out of here. And
watch that chap——”</p>
<p>Muggs was on his feet, looking wildly about the
room. There was no ladder, no rope, nothing that
could reach to the bottom of that twelve-foot pit.
But there was a couch in the corner, and Muggs tore
off the cover and carried it to the pit’s edge.</p>
<p>“Grab it, while I brace myself, boss,” he directed.
“Then climb—I can hold you.”</p>
<p>And so Verbeck emerged from the pit, bracing his
feet against the wall of it and climbing hand over
hand up the couch cover, while Muggs, above, braced
his feet and bent back, gripping the other end of the
cloth. Then the trapdoor was closed again.</p>
<p>“Have you killed him?” Verbeck cried when he saw
the form of the Black Star on the floor.</p>
<p>“I felt like it, but I thought you’d want him again,
boss. I just gave him a smash behind the ear.”</p>
<p>“Um!”</p>
<p>“Don’t you think we’d better call the police now,
boss? I got a hunch——”</p>
<p>“You heard what he said, didn’t you, Muggs? If
the police take him in, the others will discover it, and
escape. And he said some other things that have me
guessing. How did he know what I said last night
at a private reception in a private residence, eh? I
know none of his crooks was close enough to overhear me.
And how does he know what’s in my safe?
He says he even knows the combination of it, and I
don’t doubt him.”</p>
<p>“Then what are we going to do, boss?”</p>
<p>Verbeck had slipped off his robe, and now handed
it, together with the mask, to Muggs.</p>
<p>“Put these outside in the box, then hurry back,”
he directed.</p>
<p>As Muggs rushed away, Verbeck bent forward
and took off the Black Star’s mask. There was revealed
the not unhandsome face of a man about forty-five.
Verbeck contemplated this countenance as he
started to remove the Black Star’s robe. It was one
he never had seen before. Despite the Black Star’s
words, Verbeck had been half of a mind that the
master crook was some one known to the city in
general as a respectable man, a sort of Jekyll and
Hyde.</p>
<p>Muggs returned, and the Black Star was gagged
and bound with a curtain that Muggs tore from one
of the doorways and ripped into strips.</p>
<p>“And now——” Verbeck began.</p>
<p>He did not complete the sentence. On the wall
above his head a bell tinkled. Verbeck and Muggs
looked at each other, the same idea in the mind of
each.</p>
<p>“Another crook,” Muggs whispered.</p>
<p>“No doubt.”</p>
<p>“What’ll we do?”</p>
<p>Verbeck hesitated a moment. “This is a great
chance, Muggs,” he said finally. “I’ll play the Black
Star’s part. I’ll be a crook pro tempore.”</p>
<p>“What kind of a crook is that?”</p>
<p>“The kind I’m going to be, Muggs. Hurry! Get
this chap in the other room and shut the door—and
watch.”</p>
<p>As Muggs obeyed, Verbeck put on the Black Star’s
robe and mask. The little bell jangled again. On
the wall below it was a button, and this button Verbeck
pushed. He could hear the click as the door
was unlocked, and he slipped through the door by
which the Black Star had made his entrance, and
found himself in another dusty, unfurnished room.</p>
<p>In a moment he heard some one enter the other
door. He waited for a time, as the Black Star had
done, then opened the door and walked boldly into
the room, nodding his head to the other man in robe
and mask and taking his position at the Black Star’s
blackboard.</p>
<p>“Number Eight,” the other wrote.</p>
<p>“Countersign?”</p>
<p>“Harvard.”</p>
<p>Verbeck did not know, of course, whether it was
the proper countersign, but he had to take the chance.</p>
<p>“Report,” he wrote.</p>
<p>“Have information you desire.”</p>
<p>The man stepped away from the blackboard, put
one hand beneath his robe, and took out a letter, which
he threw on the table. Then he went back to the
blackboard and stood at attention.</p>
<p>Verbeck went to the table and picked up the letter.
He ripped it open, watching the other meanwhile, then
lowered his eyes to read. What was written there
was startling and very much to the point:</p>
<blockquote>
Mrs. Greistman will wear diamonds and rope
of pearls at Charity Ball. They will be taken
from safe-deposit box during the afternoon.
After the ball they will be kept in safe in Greistman
library. Safe is old one. Library is on first
floor; one door opens into hall; three windows,
one opening on veranda and others on side of
house and shaded from street lights by vines and
trees. All servants sleep on second floor, in the
rear. Mr. and Mrs. Greistman and daughter
sleep on same floor, in front, latter on left side
of hall, parents on right side as you face rear of
house. Daughter subject to insomnia, especially
after brilliant society events, and often takes
sleeping draft.</blockquote>
<p>There it was, full information that indicated the
Black Star contemplated getting the Greistman jewels,
reported by means of the organization, no doubt.
The note had been written on a typewriter, and there
were no marks on the envelope. Any active crook
might have been able to discover where the members
of the Greistman family slept, and learn where the
safe was kept, and how the doors and windows of
the library were located, but only some one in close
touch with the family could know when they anticipated
taking the jewels from the safe-deposit box
and where they would be kept the night after the ball.</p>
<p>Verbeck found himself wondering how this information
had been obtained and whether the man who
now stood before him in robe and mask had obtained
it or was merely a messenger to carry it to the Black
Star. He stepped back to the blackboard and picked
up the chalk again.</p>
<p>“Where did you get information?” he wrote.</p>
<p>“As you instructed,” came the written answer.</p>
<p>Verbeck could ask no more without betraying himself.
He had no idea regarding the identity of the
man before him. It was possible, of course, for him
to call Muggs from the other room and overpower
the crook, but it was doubtful if the man would talk
and reveal anything after he discovered he was not
dealing with the Black Star, but with an outsider.
And what Verbeck wanted was accurate knowledge;
he would have to be careful not to arouse the man’s
suspicion.</p>
<p>“Good!” he wrote on the blackboard. Then he
nodded to the man, as if in dismissal. But the other
did not seem ready to go, and acted as if there was
something wanting.</p>
<p>“Any orders?” he wrote finally.</p>
<p>Verbeck remembered the pile of letters on the end
of the table, and now he went over and inspected
them. They were orders for members of the band,
evidently, for on each envelope a number was stamped.
He found the one marked “Eight,” and took out the
sheet of paper it contained. There were the orders the
Black Star had prepared for this man:</p>
<blockquote>
At three o’clock in the afternoon there is a
committee meeting of the Browning Club in a
parlor of the second floor of the National Hotel,
at which Miss Freda Brakeland will be present.
Manage to be in the lobby of the hotel after the
meeting, and meet Miss Brakeland as if by accident.
Talk of the Charity Ball, and ascertain
whether she is to wear the famous Brakeland
jewels at that affair. Report in usual manner
here at ten o’clock at night; and remember that
no excuse can be accepted for failure.</blockquote>
<p>Here was another glimpse of the Black Star’s work.
Verbeck, after a moment’s thought, decided to give
the man his orders and let him go. He would continue
to play at being the Black Star and discover all
he could of the master crook’s plans. Perhaps he
would be able to prevent the wholesale theft of valuable
jewels; for it appeared that the Black Star intended
a series of crimes following the Charity Ball.
This man before him had orders to report the following
night, so there was no object in exciting his suspicions
now.</p>
<p>Verbeck would have given a great deal at that
moment to have been able to peer behind the other
man’s mask. Who was this man before him who
could be expected to engage Miss Freda Brakeland
in conversation without arousing suspicion? Somebody
who belonged in the city, surely, somebody well
known in society, for Freda Brakeland was one of
the most exclusive and unapproachable women of the
younger set.</p>
<p>Verbeck was annoyed by the Black Star’s threat
that the chickens might come home to roost. He was
astounded at the lines of information gathered for
the benefit of the master crook, and a multitude of
questions rushed to his mind, none of which he could
answer. He decided to refrain from calling in the
police at present, at least until he discovered more.</p>
<p>And now to Verbeck came another plan he decided
to use. He placed the orders on the end of the table
and motioned for the other man to pick them up;
then he hurried to his blackboard and wrote supplementary
orders there:</p>
<blockquote>
Pass the northwest corner of First Avenue and
American Boulevard at exactly two o’clock in
afternoon on your way to the hotel. Stop on
corner, remove hat, and pretend to brush dust
from it. If there is to be any change in your
orders, an envelope will be slipped to you at that
time; otherwise, go ahead as you have been
directed.</blockquote>
<p>It seemed to Verbeck that the other man expressed
surprise in the way his shoulders straightened and his
head lifted, and for an instant Verbeck feared he had
attempted too much. But the other only nodded that
he understood, then saluted and backed out of the
door. Two minutes later Muggs came in from the
other room and reported that the crook had put robe
and mask in the box outside, and had hurried away.</p>
<p>“I’ll get him!” Verbeck said. “He’ll stop on that
corner and give the sign, and then I’ll follow him.
I’ll learn who it is that’s helping the Black Star gather
valuable information. We’ve got to stick to the game
now, Muggs, old man!”</p>
<p>“I’d call the police——”</p>
<p>“Not yet! I’m going to play this game myself
until it gets too hot for me. The Black Star challenged
me, didn’t he? I’ll have plenty of evidence
before I call in the police.”</p>
<p>“What about the chief crook in the other room?
He’s conscious again.”</p>
<p>Verbeck paced the floor for a time, his head bowed,
thinking.</p>
<p>“I have it!” he exclaimed at last. “You get out of
here, Muggs, and hurry to the garage and get my car.
Stop at the rooms and get that bunch of keys in
the right-hand drawer of my desk——”</p>
<p>“The keys to the old place?”</p>
<p>“Yes. We’ll take the Black Star there, Muggs.
Bring the car to the corner nearest this house, then
hurry in and help with him. We’ve got to have it
done before dawn. Hurry! That’s what we’ll do,
Muggs! We’ll take the Black Star to the old house,
and there you’ll guard him, while I play master crook
in his mask and robe.”</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-vmuggs-on-guard">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id5">CHAPTER V—MUGGS ON GUARD</SPAN></h1>
<p>When Muggs had departed Verbeck got up and
walked into the other room, where the Black
Star was on the floor in an uncomfortable position.
Muggs had left the window open, and the cold air
swept in, bringing sleet and snow with it. It had been
all one with Muggs whether the Black Star froze to
death or not.</p>
<p>Verbeck closed the window. He didn’t want to
carry the man into the furnished room for fear some
other member of the gang might come to make a
report, although now it was almost three o’clock in
the morning. So he threw the door open wide and
rolled in the couch and lifted the Black Star upon
it, covering him with two heavy portières that hung
before one of the doors. However, there was no
expression of thanks in the Black Star’s countenance.</p>
<p>Verbeck went back into the other room and closed
the door behind him. He took a candle from a shelf
in the corner and lighted it, then made an inspection
of the house from bottom to top. No other room
was furnished; there were no arrangements for cooking,
no store of food. The Black Star, then, did not
live here, only came here to receive the members of
his gang. That would make it possible for Verbeck
to remain away from the house except at night.</p>
<p>He went back to the furnished room and conducted
an investigation there. First he looked at the orders
in the envelopes. Nine was the highest number there,
but Verbeck did not know how many envelopes had
been given out that night before his arrival. And
the orders were astounding.</p>
<p>Only one had to do with gathering information;
the others concerned projected crimes. Some of
them Verbeck could not understand, since they referred
to orders given previously. But others indicated
not only crimes, but the manner in which they
were to be committed. They told what to steal and
just where to steal it, where there was danger and
where there was none. Verbeck began considering
whether he should give these orders out if any more
men called. Taking the place of the Black Star did
not include aiding in crimes, he told himself. He
would issue orders of his own, orders that would
keep the members of the band from their nefarious
business, but at the same time would keep them in
touch until he could arrange a wholesale capture.</p>
<p>Verbeck fumbled around the end of the table for
several minutes before he found the spring which
released the drawer and caused it to open. As he
and Muggs had seen earlier in the night, there was
an abundance of money in the drawer. There were
half a score of diamond rings, too, a pearl necklace,
other gems. There was a box of little rubber type
and an ink pad and a small memoranda book.</p>
<p>Verbeck opened the book. On the last written
page of it he found something that interested him.
At the top was a date—that very day—and below was
a list of numbers, with hours set opposite. The book
told when members of the band were expected to report.
Verbeck found that the first was Number Three,
due at nine o’clock that night. And from then until
two o’clock the next morning others were due at stated
intervals. The entire band, it was evident, was to
appear for orders within a few hours and comparison
of the book with the printed orders gave Verbeck an
inkling of the scheme.</p>
<p>The Black Star had, indeed, planned a staggering
blow to the city’s pride; his band of crooks was to
make a specialty of stealing jewels taken from safe-deposit
boxes to be worn at the Charity Ball. For
a few hours these valuable jewels would be protected
only by ordinary safes in residences, and during those
few hours the members of the Black Star’s band
would strike.</p>
<p>Verbeck went in to see that the Black Star was
as comfortable as he could be while bound and gagged,
and then walked over to the window. The storm
was dying down; the snow and sleet had almost
ceased to fall, but the cold seemed to be increasing.</p>
<p>Returning to the furnished room, he sat down beside
the table to wait. An hour from the time Muggs
had departed the bell tinkled. Verbeck adjusted his
mask and touched the button that opened the door.
In a moment Muggs stood beside him.</p>
<p>“Here are the keys, boss,” he said. “I’ve got the
car near the mouth of the alley, and the lights are
out. We can take him along the hedge——”</p>
<p>“Good!” Verbeck interrupted.</p>
<p>They went inside and lifted the Black Star and
carried him out. Verbeck took off mask and robe
and put them on the table, and one by one blew out
the candles. Then he closed the door and helped
Muggs carry the Black Star through the musty hall.
Another moment, and they were outside.</p>
<p>It was not particularly a difficult task to carry their
man along the hedge and to the car, and there Verbeck
put him in the back and got in beside him, while
Muggs took the wheel. They made their way slowly
up the hill and to a well-paved street, and there Muggs
turned on the lights and the car rushed forward
through the night.</p>
<p>The old Verbeck place was one of the city’s landmarks.
It was closed now, and had been closed for
the greater part of the past five years. It had been
bequeathed Verbeck, the last of his family, by his
father, and the young man had had no desire to repair
it and live in it alone with a staff of servants. He
preferred his apartment, and to live in it with no
servant except Muggs.</p>
<p>But now, betrothed to wed Faustina Wendell, Verbeck
was contemplating tearing down the old house
and erecting a mansion in its place for his bride.
The present house occupied the center of the block.
It was surrounded by trees and tangled underbrush.
The walks about it were in poor condition, and nobody
ever approached it. It was to this place that
he was taking the Black Star.</p>
<p>It was a long, cold ride. The Black Star groaned
and threw his head from side to side, indicating that
he wanted the gag removed, but Verbeck declined to
accommodate him. He was taking no chances with
the Black Star.</p>
<p>The machine lurched and skidded along the streets,
dashed along boulevards, swung around corners.
Muggs was putting on all possible speed, for the dawn
was not far away.</p>
<p>The machine was finally brought to a standstill before
the double gates that opened into the driveway
of the old Verbeck place. Verbeck got out and helped
Muggs throw open the gates, and they drove in.</p>
<p>There was fuel in the house, and after they had
carried the Black Star in and made him comfortable
on a couch Verbeck built a fire in the large grate in
the living room. Then he removed the man’s gag,
and all his bonds except those which held his hands
fastened behind his back.</p>
<p>“There, Mr. Black Star!” he said. “It has been
an exciting night. You sent a man to invade my
apartment, and in turn I invaded your place of business—I
suppose that is what you’d call it—and made
you prisoner, with the aid of this very good friend of
mine. And now you are here—and I’m quite sure
you don’t know just where. And here you’ll remain
for the time being, until I form some plans and put
them in operation. You’ll be kept warm, and you’ll
have food. Muggs will guard you. And you’ll be
unable to escape.”</p>
<p>“All very clever,” the Black Star retorted. “But
you are playing with fire, Mr. Verbeck, and are liable
to be badly scorched.”</p>
<p>“I’ll run the risk of that.”</p>
<p>“Remember, I told you my organization has a long
arm. I’m storing all this up against you.”</p>
<p>“Very kind of you, I’m sure.” He turned to
Muggs. “How do you want to work this thing?”
he asked.</p>
<p>“Just let him fuss around with his hands tied,
boss,” Muggs said. “I’ll get a strap or some rope
from the closet and tie ’em properly. And if he tries
any funny tricks I’ll either shoot him or pound him
on the head with the butt of the gun—’tis immaterial.
You can leave it to me, boss.”</p>
<p>And Verbeck knew by the expression of Muggs’
face that he could.</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-vian-unprofitable-afternoon">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id6">CHAPTER VI—AN UNPROFITABLE AFTERNOON</SPAN></h1>
<p>Verbeck put his car in the garage, returned to
his apartment and slept. He awakened at eleven
o’clock, rushed through bath and breakfast, got the
car out again, purchased groceries, and whirled away
toward the old house.</p>
<p>There he found Muggs pacing back and forth, with
the pistol in his hand, reading the Black Star a lecture
on the evils of a nefarious existence. The Black Star
looked disgusted.</p>
<p>“If you’re going to keep me prisoner,” he told
Verbeck, “I’d be obliged if you’d give me another
jailer.”</p>
<p>“What’s the matter with Muggs?”</p>
<p>“Barring the fact that he is insane, he may be all
right. I don’t want to be talked to death.”</p>
<p>Verbeck gave him a grin for answer and unpacked
the groceries. He had small time to spend here, and,
taking Muggs into a corner, he bade him be sure to
guard the prisoner carefully.</p>
<p>“You may not see me again until to-morrow morning,
Muggs,” he said. “I’ll be busy this afternoon,
and to-night I’m going to that house where the Black
Star has his headquarters and start some plans going.”</p>
<p>“You’ll be careful, boss?”</p>
<p>“I’ll be careful, Muggs. When it comes time for
sleep what are you going to do here?”</p>
<p>“Stay awake, I guess.”</p>
<p>“There is a vegetable pit in the basement, remember.
Get plenty of blankets from the closet and put
them there, and make him climb down and sleep on
them. You can bolt the trapdoor and sleep in peace
here before the fire. Careful, now. I’m off!”</p>
<p>At one o’clock he put the car in the garage again,
for he had decided he’d not use it that afternoon.
Precisely at ten minutes of two he was standing at
the corner on which he had directed the crook the
night before to fumble with his hat and await orders.</p>
<p>It happened to be a pet day with shoppers. Traffic
officers worked furiously to keep the crossings free
of vehicles; uniformed footmen opened limousine
doors and helped well-dressed women across the walks
and into shops. Conversations seemed limited to dry
goods and bargains.</p>
<p>Verbeck had not remembered how the corner would
be thronged when he gave the Black Star’s man his
orders. The corner now was a jam of human beings.
Verbeck crossed the street and stood beside a stone
pillar in front of a show window, from where he could
watch easily.</p>
<p>The hour of two arrived, and Verbeck scrutinized
every man who passed the corner. Five minutes
passed, and no one had given him the signal. And
then he saw Howard Wendell, the brother of his
fiancée, walking slowly down the street close to the
curbing.</p>
<p>Verbeck drew back quickly behind the pillar. If
Howard Wendell saw him, he undoubtedly would stop
to talk, and Verbeck did not want to hold a conversation
just then.</p>
<p>Wendell passed without seeing him. He stopped
for an instant on the corner; he removed his hat, and
he ran one hand around the brim of it as if brushing
away dust.</p>
<p>Verbeck’s jaw dropped and his eyes bulged with
amazement. The next instant he was chuckling at
the coincidence of it. There was no possibility of
Howard Wendell being a member of the Black Star’s
band, of course. The boy accidentally had done what
Verbeck had ordered the crook to do, that was all,
and when he came to think of it Verbeck realized it
was a natural thing for any man to do, and wished
he had told the crook to use some other sign.</p>
<p>Howard Wendell walked on up the street, and
Verbeck continued his watch. The minutes slipped by,
and no other man gave the sign. A doubt entered
Verbeck’s mind. That boast he had made at the reception—Howard
Wendell had heard that, and the
Black Star had known of it soon afterward. And
Howard had given the correct sign.</p>
<p>“Bosh! Can’t be!” Verbeck muttered to himself.
“I’m a fool to think it for a minute. Why on earth
would Howard be mixed up with a gang of crooks?
Even if he wanted to be, how could he get into a
first-order gang like that of the Black Star? They’d
not have him! I’m crazy to think of it!”</p>
<p>He looked at his watch; it was a quarter of three.
He decided to go to the hotel where the unknown
crook was to hold conversation with Miss Freda
Brakeland. Perhaps he could decide the matter there,
learn the crook’s identity.</p>
<p>The lobby of the hotel was thronged when Verbeck
entered. He met men and women he knew,
but managed to keep free from lingering conversation.
He wanted to be at liberty to make a complete investigation.</p>
<p>Then he met Faustina Wendell face to face.</p>
<p>“Why, Roger!” she gasped. “Fancy meeting you
here! I’ve heard you say you hate hotel lobbies.”</p>
<p>“I came in to take a peek so I’ll hate them more,”
Verbeck replied. “And you?”</p>
<p>“Browning Club meeting, dear.”</p>
<p>“It is over already?”</p>
<p>“A quarter of an hour ago. In fact, we met only
to postpone it, for every one is talking of the Charity
Ball to-morrow night.”</p>
<p>“I see,” said Verbeck. He did see—that he had
missed his chance to learn the identity of the crook.</p>
<p>“I came down in the electric,” Faustina continued.
“Come along home with me, if you haven’t an engagement.”</p>
<p>He entered the electric and sat beside her as she
piloted the car through the busy streets. She was
giving all her attention to the driving, and he did
not attempt conversation. And now that her face
was in repose, it seemed to Verbeck that there was a
peculiar expression on it, one that he was not used
to seeing. He would have sworn that the girl beside
him, who had promised to be his wife, was anxious,
worried—and that was foreign to her nature.</p>
<p>The Wendells had been wealthy once, but were not
now. Mr. Wendell had died two years before, leaving
an estate much smaller than was anticipated. His
widow had built a modern apartment house, and from
it derived an income, the Wendells living in one of
the apartments on the first floor. Yet they had
enough to maintain their position in society, and this
was an important position, for the Wendells were an
old pioneer family, noted for piety and pride.</p>
<p>“You are looking tired,” Verbeck observed.</p>
<p>“You’re not very complimentary, Roger. Perhaps
I am a bit tired, though.”</p>
<p>“Too much Charity Ball?” he asked.</p>
<p>“I am not worrying much about that. I intend going,
of course.”</p>
<p>“I should hope so,” Verbeck said.</p>
<p>“Would it disappoint you very much if I said I’d
rather not?”</p>
<p>“Nothing you can do will disappoint me,” he said
loyally; “but I cannot imagine a Charity Ball without
you in attendance. Are you thinking of remaining
away?”</p>
<p>She was looking ahead, and Verbeck imagined that
her lips quivered for an instant.</p>
<p>“Is anything the matter?” he asked. “You don’t
seem to be yourself to-day.”</p>
<p>“I—oh, it is nothing, Roger! Perhaps I am a
bit nervous. Let us talk of something else. Here
we are at home. You’ll come in, of course?”</p>
<p>He followed her inside, and greeted her mother,
who immediately left them alone.</p>
<p>“Now,” Verbeck said, bending toward her, “tell
me what is troubling you. I can see that there is
something.”</p>
<p>“Really it is nothing, Roger. Perhaps I am a bit
out of sorts. And—what I said about the ball—forget
that, please.”</p>
<p>“But if you do not wish to go——” he said.</p>
<p>“Can’t we decide it to-morrow afternoon, dear?
All right—let us leave it until then. Perhaps I’ll be
feeling better.”</p>
<p>“And there is no trouble—nothing I can do to
help?” he persisted.</p>
<p>“Foolish boy! I’m just—just tired.”</p>
<p>“Then I’m going to run right away and let you
rest. I ought to be downtown, anyway. I’ll telephone
the garage for my car.”</p>
<p>He went to the telephone and sent in his call, then
returned to sit beside her. She was trying hard to
smile and act naturally, but Verbeck knew something
was troubling her. But he imagined it might be something
connected with the family finance, and so did
not press her for an answer.</p>
<p>The car came from the garage, and Verbeck left,
and drove through the streets in a way that defied all
traffic ordinances. He had failed to identify the crook
who had received orders to speak with Miss Freda
Brakeland. And something was troubling his fiancée,
and Faustina had refused to confide in him. It had
been an unprofitable afternoon.</p>
<p>And there was a busy and dangerous night before
him.</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-viiidentical-orders">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id7">CHAPTER VII—IDENTICAL ORDERS</SPAN></h1>
<p>Eight o’clock that night found Roger Verbeck in
the Black Star’s headquarters, the room put in
order, and the candles burning. He was sitting at
the end of the long table, in robe and mask, and with
the little rubber stamps he was busy writing out orders.
All the orders were identical; the ones previously
written by the Black Star had been destroyed.</p>
<p>Promptly at nine o’clock the little bell on the wall
tinkled, and Verbeck, shutting the drawer in the table
and holding his automatic in readiness beneath his
robe, went to the wall and pressed the button that
opened the door. He hurried from the room, and
waited.</p>
<p>Presently he entered again, to find a masked and
robed figure standing before the blackboard. Number
and countersign were given, and Verbeck handed
the man his orders and a twenty-dollar bill taken from
the drawer in the table. The man bowed and went out.</p>
<p>Nine-thirty brought another man, and the same
ceremony was observed. Ten o’clock brought the
member of the band to whom Verbeck had given
orders the night before. After he had written his
number and countersign, Verbeck whirled to the
blackboard.</p>
<p>“Report,” he wrote.</p>
<p>“Browning Club meeting was postponed, and I
missed the person you mentioned,” the other scribbled
on the board. “I followed her, and spoke with her
later in a tea room. She will wear her jewels, including
the famous ruby collar.”</p>
<p>Verbeck nodded for the man to erase. Again he
found himself wondering at the identity of this man
who could talk so freely to Freda Brakeland. And
now he wrote on the blackboard himself:</p>
<p>“Why did you not carry out orders?”</p>
<p>“Pardon, but I did.”</p>
<p>“You appeared at the corner I mentioned?”</p>
<p>“Yes. Nobody approached me, so I went on as
ordered.”</p>
<p>Verbeck wondered whether the man was speaking
the truth, whether he had appeared at the corner, as
ordered, and Verbeck had missed him. It was possible,
he knew, because of the throng of shoppers.
And, again—— The robe effectually disguised the
man before him, but Verbeck imagined he was taller
than Howard Wendell. He told himself again he
was a fool to think that the man before him was his
fiancée’s brother. He had half a notion to order
him to remove his mask, but thought better of it.
This man was a crook, could be nothing else. And
Verbeck dared do nothing that would arouse suspicion
and endanger the plan he had formed.</p>
<p>“Very well,” he wrote on the board; then went
to the table and tossed the proper envelope toward
the other.</p>
<p>The man picked it up and read the orders. It
seemed to Verbeck that he appeared startled. He
went to the blackboard and wrote again:</p>
<p>“Are you sure, sir, that these are my orders?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” Verbeck wrote.</p>
<p>“Must I carry them out?”</p>
<p>“They must be carried out—to the letter,” wrote
Verbeck.</p>
<p>The other hesitated a moment, then wrote rapidly
on the board:</p>
<p>“You are unfair, but I am unable to help myself.”</p>
<p>And then, as Verbeck started forward, the other
saluted and darted out of the door, to hurry down
the dusty hall. Roger returned to the table. He
half wished he had forced the other man to remove
his mask.</p>
<p>Ten-thirty o’clock brought a woman. Verbeck
knew she was a woman because he could see her
hands, the fingers covered with rings and the bottom of
her skirts showed beneath the robe. Her writing on
the blackboard was unmistakably feminine, too. The
Black Star had said that women belonged to his organization,
but Verbeck had not anticipated meeting
one in this house; he had believed they worked on
orders transmitted by others.</p>
<p>“Everything arranged,” the woman wrote on the
board. “It will be easy. I’ll get the necklace about
three o’clock in the morning and hide it where you
ordered. It may be found there any time after four
o’clock.”</p>
<p>Here Verbeck found himself facing something of
which he knew nothing, some crime already outlined
by the Black Star.</p>
<p>“Disregard all previous orders,” he wrote, “for the
time being. I have new orders for you, and you’ll
attend to them first. Do you understand?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” she wrote.</p>
<p>He threw her envelope on the table, and she read
the instructions it contained. She, too, scribbled a
protest on the blackboard.</p>
<p>“Isn’t it dangerous?” she wrote.</p>
<p>“Carry out your orders. You do not know all the
scheme, remember.”</p>
<p>“I understand. I’ll obey.”</p>
<p>Then she hurried out.</p>
<p>At eleven o’clock the bell tinkled again, and Verbeck
admitted another of the band. This one, too,
was a woman. She appeared timid, whereas the first
had given every indication of being used to this sort
of thing. Her hand trembled as she wrote her number
on the board. Then she gave her countersign
and waited.</p>
<p>Evidently she was not working on a case, but had
reported to get orders. Verbeck had no orders ready
for her, for her number had not been on the list
he had found in the Black Star’s book. Apparently
this was her first visit, or else the Black Star had
not contemplated making use of her at the present
time.</p>
<p>He took orders he had printed for one of the others
and put them on the end of the table, motioning for
her to pick them up and read. As she advanced toward
the table, Verbeck found that her eyes were
upon him, and she seemed afraid to touch the envelope.
She opened it finally, read quickly, and Verbeck
thought she gave a little cry. She staggered
backward, but seemed to regain her composure as he
started forward to aid her, and backed away from
him. The sheet of paper fluttered from her hand to
the floor.</p>
<p>Verbeck stooped and picked it up, and handed it
to her. She did not seem to see it—she was looking
down at Verbeck’s hand. Like a wild thing, she
whirled around and rushed back to the blackboard and
seized the chalk.</p>
<p>“Where did you get that ring?” she wrote rapidly.</p>
<p>Verbeck answered on his board:</p>
<p>“Why? Do you fancy it?”</p>
<p>“Where did you get it?”</p>
<p>“That is my personal and private business,” he
wrote. The ring was a peculiar signet he had picked
up abroad and had worn for years.</p>
<p>The woman dropped the chalk to the floor. She
raised one hand as if to put it to her face; she dropped
it again; her eyes burned into Verbeck’s from behind
her mask; then she gave a cry that expressed pain
and despair, and hurried through the door and into
the hall.</p>
<p>“Well, what do you think of that?” Verbeck mused.
“Was she really frightened or only playing a part?
I wonder if the Black Star has been treating her
badly and has made her afraid of him? She seemed
awfully interested in my ring—because she’d never
noticed it on the Black Star’s hand, I suppose. If
she should be suspicious—— But she couldn’t do
anything if she was!”</p>
<p>The members of the band continued to arrive at
intervals, but there were no more women. Verbeck
received their numbers and countersigns, and gave out
copies of the orders. At three o’clock in the morning
he decided there were no more to come. Two women
and eight men had been received during the night—ten
persons had walked into the trap he had constructed.
Less than twenty-four hours, and the Black
Star and his band would be in the hands of the police.
Verbeck felt that he had planned well.</p>
<p>At half past three o’clock he left the house and
walked five blocks to catch an owl car. Half an hour
later he was on the boulevard, approaching the building
in which he had his rooms. As he reached the
steps of the apartment house he happened to turn
and glance down the street. He saw a man dodge
behind a lamp-post a short distance away.</p>
<p>Verbeck stepped into the vestibule, waited a moment,
then stepped out again quickly. Again he saw
the man dodge behind the post.</p>
<p>Darting down the steps, Verbeck ran toward the
man. A shadowy form rushed across the driveway
and lost itself in the shadows of the underbrush.
Verbeck stopped and retraced his steps. He doubted
whether he could catch the man, and he wasn’t inclined
to pursue him at that hour of the morning.
Perhaps it was not a man watching him, but a lurking
thief, he thought, and at the same time he felt that
he had been under surveillance.</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-viiithe-police-get-a-tip">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id8">CHAPTER VIII—THE POLICE GET A TIP</SPAN></h1>
<p>Verbeck arose at noon to face the day that meant
the culmination of his plans. As he bathed and
shaved and dressed he kept thinking of the prowler
he had seen a few hours before. Could it be possible,
he asked himself, that some of the Black Star’s band
had grown suspicious and would take an active part
against him? Had the Black Star, a prisoner in the
old Verbeck house, sent out some message from his
prison calling for rescue? Verbeck was half afraid
he had made some blunder, had overlooked something
that would allow the master criminal to turn
the tables and emerge victor from the duel of wits.</p>
<p>He telephoned the garage for his roadster, and
hurried out to the old Verbeck place, taking with him
a lineman from the telephone company’s office. The
lineman connected the telephone, which had been out
of service.</p>
<p>“How is the prisoner?” Verbeck asked Muggs after
the lineman had departed.</p>
<p>“Down in the vegetable pit, thinking of his sins.”</p>
<p>“Fetch him up,” Verbeck directed, and began carrying
in the food he had purchased before running out
from town.</p>
<p>It was a surly Black Star who entered the living
room, with Muggs at his heels urging him on. He
no longer was handsome because of a two days’ growth
of beard and dark circles under his eyes. He glared
at Muggs malevolently as he crossed the room and
sat down stiffly on a divan.</p>
<p>“How long,” he demanded of Verbeck, “are you
going to keep me prisoner, with a maniac for jailer?”</p>
<p>“Probably until a late hour to-night. But you need
not be confined in the pit again. I’m going to have
Muggs keep you in this room, where it is warm and
comfortable. I want to give you a bit of liberty until
to-night.”</p>
<p>“And then?”</p>
<p>“Then I’ll probably hand you over to the police,
and you’ll have mighty small freedom for years to
come.”</p>
<p>“Indeed?” the Black Star snarled. “You have arranged
everything, have you? Planned a coup of
some sort?”</p>
<p>“Time will tell,” said Verbeck.</p>
<p>“And don’t you ever stop to fear for yourself?”</p>
<p>“I haven’t felt particularly afraid at any time.”</p>
<p>“I have warned you that the arm of my organization——”</p>
<p>“Is a long one—I remember,” said Verbeck. “The
arm of the law also is long, Mr. Black Star, and a
clever, honest man can outwit a clever crook any time,
as I said once before. You called it a boast, I believe.”</p>
<p>“You are not done yet.”</p>
<p>“Certainly not—but I’ll be done within a few
hours.”</p>
<p>Verbeck walked to a corner and beckoned Muggs
to him.</p>
<p>“I’ll return to-night, some time after nine o’clock,”
he said. “I want you to watch the Black Star well,
Muggs. If he escapes now——”</p>
<p>“Why don’t you call in the police, boss?”</p>
<p>“And spoil everything? I’m going through with
this now—I’m going to nab the Black Star and his
gang.”</p>
<p>“Then there’s something big coming off, and I’m
not to be in on it?” Muggs demanded.</p>
<p>“Neither am I, Muggs—at the moment it comes
off. But we’ll both be in at the finish—and we’ll be
there strong. Just curb your curiosity, Muggs, until
this evening. I’ll explain everything then. Careful,
now, and don’t let the Black Star escape. I fancy
you’ve been aggravating him.”</p>
<p>“Aw, boss——”</p>
<p>“He looks it. Haven’t you?”</p>
<p>“I was just reciting a list of his sins, boss.”</p>
<p>“Well, Muggs, recite less and keep your eyes open
more. Watch every move he makes. Don’t you use
that telephone, and don’t let the Black Star get near
it. I had it connected so we can use it to-night. Now
I’m off!”</p>
<p>He got in the roadster and started back downtown.
He stopped before a suburban drug store and went
into a telephone booth. He had not wanted to send
this telephone message from his own apartment nor
from the old Verbeck place, for it might be traced.</p>
<p>He called police headquarters, and asked to be connected
with the chief. No, he said, the chief’s secretary
wouldn’t do. It was something about the Black
Star.</p>
<p>In a moment he heard the chief’s gruff voice.</p>
<p>“Listen carefully,” Verbeck told him, “for I am
not going to repeat what I say or answer questions.
This is very important, and if you disregard it you’ll
be sorry. Have your secretary get on the phone extension
and take down in shorthand what I am going
to say.”</p>
<p>There was a short wait while the chief made the
necessary arrangements, then Verbeck heard himself
commanded to speak.</p>
<p>“I have run down and caught the Black Star,” he
said. “I am holding him prisoner now. I cannot
hand him over to you just yet, for, if I did, and the
least news of it leaked out, you’d never catch one
of his gang, and, without his gang, you never could
convict him. Never mind how I know it—I am not
talking nonsense. You’ve got that?”</p>
<p>An excited voice told him that the chief understood.</p>
<p>“Now, listen to this,” Verbeck went on. “I have
arranged for all the Black Star’s band to be at a certain
place at the same time, so you and your men can
take them all. Keep quiet, chief, and don’t ask questions.
I want you to send men enough to arrest them—eight
men and two women are in the crowd. They
are to be arrested just when and where I say. If
you let as much as one of them escape all my work
and yours probably will have been for nothing. When
you get them you’ll find stolen property on every one.
And as soon as I learn you have all of them under
arrest I’ll turn over the Black Star to you, I’ll tell
you where and how he met the members of his gang
and gave them orders, and I’ll let you have the inside
workings of one of the smoothest crooks’ schemes
ever devised. But if you make one false move——”</p>
<p>A torrent of words over the wire stopped him for
a moment.</p>
<p>“No questions, I said,” he went on. “You have
understood so far? Very well! No, I’ll not tell you
who I am or where I am! Very well, if you’ll not
listen! I’ll call you up later, when you’re in a better
mood, and explain where you are to make the catch.
Good-by!”</p>
<p>And an irate Roger Verbeck strode from the telephone
booth, went out to the street, and sprang into
his car to drive furiously down the thoroughfare.
No excited chief of police could bully him with a lot
of mandatory questions, he told himself. Let them
fuss and fume for a time, then they’d listen when he
telephoned.</p>
<p>His actions had the desired effect. At police headquarters
there was a spirited debate for five minutes
between the chief and his secretary as to whether
the telephone communication had come from some
practical joker. The secretary was inclined to believe
that it had. The chief insisted that some member
of the Black Star’s band had turned against him
and was engineering his downfall.</p>
<p>Verbeck drove on through the streets until he
reached the Wendell apartment house. Faustina was
waiting for him, and again Verbeck noticed that
anxiety was stamped on her face, and now he thought
there was a look of fear also.</p>
<p>“Well, here we are,” he said. “And what about
the ball?”</p>
<p>“I—I have decided to go,” she said, looking at him
peculiarly.</p>
<p>“Brother Howard going, too?”</p>
<p>“Yes—he is going.”</p>
<p>“With any particular young lady?”</p>
<p>“No—alone.”</p>
<p>“Good! Will you be angry, Faustina, if I ask
you to go to the ball with Howard? I cannot explain
just now, but—well, I’ll be there late, in time
to have a couple of dances and bring you home. I’m
sorry that I cannot explain exactly—it is something
important that will keep me away until late.”</p>
<p>He looked up, to find her staring at him fixedly.</p>
<p>“Why—what is the matter?” he stammered.</p>
<p>“I—oh, Roger, it is nothing!”</p>
<p>He sat down beside her and started to take her in
his arms, but she drew away from him.</p>
<p>“Why, Faustina——”</p>
<p>“I’m—oh, I’m just a bit nervous, Roger.”</p>
<p>“There seemed to be something troubling you yesterday,
and there certainly is to-day,” he said. “Can’t
you confide in me, Faustina? Is there anything wrong—anything
I can do to help?”</p>
<p>“Nothing you can do—to help,” she said.</p>
<p>“Then there is something wrong?”</p>
<p>“Don’t ask me, please, Roger. I’m nervous, worried.
Just let me rest until to-night—I’ll try to be
all right then. Certainly I’ll go to the ball with Howard—and
expect you later. And now you’ll go, won’t
you, Roger? I must lie down—and rest.”</p>
<p>The puzzled Verbeck walked slowly to the door,
Faustina following him. He took her in his arms
and kissed her. She did not return the caress, and
she seemed on the verge of tears.</p>
<p>“Don’t worry,” he said softly.</p>
<p>“You tell me not to worry.”</p>
<p>“Why, yes. Perhaps whatever is troubling you
will cease to trouble. We’ll talk of it to-night?
You’ll let me help you?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” she said, “we’ll talk of it to-night. We
must talk of it to-night.”</p>
<p>Verbeck hurried out, got into the car, and started
for the business district. Faustina’s actions and manner
worried him, yet his mind was busy with the Black
Star and his affair. Once the Black Star and his
band of crooks were handed over to the police he’d
look into Faustina’s trouble, he told himself. Perhaps
Howard was running about too much. Perhaps
there was financial trouble in the family. Whatever
it was, he’d smooth things out, he promised. He
couldn’t have Faustina worrying.</p>
<p>He drove carefully now through the heavy traffic,
and finally stopped before a hotel. There he entered
a public telephone booth, and called police headquarters
again. Once more he got the chief on the wire.</p>
<p>“Will you listen now, and ask no questions?” he
demanded. “This is no hoax, so you’d better act on
my tip.”</p>
<p>Then he told the chief where the members of the
Black Star’s band could be captured, and when and
how.</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-ixchickens-come-home-to-roost">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id9">CHAPTER IX—“CHICKENS COME HOME TO ROOST”</SPAN></h1>
<p>That evening there came the heavy winds again.
They came as night descended, to howl about
buildings and shriek through the streets, carrying the
merest suggestion of snow. They swayed the arc
lights, rattled signs, and shook skeletons of trees.
And then they settled down to a steady blow from
the north, and soft snow began to fall heavily. And
through the steady sheet of snow gleamed thousands
upon thousands of incandescent bulbs at the big hall
where the Charity Ball was to be held.</p>
<p>That hall had been built to hold thousands, and
its capacity would be tested this night. On the dancing
floor would be women famous in society, stately
matrons, pretty girls enjoying their first social season.
Gowns to dazzle would be shown by hundreds, and
jewels—precious and famous jewels—would flash reflection
from myriads of electric lights—jewels taken
from safe-deposit boxes to be worn at this affair, and
then to be returned to their hiding places.</p>
<p>The galleries would be filled with spectators; a
gigantic orchestra would please musical ears; in the
streets outside, hundreds of limousines would be waiting
for the end.</p>
<p>Verbeck was thinking of the scene at the big hall
as he drove his roadster out to the old place again
shortly after ten o’clock that night. He had intended
going to the old house earlier, but had been delayed
in carrying out his plans. And now everything was
done—there was nothing more to do except await the
appointed hour, call police headquarters, ascertain that
the members of the Black Star’s band were in jail,
and then turn over the Black Star himself. He would
have a good excuse to escape the plaudits of the police
and reporters at headquarters—he would have to hurry
to the big hall to dance with his fiancée and escort
her to her home.</p>
<p>The gates were open, and Verbeck sent the car
through and along the driveway, and brought it to a
stop where it would be shielded by the corner of the
house from the swirling snow.</p>
<p>When he entered the living room, the Black Star
was sitting on the divan in the corner, and Muggs
was pacing back and forth before him, still preaching
on the merits of an honest existence as compared to
a life of thievery.</p>
<p>“Everything is lovely, boss,” he reported to Verbeck.
“This gent has been getting restless, but he
hasn’t made a move he shouldn’t. I’ve been hoping
he would—I haven’t taken a pot shot at a man in
ages.”</p>
<p>“We’ll have no carnage, Muggs,” said Verbeck,
laughing. “We want to hand him over entire, not
in pieces. Give me that pistol, and I’ll watch the
gentleman while you untie his hands and fasten them
again in front instead of behind his back. I’m going
to give him a cigar to smoke; he’ll need it to quiet
his nerves.”</p>
<p>Muggs did as he was ordered, and the Black Star
accepted the cigar with good grace and puffed at it
with evident enjoyment.</p>
<p>“Do we call the police now, boss?” Muggs asked.</p>
<p>“Not yet, Muggs.”</p>
<p>“You and I have done a lot of things, boss, in all
corners of the world,” he said in a whisper, so the
Black Star could not hear. “When you feel that you
can’t hold in any longer, you make me stop being
a valet, and let me be a comrade, and we go out after
adventure. It’s always been all right. But, about
this thing—— Boss, I told you I had a hunch.”</p>
<p>“I’m afraid your hunch isn’t working well this
time, Muggs. The thing has been accomplished. I’m
merely waiting here until the police make a move I
requested them to make, and then we’ll surrender the
Black Star. It hasn’t been so very much of an adventure,
after all, has it, old man? There hasn’t been
much excitement—not what we call excitement.”</p>
<p>“I’ll not be satisfied until the police have their hands
on him, boss.”</p>
<p>“Neither shall I. But nothing is going to happen,
Muggs, to bother us. Keep that hunch of yours until
another time.”</p>
<p>Muggs resumed his guard of the prisoner, and,
though he asked Verbeck nothing concerning the plans
he had made, there was a question in the expression
of his face. Verbeck lighted a cigar for himself, and
sat down not far from the Black Star. He looked at
his watch.</p>
<p>“It is half after ten,” he announced. “Mr. Black
Star, in exactly an hour and a half the police will
take into custody some of your people; eight men and
two women, to be exact.”</p>
<p>“Indeed?”</p>
<p>“Exactly,” said Verbeck.</p>
<p>“Would you mind telling me how this is to be done?
I am somewhat interested and wholly skeptical.”</p>
<p>“Last night,” said Verbeck, “I assumed your robe
and mask, and played at being the Black Star. I
destroyed the orders you had prepared, countermanded
all of which I learned, and issued new orders of my
own. There was no hitch in the arrangement. Not
one of them became suspicious as far as I could see.”</p>
<p>“And the orders?” the Black Star asked, interest
showing in his face.</p>
<p>“Were the same in each instance,” said Verbeck.
“The orders make it possible for the police to round
up the entire gang at one swoop. They’ll be kept
separate until I turn you over and tell all I know.
With those facts upon which to work the detectives
will have no trouble getting confessions. As for you—Muggs
and I can swear to enough to convict you,
especially after the police have searched that house
where you had your headquarters.”</p>
<p>There was a look of apprehension in the Black
Star’s face now, but he did not pretend to Verbeck
that he was alarmed.</p>
<p>“May I ask how you expect to catch these persons?”
he asked.</p>
<p>“Yes—and I’ll tell you. There was a flaw in your
perfect arrangement, Mr. Black Star. You taught
your crooks to work in the dark, and not ask questions.
They have faith in you; and if you ordered
one of them to enter the First National Bank at noon
and hold up the first teller to the right, he’d perhaps
do it, believing that his work was only a part of a
big scheme and that he’d escape consequences because
of some plan of yours.”</p>
<p>“True,” said the Black Star. “I have issued orders
that seemed dangerous, but were not so when a man
knew all the different angles of my plan.”</p>
<p>“Exactly. And so, when I gave orders that seemed
dangerous, scarcely an objection was raised. You
want to know how they are to be captured, eh? Here
is a copy of the orders I gave each, Mr. Black Star,
listen to it!”</p>
<p>Verbeck pulled a sheet of paper from his pocket
and read:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>“You will dress as well as possible—evening
clothes if you can—and attend the Charity Ball.
I give you herewith money for ticket and other
expenses. You will mingle with the crowd on
the dance floor, and, working alone, lift all the
jewels you can. Be careful of discovery, but
do not fear the outcome. Between ten o’clock
and midnight will be the best time for you to do
your work.</p>
<p>“Exactly at midnight you will be in the southwest
corner of the lobby, where there is a drinking
fountain. Before going there put a bit of
red ribbon on the lapel of your coat. If you see
others wearing this sign, do not speak to them or
give them any attention. Follow these instructions
to the letter, and our great plans will be
consummated. It is to be a big clean-up, and all
arrangements have been made.”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Verbeck ceased reading, and looked across at the
Black Star.</p>
<p>“You understand?” he asked. “Each one thinks
he does not know all the plan, but will be safe if he
carries out his instructions. I gave each a bill out
of the drawer in the table, and I told the women to
wear the red ribbon on their shoulders. A score or
more of detectives will be in the neighborhood. At
midnight they will take in custody all who wear the
red ribbon. A quick search will disclose stolen property
in their possession. You see? I don’t know
whether Pm guilty of a felony or not, ordering them
to steal like that, but I guess I’ll be forgiven, since it
is in such a good cause.</p>
<p>“So there goes your perfect arrangement, Mr. Black
Star. Those crooks who have been trusting you will
be cursing your name before long. And you’re going
to the penitentiary with them. You can’t be crooked
and get away with it always—no matter how clever
you are. And all this, Mr. Black Star, because you
overplayed your part by sending a man to put a letter
on my desk. You needn’t sneer—I’m not meaning
to praise myself. There are a thousand men in town
who could have overcome you, given the chance I
had.”</p>
<p>“I am not sneering at your egotism,” said the Black
Star, apparently without emotion. “I am sneering at
the futility of your plans. I warned you, Roger Verbeck.
I told you that chickens come home to roost.
So you’ll send my men and women to jail, will you?
You’ll break up my organization? You strike me a
deathblow like that—and you’ll strike yourself one
at the same time.”</p>
<p>“I’ve heard your pointless talk before,” Verbeck
said.</p>
<p>“But this is not pointless talk, Roger Verbeck. It
is very much to the point. I told you that I had an
organization that gathered information, didn’t I? I
said it was separate and distinct from the band that
committed the crimes. You have made the grave
mistake, I fear, of mixing the two bands together—and
the consequences will not be to your liking.”</p>
<p>“Indeed?”</p>
<p>“Yes—indeed! How do you suppose I heard of
your boast at that reception a few nights ago? How
do you suppose I know so much about people’s private
affairs? I’ll tell you, Roger Verbeck—I know because
men and women of your acquaintance belong
to my organization. You don’t believe that, eh? You
will—soon.”</p>
<p>“I scarcely can imagine any of my friends turning
crook.”</p>
<p>“Not voluntarily, perhaps. Not because they need
money, either—not always.”</p>
<p>“Explain,” Verbeck said.</p>
<p>“I’ve told you I have a partner who knows me well—he
and I work together. Some of the organization
know him, but not one knows me, nor has seen my
face or heard my voice. If you are skeptical, I’ll
outline the plan in a few words. In Chicago, for instance,
we caught a certain youngster of this city
when he was in trouble. He was extricated from his
scrape, and the price of it was that he join my organization.
We held something over his head. Deathly
afraid, he carried out my orders; he feared to refuse.
Through him we brought into the organization the
girl to whom he was betrothed—threatening to send
her sweetheart to prison unless she joined the band.
You see? A sort of endless-chain affair.”</p>
<p>“I don’t believe it!” Verbeck exclaimed.</p>
<p>“You want proof, eh? In ten minutes, Roger Verbeck,
you’ll be giving me my liberty, and you’ll be
moving heaven and earth, with me beside you, trying
to prevent the capture of those people at the Charity
Ball. You know who told me of your boast at that
reception? He told me because he admires your native
cleverness—begged me to stop everything and leave
town, for, he said, if you started out to get me you’d
do it.”</p>
<p>“He was a sensible man, and you should have taken
his advice,” said Verbeck.</p>
<p>“I am telling you the truth, Verbeck. The man
who told me was Howard Wendell, the brother of the
girl you expect to marry.”</p>
<p>“You lie!” Verbeck cried, springing from his chair.
Muggs snarled, and stepped forward, ready for a fray,
but Verbeck motioned him back.</p>
<p>“I do not lie,” said the Black Star. “I told you
to beware, that the chickens might come home to roost.
Two months ago Howard Wendell was in Chicago
on some business for his uncle. We knew him—we
wanted him. A man already a member of the organization
saw to it that Howard Wendell went the pace
for a few days. He is but a boy, we’ll say—he was
easily led. He woke up one morning to find that
he had gambled away three thousand dollars of his
uncle’s money. He was almost insane because of what
he had done. His friend took him to my partner;
my partner gave him the money.”</p>
<p>“But that——”</p>
<p>“Wait! In return he gave my partner a check
drawn on a bank in this city. Of course it was a
forged check. Oh, he did not intend it as deceit!
He said the check was worthless. My partner laughed
and said he knew it, but that he would keep it until
the boy could pay—if he never paid, it would be all
right. My partner, you see, owned the gambling
house where the money was lost. You begin to understand?”</p>
<p>Verbeck still stood before him, hands clenched.</p>
<p>“But the next day he was informed that the check
would be presented, would be returned, and that he
would be arrested for having written it—unless he
did as he was ordered. That is how Howard Wendell
became a member of our organization.”</p>
<p>“You beat!” Verbeck cried.</p>
<p>“Don’t beat me up yet—please,” sneered the Black
Star. “If you stop to do that you’ll suffer considerable
anguish later. I am not done—there are more
chickens coming home to roost. What numbers did
the men have, those to whom you gave orders?”</p>
<p>Fearing, Verbeck told him.</p>
<p>“So? Howard Wendell is one of them, Verbeck.
He is the one who brought you the letter that first
night concerning the Greistman jewels—remember?
He’ll be one for the police to nab to-night. He must
have been surprised to get orders like that—he understood
he was to do nothing except gather information.”</p>
<p>Verbeck felt that the Black Star was speaking the
truth. Howard had objected to the orders—had said
that they were unfair to him, but that he was unable
to help himself. It had been possible for him to tell
the Black Star of Verbeck’s boast. He had given
the sign that afternoon before seeking a talk with
Freda Brakeland. And the police would capture
Howard Wendell through Verbeck’s planning, capture
him with stolen jewels in his possession.</p>
<p>“And the women?” the Black Star asked. “Tell
me quickly! What numbers did they have?”</p>
<p>Verbeck told him.</p>
<p>“The first is one of the cleverest in the organization,”
said the master crook. “She is an experienced
thief. But the second—small wonder you did not find
her number in the book! She is a new one. That was
her first visit, and I had ordered it some days before.
She was brought into the organization through her
love for another, a member of her family. So she’ll
be caught, too, eh? And do you know her identity,
Roger Verbeck? Do you know the woman you are
handing over to the police through meddling with
my affairs? I’ll tell you—gladly: She is Miss Faustina
Wendell—your fiancée!”</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xcaught-in-a-net">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id10">CHAPTER X—CAUGHT IN A NET</SPAN></h1>
<p>Silence followed the announcement of the Black
Star—silence for a moment, during which Muggs
watched his master and waited for the sign that he
was to choke the man on the divan into insensibility
for daring to say such a thing. But the sign was not
given.</p>
<p>Suddenly Roger Verbeck felt sick at heart. The
Black Star’s tone, his bearing, the expression in his
face told that he spoke the truth. And Verbeck knew
enough to confirm it. Faustina had been acting in a
peculiar manner. And that second woman who had
called on him in the Black Star’s headquarters—how
timid she had appeared, how afraid! She had reeled
when she read her orders. She had demanded to
know where Verbeck got the ring he was wearing.
And that very afternoon, when he met her at her home—her
words had been mysterious, her actions out of
the ordinary.</p>
<p>“So you see how it is,” the Black Star was saying.
“Do you want to save her, save her brother also?
Then release me, and I’ll help—for I must save those
friends of mine. I’m as much in the dark regarding
them as you, for I’ve never seen any of their faces,
remember. You realize what will happen if they are
caught, don’t you? There could be no escape from
the penitentiary for any of them. And there are
things to be found in my headquarters—notes in Faustina
Wendell’s handwriting, for instance, notes giving
information——”</p>
<p>He stopped at the look that came into Verbeck’s
face.</p>
<p>“And you think I’ll let you go now?” Verbeck demanded.
“Why, I’ll fight you more than ever now!
You’ve made a cat’s-paw of that boy; you’ve dragged
the sweetest and most innocent girl in the world into
your filthy scheme.”</p>
<p>“The prosecuting attorney won’t consider her innocent
when he reads those notes.”</p>
<p>“You’d have me let you go—then you’d try to
drag <em>me</em> into the mess to save my intended wife!
And, through me, others—and so on! It’s fight you
and beat you now, or surrender to you like a coward,
and let you go ahead with your nefarious plans.
I’ll take the chance, Mr. Black Star!”</p>
<p>Verbeck looked at his watch; it was a quarter of
eleven. He whirled to face Muggs.</p>
<p>“Guard this crook!” he cried. “Guard him well.
Shoot him if he tries to escape!”</p>
<p>“What are you going to do, boss?”</p>
<p>“I’m going to play the game out to the end. I’m going
to the ball and save Faustina Wendell and her
brother—and I’m going to see that the police get the
others, and then this man here. That’s all I have to do—get
Faustina and Howard away in time. This
crook’s clever scheme has another angle—nobody can
swear the Wendells are mixed up in this. That’s what
I have to do—separate the crooks from the innocent
victims. Watch that man!”</p>
<p>Muggs screeched at him. The Black Star tried to
tell him something. But Roger Verbeck had dashed
from the house and toward his machine. He was almost
sobbing, and fear gripped at his heart. The
chickens had come home to roost! No wonder Faustina
had acted so peculiarly, small wonder she had
shown anxiety! And she was in danger. He had
ordered her to steal—perhaps her love and fear for
her brother would lead her to do so. She might be
caught in the act—Faustina Wendell, proud daughter
of one of the pioneer families, caught stealing jewels!</p>
<p>And his ring—she had recognized that! Great
Heaven! Did she think he was the Black Star?
Did she imagine he had played on her love to make
her a member of a band of thieves? What might she
not suspect, when she had seen that ring?</p>
<p>She would remember that he had led a sort of wild
life in the ends of the earth, never showing a tendency
to settle down until he had fallen in love with her.
She might pile up the little things until she had a
mound of evidence—women do such things. She
might doubt his manhood, really believe he was the
master crook, brutal enough to endanger the girl he
professed to love and her brother. Had Howard Wendell
noticed that ring, too? Had Howard been the
midnight prowler waiting on the boulevard to see
what time Verbeck reached home?</p>
<p>He was in the car, out of the yard, rushing like
the wind down the street, not caring whether the
machine skidded perilously through the snow. It
was almost eleven o’clock; he had ample time, more
than an hour. It would be a simple thing, after all,
merely to get Faustina and Howard to one side and
see that neither wore a red ribbon, let the police capture
the others, and then explain.</p>
<p>Then another thought came to him—those notes
the Black Star had said were in the house where he
made his headquarters! The captured men would talk,
mention that house, and the police would search.
Faustina might be endangered in that way. He didn’t
dare take the chance of leaving those notes until after
he went to the ball. He’d have to search for them,
find, and destroy them.</p>
<p>There was more than an hour—he had ample time.
He drove the machine at a furious pace, disregarding
police, who shrieked at him, barely missing trolley
cars, dodging pedestrians at crossings. Out along the
long boulevard it was easier going, for there the wind
had swept the pavement clear of snow, and there was
not so much traffic. He left the paved street and cut
down the hill toward the old house where the Black
Star had established his headquarters. He did not
have time to take precautions; he trusted to the good
fortune that always had stood at his side in emergencies.
He turned the machine to the curb a block
away from the house, sprang out, and rushed across
vacant lots toward his goal.</p>
<p>Through the dusty hall he rushed, reaching in his
coat pocket for matches. He found a candle in the
furnished room and lighted it. Then breathlessly he
began his search.</p>
<p>Nothing was in the drawer at the end of the table
except what he had seen before. There was no furniture
in the room in which letters might be concealed.
He inspected the couch, but found nothing. He ripped
the seat and back from the armchair, but his search
was not rewarded. In the kitchen he opened drawers
and bins, but found nothing except dust and cobwebs.
He rushed back to the Black Star’s room again.</p>
<p>His foot found the trigger of the trapdoor, and he
opened it and crept to the edge of the pit to hold the
candle and peer down. There was nothing but the
smooth cement walls and flooring. He ripped away
rugs, searched the floor, finally stood, panting, beside
the table in despair.</p>
<p>“He lied!” he gasped. “He must have lied—and I
have been losing time!”</p>
<p>He looked at his watch again—it was one minute
after eleven o’clock. It would take him only fifteen
minutes to reach the big hall where the Charity Ball
was being held if he drove swiftly, and so he had
time for further search, but it seemed of no use.</p>
<p>Staggering against the side of the table, he threw
out his hand to grip the edge—and a drawer shot
out!</p>
<p>He forgot the place and danger, and gave a cry
of joy. Accident had accomplished what search had
failed to reveal. The drawer was half filled with
papers. He inspected them quickly—yes, there were
several notes in Faustina’s handwriting, and a forged
check for three thousand dollars in the bolder scrawl
that belonged to Howard Wendell. The Black Star
evidently had had that check close at hand to show
the boy now and then in case he thought of quitting
the organization.</p>
<p>There were other letters, too, the handwriting of
which Verbeck seemed to recognize, but could not
quite place—letters written by other victims of the
Black Star, he supposed.</p>
<p>He carried them to the grate, set them afire, fed
them to the flames one at a time. He ran back to the
table and pressed the edge of it all the way around,
and found one other drawer. There was nothing in
it, however, and he felt that he had secured and destroyed
all the dangerous papers there. The fire in
the grate died down. Verbeck stirred the ashes to
make certain nothing remained that would give a
clew. Then he blew out the candle and started through
the dusty hall to the door.</p>
<p>As he reached it he stopped in alarm. Creeping
toward the house from the hedge were two men.
Far to the right were two more. To the left were
two more. He heard a sibilant whisper from near
the wall a short distance away. Light from the nearest
street lamp flashed against a policeman’s shield.</p>
<p>The police were surrounding the house!</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xiclose-quarters">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id11">CHAPTER XI—CLOSE QUARTERS</SPAN></h1>
<p>Muggs stood in front of the door for a moment
after Verbeck had dashed from the house, then
turned to face the Black Star again. Muggs’ lower
jaw was shot out, his eyes were narrowed, and, but
for Verbeck’s orders, he probably would have launched
himself at the Black Star and attempted the old-fashioned
retaliation known as “beating up.”</p>
<p>Muggs was small in size, but he had great strength
in his arms and shoulders, and possessed knowledge
of a multitude of tricks to aid him in the art of self-defense
or aggression. He worshiped Roger Verbeck.
He was ready at any time to fight for Verbeck, to
defend his life and his happiness. The fact that the
Black Star had caused his master misery was enough
to make Muggs want to throttle the man. But Verbeck
had decreed against that.</p>
<p>Muggs wished he was at his master’s side, helping
him in the fight. He imagined Verbeck driving the
roadster at top speed through the streets to the big
hall; he fancied him entering upon the brilliant scene
there, as he had intended doing at a later hour, getting
Faustina Wendell and her brother to places of safety,
then witnessing the capture of the Black Star’s band.
He anticipated a telephone call from Verbeck telling
of success.</p>
<p>Meanwhile he walked back and forth before his
prisoner, the pistol held in his hand, and raged at the
man on the divan.</p>
<p>“A cur like you causing a man like Mr. Verbeck
pain!” he exclaimed. “Killing’s too good for you!
I hope you get a life sentence. But he’s got you,
Mr. Black Star! My boss has you! Have your little
signs pasted on his bed and all over his library, will
you? Leave sassy letters for him, eh? I reckon you’re
sorry for it now!”</p>
<p>The Black Star still was smoking the cigar Verbeck
had given him. He blinked at Muggs, and puffed at
the cigar furiously, then suddenly bent forward and
bowed his head on his hands.</p>
<p>“That’s right!” Muggs went on. “Think of your
sins! Do a little wailing yourself! Cause my boss
trouble, will you? You’d better put your head in your
hands and wish you’d played straight! Small good
it will do you to repent now, you scum!”</p>
<p>The Black Star’s head bent lower; he was a picture
of misery. Muggs looked at him with scorn and
turned to walk the length of the room. He stopped
his tirade long enough to pick up a sandwich from the
table and begin eating it. He imagined the Black
Star about to weep because disaster had overtaken
him—and Muggs always felt disgusted when he saw
a man weep.</p>
<p>But the Black Star was not weeping—he was endeavoring
a subterfuge. When he bowed his head,
the burning end of his cigar rested against the rope
that bound his wrists together. Now and then he
puffed again, until the rope was scorched. Strand
after strand was burned through as Muggs talked.</p>
<p>“Getting your dirty hands on your betters and making
them join your gang!” Muggs said, walking back
toward him. “You got your hands on one too many,
I guess. And I’ll be a witness at your trial, too! I’ll
help send you over the road——”</p>
<p>He had passed the Black Star and was about to
turn. And at that instant the Black Star sprang.
Muggs was taken unawares. A fist dealt him a blow
on the back of the head. As he staggered forward,
trying to turn, the pistol was wrenched from his hand
and the butt of it crashed against his temple. The
Black Star struck him even as Muggs had struck
the Black Star in his headquarters room, when Roger
Verbeck was shot into the pit.</p>
<p>“Take that, you whelp!” the Black Star cried. “Try
conclusions with me, will you—you and your precious
master? You haven’t whipped me yet! There’s something
in that old house I want—money, and those letters—money
to get me away to Chicago, and the letters
to send to the prosecuting attorney with a sarcastic
little note. I’ll fix your precious master and his girl.
And while he’s trying to save her I’ll be taking a train
out of town. As for my crooks—bah! I never saw
their faces—they are no friends of mine. Let ’em
go to prison—there are plenty more crooks to be had!”</p>
<p>He kicked the prostrate Muggs and hurried from
the house. He did not know exactly in what part
of the city he found himself, but he made for a crossing
where he had seen a trolley car flash past, where
he could make a start downtown.</p>
<p>And Muggs, groaning in pain, remained on the
floor, but he was not fully unconscious. He had heard
every word uttered by the Black Star—they seemed
to ring in his brain. He kept telling himself he wanted
to get up, he wanted to do something—but he could
not. He struggled mentally to rise, and finally his
will was communicated to his muscles. He rolled over,
sat up on the floor.</p>
<p>Dizziness overcame him, but he closed his eyes and
bit his lower lip and tried to master it. And in time
he did, and staggered to the divan and fell upon it.</p>
<p>What was it the Black Star had said? That he
was going to his headquarters to get money and letters,
that he was going to leave the members of his band
to their fate, and make his escape. He must stop
the Black Star! Verbeck’s plans would be shattered
unless he did. And the Black Star would be a living
menace to Verbeck unless he was stopped, and perhaps
would build up another organization in some
other city. Even in this moment of pain Muggs,
though claiming no superior power of reasoning,
could not help but think what a fool the Black Star
had been to tell Verbeck his schemes. That was the
man’s weakness—he had to boast. It was boasting
that had brought him to the close attention of Roger
Verbeck and caused all the trouble.</p>
<p>“My hunch was right,” Muggs muttered. “I told
the boss—that I had a hunch!”</p>
<p>He sat up again; the dizziness had passed, but his
head still pained. He must act quickly, he kept telling
himself over and over. Then the plan for which he
had been groping flashed into his brain.</p>
<p>Muggs sprang to the telephone and called police
headquarters. He got the chief on the wire.</p>
<p>“The Black Star has escaped!” he cried. “You’ll
get his gang down at the dance, but you’ll not get
him unless you hurry. He knocked me down and
escaped. I know where you can catch him—if you’re
quick!”</p>
<p>Shotted queries and commands came to him from
the frenzied chief.</p>
<p>“A house—in the south end of town!” Muggs
gasped. “A deserted house—he has his headquarters
there! He’s gone there to get money, then he’ll
get out of town. You can catch him! ... What’s
that? Oh, yes—I didn’t give you the address!”</p>
<p>Muggs swayed from the telephone, but in a moment
had gathered his strength and was talking again.
He gave the location of the house, and the chief said
that he understood.</p>
<p>“And I’ll be there—I’ll start right now,” Muggs
added. “I’ll be there to identify him.”</p>
<p>Sudden decision had come to Muggs, and he stumbled
away from the instrument without further words,
not even stopping to hang up the receiver. He hurried
across to the door and threw it open and went
out. The stinging cold air refreshed him. He started
along the driveway.</p>
<p>By the time he reached the boulevard, Muggs was
himself again, except that the pain pounded in his
head because of the blows the Black Star had given
him. He hurried along the street, half running. On
the first corner he waited for a car.</p>
<p>An automobile came along, bound for town, and
Muggs hailed the driver. He was a private chauffeur
going to the big hall to fetch home from the ball
some of the women of the family for which he worked.
Muggs told him it was a matter of life and death,
and the chauffeur allowed him to crawl up beside him
and put on speed. Five minutes later, well down in
town, Muggs got off and hailed the first taxicab he
saw, offering double pay if good time was made, and
the cab soon was rushing toward its destination.</p>
<p>The police had acted promptly on Muggs’ information,
and as the taxicab whirled around a corner half
a dozen blocks from the goal, Muggs could hear in
the distance the shrieking of a siren on a police automobile.
He urged his chauffeur to greater speed. At
a corner he stopped the cab, paid the driver, and the
next moment was running down the dark side street
toward the deserted house.</p>
<p>He slipped along the hedge and crept near the wall,
making his way toward the door. It was closed, and
Muggs did not try to open it, but went on to a window.
He raised it as he had that first night when
Verbeck had been with him. Muggs wanted to get
inside and catch the Black Star at work. He wanted
just one blow at the Black Star before the police
arrived, for the blow that had been given him, and
for the misery Verbeck had been caused. Then he’d
gladly hand the Black Star over to the authorities.</p>
<p>He slipped through the window. As he did so the
police automobile stopped on the nearest corner, and
men piled out of it and ran forward to surround the
house. Muggs gave them one glance, then left the
window and stepped softly across the room. Light
was coming through that crack in the door—the Black
Star was there!</p>
<p>Muggs put his eye to the crack. He did not see the
Black Star—he saw Roger Verbeck just blowing out
the candle and starting to enter the dusty hall!</p>
<p>The meaning of the situation flashed over Muggs
in an instant. The Black Star had not arrived yet.
Verbeck had come here to get those letters before
going to the big hall. And he—Muggs—had brought
the police! They would capture Roger Verbeck—and
there was nothing to prove that Roger Verbeck
was not the Black Star!</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xiiat-the-charity-ball">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id12">CHAPTER XII—AT THE CHARITY BALL</SPAN></h1>
<p>Muggs jerked open the door, rushed through the
furnished room, and entered the hall.</p>
<p>“Boss! Boss!” he hissed.</p>
<p>Verbeck was just recoiling from the outer door.
He closed it as noiselessly as he could and hurried
back.</p>
<p>“Boss!”</p>
<p>“That you, Muggs?”</p>
<p>“Yes. That devil worked a trick on me—he got
away. He intended to come here and get money, then
hurry out of town. I—I telephoned the police, boss,
to come here, and I came myself to identify him. I
didn’t know that——”</p>
<p>“All right, Muggs. I understand. You did right.”</p>
<p>“But I let him trick me—and the cops are here.
If they catch you they’ll think you’re the Black Star.”</p>
<p>Verbeck realized that even better than Muggs. If
the capture was made at the big hall, and the prisoners
questioned—as they would be, and mercilessly—Faustina
Wendell and her brother, under the strain, might
give evidence that would convict him.</p>
<p>“We’ve got to get away, boss!”</p>
<p>She had recognized the ring, Verbeck was thinking.
Perhaps it was Howard Wendell who had watched
as he went home that night. Yes—he’d have to escape.</p>
<p>“Oh, boss! I said I had a hunch!”</p>
<p>“Quick!” Verbeck whispered. “And be quiet! My
roadster is at the curb a block away. We must get
out and reach it. How many policemen?”</p>
<p>“A dozen at least, boss—and there may be another
auto full of ’em coming.”</p>
<p>“Hush! Some one is trying that door now. Into
the kitchen with you!”</p>
<p>Muggs hurried through the kitchen door. Verbeck
pushed him into a closet and bade him remain there
until he returned. Then he went from the kitchen
to the dining room, and there he lifted his pistol and
sent three shots ringing into the ceiling.</p>
<p>Another instant and he was back in the kitchen,
in the closet with Muggs.</p>
<p>“Perhaps they’ll think the Black Star has committed
suicide when they hear those shots and find
there isn’t a light,” he whispered. “There is a window
behind you, Muggs. Can you open it quietly and
without attracting attention, while those police are
wondering about the shots?”</p>
<p>Muggs went to work, making no noise. The window
was raised a fraction of an inch at a time. Verbeck
turned the key in the closet door, for things
might come to a pass where seconds of delay would
mean everything.</p>
<p>Finally the window was open. Muggs, putting out
his head cautiously, looked around.</p>
<p>“Only one man on this side, boss,” he reported.
“The others have gone around to the door.”</p>
<p>“They’re in the house,” Verbeck replied. “They’re
flashing their torches—I can see them in the hall
through the keyhole.”</p>
<p>“This side of the house is dark, boss, shaded by
trees. And there is a drift of snow against it. We
might get out without being heard or seen.”</p>
<p>“Try it!” ordered Verbeck grimly.</p>
<p>Muggs went first, like a shadow, and soon was
standing beneath the window in the deep darkness
close to the wall. Verbeck followed, almost afraid to
breathe, expecting every second to hear the challenge
of a policeman and to be taken. But finally he, too,
stood in the shadows against the side of the house.</p>
<p>“One man,” Muggs whispered. “See him? We’ve
got to hurry—those cops in the house will be through
searching soon. You wait here, boss.”</p>
<p>Muggs slipped away beneath the trees; Verbeck
could scarcely see him. Nearer and nearer he got to
the unsuspecting policeman, who was watching the
group in front of the door. Then Muggs sprang, and
the policeman went down. It had been done without
noise, with a single blow, but not effectually enough to
render the officer unconscious for long.</p>
<p>Verbeck hurried across and joined Muggs; each
took a deep breath, and then, just as the man on
the ground raised a cry they darted out into the open,
racing for the hedge.</p>
<p>Behind them was a chorus of cries, a fusillade of
shots. They got to the other side of the hedge and
ran wildly for the street. Behind them came the determined
pursuit, a captain shouting orders. As they
ran, Verbeck found himself wondering at the queerness
of it—that he and Muggs had been forced to attack
a guardian of the law in the interests of justice.
Verbeck promised himself to make that policeman a
handsome present when things were straightened out.</p>
<p>More shots whistled near them—the police were
through the hedge now. On and on they ran, Verbeck
slightly in the lead. They saw a police auto standing
in the street near them, another at the other end of
the block. And Verbeck’s roadster was a block away!</p>
<p>They were in the street now, running at their utmost
speed. Behind them came the pursuing policemen,
while others rushed toward the automobiles, intending
to take up the pursuit in that manner if the
quarry got away. Nearer and nearer they came to the
roadster. When they reached it Muggs sprang to the
wheel. Verbeck threw himself in beside Muggs.</p>
<p>“Shoot at ’em a couple of times, boss, and slow ’em
up,” Muggs said.</p>
<p>“That’s going too far. Get up on the boulevard!”</p>
<p>The car started. Another fusillade of shots came,
none taking effect. The machine skidded around the
corner and dashed at the hill. It lurched and swayed
over the soft, snow-covered ground. Behind came the
two police automobiles, their sirens shrieking.</p>
<p>Muggs reached the boulevard, and opened her up.
He had no idea except to shake off pursuit. Verbeck
glanced at his watch as they passed beneath a
light—it was twenty minutes after eleven. Events
had been occurring rapidly in the last half hour. And
he was working under a close time limit, too. He had
to escape the pursuit, and he had to reach the big
hall before midnight to save Faustina Wendell and
her brother.</p>
<p>Verbeck looked back continually—they did not
seem to be gaining. The streets flashed by. Muggs
narrowly evaded collision a score of times, for he
was taking desperate chances. To escape, and to save
Faustina, and all in forty minutes of time—that was
task enough. Added to the mental strain of this was
the fact that the Black Star had escaped, and that
Verbeck’s case would fall down in part because of it.
Yet some of the work would be good, for the band
would be broken up partially, at least, if the officers
at the big hall caught the thieves with stolen goods
in their possession.</p>
<p>They did not seem to be able to gain on their pursuers,
and the precious minutes were flying. They
took corners at a reckless pace, zigzagging through
the city in a vain attempt to outwit those who followed.
Now and then Verbeck waved his hand to
indicate a turn, and Muggs obeyed.</p>
<p>They skirted the retail district, and got to the wholesale
district, where there was scant traffic at this hour
of the night, but always behind them came the two
police automobiles, sirens shrieking, officers screeching.</p>
<p>“We can’t dodge ’em, boss!” Muggs yelled.</p>
<p>Verbeck looked at his watch again. He had only
thirty minutes! But an automobile going at racing
pace can cover a lot of ground in thirty minutes, even
through the streets of a city. On they dashed, twisting
and turning, never gaining, just holding their own.</p>
<p>Down another hill they raced, and now they were
near the stockyards. Here there was no pavement;
here the mud and slush and slime splashed over the
machine and around them, and the auto lurched and
skidded dangerously.</p>
<p>“Slow down at the next turn,” Verbeck ordered,
“I’ll drop off, and you keep on. Get away if you
can—work back into town and give them the dodge.
I can’t waste another minute—I’ve got to get to the
big hall. And I can’t do it in the machine, for we
can’t shake them off.”</p>
<p>“I can take you back nearer the hall, boss.”</p>
<p>“I’d not dare try to drop off there—they might see
me. But here, where it is so dark—— At the next
turning, Muggs!”</p>
<p>“Boss——”</p>
<p>“Here we are! Get away if you can, and if you
do, come to the hall later. I’ll be all right!”</p>
<p>They made the turning, and Verbeck dropped off,
and then Muggs opened her up again and dashed on
along the muddy street, and behind him rushed the
determined police in their two automobiles. They
passed within forty feet of Roger Verbeck, who was
inside a stockade, in close proximity to a hundred
startled Texas steers.</p>
<p>Less than thirty minutes—and he was at the stockyards.
There was not a second to waste. He could
not glance at his watch to get the exact time without
striking a match, and he did not dare do that because
some watchman might see and apprehend him. He
got out of the cattle pen and started running along
the street in the dark, toward the nearest car line.
Slush and mud splashed over his trousers, and he
realized that he would not be the usual well-groomed
Roger Verbeck society knew when he invaded the
big hall.</p>
<p>He boarded a car, drew his overcoat close around
him, and crouched in a corner. It seemed that the
car stopped at every street, that it made wretched time.
The blocks never before had seemed so long. Verbeck
looked at his watch again, fearing he would be too
late. He felt on the verge of screeching to the motorman
to give the car greater speed.</p>
<p>Finally it was up in town, and Verbeck got off and
rushed for the nearest taxicab stand. In an instant
he was inside a machine, and a chauffeur was taking
chances to earn the extra pay promised him if he
reached the hall before midnight.</p>
<p>Verbeck took out a handkerchief and wiped off
his pumps, and brushed mud and slush from the bottoms
of his trousers as well as he could. He smoothed
down his hair, and tried to regain his composure so
that he would appear outwardly calm at least. He
would have to enter the hall in a matter-of-fact way.
An excited entrance would attract attention.</p>
<p>The cab stopped before one of the entrances of
the hall. Verbeck glanced at his watch again—it was
five minutes of twelve. As he sprang out he tossed
the chauffeur a bill. He took a deep breath, threw
back his shoulders, handed his ticket to the man at
the door, and stepped into the lobby with a smile on
his face.</p>
<p>Three men were loitering in the southwest corner
by the drinking fountain. Two more were approaching,
and a woman was walking toward the fountain
from the opposite direction. All the men wore bits
of red ribbon on their coat lapels—the woman on her
right shoulder.</p>
<p>And Verbeck saw something else, too—men who
were scattered about in couples, each couple pretending
to carry on an animated conversation, but watching
the corner. They were detectives, several of
whom Verbeck recognized.</p>
<p>He walked past the fountain swiftly and turned
the corner. Faustina Wendell and her brother were
approaching him side by side, each decorated with
the red ribbon. In a moment they would be out where
the detectives would see, if they had not been observed
already. Verbeck had removed his hat and coat, and
as he turned the corner he tossed them to a check
boy. He almost ran forward to meet Faustina and
Howard. He knew it lacked but a few seconds to
midnight.</p>
<p>“Quick!” he whispered as he met them. “Don’t ask
questions, but, for Heaven’s sake, do as I say! Take
off that red ribbon—quick! Howard! Get back on
the floor—anywhere to get out of sight. Faustina—come!”</p>
<p>Verbeck himself tore the ribbon from her shoulder
as Howard removed his own. He pushed Howard
ahead of him until he was on the dancing floor. He
grasped Faustina about the waist—he waltzed her out
into the crowd!</p>
<p>The hands of the clock pointed to midnight—and
from the southwest corner of the lobby came sounds
of a commotion as the detectives, obeying their orders,
closed in on the Black Star’s crooks.</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xiiimuggsgreat-little-man">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id13">CHAPTER XIII—MUGGS—GREAT LITTLE MAN</SPAN></h1>
<p>Verbeck felt Faustina grow limp in his arms,
and he waltzed her to a position near the wall
and the door. Howard stepped over to them.</p>
<p>“You—you——” Faustina was trying to speak.</p>
<p>“Don’t say a word,” Verbeck whispered. “I understand
everything. There is no danger for you. I
have destroyed all the notes you wrote and the check
Howard gave.”</p>
<p>“But——”</p>
<p>“Thank Heaven I was in time! I almost failed to
save you!”</p>
<p>“To save me——”</p>
<p>“Careful—whisper! Step closer, Howard. I, too,
was almost caught in the Black Star’s trap. I discovered
his hiding place and took him prisoner. I
knew his gang would have to be caught if ever he
was to be convicted, and so I tried to play a lone hand
against him. Muggs warned me—he had a hunch,
he said. While the Black Star was kept prisoner I
played his part, issued orders, got all of the gang
to be here to-night, then informed the police to take
them in.”</p>
<p>“You——” Howard began.</p>
<p>“Careful—act naturally! I gave you and Faustina
orders, too, not knowing. Then the Black Star told
me what I had done, tried to get me to let him go
free. And I rushed to that house where he had his
headquarters and destroyed the letters and Howard’s
check. Nobody knows you were involved except the
Black Star and myself, and the Black Star cannot
prove anything. And that Chicago partner of his,
you may be sure, will remain away. You’ll never be
bothered. I’ve saved you—but I had a narrow escape.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Roger!” Faustina whispered. “And—almost—I
thought that you were the Black Star. I recognized
the ring and your hand—and Howard watched
that night and saw you go home at four o’clock in
the mor——”</p>
<p>“I was afraid of that,” Verbeck said.</p>
<p>“I didn’t—really—mistrust you,” she said. “But
it—it looked so peculiar. And so we came here to-night—but
we talked it over first, and decided we’d
not steal. I couldn’t do it, dear, and neither could
Howard. And you must not blame Howard too much
about that check. He was young, thoughtless—it has
been a great lesson to him. They really stole the
money from him, and he got it back from them. We
intended going to the corner—at midnight—no matter
what happened. We expected the worst—but we
couldn’t steal.”</p>
<p>“My girl!” Verbeck breathed.</p>
<p>There was more commotion in the lobby. Some
of the dancers were walking in that direction, and
Verbeck led Faustina there, with Howard on her other
side, in a manner as natural as possible.</p>
<p>The Black Star’s men and the woman wore handcuffs.
Detectives were taking jewels from them, gems
they had stolen in the last hour or so. One of the
men already was cursing the Black Star aloud, swearing
that the Black Star had betrayed them and declaring
he would tell everything he knew. Verbeck
was thankful he had gone to the house and destroyed
the letters.</p>
<p>“There were to be eight men and two women,”
he heard a captain say. “We’re one man and one
woman shy.”</p>
<p>“I saw another woman with the red ribbon on,”
spoke up one of the detectives. “Maybe I’d recognize
her if I saw her again.”</p>
<p>“We’ll have all the exits guarded, and you can
look——”</p>
<p>Verbeck whirled to Faustina.</p>
<p>“We’ve got to get out of this quick!” he said.
“That man may have seen you, may recognize you.
If we get out now we are safe, for if he saw you
on the street afterward in different clothes he’d never
recognize you. And nobody would suspect Faustina
Wendell. But right now it would be dangerous for
him to see you.”</p>
<p>“What can we do?” Howard asked in sudden alarm.</p>
<p>“Quiet! Act naturally, for Heaven’s sake. Come
with me to the door. You came in the electric?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” Faustina said.</p>
<p>“Get all our things in the check room, Howard—as
naturally as possible, remember—and meet us at
the door——”</p>
<p>Already he was leading Faustina toward the nearest
entrance. The captain of detectives was rushing
there to go on guard immediately. Howard came
from the check room, and Verbeck put Faustina’s
wrap over her shoulders.</p>
<p>“Wait a minute there!” It was the captain of
detectives who called to them. “I want to see you
before you go—— Oh, ’tis you, Mr. Verbeck? You
and your young lady and her brother? Go right
along, sir. We’re trying to catch a crook or two—we
want to watch all who leave. Sorry to have
bothered you, sir——”</p>
<p>“That’s all right, captain,” Verbeck said. “I hope
you catch your crooks.” He lifted his hat and led
Faustina out into the corridor, Howard following.
They went out into the softly falling snow and the
blur of thousands of electric lights to safety.</p>
<p>They started toward the corner where the electric
had been left. But before they reached it Verbeck
halted in surprise, and with an exclamation of unbelief
on his lips. Muggs was running toward him.</p>
<p>“May I speak to you a minute—boss?” he asked.</p>
<p>Wondering, Verbeck excused himself and stepped
to one side.</p>
<p>“I’ve got the Black Star in the car across the street,
where it’s dark,” Muggs said. “I gave him a crack
on the head and threw him on the floor of the car
and put a robe over him—but he’s liable to come to
any time.”</p>
<p>“How——”</p>
<p>“For the love of Mike, boss, hand the devil over
to the police and get rid of him. I’ve still got that
hunch!”</p>
<p>Verbeck hurried back to the others.</p>
<p>“Get in the electric and wait for me at the corner,”
he directed. “I’ll be only a minute or so.”</p>
<p>As they started on, Verbeck followed Muggs across
the street. He knew exactly what he intended doing;
there would not be any waste of time.</p>
<p>“We’ll act on that hunch of yours right now,
Muggs,” he said. “Drive to the entrance of the hall.”</p>
<p>In a moment they were there. Verbeck went inside
and called the captain of detectives to him.</p>
<p>“Bring a couple of your men and come out here,”
he said. “I’ve got the Black Star for you. Yes—come
along! I’m the man who caught him, captain,
and did the telephoning to the chief.”</p>
<p>The captain and two others followed Verbeck to the
curb. The Black Star was groaning, but not yet
conscious.</p>
<p>“Take him away,” Verbeck directed. “I’ve got to
escort my fiancée home, and she’s waiting in a car
at the corner. This is Muggs, my man. He’ll follow
out to my fiancée’s home with the car, and I’ll drive
right back in it to headquarters and tell you the story.
Watch that man, captain—he’s a smooth customer.
Muggs—you understand?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir,” said Muggs.</p>
<p>He stepped aside with Verbeck as the officers carried
the Black Star around the corner to a patrol
wagon—the Black Star was wearing handcuffs.</p>
<p>“The police followed me back up in town,” Muggs
explained. “I couldn’t get away by running, so I
tricked ’em. I went to the union depot—time for a
bunch of trains to be due, you see, and a big crowd
there. I got a lead on ’em and whirled around the
corner and stopped my car among a bunch of others—got
out and was standing on the walk looking innocent
and picking my teeth when the cops rushed by.
They went on past the depot—supposed I had gone
that way. Easy! Then I started up again to get
back near the hall. Remember that dark space near
the middle of the viaduct, where so many holdups
come off? Just as I got there I saw Mr. Black Star
sneaking along with a suit case in one hand. Stopped
the car and smashed him on the head with a wrench
before he knew it! Threw him in the car and covered
him up—see? Easy!”</p>
<p>Verbeck’s hand gripped that of Muggs for an instant,
and then he hurried to join Faustina and
Howard.</p>
<p>“We’ve got the Black Star, too,” was all he said.
“I’ll have to run back to police headquarters after I
go home with you, and tell them all about it. And
I’ll explain the entire thing to both of you to-morrow
morning. I suppose you’ll kiss me now, Faustina,
even if Howard is looking? You wouldn’t, you know,
when you suspected me of being the Black Star.”</p>
<p>Although she was driving the car, Faustina ran the
risk of collision by taking her eyes off the street long
enough to do as Verbeck wished.</p>
<p>Then, satisfied, he settled back in the seat beside
Howard.</p>
<p>“One thing,” he said, “I shall do. After this I’ll
pay more attention to any hunch Muggs may get.
Great little man—Muggs!”</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xivunexpected-news">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id14">CHAPTER XIV—UNEXPECTED NEWS</SPAN></h1>
<p>It was exactly one o’clock in the morning when
Mr. Roger Verbeck clasped in his arms Miss
Faustina Wendell—dainty, sweet, and twenty-four—and
pressed upon her lips an ardent kiss.</p>
<p>“It is time for little girls to be in bed,” he said after
the kiss. “We’ll talk it all over this evening.”</p>
<p>There was another kiss, and then Roger Verbeck
followed Howard Wendell to the outer door, turned
up the collar of his ulster, and hurried out into the
blinding snowstorm to where Muggs awaited him.</p>
<p>Muggs sat behind the wheel of Roger Verbeck’s
powerful roadster, his chin down in his coat collar,
and allowed the soft snow to pile against the side of
his head, meanwhile listening to the purring of the
engine and living over again the events of the past two
days. Muggs was a modest man, but even in his
modesty he was forced to admit that he had something
to do with the fact that the Black Star now was in the
hands of the police.</p>
<p>“Dreaming, eh?” Verbeck demanded, stopping beside
the roadster.</p>
<p>“Excuse me, boss. I didn’t think you’d be out so
soon.”</p>
<p>“We’ve got to hustle down to police headquarters—remember
that, Muggs. We must tell the chief and
his boys what happened. All they know is that they
have made some arrests on our information. Drive
slowly.”</p>
<p>Muggs started the roadster and drove on. He
stopped the machine in the blinding snow at a corner
and squawked the horn. Reasonably sure at last that
he could cross without maiming half a dozen pedestrians
for life, he sent the roadster down a side street
and stopped it before police headquarters.</p>
<p>“Get out, and come in, Muggs,” Verbeck directed.
“You’re in on this. I hope we can keep away from
the newspaper boys, or we’ll both have our pictures
in the papers. Come along.”</p>
<p>They hurried across the walk, threw open the front
door of headquarters, and entered. And just inside
the door they stopped, confronted by a scene that was
a commingling of confusion and hysteria.</p>
<p>Half a dozen detectives were scattered along one
wall, looking as if they wished to be elsewhere. Three
or four uniformed officers stood about nervously. A
captain sat behind his desk and chewed savagely at
his mustache. And up and down the center of the
big room strode the chief of police, waving his arms
and bellowing accusations and charges of cowardice
and incompetence.</p>
<p>“Babies! Fools!” the chief was shouting. “I’ll
have the shields off every one of you for this! Haven’t
the newspapers been laughing at us enough? You’ll
drive me to drink! I’ll hand my resignation to the
mayor in the morning! I’ll—— How d’you do, Mr.
Verbeck?”</p>
<p>“How do you do, chief?”</p>
<p>“Here’s the man who did it—Roger Verbeck! Because
he got peeved at this Black Star he turns in
and runs him down—what you boobs are supposed
to get paid for doing! He takes chances—he and
his chauffeur, or whatever he calls him—and he gets
his man! Keeps the police out of it, and does it all
by himself, just to show you up——”</p>
<p>“Scarcely for that reason, chief,” Roger put in.</p>
<p>“Don’t misunderstand me, Mr. Verbeck—I’m not
belittling what you’ve done. I’m just showing these
alleged sleuths that they are wanting in intelligence.
Here’s a plain citizen gets peeved and goes out and
rounds up a big crook—hands him over to you all done
up in a bundle and handcuffed, watches while you
throw him in the wagon, and then——”</p>
<p>The chief stopped a moment and gurgled in anger.</p>
<p>“<em>And then, by Heaven, right at the door of headquarters,
you let him escape!</em>”</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xvthe-challenge">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id15">CHAPTER XV—THE CHALLENGE</SPAN></h1>
<p>Silence for a moment, save for Muggs’ single
gurgle of disgust, and then:</p>
<p>“What’s that?” Roger Verbeck demanded, stepping
forward and facing the chief.</p>
<p>“They let him escape, I’m telling you! How, in
the name of all that’s human, they could do it is more
than I can guess! Don’t ask me—ask some of these
boobs! For months we’ve been crazy to get this Black
Star—we have him handcuffed and in the wagon—and
he escapes! He’s been gone an hour or more.
He’s probably ransacked the mayor’s house and blown
up the vault of the First National Bank in that time,
just to show his anger at being pinched. Ah-h!”</p>
<p>The chief sputtered his wrath again.</p>
<p>“Out!” he cried to his men. “Out—every man of
you! Some of you saw that crook’s face—though I
doubt if you can tell me now whether he’s got one
eye or two. Out, and get him! Don’t come back until
you do! Get out of here—and I’ll break the man
who dares to report no progress! Out, fools!”</p>
<p>Glad to escape their superior’s wrath, the detectives
scattered, and the uniformed men ascended the
stairs to the room used by the reserves, there to discuss
the latest event in lowered voices, for the chief’s
command did not apply to the “harness bulls.”</p>
<p>The chief beckoned Verbeck and Muggs to follow
him into his private office.</p>
<p>“It’s enough to drive a man insane!” he exploded,
reaching for his box of cigars and passing it around.</p>
<p>“How did it happen?” Verbeck asked.</p>
<p>“Don’t ask me! The wagon stopped before the
jail door as usual. We had the eight crooks and this
Black Star. As they started to get out, two of the
crooks bumped my men aside, two more tripped at
the end of the wagon, the female crooks of the gang
pretended to faint, and the Black Star made a dash
for the alley. One of the fools took a shot at him
and smashed a fourth-story window across the street.
He made a clean get-away with the bracelets on him!
Think of it! Right here at headquarters! They
thought he was knocked out——”</p>
<p>“Probably he was shamming,” Verbeck observed in
an emotionless voice.</p>
<p>“You’d think anybody’d watch out for that—but
not these fine detectives of mine! And every newspaper
in town knows we had our hands on the Black
Star and let him go. They’ve been pestering the life
out of me, and I tipped off the capture as soon as my
men telephoned from the Charity Ball, where you
handed the crook over, thinking the department would
get a little credit. And now they’ll be worse on me than
before. I’ll resign! I’m done! But I’ll break some
of ’em first——”</p>
<p>“Your men are after him, aren’t they?” Verbeck
interrupted.</p>
<p>“Yes—they’re after him. They’ve been after him
for four months, and a lot of good it has done. You
tell me your story, Verbeck; there are some things I
don’t know.”</p>
<p>Speaking quickly, Verbeck did as he had been requested,
telling the chief of his discovery of the Black
Star, and of how he had played master criminal for
a day in an effort to corral the band. He explained
how the Black Star had an organization that gathered
information for him and another that committed the
crimes. When he had finished the chief chewed at
his cigar and smote the desk with a palm.</p>
<p>“Great scheme!” he exclaimed. “Got an organization
that reaches into every corner, eh? No wonder
we had a time trying to get a line on him! Oh, he’s
a master crook all right! Great Scott! Maybe some
of his men are right here in headquarters!”</p>
<p>“It is possible,” Verbeck said.</p>
<p>“Well, his perfect plans are spoiled now, at any
rate. And half a dozen of my men have seen his
face—besides you and this man Muggs of yours. So
I suppose he’ll make a break and get away; he’ll be
afraid to work here any more. We’ll send his eight
crooks over the road, but not the Black Star, eh?
That’ll be one nice stain on my department! But,
thank Heaven, his work is done in this town!”</p>
<p>Suddenly the chief sat forward and regarded Verbeck
gravely.</p>
<p>“See here!” he exclaimed. “There may be considerable
danger for you. Even if the Black Star
beats it, and his plans are smashed and his organization
scattered, some of his friends may take it out
on you for getting hands on him and spoiling their
game. You may be a marked man. Better let me
send a couple of good men up to that bachelor apartment
of yours. And you’d better stay, close around
home for a few days, until we know how things are
going to be.”</p>
<p>“Pardon me,” said Verbeck, “but from what you
have told me to-night I scarcely think a couple of
your men would be of much value. I’d rather rely on
myself and Muggs.”</p>
<p>“Rubbing it in, eh? I don’t blame you! But you
can have the men if you want them.”</p>
<p>“No, thanks, chief. I’ll go along home now and get
some sleep. Here’s hoping you catch your man. He
didn’t have much of a start, and he had handcuffs
on his wrists—but he’s a slippery customer. My man
can testify to that. He slipped away from him once,
and left a bump on his head when he did it.”</p>
<p>“Better let me send up those men, Mr. Verbeck, even
if they are pretty much worthless. We don’t want
to have you found knifed in bed some morning.”</p>
<p>“I’m not afraid of any of the gang, chief, and the
Black Star can’t organize again and issue orders until
he has a new headquarters. And, remember, I’ve
talked to the Black Star. He isn’t the sort of man
who kills.”</p>
<p>“No?”</p>
<p>“No; he’s the sort that takes a pride in being a
master criminal who uses brains instead of violence
in pulling jobs no other man would approach and in
doing them in a neat manner. Did he ever leave a
mussed-up safe behind?”</p>
<p>“He generally unlocks ’em, takes what he wants,
puts one of his blamed black stars in ’em, and locks
’em again—cuss him!”</p>
<p>“There you have his character, chief. Good night!”</p>
<p>Verbeck and Muggs made their exit in dignified
and proper manner, and they did not speak until they
were in the roadster and a block from police headquarters,
on their way home. Then Muggs broke the
silence in characteristic fashion.</p>
<p>“Whaddaya know about that!” he exclaimed in
great disgust.</p>
<p>“The Black Star is a clever man, Muggs.”</p>
<p>“His pals helped that get-away.”</p>
<p>“Certainly—thinking that, with the Black Star at
liberty, the organization will come to their rescue in
some manner.”</p>
<p>“I noticed you swallowed that bunk the chief handed
out about this Black Star making a break for other
parts, now that he has been seen by a few cops.”</p>
<p>“You think I swallowed it, Muggs?”</p>
<p>“I was hopin’ you didn’t.”</p>
<p>“Well, I didn’t, Muggs. I boasted I could capture
the Black Star, and he’s just the sort of man to try
to show me I cannot. I wouldn’t be the least bit
surprised if he remained in the city for the purpose
of making a laughingstock of me.”</p>
<p>“That’s the way I’m looking at it, boss.”</p>
<p>“I fancy we’ll hear from him in a few days, Muggs.”</p>
<p>They put the roadster in the garage at the rear of
the bachelor-apartment house, and then ascended to
Verbeck’s apartment. Muggs snapped on the lights
in the library, while Verbeck threw off hat and overcoat
and gloves and reached for his favorite pipe.
He glanced at the clock on the desk—it was within
a few minutes of four in the morning.</p>
<p>He gave an exclamation, took a quick step forward,
and looked at the face of the clock again.</p>
<p>On the glass, directly over the figure IX, <em>had been
pasted a tiny black star</em>!</p>
<p>“That wasn’t there when I dressed last evening,”
Verbeck mused. “So he’s been here since he escaped
the police, eh? That is pretty swift work!”</p>
<p>Muggs hurried in from the bedroom.</p>
<p>“Boss! Look!” he cried. “This was pinned on
your pillow!”</p>
<p>He extended an envelope. A black star was pasted
on it. The letter was addressed to Roger Verbeck.</p>
<p>“Swift work!” Roger exclaimed again.</p>
<p>“Boss, my hunch is workin’ yet! Telephone the
chief to send up them men—let him send twenty of
em!”</p>
<p>“One moment, Muggs! Your solicitude for my
welfare is overwhelming—but suppose we read this
entertaining epistle before making a move. Perhaps
I’ll want to fight this out alone.”</p>
<p>He ripped the envelope open, took out a sheet of
paper, unfolded it, and read:</p>
<blockquote>
<p><span class="small-caps">Mr. Roger Verbeck</span>: You almost had me,
but at the supreme moment I escaped. You have
seen me; so have police officers and eight of my
band who never saw me before. You have discovered
some things concerning me, but what you
have found out is as nothing when compared to
what you do not know. This little incident has
served to put an edge on my wit.</p>
<p>You boasted you could catch me—do it! And
the next time hang on to me until I am behind
the bars—and even then I’ll triumph. I laugh
at you and your efforts, as I laugh at the police.
I am not going to run away! I’ll even keep you
informed of my movements—and then you cannot
get me. And, for the trouble you and your man
have caused me, I am going to get you, Roger
Verbeck, and get you good! I do not contemplate
violence on your person—that would be the
resort of an ordinary thug. But I’ll hurt you,
Roger Verbeck, in a thousand ways, break you
down, ruin you, make you a joke, until you’ll
curse the day you first heard of the Black Star.
It’s a fight to a finish between us. Every place
you turn you’ll be reminded of me and my purpose.</p>
<p>Sleep well to-night, and in security, for you’ll
need the rest. The moment you awake the fight
is on. And I’ll know when you awake. I’ll know
every move you make, and I’ll almost know every
thought in your head—you poor fool!</p>
</blockquote>
<p class="center">*****</p>
<p>Roger Verbeck took the most of that epistle as a
matter of course, but his eyes narrowed to two tiny
slits when he read that “poor fool,” and his lips set
in a straight line. That “poor fool” stung Roger
Verbeck almost as much as the unpardonable phrase
would have stung him.</p>
<p>He handed the Black Star’s letter to the waiting
Muggs.</p>
<p>“We’ve fought some pretty good battles, Muggs,
but nothing to what this is going to be,” he said.
“On your toes, Muggs! Forget that hunch of yours!
We don’t quit until I stand in court and hear a judge
sentence the Black Star for his crimes, until I watch
him pass in through the doors of a State prison.
Think what he’s done, Muggs—of the decent persons
he’s forced into his gang! This is going to be the
hardest fight of our lives.”</p>
<p>“My coat’s off, boss, and my sleeves rolled up!”</p>
<p>“Good! We’ll fight alone, if we can. There is no
one we can trust. Police officers, persons we meet
every day, our acquaintances, even our friends, may
be in his organization—and he’ll soon get it working
again. But we can trust each other, Muggs.”</p>
<p>“You said something there, boss! You bet we
can!”</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xvia-nocturnal-visit">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id16">CHAPTER XVI—A NOCTURNAL VISIT</SPAN></h1>
<p>Verbeck opened his eyes at eleven o’clock that
morning after a dreamless, refreshing sleep to
find Muggs standing at the foot of his bed, fully
dressed, grinning, the morning newspapers in his
hands.</p>
<p>“They’ve got it all, boss,” he reported. “That
Black Star sent letters to the papers last night by
special messengers, and from a downtown hotel.
Whaddaya think of his nerve? Here it is—story of
the whole thing, givin’ us a lot of credit and makin’
fun of the police for lettin’ the crook escape. I’ll
bet that fat chief has a fit when he reads this!”</p>
<p>“Probably he read it several hours ago and already
has had his fit,” Verbeck said. “Had breakfast?
Yes? You’re the original early bird, Muggs. Well,
I’m famished!”</p>
<p>Verbeck bathed and dressed in record time, and
hurried to the café in the basement, eager to eat and
be gone before the regular luncheon crowd gathered
to point him out and make remarks about his pursuit
and capture of the Black Star.</p>
<p>No sooner had he seated himself at his favorite
table than the waiter placed before his eyes an extra
edition of one of the evening papers, damp from the
press. Roger spread it open to find his own portrait
gazing at him from the front page, and as he waited
for his toast and eggs and coffee he read.</p>
<p>The Black Star had sent a letter to the evening
paper also, but through the mail, with a special-delivery
stamp affixed. Again the master criminal
scoffed at the police, threatened some particularly
daring crimes to demonstrate that he did not fear
them, and then paid his respects to Roger Verbeck.
A reproduction of the last paragraph of the Black
Star’s letter was shown in the paper:</p>
<blockquote>
<span class="small-caps">To All Whom It May Concern</span>: There is
war between myself and Roger Verbeck, who
caused me considerable trouble the last few days.
I hereby warn all persons not to give aid to this
enemy of mine—to refuse him shelter, food,
clothing, refuse to hold conversation with him,
or have business dealings with him of any sort
whatsoever. Against those who dare disobey this
order I’ll strike—and strike hard.</blockquote>
<p class="center">*****</p>
<p>Roger smiled as he read that paragraph; he presumed
it was one of the Black Star’s jokes—for he
had discovered that the master rogue had a sense of
humor. Certainly it could be nothing else. Roger
Verbeck was the last of one of the city’s old families,
a young man respected by all, with unlimited wealth
at his command, possessing a myriad of acquaintances
and legions of friends. This warning of the Black
Star was very liable to fall upon deaf ears.</p>
<p>Still, it was embarrassing, and Roger found himself
frowning because of the unpleasant publicity. That
was one way the Black Star could fight him—by making
him ridiculous through the newspapers; for it was
certain that the papers would print any letters the
Black Star sent them. Roger caught a vision of future
days of horror, with every one pointing him out,
joking him, making his life miserable. On the streets,
at any of his clubs, wherever he met his friends, his
name would be coupled with that of the Black Star.
There would be but one escape—and that by capturing
the master crook, turning the laugh on him, and so
ending the affair.</p>
<p>Having breakfasted, Verbeck had Muggs get out
the roadster, and they drove to police headquarters.
The snowstorm was at an end, and the day was warm
for March. But they failed to find the spirit of spring
prevalent when police headquarters was reached.</p>
<p>A sleepy chief paced the floor of his private office,
chewing at his inevitable black cigar. Detectives,
plain-clothes men, and uniformed officers rushed in
and out. Telephones rang.</p>
<p>“Don’t ask me,” the chief roared when he saw his
visitors. “I’ll tell you—it’ll take less time. We
haven’t got him. We haven’t even discovered a trace
of him. The handcuffs he wore were found in an
alley less than half a dozen blocks away—and that’s
all. He’s found time to send letters to the papers—and
to me.”</p>
<p>“He sent one to you?” Roger asked.</p>
<p>“He did. If ever I get my two hands around the
throat of that Black Star I’ll choke the life out of
him. I wouldn’t care if he got mad and sent me cuss
words—but he called me a blanked fool!”</p>
<p>“Ah! We are fellow sufferers,” Verbeck said.
“That’s what he called me.”</p>
<p>“You! You’ve heard from him?”</p>
<p>“When I got home this morning his black stars
were pasted around my apartment, and I found a
letter pinned to my pillow—or rather Muggs did.
Here it is.”</p>
<p>Verbeck handed it over; the chief read it. Then
the head of the city’s police department sat down
before his desk, thought for a moment, and finally
pushed a button. A sergeant entered.</p>
<p>“Send me Detective Riley!” he ordered.</p>
<p>A moment’s waiting, while the chief chewed his
cigar and Roger and Muggs puffed at theirs. Then
Riley entered and saluted his chief respectfully.</p>
<p>Detective Riley was a man of fifty, and he had
been in the department since the age of twenty-one.
He knew every inch of the city, and was a man of
nerve and resource. But for his honest and outspoken
opinions of political leaders undoubtedly he
would have been high in the department. As it was,
he was satisfied.</p>
<p>“I believe you know Mr. Verbeck, Riley,” the chief
said.</p>
<p>“I certainly do, sir,” the detective answered, grinning
at Roger. “His father got me my job on the
force, and I taught Roger how to hold a bat when
he played ball on the corner lot near the old Verbeck
place.”</p>
<p>“Um! You know this town pretty well, too, and
you’re an honest man. Sit down—and listen. You’re
going on the trail of this Black Star, Riley. And if
you’re in at the death when he’s nabbed I’ll see you
made a captain, if I have to go into politics myself
and slay half a dozen ward bosses who don’t like your
looks.”</p>
<p>“Some special line of work, sir? I’m already assigned
to the case.”</p>
<p>“So is every other man in the department. Yes—this
is a special line of work. You are to glue yourself
to Mr. Roger Verbeck and hang on. Understand?”</p>
<p>“But, chief——” Roger began.</p>
<p>“Just a moment, Mr. Verbeck. I admire your courage
and all that, but we’ve got to do this in proper
fashion. You’ve been threatened by this Black Star.
He’s going to take you partly into his confidence so
he can make a fool of you. I want Riley with you
for two reasons. The first is that you are going to
have police protection whether you wish it or not. If
Riley is with you and Muggs, one man can be awake
and on the job always, yet all of you get plenty of
rest. The second is that Riley can add his police experience
and knowledge of crooks and the city to your
natural courage and cleverness. Understand? If this
Black Star communicates with you or makes a move
against you in any way Riley will be there and on
the job to help. You’ll not lose time sending to headquarters
for assistance.”</p>
<p>“I understand, chief.”</p>
<p>“Another thing. Do you feel you can trust Riley?”</p>
<p>“I certainly do,” said Verbeck earnestly.</p>
<p>“Good enough! It isn’t every one we can trust in
this game. You take Riley with you and go after the
Black Star, independent of this department—just as
you did before, except that you’ll have a regular officer
along. And we’ll work on our own lines. And between
us, we’d ought to get our hands on him. Riley
knows a certain private phone number he can use in
case of emergency, and a call will rush a score of men
to any part of the city. That’s agreeable? Get out,
then, and take Riley with you! I’m going to lie down
on the couch and take a nap.”</p>
<p>Verbeck laughed and led the way from the private
office, waiting in the lobby with Muggs while Riley
went to his locker for certain paraphernalia he always
had on his person when engaged on a particular case.</p>
<p>“I like that guy,” Muggs confided in a whisper.</p>
<p>“The chief?”</p>
<p>“Naw! This Riley. I’m glad he’s goin’ to be
along.”</p>
<p>“If I needed a recommendation for Riley—which
luckily I do not—that would be the best I could get,”
Roger said, and he meant every word of it.</p>
<p>“I think the three of us can make the Black Star
look like a sucker!”</p>
<p>“You don’t want to underestimate the Black Star,
Muggs. Whenever you feel inclined to do so, remember
a certain smash behind the ear he gave you
recently when you thought his hands were tied.”</p>
<p>“He’ll never do it again!” Muggs declared. “If I
ever get my lamps on that man again I’ll forget how
to turn my head!”</p>
<p>Riley returned, and the three went out to the roadster.</p>
<p>The greater part of the afternoon was spent in
Verbeck’s apartment discussing plans for the campaign.
There was no sense, Riley pointed out, in
running blindly around town trying to find the man
they wanted; for the Black Star, it was to be supposed,
was in hiding for the time being, and without
doubt planning a campaign of his own. Detectives
were watching railroad stations, hotels, and lodging
houses, and the deserted residence where the Black
Star had had his headquarters. There was nothing
for the three men who sat in Verbeck’s library to do
except wait for the master criminal to make the first
move.</p>
<p>Roger visited Faustina Wendell for an hour that
evening, while Muggs and Riley remained outside in
front of the house where she lived with her mother
and brother. Then the three returned to Roger’s
apartment and spent an hour around the pool table.</p>
<p>“A crook works at night if he’s breaking safes
and vaults,” Riley said. “Hence it is proper that
we are prepared for night work. I suggest we never
retire until four or five o’clock in the morning and
get up about noon. Then we’ll be ready to jump if
anything happens.”</p>
<p>“Get a deck of cards, Muggs,” Verbeck ordered.
“What Detective Riley says goes. By the way, Riley,
I’ve ordered the roadster left standing in front of
the building all night, ready for a quick jump.”</p>
<p>“That’s the stuff! I wish this Black Star would
hurry up and start something. I’m anxious to get
into action.”</p>
<p>Tired of cards, they played pool again, and then
they read, and then they talked of the Black Star some
more, and finally they began wondering if it wasn’t
time to retire.</p>
<p>“Just four o’clock,” Verbeck announced.</p>
<p>And then the telephone rang!</p>
<p>Roger stepped across the room to the desk and
picked up the instrument; Muggs and Riley were on
their feet, eager to know what the message would
be, and hoping it was a call to battle.</p>
<p>“Is this Mr. Verbeck’s apartment?” a voice demanded.</p>
<p>“Yes,” Roger answered.</p>
<p>“And who is this speaking?”</p>
<p>“This is Mr. Verbeck.”</p>
<p>“Indeed? I thought perhaps it was that dolt, Detective
Riley, from headquarters. I understand he is
a more or less permanent guest of yours.”</p>
<p>“Who is this?” Roger demanded in turn.</p>
<p>“Pardon me for not telling you before. This is
the Black Star.”</p>
<p>“What’s that?” Roger exclaimed.</p>
<p>“I assure you I am the Black Star. This is not
one of your friends playing a joke on you. I just
thought I’d call you up and say that the letter I sent
the newspapers was meant. I’ve already made a move
against the manager of the apartment house where you
live because he hasn’t ousted you.”</p>
<p>“Indeed?” Roger asked, beckoning Riley and Muggs
toward him.</p>
<p>“You think I am jesting? I never jest about my
work, Mr. Verbeck. I imagine you’ll have to find
another home before night. Pardon me if I ring
off now. It is possible you are sending Detective
Riley or Muggs to another telephone to trace this
call. And that would be both unnecessary and embarrassing
for me. For I am speaking to you from
the office of your own apartment house. Good-by!”</p>
<p>Roger Verbeck dropped the telephone, spoke a
dozen quick words, and was running out into the hall,
closely followed by Riley and Muggs. Down three
flights of stairs, four steps at a time, they rushed,
and into the lobby.</p>
<p>Not a person was in sight.</p>
<p>From outside came the roaring of an automobile
engine. They ran to the door, hurled it open, and
hurried out. Tearing down the broad boulevard was
Roger Verbeck’s big roadster, and the man who drove
it turned an instant to wave one hand at them.</p>
<p>“The nerve of——” Muggs began.</p>
<p>Detective Riley emptied his automatic at the vanishing
car, and growled low in his throat because
he knew he had missed.</p>
<p>“The night clerk——” Verbeck cried. “Where was
the clerk?”</p>
<p>They rushed back into the lobby. They heard doors
slamming on the floors above as tenants, aroused by
the turmoil and shooting, started an investigation.
And they heard groans coming from behind the long
desk.</p>
<p>Verbeck vaulted the counter, and cried out in surprise.
On the floor, bound hand and foot, and gagged,
was the night clerk of the bachelor-apartment house.</p>
<p>In the middle of his forehead was pasted a tiny
black star!</p>
<p>And pinned to his breast was a card that bore this
information:</p>
<blockquote>
<span class="small-caps">To the Manager</span>: This is just a hint that
Roger Verbeck must go. If he does not, my
next demonstration will be more disastrous.</blockquote>
<p class="center">*****</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xviiinterrupted-conversation">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id17">CHAPTER XVII—INTERRUPTED CONVERSATION</SPAN></h1>
<p>Detective Riley grasped the nearest telephone
and sent an alarm to headquarters. Less
than an hour later the report came that Verbeck’s
roadster had been found abandoned on a corner in
the heart of the city, but that no trace of the Black
Star had been discovered.</p>
<p>In the meantime the night clerk had told his simple
story. A man had entered and asked whether a Mr.
Rodney Stone lived there. The clerk said no such
person was registered. Sure that no other person
was in the office, the visitor pulled an automatic from
his pocket and ordered the clerk to throw up his hands.</p>
<p>The clerk was forced to obey, and believed at the
time that he was the victim of an ordinary holdup
man, and rejoiced that all funds, except a few dollars,
were locked in the safe, which he could not open.
But his visitor walked behind the counter and forced
the clerk to stretch out on the floor, threatening death
if he made a sound. He bound and gagged him,
pinned the card to his breast, and stamped his brow
with a black star, then walked calmly to the switchboard,
looked at the guest list to find the number
of Verbeck’s apartment, called Verbeck, held his conversation,
and hurried out of the front door.</p>
<p>Gentlemen guests of the house in all sorts of night
attire heard this story and looked upon Roger Verbeck
with varied emotions. Some envied him the adventure
and publicity, others feared for him, but the great
majority was thinking of that warning and wondering
whether they could find new quarters that day, and
Roger Verbeck knew it.</p>
<p>The manager said nothing, for Verbeck had lived
there for years and was excellent pay, but he looked
worried.</p>
<p>“I’ll discuss this matter with you later,” Roger said,
and he beckoned Muggs and Riley and led the way
back to his apartment.</p>
<p>There they lighted fresh cigars and sat at the long
table in the library, Muggs and Riley silent and waiting
for Roger to speak.</p>
<p>“Well, we’ve got to move,” he said after a time.
“If we don’t, the others will, for they’ll be afraid
the Black Star will demolish the place with a bomb.
Perhaps it’ll be best, after all.”</p>
<p>“But where?” Riley asked. “He’d bomb another
hotel just as quick if that’s his game.”</p>
<p>“I have a place of my own—the old Verbeck place,
Riley. You know it. Muggs knows it, too, for there
we kept the Black Star prisoner for a day and night
before we handed him over to the police.”</p>
<p>“I remember it,” Riley said.</p>
<p>“A big, old house in the middle of a block of
ground, surrounded by trees and tangled underbrush.
I intend to have it torn down and a new residence
erected in its place after I’m married. We can go
there with fuel and provisions and make ourselves
comfortable. There is a telephone, so we can keep
in touch with headquarters. We’ll be by ourselves,
and so need fear no spies of the Black Star. We can
conduct our campaign from there.”</p>
<p>“Great!” the detective exclaimed.</p>
<p>“No fear of spies, and nobody to bother us. We’ll
make it our headquarters. One of us can be on guard
all the time. The Black Star will have to be very
clever to get at us there. And if he does he’ll be
injuring my own property, and he’ll not be hurting
some outsider who has no concern in this affair. Let’s
get some sleep, then go ahead with our preparations.”</p>
<p>It was noon when a much-relieved apartment-house
manager saw them drive away in Verbeck’s recovered
roadster, the back of the car heaped high with provisions.
Half an hour later they had reached the
old Verbeck place and unloaded the car; Muggs had
built a roaring fire in the living-room fireplace, and
they were making themselves comfortable.</p>
<p>“This thing of working in the dark gets on my
nerves,” Riley admitted. “I’d rather catch sight of
this Black Star committing a crime and have a chase,
a sort of running fight, and either victory or defeat
at its end. But what can we do? Here we must
sit, waiting for him to make a move. How do we know
where he’ll strike next? He may rob a bank, rifle
some lady’s jewel case—we can’t tell. We’ve got to
wait until he does something, and then take up the
trail. You had a hot trail before, Roger—one of his
men led you to him and you had a chance to get
hands on him.”</p>
<p>“I fancy that, in his egotism, he’ll announce where
he’ll strike next,” Verbeck said. “He’s done it before.”</p>
<p>“If he does it again we’ll get him!” Riley said.</p>
<p>They made a tour of the grounds and looked
through the house. There was little more than dust
and cobwebs in the house, and the furniture was covered,
except in the big living room and one bedroom,
which they made habitable. Then they devoured the
luncheon Muggs had prepared.</p>
<p>It was four o’clock in the afternoon when there
came a knock at the front door, and when Verbeck
opened it he found ten policemen and a sergeant in
plain clothes standing before him.</p>
<p>“What’s this mean?” he demanded.</p>
<p>“Chief’s orders, Mr. Verbeck,” the sergeant replied.
“These men are to surround the block and
guard your house.”</p>
<p>“But that is just what we do not want!” Verbeck
protested.</p>
<p>“Chief’s orders. Here’s a letter he told me to give
you. He got it by messenger a couple of hours ago.”</p>
<p>He handed Verbeck the letter. It was from the
Black Star and addressed to the chief. It read:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Within four days I will commit my greatest
crime since coming to your fair city.</p>
<p>Within four days I’ll make a huge laughingstock
of Roger Verbeck. His sudden change of
residence will not save him from the punishment
I intend administering to him.</p>
<p>Within four days!</p>
</blockquote>
<p class="center">*****</p>
<p>Verbeck handed the letter to Riley, and faced the
sergeant again.</p>
<p>“No doubt the chief means well, but I don’t need
so much police protection,” he said. “There are three
of us here, and all of us will not sleep at once.”</p>
<p>“My orders, Mr. Verbeck.”</p>
<p>“Telephone the chief,” Riley suggested.</p>
<p>Verbeck hurried to the telephone, and called headquarters
and got the chief.</p>
<p>“I don’t want this squad of men out here, chief,”
he said.</p>
<p>“The orders come direct from the mayor, Mr. Verbeck,
and he’ll not countermand them. That threat
of the Black Star’s is too strong to be ignored. I
didn’t call you up before I sent the men out because
I knew you’d object. Those men will not bother you.
They’ll surround the block and stay out of your way,
and be relieved at stated intervals. They’ll serve to
keep the curious away, and they’ll be there to guard
the house in case you three men rush out on a chase
or anything like that.”</p>
<p>“But——” Verbeck began.</p>
<p>“I insist, Mr. Verbeck. We cannot afford to run
chances. If anything happened to you, and we hadn’t
given you protection after receiving those threats,
we’d never hear the last of it. You’re a prominent
young man, remember. Just let the men stay. You
haven’t heard anything, have you?”</p>
<p>“Not a thing,” Verbeck replied, “and we can’t make
a move until we do.”</p>
<p>“We’ve got the greatest dragnet in the history of
the department in operation—watching every exit
from the city and searching everywhere—have corralled
half a hundred suspects already. If the Black
Star is in the city we’ll get him. We’re only hoping
he’s brazen enough to tip off where he is or what he
intends doing. If he does, he may find he has gone
too far.”</p>
<p>“But really, chief, I’d rather not have the men
here.”</p>
<p>A rattling noise came through the telephone, and
another voice spoke.</p>
<p>“Get off the line!” the chief roared. “This line’s
busy.”</p>
<p>“Pardon me,” said the voice. “I just wanted to tell
Mr. Verbeck that he’d better let the police remain.
He’ll need them to guard him.”</p>
<p>“Who the devil are you?” the chief roared.</p>
<p>“I am the Black Star!”</p>
<p>“W-what?”</p>
<p>“Fact, I assure you. You might as well shout from
the housetops, chief. I know everything you do and
say. So you’ve got out the dragnet, eh? Might as
well call in your men; it’ll not do any good to tire
them out.”</p>
<p>“How—what——” the chief stammered. He was
beginning to realize that the Black Star actually was
on the line and speaking.</p>
<p>“Don’t excite yourself, chief. And you, Mr. Verbeck,
if you relish protection, better let the chief scatter
a hundred men around your place. Even that
number wouldn’t save you!”</p>
<p>“How’d you get on this line? Where are you?”
the chief shouted into the instrument, not realizing
he was talking foolishly.</p>
<p>“Possibly I’ve tapped the line right in police headquarters
building—who knows?” the Black Star
taunted. “And you scarcely can expect me to tell
you where I am. Why not find me? Go right on
hoping I’ll be brazen enough to tip off what I intend
doing, chief—it does a person good to hope.”</p>
<p>“You—you’re a devil!” the chief exploded.</p>
<p>“Thanks for the compliment! Good-by!”</p>
<p>Again the rattling sound, and then they heard the
Black Star’s voice no more.</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xviiimysteries">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id18">CHAPTER XVIII—MYSTERIES</SPAN></h1>
<p>Verbeck turned and told Riley and Muggs, as
well as the policemen, what had occurred over
the telephone.</p>
<p>“That man ain’t human,” the sergeant offered.</p>
<p>“You bet he is human, and by that token we’ll get
him!” Riley declared. “He thinks he’s playin’ a funny
game, and he is, but there’s an end to every game.”</p>
<p>“He sure is human!” Muggs declared. “’Twas a
human fist he smashed me with in back of the ear
once—I know! But we’ll get him!”</p>
<p>“The fact of the matter is,” said Riley, “that we
don’t know whether it was the Black Star talkin’.
If he’s got a bunch of helpers, maybe one of them’s
at police headquarters and just naturally tapped the
chief’s private telephone line.”</p>
<p>“It was the Black Star—I know his voice,” Verbeck
said. “There is no doubt about it. He speaks
in a peculiar, halting way that I’ll defy any one to
imitate correctly.” He turned to the sergeant. “You
may post your men,” he said. “I presume the chief’s
orders must be obeyed.”</p>
<p>After the sergeant and his men had gone, Verbeck
closed the door and turned to face Muggs and the
detective.</p>
<p>“This waiting makes me nervous,” he admitted.
“I’d like to be doing something. But, as you said,
Riley, we can do nothing except wait until the Black
Star makes a move, and then attempt to get on his
trail. If ever we do get on his trail——”</p>
<p>“We’ll get him!” Muggs announced.</p>
<p>“So we may as well make ourselves comfortable.
You cook a good dinner, Muggs—we’ve got all sorts
of supplies. Riley, take another cigar and get that
sour look off your face. All we can do is wait.”</p>
<p>Muggs departed for the kitchen, and Riley stretched
his length on a divan and blew clouds of smoke toward
the ceiling. Verbeck walked to a window and observed
that the police had been scattered around the
block just inside the fence.</p>
<p>In the kitchen pots and pans rattled, and they heard
Muggs mumbling to himself because the fire would
not blaze to suit him. Riley, after a time, arose and
paced the floor like a hound that wanted to be on
the scent and had been retained in kennels. Verbeck
called up Faustina Wendell and held a conversation
of some ten minutes, during which his fiancée expressed
a thousand fears for his welfare, and Verbeck
stated half a hundred times that she was not to worry.
His telephone conversation at an end, he began pacing
the floor also. The monotony of waiting was
tiresome.</p>
<p>“We’ve got to start a checker tournament or something
lively like that,” Riley declared, “or we’ll go
insane. Some time during the next four days, eh?
Ain’t that what the Black Star said in his letter? I
wish he’d make it to-night. And I’ll bet that the devil,
just to be ornery, will wait until the last hour of the
four days. Where do you suppose he’ll strike?”</p>
<p>“That’s a hard question to answer,” Verbeck replied.
“He’s liable to do almost anything that means
profit. You want to remember that he had an organization
that was collecting information for him,
as I discovered. He knows more than we think. He
has combinations of safes, knows the personal habits
of people, knows—oh, everything that a crook would
want to know if he pulled off a job! The information
I found tabulated at his headquarters was all
concerning jewels to be worn at the Charity Ball, but
Heaven alone knows, besides himself, what he had
gathered in the way of facts before that.”</p>
<p>“But he said he’d commit the greatest crime since
he’d got to town,” Riley went on. “What could that
be? He’s turned some pretty good tricks, you’ll remember.”</p>
<p>“He might get into the vault of the First National,”
Verbeck offered.</p>
<p>“No chance! That’s the finest——”</p>
<p>“Pardon me, Riley. Fine vaults and burglar-proof
affairs do not seem to bother the Black Star. You
remember how he robbed the safety-deposit boxes of
the National Trust, don’t you?”</p>
<p>“Well, what would be something big he could do?”
the detective asked.</p>
<p>“He goes after money, but jewels are his particular
delight, if I have judged the man correctly,” Verbeck
said. “He has some perfect arrangement for disposing
of them at a profit, I suppose. And there are
half a hundred places he could make a rich haul of
jewels. He’s what might be called a jewel fiend, Riley.
He—— Ah!”</p>
<p>“What’s the matter?” Riley asked, looking up
quickly and stopping his pacing.</p>
<p>“I have an idea.”</p>
<p>“If it’s anything that will help us catch the Black
Star or bring him out of his hole so we can chase him,
for Heaven’s sake let us have it!” Riley cried.</p>
<p>“It is something that may bring him out of his hole—a
trap! Why didn’t I think of it before? And it
can be arranged easily.”</p>
<p>“Let’s have it, then.”</p>
<p>“As you know, I am to be married soon. My gift
to my bride will be the same my father gave my mother—the
famous Verbeck diamond necklace. That necklace
is in a certain safe-deposit vault now, and I’ll
not even tell you where it is.”</p>
<p>“But where’s the trap, Roger?”</p>
<p>“A moment, Riley—don’t be so impatient. That
necklace is the same as the day my father clasped it
on his bride’s throat. That was a good many years
ago, and fashions in jewel settings change. So naturally,
before I present it to my bride, I’ll have to have
the stones reset.”</p>
<p>“Sure.”</p>
<p>“The stones alone are worth a quarter of a million
dollars—enough to tempt any jewel thief, and especially
a jewel fiend, since some of the stones have histories.
Now—suppose it gets noised abroad that I
am having the necklace reset for my fiancée. The
newspapers, we’ll say, print the history of the necklace
and tell of my intentions. It is announced that the
jewelry firm of So & So is to do the work, and that
the necklace has been taken from the safe deposit and
now is in the vault of that firm.”</p>
<p>“I begin to get you, Roger.”</p>
<p>“I thought you would. If you were the Black Star,
and read that in the papers, what would you do?
If you were the Black Star and held enmity for me,
and wanted to turn a big trick to show your contempt
for the police, what would you do?”</p>
<p>“Ha! I’d pinch that necklace, thereby getting a
quarter of a million in stones, and some other truck
as well—and at the same time get square with Mr.
Roger Verbeck.”</p>
<p>“Exactly, Riley! Even the Black Star would fall
for that trap. If he could get those stones, he’d not
only have a handsome profit, he’d make a laughingstock
of me—what he has sworn to do. See?”</p>
<p>“And you’d be takin’ a mighty big chance to do it.”</p>
<p>“Ah! As it happens, there is a paste duplicate of
the necklace. That will be sent to the firm of So & So—the
real firm to be decided between us later. And
there we can fix a trap, have the place watched night
and day, be on the job ourselves. Either the Black
Star will not have the courage to go after it—or he’ll
go after it, and we’ll catch him. And we’ll get him
when he has the paste jewels in his hands, and give
him the laugh, along with a term in prison.”</p>
<p>“Great—great!” Riley exclaimed. “But can you
do it?”</p>
<p>“I’ll make the arrangements to-morrow. It’ll be like
throwing out bait to catch a big fish.”</p>
<p>“A sucker!” Riley gurgled.</p>
<p>“If he doesn’t make some sort of move to-night we’ll
make the arrangements to-morrow. We’ll bring him
out of his hole where we can get on his trail.”</p>
<p>Mr. Muggs walked slowly into the room from the
kitchen, his face inscrutable.</p>
<p>“Boss, you bought that bread at the delicatessen,
didn’t you?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Yes, Muggs.”</p>
<p>“Just picked a loaf off the counter and had it
wrapped up?”</p>
<p>“Why, yes!”</p>
<p>“Didn’t notice anything unusual about it?”</p>
<p>“No. What do you mean, Muggs? Isn’t the bread
good?”</p>
<p>“And we got right into the car with it and came
here and put it with the other stuff on the table in the
kitchen——”</p>
<p>“Yes—yes! What’s the trouble?”</p>
<p>“Did you notice the top of the loaf carefully when
you picked it up?”</p>
<p>“Yes, confound you! What——”</p>
<p>“And the old Dutchman wrapped it up right under
your eyes, didn’t he? And we brought it here, as
I said, and I unwrapped it and put it on the table
when I unwrapped the other things. I looked at it
when I did that—I know I looked at the top of it,
and there wasn’t anything the matter with it then—and
that was less than two hours ago, wasn’t it?”</p>
<p>“Muggs, if you don’t tell us——” Verbeck began.</p>
<p>“Oh, I’ll tell you, all right, boss. On the top of
that loaf now, right down the middle of the top, is a
row of little black stars.”</p>
<p>“What!” Verbeck and Riley cried in a breath.</p>
<p>They rushed into the kitchen. Muggs pointed at
the bread dramatically. As he had said, there was a
row of the little black stars down the middle of the
top of the loaf.</p>
<p>“This beats the deuce!” Riley exclaimed. “How
did they get there?”</p>
<p>“I’ll swear they were not there when that loaf was
wrapped,” Verbeck said.</p>
<p>“And I’ll swear they wasn’t there when I unwrapped
it,” Muggs declared. “And now they are
there! So they must have been put there while we
were talking in the living room!”</p>
<p>“Great Scott!” Riley cried. “Do you mean to say
the Black Star or one of his men has been here and
did that?”</p>
<p>“No little bird did it!” Muggs exclaimed.</p>
<p>“Stand back!” Riley said. “Here is where experience
takes the lead. I’ll just look into this.”</p>
<p>He investigated the kitchen first. None of the
windows had been unfastened since they had come to
the house, and dust on the sills showed that nobody
had touched them. The back door had not been unlocked,
for there was an abundance of fuel in the
kitchen, and Muggs had not been obliged to go out
for water. Riley opened the door, however, and his
eyes met a drift of snow unmarred by footprints. Nobody
had entered there.</p>
<p>There was but one other door, and that opened
into a pass pantry, which, in turn, opened into the
dining room. Riley went into the dining room, which
had not been touched, since they had decided to eat
in the living room, and found no traces of an intruder
there. Even the dust on the floor had not been disturbed.
There were no traces in the pass pantry, and
it would have been impossible, of course, for any one
to have entered through the living room, since they
had been in it constantly since reaching the house, and
would have seen any unwelcome visitor.</p>
<p>“Humph!” Riley said, and looked at Muggs suspiciously.</p>
<p>“Boss, he thinks I done it!” Muggs exclaimed.</p>
<p>“Nonsense!” Verbeck replied.</p>
<p>“I don’t think you’re a member of the Black Star’s
gang, if that’s what you mean,” Riley stated, “but I
do think it wouldn’t be a bit past you to try out a
little joke.”</p>
<p>“I didn’t! Boss, I swear I didn’t!”</p>
<p>“I believe you,” Verbeck said.</p>
<p>“Then it’s mighty puzzlin’,” Riley declared. “Rows
of black stars don’t go stickin’ themselves to bread
of their own accord.”</p>
<p>He stepped back and looked at the interior of the
kitchen again. No one had entered or left by the
rear door or any of the windows—that much was certain.
No one could have entered from the living room
through the pass pantry. Then——</p>
<p>The table stood beside the range. Over the range
was a big hood that opened into a wide chimney.
Riley went forward and peered into the hood—struck
a match and held it beside his head and peered into
the chimney’s wide mouth. There was some dust and
soot sprinkled over the back of the range, but Riley
could not tell whether it had been sprinkled there
recently, because the house had been uninhabited for
so long that dust and soot and cobwebs were everywhere.</p>
<p>“Where does that chimney go?” he asked.</p>
<p>“It is one of those old-fashioned, wide chimneys
that run straight up through a house, with stove-hole
openings, in every room,” Verbeck answered.</p>
<p>“We’ll just take a look upstairs. You can remain
here, Muggs, and keep your eyes open.”</p>
<p>Riley led the way up the broad stairs and he had
his automatic clutched in his hand. Dust—everywhere
was dust! They searched all the rooms of the
second floor, though long search was not needed, for
the deep dust on the floors showed no trace of footprints.</p>
<p>“Anything above?” Riley asked.</p>
<p>“Garret—two rooms half finished,” Verbeck announced.</p>
<p>“They made their way up the narrow stairs and
raised the trapdoor. The two half-finished rooms
were deep with dust also, and cobwebs hung in clusters
before stove holes.</p>
<p>“False alarm, I reckon,” Riley said. “But it beats
me. You don’t suppose Muggs——”</p>
<p>“I do not,” said Verbeck. “I know Muggs well—he’d
not try a trick like that.”</p>
<p>“Humph! Something mighty funny about this!
Whoever put those stars on the bread didn’t enter by
kitchen door or window, and didn’t go down the chimney
from one of these upper floors. Those stars must
have been put there by the delicatessen man when you
bought the bread. Muggs just didn’t notice them
when he unwrapped the loaf—that’s all. It’s the only
way they could have got there!”</p>
<p>They started back down the narrow stairs. As
they reached the second floor they heard Muggs’ voice,
coming to them weakly, as if from a great distance,
and with a note of pain in it.</p>
<p>“Boss! Boss!”</p>
<p>Four steps at a time Verbeck took that last flight,
with Riley two jumps behind him. They rushed
through the living room and into the kitchen. They
saw Muggs reeling toward them from the door, staggering
toward the table, trying to hold one hand to
his head.</p>
<p>“Muggs! Muggs! What is it?” Verbeck cried,
grasping him by the arm. “You’re hurt, man! Your
head’s bloody! You——”</p>
<p>“Look! His forehead!” Riley cried.</p>
<p>On Muggs’ forehead was a tiny black star!</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xixsuspicion">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id19">CHAPTER XIX—SUSPICION</SPAN></h1>
<p>Muggs apparently was making an effort to speak,
but could not collect his wits. Blood was flowing
from a wound on the back of his head. He staggered
again, and would have fallen had not Verbeck
helped him to a chair. Riley, preferring effective
methods to kindness, grasped a pail of water and
dashed the contents of the pail in Muggs’ face.</p>
<p>“What happened?” the detective demanded.</p>
<p>Muggs sputtered and spat, and sat more erect.</p>
<p>“I’m—all right now,” he gasped.</p>
<p>“Tell us!”</p>
<p>“I—I looked around after you went upstairs—then
bent over the stove to arrange the pots. Something
smashed me on the head—that’s all I know. I think
somebody grabbed me by the coat collar as I started
to fall. I woke up and found myself on the floor—and
tried to call the boss.”</p>
<p>“That’s all?” demanded Riley.</p>
<p>“Y-yes.”</p>
<p>Detective Riley took charge in this emergency without
as much as mentioning the matter to Roger Verbeck.
He ran to the rear door and jerked it open,
observed that the snow was still innocent of footprints,
then put a police whistle to his lips and blew a
vigorous blast.</p>
<p>The sergeant came running, one of the men with
him.</p>
<p>“Bring your men in closer and watch all sides of
the house!” Riley commanded. “Watch the roof, too,
particularly the mouth of the chimney!”</p>
<p>The sergeant turned away, shouting his orders.
Riley slammed the door shut and whirled toward the
stove.</p>
<p>“Into the other room, Roger, and watch the stairs—and
have your automatic ready,” he said. “In the
chimney is the only place a man could be to pull off
these stunts, and if he’s in the chimney he’s going to
be smoked out!”</p>
<p>He grasped the paper that had been around the provisions
and threw it into the stove. He opened the
drafts, and reached for more paper. The stove roared—smoke
and flame sprang up into the chimney and
through the big hood.</p>
<p>“Watch her, Muggs—more paper when she needs
it—and hold your gun ready, man! You’re all right?”
Riley cried.</p>
<p>“I’ll watch ’er!”</p>
<p>Riley sprang into the other room. “Come!” he
commanded Verbeck, and ran up the stairs again.
Once more they looked into all the rooms on the second
floor, and knew that nobody had been in any of
them. Once more they ascended to the garret and
looked into the two half-finished rooms there—and
found nothing. Not a track was in the deep dust, not
a cobweb had been brushed from a wall.</p>
<p>“What’s that door over there?” Riley asked, pointing
across one of the rooms.</p>
<p>“Small closet—never used except to store toys in
when I was a kid,” Verbeck answered.</p>
<p>“We’ll just—— No use, though! Look at those
cobwebs on the doorknob! Nobody in there! This
beats me! Let’s go down again!”</p>
<p>They retreated down the stairs, and went out on
the veranda. No one had come from the house, the
sergeant said. Smoke, and even flame, was pouring
from the top of the chimney.</p>
<p>“All right, sergeant—return your men to their posts,
but keep a close watch,” Riley said. “No—there isn’t
anything much wrong.”</p>
<p>The sergeant knew there was, but he knew also
that Riley did not talk when he preferred to remain
silent. He sent the men back to their posts, and
Riley and Verbeck reēntered the house and closed
the door.</p>
<p>In the kitchen Muggs was still putting paper into
the stove, and Riley ordered him to stop.</p>
<p>“If he was in that chimney, he’s a dead man,” the
detective said. “And if he was a dead man, he’d
fall and smash that hood to bits. So he isn’t in the
chimney—and wasn’t—and he isn’t upstairs in any
room—and he didn’t enter from outside. We’ve been
dreaming.”</p>
<p>“Not much we haven’t!” Muggs exclaimed. “Look
at this bump on my head!”</p>
<p>“Then please explain it!” Riley roared. “Explain
those stars on the bread and the one between your
eyes. I suppose this Black Star has spirits to help
him or something like that. Give me an answer!”</p>
<p>“The Black Star,” Verbeck observed, “is a smooth
article.”</p>
<p>“He is,” Riley admitted, “when he can smash a
man on the head without coming into the house to do
it. Ha! The basement!”</p>
<p>There was a door opening into the basement from
the kitchen, and it was locked. Moreover, an investigation
showed that the bolt had not been shot
for some time, for dust and cobwebs were on that
bolt and on the door around it. Nevertheless, Riley
opened the door, drew out his pocket flash lamp, and
descended into the basement with Verbeck at his heels.</p>
<p>The basement was large, but nothing was stored
in it now except a small quantity of fuel. It did not
take Riley and Verbeck long to decide no intruder
had been in the basement.</p>
<p>“Looks mighty funny to me!” Riley declared. “If
that Muggs man of yours is playing tricks——”</p>
<p>“Would he smash himself on the head?” Verbeck
demanded, something of anger in his voice.</p>
<p>“Such things have been done before. A little rap
would start the blood, and he might have shammed a
great deal of that staggering-around business. You
don’t suppose this Black Star has got hold of Muggs—corrupted
him or got the hooks into him?”</p>
<p>“I do not!” Verbeck replied emphatically. “I’d
stake my life on Muggs. He’s loyal! If the Black
Star tried anything like that Muggs would tell me
at once.”</p>
<p>“Then how did it happen? Answer me that! It
stands to reason, doesn’t it, that nobody has been in
this house except the three of us?”</p>
<p>“It looks that way, but——”</p>
<p>“Humph! You go right ahead thinking what you
like, Roger. As for me, boy, I’m going to keep one
eye on Mr. Muggs.”</p>
<p>“But——”</p>
<p>“Don’t be angry now. It’s my business to be suspicious
of people. I knew you when you were a baby,
and I’m right with you in this scrap with the Black
Star. You’ve lived with this Muggs man for some
time, and you think he’s loyal—sure! He’s somewhat
of a stranger to me, and I look at him from the outside,
and don’t see him with any rosy waves of glory
around his head. No insult meant, Roger. I’ll just
keep an eye on him, and if he ain’t guilty it won’t hurt
him a bit.”</p>
<p>They went back to the kitchen. Muggs, now that
the excitement was over, was going ahead with the
preparations of the evening meal. Half an hour later
he had it ready, and the three of them ate it in the
living room, while Muggs groaned now and then and
held his hand to the back of his head often, apparently
not noticing that Riley eyed him constantly.</p>
<p>“If I get my hands on that Black Star I’ll kill him!”
Muggs promised. “That’s the second time he’s
smashed me on the head!”</p>
<p>“Maybe the Black Star didn’t do it,” Riley said.</p>
<p>“Either him or one of his crooks!”</p>
<p>“But we couldn’t find a trace——”</p>
<p>“I don’t care,” Muggs interrupted; “if we knew
absolutely that there wasn’t another human bein’
within ten miles—I know a man smashed me on
the back of the head with a blackjack! I’ve had it
done often enough in my life, and I know the feelin’!
And as I fell he grabbed me by the shoulder and
slapped that black star on my face! Don’t tell me!”</p>
<p>The meal at an end, they discussed the trap Roger
had proposed to set for the Black Star, perfecting
details and deciding just how the scheme was to be
worked. It was planned that Roger should go into
the business district the following morning and arrange
matters with a jewelry firm, communicate to
the newspapers the news that he intended having the
famous diamond necklace reset, and arrange with the
chief to have the jewelry establishment crowded with
officers day and night.</p>
<p>So Roger retired at eleven that night, leaving Riley
and Muggs on guard. He slept in the bedroom, with
his clothes arranged beside the bed on a chair so that
he could don them quickly if an alarm came from
headquarters that the Black Star had committed the
great crime he had promised. He was to arise at five
and let Riley and Muggs sleep from five until ten.
Then they would take up the watch again, and Roger
would go into town about his business.</p>
<p>At five o’clock Muggs awoke him, announcing that
he had cleaned the bathroom and arranged the bath.</p>
<p>“Anything happen?” Verbeck asked. “I’ve slept
like a dead man.”</p>
<p>“Quiet night, boss. Riley went out at midnight
and prowled around the grounds a while and talked
with the cops. Nobody’d been near the place, he said.
I’ll have some coffee ready by the time you’re dressed,
and when you’ve had it Riley can go to bed.”</p>
<p>“And so can you, Muggs.”</p>
<p>“Not for some time, I ain’t. You can bet I ain’t
goin’ to let you be alone in that room with both Riley
and me asleep. Look what happened to me in the
kitchen when I was alone!”</p>
<p>“I’ll call in the sergeant in charge of the squad,
Muggs.”</p>
<p>“Yes, and maybe he’s one of the Black Star’s men
for all you know!”</p>
<p>“Nonsense! Well, I’ll let you stay up until seven—how’s
that?”</p>
<p>“That’s a little better, boss.”</p>
<p>Verbeck dressed and had his coffee, and Detective
Riley retired to the bedroom. Muggs curled up on
the divan. Verbeck paced the floor for a time, and
then threw open the door and went out on the veranda
for a breath of morning air. The squad of police
had been changed, and the new sergeant in charge
hurried toward Verbeck across the lawn.</p>
<p>“I brought you the morning papers, Mr. Verbeck,”
he said, “when I came on duty. Thought perhaps
you’d like to have ’em.”</p>
<p>“Thanks, sergeant.”</p>
<p>“Your name certainly is in all of them! Say, is it
true what they say?”</p>
<p>“And what do they say?”</p>
<p>“That you were planning a trap for the Black Star
and he knew all about it?”</p>
<p>“What!” Verbeck cried.</p>
<p>He grasped the papers and opened the first that
came to his hand. Great headlines told of the day’s
progress in the Black Star case. The attack on the
hotel clerk was exploited at length, the removal of
Verbeck and Muggs and Riley to the old Verbeck
place mentioned. The paper told how the place was
surrounded at all hours by policemen, and grilled the
police department because the dragnet had caught
nothing but small fish.</p>
<p>The eight crooks arrested with the Black Star, and
who really aided his escape, had been bailed out. Bail
of five thousand had been fixed in each case, and two
famous criminal lawyers had appeared and put up
forty thousand dollars cash, refusing to say for whom
they acted, merely declaring the crooks were their
clients.</p>
<p>“So they’re loose!” Roger thought. “They’ll be at
work again—or else they’ll all jump bail and so keep
from betraying the Black Star’s secrets. I imagine
it’d be worth forty thousand to him to have his plans
safeguarded.”</p>
<p>He read on. At two o’clock that morning, just
as the paper was going to press, a messenger boy had
appeared with a letter from the Black Star. The
press had been stopped to get in this latest bit of news.
The messenger declared he had been called to a prominent
hotel and handed the letter by a distinguished-looking
gentleman whose description did not tally
with that of the Back Star.</p>
<p>That letter read:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Within three days!</p>
<p>Within three days I commit the greatest theft I
have perpetrated since coming to the city!</p>
<p>Within three days I make a huge joke of Roger
Verbeck, who dares match wits with me!</p>
<p>I know all that goes on—I know everything!
The police dragnet is most amusing. They never
would dream of looking for me where I am
hiding!</p>
<p>I know, for instance, that yesterday afternoon,
and again last evening, sitting in the living room
of his ancestral home, Roger Verbeck planned
with Detective Riley and Muggs, Verbeck’s man
of all work, to set a trap for me. Very clever—had
I not learned of it.</p>
<p>Let Roger Verbeck understand that he may
advertise to his heart’s content that he is having
his famous diamond necklace reset at a prominent
jeweler’s—and hope that I’ll take the bait
and try to steal the jewels while a crowd of
police are waiting to make a capture—but his
hopes will be in vain. I am planning something
bigger than the theft of the Verbeck necklace.
The shock will come soon——</p>
<p>Within three days!</p>
</blockquote>
<p class="center">*****</p>
<p>Verbeck did not go back into the house just then.
He thanked the sergeant for the papers again, and
turned toward one end of the veranda, to stand there
and look off down the street, thinking.</p>
<p>It was almost uncanny what this Black Star knew.
It was beyond belief that either the Black Star or one
of his confederates had been in the house and overheard
those conversations. Had they not searched
the house from bottom to top the evening before?</p>
<p>How, then, had the knowledge reached the Black
Star? Three men knew of that plan—himself, Riley,
and Muggs. Then either Riley or Muggs, on the face
of things, must have conveyed the information to the
Black Star.</p>
<p>“I can’t believe it—I can’t!” Verbeck told himself.</p>
<p>He considered Muggs first. He believed in Muggs’
loyalty, had received many manifestations of it.
Muggs also had entered the first chase of the Black
Star with zeal, had in reality effected the crook’s
capture. Would he turn traitor now?</p>
<p>There was that affair of the evening before, when
Muggs had received the blow on his head. There
was the affair of the stars on the bread. Search had
revealed that nobody was in the house. Who had
put the stars on the bread then, and who had struck
down Muggs and stamped his forehead? Had Riley
been right? Was Muggs a Black Star man? Had
he stamped that bread himself, given himself a wound,
and pretended to be badly injured for a time just
to carry out the orders of the master criminal?</p>
<p>Then he considered Detective Riley. He would as
soon believe Muggs guilty as Riley. His father had
been Riley’s benefactor. Riley had known him since
he was a baby, had taught him how to play baseball,
how to swim. Yet in the last few years he had not
seen much of Riley, and maybe he had been caught
in the net of official graft. Maybe he was no longer
honest, save on the surface. Perhaps, angered at
last because he had not received the promotion he deserved,
he had turned crook and was trading on his
reputation for honesty.</p>
<p>Muggs had said Riley had gone out and prowled
around the house about midnight. He had a chance,
then, to communicate with some agent of the Black
Star. That would give the Black Star just about
time to write the letter to the paper and have it delivered
so that it would reach the newspaper office
by two o’clock.</p>
<p>Back and forth, back and forth across the veranda,
Roger Verbeck paced, trying to fight down suspicions
he did not believe worthy of him. Muggs disloyal?
He could not believe it! Riley turned crook? He
could not think it!</p>
<p>Yet there was the morning paper. No one but
Riley and Muggs had heard those plans. They had
been discussed at the table in the center of the living
room, with all the doors closed, and they had been
discussed in low tones as the three men bent over the
table. Why, it was doubtful if a man could have
overheard, had he even been in an adjoining room
and listening—and Verbeck knew no man had been
in an adjoining room.</p>
<p>“I can’t believe it!” he told himself again. “Yet
here it is—and must be believed! I’ll say nothing—I’ll
just let them read the papers. And I’ll watch! If
either Riley or Muggs has turned against me, my
faith in human nature is gone! Can’t I have even one
honest ally? Must I fight this master criminal alone?”</p>
<p>Muggs called to him from the doorway, wanting
to know whether Verbeck was not cold without his
coat. He looked at Muggs. He saw the seamed and
wrinkled countenance, the eyes that twinkled kindly,
the doglike look of devotion in the face—Muggs, who
had fought for him scores of times, who had been
willing in some of their adventures to lay down his
life for the man who had saved him from the Seine.
No—Muggs could not be disloyal!</p>
<p>Detective Riley, then?</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xxthe-voice-on-the-wire">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id20">CHAPTER XX—THE VOICE ON THE WIRE</SPAN></h1>
<p>At seven o’clock Verbeck ordered Muggs to bed,
promising to call him with Riley at ten o’clock.
He had kept the morning papers from Muggs, for
he had decided to announce the failure of their contemplated
trap when both men were facing him.</p>
<p>When snores from the adjoining room told him
that Muggs was in a heavy sleep, Verbeck decided to
make a tour of the house by himself in an effort to
solve the mysteries that had been puzzling him. Automatic
held ready, he crept softly up the stairs and
examined every room on the second floor, looking
at every window and door, but failing to find as
much as a track in the dust.</p>
<p>He mounted to the garret once more and peered
into the two half-finished rooms there. Then he returned
to the first floor and sat down before the table
in the living room, trying to think it out. He asked
himself again whether Muggs had really put those
black stars on the bread and had wounded himself
in an effort to make Verbeck believe he had been
attacked. What would be the motive? Verbeck
shook his head because he could think of none. And
had Riley betrayed their contemplated trap? Again
he asked himself the motive, and told himself there
was none, unless Detective Riley was a member of the
Black Star’s band and acting under the orders of the
master criminal.</p>
<p>He paced the floor, and occasionally went on the
veranda, fighting down the belief that either of the
men had turned against him, calling upon himself to
have faith in them.</p>
<p>Ten o’clock came, and he awoke Riley and Muggs
and prepared coffee while they dressed. He put the
coffee on the table, with butter and rolls, and scattered
the newspapers around. Then, as the two men began
eating, he walked to the nearest window and stood
looking out over the snow-covered lawn.</p>
<p>Presently there was an exclamation behind him, and
he whirled around, to find both Muggs and Riley
staring at newspapers as if they could not believe
their eyes. Verbeck decided that either they were
genuinely surprised, or were good actors.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he said before either of the others could
speak, “the Black Star knows. It will not be necessary
for me to go into town and make arrangements
with the jewelers and the chief.”</p>
<p>“But——” Riley began, and stopped and looked at
the paper again.</p>
<p>“Yesterday afternoon I discussed the matter with
Riley,” Verbeck went on. “We sat here at the table
and talked in ordinary tones. Last evening the three
of us discussed it, sitting at the table and speaking
softly. I doubt whether a man, had he even been in
the bedroom adjoining, could have understood us
clearly. Yet the Black Star knows all about it—he
knew in time to have that letter reach the newspaper
by two o’clock in the morning. I, for one, am certain
I did not communicate with the Black Star or any of
his crooks.”</p>
<p>He turned his back upon them again, and looked
through the window.</p>
<p>“But—but——” Riley stammered. “Why, nobody
except the three of us knew anything about it!”</p>
<p>“Exactly!” said Verbeck.</p>
<p>“Then how—— You don’t think I tipped it off
in any way?”</p>
<p>“Boss,” cried Muggs, “you don’t suppose I——”</p>
<p>“I am not thinking, or supposing, anything about
it,” said Verbeck. “We are confronted by facts.”</p>
<p>“Well, let’s consider the matter squarely,” Riley
offered. “Even if we take it for granted that either
Muggs or myself is a member of the Black Star’s
band, when would either of us have had a chance
to betray the plan?”</p>
<p>“You went outdoors and prowled around considerable
about midnight,” Muggs said. “You had a
chance then.”</p>
<p>“If it comes to that, my impetuous friend, you
were alone in the kitchen yesterday afternoon while
Roger and I were discussing the matter. You were
there when mysterious black stars got stuck on a
loaf of bread and when there was an alleged mysterious
assault on your own person committed by somebody
who could not have been in the house at the time.”
Riley showed some anger in his voice.</p>
<p>“You accusin’ me?” Muggs demanded.</p>
<p>“You accused me, didn’t you?”</p>
<p>Verbeck turned away from the window and walked
to the table.</p>
<p>“Suppose we cease all accusations,” he said. “I
cannot think either of you would do such a thing.
Muggs has demonstrated his loyalty to me scores of
times. You, Riley, owed your start in life to my
father, and have known me since I was a toddling
baby. I can’t believe either of you guilty of this.
And yet—there are the facts. Only we three knew—and
the Black Star knew soon afterward. We’ll just
call this another little mystery added to those that
have gone before. Eat your rolls and drink your
coffee. We’ll not discuss the matter further now.”</p>
<p>Riley and Muggs made pretense of eating as Verbeck
walked to the door and went out on the veranda
again, but for the most part they glared at each other
across the table, each suspicious of the other apparently.</p>
<p>The telephone rang, and Verbeck hurried in from
the veranda to answer it. It was the chief speaking.</p>
<p>“Everything all right out there?” he asked. “Good!
Say, is that right, what the papers say about you planning
that trap about the necklace?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” Verbeck answered.</p>
<p>“But, how the deuce——”</p>
<p>“I don’t know,” Verbeck interrupted. “There evidently
was a leak somewhere, yet it seems impossible.
It’s just one of those things that cannot be explained.”</p>
<p>“Anything can be explained,” the chief declared.
“But we’ll have to talk of that affair later. I’ve just
had a telephone message from the editor of one of
the evening papers. He received a letter from the
Black Star through the morning mail. The Black Star
says he is going to pull off that big crime of his within
twenty-four hours. So get on your toes, you people!
I suppose he means to-night.”</p>
<p>“What plans have you made?” Verbeck asked.</p>
<p>“Of course, we have no idea what he is going to
do. We’re having special guards around the largest
banks and trust companies. All we can do is to wait
for an alarm. When we get it we can rush to the
spot and take up the trail. We’ll keep in touch with
you.”</p>
<p>Again there came that peculiar, rattling noise they
had heard once before while holding a telephone conversation.
Both Verbeck and the chief waited for
the voice they knew they would hear.</p>
<p>“Hello!” it said. “This is the Black Star! I’m
too busy to talk long, so please listen—and do not
swear over the wire, chief. I have been listening to
your interesting conversation. Make all the preparations
you like, chief, but they’ll avail you nothing.
You’ll be sufficiently startled before daybreak to-morrow
morning. I will mention, too, that I am going
to commit this crime myself, without any aid whatever.
As for you, Mr. Roger Verbeck, you will be
the laughingstock of the city to-morrow, so prepare
to be ridiculed.”</p>
<p>“Indeed?” Roger said.</p>
<p>“Another thing, Mr. Verbeck. I know every word
you have said to Detective Riley and Muggs this
morning. You wrong them, Mr. Verbeck, with your
suspicions. I was but waiting for some one to call
you up so I could break in and tell you so. You see,
if I called myself you might be able to trace the call.
Neither of the men, Mr. Verbeck, sent me information
regarding the clever trap you proposed. I just
simply knew. I know everything! Good-by!”</p>
<p>Again the rattling sound, and then Roger Verbeck
heard nothing over the wire except the explosive profanity
of the chief of police, who finally gave the information
that he would call again later, and rang off.</p>
<p>Verbeck turned from the instrument with a beaming
face, and hurried forward to clasp Riley and
Muggs by their hands.</p>
<p>“I was a fool to doubt either of you a second,” he
said. “The Black Star has just proved to me that it
wasn’t necessary for either of you to turn traitor.”</p>
<p>“Was that crook on the wire again?” Muggs demanded.</p>
<p>“He certainly was—broke in while I was speaking
to the chief. He told me he knew what I had been
saying to you here a very few minutes ago, and that
I was unjust in my suspicions.”</p>
<p>“If either of us were guilty he might say that just
to help us out—to make you think we were all right
so we could go on doing his dirty work,” Riley warned.</p>
<p>“But the fact that he knew our conversation of a
few minutes ago shows he might have heard us speaking
yesterday about the trap. I am quite sure neither
of you have had a chance to communicate with him in
the past half hour.”</p>
<p>Riley rose ponderously from the table and crashed
a fist down on it.</p>
<p>“Then tell me,” he said, “how this crook knows
what we say here in this room!”</p>
<p>“I wish I knew!”</p>
<p>“We’ve searched this house from bottom to top,
and he isn’t in it. To hear what we said he’d either
have to be in the basement under us or in an adjoining
room, and then he couldn’t hear half of it. This
thing gets my goat!”</p>
<p>“Then here is something that’ll please you, Riley.
The Black Star has sent another letter to a paper, so
the chief told me, saying he’s going to commit this
big crime of his within the next twenty-four hours.
I suppose he means during the night some time.”</p>
<p>“Then we’ll get on his trail!” Riley shouted. “We
won’t have to work in the dark any more. At least
we’ll know where to start. He’s got to come out of
hiding to commit a crime, and we can trail him from
where he pulls it off!”</p>
<p>“Yes, and where will that be?” Muggs asked.</p>
<p>“Wherever it is, we’ll have something to start on.
I just want a start—that’s all! That crook’s going
too far with his mysterious black stars and his telephone
stunts and mind-reading performances! He’ll
make a slip! Never a crook lived that didn’t make a
slip some time!”</p>
<p>“I’d like to know how those stars got on that loaf
and how I got tapped on the head!” Muggs announced.
“That Black Star must be able to make himself invisible!”</p>
<p>Riley snorted.</p>
<p>“He’s a human man, and that’s all there is to it—a
clever, human man!” the detective declared. “And
we’re clever, human men! We’ll get him! And he’ll
be visible enough when we do! There never was a
mystery that didn’t have a common, everyday solution,
if a man’s wise enough to know how to look at
things. Twenty-four hours, eh? Some time to-night?
We’ll be crazy before he pulls off his trick—crazy
from waiting! You’re sure that roadster is loaded
with gas, Verbeck?”</p>
<p>“I’m sure, Riley. Every officer in town knows that
roadster, and the chief has issued orders that we are
to be allowed to smash all speed limits if we see fit.”</p>
<p>“Then all we can do is wait—wait for the alarm.
It may come in ten minutes, and it may come at two
o’clock to-morrow morning. And waitin’ is the worst
thing I do!”</p>
<p>The day passed, every hour seeming an age. Muggs
cooked the evening meal with head cocked for the
sound of the telephone bell. Riley paced the floor,
looking at his automatic and handcuffs every half
hour. Verbeck smoked innumerable cigars and betrayed
nervousness in innumerable ways.</p>
<p>Nine o’clock came and passed—ten—eleven. Midnight
struck!</p>
<p>The telephone rang!</p>
<p>Verbeck reached the instrument in two bounds, and
Muggs and Riley were close behind him, ready for a
dash, Muggs with his hand on the doorknob.</p>
<p>“Hello!” Verbeck cried.</p>
<p>“Hello! Hello! Mr. Verbeck?”</p>
<p>It was a woman’s voice, one that Verbeck never
had heard before, an excited woman’s voice.</p>
<p>“This is Mr. Verbeck.”</p>
<p>“Listen! I may not have a chance to repeat! Do
you want to locate the Black Star before he commits
his crime? Do you want to learn why he has heard
everything you’ve said there?”</p>
<p>“Who is this?” Verbeck tried to control his voice
and speak in a matter-of-fact way.</p>
<p>“Never mind my name. I have a reason for what
I am now doing. You must act quickly. Take all
the help you can get. You have police there—take
them all!”</p>
<p>“Yes; but what——”</p>
<p>“Listen, please! I will not have a chance to telephone
again. Look around your living room. Look
at the center leg of your table. And then—follow
the wire! All the help you can get—act quickly—and
follow the wire!”</p>
<p>And the unknown woman rang off.</p>
<p>Verbeck whirled to the others, speaking rapidly,
starting back across the room toward the table. With
Muggs and Riley beside him, he went down on his
knees to investigate the center leg. Riley was the
fortunate one. An exclamation of disgust escaped
him.</p>
<p>“Boobs! Boobs! That’s what we are! A common,
everyday dictograph disk! And we never
thought of it! Look!”</p>
<p>He pointed to the bit of metal.</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xxithe-end-of-the-wire">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id21">CHAPTER XXI—THE END OF THE WIRE</SPAN></h1>
<p>“Follow the wire!”</p>
<p>The unknown woman’s words seemed to ring in
Verbeck’s head.</p>
<p>“We must decide instantly,” he said. “Shall we
follow the wire or remain here and await an alarm?”</p>
<p>“Follow the wire!” Riley advised. “That woman
is one of the Black Star’s gang that’s turned against
him. She’s tipped us off right, and I’ll bet on it!
It’s only a few minutes after midnight. It shouldn’t
take us long. Dictograph! Huh! No wonder he
knew everything we said. Poor boobs!”</p>
<p>“Do we go alone, or take the police?” Verbeck
asked.</p>
<p>“Let’s take ’em. It won’t hurt, and may do a great
deal of good. We’ll have the sergeant leave one man
here to take any telephone message that comes.”</p>
<p>Riley ran to the door and blew his whistle. Verbeck
and Muggs already were at work. Before Riley
could instruct the sergeant that a man be detailed to
remain at the house while the others followed, Verbeck
and Muggs had pulled the heavy table to one side—to
find the wire passing through a tiny hole in the
floor and into the basement.</p>
<p>Verbeck led the way below. The wire was picked
up easily, running to an outside wall and through it.
On the outside it went up the side of the house, beside
a water pipe, thence to a tree near by.</p>
<p>“Follow the wire—and be quick about it!” Riley
commanded the sergeant and his men. The police
knew only that this had something to do with the
pursuit of the Black Star, but the excitement of Verbeck
and his companions was infectious, and they went
at their work eagerly, sensing that seconds were precious.</p>
<p>Electric torches flashed as they surrounded the tree,
and one man prepared to climb.</p>
<p>“There it runs!” Riley shouted. “Flash your lights!
See it? To the other tree!”</p>
<p>Thus they crossed the yard to a corner, going from
tree to tree, flashing their lamps always on that slim,
long-hanging wire.</p>
<p>“Whoever heard of a dictograph wire this long!”
Riley exclaimed. “Nobody but the Black Star would
use it. No telling where it runs—and we haven’t a
great deal of time! Send back another man, sergeant,
to stand by the house and bring us news if
there’s a telephone call. Send one who can drive
Verbeck’s roadster to us!”</p>
<p>A man was selected and sent, and the tracing of
the wire went on. They came to the corner, and there
the wire sprang from a tree to a telephone pole, and
across the street to another pole, then to an unimproved
block of land, where it ran from tree to tree
as before.</p>
<p>Led by Verbeck and Riley, with Muggs at their
heels, the police waded through snowdrifts, crashed
through wet underbrush, rending the black night with
the light of their torches. The wire twisted from
tree to tree, never more than a few feet above the
ground.</p>
<p>“Whoever laid that wire didn’t waste any time,”
Riley said.</p>
<p>They lost it in a clump of brush, but found it again.
Every man of them was wet to the waist now from
breaking through the drifts of snow, but their enthusiasm
was not dampened.</p>
<p>“We’ve been half an hour already!” Muggs protested.
“How far does this thing run?”</p>
<p>No one took the trouble to answer him. They
had crossed the unimproved block at last and reached
another street. Once more the wire sprang to the
crosspiece of a telephone pole, and across the street
to another. Now it ran along the edge of a private
park to a narrow alley, and there it followed the roof
line of sheds.</p>
<p>They began exercising some caution now, for there
was no telling where the wire would end, or when, and
they did not care to stumble on the retreat of the
Black Star unprepared for a clash. Muggs, some paces
ahead of the others, strained eyes and ears to detect
the presence of a foe. Muggs didn’t feel sure they
had done right in following the wire, but he realized
that the tip from the unknown woman was one that
could not have been ignored.</p>
<p>At the end of the alley, the wire ran in the direction
of a cross street. Here it was suspended from
the trees again, but higher, and there was difficulty
in following it. It took half an hour to reach the
next corner, and there the wire turned back toward
Verbeck’s house.</p>
<p>“’Tis a quarter after one,” Riley said. “There’s
been no alarm from headquarters, or we’d have had
the man coming after us in the roadster. But where
the deuce does this wire run?”</p>
<p>Down the street a block, around the corner, went
the wire, from tree to tree, now high in the air and
now looped low. To the alley again, and down it in
the black night! Here, their torches flashing, they
followed it from shed to shed, and finally came to
where it ran down the side of a garage and so reached
the ground. Muggs dug frantically with his hands
until the snow had been thrown to one side. The
wire ran beneath a board, and half a dozen men
scraped snow away until the board could be raised,
Verbeck and Riley working frantically and urging on
the others.</p>
<p>The board ended at the edge of an iron manhole,
and Riley, with a muttered curse, got up from his
knees.</p>
<p>“Into the sewer!” he exclaimed. “Into the sewer!
Think o’ that!”</p>
<p>“It’s a fake—we’ve been done!” Muggs declared.</p>
<p>“’Tis no fake!” Riley protested. “Here’s the wire,
and we was told to follow it, wasn’t we? Into the
sewer!”</p>
<p>“Off with that cover!” Verbeck shouted, stepping
forward and taking command. “You’ve forgotten
something, Riley. This is the old sewer, and has been
used for two or three years as a conduit for gas pipes
and electric wires. There’s no sewage in it.”</p>
<p>Riley’s exclamation of relief showed that he had
forgotten. Like madmen they worked at the covering
of the manhole, smashing the ice around it, tearing
at it with their hands until they were raw and
bleeding. Presently they hurled it to one side.</p>
<p>“In we go!” Verbeck said. “And let’s try to make
better time!”</p>
<p>“Easy there! We go—but we go prepared!” Riley
said. “I’ll go first, if you don’t mind, Roger. Some
of the Black Star’s gentlemen friends might be waiting
in this old sewer with implements of destruction
to greet us.”</p>
<p>He flashed his torch, and lowered himself. A moment
later they heard his call, and one by one they
slipped from the alley into the big bore in the earth,
the last man letting the manhole covering fall into
place.</p>
<p>Straight ahead they went now, bending low, dodging
elbows of big gas mains, on the alert for uninsulated
electric wires. The cement walls were covered
with frost, the air was like that of a refrigerator.</p>
<p>They made a turning, and went on, always following
the little wire that had been looped along the joints
of the gas main. And always they were on the alert,
flashing their torches ahead, expecting to be greeted
any instant by some show of hostility. They knew
the reputation of the Black Star—these men. Perhaps,
after all, this was his trick. Perhaps they would
find themselves prisoners underground, or face some
new peril the master criminal had invented for their
discomfiture.</p>
<p>Another curve in the big bore, with Riley stopping
them and creeping ahead to peer around the
bend, and be sure no danger waited! They made
their way along as swiftly as they could now, their
teeth chattering, their hands numb with the cold. And
now the wire ran to the roof again, along a smaller
gas main, and so to another manhole.</p>
<p>“Out again into the night!” Riley grunted. “What
do you know about that? Well—let’s get after it!”</p>
<p>They got beneath the manhole covering and fought
to get it free. It was heartbreaking work, for the
covering had a weight of snow above it, and ice filled
every crevice. But finally they felt it give, and after
a time forced it a short distance to one side, the snow
caving in upon them.</p>
<p>Muggs crawled up and dug at the snow! Inch by
inch they forced the manhole covering back, and
finally they emerged into the open air and closed the
covering again. They traced the wire to a tree at
the end of the alley, and from there to a telephone
pole, and across the street in the usual manner.</p>
<p>They spoke but seldom now. They were almost
exhausted; more than one feared they had been
hoaxed. Again they flashed their torches and followed
the wire, once more across the corner of an
unimproved lot, across another street, and then——</p>
<p>“Wh-what?” Riley cried. “Do you see where we
are? Back to Verbeck’s place—that’s what! On the
other side of the house!”</p>
<p>He would have said more, but Verbeck’s grasp on
his arm stopped him. Into Verbeck’s heart had come
a sudden fear, and he didn’t see the advisability of
the sergeant and the police squad knowing everything.</p>
<p>“What kind of a stunt is this?” the sergeant
growled.</p>
<p>“Never mind!” Riley counseled sternly, aware of
what the end might be. “We’ve been following this
wire, haven’t we? Very well! We had a reason for
wanting to know where it ran. And that’s all.”</p>
<p>The sergeant subsided, but he guessed that it was
not all.</p>
<p>They were in the yard of the Verbeck place again
now, the wire running from tree to tree as before.
Finally it sprang to the side of the house, and down
it to a window in a rear room. There Riley, who
was leading, stopped.</p>
<p>“That’s all for the present, sergeant,” he said.
“Go inside and get warm—you and the men. If
there’s been any telephone message, come out and
tell us.”</p>
<p>The men needed no second invitation to hurry to
the fire, and they followed the sergeant rapidly around
the corner of the house toward the veranda, leaving
Verbeck and Riley and Muggs alone beneath the
window.</p>
<p>“Well?” Riley said.</p>
<p>“Follow it!” Verbeck commanded. “It must end
somewhere. And we don’t need the squad with us
when we find the end.”</p>
<p>“That’s the way I looked at it. Great Scott, what
a chase! Through the snow and through the
sewer——”</p>
<p>“No message!” the sergeant shouted from the
veranda.</p>
<p>Muggs raised the window. They crept over the
sill into the dusty room. Again Riley’s torch flashed,
and they saw the wire running up the side of the
window to the ceiling and through it.</p>
<p>“To the floor above!” Verbeck said.</p>
<p>They ran to the stairs and went up. As they
passed the door of the living room, they saw the policemen
standing before the big fireplace, extending their
numb hands to the blaze.</p>
<p>They had no difficulty locating the wire on the
second floor. It came from below, and ran up the
side of a window. It followed the border of the wall
paper, and once more it penetrated a ceiling.</p>
<p>“Into the garret!” Riley said.</p>
<p>They ran up the narrow stairs. Riley and Muggs
both held their automatics ready now, and Verbeck
reached for his. They threw open the door opening
into one of the half-finished rooms. There was the
wire, almost hidden as it ran along the bottom of
the window. It followed a wide crack in the floor
across the room. It disappeared into the wall.</p>
<p>Riley raised a hand for silence, and pointed to the
floor.</p>
<p>“We were blind before,” he whispered. “See those
tracks? Whoever made them scattered dust behind
him. They’re almost obliterated—but there they are!
We didn’t use our eyes before. And that wire——”</p>
<p>“Must run into the old toy closet,” Verbeck interrupted.
“But—see here! The door of the closet is
locked on this side, and you can see it hasn’t been
opened.”</p>
<p>“You’re right—it hasn’t! But we’ll just take a
look!”</p>
<p>Verbeck turned the key. Muggs and Riley focused
the light of their torches on the door, and held their
automatics ready. Verbeck sprang aside and hurled
the door open.</p>
<p>The interior of the closet was flooded with light.
All three gasped as they looked.</p>
<p>No Black Star menaced them with weapon. No
diabolical engine of destruction was there.</p>
<p>But there was the end of the wire!</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xxiion-the-scent">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id22">CHAPTER XXII—ON THE SCENT</SPAN></h1>
<p>“He’s done it! He said he’d make me a laughingstock—and
he’s done it!”</p>
<p>Verbeck’s exclamation brought them to their senses.
They stepped through the door.</p>
<p>There was a blanket, a store of provisions, a telephone
that they knew without examination had been
connected with the one in the living room below, and
the end of the dictograph wire.</p>
<p>Fastened to the telephone were several sheets of
paper. Verbeck tore them away, and while Muggs
and Riley held their torches he read in a low voice
the Black Star’s message:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>“<span class="small-caps">Mr. Roger Verbeck</span>: I am assuming you
have answered the call of the damsel and have
followed the wire. The snow is somewhat deeper
than when the wire was stretched by me, and
possibly you have been put to some inconvenience,
but it was necessary, I assure you. I trust you
liked your trip through the old sewer.</p>
<p>“I thank you for your hospitality, for here I
have lived beneath your roof since escaping the
silly police.</p>
<p>“I thank you cordially for the police protection
afforded me while the chief had his dragnet
in operation. It was amusing to look from the
window and watch the officers guarding the house
carefully to see that I was not disturbed.”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>“If ever I get my hands on that devil——” Riley
exclaimed.</p>
<p>“Keep still, Riley—let me finish it! There may be
need for haste yet.”</p>
<p>Verbeck read on:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>“I said I’d make you a laughingstock, and I
have. To-night I send letters to the papers telling
them how I hid in your own house, listened
to all your plans over a dictograph, and tapped
your telephone wire. You cannot hope to match
wits with the Black Star.</p>
<p>“It was very simple. I came here the night I
escaped, after visiting your apartment and mailing
a few letters. Only two of my band knew
of my whereabouts and aided me—one of them
the charming woman who told you to follow the
wire.</p>
<p>“The second night I strung the dictograph wire,
tapped the telephone, and carried my provisions
here. Then I attacked the apartment-house clerk.
I felt very confident you’d move here after that,
and I guessed correctly.</p>
<p>“You came. I rested and ate and listened to
your conversations. At night, by means of a candle,
I signaled from the window to a friend, who
took down my messages for the papers and the
chief of police.</p>
<p>“It has been great entertainment, I assure you.
It was very convenient for me to keep in touch
in this way.”</p>
</blockquote>
<p>“That’s sarcasm for you!” Riley exploded.</p>
<p>“Quiet!” Verbeck demanded, and read on:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>“Is there anything to explain? Ah, yes! My
mode of entrance was not through the door. I
strung the wire to the wall and through the hole
there, retreated after covering my tracks with
dust, and entered in a different place. Perhaps
you know your old family estate, Mr. Verbeck,
and perhaps not. If you will look at the end of
this closet you’ll see a section of wall that can
be removed. I fixed that. It opens into an old,
wide chimney. At some time when the house was
remodeled, and the new chimney built, a part of
this old one was left intact, probably to save the
trouble of remodeling the garret. Inside the
chimney you will find a rope ladder—not very
well made, it is true, yet serviceable. Descend,
and you’ll be able to get into the new chimney.
Go down far enough and you will find yourself
beside the hood over the kitchen stove.</p>
<p>“By extending a hand down while you three
were in the living room, I was able to put on your
loaf of bread the black stars that bothered you
so much. I was able in the same manner to tap
Mr. Muggs on the head as he bent over his pots
and pans. It was a scientific tap, and as he reeled
I clutched him by the collar and decorated his
forehead with a star. Very simple, I assure you.</p>
<p>“I nearly laughed aloud when Riley built the
big fire to smoke me out if I happened to be in
the chimney. I had got back into the old chimney,
of course, and closed the opening by that
time.</p>
<p>“Thanks once more for your splendid hospitality.
To-night being the time for my best
effort so far in your city, I must leave you. My
new headquarters have been arranged by my
friends, and I am sure they’ll prove much more
comfortable. I’ll direct my work from there
hereafter.</p>
<p>“Since I had to get away from your house,
I had a certain woman call you up and tell you
to follow the wire. I knew it would take an hour
or two for you to do so. After you had gone,
I descended the chimney, slipped out of the back
door. At least, that is what I intend doing after
writing this letter, and I am sure my plans will
come out all right.</p>
<p>“I would like to use your splendid roadster
again as I leave, but cannot, as I have made other
plans.</p>
<p>“And now, Mr. Verbeck, search this closet
well, and you’ll find a short note telling you what
I intend doing to-night. The search may delay
you a little, and delay will help me.”</p>
</blockquote>
<p class="center">*****</p>
<p>As Verbeck finished reading, and crammed the letter
into his pocket, Riley, muttering madly to himself,
began pawing among the Black Star’s provisions in
search of the note. Muggs attacked a pile of old toys
in a corner. Verbeck stood still in the center of the
closet for a moment, astounded.</p>
<p>The Black Star had hidden in <em>his</em> house, with the
police guard around it! The Black Star had sent
word to the newspapers of what he had done.
Laughingstock! Roger Verbeck would not dare
show his face among his friends, unless—— There
was one way to wipe out this slur the Black Star
had thrown upon him—by capturing the master criminal
at his work!</p>
<p>Verbeck joined in the search. Working frantically,
they hurled toys around the closet, scattered cans and
boxes of provisions, shook blankets. Then Verbeck
remembered the opening in the wall, and sought until
he found it. There, pinned to the top rung of the
crude rope ladder, was the note.</p>
<p>“Read it, quick, boss!” Muggs begged. “I want
to get my hands on that crook! I’ll show him how
to tap me on the head!”</p>
<p>Verbeck read quickly:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>“As you have said, I love jewels—especially
diamonds. There is a new shipment in the city
that exceeds in value even your famous necklace,
Mr. Verbeck. The general public does not know
of this shipment, which has just been received.
But, having ways of finding out things, I do
know of it.</p>
<p>“To-night I raid the vault of Jones & Co.,
diamond importers, on the second floor of the
National Building.”</p>
</blockquote>
<p class="center">*****</p>
<p>With a roar that could have been heard half a
block, Detective Riley sprang through the door and
toward the head of the stairs, Muggs and Roger
Verbeck at his heels.</p>
<p>Four steps at a time they took the two flights, and
burst into the living room like madmen, startling the
officers there.</p>
<p>“Quick!” Riley cried to the sergeant. “Call headquarters,
private line! Tell them to surround block
of National Building. Black Star’s raiding Jones &
Co.! You, Muggs! Start the car! Ready, Verbeck?”</p>
<p>The sergeant whirled toward them.</p>
<p>“Phone’s dead! Wires cut, I suppose!” he reported.</p>
<p>“Of course! Trust the Black Star not to forget
that! Get the nearest phone, sergeant—probably one
across street!”</p>
<p>He dashed out, following Verbeck. They sprang
into the roadster. Muggs sent the machine shooting
at the big gate, through it, into the broad boulevard,
sounding his horn like a maniac, jumping the powerful
engine into its greatest speed.</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xxxii-into-the-vault">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id23">CHAPTER XXXII.—INTO THE VAULT</SPAN></h1>
<p>Verbeck and Muggs had taken many wild rides
in the big roadster, but nothing that compared
to this. On the boulevard, the street cleaners had
removed most of the snow, but the slush had frozen,
and the going was treacherous. The car skidded from
side to side, at times almost turned end for end,
lurched and swayed sickeningly.</p>
<p>Detective Riley gritted his teeth and clung to one
end of the seat in which Verbeck crouched. Muggs
bent forward, squinting his eyes and trying to get a
clear view ahead. They turned corners and swept
around curves at dangerous speed, sprang down hills
as if the car was some wild thing running for life
from a hereditary foe.</p>
<p>It was half past two o’clock in the morning, and
few vehicles were abroad, a fact for which Muggs
gave devout thanks. They reached the edge of the
business district, yet he did not slacken the car’s
speed. Detective Riley had said no word since the
start—now he was the sleuth on the trail, the officer
of the law ready to try conclusions with the criminal.
Neither did Roger Verbeck speak, not even to shriek
orders to Muggs, for Muggs did not need orders, and
Verbeck was thinking of the humiliation in store for
him unless the master criminal was caught.</p>
<p>Muggs dodged an owl car by less than a foot, and
took a corner on two wheels. Riley would have been
dashed from the machine had not Verbeck flung an
arm around him. Down another hill they raced, and
into a cross street, where the heavy traffic of the day
had obliterated the most of the slush, and the going
was safer.</p>
<p>They were within a few blocks of their destination
now. Verbeck and Riley were both wondering if the
sergeant had been able to get to another telephone and
notify headquarters. The Black Star might have a
chance of escape if the block was not surrounded.</p>
<p>And they were not certain that he had not committed
his theft and escaped already. He had had
plenty of time while they were following the dictagraph
wire, especially since it was certain his plans
had been made carefully. Would they arrive in time
to find him at work? Or, would they find the door
of the vault open and a fortune in jewels gone?</p>
<p>Riley bent over and screeched in Muggs’ ear:</p>
<p>“Stop that horn! And stop the machine at the
corner this way!”</p>
<p>Muggs nodded that he understood. He drove
around another corner, and swung the roadster to a
stop. Riley sprang to the walk, Verbeck and Muggs
following closely. They hurried around the corner
and to the entrance of the big building.</p>
<p>Automatics and electric torches were held ready
now. There was no watchman in the entrance, and
they started to creep up the stairs to the second floor.
And there, at the top of the marble steps, just in front
of the heavy glass doors that opened into the establishment
of Jones & Co., they found the watchman.</p>
<p>He was stretched on the floor, bound and gagged
and with a black star on his forehead. Riley motioned
for silence, and relieved the watchman of gag
and ropes.</p>
<p>“He slipped up on me,” the man whispered. “He’s
inside now.”</p>
<p>“Only one?”</p>
<p>“Just one man!” the watchman whispered. “He
tapped me on the head and had me gagged before I
knew what was happening. Then he bound me. I’m
sure there was only one man. He unlocked the door
with a key.”</p>
<p>“How long ago?”</p>
<p>“Half an hour or more.”</p>
<p>“Then he’s gone out some other way,” Riley whispered
to the others. “He wouldn’t stay in there that
long. What’s the matter with headquarters, I wonder?
I don’t hear any siren. Here, you, watchman,
go down and tell the men, when they come, to surround
the block, and send a few in here. We’ll go
on in.”</p>
<p>The watchman tottered to the top of the stairs and
started down. Riley drew Verbeck and Muggs close
to him.</p>
<p>“No lights until we’re sure where we stand,” he
instructed. “He may be ready to shoot, if he’s still
in there, and a light furnishes a swell target. There’ll
be a faint light inside, reflected from the stairs. I
know this place. This is the only entrance except
a freight elevator at the rear. There are windows, of
course, that open into the court. I’m afraid he’s
gone that way! Ready? Come on, then, and keep
your eyes open!”</p>
<p>Inch by inch Riley swung the glass door open, so
as not to make any sound. Inch by inch they crept
inside and closed the door again. Here the aisles
were covered with thick carpets. An uncertain light
came through the door and made the interior of the
gem store a mass of shadows.</p>
<p>Before them was the general retail salesroom, with
its rows of counters and show cases on either side,
and its divans and chairs in the center. Slowly, carefully,
holding weapons and torches ready, they crept
from shadow to shadow, scarcely daring to breathe,
fearing they would make a sound.</p>
<p>They soon were convinced nobody was in the salesroom.
They came to the partition in the rear, and
found the door partly open. Here they redoubled
their caution. If the Black Star was present he was
somewhere behind that partition.</p>
<p>Riley opened the door carefully, and they stepped
inside. Here they found a dim light, too, coming in
from the street. Here were tables where diamonds
were displayed to purchasing merchants, sets of mirrors
so an employee could see the entire interior at
a glance, and, at the opposite end of the room, the
door to the great vault of Jones & Co.—the vault that
held always a fortune in jewels and was supposed to
be impregnable.</p>
<p>They crouched—and looked. Verbeck drew in his
breath sharply.</p>
<p>The door of the vault stood open.</p>
<p>In it, his back toward them, gloating over a handful
of jewels, was—the Black Star!</p>
<p>As they watched, they heard him chuckle softly,
saw him throw up his head—<em>and walk into the vault</em>!</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xxivhow-it-ended">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id24">CHAPTER XXIV—HOW IT ENDED</SPAN></h1>
<p>Verbeck’s whisper was so low that Riley and
Muggs scarcely could hear it, yet they could detect
the note of exultation:</p>
<p>“We’ve got him!”</p>
<p>That was all, and then they started to creep forward,
their eyes on the vault, from which not a bit
of light came. The Back Star evidently was working
in the dark.</p>
<p>Foot by foot they made their way noiselessly toward
the open door, expecting every instant to see
their quarry step forth and confront them, ready to
prevent him fighting his way to liberty. They listened,
too, for the sound of feet in the room behind
them that would tell of the arrival of the police, but
the sound of feet did not come.</p>
<p>And now, at last, they were within six feet of the
open door, staring into the blackness of the vault,
from which came not the slightest sound. Verbeck
felt his heart pounding at his ribs like a trip hammer
as they waited. The seconds passed.</p>
<p>Then Riley spoke in a low, tense tone, yet his voice
seemed to roar through the place:</p>
<p>“Come out, Mr. Black Star! We’ve got you!”</p>
<p>Silence their answer!</p>
<p>“Come out! Why delay the game?”</p>
<p>Still no answer. Riley reached out and touched
Verbeck, touched Muggs, a voiceless command for
action. They crept forward again, Verbeck to one
side, Muggs on the other, Riley directly before the
door. Now they were in the shadows, and between
them and the door was but a faint streak of light
that came through the windows from the street—a
streak of light they would have to cross to reach the
vault door.</p>
<p>What would happen when they crossed that streak
of light? Riley imagined he knew. Verbeck felt
sure that he knew. Muggs already imagined he heard
the cracking of an automatic, grunts of pain, faced
the whirlwind charge of a desperate, cornered man,
fighting his way to freedom.</p>
<p>“Come out!” Riley commanded again. “Come—or
we’ll come in after you!”</p>
<p>Still no answer. Riley crouched and held the torch
high above his head in his left hand, ready to touch
the button and send a shaft of light into the vault.
In his right hand he held the automatic, safety catch
off, ready to fire on the instant.</p>
<p>He touched the button.</p>
<p>Light shot through the blackness and illuminated a
pathway through the vault door and to the interior.
From side to side Riley swung his light, expecting
every instant to hear the shot he anticipated. There
was no man in the light’s path, but it did not penetrate
to the corners.</p>
<p>Riley expelled his breath in a great gasp of determination,
and slipped forward. Verbeck and Muggs
closed in. If the Black Star was waiting for them
to rush, then the moment for the rush had arrived.</p>
<p>Muggs could endure the suspense no longer. His
nerves were on edge. He gave a subdued squeal and
sprang across the path of light, grasped the door,
hurled it shut, twisted the handle.</p>
<p>“We’ve got him—got him!” he screeched.</p>
<p>Riley’s light showed the perspiration standing out
on his forehead in great globules.</p>
<p>“Why did you do that?” the detective demanded.</p>
<p>“We’ve got him! Turn on the lights! The police
will be here in a minute, then he’ll have no chance
to escape!”</p>
<p>Riley would have had it otherwise, and Roger Verbeck
had anticipated having the Black Star in shackles
by the time the police arrived, but that could not be
helped now. Riley went around the room until he
found the electric switch; he threw it, and the room
was suddenly brilliant with light.</p>
<p>“Well, we’ve got him, anyway,” Verbeck said.
“The Black Star may be able to get into a vault, but
I’ll defy him to get out of that one except by the
door.”</p>
<p>“Yes, and he’ll be dead before he gets out that
way, if some one who can open that vault doesn’t
come soon. Where’s a telephone?”</p>
<p>He saw one in a corner, and rushed toward it and
gave the private number.</p>
<p>“That you, chief?” he asked. “This is Riley?
Have you sent men? What’s that—just started?
Great Scott—— He did, eh? Say, chief, have the
desk sergeant telephone to the manager of Jones & Co.
to hurry down here. We’ve got the Black Star locked
in the vault, and have to get it unlocked. Yes—sure!”</p>
<p>He hung up the receiver and turned to the others.</p>
<p>“Men on the way,” he said. “The chief says he
just got the telephone message. Says the sergeant
said he tried three phones near your place, and all
of them had wires cut. Pretty smooth article, that
Black Star—but we’ve got him! There they come
now!”</p>
<p>From the distance came the sound of a siren, the
clanging of a patrol-wagon bell. Then the pounding
feet on the marble stairs, loud commands, and men
rushed into the establishment of Jones & Co.</p>
<p>“We’ve got him!” Riley exulted. “Caught him at
it! Locked him in the vault! And now we’ll stand
around until the manager gets here and works the
combination. He played a smooth game, all right—ask
Mr. Verbeck about it. But we got him! I reckon
he’s mighty sorry now that he stayed in town to make
a fool out of Mr. Verbeck.”</p>
<p>They waited, crowding about the place, talking excitedly
in whispers, debating whether the Black Star
would put up a fight when the door was opened,
whether he’d commit suicide and cheat the law, now
that he was cornered.</p>
<p>Then the chief came beaming, dreaming of the vindication
of his department the newspapers would have
to grant. He grasped Verbeck by the hand warmly,
patted Muggs on the back, congratulated Detective
Riley.</p>
<p>“I didn’t tip off the reporters this time,” he said.
“Too late for ’em, anyway. They’ll get it in the noon
editions to-day, though. Laugh at the police department,
will they? Not after this!”</p>
<p>And then the manager of Jones & Co. arrived, a
gentleman the personification of dignity generally, but
at present the personification of excitement and dread.
He stammered when he talked, and threw up his
hands in horror when he saw his establishment
crowded with police, and it took the chief some minutes
to assure him that his property was safe and the
would-be thief locked in the vault.</p>
<p>He advanced to the door and prepared to work
the combination. His nervousness caused him to
make a mistake at first, but finally he nodded that all
that was necessary to open the door was to turn the
handle.</p>
<p>The manager retreated then, to hide behind a show
case in fear of flying bullets.</p>
<p>“Might as well come out, Mr. Black Star, and take
your medicine!” Riley cried “We’ve got twenty men
here, with guns pointing at that door. You make a
hostile move when we open it, and you’ll see your
finish!”</p>
<p>He nodded to the police, twisted the handle, and
threw the door open.</p>
<p>Light flooded the interior of the vault. Half a
dozen officers, Riley at their head, rushed.</p>
<p>A cry of consternation came from the detective.
Verbeck and Muggs crowded through to took inside.</p>
<p>On the floor of the vault were empty trays that
had held jewels. Among them were empty chamois
bags. Mountings of inferior value were scattered
about. But no master criminal stood before them,
ready for battle, or in token of surrender!</p>
<p>“Gone!” Muggs cried.</p>
<p>“But he can’t be gone!” Riley shrieked. “We saw
him step into the vault! We came right up, never
taking our eyes from the door! Muggs slammed the
door and twisted the combination. There’s no way
in or out except the door!”</p>
<p>“Gone!” Verbeck echoed.</p>
<p>The chief of police swore. The manager of Jones
& Co., who had left his place of safety, tore his hair
and lamented his loss and berated the police.</p>
<p>“He—he can’t be gone!” Riley reiterated.</p>
<p>Verbeck, his heart sinking, stepped inside and looked
around. Fastened in the corner of one of the trays
was what he had feared he would find—a letter written
by the Black Star and addressed to himself. He read
it swiftly, then handed it to the chief, and threw wide
his hands in a gesture of momentary despair.</p>
<p>And this is what he had read:</p>
<blockquote>
<p><span class="small-caps">Mr. Verbeck and Aids</span>: I am leaving this
because I assume you’ll find my other note at the
house and follow me here. I dare say that, when
you entered you saw me standing before the open
door of the vault. You watched, and saw me
enter the vault. Did you not? You did not!
Your eyes deceived you! I intend waiting here
until you arrive, to add one more small bit to my
evening’s entertainment.</p>
<p>Illusion, my dear Mr. Verbeck—all illusion.
The dim light coming in from the street, you
know, helps some. You will notice that there
are many mirrors scattered around the room.
I took the liberty of moving a few of them
to serve my purpose. Go back to the door at
which you entered and look at the vault. Have
your silly Muggs stand ten feet to the right of
the door to the room. Now look at the vault,
Mr. Verbeck, and it will appear that the silly
Muggs is standing in the vault door. You follow?
Simple, old-fashioned mirror illusion that
won’t even go at country fairs any more. And
you fell for that!</p>
<p>For, when you enter the room, I shall be standing
within ten feet of you, and you’ll imagine
you see me in the vault door, and creep forward.
I’ll take two steps to the right, and you’ll think
I have entered the vault. You’ll advance toward
it, and I’ll step outside quietly to the window that
opens on the court, let myself down a rope already
prepared, and be on my way—with this
excellent collection of diamonds. All thought out
beforehand, you see!</p>
<p>I have made you a laughingstock, as I promised,
but I am not done with you yet. I defy
you again, Roger Verbeck, as I defy the police.
You’ll hear from me soon.</p>
</blockquote>
<p class="center">*****</p>
<p>They snapped out the lights and tried it—Muggs
standing where the Black Star had said—and found
it was so.</p>
<p>They went to the court and found an open window
from which a rope dangled to the ground floor below.</p>
<p>Then they placed a guard and went out, leaving
the manager to estimate and bemoan his loss.</p>
<p>“He’s a devil—a devil!” the chief was muttering.</p>
<p>“He’s human—and we’ll get him yet!” Roger Verbeck
answered, and the fighting look was in his face
when he spoke.</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xxvshadowed-by-three">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id25">CHAPTER XXV—SHADOWED BY THREE</SPAN></h1>
<p>Roger Verbeck’s powerful, four-seated roadster,
its curtains up against the fine drizzle of
rain, and with Muggs at the wheel, drew up when
the traffic policeman raised a warning hand, and waited
for the cross-town stream of vehicles and pedestrians
to pass.</p>
<p>It was eight o’clock in the evening, and the streets
were thronged. Crowds were hurrying toward the
theaters; more crowds were making for a big automobile
show, and others were hastening toward a large
hall, where there was to be a mass meeting, at which
infuriated speakers would demand that the police department
of the city capture instantly the Black Star,
the notorious master criminal, who, with his band of
clever crooks, had terrorized the city for half a year.</p>
<p>Verbeck’s car was of foreign make and of peculiar
appearance, and it was natural that it should be recognized.
Muggs bent over the wheel and gritted his
teeth as he heard the expressions passed by pedestrians,
and the young man beside him looked straight ahead
as if seeing nothing and hearing nothing.</p>
<p>“When you goin’ to get the Black Star?”</p>
<p>“What’s Black Star payin’ you to hold off, Verbeck?”</p>
<p>“That crook’s too much for you, ain’t he?”</p>
<p>“Well, well—so he hasn’t caught you again?”</p>
<p>Those were samples of the remarks being passed,
and they made Muggs want to get from the roadster
and fight his way into the midst of the mob. Muggs
knew better than any one else how Verbeck, since
the memorable day when the Black Star had dared the
young millionaire to capture him, had tried every
means in his power to get hands on the master criminal.</p>
<p>The Black Star had written again to Roger Verbeck,
saying that he and his man Muggs would be
abducted by the Black Star’s men, taken to the master
crook’s new headquarters, for which they had been
searching in vain, and from there taken to the scene
of a big crime. They would be forced to stand by
under guard and watch the crime committed, and
then they would be treated to shots from the vapor
gun the Black Star and his men used, and left unconscious
on the spot—laughingstocks for the public.</p>
<p>That letter had been sent to the newspapers three
weeks before, and as yet the Black Star had not abducted
Roger Verbeck and Muggs. The criminal, in
another letter to the papers, insisted that this was not
because he had not had an opportunity to effect the
abduction, but because preparations had not been completed
for the next big crime.</p>
<p>So now, as Verbeck’s roadster waited at the
corner, those who recognized the car and its occupants
enjoyed a few moments of sarcastic abuse. It was
nothing to the general public that Verbeck had spent
time and money in an effort to capture the master
criminal after the police had failed, that he had risked
his life half a score of times, and once even had been
accused of belonging to the Black Star’s band himself.</p>
<p>The unthinking public looked only at results—and
there had been none. Muggs and Verbeck and the
few thinkers in the city knew well that, if the Black
Star was caught, these thoughtless ones would be the
first to praise Verbeck loudly; but in the meantime
the sarcasm was highly unpleasant.</p>
<p>After a time the traffic cop turned and raised a
hand, and Muggs growled again and threw in the
clutch and piloted the heavy car across the street and
down the broad avenue. They were out of the congested
district within a few minutes, and speeding
along a boulevard that led to a section of the city
where large and modern apartment houses were to
be found.</p>
<p>Half a block behind Verbeck’s roadster a man
trailed on a motor cycle, seemingly paying no attention
to the car ahead, but in reality keeping close watch
on it. A short distance behind the motor cycle trailed
a runabout with one man in it. The runabout was a
small car, but a mechanician could have told after a
second glance that it was a powerful one. The man
in the runabout was watching both the motor cycle
and Verbeck’s car.</p>
<p>A short distance behind the runabout was a lightweight
truck. Behind the wheel of the truck was a
young man, who appeared eager to get home after
an overtime delay in making deliveries. He wore
greasy overalls and jumper, and a slouch hat pulled
well down over his eyes. The collar of the jumper
was turned up to keep out the drizzle.</p>
<p>Thus the procession moved along the broad boulevard,
and, after a time, Verbeck’s roadster drew up
at the curb in front of an imposing apartment house.
Muggs remained behind the wheel, but the man he
had been driving got out and hurried into the building.
It was natural that he did so, for on the ground
floor lived his fiancée. The threat of abduction, it
appeared, did not keep Roger Verbeck from paying
his customary visits to his sweetheart.</p>
<p>The man on the motor cycle pulled in at the curb
on the opposite side of the street, dismounted, and
appeared to be tinkering with his machine. The runabout
passed him, and its driver bent out and spoke a
few words as it passed, the motor cyclist nodding in
reply. Then the runabout went around the next corner,
where it stopped, its driver getting out and walking
slowly back up the boulevard, like a belated laborer
on his way home.</p>
<p>The light truck did not pass Verbeck’s car. It
turned into an alley and pulled up behind a garage
there. Its driver got out and walked quickly back to
the mouth of the alley, and there he peered around
the corner of a high fence and down the boulevard.
He noticed that the motor cyclist had left his machine
and crossed the street and was approaching Verbeck’s
roadster. He saw the man who had been driving the
runabout walking slowly from the other direction.</p>
<p>The driver of the truck chuckled lightly to himself
and remained at the mouth of the alley in the shadows,
watching.</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xxvia-man-of-mystery">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id26">CHAPTER XXVI—A MAN OF MYSTERY</SPAN></h1>
<p>Muggs, crouched down behind the wheel, watched
the fine rain beat against the wind shield of the
roadster, and hoped he would not have to remain in
that position of inaction for long.</p>
<p>He observed a man approaching along the sidewalk,
a man who glanced at the apartment houses as if
seeking a certain one. Directly opposite the roadster
this man stopped, looked around for an instant, and
then hurried over to Muggs.</p>
<p>“Know where the Albemarle Apartments might
be?” he asked.</p>
<p>“They might be almost any place, but I’ve got an
idea you’ll find them in the middle of the next block,”
Muggs replied. “It’s a big, white, brick building.”</p>
<p>“Thanks,” the other growled.</p>
<p>He turned away—and as quickly turned back again.
Reflection from the light on the corner flashed from
something he held in his hand. A small cloud of
vapor rushed at Muggs’ face. Muggs gasped, and
his head fell forward.</p>
<p>Instantly the other man sprang into the roadster,
lifted the unconscious form of Muggs from the
driver’s seat, and placed it in the rear seat, afterward
throwing a robe over it. Then he took Muggs’ place
behind the wheel, crouched forward, waiting.</p>
<p>The motor cyclist stopped beside the roadster at
this moment.</p>
<p>“Got him all right?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Cinch! Muggs is now sleeping peacefully in the
rear beneath a heavy robe. I sure caught him off
guard.”</p>
<p>“Well, Verbeck is the next job. He may stay in
there talkin’ to his girl half the night, and he may
be out in three minutes. It’ll be a game of wait, I
guess. I’ll hang around to give help, if you need it,
and be ready to jump in as soon as you get him. You
gave Muggs a heavy shot, didn’t you?”</p>
<p>“I guess he’s good for half an hour in dreamland,
all right.”</p>
<p>“Verbeck wants to get a heavy shot, too. When
we get out on the river road we can bind and gag
the two of ’em. Careful now. If we miss out on
this the big boss’ll half kill us.”</p>
<p>“I ain’t never failed him yet, not the Bl——”</p>
<p>“Cut it!” the motor cyclist exclaimed. “Be gentle
with that name around these parts. This is the home
of Verbeck’s fiancée, remember, and Heaven knows
what sort of cops might be posted around here. I’d
better duck now.”</p>
<p>He left the roadster and walked a short distance
down the street, finally coming to a stop against a
wall. There he waited in the shadows, as did the
driver of the light truck at the mouth of the alley.
The truck driver had witnessed the undoing of Muggs,
and had chuckled some at it, but had made no move
to interfere. Little cared he if the Black Star’s men
rendered Roger Verbeck’s chauffeur unconscious and
hurled him into the rear of the roadster!</p>
<p>Fifteen minutes passed. The motor cyclist left his
retreat and walked up and down the street now and
then. The man in Verbeck’s car remained crouched
behind the wheel of the machine, and the truck driver
at the alley’s mouth did not change his position.</p>
<p>Then the front door of the apartment house was
opened, and a man and woman stood framed in it
for a moment. The woman stepped back, and the door
was closed again; the man turned up the collar of
his raincoat and stepped briskly down the steps and
toward the waiting roadster.</p>
<p>The watcher at the mouth of the alley betrayed
some interest now. The motor cyclist left his place
of seclusion and walked forward slowly, head bent
as if against the force of the storm.</p>
<p>“Home, Muggs!”</p>
<p>The man who had taken Muggs’ place reached forward
as he heard the words and found the seat beside
him occupied. And for the second time that
evening he turned swiftly and discharged a cloud of
vapor from the pistol he carried. For the second
time also that vapor rendered a man unconscious instantly.</p>
<p>“Great! Walked right into the trap!” It was the
motor cyclist who spoke. He got into the car and
aided his companion in putting the second unconscious
man in the rear, under the robe. “Better let
her out now!” he went on. “We’ve got ’em both—Verbeck
and Muggs. I reckon we caught ’em off
their guard. They didn’t expect to get that vapor
stuff right here on the boulevard. Great idea of the
boss to always give a man what he doesn’t expect!
I guess this’ll put a crimp into young and handsome
Mr. Verbeck. Nail the boss, will he? Huh!”</p>
<p>The other had turned the roadster, and now it
darted up the boulevard at a speed perilously near the
limit allowed by city ordinance. From the mouth
of the alley darted the light truck, and took up the
pursuit. The driver of it was chuckling again, evidently
at the ease with which the Black Star’s men
had made Verbeck and Muggs captives.</p>
<p>The Verbeck roadster led the way up the boulevard,
and, after a time, turned into a side street. Down
a long hill it dashed, with the light truck following
less than a block behind. Traffic was passing in both
directions, but the speed of roadster and truck did
not diminish to any great extent.</p>
<p>Now the residence district was left behind, and the
two machines were passing through the dark wholesale
district. Here the truck dropped a short distance
behind, and its driver glanced around frequently to
see whether any other machine was following.</p>
<p>And then a railroad crossing was reached, and the
roadster was forced to stop against the gates while
a long freight train was pulled slowly by. The truck
drove up and stopped behind it. The driver got down
and stepped across the sidewalk and into a cheap
saloon on the corner there. He came out again almost
instantly, puffing at a cigar he had purchased. He
stood beside his truck, looking at the train, shaking
the raindrops from his coat collar. The two men in
the front seats of the roadster glanced at him, but
apparently he gave them no attention.</p>
<p>The end of the train rattled past; the gates began
to lift. The roadster started slowly forward across
the tracks. The man who had been driving the truck
gave a quick spring—and landed on the rear of the
roadster, where there was a broad bulge in the body,
with an extra wheel lashed upon it. Top and curtains
were up; the men in the roadster could not see him.</p>
<p>They were in the poorer part of the city now, and
presently at the end of the paved streets. Here there
began a road that curved along the river, and, after
striking this road, the man driving the roadster got
all speed possible out of his machine. The other crept
into the rear end, lifted the robe, gave the two prisoners
fresh shots from the vapor gun, and then bound
and gagged them.</p>
<p>On and on they rushed through the night, the
wheels hurling mud in all directions, the brilliant headlights
cutting a path through the darkness.</p>
<p>They came to a bridge, and so crossed the river.
Here the man who rode on the rear end of the car
was exposed twice as it flashed under the bridge lights,
but no bridge tender observed him. It was a bad
night—the tenders merely stepped to the doors of their
tiny houses, saw that a motor car was passing, and
let it go at that.</p>
<p>On the other side of the river, the speed of the
car decreased. After a time the machine was driven
from the main road into a sort of lane. Here the
going was slower yet, for the mud was deep and
the roadbed cut into deep ruts. The car lurched from
side to side in such fashion that the man who rode
behind was almost hurled off.</p>
<p>He could hear the men in the car talking now.</p>
<p>“Nearly there—better dim the headlights,” one of
them was saying.</p>
<p>Instantly the headlights were dimmed, and in the
semidarkness the car plowed on through the mud.
Now it approached an old house, from one window
of which a light flashed. The car was stopped. The
man who had been riding behind dropped off into the
mud and crept through the black night toward the
fence.</p>
<p>One at a time, the two unconscious prisoners were
taken from the roadster, carried through a gate up a
walk, and to the front door of the old house. A bell
would tinkle, the door would be opened, the prisoner
handed over. After that had been done, the roadster,
with all lights out, was turned around and left in
front of the gate. Then the men who had accomplished
the abduction entered the house, and the one
light that had shone from a window was extinguished.</p>
<p>Now the man who had been crouching against the
fence moved rapidly, yet with extreme caution. He
crept past the gate, and where a great tree threw its
branches over the fence he vaulted over. Standing
against the trunk of the tree, he waited for a time
in silence, listening intently for some noise that would
tell of a human being near. He heard nothing but
the moaning of the wind, the beating of the river
against the shore, the soft patter of the rain on the
leaves.</p>
<p>He crept forward again, a few feet at a time, and
finally reached the side of the house. He listened
near a window, but could hear nothing. He found
the window fastened, went on to another, and found
that locked also.</p>
<p>Now he sensed something near him, but it seemed
to be animal rather than human. His hand dived into
a pocket and came out with one of the Black Star’s
vapor guns. With his back against the side of the
house, he listened and waited.</p>
<p>He was sure now that he could hear breathing.
Then he made out two eyes glaring at him in the
darkness. Those eyes seemed to flicker for an instant,
and in that instant the man lurched quickly to one side.</p>
<p>A body fell against him; he heard a snarl. He sank
to his knees, grasped a hairy throat, discharged the
vapor gun, and felt the body relax. His hands worked
swiftly in the darkness on a mission of exploration.
He was chuckling again as he got upon his feet. So
the Black Star did not depend wholly on human beings
to guard him—he had trained dogs!</p>
<p>Should there be another dog, he might sound an
alarm before the vapor gun got in its work. The
prowler knew that, and so he hesitated no longer,
but hurried around the end of the house. Here he
found a cellar window unlocked. A moment later he
was inside the house.</p>
<p>He had an electric torch in a pocket, but feared to
flash it here. Again he listened for a time, and then
felt his way around the wall, and so came to a flight
of steps. Up these he crept, to find a locked door at
the top.</p>
<p>Once more he listened, and seemed to hear voices
coming from a distance. He reached in another
pocket, drew forth a key of peculiar shape, and worked
at the lock of the door for some time. On the other
side a key fell out with a clatter. He waited fully
a minute, scarcely daring to breathe, but decided at the
end of that time that the noise made by the falling
key had not been heard.</p>
<p>Now he turned the knob, and presently opened the
door half an inch. Bit by bit he threw it back, and
finally stepped into the room. He closed the door behind
him as carefully as he had opened it, and even
searched and found the key and locked the door again.
Hurrying noiselessly across the room, he entered
another, and finally passed into a narrow hallway. He
carried the vapor gun in one hand now and his electric
torch in the other. At any instant, he knew, discovery
might come. Some place in that hall a door might
be opened, and light flood it. He was liable to stumble
against one of the Black Star’s men in the darkness.</p>
<p>When he reached the other end of the hall he stopped
to listen again. Once more he heard voices coming
as if from a distance, and decided that they came from
some room on the second floor. He was bold enough
to flash his torch once now, and discovered a rear
staircase. To this he made his way, and up it, and
into a hallway on the second floor.</p>
<p>Now he felt that he was on more dangerous
ground. He could hear the voices plainly, and could
locate the room from which they came. Toward the
front of the hall a thin streak of light streamed from
beneath a door.</p>
<p>He managed to slip into the room adjoining that
from which the light came. After listening for some
time there, he flashed his torch again. The room was
large, bare, dusty. On one side were two windows,
the panes filmed with dirt. On the opposite side from
which he had entered was another door, with some
old curtains hanging before it.</p>
<p>He crept across to this door, careful that the boards
of the floor did not creak with his steps. He bent and
peered through a keyhole into the room beyond. He
did not chuckle now, for a chuckle might have meant
disaster, but he did smile, and the expression on his
face was one of lively satisfaction. He had arrived
at an opportune moment.</p>
<p>Caution remained with him, however. He hurried
back across the room and locked the door with the
key from his pocket. Then he journeyed to one of
the windows and made sure that it was unlocked and
that from it a man easily could drop to the ground.
That done, he went back to the keyhole again and
bent down to watch.</p>
<p>As he took up his position a deep voice came from
the other room, a voice that seemed to be issuing orders
in a tone that meant the speaker generally had
his orders obeyed instantly.</p>
<p>“All ready now! Bring those two back to earth,
and we’ll have the show!” the voice said. “Number
Ten, get out of the house and down to the river and
see that everything is prepared. It is now nine-thirty
o’clock, and we want to leave about eleven.”</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xxviiin-black-stars-hands">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id27">CHAPTER XXVII—IN BLACK STAR’S HANDS</SPAN></h1>
<p>The man who peered through the keyhole saw a
large room, furnished lavishly. The furniture
was massive and antique; the rugs on the floor were
valuable; tapestries of rare worth were there; cut
glass was on a heavy buffet at one side of the room;
an antique lamp standing near the center of the room
shed an uncertain yellow light that made some things
look grotesque and others fantastic.</p>
<p>At the end of a long table and beside this lamp
stood the Black Star, his robe and hood and mask in
place and the star of flaming jet flashing on the hood.
Behind him was the blackboard upon which he wrote
orders to those of his band not enough trusted to
hear his voice. To one side were six members of the
band, each dressed in black robe and mask.</p>
<p>On two chairs a short distance in front of him,
their hands and feet bound and their mouths gagged,
were the two prisoners of the roadster. As the man
of mystery watched, one of the Black Star’s followers
approached the chairs, and for an instant he
held a small sponge beneath the nostrils of each of the
two men.</p>
<p>He stepped back near the others. A moment passed,
and then Muggs groaned and opened his eyes. Those
eyes seemed to flash fire when he took in the scene.</p>
<p>“Well, my dear Muggs, here we are again,” the
Black Star said, laughing a little. “You regain consciousness
a second sooner than Mr. Verbeck, as I
have noticed before. That, I presume, is because you
are a tougher specimen of humanity.”</p>
<p>“You—you——” Muggs stammered.</p>
<p>“What’s this? Your gag has slipped? That is
well, for I was about to have it removed, anyway.
So you can talk, eh?”</p>
<p>Muggs waved his head from side to side and caused
the gag to slip again.</p>
<p>“I’d talk to you with my fists if I had th’ chance!”
Muggs said.</p>
<p>“There you go again—always violence! I have
wondered many times how Mr. Verbeck can put up
with you. Ah, Mr. Verbeck is in the land of the conscious
again, I perceive!”</p>
<p>Muggs turned his head and looked at the man beside
him. Then he faced the Black Star again.</p>
<p>“Them ropes on his arms are too tight and that
gag’s chokin’ him,” Muggs complained. “You treat
me rough if you want, but you treat my boss decent
or I’ll have somethin’ to say to you some time.”</p>
<p>“You scarcely are in a position to threaten just
now, Mr. Muggs,” the Black Star replied, laughing.
“However, Muggs, it is not my intention to cause
Mr. Verbeck any great degree of physical discomfort.
Mental discomfort, of course, is another thing.”</p>
<p>He made a motion, and one of his men hurried
forward and removed the gag. He looked at the
ropes, too, but shook his head as he regained his
former position at the Black Star’s left.</p>
<p>“There, Muggs, are you satisfied?” the Black Star
asked. “Your beloved master has had his gag removed,
and may talk or shriek to his heart’s content.
My man indicates, however, that the ropes are all
right. You cannot tempt me, Muggs. Once, or twice
before you and Mr. Verbeck were able to unfasten
your bonds. I want nothing like that to happen
to-night.”</p>
<p>He walked around the end of the table and toward
the two prisoners, and he laughed aloud as he looked
down upon them.</p>
<p>“Well, Roger Verbeck, here is the Black Star’s new
headquarters,” he said. “You often have wished to
see the place, I believe, so take a look. You still think
you can match wits with the Black Star, eh? I have
done as I threatened. I have had you and Muggs
abducted, and I am going to take you along to-night
when we do our little trick, and then leave you unconscious
on the spot for the city to laugh at. Aren’t
you about ready to admit that the Black Star is too
crafty for you?”</p>
<p>“Scarcely,” came the reply in a firm voice.</p>
<p>“Why, my men tell me it was like kidnapping babies
to get you and Muggs to-night. It really was a shame
to do it. So you are going to continue your efforts
to capture me, eh?”</p>
<p>“I am—certainly!”</p>
<p>“Um! Your voice almost has the note of fear in
it. You do not seem as sure as you did the last time
I had the pleasure of entertaining you for a few
minutes.”</p>
<p>“A few minutes is right!” Muggs put in. “You’ve
got your dirty hands on us three times now, but
you’ve never kept us longer than a few minutes. And
you’ll not keep us to-night——”</p>
<p>“I fear you err, my dear Muggs. I am taking
no chances with you or your precious master to-night.
As I live, Mr. Verbeck, your face appears changed.
Your cheeks are somewhat thinner. That comes, I
suppose, from living in continual fear of me. Let
me see! Um! It has been about three weeks since
I informed you of my intention to abduct you and
make you a laughingstock again. You’ve been worrying
about it all that time, eh? Been fearing to sleep
or eat or ride abroad? Small wonder your face is
thinner and your voice expresses fatigue.”</p>
<p>“He’s been off his feed!” Muggs blurted out. “And
he’s had a bad cold. You needn’t think me, or my boss,
either, would let anything you said throw a scare into
us!”</p>
<p>“Indeed? Had a bad cold, eh? I truly am sorry
I did not give you this little entertainment when you
were in good physical condition. But everything is
prepared, Mr. Verbeck, and also you neglected to inform
me you had a cold and wanted to discontinue
this fight until you were better.”</p>
<p>The Black Star laughed again as at a good joke, and
Muggs growled imprecations deep down in his throat,
but the other man merely looked the Black Star
straight in the eyes and remained silent.</p>
<p>“I trust you understand the program, Mr. Verbeck,”
the master criminal went on, his laugh at an end. “It
has been about six months since you made your foolish
boast that you could capture me. You should know
by this time that it is an impossibility. However,
you have had some excellent fun trying it, and I have
enjoyed the battle immensely. But now it must end.
It is getting to be a bore.”</p>
<p>“Really?”</p>
<p>“Exactly. You’re a sportsman, I believe. I’ll make
a deal with you. If Roger Verbeck does not capture
the Black Star within the next twenty-four hours,
after being right here and seeing the Black Star’s
headquarters, and being taken by the Black Star to
the scene of to-night’s crime—then Roger Verbeck
gives his word of honor that he’ll stop his feeble attempt
and not bother the Black Star more.”</p>
<p>“Roger Verbeck does nothing of the sort!”</p>
<p>“Still determined, eh? Very well. Then, Mr. Verbeck,
we are going to take you and your man Muggs
with us. We’re going to give you a dose from a
vapor gun and leave you where the crime is committed,
as I said we’d do. We’ll give the alarm ourselves
and have the police find you two there unconscious.
Then let the public laugh! I fancy you’ll
hear a howl go up for you to be ordered off the case.
I’d not be surprised if you were hounded out of this
town, which has been your home all your life.”</p>
<p>“I think not.”</p>
<p>“Which shall you do—make the deal I proposed
or be made a public laughingstock again?”</p>
<p>“I make no deals with a crook!”</p>
<p>“And what’s more, you’re wastin’ your breath,”
Muggs put in. “You leave my boss alone! He’s about
half sick. He’s said a hundred times that you’ll get
too fresh some day. Some day you’ll overlook a
bet, make a mistake, and then he’ll get you. And
I’ll be right there, I hope when the gettin’s got!”</p>
<p>“You are a very boisterous man, Muggs,” the
master criminal said. “You’d be very vicious, I imagine,
under some circumstances. Please do not be
so violent. I abhor violence.”</p>
<p>“You’re right; you’ll abhor it if I ever get my hands
on you proper!” Muggs exclaimed.</p>
<p>The Black Star brought the palms of his hands together
sharply.</p>
<p>“Enough of this chatter!” he commanded. “We
have scant time before leaving here for the scene of
the evening’s festivities. You have decided, Mr. Verbeck,
to be made a laughingstock! Very well!”</p>
<p>“And where is this to take place?” came the question.</p>
<p>“Ah! Roger Verbeck thinks I fear to tell him in
advance, does he? Why, sir, I’ll even tell you every
detail of the proposed crime, if you wish. You are
most certainly my prisoner, and cannot warn the police,
and, could you, it would avail those stupid police nothing.
One could steal the buttons off their uniforms
and they’d not know it until the next day.”</p>
<p>“I’m listening!”</p>
<p>“Such impatience!” the Black Star exclaimed. “Attend
me closely, then, Mr. Verbeck—you also, Muggs.
Little good it’ll do you! It is my intention to-night to
reap a harvest of some three hundred thousand dollars
in money and securities. Quite ambitious—that?
Merely an ordinary task for the Black Star, I assure
you.”</p>
<p>“You’re th’ original shrinkin’ onion!” Muggs declared.</p>
<p>“Silence, please, while I explain. The money and
securities I mentioned are in the vaults of the National
Trust Company. Those vaults are impregnable, it is
said. This is a joke, of course. With us it will be
as easy to get that fortune as it would be to purchase
a new cravat.”</p>
<p>“You’re some modest violet!” said Muggs.</p>
<p>“Keep quiet, Muggs, and hear the plans,” the Black
Star said, his eyes glittering through his mask.
“Within the past two months there has been formed
in the city a new lodge called the Knights of Certainty.
When one understands things that title is
rather a good joke. Many good men have heard of
the order and wondered why some one did not ask
them to join, I presume. The membership was strictly
limited. Members of my own band form the lodge.”</p>
<p>“And you’re the supreme boss crook!” Muggs said.</p>
<p>“Another remark, Muggs, and you get the vapor
gun. Mr. Verbeck, you’d better warn your man to
remain silent!” The Black Star evidently was getting
angry.</p>
<p>Muggs turned his head and found his fellow prisoner
indicating that he was to be quiet. Muggs
obeyed.</p>
<p>“It would be a difficult task to get into a meeting
of the Knights of Certainty,” the Black Star went on.
“We’re mighty particular who sees things. I may
mention that, from the moment we hired our hall and
put in furniture, the room has been under close guard,
one of our own men even doing the janitor work.
This hall is on the third floor of the American Building,
adjoining the National Trust Company. We
have been making our preparations nightly, of course,
working from our hall. Some excellent carpenter
and mechanical work has been done, and now, when
we wish, we have merely to pass through a wall to
a stairway and then make our way over a trail we
have prepared to the vaults of the bank and loot them.</p>
<p>“Everything is prepared, I assure you. At this
moment my men are in the uniforms of the watchmen,
and doing their work. There will be no one to molest
us. The vault locks have been fixed so that a few
turns of the knobs will unlock them, and yet an
expert would swear that time locks and other protections
are in perfect working order. It has taken
us some time to get this state of affairs prepared,
but the reward will be well worth our trouble. The
bank received a heavy gold shipment two weeks ago.
Negotiable securities are piled in the vaults. The
bank, in addition, always carries a heavy cash balance,
for it has numerous branches and small affiliated
banks. Yes—I fancy we will be well repaid for the
work we have put on it.”</p>
<p>“If you get the stuff!” said Muggs.</p>
<p>The Black Star whirled toward him, and one of
his men stepped forward, but the master criminal decided
to let the remark pass. He walked to the head
of the table and glanced at his watch.</p>
<p>“We start in half an hour,” he said. “Number Six,
go down to the river and inform Number Ten to be
ready to get away instantly.”</p>
<p>Once more he faced his prisoners.</p>
<p>“How do you like my new headquarters?” he asked.
“Only a few chosen and trusted men of mine come
here. This is a ramshackle old house, but I have
three rooms fixed up comfortably. And there are
things of value in it, believe me! I find it advisable
to dispose of loot slowly. I’d hate to flood the market
and lower prices.”</p>
<p>He laughed again, and once more turned toward
his men. For a moment he conversed with them in
whispers, ignoring his prisoners. A bell tinkled presently;
the Black Star touched a button on the end of
the table, and a few seconds later the man who had
been sent away returned.</p>
<p>“Everything ready, chief,” he reported in a low
tone.</p>
<p>“Ah! Number Four, telephone Main 5782, ask
for Gregg, and say that Mr. Stewart will have four
cases of eggs to-morrow. That will tell those at the
other end that we are starting.”</p>
<p>The man designated moved swiftly across the room
to the telephone and sent the message. The Black
Star waved a hand, and another man approached the
two prisoners, a vapor gun in his hand. They twisted
and turned in their bonds, but the gun did its work;
the Black Star laughed again as their heads fell forward.</p>
<p>“Clever Mr. Verbeck and clever Mr. Muggs,” he
said. “Their attempts to capture me are childish,
to say the least. Get ready now, for we must be off.”</p>
<p>The men removed their robes and masks and put on
overcoats and soft hats. The Black Star took off
his robe, but his hood and mask remained in place,
and the overcoat he donned had a wide collar that,
when turned up, effectually hid his face. No one,
without looking at him squarely under a bright light,
could have seen the mask.</p>
<p>The master criminal waved his hand, and his men
picked up the two unconscious prisoners. He led the
way, and they followed, and the last man out turned
off the light. Their steps sounded in the front hallway,
the door latch clicked—they were gone.</p>
<p>The man who had been watching all this through
the keyhole chuckled aloud now, and presently he
opened the door with his key and slipped into the
headquarters room.</p>
<p>There he stood for some minutes to listen, for he
wanted to be sure that he was alone in the house, and
then he crossed the room to the telephone, took down
the receiver, and called a number in a soft voice.</p>
<p>The number was that of police headquarters.</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xxviiithe-police-launch">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id28">CHAPTER XXVIII—THE POLICE LAUNCH</SPAN></h1>
<p>Down on the bank of the river a speedy launch
was concealed under overhanging trees. Two
men were waiting in it when the Black Star, his other
followers, and the two prisoners arrived. The prisoners,
still bound, were stretched on a robe in the
bottom, the Black Star and his men got aboard, and
the launch slipped almost noiselessly out into the
stream and started down it toward the city.</p>
<p>The craft showed its lights properly, but it kept
away from all other vessels, and the men aboard
crouched down low and spoke in whispers. In time
the two prisoners groaned and opened their eyes, the
effect of the vapor having worn off, and at a sign
from the Black Star one of his men inspected bonds
and gags and made sure that they were secure. The
Black Star did not want any slip this night with a
fortune at stake.</p>
<p>“Your attitude this evening puzzles me, Mr. Verbeck,”
the master criminal whispered in a sarcastic
tone. “You do not seem to be your usual self. Three
or four times now I have had you as prisoner, and
we have exchanged some conversation, and while I
cannot say that I know you well, yet you do not seem
the Verbeck of old. Apparently you have given up
the fight; you are passive. Been worrying, eh?
Afraid I’ll abduct your fiancée, as I almost did once,
and through her force you to join my band? Stop
your silly attempt to capture me, Verbeck, and your
worry will end. No? Very well, then!”</p>
<p>Muggs gurgled behind his gag at this baiting of his
comrade, and the Black Star laughed at his ineffectual
attempt to speak and at the angry glint in his eyes.</p>
<p>“Nor do you seem to be up to standard, my dear
Muggs,” he went on. “I am disgusted with you this
evening. Here you have been in my power for a
couple of hours, and have not made a violent move.
Generally you manage to slip your ropes by some clever
means. Losing your fighting spirit, are you?”</p>
<p>Muggs gurgled again, and the Black Star laughed
softly and turned away.</p>
<p>“We do not go into a wharf,” he told his men. “We
will take no chances of the police being informed and
in wait for us. We stop at a certain place and transfer
to touring cars. Get those fantastic robes from the
locker and dress Verbeck and Muggs in them. We’ll
mask them, too, and so, when we reach the city, if
any one gets inquisitive we are merely initiating two
gentlemen into the Knights of Certainty.”</p>
<p>They were halfway to the city now, and his men
began carrying out his orders. Suddenly the engineer
of the launch growled something, shut off the power,
cut out all the lights, and let the craft drift.</p>
<p>“Police launch!” he hissed over his shoulder.</p>
<p>Up the river and directly at them rushed a high-powered
craft that was hurling back the water from
her bows. Her searchlight was sweeping the river.
The Black Star growled orders, his men stretched
beside him on the bottom, and the engineer hurled
quantities of sacks over them. Then he snapped on
the lights again and started the launch forward slowly,
for he would be able to escape suspicion that way
better than if discovered by the searchlight and found
to be drifting without lights burning.</p>
<p>For a moment the searchlight rested on the launch,
which continued on its course. The police craft swung
in and headed directly for it. A hail came across the
water. The launch was slowed down and the police
boat stopped almost alongside.</p>
<p>“Who are you, and where are you going?” an officer
demanded.</p>
<p>“This is the launch <em>Speedy</em>,” the engineer replied.
“I’m runnin’ to th’ fish market with a load o’ sacks.
What’s th’ matter?”</p>
<p>“Seen any other launch?” the officer demanded.</p>
<p>“Nope!”</p>
<p>“How far have you come?”</p>
<p>“From the mouth o’ th’ river. Good fishin’ there
now.”</p>
<p>“I’ll come aboard and look you over,” the officer
said.</p>
<p>The police boat started slowly and swung nearer.
In that instant the Black Star’s engineer acted. He
threw on the power and dropped, for the wheel was
locked. The screw churned the water and hurled a
great wave at the police boat.</p>
<p>Behind, the men in the police boat were shouting,
and a fusillade of revolver shots spattered around the
Black Star’s craft. But the police found themselves
at a disadvantage. The Black Star’s launch was
swifter, and the police boat was headed the wrong
way and had to be turned. While the turn was being
accomplished, the firing continued, and the searchlight
kept the prey in sight but that prey was gradually
putting distance between itself and the boat behind.</p>
<p>The Black Star’s boat was a hundred yards in the
lead by the time the police launch had straightened
out and taken up the chase in earnest. The grim race
was on, with the police firing at times, and the searchlight
always playing on the vessel ahead. The Black
Star had crawled from beneath the sacks now, and
was directing operations.</p>
<p>“All the speed you have, and get around the bend,”
he ordered. “We can leave the boat and take to the
touring cars. We’ll be lost in the city before they
can telephone headquarters or get cars and trail us!”</p>
<p>The bend in the stream was not far ahead now,
and the master criminal issued further orders. The
two prisoners were treated to shots from the vapor
gun again. The siren of the launch shrieked a message
to the men ahead waiting with the touring cars.</p>
<p>Around the bend—and the launch dashed for the
shore. As it was reached, the police boat came into
view, its searchlight trying to pick up the quarry.
The Black Star and his men tumbled out, carrying
the prisoners. From the road a short distance away
came the honking of an automobile horn.</p>
<p>Then the searchlight struck them, and the police
launch turned and headed for the shore. More flashes
of flame split the darkness, and bullets whined through
the trees and underbrush.</p>
<p>But the Black Star and his men were in the dense
woods now and hurrying along a narrow path that
led to the road. They reached the two waiting motor
cars and tumbled in, and the automobiles started toward
the city.</p>
<p>The police were just leaving their boat and rushing
into the woods, flashing their pocket torches, their
revolvers held ready, calling to one another. They
reached the road in time to hear the roaring of two
motors and to see two cars disappearing down the
highway. They wasted another fusillade of shots, and
then hurried back toward the boat.</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xxixblack-star-takes-a-trick">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id29">CHAPTER XXIX—BLACK STAR TAKES A TRICK</SPAN></h1>
<p>The Black Star rode in the first car with his two
prisoners and three of his trusted men, and the
others followed in the second car as close as safety
would permit.</p>
<p>Both chauffeurs got all the speed possible out of
the machines they drove. The police had been left
behind for the time being, but there was danger of
them getting to a telephone in some way and sending
an alarm to headquarters. If the Black Star’s autos
were headed off as they were entering the city, disaster
might follow. If they could gain the city’s
streets and separate, undoubtedly their chances for
getting to the lodge hall unobserved would be excellent.</p>
<p>The Black Star was not worrying about the police.
He deemed it a coincidence that the launch had run
upon him. He believed the officers had been looking
for river thieves, and that they would continue to
look for them. He did not think for a moment that
the police in the launch were looking for the Black
Star and members of his band. How could that be
possible? How could the police know that this was
the night the Black Star had chosen for a crime and
that he would be coming up the river in a launch?</p>
<p>“We’ll be at th’ bridge in a few minutes,” the master
criminal’s chauffeur warned.</p>
<p>“The road curves up to the bridge,” the Black Star
replied. “I do not think it possible that word could
have been sent ahead, but it is well to be prepared.
Slow down as you reach the curve and shut off your
lights. The car behind will do the same. We’ll stop
this side of the curve and investigate.”</p>
<p>On dashed the cars, and presently the Black Star’s
chauffeur decreased his speed, forcing the chauffeur
behind to do the same. The lights of the two cars
went out; they rolled along the road with scarcely
any noise, and presently came to a stop.</p>
<p>Here the road ran close to the river, and by getting
from the car and walking a hundred feet the
master criminal could look down at the bridge. He
took one of his men with him and went to make his
investigation. He saw at a glance what was happening.</p>
<p>The police, it was evident, had reached a telephone.
The bridge at the moment was swinging open. And
when it was open it remained so, though there was
no boat in sight to make the passage through. And,
as the master criminal watched, he saw the police
launch darting up the river. Its searchlight flashed
upon the bridge, and its siren bellowed. It turned toward
the shore and touched. The police sprang out
and ran up the bank. The Black Star could see them
reach the floor of the bridge and run along it to the
tender’s shanty. Then they scattered, hiding among
girders and along the bridge approach.</p>
<p>“Um! Very clever!” the Black Star said to his
man. “There is only the one road, too. We drive
at a furious pace on to the bridge; we see the draw
open, and we stop—and the clever police spring out
and make us all prisoners. Very clever—except that I
anticipated it.”</p>
<p>“Maybe we could turn around and get back to our
launch,” his man suggested.</p>
<p>“Fool! In the first place, we’d lose valuable time,
and then, when we did come up the river, we’d have
to clash with the police boat again. Also, my brainy
friend, if our launch is where we left it, you may be
sure there is a police guard there waiting for us to
return. If you happen to have any brains, try to use
them.”</p>
<p>The Black Star’s man gulped and kept silent.</p>
<p>“Go back to the cars and have all the men come
here, bringing Muggs and Verbeck,” the master criminal
ordered.</p>
<p>The man obeyed; within two minutes all were
grouped around the Black Star, and the unconscious
prisoners were on the ground at the foot of a tree.
The Black Star explained their predicament.</p>
<p>“You chauffeurs, get back in the cars, turn on the
lights, and drive on to the bridge,” he instructed.
“When the police question you, simply say you have
been out to that road house on the river bank earlier
this evening—which will be true—and not finding
fares there, or prospects of any, are on your way
back to the city. Admit you heard firing back on the
road, and saw men rushing through the trees. Say
you didn’t stop because you were afraid of being held
up—there have been several automobile holdups in
that vicinity recently. And argue with the police as
long as possible, while we do our part.”</p>
<p>The chauffeurs hurried away. They ran some risk,
they knew. They might be put under arrest, but they
had little fear of that. Both held licenses as public
chauffeurs, and they had established the road-house
alibi on the master criminal’s orders. And, if held,
the Black Star would see that they were bailed out—and
then they’d simply jump their bail.</p>
<p>“We’re going through that bridge and to the city,
and we’re going in the police launch,” the Black Star
told the others. “That’ll be rather rubbing it in, but
the police deserve it. I’ll write a letter to the papers
afterward, telling just how we did it. There is only
one man in the launch. We must seize it and make
a quick get-away. Run under the bridge and straight
up the river. We’ll desert the police boat a short distance
down the stream. I’ve arranged for two taxicabs
to be there. I wasn’t exactly sure where it would
be best to leave our own launch, and I always prepare
for emergencies.”</p>
<p>He led the way through the brush on the bank of
the river. They had but a short distance to go, and
they were directly opposite the police boat and about
a hundred feet from it when they heard the two automobiles
run up on the bridge and stop at the command
of a policeman.</p>
<p>The Black Star was a wise general; he did not send
all his men forward at once. Had he done that, the
engineer of the launch would have been suspicious
and instantly sounded an alarm. The master criminal
selected one man, and had him walk boldly through
the brush and down to the launch. In the semidarkness
the engineer of the launch would believe him to
be one of the plain-clothes men returning with orders.</p>
<p>The Black Star’s man was within a dozen feet of
the boat before the engineer was aware of his approach,
for he was busy with the searchlight. He
turned when he heard the man splashing through the
mud at the edge of the river, and before he could ask
a question he received a shot from a vapor gun and
collapsed in the bottom of the boat, unconscious.</p>
<p>The searchlight had been playing on the bridge approach.
The Black Star’s man swerved it aside for
a moment, and then back into position, thus notifying
his master that his work had been accomplished.</p>
<p>Down through the brush crept the Black Star and
his men, carrying their two prisoners. They reached
the launch and boarded it, and the master criminal’s
engineer hurried to his machinery. The police engineer
had been tossed out on the shore.</p>
<p>But the escape was not to be made without trouble.
There was a captain in charge of the police squad
who thought quickly. When the two empty automobiles
reached the bridge, and the questioning of the
chauffeurs began, this captain ordered half his men
to return to the launch and go back up the river to
look for traces of their quarry. They broke through
the brush just as the launch’s engineer was put on
the shore.</p>
<p>The mere sight of men aboard the launch was
enough to tell the police what had occurred. They
charged forward, shooting wildly and yelling alarms
to their companions up on the bridge. Bullets smashed
into the sides of the craft as it backed slowly away
from the shore. The engineer was doing his best,
but he could not turn and put on speed until safely
away from the shallows.</p>
<p>It was a perilous moment for the Black Star and
his men. The criminals returned the fire, but made
no attempt to hit their targets, for the master crook’s
orders always stood against inflicting wounds or
causing death, unless it was absolutely necessary.
Crouching in the bottom of the launch, they waited
for the engineer to back out into the stream. More
police were hurrying down from the bridge, and soon
would be firing at the launch. And they would be
able to keep up their volleys until the launch was
some distance away, endangering the Black Star and
his men and prisoners every moment of the time.</p>
<p>But the master criminal, it appeared, though he
pretended to abhor all violence, was no physical coward.
He sprang to his feet, away from the protection
of the bulwarks, and jumped forward to the
searchlight. While bullets rained around him he
reached the light and turned it. It flashed straight
into the faces of the foes on the shore, blinding them
at that short range, making them easy targets, and
rendering them incapable of aiming at the men on the
launch.</p>
<p>Some continued firing in the path of light; others
sprang for cover in the brush, expecting the men on
the boat to fire a volley. The laugh of the Black Star
rang out; he continued playing the light on them.
The launch was out in the stream now and turning;
a moment later the engineer gave her the maximum
amount of speed, and she dashed beneath the bridge
and toward the city.</p>
<p>“Too bad our prisoners could not have been conscious
and enjoyed this little battle,” he told his men.
“Really, Muggs and Verbeck are not in the thick of
it at all to-night. Generally they cause a part of the
trouble, but to-night all our trouble has come from
others.”</p>
<p>He chuckled as if well pleased with himself.</p>
<p>“Some joke this—stealing the enemy’s boat,” he
observed.</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xxxmuggs-in-action">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id30">CHAPTER XXX—MUGGS IN ACTION</SPAN></h1>
<p>For fifteen minutes they ran in silence, and then
the Black Star went forward and stood beside
the engineer.</p>
<p>“Put in at the alley between National and Washington
Streets,” he ordered. “Out with your lights,
and make as little noise as possible. The two taxicabs
should be waiting at the end of the alley. Get ready,
men, and pick up Verbeck and Muggs. We don’t
want to lose any more time—we’ve lost enough already.”</p>
<p>He was not chuckling now; he spoke in a stern
voice, and his men knew that the Black Star was
thinking only of the big-planned crime now, of getting
the money and securities from the vault of the
National Trust Company and removing the fortune
to his headquarters. Then the band would scatter as
usual, and in the morning the police would discover
that the lodge hall of the Knights of Certainty had
been a crooks’ workshop and the robbery made possible
because of it—but they would make the discovery
too late, as usual.</p>
<p>They would find little black stars pasted in the
lodge hall and on the vaults, and none of the members
of the Knights of Certainty would be seen again.
The Black Star and his men would leave behind a
couple of hundred dollars’ worth of furniture—and
take away between two and three hundred thousand
in coin and negotiable securities. And the next blow
perhaps would be struck in a different section of the
city and at an unexpected moment, as usual.</p>
<p>The lights of the launch went out, and her speed
was cut down until she scarcely crept through the
water. Closer and closer she slipped to the shore,
inside the shadows of large warehouses. She passed
the end of a street, went in closer, and came finally
to the alley. Silently the men lashed her to piling
there.</p>
<p>The two taxicabs were waiting, and the transfer to
them took but a few minutes. With curtains up, they
crept to the mouth of the alley, turned into a street,
and sped along it toward the business district. There
was nothing unusual in the appearance of the taxicabs.
A score of police officers would have glanced at them
once, and then turned away. Repeatedly they were
held up at crossings by the theater and café crowds
passing. They were caught in traffic jams, but their
chauffeurs puffed at cigarettes and waited nonchalantly
until they could go ahead.</p>
<p>They reached the front of the building where the
Knights of Certainty had their hall, but did not stop
there. They went into the alley and pulled up at a
little side door. One of the men got out, rapped on
the door, and gave a password when a slot in it was
opened. The Black Star and his men got out, glanced
around, carried their prisoners from the cabs, and
went into the building. The door was closed again;
the two taxicabs drove away.</p>
<p>An elevator made two trips to the third floor, and
the Black Star and his men entered the lodge hall.
Guards took up the positions that had been assigned
to them. The doors were bolted securely; the windows
had been fitted with opaque glass and heavy curtains.</p>
<p>“Well, here we are,” the Black Star said. “Mask,
gentlemen! Now bring our prisoners back to life,
and we’ll let them see how easy it is to take money.”</p>
<p>While his orders were being obeyed the master
criminal went to one of the walls and pressed against
a certain spot there. A section of the wall swung
out, and in the aperture a masked man stood.</p>
<p>“Everything all right?” the Black Star asked.</p>
<p>“All safe, sir,” came the reply.</p>
<p>“The watchmen——”</p>
<p>“Not a hitch there, sir; they are all unconscious
and our men in their places. We have reported regular
for four hours, and not a suspicion at headquarters
or they’d have investigated before this. The
patrolman on the beat even looked in at a window
once and waved at our man on the first floor.”</p>
<p>“Excellent!” the Black Star said, rubbing his hands
in satisfaction.</p>
<p>He walked back to the end of the room. His prisoners
were revived now and had been placed side by
side in chairs before one of the curtained windows
in the rear of the hall.</p>
<p>“Ah, Mr. Verbeck and Mr. Muggs!” the master
criminal smirked. “You are conscious again, then?
’Twas a pity you didn’t see the little fight we had with
the police. I’d tell you all about it, but we haven’t
the time to spare, and you can read about it in to-morrow’s
papers. Well, here you are in the hall of
the Knights of Certainty. You see the aperture in
the wall? My mechanics have arranged a passageway
between the walls of the two buildings. We
have a sort of glorified dumb-waiter, and by its use
can descend to the first floor of the National Trust
Company’s building. Simple, eh? I regret I cannot
explain the method we are going to use to get into the
burglar-proof vaults. Did it become public property,
the manufacturers might invent some means of
counteracting it. Kindly sit still, gentlemen, while I
have my men prepare the way.”</p>
<p>He deliberately turned his back and walked to the
center of the hall again and called his men to him,
all except the guards near the doors. He issued instructions,
and two men hurried to the aperture in
the wall and disappeared. The Black Star was the
commanding general now, and his followers were
eager to obey.</p>
<p>For fifteen minutes perhaps he paced the floor,
glancing at his prisoners now and then, and often
stopping to issue some whispered instruction. Then
one of the men he had sent below returned.</p>
<p>“All ready, sir,” he reported.</p>
<p>“The vaults are opened?” the Black Star asked.</p>
<p>“Yes, sir, and every strong box. All you have to
do is take out the swag, sir.”</p>
<p>“The suit cases are there and ready?”</p>
<p>“Yes, sir.”</p>
<p>“Two of you carry Mr. Verbeck to the dumb-waiter,
and we’ll descend with him,” the master criminal commanded.
“Sorry I cannot take you at the same time,
my dear Muggs, but the capacity of our dumb-waiter
is limited. I’ll have you taken below before we are
through, though. In the meantime, sit calmly on your
chair.”</p>
<p>He laughed as he turned toward the aperture in
the wall, laughed again as two of his men carried
the bound and gagged prisoner as if he had been a
log of wood, and chuckled as he saw the anger flashing
in Muggs’ eyes. The Black Star, his helpless
prisoner, and his two men disappeared, and the aperture
in the wall was closed.</p>
<p>Those who remained glanced at Muggs, but did
not approach him, and made no offer to taunt him.
They left that to the Black Star. All except the
guards at the two doors and one who peered through
a slit in the curtain at a front window, gathered in
the middle of the room and spoke in whispers.</p>
<p>Muggs tugged at his bonds for the hundredth time,
and realized that he had been bound well. There was
no hope of slipping from these ropes. Here was no
broken glass upon which he could saw the ropes, as
Roger Verbeck had done once. Nor could he manage
to get his fingers into a hip pocket and extract a knife
that opened with a touch of the thumb and cut his
bonds with that as he had done once before when in
the Black Star’s hands. Back at the master criminal’s
headquarters he had been searched and his knife
taken from him.</p>
<p>He racked his brain for an idea that would lead to
release, and could think of none. On the first floor
of the adjoining building, he guessed, the Black Star
and his men were filling suit cases with the wealth
of the National Trust Company, and a helpless and
raging prisoner was being forced to watch the crime
and endure the taunts of the Black Star at the same
time. If only he could be free and have a good automatic
in his hand——</p>
<p>He glanced at the Black Star’s men again; they
were not even looking in his direction; they knew well,
he supposed, that he could not make a move. He could
only sit in the chair against the curtained rear window
and look straight ahead, absolutely helpless.</p>
<p>He imagined that he could hear a slight noise outside
the window, but it was not repeated. If he could
have seen, he would have noticed that the point of a
sharp knife pierced the heavy curtain directly behind
him, and where none in the room could see. Working
slowly, cutting an inch at a time, that knife made
a slit half a foot long.</p>
<p>Then Muggs heard the slightest suggestion of a
whisper.</p>
<p>“Muggs! We’re here to help, but must move carefully.
I’m going to cut your ropes and slip you a
gun. Hold your arms tight so the ropes won’t fall
away until you’re ready. Steady now!”</p>
<p>Muggs might have shrieked his happiness had not
the gag prevented. He didn’t pretend to know the
owner of the voice, and he didn’t care much, so that
it was a friend. One thing he did know—it was not
the voice of Roger Verbeck. And it was not the
voice of old Detective Riley, who had helped Muggs
and Verbeck several times in their effort to take the
Black Star. It was a strange voice, but welcome for
all that.</p>
<p>Muggs felt a knife sawing at the ropes that bound
his wrists together behind him. He caught the ends
as the ropes were severed, and held them so that they
would not drop away and alarm the Black Star’s men
before his feet were free.</p>
<p>The knife was working on the ropes that bound
his feet now. It was slow and tedious work, and
at times the knife was still. Finally Muggs felt the
last rope give, and he heard the whisper again.</p>
<p>“I’m going to slip you an automatic. Stick ’em
all up and hold ’em while we break in behind you.
If we make a false move we’ll lose. Is the Black Star
still below? Wiggle your fingers if he is.”</p>
<p>Muggs wiggled his fingers by way of answer, and
almost immediately he felt the butt of an automatic
pressed against his palm.</p>
<p>“Now!” the voice whispered.</p>
<p>None of the criminals were facing Muggs. He
stretched his arms and legs once to restore circulation,
and then sprang from his chair.</p>
<p>“Hands up!” he shrieked, and leveled the automatic.</p>
<p>Every man in the room whirled to face him at that
command. One reached for a weapon, and Muggs
shot over his head. Behind him the window was
shattered, and there was a sudden commotion as half
a dozen uniformed policemen, a lieutenant at their
head, tumbled into the lodge hall with guns held
ready.</p>
<p>“Keep ’em up!” the lieutenant warned.</p>
<p>Another of the Black Star’s men reached for a
gun, and the sergeant dropped him. Another darted
quickly across the room, and the bullet that went in
his direction missed its mark. He reached the wall—and
the light switch.</p>
<p>The lights went out.</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xxxiin-the-bank">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id31">CHAPTER XXXI—IN THE BANK</SPAN></h1>
<p>The forces were about even, and these men of the
Black Star’s organization whom he had taken
into his inner circle, and, in a measure, into his confidence
could be expected to put up a brave fight to
save themselves and their master from capture or
death. They knew how the public regarded the Black
Star and his band; they knew what a jury would do
to any one of them who stood in the prisoner’s dock,
and that the judge would give the limit of imprisonment
to any declared guilty.</p>
<p>So, as the lights went out, there came a scattered
volley from the criminals, who had darted to different
parts of the lodge hall. Muggs and most of the policemen,
however, anticipating that volley, had thrown
themselves flat on the floor, and they fired at the flashes
and changed their positions quickly.</p>
<p>Again volleys were exchanged, and shrieks of pain
told that some of the bullets had found human marks.
The lieutenant was bellowing his commands, urging
his men to guard doors and windows. In the darkness
it was impossible to tell policeman from criminal,
and both sides ceased firing.</p>
<p>There came a rush, and some of the Black Star’s
men reached the door that opened into the hall and
threw it open. They were met by a stream of light
from the corridor, and saw more policemen standing
there awaiting them, their weapons held ready; there
was no escape that way.</p>
<p>The light made it possible for the police to shoot
again, and two of the criminals went to the floor
badly wounded. Others ran to the front windows, but
there was no way of escape there, for it was three
stories to the ground; nor could they reach the rear
windows and fire escape, for the police were on guard
there.</p>
<p>They were cornered in the lodge hall, and knew it.
To each of them came the thought that prison was
better than death—for no murder was charged against
the Black Star’s band. And they had faith in their
master and his organization—arrest did not mean
prison necessarily.</p>
<p>“Throw down them guns, or take it!” the lieutenant
commanded.</p>
<p>One of the Black Star’s lieutenants groaned, threw
down his gun, and put up his hands. Then the others
followed his example. They couldn’t understand how
the police happened to be there—the Black Star had
almost always managed to lead them astray before.
They began wondering how it fared with the Black
Star and the others on the floor below.</p>
<p>“Once too often this gang has tried to put over
something!” the lieutenant said as his men snapped
handcuffs on the crestfallen criminals. “We’ve got
you this time, and you’ll do a long stretch each.”</p>
<p>“We was only holdin’ a meetin’,” one of the men
replied.</p>
<p>“Yeh? I know all about that meetin’. Masks on
your faces, and the Black Star and some more down
in the bank, and Muggs bound and gagged in a chair—and
you was only holdin’ a meetin’. Down to the
wagon you go now, and straight to the hoosgow!”</p>
<p>Muggs was not listening to this tirade of the lieutenant’s.
No sooner had he seen that the battle was
over than he had raced across the hall to the wall
where the Black Star had touched a hidden button and
caused an aperture to show there. He pressed the
wall frantically, but with no result. He covered every
square inch of it near where he had seen the Black
Star put his hand, but no opening appeared.</p>
<p>“Needn’t waste time there, Muggs, if you want
to get to that Verbeck man of yours,” he heard the
sergeant saying. “There’s some trick about it, of
course, or it wouldn’t belong to the Black Star. We
were outside the window on the fire escape, and saw
him open that, and heard what he said. So we’ll just
guard this end here, in case they should open it and
try to come up. The lower floor is guarded, too, and
they’ll be mixing things there in a minute; they’re
waitin’ until Black Star gets his hands on some money
and stuff. We want to get him with the goods, see?
Men all around the block, too—a mouse couldn’t get
away. We’ve got him this time!”</p>
<p>“How’d you know?” Muggs demanded.</p>
<p>“Don’t ask me! Some tip to the chief—and it sure
was a correct tip. Two thirds of the night relief is
scattered around this block right now. Here’s where
we clean up. By George, I’m sorry you and Verbeck
didn’t do it!”</p>
<p>“Didn’t we?” Muggs snarled.</p>
<p>“You wouldn’t have done much, I guess, bound
and gagged the way you were—just been left here
for another joke. Nope! The police get the credit
for this—the police and whoever tipped this off. One
of the Black Star’s men did it, I suppose—some one
that was sore at him for something.”</p>
<p>“Guess again!” Muggs snarled. He didn’t fancy
this belittling of Roger Verbeck by a lieutenant of
police.</p>
<p>He turned and hurried across the hall and into the
corridor, and sped down the stairs. He wanted to get
around to the other side of the block and see what was
transpiring in the National Trust Company’s building.
He had forgotten the fantastic robe in which the Black
Star had dressed him, and the laughter of one of the
policemen in the hall brought it to mind. Muggs tore
the robe off and growled his imprecations, and ran
on as the policeman laughed again.</p>
<p>At the entrance to the building an officer held him
up with leveled weapon, not being sure of his identity.
Muggs lost time until another lieutenant appeared
who knew him and ordered his release. He reached
the street, sprinted for the corner, darted around it,
and reached the front of the bank.</p>
<p>Everything seemed quiet there. Half a dozen policemen
were standing on the sidewalk, and there
seemed no commotion inside.</p>
<p>“Why don’t you get in? Why don’t you do something?”
Muggs wanted to know. “Standin’ here like
dummies that ain’t got——”</p>
<p>“Easy there, man!” one of them replied. “We’re
doin’ something, all right. You just wait here with
us until we get the signal.”</p>
<p>“Wait nuthin’!” Muggs exclaimed. “I’m goin’——”</p>
<p>“Wait, Muggs! We know the Black Star is in
there and what he’s doing, and we know he’s got
Verbeck in there. Take it easy—we’ve got it planned
and we’ll get him with the goods.”</p>
<p>“You’ll let him get away with half of what’s in the
vaults, that’s what you’ll do!” Muggs stormed. “I’ve
seen that gent work before. You just let me get in
there! I’ve got a score or two to settle with him!”</p>
<p>“You’ll have to wait——”</p>
<p>He was interrupted by the blast of a whistle. Instantly
the officers were active. They sprang to the
big double doors of the bank and crashed them open
and tumbled inside. Others who came running took
up their stations outside to watch every exit. Muggs
was the second man through the front door.</p>
<p>It was dark inside, save where some light came
through the windows from the street. The police
flashed their torches and charged through the main
room and into the office section. They tumbled over
low partitions and scrambled over tables and desks
and chairs, working their way back of the cages toward
the vaults.</p>
<p>There had been officers stationed inside the building
before the Black Star and his men arrived to begin
operations, and they were in the front of the charge.
It had been the chief of police who had given the
signal on the whistle. Through a glass partition he
had watched proceedings until what he judged was
the right moment to act. He was eager to catch the
master criminal with loot in his hands, to get such
evidence that there would be no possibility of a mistrial
or acquittal.</p>
<p>There was the sound of crashing glass as the partitions
went down. There was a loud command for
the Black Star and his men to throw up their hands
and surrender.</p>
<p>There came a deafening crash, and a cloud of vapor
rolled toward the police. Some inhaled it and fell;
others, guessing what it meant, tried to hold breath
until it passed, though it half blinded them and made
their eyes smart and torrents of tears run from them.</p>
<p>Over the noise and confusion rang the mocking
laugh of the Black Star. Through the gas cloud they
could see him retreating, shielding himself with the
body of his bound and gagged prisoner. Three men
who retreated before him carried two heavy suit cases
between them.</p>
<p>Shots rang out, but none fell. Those of the police
who had not been rendered unconscious by the gas
bomb charged again. They saw the Black Star back
into a little side corridor, saw him hesitate a moment
by the wall, put his hand against it, and saw an opening
appear.</p>
<p>Through this opening his men darted. He stepped
into it himself, still using his prisoner as a shield.
Then the opening closed.</p>
<p>“We’ve got him—got him!” the chief cried. “Our
men are watching the top of that between-the-walls
business he built, and we are watching the bottom.
He can’t get out. He’ll give up or he’ll stay there
and starve. And if he doesn’t give up mighty quick
we’ll go in after him.”</p>
<p>Muggs grasped the chief by the arm and opened his
mouth to speak, but the chief was quicker.</p>
<p>“I know, Muggs,” he said. “The scoundrel’s got
Verbeck in there. But we’ll get ’em—and I don’t think
he’ll hurt Verbeck.”</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xxxiia-narrow-escape">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id32">CHAPTER XXXII—A NARROW ESCAPE</SPAN></h1>
<p>When the Black Star had entered the aperture in
the lodge hall, and the panel closed behind him,
he flashed his electric torch around the interior of a
space about five feet long and three wide.</p>
<p>“Notice our ingenuity, Mr. Verbeck,” he said.
“Here we have constructed, as I remarked, a sort of
dumb-waiter between the walls of the two buildings.
It took considerable time, and great care was necessary,
but the job will be profitable for all that. Every
bit of material had to be smuggled into the lodge hall,
but we did it without the stupid police suspecting anything
was wrong.</p>
<p>“I am sorry that I cannot remove your mask and
gag and discuss this bit of work with you, but you
might shriek and call down our foes. Kindly give
me your close attention now. You see this small cable
running through the corner? I pull on it like this—similar
to the old-fashioned elevators, you see. And
down we go!”</p>
<p>The little box arrangement crept downward slowly
as the Black Star chuckled his satisfaction. There
was not the slightest noise; the holes even had been
greased so the cable would slip through silently. Inch
by inch the box descended. It was insufferably hot,
and the air was bad. None spoke a word until the
descent of the box stopped, and then the Black Star
turned to his prisoner again.</p>
<p>“We are at the bottom,” he said. “You see this
small button here? It is connected with an electric light
signal that we installed, and when I press it a
certain number of times it conveys a meaning to one
of my men in the bank. The little bulb light, I assure
you, is cunningly hidden. You see, I am prepared
for everything, Mr. Verbeck. Perhaps that is why I
am so successful.”</p>
<p>He reached out and pressed the button. There
was a wait of half a minute, and then a green bulb
glowed in the top of the box.</p>
<p>“Ah, the coast is clear!” the Black Star said. “We
are about to take a fortune in money and securities
from the strongest bank in the city, Mr. Verbeck, from
a bank that boasts its vaults cannot be opened by
burglars.”</p>
<p>The Black Star chuckled again, and then pressed
against the wall. An opening showed before them,
and one of the Black Star’s men stood just outside,
masked.</p>
<p>“All ready, sir,” he reported. “The suit cases are
on a table before the vault’s door and you have only
to open that door and step inside.”</p>
<p>“The watchmen are on duty?”</p>
<p>“In front on the two upper floors, sir, and in the
rear on this floor at this time. He has to punch his
report box there in ten minutes.”</p>
<p>“Guard the corridor, then. I want only the three
men with me in the vault room. Should there be trouble,
use the back exit, and leave this for me and those
working with me.”</p>
<p>He stepped out as he ceased speaking, and the men
behind him carried the prisoner between them as they
had on the floor above. They were in a narrow side
corridor that ran from the offices to an alley entrance—an
entrance used by directors when they attended
a meeting, and by bank officials when they desired to
get out of the building without seeing some undesirable.</p>
<p>Along this narrow corridor they walked slowly,
bending low when they came to a place where light
came through the windows from the street. They
opened a door and passed through an office, opened
another door, and were in the vault room.</p>
<p>“Put Mr. Verbeck in that chair at the end of the
table and facing the door of the vault,” the Black
Star whispered to his men. “I want him to have the
privilege of watching operations. Then, when we are
done, we’ll pin a nice little note to his breast, put
him to sleep, go away, and telephone the stupid police
to come here and find him. And then the public can
have a laugh.”</p>
<p>His men obeyed him, and the Black Star turned
to the door of the vault. He chuckled again as he
reached a hand forward, grasped the handle, and
swung the heavy door open. He looked back at his
prisoner and waved a hand in derision, and then
stepped into the vault.</p>
<p>The others could see his torch flash, and presently
he came out.</p>
<p>“A very good haul, I imagine,” he announced, and
began piling packages of bank notes into one of the
suit cases. “I am gathering the big bills—haven’t
time to bother with such things as fives and tens at
first. Perhaps, if we have time, I’ll take a few packages
for the men. Now for some more.”</p>
<p>Six trips he made into the vault, and each time
he came out with his arms filled with bundles of
bank notes, which he put into the suit case. On the
seventh trip he carried two bags of gold coins and put
one in the first suit case and locked it, and then threw
the second sack in a corner of the second suit case.</p>
<p>Securities were the next things he went after. He
filled the second suit case with bonds, even stopping
to flash his torch over them and discard those of
small value or such as would not be easily negotiable.</p>
<p>“You see how simple it is, Mr. Verbeck, when a man
with brains plans things?” he asked. “Quite a bit of
wealth here, what? More than many ordinary men
would earn during their lifetimes. And I take it as
an evening’s diversion, after some weeks of preparation,
of course, and make it, instead of a lifetime’s
work, only one bit of work out of many good ones.
I am going to make one more trip. I have heard of
a certain diamond necklace that is kept in this vault,
and I want it, if it can be found quickly. If I do
not get it to-night I’ll have to rob this place again, and
I have made it a rule heretofore never to strike twice
in the same place.”</p>
<p>Even his own men marveled at the man’s composure.
Here he was robbing the strongest financial
institution in the city, entering a vault considered impregnable,
and without showing the slightest nervousness.
Apparently he was in no great hurry to get
away. He might have been a man in his own home,
showing his friends treasures taken from a private
safe.</p>
<p>Then came the sound of a distant shot, the sound
of breaking glass, a man’s shriek. The Black Star
hurried from the vault and stood listening, and the
faint light from the street showed that there was some
concern in his countenance. One of the watchmen
came running in from the corridor.</p>
<p>“The red signal!” he exclaimed. “The signal from
the lodge hall!”</p>
<p>“Quietly, quietly, my man,” the master criminal
said. “Nothing ever is gained by getting into a sweat
when quick thinking is necessary. Give the signal
and go out the rear way—all of you.”</p>
<p>“But you, sir?”</p>
<p>“I’ll take care of myself—go! Undoubtedly those
fools upstairs are frightened at nothing.”</p>
<p>But a fusillade of shots from the lodge hall above
gave the lie to his words.</p>
<p>“Something appears to be wrong,” he said. “I
suppose we may as well get out of here and into our
between-the-walls box. Pick up the suit cases, men.
I am sure I don’t imagine what has happened. There
is no way in which the police could have been informed.
If you were not my prisoner now, Mr.
Verbeck—but you are, and so is Muggs. I was going
to bring Muggs down here and leave him with you,
but he’ll have to miss this share of the fun, I think.
One moment, Mr. Verbeck, until I decorate your
breast with a sarcastic note.”</p>
<p>He reached in his pocket and brought forth the note
he had prepared, and stepped toward the prisoner,
reaching to his lapel for a pin.</p>
<p>“We’d better hurry,” one of his men suggested.</p>
<p>“Are you afraid, when I am here beside you?” the
Black Star demanded. “Such a man has no place in
an organization like mine.”</p>
<p>“I’m afraid for you, sir—that’s all.”</p>
<p>“Your solicitude for my welfare overwhelms me.
Start on, my man, and I’ll be with you almost instantly.”</p>
<p>The three men started toward the door with the
suit cases. The Black Star bent forward to pin the
note on the breast of the man before him. And then
the chief’s whistle came.</p>
<p>With the crashing in of the front door of the bank,
the Black Star was a changed man. He grasped his
prisoner by the shoulders, jerked him from the chair,
and dragged him across the room to the office door.
Through the offices police poured in upon him. His
hand dived into his pocket, and came forth, holding
a round object about the size of a tennis ball. He
hurled it on the floor in front of the advancing foes.</p>
<p>There was a roar as the bomb struck, a hiss as
the cloud of vapor spread. The Black Star laughed
mockingly, and backed toward the wall, shielding himself
behind his helpless prisoner’s body. He touched
the wall, and the opening appeared. He went in, still
carrying his prisoner, and in the little box he laughed
again, aloud, and tugged at the cable.</p>
<p>“Quite a bit of excitement, Mr. Verbeck,” he observed.
“But here we are, safe and sound, and with
the suit cases filled with loot. Now I wonder what
brought those police down upon us. I suppose I’ll
have to go through my organization and ask a few
questions. And if there is such a thing as a traitor—ha!”</p>
<p>He tugged at the cable again, and the box ascended.</p>
<p>“Listen to the poor fools pounding on the wall!”
he exclaimed. “They will have difficulty, I imagine,
finding how that opening is caused. You notice, my
dear Mr. Verbeck, that when I opened it either above
or below, I press the wall with my hand. That is
merely a trick, should some one be observing too
closely. As I do that, I touch the real spring with the
toe of my shoe. Men can press with their hands all
day and not find it.”</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xxxiiipuzzled-police">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id33">CHAPTER XXXIII—PUZZLED POLICE</SPAN></h1>
<p>As he ceased speaking, the Black Star turned suddenly
and gave his prisoner a shot from the
vapor gun. His own men evidently had guessed what
was coming, for they turned their faces away, and
each held a small sponge to his nostrils, for in that
close space the vapor seemed twice as heavy.</p>
<p>“Quick, now!” the master criminal instructed his
men. “I don’t know how it happens that the police
came down on us, but they’re here, and I suppose
the block is surrounded. We can’t go up, and we
can’t go down—yet. The men upstairs must have
been overcome, since the fighting has stopped, and the
bank is full of police. So we’ll try the halfway
station.”</p>
<p>He tugged at the cable, and the car stopped. He
flashed his torch on the wall, and then pulled the
cable again and forced the car to ascend as slowly as
possible, while he looked closely at the wall.</p>
<p>“Here’s the scratch we made,” he said finally, and
stopped the box. He pressed against the wall, and
a new aperture showed. “In with you,” he instructed,
“and don’t forget the loot.”</p>
<p>The three men stepped past him and into a tiny
room that had been constructed between the walls,
halfway from the first floor to the third. The Black
Star followed, turned to tug at the cable and send
the box on to the top of the shaft, and then closed
the opening and turned to face his three men and
his unconscious prisoner.</p>
<p>“Here we are!” he said. “Speak in whispers now,
and we’ll be all right. We have some ventilation
here, and you may smoke if you wish. This little
room was connected with an airshaft in the building,
you’ll remember. You see what forethought does? I
had this constructed just for such an emergency. The
percentage of chance was against it ever being needed,
but I thought it better to take no chance, and you see
what it has meant. That is why I always win. I
prepare for every possible contingency.”</p>
<p>The police, at that moment, were trying it. Down
below, the chief was ordering his men to hammer
through the wall, since they were unable to find the
spring that released the panel. Those above had been
unsuccessful in their search for the spring, too, and
both above and below officers were smashing at the
wall with axes, trying to cut their way through.</p>
<p>Down in the bank, Muggs was raging.</p>
<p>“I knew you’d let him get away!” he cried. “I
knew it!”</p>
<p>“We’ve got him trapped,” the chief answered.</p>
<p>“How do you know it? Ain’t you got some respect
for the Black Star’s schemes by this time?”</p>
<p>“We’ll get him—you’re worrying about Verbeck,
that’s all. I don’t think he’ll hurt your boss.”</p>
<p>“The Black Star’ll get out some way!”</p>
<p>“Take it easy, Muggs,” the chief advised. “We’ve
got the entire block surrounded. Every door and
window is being watched. Why, I’ve even got men
watching the sewer connections. Not a rat could get
out of this block without being seen and caught.”</p>
<p>“Yeh? We had him surrounded in a house once
out on the river, and didn’t he get to the roof and
streak it away in an aëroplane?”</p>
<p>“Well, you may be sure he hasn’t any plane on the
roof of this building, Muggs. He couldn’t have driven
it here and landed—he’d have been smashed to bits,
and, besides, some one would have heard or seen him.
An aëroplane makes a noise. And he didn’t have any
on the roof at supper time, because one of the watchmen
we found bound and gagged lives up there, and
he just told me he’d seen nothing suspicious. We’ve
got him in a trap, I tell you.”</p>
<p>The wall crashed in, and the men fell back, half
expecting to face a fight with the Black Star and his
men. But their torches showed them a dark shaft
running up between the walls and a cable in one
corner of it, and that was all.</p>
<p>They cleared away the debris. Up in the lodge
hall the other policemen smashed through the wall,
too, and sent a shower of bricks and plaster down.
Through the shaft they held conversation with those
below.</p>
<p>“That box business is up here, chief, but she’s
empty,” one of the men called.</p>
<p>“What’s that—empty?”</p>
<p>“Not a sign of anybody in it or anything. It was
at the top of the shaft.”</p>
<p>The chief sputtered a moment in impotent rage,
and then shouted his orders up the shaft.</p>
<p>“Two or three of you get into that blamed thing
and come down, and you examine the walls every
inch of the way. Keep your torches going and have
your guns ready. I tell you they’ve got to be in the
shaft somewhere!”</p>
<p>Then he stepped back and waited. The cable moved,
and by glancing into the shaft the chief and his men
could see that the box was descending slowly. The
chief turned to send a captain outside to warn the men
who surrounded the block that closer watch was to
be kept.</p>
<p>“They’re in this block—and they can’t get out without
being nabbed!” he declared.</p>
<p>And then the box struck the bottom of the shaft,
and with a sigh of relief a lieutenant and two men
crawled out.</p>
<p>“Not a thing!” he reported. “We examined every
foot of the walls, and there isn’t a crack nor a hole
a mouse could get through. The top of the shaft is
solid wall, and so is the bottom. The Black Star
and three of his men went in there and took Verbeck
with them, and they’ve gone up in smoke or something!”</p>
<p>“You’re a fool!” the chief retorted.</p>
<p>He got in the box himself with two men, and went
up and came down again, and confessed himself bewildered.
Reports came in from the streets that not
a person had left the block. The Black Star and
the others, it seemed, had melted into thin air and
drifted out and away.</p>
<p>The Black Star at that moment was chuckling softly
and assuring himself that his prisoner was not regaining
consciousness. He had used the vapor gun in the
box before reaching this hole in the wall, because he
didn’t want his prisoner to know where he had been.
For the Black Star intended having his little joke.</p>
<p>He and his three men had held their sides to keep
from laughing aloud as the police went up and down
the shaft, so close to them at times that they could
hear the muttered curses of the officers.</p>
<p>“The entrance to this little room was the best job
of all,” he said. “They could look right at it and
not see it, and, if they did see it, they couldn’t get in.”</p>
<p>“But we’re due for quite a rest here,” one of his
men complained.</p>
<p>“Don’t get nervous,” the master criminal warned.
“We are due to get out of here before daylight, and
don’t you forget that. Don’t think that I intend to
stay here all day to-morrow, waiting for to-morrow
night. If we did we might find that the stupid police
had sealed up the bottom and top of the shaft. That’d
be lovely, wouldn’t it?”</p>
<p>He chuckled again as his three men shuddered at
the thought of being interred alive. He went to the
wall and pressed against it, and the panel slid back
three or four inches. Leaning forward carefully, the
Black Star glanced down.</p>
<p>He could see the flashes of the police torches at
the bottom of the shaft, and he could hear Muggs and
the chief in a lively argument. Glancing up, he saw
the flash of a torch at the top. He reached out, knowing
that his hand could not be seen unless several
torches were flashed down the shaft at the same time,
and pulled at the cable. The box began to ascend.</p>
<p>It was halfway to the hole in the wall before the
chief noticed it, and then, thinking the men above
were raising it, he shouted for them to lower it again.
While they conversed by shrieks and yells, the Black
Star brought the box opposite the sliding panel and
gripped the cable there.</p>
<p>The men below and the men above tugged at the
cable, but the box remained in place. The Black Star,
still chuckling, took pencil and paper from his pocket
and scribbled a note, and pinned it to the breast of
the unconscious man before him. Then he tumbled
his prisoner into the box.</p>
<p>“Go down to your friend, the chief, and mystify
him, my dear Mr. Verbeck,” the Black Star said.
“You have not indulged in much action this evening.
I trust the chief will unbind you, and that when you
regain consciousness you’ll join in the chase.”</p>
<p>He chuckled again, tugged at the cable, and sent
the box downward, and then closed the panel and sat
down beside his men.</p>
<p>“Listen now, and you’ll hear a roar!” he exclaimed.</p>
<p>“But how are we goin’ to get out, sir?” one of
the crooks asked.</p>
<p>“Don’t worry about that. What time is it?”</p>
<p>The man flashed a torch and glanced at his watch.</p>
<p>“It’s almost two o’clock.”</p>
<p>“Ha! Then we’d better get out of here within the
hour. It’ll be daylight by four-thirty, and I want to
be back at headquarters before then. You know how
I am going, of course.”</p>
<p>“I know how you’ll go if you get out of here,” the
man replied. “Getting out of here is what is worrying
me.”</p>
<p>“Don’t worry—it causes gray hairs. Listen!”</p>
<p>They could hear a commotion at the bottom of the
shaft. The box had reached its destination, and the
bound, gagged, and unconscious man had been seen
and taken out.</p>
<p>“It’s Verbeck!” the chief cried. “He’s doped, or
something!”</p>
<p>“Vapor gun!” Muggs explained.</p>
<p>“Then they’ve sent him back to us. But where did
he come from? Answer me that! He didn’t come
from the top, and there’s no place between here and
the top where he could come from. Unbind him,
you men, and take that gag off. Maybe he can tell
us something when he gets rid of that vapor dope.
What’s this—a note?”</p>
<p>One of the men held his torch, and the chief read it
swiftly:</p>
<blockquote>
<span class="small-caps">Dear Chief</span>: Here is Roger Verbeck safe and
sound. Since you don’t seem able to make very
much war against me, perhaps you’ll revive Verbeck
and let him get into the game. I’ve kept
him pretty quiet to-night. I’m sending him to
you out of the sky, my dear chief, you might say.
At least, you don’t know where I am sending
him from, and cannot find out. I don’t know
how you got on my trail so swiftly to-night, but
it didn’t save the bank from losing a vast sum,
and didn’t help you much, did it?</blockquote>
<p class="center">*****</p>
<p>“If I ever get my two hands on that man he’ll never
live to stand trial!” the chief promised. “Verbeck
conscious yet? We’ve got to look into this business.
I tell you the Black Star’s somewhere in this building.
He’s somewhere in that shaft——”</p>
<p>“But he can’t be,” a lieutenant protested. “There
isn’t a place in the shaft where a man could leave the
box.”</p>
<p>“Nevertheless——”</p>
<p>“Verbeck’s come to!” one of the men cried.</p>
<p>They knelt beside him, aided him to sit up, tried
to get him to talk. They shot questions at him as
bullets come from a machine gun, and he waved them
away.</p>
<p>“Where did they take you, Verbeck?” the chief demanded.</p>
<p>“I—don’t know. I’ve been unconscious——”</p>
<p>“All the time?”</p>
<p>“They did it—just after the box started up. That’s
the last I knew—until now.”</p>
<p>“They’re in that shaft!” the chief cried. “I’m going
up again to see!”</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xxxivwhat-happened-to-the-chief">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id34">CHAPTER XXXIV—WHAT HAPPENED TO THE CHIEF</SPAN></h1>
<p>The head of the police department, knowing that
a crowd surrounded the block now, and that
news had gone abroad that the Black Star and some
of his men had been cornered, and that certain newspaper
reporters were standing by and waiting to see
whether the police would be made again to look like
fools, grew frantic. Also, his determination to capture
the Black Star increased. He had his men drive
every one out of the bank building and guard the
offices and corridors, and, leaving four men to guard
the bottom of the shaft, with two others, he got in the
box and started to ascend.</p>
<p>The Black Star, from his post above, heard the chief
issue these orders, and knew the box was on its upward
journey.</p>
<p>“Couldn’t be better,” he told his men. “Only four
at the bottom of the shaft now. You know we have
to go, of course? Hurry through the corridor to the
narrow flight of stairs in the rear, and climb!”</p>
<p>“But——” one of his men began.</p>
<p>“Silence, fool. The box is almost opposite us!”</p>
<p>The chief and his two men were ascending slowly,
examining every inch of the walls with their torches.
They stopped for a moment just outside the panel, but
evidently saw nothing to make them suspicious, for
the box continued its ascent.</p>
<p>It went on until it was at the top, and there the
chief held a consultation with his men, and examined
the lodge hall’s walls, making certain by questioning
the men on guard that it would have been impossible
for the Black Star and his men to have passed through
the room without being seen.</p>
<p>Then the disgusted and sorely angry chief got into
the box with his two officers again and started to descend,
more puzzled than before.</p>
<p>The Black Star heard the descent begin, and
growled orders to his three followers. He touched
the wall and slipped the panel back three inches, and
thus he waited, one hand ready to close the aperture
instantly, the other holding a vapor gun. Below him
one of his men stretched out on the floor and made
ready to grip the cable when the master criminal gave
the word.</p>
<p>The box continued to descend. The chief was
speaking of the futility of examining the walls again.
He was going to double the guard around the block,
he declared, and wait for daylight, and go through the
buildings inch by inch until he found the Black Star.
The master criminal’s men, all but the three with him,
had been accounted for, and now were in cells at
police headquarters, he was saying.</p>
<p>The Black Star hissed a warning to the man on
the floor. The box came directly opposite the aperture
in the wall. The man on the floor gripped the
cable and stopped it, and as he did so the Black Star’s
vapor gun worked. Three times he pressed the trigger,
filling the box with stupefying gas. The chief
was the first to topple forward; the other two were
unconscious almost instantly.</p>
<p>The Black Star and his men staggered backward,
holding the little sponges to their nostrils. The air
cleared, and then the master crook opened the panel
to its greatest extent, and hauled the chief of police
and his two men inside the little room.</p>
<p>“Lively now,” the Black Star commanded. “Only
four men at the bottom, remember, and there are
three of us. I’ll hurl a vapor bomb as soon as we get
to the bottom, and you be ready with your guns. I’ll
take one of those suit cases. Number Ten, you take
the other. And you, Number Six, make sure of at
least two of the men at the bottom, if you can.”</p>
<p>They got into the box and started it downward,
leaving the chief and his two men in the halfway
room. They mumbled a conversation so that the men
below would hear it and think nothing was wrong.</p>
<p>Foot by foot they drew nearer the bottom of the
shaft. Finally the box jarred and stopped.</p>
<p>A bomb crashed at the feet of the four men standing
less than half a dozen paces away; the cloud of
vapor surged at them as the Black Star and his three
men sprang out. Vapor guns flashed—and the four
criminals rushed through the narrow corridor toward
the rear stairs.</p>
<p>They had not hoped to get away without an uproar
being raised, and they did not. Two of the four
guards shrieked as they fell, and other policemen came
running from the front of the bank. They arrived
in time to see their comrades falling and to see four
dusky shapes running down the corridor. Their revolvers
spoke, and the Black Star and his men once
more found themselves in the midst of a leaden hail.
As they got to the bottom of the stairs one of the
men stumbled and fell, coughing because of the wound
he had received.</p>
<p>The Black Star and the other two had no time to
stop. It was an axiom of the master criminal’s organization
that every man should care for himself
in such an emergency. “Get away with the loot!” was
the motto. A man arrested would be bailed out or
aided to escape from prison by the organization, if
possible—but the others of the organization were waiting
to share the loot and could not be denied for
the sake of a single man.</p>
<p>So the three ran on, springing up the stairs two at
a time, reaching the second floor and going on to the
third. Behind them came the determined pursuit.
Outside in the streets other officers heard the commotion,
and prepared for a dash on the part of the crooks.
The Black Star hurled another vapor bomb, and
checked the pursuit for a moment, but not for long.</p>
<p>They were on the fourth floor now, and they could
tell by the sounds that officers were rushing up the
broad stairs in front. The Black Star was glad that
the elevators were not running. Had they been, he
could have made a swifter get-away, but also the
pursuit would have been closer.</p>
<p>Now they were panting because of their exertion,
but did not slacken their pace. The fifth floor was
reached, and half a dozen policemen dashed down a
hallway at them. Once more there came a fusillade
of bullets—and another of the Black Star’s men fell.
There remained only himself and one other now—but
they kept hold of the two suit cases filled with
loot.</p>
<p>The top floor was above them, and they reached it
only by hurling two more vapor bombs. They rushed
along a hallway toward the front of the building
now. They came to where a curving iron stairway
led to the roof, and up this they rushed, exposed to
the shots of the police as they came into view.</p>
<p>The Black Star threw his last bomb. The man
behind him staggered and fell, but was upon his feet
again instantly. He gasped that he had not been
wounded, had only tripped on the edge of a step.
They reached the little door at the top, threw it open,
and dashed out on the roof. The door was slammed
behind them, bolted, and barred. The bars constituted
another of the Black Star’s preparations against emergencies—his
men had affixed them the last thing that
evening.</p>
<p>On the other side the police crashed against the
little door, fired into it, and then realized that it was
a metal, fireproof door, and proof against their bullets.
It was another case where axes would be necessary.</p>
<p>It took several minutes to send word down and get
axes from below, and then the assault on the door
began. They took turns working at it, for this was
no easy task. Finally the hinges gave a trifle, and they
redoubled their blows, while others behind them got
ready to give battle. The word spread below rapidly—the
Black Star and one of his men were on the roof,
trapped. They would be prisoners or dead soon now.
If the police could not get at them through the door,
then the fire department would be called, ladders would
be raised, and they would be reached that way.</p>
<p>The door gave again; some of the police cheered.
With revolvers held ready, they waited for the blow
that would hurl the door to the roof and let them
through.</p>
<p>The door crashed—and a roaring filled their ears.
A gust of wind swept back against them. Something
dark showed against the sky. They heard a mocking
laugh.</p>
<p>“His aëroplane, curse him!” a sergeant cried in anger.
“There he goes!”</p>
<p>Again they heard the laugh. They fired in the air,
knowing as they did that their target already was
beyond reach. The beating of the aëroplane’s engine
grew fainter.</p>
<p>The sergeant stepped to the flagpole at the corner
of the roof and took from it a bit of paper that had
been fastened there. He read it, then put it in his
pocket to give his chief. And this is what he read:</p>
<blockquote>
<p>Farewell, gentlemen. You gave me a run for
my money to-night, battered up some good men
of mine, and took others prisoner, but I have
triumphed in the end.</p>
<p>Perhaps you wonder how the aëroplane happened
to be here on the roof, where it could not
possibly have landed, though it can take off from
here. Why, it was carried up from the lodge hall
in sections to-night after the building watchmen
had been disposed of and my men took charge,
and expert mechanics worked hard to assemble
it. I had not expected to use it, but found it
necessary. It was another emergency for which
I was prepared. Always prepare for emergencies
and never make mistakes, and you may be successful,
like me.</p>
<p>By the way, I am getting away with quite a
fortune, and with the place filled with police.
Tell that to the papers, and give my respects to
Roger Verbeck and Muggs.</p>
</blockquote>
<p class="center">*****</p>
<p>“Got away—got away with th’ goods,” the sergeant
muttered. “Oh, heavens! What will th’ public
say to this? They’ll clean out the department from
the chief to th’ office boy!”</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xxxvan-unexpected-blow">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id35">CHAPTER XXXV—AN UNEXPECTED BLOW</SPAN></h1>
<p>The Black Star took his aëroplane to an altitude of
three thousand feet, circled over the city, and
finally started down the river. He gave all his attention
to the machine, and did not even glance at the
man who sat beside him. Far below were the lights
of the city where he had stolen so many fortunes in
money and jewels the past six months, the city he
had terrorized, at whose police he had scoffed, and the
home of Roger Verbeck, the young millionaire clubman
who had sworn to capture him.</p>
<p>Well, Verbeck had not captured him, he thought.
He had made the young clubman a laughingstock
more than once. He had made his efforts appear
childlike and foolish, and so he was satisfied. For he
would have to leave this particular city now, he knew.
His last two adventures had almost resulted in his
downfall. In them he had lost many men, including
his most trusted lieutenants. The man beside him
really was the only one left whom he could trust.</p>
<p>He could afford to retire for a time, and that was
what he would do, he decided. He had ample funds.
He would call the remainder of his band together in
a couple of days, at some new headquarters—for he
had a feeling that the present one was dangerous after
to-night—give them their share of the money on hand,
and then pack up and get out.</p>
<p>War-ridden Europe did not appeal to him now, but
there was Japan and China and the South Seas. He’d
spend a year or so touring around, taking life easy,
enjoying himself, spending his money, and gloating
over some of the magnificent jewels that the band had
stolen and which he had claimed in his share of loot.</p>
<p>When the country had begun to forget the Black
Star he’d reappear in some other city, organize his
band again, and start his depredations anew.</p>
<p>It took the Black Star only a few minutes to decide
this. Having decided it, he felt better. He looked
down at the river, and failed to see any craft.</p>
<p>“I’ll go to headquarters,” the Black Star told his
man. “You go on with the plane and hide it in the
usual place back in the woods, and then get into town.
I’ll send you word in the usual way within a couple
of days where to have the men come for their share.
I’m going to give up the present headquarters, for it’ll
be dangerous after to-night, I am afraid. I’ll pack
up and get out by noon to-morrow.”</p>
<p>“Verbeck’s roadster is near the front gate,” the
man reminded him.</p>
<p>“That’s right—got to get that out of the way before
daylight. You go ahead with the plane, though. I’ll
get the suit cases in the house, and then run the roadster
up the road and drive it into the river off the
cliff.”</p>
<p>He turned the plane toward the shore and descended
slowly. On reaching the ground the master criminal
tossed the suit cases overboard, then sprang out himself.</p>
<p>“Good night,” he said.</p>
<p>“Good night, sir.”</p>
<p>The plane, with its engine roaring, took the air.
The Black Star picked up the heavy suit cases and
started for the road.</p>
<p>After all, he was thinking, it would be a relief to
get away and give up his dangerous occupation for a
time. He hated to admit it even to himself, but to-night’s
business had shaken him. He had almost felt
fear, especially when he had been cornered in the
halfway room.</p>
<p>But he had succeeded. He had made a last big
haul. He was safe now—there remained only to
leave the headquarters, meet the men, and distribute
some money, and then quit the city for the West and
China and the South Seas. Crime didn’t pay, eh?
Well—he had made it pay!</p>
<p>He decided that he’d send a last sarcastic note to
the police, the newspapers, and to Roger Verbeck, just
as he left. He chuckled again now as he thought of
Verbeck. It seemed that he had been unable to get
into action to-night. How he would rage when told
that the Black Star had escaped again! How funny
little Muggs would snort! How the fat chief would
fuss and fume! Yes—the Black Star had had his fun
as well as his profit!</p>
<p>He reached the gate and passed through it up the
drive to the house. Here he set the suit cases down
on the porch and unlocked the front door. Then he
took the loot inside, struck a match, and applied it
to the wick of a lamp. A hasty glance around the
room told him that nothing had been disturbed during
his absence. For a moment he stood in the center
of the room and listened and looked about. Then he
put the suit cases on a table.</p>
<p>He threw off hood and mask and overcoat and hat,
and opened the suit cases. Before him were the bundles
of bank notes, the two bags of gold, the packages
of securities—a fortune!</p>
<p>He laughed lightly and went to a cupboard and got
out crackers and cheese and a can of fish. He laughed
as he ate his simple meal, and promised himself a
gorgeous dinner before another twenty-four hours
had passed.</p>
<p>Having eaten, he put the remainder of the food
away, closed the suit cases again, lifted a trapdoor
in the floor beneath a rug, and put the loot in a hidden
box there. He stretched his arms and glanced at
his watch. It would be daylight within the half hour
now, and he needed sleep. He decided that he’d retire
and rise in about four hours. Four hours of sleep
would refresh him enough, he decided, for the time
being. He wanted to smuggle himself and his ill-gotten
gains into the city by noon.</p>
<p>Keen eyes watched his every movement through
the keyhole in the door that opened into the adjoining,
unused room. The mysterious man who had
trailed the abductors there early in the evening was
still in the house. The hours had seemed doubly long—but
he had waited.</p>
<p>He watched the Black Star carefully now. He had
made sure that he had returned to the headquarters
alone, and now he was awaiting his chance. He knew
that the Black Star had a couch in the room on the
other side of the headquarters room, and would sleep
there if he decided to go to bed.</p>
<p>He watched him as he removed coat and vest and
took off his shoes and donned a pair of slippers. And
then he crept softly across the room, unlocked the
door that led to the hall, and slipped out.</p>
<p>Foot by foot he made his way along the hall, and
noiselessly, for he had removed his shoes. He reached
the door of the room where Black Star slept, and crept
inside and went across to the other door, and there,
crouching at one side, he waited.</p>
<p>The Black Star finished undressing and put on a
pair of gorgeous pajamas. Then he turned off the
light and started for his couch. He passed through
the door.</p>
<p>And then he gasped in surprise and alarm, tottered,
tried to curse, and fell forward unconscious into the
arms of the other man, a victim of his own vapor gun.</p>
<p>The man who had caused his downfall laughed
aloud now and ran to the lamp to light it again.
From a corner he carried ropes and bound the unconscious
man securely. He gagged him, too, and
propped him up in a chair and tied him in it with
ropes.</p>
<p>Then he whirled toward the trapdoor beneath the
rug, and managed to get it open. He lifted out the
suit cases and other boxes in which valuables had
been stored.</p>
<p>“Money, securities, and jewels!” he said. “I guess
I’ll just take care of these, Mr. Black Star!”</p>
<p>He laughed again, half in relief and half in pure
joy, and then he rushed across to the telephone. For
the second time that night he called a number—the
number of police headquarters. And then he gave a
startling message.</p>
</div>
<div class="section" id="chapter-xxxviin-custody">
<h1><SPAN class="toc-backref" href="#id36">CHAPTER XXXVI—IN CUSTODY</SPAN></h1>
<p>When the Black Star opened his eyes he saw a
peculiar-looking individual before him, scarcely
half a dozen feet away, who held an automatic pistol
in his hand in a threatening manner. This individual
was dressed in greasy overalls and jumper, and had
a soft hat pulled down low over his forehead. The
collar of his jumper was turned up so that scarcely
any of the face could be seen except the eyes. His
hands were dirty; his hair was black and long, and
apparently needed cutting badly.</p>
<p>“Well, I’ve got you, all right!” the individual
growled in a hoarse voice. “Pretty good pickin’
around these diggin’s, too. Notice the swag I’ve got
here on the table?”</p>
<p>He bent forward and tore the gag from the Black
Star’s mouth.</p>
<p>“Talk, if you want to,” he offered. “Black Star, eh?
Big crook, eh?”</p>
<p>“Who are you?” the Black Star asked.</p>
<p>“What do you care?”</p>
<p>“I am interested. Any man who can put me down
and out—and I suppose you are the one who did it—interests
me strangely. So you think I am the
Black Star?”</p>
<p>“I know it.”</p>
<p>“I suppose you want to join my organization and
are taking this melodramatic way to show me you are
fitted?”</p>
<p>“Guess again!”</p>
<p>“Well, what is the idea, then? I suppose you realize
what you are running up against when you tackle
the Black Star?”</p>
<p>“I know that, all right, and I’m not scared.”</p>
<p>“You’re not very communicative,” said the other.
“Suppose you untie me now, and we’ll talk business.
If it is money you want——”</p>
<p>“Why untie you when I’ve got it all right here on
the table?”</p>
<p>“Well, what are you going to do?”</p>
<p>“Give you a surprise,” came the answer.</p>
<p>The Black Star saw the man before him straighten
up suddenly. His hand went to his hat, and the hat
came off, and with it a black wig. And then he
smiled and bowed.</p>
<p>“Roger Verbeck!” the Black Star gasped.</p>
<p>“At your service, Sir Crook! I said I’d get you,
and I have!”</p>
<p>“But—— How did you get here so soon? I saw
you back at the National Trust—as I was leaving.”</p>
<p>“Pardon me, my dear Mr. Black Star. You are
not very observing, are you? How many times have
you seen me, spoken to me?”</p>
<p>“Half a dozen, I suppose.”</p>
<p>“But never paid particular attention to me, did you?”</p>
<p>“I never had a chance particularly, as I always saw
you under conditions of excitement.”</p>
<p>“That was one bad mistake you made. You should
know me when you meet me face to face.”</p>
<p>“I know that, all right, but you haven’t answered
my question—how did you get here so quickly, and
alone? How did you know where my headquarters
was?”</p>
<p>“Naturally, since I was out to get you, I just discovered
that.”</p>
<p>“One of my men turned traitor, I suppose.”</p>
<p>“Indeed, no. I did it all by my own little self,
Mr. Black Star. I said six months ago that I could
get you, and you dared me to try. You went right
ahead with your crimes, and you made a fool of me
on several occasions. You always prepared for every
possible emergency; that was it. You never made a
mistake. You went ahead on your thieving way, and
I told you that no criminal could be successful for
always, no matter how brainy a man, and that some
day you’d make a mistake. You’ve made one—and
now you’re going to pay for it. For you’re going to
jail from here, Mr. Black Star. I’m going to see you
in the prisoner’s dock, as I swore I should. And I’m
going to follow you to the doors of the penitentiary,
and see them close behind you. You have to pay
for your career of crime. Every criminal must pay!
He may succeed for a time, but in the end he pays!
He can’t dodge the law of compensation.”</p>
<p>“I’m not in jail yet, Mr. Verbeck.”</p>
<p>“You’ll be there soon. I notice you are slipping
your foot along the floor. I presume you are looking
for the button that throws a trap and opens a pit beneath
where I am standing. Might as well give up. I
found that trap several hours ago and wrecked the
spring. Oh, I’ve got you this time, Mr. Black Star!”</p>
<p>“Several hours ago! I don’t understand.”</p>
<p>“You made a mistake, that’s all—a bad and a sad
mistake.”</p>
<p>“Suppose you tell me about it.”</p>
<p>“In good time,” Verbeck replied. “I am waiting
for some friends of mine—Muggs and the police and
some others.”</p>
<p>“You’ve called the police?”</p>
<p>“To hand you over—yes. How did you escape
them to-night? I warned them what you were going
to do.”</p>
<p>“So that’s how they discovered it! But how could
you warn them, when I had you abducted and carried
here and had you watched every minute of the time
until—— What do you mean? Explain!”</p>
<p>“You made a bad mistake,” Verbeck reiterated.
“That explains everything. Ah!”</p>
<p>Down the road a siren shrieked. Verbeck deliberately
turned his back on the Black Star, walked
through the house and threw open the front door.
Two automobiles splashed through the mud and
stopped near the front gate.</p>
<p>“That you, Verbeck?” some one called.</p>
<p>“Yes. Come right on in!”</p>
<p>He went back and stood before his prisoner again.</p>
<p>“Quick, Verbeck—let me go!” the Black Star
begged. “I’ll do anything you say—let you give them
back the stuff——”</p>
<p>“Save your breath!” Verbeck replied.</p>
<p>The crowd rushed in from the road. The chief and
Muggs were in the lead, and half a dozen officers,
revolvers in their hands as if they were expecting another
battle, followed at their heels. They stopped
in astonishment when they saw Verbeck.</p>
<p>“Wha-what——” the chief cried.</p>
<p>“No questions!” Verbeck begged, laughing. “Here
is the Black Star, chief, and there is the loot he got
to-night, and some jewels he obtained in other robberies.
See that you don’t let him get away this time!
I got him—as I said I would. And where is—— Ah!”</p>
<p>Another man came through the door and stood at
Verbeck’s side. Every man there except Muggs
gasped in surprise, and Muggs only grinned. Here
were two Verbecks, alike except that one was an
inch shorter than the other and slightly thinner in
the face.</p>
<p>“Here is the explanation, gentlemen,” Verbeck said.
“I discovered that the Black Star was having me
shadowed night and day. The men who shadowed
had to report some time, of course. I got the idea
that if I could get some one to take my place I might
shadow the Black Star’s shadow and so find his headquarters.
When he threatened three weeks ago to
abduct me and let me witness his next crime, I realized
that here was my chance. Gentlemen, allow me
to introduce you to my cousin. His father and mine
married sisters—perhaps that is why we look so much
alike.”</p>
<p>“Your cousin!” the chief gasped.</p>
<p>“He has been living out West. I wrote him full
details, and he came on to help me. I smuggled him
into my house and let him take my place. He went
out with Muggs, visited my fiancée in my place, went
to my clubs a bit. Only Muggs was in the secret, for
I didn’t want to take a chance of having that secret
leak out. And I shadowed the shadow, waiting for
the abduction, and to-night it came. Mr. Black Star,
I came here on the rear of my own roadster, which
carried your prisoners. I put your watchdog to sleep
and entered this house, and I’ve been here since. I
overheard your plans and telephoned the police as
soon as you had left.</p>
<p>“I wanted to be in at the death, of course, but knew
I could not get back to the city in time. And I had
a suspicion that you’d escape the police at the last
minute, as you had so many times before—so I remained
here, waiting for you, and when you came I
succeeded in making you my prisoner. While you
were gone I examined the house and found many
interesting things.</p>
<p>“In your excitement at planning and carrying out a
big crime you made a mistake, Mr. Black Star—you
didn’t use your eyes, didn’t observe closely. You
took my cousin for me. That’s all. And now you
must pay! Oh, yes! I must decorate you as you
have often in the past decorated me.”</p>
<p>He took a bit of paper from his pocket and he pinned
it to the Black Star’s breast while the master criminal
sputtered his wrath. It read:</p>
<blockquote>
<p><span class="small-caps">Mr. Black Star</span>: Never depend on the eyes of
others but use your own. Because Muggs drove
a roadster and my cousin looks like me, your
men took it for granted that my cousin was me,
and you let it go at that. That was your mistake.</p>
<p class="right"><span class="small-caps">Roger Verbeck.</span></p>
</blockquote>
<p>“Now, chief, take your man,” Verbeck concluded.
“And don’t let him get away this time. And you,
Muggs, go out and get the roadster ready. We’re
going home! There is a telephone, chief, if you want
to give the glad news to the papers.”</p>
<p>Muggs turned toward the door. The adventure
was over, Muggs knew. He was no longer comrade
in arms—now he was chauffeur and valet and all-around
man to Roger Verbeck—until that young gentleman
should feel the call of adventure again.</p>
<p class="center">THE END</p>
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