Shot With Crimson
one of the crosstown streets, near Fifth Avenue. A brief conversation over the wire ensued. A few minu
p and was expecting me to join his party at the Helvetia for supper, Mr. Rogers?
o recolle
all take the matter up with the manager in the morning, Rogers. It has happen
en any carelessness, Mr. Zimmerlein, it has been with her,-not with us, sir," said the cle
ey have been waiting for me since eleven o'c
s a little before t
tigate. I warn you that I inte
lerk, but Zimmerlein was alre
m, and then retired behind the k
sore as a crab about not getting a message that came in a
said to Zimmerlein,-about calling up at nine and giving directions and all that bunk,-and I had
broke in the clerk, and moved languidly awa
minutes' walk from Zimmerlei
in his rooms or in the caf
fé, Mr. Zi
ank
ven or eight people were seated. Nodding and smiling in his most amiable
wn you really wanted me. Thanks for calling me up again. It was good of you, and I'll try to make up for all the lost time an
the profound affability of a far-Westerner, he made the newcomer welcome. If his steel-grey eyes bored inquiringly into Zimmerlein's for the briefest
two of the ladies, who, with evident eagerness, made room for
out in the lobby, Prince. Stillwell. I told him you'd be happy to ha
't miss seeing him for anything in the world. An ol
both, we 'll-" began Zi
. "Good old Still! We 'll bring him back with us if we hav
hey did not speak until they reached
1
p?" deman
aded, I'll say that for him. Said he was you, and wanted to know why the devil I hadn't showed up over here. I was wise in a second. We met in the most casual manner at the corner. He will go a long way, that chap will
ing was in the wind. Is i
ock I shall ask you to excuse me, Prince. Engagement very early in the morning. Mu
ell, wa
t be shot up worse than I though
to get in touch
permitted himself what was meant to be
to utter in these days," said P
by simply being who and what and where y
questions," said
pped Zimmerlein. "Oh, Lor
e. I am not above it,-nor are you. Now, let us return." Shortly after one o'clock, Zimmerlein said good night to the host and the guests upon whom he had deliberately imposed
ax
paces, and then, apparently
sylvania," he said,
the corners and kept their faces and bodies well out of sight fr
car. The exhaust roared, the gears grated and snarled, and the lo
taxi drew up in front of the little hotel in the cross-town street, he got down
's all. There must be no trace,-absolutely no trace." As he sauntered into the hotel, the taxi rattled swiftly off
at all. It was his nice little way of stringing me. Assuage the poor girl's grief if you know how, Rogers. Tell her it's all r
elevator, and once more str
n. He's stewed and says his friend's a
ime Pilcher wants to get off till half-past 'leven, he needn't leave a call for me. I'm through accommodating that mutt. My Gawd! Two o'clock, and he sw
in' an egg on an oyster fork.
beside his plate of sliced oranges. His eyes swept the headlines on the front page. A slight frown darkened his brow. He looked again, a little more closely. Then he took up the other
a solitary line about t
fternoon of the preceding day. He was go
morning papers," Elberson had said gua
ething great in the news
ut two o'clock. No details. I doubt w
n? Elberon was in a position to know. He never went off half-cocked. There wasn't the least doubt in Zimmerlein's mind that the Elston had been sunk,-but why this amazing failure of the newspapers to-- He started suddenly. C
to drop in and see Elbe
took the time to run through both papers with unusual thoroughness. It was barely possible that a paragraph,-one
ater-front of an American port from which heavily laden ships departed
nd admittedly unreasonable sense of irritation that assailed him, for, after all, Elberon regulated his actions according to the demands of his own business.
e door behind him and stalked off into the counter-li
shook a little as he paused inside the doors to light a cigarette.
rning," and the alert office-boy went her one better b
iss Agnew?" inqu
y Club. He says there is a leak and wants to know if you, as chair
demanded, s
id, Mr. Z
ne and ask him to come
hung them up in the closet. His mail received scant attention. As a matter o
private office, carryin
and deliberately spread the prints on the desk and we
Not a
her queer, don
r with a keen and soul-searching eye. "It won't do, my friend. Nervousness tends to irritat
it. Don't lecture me. I'm not going
ou know," remarked Thorsensel sententiou
mean that-that they didn't pull it off? God, t
t there was the slightest chance of failure, he would have taken no risk. That's Scarf, my friend. Ca
one directly from his hotel to the little French café down the street. He knew that it was the unvarying habit of the strange, silent engineer to drop in at
problem confro
ok the matter out of his hands. It was he who laid the plans. Zimmerlein bec
absorbing some of the other's fatalistic
rsensel, laying his big, clenched fist upon the desk,-not violently but with a gentl
rew a long,
about the Elst
e went down in eight minutes. They made a good job of it, bless 'em. No wonder the night wind weeps! Now, we'll see what old England has to say for the invincibility of her fleet, and what she 'll say to the
ident look had left his eyes; in its stead lurked something that finally developed into real, undisguised anxiety. An atmosphere of r
id visit the club-house and question the employés? That was not an unusual proceeding. They were doing something of the sort all the time. But, said Peter, they obtained a list of all the members and guest
passports and papers from the
e all in order,
The mere fact that they asked for
said Thorsensel, gnawing at his moustache. "These fellows, fro
ut in Zimmerlein. "They've l
stripe in the class with-well, with a few I could mention, do you? They've only touched the surface, my friend. It is ve
stoop-shouldered, consumptive-looking, unwashed
immerlein, glar
ave you been?" g
bent figure and drawing a long, full breath. He passed his hand across his
Zimmerlein, as the man pre
he leaned forward and fixed the others with burning, hitter eye
ison from the li
s Attorney's office with half a dozen expe
ween Thorsensel's teeth. Zimmerlein's
urse,-nothing for the public,-and took him down for a grilling. Zumpe says old Elberon has
l. "He has been very thick lately with Kleinhans, the banker. I told
eried Scarf, a twist at the corner
e Kleinhans out of my sight. He actually thinks he's an American,-
. As for that other little matte
ered hoarsely:
said Scarf, and again pas
't stay here all afterno
ttomless pit at that. Why didn't you tell me that
at's that
happened,-caught in the very net they were laying for him. His pals,-that's what they would have made of us,-his comrades, mind you, not his enemies. How the devil could we have explained? And would they have believed him, no matter what he said about us? Not on your life. The very thing they were watching for would have happe
ly. "What's the angle, Zimmerlein,-what's the angle? You are sup
I can't understand it, Thors
e next block, according to plans. He was to wait for us there,-fixing his engine as
demanded Zimmerlei
He's your protégé,"
I'd say," said Thorsens
as running the front elevator. All I know is that Ruddy and I barely had time to get out of the window and onto a little balcony and drop down t
his room?" cr
nt. It's closed except when he comes up occasionally from camp for a night or two. Family in the South somewhere, servants dismissed. We didn't waste any time. Had it all doped out. Went to his door and rang the bell. Pretty soon he came and opened it and asked what we wanted. We told him right
. 'My God, it's terrible-horrible,' he says. 'Who put you wise? How much is actually known?' That was enough for Ruddy. He stuck the gun under his ear and let him have it. He never knew what hit him. Ruddy dropped the revolver on the floor beside the chair,-just where he would have dropped it himself,-and then we started out to see if we could find anythi
ain they have hanging there to hide the stairway. They didn't hear us. They were talking about Blechter. We knew in a second what they were. There was a cubby hole under the stairs where they keep mops and brooms and such stuff. We got in there, leaving a crack through which we could hear. After awhile the front elevator came down. We heard 'em all talking. They said he had shot himself, and they cursed their luck because they hadn't been able to take him alive. He must have been warned that they were after him. That's what they were roaring about. After a while we got out of the mop-hole and sneaked down to the basement. The doors were locked, and there were men in the eng