FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   248   249   250   251   252   253   254   255   256   257   258   259   260   261   262   263   264   265   266   267   268   269   270   271   >>  
much of the "sixth" sense; the subtle and indefinable prescience which warns its possessor of invisible danger. No such warning was vouchsafed him when he leaned across the end of the writing-table, turned on the gas, and held a lighted match over the chimney of the working-lamp. It was while he was still bending over the table, with both hands occupied, that he looked aside. In his own pivot-chair, covering him with the mate to the weapon he had smashed and thrown away, sat the man who had opened the two doors and drawn the window shades and otherwise prepared the trap. "You bought a couple o' these little playthings, Mr. Griswold," said the man, quietly. "Keep your hands right where they are, and tell me in which pocket you've got the other one." Griswold laughed, and there was a sudden snapping of invisible bonds. He dismissed instantly the thought that Charlotte Farnham had taken him at his word; and if she had not, there was nothing to fear. "I threw the other one away a little while ago," he said. "Reach your free hand over and feel my pockets." Broffin acted upon the suggestion promptly. "You ain't got it on you, anyway," he conceded; and when Griswold had dropped into the chair at the table's end: "I reckon you know what I'm here for." "I know that you are holding that gun of mine at an exceedingly uncomfortable angle--for me," was the cool rejoinder. "I've always had a squeamish horror of being shot in the stomach." The detective's grin was appreciative. "You've got a good cold nerve, anyway," he commented. "I've been puttin' it up that when the time came, you'd throw a fit o' some sort--what? Since you're clothed in your right mind, we'll get down to business. First, I'll ask you to hand over the key to that safety-deposit box you've got in Mr. Grierson's bank." Griswold took his bunch of keys from his pocket, slipped the one that was asked for from the ring, and gave it to his captor. "Of course, I'm surrendering it under protest," he said. "You haven't yet told me who you are, or what you are holding me up for." Broffin waved the formalities aside with a pistol-pointed gesture. "We can skip all that. I've got you dead to rights, after so long a time, and I'm goin' to take you back to New Orleans with me. The only question is: do you go easy, or hard?" "I don't go either way until you show your authority." "I don't need any authority. You're the parlor-anarchist that held up the p
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   248   249   250   251   252   253   254   255   256   257   258   259   260   261   262   263   264   265   266   267   268   269   270   271   >>  



Top keywords:

Griswold

 

authority

 

pocket

 

holding

 
Broffin
 

invisible

 

safety

 

deposit

 
business
 

possessor


stomach
 
slipped
 

indefinable

 

Grierson

 

prescience

 

puttin

 

appreciative

 

commented

 

detective

 

clothed


question
 

Orleans

 

parlor

 

anarchist

 

subtle

 

protest

 
surrendering
 
formalities
 

pistol

 
rights

pointed

 

gesture

 
captor
 

quietly

 

bending

 
working
 
chimney
 

dismissed

 

instantly

 

snapping


sudden

 

lighted

 

laughed

 
occupied
 

looked

 
opened
 

smashed

 

thrown

 

covering

 
window