It did not need explanatory notes to tell Van Bibber that the man below had robbed the big house on the corner, and that if it had not been for his having passed when he did the burglar would have escaped with his treasure. His first thought was that he was not a policeman, and that a fight with a burglar was not in his line of life; and this was followed by the thought that though the gentleman who owned the property in the two bags was of no interest to him, he was, as a respectable member of society, more entitled to consideration than the man with the revolver.
The fact that he was now, whether he liked it or not, perched on the top of the wall like Humpty Dumpty, and that the burglar might see him and shoot him the next minute, had also an immediate influence on his movements. So he balanced himself cautiously and noiselessly and dropped upon the man’s head and shoulders, bringing him down to the flagged walk with him and under him. The revolver went off once in the struggle, but before the burglar could know how or from where his assailant had come, Van Bibber was standing up over him and had driven his heel down on his hand and kicked the pistol out of his fingers. Then he stepped quickly to where it lay and picked it up and said, “Now, if you try to get up I’ll shoot at you.” He felt an unwarranted and ill-timedly humorous inclination to add, “and I’ll probably miss you,” but subdued it. The burglar, much to Van Bibber’s astonishment, did not attempt to rise, but sat up with his hands locked across his knees and said: “Shoot ahead. I’d a damned sight rather you would.”
His teeth were set and his face desperate and bitter, and hopeless to a degree of utter hopelessness that Van Bibber had never imagined.
“Go ahead,” reiterated the man, doggedly, “I won’t move. Shoot me.”
It was a most unpleasant situation. Van Bibber felt the pistol loosening in his hand, and he was conscious of a strong inclination to lay it down and ask the burglar to tell him all about it.
“You haven’t got much heart,” said Van Bibber, finally. “You’re a pretty poor sort of a burglar, I should say.”
“What’s the use?” said the man, fiercely. “I won’t go back — I won’t go back there alive. I’ve served my time forever in that hole. If I have to go back again — s’help me if I don’t do for a keeper and die for it. But I won’t serve there no more.”
“Go back where?” asked Van Bibber, gently, and greatly interested; “to prison?”
“To prison, yes!” cried the man, hoarsely: “to a grave. That’s where. Look at my face,” he said, “and look at my hair. That ought to tell you where I’ve been. With all the color gone out of my skin, and all the life out of my legs. You needn’t be afraid of me. I couldn’t hurt you if I wanted to. I’m a skeleton and a baby, I am. I couldn’t kill a cat. And now you’re going to send me back again for another lifetime. For twenty years, this time, into that cold, forsaken hole, and after I done my time so well and worked so hard.” Van Bibber shifted the pistol from one hand to the other and eyed his prisoner doubtfully.
“How long have you been out?” he asked, seating himself on the steps of the kitchen and holding the revolver between his knees. The sun was driving the morning mist away, and he had forgotten the cold.
“I got out yesterday,” said the man.
Van Bibber glanced at the bags and lifted the revolver. “You didn’t waste much time,” he said.
“No,” answered the man, sullenly, “no, I didn’t. I knew this place and I wanted money to get West to my folks, and the Society said I’d have to wait until I earned it, and I couldn’t wait. I haven’t seen my wife for seven years, nor my daughter. Seven years, young man; think of that — seven years. Do you know how long that is? Seven years without seeing your wife or your child! And they’re straight people, they are,” he added, hastily. “My wife moved West after I was put away and took another name, and my girl never knew nothing about me. She thinks I’m away at sea. I was to join ’em. That was the plan. I was to join ’em, and I thought I could lift enough here to get the fare, and now,” he added, dropping his face in his hands, “I’ve got to go back. And I had meant to live straight after I got West, — God help me, but I did! Not that it makes much difference now. An’ I don’t care whether you believe it or not neither,” he added, fiercely.
“I didn’t say whether I believed it or not,” answered Van Bibber, with grave consideration.
He eyed the man for a brief space without speaking, and the burglar looked back at him, doggedly and defiantly, and with not the faintest suggestion of hope in his eyes, or of appeal for mercy. Perhaps it was because of this fact, or perhaps it was the wife and child that moved Van Bibber, but whatever his motives were, he acted on them promptly. “I suppose, though,” he said, as though speaking to himself, “that I ought to give you up.”
“I’ll never go back alive,” said the burglar, quietly.
“Well, that’s bad, too,” said Van Bibber. “Of course I don’t know whether you’re lying or not, and as to your meaning to live honestly, I very much doubt it; but I’ll give you a ticket to wherever your wife is, and I’ll see you on the train. And you can get off at the next station and rob my house tomorrow night, if you feel that way about it. Throw those bags inside that door where the servant will see them before the milkman does, and walk on out ahead of me, and keep your hands in your pockets, and don’t try to run. I have your pistol, you know.”
The man placed the bags inside the kitchen door; and, with a doubtful look at his custodian, stepped out into the street, and walked, as he was directed to do, toward the Grand Central station. Van Bibber kept just behind him, and kept turning the question over in his mind as to what he ought to do. He felt very guilty as he passed each policeman, but he recovered himself when he thought of the wife and child who lived in the West, and who were “straight.”
“Where to?” asked Van Bibber, as he stood at the ticket-office window.
“Helena, Montana,” answered the man with, for the first time, a look of relief.
Van Bibber bought the ticket and handed it to the burglar. “I suppose you know,” he said, “that you can sell that at a place downtown for half the money.”
“Yes, I know that,” said the burglar.
There was a half-hour before the train left, and Van Bibber took his charge into the restaurant and watched him eat everything placed before him, with his eyes glancing all the while to the right or left. Then Van Bibber gave him some money and told him to write to him, and shook hands with him. The man nodded eagerly and pulled off his hat as the car drew out of the station; and Van Bibber came downtown again with the shop girls and clerks going to work, still wondering if he had done the right thing.
He went to his rooms and changed his clothes, took a cold bath, and crossed over to Delmonico’s for his breakfast, and, while the waiter laid the cloth in the café, glanced at the headings in one of the papers. He scanned first with polite interest the account of the dance on the night previous and noticed his name among those present. With greater interest he read of the fight between “Dutchy” Mack and the Black Diamond, and then he read carefully how “Abe” Hubbard, alias “Jimmie the Gent,” a burglar, had broken jail in New Jersey, and had been traced to New York. There was a description of the man, and Van Bibber breathed quickly as he read it. “The detectives have a clue to his whereabouts,” the account said; “if he is still in the city they are confident of recapturing him. But they fear that the same friends who helped him to break jail will probably assist him from the country or to get out West.”