"It may be mind," he said, turning back toward Dale, "but forgive me if I say I think it seems more like foolhardy stubbornness!"
Dale turned away from the window. "Then you think there is really danger?"
The Doctor"s eyes were grave.
"Well--those letters--" he dropped the letter on the table. "They mean something. Here you are--isolated the village two miles away--and enough shrubbery round the place to hide a dozen a.s.sa.s.sins--"
If his manner had been in the slightest degree melodramatic, Dale would have found the ominous sentences more easy to discount. But this calm, intent statement of fact was a chill touch at her heart. And yet--
"But what enemies can Aunt Cornelia have?" she asked helplessly.
"Any man will tell you what I do," said the Doctor with increasing seriousness. He took a cigarette from his case and tapped it on the case to emphasize his words. "This is no place for two women, practically alone."
Dale moved away from him restlessly, to warm her hands at the fire. The Doctor gave a quick glance around the room. Then, unseen by her, he stepped noiselessly over to the table, took the matchbox there off its holder and slipped it into his pocket. It seemed a curiously useless and meaningless gesture, but his next words evinced that the action had been deliberate.
"I don"t seem to be able to find any matches--" he said with a.s.sumed carelessness, fiddling with the matchbox holder.
Dale turned away from the fire. "Oh, aren"t there any? I"ll get you some," she said with automatic politeness, and departed to search for them.
The Doctor watched her go--saw the door close behind her. Instantly his face set into tense and wary lines. He glanced about--then ran lightly into the alcove and noiselessly unfastened the bolt on the terrace door which he had pretended to fasten after his search of the shrubbery. When Dale returned with the matches, he was back where he had been when she had left him, glancing at a magazine on the table.
He thanked her urbanely as she offered him the box. "So sorry to trouble you--but tobacco is the one drug every Doctor forbids his patients and prescribes for himself."
Dale smiled at the little joke. He lit his cigarette and drew in the fragrant smoke with apparent gusto. But a moment later he had crushed out the glowing end in an ash tray.
"By the way, has Miss Van Gorder a revolver?" he queried casually, glancing at his wrist watch.
"Yes--she fired it off this afternoon to see if it would work." Dale smiled at the memory.
The Doctor, too, seemed amused. "If she tries to shoot anything--for goodness" sake stand behind her!" he advised. He glanced at the wrist watch again. "Well--I must be going--"
"If anything happens," said Dale slowly, "I shall telephone you at once."
Her words seemed to disturb the Doctor slightly--but only for a second.
He grew even more urbane.
"I"ll be home shortly after midnight," he said. "I"m stopping at the Johnsons" on my way--one of their children is ill--or supposed to be."
He took a step toward the door, then he turned toward Dale again.
"Take a parting word of advice," he said. "The thing to do with a midnight prowler is--let him alone. Lock your bedroom doors and don"t let anything bring you out till morning." He glanced at Dale to see how she took the advice, his hand on the k.n.o.b of the door.
"Thank you," said Dale seriously. "Good night, Doctor--Billy will let you out, he has the key."
"By Jove!" laughed the Doctor, "you are careful, aren"t you! The place is like a fortress! Well--good night, Miss Dale--"
"Good night." The door closed behind him--Dale was left alone.
Suddenly her composure left her, the fixed smile died. She stood gazing ahead at nothing, her face a mask of terror and apprehension.
But it was like a curtain that had lifted for a moment on some secret tragedy and then fallen again. When Billy returned with the front door key she was as impa.s.sive as he was.
"Has the new gardener come yet?"
"He here," said Billy stolidly. "Name Brook."
She was entirely herself once more when Billy, departing, held the door open wide--to admit Miss Cornelia Van Gorder and a tall, strong-featured man, quietly dressed, with reticent, piercing eyes--the detective!
Dale"s first conscious emotion was one of complete surprise. She had expected a heavy-set, blue-jowled vulgarian with a black cigar, a battered derby, and stubby policeman"s shoes. "Why this man"s a gentleman!" she thought. "At least he looks like one--and yet--you can tell from his face he"d have as little mercy as a steel trap for anyone he had to--catch--" She shuddered uncontrollably.
"Dale, dear," said Miss Cornelia with triumph in her voice. "This is Mr. Anderson."
The newcomer bowed politely, glancing at her casually and then looking away. Miss Cornelia, however, was obviously in fine feather and relishing to the utmost the presence of a real detective in the house.
"This is the room I spoke of," she said briskly. "All the disturbances have taken place around that terrace door."
The detective took three swift steps into the alcove, glanced about it searchingly. He indicated the stairs.
"That is not the main staircase?"
"No, the main staircase is out there," Miss Cornelia waved her hand in the direction of the hall.
The detective came out of the alcove and paused by the French windows.
"I think there must be a conspiracy between the Architects" a.s.sociation and the Housebreakers" Union these days," he said grimly. "Look at all that gla.s.s. All a burglar needs is a piece of putty and a diamond-cutter to break in."
"But the curious thing is," continued Miss Cornelia, "that whoever got into the house evidently had a key to that door." Again she indicated the terrace door, but Anderson did not seem to be listening to her.
"h.e.l.lo--what"s this?" he said sharply, his eye lighting on the broken gla.s.s below the shattered French window. He picked up a piece of gla.s.s and examined it.
Dale cleared her throat. "It was broken from the outside a few minutes ago," she said.
"The outside?" Instantly the detective had pulled aside a blind and was staring out into the darkness.
"Yes. And then that letter was thrown in." She pointed to the threatening missive on the center table.
Anderson picked it up, glanced through it, laid it down. All his movements were quick and sure--each executed with the minimum expense of effort.
"H"m," he said in a calm voice that held a glint of humor. "Curious, the anonymous letter complex! Apparently someone considers you an undesirable tenant!"
Miss Cornelia took up the tale.
"There are some things I haven"t told you yet," she said. "This house belonged to the late Courtleigh Fleming." He glanced at her sharply.
"The Union Bank?"
"Yes. I rented it for the summer and moved in last Monday. We have not had a really quiet night since I came. The very first night I saw a man with an electric flashlight making his way through the shrubbery!"
"You poor dear!" from Dale sympathetically. "And you were here alone!"
"Well, I had Lizzie. And," said Miss Cornelia with enormous importance, opening the drawer of the center table, "I had my revolver.