“I never really liked Gil, but I was under a great obligation to him, so when he came to New York I saw more or less of him — got him invited places and so on. Finally, about four months ago, he started after me to go in on a stock speculation with him. At first I wouldn’t listen, but he talked it up and it really sounded good. He wanted me to interest Uncle Carson in it, and at length I consented; but I didn’t have much success. Uncle looked into it a little and turned it down cold; said it wasn’t worth a cent.”
“Did the Colonel meet Warner?” the detective put in.
“No. I didn’t mention Gil’s name. Then Gil got after me to go in on my own hook. You know, I have — had — about a hundred thousand left me by father, in good securities. I refused twenty times, but he kept after me, and at last I gave in. That’s where I was a blanked ass. But it really looked good to me. I went to Mr. Mawson—”
“What did you go to Mawson for?”
“He handled things for me. He has since father’s death. I told him all about it, and he agreed to help me realize on the securities without telling uncle. I got it and put it all in United Traffic. We—”
“In what?”
“United Traffic. What’s the matter? Oh, you’ve heard how it blew up, of course. I said I was a blanked ass.”
The detective had stopped short with an expression of surprise on his face. Now he whistled a little, as the surprise deepened into perplexity.
“Yes, I’ve heard how it blew up,” he replied as he moved on again. “But it wasn’t that. It was — nothing. Go on.”
“That’s all. It blew up. The bottom fell out. And then Gil came to me and said he had embezzled a big sum from the brokers he works for and sunk it in United Traffic. He was frantic. This was only day before yesterday. As I said, I was under a great obligation to him. I promised to see uncle and try to get a loan to help him out. I meant to do it tonight — and this afternoon — and uncle’s dead. I had an appointment to see Gil at Brockton. He’s — you saw what condition he’s in. They’re onto him and he’s laying low. I don’t know what to do — I’m all broken up about Uncle Carson and I can’t think anyway. I thought maybe I’d see Mr. Mawson in the morning.”
The young man finished and the detective began to ply him with questions. All of them he answered readily and consistently. About them was the soft silence of the countryside, broken only by their voices and the rhythmic pat of their feet on the macadam as they swung along side by side; the moon was dropping to the horizon now, and there was a new ghostliness in the long narrow shadows of the trees as they stretched into the fields and moved their lazy fingers to and fro over the quiet grass. The two men became silent, walking more swiftly; an abrupt question now and then, and its answer, was all that was heard for half an hour.
“The best thing you can do is to drop this Gil Warner entirely,” Rankin observed as they came within sight of the gate of Greenlawn. “Obligation is one thing and common sense is another. He’s a crook anyway, and the more you do the more you’ll have to do. You say you think he’s not been in this neighborhood before. I’ll find out about that. He may know—”
The detective stopped short.
“By Jove, I’d forgotten!” he exclaimed after a moment.
Harry turned inquiring eyes on him.
“There was a man following me,” Rankin explained. “He came out of the Greenlawn gate and followed us all the way to Brockton. I saw him there in a doorway. In the excitement I forgot all about it.”
“He came out of Greenlawn?”
“Yes. Not far behind me. He followed all the way.” Half involuntarily the detective wheeled and looked back down the road. The next instant he grasped Harry by the arm.
“There he is now!” he cried.
Chapter V
Harry turned and gazed back down the road.
“Where? I don’t see anyone.”
“No. Not now. He jumped into the shadow — that clump of trees on the right.”
“But who can it be?”
“I don’t know.” The detective stood peering intently toward the clump of trees two hundred yards away. “It looks as though you’d got mixed up in a dirtier piece of business than you bargained for.”
“What — you don’t mean Uncle—”
Rankin interrupted him:
“Ah, there he is!”
With the words the detective was off toward the trees with a bound, and without an instant’s hesitation Harry was at his heels. Back down the road they raced at the top of their speed; and when they had traversed half the distance, in the dim glow of the waning moonlight they saw a figure dart suddenly out of the shadow across the road, scramble over the fence and start at a dead run across the fields like a startled rabbit. Rankin swerved aside, squeezed between the wires almost without halting and took after him. Harry, not far behind, was calling as he ran:
“Cut across! He’s making for the woods!”
Rankin had already seen and was straining every muscle to intercept the maneuver, but Harry, with his youthful athletic stride, soon passed him. The man ahead bounded frantically across the furrows without looking back; his goal was evidently the fringe of woods bordering the river some five hundred yards from the road, and the advantage was his, as the two converged at a point half a mile down. Rankin, seeing himself outdistanced by Harry anyway, took it easier, as his injured shoulder was causing him considerable pain; then, seeing their quarry finally reach the edge of the woods and disappear, he pushed forward again. When at length he reached the spot he could see nothing, for the waning moonlight stopped at the barrier of the thick foliage and left all in darkness. Young Adams, too, had disappeared.
From the woods, some distance within, came the sound of rushing footsteps and rustling branches, and the detective pushed forward in that direction, calling meanwhile:
“Harry! Harry! Where are you?”
An answering shout came:
“Here! This way!”
Rankin went on, stumbling over hollows and fallen trees and scratching his face and hands on the low-hanging branches. The sounds ahead of him grew fainter, then suddenly swerved to the left and seemed to be approaching. Here in the midst of the woods the night was black, though now and then, through the interstices of the leaves, could be seen the faint shimmer of the last rays of the moon on the surface of the nearby river.
“Where are you, Rankin?”
The detective answered and thrust his way blindly toward the voice. The sounds of commotion had ceased. Two minutes later he came suddenly upon Harry at the edge of a small clearing.
“Is it you, Harry? Have you lost him?”
The young man nodded. “Keep still a minute.”
They stood there motionless, listening, enveloped in darkness and silence. The woods were still as the tomb; there was not so much as the sound of a rustling leaf; from a distance there came faintly on the air the murmur of the river in the shallows half a mile below.
“He got through the thicket to the bank,” said Harry at length, “and started downstream. Then he dived into the underbrush again and I couldn’t tell which way he went. I thought I heard him again, but it was you. He’s lying low not far from us right now.”
They listened another while, but no sound came.
“No use; he’s given us the slip,” the detective finally observed.
They turned reluctantly and made their way back through the woods. A match showed Rankin the face of his watch; twenty-five minutes past two. When they got to the open they found that in the short interval of their search the moon had dropped below the edge of the hills to the east, leaving the sky light and the earth dark. Tramping across the stubble, they crossed over the fence into the road, and five minutes later were at Greenlawn.