"No," she said. "No. The Doctor isn't a murderer. He's as puzzled as we are about some things. He and Courtleigh Fleming were working together--but remember this--Doctor Wells was locked in the living-room with us. He'd been trying to get up the stairs all evening and failed every time."
But Bailey was as convinced of the truth of his theory as she of hers.
"He was here ten minutes ago--locked in this room," he said with a glance at the ladder up which the doctor had ascended.
"I'll grant you that," said Miss Cornelia. "But--" She thought back swiftly. "But at the same time an Unknown Masked Man was locked in that mantel-room with Dale. The Doctor put out the candle when you opened that Hidden Room. Why? Because he thought Courtleigh Fleming was hiding there!" Now the missing pieces of her puzzle were falling into their places with a vengeance. "But at this moment," she continued, "the Doctor believes that Fleming has made his escape! No--we haven't solved the mystery yet. There's another element--an unknown element," her eyes rested for a moment upon the Unknown, "and that element is--the Bat!"
She paused, impressively. The others stared at her--no longer able to deny the sinister plausibility of her theory. But this new tangling of the mystery, just when the black threads seemed raveled out at last, was almost too much for Dale.
"Oh, call the detective!" she stammered, on the verge of hysterical tears. "Let's get through with this thing! I can't bear any more!"
But Miss Cornelia did not even hear her. Her mind, strung now to concert pitch, had harked back to the point it had reached some time ago, and which all the recent distractions had momentarily obliterated.
Had the money been taken out of the house or had it not? In that mad rush for escape had the man hidden with Dale in the recess back of the mantel carried his booty with him, or left it behind? It was not in the Hidden Room, that was certain.
Yet she was so hopeless by that time that her first search was purely perfunctory.
During her progress about the room the Unknown's eyes followed her, but so still had he sat, so amazing had been the discovery of the body, that no one any longer observed him. Now and then his head drooped forward as if actual weakness was almost overpowering him, but his eyes were keen and observant, and he was no longer taking the trouble to act--if he had been acting.
It was when Bailey finally opened the lid of a clothes hamper that they stumbled on their first clue.