Elaine had returned home.
Alone, her thoughts naturally went back to what had happened recently to interrupt a friendship which had been the sweetest in her life.
"There MUST be some mistake," she murmured pensively to herself, thinking of the photograph Flirty had given her. "Oh, why did I send him away? Why didn"t I believe him?"
Then she thought of what had happened, of how she had been seized by Dan the Dude in the deserted house, of how the noxious gas had overcome her.
They had told her of how Craig had risked his life to save her, how she had been brought home, still only half alive, after his almost miraculous work with the new electric machine.
There was his picture. She had not taken that away. As she looked at it, a wave of feeling came over her. Mechanically, she put out her hand to the telephone.
She was about to take off the receiver, when something seemed to stay her hand. She wanted him to come to her.
And, if either of them had called the other just then, they would have probably crossed wires.
Of such stuff are the quarrels of lovers.
Craig"s eye fell on the telegraphone, and an idea seemed to occur to him.
"Walter, you and Chase bring that thing along," he said a moment later.
He paused long enough to take a badge from the drawer of a cabinet, and went out. We followed him, lugging the telegraphone.
At last we came to the apartment house at which Chase had located the woman.
"There it is," he pointed out, as I gave a groan of relief, for the telegraphone was getting like lead.
Kennedy nodded and drew from his pocket the badge I had seen him take from the cabinet.
"Now, Chase," he directed, "you needn"t go in with us. Walter and I can manage this, now. But don"t get out of touch with me. I shall need you any moment--certainly tomorrow."
I saw that the badge read, Telephone Inspector.
"Walter," he smiled, "you"re elected my helper."
We entered the apartment house hall and found a Negro boy in charge of the switchboard. It took Craig only a moment to convince the boy that he was from the company and that complaints had been made by some anonymous tenant.
"You look over that switchboard, Kelly," he winked at me, "while I test out the connections back here. There must be something wrong with the wires or there wouldn"t be so many complaints."
He had gone back of the switchboard and the Negro, still unsuspicious, watched without understanding what it was all about.
"I don"t know," Craig muttered finally for the benefit of the boy, "but I think I"ll have to leave that tester after all. Say, if I put it here, you"ll have to be careful not to let anyone meddle with it. If you do, there"ll be the deuce to pay. See?"
Kennedy had already started to fasten the telegraphone to the wires he had selected from the tangle.
At last he finished and stood up.
"Don"t disturb it and don"t let anyone else touch it," he ordered.
"Better not tell anyone--that"s the best way. I"ll be back for it tomorrow probably."
"Yas sah," nodded the boy, with a bow, as we went out.
We returned to the laboratory, where there seemed to be nothing we could do now except wait for something to happen.
Kennedy, however, employed the time by plunging into work, most of the time experimenting with a peculiar little coil to which ran the wires of an ordinary electric bell.
Back in the new hang-out, the Clutching Hand was laying down the law to his lieutenants and heelers, when Spike at last entered.
"Huh!" growled the master criminal, covering the fact that he was considerably relieved to see him at last, "where have YOU been? I"ve been off on a little job myself and got back."
Spike apologized profusely. He had succeeded so easily that he had thought to take a little time to meet up with an old pal whom he ran across, just out of prison.
"Yes sir," he replied hastily, "well, I went over to the Dodge house, and I saw them finally. Followed them into a jewelry shop. That lawyer bought her a wrist watch. So I bought one just like it. I thought perhaps we could--"
"Give it to me," growled Clutching Hand, seizing it the moment Slim displayed it. "And don"t b.u.t.t in--see?"
From the capacious desk, the master criminal pulled a set of small drills, vices, and other jeweler"s tools and placed them on the table.
"All right," he relented. "Now, do you see what I have just thought of--no? This is just the chance. Look at me."
The heelers gathered around him, peering curiously at their master as he worked at the bracelet watch.
Carefully he plied his hands to the job, regardless of time.
"There," he exclaimed at last, holding the watch up where they could all see it. "See!"
He pulled out the stem to set the hands and slowly twisted it between his thumb and finger. He turned the hands until they were almost at the point of three o"clock.
Then he held the watch out where all could see it.
They bent closer and strained their eyes at the little second hand ticking away merrily.
As the minute hand touched three, from the back of the case, as if from the casing itself, a little needle, perhaps a quarter of an inch, jumped out. It seemed to come from what looked like merely a small inset in the decorations.
"You see what will happen at the hour of three?" he asked.
No one said a word, as he held up a vial which he had drawn from his pocket. On it they could read the label, "Ricinus."
"One of the most powerful poisons in the world!" he exclaimed. "Enough here to kill a regiment!"
They fairly gasped and looked at it with horror, exchanging glances.
Then they looked at him in awe. There was no wonder that Clutching Hand kept them in line, once he had a crook in his power.
Opening the vial carefully, he dipped in a thin piece of gla.s.s and placed a tiny drop in a receptacle back of the needle and on the needle itself.
Altogether it savored of the ancient days of the Borgias with their weird poisoned rings.
Then he dropped the vial back into his pocket, pressed a spring, and the needle went back into its unsuspected hiding place.