Warfield nodded, still trembling.
"Who is The Master?" questioned Arnaud.
"I do not know his name," replied Warfield. "I know him only as The Master — The Black Master. I have met him only at one place; then it has been dark — pitch-dark. I have only heard his voice, and I have obeyed!"
"Why?"
"Because he knew — he knew my secret! He threatened me by telephone first. Then he summoned me! I came to him. Since then I have done his bidding!"
"And his commands concerned your friend Hubert Banks."
"How did you know?" There was terror in Warfield's voice.
"I, too, have been watching you," said Arnaud quietly. "I have been watching four men. Pennypacker, Houghton, Houston — and yourself. Three of them are dead—"
"I know!" exclaimed Warfield. "That is how I found out what The Master meant to do with me! I was to die with them!
"Not one of us knew the others were in The Master's power. Those men were friends of mine — but I never suspected them, until — until they died!"
"And then—"
"Then I tried to escape The Master! I wanted to hide; I thought New York would be the safest place.
But last night I received the summons.
"I left the hotel where I was staying. I came here. Tonight I received a phone call. A voice said: 'Watch the lights from your window. Each one is a minute'—"
Instinctively the man looked beyond Henry Arnaud. His mouth opened as though he were about to cry in horror, but no sound resulted. He pointed wildly through the window.
Arnaud threw a quick glance in that direction. The last light in the row was blank.
Henry Arnaud looked calmly toward Perry Warfield. The man was cowering, trembling, between Arnaud and the door.
Arnaud was a living statue. He stood silent, his keen eyes seeing not only Warfield, but the door beyond.
He detected a slight motion. His watchfulness increased. In the door the key was turning, slowly, noiselessly. The handle of the door began to move. It stopped. The door swung silently inward.
It was then that Henry Arnaud acted. As the door opened, Arnaud's arm came upward from his pocket, his eyes fixed upon the door.
A stocky, hard-faced man stood with leveled automatic in the opening. Before the murderer could fire, Henry Arnaud's finger pressed the trigger of his revolver.
But for the unexpected, the murderer would have fallen. Perry Warfield supplied the unexpected. The door had opened behind his back. Henry Arnaud had momentarily ignored the cringing man.
In the upraising of Arnaud's automatic, only one explanation could come to Warfield's terrified mind. He thought that Arnaud meant to kill him. With a wild scream, he leaped forward and upward as Arnaud's finger touched the trigger.
He struck the arm of the man who was about to save him. The bullets from Arnaud's automatic went wild as he resisted this mad attack. He stumbled as he flung Warfield from him.
In falling, Perry Warfield saw the man at the door. He screamed in sudden recognition.
Before Arnaud could bring his gun into play, the room was plunged into darkness as the man at the door pressed the switch. Then came the roar of the murderer's automatic.
Warfield's screams were broken. The door slammed shut, just as Henry Arnaud fired his parting, futile shot.
Arnaud snapped the switch on the table lamp. He bent over the form of the man upon the floor. Perry Warfield was still alive. He opened his eyes.
He was dying, a victim of his own stupidity; yet in his last moments he had gained a bravery that was heroic.
"It was — Killer Bryan!" he gasped. "I have seen — him — before! He kills — for The Master — for The Black Master! He will kill again. You must — stop him!"
Warfield raised a clenched fist. He sought Arnaud's hand. He opened his fist and dropped a small black object of thin metal. Arnaud thrust it into his pocket.
Footsteps and excited voices came from the corridor. Arnaud remained close beside the dying man.
"He will kill," said Warfield feebly. "He will — kill—"
"Hubert Banks?" came Arnaud's question.
Warfield nodded.
"Later," he said. "Before — before that he will — will kill—"
Arnaud's arm was beneath Warfield's head. The light switched on; men were in the room, seizing Arnaud.
He withstood their clutches for the moment. His gaze was focused upon Perry Warfield's lips. He saw them move as they tried to repeat a name. Slight though the motion was, Arnaud understood. He nodded.
Warfield's head slipped from his arm. The man was dead. His body rolled upon the floor. Five men seized Henry Arnaud and overpowered him.
CHAPTER IX. THE SECOND MURDER
HENRY ARNAUD lay in a corner of the room, his hands cuffed behind him. In front of him stood two hotel attendants and the house detective, keeping close watch, awaiting the arrival of the police.
Soon a plainclothesman shoved his way into the room. He looked at Arnaud, then glanced questioningly at the house detective.
"This the guy?" he asked.
"Yes."
"I'm Detective Blaine from headquarters," said the newcomer. "I'll take charge from now on!"
He asked Arnaud's name. Then, "You killed this man?"
"No!"
The detective laughed.
"The murderer," persisted Arnaud, "is a man called Killer Bryan. He has escaped. He intends to commit another murder. I can tell you the name—"
"Lay off that stall!" exclaimed the headquarters man threateningly. "It won't do you any good to try to lay the blame somewhere else. Get me?"
"The name of the man marked for murder is Matthew—"
"Shut up!" ordered the detective. "Another peep and you won't be able to do any talking. Get me? You'll have plenty of chance to talk at headquarters."
Henry Arnaud remained silent, but his eyes were intent, his face taut, as if he was engaged in physical effort. The headquarters detective leaned over the body of Perry Warfield. The others in the room concentrated on the action of the sleuth, as he made his careful inspection. It was then that the unexpected happened.
Slowly, almost unnoticeably, Henry Arnaud raised his body. A man beside him detected a sound and turned. Before he could make an exclamation, Arnaud's freed right hand swung from behind his back.
The handcuffs were still fastened to his right wrist. The solid mass of metal struck the watcher at the base of his neck. He collapsed.
Arnaud was on his feet. As the headquarters man turned, automatic in hand, the shackled arm descend and knocked the pistol from the detective's grasp.
The house detective and two other men made a leap for the prisoner; but Arnaud was too quick for them. His right arm swung in a wide arc.
One man escaped the blow by dropping to the floor. Another fell as he received a staggering stroke. The third grappled with Arnaud for a brief moment; then the conflict ended as the steel manacles glanced against the man's head.
The prisoner made a leap for the door, pulling the handcuff from his right wrist as he went. This amazing man, through some strange ability, could laugh at manacles.
The path to freedom lay ahead, but Arnaud scented danger. He dropped suddenly toward the floor and turned just as the headquarters detective reclaimed his automatic and raised it toward the fleeing form.
Arnaud's action required that the detective change his aim.
Before the threatening finger could pull the trigger, the handcuffs whizzed through the air at terrific speed.
The detective threw up a protecting arm. He was too late to save himself. The heavy steel cuffs struck the top of his head and he fell.
Then Arnaud was gone, but from the corridor outside the room came a last reminder of his presence. It was a long, eerie laugh, a terrible laugh that seemed a laugh of triumph.