<SPAN name="CH5"><!-- CH5 --></SPAN>
<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
<p>Mr. Reynolds did not come home to dinner after all. The water
had got into the basement at the store, he telephoned, one of the
flood-gates in a sewer having leaked, and they were moving some of
the departments to an upper floor. I had expected to have him in
the house that evening, and now I was left alone again.</p>
<p>But, as it happened, I was not alone. Mr. Graves, one of the
city detectives, came at half past six, and went carefully over the
Ladleys' room. I showed him the towel and the slipper and the
broken knife, and where we had found the knife-blade. He was very
non-committal, and left in a half-hour, taking the articles with
him in a newspaper.</p>
<p>At seven the door-bell rang. I went down as far as I could on
the staircase, and I saw a boat outside the door, with the boatman
and a woman in it. I called to them to bring the boat back along
the hall, and I had a queer feeling that it might be Mrs. Ladley,
and that I'd been making a fool of myself all day for nothing. But
it was not Mrs. Ladley.</p>
<p>"Is this number forty-two?" asked the woman, as the boat came
back.</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"Does Mr. Ladley live here?"</p>
<p>"Yes. But he is not here now."</p>
<p>"Are you Mrs. Pittock?"</p>
<p>"Pitman, yes."</p>
<p>The boat bumped against the stairs, and the woman got out. She
was as tall as Mrs. Ladley, and when I saw her in the light from
the upper hall, I knew her instantly. It was Temple Hope, the
leading woman from the Liberty Theater.</p>
<p>"I would like to talk to you, Mrs. Pitman," she said. "Where can
we go?"</p>
<p>I led the way back to my room, and when she had followed me in,
she turned and shut the door.</p>
<p>"Now then," she said without any preliminary, "where is Jennie
Brice?"</p>
<p>"I don't know, Miss Hope," I answered.</p>
<p>We looked at each other for a minute, and each of us saw what
the other suspected.</p>
<p>"He has killed her!" she exclaimed. "She was afraid he would do
it, and—he has."</p>
<p>"Killed her and thrown her into the river," I said. "That's what
I think, and he'll go free at that. It seems there isn't any murder
when there isn't any corpse."</p>
<p>"Nonsense! If he has done that, the river will give her up,
eventually."</p>
<p>"The river doesn't always give them up," I retorted. "Not in
flood-time, anyhow. Or when they are found it is months later, and
you can't prove anything."</p>
<p>She had only a little time, being due at the theater soon, but
she sat down and told me the story she told afterward on the
stand:</p>
<p>She had known Jennie Brice for years, they having been together
in the chorus as long before as <i>Nadjy</i>.</p>
<p>"She was married then to a fellow on the vaudeville circuit,"
Miss Hope said. "He left her about that time, and she took up with
Ladley. I don't think they were ever married."</p>
<p>"What!" I said, jumping to my feet, "and they came to a
respectable house like this! There's never been a breath of scandal
about this house, Miss Hope, and if this comes out I'm ruined."</p>
<p>"Well, perhaps they were married," she said. "Anyhow, they were
always quarreling. And when he wasn't playing, it was worse. She
used to come to my hotel, and cry her eyes out."</p>
<p>"I knew you were friends," I said. "Almost the last thing she
said to me was about the black and white dress of hers you were to
borrow for the piece this week."</p>
<p>"Black and white dress! I borrow one of Jennie Brice's dresses!"
exclaimed Miss Hope. "I should think not. I have plenty of my
own."</p>
<p>That puzzled me; for she had said it, that was sure. And then I
remembered that I had not seen the dress in the room that day, and
I went in to look for it. It was gone. I came back and told Miss
Hope.</p>
<p>"A black and white dress! Did it have a red collar?" she
asked.</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"Then I remember it. She wore a small black hat with a red quill
with that dress. You might look for the hat."</p>
<p>She followed me back to the room and stood in the doorway while
I searched. The hat was gone, too.</p>
<p>"Perhaps, after all, he's telling the truth," she said
thoughtfully. "Her fur coat isn't in the closet, is it?"</p>
<p><i>It</i> was gone. It is strange that, all day, I had never
thought of looking over her clothes and seeing what was missing. I
hadn't known all she had, of course, but I had seen her all winter
in her fur coat and admired it. It was a striped fur, brown and
gray, and very unusual. But with the coat missing, and a dress and
hat gone, it began to look as if I had been making a fool of
myself, and stirring up a tempest in a teacup. Miss Hope was as
puzzled as I was.</p>
<p>"Anyhow, if he didn't kill her," she said, "it isn't because he
did not want to. Only last week she had hysterics in my
dressing-room, and said he had threatened to poison her. It was all
Mr. Bronson, the business manager, and I could do to quiet
her."</p>
<p>She looked at her watch, and exclaimed that she was late, and
would have to hurry. I saw her down to her boat. The river had been
falling rapidly for the last hour or two, and I heard the boat
scrape as it went over the door-sill. I did not know whether to be
glad that the water was going down and I could live like a
Christian again, or to be sorry, for fear of what we might find in
the mud that was always left.</p>
<p>Peter was lying where I had put him, on a folded blanket laid in
a clothes-basket. I went back to him, and sat down beside the
basket.</p>
<p>"Peter!" I said. "Poor old Peter! Who did this to you? Who hurt
you?" He looked at me and whined, as if he wanted to tell me, if
only he could.</p>
<p>"Was it Mr. Ladley?" I asked, and the poor thing cowered close
to his bed and shivered. I wondered if it had been he, and, if it
had, why he had come back. Perhaps he had remembered the towel.
Perhaps he would come again and spend the night there. I was like
Peter: I cowered and shivered at the very thought.</p>
<p>At nine o'clock I heard a boat at the door. It had stuck there,
and its occupant was scolding furiously at the boatman. Soon after
I heard splashing, and I knew that whoever it was was wading back
to the stairs through the foot and a half or so of water still in
the hall. I ran back to my room and locked myself in, and then
stood, armed with the stove-lid-lifter, in case it should be Ladley
and he should break the door in.</p>
<p>The steps came up the stairs, and Peter barked furiously. It
seemed to me that this was to be my end, killed like a rat in a
trap and thrown out the window, to float, like my kitchen chair,
into Mollie Maguire's kitchen, or to be found lying in the ooze of
the yard after the river had gone down.</p>
<p>The steps hesitated at the top of the stairs, and turned back
along the hall. Peter redoubled his noise; he never barked for Mr.
Reynolds or the Ladleys. I stood still, hardly able to breathe. The
door was thin, and the lock loose: one good blow, and—</p>
<p>The door-knob turned, and I screamed. I recall that the light
turned black, and that is all I <i>do</i> remember, until I came
to, a half-hour later, and saw Mr. Holcombe stooping over me. The
door, with the lock broken, was standing open. I tried to move, and
then I saw that my feet were propped up on the edge of Peter's
basket.</p>
<p>"Better leave them up." Mr. Holcombe said. "It sends the blood
back to the head. Half the damfool people in the world stick a
pillow under a fainting woman's shoulders. How are you now?"</p>
<p>"All right," I said feebly. "I thought you were Mr. Ladley."</p>
<p>He helped me up, and I sat in a chair and tried to keep my lips
from shaking. And then I saw that Mr. Holcombe had brought a suit
case with him, and had set it inside the door.</p>
<p>"Ladley is safe, until he gets bail, anyhow," he said. "They
picked him up as he was boarding a Pennsylvania train bound
east."</p>
<p>"For murder?" I asked.</p>
<p>"As a suspicious character," he replied grimly. "That does as
well as anything for a time." He sat down opposite me, and looked
at me intently.</p>
<p>"Mrs. Pitman," he said, "did you ever hear the story of the
horse that wandered out of a village and could not be found?"</p>
<p>I shook my head.</p>
<p>"Well, the best wit of the village failed to locate the horse.
But one day the village idiot walked into town, leading the missing
animal by the bridle. When they asked him how he had done it, he
said: 'Well, I just thought what I'd do if I was a horse, and then
I went and did it.'"</p>
<p>"I see," I said, humoring him.</p>
<p>"You <i>don't</i> see. Now, what are we trying to do?"</p>
<p>"We're trying to find a body. Do you intend to become a
corpse?"</p>
<p>He leaned over and tapped on the table between us. "We are
trying to prove a crime. I intend for the time to be the
criminal."</p>
<p>He looked so curious, bent forward and glaring at me from under
his bushy eyebrows, with his shoes on his knee—for he had
taken them off to wade to the stairs—and his trousers rolled
to his knees, that I wondered if he was entirely sane. But Mr.
Holcombe, eccentric as he might be, was sane enough.</p>
<p>"Not <i>really</i> a criminal!"</p>
<p>"As really as lies in me. Listen, Mrs. Pitman. I want to put
myself in Ladley's place for a day or two, live as he lived, do
what he did, even think as he thought, if I can. I am going to
sleep in his room to-night, with your permission."</p>
<p>I could not see any reason for objecting, although I thought it
silly and useless. I led the way to the front room, Mr. Holcombe
following with his shoes and suit case. I lighted a lamp, and he
stood looking around him.</p>
<p>"I see you have been here since we left this afternoon," he
said.</p>
<p>"Twice," I replied. "First with Mr. Graves, and
later—"</p>
<p>The words died on my tongue. Some one had been in the room since
my last visit there.</p>
<p>"He has been here!" I gasped. "I left the room in tolerable
order. Look at it!"</p>
<p>"When were you here last?"</p>
<p>"At seven-thirty, or thereabouts."</p>
<p>"Where were you between seven-thirty and eight-thirty?"</p>
<p>"In the kitchen with Peter." I told him then about the dog, and
about finding him shut in the room.</p>
<p>The wash-stand was pulled out. The sheets of Mr. Ladley's
manuscript, usually an orderly pile, were half on the floor. The
bed coverings had been jerked off and flung over the back of a
chair.</p>
<p>Peter, imprisoned, <i>might</i> have moved the wash-stand and
upset the manuscript—Peter had never put the bed-clothing
over the chair, or broken his own leg.</p>
<p>"Humph!" he said, and getting out his note-book, he made an
exact memorandum of what I had told him, and of the condition of
the room. That done, he turned to me.</p>
<p>"Mrs. Pitman," he said, "I'll thank you to call me Mr. Ladley
for the next day or so. I am an actor out of employment, forty-one
years of age, short, stout, and bald, married to a woman I would
like to be quit of, and I am writing myself a play in which the
Shuberts intend to star me, or in which I intend the Shuberts to
star me."</p>
<p>"Very well, Mr. Ladley," I said, trying to enter into the spirit
of the thing, and, God knows, seeing no humor in it. "Then you'll
like your soda from the ice-box?"</p>
<p>"Soda? For what?"</p>
<p>"For your whisky and soda, before you go to bed, sir."</p>
<p>"Oh, certainly, yes. Bring the soda. And—just a moment,
Mrs. Pitman: Mr. Holcombe is a total abstainer, and has always been
so. It is Ladley, not Holcombe, who takes this abominable
stuff."</p>
<p>I said I quite understood, but that Mr. Ladley could skip a
night, if he so wished. But the little gentleman would not hear to
it, and when I brought the soda, poured himself a double portion.
He stood looking at it, with his face screwed up, as if the very
odor revolted him.</p>
<p>"The chances are," he said, "that Ladley—that
I—having a nasty piece of work to do during the night,
would—will take a larger drink than usual." He raised the
glass, only to put it down. "Don't forget," he said, "to put a
large knife where you left the one last night. I'm sorry the water
has gone down, but I shall imagine it still at the seventh step.
Good night, Mrs. Pitman."</p>
<p>"Good night, Mr. Ladley," I said, smiling, "and remember, you
are three weeks in arrears with your board."</p>
<p>His eyes twinkled through his spectacles. "I shall imagine it
paid," he said.</p>
<p>I went out, and I heard him close the door behind me. Then,
through the door, I heard a great sputtering and coughing, and I
knew he had got the whisky down somehow. I put the knife out, as he
had asked me to, and went to bed. I was ready to drop. Not even the
knowledge that an imaginary Mr. Ladley was about to commit an
imaginary crime in the house that night could keep me awake.</p>
<p>Mr. Reynolds came in at eleven o'clock. I was roused when he
banged his door. That was all I knew until morning. The sun on my
face wakened me. Peter, in his basket, lifted his head as I moved,
and thumped his tail against his pillow in greeting. I put on a
wrapper, and called Mr. Reynolds by knocking at his door. Then I
went on to the front room. The door was closed, and some one beyond
was groaning. My heart stood still, and then raced on. I opened the
door and looked in.</p>
<p>Mr. Holcombe was on the bed, fully dressed. He had a wet towel
tied around his head, and his face looked swollen and puffy. He
opened one eye and looked at me.</p>
<p>"What a night!" he groaned.</p>
<p>"What happened! What did you find?"</p>
<p>He groaned again. "Find!" he said. "Nothing, except that there
was something wrong with that whisky. It poisoned me. I haven't
been out of the house!"</p>
<p>So for that day, at least, Mr. Ladley became Mr. Holcombe again,
and as such accepted ice in quantities, a mustard plaster over his
stomach, and considerable nursing. By evening he was better, but
although he clearly intended to stay on, he said nothing about
changing his identity again, and I was glad enough. The very name
of Ladley was horrible to me.</p>
<p>The river went down almost entirely that day, although there was
still considerable water in the cellars. It takes time to get rid
of that. The lower floors showed nothing suspicious. The papers
were ruined, of course, the doors warped and sprung, and the floors
coated with mud and debris. Terry came in the afternoon, and
together we hung the dining-room rug out to dry in the sun.</p>
<p>As I was coming in, I looked over at the Maguire yard. Molly
Maguire was there, and all her children around her, gaping. Molly
was hanging out to dry a sodden fur coat, that had once been
striped, brown and gray.</p>
<p>I went over after breakfast and claimed the coat as belonging to
Mrs. Ladley. But she refused to give it up. There is a sort of
unwritten law concerning the salvage of flood articles, and I had
to leave the coat, as I had my kitchen chair. But it was Mrs.
Ladley's, beyond a doubt.</p>
<p>I shuddered when I thought how it had probably got into the
water. And yet it was curious, too, for if she had had it on, how
did it get loose to go floating around Molly Maguire's yard? And if
she had not worn it, how did it get in the water?</p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
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