psychology and as simple as the improvisation of a child."
Spatola seemed surprised at this apparent warmth; he looked at Ashton-Kirk questioningly.
"And, with all their scholarship, the Germans are so practical,"went on the latter. "Only the other day I came upon a booklet published in Leipzig that dealt with the difficulty a composer sometimes encounters in getting the notes on paper when a melody sweeps through his brain. The writer claimed that the world had lost thousands of inspirations because of this, and to prevent further loss, he proffered an invention—a system of—so to speak—musical shorthand."
A sullen look of suspicion came into Spatola's face; he regarded the speaker from under lowered brows.
"Perhaps you don't quite understand the value of such an invention,"proceeded Ashton-Kirk. "But if you had a knowledge of stenography, and the short cuts it—"
But the Italian interrupted him brusquely.
"I know nothing of such things,"said he, "and what is more I don't want to know anything of them."Then in a sharp, angry tone, he added: "What do you want of me? I am not acquainted with you. Why am I annoyed like this? Is it always to be so—first one and then another?"
At this sudden display of resentment, the turnkey approached.
"I will go back to my cell,"Spatola told him, "and please do not bring me out again. My nerves are bad. I have been worried much of late and I can't stand it."
The turnkey looked at Ashton-Kirk, who nodded his head. And, as Spatola was led gesticulating away, Pendleton said in a low tone of conviction:
"I tell you, Kirk, there's your man. Besides the other things against him, he knows German."
"But what of the phonographic signs?"
"He knows them also. His manner proved it. As soon as you mentioned shorthand he became suspicious and showed uneasiness and anger. I tell you again,"with an air, of finality, "he's your man."
CHAPTER XIII
A NEW LIGHT ON ALLAN MORRIS
From the City Hall the car headed for Christie Place once more; it halted some half dozen doors from Hume's and the occupants got out.
The first floor was used by a dealer in second-hand machinery, but at one side was a long, dingy entry with a rickety, twisting flight of stairs at the end. Ashton-Kirk rang the bell here, and while they waited a man who had been seated in the open door of the machine shop got up and approached them.
He wore blue overalls and a jumper liberally discolored by plumbago and other lubricants; a short wooden pipe was held between his teeth, and a cloth cap sat upon the back of his head.
"Looking up the Dago?"asked he with a grin. He jerked a dirty thumb toward the stairs.
Ashton-Kirk nodded; the man took the wooden pipe from his mouth, blew out a jet of strong-smelling smoke and said:
"I knowed he'd put a knife or something into somebody, some day. These people with bad tempers ought to be chained up short."
"Do you know him well?"inquired the investigator.
"Been acquainted with him ever since he's been living here—and that's going on three years."
"Did he have many visitors, do you know?"
The man in the cloth cap pulled at his pipe reflectively.
"I can't just say,"he replied. "But I've been thinking—"he paused here and examined both young men questioningly. Then he asked: "You're detectives, ain't you?"
"Something of that sort,"replied Ashton-Kirk.
The man grinned at this.
"Oh, all right,"said he. "You don't have to come out flat with it if you don't want to. I ain't one of the kind that you've got to hit with a mallet to make them catch on to a thing."Here the wooden pipe seemed to clog; he took a straw from behind his ear and began clearing the stem carefully. At the same time he added: "As I was saying, I've been thinking."
"That,"said Ashton-Kirk, giving another tug at the unanswered bell, "is very commendable."
"And queer enough, it's been about visitors—here,"and the man pointed with the straw toward the doorway. "Funny kind of people too, for a house like this."
"Take a cigar,"said Ashton-Kirk. "That pipe seems out of commission."Then, as the man put the pipe away in the pocket of his jumper and lighted the proffered cigar, he added: "What do you mean by 'funny kind of people?'"
The cigar well lighted, the man in the overalls drew at it with gentle relish.
"There's a good many kinds of funny people,"said he. "Some of them you laugh at, and others you don't. These that I mean are the kind you don't. Now, Mrs. Marx, the woman that keeps this place, is all right in her way, but it ain't no swell place at that. Her lodgers are mostly fellows that canvass for different kinds of things; they wear shiny coats and their shoes are mostly run down at the heels. So when I see swell business looking guys coming here I got to wondering who they were. That's only natural, ain't it?"
Ashton-Kirk nodded, but before he could reply in words there came a clatter upon the rickety stairs at the far end of the entry. A thin, slipshod woman with untidy hair and a sharp face paused on the lower step and looked out at them.
"What do you want?"she demanded, shrilly.
Ashton-Kirk, followed by Pendleton, stepped inside and advanced down the entry.
"Are you Mrs. Marx?"he inquired.
"Yes,"snapped the woman. "What do you want?"
"A little information."
"You're a reporter!"accused the sharp-faced woman. "And let me tell you that I don't want nothing more to say to no reporters."
But Ashton-Kirk soothingly denied the accusation.
"I dare say you've been bothered to death by newspaper men,"spoke he. "But we assure you that—"
"It don't make no difference,"stated the woman, rearing her head until her long chin pointed straight at them. "I ain't got nothing to say to nobody. I don't want to get into no trouble."
"The only way you can possibly get into trouble in this matter,"said the investigator, "is to conceal what you know. An attempt to hide facts is always considered by the police as a sort of admission of complicity."
The woman at this lifted a corner of a soiled apron and applied it to her eyes.
"Things is come to a nice pass,"she said, vainly endeavoring to squeeze a tear from eyes to which such things had long been strangers, "when a respectable woman can't mind her own business in her own house."
At this point, Pendleton, who looked discreetly away, caught the rustle of a crisp bill; and when Mrs. Marx spoke again, her tone had undergone a decided change.
"But of course,"she said, "if the law asks me anything, I must do the best I can. I've kept a rooming house for a good many years now, gentlemen, and this is the first time I have had any notoriety. It is, I assure you."
As Ashton-Kirk had seen at a second glance, Mrs. Marx was a lady fully competent to confront any situation that might arise; so he wasted no time in soothing her injured feelings.
"We desire any information that you can give us regarding your lodger, Antonio Spatola,"said he. "Tell us all you know about him."
"He wasn't a bad-hearted young man,"said the landlady, "but for all that I wish I'd never seen him. If I hadn't then I'd never had this disgrace come on me."
Here she made another effort with the corner of her apron; but it was even more unsuccessful than the first. She gave it up and went on acidly.
"Mr. Spatola came