"A counterfeit ten dollar bill, did you say?" she demanded.
"Yes--it is a remarkable counterfeit. You would not know it from a good one. Only an expert can tell the difference. But all these crooks overreach themselves. Clever as they are, they usually leave some mark which betrays them. For example, in printing this bill which bears the head of Lincoln, they have spelled his first name "Abrahem"--in other words, the engraver made an "e" when it should have been "a.""
Ray jumped up, quite excited. Her eyes flashing, she cried.
"Isn"t that strange! I have a new $10 bill, and I noticed to-day the queer spelling of Abraham. Wouldn"t it be funny if I had one of the counterfeits?"
The lawyer smiled.
"It wouldn"t be funny; it would be a tragedy, considering that in a short while from now I am to pay your bills. Where is the bank note?"
"I"ll run up and get it. It"s in my purse."
When she had disappeared, Steell turned to his hostess and said:
"Have you seen Signor Keralio lately?"
"Hardly--you know I dismissed him from the house."
The lawyer sat thoughtfully drumming his fingers on the table.
Musingly, he said:
"Somehow I have a hunch that that fellow knows something about the diamonds. Does Kenneth ever see him?"
"I asked him the other day. He said he did not."
"That"s strange!" exclaimed the lawyer. "It was only yesterday morning that I saw them together in a taxicab."
"Where?" demanded Helen, surprised.
"Away uptown. I had business up in the Bronx. I was driving my car and was near 200th street and going north when suddenly I had to steer to one side to allow a taxicab to pa.s.s. There were two men in it. I just chanced to glance inside and, to my surprise, I recognized your husband and Keralio."
"What time was that?"
"Very early--about nine o"clock."
"What direction?"
"They were coming south."
"Then he must have been with Keralio all night, for he didn"t come home."
The lawyer was silent. Certainly here was a mystery which needed more detective talent than he possessed to clear up. Yet he would not rest until it was solved. To-morrow he would get d.i.c.k Reynolds busy, and they would go to work in earnest. The first thing to find out was what took Keralio and Kenneth to the Bronx.
"Does Keralio live in the Bronx?"
"I don"t know," said Helen.
"I"ll find out," said the lawyer, grimly.
At that moment Ray returned, holding out a new ten-dollar bill.
"I was right," she cried. "The name Abraham is spelled with an "e."
Do you really think this is a counterfeit?"
The lawyer took the bill and examined it critically.
"I have no doubt of it," he answered. "There are other indications--the general appearance, the touch of the paper. Where did you get it?"
For a moment the young girl was puzzled.
"Let me think. Where did I get it. Oh yes, I know. Francois gave it to me."
"Francois!" exclaimed Helen.
The lawyer started and looked up in surprise.
"Francois, your brother-in-law"s valet?"
"Yes--I wanted a $20 bill changed to pay for some things that came home from the store, and he went out and brought me some old bills and this new one."
The lawyer gave vent to a low, expressive whistle.
"Francois gave it to you, eh? Where is Francois?"
"I discharged him to-day for insolence," said Helen.
"He"s gone!"
"Yes--he went shortly before you came in."
The lawyer jumped to his feet, a look of exultation on his face.
Quickly, he said:
"Didn"t you say that this Francois was formerly with Signor Keralio?"
"Yes--he was with him for years."
The lawyer gave a wild whoop of joy.
"Then we"ve got it--at last."
"Got what?" cried the women.
"A clue--a clue!" cried the lawyer, excitedly. "Can"t you see it?
Francois is hand in glove with Keralio--the master rogue who is making this counterfeit."
"What do you propose to do?"