6 THE SCHAXTON THIIJUXE THURSDAY MOTJNIXG, MAY 2.', 1803. 1 ' ' a Ml ?HimmtMa.ait!isiHM:HiiK EB7SE53 I -OF- II Efst&K Esacsa La He. A I A. J" I 3 !i is 3 Ml i Hi i x f 4 J .. IP THE . . . !l I FralidijleDt P.v HOWABfi j - . (Theas short serial stories are copyrighted by Bachelor. Johnson & flftrh tiler, and are printed InTheTrlbune by special arranK (.mont, simultaneous with thtlr appearance In the leading dally Journals of the la: co cities). , The exceptional contract etween Mr. Horace Preble and the Detective bu reau of the New York police allowed that young man a month In every year when his time was absolutely his own. He was then at liberty to rest from all labor, or to use his talents for his per sonal advantage. Thte bleased period had arrived, and Preble had begun to taste anew the Joys of Idleness, when be received a summons promising so rich a fiinanclal reward that he could not afford to disregard It. Vice President Hersch, of the Euro pean and North American Life Assur ance society, was the man who desired Preble's services. He did not state the case hi his note, but he Intimated that the society would not haggle about the question of remuneration. It will be remembered, perhaps, .that Preble was In the detective business for money. He hated it from the bottom of his boots, and, as an abstract propo sition, he would have declared death to be preferable. But he had a false pride which would not permit him to be driven to the wall In the battle of life, and the objectionable means of livelihood had come to him when his back was very close to that wall. Ha had as little appetite for the Investiga tion of an Insurance fraud an any man alive, but he, could be hired to do It. Men have written Immortal verse for the same lofty motive. Preble called upon Vice President Hersch Immediately upon receipt of his note. The official received him cor dially, In a cozy office In the society's big building on lower Broadway. There was a cheerful grate fire In the office, and the two men drew their chairs be fore It, and proceeded to business. "This Is ; the case of a fraudulent claim," said Mr. Hersch. "Mrs. Albert Monell" ho referred to some papers "has given the usunl legal notice of her demand for Ja5,000, the amount of her husband's policies In this company." "Well," said Preble, "isn't he dead?" "Oh, yes; he's dead fast enough." ' 'Did tho woman murder him?" "No, Indeed." "Then, what's the matter?" "Why, the man committed suicide." "How do you know?" "Now, that" business," said Hersch, rubbing his hands. "That's the ques tion I could, have expected from you, Mr. Preble. How do I know? Well, the fact Is, I don't know? I only sus pect. It Is because I want to. know,, that I call upon you." ". ' " ,': "It seems to me that I remember Something about the case,"-said Preble, "Died at hla club, didn't he? Doctor aid heart disease, I believe?" ' ; , . " "Yesj that was the ostcnplble cause." R A FIFLDIMfi "V.'hat did the company's doctor say?" "Ke suspected joIson, but tho rane.il was so Infernally clever ns to leave m traee of his work. I tell you that a grain of noonilln distributed through a man's system Vt mighty hard to find." "It you know th.it ho wi aeon Itia " "U'e don't: but that poison would have produce:! the lvsulta. We Khali al lege Ms ur.e wlu-n the case curarj to trial." "Hut you don't dare to go Into com t on th;- nvJIfiil testimony alone," said Prebtf. "is th.it it.'" "That's it exactly." "What else have ynu." "We believe that he Informed his partner in bu?ln-fii that he was going to do this, and that t'io man can In. Induced to testify." Lr.ioi illnary roiife.slon to make to a bU'MnoHH aroelale." "Tlicy had been Intimate friends for many years," said Hersch. "That could be presented to the Jury." "Tho Jury," Raid Preble, "would want something to bac k It. Kvcn a Juryman would know that a fellow who would "II;!lf What I Snvc Your Company." rise up against ithe widow of his In timate friend would He for what you'd be willing to pay. By the way, what would you be willing to pay?" "We are becoming very confidential," said Hersch. "Oh, .that's all right! There are no wltnosses." Hersch glanced complacently at the cloEed doors of the HUle room. 'Then he said In a low voice: "From 11,000 to $5,000, according to the nature of his evidence." Preble kicked the grate reflectively. "Who is this rascal?" he asked. "The partner?" Qdifii 7 PS 2 U U N D L Ladies' and Gents' Furnishing Goods, Etc. ESS THAN ONE-HALF PRICE. vk Si i-j S "Certainly. We've turned up only one other rascal In the case so far except myself." "One other?" "Go on. What's his name and ad dress?" "John M. Lawrence. His office Is In thj Storrow building. They were working two or three patented devices a railroad signal was one of them, I believe. There was no money in it. They vjre on the verge of failure." "So I Inferred from llonell's buI clde." "That's a point fur th? Jury, cer tainly." Preble looked Into the fire for a mo ment. He was wondering what sort of woman Mrs. Mom-ll was, and what chance Khe would stand In the drug gie for existence when so strong a man as himself bad si nearly failed. "iloiv did you find out that Law rence was willing .to to make a lit tle rnunrjy In this way?" "t don't knot that certainly, but It happens that the agent who got Mon ell Into our company was an Inti mate frlon.l of both of them. He was with them on' the evening when, us the agent thinks, Movrell told bin partner what he vai golnr; to do. Of course, our ag; nt did not hear the disclosure, but something, was said before he left tlvrn which stuck In his mind ami ex cited ills Kiifpleion afterward. Ko ho went to Lawrence and tried to get some thing out of hlni, Lawrence would only hint at tvhat he knew." "Why didn't you have him down here?" "I prefer not to do that. It might be Injudicious, as you can readily Bee. If any bargain la to be made with him somebody not connected with us directly mu.'it do It. You see, I'm trusting you Implicitly. They told me at headfiuarters that I couldn't make any mi.italte In doing so." "I'm a thoroughly bonest man," snld Preble. "That's why 1 think so well of this particular Job." Hersch eyed him askance, hut th? expression of the detective's face re assured him. "It seems to me," Preble said, after a pause, "that your case Is weak. Un less you have something better than thl'i you'll lose' it." "There is something better, If we can find It," responded Hersch. "On that night at the club Monel wrote a long letter to his wife." Proble suddenly sat up straight In hl3 chair. "Now, that's tangible," ho said. "It looks like business. Htie was In the city at the time? I see. A man, ex cept .on special occasions, doeBn't write long letters to his wife from the club. He goes there' to forget her, as a rule. "If that letter could be found" "Are you sure 'he wrote It?" "Wo know that he wrote a long let ter, and a servant at the house where the Monells lived says that she took It from a boy. But we can't find the boy, and the servant Is not positively certain about the night. She Is will ing to testify, but she's so stupid that she couldn't stand cross-examination, even If she was telling the truth. "Now, Mr. Preble,, you see what I'm driving, at. That letter must be found. It's Aon to one that he told her all, and It's a hundred to one that she kept the letter. Women always preserve danger ous documents. And In this case It con tained her husband's last'words to her. It's a thing she'd never part with." "And you want me to go to her house E. C R A M X yyvyvyryvvTyyy?vvytyyyfvvyyyvyfyfyffyfyytyyyfyfftvyyy?yyfywyvyvyvvyfTffffy?yyyyv nnd stral it, 'raid Preble, calmly. "Very well. What's it worth?" "Whatever you think Is right, Mr. Preble." The detective rose and kicked his chair back from 'the lire. "Half what I save your company," ho said. "Without the letter you've no case. With It you win, for there's no mortal doubt what's In It." "That's a good deal of money $12.r.C0." "Good afternoon." "Hold on, Mr. Preble; suppose we pay ten thousand?" "Good af " "Oh, very well! Just as you say." "Put It In writing." It wan done with great reluctance on the part of Hersch, who took th? precaution to laboriously drum the eoii'tract out on his typewriter nnd sign It In a disguised hand. Preble pocketed the document. "That's all right," he snld. "Now tell me how many detectives you've al ready sent 'to the house. But ntver mind; your whole etaff bas failed, or you'd never have offered any Hitch money ns this. I'll go up there, and on the way I'll cull on Lawrence." He took Mrs. Monell's address, and then left the room. John M. Lawrence, who was born In 'fin. and has grown 'over 40 years old since that date, was sitting in his of fice reading. The. subject or his perus al was a notiflrntlon from his bank thait a note for nine hundred and odd dollars would fall duo In the very near futuer. If he was wondering why, when It had been powibh- to borrow so much money, be bad not borrowed more nnd lOilpped with It, he was cer tainly not the only man who had been gnawed by that form of j-ijnorsu. "I represent the Kurop mn and all ihe rest of it Insurance company," said Preble when he had closed the door behind him. "Wo are going to contest Mrs. Monell's claim, and we want to find out whether you'll go on the Etunil and tell what you know." Lawrence Involuntarily clutched the notlllcatlon. Neither .the gesture nor tho nature of the document escaped Preble's eye. "And If so," Preble continued, "for how much?" Lawrence was something of a busi ness man himself, but he hud net reached the Btngp of development when he could transact that kind of business so quickly. Desiring time to collect his thoughts, he said: "You're nn Impudent rascal." Preblo laughed. "We're not children," he salj. "We're business men. Do you want to pay that note, or do you want It to go to pro test?" Lawrence put the wrong end of a fresh cigar Into his mouth and tried to light the other. Naturally there was no draught. He laughed nervlnusly. Then, check ing himself suddenly, he exclaimed: "By the Lord .Harry, I like your way of going at a thing. You don't waste much time, I'll swear. Show me your credentials." Preble folded his contract backward and showed Lawrence Hersch's name on the end of it. Of course that amounted to the same thing, but Law rence was not In a mood to be too par ticular. Then there was a fencing match, In which point after point was scored by Preble. Twenty minutes later he hSd bought his man for $1,200, and had learned all he had to tell. Albert Monell had committed suicide. NICHOLSO AT- IN O He had confided In his partner partly through friendship, but chiefly, as he had confessed, because he had feared that Lawrence would suspect, and It was better ho should be under a pledge. The nature of that pledge, Lawrence did not disclose, but Preble noticed that he shuddered when the conversation drifted near It. The dlscloaure had been made at the imo when the Insurance agent had sup ..iscd It to have occurred. Monell had .ointed out that his affairs had reached ho brink of ruin; that he was utterly orn out: that he had neither the .trcn;?th to begin the struggles anew lor the heart to drag his wife down to he dull misery of squalor. "He loved the woman," snld Lnw onee, "and by the eteinul heavens, ihe's worth It." "Let us stick to business," rejoined "reble. Thus admonished, Lawrence related .ho story of his friend's last night In che land of the living. "As soon ns I saw him," he said, "I (new .that he'd made up his mind t.) 1.) It. I saw him In the writing room. He was wilting to her, and I'll tell you It took a, better nerve even than g 73 m ,T. 3 We Are (iolng to in I .Mrs. .Monell's U. . .. his to keep a stiff upper Up while he did It. There's nothing particularly soft about me, but 1 own that the sight of him R-ave me the shivers. I couldn't stand It; and, !y and by, when he had flnlnhed his letter, 1 got hold of him and tried to Jolly him out of the Idea. " 'My duir fellow,' he said, 'I've no more Idea of killing myself than- you have.'' . "Of course that was a bluff.. Ho smiled' pleasantly, and went on Into the cafe.. There were several of his frlendn sitting .by one of the tubles and drinking. He Joined them, and so did I. He sat there for an hour talk ing to all the fellows In the nicest Bout' of way, making everybody feel goiM, you know. I made up my mind Hint A OAK BILL STUFF. LTH LUMBER CO., i TELEPHONE 482. A I VE 2L. he was all right, till, all of a sudden, I tumbled. I saw what he was up to. It was good-bye with him, and he wa3 giving every fellow a kind word to re member him by. From that time on I was rattled. I expected every second to see something happen, and I couldn't have told you whether I was drinking champagne or cold tea. The first thing I knew for certain, his eye was on me, nnd he was saying some thing about friendship. It was a toast. I raised the glass to my IIjks, but my hand shook so that I choked myself with the wine. I coughed and turned away. Then there was a crash and a cry. I started up, and there was Al bert lying beside his chair, with the others round him. They said that he fell dead In an Instant, and that he tlld not breathe after he touched the lloor." "And that's all you know about It said Preblo. "That's all. Isn't It enough?" "It's hardly worth the mon.y." Preble glanced at the billet doux from the bank which the other still Held in ins Hand. Lawrence swore a round eatb. "Have you got all this out of me," he demanded, "and now you're going back nn your agreement?" "Not at all, but I shall want ynu to strengthen that story on the witness stand." "What do you want mo to say?" Treble looked up at Mie celling for a moment. Then he said: "Suppose we talk It over quietly In Grossman's back room?" (To He Concluded.) Gilmofe's Aromatic Wine A tonic for ladies. II" yoy are suffering from weakness, and feel exhausted and ner vous; are getting thin and all run down; Gilmore's Aro matic Wine will bring roses to your cheeks and restore you to flesh and plumpness. Mothers, use it for your daughters. It is the best regulator and corrector for ailments peculiar to woman hood. It promotes digestion, enriches the blood and gives lasting strength. 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