Zane Grey - The Day of the Beast

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“Well, Pepper, that's strong talk,” returned Lane. “But cut it, and hurry to—to what comes home to me. What's the matter with these Middleville girls?”

“Lane, any intelligent man, who knows things, and who can think for himself, will tell you this—that to judge from the dress, dance, talk, conduct of these young girls—most of them have apparently gone wrong.”

“You include our nice girls—from what we used to call Middleville's best families?”

“I don't only include them. I throw the emphasis on them. The girls you know best.”

Lane straightened up, to look at his companion. Pepper certainly was not drunk.

“Do you know—anything about Lorna?”

“Nothing specifically to prove anything. She's in the thick of this thing in Middleville. Only a few nights ago I saw her at a roadhouse, out on the State Road, with a crowd of youngsters. They were having a high old time, I'll say. They danced jazz, and I saw Lorna drink lemonade into which liquor had been poured from a hip-pocket flask.”

Lane put his head on his hands, as if to rest it, or still the throbbing there.

“Who took Lorna to this place?” he asked, presently, breathing heavily.

“I don't know. But it was Dick Swann who poured the drink out of the flask. Between you and me, Lane, that young millionaire is going a pace hereabouts. Listen,” he went on, lowering his voice, and glancing round to see there was no one to overhear him, “there's a gambling club in Middleville. I go there. My rooms are in the same building. I've made a peep-hole through the attic floor next to my room. Do I see more things than cards and bottles? Do I! If the fathers of Middleville could see what I've seen they'd go out to the asylum.... I'm not supposed to know it's more than a place to gamble. And nobody knows I know. Dick Swann and Hardy Mackay are at the head of this club. Swann is the genius and the support of it. He's rich, and a high roller if I ever saw one.... Among themselves these young gentlemen call it the Strong Arm Club. Study over that, Lane. Do you get it? I know you do, and that saves me talking until I see red.”

“Pepper, have you seen my sister—there?” queried Lane, tensely.

“Yes.”

“With whom?”

“I'll not say, Lane. There's no need for that. I'll give you a key to my rooms, and you can go there—in the afternoons—and paste yourself to my peep-hole, and watch.... Honest to God, I believe it means bloodshed. But I can't help that. Something must be done. I'm not much good, but I can see that.”

Colonel Pepper wiped his moist face. He was now quite pale and his hands shook.

“I never had a wife, or a sweetheart,” he went on. “But once I had a little sister. Thank Heaven she didn't live her girlhood in times like these.”

Lane again bowed his head on his hands, and wrestled with the might of reality.

“I'm going to take you to these club-rooms to-night,” went on Pepper. “It'll cause a hell of a row. But once you get in, there'll be no help for them. Swann and his chums will have to stand for it.”

“Did you ever take an outsider in?” asked Lane.

“Several times. Traveling men I met here. Good fellows that liked a game of cards. Swann made no kick at that. He's keen to gamble. And when he's drinking the sky's the limit.”

“Wouldn't it be wiser just to show me these rooms, and let me watch from your place—until I find my sister there?” queried Lane.

“I don't know,” replied Pepper, thoughtfully. “I think if I were you I'd butt in to-night with me. You can drag young Dalrymple home before he gets drunk.”

“Pepper, I'll break up this—this club,” declared Lane.

“I'll say you will. And I'm for you strong. If it was only the booze and cards I'd not have squealed. That's my living. But by God, I can't stand for the—the other stuff any longer!... Come on now. And I'll put you on to a slick stunt that'll take your breath away.”

He led the way out of the hotel, in his excitement walking rather fast.

“Go slow, Pepper,” said Lane. “We're not going over the top.”

Pepper gave him a quick, comprehending look.

“Good Lord, Lane, you're not as—as bad as all that!”

Lane nodded. Then at slower pace they went out and down the bright Main Street for two blocks, and then to the right on West Street, which was quite comparable to the other thoroughfare as a business district. At the end of the street the buildings were the oldest in Middleville, and entirely familiar to Lane.

“Give White's the once over,” said Pepper, indicating a brightly lighted store across the street. “That place is new to you, isn't it?”

“Yes, I don't remember White, or that there was a confectionery den along here.”

“Den is right. It's some den, believe me.... White's a newcomer—a young sport, thick with Swann. For all I know Swann is backing him. Anyway he has a swell joint and a good trade. People kick about his high prices. Ice cream, candy, soda, soft drinks, and all that rot. But if he knows who you are you can get a shot. It'll strike you funny later to see he waits on the customers himself. But when you get wise it'll not be so funny. He's got a tea parlor upstairs—and they say it's some swell place, with a rest room or ladies' dressing room back. Now from this back room the girls can get into the club-rooms of the boys, and go out on the other side of the block. In one way and out the other—at night. Not necessary in the afternoon.... Come on now, well go round the block.”

A short walk round the block brought them into a shaded, wide street with one of Middleville's parks on the left. A row of luxuriant elm trees helped the effect of gloom. The nearest electric light was across on the far corner, with trees obscuring it to some extent. At the corner where Pepper halted there was an outside stairway running up the old-fashioned building. The ground floor shops bore the signs of a florist and a milliner; above was a photograph gallery; and the two upper stories were apparently unoccupied. To the left of the two stores another stairway led up into the center of the building. Pepper led Lane up this stairway, a long, dark climb of three stories that taxed Lane's endurance.

“Sure is a junk heap, this old block,” observed Pepper, as he fumbled in the dim light with his keys. At length he opened a door, turned on a light and led Lane into his apartment. “I have three rooms here, and the back one opens into a kind of areaway from which I get into an abandoned storeroom, or I guess it's an attic. To-morrow afternoon about three you meet me here and I'll take you in there and let you have a look through the peep-hole I made. It's no use to-night, because there'll be only boys at the club, and I'm going to take you right in.”

He switched off the light, drew Lane out and locked the door. “I'm the only person who lives on this floor. There're three holes to this burrow and one of them is at the end of this hall. The exit where the girls slip out is on the floor below, through a hallway to that outside stairs. Oh, I'll say it's a Coney Island maze, this building! But just what these young rakes want.... Come on, and be careful. It'll be dark and the stairs are steep.”

At the end of the short hall Pepper opened a door, and led Lane down steep steps in thick darkness, to another hall, dimly lighted by a window opening upon the street.

“You'll have to make a bluff at playing poker, unless my butting in with you causes a row,” said Pepper, as he walked along. Presently he came to a door upon which he knocked several times. But before it was opened footsteps and voices sounded down the hall in the opposite direction from which Pepper had escorted Lane.

“Guess they're just coming. Hard luck,” said Pepper. “'Fraid you'll not get in now.”

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