Eaton got up slowly and mechanically and followed the conductor. At the door he halted and looked back; Harriet Santoine was not looking; her face was covered with her hands; Eaton hesitated; then he went on.

Connery threw open the door of the compartment next to the washroom and corresponding to the drawing-room at the other end of the car, but smaller.

"You"ll do well enough in here." He looked over Eaton deliberately.

"Judging from your manner, I suppose there"s not much use expecting you to answer anything more about yourself--either in relation to the Warden murder or this?"

"No," said Eaton, "there is not."

"You prefer to make us find out anything more?"

Eaton made no answer.

"All right," Connery concluded. "But if you change your mind for the better, or if you want anything bad enough to send for me, ring for the porter and he"ll get me."

He closed the door upon Eaton and locked it. As Eaton stood staring at the floor, he could hear through the metal part.i.tion of the washroom the nervous, almost hysterical weeping of an overstrained girl. The thing was done; in so far as the authorities on the train were concerned, it was known that he was the man who had had the appointment with Gabriel Warden and had disappeared; and in so far as the train officials could act, he was accused and confined for the attack upon Basil Santoine. But besides being overwhelmed with the horror of this position, the manner in which he had been accused had roused him to helpless anger, to rage at his accusers which still increased as he heard the sounds on the other side of the part.i.tion where Avery was now trying to silence Harriet Santoine and lead her away.

Why had Avery gone at his accusation of him in that way? Connery had had the telegram in his pocket from the start of the questioning in the washroom; Avery had seen and read it; they could have condemned him with whomever they wished, merely by showing it. Why, then, had Avery chosen to drag this girl--strained and upset already by the attack upon her father and with long hours of nursing ahead of her before expert help could be got--step by step through their accusation of him? Eaton saw that--whatever Harriet Santoine"s casual interest in himself might be--this showed at least that Avery"s relation to her was not so completely accepted by her and so definite as appeared on the surface, since Avery thought it necessary to convince her rather than merely tell her. And what sent the blood hot and throbbing into Eaton"s temples was the cruelty of Avery"s action.

So Avery was that kind of a man! The kind that, when an end is to be attained, is ready to ignore as though unimportant the human side of things. Concurrently with these thoughts--as always with all his thoughts--was running the memory of his own experience--that experience of which Eaton had not spoken and of which he had avoided speaking at any cost; and as he questioned now whether Avery might be one of those men who to gain an end they deem necessary are ready to disregard humanity,--to inflict suffering, wrong, injustice,--he realized that he was beginning to hate Avery for himself, for what he was, aside from the accusation he brought.

No sounds came to him now from the washroom--the girl must have controlled herself; footsteps pa.s.sing the door of his compartment told him then that the two had gone out into the open car.

CHAPTER X

THE BLIND MAN"S EYES

Half an hour later, Connery unlocked the door of Eaton"s compartment, entered and closed the door behind him. He had brought in Eaton"s traveling bag and put it down.

"You understand," said the conductor, "that when a train is stalled like this it is considered as if under way. So I have local police power, and I haven"t exceeded my rights in putting you under arrest."

"I don"t recall that I have questioned your right," Eaton answered shortly.

"I thought you might question it now. I"m going to search you. Are you going to make trouble or needn"t I send for help?"

"I"ll help you." Eaton took off his coat and vest and handed them over. The conductor put them on a seat while he felt over his prisoner for weapons or other concealed objects. Eaton handed him a pocket-knife, and the key to his traveling-bag--he had no other keys--from his trousers pockets. The conductor discovered nothing else. He found a pencil--but no papers or memorandum book--a plain gold watch, unengraved, and a bill-fold containing seven hundred dollars in United States bank-notes in the vest. Connery wrote out a receipt for the money and handed it to his prisoner. He returned the other articles. In the coat, the conductor found a handkerchief and in another pocket the torn sc.r.a.ps of the telegram delivered to Eaton in his berth.

"That"s the one we had the fuss over in the dining car," Eaton volunteered, as the conductor began fitting the sc.r.a.ps together.

"You forgot to completely destroy it, eh?"

"What was the use?" Eaton took up the other"s point of view. "You had a copy anyway."

"You might have wanted to get rid of it since the discovery of the murder."

"Murder?"

"I guess it"s the same thing." The conductor dropped the sc.r.a.ps into an envelope and put it in his pocket. He examined the coat for a tailor"s name.

"That coat was copied by a Chinaman in Amoy from the coat I had before.

Before the new one was made, I took out the name of the other tailor so it wouldn"t be copied too," Eaton remarked in explanation of the lack of any mark. Connery handed back the coat, went out and locked the door behind him.

Eaton opened his traveling bag and checked over the contents. He could tell that everything in it had been again carefully examined, but nothing more had been taken except the small Chinese-English dictionary; that was now gone. There had been nothing in the bag to betray any other ident.i.ty than the one he had given. Eaton put the bag away and went back to his seat by the window.

The clear, bright day was drawing toward its dusk: there had been no movement or attempt to move the train all day. About six o"clock, as people began pa.s.sing forward to the diner, Connery appeared again with a waiter from the dining car bearing a tray with dinner.

"This is "on" the Department of Justice, Conductor?" Eaton tried to ask lightly.

"The check is a dollar twenty. If you want this, I"ll charge it against your money which I have."

"Make it a dollar, forty-five then," Eaton directed. "Remember the waiter."

The black boy grinned and spread the table.

"How is Mr.--" Eaton began.

"Dorne?" Connery put in sharply.

"Thanks," said Eaton. "I understand. How is he?"

Connery did not answer, and with the waiter left him, locking him in again. At ten, Connery came once more with the porter of the car, and the conductor stood by silently while the porter made up the berth.

Eaton went to bed with the car absolutely still, with only the wall of snow outside his window and no evidence of any one about but a subdued step occasionally pa.s.sing his door. Though he had had nothing to do all the long, lonely hours of the evening but to think, Eaton lay awake thinking. He understood definitely now that whatever action was to be taken following his admission of his presence at Warden"s, a charge of murder or of a.s.sault to kill--dependent upon whether Santoine died or seemed likely to recover--would be made against him at the first city they reached after the train had started again. He would be turned over to the police; inquiry would be made; then--he shrank from going further with these thoughts.

The night again was very cold; it was clear, with stars shining; toward midnight wind came; but little snow drifted now, for the cold had frozen a crust. In the morning, from somewhere over the snow-covered country, a man and a boy appeared at the top of the shining bank beside the train. They walked beside the sleepers to the dining car, where, apparently, they disposed of whatever they had brought in the bags they carried; they came back along the cars and then disappeared.

As he watched them, Eaton felt the desperate impulse to escape through the window and follow them; but he knew he surely would be seen; and even if he could get away un.o.bserved, he would freeze; his overcoat and hat had been kept by Connery. The conductor came after a time and let in the porter, who unmade the berth and carried away the linen; and later, Connery came again with the waiter bringing breakfast. He had brought a magazine, which he dropped upon the seat beside Eaton; and he stood by until Eaton had breakfasted and the dishes were carried away.

"Want to talk yet?" he asked.

"No."

"Is there anything else you want?" he asked.

"I"d like to see Miss Santoine."

Connery turned away.

"You will tell Miss Santoine I have something I want to say to her?"

Eaton asked more definitely.

Connery turned back. "If you"ve anything to say, tell it to me," he bade curtly.

"It will do no good to tell it to you. Will you tell her what I asked?"

"No," said Connery.

At noon, when they brought Eaton"s luncheon, he repeated his request and was again refused; but less than an hour afterward Connery came to his door again, and behind Connery, Eaton saw Harriet Santoine and Avery.

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