A dark, good-looking young man rose from a desk in the inner office when Rose entered exactly at ten. In his eyes there sparked a little flicker of surprised appreciation. Jack Cunningham was always susceptible to the beauty of women. This girl was lovely both of feature and of form. The fluent grace of the slender young body was charming, but the weariness of grief was shadowed under the long-lashed eyes.
She looked around, hesitating. "I have an appointment with Mr.
Cunningham," she explained.
"My name," answered the young man.
"Mr. James Cunningham?"
"Afraid you"ve made a mistake. I"m Jack Cunningham. This is my uncle"s office. I"m taking charge of his affairs. You called his number instead of my brother"s. People are always confusing the two."
"I"m sorry."
"If I can be of any service to you," he suggested.
"I read that your brother was trying to arrange bond for Mr. Lane. I want to see him about that. I am Rose McLean. My sister worked for your uncle in his office."
"Oh!" A film of wary caution settled over his eyes. It seemed to Rose that what she had said transformed him into a potential adversary.
"Glad to meet you, Miss McLean. If you"d rather talk with my brother I"ll make an appointment with him for you."
"Perhaps that would be best," she said.
"Of course he"s very busy. If it"s anything I could do for you--"
"I"d like you both to hear what I have to say."
For the beating of a pulse his eyes thrust at her as though they would read her soul. Then he was all smiling urbanity.
"That seems to settle the matter. I"ll call my brother up and make an appointment."
Over the wire Jack put the case to his brother. Presently he hung up the receiver. "We"ll go right over, Miss McLean."
They went down the elevator and pa.s.sed through the lower hall of the building to Sixteenth Street. As they walked along Stout to the Equitable Building, Rose made an explanation.
"I saw you and Mr. James Cunningham at the inquest."
His memory stirred. "Think I saw you, too. "Member your bandaged arm.
Is it broken?"
"Yes."
He felt the need of talking against an inner perturbation he did not want to show. What was this girl, the sister of Esther McLean, going to tell him and his brother? What did she know about the murder of his uncle? Excitement grew in him and he talked at random to cover it.
"Fall down?"
"A horse threw me and trod on my arm."
"Girls are too venturesome nowadays." In point of fact he did not think so. He liked girls who were good sportsmen and played the game hard. But he was talking merely to bridge a mental stress. "Think they can do anything a man can. "Fess up, Miss McLean. You"d try to ride any horse I could, no matter how mettlesome it was. Now wouldn"t you?"
"I wouldn"t go that far," she said dryly. For an instant the thought flickered through her mind that she would like to get this spick-and-span riding-school model on the back of Wild Fire and see how long he would stick to the saddle.
James Cunningham met Rose with a suave courtesy, but with reserve.
Like his brother he knew of only one subject about which the sister of Esther McLean could want to talk with him. Did she intend to be reasonable? Would she accept a monetary settlement and avoid the publicity that could only hurt her sister as well as the reputation of the name of Cunningham? Or did she mean to try to impose impossible conditions? How much did she know and how much guess? Until he discovered that he meant to play his cards close.
Characteristically, Rose came directly to the point after the first few words of introduction.
"You know my sister, Esther McLean, a stenographer of your uncle?" she asked.
The girl was standing. She had declined a chair. She stood straight-backed as an Indian, carrying her head with fine spirit. Her eyes attacked the oil broker, would not yield a thousandth part of an inch to his impa.s.sivity.
"I--have met her," he answered.
"You know . . . about her trouble?"
"Yes. My cousin mentioned it. We--my brother and I--greatly regret it. Anything in reason that we can do we shall, of course, hold ourselves bound for."
He flashed a glance at Jack who murmured a hurried agreement. The younger man"s eyes were busy examining a calendar on the wall.
"I didn"t come to see you about that now," the young woman went on, cheeks flushed, but chin held high. "Nor would I care to express my opinion of the . . . the creature who could take advantage of such a girl"s love. I intend to see justice is done my sister, as far as it can now be done. But not to-day. First, I"m here to ask you if you"re friends of Kirby Lane. Do you believe he killed his uncle?"
"No," replied James promptly. "I am quite sure he didn"t kill him. I am trying to get him out on bond. Any sum that is asked I"ll sign for."
"Then I want to tell you something you don"t know. The testimony showed that Kirby went to his uncle"s apartment about 9.20 and left nearly an hour later. That isn"t true."
"How do you know it isn"t?"
"Because I was there myself part of the time."
Jack stared at her in blank dismay. Astonishment looked at her, too, from the older brother"s eyes.
"You were in my uncle"s apartment--on the night of the murder?" James said at last.
"I was. I came to Denver to see him--to get justice for my sister. I didn"t intend to let the villain escape scot free for what he had done."
"Pardon me," interrupted Jack, and the girl noticed his voice had a queer note of anxiety in it. "Did your sister ever tell you that my uncle was responsible for--?" He left the sentence in air.
"No, she won"t talk yet. I don"t know why. But I found a note signed with his initials. He"s the man. I know that."
James looked at his brother. "I think we may take that for granted, Jack. We"ll accept such responsibilities on us as it involves.
Perhaps you"d better not interrupt Miss McLean till she has finished her story."
"I made an appointment with him after I had tried all day to get him on the "phone or to see him. That was Thursday, the day I reached town."
"He was in Colorado Springs all that day," explained James.
"Yes, he told me so when I reached him finally at the City Club. He didn"t want to see me, but I wouldn"t let him off till he agreed. So he told me to come to the Paradox and he would give me ten minutes. He told me not to come till nearly ten, as he would be busy. I think he hoped that by putting it so late and at his rooms he would deter me from coming. But I intended to see him. He couldn"t get away from me so easily as that. I went."
Jack moistened dry lips. His debonair ease had quite vanished. "When did you go?"