Anita Douglas, confidence established now, poured out her story unreservedly, as there was little reason why she should not, a story of the refined brutality and neglect and inhumanity of her husband.
She told of her own first suspicions of him, of a girl who had been his stenographer, a Miss Helen Brett.
But he was careful. There had never been any direct, positive evidence against him. Still, there was enough to warrant a separation and the payment to her of an allowance.
They had lived, she said, in a pretty little house in the suburb of Glenclair, near New York. Now that they were separated, she had taken a little kitchenette apartment at the new Melcombe. Her husband was living in the house, she believed, when he was not in the city at his club, "or elsewhere," she added bitterly.
"But," she confided as she finished, "it is very lonely here in a big city all alone."
"I know it is," agreed Constance sympathetically as they parted. "I, too, am often very lonely. Call on me, especially if you find anything crooked going on. Call on me, anyhow. I shall be glad to see you any time."
The words, "anything crooked going on," rang in Mrs. Douglas"s ears long after the elevator door had clanged shut and her new friend had gone. She was visibly perturbed. And the more she thought about it the more perturbed she became.
She had carried on a mild, then an ardent, flirtation with the man who had introduced himself as "Mr. White"--really Lynn Munro. But she relied on her woman"s instinct in her judgment of him. No, she felt sure that he could not be other than she thought. But as for Alice Murray and her friend whom she had met at the Palais de Maxixe--well, she was forced to admit that she did not know, that Constance"s warning might, after all, be true.
Munro had had to run out of town for a few days on a business trip.
That she knew, for it had been the reason why he had wanted to see her before he went.
He had, in fact, spent the evening in her company, after the other couple had excused themselves on one pretext or another.
She called up Alice Murray at the number she had given. She was not there. In fact, no one seemed to know when she would be there. It was strange, because always before it had seemed possible to get her at any moment, almost instantly. That, too, worried her.
She tried to get the thing out of her mind, but she could not. She had a sort of foreboding that her new friend had not spoken without reason, a feeling of insecurity as though something were impending over her.
The crisis came sooner than even Constance had antic.i.p.ated when she called on Anita Douglas. It was early in the afternoon, while Anita was still brooding, that a strange man called on her. Instinctively she seemed to divine that he was a detective. He, at least, had the look.
"My name," he introduced himself, "is Drummond."
Drummond paused and glanced about as if to make sure that he could by no possibility be overheard.
"I have called," he continued, "on a rather delicate matter."
He paused for effect, then went on:
"Some time ago I was employed by Mr. Douglas to--er--to watch his wife."
He was watching her narrowly to see what effect his sudden remark would have on her. She was speechless.
"Since then," he added quietly, "I have watched, I have seen--what I have seen."
Drummond had faced her. Somehow the effect of his words was more potent on her than if he had not accused her by indirection. Still she said nothing.
"I can suppress it," he insinuated.
Her heart was going like a trip-hammer.
"But it will cost something to do that."
Here was a straw--she caught at it eagerly.
"Cost something?" she repeated, facing him. "How much?"
Drummond never took his eyes from her anxious face.
"I was to get a fee of one thousand dollars if I obtained some letters that had pa.s.sed from her to a man named Lynn Munro. He has gone out of town--has left his rooms unguarded. I have the letters."
She felt a sinking sensation. One thousand dollars!
Suddenly the truth of the situation flashed over her. He had come with an offer that set her bidding against her husband for the letters. And in a case of dollars her husband would win. One thousand dollars! It was blackmail.
"I--I can"t afford it," she pleaded weakly. "Can"t you make it--less?"
Drummond shook his head. Already he had learned what he had come to learn. She did not have the money.
"No," he replied positively, adding, by way of inserting the knife and turning it around, "I shall have to turn the letters over to him to-day."
She drew herself up. At least she could fight back.
"But you can"t prove anything," she cut in quickly.
"Can"t I?" he returned. "The letters don"t speak for themselves, do they? You don"t realize that this interview helps to prove it, do you?
An innocent woman wouldn"t have considered my offer, much less plead with me. Bah! can"t prove anything. Why, it"s all in plain black and white!"
Drummond flicked the ashes from his cigar into the fireplace as he rose to go. At the door he turned for one parting shot.
"I have all the evidence I need," he concluded. "I"ve got the goods on you. To-night it will be locked in his safe--doc.u.mentary evidence. If you should change your mind--you can reach me at his office. Call under an a.s.sumed name--Mrs. Green, perhaps."
He was gone, with a mocking smile at the parting shot.
Anita Douglas saw it all now. Things had not been going fast enough to suit her new friend, Mrs. Murray. So, after a time, she had begun to tell of her own escapades and to try to get Anita to admit that she had had similar adventures. It was a favorite device of detectives, working under the new psychological method by use of the law of suggestion.
She had introduced herself, had found out about Lynn Munro, and in some way, after he had left town, had got the letters. Was he in the plot, too? She could not believe it.
Suddenly the thought came to her that the blackmailers might give her husband material that would look very black if a suit for divorce came up in court.
What if he were able to cut off her little allowance? She trembled at the thought of being thus cast adrift on the world.
Anita Douglas did not know which way to turn. In her dilemma she thought only of Constance. She hurried to her.
"It was as you said, a frame-up," she blurted out, as she entered Constance"s apartment, then in the same breath added, "That Mrs. Murray was just a stool pigeon."
Constance received her sympathetically. She had expected such a visit, though not so soon.
"Just how much do they--know?" she asked pointedly.
Anita had pressed her hands together nervously. "Really--I confess,"
she murmured, "indiscretions--yes; misconduct--no!"
She spoke the last words defiantly. Constance listened eagerly, though she did not betray it.