without, a heavy-built,
clean-shaven, sharp-featured man stepped into the room, slammed the
door shut behind him, re-locked it, and swept a shrewd, inquisitive,
suspicious glance about the place.
"It took you a damned long time to open that door, Mister
Smarlinghue!" he said sharply.
The man addressed touched his lips with the tip of his tongue nervously,
shrank back, and made no reply.
The lapel of the visitor's coat thrown carelessly back displayed a police
shield on the vest beneath; and now, completing a preliminary survey
of the surroundings, the man's eyes narrowed on Smarlinghue.
"I guess you know who I am, don't you? Heard of me perhaps, too--eh?
Clancy of headquarters is my name!" He laughed menacingly,
unpleasantly.
Smarlinghue's clothes were threadbare and ill-fitting; his coat was a
size too small for him, and from the short sleeves protruded blatantly
the frayed and soiled wristbands of his shirt. He twined his hands
together anxiously, and retreated further back into the room.
"I haven't done anything, honest to God, I haven't!" he whined.
"Ain't, eh?" The other laughed again. "No, of course not! Nobody ever
did! But now I'm here--just dropped in socially, you know--I'll have a
look around."
He began to move about the room. Smarlinghue, still twining his hands
in a helpless, frightened way, still circling his lips nervously with the
tip of his tongue, followed the other's movements in miserable
apprehension with his eyes.
Clancy, as he had introduced himself, shot up the roller shade, peered
out into the courtyard, yanked the shade down again with a callous jerk
that almost tore it from its fastenings, and strode over toward the easel,
contemptuously kicking a chair that happened to be in his way over
onto the floor. Reaching the easel he picked up the canvas that rested
upon it, stared at it for a moment--and with a grunt of disdain flung it
away from him to the ground.
There was a crash as it struck the floor, a ripping sound as the canvas
split, and with a pitiful cry Smarlinghue rushed forward and snatched it
up.
"It--it was sold," he choked. "I--I was to get the money to-morrow. I
have had bad luck for a month--nothing sold but this--and now--and
now--" He drew himself up suddenly, and, with the ruined painting
clutched to his breast, shook his other fist wildly. "You have no right
here!" he screamed in fury. "Do you hear! I have not done anything! I
tell you, I have not done anything! You have no right here! I will make
you pay for this! I will! I will!" His voice was rising in a shrill falsetto.
"I will make you--"
"You hold your tongue," growled Clancy savagely, "or I'll give you
something more than an old chromo to make a row about! I don't want
any mass meeting of your kind of citizens. Get that?" He caught
Smarlinghue roughly by the shoulder, and pushed him into a chair near
the table. "Sit down there, and close your jaw!"
Cowed, Smarlinghue's voice dropped to a mumble, and he let the torn
canvas slip from his fingers to the floor.
Clancy laughed gruffly, pulled another chair to the opposite side of the
table, sat down himself, and eyed Smarlinghue coldly for a moment.
"Sold it, eh?" he observed grimly. "How much were you going to get
for it?"
A cunning gleam flashed in Smarlinghue's eyes--and vanished instantly.
He wet his lips with his tongue again.
"Ten dollars," he said hoarsely.
Clancy brushed aside the litter on the table, and nonchalantly laid down
a ten-dollar bill.
With a sharp little cry that brought on a fit of coughing, Smarlinghue
stretched out his hand for the money eagerly.
Clancy drew the money back out of reach.
"Oh, no, nothing like that!" he drawled unpleasantly. "Don't make the
mistake of taking me for a fool. I'm not buying any ten-cent art
treasures at ten dollars a throw!"
Smarlinghue's eyes remained greedily riveted on the ten-dollar note. He
began to twine his hands together once more.
"I don't know what you mean," he muttered tremulously.
"Don't you!" retorted the other shortly. "Well, I mean exactly what I
say. I'm not buying any pictures, I'm buying--you. I have been keeping
an eye on you for the last three or four months. You're just the guy I've
been looking for. As far as I can make out, there ain't a dive or a roost
in the Bad Lands where you don't get the glad hand--eh?"
"I--I haven't done anything! Not a thing! I--I swear I haven't!"
Smarlinghue burst out frantically.
"Aw, forget it!" Clancy permitted a thin smile to flicker
contemptuously across his lips. "You've got a whole lot of friends that
I'm interested in. Get the idea? There ain't a crook in New York
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