over the banisters. "Those government fellows act pretty swiftly when they make up their minds. We haven't the power that they have."
The Inspector, arrived with the locksmith, ordered the latter to open the door.
Frank looked about him curiously as, the door once opened, all hands passed into the room beyond. Its tables were littered with envelopes, circulars and letters.
The big lodge chamber was partitioned off at one end by a cambric curtain. Here there was a couch, a small oil stove and some eatables and dishes, evidences of light housekeeping on the premises.
The inspector darted about from corner to corner, and into all the little apartments that had formerly been in service as lodge and rooms.
"H'm," he observed, coming back from his inspection to the others, "birds have flown."
He moved to an open window. Pendant from an iron shutter hinge was a strong portable knotted fire escape. Its ground end trailed into an inside court of the building.
"If you think you know the people who were here and who have certainly escaped," suggested the Inspector to the marshal, "you had better get your men on their track before they leave town."