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e saw that which brought him to instant action. It was a rope clothes-line which ran from post to post, angling from one corner of the building to another and back to the opposite one. No man in Manhattan's millions knew the value of a rope or could handle one more expertly than this cattleman. His knife was open before he had reached the nearest post. One strong slash of the blade severed it. In six long strides he was at the second post unwinding the line. He used his knife a second time at the third post. Through the darkness he could see the dim forms of men stopping to examine the scuttle. Then voices came dear to him in the still night. "If he reached the roof we've got him." "Unless he found an open trap," a second answered. With deft motions Clay worked swiftly. He was fastening the rope to the chimney of the house. Every instant he expected to hear a voice raised in excited discovery of him crouched in the shadows. But his fingers were as sure and as steady as though he had minutes before him instead of seconds. "There's the guy--over by the chimney." Clay threw the slack of the line from the roof. He had no time to test the strength of the rope nor its length. As the police rushed him he slid over the edge and began to lower himself hand under hand. Would they cut the rope? Or would they take pot shots at him. He would know soon enough. The wide eaves protected him. A man would have to hang out from the wall above the ledge to see him. Clay's eyes were on the gutter above while he jerked his way down a foot at a time. A face and part of a body swung out into sight. "We've got yuh. Come back or I'll shoot," a voice called down. A revolver showed against the black sky. The man from Arizona did not answer and did not stop. He knew that shooting from above is an art that few men have acquired. A bullet sang past his ear just as he swung in and crouched on the window-sill. Another one hit the bricks close to his head. The firing stopped. A pair of uniformed legs appeared dangling from the eaves. A body and a head followed these. They began to descend jerkily. Clay took a turn at the gun-play. He fired his revolver into the air. The spasmodic jerking of the blue legs abruptly ceased. "He's got a gun!" the man in the air called up to those above. The fact was obvious. It could not be denied. "Yuh'd better give up quietly. We're bound to get yuh," an off
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