The Victorian Rogues MEGAPACK ™: 28 Classic Tales
Page 209
“…of $500,000,” it continued to write, “in cash, stocks and bonds, with interest to date, all proceedings against Graeme Mackenzie will be dropped and the indictment quashed.
“Marshall Taylor, Pres. Central Western Trust.”
“Maxwell Wickham, District Att’y.”
“Riley Drummond, Detective.”
“It is even broader than I had hoped,” cried Constance in delight. “Does that satisfy you, Graeme?”
“Y-yes,” he murmured, not through hesitation, but from the suddenness and surprise of the thing.
“Then sign this.”
She wrote quickly: “In consideration of the dropping of all charges against me, I agree to tell the number and location of the safe deposit box in New York where the stocks and bonds I possess are located and to hand over a key and written order to the same. I now agree immediately to pay by check the balance of the half million, including interest.”
She stepped aside from the machine. With a tremor of eagerness he seized the stylus and underneath what she had written wrote boldly the name, “Graeme Mackenzie.”
Next Constance herself took the stylus. “Place in the telautograph a blank check,” she wrote. “He will write in the name of the bank, the amount, and the signature.”
She did the same. “Now, Graeme, sign this cheek on the Universal Bank as Lawrence Macey,” she said, writing in the amount.
Mechanically he took the stylus. His fingers trembled as he held it, but with an effort he controlled himself. It was too weird, too uncanny to be true. Here he was, without stirring forth from the security of his hiding place; there were his pursuers in their hotel. With the precautions taken by Constance, neither party knew where the other was. Yet they were in instant touch, not by the ear alone, but by handwriting itself.
He placed the stylus on the paper. She had already written in the number of the check, the date, the bank, the amount, and the payee, Marshall Taylor. Hastily Graeme signed it, as though in fear that they might rescind their action before he could finish.
“Now the securities,” she said. “I have withdrawn already the amount we have made trading—it is a substantial sum. Write out an order to the Safe Deposit Company to deliver the key and the rest of the contents of the box to Taylor. I have fixed it with them after a special interview this morning. They understand.”
Again Graeme wrote, feverishly.
“I—we—are entirely free from prosecution of any kind?” he asked eagerly.
“Yes,” Constance murmured, with just a catch in her throat, as now that the excitement was over, she realized that he was free, independent of her again.
The telautograph had stopped. No, it was starting again. Had there been a slip! Was the dream at last to turn to ashes? They watched anxiously.
“Mrs. Dunlap,” the words unfolded, “I take my hat off to you. You have put it across again.
“Drummond.”
Constance read it with a sense of overwhelming relief. It was a magnanimous thing in Drummond. Almost she forgave him for many of the bitter hours he had caused in the discharge of his duty.
As they looked at the writing they realized its import. The detective had abandoned the long search. It was as though he had put his “O.K.” on the agreement.
“We are no longer fugitives!” exclaimed Graeme, drawing in a breath that told of the weight lifted from him.
For an instant he looked down into her upturned face and read the conflict that was going on in her. She did not turn away, as she had before. It flashed over him that once, not long ago, she had talked in a moment of confidence of the loneliness she had felt since she had embarked as the rescuer of amateur criminals.
Graeme bent down and took her hand, as he had the first night when they had entered their strange partnership.
“Never—never can I begin to pay you what I owe,” he said huskily, his face near hers.
He felt her warm breath almost on his cheek, saw the quick color come into her face, her breast rise and fall with suppressed emotion. Their eyes met.
“You need not pay,” she whispered. “I am yours.”