Part 18 (1/2)
Why not wait until morning? Perhaps, in the cold gray dawn, he would see more clearly his way through this preposterous tangle. Anyhow, it would be dangerous to give into any woman's keeping just then a package so earnestly sought by desperate men. Yes, he would wait until morning.
That was the only reasonable course.
Reasonable? That was the word he used. A knight prating of the reasonable!
Mr. Magee unlocked the door of number seven and entered. Lighting his candles and prodding the fire, he composed a note to the waiting girl in seventeen:
”Everything all right. Sleep peacefully. I am on the job. Will see you to-morrow. Mr.--Billy.”
Slipping this message under her door, the ex-knight hurried away to avoid an interview, and sat down in his chair before the fire.
”I must think,” he muttered. ”I must get this thing straight.”
For an hour he pondered, thres.h.i.+ng out as best he could this mysterious game in which he played a leading part unequipped with a book of rules.
He went back to the very beginning--even to the station at Upper Asquewan Falls where the undeniable charm of the first of these girls had won him completely. He reviewed the arrival of Bland and his babble of haberdashery, of Professor Bolton and his weird tale of peroxide blondes and suffragettes, of Miss Norton and her impossible mother, of Cargan, hater of reformers, and Lou Max, foe of suspicion. He thought of the figure in the dark at the foot of the steps that had fought so savagely for the package now in his own pocket--of the girl who had pleaded so convincingly on the balcony for his help--of the colder, more sophisticated woman who came with Hal Bentley's authority to ask of him the same favor. Myra Thornhill? He had heard the name, surely. But where?
Mr. Magee's thoughts went back to New York. He wondered what they would say if they could see him now, whirling about in a queer romance not of his own writing--he who had come to Baldpate Inn to get away from mere romancing and look into men's hearts, a philosopher. He laughed out loud.
”To-morrow is another day,” he reflected. ”I'll solve this whole thing then. They can't go or playing without me--I've got the ball.”
He took the package from his pocket. Its seals had already been broken.
Untying the strings, he began carefully to unwrap the paper--the thick yellow banking manila, and then the oiled inner wrapping. So finally he opened up the solid ma.s.s of--what? He looked closer. Crisp, beautiful, one thousand dollar bills. Whew! He had never seen a bill of this size before. And here were two hundred of them.
He wrapped the package up once more, and prepared for bed. Just as he was about to retire, he remembered Mr. Bland, bound and gagged below. He went into the hall with the idea of releasing the unlucky haberdasher, but from the office rose the voices of the mayor, Max, and Bland himself. Peace, evidently, had been declared between them. Mr. Magee returned to number seven, locked all the windows, placed the much-sought package beneath his pillow, and after a half-hour of puzzling and tossing, fell asleep.
It was still quite dark when he awoke with a start. In the blackness he could make out a figure standing by the side of his bed. He put his hand quickly beneath his pillow; the package was still there.
”What do you want?” he asked, sitting up in bed.
For answer, the intruder sprang through the door and disappeared in the darkness of the outer room. Mr. Magee followed. One of his windows slammed back and forth in the wind. Slipping on a dressing-gown and lighting a candle, he made an investigation. The gla.s.s above the lock had been broken. Outside, in the snow on the balcony, were recent footprints.
Sleepily Mr. Magee procured the precious package and put it in the pocket of his gown. Then drawing on his shoes, he added a greatcoat to his equipment, took a candle, and went out on to the balcony.
The storm had increased; the snow flurried and bl.u.s.tered; the windows of Baldpate Inn rattled wildly all about. It was difficult to keep the candle burning in that wind. Mr. Magee followed the footprints along the east side of the inn to the corner, then along the more sheltered rear, and finally to the west side. On the west was a rather unlovely annex to the main building, which increasing patronage had made necessary. It was connected with the inn by a covered pa.s.sageway from the second floor balcony. At the entrance to this pa.s.sageway the footprints stopped.
Entering the dark pa.s.sageway, Mr. Magee made his way to the door of the annex. He tried it. It was locked. But as he turned away, he heard voices on the other side.
Mr. Magee had barely enough time to extinguish his candle and slip into the shadows of the corner. The door of the annex opened. A man stepped out into the pa.s.sageway. He stood there The light from a candle held by some one in the doorway whom Mr. Magee could not see fell full upon his face--the bespectacled wise face of Professor Thaddeus Bolton.
”Better luck next time,” said the professor.
”Keep an eye an him,” said the voice from inside. ”If he tries to leave the inn there'll be a big row. We must be in on it--and win.”
”I imagine,” said Professor Bolton, smiling his academic smile, ”that the inmates of Baldpate will make to-morrow a rather interesting day for him.”
”It will be an interesting day for every one,” answered the voice.
”If I should manage to secure the package, by any chance,” the professor went on, ”I shall undoubtedly need your help in getting away with it.
Let us arrange a signal. Should a window of my room be open at any time to-morrow, you will know the money is in my hands.”