A Woman at Bay Part 48
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"Why, what would happen to him there?" she demanded quickly.
"For one thing the rats would probably eat him up before very long, and it wouldn't be the first meal of that kind they've had down there, either."
"You didn't tell me where you put him," said Madge.
"I don't tell anybody exactly where that place is, Madge. It's a little hole that I've dug out underneath the cellar of this house; if it was anywhere in the old country it would be called a dungeon; as it is, I call it the grave--people who go there have a habit of never coming out again."
The detective was anxious to know what had become of Phil, the bartender. It was evident that the man had done nothing to betray the detective, since these two were talking so quietly just inside the door where Nick was listening.
The next words, while they did not exactly rea.s.sure him, made him think that, after all, the bartender might be carrying out his contract by attempting to set Chick at liberty himself.
"Is that where you sent Phil a few moments ago?" she asked. "Down there to the dungeon where you put Chick?"
The detective could hear Grinnel chuckle and then reply:
"Yes, Madge, I sent him down there to fasten the young fellow up, so that there would be no chance of his getting loose. You see, he was senseless when we chucked him in there, and I forgot to make him fast, as a sailor would say, but there are staples in the wall down there, and there are chains fastened to those staples, and there are nice little steel bracelets at the end of those chains, that fit beautifully around a man's ankles. I sent Phil down to lock them fast."
"I thought n.o.body knew where that place was except yourself," said Madge quickly.
"Oh, Phil's all right. I have to have some confidence in my men here, or I couldn't run the place."
"All the same," the detective heard her murmur, "I'd rather you had left Chick to me. They're a slippery lot, those detectives, and I shall be uneasy----"
The detective heard no more of what was said, for at that instant he was greatly startled by hearing a sound behind him, and evidently beneath him, the consequence being that he paid no further attention to the conversation beyond the door.
Indeed, he drew back away from it, and softly rose to his feet, in order that he might be thoroughly prepared for anything that should happen; and while he stood there he was conscious of a cold, damp draught of air blown into his face--air that smelled as if it might come from the cellar--and he was somehow conscious that a trapdoor had been lifted, while the next moment he was aware that somebody was climbing through it into that narrow hallway--somebody who was not more than ten or twelve feet away from him. How he had wished for his little flash light then.
Once he imagined that he could hear a faint whisper, and a sharp, warning hiss for silence immediately following it.
Then it came back to him suddenly, all that he had heard Mike Grinnel say to Madge about the dungeon in the house, and the bartender's errand to it.
He thought then that the people who had raised themselves through the trap--and he was sure that there were two of them--must be Phil and Chick, the latter having been liberated by the former; and, acting upon the impulse of the moment, he struck a match and held it into the faces of the two men. The glare of the match shone directly into the face of Chick.
CHAPTER XXVIII.
BLACK MADGE CAUGHT IN A TRAP.
But the flaring up of the match also developed another rather startling fact, and that was the presence of Curly, who, with the bartender, Phil, was standing directly behind Chick.
The light also discovered Nick Carter to the others, as it discovered them to him, and, although it burned but a moment, it was a revelation to all the parties concerned. It was Phil, the bartender, who acted more quickly than the others in this somewhat confusing moment of the encounter, for, with admirable presence of mind, he stepped quickly forward, and, reaching out his hands, managed to pull the others toward him until their heads were so close together that the faintest whisper could be heard, and then he said:
"Follow me along the corridor into the front hall. We can talk there."
They did so, and presently they stood together in the front hallway beside the stairs beyond the hidden doorway which Nick had discovered.
And, during the time they occupied in getting to this point, Nick, who realized that the disguise he wore was no longer of any importance, busily engaged himself in removing it, or, at least, the facial part of it, so that, although in the dark they could not see him, he had restored himself, nevertheless, to his proper person.
"Now, Curly," said the detective, "tell me what this all means. I don't understand it at all."
"Let me talk," interrupted Phil. "It's this way, Carter: When you escaped from the barroom through the little door into the boss' sanctum, you had no sooner gone than Grinnel switched on the lights again, and your absence was discovered. Then it was that the whole bunch lit on to Curly and Chick here, with both feet, downed them, trussed them up, and when Chick was taken to the cellar below, to feed the rats, if he had been left there long enough, Curly was fired along with him. I tell you, right now, Carter, it's all up with Curly in this place. He never can make himself good with this bunch again as long as he lives, and it's up to him to light out now, for good and all, unless he wants to turn up his toes and go to the morgue."
The detective turned to Curly again, and once more struck a match so that they could all see the faces of one another.
"Is that straight, Curly?" he asked.
"That's about the size of it, Mr. Carter."
"Then," said Nick, "am I to understand that the occurrences of this evening have released me from my promise to you to make no arrests in this place, or any arrest of any one who is now in this place within twenty-four hours?"
"Yes, sir, the promise is all off. You can do as you've a mind to. It would suit me to a T if you would gather in the whole push."
"Thank you, Curly," said Nick. "That statement of yours lets me out of a peck of trouble, for having given the promise, of course I would not break it, and I could not quite see how we could carry this thing through to a finish without."
He was silent for a moment after that, and then he asked:
"Can I rely upon you, Curly, to stand by me through what is to come?"
"To the last ditch, Mr. Carter," was the emphatic response.
"And you, Phil--what about you?"
"Well," was the slow reply, for the man was evidently considering his words with very great care, "I guess my usefulness in this place is just about over. When the boss finds out that Curly and Chick have both gotten out of the dungeon below, he will know mighty well who it was that let them out, and that will mean yours truly for the dead wagon in about fifteen minutes; so I think, Carter, that I'd better tie up to you while I've got the chance. I am not a crook myself, and never have been one, although I have consorted with them, and been companions with them for a good many years."
"And will you see the thing through to the finish, Phil?" asked Nick again.
"I will do just as Curly said he would do. I'll stand by you to the last ditch."
"Are you all ready to obey my orders, exactly as I shall give them?"
asked Nick again, slowly.
"We are," came the unanimous response.
"In this case," said the detective, "I am going to make a desperate effort to find out what a bold stroke will do, and here is my plan: We will go back together to that door before which I was standing a moment ago, which, I conclude, from its character, is rather a flimsy----"
"It is that," said Phil.
"And after we get there we will stand silently for a moment, each one of you preparing for the signal which I shall give. When I say, 'Now,' I will throw myself against the door, and burst it open, and as I do so, and leap into the room, you three are to follow me, one after the other, as quickly as possible.
"You, Phil, will make directly for the electric switch, and you will see to it, no matter what happens, that the room is not plunged in darkness.
"You, Curly--by the way, have you any weapons about you?"
"I have got two guns in my pocket, all right."
"Very well; you, Curly, the moment you get into the room, will draw your two guns, and level them at the crowd.
A Woman at Bay Part 48
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A Woman at Bay Part 48 summary
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