wn, but for the moment he thought it
was. He would leave the office himself and thus give her an opportunity
to quit her work and shut herself up with the safe. But--(was his mind
leaving him?) there was something to be done first. The way must be
cleared for the man in hiding to enter that room before she did. How was
this to be accomplished? A dozen suggestions had been given him by his
confederate, but he had forgotten them all. He was in too great a whirl
to think, yet he must think; some way must be found. Ah, he had it.
Taking up the receiver at his side, he telephoned to a German friend to
call him up in five minutes, giving him the number of the telephone in
the farthest room. This he did in German, telling him it was a joke and
that he was not to insist upon an answer. Then he waited. In five
minutes this farther bell rang. Calling to Miss Lee, he asked her to
answer for him, saying he was very busy. As she rose, he gave a
preconcerted signal on the door of Mr. Beers's room. As she disappeared
in the one beyond, the dapper figure of Johnson crossed the outer office
and slipped into the one holding the safe. A minute later she was back
reporting the message and getting instructions, but the one thing she
had to fear had been done; the trap had been laid, and now for its
victim!
It was not long before that victim responded to the call. On the
departure of the manager from the room Grace Lee rose, and with a
conscious look toward the two clerks, slipped across the floor to the
open door of the safe room. Entering, she swung to the door, which
closed with a snap; then, with just a moment of hesitation, in which she
seemed to be trying to regain her breath, she passed quickly across to
the safe and took up her stand before it. So directly and so quickly had
she done this that she had not seen the slim, immovable figure drawn up
against the wall at her right behind the projection of a large bookcase.
Nor did any influence for good or evil cause her to turn after she had
reached the safe. All her thoughts, all her hopes, all the dreams which
she had cherished seemed to be concentrated in the blank, eyeless object
which confronted her, impenetrable to all appearance--a block of steel
without visible opening--an enigma among safes--the problem of all
problems to every cracksman in town but one--which was about to be
solved if one could judge from the thrill which now shook her, and in
shaking her communicated the same
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