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The Blackmailers
by
She had introduced herself, had found out about Lynn Munro, and in some way, after he had left town, had got the letters. Was he in the plot, too? She could not believe it.
Suddenly the thought came to her that the blackmailers might give her husband material that would look very black if a suit for divorce came up in court.
What if he were able to cut off her little allowance? She trembled at the thought of being thus cast adrift on the world.
Anita Douglas did not know which way to turn. In her dilemma she thought only of Constance. She hurried to her.
“It was as you said, a frame-up,” she blurted out, as she entered Constance’s apartment, then in the same breath added, “That Mrs. Murray was just a stool pigeon.”
Constance received her sympathetically. She had expected such a visit, though not so soon.
“Just how much do they–know?” she asked pointedly.
Anita had pressed her hands together nervously. “Really–I confess,” she murmured, “indiscretions–yes; misconduct–no!”
She spoke the last words defiantly. Constance listened eagerly, though she did not betray it.
She had found out that it was a curious twist in feminine psychology that the lie under such circumstances was a virtue, that it showed that there was hope for such a woman. Admission of the truth, even to a friend, would have shown that the woman was hopelessly lost. Lie or not, Constance felt in her inmost heart that she approved of it.
“Still, it looks badly,” she remarked.
“Perhaps it does–on the surface,” persisted Anita.
“You poor dear creature,” soothed Constance. “I don’t say I blame you for your–indiscreet friendships. You are more sinned against than sinning.”
Sympathy had its effect. Anita was now sobbing softly, as Constance stole her arm about her waist.
“The next question,” she reasoned, considering aloud, “is, of course, what to do? If it was just one of these blackmailing detective cases it would be common, but still very hard to deal with. There’s a lot of such blackmailing going on in New York. Next to business and political cases, I suppose, it is the private detective’s most important graft. Nearly everybody has a past– although few are willing to admit it. The graft lies in the fact that people talk so much, are so indiscreet, take such reckless chances. It’s a wonder, really, that there isn’t more of it.”
“Yet there is the–evidence, as he called it–my letters to Lynn– and the reports that that woman must have made of our–our conversations,” groaned Anita. “How they may distort it all!”
Constance was thinking rapidly.
“It is now after four o’clock,” she said finally, looking at her wrist watch. “You say it was not half an hour ago that Drummond called on you. He must be downtown about now. Your husband will hardly have a chance more than to glance over the papers this afternoon.”
Suddenly an idea seemed to occur to her. “What do you suppose he will do with them?” she asked.
Mrs. Douglas looked up through her tears, calmer. “He is very methodical,” she answered slowly. “If I know him rightly, I think he will probably go out to Glenclair with them to-night, to look them over.”
“Where will he keep them?” broke in Constance suddenly.
“He has a little safe in the library out there where he keeps all such personal papers. I shouldn’t be surprised if he looked them over and locked them up there until he intends to use them at least until morning.”
“I have a plan,” exclaimed Constance excitedly. “Are you game?”
Anita Douglas looked at her friend squarely. In her face Constance read the desperation of a woman battling for life and honor.
“Yes,” replied Anita in a low, tense tone, “for anything.”
“Then meet me after dinner in the Terminal. We’ll go out to Glenclair.”
The two looked deeply into each other’s eyes. Nothing was said, but what each read was a sufficient answer to a host of unspoken questions.
A moment after Mrs. Douglas had gone, Constance opened a cabinet. From the false back of a drawer she took two little vials of powder and a small bottle with a sponge.