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PAGE 12

The Only Girl At Overlook
by [?]

The two men stood close to and facing each other. The eyes of the detective glared gloatingly at an upward angle into the pale but still firm face of the taller Gerald, and then dropped slowly, until they became fixed on a red stain on the sleeve of the other’s coat. Did he possess the animal scent of a bloodhound?

“What is that?” he sharply asked. He seized the arm and smelled of the spotted fabric. “It is blood! Let me see your knife.”

Quite mechanically Gerald thrust one hand into his trousers pocket and brought out the knife which he had taken back from Ravelli, whose blood was on it yet.

The storm was overhead. A first peal of thunder broke loudly. It came at the instant of the assemblage’s tensest interest–at the instant when Gerald Heath was aghast with the revelation of his awful jeopardy–at the instant of his exposure as a murderer. It impressed them and him with a shock of something supernatural. The reverberation rumbled into silence, which was broken by O’Reagan:

“There’ll be no need to catch Eph,” he said, in a tone of professional glee. “This man is the murderer.”

Again thunder rolled and rumbled angrily above Overlook, and the party stood aghast in the presence of the man dead and the man condemned.

“Bring him to the telegraph station,” O’Reagan commanded.

Nobody disputed the detective’s methods now–not even Gerald; and a prisoner as completely as though manacled, although not touched by any one, he went with the rest.

Mary Warriner had taken down the tarpaulin front of her shed when the men approached. In the ordinary course of her early morning doings she would wait an hour to dispatch and receive the first telegrams of the day, and then go to breakfast alone at the table where the engineers and overseers would by that time have had their meal. She was astonished to see nearly the whole population of Overlook crowd around her quarters, while a few entered. But she went quickly behind the desk, and took her place on the stool. The soberness of the faces impressed her, but nothing indicated that Gerald was in custody, and her quick thought was that some disaster made it necessary to use the wire importantly.

“I wish to send a message,” said O’Reagan, stepping forward.

The eyes of the girl rested on him inquiringly, and he palpably flinched, but as obviously nerved himself to proceed, and when he spoke again the Irish accent became more pronounced to hear, although not sufficiently to be shown in the printed words: “I will dictate it slowly, so that you can transmit it as I speak. Are you ready?”

Mary’s fingers were on the key, and her bright, alert face was an answer to the query.

“To Henry Deckerman, president,” the detective slowly said, waiting for the clicks of the instrument to put his language on the wire; “Tonio Ravelli, a sub-contractor here, was murdered last night.”

Mary’s hand slid away from the key after sending that, and the always faint tint in her cheeks faded out, and her eyes flickered up in a scared way to the stern faces in front of her. The shock of the news that a man had been slain, and that he was a man who, only the previous day, had proffered his love to her, was for a moment disabling. But the habit of her employment controlled her, and she awaited the further dictation.

“His body was found this morning in the furnace of the steam boiler.” O’Reagan resumed deliberately, “where it had evidently been placed in a vain attempt to destroy it.”

A shudder went through Mary, and she convulsively wrung her small hands together, as though to limber them from a cramp. But her fingers went back to the key.

“The murderer has been discovered,” the detective slowly continued, and the operator kept along with his utterance word by word. “He killed Ravelli for revenge. It was a love affair.” Here the girl grew whiter still, and the clicks became very slow, but they did not cease. O’Reagan’s voice was cold and ruthless: “The motive of the murderer was revenge. His name is Gerald Heath.”