Part 8 (1/2)
”Why, just take the case of Phyllis Dodge....”
Mrs. Dodge [Quinn continued, after he had packed his pipe to a condition where it was reasonably sure to remain lighted for some time] was, theoretically at least, a widow. Her full name, as it appeared on many pa.s.senger lists during the early part of 1913, was Mrs. Mortimer C.
Dodge, of Cleveland, Ohio. When the customs officials came to look into the matter they weren't able to find anyone in Cleveland who knew her, but then it's no penal offense to give the purser a wrong address, or even a wrong name, for that matter.
While there may have been doubts about Mrs. Dodge's widowhood--or whether she had ever been married, for that matter--there could be none about her beauty. In the language of the cla.s.sics, she was there. Black hair, brown eyes, a peaches-and-cream complexion that came and went while you watched it, and a figure that would have made her fortune in the Follies. Joe Gregory said afterward that trailing her was one of the easiest things he had ever done.
To get the whole story of Phyllis and her extraordinary cleverness--extraordinary because it was so perfectly obvious--we'll have to cut back a few months before she came on the scene.
For some time the Treasury Department had been well aware that a number of precious stones, princ.i.p.ally pearl necklaces, were being smuggled into the country. Agents abroad--the department maintains a regular force in Paris, London, Rotterdam, and other European points, you know--had reported the sale of the jewels and they had turned up a few weeks later in New York or Chicago. But the Customs Service never considers it wise to trace stones back from their owners on this side.
There are too many ramifications to any well-planned smuggling scheme, and it is too easy for some one to claim that he had found them in a long-forgotten chest in the attic or some such story as that. The burden of proof rests upon the government in a case of this kind and, except in the last extremity, it always tries to follow the chase from the other end--to nab the smuggler in the act and thus build up a jury-proof case.
Reports of the smuggling cases had been filtered into the department half a dozen times in as many months, and the matter finally got on the chief's nerves to such a degree that he determined to thrash it out if it took every man he had.
In practically every case the procedure was the same--though the only princ.i.p.als known were different each time.
Rotterdam, for example, would report: ”Pearl necklace valued at $40,000, sold to-day to man named Silverburg. Have reason to believe it is destined for States”--and then would follow a technical description of the necklace. Anywhere from six weeks to three months later the necklace would turn up in the possession of a jeweler who bore a shady reputation. Sometimes the article wouldn't appear at all, which might have been due to the fact that they weren't brought into this country or that the receivers had altered them beyond recognition. However, the European advices pointed to the latter supposition--which didn't soothe the chief's nerves the least bit.
Finally, along in the middle of the spring of nineteen thirteen, there came a cable from Paris announcing the sale of the famous Yquem emerald--a gorgeous stone that you couldn't help recognizing once you got the description. The purchaser was reported to be an American named Williamson. He paid cash for it, so his references and his antecedents were not investigated at the time.
Sure enough, it wasn't two months later when a report came in from Chicago that a pork-made millionaire had added to his collection a stone which tallied to the description of the Yquem emerald.
”Shall we go after it from this end, Chief?” inquired one of the men on the job in Was.h.i.+ngton. ”We can make the man who bought it tell us where he got it and then sweat the rest of the game out of the go-betweens.”
”Yes,” snorted the chief, ”and be laughed out of court on some trumped-up story framed by a well-paid lawyer. Not a chance! I'm going to land those birds and land 'em with the goods. We can't afford to take any chances with this crowd. They've evidently got money and brains, a combination that you've got to stay awake nights to beat. No--we'll nail 'em in New York just as they're bringing the stones in.
”Send a wire to Gregory to get on the job at once and tell New York to turn loose every man they've got--though they've been working on the case long enough, Heaven knows!”
The next morning when Gregory and his society manner strolled into the customhouse in New York he found the place buzzing. Evidently the instructions from Was.h.i.+ngton had been such as to make the entire force fear for their jobs unless the smuggling combination was broken up quickly. It didn't take Joe very long to get the details. They weren't many and he immediately discarded the idea of possible collusion between the buyers of the stones abroad. It looked to be a certainty on the face of it, but, once you had discovered that, what good did it do you? It wasn't possible to jail a man just because he bought some jewels in Europe--and, besides, the orders from Was.h.i.+ngton were very clear that the case was to be handled strictly from this side--at least, the final arrest was to be made on American soil, to avoid extradition complications and the like.
So when Joe got all the facts they simply were that some valuable jewels had been purchased in Europe and had turned up in America, without going through the formality of visiting the customhouse, anywhere from six weeks to three months later.
”Not much to work on,” grumbled Gregory, ”and I suppose, as usual, that the chief will be as peevish as Hades if we don't nab the guilty party within the week.”
”It's more than possible,” admitted one of the men who had handled the case.
Gregory studied the dates on which the jewels had been purchased and those on which they had been located in this country for a few moments in silence. Then:
”Get me copies of the pa.s.senger lists of every steamer that has docked here in the past year,” he directed. ”Of course it's possible that these things might have been landed at Boston or Philadelphia, but New York's the most likely port.”
When the lists had been secured Gregory stuffed them into his suit case and started for the door.
”Where you going?” inquired McMahon, the man in charge of the New York office.
”Up to the Adirondacks for a few days,” Gregory replied.
”What's the idea? Think the stuff is being brought over by airplane and landed inland? Liners don't dock upstate, you know.”
”No,” said Gregory, ”but that's where I'm going to dock until I can digest this stuff,” and he tapped his suit case. ”Somewhere in this bunch of booklets there's a clue to this case and it's up to me to spot it. Good-by.”