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MIIm I . - ; I The Exploits of Elaine A Detective Novel and a Motion Picture Drama By ARTHUR B. REEVE The Well-Known Novelist and the Creator of the "Craig Kennedy" Stories Presented in Collaboration With the Pathe Players and the Eclectic Film Company Copyright. 1914. by the Star Company All Foreign Rights Retcnreti SYNOPSIS. Trie New York police are mystified by a series of murders and other crimes. The principal clue to the criminal is the warn ine letter which is sent the victims, aigned with a "clutching hand." The lat est victim of the mysterious assassin is Taylor Dodge, the insurance president. His daughter. Elaine, employs Craig Kennedy, the famous scientific detective, to try to unravel the mystery. W1?at Kennedy accomplishes is told by his friend Jameson, a newspaper man. En raged at the determined effort which Elaine and Craig Kennedy are making to put an end to his crimes, the Clutching Hand, as this strange criminal is known, resorts to all sorts of th most diabolical 3cheme3 to put ther out of the way. Kach chapter of th. sto tells of a new Ilot against their live and of the way the grea detective uses all his skill to save this pretty girl and himself from -death. SEVENTH EPISODE The Double Trap. Mindful of the sage advice that a time of peace is best employed in pre paring for war, I was busily engaged in cleaning my automatic gun one morning as Kennedy and I were seat ed in our living room. Our door buzzer sounded, and Ken nedy, always alert, jumped up, push ing aside a great pile of papers which bad accumulated in the Dodge case. Two steps took him to the haii, where the day before he had installed a peculiar box about four by six inches, connected in some way with a lens like box of similar size above our bell and speaking tube in the hallway be- . low it. He opened it, disclosing an ob- j long plate of ground glass. "I thought the seismograph ar rangement was not quite enough after that spring-gun affair," he remarked, "so I have put in a sort of teleview of my own invention so that I can se down into the vestibule downstairs. Well just look who's here!" "Some new-fangled periscope ar rangement, I suppose?" I queried, mov ing slowly over toward it. However, one look was enough to interest me. I can express it only in slang. There, framed in the little thing, was a vision of as swell a "chicken" as I have ever seen. I whistled under my breath. "Urn!" I exclaimed shamelessly, "A -peach! Who's your friend?" I had never said a truer word than In my description of her, though I did not know it at the time. She was in deed known as "Gertie the Peach" in the select circle where she belonged. iKennedy had opened the lower 3oor and our fair visitor was coming upstairs. "Go in there, Walter," he said, seiz ing me quickly and pushing me into my room. "I want you to wait there and watch her carefully." Kennedy opened the door, disclos ing a very excited young woman. "Oh, Professor Kennedy," she cried, all in one breath, with much emotion, "I'm so glad I found yu in. I can't tell you. Oh my jewels! They have been stolen and my husband must not know of it. Help me to recover them please ! " "Just a moment, my dear young lady," interrupted Craig, finding at last a chance to get a word in edge ways. "Do you see that table and all those papers? Really, I can't take your ease. I am too busy, as it is, even to take the cases of many of my own clients." "But please, Professor' Kennedy please!" she begged. "Help me. It means oh, 1 can't tell you how much it means to me!" She had come close to him and had laid her warm, little soft hand on his, in ardent entreaty. From my hiding place in my room, I could not help seeir? that she was using every charm of her sex and per sonality to lure him on, as she clung confidingly to him. Gertie had thrown her arms about Kennedy, as if in wildest devotion. I wondered wllat Elaine would have thought if she had a picture of that! "Oh," she begged him, 'please jplease help me!" Still Kennedy seemed utterly unaf fected by her passionate embrace. Carefully he loosened her fingers from about his neck and removed the plump, enticing arms. Gertie sank into a chair, weeping, while Kennedy stood before her a mo ment in deep abstraction. Finally he seemed to make up his mind to something. His manner toward her changed. He took a step to her side. I will help you," he said, laying his "hand on her shoulder. "If it is pos sible I will recover your jewels. Where do you live?" "At Hazlehurst," she replied, grate fully. "Oh, Mr. Kennedy, how can I ever thank you?" She seemed overcome with grati tude, and took his hand, pressed it, even kissed it. "Just a minute," he added, carefully extricating his hand. "I'll be ready in Just a minute." Kennedy entered the room where I was listening. "What's it all about, Craig?" I whis pered, mystified. For a moment he stood thinking, ap parently reconsidering what he had --mammmmmmMmmmmmmmmmmmmmWmmmWmmmmmVmmmmWmmWmmmmWmmWmmWmmmmmWmmmm 13 1 just done. Then his second thought seemed to approve it. "This is a trap of the Clutching Hand, Walter," he whispered, adding tensely, "and we're going to walk'right into it." "But, Craig," I demurred, "that's foolhardy. Have her trailed any thingbut He shook his head, and with a mere motion of his hand brushed aside my objections as he went to a cabinet across the room. From one shelf he took out a small metal box and from another a test tube, placing the test tube in his waistcoat pocket and the small box in his coat pocket with excessive care. Then he turned and motioned to me to follow him out into the other room. I did so, stuffing my "gatt" into my pocket. "Let me introduce my friend, Mr. Jameson," said Craig, presenting me to the pretty crook. The introduction quickly over, we three went out to get Craig's car, which he kept at a nearby garage. That forenoon Perry Bennett was reading up a case. In the outer of fice Milton Schofield, his office boy, was industriously chewing gum and admiring his feet, cocked up on the desk before him. The door to the waiting room opened and an attractive woman of perhaps thirty, dressed in extreme mourning, entered with a boy. Milton cast a glance of scorn at the "little dude." He was in reality about fourteen years old, but was dressed to look much younger. "Did you wish to see Mr. Bennett?" asked the precocious Milton, politely, on one hand, while on the other he made a wry grimace. "Yes here is my card," replied the woman. It was deeply bordered in black. Even Milton was startled at reading it: "Mrs. Taylor Dodge." He looked at the woman in open mouthed astonishment. Even he knew that Elaine's mother had been dead for years. The woman, however, true to her name in the artistic coterie in which she was leader, had sunk into a chair and was sobbing convulsively, as only "Weepy Mary" could. It was so effective that even Milton was visibly moved. He took the card in, excitedly, to Bennett. "There's a woman outside says she is Mrs. Taylor Dodge!" he cried. If Milton had had an X-ray eye he could have seen her take a cigarette from her handbag and light it non chalantly the moment he was gone. As for Bennett, Milton, who was watching him closely, thought he wras about to discharge him on the spot for bothering him. He took the card, and his face expressed the most ex treme surprise, then anger. He thought a moment. "Tell that woman to state her busi ness in writing," he thundered curtly at Milton. As the boy turned to go back to the waiting room, Weepy Mary, hear ing him coming, hastily shoved the cigarette into her "son's" hand. "Mr. Bennett says for you to write out what it is you want to see him about," reported Milton, indicating the table before which she was sitting. Mary had automatically taken up sobbing with the release of the ciga rette. She looked at the table on which were letter paper, pens and ink. "I may write here?" she asked. "Surely, ma'am," replied Milton, still very much overwhelmed by her sorrow. "Weepy Mary" sat there, writing and sobbing. In the midst of his sympathy, how ever, Milton sniffed. There was an unmistakable odor of tobacco smoke about the room. He looked sharply at the "son," and discovered the still smoking cigarette. It was too much for Milton's out raged dignity. Bennett did not allow him that coveted privilege. This up start could not usurp it. He reached over and seized the boy by the arm, and swung him around till he faced a sign in the corner on the wall. "See?" he demanded. The sign read, courteously: "No Smoking in This Office Please. "PERRY BENNETT." "Leggo my arm," snarled the "son," putting the offensive cigarette defi antly into his mouth. There was every element of a gaudy mixup, when the outer door of the of fice suddenly swung open and Elaine Dodge entered. Gallantry was Milton's middle name, and he sprang forward to hold the door, and then opened Bennett's . door, as he ushered in Elaine. As she passed "Weepy Mary," who was still writing at the table and cry ing bitterly, Elaine hesitated and looked at her curiously. Even after Milton had opened Bennett's door, she could not resist another glance. In stinctively, Elaine seemed to scent trouble. Bennett was still studying the black bordered card when she greeted him. THIS REVIEW. HIGH POINT, NORTH CAROLINA "Who is that woman?" she asked, still wondering ,about the identity of the niobe outside. At first he said nothing. But finally, seeing that she had noticed it, he handed Elaine the card, reluctantly. Elaine read it with a gasp. The look of surprise that crossed her face was terrible. Before she could say anything, how ever, Milton had returned with the sheet of paper on which "Weepy Mary" had written and handed it to Bennett. Bennett read it with uncontrolled astonishment. "What is it?" demanded Elaine. He handed it to her, and she read: As the lawful wife and widow of Taylor Dodge I demand my son's rights and my own. MRS. TAYLOR DODGE. Elaine gasped at it. v "She my father's wife!" she ex claimed. "What effrontery! What does she mean?" Bennett hesitated. "Tell me," Elaine cried. "Is there can there be anything in it? No no there isn't." Bennett spoke in a low tone. "I have heard a whisper of some scan dal or other connected with your fath er but " He paused. Elaine was first shocked, then indig nant. "Why such a thing is absurd. Show the .woman in ! " "No please Miss Dodge. Let me deal with her." By this time Elaine was furious. "Yes I will see her." She pressed the button on Bennett's desk, and Milton responded. "Milton, show the the woman in," she ordered, "and that boy, too." As Milton turned to crook his finger at "Weepy Mary," she nodded surrep titiously and dug her fingers sharply into "son's" ribs. "Yell you little fool yell," she whispered. Obedient to his "mother's" com mands, and much to Milton's disgust, the boy started to cry in close imita tion of his elder. Elaine was still holding the paper in her hands when they entered. "What does all this mean?" she de manded. "Weepy Mary," between sobs, man aged to blurt out, "You are Miss Elaine Dodge, aren't you? Well, it There Stood Her Arch Enemy, the Clutching Hand. means that your father married me when I was only seventeen and this boy is our son your half-brother." "No never," cried Elaine vehem ently, unable to restrain her disgust. "Weepy Mary" smiled cynically. "Come with me and I will show you the church records and the minister who married us." "You will?" repeated Elaine defiant ly. "Well, I'll just do as you ask. Mr. Bennett shall go with me." "No, no, Miss Dodge don't go. Leave the matter to me," urged Ben nett. "I will take care of her. Be sides, I must be in court in twenty minutes." Elaine paused, but she was thor oughly aroused. "Then I will go with her myself," she cried defiantly. In spite of every objection that Ben nett made, "Weepy Mary," her son and Elaine went out to call a taxicab to take them to the railroad station where they could catch a train to the little town where the woman asserted she had been married. Meanwhile, before a little country church in the town, a closed automo bile had drawn up. As the door opened a figure, humped up and masked, alighted. It was the Clutching Hand. The car had scarcely pulled away when he gave a long rap, followed by two short taps, at the door of the vestry, a secret code, evidently. Inside the vestry room a man well dressed, but with a very sinister face, heard the knock and a second later opened the door. "What not ready yet?" growled the Clutching Hand. "Quick now get on those clothes. I heard the train whis tle as I came in the car. In which closet does the minister keep them?" The crook, without a word, went to a closet and took out a suit of clothes of ministerial cut. Then he hastily put them on, adding some side-whiskers, which he had brought with him. At about the same time Elaine, ac companied by "Weepy Mary" and her "son," had arrived at the little tumble down station and had taken the only vehicle in sight, a very ancient car riage. It ambled along until, at last, It pulled up before the vestry room door of the church, just as the bogus min ister was finishing his transformation from a frank crook. Clutching Hand was giving him his final instructions. Elaine and the others alighted and approached the church, while the an cient vehicle rattled away. "They're coming!" whispered the crook, peering cautiously out of the window. Clutching Hand moved silently ad snakelike into the closet and shut th door. "How do you do, Doctor Carton?" greeted "Weepy Mary." I guess you don't remember me." The clerical gentleman looked at her fixedly a moment. "Remember you?" he repeated. "Of course, my dear. I remember every one I marry." "And you remember to whom you married me?" "Perfectly. To an older man a Tay lor Dodge." Elaine was overcome. "Won't you step in?" he said suavely. "Your friend here doesn't seem well." They all entered. "And you you say you married this this woman to Taylor Dodge?" queried Elaine, tensely. The bogus minister seemed to be very fatherly. "Yes," he asserted, "I certainly did so." "Have you the record?" asked Elaine, fighting to the last. "Why, yes. I can show you the record." He moved over to the closet. "Come over here," he asked. He opened the door. Elaine screamed and drew back. There stood her arch enemy, the Clutching Hand himself. As he stepped forth, she turned wild ly, to run anywhere. But strong arms seized her and forced her into a chair. She looked at the woman and the minister. It was a plot! "A moment Clutching Hand looked Elaine over. 1 "Put the others out," he ordered the other crook. "Now, my pretty dear," began the Clutching Hand as the lock turned in the vestry door, "we shall be joined shortly by ypur friend, Craig Kennedy, and," he added with a leer, "I think your rather insistent search for a certain person will cease." Elaine drew back in the chair, horri fied at the implied threat. Clutching Hand laughed diabolically. While these astounding events were transpiring in the little church, Ken nedy and I had been tearing across the country in his big car, following the directions of our fair friend. We stopped at last before a pros perous, attractive-looking house and entered a very prettily furnished, but small parlor. Heavy portieres hung over the doorway into the hall, over another into a back room and over the bay windows. "Won't you sit down a moment?" coaxed Gertie. "I'm quite blown to pieces after that ride. My, how you drive ! " As she pulled aside the hall por tieres, three men with guns thrust their hands out. I turned. Two oth ers had stepped from the back room and two more from the bay window. We were surrounded. Seven guns were aimed as us with deadly preci sion. "Gentlemen," he said quietly. "I suspected some such thing. "I nave here a small box of fulminate of mer cury. If I drop it, this building and the entire vicinity will be blown to atoms. Go ahead shoot!" he added, nonchalantly. The seven of them drew back rath er hurriedly. Kennedy was a dangerous prisoner. He calmly sat down in an arm chair, leaning back as he carefully balanced the deadly little box of ful minate of mercury on his knee. Gertie ran from the room. For a moment they looked at each other, undecided. Then, one by one, they stepped away from Kennedy to ward the door. The leader was the last to go. He had scarcely taken a step. "Stop!" ordered Kennedy. The crook did so. As Craig movd toward him, he waited, coW sweat breaking out on his face. "Say," he whined, "you let me be!" It was ineffectual. Kennedy, smil ing confidently, came closer, still hold ing the deadly little box, balanced be tween two fingers. He took the crook's gun and dropped it into his pocket. "Sit down!" ordered Craig. Outside, the other six parleyed in hoarse whispers. One raised a gun, but the woman and tbe others re strained him and fled. "Take me to your master!" de manded Kennedy. The crook remained silent. "Where is he?" repeated Craig. "Tell me!" Still the man remained silent. Craig looked the fellow over again. Then, still with that confident smile, he reached into his inside pocket and drew forth the tube I had seen him place there. "No mattei how much you accuse me," added Craig casually, "no one will ever take the word of a crook that a reputable scientist like me would do what I am about to do." He had taken out his penknife and opened it. Then he beckoned to me. "Bare his arm and hold his wrist, Walter," he said. Craig bent down with the knife and the tube, then paused a moment and turned to tube so that we could see it. On the label were the ominous words: Germ Culture 6248A Bacillus Leprae (Leprosy) Calmly he took the knife and pro ceeded to make an incision in the man's arm. The crook's feelings un derwent a terrific struggle. "No no no don't," he implored. "I will take you to the Clutching Hand even if he kills me!" Kennedy stepped back, replacing the tube in his pocket. "Very well, go ahead!" he agreed. We followed the crook, Craig still holding the deadly box of fulminate of mercury carefully balanced so that if anyone shot him from a hiding place it would drop. No sooner had we gone than Gertie hurried to the nearest telephone to inform the Cluching Hand of our escape. Elaine had sunk back into the chair as the telephone rang. Clutching Hand answered it. A moment later, in uncontrollable fury he hurled the instrument to the floor. "Here we've got to act quickly that devil has escaped again," he hissed. "We must get her away. You keep her here. I'll be back right away with a car." He dashed madly from the church, pulling off his mask as he gained the street. Kennedy had foreed the crook ahead of us into the car which was waiting, and I followed, taking the wheel this time. "Which way, now quick!" demand ed Craig. "And if you get me in wrong I've got that tube yet you re member." Our crook started off with a whole burst of directions that rivaled the motor guide "through the town, fol lowing trolley tracks, jog right, jog left under the railroad bridge, leaving trolley tracks; at the cemetery turn left, stopping at the old stone church." "Is this it?" asked Craig incredu lously. "Yes as I live," swore the crook in a cowed voice. He had gone to pieces. Kennedy jumped from the machine. "Here, take this gun, Walter," he said to me. "Don't take your eyes off the fellow keep him covered." Craig walked around the church, out of sight, until he came to a small vestry window and looked in. There was Elaine, sitting in a chair, and near her stood an elderly-looking man in clerical garb, which to Craig's trained eye was quite evidently a dis guise. Elaine happened just then to glance at the window and her eyes grew wide with astonishment at the sight of Craig. He made a hasty motion to her to make a dash for the door. She nodded quietly. With a glance at her guardian she suddenly made a rush. He was at her in a moment, pounc ing on her, catlike. Kennedy had seized an iron bar that lay beside the window where some workmen had been repairing the stone pavement, and with a blow shattered the glass and the sash. At the sound of the smashing glass the crook turned and with a mighty effort threw Elaine aside, drawing his revolver. As he raised it, Elaine sprang at him and frantically seized his wrist. Utterly merciless the man brought the butt of the gun down with full force on Elaine's head. Only her hat and hair saved her, but she sank un conscious. Then he turned at Craig and fired twice. One shot grazed Craig's hat, but the other struck him in the shoulder and Kennedy reeled. With" a desperate effort he pulled himself toward her and leaped forward again, closing with the fellow and wrenching the gun from him before he could fire again. Just then the man broke away and made a dash for the door leading back into the church itself, with Kennedy after him. Up he went into the choir loft and then into the belfry itself. There they came to sheer hand-to-hand struggle. Kennedy tripped on a loose board, and would have fallen backwards if he had not been able to recover himself just in time. The crook, desperate, leaped for the ladder leading fanner np into the steeple. Kennedy followed. Elaine had recovered consciousness almost immediately, and, hearing the commotion, stirred and started to rise and look about. From the church she could hear sounds of the struggle. She paused just long enough to seize the crook's revolver lying on the floor. She hurried into the church and up into the belfry, thence up the ladder, whence the sounds came. The crook by this time had gained the outside of the steeple through an opening. Kennedy was in close pur suit. ' On the top of the steeple was a great gilded cross, considerably larger than a man. As the crook clambered outside, he scaled the steeple, using a lightning rod aid some projecting points to pull himself up, desperately. . Kennedy followed unhesitatingly. There tly were, struggling in dead ly combat, clinging to the gilded cross. The first I knew of it was a horrified gasp from my own crook. I looked up JpjpCC00004tfX Just Then I Saw a Woman's Face Tense With Horror; It Was Elaine. carefully, fearing it was a stall to get me off my guard. There were Kennedy and the other crook, struggling, swaying back and forth, between life and death. There was nothing I could do. Kennedy was clinging to a light ning rod on the croars. It broke. I gasped as Craig reeled back. But be managed to cat'ih hold of the rod farther down and cline to it. The crook begm to exult diaboli cally. Holding with both hands to the cross he let himnelf out to his full length and stamped on Kennedy's fin gers, trying every way to dislodge him. It was all Kennedy could do to keep his hold. I cried out in agony at the sight, for he had dislodged one of Craig's hands. The other could not hold much longer. He was about to fall. Just then I saw a face at the little window opening out from the ladder to the outside of the steeple a wom an's face, tense with horror. It was Elaine! Quickly a hand followed, and in it was a revolver. Just as the crook was about to dis lodge Kennedy's other hand I saw a flash and puff of smoke, and a second later heard a report and another and another. Horrors ! The crook who had taken refugo seemed to stagger back, wildly, taking a couple of steps in the thin air. Kennedy regained his hold. With a sickening thud the body of the crook landed on the ground around the corner of the church from me. it S1 I J - m mm M (jome you: l grounu out, cuvei ing my own crook with the pistol, "and if you attempt a getaway I'll kill you, too!" He followed, trembling, unnerved. We bent over th-fc man. It seemed that every bone in his body must bo broken. He groaned, and before I could even attempt anything for him, was dead. As Kennedy let himself slowly and painfully down the lightning rod, Elaine seized him and, with all her strength, pulled hllm through the win dow. He was quite wiak now from loss of blood. "Are you all ri,ght?" she gasped, an they reached the foot of the ladur in the belfry. Craig looked down at his torn and soiled clothes. Then, in spite of ttie smarting pain of his wounds, be smiled, "Yes all right!" "Thank Heaven!" she murmured fer vently, trying to stanch the flow of blood. "This time it was you saved me!" he cried, "Elaine!" Involuntarily his arms sought hers--and he held her a moment, lookini deep into her wonderful eyes. Then their faces came slowly W gether in their first kiss. (TO BE CONTINUED.