Tangled Trails

Chapter 14

"No."

"Had you any expectation of being remembered in your uncle"s will?"

"None whatever," answered Kirby, smiling. "Even if he had left me anything I should have declined to accept it. But there was no chance at all that he would."

"Yet when you came to town you called on him at the first opportunity?"

"Yes."

"On what business?"

"I reckon we"ll not go into that."

Johns glanced at his notes and pa.s.sed to another line of questioning.

"You have heard the testimony of Mr. and Mrs. Hull and of Mr. Ellis.

Is that testimony true?"

"Except in one point. It lacked only three or four minutes to ten when I knocked at the door an" Mrs. Hull opened it."

"You"re sure of that?"

"Sure. I looked at my watch just before I went into the Paradox Apartments."

"Will you tell the jury what took place between you and Mrs. Hull?"

""Soon as I saw her I knew she was scared stiff about somethin". So was Hull. He was headin" for a bedroom, so I wouldn"t see him."

The slender, well-dressed woman in the black veil, sitting far over to the left, leaned forward and seemed to listen intently. All over the room there was a stir of quickened interest.

"How did she show her fear?"

"No color in her face, eyes dilated an" full of terror, hands tremblin"."

"And Mr. Hull?"

"He was yellow. Color all gone from his face. Looked as though he"d had a shock."

"What was said, if anything?"

"I asked Mrs. Hull where my uncle"s apartment was. That gave her another fright. At least she almost fainted."

"Did she say anything?"

"She told me where his rooms were. Then she shut the door, right in my face. I went upstairs to Apartment 12."

"Where your uncle lived?"

"Where my uncle lived. I rang the bell twice an" didn"t get an answer.

Then I noticed the door was ajar. I opened it, called, an" walked in, shuttin" it behind me. I guessed he must be around an" would be back in a few minutes."

"Just exactly what did you do?"

"I waited by the table in the living-room for a few minutes. There was a note there signed by S. Horikawa."

"We have that note. What happened next? Did your uncle return?"

"No. I had a feelin" that somethin" was wrong. I looked into the bedroom an" then opened the door into the small smoking-room. The odor of chloroform met me. I found the b.u.t.ton an" flashed on the light."

Except the sobbing breath of an unnerved woman no slightest sound could be heard in the court-room but Lane"s quiet, steady voice. It went on evenly, clearly, dominating the crowded room by the drama of its undramatic timbre.

"My uncle was sittin" in a chair, tied to it. His head was canted a little to one side an" he was lookin" up at me. There was a bullet hole in his forehead. He was dead."

The veiled woman in black gasped for air. Her head sank forward and her slender body swayed.

"Look out!" called the witness to the woman beside her.

Before Kirby could reach her, the fainting woman had slipped to the floor. He stooped to lift her head from the dusty planks--and the odor of violet perfume met his nostrils.

"If you"ll permit me," a voice said.

The cattleman looked up. His cousin James, white to the lips, was beside him unfastening the veil.

The face of the woman in black was the original of the photograph Kirby had seen in his uncle"s room, the one upon which had been written the words, "Always, Phyllis."

CHAPTER XIV

A FRIEND IN NEED

The rest of the coroner"s inquest was anticlimax. Those who had come to tickle their palates with excitement tasted only one other moment of it.

"According to your own story you must have been in your uncle"s apartment at least a quarter of an hour, Mr. Lane," said the prosecuting attorney. "What were you doing there all that time?"

"Most of the time I was waitin" for him to return."

"Why did you not call up the police at once, as soon as you found the crime had been committed?"

"I suppose I lost my head an" went panicky. I heard some one at the door, an" I did not want to be found there. So I ran into the bedroom, put out the light, an" left by the fire escape."

"Was that the conduct one would expect of an innocent man?"

"It was the action of an innocent man."

"You don"t look like a man that would lose his head, Mr. Lane."

A smile lit the brown face of the witness. "Perhaps I wouldn"t where I come from, but I"m not used to city ways. I didn"t know what to do.

So I followed my instinct an" bolted. I was unlucky enough to be seen."

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