Elusive Isabel, by Jacques Futrelle by Unknown (interesting books to read for teens .txt) ๐
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Read book online ยซElusive Isabel, by Jacques Futrelle by Unknown (interesting books to read for teens .txt) ๐ยป. Author - Unknown
There was another long pause.
โI want to believe you, Miss Thorne,โ he supplemented.
She turned quickly with something of defiance in her attitude.
โYes, I know,โ she said slowly. โIt were useless to deny it.โ
โWho was it?โ
โI wonโt tell you.โ
Mr. Grimm leaned forward in his chair, and spoke earnestly.
โUnderstand, please, that by that answer you assume equal guilt with the person who actually did the shooting,โ he explained. โIf you adhere to it you compel me to regard you as an accomplice.โ His questioning took a different line.
โWill you explain how the revolver came into your possession?โ
โOh, IโI picked it up in the hallway there,โ she replied vaguely.
โI want to believe you, Miss Thorne,โ Mr. Grimm said again.
โYou may. I picked it up in the hallway,โ she repeated. โI saw it lying there and picked it up.โ
โWhy that, instead of giving an alarm?โ
โNo alarm was necessary. The shot itself was an alarm.โ
โThen why,โ Mr. Grimm persisted coldly, โdid you run along the hallway and escape by way of the kitchen? If you did not do the shooting, why the necessity of escape, carrying the revolver?โ
There was that in the blue-gray eyes which brought Mr. Grimm to his feet. His hands gripped each other cruelly; his tone was calm as always.
โWhy did you take the revolver?โ he asked.
Miss Thorneโs head drooped forward a little, and she was silent.
โThere are only two possibilities, of course,โ he went on. โFirst, that you, in spite of your denial, did the shooting.โ
โI did not!โ The words fairly burst from her tightly closed lips.
โOr that you knew the revolver, and took it to save the person, man or woman, who fired the shot. I will assume, for the moment, that this is correct. Where is the revolver?โ
From the adjoining room there came a slight noise, a faint breath of sound; or it might have been only an echo of silence. Their eyes were fixed each upon the others unwaveringly, with not a flicker to indicate that either had heard. After a moment Miss Thorne returned to her chair and sat down.
โItโs rather a singular situation, isnโt it, Mr. Grimm?โ she inquired irrelevantly. โYou, Mr. Grimm of the Secret Service of the United States; I, Isabel Thorne, a secret agent of Italy together here, one accusing the other of a crime, and perhaps with good reason.โ
โWhere is the revolver?โ Mr. Grimm insisted.
โIf you were any one else but you! I could not afford to be frank with you andโโ
โIf you had been any one else but you I should have placed you under arrest when I entered the room.โ
She smiled, and inclined her head.
โI understand,โ she said pleasantly. โFor the reason that you are Mr. Grimm of the Secret Service I shall tell you the truth. I did take the revolver because I knew who had fired the shot. Believe me when I tell you that that person did not act with my knowledge or consent. You do believe that? You do?โ She was pleading, eager to convince him.
After a while Mr. Grimm nodded.
โThe revolver is beyond your reach and shall remain so,โ she resumed. โAccording to your laws I suppose I am an accomplice. That is my misfortune. It will in no way alter my determination to keep silent. If I am arrested I canโt help it.โ She studied his face with hopeful eyes. โAm I to be arrested?โ
โWhere is the paper that was taken from Senor Alvarez immediately after he was shot?โ Mr. Grimm queried.
โI donโt know,โ she replied frankly.
โAs I understand it, then, the motive for the shooting was to obtain possession of that paper? For your government?โ
โThe individual who shot Senor Alvarez did obtain the paper, yes. And now, please, am I to be arrested?โ
โAnd just what was the purpose, may I inquire, of the message you telegraphed with your fan in the ball-room?โ
โYou read that?โ exclaimed Miss Thorne in mock astonishment. โYou read that?โ
โAnd the man who read that message? Perhaps he shot the senor?โ
โPerhaps,โ she taunted.
For a long time Mr. Grimm stood staring at her, staring, staring. She, too, rose, and faced him quietly.
โAm I to be arrested?โ she asked again.
โWhy do you make me do it?โ he demanded.
โThat is my affair.โ
Mr. Grimm laid a hand upon her arm, a hand that had never known nervousness. A moment longer he stared, and then:
โMadam, you are my prisoner for the attempted murder of Senor Alvarez!โ
The rings on the portieres behind him clicked sharply, and the draperies parted. Mr. Grimm stood motionless, with his hand on Miss Thorneโs arm.
โYou were inquiring a moment ago for a revolver,โ came in a manโs voice. โHere it is!โ
Mr. Grimm found himself inspecting the weapon from the barrel end. After a moment his glance shifted to the blazing eyes of the man who held itโa young man, rather slight, with clean-cut, aristocratic features, and of the pronounced Italian type.
[Illustration: He found himself inspecting the weapon from the barrel end.]
โMy God!โ The words came from Miss Thorneโs lips almost in a scream. โDonโtโ!โ
โI did make some inquiries about a revolver, yes,โ Mr. Grimm interrupted quietly. โIs this the one?โ
He raised his hand quite casually, and his fingers closed like steel around the weapon. Behind his back Miss Thorne made some quick emphatic gesture, and the new-comer released the revolver.
โI shall ask you, please, to free Miss Thorne,โ he requested courteously. โI shot Senor Alvarez. I, too, am a secret agent of the Italian government, willing and able to defend myself. Miss Thorne has told you the truth; she had nothing whatever to do with it. She took the weapon and escaped because it was mine. Here is the paper that was taken from Senor Alvarez,โ and he offered a sealed envelope. โI have read it; it is not what I expected. You may return it to Senor Alvarez with my compliments.โ
After a moment Mr. Grimmโs hand fell away from Miss Thorneโs arm, and he regarded the new-comer with an interest in which admiration,
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