was in this house?"
"Why certainly," retorted Marsh. "Didn't I tell you that we heard the
struggle and the shot right over our heads?"
"Well, it sure takes a lot to disturb some people," said Murphy, as he
placed the telephone receiver to his ear and called for his connection.
After some words he got his precinct station.
"Hello!" he called. "Is that you, Sergeant? This is Murphy. I'm in the
Hillcrest apartments on Sheridan Road. . . . Yes, that's right. . . . Just
north of Lawrence Avenue. I think somebody's been murdered and
we'll have to break in. Send the wagon, will you? . . . Don't know a
damn thing yet," he added, evidently in reply to a question. "Hurry up
the wagon." He replaced the receiver on its hook; then turned to Marsh
as he stood up.
"I think I'll hang around the door up there until the boys come. Much
obliged for your help. You'd better get back to bed now."
"Oh, no," objected Marsh. "I couldn't sleep with all this excitement
going on. And then--Mr. Ames is a friend of mine. He would want me
to look after things for him."
Murphy looked Marsh over in evident speculation. The man was tall
and broad shouldered. His face was clean shaven. The features were
strong, with a regularity that many people would consider handsome.
He was what one would call a big man, but this appearance of bigness
arose more from a heavy frame, and exceptional muscular development,
than fleshiness. Murphy took in these details quickly, and the pause
was slight before he spoke.
"Who's Ames?" he said.
"The man who rents the apartment upstairs." Then apparently taking
the matter as settled, Marsh added, "I'll go along with you."
Murphy grunted, whether in assent or disapproval was hard to tell, but
as he climbed the stairs again, Marsh was close beside him.
Murphy placed his hand on the doorknob and shook the door as he
violently turned the knob. The door was securely locked. Then he threw
his two hundred and some odd pounds against the door itself. The stout
oak resisted his individual efforts.
"No use," he grumbled. "I'll have to wait 'till the boys come."
The two men then sat down on the top step to wait for the coming of
the police. They chatted, speculating upon the possible causes of the
disturbance. Marsh, however, seemed more interested in getting
Murphy's ideas than in expressing opinions of his own. At length they
heard the clang of the gong on the police patrol as it crossed Lawrence
Avenue. They stood up expectantly. An instant later there was a clatter
in the lower hall as the police entered. They mounted the stairs
rapidly-two officers in uniform and another in civilian clothes.
"Where's the trouble?" cried the latter, as the party climbed the last
flight.
"In here, as far as I know," returned Murphy, as he jerked a thumb over
his shoulder toward the door of the apartment. "I can't get arise out of
anybody. We'll have to break in."
Marsh stood aside while the four men took turns, two-and-two, in
throwing themselves against the door. It creaked and groaned, and from
time to time there was a sharp crack as the strong oak began to give.
In the meantime, the murmur of voices came up from the lower floors.
Presently faces appeared on the landing just below where the police
were working. Marsh leaned over the rail and in a few words outlined
to the excited tenants what was going on.
Intent on their work of breaking in the door, the policemen paid little
attention to their audience, and apparently did not notice that the door
across the hall was still closed and silent. Murphy, however, recalled
this fact later on.
At last, with a crash and a splintering of wood, the lock gave way and
the door flew open. All was darkness and silence before them.
The five men stood grouped in the doorway, listening intently. The
black silence remained unbroken save for the labored breathing of the
men who had just broken in the door. The plain-clothes man then
brought forth an electric pocket lamp and flashed its rays into the
entrance hall, while the others drew their revolvers and held them in
readiness. Then all stepped into the hallway. This was a large, square
entrance way with four doorways opening from it. Two closed doors
faced them. As they discovered later, these led to a bedroom, and the
bathroom. The others, one opening toward the front of the apartment,
and one toward the rear, were wide archways covered with heavy
velvet portieres.
The plain-clothes man found the wall switch and turned on the electric
light. Instructing one of his companions to watch the hall
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