Robert Wallace - The Dancing Doll Murders

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The Phantom Detective, was Standard Magazine's answer to The Shadow and even outlived his more famous cousin. Phantom Detective was written by a plethora of authors, all hidden under the house name of Robert Wallace. DEATH'S DIARY "White Orchids spell death in this action-packed novel of The Phantom's perilous pursuit of a master criminal whose diabolical, gruesome crimes follow each other in a grim procession.

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“Yes,” said Van bitterly, “it looks so.”

He didn’t reproach Farragut for not seeing to it that his men were more wary. There was no use in reproaches now. But the inspector’s detectives had fallen for that trick of the exploding bomb out on the lawn which had killed two of their number. The others had left their posts, and during that time there had been plenty of opportunity for a killer to make his entry.

THE door at the bottom of the back stairway led to a side porch. It was now unlocked, swinging open, and there was no chance of finding footprints out on the tight, frozen sod of the lawn.

“I agree that the Chief probably won’t come back here,” Van went on. “But we can expect him in other places. Double the guard around Winstead’s room in the hospital, Inspector. And I advise you to place armed men in the cells next to Moxley’s up in the pen, too. The Chief might bribe some fellow prisoner to kill him.”

Van turned then and picked up the dancing doll which had come to Caulder’s house in the late mail like the others. He examined it. Again the Chief had given notice of the murder method he planned to use. For the doll’s wig and clothing had been singed in a dozen spots. Van shuddered. The faint smell of that burned hair was almost like roasting flesh. Except for the courage and quick thinking of Caulder’s nurse that odor would now be permeating the whole house.

The Phantom spoke suddenly.

“With your permission, Inspector, I’m going to make a thorough dust examination of the house. That explosion stirred up enough of it, and this crime differs in one respect from all the others. The Chief, according to the story we’ve just heard, worked alone. He came alone, flung his grenades, and set his fires. We have reason to believe we know just which way he took into the house and out. That’s why a dust collection and analysis is indicated. I’ve got the necessary equipment. I’ll go get it, come back here, and go over every inch of floor space the Chief must have traveled.”

Farragut nodded. “It’s okay by me, Phantom.”

Van borrowed a police coupé, drove it himself back to Dr. Paul Bendix’s laboratory. He had already turned Blackie Guido over to the inspector. The man was now warming a cell in the Tombs.

Van took a bulky apparatus down from a shelf. It was a vacuum cleaner, but of no ordinary kind. Its mechanism was almost silent, in spite of its super-powerful motor. There were over a dozen different shaped nozzles which could be used to collect dust from every conceivable location in a room.

And, instead of one dust bag, there were a dozen small ones, with blank tags on them. More and more the scientific examination of dust was becoming an aid to criminology. And the Phantom, as usual, had the very latest gadgets.

He hurried back to Caulder’s home with his equipment and went over every inch of the route they had reason to think the killer had taken. The sick man had been removed to another room; because the broken windows on the north side made his former bedroom uninhabitable. Van went in that, too.

It was filled with detectives, but they moved aside respectfully to let the Phantom work. The thin hum of his strange vacuum cleaner sounded minute after minute. He went at it systematically, even opening the doors of several closets and thrusting one of his nozzles inside. No telling where dust might have been blown to in that violent explosion. Each time he got a sample from a different room or closet he took the dust bag off, tagged it, and fastened a new one on.

He left the Caulder home with enough dust to occupy him for several days. It might even take him a week to look through the millions of particles with the aid of microscopes and chemicals.

But it was the sort of work the Phantom loved when he wasn’t engaged in violent action. He would turn the white light of science on the macabre trail of the Chief. He left word with Frank Havens to call him at the Bendix laboratory if anything new developed.

IT was forty-eight hours later that an item in a late edition of an afternoon paper caught Van’s interest:

PRISON AUTHORITIES WILL ALLOW CONVICT

TO VISIT DYING RELATIVE

Those were the headlines. The item went on to state that the warden of the State penitentiary had received a request from Judd Moxley to be allowed to make a short visit to his cousin, Esmond Caulder. Caulder had expressed a wish to see his relative before he died.

There was a picture of Moxley. Van was impressed by his striking resemblance to the rest of the Caulder family. He had the same square jaw and high cheek bones as old Esmond. The same look of arrogant independence. In making a decision on his request the prison board had taken into consideration the fact that Moxley’s sentence would be up shortly.

Van studied Moxley’s face for a long time, then strode back to his microscopes and worked more feverishly than ever. It was plain that Moxley would be in greater danger out of jail than in. The thought that another murder was possibly brewing brought home to Van the need of haste. Soon, some way or other, he must have his reckoning with the Chief.

For two hours more Van isolated and examined particles of dust. Then at last he bent over the lens of his microscope in tense excitement. Tiny tell-tale outlines showed on his slide – outlines that he had seen somewhere before in the past week.

The silhouettes of different types of dust, Van knew, were different. He looked again at the label of the bag from which this dust had come, then abruptly he got up, lighted a cigarette, and paced his laboratory, deep in thought. He had run across one of the most interesting leads he’d met in the whole case.

The jangling of the telephone roused him from his reverie. It was Frank Havens of the Clarion, his voice crackling with emotion.

“Van, the big break has come! I’ve got a visitor who wants to see you. Simon Blackwell’s housekeeper – you remember, the old woman – is here asking for the Phantom. She won’t tell me what she wants; but she hints that she’s representing her master. She knows where he is, I think.”

“Good!” said Van. “That will be one point cleared up, anyway.”

“But don’t you get it?” snapped Havens. “It’s a trap obviously – a trap for you! It can’t be anything else. This woman is working with the Chief to bring about the death of the Phantom.”

“You think so?”

“I do, certainly. But you can turn the tables against him. You can outwit this woman into making her betray her master.”

“There’s only one trouble with that,” Van answered. “It would take time – lots of it. And right now I’ve got something else on my mind – a direct clue to the Chief’s whereabouts. I’m practically certain he plans another murder tonight.”

“Where is he?” asked Havens. “If you know why not go get him?”

“To convince the police that I have the right man,” said Van tensely, “I’ve got to catch the Chief red-handed.”

“How?”

“Just this way,” said Van. “Judd Moxley’s coming out of prison tonight. He’s the one I think the Chief has marked for murder. So Moxley mustn’t leave the pen. It’s as much as his life’s worth. I want you to call up Farragut and ask him to meet me immediately in your office. I’m going to make arrangements to impersonate Moxley and leave jail in his place.”

CHAPTER XVIII

DEATH IN THE DARK

LATER, they met in Havens’s office, and Inspector Farragut shook his head.

“I’m against it!” he announced positively. “It’s dangerous as hell, Phantom, besides being unethical. Caulder’s dying and wants to see his cousin. You can’t play a trick like that with a man on his deathbed.”

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