"It"s all right," answered Pinky.
"Do you know where it is?"
"Yes."
"And can you put your hand on it?"
"At any moment."
"Not worth the trouble of looking after now," said Mrs. Bray, a.s.suming an indifferent manner.
"Why?" Pinky turned on her quickly.
"Oh, because the old lady is dead."
"What old lady?"
"The grandmother."
"When did she die?"
"Three or four weeks ago."
"What was her name?" asked Pinky.
Mrs. Bray closed her lips tightly and shook her head.
"Can"t betray thatt secret," she replied.
"Oh, just as you like;" and Pinky gave her head an impatient toss. "High sense of honor! Respect for the memory of a departed friend! But it won"t go down with me, Fan. We know each other too well. As for the baby--a pretty big one now, by the way, and as handsome a boy as you"ll find in all this city--he"s worth something to somebody, and I"m on that somebody"s track. There"s mother as well as a grandmother in the case, Fan."
Mrs. Bray"s eyes flashed, and her face grew red with an excitement she could not hold back. Pinky watched her keenly.
"There"s somebody in this town to-day who would give thousands to get him," she added, still keeping her eyes on her companion. "And as I was saying, I"m on that somebody"s track. You thought no one but you and Sal Long knew anything, and that when she died you had the secret all to yourself. But Sal didn"t keep mum about it."
"Did she tell you anything?" demanded Mrs. Bray, thrown off her guard by Pinky"s last a.s.sertion.
"Enough for me to put this and that together and make it nearly all out," answered Pinky, with great coolness. "I was close after the game when I got caught myself. But I"m on the track once more, and don"t mean to be thrown off. A link or two in the chain of evidence touching the parentage of this child, and I am all right. You have these missing links, and can furnish them if you will. If not, I am bound to find them. You know me, Fan. If I once set my heart on doing a thing, heaven and earth can"t stop me."
"You"re devil enough for anything, I know, and can lie as fast as you can talk," returned Mrs. Bray, in considerable irritation. "If I could believe a word you said! But I can"t."
"No necessity for it," retorted Pinky, with a careless toss of her head.
"If you don"t wish to hunt in company, all right. I"ll take the game myself."
"You forget," said Mrs. Bray, "I can spoil your game."
"Indeed! how?"
"By blowing the whole thing to Mr.--"
"Mr. who?" asked Pinky, leaning forward eagerly as her companion paused without uttering the name that was on her lips.
"Wouldn"t you like to know?" Mrs. Bray gave a low tantalizing laugh.
"I"m not sure that I would, from you. I"m bound to know somehow, and it will be cheapest to find out for myself," replied Pinky, hiding her real desire, which was to get the clue she sought from Mrs. Bray, and which she alone could give. "As for blowing on me, I wouldn"t like anything better. I wish you"d call on Mr. Somebody at once, and tell him I"ve got the heir of his house and fortune, or on Mrs. Somebody, and tell her I"ve got her lost baby. Do it, Fan; that"s a deary."
"Suppose I were to do so?" asked Mrs. Bray, repressing the anger that was in her heart, and speaking with some degree of calmness.
"What then?"
"The police would be down on you in less than an hour."
"And what then?"
"Your game would be up."
Pinky laughed derisively:
"The police are down on me now, and have been coming down on me for nearly a month past. But I"m too much for them. I know how to cover my tracks."
"Down on you! For what?"
"They"re after the boy."
"What do they know about him? Who set them after him?"
"I grabbed him up last Christmas down in Briar street after being on his track for a week, and them that had him are after him sharp."
"Who had him?"
"I"m a little puzzled at the rumpus it has kicked up," said Pinky, in reply. "It"s stirred things amazingly."
"How?"
"Oh, as I said, the police are after me sharp. They"ve had me before the mayor twice, and got two or three to swear they saw me pick up the child in Briar street and run off with him. But I denied it all."
"And I can swear that you confessed it all to me," said Mrs. Bray, with ill-concealed triumph.
"It won"t do, Fan," laughed Pinky. "They"ll not be able to find him any more then than now. But I wish you would. I"d like to know this Mr.
Somebody of whom you spoke. I"ll sell out to him. He"ll bid high, I"m thinking."
Baffled by her sharper accomplice, and afraid to trust her with the secret of the child"s parentage lest she should rob her of the last gain possible to receive out of this great iniquity, Mrs. Bray became wrought up to a state of ungovernable pa.s.sion, and in a blind rage pushed Pinky from her room. The a.s.sault was sudden and unexpected---so sudden that Pinky, who was the stronger, had no time to recover herself and take the offensive before she was on the outside and the door shut and locked against her. A few impotent threats and curses were interchanged between the two infuriated women, and then Pinky went away.
On the day following, as Mr. Dinneford was preparing to go out, he was informed that a lady had called and was waiting down stairs to see him.
She did not send her card nor give her name. On going into the room where the visitor had been shown, he saw a little woman with a dark, sallow complexion. She arose and came forward a step or two in evident embarra.s.sment.
"Mr. Dinneford?" she said.
"That is my name, madam," was replied.