“The devil it is!” cried Hayden. His voice betrayed a startled annoyance.
“It hasn’t worried me none,” went on the mayor. “They can’t touch me. I own the prosecutor, and you know it. But it ain’t going to do you any good on the avenue if you’re seen here with me. Is it, Mr. Hayden?”
“The more reason,” replied Hayden, “for getting the money and leaving at once. I’m not afraid of you, Cargan. I’m armed.”
“I ain’t,” sneered the mayor. “But no exquisite from your set with his little air-gun ever scared me. You try to get away from here with that bundle and you’ll find yourself all tangled up in the worst scrap that ever happened.”
“Where’s the money, Joe?” asked Hayden.
“You won’t wait—” Bland begged.
“Wait to get my own money — I guess not. Show me where it is.”
“Remember,” put in Cargan, “that money’s mine. And don’t have any pipe dreams about the law — the law ain’t called into things of this sort as a rule. I guess you’d be the last to call it. You’ll never get away from here with my money.”
Mr. Magee opened the card-room door farther, and saw the figure of the stranger Hayden confronting the mayor. Mr. Cargan’s title of exquisite best described him. The newcomer was tall, fair, fastidious in dress and manner. A revolver gleamed in his hand.
“Joe,” he said firmly, “take me to that money at once.”
“It’s out here,” replied Bland. He and Hayden disappeared through the dining-room door into the darkness. Cargan and Max followed close behind.
Hot with excitement, Mr. Magee slipped from his place of concealment. A battle fit for the gods was in the air. He must be in the midst of it — perhaps again in a three-cornered fight it would be the third party that would emerge victorious.
In the darkness of the dining-room he bumped into a limp clinging figure. It proved to be the Hermit of Baldpate Mountain.
“I got to talk to you, Mr. Magee,” he whispered in a frightened tremolo. “I got to have a word with you this minute.”
“Not now,” cried Magee, pushing him aside. “Later.”
The hermit wildly seized his arm.
“No, now,” he said. “There’s strange goings-on, here, Mr. Magee. I got something to tell you — about a package of money I found in the kitchen.”
Mr. Magee stood very still. Beside him in the darkness he heard the hermit’s excited breathing.
Chapter XIV
The Sign of the Open Window
Undecided, Mr. Magee looked toward the kitchen door, from behind which came the sound of men’s voices. Then he smiled, turned and led Mr. Peters back into the office. The Hermit of Baldpate fairly trembled with news.
“Since I broke in on you yesterday morning,” he said in a low tone as he took a seat on the edge of a chair, “one thing has followed another so fast that I’m a little dazed. I can’t just get the full meaning of it all.”
“You have nothing on me there, Peters,” Magee answered. “I can’t either.”
“Well,” went on the hermit, “as I say, through all this downpour of people, including women, I’ve hung on to one idea. I’m working for you. You give me my wages. You’re the boss. That’s why I feel I ought to give what information I got to you.”
“Yes, yes,” Mr. Magee agreed impatiently. “Go ahead.”
“Where you find women,” Peters continued, “there you find things beyond understanding. History—”
“Get to the point.”
“Well — yes. This afternoon I was looking round through the kitchen, sort of reconnoitering, you might say, and finding out what I have to work with, for just between us, when some of this bunch goes I’ll easily be persuaded to come back and cook for you. I was hunting round in the big refrigerator with a candle, thinking maybe some little token of food had been left over from last summer’s rush — something in a can that time can not wither nor custom stale, as the poet says — and away up on the top shelf, in the darkest corner, I found a little package.”
“Quick, Peters,” cried Magee, “where is that package now?”
“I’m coming to that,” went on the hermit, not to be hurried. “What struck me first about the thing was it didn’t have any dust on it. ‘Aha,’ I says, or words to that effect. I opened it. What do you think was in it?”
“I don’t have to think — I know,” said Magee. “Money. In the name of heaven, Peters, tell me where you’ve got the thing.”
“Just a minute, Mr. Magee. Let me tell it my way. You’re right. There was money in that package. Lots of it. Enough to found a university, or buy a woman’s gowns for a year. I was examining it careful-like when a shadow came in the doorway. I looked up—”
“Who?” asked Magee breathlessly.
“That little blinky-eyed Professor Bolton was standing there, most owlish and interested. He came into the refrigerator. ‘That package you have in your hand, Peters,’ he says, ‘belongs to me. I put it in cold storage so it would keep. I’ll take it now.’ Well, Mr. Magee, I’m a peaceful man. I could have battered that professor into a learned sort of jelly if I’d wanted to. But I’m a great admirer of Mr. Carnegie, on account of the library, and I go in for peace. I knew it wasn’t exactly the thing, but—”
“You gave him the package?”
“That’s hardly the way I would put it, Mr. Magee. I made no outcry or resistance when he took it. ‘I’m just a cook,’ I says, ‘in this house. I ain’t the trusted old family retainer that retains its fortunes like a safety deposit vault.’ So I let go the bundle. It was weak of me, I know, but I sort of got the habit of giving up money, being married so many years.”
“Peters,” said Mr. Magee, “I’m sorry your grip was so insecure, but I’m mighty glad you came to me with this matter.”
“He told me I wasn’t to mention it to anybody,” replied the hermit, “but as I say, I sort of look on it that we were here first, and if our guests get to chasing untold wealth up and down the place, we ought to let each other in on it.”
“Correct,” answered Magee. “You are a valuable man, Peters. I want you to know that I appreciate the way you have acted in this affair.” Four shadowy figures tramped in through the dining-room door. “I should say,” he continued, “that the menu you propose for dinner will prove most gratifying.”
“What — oh — yes, sir,” said Peters. “Is that all?”
“Quite,” smiled Magee. “Unless — just a minute, this may concern you — on my word, there’s another new face at Baldpate.”
He stood up, and in the light of the fire met Hayden. Now he saw that the face of the latest comer was scheming and weak, and that under a small blond mustache a very cruel mouth sought to hide. The stranger gazed at Magee with an annoyance plainly marked.
“A friend of mine — Mr. — er — Downs, Mr. Magee,” muttered Bland.
“Oh, come now,” smiled Magee. “Let’s tell our real names. I heard you greeting your friend a minute ago. How are you, Mr. Hayden?”
He held out his hand. Hayden looked him angrily in the eyes.
“Who the devil are you?” he asked.
“Do you mean,” said Magee, “that you didn’t catch the name. It’s Magee — William Hallowell Magee. I hold a record hereabouts, Mr. Hayden. I spent nearly an hour at Baldpate Inn — alone. You see, I was the first of our amiable little party to arrive. Let me make you welcome. Are you staying to dinner? You must.”
“I’m not,” growled Hayden.
“Don’t believe him, Mr. Magee,” sneered the mayor, “he doesn’t always say what he means. He’s going to stay, all right.”