PAGE 9
The Broken Shoelace
by
“Remember anything else about him that was striking?” prompted Green.
“Let’s see?” pondered Mr. Cassidy. Then after a little pause, “No, that’s all I seem to recall right now.”
“How about his being a patron of moving pictures?”
“That’s right,” agreed the other, “that’s the only part of it I forgot.” He repeated pretty exactly the language of the concluding paragraph of the official police circular that all the papers had carried for days: “Formerly addicted to reading cheap and sensational novels, now an inveterate attendant of motion-picture theatres.” He glanced at Judson Green over his cigar. “What’s the idea?” he asked. “Know something about this case?”
“Not much,” said Green, “except that I have found the man who killed old Steinway.”
Forgetting his professional gravity, up rose Mr. Cassidy, and his chair, which had been tilted back, brought its forelegs to the floor with a thump.
“No!” he said, half-incredulously, half-hopefully.
“Yes,” stated Mr. Green calmly. “At least I’ve found Maxwell. Or anyway, I think I have.”
Long before he was through telling what he had seen and heard the afternoon before, Mr. Cassidy, surnamed Michael J., was almost sitting in his lap. When the younger man had finished his tale the detective fetched a deep and happy breath.
“It sounds good to me,” he commented, “it certainly sounds to me like you’ve got the right dope on this party. But listen, Mr. Green, how do you figure in this here party’s fad for getting himself manicured as a part of the lay-out–I can see it all but that?”
“Here is how I deduced that element of the case,” stated Green. “Conceding this man to be the fugitive Maxwell, it is quite evident that he has a highly developed imagination–his former love of trashy literature and his present passion for moving pictures would both seem to prove that. Now then, you remember that all the accounts of that murder told of the deep marks of finger-nail scratches in the old man’s throat. If this man is the murderer, I would say, from what we know of him, that he cannot rid himself of the feeling that the blood of his victim is still under his nails. And so, nursing that delusion, he goes daily to that manicure girl—-“
He got no farther along than that. Mr. Cassidy extended his large right hand in a congratulatory clasp, and admiration was writ large upon his face.
“Colonel,” he said, “you’re immense–you oughter be in the business. Say, when are we going to nail this guy?”
“Well,” said Green, “I think we should start watching his movements at once, but we should wait until we are pretty sure of the correctness of our theory before acting. And of course, in the meanwhile, we must deport ourselves in such a way as to avoid arousing his suspicions.”
“Just leave that to me. You do the expert thinking on this here case; I’ll guarantee a good job of trailing.”
Inside of forty-eight hours these two, working discreetly, knew a good deal of their man. For example, they knew that under the name of Morrison he was living in a summer boarding house on a little hill rising to the west of the park; that he had been living there for a little more than a fortnight; that his landlady didn’t know his business, but thought that he must be an invalid. Among the other lodgers the impression prevailed that he suffered from a nervous trouble. Mornings, he kept to his room, sleeping until late. In fact, as well as the couple occupying the room below his might judge, he did most of his sleeping in the daytime–they heard him night after night, walking the floor until all hours.
A maid-servant of ultra conversational tendencies gratuitously furnished most of these valued details, after Michael J. Cassidy had succeeded in meeting her socially.
Afternoons, the suspect followed a more or less regular itinerary. He visited the manicure girl at the new barber shop; he patronized one or both of the moving picture places in the vicinity, but usually both, and then he went for a solitary walk through the park, and along toward dusk he returned to the boarding house, ate his supper and went to his room. He had no friends, apparently; certainly he had no callers. He received no letters and seemingly wrote none. Cassidy was convinced; he burned with eagerness to make the arrest without further delay. For this would be more than a feather in the Cassidy cap; it would be a whole war bonnet.