The Strange Case of Cavendish by Randall Parrish
page 91 of 344 (26%)
page 91 of 344 (26%)
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"Enright!" she said definitely. "Obviously now. I've thought so from the first. But always he worked so carefully, so guardedly, that sometimes I have doubted. But now I say without qualifications--Enright, smooth Mr. Enright, late of New York." "That's my bet," Westcott agreed, his hand on her shoulder, forgetful of his intense earnestness, "Enright is the only one who could do it, and he has schemed so as to get John into a hole where he dare not emit a sound, no matter what they do to him. Do you see? If the boy breathes a suspicion he'll be indicted for murder. If they can only succeed in keeping Frederick safely out of sight until after the court awards the property to his heir, they can milk John at their leisure. It's a lawyer's graft, all right." "Then Frederick may be confined not far away?" "Likely enough; it's wild country. There are a hundred places within fifty miles where he might be hidden away for years. That is the job which was given to Beaton; he had the dirty work to perform, while the girl took care of John. I do not know how he did it--knockout drops, possibly, in a glass of beer; the blow of a fist on a train-platform at night; a ride into the desert to look at some thing of interest--there are plenty of ways in which it could be quietly done by a man of Mr. Beaton's expert experience." "Yes, but he does not know this country--if it was only New York now." "But Bill Lacy does, and these fellows are well acquainted--friends apparently. Lacy and I are at daggers-points over a mining claim, and he |
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