Part 25 (1/2)
”YOU'RE A FOOL IF YOU THINK YOU CAN GET AWAY with kidnapping me,” Cromwell stated contemptuously. ”You have no authority to arrest me without a warrant. As soon as we get back to San Francisco, my attorneys will demand my release. After making fools of the Van Dorn Detective Agency, I shall walk free as a bird. Then I'll launch a series of lawsuits that will break your agency and drown it in a sea of scandal.”
Cromwell sat manacled to a large couch in the center of the parlor car. His wrists, legs, and even his neck were encased in steel bands that were chained to tie-down rings on the floor of the forward baggage section of the car. No chances were taken. Four heavily armed Van Dorn agents from the Los Angeles office sat in the car less than ten feet from the bandit, sawed-off shotguns, loaded and c.o.c.ked, laid across their knees.
”You may have a chance to demonstrate your arrogant ego with your pals in city hall, my friend,” said Bell. ”But you'll walk free only as far as a pig to a butcher shop.”
”I am an innocent man,” said Cromwell matter-of-factly. ”I can prove I was nowhere near the bank robberies you accuse me of. Where is your evidence? Where are your witnesses?”
”I'm a witness,” Bell answered. ”I saw through your disguise as a woman in Telluride before you shot me.”
”You, Mr. Bell? What jury in San Francisco would buy your testimony? The trial will be a farce. You have nothing to bring an indictment, much less conviction.” Mr. Bell? What jury in San Francisco would buy your testimony? The trial will be a farce. You have nothing to bring an indictment, much less conviction.”
Bell gave Cromwell a foxlike smile. ”I am not the only witness. There are other people in the towns where you committed your murders who can identify you.”
”Really.” Cromwell leaned back in the couch as if he hadn't a care in the world. ”From what I read of the Butcher Bandit, he always used disguises during his crimes. How can he be identified?”
”You'll have to wait and see.”
”I have great influence in San Francisco,” Cromwell said with total conviction. ”I have contributed heavily to the election of every superior and federal court judge on the bench. They owe me. Same with the good citizens of San Francisco. Even if you could bring me to trial, no jury of my peers will convict me, not when they take into account the many thousands of dollars I've spent on their behalf.”
”You're betting your hand before you see it,” said Bell. ”A federal judge will be sent out from Was.h.i.+ngton to hear your case and the venue will be moved elsewhere, where you're not the city's darling.”
”I can afford the finest attorneys in the country,” Cromwell continued haughtily. ”No jury, regardless of what judge sits on the bench, will ever sentence me for crimes with so little evidence, certainly not with my reputation as a man who is beloved by the poor and homeless of San Francisco.”
Bronson's face was clouded with disgust. It took all his willpower not to plant his fist in Cromwell's face. ”Tell that to the families of the victims you shot down in cold blood. Tell them how the money you stole went to give you a lavish lifestyle as a banker in a mansion on n.o.b Hill.”
Cromwell smiled brazenly and said nothing.
The train began to slow. Bronson stepped over to a window and peered out. ”We're coming into Santa Barbara. The engineer will probably stop to take on water.”
”I'd like to get off at the depot,” said Bell. ”There's a little matter I'd like to take care of.”
As soon as the train came to a stop, Bell jumped down the stairs to the platform and quickly disappeared into the depot. Ten minutes later, as the engineer tooted the whistle warning that he was going to engage the drive wheels, Bell trotted out and climbed back aboard the Pullman car.
”What was that all about?” asked Bronson.
Cromwell immediately suspected something that was not to his liking. He s.h.i.+fted in his chair and leaned forward to listen.
”The phone lines have been repaired over the ravine where the flash flood went though,” Bell answered Bronson. Then he looked down at Cromwell with a sardonic grin. ”I put a call through to the Van Dorn office and instructed our agents to take your sister into custody as an accomplice.”
”You're insane,” Cromwell cried out.
”I think we can prove she is implicated in the murders carried out by the Butcher Bandit.”
Cromwell surged up from the couch, his face a mask of loathing and hate, but was stopped dead by his chains. ”You dirty swine,” he hissed. ”Margaret had nothing to do with any of this. She knew nothing about my...” He hesitated, before he incriminated himself. He slowly lowered himself back onto the couch, his composure and presumptuous behavior regaining control. ”You'll pay dearly for involving an innocent woman in your ridiculous accusations. Margaret will be back in her parlor within an hour after she's falsely accused of crimes she knows nothing about.”
Bell stared into Cromwell's eyes with the self-a.s.surance of a panther about to take a bite out of an antelope. ”Margaret will talk,” Bell said firmly. ”She will tell what she knows in an effort to save her brother. She'll lie, of course, but she'll be tripped up on a thousand details she can't answer. Margaret will be the witness who will unwittingly lead you to the gallows.”
”Even if I was guilty, Margaret would never utter a single word against me,” Cromwell said with conviction.
”She will if she knows she's going to jail for the rest of her natural life. That, and the loss of a luxurious lifestyle. Turning state's evidence will be quite simple if there is a heavy price to pay for not doing so.”
”You've badly underestimated Margaret.”
”I don't think so,” said Bell quietly.
Cromwell smiled tightly. ”You'll never connect Margaret with the crimes any more than you can convince a jury that I am guilty.”
Bell stared at the banker. ”Are you guilty?”
Cromwell laughed and nodded around the parlor car. ”Admit to being your Butcher Bandit in front of witnesses? Come now, Bell.” There was no ”Mr.” this time. ”You're skating on thin ice and you know it.”
Then Bell pulled off the glove on Cromwell's left hand and revealed a metal tube where his finger once extended.
”We'll see,” Bell mused aloud. ”We shall see.”
BELL WAS taking no chances. When they reached San Francisco, he ordered the engineer to bypa.s.s the main depot and head onto the siding of the railyard. Bronson had a small army of agents on hand to escort Jacob Cromwell to an ambulance, where he was tied down to a stretcher, for the ride through the city.
”We can't run the risk of putting Cromwell in the county jail,” said Bell. ”He's right about his friends springing him within an hour. Take him across the bay to the state prison at San Quentin. We'll keep him on ice until we're ready to bring formal charges.”
”Every reporter with every newspaper in town will be on hand to report that event,” said Bronson.
”They'll send the story across the country by telegraph to every newspaper from here to Bangor, Maine,” Bell said with a grin. ”Now all we have to do is keep him from slipping through our fingers. Cromwell will attempt to bribe any guard that comes near him.”
”I know the warden at San Quentin,” said Bronson. ”He's as straight as an arrow. Cromwell will be wasting his breath if he thinks he can bribe him into escaping.”
”Don't think he won't try.” Bell looked at Cromwell as he was roughly lifted into the ambulance. ”Put a hood over his head so no one will recognize him. Swear the warden to secrecy, and have him lock Cromwell in solitary confinement, away from the other prisoners. We'll give the warden the necessary paperwork in the morning.”
”What about Margaret? I doubt a judge with his hand in Cromwell's pockets would fill out arrest papers for her.”
”Go through the motions,” Bell instructed. ”Put pressure on her. Once she knows her brother is in custody and that she may go down with him, I'm betting Margaret will gather up all the cash she can and make a run for it. Then she'll sail right into our hands.”
Before heading for Bronson's office, Bell stopped off at a telegraph office and sent a lengthy wire to Van Dorn reporting the capture of the notorious Butcher Bandit. He also asked for whatever help Colonel Danzler could offer from the federal government.
CROMWELL WAS right about one thing. Margaret walked out of the police department less than thirty minutes after she was escorted there by two Van Dorn agents. Cromwell's attorneys were already there arranging bond when she arrived. Even her chauffeur was on hand to drive her home, waiting in the Rolls-Royce out front, parked in a zone where no vehicle was allowed. A court magistrate miraculously appeared to sign the necessary release papers. It seemed to a reporter, who happened to be present covering a burglary case, that Margaret's arrest and almost-instant release were a staged formality.
Meanwhile, Bronson and his agents had driven the ambulance carrying Cromwell onto the ferry that took them across the bay to Marin County. After moving off the dock, they drove to the state prison at San Quentin. As Bronson had claimed, the warden was very cooperative and even proud to have the famous Butcher Bandit in his prison until Bell and Bronson could orchestrate an arraignment.
After Bell left the telegraph office, he walked to Cromwell's bank. He took the elevator up to the main office and approached Marion's desk. ”Get your hat,” he said without preamble in a no-nonsense tone. ”You're taking the rest of the day off.”
She faltered, taken completely off balance by his sudden appearance after three days. Her sensual feelings toward him came flooding back. She could see that there was no arguing with him, yet she said, ”I just can't leave when I feel like it. I could lose my job.”