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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Million Dollar Mystery, by Harold MacGrath
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Million Dollar Mystery
+ Novelized from the Scenario of F. Lonergan
+
+Author: Harold MacGrath
+
+Release Date: March 14, 2012 [EBook #39134]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MILLION DOLLAR MYSTERY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Al Haines
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Cover art]
+
+
+
+
+
+[Frontispiece: THE PAPER SHE HAD PURLOINED WAS INDEED BLANK]
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MILLION DOLLAR MYSTERY
+
+
+Novelized from the Scenario of
+
+F. LONERGAN
+
+
+
+BY
+
+HAROLD MACGRATH
+
+
+
+ AUTHOR OF
+ THE MAN ON THE BOX,
+ THE GOOSE GIRL, HEARTS AND MASKS, ETC.
+
+
+
+
+ PROFUSELY ILLUSTRATED
+ WITH SCENES FROM THE PHOTO PLAY
+
+
+
+
+GROSSET & DUNLAP
+
+PUBLISHERS : NEW YORK
+
+
+
+
+COPYRIGHT, 1915
+
+HAROLD MACGRATH
+
+
+
+
+ _Published by arrangement with
+ The Bobbs-Merrill Company_.
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+The paper she had purloined was indeed blank . . . . . . _Frontispiece._
+
+Miss Farlow's Private School
+
+You might have marked him for a successful lawyer.
+
+The Princess Perigoff
+
+The Black Hundred
+
+Friends from Tophet
+
+The Peaceful Butler entered into the field of action
+
+She had gained the confidence of Florence
+
+There was a stormy scene between Braine and the Princess
+
+Norton reached the Captain first
+
+She read with Susan
+
+"Who is it?" Jones whispered, his lips white and dry.
+
+He read: "Florence--the hiding place is discovered."
+
+That night there was a meeting of the organization
+
+Jones engaged a motorboat
+
+"Leo, are you using any drugs these days?"
+
+The Secret Panel
+
+Four men were told off
+
+"Better be sensible," he said
+
+They had become secretly engaged
+
+With her he was happy, for he had no time to plan over the future
+
+They were to be married
+
+Florence was permitted to wander about the ship as she pleased
+
+Every one felt extremely sorry for this beautiful girl
+
+Florence steals out in the night to jump overboard
+
+A young and beautiful woman did not jump from a big Atlantic
+ liner without the newspapers getting hold of the facts
+
+"The poor young thing!" murmured the motherly Mrs. Barnes
+
+"Come out o' that now!"
+
+"I ain't goin' t' hurt ye"
+
+Florence fought; but she was weak, and so the conquest was easy
+
+"I know it now," she said, and she kissed him
+
+He had put Florence and Braine in the boat and had landed them
+
+They bound Florence and left her seated in a chair
+
+They did not care a snap of the finger what Jones thought
+
+She first thought of changing the clock
+
+He took her straight to the executive chamber of the Black Hundred
+
+Here was an operation that needed all his care and skill.
+
+He examined the blotter with care
+
+The men rioted about the house, searching nooks and corners
+
+They were mapping out a plan when Susan's message came
+
+Norton was idling at his desk when the city editor called him
+
+"Give this to your father. He knows how to read it."
+
+Florence discovers the cave
+
+Florence steals the papers from Braine's pocket
+
+Braine procured a launch and began to prowl about
+
+Braine reached the girl and pulled her into the boat
+
+From the shore came another boat
+
+"They have all three taken out naturalization papers."
+
+"Just a minute, gentlemen!"
+
+The Police Captain's desk
+
+They were tumbling through the library and the living room
+
+Braine sank inertly to the floor, dead
+
+Instantly they sought the fallen man's side
+
+A quick clutch and the policeman had her by the wrist
+
+The Mystic Million
+
+"Florence, that is all yours."
+
+Immediately after the ceremony
+
+After the storm, the sunshine
+
+
+
+
+The Million Dollar Mystery
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+There are few things darker than a country road at night, particularly
+if one does not know the lay of the land. It is not difficult to
+traverse a known path; no matter how dark it is, one is able to find
+the way by the aid of a mental photograph taken in the daytime. But
+supposing you have never been over the road in the daytime, that you
+know nothing whatever of its topography, where it dips or rises, where
+it narrows or forks. You find yourself in the same unhappy state of
+mind as a blind man suddenly thrust into a strange house.
+
+One black night, along a certain country road in the heart of New
+Jersey, in the days when the only good roads were city thoroughfares
+and country highways were routes to limbo, a carriage went forward
+cautiously. From time to time it careened like a blunt-nosed barge in
+a beam sea. The wheels and springs voiced their anguish continually;
+for it was a good carriage, unaccustomed to such ruts and hummocks.
+
+"Faster, faster!" came a muffled voice from the interior.
+
+"Sir, I dare not drive any faster," replied the coachman. "I can't see
+the horses' heads, sir, let alone the road. I've blown out the lamps,
+but I can't see the road any better for that."
+
+"Let the horses have their heads; they'll find the way. It can't be
+much farther. You'll see lights."
+
+The coachman swore in his teeth. All right. This man who was in such
+a hurry would probably send them all into the ditch. Save for the few
+stars above, he might have been driving Beelzebub's coach in the
+bottomless pit. Black velvet, everywhere black velvet. A wind was
+blowing, and yet the blackness was so thick that it gave the coachman
+the sensation of mild suffocation.
+
+By and by, through the trees, he saw a flicker of light. It might or
+might not be the destination. He cracked his whip recklessly and the
+carriage lurched on two wheels. The man in the carriage balanced
+himself carefully, so that the bundle in his arms should not be unduly
+disturbed. His arms ached. He stuck his head out of the window.
+
+"That's the place," he said. "And when you drive up make as little
+noise as you can."
+
+"Yes, sir," called down the driver.
+
+When the carriage drew up at its journey's end the man inside jumped
+out and hastened toward the gates. He scrutinized the sign on one of
+the posts. This was the place:
+
+ MISS FARLOW'S PRIVATE SCHOOL
+
+[Illustration: MISS FARLOW'S PRIVATE SCHOOL]
+
+
+The bundle in his arms stirred and he hurried up the path to the door
+of the house. He seized the ancient knocker and struck several times.
+He then placed the bundle on the steps and ran back to the waiting
+carriage, into which he stepped.
+
+"Off with you!"
+
+"That's a good word, sir. Maybe we can make your train."
+
+"Do you think you could find this place again?"
+
+"You couldn't get me on this pike again, sir, for a thousand; not me!"
+
+The door slammed and the unknown sank back against the cushions. He
+took out his handkerchief and wiped the damp perspiration from his
+forehead. The big burden was off his mind. Whatever happened in the
+future, they would never be able to get him through his heart. So much
+for the folly of his youth.
+
+It was a quarter after ten. Miss Susan Farlow had just returned to the
+reception room from her nightly tour of the upper halls to see if all
+her charges were in bed, where the rules of the school confined them
+after nine-thirty. It was at this moment that she heard the thunderous
+knocking at the door. The old maid felt her heart stop beating for a
+moment. Who could it be, at this time of night? Then the thought came
+swiftly that perhaps the parent of some one of her charges was ill and
+this was the summons. Stilling her fears, she went resolutely to the
+door and opened it.
+
+"Who is it?" she called.
+
+No one answered. She cupped her hand to her ear. She could hear the
+clatter of horses dimly.
+
+"Well!" she exclaimed; rather angrily, too.
+
+She was in the act of closing the door when the light from the hall
+discovered to her the bundle on the steps. She stooped and touched it.
+
+"Good heavens, it's a child!"
+
+She picked the bundle up. A whimper came from it, a tired little
+whimper of protest. She ran back to the reception room. A foundling!
+And on her doorstep! It was incredible. What in the world should she
+do? It would create a scandal and hurt the prestige of the school.
+Some one had mistaken her select private school for a farmhouse. It
+was frightful.
+
+Then she unwrapped the child. It was about a year old, dimpled and
+golden haired. A thumb was in its rosebud mouth and its blue eyes
+looked up trustfully into her own.
+
+"Why, you cherub!" cried the old maid, a strange turmoil in her heart.
+She caught the child to her breast, and then for the first time noticed
+the thick envelope pinned to the child's cloak. She put the baby into
+a chair and broke open the envelope.
+
+"Name this child Florence Gray. I will send annually a liberal sum for
+her support and reclaim her on her eighteenth birthday. The other half
+of the inclosed bracelet will identify me. Treat the girl well, for I
+shall watch over her in secret."
+
+Into the fixed routine of her humdrum life had come a mystery, a
+tantalizing, fascinating mystery. She had read of foundlings left on
+doorsteps--from paper-covered novels confiscated from her pupils--but
+that one should be placed upon her own respectable doorstep! Suddenly
+she smiled down at the child and the child smiled back. And there was
+nothing more to be done except to bow before the decrees of fate. Like
+all prim old maids, her heart was full of unrequited romance, and here
+was something she might spend its floods upon without let or hindrance.
+Already she was hoping that the man or woman who had left it might
+never come back.
+
+The child grew. Regularly each year, upon a certain date, Miss Farlow
+received a registered letter with money. These letters came from all
+parts of the world; always the same sum, always the same line--"I am
+watching."
+
+Thus seventeen years passed; and to Susan Farlow each year seemed
+shorter than the one before. For she loved the child with all her
+heart. She had not trained young girls all these years without
+becoming adept in the art of reading the true signs of breeding. There
+was no ordinary blood in Florence; the fact was emphasized by her
+exquisite face, her small hands and feet, her spirit and gentleness.
+And now, at any day, some one with a broken bracelet might come for
+her. As the days went on the heart of Susan Farlow grew heavy.
+
+"Never mind, aunty," said Florence; "I shall always come back to see
+you."
+
+She meant it, poor child; but how was she to know the terrors which lay
+beyond the horizon!
+
+
+The house of Stanley Hargreave, in Riverdale, was the house of no
+ordinary rich man. Outside it was simple enough, but within you
+learned what kind of a man Hargreave was. There were rare Ispahans and
+Saruks on the floors and tapestries on the walls, and here and there a
+fine painting. The library itself represented a fortune. Money had
+been laid out lavishly but never wastefully. It was the home of a
+scholar, a dreamer, a wide traveler.
+
+In the library stood the master of the house, idly fingering some
+papers which lay on the study table. He shrugged at some unpleasant
+thought, settled his overcoat about his shoulders, took up his hat, and
+walked from the room, frowning slightly. The butler, who also acted in
+the capacity of valet and was always within call when his master was
+about, stepped swiftly to the hall door and opened it.
+
+"I may be out late, Jones," said Hargreave.
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+Hargreave stared into his face keenly, as if trying to pierce the grave
+face to learn what was going on behind it. "How long have you been
+with me?"
+
+"Fourteen years, sir."
+
+"Some day I shall need you."
+
+"My life has always been at your disposal, sir, since that night you
+rescued me."
+
+"Well, I haven't the least doubt that when I ask you will give."
+
+"Without question, sir. It was always so understood."
+
+Hargreave's glance sought the mirror, then the smileless face of his
+man. He laughed, but the sound conveyed no sense of mirth; then he
+turned and went down the steps slowly, like a man burdened with some
+thought which was not altogether to his liking. He had sent an order
+for his car, but had immediately countermanded it. He would walk till
+he grew tired, hail a taxicab, and take a run up and down Broadway.
+The wonderful illumination might prove diverting. For eighteen years
+nearly; and now it was as natural for him to throw a glance over his
+shoulder whenever he left the house as it was for him to breathe. The
+average man would have grown careless during all these years; but
+Hargreave was not an average man; he was, rather, an extraordinary
+individual. It was his life in exchange for eternal vigilance, and he
+knew and accepted the fact.
+
+Half an hour later he got into a taxicab and directed the man to drive
+down-town as far as Twenty-third Street and back to Columbus circle.
+The bewildering display of lights, however, in nowise served to lift
+the sense of oppression that had weighed upon him all day. South of
+Forty-second Street he dismissed the taxicab and stared undecidedly at
+the brilliant sign of a famous restaurant. He was neither hungry nor
+thirsty; but there would be strange faces to study and music.
+
+It was an odd whim. He had not entered a Broadway restaurant in all
+these years. He was unknown. He belonged to no clubs. Two months was
+the longest time he had ever remained in New York since the disposal of
+his old home in Madison Avenue and his resignation from his clubs.
+This once, then, he would break the law he had written down for
+himself. Boldly he entered the restaurant.
+
+Some time before Hargreave surrendered to the restless spirit of
+rebellion, bitterly to repent for it later, there came into this
+restaurant a man and a woman. They were both evidently well known, for
+the head waiter was obsequious and hurried them over to the best table
+he had left and took the order himself.
+
+The man possessed a keen, intelligent face. You might have marked him
+for a successful lawyer, for there was an earnestness about his
+expression which precluded a life of idleness. His age might have been
+anywhere between forty and fifty. The shoulders were broad and the
+hands which lay clasped upon the table were slim but muscular. Indeed,
+everything about him suggested hidden strength and vitality. His
+companion was small, handsome, and animated. Her frequent gestures and
+mutable eyebrows betrayed her foreign birth. Her age was a matter of
+importance to no one but herself.
+
+[Illustration: YOU MIGHT HAVE MARKED HIM FOR A SUCCESSFUL LAWYER]
+
+They were at coffee when she said: "There's a young man coming toward
+us. He is looking at you."
+
+The man turned. Instantly his face lighted up with a friendly smile of
+recognition.
+
+"Who is it?" she asked.
+
+"A chap worth knowing; a reporter just a little out of the ordinary.
+I'm going to introduce him. You never can tell. We might need him
+some day. Ah, Norton, how are you?"
+
+"Good evening, Mr. Braine." The reporter, catching sight of a pair of
+dazzling eyes, hesitated.
+
+"The Countess Perigoff, Norton. You're in no hurry, are you?"
+
+[Illustration: THE PRINCESS PERIGOFF]
+
+"Not now," smiled the reporter.
+
+"Ah!" said the countess, interested. It was the old compliment, said
+in an unusual way. It pleased her.
+
+The reporter sank into a chair. When inactive he was rather a
+dreamy-eyed sort of chap. He possessed that rare accomplishment of
+talking upon one subject and thinking upon another at the same time.
+So while he talked gaily with the young woman on varied themes, his
+thoughts were busy speculating upon her companion. He was quite
+certain that the name Braine was assumed, but he was also equally
+certain that the man carried an extraordinary brain under his thatch of
+salt and pepper hair. The man had written three or four brilliant
+monographs on poisons and the uses of radium, and it was through and by
+these that the reporter had managed to pick up his acquaintance. He
+lived well, but inconspicuously.
+
+Suddenly the pupils of Braine's eyes narrowed; the eye became cold.
+Over the smoke of his cigarette he was looking into the wall mirror. A
+man had passed behind him and sat down at the next table. Still gazing
+into the mirror, Braine saw Norton wave his hand; saw also the open
+wonder on the reporter's pleasant face.
+
+"Who is your friend, Norton?" Braine asked indifferently, his head
+still unturned.
+
+"Stanley Hargreave. Met him in Hongkong when I was sent over to handle
+a part of the revolution. War correspondence stuff. First time I ever
+ran across him on Broadway at night. We've since had some powwows over
+some rare books. Queer old cock; brave as a lion, but as quiet as a
+mouse."
+
+"Bookish, eh? My kind. Bring him over." Underneath the table Braine
+maneuvered to touch the foot of the countess.
+
+"I don't know," said the reporter dubiously. "He might say no, and
+that would embarrass the whole lot of us. He's a bit of a hermit. I'm
+surprised to see him here."
+
+"Try," urged the countess. "I like to meet men who are hermits."
+
+"I haven't the least doubt about that," the reporter laughed. "I'll
+try; but don't blame me if I'm rebuffed."
+
+He left the table with evident reluctance and approached Hargreave.
+The two shook hands cordially, for the elder man was rather fond of
+this medley of information known as Jim Norton.
+
+"Sit down, boy; sit down. You're just the kind of a man I've been
+wanting to talk to to-night."
+
+"Wouldn't you rather talk to a pretty woman?"
+
+"I'm an old man."
+
+"Bah! That's a hypocritical bluff, and you know it. My friends at the
+next table have asked me to bring you over."
+
+"I do not usually care to meet strangers."
+
+"Make an exception this once," said the reporter, who had seen Braine's
+eyes change and was curious to know why the appearance of Hargreave in
+the mirror had brought about that metally gleam. Here were two unique
+men; he desired to see them face to face.
+
+"This once. My fault; I ought not to be here; I feel out of place.
+What a life, though, you reporters lead! To meet kings and presidents
+and great financiers, socialists and anarchists, the whole scale of
+life, and to slap these people on the back as if they were every-day
+friends!"
+
+"Now you're making fun of me. For one king there are always twenty
+thick brogans ready to kick me down the steps; don't forget that."
+
+Hargreave laughed. "Come, then; let us get it over with."
+
+The introductions were made. Norton felt rather chagrined. As far as
+he could see, the two men were total strangers. Well, it was all in
+the game. Nine out of ten opportunities for the big story were fake
+alarms; but he was always willing to risk the labor these nine entailed
+for the sake of the tenth.
+
+At length Braine glanced at his watch, and the countess nodded. Adieux
+were said. Inside the taxicab Braine leaned back with a deep, audible
+sigh.
+
+"What is it?" she asked.
+
+"The luck of the devil's own," he said. "Child of the Steppes, for
+years I've flown about seas and continents, through valleys and over
+mountains--for what? For the sight of the face of that man we have
+just left. At first glance I wasn't sure; but the sound of his voice
+was enough. Olga, the next time you see that reporter, throw your arms
+around his neck and kiss him. What did I tell you? Without Norton's
+help I would not have been sure. I'm going to leave you at your
+apartment."
+
+"The man of the Black Hundred?" she whispered.
+
+"The man who deserted and defied the Black Hundred, who broke his vows,
+and never paid a kopeck for the privilege; the man who had been
+appointed for the supreme work and who ran away. In those days we
+needed men of his stamp, and to accomplish this end...."
+
+"There was a woman," she interrupted, with a touch of bitterness.
+
+"Always the woman. And she was as clever and handsome as you are."
+
+"Thanks. Sometimes..."
+
+"Ah, yes!" ironically. "Sometimes you wish you could settle down,
+marry and have a family! Your domesticity would last about a month."
+
+She made no retort because she recognized the truth of this statement.
+
+"There's an emerald I know of," he said ruminatively. "It's quite
+possible that you may be wearing it within a few days."
+
+"I am mad over them. There is something in the green stone that
+fascinates me. I can't resist it."
+
+"That's because, somewhere in the far past, your ancestors were
+orientals. Here we are. I'll see you to-morrow. I must hurry. Good
+night."
+
+She stood on the curb for a moment and watched the taxicab as it
+whirled around a corner. The man held her with a fascination more
+terrible than any jewel. She knew him to be a great and daring rogue,
+cunning, patient, fearless. Packed away in that mind of his there were
+a thousand accomplished deeds which had roused futilely the police of
+two continents. Braine! She could have laughed. The very name he had
+chosen was an insolence directed at society.
+
+The subject of her thoughts soon arrived at his destination. A flight
+of stairs carried him into a dimly lighted hall, smelling evilly of
+escaping gas. He donned a black mask and struck the door with a series
+of light blows; two, then one, then three, and again one. The door
+opened and he slipped inside. Round a table sat several men, also
+masked. They were all tried and trusted rogues; but not one of them
+knew what Braine looked like. He alone remained unknown save to the
+man designated as the chief, who was only Braine's lieutenant. The
+mask was the insignia of the Black Hundred, an organization with all
+the ramifications of the Camorra without their abiding stupidity. From
+the assassination of a king, down to the robbery of a country
+post-office, nothing was too great or too small for their nets. Their
+god dwells in the hearts of all men and is called greed.
+
+The ordinary business over, the chief dismissed the men, and he and
+Braine alone remained.
+
+"Vroon, I have found him," said Braine.
+
+"There are but few: which one?"
+
+"Eighteen years ago, in St. Petersburg."
+
+"I remember. The millionaire's son. Did he recognize you?"
+
+"I don't know. Probably he did. But he always had good nerves. He is
+being followed at this moment. We shall strike quick; for if he
+recognized me he will act quick. He is cool and brave. You remember
+how he braved us that night in Russia. Jumped boldly through the
+window at the risk of breaking his neck. He landed safely; that is the
+only reason he eluded us. Millions--and they slipped through our
+fingers. If I could only find some route to his heart! The lure we
+held out to him is dead."
+
+[Illustration: THE BLACK HUNDRED]
+
+"Or in the fortress, which is the same thing. What are your plans?"
+
+"I have in mind something like this."
+
+And Hargreave was working out his plans, too; and he was just as much
+of a general as Braine. He sat at his library table, the maxillary
+muscles of his jaws working. So they had found him? Well, he had
+broken the law of his own making and he must suffer the consequences.
+Braine, who was Menshikoff in Russia, Schwartz in Germany, Mendoza in
+Spain, Cartucci in Italy, and Du Bois in France; so the rogue had found
+him out? Poor fool that he had been! High spirited, full of those
+youthful dreams of doing good in the world, he had joined what he had
+believed a great secret socialistic movement, to learn that he had been
+trapped by a band of brilliant thieves. Kidnapers and assassins for
+hire; the Black Hundred; fiends from Tophet! For nearly eighteen years
+he had eluded them, for he knew that directly or indirectly they would
+never cease to hunt for him; and an idle whim had toppled him into
+their clutches.
+
+He wrote several letters feverishly. The last was addressed to Miss
+Susan Farlow and read: "Dear Madam: Send Florence Gray to New York, to
+arrive here Friday morning. My half of the bracelet will be
+identification. Inclosed find cash to square accounts." He would get
+together all his available funds, recover his child, and fly to the
+ends of the world. He would tire them out. They would find that the
+peaceful dog was a bad animal to rouse. He rang for the faithful Jones.
+
+"Jones, they have found me," he said simply.
+
+"You will need me, then?"
+
+"Quite possible. Please mail these and then we'll talk it over. No
+doubt some one is watching outside. Be careful."
+
+"Very good, sir."
+
+Hargreave bowed his head in his hands. Many times he had journeyed to
+the school and hung about the gates, straining his eyes toward the
+merry groups of young girls. Which among them was his, heart of his
+heart, blood of his blood? That she might never be drawn into this
+abominable tangle, he had resolutely torn her out of his life
+completely. The happiness of watching the child grow into girlhood he
+had denied himself. She at least would be safe. Only when she was
+safe in a far country would he dare tell her. He tried in vain to
+conjure up a picture of her; he always saw the mother whom he had loved
+and hated with all the ardor of his youth.
+
+Many things happened the next day. There was a visit to the hangar of
+one William Orts, the aviator, famous for his daredevil exploits.
+There were two visitors, in fact, and the second visitor was knocked
+down for his pains. He had tried to bribe Orts.
+
+There were several excited bankers, who protested against such large
+withdrawals without the usual formal announcement. But a check was a
+check, and they had to pay.
+
+[Illustration: FIENDS FROM TOPHET]
+
+Hargreave covered a good deal of ground, but during all this time his
+right hand never left the automatic in his overcoat pocket, except at
+those moments when he was obliged to sign his checks. He would shoot
+and make inquiries afterward.
+
+Far away a young girl and her companion got on the train which was to
+carry her to New York, the great dream city she was always longing to
+see.
+
+And the spider wove his web.
+
+Hargreave reached home at night. He put the money in the safe and was
+telephoning when Jones entered and handed his master an unstamped note.
+
+"Where did you get this?"
+
+"At the door, sir. I judge that the house is surrounded."
+
+Hargreave read the note. It stated briefly that all his movements
+during the day had been noted. It was known that he had collected a
+million in paper money. If he surrendered this he would be allowed
+twenty-four hours before the real chase began. Otherwise he should die
+before midnight. Hargreave crushed the note in his hand. They might
+kill him; there was a chance of their accomplishing that; but never
+should they touch his daughter's fortune.
+
+"Jones, you go to the rear door and I'll take a look out of the front.
+We have an hour. I know the breed. They'll wait till midnight and
+then force their way in."
+
+Hargreave saw a dozen shadows in the front yard.
+
+"Men all about the back yard," whispered Jones down the hall.
+
+The master eyed the man.
+
+"Very well, sir," replied the latter, with understanding. "I am ready."
+
+The master went to the safe, emptied it of its contents, crossed the
+hall to the bedroom, and closed the door softly behind him, Jones
+having entered the same room through another door to befool any
+possible watcher. After a long while, perhaps an hour, the two men
+emerged from the room from the same doors they had entered. So
+whispered the watcher to his friends below.
+
+"Hargreave is going up-stairs."
+
+"Let him go. Let him take a look at us from the upper windows. He
+will understand that nothing but wings will save him."
+
+Silence. By and by a watcher reported that he heard the scuttle of the
+roof rattle.
+
+"Look!" another cried, startled.
+
+A bluish glare came from the roof.
+
+"He's shooting off a Roman candle!"
+
+They never saw the man-made bird till it alighted upon the roof. They
+never thought of shooting at it until it had taken wing! Then they
+rushed the doors of the house. They made short work of Jones, whom
+they tied up like a Christmas fowl and plumped roughly into a chair.
+They broke open the safe, to find it empty. And while the rogues were
+rummaging about the room, venting their spite upon many a treasure they
+could neither appreciate nor understand, a man from the outside burst
+in.
+
+"The old man is dead and the money is at the bottom of the ocean! We
+punctured her. She's gone!"
+
+A thin, inscrutable smile stirred the lips of the man bound in the
+chair.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+Vroon faced Hargreave's butler somberly. The one reason why Braine
+made this man his lieutenant was because Vroon always followed the
+letter of his instructions to the final period; he never sidestepped or
+added any frills or innovations of his own, and because of this very
+automatism he rarely blundered into a trap. If he failed it was for
+the simple fact that the master mind had overlooked some essential
+detail. The organization of the Black Hundred was almost totally
+unknown to either the public or the police. It is only when you fail
+that you are found out.
+
+"The patrolman has been trussed up like you," began Vroon. "If they
+find him they will probably find you. But before that you will grow
+thirsty and hungry. Where did your master put that money?"
+
+"He carried it with him."
+
+"Why didn't you call for help?"
+
+"The houses on either side are too far away. I might yell till
+doomsday without being heard. They will have heard the pistol shots;
+but Mr. Hargreave was always practising in the back yard."
+
+"The people in those two houses have been called out of town. The
+servants are off for the night."
+
+"Very interesting," replied Jones, staring at the rug.
+
+"Your master is dead."
+
+Jones' chin sank upon his breast. His heart was heavy, heavier than it
+had ever been before.
+
+"Your master left a will?"
+
+"Indeed, I could not say."
+
+"We can say. He has still three or four millions in stocks and bonds.
+What he took to the bottom of the sea with him was his available cash."
+
+"I know nothing about his finances. I was his butler and valet."
+
+Vroon nodded. "Come, men; it is time we took ourselves off. Put
+things in order; close the safe. You poor jackals, I always have to
+watch you for outbreaks of vandalism. Off with you!"
+
+He was the last to leave. He stared long and searchingly at Jones, who
+felt the burning gaze but refused to meet it lest the plotter see the
+fire in his. The door closed. For fully an hour Jones listened but
+did not stir. They were really gone. He pressed his feet to the floor
+and began to hitch the chair toward the table. Half-way across the
+intervening space he crumpled in the chair, almost completely
+exhausted. He let a quarter of an hour pass, then made the final
+attack upon the remaining distance. He succeeded in reaching the desk,
+but he could not have stirred an inch farther. The hair on his head
+was damp with sweat and his hands were clammy.
+
+When he felt strength returning he lifted the telephone off the hook
+with his teeth.
+
+"Central, central! Call the police to come to this number at once;
+Hargreave's house, Riverdale. Tell them to break in."
+
+After what seemed an age of waiting to the exhausted prisoner, with
+crashing and smashing of doors, the police appeared in the room.
+
+"Where's your gag?" demanded the first officer to reach Jones' side.
+
+"There wasn't any."
+
+"Then why didn't you yell for help?"
+
+"The thieves lured our neighbors away from town. The patrolman who
+walks this beat is bound and gagged and is probably reposing back of
+the billboard in the next block."
+
+"Murphy, you watch this man while I make a call on the neighbors," said
+the officer who seemed to be in authority. When he returned he was
+frowning seriously. "We'd better telephone to the precinct to search
+for Dennison. There's nobody at home in either house and there's
+nobody back of the billboards. Untie the man." When this was done,
+the officer said: "Now, tell us what's happened; and don't forget any
+of the details."
+
+Jones told a simple and convincing story; it was so simple and
+convincing that the police believed it without question.
+
+"Well, if that ain't the limit! Did you hear any autos outside?"
+
+"I don't recollect," said Jones, stretching his legs gratefully. "Why?"
+
+"The auto bandits held up a bank messenger to-day and got away with
+twenty thousand. Whenever a man draws down a big sum they seem to know
+about it. And say, Murphy, call up and have the river police look out
+for a new-fangled airship. Your master may have been rescued," turning
+to Jones.
+
+"If I were only sure of that, sir!"
+
+When the police took themselves off Jones proceeded to act upon those
+plans laid down by Hargreave early that night. When this was done he
+sought his bed and fell asleep, the sleep of the exhausted. When
+Hargreave picked up Jones to share his fortunes, he had put his trust
+in no ordinary man.
+
+A dozen reporters trooped out to the Hargreave home, only to find it
+deserted. And while they were ringing bells and tapping windows, the
+man they sought was tramping up and down the platform of the railway
+station.
+
+Through all this time Norton, the reporter, Hargreave's only friend,
+slept the sleep of the just and unjust. He rarely opened his eyes
+before noon.
+
+Group after group of passengers Jones eyed eagerly. Often, just as he
+was in the act of approaching a couple of young women, some man would
+hurry up, and there would be kisses or handshakes. At length the crowd
+thinned, and then it was that he discovered a young girl perhaps
+eighteen, accompanied by a young woman in the early thirties. They had
+the appearance of eagerly awaiting some one. Jones stepped forward
+with a good deal of diffidence.
+
+"You are waiting for some one?"
+
+"Yes," said the elder woman, coldly.
+
+"A broken bracelet?"
+
+The distrust on both faces vanished instantly. The young girl's face
+brightened, her eyes sparkled with suppressed excitement.
+
+"You are ... my father?"
+
+"No, miss," very gravely. "I am the butler."
+
+"Let me see your part of the bracelet," said the young girl's guardian,
+a teacher who had been assigned to this delicate task by Miss Farlow,
+who could not bring herself to say good-by to Florence anywhere except
+at the school gates.
+
+The halves were produced and examined.
+
+"I believe we may trust him, Florence."
+
+"Let us hurry to the taxicab. We must not stand here."
+
+"My mother?"
+
+"She is dead. I believe she died shortly after your birth. I have
+been with your father but fourteen years. I know but little of his
+life prior to that."
+
+"Why did he leave me all these years without ever coming to see me?
+Why?"
+
+"It is not for me, Miss Florence, to inquire into your father's act.
+But I do know that whatever he did was meant for the best. Your
+welfare was everything to him."
+
+"It is all very strange," said the girl, bewilderedly. "Why didn't he
+come to meet me instead of you?"
+
+Jones stared at his hands, miserably.
+
+"Why?" she demanded. "I have thought of him, thought of him. He has
+hurt me with all this neglect. I expected to see him at the station,
+to throw my arms, around his neck and ... forgive him!" Tears swam in
+her eyes as she spoke.
+
+"Everything will be explained to you when we reach the house. But
+always remember this, Miss Florence: You were everything in this wide
+world to your father. You will never know the misery and loneliness he
+suffered that you might not have one hour of unrest. What are your
+plans?" he asked abruptly of the teacher from Miss Farlow's.
+
+"That depends," she answered, laying her hand protectingly over the
+girl's.
+
+"You could leave Miss Farlow's on the moment?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then you will stay and be Miss Florence's companion?"
+
+"Gladly."
+
+"What is my father's name?"
+
+"Hargreave, Stanley Hargreave."
+
+The girl's eyes widened in terror. Suddenly she burst into a wild
+frenzy of sobbing, her head against the shoulder of her erstwhile
+teacher.
+
+Jones appeared visibly shocked. "What is it?"
+
+"We read the story in the newspaper," said the elder woman, her own
+eyes filling with tears. "The poor child! To have all her
+castles-in-air tumble down like this! But what authority have you to
+engage me?" sensibly.
+
+Jones produced a document, duly signed by Hargreave, and witnessed and
+sealed by a notary, in which it was set forth that Henry Jones, butler
+and valet to Stanley Hargreave, had full powers of attorney in the
+event of his (Hargreave's) disappearance; in the event of his death,
+till Florence became of legal age.
+
+Said Jones as he put the document back in his pocket: "What is your
+name?"
+
+"Susan Wane."
+
+"Do you love this child?"
+
+"With all my heart, the poor unhappy babe!"
+
+"Thank you!"
+
+Inside the home he conducted them through the various rooms, at the
+same time telling them what had taken place during the preceding night.
+
+"They have not found his body?" asked Florence. "My poor, poor father!"
+
+"No."
+
+"Then he may be alive!"
+
+"Please God that he may!" said the butler, with genuine piety, for he
+had loved the man who had gone forth into the night so bravely and so
+strangely. "This is your room. Your father spent many happy hours
+here preparing it for you."
+
+Tears came into the girl's eyes again, and discreetly Jones left the
+two alone.
+
+"What shall I do, Susan? Whatever shall I do?"
+
+"Be brave as you always are. I will never leave you till you find your
+father."
+
+Florence kissed her fervently. "What is your opinion of the butler?"
+
+"I think we may both trust him absolutely."
+
+Then Florence began exploring the house. Susan followed her closely.
+Florence peered behind the mirrors, the pictures, in the drawers of the
+desk, in the bookcases.
+
+"What are you hunting for, child?"
+
+"A photograph of father." But she found none. More, there were no
+photographs of any kind to be found in Stanley Hargreave's home.
+
+When Norton awoke, he naturally went to the door for the morning papers
+which were always placed in a neat pile before the sill. He yawned,
+gathered up the bundle, was about to climb back into bed, when a
+headline caught his dull eyes. Twenty-one minutes later, to be
+precise, he ran up the steps of the Hargreave home and rang the bell.
+He was admitted by the taciturn Jones, to whom the reporter had never
+paid any particular attention. Somehow Jones always managed to stand
+in shadows.
+
+"I can add nothing to what has already appeared in the newspapers,"
+replied Jones, as Norton opened his batteries of inquiries.
+
+"Mr. Jones, I have known your master several years, as you will
+recollect. There never was a woman in this house, not even among the
+servants. There are two in the other room. Who are they? And what
+are they doing here?"
+
+Jones shook his head.
+
+"Well, I can easily find out."
+
+Jones barred his path, and for the first time Norton gazed into the
+eyes of the man servant. They were as hard as gun metal.
+
+"My dear Mr. Jones, you ought to know that sooner or later we reporters
+find out what we seek."
+
+Jones appeared to reflect. "Mr. Norton, you claim to be a friend of
+Mr. Hargreave?"
+
+"I do not claim. I am. More than that I do not believe he is dead.
+He was deep. He had some relentless enemies--I don't know where from
+or what kind--and he is pretending he's dead till this blows over and
+is forgotten."
+
+"You are not going to say that in your newspaper?" Jones was visibly
+agitated.
+
+"Not if I can prove it."
+
+"If I tell you who those young ladies are, will you give me your word
+of honor not to write about them till I give my permission?"
+
+Norton, having in mind the big story at the end of the mystery tangle,
+agreed.
+
+"The elder is a teacher from a private school; the other is Stanley
+Hargreave's daughter."
+
+"Good lord!" gasped the astonished reporter. "He never mentioned the
+fact to me, and we've been together in some tight places."
+
+"He never mentioned it to any one but me." Jones again seemed to
+reflect. At last he raised his glance to the reporter. "Are you
+willing to wait for a great story, the real story?"
+
+"If there is one," answered Norton with his usual caution.
+
+"On my word of honor, you shall have such a story as you never dreamed
+of, if you will promise not to divulge it till the appointed time."
+
+"I agree."
+
+"The peace and happiness of that child depends upon how you keep your
+word."
+
+That was sufficient for Norton. "Your master knew me. He also knew
+that I am not a man who promises lightly. Now introduce me to the
+daughter."
+
+With plain reluctance Jones went about the affair. Norton put a dozen
+perfunctory questions to the girl. What he was in search of was not
+news but the sound of her voice. In that quarter of an hour he felt
+his heart disturbed as it had never before been disturbed.
+
+"Now, Mr. Norton," said Jones gloomily, "will you be so kind as to
+follow me?"
+
+Norton was led to Jones' bedroom. The butler-valet closed the door and
+drew the window shade. Always seeking shadows. This did not impress
+the reporter at the time; he had no other thought but the story. Jones
+then sat down beside the reporter and talked in an undertone. When he
+had done he took Norton by the elbow and gently but forcibly led him
+down to the front door and ushered him forth. Norton jumped into his
+taxicab and returned to his rooms, which were at the top of the huge
+apartment hotel. He immediately called up his managing editor.
+
+"Hello! This is Norton. Put Griffin on the Hargreave yarn. I'm off
+on another deal."
+
+"But Hargreave was a friend of yours," protested the managing editor.
+
+"I know it. But you know me well enough, Mr. Blair. I should not ask
+the transfer if it was not vitally important."
+
+"Oh, very well."
+
+"We shan't be scooped."
+
+"If you can promise that, I don't care who works on the job. Will you
+be in the office to-night?"
+
+"If nothing prevents me."
+
+"Well, good-by."
+
+Norton filled his pipe, drew his chair to the window, and stared at the
+great liner going down to sea.
+
+"Lord, lord!" he murmured. Then he smiled and chuckled. Some bright
+morning he would have all New York by the ears, the police running
+round in circles, and the chiefs of the rival sheets tearing their
+hair. What a story! Four columns on the first page, and two whole
+pages Sunday.... And all of a sudden he ceased to smile and chuckle.
+
+In the living room of the Countess Olga Perigoff's apartment the
+mistress lay reading on the divan. There was no cigarette between her
+well shaped lips, for she was not the accepted type of adventuress. In
+fact, she was not an adventuress; she was really the Countess Perigoff.
+Her maiden name had been Olga Pushkin; but more of that later.
+
+When Braine came in he found her dreaming with half-closed eyes. He
+flourished an evening newspaper.
+
+"Olga, even the best of us make mistakes. Here, just glance over this."
+
+The Russian accepted the newspaper and read the heading indicated:
+"Aeronaut picked up far out at sea. Slips ashore from tramp steamer.
+Had five thousand in cash in his pockets."
+
+"Hargreave escaped!"
+
+"Not necessarily," she replied. "If it was Hargreave he would have had
+more than five thousand in his pockets. My friend, I believe it an
+attempt to fool you; or it is another man entirely." She clicked her
+teeth with the tops of her polished nails.
+
+"There are two young women in the house. What the deuce can that mean?"
+
+"Two young women? Oh! then everything's as simple as daylight.
+Katrina Pushkin, my cousin, had a child."
+
+"Child? Hargreave had a child? What do you mean by keeping this fact
+from me?" he stormed.
+
+"It was useless till this moment. He probably sent for her yesterday;
+but in his effort to escape had to turn her over to his butler. We
+shall soon learn whether Hargreave is dead or alive. We can use the
+child to bring him back."
+
+The anger went out of his eyes. "You're a wonder, Olga."
+
+"But you should have gone with Vroon last night. He does everything
+just as you tell him. When they reported that Hargreave had visited
+Orts' hangar you ought to have prepared against such a coup as flight
+through the air."
+
+"I admit it. But a daughter! Well, I can bring him back," with a
+sinister laugh. "By the Lord Harry, I have him in my hands this time,
+that is, if this girl turns out to be his daughter. A million? Two,
+three, all he has in the world. I want you to pay a visit right away.
+Watch the butler, Jones. He'll lie, of course; but note how he treats
+the girl; and if you get the chance look around the walls for a secret
+panel. He might not have carried away the cash at all, only enough for
+his immediate needs, which would account for that five thousand on the
+man picked up at sea. If I could only get inside that house for an
+hour!"
+
+"I believe I'll call at once. Leo, was Hargreave the man's real name?"
+
+Braine laughed. "That is of no vital consequence. He will be
+Hargreave till the end of the chapter, dead or alive. You can tell me
+the news at dinner to-night."
+
+So, later, when the butler accepted her card at the door, loath as he
+might be, there was nothing for him to do but admit her.
+
+"Whom do you wish to see, madam?" stepping back into the shadow.
+
+"Miss Hargreave. I'm an old friend of her mother's."
+
+"There is no such person here."
+
+"To whom, then, does this hat belong?" she asked quietly. She waved
+her hand indolently toward the hall rack.
+
+Jones' lips tightened. "That belongs to Miss Gray, a kind of protégée
+of Mr. Hargreave's."
+
+"Indeed! You have no objections to my seeing her? My maiden name was
+Olga Pushkin, cousin to Katrina, wife of Stanley Hargreave. I am, if
+you will weigh the matter carefully, a kind of aunt."
+
+To Jones it was as if ice had suddenly come into contact with his
+heart's blood. But as he still stood in the shadow, she did not
+observe the pallor of his face.
+
+"If you will state exactly why you wish to see her, madam."
+
+"You seem to possess authority?"
+
+"Yes, madam, absolute authority."
+
+Jones produced his document and presented it to her.
+
+"There is no flaw in that," she agreed readily. "I wish to see the
+child. I have told you why."
+
+"Very well, madam." Why had they not telegraphed the child, even on
+the train, to return to Farlow's. He knew nothing of this woman,
+whether she was an enemy or a friend. He conducted his unwelcome guest
+into the library.
+
+"How did you know that she was here?" suddenly.
+
+But she was ready. "I did not. But the death of Mr. Hargreave brought
+me. And that youthful hat in the hall was a story all its own. Later
+I shall show you some papers of my own. You will have no cause to
+doubt them. They have not the legal power of yours, but they would
+find standing in any court."
+
+Jones turned and went in search of Florence.
+
+The countess lost no time in beginning her investigations, but she
+wasted her time. There was no secret panel in evidence.
+
+"Who is she?" asked Florence as she looked at the card. "Did my father
+know countesses?"
+
+"Yes," said Jones briefly. "Be very careful what you say to her.
+Admit nothing. She claims to be a cousin of your mother. Perhaps."
+
+"My mother?" Without waiting for any further advice from Jones, whom
+Florence in her young years thought presuming upon his authority, she
+ran downstairs to the library. Her mother, to learn some facts about
+the mother of whom she knew nothing!
+
+"You knew my mother?" she cried without ceremony,
+
+Jones heard the countess say: "I did, my child; and heaven is witness
+that you are the exact picture of her at your age. And I knew your
+father."
+
+Jones straightened, his hands shut tightly.
+
+"Tell me about my father!"
+
+The countess smiled. It was Katrina. Pushkin come to life, the same
+impulsiveness. "I knew him but slightly. I was a mere child myself
+when he used to pinch my cheeks. I met him again the other night, but
+he did not recognize me; and I could not find it in my heart to awaken
+his memory in a public restaurant."
+
+Presently Jones came in to announce that two detectives requested to
+see Florence. The two men entered, informing her that they had been
+instructed to investigate the disappearance of Stanley Hargreave.
+
+"Who are you, miss?"
+
+"I am his daughter."
+
+"Ah!"
+
+One of the detectives questioned Florence minutely, while the other
+wandered about the rooms, feeling the walls, using the magnifying
+glass, turning back the rugs. Even the girl's pretty room did not
+escape his scrutiny. By and by he returned to the library and beckoned
+to his companion. The two conferred for a moment. One chanced to look
+into the mirror. He saw the bright eyes of the countess gazing
+intelligently into his.
+
+[Illustration: THE PEACEFUL BUTLER ENTERED INTO THE FIELD OF ACTION]
+
+"I'm afraid we'll have to ask you to accompany us to the station, miss."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Some technicalities. We must have some proof of your right to be in
+this house. So far as we have learned, Hargreave was unmarried. It
+will take but a few minutes."
+
+"And I will accompany you," said the countess. "We'll be back within
+half an hour. I'll tell them what I know."
+
+Jones, in the hall, caught sight of the reporter coming up the steps.
+Here was some one he could depend upon.
+
+"Why, Mr. Norton!"
+
+The reporter eyed the countess in amazement.
+
+"You look surprised. Naturally. I am a cousin of Miss Florence's
+mother. You might say that I am her aunt. It's a small world, isn't
+it?" But if wishing could poison, the reporter would have died that
+moment.
+
+"Who are you and what are you doing here?" one of the detectives
+demanded.
+
+"I am going to ask that very question of you," said Norton urbanely.
+
+"We are from headquarters," replied one, showing his badge.
+
+"What headquarters? What are they asking you to do?" he said to
+Florence.
+
+"They say I must go to the police station with them."
+
+"Not the least in the world," laughed the reporter. "You two clear out
+of here as fast as your rascally legs can carry you. I don't know what
+your game is, but I do know every reputable detective in New York, and
+you don't belong."
+
+"Good heavens!" exclaimed the countess; "do you mean to say that these
+men are not real detectives?"
+
+"This girl goes to the police station, young man. So much the worse
+for you if you meddle. Take yourself off!"
+
+"All in good time."
+
+"Here, Jenner, you take charge of the girl. I'll handle this guy. He
+shall go to the station, too."
+
+What followed would always be vividly remembered by Florence, fresh
+from the peace and happiness of her school life. Norton knocked his
+opponent down. He rose and for a moment the room seemed full of legs
+and arms and panting men. A foot tripped up Norton and he went down
+under the bogus detective. He never suspected that the tripping foot
+was not accidental. He was too busy.
+
+The other man dragged Florence toward the hall, but there the peaceful
+butler entered into the field of action with a very unattractive
+automatic. The detective threw up his hands.
+
+The struggle went on in the library. A trick of jiu-jutsu brought
+about the downfall of Norton's man, and Norton ran out into the hall to
+aid Jones. He searched the detective's pockets and secured the
+revolver. The result of all this was that the two bogus detectives
+soon found themselves in charge of two policemen, and they were marched
+off to the station.
+
+"Your advent was most providential, Mr. Norton," said Jones in his
+usual colorless tones.
+
+"I rather believe so. Why don't you pack up and clear out for a while?"
+
+"I am stronger in this house than elsewhere," answered the butler
+enigmatically.
+
+"Well, you know best," said the reporter.
+
+The countess was breathing rapidly. No, on second thought she had no
+wish to throw her arms about the reporter's neck and kiss him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+The countess did not remain long after the departure of the police with
+the bogus detectives. It had been a very difficult corner to wriggle
+out of, all because Braine had added to his plans after she had left
+the apartment. But for the advent of the meddling reporter the coup
+would have succeeded, herself apparently perfectly innocent of
+complicity. That must be the keynote of all her plans: to appear quite
+innocent and leave no trail behind her. She had gained the confidence
+of Florence and her companion. And she was rather certain that she had
+impressed this lazy-eyed reporter and the stolid butler. She had told
+nothing but the truth regarding her relationship. They would find that
+out. She was Katrina Pushkin's cousin. But blood with her counted as
+naught. She had room in her heart but for two things, Braine and money
+to spend on her caprices.
+
+[Illustration: SHE HAD GAINED THE CONFIDENCE OF FLORENCE]
+
+"How long has your highness known Mr. Braine?" asked the reporter idly,
+as he smoothed away all signs of his recent conflict.
+
+"Oh, the better part of a year. Mr. Hargreave did not recognize me the
+other night. That was quite excusable, for when he last saw me I was
+not more than twelve. My child," she said to Florence, "build no hopes
+regarding your mother. She is doubtless dead. Upon some trivial
+matter--I do not know what it was--she was confined to the fortress.
+That was seventeen years ago. When you enter the fortress at St.
+Petersburg, you cease to be."
+
+"That is true enough."
+
+"I did not recall myself to your father. I did not care at that moment
+to shock him with the remembrance of the past. Is not Mr. Braine a
+remarkable man?" All this in her charming broken English.
+
+"He is, indeed," affirmed Norton. "He's a superb linguist, knows
+everybody and has traveled everywhere. No matter what subject you
+bring up he seems well informed."
+
+"Come often," urged Florence.
+
+"I shall, my child. And any time you need me, call for me. After all,
+I am nearly your aunt. You will find life in the city far different
+from that which you have been accustomed to."
+
+She limped down to her limousine. In tripping up Norton he had stepped
+upon her foot heavily.
+
+"She is lovely!" cried Florence.
+
+"Well, I must be on my way, also," said Norton. "I am a worldly-wise
+man, Miss Florence. So is Jones here. Never go any place without
+letting him know; not even to the corner drug store. I am going to
+find your father. Some one was rescued. I'm going to find out whether
+it was the aviator or Mr. Hargreave."
+
+Jones drew in a deep breath and his eyes closed for a moment. At the
+door he spoke to the reporter.
+
+"What do you think of that woman?"
+
+"I believe that she told the truth. She is charming."
+
+"She is. But for all her charm and truth I can not help distrusting
+her. I have an idea. I shall call up your office at the end of each
+day. If a day comes without a call, you will know that something is
+wrong."
+
+"A very good idea." Norton shook hands with every one and departed.
+
+"What a brave, pleasant young man!" murmured Susan.
+
+"I like him, too; and I'd like him for a friend," said the guileless
+girl.
+
+"It is very good to have a friend like Mr. Norton," added Jones; and
+passed out into the kitchen. All the help had been discharged and upon
+his shoulders lay the burden of the cooking till such time when he
+could reinstate the cook.
+
+There was a stormy scene between Braine and the countess that night.
+
+[Illustration: THERE WAS A STORMY SCENE BETWEEN BRAINE AND THE PRINCESS]
+
+"Are you in your dotage?" she asked vehemently.
+
+"There, there; bring your voice down a bit. Where's the girl?"
+
+"In her home. Where did you suppose she would be, after that botchwork
+of letting me go to do one thing while you had in mind another? And an
+ordinary pair of cutthroats, at that!"
+
+"The thought came to me after you left. I knew you'd recognize the men
+and understand. I see no reason why it didn't work."
+
+"It would have been all right if you had consulted a clairvoyant."
+
+"What the deuce do you mean by that?" Braine demanded roughly.
+
+"I mean that then you would have learned your friend the reporter was
+to arrive upon the scene at its most vital moment."
+
+"What, Norton?"
+
+"Yes. The trouble is with you, you have been so successful all these
+years that you have grown overconfident. I tell you that there is a
+desperately shrewd man somewhere back of all this. Mark me, I do not
+believe Hargreave is dead. He is in hiding. It may be near by. He
+may have dropped from the balloon before it left land. The man they
+picked up may be Orts, the aeronaut. The five thousand might have been
+his fee for rescuing Hargreave. Here is the greatest thing we've ever
+been up against; and you start in with every-day methods!"
+
+"Little woman, don't let your tongue run away with you too far."
+
+"I'm not the least bit afraid of you, Leo. You need me, and it has
+never been more apparent than at this moment."
+
+"All right. I fell by the wayside this trip. Truthfully, I realized
+it five minutes after the men were gone. The only clever thing I did
+was to keep the mask on my face. They can't come back at me. But the
+thing looked so easy; and it would have worked but for Norton's
+appearance."
+
+"You all but compromised me. That butler worries me a little." Her
+expression lost its anger and grew thoughtful. "He's always about,
+somewhere. Do you think Hargreave took him into his confidence?"
+
+"Can't tell. He's been watched straight for forty hours. He hasn't
+mailed a letter or telephoned to any place but the grocery. There have
+been no telegrams. Some one in that house knows where the money is,
+and it's ten to one that it will be the girl."
+
+"She looks enough like Katrina to be her ghost."
+
+Braine went over to the window and stared up at the stars.
+
+"You have made a good impression on the girl?" with his back still
+toward her.
+
+"I had her in my arms."
+
+"Olga, my hat is off to you," turning, now that his face was again in
+repose. "Your very frankness regarding your relationship will pull the
+wool over their eyes. Of course they'll make inquiries and they'll
+find out that you haven't lied. It's perfect. Not even that newspaper
+weasel will see anything wrong. Toward you they will eventually ease
+up and you can act without their even dreaming your part in the
+business. We must not be seen in public any more. This butler may
+know where I stand even though he can not prove it. Now, I'm going to
+tell you something. Perhaps you've long since guessed it. Katrina was
+mine till Hargreave--never mind what his name was then--till Hargreave
+came into the fold. So sure of her was I that I used her as a lure to
+bring him to us. She fell in love with him, but too late to warn him.
+I had the satisfaction of seeing him cast her aside, curse her, and
+leave her. In one thing she fooled us all. I never knew of the child
+till you told me."
+
+He paused to light a cigarette.
+
+"Hargreave was madly in love with her. He cursed her, but he came back
+to the house to forgive her, to find that she had been seized by the
+secret police and entombed in the fortress. I had my revenge. It was
+I who sent in the information, practically bogus. But in Russia they
+never question; they act and forget. So he had a daughter!"
+
+He paced the floor, his hands behind his back; the woman watched him,
+oscillating between love and fear. He came to a halt abruptly and
+looked down at her.
+
+"Don't worry. You have no rival. I'll leave the daughter to your
+tender mercies."
+
+"The butler," she said, "has full power of attorney to act for
+Hargreave while absent, up to the day the girl becomes of legal age."
+
+"I'll keep an eye on our friend Jones. From now on, day and night,
+there will be a cat at the knothole, and 'ware mouse! Could you make
+up anything like this girl?" suddenly.
+
+"A fair likeness."
+
+"Do it. Go to the ship which picked up the man at sea and quiz the
+captain. Either the aviator or Hargreave is alive. It is important to
+learn which at once. Be very careful; play the game only as you know
+how to play it. And if Hargreave is alive, we win. To-morrow morning,
+early. Tears of anguish, and all that. Sailors are easy when a woman
+weeps. No color, remember; just the yellow wig and the salient
+features. Now, by-by!"
+
+"Aren't you going to kiss me, Leo?"
+
+He caught her hands. "There is a species of Delilah about you, Olga.
+A kiss to-night from your lips would snip my locks; and I need a clear
+head. Whether we fail or win, when this game is played you shall be my
+wife." He kissed the hands and strode out into the hall.
+
+The woman gazed down at her small white hands and smiled tenderly.
+(The tigress has her tender moments!) He meant it!
+
+She went into her dressing-room and for an hour or more worked over her
+face and hair, till she was certain that if the captain of the ship
+described her to any one else he could not fail to give a fair
+description of Florence Hargreave.
+
+But Norton reached the captain first. Other reporters had besieged
+him, but they had succeeded in gathering the vaguest kind of
+information. They had no description of Hargreave, while Norton had.
+Before going down to the boat, however, he had delved into the past of
+the Countess Olga Perigoff. It cost him a pocketful of money, but the
+end justified the means. The countess had no past worth mentioning.
+By piecing this and that together he became assured that she had told
+the simple truth regarding the relationship to Florence's mother. A
+cablegram had given him all the facts in her history; there were no
+gaps or discrepancies. It read clear and frank. Trust a Russian
+secret agent to know what he was talking about.
+
+[Illustration: NORTON REACHED THE CAPTAIN FIRST]
+
+So Norton's suspicions--and he had entertained some--were completely
+lulled to sleep. And he wouldn't have doubted her at all except for
+the fact that Braine had been with her when he had introduced
+Hargreave. Hargreave had feared Braine; that much the reporter had
+elicited from the butler. But there wasn't the slightest evidence.
+Braine had been in New York for nearly six years. The countess had
+arrived in the city but a year ago. And Braine was a member of several
+fashionable clubs, never touched cards, and seldom drank. He was an
+expert chess player and a wonderful amateur billiardist. Perhaps
+Jones, the taciturn and inscrutable, had not told him all he knew
+regarding his master's past. Well, well; he had in his time untangled
+worse snarls. The office had turned him loose, a free lance, to handle
+the case as he saw fit, to turn in the story when it was complete.
+
+But what a story it was going to be when he cleared it up! The more
+mystifying it was, the greater the zest and sport for him. Norton was
+like a gambler who played for big stakes, and only big stakes stirred
+his cravings.
+
+The captain of the tramp steamer _Orient_ told him the same tale he had
+told the other reporters: he had picked up a man at sea. The man had
+been brought aboard totally exhausted.
+
+"Was there another body anywhere?"
+
+"No."
+
+"What became of him?"
+
+"I sent a wireless and that seemed to bother him. It looked as though
+he did not want anybody to learn that he had been rescued. The moment
+the boat touched the pier he lost himself in the crowd. Fifty
+reporters came aboard, but he was gone. And I could but tell them just
+what I'm telling you."
+
+"He had money."
+
+"About five thousand."
+
+"Please describe him."
+
+The captain did so. It was the same description he had given to all
+the reporters. Norton looked over the rail at the big warehouse.
+
+"Was it an ordinary balloon?"
+
+"There you've got me. My Marconi man says the balloon part was like
+any other balloon; but the passenger car was a new business to him. It
+could be driven against the wind."
+
+"Driven against the wind. Did you tell this to the other chaps?"
+
+"Don't think I did. Just remembered it. Probably some new invention;
+and now it's at the bottom of the sea. Two men, as I understand, went
+off in this contraption. One is gone for good."
+
+"For good," echoed the reporter gravely. "Gone for good, indeed, poor
+devil!"
+
+Norton took out a roll of bills. "There's two hundred in this roll."
+
+"Well?" said the captain, vastly astonished.
+
+"It's yours if you will do me a small favor."
+
+"If it doesn't get me mixed up with the police. I'm only captain of a
+tramp; and some of the harbor police have taken a dislike to me. What
+do you want me to do?"
+
+"The police will not bother you. This man Hargreave had some enemies;
+they want either his life or his money; maybe both. It's a peculiar
+case, with Russia in the background. He might have laid the whole
+business before the police, but he chose to fight it out himself. And
+to tell the truth, I don't believe the police would have done any good."
+
+"Heave her over; what do you want me to do for that handsome roll of
+money?"
+
+"If any man or woman who is not a reporter comes to pump you tell them
+the man went ashore with a packet under his arm."
+
+"Tie a knot in that."
+
+"Say the man was gray-haired, clean-shaven, straight, with a scar high
+up on his forehead, generally covered up by his hair."
+
+"That's battened down, my lad. Go on."
+
+"Say that you saw him enter yonder warehouse, and later depart without
+his packet."
+
+"Easy as dropping my mudhook."
+
+"That's all." Norton gave the captain the money. "Good-by and many
+thanks."
+
+"Don't mention it."
+
+Norton left the slip and proceeded to the office of the warehouse. He
+approached the manager's desk.
+
+"Hello, Grannis, old top!"
+
+The man looked up from his work surlily. Then his face brightened.
+
+"Norton? What's brought you here? Oh, yes; that balloon business.
+Sit down."
+
+"What kind of a man is the captain of that old hooker in the slip?"
+
+"Shifty in gun running, but otherwise as square as a die. Looks funny
+to see an old tub like that fixed up with wireless; but that has saved
+his neck a dozen times when he was running it into a noose. Not going
+to interview me, are you?"
+
+"No. I'm going to ask you to do me a little favor."
+
+"They always say that. But spin her out. If it doesn't cost me my
+job, it's yours."
+
+"Well, there will be a person making inquiries about the mysterious
+aeronaut. All I want you to say is, that he left a packet with you,
+that you've put it in that safe till he calls to claim it."
+
+Grannis nibbled the end of his pen. "Suppose some one should come and
+demand that I open the safe and deliver?"
+
+"All you've got to do is to tell them to show the receipt signed by
+you."
+
+The warehouse manager laughed. "Got a lot of sense in that ivory dome
+of yours. All right. But if anything happens you've got to come
+around and back me up. What's it about?"
+
+"That I dare not tell you. This much, I'm laying a trap and I want
+some one I don't know to fall into it."
+
+"On your way, James. But if you don't send me some prize fight tickets
+next week for this, I'll never do you another favor."
+
+In reply Norton took from his pocket two bits of pasteboard and laid
+them on the desk. "I knew you'd be wanting something like this."
+
+"Ringside!" cried Grannis. "You reporters are lucky devils!"
+
+"I'd go myself if there was any earthly chance of a real scrap. You
+make me laugh, Gran. You're always going, always hoping the next one
+will be a real one. But it's all bunk. The pugs are the biggest
+fakers on top of the sod. They've got us newspaper men done to a
+frazzle."
+
+"I guess you're right. Well, count on me regarding that mysterious
+bundle in the safe."
+
+"At three o'clock this afternoon I want you to call me up. If no one
+has called, why the game is up. But if some one does come around and
+make inquiries, don't fail to let me know."
+
+"I'll be here till five. I'd better call you up then."
+
+Then Norton returned home and idled about till afternoon. He went over
+to Riverdale. Five times he walked up and down in front of the
+Hargreave place, finally plucked up his courage and walked to the door.
+After all, he was a lucky mortal. He had a good excuse to visit this
+house every day in the week. And there was something tantalizing in
+the risk he took. Besides, he wanted to prove to himself whether it
+was a passing fancy or something deeper. That's the way with humans;
+we never see a sign "Fresh Paint" that we don't have to prove it.
+
+He chatted with Florence for a while and found that, for all she might
+be guileless to the world, she was a good linguist, a fine musician,
+and talked with remarkable keenness about books and arts. But unless
+he roused her, the sadness of her position always lay written in her
+face. It was not difficult for him to conjure up her dreams in coming
+to the city and the blow which, like a bolt of lightning from a clear
+sky, had shattered them ruthlessly.
+
+"You must come every day and tell me how you have progressed," she said.
+
+"I'll obey that order gladly, whenever I can possibly do it. My visits
+will always be short."
+
+"That is not necessary."
+
+"No," said Norton in his heart, "but it is wise."
+
+Always he found Jones waiting for him at the door, always in the shadow.
+
+"Well?" the butler whispered.
+
+"I have laid a neat trap. Whether this balloon was the one that left
+the top of this house I don't know. But if there were two men in it,
+one of them lies at the bottom of the sea."
+
+"And the man who was found?" The butler's voice was tense.
+
+"It was not Hargreave. I met Orts but once, and as he wore a beard
+then, the captain's description did not tally with your recollection."
+
+"Thank God! But what is this trap?"
+
+"I propose to find out by it who is back of all this, who Hargreave's
+real enemies are."
+
+Norton returned to his rooms, there to await the call from Grannis. He
+was sorry, but if Jones would not take him into his fullest confidence,
+he must hold himself to blame for any blunder he (Norton) made. Of
+course, he could readily understand Jones' angle of vision. He knew
+nothing of the general run of reporters; he had heard of them by rumor
+and distrusted them. He was not aware of the fact that the average
+reporter carries more secrets in his head than a prime minister. It
+was, then, up to him to set about to allay this distrust and gain the
+man's complete confidence.
+
+Meanwhile that same morning a pretty young woman boarded the _Orient_
+and asked to be led to the captain. Her eyes were red; she had
+evidently been weeping. When the captain, susceptible like all
+sailors, saw her his promises to Norton took wings.
+
+"This is Captain Hagan?" she asked, balling the handkerchief she held
+in her hand.
+
+"Yes, miss. What can I do for you?" He put his hands embarrassedly
+into his pockets--and felt the crisp bills. But for that magic touch
+he would have forgotten his lines. He squared his shoulders.
+
+"I have every assurance that the man you picked up at sea is my father.
+I am Florence Hargreave. Tell me everything."
+
+The captain's very blundering deceived her. "And then he hustled down
+the gangplank and headed for that warehouse. He had a package which he
+was as tender of as if it had been dynamite."
+
+"Thank you!" impulsively.
+
+"A man has to do his duty, miss. A sailor's always glad to rescue a
+man at sea," awkwardly.
+
+When she finally went down the gangplank the sigh the captain heaved
+was almost as loud as the exhaust from the donkey engines which were
+working out the crates of lemons from the hold.
+
+"Maybe she is his daughter; but two hundred is two hundred, and I'm a
+poor sailor man."
+
+Then Grannis came in for his troubles. What was a chap to do when a
+pretty girl appealed to him?
+
+"I am sorry, miss, but I can't give you that package. I gave the man a
+receipt and till it is presented to me the package must remain in
+yonder safe. You understand enough about the business to realize that.
+I did not solicit the job. It was thrust upon me. I'd give a hundred
+dollars if the blame thing was out of my safe. You say it is your
+fortune. That hasn't been proved. It may be gunpowder, dynamite. I'm
+sorry, but you will have to find your father and bring the receipt."
+
+The young woman left the warehouse, dabbing her eyes with the sodden
+handkerchief.
+
+"I wonder," mused Grannis, as he watched her from the window, "I wonder
+what the deuce that chap Norton is up to. The girl might have been the
+man's daughter.... Good lord, what an ass I am! There wasn't any
+man!" And so he reached over for the telephone.
+
+Immediately upon receipt of the message the reporter set his machinery
+in motion. Some time before dawn he would know who the
+arch-conspirator was. He questioned Grannis thoroughly, and Grannis'
+description tallied amazingly with that of Florence Hargreave. But a
+call over the wire proved to him conclusively that Florence had not
+been out of the house that morning.
+
+On the morrow the newspapers had scare heads about an attempt to rob
+the Duffy warehouse. It appeared that the police had been tipped
+beforehand and were on the grounds in time to gather in several
+notorious gunmen, who, under pressure of the third degree, vowed that
+they had been hired and paid by a man in a mask and had not the
+slightest idea what he wanted them to raid. Nothing further could be
+got out of the gunmen. That they were lying the police had no doubt,
+but they were up against a stout wall and all they could do was to hold
+the men for the grand jury.
+
+Norton was in a fine temper. After all his careful planning he had
+gained nothing--absolutely nothing. But wait; he had gained
+something--the bitter enmity of a cunning and desperate man, who had
+been forced to remain hidden under the pier till almost dawn.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+Braine crawled from his uncomfortable hiding place. His clothes were
+soiled and damp, his hat was gone. By a hair's breadth he had escaped
+the clever trap laid for him. Hargreave was alive, he had escaped;
+Braine was as certain of this fact as he was of his own breathing. He
+now knew how to account for the flickering light in the upper story of
+the warehouse. His ancient enemy had been watching him all the time.
+More than this, Hargreave and the meddling reporter were in collusion.
+In the flare of lights at the end of the gun-play he had caught the
+profile of the reporter. Here was a dangerous man, who must be watched
+with the utmost care.
+
+He, Braine, had been lured to commit an overt act, and by the rarest
+good luck had escaped with nothing more serious than a cold chill and a
+galling disappointment.
+
+He crawled along the top of the pier, listening, sending his
+dark-accustomed glance hither and thither. The sky in the east was
+growing paler and paler. In and out among the bales of wool, bags of
+coffee and lemon crates he slowly and cautiously wormed his way. A
+watchman patrolled the office side of the warehouse, and Braine found
+it possible to creep around the other way, thence into the street.
+After that he straightened up, sought a second-hand shop and purchased
+a soft hat, which he pulled down over his eyes.
+
+He had half a dozen rooms which he always kept in readiness for such
+adventures as this. He rented them furnished in small hotels which
+never asked questions of their patrons. To one of these he went as
+fast as his weary legs could carry him. He always carried the key.
+Once in his room he donned fresh wearing apparel, linen, shoes, and
+shaved. Then he proceeded down-stairs, the second-hand hat shading his
+eyes and the upper part of his face.
+
+At half past twelve Norton entered the Knickerbocker cafe-restaurant,
+and the first person he noticed was Braine, reading the morning's
+paper, propped up against the water carafe. Evidently he had just
+ordered, for there was nothing on his plate. Norton walked over and
+laid his hand upon Braine's shoulder. The man looked up with mild
+curiosity.
+
+"Why, Norton, sit down, sit down! Have you had lunch? No? Join me."
+
+"Thanks. Came in for my breakfast," said Norton, drawing out the
+chair. Braine was sitting with his back to the wall on the lounge-seat.
+
+"I wonder if you newspaper men ever eat a real, true enough breakfast.
+I should think the hours you lead would kill you off. Anything new on
+the Hargreave story?"
+
+"I'm not handling that," the reporter lied cheerfully. "Didn't want
+to. I knew him rather intimately. I've a horror of dead people, and
+don't want to be called upon to identify the body when they find it."
+
+"Then you think they will find it?"
+
+"I don't know. It's a strange mixup. I'm not on the story, mind you;
+but I was in the locality of Duffy's warehouse late last night and fell
+into a gunman rumpus."
+
+"Yes, I read about that. What were they after?"
+
+"You've got me there. No one seems to know. Some cock and bull story
+about there being something valuable. There was."
+
+"What was it? The report in this paper does not say."
+
+"Ten thousand bags of coffee."
+
+Braine lay back in his chair and laughed.
+
+"If you want my opinion," said Norton, "I believe the gunmen were out
+to shoot up another gang, and the police got wind of it."
+
+"Don't you think it about time the police called a halt in this gunman
+matter?"
+
+"Oh, so long as they pot each other the police look the other way. It
+saves a long trial and passage up the river. Besides, when they are
+nabbed some big politician manages to open the door for them. Great is
+the American voter."
+
+"Take Mr. Norton's order, Luigi," said Braine.
+
+"A German pancake, buttered toast and coffee," ordered the reporter.
+
+"Man, eat something!"
+
+"It's enough for me."
+
+"And you'll go all the rest of the day on tobacco. I know something of
+you chaps. I don't see how you manage to do it."
+
+"Food is the least of our troubles. By the way, may I ask you a few
+questions? Nothing for print, unless you've got a new book coming."
+
+"Fire away."
+
+"What do you know about the Countess Perigoff?"
+
+"Let me see. H'm. Met her first about a year ago at a reception given
+to Nasimova. A very attractive woman. I see quite a lot of her. Why?"
+
+"Well, she claims to be a sort of aunt to Hargreave's daughter."
+
+"She said something to me about that the other night. You never know
+where you're at in this world, do you?"
+
+The German pancake, the toast, the coffee disappeared, and the reporter
+passed his cigars.
+
+"The president visits town to-day and I'm off to watch the show. I
+suppose I'll have to interview him about the tariff and all that rot.
+When you start on a new book let me know and I'll be your press agent."
+
+"That's a bargain."
+
+"Thanks for the breakfast."
+
+Braine picked up his newspaper, smoked and read. He smoked, yes, but
+he only pretended to read. The young fool was clever, but no man is
+infallible. He had not the least suspicion; he saw only the newspaper
+story. Still, in some manner he might stumble upon the truth, and it
+would be just as well to tie the reporter's hands effectually.
+
+The rancor of early morning had been subdued; anger and quick temper
+never paid in the long run, and no one appreciated this fact better
+than Braine. To put Norton out of the way temporarily was only a wise
+precaution; it was not a matter of spite or reprisal.
+
+He paid the reckoning, left the restaurant, and dropped into one of his
+clubs for a game of billiards. He drew quite a gallery about the
+table. He won easily, racked his cue and sought the apartments of the
+countess.
+
+What a piece of luck it was that Olga had really married that old
+dotard, Perigoff! He had left her a titled widow six months after her
+marriage. But she had had hardly a kopeck to call her own.
+
+"Olga, Hargreave is alive. He was there last night. But somehow he
+anticipated the raid and had the police in waiting. The question is,
+has he fooled us? Did he take that million or did he hide it? There
+is one thing left--to get that girl. No matter where Hargreave is
+hidden, the knowledge that she is in my hands will bring him out into
+the open."
+
+"No more blind alleys."
+
+"What's on your mind?"
+
+"She has never seen her father. She confessed to me that she has not
+even seen a photograph of him."
+
+There was a long pause.
+
+"Do you understand me?" she asked.
+
+"By the Lord Harry, I do! You've a head on you worth two of mine. The
+very simplicity of the idea will win out for us. Some one to pose as
+her father; a message handed to her in secret; dire misfortune if she
+whispers a word to any one; that her father's life hangs upon the
+secrecy; she must confide in no one, least of all Jones, the butler.
+It all depends upon how the letter gets to her. Bred in the country,
+she probably sleeps with her window open. A pebble attached to a note,
+tossed into the window. I'll trust this to no one; I'll do it myself.
+With the girl in our control the rest will be easy. If she really does
+not know where the money is Hargreave will tell us. Great head, little
+woman, great head. She does not know her father's handwriting?"
+
+"She has never seen a scrap of it. Miss Farlow never showed her the
+registered letters. The original note left on the doorstep with
+Florence has been lost. Trust me to make all these inquiries."
+
+"To-morrow night, then, immediately after dinner, a taxicab will await
+her just around the corner. Grange is the best man I can think of.
+He's an artist when it comes to playing the old-man parts."
+
+"Not too old, remember. Hargreave isn't over forty-five."
+
+"Another good point. I'm going to stretch out here on the divan and
+snooze for a while. Had a devil of a time last night."
+
+"When shall I wake you?"
+
+"At six. We'll have an early dinner sent in. I want to keep out of
+everybody's way. By-by!"
+
+In less than three minutes he was sound asleep. The woman gazed down
+at him in wonder and envy. If only she could drop to sleep like that.
+Very softly she pressed her lips to his hair.
+
+At eleven o'clock the following night the hall light in the Hargreave
+house was turned off and the whole interior became dark. A shadow
+crept through the lilac bushes without any more sound than a cat would
+have made. Florence's window was open as the arch-conspirator had
+expected it would be. With a small string and stone as a sling he sent
+the letter whirling skilfully through the air. It sailed into the
+girl's room. The man below heard no sound of the stone hitting
+anything and concluded that it had struck the bed.
+
+He waited patiently. Presently a wavering light could be distinguished
+over the sill of the window. The girl was awake and had lit the
+candle. This knowledge was sufficient for his need. The tragic letter
+would do the rest, that is, if the girl came from the same pattern as
+her father and mother--strong-willed and adventurous.
+
+He tiptoed back to the lilacs, when a noise sent him close to the
+ground. Half a dozen feet away he saw a shadow creeping along toward
+the front door. Presently the shadow stood up as if listening. He
+stooped again and ran lightly to the steps, up these to the door, which
+he hugged.
+
+Who was this? wondered Braine. Patiently he waited, arranging his
+posture so that he could keep a lookout at the door. By and by the
+door opened cautiously. A man holding a candle appeared. Braine
+vaguely recognized Olga's description of the butler. The man on the
+veranda suddenly blew out the light.
+
+Braine could hear the low murmur of voices, but nothing more. The
+conversation lasted scarcely a minute. The door closed and the man,
+ran down the steps, across the lawn, with Braine close at his heels.
+
+"Just a moment, Mr. Hargreave," he called ironically; "just a moment!"
+
+The man he addressed as Hargreave turned with lightning rapidity and
+struck. The blow caught Braine above the ear, knocking him flat. When
+he regained his feet the rumble of a motor told him the rest of the
+story.
+
+
+By the dim light of her bedroom candle Florence read the note which had
+found entrance so strangely and mysteriously into her room. Her
+father! He lived, he needed her! Alive, but in dread peril, and only
+she could save him! She longed to fly to him at once, then and there.
+How could she wait till to-morrow night at eight? Immediately she
+began to plan how to circumvent the watchful Jones and the careful
+Susan. Her father! She slept no more that night.
+
+
+"My Darling Daughter: I must see you. Come at eight o'clock to-morrow
+night to 78 Grove Street, third floor. Confide in no one, or you seal
+my death warrant.
+
+"Your unhappy
+ "FATHER."
+
+
+What child would refuse to obey a summons like this?
+
+A light tap on the door startled her.
+
+"Is anything the matter?" asked the mild voice of Jones.
+
+"No. I got up to get a drink of water."
+
+She heard his footsteps die away down the corridor. She thrust the
+letter into the pocket of her dress, which lay neatly folded on the
+chair at the foot of the bed, then climbed back into the bed itself.
+She must not tell even Mr. Norton.
+
+Was the child spinning a romance over the first young man she had ever
+met? In her heart of hearts the girl did not know.
+
+Her father!
+
+It was all so terribly and tragically simple, to match a woman's mind
+against that of a child. Both Norton and the sober Jones had
+explicitly warned her never to go anywhere, receive telephone calls or
+letters, without first consulting one or the other of them. And now
+she had planned to deceive them, with all the cunning of her sex.
+
+The next morning at breakfast there was nothing unusual either in her
+appearance or manners. Under the shrewd scrutiny of Jones she was just
+her every-day self, a fine bit of acting for one who had yet to see the
+stage. But it is born in woman to act, as it is born in man to fight,
+and Florence was no exception to the rule.
+
+She was going to save her father.
+
+She read with Susan, played the piano, sewed a little, laughed, hummed
+and did a thousand and one things young girls do when they have the
+deception of their elders in view.
+
+[Illustration: SHE READ WITH SUSAN...]
+
+All day long Jones went about like an old hound with his nose to the
+wind. There was something in the air, but he could not tell what it
+was. Somehow or other, no matter which room Florence went into, there
+was Jones within earshot. And she dared not show the least impatience
+or restiveness. It was a large order for so young a girl, but she
+filled it.
+
+She rather expected that the reporter would appear some time during the
+afternoon; and sure enough he did. He could no more resist the desire
+to see and talk to her than he could resist breathing. There was no
+use denying it; the world had suddenly turned at a new angle,
+presenting a new face, a roseate vision. It rather subdued his easy
+banter.
+
+"What news?" she asked.
+
+"None," rather despondingly. "I'm sorry. I had hoped by this time to
+get somewhere. But it happens that I can't get any farther than this
+house."
+
+She did not ask him what he meant by that.
+
+"Shall I play something for you?" she said.
+
+"Please."
+
+He drew a chair beside the piano and watched her fingers, white as the
+ivory keys, flutter up and down the board. She played Chopin for him,
+Mendelssohn, Grieg and Chaminade; and she played them in a surprisingly
+scholarly fashion. He had expected the usual schoolgirl choice and
+execution; _Titania_, the _Moonlight Sonata_ (which not half a dozen
+great pianists have ever played correctly), _Monastery Bells_, and the
+like. He had prepared to make a martyr of himself; instead, he was
+distinctly and delightfully entertained.
+
+"You don't," he said whimsically, when she finally stopped, "you don't,
+by any chance, know _The Maiden's Prayer_?"
+
+She laughed. This piece was a standing joke at school.
+
+"I have never played it. It may, however, be in the cabinet. Would
+you like to hear it?" mischievously.
+
+"Heaven forfend!" he murmured, raising his hands.
+
+All the while the letter burned against her heart, and the smile on her
+face and the gaiety on her tongue were forced. "Confide in no one,"
+she repeated mentally, "or you seal my death warrant."
+
+"Why do you shake your head like that?" he asked.
+
+"Did I shake my head?" Her heart fluttered wildly. "I was not
+conscious of it."
+
+"Are you going to keep your promise?"
+
+"What promise?"
+
+"Never to leave this house without Jones or myself being with you."
+
+"I couldn't if I wanted to. I'll wager Jones is out there in the hall
+this minute. I know; it is all for my sake. But it bothers me."
+
+Jones was indeed in the hall, and when he sensed the petulance in her
+voice his shoulders sank despondently and he sighed deeply if silently.
+
+At a quarter to eight Florence, being alone for a minute, set fire to a
+veil and stuffed it down the register.
+
+"Jones," she called excitedly, "I smell something burning!"
+
+Jones dashed into the room, sniffed, and dashed out again, heading for
+the cellar door. His first thought was naturally that the devils
+incarnate had set fire to the house. When he returned, having, of
+course, discovered no fire, he found Florence gone. He rushed into the
+hall. Her hat was missing. He made for the hall door with a speed
+which seemed incredible to the bewildered Susan's eyes. Out into the
+street, up and down which he looked. Far away he discovered a
+dwindling taxicab. The child was gone.
+
+In the house Susan was answering the telephone, talking incoherently.
+
+"Who is it?" Jones whispered, his lips white and dry.
+
+[Illustration: "WHO IS IT?" WHISPERED JONES, HIS LIPS WHITE AND DRY]
+
+"The countess...." began Susan.
+
+He took the receiver from her roughly.
+
+"Hello, who is it?"
+
+"This is Olga Perigoff. Is Florence there?"
+
+"No, madam. She has just stepped out for a moment. Shall I tell her
+to call you when she returns?"
+
+"Yes, please. I want her and Susan and Mr. Norton to come to tea
+to-morrow. Good-by."
+
+Jones hung up the receiver, sank into a chair near by and buried his
+face in his hands.
+
+"What is it?" cried Susan, terrified by the haggardness of his face.
+
+"She's gone! My God, those wretches have got her! They've got her!"
+
+Florence was whirled away at top speed. Her father! She was actually
+on the way to her father, whom she had always loved in dreams, yet
+never seen.
+
+Number 78 Grove Street was not an attractive place, but when she
+arrived she was too highly keyed to take note of its sordidness. She
+was rather out of breath when she reached the door of the third flat.
+She knocked timidly. The door was instantly opened by a man who wore a
+black mask. She would have turned then and there and flown but for the
+swift picture she had of a well-dressed man at a table. He lay with
+his head upon his arms.
+
+"Father!" she whispered.
+
+The man raised his careworn face, so very well done that only the
+closest scrutiny would have betrayed the paste of the theater. He
+arose and staggered toward her with outstretched arms. But the moment
+they closed about her Florence experienced a peculiar shiver.
+
+"My child!" murmured the broken man. "They caught me when I was about
+to come to you. I have given up the fight."
+
+A sob choked him.
+
+What was it? wondered the child, her heart burning with the misery of
+the thought that she was sad instead of glad. Over his shoulder she
+sent a glance about the room. There was a sofa, a table, some chairs
+and an enormous clock, the face of which was dented and the hands
+hopelessly tangled. Why, at such a moment, she should note such
+details disturbed her. Then she chanced to look into the cracked
+mirror. In it she saw several faces, all masked. These men were
+peering at her through the half-closed door behind her.
+
+"You must return home and bring me the money," went on the wretch who
+dared to perpetrate such a mockery. "It is all that stands between me
+and death."
+
+Then she knew! The insistent daily warnings came home to her. She
+understood now. She had deliberately walked into the spider's net.
+But instead of terror an extraordinary calm fell upon her.
+
+"Very well, father, I will go and get it." Gently she released herself
+from those horrible arms.
+
+"Wait, my child, till I see if they will let you go. They may wish to
+hold you as hostage."
+
+When he was gone she tried the doors. They were locked. Then she
+crossed over to the window and looked out. A leap from there would
+kill her. She turned her gaze toward the lamp, wondering.
+
+The false father returned, dejectedly.
+
+"It is as I said. They insist upon sending some one. Write down the
+directions I gave to you. I am very weak!"
+
+"Write down the directions yourself, father; you know them better than
+I." Since she saw no escape, she was determined to keep up the tragic
+farce no longer.
+
+"I am not your father."
+
+"So I see," she replied, still with the amazing calm.
+
+Braine, in the other room, shook his head savagely. Father and
+daughter; the same steel in the nerves. Could they bend her? Would
+they break her? He did not wish to injure her bodily, but a million
+was always a million, and there was revenge which was worth more to him
+than the money itself. He listened, motioning to the others to be
+silent.
+
+"Write the directions," commanded the scoundrel, who discarded the
+broken-man style.
+
+"I know of no hidden money."
+
+"Then your father dies this night." Grange put a whistle to his lips.
+"Sign, write!"
+
+"I refuse!"
+
+"Once more. The moment I blow this whistle the men in the other room
+will understand that your father is to die. Be wise. Money is
+nothing--life is everything."
+
+"I refuse!" Even as she had known this vile creature to be an impostor
+so she knew that he lied, that her father was still free.
+
+Grange blew the whistle. Instantly the room became filled with masked
+men. But Florence was ready. She seized the lamp and hurled it to the
+floor, quite indifferent whether it exploded or went out. Happily for
+her, it was extinguished. At the same moment she cast the lamp she
+caught hold of a chair, remembering the direction of the window. She
+was superhumanly strong in this moment. The chair went true. A crash
+followed.
+
+"She has thrown herself out of the window!" yelled a voice.
+
+Some one groped for the lamp, lit it and turned in time to see Florence
+pass out of the room into that from which they had come. The door
+slammed. The surprised men heard the key click.
+
+She was free. But she was no longer a child.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+"Gone!"
+
+Jones kept saying to himself that he must strive to be calm, to think,
+think. Despite all his warnings, the warnings of Norton, she had
+tricked them and run away. It was maddening. He wanted to rave, tear
+his hair, break things. He tramped the hall. It would be wasting time
+to send for the police. They would only putter about fruitlessly. The
+Black Hundred knew how to arrange these abductions.
+
+How had they succeeded in doing it? No one had entered the house that
+day without his being present. There had been no telephone call he had
+not heard the gist of, nor any letters he had not first glanced over.
+How had they done it? Suddenly into his mind flashed the remembrance
+of the candle-light under Florence's door the night before. In a dozen
+bounds he was in her room, searching drawers, paper boxes, baskets. He
+found nothing. He returned in despair to Susan, who, during all this
+turmoil, had sat as if frozen in her chair.
+
+"Speak!" he cried. "For God's sake, say something, think something!
+Those devils are likely to torture her, hurt, her!" He leaned against
+the wall, his head on his arm.
+
+When he turned again he was calm. He walked with bent head toward the
+door, opened it and stood upon the threshold for a space. Across the
+street a shadow stirred, but Jones did not see it. His gaze was
+attracted by something which shone dimly white on the walk just beyond
+the steps. He ran to it. A crumpled letter, unaddressed. He carried
+it back to the house, smoothed it out and read, its contents. Florence
+in her haste had dropped the letter.
+
+He clutched at his hat, put it on and ran to Susan.
+
+"Here!" he cried, holding out an automatic. "If any one comes in that
+you don't know, shoot! Don't ask questions, shoot!"
+
+"I'm afraid!" She breathed with difficulty.
+
+"Afraid?" he roared at her. He put the weapon in her hand. It slipped
+and thudded to the floor. He stooped for it and slammed it into her
+lap. "You love your life and honor. You'll know how to shoot when the
+time comes. Now, attend to me. If I'm not back here by ten o'clock,
+turn this note over to the police. If you can't do that, then God help
+us all!" And with that he ran from the house.
+
+Susan eyed the revolver with growing terror. For what had she left the
+peace and quiet of Miss Farlow's; assassination, robbery, thieves and
+kidnapers? She wanted to shriek, but her throat was as dry as paper.
+Gingerly she touched the pistol. The cold steel sent a thrill of fear
+over her. He hadn't told her how to shoot it!
+
+Two blocks down the street, up an alley, was the garage wherein
+Hargreave had been wont to keep his car. Toward this Jones ran with
+the speed of a track athlete. There might be half a dozen taxicabs
+about, but he would not run the risk of engaging any of them. The
+Black Hundred was capable of anticipating his every movement.
+
+The shadow across the street stood undecided. At length he concluded
+to give Jones ten minutes in which to return. If he did not return in
+that time, the watcher would go up to the drug store and telephone for
+instructions.
+
+But Jones did not come back.
+
+"Where's Howard?" he demanded.
+
+"Hello, Jones; what's up?"
+
+"Howard, get that car out at once."
+
+"Out she comes. Wait till I give her radiator a bucket of water.
+Gee!" whispered Howard, whom Hargreave often used as his chauffeur,
+"get on to his nibs! First time I ever saw him awake. I wonder what's
+doing? You never know what's back of those mummy-faced head
+waiters.... All right, Jones!"
+
+The chauffeur jumped into the car and Jones took the seat beside him.
+
+"Where to?"
+
+"Number 78..." and the rest of it trailed away, smothered in the
+violent thunder of the big six's engines.
+
+During the car's flight several policemen hailed it without success.
+Down this street, up that, round this corner, fifty miles an hour; and
+all the while Jones shouted: "Faster, faster!"
+
+Within twelve minutes from the time it left the garage, the car stopped
+opposite 78 Grove Street, and Jones got out.
+
+"Wait here, Howard. If several men come rushing out, or I don't appear
+within ten minutes, fire your gun a couple of times for the police. I
+don't want them if we can manage without. They'd only bungle."
+
+"All right, Mr. Jones," said the chauffeur. He had, in the past
+quarter of an hour, acquired a deep and lasting respect for the butler
+chap. He was a regular fellow, for all his brass buttons.
+
+As Jones reached the curb, Florence came forth as if on invisible
+wings. Jones caught her by the arm. She flung him aside with a
+strength he had not dreamed existed in her slim body.
+
+"Florence, I am Jones!"
+
+She stopped, recognized him, and without a word ran across the street
+to the automobile and climbed into the tonneau. Jones followed
+immediately.
+
+"Home!"
+
+The car shot up the dimly lighted street, shone palely for a second
+under the corner lamp, and vanished.
+
+"Ah, child, child!" groaned the man at her side, all the tenseness gone
+from his body. He was Jones again.
+
+Still she did not speak, but stared ahead with unseeing eyes.
+
+No further reproach fell from the butler's lips. It was enough that
+God had guided him to her at the appointed moment. He felt assured
+that never again would she be drawn into any trap. Poor child! What
+had they said to her, done to her? How, in God's name, had she escaped
+from them who never let anybody escape? Presently she would become
+normal, and then she would tell him.
+
+"I found the lying note. You dropped it."
+
+"Horrible, horrible!" she said almost inaudibly.
+
+"What did they do to you?"
+
+"He said he was my father.... He put his arms around me.... And I
+knew!"
+
+"Knew what?"
+
+"That he lied. I can't explain."
+
+"Don't try!"
+
+Suddenly she laid her head against the butler's shoulder and cried. It
+was terrible to hear youth weep in this fashion. Jones put his arm
+about her and tried to console her.
+
+"Horrible!" she murmured between the violent hiccoughs. "I was wrong,
+wrong! Forgive me!"
+
+Unconsciously the arm sustaining her drew her closer.
+
+"Never mind," he consoled. "Tell no one what has happened. Go about
+as usual. Don't let even Susan know. Whatever your poor father did
+was for your sake. He wanted you to be happy, without a care in the
+world."
+
+"I promise." And gradually the sobs ceased. "But I feel so old,
+Jones, so very old. I threw over the lamp. I threw a chair through
+the window. They thought that it was I who had jumped out. That gave
+me the necessary time. I don't understand how I did it. I wasn't
+frightened at all till I gained the street."
+
+They found Susan still seated in the chair, the automatic in her lap.
+She had not moved in all this time!
+
+
+Braine paced the apartment of the Countess Perigoff. From the living
+room to the boudoir and back, fully twenty times. From the divan Olga
+watched him nervously. He was like a tiger, fresh in captivity. All
+at once he paused in front of her.
+
+"Do you realize what that mere chit did?"
+
+"I do."
+
+"Planned to the minute. We had her; seven of us; doors locked, and all
+that. No weeping, no wailing; I could not understand then, but I do
+now. It's in the blood. Hargreave was as peaceful as a St. Bernard
+dog till you cornered him, and then he was a lion. Oh, the devil!
+Slipped out of our fingers like an eel. And across the street, Jones
+in a racer! I never paid any particular attention to Jones, but from
+now on I shall. The girl may or may not know where the money is, but
+Jones does, Jones does! Two men shall watch. Felton on the street and
+Orloff from the windows of the deserted house. With opera glasses he
+will be able to take note of all that happens in the house during the
+day. He will be able to see the girl's room. And that's the important
+point. It was a good plan, little woman; and it would have been plain
+sailing if only we had remembered that the girl was Hargreave's
+daughter. Be very careful hereafter when you call on her. A night
+like this will have made her suspicious of every one. Our hope lies
+with you. Anything on your mind?"
+
+"Yes. Why not insert a personal in the _Herald_?" She drew some
+writing paper toward her and scribbled a few words.
+
+He read: "Florence--the hiding place is discovered. Remove it to a
+more secret spot at once. S.H."--He laughed and shook his head. "I'm
+afraid that will never do."
+
+[Illustration: HE READ ... FLORENCE ... THE HIDING-PLACE IS DISCOVERED]
+
+"If she reads it, Jones will. The man with the opera glasses may see
+something. There's a chance Jones might become worried."
+
+"Well, we'll give it a chance."
+
+It was midnight when he made his departure. As he stepped into the
+street, he glanced about cautiously. On the corner he saw a policeman
+swinging his night stick. Otherwise the street was deserted. Braine
+proceeded jauntily down the street.
+
+And yet, from the darkened doors of the house across the way, the
+figure of a man emerged and stood contemplating the windows of the
+Perigoff apartment. Suddenly the lights went out. The watcher made no
+effort to follow Braine. The knowledge he was after did not
+necessitate any such procedure.
+
+Of course, Florence read the "personal." She took the newspaper at
+once to Jones, who smiled grimly.
+
+"You see, I trust you."
+
+"And so long as you continue to trust me no harm will befall you. You
+were left in my care by your father. I am to guard you at the expense
+of my life. Last night's affair was a miracle. The next time you will
+not find it so easy to escape."
+
+Nor did she.
+
+"There will be no next time," gravely. "But I am going to ask you a
+direct question. Is my father alive?"
+
+The butler's brow puckered. "I have promised to say nothing, one way
+or the other."
+
+She laughed.
+
+"Why do you laugh?"
+
+"I laugh because if he were dead there would be no earthly reason for
+your not saying so at once. But I hate money, the name of it, the
+sound of it, the sight of it. It is at the bottom of all wars and
+crimes. I despise it!"
+
+"The root of all evil. Yet it performs many noble deeds. But never
+mind the money. Let us give our attention to this personal. Doubtless
+it originated in the same mind which conceived the letter. Your father
+would never have inserted such a personal. What! Give his enemies a
+chance to learn his secret? No. On the other hand, I want you to show
+this personal to all you meet to-day, Susan, the reporter, to
+everybody. Talk about it. Say that you wonder what you shall do.
+Trust no one with your real thoughts."
+
+"Not even you, Mr. Jones," thought the girl as she nodded.
+
+"And tell them that you showed it to me and that I appeared worried."
+
+That night there was a meeting of the organization called the Black
+Hundred. Braine asked if any one knew what the Hargreave butler looked
+like.
+
+[Illustration: THAT NIGHT THERE WAS A MEETING OF THE ORGANIZATION]
+
+"I had a glimpse of him the other night; but being unprepared, I might
+not recognize him again."
+
+Vroon described Jones minutely. Braine could almost see the portrait.
+
+"Vroon, that memory of yours is worth a lot of money," was his only
+comment.
+
+"I hope it will be worth more soon."
+
+"I believe I'll be able to recognize Mr. Jones if I see him. Who is he
+and what is he?"
+
+"He has been with Hargreave for fourteen years. There was a homicidal
+case in which Jones was active. Hargreave saved him. He is faithful
+and uncommunicative. Money will not touch him. If he does know where
+that million is, hot irons could not make him own up to it. The only
+way is to watch him, follow him, wait for the moment when he'll grow
+careless. No man is always on his mettle; he lets up sooner or later."
+
+"He is being watched, as you know."
+
+Vroon nodded approvingly. "The captain of the tramp steamer _Orient_,
+by the way, was seen with a roll of money. He was in one of the
+water-front saloons, bragging how he had hoodwinked some one."
+
+"Did he say where he'd got the cash?" asked Braine.
+
+"They tried to pump him on that, but he shut up. Well, we have agreed
+that Felton shall watch from the street and Orloff from the window.
+Orloff will whistle if he sees Jones removing anything from any of the
+rooms. The rest will be left to Felton."
+
+"And, Felton, my friend," said Braine softly--he always spoke softly
+when he was in a deadly humor--"Felton, you slept on duty the other
+night. Hargreave stole up, consulted Jones, and got away after
+knocking me down. The next failure will mean short shift. Be warned!"
+
+"I saw only you, sir. So help me. I was not asleep. I saw you run
+down the street after the taxicab. I did not see any one else."
+
+Braine shrugged. "Remember what I said."
+
+Felton bowed respectfully and made his exit. He wished in his soul
+that he might some day catch the master mind free of his eternal mask.
+It was an iron hand which ruled them and there were friends of his
+(Felton's) who had mysteriously vanished after a brief period of
+rebellion. The boss was a swell; probably belonged to clubs and
+society which he adroitly pilfered. The organization always had money.
+Whenever there was a desperate job to be undertaken, Vroon simply
+poured out the money necessary to promote it. Whenever Braine and
+Vroon became engaged in earnest conversation they talked Slav. Braine
+was never called by name here; the boss, simply that.
+
+Well, ten per cent. of a million was a hundred thousand. This would be
+equally divided between the second ten of the Black Hundred. Another
+ten per cent. would go to eighty members; the balance would be divided
+between Vroon and the boss. But his soul rebelled at being ordered
+about like so much dirt under another man's feet. He would take his
+ten thousand and make the grand getaway.
+
+The next afternoon the countess called upon Florence. Nothing was said
+about the adventure, and this fact created a vague unrest in the
+scheming woman's mind. She realized that she must play her cards more
+carefully than ever. Not the least distrust must be permitted to enter
+the child's head. Once that happened good-by to the wonderful
+emeralds. Was it that she really craved the stone? Was it not rather
+a venom acquired from the knowledge that this child's mother had won
+what she herself, with all her cleverness, was not sure of--Braine's
+love? Did he really care for her or was she only the cats-paw to pluck
+his hot chestnuts from the fire?
+
+When Florence showed her the "personal," her vague doubts became
+instantly dissipated. The child would not have shown her the newspaper
+had there been any distrust on her part.
+
+"My child, your father is alive, then?" animatedly.
+
+"We don't know," sadly.
+
+"Why, I should say that this proves it."
+
+"On the contrary, it proves nothing of the sort, since I have yet to
+discover a treasure in this house. I have hunted in every nook,
+drawer; I've searched for panels, looked in trunks for false bottoms.
+Nothing, nothing! Ah, if I could only find it!"
+
+"And what would you do with it?"
+
+"Take it at once to some bank and offer the whole of it for the safe
+return of my father, every penny of it. I don't know what to do, which
+way to turn," tears gathering in her eyes and they were genuine tears,
+too. "There are millions in stocks and bonds and I can not touch a
+penny of it because the legal documents have not been found. I can't
+even prove that I am his daughter, except for half an old bracelet, and
+my father's lawyers say that that would not hold in any court."
+
+"You were born in St. Petersburg, my dear. Have the embassy there look
+up the birth registers."
+
+"That would not put me into possession. Nothing but the return of my
+father will avail me. And there's a horrible thought always of my not
+being his real daughter."
+
+"There's no doubt in my mind. I have only to recall Katrina's face to
+know whose child you are. But what will you live on?" Here was a far
+greater mixup than she had calculated upon. Supposing after all it was
+only a resemblance, that the child was not Hargreave's, a substitute
+just to blind the Black Hundred? To keep them away from the true
+daughter? Her mind grew bewildered over such possibilities. The
+single and only way to settle all doubts was to make this child a
+prisoner. If she was Hargreave's true daughter he would come out of
+his hiding.
+
+She heard Florence answering her question: "There is a sum of ten or
+twelve thousand in the Riverdale bank, under the control of my father's
+butler. After that is gone, I don't know what will happen to us, Susan
+and me."
+
+"The door of Miss Farlow's will always be open to you, Florence,"
+replied Susan, with love in her eyes.
+
+This interesting conversation was interrupted by the advent of Norton.
+He was always dropping in during the late afternoon hours. Florence
+liked him for two reasons. One was that Jones trusted him to a certain
+extent and the other was that ... that she liked him. She finished
+this sentence in her heart defiantly.
+
+To-day he brought her a box of beautiful roses, and at the sight of
+them the countess smiled faintly. Set the wind in that quarter? She
+could have laughed. Here was her revenge against this meddler who took
+no particular notice of her while Florence was in the room. She would
+encourage him, poor grubbing newspaper writer, with his beggarly
+pittance! What chance had he of marrying this girl with millions
+within reach of her hand?
+
+The peculiar thing about this was that Norton was entertaining the same
+thought at the same time: what earthly chance had he?
+
+In the second-story window of the house over the way there was a
+worried man. But when his glasses brought in range the true contents
+of the box he laughed sardonically. "This watching is getting my goat.
+I smell a rat every time I see a shadow." He wiped the lenses of his
+opera glasses and proceeded to roll a cigarette.
+
+When the countess and Norton went away Jones stole quietly up to
+Florence's room and threw up the curtain. Two round points of light
+flashed from the watcher's window, but the saturnine smile on Jones'
+lips was not observed. He went to the door, opened it cautiously, a
+hand to his ear. Then he closed the door, turned back the rug and
+removed a section of the flooring. Out of this cavity he raised a box.
+There was lettering on the lid; in fact, the name of its owner, Stanley
+Hargreave. Jones replaced the flooring, tucked the box under his arm
+and made his exit.
+
+The man lounging in the shadow heard a faint whistle. It was the
+signal agreed upon. The man Felton ran across the street and boldly
+rang the bell. It was only then that Florence missed the ever present
+butler. She hesitated, then sent Susan to the door.
+
+"I must see Mr. Jones upon vitally important business."
+
+"He has gone out," said Susan, and very sensibly closed the door before
+Felton's foot succeeded in getting inside.
+
+It was time to act. He ran around to the rear. The ladder convinced
+him that Jones had tricked him. He was wild with rage. He was over
+the wall in an instant. Away down the back street his eye discovered
+his man in full flight. He gave chase. As he came to the first corner
+he was nearly knocked over by a man coming the other way.
+
+"Who are you bumping into?" growled Felton.
+
+"Not so fast, Felton!"
+
+"Who the devil are you?"
+
+The stranger made a sign which Felton instantly recognized.
+
+"Quick! What has happened?"
+
+"Jones has the million and is making his getaway. See him hiking
+toward the water front?"
+
+The two men began to run.
+
+There followed a thrilling chase. Jones engaged a motorboat and it was
+speeding seaward when the two pursuers arrived. They were not laggard.
+There was another boat and they made for it.
+
+[Illustration: JONES ENGAGED A MOTOR BOAT]
+
+"A hundred if you overtake that boat," said Felton's strange companion.
+
+Felton eyed him thoughtfully. There was something familiar about that
+voice.
+
+Great plumes of water shot up into the air. It did not prove a short
+race by any means. It took half an hour for the pursuer to overhaul
+the pursued.
+
+"Is that Jones?"
+
+"Yes." Felton fired his revolver into the air in hopes of terrifying
+Jones' engineer; but there was five hundred dangling before that
+individual's eyes.
+
+"Let them get a little nearer," shouted the butler.
+
+The engineer let down the speed a notch. The other boat crept up
+within twenty yards. Jones sought a perfect range. He would have to
+find this spot again.
+
+"Surrender!" yelled Felton.
+
+In reply Jones raised the precious box and deliberately dropped it into
+the sea. Then he turned his automatic upon his pursuers and succeeded
+in setting their boat afire.
+
+All this within the space of an hour. During dinner that night (there
+was now a cook) Jones walked about the dining-table, rubbing his hands
+together from time to time.
+
+"Jones," said Florence, "why do you rub your hands like that?"
+
+"Was I rubbing my hands, Miss Florence?" he asked innocently.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+"Did you get the range?" asked the countess, when that night Braine
+recounted his adventure.
+
+"Range!" he snarled. "My girl, haven't I just told you that I had to
+fight for my life? My boat was in flames. We had to swim for it till
+we were picked up by a Long Island barge tug. I don't know what became
+of the motorman. He must have headed straight for shore. And I'm glad
+he did. Otherwise he'd be howling for the price of another boat.
+Olga, for the first time I've had to let one of the boys have a look at
+my face. Doesn't know the name; but one of these days he'll stumble
+across it, and the result will be blackmail, unless I push him off into
+the dark. It was accidental."
+
+The countess leaned forward, her hands tightly clinched.
+
+"But the box!"
+
+Braine made a gesture of despair.
+
+"Leo, are you using any drug these days?"
+
+[Illustration: "LEO, ARE YOU USING ANY DRUGS THESE DAYS?"]
+
+"Don't make fun of me, Olga," impatiently. "Did you ever see me drink
+more than a pint of wine or smoke more than two cigars in an evening?
+Poor fools! What! Let my brain go into the wastebasket for the sake
+of an hour or so of exhilaration? No, and never will I! I'm keen
+about the gray matter I've got, and by the Lord Harry, I'm going to
+keep it. There's only one dope fiend in the Hundred, and he's one of
+the best decoys we have; so we let him have his coke whenever he really
+needs it. But this man Felton has seen my face. Some day he'll see it
+again, ask questions, and then..."
+
+"Then what?"
+
+"A burial at sea," he laughed. The laughter died swiftly as it came.
+"Threw it into eight hundred feet of water, on a bar where the sands
+are always shifting. He'll never find it, even if he took the range.
+He could not have got a decent one. The sun was dropping and the
+shadows were long. He threw the chest into the water and then began
+pegging away at us, cool as you please, and fired our tank."
+
+"It looks to me as if he had wasted his time."
+
+"That depends. Between you and me and the gatepost, I've a sneaking
+idea that this man Jones, whom nobody has given any particular
+attention, is a deep, clever man. He may have been honestly attempting
+to find a new hiding place; the advertisement in the newspaper may have
+drawn him. He may have thrown the box over in pure rage at seeing
+himself checkmated. Again, the whole thing may have been worked up for
+our benefit, a blind. But if that's the case, Jones has us on the hip,
+for we can't tell. But we can do what in all probability he expects
+we'll cease to do--watch him just as shrewdly as before."
+
+Olga caught his hand and drew him down beside her. "I wasn't going to
+bother you to-night, but it may mean something vital."
+
+"What?" alertly.
+
+For reply she rose and walked over to the light button. She pressed it
+and the apartment became dark.
+
+"Come over to the window, quick!" She dragged him across the room.
+"Over the way, the house with the marble frontage."
+
+A man emerged, lit a cigarette, and walked leisurely down the street.
+
+"No!" she cried, as Braine turned to make for the door doubtless with
+the intention of finding out who the man was. "Every night after you
+leave he appears."
+
+"Does he follow me?"
+
+"No. And that's what bothered me at first. I believed he was watching
+some apartment above. But regularly when I turn out the lights he
+comes forth. So there's no doubt he watches you enter and takes note
+of your departure."
+
+"But doesn't follow me. That's odd. What the devil is his idea?"
+
+"I'd give a good deal to learn."
+
+The shadow and the glowing cigarette disappeared around the corner, and
+the lights in the apartment were turned on again.
+
+"He's gone. You really think he's watching me?"
+
+"He is watching this apartment, I know that much."
+
+And even at that moment the watcher was watching from his vantage
+behind the corner.
+
+"Suspicious!" he murmured, tossing the cigarette into the gutter.
+"They're watching me for a change. I'll drop out. I know what I know.
+It's a great world. It's fine to be alive and kicking on top of it."
+He went on without haste and took the subway train for down-town.
+
+"Is there any way I could get near him?" asked Braine.
+
+"To-morrow night you might leave by the janitor's entrance. I'll keep
+the lights on till you're outside. Then I'll turn them off and you can
+follow and learn who he is."
+
+"It's mighty important."
+
+"Don't scowl. At your age a wrinkle is apt to remain it you once get
+it started."
+
+He laughed. "Wrinkles!" She could talk of wrinkles!
+
+"They are more important than you think. Every morning I rub out the
+wrinkle I go to bed with."
+
+"I wish you could rub out the general stupidity which is wrinkling my
+brain. I've made three moves and failed in each. What's come over me?"
+
+"Perhaps you've had too many successes. The wheel of chance is always
+turning around."
+
+"May I smoke?"
+
+"Thanks. At least it proves you still have some consideration for me.
+You would smoke whether it was agreeable or not. But I like the odor
+of a good cigar. And it always helps you to think."
+
+Braine lighted his cigar and began his customary pacing. At length he
+paused.
+
+"Suppose we have a real old-fashioned coaching party out to the old
+mansion we know about?"
+
+"And what shall we do there?"
+
+"Make the mansion, an enchanted castle where sometimes people who enter
+can't get out. Do you think you could get her to go?"
+
+"I can try."
+
+"Olga, I must have that girl; and I must have her soon. Sometimes I
+find myself mightily puzzled over the whole thing. If Hargreave is
+alive, why doesn't he turn up now that it's practically known that his
+daughter presides over his household? I might understand it if I
+didn't know that Hargreave is really afraid of nothing. Where is the
+man with the five thousand, picked up at sea? What was the reason for
+Jones carrying that box out in broad daylight? Who is the chap
+watching across the street? Sometimes I believe in my soul--if I have
+one!--that Hargreave is playing with us, playing! Well," flinging the
+half consumed cigar into the grate, "the Black Hundred always goes
+forward, win or lose, and never forgets."
+
+"We are a fine pair!" said the woman bitterly.
+
+"We are exactly what fate intended us to be. They wrote you down in
+the book as a beautiful body with a crooked mind. They wrote me down
+as the devil, doomed to roam the earth's top till I'm killed."
+
+"Killed?"
+
+"Why, yes. I'm not the kind of chap who dies in bed, surrounded by the
+weeping members of the family, doctor, nurse, and priest. I'm a
+scoundrel; but it has this saving grace, I enjoy being the scoundrel.
+Now, I'm going up to the club. There's nothing like a game of
+billiards or chess to smooth that wrinkle which seems to worry you."
+
+In the great newspaper office there was a mighty racket. Midnight
+always means pandemonium in the city room of a metropolitan daily.
+Copy boys were rushing to and fro, messengers and printers with sticky
+galleys in their hands; reporters were banging away at their
+typewriters, and intermingling you could hear the ceaseless
+clickety-click from the telegraph room.
+
+The managing editor came out of his office and approached the desk of
+the night city editor.
+
+"Editorial page gone down?"
+
+"Twenty minutes ago," said the night city editor.
+
+"I wanted a stick on that Panama rumpus."
+
+"Too late."
+
+"Where's Jim Norton?"
+
+"At the chamber of commerce banquet. The major is going to throw a
+bomb into the enemy's camp."
+
+"Nothing on the Hargreave stuff?"
+
+"No. Guess I'd better put that in the cubbyhole. He's dead."
+
+"No will found yet?"
+
+"Not a piece as big as a postage stamp."
+
+"That will leave the girl in a tough place. No will, no birth
+certificate; and, worst of all, no photograph of the old man himself.
+I don't see why Jim sidestepped this affair. He is the only man in
+town who knew anything about Hargreave."
+
+"He hasn't given it up; but he wants to cover it on his own, turn the
+yarn over when he's got it, no false alarms."
+
+"Ah! So that's the game?"
+
+"Yes; and Jim is the sort every paper needs. When the time comes the
+story turns up, if there is one. Here he is now. Looks like an actor
+in the fourth act of a drama. Good-looking chap, though."
+
+Norton came in through the outer gates. He was in evening clothes, top
+hat. A dead cigarette dangled between his lips.
+
+"How much do you want?" asked the night city editor.
+
+"Column and a half."
+
+"Off with your glad rags!"
+
+"Anything good?" asked the managing editor.
+
+"The lid has been jammed on tight. No wine in any restaurant after one
+o'clock. There'll be a roundup of every gunman in town."
+
+"Good work! Go to it."
+
+It was one o'clock when Norton turned in his last sheet of copy and
+started for home. Just outside the entrance to the building a man with
+a slouch hat drawn down over his eyes stepped forward.
+
+"Mr. Norton?"
+
+"Yes." Norton stepped back suspiciously.
+
+The other chuckled, raised and lowered his hat swiftly.
+
+"Good lord!" murmured the reporter.
+
+"Will you take a ride with me in a taxi?"
+
+"All the way to Syracuse, if you say so. Well, I'll be tinker d--d!"
+
+"No names, please!"
+
+What took place in that taxicab was never generally known. But at ten
+o'clock the next morning Norton surprised the elevator boy by going
+out. Norton proceeded down-town to the national bank, where he
+deposited $5,000 in bills of large denominations. The teller had some
+difficulty in counting them. They stuck together and retained the
+sodden appearance of money recently submerged in water.
+
+
+Florence was delighted at the idea of a coaching party. Often during
+her schoolgirl days she had seen the fashionable coaches go careening
+along the road, with the sharp, clear note of the bugle rising above
+the thunder of hoofs and rattling of wheels. Jones was not
+enthusiastic; neither was he a killjoy.
+
+"But you are to go along, too," said Florence.
+
+"I, Miss Florence?"
+
+"The countess invited you especially. You will go with a hamper."
+
+"Ah, in my capacity as butler; very good, Miss Florence." To her he
+gave no sign of his secret great satisfaction.
+
+The hour arrived, and the gay party bowled away. They wound in and out
+of the streets toward the country to the crack of the whip and the
+blare of the horn. Florence's enjoyment would have been perfect had it
+not been for the absence of Norton. Why hadn't he been invited? She
+did not ask because she did not care to disclose to the countess her
+interest in the reporter. They were nearing the limits of the city,
+when the coach was forced to take a sharp turn to avoid an automobile
+in trouble. The man puttering at the engine raised his head. It was
+Norton, and Florence waved her hand vigorously.
+
+"A coaching party," he murmured; "and your Uncle James was not invited!
+Oh, very well!" He laughed, and suddenly grew serious. It would not
+hurt to find out where that coach was going.
+
+He set to work savagely, located the trouble, righted it, and set off
+for the Hargreave home. He found Susan and bombarded her with
+questions which to Susan came with the rapidity of rain upon the roof.
+
+"So Jones went along?"
+
+"In his capacity of butler only."
+
+Norton smiled. "Well, I'll take a jaunt out there myself. You are
+sure of the location?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, good-by. I'll go as a waiter, since they wouldn't invite me.
+I'm one of the best little waiters you ever heard of; and all things
+come to him who waits."
+
+What a pleasant, affable young man he was! thought Susan as she watched
+him jump into the car and go flying up the street.
+
+Jones was a good deal surprised when Norton turned up at the old
+Chilton manor.
+
+"What made you come here dressed like this?" the butler demanded.
+
+"I'm a suspicious duffer; maybe that's the reason."
+
+"Do you know anything?"
+
+"Well, no; I can't say that I do. But, hang it, I just had to come out
+here."
+
+"Maybe it's just as well you did," said Jones moodily.
+
+"I know this place. The housekeeper used to be my nurse, and if she is
+still on the job she may be of service to us. You don't think they'll
+question or recognize me?"
+
+"Hardly. I'll put in a word for you. I'll say I sent for you, not
+knowing if we had enough servants to take care of the luncheon."
+
+"And now I'll go and hunt up Meg."
+
+Sure enough, his old nurse was still in charge of the house; and when
+her "baby" disclosed his identity she all but fell upon his neck.
+
+"But what are you doing here, dressed up as a waiter?"
+
+"It's a little secret, Meg. I wasn't invited, and the truth is I'm
+very desperately in love with the young lady in whose honor this
+coaching party is being given. And ... maybe she's in danger."
+
+"Danger? What about?"
+
+"The Lord only knows. But show me about the house. I've not been here
+in so long I've forgotten the run of it. I remember one room with the
+secret panel and another with a painting that turned. Have they
+changed them?"
+
+"No; it is just the same here as it used to be. Come along and I'll
+show you."
+
+Norton inspected the rooms carefully, stowing away in his mind every
+detail. He might be worrying about nothing; but so many strange things
+had happened that it was better to be on the side of caution than on
+the side of carelessness. He left the house and ran across Jones
+carrying a basket of wine.
+
+"Here, Norton; take this to the party. I want to reconnoiter."
+
+"All right, m'lud! Say, Jones, how much do you think I'd earn at this
+job?" comically.
+
+"Get along with you, Mr. Norton. It may be the time to laugh, and then
+it may not."
+
+"I'm going back into the house and hide behind a secret panel. I've
+got my revolver. You go to the stables and take a try at my car; see
+if she works smoothly. We may have to do some hiking. Where is the
+countess in this?"
+
+"Leave that to me, Mr. Norton," said the butler with his grim smile.
+"Be off; they are moving back toward the house."
+
+So Norton carried the basket around to the lawn, where it was taken
+from his hands by the regular servant. He sighed as he saw Florence,
+laughing and chatting with a man who was a stranger and whom he heard
+addressed as count. Some friend of the countess, no doubt. Where was
+all this tangle going to end? He wished he knew. And what a yarn he
+was going to write some day! It would read like one of Gaboriau's
+tales. He turned away to wander idly about the grounds, when beyond a
+clump of cedars he saw three or four men conversing slowly. He got as
+near as possible, for when three or four men put their heads together
+and whisper animatedly, it usually means a poker game or something
+worse. He caught a phrase or two as they came down the wind, and then
+he knew that the vague suspicion that had brought him out here had been
+set in motion by fate. He heard "Florence" and "the old drawing room;"
+and that was enough.
+
+He scurried about for Jones. It was pure luck that he had had old Meg
+show him through the house, otherwise he would have forgotten all about
+the secret panel in the wall and the painting. Jones shrugged
+resignedly. Were these men of the countess' party? Norton couldn't
+say.
+
+[Illustration: THE SECRET PANEL]
+
+Norton made his hiding place in safety; and by and by he could hear the
+guests moving about in the room. Then all sounds ceased for a while.
+A door closed sharply.
+
+"No; here you must stay, young lady," said a man's voice.
+
+"What do you mean, sir?" demanded the beloved voice.
+
+"It means that no one will return to this room and that you will not be
+missed until it is too late."
+
+The sound of voices stopped abruptly, and something like scuffling
+ensued. Later Norton heard the back of a chair strike the panel and
+some one sat heavily upon it. He waited perhaps five minutes; then he
+gently slid back the panel. Florence sat bound and gagged under his
+very eyes. It was but the work of a moment to liberate her.
+
+"It is I, Jim. Do not speak or make the least noise. Follow me."
+
+Greatly astonished, Florence obeyed; and the panel slipped back into
+place. The room behind the secret panel had barred windows. To
+Florence it appeared to be a real prison.
+
+"How did you get here?" she asked breathlessly.
+
+"Something told me to follow you. And something is always going to
+tell me to follow you, Florence."
+
+She pressed his hand. It was to her as if one of those book heroes had
+stepped out of a book; only book heroes always had tremendous fortunes
+and did not have to work for a living. Oddly enough, she was not
+afraid.
+
+"Who was the man?" he asked.
+
+"The Count Norfeldt. Some one has imposed upon the countess."
+
+"Do you think so?" with a strange look in his eyes.
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"Nothing just now. The idea is to get out of here just as quickly as
+we can. See this painting?" He touched a spot in the wall and the
+painting slowly swung out like a door. "Come; we make our escape to
+the side lawn from here."
+
+At the stable they were confronted with the knowledge that Norton's car
+was out of commission; Jones could do nothing with it. Then Norton
+suggested that he make an effort to commandeer the limousine of the
+countess; but there were men about, so the limousine was out of the
+question.
+
+"Horses!" whispered Jones. "There are several saddle horses, already
+saddled. How about these people, the owners?"
+
+"Oh, they are beyond reproach. They have doubtless been imposed upon.
+But let us get aboard first. There will be time to talk later. I'll
+have to do some explaining, taking these nags off like this. We won't
+have to ride out in front where the picnickers are. There's a lane
+back of the stable, and a slight detour brings us back into the main
+road."
+
+The three mounted and clattered away. To Florence it had the air of a
+prank. She was beginning to have such confidence in these two
+inventive men that she felt as if she was never going to be afraid any
+more.
+
+When the Countess Olga saw the three horses it was an effort not to fly
+into a rage. But secretly she warned her people, who presently gave
+chase in the limousine, while she prattled and jested and laughed with
+her company, who were quite unaware that a drama was being enacted
+right under their very noses. The countess, while she acted superbly,
+tore her handkerchief into shreds. There was something sinister in the
+way all their plans fell through at the very moment of consummation;
+and that night she determined to ask Braine to withdraw from this
+warfare, which gradually decimated their numbers without getting
+anywhere toward the goal.
+
+Jones shouted that the limousine was tearing down the road. Something
+must be done to stop it. He suggested that he drop behind, leave his
+horse, and take a chance at potting a tire from the shrubbery at the
+roadside.
+
+"Keep going. Don't stop, Norton, till you are back in town. I'll
+manage to take good care of myself."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+When all three finally met at the Hargreave home Florence suddenly took
+Jones by the shoulders and kissed him lightly on the cheek. Jones
+started back, pale and disturbed.
+
+Norton laughed. He did not feel the slightest twinge of jealousy, but
+he was eaten up with envy, as the old wives say.
+
+"You are wondering if I suspect the Countess Perigoff?" said Jones.
+
+"I am." This man Jones was developing into a very remarkable
+character. The reporter found himself side glancing at the thin, keen
+face of this resourceful butler. The lobe of the man's left ear came
+within range. Norton reached for a cigarette, but his hands shook as
+he lit it. There was a peculiar little scar in the center of the lobe.
+
+"Well," said Jones, "I can find no evidence that she has been concerned
+in any of these affairs."
+
+"You are suspicious?"
+
+"Of everybody," looking boldly into the reporter's eyes.
+
+"Of me?" smiling.
+
+"Even of myself sometimes."
+
+Conversation dropped entirely after this declaration.
+
+"You're a taciturn sort of chap."
+
+"Am I?"
+
+"You are. But an agreement is an agreement, and while I'd like to
+print this story, I'll not. We newspaper men seldom break our word."
+
+Jones held out his hand.
+
+"Sometimes I wish I'd started life right," said the reporter gloomily.
+"A newspaper man is generally improvident. He never looks ahead for
+to-morrow. What with my special articles to the magazines, I earn
+between four and five thousand the year; and I've never been able to
+save a cent."
+
+"Perhaps you've never really tried," replied Jones, with a glance at
+his companion. It was a good face, strong in outline; a little
+careworn, perhaps, but free from any indications of dissipation. "If I
+had begun life as you did, I'd have made real and solid use of the
+great men I met. I'd have made financiers help me to invest my
+earnings, or savings, little as they might be. And to-day I'd be
+living on the income."
+
+"You never can tell. Perhaps a woman might have made you think of
+those things; but if you had remained unattached up to thirty-one, as I
+have, the thought of saving might never have entered your head. A man
+in my present condition, financially, has no right to think of
+matrimony."
+
+"It might be the saving of you if you met and married the right woman."
+
+"But the right woman might be heiress to millions. And a poor devil
+like me could not marry a girl with money and hang on to his
+self-respect."
+
+"True. But there are always exceptions to all rules in life, except
+those regarding health. A healthy man is a normal man, and a normal
+man has no right to remain single. You proved yourself a man this
+afternoon, considering that you did not know I occupied the wheel seat.
+Come to think it over, you really saved the day. You gave me the
+opportunity of steering straight for the police station. Well,
+good-by."
+
+"Queer duck!" mused the reporter as, after telephoning, he headed for
+his office. Queer duck, indeed! What a game it was going to be! And
+this man Jones was playing it like a master. It did not matter that
+some one else laid down the rules; it was the way in which they were
+interpreted.
+
+Braine heard of the failure. The Black Hundred was finding its stock
+far below par value. Four valuable men locked up in the Tombs awaiting
+trial, to say nothing of the seven gunmen gathered in at the old
+warehouse. Braine began to suspect that his failures were less due to
+chance than to calculation, that at last he had encountered a mind
+which anticipated his every move. He would have recognized this fact
+earlier had it not been that revenge had temporarily blinded him. The
+spirit of revenge never makes for mental clarity.
+
+There was a meeting that night of the Black Hundred. Four men were
+told off, and they drew their chairs up to Vroon's table for
+instructions. Braine sat at Vroon's elbow. These four men composed
+the most dangerous quartet in New York City. They were as daring as
+they were desperate. They were the men who held up bank messengers and
+got away with thousands. They had learned to swoop down upon their
+victims as the hawk swoops down upon the heron. The newspapers
+referred to them as the "auto bandits," and the men took a deal of
+pride in the furore they had created.
+
+[Illustration: FOUR MEN WERE TOLD OFF]
+
+Vroon went over the Hargreave case minutely; he left no detail
+unexplained. Bluntly and frankly, the daughter of Stanley Hargreave
+must be caught and turned over to the care of the Black Hundred. It
+must be quick action. Four valuable members were in the Tombs. They
+might or might not weaken under pressure. For the first time in its
+American career the organization stood facing actual peril; and its one
+possible chance of salvation lay in the fact that no one's face was
+known to his neighbor. He, Vroon, and the boss alone knew who and what
+each man was. But the plans, the ramifications of the organization
+might become public property; and that would mean an end to an
+exceedingly profitable business.
+
+The daughter of Hargreave rode horseback early every morning. She
+sought the country road. She was invariably attended by the riding
+master of a school near by.
+
+"You four will make your own plans."
+
+"If she should be injured?"
+
+"Avoid it if possible."
+
+"We have a free hand?"
+
+"Absolutely."
+
+"We risk a bad fall from her horse if it's a spirited one."
+
+"Pretend a breakdown in the road," interpolated Braine. "As they
+approach, draw and order them to dismount. That method will prevent
+any accident."
+
+"We'll plan it somehow. It looks easy."
+
+"Nothing is easy where that girl is concerned. A thousand eyes seem to
+be watching her slightest move."
+
+"We shan't leave anything to chance. How many days will you give us?"
+
+"Seven. A failure, mind you, will prove unhealthy to all concerned,"
+with a menace which made the four stir uneasily.
+
+The telephone rang. Braine reached for the receiver.
+
+"A man just entered the Hargreave house at the rear. Come at once,"
+was the message.
+
+"Is your car outside?" Braine asked.
+
+"We are never without it."
+
+"Then let us be off. No one will stop us for speeding on a side
+street."
+
+Fourteen minutes by the clock brought the car to a stand at the curb a
+few houses below the Hargreave home. The men got out. The watcher ran
+up.
+
+"He is still inside," he whispered.
+
+"Good! Spread out. If any one leaves that house, catch him. If he
+runs too fast, shoot. We can beat the police."
+
+The man obeyed, and the watcher ran back to his post. He was
+desperately hoping the affair would terminate to-night. He was growing
+weary of this eternal vigilance; and it was only his fear of the man
+known as the boss that kept him at his post. He wanted a night to
+carouse in, to be with the boys.
+
+The man for whom they were lying in wait was seen presently to creep
+cautiously round the side of the house. He hugged a corner and paused.
+They could see the dim outline of his body. The light in the street
+back of the grounds almost made a silhouette of him. By and by, as if
+assured that the coast was clear, he stole down to the street.
+
+"Halt!"
+
+Instantly the prowler took to his heels. Two shots rang out. The man
+was seen to stop, stagger, and then go on desperately.
+
+"He's hit!"
+
+By the time the men reached the corner they heard the rumble of a
+motor. One dashed back to the car they had left standing at the curb.
+He made quick work of the job, but he was not quick enough. Still,
+they gave chase. They saw the car turn toward the city. But,
+unfortunately for the success of the chase, several automobiles passed,
+going into town and leaving it. Checkmate.
+
+Braine was keen enough to-night.
+
+"He is hit; whether badly or not remains to be seen. We can find that
+out. Drive to the nearest drug store and get a list of hospitals.
+It's a ten to one shot that we land him somewhere among the hospitals."
+
+But they searched the hospitals in vain. None of them had that night
+received a shooting case, nor had they heard one reported. The man had
+been unmistakably hit. He would not have dared risk the loss of time
+for a bit of play-acting. Evidently he had kept his head and sought
+his lodgings. To call up doctors would be utter folly; for it would
+take a week for a thorough combing. This was the second time the man
+had got away.
+
+"Perhaps I'm to blame," admitted Braine. "I should have advised Miles
+to stalk him and pot him if he got the chance. There's a master mind
+working somewhere back of all this, and it's time I woke up to the
+fact. But you," turning to the auto bandits, "you men have your
+instructions. More than that, you have been given a free rein. See
+that you make good, or by the Lord Harry! I'll break the four of you
+like pipestems."
+
+"We haven't had a failure yet," spoke up one of the men, more
+courageous than his companions.
+
+"You are not holding up a bank messenger this trip. Remember that.
+Drive me as far as Columbus Circle. Leave me on the side street,
+between the lights, so I can take off this mask."
+
+Later Braine sauntered into Pabst's and ordered a light supper. This
+night's work, more than anything else, brought home to him the fact
+that his luck was changing. For years he had proceeded with his shady
+occupations without encountering any memorable failure. He moved in
+the high world, quite unsuspected. He had written books, given
+lectures, been made a lion of, all the while laughing in his sleeve at
+the gullibility of human nature. But within the last two weeks he had
+received serious checks. From now on he must move with the utmost
+caution. Some one was playing his own game, waging warfare unseen. A
+battle of wits? So be it; but Braine intended to play with rough wits,
+and he wasn't going to care which way the sword cut.
+
+He hated Stanley Hargreave with all the hatred of his soul; the hatred
+of a man balked in love. And the man was alive, defying him; alive
+somewhere in this city this very night, with a bullet under his skin.
+
+"Is everything satisfactory, sir?" he heard the head waiter say.
+
+"Satisfactory?" Braine repeated blankly.
+
+"Yes, sir. You struck the table as though displeased."
+
+"Oh!" Then Braine laughed relievedly. "If I struck the table, it was
+done unconsciously. I was thinking."
+
+"Beg pardon, sir. Anything else, sir?"
+
+"No. Bring me the check."
+
+
+"Your master gives riding lessons?"
+
+The groom who had led the horse back from Hargreave's eyed his
+questioner rather superciliously.
+
+"Yes." The groom fondled the animal's legs.
+
+"How much is it?"
+
+"Twenty dollars for a ticket of five rides. The master is the fashion
+up here. He doesn't cater to any but the best families."
+
+"Pretty steep. Who was that young lady riding this morning with your
+master?"
+
+"That's the girl all the newspapers have been talking about," answered
+the groom importantly.
+
+"Actress?"
+
+"Actress! I should say not. That young woman is the daughter of
+Stanley Hargreave, the millionaire who was lost at sea. And it won't
+be long before she puts her finger in a pie of four or five millions.
+If you want any rides, you'll have to talk it over with the boss. He
+may or may not take any more rides. You'd probably have to ride in the
+afternoon, anyhow, as every nag is out in the morning."
+
+"Where's the most popular road?"
+
+"Toward the park; but Miss Hargreave always goes along the riverside
+road. She doesn't like strangers about."
+
+"Oh, I see. Well, I'll drop in this afternoon and see your master.
+They say that riding is good for a torpid liver. Have a cigar?"
+
+"Thanks."
+
+The groom proceeded into the stables and the affable stranger took
+himself off.
+
+A free rein; they could work it to suit themselves. There wasn't the
+least obstacle in the way. On the face of it, it appeared to be the
+simplest job they had yet undertaken. To get rid of the riding master
+in some natural way after he and the girl had started. It was like
+falling off a log.
+
+"Susan," said Florence, as she came into breakfast after her
+exhilarating ride, "did you hear pistol shots last night?"
+
+"I heard some noise, but I was so sleepy I didn't try to figure out
+what it was."
+
+"Did you, Jones?"
+
+"Yes, Miss Florence. The shots came from the street. A policeman came
+running up later and said he saw two automobiles on the run. But
+evidently there wasn't anybody hurt. One has to be careful at night
+nowadays. There are pretty bad men abroad. Did you enjoy the ride?"
+
+"Very much. But there were some spots of blood on the walk near the
+corner."
+
+"Blood?" Jones caught the back of a chair to steady himself.
+
+"Yes. So some one was hurt. Oh, let's leave this place!" impulsively.
+"Let us go back to Miss Farlow's. You could find a place in the
+village, Jones. But if I stay here much longer in this state of unrest
+I shall lose faith in everything and everybody. Whoever my father's
+enemies are, they do not lack persistence. They have made two attempts
+against my liberty, and sooner or later they will succeed. I keep
+looking over my shoulder all the time. If I hear a noise I jump."
+
+"Miss Florence, if I thought it wise, you should be packed off to Miss
+Farlow's this minute. But not an hour of the day or night passes
+without this house being watched. I seldom see anybody about. I can
+only sense the presence of a watcher. At Miss Farlow's you would be
+far more like a prisoner than here. I could not accompany you. I am
+forbidden to desert this house."
+
+"My father's orders?"
+
+Jones signified neither one way nor the other. He merely gazed
+stolidly at the rug.
+
+"That blood!" She sprang from her chair, horrified. "It was his! He
+was here last night and they shot him! Oh!"
+
+"There, there, Miss Florence! The man was only slightly wounded. He's
+where they never will look for him." Then Jones continued, as with an
+effort: "Trust me, Miss Florence. It would not pay to run away. The
+whole affair would be repeated elsewhere. We might go to the other end
+of the world, but it would not serve us in the least. It is not a
+question of escape, but of who shall vanquish the other. There is
+nothing to do but remain here and fight, fight, fight. We have put
+four of them in the Tombs, to say nothing of the gunmen. That is what
+we must do--put them in a safe place, one by one, till we reach the
+master. Then only may we breathe in safety. But if they watch, so do
+we. There is never a moment when help is not within reach, no matter
+where you go. So long as you do not deceive me, no real harm shall
+befall you. Don't cry. Be your father's daughter, as I am his
+servant."
+
+"I am very unhappy!" And Florence threw her arms around Susan and laid
+her head upon her friend's shoulder.
+
+"Poor child!" Susan, however, recognized the wisdom of Jones'
+statements. They were safest here.
+
+The morning rides continued. To the girl, who loved the open, it was
+glorious fun. Those mad gallops along the roads, the smell of earth
+and sea, the tingle in the blood, were the second best moments of the
+day. The first? She invariably blushed when she considered what these
+first best moments were. He was a brave young man, good to look at,
+witty, and always cheerful. Why shouldn't she like him? Even Jones
+liked him--Jones, who didn't seem to like anybody. It did not matter
+whether he was wise or not; a worldly point of view was farthest from
+her youthful thoughts. It was her own affair; her own heart.
+
+Five days later, as she and the riding master were cantering along the
+road, enjoying every bit of it, they heard the beat of hoofs behind.
+They drew up and turned. A rider was approaching them at a run. It
+was the head groom. The man stopped his horse in a cloud of dust.
+
+"Sir, the stables are on fire."
+
+"Fire?"
+
+All the riding master's savings were invested in the stables. The fact
+that he had solemnly promised never to leave Florence alone, and that
+he had accepted a generous bonus slipped from his mind at the thought
+of fire, a terrible word to any horseman. He wheeled and started off
+at breakneck speed, his head groom clattering behind him.
+
+Florence naturally wondered which of two courses to pursue: follow
+them, when she would be perfectly helpless to aid them, or continue the
+ride and save at least one horse from the terror of seeing flames. She
+chose the latter. But she did not ride with the earlier zest. She
+felt depressed. She loved horses, and the thought of them dying in
+those wooden stables was horrifying.
+
+The fire, however, proved to be incipient. But it was plainly
+incendiary. Some one had set fire to the stables with a purpose in
+view. Norton recognized this fact almost as soon as the firemen. He
+had come this morning with the idea of surprising Florence. He was
+going out on horseback to join her.
+
+His spine grew suddenly cold. A trap! She had been left alone on the
+road! He ran over to the garage, secured a car, and went humming out
+toward the river road. A trap, and only by the sheerest luck had he
+turned up in time.
+
+Meantime Florence was walking her mount slowly. For once the scenery
+passed unobserved. She was deeply engrossed with thoughts, some of
+which were happy and some of which were sad. If only her father could
+be with her she would be the happiest girl alive.
+
+She was brought out of her revery by the sight of a man staggering
+along the road ahead of her. Finally he plunged upon his face in the
+road. Like the tender-hearted girl she was, she stopped, dismounted,
+and ran to the fallen man to give him aid. She suddenly found her
+wrists clasped in two hands like iron. The man rose to his feet,
+smiling evilly. She struggled wildly but futilely.
+
+"Better be sensible," he said. "I am stronger than you are. And I
+don't wish to hurt you. Walk on ahead of me. It will be utterly
+useless to scream or cry out. You can see for yourself that we are in
+a deserted part of the road. If you will promise to act sensibly I
+shan't lay a hand on you. Do you see that hut yonder, near the fork in
+the road? We'll stop there. Now, march!"
+
+[Illustration: "BETTER BE SENSIBLE," HE SAID]
+
+She dropped her handkerchief, later her bracelet, and finally her crop,
+in hope that these slight clues might bring her help. She knew that
+Jones would hear of the fire, and, finding that she had not returned
+with the riding master, would immediately start out in pursuit. She
+was beginning to grow very fond of Jones, who never spoke unless spoken
+to, who was always at hand, faithful and loyal.
+
+From afar came the low rumble of a motor. She wondered if her captor
+heard it. He did, but his ears tricked him into believing that it came
+from another direction. Eventually they arrived at the hut, and
+Florence was forced to enter. The man locked the door and waited
+outside for the automobile which he was expecting. He was rather
+dumfounded when he saw that it was coming from the city, not going
+toward it.
+
+It was Norton. The riderless horse told him enough; the handkerchief
+and bracelet and crop led him straight for the hut.
+
+The man before the hut realized by this time that he had made a
+mistake. He attempted to re-enter the hut and prepare to defend it
+till his companions hove in sight. But Florence, recognizing Norton,
+held the door with all her strength. The man snarled and turned toward
+Norton, only to receive a smashing blow on the jaw.
+
+Norton flung open the door. "Into the car, Florence! There's another
+car coming up the road. Hurry!"
+
+It was not a long chase. The car of the auto bandits, looking like an
+ordinary taxicab, was a high-powered machine, and it gained swiftly on
+Norton's four-cylinder. The reporter waited grimly.
+
+"Keep your head down!" he warned Florence. "I'm going to take a pot at
+their tires when they get within range. If I miss I'm afraid we'll
+have trouble. Under no circumstances attempt to leave this car. Here
+they come!"
+
+He suddenly leaned back and fired. It was only chance. The manner in
+which the cars were lurching made a poor target for a marksman even of
+the first order. Chance directed Norton's first bullet into the right
+forward tire, which exploded. Going at sixty-odd miles an hour, they
+could not stop the car in time to avoid fatality. The car careened
+wildly and plunged down the embankment into the river.
+
+Florence covered her eyes with her hands, and, quite unconscious of
+what he was doing, Norton put his arms around her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+After the affair of the auto bandits--three of whom were killed--a lull
+followed. If you're a sailor you know what kind of a lull I
+mean--blue-black clouds down the southwest horizon, the water crinkly,
+the booms wabbling. Suddenly a series of "accidents" began to happen
+to Norton. At first he did not give the matter much thought. The safe
+which fell almost at his feet and crashed through the sidewalk merely
+induced him to believe he was lucky. At another time an automobile
+came furiously around a corner while he was crossing the street, and
+only amazing agility saved him from bodily hurt. The car was out of
+sight when he thought to recall the number.
+
+Then came the jolt in the subway. Only a desperate grab by one of the
+guards saved him from being crushed to death. Even then he thought
+nothing. But when a new box of cigarettes arrived and he tried one and
+found it strangely perfumed, and, upon further analysis, found it to
+contain a Javanese narcotic, a slow but sure death, he became wide
+awake enough. They were after him. He began to walk carefully, to
+keep in public places as often as he possibly could.
+
+He was not really afraid of death, but he did abhor the thought of its
+coming up from behind. Except for the cigarettes they were all
+"accidents;" he could not have proved anything before a jury of his
+intimate friends.
+
+He never entered an elevator without scrupulous care. He never passed
+under coverings over the sidewalks where construction was going on.
+Still, careful as he was, death confronted him once more. It was his
+habit to have his coffee and rolls--he rarely ate anything more for his
+breakfast--set down outside his door every morning. The coffee, being
+in a silver thermos bottle, kept its heat for hours. When he took the
+stopper out and poured forth a cup it looked oddly black, discolored.
+It is quite probable that had there been no series of "accidents" he
+would have drunk a cup--and died in mortal agony. It contained
+bichloride of mercury.
+
+Very quietly he set about to make inquiries. This was really becoming
+serious. In the kitchens clown-stairs nothing could be learned. The
+maid had set the thermos bottle before the door at ten-thirty. Norton
+had opened the door at one-thirty--three hours after. The outlook was
+not the cheerfulest. He knew perfectly well why all these things
+"happened;" he had interfered with the plans of the scoundrels who were
+making every possible move to kidnap Florence Hargreave.
+
+One afternoon he paid Florence a visit. Of course he told her nothing.
+They had become secretly engaged the day after he had rescued her from
+the auto bandits. They were secretly engaged because Florence wanted
+it so. For once Jones suspected nothing. Why should he? He had
+troubles enough. As a matter of fact, Norton was afraid of him in the
+same sense as a boy is afraid of a policeman.
+
+[Illustration: THEY HAD BECOME SECRETLY ENGAGED]
+
+But on this day, when the time came, he accosted the butler and drew
+him into the pantry.
+
+"Jones, they are after me now."
+
+"You? Explain."
+
+Norton briefly recounted the deliberate attempts against his life.
+
+"You see, I'm not liar enough to say that I'm not worried. I am,
+devilishly worried. I'm not worth any ransom. I'm in the way, and
+they seem determined to put me out of it."
+
+"To any other man I would say travel. But to you I say when you leave
+your rooms don't go where you first thought you would--that is, some
+usual haunt. They'll be everywhere, near your restaurants, your clubs,
+your office. You're a methodical young man; become erratic. Keep away
+from here for at least three days, but always call me up by telephone
+some time during the day. Never under any circumstance, unless I send
+for you, come here at night. Only one man now watches the house during
+the day, but five are prowling around after dark. They might have
+instructions to shoot you on sight. I can't spare you just at present,
+Mr. Norton. You've been a godsend; and if it seems that sometimes I
+did not trust you fully it was because I did not care to drag you in
+too deep."
+
+Deep? Norton thought of Florence and smiled inwardly. Could anybody
+be in deeper than he was? Once it was on the tip of his tongue to
+confess his love for Florence, but the gravity of Jones' countenance
+was an obstacle to such move; it did not invite it.
+
+To be sure, Jones had no real authority to say what Florence should or
+should not do with her heart. Still, from all points of view, it was
+better to keep the affair under the rose till there came a more
+propitious hour in which to make the disclosure.
+
+Love, in the midst of all these alarms! Sharp, desperate rogues on one
+side, millions on the other, and yet love could enter the scene
+serenely, like an actor who had missed his cue and come on too soon.
+
+Oddly enough, there was no real love-making such as you often read
+about. A pressure of the hand, a glance from the eye, there was seldom
+anything more. Only once--that memorable day on the river road--had he
+kissed her. No word of love had been spoken on either side. In that
+wild moment all conventionalities had disappeared like smoke in the
+wind. There had been neither past nor future, only the present in
+which they knew that they loved. With her he was happy, for he had no
+time to plan over the future. Away from her he saw the inevitable
+barriers providing against the marriage between a poor young man and a
+very rich young woman. A man who has any respect for himself wants
+always to be on equal terms with his wife. It's the way this peculiar
+organization called society has written down its rules. Doubtless a
+relic of the stone age, when Ab went out with his club to seek a wife
+and drag her by the hair to his den, there to care for her and to guard
+her with his life's blood. It is one of the few primitive sensations
+that remain to us, this wanting the female dependent upon the male.
+Perhaps this accounts for man's lack of interest on the suffragette
+question.
+
+[Illustration: WITH HER HE WAS HAPPY, FOR HE HAD NO TIME TO PLAN OVER
+THE FUTURE]
+
+Only Susan suspected the true state of affairs, being a woman. Having
+had no real romance herself, she delighted in having a second-hand one,
+as you might say. She intercepted many a glance and pretended not to
+see the stolen hand pressures. The wedding was already full drawn in
+her mind's eye. These two young people should be married at Susan
+Farlow's when the roses were climbing up the sides of the house and the
+young robins were boldly trying their fuzzy wings. It struck her as
+rather strange, but she could not conjure up (at this wedding) more
+than two men besides the minister, the bridegroom and the butler.
+
+By forsaking his accustomed haunts, under the advice of Jones, the
+hidden warfare ceased temporarily. You can't very well kill a man when
+you don't know where to find him. He ate his breakfasts haphazardly,
+now here, now there. He received most of his assignments by telephone
+and wrote his stories and articles in his club, in the writing rooms of
+hotels, and invariably despatched them to the office by messenger. The
+managing editor wanted to know what all this meant; but Norton declined
+to tell him.
+
+It irked him to be forced to rearrange his daily life--his habits. It
+was a revolution against his ease, for he loved ease when he was not at
+work. He had the sensation of having been suddenly robbed of his home,
+of having been cast out into the streets. And on top of all this he
+had to go and fall in love!
+
+There was no longer a shadow opposite the apartments of the Countess
+Perigoff. Braine came and went nightly without discovering any one.
+This rather worried him. It gave him the impression that the shadow
+had found out what he had been seeking and no longer needed to watch
+the coming and going of either himself or the Countess Perigoff.
+
+"Olga, it looks as if we were at the end of our rope," he said
+discouragedly. "We have failed in our attempts so far. The devil
+watches over that girl."
+
+"Or God," replied the countess gloomily. In nearly every instance
+their success has been due to chance. "Somehow I'm convinced that we
+began wrong. We should have let Hargreave escape quietly, followed
+him, and made him fast when the right opportunity came. After a month
+or so his vigilance would have relaxed; he would have arrived at the
+belief that he had eluded us."
+
+"Indeed!" ironically. "He wasn't vigilant all these years in which he
+did elude us. How about the child he never sought but guarded?
+Vigilance! He never was anything else all these seventeen years. The
+truth is, success has developed a coarseness in our methods. And now
+it is too late for finesse. We have tried every device we can think
+of; and there they are--the girl free, Norton unharmed, and the father
+as secure in his retreat as though he wore an invisible cloak. My head
+aches. I have ceased to be inventive."
+
+[Illustration: THEY WERE TO BE MARRIED]
+
+"The two are in love with each other."
+
+"Are you sure of that?"
+
+"I have my eyes. But I begin to wonder."
+
+"About what?"
+
+"Whether or not Jones suspects me and is giving me rope to hang myself
+with. Not once have the police been called in and told what has really
+happened. They are totally at sea. And what has become of the man
+over the way?"
+
+"By the Lord Harry!" exclaimed Braine, clapping his hands. "I believe
+I've solved that. We shot a man coming out of Hargreave's. Since then
+there's been no one across the way. One and the same man!"
+
+"But that knowledge doesn't get us anywhere."
+
+"No. You say they are in love?"
+
+"Secretly. I don't believe the butler has an inkling of it. It is
+possible, however, that Susan has caught the trend of affairs. But,
+being rather romantic, she will in nowise interfere."
+
+Braine smoked in silence. Presently a smile twisted his lips.
+
+"You have thought of something?" she asked.
+
+"You might try it," he said. "They have accepted your friendship;
+whether with ulterior purpose remains to be learned. She has been to
+your apartments two or three times to tea and always got home safely."
+
+"No," she said determinedly. "Nothing shall happen here. I will not
+take the risk."
+
+"Wait till I'm through. Break up the romance in such a way that the
+girl will bar Norton from the house. That's what we've been aiming at;
+to get rid of that meddling reporter. We've tried poisons. Try your
+kind."
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"Lies."
+
+"Ah! I understand. You want me to win him away from her. It can not
+be done."
+
+"Pshaw! You have a bag full of tricks. You can easily manage to put
+him into an equivocal position out of which he can not possibly squirm
+so far as the girl is concerned. A little melodrama, arranged for the
+benefit of Florence. Fall into Norton's arms at the right moment, or
+something like that."
+
+"I suppose I could. But if I failed..."
+
+"You're too damnably clever to fail in your own particular work.
+Something has got to be done to keep those two apart. I've often
+thought of raiding the house and boldly carrying off the whole family,
+Susan and all. But a wholesale affair like that would be too noisy.
+Think it over, Olga; we have gone too far to back down now. There's
+always Russia; and while I'm the boss over here they never cease to
+watch me. They'll make me answer for a failure like this."
+
+She eyed him speculatively. "You have money."
+
+"Oh, the money doesn't matter. It's the game. It's the game of
+playing fast and loose with society, of pilfering it with one hand and
+making it kow-tow with the other. It's the sport of the thing. What
+was your thought?"
+
+"We could go away together, to South America."
+
+"And tire of each other within a month," he retorted shrewdly. "No; we
+are in the same boat. We could not live but for this never-ending
+excitement. And, more than that, we never could get far enough away
+from the long arm of the First Ten. We'll have to stick it out here.
+Can't you see?"
+
+"Yes, I can see."
+
+But in her heart she knew that she would have lived in a hut with this
+man till the end of her days. She abhorred the life, though she never,
+by the slightest word, let him become aware of it. There was always
+that abiding fear that at the first sign of weakness he would desert
+her. And she was wise in her deductions. Braine was loyal to her
+because she held his interest. Once that failed, he would be off and
+away.
+
+The next afternoon the countess, having matured her plans against the
+happiness of the young girl who trusted her, drew up before the
+Hargreave place and alighted. Her welcome was the same as ever, and
+this strengthened her confidence.
+
+The countess was always gesticulating. Her hands fluttered to
+emphasize her words. And the beautiful diamond solitaire caught the
+girl's eye. She seized the hand. Having an affair of her own, it was
+natural that she should be interested in that of her friend.
+
+"I never saw that ring before."
+
+"A gift of yesterday." The countess assumed a shy air which would have
+deceived St. Anthony. She twisted the ring on her finger.
+
+"Tell me," cried Florence. "You are engaged?"
+
+"Mercy, no!"
+
+"Is he rich?"
+
+"No. Money should not matter when your heart is involved."
+
+As this thought was in accord with her own, Florence nodded her head
+sagely.
+
+"It's nothing serious. Just a fancy. I shall never marry again. Men
+are gay deceivers; they always have been and always will be. Perhaps
+I'm a bit wicked; but I rather like to prove my theory that all men are
+weak. If I had a daughter I'd rather have her be an old man's darling
+than a young man's drudge. I distrust every man I know. I came to ask
+you and Susan to go to the opera with me to-night. You will come to my
+apartments first. You will come?"
+
+"To be sure we will!"
+
+"Simple little fool!" thought the Russian on the way home. "She shall
+see."
+
+"I believe the countess is engaged to be married," said Florence to
+Jones.
+
+"Indeed, miss?"
+
+"Yes. I couldn't get anything definite out of her, but she had a
+beautiful ring on her finger. She wants Susan and me to go to the
+opera with her to-night. Will that be all right?"
+
+Jones gazed abstractedly at the rug. Whenever a problem bothered him
+he seemed to find the solution in the delicate patterns of the Persian
+rugs. Finally he nodded. "I see no reason why you should not go.
+Only, watch out."
+
+"Jones, there is one thing that will make me brave and happy. Will you
+tell me if you are in direct communication with my father?"
+
+"Yes, Miss Florence," he answered promptly. "But do not breathe this
+to a single soul, neither Susan nor Norton."
+
+"I promise that. But, ah! hasten the day when he can come to me
+without fear."
+
+"That is my wish also."
+
+"You need not call me miss. Why should you?"
+
+"It might not be wise to have any one hear me call you thus
+familiarly," he objected gravely.
+
+"Please yourself about that. Now I must telephone Jim."
+
+"Jim?" the butler murmured.
+
+He caught the word which was not intended for his ears. But for once
+Jones had been startled out of himself.
+
+"Is it wrong for me to call Mr. Norton Jim?" she asked with a bit of
+banter.
+
+"It is not considered quite the proper thing, Miss Florence, to call a
+young man by his first name unless you are engaged to marry him, or
+grew up with him from childhood."
+
+"Well, supposing I were engaged to him?" haughtily.
+
+"That would be a very grave affair. What have you to prove that he may
+not wish to marry you for your money?"
+
+"Why, Jones, you know that I haven't a penny in the world I can call my
+own! There is nothing to prove, except your word, that I am Stanley
+Hargreave's daughter."
+
+"No, there is nothing to prove that you are his daughter. But hasn't
+it ever occurred to you that there might be a purpose back of this?
+Might it not be of inestimable value that your father's enemies should
+be left in doubt? Might it not be a means of holding them on the
+leash? There is proof, ample proof, my child; and when the time comes
+these will be shown you. But meantime put all thought of marrying Mr.
+Norton out of your mind."
+
+"That I refuse to do," quietly. "I am at least mistress of my heart;
+and no one shall dictate to me whom I shall or shall not marry. I love
+Mr. Norton and he loves me, knowing that I may not be an heiress after
+all. And some day I shall marry him."
+
+Jones bowed. This seemed to appear final to him, and nothing more was
+to be said.
+
+Norton did not return to his rooms till seven. He found the telephone
+call and also a note in a handwriting unfamiliar. He tore off the
+envelope and found! the contents to be from the Countess Perigoff.
+
+"Call at eight to-night," he read. "I have an important news story for
+you. Tell no one, as I can not be involved in the case. Cordially,
+Olga, Countess Perigoff."
+
+Humph! Norton twiddled the note in his fingers and at length rolled it
+into a ball and threw it into the waste-basket. He, too, made a
+mistake; he should have kept that note. He dressed, dined, and hurried
+off to the apartments of the countess.
+
+He arrived ten minutes before Florence and Susan.
+
+And Jones did some rapid telephoning.
+
+"How long, how long!" the butler murmured. How long would this strange
+combat last? The strain was terrible. He slept but little during the
+nights, for his ears were always waiting for sounds. He had cast the
+chest into the sea, and it would take a dozen expert divers to locate
+it. And now, atop of all these worries, the child must fall in love
+with the first comer! It was heart-breaking. Norton, so far as he had
+learned, was cool and brave, honest and reliable in a pinch; but as the
+husband of Stanley Hargreave's daughter, that was altogether a
+different matter. And he must devise some means of putting a stop to
+it, but---
+
+But he was saved that trouble.
+
+Mongoose and cobra, that was the game being played; the cunning of the
+one against the deadly venom of the other. If he forced matters he
+would only lay himself open to the strike of the snake. He must have
+patience. Gradually they were breaking the organization, lopping off a
+branch here and there, but the peace of the future depended upon
+getting a grip on the spine of the cobra himself.
+
+The trick was simple. The countess had news; trust her for that. She
+exhibited a cablegram, dated at Gibraltar, in which the British
+authorities stated definitely that no such a person as William Orts,
+aviator, had arrived at Gibraltar. And then, as Norton rose, she rose
+also and gently precipitated herself into his arms, just at the moment
+when Florence appeared in the doorway.
+
+Very simple, indeed. When a woman falls toward a man there is nothing
+for him to do but extend his arms to prevent her from falling.
+Outwardly, however, to the eye which saw only the picture and
+comprehended not the cause, it had all the hallmarks of an affectionate
+embrace.
+
+Florence stood perfectly still for a moment, then turned away.
+
+"I beg your pardon," said the countess, "but a sudden fainting spell
+seized me. My heart is a bit weak."
+
+"Don't mention it," replied the gallant Norton. He was as innocent as
+a babe as to what had really taken place.
+
+Florence went back home. She wrote a brief note to Norton and inclosed
+the ring which she had secretly worn attached to a little chain around
+her neck.
+
+When Norton came the next day she refused to see him. It was all over.
+She never wished to see him again.
+
+"He says there has been some cruel mistake," said Jones.
+
+"I saw him with the countess in his arms. I do not see any cruel
+mistake in that. I saw him. Tell him so. And add that I never wish
+to see him again."
+
+Then she ran swiftly to her room, where she broke down and cried
+bitterly and would not be comforted by Susan.
+
+"In heaven's name, what has happened?" demanded the frantic lover,
+"what has happened?"
+
+The comedy of the whole affair lay in the fact that neither of the two
+suspected the countess, who consoled them both.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+So far as Jones was concerned, he was rather pleased with the turn of
+affairs. This was no time for love-making; no time for silly,
+innocuous quarrels and bickerings, in which love must indulge or die.
+Florence no longer rode horseback, and Norton returned to his
+accustomed haunts, where no one made the slightest attempt upon his
+life. In his present state of mind he would have welcomed it.
+
+"What's the matter with Jim?" asked the night city editor, raising his
+eye shade.
+
+"I don't know," answered the copy reader.
+
+"Goes around as if he'd been eating dope; bumped into the boss a while
+ago and never stopped to apologize."
+
+"Perhaps he's mapping out the front page for that Hargreave stuff,"
+laughed the copy reader. "Between you and me and the gate post, I
+don't believe there ever was a man by the name of Hargreave."
+
+"Oh, there was a chap by that name, all right. He's dead. A man can't
+swim three hundred miles in rough water, life-buoy or no. They ought
+to have funeral services, and let it go at that."
+
+"But what was the reason for that fake cable from Gibraltar saying that
+Orts was alive? I don't see any sense in that."
+
+"The man who pulled it off did. I think, for my part, that both Orts
+and Hargreave are dead, and that the man picked up by the tramp steamer
+_Orient_ was riding some other balloon."
+
+"You're wrong there. The description of it proved that it was Orts'
+machine. Oh, Jim probably has got a man's-size yarn up his sleeve, but
+he's a long time in delivering the goods. He's beginning to mope a
+good deal. Woman back of it somewhere. Haven't held down this copy
+job for twelve years without being able to make some tolerable guesses.
+Jim's a star man. When he gets started nothing can stop him. He
+covered the Chinese Boxer rebellion better than any other correspondent
+there. I wonder how old he is?"
+
+"Oh, I should say about thirty-one or two. Here he comes now. 'Lo,
+Jim!"
+
+"Hello! Where's Ford? He gave me a ticket to the theater to-night,
+and I want to punch his head. What's drama coming to, anyhow?
+Cigarettes and booze and mismated couples. Can't they find good enough
+things out of doors? Oh, I know. They cater to a lot of fools who
+believe that what they see is an expression of high life in New York
+and London. And it's rot, plain rot. It's merely the scum of the
+boiling pot. Any old housewife would skim it off and chuck it into the
+slops. Life? Piffle!"
+
+"What's the grouch?"
+
+"Looking for the dramatic job?"
+
+"No. I've just been wondering how far these theatrical managers can go
+without slitting the golden goose."
+
+Norton sought his desk and began rummaging the drawers. He was not
+hunting for anything; he was merely passing away the time. By and by,
+when the time no longer served, he pulled his chair over to the window
+and sat down, staring at stars such as Copernicus never dreamed of.
+Ships going down to sea, ferries swooping diagonally hither and
+thither, the clockwork signs; but he took no note of these marvels of
+light.
+
+"Not at home!" he muttered.
+
+He had called, written, telephoned. No use. The door remained shut,
+Jones answered the telephone, and the letters came back. He began to
+think very deeply concerning the Perigoff woman. Had she played a
+trick? Had that fainting spell been buncombe for his benefit as well
+as Florence's? But he had not a shadow of a proof. The thing that
+puzzled him equally with this was that all attempts against his life
+had miraculously ceased; no safes thundered down in front of him, and
+no autos tried to carve him in two. The only thing that kept him
+active was the daily call of Jones by wire. Miss Florence was well;
+that was all Jones was permitted to say.
+
+Restlessly Norton spurned his chair and walked over to the telephone
+booth. It was midnight. He might or might not be able to get Jones.
+But almost instantly a voice said, "What is it?"
+
+"Jones?"
+
+"Yes. Who is it?"
+
+"Norton."
+
+"Why, you called me up not ten minutes ago."
+
+"Not I!"
+
+"It was your voice, as plain as day."
+
+"What did I want?" keen all at once.
+
+The reply did not come immediately. "You are certain it was not you?"
+
+"Wait a moment and I'll call the editor. He will prove to you that
+I've been here for an hour, and that this is the first call I've made.
+Some one has been imposing on you. What did they ask you to do?"
+
+"You asked me to come down to the office at once, and I requested you
+to come to the house, and you said you could not. I declined to stir."
+
+"What did you think?"
+
+"Exactly what you're thinking--that they have come to life again."
+
+"Jones, is Miss Florence awake?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Do you think there is any hope of having her understand what really
+happened?"
+
+"I am only here to guard her. I can not undertake to read her
+thoughts."
+
+"You're not quite in favor of a reconciliation?"
+
+"Oh, yes, if it went no further. Young people are young people the
+world over."
+
+"What does that mean?"
+
+"That they would not create imaginary heartaches if they were not
+young. Better let things remain exactly as they are. When all these
+troubles are settled finally, the lesser trouble may be talked over
+sensibly. But this is not the time. There is no news. Good night."
+
+Norton returned to his chair, gloomier than ever. With his feet upon
+the window sill he stared and stared and dreamed and dreamed till a
+hand fell upon his shoulder. It belonged to one of the office boys.
+
+"Note f'r you, sir."
+
+Norton read it and tore it into little pieces. Then he rose and
+distributed the pieces in the several yawning waste baskets which
+strewed the aisle leading to the city desk.
+
+"I'm not wanted for anything?" he asked.
+
+"No. Clear out!" laughed the night city editor. "The sight of you is
+putting everybody in the gloom ward."
+
+Norton went down to the street. At the left of the entrance he was
+quietly joined by a man whose arm was carried in a sling. He motioned
+Norton to get into the taxicab. They were dropped in a deserted spot
+in Riverdale. On foot they went forward to their destination, which
+proved to be the deserted hangar of the aviator, William Orts.
+
+"I want you to tell Jones that a tub and several divers are at work on
+the spot where he threw the chest. That's all. Now, doctor, rewind
+this arm of mine."
+
+The amateur surgeon made a very good job of it; not for nothing had he
+followed fighting armies to the front.
+
+"Did they find anything?"
+
+"Not up to date. But we might if we cared to. They have left a buoy
+over the spot they're exploring. But just now it floats a quarter of a
+mile to the east of the spot."
+
+"Who were the men in the motor boat that chased Jones?"
+
+"Only Jones can tell you. Queer old codger, eh?"
+
+"A bit stubborn. He wants to handle it without police assistance."
+
+"And he's right. We are not aiming to arrest any one," sinisterly.
+"There can't be any draw to this game. Here, no smoking. Too much gas
+afloat."
+
+Norton put the cigarettes back into his pocket. "What's the real
+news?" he demanded. "You would not bring me out here just to rebandage
+that arm. It really did not need it. Come, out with it."
+
+"You're sharp."
+
+"I'm paid to be sharp."
+
+"I've found where the Black Hundred hold their sessions."
+
+"By George, that's news!"
+
+"The room above is vacant. A little hole in the ceiling, and who knows
+what might happen?"
+
+"What do you want me to do?"
+
+"Tell Jones. When the next meeting comes around I'll advise you. I've
+stumbled upon a dissatisfied member. So, buck up, as they say. We've
+got two ends of the net down, and with a little care we'll have them
+all. Now let me have a hundred."
+
+Norton drew out a packet of bills and counted off five twenties.
+
+"Why don't you draw the cash yourself?"
+
+"It happens to be in your name, son."
+
+"I forgot," said Norton. "But what a chance for me! Nearly five
+thousand, all mine for a ticket to Algiers!"
+
+A grunt was the only reply.
+
+"I want you to tell me about the Perigoff woman."
+
+"I know only one thing--that Braine is there every night."
+
+"No!"
+
+"The orders are for you to play the game just as you are playing it.
+When we strike, it must be the last blow. All this hide-and-seek
+business may look foolish to you. It's like that Japanese game called
+'jo.' It looks simple, but chess is a tyro's game beside it. Can you
+find your way back all right?"
+
+"I can."
+
+"Well, you'd better be going. That's all the light I have, in this
+torch here. Got a lot to do to-morrow and need sleep."
+
+Norton stole away with great caution. His first intention was to
+proceed straight to the city, but despite his resolution he found
+himself within a quarter of an hour gazing up at the windows of the
+Hargreave house. "Not at home!"
+
+Quite unconscious of the fact, he was as close to death as any mortal
+man might care to be. The policeman suddenly looming up under the arc
+lamp proved to be his savior.
+
+
+The lull made Jones doubly alert. He was positive that they were
+preparing to strike again. But from what direction and in what manner?
+He had not met the gift of clairvoyance so he had to wait; and waiting
+is a terrible game when perhaps death is balancing the scales. It is
+always easier to make an assault than to await it; and it is a good
+general who always finds himself prepared.
+
+But it made his heart ache to watch the child. She went about
+cheerfully--when any one was in the room with her. Many a time,
+however, he had stolen to the door of her bedroom and heard the
+heart-rending sobs, a vain attempt being made to stifle them among the
+pillows. She was only eighteen; it was first love; and first loves are
+pale, evanescent attachments. It hurt now; but she would get over it
+presently. Youth forgets. Time, like water, smooths away the ragged
+places.
+
+The countess called regularly. She was, of course, dreadfully sorry
+over what had happened. She had heard something about his character;
+newspaper men weren't always the best. This one was a mere fortune
+hunter; a two-faced one, at that. She was never more surprised in her
+life than when he threw his arms around her. And so on, and so forth,
+half lies and half truths, till the patient Jones felt like wringing
+her neck.
+
+From his vantage point the butler smiled ironically. He could read the
+heart of the Perigoff woman as he could read the page of a book. The
+effrontery! And all the while he must gravely admit her and pretend
+when the blood rioted in his veins at the sight of her. But he dared
+not swerve a single inch from the plans laid down. It was a cup of
+bitter gall, and there was no way of avoiding the putting of it to his
+lips. She emanated poison as nightshade emanates it, the upas tree.
+And he must bow when she entered and bow when she left! Still, she had
+done him an indirect favor in breaking up this love business.
+
+One afternoon Braine summoned his runabout and called up two
+physicians. When he was ushered into the deserted office of the first
+he sent his card in. The doctor replied in person. His face was pale
+and his hands shook.
+
+"Good afternoon," said Braine, smiling affably.
+
+The doctor eyed him like a man hypnotized. "You ... you wished to see
+me on some particular business?"
+
+"Very particular," dryly. "My car is outside. Will you be so good as
+to accompany me?"
+
+The doctor slowly went into the hall for his hat and coat. He left the
+house and got into the car with never a word of protest.
+
+"Thinking?" said Braine.
+
+"I am always thinking whenever I see your evil face. What devilment do
+you require of me this time?"
+
+"A mere stroke of the pen."
+
+"Where are we going?"
+
+"To call on another physician of your standing," significantly. "It is
+a great thing to have friends like you two. Always ready to serve us,
+for the mere love of it."
+
+"There's no need of using that kind of talk to me. You have me in the
+hollow of your hand. Why should I bother to deny it? I have broken
+the law. I broke it because I was starving."
+
+"It is better to starve in freedom than to eat fat joints up the river.
+To-day it is a question of sanity."
+
+"And you want me to assist in signing away the liberty of some person
+who is perfectly sane?"
+
+"The nail on the head," urbanely.
+
+"You're a fine scoundrel!"
+
+"Not so loud!" warningly.
+
+"As loud as I please. I am not forgetting that you need me. I'm no
+coward. I recognize that you hold the whip hand. But you can send me
+to the chair before I'll crawl to you. Now, leave me alone for a
+while."
+
+The other physician had no such qualms of conscience. He was ready at
+all times for the generous emoluments which accrued from his dealings
+with the man Braine.
+
+The Countess Perigoff was indisposed; so it was quite in the order of
+things that she should summon physicians.
+
+There is a law in the state of New York--just or unjust, whichever you
+please--that reads that any person may be adjudged insane if the
+signatures of two registered physicians are affixed to the document.
+It does not say that these physicians shall have been proved reputable.
+
+There were, besides the physicians, a motherly looking woman and a man
+of benign countenance. Their faces were valuable assets. To gain
+another person's confidence is, perhaps, among the greatest human
+achievements. A confidence man and woman in the real sense of the
+word. In your mind's eye you could see this man carrying the
+contribution plate down the aisle on Sunday mornings, and his wife Kate
+putting her mite on the plate for the benefit of some poor, untidy
+Hottentot.
+
+On Tuesday of the following week Florence and Susan went shopping. The
+chauffeur was a strong young fellow whom Jones relied upon. If you pay
+a man well and hold out fine promises, you generally can trust him. As
+their car left the corner another followed leisurely. This second
+automobile contained Thomas Wendt and his wife Kate. The two young
+women stopped at the great dry goods shop near the public library, and
+for the time being naturally forgot everything but the marvels which
+had come from all parts of the world. It is as natural for a woman to
+buy as it is for a man to sell.
+
+In some manner or other Florence became separated from Susan. She
+hunted through aisle after aisle, but could not find her; for the
+simple reason that Susan was hunting for her. It occurred to the girl
+that Susan might have wisely concluded the best place to wait would be
+in the taxicab. And so Florence hurried out into the street, into the
+arms of the Wendt family, who were patiently awaiting her.
+
+The trusted chauffeur had been sent around to the side entrance by the
+major domo. The young lady had so requested, so he said.
+
+Florence struggled and called for the policeman, who came running up,
+followed by the usual idle, curious crowd.
+
+"The poor young woman is insane," said the motherly Kate, tears in her
+eyes. The benign Thomas looked at heaven. "We are her keepers."
+
+"It is not true," cried Florence desperately.
+
+"She has the hallucination that she is the daughter of the millionaire
+Stanley Hargreave." And Thomas exhibited his document, which was
+perfectly legal, so far as appearances went.
+
+"Hurry up and get her off the walk. I can't have the crowd growing any
+larger," said the policeman, convinced.
+
+So, despite her cries and protestations, Florence was hustled into the
+automobile, even the policeman lending a hand.
+
+"Poor young thing!" he said to the crowd. "Come now, move on. I can't
+have the walk blocked up. Get a gait on you."
+
+He was congratulating himself upon the orderliness of the affair when a
+keen-eyed young man in the garb of a chauffeur touched his shoulder.
+
+"What's this I hear about an insane young woman?" he demanded.
+
+"She was insane, all right. They had papers to prove it. She kept
+crying that she was Stanley Hargreave's daughter."
+
+"My God!" The young man struck his forehead in despair. "You ass, she
+was Stanley Hargreave's daughter, and they've kidnaped her right under
+your nose! What was the number of that car?"
+
+"Cut out that line of talk, young fellah; I know my business. They had
+the proper documents."
+
+"But you hadn't brains enough to inquire whether they were genuine or
+not! You wait!" shrilled the chauffeur. "I'll have you broken for
+this work." He wheeled and ran back to his car, to find Susan and the
+countess in a great state of agitation. "They got her, they got her!
+And I swore on the book that they never should, so long as I drove the
+car."
+
+[Illustration: FLORENCE WAS PERMITTED TO WANDER ABOUT THE SHIP AS SHE
+PLEASED]
+
+Susan wept, and the countess tried in vain to console her.
+
+And when Jones was informed he frightened even the countess with the
+snarl of rage which burned across his lips. He tore into the hall,
+seized his hat, and was gone. Not a word of reproach did he offer to
+the chauffeur. He understood that no one is infallible. He found the
+blundering policeman, who now realized that he stood in for a whiff of
+the commissioner's carpet. All he could do was to give a good
+description of the man and woman. Word was sent broadcast through the
+city. The police had to be informed this time.
+
+Late in the day an officer whose beat included the ferry landing at
+Hoboken said he had seen the three. Everything had looked all right to
+him. It was the motherly face of the one and the benign countenance of
+the other that had blinded him.
+
+At midnight Jones, haggard and with the air of one beaten, returned
+home.
+
+"No wireless yet?" asked Norton.
+
+"The _George Washington_ of the North German Lloyd does not answer.
+Something has happened to her wires; tampered with, possibly."
+
+"So long as we know they are at sea, we can remedy the evil. They will
+not be able to land at a single port. I have sent ten cables. They
+can't get away from the wire. If I could only get hold of the names of
+those damnable doctors who signed that document! Twenty years."
+
+Jones bent his head in his hands, and Norton tramped the floor till the
+sound of his footsteps threatened to drive the moaning Susan into
+hysterics.
+
+"It is only a matter of a few days."
+
+"But can the child stand the terrors?" questioned Jones. "Who knows
+that they may not really drive her insane?"
+
+On board the _George Washington_ every one felt extremely sorry for
+this beautiful girl. It was a frightful misfortune to be so stricken
+at her age.
+
+"She is certainly insane," said one of the passengers, who had known
+Hargreave slightly through some banking business. "Hargreave wasn't
+married. He lived alone."
+
+After the second day out Florence was permitted to wander about the
+ship as she pleased.
+
+A good many of the passengers were mightily worried when they learned
+that the wireless had in some mysterious way been tampered with after
+the boat had made the open sea. It was impossible to put about. The
+apparatus must be fixed at sea.
+
+[Illustration: EVERYONE FELT EXTREMELY SORRY FOR THIS BEAUTIFUL GIRL]
+
+And when finally Norton's wireless caught the wires of the _George
+Washington_ he was gravely informed that the young lady referred to had
+leaped the rail off the banks at night and had been drowned. She had
+not been missed till the following morning.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+It was perfectly true that Florence had cast herself into the sea. It
+had not been an act of despair, however. On the contrary, hope and
+courage had prompted her to leap. The night was clear, with only a
+moderate sea running. At the time the great ship was passing the
+banks, and almost within hail, she saw a fishing schooner riding
+gracefully at anchor. She quite readily believed that if she remained
+on board the _George Washington_ she was lost. She naturally forgot
+the marvel of wireless telegraphy. No longer may a man hide at sea.
+
+So, with that quick thought which was a part of her inheritance, she
+seized the life buoy, climbed the rail and leaped far out. As the
+great, dark, tossing sea swooped up to meet her she noted a block of
+wood bobbing up and down. She tried to avoid it, but could not, and
+struck it head on. Despite the blow and the shock of the chill water
+she instinctively clung to the buoy. The wash from the mighty
+propellers tossed her about, hither and yon, from one swirl to another,
+like a chip of wood. Then everything grew blank.
+
+Fortunately for her the master of the fishing schooner was at the time
+standing on his quarterdeck by the wheel, squinting through his glass
+at the liner and envying the ease and comfort of those on board her.
+The mate, sitting on the steps and smoking his turning-in pipe, saw the
+master lean forward suddenly, lower the glass, then raise it again.
+
+"Lord A'mighty!"
+
+"What's the matter, Cap'n?"
+
+"Jake, in God's name, come 'ere an' take a peek through this glass.
+I'm dreamin'!"
+
+The mate jumped and took the glass. "Where away, sir?"
+
+"A p'int off th' sta'board bow. See somethin' white bobbin' up?"
+
+"Yessir! Looks like some one dropped a bolster 'r a piller
+overboard.... Cod's whiskers!" he broke off.
+
+"Then I ain't really seein' things," cried the master. "Hi, y'
+lubbers," he yelled to the crew; "lower th' dory. They's a woman in
+th' water out there. I seen her leap th' rail. Look alive! Sharp's
+th' word! Mate, you go 'long."
+
+The crew dropped their tasks and sprang for the davits, and the
+starboard dory was lowered in ship shape style.
+
+It takes a good bit of seamanship to haul a body out of the sea, into a
+dancing, bobtailed dory, when one moment it is climbing frantically
+heavenward and the next heading for the bottomless pit. They were very
+tender with her. They laid her out in the bottom of the boat, with the
+life buoy as a pillow, and pulled energetically for the schooner. She
+was alive, because she breathed; but she did not stir so much as an
+eyelid. It was a stiff bit of work, too, to land her aboard without
+adding to her injuries. The master ordered the men to put her in his
+own bunk, where he nearly strangled her by forcing raw brandy down her
+throat.
+
+"Well, she's alive, anyhow."
+
+[Illustration: FLORENCE STEALS OUT IN THE NIGHT TO JUMP OVERBOARD]
+
+When Florence finally opened her eyes the gray of dawn lay upon the
+sea, dotted here and there by the schooners of the fleet, which seemed
+to be hanging in midair, as at the moment there was visible to the eye
+no horizon.
+
+"Don't seem t' recognize nothin'."
+
+"Mebbe she's got a fever," suggested the mate, rubbing his bristly chin.
+
+"Fever nothin'! Not after bein' in th' water half an hour. Mebbe she
+hit one o' them wooden floats we left. Them dinged liners keep on
+crowdin' us," growled Barnes, with a fisherman's hate for the floating
+hotels. "Went by without a toot. See 'er, jes' like the banker's wife
+goin' t' church on Sunday? A mile a minute; fog or no fog, it's all
+the same t' them. They run us down and never stop. What th' tarnation
+we goin' to do? She'll haff t' stay aboard till th' run is over. I
+can't afford t' yank up my mudhook this time o' day."
+
+"Guess she can stand three 'r four days in our company, smellin'
+oilcloths, fish, kerosene, an' punk t'bacco."
+
+"If y' don't like th' kind o' t'bacco I buy buy your own. I ain't
+objectin' none."
+
+The mate stepped over to the bunk and gingerly ran his hand over the
+girl's head. "Cod's whiskers, Cap'n, they's a bump as big's a cork on
+th' back o' her head! She's struck one o' them floats all right.
+Where's the arnica?"
+
+Barnes turned to his locker and rummaged about, finally producing an
+ancient bottle and some passably clean cloth used frequently for
+bandages. Sometimes a man grew careless with his knife or got in the
+way of a pulley block. With blundering kindness the two men bound up
+the girl's head, and then went about their duties.
+
+For three days Florence evinced not the slightest inclination to leave
+the bunk. She lay on her back either asleep or with her eyes staring
+at the beams above her head. She ate just enough to keep her alive;
+and the strong black coffee did nothing more than to make her wakeful.
+No one knew what the matter was. There was the bump, now diminished;
+but that it should leave her in this comatose state vastly puzzled the
+men. The truth is she had suffered a slight concussion of the brain,
+and this, atop of all the worry she had had for the last few weeks, was
+sufficient to cause this blankness of the mind.
+
+The final cod was cleaned and packed away in salt, the mudhook raised,
+and the schooner _Betty_ set her sails for the southwest. Barnes
+realized that to save the girl she must have a doctor who knew his
+business. Mrs. Barnes would know how to care for the girl, once she
+knew what the trouble was. There would be some news in the papers. A
+young and beautiful woman did not jump from a big Atlantic liner
+without the newspapers getting hold of the facts.
+
+[Illustration: "A YOUNG AND BEAUTIFUL WOMAN DID NOT JUMP FROM A BIG
+ATLANTIC LINER WITHOUT THE NEWSPAPERS GETTING HOLD OF THE FACTS"]
+
+A fair wind carried the _Betty_ into her haven, and shortly after
+Florence was sleeping peacefully in a feather bed, ancient, it is true,
+but none the less soft and inviting. In all this time she had not
+spoken a single word.
+
+"The poor young thing!" murmured the motherly Mrs. Barnes. "What
+beautiful hair! Oh, John, I wish you would give up the sea. I hate
+it. It is terrible. I am always watching you in my mind's eye, in
+calm weather, in storms. Pieces of wrecks come ashore, and I always
+wonder over the death and terror back of them."
+
+"Don't y' worry none about me, Betty. I never take no chances. Now
+I'm goin' int' th' village an' bring back th' sawbones. He'll tell us
+what t' do."
+
+The village doctor shook his grizzled head gravely.
+
+"She's been hurt and shocked at the same time. It will be many days
+before she comes around to herself. Just let her do as she pleases.
+Only keep an eye on her so that she doesn't wander off and get lost.
+I'll watch the newspapers and if I come across anything which bears
+upon the case I'll notify you."
+
+But he searched the newspapers in vain, for the simple fact that he did
+not think to glance over the old ones.
+
+The village took a good deal of interest in the affair. They gossiped
+about it and strolled out to the Barnes' cottage to satisfy their
+curiosity. One thing was certain to their simple minds: some day
+Barnes would get a great sum of money for his kindness. They had read
+about such things in the family story paper. She was a rich man's
+daughter; the ring on the unknown's finger would have fitted out a
+fleet.
+
+Florence was soon able to walk about. Ordinary conversation she seemed
+to understand; but whenever the past was broached she would shake her
+head with frowning eyes. Her main diversion consisted of sitting on
+the sand dunes and gazing out at sea.
+
+One day a stranger came to town. He said he represented a life
+insurance company and was up here from Boston to take a little
+vacation. He sat on the hotel porch that evening surrounded by an
+admiring audience. The stranger had been all over the world, so it
+seemed. He spoke familiarly of St. Petersburg, Vladivostok, Shanghai,
+as the villagers--some of them--might have spoken of Boston.
+
+There were one or two old-timers among the audience. They had been to
+all these parts. The stranger knew what he was telling about. After
+telling of his many voyages he asked if there was a good bathing beach
+near by. He was told that he would find the most suitable spot near
+Captain Barnes' cottage just outside the village.
+
+"An' say, Mister, seen anythin' in th' papers about a missin' young
+woman?" asked some one.
+
+"Missing young woman? What's that?"
+
+The man told the story of Florence's leap into the sea and her
+subsequent arrival at the cape.
+
+"That's funny," said the stranger. "I don't recollect reading about
+any young woman being lost at sea. But those big liners are always
+keeping such things under cover. Hoodoos the ship, they say, and turns
+prospective passengers to other lines. It hurts business. What's the
+young girl look like?"
+
+Florence was described minutely. The stranger teetered in his chair
+and smoked. Finally he spoke.
+
+"She probably was insane. That's the way generally with insane people.
+They can't see water or look off a tall building without wanting to
+jump. My business is insurance, and we've got the thing figured pretty
+close to the ground. They used to get the best of us on the suicide
+game. A man would take out a large policy to-day and to-morrow he'd
+blow his head off, and we'd have to pay his wife. But nowadays a
+policy is not worth the paper it's written on if a man commits suicide
+under two years."
+
+"You ain't tryin' to insure anybody in town, are you?"
+
+"Oh, no. No work for me when I'm on my vacation. Well, I'm going to
+bed; and to-morrow morning I'll go out to Captain Barnes' beach and
+have a good swim. I'm no sailor, but I like water."
+
+[Illustration: "THE POOR YOUNG THING," MURMURED THE MOTHERLY MRS.
+BARNES]
+
+He honestly enjoyed swimming. Early the next morning he was in the
+water, frolicking about as playfully as a boy. He had all the time in
+the world. Over his shoulder he saw two women wandering down toward
+the beach. Deeper he went, farther out. He was a bold swimmer, but
+that did not prevent a sudden and violent attack of cramps. And it was
+a rare piece of irony that the poor girl should save the life of that
+scoundrel who was without pity or mercy. As she saw his face a
+startled frown marred her brow. But she could not figure out the
+puzzle. Had she ever seen the man before? She did not know, she could
+not tell. Why could not she remember? Why must her poor head ache so
+when she tried to pierce the wall of darkness which surrounded her
+mentally?
+
+The man thanked her feebly, but not in his heart. When he had
+sufficiently recovered he returned to the village and sought the
+railway station, where the Western Union had its office.
+
+"I want to send a code message to my firm. Do you think you can follow
+it?"
+
+"I can try," said the operator.
+
+The code was really Slav; and when the long message was signed it was
+signed by the name Vroon.
+
+The day after the news came that Florence had jumped overboard off the
+banks, Vroon with a dozen other men had started out to comb all the
+fishing villages along the New England coast. Somewhere along the way
+he felt confident that he would learn whether the girl was dead or
+alive. If she was dead then the game was a draw, but if she was alive
+there was still a fighting chance for the Black Hundred. He had had
+some idea of remaining in the village and accomplishing the work
+himself; but after deliberation he concluded that it was important
+enough for Braine himself to take a hand in. So the following night he
+departed for Boston, from there to New York. He proceeded at once to
+the apartment of the countess, where Braine declared that he himself
+would go to the obscure village and claim Florence as his own child.
+But to insure absolute success they would charter Morse's yacht and
+steam right up into the primitive harbor.
+
+When Vroon left the apartment Norton saw him. He was a man of
+impulses, and he had found by experience that first impulses are
+generally the best. He did not know who Vroon was. Any man who called
+on the Countess Perigoff while Braine was with her would be worth
+following.
+
+On the other hand, Vroon recognized the reporter instantly and with
+that ever-ready and alert mind of his set about to lure the young man
+into a trap out of which he might not easily come.
+
+Norton decided to follow his man. He might be going on a wild-goose
+chase, he reasoned; still his first impulses had hitherto served him
+well. He looked care-worn. He was convinced that Florence was dead,
+despite the assertions of Jones to the contrary. He had gone over all
+the mishaps which had taken place and he was now absolutely convinced
+that his whilom friend Braine and the Countess Perigoff were directly
+concerned. Florence had either been going to or coming from the
+apartment. And that memorable day of the abduction the countess had
+been in the dry goods shop.
+
+Vroon took a down-town surface car, and Norton took the same. He sat
+huddled in a corner, never suspecting that Vroon was watching him from
+a corner of his eye. Norton was not keen to-day. The thought of
+Florence kept running through his head.
+
+The car stopped and Vroon got off. He led Norton a winding course
+which at length ended at the door of a tenement building. Vroon
+entered. Norton paused wondering what next to do, now that his man had
+reached his destination. Well, since he had followed him all this
+distance he must make an effort to find out who he was and what he was
+going to do. Cautiously he entered the hallway. As he was about to
+lay his hand on the newel post of the dilapidated stairs the floor
+dropped from under his feet and he was precipitated into the cellar.
+
+This tenement belonged to the Black Hundred; it concealed a thousand
+doors and a hundred traps. Its history was as dark as its hallways.
+
+When Vroon and his companion, who had been waiting for him, descended
+into the cellar they found the reporter insensible. They bound,
+blindfolded, and gagged him.
+
+"Saunders," said Vroon, "you tell Corrigan that I've a sailor for him
+to-night, and that I want this sailor booked for somewhere south of the
+equator. Tell him to say to the master that this fellow is ugly and
+disobedient. A tramp freighter, whose captain is a bully. Do you
+understand me?"
+
+"I get you. But there's no need to go to Corrigan this trip. Bannock
+is in port and sails to-night for Norway. That's far enough."
+
+"Bannock? The very man. Well, Mr. Norton, reporter and amateur
+detective, I guess we've got you fast enough this time. You may or may
+not come back alive. Go and bring around a taxi; some one you can
+trust. I'll dope the reporter while you're gone."
+
+Long hours afterward Norton opened his aching eyes. He could hardly
+move and his head buzzed abominably. What had happened? What was the
+meaning of this slow rise and fall of his bed? Shanghaied?
+
+"Come out o' that now, ye skulker!" roared a voice down the
+companionway.
+
+[Illustration: "COME OUT O' THAT NOW"]
+
+"Shanghaied!" the reporter murmured. He sat up and ran through his
+pockets. Not a sou-markee, not a match even; and a second glance told
+him that the clothes he wore were not his own. "They've landed me this
+time. Shanghaied! What the devil am I going to do?"
+
+"D'ye hear me?" bawled the strident voice again.
+
+Norton looked about desperately for some weapon of defense. He saw an
+engineer's spanner on the floor by the bunk across the way, and with no
+small physical effort he succeeded in obtaining it. He stood up, his
+hand behind his back.
+
+"All right, me bucko! I'll come down an' git ye!"
+
+A pair of enormous boots began to appear down the companionway, and
+there gradually rose up from them a man as wide as a church door and as
+deep as a well.
+
+"Wait a moment," said Norton, gripping the spanner. "Let us have a
+perfect understanding right off the bat."
+
+"We're going to have it, matey. Don't ye worry none."
+
+Norton raised the spanner, and, dizzy as he was, faced this seafaring
+Hercules courageously.
+
+"I've been shanghaied, and you know it. Where are we bound?"
+
+"Copenhagen."
+
+"Well, for a month or more you'll beat me up whenever the opportunity
+offers. But I merely wish to warn you that if you do you'll find a
+heap of trouble waiting for you the next time you drop your mudhook in
+North America."
+
+"Is that so?" said the giant, eying the spanner and the shaking hand
+that held it aloft.
+
+"It is. I'll take your orders and do the best I can, because you've
+got the upper hand. But, God is witness, you'll pay for every needless
+blow you strike. Now what do you want me to do?"
+
+"Lay down that spanner an' come on deck, I'll tell ye what t' do. I
+was goin' t' whale th' daylights out o' ye; but ye're somethin' av a
+man. Drop the spanner first."
+
+Norton hesitated. As lithe as a tiger the bulk of a man sprang at him
+and crushed him to the floor, wrenching away the spanner. Then the
+giant took Norton by the scruff of his neck and banged him up the steps
+to the deck.
+
+"I ain't goin' t' hurt ye. I had t' show ye that no spanner ever
+bothered Mike Bannock. Now, d' know what a cook's galley is?"
+
+[Illustration: "I AIN'T GOIN' T' HURT YE"]
+
+"I do," said Norton, breathing hard.
+
+"Well, hike there an' start in with peelin' spuds, an' don't waste 'em
+neither. That'll be all fer th' present. Ye were due for a wallopin'
+but I kinda like yer spunk."
+
+So Jim stumbled down to the cook's galley and grimly set to work at the
+potatoes. It might have been far worse. But here he was, likely to be
+on the high seas for months, and no way of notifying Jones what had
+happened. The outlook was anything but cheerful. But a vague hope
+awoke in his heart. If they were still after him might it not signify
+that Florence lived.
+
+Meantime Braine had not been idle. According to Vroon the girl's
+memory was in bad shape; so he had not the least doubt of bringing her
+back to New York without mishap. Once he had her there the game would
+begin in earnest. He played his cards exceedingly well. Steaming up
+into the little fishing harbor with a handsome yacht in itself would
+allay any distrust. And he wore a capital disguise, too. Everything
+went well till he laid his hand on Florence's shoulder. She gave a
+startled cry and ran over to Barnes, clinging to him wildly.
+
+"No, no!" she cried.
+
+"Now what, my child?" asked the sailor.
+
+She shook her head. Her aversion was inexplicable.
+
+"Come, my dear; can't you see that it is your father?" Braine turned
+to the captain. "She has been like this for a year. Heaven knows if
+she'll ever be in her right mind again," sadly. "I was giving her an
+ocean voyage, with the kindest nurses possible, and yet she jumped
+overboard. Come, Florence."
+
+The girl wrapped her arms all the tighter around Barnes' neck.
+
+An idea came into the old sailor's head. "Of course, sir, ye've got
+proof thet she's your daughter?"
+
+"Proof?" Braine was taken aback.
+
+"Yes; somethin' t' prove that you're her father. I got skinned out of
+a sloop once because I took a man's word at its face value. Black an'
+white, an' on paper, says I, hereafter."
+
+"But I never thought of such a thing," protested Braine, beginning to
+lose his patience. "I can't risk sending to New York for documents.
+She is my daughter, and you will find it will not pay to take this
+peculiar stand."
+
+"In black an' white, 'r y' can't have her."
+
+Braine thereupon rushed forward to seize Florence. Barnes swung
+Florence behind him.
+
+"I guess she'll stay here a leetle longer, sir."
+
+Time was vital, and this obstinacy made Braine furious.
+
+He reached again for Florence.
+
+"Clear out o' here, 'r show your authority," growled Barnes.
+
+"She goes with me, or you'll regret it."
+
+"All right. But I guess th' law won't hurt me none. I'm in my rights.
+There's the door, mister."
+
+"I refuse to go without her!"
+
+Barnes sighed. He was on land a man of peace, but there was a limit to
+his patience. He seized Braine by the shoulders and hustled him out of
+the house.
+
+"Bring your proofs, mister, an' nothin' more'll be said; but till y'
+bring 'em, keep away from this cottage."
+
+And, simple-minded sailor that he was, he thought this settled the
+matter.
+
+That night he kept his ears open for unusual sounds, but he merely
+wasted his night's rest. Quite naturally, he reckoned that the
+stranger would make his attempt at night. Indeed, he made it in broad
+daylight, with Barnes not a hundred yards away, calking a dory whose
+seams had sprung a leak. Braine had Florence upon the chartered yacht
+before the old man realized what had happened. He never saw Florence
+again; but one day, months later, he read all about her in a newspaper.
+
+Florence fought; but she was weak, and so the conquest was easy.
+Braine was kind enough, now that he had her safe. He talked to her,
+but she merely stared at the receding coast.
+
+[Illustration: FLORENCE FOUGHT BUT SHE WAS WEAK AND SO THE CONQUEST WAS
+EASY]
+
+"All right; don't talk if you don't want to. Here," to one of the men,
+"take her to the cabin and keep her there. But don't you touch her.
+I'll break you if you do. Put her in the cabin and guard the door; at
+least keep an eye on it. She may take it into her head to jump
+overboard."
+
+Even the temporarily demented are not without a species of cunning.
+Florence had never seen Braine till he appeared at the Barnes cottage.
+Yet she revolted at the touch of his hand. On the second day out
+toward New York she found a box of matches and blithely set fire to her
+cabin, walked out into the corridor and thence to the deck. When the
+fire was discovered it had gained too much headway to be stopped. The
+yacht was doomed. They put off in the boats and for half a day drifted
+helplessly.
+
+Fate has everything mapped out like a game of chess. You move a pawn,
+and bang goes your bishop, or your knight, or your king; or she lets
+you almost win a game, and then checkmates you. But there is one thing
+to be said in her favor--rail at her how we will, she is always giving
+odds to the innocent.
+
+
+Mike Bannock was in the pilothouse, looking over his charts, when the
+lookout in the crow's nest sang out: "Two boats adrift off the port
+bow, sir!" And Bannock, who was a first-class sailor, although a rough
+one, shouted down the tube to the engine room. The freighter came to a
+halt in about ten minutes. The castaways saw that they had been noted,
+and pulled gallantly at the oars.
+
+There are some things which science, well advanced as it is, can not
+explain. Among them is the shock which cuts off the past and the
+countershock which reawakens memory. They may write treatise after
+treatise and expound, but they never succeed in truly getting beyond
+that dark wall of mystery.
+
+At the sound of Jim Norton's voice and at the sight of his face--for
+subconsciously she must have been thinking of him all the while--a
+great blinding heat-wave seemed to burn across her eyes, and when the
+effect passed away she was herself again. A wild glance at her
+surroundings convinced her that both she and her lover were in danger.
+"Keep back," whispered Jim. "Don't recognize me."
+
+"They believe that I've lost my mind, and I'll keep that idea in their
+heads. Sometime to-night I'll find a chance to talk to you."
+
+It took a good deal of cautious maneuvering to bring about the meeting.
+
+"They shanghaied me. And I thought you dead! It was all wrong. It
+was a trick of that Perigoff woman, and it succeeded. Girl, girl, I
+love you better than life!"
+
+"I know it now," she said, and she kissed him. "Has my father appeared
+yet?"
+
+[Illustration: "I KNOW IT NOW," SHE SAID, AND SHE KISSED HIM]
+
+"No."
+
+"Do you know anything at all about him?" sadly.
+
+"I thought I did. It's all a jumble to me. But beware of the man who
+brought you here. He is the head of all our troubles; and if he knew I
+was on board he'd kill me out of hand. He'd have to."
+
+Braine offered Bannock $1,000 to turn back as far as Boston; and as
+Bannock had all the time in the world, carrying no perishable goods, he
+consented. But he never could quite understand what followed. He had
+put Florence and Braine in the boat and landed them; but when he went
+down to see if Braine had left anything behind, he found that
+individual bound and gagged in his bunk.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+When Jones received the telegram that Florence was safe, the iron nerve
+of the man broke down. The suspense had been so keenly terrible that
+the sudden reaction left him almost hysterically weak. Three weeks of
+waiting, waiting. Not even the scoundrel and his wife who had been the
+principal actors in the abduction had been found. From a great ship in
+midocean they had disappeared. Doubtless they had hidden among the
+immigrants, who, for little money, would have fooled all the officers
+on board. There was no doubt in Jones' mind that the pair had landed
+safely at Madrid.
+
+As for Susan, she did have hysterics. She went about the room, wailing
+and laughing and wringing her hands. You would have thought by her
+actions that Florence had just died. The sight of her stirred the
+saturnine lips of the butler into a smile. But he did not remonstrate
+with her. In fact, he rather envied her freedom in emotion. Man can
+not let go in that fashion; it is a sign of weakness; and he dared not
+let even Susan see any sign of weakness in him.
+
+So the reporter had found her, and she was safe and sound on her way to
+New York? Knowing by this time something of the reporter's courage, he
+was eager to learn how the event had come about. When he had not had a
+telephone message from Norton in forty-eight hours, he had decided that
+the Black Hundred had finally succeeded in getting hold of him. It had
+been something of a blow; for while he looked with disfavor upon the
+reporter's frank regard for his charge, he appreciated the fact that
+Norton was a staff to lean on, and had behind him all the power of the
+press, which included the privilege of going everywhere even if one
+could not always get back.
+
+As he folded the telegram and put it into his pocket, he observed the
+man with the opera glasses over the way. He shrugged. Well, let him
+watch till his eyes dropped out of his head; he would only see that
+which was intended for his eyes. Still, it was irksome to feel that no
+matter when or where you moved, watching eyes observed and chronicled
+these movements.
+
+Suddenly, not being devoid of a sense of dry humor, Jones stepped over
+to the telephone and called up her highness the Countess Perigoff.
+
+"Who is it?"
+
+He was forced to admit, however reluctantly, that the woman had a
+marvelously fine speaking voice.
+
+"It is Jones, madam."
+
+"Jones?"
+
+"Mr. Hargreave's butler, madam."
+
+"Oh! You have news of Florence?"
+
+"Yes." It will be an embarrassing day for humanity when some one
+invents a photographic apparatus by which two persons at the two ends
+of the telephone may observe the facial expressions of each other.
+
+"What is it? Tell me quickly."
+
+"Florence has been found, and she is on her way back to New York. She
+was found by Mr. Norton, the reporter."
+
+"I am so glad! Shall I come up at once and have you tell me the whole
+amazing story?"
+
+"It would be useless, madam, for I know nothing except what I learned
+from a telegram I have just received. But no doubt some time this
+evening you might risk a call."
+
+"Ring up the instant she returns. Did she say what train?"
+
+"No, madam," lied Jones, smiling.
+
+He hung up the receiver and stared at the telephone as if he would
+force his gaze in and through it to the woman at the other end. Flesh
+and blood! Well, greed was stronger than that. Treacherous cat! Let
+her play; let her weave her nets, dig her pits. The day would come,
+and it was not far distant, when she would find that the mild-eyed
+mongoose was just as deadly as the cobra, and far more cunning.
+
+The heads of the Black Hundred must be destroyed. Those were the
+orders. What good to denounce them, to send them to a prison from
+which, with the aid of money and a tremendous secret political pull,
+they might readily find their way out? They must be exterminated, as
+one kills off the poisonous plague rats of the Orient. A woman? In
+the law of reprisal there was no sex.
+
+Shortly after the telephone episode (which rather puzzled the countess)
+she received a wire from Braine, which announced the fact that Florence
+and Norton had escaped and were coming to New York on train No. 25, and
+advising her to meet the train en route. She had to fly about to do it.
+
+[Illustration: HE HAD PUT FLORENCE AND BRAINE IN THE BOAT AND LANDED
+THEM]
+
+When Captain Bannock released Braine, he had been in no enviable frame
+of mind. Tricked, fooled by the girl, whose mind was as unclouded as
+his own! She had succeeded in bribing a coal stoker, and had taken him
+unawares. The man had donned the disguise he had laid out for shore
+approach, and the blockheaded Bannock had never suspected. He had not
+recognized Norton at all. It was only when Bannock explained the
+history of the shanghaied stoker that he realized his real danger.
+Norton! He must be pushed off the board. After this episode he could
+no longer keep up the pretense of being friendly. Norton, by a rare
+stroke of luck, had forced him out into the open. So be it.
+Self-preservation is in nowise looked upon as criminal. The law may
+have its ideas about it, but the individual recognizes no law but its
+own. It was Braine whom he loved and admired, or Norton whom he hated
+as a dog with rabies hates water. With Norton free, he would never
+again dare return to New York openly. This meddling reporter aimed at
+his ease and elegance.
+
+He left the freighter as soon as a boat could carry him ashore. The
+fugitives would make directly for the railroad, and thither he went at
+top speed, to arrive ten minutes too late.
+
+"Free!" said Florence, as the train began to increase its speed.
+
+Norton reached over and patted her hand. Then he sat back with a
+sudden shock of dismay. He dived a hand into a pocket, into another
+and another. The price of the telegram he had sent to Jones was all he
+had had in the world; and he had borrowed that from a friendly stoker.
+In the excitement he had forgotten all about such a contingency as the
+absolute need of money.
+
+"Florence, I'm afraid we're going to have trouble with the conductor
+when he comes."
+
+"Why?"
+
+He pulled out his pockets suggestively. "Not a postage stamp. They'll
+put us off at the next station. And," with a glance in the little
+mirror between the two windows, "I shouldn't blame them a bit." He was
+unshaven, he was wearing the suit substituted for his own; and
+Florence, sartorially, was not much better off.
+
+She smiled, blushed, stood up, and turned her back to him. Then she
+sat down again. In her hand she held a small dilapidated roll of
+banknotes.
+
+"I had them with me when they abducted me," she said. "Besides, this
+ring is worth something."
+
+"Thank the Lord!" he exclaimed, relievedly.
+
+So there was nothing more to do but be happy; and happy they were.
+They were quite oblivious to the peculiar interest they aroused among
+the other passengers. This unshaven young man, in his ragged coat and
+soiled jersey; this beautiful young girl, in a wrinkled homespun, her
+glorious blond hair awry; and the way they looked at each other during
+those lulls in conversation peculiar to lovers the world over,
+impressed the other passengers with the idea that something very
+unusual had happened to these two.
+
+The Pullman conductor was not especially polite; but money was money,
+and the stockholders, waiting for their dividends, made it impossible
+for him to reject it. The regular conductor paid them no more
+attention than to grumble over changing a twenty-dollar bill.
+
+So, while these two were hurrying on to New York, the plotters were
+hurrying east to meet them. The two trains met and stopped at the same
+station about eighty miles from New York. The countess, accompanied by
+Vroon, who kept well in the background, entered the car occupied by the
+two castaways.
+
+In the mirror at the rear of the car Norton happened to cast an idle
+glance, and he saw the countess. Vroon, however, escaped his eye.
+
+"Be careful, Florence," he said. "The countess is in the car. The
+game begins again. Pretend that you suspect nothing. Pretty quick
+work on their part. And that's all the more reason why we should play
+the comedy well. Here she comes. She will recognize you, throw her
+arms around you, and show all manner of effusiveness. Just keep your
+head and play the game."
+
+"She lied about you to me."
+
+"No matter."
+
+"Oh!" cried the countess. She seized Florence in a wild embrace. She
+was an inimitable actress, and Norton could not help admiring her.
+"Your butler telephoned me! I ran to the first train out. And here
+you are, back safe and sound! It is wonderful. Tell me all about it.
+What an adventure! And, good heavens, Mr. Norton, where did you get
+those clothes? Did you find her and rescue her? What a newspaper
+story you'll be able to make out of it all! Now, tell me just what
+happened." She sat down on the arm of Florence's chair. The girl had
+steeled her nerves against the touch of her. And yet she was
+beautiful! How could any one so beautiful be so wicked?
+
+"Well, it began like this," began Florence; and she described her
+adventures, omitting, to be sure, Braine's part in it.
+
+She had reached that part where they had been rescued by Captain
+Bannock when a thundering, grinding crash struck the words from her
+lips. The three of them were flung violently to one side of the car
+amid splintering wood, tinkling glass, and the shriek of steel against
+steel. A low wail of horror rose and died away as the car careened
+over on its side. The three were rendered unconscious and were huddled
+together on the floor, under the uprooted chairs.
+
+Vroon had escaped with only a slight cut on the hand from flying glass.
+He climbed over the chairs and passengers with a single object in view.
+He saw that all three he was interested in were insensible. He quickly
+examined them and saw that they had not received serious injuries. He
+had but little time. The countess and Norton would have to take their
+chance with the other passengers. Resolutely he stooped and lifted
+Florence in his arms and crawled out of the car with her. It was a
+difficult task, but he managed it. Outside, in the confusion, no one
+paid any attention to him. So he threw the unconscious girl over his
+shoulder and staggered on toward the road.
+
+It was fortunate that the accident had occurred where it did. Five
+miles beyond was the station marked for the arrest of Norton as an
+abductor and the taking in charge of Florence as a rebellious girl who
+had run away from her parents. If he could only reach the Swede's hut,
+where his confederates were in waiting, the game would then be his.
+
+After struggling along for half an hour a carriage was spied by Vroon,
+and he hailed it when it reached his side.
+
+"What's the trouble, mister?" asked the farmer.
+
+"A wreck on the railroad. My daughter is badly hurt. I must take her
+to the nearest village. How far is it?"
+
+"About three miles."
+
+"I'll give you twenty dollars for the use of that rig of yours."
+
+"Can't do it, mister."
+
+"But it's a case of humanity, sir!" indignantly. "You are refusing to
+aid the unfortunate."
+
+The farmer thought it over for a moment. "All right. You can have the
+buggy for twenty dollars. When you get to the village take the nag to
+Doc Sanders' livery. He'll know what to do."
+
+"Thank you. Help me in with her."
+
+Vroon drove away without the least intention of going toward the
+village. As a result, when Florence came to her senses she found
+herself surrounded by strange and ominous faces. At first she thought
+they had taken her from the wreck out of kindness; but when she saw the
+cold, impassive face of the man Vroon she closed her eyes and lay back
+in the chair. Well, ill and weak as she was, they should find that she
+was not without a certain strength.
+
+In the meantime Norton revived and looked about in vain for Florence.
+He searched among the crowd of terrified passengers, the hurt and the
+unharmed, but she was not to be found. He ran back to the countess and
+helped her out of the broken car.
+
+"Where is Florence?" she asked dazedly.
+
+"God knows! Here, come over and sit down by the fence till I see if
+there is a field telegraph."
+
+They had already erected one, and his message went off with a batch of
+others. This time he was determined not to trust to chance. The shock
+may have brought back Florence's recent mental disorder, and she may
+have wandered off without knowing what she was doing. On the other
+hand, she may have been carried off. And against such a contingency he
+must be fortified. Money! The curse of God was upon it; it was the
+trail of the serpent, spreading poison in its wake.
+
+By and by the countess was able to walk; and, supporting her, he led
+her to the road, along which they walked slowly for at least an hour.
+They might very well have waited for the relief train. But he could
+not stand the thought of inactivity. The countess had her choice of
+staying behind or going with him. He hated the woman, but he could not
+refuse her aid. She had a cut on the side of her head, and she limped
+besides.
+
+They stopped at the first farmhouse, explained what had happened, and
+the mistress urged them to enter. She had seen no one, and certainly
+not a young woman. She must have wandered off in another direction.
+She ran into the kitchen for a basin and towel and proceeded to patch
+the countess' hurts.
+
+The latter was extremely uneasy. That she should be under obligation
+to Norton galled her. There was a spark of conscience left in her
+soul. She had tried to destroy him, and he had been kind to her. Was
+he a fool or was he deep, playing a game as shrewd as her own? She
+could not tell. Where was Vroon? Had he carried Florence off?
+
+An hour later a man came in.
+
+"Hullo! More folks from the wreck?"
+
+"Where's the horse and buggy, Jake?" his wife asked.
+
+"Rented it to a man whose daughter was hurt. He went to the village."
+
+"Will you describe the daughter?" asked Norton.
+
+The countess twisted her fingers.
+
+The farmer rudely described Florence.
+
+"Have you another horse and a saddle?"
+
+"What's your hurry?"
+
+"I'll tell you later. What I want now is the horse."
+
+"What is to become of me?" asked the countess.
+
+"You will be in good hands," he answered briefly. "I am going to find
+out what has become of Florence. Is there a deserted farmhouse
+hereabouts?" he asked of the farmer.
+
+"Not that I recollect."
+
+"Why yes, there is, Jake. There's that old hut about two miles up the
+fork," volunteered the wife. "Where the Swede died last winter."
+
+"By jingo! I'm going into the village and see if that man brought in
+the rig."
+
+"But get my horse first. My name is James Norton, and I am on the
+_Blade_ in New York. Which way do I go?"
+
+"First turn to the left. Come on; I'll get the horse for you."
+
+Once the horse was saddled, Norton set off at a run. He was unarmed;
+he forgot all about this fact. His one thought was to find the woman
+he loved. He was not afraid of meeting a dozen men, not while his
+present fury lasted.
+
+And he fell into an ambush within a hundred yards of his goal. They
+dragged him off the horse and buffeted and mishandled him into the hut.
+
+"Both of them!" said Vroon, rubbing his hands.
+
+"I know you, you Russian rat!" cried Norton. "And if I ever get out of
+this I'll kill you out of hand! Damn you!"
+
+"Oh, yes; talk, talk; but it never hurts any one," jeered Vroon.
+"You'll never have the chance to kill me out of hand, as you say.
+Besides, do you know my face?"
+
+"I do. The mask doesn't matter. You're the man who had me shanghaied.
+The voice is enough."
+
+"Very good. That's what I wished to know. That's your death warrant.
+We'll do it like they used to do at the old Academy; tie you to the
+railroad track. We shall not hurt you at all. If some engine runs
+over you heaven is witness we did not guide the engine. Remember the
+story of the boy and the cat?" with sinister amiability. "The boy said
+he wasn't pulling the cat's tail, he was only holding it; the cat did
+the pulling. Bring him along, men. Time is precious, and we have a
+good deal to do before night settles down. Come on with him. The
+track is only a short distance."
+
+"Jim, Jim!" cried Florence in anguish.
+
+"Never you mind, girl; they're only bluffing. They won't dare."
+
+"You think so?" said Vroon. "Wait and see." He turned upon Florence.
+"He is your lover. Do you wish him to die?"
+
+"No, no!"
+
+"We promise to give him his freedom twelve hours from now on condition
+that you tell where that money is."
+
+"Florence!" warned Norton.
+
+Vroon struck him on the mouth. "Be silent, you scum!"
+
+"It is in the chest Jones, the butler, threw into the sound," she said
+bravely. And so it might be for all she knew.
+
+Vroon laughed. "We know about where that is."
+
+"Florence, say nothing on my account. They are not the kind of men who
+keep their word."
+
+"Eh?" snarled Vroon. "We'll see about that." He glanced at his watch.
+"In half an hour the freight comes along. It may become stalled at the
+wreck. But it will serve."
+
+Norton knew very well that if need said must they would not hesitate to
+execute a melodramatic plan of this character. It was the way of the
+Slav; they had to make crime abnormal in order to enjoy it. They could
+very well have knocked him on the head then and there and have done
+with him. But the time used in conveying him to the railroad might
+prove his salvation. Nearly four hours had passed since the sending of
+the telegram to Jones.
+
+They bound Florence and left her seated in the chair. As soon as they
+were gone she rolled to the floor. She was able to right herself to
+her knees, and after a torturous five minutes reached the fireplace.
+She burnt her hands and wrists, but the blaze was the only knife
+obtainable. She was free.
+
+[Illustration: THEY BOUND FLORENCE AND LEFT HER SEATED IN THE CHAIR]
+
+
+Jones arrived with half a dozen policemen. Vroon alone escaped.
+
+The butler caught Florence in his arms and nearly crushed the breath
+out of her. And she was so glad to see him that she kissed him half a
+dozen times. What if he was her father's butler? He was brave and
+loyal and kind.
+
+"They tied him to the track," she cried. "Look at my wrists!" The
+butler did so, and kissed them tenderly. "And I saved him."
+
+Jones stretched out a hand over Florence's shoulder. "When the time
+comes," he said; "when the right time comes and my master's enemies are
+confounded. But always the rooks, never the hawks, do we catch. God
+bless you, Norton! I don't know what I should have done without you."
+
+"When a chap's in love," began Norton, embarrassedly.
+
+"I know, I know," interrupted Jones. "The second relief train is
+waiting. Let us hurry back. I shan't feel secure till we are once
+more in the house."
+
+So, arm in arm, the three of them went down the tracks to the hand-car
+which had brought the police.
+
+And now for the iron-bound chest at the bottom of the sea.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+A dipsy-chanty, if you please; of sailormen in jerseys and tarry caps,
+of rolling gaits, strong tobacco and diverse profanity; of cutters, and
+blunt-nosed schooners, and tramps, canvas and steam, some of them
+honest, some of them shady, and some of them pirates of the first water
+who did not find it necessary to hoist aloft the skull and bones. The
+seas are dotted with them. They remind you of the once prosperous
+merchant, run down at the heel, who slinks along the side streets,
+ashamed to meet those he knew in the past. You never hear them
+mentioned in the maritime news, which is the society column of the
+ships; you know of their existence only by the bleached bones of them,
+strewn along the coast.
+
+You who crave adventures on high seas, you purchase a ticket, a steamer
+chair, and a couple of popular novels, go on board to the blare of a
+very indifferent brass band, and believe you are adventuring; when, as
+a matter of fact, you are about to spend a dull week or a fortnight on
+a water hotel, where the most exciting thing is the bugle's call to
+meals or the discovery of a card sharp in the smoking-room. Take a
+real ship, go as supercargo, to the South Seas; take the side streets
+of the ocean, and learn what it can do with hurricanes, typhoons,
+blistering calms, and men's souls. There will be adventure enough
+then. If you are a weakling, either you are made strong, or you die.
+
+An honest ship, but run down at the heel, rode at anchor in the sound,
+a fourth-rater of the hooker breed; that is, her principal line of
+business was hauling barges up and down the coast. When she could not
+pick up enough barges to make it pay, why she'd go gallivanting down to
+Cuba for bales of tobacco or even to the Bermudas for the
+heaven-smelling onion. To-day she was an onion ship; which precludes
+any idea of adventure. She was about four thousand tons, and her
+engines were sternward and not amidship. She carried two masts and a
+half-dozen hoist booms, and the only visible sign of anything new on
+her was her bowsprit. This was new doubtless because she had poked her
+nose too far into her last slip.
+
+Her crew was orderly and tractable. There were shore drunks, to be
+sure, because they were sailors; but they were at work. They moved
+about briskly, for they were on the point of sailing for the
+Bahamas--perhaps for more onions. Presently the windlass creaked and
+shrilled, and the blobby links, much in need of tar paint, red as fish
+gills, clattered down into the bow. Sometimes they painted the chain
+as it came over; but paint was costly, and this was done only when the
+anchor threatened to stay on the bottom.
+
+There was a sailor among this crew, and he went by the name of Steve
+Blossom; and he was one of his kind. A grimy dime novel protruded
+rakishly from his hip pocket, and his right cheek was swollen as with
+the toothache, due, probably, to a generous "chaw" of Seaman's Delight.
+He was a real tobacco chewer, for he rarely spat. He was as peaceful
+as a backwater bay in summer; non-argumentative and passive, he stood
+his watch in fair weather and foul.
+
+No one gave the anchor any more attention after it came to rest. The
+great city over the way was fairy-like in its haziness and softened
+lines. It was the poetry of angles, of shafts and spars of stone; and
+Steve Blossom, having a moment to himself, leaned against the rail and
+stared regretfully. He had been generously drunk the night before, and
+it was a pleasant recollection. Chance led his glance to trail down
+the cutwater. His neck stretched from his collar like a turtle's from
+its shell.
+
+"Well, I'll be hornswoggled!" he murmured, shifting his cud from
+starboard to port.
+
+Caught on the fluke of the anchor was the strangest looking box he had
+ever laid eyes on. There were leather and steel bands and
+diamond-shaped ivory and mother of pearl, and it hung jauntily on the
+point of the rusty fluke. Anybody would be hornswoggled to glimpse
+such a droll jest of fate. On the fluke of the old mudhook, by a hair,
+you might say. In all the wild sea yarns he had ever read or heard
+there was nothing to match this.
+
+Treasure!
+
+And Steve was destined never to be passive again. His first impulse
+was to call his companions; his second impulse was to say nothing at
+all, and wait for an opportunity to get the box to his bunk without
+being detected. Treasure! Diamonds and rubies and pearls and old
+Spanish gold; and all hanging to the fluke of the anchor.
+
+"Hornswoggled!" in a kind of awesome whisper this time. "An' we
+a-headin' for th' Bahamas!" For under his feet he could hear the
+rhythm of engines. "What'll I do? If I leave it, some one else'll see
+it." He scratched his chin perplexedly; and the cud went back to
+starboard. "I got it!"
+
+He took off his coat and carefully dropped it down over the mysterious
+box. It was growing darker and darker all the time, and shortly
+neither coat nor anchor would be visible without close scrutiny.
+Treasure: greed, cupidity, crime. Steve saw only the treasure and not
+its camp followers. What did they call them?--doubloons and
+pieces-of-eight?
+
+He ate his supper with his messmates, and he ate heartily as usual. It
+would have taken something more vital than mere treasure to disturb
+Steve Blossom's appetite. He was one of those enviable individuals
+whose imagination and gastric juices work at the same time. And while
+he ate he planned. In the first place, he would buy that home at
+Bedford; then he would take over the Gilson House and live like a lord.
+If he wanted a drink, all he would have to do would be to turn the
+spigot or tip a bottle; and more than that, he'd have a bartender to do
+it. Onions! He swore he would not have an onion within a mile of the
+Gilson House. "Onions!" Quite unconsciously he spoke the words aloud.
+
+"Huh? Well, if ye don't like onions, find a hooker that packs violets
+in her hold," was the cheerful advice of the man at Steve's elbow.
+
+"Who's talkin' t' you?" grunted Steve. "Wha' did I say?"
+
+"Onions, ye lubber! Don't we know whut onions is? Ain't we smelt 'em
+so long that ye could stick yer nose in th' starboard light an' never
+smell no kerosene? Onions! Pass th' cawffy."
+
+Steve helped himself first. The man who spoke bunked over him, and
+they were not on the best of terms. There was no real reason for this
+frank antagonism; simply, they did not splice any more effectually than
+cotton rope and hemp splice. Sailors are moody and superstitious; at
+least they generally are on hookers of the _Captain Manners_ breed.
+Steve was superstitious and Jim Dunkers was moody and had no thumb on
+his left hand. Steve hated the sight of that red nubbin. He was quite
+certain that it had been a whole thumb once, on the way to gouge out
+somebody's eye, and had inadvertently connected with somebody's teeth.
+
+Spanish doubloons and pearls and diamonds and rubies! It was mighty
+hard not to say these words out loud, too; blare them into the sullen
+faces grouped around the table. He was off watch till midnight; and he
+was wondering if he could get the box without attracting the attention
+of the lookout, who had a devilish keen eye for everything that stirred
+on deck or on water. Well, he would have to risk it; but he would wait
+till full darkness had fallen over the sea and the lookout would be
+compelled to keep his eyes off the deck. The boys wanted him to play
+cards.
+
+"Not for me. Busted. How long d' y' think forty dollars 'll last in
+New York, anyhow?" And he stalked out of the forecastle and went down
+into the waist to enjoy his evening pipe, all the while keeping a
+weather eye forward, at the ratty old pilot house.
+
+It was ten o'clock, land time, when he rammed his cutty into a pocket
+and resolutely walked forward. If any one watched him they would think
+he was only looking down the cutwater. The thought of money and the
+pleasures it will buy makes cunning the stupidest of dolts; and Steve
+was ordinarily a dolt. But to-night his brain was keen enough for all
+purposes. It was a hazardous job to get the box off the fluke without
+letting it slip back into the sea. Steve, however, accomplished the
+feat, climbed back on the rail and sat down, waiting. A quarter of an
+hour passed. No one had seen him. With his coat securely wrapped
+about his precious find he made for the forecastle. His mates, save
+those who were doing their watch, were all in their bunks. An oil lamp
+dimly illuminated the forward partition. Steve's bunk was almost in
+darkness. Very deftly he rolled back the bedding and secreted the box
+under his pillows, and then stretched himself out with the pretense of
+snoozing till the bell called him to duty.
+
+He was rich; and the moment a man has money he has troubles; there is
+always some one who wants to take it away from you. His bunk was on
+the port side, and there was plenty of hiding space between the iron
+plates and the wooden partition. He intended to loosen three or four
+planks, and then when the time came, slip the box behind them. Some
+time during the morning the forecastle would be empty, and then would
+be his time.
+
+But he suffered the agonies of damnation during the four-hours' watch.
+Supposing some fool should go rummaging about his bunk and discover the
+box? Suppose ... But he dared not suppose. There was nothing to do
+but wait. If he created any curiosity on the part of his mates he was
+lost. He would have to divide with them all, from the captain down to
+the cook's boy. It was a heart-rending thought. From being the most
+open and frank man aboard, he became the most cunning. From being a
+man without enemies, he saw an enemy even in his shadow.
+
+At four o'clock he turned in and slept like a log.
+
+In the morning he found his opportunity. For half an hour the
+forecastle was empty of all save himself. Feverishly he pried back the
+boards, found the brace beam, and gently laid the box there. It was a
+mighty curious-looking box. Once he had stoked up the Chinese coast
+from the Philippines, and he judged it to be Chinese in origin. He
+tried to pry open the cover and feast his eyes upon the treasure; but
+under the leather and ivory and mother of pearl was impervious steel.
+It would take an ax or a crowbar to stir that lid. He sighed. He
+replaced the boards, and became to all appearances his stolid self
+again.
+
+But all the way down to the Bahamas he was moody, and when he answered
+any questions it was with words spoken testily and jerkily.
+
+"I know whut's th' matter," said Dunkers. "He's in love."
+
+"Shut your mouth!"
+
+"Didn't I tell yuh?" laughed the tantalizer, dancing toward the
+companion way. "Steve's in love, 'r he didn't git drunk enough on
+shore t' satisfy his whale's belly!"
+
+A boot thudded spitefully against the door jamb.
+
+"You fellahs let me alone, 'r I'll bash in a couple o' heads!"
+
+"Oh, yuh will, will yuh?" cried Dunkers from the deck. "If yuh want a
+little exercise, yuh can begin on me, yuh moonsick swab! Whut's th'
+matter with yuh, anyhow? Where'd yuh git this grouch? Whut've we done
+t' yuh? Huh?"
+
+"You keep out o' my way, that's all. I'm mindin' my watches, an' don't
+ask no odds of you duffers. What if I have a grouch? Is it any o'
+your business? All right. When we step ashore at th' Bahamas, Mister
+Jim Dunkers, I'll tear the ropes out o' your pulley blocks. But till
+we git there, you t' th' upper bunk an' me t' mine."
+
+"Leave th' ol' grouch alone, Jim. Th' mate won't stand for no
+scrappin' aboard. We'll have th' thing done right in th' custom sheds.
+We'll have a finish fight, Queensberry rules, an' may th' best man win."
+
+"I'm willin'," said Jim.
+
+"So'm I," agreed Steve. But his intentions were not honorable. He
+proposed to desert before any fight took place. Not that he was
+physically afraid; no; he wanted to dig his hands deep into those
+doubloons and pieces-of-eight.
+
+So the four days down passed otherwise uneventfully, amid paint pots
+and iron rust and three meals a day of pork, onion soup, potatoes, and
+strong, bitter coffee. The winds became light and balmy and the sea
+blue and gentle. The men went about in their undershirts and
+dungarees, barefooted. Of course the coming fight was the main topic
+of conversation. It promised to be a rattling good scrap, for both men
+were evenly matched, and both had a "kick" in either hand. Even the
+captain took a mild interest in the affair. He was an old sailor. He
+knew that there was no such word as arbitration in a sailor's
+vocabulary; his disputes could be settled only in one manner, by his
+calloused fists.
+
+When the old mudhook (and some day Steve was going to buy it and hang
+it over the entrance to the Gilson House) slithered down into the
+smiling waters of the bay, Steve concluded that discretion was the
+better part of valor. He would steal ashore on the quarantine tug
+which lay alongside. He was willing to fight under ordinary
+circumstances, but he must get his treasure in safety first. They
+could call him a welcher if they wanted to; devil a bit did he care.
+So he pried back the boards of his bunk wall, took out the box, eyed it
+fondly, and noted for the first time the lettering on it:
+
+ STANLEY HARGREAVE.
+
+
+He wrinkled his brow in the effort to recall a pirate by this name, but
+was unsuccessful. No matter. He hugged the box under his coat and
+made for the gangway, and inadvertently ran into his enemy.
+
+Dunkers caught a bit of the box peeping from under the coat.
+
+"What 'a' yuh got there?" he demanded truculently.
+
+"None o' your dam business! You lemme by; hear me?"
+
+"Ain't none o' my business, huh? Where'd yuh git a box like that?
+Steal it? By cripes, I'm goin' t' have a look at that box, my hearty.
+It don't smell like honest onions."
+
+"You lemme by!" breathed Steve, with murder in his heart.
+
+Suddenly the two men closed, surged back and forth, one determined to
+take and the other to hold this mysterious box. Dunkers struggled to
+uphold his word: not that he really wanted the box but to prove that he
+was strong enough to take it if he wanted to. The name on the box
+flashed and disappeared. It was a kind of shock to him. He and
+Blossom went battering against the rail. Dunker's grip slipped and so
+did Blossom's. The result was that the box was catapulted into the
+sea. With an agonizing cry, Blossom leaned far over. He saw the box
+oscillate for a moment, then sink gracefully in a zigzag course, down
+through the blue waters. Fainter and fainter it grew, and at last
+vanished.
+
+"I'm sorry, Steve; but yuh wouldn't let me look at it," said Dunkers,
+contritely.
+
+"Damn you; I'm goin' t' kill y' for that!"
+
+It became a real fight this time, fist and foot, tooth and nail; one
+mad with the lust to kill and the other desperately intent on living.
+It was one of those contests in which honor and fair play have no part.
+But for the timely arrival of the captain and some of the crew Dunkers
+would have been badly injured, perhaps fatally. They hauled back
+Blossom, roaring out his oaths at the top of his lungs. It took half
+an hour's arguing to calm him down. Then the captain demanded to know
+what it was all about. And blubbering, Steve told him.
+
+"Six hundred feet of water, if I've got my reckoning right. The anchor
+lies in sixty feet, but the starboard side drops sheer six hundred.
+You swab! Why didn't you bring the box to me? A man has a right to
+what he finds. I'd have taken care of it for you till we got back to
+port. I know; you were greedy; you thought I might want to stick my
+fist into your treasure. And you'll never find it in six hundred feet
+of water and tangled, porous coral. That's what, you get for being a
+blamed hog. As for you," and the captain turned to Dunkers, "get your
+dunnage and your pay and hunt for another boat back. I won't have no
+murder on board _Captain Manners_. And the sooner you go, the better."
+
+"I'll go, sir," said Dunkers, readily enough. Had the misfortune
+happened to him and had Blossom been the aggressor, he would want his
+life. He understood. Like the valet in _Olivette_, it was the time
+for disappearing.
+
+"An' keep out o' my way. I'll git y' yet," growled Blossom.
+
+"Keep your mouth shut," said the mate, "or I'll have you put in irons,
+you pig!"
+
+"All right, sir. I've said all I'm goin't' say t'day;" and Blossom
+strode off.
+
+"What was the box like?" asked the captain of Dunkers.
+
+"Chinese contraption, sir; leastwise it looked that way to me. Didn't
+look as if it'd been in th' water long, sir. Somethin' lost overboard
+by some private yacht, t' my thinkin'. I'll keep out o' Steve's way.
+I'll lay low on shore, sir."
+
+And though Steve made a perfect range of the spot, he never came back
+to find the mysterious box, never saw the Gilson House back home, nor
+did he ever see Dunkers again. On the voyage home he brooded
+continually, and was frequently found blubbering; and one night he
+skipped his watch and went to Davy Jones' locker.
+
+Dunkers had not told about the name he had seen on the box; and Blossom
+had not thought to. The name Hargreave had instantly brought back to
+Dunkers' mind the newspaper stories he had recently read. There was no
+doubt in the world that this box belonged to the missing millionaire,
+who had drawn a million from his banks and vanished; and, moreover,
+there was no doubt in Dunkers' mind that this million lay in the
+Bahaman waters. It had been drawn up from the bottom of the sound,
+under the path of the balloon. He proceeded, then, to take a most
+minute range. It would require money and partners; but half a loaf
+would be far better than no loaf at all; and he was determined to
+return to New York to find backing. Finding is keeping, on land or sea.
+
+Now it happened that his favorite grog shop was a cheap saloon across
+the way from the headquarters of the Black Hundred; and Vroon
+occasionally dropped in, for he often picked up a valuable bit of
+maritime news. Bunkers was an old friend of the barkeeper, and he
+proceeded to pour and guzzle down his throat a very poor substitute for
+whisky. He became communicative. He bragged. He knew where there was
+a million, and all he needed was a first-class diving bell. A year
+from now he would not be drinking cheap whisky; he'd be steering a
+course up and down Broadway and buying wine when he was thirsty. He
+was no miser. But he had to have a diving bell; and where the blue
+devil could he get one with twelve dollars and an Ingersoll watch in
+his pocket?
+
+From his table Vroon made a sign which the bartender understood. Then
+he rose and approached Bunkers.
+
+"I own a pretty good diving apparatus," he said. "If you've got the
+goods, I'll take a chance on a fifty-fifty basis." Vroon did not
+believe there was anything back of his talk; but it always paid to dig
+deep enough to find out. "Have a drink; and, Bill, give us a real
+whisky and none of your soap-lye. Now, let's hear your yarn."
+
+"I don't know yuh," said Bunkers, with drunken caution. "How is it,
+Bill?" turning to the bartender.
+
+"He's the goods, Jim. You've heard of Wyant & Co.?"
+
+"Sure I've heard o' them. Best divin' app'ratus they is."
+
+"Well, this gent here is Mr. Brooks, general manager for Wyant & Co. I
+can O.K. him."
+
+Vroon threw an appreciative glance at the bartender. He was not
+affiliated with the Black Hundred, but he had often aided Vroon in
+minor affairs.
+
+"All right, if yuh say so, Bill. Well, here's th' yarn."
+
+And when he had done, Vroon smoked quietly without speaking.
+
+"Don't yuh believe it?" demanded Bunkers, truculently.
+
+"But six hundred feet of water, in a coral bottom, and no way of
+telling just where it fell overboard. That's a tough proposition."
+
+"Oh, it is, is it? I'm a sailor. I can lay my hand right over th'
+spot. Do yuh think I'd be fool enough t' hunt for it without a perfect
+range?" Bunkers tapped his coat pocket suggestively.
+
+And Vroon knew that the one thing he wanted was there, a plan or a
+drawing of the range. So there was another man shanghaied that night,
+and his destination was Cape Town, twenty-two days' voyage by the
+calendar.
+
+Vroon carried his information to the organization that same night.
+They would start the expedition at once, and till this was
+accomplished, Hargreave's daughter was to be immune from attacks.
+Besides, it would give Hargreave (wherever he was) and the others the
+idea that the Black Hundred had concluded to give up the chase.
+
+Above, with his ear to a small hole, skilfully bored through the
+ceiling without permitting the plaster to fall, knelt a man with a
+bandaged arm. He could never see any faces; no one ever took off a
+mask in this sinister chamber. But there were voices, and he was going
+to forget some of them. After the meeting came to an end, he waited an
+hour, and then stole down into the street by the aid of the
+fire-escape. Later, he entered a telephone booth and called up Jones.
+
+Then, one leathern and steel box, dotted with bits of ivory and
+mother-of-pearl, became two; and the second one was soaked in mud and
+salt water for two weeks till you could not have told it from the
+original. And that is why Jones was able, some weeks later, to hide
+once more the original box. As for the substitute, just as Braine was
+about to use a mallet and chisel upon it, the lights went out. There
+was a wild scramble, a chair or two was overturned.
+
+"The door, the door!" shouted Braine, furious.
+
+It slammed the moment the words left his lips. And as suddenly as they
+had gone out the lights sprang up. The box was gone. There were
+evidently traitors among the Black Hundred.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+The Black Hundred, not as individuals but as an organization, began to
+worry. Powerful, and often reckless and daring because it was
+powerful, it began to look about for some basic cause for all these
+failures against Hargreave's daughter and Hargreave's ghost. They had
+tried to put the inquisitive reporter out of the way; they had laid
+every trap they could think of to catch the mysterious visitor at the
+Hargreave home; they had thrown out a hundred lures to bring Hargreave
+out of his lair, and failed; and they had lost a dozen valuable men and
+several thousand dollars. This must end somewhere, and quickly.
+
+The one ray of hope for the conspirators lay in the fact that Florence
+had never seen her father and knew not in the least what he looked
+like. They determined to try again in this direction.
+
+"Give it all up," said the countess to Braine. "I tell you, whatever
+is back of all this is stronger than we are. He knows the
+organization, and for all we know he may be a ghost."
+
+"I never go back," smiled Braine. "There's something more than the
+million. There's the sport of the thing. We've been bested in a dozen
+bouts, and nearly always by a fluke. They have the breaks, as they say
+out at the Polo Grounds."
+
+"But the time and expense when we might be getting results elsewhere!
+I tell you, Leo, I'm afraid. It's like always hearing some one behind
+you and never finding anybody when you turn. I have told you my
+doubts. I have also asked you to trap that butler, but you've always
+laughed."
+
+"You are seeing ghosts, Olga. A new man from holy Russia," shrugging,
+"is coming to-night. Evidently the head over there thinks our
+contributions of late have not been up to the mark, and they are going
+to stir us up. I am willing to wager my soul, however, that that box
+is simply a hoax to befuddle us. Either that or it holds the key. But
+the rest of them insist that the box must be recovered. When I leave
+this room to-night I am going over to Riverdale and stalk all by
+myself. I'm going to get a glimpse of that mysterious stranger. He
+carries a scar of mine somewhere, for I hit him that night."
+
+The door opened and the executive chamber became silent.
+
+"Count Paroff," boomed the voice of Vroon. "He will present his
+credentials."
+
+This formality was executed as prescribed by the rules; and Count
+Paroff was given his chair. He spoke for a while, rather pompously.
+
+"The head organization is not satisfied with its offspring in this
+Hargreave affair," he said in conclusion. "You are slow."
+
+"Then perhaps you have come with some suggestions for the betterment of
+our business?" asked Braine ironically.
+
+"Sir, this is not the hour for flippancy," said the agent coldly.
+
+Braine made a sign with his hand, a sign not observed by every one.
+Instantly Paroff bent lowly. He recognized that the speaker was the
+actual, not the nominal, head of the American branch.
+
+"What are your suggestions?" inquired the nominal head from his chair,
+anxious to avoid a clash between the newcomer and the truculent master
+of them all.
+
+"I have been informed that Hargreave's daughter has never seen her
+father, not even a photograph of him," said Paroff, more amiably.
+
+"We are absolutely certain that this is the case," said the nominal
+head, who was known as the president. "But we tried one play in that
+direction, and it failed miserably."
+
+"I have the story," replied Paroff. "It was clumsily done. The ruse
+was an old one."
+
+Braine was frank enough to admit the truth of this statement, however
+much he disliked the admission. He nodded.
+
+"I have authority to take a hand in this affair. We can not waste all
+summer. Those government plans of the fortifications of the Panama are
+waiting. There's your millions. But the fact remains that it is the
+law of the Black Hundred never to step down till absolutely defeated.
+The hidden million is but half; we must find and break this renegade
+Hargreave."
+
+"If he lives," said Braine.
+
+"Who can say one way or the other?" bruskly asked Paroff. "The fact
+that all your plans and schemes have come to naught should prove to you
+that you are not fighting a ghost. There is but one way to bring out
+the truth."
+
+"And that is to make a captive of his daughter," supplemented Braine.
+"And we have worked toward that end ceaselessly. We are quite ready to
+listen to your suggestions, count."
+
+"And so am I," thought the man with his ear to the little hole in the
+ceiling above. "And some day, my energetic friend, I'm going to pay
+you back for that bullet."
+
+Count Paroff cleared his voice and laid his plans before his audience.
+
+"To act frankly and in the open, to go boldly to the Hargreave home and
+proclaim myself Hargreave. I can disguise myself in a manner that will
+at least temporarily fool the butler."
+
+"Who has been with his master for fourteen years, knows every move,
+habit, gesture, inflection," interposed Braine. "But proceed, count,
+proceed. You will remember the old adage; too many cooks."
+
+"Ah," flashed back the count, "but a new cook?"
+
+Olga touched Braine's arm warningly.
+
+"You mean, then, that there has been talk in St. Petersburg of
+disposing of some one?"
+
+"A good deal of talk, sir," haughtily, forgetting that he had bent
+humbly enough but a few moments gone.
+
+"Very well; go on."
+
+Thought the man at the peephole above: "There's another adage. When
+thieves fall out, then honest men get their dues. Yes, yes; proceed,
+proceed!"
+
+Paroff went on. "I shall, then, go frankly to the Hargreave house and
+claim my own. Meantime I leave to you the business of luring the
+butler away. Half an hour is all I need to bring that child here, to
+break the wall that stands between us and what we seek."
+
+"Is that so?" murmured Braine. "Olga, I want you to play a trick on
+this handsome delegate-at-large. I'm not very enthusiastic over his
+talk. I want him humiliated. All you have to do, he says, is to walk
+into the Hargreave house and walk out again. Well, let's you and I see
+that he does that and nothing else. I'll have no one meddling with my
+own game."
+
+Some one sneezed, and everybody looked at his neighbor. The sneeze was
+repeated, but muffled, as if some one was desperately anxious to avoid
+sneezing.
+
+"It came from above!" whispered Olga. "Don't look up!"
+
+Braine was cool. He walked idly across the room to where Vroon sat.
+"Very well, Paroff; we give you free rein." To Vroon he said: "Some
+one is watching us from the room overhead. I thought that room
+belonged to us."
+
+"It does," said Vroon stolidly.
+
+"Then how is it that some one is watching from up there? No
+excitement. I'm going to bid every one good night, then I'm going to
+investigate. When I leave you will quietly send men to all exits to
+the building. I want the man who sneezed, and I want him badly."
+
+Olga departed with Braine, only she immediately sought the taxi that
+brought her and was driven home. It was always understood that when
+any serious exploit was under way hereabouts she was to make her
+departure at once.
+
+Vroon stationed his men at the several exits and Braine went up-stairs.
+The man who had sneezed, however, had vanished as completely as if he
+had worn that invisible cloak one reads about in the Persian tales. As
+a matter of fact, after the second sneeze he had gone up to the roof,
+got out by the trap, and jumped--rather risky business, too--to the
+next roof and had clambered down the fire-escape of the second
+building. He was swearing inaudibly. After all these days of care and
+planning, after all his cleverness in locating the rendezvous of the
+Black Hundred, and now to lose his advantage because of an
+uncontrollable sneeze! He would never dare go back, and just when he
+was beginning to pick up fine bits of information! So Florence
+Hargreave was going to have a new father in a day or so? There were
+some clever rogues among this band of theirs; but their cleverness was
+well offset by an equal number of fools.
+
+Yes, there were some clever rogues, and to prove this assertion Braine
+secured a taxicab and drove furiously away, his destination the home of
+his ancient enemy. He dropped the cab a block or two away and
+presently stowed himself away in the summer house at the left of the
+lawn. It would have been a capital idea--that is, if the other man had
+not thought of and anticipated this very thing. So he used a public
+pay station telephone; and Braine waited in vain, waited till the
+lights in the Hargreave house went out one by one and it became wrapped
+in darkness within and moonshine without.
+
+Braine was a philosopher. He returned to his waiting taxicab, drove
+home, paid the bill, smiling grimly, and went to bed. It was going to
+be a wonderful game of blind man's buff, and it was going to be sport
+to watch this fool Paroff blunder into a pit.
+
+The next afternoon Florence and Norton sat in the summer house talking
+of the future. Lovers are prone to talk of that. As if anything else
+in the world ever equals the present! They talked of nice little
+apartments and vacations in the summer and how much they would save out
+of his salary, and a thousand and one other things which would not
+interest you at all if I recounted them in detail. But they did love
+each other, and they were going to be married; you may be certain of
+that. They did not care a snap of the finger what Jones thought. They
+were going to be married, and that was all there was to it. Of course,
+Florence couldn't touch a penny of her father's money. If he, Norton,
+couldn't take care of her without help, why, he wouldn't be worth the
+powder to blow him up with.
+
+[Illustration: THEY DID NOT CARE A SNAP OF THEIR FINGERS WHAT JONES
+THOUGHT]
+
+"But, my dear, you must be very careful," he said. "Jones and I will
+always be about somewhere. If they really get hold of you once, God
+alone knows what will happen. It is not you, it is your poor father
+they want to bring out into the open. If they knew where he was they
+would not bother you in the least."
+
+"Have I really a father? Sometimes I doubt. Why couldn't he steal
+into the house and see me, just once?"
+
+"Perhaps he dares not. This house is always watched, night and day,
+though you'll look in vain to discover any one. Your father knows best
+what he is doing, my dear girl. You see, I met him years ago in China;
+and when he started out to do a certain thing he generally did it. He
+never botched any of his plans. So we all must wait. Only I'm going
+to marry you all the same, whether he likes it or not. The rogues will
+try to impose upon you again; but do not pay any attention to notes or
+personals in the papers. And it was a lucky thing that I was on the
+freighter that picked you up at sea. I shall always wonder how that
+yacht took fire."
+
+"So shall I," replied Florence, her brows drawing together in
+puzzlement. "Sometimes I think I must have done it. You know, people
+out of their heads do strange things. I seem to see myself as in a
+dream. And this man Braine is a scoundrel!"
+
+"Yes; and more than that, he is the dear friend of the countess. But
+understand, you must never let her dream or suspect that you know. By
+lulling her into overconfidence some day she will naturally grow
+careless, and then we'll have them all. I think I understand what your
+father's idea is: not to have them arrested for blackmail, but
+practically to exterminate them, put them in prison for such terms of
+years that they'll die there. When you see a snake, a poisonous one,
+don't let it get away. Kill it. Well, I must be off to work."
+
+"And you be careful, too. You are in more danger than I am."
+
+"But I'm a man and can dodge quick," he laughed, picking up his hat.
+
+"What a horrid thing money is! If I hadn't any money, nobody would
+bother me."
+
+"I would," he smiled. He wanted to kiss her, but the eternal Jones
+might be watching from the windows; and so he patted her hand instead
+and walked down the graveled path to the street.
+
+It was difficult work for Florence to play at friendship. She was like
+her father; she did not bestow it on every one. She had given her
+friendship to the Russian, the first real big friendship in her life,
+and she had been roughly disillusioned. But if the countess could act,
+so could she; and of the two her acting was the more consummate. She
+could smile and laugh and jest, all the while her heart was burning
+with wrath.
+
+One day, a week or so after her meeting with Norton in the summer
+house, Olga arrived, beautifully gowned, handsome as ever. There was
+not the least touch of the adventuress in her makeup. Florence had
+just received some mail, and she had dropped the letters on the library
+table to greet the countess. She had opened them, but had not yet
+looked at their contents.
+
+They were chatting pleasantly about inconsequent things, when the maid
+came in and asked Florence to come to Miss Susan's room for a moment.
+Florence excused herself, wondering what Susan could want. She forgot
+the mail.
+
+As soon as she was gone the countess, certain that Jones was not
+lurking about, picked up the letters and calmly examined their
+contents; and among them she found this remarkable document: "Dear
+daughter I have never seen: I must turn the treasure over to you. Meet
+me at eight in the summer house. Tell no one, as my life is in danger.
+Your loving father."
+
+The countess could have laughed aloud. She saw this man Paroff's hand;
+and here was the chance to befool and humiliate him and send him off
+packing to his cold and miserable country. She had made up once as
+Florence, and she could easily do so again. The only thing that
+troubled her was the fact that she did not know whether Florence had
+read the letter or not. Thus, she did not dare destroy it. She first
+thought of changing the clock; then she concluded to drop the letter
+exactly where she found it and trust to luck.
+
+[Illustration: SHE FIRST THOUGHT OF CHANGING THE CLOCK]
+
+When Florence returned she explained that her absence had been due to
+some trifling household affair.
+
+Said the Russian: "I come primarily to ask you to tea to-morrow, where
+they dance. If you like, you may ask Mr. Norton to go along. I begin
+to observe that you two are rather fond of each other."
+
+"Oh, Mr. Norton is just a valuable friend," returned Florence with a
+smile that quite deceived the other woman. "I shall be glad to go to
+the tea. But I shall not promise to dance."
+
+"Not with Mr. Norton?" archly.
+
+"Reporters never dance themselves; they make others dance instead."
+
+"I shall have to tell that," declared the countess; and she laughed
+quite honestly.
+
+"Then I have said something witty?"
+
+"Indeed you have; and it is not only witty but truthful. I'm afraid
+you're deeper than the rest of us have any idea of."
+
+"Perhaps I am," thought Florence; "at least deeper than you believe."
+
+When the countess fluttered down to her limousine--Florence hated the
+sight of it--and drove away, Florence remembered her letters. And when
+she came to the one purporting to be from her father, she read it
+carefully, bent her head in thought, and finally destroyed the missive,
+absolutely confident that it was only a trap, and not very well
+conceived at that. Norton had given her plenty of reason for believing
+all such letters to be forgeries. Her father, if he really wished to
+see her, would enter the house; he would not write. Ah, when would she
+see that father of hers, so mysterious, always hovering near, always
+unseen?
+
+It must have been an amusing adventure for the countess. To steal into
+the summer house and wait there, not knowing if Florence had advised
+Jones or the reporter. If caught, she had her excuses. Paroff, the
+confident, however, appeared shortly after.
+
+"My child!" whispered the man.
+
+And Olga stifled a laugh; but to him it sounded like a sob.
+
+"I am worn out," he said. "I am tired of the game of hide and seek."
+
+"You will not have to play the game long," thought Olga.
+
+"The money is hidden in my office down-town. And we must go there at
+once. When we return we will pack up and leave for Europe. I've
+longed to see you so!"
+
+"You poor fool! And they sent you to supersede Leo!" she mused.
+
+She played out the farce to the very end. She permitted herself to be
+pinioned and jogged; and for what unnecessary roughness she suffered at
+the hands of Paroff he would presently pay. He took her straight to
+the executive chamber of the Black Hundred and pushed her into the
+room, exclaiming triumphantly:
+
+"Here is Hargreave's daughter!"
+
+[Illustration: HE TOOK HER STRAIGHT TO THE EXECUTIVE CHAMBER OF THE
+BLACK HUNDRED]
+
+"Indeed!" said Olga, throwing back her veil and standing revealed in
+her mask.
+
+"Olga!" cried Braine, laughing.
+
+And that was the inglorious end of the secret agent from Russia.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+Perhaps the most amusing phase of the secret agent's discomfiture was
+the fact that neither Jones nor Florence had the least idea what had
+happened. Florence regretted a hundred times during the evening that
+she had not gone out to the summer house. It might really have been
+her father. Her regret grew so deep in her that just before going to
+bed she confessed to Jones.
+
+"You received a letter of that sort and did not show it to me?" said
+Jones, astonished.
+
+"You warned me never to pay any attention to them."
+
+"No; I warned you never to act upon them without first consulting me.
+And we might have made a capture! My child, always show me these
+things. I will advise you whether to tear them up or not."
+
+"Jones, I believe you are going a little too far," said Florence
+haughtily. "It might have been my father."
+
+"Never in this world, Miss Florence. Still, I beg your pardon for
+raising my voice. What I do and have done is only for your own sake.
+There are two things I wish to impress upon your mind before I go.
+This can be made a comedy or a terrible tragedy. You have already had
+a taste of the latter; and each time you escaped because God was good
+to us. But He is rarely kind to thoughtless people. They have to look
+out for themselves. I am acting under orders; always remember that."
+
+"Forgive me; I acted wrongly. But I'm so weary and tired of this
+eternal suspicion of everybody and everything. Can't I go somewhere,
+some place where I can have rest?"
+
+"If I thought for a single moment it was possible to take you thousands
+of miles from this spot, it would be done this very night. But this is
+our fortress. So far it has been impregnable. The police are watching
+it; and that prevents a general assault by the scoundrels. If we tried
+to leave we would be followed; and they play the game exceedingly well.
+Now, good night. We'll have you out of all this doubt and suspicion
+one of these days. There will not be any past; that will be lopped off
+as you'd lop a limb from a tree."
+
+"Please let it be quick. I want to see my father."
+
+Jones' eyes sparkled. "And you have my word that he wants to see you.
+But I dare not tell you."
+
+"Do you think he would object to Mr. Norton?" she asked, studying the
+rug.
+
+"In what capacity?" he countered, forcing her hand.
+
+"As--as a husband?" bravely.
+
+Jones in turn studied the patterns in the rug. "It is only natural for
+a father to look high for his daughter's husband. But, after all, an
+honest man is worth as much as anything I know of. And Norton is
+honest and loyal and brave."
+
+"Thank you, Jones. I intend to marry him when the time comes; so you
+may as well prepare father for this eventuality."
+
+"There is an old adage--"
+
+But she interrupted him. "If you have a new adage, Jones, I shouldn't
+mind hearing it. But I'm only just out of school, where old adages are
+served from soup to pudding. Good night."
+
+And Jones went to the rear of the house, chuckling.
+
+In the passing it might well be observed that the Hargreave house had a
+remarkable menage. There was a gardener, a cook, and a maid; and the
+three of them reported to Jones each night before going to bed. They
+were all three detectives from one of the greatest organizations in
+America.
+
+Finding themselves unable to lure Florence away from the environs of
+the Hargreave home, the Black Hundred set some new machinery in motion.
+They proposed to rid the house of every one in it by a perfectly
+logical device. But the first step in this new move was going to be
+extremely delicate and risky. It was no small adventure to enter the
+Hargreave home; and yet this must be done. So finally "Spider" Beggs
+was selected for the work. The man could practically walk over
+crockery without causing a sound; he could climb a house by the window
+ledges; and he could hold his breath like those professional tank
+swimmers.
+
+Three or four nights after the Paroff fiasco, Jones started the rounds,
+putting out the lights. He left the one in the hall till the last, for
+it was his habit, after having turned off that light, to stand by the
+door for several minutes, watching. One never could tell.
+
+On the other hand, "Spider" Beggs never approached a house till an hour
+after the lights went out. Persons were likely to move about for some
+minutes later; they might want something to eat, a drink of water. So
+he remained hidden behind the summer house till long after midnight.
+When at last he felt assured that all in the Hargreave house were
+asleep, he moved out cautiously. Both his future and his pocketbook
+depended upon the success of this venture. It took him ten minutes to
+crawl from the summer house to the veranda, and to have detected this
+approach Jones, had he been watching, would have needed a searchlight.
+Beggs hugged the lattice-work for another ten minutes and then drew
+himself up and wriggled to one of the windows. Here was an operation
+that needed all his care and skill; to lift this window without sound.
+But he was an old hand and windows with ordinary locks were playthings
+under his deft touch. He raised the window, stepped over the sill into
+the library, and crouched down. He did not close the window; house
+thieves never do. They leave windows and doors open, because sooner or
+later they have to make their escape that way.
+
+[Illustration: HERE WAS AN OPERATION THAT NEEDED ALL HIS CARE AND SKILL]
+
+Presently he stood up, flashed his torch, found the library shelves,
+and tiptoed toward them. He then selected three or four volumes,
+opened them at random and laid neat packages of money between the
+leaves. It was not real money, but only a bank clerk could have told
+that. This done, he moved toward the window again.
+
+"Stop!" said Jones quietly.
+
+"Spider" Beggs gasped, it was so unexpected; but at the same time
+almost instinctively he plunged headlong through the window, and the
+bullet which followed snipped a lock of his hair. He threw himself off
+the veranda and scurried across the lawn, zigzag fashion. But no more
+bullets followed.
+
+Jones turned on the lights and investigated the room, but he could not
+find anything disturbed, and naturally came to the conclusion that the
+intruder had been interrupted before he had begun his work. He turned
+off the lights and sat up the major part of the night. Nothing more
+happened. Florence came down, but he sent her back to bed, explaining
+that some one had attempted to enter the house and he had taken a shot
+at him.
+
+"Spider" Beggs had a letter to write. He was in high feather. He had
+tackled a difficult job and had come away without a scratch. But he
+had the misfortune to write his letter to the secret service officials
+in a hotel often frequented by Norton. And so Jim, on finishing his
+own letter, blotted it and casually glanced at the blotter. A single
+word caught his eye. Being an alert newspaper man, always on the hunt
+for stories, he examined the blotter with care. It was an easy matter
+for him to read writing backward, having fooled away many an hour in
+the composing rooms. The word which had awakened the reportorial sense
+in him was "counterfeit." He held the blotter toward the mirror and
+read enough to satisfy himself that the Black Hundred had become active
+once more. And this was one of the best ideas they had yet conceived.
+
+[Illustration: HE EXAMINED THE BLOTTER WITH CARE]
+
+Hargreave had always been something of a mystery to his neighbors.
+Where he had lived in other days was unknown; neither had any one the
+remotest idea from what source his riches had been obtained. And
+nothing was known of Jones or the daughter. It was a very shrewd
+method of clearing every one out of the house and leaving it to be
+examined at leisure. And he had fallen upon this thing; he, Norton,
+all because his tailor had written him a sharp note about his bill and
+he had been provoked to reply in kind! Counterfeit money. There was
+quite a flurry these days over certain issues of spurious paper. It
+was so good that only experts could detect it. There were two plates,
+one for a ten and another for a twenty. For a while he was pulled
+between duty and love. Well, it would only add another interesting
+chapter to the general story when he published it. He started out to
+Riverdale to acquaint Jones with the discovery.
+
+"Humph!" said Jones; "not a bad idea this. So that's what the sneak
+was doing here last night. I've been wondering and wondering. Let's
+have a look."
+
+He went through the books and at length came across the three volumes.
+These held a thousand in excellent counterfeit.
+
+"Mighty good work that. What are you going to do?" asked the reporter.
+
+Jones rubbed his chin reflectively. "How long may a counterfeiter be
+sent up?"
+
+"Anywhere from ten to twenty years."
+
+"That will serve. My boy, this time we'll go and take Mr. Black
+Hundred right in his cubby-hole."
+
+"You know where it is?"
+
+"Every nook and corner of it. Now you go at once to the chief of the
+local branch of the secret service and put the matter to him frankly.
+I, Florence, Susan, and the rest of us must be arrested. The wretches
+must believe that the house is empty. They'll rove about fruitlessly
+and will return to their den to report the success of the coup. All
+the while you and some detectives will be in hiding up-stairs,
+dictagraph and all that. When the time comes you will follow. This
+will not reach the heads, perhaps, but it will demoralize the
+organization in such a way as to make it helpless for several months to
+come. There is a tunnel from the stables to this house."
+
+"What, a tunnel?"
+
+"Yes, Mr. Hargreave had it built several years ago. I don't know what
+his idea was; possibly he anticipated an event like this. You and your
+men will find entrance by this method. It can be done without exciting
+the suspicions of the watchers."
+
+"Looks as if my yarn wasn't going to be delayed so long after all.
+Jones, you ought to have been in the secret service yourself,"
+admiringly.
+
+Jones smiled and shrugged. "I am perfectly satisfied with my lot--or
+would be if the Black Hundred could be wiped out of existence."
+
+"I'll see the secret service people at once. I stand in well with them
+all."
+
+"And good luck to you. We'll need good luck."
+
+Norton was welcomed cordially by the chief. The secret service men
+trusted him and told him lots of tales that never saw light on the
+printed page. The reporter went directly to the point of his story,
+without elaboration, and the chief smiled and handed him the original
+letter.
+
+"Norton, I've been after this gang of counterfeiters for months and
+they are clever beyond words. I've never been able to get anywhere
+near their presses. And for a moment I thought this note was from a
+squealer. I've a dozen men scouring the country. They find the bogus
+notes, but never the men who pass them. You see, it's new stuff. I
+know what all of the old-timers are at; none of them has had a hand in
+this issue. Some foreigners, I take it, under the leadership of a man
+I'd very much like to know. Now, what's your scheme?"
+
+Jim outlined it briefly.
+
+"It all depends," said the chief, "upon the fact that they will be
+impatient. If they have the ability to wait, we lose. But we can
+afford to risk the chance. The man who wrote this letter is not a
+counterfeiter. He's an old yeggman. We haven't heard anything of him
+lately. We tried to corner him on a post-office job, but he slipped
+by. He may be a stool. Anyhow, I'll draw him in somehow."
+
+"There'll be some excitement."
+
+"We're used to that; you too. All we've got to do is to locate this
+man Beggs. There are signs of spite in this letter. Very well played,
+if you want my opinion. What's this Black Hundred?"
+
+"I'm not at liberty to tell just yet. It's a strange game; half
+political, half blackmail. It's a pretty strong organization. But if
+they're back of this counterfeiting, there's a fine chance of landing
+them all."
+
+Here the chief's assistant came in. "Got Beggs on the wire. Says
+he'll conduct you to the home if you'll promise him immunity for some
+other offenses."
+
+"Tell him he shall have immunity on the word of the chief. But also
+say that he must come to see me in person."
+
+"All right, sir."
+
+"I don't believe it would be wise for Beggs to see me here. I gave him
+a good send-off--Sing Sing--five years ago. He may recollect," said
+Norton.
+
+"Suit yourself about that. Only, keep in communication with me by
+telephone and I'll tip you off as to when the raid shall take place.
+Lucky you came in. I should have honestly gone there and arrested
+innocent people, and they would have had a devil of a time explaining.
+It would have taken them at least a week to clear themselves. That
+would leave the house empty all that time."
+
+Norton did not reply, but he put the blotter away carefully. There was
+no getting away from the fact, but the god of luck was with him.
+
+"Do you know what's back of it all?"
+
+"I can't tell you any more than I have," said Norton.
+
+"Then I pass. I know you well enough. If you've made up your mind not
+to talk a man couldn't get anything out of you with a can-opener. And
+that's why we trust you, my boy. Don't forget the telephone."
+
+"I shan't. So long."
+
+That same night Braine paid the Russian woman a brief visit.
+
+"I think that here's where we go forward. The secret service will raid
+the house to-morrow and then for a few days we'll roam about as we
+bally please. I'm hanged if I don't have every plank torn up and the
+walls pulled down. More and more I'm convinced that the money is in
+that house."
+
+"Don't be too confident," warned Olga. "So many times we have been
+tripped up when everything seemed in our hands. The house should be
+guarded but not entered for a day or two; at least not till after the
+raid is cold. I'm beginning to see traps everywhere."
+
+"Nonsense! Leave it to me. We shan't stick our heads inside the
+Hargreave house till we are dead certain that it is absolutely empty.
+Olga, you're a gem. I don't think Russia will bother us for a while.
+Eh? Paroff will not dare tell how he was flimflammed. The least he
+can do to save his own skin is to say that we are fully capable of
+taking care of ourselves."
+
+Olga laughed. "To think of his writing a note like that! Florence
+would have recognized--and no doubt did--a palpable attempt to play an
+old game twice."
+
+"How does she act toward you?"
+
+"Cordial as ever; and yet..."
+
+"Yet what?"
+
+"I thought her an ordinary schoolgirl, and yet every once in a while
+she makes what you billiard players call a professional shot. What
+matter? So long as they do not shut the door in my face, I ask nothing
+more. But do you want my opinion? I feel it in my bones that
+something will go wrong to-morrow."
+
+"Good lord, are you losing your nerve?" cried Braine impatiently. "The
+secret service has the warning; they find the green stuff, and Jones &
+Co. will mog off to the police station. And there'll be a week of red
+tape before they are turned loose again. They'll dig into Hargreave's
+finances and all that. We'll have all the security in the world to
+find out if the money is in the house or not. Why worry?"
+
+"It's only the way I feel. There is something uncanny in the
+regularity of that girl's good luck."
+
+"Ah, but we're not after her this time; it's the whole family."
+
+"The servants too?"
+
+"Everybody in the house will be under suspicion."
+
+"And can you trust Beggs?"
+
+"His life is in the hollow of my hand. You can always trust a man when
+you hold the rope that's around his neck."
+
+Still the frown did not leave Olga's brow. With all her soul she
+longed to be out of this tangle. It had all looked so easy at the
+start; yet here they were, weeks later, no further forward than at the
+beginning, and added to this they had paid much in lives and money.
+Well, if she would be fool enough to love this man she must abide with
+the consequences. She wanted him all by herself, out of danger, in a
+far country. He might tire, but she knew in her heart that she never
+would. This was her one great passion, and while her mode of living
+was not as honest as might be, her love was honest enough and
+unswerving, though it was not gilded by the pleasant fancies of youth.
+
+"Of what are you thinking?" he asked when he concluded that the pause
+had been long enough.
+
+"You."
+
+"H'm. Complimentary?"
+
+"No; just ordinary every-day love."
+
+"Ah, Olga, why the deuce must you go and fall in love with a bundle of
+ashes like myself? Ashes, and bitter ashes, too. Sometimes I regret.
+But the regretting only seems to make me all the more savage. What
+opium and dope are to other men, danger and excitement are to me. It
+is not written that I shall die in bed. I have told you that already.
+There is no other woman--now. And I do love you after a fashion, as a
+man loves a comrade. Wait till this dancing bout is over and I may
+talk otherwise. And now I am going to shake hands and hobnob with the
+elite--beautiful word! And while I bow and smirk and crack witticisms,
+I and the devil will be chuckling in our sleeves. But this I'll tell
+you, while there's a drop of blood in my veins, a breath in my body,
+I'll stick to this fight if only to prove that I'm not a quitter."
+
+He caught her suddenly in his arms, kissed her, ran lightly to the
+door, and was gone before she could recover from her astonishment.
+
+The affair went smoothly, without a hitch. Norton and his men gained
+the house through the tunnel without attracting the least attention.
+The Black Hundred, watching the front and rear of the house, never
+dreamed that there existed another mode of entrance or that there was a
+secret cabinet room.
+
+Half an hour later the head of the secret service, accompanied by his
+men, together with "Spider" Beggs, who was in high feather over his
+success, arrived, demanded admittance, and went at the front of the
+business at once.
+
+"Your name is Jones?" began the chief.
+
+The butler nodded, though his face evinced no little bewilderment at
+the appearance of these men.
+
+"What is it you wish, sir?"
+
+"I am from the secret service and I have it from a pretty good source
+that there is counterfeit money hidden in this house. More than that,
+I can put my hand on the very place it is hidden."
+
+"That is impossible, sir," declared Jones indignantly.
+
+"I am an old hand, Mr. Jones. It will not do you a bit of good to put
+on that bold front."
+
+Beggs smiled. How was he to know that this was a comedy set especially
+for his benefit?
+
+"I should like to see that money," said Jones, not quite so bravely.
+
+"Come with me," said the secret service man. "Where's the library?"
+
+"Beyond that door, sir."
+
+The chief beckoning to his men, entered the library, went directly to a
+certain shelf, extracted three volumes, and there lay the money in
+three neat packages.
+
+"Good heavens!" gasped Jones.
+
+"I shall have to request you and the family to accompany me to the
+station."
+
+"But it is all utterly impossible, sir! I know nothing of that money
+nor how it got there. It's a plot. I declare on my oath, sir, that I
+am innocent, that Miss Florence and her companion know nothing about
+it."
+
+"You will have to tell that to the federal judge, sir. My duty is to
+take you all to the station. It would be just as well not to say
+anything more, sir."
+
+"Very well; but some one shall smart for this outrage."
+
+"That remains to be seen," was the terse comment of the secret service
+man.
+
+He led his prisoners away directly.
+
+Norton and his men had to wait far into the night. The Black Hundred
+did not intend to make any mistake this time by a hasty move. At
+quarter after ten they descended. Braine was not with them. This was
+due to the urgent request of Olga, who still had her doubts. The men
+rioted about the house, searching nooks and corners, examining floors
+and walls, opening books, pulling out drawers, but they found nothing.
+They talked freely, and the dictagraph registered every word. The
+printing plant, which had so long defied discovery, was in the cellar
+of the house occupied by the Black Hundred. Norton and his men
+determined to follow and raid the building. And the reporter promised
+himself a good front-page story without in any way conflicting with his
+promises to Jones.
+
+[Illustration: THE MEN RIOTED ABOUT THE HOUSE SEARCHING NOOKS AND
+CORNERS]
+
+Events came to pass as they expected. The trailing was not the easiest
+thing. Norton knew about where the building was, but he could not go
+to it directly. He was quite confident that its entrance was identical
+with that which had the trap door through which he had been flung that
+memorable day when he had been shanghaied.
+
+When they reached the building he warned the men to hug the wall to the
+stairs. The trap yawned, but no one was hurt. They scampered up the
+stairs like a lot of eager boys; broke the door in--to find the weird
+executive chamber dark and empty and an acrid smoke in their nostrils.
+This latter grew stifling as they blundered about in the dark. By luck
+Norton found the exit and called to the men to follow. They saw Beggs
+at the top of the stairway and called out to him to surrender. He held
+up his hands and the stairs collapsed. Real fire burst out and Norton
+and his companions had a desperate battle with flame and smoke to gain
+the street.
+
+The fire was put out finally, but there was nothing in the ruins to
+prove that there had been a counterfeiting den there. There was,
+however, at least one consoling feature: in the future the Black
+Hundred would have to hold their star-chamber elsewhere.
+
+It was checkmate; or, rather, it was a draw.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+If the truth is to be told, Jones was as deeply chagrined over the
+outcome of the counterfeit deal as was Braine. They had both failed
+signally to reach the goal sought. But this time the organization had
+broken even with Jones, and this fact disturbed the butler. It might
+signify that the turning point had been reached, and that in the future
+the good luck might swing over to the side of the Black Hundred. Jones
+redoubled his cautions, reiterated his warnings, and slept less than
+ever. Indeed, as he went over the ground he conceded a point to the
+Black Hundred. He would no longer be able to keep tab on the
+organization. They had deserted their former quarters absolutely. The
+agent of whom they had leased the building knew nothing except that he
+would have to repair the place. The rent had been paid a year in
+advance, as it had been these last eight years. He had dealt through
+an attorney who knew no more of his clients than the agent. So it will
+be seen that Jones had in reality received a check.
+
+More than all this, it would give his enemies renewed confidence; and
+this was a deeper menace than he cared to face. But he went about his
+affairs as usual, giving no hint to any one of the mental turmoil which
+had possession of him.
+
+It is needless to state Norton did not scoop his rivals on the
+counterfeit story. But he set to work exploring the cellar of the
+gutted building, and in one corner he found a battered die. He turned
+this over to the secret service men. There was one man he wanted to
+find--Vroon. This man, could he find him, should be made to lead him,
+Norton, to the new stronghold. He saw the futility of trying to trap
+Braine by shadowing him. He desired Braine to believe that his escape
+from the freighter had been a bit of wild luck and not a preconceived
+plan. Braine was out of reach for the present, so he began to search
+for the man Vroon. He haunted the water front saloons for a week
+without success.
+
+He did not know that it was the policy of the Black Hundred to lay low
+for a month after a raid of such a serious character. So the Hargreave
+menage had thirty days of peace; always watched, however. For Braine
+never relaxed his vigilance in that part of the game. He did not care
+to lose sight of Jones, who he was positive was ready for flight if the
+slightest opportunity offered itself.
+
+Norton went back to the primrose paths of love; and sometimes he would
+forget all about such a thing as the Black Hundred. So the summer days
+went by, with the lilacs and the roses embowering the Hargreave home.
+But Norton took note of the fact that Florence was no longer the
+light-hearted schoolgirl he had first met. Her trials had made a
+serious woman of her, and perhaps this phase was all the more
+enchanting to him, who had his serious side also. Her young mind was
+like an Italian garden, always opening new vistas for his admiring gaze.
+
+He went about his work the same as of old, interviewing, playing
+detective, fattening his pay envelope by specials to the Sunday edition
+and some of the lighter magazines. Sometimes he had vague dreams of
+writing a play, a novel, and making a tremendous fortune like that chap
+Manders, who only a few years ago had been his desk mate. He really
+began the first chapter of a novel; but that has nothing to do with
+this history.
+
+All ready, then. The chess are once more on the board, and it is the
+move of the Black Hundred.
+
+The day was rather cloudy. Jones viewed the sky wearily. He could
+hear Florence playing rather a cheerless nocturne by Chopin. Fourteen
+weeks ago this warfare had begun, and all he had accomplished, he and
+those with him, was the death or incarceration of a few inconsequent
+members of the Black Hundred. Always they struck and always he had to
+ward off. He had always been on the defensive; and a defensive fighter
+may last a long while, but he seldom wins; and the butler knew that
+they must win or go down in bitter defeat. There was no half-way route
+to the end; there could be no draw. It all reminded him of
+thunderbolts; one man knew where they were going to strike.
+
+The telephone rang; at the same moment Florence left the piano. She
+stopped at the threshold.
+
+"Hello! You? Where have you been? What has happened?"
+
+"Who is it?" asked Florence, stepping forward.
+
+Jones held up a warning hand, and Florence paused.
+
+"Yes, yes; I hear perfectly. Oh! You've been working out their new
+quarters? Good, good! But be very careful, sir. One never knows what
+may happen. They have been quiet for some time now.... Ah! You can't
+work the ceiling this time? ... Window over the way. Very good, sir.
+But be careful."
+
+The word "sir" caught Florence's attention. She ran to Jones and
+seized him by the arm.
+
+"Who was that?" she cried, as he turned away from the telephone.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"You said 'sir.'"
+
+Jones' eyes widened. "I did?"
+
+"Yes, and it's the first time I ever heard you use it over the
+telephone. Jones, you were talking to my father!"
+
+"Please, Miss Florence, do not ask me any questions. I can not answer
+any. I dare not."
+
+"But if I should command, upon the pain of dismissal?" coldly.
+
+"Ah, Miss Florence," and Jones tapped his pocket, "you forget that you
+can not dismiss me by word. I am legally in control here. I am sorry
+that you have made me recall this fact to you."
+
+Florence began to cry softly.
+
+"I am sorry, very sorry," said the butler, torn between the desire to
+comfort her and the law that he had laid down for himself. "It is very
+gloomy to-day, and perhaps we are a little depressed by it. I am
+sorry."
+
+"Oh, I realize, Jones, that all this unending mystery and secrecy have
+a set purpose at back. Only, it does just seem as if I should go mad
+sometimes with waiting and wondering."
+
+"And if the truth must be told, it is the same with me. We have to
+wait for them to strike. Shall I get you something to read? I am
+going down to the drug store and they have a circulating library."
+
+"Get me anything you please. But I'd feel better with a little
+sunshine."
+
+"That's universal," replied Jones, going into the hall for his hat.
+
+Had the telephone rung again at that moment it is quite probable that
+the day would have come to a close as the day before had, monotonously.
+But the ring came five minutes after Jones had left the house.
+
+"Is this the Hargreave place?"
+
+"Yes," said Florence. "Who is it?"
+
+"This is Miss Hargreave talking?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"This is Doctor Morse. I am at the Queen Hotel. Mr. Norton has been
+badly hurt, and he wants you and Mr. Jones to come at once. We can not
+tell just how serious the injury is. He is just conscious. Shall I
+tell him you will come immediately?"
+
+"Yes, yes!"
+
+Florence snapped the receiver on the hook. She wanted to fly, fly. He
+was hurt. How, when, where?
+
+"Susan! Susan!" she called.
+
+"What is it?" asked Susan, running into the room.
+
+"Jim is badly hurt. He wants me to come at once. Oh, Susan! I've
+been dreading something all day long." Florence struck the maid's
+bell. "My wraps. You will go with me, Susan."
+
+"Where, Miss Florence," asked the maid, alive to her duty.
+
+"Where? What is that to you?" demanded Florence, who did not know that
+this maid was a detective.
+
+"Why not wait till Mr. Jones returns?" she suggested patiently.
+
+"And let the man I love die?" vehemently.
+
+"At least you will leave word where you are going, Miss Florence."
+
+"The Queen Hotel. And if you say another word I'll discharge you.
+Come, Susan."
+
+There happened to be a taxicab conveniently near (as Vroon took care
+there should be), and Florence at once engaged it. She did not see the
+man hiding in the bushes. The two young women stepped into the taxicab
+and were driven off. They had been gone less than five minutes when
+Jones returned with his purchase, to find the house empty of its most
+valuable asset. He was furious, not only at the maid, who, he
+realized, was virtually helpless, but at his own negligence.
+
+In the midst of his violent harangue the bell sounded. In his bones he
+knew what was going to be found there. It was a letter on the back of
+which was drawn the fatal black mask. With shaking fingers he tore
+open the envelope and read the contents:
+
+
+"Florence is now in our power. Only the surrender of the million will
+save her. Our agent will call in an hour for an answer. THE BLACK
+HUNDRED."
+
+
+As a matter of fact, they had wanted Jones almost as badly as Florence,
+but her desire for a book--some popular story of the day--had saved him
+from the net. The letter had been written against this possibility.
+
+Jones became cool, now that he knew just what to face. The Queen Hotel
+meant nothing. Florence would not be taken there. He called up
+Norton. It took all the butler's patience, however, as it required
+seven different calls to locate the reporter.
+
+Meantime the taxicab containing Florence and Susan spun madly toward
+the water front. Here the two were separated by an effective threat.
+Florence recognized the man Vroon and knew that to plead for mercy
+would be a waste of time. She permitted herself to be led to a waiting
+launch. Always when she disobeyed Jones something like this happened.
+But this time they had cunningly struck at her heart, and all thought
+of her personal safety became as nothing. For the present she knew
+that she was in no actual physical danger. She was merely to be held
+as a hostage. Would Susan have mentality enough to tell Jones where
+the taxicab had stopped? She doubted. In an emergency Susan had
+proved herself a nonentity, a bundle of hysterical thrills.
+
+As a matter of fact, for once Florence's deductions were happily wrong.
+When the chauffeur peremptorily deposited Susan on the lonely country
+road, several miles from home, she ran hot-foot to the nearest
+telephone and sent a very concise message home. Susan was becoming
+acclimated to this strange, exciting existence.
+
+Norton arrived in due time, and he and Jones were mapping out a plan
+when Susan's message came.
+
+[Illustration: THEY WERE MAPPING OUT A PLAN WHEN SUSAN'S MESSAGE CAME]
+
+"Good girl!" said Jones. "She's learning. Can you handle this alone,
+Norton? They want me out of the house again, for I believe they were
+after me as well as Florence. Half an hour gone!"
+
+"Trust me!" cried Norton.
+
+And he ran out to his auto. It was a wild ride. Several policemen
+shouted after him, but he went on unmindful. They could take his
+license number a hundred times for all he cared. So they had got her?
+They could wait till their enemy's vigilance slacked and then would
+strike? But Susan! The next time he saw Susan he was going to take
+her in his arms and kiss her. It might be a new sensation to kiss
+Susan, always so prim and offish. Corey Street--that had been her
+direction. They had put Florence in a motor boat at the foot of Corey
+Street. He was perhaps half an hour behind.
+
+Florence never opened her lips. She stared ahead proudly. She would
+show these scoundrels that she was her father's daughter. They plied
+her with questions, but she pretended not to hear.
+
+"Well, pretty bird, we'll make you speak when the time comes. We've
+got you this trip where we want you. There won't be any jumping
+overboard this session, believe me. We've wasted enough time. We've
+got you and we're going to keep you."
+
+"Let her be," said Vroon morosely. "We'll put all the questions we
+wish when we're at our destination." And he nodded significantly
+toward the ships riding at anchor.
+
+Florence felt her heart sink in spite of her abundant courage. Were
+they going to take her to sea again? She had acquired a horror of the
+sea, so big, so terrible, so strong. She had had an experience with
+its sullen power. They had gone about four miles down when she looked
+back longingly toward shore. Something white seemed to be spinning
+over the water far behind. At first she could not discern what it was.
+As she watched it it grew and grew. It finally emerged from the
+illusion of a gigantic bird into the actuality of an every-day
+hydroplane. Her heart gave a great bound. This flying machine was
+coming directly toward the launch; it did not deviate a hair's breadth
+from the line. Fortunately the men were looking toward the huge
+freighter a quarter of a mile farther on, and from their talk it was
+evident that the freighter was to be her prison--bound for where?
+Nearer and nearer came the hydroplane. Was it for her?
+
+It was impossible for the men not to take notice of the barking of the
+engines at last.
+
+"The thing's headed for us!"
+
+Vroon stared under his palm. It was not credible that pursuit had
+taken place so quickly. To test yonder man-bird he abruptly changed
+the course of the launch. The hydroplane veered its course to suit.
+
+Florence heard her name called faintly. One of the men drew his
+revolver, but Vroon knocked it out of his hand.
+
+"There's the police boat, you fool!"
+
+"Jump!" a voice called to Florence.
+
+She flung herself into the water without the slightest hesitation.
+
+All this came about something after this fashion. When Norton arrived
+at the foot of Corey Street a boatman informed him that a young woman
+of his description had got into a fast motor boat and had gone down the
+river.
+
+"Was there any struggle?"
+
+"Struggle? None that I could see. She didn't make no fuss about
+going."
+
+"Have you a launch?"
+
+"Yes, but the other boat has half an hour's start, and I'd never catch
+her in a thousand years. But there's a hydroplane a little above here.
+You might interest the feller that runs it."
+
+"Thanks!"
+
+But the aviator would not listen.
+
+"A life may hang in the balance, man!" expostulated Norton, longing to
+pommel the stubborn man.
+
+"What proof have I of that?"
+
+Norton showed his card and badge.
+
+"Oh, I see!" jeered the aviator. "A little newspaper stunt in which I
+am to be the goat. It can't be done, Mr. Norton; it can't be done."
+
+"A hundred dollars!"
+
+"Not for five hundred," and the aviator callously turned away toward
+the young woman with whom he had been conversing prior to Norton's
+approach. The two walked a dozen yards away.
+
+Norton had not served twelve years as a metropolitan newspaper man for
+nothing. He approached the mechanics who were puttering about the
+machine.
+
+"How about twenty apiece?" he began.
+
+"For what?" the men asked.
+
+"For sending that paddle around a few times."
+
+"Get into that seat, but don't touch any of those levers," one of them
+warned. "Twenty is twenty, Jack, and the boss is a sorehead to-day
+anyhow. Give her a shove for the fun of it."
+
+It was a dumfounded aviator who saw his hydroplane skim the water and a
+moment later sail into the air. These swift moving days a reporter of
+the first caliber is supposed to be able to run railroad engines,
+submarines, flying machines, conduct a war, able to shoot, walk, run,
+swim, fight, think, go without food like a python, and live without
+water like a camel. Norton had flown many times in the last four
+years. At the moment he called out to Florence to jump he dropped to
+the water with all the skill of an old-timer and took her aboard. And
+he could not use a line of this exploit for his paper!
+
+
+Jones heard the bell. It was the agent from the Black Hundred. He
+smiled jauntily.
+
+"Well, old fox, we've cornered you at last, haven't we? I want that
+money, or Hargreave's daughter takes another sea voyage, and this time
+she will not jump overboard. A million; and no more nonsense."
+
+"Give me fifteen minutes to decide," begged Jones, hoping against hope.
+
+"Fifteen seconds!"
+
+"Then we can't do business. What! Give you a million, knowing you all
+to be a pack of liars? Bring Miss Florence back and the money is
+yours. We are tired of fighting." As indeed Jones really was. The
+strain had been terrific for weeks.
+
+"The money first. We don't lie any better than you do. Fork over.
+You'll have to trust us. We have no use for the girl once we get the
+cash."
+
+"And you'll never touch a penny of it, you blackguard!" cried Norton
+from the doorway.
+
+The agent turned to behold the reporter and the girl. He did not stop
+to ask questions, but bolted. He never got beyond the door, however.
+
+"Always the small fry," sighed Jones. "And if I could have put my
+hands on the money I'd have given it to him! Ah, girl, it doesn't do
+any good to talk to you, does it?"
+
+"But they told me he was dying!"
+
+Jones shrugged.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+The maid stole into the house, wondering if she had been seen. She
+wanted to be loyal to this girl, but she was tired of the life; she
+wanted to be her own mistress, and the small fortune offered her would
+put her on the way to realize her ambition. What had she not seen and
+been of life since she joined the great detective force! Lady's maid,
+cook, ship stewardess, flash woman, actress, clerk, and a dozen other
+employments. Her pay, until she secured some fat reward, was but
+twelve hundred a year; and here was five thousand in advance, with the
+promise of five thousand more the minute her work was done. And it was
+simple work, without any real harm toward Florence as far as she was
+concerned. The whole thing rested upon one difficulty; would Jones
+permit the girls to leave the house?
+
+One day Florence found Susan sitting in a chair, her head in her hands.
+
+"Why, Susan, what's the matter?" cried Florence.
+
+"I don't know what is the matter, dear, but I haven't felt well for two
+or three days. I'm dizzy all the time; I can't read or sew or eat or
+sleep."
+
+"Why didn't you tell me?" said Florence, reproachfully. She rang for
+the detective-maid. "Ella, I don't know anything about doctors
+hereabouts."
+
+"I know a good one, Miss Florence. Shall I send for him?"
+
+"Do; Susan is ill."
+
+Jones was not prepared for treachery in his own household; so when he
+heard that a doctor had been called to attend Susan he was without the
+least suspicion that he had been betrayed. More than this, there had
+been no occasion to summon a doctor in the seven years Mr. Hargreave
+had lived there. So Jones went about his petty household affairs
+without more thought upon the matter. The maid had been recommended to
+him as one of the shrewdest young women in the detective business.
+
+The doctor arrived. He was a real doctor; no doubt of that. He
+investigated Susan's condition--brought about by a subtle though not
+dangerous poison--and instantly recommended the seashore. Susan was
+not used to being confined to the house; she was essentially an
+out-of-doors little body. The seashore would bring her about in no
+time. The doctor suggested Atlantic City because of its mildness
+throughout the year and its nearness to New York.
+
+"I'm afraid she'll have to go alone," said Jones gravely.
+
+"I shan't stir!" declared Susan. "I shan't leave my girl even if I am
+sick." Susan caught Florence's hand and pressed it.
+
+"Would you like to go with her, Florence?" asked Jones, with a shy
+glance at the strange doctor. The shy glance was wasted. The doctor
+evinced no sign that it mattered one way or the other to him.
+
+"It is nothing very serious now," he volunteered. "But it may turn out
+serious if it is not taken care of at once."
+
+"What is the trouble?" inquired Jones, who was growing fond of Susan.
+
+"Weak heart. Sunshine and good sea air will strengthen her up again.
+No, no!" as Jones drew forth his wallet. "I'll send in my bill the
+first of the month. Sunshine and sea air; that's all that's necessary.
+And now, good day."
+
+All very businesslike; not the least cause in the world for any one to
+suspect that a new trap was being set by the snarers. The maid
+returned to the sewing-room, while Florence coddled her companion and
+made much of her.
+
+Jones was suspicious, but dig in his mind as he would he could find no
+earthly reason for this suspicion save that this attribute was now
+instinctive, that it was always near the top. If Susan was ill she
+must be given good care; there was no getting around this fact. Later,
+he telephoned several prominent physicians. The strange doctor was
+recommended as a good ordinary practitioner and in good standing; and
+so Jones dismissed his suspicions as having no hook to hang them on.
+
+His hair would have tingled at the roots, however, had he known that
+this same physician was one of the two who had signed the document
+which had accredited Florence with insanity and had all but succeeded
+in making a supposition a fact. Nor was Jones aware of the fact that
+the telephone wire had been tapped recently. So when he finally
+concluded to permit Florence to accompany Susan to Atlantic City he
+telephoned to the detective agency to send up a trusty man, who was
+shadowed from the moment he entered the Hargreave home till he started
+for the railway station. He became lost in the shuffle and was not
+heard from till weeks later, in Havana. The Black Hundred found a good
+profit in the shanghaing business.
+
+Susan began to pick up, as they say, the day after the arrival at
+Atlantic City, due, doubtless, to the cessation of the poison she had
+been taking unawares. The two young women began to enjoy life for the
+first time since they had left Miss Farlow's. They were up with the
+sun every day and went to bed tired but happy. No one bothered them.
+If some stray reporter encountered their signatures on the hotel
+register, he saw nothing to excite his reportorial senses. All this,
+of course, was due to Norton's policy of keeping the affair out of the
+papers.
+
+Following Jones' orders, they made friends with none. Those about the
+hotel--especially the young men--when they made any advances were
+politely snubbed. Every night Florence would write to her good butler
+to report what had taken place during the day, and he was left to judge
+for himself if there was anything to arouse his suspicions. He, of
+course, believed the two were covertly guarded by the detective he had
+sent after them.
+
+When Braine called on Olga he found his doctor there.
+
+"Well, what's the news?" he asked.
+
+"I had better run down and inquire how the young lady is progressing,"
+said the doctor, who was really a first-rate surgeon and who had
+performed a number of skilled operations upon various members of the
+Black Hundred anent their encounters with the police. "I've got Miss
+Florence where you want her. It's up to you now."
+
+"She ought to be separated from her companion. We have left them alone
+for a whole week, so Jones will not worry particularly. A mighty
+curious thing has turned up. Before Hargreave's disappearance not a
+dozen persons could recollect what Jones looked like. He was rarely
+ever in sight. What do you suppose that signifies?"
+
+"Don't ask me," shrugged the man of medicine. "I shouldn't worry over
+Jones."
+
+"But we can't stir the old fool. We can't get him out of that house.
+I've tried to get that maid to put a little something in his coffee,
+but she stands off at that. She says that she did as she agreed in
+regard to Florence, but her agreement ended there. We have given the
+jade five thousand already and she is clamoring for the balance."
+
+"Have you threatened her?" asked Olga.
+
+Braine smiled a little. "My dear woman, it is fifty-fifty. While I
+have a hold on her, it is not quite so good as she has on me. We are
+not dealing with an ordinary servant we could threaten and scare. No,
+indeed; a shrewd little woman who desperately wanted money. And she
+will be paid; no getting out of it. She will not move another step,
+one way or the other, after she receives the balance. Hargreave will
+have a pretty steep bill to pay when the time comes."
+
+"She has no idea where the million is?"
+
+"If she had, she's quite capable of lugging it off all by herself,"
+said Braine.
+
+The doctor laughed.
+
+"Olga," went on Braine, "you must look at it as I do; that it is still
+in the middle of the game, and we have neither lost nor won."
+
+"How do you know that Hargreave may not have at his beck and call an
+organization quite as capable if not as large as ours?" suggested the
+physician.
+
+"That is not possible," Braine declared without hesitation.
+
+"Well, it begins to look that way to me. We've never made a move yet
+that hasn't been blocked."
+
+"Pure luck each time, I tell you; the devil's own luck always at the
+critical moment, when everything seems to be in our hands. Now, we
+want Florence, and we've tried a hundred ways to accomplish this fact
+and failed. The question is, how to get her away from her companion?"
+
+"Simple enough," said the doctor complacently.
+
+"Out with it, if you have an idea."
+
+The doctor leaned forward and whispered a few words.
+
+"Well, I'm hanged!" Braine laughed and slapped the doctor on the
+shoulder. "The simplest thing in the world. Mad dog wouldn't be in
+it. I always said that you had gray matter if you cared to exert
+yourself."
+
+"Thanks," replied the doctor dryly. "I'll drop down there to-morrow,
+if you say so, ostensibly to see the other patient. It will make a
+deuce of a disturbance."
+
+"Not if you scare the hotel people."
+
+"That is what I propose to do. They will not want such a thing known.
+It would scare every one away for the rest of the season. But of
+course this depends upon whether they are honest or in the hotel
+business to make money."
+
+Again Braine laughed. "Bring her back to New York alone, Esculapius,
+and a fat check is yours. Nothing could be simpler than an idea like
+this. It's a fact; no man can think of everything, and you've just
+proved it to me. I've tried to do a general's work without aids.
+Olga, does any one watch me come and go any more?"
+
+"No; I've watched a dozen nights. The man has gone. Either he found
+out what he wanted or he gave up the job. To my mind he found out what
+he wanted."
+
+"And what's that?"
+
+"Heaven knows!" discouragedly.
+
+"Come, doctor, suppose you and I go down to Daly's for a little turn at
+billiards?"
+
+"Nothing would suit me better."
+
+"All aboard, then! Good night, Olga, keep your hair on; I mean your
+own hair. We're going to win out, don't you worry. In all games the
+minute you begin to doubt you begin to lose."
+
+That same night Norton sat at his desk, in his shirt sleeves, pounding
+away at his typewriter. From time to time he paused and teetered his
+chair and scowled over his pipe at the starlit night outside. Bang!
+would go his chair again, and clickity-click would sing the keys of the
+machine. The story he was writing was in the ordinary routine; the
+arrival of a great ocean liner with some political notables who were
+not adverse to denouncing the present administration. You will have
+noticed, no doubt, that some disgruntled politician is always
+denouncing the present administration, it matters not if it be
+Republican or Democratic. When you are out of a good job you are
+always prone to denounce. The yarn bored. Norton because his thoughts
+were miles southward.
+
+He completed his story, yanked out the final sheet, called for a copy
+boy, rose and sauntered over to the managing editor's door, before
+which he paused indecisively. The "old man" had been after him lately
+regarding the Hargreave story, and he doubted if his errand would prove
+successful.
+
+However, he boldly opened the door and walked in.
+
+"Humph!" said the "old man," twisting his cigar into the corner of his
+mouth. "Got that story?"
+
+Norton sat down. "Yes, but I have not got it for print yet. Mr.
+Blair, when you gave me the Hargreave job you gave me carte blanche."
+
+"I did," grimly. "But, on the other hand, I did not give you ten years
+to clear it up in."
+
+"Have I ever fallen down on a good story?" quietly.
+
+"H'm, can't remember," grudgingly.
+
+"Well, if you'll have patience I'll not fall down on this one. It's
+the greatest criminal story I ever handled, but it's so big that it's
+going to take time."
+
+"Gimme an outline."
+
+"I have promised not to," with a grimness equal to the "old man's."
+"If a line of this story trickles out it will mean that every other
+paper will be moving around, and in the end will discover enough to
+spoil my end of it. I'll tell you this much: The most colossal band of
+thieves this country ever saw is at one end of the stick. And when I
+say that counterfeiting and politics and millions are involved, you'll
+understand how big it is. This gang has city protection. We are
+running them all into a corner; but we want that corner so deep that
+none of them can wriggle out of it."
+
+"Umhm. Go on."
+
+"I want two months more."
+
+The "old man" beat a tattoo with his fat pencil. "Sixty days, then.
+And if the yarn isn't on my desk at midnight, you--"
+
+"Hunt for another job. All right. I came in to ask for three days'
+leave."
+
+"You're your own boss, Jim, for sixty days more. Whadda y' mean
+counterfeiting?"
+
+"Those new tens and twenties. If I stumble on that right, why, I can
+turn it over without conflicting with the other story."
+
+"Well, go to it."
+
+"I'm turning in my regular work, day in and day out, and while doing it
+I've gone through more hairbreadth escapes than you ever heard of.
+They have been after me. I've dodged falling safes; I've been
+shanghaied, poisoned; but I haven't said a word."
+
+"Good lord! Do you mean all that?"
+
+"Every word, sir."
+
+"I'll make it ninety days, Jim; and if this story comes in I'll see
+that you get a corking bonus."
+
+"I'm not looking for bonuses. I'm proud of my work. To get this story
+is all I want. That'll be enough. Thanks for the extension of time.
+Good night."
+
+So Florence received a long night letter in the morning.
+
+And the doctor arrived at about the same time. And called promptly
+upon his patient.
+
+"Fine!" he said. "The sea air was just the thing. A doctor always
+likes to find his advice turning out well."
+
+He glanced quizzically at Florence, who was the picture of glowing
+health. Suddenly he frowned anxiously.
+
+"You need not look at me," she laughed. "I never felt better in all my
+life."
+
+"Are you sure?"
+
+"Why, what in the world do you mean?"
+
+He did not speak, but stepped forward and took her by the wrist,
+holding his watch in his other hand. He shook his head. He looked
+very solemn, indeed.
+
+"What is it?" demanded Susan, with growing terror.
+
+"Go to your own room immediately and remain there for the present," he
+ordered. "I must see Miss Hargreave alone."
+
+He opened the door and Susan passed out bewilderedly. He returned to
+Florence, who was even more bewildered than her companion. The doctor
+began to ask her questions; how she slept, if she was thirsty, felt
+pains in her back. She answered all these questions vaguely. Not the
+slightest suspicion entered her head that she was being hoodwinked.
+Why should she entertain any suspicion? This doctor, who seemed kindly
+and benevolent, who had prescribed for Susan and benefited her, why
+should she doubt him?
+
+"In heaven's name, tell me what is the matter?" she pleaded.
+
+"Stay here for a little while and I'll be back. Under no circumstances
+leave your room till I return."
+
+He paced out into the hall, to meet the frantic Susan.
+
+"We must see the manager at once," he replied to her queries. "And we
+must be extremely quiet about it. There must be no excitement. You
+had better go to your room. You must not go into Miss Hargreave's.
+Tell me, where have you been? Have you been trying to do any
+charitable work among the poorer classes?"
+
+"Only once," admitted Susan, now on the verge of tears.
+
+"Only once is sufficient. Come; we'll go and see the manager together."
+
+They arrived at the desk, and the manager was summoned.
+
+"I take it," began the doctor lowly, "that a contagious disease, if it
+became known among your guests, would create a good deal of
+disturbance?"
+
+"Disturbance! Good heavens, man, it would ruin my business for the
+whole season!" exclaimed the astounded manager.
+
+"I am sorry, but this young lady's companion has been stricken with
+smallpox--"
+
+The manager fell back against his desk, his jaw fallen. Susan turned
+as white as the marble top.
+
+"The only way to avoid trouble is to have her conveyed immediately to
+some place where she can be treated properly. Not a word to any one
+now; absolute secrecy or a panic."
+
+The manager was glad enough to agree.
+
+"She is not dangerous at present, but it is only a matter of a few
+hours when the disease will become virulent. If you will place a
+porter before Miss Hargreave's door till I make arrangements to take
+her away, that will simplify matters."
+
+Smallpox! Susan wandered aimlessly about, half out of her mind with
+terror. There was no help against such a dreaded disease. Her
+Florence, her pretty rosy-cheeked Florence, disfigured for life....!
+
+"Miss Susan, where is Florence?"
+
+"Oh, Mr. Norton!" she gasped.
+
+"What's the trouble?" instantly alert.
+
+"Florence has the smallpox!"
+
+"Impossible! Come with me."
+
+But the porter having had the strictest orders from the manager,
+refused to let them into Florence's room.
+
+"Never mind, Susan. Come along." Out of earshot of the porter, he
+said: "My room is directly above Florence's. We'll see what can be
+done. This smells of the Black Hundred a mile off. Smallpox! Only
+yesterday she wrote me that she never felt better. Have you wired
+Jones?"
+
+"I never thought to!"
+
+"Then I shall. Our old friends are at work again."
+
+"But it's the same doctor who sent me down here."
+
+Norton frowned.
+
+What followed all appeared in the reporter's story, as written three
+months later. He and Susan went up to his room, raised the flooring,
+cut through the ceiling, and with the fire-escape rope dropped below.
+One glance at Florence's tear-stained face was enough for him.
+Norton's subsequent battle with the doctor and his accomplices made
+very interesting reading. Their escape from the hotel, their flight,
+their encounter with one of the gang in the road, and Florence's
+blunder into the bed of quicksand, gave a succession of thrills to the
+readers of the _Blade_.
+
+And all this while the million accumulated dust, layer by layer.
+Perhaps an occasional hardy roach scrambled over the packets, no doubt
+attracted by the peculiar odor of the ink.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+The Black Hundred possessed three separate council chambers, always in
+preparation. Hence, when the one in use was burned down they
+transferred their conferences to the second council chamber appointed
+identically the same as the first. As inferred, the organization owned
+considerable wealth, and they leased the buildings in which they had
+their council chambers, leased them for a number of years, and
+refurnished them secretly with trap floors, doors and panels and all
+that apparatus so necessary to men who are sometimes compelled to make
+a quick getaway.
+
+When the Atlantic City attempt was turned into a fiasco by Norton's
+timely arrival Braine determined once more to rid himself of this
+meddling reporter. He knew too much, in the first place, and in the
+second place Braine wanted to learn whether the reporter bore a charmed
+life or was just ordinarily lucky. He would attempt nothing delicate,
+requiring finesse. He would simply waylay Norton and make a
+commonplace end of him. He would disappear, this reporter, that would
+be all; and when they found him he might or might not be recognizable.
+
+So Braine called a conference and he and his fellow rogues went over a
+number of expedients and finally agreed that the best thing to do would
+be to send a man to the newspaper, ostensibly as a reporter looking for
+a situation. With this excuse he would be able to hang around the city
+room for three or four days. The idea back of this was to waylay
+Norton on his way to some assignment which took him to the suburbs.
+
+All this was arranged down to the smallest detail; and a man whom they
+were quite certain Norton had not yet seen was selected to play the
+part. He had been a reporter once, more's the pity; so there was no
+doubt of his being able to handle his end of the game.
+
+"I want Norton, I want him badly," declared Braine, "and woe to you if
+you let booze play in between you and the object of this move."
+
+The man selected to act the reporter hung his head. Whisky had been
+the origin of his fall from honest living, and he was not so calloused
+as not to feel the sting of remorse at times.
+
+"More," went on Braine, "I want Norton brought to 49. It's a little
+off the beat, and we can handle Norton as we please. When we get rid
+of this newspaper ferret there'll be another to eliminate. But he's a
+fox, and a fox must be set to trail him."
+
+"And who is that?"
+
+"Jones, Jones, Jones!" thundered Braine. "He's the live wire. But the
+reporter first. Jones depends a lot on him. Take away this prop and
+Jones will not be so sure of himself. There's a man outside all this
+circle, and all these weeks of warfare have not served to bring him
+into the circle."
+
+"Hargreave is dead," said Vroon stolidly.
+
+"As dead as I am," snarled Braine. "Two men went away in that balloon;
+and I'll wager my head that one man came back. I am beginning to put a
+few things together that I have not thought of before. Who knows?
+That balloon may have been carried out to sea purposely. The captain
+on that tramp steamer may have lied from beginning to end. I tell you,
+Hargreave is alive, and wherever he is he has his hand on all the
+wires. He has agents, too, whom we know nothing about. Hang the
+million! I want to put my hands on Hargreave just to prove that I am
+the better man. He communicates with Jones, perhaps through the
+reporter; he has had me followed; it was he who changed the boxes,
+bored the hole in the ceiling of the other quarters and learned heaven
+knows what."
+
+"If that's the case," said Vroon, "why hasn't he had us apprehended?"
+
+Braine laughed heartily. "Haven't you been able to see by this time
+what his game is? Revenge. He does not want the police to meddle only
+in the smaller affairs. He wants to put terror into the hearts of all
+of us. Keep this point in your mind when you act. He'll never summon
+the police unless we make a broad daylight attempt to get possession of
+his daughter. And even then he would make it out a plain case of
+kidnaping. Elimination, that's the word. All right. We'll play at
+that game ourselves. No. 1 shall be Mr. Norton. And if you fail I'll
+break you," Braine added to the ex-reporter.
+
+"I'll get him," said the man sullenly.
+
+Later, when he applied for a situation on the _Blade_, it happened that
+there were two strikes on hand, and two or three extra men were needed
+on the city staff. The man from the Black Hundred was given a
+temporary job and went by the name of Gregg.
+
+For three days he worked faithfully, abstaining from his favorite
+tipple. He had never worked in New York, so his record was unknown.
+He had told the city editor that he had worked on a Chicago paper, now
+defunct.
+
+He paid no attention whatsoever to Norton, a sign of no little acumen.
+On the other hand Norton never went forth on an assignment that Gregg
+did not know exactly where he was going. But all these stories kept
+Norton in town; and it would be altogether too risky to attempt to
+handle him anywhere but outside of town. So Gregg had to abide his
+time.
+
+It came soon enough.
+
+Norton was idling at his desk when the city editor called him up to the
+wicket.
+
+[Illustration: NORTON WAS IDLING AT HIS DESK WHEN THE CITY EDITOR
+CALLED HIM UP TO THE WICKET]
+
+"General Henderson has just returned to America. Get his opinion on
+the latest Balkan rumpus. He's out at his suburban home. Here's the
+address."
+
+"How long will you hold open for me?" asked Norton, meaning how long
+would the city editor wait for the story.
+
+"Till one-thirty. You ought to be back by midnight. It's only eight
+now."
+
+"All right; Henderson's approachable. I may get a good story out of
+him."
+
+"Maybe," thought Gregg, who had lost nothing of this conversation.
+
+It was his opportunity. He immediately left the zone of the city desk
+for a telephone booth. But as he passed the line of desks and busy
+reporters he did not note the keen scrutiny of a smooth-faced,
+gray-haired man who stood at the side of Norton's desk awaiting the
+reporter's return.
+
+"Why, Jones," cried the surprised Norton. "What are you doing all this
+way from home?"
+
+"Orders," said Jones, smiling faintly as he delivered a note to the
+reporter.
+
+"Anything serious?"
+
+"Not that I am aware of. Miss Florence was rather particular. She
+wanted to be sure that the note reached your hands safely."
+
+"And do you mean to say that you came away and left her alone in that
+house?"
+
+Again Jones smiled. "I left her well guarded, you may be sure of that.
+She will never run away again." He waited for Norton to read the note.
+
+It was nothing more than one of those love orders to come and call at
+once. And she had made Jones venture into town with it! The reporter
+smiled and put the note away tenderly. And then he caught Jones
+smiling, too.
+
+"I'm going to marry her, Jones."
+
+"That remains to be seen," replied the butler, not unkindly.
+
+"Well, anyhow, thanks for bringing the note. But I've got to
+disappoint her to-night. I'm off in a deuce of a hurry to interview
+General Henderson. I'll be out to tea to-morrow. You can find your
+way out of this old firetrap. By-by!"
+
+The moment he turned away the smile faded from Jones' face, and with
+the quickness and noiselessness of a cat he reached the side of the
+booth in which Gregg believed himself so secure from eavesdropping.
+The half dozen words Jones heard convinced him that Norton was again
+the object of the Black Hundred's attention. He had seen the man's
+face that memorable night when the balloon stopped for its passenger.
+Before Gregg came out of the booth Jones decided to overtake Norton and
+forewarn him, but unfortunately the reporter was nowhere in sight.
+
+There was left for Jones nothing else but to return home or follow when
+Gregg came out. As this night he knew Florence to be exceptionally
+well guarded, both within and without the house, he decided to wait and
+follow the spy.
+
+When Braine received the message he was pleased. Norton's assignment
+fitted his purpose like a glove. Before midnight he would have Mr.
+Meddling Reporter where he would bother no one for some time--if he
+proved tractable. If not, he would never bother any one again. Braine
+gave his orders tersely. Unless Norton met with unforeseen delay,
+nothing could prevent his capture.
+
+When Norton arrived at the Henderson place, a footman informed him from
+the veranda that General Henderson was at 49 Elm Street for the
+evening, and it would be wise to call there. Jim nodded his thanks and
+set off in haste for 49 Elm Street. The footman did not enter the
+house, but hurried down the steps and slunk off among the adjacent
+shrubbery. His mission was over with.
+
+The house in Elm Street was Braine's suburban establishment. He went
+there occasionally to hibernate, as it were, to grow a new skin when
+close pressed. The caretaker was a man rightly called Samson. He was
+a bruiser of the bouncer type.
+
+It was fast work for Braine to get out there. If the man disguised as
+a footman played his cards badly Braine would have all his trouble for
+nothing. He disguised himself with that infernal cleverness which had
+long since made him a terror to the police, who were looking for ten
+different men instead of one. He knew that Norton would understand
+instantly that he was not the general; but on the other hand he would
+not know that he was addressing Braine.
+
+So the arch-conspirator waited; and so Norton arrived and was ushered
+into the room. A single glance was enough to satisfy the reporter,
+always keen-eyed and observant.
+
+"I wish to see General Henderson," he said politely.
+
+"General Henderson is doubtless at his own house."
+
+"Ah!"
+
+"Don't be alarmed--yet," said Braine smoothly.
+
+"I am not alarmed," replied Norton. "I am only chagrined. Since
+General Henderson is not to be found here I must be excused."
+
+"I will excuse you presently."
+
+"Ah! I begin to see."
+
+"Indeed!" mocked Braine.
+
+"I have tumbled or walked into a trap."
+
+"A keen mind like yours must have recognized that fact the moment you
+discovered that I was not the general."
+
+"I am indebted to the Black Hundred?" coolly.
+
+"Precisely. We do not wish you ill, Mr. Norton."
+
+"To be sure, no!" ironically. "What with falling safes, poisoned
+cigarettes, and so forth, I can readily see that you have my welfare at
+heart. What puzzled me was the suddenness with which these
+affectionate signs ceased."
+
+"You're a man of heart," said Braine with genuine admiration. "These
+affectionate signs, as you call them, ceased because for the time being
+you ceased to be a menace. You have become that once more, and here
+you are!"
+
+"And what are you going to do with me now that you have got me?"
+
+"There will be two courses." Braine reached into a drawer and drew out
+a thick roll of bills. "There are here something like $5,000."
+
+"Quite a tidy sum; enough for a chap to get married on."
+
+The two eyed each other steadily. And in his heart Braine sighed. For
+he saw in this young man's eyes incorruptibility.
+
+"It is yours on one condition," said Braine, reaching out his foot
+stealthily toward the button which would summon Samson.
+
+"And that is," interpolated Norton, "that I join the Black Hundred."
+
+"Or the great beyond, my lad," took up Braine, his voice crisp and cold.
+
+Norton could not repress a shiver. Where had he heard this voice
+before? ... Braine! He stiffened.
+
+"Murder in cold blood?" he managed to say.
+
+"Indefinite imprisonment. Choose."
+
+"I have chosen."
+
+"H'm!" Braine rose and went over to the sideboard for the brandy.
+"I'm going to offer you a drink to show you that personally there are
+no hard feelings. You are in the way. After you, our friend, Jones.
+This brandy is not poisoned, neither are the glasses. Choose either
+and I'll drink first. We are all desperate men, Norton; and we stop at
+nothing. Your life hangs by a hair. Do you know where Hargreave is?"
+
+Norton eyed his liquor thoughtfully.
+
+"Do you know where the money is?"
+
+Norton smelt of the brandy.
+
+"I am sorry," said Braine. "I should have liked to win over a head
+like yours."
+
+Norton nonchalantly took out his watch, and that bit of bravado perhaps
+saved his life. In the case of his watch he saw a brutal face behind
+him. Without a tremor, Norton took up his glass.
+
+"I am sorry to disappoint you," he said, "but I shall neither join you
+nor go to by-by."
+
+Quick as a bird shadow above grass, he flung his brandy over his
+shoulder into the face of the man behind. Samson yelled with pain.
+Almost at the same instant Norton pushed over the table, upsetting
+Braine with it. Next he dashed through the curtains, slammed the door,
+and fled to the street, very shaky about the knees, if the truth is to
+be told.
+
+General Henderson's views upon the latest Balkan muddle were missing
+from the _Blade_ the following morning. Norton, instead of returning
+to the general's and fulfilling his assignment like a dutiful reporter,
+hurried out to Riverside to acquaint Jones with what had happened.
+Jones was glad to see him safe and sound.
+
+"That new reporter started the game," he said. "I overheard a word or
+two while he was talking in the booth. All your telephone booths are
+ramshackle affairs, you use them so constantly. I tried to find you,
+but you were out of sight. Now, tell me what happened."
+
+"Sh!" warned Norton as he spied Florence coming down the stairs.
+
+"I thought you couldn't come!" she cried. "But ten o'clock!"
+
+"I changed my mind," he replied, laughing.
+
+He caught her arm in his and drew her toward the library. Jones smiled
+after them with that enigmatical smile of his, which might have
+signified irony or affection. After half an hour's chat, Florence,
+quite unaware that the two men wished to talk, retired.
+
+At the door Norton told Jones what had taken place at 49 Elm Street.
+
+"Ah! we must not forget that number," mused Jones. "My advice is, keep
+an eye on this Gregg chap. We may get somewhere by watching him."
+
+"Do you know where Hargreave is?"
+
+Jones scratched his chin reflectively.
+
+Norton laughed. "I can't get anything out of you."
+
+"Much less any one else. I'm growing fond of you, my boy. You're a
+man."
+
+"Thanks; and good night."
+
+When Olga Perigoff called the next day Jones divested himself of his
+livery, donned a plain coat and hat, and left the house stealthily.
+To-day he was determined to learn something definite in regard to this
+suave, handsome Russian. When she left the house Jones rose from his
+hiding place and proceeded to follow her. The result of this espionage
+on the part of Jones will be seen presently.
+
+Meantime Jim went down to the office and lied cheerfully about his
+missing the general. Whether the city editor believed him or not is of
+no matter. Jim went over to his desk. From the corner of his eye he
+could see Gregg scribbling away. He never raised his head as Jim sat
+down to read his mail. After a while Gregg rose and left the office;
+and, of course, Jim left shortly afterward. When the newcomer saw that
+he was being followed, he smiled and continued on his way. This Norton
+chap was suspicious. All the better; his suspicions should be made the
+hook to land him with. By and by the man turned into a drug store and
+Jim loitered about till he reappeared. Gregg walked with brisker steps
+now. It was his intention to lead Norton on a wild goose chase for an
+hour or so, long enough to give Braine time to arrange a welcome at
+another house.
+
+Norton kept perhaps half a block in the rear of his man all the while.
+But for this caution he would have witnessed a little pantomime that
+would have put him wholly upon his guard. Turning a corner, Gregg all
+but bumped into the countess. He was quick enough to place a finger on
+his lips and motion his head toward a taxicab. Olga hadn't the least
+idea who was coming around the corner, but she hailed the cab and was
+off in it before Jim swung around the corner.
+
+Jones, who had followed the countess for something over an hour and a
+half, hugged a doorway. What now? he wondered. The countess knew the
+man. That was evidence enough for the astute butler. But what meant
+the pantomime and the subsequent hurry? He soon learned. The man
+Gregg went his way, and then Jim turned the corner. Jones cast a
+wistful glance at the vanishing cab of the Russian, and decided to
+shadow the shadower--in other words, to follow the reporter, to see
+that nothing serious befell him.
+
+The lurer finally paused at a door, opened it with a key and swung it
+behind him, very careful, however, not to spring the latch. Naturally
+Jim was mightily pleased when he found the door could be opened. When
+Jones, not far behind, saw him open the door, he started to call out a
+warning, but thought the better of it. If Norton was walking into a
+trap it was far better that he, Jones, should remain outside of it. If
+Jim did not appear after a certain length of time, he would start an
+investigation on his own account.
+
+No sooner was Jim in the hallway than he was set upon and overpowered.
+They had in this house what was known as "the punishment room." Here
+traitors paid the reckoning and were never more heard of. Into this
+room Jim was unceremoniously dropped when Braine found that he could
+get no information from the resolute reporter.
+
+The room did not look sinister, but for all that it possessed the
+faculty of growing smaller and smaller, slowly or swiftly, as the man
+above at the lever willed. When Jim was apprised of this fact, he ran
+madly about in search of some mode of escape, knowing full well in his
+heart that he should not find one.
+
+Presently the machinery began to work, and Norton's tongue grew dry
+with terror. They had him this time; there was not the least doubt of
+it. And they had led him there by the nose into the bargain.
+
+Twenty minutes passed, and Jones concluded it was time for him to act.
+He went forward to try the door, but this time it was locked. Jones,
+however, was not without resource. The house next door was vacant, and
+he found a way into this, finally reaching the roof. From this he
+jumped to the other roof, found the scuttle open, and crept down the
+stairs, flight after flight, till the whir of a motor arrested him.
+
+Conspirators are often overeager, too. So intent were the rascals upon
+the business at hand that they did not notice the door open slowly. It
+did not take the butler more than a moment to realize that his friend
+and ally was near certain death. With an oath he sprang into the room,
+gave Braine a push which sent him down to join the victim, and pitched
+into the other two. It was a battle royal while it lasted. Jones
+knocked down one of them, yelled to Norton, and kicked the rope he saw
+down into the pit. One end of this rope was attached to a ring in the
+wall. And up this rope Norton swarmed after he had disposed of Braine.
+The tide of battle then swung about in favor of the butler, and shortly
+the fake reporter and his companion were made to join their chief.
+
+Jones stopped the machinery. He could not bring himself to let his
+enemies die so horribly. Later he knew he would regret this sentiment.
+
+When the people came, summoned by some outsider who had heard the
+racket of the conflict, there was no one to be found in the pit. Nor
+was there any visible sign of an exit.
+
+There was one, however, built against such an hour and known only to
+the chiefs of the Black Hundred.
+
+And still the golden-tinted banknotes reposed tranquilly in their
+hiding place!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+About this time--that is to say, about the time the Black Hundred was
+stretching out its powerful secret arms toward Norton--there arrived in
+New York city a personage. This personage was the Princess Parlova, a
+fabulously rich Polish Russian. She leased a fine house near Central
+Park and set about to conquer social New York. This was not very
+difficult, for her title was perfectly genuine and she moved in the
+most exclusive diplomatic circle in Europe, which, as everybody knows,
+is the most brilliant in the world. When the new home was completely
+decorated she gave an elaborate dinner, and that attracted the
+newspapers. They began to talk about her highness, printed portraits
+of her, and devoted a page occasionally in the Sunday editions. She
+became something of a rage. One morning it was announced that the
+Princess Parlova would give a masked ball formally to open her home to
+society; and it was this notice that first brought the Princess Parlova
+under Braine's eyes. He was at the Perigoff apartment at the time.
+
+"Well, well," he mused aloud.
+
+"What is it?" asked Olga, turning away from the piano and ending one of
+Chopin's mazurkas brokenly.
+
+"Here is the Princess Parlova in town."
+
+"And who is she?"
+
+"She is the real thing, Olga; a real princess with vast estates in
+Poland with which the greedy Slav next door has been very gentle."
+
+"I haven't paid much attention to the social news lately. What about
+her?"
+
+"She is giving a masked ball formally to open her house on the West
+Side. And it's going to cost a pretty penny."
+
+"Well, you're not telling me this to make me want to know the
+princess," said Olga, petulantly.
+
+"No. But I'm going to give you a letter of introduction to her
+highness."
+
+"Oh!"
+
+"And you are going to ask her to invite two particular friends of yours
+to this wonderful ball of hers."
+
+"Indeed," ironically. "That sounds all very easy."
+
+"Easier than you think, my child."
+
+"I will not have you call me child."
+
+"Well, then, Olga."
+
+"That's better. Now, how will it be easier than I think?"
+
+"Simply this; the Princess Parlova is an oath-bound member, but has not
+been active for years."
+
+"Oho!" Olga was all animation now. "Go on!"
+
+"You will go to her with a letter of introduction--no! Better than
+that, you will make a formal call and show her this ring. You know the
+ring," he said, passing the talisman to the countess. "Show this to
+her and she will obey you in everything. She will have no alternative."
+
+"Very good," replied Olga. "And then the program is to insist that she
+invite Florence and that fool of a reporter to this ball. Then what?"
+
+"You can leave that to me."
+
+"Haven't all these failures been a warning?"
+
+"No, my dear. I was born optimistic; but there's a jinx somewhere in
+one of my pockets. Time after time I've had everything just where I
+wanted it, and then--poof! It's pure bald luck on their side, but
+sooner or later the wheel will turn. And any chance that offers I am
+bound to accept. Somehow or other we may be able to trap Florence and
+Norton. I want both of them. If I can get them, Jones will be forced
+to draw in Hargreave."
+
+"Is there such a man?"
+
+"You saw him that night at the restaurant."
+
+"I have often thought that perhaps I just dreamed it." She turned
+again to the piano and began humming idly.
+
+"Stop that and listen to me," said Braine, not in quite the best of
+tempers. "I'm in no mood for whims."
+
+"Music does not soothe your soul, then?" cynically.
+
+"If I had one it might. You will call on the Princess Parlova
+to-morrow afternoon. It depends upon you what my plans will be. I
+think you'll have little trouble in getting into the presence of her
+highness, and once there she will not be able to resist you."
+
+"I'll go."
+
+And go she did. The footman in green livery hesitated for a moment,
+but the title on the visiting card was quite sufficient. He bowed the
+countess into the reception room and went in search of his
+distinguished mistress.
+
+The Princess Parlova was a handsome woman verging upon middle age. She
+was a patrician; Olga's keen eye discerned that instantly. She came
+into the reception room with that dignified serenity which would have
+impressed any one as genuine. She held the card in her fingers and
+smiled inquiringly toward her guest.
+
+"I confess," she began, "that I recall neither your face nor your name.
+I am sorry. Where have I had the honor of meeting you before?"
+
+"You have never met me before, your highness," answered Olga sweetly.
+
+"You came on a charity errand, then?"
+
+"That depends, your highness. Will you be so good as to glance at
+this?" Olga asked, holding out her palm upon which the talisman lay.
+
+The princess shrank back, paling.
+
+"Where did you get that?" she panted.
+
+"From the head," was the answer.
+
+"And you have followed me from Russia?" whispered the princess, her
+terror growing.
+
+"Oh, no. The Black Hundred is as strongly organized here as in St.
+Petersburg. But we always keep track of old members, especially when
+they stand so high in the world as yourself."
+
+"But I was deceived and betrayed!" exclaimed the princess. "They urged
+me to join on the ground that the organization was to attempt to bring
+about the freedom of Poland."
+
+Olga shrugged. "You were rich, highness. The Black Hundred needed
+money!"
+
+"And you need it now?" eagerly, believing that she saw a loophole.
+"How much? Oh, I will give a hundred thousand rubles on your promise
+to leave me alone. Tell me!"
+
+"I am sorry, your highness, but I have no authority to accept such an
+offer. Indeed, my errand is far from being expensive. All the Black
+Hundred desires is four invitations to this ball which you are soon to
+give. That should mot cause you any alarm. We shall not interfere
+with your sojourn in America in any way whatsoever, provided these
+invitations are issued."
+
+"You would rob my guests?" horrified.
+
+"Positively no! Here is a list of four names. Invite them; that is
+all you have to do. Not so much as a silver spoon will be found
+missing. This is on my word of honor, and I never break that word, if
+you please."
+
+"Give me the list," said the princess wearily. "Who gave you that
+ring?"
+
+"The head."
+
+"In Russia?"
+
+"No; here in America." Olga dipped into her handbag and produced a
+slip of paper. This she handed to the princess. "Here is the list,
+highness."
+
+"Who is Florence Hargreave?"
+
+"A friend of mine," evasively.
+
+"Does she belong to the organization?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Then you have some ulterior purpose in having me invite her?"
+
+"I have," answered Olga sharply; "but that does not concern your
+highness in the least."
+
+The princess bit her lips. "I see your name here also; a man named
+Braine, and another, Norton."
+
+"Say at once that you do not care to execute the wishes--the
+commands--of the order," said Olga coldly.
+
+"I will do as you wish. And I beg you now to excuse me. But if
+anything happens to any of my personal friends--"
+
+"Well?" haughtily from Olga.
+
+"Well, I will put the matter in the hands of the police."
+
+"But so long as your personal friends are not concerned?"
+
+"I shall then of necessity remain deaf and blind. It is one of the
+penalties I must pay for my folly. I wish you good day."
+
+"And also good riddance," murmured Olga under her breath, as she arose
+and started for the hallway.
+
+Thus it was that when Norton went to the office the next afternoon he
+found a broad white envelope on his desk. Indifferently he opened the
+same and his eyes bulged. "Princess Parlova requests" and so forth and
+so on. Then he shrugged. The chief had probably asked for the
+invitation and he would have to write up the doings, a phase of
+reportorial work eminently distasteful to him. He went up to the city
+desk.
+
+"Can't you find some one else to do this stuff?" he growled to the city
+editor.
+
+The city editor glanced at the card and crested envelope. "Good lord,
+man! Nobody in this office had anything to do with that. What luck!
+Our Miss Hayes tried all manner of schemes, but was rebuffed on all
+sides. How the deuce did you chance to get one?"
+
+"Search me," said the bewildered Norton.
+
+"If I were you I'd sit tight and take it all in," advised the editor.
+"It's going to be the biggest splurge of its kind we've had in years.
+We've been working every wire we know to get Miss Hayes inside, but it
+was no go. This princess is not on to the game yet. In this country
+you get into society or you don't through the Sundays."
+
+"Hanged if I know who wished this thing on me."
+
+"Take it philosophically," said the editor sarcastically. "The
+princess won't bite you. She may even have seen your picture--"
+
+"Get out!" grumbled Norton, turning away.
+
+He would go out and see Florence. On the way out to Riverdale he came
+to the conclusion that the list of the princess fell short and some
+friend of his who was helping the woman out suggested his name. It was
+the only way he could account for it.
+
+But when he learned that Florence had an invitation exactly like his
+own and that she received it that morning he became suspicious.
+
+"Jones, what do you think of it?" he questioned.
+
+"I think it was very kind of the Countess Perigoff suggesting your name
+and that of Florence," said the butler urbanely.
+
+"Olga?" cried Florence disappointedly.
+
+"It is the only logical deduction I can make," declared Jones. "They
+are both practically Russians."
+
+"And what would you advise?" asked Norton.
+
+"Why, go and enjoy yourselves. Forewarned is forearmed. The thing is,
+be very careful not to acquaint any one with the character of your
+disguise, least of all the Countess Perigoff. Besides," Jones added
+smiling, "perhaps I may go myself."
+
+"Goody! I've read about masked balls and have always been crazy to go
+to one," said Florence with eagerness.
+
+"Suppose we go at once and pick out some costumes?" suggested Norton.
+
+"Just as soon as I can get my hat on," replied Florence, happy as a
+lark.
+
+"But mind," warned Jones; "be sure that you see the costumer alone and
+that no one else is about."
+
+"I'll take particular care," agreed Norton. "We've got to do some
+hustling to find something suitable. For a big affair like this the
+town will be ransacked. All aboard! There's room for two in that car
+of mine; and we can have a spin besides. Hang work!"
+
+Florence laughed, and even Jones permitted a smile (which was not grim
+this time) to stir his lips.
+
+A happy person is generally unobservant. Two happy persons together
+are totally unobservant of what passes around them. In plainer terms
+this lack is called love. And being frankly in love with each other,
+neither Norton nor Florence observed that a taxicab followed them into
+town. Jones, not being in love, was keenly observant; but the taxicab
+took up the trail two blocks away, so the matter wholly escaped Jones'
+eye.
+
+The two went into several costumers', but eventually discovered a shop
+on a side street that had been overlooked by those invited to the
+masquerade. They had a merry time rummaging among the
+camphory-smelling boxes. There were dominoes of all colors, and at
+length they agreed upon two modest ones that were evenly matched in
+color and design. Florence ordered them to be sent home. Then the two
+of them sallied up to the Ritz-Carleton and had tea.
+
+The man from the taxicab entered the costumer's, displayed a
+detective's shield and demanded that the proprietor show him the
+costumes selected by the two young people who had just left. The man
+obeyed wonderingly.
+
+"I want a pair exactly like these," said the detective. "How much?"
+
+"Two dollars each, rental; seven apiece if you wish to buy them."
+
+"I'll buy them."
+
+The detective paid the bill, nodded curtly, and returned to his taxicab.
+
+"Now, I wonder," mused the costumer, "what the dickens those
+innocent-looking young people are up to?" He never found out.
+
+On the night of the ball Norton dined with Florence for the first time;
+and for once in his life he experienced that petty disturbance of
+collective thought called embarrassment. To talk over war plans with
+Jones was one thing, but to have Jones serve soup was altogether
+another. All through dinner Jones replied to questions with no more
+and no less than "Yes, sir," and "No, sir." Norton was beginning to
+learn that this strange man could put on a dozen kinds of armor and
+always retain his individuality. And to-night there seemed something
+vaguely familiar about the impassive face of the butler, as if he had
+seen it somewhere in the past, but could not tell when or where. As he
+and Florence were leaving for the automobile which was to take them to
+the princess', the truth came home to him with the shock of a douche of
+ice-cold water. Under his breath he murmured: "You're a wonderful man,
+Jones; and I take my hat off to you with the deepest admiration. Hang
+me!"
+
+"What are you mumbling about?" asked the happy girl.
+
+"Was I mumbling? Perhaps I was going over my catechism. I haven't
+been out in society in so long that I've forgotten how to act."
+
+"I believe that. We've been in here for five minutes and you haven't
+told me that you love me."
+
+"Good heavens!" And his arms went around her so tightly that she
+begged for quarter.
+
+"How strong you are!"
+
+The splendor of the rooms, the dazzling array of jewels, the
+kaleidoscopic colors, the perfume of the banked flowers and the music
+all combined to put Florence into a pleasurable kind of trance. And it
+was only when the first waltz began that she became herself and
+surrendered to the arms of the man she loved.
+
+And they were waltzing over a volcano. She knew and he knew it. From
+what direction would the blow come? Well, they were prepared for all
+manner of tricks.
+
+In an alcove off the ballroom sat Braine and Olga, both dressed exactly
+like Norton and Florence. Another man and woman entered presently, and
+Braine spoke to them for a moment, as if giving instructions, which was
+indeed the case.
+
+The band crashed into another dance, and the masqueraders began
+swirling hither and thither and yon. A gay cavalier suddenly stopped
+in front of Florence.
+
+"Enchantress, may I have the pleasure of this dance?"
+
+Jim touched Florence's hand. But she turned laughingly toward the
+stranger. What difference did it make? The man would never know who
+she was nor would she know him. It was a lark, that was all; and
+despite Jim's warning touch she was up and away like the mischievous
+sprite that she was. Jim remained in his chair, twisting his fingers
+and wondering whether to laugh or grow angry. After all, he could not
+blame her. To him an affair like this was an ancient story; to her it
+was the door of fairyland swung open. Let her enjoy herself.
+
+Florence was having a splendid time. Her partner was asking her all
+sorts of questions and she was replying in kind, when out of the crowd
+came Norton (as she supposed), who touched her arm. The cavalier
+stopped, bowed and made off.
+
+Norton whispered: "I have made an important discovery. We must be off
+at once. Come with me."
+
+Florence, without the least suspicion in the world, followed him up the
+broad staircase. What with the many sounds it was not to be wondered
+at that the difference in the quality of voices did not strike
+Florence's ear as odd. The result of her confidence was that upon
+reaching the upper halls, opposite the dressing rooms, she was suddenly
+thrust into a room and made prisoner. When the light was turned up she
+recognized with horror the woman who had helped to kidnap her and take
+her away on the _George Washington_ weeks ago. She could not have
+cried out for help if she had tried.
+
+Meantime Jim got up and began to wander about in search of Florence.
+
+Braine played a clever game that night. He and the Russian, still
+dominoed like Norton and Florence, ordered the Hargreave auto, by
+number, entered it and were driven up to the porte-cochère of the
+Hargreave house. The two alighted, the chauffeur sent the car toward
+the garage, and Braine and his companion ran lightly down the path to
+the street where the cab which had followed picked them up.
+
+It grew more and more evident to Jim that something untoward had taken
+place. He could not find Florence anywhere, in the alcoves, in the
+side rooms, the supper or card room. Later, to his utter amazement, he
+was informed that the Hargreave auto had some time since been called
+and its owner taken home. Some one had taken his place.
+
+His first sensation was impotent fury against Jones, who had permitted
+them to play with fire. He flung out of the mansion unceremoniously,
+commandeered a cab, and flew out to Riverdale. And when Jones came to
+the door he was staggering with sleep.
+
+"What's the matter with you?" demanded Jim roughly. "Where's Florence?"
+
+"Isn't she with you?" cried Jones, making an effort to dispel the
+drowsiness. "What time is it?" suddenly.
+
+"Midnight! Where is she?"
+
+"Midnight? I've been drugged!"
+
+Without a word Jones staggered off to the kitchens, Jim at his heels.
+
+There was always hot water, and within five minutes Jones had drunk two
+cups of raw strong coffee.
+
+"Drugged!" he murmured. "Some one in the house! I'll attend to that
+later. Now, the chauffeur."
+
+But the chauffeur swore on his oath that he had left Jim and Florence
+on the steps of the porte-cochère.
+
+"Get in!" said Jones to Norton, now fully alive. He could not get it
+out of his head that some one in the house had drugged him.
+
+The events which followed were to both Jones and Norton something like
+a series of nightmares. In the new home of the Princess Parlova a bomb
+had exploded and fire followed the explosion. From pleasure to terror
+is only a step. The wildest confusion imaginable ensued. Most of the
+guests were of the opinion that some anarchist had attempted to blow up
+the house of the rich Pole. Jones and Norton arrived just as the smoke
+began to pour out from the windows. A crowd had already collected.
+
+Then Jim overheard a woman masquerader say: "The fool made the bomb too
+strong. She is in the room on the second floor. The game is up if she
+suffocates----" The voice trailed off and the woman became lost in the
+crowd. But it was enough for the reporter, who pushed his way roughly
+through the excited masqueraders and entered the house. The rescue was
+one of the most exciting to be found in the newspaper files of the day.
+
+So Braine in his effort to scare everybody from the house had
+overreached himself once more.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+Florence was a fortnight in recovering from the shock of her experience
+at the masked ball of the Princess Parlova, who, by the way,
+disappeared from New York shortly after the fire, no doubt because of
+her fear of the Black Hundred. The fire did not destroy the house, but
+most of the furnishings were so thoroughly drenched by water that they
+were practically ruined. Her coming and going were a nine-days'
+wonder, and then the public found something else to talk about.
+
+Norton was a constant visitor at the Hargreave place. There was to him
+a new interest in that mysterious house, with its hidden panels, its
+false floors, its secret tunnels; but he treated Jones upon the same
+basis as hitherto. One thing, however: He felt a sense of security in
+regard to Florence such as he had not felt before. So, between
+assignments, he ran out to Riverdale and did what he could to amuse his
+sweetheart. Later they took short rides in the runabout, and at length
+she became as lively as she had ever been.
+
+But often she would catch Norton brooding.
+
+"What makes you frown like that?"
+
+"Was I frowning?" innocently enough.
+
+"I find you this way a dozen times in an afternoon. What is the
+matter? Are they after you again?"
+
+"Heavens, no! I'm only a vague issue. They will not bother me so long
+as I do not bother them. It has dwindled into a game of truce."
+
+"Do you think so?" eying him curiously.
+
+"Why, yes."
+
+"What's the use of trying to fool me, Jim? If they haven't been after
+you, you are sensing a presage of evil. I'm not a child any longer.
+Haven't I been through enough to make me a woman? Sometimes I feel
+very old."
+
+"To me you are the most charming in all this wide world. No, you're
+not a child any longer. You are a woman, brave and patient; and I know
+that I could trust you with any secret I have or own. But sometimes a
+person may have a secret which is not his and which he hasn't any right
+to disclose."
+
+She became silent for a while. "I hate money," she said. "I hate it,
+hate it!"
+
+"It's mighty comfortable to have it around sometimes," he countered.
+
+"As in my case, for instance. If I were poor and had to work no one
+would bother me."
+
+"I would!" he declared, laughing. "Come; let's throw off moods and go
+into town for tea at the Rose Garden; and if you feel strong enough
+we'll trip the light fantastic."
+
+They had been gone from the house less than an hour when a man ran up
+the steps of the veranda and rang the bell. Jones being busy at the
+rear of the house, the maid came to the door.
+
+"Is Miss Hargreave in?" the stranger asked.
+
+"No," abruptly. The door began to close ever so slowly
+
+"Do you know where I can find her?"
+
+The maid eyed him with covert keenness; then, remembering that the
+reporter was with Florence, said: "I believe she is at the Rose Garden
+this afternoon."
+
+"That is in town?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Thanks." The man turned abruptly and ran down the steps.
+
+The maid ran back to Jones.
+
+"Why didn't you call me?" he demanded impatiently.
+
+"There wasn't time."
+
+"Did you tell him where she was?"
+
+"Yes. But I shouldn't have told him if Mr. Norton had not been with
+Miss Florence."
+
+Jones ran to the front, dashed out, eyed the back of the man hastening
+down the street, smiled, and returned to his work, or, rather, to the
+maid. He took her by the shoulder, whirled her about, and shot a look
+into her eyes that quailed her.
+
+"Always call me hereafter, no matter what I'm doing. That man has
+never laid eyes on Florence and has no idea what she looks like. Why
+did you drug my coffee the night of that ball?"
+
+She stepped back.
+
+"And how much did they pay you for letting that doctor send Florence to
+Atlantic City? I know everything. Hereafter, walk straight. If you
+play another trick I'll kill you with these two hands. And listen and
+tell this to your confederates: I always know every move they make;
+that is why no one is missing from this house. There is a traitor.
+Let them find him if they can. Will you walk straight, or will you
+leave?"
+
+"I--I will walk straight," she faltered. "The money was too big a
+temptation."
+
+"Did they give it to you?"
+
+"Yes. And more to stay here. But this is the first bit of dishonest
+work I ever did."
+
+"Well, remember what I have said. Another misstep and I'll make an end
+to you. Don't think I'm trying to scare you. You have witnessed
+enough to know that it's life and death in this house. Now run along."
+
+At the garden Jim and Florence sauntered among the crowd, not having
+any particular objective point in view.
+
+"Sh!" whispered Jim.
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"Olga Perigoff is yonder in a box."
+
+"Very well; let us go and sit with her. Is she alone?"
+
+"Apparently. But don't you think we'd better go elsewhere?"
+
+"My dear young man," said Florence with mock loftiness, "Olga Perigoff
+has written me down as a simple young fool, and that is why, sooner or
+later, I'm going to put the shoe on the other foot. You and Jones have
+coddled me long enough. Inasmuch as I am the stake they are playing
+for, I intend to have something more than a speaking part in the play."
+
+"All right; you're the admiral," he said with pretended lightness.
+
+So the two of them joined their subtle enemy, conscious of a tingle of
+zest as they did so. On her part, the countess was always suspicious
+of this sleepy-eyed reporter. She never could tell how much he knew.
+But of Florence she was reasonably certain; and so long as she could
+fool the pretty infant the suspicions of the reporter were a negligible
+quantity. She greeted them effusively and offered them chairs. For
+half an hour they sat there, chatting inanities, all the while each
+mind was busy with deeper concerns.
+
+When the man in search of Florence eventually arrived and asked the
+manager of the garden if he knew Miss Hargreave by sight the manager
+pointed toward the box. The man wound his way in and out of the idlers
+and by the time he reached the box Jim and Florence had made their
+departure. The man bowed, approached, and asked the countess if she
+was Miss Hargreave. For a moment Olga suspected a trap. Then it
+appealed to her mind that if there was no trap it might be well to pose
+as Florence, if only to learn what the outcome might be.
+
+"Yes. What is wanted?" she asked.
+
+The man took a letter from his pocket and handed it to Olga, saying:
+"Give this to your father. He knows how to read it."
+
+[Illustration: "GIVE THIS TO YOUR FATHER. HE KNOWS HOW TO READ IT"]
+
+Before she could reply the man had turned and was hurrying away.
+
+Olga opened the note, her heart beating furiously. It was utterly
+blank. At first she thought it was a hoax. Then she happened to
+remember that there was such a thing as invisible ink. At last!
+Hargreave was alive; this letter settled all doubt in her mind on this
+question. Alive! And not only that, but the girl and Jones were
+evidently in communication with him. She summoned a waiter, made a
+secret sign, and he bowed and approached. She slipped the letter into
+his hand and whispered: "Show that at the cave to-morrow. It is in
+invisible ink and meant for Hargreave."
+
+"He's alive?"
+
+"Positively."
+
+"Very well." The waiter bowed and strolled away nonchalantly.
+
+Braine was in Boston over night, otherwise the countess would have
+taken the mysterious note at once to him. She remained for perhaps a
+quarter of an hour longer and then left the garden. She would have
+taken the letter to her own apartment but for the fact that the
+chemicals needed were hidden in the cave.
+
+Now it happened that Florence went out for her early ride the next
+morning, and crossing a field she saw a man with a bundle under his
+arm. The sun struck his profile and limned it plainly, and Florence
+uttered a low cry. The man had not observed her. So, very quietly,
+she slipped from the horse, tethered it to a tree, and started after
+the man to learn what he was doing so far from the city. She would
+never forget that face. She had seen it that dreadful night when the
+note had lured her into the hands of her enemies. The face belonged to
+the man who had impersonated her father.
+
+It occurred to her that she might just as well do a little detective
+work on her own hook. She had passed through so many terrifying
+episodes that she was beginning to crave for the excitement, strange as
+this may seem. Like a gambler who has once played for high stakes, she
+no longer found pleasure in thimbles and needles and pins. She
+followed the man with no little skill and at length she saw him
+approach a knoll, stoop, apparently press a spring, and a hole suddenly
+yawned. The man vanished quickly, and the spot took on again its
+virginal appearance. A cave. Florence had the patience to wait. By
+and by the man appeared again and slunk away.
+
+When she was sure that he was beyond range, she came out from the place
+of concealment, crept up the knoll, and searched about for the magic
+handle of this strange door. Diligence rewarded her, and she soon
+found herself in a large, musty, earth-smelling cave. Loot was
+scattered about, and there were boxes and chairs and a large chest.
+Men evidently met here, possibly after some desperate adventure against
+society. She found nothing to reward her hardihood, and as she was in
+the act of moving toward the cave's door she beheld with terror that it
+was moving!
+
+[Illustration: FLORENCE DISCOVERS THE CAVE]
+
+She was near the chest at that moment. The cave was not a deep one.
+There was no tunnel, only a wall. Resolutely she raised the lid of the
+chest, stepped inside, and drew the lid down. She was just in time.
+The door opened and three men entered, talking volubly. They felt
+perfectly secure in talking as loudly as they pleased. To Florence it
+seemed almost impossible that they did not hear the thunder of her
+heart? Strain her ears as she might, she could gather but little of
+what they said, except:
+
+"If Hargreave had this paper we might all be put on the defensive. To
+an outsider it is a blank paper. But the boss will be able to read
+it...." The speaker moved away from the vicinity of the chest and she
+heard no more.
+
+Very deftly Florence raised the lid just enough to peep out. The man
+who had been talking was putting the note in his hip pocket. As he
+turned toward the chest he sat down on the soap-box immediately in
+front of the chest. An inspiration came to the girl, an exceedingly
+daring one. She took her liberty in her hands as she executed the
+deed. But the dimness of the cave aided her. When she crouched down
+again the magic paper was hers.
+
+It seemed hours to her before the men left the cave. As she heard the
+hidden door jar in closing she raised the lid and stepped out,
+breathing deeply. The paper she had purloined was indeed blank, but
+Jones or Jim would know what to do with it. And wouldn't they be
+surprised when she told them what she had accomplished all alone? Her
+exultation was of short duration. She heard the whine of the door on
+its hinges. The men were returning. Why?
+
+They were returning because they had discovered a woman's shoeprint
+outside. It pointed toward the cave, freshly, and there was none
+coming away. To re-enter the chest would be foolhardy. It would be
+the first place the men would look. She glanced about desperately.
+She saw but one chance, the well. And even while the door was swinging
+inward, letting the brilliant sunshine enter, she summoned up the
+courage and let herself down into the well, which proved to be nothing
+more nor less than an underground river!
+
+The men came in with a rush. They upset boxes, looked into the chest,
+and the man who was evidently in command, gazed down the well, shaking
+his head. Their search was thorough, but they found no one. And at
+length they began to reason that perhaps a woman had got as far as the
+door and then turned away, walking on the turf.
+
+Meantime Florence was borne along by the swift current of the river,
+which gained in swiftness every moment. From time to time she bumped
+along the rocky walls, but she clung to life valiantly. In ten minutes
+she was swept to the other side of the hill, into the rapids; but the
+blue sky was overhead, she was out in the familiar world again. On, on
+she was carried. Even though she was half dead, she could hear the
+roar of a falls somewhere in advance.
+
+
+Braine thought he really had a clue to the treasure, and with his usual
+promptness he set about to learn if it was worth anything. He procured
+a launch and began to prowl about, using a pole as a feeler. All the
+while he was being closely watched by Norton, who had concluded to hang
+on to Braine's trail till he found something worthy of note. Braine
+was disguised, but this time Jim was not to be fooled. But what was he
+looking for, wondered the reporter? Braine continued to pole along,
+sometimes pausing to look over the gunwale down into the water. In
+raising his head after the last investigation, he discerned something
+struggling in the water, about three hundred yards away. The current
+leisurely brought the object into full view. It was a young woman with
+just power enough to keep herself afloat. The golden head roused
+something in him stronger than curiosity. It might be!
+
+Braine proceeded to move the launch in the direction of the girl. It
+was this movement that turned the reporter's gaze. He, too, now saw
+the woman in the water and wondered how she had come there. When
+Braine reached the girl and pulled her into the launch Jim saw her face
+plainly.
+
+[Illustration: FLORENCE STEALS THE PAPERS FROM BRAINE'S POCKET]
+
+He flew from his vantage point, found a skiff and started after Braine.
+
+"By the Lord Harry!" murmured the rogue. "Well, they can talk of manna
+from heaven, but this is what I call luck. Florence Hargreave, out of
+nowhere, into my arms! The god of luck has cast another horseshoe and
+it's mine."
+
+He had a flask in his pocket, and he forced some of the biting spirits
+down the girl's throat. She opened her eyes.
+
+"Well, my beauty?"
+
+Florence eyed him wildly, not quite understanding where he had come
+from.
+
+"I don't know how you got here," he said, "and I don't care. But here
+we are together at last. Where is your father?"
+
+"I--I don't know," dazedly.
+
+"Better think quickly," he warned; "I want lucid answers to my
+questions or back you go into the water. I'm about at the end of my
+rope. I've been beaten too many times, my girl, to have any particular
+love for you. Now, where is your father?"
+
+"I don't know; I have never seen him."
+
+Braine laughed.
+
+And Jim's boat ran afoul some rocks and into the water he went. He had
+not attracted Braine's attention, fortunately. He began to swim toward
+the drifting launch.
+
+"Where have they hidden that money?"
+
+"I don't know."
+
+"Well, well; I've given you your chance. You'll have to try your luck
+with the water again."
+
+Florence, weak as she was, set her lips.
+
+"You don't ask for mercy?" he said banteringly.
+
+"I should be wasting my breath to ask for mercy from such a monster as
+you are," she answered quickly.
+
+"That damned Hargreave nerve!" he snarled.
+
+He rolled up his sleeves and stepped toward her. She braced herself
+but did not turn her eyes from his. Suddenly, from nowhere at all,
+came a pair of hands. One clutched the gunwale and the other laid hold
+of Braine. A quick pull followed, and Braine began to topple. But
+even as he fell he managed to fling himself atop his assailant; and it
+was only when the struggle began in the water that he recognized the
+reporter. All the devil in him came to the surface and he fought with
+the fierceness of a tiger to kill, kill, kill. In nearly every
+instance this meddling reporter had checkmated him. This time one or
+the other of them should stay in the water.
+
+Norton recognized that he had a large order before him to disable
+Braine. The recognition between them was now frank and absolute; there
+could never again be any diplomatic sidestepping.
+
+"You're a dead man, Norton!" panted Braine, as he reached for the
+reporter's throat.
+
+Norton said nothing, but struck the hand aside. For a moment they both
+went under. They came up sputtering, each trying for a hold. It was a
+terribly enervating struggle.
+
+Florence could do nothing. The boat in which she sat continued to
+drift away from the fighting men. Once she tried to reach Braine with
+the pole he had been using, but failed.
+
+[Illustration: BRAINE PROCURED A LAUNCH AND BEGAN TO PROWL ABOUT]
+
+From the shore came another boat. For a while she could not tell
+whether it contained friends or enemies. It was terrible to be forced
+to wait, absolutely helpless. When she heard the newcomers call
+encouragingly to Braine she knew then that the brave fight of her
+sweetheart was going to come to naught. She knew a little about
+motors. She threw on the power and headed straight toward the rowboat.
+The men shouted at her, but she did not alter her course. The rowboat
+had its sides crushed in and the men went piling into the water.
+
+"Jim," she cried.
+
+Norton suddenly flung off Braine and began to swim madly for the motor
+boat, which Florence had brought about. Even then it was only by the
+barest luck in the world that Norton managed to catch the gunwale. The
+rest of it was simple. When they finally reached a haven, Florence,
+oddly enough, thought of the horse she had left tethered nine miles
+from the stables. She laughed hysterically.
+
+"I guess he won't die. We can send some one out for him. Now, for
+heaven's sake, how did you get into this? Where were you? What have
+you been up to?" with tender bruskness.
+
+"I wanted to do a little detective work of my own," she faltered.
+
+"It looks as if you had done it. You infant! Will you never learn to
+keep outside this muddle? It's a man's work."
+
+Florence, thoroughly weakened by her long immersion in the water, began
+to weep silently.
+
+"You poor child. I'm a brute!" And he comforted her.
+
+Later that day, at home, she remembered the blank paper.
+
+"I stole this from one of the men in the cave. He said this blank
+paper would probably save father."'
+
+Jim took it. "H'm! Invisible ink, and it's had a fine washing."
+
+"But maybe it is waterproof."
+
+"Maybe it is. Anyhow, Miss Sherlock, we'll show it to Jones and see
+what he says."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+"What I want now," said Braine, as he paced the living-room of the
+apartment of the countess, "is revenge. I've been checkmated enough,
+Olga; they're playing with us."
+
+"That is nothing new," she replied, shrugging. "At the beginning I
+warned you. I never liked this affair after the first two or three
+failures. But you would have your way. You wanted revenge at that
+early date; but I can not see that you've gone forward. Has it ever
+occurred to you that the organization may be getting tired, too? They
+depend solely upon your invention, and each time your invention has
+resulted in touching nothing but zero."
+
+"Thanks!"
+
+"Oh, I'm not chiding you. I've failed, too."
+
+"Are you turning against me?" he demanded bitterly.
+
+"Do my actions point that way?" she countered. "No. But the more I
+view what has passed, the more disheartened I grow. It has been a
+series of blind alleys, and all we have succeeded in doing is knocking
+our heads. I can see now that all our failures are due to one mistake."
+
+"And what the devil is that?" he asked irritably.
+
+"We were in too much of a hurry at the beginning. Hargreave prepared
+himself for quick action on your part."
+
+[Illustration: BRAINE REACHED THE GIRL AND PULLED HER INTO THE BOAT]
+
+"And if I had not acted quickly he would have started successfully on
+one of his world tours again, and that would have been the last of him,
+and we should never have learned of the girl's existence. So there's
+your argument."
+
+"Perhaps you are right. But for all that we have not played the game
+with any degree of finesse."
+
+"Bah!" Braine lit a cigarette and smoked nervously. "I can't even get
+rid of that meddling reporter. He has been as much to blame for our
+failures as either Jones or Hargreave. I admit that in his case I
+judged hastily. I believed him to be just an ordinary newspaper man,
+and he was clever enough to lull my suspicions. But I'm going to get
+him, Olga, even if I have to resort to ordinary gunman tricks. If
+there's any final reckoning, by the Lord Harry, he shan't get a chance
+in the witness stand."
+
+"And I begin to think that that little chit of a girl has been
+hoodwinking me all along. By the way, did you find out what that
+letter said?" she asked after a pause.
+
+"Letter? What letter?"
+
+She sprang from her chair. "Do you mean to say that they have not told
+you about that?" Olga became greatly excited.
+
+"Explain," he said.
+
+"Why, I was at the garden day before yesterday, and a man approached
+and asked if I was Miss Hargreave. Becoming at once suspicious that
+something very important was about to happen I signified that I was
+Miss Hargreave. The man slipped a paper into my hand and hurried off.
+I took a quick glance at it and was dumfounded to find it utterly blank
+of writing. At first I thought some joke had been played on me, then I
+chanced to remember the invisible ink letters you always wrote me.
+Understanding that you were to visit the cave in the morning, I had one
+man at the garden take the note. And you never got it!"
+
+"Some one shall certainly pay for this carelessness. I'll call up
+Vroon and Jackson at once. Wait just a moment."
+
+He went to the telephone. A low muttering conversation took place.
+Olga could hear little or none of it. When Braine put the receiver
+back on the hook his face was not pleasant to see.
+
+"That girl!"
+
+"What now?"
+
+"It seems she had been out horseback riding that morning. She had seen
+one of the boys cross the field and suddenly disappear; and she was
+curious to learn what had become of him. With her usual luck she
+stumbled on the method of opening the door of the cave and went in.
+She must have been nosing about. She didn't have much time, though, as
+the boys came up to await me. Evidently she crawled into that old
+chest and in some inexplicable manner purloined the letter from
+Jackson's pocket. They left to reconnoiter; and it was then that
+Jackson discovered his loss. When Florence heard them returning she
+jumped into the well. And lived through that tunnel! The devil is in
+it!"
+
+"Or out of it, since we consider him our friend."
+
+"And I had her in my hands, note and all!"
+
+"But with all that water there will not be any writing left on the
+letter."
+
+"Invisible ink is generally indelible and impervious to the action of
+water; at least the kind I use is. I'd give a thousand for a sight of
+that letter."
+
+[Illustration: FROM THE SHORE CAME ANOTHER DOAT]
+
+"And it might be worth a million," Olga suggested.
+
+"Not the least doubt of it in my mind. Olga, old girl, it does look as
+if my star was growing dim. We'll never get our hands on that million.
+I feel it in my bones. So let's settle down to a campaign of revenge,
+without any furbelows. I want to twist Hargreave's heart before the
+game winds up."
+
+"You wish really to injure her?"
+
+"I do not wish to injure her. Far from it," he replied, smiling evilly.
+
+"You want her ... dead?" whispered Olga, paling.
+
+"Exactly. I want her dead. And so if all my efforts here come to
+nothing, so shall Hargreave's. His millions will become waste paper to
+him. That's revenge. The Persian peach method."
+
+"Poison? You shall not! You shall not kill her!" vehemently.
+
+"Tender-hearted?"
+
+"No. If I must in the end go to prison, so be it; but I refuse to die
+in the chair."
+
+"Very well, then. We shan't kill her, but we'll make her wish she was
+dead. I was only trying to see how far you would go. The basket of
+peaches is in the hallway. Every peach is poisoned. No man in the
+country knows more about subtle poisons than I do. Have I not written
+books on that subject?" ironically.
+
+"And they will trace it back to you in a straight line," she warned.
+"I will not have it!"
+
+"I can go elsewhere," he replied coldly.
+
+"You would leave me?"
+
+"The moment you cross my will," emphatically.
+
+It became her turn to pace. Torn between her love of the man and the
+danger which stared her in the face, she was for the time being
+distracted. All the time he watched her with malevolent curiosity,
+knowing that in the end she would concur with his evil plans.
+
+"Very well," she said finally. "But listen; we shall be found out.
+Never doubt that. Your revenge will cost us both our lives. I feel
+it."
+
+"Bah! The law will have no hand in my end. I always carry a pellet;
+and that ring of yours would suffice a regiment. She will not die.
+She will merely become a kind of paralytic; the kind that can move a
+little but not enough; always wheeled about in a chair. I'll bring in
+the peaches; rosy and downy. One bite, after a given time, will do the
+trick. If they suspect and throw them out we have lost nothing but the
+peaches. A trusted messenger will carry them to the Hargreave house.
+And then we'll sit down and wait."
+
+Meantime, in the library of the Hargreave house, Florence and Jim were
+puzzling over the blank sheet of paper.
+
+"I'll wager," said Jim, "the water washed all the writing away. The
+fire does not seem to do any good. We'll turn it over to Jones.
+Jones'll find a way to solve it. Trust him."
+
+"What are you two chattering about?" asked Susan, who was arranging
+some flowers on the table.
+
+"Secrets," said Jim, smiling.
+
+"Humph!"
+
+Susan puttered about for a few minutes longer, then crossed to the
+reception room, intending to go up-stairs. At that moment the maid was
+admitting a messenger with a basket of fruit.
+
+"For Miss Hargreave," said he. He gave the basket to the maid, touched
+his cap awkwardly, and swung on his heel, closing the door behind him.
+He was in a hurry to deliver another message.
+
+"Oh, what lovely fruit!" cried Susan, pausing. "I'm going to steal
+one," she laughed. She selected a peach and began eating it on the way
+up to her room.
+
+The maid passed on into the library.
+
+"What's this?" inquired Florence, as the maid held out the basket. She
+selected a peach and was about to set her white teeth into it when Jim
+interposed.
+
+"Wait a moment, dear." Florence lowered the peach. Jim turned to the
+maid. "Who sent it?"
+
+"I don't know, sir. A messenger brought it, saying it was for Miss
+Hargreave."
+
+"Let me see if there is a card." But Jim searched in vain for the card
+of the donor. All at once his suspicions arose. "Don't touch them.
+Better let the maid throw them out. Fruit from unknown persons might
+not be the healthiest thing in the world."
+
+"What do you think?"
+
+"That in all probability they are poisoned. But there's no need trying
+to prove my theory right or wrong. Ask Jones. He'll tell you to throw
+them away."
+
+"Horrible!" Florence shuddered. "But they do not want to poison me.
+I'm too valuable. They want me alive."
+
+"Who can say?" returned Jim gloomily. "They may have learned that they
+can not beat us, no matter what card they turn up. I may be wrong, but
+take my advice and throw them away.... Good lord, what's that?"
+startled.
+
+"Some one cried!"
+
+"Oh, Miss Florence!" exclaimed the maid, terror-stricken as she
+recalled Susan's act. "Miss Susan took a peach from the basket and was
+eating it on the way to her room!"
+
+"Good heavens!" gasped Jim. "I was right. The fruit was poisoned."
+
+Jim had heard enough to send for a specialist he knew. The specialist
+arrived about twenty minutes after Susan's first cry. To his keen eye
+it looked like a certain poison which had for its basis the venom of
+the cobra.
+
+"Will she live?"
+
+"Oh, yes. But she'll be a wreck for some months. Send her to the
+hospital where I can visit her frequently. And I'll take that peach
+along for analysis. No police affair?"
+
+"No. We dare not call them in," said Jim.
+
+"That's your affair. I'll send down the ambulance. Keep her quiet.
+She'll have a species of paralysis; but that'll work off under
+treatment. A strange business."
+
+"So it is," agreed Jim grimly.
+
+Florence knelt beside her friend's bed and cried softly.
+
+"You called me just in time. An hour later, nothing would have saved
+her. She would have been paralyzed for life."
+
+Jim accompanied the doctor to the door and went in search of Jones. He
+found the taciturn butler eying the fruit basket, his face gray and
+drawn, though his eyes blazed with fury.
+
+"Poison!"
+
+"A pretty bad poison, too," said Jim. "We can't do anything. We've
+just got to sit still. But in the end we'll get them. That she
+devil...."
+
+"No, my friend; that he devil. The woman is mad over him and would
+commit any crime at his bidding. But this is his work. We want him.
+He wasn't without courage to send this fruit, knowing that I would
+instantly suspect the sender. Yet, I have no definite proof. I could
+not hold him in court in law. He will have bought the fruit piece by
+piece, the basket in a basket shop. He will have injected the poison
+himself when alone. Poor Susan! That messenger was without doubt some
+one over whom he holds the threat of the death chair. That's the way
+he works."
+
+Jim tramped the room while Jones carried the fruit to the kitchen. The
+butler returned after a while.
+
+"What about that blank sheet of paper?"
+
+"It has to be dipped into a solution; after that you can read it by
+heating. I have already dipped it into the solution. The moment the
+heat leaves the sheet the writing disappears again. The ink is
+waterproof. I'll show you."
+
+Jones got a candle from the mantel, lit it, and held the sheet of paper
+very close to the flame. Gradually, almost imperceptibly, letters
+began to form on the blank sheet. At length the message was complete.
+
+
+"Dear Hargreave--The Russian minister of police is at the Blank Hotel
+under the name of Henri Servan. He is investigating the work of the
+Black Hundred in this country and can free you from their vengeance if
+you supply the evidence needed."
+
+
+"Now, what evidence can he want?" asked Jim.
+
+"Such as will prove Braine an undesirable citizen."
+
+"And then?"
+
+"Quietly pack him off to Russia, where he is badly wanted."
+
+"Who sent this message?"
+
+"One of our mysterious friends. We have a few, as you already know.
+But I'll go and make this man Servan a visit. I have seen the real
+minister, and if this man is the same one, something of importance may
+turn up. I shall want you somewhere about. Here, I'll let you have
+this letter. Remember, heat brings it out and cold air makes it
+vanish. Now I'll go up for a moment to see how that poor girl is
+getting along. We are lucky; there's no gainsaying that."
+
+"You're a clever man, Jones," said Jim.
+
+Jones turned upon him, his face grave. The two men looked steadily
+into each other's eyes. Jones was first to turn aside his glance, as
+he had something to conceal and Jim had nothing.
+
+When the ambulance took the tortured Susan away, Jones addressed
+Florence gravely.
+
+"I am going out, and so is Mr. Norton. Do not leave the house; not
+even if you have a telephone call from me or Norton. Both of us will
+return; so don't let anything bother or confuse you."
+
+"I promise," said Florence, struggling with a sob.
+
+Jones went down-stairs again, paused by a window as if cogitating, and
+suddenly threw it up and looked abroad. A rustle among the lilacs
+caused a smile to flit across his face. So they had sent some one to
+learn the effect of the poison? Or to follow him should he leave the
+house? He retired to the kitchen and gave some explicit orders to the
+chef, orders which did not in any way refer to cooking. Then Jones and
+the reporter left the house, each quite aware that they were being
+followed. Near the Blank Hotel they separated in order to confuse the
+stalker. He might dodder and follow the wrong man. But it was evident
+that this time he had been directed to follow Jones; for he entered the
+hotel a minute after Jones.
+
+Meantime a second spy, whom Jones had not seen, had observed the
+transfer of the invisible writing and had immediately informed Braine,
+who was not far away. That his poisoned fruit had stricken down an
+outsider troubled him none at all. But that mysterious message he
+meant to have; it might be a life and death affair, it might be a clue
+to the treasure, or the whereabouts of Hargreave.
+
+Thus, while only one man followed Jones, several kept a far eye on Jim.
+
+Jones scribbled his name on a blank card and had it taken to the
+Russian's room. The page eyed that card curiously. It was different
+from anything he had ever seen before. In one corner were written
+three or four words which resembled a cross between Hebrew and Greek.
+
+"Humph!" muttered the boy. "Whadda y' know about that? Chicken
+scratches; but I guess the bell rings Roosian. On your way, Hortense,"
+he cried to the hall maid, who wanted a look at the card. "Up t' th'
+room, sir. He'll see yuh!" The boy kept the silver salver extended
+expectantly, but Jones went past without apparently noticing the hint.
+
+The Russian was standing by a window when Jones knocked and was bidden
+to enter.
+
+"You are not Hargreave."
+
+"Neither are you the Russian minister of police," urbanely.
+
+"Who are you?"
+
+"I am Hargreave's confidential man, sir."
+
+The two men eyed each other cautiously.
+
+"You speak Russian?"
+
+"No. I am able to scribble a few words; that is all."
+
+The Russian lit a cigarette and smoked leisurely. He was in no hurry.
+
+"No, I am not the minister; but I am his accredited agent. I am
+empowered to bring back to Russia a man who is known here by the name
+of Braine, another by the name of Vroon, and a woman who calls herself
+a countess and unfortunately is one. All I desire is some damaging
+proof against them that they are outlaws in this country. The rest
+will be simple."
+
+"They have all three taken out naturalization papers."
+
+[Illustration: THEY HAVE ALL THREE TAKEN OUT NATURALIZATION PAPERS]
+
+The Russian waved his hand airily. "Once they are in Russia those
+documents will never come to light. This man Braine, it has been
+learned, has long been in the pay of Prussia, and has given the general
+staff of that country many plans of our frontier fortifications. I do
+not know what any one of the three looks like. That is why I sought
+Hargreave."
+
+"I will gladly point them out to you," said Jones, rubbing his hands
+together, a sign that he was greatly pleased.
+
+"That will be very good of you, I'm sure," in a rumbling but perfectly
+intelligible English.
+
+"And suddenly they all three will disappear."
+
+"Suddenly; and you may believe me that from that time on they'll be
+heard of never more."
+
+"All this sounds extremely agreeable to me. Mr. Hargreave will be
+happy to hear that his long enforced hiding will soon come to an end."
+
+"All you have to do, sir, is to point them out to me."
+
+"It may take a week or ten days."
+
+"My government has waited for ten years to gather in this delectable
+trio. A month, if you like."
+
+"The sooner the better. I shall call this evening after dinner. We
+shall begin with Mr. Braine; and generally where he is is the woman.
+Vroon will be the most difficult."
+
+"After dinner, then, since you know some of his haunts. There is a
+reward."
+
+Jones laughed shortly. "Keep it yourself, sir. Mr. Hargreave would
+willingly double whatever this reward is to eliminate these despicable
+creatures from his affairs."
+
+"Thanks."
+
+While this conversation was taking place Norton idled about; and
+feeling the cravings for a cigarette, prepared to roll one, only to
+find that he hadn't the "makings." So fate urged him to step into the
+nearest tobacconist's. He asked for his favorite brand and passed over
+the silver.
+
+Braine and his companions saw Norton enter the shop. It agreed with
+their plans perfectly. The tobacconist happened to be affiliated with
+the order. So they hurried into the shop. Jim instantly realized that
+he was in a trap.
+
+"How can I get out of here?" he whispered to the tobacconist.
+
+The latter smiled. "I have to obey these gentlemen. I don't know what
+they want you for; but if I made a move to help you I should find my
+own throat cut without saving yours."
+
+"The devil!"
+
+Jim made a dash for the rear door, to find it locked. Even as he
+fumbled with the key Braine and his companions flung themselves upon
+the reporter and overpowered him.
+
+"Ah, my friend Braine!" he said.
+
+"My friend Norton!" jeered the victor.
+
+"And what do you want; some peaches?"
+
+"A paper, my friend, a little secret of paper with invisible writing on
+it. We promise to give you something in exchange for it."
+
+"What?" asked Jim with as much nonchalance as he could assume.
+
+"Life."
+
+"Search," said Jim. "You won't object to my smoking?" He began to
+roll a cigarette while they passed over him. He struck a match; the
+pleasant aroma of tobacco floated about his head.
+
+"He's got it on him somewhere. I saw him take it. He's got his nerve
+with him."
+
+The cigarette glowed. Jim smoked hurriedly.
+
+Through every pocket they went. The contents of his wallet lay
+scattered at his feet; his watch dangled from the chain. The cigarette
+grew shorter and shorter. Suddenly one of the men stretched out a hand
+and whisked the cigarette from Jim's lips. He threw it to the floor
+and stamped out the coal.
+
+"I thought so!" he exclaimed, holding out the scrap of burnt paper
+toward Braine.
+
+The words "Dear Hargreave" were all that remained of the message. With
+a snarl of rage Braine whipped out his revolver.
+
+"I will give you one minute to tell me what that paper contained."
+
+"And after that minute is up?"
+
+"A bullet in your stomach."
+
+Quick as a flash Jim's hand shot out, caught the loosely held revolver,
+gave it a wrench, and brought it down savagely upon Braine's head.
+Then he reversed it and backed toward the front entrance.
+
+"Au revoir, till we meet again, gentlemen!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+Jim said nothing at first about his adventure to Jones, whom he met
+half an hour later.
+
+"Was it necessary to keep that invisible letter?" he asked.
+
+"No," said Jones.
+
+"Would it have given our affairs a serious turn if it had fallen into
+alien hands?"
+
+"Decidedly," answered Jones. "It would mean flight for the Black
+Hundred or a long time under cover, if our friend Braine learned that
+Russia was now taking an active interest in the doings of the Black
+Hundred. And eventually all our work would have to be done over again."
+
+"Ah!"
+
+"You look a bit mussed up. Anything happened?" asked the keen-eyed
+butler.
+
+"Nothing much. I made a cigarette out of the letter and smoked it."
+
+Jones chuckled. "I see that you have had an adventure of some sort;
+but it can wait."
+
+"It can."
+
+"Because I want you to pack off to Washington."
+
+"Washington?"
+
+"Yes. I want you to interview those officials who are most familiar
+with the extradition laws."
+
+"A new kink?"
+
+"What I wish to learn is this: Can a man, formerly undesirable, take
+out naturalization papers and hold to the protection of the United
+States government? That is to say, a poisoner, menaced by Siberia,
+becomes an American citizen. He is abducted and carried back to
+Russia. Could he look to this government for protection? That is what
+I want you to find out?"
+
+"That will be easy. When shall I start?"
+
+"As soon as you can pack your grip."
+
+"That's always packed," replied the reporter. "You see, I'm eternally
+shunted hither and yon, at a moment's notice, so I always have an extra
+grip packed for quick travel."
+
+"The Russian agent wants Braine, Vroon, and the countess; and to-night
+I'm going to try to point them out to him. It would satisfy me more
+than anything I know to eliminate this precious trio in Russian
+fashion. It's thorough; and once accomplished, good day to the Black
+Hundred in America. The organization in Russia has still some
+political significance, but on this side of the water it is merely an
+aggregation of merciless thugs."
+
+"I'll take the first train out. But you will tell Florence?"
+
+"Surely."
+
+"And take care of your own heels. You were watched at the hotel."
+
+"I know it; but the watcher could learn nothing. Henri Servan as a
+name will suggest nothing to the fool who followed me. Besides we both
+knew that he was trying to peek through the keyhole. That hotel, you
+know, still retains the old-fashioned keyholes."
+
+"To keep the maids in good humor, I suppose," laughed Jim. "Well, I
+must be on my way to make that flyer."
+
+The two shook hands and Jim hurried off. The butler watched him till
+he disappeared down the subway.
+
+"He's a good lad," he murmured, "and a brave lad; and money is only an
+incident in human affairs after all. I'll be a good angel and let the
+two be happy, since they love each other and have proved it in a
+thousand ways."
+
+Meanwhile the Russian agent settled down before his writing portfolio;
+and once or twice as he wrote he thought he heard a sound outside the
+door. No doubt this butler of Hargreave's had been watched and
+followed. By and by he rose, drew his revolver, and tiptoed to the
+door obliquely so that the watcher outside might not become aware of
+his approach. Swiftly he swung back the door and the member of the
+Black Hundred stumbled into the room. Almost instantly the Russian
+caught him by the collar and held him up.
+
+"What were you doing outside my door?"
+
+The man, trying to collect his thoughts, did not answer.
+
+"A spy of some sort, eh?"
+
+"I'm a detective," said the man finally, thinking he saw his way clear.
+
+"And what did you expect to learn by looking through the keyhole of my
+door?"
+
+Servan laughed. "Show me your badge of authority."
+
+The man fumbled in his upper pocket, hoping against hope that the
+muzzle of the revolver would waver.
+
+"You're an ordinary thief," declared the Russian; "and as such I shall
+instantly hand you over to the hotel authorities unless you tell me
+exactly who and what you are."
+
+The man remained dumb. He hung between the devil and the deep sea. If
+he told the truth the organization would soon learn the truth; if he
+kept still he would be lodged in jail, perhaps indefinitely, for he
+hadn't a savory police record. Presently his nerve gave way in face of
+the steady eye and hand, and he confessed the why and wherefore he had
+sought the keyhole of Servan's room.
+
+"We are after this butler. Wherever he goes we follow."
+
+"Well, you've wasted your time, my man. All I am here for is to take
+over some property Mr. Hargreave left in France for sale. I know
+nothing about your private feuds. Now, get out. But keep out of my
+way; I am not a peaceful man."
+
+The spy tumbled out as he had tumbled in, by an act of gravity; and
+Servan was alone. He spent two days in comparative idleness. Then
+things began to wake up.
+
+
+For a long time the leather box across which was inscribed "Stanley
+Hargreave" lay in peace undisturbed. A busy spider had woven a trap
+across the handle to the quaint lock. The box was still badly stained
+from its immersion in the salt water. At a certain time it was quietly
+withdrawn from its hiding place. It was stealthily opened. A hand
+reached in and when it withdrew a packet of papers was also withdrawn.
+The box was again locked and lowered; and presently the spider returned
+to find that his cunning trap had been totally destroyed. With the
+infinite patience of his kind he began the weaving of another trap.
+Perhaps this would be more successful than its predecessor.
+
+Later Henri Servan received a telephone call. He was informed that his
+purpose in America would be realized by his presence at such and such a
+box that night at the opera. Further information could not be given
+over the telephone. Servan seemed well satisfied. He dressed
+carefully that evening, called up the office clerk and inquired if his
+box tickets for the opera had arrived. He was informed that they had.
+Instantly the spy, who had dared to linger about the hotel, overhearing
+this conversation, determined to notify Braine at once. And at the
+same time, Norton, in disguise, determined not to lose sight of this
+man whom he had set himself to watch.
+
+The spy left by one entrance and Jim by another. Jim had learned what
+he desired; that the Russian agent would be followed to the opera and
+that it was going to be difficult to hand the documents to him. The
+spy entered a drug store and telephoned. Jim waited outside. When the
+man came out he strolled up the street and entered the nearest saloon.
+Jim's work was done.
+
+It was Braine's lieutenant, however, who took the news to Braine.
+
+"We have succeeded."
+
+"Good!" said Braine.
+
+"He will go to the opera. He will have a box. Doubtless they have
+arranged to deliver the papers there."
+
+"And the next thing is to get the number of his box." This Braine had
+no difficulty in doing. "So that's all fixed. He calls himself Servan
+and registers from Paris. I'll show the fool that he has no moujik to
+deal with this time."
+
+"And what are these documents?" asked Olga.
+
+"Ah, that's what we are so anxious to find out. Some papers are going
+to be exchanged between this Russian spy and Jones or his agents. That
+these papers concern us vitally I am certain. That is why I am going
+to get them if there has to be a murder at the opera to-night. Norton
+has been to Washington. He was seen coming out of the Russian embassy,
+from the secretaries of state and war and a dozen other offices. I've
+got to find out just what all this means."
+
+"It means that the time has come for us to fly," said Olga. "We have
+failed. I have warned you. We have still plenty of money left. It is
+time we folded our tents and stole away quietly. I tell you I feel it
+in my bones that there is a pit before us somewhere! and if you force
+issues we shall all fall into it."
+
+"The white feather, my dear."
+
+"There is altogether some difference between the white feather and
+common-sense caution."
+
+"I shall never give up. You are free to pack up and go if you wish.
+As for me, I'm going to fight this out to the bitter end."
+
+"And take my word for it, the end will be bitter."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Oh, I shall stay. You know that my future is bound up in yours. In
+the old days my advice generally appealed to you as sound; and when you
+followed it you were successful. From the first I advised you not to
+pursue Hargreave. See what has happened!"
+
+"Enough of this chatter. I've got to die some time; it will be with my
+face toward this man I hate with all my soul. You trust to me; I'll
+pull out of this all right. You just fix yourself up stunningly for
+the opera to-night and leave the rest to me."
+
+Olga shrugged. She was something of a fatalist. This man of hers had
+suddenly gone mad; and one did not reason with mad people.
+
+"What shall I wear?" she asked calmly.
+
+[Illustration: "JUST A MOMENT, GENTLEMEN"]
+
+"Emeralds; they're your good luck stones. You will go to the box
+before I do. I've got to spend some time at the curb to be sure that
+this Servan chap arrives. And it is quite possible that our friend
+Jones will come later. If not Jones, then Norton. I was a fool not to
+shoot him when I had the chance. We could have covered it up without
+the least difficulty. But I needed the information about that paper.
+With Norton going to Washington and Jones conferring with this Servan,
+I've got to strike quick. It concerns us, that I'm certain. Perk up;
+we've lots of cards in our sleeves yet. Be at the opera at
+eight-thirty. Pay no attention to any one; wait for me. Remember, I
+shan't write or send any phone messages. Be wary of any trap like that
+to get you outside. Now, I'm off."
+
+Jones approached Florence immediately after dinner.
+
+"I have important business in the city to-night. Under no
+circumstances leave the house. I shall probably be followed. And our
+enemies will have need of you far more to-night than at any previous
+time. I shall not send you phone or written message. You have your
+revolver. Shoot any strange man who enters. We'll make inquiries
+after."
+
+"We are near the end?" whispered Florence.
+
+"Very near the end."
+
+"And I shall see my father?"
+
+Jones bent his head. "If we succeed."
+
+"There is danger?" thinking of her lover.
+
+"There is always danger when I leave this house. So be good," the
+butler added with a smile.
+
+"And Jim?"
+
+"He has proved that he can take care of himself."
+
+"Tell him to be very careful."
+
+"I'll do so, but it will not be necessary;" and with this Jones set
+forth upon what he considered the culminating adventure.
+
+The usual brilliant crowd began to pour into the opera. Braine took
+his stand by the entrance. He waited a long time, but his patience was
+rewarded. A limousine drove up and out of the door came his man, who
+looked about with casual interest. He dismissed the limousine, which
+wheeled slowly around the corner where it could be conveniently parked.
+Then Servan entered the opera.
+
+Braine hurried around to the limousine. The lights, save those
+demanded by traffic regulations, were out. The chauffeur was huddled
+in his seat.
+
+"My man," said Braine, "would you like to make some money?"
+
+"How much?" listlessly. The voice was muffled.
+
+"Twenty."
+
+"Good night, sir."
+
+"Fifty."
+
+"Good night and good morning!"
+
+"A hundred!"
+
+"Now you've got me interested. What kind of a joy ride do you want?"
+
+"No joy ride. Listen."
+
+Briefly the conspirator outlined his needs, and finally the chauffeur
+nodded. Five twenties were pressed into his hand and he curled up in
+his seat again.
+
+Servan entered his box. In the box next to his sat a handsomely gowned
+young woman. He threw her an idle glance, which was repaid in kind.
+Later, Braine came in and sat down beside Olga.
+
+"Everything looks like plain sailing," he whispered.
+
+Olga shrugged slightly.
+
+During the intermission between the first and second acts, Servan took
+the rear chair of his box, near the curtains. Braine, watching with
+the eyes of a lynx, suddenly observed the curtains stirring. A hand
+was thrust through. In that hand was a packet of papers. With seeming
+indifference Servan reached back and took the papers, stowing them away
+in a pocket.
+
+Braine rose at the beginning of the second act.
+
+"Where are you going?" asked Olga nervously.
+
+"To see Otto."
+
+A bold attempt was made to rob Servan while in the box, but the timely
+arrival of Jim frustrated this plan. So Braine was forced to rely on
+the chauffeur of the limousine.
+
+As Farrar's last thrilling note died away Braine and Olga rose.
+
+"Be careful. And come to the apartments just as soon as you can."
+
+"I'll be careful," Braine declared easily. "You can watch the play if
+you wish."
+
+When Servan entered the limousine he was quietly but forcibly seized by
+two men who had been lying in wait for him, due to the apparent
+treachery of the chauffeur. Servan fought valiantly, for all that he
+knew what the end of this exploit was going to be. One of the men
+succeeded in getting the documents from Servan's pocket.
+
+"Done, my boy!" cried the victor. "Give him a crack on the coco and
+we'll beat it."
+
+"Just a minute, gentlemen!" said a voice from the seat at the side of
+the chauffeur. "I'll take those papers!" And the owner of the voice,
+backed by a cold, sinister-looking automatic, reached in and
+confiscated the spoils of war. "And I shouldn't make any attempt to
+slip out by the side door."
+
+"Thanks, my friend," said Servan, shaking himself free from his captors.
+
+"Don't mention it," said Norton amiably. "We thought something like
+this would happen. Keep perfectly quiet, you chaps. Drive on,
+chauffeur; drive on!"
+
+"Yes, my lord! To what particular police station shall I head this
+omnibus?"
+
+"The nearest, Jones; the very nearest you can think of! Some day, when
+I'm rich, I'll hire you for my chauffeur. But for the present I shall
+expect at least a box of Partagas out of that hundred."
+
+Jones chuckled. "I'll buy you a box out of my own pocket. That
+hundred goes to charity."
+
+"Here we are! Out with you," said Jim to his prisoners. He shouldered
+them into the police station, to the captain's desk.
+
+"What's this?" demanded the captain.
+
+"Holdup men," said Jim. "Entered this man's car and tried to rob him."
+
+"Uh-huh! An' who're you?"
+
+Jim showed his badge and card.
+
+"Oho! Hey, there; I mean you!" said the captain, leveling a finger at
+Otto. "Lift up that hat; lift it up. Sure, it's Fountain Pen Otto!
+Well, well; an' we've been lookin' for you for ten months on the last
+forgery case. Mr. Norton, my thanks. Take 'em below, sergeant.
+You'll be here to make the complaint in th' mornin', sir," he added to
+Servan.
+
+"If it is necessary."
+
+"It may be against Otto's pal. I don't know him."
+
+"Very well."
+
+[Illustration: THE POLICE CAPTAIN'S DESK]
+
+And Jones and Norton and Servan trooped out of the station.
+
+At last Jones and the reporter entered a cheap restaurant and ordered
+coffee and toast.
+
+"You're a wonderful man, Jones, even if you are an Englishman," said
+Jim as he called for the check.
+
+"English? What makes you think I am English?" asked Jones with a
+curious glitter in his eyes.
+
+"I'll tell you on the night we put the rollers under Braine and
+company."
+
+Jones stared long and intently at his young partner. What did he
+really know?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+The federal government agreed to say nothing, to put no obstacles in
+the way of the Russian agent, provided he could abduct his trio without
+seriously clashing with the New York police authorities. It was a
+recognized fact that the local police force wanted the newspaper glory
+which would attend the crushing of the Black Hundred. It would be an
+exploit. But their glory was nil; nor did Servan take his trio back
+with him to Russia.
+
+Many strange things happened that night, the night of the final
+adventure.
+
+Florence sat in her room reading. The book was Oliver Twist, not the
+pleasantest sort of book to read under the existing circumstances.
+Several times--she had reached the place where Fagin overheard Nancy's
+confession--she fancied she heard doors closing softly, but credited it
+to her imagination. Poor Nancy, who wanted to be good but did not find
+time to be! Florence possessed a habit familiar to most of us; the
+need of apples or candy when we are reading. So she rang the bell for
+her maid, intending to ask her to bring up some apples. She turned to
+her reading, presently to break off and strike the bell again. Where
+was that maid? She waited perhaps five minutes, then laid down the
+book and began to investigate.
+
+There was not a servant to be found in the entire house! What in the
+world could that mean? Used as she was to heartrending suspense, she
+was none the less terrified. Something had taken the servants from the
+house. From whence was the danger to come this time? Where was Jones?
+Why did he not return as he had promised? It was long past the hour
+when he said he would be back.
+
+She went into the library and picked up the telephone. She was told
+that Mr. Norton was out on an assignment, but that he would be notified
+the moment he returned. She opened the drawer in the desk. She
+touched the automatic, but did not take it up. She left the drawer
+open, however.
+
+Earlier, at the newspaper office that night, Jim went into the managing
+editor's office and laid a bulky manuscript on that gentleman's desk.
+
+"Is this it?"
+
+"It is," said Jim.
+
+"You have captured them?"
+
+"No; but there is a net about them from which not one shall escape.
+There's the story of my adventures, of the adventures of Miss Hargreave
+and the butler, Jones. You'll find it exciting enough. You might just
+as well send it up to the composing room. At midnight I'll telephone
+the introduction. It's a scoop. Don't worry about that."
+
+The editor riffled the pages.
+
+"A hundred and twelve pages, three hundred words to the page; man, it's
+a novel!"
+
+"It'll read like one."
+
+"Sit down for a moment and let me skim through the first story."
+
+At the end of ten minutes the editor laid down the copy. He opened a
+drawer and took out two envelopes. The blue one he tore up and dropped
+into the waste basket. Norton understood and smiled. They had meant
+to discharge him if he fell down. The other envelope was a fat one.
+
+"Open it," said the editor, smiling a little to himself.
+
+This envelope contained a check for two thousand five hundred dollars,
+two round-trip first-class tickets to Liverpool, together with
+innumerable continental tickets such as are issued to tourists.
+
+"Why two?" asked Jim innocently.
+
+"Forget it, my boy, forget it. You ought to know that in this office
+we don't employ blind men. The whole staff is on. There you are, a
+fat check and three months' vacation. Go and get married; and if you
+return before the three months are up I'll fire you myself on general
+principles."
+
+Jim laughed happily and the two men shook hands. Then Jim went forth
+to complete the big assignment. Five minutes later Florence called him
+up to learn that he had gone.
+
+What should she do? Jones had told her to stay in the house and not to
+leave it. But where was he? Why did he not come? What was the
+meaning of this desertion by the servants? She wandered about
+aimlessly, looking out of windows, imagining forms in the shadows. Her
+imagination had not deceived her; she had heard doors close softly.
+
+"Susan, Susan!" she murmured, but Susan was in the hospital.
+
+_Oliver Twist_! What had possessed her to start reading that old tale
+again? She should have read something of a light and joyous character.
+After half an hour's wandering about the lonely house she returned to
+the library, feeling that she would be safer where both telephone and
+revolver were.
+
+And while she sat waiting for she knew not what, her swiftly beating
+heart sending the blood into her throat so that it almost suffocated
+her, a man turned into the street and walked noiselessly toward the
+Hargreave place. He passed a man leaning against a lamp-post, but he
+never turned to look at him.
+
+This man, however, threw away his cigar and hot-footed it to the
+nearest pay station. He knew in his soul that he had just seen the man
+for whom they had been hunting all these weary but strenuous
+weeks--Stanley Hargreave in the flesh! Half an hour after his
+telephone message the chief of the Black Hundred and many lesser lights
+were on their way to the house of mystery. Had they but known!
+
+Now, the man who had created this tremendous agitation went serenely
+on. He proceeded directly and fearlessly to the front door, produced a
+latchkey and entered. He passed through the hall and reception room to
+the library and paused on the threshold dramatically. Florence stepped
+back with a sharp cry of alarm. She had heard the hall door open and
+close and had taken it for granted that Jones had entered.
+
+There was a tableau of short duration.
+
+"Don't you know me?" asked the stranger in a singularly pleasant voice.
+
+Florence had been imposed upon too many times. She shook her head
+defiantly, though her knees shook so that she was certain that the
+least touch would send her over.
+
+"I am your father, child!"
+
+Florence slipped unsteadily behind the desk and seized the revolver
+which lay in the drawer. The man by the curtains smiled sadly. It was
+a smile that caused Florence to waver a bit. Still she extended her
+arm.
+
+"You do not believe me?" said the man, advancing slowly.
+
+"No. I have been deceived too many times, sir. Stay where you are.
+You will wait here till my butler returns. Oh, if I were only sure!"
+she burst out suddenly and passionately. "What proof have you that you
+are what you say?"
+
+He came toward her, holding out his hands. "This, that you can not
+shoot me. Ah, the damnable wretches! What have they done to you, my
+child, to make you suspicious of every one? How I have watched over
+you in the street! I will tell you what only Jones and the reporter
+know, that the aviator died, that I alone was rescued, that I gave
+Norton the five thousand; that I watched the windows of the Russian
+woman, and overheard nearly every plot that was hatched in the council
+chamber of the Black Hundred; that I was shot in the arm while crossing
+the lawn one night. And now we have the scoundrels just where we want
+them. They will be in this house for me within half an hour, and not
+one of them will leave it in freedom. I am your father, Florence. I
+am the lonely father who has spent the best years of his life away from
+you in order to secure your safety. Can't you feel the truth of all
+this?"
+
+"No, no! Please do not approach any nearer; stay where you are!"
+
+[Illustration: THEY WERE TUMBLING THROUGH THE LIBRARY AND READING-ROOM]
+
+At that moment the telephone rang. With the revolver still leveled she
+picked up the receiver.
+
+"Hello, hello! Who is it? ... Oh, Jim, Jim, come at once! I am
+holding at bay a man who says he is my father. Hold him where he is,
+you say? All right, I will. Come quick!"
+
+"Jim!" murmured the man, still advancing. He must have that revolver.
+The poor child might spoil the whole affair. "So what Jones tells me
+is true; that you are going to marry this reporter chap?"
+
+She did not answer.
+
+"With or without my consent?"
+
+If only he would drop that fearless smile! she thought. "With or
+without anybody's consent," she said.
+
+"What in the world can I say to you to convince you?" he cried. "The
+trap is set; but if Braine and his men come and find us like this, good
+heaven, child, we are both lost! Come, come!"
+
+"Stay where you are!"
+
+At that moment she heard a sound at the door. Her gaze roved; and it
+was enough for the man. He reached out and caught her arm. She tried
+to tear herself loose.
+
+"My child, in God's name, listen to reason! They are entering the hall
+and they will have us both."
+
+Suddenly Florence knew. She could not have told you why; but there was
+an appeal in the man's voice that went to her heart.
+
+"You are my father!"
+
+"Yes, yes! But you've found it out just a trifle too late, my dear.
+Quick; this side of the desk!"
+
+Braine and his men dashed into the library. Olga entered leisurely.
+
+"Both of them!" yelled Braine exultantly. "Both of them together; what
+luck!"
+
+There was a sharp, fierce struggle; and when it came to an end
+Hargreave was trussed to a chair.
+
+"Ah, so we meet again, Hargreave!" said Braine.
+
+Hargreave shrugged. What he wanted was time.
+
+"A million! We have you. Where is it, or I'll twist your heart before
+your eyes."
+
+"Father, forgive me!"
+
+"I understand, my child."
+
+"Where is it?" Braine seized Florence by the wrist and swung her
+toward him.
+
+"Don't tell him, father; don't mind me," said the girl bravely.
+
+Braine, smiling his old evil smile, drew the girl close. It was the
+last time he ever touched her.
+
+"Look!" screamed Olga.
+
+Every one turned, to see Jones' face peering between the curtains.
+There was an ironic smile on the butler's lips. The face vanished.
+
+"After him!" cried Braine, releasing Florence.
+
+"After him!" mimicked a voice from the hall.
+
+The curtains were thrown back suddenly. Jones appeared, and Jim and
+the Russian agent and a dozen policemen. Tableau!
+
+Braine sprang at Florence savagely, and Norton tore him back, and they
+went tumbling through the library and the living room. It was a death
+struggle; make no mistake about that. The others dared not shoot for
+fear of hitting Norton. But the Countess Olga, in the hallway, dared
+the risk. As Norton's back came into view she fired. Almost at the
+same instant Norton had swung Braine about. A shudder ran through the
+arch-scoundrel, his hands slipped off Norton's shoulders, a surprised
+expression swept over his face, then he sank inertly to the floor, dead.
+
+[Illustration: BRAINE SANK INERTLY TO THE FLOOR, DEAD]
+
+Olga ran up-stairs wildly, followed by a determined policeman. She
+dashed into Florence's room and locked the door. Instantly she crossed
+over to the window, and paused.
+
+Down-stairs the police were marching off the leaders of the Black
+Hundred.
+
+"Well," said Norton, "I guess it's all over. And, my word for it, Mr.
+Jedson, you've played your end consummately."
+
+"Jedson!" exclaimed Jones, starting back.
+
+"Yes, Jedson, formerly of Scotland Yard," went on the reporter. "I
+recognized him long ago."
+
+"It is true," said Hargreave, taking Jones' hand in his own. "Fifteen
+years ago I employed him to watch my affairs, and very well has he done
+so."
+
+Presently, Hargreave, Jones, Florence and Jim were alone. That smile
+which had revealed to Florence her father's identity stole over his
+face again. He put his hand on Jim's shoulder and beckoned to Florence.
+
+"Are you really anxious to marry this young man?"
+
+Florence nodded.
+
+"Well, then, do so. And go to Europe with him on your honeymoon; and
+as a wedding present to you both, for every dollar that he has I will
+add a hundred; and when you get tired of travel you will both come hack
+here to live. The Black Hundred has ceased to exist."
+
+"And now," said Jones, shaking his shoulders.
+
+"Well?" said Hargreave.
+
+"My business is done. Still--" Jones paused.
+
+"Go on," said Hargreave soberly.
+
+"Well, the truth is, sir, I've grown used to you. And if you'll let me
+play the butler till the end I shall be most happy."
+
+"I was going to suggest it."
+
+Norton took Florence by the hand and drew her away.
+
+"Where are you taking me?" she asked.
+
+"I'm going to take this pretty hand of yours and put it flat upon one
+million dollars. And if you don't believe it, follow me."
+
+She followed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+It will be remembered that the Countess Olga had darted up the stairs
+during the struggle between Braine and his captors. The police who had
+followed her were recalled to pursue one of the lesser rogues. This
+left Olga free for a moment. She stole out and down as far as the
+landing.
+
+Servan, the Russian agent, stood waiting for the taxi-cab to roll up to
+the porte-cochère for himself, Braine and Vroon. Norton had taken
+Florence by the hand, ostensibly to conduct her to the million.
+Suddenly Braine made a dash for liberty. Norton rushed after him.
+Just as he reached Braine, a shot rang out. Braine whirled upon his
+heels and crashed to the floor.
+
+Olga, intent upon giving injury to Norton, who she regarded equally
+with Hargreave as having brought about the downfall, had hit her lover
+instead. With a cry of despair she dashed back into Florence's room,
+quite ready to end it all. She raised the revolver to her temple,
+shuddered, and lowered the weapon: so tenaciously do we cling to life!
+
+Below, they were all quite stunned by the suddenness of the shot.
+Instantly they sought the fallen man's side, and a hasty examination
+gave them the opinion that the man was dead. Happily a doctor was on
+the way, Servan having given the call, as one of the Black Hundred had
+been wounded badly.
+
+[Illustration: INSTANTLY THEY SOUGHT THE FALLEN MAN'S SIDE]
+
+But what to do with that mad woman up-stairs? Hargreave advised them
+to wait. The house was surrounded; she could not possibly escape save
+by one method, and perhaps that would be the best for her. Hargreave
+looked gravely at Norton as he offered this suggestion. The reporter
+understood: the millionaire was willing to give the woman a chance.
+
+"And you are my father?" said Florence, still bewildered by the amazing
+events. "But I don't understand yet!" her gaze roving from the real
+Jones to her father.
+
+"I don't doubt it, child," said Hargreave. "I'll explain. When I
+hired Jones here, who is really Jedson of the Scotland Yard, I did so
+because we looked alike when shaven. It was Jedson here who escaped by
+the balloon; it was Jedson who returned the five thousand to Norton,
+who watched the countess' apartment; it was Jedson who was wounded in
+the arm. I myself guarded you, my child. Last night, unbeknown to
+you, I left and the real Jones--for it is easier to call him
+that!--took my place."
+
+"And I never saw the difference!" exclaimed Florence.
+
+"That is natural," smiled her father. "You were thinking of Norton
+here instead of me. Eh?"
+
+Florence blushed.
+
+"Well, why not? Here, Norton!" The millionaire took Florence's hand
+and placed it in the reporter's. "It seems that I've got to lose her
+after all. Kiss her, man; in heaven's name, kiss her!"
+
+And Norton threw his arms around the girl and kissed her soundly,
+careless of the fact that he was observed by both enemies and friends.
+
+[Illustration: A QUICK CLUTCH AND THE POLICEMAN HAD HER BY THE WRIST]
+
+Suddenly the policeman who had been standing by the side of Braine ran
+into the living-room.
+
+"He's alive! Braine's alive; he just stirred."
+
+"What?" exclaimed Norton and Hargreave in a single breath.
+
+"Yes, sir! I saw his hands move. It's a good thing we sent for a
+doctor. He ought to be along about now."
+
+Even as he spoke the bell rang: and they all surged out into the hall,
+forgetting for the moment all about the million. Olga hadn't killed
+the man, then? The doctor knelt beside the stricken man and examined
+him. He shrugged.
+
+"Will he live?"
+
+"Certainly. A scalp wound, that laid him out for a few moments. He'll
+be all right in a few days. He was lucky. A quarter of an inch lower,
+and he'd have passed in his checks."
+
+"Good!" murmured Servan. "So our friend will accompany me back to good
+Russia? Oh, we'll be kind to him during the journey. Have him taken
+to the hospital ward at the Tombs. Now, for the little lady up-stairs."
+
+A moment later Braine opened his eyes, and the policeman assisted him
+to his feet. Servan, with a nod, ordered the police to help the
+wounded man to the taxicab which had just arrived. Braine, now wholly
+conscious, flung back one look of supreme hatred toward Hargreave; and
+that was the last either Florence or her father ever saw of Braine of
+the Black Hundred--a fine specimen of a man gone wrong through greed
+and an inordinate lust for revenge.
+
+The policeman returned to Hargreave.
+
+"It's pretty quiet up-stairs," he suggested. "Don't you think, sir,
+that I'd better try that bedroom door again?"
+
+"Well, if you must," assented Hargreave reluctantly. "But don't be
+rough with her if you can help it."
+
+For Braine he had no sympathy. When he recalled all the misery that
+devil's emissary had caused him, the years of hiding and pursuit, the
+loss of the happiness that had rightfully been his, his heart became
+adamant. For eighteen years to have ridden and driven and sailed up
+and down the world, always confident that sooner or later that demon
+would find him! He had lost the childhood of his daughter; and now he
+was to lose her in her womanhood. And because of this implacable
+hatred the child's mother had died in the Petrograd prison-fortress.
+But what an enemy the man had been! He, Hargreave, had needed all his
+wits constantly; he had never dared to go to sleep except with one eye
+open. But in employing ordinary crooks, Braine had at length
+overreached himself; and now he must pay the penalty. The way of the
+transgressor is hard; and though this ancient saying looks dingy with
+the wear and tear of centuries, it still holds good.
+
+But he felt sorry for the woman up above. She had loved not wisely but
+too well. Far better for her if she put an end to life. She would not
+live a year in the God-forsaken snows of Siberia.
+
+"My kind father!" said Florence, as if she could read his thoughts.
+
+"I had a hard time of it, child. It was difficult to play the butler
+with you about. The times that I fought down the desire to sweep you
+up in my arms! But I kept an iron grip on that impulse. It would have
+imperiled you. In some manner it would have leaked out; and your life
+and mine wouldn't have been worth a button."
+
+[Illustration: THE MYSTIC MILLION]
+
+Florence threw her arms around him and held him tightly.
+
+"That poor woman up-stairs!" she murmured. "Can't they let her go?"
+
+"No, dear. She has lost, and losers pay the stakes. That's life.
+Norton, you knew who I was all the time, didn't you?"
+
+"I did; Mr. Hargreave. There was a scar on the lobe of your ear; and
+secretly I often wondered at the likeness between you and the real
+Jones. When I caught a glimpse of that ear, then I knew what the game
+was. And I'll add that you played it amazingly well. The one flaw in
+Braine's campaign was his hurry. He started the ball rolling before
+getting all the phases clearly established in his mind. He was a brave
+man, anyhow; and more than once he had me where I believed that prayers
+only were necessary."
+
+"And do you think that you can lead Florence to the million?" asked
+Hargreave, smiling.
+
+"For one thing, it is in her room, and has always been there. It never
+was in the chest."
+
+"Not bad, not bad," mused the father.
+
+"But perhaps after all it will be better if you show it to her
+yourself."
+
+"Just a little uncertain?" jibed the millionaire.
+
+"Absolutely certain. I will whisper in your ear where it is hidden."
+Norton leaned forward as Hargreave bent attentively.
+
+"You've hit it! But how in the world did you guess it?"
+
+"Because it was the last place any one would look for it. I judged at
+the start that you'd hide it in just such a spot, in some place where
+you could always guard it, and lay your hands on it quickly if needs
+said must."
+
+"I'm mighty glad you were on my side," said Hargreave. "In a few
+minutes we'll go up and take a look at those packets of bills. There's
+a very unhappy young woman there at present."
+
+"It is in my room?" cried Florence.
+
+Hargreave nodded.
+
+Meantime the Countess Olga hovered between two courses: a brave attempt
+to escape by the window or to turn the revolver against her heart. In
+either case there was nothing left in life for her. The man she loved
+was dead below, killed by her hand. She felt as though she was
+treading air in some fantastical nightmare. She could not go forward
+or backward, and her heels were always within reach of her pursuers.
+
+So this was the end of things? The dreams she had had of going away
+with Braine to other climes, the happiness she had pictured, all mere
+chimeras! A sudden rage swept over her. She would escape, she would
+continue to play the game to the end. She would show them that she had
+been the man's mate, not his pliant tool. She raised the window and
+stepped out onto the balcony .... into the hands of the policeman who
+had patiently been waiting for her to do so! Instantly she placed the
+revolver at her temple. A quick clutch, and the policeman had her by
+the wrist. She made one tigerish effort to free herself, shrugged, and
+signified that she surrendered.
+
+"I don't want to hurt you, Miss," said the policeman; "but if you make
+any attempt to escape, I'll have to put the handcuffs on you."
+
+"I'll go quietly. What are you going to do with me?"
+
+"Turn you over to the Russian agent. He has extradition papers; and I
+guess it's Siberia."
+
+[Illustration: "FLORENCE, THAT IS ALL YOURS"]
+
+"For me?" She laughed scornfully. "Do I look like a woman who would go
+to Siberia?"
+
+"Be careful, Miss. As I said, I don't want to put the cuffs on unless
+I have to."
+
+She laughed again. It did not have a pleasant sound in the officer's
+ears. He had heard women, suicidal bent, laugh like that.
+
+"I'll ask you for that ring on your finger."
+
+"Do you think there is poison in it?"
+
+"I shouldn't be surprised," he admitted.
+
+She slipped the ring from her finger and gave it to him.
+
+"There is poison in it; so be careful how you handle it," she said.
+
+The policeman accepted it gingerly and dropped it into his capacious
+pocket. It tinkled as it fell against the handcuffs.
+
+At that moment the other policeman broke in the door.
+
+"All right, Dolan; she's given up the game."
+
+"She didn't kill the man after all," said Dolan.
+
+"He's alive?" she screamed.
+
+"Yes; and they've taken him off to the Tombs. Just a scalp wound.
+He'll be all right in a day or two."
+
+"Alive!" murmured Olga. She had not killed the man she loved, then?
+And if they were indeed taken to Siberia, she would be with him until
+the end of things.
+
+With her handsome head proudly erect, she walked toward the door. She
+paused for a moment to look at the portrait of Hargreave. Somehow it
+seemed to smile at her ironically. Then on, down the stairs, between
+the two officers, she went. Her glance traveled coolly from face to
+face, and stopped at Florence's. There she saw pity.
+
+"You are sorry for me?" she asked skeptically.
+
+"Oh, yes! I forgive you," said the generous Florence.
+
+"Thanks! Officers, I am ready."
+
+So the Countess Olga passed through that hall door forever. How many
+times had she entered it, with guile and treachery in her heart? It
+was the game. She had played it and lost, and she must pay her debts
+to Fate the fiddler. Siberia! The tin or lead mines, the
+ankle-chains, the knout, and many things that were far worse to a
+beautiful woman! Well, so long as Braine was at her side, she would
+suffer all these things without a murmur. And always there would be a
+chance, a chance!
+
+When they heard the taxicab rumble down the driveway to the street,
+Hargreave turned to Florence.
+
+"Come along, now, and we'll have the bad taste taken off our tongues.
+To win out is the true principle of life. It takes off some of the
+tinsel and glamour, but the end is worth while."
+
+They all trooped up-stairs to Florence's room. So wonderful is the
+power and attraction of money that they forgot the humiliation of their
+late enemies.
+
+Hargreave approached the portrait of himself, took it from the wall,
+pressed a button on the back, which fell outward. Behold! There, in
+neat packages of a hundred thousand each, lay the mystic million! The
+spectators were awed into silence for a moment. Perhaps the thought of
+each was identical--the long struggle, the terrible hazards, the
+deaths, that had taken place because of this enormous sum of money.
+
+A million, sometimes called cool; why, nobody knows. There it lay,
+without feeling, without emotion; yellow notes payable to bearer on
+demand. Presently Florence gasped, Norton sighed, and Hargreave
+smiled. The face of Jones (or Jedson) alone remained impassive.
+
+[Illustration: AFTER THE STORM, THE SUNSHINE]
+
+A million dollars is a marvelous sight. Very few people have ever seen
+it, not even millionaires themselves. I dare say you never saw it; and
+I'm tolerably certain I never have, or will! A million, ready for
+eager, careless fingers to spend, or thrifty fingers to multiply! What
+Correggio, what Rubens, what Titian, could stand beside it? None that
+I wot of.
+
+"Florence, that is all yours, to do with as you please, to spend when
+and how you will. Share it with your husband-to-be. He is a brave and
+gallant young man, and is fortunate in finding a young woman equally
+brave and gallant. For the rest of my days I expect peace. Perhaps
+sometimes Jones here and I will talk over the strange things that have
+happened; but we'll do that only when we haven't you young folks to
+talk to. After your wedding journey you will return here. While I
+live this shall be your home. I demand that much. Free! No more
+looking over my shoulder when I walk the streets; no more testing
+windows and doors. I am myself again. I take up the thread I laid
+down eighteen years ago. Have no fear. Neither Braine nor Olga will
+ever return. Russia has a grip of steel."
+
+Three weeks later Servan, the Russian agent, left for Russia with his
+three charges, Olga, Braine and Vroon. It was a long journey they went
+upon, something like ten weeks, always watched, always under the
+strictest guard, compelled to eat with wooden forks and knives and
+spoons. Waking or sleeping they knew no rest from espionage. From
+Paris to Berlin, from Berlin to St. Petersburg, as Petrograd was then
+called; and then began the cruel journey over the mighty steppes of
+that barbaric wilderness to the Siberian mines. The way of the
+transgressor is hard.
+
+On the same day that Olga and Braine made their first descent into the
+deadly mines, Florence and Norton were married. After the storm, the
+sunshine: and who shall deny them happiness?
+
+[Illustration: IMMEDIATELY AFTER THE CEREMONY]
+
+Immediately after the ceremony the two sailed for Europe, on their
+honeymoon; and it is needless to say that some of the million went with
+them, but there was no mystery about it!
+
+
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+Harold MacGrath
+
+A Sketch of the Author at Work and at Play
+
+Harold MacGrath, author of more than a dozen best sellers, the book of
+an operetta, and short stories without number, is a native of Syracuse,
+N. Y., having been born in that city on September 4, 1871, and lived
+there ever since, except when he is out circling the globe or in Gotham
+looking things over.
+
+Mr. MacGrath was a journalist before he essayed the higher form of
+literature that sells on a royalty basis, instead of by the yard, and
+he claims that he owes his start in "romancing" to a physical defect.
+Mr. MacGrath is partially deaf and while serving as a newspaper
+reporter he heard only about half of what was said to him, and had to
+"make up" the other half himself. Thus, his imagination was given
+quite a course in physical culture before its owner's conscience began
+to prick him. "Why not do the thing right?" MacGrath asked himself.
+"I don't knew," he replied. "Let's try it," he suggested. "All
+right," he answered. And he quit the newspaper game and started a
+novel, "Arms and the Woman," which appeared in 1890. This was followed
+by many good sellers, the speed limit of the author being three books
+some years.
+
+Next to being a novelist MacGrath is a globe-trotter. He has been in
+every nook and corner on the face of the globe where white man dares to
+go and can get there without swimming or flying. As a result, he has
+obtained the inspirations for most of his novels while amid the
+fascinating surroundings in some Asiatic harbor town, while traveling
+down the Rhine, or while listening to strains of Viennese music in some
+little out-of-the-way cafe along the Danube. He is a genius in pen
+picturing and can impart the color, the life, the action of real life
+into his pages in a manner that is bound to attract.
+
+He is fond of tennis and out-of-door sports. He likes boxing and is
+one of the best amateur pool and billiard players in the country. He
+has friends in almost every large city in the world and has met more
+"crowned heads" than any other author, perhaps, outside of Hallie
+Erminie Rives, wife of Post Wheeler, the versatile secretary of the
+American Embassy at Tokio.
+
+As a collector and connoisseur, Mr. MacGrath has a wide reputation, his
+especial hobby being Turkish rugs and antique jewelry, of which he has
+a wonderful collection. Another of his hobbies is horses, and although
+he owns only one himself, he will never pass a good looking horse by
+without stopping to pat it. He even carries lump sugar in his pocket
+and takes great delight in feeding it to the horses of the mounted
+officers in New York, many of whom (the officers) know him.
+
+His method of working up his stories is unique. According to his own
+statement, he first "thinks out" the start of his story, carrying his
+idea through what develops into the first few chapters of the book.
+Then he drops the thread of thought and starts again, but this time at
+the end, and figures out how he will dispose of his characters and how
+best the story should end. This accomplished, he sits down to his
+typewriter and "goes to work." While writing, he often strikes on good
+ideas to be incorporated in parts already considered. Immediately he
+jots down his idea on the back of an envelope or a scrap of paper and
+inserts the note among the pages of his manuscript just where it
+belongs After completing his first draft, he goes back over the entire
+manuscript, making corrections here and there and additions. He then
+sits down to sum the whole story up in his mind and by this process is
+able to pick out the flaws. His second draft, therefore, is quite a
+finished product. He makes the final draft of his manuscript himself,
+as he has found that he often strikes upon improvements at the eleventh
+hour that go far to better his stories. If he turned the work of
+making the final draft over to a stenographer, this last chance would
+be lost.
+
+He is one of the few modern writers who does not have to try to be
+funny. It is natural with him to amuse.
+
+Those interested in the chronological order of his stories will find
+them as follows:
+
+In 1901 he published his second book, "The Puppet Crown." "The Grey
+Cloak" followed in 1903, and by the time it appeared, most of the
+readers of fiction had acquired the MacGrath habit and were on the
+lookout for the next dose of his delightful literary stimulant that
+chased the "blues." Then came the story which established MacGrath's
+reputation, "The Man on the Box," which appeared in 1904 and is still
+one of the best sellers in popular editions. In 1905 MacGrath put on
+some extra speed. He worked a double shift in his brain mill and the
+result was that before the dawn of the next New Year's Day he had three
+more successful books to his credit. They were "The Princess Elopes,"
+a novelette; "Enchantment," a book of short stories, and "Hearts and
+Masks," a novel that dealt with entanglements developing at a mask
+ball. In the same year he wrote "Half a Rogue," another highly popular
+story. In 1906 he turned out "The Watteau Shepherdess," an operetta.
+These two productions were followed by "The Best Man" in 1907; "The
+Enchanted Hat" and "The Lure of the Mask" in 1908. "The Goose Girl"
+was MacGrath's next novel, and went far to uphold his reputation. "A
+Splendid Hazard" and "The Carpet of Bagdad" followed within the space
+of little more than a year. Next "The Place of Honeymoons" was
+published, then "Parrot & Co.," "Deuces Wild," "Pidgin Island," "The
+Adventures of Kathlyn," and "Voice in the Fog."
+
+The "purpose novel," as that term is generally understood, finds but
+little sympathy at the hands of Harold MacGrath. Yet he has a definite
+purpose of his own. It is to amuse.
+
+"The one definite idea I have in mind in writing stories," he says, "is
+to afford an agreeable, pleasant hour or two to my readers. I wish to
+amuse them, to make them wish that they, too, might have lived as this
+or that hero, in this or that land, probable or improbable. I prefer
+sunshine, mirth, buoyancy, and I believe most readers prefer the same.
+Grown-up people never wholly lose their love of fairy tales; and grown
+up fairy tales have been the scheme of most of my novels."
+
+Could an author have a better purpose than this? Could he serve men to
+better advantage than by lightening the burden they are destined to
+carry through life by allowing their minds to dwell in pleasant places
+and to rejoice with the people of a make-believe world?
+
+"I usually begin a story as a dramatist begins a play--with the end,"
+says MacGrath. "The characters work out the plot themselves; I have
+very little to do with it after they have started."
+
+"The structure of a plot must naturally be foremost; for, after all is
+said and done, the story's the thing. I never outline a plot; I carry
+the main thread in my head until I am ready to put it on paper, and
+after it assumes body on paper, it has many devious twists and turns of
+which I have no prior idea."
+
+"I write whenever I feel like it, for when I am in the mood I do better
+work. I never force myself to do so much work each day. There are
+days when it is impossible to write one hundred words; again, I have
+written as many as seven thousand words a day. Obstacles? There are
+altogether too many to demonstrate. A character that doesn't "balk"
+never fails to be uninteresting. I have always tried to place human
+people in absurd or unique situations and to let them extricate
+themselves as you or I, if so placed.
+
+"The anatomy of a motif for a story is a complex thing, but of a
+practical joke, 'The Man on the Box' was evolved. A young man
+disguised as a coachman drove his sister and her friend to a ball one
+night. This happened in my native town, Syracuse, and it amused me
+greatly when critics said that the exploit was highly improbable. Out
+of the Italian state and church marriage came the plot of 'The Lure of
+the Mask.' The most trivial thing sometimes will suggest a plot. I
+found the ten of hearts one night on the sidewalk. It became the motif
+of 'Hearts and Masks.' Once, in Indianapolis, I chanced to see an
+Italian selling plaster images. It gave me a starting point for 'A
+Splendid Hazard.' Walking down Broadway one day I stopped to look in a
+window where oriental rugs were being advertised. When I turned away
+the seed germ for my latest book, 'The Carpet from Bagdad,' was in my
+mind."
+
+Mr. MacGrath is an enthusiastic fisherman. He goes to Cape Vincent,
+Lake Ontario, every summer, when he isn't ambling in China, or India,
+or Africa. He believes that the best bass grounds in the world are
+within a radius of twenty miles from Cape Vincent, which is really in
+the head of the St. Lawrence River. A friend undertook to convince him
+that there were other places, so MacGrath consented to accompany him to
+Canada. They arrived at sunset, and the host extemporized over the
+glories of the setting sun.
+
+"Ever see anything to beat that, Mac?"
+
+"Fine!"
+
+On the following morning they went out for bass. At four o'clock in
+the afternoon they had caught exactly one.
+
+The host again rhapsodized over the sunset.
+
+The second day they caught no bass at all. On their way back to the
+hotel the host was silent. As they came up to the landing, MacGrath
+touched his host on the shoulder.
+
+"There's your darned sunset, Jim!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Million Dollar Mystery, by Harold MacGrath
+
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+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Million Dollar Mystery, by Harold MacGrath
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Million Dollar Mystery
+ Novelized from the Scenario of F. Lonergan
+
+Author: Harold MacGrath
+
+Release Date: March 14, 2012 [EBook #39134]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MILLION DOLLAR MYSTERY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Al Haines
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<br /><br /><br />
+<a id="img-cover"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-cover.jpg" alt="Cover art" />
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<br /><br /><br />
+<a id="img-front"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-front.jpg" alt="THE PAPER SHE HAD PURLOINED WAS INDEED BLANK" />
+<br />
+THE PAPER SHE HAD PURLOINED WAS INDEED BLANK
+</p>
+
+<h1>
+<br /><br /><br />
+THE MILLION DOLLAR MYSTERY
+</h1>
+
+<p class="t3b">
+<br />
+Novelized from the Scenario of
+<br />
+F. LONERGAN
+</p>
+
+<p class="t3">
+<br /><br />
+BY
+</p>
+
+<p class="t2">
+HAROLD MACGRATH
+</p>
+
+<p class="t4">
+<br /><br />
+AUTHOR OF<br />
+THE MAN ON THE BOX,<br />
+THE GOOSE GIRL, HEARTS AND MASKS, ETC.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p class="t4">
+<br /><br /><br />
+PROFUSELY ILLUSTRATED<br />
+WITH SCENES FROM THE PHOTO PLAY<br />
+</p>
+
+<p class="t3">
+<br /><br /><br />
+GROSSET &amp; DUNLAP
+<br />
+PUBLISHERS : NEW YORK
+</p>
+
+<p class="t4">
+<br /><br /><br />
+COPYRIGHT, 1915
+<br />
+HAROLD MACGRATH
+</p>
+
+<p class="t4">
+<br /><br /><br />
+<i>Published by arrangement with<br />
+The Bobbs-Merrill Company</i>.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p class="t2">
+<br /><br /><br />
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-front">
+The paper she had purloined was indeed blank . . . . . . <i>Frontispiece.</i>
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-002">
+Miss Farlow's Private School
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-007">
+You might have marked him for a successful lawyer.
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-008">
+The Princess Perigoff
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-012">
+The Black Hundred
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-013">
+Friends from Tophet
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-032">
+The Peaceful Butler entered into the field of action
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-033">
+She had gained the confidence of Florence
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-035">
+There was a stormy scene between Braine and the Princess
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-039">
+Norton reached the Captain first
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-055">
+She read with Susan
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-058">
+"Who is it?" Jones whispered, his lips white and dry.
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-067">
+He read: "Florence&mdash;the hiding place is discovered."
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-069">
+That night there was a meeting of the organization
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-074">
+Jones engaged a motorboat
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-076">
+"Leo, are you using any drugs these days?"
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-086">
+The Secret Panel
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-091">
+Four men were told off
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-100">
+"Better be sensible," he said
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-104">
+They had become secretly engaged
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-106">
+With her he was happy, for he had no time to plan over the future
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-107">
+They were to be married
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-127">
+Florence was permitted to wander about the ship as she pleased
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-128">
+Every one felt extremely sorry for this beautiful girl
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-129">
+Florence steals out in the night to jump overboard
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-132">
+A young and beautiful woman did not jump from a big Atlantic
+ liner without the newspapers getting hold of the facts
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-133">
+"The poor young thing!" murmured the motherly Mrs. Barnes
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-138">
+"Come out o' that now!"
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-139">
+"I ain't goin' t' hurt ye"
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-141">
+Florence fought; but she was weak, and so the conquest was easy
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-143a">
+"I know it now," she said, and she kissed him
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-143b">
+He had put Florence and Braine in the boat and had landed them
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-155">
+They bound Florence and left her seated in a chair
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-177">
+They did not care a snap of the finger what Jones thought
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-179">
+She first thought of changing the clock
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-181">
+He took her straight to the executive chamber of the Black Hundred
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-185">
+Here was an operation that needed all his care and skill.
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-186">
+He examined the blotter with care
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-194">
+The men rioted about the house, searching nooks and corners
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-202">
+They were mapping out a plan when Susan's message came
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-222">
+Norton was idling at his desk when the city editor called him
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-248">
+"Give this to your father. He knows how to read it."
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-249">
+Florence discovers the cave
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-250">
+Florence steals the papers from Braine's pocket
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-252a">
+Braine procured a launch and began to prowl about
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-252b">
+Braine reached the girl and pulled her into the boat
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-254">
+From the shore came another boat
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-266">
+"They have all three taken out naturalization papers."
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-277">
+"Just a minute, gentlemen!"
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-278">
+The Police Captain's desk
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-286a">
+They were tumbling through the library and the living room
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-286b">
+Braine sank inertly to the floor, dead
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-289">
+Instantly they sought the fallen man's side
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-294">
+A quick clutch and the policeman had her by the wrist
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-296">
+The Mystic Million
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-297">
+"Florence, that is all yours."
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-298a">
+Immediately after the ceremony
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+<a href="#img-298b">
+After the storm, the sunshine
+</a>
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap01"></a></p>
+
+<h2>
+The Million Dollar Mystery
+</h2>
+
+<h3>
+<br /><br /><br />
+CHAPTER I
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+There are few things darker than a country road at night, particularly
+if one does not know the lay of the land. It is not difficult to
+traverse a known path; no matter how dark it is, one is able to find
+the way by the aid of a mental photograph taken in the daytime. But
+supposing you have never been over the road in the daytime, that you
+know nothing whatever of its topography, where it dips or rises, where
+it narrows or forks. You find yourself in the same unhappy state of
+mind as a blind man suddenly thrust into a strange house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One black night, along a certain country road in the heart of New
+Jersey, in the days when the only good roads were city thoroughfares
+and country highways were routes to limbo, a carriage went forward
+cautiously. From time to time it careened like a blunt-nosed barge in
+a beam sea. The wheels and springs voiced their anguish continually;
+for it was a good carriage, unaccustomed to such ruts and hummocks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Faster, faster!" came a muffled voice from the interior.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Sir, I dare not drive any faster," replied the coachman. "I can't see
+the horses' heads, sir, let alone the road. I've blown out the lamps,
+but I can't see the road any better for that."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Let the horses have their heads; they'll find the way. It can't be
+much farther. You'll see lights."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The coachman swore in his teeth. All right. This man who was in such
+a hurry would probably send them all into the ditch. Save for the few
+stars above, he might have been driving Beelzebub's coach in the
+bottomless pit. Black velvet, everywhere black velvet. A wind was
+blowing, and yet the blackness was so thick that it gave the coachman
+the sensation of mild suffocation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By and by, through the trees, he saw a flicker of light. It might or
+might not be the destination. He cracked his whip recklessly and the
+carriage lurched on two wheels. The man in the carriage balanced
+himself carefully, so that the bundle in his arms should not be unduly
+disturbed. His arms ached. He stuck his head out of the window.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That's the place," he said. "And when you drive up make as little
+noise as you can."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes, sir," called down the driver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the carriage drew up at its journey's end the man inside jumped
+out and hastened toward the gates. He scrutinized the sign on one of
+the posts. This was the place:
+</p>
+
+<p class="t3">
+MISS FARLOW'S PRIVATE SCHOOL<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-002"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-002.jpg" alt="MISS FARLOW'S PRIVATE SCHOOL" />
+<br />
+MISS FARLOW'S PRIVATE SCHOOL
+</p>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<p>
+The bundle in his arms stirred and he hurried up the path to the door
+of the house. He seized the ancient knocker and struck several times.
+He then placed the bundle on the steps and ran back to the waiting
+carriage, into which he stepped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Off with you!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That's a good word, sir. Maybe we can make your train."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do you think you could find this place again?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You couldn't get me on this pike again, sir, for a thousand; not me!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The door slammed and the unknown sank back against the cushions. He
+took out his handkerchief and wiped the damp perspiration from his
+forehead. The big burden was off his mind. Whatever happened in the
+future, they would never be able to get him through his heart. So much
+for the folly of his youth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a quarter after ten. Miss Susan Farlow had just returned to the
+reception room from her nightly tour of the upper halls to see if all
+her charges were in bed, where the rules of the school confined them
+after nine-thirty. It was at this moment that she heard the thunderous
+knocking at the door. The old maid felt her heart stop beating for a
+moment. Who could it be, at this time of night? Then the thought came
+swiftly that perhaps the parent of some one of her charges was ill and
+this was the summons. Stilling her fears, she went resolutely to the
+door and opened it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who is it?" she called.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No one answered. She cupped her hand to her ear. She could hear the
+clatter of horses dimly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well!" she exclaimed; rather angrily, too.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was in the act of closing the door when the light from the hall
+discovered to her the bundle on the steps. She stooped and touched it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Good heavens, it's a child!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She picked the bundle up. A whimper came from it, a tired little
+whimper of protest. She ran back to the reception room. A foundling!
+And on her doorstep! It was incredible. What in the world should she
+do? It would create a scandal and hurt the prestige of the school.
+Some one had mistaken her select private school for a farmhouse. It
+was frightful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then she unwrapped the child. It was about a year old, dimpled and
+golden haired. A thumb was in its rosebud mouth and its blue eyes
+looked up trustfully into her own.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why, you cherub!" cried the old maid, a strange turmoil in her heart.
+She caught the child to her breast, and then for the first time noticed
+the thick envelope pinned to the child's cloak. She put the baby into
+a chair and broke open the envelope.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Name this child Florence Gray. I will send annually a liberal sum for
+her support and reclaim her on her eighteenth birthday. The other half
+of the inclosed bracelet will identify me. Treat the girl well, for I
+shall watch over her in secret."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Into the fixed routine of her humdrum life had come a mystery, a
+tantalizing, fascinating mystery. She had read of foundlings left on
+doorsteps&mdash;from paper-covered novels confiscated from her pupils&mdash;but
+that one should be placed upon her own respectable doorstep! Suddenly
+she smiled down at the child and the child smiled back. And there was
+nothing more to be done except to bow before the decrees of fate. Like
+all prim old maids, her heart was full of unrequited romance, and here
+was something she might spend its floods upon without let or hindrance.
+Already she was hoping that the man or woman who had left it might
+never come back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The child grew. Regularly each year, upon a certain date, Miss Farlow
+received a registered letter with money. These letters came from all
+parts of the world; always the same sum, always the same line&mdash;"I am
+watching."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus seventeen years passed; and to Susan Farlow each year seemed
+shorter than the one before. For she loved the child with all her
+heart. She had not trained young girls all these years without
+becoming adept in the art of reading the true signs of breeding. There
+was no ordinary blood in Florence; the fact was emphasized by her
+exquisite face, her small hands and feet, her spirit and gentleness.
+And now, at any day, some one with a broken bracelet might come for
+her. As the days went on the heart of Susan Farlow grew heavy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Never mind, aunty," said Florence; "I shall always come back to see
+you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She meant it, poor child; but how was she to know the terrors which lay
+beyond the horizon!
+</p>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<p>
+The house of Stanley Hargreave, in Riverdale, was the house of no
+ordinary rich man. Outside it was simple enough, but within you
+learned what kind of a man Hargreave was. There were rare Ispahans and
+Saruks on the floors and tapestries on the walls, and here and there a
+fine painting. The library itself represented a fortune. Money had
+been laid out lavishly but never wastefully. It was the home of a
+scholar, a dreamer, a wide traveler.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the library stood the master of the house, idly fingering some
+papers which lay on the study table. He shrugged at some unpleasant
+thought, settled his overcoat about his shoulders, took up his hat, and
+walked from the room, frowning slightly. The butler, who also acted in
+the capacity of valet and was always within call when his master was
+about, stepped swiftly to the hall door and opened it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I may be out late, Jones," said Hargreave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes, sir."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hargreave stared into his face keenly, as if trying to pierce the grave
+face to learn what was going on behind it. "How long have you been
+with me?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Fourteen years, sir."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Some day I shall need you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My life has always been at your disposal, sir, since that night you
+rescued me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, I haven't the least doubt that when I ask you will give."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Without question, sir. It was always so understood."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hargreave's glance sought the mirror, then the smileless face of his
+man. He laughed, but the sound conveyed no sense of mirth; then he
+turned and went down the steps slowly, like a man burdened with some
+thought which was not altogether to his liking. He had sent an order
+for his car, but had immediately countermanded it. He would walk till
+he grew tired, hail a taxicab, and take a run up and down Broadway.
+The wonderful illumination might prove diverting. For eighteen years
+nearly; and now it was as natural for him to throw a glance over his
+shoulder whenever he left the house as it was for him to breathe. The
+average man would have grown careless during all these years; but
+Hargreave was not an average man; he was, rather, an extraordinary
+individual. It was his life in exchange for eternal vigilance, and he
+knew and accepted the fact.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Half an hour later he got into a taxicab and directed the man to drive
+down-town as far as Twenty-third Street and back to Columbus circle.
+The bewildering display of lights, however, in nowise served to lift
+the sense of oppression that had weighed upon him all day. South of
+Forty-second Street he dismissed the taxicab and stared undecidedly at
+the brilliant sign of a famous restaurant. He was neither hungry nor
+thirsty; but there would be strange faces to study and music.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was an odd whim. He had not entered a Broadway restaurant in all
+these years. He was unknown. He belonged to no clubs. Two months was
+the longest time he had ever remained in New York since the disposal of
+his old home in Madison Avenue and his resignation from his clubs.
+This once, then, he would break the law he had written down for
+himself. Boldly he entered the restaurant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some time before Hargreave surrendered to the restless spirit of
+rebellion, bitterly to repent for it later, there came into this
+restaurant a man and a woman. They were both evidently well known, for
+the head waiter was obsequious and hurried them over to the best table
+he had left and took the order himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man possessed a keen, intelligent face. You might have marked him
+for a successful lawyer, for there was an earnestness about his
+expression which precluded a life of idleness. His age might have been
+anywhere between forty and fifty. The shoulders were broad and the
+hands which lay clasped upon the table were slim but muscular. Indeed,
+everything about him suggested hidden strength and vitality. His
+companion was small, handsome, and animated. Her frequent gestures and
+mutable eyebrows betrayed her foreign birth. Her age was a matter of
+importance to no one but herself.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-007"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-007.jpg" alt="YOU MIGHT HAVE MARKED HIM FOR A SUCCESSFUL LAWYER" />
+<br />
+YOU MIGHT HAVE MARKED HIM FOR A SUCCESSFUL LAWYER
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were at coffee when she said: "There's a young man coming toward
+us. He is looking at you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man turned. Instantly his face lighted up with a friendly smile of
+recognition.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who is it?" she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A chap worth knowing; a reporter just a little out of the ordinary.
+I'm going to introduce him. You never can tell. We might need him
+some day. Ah, Norton, how are you?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Good evening, Mr. Braine." The reporter, catching sight of a pair of
+dazzling eyes, hesitated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The Countess Perigoff, Norton. You're in no hurry, are you?"
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-008"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-008.jpg" alt="THE PRINCESS PERIGOFF" />
+<br />
+THE PRINCESS PERIGOFF
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Not now," smiled the reporter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ah!" said the countess, interested. It was the old compliment, said
+in an unusual way. It pleased her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The reporter sank into a chair. When inactive he was rather a
+dreamy-eyed sort of chap. He possessed that rare accomplishment of
+talking upon one subject and thinking upon another at the same time.
+So while he talked gaily with the young woman on varied themes, his
+thoughts were busy speculating upon her companion. He was quite
+certain that the name Braine was assumed, but he was also equally
+certain that the man carried an extraordinary brain under his thatch of
+salt and pepper hair. The man had written three or four brilliant
+monographs on poisons and the uses of radium, and it was through and by
+these that the reporter had managed to pick up his acquaintance. He
+lived well, but inconspicuously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly the pupils of Braine's eyes narrowed; the eye became cold.
+Over the smoke of his cigarette he was looking into the wall mirror. A
+man had passed behind him and sat down at the next table. Still gazing
+into the mirror, Braine saw Norton wave his hand; saw also the open
+wonder on the reporter's pleasant face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who is your friend, Norton?" Braine asked indifferently, his head
+still unturned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Stanley Hargreave. Met him in Hongkong when I was sent over to handle
+a part of the revolution. War correspondence stuff. First time I ever
+ran across him on Broadway at night. We've since had some powwows over
+some rare books. Queer old cock; brave as a lion, but as quiet as a
+mouse."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Bookish, eh? My kind. Bring him over." Underneath the table Braine
+maneuvered to touch the foot of the countess.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I don't know," said the reporter dubiously. "He might say no, and
+that would embarrass the whole lot of us. He's a bit of a hermit. I'm
+surprised to see him here."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Try," urged the countess. "I like to meet men who are hermits."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I haven't the least doubt about that," the reporter laughed. "I'll
+try; but don't blame me if I'm rebuffed."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He left the table with evident reluctance and approached Hargreave.
+The two shook hands cordially, for the elder man was rather fond of
+this medley of information known as Jim Norton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Sit down, boy; sit down. You're just the kind of a man I've been
+wanting to talk to to-night."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Wouldn't you rather talk to a pretty woman?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'm an old man."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Bah! That's a hypocritical bluff, and you know it. My friends at the
+next table have asked me to bring you over."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I do not usually care to meet strangers."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Make an exception this once," said the reporter, who had seen Braine's
+eyes change and was curious to know why the appearance of Hargreave in
+the mirror had brought about that metally gleam. Here were two unique
+men; he desired to see them face to face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"This once. My fault; I ought not to be here; I feel out of place.
+What a life, though, you reporters lead! To meet kings and presidents
+and great financiers, socialists and anarchists, the whole scale of
+life, and to slap these people on the back as if they were every-day
+friends!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Now you're making fun of me. For one king there are always twenty
+thick brogans ready to kick me down the steps; don't forget that."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hargreave laughed. "Come, then; let us get it over with."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The introductions were made. Norton felt rather chagrined. As far as
+he could see, the two men were total strangers. Well, it was all in
+the game. Nine out of ten opportunities for the big story were fake
+alarms; but he was always willing to risk the labor these nine entailed
+for the sake of the tenth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At length Braine glanced at his watch, and the countess nodded. Adieux
+were said. Inside the taxicab Braine leaned back with a deep, audible
+sigh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What is it?" she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The luck of the devil's own," he said. "Child of the Steppes, for
+years I've flown about seas and continents, through valleys and over
+mountains&mdash;for what? For the sight of the face of that man we have
+just left. At first glance I wasn't sure; but the sound of his voice
+was enough. Olga, the next time you see that reporter, throw your arms
+around his neck and kiss him. What did I tell you? Without Norton's
+help I would not have been sure. I'm going to leave you at your
+apartment."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The man of the Black Hundred?" she whispered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The man who deserted and defied the Black Hundred, who broke his vows,
+and never paid a kopeck for the privilege; the man who had been
+appointed for the supreme work and who ran away. In those days we
+needed men of his stamp, and to accomplish this end...."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There was a woman," she interrupted, with a touch of bitterness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Always the woman. And she was as clever and handsome as you are."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thanks. Sometimes..."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ah, yes!" ironically. "Sometimes you wish you could settle down,
+marry and have a family! Your domesticity would last about a month."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She made no retort because she recognized the truth of this statement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There's an emerald I know of," he said ruminatively. "It's quite
+possible that you may be wearing it within a few days."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am mad over them. There is something in the green stone that
+fascinates me. I can't resist it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That's because, somewhere in the far past, your ancestors were
+orientals. Here we are. I'll see you to-morrow. I must hurry. Good
+night."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stood on the curb for a moment and watched the taxicab as it
+whirled around a corner. The man held her with a fascination more
+terrible than any jewel. She knew him to be a great and daring rogue,
+cunning, patient, fearless. Packed away in that mind of his there were
+a thousand accomplished deeds which had roused futilely the police of
+two continents. Braine! She could have laughed. The very name he had
+chosen was an insolence directed at society.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The subject of her thoughts soon arrived at his destination. A flight
+of stairs carried him into a dimly lighted hall, smelling evilly of
+escaping gas. He donned a black mask and struck the door with a series
+of light blows; two, then one, then three, and again one. The door
+opened and he slipped inside. Round a table sat several men, also
+masked. They were all tried and trusted rogues; but not one of them
+knew what Braine looked like. He alone remained unknown save to the
+man designated as the chief, who was only Braine's lieutenant. The
+mask was the insignia of the Black Hundred, an organization with all
+the ramifications of the Camorra without their abiding stupidity. From
+the assassination of a king, down to the robbery of a country
+post-office, nothing was too great or too small for their nets. Their
+god dwells in the hearts of all men and is called greed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ordinary business over, the chief dismissed the men, and he and
+Braine alone remained.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Vroon, I have found him," said Braine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There are but few: which one?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Eighteen years ago, in St. Petersburg."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I remember. The millionaire's son. Did he recognize you?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I don't know. Probably he did. But he always had good nerves. He is
+being followed at this moment. We shall strike quick; for if he
+recognized me he will act quick. He is cool and brave. You remember
+how he braved us that night in Russia. Jumped boldly through the
+window at the risk of breaking his neck. He landed safely; that is the
+only reason he eluded us. Millions&mdash;and they slipped through our
+fingers. If I could only find some route to his heart! The lure we
+held out to him is dead."
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-012"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-012.jpg" alt="THE BLACK HUNDRED" />
+<br />
+THE BLACK HUNDRED
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Or in the fortress, which is the same thing. What are your plans?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have in mind something like this."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Hargreave was working out his plans, too; and he was just as much
+of a general as Braine. He sat at his library table, the maxillary
+muscles of his jaws working. So they had found him? Well, he had
+broken the law of his own making and he must suffer the consequences.
+Braine, who was Menshikoff in Russia, Schwartz in Germany, Mendoza in
+Spain, Cartucci in Italy, and Du Bois in France; so the rogue had found
+him out? Poor fool that he had been! High spirited, full of those
+youthful dreams of doing good in the world, he had joined what he had
+believed a great secret socialistic movement, to learn that he had been
+trapped by a band of brilliant thieves. Kidnapers and assassins for
+hire; the Black Hundred; fiends from Tophet! For nearly eighteen years
+he had eluded them, for he knew that directly or indirectly they would
+never cease to hunt for him; and an idle whim had toppled him into
+their clutches.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He wrote several letters feverishly. The last was addressed to Miss
+Susan Farlow and read: "Dear Madam: Send Florence Gray to New York, to
+arrive here Friday morning. My half of the bracelet will be
+identification. Inclosed find cash to square accounts." He would get
+together all his available funds, recover his child, and fly to the
+ends of the world. He would tire them out. They would find that the
+peaceful dog was a bad animal to rouse. He rang for the faithful Jones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jones, they have found me," he said simply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You will need me, then?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Quite possible. Please mail these and then we'll talk it over. No
+doubt some one is watching outside. Be careful."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Very good, sir."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hargreave bowed his head in his hands. Many times he had journeyed to
+the school and hung about the gates, straining his eyes toward the
+merry groups of young girls. Which among them was his, heart of his
+heart, blood of his blood? That she might never be drawn into this
+abominable tangle, he had resolutely torn her out of his life
+completely. The happiness of watching the child grow into girlhood he
+had denied himself. She at least would be safe. Only when she was
+safe in a far country would he dare tell her. He tried in vain to
+conjure up a picture of her; he always saw the mother whom he had loved
+and hated with all the ardor of his youth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Many things happened the next day. There was a visit to the hangar of
+one William Orts, the aviator, famous for his daredevil exploits.
+There were two visitors, in fact, and the second visitor was knocked
+down for his pains. He had tried to bribe Orts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There were several excited bankers, who protested against such large
+withdrawals without the usual formal announcement. But a check was a
+check, and they had to pay.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-013"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-013.jpg" alt="FIENDS FROM TOPHET" />
+<br />
+FIENDS FROM TOPHET
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hargreave covered a good deal of ground, but during all this time his
+right hand never left the automatic in his overcoat pocket, except at
+those moments when he was obliged to sign his checks. He would shoot
+and make inquiries afterward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Far away a young girl and her companion got on the train which was to
+carry her to New York, the great dream city she was always longing to
+see.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And the spider wove his web.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hargreave reached home at night. He put the money in the safe and was
+telephoning when Jones entered and handed his master an unstamped note.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where did you get this?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"At the door, sir. I judge that the house is surrounded."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hargreave read the note. It stated briefly that all his movements
+during the day had been noted. It was known that he had collected a
+million in paper money. If he surrendered this he would be allowed
+twenty-four hours before the real chase began. Otherwise he should die
+before midnight. Hargreave crushed the note in his hand. They might
+kill him; there was a chance of their accomplishing that; but never
+should they touch his daughter's fortune.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jones, you go to the rear door and I'll take a look out of the front.
+We have an hour. I know the breed. They'll wait till midnight and
+then force their way in."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hargreave saw a dozen shadows in the front yard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Men all about the back yard," whispered Jones down the hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The master eyed the man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Very well, sir," replied the latter, with understanding. "I am ready."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The master went to the safe, emptied it of its contents, crossed the
+hall to the bedroom, and closed the door softly behind him, Jones
+having entered the same room through another door to befool any
+possible watcher. After a long while, perhaps an hour, the two men
+emerged from the room from the same doors they had entered. So
+whispered the watcher to his friends below.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hargreave is going up-stairs."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Let him go. Let him take a look at us from the upper windows. He
+will understand that nothing but wings will save him."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Silence. By and by a watcher reported that he heard the scuttle of the
+roof rattle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Look!" another cried, startled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A bluish glare came from the roof.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He's shooting off a Roman candle!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They never saw the man-made bird till it alighted upon the roof. They
+never thought of shooting at it until it had taken wing! Then they
+rushed the doors of the house. They made short work of Jones, whom
+they tied up like a Christmas fowl and plumped roughly into a chair.
+They broke open the safe, to find it empty. And while the rogues were
+rummaging about the room, venting their spite upon many a treasure they
+could neither appreciate nor understand, a man from the outside burst
+in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The old man is dead and the money is at the bottom of the ocean! We
+punctured her. She's gone!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A thin, inscrutable smile stirred the lips of the man bound in the
+chair.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap02"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER II
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+Vroon faced Hargreave's butler somberly. The one reason why Braine
+made this man his lieutenant was because Vroon always followed the
+letter of his instructions to the final period; he never sidestepped or
+added any frills or innovations of his own, and because of this very
+automatism he rarely blundered into a trap. If he failed it was for
+the simple fact that the master mind had overlooked some essential
+detail. The organization of the Black Hundred was almost totally
+unknown to either the public or the police. It is only when you fail
+that you are found out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The patrolman has been trussed up like you," began Vroon. "If they
+find him they will probably find you. But before that you will grow
+thirsty and hungry. Where did your master put that money?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He carried it with him."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why didn't you call for help?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The houses on either side are too far away. I might yell till
+doomsday without being heard. They will have heard the pistol shots;
+but Mr. Hargreave was always practising in the back yard."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The people in those two houses have been called out of town. The
+servants are off for the night."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Very interesting," replied Jones, staring at the rug.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Your master is dead."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones' chin sank upon his breast. His heart was heavy, heavier than it
+had ever been before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Your master left a will?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Indeed, I could not say."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We can say. He has still three or four millions in stocks and bonds.
+What he took to the bottom of the sea with him was his available cash."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I know nothing about his finances. I was his butler and valet."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vroon nodded. "Come, men; it is time we took ourselves off. Put
+things in order; close the safe. You poor jackals, I always have to
+watch you for outbreaks of vandalism. Off with you!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was the last to leave. He stared long and searchingly at Jones, who
+felt the burning gaze but refused to meet it lest the plotter see the
+fire in his. The door closed. For fully an hour Jones listened but
+did not stir. They were really gone. He pressed his feet to the floor
+and began to hitch the chair toward the table. Half-way across the
+intervening space he crumpled in the chair, almost completely
+exhausted. He let a quarter of an hour pass, then made the final
+attack upon the remaining distance. He succeeded in reaching the desk,
+but he could not have stirred an inch farther. The hair on his head
+was damp with sweat and his hands were clammy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he felt strength returning he lifted the telephone off the hook
+with his teeth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Central, central! Call the police to come to this number at once;
+Hargreave's house, Riverdale. Tell them to break in."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After what seemed an age of waiting to the exhausted prisoner, with
+crashing and smashing of doors, the police appeared in the room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where's your gag?" demanded the first officer to reach Jones' side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There wasn't any."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then why didn't you yell for help?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The thieves lured our neighbors away from town. The patrolman who
+walks this beat is bound and gagged and is probably reposing back of
+the billboard in the next block."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Murphy, you watch this man while I make a call on the neighbors," said
+the officer who seemed to be in authority. When he returned he was
+frowning seriously. "We'd better telephone to the precinct to search
+for Dennison. There's nobody at home in either house and there's
+nobody back of the billboards. Untie the man." When this was done,
+the officer said: "Now, tell us what's happened; and don't forget any
+of the details."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones told a simple and convincing story; it was so simple and
+convincing that the police believed it without question.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, if that ain't the limit! Did you hear any autos outside?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I don't recollect," said Jones, stretching his legs gratefully. "Why?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The auto bandits held up a bank messenger to-day and got away with
+twenty thousand. Whenever a man draws down a big sum they seem to know
+about it. And say, Murphy, call up and have the river police look out
+for a new-fangled airship. Your master may have been rescued," turning
+to Jones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If I were only sure of that, sir!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the police took themselves off Jones proceeded to act upon those
+plans laid down by Hargreave early that night. When this was done he
+sought his bed and fell asleep, the sleep of the exhausted. When
+Hargreave picked up Jones to share his fortunes, he had put his trust
+in no ordinary man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A dozen reporters trooped out to the Hargreave home, only to find it
+deserted. And while they were ringing bells and tapping windows, the
+man they sought was tramping up and down the platform of the railway
+station.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Through all this time Norton, the reporter, Hargreave's only friend,
+slept the sleep of the just and unjust. He rarely opened his eyes
+before noon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Group after group of passengers Jones eyed eagerly. Often, just as he
+was in the act of approaching a couple of young women, some man would
+hurry up, and there would be kisses or handshakes. At length the crowd
+thinned, and then it was that he discovered a young girl perhaps
+eighteen, accompanied by a young woman in the early thirties. They had
+the appearance of eagerly awaiting some one. Jones stepped forward
+with a good deal of diffidence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You are waiting for some one?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes," said the elder woman, coldly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A broken bracelet?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The distrust on both faces vanished instantly. The young girl's face
+brightened, her eyes sparkled with suppressed excitement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You are ... my father?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No, miss," very gravely. "I am the butler."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Let me see your part of the bracelet," said the young girl's guardian,
+a teacher who had been assigned to this delicate task by Miss Farlow,
+who could not bring herself to say good-by to Florence anywhere except
+at the school gates.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The halves were produced and examined.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I believe we may trust him, Florence."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Let us hurry to the taxicab. We must not stand here."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My mother?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She is dead. I believe she died shortly after your birth. I have
+been with your father but fourteen years. I know but little of his
+life prior to that."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why did he leave me all these years without ever coming to see me?
+Why?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is not for me, Miss Florence, to inquire into your father's act.
+But I do know that whatever he did was meant for the best. Your
+welfare was everything to him."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is all very strange," said the girl, bewilderedly. "Why didn't he
+come to meet me instead of you?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones stared at his hands, miserably.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why?" she demanded. "I have thought of him, thought of him. He has
+hurt me with all this neglect. I expected to see him at the station,
+to throw my arms, around his neck and ... forgive him!" Tears swam in
+her eyes as she spoke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Everything will be explained to you when we reach the house. But
+always remember this, Miss Florence: You were everything in this wide
+world to your father. You will never know the misery and loneliness he
+suffered that you might not have one hour of unrest. What are your
+plans?" he asked abruptly of the teacher from Miss Farlow's.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That depends," she answered, laying her hand protectingly over the
+girl's.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You could leave Miss Farlow's on the moment?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then you will stay and be Miss Florence's companion?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Gladly."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What is my father's name?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hargreave, Stanley Hargreave."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl's eyes widened in terror. Suddenly she burst into a wild
+frenzy of sobbing, her head against the shoulder of her erstwhile
+teacher.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones appeared visibly shocked. "What is it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We read the story in the newspaper," said the elder woman, her own
+eyes filling with tears. "The poor child! To have all her
+castles-in-air tumble down like this! But what authority have you to
+engage me?" sensibly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones produced a document, duly signed by Hargreave, and witnessed and
+sealed by a notary, in which it was set forth that Henry Jones, butler
+and valet to Stanley Hargreave, had full powers of attorney in the
+event of his (Hargreave's) disappearance; in the event of his death,
+till Florence became of legal age.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Said Jones as he put the document back in his pocket: "What is your
+name?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Susan Wane."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do you love this child?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"With all my heart, the poor unhappy babe!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thank you!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Inside the home he conducted them through the various rooms, at the
+same time telling them what had taken place during the preceding night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"They have not found his body?" asked Florence. "My poor, poor father!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then he may be alive!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Please God that he may!" said the butler, with genuine piety, for he
+had loved the man who had gone forth into the night so bravely and so
+strangely. "This is your room. Your father spent many happy hours
+here preparing it for you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tears came into the girl's eyes again, and discreetly Jones left the
+two alone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What shall I do, Susan? Whatever shall I do?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Be brave as you always are. I will never leave you till you find your
+father."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence kissed her fervently. "What is your opinion of the butler?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I think we may both trust him absolutely."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Florence began exploring the house. Susan followed her closely.
+Florence peered behind the mirrors, the pictures, in the drawers of the
+desk, in the bookcases.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What are you hunting for, child?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A photograph of father." But she found none. More, there were no
+photographs of any kind to be found in Stanley Hargreave's home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Norton awoke, he naturally went to the door for the morning papers
+which were always placed in a neat pile before the sill. He yawned,
+gathered up the bundle, was about to climb back into bed, when a
+headline caught his dull eyes. Twenty-one minutes later, to be
+precise, he ran up the steps of the Hargreave home and rang the bell.
+He was admitted by the taciturn Jones, to whom the reporter had never
+paid any particular attention. Somehow Jones always managed to stand
+in shadows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I can add nothing to what has already appeared in the newspapers,"
+replied Jones, as Norton opened his batteries of inquiries.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Mr. Jones, I have known your master several years, as you will
+recollect. There never was a woman in this house, not even among the
+servants. There are two in the other room. Who are they? And what
+are they doing here?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones shook his head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, I can easily find out."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones barred his path, and for the first time Norton gazed into the
+eyes of the man servant. They were as hard as gun metal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My dear Mr. Jones, you ought to know that sooner or later we reporters
+find out what we seek."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones appeared to reflect. "Mr. Norton, you claim to be a friend of
+Mr. Hargreave?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I do not claim. I am. More than that I do not believe he is dead.
+He was deep. He had some relentless enemies&mdash;I don't know where from
+or what kind&mdash;and he is pretending he's dead till this blows over and
+is forgotten."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You are not going to say that in your newspaper?" Jones was visibly
+agitated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Not if I can prove it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If I tell you who those young ladies are, will you give me your word
+of honor not to write about them till I give my permission?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton, having in mind the big story at the end of the mystery tangle,
+agreed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The elder is a teacher from a private school; the other is Stanley
+Hargreave's daughter."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Good lord!" gasped the astonished reporter. "He never mentioned the
+fact to me, and we've been together in some tight places."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He never mentioned it to any one but me." Jones again seemed to
+reflect. At last he raised his glance to the reporter. "Are you
+willing to wait for a great story, the real story?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If there is one," answered Norton with his usual caution.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"On my word of honor, you shall have such a story as you never dreamed
+of, if you will promise not to divulge it till the appointed time."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I agree."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The peace and happiness of that child depends upon how you keep your
+word."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That was sufficient for Norton. "Your master knew me. He also knew
+that I am not a man who promises lightly. Now introduce me to the
+daughter."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With plain reluctance Jones went about the affair. Norton put a dozen
+perfunctory questions to the girl. What he was in search of was not
+news but the sound of her voice. In that quarter of an hour he felt
+his heart disturbed as it had never before been disturbed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Now, Mr. Norton," said Jones gloomily, "will you be so kind as to
+follow me?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton was led to Jones' bedroom. The butler-valet closed the door and
+drew the window shade. Always seeking shadows. This did not impress
+the reporter at the time; he had no other thought but the story. Jones
+then sat down beside the reporter and talked in an undertone. When he
+had done he took Norton by the elbow and gently but forcibly led him
+down to the front door and ushered him forth. Norton jumped into his
+taxicab and returned to his rooms, which were at the top of the huge
+apartment hotel. He immediately called up his managing editor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hello! This is Norton. Put Griffin on the Hargreave yarn. I'm off
+on another deal."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But Hargreave was a friend of yours," protested the managing editor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I know it. But you know me well enough, Mr. Blair. I should not ask
+the transfer if it was not vitally important."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, very well."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We shan't be scooped."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If you can promise that, I don't care who works on the job. Will you
+be in the office to-night?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If nothing prevents me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, good-by."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton filled his pipe, drew his chair to the window, and stared at the
+great liner going down to sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Lord, lord!" he murmured. Then he smiled and chuckled. Some bright
+morning he would have all New York by the ears, the police running
+round in circles, and the chiefs of the rival sheets tearing their
+hair. What a story! Four columns on the first page, and two whole
+pages Sunday.... And all of a sudden he ceased to smile and chuckle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the living room of the Countess Olga Perigoff's apartment the
+mistress lay reading on the divan. There was no cigarette between her
+well shaped lips, for she was not the accepted type of adventuress. In
+fact, she was not an adventuress; she was really the Countess Perigoff.
+Her maiden name had been Olga Pushkin; but more of that later.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Braine came in he found her dreaming with half-closed eyes. He
+flourished an evening newspaper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Olga, even the best of us make mistakes. Here, just glance over this."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Russian accepted the newspaper and read the heading indicated:
+"Aeronaut picked up far out at sea. Slips ashore from tramp steamer.
+Had five thousand in cash in his pockets."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hargreave escaped!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Not necessarily," she replied. "If it was Hargreave he would have had
+more than five thousand in his pockets. My friend, I believe it an
+attempt to fool you; or it is another man entirely." She clicked her
+teeth with the tops of her polished nails.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There are two young women in the house. What the deuce can that mean?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Two young women? Oh! then everything's as simple as daylight.
+Katrina Pushkin, my cousin, had a child."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Child? Hargreave had a child? What do you mean by keeping this fact
+from me?" he stormed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It was useless till this moment. He probably sent for her yesterday;
+but in his effort to escape had to turn her over to his butler. We
+shall soon learn whether Hargreave is dead or alive. We can use the
+child to bring him back."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The anger went out of his eyes. "You're a wonder, Olga."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But you should have gone with Vroon last night. He does everything
+just as you tell him. When they reported that Hargreave had visited
+Orts' hangar you ought to have prepared against such a coup as flight
+through the air."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I admit it. But a daughter! Well, I can bring him back," with a
+sinister laugh. "By the Lord Harry, I have him in my hands this time,
+that is, if this girl turns out to be his daughter. A million? Two,
+three, all he has in the world. I want you to pay a visit right away.
+Watch the butler, Jones. He'll lie, of course; but note how he treats
+the girl; and if you get the chance look around the walls for a secret
+panel. He might not have carried away the cash at all, only enough for
+his immediate needs, which would account for that five thousand on the
+man picked up at sea. If I could only get inside that house for an
+hour!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I believe I'll call at once. Leo, was Hargreave the man's real name?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine laughed. "That is of no vital consequence. He will be
+Hargreave till the end of the chapter, dead or alive. You can tell me
+the news at dinner to-night."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So, later, when the butler accepted her card at the door, loath as he
+might be, there was nothing for him to do but admit her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Whom do you wish to see, madam?" stepping back into the shadow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Miss Hargreave. I'm an old friend of her mother's."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is no such person here."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"To whom, then, does this hat belong?" she asked quietly. She waved
+her hand indolently toward the hall rack.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones' lips tightened. "That belongs to Miss Gray, a kind of protégée
+of Mr. Hargreave's."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Indeed! You have no objections to my seeing her? My maiden name was
+Olga Pushkin, cousin to Katrina, wife of Stanley Hargreave. I am, if
+you will weigh the matter carefully, a kind of aunt."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To Jones it was as if ice had suddenly come into contact with his
+heart's blood. But as he still stood in the shadow, she did not
+observe the pallor of his face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If you will state exactly why you wish to see her, madam."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You seem to possess authority?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes, madam, absolute authority."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones produced his document and presented it to her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is no flaw in that," she agreed readily. "I wish to see the
+child. I have told you why."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Very well, madam." Why had they not telegraphed the child, even on
+the train, to return to Farlow's. He knew nothing of this woman,
+whether she was an enemy or a friend. He conducted his unwelcome guest
+into the library.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How did you know that she was here?" suddenly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she was ready. "I did not. But the death of Mr. Hargreave brought
+me. And that youthful hat in the hall was a story all its own. Later
+I shall show you some papers of my own. You will have no cause to
+doubt them. They have not the legal power of yours, but they would
+find standing in any court."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones turned and went in search of Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The countess lost no time in beginning her investigations, but she
+wasted her time. There was no secret panel in evidence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who is she?" asked Florence as she looked at the card. "Did my father
+know countesses?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes," said Jones briefly. "Be very careful what you say to her.
+Admit nothing. She claims to be a cousin of your mother. Perhaps."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My mother?" Without waiting for any further advice from Jones, whom
+Florence in her young years thought presuming upon his authority, she
+ran downstairs to the library. Her mother, to learn some facts about
+the mother of whom she knew nothing!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You knew my mother?" she cried without ceremony,
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones heard the countess say: "I did, my child; and heaven is witness
+that you are the exact picture of her at your age. And I knew your
+father."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones straightened, his hands shut tightly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Tell me about my father!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The countess smiled. It was Katrina. Pushkin come to life, the same
+impulsiveness. "I knew him but slightly. I was a mere child myself
+when he used to pinch my cheeks. I met him again the other night, but
+he did not recognize me; and I could not find it in my heart to awaken
+his memory in a public restaurant."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently Jones came in to announce that two detectives requested to
+see Florence. The two men entered, informing her that they had been
+instructed to investigate the disappearance of Stanley Hargreave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who are you, miss?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am his daughter."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ah!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the detectives questioned Florence minutely, while the other
+wandered about the rooms, feeling the walls, using the magnifying
+glass, turning back the rugs. Even the girl's pretty room did not
+escape his scrutiny. By and by he returned to the library and beckoned
+to his companion. The two conferred for a moment. One chanced to look
+into the mirror. He saw the bright eyes of the countess gazing
+intelligently into his.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-032"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-032.jpg" alt="THE PEACEFUL BUTLER ENTERED INTO THE FIELD OF ACTION" />
+<br />
+THE PEACEFUL BUTLER ENTERED INTO THE FIELD OF ACTION
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'm afraid we'll have to ask you to accompany us to the station, miss."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Some technicalities. We must have some proof of your right to be in
+this house. So far as we have learned, Hargreave was unmarried. It
+will take but a few minutes."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And I will accompany you," said the countess. "We'll be back within
+half an hour. I'll tell them what I know."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones, in the hall, caught sight of the reporter coming up the steps.
+Here was some one he could depend upon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why, Mr. Norton!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The reporter eyed the countess in amazement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You look surprised. Naturally. I am a cousin of Miss Florence's
+mother. You might say that I am her aunt. It's a small world, isn't
+it?" But if wishing could poison, the reporter would have died that
+moment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who are you and what are you doing here?" one of the detectives
+demanded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am going to ask that very question of you," said Norton urbanely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We are from headquarters," replied one, showing his badge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What headquarters? What are they asking you to do?" he said to
+Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"They say I must go to the police station with them."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Not the least in the world," laughed the reporter. "You two clear out
+of here as fast as your rascally legs can carry you. I don't know what
+your game is, but I do know every reputable detective in New York, and
+you don't belong."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Good heavens!" exclaimed the countess; "do you mean to say that these
+men are not real detectives?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"This girl goes to the police station, young man. So much the worse
+for you if you meddle. Take yourself off!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"All in good time."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Here, Jenner, you take charge of the girl. I'll handle this guy. He
+shall go to the station, too."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What followed would always be vividly remembered by Florence, fresh
+from the peace and happiness of her school life. Norton knocked his
+opponent down. He rose and for a moment the room seemed full of legs
+and arms and panting men. A foot tripped up Norton and he went down
+under the bogus detective. He never suspected that the tripping foot
+was not accidental. He was too busy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The other man dragged Florence toward the hall, but there the peaceful
+butler entered into the field of action with a very unattractive
+automatic. The detective threw up his hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The struggle went on in the library. A trick of jiu-jutsu brought
+about the downfall of Norton's man, and Norton ran out into the hall to
+aid Jones. He searched the detective's pockets and secured the
+revolver. The result of all this was that the two bogus detectives
+soon found themselves in charge of two policemen, and they were marched
+off to the station.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Your advent was most providential, Mr. Norton," said Jones in his
+usual colorless tones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I rather believe so. Why don't you pack up and clear out for a while?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am stronger in this house than elsewhere," answered the butler
+enigmatically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, you know best," said the reporter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The countess was breathing rapidly. No, on second thought she had no
+wish to throw her arms about the reporter's neck and kiss him.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap03"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER III
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+The countess did not remain long after the departure of the police with
+the bogus detectives. It had been a very difficult corner to wriggle
+out of, all because Braine had added to his plans after she had left
+the apartment. But for the advent of the meddling reporter the coup
+would have succeeded, herself apparently perfectly innocent of
+complicity. That must be the keynote of all her plans: to appear quite
+innocent and leave no trail behind her. She had gained the confidence
+of Florence and her companion. And she was rather certain that she had
+impressed this lazy-eyed reporter and the stolid butler. She had told
+nothing but the truth regarding her relationship. They would find that
+out. She was Katrina Pushkin's cousin. But blood with her counted as
+naught. She had room in her heart but for two things, Braine and money
+to spend on her caprices.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-033"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-033.jpg" alt="SHE HAD GAINED THE CONFIDENCE OF FLORENCE" />
+<br />
+SHE HAD GAINED THE CONFIDENCE OF FLORENCE
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How long has your highness known Mr. Braine?" asked the reporter idly,
+as he smoothed away all signs of his recent conflict.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, the better part of a year. Mr. Hargreave did not recognize me the
+other night. That was quite excusable, for when he last saw me I was
+not more than twelve. My child," she said to Florence, "build no hopes
+regarding your mother. She is doubtless dead. Upon some trivial
+matter&mdash;I do not know what it was&mdash;she was confined to the fortress.
+That was seventeen years ago. When you enter the fortress at St.
+Petersburg, you cease to be."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That is true enough."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I did not recall myself to your father. I did not care at that moment
+to shock him with the remembrance of the past. Is not Mr. Braine a
+remarkable man?" All this in her charming broken English.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He is, indeed," affirmed Norton. "He's a superb linguist, knows
+everybody and has traveled everywhere. No matter what subject you
+bring up he seems well informed."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Come often," urged Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I shall, my child. And any time you need me, call for me. After all,
+I am nearly your aunt. You will find life in the city far different
+from that which you have been accustomed to."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She limped down to her limousine. In tripping up Norton he had stepped
+upon her foot heavily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She is lovely!" cried Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, I must be on my way, also," said Norton. "I am a worldly-wise
+man, Miss Florence. So is Jones here. Never go any place without
+letting him know; not even to the corner drug store. I am going to
+find your father. Some one was rescued. I'm going to find out whether
+it was the aviator or Mr. Hargreave."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones drew in a deep breath and his eyes closed for a moment. At the
+door he spoke to the reporter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What do you think of that woman?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I believe that she told the truth. She is charming."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She is. But for all her charm and truth I can not help distrusting
+her. I have an idea. I shall call up your office at the end of each
+day. If a day comes without a call, you will know that something is
+wrong."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A very good idea." Norton shook hands with every one and departed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What a brave, pleasant young man!" murmured Susan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I like him, too; and I'd like him for a friend," said the guileless
+girl.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is very good to have a friend like Mr. Norton," added Jones; and
+passed out into the kitchen. All the help had been discharged and upon
+his shoulders lay the burden of the cooking till such time when he
+could reinstate the cook.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a stormy scene between Braine and the countess that night.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-035"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-035.jpg" alt="THERE WAS A STORMY SCENE BETWEEN BRAINE AND THE PRINCESS" />
+<br />
+THERE WAS A STORMY SCENE BETWEEN BRAINE AND THE PRINCESS
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Are you in your dotage?" she asked vehemently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There, there; bring your voice down a bit. Where's the girl?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"In her home. Where did you suppose she would be, after that botchwork
+of letting me go to do one thing while you had in mind another? And an
+ordinary pair of cutthroats, at that!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The thought came to me after you left. I knew you'd recognize the men
+and understand. I see no reason why it didn't work."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It would have been all right if you had consulted a clairvoyant."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What the deuce do you mean by that?" Braine demanded roughly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I mean that then you would have learned your friend the reporter was
+to arrive upon the scene at its most vital moment."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What, Norton?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes. The trouble is with you, you have been so successful all these
+years that you have grown overconfident. I tell you that there is a
+desperately shrewd man somewhere back of all this. Mark me, I do not
+believe Hargreave is dead. He is in hiding. It may be near by. He
+may have dropped from the balloon before it left land. The man they
+picked up may be Orts, the aeronaut. The five thousand might have been
+his fee for rescuing Hargreave. Here is the greatest thing we've ever
+been up against; and you start in with every-day methods!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Little woman, don't let your tongue run away with you too far."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'm not the least bit afraid of you, Leo. You need me, and it has
+never been more apparent than at this moment."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"All right. I fell by the wayside this trip. Truthfully, I realized
+it five minutes after the men were gone. The only clever thing I did
+was to keep the mask on my face. They can't come back at me. But the
+thing looked so easy; and it would have worked but for Norton's
+appearance."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You all but compromised me. That butler worries me a little." Her
+expression lost its anger and grew thoughtful. "He's always about,
+somewhere. Do you think Hargreave took him into his confidence?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Can't tell. He's been watched straight for forty hours. He hasn't
+mailed a letter or telephoned to any place but the grocery. There have
+been no telegrams. Some one in that house knows where the money is,
+and it's ten to one that it will be the girl."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She looks enough like Katrina to be her ghost."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine went over to the window and stared up at the stars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You have made a good impression on the girl?" with his back still
+toward her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I had her in my arms."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Olga, my hat is off to you," turning, now that his face was again in
+repose. "Your very frankness regarding your relationship will pull the
+wool over their eyes. Of course they'll make inquiries and they'll
+find out that you haven't lied. It's perfect. Not even that newspaper
+weasel will see anything wrong. Toward you they will eventually ease
+up and you can act without their even dreaming your part in the
+business. We must not be seen in public any more. This butler may
+know where I stand even though he can not prove it. Now, I'm going to
+tell you something. Perhaps you've long since guessed it. Katrina was
+mine till Hargreave&mdash;never mind what his name was then&mdash;till Hargreave
+came into the fold. So sure of her was I that I used her as a lure to
+bring him to us. She fell in love with him, but too late to warn him.
+I had the satisfaction of seeing him cast her aside, curse her, and
+leave her. In one thing she fooled us all. I never knew of the child
+till you told me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He paused to light a cigarette.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hargreave was madly in love with her. He cursed her, but he came back
+to the house to forgive her, to find that she had been seized by the
+secret police and entombed in the fortress. I had my revenge. It was
+I who sent in the information, practically bogus. But in Russia they
+never question; they act and forget. So he had a daughter!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He paced the floor, his hands behind his back; the woman watched him,
+oscillating between love and fear. He came to a halt abruptly and
+looked down at her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Don't worry. You have no rival. I'll leave the daughter to your
+tender mercies."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The butler," she said, "has full power of attorney to act for
+Hargreave while absent, up to the day the girl becomes of legal age."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'll keep an eye on our friend Jones. From now on, day and night,
+there will be a cat at the knothole, and 'ware mouse! Could you make
+up anything like this girl?" suddenly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A fair likeness."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do it. Go to the ship which picked up the man at sea and quiz the
+captain. Either the aviator or Hargreave is alive. It is important to
+learn which at once. Be very careful; play the game only as you know
+how to play it. And if Hargreave is alive, we win. To-morrow morning,
+early. Tears of anguish, and all that. Sailors are easy when a woman
+weeps. No color, remember; just the yellow wig and the salient
+features. Now, by-by!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Aren't you going to kiss me, Leo?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He caught her hands. "There is a species of Delilah about you, Olga.
+A kiss to-night from your lips would snip my locks; and I need a clear
+head. Whether we fail or win, when this game is played you shall be my
+wife." He kissed the hands and strode out into the hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman gazed down at her small white hands and smiled tenderly.
+(The tigress has her tender moments!) He meant it!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She went into her dressing-room and for an hour or more worked over her
+face and hair, till she was certain that if the captain of the ship
+described her to any one else he could not fail to give a fair
+description of Florence Hargreave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Norton reached the captain first. Other reporters had besieged
+him, but they had succeeded in gathering the vaguest kind of
+information. They had no description of Hargreave, while Norton had.
+Before going down to the boat, however, he had delved into the past of
+the Countess Olga Perigoff. It cost him a pocketful of money, but the
+end justified the means. The countess had no past worth mentioning.
+By piecing this and that together he became assured that she had told
+the simple truth regarding the relationship to Florence's mother. A
+cablegram had given him all the facts in her history; there were no
+gaps or discrepancies. It read clear and frank. Trust a Russian
+secret agent to know what he was talking about.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-039"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-039.jpg" alt="NORTON REACHED THE CAPTAIN FIRST" />
+<br />
+NORTON REACHED THE CAPTAIN FIRST
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Norton's suspicions&mdash;and he had entertained some&mdash;were completely
+lulled to sleep. And he wouldn't have doubted her at all except for
+the fact that Braine had been with her when he had introduced
+Hargreave. Hargreave had feared Braine; that much the reporter had
+elicited from the butler. But there wasn't the slightest evidence.
+Braine had been in New York for nearly six years. The countess had
+arrived in the city but a year ago. And Braine was a member of several
+fashionable clubs, never touched cards, and seldom drank. He was an
+expert chess player and a wonderful amateur billiardist. Perhaps
+Jones, the taciturn and inscrutable, had not told him all he knew
+regarding his master's past. Well, well; he had in his time untangled
+worse snarls. The office had turned him loose, a free lance, to handle
+the case as he saw fit, to turn in the story when it was complete.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But what a story it was going to be when he cleared it up! The more
+mystifying it was, the greater the zest and sport for him. Norton was
+like a gambler who played for big stakes, and only big stakes stirred
+his cravings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The captain of the tramp steamer <i>Orient</i> told him the same tale he had
+told the other reporters: he had picked up a man at sea. The man had
+been brought aboard totally exhausted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Was there another body anywhere?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What became of him?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I sent a wireless and that seemed to bother him. It looked as though
+he did not want anybody to learn that he had been rescued. The moment
+the boat touched the pier he lost himself in the crowd. Fifty
+reporters came aboard, but he was gone. And I could but tell them just
+what I'm telling you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He had money."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"About five thousand."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Please describe him."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The captain did so. It was the same description he had given to all
+the reporters. Norton looked over the rail at the big warehouse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Was it an ordinary balloon?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There you've got me. My Marconi man says the balloon part was like
+any other balloon; but the passenger car was a new business to him. It
+could be driven against the wind."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Driven against the wind. Did you tell this to the other chaps?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Don't think I did. Just remembered it. Probably some new invention;
+and now it's at the bottom of the sea. Two men, as I understand, went
+off in this contraption. One is gone for good."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"For good," echoed the reporter gravely. "Gone for good, indeed, poor
+devil!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton took out a roll of bills. "There's two hundred in this roll."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well?" said the captain, vastly astonished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It's yours if you will do me a small favor."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If it doesn't get me mixed up with the police. I'm only captain of a
+tramp; and some of the harbor police have taken a dislike to me. What
+do you want me to do?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The police will not bother you. This man Hargreave had some enemies;
+they want either his life or his money; maybe both. It's a peculiar
+case, with Russia in the background. He might have laid the whole
+business before the police, but he chose to fight it out himself. And
+to tell the truth, I don't believe the police would have done any good."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Heave her over; what do you want me to do for that handsome roll of
+money?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If any man or woman who is not a reporter comes to pump you tell them
+the man went ashore with a packet under his arm."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Tie a knot in that."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Say the man was gray-haired, clean-shaven, straight, with a scar high
+up on his forehead, generally covered up by his hair."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That's battened down, my lad. Go on."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Say that you saw him enter yonder warehouse, and later depart without
+his packet."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Easy as dropping my mudhook."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That's all." Norton gave the captain the money. "Good-by and many
+thanks."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Don't mention it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton left the slip and proceeded to the office of the warehouse. He
+approached the manager's desk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hello, Grannis, old top!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man looked up from his work surlily. Then his face brightened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Norton? What's brought you here? Oh, yes; that balloon business.
+Sit down."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What kind of a man is the captain of that old hooker in the slip?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Shifty in gun running, but otherwise as square as a die. Looks funny
+to see an old tub like that fixed up with wireless; but that has saved
+his neck a dozen times when he was running it into a noose. Not going
+to interview me, are you?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No. I'm going to ask you to do me a little favor."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"They always say that. But spin her out. If it doesn't cost me my
+job, it's yours."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, there will be a person making inquiries about the mysterious
+aeronaut. All I want you to say is, that he left a packet with you,
+that you've put it in that safe till he calls to claim it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Grannis nibbled the end of his pen. "Suppose some one should come and
+demand that I open the safe and deliver?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"All you've got to do is to tell them to show the receipt signed by
+you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The warehouse manager laughed. "Got a lot of sense in that ivory dome
+of yours. All right. But if anything happens you've got to come
+around and back me up. What's it about?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That I dare not tell you. This much, I'm laying a trap and I want
+some one I don't know to fall into it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"On your way, James. But if you don't send me some prize fight tickets
+next week for this, I'll never do you another favor."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In reply Norton took from his pocket two bits of pasteboard and laid
+them on the desk. "I knew you'd be wanting something like this."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ringside!" cried Grannis. "You reporters are lucky devils!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'd go myself if there was any earthly chance of a real scrap. You
+make me laugh, Gran. You're always going, always hoping the next one
+will be a real one. But it's all bunk. The pugs are the biggest
+fakers on top of the sod. They've got us newspaper men done to a
+frazzle."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I guess you're right. Well, count on me regarding that mysterious
+bundle in the safe."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"At three o'clock this afternoon I want you to call me up. If no one
+has called, why the game is up. But if some one does come around and
+make inquiries, don't fail to let me know."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'll be here till five. I'd better call you up then."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Norton returned home and idled about till afternoon. He went over
+to Riverdale. Five times he walked up and down in front of the
+Hargreave place, finally plucked up his courage and walked to the door.
+After all, he was a lucky mortal. He had a good excuse to visit this
+house every day in the week. And there was something tantalizing in
+the risk he took. Besides, he wanted to prove to himself whether it
+was a passing fancy or something deeper. That's the way with humans;
+we never see a sign "Fresh Paint" that we don't have to prove it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He chatted with Florence for a while and found that, for all she might
+be guileless to the world, she was a good linguist, a fine musician,
+and talked with remarkable keenness about books and arts. But unless
+he roused her, the sadness of her position always lay written in her
+face. It was not difficult for him to conjure up her dreams in coming
+to the city and the blow which, like a bolt of lightning from a clear
+sky, had shattered them ruthlessly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You must come every day and tell me how you have progressed," she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'll obey that order gladly, whenever I can possibly do it. My visits
+will always be short."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That is not necessary."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No," said Norton in his heart, "but it is wise."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Always he found Jones waiting for him at the door, always in the shadow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well?" the butler whispered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have laid a neat trap. Whether this balloon was the one that left
+the top of this house I don't know. But if there were two men in it,
+one of them lies at the bottom of the sea."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And the man who was found?" The butler's voice was tense.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It was not Hargreave. I met Orts but once, and as he wore a beard
+then, the captain's description did not tally with your recollection."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thank God! But what is this trap?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I propose to find out by it who is back of all this, who Hargreave's
+real enemies are."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton returned to his rooms, there to await the call from Grannis. He
+was sorry, but if Jones would not take him into his fullest confidence,
+he must hold himself to blame for any blunder he (Norton) made. Of
+course, he could readily understand Jones' angle of vision. He knew
+nothing of the general run of reporters; he had heard of them by rumor
+and distrusted them. He was not aware of the fact that the average
+reporter carries more secrets in his head than a prime minister. It
+was, then, up to him to set about to allay this distrust and gain the
+man's complete confidence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile that same morning a pretty young woman boarded the <i>Orient</i>
+and asked to be led to the captain. Her eyes were red; she had
+evidently been weeping. When the captain, susceptible like all
+sailors, saw her his promises to Norton took wings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"This is Captain Hagan?" she asked, balling the handkerchief she held
+in her hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes, miss. What can I do for you?" He put his hands embarrassedly
+into his pockets&mdash;and felt the crisp bills. But for that magic touch
+he would have forgotten his lines. He squared his shoulders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have every assurance that the man you picked up at sea is my father.
+I am Florence Hargreave. Tell me everything."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The captain's very blundering deceived her. "And then he hustled down
+the gangplank and headed for that warehouse. He had a package which he
+was as tender of as if it had been dynamite."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thank you!" impulsively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A man has to do his duty, miss. A sailor's always glad to rescue a
+man at sea," awkwardly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When she finally went down the gangplank the sigh the captain heaved
+was almost as loud as the exhaust from the donkey engines which were
+working out the crates of lemons from the hold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Maybe she is his daughter; but two hundred is two hundred, and I'm a
+poor sailor man."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Grannis came in for his troubles. What was a chap to do when a
+pretty girl appealed to him?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am sorry, miss, but I can't give you that package. I gave the man a
+receipt and till it is presented to me the package must remain in
+yonder safe. You understand enough about the business to realize that.
+I did not solicit the job. It was thrust upon me. I'd give a hundred
+dollars if the blame thing was out of my safe. You say it is your
+fortune. That hasn't been proved. It may be gunpowder, dynamite. I'm
+sorry, but you will have to find your father and bring the receipt."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The young woman left the warehouse, dabbing her eyes with the sodden
+handkerchief.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I wonder," mused Grannis, as he watched her from the window, "I wonder
+what the deuce that chap Norton is up to. The girl might have been the
+man's daughter.... Good lord, what an ass I am! There wasn't any
+man!" And so he reached over for the telephone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Immediately upon receipt of the message the reporter set his machinery
+in motion. Some time before dawn he would know who the
+arch-conspirator was. He questioned Grannis thoroughly, and Grannis'
+description tallied amazingly with that of Florence Hargreave. But a
+call over the wire proved to him conclusively that Florence had not
+been out of the house that morning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the morrow the newspapers had scare heads about an attempt to rob
+the Duffy warehouse. It appeared that the police had been tipped
+beforehand and were on the grounds in time to gather in several
+notorious gunmen, who, under pressure of the third degree, vowed that
+they had been hired and paid by a man in a mask and had not the
+slightest idea what he wanted them to raid. Nothing further could be
+got out of the gunmen. That they were lying the police had no doubt,
+but they were up against a stout wall and all they could do was to hold
+the men for the grand jury.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton was in a fine temper. After all his careful planning he had
+gained nothing&mdash;absolutely nothing. But wait; he had gained
+something&mdash;the bitter enmity of a cunning and desperate man, who had
+been forced to remain hidden under the pier till almost dawn.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap04"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER IV
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+Braine crawled from his uncomfortable hiding place. His clothes were
+soiled and damp, his hat was gone. By a hair's breadth he had escaped
+the clever trap laid for him. Hargreave was alive, he had escaped;
+Braine was as certain of this fact as he was of his own breathing. He
+now knew how to account for the flickering light in the upper story of
+the warehouse. His ancient enemy had been watching him all the time.
+More than this, Hargreave and the meddling reporter were in collusion.
+In the flare of lights at the end of the gun-play he had caught the
+profile of the reporter. Here was a dangerous man, who must be watched
+with the utmost care.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He, Braine, had been lured to commit an overt act, and by the rarest
+good luck had escaped with nothing more serious than a cold chill and a
+galling disappointment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He crawled along the top of the pier, listening, sending his
+dark-accustomed glance hither and thither. The sky in the east was
+growing paler and paler. In and out among the bales of wool, bags of
+coffee and lemon crates he slowly and cautiously wormed his way. A
+watchman patrolled the office side of the warehouse, and Braine found
+it possible to creep around the other way, thence into the street.
+After that he straightened up, sought a second-hand shop and purchased
+a soft hat, which he pulled down over his eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had half a dozen rooms which he always kept in readiness for such
+adventures as this. He rented them furnished in small hotels which
+never asked questions of their patrons. To one of these he went as
+fast as his weary legs could carry him. He always carried the key.
+Once in his room he donned fresh wearing apparel, linen, shoes, and
+shaved. Then he proceeded down-stairs, the second-hand hat shading his
+eyes and the upper part of his face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At half past twelve Norton entered the Knickerbocker cafe-restaurant,
+and the first person he noticed was Braine, reading the morning's
+paper, propped up against the water carafe. Evidently he had just
+ordered, for there was nothing on his plate. Norton walked over and
+laid his hand upon Braine's shoulder. The man looked up with mild
+curiosity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why, Norton, sit down, sit down! Have you had lunch? No? Join me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thanks. Came in for my breakfast," said Norton, drawing out the
+chair. Braine was sitting with his back to the wall on the lounge-seat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I wonder if you newspaper men ever eat a real, true enough breakfast.
+I should think the hours you lead would kill you off. Anything new on
+the Hargreave story?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'm not handling that," the reporter lied cheerfully. "Didn't want
+to. I knew him rather intimately. I've a horror of dead people, and
+don't want to be called upon to identify the body when they find it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then you think they will find it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I don't know. It's a strange mixup. I'm not on the story, mind you;
+but I was in the locality of Duffy's warehouse late last night and fell
+into a gunman rumpus."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes, I read about that. What were they after?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You've got me there. No one seems to know. Some cock and bull story
+about there being something valuable. There was."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What was it? The report in this paper does not say."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ten thousand bags of coffee."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine lay back in his chair and laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If you want my opinion," said Norton, "I believe the gunmen were out
+to shoot up another gang, and the police got wind of it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Don't you think it about time the police called a halt in this gunman
+matter?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, so long as they pot each other the police look the other way. It
+saves a long trial and passage up the river. Besides, when they are
+nabbed some big politician manages to open the door for them. Great is
+the American voter."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Take Mr. Norton's order, Luigi," said Braine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A German pancake, buttered toast and coffee," ordered the reporter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Man, eat something!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It's enough for me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And you'll go all the rest of the day on tobacco. I know something of
+you chaps. I don't see how you manage to do it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Food is the least of our troubles. By the way, may I ask you a few
+questions? Nothing for print, unless you've got a new book coming."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Fire away."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What do you know about the Countess Perigoff?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Let me see. H'm. Met her first about a year ago at a reception given
+to Nasimova. A very attractive woman. I see quite a lot of her. Why?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, she claims to be a sort of aunt to Hargreave's daughter."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She said something to me about that the other night. You never know
+where you're at in this world, do you?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The German pancake, the toast, the coffee disappeared, and the reporter
+passed his cigars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The president visits town to-day and I'm off to watch the show. I
+suppose I'll have to interview him about the tariff and all that rot.
+When you start on a new book let me know and I'll be your press agent."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That's a bargain."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thanks for the breakfast."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine picked up his newspaper, smoked and read. He smoked, yes, but
+he only pretended to read. The young fool was clever, but no man is
+infallible. He had not the least suspicion; he saw only the newspaper
+story. Still, in some manner he might stumble upon the truth, and it
+would be just as well to tie the reporter's hands effectually.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The rancor of early morning had been subdued; anger and quick temper
+never paid in the long run, and no one appreciated this fact better
+than Braine. To put Norton out of the way temporarily was only a wise
+precaution; it was not a matter of spite or reprisal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He paid the reckoning, left the restaurant, and dropped into one of his
+clubs for a game of billiards. He drew quite a gallery about the
+table. He won easily, racked his cue and sought the apartments of the
+countess.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What a piece of luck it was that Olga had really married that old
+dotard, Perigoff! He had left her a titled widow six months after her
+marriage. But she had had hardly a kopeck to call her own.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Olga, Hargreave is alive. He was there last night. But somehow he
+anticipated the raid and had the police in waiting. The question is,
+has he fooled us? Did he take that million or did he hide it? There
+is one thing left&mdash;to get that girl. No matter where Hargreave is
+hidden, the knowledge that she is in my hands will bring him out into
+the open."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No more blind alleys."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What's on your mind?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She has never seen her father. She confessed to me that she has not
+even seen a photograph of him."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a long pause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do you understand me?" she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"By the Lord Harry, I do! You've a head on you worth two of mine. The
+very simplicity of the idea will win out for us. Some one to pose as
+her father; a message handed to her in secret; dire misfortune if she
+whispers a word to any one; that her father's life hangs upon the
+secrecy; she must confide in no one, least of all Jones, the butler.
+It all depends upon how the letter gets to her. Bred in the country,
+she probably sleeps with her window open. A pebble attached to a note,
+tossed into the window. I'll trust this to no one; I'll do it myself.
+With the girl in our control the rest will be easy. If she really does
+not know where the money is Hargreave will tell us. Great head, little
+woman, great head. She does not know her father's handwriting?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She has never seen a scrap of it. Miss Farlow never showed her the
+registered letters. The original note left on the doorstep with
+Florence has been lost. Trust me to make all these inquiries."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"To-morrow night, then, immediately after dinner, a taxicab will await
+her just around the corner. Grange is the best man I can think of.
+He's an artist when it comes to playing the old-man parts."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Not too old, remember. Hargreave isn't over forty-five."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Another good point. I'm going to stretch out here on the divan and
+snooze for a while. Had a devil of a time last night."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"When shall I wake you?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"At six. We'll have an early dinner sent in. I want to keep out of
+everybody's way. By-by!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In less than three minutes he was sound asleep. The woman gazed down
+at him in wonder and envy. If only she could drop to sleep like that.
+Very softly she pressed her lips to his hair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At eleven o'clock the following night the hall light in the Hargreave
+house was turned off and the whole interior became dark. A shadow
+crept through the lilac bushes without any more sound than a cat would
+have made. Florence's window was open as the arch-conspirator had
+expected it would be. With a small string and stone as a sling he sent
+the letter whirling skilfully through the air. It sailed into the
+girl's room. The man below heard no sound of the stone hitting
+anything and concluded that it had struck the bed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He waited patiently. Presently a wavering light could be distinguished
+over the sill of the window. The girl was awake and had lit the
+candle. This knowledge was sufficient for his need. The tragic letter
+would do the rest, that is, if the girl came from the same pattern as
+her father and mother&mdash;strong-willed and adventurous.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He tiptoed back to the lilacs, when a noise sent him close to the
+ground. Half a dozen feet away he saw a shadow creeping along toward
+the front door. Presently the shadow stood up as if listening. He
+stooped again and ran lightly to the steps, up these to the door, which
+he hugged.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Who was this? wondered Braine. Patiently he waited, arranging his
+posture so that he could keep a lookout at the door. By and by the
+door opened cautiously. A man holding a candle appeared. Braine
+vaguely recognized Olga's description of the butler. The man on the
+veranda suddenly blew out the light.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine could hear the low murmur of voices, but nothing more. The
+conversation lasted scarcely a minute. The door closed and the man,
+ran down the steps, across the lawn, with Braine close at his heels.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Just a moment, Mr. Hargreave," he called ironically; "just a moment!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man he addressed as Hargreave turned with lightning rapidity and
+struck. The blow caught Braine above the ear, knocking him flat. When
+he regained his feet the rumble of a motor told him the rest of the
+story.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<p>
+By the dim light of her bedroom candle Florence read the note which had
+found entrance so strangely and mysteriously into her room. Her
+father! He lived, he needed her! Alive, but in dread peril, and only
+she could save him! She longed to fly to him at once, then and there.
+How could she wait till to-morrow night at eight? Immediately she
+began to plan how to circumvent the watchful Jones and the careful
+Susan. Her father! She slept no more that night.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<p>
+"My Darling Daughter: I must see you. Come at eight o'clock to-morrow
+night to 78 Grove Street, third floor. Confide in no one, or you seal
+my death warrant.
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+"Your unhappy<br />
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"FATHER."<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<p>
+What child would refuse to obey a summons like this?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A light tap on the door startled her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is anything the matter?" asked the mild voice of Jones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No. I got up to get a drink of water."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She heard his footsteps die away down the corridor. She thrust the
+letter into the pocket of her dress, which lay neatly folded on the
+chair at the foot of the bed, then climbed back into the bed itself.
+She must not tell even Mr. Norton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Was the child spinning a romance over the first young man she had ever
+met? In her heart of hearts the girl did not know.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her father!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was all so terribly and tragically simple, to match a woman's mind
+against that of a child. Both Norton and the sober Jones had
+explicitly warned her never to go anywhere, receive telephone calls or
+letters, without first consulting one or the other of them. And now
+she had planned to deceive them, with all the cunning of her sex.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next morning at breakfast there was nothing unusual either in her
+appearance or manners. Under the shrewd scrutiny of Jones she was just
+her every-day self, a fine bit of acting for one who had yet to see the
+stage. But it is born in woman to act, as it is born in man to fight,
+and Florence was no exception to the rule.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was going to save her father.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She read with Susan, played the piano, sewed a little, laughed, hummed
+and did a thousand and one things young girls do when they have the
+deception of their elders in view.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-055"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-055.jpg" alt="SHE READ WITH SUSAN..." />
+<br />
+SHE READ WITH SUSAN...
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All day long Jones went about like an old hound with his nose to the
+wind. There was something in the air, but he could not tell what it
+was. Somehow or other, no matter which room Florence went into, there
+was Jones within earshot. And she dared not show the least impatience
+or restiveness. It was a large order for so young a girl, but she
+filled it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She rather expected that the reporter would appear some time during the
+afternoon; and sure enough he did. He could no more resist the desire
+to see and talk to her than he could resist breathing. There was no
+use denying it; the world had suddenly turned at a new angle,
+presenting a new face, a roseate vision. It rather subdued his easy
+banter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What news?" she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"None," rather despondingly. "I'm sorry. I had hoped by this time to
+get somewhere. But it happens that I can't get any farther than this
+house."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She did not ask him what he meant by that.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Shall I play something for you?" she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Please."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He drew a chair beside the piano and watched her fingers, white as the
+ivory keys, flutter up and down the board. She played Chopin for him,
+Mendelssohn, Grieg and Chaminade; and she played them in a surprisingly
+scholarly fashion. He had expected the usual schoolgirl choice and
+execution; <i>Titania</i>, the <i>Moonlight Sonata</i> (which not half a dozen
+great pianists have ever played correctly), <i>Monastery Bells</i>, and the
+like. He had prepared to make a martyr of himself; instead, he was
+distinctly and delightfully entertained.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You don't," he said whimsically, when she finally stopped, "you don't,
+by any chance, know <i>The Maiden's Prayer</i>?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She laughed. This piece was a standing joke at school.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have never played it. It may, however, be in the cabinet. Would
+you like to hear it?" mischievously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Heaven forfend!" he murmured, raising his hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All the while the letter burned against her heart, and the smile on her
+face and the gaiety on her tongue were forced. "Confide in no one,"
+she repeated mentally, "or you seal my death warrant."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why do you shake your head like that?" he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Did I shake my head?" Her heart fluttered wildly. "I was not
+conscious of it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Are you going to keep your promise?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What promise?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Never to leave this house without Jones or myself being with you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I couldn't if I wanted to. I'll wager Jones is out there in the hall
+this minute. I know; it is all for my sake. But it bothers me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones was indeed in the hall, and when he sensed the petulance in her
+voice his shoulders sank despondently and he sighed deeply if silently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At a quarter to eight Florence, being alone for a minute, set fire to a
+veil and stuffed it down the register.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jones," she called excitedly, "I smell something burning!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones dashed into the room, sniffed, and dashed out again, heading for
+the cellar door. His first thought was naturally that the devils
+incarnate had set fire to the house. When he returned, having, of
+course, discovered no fire, he found Florence gone. He rushed into the
+hall. Her hat was missing. He made for the hall door with a speed
+which seemed incredible to the bewildered Susan's eyes. Out into the
+street, up and down which he looked. Far away he discovered a
+dwindling taxicab. The child was gone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the house Susan was answering the telephone, talking incoherently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who is it?" Jones whispered, his lips white and dry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-058"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-058.jpg" alt="&quot;WHO IS IT?&quot; WHISPERED JONES, HIS LIPS WHITE AND DRY" />
+<br />
+&quot;WHO IS IT?&quot; WHISPERED JONES, HIS LIPS WHITE AND DRY
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The countess...." began Susan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He took the receiver from her roughly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hello, who is it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"This is Olga Perigoff. Is Florence there?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No, madam. She has just stepped out for a moment. Shall I tell her
+to call you when she returns?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes, please. I want her and Susan and Mr. Norton to come to tea
+to-morrow. Good-by."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones hung up the receiver, sank into a chair near by and buried his
+face in his hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What is it?" cried Susan, terrified by the haggardness of his face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She's gone! My God, those wretches have got her! They've got her!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence was whirled away at top speed. Her father! She was actually
+on the way to her father, whom she had always loved in dreams, yet
+never seen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Number 78 Grove Street was not an attractive place, but when she
+arrived she was too highly keyed to take note of its sordidness. She
+was rather out of breath when she reached the door of the third flat.
+She knocked timidly. The door was instantly opened by a man who wore a
+black mask. She would have turned then and there and flown but for the
+swift picture she had of a well-dressed man at a table. He lay with
+his head upon his arms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Father!" she whispered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man raised his careworn face, so very well done that only the
+closest scrutiny would have betrayed the paste of the theater. He
+arose and staggered toward her with outstretched arms. But the moment
+they closed about her Florence experienced a peculiar shiver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My child!" murmured the broken man. "They caught me when I was about
+to come to you. I have given up the fight."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A sob choked him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What was it? wondered the child, her heart burning with the misery of
+the thought that she was sad instead of glad. Over his shoulder she
+sent a glance about the room. There was a sofa, a table, some chairs
+and an enormous clock, the face of which was dented and the hands
+hopelessly tangled. Why, at such a moment, she should note such
+details disturbed her. Then she chanced to look into the cracked
+mirror. In it she saw several faces, all masked. These men were
+peering at her through the half-closed door behind her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You must return home and bring me the money," went on the wretch who
+dared to perpetrate such a mockery. "It is all that stands between me
+and death."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then she knew! The insistent daily warnings came home to her. She
+understood now. She had deliberately walked into the spider's net.
+But instead of terror an extraordinary calm fell upon her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Very well, father, I will go and get it." Gently she released herself
+from those horrible arms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Wait, my child, till I see if they will let you go. They may wish to
+hold you as hostage."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he was gone she tried the doors. They were locked. Then she
+crossed over to the window and looked out. A leap from there would
+kill her. She turned her gaze toward the lamp, wondering.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The false father returned, dejectedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is as I said. They insist upon sending some one. Write down the
+directions I gave to you. I am very weak!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Write down the directions yourself, father; you know them better than
+I." Since she saw no escape, she was determined to keep up the tragic
+farce no longer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am not your father."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"So I see," she replied, still with the amazing calm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine, in the other room, shook his head savagely. Father and
+daughter; the same steel in the nerves. Could they bend her? Would
+they break her? He did not wish to injure her bodily, but a million
+was always a million, and there was revenge which was worth more to him
+than the money itself. He listened, motioning to the others to be
+silent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Write the directions," commanded the scoundrel, who discarded the
+broken-man style.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I know of no hidden money."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then your father dies this night." Grange put a whistle to his lips.
+"Sign, write!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I refuse!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Once more. The moment I blow this whistle the men in the other room
+will understand that your father is to die. Be wise. Money is
+nothing&mdash;life is everything."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I refuse!" Even as she had known this vile creature to be an impostor
+so she knew that he lied, that her father was still free.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Grange blew the whistle. Instantly the room became filled with masked
+men. But Florence was ready. She seized the lamp and hurled it to the
+floor, quite indifferent whether it exploded or went out. Happily for
+her, it was extinguished. At the same moment she cast the lamp she
+caught hold of a chair, remembering the direction of the window. She
+was superhumanly strong in this moment. The chair went true. A crash
+followed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She has thrown herself out of the window!" yelled a voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some one groped for the lamp, lit it and turned in time to see Florence
+pass out of the room into that from which they had come. The door
+slammed. The surprised men heard the key click.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was free. But she was no longer a child.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap05"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER V
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+"Gone!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones kept saying to himself that he must strive to be calm, to think,
+think. Despite all his warnings, the warnings of Norton, she had
+tricked them and run away. It was maddening. He wanted to rave, tear
+his hair, break things. He tramped the hall. It would be wasting time
+to send for the police. They would only putter about fruitlessly. The
+Black Hundred knew how to arrange these abductions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How had they succeeded in doing it? No one had entered the house that
+day without his being present. There had been no telephone call he had
+not heard the gist of, nor any letters he had not first glanced over.
+How had they done it? Suddenly into his mind flashed the remembrance
+of the candle-light under Florence's door the night before. In a dozen
+bounds he was in her room, searching drawers, paper boxes, baskets. He
+found nothing. He returned in despair to Susan, who, during all this
+turmoil, had sat as if frozen in her chair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Speak!" he cried. "For God's sake, say something, think something!
+Those devils are likely to torture her, hurt, her!" He leaned against
+the wall, his head on his arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he turned again he was calm. He walked with bent head toward the
+door, opened it and stood upon the threshold for a space. Across the
+street a shadow stirred, but Jones did not see it. His gaze was
+attracted by something which shone dimly white on the walk just beyond
+the steps. He ran to it. A crumpled letter, unaddressed. He carried
+it back to the house, smoothed it out and read, its contents. Florence
+in her haste had dropped the letter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He clutched at his hat, put it on and ran to Susan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Here!" he cried, holding out an automatic. "If any one comes in that
+you don't know, shoot! Don't ask questions, shoot!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'm afraid!" She breathed with difficulty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Afraid?" he roared at her. He put the weapon in her hand. It slipped
+and thudded to the floor. He stooped for it and slammed it into her
+lap. "You love your life and honor. You'll know how to shoot when the
+time comes. Now, attend to me. If I'm not back here by ten o'clock,
+turn this note over to the police. If you can't do that, then God help
+us all!" And with that he ran from the house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Susan eyed the revolver with growing terror. For what had she left the
+peace and quiet of Miss Farlow's; assassination, robbery, thieves and
+kidnapers? She wanted to shriek, but her throat was as dry as paper.
+Gingerly she touched the pistol. The cold steel sent a thrill of fear
+over her. He hadn't told her how to shoot it!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two blocks down the street, up an alley, was the garage wherein
+Hargreave had been wont to keep his car. Toward this Jones ran with
+the speed of a track athlete. There might be half a dozen taxicabs
+about, but he would not run the risk of engaging any of them. The
+Black Hundred was capable of anticipating his every movement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The shadow across the street stood undecided. At length he concluded
+to give Jones ten minutes in which to return. If he did not return in
+that time, the watcher would go up to the drug store and telephone for
+instructions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Jones did not come back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where's Howard?" he demanded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hello, Jones; what's up?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Howard, get that car out at once."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Out she comes. Wait till I give her radiator a bucket of water.
+Gee!" whispered Howard, whom Hargreave often used as his chauffeur,
+"get on to his nibs! First time I ever saw him awake. I wonder what's
+doing? You never know what's back of those mummy-faced head
+waiters.... All right, Jones!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The chauffeur jumped into the car and Jones took the seat beside him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where to?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Number 78..." and the rest of it trailed away, smothered in the
+violent thunder of the big six's engines.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During the car's flight several policemen hailed it without success.
+Down this street, up that, round this corner, fifty miles an hour; and
+all the while Jones shouted: "Faster, faster!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Within twelve minutes from the time it left the garage, the car stopped
+opposite 78 Grove Street, and Jones got out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Wait here, Howard. If several men come rushing out, or I don't appear
+within ten minutes, fire your gun a couple of times for the police. I
+don't want them if we can manage without. They'd only bungle."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"All right, Mr. Jones," said the chauffeur. He had, in the past
+quarter of an hour, acquired a deep and lasting respect for the butler
+chap. He was a regular fellow, for all his brass buttons.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As Jones reached the curb, Florence came forth as if on invisible
+wings. Jones caught her by the arm. She flung him aside with a
+strength he had not dreamed existed in her slim body.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Florence, I am Jones!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stopped, recognized him, and without a word ran across the street
+to the automobile and climbed into the tonneau. Jones followed
+immediately.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Home!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The car shot up the dimly lighted street, shone palely for a second
+under the corner lamp, and vanished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ah, child, child!" groaned the man at her side, all the tenseness gone
+from his body. He was Jones again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still she did not speak, but stared ahead with unseeing eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No further reproach fell from the butler's lips. It was enough that
+God had guided him to her at the appointed moment. He felt assured
+that never again would she be drawn into any trap. Poor child! What
+had they said to her, done to her? How, in God's name, had she escaped
+from them who never let anybody escape? Presently she would become
+normal, and then she would tell him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I found the lying note. You dropped it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Horrible, horrible!" she said almost inaudibly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What did they do to you?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He said he was my father.... He put his arms around me.... And I
+knew!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Knew what?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That he lied. I can't explain."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Don't try!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly she laid her head against the butler's shoulder and cried. It
+was terrible to hear youth weep in this fashion. Jones put his arm
+about her and tried to console her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Horrible!" she murmured between the violent hiccoughs. "I was wrong,
+wrong! Forgive me!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Unconsciously the arm sustaining her drew her closer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Never mind," he consoled. "Tell no one what has happened. Go about
+as usual. Don't let even Susan know. Whatever your poor father did
+was for your sake. He wanted you to be happy, without a care in the
+world."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I promise." And gradually the sobs ceased. "But I feel so old,
+Jones, so very old. I threw over the lamp. I threw a chair through
+the window. They thought that it was I who had jumped out. That gave
+me the necessary time. I don't understand how I did it. I wasn't
+frightened at all till I gained the street."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They found Susan still seated in the chair, the automatic in her lap.
+She had not moved in all this time!
+</p>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<p>
+Braine paced the apartment of the Countess Perigoff. From the living
+room to the boudoir and back, fully twenty times. From the divan Olga
+watched him nervously. He was like a tiger, fresh in captivity. All
+at once he paused in front of her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do you realize what that mere chit did?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I do."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Planned to the minute. We had her; seven of us; doors locked, and all
+that. No weeping, no wailing; I could not understand then, but I do
+now. It's in the blood. Hargreave was as peaceful as a St. Bernard
+dog till you cornered him, and then he was a lion. Oh, the devil!
+Slipped out of our fingers like an eel. And across the street, Jones
+in a racer! I never paid any particular attention to Jones, but from
+now on I shall. The girl may or may not know where the money is, but
+Jones does, Jones does! Two men shall watch. Felton on the street and
+Orloff from the windows of the deserted house. With opera glasses he
+will be able to take note of all that happens in the house during the
+day. He will be able to see the girl's room. And that's the important
+point. It was a good plan, little woman; and it would have been plain
+sailing if only we had remembered that the girl was Hargreave's
+daughter. Be very careful hereafter when you call on her. A night
+like this will have made her suspicious of every one. Our hope lies
+with you. Anything on your mind?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes. Why not insert a personal in the <i>Herald</i>?" She drew some
+writing paper toward her and scribbled a few words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He read: "Florence&mdash;the hiding place is discovered. Remove it to a
+more secret spot at once. S.H."&mdash;He laughed and shook his head. "I'm
+afraid that will never do."
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-067"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-067.jpg" alt="HE READ ... FLORENCE ... THE HIDING-PLACE IS DISCOVERED" />
+<br />
+HE READ ... FLORENCE ... THE HIDING-PLACE IS DISCOVERED
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If she reads it, Jones will. The man with the opera glasses may see
+something. There's a chance Jones might become worried."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, we'll give it a chance."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was midnight when he made his departure. As he stepped into the
+street, he glanced about cautiously. On the corner he saw a policeman
+swinging his night stick. Otherwise the street was deserted. Braine
+proceeded jauntily down the street.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And yet, from the darkened doors of the house across the way, the
+figure of a man emerged and stood contemplating the windows of the
+Perigoff apartment. Suddenly the lights went out. The watcher made no
+effort to follow Braine. The knowledge he was after did not
+necessitate any such procedure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of course, Florence read the "personal." She took the newspaper at
+once to Jones, who smiled grimly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You see, I trust you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And so long as you continue to trust me no harm will befall you. You
+were left in my care by your father. I am to guard you at the expense
+of my life. Last night's affair was a miracle. The next time you will
+not find it so easy to escape."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nor did she.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There will be no next time," gravely. "But I am going to ask you a
+direct question. Is my father alive?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The butler's brow puckered. "I have promised to say nothing, one way
+or the other."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why do you laugh?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I laugh because if he were dead there would be no earthly reason for
+your not saying so at once. But I hate money, the name of it, the
+sound of it, the sight of it. It is at the bottom of all wars and
+crimes. I despise it!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The root of all evil. Yet it performs many noble deeds. But never
+mind the money. Let us give our attention to this personal. Doubtless
+it originated in the same mind which conceived the letter. Your father
+would never have inserted such a personal. What! Give his enemies a
+chance to learn his secret? No. On the other hand, I want you to show
+this personal to all you meet to-day, Susan, the reporter, to
+everybody. Talk about it. Say that you wonder what you shall do.
+Trust no one with your real thoughts."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Not even you, Mr. Jones," thought the girl as she nodded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And tell them that you showed it to me and that I appeared worried."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That night there was a meeting of the organization called the Black
+Hundred. Braine asked if any one knew what the Hargreave butler looked
+like.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-069"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-069.jpg" alt="THAT NIGHT THERE WAS A MEETING OF THE ORGANIZATION" />
+<br />
+THAT NIGHT THERE WAS A MEETING OF THE ORGANIZATION
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I had a glimpse of him the other night; but being unprepared, I might
+not recognize him again."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vroon described Jones minutely. Braine could almost see the portrait.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Vroon, that memory of yours is worth a lot of money," was his only
+comment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I hope it will be worth more soon."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I believe I'll be able to recognize Mr. Jones if I see him. Who is he
+and what is he?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He has been with Hargreave for fourteen years. There was a homicidal
+case in which Jones was active. Hargreave saved him. He is faithful
+and uncommunicative. Money will not touch him. If he does know where
+that million is, hot irons could not make him own up to it. The only
+way is to watch him, follow him, wait for the moment when he'll grow
+careless. No man is always on his mettle; he lets up sooner or later."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He is being watched, as you know."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vroon nodded approvingly. "The captain of the tramp steamer <i>Orient</i>,
+by the way, was seen with a roll of money. He was in one of the
+water-front saloons, bragging how he had hoodwinked some one."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Did he say where he'd got the cash?" asked Braine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"They tried to pump him on that, but he shut up. Well, we have agreed
+that Felton shall watch from the street and Orloff from the window.
+Orloff will whistle if he sees Jones removing anything from any of the
+rooms. The rest will be left to Felton."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And, Felton, my friend," said Braine softly&mdash;he always spoke softly
+when he was in a deadly humor&mdash;"Felton, you slept on duty the other
+night. Hargreave stole up, consulted Jones, and got away after
+knocking me down. The next failure will mean short shift. Be warned!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I saw only you, sir. So help me. I was not asleep. I saw you run
+down the street after the taxicab. I did not see any one else."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine shrugged. "Remember what I said."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Felton bowed respectfully and made his exit. He wished in his soul
+that he might some day catch the master mind free of his eternal mask.
+It was an iron hand which ruled them and there were friends of his
+(Felton's) who had mysteriously vanished after a brief period of
+rebellion. The boss was a swell; probably belonged to clubs and
+society which he adroitly pilfered. The organization always had money.
+Whenever there was a desperate job to be undertaken, Vroon simply
+poured out the money necessary to promote it. Whenever Braine and
+Vroon became engaged in earnest conversation they talked Slav. Braine
+was never called by name here; the boss, simply that.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Well, ten per cent. of a million was a hundred thousand. This would be
+equally divided between the second ten of the Black Hundred. Another
+ten per cent. would go to eighty members; the balance would be divided
+between Vroon and the boss. But his soul rebelled at being ordered
+about like so much dirt under another man's feet. He would take his
+ten thousand and make the grand getaway.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next afternoon the countess called upon Florence. Nothing was said
+about the adventure, and this fact created a vague unrest in the
+scheming woman's mind. She realized that she must play her cards more
+carefully than ever. Not the least distrust must be permitted to enter
+the child's head. Once that happened good-by to the wonderful
+emeralds. Was it that she really craved the stone? Was it not rather
+a venom acquired from the knowledge that this child's mother had won
+what she herself, with all her cleverness, was not sure of&mdash;Braine's
+love? Did he really care for her or was she only the cats-paw to pluck
+his hot chestnuts from the fire?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Florence showed her the "personal," her vague doubts became
+instantly dissipated. The child would not have shown her the newspaper
+had there been any distrust on her part.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My child, your father is alive, then?" animatedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We don't know," sadly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why, I should say that this proves it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"On the contrary, it proves nothing of the sort, since I have yet to
+discover a treasure in this house. I have hunted in every nook,
+drawer; I've searched for panels, looked in trunks for false bottoms.
+Nothing, nothing! Ah, if I could only find it!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And what would you do with it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Take it at once to some bank and offer the whole of it for the safe
+return of my father, every penny of it. I don't know what to do, which
+way to turn," tears gathering in her eyes and they were genuine tears,
+too. "There are millions in stocks and bonds and I can not touch a
+penny of it because the legal documents have not been found. I can't
+even prove that I am his daughter, except for half an old bracelet, and
+my father's lawyers say that that would not hold in any court."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You were born in St. Petersburg, my dear. Have the embassy there look
+up the birth registers."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That would not put me into possession. Nothing but the return of my
+father will avail me. And there's a horrible thought always of my not
+being his real daughter."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There's no doubt in my mind. I have only to recall Katrina's face to
+know whose child you are. But what will you live on?" Here was a far
+greater mixup than she had calculated upon. Supposing after all it was
+only a resemblance, that the child was not Hargreave's, a substitute
+just to blind the Black Hundred? To keep them away from the true
+daughter? Her mind grew bewildered over such possibilities. The
+single and only way to settle all doubts was to make this child a
+prisoner. If she was Hargreave's true daughter he would come out of
+his hiding.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She heard Florence answering her question: "There is a sum of ten or
+twelve thousand in the Riverdale bank, under the control of my father's
+butler. After that is gone, I don't know what will happen to us, Susan
+and me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The door of Miss Farlow's will always be open to you, Florence,"
+replied Susan, with love in her eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This interesting conversation was interrupted by the advent of Norton.
+He was always dropping in during the late afternoon hours. Florence
+liked him for two reasons. One was that Jones trusted him to a certain
+extent and the other was that ... that she liked him. She finished
+this sentence in her heart defiantly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To-day he brought her a box of beautiful roses, and at the sight of
+them the countess smiled faintly. Set the wind in that quarter? She
+could have laughed. Here was her revenge against this meddler who took
+no particular notice of her while Florence was in the room. She would
+encourage him, poor grubbing newspaper writer, with his beggarly
+pittance! What chance had he of marrying this girl with millions
+within reach of her hand?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The peculiar thing about this was that Norton was entertaining the same
+thought at the same time: what earthly chance had he?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the second-story window of the house over the way there was a
+worried man. But when his glasses brought in range the true contents
+of the box he laughed sardonically. "This watching is getting my goat.
+I smell a rat every time I see a shadow." He wiped the lenses of his
+opera glasses and proceeded to roll a cigarette.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the countess and Norton went away Jones stole quietly up to
+Florence's room and threw up the curtain. Two round points of light
+flashed from the watcher's window, but the saturnine smile on Jones'
+lips was not observed. He went to the door, opened it cautiously, a
+hand to his ear. Then he closed the door, turned back the rug and
+removed a section of the flooring. Out of this cavity he raised a box.
+There was lettering on the lid; in fact, the name of its owner, Stanley
+Hargreave. Jones replaced the flooring, tucked the box under his arm
+and made his exit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man lounging in the shadow heard a faint whistle. It was the
+signal agreed upon. The man Felton ran across the street and boldly
+rang the bell. It was only then that Florence missed the ever present
+butler. She hesitated, then sent Susan to the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I must see Mr. Jones upon vitally important business."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He has gone out," said Susan, and very sensibly closed the door before
+Felton's foot succeeded in getting inside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was time to act. He ran around to the rear. The ladder convinced
+him that Jones had tricked him. He was wild with rage. He was over
+the wall in an instant. Away down the back street his eye discovered
+his man in full flight. He gave chase. As he came to the first corner
+he was nearly knocked over by a man coming the other way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who are you bumping into?" growled Felton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Not so fast, Felton!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who the devil are you?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The stranger made a sign which Felton instantly recognized.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Quick! What has happened?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jones has the million and is making his getaway. See him hiking
+toward the water front?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two men began to run.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There followed a thrilling chase. Jones engaged a motorboat and it was
+speeding seaward when the two pursuers arrived. They were not laggard.
+There was another boat and they made for it.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-074"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-074.jpg" alt="JONES ENGAGED A MOTOR BOAT" />
+<br />
+JONES ENGAGED A MOTOR BOAT
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A hundred if you overtake that boat," said Felton's strange companion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Felton eyed him thoughtfully. There was something familiar about that
+voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Great plumes of water shot up into the air. It did not prove a short
+race by any means. It took half an hour for the pursuer to overhaul
+the pursued.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is that Jones?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes." Felton fired his revolver into the air in hopes of terrifying
+Jones' engineer; but there was five hundred dangling before that
+individual's eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Let them get a little nearer," shouted the butler.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The engineer let down the speed a notch. The other boat crept up
+within twenty yards. Jones sought a perfect range. He would have to
+find this spot again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Surrender!" yelled Felton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In reply Jones raised the precious box and deliberately dropped it into
+the sea. Then he turned his automatic upon his pursuers and succeeded
+in setting their boat afire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All this within the space of an hour. During dinner that night (there
+was now a cook) Jones walked about the dining-table, rubbing his hands
+together from time to time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jones," said Florence, "why do you rub your hands like that?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Was I rubbing my hands, Miss Florence?" he asked innocently.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap06"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER VI
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+"Did you get the range?" asked the countess, when that night Braine
+recounted his adventure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Range!" he snarled. "My girl, haven't I just told you that I had to
+fight for my life? My boat was in flames. We had to swim for it till
+we were picked up by a Long Island barge tug. I don't know what became
+of the motorman. He must have headed straight for shore. And I'm glad
+he did. Otherwise he'd be howling for the price of another boat.
+Olga, for the first time I've had to let one of the boys have a look at
+my face. Doesn't know the name; but one of these days he'll stumble
+across it, and the result will be blackmail, unless I push him off into
+the dark. It was accidental."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The countess leaned forward, her hands tightly clinched.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But the box!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine made a gesture of despair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Leo, are you using any drug these days?"
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-076"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-076.jpg" alt="&quot;LEO, ARE YOU USING ANY DRUGS THESE DAYS?&quot;" />
+<br />
+&quot;LEO, ARE YOU USING ANY DRUGS THESE DAYS?&quot;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Don't make fun of me, Olga," impatiently. "Did you ever see me drink
+more than a pint of wine or smoke more than two cigars in an evening?
+Poor fools! What! Let my brain go into the wastebasket for the sake
+of an hour or so of exhilaration? No, and never will I! I'm keen
+about the gray matter I've got, and by the Lord Harry, I'm going to
+keep it. There's only one dope fiend in the Hundred, and he's one of
+the best decoys we have; so we let him have his coke whenever he really
+needs it. But this man Felton has seen my face. Some day he'll see it
+again, ask questions, and then..."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then what?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A burial at sea," he laughed. The laughter died swiftly as it came.
+"Threw it into eight hundred feet of water, on a bar where the sands
+are always shifting. He'll never find it, even if he took the range.
+He could not have got a decent one. The sun was dropping and the
+shadows were long. He threw the chest into the water and then began
+pegging away at us, cool as you please, and fired our tank."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It looks to me as if he had wasted his time."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That depends. Between you and me and the gatepost, I've a sneaking
+idea that this man Jones, whom nobody has given any particular
+attention, is a deep, clever man. He may have been honestly attempting
+to find a new hiding place; the advertisement in the newspaper may have
+drawn him. He may have thrown the box over in pure rage at seeing
+himself checkmated. Again, the whole thing may have been worked up for
+our benefit, a blind. But if that's the case, Jones has us on the hip,
+for we can't tell. But we can do what in all probability he expects
+we'll cease to do&mdash;watch him just as shrewdly as before."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Olga caught his hand and drew him down beside her. "I wasn't going to
+bother you to-night, but it may mean something vital."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What?" alertly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For reply she rose and walked over to the light button. She pressed it
+and the apartment became dark.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Come over to the window, quick!" She dragged him across the room.
+"Over the way, the house with the marble frontage."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A man emerged, lit a cigarette, and walked leisurely down the street.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No!" she cried, as Braine turned to make for the door doubtless with
+the intention of finding out who the man was. "Every night after you
+leave he appears."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Does he follow me?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No. And that's what bothered me at first. I believed he was watching
+some apartment above. But regularly when I turn out the lights he
+comes forth. So there's no doubt he watches you enter and takes note
+of your departure."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But doesn't follow me. That's odd. What the devil is his idea?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'd give a good deal to learn."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The shadow and the glowing cigarette disappeared around the corner, and
+the lights in the apartment were turned on again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He's gone. You really think he's watching me?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He is watching this apartment, I know that much."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And even at that moment the watcher was watching from his vantage
+behind the corner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Suspicious!" he murmured, tossing the cigarette into the gutter.
+"They're watching me for a change. I'll drop out. I know what I know.
+It's a great world. It's fine to be alive and kicking on top of it."
+He went on without haste and took the subway train for down-town.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is there any way I could get near him?" asked Braine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"To-morrow night you might leave by the janitor's entrance. I'll keep
+the lights on till you're outside. Then I'll turn them off and you can
+follow and learn who he is."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It's mighty important."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Don't scowl. At your age a wrinkle is apt to remain it you once get
+it started."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He laughed. "Wrinkles!" She could talk of wrinkles!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"They are more important than you think. Every morning I rub out the
+wrinkle I go to bed with."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I wish you could rub out the general stupidity which is wrinkling my
+brain. I've made three moves and failed in each. What's come over me?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Perhaps you've had too many successes. The wheel of chance is always
+turning around."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"May I smoke?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thanks. At least it proves you still have some consideration for me.
+You would smoke whether it was agreeable or not. But I like the odor
+of a good cigar. And it always helps you to think."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine lighted his cigar and began his customary pacing. At length he
+paused.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Suppose we have a real old-fashioned coaching party out to the old
+mansion we know about?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And what shall we do there?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Make the mansion, an enchanted castle where sometimes people who enter
+can't get out. Do you think you could get her to go?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I can try."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Olga, I must have that girl; and I must have her soon. Sometimes I
+find myself mightily puzzled over the whole thing. If Hargreave is
+alive, why doesn't he turn up now that it's practically known that his
+daughter presides over his household? I might understand it if I
+didn't know that Hargreave is really afraid of nothing. Where is the
+man with the five thousand, picked up at sea? What was the reason for
+Jones carrying that box out in broad daylight? Who is the chap
+watching across the street? Sometimes I believe in my soul&mdash;if I have
+one!&mdash;that Hargreave is playing with us, playing! Well," flinging the
+half consumed cigar into the grate, "the Black Hundred always goes
+forward, win or lose, and never forgets."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We are a fine pair!" said the woman bitterly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We are exactly what fate intended us to be. They wrote you down in
+the book as a beautiful body with a crooked mind. They wrote me down
+as the devil, doomed to roam the earth's top till I'm killed."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Killed?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why, yes. I'm not the kind of chap who dies in bed, surrounded by the
+weeping members of the family, doctor, nurse, and priest. I'm a
+scoundrel; but it has this saving grace, I enjoy being the scoundrel.
+Now, I'm going up to the club. There's nothing like a game of
+billiards or chess to smooth that wrinkle which seems to worry you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the great newspaper office there was a mighty racket. Midnight
+always means pandemonium in the city room of a metropolitan daily.
+Copy boys were rushing to and fro, messengers and printers with sticky
+galleys in their hands; reporters were banging away at their
+typewriters, and intermingling you could hear the ceaseless
+clickety-click from the telegraph room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The managing editor came out of his office and approached the desk of
+the night city editor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Editorial page gone down?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Twenty minutes ago," said the night city editor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I wanted a stick on that Panama rumpus."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Too late."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where's Jim Norton?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"At the chamber of commerce banquet. The major is going to throw a
+bomb into the enemy's camp."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Nothing on the Hargreave stuff?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No. Guess I'd better put that in the cubbyhole. He's dead."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No will found yet?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Not a piece as big as a postage stamp."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That will leave the girl in a tough place. No will, no birth
+certificate; and, worst of all, no photograph of the old man himself.
+I don't see why Jim sidestepped this affair. He is the only man in
+town who knew anything about Hargreave."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He hasn't given it up; but he wants to cover it on his own, turn the
+yarn over when he's got it, no false alarms."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ah! So that's the game?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes; and Jim is the sort every paper needs. When the time comes the
+story turns up, if there is one. Here he is now. Looks like an actor
+in the fourth act of a drama. Good-looking chap, though."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton came in through the outer gates. He was in evening clothes, top
+hat. A dead cigarette dangled between his lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How much do you want?" asked the night city editor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Column and a half."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Off with your glad rags!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Anything good?" asked the managing editor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The lid has been jammed on tight. No wine in any restaurant after one
+o'clock. There'll be a roundup of every gunman in town."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Good work! Go to it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was one o'clock when Norton turned in his last sheet of copy and
+started for home. Just outside the entrance to the building a man with
+a slouch hat drawn down over his eyes stepped forward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Mr. Norton?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes." Norton stepped back suspiciously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The other chuckled, raised and lowered his hat swiftly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Good lord!" murmured the reporter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Will you take a ride with me in a taxi?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"All the way to Syracuse, if you say so. Well, I'll be tinker d&mdash;d!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No names, please!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What took place in that taxicab was never generally known. But at ten
+o'clock the next morning Norton surprised the elevator boy by going
+out. Norton proceeded down-town to the national bank, where he
+deposited $5,000 in bills of large denominations. The teller had some
+difficulty in counting them. They stuck together and retained the
+sodden appearance of money recently submerged in water.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<p>
+Florence was delighted at the idea of a coaching party. Often during
+her schoolgirl days she had seen the fashionable coaches go careening
+along the road, with the sharp, clear note of the bugle rising above
+the thunder of hoofs and rattling of wheels. Jones was not
+enthusiastic; neither was he a killjoy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But you are to go along, too," said Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I, Miss Florence?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The countess invited you especially. You will go with a hamper."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ah, in my capacity as butler; very good, Miss Florence." To her he
+gave no sign of his secret great satisfaction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The hour arrived, and the gay party bowled away. They wound in and out
+of the streets toward the country to the crack of the whip and the
+blare of the horn. Florence's enjoyment would have been perfect had it
+not been for the absence of Norton. Why hadn't he been invited? She
+did not ask because she did not care to disclose to the countess her
+interest in the reporter. They were nearing the limits of the city,
+when the coach was forced to take a sharp turn to avoid an automobile
+in trouble. The man puttering at the engine raised his head. It was
+Norton, and Florence waved her hand vigorously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A coaching party," he murmured; "and your Uncle James was not invited!
+Oh, very well!" He laughed, and suddenly grew serious. It would not
+hurt to find out where that coach was going.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He set to work savagely, located the trouble, righted it, and set off
+for the Hargreave home. He found Susan and bombarded her with
+questions which to Susan came with the rapidity of rain upon the roof.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"So Jones went along?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"In his capacity of butler only."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton smiled. "Well, I'll take a jaunt out there myself. You are
+sure of the location?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, good-by. I'll go as a waiter, since they wouldn't invite me.
+I'm one of the best little waiters you ever heard of; and all things
+come to him who waits."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What a pleasant, affable young man he was! thought Susan as she watched
+him jump into the car and go flying up the street.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones was a good deal surprised when Norton turned up at the old
+Chilton manor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What made you come here dressed like this?" the butler demanded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'm a suspicious duffer; maybe that's the reason."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do you know anything?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, no; I can't say that I do. But, hang it, I just had to come out
+here."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Maybe it's just as well you did," said Jones moodily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I know this place. The housekeeper used to be my nurse, and if she is
+still on the job she may be of service to us. You don't think they'll
+question or recognize me?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hardly. I'll put in a word for you. I'll say I sent for you, not
+knowing if we had enough servants to take care of the luncheon."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And now I'll go and hunt up Meg."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sure enough, his old nurse was still in charge of the house; and when
+her "baby" disclosed his identity she all but fell upon his neck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But what are you doing here, dressed up as a waiter?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It's a little secret, Meg. I wasn't invited, and the truth is I'm
+very desperately in love with the young lady in whose honor this
+coaching party is being given. And ... maybe she's in danger."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Danger? What about?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The Lord only knows. But show me about the house. I've not been here
+in so long I've forgotten the run of it. I remember one room with the
+secret panel and another with a painting that turned. Have they
+changed them?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No; it is just the same here as it used to be. Come along and I'll
+show you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton inspected the rooms carefully, stowing away in his mind every
+detail. He might be worrying about nothing; but so many strange things
+had happened that it was better to be on the side of caution than on
+the side of carelessness. He left the house and ran across Jones
+carrying a basket of wine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Here, Norton; take this to the party. I want to reconnoiter."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"All right, m'lud! Say, Jones, how much do you think I'd earn at this
+job?" comically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Get along with you, Mr. Norton. It may be the time to laugh, and then
+it may not."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'm going back into the house and hide behind a secret panel. I've
+got my revolver. You go to the stables and take a try at my car; see
+if she works smoothly. We may have to do some hiking. Where is the
+countess in this?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Leave that to me, Mr. Norton," said the butler with his grim smile.
+"Be off; they are moving back toward the house."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Norton carried the basket around to the lawn, where it was taken
+from his hands by the regular servant. He sighed as he saw Florence,
+laughing and chatting with a man who was a stranger and whom he heard
+addressed as count. Some friend of the countess, no doubt. Where was
+all this tangle going to end? He wished he knew. And what a yarn he
+was going to write some day! It would read like one of Gaboriau's
+tales. He turned away to wander idly about the grounds, when beyond a
+clump of cedars he saw three or four men conversing slowly. He got as
+near as possible, for when three or four men put their heads together
+and whisper animatedly, it usually means a poker game or something
+worse. He caught a phrase or two as they came down the wind, and then
+he knew that the vague suspicion that had brought him out here had been
+set in motion by fate. He heard "Florence" and "the old drawing room;"
+and that was enough.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He scurried about for Jones. It was pure luck that he had had old Meg
+show him through the house, otherwise he would have forgotten all about
+the secret panel in the wall and the painting. Jones shrugged
+resignedly. Were these men of the countess' party? Norton couldn't
+say.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-086"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-086.jpg" alt="THE SECRET PANEL" />
+<br />
+THE SECRET PANEL
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton made his hiding place in safety; and by and by he could hear the
+guests moving about in the room. Then all sounds ceased for a while.
+A door closed sharply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No; here you must stay, young lady," said a man's voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What do you mean, sir?" demanded the beloved voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It means that no one will return to this room and that you will not be
+missed until it is too late."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sound of voices stopped abruptly, and something like scuffling
+ensued. Later Norton heard the back of a chair strike the panel and
+some one sat heavily upon it. He waited perhaps five minutes; then he
+gently slid back the panel. Florence sat bound and gagged under his
+very eyes. It was but the work of a moment to liberate her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is I, Jim. Do not speak or make the least noise. Follow me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Greatly astonished, Florence obeyed; and the panel slipped back into
+place. The room behind the secret panel had barred windows. To
+Florence it appeared to be a real prison.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How did you get here?" she asked breathlessly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Something told me to follow you. And something is always going to
+tell me to follow you, Florence."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She pressed his hand. It was to her as if one of those book heroes had
+stepped out of a book; only book heroes always had tremendous fortunes
+and did not have to work for a living. Oddly enough, she was not
+afraid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who was the man?" he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The Count Norfeldt. Some one has imposed upon the countess."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do you think so?" with a strange look in his eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What do you mean?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Nothing just now. The idea is to get out of here just as quickly as
+we can. See this painting?" He touched a spot in the wall and the
+painting slowly swung out like a door. "Come; we make our escape to
+the side lawn from here."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the stable they were confronted with the knowledge that Norton's car
+was out of commission; Jones could do nothing with it. Then Norton
+suggested that he make an effort to commandeer the limousine of the
+countess; but there were men about, so the limousine was out of the
+question.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Horses!" whispered Jones. "There are several saddle horses, already
+saddled. How about these people, the owners?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, they are beyond reproach. They have doubtless been imposed upon.
+But let us get aboard first. There will be time to talk later. I'll
+have to do some explaining, taking these nags off like this. We won't
+have to ride out in front where the picnickers are. There's a lane
+back of the stable, and a slight detour brings us back into the main
+road."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The three mounted and clattered away. To Florence it had the air of a
+prank. She was beginning to have such confidence in these two
+inventive men that she felt as if she was never going to be afraid any
+more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the Countess Olga saw the three horses it was an effort not to fly
+into a rage. But secretly she warned her people, who presently gave
+chase in the limousine, while she prattled and jested and laughed with
+her company, who were quite unaware that a drama was being enacted
+right under their very noses. The countess, while she acted superbly,
+tore her handkerchief into shreds. There was something sinister in the
+way all their plans fell through at the very moment of consummation;
+and that night she determined to ask Braine to withdraw from this
+warfare, which gradually decimated their numbers without getting
+anywhere toward the goal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones shouted that the limousine was tearing down the road. Something
+must be done to stop it. He suggested that he drop behind, leave his
+horse, and take a chance at potting a tire from the shrubbery at the
+roadside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Keep going. Don't stop, Norton, till you are back in town. I'll
+manage to take good care of myself."
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap07"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER VII
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+When all three finally met at the Hargreave home Florence suddenly took
+Jones by the shoulders and kissed him lightly on the cheek. Jones
+started back, pale and disturbed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton laughed. He did not feel the slightest twinge of jealousy, but
+he was eaten up with envy, as the old wives say.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You are wondering if I suspect the Countess Perigoff?" said Jones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am." This man Jones was developing into a very remarkable
+character. The reporter found himself side glancing at the thin, keen
+face of this resourceful butler. The lobe of the man's left ear came
+within range. Norton reached for a cigarette, but his hands shook as
+he lit it. There was a peculiar little scar in the center of the lobe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well," said Jones, "I can find no evidence that she has been concerned
+in any of these affairs."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You are suspicious?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Of everybody," looking boldly into the reporter's eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Of me?" smiling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Even of myself sometimes."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Conversation dropped entirely after this declaration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You're a taciturn sort of chap."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Am I?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You are. But an agreement is an agreement, and while I'd like to
+print this story, I'll not. We newspaper men seldom break our word."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones held out his hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Sometimes I wish I'd started life right," said the reporter gloomily.
+"A newspaper man is generally improvident. He never looks ahead for
+to-morrow. What with my special articles to the magazines, I earn
+between four and five thousand the year; and I've never been able to
+save a cent."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Perhaps you've never really tried," replied Jones, with a glance at
+his companion. It was a good face, strong in outline; a little
+careworn, perhaps, but free from any indications of dissipation. "If I
+had begun life as you did, I'd have made real and solid use of the
+great men I met. I'd have made financiers help me to invest my
+earnings, or savings, little as they might be. And to-day I'd be
+living on the income."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You never can tell. Perhaps a woman might have made you think of
+those things; but if you had remained unattached up to thirty-one, as I
+have, the thought of saving might never have entered your head. A man
+in my present condition, financially, has no right to think of
+matrimony."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It might be the saving of you if you met and married the right woman."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But the right woman might be heiress to millions. And a poor devil
+like me could not marry a girl with money and hang on to his
+self-respect."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"True. But there are always exceptions to all rules in life, except
+those regarding health. A healthy man is a normal man, and a normal
+man has no right to remain single. You proved yourself a man this
+afternoon, considering that you did not know I occupied the wheel seat.
+Come to think it over, you really saved the day. You gave me the
+opportunity of steering straight for the police station. Well,
+good-by."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Queer duck!" mused the reporter as, after telephoning, he headed for
+his office. Queer duck, indeed! What a game it was going to be! And
+this man Jones was playing it like a master. It did not matter that
+some one else laid down the rules; it was the way in which they were
+interpreted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine heard of the failure. The Black Hundred was finding its stock
+far below par value. Four valuable men locked up in the Tombs awaiting
+trial, to say nothing of the seven gunmen gathered in at the old
+warehouse. Braine began to suspect that his failures were less due to
+chance than to calculation, that at last he had encountered a mind
+which anticipated his every move. He would have recognized this fact
+earlier had it not been that revenge had temporarily blinded him. The
+spirit of revenge never makes for mental clarity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a meeting that night of the Black Hundred. Four men were
+told off, and they drew their chairs up to Vroon's table for
+instructions. Braine sat at Vroon's elbow. These four men composed
+the most dangerous quartet in New York City. They were as daring as
+they were desperate. They were the men who held up bank messengers and
+got away with thousands. They had learned to swoop down upon their
+victims as the hawk swoops down upon the heron. The newspapers
+referred to them as the "auto bandits," and the men took a deal of
+pride in the furore they had created.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-091"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-091.jpg" alt="FOUR MEN WERE TOLD OFF" />
+<br />
+FOUR MEN WERE TOLD OFF
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vroon went over the Hargreave case minutely; he left no detail
+unexplained. Bluntly and frankly, the daughter of Stanley Hargreave
+must be caught and turned over to the care of the Black Hundred. It
+must be quick action. Four valuable members were in the Tombs. They
+might or might not weaken under pressure. For the first time in its
+American career the organization stood facing actual peril; and its one
+possible chance of salvation lay in the fact that no one's face was
+known to his neighbor. He, Vroon, and the boss alone knew who and what
+each man was. But the plans, the ramifications of the organization
+might become public property; and that would mean an end to an
+exceedingly profitable business.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The daughter of Hargreave rode horseback early every morning. She
+sought the country road. She was invariably attended by the riding
+master of a school near by.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You four will make your own plans."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If she should be injured?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Avoid it if possible."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We have a free hand?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Absolutely."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We risk a bad fall from her horse if it's a spirited one."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Pretend a breakdown in the road," interpolated Braine. "As they
+approach, draw and order them to dismount. That method will prevent
+any accident."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We'll plan it somehow. It looks easy."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Nothing is easy where that girl is concerned. A thousand eyes seem to
+be watching her slightest move."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We shan't leave anything to chance. How many days will you give us?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Seven. A failure, mind you, will prove unhealthy to all concerned,"
+with a menace which made the four stir uneasily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The telephone rang. Braine reached for the receiver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A man just entered the Hargreave house at the rear. Come at once,"
+was the message.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is your car outside?" Braine asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We are never without it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then let us be off. No one will stop us for speeding on a side
+street."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fourteen minutes by the clock brought the car to a stand at the curb a
+few houses below the Hargreave home. The men got out. The watcher ran
+up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He is still inside," he whispered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Good! Spread out. If any one leaves that house, catch him. If he
+runs too fast, shoot. We can beat the police."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man obeyed, and the watcher ran back to his post. He was
+desperately hoping the affair would terminate to-night. He was growing
+weary of this eternal vigilance; and it was only his fear of the man
+known as the boss that kept him at his post. He wanted a night to
+carouse in, to be with the boys.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man for whom they were lying in wait was seen presently to creep
+cautiously round the side of the house. He hugged a corner and paused.
+They could see the dim outline of his body. The light in the street
+back of the grounds almost made a silhouette of him. By and by, as if
+assured that the coast was clear, he stole down to the street.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Halt!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Instantly the prowler took to his heels. Two shots rang out. The man
+was seen to stop, stagger, and then go on desperately.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He's hit!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By the time the men reached the corner they heard the rumble of a
+motor. One dashed back to the car they had left standing at the curb.
+He made quick work of the job, but he was not quick enough. Still,
+they gave chase. They saw the car turn toward the city. But,
+unfortunately for the success of the chase, several automobiles passed,
+going into town and leaving it. Checkmate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine was keen enough to-night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He is hit; whether badly or not remains to be seen. We can find that
+out. Drive to the nearest drug store and get a list of hospitals.
+It's a ten to one shot that we land him somewhere among the hospitals."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But they searched the hospitals in vain. None of them had that night
+received a shooting case, nor had they heard one reported. The man had
+been unmistakably hit. He would not have dared risk the loss of time
+for a bit of play-acting. Evidently he had kept his head and sought
+his lodgings. To call up doctors would be utter folly; for it would
+take a week for a thorough combing. This was the second time the man
+had got away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Perhaps I'm to blame," admitted Braine. "I should have advised Miles
+to stalk him and pot him if he got the chance. There's a master mind
+working somewhere back of all this, and it's time I woke up to the
+fact. But you," turning to the auto bandits, "you men have your
+instructions. More than that, you have been given a free rein. See
+that you make good, or by the Lord Harry! I'll break the four of you
+like pipestems."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We haven't had a failure yet," spoke up one of the men, more
+courageous than his companions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You are not holding up a bank messenger this trip. Remember that.
+Drive me as far as Columbus Circle. Leave me on the side street,
+between the lights, so I can take off this mask."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Later Braine sauntered into Pabst's and ordered a light supper. This
+night's work, more than anything else, brought home to him the fact
+that his luck was changing. For years he had proceeded with his shady
+occupations without encountering any memorable failure. He moved in
+the high world, quite unsuspected. He had written books, given
+lectures, been made a lion of, all the while laughing in his sleeve at
+the gullibility of human nature. But within the last two weeks he had
+received serious checks. From now on he must move with the utmost
+caution. Some one was playing his own game, waging warfare unseen. A
+battle of wits? So be it; but Braine intended to play with rough wits,
+and he wasn't going to care which way the sword cut.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He hated Stanley Hargreave with all the hatred of his soul; the hatred
+of a man balked in love. And the man was alive, defying him; alive
+somewhere in this city this very night, with a bullet under his skin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is everything satisfactory, sir?" he heard the head waiter say.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Satisfactory?" Braine repeated blankly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes, sir. You struck the table as though displeased."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh!" Then Braine laughed relievedly. "If I struck the table, it was
+done unconsciously. I was thinking."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Beg pardon, sir. Anything else, sir?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No. Bring me the check."
+</p>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<p>
+"Your master gives riding lessons?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The groom who had led the horse back from Hargreave's eyed his
+questioner rather superciliously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes." The groom fondled the animal's legs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How much is it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Twenty dollars for a ticket of five rides. The master is the fashion
+up here. He doesn't cater to any but the best families."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Pretty steep. Who was that young lady riding this morning with your
+master?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That's the girl all the newspapers have been talking about," answered
+the groom importantly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Actress?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Actress! I should say not. That young woman is the daughter of
+Stanley Hargreave, the millionaire who was lost at sea. And it won't
+be long before she puts her finger in a pie of four or five millions.
+If you want any rides, you'll have to talk it over with the boss. He
+may or may not take any more rides. You'd probably have to ride in the
+afternoon, anyhow, as every nag is out in the morning."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where's the most popular road?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Toward the park; but Miss Hargreave always goes along the riverside
+road. She doesn't like strangers about."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, I see. Well, I'll drop in this afternoon and see your master.
+They say that riding is good for a torpid liver. Have a cigar?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thanks."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The groom proceeded into the stables and the affable stranger took
+himself off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A free rein; they could work it to suit themselves. There wasn't the
+least obstacle in the way. On the face of it, it appeared to be the
+simplest job they had yet undertaken. To get rid of the riding master
+in some natural way after he and the girl had started. It was like
+falling off a log.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Susan," said Florence, as she came into breakfast after her
+exhilarating ride, "did you hear pistol shots last night?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I heard some noise, but I was so sleepy I didn't try to figure out
+what it was."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Did you, Jones?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes, Miss Florence. The shots came from the street. A policeman came
+running up later and said he saw two automobiles on the run. But
+evidently there wasn't anybody hurt. One has to be careful at night
+nowadays. There are pretty bad men abroad. Did you enjoy the ride?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Very much. But there were some spots of blood on the walk near the
+corner."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Blood?" Jones caught the back of a chair to steady himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes. So some one was hurt. Oh, let's leave this place!" impulsively.
+"Let us go back to Miss Farlow's. You could find a place in the
+village, Jones. But if I stay here much longer in this state of unrest
+I shall lose faith in everything and everybody. Whoever my father's
+enemies are, they do not lack persistence. They have made two attempts
+against my liberty, and sooner or later they will succeed. I keep
+looking over my shoulder all the time. If I hear a noise I jump."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Miss Florence, if I thought it wise, you should be packed off to Miss
+Farlow's this minute. But not an hour of the day or night passes
+without this house being watched. I seldom see anybody about. I can
+only sense the presence of a watcher. At Miss Farlow's you would be
+far more like a prisoner than here. I could not accompany you. I am
+forbidden to desert this house."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My father's orders?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones signified neither one way nor the other. He merely gazed
+stolidly at the rug.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That blood!" She sprang from her chair, horrified. "It was his! He
+was here last night and they shot him! Oh!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There, there, Miss Florence! The man was only slightly wounded. He's
+where they never will look for him." Then Jones continued, as with an
+effort: "Trust me, Miss Florence. It would not pay to run away. The
+whole affair would be repeated elsewhere. We might go to the other end
+of the world, but it would not serve us in the least. It is not a
+question of escape, but of who shall vanquish the other. There is
+nothing to do but remain here and fight, fight, fight. We have put
+four of them in the Tombs, to say nothing of the gunmen. That is what
+we must do&mdash;put them in a safe place, one by one, till we reach the
+master. Then only may we breathe in safety. But if they watch, so do
+we. There is never a moment when help is not within reach, no matter
+where you go. So long as you do not deceive me, no real harm shall
+befall you. Don't cry. Be your father's daughter, as I am his
+servant."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am very unhappy!" And Florence threw her arms around Susan and laid
+her head upon her friend's shoulder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Poor child!" Susan, however, recognized the wisdom of Jones'
+statements. They were safest here.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The morning rides continued. To the girl, who loved the open, it was
+glorious fun. Those mad gallops along the roads, the smell of earth
+and sea, the tingle in the blood, were the second best moments of the
+day. The first? She invariably blushed when she considered what these
+first best moments were. He was a brave young man, good to look at,
+witty, and always cheerful. Why shouldn't she like him? Even Jones
+liked him&mdash;Jones, who didn't seem to like anybody. It did not matter
+whether he was wise or not; a worldly point of view was farthest from
+her youthful thoughts. It was her own affair; her own heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Five days later, as she and the riding master were cantering along the
+road, enjoying every bit of it, they heard the beat of hoofs behind.
+They drew up and turned. A rider was approaching them at a run. It
+was the head groom. The man stopped his horse in a cloud of dust.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Sir, the stables are on fire."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Fire?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All the riding master's savings were invested in the stables. The fact
+that he had solemnly promised never to leave Florence alone, and that
+he had accepted a generous bonus slipped from his mind at the thought
+of fire, a terrible word to any horseman. He wheeled and started off
+at breakneck speed, his head groom clattering behind him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence naturally wondered which of two courses to pursue: follow
+them, when she would be perfectly helpless to aid them, or continue the
+ride and save at least one horse from the terror of seeing flames. She
+chose the latter. But she did not ride with the earlier zest. She
+felt depressed. She loved horses, and the thought of them dying in
+those wooden stables was horrifying.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fire, however, proved to be incipient. But it was plainly
+incendiary. Some one had set fire to the stables with a purpose in
+view. Norton recognized this fact almost as soon as the firemen. He
+had come this morning with the idea of surprising Florence. He was
+going out on horseback to join her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His spine grew suddenly cold. A trap! She had been left alone on the
+road! He ran over to the garage, secured a car, and went humming out
+toward the river road. A trap, and only by the sheerest luck had he
+turned up in time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meantime Florence was walking her mount slowly. For once the scenery
+passed unobserved. She was deeply engrossed with thoughts, some of
+which were happy and some of which were sad. If only her father could
+be with her she would be the happiest girl alive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was brought out of her revery by the sight of a man staggering
+along the road ahead of her. Finally he plunged upon his face in the
+road. Like the tender-hearted girl she was, she stopped, dismounted,
+and ran to the fallen man to give him aid. She suddenly found her
+wrists clasped in two hands like iron. The man rose to his feet,
+smiling evilly. She struggled wildly but futilely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Better be sensible," he said. "I am stronger than you are. And I
+don't wish to hurt you. Walk on ahead of me. It will be utterly
+useless to scream or cry out. You can see for yourself that we are in
+a deserted part of the road. If you will promise to act sensibly I
+shan't lay a hand on you. Do you see that hut yonder, near the fork in
+the road? We'll stop there. Now, march!"
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-100"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-100.jpg" alt="&quot;BETTER BE SENSIBLE,&quot; HE SAID" />
+<br />
+&quot;BETTER BE SENSIBLE,&quot; HE SAID
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She dropped her handkerchief, later her bracelet, and finally her crop,
+in hope that these slight clues might bring her help. She knew that
+Jones would hear of the fire, and, finding that she had not returned
+with the riding master, would immediately start out in pursuit. She
+was beginning to grow very fond of Jones, who never spoke unless spoken
+to, who was always at hand, faithful and loyal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From afar came the low rumble of a motor. She wondered if her captor
+heard it. He did, but his ears tricked him into believing that it came
+from another direction. Eventually they arrived at the hut, and
+Florence was forced to enter. The man locked the door and waited
+outside for the automobile which he was expecting. He was rather
+dumfounded when he saw that it was coming from the city, not going
+toward it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was Norton. The riderless horse told him enough; the handkerchief
+and bracelet and crop led him straight for the hut.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man before the hut realized by this time that he had made a
+mistake. He attempted to re-enter the hut and prepare to defend it
+till his companions hove in sight. But Florence, recognizing Norton,
+held the door with all her strength. The man snarled and turned toward
+Norton, only to receive a smashing blow on the jaw.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton flung open the door. "Into the car, Florence! There's another
+car coming up the road. Hurry!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was not a long chase. The car of the auto bandits, looking like an
+ordinary taxicab, was a high-powered machine, and it gained swiftly on
+Norton's four-cylinder. The reporter waited grimly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Keep your head down!" he warned Florence. "I'm going to take a pot at
+their tires when they get within range. If I miss I'm afraid we'll
+have trouble. Under no circumstances attempt to leave this car. Here
+they come!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He suddenly leaned back and fired. It was only chance. The manner in
+which the cars were lurching made a poor target for a marksman even of
+the first order. Chance directed Norton's first bullet into the right
+forward tire, which exploded. Going at sixty-odd miles an hour, they
+could not stop the car in time to avoid fatality. The car careened
+wildly and plunged down the embankment into the river.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence covered her eyes with her hands, and, quite unconscious of
+what he was doing, Norton put his arms around her.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap08"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER VIII
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+After the affair of the auto bandits&mdash;three of whom were killed&mdash;a lull
+followed. If you're a sailor you know what kind of a lull I
+mean&mdash;blue-black clouds down the southwest horizon, the water crinkly,
+the booms wabbling. Suddenly a series of "accidents" began to happen
+to Norton. At first he did not give the matter much thought. The safe
+which fell almost at his feet and crashed through the sidewalk merely
+induced him to believe he was lucky. At another time an automobile
+came furiously around a corner while he was crossing the street, and
+only amazing agility saved him from bodily hurt. The car was out of
+sight when he thought to recall the number.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then came the jolt in the subway. Only a desperate grab by one of the
+guards saved him from being crushed to death. Even then he thought
+nothing. But when a new box of cigarettes arrived and he tried one and
+found it strangely perfumed, and, upon further analysis, found it to
+contain a Javanese narcotic, a slow but sure death, he became wide
+awake enough. They were after him. He began to walk carefully, to
+keep in public places as often as he possibly could.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was not really afraid of death, but he did abhor the thought of its
+coming up from behind. Except for the cigarettes they were all
+"accidents;" he could not have proved anything before a jury of his
+intimate friends.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He never entered an elevator without scrupulous care. He never passed
+under coverings over the sidewalks where construction was going on.
+Still, careful as he was, death confronted him once more. It was his
+habit to have his coffee and rolls&mdash;he rarely ate anything more for his
+breakfast&mdash;set down outside his door every morning. The coffee, being
+in a silver thermos bottle, kept its heat for hours. When he took the
+stopper out and poured forth a cup it looked oddly black, discolored.
+It is quite probable that had there been no series of "accidents" he
+would have drunk a cup&mdash;and died in mortal agony. It contained
+bichloride of mercury.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Very quietly he set about to make inquiries. This was really becoming
+serious. In the kitchens clown-stairs nothing could be learned. The
+maid had set the thermos bottle before the door at ten-thirty. Norton
+had opened the door at one-thirty&mdash;three hours after. The outlook was
+not the cheerfulest. He knew perfectly well why all these things
+"happened;" he had interfered with the plans of the scoundrels who were
+making every possible move to kidnap Florence Hargreave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One afternoon he paid Florence a visit. Of course he told her nothing.
+They had become secretly engaged the day after he had rescued her from
+the auto bandits. They were secretly engaged because Florence wanted
+it so. For once Jones suspected nothing. Why should he? He had
+troubles enough. As a matter of fact, Norton was afraid of him in the
+same sense as a boy is afraid of a policeman.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-104"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-104.jpg" alt="THEY HAD BECOME SECRETLY ENGAGED" />
+<br />
+THEY HAD BECOME SECRETLY ENGAGED
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But on this day, when the time came, he accosted the butler and drew
+him into the pantry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jones, they are after me now."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You? Explain."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton briefly recounted the deliberate attempts against his life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You see, I'm not liar enough to say that I'm not worried. I am,
+devilishly worried. I'm not worth any ransom. I'm in the way, and
+they seem determined to put me out of it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"To any other man I would say travel. But to you I say when you leave
+your rooms don't go where you first thought you would&mdash;that is, some
+usual haunt. They'll be everywhere, near your restaurants, your clubs,
+your office. You're a methodical young man; become erratic. Keep away
+from here for at least three days, but always call me up by telephone
+some time during the day. Never under any circumstance, unless I send
+for you, come here at night. Only one man now watches the house during
+the day, but five are prowling around after dark. They might have
+instructions to shoot you on sight. I can't spare you just at present,
+Mr. Norton. You've been a godsend; and if it seems that sometimes I
+did not trust you fully it was because I did not care to drag you in
+too deep."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Deep? Norton thought of Florence and smiled inwardly. Could anybody
+be in deeper than he was? Once it was on the tip of his tongue to
+confess his love for Florence, but the gravity of Jones' countenance
+was an obstacle to such move; it did not invite it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To be sure, Jones had no real authority to say what Florence should or
+should not do with her heart. Still, from all points of view, it was
+better to keep the affair under the rose till there came a more
+propitious hour in which to make the disclosure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Love, in the midst of all these alarms! Sharp, desperate rogues on one
+side, millions on the other, and yet love could enter the scene
+serenely, like an actor who had missed his cue and come on too soon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Oddly enough, there was no real love-making such as you often read
+about. A pressure of the hand, a glance from the eye, there was seldom
+anything more. Only once&mdash;that memorable day on the river road&mdash;had he
+kissed her. No word of love had been spoken on either side. In that
+wild moment all conventionalities had disappeared like smoke in the
+wind. There had been neither past nor future, only the present in
+which they knew that they loved. With her he was happy, for he had no
+time to plan over the future. Away from her he saw the inevitable
+barriers providing against the marriage between a poor young man and a
+very rich young woman. A man who has any respect for himself wants
+always to be on equal terms with his wife. It's the way this peculiar
+organization called society has written down its rules. Doubtless a
+relic of the stone age, when Ab went out with his club to seek a wife
+and drag her by the hair to his den, there to care for her and to guard
+her with his life's blood. It is one of the few primitive sensations
+that remain to us, this wanting the female dependent upon the male.
+Perhaps this accounts for man's lack of interest on the suffragette
+question.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-106"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-106.jpg" alt="WITH HER HE WAS HAPPY, FOR HE HAD NO TIME TO PLAN OVER THE FUTURE" />
+<br />
+WITH HER HE WAS HAPPY, FOR HE HAD NO TIME TO PLAN OVER THE FUTURE
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Only Susan suspected the true state of affairs, being a woman. Having
+had no real romance herself, she delighted in having a second-hand one,
+as you might say. She intercepted many a glance and pretended not to
+see the stolen hand pressures. The wedding was already full drawn in
+her mind's eye. These two young people should be married at Susan
+Farlow's when the roses were climbing up the sides of the house and the
+young robins were boldly trying their fuzzy wings. It struck her as
+rather strange, but she could not conjure up (at this wedding) more
+than two men besides the minister, the bridegroom and the butler.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By forsaking his accustomed haunts, under the advice of Jones, the
+hidden warfare ceased temporarily. You can't very well kill a man when
+you don't know where to find him. He ate his breakfasts haphazardly,
+now here, now there. He received most of his assignments by telephone
+and wrote his stories and articles in his club, in the writing rooms of
+hotels, and invariably despatched them to the office by messenger. The
+managing editor wanted to know what all this meant; but Norton declined
+to tell him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It irked him to be forced to rearrange his daily life&mdash;his habits. It
+was a revolution against his ease, for he loved ease when he was not at
+work. He had the sensation of having been suddenly robbed of his home,
+of having been cast out into the streets. And on top of all this he
+had to go and fall in love!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was no longer a shadow opposite the apartments of the Countess
+Perigoff. Braine came and went nightly without discovering any one.
+This rather worried him. It gave him the impression that the shadow
+had found out what he had been seeking and no longer needed to watch
+the coming and going of either himself or the Countess Perigoff.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Olga, it looks as if we were at the end of our rope," he said
+discouragedly. "We have failed in our attempts so far. The devil
+watches over that girl."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Or God," replied the countess gloomily. In nearly every instance
+their success has been due to chance. "Somehow I'm convinced that we
+began wrong. We should have let Hargreave escape quietly, followed
+him, and made him fast when the right opportunity came. After a month
+or so his vigilance would have relaxed; he would have arrived at the
+belief that he had eluded us."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Indeed!" ironically. "He wasn't vigilant all these years in which he
+did elude us. How about the child he never sought but guarded?
+Vigilance! He never was anything else all these seventeen years. The
+truth is, success has developed a coarseness in our methods. And now
+it is too late for finesse. We have tried every device we can think
+of; and there they are&mdash;the girl free, Norton unharmed, and the father
+as secure in his retreat as though he wore an invisible cloak. My head
+aches. I have ceased to be inventive."
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-107"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-107.jpg" alt="THEY WERE TO BE MARRIED" />
+<br />
+THEY WERE TO BE MARRIED
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The two are in love with each other."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Are you sure of that?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have my eyes. But I begin to wonder."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"About what?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Whether or not Jones suspects me and is giving me rope to hang myself
+with. Not once have the police been called in and told what has really
+happened. They are totally at sea. And what has become of the man
+over the way?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"By the Lord Harry!" exclaimed Braine, clapping his hands. "I believe
+I've solved that. We shot a man coming out of Hargreave's. Since then
+there's been no one across the way. One and the same man!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But that knowledge doesn't get us anywhere."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No. You say they are in love?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Secretly. I don't believe the butler has an inkling of it. It is
+possible, however, that Susan has caught the trend of affairs. But,
+being rather romantic, she will in nowise interfere."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine smoked in silence. Presently a smile twisted his lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You have thought of something?" she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You might try it," he said. "They have accepted your friendship;
+whether with ulterior purpose remains to be learned. She has been to
+your apartments two or three times to tea and always got home safely."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No," she said determinedly. "Nothing shall happen here. I will not
+take the risk."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Wait till I'm through. Break up the romance in such a way that the
+girl will bar Norton from the house. That's what we've been aiming at;
+to get rid of that meddling reporter. We've tried poisons. Try your
+kind."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What do you mean?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Lies."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ah! I understand. You want me to win him away from her. It can not
+be done."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Pshaw! You have a bag full of tricks. You can easily manage to put
+him into an equivocal position out of which he can not possibly squirm
+so far as the girl is concerned. A little melodrama, arranged for the
+benefit of Florence. Fall into Norton's arms at the right moment, or
+something like that."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I suppose I could. But if I failed..."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You're too damnably clever to fail in your own particular work.
+Something has got to be done to keep those two apart. I've often
+thought of raiding the house and boldly carrying off the whole family,
+Susan and all. But a wholesale affair like that would be too noisy.
+Think it over, Olga; we have gone too far to back down now. There's
+always Russia; and while I'm the boss over here they never cease to
+watch me. They'll make me answer for a failure like this."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She eyed him speculatively. "You have money."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, the money doesn't matter. It's the game. It's the game of
+playing fast and loose with society, of pilfering it with one hand and
+making it kow-tow with the other. It's the sport of the thing. What
+was your thought?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We could go away together, to South America."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And tire of each other within a month," he retorted shrewdly. "No; we
+are in the same boat. We could not live but for this never-ending
+excitement. And, more than that, we never could get far enough away
+from the long arm of the First Ten. We'll have to stick it out here.
+Can't you see?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes, I can see."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But in her heart she knew that she would have lived in a hut with this
+man till the end of her days. She abhorred the life, though she never,
+by the slightest word, let him become aware of it. There was always
+that abiding fear that at the first sign of weakness he would desert
+her. And she was wise in her deductions. Braine was loyal to her
+because she held his interest. Once that failed, he would be off and
+away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next afternoon the countess, having matured her plans against the
+happiness of the young girl who trusted her, drew up before the
+Hargreave place and alighted. Her welcome was the same as ever, and
+this strengthened her confidence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The countess was always gesticulating. Her hands fluttered to
+emphasize her words. And the beautiful diamond solitaire caught the
+girl's eye. She seized the hand. Having an affair of her own, it was
+natural that she should be interested in that of her friend.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I never saw that ring before."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A gift of yesterday." The countess assumed a shy air which would have
+deceived St. Anthony. She twisted the ring on her finger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Tell me," cried Florence. "You are engaged?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Mercy, no!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is he rich?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No. Money should not matter when your heart is involved."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As this thought was in accord with her own, Florence nodded her head
+sagely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It's nothing serious. Just a fancy. I shall never marry again. Men
+are gay deceivers; they always have been and always will be. Perhaps
+I'm a bit wicked; but I rather like to prove my theory that all men are
+weak. If I had a daughter I'd rather have her be an old man's darling
+than a young man's drudge. I distrust every man I know. I came to ask
+you and Susan to go to the opera with me to-night. You will come to my
+apartments first. You will come?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"To be sure we will!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Simple little fool!" thought the Russian on the way home. "She shall
+see."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I believe the countess is engaged to be married," said Florence to
+Jones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Indeed, miss?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes. I couldn't get anything definite out of her, but she had a
+beautiful ring on her finger. She wants Susan and me to go to the
+opera with her to-night. Will that be all right?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones gazed abstractedly at the rug. Whenever a problem bothered him
+he seemed to find the solution in the delicate patterns of the Persian
+rugs. Finally he nodded. "I see no reason why you should not go.
+Only, watch out."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jones, there is one thing that will make me brave and happy. Will you
+tell me if you are in direct communication with my father?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes, Miss Florence," he answered promptly. "But do not breathe this
+to a single soul, neither Susan nor Norton."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I promise that. But, ah! hasten the day when he can come to me
+without fear."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That is my wish also."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You need not call me miss. Why should you?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It might not be wise to have any one hear me call you thus
+familiarly," he objected gravely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Please yourself about that. Now I must telephone Jim."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jim?" the butler murmured.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He caught the word which was not intended for his ears. But for once
+Jones had been startled out of himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is it wrong for me to call Mr. Norton Jim?" she asked with a bit of
+banter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is not considered quite the proper thing, Miss Florence, to call a
+young man by his first name unless you are engaged to marry him, or
+grew up with him from childhood."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, supposing I were engaged to him?" haughtily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That would be a very grave affair. What have you to prove that he may
+not wish to marry you for your money?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why, Jones, you know that I haven't a penny in the world I can call my
+own! There is nothing to prove, except your word, that I am Stanley
+Hargreave's daughter."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No, there is nothing to prove that you are his daughter. But hasn't
+it ever occurred to you that there might be a purpose back of this?
+Might it not be of inestimable value that your father's enemies should
+be left in doubt? Might it not be a means of holding them on the
+leash? There is proof, ample proof, my child; and when the time comes
+these will be shown you. But meantime put all thought of marrying Mr.
+Norton out of your mind."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That I refuse to do," quietly. "I am at least mistress of my heart;
+and no one shall dictate to me whom I shall or shall not marry. I love
+Mr. Norton and he loves me, knowing that I may not be an heiress after
+all. And some day I shall marry him."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones bowed. This seemed to appear final to him, and nothing more was
+to be said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton did not return to his rooms till seven. He found the telephone
+call and also a note in a handwriting unfamiliar. He tore off the
+envelope and found! the contents to be from the Countess Perigoff.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Call at eight to-night," he read. "I have an important news story for
+you. Tell no one, as I can not be involved in the case. Cordially,
+Olga, Countess Perigoff."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Humph! Norton twiddled the note in his fingers and at length rolled it
+into a ball and threw it into the waste-basket. He, too, made a
+mistake; he should have kept that note. He dressed, dined, and hurried
+off to the apartments of the countess.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He arrived ten minutes before Florence and Susan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Jones did some rapid telephoning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How long, how long!" the butler murmured. How long would this strange
+combat last? The strain was terrible. He slept but little during the
+nights, for his ears were always waiting for sounds. He had cast the
+chest into the sea, and it would take a dozen expert divers to locate
+it. And now, atop of all these worries, the child must fall in love
+with the first comer! It was heart-breaking. Norton, so far as he had
+learned, was cool and brave, honest and reliable in a pinch; but as the
+husband of Stanley Hargreave's daughter, that was altogether a
+different matter. And he must devise some means of putting a stop to
+it, but&mdash;-
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he was saved that trouble.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mongoose and cobra, that was the game being played; the cunning of the
+one against the deadly venom of the other. If he forced matters he
+would only lay himself open to the strike of the snake. He must have
+patience. Gradually they were breaking the organization, lopping off a
+branch here and there, but the peace of the future depended upon
+getting a grip on the spine of the cobra himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The trick was simple. The countess had news; trust her for that. She
+exhibited a cablegram, dated at Gibraltar, in which the British
+authorities stated definitely that no such a person as William Orts,
+aviator, had arrived at Gibraltar. And then, as Norton rose, she rose
+also and gently precipitated herself into his arms, just at the moment
+when Florence appeared in the doorway.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Very simple, indeed. When a woman falls toward a man there is nothing
+for him to do but extend his arms to prevent her from falling.
+Outwardly, however, to the eye which saw only the picture and
+comprehended not the cause, it had all the hallmarks of an affectionate
+embrace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence stood perfectly still for a moment, then turned away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I beg your pardon," said the countess, "but a sudden fainting spell
+seized me. My heart is a bit weak."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Don't mention it," replied the gallant Norton. He was as innocent as
+a babe as to what had really taken place.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence went back home. She wrote a brief note to Norton and inclosed
+the ring which she had secretly worn attached to a little chain around
+her neck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Norton came the next day she refused to see him. It was all over.
+She never wished to see him again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He says there has been some cruel mistake," said Jones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I saw him with the countess in his arms. I do not see any cruel
+mistake in that. I saw him. Tell him so. And add that I never wish
+to see him again."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then she ran swiftly to her room, where she broke down and cried
+bitterly and would not be comforted by Susan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"In heaven's name, what has happened?" demanded the frantic lover,
+"what has happened?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The comedy of the whole affair lay in the fact that neither of the two
+suspected the countess, who consoled them both.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap09"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER IX
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+So far as Jones was concerned, he was rather pleased with the turn of
+affairs. This was no time for love-making; no time for silly,
+innocuous quarrels and bickerings, in which love must indulge or die.
+Florence no longer rode horseback, and Norton returned to his
+accustomed haunts, where no one made the slightest attempt upon his
+life. In his present state of mind he would have welcomed it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What's the matter with Jim?" asked the night city editor, raising his
+eye shade.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I don't know," answered the copy reader.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Goes around as if he'd been eating dope; bumped into the boss a while
+ago and never stopped to apologize."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Perhaps he's mapping out the front page for that Hargreave stuff,"
+laughed the copy reader. "Between you and me and the gate post, I
+don't believe there ever was a man by the name of Hargreave."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, there was a chap by that name, all right. He's dead. A man can't
+swim three hundred miles in rough water, life-buoy or no. They ought
+to have funeral services, and let it go at that."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But what was the reason for that fake cable from Gibraltar saying that
+Orts was alive? I don't see any sense in that."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The man who pulled it off did. I think, for my part, that both Orts
+and Hargreave are dead, and that the man picked up by the tramp steamer
+<i>Orient</i> was riding some other balloon."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You're wrong there. The description of it proved that it was Orts'
+machine. Oh, Jim probably has got a man's-size yarn up his sleeve, but
+he's a long time in delivering the goods. He's beginning to mope a
+good deal. Woman back of it somewhere. Haven't held down this copy
+job for twelve years without being able to make some tolerable guesses.
+Jim's a star man. When he gets started nothing can stop him. He
+covered the Chinese Boxer rebellion better than any other correspondent
+there. I wonder how old he is?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, I should say about thirty-one or two. Here he comes now. 'Lo,
+Jim!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hello! Where's Ford? He gave me a ticket to the theater to-night,
+and I want to punch his head. What's drama coming to, anyhow?
+Cigarettes and booze and mismated couples. Can't they find good enough
+things out of doors? Oh, I know. They cater to a lot of fools who
+believe that what they see is an expression of high life in New York
+and London. And it's rot, plain rot. It's merely the scum of the
+boiling pot. Any old housewife would skim it off and chuck it into the
+slops. Life? Piffle!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What's the grouch?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Looking for the dramatic job?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No. I've just been wondering how far these theatrical managers can go
+without slitting the golden goose."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton sought his desk and began rummaging the drawers. He was not
+hunting for anything; he was merely passing away the time. By and by,
+when the time no longer served, he pulled his chair over to the window
+and sat down, staring at stars such as Copernicus never dreamed of.
+Ships going down to sea, ferries swooping diagonally hither and
+thither, the clockwork signs; but he took no note of these marvels of
+light.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Not at home!" he muttered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had called, written, telephoned. No use. The door remained shut,
+Jones answered the telephone, and the letters came back. He began to
+think very deeply concerning the Perigoff woman. Had she played a
+trick? Had that fainting spell been buncombe for his benefit as well
+as Florence's? But he had not a shadow of a proof. The thing that
+puzzled him equally with this was that all attempts against his life
+had miraculously ceased; no safes thundered down in front of him, and
+no autos tried to carve him in two. The only thing that kept him
+active was the daily call of Jones by wire. Miss Florence was well;
+that was all Jones was permitted to say.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Restlessly Norton spurned his chair and walked over to the telephone
+booth. It was midnight. He might or might not be able to get Jones.
+But almost instantly a voice said, "What is it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jones?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes. Who is it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Norton."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why, you called me up not ten minutes ago."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Not I!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It was your voice, as plain as day."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What did I want?" keen all at once.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The reply did not come immediately. "You are certain it was not you?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Wait a moment and I'll call the editor. He will prove to you that
+I've been here for an hour, and that this is the first call I've made.
+Some one has been imposing on you. What did they ask you to do?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You asked me to come down to the office at once, and I requested you
+to come to the house, and you said you could not. I declined to stir."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What did you think?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Exactly what you're thinking&mdash;that they have come to life again."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jones, is Miss Florence awake?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do you think there is any hope of having her understand what really
+happened?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am only here to guard her. I can not undertake to read her
+thoughts."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You're not quite in favor of a reconciliation?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, yes, if it went no further. Young people are young people the
+world over."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What does that mean?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That they would not create imaginary heartaches if they were not
+young. Better let things remain exactly as they are. When all these
+troubles are settled finally, the lesser trouble may be talked over
+sensibly. But this is not the time. There is no news. Good night."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton returned to his chair, gloomier than ever. With his feet upon
+the window sill he stared and stared and dreamed and dreamed till a
+hand fell upon his shoulder. It belonged to one of the office boys.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Note f'r you, sir."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton read it and tore it into little pieces. Then he rose and
+distributed the pieces in the several yawning waste baskets which
+strewed the aisle leading to the city desk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'm not wanted for anything?" he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No. Clear out!" laughed the night city editor. "The sight of you is
+putting everybody in the gloom ward."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton went down to the street. At the left of the entrance he was
+quietly joined by a man whose arm was carried in a sling. He motioned
+Norton to get into the taxicab. They were dropped in a deserted spot
+in Riverdale. On foot they went forward to their destination, which
+proved to be the deserted hangar of the aviator, William Orts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I want you to tell Jones that a tub and several divers are at work on
+the spot where he threw the chest. That's all. Now, doctor, rewind
+this arm of mine."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The amateur surgeon made a very good job of it; not for nothing had he
+followed fighting armies to the front.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Did they find anything?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Not up to date. But we might if we cared to. They have left a buoy
+over the spot they're exploring. But just now it floats a quarter of a
+mile to the east of the spot."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who were the men in the motor boat that chased Jones?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Only Jones can tell you. Queer old codger, eh?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A bit stubborn. He wants to handle it without police assistance."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And he's right. We are not aiming to arrest any one," sinisterly.
+"There can't be any draw to this game. Here, no smoking. Too much gas
+afloat."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton put the cigarettes back into his pocket. "What's the real
+news?" he demanded. "You would not bring me out here just to rebandage
+that arm. It really did not need it. Come, out with it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You're sharp."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'm paid to be sharp."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I've found where the Black Hundred hold their sessions."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"By George, that's news!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The room above is vacant. A little hole in the ceiling, and who knows
+what might happen?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What do you want me to do?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Tell Jones. When the next meeting comes around I'll advise you. I've
+stumbled upon a dissatisfied member. So, buck up, as they say. We've
+got two ends of the net down, and with a little care we'll have them
+all. Now let me have a hundred."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton drew out a packet of bills and counted off five twenties.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why don't you draw the cash yourself?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It happens to be in your name, son."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I forgot," said Norton. "But what a chance for me! Nearly five
+thousand, all mine for a ticket to Algiers!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A grunt was the only reply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I want you to tell me about the Perigoff woman."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I know only one thing&mdash;that Braine is there every night."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The orders are for you to play the game just as you are playing it.
+When we strike, it must be the last blow. All this hide-and-seek
+business may look foolish to you. It's like that Japanese game called
+'jo.' It looks simple, but chess is a tyro's game beside it. Can you
+find your way back all right?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I can."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, you'd better be going. That's all the light I have, in this
+torch here. Got a lot to do to-morrow and need sleep."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton stole away with great caution. His first intention was to
+proceed straight to the city, but despite his resolution he found
+himself within a quarter of an hour gazing up at the windows of the
+Hargreave house. "Not at home!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Quite unconscious of the fact, he was as close to death as any mortal
+man might care to be. The policeman suddenly looming up under the arc
+lamp proved to be his savior.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<p>
+The lull made Jones doubly alert. He was positive that they were
+preparing to strike again. But from what direction and in what manner?
+He had not met the gift of clairvoyance so he had to wait; and waiting
+is a terrible game when perhaps death is balancing the scales. It is
+always easier to make an assault than to await it; and it is a good
+general who always finds himself prepared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it made his heart ache to watch the child. She went about
+cheerfully&mdash;when any one was in the room with her. Many a time,
+however, he had stolen to the door of her bedroom and heard the
+heart-rending sobs, a vain attempt being made to stifle them among the
+pillows. She was only eighteen; it was first love; and first loves are
+pale, evanescent attachments. It hurt now; but she would get over it
+presently. Youth forgets. Time, like water, smooths away the ragged
+places.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The countess called regularly. She was, of course, dreadfully sorry
+over what had happened. She had heard something about his character;
+newspaper men weren't always the best. This one was a mere fortune
+hunter; a two-faced one, at that. She was never more surprised in her
+life than when he threw his arms around her. And so on, and so forth,
+half lies and half truths, till the patient Jones felt like wringing
+her neck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From his vantage point the butler smiled ironically. He could read the
+heart of the Perigoff woman as he could read the page of a book. The
+effrontery! And all the while he must gravely admit her and pretend
+when the blood rioted in his veins at the sight of her. But he dared
+not swerve a single inch from the plans laid down. It was a cup of
+bitter gall, and there was no way of avoiding the putting of it to his
+lips. She emanated poison as nightshade emanates it, the upas tree.
+And he must bow when she entered and bow when she left! Still, she had
+done him an indirect favor in breaking up this love business.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One afternoon Braine summoned his runabout and called up two
+physicians. When he was ushered into the deserted office of the first
+he sent his card in. The doctor replied in person. His face was pale
+and his hands shook.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Good afternoon," said Braine, smiling affably.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The doctor eyed him like a man hypnotized. "You ... you wished to see
+me on some particular business?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Very particular," dryly. "My car is outside. Will you be so good as
+to accompany me?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The doctor slowly went into the hall for his hat and coat. He left the
+house and got into the car with never a word of protest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thinking?" said Braine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am always thinking whenever I see your evil face. What devilment do
+you require of me this time?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A mere stroke of the pen."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where are we going?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"To call on another physician of your standing," significantly. "It is
+a great thing to have friends like you two. Always ready to serve us,
+for the mere love of it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There's no need of using that kind of talk to me. You have me in the
+hollow of your hand. Why should I bother to deny it? I have broken
+the law. I broke it because I was starving."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is better to starve in freedom than to eat fat joints up the river.
+To-day it is a question of sanity."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And you want me to assist in signing away the liberty of some person
+who is perfectly sane?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The nail on the head," urbanely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You're a fine scoundrel!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Not so loud!" warningly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"As loud as I please. I am not forgetting that you need me. I'm no
+coward. I recognize that you hold the whip hand. But you can send me
+to the chair before I'll crawl to you. Now, leave me alone for a
+while."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The other physician had no such qualms of conscience. He was ready at
+all times for the generous emoluments which accrued from his dealings
+with the man Braine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Countess Perigoff was indisposed; so it was quite in the order of
+things that she should summon physicians.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is a law in the state of New York&mdash;just or unjust, whichever you
+please&mdash;that reads that any person may be adjudged insane if the
+signatures of two registered physicians are affixed to the document.
+It does not say that these physicians shall have been proved reputable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There were, besides the physicians, a motherly looking woman and a man
+of benign countenance. Their faces were valuable assets. To gain
+another person's confidence is, perhaps, among the greatest human
+achievements. A confidence man and woman in the real sense of the
+word. In your mind's eye you could see this man carrying the
+contribution plate down the aisle on Sunday mornings, and his wife Kate
+putting her mite on the plate for the benefit of some poor, untidy
+Hottentot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On Tuesday of the following week Florence and Susan went shopping. The
+chauffeur was a strong young fellow whom Jones relied upon. If you pay
+a man well and hold out fine promises, you generally can trust him. As
+their car left the corner another followed leisurely. This second
+automobile contained Thomas Wendt and his wife Kate. The two young
+women stopped at the great dry goods shop near the public library, and
+for the time being naturally forgot everything but the marvels which
+had come from all parts of the world. It is as natural for a woman to
+buy as it is for a man to sell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In some manner or other Florence became separated from Susan. She
+hunted through aisle after aisle, but could not find her; for the
+simple reason that Susan was hunting for her. It occurred to the girl
+that Susan might have wisely concluded the best place to wait would be
+in the taxicab. And so Florence hurried out into the street, into the
+arms of the Wendt family, who were patiently awaiting her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The trusted chauffeur had been sent around to the side entrance by the
+major domo. The young lady had so requested, so he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence struggled and called for the policeman, who came running up,
+followed by the usual idle, curious crowd.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The poor young woman is insane," said the motherly Kate, tears in her
+eyes. The benign Thomas looked at heaven. "We are her keepers."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is not true," cried Florence desperately.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She has the hallucination that she is the daughter of the millionaire
+Stanley Hargreave." And Thomas exhibited his document, which was
+perfectly legal, so far as appearances went.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hurry up and get her off the walk. I can't have the crowd growing any
+larger," said the policeman, convinced.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So, despite her cries and protestations, Florence was hustled into the
+automobile, even the policeman lending a hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Poor young thing!" he said to the crowd. "Come now, move on. I can't
+have the walk blocked up. Get a gait on you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was congratulating himself upon the orderliness of the affair when a
+keen-eyed young man in the garb of a chauffeur touched his shoulder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What's this I hear about an insane young woman?" he demanded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She was insane, all right. They had papers to prove it. She kept
+crying that she was Stanley Hargreave's daughter."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My God!" The young man struck his forehead in despair. "You ass, she
+was Stanley Hargreave's daughter, and they've kidnaped her right under
+your nose! What was the number of that car?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Cut out that line of talk, young fellah; I know my business. They had
+the proper documents."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But you hadn't brains enough to inquire whether they were genuine or
+not! You wait!" shrilled the chauffeur. "I'll have you broken for
+this work." He wheeled and ran back to his car, to find Susan and the
+countess in a great state of agitation. "They got her, they got her!
+And I swore on the book that they never should, so long as I drove the
+car."
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-127"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-127.jpg" alt="FLORENCE WAS PERMITTED TO WANDER ABOUT THE SHIP AS SHE PLEASED" />
+<br />
+FLORENCE WAS PERMITTED TO WANDER ABOUT THE SHIP AS SHE PLEASED
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Susan wept, and the countess tried in vain to console her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And when Jones was informed he frightened even the countess with the
+snarl of rage which burned across his lips. He tore into the hall,
+seized his hat, and was gone. Not a word of reproach did he offer to
+the chauffeur. He understood that no one is infallible. He found the
+blundering policeman, who now realized that he stood in for a whiff of
+the commissioner's carpet. All he could do was to give a good
+description of the man and woman. Word was sent broadcast through the
+city. The police had to be informed this time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Late in the day an officer whose beat included the ferry landing at
+Hoboken said he had seen the three. Everything had looked all right to
+him. It was the motherly face of the one and the benign countenance of
+the other that had blinded him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At midnight Jones, haggard and with the air of one beaten, returned
+home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No wireless yet?" asked Norton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The <i>George Washington</i> of the North German Lloyd does not answer.
+Something has happened to her wires; tampered with, possibly."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"So long as we know they are at sea, we can remedy the evil. They will
+not be able to land at a single port. I have sent ten cables. They
+can't get away from the wire. If I could only get hold of the names of
+those damnable doctors who signed that document! Twenty years."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones bent his head in his hands, and Norton tramped the floor till the
+sound of his footsteps threatened to drive the moaning Susan into
+hysterics.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is only a matter of a few days."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But can the child stand the terrors?" questioned Jones. "Who knows
+that they may not really drive her insane?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On board the <i>George Washington</i> every one felt extremely sorry for
+this beautiful girl. It was a frightful misfortune to be so stricken
+at her age.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She is certainly insane," said one of the passengers, who had known
+Hargreave slightly through some banking business. "Hargreave wasn't
+married. He lived alone."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After the second day out Florence was permitted to wander about the
+ship as she pleased.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A good many of the passengers were mightily worried when they learned
+that the wireless had in some mysterious way been tampered with after
+the boat had made the open sea. It was impossible to put about. The
+apparatus must be fixed at sea.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-128"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-128.jpg" alt="EVERYONE FELT EXTREMELY SORRY FOR THIS BEAUTIFUL GIRL" />
+<br />
+EVERYONE FELT EXTREMELY SORRY FOR THIS BEAUTIFUL GIRL
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And when finally Norton's wireless caught the wires of the <i>George
+Washington</i> he was gravely informed that the young lady referred to had
+leaped the rail off the banks at night and had been drowned. She had
+not been missed till the following morning.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap10"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER X
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+It was perfectly true that Florence had cast herself into the sea. It
+had not been an act of despair, however. On the contrary, hope and
+courage had prompted her to leap. The night was clear, with only a
+moderate sea running. At the time the great ship was passing the
+banks, and almost within hail, she saw a fishing schooner riding
+gracefully at anchor. She quite readily believed that if she remained
+on board the <i>George Washington</i> she was lost. She naturally forgot
+the marvel of wireless telegraphy. No longer may a man hide at sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So, with that quick thought which was a part of her inheritance, she
+seized the life buoy, climbed the rail and leaped far out. As the
+great, dark, tossing sea swooped up to meet her she noted a block of
+wood bobbing up and down. She tried to avoid it, but could not, and
+struck it head on. Despite the blow and the shock of the chill water
+she instinctively clung to the buoy. The wash from the mighty
+propellers tossed her about, hither and yon, from one swirl to another,
+like a chip of wood. Then everything grew blank.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fortunately for her the master of the fishing schooner was at the time
+standing on his quarterdeck by the wheel, squinting through his glass
+at the liner and envying the ease and comfort of those on board her.
+The mate, sitting on the steps and smoking his turning-in pipe, saw the
+master lean forward suddenly, lower the glass, then raise it again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Lord A'mighty!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What's the matter, Cap'n?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jake, in God's name, come 'ere an' take a peek through this glass.
+I'm dreamin'!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mate jumped and took the glass. "Where away, sir?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A p'int off th' sta'board bow. See somethin' white bobbin' up?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yessir! Looks like some one dropped a bolster 'r a piller
+overboard.... Cod's whiskers!" he broke off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then I ain't really seein' things," cried the master. "Hi, y'
+lubbers," he yelled to the crew; "lower th' dory. They's a woman in
+th' water out there. I seen her leap th' rail. Look alive! Sharp's
+th' word! Mate, you go 'long."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The crew dropped their tasks and sprang for the davits, and the
+starboard dory was lowered in ship shape style.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It takes a good bit of seamanship to haul a body out of the sea, into a
+dancing, bobtailed dory, when one moment it is climbing frantically
+heavenward and the next heading for the bottomless pit. They were very
+tender with her. They laid her out in the bottom of the boat, with the
+life buoy as a pillow, and pulled energetically for the schooner. She
+was alive, because she breathed; but she did not stir so much as an
+eyelid. It was a stiff bit of work, too, to land her aboard without
+adding to her injuries. The master ordered the men to put her in his
+own bunk, where he nearly strangled her by forcing raw brandy down her
+throat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, she's alive, anyhow."
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-129"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-129.jpg" alt="FLORENCE STEALS OUT IN THE NIGHT TO JUMP OVERBOARD" />
+<br />
+FLORENCE STEALS OUT IN THE NIGHT TO JUMP OVERBOARD
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Florence finally opened her eyes the gray of dawn lay upon the
+sea, dotted here and there by the schooners of the fleet, which seemed
+to be hanging in midair, as at the moment there was visible to the eye
+no horizon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Don't seem t' recognize nothin'."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Mebbe she's got a fever," suggested the mate, rubbing his bristly chin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Fever nothin'! Not after bein' in th' water half an hour. Mebbe she
+hit one o' them wooden floats we left. Them dinged liners keep on
+crowdin' us," growled Barnes, with a fisherman's hate for the floating
+hotels. "Went by without a toot. See 'er, jes' like the banker's wife
+goin' t' church on Sunday? A mile a minute; fog or no fog, it's all
+the same t' them. They run us down and never stop. What th' tarnation
+we goin' to do? She'll haff t' stay aboard till th' run is over. I
+can't afford t' yank up my mudhook this time o' day."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Guess she can stand three 'r four days in our company, smellin'
+oilcloths, fish, kerosene, an' punk t'bacco."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If y' don't like th' kind o' t'bacco I buy buy your own. I ain't
+objectin' none."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mate stepped over to the bunk and gingerly ran his hand over the
+girl's head. "Cod's whiskers, Cap'n, they's a bump as big's a cork on
+th' back o' her head! She's struck one o' them floats all right.
+Where's the arnica?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Barnes turned to his locker and rummaged about, finally producing an
+ancient bottle and some passably clean cloth used frequently for
+bandages. Sometimes a man grew careless with his knife or got in the
+way of a pulley block. With blundering kindness the two men bound up
+the girl's head, and then went about their duties.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For three days Florence evinced not the slightest inclination to leave
+the bunk. She lay on her back either asleep or with her eyes staring
+at the beams above her head. She ate just enough to keep her alive;
+and the strong black coffee did nothing more than to make her wakeful.
+No one knew what the matter was. There was the bump, now diminished;
+but that it should leave her in this comatose state vastly puzzled the
+men. The truth is she had suffered a slight concussion of the brain,
+and this, atop of all the worry she had had for the last few weeks, was
+sufficient to cause this blankness of the mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The final cod was cleaned and packed away in salt, the mudhook raised,
+and the schooner <i>Betty</i> set her sails for the southwest. Barnes
+realized that to save the girl she must have a doctor who knew his
+business. Mrs. Barnes would know how to care for the girl, once she
+knew what the trouble was. There would be some news in the papers. A
+young and beautiful woman did not jump from a big Atlantic liner
+without the newspapers getting hold of the facts.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-132"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-132.jpg" alt="&quot;A YOUNG AND BEAUTIFUL WOMAN DID NOT JUMP FROM A BIG ATLANTIC LINER WITHOUT THE NEWSPAPERS GETTING HOLD OF THE FACTS&quot;" />
+<br />
+&quot;A YOUNG AND BEAUTIFUL WOMAN DID NOT JUMP FROM A BIG ATLANTIC LINER WITHOUT THE NEWSPAPERS GETTING HOLD OF THE FACTS&quot;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A fair wind carried the <i>Betty</i> into her haven, and shortly after
+Florence was sleeping peacefully in a feather bed, ancient, it is true,
+but none the less soft and inviting. In all this time she had not
+spoken a single word.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The poor young thing!" murmured the motherly Mrs. Barnes. "What
+beautiful hair! Oh, John, I wish you would give up the sea. I hate
+it. It is terrible. I am always watching you in my mind's eye, in
+calm weather, in storms. Pieces of wrecks come ashore, and I always
+wonder over the death and terror back of them."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Don't y' worry none about me, Betty. I never take no chances. Now
+I'm goin' int' th' village an' bring back th' sawbones. He'll tell us
+what t' do."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The village doctor shook his grizzled head gravely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She's been hurt and shocked at the same time. It will be many days
+before she comes around to herself. Just let her do as she pleases.
+Only keep an eye on her so that she doesn't wander off and get lost.
+I'll watch the newspapers and if I come across anything which bears
+upon the case I'll notify you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he searched the newspapers in vain, for the simple fact that he did
+not think to glance over the old ones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The village took a good deal of interest in the affair. They gossiped
+about it and strolled out to the Barnes' cottage to satisfy their
+curiosity. One thing was certain to their simple minds: some day
+Barnes would get a great sum of money for his kindness. They had read
+about such things in the family story paper. She was a rich man's
+daughter; the ring on the unknown's finger would have fitted out a
+fleet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence was soon able to walk about. Ordinary conversation she seemed
+to understand; but whenever the past was broached she would shake her
+head with frowning eyes. Her main diversion consisted of sitting on
+the sand dunes and gazing out at sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One day a stranger came to town. He said he represented a life
+insurance company and was up here from Boston to take a little
+vacation. He sat on the hotel porch that evening surrounded by an
+admiring audience. The stranger had been all over the world, so it
+seemed. He spoke familiarly of St. Petersburg, Vladivostok, Shanghai,
+as the villagers&mdash;some of them&mdash;might have spoken of Boston.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There were one or two old-timers among the audience. They had been to
+all these parts. The stranger knew what he was telling about. After
+telling of his many voyages he asked if there was a good bathing beach
+near by. He was told that he would find the most suitable spot near
+Captain Barnes' cottage just outside the village.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"An' say, Mister, seen anythin' in th' papers about a missin' young
+woman?" asked some one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Missing young woman? What's that?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man told the story of Florence's leap into the sea and her
+subsequent arrival at the cape.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That's funny," said the stranger. "I don't recollect reading about
+any young woman being lost at sea. But those big liners are always
+keeping such things under cover. Hoodoos the ship, they say, and turns
+prospective passengers to other lines. It hurts business. What's the
+young girl look like?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence was described minutely. The stranger teetered in his chair
+and smoked. Finally he spoke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She probably was insane. That's the way generally with insane people.
+They can't see water or look off a tall building without wanting to
+jump. My business is insurance, and we've got the thing figured pretty
+close to the ground. They used to get the best of us on the suicide
+game. A man would take out a large policy to-day and to-morrow he'd
+blow his head off, and we'd have to pay his wife. But nowadays a
+policy is not worth the paper it's written on if a man commits suicide
+under two years."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You ain't tryin' to insure anybody in town, are you?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, no. No work for me when I'm on my vacation. Well, I'm going to
+bed; and to-morrow morning I'll go out to Captain Barnes' beach and
+have a good swim. I'm no sailor, but I like water."
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-133"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-133.jpg" alt="&quot;THE POOR YOUNG THING,&quot; MURMURED THE MOTHERLY MRS. BARNES" />
+<br />
+&quot;THE POOR YOUNG THING,&quot; MURMURED THE MOTHERLY MRS. BARNES
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He honestly enjoyed swimming. Early the next morning he was in the
+water, frolicking about as playfully as a boy. He had all the time in
+the world. Over his shoulder he saw two women wandering down toward
+the beach. Deeper he went, farther out. He was a bold swimmer, but
+that did not prevent a sudden and violent attack of cramps. And it was
+a rare piece of irony that the poor girl should save the life of that
+scoundrel who was without pity or mercy. As she saw his face a
+startled frown marred her brow. But she could not figure out the
+puzzle. Had she ever seen the man before? She did not know, she could
+not tell. Why could not she remember? Why must her poor head ache so
+when she tried to pierce the wall of darkness which surrounded her
+mentally?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man thanked her feebly, but not in his heart. When he had
+sufficiently recovered he returned to the village and sought the
+railway station, where the Western Union had its office.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I want to send a code message to my firm. Do you think you can follow
+it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I can try," said the operator.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The code was really Slav; and when the long message was signed it was
+signed by the name Vroon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The day after the news came that Florence had jumped overboard off the
+banks, Vroon with a dozen other men had started out to comb all the
+fishing villages along the New England coast. Somewhere along the way
+he felt confident that he would learn whether the girl was dead or
+alive. If she was dead then the game was a draw, but if she was alive
+there was still a fighting chance for the Black Hundred. He had had
+some idea of remaining in the village and accomplishing the work
+himself; but after deliberation he concluded that it was important
+enough for Braine himself to take a hand in. So the following night he
+departed for Boston, from there to New York. He proceeded at once to
+the apartment of the countess, where Braine declared that he himself
+would go to the obscure village and claim Florence as his own child.
+But to insure absolute success they would charter Morse's yacht and
+steam right up into the primitive harbor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Vroon left the apartment Norton saw him. He was a man of
+impulses, and he had found by experience that first impulses are
+generally the best. He did not know who Vroon was. Any man who called
+on the Countess Perigoff while Braine was with her would be worth
+following.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the other hand, Vroon recognized the reporter instantly and with
+that ever-ready and alert mind of his set about to lure the young man
+into a trap out of which he might not easily come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton decided to follow his man. He might be going on a wild-goose
+chase, he reasoned; still his first impulses had hitherto served him
+well. He looked care-worn. He was convinced that Florence was dead,
+despite the assertions of Jones to the contrary. He had gone over all
+the mishaps which had taken place and he was now absolutely convinced
+that his whilom friend Braine and the Countess Perigoff were directly
+concerned. Florence had either been going to or coming from the
+apartment. And that memorable day of the abduction the countess had
+been in the dry goods shop.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vroon took a down-town surface car, and Norton took the same. He sat
+huddled in a corner, never suspecting that Vroon was watching him from
+a corner of his eye. Norton was not keen to-day. The thought of
+Florence kept running through his head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The car stopped and Vroon got off. He led Norton a winding course
+which at length ended at the door of a tenement building. Vroon
+entered. Norton paused wondering what next to do, now that his man had
+reached his destination. Well, since he had followed him all this
+distance he must make an effort to find out who he was and what he was
+going to do. Cautiously he entered the hallway. As he was about to
+lay his hand on the newel post of the dilapidated stairs the floor
+dropped from under his feet and he was precipitated into the cellar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This tenement belonged to the Black Hundred; it concealed a thousand
+doors and a hundred traps. Its history was as dark as its hallways.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Vroon and his companion, who had been waiting for him, descended
+into the cellar they found the reporter insensible. They bound,
+blindfolded, and gagged him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Saunders," said Vroon, "you tell Corrigan that I've a sailor for him
+to-night, and that I want this sailor booked for somewhere south of the
+equator. Tell him to say to the master that this fellow is ugly and
+disobedient. A tramp freighter, whose captain is a bully. Do you
+understand me?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I get you. But there's no need to go to Corrigan this trip. Bannock
+is in port and sails to-night for Norway. That's far enough."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Bannock? The very man. Well, Mr. Norton, reporter and amateur
+detective, I guess we've got you fast enough this time. You may or may
+not come back alive. Go and bring around a taxi; some one you can
+trust. I'll dope the reporter while you're gone."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Long hours afterward Norton opened his aching eyes. He could hardly
+move and his head buzzed abominably. What had happened? What was the
+meaning of this slow rise and fall of his bed? Shanghaied?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Come out o' that now, ye skulker!" roared a voice down the
+companionway.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-138"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-138.jpg" alt="&quot;COME OUT O' THAT NOW&quot;" />
+<br />
+&quot;COME OUT O' THAT NOW&quot;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Shanghaied!" the reporter murmured. He sat up and ran through his
+pockets. Not a sou-markee, not a match even; and a second glance told
+him that the clothes he wore were not his own. "They've landed me this
+time. Shanghaied! What the devil am I going to do?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"D'ye hear me?" bawled the strident voice again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton looked about desperately for some weapon of defense. He saw an
+engineer's spanner on the floor by the bunk across the way, and with no
+small physical effort he succeeded in obtaining it. He stood up, his
+hand behind his back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"All right, me bucko! I'll come down an' git ye!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A pair of enormous boots began to appear down the companionway, and
+there gradually rose up from them a man as wide as a church door and as
+deep as a well.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Wait a moment," said Norton, gripping the spanner. "Let us have a
+perfect understanding right off the bat."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We're going to have it, matey. Don't ye worry none."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton raised the spanner, and, dizzy as he was, faced this seafaring
+Hercules courageously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I've been shanghaied, and you know it. Where are we bound?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Copenhagen."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, for a month or more you'll beat me up whenever the opportunity
+offers. But I merely wish to warn you that if you do you'll find a
+heap of trouble waiting for you the next time you drop your mudhook in
+North America."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is that so?" said the giant, eying the spanner and the shaking hand
+that held it aloft.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is. I'll take your orders and do the best I can, because you've
+got the upper hand. But, God is witness, you'll pay for every needless
+blow you strike. Now what do you want me to do?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Lay down that spanner an' come on deck, I'll tell ye what t' do. I
+was goin' t' whale th' daylights out o' ye; but ye're somethin' av a
+man. Drop the spanner first."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton hesitated. As lithe as a tiger the bulk of a man sprang at him
+and crushed him to the floor, wrenching away the spanner. Then the
+giant took Norton by the scruff of his neck and banged him up the steps
+to the deck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I ain't goin' t' hurt ye. I had t' show ye that no spanner ever
+bothered Mike Bannock. Now, d' know what a cook's galley is?"
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-139"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-139.jpg" alt="&quot;I AIN'T GOIN' T' HURT YE&quot;" />
+<br />
+&quot;I AIN'T GOIN' T' HURT YE&quot;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I do," said Norton, breathing hard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, hike there an' start in with peelin' spuds, an' don't waste 'em
+neither. That'll be all fer th' present. Ye were due for a wallopin'
+but I kinda like yer spunk."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Jim stumbled down to the cook's galley and grimly set to work at the
+potatoes. It might have been far worse. But here he was, likely to be
+on the high seas for months, and no way of notifying Jones what had
+happened. The outlook was anything but cheerful. But a vague hope
+awoke in his heart. If they were still after him might it not signify
+that Florence lived.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meantime Braine had not been idle. According to Vroon the girl's
+memory was in bad shape; so he had not the least doubt of bringing her
+back to New York without mishap. Once he had her there the game would
+begin in earnest. He played his cards exceedingly well. Steaming up
+into the little fishing harbor with a handsome yacht in itself would
+allay any distrust. And he wore a capital disguise, too. Everything
+went well till he laid his hand on Florence's shoulder. She gave a
+startled cry and ran over to Barnes, clinging to him wildly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No, no!" she cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Now what, my child?" asked the sailor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She shook her head. Her aversion was inexplicable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Come, my dear; can't you see that it is your father?" Braine turned
+to the captain. "She has been like this for a year. Heaven knows if
+she'll ever be in her right mind again," sadly. "I was giving her an
+ocean voyage, with the kindest nurses possible, and yet she jumped
+overboard. Come, Florence."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl wrapped her arms all the tighter around Barnes' neck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An idea came into the old sailor's head. "Of course, sir, ye've got
+proof thet she's your daughter?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Proof?" Braine was taken aback.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes; somethin' t' prove that you're her father. I got skinned out of
+a sloop once because I took a man's word at its face value. Black an'
+white, an' on paper, says I, hereafter."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But I never thought of such a thing," protested Braine, beginning to
+lose his patience. "I can't risk sending to New York for documents.
+She is my daughter, and you will find it will not pay to take this
+peculiar stand."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"In black an' white, 'r y' can't have her."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine thereupon rushed forward to seize Florence. Barnes swung
+Florence behind him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I guess she'll stay here a leetle longer, sir."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Time was vital, and this obstinacy made Braine furious.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He reached again for Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Clear out o' here, 'r show your authority," growled Barnes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She goes with me, or you'll regret it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"All right. But I guess th' law won't hurt me none. I'm in my rights.
+There's the door, mister."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I refuse to go without her!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Barnes sighed. He was on land a man of peace, but there was a limit to
+his patience. He seized Braine by the shoulders and hustled him out of
+the house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Bring your proofs, mister, an' nothin' more'll be said; but till y'
+bring 'em, keep away from this cottage."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And, simple-minded sailor that he was, he thought this settled the
+matter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That night he kept his ears open for unusual sounds, but he merely
+wasted his night's rest. Quite naturally, he reckoned that the
+stranger would make his attempt at night. Indeed, he made it in broad
+daylight, with Barnes not a hundred yards away, calking a dory whose
+seams had sprung a leak. Braine had Florence upon the chartered yacht
+before the old man realized what had happened. He never saw Florence
+again; but one day, months later, he read all about her in a newspaper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence fought; but she was weak, and so the conquest was easy.
+Braine was kind enough, now that he had her safe. He talked to her,
+but she merely stared at the receding coast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-141"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-141.jpg" alt="FLORENCE FOUGHT BUT SHE WAS WEAK AND SO THE CONQUEST WAS EASY" />
+<br />
+FLORENCE FOUGHT BUT SHE WAS WEAK AND SO THE CONQUEST WAS EASY
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"All right; don't talk if you don't want to. Here," to one of the men,
+"take her to the cabin and keep her there. But don't you touch her.
+I'll break you if you do. Put her in the cabin and guard the door; at
+least keep an eye on it. She may take it into her head to jump
+overboard."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even the temporarily demented are not without a species of cunning.
+Florence had never seen Braine till he appeared at the Barnes cottage.
+Yet she revolted at the touch of his hand. On the second day out
+toward New York she found a box of matches and blithely set fire to her
+cabin, walked out into the corridor and thence to the deck. When the
+fire was discovered it had gained too much headway to be stopped. The
+yacht was doomed. They put off in the boats and for half a day drifted
+helplessly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fate has everything mapped out like a game of chess. You move a pawn,
+and bang goes your bishop, or your knight, or your king; or she lets
+you almost win a game, and then checkmates you. But there is one thing
+to be said in her favor&mdash;rail at her how we will, she is always giving
+odds to the innocent.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<p>
+Mike Bannock was in the pilothouse, looking over his charts, when the
+lookout in the crow's nest sang out: "Two boats adrift off the port
+bow, sir!" And Bannock, who was a first-class sailor, although a rough
+one, shouted down the tube to the engine room. The freighter came to a
+halt in about ten minutes. The castaways saw that they had been noted,
+and pulled gallantly at the oars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There are some things which science, well advanced as it is, can not
+explain. Among them is the shock which cuts off the past and the
+countershock which reawakens memory. They may write treatise after
+treatise and expound, but they never succeed in truly getting beyond
+that dark wall of mystery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the sound of Jim Norton's voice and at the sight of his face&mdash;for
+subconsciously she must have been thinking of him all the while&mdash;a
+great blinding heat-wave seemed to burn across her eyes, and when the
+effect passed away she was herself again. A wild glance at her
+surroundings convinced her that both she and her lover were in danger.
+"Keep back," whispered Jim. "Don't recognize me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"They believe that I've lost my mind, and I'll keep that idea in their
+heads. Sometime to-night I'll find a chance to talk to you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It took a good deal of cautious maneuvering to bring about the meeting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"They shanghaied me. And I thought you dead! It was all wrong. It
+was a trick of that Perigoff woman, and it succeeded. Girl, girl, I
+love you better than life!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I know it now," she said, and she kissed him. "Has my father appeared
+yet?"
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-143a"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-143a.jpg" alt="&quot;I KNOW IT NOW,&quot; SHE SAID, AND SHE KISSED HIM" />
+<br />
+&quot;I KNOW IT NOW,&quot; SHE SAID, AND SHE KISSED HIM
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do you know anything at all about him?" sadly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I thought I did. It's all a jumble to me. But beware of the man who
+brought you here. He is the head of all our troubles; and if he knew I
+was on board he'd kill me out of hand. He'd have to."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine offered Bannock $1,000 to turn back as far as Boston; and as
+Bannock had all the time in the world, carrying no perishable goods, he
+consented. But he never could quite understand what followed. He had
+put Florence and Braine in the boat and landed them; but when he went
+down to see if Braine had left anything behind, he found that
+individual bound and gagged in his bunk.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap11"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER XI
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+When Jones received the telegram that Florence was safe, the iron nerve
+of the man broke down. The suspense had been so keenly terrible that
+the sudden reaction left him almost hysterically weak. Three weeks of
+waiting, waiting. Not even the scoundrel and his wife who had been the
+principal actors in the abduction had been found. From a great ship in
+midocean they had disappeared. Doubtless they had hidden among the
+immigrants, who, for little money, would have fooled all the officers
+on board. There was no doubt in Jones' mind that the pair had landed
+safely at Madrid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As for Susan, she did have hysterics. She went about the room, wailing
+and laughing and wringing her hands. You would have thought by her
+actions that Florence had just died. The sight of her stirred the
+saturnine lips of the butler into a smile. But he did not remonstrate
+with her. In fact, he rather envied her freedom in emotion. Man can
+not let go in that fashion; it is a sign of weakness; and he dared not
+let even Susan see any sign of weakness in him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So the reporter had found her, and she was safe and sound on her way to
+New York? Knowing by this time something of the reporter's courage, he
+was eager to learn how the event had come about. When he had not had a
+telephone message from Norton in forty-eight hours, he had decided that
+the Black Hundred had finally succeeded in getting hold of him. It had
+been something of a blow; for while he looked with disfavor upon the
+reporter's frank regard for his charge, he appreciated the fact that
+Norton was a staff to lean on, and had behind him all the power of the
+press, which included the privilege of going everywhere even if one
+could not always get back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As he folded the telegram and put it into his pocket, he observed the
+man with the opera glasses over the way. He shrugged. Well, let him
+watch till his eyes dropped out of his head; he would only see that
+which was intended for his eyes. Still, it was irksome to feel that no
+matter when or where you moved, watching eyes observed and chronicled
+these movements.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly, not being devoid of a sense of dry humor, Jones stepped over
+to the telephone and called up her highness the Countess Perigoff.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who is it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was forced to admit, however reluctantly, that the woman had a
+marvelously fine speaking voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is Jones, madam."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jones?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Mr. Hargreave's butler, madam."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh! You have news of Florence?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes." It will be an embarrassing day for humanity when some one
+invents a photographic apparatus by which two persons at the two ends
+of the telephone may observe the facial expressions of each other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What is it? Tell me quickly."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Florence has been found, and she is on her way back to New York. She
+was found by Mr. Norton, the reporter."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am so glad! Shall I come up at once and have you tell me the whole
+amazing story?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It would be useless, madam, for I know nothing except what I learned
+from a telegram I have just received. But no doubt some time this
+evening you might risk a call."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ring up the instant she returns. Did she say what train?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No, madam," lied Jones, smiling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He hung up the receiver and stared at the telephone as if he would
+force his gaze in and through it to the woman at the other end. Flesh
+and blood! Well, greed was stronger than that. Treacherous cat! Let
+her play; let her weave her nets, dig her pits. The day would come,
+and it was not far distant, when she would find that the mild-eyed
+mongoose was just as deadly as the cobra, and far more cunning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The heads of the Black Hundred must be destroyed. Those were the
+orders. What good to denounce them, to send them to a prison from
+which, with the aid of money and a tremendous secret political pull,
+they might readily find their way out? They must be exterminated, as
+one kills off the poisonous plague rats of the Orient. A woman? In
+the law of reprisal there was no sex.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Shortly after the telephone episode (which rather puzzled the countess)
+she received a wire from Braine, which announced the fact that Florence
+and Norton had escaped and were coming to New York on train No. 25, and
+advising her to meet the train en route. She had to fly about to do it.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-143b"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-143b.jpg" alt="HE HAD PUT FLORENCE AND BRAINE IN THE BOAT AND LANDED THEM" />
+<br />
+HE HAD PUT FLORENCE AND BRAINE IN THE BOAT AND LANDED THEM
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Captain Bannock released Braine, he had been in no enviable frame
+of mind. Tricked, fooled by the girl, whose mind was as unclouded as
+his own! She had succeeded in bribing a coal stoker, and had taken him
+unawares. The man had donned the disguise he had laid out for shore
+approach, and the blockheaded Bannock had never suspected. He had not
+recognized Norton at all. It was only when Bannock explained the
+history of the shanghaied stoker that he realized his real danger.
+Norton! He must be pushed off the board. After this episode he could
+no longer keep up the pretense of being friendly. Norton, by a rare
+stroke of luck, had forced him out into the open. So be it.
+Self-preservation is in nowise looked upon as criminal. The law may
+have its ideas about it, but the individual recognizes no law but its
+own. It was Braine whom he loved and admired, or Norton whom he hated
+as a dog with rabies hates water. With Norton free, he would never
+again dare return to New York openly. This meddling reporter aimed at
+his ease and elegance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He left the freighter as soon as a boat could carry him ashore. The
+fugitives would make directly for the railroad, and thither he went at
+top speed, to arrive ten minutes too late.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Free!" said Florence, as the train began to increase its speed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton reached over and patted her hand. Then he sat back with a
+sudden shock of dismay. He dived a hand into a pocket, into another
+and another. The price of the telegram he had sent to Jones was all he
+had had in the world; and he had borrowed that from a friendly stoker.
+In the excitement he had forgotten all about such a contingency as the
+absolute need of money.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Florence, I'm afraid we're going to have trouble with the conductor
+when he comes."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He pulled out his pockets suggestively. "Not a postage stamp. They'll
+put us off at the next station. And," with a glance in the little
+mirror between the two windows, "I shouldn't blame them a bit." He was
+unshaven, he was wearing the suit substituted for his own; and
+Florence, sartorially, was not much better off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She smiled, blushed, stood up, and turned her back to him. Then she
+sat down again. In her hand she held a small dilapidated roll of
+banknotes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I had them with me when they abducted me," she said. "Besides, this
+ring is worth something."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thank the Lord!" he exclaimed, relievedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So there was nothing more to do but be happy; and happy they were.
+They were quite oblivious to the peculiar interest they aroused among
+the other passengers. This unshaven young man, in his ragged coat and
+soiled jersey; this beautiful young girl, in a wrinkled homespun, her
+glorious blond hair awry; and the way they looked at each other during
+those lulls in conversation peculiar to lovers the world over,
+impressed the other passengers with the idea that something very
+unusual had happened to these two.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Pullman conductor was not especially polite; but money was money,
+and the stockholders, waiting for their dividends, made it impossible
+for him to reject it. The regular conductor paid them no more
+attention than to grumble over changing a twenty-dollar bill.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So, while these two were hurrying on to New York, the plotters were
+hurrying east to meet them. The two trains met and stopped at the same
+station about eighty miles from New York. The countess, accompanied by
+Vroon, who kept well in the background, entered the car occupied by the
+two castaways.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the mirror at the rear of the car Norton happened to cast an idle
+glance, and he saw the countess. Vroon, however, escaped his eye.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Be careful, Florence," he said. "The countess is in the car. The
+game begins again. Pretend that you suspect nothing. Pretty quick
+work on their part. And that's all the more reason why we should play
+the comedy well. Here she comes. She will recognize you, throw her
+arms around you, and show all manner of effusiveness. Just keep your
+head and play the game."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She lied about you to me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No matter."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh!" cried the countess. She seized Florence in a wild embrace. She
+was an inimitable actress, and Norton could not help admiring her.
+"Your butler telephoned me! I ran to the first train out. And here
+you are, back safe and sound! It is wonderful. Tell me all about it.
+What an adventure! And, good heavens, Mr. Norton, where did you get
+those clothes? Did you find her and rescue her? What a newspaper
+story you'll be able to make out of it all! Now, tell me just what
+happened." She sat down on the arm of Florence's chair. The girl had
+steeled her nerves against the touch of her. And yet she was
+beautiful! How could any one so beautiful be so wicked?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, it began like this," began Florence; and she described her
+adventures, omitting, to be sure, Braine's part in it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She had reached that part where they had been rescued by Captain
+Bannock when a thundering, grinding crash struck the words from her
+lips. The three of them were flung violently to one side of the car
+amid splintering wood, tinkling glass, and the shriek of steel against
+steel. A low wail of horror rose and died away as the car careened
+over on its side. The three were rendered unconscious and were huddled
+together on the floor, under the uprooted chairs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vroon had escaped with only a slight cut on the hand from flying glass.
+He climbed over the chairs and passengers with a single object in view.
+He saw that all three he was interested in were insensible. He quickly
+examined them and saw that they had not received serious injuries. He
+had but little time. The countess and Norton would have to take their
+chance with the other passengers. Resolutely he stooped and lifted
+Florence in his arms and crawled out of the car with her. It was a
+difficult task, but he managed it. Outside, in the confusion, no one
+paid any attention to him. So he threw the unconscious girl over his
+shoulder and staggered on toward the road.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was fortunate that the accident had occurred where it did. Five
+miles beyond was the station marked for the arrest of Norton as an
+abductor and the taking in charge of Florence as a rebellious girl who
+had run away from her parents. If he could only reach the Swede's hut,
+where his confederates were in waiting, the game would then be his.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After struggling along for half an hour a carriage was spied by Vroon,
+and he hailed it when it reached his side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What's the trouble, mister?" asked the farmer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A wreck on the railroad. My daughter is badly hurt. I must take her
+to the nearest village. How far is it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"About three miles."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'll give you twenty dollars for the use of that rig of yours."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Can't do it, mister."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But it's a case of humanity, sir!" indignantly. "You are refusing to
+aid the unfortunate."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The farmer thought it over for a moment. "All right. You can have the
+buggy for twenty dollars. When you get to the village take the nag to
+Doc Sanders' livery. He'll know what to do."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thank you. Help me in with her."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vroon drove away without the least intention of going toward the
+village. As a result, when Florence came to her senses she found
+herself surrounded by strange and ominous faces. At first she thought
+they had taken her from the wreck out of kindness; but when she saw the
+cold, impassive face of the man Vroon she closed her eyes and lay back
+in the chair. Well, ill and weak as she was, they should find that she
+was not without a certain strength.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the meantime Norton revived and looked about in vain for Florence.
+He searched among the crowd of terrified passengers, the hurt and the
+unharmed, but she was not to be found. He ran back to the countess and
+helped her out of the broken car.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where is Florence?" she asked dazedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"God knows! Here, come over and sit down by the fence till I see if
+there is a field telegraph."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They had already erected one, and his message went off with a batch of
+others. This time he was determined not to trust to chance. The shock
+may have brought back Florence's recent mental disorder, and she may
+have wandered off without knowing what she was doing. On the other
+hand, she may have been carried off. And against such a contingency he
+must be fortified. Money! The curse of God was upon it; it was the
+trail of the serpent, spreading poison in its wake.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By and by the countess was able to walk; and, supporting her, he led
+her to the road, along which they walked slowly for at least an hour.
+They might very well have waited for the relief train. But he could
+not stand the thought of inactivity. The countess had her choice of
+staying behind or going with him. He hated the woman, but he could not
+refuse her aid. She had a cut on the side of her head, and she limped
+besides.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They stopped at the first farmhouse, explained what had happened, and
+the mistress urged them to enter. She had seen no one, and certainly
+not a young woman. She must have wandered off in another direction.
+She ran into the kitchen for a basin and towel and proceeded to patch
+the countess' hurts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The latter was extremely uneasy. That she should be under obligation
+to Norton galled her. There was a spark of conscience left in her
+soul. She had tried to destroy him, and he had been kind to her. Was
+he a fool or was he deep, playing a game as shrewd as her own? She
+could not tell. Where was Vroon? Had he carried Florence off?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An hour later a man came in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hullo! More folks from the wreck?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where's the horse and buggy, Jake?" his wife asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Rented it to a man whose daughter was hurt. He went to the village."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Will you describe the daughter?" asked Norton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The countess twisted her fingers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The farmer rudely described Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Have you another horse and a saddle?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What's your hurry?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'll tell you later. What I want now is the horse."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What is to become of me?" asked the countess.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You will be in good hands," he answered briefly. "I am going to find
+out what has become of Florence. Is there a deserted farmhouse
+hereabouts?" he asked of the farmer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Not that I recollect."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why yes, there is, Jake. There's that old hut about two miles up the
+fork," volunteered the wife. "Where the Swede died last winter."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"By jingo! I'm going into the village and see if that man brought in
+the rig."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But get my horse first. My name is James Norton, and I am on the
+<i>Blade</i> in New York. Which way do I go?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"First turn to the left. Come on; I'll get the horse for you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once the horse was saddled, Norton set off at a run. He was unarmed;
+he forgot all about this fact. His one thought was to find the woman
+he loved. He was not afraid of meeting a dozen men, not while his
+present fury lasted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he fell into an ambush within a hundred yards of his goal. They
+dragged him off the horse and buffeted and mishandled him into the hut.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Both of them!" said Vroon, rubbing his hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I know you, you Russian rat!" cried Norton. "And if I ever get out of
+this I'll kill you out of hand! Damn you!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, yes; talk, talk; but it never hurts any one," jeered Vroon.
+"You'll never have the chance to kill me out of hand, as you say.
+Besides, do you know my face?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I do. The mask doesn't matter. You're the man who had me shanghaied.
+The voice is enough."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Very good. That's what I wished to know. That's your death warrant.
+We'll do it like they used to do at the old Academy; tie you to the
+railroad track. We shall not hurt you at all. If some engine runs
+over you heaven is witness we did not guide the engine. Remember the
+story of the boy and the cat?" with sinister amiability. "The boy said
+he wasn't pulling the cat's tail, he was only holding it; the cat did
+the pulling. Bring him along, men. Time is precious, and we have a
+good deal to do before night settles down. Come on with him. The
+track is only a short distance."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jim, Jim!" cried Florence in anguish.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Never you mind, girl; they're only bluffing. They won't dare."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You think so?" said Vroon. "Wait and see." He turned upon Florence.
+"He is your lover. Do you wish him to die?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No, no!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We promise to give him his freedom twelve hours from now on condition
+that you tell where that money is."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Florence!" warned Norton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vroon struck him on the mouth. "Be silent, you scum!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is in the chest Jones, the butler, threw into the sound," she said
+bravely. And so it might be for all she knew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vroon laughed. "We know about where that is."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Florence, say nothing on my account. They are not the kind of men who
+keep their word."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Eh?" snarled Vroon. "We'll see about that." He glanced at his watch.
+"In half an hour the freight comes along. It may become stalled at the
+wreck. But it will serve."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton knew very well that if need said must they would not hesitate to
+execute a melodramatic plan of this character. It was the way of the
+Slav; they had to make crime abnormal in order to enjoy it. They could
+very well have knocked him on the head then and there and have done
+with him. But the time used in conveying him to the railroad might
+prove his salvation. Nearly four hours had passed since the sending of
+the telegram to Jones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They bound Florence and left her seated in the chair. As soon as they
+were gone she rolled to the floor. She was able to right herself to
+her knees, and after a torturous five minutes reached the fireplace.
+She burnt her hands and wrists, but the blaze was the only knife
+obtainable. She was free.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-155"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-155.jpg" alt="THEY BOUND FLORENCE AND LEFT HER SEATED IN THE CHAIR" />
+<br />
+THEY BOUND FLORENCE AND LEFT HER SEATED IN THE CHAIR
+</p>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<p>
+Jones arrived with half a dozen policemen. Vroon alone escaped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The butler caught Florence in his arms and nearly crushed the breath
+out of her. And she was so glad to see him that she kissed him half a
+dozen times. What if he was her father's butler? He was brave and
+loyal and kind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"They tied him to the track," she cried. "Look at my wrists!" The
+butler did so, and kissed them tenderly. "And I saved him."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones stretched out a hand over Florence's shoulder. "When the time
+comes," he said; "when the right time comes and my master's enemies are
+confounded. But always the rooks, never the hawks, do we catch. God
+bless you, Norton! I don't know what I should have done without you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"When a chap's in love," began Norton, embarrassedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I know, I know," interrupted Jones. "The second relief train is
+waiting. Let us hurry back. I shan't feel secure till we are once
+more in the house."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So, arm in arm, the three of them went down the tracks to the hand-car
+which had brought the police.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now for the iron-bound chest at the bottom of the sea.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap12"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER XII
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+A dipsy-chanty, if you please; of sailormen in jerseys and tarry caps,
+of rolling gaits, strong tobacco and diverse profanity; of cutters, and
+blunt-nosed schooners, and tramps, canvas and steam, some of them
+honest, some of them shady, and some of them pirates of the first water
+who did not find it necessary to hoist aloft the skull and bones. The
+seas are dotted with them. They remind you of the once prosperous
+merchant, run down at the heel, who slinks along the side streets,
+ashamed to meet those he knew in the past. You never hear them
+mentioned in the maritime news, which is the society column of the
+ships; you know of their existence only by the bleached bones of them,
+strewn along the coast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You who crave adventures on high seas, you purchase a ticket, a steamer
+chair, and a couple of popular novels, go on board to the blare of a
+very indifferent brass band, and believe you are adventuring; when, as
+a matter of fact, you are about to spend a dull week or a fortnight on
+a water hotel, where the most exciting thing is the bugle's call to
+meals or the discovery of a card sharp in the smoking-room. Take a
+real ship, go as supercargo, to the South Seas; take the side streets
+of the ocean, and learn what it can do with hurricanes, typhoons,
+blistering calms, and men's souls. There will be adventure enough
+then. If you are a weakling, either you are made strong, or you die.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An honest ship, but run down at the heel, rode at anchor in the sound,
+a fourth-rater of the hooker breed; that is, her principal line of
+business was hauling barges up and down the coast. When she could not
+pick up enough barges to make it pay, why she'd go gallivanting down to
+Cuba for bales of tobacco or even to the Bermudas for the
+heaven-smelling onion. To-day she was an onion ship; which precludes
+any idea of adventure. She was about four thousand tons, and her
+engines were sternward and not amidship. She carried two masts and a
+half-dozen hoist booms, and the only visible sign of anything new on
+her was her bowsprit. This was new doubtless because she had poked her
+nose too far into her last slip.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her crew was orderly and tractable. There were shore drunks, to be
+sure, because they were sailors; but they were at work. They moved
+about briskly, for they were on the point of sailing for the
+Bahamas&mdash;perhaps for more onions. Presently the windlass creaked and
+shrilled, and the blobby links, much in need of tar paint, red as fish
+gills, clattered down into the bow. Sometimes they painted the chain
+as it came over; but paint was costly, and this was done only when the
+anchor threatened to stay on the bottom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a sailor among this crew, and he went by the name of Steve
+Blossom; and he was one of his kind. A grimy dime novel protruded
+rakishly from his hip pocket, and his right cheek was swollen as with
+the toothache, due, probably, to a generous "chaw" of Seaman's Delight.
+He was a real tobacco chewer, for he rarely spat. He was as peaceful
+as a backwater bay in summer; non-argumentative and passive, he stood
+his watch in fair weather and foul.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No one gave the anchor any more attention after it came to rest. The
+great city over the way was fairy-like in its haziness and softened
+lines. It was the poetry of angles, of shafts and spars of stone; and
+Steve Blossom, having a moment to himself, leaned against the rail and
+stared regretfully. He had been generously drunk the night before, and
+it was a pleasant recollection. Chance led his glance to trail down
+the cutwater. His neck stretched from his collar like a turtle's from
+its shell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, I'll be hornswoggled!" he murmured, shifting his cud from
+starboard to port.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Caught on the fluke of the anchor was the strangest looking box he had
+ever laid eyes on. There were leather and steel bands and
+diamond-shaped ivory and mother of pearl, and it hung jauntily on the
+point of the rusty fluke. Anybody would be hornswoggled to glimpse
+such a droll jest of fate. On the fluke of the old mudhook, by a hair,
+you might say. In all the wild sea yarns he had ever read or heard
+there was nothing to match this.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Treasure!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Steve was destined never to be passive again. His first impulse
+was to call his companions; his second impulse was to say nothing at
+all, and wait for an opportunity to get the box to his bunk without
+being detected. Treasure! Diamonds and rubies and pearls and old
+Spanish gold; and all hanging to the fluke of the anchor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hornswoggled!" in a kind of awesome whisper this time. "An' we
+a-headin' for th' Bahamas!" For under his feet he could hear the
+rhythm of engines. "What'll I do? If I leave it, some one else'll see
+it." He scratched his chin perplexedly; and the cud went back to
+starboard. "I got it!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He took off his coat and carefully dropped it down over the mysterious
+box. It was growing darker and darker all the time, and shortly
+neither coat nor anchor would be visible without close scrutiny.
+Treasure: greed, cupidity, crime. Steve saw only the treasure and not
+its camp followers. What did they call them?&mdash;doubloons and
+pieces-of-eight?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He ate his supper with his messmates, and he ate heartily as usual. It
+would have taken something more vital than mere treasure to disturb
+Steve Blossom's appetite. He was one of those enviable individuals
+whose imagination and gastric juices work at the same time. And while
+he ate he planned. In the first place, he would buy that home at
+Bedford; then he would take over the Gilson House and live like a lord.
+If he wanted a drink, all he would have to do would be to turn the
+spigot or tip a bottle; and more than that, he'd have a bartender to do
+it. Onions! He swore he would not have an onion within a mile of the
+Gilson House. "Onions!" Quite unconsciously he spoke the words aloud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Huh? Well, if ye don't like onions, find a hooker that packs violets
+in her hold," was the cheerful advice of the man at Steve's elbow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who's talkin' t' you?" grunted Steve. "Wha' did I say?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Onions, ye lubber! Don't we know whut onions is? Ain't we smelt 'em
+so long that ye could stick yer nose in th' starboard light an' never
+smell no kerosene? Onions! Pass th' cawffy."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Steve helped himself first. The man who spoke bunked over him, and
+they were not on the best of terms. There was no real reason for this
+frank antagonism; simply, they did not splice any more effectually than
+cotton rope and hemp splice. Sailors are moody and superstitious; at
+least they generally are on hookers of the <i>Captain Manners</i> breed.
+Steve was superstitious and Jim Dunkers was moody and had no thumb on
+his left hand. Steve hated the sight of that red nubbin. He was quite
+certain that it had been a whole thumb once, on the way to gouge out
+somebody's eye, and had inadvertently connected with somebody's teeth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Spanish doubloons and pearls and diamonds and rubies! It was mighty
+hard not to say these words out loud, too; blare them into the sullen
+faces grouped around the table. He was off watch till midnight; and he
+was wondering if he could get the box without attracting the attention
+of the lookout, who had a devilish keen eye for everything that stirred
+on deck or on water. Well, he would have to risk it; but he would wait
+till full darkness had fallen over the sea and the lookout would be
+compelled to keep his eyes off the deck. The boys wanted him to play
+cards.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Not for me. Busted. How long d' y' think forty dollars 'll last in
+New York, anyhow?" And he stalked out of the forecastle and went down
+into the waist to enjoy his evening pipe, all the while keeping a
+weather eye forward, at the ratty old pilot house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was ten o'clock, land time, when he rammed his cutty into a pocket
+and resolutely walked forward. If any one watched him they would think
+he was only looking down the cutwater. The thought of money and the
+pleasures it will buy makes cunning the stupidest of dolts; and Steve
+was ordinarily a dolt. But to-night his brain was keen enough for all
+purposes. It was a hazardous job to get the box off the fluke without
+letting it slip back into the sea. Steve, however, accomplished the
+feat, climbed back on the rail and sat down, waiting. A quarter of an
+hour passed. No one had seen him. With his coat securely wrapped
+about his precious find he made for the forecastle. His mates, save
+those who were doing their watch, were all in their bunks. An oil lamp
+dimly illuminated the forward partition. Steve's bunk was almost in
+darkness. Very deftly he rolled back the bedding and secreted the box
+under his pillows, and then stretched himself out with the pretense of
+snoozing till the bell called him to duty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was rich; and the moment a man has money he has troubles; there is
+always some one who wants to take it away from you. His bunk was on
+the port side, and there was plenty of hiding space between the iron
+plates and the wooden partition. He intended to loosen three or four
+planks, and then when the time came, slip the box behind them. Some
+time during the morning the forecastle would be empty, and then would
+be his time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he suffered the agonies of damnation during the four-hours' watch.
+Supposing some fool should go rummaging about his bunk and discover the
+box? Suppose ... But he dared not suppose. There was nothing to do
+but wait. If he created any curiosity on the part of his mates he was
+lost. He would have to divide with them all, from the captain down to
+the cook's boy. It was a heart-rending thought. From being the most
+open and frank man aboard, he became the most cunning. From being a
+man without enemies, he saw an enemy even in his shadow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At four o'clock he turned in and slept like a log.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the morning he found his opportunity. For half an hour the
+forecastle was empty of all save himself. Feverishly he pried back the
+boards, found the brace beam, and gently laid the box there. It was a
+mighty curious-looking box. Once he had stoked up the Chinese coast
+from the Philippines, and he judged it to be Chinese in origin. He
+tried to pry open the cover and feast his eyes upon the treasure; but
+under the leather and ivory and mother of pearl was impervious steel.
+It would take an ax or a crowbar to stir that lid. He sighed. He
+replaced the boards, and became to all appearances his stolid self
+again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But all the way down to the Bahamas he was moody, and when he answered
+any questions it was with words spoken testily and jerkily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I know whut's th' matter," said Dunkers. "He's in love."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Shut your mouth!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Didn't I tell yuh?" laughed the tantalizer, dancing toward the
+companion way. "Steve's in love, 'r he didn't git drunk enough on
+shore t' satisfy his whale's belly!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A boot thudded spitefully against the door jamb.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You fellahs let me alone, 'r I'll bash in a couple o' heads!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, yuh will, will yuh?" cried Dunkers from the deck. "If yuh want a
+little exercise, yuh can begin on me, yuh moonsick swab! Whut's th'
+matter with yuh, anyhow? Where'd yuh git this grouch? Whut've we done
+t' yuh? Huh?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You keep out o' my way, that's all. I'm mindin' my watches, an' don't
+ask no odds of you duffers. What if I have a grouch? Is it any o'
+your business? All right. When we step ashore at th' Bahamas, Mister
+Jim Dunkers, I'll tear the ropes out o' your pulley blocks. But till
+we git there, you t' th' upper bunk an' me t' mine."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Leave th' ol' grouch alone, Jim. Th' mate won't stand for no
+scrappin' aboard. We'll have th' thing done right in th' custom sheds.
+We'll have a finish fight, Queensberry rules, an' may th' best man win."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'm willin'," said Jim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"So'm I," agreed Steve. But his intentions were not honorable. He
+proposed to desert before any fight took place. Not that he was
+physically afraid; no; he wanted to dig his hands deep into those
+doubloons and pieces-of-eight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So the four days down passed otherwise uneventfully, amid paint pots
+and iron rust and three meals a day of pork, onion soup, potatoes, and
+strong, bitter coffee. The winds became light and balmy and the sea
+blue and gentle. The men went about in their undershirts and
+dungarees, barefooted. Of course the coming fight was the main topic
+of conversation. It promised to be a rattling good scrap, for both men
+were evenly matched, and both had a "kick" in either hand. Even the
+captain took a mild interest in the affair. He was an old sailor. He
+knew that there was no such word as arbitration in a sailor's
+vocabulary; his disputes could be settled only in one manner, by his
+calloused fists.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the old mudhook (and some day Steve was going to buy it and hang
+it over the entrance to the Gilson House) slithered down into the
+smiling waters of the bay, Steve concluded that discretion was the
+better part of valor. He would steal ashore on the quarantine tug
+which lay alongside. He was willing to fight under ordinary
+circumstances, but he must get his treasure in safety first. They
+could call him a welcher if they wanted to; devil a bit did he care.
+So he pried back the boards of his bunk wall, took out the box, eyed it
+fondly, and noted for the first time the lettering on it:
+</p>
+
+<p class="t3">
+STANLEY HARGREAVE.<br />
+</p>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<p>
+He wrinkled his brow in the effort to recall a pirate by this name, but
+was unsuccessful. No matter. He hugged the box under his coat and
+made for the gangway, and inadvertently ran into his enemy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dunkers caught a bit of the box peeping from under the coat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What 'a' yuh got there?" he demanded truculently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"None o' your dam business! You lemme by; hear me?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ain't none o' my business, huh? Where'd yuh git a box like that?
+Steal it? By cripes, I'm goin' t' have a look at that box, my hearty.
+It don't smell like honest onions."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You lemme by!" breathed Steve, with murder in his heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly the two men closed, surged back and forth, one determined to
+take and the other to hold this mysterious box. Dunkers struggled to
+uphold his word: not that he really wanted the box but to prove that he
+was strong enough to take it if he wanted to. The name on the box
+flashed and disappeared. It was a kind of shock to him. He and
+Blossom went battering against the rail. Dunker's grip slipped and so
+did Blossom's. The result was that the box was catapulted into the
+sea. With an agonizing cry, Blossom leaned far over. He saw the box
+oscillate for a moment, then sink gracefully in a zigzag course, down
+through the blue waters. Fainter and fainter it grew, and at last
+vanished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'm sorry, Steve; but yuh wouldn't let me look at it," said Dunkers,
+contritely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Damn you; I'm goin' t' kill y' for that!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It became a real fight this time, fist and foot, tooth and nail; one
+mad with the lust to kill and the other desperately intent on living.
+It was one of those contests in which honor and fair play have no part.
+But for the timely arrival of the captain and some of the crew Dunkers
+would have been badly injured, perhaps fatally. They hauled back
+Blossom, roaring out his oaths at the top of his lungs. It took half
+an hour's arguing to calm him down. Then the captain demanded to know
+what it was all about. And blubbering, Steve told him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Six hundred feet of water, if I've got my reckoning right. The anchor
+lies in sixty feet, but the starboard side drops sheer six hundred.
+You swab! Why didn't you bring the box to me? A man has a right to
+what he finds. I'd have taken care of it for you till we got back to
+port. I know; you were greedy; you thought I might want to stick my
+fist into your treasure. And you'll never find it in six hundred feet
+of water and tangled, porous coral. That's what, you get for being a
+blamed hog. As for you," and the captain turned to Dunkers, "get your
+dunnage and your pay and hunt for another boat back. I won't have no
+murder on board <i>Captain Manners</i>. And the sooner you go, the better."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'll go, sir," said Dunkers, readily enough. Had the misfortune
+happened to him and had Blossom been the aggressor, he would want his
+life. He understood. Like the valet in <i>Olivette</i>, it was the time
+for disappearing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"An' keep out o' my way. I'll git y' yet," growled Blossom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Keep your mouth shut," said the mate, "or I'll have you put in irons,
+you pig!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"All right, sir. I've said all I'm goin't' say t'day;" and Blossom
+strode off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What was the box like?" asked the captain of Dunkers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Chinese contraption, sir; leastwise it looked that way to me. Didn't
+look as if it'd been in th' water long, sir. Somethin' lost overboard
+by some private yacht, t' my thinkin'. I'll keep out o' Steve's way.
+I'll lay low on shore, sir."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And though Steve made a perfect range of the spot, he never came back
+to find the mysterious box, never saw the Gilson House back home, nor
+did he ever see Dunkers again. On the voyage home he brooded
+continually, and was frequently found blubbering; and one night he
+skipped his watch and went to Davy Jones' locker.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dunkers had not told about the name he had seen on the box; and Blossom
+had not thought to. The name Hargreave had instantly brought back to
+Dunkers' mind the newspaper stories he had recently read. There was no
+doubt in the world that this box belonged to the missing millionaire,
+who had drawn a million from his banks and vanished; and, moreover,
+there was no doubt in Dunkers' mind that this million lay in the
+Bahaman waters. It had been drawn up from the bottom of the sound,
+under the path of the balloon. He proceeded, then, to take a most
+minute range. It would require money and partners; but half a loaf
+would be far better than no loaf at all; and he was determined to
+return to New York to find backing. Finding is keeping, on land or sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now it happened that his favorite grog shop was a cheap saloon across
+the way from the headquarters of the Black Hundred; and Vroon
+occasionally dropped in, for he often picked up a valuable bit of
+maritime news. Bunkers was an old friend of the barkeeper, and he
+proceeded to pour and guzzle down his throat a very poor substitute for
+whisky. He became communicative. He bragged. He knew where there was
+a million, and all he needed was a first-class diving bell. A year
+from now he would not be drinking cheap whisky; he'd be steering a
+course up and down Broadway and buying wine when he was thirsty. He
+was no miser. But he had to have a diving bell; and where the blue
+devil could he get one with twelve dollars and an Ingersoll watch in
+his pocket?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From his table Vroon made a sign which the bartender understood. Then
+he rose and approached Bunkers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I own a pretty good diving apparatus," he said. "If you've got the
+goods, I'll take a chance on a fifty-fifty basis." Vroon did not
+believe there was anything back of his talk; but it always paid to dig
+deep enough to find out. "Have a drink; and, Bill, give us a real
+whisky and none of your soap-lye. Now, let's hear your yarn."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I don't know yuh," said Bunkers, with drunken caution. "How is it,
+Bill?" turning to the bartender.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He's the goods, Jim. You've heard of Wyant &amp; Co.?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Sure I've heard o' them. Best divin' app'ratus they is."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, this gent here is Mr. Brooks, general manager for Wyant &amp; Co. I
+can O.K. him."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vroon threw an appreciative glance at the bartender. He was not
+affiliated with the Black Hundred, but he had often aided Vroon in
+minor affairs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"All right, if yuh say so, Bill. Well, here's th' yarn."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And when he had done, Vroon smoked quietly without speaking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Don't yuh believe it?" demanded Bunkers, truculently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But six hundred feet of water, in a coral bottom, and no way of
+telling just where it fell overboard. That's a tough proposition."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, it is, is it? I'm a sailor. I can lay my hand right over th'
+spot. Do yuh think I'd be fool enough t' hunt for it without a perfect
+range?" Bunkers tapped his coat pocket suggestively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Vroon knew that the one thing he wanted was there, a plan or a
+drawing of the range. So there was another man shanghaied that night,
+and his destination was Cape Town, twenty-two days' voyage by the
+calendar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vroon carried his information to the organization that same night.
+They would start the expedition at once, and till this was
+accomplished, Hargreave's daughter was to be immune from attacks.
+Besides, it would give Hargreave (wherever he was) and the others the
+idea that the Black Hundred had concluded to give up the chase.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Above, with his ear to a small hole, skilfully bored through the
+ceiling without permitting the plaster to fall, knelt a man with a
+bandaged arm. He could never see any faces; no one ever took off a
+mask in this sinister chamber. But there were voices, and he was going
+to forget some of them. After the meeting came to an end, he waited an
+hour, and then stole down into the street by the aid of the
+fire-escape. Later, he entered a telephone booth and called up Jones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, one leathern and steel box, dotted with bits of ivory and
+mother-of-pearl, became two; and the second one was soaked in mud and
+salt water for two weeks till you could not have told it from the
+original. And that is why Jones was able, some weeks later, to hide
+once more the original box. As for the substitute, just as Braine was
+about to use a mallet and chisel upon it, the lights went out. There
+was a wild scramble, a chair or two was overturned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The door, the door!" shouted Braine, furious.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It slammed the moment the words left his lips. And as suddenly as they
+had gone out the lights sprang up. The box was gone. There were
+evidently traitors among the Black Hundred.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap13"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER XIII
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+The Black Hundred, not as individuals but as an organization, began to
+worry. Powerful, and often reckless and daring because it was
+powerful, it began to look about for some basic cause for all these
+failures against Hargreave's daughter and Hargreave's ghost. They had
+tried to put the inquisitive reporter out of the way; they had laid
+every trap they could think of to catch the mysterious visitor at the
+Hargreave home; they had thrown out a hundred lures to bring Hargreave
+out of his lair, and failed; and they had lost a dozen valuable men and
+several thousand dollars. This must end somewhere, and quickly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The one ray of hope for the conspirators lay in the fact that Florence
+had never seen her father and knew not in the least what he looked
+like. They determined to try again in this direction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Give it all up," said the countess to Braine. "I tell you, whatever
+is back of all this is stronger than we are. He knows the
+organization, and for all we know he may be a ghost."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I never go back," smiled Braine. "There's something more than the
+million. There's the sport of the thing. We've been bested in a dozen
+bouts, and nearly always by a fluke. They have the breaks, as they say
+out at the Polo Grounds."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But the time and expense when we might be getting results elsewhere!
+I tell you, Leo, I'm afraid. It's like always hearing some one behind
+you and never finding anybody when you turn. I have told you my
+doubts. I have also asked you to trap that butler, but you've always
+laughed."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You are seeing ghosts, Olga. A new man from holy Russia," shrugging,
+"is coming to-night. Evidently the head over there thinks our
+contributions of late have not been up to the mark, and they are going
+to stir us up. I am willing to wager my soul, however, that that box
+is simply a hoax to befuddle us. Either that or it holds the key. But
+the rest of them insist that the box must be recovered. When I leave
+this room to-night I am going over to Riverdale and stalk all by
+myself. I'm going to get a glimpse of that mysterious stranger. He
+carries a scar of mine somewhere, for I hit him that night."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The door opened and the executive chamber became silent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Count Paroff," boomed the voice of Vroon. "He will present his
+credentials."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This formality was executed as prescribed by the rules; and Count
+Paroff was given his chair. He spoke for a while, rather pompously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The head organization is not satisfied with its offspring in this
+Hargreave affair," he said in conclusion. "You are slow."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then perhaps you have come with some suggestions for the betterment of
+our business?" asked Braine ironically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Sir, this is not the hour for flippancy," said the agent coldly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine made a sign with his hand, a sign not observed by every one.
+Instantly Paroff bent lowly. He recognized that the speaker was the
+actual, not the nominal, head of the American branch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What are your suggestions?" inquired the nominal head from his chair,
+anxious to avoid a clash between the newcomer and the truculent master
+of them all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have been informed that Hargreave's daughter has never seen her
+father, not even a photograph of him," said Paroff, more amiably.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We are absolutely certain that this is the case," said the nominal
+head, who was known as the president. "But we tried one play in that
+direction, and it failed miserably."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have the story," replied Paroff. "It was clumsily done. The ruse
+was an old one."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine was frank enough to admit the truth of this statement, however
+much he disliked the admission. He nodded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have authority to take a hand in this affair. We can not waste all
+summer. Those government plans of the fortifications of the Panama are
+waiting. There's your millions. But the fact remains that it is the
+law of the Black Hundred never to step down till absolutely defeated.
+The hidden million is but half; we must find and break this renegade
+Hargreave."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If he lives," said Braine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who can say one way or the other?" bruskly asked Paroff. "The fact
+that all your plans and schemes have come to naught should prove to you
+that you are not fighting a ghost. There is but one way to bring out
+the truth."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And that is to make a captive of his daughter," supplemented Braine.
+"And we have worked toward that end ceaselessly. We are quite ready to
+listen to your suggestions, count."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And so am I," thought the man with his ear to the little hole in the
+ceiling above. "And some day, my energetic friend, I'm going to pay
+you back for that bullet."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Count Paroff cleared his voice and laid his plans before his audience.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"To act frankly and in the open, to go boldly to the Hargreave home and
+proclaim myself Hargreave. I can disguise myself in a manner that will
+at least temporarily fool the butler."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who has been with his master for fourteen years, knows every move,
+habit, gesture, inflection," interposed Braine. "But proceed, count,
+proceed. You will remember the old adage; too many cooks."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ah," flashed back the count, "but a new cook?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Olga touched Braine's arm warningly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You mean, then, that there has been talk in St. Petersburg of
+disposing of some one?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A good deal of talk, sir," haughtily, forgetting that he had bent
+humbly enough but a few moments gone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Very well; go on."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thought the man at the peephole above: "There's another adage. When
+thieves fall out, then honest men get their dues. Yes, yes; proceed,
+proceed!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Paroff went on. "I shall, then, go frankly to the Hargreave house and
+claim my own. Meantime I leave to you the business of luring the
+butler away. Half an hour is all I need to bring that child here, to
+break the wall that stands between us and what we seek."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is that so?" murmured Braine. "Olga, I want you to play a trick on
+this handsome delegate-at-large. I'm not very enthusiastic over his
+talk. I want him humiliated. All you have to do, he says, is to walk
+into the Hargreave house and walk out again. Well, let's you and I see
+that he does that and nothing else. I'll have no one meddling with my
+own game."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some one sneezed, and everybody looked at his neighbor. The sneeze was
+repeated, but muffled, as if some one was desperately anxious to avoid
+sneezing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It came from above!" whispered Olga. "Don't look up!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine was cool. He walked idly across the room to where Vroon sat.
+"Very well, Paroff; we give you free rein." To Vroon he said: "Some
+one is watching us from the room overhead. I thought that room
+belonged to us."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It does," said Vroon stolidly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then how is it that some one is watching from up there? No
+excitement. I'm going to bid every one good night, then I'm going to
+investigate. When I leave you will quietly send men to all exits to
+the building. I want the man who sneezed, and I want him badly."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Olga departed with Braine, only she immediately sought the taxi that
+brought her and was driven home. It was always understood that when
+any serious exploit was under way hereabouts she was to make her
+departure at once.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vroon stationed his men at the several exits and Braine went up-stairs.
+The man who had sneezed, however, had vanished as completely as if he
+had worn that invisible cloak one reads about in the Persian tales. As
+a matter of fact, after the second sneeze he had gone up to the roof,
+got out by the trap, and jumped&mdash;rather risky business, too&mdash;to the
+next roof and had clambered down the fire-escape of the second
+building. He was swearing inaudibly. After all these days of care and
+planning, after all his cleverness in locating the rendezvous of the
+Black Hundred, and now to lose his advantage because of an
+uncontrollable sneeze! He would never dare go back, and just when he
+was beginning to pick up fine bits of information! So Florence
+Hargreave was going to have a new father in a day or so? There were
+some clever rogues among this band of theirs; but their cleverness was
+well offset by an equal number of fools.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yes, there were some clever rogues, and to prove this assertion Braine
+secured a taxicab and drove furiously away, his destination the home of
+his ancient enemy. He dropped the cab a block or two away and
+presently stowed himself away in the summer house at the left of the
+lawn. It would have been a capital idea&mdash;that is, if the other man had
+not thought of and anticipated this very thing. So he used a public
+pay station telephone; and Braine waited in vain, waited till the
+lights in the Hargreave house went out one by one and it became wrapped
+in darkness within and moonshine without.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine was a philosopher. He returned to his waiting taxicab, drove
+home, paid the bill, smiling grimly, and went to bed. It was going to
+be a wonderful game of blind man's buff, and it was going to be sport
+to watch this fool Paroff blunder into a pit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next afternoon Florence and Norton sat in the summer house talking
+of the future. Lovers are prone to talk of that. As if anything else
+in the world ever equals the present! They talked of nice little
+apartments and vacations in the summer and how much they would save out
+of his salary, and a thousand and one other things which would not
+interest you at all if I recounted them in detail. But they did love
+each other, and they were going to be married; you may be certain of
+that. They did not care a snap of the finger what Jones thought. They
+were going to be married, and that was all there was to it. Of course,
+Florence couldn't touch a penny of her father's money. If he, Norton,
+couldn't take care of her without help, why, he wouldn't be worth the
+powder to blow him up with.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-177"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-177.jpg" alt="THEY DID NOT CARE A SNAP OF THEIR FINGERS WHAT JONES THOUGHT" />
+<br />
+THEY DID NOT CARE A SNAP OF THEIR FINGERS WHAT JONES THOUGHT
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But, my dear, you must be very careful," he said. "Jones and I will
+always be about somewhere. If they really get hold of you once, God
+alone knows what will happen. It is not you, it is your poor father
+they want to bring out into the open. If they knew where he was they
+would not bother you in the least."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Have I really a father? Sometimes I doubt. Why couldn't he steal
+into the house and see me, just once?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Perhaps he dares not. This house is always watched, night and day,
+though you'll look in vain to discover any one. Your father knows best
+what he is doing, my dear girl. You see, I met him years ago in China;
+and when he started out to do a certain thing he generally did it. He
+never botched any of his plans. So we all must wait. Only I'm going
+to marry you all the same, whether he likes it or not. The rogues will
+try to impose upon you again; but do not pay any attention to notes or
+personals in the papers. And it was a lucky thing that I was on the
+freighter that picked you up at sea. I shall always wonder how that
+yacht took fire."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"So shall I," replied Florence, her brows drawing together in
+puzzlement. "Sometimes I think I must have done it. You know, people
+out of their heads do strange things. I seem to see myself as in a
+dream. And this man Braine is a scoundrel!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes; and more than that, he is the dear friend of the countess. But
+understand, you must never let her dream or suspect that you know. By
+lulling her into overconfidence some day she will naturally grow
+careless, and then we'll have them all. I think I understand what your
+father's idea is: not to have them arrested for blackmail, but
+practically to exterminate them, put them in prison for such terms of
+years that they'll die there. When you see a snake, a poisonous one,
+don't let it get away. Kill it. Well, I must be off to work."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And you be careful, too. You are in more danger than I am."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But I'm a man and can dodge quick," he laughed, picking up his hat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What a horrid thing money is! If I hadn't any money, nobody would
+bother me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I would," he smiled. He wanted to kiss her, but the eternal Jones
+might be watching from the windows; and so he patted her hand instead
+and walked down the graveled path to the street.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was difficult work for Florence to play at friendship. She was like
+her father; she did not bestow it on every one. She had given her
+friendship to the Russian, the first real big friendship in her life,
+and she had been roughly disillusioned. But if the countess could act,
+so could she; and of the two her acting was the more consummate. She
+could smile and laugh and jest, all the while her heart was burning
+with wrath.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One day, a week or so after her meeting with Norton in the summer
+house, Olga arrived, beautifully gowned, handsome as ever. There was
+not the least touch of the adventuress in her makeup. Florence had
+just received some mail, and she had dropped the letters on the library
+table to greet the countess. She had opened them, but had not yet
+looked at their contents.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were chatting pleasantly about inconsequent things, when the maid
+came in and asked Florence to come to Miss Susan's room for a moment.
+Florence excused herself, wondering what Susan could want. She forgot
+the mail.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As soon as she was gone the countess, certain that Jones was not
+lurking about, picked up the letters and calmly examined their
+contents; and among them she found this remarkable document: "Dear
+daughter I have never seen: I must turn the treasure over to you. Meet
+me at eight in the summer house. Tell no one, as my life is in danger.
+Your loving father."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The countess could have laughed aloud. She saw this man Paroff's hand;
+and here was the chance to befool and humiliate him and send him off
+packing to his cold and miserable country. She had made up once as
+Florence, and she could easily do so again. The only thing that
+troubled her was the fact that she did not know whether Florence had
+read the letter or not. Thus, she did not dare destroy it. She first
+thought of changing the clock; then she concluded to drop the letter
+exactly where she found it and trust to luck.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-179"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-179.jpg" alt="SHE FIRST THOUGHT OF CHANGING THE CLOCK" />
+<br />
+SHE FIRST THOUGHT OF CHANGING THE CLOCK
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Florence returned she explained that her absence had been due to
+some trifling household affair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Said the Russian: "I come primarily to ask you to tea to-morrow, where
+they dance. If you like, you may ask Mr. Norton to go along. I begin
+to observe that you two are rather fond of each other."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, Mr. Norton is just a valuable friend," returned Florence with a
+smile that quite deceived the other woman. "I shall be glad to go to
+the tea. But I shall not promise to dance."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Not with Mr. Norton?" archly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Reporters never dance themselves; they make others dance instead."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I shall have to tell that," declared the countess; and she laughed
+quite honestly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then I have said something witty?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Indeed you have; and it is not only witty but truthful. I'm afraid
+you're deeper than the rest of us have any idea of."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Perhaps I am," thought Florence; "at least deeper than you believe."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the countess fluttered down to her limousine&mdash;Florence hated the
+sight of it&mdash;and drove away, Florence remembered her letters. And when
+she came to the one purporting to be from her father, she read it
+carefully, bent her head in thought, and finally destroyed the missive,
+absolutely confident that it was only a trap, and not very well
+conceived at that. Norton had given her plenty of reason for believing
+all such letters to be forgeries. Her father, if he really wished to
+see her, would enter the house; he would not write. Ah, when would she
+see that father of hers, so mysterious, always hovering near, always
+unseen?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It must have been an amusing adventure for the countess. To steal into
+the summer house and wait there, not knowing if Florence had advised
+Jones or the reporter. If caught, she had her excuses. Paroff, the
+confident, however, appeared shortly after.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My child!" whispered the man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Olga stifled a laugh; but to him it sounded like a sob.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am worn out," he said. "I am tired of the game of hide and seek."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You will not have to play the game long," thought Olga.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The money is hidden in my office down-town. And we must go there at
+once. When we return we will pack up and leave for Europe. I've
+longed to see you so!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You poor fool! And they sent you to supersede Leo!" she mused.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She played out the farce to the very end. She permitted herself to be
+pinioned and jogged; and for what unnecessary roughness she suffered at
+the hands of Paroff he would presently pay. He took her straight to
+the executive chamber of the Black Hundred and pushed her into the
+room, exclaiming triumphantly:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Here is Hargreave's daughter!"
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-181"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-181.jpg" alt="HE TOOK HER STRAIGHT TO THE EXECUTIVE CHAMBER OF THE BLACK HUNDRED" />
+<br />
+HE TOOK HER STRAIGHT TO THE EXECUTIVE CHAMBER OF THE BLACK HUNDRED
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Indeed!" said Olga, throwing back her veil and standing revealed in
+her mask.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Olga!" cried Braine, laughing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And that was the inglorious end of the secret agent from Russia.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap14"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER XIV
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+Perhaps the most amusing phase of the secret agent's discomfiture was
+the fact that neither Jones nor Florence had the least idea what had
+happened. Florence regretted a hundred times during the evening that
+she had not gone out to the summer house. It might really have been
+her father. Her regret grew so deep in her that just before going to
+bed she confessed to Jones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You received a letter of that sort and did not show it to me?" said
+Jones, astonished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You warned me never to pay any attention to them."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No; I warned you never to act upon them without first consulting me.
+And we might have made a capture! My child, always show me these
+things. I will advise you whether to tear them up or not."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jones, I believe you are going a little too far," said Florence
+haughtily. "It might have been my father."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Never in this world, Miss Florence. Still, I beg your pardon for
+raising my voice. What I do and have done is only for your own sake.
+There are two things I wish to impress upon your mind before I go.
+This can be made a comedy or a terrible tragedy. You have already had
+a taste of the latter; and each time you escaped because God was good
+to us. But He is rarely kind to thoughtless people. They have to look
+out for themselves. I am acting under orders; always remember that."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Forgive me; I acted wrongly. But I'm so weary and tired of this
+eternal suspicion of everybody and everything. Can't I go somewhere,
+some place where I can have rest?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If I thought for a single moment it was possible to take you thousands
+of miles from this spot, it would be done this very night. But this is
+our fortress. So far it has been impregnable. The police are watching
+it; and that prevents a general assault by the scoundrels. If we tried
+to leave we would be followed; and they play the game exceedingly well.
+Now, good night. We'll have you out of all this doubt and suspicion
+one of these days. There will not be any past; that will be lopped off
+as you'd lop a limb from a tree."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Please let it be quick. I want to see my father."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones' eyes sparkled. "And you have my word that he wants to see you.
+But I dare not tell you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do you think he would object to Mr. Norton?" she asked, studying the
+rug.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"In what capacity?" he countered, forcing her hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"As&mdash;as a husband?" bravely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones in turn studied the patterns in the rug. "It is only natural for
+a father to look high for his daughter's husband. But, after all, an
+honest man is worth as much as anything I know of. And Norton is
+honest and loyal and brave."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thank you, Jones. I intend to marry him when the time comes; so you
+may as well prepare father for this eventuality."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is an old adage&mdash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But she interrupted him. "If you have a new adage, Jones, I shouldn't
+mind hearing it. But I'm only just out of school, where old adages are
+served from soup to pudding. Good night."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Jones went to the rear of the house, chuckling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the passing it might well be observed that the Hargreave house had a
+remarkable menage. There was a gardener, a cook, and a maid; and the
+three of them reported to Jones each night before going to bed. They
+were all three detectives from one of the greatest organizations in
+America.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Finding themselves unable to lure Florence away from the environs of
+the Hargreave home, the Black Hundred set some new machinery in motion.
+They proposed to rid the house of every one in it by a perfectly
+logical device. But the first step in this new move was going to be
+extremely delicate and risky. It was no small adventure to enter the
+Hargreave home; and yet this must be done. So finally "Spider" Beggs
+was selected for the work. The man could practically walk over
+crockery without causing a sound; he could climb a house by the window
+ledges; and he could hold his breath like those professional tank
+swimmers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Three or four nights after the Paroff fiasco, Jones started the rounds,
+putting out the lights. He left the one in the hall till the last, for
+it was his habit, after having turned off that light, to stand by the
+door for several minutes, watching. One never could tell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the other hand, "Spider" Beggs never approached a house till an hour
+after the lights went out. Persons were likely to move about for some
+minutes later; they might want something to eat, a drink of water. So
+he remained hidden behind the summer house till long after midnight.
+When at last he felt assured that all in the Hargreave house were
+asleep, he moved out cautiously. Both his future and his pocketbook
+depended upon the success of this venture. It took him ten minutes to
+crawl from the summer house to the veranda, and to have detected this
+approach Jones, had he been watching, would have needed a searchlight.
+Beggs hugged the lattice-work for another ten minutes and then drew
+himself up and wriggled to one of the windows. Here was an operation
+that needed all his care and skill; to lift this window without sound.
+But he was an old hand and windows with ordinary locks were playthings
+under his deft touch. He raised the window, stepped over the sill into
+the library, and crouched down. He did not close the window; house
+thieves never do. They leave windows and doors open, because sooner or
+later they have to make their escape that way.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-185"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-185.jpg" alt="HERE WAS AN OPERATION THAT NEEDED ALL HIS CARE AND SKILL" />
+<br />
+HERE WAS AN OPERATION THAT NEEDED ALL HIS CARE AND SKILL
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently he stood up, flashed his torch, found the library shelves,
+and tiptoed toward them. He then selected three or four volumes,
+opened them at random and laid neat packages of money between the
+leaves. It was not real money, but only a bank clerk could have told
+that. This done, he moved toward the window again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Stop!" said Jones quietly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Spider" Beggs gasped, it was so unexpected; but at the same time
+almost instinctively he plunged headlong through the window, and the
+bullet which followed snipped a lock of his hair. He threw himself off
+the veranda and scurried across the lawn, zigzag fashion. But no more
+bullets followed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones turned on the lights and investigated the room, but he could not
+find anything disturbed, and naturally came to the conclusion that the
+intruder had been interrupted before he had begun his work. He turned
+off the lights and sat up the major part of the night. Nothing more
+happened. Florence came down, but he sent her back to bed, explaining
+that some one had attempted to enter the house and he had taken a shot
+at him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Spider" Beggs had a letter to write. He was in high feather. He had
+tackled a difficult job and had come away without a scratch. But he
+had the misfortune to write his letter to the secret service officials
+in a hotel often frequented by Norton. And so Jim, on finishing his
+own letter, blotted it and casually glanced at the blotter. A single
+word caught his eye. Being an alert newspaper man, always on the hunt
+for stories, he examined the blotter with care. It was an easy matter
+for him to read writing backward, having fooled away many an hour in
+the composing rooms. The word which had awakened the reportorial sense
+in him was "counterfeit." He held the blotter toward the mirror and
+read enough to satisfy himself that the Black Hundred had become active
+once more. And this was one of the best ideas they had yet conceived.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-186"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-186.jpg" alt="HE EXAMINED THE BLOTTER WITH CARE" />
+<br />
+HE EXAMINED THE BLOTTER WITH CARE
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hargreave had always been something of a mystery to his neighbors.
+Where he had lived in other days was unknown; neither had any one the
+remotest idea from what source his riches had been obtained. And
+nothing was known of Jones or the daughter. It was a very shrewd
+method of clearing every one out of the house and leaving it to be
+examined at leisure. And he had fallen upon this thing; he, Norton,
+all because his tailor had written him a sharp note about his bill and
+he had been provoked to reply in kind! Counterfeit money. There was
+quite a flurry these days over certain issues of spurious paper. It
+was so good that only experts could detect it. There were two plates,
+one for a ten and another for a twenty. For a while he was pulled
+between duty and love. Well, it would only add another interesting
+chapter to the general story when he published it. He started out to
+Riverdale to acquaint Jones with the discovery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Humph!" said Jones; "not a bad idea this. So that's what the sneak
+was doing here last night. I've been wondering and wondering. Let's
+have a look."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He went through the books and at length came across the three volumes.
+These held a thousand in excellent counterfeit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Mighty good work that. What are you going to do?" asked the reporter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones rubbed his chin reflectively. "How long may a counterfeiter be
+sent up?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Anywhere from ten to twenty years."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That will serve. My boy, this time we'll go and take Mr. Black
+Hundred right in his cubby-hole."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You know where it is?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Every nook and corner of it. Now you go at once to the chief of the
+local branch of the secret service and put the matter to him frankly.
+I, Florence, Susan, and the rest of us must be arrested. The wretches
+must believe that the house is empty. They'll rove about fruitlessly
+and will return to their den to report the success of the coup. All
+the while you and some detectives will be in hiding up-stairs,
+dictagraph and all that. When the time comes you will follow. This
+will not reach the heads, perhaps, but it will demoralize the
+organization in such a way as to make it helpless for several months to
+come. There is a tunnel from the stables to this house."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What, a tunnel?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes, Mr. Hargreave had it built several years ago. I don't know what
+his idea was; possibly he anticipated an event like this. You and your
+men will find entrance by this method. It can be done without exciting
+the suspicions of the watchers."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Looks as if my yarn wasn't going to be delayed so long after all.
+Jones, you ought to have been in the secret service yourself,"
+admiringly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones smiled and shrugged. "I am perfectly satisfied with my lot&mdash;or
+would be if the Black Hundred could be wiped out of existence."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'll see the secret service people at once. I stand in well with them
+all."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And good luck to you. We'll need good luck."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton was welcomed cordially by the chief. The secret service men
+trusted him and told him lots of tales that never saw light on the
+printed page. The reporter went directly to the point of his story,
+without elaboration, and the chief smiled and handed him the original
+letter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Norton, I've been after this gang of counterfeiters for months and
+they are clever beyond words. I've never been able to get anywhere
+near their presses. And for a moment I thought this note was from a
+squealer. I've a dozen men scouring the country. They find the bogus
+notes, but never the men who pass them. You see, it's new stuff. I
+know what all of the old-timers are at; none of them has had a hand in
+this issue. Some foreigners, I take it, under the leadership of a man
+I'd very much like to know. Now, what's your scheme?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jim outlined it briefly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It all depends," said the chief, "upon the fact that they will be
+impatient. If they have the ability to wait, we lose. But we can
+afford to risk the chance. The man who wrote this letter is not a
+counterfeiter. He's an old yeggman. We haven't heard anything of him
+lately. We tried to corner him on a post-office job, but he slipped
+by. He may be a stool. Anyhow, I'll draw him in somehow."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There'll be some excitement."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We're used to that; you too. All we've got to do is to locate this
+man Beggs. There are signs of spite in this letter. Very well played,
+if you want my opinion. What's this Black Hundred?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'm not at liberty to tell just yet. It's a strange game; half
+political, half blackmail. It's a pretty strong organization. But if
+they're back of this counterfeiting, there's a fine chance of landing
+them all."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here the chief's assistant came in. "Got Beggs on the wire. Says
+he'll conduct you to the home if you'll promise him immunity for some
+other offenses."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Tell him he shall have immunity on the word of the chief. But also
+say that he must come to see me in person."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"All right, sir."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I don't believe it would be wise for Beggs to see me here. I gave him
+a good send-off&mdash;Sing Sing&mdash;five years ago. He may recollect," said
+Norton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Suit yourself about that. Only, keep in communication with me by
+telephone and I'll tip you off as to when the raid shall take place.
+Lucky you came in. I should have honestly gone there and arrested
+innocent people, and they would have had a devil of a time explaining.
+It would have taken them at least a week to clear themselves. That
+would leave the house empty all that time."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton did not reply, but he put the blotter away carefully. There was
+no getting away from the fact, but the god of luck was with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do you know what's back of it all?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I can't tell you any more than I have," said Norton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then I pass. I know you well enough. If you've made up your mind not
+to talk a man couldn't get anything out of you with a can-opener. And
+that's why we trust you, my boy. Don't forget the telephone."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I shan't. So long."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That same night Braine paid the Russian woman a brief visit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I think that here's where we go forward. The secret service will raid
+the house to-morrow and then for a few days we'll roam about as we
+bally please. I'm hanged if I don't have every plank torn up and the
+walls pulled down. More and more I'm convinced that the money is in
+that house."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Don't be too confident," warned Olga. "So many times we have been
+tripped up when everything seemed in our hands. The house should be
+guarded but not entered for a day or two; at least not till after the
+raid is cold. I'm beginning to see traps everywhere."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Nonsense! Leave it to me. We shan't stick our heads inside the
+Hargreave house till we are dead certain that it is absolutely empty.
+Olga, you're a gem. I don't think Russia will bother us for a while.
+Eh? Paroff will not dare tell how he was flimflammed. The least he
+can do to save his own skin is to say that we are fully capable of
+taking care of ourselves."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Olga laughed. "To think of his writing a note like that! Florence
+would have recognized&mdash;and no doubt did&mdash;a palpable attempt to play an
+old game twice."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How does she act toward you?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Cordial as ever; and yet..."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yet what?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I thought her an ordinary schoolgirl, and yet every once in a while
+she makes what you billiard players call a professional shot. What
+matter? So long as they do not shut the door in my face, I ask nothing
+more. But do you want my opinion? I feel it in my bones that
+something will go wrong to-morrow."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Good lord, are you losing your nerve?" cried Braine impatiently. "The
+secret service has the warning; they find the green stuff, and Jones &amp;
+Co. will mog off to the police station. And there'll be a week of red
+tape before they are turned loose again. They'll dig into Hargreave's
+finances and all that. We'll have all the security in the world to
+find out if the money is in the house or not. Why worry?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It's only the way I feel. There is something uncanny in the
+regularity of that girl's good luck."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ah, but we're not after her this time; it's the whole family."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The servants too?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Everybody in the house will be under suspicion."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And can you trust Beggs?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"His life is in the hollow of my hand. You can always trust a man when
+you hold the rope that's around his neck."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still the frown did not leave Olga's brow. With all her soul she
+longed to be out of this tangle. It had all looked so easy at the
+start; yet here they were, weeks later, no further forward than at the
+beginning, and added to this they had paid much in lives and money.
+Well, if she would be fool enough to love this man she must abide with
+the consequences. She wanted him all by herself, out of danger, in a
+far country. He might tire, but she knew in her heart that she never
+would. This was her one great passion, and while her mode of living
+was not as honest as might be, her love was honest enough and
+unswerving, though it was not gilded by the pleasant fancies of youth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Of what are you thinking?" he asked when he concluded that the pause
+had been long enough.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"H'm. Complimentary?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No; just ordinary every-day love."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ah, Olga, why the deuce must you go and fall in love with a bundle of
+ashes like myself? Ashes, and bitter ashes, too. Sometimes I regret.
+But the regretting only seems to make me all the more savage. What
+opium and dope are to other men, danger and excitement are to me. It
+is not written that I shall die in bed. I have told you that already.
+There is no other woman&mdash;now. And I do love you after a fashion, as a
+man loves a comrade. Wait till this dancing bout is over and I may
+talk otherwise. And now I am going to shake hands and hobnob with the
+elite&mdash;beautiful word! And while I bow and smirk and crack witticisms,
+I and the devil will be chuckling in our sleeves. But this I'll tell
+you, while there's a drop of blood in my veins, a breath in my body,
+I'll stick to this fight if only to prove that I'm not a quitter."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He caught her suddenly in his arms, kissed her, ran lightly to the
+door, and was gone before she could recover from her astonishment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The affair went smoothly, without a hitch. Norton and his men gained
+the house through the tunnel without attracting the least attention.
+The Black Hundred, watching the front and rear of the house, never
+dreamed that there existed another mode of entrance or that there was a
+secret cabinet room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Half an hour later the head of the secret service, accompanied by his
+men, together with "Spider" Beggs, who was in high feather over his
+success, arrived, demanded admittance, and went at the front of the
+business at once.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Your name is Jones?" began the chief.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The butler nodded, though his face evinced no little bewilderment at
+the appearance of these men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What is it you wish, sir?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am from the secret service and I have it from a pretty good source
+that there is counterfeit money hidden in this house. More than that,
+I can put my hand on the very place it is hidden."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That is impossible, sir," declared Jones indignantly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am an old hand, Mr. Jones. It will not do you a bit of good to put
+on that bold front."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Beggs smiled. How was he to know that this was a comedy set especially
+for his benefit?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I should like to see that money," said Jones, not quite so bravely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Come with me," said the secret service man. "Where's the library?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Beyond that door, sir."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The chief beckoning to his men, entered the library, went directly to a
+certain shelf, extracted three volumes, and there lay the money in
+three neat packages.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Good heavens!" gasped Jones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I shall have to request you and the family to accompany me to the
+station."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But it is all utterly impossible, sir! I know nothing of that money
+nor how it got there. It's a plot. I declare on my oath, sir, that I
+am innocent, that Miss Florence and her companion know nothing about
+it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You will have to tell that to the federal judge, sir. My duty is to
+take you all to the station. It would be just as well not to say
+anything more, sir."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Very well; but some one shall smart for this outrage."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That remains to be seen," was the terse comment of the secret service
+man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He led his prisoners away directly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton and his men had to wait far into the night. The Black Hundred
+did not intend to make any mistake this time by a hasty move. At
+quarter after ten they descended. Braine was not with them. This was
+due to the urgent request of Olga, who still had her doubts. The men
+rioted about the house, searching nooks and corners, examining floors
+and walls, opening books, pulling out drawers, but they found nothing.
+They talked freely, and the dictagraph registered every word. The
+printing plant, which had so long defied discovery, was in the cellar
+of the house occupied by the Black Hundred. Norton and his men
+determined to follow and raid the building. And the reporter promised
+himself a good front-page story without in any way conflicting with his
+promises to Jones.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-194"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-194.jpg" alt="THE MEN RIOTED ABOUT THE HOUSE SEARCHING NOOKS AND CORNERS" />
+<br />
+THE MEN RIOTED ABOUT THE HOUSE SEARCHING NOOKS AND CORNERS
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Events came to pass as they expected. The trailing was not the easiest
+thing. Norton knew about where the building was, but he could not go
+to it directly. He was quite confident that its entrance was identical
+with that which had the trap door through which he had been flung that
+memorable day when he had been shanghaied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When they reached the building he warned the men to hug the wall to the
+stairs. The trap yawned, but no one was hurt. They scampered up the
+stairs like a lot of eager boys; broke the door in&mdash;to find the weird
+executive chamber dark and empty and an acrid smoke in their nostrils.
+This latter grew stifling as they blundered about in the dark. By luck
+Norton found the exit and called to the men to follow. They saw Beggs
+at the top of the stairway and called out to him to surrender. He held
+up his hands and the stairs collapsed. Real fire burst out and Norton
+and his companions had a desperate battle with flame and smoke to gain
+the street.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fire was put out finally, but there was nothing in the ruins to
+prove that there had been a counterfeiting den there. There was,
+however, at least one consoling feature: in the future the Black
+Hundred would have to hold their star-chamber elsewhere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was checkmate; or, rather, it was a draw.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap15"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER XV
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+If the truth is to be told, Jones was as deeply chagrined over the
+outcome of the counterfeit deal as was Braine. They had both failed
+signally to reach the goal sought. But this time the organization had
+broken even with Jones, and this fact disturbed the butler. It might
+signify that the turning point had been reached, and that in the future
+the good luck might swing over to the side of the Black Hundred. Jones
+redoubled his cautions, reiterated his warnings, and slept less than
+ever. Indeed, as he went over the ground he conceded a point to the
+Black Hundred. He would no longer be able to keep tab on the
+organization. They had deserted their former quarters absolutely. The
+agent of whom they had leased the building knew nothing except that he
+would have to repair the place. The rent had been paid a year in
+advance, as it had been these last eight years. He had dealt through
+an attorney who knew no more of his clients than the agent. So it will
+be seen that Jones had in reality received a check.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+More than all this, it would give his enemies renewed confidence; and
+this was a deeper menace than he cared to face. But he went about his
+affairs as usual, giving no hint to any one of the mental turmoil which
+had possession of him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is needless to state Norton did not scoop his rivals on the
+counterfeit story. But he set to work exploring the cellar of the
+gutted building, and in one corner he found a battered die. He turned
+this over to the secret service men. There was one man he wanted to
+find&mdash;Vroon. This man, could he find him, should be made to lead him,
+Norton, to the new stronghold. He saw the futility of trying to trap
+Braine by shadowing him. He desired Braine to believe that his escape
+from the freighter had been a bit of wild luck and not a preconceived
+plan. Braine was out of reach for the present, so he began to search
+for the man Vroon. He haunted the water front saloons for a week
+without success.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He did not know that it was the policy of the Black Hundred to lay low
+for a month after a raid of such a serious character. So the Hargreave
+menage had thirty days of peace; always watched, however. For Braine
+never relaxed his vigilance in that part of the game. He did not care
+to lose sight of Jones, who he was positive was ready for flight if the
+slightest opportunity offered itself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton went back to the primrose paths of love; and sometimes he would
+forget all about such a thing as the Black Hundred. So the summer days
+went by, with the lilacs and the roses embowering the Hargreave home.
+But Norton took note of the fact that Florence was no longer the
+light-hearted schoolgirl he had first met. Her trials had made a
+serious woman of her, and perhaps this phase was all the more
+enchanting to him, who had his serious side also. Her young mind was
+like an Italian garden, always opening new vistas for his admiring gaze.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He went about his work the same as of old, interviewing, playing
+detective, fattening his pay envelope by specials to the Sunday edition
+and some of the lighter magazines. Sometimes he had vague dreams of
+writing a play, a novel, and making a tremendous fortune like that chap
+Manders, who only a few years ago had been his desk mate. He really
+began the first chapter of a novel; but that has nothing to do with
+this history.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All ready, then. The chess are once more on the board, and it is the
+move of the Black Hundred.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The day was rather cloudy. Jones viewed the sky wearily. He could
+hear Florence playing rather a cheerless nocturne by Chopin. Fourteen
+weeks ago this warfare had begun, and all he had accomplished, he and
+those with him, was the death or incarceration of a few inconsequent
+members of the Black Hundred. Always they struck and always he had to
+ward off. He had always been on the defensive; and a defensive fighter
+may last a long while, but he seldom wins; and the butler knew that
+they must win or go down in bitter defeat. There was no half-way route
+to the end; there could be no draw. It all reminded him of
+thunderbolts; one man knew where they were going to strike.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The telephone rang; at the same moment Florence left the piano. She
+stopped at the threshold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hello! You? Where have you been? What has happened?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who is it?" asked Florence, stepping forward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones held up a warning hand, and Florence paused.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes, yes; I hear perfectly. Oh! You've been working out their new
+quarters? Good, good! But be very careful, sir. One never knows what
+may happen. They have been quiet for some time now.... Ah! You can't
+work the ceiling this time? ... Window over the way. Very good, sir.
+But be careful."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The word "sir" caught Florence's attention. She ran to Jones and
+seized him by the arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who was that?" she cried, as he turned away from the telephone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You said 'sir.'"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones' eyes widened. "I did?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes, and it's the first time I ever heard you use it over the
+telephone. Jones, you were talking to my father!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Please, Miss Florence, do not ask me any questions. I can not answer
+any. I dare not."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But if I should command, upon the pain of dismissal?" coldly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ah, Miss Florence," and Jones tapped his pocket, "you forget that you
+can not dismiss me by word. I am legally in control here. I am sorry
+that you have made me recall this fact to you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence began to cry softly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am sorry, very sorry," said the butler, torn between the desire to
+comfort her and the law that he had laid down for himself. "It is very
+gloomy to-day, and perhaps we are a little depressed by it. I am
+sorry."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, I realize, Jones, that all this unending mystery and secrecy have
+a set purpose at back. Only, it does just seem as if I should go mad
+sometimes with waiting and wondering."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And if the truth must be told, it is the same with me. We have to
+wait for them to strike. Shall I get you something to read? I am
+going down to the drug store and they have a circulating library."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Get me anything you please. But I'd feel better with a little
+sunshine."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That's universal," replied Jones, going into the hall for his hat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Had the telephone rung again at that moment it is quite probable that
+the day would have come to a close as the day before had, monotonously.
+But the ring came five minutes after Jones had left the house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is this the Hargreave place?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes," said Florence. "Who is it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"This is Miss Hargreave talking?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"This is Doctor Morse. I am at the Queen Hotel. Mr. Norton has been
+badly hurt, and he wants you and Mr. Jones to come at once. We can not
+tell just how serious the injury is. He is just conscious. Shall I
+tell him you will come immediately?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes, yes!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence snapped the receiver on the hook. She wanted to fly, fly. He
+was hurt. How, when, where?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Susan! Susan!" she called.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What is it?" asked Susan, running into the room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jim is badly hurt. He wants me to come at once. Oh, Susan! I've
+been dreading something all day long." Florence struck the maid's
+bell. "My wraps. You will go with me, Susan."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where, Miss Florence," asked the maid, alive to her duty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where? What is that to you?" demanded Florence, who did not know that
+this maid was a detective.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why not wait till Mr. Jones returns?" she suggested patiently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And let the man I love die?" vehemently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"At least you will leave word where you are going, Miss Florence."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The Queen Hotel. And if you say another word I'll discharge you.
+Come, Susan."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There happened to be a taxicab conveniently near (as Vroon took care
+there should be), and Florence at once engaged it. She did not see the
+man hiding in the bushes. The two young women stepped into the taxicab
+and were driven off. They had been gone less than five minutes when
+Jones returned with his purchase, to find the house empty of its most
+valuable asset. He was furious, not only at the maid, who, he
+realized, was virtually helpless, but at his own negligence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the midst of his violent harangue the bell sounded. In his bones he
+knew what was going to be found there. It was a letter on the back of
+which was drawn the fatal black mask. With shaking fingers he tore
+open the envelope and read the contents:
+</p>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<p>
+"Florence is now in our power. Only the surrender of the million will
+save her. Our agent will call in an hour for an answer. THE BLACK
+HUNDRED."
+</p>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<p>
+As a matter of fact, they had wanted Jones almost as badly as Florence,
+but her desire for a book&mdash;some popular story of the day&mdash;had saved him
+from the net. The letter had been written against this possibility.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones became cool, now that he knew just what to face. The Queen Hotel
+meant nothing. Florence would not be taken there. He called up
+Norton. It took all the butler's patience, however, as it required
+seven different calls to locate the reporter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meantime the taxicab containing Florence and Susan spun madly toward
+the water front. Here the two were separated by an effective threat.
+Florence recognized the man Vroon and knew that to plead for mercy
+would be a waste of time. She permitted herself to be led to a waiting
+launch. Always when she disobeyed Jones something like this happened.
+But this time they had cunningly struck at her heart, and all thought
+of her personal safety became as nothing. For the present she knew
+that she was in no actual physical danger. She was merely to be held
+as a hostage. Would Susan have mentality enough to tell Jones where
+the taxicab had stopped? She doubted. In an emergency Susan had
+proved herself a nonentity, a bundle of hysterical thrills.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As a matter of fact, for once Florence's deductions were happily wrong.
+When the chauffeur peremptorily deposited Susan on the lonely country
+road, several miles from home, she ran hot-foot to the nearest
+telephone and sent a very concise message home. Susan was becoming
+acclimated to this strange, exciting existence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton arrived in due time, and he and Jones were mapping out a plan
+when Susan's message came.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-202"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-202.jpg" alt="THEY WERE MAPPING OUT A PLAN WHEN SUSAN'S MESSAGE CAME" />
+<br />
+THEY WERE MAPPING OUT A PLAN WHEN SUSAN'S MESSAGE CAME
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Good girl!" said Jones. "She's learning. Can you handle this alone,
+Norton? They want me out of the house again, for I believe they were
+after me as well as Florence. Half an hour gone!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Trust me!" cried Norton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he ran out to his auto. It was a wild ride. Several policemen
+shouted after him, but he went on unmindful. They could take his
+license number a hundred times for all he cared. So they had got her?
+They could wait till their enemy's vigilance slacked and then would
+strike? But Susan! The next time he saw Susan he was going to take
+her in his arms and kiss her. It might be a new sensation to kiss
+Susan, always so prim and offish. Corey Street&mdash;that had been her
+direction. They had put Florence in a motor boat at the foot of Corey
+Street. He was perhaps half an hour behind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence never opened her lips. She stared ahead proudly. She would
+show these scoundrels that she was her father's daughter. They plied
+her with questions, but she pretended not to hear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, pretty bird, we'll make you speak when the time comes. We've
+got you this trip where we want you. There won't be any jumping
+overboard this session, believe me. We've wasted enough time. We've
+got you and we're going to keep you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Let her be," said Vroon morosely. "We'll put all the questions we
+wish when we're at our destination." And he nodded significantly
+toward the ships riding at anchor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence felt her heart sink in spite of her abundant courage. Were
+they going to take her to sea again? She had acquired a horror of the
+sea, so big, so terrible, so strong. She had had an experience with
+its sullen power. They had gone about four miles down when she looked
+back longingly toward shore. Something white seemed to be spinning
+over the water far behind. At first she could not discern what it was.
+As she watched it it grew and grew. It finally emerged from the
+illusion of a gigantic bird into the actuality of an every-day
+hydroplane. Her heart gave a great bound. This flying machine was
+coming directly toward the launch; it did not deviate a hair's breadth
+from the line. Fortunately the men were looking toward the huge
+freighter a quarter of a mile farther on, and from their talk it was
+evident that the freighter was to be her prison&mdash;bound for where?
+Nearer and nearer came the hydroplane. Was it for her?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was impossible for the men not to take notice of the barking of the
+engines at last.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The thing's headed for us!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Vroon stared under his palm. It was not credible that pursuit had
+taken place so quickly. To test yonder man-bird he abruptly changed
+the course of the launch. The hydroplane veered its course to suit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence heard her name called faintly. One of the men drew his
+revolver, but Vroon knocked it out of his hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There's the police boat, you fool!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jump!" a voice called to Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She flung herself into the water without the slightest hesitation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All this came about something after this fashion. When Norton arrived
+at the foot of Corey Street a boatman informed him that a young woman
+of his description had got into a fast motor boat and had gone down the
+river.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Was there any struggle?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Struggle? None that I could see. She didn't make no fuss about
+going."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Have you a launch?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes, but the other boat has half an hour's start, and I'd never catch
+her in a thousand years. But there's a hydroplane a little above here.
+You might interest the feller that runs it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thanks!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the aviator would not listen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A life may hang in the balance, man!" expostulated Norton, longing to
+pommel the stubborn man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What proof have I of that?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton showed his card and badge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, I see!" jeered the aviator. "A little newspaper stunt in which I
+am to be the goat. It can't be done, Mr. Norton; it can't be done."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A hundred dollars!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Not for five hundred," and the aviator callously turned away toward
+the young woman with whom he had been conversing prior to Norton's
+approach. The two walked a dozen yards away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton had not served twelve years as a metropolitan newspaper man for
+nothing. He approached the mechanics who were puttering about the
+machine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How about twenty apiece?" he began.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"For what?" the men asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"For sending that paddle around a few times."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Get into that seat, but don't touch any of those levers," one of them
+warned. "Twenty is twenty, Jack, and the boss is a sorehead to-day
+anyhow. Give her a shove for the fun of it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a dumfounded aviator who saw his hydroplane skim the water and a
+moment later sail into the air. These swift moving days a reporter of
+the first caliber is supposed to be able to run railroad engines,
+submarines, flying machines, conduct a war, able to shoot, walk, run,
+swim, fight, think, go without food like a python, and live without
+water like a camel. Norton had flown many times in the last four
+years. At the moment he called out to Florence to jump he dropped to
+the water with all the skill of an old-timer and took her aboard. And
+he could not use a line of this exploit for his paper!
+</p>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<p>
+Jones heard the bell. It was the agent from the Black Hundred. He
+smiled jauntily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, old fox, we've cornered you at last, haven't we? I want that
+money, or Hargreave's daughter takes another sea voyage, and this time
+she will not jump overboard. A million; and no more nonsense."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Give me fifteen minutes to decide," begged Jones, hoping against hope.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Fifteen seconds!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then we can't do business. What! Give you a million, knowing you all
+to be a pack of liars? Bring Miss Florence back and the money is
+yours. We are tired of fighting." As indeed Jones really was. The
+strain had been terrific for weeks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The money first. We don't lie any better than you do. Fork over.
+You'll have to trust us. We have no use for the girl once we get the
+cash."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And you'll never touch a penny of it, you blackguard!" cried Norton
+from the doorway.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The agent turned to behold the reporter and the girl. He did not stop
+to ask questions, but bolted. He never got beyond the door, however.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Always the small fry," sighed Jones. "And if I could have put my
+hands on the money I'd have given it to him! Ah, girl, it doesn't do
+any good to talk to you, does it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But they told me he was dying!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones shrugged.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap16"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER XVI
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+The maid stole into the house, wondering if she had been seen. She
+wanted to be loyal to this girl, but she was tired of the life; she
+wanted to be her own mistress, and the small fortune offered her would
+put her on the way to realize her ambition. What had she not seen and
+been of life since she joined the great detective force! Lady's maid,
+cook, ship stewardess, flash woman, actress, clerk, and a dozen other
+employments. Her pay, until she secured some fat reward, was but
+twelve hundred a year; and here was five thousand in advance, with the
+promise of five thousand more the minute her work was done. And it was
+simple work, without any real harm toward Florence as far as she was
+concerned. The whole thing rested upon one difficulty; would Jones
+permit the girls to leave the house?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One day Florence found Susan sitting in a chair, her head in her hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why, Susan, what's the matter?" cried Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I don't know what is the matter, dear, but I haven't felt well for two
+or three days. I'm dizzy all the time; I can't read or sew or eat or
+sleep."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why didn't you tell me?" said Florence, reproachfully. She rang for
+the detective-maid. "Ella, I don't know anything about doctors
+hereabouts."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I know a good one, Miss Florence. Shall I send for him?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do; Susan is ill."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones was not prepared for treachery in his own household; so when he
+heard that a doctor had been called to attend Susan he was without the
+least suspicion that he had been betrayed. More than this, there had
+been no occasion to summon a doctor in the seven years Mr. Hargreave
+had lived there. So Jones went about his petty household affairs
+without more thought upon the matter. The maid had been recommended to
+him as one of the shrewdest young women in the detective business.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The doctor arrived. He was a real doctor; no doubt of that. He
+investigated Susan's condition&mdash;brought about by a subtle though not
+dangerous poison&mdash;and instantly recommended the seashore. Susan was
+not used to being confined to the house; she was essentially an
+out-of-doors little body. The seashore would bring her about in no
+time. The doctor suggested Atlantic City because of its mildness
+throughout the year and its nearness to New York.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'm afraid she'll have to go alone," said Jones gravely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I shan't stir!" declared Susan. "I shan't leave my girl even if I am
+sick." Susan caught Florence's hand and pressed it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Would you like to go with her, Florence?" asked Jones, with a shy
+glance at the strange doctor. The shy glance was wasted. The doctor
+evinced no sign that it mattered one way or the other to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is nothing very serious now," he volunteered. "But it may turn out
+serious if it is not taken care of at once."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What is the trouble?" inquired Jones, who was growing fond of Susan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Weak heart. Sunshine and good sea air will strengthen her up again.
+No, no!" as Jones drew forth his wallet. "I'll send in my bill the
+first of the month. Sunshine and sea air; that's all that's necessary.
+And now, good day."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All very businesslike; not the least cause in the world for any one to
+suspect that a new trap was being set by the snarers. The maid
+returned to the sewing-room, while Florence coddled her companion and
+made much of her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones was suspicious, but dig in his mind as he would he could find no
+earthly reason for this suspicion save that this attribute was now
+instinctive, that it was always near the top. If Susan was ill she
+must be given good care; there was no getting around this fact. Later,
+he telephoned several prominent physicians. The strange doctor was
+recommended as a good ordinary practitioner and in good standing; and
+so Jones dismissed his suspicions as having no hook to hang them on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His hair would have tingled at the roots, however, had he known that
+this same physician was one of the two who had signed the document
+which had accredited Florence with insanity and had all but succeeded
+in making a supposition a fact. Nor was Jones aware of the fact that
+the telephone wire had been tapped recently. So when he finally
+concluded to permit Florence to accompany Susan to Atlantic City he
+telephoned to the detective agency to send up a trusty man, who was
+shadowed from the moment he entered the Hargreave home till he started
+for the railway station. He became lost in the shuffle and was not
+heard from till weeks later, in Havana. The Black Hundred found a good
+profit in the shanghaing business.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Susan began to pick up, as they say, the day after the arrival at
+Atlantic City, due, doubtless, to the cessation of the poison she had
+been taking unawares. The two young women began to enjoy life for the
+first time since they had left Miss Farlow's. They were up with the
+sun every day and went to bed tired but happy. No one bothered them.
+If some stray reporter encountered their signatures on the hotel
+register, he saw nothing to excite his reportorial senses. All this,
+of course, was due to Norton's policy of keeping the affair out of the
+papers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Following Jones' orders, they made friends with none. Those about the
+hotel&mdash;especially the young men&mdash;when they made any advances were
+politely snubbed. Every night Florence would write to her good butler
+to report what had taken place during the day, and he was left to judge
+for himself if there was anything to arouse his suspicions. He, of
+course, believed the two were covertly guarded by the detective he had
+sent after them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Braine called on Olga he found his doctor there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, what's the news?" he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I had better run down and inquire how the young lady is progressing,"
+said the doctor, who was really a first-rate surgeon and who had
+performed a number of skilled operations upon various members of the
+Black Hundred anent their encounters with the police. "I've got Miss
+Florence where you want her. It's up to you now."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She ought to be separated from her companion. We have left them alone
+for a whole week, so Jones will not worry particularly. A mighty
+curious thing has turned up. Before Hargreave's disappearance not a
+dozen persons could recollect what Jones looked like. He was rarely
+ever in sight. What do you suppose that signifies?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Don't ask me," shrugged the man of medicine. "I shouldn't worry over
+Jones."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But we can't stir the old fool. We can't get him out of that house.
+I've tried to get that maid to put a little something in his coffee,
+but she stands off at that. She says that she did as she agreed in
+regard to Florence, but her agreement ended there. We have given the
+jade five thousand already and she is clamoring for the balance."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Have you threatened her?" asked Olga.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine smiled a little. "My dear woman, it is fifty-fifty. While I
+have a hold on her, it is not quite so good as she has on me. We are
+not dealing with an ordinary servant we could threaten and scare. No,
+indeed; a shrewd little woman who desperately wanted money. And she
+will be paid; no getting out of it. She will not move another step,
+one way or the other, after she receives the balance. Hargreave will
+have a pretty steep bill to pay when the time comes."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She has no idea where the million is?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If she had, she's quite capable of lugging it off all by herself,"
+said Braine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The doctor laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Olga," went on Braine, "you must look at it as I do; that it is still
+in the middle of the game, and we have neither lost nor won."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How do you know that Hargreave may not have at his beck and call an
+organization quite as capable if not as large as ours?" suggested the
+physician.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That is not possible," Braine declared without hesitation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, it begins to look that way to me. We've never made a move yet
+that hasn't been blocked."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Pure luck each time, I tell you; the devil's own luck always at the
+critical moment, when everything seems to be in our hands. Now, we
+want Florence, and we've tried a hundred ways to accomplish this fact
+and failed. The question is, how to get her away from her companion?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Simple enough," said the doctor complacently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Out with it, if you have an idea."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The doctor leaned forward and whispered a few words.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, I'm hanged!" Braine laughed and slapped the doctor on the
+shoulder. "The simplest thing in the world. Mad dog wouldn't be in
+it. I always said that you had gray matter if you cared to exert
+yourself."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thanks," replied the doctor dryly. "I'll drop down there to-morrow,
+if you say so, ostensibly to see the other patient. It will make a
+deuce of a disturbance."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Not if you scare the hotel people."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That is what I propose to do. They will not want such a thing known.
+It would scare every one away for the rest of the season. But of
+course this depends upon whether they are honest or in the hotel
+business to make money."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again Braine laughed. "Bring her back to New York alone, Esculapius,
+and a fat check is yours. Nothing could be simpler than an idea like
+this. It's a fact; no man can think of everything, and you've just
+proved it to me. I've tried to do a general's work without aids.
+Olga, does any one watch me come and go any more?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No; I've watched a dozen nights. The man has gone. Either he found
+out what he wanted or he gave up the job. To my mind he found out what
+he wanted."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And what's that?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Heaven knows!" discouragedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Come, doctor, suppose you and I go down to Daly's for a little turn at
+billiards?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Nothing would suit me better."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"All aboard, then! Good night, Olga, keep your hair on; I mean your
+own hair. We're going to win out, don't you worry. In all games the
+minute you begin to doubt you begin to lose."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That same night Norton sat at his desk, in his shirt sleeves, pounding
+away at his typewriter. From time to time he paused and teetered his
+chair and scowled over his pipe at the starlit night outside. Bang!
+would go his chair again, and clickity-click would sing the keys of the
+machine. The story he was writing was in the ordinary routine; the
+arrival of a great ocean liner with some political notables who were
+not adverse to denouncing the present administration. You will have
+noticed, no doubt, that some disgruntled politician is always
+denouncing the present administration, it matters not if it be
+Republican or Democratic. When you are out of a good job you are
+always prone to denounce. The yarn bored. Norton because his thoughts
+were miles southward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He completed his story, yanked out the final sheet, called for a copy
+boy, rose and sauntered over to the managing editor's door, before
+which he paused indecisively. The "old man" had been after him lately
+regarding the Hargreave story, and he doubted if his errand would prove
+successful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+However, he boldly opened the door and walked in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Humph!" said the "old man," twisting his cigar into the corner of his
+mouth. "Got that story?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton sat down. "Yes, but I have not got it for print yet. Mr.
+Blair, when you gave me the Hargreave job you gave me carte blanche."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I did," grimly. "But, on the other hand, I did not give you ten years
+to clear it up in."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Have I ever fallen down on a good story?" quietly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"H'm, can't remember," grudgingly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, if you'll have patience I'll not fall down on this one. It's
+the greatest criminal story I ever handled, but it's so big that it's
+going to take time."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Gimme an outline."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have promised not to," with a grimness equal to the "old man's."
+"If a line of this story trickles out it will mean that every other
+paper will be moving around, and in the end will discover enough to
+spoil my end of it. I'll tell you this much: The most colossal band of
+thieves this country ever saw is at one end of the stick. And when I
+say that counterfeiting and politics and millions are involved, you'll
+understand how big it is. This gang has city protection. We are
+running them all into a corner; but we want that corner so deep that
+none of them can wriggle out of it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Umhm. Go on."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I want two months more."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The "old man" beat a tattoo with his fat pencil. "Sixty days, then.
+And if the yarn isn't on my desk at midnight, you&mdash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hunt for another job. All right. I came in to ask for three days'
+leave."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You're your own boss, Jim, for sixty days more. Whadda y' mean
+counterfeiting?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Those new tens and twenties. If I stumble on that right, why, I can
+turn it over without conflicting with the other story."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, go to it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'm turning in my regular work, day in and day out, and while doing it
+I've gone through more hairbreadth escapes than you ever heard of.
+They have been after me. I've dodged falling safes; I've been
+shanghaied, poisoned; but I haven't said a word."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Good lord! Do you mean all that?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Every word, sir."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'll make it ninety days, Jim; and if this story comes in I'll see
+that you get a corking bonus."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'm not looking for bonuses. I'm proud of my work. To get this story
+is all I want. That'll be enough. Thanks for the extension of time.
+Good night."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Florence received a long night letter in the morning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And the doctor arrived at about the same time. And called promptly
+upon his patient.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Fine!" he said. "The sea air was just the thing. A doctor always
+likes to find his advice turning out well."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He glanced quizzically at Florence, who was the picture of glowing
+health. Suddenly he frowned anxiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You need not look at me," she laughed. "I never felt better in all my
+life."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Are you sure?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why, what in the world do you mean?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He did not speak, but stepped forward and took her by the wrist,
+holding his watch in his other hand. He shook his head. He looked
+very solemn, indeed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What is it?" demanded Susan, with growing terror.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Go to your own room immediately and remain there for the present," he
+ordered. "I must see Miss Hargreave alone."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He opened the door and Susan passed out bewilderedly. He returned to
+Florence, who was even more bewildered than her companion. The doctor
+began to ask her questions; how she slept, if she was thirsty, felt
+pains in her back. She answered all these questions vaguely. Not the
+slightest suspicion entered her head that she was being hoodwinked.
+Why should she entertain any suspicion? This doctor, who seemed kindly
+and benevolent, who had prescribed for Susan and benefited her, why
+should she doubt him?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"In heaven's name, tell me what is the matter?" she pleaded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Stay here for a little while and I'll be back. Under no circumstances
+leave your room till I return."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He paced out into the hall, to meet the frantic Susan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We must see the manager at once," he replied to her queries. "And we
+must be extremely quiet about it. There must be no excitement. You
+had better go to your room. You must not go into Miss Hargreave's.
+Tell me, where have you been? Have you been trying to do any
+charitable work among the poorer classes?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Only once," admitted Susan, now on the verge of tears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Only once is sufficient. Come; we'll go and see the manager together."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They arrived at the desk, and the manager was summoned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I take it," began the doctor lowly, "that a contagious disease, if it
+became known among your guests, would create a good deal of
+disturbance?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Disturbance! Good heavens, man, it would ruin my business for the
+whole season!" exclaimed the astounded manager.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am sorry, but this young lady's companion has been stricken with
+smallpox&mdash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The manager fell back against his desk, his jaw fallen. Susan turned
+as white as the marble top.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The only way to avoid trouble is to have her conveyed immediately to
+some place where she can be treated properly. Not a word to any one
+now; absolute secrecy or a panic."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The manager was glad enough to agree.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She is not dangerous at present, but it is only a matter of a few
+hours when the disease will become virulent. If you will place a
+porter before Miss Hargreave's door till I make arrangements to take
+her away, that will simplify matters."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Smallpox! Susan wandered aimlessly about, half out of her mind with
+terror. There was no help against such a dreaded disease. Her
+Florence, her pretty rosy-cheeked Florence, disfigured for life....!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Miss Susan, where is Florence?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, Mr. Norton!" she gasped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What's the trouble?" instantly alert.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Florence has the smallpox!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Impossible! Come with me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the porter having had the strictest orders from the manager,
+refused to let them into Florence's room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Never mind, Susan. Come along." Out of earshot of the porter, he
+said: "My room is directly above Florence's. We'll see what can be
+done. This smells of the Black Hundred a mile off. Smallpox! Only
+yesterday she wrote me that she never felt better. Have you wired
+Jones?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I never thought to!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then I shall. Our old friends are at work again."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But it's the same doctor who sent me down here."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton frowned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What followed all appeared in the reporter's story, as written three
+months later. He and Susan went up to his room, raised the flooring,
+cut through the ceiling, and with the fire-escape rope dropped below.
+One glance at Florence's tear-stained face was enough for him.
+Norton's subsequent battle with the doctor and his accomplices made
+very interesting reading. Their escape from the hotel, their flight,
+their encounter with one of the gang in the road, and Florence's
+blunder into the bed of quicksand, gave a succession of thrills to the
+readers of the <i>Blade</i>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And all this while the million accumulated dust, layer by layer.
+Perhaps an occasional hardy roach scrambled over the packets, no doubt
+attracted by the peculiar odor of the ink.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap17"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER XVII
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+The Black Hundred possessed three separate council chambers, always in
+preparation. Hence, when the one in use was burned down they
+transferred their conferences to the second council chamber appointed
+identically the same as the first. As inferred, the organization owned
+considerable wealth, and they leased the buildings in which they had
+their council chambers, leased them for a number of years, and
+refurnished them secretly with trap floors, doors and panels and all
+that apparatus so necessary to men who are sometimes compelled to make
+a quick getaway.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the Atlantic City attempt was turned into a fiasco by Norton's
+timely arrival Braine determined once more to rid himself of this
+meddling reporter. He knew too much, in the first place, and in the
+second place Braine wanted to learn whether the reporter bore a charmed
+life or was just ordinarily lucky. He would attempt nothing delicate,
+requiring finesse. He would simply waylay Norton and make a
+commonplace end of him. He would disappear, this reporter, that would
+be all; and when they found him he might or might not be recognizable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Braine called a conference and he and his fellow rogues went over a
+number of expedients and finally agreed that the best thing to do would
+be to send a man to the newspaper, ostensibly as a reporter looking for
+a situation. With this excuse he would be able to hang around the city
+room for three or four days. The idea back of this was to waylay
+Norton on his way to some assignment which took him to the suburbs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All this was arranged down to the smallest detail; and a man whom they
+were quite certain Norton had not yet seen was selected to play the
+part. He had been a reporter once, more's the pity; so there was no
+doubt of his being able to handle his end of the game.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I want Norton, I want him badly," declared Braine, "and woe to you if
+you let booze play in between you and the object of this move."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man selected to act the reporter hung his head. Whisky had been
+the origin of his fall from honest living, and he was not so calloused
+as not to feel the sting of remorse at times.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"More," went on Braine, "I want Norton brought to 49. It's a little
+off the beat, and we can handle Norton as we please. When we get rid
+of this newspaper ferret there'll be another to eliminate. But he's a
+fox, and a fox must be set to trail him."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And who is that?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jones, Jones, Jones!" thundered Braine. "He's the live wire. But the
+reporter first. Jones depends a lot on him. Take away this prop and
+Jones will not be so sure of himself. There's a man outside all this
+circle, and all these weeks of warfare have not served to bring him
+into the circle."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hargreave is dead," said Vroon stolidly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"As dead as I am," snarled Braine. "Two men went away in that balloon;
+and I'll wager my head that one man came back. I am beginning to put a
+few things together that I have not thought of before. Who knows?
+That balloon may have been carried out to sea purposely. The captain
+on that tramp steamer may have lied from beginning to end. I tell you,
+Hargreave is alive, and wherever he is he has his hand on all the
+wires. He has agents, too, whom we know nothing about. Hang the
+million! I want to put my hands on Hargreave just to prove that I am
+the better man. He communicates with Jones, perhaps through the
+reporter; he has had me followed; it was he who changed the boxes,
+bored the hole in the ceiling of the other quarters and learned heaven
+knows what."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If that's the case," said Vroon, "why hasn't he had us apprehended?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine laughed heartily. "Haven't you been able to see by this time
+what his game is? Revenge. He does not want the police to meddle only
+in the smaller affairs. He wants to put terror into the hearts of all
+of us. Keep this point in your mind when you act. He'll never summon
+the police unless we make a broad daylight attempt to get possession of
+his daughter. And even then he would make it out a plain case of
+kidnaping. Elimination, that's the word. All right. We'll play at
+that game ourselves. No. 1 shall be Mr. Norton. And if you fail I'll
+break you," Braine added to the ex-reporter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'll get him," said the man sullenly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Later, when he applied for a situation on the <i>Blade</i>, it happened that
+there were two strikes on hand, and two or three extra men were needed
+on the city staff. The man from the Black Hundred was given a
+temporary job and went by the name of Gregg.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For three days he worked faithfully, abstaining from his favorite
+tipple. He had never worked in New York, so his record was unknown.
+He had told the city editor that he had worked on a Chicago paper, now
+defunct.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He paid no attention whatsoever to Norton, a sign of no little acumen.
+On the other hand Norton never went forth on an assignment that Gregg
+did not know exactly where he was going. But all these stories kept
+Norton in town; and it would be altogether too risky to attempt to
+handle him anywhere but outside of town. So Gregg had to abide his
+time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It came soon enough.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton was idling at his desk when the city editor called him up to the
+wicket.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-222"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-222.jpg" alt="NORTON WAS IDLING AT HIS DESK WHEN THE CITY EDITOR CALLED HIM UP TO THE WICKET" />
+<br />
+NORTON WAS IDLING AT HIS DESK WHEN THE CITY EDITOR CALLED HIM UP TO THE WICKET
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"General Henderson has just returned to America. Get his opinion on
+the latest Balkan rumpus. He's out at his suburban home. Here's the
+address."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How long will you hold open for me?" asked Norton, meaning how long
+would the city editor wait for the story.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Till one-thirty. You ought to be back by midnight. It's only eight
+now."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"All right; Henderson's approachable. I may get a good story out of
+him."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Maybe," thought Gregg, who had lost nothing of this conversation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was his opportunity. He immediately left the zone of the city desk
+for a telephone booth. But as he passed the line of desks and busy
+reporters he did not note the keen scrutiny of a smooth-faced,
+gray-haired man who stood at the side of Norton's desk awaiting the
+reporter's return.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why, Jones," cried the surprised Norton. "What are you doing all this
+way from home?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Orders," said Jones, smiling faintly as he delivered a note to the
+reporter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Anything serious?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Not that I am aware of. Miss Florence was rather particular. She
+wanted to be sure that the note reached your hands safely."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And do you mean to say that you came away and left her alone in that
+house?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again Jones smiled. "I left her well guarded, you may be sure of that.
+She will never run away again." He waited for Norton to read the note.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was nothing more than one of those love orders to come and call at
+once. And she had made Jones venture into town with it! The reporter
+smiled and put the note away tenderly. And then he caught Jones
+smiling, too.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'm going to marry her, Jones."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That remains to be seen," replied the butler, not unkindly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, anyhow, thanks for bringing the note. But I've got to
+disappoint her to-night. I'm off in a deuce of a hurry to interview
+General Henderson. I'll be out to tea to-morrow. You can find your
+way out of this old firetrap. By-by!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The moment he turned away the smile faded from Jones' face, and with
+the quickness and noiselessness of a cat he reached the side of the
+booth in which Gregg believed himself so secure from eavesdropping.
+The half dozen words Jones heard convinced him that Norton was again
+the object of the Black Hundred's attention. He had seen the man's
+face that memorable night when the balloon stopped for its passenger.
+Before Gregg came out of the booth Jones decided to overtake Norton and
+forewarn him, but unfortunately the reporter was nowhere in sight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was left for Jones nothing else but to return home or follow when
+Gregg came out. As this night he knew Florence to be exceptionally
+well guarded, both within and without the house, he decided to wait and
+follow the spy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Braine received the message he was pleased. Norton's assignment
+fitted his purpose like a glove. Before midnight he would have Mr.
+Meddling Reporter where he would bother no one for some time&mdash;if he
+proved tractable. If not, he would never bother any one again. Braine
+gave his orders tersely. Unless Norton met with unforeseen delay,
+nothing could prevent his capture.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Norton arrived at the Henderson place, a footman informed him from
+the veranda that General Henderson was at 49 Elm Street for the
+evening, and it would be wise to call there. Jim nodded his thanks and
+set off in haste for 49 Elm Street. The footman did not enter the
+house, but hurried down the steps and slunk off among the adjacent
+shrubbery. His mission was over with.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The house in Elm Street was Braine's suburban establishment. He went
+there occasionally to hibernate, as it were, to grow a new skin when
+close pressed. The caretaker was a man rightly called Samson. He was
+a bruiser of the bouncer type.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was fast work for Braine to get out there. If the man disguised as
+a footman played his cards badly Braine would have all his trouble for
+nothing. He disguised himself with that infernal cleverness which had
+long since made him a terror to the police, who were looking for ten
+different men instead of one. He knew that Norton would understand
+instantly that he was not the general; but on the other hand he would
+not know that he was addressing Braine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So the arch-conspirator waited; and so Norton arrived and was ushered
+into the room. A single glance was enough to satisfy the reporter,
+always keen-eyed and observant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I wish to see General Henderson," he said politely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"General Henderson is doubtless at his own house."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ah!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Don't be alarmed&mdash;yet," said Braine smoothly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am not alarmed," replied Norton. "I am only chagrined. Since
+General Henderson is not to be found here I must be excused."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I will excuse you presently."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ah! I begin to see."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Indeed!" mocked Braine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have tumbled or walked into a trap."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A keen mind like yours must have recognized that fact the moment you
+discovered that I was not the general."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am indebted to the Black Hundred?" coolly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Precisely. We do not wish you ill, Mr. Norton."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"To be sure, no!" ironically. "What with falling safes, poisoned
+cigarettes, and so forth, I can readily see that you have my welfare at
+heart. What puzzled me was the suddenness with which these
+affectionate signs ceased."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You're a man of heart," said Braine with genuine admiration. "These
+affectionate signs, as you call them, ceased because for the time being
+you ceased to be a menace. You have become that once more, and here
+you are!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And what are you going to do with me now that you have got me?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There will be two courses." Braine reached into a drawer and drew out
+a thick roll of bills. "There are here something like $5,000."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Quite a tidy sum; enough for a chap to get married on."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two eyed each other steadily. And in his heart Braine sighed. For
+he saw in this young man's eyes incorruptibility.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is yours on one condition," said Braine, reaching out his foot
+stealthily toward the button which would summon Samson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And that is," interpolated Norton, "that I join the Black Hundred."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Or the great beyond, my lad," took up Braine, his voice crisp and cold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton could not repress a shiver. Where had he heard this voice
+before? ... Braine! He stiffened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Murder in cold blood?" he managed to say.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Indefinite imprisonment. Choose."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have chosen."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"H'm!" Braine rose and went over to the sideboard for the brandy.
+"I'm going to offer you a drink to show you that personally there are
+no hard feelings. You are in the way. After you, our friend, Jones.
+This brandy is not poisoned, neither are the glasses. Choose either
+and I'll drink first. We are all desperate men, Norton; and we stop at
+nothing. Your life hangs by a hair. Do you know where Hargreave is?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton eyed his liquor thoughtfully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do you know where the money is?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton smelt of the brandy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am sorry," said Braine. "I should have liked to win over a head
+like yours."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton nonchalantly took out his watch, and that bit of bravado perhaps
+saved his life. In the case of his watch he saw a brutal face behind
+him. Without a tremor, Norton took up his glass.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am sorry to disappoint you," he said, "but I shall neither join you
+nor go to by-by."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Quick as a bird shadow above grass, he flung his brandy over his
+shoulder into the face of the man behind. Samson yelled with pain.
+Almost at the same instant Norton pushed over the table, upsetting
+Braine with it. Next he dashed through the curtains, slammed the door,
+and fled to the street, very shaky about the knees, if the truth is to
+be told.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+General Henderson's views upon the latest Balkan muddle were missing
+from the <i>Blade</i> the following morning. Norton, instead of returning
+to the general's and fulfilling his assignment like a dutiful reporter,
+hurried out to Riverside to acquaint Jones with what had happened.
+Jones was glad to see him safe and sound.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That new reporter started the game," he said. "I overheard a word or
+two while he was talking in the booth. All your telephone booths are
+ramshackle affairs, you use them so constantly. I tried to find you,
+but you were out of sight. Now, tell me what happened."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Sh!" warned Norton as he spied Florence coming down the stairs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I thought you couldn't come!" she cried. "But ten o'clock!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I changed my mind," he replied, laughing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He caught her arm in his and drew her toward the library. Jones smiled
+after them with that enigmatical smile of his, which might have
+signified irony or affection. After half an hour's chat, Florence,
+quite unaware that the two men wished to talk, retired.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the door Norton told Jones what had taken place at 49 Elm Street.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ah! we must not forget that number," mused Jones. "My advice is, keep
+an eye on this Gregg chap. We may get somewhere by watching him."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do you know where Hargreave is?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones scratched his chin reflectively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton laughed. "I can't get anything out of you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Much less any one else. I'm growing fond of you, my boy. You're a
+man."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thanks; and good night."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Olga Perigoff called the next day Jones divested himself of his
+livery, donned a plain coat and hat, and left the house stealthily.
+To-day he was determined to learn something definite in regard to this
+suave, handsome Russian. When she left the house Jones rose from his
+hiding place and proceeded to follow her. The result of this espionage
+on the part of Jones will be seen presently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meantime Jim went down to the office and lied cheerfully about his
+missing the general. Whether the city editor believed him or not is of
+no matter. Jim went over to his desk. From the corner of his eye he
+could see Gregg scribbling away. He never raised his head as Jim sat
+down to read his mail. After a while Gregg rose and left the office;
+and, of course, Jim left shortly afterward. When the newcomer saw that
+he was being followed, he smiled and continued on his way. This Norton
+chap was suspicious. All the better; his suspicions should be made the
+hook to land him with. By and by the man turned into a drug store and
+Jim loitered about till he reappeared. Gregg walked with brisker steps
+now. It was his intention to lead Norton on a wild goose chase for an
+hour or so, long enough to give Braine time to arrange a welcome at
+another house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton kept perhaps half a block in the rear of his man all the while.
+But for this caution he would have witnessed a little pantomime that
+would have put him wholly upon his guard. Turning a corner, Gregg all
+but bumped into the countess. He was quick enough to place a finger on
+his lips and motion his head toward a taxicab. Olga hadn't the least
+idea who was coming around the corner, but she hailed the cab and was
+off in it before Jim swung around the corner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones, who had followed the countess for something over an hour and a
+half, hugged a doorway. What now? he wondered. The countess knew the
+man. That was evidence enough for the astute butler. But what meant
+the pantomime and the subsequent hurry? He soon learned. The man
+Gregg went his way, and then Jim turned the corner. Jones cast a
+wistful glance at the vanishing cab of the Russian, and decided to
+shadow the shadower&mdash;in other words, to follow the reporter, to see
+that nothing serious befell him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lurer finally paused at a door, opened it with a key and swung it
+behind him, very careful, however, not to spring the latch. Naturally
+Jim was mightily pleased when he found the door could be opened. When
+Jones, not far behind, saw him open the door, he started to call out a
+warning, but thought the better of it. If Norton was walking into a
+trap it was far better that he, Jones, should remain outside of it. If
+Jim did not appear after a certain length of time, he would start an
+investigation on his own account.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No sooner was Jim in the hallway than he was set upon and overpowered.
+They had in this house what was known as "the punishment room." Here
+traitors paid the reckoning and were never more heard of. Into this
+room Jim was unceremoniously dropped when Braine found that he could
+get no information from the resolute reporter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The room did not look sinister, but for all that it possessed the
+faculty of growing smaller and smaller, slowly or swiftly, as the man
+above at the lever willed. When Jim was apprised of this fact, he ran
+madly about in search of some mode of escape, knowing full well in his
+heart that he should not find one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently the machinery began to work, and Norton's tongue grew dry
+with terror. They had him this time; there was not the least doubt of
+it. And they had led him there by the nose into the bargain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Twenty minutes passed, and Jones concluded it was time for him to act.
+He went forward to try the door, but this time it was locked. Jones,
+however, was not without resource. The house next door was vacant, and
+he found a way into this, finally reaching the roof. From this he
+jumped to the other roof, found the scuttle open, and crept down the
+stairs, flight after flight, till the whir of a motor arrested him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Conspirators are often overeager, too. So intent were the rascals upon
+the business at hand that they did not notice the door open slowly. It
+did not take the butler more than a moment to realize that his friend
+and ally was near certain death. With an oath he sprang into the room,
+gave Braine a push which sent him down to join the victim, and pitched
+into the other two. It was a battle royal while it lasted. Jones
+knocked down one of them, yelled to Norton, and kicked the rope he saw
+down into the pit. One end of this rope was attached to a ring in the
+wall. And up this rope Norton swarmed after he had disposed of Braine.
+The tide of battle then swung about in favor of the butler, and shortly
+the fake reporter and his companion were made to join their chief.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones stopped the machinery. He could not bring himself to let his
+enemies die so horribly. Later he knew he would regret this sentiment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the people came, summoned by some outsider who had heard the
+racket of the conflict, there was no one to be found in the pit. Nor
+was there any visible sign of an exit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was one, however, built against such an hour and known only to
+the chiefs of the Black Hundred.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And still the golden-tinted banknotes reposed tranquilly in their
+hiding place!
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap18"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER XVIII
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+About this time&mdash;that is to say, about the time the Black Hundred was
+stretching out its powerful secret arms toward Norton&mdash;there arrived in
+New York city a personage. This personage was the Princess Parlova, a
+fabulously rich Polish Russian. She leased a fine house near Central
+Park and set about to conquer social New York. This was not very
+difficult, for her title was perfectly genuine and she moved in the
+most exclusive diplomatic circle in Europe, which, as everybody knows,
+is the most brilliant in the world. When the new home was completely
+decorated she gave an elaborate dinner, and that attracted the
+newspapers. They began to talk about her highness, printed portraits
+of her, and devoted a page occasionally in the Sunday editions. She
+became something of a rage. One morning it was announced that the
+Princess Parlova would give a masked ball formally to open her home to
+society; and it was this notice that first brought the Princess Parlova
+under Braine's eyes. He was at the Perigoff apartment at the time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, well," he mused aloud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What is it?" asked Olga, turning away from the piano and ending one of
+Chopin's mazurkas brokenly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Here is the Princess Parlova in town."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And who is she?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She is the real thing, Olga; a real princess with vast estates in
+Poland with which the greedy Slav next door has been very gentle."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I haven't paid much attention to the social news lately. What about
+her?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She is giving a masked ball formally to open her house on the West
+Side. And it's going to cost a pretty penny."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, you're not telling me this to make me want to know the
+princess," said Olga, petulantly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No. But I'm going to give you a letter of introduction to her
+highness."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And you are going to ask her to invite two particular friends of yours
+to this wonderful ball of hers."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Indeed," ironically. "That sounds all very easy."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Easier than you think, my child."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I will not have you call me child."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, then, Olga."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That's better. Now, how will it be easier than I think?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Simply this; the Princess Parlova is an oath-bound member, but has not
+been active for years."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oho!" Olga was all animation now. "Go on!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You will go to her with a letter of introduction&mdash;no! Better than
+that, you will make a formal call and show her this ring. You know the
+ring," he said, passing the talisman to the countess. "Show this to
+her and she will obey you in everything. She will have no alternative."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Very good," replied Olga. "And then the program is to insist that she
+invite Florence and that fool of a reporter to this ball. Then what?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You can leave that to me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Haven't all these failures been a warning?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No, my dear. I was born optimistic; but there's a jinx somewhere in
+one of my pockets. Time after time I've had everything just where I
+wanted it, and then&mdash;poof! It's pure bald luck on their side, but
+sooner or later the wheel will turn. And any chance that offers I am
+bound to accept. Somehow or other we may be able to trap Florence and
+Norton. I want both of them. If I can get them, Jones will be forced
+to draw in Hargreave."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is there such a man?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You saw him that night at the restaurant."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have often thought that perhaps I just dreamed it." She turned
+again to the piano and began humming idly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Stop that and listen to me," said Braine, not in quite the best of
+tempers. "I'm in no mood for whims."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Music does not soothe your soul, then?" cynically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If I had one it might. You will call on the Princess Parlova
+to-morrow afternoon. It depends upon you what my plans will be. I
+think you'll have little trouble in getting into the presence of her
+highness, and once there she will not be able to resist you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'll go."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And go she did. The footman in green livery hesitated for a moment,
+but the title on the visiting card was quite sufficient. He bowed the
+countess into the reception room and went in search of his
+distinguished mistress.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Princess Parlova was a handsome woman verging upon middle age. She
+was a patrician; Olga's keen eye discerned that instantly. She came
+into the reception room with that dignified serenity which would have
+impressed any one as genuine. She held the card in her fingers and
+smiled inquiringly toward her guest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I confess," she began, "that I recall neither your face nor your name.
+I am sorry. Where have I had the honor of meeting you before?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You have never met me before, your highness," answered Olga sweetly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You came on a charity errand, then?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That depends, your highness. Will you be so good as to glance at
+this?" Olga asked, holding out her palm upon which the talisman lay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The princess shrank back, paling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where did you get that?" she panted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"From the head," was the answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And you have followed me from Russia?" whispered the princess, her
+terror growing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, no. The Black Hundred is as strongly organized here as in St.
+Petersburg. But we always keep track of old members, especially when
+they stand so high in the world as yourself."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But I was deceived and betrayed!" exclaimed the princess. "They urged
+me to join on the ground that the organization was to attempt to bring
+about the freedom of Poland."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Olga shrugged. "You were rich, highness. The Black Hundred needed
+money!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And you need it now?" eagerly, believing that she saw a loophole.
+"How much? Oh, I will give a hundred thousand rubles on your promise
+to leave me alone. Tell me!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am sorry, your highness, but I have no authority to accept such an
+offer. Indeed, my errand is far from being expensive. All the Black
+Hundred desires is four invitations to this ball which you are soon to
+give. That should mot cause you any alarm. We shall not interfere
+with your sojourn in America in any way whatsoever, provided these
+invitations are issued."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You would rob my guests?" horrified.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Positively no! Here is a list of four names. Invite them; that is
+all you have to do. Not so much as a silver spoon will be found
+missing. This is on my word of honor, and I never break that word, if
+you please."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Give me the list," said the princess wearily. "Who gave you that
+ring?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The head."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"In Russia?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No; here in America." Olga dipped into her handbag and produced a
+slip of paper. This she handed to the princess. "Here is the list,
+highness."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who is Florence Hargreave?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A friend of mine," evasively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Does she belong to the organization?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Then you have some ulterior purpose in having me invite her?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have," answered Olga sharply; "but that does not concern your
+highness in the least."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The princess bit her lips. "I see your name here also; a man named
+Braine, and another, Norton."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Say at once that you do not care to execute the wishes&mdash;the
+commands&mdash;of the order," said Olga coldly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I will do as you wish. And I beg you now to excuse me. But if
+anything happens to any of my personal friends&mdash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well?" haughtily from Olga.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, I will put the matter in the hands of the police."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But so long as your personal friends are not concerned?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I shall then of necessity remain deaf and blind. It is one of the
+penalties I must pay for my folly. I wish you good day."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And also good riddance," murmured Olga under her breath, as she arose
+and started for the hallway.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus it was that when Norton went to the office the next afternoon he
+found a broad white envelope on his desk. Indifferently he opened the
+same and his eyes bulged. "Princess Parlova requests" and so forth and
+so on. Then he shrugged. The chief had probably asked for the
+invitation and he would have to write up the doings, a phase of
+reportorial work eminently distasteful to him. He went up to the city
+desk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Can't you find some one else to do this stuff?" he growled to the city
+editor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The city editor glanced at the card and crested envelope. "Good lord,
+man! Nobody in this office had anything to do with that. What luck!
+Our Miss Hayes tried all manner of schemes, but was rebuffed on all
+sides. How the deuce did you chance to get one?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Search me," said the bewildered Norton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If I were you I'd sit tight and take it all in," advised the editor.
+"It's going to be the biggest splurge of its kind we've had in years.
+We've been working every wire we know to get Miss Hayes inside, but it
+was no go. This princess is not on to the game yet. In this country
+you get into society or you don't through the Sundays."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hanged if I know who wished this thing on me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Take it philosophically," said the editor sarcastically. "The
+princess won't bite you. She may even have seen your picture&mdash;"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Get out!" grumbled Norton, turning away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He would go out and see Florence. On the way out to Riverdale he came
+to the conclusion that the list of the princess fell short and some
+friend of his who was helping the woman out suggested his name. It was
+the only way he could account for it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But when he learned that Florence had an invitation exactly like his
+own and that she received it that morning he became suspicious.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jones, what do you think of it?" he questioned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I think it was very kind of the Countess Perigoff suggesting your name
+and that of Florence," said the butler urbanely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Olga?" cried Florence disappointedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is the only logical deduction I can make," declared Jones. "They
+are both practically Russians."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And what would you advise?" asked Norton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why, go and enjoy yourselves. Forewarned is forearmed. The thing is,
+be very careful not to acquaint any one with the character of your
+disguise, least of all the Countess Perigoff. Besides," Jones added
+smiling, "perhaps I may go myself."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Goody! I've read about masked balls and have always been crazy to go
+to one," said Florence with eagerness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Suppose we go at once and pick out some costumes?" suggested Norton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Just as soon as I can get my hat on," replied Florence, happy as a
+lark.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But mind," warned Jones; "be sure that you see the costumer alone and
+that no one else is about."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'll take particular care," agreed Norton. "We've got to do some
+hustling to find something suitable. For a big affair like this the
+town will be ransacked. All aboard! There's room for two in that car
+of mine; and we can have a spin besides. Hang work!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence laughed, and even Jones permitted a smile (which was not grim
+this time) to stir his lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A happy person is generally unobservant. Two happy persons together
+are totally unobservant of what passes around them. In plainer terms
+this lack is called love. And being frankly in love with each other,
+neither Norton nor Florence observed that a taxicab followed them into
+town. Jones, not being in love, was keenly observant; but the taxicab
+took up the trail two blocks away, so the matter wholly escaped Jones'
+eye.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two went into several costumers', but eventually discovered a shop
+on a side street that had been overlooked by those invited to the
+masquerade. They had a merry time rummaging among the
+camphory-smelling boxes. There were dominoes of all colors, and at
+length they agreed upon two modest ones that were evenly matched in
+color and design. Florence ordered them to be sent home. Then the two
+of them sallied up to the Ritz-Carleton and had tea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man from the taxicab entered the costumer's, displayed a
+detective's shield and demanded that the proprietor show him the
+costumes selected by the two young people who had just left. The man
+obeyed wonderingly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I want a pair exactly like these," said the detective. "How much?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Two dollars each, rental; seven apiece if you wish to buy them."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'll buy them."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The detective paid the bill, nodded curtly, and returned to his taxicab.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Now, I wonder," mused the costumer, "what the dickens those
+innocent-looking young people are up to?" He never found out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the night of the ball Norton dined with Florence for the first time;
+and for once in his life he experienced that petty disturbance of
+collective thought called embarrassment. To talk over war plans with
+Jones was one thing, but to have Jones serve soup was altogether
+another. All through dinner Jones replied to questions with no more
+and no less than "Yes, sir," and "No, sir." Norton was beginning to
+learn that this strange man could put on a dozen kinds of armor and
+always retain his individuality. And to-night there seemed something
+vaguely familiar about the impassive face of the butler, as if he had
+seen it somewhere in the past, but could not tell when or where. As he
+and Florence were leaving for the automobile which was to take them to
+the princess', the truth came home to him with the shock of a douche of
+ice-cold water. Under his breath he murmured: "You're a wonderful man,
+Jones; and I take my hat off to you with the deepest admiration. Hang
+me!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What are you mumbling about?" asked the happy girl.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Was I mumbling? Perhaps I was going over my catechism. I haven't
+been out in society in so long that I've forgotten how to act."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I believe that. We've been in here for five minutes and you haven't
+told me that you love me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Good heavens!" And his arms went around her so tightly that she
+begged for quarter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How strong you are!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The splendor of the rooms, the dazzling array of jewels, the
+kaleidoscopic colors, the perfume of the banked flowers and the music
+all combined to put Florence into a pleasurable kind of trance. And it
+was only when the first waltz began that she became herself and
+surrendered to the arms of the man she loved.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And they were waltzing over a volcano. She knew and he knew it. From
+what direction would the blow come? Well, they were prepared for all
+manner of tricks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In an alcove off the ballroom sat Braine and Olga, both dressed exactly
+like Norton and Florence. Another man and woman entered presently, and
+Braine spoke to them for a moment, as if giving instructions, which was
+indeed the case.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The band crashed into another dance, and the masqueraders began
+swirling hither and thither and yon. A gay cavalier suddenly stopped
+in front of Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Enchantress, may I have the pleasure of this dance?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jim touched Florence's hand. But she turned laughingly toward the
+stranger. What difference did it make? The man would never know who
+she was nor would she know him. It was a lark, that was all; and
+despite Jim's warning touch she was up and away like the mischievous
+sprite that she was. Jim remained in his chair, twisting his fingers
+and wondering whether to laugh or grow angry. After all, he could not
+blame her. To him an affair like this was an ancient story; to her it
+was the door of fairyland swung open. Let her enjoy herself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence was having a splendid time. Her partner was asking her all
+sorts of questions and she was replying in kind, when out of the crowd
+came Norton (as she supposed), who touched her arm. The cavalier
+stopped, bowed and made off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton whispered: "I have made an important discovery. We must be off
+at once. Come with me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence, without the least suspicion in the world, followed him up the
+broad staircase. What with the many sounds it was not to be wondered
+at that the difference in the quality of voices did not strike
+Florence's ear as odd. The result of her confidence was that upon
+reaching the upper halls, opposite the dressing rooms, she was suddenly
+thrust into a room and made prisoner. When the light was turned up she
+recognized with horror the woman who had helped to kidnap her and take
+her away on the <i>George Washington</i> weeks ago. She could not have
+cried out for help if she had tried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meantime Jim got up and began to wander about in search of Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine played a clever game that night. He and the Russian, still
+dominoed like Norton and Florence, ordered the Hargreave auto, by
+number, entered it and were driven up to the porte-cochère of the
+Hargreave house. The two alighted, the chauffeur sent the car toward
+the garage, and Braine and his companion ran lightly down the path to
+the street where the cab which had followed picked them up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It grew more and more evident to Jim that something untoward had taken
+place. He could not find Florence anywhere, in the alcoves, in the
+side rooms, the supper or card room. Later, to his utter amazement, he
+was informed that the Hargreave auto had some time since been called
+and its owner taken home. Some one had taken his place.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His first sensation was impotent fury against Jones, who had permitted
+them to play with fire. He flung out of the mansion unceremoniously,
+commandeered a cab, and flew out to Riverdale. And when Jones came to
+the door he was staggering with sleep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What's the matter with you?" demanded Jim roughly. "Where's Florence?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Isn't she with you?" cried Jones, making an effort to dispel the
+drowsiness. "What time is it?" suddenly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Midnight! Where is she?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Midnight? I've been drugged!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Without a word Jones staggered off to the kitchens, Jim at his heels.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was always hot water, and within five minutes Jones had drunk two
+cups of raw strong coffee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Drugged!" he murmured. "Some one in the house! I'll attend to that
+later. Now, the chauffeur."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the chauffeur swore on his oath that he had left Jim and Florence
+on the steps of the porte-cochère.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Get in!" said Jones to Norton, now fully alive. He could not get it
+out of his head that some one in the house had drugged him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The events which followed were to both Jones and Norton something like
+a series of nightmares. In the new home of the Princess Parlova a bomb
+had exploded and fire followed the explosion. From pleasure to terror
+is only a step. The wildest confusion imaginable ensued. Most of the
+guests were of the opinion that some anarchist had attempted to blow up
+the house of the rich Pole. Jones and Norton arrived just as the smoke
+began to pour out from the windows. A crowd had already collected.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then Jim overheard a woman masquerader say: "The fool made the bomb too
+strong. She is in the room on the second floor. The game is up if she
+suffocates&mdash;&mdash;" The voice trailed off and the woman became lost in the
+crowd. But it was enough for the reporter, who pushed his way roughly
+through the excited masqueraders and entered the house. The rescue was
+one of the most exciting to be found in the newspaper files of the day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Braine in his effort to scare everybody from the house had
+overreached himself once more.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap19"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER XIX
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+Florence was a fortnight in recovering from the shock of her experience
+at the masked ball of the Princess Parlova, who, by the way,
+disappeared from New York shortly after the fire, no doubt because of
+her fear of the Black Hundred. The fire did not destroy the house, but
+most of the furnishings were so thoroughly drenched by water that they
+were practically ruined. Her coming and going were a nine-days'
+wonder, and then the public found something else to talk about.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton was a constant visitor at the Hargreave place. There was to him
+a new interest in that mysterious house, with its hidden panels, its
+false floors, its secret tunnels; but he treated Jones upon the same
+basis as hitherto. One thing, however: He felt a sense of security in
+regard to Florence such as he had not felt before. So, between
+assignments, he ran out to Riverdale and did what he could to amuse his
+sweetheart. Later they took short rides in the runabout, and at length
+she became as lively as she had ever been.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But often she would catch Norton brooding.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What makes you frown like that?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Was I frowning?" innocently enough.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I find you this way a dozen times in an afternoon. What is the
+matter? Are they after you again?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Heavens, no! I'm only a vague issue. They will not bother me so long
+as I do not bother them. It has dwindled into a game of truce."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do you think so?" eying him curiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why, yes."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What's the use of trying to fool me, Jim? If they haven't been after
+you, you are sensing a presage of evil. I'm not a child any longer.
+Haven't I been through enough to make me a woman? Sometimes I feel
+very old."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"To me you are the most charming in all this wide world. No, you're
+not a child any longer. You are a woman, brave and patient; and I know
+that I could trust you with any secret I have or own. But sometimes a
+person may have a secret which is not his and which he hasn't any right
+to disclose."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She became silent for a while. "I hate money," she said. "I hate it,
+hate it!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It's mighty comfortable to have it around sometimes," he countered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"As in my case, for instance. If I were poor and had to work no one
+would bother me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I would!" he declared, laughing. "Come; let's throw off moods and go
+into town for tea at the Rose Garden; and if you feel strong enough
+we'll trip the light fantastic."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They had been gone from the house less than an hour when a man ran up
+the steps of the veranda and rang the bell. Jones being busy at the
+rear of the house, the maid came to the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is Miss Hargreave in?" the stranger asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No," abruptly. The door began to close ever so slowly
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do you know where I can find her?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The maid eyed him with covert keenness; then, remembering that the
+reporter was with Florence, said: "I believe she is at the Rose Garden
+this afternoon."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That is in town?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thanks." The man turned abruptly and ran down the steps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The maid ran back to Jones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why didn't you call me?" he demanded impatiently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There wasn't time."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Did you tell him where she was?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes. But I shouldn't have told him if Mr. Norton had not been with
+Miss Florence."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones ran to the front, dashed out, eyed the back of the man hastening
+down the street, smiled, and returned to his work, or, rather, to the
+maid. He took her by the shoulder, whirled her about, and shot a look
+into her eyes that quailed her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Always call me hereafter, no matter what I'm doing. That man has
+never laid eyes on Florence and has no idea what she looks like. Why
+did you drug my coffee the night of that ball?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She stepped back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And how much did they pay you for letting that doctor send Florence to
+Atlantic City? I know everything. Hereafter, walk straight. If you
+play another trick I'll kill you with these two hands. And listen and
+tell this to your confederates: I always know every move they make;
+that is why no one is missing from this house. There is a traitor.
+Let them find him if they can. Will you walk straight, or will you
+leave?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I&mdash;I will walk straight," she faltered. "The money was too big a
+temptation."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Did they give it to you?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes. And more to stay here. But this is the first bit of dishonest
+work I ever did."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, remember what I have said. Another misstep and I'll make an end
+to you. Don't think I'm trying to scare you. You have witnessed
+enough to know that it's life and death in this house. Now run along."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the garden Jim and Florence sauntered among the crowd, not having
+any particular objective point in view.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Sh!" whispered Jim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What is it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Olga Perigoff is yonder in a box."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Very well; let us go and sit with her. Is she alone?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Apparently. But don't you think we'd better go elsewhere?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My dear young man," said Florence with mock loftiness, "Olga Perigoff
+has written me down as a simple young fool, and that is why, sooner or
+later, I'm going to put the shoe on the other foot. You and Jones have
+coddled me long enough. Inasmuch as I am the stake they are playing
+for, I intend to have something more than a speaking part in the play."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"All right; you're the admiral," he said with pretended lightness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So the two of them joined their subtle enemy, conscious of a tingle of
+zest as they did so. On her part, the countess was always suspicious
+of this sleepy-eyed reporter. She never could tell how much he knew.
+But of Florence she was reasonably certain; and so long as she could
+fool the pretty infant the suspicions of the reporter were a negligible
+quantity. She greeted them effusively and offered them chairs. For
+half an hour they sat there, chatting inanities, all the while each
+mind was busy with deeper concerns.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the man in search of Florence eventually arrived and asked the
+manager of the garden if he knew Miss Hargreave by sight the manager
+pointed toward the box. The man wound his way in and out of the idlers
+and by the time he reached the box Jim and Florence had made their
+departure. The man bowed, approached, and asked the countess if she
+was Miss Hargreave. For a moment Olga suspected a trap. Then it
+appealed to her mind that if there was no trap it might be well to pose
+as Florence, if only to learn what the outcome might be.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes. What is wanted?" she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man took a letter from his pocket and handed it to Olga, saying:
+"Give this to your father. He knows how to read it."
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-248"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-248.jpg" alt="&quot;GIVE THIS TO YOUR FATHER. HE KNOWS HOW TO READ IT&quot;" />
+<br />
+&quot;GIVE THIS TO YOUR FATHER. HE KNOWS HOW TO READ IT&quot;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before she could reply the man had turned and was hurrying away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Olga opened the note, her heart beating furiously. It was utterly
+blank. At first she thought it was a hoax. Then she happened to
+remember that there was such a thing as invisible ink. At last!
+Hargreave was alive; this letter settled all doubt in her mind on this
+question. Alive! And not only that, but the girl and Jones were
+evidently in communication with him. She summoned a waiter, made a
+secret sign, and he bowed and approached. She slipped the letter into
+his hand and whispered: "Show that at the cave to-morrow. It is in
+invisible ink and meant for Hargreave."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He's alive?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Positively."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Very well." The waiter bowed and strolled away nonchalantly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine was in Boston over night, otherwise the countess would have
+taken the mysterious note at once to him. She remained for perhaps a
+quarter of an hour longer and then left the garden. She would have
+taken the letter to her own apartment but for the fact that the
+chemicals needed were hidden in the cave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now it happened that Florence went out for her early ride the next
+morning, and crossing a field she saw a man with a bundle under his
+arm. The sun struck his profile and limned it plainly, and Florence
+uttered a low cry. The man had not observed her. So, very quietly,
+she slipped from the horse, tethered it to a tree, and started after
+the man to learn what he was doing so far from the city. She would
+never forget that face. She had seen it that dreadful night when the
+note had lured her into the hands of her enemies. The face belonged to
+the man who had impersonated her father.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It occurred to her that she might just as well do a little detective
+work on her own hook. She had passed through so many terrifying
+episodes that she was beginning to crave for the excitement, strange as
+this may seem. Like a gambler who has once played for high stakes, she
+no longer found pleasure in thimbles and needles and pins. She
+followed the man with no little skill and at length she saw him
+approach a knoll, stoop, apparently press a spring, and a hole suddenly
+yawned. The man vanished quickly, and the spot took on again its
+virginal appearance. A cave. Florence had the patience to wait. By
+and by the man appeared again and slunk away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When she was sure that he was beyond range, she came out from the place
+of concealment, crept up the knoll, and searched about for the magic
+handle of this strange door. Diligence rewarded her, and she soon
+found herself in a large, musty, earth-smelling cave. Loot was
+scattered about, and there were boxes and chairs and a large chest.
+Men evidently met here, possibly after some desperate adventure against
+society. She found nothing to reward her hardihood, and as she was in
+the act of moving toward the cave's door she beheld with terror that it
+was moving!
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-249"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-249.jpg" alt="FLORENCE DISCOVERS THE CAVE" />
+<br />
+FLORENCE DISCOVERS THE CAVE
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was near the chest at that moment. The cave was not a deep one.
+There was no tunnel, only a wall. Resolutely she raised the lid of the
+chest, stepped inside, and drew the lid down. She was just in time.
+The door opened and three men entered, talking volubly. They felt
+perfectly secure in talking as loudly as they pleased. To Florence it
+seemed almost impossible that they did not hear the thunder of her
+heart? Strain her ears as she might, she could gather but little of
+what they said, except:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If Hargreave had this paper we might all be put on the defensive. To
+an outsider it is a blank paper. But the boss will be able to read
+it...." The speaker moved away from the vicinity of the chest and she
+heard no more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Very deftly Florence raised the lid just enough to peep out. The man
+who had been talking was putting the note in his hip pocket. As he
+turned toward the chest he sat down on the soap-box immediately in
+front of the chest. An inspiration came to the girl, an exceedingly
+daring one. She took her liberty in her hands as she executed the
+deed. But the dimness of the cave aided her. When she crouched down
+again the magic paper was hers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It seemed hours to her before the men left the cave. As she heard the
+hidden door jar in closing she raised the lid and stepped out,
+breathing deeply. The paper she had purloined was indeed blank, but
+Jones or Jim would know what to do with it. And wouldn't they be
+surprised when she told them what she had accomplished all alone? Her
+exultation was of short duration. She heard the whine of the door on
+its hinges. The men were returning. Why?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were returning because they had discovered a woman's shoeprint
+outside. It pointed toward the cave, freshly, and there was none
+coming away. To re-enter the chest would be foolhardy. It would be
+the first place the men would look. She glanced about desperately.
+She saw but one chance, the well. And even while the door was swinging
+inward, letting the brilliant sunshine enter, she summoned up the
+courage and let herself down into the well, which proved to be nothing
+more nor less than an underground river!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The men came in with a rush. They upset boxes, looked into the chest,
+and the man who was evidently in command, gazed down the well, shaking
+his head. Their search was thorough, but they found no one. And at
+length they began to reason that perhaps a woman had got as far as the
+door and then turned away, walking on the turf.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meantime Florence was borne along by the swift current of the river,
+which gained in swiftness every moment. From time to time she bumped
+along the rocky walls, but she clung to life valiantly. In ten minutes
+she was swept to the other side of the hill, into the rapids; but the
+blue sky was overhead, she was out in the familiar world again. On, on
+she was carried. Even though she was half dead, she could hear the
+roar of a falls somewhere in advance.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<p>
+Braine thought he really had a clue to the treasure, and with his usual
+promptness he set about to learn if it was worth anything. He procured
+a launch and began to prowl about, using a pole as a feeler. All the
+while he was being closely watched by Norton, who had concluded to hang
+on to Braine's trail till he found something worthy of note. Braine
+was disguised, but this time Jim was not to be fooled. But what was he
+looking for, wondered the reporter? Braine continued to pole along,
+sometimes pausing to look over the gunwale down into the water. In
+raising his head after the last investigation, he discerned something
+struggling in the water, about three hundred yards away. The current
+leisurely brought the object into full view. It was a young woman with
+just power enough to keep herself afloat. The golden head roused
+something in him stronger than curiosity. It might be!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine proceeded to move the launch in the direction of the girl. It
+was this movement that turned the reporter's gaze. He, too, now saw
+the woman in the water and wondered how she had come there. When
+Braine reached the girl and pulled her into the launch Jim saw her face
+plainly.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-250"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-250.jpg" alt="FLORENCE STEALS THE PAPERS FROM BRAINE'S POCKET" />
+<br />
+FLORENCE STEALS THE PAPERS FROM BRAINE'S POCKET
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He flew from his vantage point, found a skiff and started after Braine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"By the Lord Harry!" murmured the rogue. "Well, they can talk of manna
+from heaven, but this is what I call luck. Florence Hargreave, out of
+nowhere, into my arms! The god of luck has cast another horseshoe and
+it's mine."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had a flask in his pocket, and he forced some of the biting spirits
+down the girl's throat. She opened her eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, my beauty?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence eyed him wildly, not quite understanding where he had come
+from.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I don't know how you got here," he said, "and I don't care. But here
+we are together at last. Where is your father?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I&mdash;I don't know," dazedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Better think quickly," he warned; "I want lucid answers to my
+questions or back you go into the water. I'm about at the end of my
+rope. I've been beaten too many times, my girl, to have any particular
+love for you. Now, where is your father?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I don't know; I have never seen him."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Jim's boat ran afoul some rocks and into the water he went. He had
+not attracted Braine's attention, fortunately. He began to swim toward
+the drifting launch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where have they hidden that money?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I don't know."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, well; I've given you your chance. You'll have to try your luck
+with the water again."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence, weak as she was, set her lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You don't ask for mercy?" he said banteringly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I should be wasting my breath to ask for mercy from such a monster as
+you are," she answered quickly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That damned Hargreave nerve!" he snarled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He rolled up his sleeves and stepped toward her. She braced herself
+but did not turn her eyes from his. Suddenly, from nowhere at all,
+came a pair of hands. One clutched the gunwale and the other laid hold
+of Braine. A quick pull followed, and Braine began to topple. But
+even as he fell he managed to fling himself atop his assailant; and it
+was only when the struggle began in the water that he recognized the
+reporter. All the devil in him came to the surface and he fought with
+the fierceness of a tiger to kill, kill, kill. In nearly every
+instance this meddling reporter had checkmated him. This time one or
+the other of them should stay in the water.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton recognized that he had a large order before him to disable
+Braine. The recognition between them was now frank and absolute; there
+could never again be any diplomatic sidestepping.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You're a dead man, Norton!" panted Braine, as he reached for the
+reporter's throat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton said nothing, but struck the hand aside. For a moment they both
+went under. They came up sputtering, each trying for a hold. It was a
+terribly enervating struggle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence could do nothing. The boat in which she sat continued to
+drift away from the fighting men. Once she tried to reach Braine with
+the pole he had been using, but failed.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-252a"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-252a.jpg" alt="BRAINE PROCURED A LAUNCH AND BEGAN TO PROWL ABOUT" />
+<br />
+BRAINE PROCURED A LAUNCH AND BEGAN TO PROWL ABOUT
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the shore came another boat. For a while she could not tell
+whether it contained friends or enemies. It was terrible to be forced
+to wait, absolutely helpless. When she heard the newcomers call
+encouragingly to Braine she knew then that the brave fight of her
+sweetheart was going to come to naught. She knew a little about
+motors. She threw on the power and headed straight toward the rowboat.
+The men shouted at her, but she did not alter her course. The rowboat
+had its sides crushed in and the men went piling into the water.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jim," she cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton suddenly flung off Braine and began to swim madly for the motor
+boat, which Florence had brought about. Even then it was only by the
+barest luck in the world that Norton managed to catch the gunwale. The
+rest of it was simple. When they finally reached a haven, Florence,
+oddly enough, thought of the horse she had left tethered nine miles
+from the stables. She laughed hysterically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I guess he won't die. We can send some one out for him. Now, for
+heaven's sake, how did you get into this? Where were you? What have
+you been up to?" with tender bruskness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I wanted to do a little detective work of my own," she faltered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It looks as if you had done it. You infant! Will you never learn to
+keep outside this muddle? It's a man's work."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence, thoroughly weakened by her long immersion in the water, began
+to weep silently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You poor child. I'm a brute!" And he comforted her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Later that day, at home, she remembered the blank paper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I stole this from one of the men in the cave. He said this blank
+paper would probably save father."'
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jim took it. "H'm! Invisible ink, and it's had a fine washing."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But maybe it is waterproof."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Maybe it is. Anyhow, Miss Sherlock, we'll show it to Jones and see
+what he says."
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap20"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER XX
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+"What I want now," said Braine, as he paced the living-room of the
+apartment of the countess, "is revenge. I've been checkmated enough,
+Olga; they're playing with us."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That is nothing new," she replied, shrugging. "At the beginning I
+warned you. I never liked this affair after the first two or three
+failures. But you would have your way. You wanted revenge at that
+early date; but I can not see that you've gone forward. Has it ever
+occurred to you that the organization may be getting tired, too? They
+depend solely upon your invention, and each time your invention has
+resulted in touching nothing but zero."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thanks!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, I'm not chiding you. I've failed, too."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Are you turning against me?" he demanded bitterly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do my actions point that way?" she countered. "No. But the more I
+view what has passed, the more disheartened I grow. It has been a
+series of blind alleys, and all we have succeeded in doing is knocking
+our heads. I can see now that all our failures are due to one mistake."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And what the devil is that?" he asked irritably.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We were in too much of a hurry at the beginning. Hargreave prepared
+himself for quick action on your part."
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-252b"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-252b.jpg" alt="BRAINE REACHED THE GIRL AND PULLED HER INTO THE BOAT" />
+<br />
+BRAINE REACHED THE GIRL AND PULLED HER INTO THE BOAT
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And if I had not acted quickly he would have started successfully on
+one of his world tours again, and that would have been the last of him,
+and we should never have learned of the girl's existence. So there's
+your argument."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Perhaps you are right. But for all that we have not played the game
+with any degree of finesse."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Bah!" Braine lit a cigarette and smoked nervously. "I can't even get
+rid of that meddling reporter. He has been as much to blame for our
+failures as either Jones or Hargreave. I admit that in his case I
+judged hastily. I believed him to be just an ordinary newspaper man,
+and he was clever enough to lull my suspicions. But I'm going to get
+him, Olga, even if I have to resort to ordinary gunman tricks. If
+there's any final reckoning, by the Lord Harry, he shan't get a chance
+in the witness stand."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And I begin to think that that little chit of a girl has been
+hoodwinking me all along. By the way, did you find out what that
+letter said?" she asked after a pause.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Letter? What letter?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She sprang from her chair. "Do you mean to say that they have not told
+you about that?" Olga became greatly excited.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Explain," he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why, I was at the garden day before yesterday, and a man approached
+and asked if I was Miss Hargreave. Becoming at once suspicious that
+something very important was about to happen I signified that I was
+Miss Hargreave. The man slipped a paper into my hand and hurried off.
+I took a quick glance at it and was dumfounded to find it utterly blank
+of writing. At first I thought some joke had been played on me, then I
+chanced to remember the invisible ink letters you always wrote me.
+Understanding that you were to visit the cave in the morning, I had one
+man at the garden take the note. And you never got it!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Some one shall certainly pay for this carelessness. I'll call up
+Vroon and Jackson at once. Wait just a moment."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He went to the telephone. A low muttering conversation took place.
+Olga could hear little or none of it. When Braine put the receiver
+back on the hook his face was not pleasant to see.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That girl!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What now?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It seems she had been out horseback riding that morning. She had seen
+one of the boys cross the field and suddenly disappear; and she was
+curious to learn what had become of him. With her usual luck she
+stumbled on the method of opening the door of the cave and went in.
+She must have been nosing about. She didn't have much time, though, as
+the boys came up to await me. Evidently she crawled into that old
+chest and in some inexplicable manner purloined the letter from
+Jackson's pocket. They left to reconnoiter; and it was then that
+Jackson discovered his loss. When Florence heard them returning she
+jumped into the well. And lived through that tunnel! The devil is in
+it!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Or out of it, since we consider him our friend."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And I had her in my hands, note and all!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But with all that water there will not be any writing left on the
+letter."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Invisible ink is generally indelible and impervious to the action of
+water; at least the kind I use is. I'd give a thousand for a sight of
+that letter."
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-254"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-254.jpg" alt="FROM THE SHORE CAME ANOTHER DOAT" />
+<br />
+FROM THE SHORE CAME ANOTHER DOAT
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And it might be worth a million," Olga suggested.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Not the least doubt of it in my mind. Olga, old girl, it does look as
+if my star was growing dim. We'll never get our hands on that million.
+I feel it in my bones. So let's settle down to a campaign of revenge,
+without any furbelows. I want to twist Hargreave's heart before the
+game winds up."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You wish really to injure her?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I do not wish to injure her. Far from it," he replied, smiling evilly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You want her ... dead?" whispered Olga, paling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Exactly. I want her dead. And so if all my efforts here come to
+nothing, so shall Hargreave's. His millions will become waste paper to
+him. That's revenge. The Persian peach method."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Poison? You shall not! You shall not kill her!" vehemently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Tender-hearted?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No. If I must in the end go to prison, so be it; but I refuse to die
+in the chair."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Very well, then. We shan't kill her, but we'll make her wish she was
+dead. I was only trying to see how far you would go. The basket of
+peaches is in the hallway. Every peach is poisoned. No man in the
+country knows more about subtle poisons than I do. Have I not written
+books on that subject?" ironically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And they will trace it back to you in a straight line," she warned.
+"I will not have it!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I can go elsewhere," he replied coldly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You would leave me?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The moment you cross my will," emphatically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It became her turn to pace. Torn between her love of the man and the
+danger which stared her in the face, she was for the time being
+distracted. All the time he watched her with malevolent curiosity,
+knowing that in the end she would concur with his evil plans.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Very well," she said finally. "But listen; we shall be found out.
+Never doubt that. Your revenge will cost us both our lives. I feel
+it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Bah! The law will have no hand in my end. I always carry a pellet;
+and that ring of yours would suffice a regiment. She will not die.
+She will merely become a kind of paralytic; the kind that can move a
+little but not enough; always wheeled about in a chair. I'll bring in
+the peaches; rosy and downy. One bite, after a given time, will do the
+trick. If they suspect and throw them out we have lost nothing but the
+peaches. A trusted messenger will carry them to the Hargreave house.
+And then we'll sit down and wait."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meantime, in the library of the Hargreave house, Florence and Jim were
+puzzling over the blank sheet of paper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'll wager," said Jim, "the water washed all the writing away. The
+fire does not seem to do any good. We'll turn it over to Jones.
+Jones'll find a way to solve it. Trust him."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What are you two chattering about?" asked Susan, who was arranging
+some flowers on the table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Secrets," said Jim, smiling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Humph!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Susan puttered about for a few minutes longer, then crossed to the
+reception room, intending to go up-stairs. At that moment the maid was
+admitting a messenger with a basket of fruit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"For Miss Hargreave," said he. He gave the basket to the maid, touched
+his cap awkwardly, and swung on his heel, closing the door behind him.
+He was in a hurry to deliver another message.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, what lovely fruit!" cried Susan, pausing. "I'm going to steal
+one," she laughed. She selected a peach and began eating it on the way
+up to her room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The maid passed on into the library.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What's this?" inquired Florence, as the maid held out the basket. She
+selected a peach and was about to set her white teeth into it when Jim
+interposed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Wait a moment, dear." Florence lowered the peach. Jim turned to the
+maid. "Who sent it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I don't know, sir. A messenger brought it, saying it was for Miss
+Hargreave."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Let me see if there is a card." But Jim searched in vain for the card
+of the donor. All at once his suspicions arose. "Don't touch them.
+Better let the maid throw them out. Fruit from unknown persons might
+not be the healthiest thing in the world."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What do you think?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That in all probability they are poisoned. But there's no need trying
+to prove my theory right or wrong. Ask Jones. He'll tell you to throw
+them away."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Horrible!" Florence shuddered. "But they do not want to poison me.
+I'm too valuable. They want me alive."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who can say?" returned Jim gloomily. "They may have learned that they
+can not beat us, no matter what card they turn up. I may be wrong, but
+take my advice and throw them away.... Good lord, what's that?"
+startled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Some one cried!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, Miss Florence!" exclaimed the maid, terror-stricken as she
+recalled Susan's act. "Miss Susan took a peach from the basket and was
+eating it on the way to her room!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Good heavens!" gasped Jim. "I was right. The fruit was poisoned."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jim had heard enough to send for a specialist he knew. The specialist
+arrived about twenty minutes after Susan's first cry. To his keen eye
+it looked like a certain poison which had for its basis the venom of
+the cobra.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Will she live?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, yes. But she'll be a wreck for some months. Send her to the
+hospital where I can visit her frequently. And I'll take that peach
+along for analysis. No police affair?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No. We dare not call them in," said Jim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That's your affair. I'll send down the ambulance. Keep her quiet.
+She'll have a species of paralysis; but that'll work off under
+treatment. A strange business."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"So it is," agreed Jim grimly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence knelt beside her friend's bed and cried softly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You called me just in time. An hour later, nothing would have saved
+her. She would have been paralyzed for life."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jim accompanied the doctor to the door and went in search of Jones. He
+found the taciturn butler eying the fruit basket, his face gray and
+drawn, though his eyes blazed with fury.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Poison!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A pretty bad poison, too," said Jim. "We can't do anything. We've
+just got to sit still. But in the end we'll get them. That she
+devil...."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No, my friend; that he devil. The woman is mad over him and would
+commit any crime at his bidding. But this is his work. We want him.
+He wasn't without courage to send this fruit, knowing that I would
+instantly suspect the sender. Yet, I have no definite proof. I could
+not hold him in court in law. He will have bought the fruit piece by
+piece, the basket in a basket shop. He will have injected the poison
+himself when alone. Poor Susan! That messenger was without doubt some
+one over whom he holds the threat of the death chair. That's the way
+he works."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jim tramped the room while Jones carried the fruit to the kitchen. The
+butler returned after a while.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What about that blank sheet of paper?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It has to be dipped into a solution; after that you can read it by
+heating. I have already dipped it into the solution. The moment the
+heat leaves the sheet the writing disappears again. The ink is
+waterproof. I'll show you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones got a candle from the mantel, lit it, and held the sheet of paper
+very close to the flame. Gradually, almost imperceptibly, letters
+began to form on the blank sheet. At length the message was complete.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<p>
+"Dear Hargreave&mdash;The Russian minister of police is at the Blank Hotel
+under the name of Henri Servan. He is investigating the work of the
+Black Hundred in this country and can free you from their vengeance if
+you supply the evidence needed."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Now, what evidence can he want?" asked Jim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Such as will prove Braine an undesirable citizen."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And then?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Quietly pack him off to Russia, where he is badly wanted."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who sent this message?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"One of our mysterious friends. We have a few, as you already know.
+But I'll go and make this man Servan a visit. I have seen the real
+minister, and if this man is the same one, something of importance may
+turn up. I shall want you somewhere about. Here, I'll let you have
+this letter. Remember, heat brings it out and cold air makes it
+vanish. Now I'll go up for a moment to see how that poor girl is
+getting along. We are lucky; there's no gainsaying that."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You're a clever man, Jones," said Jim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones turned upon him, his face grave. The two men looked steadily
+into each other's eyes. Jones was first to turn aside his glance, as
+he had something to conceal and Jim had nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the ambulance took the tortured Susan away, Jones addressed
+Florence gravely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am going out, and so is Mr. Norton. Do not leave the house; not
+even if you have a telephone call from me or Norton. Both of us will
+return; so don't let anything bother or confuse you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I promise," said Florence, struggling with a sob.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones went down-stairs again, paused by a window as if cogitating, and
+suddenly threw it up and looked abroad. A rustle among the lilacs
+caused a smile to flit across his face. So they had sent some one to
+learn the effect of the poison? Or to follow him should he leave the
+house? He retired to the kitchen and gave some explicit orders to the
+chef, orders which did not in any way refer to cooking. Then Jones and
+the reporter left the house, each quite aware that they were being
+followed. Near the Blank Hotel they separated in order to confuse the
+stalker. He might dodder and follow the wrong man. But it was evident
+that this time he had been directed to follow Jones; for he entered the
+hotel a minute after Jones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meantime a second spy, whom Jones had not seen, had observed the
+transfer of the invisible writing and had immediately informed Braine,
+who was not far away. That his poisoned fruit had stricken down an
+outsider troubled him none at all. But that mysterious message he
+meant to have; it might be a life and death affair, it might be a clue
+to the treasure, or the whereabouts of Hargreave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus, while only one man followed Jones, several kept a far eye on Jim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones scribbled his name on a blank card and had it taken to the
+Russian's room. The page eyed that card curiously. It was different
+from anything he had ever seen before. In one corner were written
+three or four words which resembled a cross between Hebrew and Greek.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Humph!" muttered the boy. "Whadda y' know about that? Chicken
+scratches; but I guess the bell rings Roosian. On your way, Hortense,"
+he cried to the hall maid, who wanted a look at the card. "Up t' th'
+room, sir. He'll see yuh!" The boy kept the silver salver extended
+expectantly, but Jones went past without apparently noticing the hint.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Russian was standing by a window when Jones knocked and was bidden
+to enter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You are not Hargreave."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Neither are you the Russian minister of police," urbanely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Who are you?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am Hargreave's confidential man, sir."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two men eyed each other cautiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You speak Russian?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No. I am able to scribble a few words; that is all."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Russian lit a cigarette and smoked leisurely. He was in no hurry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No, I am not the minister; but I am his accredited agent. I am
+empowered to bring back to Russia a man who is known here by the name
+of Braine, another by the name of Vroon, and a woman who calls herself
+a countess and unfortunately is one. All I desire is some damaging
+proof against them that they are outlaws in this country. The rest
+will be simple."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"They have all three taken out naturalization papers."
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-266"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-266.jpg" alt="THEY HAVE ALL THREE TAKEN OUT NATURALIZATION PAPERS" />
+<br />
+THEY HAVE ALL THREE TAKEN OUT NATURALIZATION PAPERS
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Russian waved his hand airily. "Once they are in Russia those
+documents will never come to light. This man Braine, it has been
+learned, has long been in the pay of Prussia, and has given the general
+staff of that country many plans of our frontier fortifications. I do
+not know what any one of the three looks like. That is why I sought
+Hargreave."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I will gladly point them out to you," said Jones, rubbing his hands
+together, a sign that he was greatly pleased.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That will be very good of you, I'm sure," in a rumbling but perfectly
+intelligible English.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And suddenly they all three will disappear."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Suddenly; and you may believe me that from that time on they'll be
+heard of never more."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"All this sounds extremely agreeable to me. Mr. Hargreave will be
+happy to hear that his long enforced hiding will soon come to an end."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"All you have to do, sir, is to point them out to me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It may take a week or ten days."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My government has waited for ten years to gather in this delectable
+trio. A month, if you like."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The sooner the better. I shall call this evening after dinner. We
+shall begin with Mr. Braine; and generally where he is is the woman.
+Vroon will be the most difficult."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"After dinner, then, since you know some of his haunts. There is a
+reward."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones laughed shortly. "Keep it yourself, sir. Mr. Hargreave would
+willingly double whatever this reward is to eliminate these despicable
+creatures from his affairs."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thanks."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While this conversation was taking place Norton idled about; and
+feeling the cravings for a cigarette, prepared to roll one, only to
+find that he hadn't the "makings." So fate urged him to step into the
+nearest tobacconist's. He asked for his favorite brand and passed over
+the silver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine and his companions saw Norton enter the shop. It agreed with
+their plans perfectly. The tobacconist happened to be affiliated with
+the order. So they hurried into the shop. Jim instantly realized that
+he was in a trap.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How can I get out of here?" he whispered to the tobacconist.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The latter smiled. "I have to obey these gentlemen. I don't know what
+they want you for; but if I made a move to help you I should find my
+own throat cut without saving yours."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The devil!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jim made a dash for the rear door, to find it locked. Even as he
+fumbled with the key Braine and his companions flung themselves upon
+the reporter and overpowered him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ah, my friend Braine!" he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My friend Norton!" jeered the victor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And what do you want; some peaches?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A paper, my friend, a little secret of paper with invisible writing on
+it. We promise to give you something in exchange for it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What?" asked Jim with as much nonchalance as he could assume.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Life."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Search," said Jim. "You won't object to my smoking?" He began to
+roll a cigarette while they passed over him. He struck a match; the
+pleasant aroma of tobacco floated about his head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He's got it on him somewhere. I saw him take it. He's got his nerve
+with him."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The cigarette glowed. Jim smoked hurriedly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Through every pocket they went. The contents of his wallet lay
+scattered at his feet; his watch dangled from the chain. The cigarette
+grew shorter and shorter. Suddenly one of the men stretched out a hand
+and whisked the cigarette from Jim's lips. He threw it to the floor
+and stamped out the coal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I thought so!" he exclaimed, holding out the scrap of burnt paper
+toward Braine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The words "Dear Hargreave" were all that remained of the message. With
+a snarl of rage Braine whipped out his revolver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I will give you one minute to tell me what that paper contained."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And after that minute is up?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A bullet in your stomach."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Quick as a flash Jim's hand shot out, caught the loosely held revolver,
+gave it a wrench, and brought it down savagely upon Braine's head.
+Then he reversed it and backed toward the front entrance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Au revoir, till we meet again, gentlemen!"
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap21"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER XXI
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+Jim said nothing at first about his adventure to Jones, whom he met
+half an hour later.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Was it necessary to keep that invisible letter?" he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No," said Jones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Would it have given our affairs a serious turn if it had fallen into
+alien hands?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Decidedly," answered Jones. "It would mean flight for the Black
+Hundred or a long time under cover, if our friend Braine learned that
+Russia was now taking an active interest in the doings of the Black
+Hundred. And eventually all our work would have to be done over again."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ah!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You look a bit mussed up. Anything happened?" asked the keen-eyed
+butler.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Nothing much. I made a cigarette out of the letter and smoked it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones chuckled. "I see that you have had an adventure of some sort;
+but it can wait."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It can."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Because I want you to pack off to Washington."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Washington?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes. I want you to interview those officials who are most familiar
+with the extradition laws."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A new kink?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What I wish to learn is this: Can a man, formerly undesirable, take
+out naturalization papers and hold to the protection of the United
+States government? That is to say, a poisoner, menaced by Siberia,
+becomes an American citizen. He is abducted and carried back to
+Russia. Could he look to this government for protection? That is what
+I want you to find out?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That will be easy. When shall I start?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"As soon as you can pack your grip."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That's always packed," replied the reporter. "You see, I'm eternally
+shunted hither and yon, at a moment's notice, so I always have an extra
+grip packed for quick travel."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The Russian agent wants Braine, Vroon, and the countess; and to-night
+I'm going to try to point them out to him. It would satisfy me more
+than anything I know to eliminate this precious trio in Russian
+fashion. It's thorough; and once accomplished, good day to the Black
+Hundred in America. The organization in Russia has still some
+political significance, but on this side of the water it is merely an
+aggregation of merciless thugs."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'll take the first train out. But you will tell Florence?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Surely."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And take care of your own heels. You were watched at the hotel."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I know it; but the watcher could learn nothing. Henri Servan as a
+name will suggest nothing to the fool who followed me. Besides we both
+knew that he was trying to peek through the keyhole. That hotel, you
+know, still retains the old-fashioned keyholes."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"To keep the maids in good humor, I suppose," laughed Jim. "Well, I
+must be on my way to make that flyer."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two shook hands and Jim hurried off. The butler watched him till
+he disappeared down the subway.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He's a good lad," he murmured, "and a brave lad; and money is only an
+incident in human affairs after all. I'll be a good angel and let the
+two be happy, since they love each other and have proved it in a
+thousand ways."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile the Russian agent settled down before his writing portfolio;
+and once or twice as he wrote he thought he heard a sound outside the
+door. No doubt this butler of Hargreave's had been watched and
+followed. By and by he rose, drew his revolver, and tiptoed to the
+door obliquely so that the watcher outside might not become aware of
+his approach. Swiftly he swung back the door and the member of the
+Black Hundred stumbled into the room. Almost instantly the Russian
+caught him by the collar and held him up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What were you doing outside my door?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man, trying to collect his thoughts, did not answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A spy of some sort, eh?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'm a detective," said the man finally, thinking he saw his way clear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And what did you expect to learn by looking through the keyhole of my
+door?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Servan laughed. "Show me your badge of authority."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man fumbled in his upper pocket, hoping against hope that the
+muzzle of the revolver would waver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You're an ordinary thief," declared the Russian; "and as such I shall
+instantly hand you over to the hotel authorities unless you tell me
+exactly who and what you are."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man remained dumb. He hung between the devil and the deep sea. If
+he told the truth the organization would soon learn the truth; if he
+kept still he would be lodged in jail, perhaps indefinitely, for he
+hadn't a savory police record. Presently his nerve gave way in face of
+the steady eye and hand, and he confessed the why and wherefore he had
+sought the keyhole of Servan's room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We are after this butler. Wherever he goes we follow."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, you've wasted your time, my man. All I am here for is to take
+over some property Mr. Hargreave left in France for sale. I know
+nothing about your private feuds. Now, get out. But keep out of my
+way; I am not a peaceful man."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The spy tumbled out as he had tumbled in, by an act of gravity; and
+Servan was alone. He spent two days in comparative idleness. Then
+things began to wake up.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /></p>
+
+<p>
+For a long time the leather box across which was inscribed "Stanley
+Hargreave" lay in peace undisturbed. A busy spider had woven a trap
+across the handle to the quaint lock. The box was still badly stained
+from its immersion in the salt water. At a certain time it was quietly
+withdrawn from its hiding place. It was stealthily opened. A hand
+reached in and when it withdrew a packet of papers was also withdrawn.
+The box was again locked and lowered; and presently the spider returned
+to find that his cunning trap had been totally destroyed. With the
+infinite patience of his kind he began the weaving of another trap.
+Perhaps this would be more successful than its predecessor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Later Henri Servan received a telephone call. He was informed that his
+purpose in America would be realized by his presence at such and such a
+box that night at the opera. Further information could not be given
+over the telephone. Servan seemed well satisfied. He dressed
+carefully that evening, called up the office clerk and inquired if his
+box tickets for the opera had arrived. He was informed that they had.
+Instantly the spy, who had dared to linger about the hotel, overhearing
+this conversation, determined to notify Braine at once. And at the
+same time, Norton, in disguise, determined not to lose sight of this
+man whom he had set himself to watch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The spy left by one entrance and Jim by another. Jim had learned what
+he desired; that the Russian agent would be followed to the opera and
+that it was going to be difficult to hand the documents to him. The
+spy entered a drug store and telephoned. Jim waited outside. When the
+man came out he strolled up the street and entered the nearest saloon.
+Jim's work was done.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was Braine's lieutenant, however, who took the news to Braine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We have succeeded."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Good!" said Braine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He will go to the opera. He will have a box. Doubtless they have
+arranged to deliver the papers there."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And the next thing is to get the number of his box." This Braine had
+no difficulty in doing. "So that's all fixed. He calls himself Servan
+and registers from Paris. I'll show the fool that he has no moujik to
+deal with this time."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And what are these documents?" asked Olga.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ah, that's what we are so anxious to find out. Some papers are going
+to be exchanged between this Russian spy and Jones or his agents. That
+these papers concern us vitally I am certain. That is why I am going
+to get them if there has to be a murder at the opera to-night. Norton
+has been to Washington. He was seen coming out of the Russian embassy,
+from the secretaries of state and war and a dozen other offices. I've
+got to find out just what all this means."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It means that the time has come for us to fly," said Olga. "We have
+failed. I have warned you. We have still plenty of money left. It is
+time we folded our tents and stole away quietly. I tell you I feel it
+in my bones that there is a pit before us somewhere! and if you force
+issues we shall all fall into it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The white feather, my dear."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is altogether some difference between the white feather and
+common-sense caution."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I shall never give up. You are free to pack up and go if you wish.
+As for me, I'm going to fight this out to the bitter end."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And take my word for it, the end will be bitter."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, I shall stay. You know that my future is bound up in yours. In
+the old days my advice generally appealed to you as sound; and when you
+followed it you were successful. From the first I advised you not to
+pursue Hargreave. See what has happened!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Enough of this chatter. I've got to die some time; it will be with my
+face toward this man I hate with all my soul. You trust to me; I'll
+pull out of this all right. You just fix yourself up stunningly for
+the opera to-night and leave the rest to me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Olga shrugged. She was something of a fatalist. This man of hers had
+suddenly gone mad; and one did not reason with mad people.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What shall I wear?" she asked calmly.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-277"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-277.jpg" alt="&quot;JUST A MOMENT, GENTLEMEN&quot;" />
+<br />
+&quot;JUST A MOMENT, GENTLEMEN&quot;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Emeralds; they're your good luck stones. You will go to the box
+before I do. I've got to spend some time at the curb to be sure that
+this Servan chap arrives. And it is quite possible that our friend
+Jones will come later. If not Jones, then Norton. I was a fool not to
+shoot him when I had the chance. We could have covered it up without
+the least difficulty. But I needed the information about that paper.
+With Norton going to Washington and Jones conferring with this Servan,
+I've got to strike quick. It concerns us, that I'm certain. Perk up;
+we've lots of cards in our sleeves yet. Be at the opera at
+eight-thirty. Pay no attention to any one; wait for me. Remember, I
+shan't write or send any phone messages. Be wary of any trap like that
+to get you outside. Now, I'm off."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones approached Florence immediately after dinner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I have important business in the city to-night. Under no
+circumstances leave the house. I shall probably be followed. And our
+enemies will have need of you far more to-night than at any previous
+time. I shall not send you phone or written message. You have your
+revolver. Shoot any strange man who enters. We'll make inquiries
+after."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"We are near the end?" whispered Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Very near the end."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And I shall see my father?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones bent his head. "If we succeed."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is danger?" thinking of her lover.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is always danger when I leave this house. So be good," the
+butler added with a smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And Jim?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He has proved that he can take care of himself."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Tell him to be very careful."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'll do so, but it will not be necessary;" and with this Jones set
+forth upon what he considered the culminating adventure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The usual brilliant crowd began to pour into the opera. Braine took
+his stand by the entrance. He waited a long time, but his patience was
+rewarded. A limousine drove up and out of the door came his man, who
+looked about with casual interest. He dismissed the limousine, which
+wheeled slowly around the corner where it could be conveniently parked.
+Then Servan entered the opera.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine hurried around to the limousine. The lights, save those
+demanded by traffic regulations, were out. The chauffeur was huddled
+in his seat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My man," said Braine, "would you like to make some money?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"How much?" listlessly. The voice was muffled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Twenty."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Good night, sir."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Fifty."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Good night and good morning!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A hundred!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Now you've got me interested. What kind of a joy ride do you want?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No joy ride. Listen."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Briefly the conspirator outlined his needs, and finally the chauffeur
+nodded. Five twenties were pressed into his hand and he curled up in
+his seat again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Servan entered his box. In the box next to his sat a handsomely gowned
+young woman. He threw her an idle glance, which was repaid in kind.
+Later, Braine came in and sat down beside Olga.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Everything looks like plain sailing," he whispered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Olga shrugged slightly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During the intermission between the first and second acts, Servan took
+the rear chair of his box, near the curtains. Braine, watching with
+the eyes of a lynx, suddenly observed the curtains stirring. A hand
+was thrust through. In that hand was a packet of papers. With seeming
+indifference Servan reached back and took the papers, stowing them away
+in a pocket.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine rose at the beginning of the second act.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where are you going?" asked Olga nervously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"To see Otto."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A bold attempt was made to rob Servan while in the box, but the timely
+arrival of Jim frustrated this plan. So Braine was forced to rely on
+the chauffeur of the limousine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As Farrar's last thrilling note died away Braine and Olga rose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Be careful. And come to the apartments just as soon as you can."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'll be careful," Braine declared easily. "You can watch the play if
+you wish."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Servan entered the limousine he was quietly but forcibly seized by
+two men who had been lying in wait for him, due to the apparent
+treachery of the chauffeur. Servan fought valiantly, for all that he
+knew what the end of this exploit was going to be. One of the men
+succeeded in getting the documents from Servan's pocket.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Done, my boy!" cried the victor. "Give him a crack on the coco and
+we'll beat it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Just a minute, gentlemen!" said a voice from the seat at the side of
+the chauffeur. "I'll take those papers!" And the owner of the voice,
+backed by a cold, sinister-looking automatic, reached in and
+confiscated the spoils of war. "And I shouldn't make any attempt to
+slip out by the side door."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thanks, my friend," said Servan, shaking himself free from his captors.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Don't mention it," said Norton amiably. "We thought something like
+this would happen. Keep perfectly quiet, you chaps. Drive on,
+chauffeur; drive on!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes, my lord! To what particular police station shall I head this
+omnibus?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The nearest, Jones; the very nearest you can think of! Some day, when
+I'm rich, I'll hire you for my chauffeur. But for the present I shall
+expect at least a box of Partagas out of that hundred."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones chuckled. "I'll buy you a box out of my own pocket. That
+hundred goes to charity."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Here we are! Out with you," said Jim to his prisoners. He shouldered
+them into the police station, to the captain's desk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What's this?" demanded the captain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Holdup men," said Jim. "Entered this man's car and tried to rob him."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Uh-huh! An' who're you?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jim showed his badge and card.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oho! Hey, there; I mean you!" said the captain, leveling a finger at
+Otto. "Lift up that hat; lift it up. Sure, it's Fountain Pen Otto!
+Well, well; an' we've been lookin' for you for ten months on the last
+forgery case. Mr. Norton, my thanks. Take 'em below, sergeant.
+You'll be here to make the complaint in th' mornin', sir," he added to
+Servan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"If it is necessary."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It may be against Otto's pal. I don't know him."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Very well."
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-278"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-278.jpg" alt="THE POLICE CAPTAIN'S DESK" />
+<br />
+THE POLICE CAPTAIN'S DESK
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Jones and Norton and Servan trooped out of the station.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last Jones and the reporter entered a cheap restaurant and ordered
+coffee and toast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You're a wonderful man, Jones, even if you are an Englishman," said
+Jim as he called for the check.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"English? What makes you think I am English?" asked Jones with a
+curious glitter in his eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'll tell you on the night we put the rollers under Braine and
+company."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jones stared long and intently at his young partner. What did he
+really know?
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap22"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER XXII
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+The federal government agreed to say nothing, to put no obstacles in
+the way of the Russian agent, provided he could abduct his trio without
+seriously clashing with the New York police authorities. It was a
+recognized fact that the local police force wanted the newspaper glory
+which would attend the crushing of the Black Hundred. It would be an
+exploit. But their glory was nil; nor did Servan take his trio back
+with him to Russia.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Many strange things happened that night, the night of the final
+adventure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence sat in her room reading. The book was Oliver Twist, not the
+pleasantest sort of book to read under the existing circumstances.
+Several times&mdash;she had reached the place where Fagin overheard Nancy's
+confession&mdash;she fancied she heard doors closing softly, but credited it
+to her imagination. Poor Nancy, who wanted to be good but did not find
+time to be! Florence possessed a habit familiar to most of us; the
+need of apples or candy when we are reading. So she rang the bell for
+her maid, intending to ask her to bring up some apples. She turned to
+her reading, presently to break off and strike the bell again. Where
+was that maid? She waited perhaps five minutes, then laid down the
+book and began to investigate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was not a servant to be found in the entire house! What in the
+world could that mean? Used as she was to heartrending suspense, she
+was none the less terrified. Something had taken the servants from the
+house. From whence was the danger to come this time? Where was Jones?
+Why did he not return as he had promised? It was long past the hour
+when he said he would be back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She went into the library and picked up the telephone. She was told
+that Mr. Norton was out on an assignment, but that he would be notified
+the moment he returned. She opened the drawer in the desk. She
+touched the automatic, but did not take it up. She left the drawer
+open, however.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Earlier, at the newspaper office that night, Jim went into the managing
+editor's office and laid a bulky manuscript on that gentleman's desk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Is this it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is," said Jim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You have captured them?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No; but there is a net about them from which not one shall escape.
+There's the story of my adventures, of the adventures of Miss Hargreave
+and the butler, Jones. You'll find it exciting enough. You might just
+as well send it up to the composing room. At midnight I'll telephone
+the introduction. It's a scoop. Don't worry about that."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The editor riffled the pages.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A hundred and twelve pages, three hundred words to the page; man, it's
+a novel!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It'll read like one."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Sit down for a moment and let me skim through the first story."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the end of ten minutes the editor laid down the copy. He opened a
+drawer and took out two envelopes. The blue one he tore up and dropped
+into the waste basket. Norton understood and smiled. They had meant
+to discharge him if he fell down. The other envelope was a fat one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Open it," said the editor, smiling a little to himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This envelope contained a check for two thousand five hundred dollars,
+two round-trip first-class tickets to Liverpool, together with
+innumerable continental tickets such as are issued to tourists.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Why two?" asked Jim innocently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Forget it, my boy, forget it. You ought to know that in this office
+we don't employ blind men. The whole staff is on. There you are, a
+fat check and three months' vacation. Go and get married; and if you
+return before the three months are up I'll fire you myself on general
+principles."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jim laughed happily and the two men shook hands. Then Jim went forth
+to complete the big assignment. Five minutes later Florence called him
+up to learn that he had gone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What should she do? Jones had told her to stay in the house and not to
+leave it. But where was he? Why did he not come? What was the
+meaning of this desertion by the servants? She wandered about
+aimlessly, looking out of windows, imagining forms in the shadows. Her
+imagination had not deceived her; she had heard doors close softly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Susan, Susan!" she murmured, but Susan was in the hospital.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Oliver Twist</i>! What had possessed her to start reading that old tale
+again? She should have read something of a light and joyous character.
+After half an hour's wandering about the lonely house she returned to
+the library, feeling that she would be safer where both telephone and
+revolver were.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And while she sat waiting for she knew not what, her swiftly beating
+heart sending the blood into her throat so that it almost suffocated
+her, a man turned into the street and walked noiselessly toward the
+Hargreave place. He passed a man leaning against a lamp-post, but he
+never turned to look at him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This man, however, threw away his cigar and hot-footed it to the
+nearest pay station. He knew in his soul that he had just seen the man
+for whom they had been hunting all these weary but strenuous
+weeks&mdash;Stanley Hargreave in the flesh! Half an hour after his
+telephone message the chief of the Black Hundred and many lesser lights
+were on their way to the house of mystery. Had they but known!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, the man who had created this tremendous agitation went serenely
+on. He proceeded directly and fearlessly to the front door, produced a
+latchkey and entered. He passed through the hall and reception room to
+the library and paused on the threshold dramatically. Florence stepped
+back with a sharp cry of alarm. She had heard the hall door open and
+close and had taken it for granted that Jones had entered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a tableau of short duration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Don't you know me?" asked the stranger in a singularly pleasant voice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence had been imposed upon too many times. She shook her head
+defiantly, though her knees shook so that she was certain that the
+least touch would send her over.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am your father, child!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence slipped unsteadily behind the desk and seized the revolver
+which lay in the drawer. The man by the curtains smiled sadly. It was
+a smile that caused Florence to waver a bit. Still she extended her
+arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You do not believe me?" said the man, advancing slowly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No. I have been deceived too many times, sir. Stay where you are.
+You will wait here till my butler returns. Oh, if I were only sure!"
+she burst out suddenly and passionately. "What proof have you that you
+are what you say?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He came toward her, holding out his hands. "This, that you can not
+shoot me. Ah, the damnable wretches! What have they done to you, my
+child, to make you suspicious of every one? How I have watched over
+you in the street! I will tell you what only Jones and the reporter
+know, that the aviator died, that I alone was rescued, that I gave
+Norton the five thousand; that I watched the windows of the Russian
+woman, and overheard nearly every plot that was hatched in the council
+chamber of the Black Hundred; that I was shot in the arm while crossing
+the lawn one night. And now we have the scoundrels just where we want
+them. They will be in this house for me within half an hour, and not
+one of them will leave it in freedom. I am your father, Florence. I
+am the lonely father who has spent the best years of his life away from
+you in order to secure your safety. Can't you feel the truth of all
+this?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No, no! Please do not approach any nearer; stay where you are!"
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-286a"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-286a.jpg" alt="THEY WERE TUMBLING THROUGH THE LIBRARY AND READING-ROOM" />
+<br />
+THEY WERE TUMBLING THROUGH THE LIBRARY AND READING-ROOM
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At that moment the telephone rang. With the revolver still leveled she
+picked up the receiver.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Hello, hello! Who is it? ... Oh, Jim, Jim, come at once! I am
+holding at bay a man who says he is my father. Hold him where he is,
+you say? All right, I will. Come quick!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jim!" murmured the man, still advancing. He must have that revolver.
+The poor child might spoil the whole affair. "So what Jones tells me
+is true; that you are going to marry this reporter chap?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She did not answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"With or without my consent?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If only he would drop that fearless smile! she thought. "With or
+without anybody's consent," she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What in the world can I say to you to convince you?" he cried. "The
+trap is set; but if Braine and his men come and find us like this, good
+heaven, child, we are both lost! Come, come!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Stay where you are!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At that moment she heard a sound at the door. Her gaze roved; and it
+was enough for the man. He reached out and caught her arm. She tried
+to tear herself loose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My child, in God's name, listen to reason! They are entering the hall
+and they will have us both."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly Florence knew. She could not have told you why; but there was
+an appeal in the man's voice that went to her heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You are my father!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes, yes! But you've found it out just a trifle too late, my dear.
+Quick; this side of the desk!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine and his men dashed into the library. Olga entered leisurely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Both of them!" yelled Braine exultantly. "Both of them together; what
+luck!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a sharp, fierce struggle; and when it came to an end
+Hargreave was trussed to a chair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ah, so we meet again, Hargreave!" said Braine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hargreave shrugged. What he wanted was time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"A million! We have you. Where is it, or I'll twist your heart before
+your eyes."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Father, forgive me!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I understand, my child."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where is it?" Braine seized Florence by the wrist and swung her
+toward him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Don't tell him, father; don't mind me," said the girl bravely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine, smiling his old evil smile, drew the girl close. It was the
+last time he ever touched her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Look!" screamed Olga.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Every one turned, to see Jones' face peering between the curtains.
+There was an ironic smile on the butler's lips. The face vanished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"After him!" cried Braine, releasing Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"After him!" mimicked a voice from the hall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The curtains were thrown back suddenly. Jones appeared, and Jim and
+the Russian agent and a dozen policemen. Tableau!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Braine sprang at Florence savagely, and Norton tore him back, and they
+went tumbling through the library and the living room. It was a death
+struggle; make no mistake about that. The others dared not shoot for
+fear of hitting Norton. But the Countess Olga, in the hallway, dared
+the risk. As Norton's back came into view she fired. Almost at the
+same instant Norton had swung Braine about. A shudder ran through the
+arch-scoundrel, his hands slipped off Norton's shoulders, a surprised
+expression swept over his face, then he sank inertly to the floor, dead.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-286b"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-286b.jpg" alt="BRAINE SANK INERTLY TO THE FLOOR, DEAD" />
+<br />
+BRAINE SANK INERTLY TO THE FLOOR, DEAD
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Olga ran up-stairs wildly, followed by a determined policeman. She
+dashed into Florence's room and locked the door. Instantly she crossed
+over to the window, and paused.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Down-stairs the police were marching off the leaders of the Black
+Hundred.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well," said Norton, "I guess it's all over. And, my word for it, Mr.
+Jedson, you've played your end consummately."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Jedson!" exclaimed Jones, starting back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes, Jedson, formerly of Scotland Yard," went on the reporter. "I
+recognized him long ago."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is true," said Hargreave, taking Jones' hand in his own. "Fifteen
+years ago I employed him to watch my affairs, and very well has he done
+so."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently, Hargreave, Jones, Florence and Jim were alone. That smile
+which had revealed to Florence her father's identity stole over his
+face again. He put his hand on Jim's shoulder and beckoned to Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Are you really anxious to marry this young man?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence nodded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, then, do so. And go to Europe with him on your honeymoon; and
+as a wedding present to you both, for every dollar that he has I will
+add a hundred; and when you get tired of travel you will both come hack
+here to live. The Black Hundred has ceased to exist."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And now," said Jones, shaking his shoulders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well?" said Hargreave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My business is done. Still&mdash;" Jones paused.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Go on," said Hargreave soberly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, the truth is, sir, I've grown used to you. And if you'll let me
+play the butler till the end I shall be most happy."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I was going to suggest it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Norton took Florence by the hand and drew her away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Where are you taking me?" she asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'm going to take this pretty hand of yours and put it flat upon one
+million dollars. And if you don't believe it, follow me."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She followed.
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap23"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER XXIII
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+It will be remembered that the Countess Olga had darted up the stairs
+during the struggle between Braine and his captors. The police who had
+followed her were recalled to pursue one of the lesser rogues. This
+left Olga free for a moment. She stole out and down as far as the
+landing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Servan, the Russian agent, stood waiting for the taxi-cab to roll up to
+the porte-cochère for himself, Braine and Vroon. Norton had taken
+Florence by the hand, ostensibly to conduct her to the million.
+Suddenly Braine made a dash for liberty. Norton rushed after him.
+Just as he reached Braine, a shot rang out. Braine whirled upon his
+heels and crashed to the floor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Olga, intent upon giving injury to Norton, who she regarded equally
+with Hargreave as having brought about the downfall, had hit her lover
+instead. With a cry of despair she dashed back into Florence's room,
+quite ready to end it all. She raised the revolver to her temple,
+shuddered, and lowered the weapon: so tenaciously do we cling to life!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Below, they were all quite stunned by the suddenness of the shot.
+Instantly they sought the fallen man's side, and a hasty examination
+gave them the opinion that the man was dead. Happily a doctor was on
+the way, Servan having given the call, as one of the Black Hundred had
+been wounded badly.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-289"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-289.jpg" alt="INSTANTLY THEY SOUGHT THE FALLEN MAN'S SIDE" />
+<br />
+INSTANTLY THEY SOUGHT THE FALLEN MAN'S SIDE
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But what to do with that mad woman up-stairs? Hargreave advised them
+to wait. The house was surrounded; she could not possibly escape save
+by one method, and perhaps that would be the best for her. Hargreave
+looked gravely at Norton as he offered this suggestion. The reporter
+understood: the millionaire was willing to give the woman a chance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And you are my father?" said Florence, still bewildered by the amazing
+events. "But I don't understand yet!" her gaze roving from the real
+Jones to her father.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I don't doubt it, child," said Hargreave. "I'll explain. When I
+hired Jones here, who is really Jedson of the Scotland Yard, I did so
+because we looked alike when shaven. It was Jedson here who escaped by
+the balloon; it was Jedson who returned the five thousand to Norton,
+who watched the countess' apartment; it was Jedson who was wounded in
+the arm. I myself guarded you, my child. Last night, unbeknown to
+you, I left and the real Jones&mdash;for it is easier to call him
+that!&mdash;took my place."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And I never saw the difference!" exclaimed Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That is natural," smiled her father. "You were thinking of Norton
+here instead of me. Eh?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence blushed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, why not? Here, Norton!" The millionaire took Florence's hand
+and placed it in the reporter's. "It seems that I've got to lose her
+after all. Kiss her, man; in heaven's name, kiss her!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Norton threw his arms around the girl and kissed her soundly,
+careless of the fact that he was observed by both enemies and friends.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-294"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-294.jpg" alt="A QUICK CLUTCH AND THE POLICEMAN HAD HER BY THE WRIST" />
+<br />
+A QUICK CLUTCH AND THE POLICEMAN HAD HER BY THE WRIST
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly the policeman who had been standing by the side of Braine ran
+into the living-room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He's alive! Braine's alive; he just stirred."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"What?" exclaimed Norton and Hargreave in a single breath.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes, sir! I saw his hands move. It's a good thing we sent for a
+doctor. He ought to be along about now."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even as he spoke the bell rang: and they all surged out into the hall,
+forgetting for the moment all about the million. Olga hadn't killed
+the man, then? The doctor knelt beside the stricken man and examined
+him. He shrugged.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Will he live?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Certainly. A scalp wound, that laid him out for a few moments. He'll
+be all right in a few days. He was lucky. A quarter of an inch lower,
+and he'd have passed in his checks."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Good!" murmured Servan. "So our friend will accompany me back to good
+Russia? Oh, we'll be kind to him during the journey. Have him taken
+to the hospital ward at the Tombs. Now, for the little lady up-stairs."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A moment later Braine opened his eyes, and the policeman assisted him
+to his feet. Servan, with a nod, ordered the police to help the
+wounded man to the taxicab which had just arrived. Braine, now wholly
+conscious, flung back one look of supreme hatred toward Hargreave; and
+that was the last either Florence or her father ever saw of Braine of
+the Black Hundred&mdash;a fine specimen of a man gone wrong through greed
+and an inordinate lust for revenge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The policeman returned to Hargreave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It's pretty quiet up-stairs," he suggested. "Don't you think, sir,
+that I'd better try that bedroom door again?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Well, if you must," assented Hargreave reluctantly. "But don't be
+rough with her if you can help it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For Braine he had no sympathy. When he recalled all the misery that
+devil's emissary had caused him, the years of hiding and pursuit, the
+loss of the happiness that had rightfully been his, his heart became
+adamant. For eighteen years to have ridden and driven and sailed up
+and down the world, always confident that sooner or later that demon
+would find him! He had lost the childhood of his daughter; and now he
+was to lose her in her womanhood. And because of this implacable
+hatred the child's mother had died in the Petrograd prison-fortress.
+But what an enemy the man had been! He, Hargreave, had needed all his
+wits constantly; he had never dared to go to sleep except with one eye
+open. But in employing ordinary crooks, Braine had at length
+overreached himself; and now he must pay the penalty. The way of the
+transgressor is hard; and though this ancient saying looks dingy with
+the wear and tear of centuries, it still holds good.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he felt sorry for the woman up above. She had loved not wisely but
+too well. Far better for her if she put an end to life. She would not
+live a year in the God-forsaken snows of Siberia.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"My kind father!" said Florence, as if she could read his thoughts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I had a hard time of it, child. It was difficult to play the butler
+with you about. The times that I fought down the desire to sweep you
+up in my arms! But I kept an iron grip on that impulse. It would have
+imperiled you. In some manner it would have leaked out; and your life
+and mine wouldn't have been worth a button."
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-296"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-296.jpg" alt="THE MYSTIC MILLION" />
+<br />
+THE MYSTIC MILLION
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Florence threw her arms around him and held him tightly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"That poor woman up-stairs!" she murmured. "Can't they let her go?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"No, dear. She has lost, and losers pay the stakes. That's life.
+Norton, you knew who I was all the time, didn't you?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I did; Mr. Hargreave. There was a scar on the lobe of your ear; and
+secretly I often wondered at the likeness between you and the real
+Jones. When I caught a glimpse of that ear, then I knew what the game
+was. And I'll add that you played it amazingly well. The one flaw in
+Braine's campaign was his hurry. He started the ball rolling before
+getting all the phases clearly established in his mind. He was a brave
+man, anyhow; and more than once he had me where I believed that prayers
+only were necessary."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"And do you think that you can lead Florence to the million?" asked
+Hargreave, smiling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"For one thing, it is in her room, and has always been there. It never
+was in the chest."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Not bad, not bad," mused the father.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"But perhaps after all it will be better if you show it to her
+yourself."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Just a little uncertain?" jibed the millionaire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Absolutely certain. I will whisper in your ear where it is hidden."
+Norton leaned forward as Hargreave bent attentively.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You've hit it! But how in the world did you guess it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Because it was the last place any one would look for it. I judged at
+the start that you'd hide it in just such a spot, in some place where
+you could always guard it, and lay your hands on it quickly if needs
+said must."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'm mighty glad you were on my side," said Hargreave. "In a few
+minutes we'll go up and take a look at those packets of bills. There's
+a very unhappy young woman there at present."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"It is in my room?" cried Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hargreave nodded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meantime the Countess Olga hovered between two courses: a brave attempt
+to escape by the window or to turn the revolver against her heart. In
+either case there was nothing left in life for her. The man she loved
+was dead below, killed by her hand. She felt as though she was
+treading air in some fantastical nightmare. She could not go forward
+or backward, and her heels were always within reach of her pursuers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So this was the end of things? The dreams she had had of going away
+with Braine to other climes, the happiness she had pictured, all mere
+chimeras! A sudden rage swept over her. She would escape, she would
+continue to play the game to the end. She would show them that she had
+been the man's mate, not his pliant tool. She raised the window and
+stepped out onto the balcony .... into the hands of the policeman who
+had patiently been waiting for her to do so! Instantly she placed the
+revolver at her temple. A quick clutch, and the policeman had her by
+the wrist. She made one tigerish effort to free herself, shrugged, and
+signified that she surrendered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I don't want to hurt you, Miss," said the policeman; "but if you make
+any attempt to escape, I'll have to put the handcuffs on you."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'll go quietly. What are you going to do with me?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Turn you over to the Russian agent. He has extradition papers; and I
+guess it's Siberia."
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-297"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-297.jpg" alt="&quot;FLORENCE, THAT IS ALL YOURS&quot;" />
+<br />
+&quot;FLORENCE, THAT IS ALL YOURS&quot;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"For me?" She laughed scornfully. "Do I look like a woman who would go
+to Siberia?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Be careful, Miss. As I said, I don't want to put the cuffs on unless
+I have to."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She laughed again. It did not have a pleasant sound in the officer's
+ears. He had heard women, suicidal bent, laugh like that.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I'll ask you for that ring on your finger."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Do you think there is poison in it?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I shouldn't be surprised," he admitted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She slipped the ring from her finger and gave it to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There is poison in it; so be careful how you handle it," she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The policeman accepted it gingerly and dropped it into his capacious
+pocket. It tinkled as it fell against the handcuffs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At that moment the other policeman broke in the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"All right, Dolan; she's given up the game."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"She didn't kill the man after all," said Dolan.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"He's alive?" she screamed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Yes; and they've taken him off to the Tombs. Just a scalp wound.
+He'll be all right in a day or two."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Alive!" murmured Olga. She had not killed the man she loved, then?
+And if they were indeed taken to Siberia, she would be with him until
+the end of things.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With her handsome head proudly erect, she walked toward the door. She
+paused for a moment to look at the portrait of Hargreave. Somehow it
+seemed to smile at her ironically. Then on, down the stairs, between
+the two officers, she went. Her glance traveled coolly from face to
+face, and stopped at Florence's. There she saw pity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"You are sorry for me?" she asked skeptically.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Oh, yes! I forgive you," said the generous Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Thanks! Officers, I am ready."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So the Countess Olga passed through that hall door forever. How many
+times had she entered it, with guile and treachery in her heart? It
+was the game. She had played it and lost, and she must pay her debts
+to Fate the fiddler. Siberia! The tin or lead mines, the
+ankle-chains, the knout, and many things that were far worse to a
+beautiful woman! Well, so long as Braine was at her side, she would
+suffer all these things without a murmur. And always there would be a
+chance, a chance!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When they heard the taxicab rumble down the driveway to the street,
+Hargreave turned to Florence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Come along, now, and we'll have the bad taste taken off our tongues.
+To win out is the true principle of life. It takes off some of the
+tinsel and glamour, but the end is worth while."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They all trooped up-stairs to Florence's room. So wonderful is the
+power and attraction of money that they forgot the humiliation of their
+late enemies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hargreave approached the portrait of himself, took it from the wall,
+pressed a button on the back, which fell outward. Behold! There, in
+neat packages of a hundred thousand each, lay the mystic million! The
+spectators were awed into silence for a moment. Perhaps the thought of
+each was identical&mdash;the long struggle, the terrible hazards, the
+deaths, that had taken place because of this enormous sum of money.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A million, sometimes called cool; why, nobody knows. There it lay,
+without feeling, without emotion; yellow notes payable to bearer on
+demand. Presently Florence gasped, Norton sighed, and Hargreave
+smiled. The face of Jones (or Jedson) alone remained impassive.
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-298a"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-298a.jpg" alt="AFTER THE STORM, THE SUNSHINE" />
+<br />
+AFTER THE STORM, THE SUNSHINE
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A million dollars is a marvelous sight. Very few people have ever seen
+it, not even millionaires themselves. I dare say you never saw it; and
+I'm tolerably certain I never have, or will! A million, ready for
+eager, careless fingers to spend, or thrifty fingers to multiply! What
+Correggio, what Rubens, what Titian, could stand beside it? None that
+I wot of.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Florence, that is all yours, to do with as you please, to spend when
+and how you will. Share it with your husband-to-be. He is a brave and
+gallant young man, and is fortunate in finding a young woman equally
+brave and gallant. For the rest of my days I expect peace. Perhaps
+sometimes Jones here and I will talk over the strange things that have
+happened; but we'll do that only when we haven't you young folks to
+talk to. After your wedding journey you will return here. While I
+live this shall be your home. I demand that much. Free! No more
+looking over my shoulder when I walk the streets; no more testing
+windows and doors. I am myself again. I take up the thread I laid
+down eighteen years ago. Have no fear. Neither Braine nor Olga will
+ever return. Russia has a grip of steel."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Three weeks later Servan, the Russian agent, left for Russia with his
+three charges, Olga, Braine and Vroon. It was a long journey they went
+upon, something like ten weeks, always watched, always under the
+strictest guard, compelled to eat with wooden forks and knives and
+spoons. Waking or sleeping they knew no rest from espionage. From
+Paris to Berlin, from Berlin to St. Petersburg, as Petrograd was then
+called; and then began the cruel journey over the mighty steppes of
+that barbaric wilderness to the Siberian mines. The way of the
+transgressor is hard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the same day that Olga and Braine made their first descent into the
+deadly mines, Florence and Norton were married. After the storm, the
+sunshine: and who shall deny them happiness?
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-298b"></a>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-298b.jpg" alt="IMMEDIATELY AFTER THE CEREMONY" />
+<br />
+IMMEDIATELY AFTER THE CEREMONY
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Immediately after the ceremony the two sailed for Europe, on their
+honeymoon; and it is needless to say that some of the million went with
+them, but there was no mystery about it!
+</p>
+
+<p class="finis">
+<br /><br /><br />
+THE END
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap24"></a></p>
+
+<h2>
+Harold MacGrath
+</h2>
+
+<h3>
+A Sketch of the Author at Work and at Play
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+Harold MacGrath, author of more than a dozen best sellers, the book of
+an operetta, and short stories without number, is a native of Syracuse,
+N. Y., having been born in that city on September 4, 1871, and lived
+there ever since, except when he is out circling the globe or in Gotham
+looking things over.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. MacGrath was a journalist before he essayed the higher form of
+literature that sells on a royalty basis, instead of by the yard, and
+he claims that he owes his start in "romancing" to a physical defect.
+Mr. MacGrath is partially deaf and while serving as a newspaper
+reporter he heard only about half of what was said to him, and had to
+"make up" the other half himself. Thus, his imagination was given
+quite a course in physical culture before its owner's conscience began
+to prick him. "Why not do the thing right?" MacGrath asked himself.
+"I don't knew," he replied. "Let's try it," he suggested. "All
+right," he answered. And he quit the newspaper game and started a
+novel, "Arms and the Woman," which appeared in 1890. This was followed
+by many good sellers, the speed limit of the author being three books
+some years.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next to being a novelist MacGrath is a globe-trotter. He has been in
+every nook and corner on the face of the globe where white man dares to
+go and can get there without swimming or flying. As a result, he has
+obtained the inspirations for most of his novels while amid the
+fascinating surroundings in some Asiatic harbor town, while traveling
+down the Rhine, or while listening to strains of Viennese music in some
+little out-of-the-way cafe along the Danube. He is a genius in pen
+picturing and can impart the color, the life, the action of real life
+into his pages in a manner that is bound to attract.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He is fond of tennis and out-of-door sports. He likes boxing and is
+one of the best amateur pool and billiard players in the country. He
+has friends in almost every large city in the world and has met more
+"crowned heads" than any other author, perhaps, outside of Hallie
+Erminie Rives, wife of Post Wheeler, the versatile secretary of the
+American Embassy at Tokio.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As a collector and connoisseur, Mr. MacGrath has a wide reputation, his
+especial hobby being Turkish rugs and antique jewelry, of which he has
+a wonderful collection. Another of his hobbies is horses, and although
+he owns only one himself, he will never pass a good looking horse by
+without stopping to pat it. He even carries lump sugar in his pocket
+and takes great delight in feeding it to the horses of the mounted
+officers in New York, many of whom (the officers) know him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His method of working up his stories is unique. According to his own
+statement, he first "thinks out" the start of his story, carrying his
+idea through what develops into the first few chapters of the book.
+Then he drops the thread of thought and starts again, but this time at
+the end, and figures out how he will dispose of his characters and how
+best the story should end. This accomplished, he sits down to his
+typewriter and "goes to work." While writing, he often strikes on good
+ideas to be incorporated in parts already considered. Immediately he
+jots down his idea on the back of an envelope or a scrap of paper and
+inserts the note among the pages of his manuscript just where it
+belongs After completing his first draft, he goes back over the entire
+manuscript, making corrections here and there and additions. He then
+sits down to sum the whole story up in his mind and by this process is
+able to pick out the flaws. His second draft, therefore, is quite a
+finished product. He makes the final draft of his manuscript himself,
+as he has found that he often strikes upon improvements at the eleventh
+hour that go far to better his stories. If he turned the work of
+making the final draft over to a stenographer, this last chance would
+be lost.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He is one of the few modern writers who does not have to try to be
+funny. It is natural with him to amuse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Those interested in the chronological order of his stories will find
+them as follows:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In 1901 he published his second book, "The Puppet Crown." "The Grey
+Cloak" followed in 1903, and by the time it appeared, most of the
+readers of fiction had acquired the MacGrath habit and were on the
+lookout for the next dose of his delightful literary stimulant that
+chased the "blues." Then came the story which established MacGrath's
+reputation, "The Man on the Box," which appeared in 1904 and is still
+one of the best sellers in popular editions. In 1905 MacGrath put on
+some extra speed. He worked a double shift in his brain mill and the
+result was that before the dawn of the next New Year's Day he had three
+more successful books to his credit. They were "The Princess Elopes,"
+a novelette; "Enchantment," a book of short stories, and "Hearts and
+Masks," a novel that dealt with entanglements developing at a mask
+ball. In the same year he wrote "Half a Rogue," another highly popular
+story. In 1906 he turned out "The Watteau Shepherdess," an operetta.
+These two productions were followed by "The Best Man" in 1907; "The
+Enchanted Hat" and "The Lure of the Mask" in 1908. "The Goose Girl"
+was MacGrath's next novel, and went far to uphold his reputation. "A
+Splendid Hazard" and "The Carpet of Bagdad" followed within the space
+of little more than a year. Next "The Place of Honeymoons" was
+published, then "Parrot &amp; Co.," "Deuces Wild," "Pidgin Island," "The
+Adventures of Kathlyn," and "Voice in the Fog."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The "purpose novel," as that term is generally understood, finds but
+little sympathy at the hands of Harold MacGrath. Yet he has a definite
+purpose of his own. It is to amuse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The one definite idea I have in mind in writing stories," he says, "is
+to afford an agreeable, pleasant hour or two to my readers. I wish to
+amuse them, to make them wish that they, too, might have lived as this
+or that hero, in this or that land, probable or improbable. I prefer
+sunshine, mirth, buoyancy, and I believe most readers prefer the same.
+Grown-up people never wholly lose their love of fairy tales; and grown
+up fairy tales have been the scheme of most of my novels."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Could an author have a better purpose than this? Could he serve men to
+better advantage than by lightening the burden they are destined to
+carry through life by allowing their minds to dwell in pleasant places
+and to rejoice with the people of a make-believe world?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I usually begin a story as a dramatist begins a play&mdash;with the end,"
+says MacGrath. "The characters work out the plot themselves; I have
+very little to do with it after they have started."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The structure of a plot must naturally be foremost; for, after all is
+said and done, the story's the thing. I never outline a plot; I carry
+the main thread in my head until I am ready to put it on paper, and
+after it assumes body on paper, it has many devious twists and turns of
+which I have no prior idea."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I write whenever I feel like it, for when I am in the mood I do better
+work. I never force myself to do so much work each day. There are
+days when it is impossible to write one hundred words; again, I have
+written as many as seven thousand words a day. Obstacles? There are
+altogether too many to demonstrate. A character that doesn't "balk"
+never fails to be uninteresting. I have always tried to place human
+people in absurd or unique situations and to let them extricate
+themselves as you or I, if so placed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The anatomy of a motif for a story is a complex thing, but of a
+practical joke, 'The Man on the Box' was evolved. A young man
+disguised as a coachman drove his sister and her friend to a ball one
+night. This happened in my native town, Syracuse, and it amused me
+greatly when critics said that the exploit was highly improbable. Out
+of the Italian state and church marriage came the plot of 'The Lure of
+the Mask.' The most trivial thing sometimes will suggest a plot. I
+found the ten of hearts one night on the sidewalk. It became the motif
+of 'Hearts and Masks.' Once, in Indianapolis, I chanced to see an
+Italian selling plaster images. It gave me a starting point for 'A
+Splendid Hazard.' Walking down Broadway one day I stopped to look in a
+window where oriental rugs were being advertised. When I turned away
+the seed germ for my latest book, 'The Carpet from Bagdad,' was in my
+mind."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. MacGrath is an enthusiastic fisherman. He goes to Cape Vincent,
+Lake Ontario, every summer, when he isn't ambling in China, or India,
+or Africa. He believes that the best bass grounds in the world are
+within a radius of twenty miles from Cape Vincent, which is really in
+the head of the St. Lawrence River. A friend undertook to convince him
+that there were other places, so MacGrath consented to accompany him to
+Canada. They arrived at sunset, and the host extemporized over the
+glories of the setting sun.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Ever see anything to beat that, Mac?"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Fine!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the following morning they went out for bass. At four o'clock in
+the afternoon they had caught exactly one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The host again rhapsodized over the sunset.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The second day they caught no bass at all. On their way back to the
+hotel the host was silent. As they came up to the landing, MacGrath
+touched his host on the shoulder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There's your darned sunset, Jim!"
+</p>
+
+<p><br /><br /><br /><br /></p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Million Dollar Mystery, by Harold MacGrath
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MILLION DOLLAR MYSTERY ***
+
+***** This file should be named 39134-h.htm or 39134-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ http://www.gutenberg.org/3/9/1/3/39134/
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Million Dollar Mystery, by Harold MacGrath
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Million Dollar Mystery
+ Novelized from the Scenario of F. Lonergan
+
+Author: Harold MacGrath
+
+Release Date: March 14, 2012 [EBook #39134]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE MILLION DOLLAR MYSTERY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Al Haines
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: Cover art]
+
+
+
+
+
+[Frontispiece: THE PAPER SHE HAD PURLOINED WAS INDEED BLANK]
+
+
+
+
+
+THE MILLION DOLLAR MYSTERY
+
+
+Novelized from the Scenario of
+
+F. LONERGAN
+
+
+
+BY
+
+HAROLD MACGRATH
+
+
+
+ AUTHOR OF
+ THE MAN ON THE BOX,
+ THE GOOSE GIRL, HEARTS AND MASKS, ETC.
+
+
+
+
+ PROFUSELY ILLUSTRATED
+ WITH SCENES FROM THE PHOTO PLAY
+
+
+
+
+GROSSET & DUNLAP
+
+PUBLISHERS : NEW YORK
+
+
+
+
+COPYRIGHT, 1915
+
+HAROLD MACGRATH
+
+
+
+
+ _Published by arrangement with
+ The Bobbs-Merrill Company_.
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+The paper she had purloined was indeed blank . . . . . . _Frontispiece._
+
+Miss Farlow's Private School
+
+You might have marked him for a successful lawyer.
+
+The Princess Perigoff
+
+The Black Hundred
+
+Friends from Tophet
+
+The Peaceful Butler entered into the field of action
+
+She had gained the confidence of Florence
+
+There was a stormy scene between Braine and the Princess
+
+Norton reached the Captain first
+
+She read with Susan
+
+"Who is it?" Jones whispered, his lips white and dry.
+
+He read: "Florence--the hiding place is discovered."
+
+That night there was a meeting of the organization
+
+Jones engaged a motorboat
+
+"Leo, are you using any drugs these days?"
+
+The Secret Panel
+
+Four men were told off
+
+"Better be sensible," he said
+
+They had become secretly engaged
+
+With her he was happy, for he had no time to plan over the future
+
+They were to be married
+
+Florence was permitted to wander about the ship as she pleased
+
+Every one felt extremely sorry for this beautiful girl
+
+Florence steals out in the night to jump overboard
+
+A young and beautiful woman did not jump from a big Atlantic
+ liner without the newspapers getting hold of the facts
+
+"The poor young thing!" murmured the motherly Mrs. Barnes
+
+"Come out o' that now!"
+
+"I ain't goin' t' hurt ye"
+
+Florence fought; but she was weak, and so the conquest was easy
+
+"I know it now," she said, and she kissed him
+
+He had put Florence and Braine in the boat and had landed them
+
+They bound Florence and left her seated in a chair
+
+They did not care a snap of the finger what Jones thought
+
+She first thought of changing the clock
+
+He took her straight to the executive chamber of the Black Hundred
+
+Here was an operation that needed all his care and skill.
+
+He examined the blotter with care
+
+The men rioted about the house, searching nooks and corners
+
+They were mapping out a plan when Susan's message came
+
+Norton was idling at his desk when the city editor called him
+
+"Give this to your father. He knows how to read it."
+
+Florence discovers the cave
+
+Florence steals the papers from Braine's pocket
+
+Braine procured a launch and began to prowl about
+
+Braine reached the girl and pulled her into the boat
+
+From the shore came another boat
+
+"They have all three taken out naturalization papers."
+
+"Just a minute, gentlemen!"
+
+The Police Captain's desk
+
+They were tumbling through the library and the living room
+
+Braine sank inertly to the floor, dead
+
+Instantly they sought the fallen man's side
+
+A quick clutch and the policeman had her by the wrist
+
+The Mystic Million
+
+"Florence, that is all yours."
+
+Immediately after the ceremony
+
+After the storm, the sunshine
+
+
+
+
+The Million Dollar Mystery
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+There are few things darker than a country road at night, particularly
+if one does not know the lay of the land. It is not difficult to
+traverse a known path; no matter how dark it is, one is able to find
+the way by the aid of a mental photograph taken in the daytime. But
+supposing you have never been over the road in the daytime, that you
+know nothing whatever of its topography, where it dips or rises, where
+it narrows or forks. You find yourself in the same unhappy state of
+mind as a blind man suddenly thrust into a strange house.
+
+One black night, along a certain country road in the heart of New
+Jersey, in the days when the only good roads were city thoroughfares
+and country highways were routes to limbo, a carriage went forward
+cautiously. From time to time it careened like a blunt-nosed barge in
+a beam sea. The wheels and springs voiced their anguish continually;
+for it was a good carriage, unaccustomed to such ruts and hummocks.
+
+"Faster, faster!" came a muffled voice from the interior.
+
+"Sir, I dare not drive any faster," replied the coachman. "I can't see
+the horses' heads, sir, let alone the road. I've blown out the lamps,
+but I can't see the road any better for that."
+
+"Let the horses have their heads; they'll find the way. It can't be
+much farther. You'll see lights."
+
+The coachman swore in his teeth. All right. This man who was in such
+a hurry would probably send them all into the ditch. Save for the few
+stars above, he might have been driving Beelzebub's coach in the
+bottomless pit. Black velvet, everywhere black velvet. A wind was
+blowing, and yet the blackness was so thick that it gave the coachman
+the sensation of mild suffocation.
+
+By and by, through the trees, he saw a flicker of light. It might or
+might not be the destination. He cracked his whip recklessly and the
+carriage lurched on two wheels. The man in the carriage balanced
+himself carefully, so that the bundle in his arms should not be unduly
+disturbed. His arms ached. He stuck his head out of the window.
+
+"That's the place," he said. "And when you drive up make as little
+noise as you can."
+
+"Yes, sir," called down the driver.
+
+When the carriage drew up at its journey's end the man inside jumped
+out and hastened toward the gates. He scrutinized the sign on one of
+the posts. This was the place:
+
+ MISS FARLOW'S PRIVATE SCHOOL
+
+[Illustration: MISS FARLOW'S PRIVATE SCHOOL]
+
+
+The bundle in his arms stirred and he hurried up the path to the door
+of the house. He seized the ancient knocker and struck several times.
+He then placed the bundle on the steps and ran back to the waiting
+carriage, into which he stepped.
+
+"Off with you!"
+
+"That's a good word, sir. Maybe we can make your train."
+
+"Do you think you could find this place again?"
+
+"You couldn't get me on this pike again, sir, for a thousand; not me!"
+
+The door slammed and the unknown sank back against the cushions. He
+took out his handkerchief and wiped the damp perspiration from his
+forehead. The big burden was off his mind. Whatever happened in the
+future, they would never be able to get him through his heart. So much
+for the folly of his youth.
+
+It was a quarter after ten. Miss Susan Farlow had just returned to the
+reception room from her nightly tour of the upper halls to see if all
+her charges were in bed, where the rules of the school confined them
+after nine-thirty. It was at this moment that she heard the thunderous
+knocking at the door. The old maid felt her heart stop beating for a
+moment. Who could it be, at this time of night? Then the thought came
+swiftly that perhaps the parent of some one of her charges was ill and
+this was the summons. Stilling her fears, she went resolutely to the
+door and opened it.
+
+"Who is it?" she called.
+
+No one answered. She cupped her hand to her ear. She could hear the
+clatter of horses dimly.
+
+"Well!" she exclaimed; rather angrily, too.
+
+She was in the act of closing the door when the light from the hall
+discovered to her the bundle on the steps. She stooped and touched it.
+
+"Good heavens, it's a child!"
+
+She picked the bundle up. A whimper came from it, a tired little
+whimper of protest. She ran back to the reception room. A foundling!
+And on her doorstep! It was incredible. What in the world should she
+do? It would create a scandal and hurt the prestige of the school.
+Some one had mistaken her select private school for a farmhouse. It
+was frightful.
+
+Then she unwrapped the child. It was about a year old, dimpled and
+golden haired. A thumb was in its rosebud mouth and its blue eyes
+looked up trustfully into her own.
+
+"Why, you cherub!" cried the old maid, a strange turmoil in her heart.
+She caught the child to her breast, and then for the first time noticed
+the thick envelope pinned to the child's cloak. She put the baby into
+a chair and broke open the envelope.
+
+"Name this child Florence Gray. I will send annually a liberal sum for
+her support and reclaim her on her eighteenth birthday. The other half
+of the inclosed bracelet will identify me. Treat the girl well, for I
+shall watch over her in secret."
+
+Into the fixed routine of her humdrum life had come a mystery, a
+tantalizing, fascinating mystery. She had read of foundlings left on
+doorsteps--from paper-covered novels confiscated from her pupils--but
+that one should be placed upon her own respectable doorstep! Suddenly
+she smiled down at the child and the child smiled back. And there was
+nothing more to be done except to bow before the decrees of fate. Like
+all prim old maids, her heart was full of unrequited romance, and here
+was something she might spend its floods upon without let or hindrance.
+Already she was hoping that the man or woman who had left it might
+never come back.
+
+The child grew. Regularly each year, upon a certain date, Miss Farlow
+received a registered letter with money. These letters came from all
+parts of the world; always the same sum, always the same line--"I am
+watching."
+
+Thus seventeen years passed; and to Susan Farlow each year seemed
+shorter than the one before. For she loved the child with all her
+heart. She had not trained young girls all these years without
+becoming adept in the art of reading the true signs of breeding. There
+was no ordinary blood in Florence; the fact was emphasized by her
+exquisite face, her small hands and feet, her spirit and gentleness.
+And now, at any day, some one with a broken bracelet might come for
+her. As the days went on the heart of Susan Farlow grew heavy.
+
+"Never mind, aunty," said Florence; "I shall always come back to see
+you."
+
+She meant it, poor child; but how was she to know the terrors which lay
+beyond the horizon!
+
+
+The house of Stanley Hargreave, in Riverdale, was the house of no
+ordinary rich man. Outside it was simple enough, but within you
+learned what kind of a man Hargreave was. There were rare Ispahans and
+Saruks on the floors and tapestries on the walls, and here and there a
+fine painting. The library itself represented a fortune. Money had
+been laid out lavishly but never wastefully. It was the home of a
+scholar, a dreamer, a wide traveler.
+
+In the library stood the master of the house, idly fingering some
+papers which lay on the study table. He shrugged at some unpleasant
+thought, settled his overcoat about his shoulders, took up his hat, and
+walked from the room, frowning slightly. The butler, who also acted in
+the capacity of valet and was always within call when his master was
+about, stepped swiftly to the hall door and opened it.
+
+"I may be out late, Jones," said Hargreave.
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+Hargreave stared into his face keenly, as if trying to pierce the grave
+face to learn what was going on behind it. "How long have you been
+with me?"
+
+"Fourteen years, sir."
+
+"Some day I shall need you."
+
+"My life has always been at your disposal, sir, since that night you
+rescued me."
+
+"Well, I haven't the least doubt that when I ask you will give."
+
+"Without question, sir. It was always so understood."
+
+Hargreave's glance sought the mirror, then the smileless face of his
+man. He laughed, but the sound conveyed no sense of mirth; then he
+turned and went down the steps slowly, like a man burdened with some
+thought which was not altogether to his liking. He had sent an order
+for his car, but had immediately countermanded it. He would walk till
+he grew tired, hail a taxicab, and take a run up and down Broadway.
+The wonderful illumination might prove diverting. For eighteen years
+nearly; and now it was as natural for him to throw a glance over his
+shoulder whenever he left the house as it was for him to breathe. The
+average man would have grown careless during all these years; but
+Hargreave was not an average man; he was, rather, an extraordinary
+individual. It was his life in exchange for eternal vigilance, and he
+knew and accepted the fact.
+
+Half an hour later he got into a taxicab and directed the man to drive
+down-town as far as Twenty-third Street and back to Columbus circle.
+The bewildering display of lights, however, in nowise served to lift
+the sense of oppression that had weighed upon him all day. South of
+Forty-second Street he dismissed the taxicab and stared undecidedly at
+the brilliant sign of a famous restaurant. He was neither hungry nor
+thirsty; but there would be strange faces to study and music.
+
+It was an odd whim. He had not entered a Broadway restaurant in all
+these years. He was unknown. He belonged to no clubs. Two months was
+the longest time he had ever remained in New York since the disposal of
+his old home in Madison Avenue and his resignation from his clubs.
+This once, then, he would break the law he had written down for
+himself. Boldly he entered the restaurant.
+
+Some time before Hargreave surrendered to the restless spirit of
+rebellion, bitterly to repent for it later, there came into this
+restaurant a man and a woman. They were both evidently well known, for
+the head waiter was obsequious and hurried them over to the best table
+he had left and took the order himself.
+
+The man possessed a keen, intelligent face. You might have marked him
+for a successful lawyer, for there was an earnestness about his
+expression which precluded a life of idleness. His age might have been
+anywhere between forty and fifty. The shoulders were broad and the
+hands which lay clasped upon the table were slim but muscular. Indeed,
+everything about him suggested hidden strength and vitality. His
+companion was small, handsome, and animated. Her frequent gestures and
+mutable eyebrows betrayed her foreign birth. Her age was a matter of
+importance to no one but herself.
+
+[Illustration: YOU MIGHT HAVE MARKED HIM FOR A SUCCESSFUL LAWYER]
+
+They were at coffee when she said: "There's a young man coming toward
+us. He is looking at you."
+
+The man turned. Instantly his face lighted up with a friendly smile of
+recognition.
+
+"Who is it?" she asked.
+
+"A chap worth knowing; a reporter just a little out of the ordinary.
+I'm going to introduce him. You never can tell. We might need him
+some day. Ah, Norton, how are you?"
+
+"Good evening, Mr. Braine." The reporter, catching sight of a pair of
+dazzling eyes, hesitated.
+
+"The Countess Perigoff, Norton. You're in no hurry, are you?"
+
+[Illustration: THE PRINCESS PERIGOFF]
+
+"Not now," smiled the reporter.
+
+"Ah!" said the countess, interested. It was the old compliment, said
+in an unusual way. It pleased her.
+
+The reporter sank into a chair. When inactive he was rather a
+dreamy-eyed sort of chap. He possessed that rare accomplishment of
+talking upon one subject and thinking upon another at the same time.
+So while he talked gaily with the young woman on varied themes, his
+thoughts were busy speculating upon her companion. He was quite
+certain that the name Braine was assumed, but he was also equally
+certain that the man carried an extraordinary brain under his thatch of
+salt and pepper hair. The man had written three or four brilliant
+monographs on poisons and the uses of radium, and it was through and by
+these that the reporter had managed to pick up his acquaintance. He
+lived well, but inconspicuously.
+
+Suddenly the pupils of Braine's eyes narrowed; the eye became cold.
+Over the smoke of his cigarette he was looking into the wall mirror. A
+man had passed behind him and sat down at the next table. Still gazing
+into the mirror, Braine saw Norton wave his hand; saw also the open
+wonder on the reporter's pleasant face.
+
+"Who is your friend, Norton?" Braine asked indifferently, his head
+still unturned.
+
+"Stanley Hargreave. Met him in Hongkong when I was sent over to handle
+a part of the revolution. War correspondence stuff. First time I ever
+ran across him on Broadway at night. We've since had some powwows over
+some rare books. Queer old cock; brave as a lion, but as quiet as a
+mouse."
+
+"Bookish, eh? My kind. Bring him over." Underneath the table Braine
+maneuvered to touch the foot of the countess.
+
+"I don't know," said the reporter dubiously. "He might say no, and
+that would embarrass the whole lot of us. He's a bit of a hermit. I'm
+surprised to see him here."
+
+"Try," urged the countess. "I like to meet men who are hermits."
+
+"I haven't the least doubt about that," the reporter laughed. "I'll
+try; but don't blame me if I'm rebuffed."
+
+He left the table with evident reluctance and approached Hargreave.
+The two shook hands cordially, for the elder man was rather fond of
+this medley of information known as Jim Norton.
+
+"Sit down, boy; sit down. You're just the kind of a man I've been
+wanting to talk to to-night."
+
+"Wouldn't you rather talk to a pretty woman?"
+
+"I'm an old man."
+
+"Bah! That's a hypocritical bluff, and you know it. My friends at the
+next table have asked me to bring you over."
+
+"I do not usually care to meet strangers."
+
+"Make an exception this once," said the reporter, who had seen Braine's
+eyes change and was curious to know why the appearance of Hargreave in
+the mirror had brought about that metally gleam. Here were two unique
+men; he desired to see them face to face.
+
+"This once. My fault; I ought not to be here; I feel out of place.
+What a life, though, you reporters lead! To meet kings and presidents
+and great financiers, socialists and anarchists, the whole scale of
+life, and to slap these people on the back as if they were every-day
+friends!"
+
+"Now you're making fun of me. For one king there are always twenty
+thick brogans ready to kick me down the steps; don't forget that."
+
+Hargreave laughed. "Come, then; let us get it over with."
+
+The introductions were made. Norton felt rather chagrined. As far as
+he could see, the two men were total strangers. Well, it was all in
+the game. Nine out of ten opportunities for the big story were fake
+alarms; but he was always willing to risk the labor these nine entailed
+for the sake of the tenth.
+
+At length Braine glanced at his watch, and the countess nodded. Adieux
+were said. Inside the taxicab Braine leaned back with a deep, audible
+sigh.
+
+"What is it?" she asked.
+
+"The luck of the devil's own," he said. "Child of the Steppes, for
+years I've flown about seas and continents, through valleys and over
+mountains--for what? For the sight of the face of that man we have
+just left. At first glance I wasn't sure; but the sound of his voice
+was enough. Olga, the next time you see that reporter, throw your arms
+around his neck and kiss him. What did I tell you? Without Norton's
+help I would not have been sure. I'm going to leave you at your
+apartment."
+
+"The man of the Black Hundred?" she whispered.
+
+"The man who deserted and defied the Black Hundred, who broke his vows,
+and never paid a kopeck for the privilege; the man who had been
+appointed for the supreme work and who ran away. In those days we
+needed men of his stamp, and to accomplish this end...."
+
+"There was a woman," she interrupted, with a touch of bitterness.
+
+"Always the woman. And she was as clever and handsome as you are."
+
+"Thanks. Sometimes..."
+
+"Ah, yes!" ironically. "Sometimes you wish you could settle down,
+marry and have a family! Your domesticity would last about a month."
+
+She made no retort because she recognized the truth of this statement.
+
+"There's an emerald I know of," he said ruminatively. "It's quite
+possible that you may be wearing it within a few days."
+
+"I am mad over them. There is something in the green stone that
+fascinates me. I can't resist it."
+
+"That's because, somewhere in the far past, your ancestors were
+orientals. Here we are. I'll see you to-morrow. I must hurry. Good
+night."
+
+She stood on the curb for a moment and watched the taxicab as it
+whirled around a corner. The man held her with a fascination more
+terrible than any jewel. She knew him to be a great and daring rogue,
+cunning, patient, fearless. Packed away in that mind of his there were
+a thousand accomplished deeds which had roused futilely the police of
+two continents. Braine! She could have laughed. The very name he had
+chosen was an insolence directed at society.
+
+The subject of her thoughts soon arrived at his destination. A flight
+of stairs carried him into a dimly lighted hall, smelling evilly of
+escaping gas. He donned a black mask and struck the door with a series
+of light blows; two, then one, then three, and again one. The door
+opened and he slipped inside. Round a table sat several men, also
+masked. They were all tried and trusted rogues; but not one of them
+knew what Braine looked like. He alone remained unknown save to the
+man designated as the chief, who was only Braine's lieutenant. The
+mask was the insignia of the Black Hundred, an organization with all
+the ramifications of the Camorra without their abiding stupidity. From
+the assassination of a king, down to the robbery of a country
+post-office, nothing was too great or too small for their nets. Their
+god dwells in the hearts of all men and is called greed.
+
+The ordinary business over, the chief dismissed the men, and he and
+Braine alone remained.
+
+"Vroon, I have found him," said Braine.
+
+"There are but few: which one?"
+
+"Eighteen years ago, in St. Petersburg."
+
+"I remember. The millionaire's son. Did he recognize you?"
+
+"I don't know. Probably he did. But he always had good nerves. He is
+being followed at this moment. We shall strike quick; for if he
+recognized me he will act quick. He is cool and brave. You remember
+how he braved us that night in Russia. Jumped boldly through the
+window at the risk of breaking his neck. He landed safely; that is the
+only reason he eluded us. Millions--and they slipped through our
+fingers. If I could only find some route to his heart! The lure we
+held out to him is dead."
+
+[Illustration: THE BLACK HUNDRED]
+
+"Or in the fortress, which is the same thing. What are your plans?"
+
+"I have in mind something like this."
+
+And Hargreave was working out his plans, too; and he was just as much
+of a general as Braine. He sat at his library table, the maxillary
+muscles of his jaws working. So they had found him? Well, he had
+broken the law of his own making and he must suffer the consequences.
+Braine, who was Menshikoff in Russia, Schwartz in Germany, Mendoza in
+Spain, Cartucci in Italy, and Du Bois in France; so the rogue had found
+him out? Poor fool that he had been! High spirited, full of those
+youthful dreams of doing good in the world, he had joined what he had
+believed a great secret socialistic movement, to learn that he had been
+trapped by a band of brilliant thieves. Kidnapers and assassins for
+hire; the Black Hundred; fiends from Tophet! For nearly eighteen years
+he had eluded them, for he knew that directly or indirectly they would
+never cease to hunt for him; and an idle whim had toppled him into
+their clutches.
+
+He wrote several letters feverishly. The last was addressed to Miss
+Susan Farlow and read: "Dear Madam: Send Florence Gray to New York, to
+arrive here Friday morning. My half of the bracelet will be
+identification. Inclosed find cash to square accounts." He would get
+together all his available funds, recover his child, and fly to the
+ends of the world. He would tire them out. They would find that the
+peaceful dog was a bad animal to rouse. He rang for the faithful Jones.
+
+"Jones, they have found me," he said simply.
+
+"You will need me, then?"
+
+"Quite possible. Please mail these and then we'll talk it over. No
+doubt some one is watching outside. Be careful."
+
+"Very good, sir."
+
+Hargreave bowed his head in his hands. Many times he had journeyed to
+the school and hung about the gates, straining his eyes toward the
+merry groups of young girls. Which among them was his, heart of his
+heart, blood of his blood? That she might never be drawn into this
+abominable tangle, he had resolutely torn her out of his life
+completely. The happiness of watching the child grow into girlhood he
+had denied himself. She at least would be safe. Only when she was
+safe in a far country would he dare tell her. He tried in vain to
+conjure up a picture of her; he always saw the mother whom he had loved
+and hated with all the ardor of his youth.
+
+Many things happened the next day. There was a visit to the hangar of
+one William Orts, the aviator, famous for his daredevil exploits.
+There were two visitors, in fact, and the second visitor was knocked
+down for his pains. He had tried to bribe Orts.
+
+There were several excited bankers, who protested against such large
+withdrawals without the usual formal announcement. But a check was a
+check, and they had to pay.
+
+[Illustration: FIENDS FROM TOPHET]
+
+Hargreave covered a good deal of ground, but during all this time his
+right hand never left the automatic in his overcoat pocket, except at
+those moments when he was obliged to sign his checks. He would shoot
+and make inquiries afterward.
+
+Far away a young girl and her companion got on the train which was to
+carry her to New York, the great dream city she was always longing to
+see.
+
+And the spider wove his web.
+
+Hargreave reached home at night. He put the money in the safe and was
+telephoning when Jones entered and handed his master an unstamped note.
+
+"Where did you get this?"
+
+"At the door, sir. I judge that the house is surrounded."
+
+Hargreave read the note. It stated briefly that all his movements
+during the day had been noted. It was known that he had collected a
+million in paper money. If he surrendered this he would be allowed
+twenty-four hours before the real chase began. Otherwise he should die
+before midnight. Hargreave crushed the note in his hand. They might
+kill him; there was a chance of their accomplishing that; but never
+should they touch his daughter's fortune.
+
+"Jones, you go to the rear door and I'll take a look out of the front.
+We have an hour. I know the breed. They'll wait till midnight and
+then force their way in."
+
+Hargreave saw a dozen shadows in the front yard.
+
+"Men all about the back yard," whispered Jones down the hall.
+
+The master eyed the man.
+
+"Very well, sir," replied the latter, with understanding. "I am ready."
+
+The master went to the safe, emptied it of its contents, crossed the
+hall to the bedroom, and closed the door softly behind him, Jones
+having entered the same room through another door to befool any
+possible watcher. After a long while, perhaps an hour, the two men
+emerged from the room from the same doors they had entered. So
+whispered the watcher to his friends below.
+
+"Hargreave is going up-stairs."
+
+"Let him go. Let him take a look at us from the upper windows. He
+will understand that nothing but wings will save him."
+
+Silence. By and by a watcher reported that he heard the scuttle of the
+roof rattle.
+
+"Look!" another cried, startled.
+
+A bluish glare came from the roof.
+
+"He's shooting off a Roman candle!"
+
+They never saw the man-made bird till it alighted upon the roof. They
+never thought of shooting at it until it had taken wing! Then they
+rushed the doors of the house. They made short work of Jones, whom
+they tied up like a Christmas fowl and plumped roughly into a chair.
+They broke open the safe, to find it empty. And while the rogues were
+rummaging about the room, venting their spite upon many a treasure they
+could neither appreciate nor understand, a man from the outside burst
+in.
+
+"The old man is dead and the money is at the bottom of the ocean! We
+punctured her. She's gone!"
+
+A thin, inscrutable smile stirred the lips of the man bound in the
+chair.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+Vroon faced Hargreave's butler somberly. The one reason why Braine
+made this man his lieutenant was because Vroon always followed the
+letter of his instructions to the final period; he never sidestepped or
+added any frills or innovations of his own, and because of this very
+automatism he rarely blundered into a trap. If he failed it was for
+the simple fact that the master mind had overlooked some essential
+detail. The organization of the Black Hundred was almost totally
+unknown to either the public or the police. It is only when you fail
+that you are found out.
+
+"The patrolman has been trussed up like you," began Vroon. "If they
+find him they will probably find you. But before that you will grow
+thirsty and hungry. Where did your master put that money?"
+
+"He carried it with him."
+
+"Why didn't you call for help?"
+
+"The houses on either side are too far away. I might yell till
+doomsday without being heard. They will have heard the pistol shots;
+but Mr. Hargreave was always practising in the back yard."
+
+"The people in those two houses have been called out of town. The
+servants are off for the night."
+
+"Very interesting," replied Jones, staring at the rug.
+
+"Your master is dead."
+
+Jones' chin sank upon his breast. His heart was heavy, heavier than it
+had ever been before.
+
+"Your master left a will?"
+
+"Indeed, I could not say."
+
+"We can say. He has still three or four millions in stocks and bonds.
+What he took to the bottom of the sea with him was his available cash."
+
+"I know nothing about his finances. I was his butler and valet."
+
+Vroon nodded. "Come, men; it is time we took ourselves off. Put
+things in order; close the safe. You poor jackals, I always have to
+watch you for outbreaks of vandalism. Off with you!"
+
+He was the last to leave. He stared long and searchingly at Jones, who
+felt the burning gaze but refused to meet it lest the plotter see the
+fire in his. The door closed. For fully an hour Jones listened but
+did not stir. They were really gone. He pressed his feet to the floor
+and began to hitch the chair toward the table. Half-way across the
+intervening space he crumpled in the chair, almost completely
+exhausted. He let a quarter of an hour pass, then made the final
+attack upon the remaining distance. He succeeded in reaching the desk,
+but he could not have stirred an inch farther. The hair on his head
+was damp with sweat and his hands were clammy.
+
+When he felt strength returning he lifted the telephone off the hook
+with his teeth.
+
+"Central, central! Call the police to come to this number at once;
+Hargreave's house, Riverdale. Tell them to break in."
+
+After what seemed an age of waiting to the exhausted prisoner, with
+crashing and smashing of doors, the police appeared in the room.
+
+"Where's your gag?" demanded the first officer to reach Jones' side.
+
+"There wasn't any."
+
+"Then why didn't you yell for help?"
+
+"The thieves lured our neighbors away from town. The patrolman who
+walks this beat is bound and gagged and is probably reposing back of
+the billboard in the next block."
+
+"Murphy, you watch this man while I make a call on the neighbors," said
+the officer who seemed to be in authority. When he returned he was
+frowning seriously. "We'd better telephone to the precinct to search
+for Dennison. There's nobody at home in either house and there's
+nobody back of the billboards. Untie the man." When this was done,
+the officer said: "Now, tell us what's happened; and don't forget any
+of the details."
+
+Jones told a simple and convincing story; it was so simple and
+convincing that the police believed it without question.
+
+"Well, if that ain't the limit! Did you hear any autos outside?"
+
+"I don't recollect," said Jones, stretching his legs gratefully. "Why?"
+
+"The auto bandits held up a bank messenger to-day and got away with
+twenty thousand. Whenever a man draws down a big sum they seem to know
+about it. And say, Murphy, call up and have the river police look out
+for a new-fangled airship. Your master may have been rescued," turning
+to Jones.
+
+"If I were only sure of that, sir!"
+
+When the police took themselves off Jones proceeded to act upon those
+plans laid down by Hargreave early that night. When this was done he
+sought his bed and fell asleep, the sleep of the exhausted. When
+Hargreave picked up Jones to share his fortunes, he had put his trust
+in no ordinary man.
+
+A dozen reporters trooped out to the Hargreave home, only to find it
+deserted. And while they were ringing bells and tapping windows, the
+man they sought was tramping up and down the platform of the railway
+station.
+
+Through all this time Norton, the reporter, Hargreave's only friend,
+slept the sleep of the just and unjust. He rarely opened his eyes
+before noon.
+
+Group after group of passengers Jones eyed eagerly. Often, just as he
+was in the act of approaching a couple of young women, some man would
+hurry up, and there would be kisses or handshakes. At length the crowd
+thinned, and then it was that he discovered a young girl perhaps
+eighteen, accompanied by a young woman in the early thirties. They had
+the appearance of eagerly awaiting some one. Jones stepped forward
+with a good deal of diffidence.
+
+"You are waiting for some one?"
+
+"Yes," said the elder woman, coldly.
+
+"A broken bracelet?"
+
+The distrust on both faces vanished instantly. The young girl's face
+brightened, her eyes sparkled with suppressed excitement.
+
+"You are ... my father?"
+
+"No, miss," very gravely. "I am the butler."
+
+"Let me see your part of the bracelet," said the young girl's guardian,
+a teacher who had been assigned to this delicate task by Miss Farlow,
+who could not bring herself to say good-by to Florence anywhere except
+at the school gates.
+
+The halves were produced and examined.
+
+"I believe we may trust him, Florence."
+
+"Let us hurry to the taxicab. We must not stand here."
+
+"My mother?"
+
+"She is dead. I believe she died shortly after your birth. I have
+been with your father but fourteen years. I know but little of his
+life prior to that."
+
+"Why did he leave me all these years without ever coming to see me?
+Why?"
+
+"It is not for me, Miss Florence, to inquire into your father's act.
+But I do know that whatever he did was meant for the best. Your
+welfare was everything to him."
+
+"It is all very strange," said the girl, bewilderedly. "Why didn't he
+come to meet me instead of you?"
+
+Jones stared at his hands, miserably.
+
+"Why?" she demanded. "I have thought of him, thought of him. He has
+hurt me with all this neglect. I expected to see him at the station,
+to throw my arms, around his neck and ... forgive him!" Tears swam in
+her eyes as she spoke.
+
+"Everything will be explained to you when we reach the house. But
+always remember this, Miss Florence: You were everything in this wide
+world to your father. You will never know the misery and loneliness he
+suffered that you might not have one hour of unrest. What are your
+plans?" he asked abruptly of the teacher from Miss Farlow's.
+
+"That depends," she answered, laying her hand protectingly over the
+girl's.
+
+"You could leave Miss Farlow's on the moment?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then you will stay and be Miss Florence's companion?"
+
+"Gladly."
+
+"What is my father's name?"
+
+"Hargreave, Stanley Hargreave."
+
+The girl's eyes widened in terror. Suddenly she burst into a wild
+frenzy of sobbing, her head against the shoulder of her erstwhile
+teacher.
+
+Jones appeared visibly shocked. "What is it?"
+
+"We read the story in the newspaper," said the elder woman, her own
+eyes filling with tears. "The poor child! To have all her
+castles-in-air tumble down like this! But what authority have you to
+engage me?" sensibly.
+
+Jones produced a document, duly signed by Hargreave, and witnessed and
+sealed by a notary, in which it was set forth that Henry Jones, butler
+and valet to Stanley Hargreave, had full powers of attorney in the
+event of his (Hargreave's) disappearance; in the event of his death,
+till Florence became of legal age.
+
+Said Jones as he put the document back in his pocket: "What is your
+name?"
+
+"Susan Wane."
+
+"Do you love this child?"
+
+"With all my heart, the poor unhappy babe!"
+
+"Thank you!"
+
+Inside the home he conducted them through the various rooms, at the
+same time telling them what had taken place during the preceding night.
+
+"They have not found his body?" asked Florence. "My poor, poor father!"
+
+"No."
+
+"Then he may be alive!"
+
+"Please God that he may!" said the butler, with genuine piety, for he
+had loved the man who had gone forth into the night so bravely and so
+strangely. "This is your room. Your father spent many happy hours
+here preparing it for you."
+
+Tears came into the girl's eyes again, and discreetly Jones left the
+two alone.
+
+"What shall I do, Susan? Whatever shall I do?"
+
+"Be brave as you always are. I will never leave you till you find your
+father."
+
+Florence kissed her fervently. "What is your opinion of the butler?"
+
+"I think we may both trust him absolutely."
+
+Then Florence began exploring the house. Susan followed her closely.
+Florence peered behind the mirrors, the pictures, in the drawers of the
+desk, in the bookcases.
+
+"What are you hunting for, child?"
+
+"A photograph of father." But she found none. More, there were no
+photographs of any kind to be found in Stanley Hargreave's home.
+
+When Norton awoke, he naturally went to the door for the morning papers
+which were always placed in a neat pile before the sill. He yawned,
+gathered up the bundle, was about to climb back into bed, when a
+headline caught his dull eyes. Twenty-one minutes later, to be
+precise, he ran up the steps of the Hargreave home and rang the bell.
+He was admitted by the taciturn Jones, to whom the reporter had never
+paid any particular attention. Somehow Jones always managed to stand
+in shadows.
+
+"I can add nothing to what has already appeared in the newspapers,"
+replied Jones, as Norton opened his batteries of inquiries.
+
+"Mr. Jones, I have known your master several years, as you will
+recollect. There never was a woman in this house, not even among the
+servants. There are two in the other room. Who are they? And what
+are they doing here?"
+
+Jones shook his head.
+
+"Well, I can easily find out."
+
+Jones barred his path, and for the first time Norton gazed into the
+eyes of the man servant. They were as hard as gun metal.
+
+"My dear Mr. Jones, you ought to know that sooner or later we reporters
+find out what we seek."
+
+Jones appeared to reflect. "Mr. Norton, you claim to be a friend of
+Mr. Hargreave?"
+
+"I do not claim. I am. More than that I do not believe he is dead.
+He was deep. He had some relentless enemies--I don't know where from
+or what kind--and he is pretending he's dead till this blows over and
+is forgotten."
+
+"You are not going to say that in your newspaper?" Jones was visibly
+agitated.
+
+"Not if I can prove it."
+
+"If I tell you who those young ladies are, will you give me your word
+of honor not to write about them till I give my permission?"
+
+Norton, having in mind the big story at the end of the mystery tangle,
+agreed.
+
+"The elder is a teacher from a private school; the other is Stanley
+Hargreave's daughter."
+
+"Good lord!" gasped the astonished reporter. "He never mentioned the
+fact to me, and we've been together in some tight places."
+
+"He never mentioned it to any one but me." Jones again seemed to
+reflect. At last he raised his glance to the reporter. "Are you
+willing to wait for a great story, the real story?"
+
+"If there is one," answered Norton with his usual caution.
+
+"On my word of honor, you shall have such a story as you never dreamed
+of, if you will promise not to divulge it till the appointed time."
+
+"I agree."
+
+"The peace and happiness of that child depends upon how you keep your
+word."
+
+That was sufficient for Norton. "Your master knew me. He also knew
+that I am not a man who promises lightly. Now introduce me to the
+daughter."
+
+With plain reluctance Jones went about the affair. Norton put a dozen
+perfunctory questions to the girl. What he was in search of was not
+news but the sound of her voice. In that quarter of an hour he felt
+his heart disturbed as it had never before been disturbed.
+
+"Now, Mr. Norton," said Jones gloomily, "will you be so kind as to
+follow me?"
+
+Norton was led to Jones' bedroom. The butler-valet closed the door and
+drew the window shade. Always seeking shadows. This did not impress
+the reporter at the time; he had no other thought but the story. Jones
+then sat down beside the reporter and talked in an undertone. When he
+had done he took Norton by the elbow and gently but forcibly led him
+down to the front door and ushered him forth. Norton jumped into his
+taxicab and returned to his rooms, which were at the top of the huge
+apartment hotel. He immediately called up his managing editor.
+
+"Hello! This is Norton. Put Griffin on the Hargreave yarn. I'm off
+on another deal."
+
+"But Hargreave was a friend of yours," protested the managing editor.
+
+"I know it. But you know me well enough, Mr. Blair. I should not ask
+the transfer if it was not vitally important."
+
+"Oh, very well."
+
+"We shan't be scooped."
+
+"If you can promise that, I don't care who works on the job. Will you
+be in the office to-night?"
+
+"If nothing prevents me."
+
+"Well, good-by."
+
+Norton filled his pipe, drew his chair to the window, and stared at the
+great liner going down to sea.
+
+"Lord, lord!" he murmured. Then he smiled and chuckled. Some bright
+morning he would have all New York by the ears, the police running
+round in circles, and the chiefs of the rival sheets tearing their
+hair. What a story! Four columns on the first page, and two whole
+pages Sunday.... And all of a sudden he ceased to smile and chuckle.
+
+In the living room of the Countess Olga Perigoff's apartment the
+mistress lay reading on the divan. There was no cigarette between her
+well shaped lips, for she was not the accepted type of adventuress. In
+fact, she was not an adventuress; she was really the Countess Perigoff.
+Her maiden name had been Olga Pushkin; but more of that later.
+
+When Braine came in he found her dreaming with half-closed eyes. He
+flourished an evening newspaper.
+
+"Olga, even the best of us make mistakes. Here, just glance over this."
+
+The Russian accepted the newspaper and read the heading indicated:
+"Aeronaut picked up far out at sea. Slips ashore from tramp steamer.
+Had five thousand in cash in his pockets."
+
+"Hargreave escaped!"
+
+"Not necessarily," she replied. "If it was Hargreave he would have had
+more than five thousand in his pockets. My friend, I believe it an
+attempt to fool you; or it is another man entirely." She clicked her
+teeth with the tops of her polished nails.
+
+"There are two young women in the house. What the deuce can that mean?"
+
+"Two young women? Oh! then everything's as simple as daylight.
+Katrina Pushkin, my cousin, had a child."
+
+"Child? Hargreave had a child? What do you mean by keeping this fact
+from me?" he stormed.
+
+"It was useless till this moment. He probably sent for her yesterday;
+but in his effort to escape had to turn her over to his butler. We
+shall soon learn whether Hargreave is dead or alive. We can use the
+child to bring him back."
+
+The anger went out of his eyes. "You're a wonder, Olga."
+
+"But you should have gone with Vroon last night. He does everything
+just as you tell him. When they reported that Hargreave had visited
+Orts' hangar you ought to have prepared against such a coup as flight
+through the air."
+
+"I admit it. But a daughter! Well, I can bring him back," with a
+sinister laugh. "By the Lord Harry, I have him in my hands this time,
+that is, if this girl turns out to be his daughter. A million? Two,
+three, all he has in the world. I want you to pay a visit right away.
+Watch the butler, Jones. He'll lie, of course; but note how he treats
+the girl; and if you get the chance look around the walls for a secret
+panel. He might not have carried away the cash at all, only enough for
+his immediate needs, which would account for that five thousand on the
+man picked up at sea. If I could only get inside that house for an
+hour!"
+
+"I believe I'll call at once. Leo, was Hargreave the man's real name?"
+
+Braine laughed. "That is of no vital consequence. He will be
+Hargreave till the end of the chapter, dead or alive. You can tell me
+the news at dinner to-night."
+
+So, later, when the butler accepted her card at the door, loath as he
+might be, there was nothing for him to do but admit her.
+
+"Whom do you wish to see, madam?" stepping back into the shadow.
+
+"Miss Hargreave. I'm an old friend of her mother's."
+
+"There is no such person here."
+
+"To whom, then, does this hat belong?" she asked quietly. She waved
+her hand indolently toward the hall rack.
+
+Jones' lips tightened. "That belongs to Miss Gray, a kind of protegee
+of Mr. Hargreave's."
+
+"Indeed! You have no objections to my seeing her? My maiden name was
+Olga Pushkin, cousin to Katrina, wife of Stanley Hargreave. I am, if
+you will weigh the matter carefully, a kind of aunt."
+
+To Jones it was as if ice had suddenly come into contact with his
+heart's blood. But as he still stood in the shadow, she did not
+observe the pallor of his face.
+
+"If you will state exactly why you wish to see her, madam."
+
+"You seem to possess authority?"
+
+"Yes, madam, absolute authority."
+
+Jones produced his document and presented it to her.
+
+"There is no flaw in that," she agreed readily. "I wish to see the
+child. I have told you why."
+
+"Very well, madam." Why had they not telegraphed the child, even on
+the train, to return to Farlow's. He knew nothing of this woman,
+whether she was an enemy or a friend. He conducted his unwelcome guest
+into the library.
+
+"How did you know that she was here?" suddenly.
+
+But she was ready. "I did not. But the death of Mr. Hargreave brought
+me. And that youthful hat in the hall was a story all its own. Later
+I shall show you some papers of my own. You will have no cause to
+doubt them. They have not the legal power of yours, but they would
+find standing in any court."
+
+Jones turned and went in search of Florence.
+
+The countess lost no time in beginning her investigations, but she
+wasted her time. There was no secret panel in evidence.
+
+"Who is she?" asked Florence as she looked at the card. "Did my father
+know countesses?"
+
+"Yes," said Jones briefly. "Be very careful what you say to her.
+Admit nothing. She claims to be a cousin of your mother. Perhaps."
+
+"My mother?" Without waiting for any further advice from Jones, whom
+Florence in her young years thought presuming upon his authority, she
+ran downstairs to the library. Her mother, to learn some facts about
+the mother of whom she knew nothing!
+
+"You knew my mother?" she cried without ceremony,
+
+Jones heard the countess say: "I did, my child; and heaven is witness
+that you are the exact picture of her at your age. And I knew your
+father."
+
+Jones straightened, his hands shut tightly.
+
+"Tell me about my father!"
+
+The countess smiled. It was Katrina. Pushkin come to life, the same
+impulsiveness. "I knew him but slightly. I was a mere child myself
+when he used to pinch my cheeks. I met him again the other night, but
+he did not recognize me; and I could not find it in my heart to awaken
+his memory in a public restaurant."
+
+Presently Jones came in to announce that two detectives requested to
+see Florence. The two men entered, informing her that they had been
+instructed to investigate the disappearance of Stanley Hargreave.
+
+"Who are you, miss?"
+
+"I am his daughter."
+
+"Ah!"
+
+One of the detectives questioned Florence minutely, while the other
+wandered about the rooms, feeling the walls, using the magnifying
+glass, turning back the rugs. Even the girl's pretty room did not
+escape his scrutiny. By and by he returned to the library and beckoned
+to his companion. The two conferred for a moment. One chanced to look
+into the mirror. He saw the bright eyes of the countess gazing
+intelligently into his.
+
+[Illustration: THE PEACEFUL BUTLER ENTERED INTO THE FIELD OF ACTION]
+
+"I'm afraid we'll have to ask you to accompany us to the station, miss."
+
+"Why?"
+
+"Some technicalities. We must have some proof of your right to be in
+this house. So far as we have learned, Hargreave was unmarried. It
+will take but a few minutes."
+
+"And I will accompany you," said the countess. "We'll be back within
+half an hour. I'll tell them what I know."
+
+Jones, in the hall, caught sight of the reporter coming up the steps.
+Here was some one he could depend upon.
+
+"Why, Mr. Norton!"
+
+The reporter eyed the countess in amazement.
+
+"You look surprised. Naturally. I am a cousin of Miss Florence's
+mother. You might say that I am her aunt. It's a small world, isn't
+it?" But if wishing could poison, the reporter would have died that
+moment.
+
+"Who are you and what are you doing here?" one of the detectives
+demanded.
+
+"I am going to ask that very question of you," said Norton urbanely.
+
+"We are from headquarters," replied one, showing his badge.
+
+"What headquarters? What are they asking you to do?" he said to
+Florence.
+
+"They say I must go to the police station with them."
+
+"Not the least in the world," laughed the reporter. "You two clear out
+of here as fast as your rascally legs can carry you. I don't know what
+your game is, but I do know every reputable detective in New York, and
+you don't belong."
+
+"Good heavens!" exclaimed the countess; "do you mean to say that these
+men are not real detectives?"
+
+"This girl goes to the police station, young man. So much the worse
+for you if you meddle. Take yourself off!"
+
+"All in good time."
+
+"Here, Jenner, you take charge of the girl. I'll handle this guy. He
+shall go to the station, too."
+
+What followed would always be vividly remembered by Florence, fresh
+from the peace and happiness of her school life. Norton knocked his
+opponent down. He rose and for a moment the room seemed full of legs
+and arms and panting men. A foot tripped up Norton and he went down
+under the bogus detective. He never suspected that the tripping foot
+was not accidental. He was too busy.
+
+The other man dragged Florence toward the hall, but there the peaceful
+butler entered into the field of action with a very unattractive
+automatic. The detective threw up his hands.
+
+The struggle went on in the library. A trick of jiu-jutsu brought
+about the downfall of Norton's man, and Norton ran out into the hall to
+aid Jones. He searched the detective's pockets and secured the
+revolver. The result of all this was that the two bogus detectives
+soon found themselves in charge of two policemen, and they were marched
+off to the station.
+
+"Your advent was most providential, Mr. Norton," said Jones in his
+usual colorless tones.
+
+"I rather believe so. Why don't you pack up and clear out for a while?"
+
+"I am stronger in this house than elsewhere," answered the butler
+enigmatically.
+
+"Well, you know best," said the reporter.
+
+The countess was breathing rapidly. No, on second thought she had no
+wish to throw her arms about the reporter's neck and kiss him.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+The countess did not remain long after the departure of the police with
+the bogus detectives. It had been a very difficult corner to wriggle
+out of, all because Braine had added to his plans after she had left
+the apartment. But for the advent of the meddling reporter the coup
+would have succeeded, herself apparently perfectly innocent of
+complicity. That must be the keynote of all her plans: to appear quite
+innocent and leave no trail behind her. She had gained the confidence
+of Florence and her companion. And she was rather certain that she had
+impressed this lazy-eyed reporter and the stolid butler. She had told
+nothing but the truth regarding her relationship. They would find that
+out. She was Katrina Pushkin's cousin. But blood with her counted as
+naught. She had room in her heart but for two things, Braine and money
+to spend on her caprices.
+
+[Illustration: SHE HAD GAINED THE CONFIDENCE OF FLORENCE]
+
+"How long has your highness known Mr. Braine?" asked the reporter idly,
+as he smoothed away all signs of his recent conflict.
+
+"Oh, the better part of a year. Mr. Hargreave did not recognize me the
+other night. That was quite excusable, for when he last saw me I was
+not more than twelve. My child," she said to Florence, "build no hopes
+regarding your mother. She is doubtless dead. Upon some trivial
+matter--I do not know what it was--she was confined to the fortress.
+That was seventeen years ago. When you enter the fortress at St.
+Petersburg, you cease to be."
+
+"That is true enough."
+
+"I did not recall myself to your father. I did not care at that moment
+to shock him with the remembrance of the past. Is not Mr. Braine a
+remarkable man?" All this in her charming broken English.
+
+"He is, indeed," affirmed Norton. "He's a superb linguist, knows
+everybody and has traveled everywhere. No matter what subject you
+bring up he seems well informed."
+
+"Come often," urged Florence.
+
+"I shall, my child. And any time you need me, call for me. After all,
+I am nearly your aunt. You will find life in the city far different
+from that which you have been accustomed to."
+
+She limped down to her limousine. In tripping up Norton he had stepped
+upon her foot heavily.
+
+"She is lovely!" cried Florence.
+
+"Well, I must be on my way, also," said Norton. "I am a worldly-wise
+man, Miss Florence. So is Jones here. Never go any place without
+letting him know; not even to the corner drug store. I am going to
+find your father. Some one was rescued. I'm going to find out whether
+it was the aviator or Mr. Hargreave."
+
+Jones drew in a deep breath and his eyes closed for a moment. At the
+door he spoke to the reporter.
+
+"What do you think of that woman?"
+
+"I believe that she told the truth. She is charming."
+
+"She is. But for all her charm and truth I can not help distrusting
+her. I have an idea. I shall call up your office at the end of each
+day. If a day comes without a call, you will know that something is
+wrong."
+
+"A very good idea." Norton shook hands with every one and departed.
+
+"What a brave, pleasant young man!" murmured Susan.
+
+"I like him, too; and I'd like him for a friend," said the guileless
+girl.
+
+"It is very good to have a friend like Mr. Norton," added Jones; and
+passed out into the kitchen. All the help had been discharged and upon
+his shoulders lay the burden of the cooking till such time when he
+could reinstate the cook.
+
+There was a stormy scene between Braine and the countess that night.
+
+[Illustration: THERE WAS A STORMY SCENE BETWEEN BRAINE AND THE PRINCESS]
+
+"Are you in your dotage?" she asked vehemently.
+
+"There, there; bring your voice down a bit. Where's the girl?"
+
+"In her home. Where did you suppose she would be, after that botchwork
+of letting me go to do one thing while you had in mind another? And an
+ordinary pair of cutthroats, at that!"
+
+"The thought came to me after you left. I knew you'd recognize the men
+and understand. I see no reason why it didn't work."
+
+"It would have been all right if you had consulted a clairvoyant."
+
+"What the deuce do you mean by that?" Braine demanded roughly.
+
+"I mean that then you would have learned your friend the reporter was
+to arrive upon the scene at its most vital moment."
+
+"What, Norton?"
+
+"Yes. The trouble is with you, you have been so successful all these
+years that you have grown overconfident. I tell you that there is a
+desperately shrewd man somewhere back of all this. Mark me, I do not
+believe Hargreave is dead. He is in hiding. It may be near by. He
+may have dropped from the balloon before it left land. The man they
+picked up may be Orts, the aeronaut. The five thousand might have been
+his fee for rescuing Hargreave. Here is the greatest thing we've ever
+been up against; and you start in with every-day methods!"
+
+"Little woman, don't let your tongue run away with you too far."
+
+"I'm not the least bit afraid of you, Leo. You need me, and it has
+never been more apparent than at this moment."
+
+"All right. I fell by the wayside this trip. Truthfully, I realized
+it five minutes after the men were gone. The only clever thing I did
+was to keep the mask on my face. They can't come back at me. But the
+thing looked so easy; and it would have worked but for Norton's
+appearance."
+
+"You all but compromised me. That butler worries me a little." Her
+expression lost its anger and grew thoughtful. "He's always about,
+somewhere. Do you think Hargreave took him into his confidence?"
+
+"Can't tell. He's been watched straight for forty hours. He hasn't
+mailed a letter or telephoned to any place but the grocery. There have
+been no telegrams. Some one in that house knows where the money is,
+and it's ten to one that it will be the girl."
+
+"She looks enough like Katrina to be her ghost."
+
+Braine went over to the window and stared up at the stars.
+
+"You have made a good impression on the girl?" with his back still
+toward her.
+
+"I had her in my arms."
+
+"Olga, my hat is off to you," turning, now that his face was again in
+repose. "Your very frankness regarding your relationship will pull the
+wool over their eyes. Of course they'll make inquiries and they'll
+find out that you haven't lied. It's perfect. Not even that newspaper
+weasel will see anything wrong. Toward you they will eventually ease
+up and you can act without their even dreaming your part in the
+business. We must not be seen in public any more. This butler may
+know where I stand even though he can not prove it. Now, I'm going to
+tell you something. Perhaps you've long since guessed it. Katrina was
+mine till Hargreave--never mind what his name was then--till Hargreave
+came into the fold. So sure of her was I that I used her as a lure to
+bring him to us. She fell in love with him, but too late to warn him.
+I had the satisfaction of seeing him cast her aside, curse her, and
+leave her. In one thing she fooled us all. I never knew of the child
+till you told me."
+
+He paused to light a cigarette.
+
+"Hargreave was madly in love with her. He cursed her, but he came back
+to the house to forgive her, to find that she had been seized by the
+secret police and entombed in the fortress. I had my revenge. It was
+I who sent in the information, practically bogus. But in Russia they
+never question; they act and forget. So he had a daughter!"
+
+He paced the floor, his hands behind his back; the woman watched him,
+oscillating between love and fear. He came to a halt abruptly and
+looked down at her.
+
+"Don't worry. You have no rival. I'll leave the daughter to your
+tender mercies."
+
+"The butler," she said, "has full power of attorney to act for
+Hargreave while absent, up to the day the girl becomes of legal age."
+
+"I'll keep an eye on our friend Jones. From now on, day and night,
+there will be a cat at the knothole, and 'ware mouse! Could you make
+up anything like this girl?" suddenly.
+
+"A fair likeness."
+
+"Do it. Go to the ship which picked up the man at sea and quiz the
+captain. Either the aviator or Hargreave is alive. It is important to
+learn which at once. Be very careful; play the game only as you know
+how to play it. And if Hargreave is alive, we win. To-morrow morning,
+early. Tears of anguish, and all that. Sailors are easy when a woman
+weeps. No color, remember; just the yellow wig and the salient
+features. Now, by-by!"
+
+"Aren't you going to kiss me, Leo?"
+
+He caught her hands. "There is a species of Delilah about you, Olga.
+A kiss to-night from your lips would snip my locks; and I need a clear
+head. Whether we fail or win, when this game is played you shall be my
+wife." He kissed the hands and strode out into the hall.
+
+The woman gazed down at her small white hands and smiled tenderly.
+(The tigress has her tender moments!) He meant it!
+
+She went into her dressing-room and for an hour or more worked over her
+face and hair, till she was certain that if the captain of the ship
+described her to any one else he could not fail to give a fair
+description of Florence Hargreave.
+
+But Norton reached the captain first. Other reporters had besieged
+him, but they had succeeded in gathering the vaguest kind of
+information. They had no description of Hargreave, while Norton had.
+Before going down to the boat, however, he had delved into the past of
+the Countess Olga Perigoff. It cost him a pocketful of money, but the
+end justified the means. The countess had no past worth mentioning.
+By piecing this and that together he became assured that she had told
+the simple truth regarding the relationship to Florence's mother. A
+cablegram had given him all the facts in her history; there were no
+gaps or discrepancies. It read clear and frank. Trust a Russian
+secret agent to know what he was talking about.
+
+[Illustration: NORTON REACHED THE CAPTAIN FIRST]
+
+So Norton's suspicions--and he had entertained some--were completely
+lulled to sleep. And he wouldn't have doubted her at all except for
+the fact that Braine had been with her when he had introduced
+Hargreave. Hargreave had feared Braine; that much the reporter had
+elicited from the butler. But there wasn't the slightest evidence.
+Braine had been in New York for nearly six years. The countess had
+arrived in the city but a year ago. And Braine was a member of several
+fashionable clubs, never touched cards, and seldom drank. He was an
+expert chess player and a wonderful amateur billiardist. Perhaps
+Jones, the taciturn and inscrutable, had not told him all he knew
+regarding his master's past. Well, well; he had in his time untangled
+worse snarls. The office had turned him loose, a free lance, to handle
+the case as he saw fit, to turn in the story when it was complete.
+
+But what a story it was going to be when he cleared it up! The more
+mystifying it was, the greater the zest and sport for him. Norton was
+like a gambler who played for big stakes, and only big stakes stirred
+his cravings.
+
+The captain of the tramp steamer _Orient_ told him the same tale he had
+told the other reporters: he had picked up a man at sea. The man had
+been brought aboard totally exhausted.
+
+"Was there another body anywhere?"
+
+"No."
+
+"What became of him?"
+
+"I sent a wireless and that seemed to bother him. It looked as though
+he did not want anybody to learn that he had been rescued. The moment
+the boat touched the pier he lost himself in the crowd. Fifty
+reporters came aboard, but he was gone. And I could but tell them just
+what I'm telling you."
+
+"He had money."
+
+"About five thousand."
+
+"Please describe him."
+
+The captain did so. It was the same description he had given to all
+the reporters. Norton looked over the rail at the big warehouse.
+
+"Was it an ordinary balloon?"
+
+"There you've got me. My Marconi man says the balloon part was like
+any other balloon; but the passenger car was a new business to him. It
+could be driven against the wind."
+
+"Driven against the wind. Did you tell this to the other chaps?"
+
+"Don't think I did. Just remembered it. Probably some new invention;
+and now it's at the bottom of the sea. Two men, as I understand, went
+off in this contraption. One is gone for good."
+
+"For good," echoed the reporter gravely. "Gone for good, indeed, poor
+devil!"
+
+Norton took out a roll of bills. "There's two hundred in this roll."
+
+"Well?" said the captain, vastly astonished.
+
+"It's yours if you will do me a small favor."
+
+"If it doesn't get me mixed up with the police. I'm only captain of a
+tramp; and some of the harbor police have taken a dislike to me. What
+do you want me to do?"
+
+"The police will not bother you. This man Hargreave had some enemies;
+they want either his life or his money; maybe both. It's a peculiar
+case, with Russia in the background. He might have laid the whole
+business before the police, but he chose to fight it out himself. And
+to tell the truth, I don't believe the police would have done any good."
+
+"Heave her over; what do you want me to do for that handsome roll of
+money?"
+
+"If any man or woman who is not a reporter comes to pump you tell them
+the man went ashore with a packet under his arm."
+
+"Tie a knot in that."
+
+"Say the man was gray-haired, clean-shaven, straight, with a scar high
+up on his forehead, generally covered up by his hair."
+
+"That's battened down, my lad. Go on."
+
+"Say that you saw him enter yonder warehouse, and later depart without
+his packet."
+
+"Easy as dropping my mudhook."
+
+"That's all." Norton gave the captain the money. "Good-by and many
+thanks."
+
+"Don't mention it."
+
+Norton left the slip and proceeded to the office of the warehouse. He
+approached the manager's desk.
+
+"Hello, Grannis, old top!"
+
+The man looked up from his work surlily. Then his face brightened.
+
+"Norton? What's brought you here? Oh, yes; that balloon business.
+Sit down."
+
+"What kind of a man is the captain of that old hooker in the slip?"
+
+"Shifty in gun running, but otherwise as square as a die. Looks funny
+to see an old tub like that fixed up with wireless; but that has saved
+his neck a dozen times when he was running it into a noose. Not going
+to interview me, are you?"
+
+"No. I'm going to ask you to do me a little favor."
+
+"They always say that. But spin her out. If it doesn't cost me my
+job, it's yours."
+
+"Well, there will be a person making inquiries about the mysterious
+aeronaut. All I want you to say is, that he left a packet with you,
+that you've put it in that safe till he calls to claim it."
+
+Grannis nibbled the end of his pen. "Suppose some one should come and
+demand that I open the safe and deliver?"
+
+"All you've got to do is to tell them to show the receipt signed by
+you."
+
+The warehouse manager laughed. "Got a lot of sense in that ivory dome
+of yours. All right. But if anything happens you've got to come
+around and back me up. What's it about?"
+
+"That I dare not tell you. This much, I'm laying a trap and I want
+some one I don't know to fall into it."
+
+"On your way, James. But if you don't send me some prize fight tickets
+next week for this, I'll never do you another favor."
+
+In reply Norton took from his pocket two bits of pasteboard and laid
+them on the desk. "I knew you'd be wanting something like this."
+
+"Ringside!" cried Grannis. "You reporters are lucky devils!"
+
+"I'd go myself if there was any earthly chance of a real scrap. You
+make me laugh, Gran. You're always going, always hoping the next one
+will be a real one. But it's all bunk. The pugs are the biggest
+fakers on top of the sod. They've got us newspaper men done to a
+frazzle."
+
+"I guess you're right. Well, count on me regarding that mysterious
+bundle in the safe."
+
+"At three o'clock this afternoon I want you to call me up. If no one
+has called, why the game is up. But if some one does come around and
+make inquiries, don't fail to let me know."
+
+"I'll be here till five. I'd better call you up then."
+
+Then Norton returned home and idled about till afternoon. He went over
+to Riverdale. Five times he walked up and down in front of the
+Hargreave place, finally plucked up his courage and walked to the door.
+After all, he was a lucky mortal. He had a good excuse to visit this
+house every day in the week. And there was something tantalizing in
+the risk he took. Besides, he wanted to prove to himself whether it
+was a passing fancy or something deeper. That's the way with humans;
+we never see a sign "Fresh Paint" that we don't have to prove it.
+
+He chatted with Florence for a while and found that, for all she might
+be guileless to the world, she was a good linguist, a fine musician,
+and talked with remarkable keenness about books and arts. But unless
+he roused her, the sadness of her position always lay written in her
+face. It was not difficult for him to conjure up her dreams in coming
+to the city and the blow which, like a bolt of lightning from a clear
+sky, had shattered them ruthlessly.
+
+"You must come every day and tell me how you have progressed," she said.
+
+"I'll obey that order gladly, whenever I can possibly do it. My visits
+will always be short."
+
+"That is not necessary."
+
+"No," said Norton in his heart, "but it is wise."
+
+Always he found Jones waiting for him at the door, always in the shadow.
+
+"Well?" the butler whispered.
+
+"I have laid a neat trap. Whether this balloon was the one that left
+the top of this house I don't know. But if there were two men in it,
+one of them lies at the bottom of the sea."
+
+"And the man who was found?" The butler's voice was tense.
+
+"It was not Hargreave. I met Orts but once, and as he wore a beard
+then, the captain's description did not tally with your recollection."
+
+"Thank God! But what is this trap?"
+
+"I propose to find out by it who is back of all this, who Hargreave's
+real enemies are."
+
+Norton returned to his rooms, there to await the call from Grannis. He
+was sorry, but if Jones would not take him into his fullest confidence,
+he must hold himself to blame for any blunder he (Norton) made. Of
+course, he could readily understand Jones' angle of vision. He knew
+nothing of the general run of reporters; he had heard of them by rumor
+and distrusted them. He was not aware of the fact that the average
+reporter carries more secrets in his head than a prime minister. It
+was, then, up to him to set about to allay this distrust and gain the
+man's complete confidence.
+
+Meanwhile that same morning a pretty young woman boarded the _Orient_
+and asked to be led to the captain. Her eyes were red; she had
+evidently been weeping. When the captain, susceptible like all
+sailors, saw her his promises to Norton took wings.
+
+"This is Captain Hagan?" she asked, balling the handkerchief she held
+in her hand.
+
+"Yes, miss. What can I do for you?" He put his hands embarrassedly
+into his pockets--and felt the crisp bills. But for that magic touch
+he would have forgotten his lines. He squared his shoulders.
+
+"I have every assurance that the man you picked up at sea is my father.
+I am Florence Hargreave. Tell me everything."
+
+The captain's very blundering deceived her. "And then he hustled down
+the gangplank and headed for that warehouse. He had a package which he
+was as tender of as if it had been dynamite."
+
+"Thank you!" impulsively.
+
+"A man has to do his duty, miss. A sailor's always glad to rescue a
+man at sea," awkwardly.
+
+When she finally went down the gangplank the sigh the captain heaved
+was almost as loud as the exhaust from the donkey engines which were
+working out the crates of lemons from the hold.
+
+"Maybe she is his daughter; but two hundred is two hundred, and I'm a
+poor sailor man."
+
+Then Grannis came in for his troubles. What was a chap to do when a
+pretty girl appealed to him?
+
+"I am sorry, miss, but I can't give you that package. I gave the man a
+receipt and till it is presented to me the package must remain in
+yonder safe. You understand enough about the business to realize that.
+I did not solicit the job. It was thrust upon me. I'd give a hundred
+dollars if the blame thing was out of my safe. You say it is your
+fortune. That hasn't been proved. It may be gunpowder, dynamite. I'm
+sorry, but you will have to find your father and bring the receipt."
+
+The young woman left the warehouse, dabbing her eyes with the sodden
+handkerchief.
+
+"I wonder," mused Grannis, as he watched her from the window, "I wonder
+what the deuce that chap Norton is up to. The girl might have been the
+man's daughter.... Good lord, what an ass I am! There wasn't any
+man!" And so he reached over for the telephone.
+
+Immediately upon receipt of the message the reporter set his machinery
+in motion. Some time before dawn he would know who the
+arch-conspirator was. He questioned Grannis thoroughly, and Grannis'
+description tallied amazingly with that of Florence Hargreave. But a
+call over the wire proved to him conclusively that Florence had not
+been out of the house that morning.
+
+On the morrow the newspapers had scare heads about an attempt to rob
+the Duffy warehouse. It appeared that the police had been tipped
+beforehand and were on the grounds in time to gather in several
+notorious gunmen, who, under pressure of the third degree, vowed that
+they had been hired and paid by a man in a mask and had not the
+slightest idea what he wanted them to raid. Nothing further could be
+got out of the gunmen. That they were lying the police had no doubt,
+but they were up against a stout wall and all they could do was to hold
+the men for the grand jury.
+
+Norton was in a fine temper. After all his careful planning he had
+gained nothing--absolutely nothing. But wait; he had gained
+something--the bitter enmity of a cunning and desperate man, who had
+been forced to remain hidden under the pier till almost dawn.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+Braine crawled from his uncomfortable hiding place. His clothes were
+soiled and damp, his hat was gone. By a hair's breadth he had escaped
+the clever trap laid for him. Hargreave was alive, he had escaped;
+Braine was as certain of this fact as he was of his own breathing. He
+now knew how to account for the flickering light in the upper story of
+the warehouse. His ancient enemy had been watching him all the time.
+More than this, Hargreave and the meddling reporter were in collusion.
+In the flare of lights at the end of the gun-play he had caught the
+profile of the reporter. Here was a dangerous man, who must be watched
+with the utmost care.
+
+He, Braine, had been lured to commit an overt act, and by the rarest
+good luck had escaped with nothing more serious than a cold chill and a
+galling disappointment.
+
+He crawled along the top of the pier, listening, sending his
+dark-accustomed glance hither and thither. The sky in the east was
+growing paler and paler. In and out among the bales of wool, bags of
+coffee and lemon crates he slowly and cautiously wormed his way. A
+watchman patrolled the office side of the warehouse, and Braine found
+it possible to creep around the other way, thence into the street.
+After that he straightened up, sought a second-hand shop and purchased
+a soft hat, which he pulled down over his eyes.
+
+He had half a dozen rooms which he always kept in readiness for such
+adventures as this. He rented them furnished in small hotels which
+never asked questions of their patrons. To one of these he went as
+fast as his weary legs could carry him. He always carried the key.
+Once in his room he donned fresh wearing apparel, linen, shoes, and
+shaved. Then he proceeded down-stairs, the second-hand hat shading his
+eyes and the upper part of his face.
+
+At half past twelve Norton entered the Knickerbocker cafe-restaurant,
+and the first person he noticed was Braine, reading the morning's
+paper, propped up against the water carafe. Evidently he had just
+ordered, for there was nothing on his plate. Norton walked over and
+laid his hand upon Braine's shoulder. The man looked up with mild
+curiosity.
+
+"Why, Norton, sit down, sit down! Have you had lunch? No? Join me."
+
+"Thanks. Came in for my breakfast," said Norton, drawing out the
+chair. Braine was sitting with his back to the wall on the lounge-seat.
+
+"I wonder if you newspaper men ever eat a real, true enough breakfast.
+I should think the hours you lead would kill you off. Anything new on
+the Hargreave story?"
+
+"I'm not handling that," the reporter lied cheerfully. "Didn't want
+to. I knew him rather intimately. I've a horror of dead people, and
+don't want to be called upon to identify the body when they find it."
+
+"Then you think they will find it?"
+
+"I don't know. It's a strange mixup. I'm not on the story, mind you;
+but I was in the locality of Duffy's warehouse late last night and fell
+into a gunman rumpus."
+
+"Yes, I read about that. What were they after?"
+
+"You've got me there. No one seems to know. Some cock and bull story
+about there being something valuable. There was."
+
+"What was it? The report in this paper does not say."
+
+"Ten thousand bags of coffee."
+
+Braine lay back in his chair and laughed.
+
+"If you want my opinion," said Norton, "I believe the gunmen were out
+to shoot up another gang, and the police got wind of it."
+
+"Don't you think it about time the police called a halt in this gunman
+matter?"
+
+"Oh, so long as they pot each other the police look the other way. It
+saves a long trial and passage up the river. Besides, when they are
+nabbed some big politician manages to open the door for them. Great is
+the American voter."
+
+"Take Mr. Norton's order, Luigi," said Braine.
+
+"A German pancake, buttered toast and coffee," ordered the reporter.
+
+"Man, eat something!"
+
+"It's enough for me."
+
+"And you'll go all the rest of the day on tobacco. I know something of
+you chaps. I don't see how you manage to do it."
+
+"Food is the least of our troubles. By the way, may I ask you a few
+questions? Nothing for print, unless you've got a new book coming."
+
+"Fire away."
+
+"What do you know about the Countess Perigoff?"
+
+"Let me see. H'm. Met her first about a year ago at a reception given
+to Nasimova. A very attractive woman. I see quite a lot of her. Why?"
+
+"Well, she claims to be a sort of aunt to Hargreave's daughter."
+
+"She said something to me about that the other night. You never know
+where you're at in this world, do you?"
+
+The German pancake, the toast, the coffee disappeared, and the reporter
+passed his cigars.
+
+"The president visits town to-day and I'm off to watch the show. I
+suppose I'll have to interview him about the tariff and all that rot.
+When you start on a new book let me know and I'll be your press agent."
+
+"That's a bargain."
+
+"Thanks for the breakfast."
+
+Braine picked up his newspaper, smoked and read. He smoked, yes, but
+he only pretended to read. The young fool was clever, but no man is
+infallible. He had not the least suspicion; he saw only the newspaper
+story. Still, in some manner he might stumble upon the truth, and it
+would be just as well to tie the reporter's hands effectually.
+
+The rancor of early morning had been subdued; anger and quick temper
+never paid in the long run, and no one appreciated this fact better
+than Braine. To put Norton out of the way temporarily was only a wise
+precaution; it was not a matter of spite or reprisal.
+
+He paid the reckoning, left the restaurant, and dropped into one of his
+clubs for a game of billiards. He drew quite a gallery about the
+table. He won easily, racked his cue and sought the apartments of the
+countess.
+
+What a piece of luck it was that Olga had really married that old
+dotard, Perigoff! He had left her a titled widow six months after her
+marriage. But she had had hardly a kopeck to call her own.
+
+"Olga, Hargreave is alive. He was there last night. But somehow he
+anticipated the raid and had the police in waiting. The question is,
+has he fooled us? Did he take that million or did he hide it? There
+is one thing left--to get that girl. No matter where Hargreave is
+hidden, the knowledge that she is in my hands will bring him out into
+the open."
+
+"No more blind alleys."
+
+"What's on your mind?"
+
+"She has never seen her father. She confessed to me that she has not
+even seen a photograph of him."
+
+There was a long pause.
+
+"Do you understand me?" she asked.
+
+"By the Lord Harry, I do! You've a head on you worth two of mine. The
+very simplicity of the idea will win out for us. Some one to pose as
+her father; a message handed to her in secret; dire misfortune if she
+whispers a word to any one; that her father's life hangs upon the
+secrecy; she must confide in no one, least of all Jones, the butler.
+It all depends upon how the letter gets to her. Bred in the country,
+she probably sleeps with her window open. A pebble attached to a note,
+tossed into the window. I'll trust this to no one; I'll do it myself.
+With the girl in our control the rest will be easy. If she really does
+not know where the money is Hargreave will tell us. Great head, little
+woman, great head. She does not know her father's handwriting?"
+
+"She has never seen a scrap of it. Miss Farlow never showed her the
+registered letters. The original note left on the doorstep with
+Florence has been lost. Trust me to make all these inquiries."
+
+"To-morrow night, then, immediately after dinner, a taxicab will await
+her just around the corner. Grange is the best man I can think of.
+He's an artist when it comes to playing the old-man parts."
+
+"Not too old, remember. Hargreave isn't over forty-five."
+
+"Another good point. I'm going to stretch out here on the divan and
+snooze for a while. Had a devil of a time last night."
+
+"When shall I wake you?"
+
+"At six. We'll have an early dinner sent in. I want to keep out of
+everybody's way. By-by!"
+
+In less than three minutes he was sound asleep. The woman gazed down
+at him in wonder and envy. If only she could drop to sleep like that.
+Very softly she pressed her lips to his hair.
+
+At eleven o'clock the following night the hall light in the Hargreave
+house was turned off and the whole interior became dark. A shadow
+crept through the lilac bushes without any more sound than a cat would
+have made. Florence's window was open as the arch-conspirator had
+expected it would be. With a small string and stone as a sling he sent
+the letter whirling skilfully through the air. It sailed into the
+girl's room. The man below heard no sound of the stone hitting
+anything and concluded that it had struck the bed.
+
+He waited patiently. Presently a wavering light could be distinguished
+over the sill of the window. The girl was awake and had lit the
+candle. This knowledge was sufficient for his need. The tragic letter
+would do the rest, that is, if the girl came from the same pattern as
+her father and mother--strong-willed and adventurous.
+
+He tiptoed back to the lilacs, when a noise sent him close to the
+ground. Half a dozen feet away he saw a shadow creeping along toward
+the front door. Presently the shadow stood up as if listening. He
+stooped again and ran lightly to the steps, up these to the door, which
+he hugged.
+
+Who was this? wondered Braine. Patiently he waited, arranging his
+posture so that he could keep a lookout at the door. By and by the
+door opened cautiously. A man holding a candle appeared. Braine
+vaguely recognized Olga's description of the butler. The man on the
+veranda suddenly blew out the light.
+
+Braine could hear the low murmur of voices, but nothing more. The
+conversation lasted scarcely a minute. The door closed and the man,
+ran down the steps, across the lawn, with Braine close at his heels.
+
+"Just a moment, Mr. Hargreave," he called ironically; "just a moment!"
+
+The man he addressed as Hargreave turned with lightning rapidity and
+struck. The blow caught Braine above the ear, knocking him flat. When
+he regained his feet the rumble of a motor told him the rest of the
+story.
+
+
+By the dim light of her bedroom candle Florence read the note which had
+found entrance so strangely and mysteriously into her room. Her
+father! He lived, he needed her! Alive, but in dread peril, and only
+she could save him! She longed to fly to him at once, then and there.
+How could she wait till to-morrow night at eight? Immediately she
+began to plan how to circumvent the watchful Jones and the careful
+Susan. Her father! She slept no more that night.
+
+
+"My Darling Daughter: I must see you. Come at eight o'clock to-morrow
+night to 78 Grove Street, third floor. Confide in no one, or you seal
+my death warrant.
+
+"Your unhappy
+ "FATHER."
+
+
+What child would refuse to obey a summons like this?
+
+A light tap on the door startled her.
+
+"Is anything the matter?" asked the mild voice of Jones.
+
+"No. I got up to get a drink of water."
+
+She heard his footsteps die away down the corridor. She thrust the
+letter into the pocket of her dress, which lay neatly folded on the
+chair at the foot of the bed, then climbed back into the bed itself.
+She must not tell even Mr. Norton.
+
+Was the child spinning a romance over the first young man she had ever
+met? In her heart of hearts the girl did not know.
+
+Her father!
+
+It was all so terribly and tragically simple, to match a woman's mind
+against that of a child. Both Norton and the sober Jones had
+explicitly warned her never to go anywhere, receive telephone calls or
+letters, without first consulting one or the other of them. And now
+she had planned to deceive them, with all the cunning of her sex.
+
+The next morning at breakfast there was nothing unusual either in her
+appearance or manners. Under the shrewd scrutiny of Jones she was just
+her every-day self, a fine bit of acting for one who had yet to see the
+stage. But it is born in woman to act, as it is born in man to fight,
+and Florence was no exception to the rule.
+
+She was going to save her father.
+
+She read with Susan, played the piano, sewed a little, laughed, hummed
+and did a thousand and one things young girls do when they have the
+deception of their elders in view.
+
+[Illustration: SHE READ WITH SUSAN...]
+
+All day long Jones went about like an old hound with his nose to the
+wind. There was something in the air, but he could not tell what it
+was. Somehow or other, no matter which room Florence went into, there
+was Jones within earshot. And she dared not show the least impatience
+or restiveness. It was a large order for so young a girl, but she
+filled it.
+
+She rather expected that the reporter would appear some time during the
+afternoon; and sure enough he did. He could no more resist the desire
+to see and talk to her than he could resist breathing. There was no
+use denying it; the world had suddenly turned at a new angle,
+presenting a new face, a roseate vision. It rather subdued his easy
+banter.
+
+"What news?" she asked.
+
+"None," rather despondingly. "I'm sorry. I had hoped by this time to
+get somewhere. But it happens that I can't get any farther than this
+house."
+
+She did not ask him what he meant by that.
+
+"Shall I play something for you?" she said.
+
+"Please."
+
+He drew a chair beside the piano and watched her fingers, white as the
+ivory keys, flutter up and down the board. She played Chopin for him,
+Mendelssohn, Grieg and Chaminade; and she played them in a surprisingly
+scholarly fashion. He had expected the usual schoolgirl choice and
+execution; _Titania_, the _Moonlight Sonata_ (which not half a dozen
+great pianists have ever played correctly), _Monastery Bells_, and the
+like. He had prepared to make a martyr of himself; instead, he was
+distinctly and delightfully entertained.
+
+"You don't," he said whimsically, when she finally stopped, "you don't,
+by any chance, know _The Maiden's Prayer_?"
+
+She laughed. This piece was a standing joke at school.
+
+"I have never played it. It may, however, be in the cabinet. Would
+you like to hear it?" mischievously.
+
+"Heaven forfend!" he murmured, raising his hands.
+
+All the while the letter burned against her heart, and the smile on her
+face and the gaiety on her tongue were forced. "Confide in no one,"
+she repeated mentally, "or you seal my death warrant."
+
+"Why do you shake your head like that?" he asked.
+
+"Did I shake my head?" Her heart fluttered wildly. "I was not
+conscious of it."
+
+"Are you going to keep your promise?"
+
+"What promise?"
+
+"Never to leave this house without Jones or myself being with you."
+
+"I couldn't if I wanted to. I'll wager Jones is out there in the hall
+this minute. I know; it is all for my sake. But it bothers me."
+
+Jones was indeed in the hall, and when he sensed the petulance in her
+voice his shoulders sank despondently and he sighed deeply if silently.
+
+At a quarter to eight Florence, being alone for a minute, set fire to a
+veil and stuffed it down the register.
+
+"Jones," she called excitedly, "I smell something burning!"
+
+Jones dashed into the room, sniffed, and dashed out again, heading for
+the cellar door. His first thought was naturally that the devils
+incarnate had set fire to the house. When he returned, having, of
+course, discovered no fire, he found Florence gone. He rushed into the
+hall. Her hat was missing. He made for the hall door with a speed
+which seemed incredible to the bewildered Susan's eyes. Out into the
+street, up and down which he looked. Far away he discovered a
+dwindling taxicab. The child was gone.
+
+In the house Susan was answering the telephone, talking incoherently.
+
+"Who is it?" Jones whispered, his lips white and dry.
+
+[Illustration: "WHO IS IT?" WHISPERED JONES, HIS LIPS WHITE AND DRY]
+
+"The countess...." began Susan.
+
+He took the receiver from her roughly.
+
+"Hello, who is it?"
+
+"This is Olga Perigoff. Is Florence there?"
+
+"No, madam. She has just stepped out for a moment. Shall I tell her
+to call you when she returns?"
+
+"Yes, please. I want her and Susan and Mr. Norton to come to tea
+to-morrow. Good-by."
+
+Jones hung up the receiver, sank into a chair near by and buried his
+face in his hands.
+
+"What is it?" cried Susan, terrified by the haggardness of his face.
+
+"She's gone! My God, those wretches have got her! They've got her!"
+
+Florence was whirled away at top speed. Her father! She was actually
+on the way to her father, whom she had always loved in dreams, yet
+never seen.
+
+Number 78 Grove Street was not an attractive place, but when she
+arrived she was too highly keyed to take note of its sordidness. She
+was rather out of breath when she reached the door of the third flat.
+She knocked timidly. The door was instantly opened by a man who wore a
+black mask. She would have turned then and there and flown but for the
+swift picture she had of a well-dressed man at a table. He lay with
+his head upon his arms.
+
+"Father!" she whispered.
+
+The man raised his careworn face, so very well done that only the
+closest scrutiny would have betrayed the paste of the theater. He
+arose and staggered toward her with outstretched arms. But the moment
+they closed about her Florence experienced a peculiar shiver.
+
+"My child!" murmured the broken man. "They caught me when I was about
+to come to you. I have given up the fight."
+
+A sob choked him.
+
+What was it? wondered the child, her heart burning with the misery of
+the thought that she was sad instead of glad. Over his shoulder she
+sent a glance about the room. There was a sofa, a table, some chairs
+and an enormous clock, the face of which was dented and the hands
+hopelessly tangled. Why, at such a moment, she should note such
+details disturbed her. Then she chanced to look into the cracked
+mirror. In it she saw several faces, all masked. These men were
+peering at her through the half-closed door behind her.
+
+"You must return home and bring me the money," went on the wretch who
+dared to perpetrate such a mockery. "It is all that stands between me
+and death."
+
+Then she knew! The insistent daily warnings came home to her. She
+understood now. She had deliberately walked into the spider's net.
+But instead of terror an extraordinary calm fell upon her.
+
+"Very well, father, I will go and get it." Gently she released herself
+from those horrible arms.
+
+"Wait, my child, till I see if they will let you go. They may wish to
+hold you as hostage."
+
+When he was gone she tried the doors. They were locked. Then she
+crossed over to the window and looked out. A leap from there would
+kill her. She turned her gaze toward the lamp, wondering.
+
+The false father returned, dejectedly.
+
+"It is as I said. They insist upon sending some one. Write down the
+directions I gave to you. I am very weak!"
+
+"Write down the directions yourself, father; you know them better than
+I." Since she saw no escape, she was determined to keep up the tragic
+farce no longer.
+
+"I am not your father."
+
+"So I see," she replied, still with the amazing calm.
+
+Braine, in the other room, shook his head savagely. Father and
+daughter; the same steel in the nerves. Could they bend her? Would
+they break her? He did not wish to injure her bodily, but a million
+was always a million, and there was revenge which was worth more to him
+than the money itself. He listened, motioning to the others to be
+silent.
+
+"Write the directions," commanded the scoundrel, who discarded the
+broken-man style.
+
+"I know of no hidden money."
+
+"Then your father dies this night." Grange put a whistle to his lips.
+"Sign, write!"
+
+"I refuse!"
+
+"Once more. The moment I blow this whistle the men in the other room
+will understand that your father is to die. Be wise. Money is
+nothing--life is everything."
+
+"I refuse!" Even as she had known this vile creature to be an impostor
+so she knew that he lied, that her father was still free.
+
+Grange blew the whistle. Instantly the room became filled with masked
+men. But Florence was ready. She seized the lamp and hurled it to the
+floor, quite indifferent whether it exploded or went out. Happily for
+her, it was extinguished. At the same moment she cast the lamp she
+caught hold of a chair, remembering the direction of the window. She
+was superhumanly strong in this moment. The chair went true. A crash
+followed.
+
+"She has thrown herself out of the window!" yelled a voice.
+
+Some one groped for the lamp, lit it and turned in time to see Florence
+pass out of the room into that from which they had come. The door
+slammed. The surprised men heard the key click.
+
+She was free. But she was no longer a child.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+"Gone!"
+
+Jones kept saying to himself that he must strive to be calm, to think,
+think. Despite all his warnings, the warnings of Norton, she had
+tricked them and run away. It was maddening. He wanted to rave, tear
+his hair, break things. He tramped the hall. It would be wasting time
+to send for the police. They would only putter about fruitlessly. The
+Black Hundred knew how to arrange these abductions.
+
+How had they succeeded in doing it? No one had entered the house that
+day without his being present. There had been no telephone call he had
+not heard the gist of, nor any letters he had not first glanced over.
+How had they done it? Suddenly into his mind flashed the remembrance
+of the candle-light under Florence's door the night before. In a dozen
+bounds he was in her room, searching drawers, paper boxes, baskets. He
+found nothing. He returned in despair to Susan, who, during all this
+turmoil, had sat as if frozen in her chair.
+
+"Speak!" he cried. "For God's sake, say something, think something!
+Those devils are likely to torture her, hurt, her!" He leaned against
+the wall, his head on his arm.
+
+When he turned again he was calm. He walked with bent head toward the
+door, opened it and stood upon the threshold for a space. Across the
+street a shadow stirred, but Jones did not see it. His gaze was
+attracted by something which shone dimly white on the walk just beyond
+the steps. He ran to it. A crumpled letter, unaddressed. He carried
+it back to the house, smoothed it out and read, its contents. Florence
+in her haste had dropped the letter.
+
+He clutched at his hat, put it on and ran to Susan.
+
+"Here!" he cried, holding out an automatic. "If any one comes in that
+you don't know, shoot! Don't ask questions, shoot!"
+
+"I'm afraid!" She breathed with difficulty.
+
+"Afraid?" he roared at her. He put the weapon in her hand. It slipped
+and thudded to the floor. He stooped for it and slammed it into her
+lap. "You love your life and honor. You'll know how to shoot when the
+time comes. Now, attend to me. If I'm not back here by ten o'clock,
+turn this note over to the police. If you can't do that, then God help
+us all!" And with that he ran from the house.
+
+Susan eyed the revolver with growing terror. For what had she left the
+peace and quiet of Miss Farlow's; assassination, robbery, thieves and
+kidnapers? She wanted to shriek, but her throat was as dry as paper.
+Gingerly she touched the pistol. The cold steel sent a thrill of fear
+over her. He hadn't told her how to shoot it!
+
+Two blocks down the street, up an alley, was the garage wherein
+Hargreave had been wont to keep his car. Toward this Jones ran with
+the speed of a track athlete. There might be half a dozen taxicabs
+about, but he would not run the risk of engaging any of them. The
+Black Hundred was capable of anticipating his every movement.
+
+The shadow across the street stood undecided. At length he concluded
+to give Jones ten minutes in which to return. If he did not return in
+that time, the watcher would go up to the drug store and telephone for
+instructions.
+
+But Jones did not come back.
+
+"Where's Howard?" he demanded.
+
+"Hello, Jones; what's up?"
+
+"Howard, get that car out at once."
+
+"Out she comes. Wait till I give her radiator a bucket of water.
+Gee!" whispered Howard, whom Hargreave often used as his chauffeur,
+"get on to his nibs! First time I ever saw him awake. I wonder what's
+doing? You never know what's back of those mummy-faced head
+waiters.... All right, Jones!"
+
+The chauffeur jumped into the car and Jones took the seat beside him.
+
+"Where to?"
+
+"Number 78..." and the rest of it trailed away, smothered in the
+violent thunder of the big six's engines.
+
+During the car's flight several policemen hailed it without success.
+Down this street, up that, round this corner, fifty miles an hour; and
+all the while Jones shouted: "Faster, faster!"
+
+Within twelve minutes from the time it left the garage, the car stopped
+opposite 78 Grove Street, and Jones got out.
+
+"Wait here, Howard. If several men come rushing out, or I don't appear
+within ten minutes, fire your gun a couple of times for the police. I
+don't want them if we can manage without. They'd only bungle."
+
+"All right, Mr. Jones," said the chauffeur. He had, in the past
+quarter of an hour, acquired a deep and lasting respect for the butler
+chap. He was a regular fellow, for all his brass buttons.
+
+As Jones reached the curb, Florence came forth as if on invisible
+wings. Jones caught her by the arm. She flung him aside with a
+strength he had not dreamed existed in her slim body.
+
+"Florence, I am Jones!"
+
+She stopped, recognized him, and without a word ran across the street
+to the automobile and climbed into the tonneau. Jones followed
+immediately.
+
+"Home!"
+
+The car shot up the dimly lighted street, shone palely for a second
+under the corner lamp, and vanished.
+
+"Ah, child, child!" groaned the man at her side, all the tenseness gone
+from his body. He was Jones again.
+
+Still she did not speak, but stared ahead with unseeing eyes.
+
+No further reproach fell from the butler's lips. It was enough that
+God had guided him to her at the appointed moment. He felt assured
+that never again would she be drawn into any trap. Poor child! What
+had they said to her, done to her? How, in God's name, had she escaped
+from them who never let anybody escape? Presently she would become
+normal, and then she would tell him.
+
+"I found the lying note. You dropped it."
+
+"Horrible, horrible!" she said almost inaudibly.
+
+"What did they do to you?"
+
+"He said he was my father.... He put his arms around me.... And I
+knew!"
+
+"Knew what?"
+
+"That he lied. I can't explain."
+
+"Don't try!"
+
+Suddenly she laid her head against the butler's shoulder and cried. It
+was terrible to hear youth weep in this fashion. Jones put his arm
+about her and tried to console her.
+
+"Horrible!" she murmured between the violent hiccoughs. "I was wrong,
+wrong! Forgive me!"
+
+Unconsciously the arm sustaining her drew her closer.
+
+"Never mind," he consoled. "Tell no one what has happened. Go about
+as usual. Don't let even Susan know. Whatever your poor father did
+was for your sake. He wanted you to be happy, without a care in the
+world."
+
+"I promise." And gradually the sobs ceased. "But I feel so old,
+Jones, so very old. I threw over the lamp. I threw a chair through
+the window. They thought that it was I who had jumped out. That gave
+me the necessary time. I don't understand how I did it. I wasn't
+frightened at all till I gained the street."
+
+They found Susan still seated in the chair, the automatic in her lap.
+She had not moved in all this time!
+
+
+Braine paced the apartment of the Countess Perigoff. From the living
+room to the boudoir and back, fully twenty times. From the divan Olga
+watched him nervously. He was like a tiger, fresh in captivity. All
+at once he paused in front of her.
+
+"Do you realize what that mere chit did?"
+
+"I do."
+
+"Planned to the minute. We had her; seven of us; doors locked, and all
+that. No weeping, no wailing; I could not understand then, but I do
+now. It's in the blood. Hargreave was as peaceful as a St. Bernard
+dog till you cornered him, and then he was a lion. Oh, the devil!
+Slipped out of our fingers like an eel. And across the street, Jones
+in a racer! I never paid any particular attention to Jones, but from
+now on I shall. The girl may or may not know where the money is, but
+Jones does, Jones does! Two men shall watch. Felton on the street and
+Orloff from the windows of the deserted house. With opera glasses he
+will be able to take note of all that happens in the house during the
+day. He will be able to see the girl's room. And that's the important
+point. It was a good plan, little woman; and it would have been plain
+sailing if only we had remembered that the girl was Hargreave's
+daughter. Be very careful hereafter when you call on her. A night
+like this will have made her suspicious of every one. Our hope lies
+with you. Anything on your mind?"
+
+"Yes. Why not insert a personal in the _Herald_?" She drew some
+writing paper toward her and scribbled a few words.
+
+He read: "Florence--the hiding place is discovered. Remove it to a
+more secret spot at once. S.H."--He laughed and shook his head. "I'm
+afraid that will never do."
+
+[Illustration: HE READ ... FLORENCE ... THE HIDING-PLACE IS DISCOVERED]
+
+"If she reads it, Jones will. The man with the opera glasses may see
+something. There's a chance Jones might become worried."
+
+"Well, we'll give it a chance."
+
+It was midnight when he made his departure. As he stepped into the
+street, he glanced about cautiously. On the corner he saw a policeman
+swinging his night stick. Otherwise the street was deserted. Braine
+proceeded jauntily down the street.
+
+And yet, from the darkened doors of the house across the way, the
+figure of a man emerged and stood contemplating the windows of the
+Perigoff apartment. Suddenly the lights went out. The watcher made no
+effort to follow Braine. The knowledge he was after did not
+necessitate any such procedure.
+
+Of course, Florence read the "personal." She took the newspaper at
+once to Jones, who smiled grimly.
+
+"You see, I trust you."
+
+"And so long as you continue to trust me no harm will befall you. You
+were left in my care by your father. I am to guard you at the expense
+of my life. Last night's affair was a miracle. The next time you will
+not find it so easy to escape."
+
+Nor did she.
+
+"There will be no next time," gravely. "But I am going to ask you a
+direct question. Is my father alive?"
+
+The butler's brow puckered. "I have promised to say nothing, one way
+or the other."
+
+She laughed.
+
+"Why do you laugh?"
+
+"I laugh because if he were dead there would be no earthly reason for
+your not saying so at once. But I hate money, the name of it, the
+sound of it, the sight of it. It is at the bottom of all wars and
+crimes. I despise it!"
+
+"The root of all evil. Yet it performs many noble deeds. But never
+mind the money. Let us give our attention to this personal. Doubtless
+it originated in the same mind which conceived the letter. Your father
+would never have inserted such a personal. What! Give his enemies a
+chance to learn his secret? No. On the other hand, I want you to show
+this personal to all you meet to-day, Susan, the reporter, to
+everybody. Talk about it. Say that you wonder what you shall do.
+Trust no one with your real thoughts."
+
+"Not even you, Mr. Jones," thought the girl as she nodded.
+
+"And tell them that you showed it to me and that I appeared worried."
+
+That night there was a meeting of the organization called the Black
+Hundred. Braine asked if any one knew what the Hargreave butler looked
+like.
+
+[Illustration: THAT NIGHT THERE WAS A MEETING OF THE ORGANIZATION]
+
+"I had a glimpse of him the other night; but being unprepared, I might
+not recognize him again."
+
+Vroon described Jones minutely. Braine could almost see the portrait.
+
+"Vroon, that memory of yours is worth a lot of money," was his only
+comment.
+
+"I hope it will be worth more soon."
+
+"I believe I'll be able to recognize Mr. Jones if I see him. Who is he
+and what is he?"
+
+"He has been with Hargreave for fourteen years. There was a homicidal
+case in which Jones was active. Hargreave saved him. He is faithful
+and uncommunicative. Money will not touch him. If he does know where
+that million is, hot irons could not make him own up to it. The only
+way is to watch him, follow him, wait for the moment when he'll grow
+careless. No man is always on his mettle; he lets up sooner or later."
+
+"He is being watched, as you know."
+
+Vroon nodded approvingly. "The captain of the tramp steamer _Orient_,
+by the way, was seen with a roll of money. He was in one of the
+water-front saloons, bragging how he had hoodwinked some one."
+
+"Did he say where he'd got the cash?" asked Braine.
+
+"They tried to pump him on that, but he shut up. Well, we have agreed
+that Felton shall watch from the street and Orloff from the window.
+Orloff will whistle if he sees Jones removing anything from any of the
+rooms. The rest will be left to Felton."
+
+"And, Felton, my friend," said Braine softly--he always spoke softly
+when he was in a deadly humor--"Felton, you slept on duty the other
+night. Hargreave stole up, consulted Jones, and got away after
+knocking me down. The next failure will mean short shift. Be warned!"
+
+"I saw only you, sir. So help me. I was not asleep. I saw you run
+down the street after the taxicab. I did not see any one else."
+
+Braine shrugged. "Remember what I said."
+
+Felton bowed respectfully and made his exit. He wished in his soul
+that he might some day catch the master mind free of his eternal mask.
+It was an iron hand which ruled them and there were friends of his
+(Felton's) who had mysteriously vanished after a brief period of
+rebellion. The boss was a swell; probably belonged to clubs and
+society which he adroitly pilfered. The organization always had money.
+Whenever there was a desperate job to be undertaken, Vroon simply
+poured out the money necessary to promote it. Whenever Braine and
+Vroon became engaged in earnest conversation they talked Slav. Braine
+was never called by name here; the boss, simply that.
+
+Well, ten per cent. of a million was a hundred thousand. This would be
+equally divided between the second ten of the Black Hundred. Another
+ten per cent. would go to eighty members; the balance would be divided
+between Vroon and the boss. But his soul rebelled at being ordered
+about like so much dirt under another man's feet. He would take his
+ten thousand and make the grand getaway.
+
+The next afternoon the countess called upon Florence. Nothing was said
+about the adventure, and this fact created a vague unrest in the
+scheming woman's mind. She realized that she must play her cards more
+carefully than ever. Not the least distrust must be permitted to enter
+the child's head. Once that happened good-by to the wonderful
+emeralds. Was it that she really craved the stone? Was it not rather
+a venom acquired from the knowledge that this child's mother had won
+what she herself, with all her cleverness, was not sure of--Braine's
+love? Did he really care for her or was she only the cats-paw to pluck
+his hot chestnuts from the fire?
+
+When Florence showed her the "personal," her vague doubts became
+instantly dissipated. The child would not have shown her the newspaper
+had there been any distrust on her part.
+
+"My child, your father is alive, then?" animatedly.
+
+"We don't know," sadly.
+
+"Why, I should say that this proves it."
+
+"On the contrary, it proves nothing of the sort, since I have yet to
+discover a treasure in this house. I have hunted in every nook,
+drawer; I've searched for panels, looked in trunks for false bottoms.
+Nothing, nothing! Ah, if I could only find it!"
+
+"And what would you do with it?"
+
+"Take it at once to some bank and offer the whole of it for the safe
+return of my father, every penny of it. I don't know what to do, which
+way to turn," tears gathering in her eyes and they were genuine tears,
+too. "There are millions in stocks and bonds and I can not touch a
+penny of it because the legal documents have not been found. I can't
+even prove that I am his daughter, except for half an old bracelet, and
+my father's lawyers say that that would not hold in any court."
+
+"You were born in St. Petersburg, my dear. Have the embassy there look
+up the birth registers."
+
+"That would not put me into possession. Nothing but the return of my
+father will avail me. And there's a horrible thought always of my not
+being his real daughter."
+
+"There's no doubt in my mind. I have only to recall Katrina's face to
+know whose child you are. But what will you live on?" Here was a far
+greater mixup than she had calculated upon. Supposing after all it was
+only a resemblance, that the child was not Hargreave's, a substitute
+just to blind the Black Hundred? To keep them away from the true
+daughter? Her mind grew bewildered over such possibilities. The
+single and only way to settle all doubts was to make this child a
+prisoner. If she was Hargreave's true daughter he would come out of
+his hiding.
+
+She heard Florence answering her question: "There is a sum of ten or
+twelve thousand in the Riverdale bank, under the control of my father's
+butler. After that is gone, I don't know what will happen to us, Susan
+and me."
+
+"The door of Miss Farlow's will always be open to you, Florence,"
+replied Susan, with love in her eyes.
+
+This interesting conversation was interrupted by the advent of Norton.
+He was always dropping in during the late afternoon hours. Florence
+liked him for two reasons. One was that Jones trusted him to a certain
+extent and the other was that ... that she liked him. She finished
+this sentence in her heart defiantly.
+
+To-day he brought her a box of beautiful roses, and at the sight of
+them the countess smiled faintly. Set the wind in that quarter? She
+could have laughed. Here was her revenge against this meddler who took
+no particular notice of her while Florence was in the room. She would
+encourage him, poor grubbing newspaper writer, with his beggarly
+pittance! What chance had he of marrying this girl with millions
+within reach of her hand?
+
+The peculiar thing about this was that Norton was entertaining the same
+thought at the same time: what earthly chance had he?
+
+In the second-story window of the house over the way there was a
+worried man. But when his glasses brought in range the true contents
+of the box he laughed sardonically. "This watching is getting my goat.
+I smell a rat every time I see a shadow." He wiped the lenses of his
+opera glasses and proceeded to roll a cigarette.
+
+When the countess and Norton went away Jones stole quietly up to
+Florence's room and threw up the curtain. Two round points of light
+flashed from the watcher's window, but the saturnine smile on Jones'
+lips was not observed. He went to the door, opened it cautiously, a
+hand to his ear. Then he closed the door, turned back the rug and
+removed a section of the flooring. Out of this cavity he raised a box.
+There was lettering on the lid; in fact, the name of its owner, Stanley
+Hargreave. Jones replaced the flooring, tucked the box under his arm
+and made his exit.
+
+The man lounging in the shadow heard a faint whistle. It was the
+signal agreed upon. The man Felton ran across the street and boldly
+rang the bell. It was only then that Florence missed the ever present
+butler. She hesitated, then sent Susan to the door.
+
+"I must see Mr. Jones upon vitally important business."
+
+"He has gone out," said Susan, and very sensibly closed the door before
+Felton's foot succeeded in getting inside.
+
+It was time to act. He ran around to the rear. The ladder convinced
+him that Jones had tricked him. He was wild with rage. He was over
+the wall in an instant. Away down the back street his eye discovered
+his man in full flight. He gave chase. As he came to the first corner
+he was nearly knocked over by a man coming the other way.
+
+"Who are you bumping into?" growled Felton.
+
+"Not so fast, Felton!"
+
+"Who the devil are you?"
+
+The stranger made a sign which Felton instantly recognized.
+
+"Quick! What has happened?"
+
+"Jones has the million and is making his getaway. See him hiking
+toward the water front?"
+
+The two men began to run.
+
+There followed a thrilling chase. Jones engaged a motorboat and it was
+speeding seaward when the two pursuers arrived. They were not laggard.
+There was another boat and they made for it.
+
+[Illustration: JONES ENGAGED A MOTOR BOAT]
+
+"A hundred if you overtake that boat," said Felton's strange companion.
+
+Felton eyed him thoughtfully. There was something familiar about that
+voice.
+
+Great plumes of water shot up into the air. It did not prove a short
+race by any means. It took half an hour for the pursuer to overhaul
+the pursued.
+
+"Is that Jones?"
+
+"Yes." Felton fired his revolver into the air in hopes of terrifying
+Jones' engineer; but there was five hundred dangling before that
+individual's eyes.
+
+"Let them get a little nearer," shouted the butler.
+
+The engineer let down the speed a notch. The other boat crept up
+within twenty yards. Jones sought a perfect range. He would have to
+find this spot again.
+
+"Surrender!" yelled Felton.
+
+In reply Jones raised the precious box and deliberately dropped it into
+the sea. Then he turned his automatic upon his pursuers and succeeded
+in setting their boat afire.
+
+All this within the space of an hour. During dinner that night (there
+was now a cook) Jones walked about the dining-table, rubbing his hands
+together from time to time.
+
+"Jones," said Florence, "why do you rub your hands like that?"
+
+"Was I rubbing my hands, Miss Florence?" he asked innocently.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+"Did you get the range?" asked the countess, when that night Braine
+recounted his adventure.
+
+"Range!" he snarled. "My girl, haven't I just told you that I had to
+fight for my life? My boat was in flames. We had to swim for it till
+we were picked up by a Long Island barge tug. I don't know what became
+of the motorman. He must have headed straight for shore. And I'm glad
+he did. Otherwise he'd be howling for the price of another boat.
+Olga, for the first time I've had to let one of the boys have a look at
+my face. Doesn't know the name; but one of these days he'll stumble
+across it, and the result will be blackmail, unless I push him off into
+the dark. It was accidental."
+
+The countess leaned forward, her hands tightly clinched.
+
+"But the box!"
+
+Braine made a gesture of despair.
+
+"Leo, are you using any drug these days?"
+
+[Illustration: "LEO, ARE YOU USING ANY DRUGS THESE DAYS?"]
+
+"Don't make fun of me, Olga," impatiently. "Did you ever see me drink
+more than a pint of wine or smoke more than two cigars in an evening?
+Poor fools! What! Let my brain go into the wastebasket for the sake
+of an hour or so of exhilaration? No, and never will I! I'm keen
+about the gray matter I've got, and by the Lord Harry, I'm going to
+keep it. There's only one dope fiend in the Hundred, and he's one of
+the best decoys we have; so we let him have his coke whenever he really
+needs it. But this man Felton has seen my face. Some day he'll see it
+again, ask questions, and then..."
+
+"Then what?"
+
+"A burial at sea," he laughed. The laughter died swiftly as it came.
+"Threw it into eight hundred feet of water, on a bar where the sands
+are always shifting. He'll never find it, even if he took the range.
+He could not have got a decent one. The sun was dropping and the
+shadows were long. He threw the chest into the water and then began
+pegging away at us, cool as you please, and fired our tank."
+
+"It looks to me as if he had wasted his time."
+
+"That depends. Between you and me and the gatepost, I've a sneaking
+idea that this man Jones, whom nobody has given any particular
+attention, is a deep, clever man. He may have been honestly attempting
+to find a new hiding place; the advertisement in the newspaper may have
+drawn him. He may have thrown the box over in pure rage at seeing
+himself checkmated. Again, the whole thing may have been worked up for
+our benefit, a blind. But if that's the case, Jones has us on the hip,
+for we can't tell. But we can do what in all probability he expects
+we'll cease to do--watch him just as shrewdly as before."
+
+Olga caught his hand and drew him down beside her. "I wasn't going to
+bother you to-night, but it may mean something vital."
+
+"What?" alertly.
+
+For reply she rose and walked over to the light button. She pressed it
+and the apartment became dark.
+
+"Come over to the window, quick!" She dragged him across the room.
+"Over the way, the house with the marble frontage."
+
+A man emerged, lit a cigarette, and walked leisurely down the street.
+
+"No!" she cried, as Braine turned to make for the door doubtless with
+the intention of finding out who the man was. "Every night after you
+leave he appears."
+
+"Does he follow me?"
+
+"No. And that's what bothered me at first. I believed he was watching
+some apartment above. But regularly when I turn out the lights he
+comes forth. So there's no doubt he watches you enter and takes note
+of your departure."
+
+"But doesn't follow me. That's odd. What the devil is his idea?"
+
+"I'd give a good deal to learn."
+
+The shadow and the glowing cigarette disappeared around the corner, and
+the lights in the apartment were turned on again.
+
+"He's gone. You really think he's watching me?"
+
+"He is watching this apartment, I know that much."
+
+And even at that moment the watcher was watching from his vantage
+behind the corner.
+
+"Suspicious!" he murmured, tossing the cigarette into the gutter.
+"They're watching me for a change. I'll drop out. I know what I know.
+It's a great world. It's fine to be alive and kicking on top of it."
+He went on without haste and took the subway train for down-town.
+
+"Is there any way I could get near him?" asked Braine.
+
+"To-morrow night you might leave by the janitor's entrance. I'll keep
+the lights on till you're outside. Then I'll turn them off and you can
+follow and learn who he is."
+
+"It's mighty important."
+
+"Don't scowl. At your age a wrinkle is apt to remain it you once get
+it started."
+
+He laughed. "Wrinkles!" She could talk of wrinkles!
+
+"They are more important than you think. Every morning I rub out the
+wrinkle I go to bed with."
+
+"I wish you could rub out the general stupidity which is wrinkling my
+brain. I've made three moves and failed in each. What's come over me?"
+
+"Perhaps you've had too many successes. The wheel of chance is always
+turning around."
+
+"May I smoke?"
+
+"Thanks. At least it proves you still have some consideration for me.
+You would smoke whether it was agreeable or not. But I like the odor
+of a good cigar. And it always helps you to think."
+
+Braine lighted his cigar and began his customary pacing. At length he
+paused.
+
+"Suppose we have a real old-fashioned coaching party out to the old
+mansion we know about?"
+
+"And what shall we do there?"
+
+"Make the mansion, an enchanted castle where sometimes people who enter
+can't get out. Do you think you could get her to go?"
+
+"I can try."
+
+"Olga, I must have that girl; and I must have her soon. Sometimes I
+find myself mightily puzzled over the whole thing. If Hargreave is
+alive, why doesn't he turn up now that it's practically known that his
+daughter presides over his household? I might understand it if I
+didn't know that Hargreave is really afraid of nothing. Where is the
+man with the five thousand, picked up at sea? What was the reason for
+Jones carrying that box out in broad daylight? Who is the chap
+watching across the street? Sometimes I believe in my soul--if I have
+one!--that Hargreave is playing with us, playing! Well," flinging the
+half consumed cigar into the grate, "the Black Hundred always goes
+forward, win or lose, and never forgets."
+
+"We are a fine pair!" said the woman bitterly.
+
+"We are exactly what fate intended us to be. They wrote you down in
+the book as a beautiful body with a crooked mind. They wrote me down
+as the devil, doomed to roam the earth's top till I'm killed."
+
+"Killed?"
+
+"Why, yes. I'm not the kind of chap who dies in bed, surrounded by the
+weeping members of the family, doctor, nurse, and priest. I'm a
+scoundrel; but it has this saving grace, I enjoy being the scoundrel.
+Now, I'm going up to the club. There's nothing like a game of
+billiards or chess to smooth that wrinkle which seems to worry you."
+
+In the great newspaper office there was a mighty racket. Midnight
+always means pandemonium in the city room of a metropolitan daily.
+Copy boys were rushing to and fro, messengers and printers with sticky
+galleys in their hands; reporters were banging away at their
+typewriters, and intermingling you could hear the ceaseless
+clickety-click from the telegraph room.
+
+The managing editor came out of his office and approached the desk of
+the night city editor.
+
+"Editorial page gone down?"
+
+"Twenty minutes ago," said the night city editor.
+
+"I wanted a stick on that Panama rumpus."
+
+"Too late."
+
+"Where's Jim Norton?"
+
+"At the chamber of commerce banquet. The major is going to throw a
+bomb into the enemy's camp."
+
+"Nothing on the Hargreave stuff?"
+
+"No. Guess I'd better put that in the cubbyhole. He's dead."
+
+"No will found yet?"
+
+"Not a piece as big as a postage stamp."
+
+"That will leave the girl in a tough place. No will, no birth
+certificate; and, worst of all, no photograph of the old man himself.
+I don't see why Jim sidestepped this affair. He is the only man in
+town who knew anything about Hargreave."
+
+"He hasn't given it up; but he wants to cover it on his own, turn the
+yarn over when he's got it, no false alarms."
+
+"Ah! So that's the game?"
+
+"Yes; and Jim is the sort every paper needs. When the time comes the
+story turns up, if there is one. Here he is now. Looks like an actor
+in the fourth act of a drama. Good-looking chap, though."
+
+Norton came in through the outer gates. He was in evening clothes, top
+hat. A dead cigarette dangled between his lips.
+
+"How much do you want?" asked the night city editor.
+
+"Column and a half."
+
+"Off with your glad rags!"
+
+"Anything good?" asked the managing editor.
+
+"The lid has been jammed on tight. No wine in any restaurant after one
+o'clock. There'll be a roundup of every gunman in town."
+
+"Good work! Go to it."
+
+It was one o'clock when Norton turned in his last sheet of copy and
+started for home. Just outside the entrance to the building a man with
+a slouch hat drawn down over his eyes stepped forward.
+
+"Mr. Norton?"
+
+"Yes." Norton stepped back suspiciously.
+
+The other chuckled, raised and lowered his hat swiftly.
+
+"Good lord!" murmured the reporter.
+
+"Will you take a ride with me in a taxi?"
+
+"All the way to Syracuse, if you say so. Well, I'll be tinker d--d!"
+
+"No names, please!"
+
+What took place in that taxicab was never generally known. But at ten
+o'clock the next morning Norton surprised the elevator boy by going
+out. Norton proceeded down-town to the national bank, where he
+deposited $5,000 in bills of large denominations. The teller had some
+difficulty in counting them. They stuck together and retained the
+sodden appearance of money recently submerged in water.
+
+
+Florence was delighted at the idea of a coaching party. Often during
+her schoolgirl days she had seen the fashionable coaches go careening
+along the road, with the sharp, clear note of the bugle rising above
+the thunder of hoofs and rattling of wheels. Jones was not
+enthusiastic; neither was he a killjoy.
+
+"But you are to go along, too," said Florence.
+
+"I, Miss Florence?"
+
+"The countess invited you especially. You will go with a hamper."
+
+"Ah, in my capacity as butler; very good, Miss Florence." To her he
+gave no sign of his secret great satisfaction.
+
+The hour arrived, and the gay party bowled away. They wound in and out
+of the streets toward the country to the crack of the whip and the
+blare of the horn. Florence's enjoyment would have been perfect had it
+not been for the absence of Norton. Why hadn't he been invited? She
+did not ask because she did not care to disclose to the countess her
+interest in the reporter. They were nearing the limits of the city,
+when the coach was forced to take a sharp turn to avoid an automobile
+in trouble. The man puttering at the engine raised his head. It was
+Norton, and Florence waved her hand vigorously.
+
+"A coaching party," he murmured; "and your Uncle James was not invited!
+Oh, very well!" He laughed, and suddenly grew serious. It would not
+hurt to find out where that coach was going.
+
+He set to work savagely, located the trouble, righted it, and set off
+for the Hargreave home. He found Susan and bombarded her with
+questions which to Susan came with the rapidity of rain upon the roof.
+
+"So Jones went along?"
+
+"In his capacity of butler only."
+
+Norton smiled. "Well, I'll take a jaunt out there myself. You are
+sure of the location?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Well, good-by. I'll go as a waiter, since they wouldn't invite me.
+I'm one of the best little waiters you ever heard of; and all things
+come to him who waits."
+
+What a pleasant, affable young man he was! thought Susan as she watched
+him jump into the car and go flying up the street.
+
+Jones was a good deal surprised when Norton turned up at the old
+Chilton manor.
+
+"What made you come here dressed like this?" the butler demanded.
+
+"I'm a suspicious duffer; maybe that's the reason."
+
+"Do you know anything?"
+
+"Well, no; I can't say that I do. But, hang it, I just had to come out
+here."
+
+"Maybe it's just as well you did," said Jones moodily.
+
+"I know this place. The housekeeper used to be my nurse, and if she is
+still on the job she may be of service to us. You don't think they'll
+question or recognize me?"
+
+"Hardly. I'll put in a word for you. I'll say I sent for you, not
+knowing if we had enough servants to take care of the luncheon."
+
+"And now I'll go and hunt up Meg."
+
+Sure enough, his old nurse was still in charge of the house; and when
+her "baby" disclosed his identity she all but fell upon his neck.
+
+"But what are you doing here, dressed up as a waiter?"
+
+"It's a little secret, Meg. I wasn't invited, and the truth is I'm
+very desperately in love with the young lady in whose honor this
+coaching party is being given. And ... maybe she's in danger."
+
+"Danger? What about?"
+
+"The Lord only knows. But show me about the house. I've not been here
+in so long I've forgotten the run of it. I remember one room with the
+secret panel and another with a painting that turned. Have they
+changed them?"
+
+"No; it is just the same here as it used to be. Come along and I'll
+show you."
+
+Norton inspected the rooms carefully, stowing away in his mind every
+detail. He might be worrying about nothing; but so many strange things
+had happened that it was better to be on the side of caution than on
+the side of carelessness. He left the house and ran across Jones
+carrying a basket of wine.
+
+"Here, Norton; take this to the party. I want to reconnoiter."
+
+"All right, m'lud! Say, Jones, how much do you think I'd earn at this
+job?" comically.
+
+"Get along with you, Mr. Norton. It may be the time to laugh, and then
+it may not."
+
+"I'm going back into the house and hide behind a secret panel. I've
+got my revolver. You go to the stables and take a try at my car; see
+if she works smoothly. We may have to do some hiking. Where is the
+countess in this?"
+
+"Leave that to me, Mr. Norton," said the butler with his grim smile.
+"Be off; they are moving back toward the house."
+
+So Norton carried the basket around to the lawn, where it was taken
+from his hands by the regular servant. He sighed as he saw Florence,
+laughing and chatting with a man who was a stranger and whom he heard
+addressed as count. Some friend of the countess, no doubt. Where was
+all this tangle going to end? He wished he knew. And what a yarn he
+was going to write some day! It would read like one of Gaboriau's
+tales. He turned away to wander idly about the grounds, when beyond a
+clump of cedars he saw three or four men conversing slowly. He got as
+near as possible, for when three or four men put their heads together
+and whisper animatedly, it usually means a poker game or something
+worse. He caught a phrase or two as they came down the wind, and then
+he knew that the vague suspicion that had brought him out here had been
+set in motion by fate. He heard "Florence" and "the old drawing room;"
+and that was enough.
+
+He scurried about for Jones. It was pure luck that he had had old Meg
+show him through the house, otherwise he would have forgotten all about
+the secret panel in the wall and the painting. Jones shrugged
+resignedly. Were these men of the countess' party? Norton couldn't
+say.
+
+[Illustration: THE SECRET PANEL]
+
+Norton made his hiding place in safety; and by and by he could hear the
+guests moving about in the room. Then all sounds ceased for a while.
+A door closed sharply.
+
+"No; here you must stay, young lady," said a man's voice.
+
+"What do you mean, sir?" demanded the beloved voice.
+
+"It means that no one will return to this room and that you will not be
+missed until it is too late."
+
+The sound of voices stopped abruptly, and something like scuffling
+ensued. Later Norton heard the back of a chair strike the panel and
+some one sat heavily upon it. He waited perhaps five minutes; then he
+gently slid back the panel. Florence sat bound and gagged under his
+very eyes. It was but the work of a moment to liberate her.
+
+"It is I, Jim. Do not speak or make the least noise. Follow me."
+
+Greatly astonished, Florence obeyed; and the panel slipped back into
+place. The room behind the secret panel had barred windows. To
+Florence it appeared to be a real prison.
+
+"How did you get here?" she asked breathlessly.
+
+"Something told me to follow you. And something is always going to
+tell me to follow you, Florence."
+
+She pressed his hand. It was to her as if one of those book heroes had
+stepped out of a book; only book heroes always had tremendous fortunes
+and did not have to work for a living. Oddly enough, she was not
+afraid.
+
+"Who was the man?" he asked.
+
+"The Count Norfeldt. Some one has imposed upon the countess."
+
+"Do you think so?" with a strange look in his eyes.
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"Nothing just now. The idea is to get out of here just as quickly as
+we can. See this painting?" He touched a spot in the wall and the
+painting slowly swung out like a door. "Come; we make our escape to
+the side lawn from here."
+
+At the stable they were confronted with the knowledge that Norton's car
+was out of commission; Jones could do nothing with it. Then Norton
+suggested that he make an effort to commandeer the limousine of the
+countess; but there were men about, so the limousine was out of the
+question.
+
+"Horses!" whispered Jones. "There are several saddle horses, already
+saddled. How about these people, the owners?"
+
+"Oh, they are beyond reproach. They have doubtless been imposed upon.
+But let us get aboard first. There will be time to talk later. I'll
+have to do some explaining, taking these nags off like this. We won't
+have to ride out in front where the picnickers are. There's a lane
+back of the stable, and a slight detour brings us back into the main
+road."
+
+The three mounted and clattered away. To Florence it had the air of a
+prank. She was beginning to have such confidence in these two
+inventive men that she felt as if she was never going to be afraid any
+more.
+
+When the Countess Olga saw the three horses it was an effort not to fly
+into a rage. But secretly she warned her people, who presently gave
+chase in the limousine, while she prattled and jested and laughed with
+her company, who were quite unaware that a drama was being enacted
+right under their very noses. The countess, while she acted superbly,
+tore her handkerchief into shreds. There was something sinister in the
+way all their plans fell through at the very moment of consummation;
+and that night she determined to ask Braine to withdraw from this
+warfare, which gradually decimated their numbers without getting
+anywhere toward the goal.
+
+Jones shouted that the limousine was tearing down the road. Something
+must be done to stop it. He suggested that he drop behind, leave his
+horse, and take a chance at potting a tire from the shrubbery at the
+roadside.
+
+"Keep going. Don't stop, Norton, till you are back in town. I'll
+manage to take good care of myself."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+When all three finally met at the Hargreave home Florence suddenly took
+Jones by the shoulders and kissed him lightly on the cheek. Jones
+started back, pale and disturbed.
+
+Norton laughed. He did not feel the slightest twinge of jealousy, but
+he was eaten up with envy, as the old wives say.
+
+"You are wondering if I suspect the Countess Perigoff?" said Jones.
+
+"I am." This man Jones was developing into a very remarkable
+character. The reporter found himself side glancing at the thin, keen
+face of this resourceful butler. The lobe of the man's left ear came
+within range. Norton reached for a cigarette, but his hands shook as
+he lit it. There was a peculiar little scar in the center of the lobe.
+
+"Well," said Jones, "I can find no evidence that she has been concerned
+in any of these affairs."
+
+"You are suspicious?"
+
+"Of everybody," looking boldly into the reporter's eyes.
+
+"Of me?" smiling.
+
+"Even of myself sometimes."
+
+Conversation dropped entirely after this declaration.
+
+"You're a taciturn sort of chap."
+
+"Am I?"
+
+"You are. But an agreement is an agreement, and while I'd like to
+print this story, I'll not. We newspaper men seldom break our word."
+
+Jones held out his hand.
+
+"Sometimes I wish I'd started life right," said the reporter gloomily.
+"A newspaper man is generally improvident. He never looks ahead for
+to-morrow. What with my special articles to the magazines, I earn
+between four and five thousand the year; and I've never been able to
+save a cent."
+
+"Perhaps you've never really tried," replied Jones, with a glance at
+his companion. It was a good face, strong in outline; a little
+careworn, perhaps, but free from any indications of dissipation. "If I
+had begun life as you did, I'd have made real and solid use of the
+great men I met. I'd have made financiers help me to invest my
+earnings, or savings, little as they might be. And to-day I'd be
+living on the income."
+
+"You never can tell. Perhaps a woman might have made you think of
+those things; but if you had remained unattached up to thirty-one, as I
+have, the thought of saving might never have entered your head. A man
+in my present condition, financially, has no right to think of
+matrimony."
+
+"It might be the saving of you if you met and married the right woman."
+
+"But the right woman might be heiress to millions. And a poor devil
+like me could not marry a girl with money and hang on to his
+self-respect."
+
+"True. But there are always exceptions to all rules in life, except
+those regarding health. A healthy man is a normal man, and a normal
+man has no right to remain single. You proved yourself a man this
+afternoon, considering that you did not know I occupied the wheel seat.
+Come to think it over, you really saved the day. You gave me the
+opportunity of steering straight for the police station. Well,
+good-by."
+
+"Queer duck!" mused the reporter as, after telephoning, he headed for
+his office. Queer duck, indeed! What a game it was going to be! And
+this man Jones was playing it like a master. It did not matter that
+some one else laid down the rules; it was the way in which they were
+interpreted.
+
+Braine heard of the failure. The Black Hundred was finding its stock
+far below par value. Four valuable men locked up in the Tombs awaiting
+trial, to say nothing of the seven gunmen gathered in at the old
+warehouse. Braine began to suspect that his failures were less due to
+chance than to calculation, that at last he had encountered a mind
+which anticipated his every move. He would have recognized this fact
+earlier had it not been that revenge had temporarily blinded him. The
+spirit of revenge never makes for mental clarity.
+
+There was a meeting that night of the Black Hundred. Four men were
+told off, and they drew their chairs up to Vroon's table for
+instructions. Braine sat at Vroon's elbow. These four men composed
+the most dangerous quartet in New York City. They were as daring as
+they were desperate. They were the men who held up bank messengers and
+got away with thousands. They had learned to swoop down upon their
+victims as the hawk swoops down upon the heron. The newspapers
+referred to them as the "auto bandits," and the men took a deal of
+pride in the furore they had created.
+
+[Illustration: FOUR MEN WERE TOLD OFF]
+
+Vroon went over the Hargreave case minutely; he left no detail
+unexplained. Bluntly and frankly, the daughter of Stanley Hargreave
+must be caught and turned over to the care of the Black Hundred. It
+must be quick action. Four valuable members were in the Tombs. They
+might or might not weaken under pressure. For the first time in its
+American career the organization stood facing actual peril; and its one
+possible chance of salvation lay in the fact that no one's face was
+known to his neighbor. He, Vroon, and the boss alone knew who and what
+each man was. But the plans, the ramifications of the organization
+might become public property; and that would mean an end to an
+exceedingly profitable business.
+
+The daughter of Hargreave rode horseback early every morning. She
+sought the country road. She was invariably attended by the riding
+master of a school near by.
+
+"You four will make your own plans."
+
+"If she should be injured?"
+
+"Avoid it if possible."
+
+"We have a free hand?"
+
+"Absolutely."
+
+"We risk a bad fall from her horse if it's a spirited one."
+
+"Pretend a breakdown in the road," interpolated Braine. "As they
+approach, draw and order them to dismount. That method will prevent
+any accident."
+
+"We'll plan it somehow. It looks easy."
+
+"Nothing is easy where that girl is concerned. A thousand eyes seem to
+be watching her slightest move."
+
+"We shan't leave anything to chance. How many days will you give us?"
+
+"Seven. A failure, mind you, will prove unhealthy to all concerned,"
+with a menace which made the four stir uneasily.
+
+The telephone rang. Braine reached for the receiver.
+
+"A man just entered the Hargreave house at the rear. Come at once,"
+was the message.
+
+"Is your car outside?" Braine asked.
+
+"We are never without it."
+
+"Then let us be off. No one will stop us for speeding on a side
+street."
+
+Fourteen minutes by the clock brought the car to a stand at the curb a
+few houses below the Hargreave home. The men got out. The watcher ran
+up.
+
+"He is still inside," he whispered.
+
+"Good! Spread out. If any one leaves that house, catch him. If he
+runs too fast, shoot. We can beat the police."
+
+The man obeyed, and the watcher ran back to his post. He was
+desperately hoping the affair would terminate to-night. He was growing
+weary of this eternal vigilance; and it was only his fear of the man
+known as the boss that kept him at his post. He wanted a night to
+carouse in, to be with the boys.
+
+The man for whom they were lying in wait was seen presently to creep
+cautiously round the side of the house. He hugged a corner and paused.
+They could see the dim outline of his body. The light in the street
+back of the grounds almost made a silhouette of him. By and by, as if
+assured that the coast was clear, he stole down to the street.
+
+"Halt!"
+
+Instantly the prowler took to his heels. Two shots rang out. The man
+was seen to stop, stagger, and then go on desperately.
+
+"He's hit!"
+
+By the time the men reached the corner they heard the rumble of a
+motor. One dashed back to the car they had left standing at the curb.
+He made quick work of the job, but he was not quick enough. Still,
+they gave chase. They saw the car turn toward the city. But,
+unfortunately for the success of the chase, several automobiles passed,
+going into town and leaving it. Checkmate.
+
+Braine was keen enough to-night.
+
+"He is hit; whether badly or not remains to be seen. We can find that
+out. Drive to the nearest drug store and get a list of hospitals.
+It's a ten to one shot that we land him somewhere among the hospitals."
+
+But they searched the hospitals in vain. None of them had that night
+received a shooting case, nor had they heard one reported. The man had
+been unmistakably hit. He would not have dared risk the loss of time
+for a bit of play-acting. Evidently he had kept his head and sought
+his lodgings. To call up doctors would be utter folly; for it would
+take a week for a thorough combing. This was the second time the man
+had got away.
+
+"Perhaps I'm to blame," admitted Braine. "I should have advised Miles
+to stalk him and pot him if he got the chance. There's a master mind
+working somewhere back of all this, and it's time I woke up to the
+fact. But you," turning to the auto bandits, "you men have your
+instructions. More than that, you have been given a free rein. See
+that you make good, or by the Lord Harry! I'll break the four of you
+like pipestems."
+
+"We haven't had a failure yet," spoke up one of the men, more
+courageous than his companions.
+
+"You are not holding up a bank messenger this trip. Remember that.
+Drive me as far as Columbus Circle. Leave me on the side street,
+between the lights, so I can take off this mask."
+
+Later Braine sauntered into Pabst's and ordered a light supper. This
+night's work, more than anything else, brought home to him the fact
+that his luck was changing. For years he had proceeded with his shady
+occupations without encountering any memorable failure. He moved in
+the high world, quite unsuspected. He had written books, given
+lectures, been made a lion of, all the while laughing in his sleeve at
+the gullibility of human nature. But within the last two weeks he had
+received serious checks. From now on he must move with the utmost
+caution. Some one was playing his own game, waging warfare unseen. A
+battle of wits? So be it; but Braine intended to play with rough wits,
+and he wasn't going to care which way the sword cut.
+
+He hated Stanley Hargreave with all the hatred of his soul; the hatred
+of a man balked in love. And the man was alive, defying him; alive
+somewhere in this city this very night, with a bullet under his skin.
+
+"Is everything satisfactory, sir?" he heard the head waiter say.
+
+"Satisfactory?" Braine repeated blankly.
+
+"Yes, sir. You struck the table as though displeased."
+
+"Oh!" Then Braine laughed relievedly. "If I struck the table, it was
+done unconsciously. I was thinking."
+
+"Beg pardon, sir. Anything else, sir?"
+
+"No. Bring me the check."
+
+
+"Your master gives riding lessons?"
+
+The groom who had led the horse back from Hargreave's eyed his
+questioner rather superciliously.
+
+"Yes." The groom fondled the animal's legs.
+
+"How much is it?"
+
+"Twenty dollars for a ticket of five rides. The master is the fashion
+up here. He doesn't cater to any but the best families."
+
+"Pretty steep. Who was that young lady riding this morning with your
+master?"
+
+"That's the girl all the newspapers have been talking about," answered
+the groom importantly.
+
+"Actress?"
+
+"Actress! I should say not. That young woman is the daughter of
+Stanley Hargreave, the millionaire who was lost at sea. And it won't
+be long before she puts her finger in a pie of four or five millions.
+If you want any rides, you'll have to talk it over with the boss. He
+may or may not take any more rides. You'd probably have to ride in the
+afternoon, anyhow, as every nag is out in the morning."
+
+"Where's the most popular road?"
+
+"Toward the park; but Miss Hargreave always goes along the riverside
+road. She doesn't like strangers about."
+
+"Oh, I see. Well, I'll drop in this afternoon and see your master.
+They say that riding is good for a torpid liver. Have a cigar?"
+
+"Thanks."
+
+The groom proceeded into the stables and the affable stranger took
+himself off.
+
+A free rein; they could work it to suit themselves. There wasn't the
+least obstacle in the way. On the face of it, it appeared to be the
+simplest job they had yet undertaken. To get rid of the riding master
+in some natural way after he and the girl had started. It was like
+falling off a log.
+
+"Susan," said Florence, as she came into breakfast after her
+exhilarating ride, "did you hear pistol shots last night?"
+
+"I heard some noise, but I was so sleepy I didn't try to figure out
+what it was."
+
+"Did you, Jones?"
+
+"Yes, Miss Florence. The shots came from the street. A policeman came
+running up later and said he saw two automobiles on the run. But
+evidently there wasn't anybody hurt. One has to be careful at night
+nowadays. There are pretty bad men abroad. Did you enjoy the ride?"
+
+"Very much. But there were some spots of blood on the walk near the
+corner."
+
+"Blood?" Jones caught the back of a chair to steady himself.
+
+"Yes. So some one was hurt. Oh, let's leave this place!" impulsively.
+"Let us go back to Miss Farlow's. You could find a place in the
+village, Jones. But if I stay here much longer in this state of unrest
+I shall lose faith in everything and everybody. Whoever my father's
+enemies are, they do not lack persistence. They have made two attempts
+against my liberty, and sooner or later they will succeed. I keep
+looking over my shoulder all the time. If I hear a noise I jump."
+
+"Miss Florence, if I thought it wise, you should be packed off to Miss
+Farlow's this minute. But not an hour of the day or night passes
+without this house being watched. I seldom see anybody about. I can
+only sense the presence of a watcher. At Miss Farlow's you would be
+far more like a prisoner than here. I could not accompany you. I am
+forbidden to desert this house."
+
+"My father's orders?"
+
+Jones signified neither one way nor the other. He merely gazed
+stolidly at the rug.
+
+"That blood!" She sprang from her chair, horrified. "It was his! He
+was here last night and they shot him! Oh!"
+
+"There, there, Miss Florence! The man was only slightly wounded. He's
+where they never will look for him." Then Jones continued, as with an
+effort: "Trust me, Miss Florence. It would not pay to run away. The
+whole affair would be repeated elsewhere. We might go to the other end
+of the world, but it would not serve us in the least. It is not a
+question of escape, but of who shall vanquish the other. There is
+nothing to do but remain here and fight, fight, fight. We have put
+four of them in the Tombs, to say nothing of the gunmen. That is what
+we must do--put them in a safe place, one by one, till we reach the
+master. Then only may we breathe in safety. But if they watch, so do
+we. There is never a moment when help is not within reach, no matter
+where you go. So long as you do not deceive me, no real harm shall
+befall you. Don't cry. Be your father's daughter, as I am his
+servant."
+
+"I am very unhappy!" And Florence threw her arms around Susan and laid
+her head upon her friend's shoulder.
+
+"Poor child!" Susan, however, recognized the wisdom of Jones'
+statements. They were safest here.
+
+The morning rides continued. To the girl, who loved the open, it was
+glorious fun. Those mad gallops along the roads, the smell of earth
+and sea, the tingle in the blood, were the second best moments of the
+day. The first? She invariably blushed when she considered what these
+first best moments were. He was a brave young man, good to look at,
+witty, and always cheerful. Why shouldn't she like him? Even Jones
+liked him--Jones, who didn't seem to like anybody. It did not matter
+whether he was wise or not; a worldly point of view was farthest from
+her youthful thoughts. It was her own affair; her own heart.
+
+Five days later, as she and the riding master were cantering along the
+road, enjoying every bit of it, they heard the beat of hoofs behind.
+They drew up and turned. A rider was approaching them at a run. It
+was the head groom. The man stopped his horse in a cloud of dust.
+
+"Sir, the stables are on fire."
+
+"Fire?"
+
+All the riding master's savings were invested in the stables. The fact
+that he had solemnly promised never to leave Florence alone, and that
+he had accepted a generous bonus slipped from his mind at the thought
+of fire, a terrible word to any horseman. He wheeled and started off
+at breakneck speed, his head groom clattering behind him.
+
+Florence naturally wondered which of two courses to pursue: follow
+them, when she would be perfectly helpless to aid them, or continue the
+ride and save at least one horse from the terror of seeing flames. She
+chose the latter. But she did not ride with the earlier zest. She
+felt depressed. She loved horses, and the thought of them dying in
+those wooden stables was horrifying.
+
+The fire, however, proved to be incipient. But it was plainly
+incendiary. Some one had set fire to the stables with a purpose in
+view. Norton recognized this fact almost as soon as the firemen. He
+had come this morning with the idea of surprising Florence. He was
+going out on horseback to join her.
+
+His spine grew suddenly cold. A trap! She had been left alone on the
+road! He ran over to the garage, secured a car, and went humming out
+toward the river road. A trap, and only by the sheerest luck had he
+turned up in time.
+
+Meantime Florence was walking her mount slowly. For once the scenery
+passed unobserved. She was deeply engrossed with thoughts, some of
+which were happy and some of which were sad. If only her father could
+be with her she would be the happiest girl alive.
+
+She was brought out of her revery by the sight of a man staggering
+along the road ahead of her. Finally he plunged upon his face in the
+road. Like the tender-hearted girl she was, she stopped, dismounted,
+and ran to the fallen man to give him aid. She suddenly found her
+wrists clasped in two hands like iron. The man rose to his feet,
+smiling evilly. She struggled wildly but futilely.
+
+"Better be sensible," he said. "I am stronger than you are. And I
+don't wish to hurt you. Walk on ahead of me. It will be utterly
+useless to scream or cry out. You can see for yourself that we are in
+a deserted part of the road. If you will promise to act sensibly I
+shan't lay a hand on you. Do you see that hut yonder, near the fork in
+the road? We'll stop there. Now, march!"
+
+[Illustration: "BETTER BE SENSIBLE," HE SAID]
+
+She dropped her handkerchief, later her bracelet, and finally her crop,
+in hope that these slight clues might bring her help. She knew that
+Jones would hear of the fire, and, finding that she had not returned
+with the riding master, would immediately start out in pursuit. She
+was beginning to grow very fond of Jones, who never spoke unless spoken
+to, who was always at hand, faithful and loyal.
+
+From afar came the low rumble of a motor. She wondered if her captor
+heard it. He did, but his ears tricked him into believing that it came
+from another direction. Eventually they arrived at the hut, and
+Florence was forced to enter. The man locked the door and waited
+outside for the automobile which he was expecting. He was rather
+dumfounded when he saw that it was coming from the city, not going
+toward it.
+
+It was Norton. The riderless horse told him enough; the handkerchief
+and bracelet and crop led him straight for the hut.
+
+The man before the hut realized by this time that he had made a
+mistake. He attempted to re-enter the hut and prepare to defend it
+till his companions hove in sight. But Florence, recognizing Norton,
+held the door with all her strength. The man snarled and turned toward
+Norton, only to receive a smashing blow on the jaw.
+
+Norton flung open the door. "Into the car, Florence! There's another
+car coming up the road. Hurry!"
+
+It was not a long chase. The car of the auto bandits, looking like an
+ordinary taxicab, was a high-powered machine, and it gained swiftly on
+Norton's four-cylinder. The reporter waited grimly.
+
+"Keep your head down!" he warned Florence. "I'm going to take a pot at
+their tires when they get within range. If I miss I'm afraid we'll
+have trouble. Under no circumstances attempt to leave this car. Here
+they come!"
+
+He suddenly leaned back and fired. It was only chance. The manner in
+which the cars were lurching made a poor target for a marksman even of
+the first order. Chance directed Norton's first bullet into the right
+forward tire, which exploded. Going at sixty-odd miles an hour, they
+could not stop the car in time to avoid fatality. The car careened
+wildly and plunged down the embankment into the river.
+
+Florence covered her eyes with her hands, and, quite unconscious of
+what he was doing, Norton put his arms around her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+After the affair of the auto bandits--three of whom were killed--a lull
+followed. If you're a sailor you know what kind of a lull I
+mean--blue-black clouds down the southwest horizon, the water crinkly,
+the booms wabbling. Suddenly a series of "accidents" began to happen
+to Norton. At first he did not give the matter much thought. The safe
+which fell almost at his feet and crashed through the sidewalk merely
+induced him to believe he was lucky. At another time an automobile
+came furiously around a corner while he was crossing the street, and
+only amazing agility saved him from bodily hurt. The car was out of
+sight when he thought to recall the number.
+
+Then came the jolt in the subway. Only a desperate grab by one of the
+guards saved him from being crushed to death. Even then he thought
+nothing. But when a new box of cigarettes arrived and he tried one and
+found it strangely perfumed, and, upon further analysis, found it to
+contain a Javanese narcotic, a slow but sure death, he became wide
+awake enough. They were after him. He began to walk carefully, to
+keep in public places as often as he possibly could.
+
+He was not really afraid of death, but he did abhor the thought of its
+coming up from behind. Except for the cigarettes they were all
+"accidents;" he could not have proved anything before a jury of his
+intimate friends.
+
+He never entered an elevator without scrupulous care. He never passed
+under coverings over the sidewalks where construction was going on.
+Still, careful as he was, death confronted him once more. It was his
+habit to have his coffee and rolls--he rarely ate anything more for his
+breakfast--set down outside his door every morning. The coffee, being
+in a silver thermos bottle, kept its heat for hours. When he took the
+stopper out and poured forth a cup it looked oddly black, discolored.
+It is quite probable that had there been no series of "accidents" he
+would have drunk a cup--and died in mortal agony. It contained
+bichloride of mercury.
+
+Very quietly he set about to make inquiries. This was really becoming
+serious. In the kitchens clown-stairs nothing could be learned. The
+maid had set the thermos bottle before the door at ten-thirty. Norton
+had opened the door at one-thirty--three hours after. The outlook was
+not the cheerfulest. He knew perfectly well why all these things
+"happened;" he had interfered with the plans of the scoundrels who were
+making every possible move to kidnap Florence Hargreave.
+
+One afternoon he paid Florence a visit. Of course he told her nothing.
+They had become secretly engaged the day after he had rescued her from
+the auto bandits. They were secretly engaged because Florence wanted
+it so. For once Jones suspected nothing. Why should he? He had
+troubles enough. As a matter of fact, Norton was afraid of him in the
+same sense as a boy is afraid of a policeman.
+
+[Illustration: THEY HAD BECOME SECRETLY ENGAGED]
+
+But on this day, when the time came, he accosted the butler and drew
+him into the pantry.
+
+"Jones, they are after me now."
+
+"You? Explain."
+
+Norton briefly recounted the deliberate attempts against his life.
+
+"You see, I'm not liar enough to say that I'm not worried. I am,
+devilishly worried. I'm not worth any ransom. I'm in the way, and
+they seem determined to put me out of it."
+
+"To any other man I would say travel. But to you I say when you leave
+your rooms don't go where you first thought you would--that is, some
+usual haunt. They'll be everywhere, near your restaurants, your clubs,
+your office. You're a methodical young man; become erratic. Keep away
+from here for at least three days, but always call me up by telephone
+some time during the day. Never under any circumstance, unless I send
+for you, come here at night. Only one man now watches the house during
+the day, but five are prowling around after dark. They might have
+instructions to shoot you on sight. I can't spare you just at present,
+Mr. Norton. You've been a godsend; and if it seems that sometimes I
+did not trust you fully it was because I did not care to drag you in
+too deep."
+
+Deep? Norton thought of Florence and smiled inwardly. Could anybody
+be in deeper than he was? Once it was on the tip of his tongue to
+confess his love for Florence, but the gravity of Jones' countenance
+was an obstacle to such move; it did not invite it.
+
+To be sure, Jones had no real authority to say what Florence should or
+should not do with her heart. Still, from all points of view, it was
+better to keep the affair under the rose till there came a more
+propitious hour in which to make the disclosure.
+
+Love, in the midst of all these alarms! Sharp, desperate rogues on one
+side, millions on the other, and yet love could enter the scene
+serenely, like an actor who had missed his cue and come on too soon.
+
+Oddly enough, there was no real love-making such as you often read
+about. A pressure of the hand, a glance from the eye, there was seldom
+anything more. Only once--that memorable day on the river road--had he
+kissed her. No word of love had been spoken on either side. In that
+wild moment all conventionalities had disappeared like smoke in the
+wind. There had been neither past nor future, only the present in
+which they knew that they loved. With her he was happy, for he had no
+time to plan over the future. Away from her he saw the inevitable
+barriers providing against the marriage between a poor young man and a
+very rich young woman. A man who has any respect for himself wants
+always to be on equal terms with his wife. It's the way this peculiar
+organization called society has written down its rules. Doubtless a
+relic of the stone age, when Ab went out with his club to seek a wife
+and drag her by the hair to his den, there to care for her and to guard
+her with his life's blood. It is one of the few primitive sensations
+that remain to us, this wanting the female dependent upon the male.
+Perhaps this accounts for man's lack of interest on the suffragette
+question.
+
+[Illustration: WITH HER HE WAS HAPPY, FOR HE HAD NO TIME TO PLAN OVER
+THE FUTURE]
+
+Only Susan suspected the true state of affairs, being a woman. Having
+had no real romance herself, she delighted in having a second-hand one,
+as you might say. She intercepted many a glance and pretended not to
+see the stolen hand pressures. The wedding was already full drawn in
+her mind's eye. These two young people should be married at Susan
+Farlow's when the roses were climbing up the sides of the house and the
+young robins were boldly trying their fuzzy wings. It struck her as
+rather strange, but she could not conjure up (at this wedding) more
+than two men besides the minister, the bridegroom and the butler.
+
+By forsaking his accustomed haunts, under the advice of Jones, the
+hidden warfare ceased temporarily. You can't very well kill a man when
+you don't know where to find him. He ate his breakfasts haphazardly,
+now here, now there. He received most of his assignments by telephone
+and wrote his stories and articles in his club, in the writing rooms of
+hotels, and invariably despatched them to the office by messenger. The
+managing editor wanted to know what all this meant; but Norton declined
+to tell him.
+
+It irked him to be forced to rearrange his daily life--his habits. It
+was a revolution against his ease, for he loved ease when he was not at
+work. He had the sensation of having been suddenly robbed of his home,
+of having been cast out into the streets. And on top of all this he
+had to go and fall in love!
+
+There was no longer a shadow opposite the apartments of the Countess
+Perigoff. Braine came and went nightly without discovering any one.
+This rather worried him. It gave him the impression that the shadow
+had found out what he had been seeking and no longer needed to watch
+the coming and going of either himself or the Countess Perigoff.
+
+"Olga, it looks as if we were at the end of our rope," he said
+discouragedly. "We have failed in our attempts so far. The devil
+watches over that girl."
+
+"Or God," replied the countess gloomily. In nearly every instance
+their success has been due to chance. "Somehow I'm convinced that we
+began wrong. We should have let Hargreave escape quietly, followed
+him, and made him fast when the right opportunity came. After a month
+or so his vigilance would have relaxed; he would have arrived at the
+belief that he had eluded us."
+
+"Indeed!" ironically. "He wasn't vigilant all these years in which he
+did elude us. How about the child he never sought but guarded?
+Vigilance! He never was anything else all these seventeen years. The
+truth is, success has developed a coarseness in our methods. And now
+it is too late for finesse. We have tried every device we can think
+of; and there they are--the girl free, Norton unharmed, and the father
+as secure in his retreat as though he wore an invisible cloak. My head
+aches. I have ceased to be inventive."
+
+[Illustration: THEY WERE TO BE MARRIED]
+
+"The two are in love with each other."
+
+"Are you sure of that?"
+
+"I have my eyes. But I begin to wonder."
+
+"About what?"
+
+"Whether or not Jones suspects me and is giving me rope to hang myself
+with. Not once have the police been called in and told what has really
+happened. They are totally at sea. And what has become of the man
+over the way?"
+
+"By the Lord Harry!" exclaimed Braine, clapping his hands. "I believe
+I've solved that. We shot a man coming out of Hargreave's. Since then
+there's been no one across the way. One and the same man!"
+
+"But that knowledge doesn't get us anywhere."
+
+"No. You say they are in love?"
+
+"Secretly. I don't believe the butler has an inkling of it. It is
+possible, however, that Susan has caught the trend of affairs. But,
+being rather romantic, she will in nowise interfere."
+
+Braine smoked in silence. Presently a smile twisted his lips.
+
+"You have thought of something?" she asked.
+
+"You might try it," he said. "They have accepted your friendship;
+whether with ulterior purpose remains to be learned. She has been to
+your apartments two or three times to tea and always got home safely."
+
+"No," she said determinedly. "Nothing shall happen here. I will not
+take the risk."
+
+"Wait till I'm through. Break up the romance in such a way that the
+girl will bar Norton from the house. That's what we've been aiming at;
+to get rid of that meddling reporter. We've tried poisons. Try your
+kind."
+
+"What do you mean?"
+
+"Lies."
+
+"Ah! I understand. You want me to win him away from her. It can not
+be done."
+
+"Pshaw! You have a bag full of tricks. You can easily manage to put
+him into an equivocal position out of which he can not possibly squirm
+so far as the girl is concerned. A little melodrama, arranged for the
+benefit of Florence. Fall into Norton's arms at the right moment, or
+something like that."
+
+"I suppose I could. But if I failed..."
+
+"You're too damnably clever to fail in your own particular work.
+Something has got to be done to keep those two apart. I've often
+thought of raiding the house and boldly carrying off the whole family,
+Susan and all. But a wholesale affair like that would be too noisy.
+Think it over, Olga; we have gone too far to back down now. There's
+always Russia; and while I'm the boss over here they never cease to
+watch me. They'll make me answer for a failure like this."
+
+She eyed him speculatively. "You have money."
+
+"Oh, the money doesn't matter. It's the game. It's the game of
+playing fast and loose with society, of pilfering it with one hand and
+making it kow-tow with the other. It's the sport of the thing. What
+was your thought?"
+
+"We could go away together, to South America."
+
+"And tire of each other within a month," he retorted shrewdly. "No; we
+are in the same boat. We could not live but for this never-ending
+excitement. And, more than that, we never could get far enough away
+from the long arm of the First Ten. We'll have to stick it out here.
+Can't you see?"
+
+"Yes, I can see."
+
+But in her heart she knew that she would have lived in a hut with this
+man till the end of her days. She abhorred the life, though she never,
+by the slightest word, let him become aware of it. There was always
+that abiding fear that at the first sign of weakness he would desert
+her. And she was wise in her deductions. Braine was loyal to her
+because she held his interest. Once that failed, he would be off and
+away.
+
+The next afternoon the countess, having matured her plans against the
+happiness of the young girl who trusted her, drew up before the
+Hargreave place and alighted. Her welcome was the same as ever, and
+this strengthened her confidence.
+
+The countess was always gesticulating. Her hands fluttered to
+emphasize her words. And the beautiful diamond solitaire caught the
+girl's eye. She seized the hand. Having an affair of her own, it was
+natural that she should be interested in that of her friend.
+
+"I never saw that ring before."
+
+"A gift of yesterday." The countess assumed a shy air which would have
+deceived St. Anthony. She twisted the ring on her finger.
+
+"Tell me," cried Florence. "You are engaged?"
+
+"Mercy, no!"
+
+"Is he rich?"
+
+"No. Money should not matter when your heart is involved."
+
+As this thought was in accord with her own, Florence nodded her head
+sagely.
+
+"It's nothing serious. Just a fancy. I shall never marry again. Men
+are gay deceivers; they always have been and always will be. Perhaps
+I'm a bit wicked; but I rather like to prove my theory that all men are
+weak. If I had a daughter I'd rather have her be an old man's darling
+than a young man's drudge. I distrust every man I know. I came to ask
+you and Susan to go to the opera with me to-night. You will come to my
+apartments first. You will come?"
+
+"To be sure we will!"
+
+"Simple little fool!" thought the Russian on the way home. "She shall
+see."
+
+"I believe the countess is engaged to be married," said Florence to
+Jones.
+
+"Indeed, miss?"
+
+"Yes. I couldn't get anything definite out of her, but she had a
+beautiful ring on her finger. She wants Susan and me to go to the
+opera with her to-night. Will that be all right?"
+
+Jones gazed abstractedly at the rug. Whenever a problem bothered him
+he seemed to find the solution in the delicate patterns of the Persian
+rugs. Finally he nodded. "I see no reason why you should not go.
+Only, watch out."
+
+"Jones, there is one thing that will make me brave and happy. Will you
+tell me if you are in direct communication with my father?"
+
+"Yes, Miss Florence," he answered promptly. "But do not breathe this
+to a single soul, neither Susan nor Norton."
+
+"I promise that. But, ah! hasten the day when he can come to me
+without fear."
+
+"That is my wish also."
+
+"You need not call me miss. Why should you?"
+
+"It might not be wise to have any one hear me call you thus
+familiarly," he objected gravely.
+
+"Please yourself about that. Now I must telephone Jim."
+
+"Jim?" the butler murmured.
+
+He caught the word which was not intended for his ears. But for once
+Jones had been startled out of himself.
+
+"Is it wrong for me to call Mr. Norton Jim?" she asked with a bit of
+banter.
+
+"It is not considered quite the proper thing, Miss Florence, to call a
+young man by his first name unless you are engaged to marry him, or
+grew up with him from childhood."
+
+"Well, supposing I were engaged to him?" haughtily.
+
+"That would be a very grave affair. What have you to prove that he may
+not wish to marry you for your money?"
+
+"Why, Jones, you know that I haven't a penny in the world I can call my
+own! There is nothing to prove, except your word, that I am Stanley
+Hargreave's daughter."
+
+"No, there is nothing to prove that you are his daughter. But hasn't
+it ever occurred to you that there might be a purpose back of this?
+Might it not be of inestimable value that your father's enemies should
+be left in doubt? Might it not be a means of holding them on the
+leash? There is proof, ample proof, my child; and when the time comes
+these will be shown you. But meantime put all thought of marrying Mr.
+Norton out of your mind."
+
+"That I refuse to do," quietly. "I am at least mistress of my heart;
+and no one shall dictate to me whom I shall or shall not marry. I love
+Mr. Norton and he loves me, knowing that I may not be an heiress after
+all. And some day I shall marry him."
+
+Jones bowed. This seemed to appear final to him, and nothing more was
+to be said.
+
+Norton did not return to his rooms till seven. He found the telephone
+call and also a note in a handwriting unfamiliar. He tore off the
+envelope and found! the contents to be from the Countess Perigoff.
+
+"Call at eight to-night," he read. "I have an important news story for
+you. Tell no one, as I can not be involved in the case. Cordially,
+Olga, Countess Perigoff."
+
+Humph! Norton twiddled the note in his fingers and at length rolled it
+into a ball and threw it into the waste-basket. He, too, made a
+mistake; he should have kept that note. He dressed, dined, and hurried
+off to the apartments of the countess.
+
+He arrived ten minutes before Florence and Susan.
+
+And Jones did some rapid telephoning.
+
+"How long, how long!" the butler murmured. How long would this strange
+combat last? The strain was terrible. He slept but little during the
+nights, for his ears were always waiting for sounds. He had cast the
+chest into the sea, and it would take a dozen expert divers to locate
+it. And now, atop of all these worries, the child must fall in love
+with the first comer! It was heart-breaking. Norton, so far as he had
+learned, was cool and brave, honest and reliable in a pinch; but as the
+husband of Stanley Hargreave's daughter, that was altogether a
+different matter. And he must devise some means of putting a stop to
+it, but---
+
+But he was saved that trouble.
+
+Mongoose and cobra, that was the game being played; the cunning of the
+one against the deadly venom of the other. If he forced matters he
+would only lay himself open to the strike of the snake. He must have
+patience. Gradually they were breaking the organization, lopping off a
+branch here and there, but the peace of the future depended upon
+getting a grip on the spine of the cobra himself.
+
+The trick was simple. The countess had news; trust her for that. She
+exhibited a cablegram, dated at Gibraltar, in which the British
+authorities stated definitely that no such a person as William Orts,
+aviator, had arrived at Gibraltar. And then, as Norton rose, she rose
+also and gently precipitated herself into his arms, just at the moment
+when Florence appeared in the doorway.
+
+Very simple, indeed. When a woman falls toward a man there is nothing
+for him to do but extend his arms to prevent her from falling.
+Outwardly, however, to the eye which saw only the picture and
+comprehended not the cause, it had all the hallmarks of an affectionate
+embrace.
+
+Florence stood perfectly still for a moment, then turned away.
+
+"I beg your pardon," said the countess, "but a sudden fainting spell
+seized me. My heart is a bit weak."
+
+"Don't mention it," replied the gallant Norton. He was as innocent as
+a babe as to what had really taken place.
+
+Florence went back home. She wrote a brief note to Norton and inclosed
+the ring which she had secretly worn attached to a little chain around
+her neck.
+
+When Norton came the next day she refused to see him. It was all over.
+She never wished to see him again.
+
+"He says there has been some cruel mistake," said Jones.
+
+"I saw him with the countess in his arms. I do not see any cruel
+mistake in that. I saw him. Tell him so. And add that I never wish
+to see him again."
+
+Then she ran swiftly to her room, where she broke down and cried
+bitterly and would not be comforted by Susan.
+
+"In heaven's name, what has happened?" demanded the frantic lover,
+"what has happened?"
+
+The comedy of the whole affair lay in the fact that neither of the two
+suspected the countess, who consoled them both.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+So far as Jones was concerned, he was rather pleased with the turn of
+affairs. This was no time for love-making; no time for silly,
+innocuous quarrels and bickerings, in which love must indulge or die.
+Florence no longer rode horseback, and Norton returned to his
+accustomed haunts, where no one made the slightest attempt upon his
+life. In his present state of mind he would have welcomed it.
+
+"What's the matter with Jim?" asked the night city editor, raising his
+eye shade.
+
+"I don't know," answered the copy reader.
+
+"Goes around as if he'd been eating dope; bumped into the boss a while
+ago and never stopped to apologize."
+
+"Perhaps he's mapping out the front page for that Hargreave stuff,"
+laughed the copy reader. "Between you and me and the gate post, I
+don't believe there ever was a man by the name of Hargreave."
+
+"Oh, there was a chap by that name, all right. He's dead. A man can't
+swim three hundred miles in rough water, life-buoy or no. They ought
+to have funeral services, and let it go at that."
+
+"But what was the reason for that fake cable from Gibraltar saying that
+Orts was alive? I don't see any sense in that."
+
+"The man who pulled it off did. I think, for my part, that both Orts
+and Hargreave are dead, and that the man picked up by the tramp steamer
+_Orient_ was riding some other balloon."
+
+"You're wrong there. The description of it proved that it was Orts'
+machine. Oh, Jim probably has got a man's-size yarn up his sleeve, but
+he's a long time in delivering the goods. He's beginning to mope a
+good deal. Woman back of it somewhere. Haven't held down this copy
+job for twelve years without being able to make some tolerable guesses.
+Jim's a star man. When he gets started nothing can stop him. He
+covered the Chinese Boxer rebellion better than any other correspondent
+there. I wonder how old he is?"
+
+"Oh, I should say about thirty-one or two. Here he comes now. 'Lo,
+Jim!"
+
+"Hello! Where's Ford? He gave me a ticket to the theater to-night,
+and I want to punch his head. What's drama coming to, anyhow?
+Cigarettes and booze and mismated couples. Can't they find good enough
+things out of doors? Oh, I know. They cater to a lot of fools who
+believe that what they see is an expression of high life in New York
+and London. And it's rot, plain rot. It's merely the scum of the
+boiling pot. Any old housewife would skim it off and chuck it into the
+slops. Life? Piffle!"
+
+"What's the grouch?"
+
+"Looking for the dramatic job?"
+
+"No. I've just been wondering how far these theatrical managers can go
+without slitting the golden goose."
+
+Norton sought his desk and began rummaging the drawers. He was not
+hunting for anything; he was merely passing away the time. By and by,
+when the time no longer served, he pulled his chair over to the window
+and sat down, staring at stars such as Copernicus never dreamed of.
+Ships going down to sea, ferries swooping diagonally hither and
+thither, the clockwork signs; but he took no note of these marvels of
+light.
+
+"Not at home!" he muttered.
+
+He had called, written, telephoned. No use. The door remained shut,
+Jones answered the telephone, and the letters came back. He began to
+think very deeply concerning the Perigoff woman. Had she played a
+trick? Had that fainting spell been buncombe for his benefit as well
+as Florence's? But he had not a shadow of a proof. The thing that
+puzzled him equally with this was that all attempts against his life
+had miraculously ceased; no safes thundered down in front of him, and
+no autos tried to carve him in two. The only thing that kept him
+active was the daily call of Jones by wire. Miss Florence was well;
+that was all Jones was permitted to say.
+
+Restlessly Norton spurned his chair and walked over to the telephone
+booth. It was midnight. He might or might not be able to get Jones.
+But almost instantly a voice said, "What is it?"
+
+"Jones?"
+
+"Yes. Who is it?"
+
+"Norton."
+
+"Why, you called me up not ten minutes ago."
+
+"Not I!"
+
+"It was your voice, as plain as day."
+
+"What did I want?" keen all at once.
+
+The reply did not come immediately. "You are certain it was not you?"
+
+"Wait a moment and I'll call the editor. He will prove to you that
+I've been here for an hour, and that this is the first call I've made.
+Some one has been imposing on you. What did they ask you to do?"
+
+"You asked me to come down to the office at once, and I requested you
+to come to the house, and you said you could not. I declined to stir."
+
+"What did you think?"
+
+"Exactly what you're thinking--that they have come to life again."
+
+"Jones, is Miss Florence awake?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Do you think there is any hope of having her understand what really
+happened?"
+
+"I am only here to guard her. I can not undertake to read her
+thoughts."
+
+"You're not quite in favor of a reconciliation?"
+
+"Oh, yes, if it went no further. Young people are young people the
+world over."
+
+"What does that mean?"
+
+"That they would not create imaginary heartaches if they were not
+young. Better let things remain exactly as they are. When all these
+troubles are settled finally, the lesser trouble may be talked over
+sensibly. But this is not the time. There is no news. Good night."
+
+Norton returned to his chair, gloomier than ever. With his feet upon
+the window sill he stared and stared and dreamed and dreamed till a
+hand fell upon his shoulder. It belonged to one of the office boys.
+
+"Note f'r you, sir."
+
+Norton read it and tore it into little pieces. Then he rose and
+distributed the pieces in the several yawning waste baskets which
+strewed the aisle leading to the city desk.
+
+"I'm not wanted for anything?" he asked.
+
+"No. Clear out!" laughed the night city editor. "The sight of you is
+putting everybody in the gloom ward."
+
+Norton went down to the street. At the left of the entrance he was
+quietly joined by a man whose arm was carried in a sling. He motioned
+Norton to get into the taxicab. They were dropped in a deserted spot
+in Riverdale. On foot they went forward to their destination, which
+proved to be the deserted hangar of the aviator, William Orts.
+
+"I want you to tell Jones that a tub and several divers are at work on
+the spot where he threw the chest. That's all. Now, doctor, rewind
+this arm of mine."
+
+The amateur surgeon made a very good job of it; not for nothing had he
+followed fighting armies to the front.
+
+"Did they find anything?"
+
+"Not up to date. But we might if we cared to. They have left a buoy
+over the spot they're exploring. But just now it floats a quarter of a
+mile to the east of the spot."
+
+"Who were the men in the motor boat that chased Jones?"
+
+"Only Jones can tell you. Queer old codger, eh?"
+
+"A bit stubborn. He wants to handle it without police assistance."
+
+"And he's right. We are not aiming to arrest any one," sinisterly.
+"There can't be any draw to this game. Here, no smoking. Too much gas
+afloat."
+
+Norton put the cigarettes back into his pocket. "What's the real
+news?" he demanded. "You would not bring me out here just to rebandage
+that arm. It really did not need it. Come, out with it."
+
+"You're sharp."
+
+"I'm paid to be sharp."
+
+"I've found where the Black Hundred hold their sessions."
+
+"By George, that's news!"
+
+"The room above is vacant. A little hole in the ceiling, and who knows
+what might happen?"
+
+"What do you want me to do?"
+
+"Tell Jones. When the next meeting comes around I'll advise you. I've
+stumbled upon a dissatisfied member. So, buck up, as they say. We've
+got two ends of the net down, and with a little care we'll have them
+all. Now let me have a hundred."
+
+Norton drew out a packet of bills and counted off five twenties.
+
+"Why don't you draw the cash yourself?"
+
+"It happens to be in your name, son."
+
+"I forgot," said Norton. "But what a chance for me! Nearly five
+thousand, all mine for a ticket to Algiers!"
+
+A grunt was the only reply.
+
+"I want you to tell me about the Perigoff woman."
+
+"I know only one thing--that Braine is there every night."
+
+"No!"
+
+"The orders are for you to play the game just as you are playing it.
+When we strike, it must be the last blow. All this hide-and-seek
+business may look foolish to you. It's like that Japanese game called
+'jo.' It looks simple, but chess is a tyro's game beside it. Can you
+find your way back all right?"
+
+"I can."
+
+"Well, you'd better be going. That's all the light I have, in this
+torch here. Got a lot to do to-morrow and need sleep."
+
+Norton stole away with great caution. His first intention was to
+proceed straight to the city, but despite his resolution he found
+himself within a quarter of an hour gazing up at the windows of the
+Hargreave house. "Not at home!"
+
+Quite unconscious of the fact, he was as close to death as any mortal
+man might care to be. The policeman suddenly looming up under the arc
+lamp proved to be his savior.
+
+
+The lull made Jones doubly alert. He was positive that they were
+preparing to strike again. But from what direction and in what manner?
+He had not met the gift of clairvoyance so he had to wait; and waiting
+is a terrible game when perhaps death is balancing the scales. It is
+always easier to make an assault than to await it; and it is a good
+general who always finds himself prepared.
+
+But it made his heart ache to watch the child. She went about
+cheerfully--when any one was in the room with her. Many a time,
+however, he had stolen to the door of her bedroom and heard the
+heart-rending sobs, a vain attempt being made to stifle them among the
+pillows. She was only eighteen; it was first love; and first loves are
+pale, evanescent attachments. It hurt now; but she would get over it
+presently. Youth forgets. Time, like water, smooths away the ragged
+places.
+
+The countess called regularly. She was, of course, dreadfully sorry
+over what had happened. She had heard something about his character;
+newspaper men weren't always the best. This one was a mere fortune
+hunter; a two-faced one, at that. She was never more surprised in her
+life than when he threw his arms around her. And so on, and so forth,
+half lies and half truths, till the patient Jones felt like wringing
+her neck.
+
+From his vantage point the butler smiled ironically. He could read the
+heart of the Perigoff woman as he could read the page of a book. The
+effrontery! And all the while he must gravely admit her and pretend
+when the blood rioted in his veins at the sight of her. But he dared
+not swerve a single inch from the plans laid down. It was a cup of
+bitter gall, and there was no way of avoiding the putting of it to his
+lips. She emanated poison as nightshade emanates it, the upas tree.
+And he must bow when she entered and bow when she left! Still, she had
+done him an indirect favor in breaking up this love business.
+
+One afternoon Braine summoned his runabout and called up two
+physicians. When he was ushered into the deserted office of the first
+he sent his card in. The doctor replied in person. His face was pale
+and his hands shook.
+
+"Good afternoon," said Braine, smiling affably.
+
+The doctor eyed him like a man hypnotized. "You ... you wished to see
+me on some particular business?"
+
+"Very particular," dryly. "My car is outside. Will you be so good as
+to accompany me?"
+
+The doctor slowly went into the hall for his hat and coat. He left the
+house and got into the car with never a word of protest.
+
+"Thinking?" said Braine.
+
+"I am always thinking whenever I see your evil face. What devilment do
+you require of me this time?"
+
+"A mere stroke of the pen."
+
+"Where are we going?"
+
+"To call on another physician of your standing," significantly. "It is
+a great thing to have friends like you two. Always ready to serve us,
+for the mere love of it."
+
+"There's no need of using that kind of talk to me. You have me in the
+hollow of your hand. Why should I bother to deny it? I have broken
+the law. I broke it because I was starving."
+
+"It is better to starve in freedom than to eat fat joints up the river.
+To-day it is a question of sanity."
+
+"And you want me to assist in signing away the liberty of some person
+who is perfectly sane?"
+
+"The nail on the head," urbanely.
+
+"You're a fine scoundrel!"
+
+"Not so loud!" warningly.
+
+"As loud as I please. I am not forgetting that you need me. I'm no
+coward. I recognize that you hold the whip hand. But you can send me
+to the chair before I'll crawl to you. Now, leave me alone for a
+while."
+
+The other physician had no such qualms of conscience. He was ready at
+all times for the generous emoluments which accrued from his dealings
+with the man Braine.
+
+The Countess Perigoff was indisposed; so it was quite in the order of
+things that she should summon physicians.
+
+There is a law in the state of New York--just or unjust, whichever you
+please--that reads that any person may be adjudged insane if the
+signatures of two registered physicians are affixed to the document.
+It does not say that these physicians shall have been proved reputable.
+
+There were, besides the physicians, a motherly looking woman and a man
+of benign countenance. Their faces were valuable assets. To gain
+another person's confidence is, perhaps, among the greatest human
+achievements. A confidence man and woman in the real sense of the
+word. In your mind's eye you could see this man carrying the
+contribution plate down the aisle on Sunday mornings, and his wife Kate
+putting her mite on the plate for the benefit of some poor, untidy
+Hottentot.
+
+On Tuesday of the following week Florence and Susan went shopping. The
+chauffeur was a strong young fellow whom Jones relied upon. If you pay
+a man well and hold out fine promises, you generally can trust him. As
+their car left the corner another followed leisurely. This second
+automobile contained Thomas Wendt and his wife Kate. The two young
+women stopped at the great dry goods shop near the public library, and
+for the time being naturally forgot everything but the marvels which
+had come from all parts of the world. It is as natural for a woman to
+buy as it is for a man to sell.
+
+In some manner or other Florence became separated from Susan. She
+hunted through aisle after aisle, but could not find her; for the
+simple reason that Susan was hunting for her. It occurred to the girl
+that Susan might have wisely concluded the best place to wait would be
+in the taxicab. And so Florence hurried out into the street, into the
+arms of the Wendt family, who were patiently awaiting her.
+
+The trusted chauffeur had been sent around to the side entrance by the
+major domo. The young lady had so requested, so he said.
+
+Florence struggled and called for the policeman, who came running up,
+followed by the usual idle, curious crowd.
+
+"The poor young woman is insane," said the motherly Kate, tears in her
+eyes. The benign Thomas looked at heaven. "We are her keepers."
+
+"It is not true," cried Florence desperately.
+
+"She has the hallucination that she is the daughter of the millionaire
+Stanley Hargreave." And Thomas exhibited his document, which was
+perfectly legal, so far as appearances went.
+
+"Hurry up and get her off the walk. I can't have the crowd growing any
+larger," said the policeman, convinced.
+
+So, despite her cries and protestations, Florence was hustled into the
+automobile, even the policeman lending a hand.
+
+"Poor young thing!" he said to the crowd. "Come now, move on. I can't
+have the walk blocked up. Get a gait on you."
+
+He was congratulating himself upon the orderliness of the affair when a
+keen-eyed young man in the garb of a chauffeur touched his shoulder.
+
+"What's this I hear about an insane young woman?" he demanded.
+
+"She was insane, all right. They had papers to prove it. She kept
+crying that she was Stanley Hargreave's daughter."
+
+"My God!" The young man struck his forehead in despair. "You ass, she
+was Stanley Hargreave's daughter, and they've kidnaped her right under
+your nose! What was the number of that car?"
+
+"Cut out that line of talk, young fellah; I know my business. They had
+the proper documents."
+
+"But you hadn't brains enough to inquire whether they were genuine or
+not! You wait!" shrilled the chauffeur. "I'll have you broken for
+this work." He wheeled and ran back to his car, to find Susan and the
+countess in a great state of agitation. "They got her, they got her!
+And I swore on the book that they never should, so long as I drove the
+car."
+
+[Illustration: FLORENCE WAS PERMITTED TO WANDER ABOUT THE SHIP AS SHE
+PLEASED]
+
+Susan wept, and the countess tried in vain to console her.
+
+And when Jones was informed he frightened even the countess with the
+snarl of rage which burned across his lips. He tore into the hall,
+seized his hat, and was gone. Not a word of reproach did he offer to
+the chauffeur. He understood that no one is infallible. He found the
+blundering policeman, who now realized that he stood in for a whiff of
+the commissioner's carpet. All he could do was to give a good
+description of the man and woman. Word was sent broadcast through the
+city. The police had to be informed this time.
+
+Late in the day an officer whose beat included the ferry landing at
+Hoboken said he had seen the three. Everything had looked all right to
+him. It was the motherly face of the one and the benign countenance of
+the other that had blinded him.
+
+At midnight Jones, haggard and with the air of one beaten, returned
+home.
+
+"No wireless yet?" asked Norton.
+
+"The _George Washington_ of the North German Lloyd does not answer.
+Something has happened to her wires; tampered with, possibly."
+
+"So long as we know they are at sea, we can remedy the evil. They will
+not be able to land at a single port. I have sent ten cables. They
+can't get away from the wire. If I could only get hold of the names of
+those damnable doctors who signed that document! Twenty years."
+
+Jones bent his head in his hands, and Norton tramped the floor till the
+sound of his footsteps threatened to drive the moaning Susan into
+hysterics.
+
+"It is only a matter of a few days."
+
+"But can the child stand the terrors?" questioned Jones. "Who knows
+that they may not really drive her insane?"
+
+On board the _George Washington_ every one felt extremely sorry for
+this beautiful girl. It was a frightful misfortune to be so stricken
+at her age.
+
+"She is certainly insane," said one of the passengers, who had known
+Hargreave slightly through some banking business. "Hargreave wasn't
+married. He lived alone."
+
+After the second day out Florence was permitted to wander about the
+ship as she pleased.
+
+A good many of the passengers were mightily worried when they learned
+that the wireless had in some mysterious way been tampered with after
+the boat had made the open sea. It was impossible to put about. The
+apparatus must be fixed at sea.
+
+[Illustration: EVERYONE FELT EXTREMELY SORRY FOR THIS BEAUTIFUL GIRL]
+
+And when finally Norton's wireless caught the wires of the _George
+Washington_ he was gravely informed that the young lady referred to had
+leaped the rail off the banks at night and had been drowned. She had
+not been missed till the following morning.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+It was perfectly true that Florence had cast herself into the sea. It
+had not been an act of despair, however. On the contrary, hope and
+courage had prompted her to leap. The night was clear, with only a
+moderate sea running. At the time the great ship was passing the
+banks, and almost within hail, she saw a fishing schooner riding
+gracefully at anchor. She quite readily believed that if she remained
+on board the _George Washington_ she was lost. She naturally forgot
+the marvel of wireless telegraphy. No longer may a man hide at sea.
+
+So, with that quick thought which was a part of her inheritance, she
+seized the life buoy, climbed the rail and leaped far out. As the
+great, dark, tossing sea swooped up to meet her she noted a block of
+wood bobbing up and down. She tried to avoid it, but could not, and
+struck it head on. Despite the blow and the shock of the chill water
+she instinctively clung to the buoy. The wash from the mighty
+propellers tossed her about, hither and yon, from one swirl to another,
+like a chip of wood. Then everything grew blank.
+
+Fortunately for her the master of the fishing schooner was at the time
+standing on his quarterdeck by the wheel, squinting through his glass
+at the liner and envying the ease and comfort of those on board her.
+The mate, sitting on the steps and smoking his turning-in pipe, saw the
+master lean forward suddenly, lower the glass, then raise it again.
+
+"Lord A'mighty!"
+
+"What's the matter, Cap'n?"
+
+"Jake, in God's name, come 'ere an' take a peek through this glass.
+I'm dreamin'!"
+
+The mate jumped and took the glass. "Where away, sir?"
+
+"A p'int off th' sta'board bow. See somethin' white bobbin' up?"
+
+"Yessir! Looks like some one dropped a bolster 'r a piller
+overboard.... Cod's whiskers!" he broke off.
+
+"Then I ain't really seein' things," cried the master. "Hi, y'
+lubbers," he yelled to the crew; "lower th' dory. They's a woman in
+th' water out there. I seen her leap th' rail. Look alive! Sharp's
+th' word! Mate, you go 'long."
+
+The crew dropped their tasks and sprang for the davits, and the
+starboard dory was lowered in ship shape style.
+
+It takes a good bit of seamanship to haul a body out of the sea, into a
+dancing, bobtailed dory, when one moment it is climbing frantically
+heavenward and the next heading for the bottomless pit. They were very
+tender with her. They laid her out in the bottom of the boat, with the
+life buoy as a pillow, and pulled energetically for the schooner. She
+was alive, because she breathed; but she did not stir so much as an
+eyelid. It was a stiff bit of work, too, to land her aboard without
+adding to her injuries. The master ordered the men to put her in his
+own bunk, where he nearly strangled her by forcing raw brandy down her
+throat.
+
+"Well, she's alive, anyhow."
+
+[Illustration: FLORENCE STEALS OUT IN THE NIGHT TO JUMP OVERBOARD]
+
+When Florence finally opened her eyes the gray of dawn lay upon the
+sea, dotted here and there by the schooners of the fleet, which seemed
+to be hanging in midair, as at the moment there was visible to the eye
+no horizon.
+
+"Don't seem t' recognize nothin'."
+
+"Mebbe she's got a fever," suggested the mate, rubbing his bristly chin.
+
+"Fever nothin'! Not after bein' in th' water half an hour. Mebbe she
+hit one o' them wooden floats we left. Them dinged liners keep on
+crowdin' us," growled Barnes, with a fisherman's hate for the floating
+hotels. "Went by without a toot. See 'er, jes' like the banker's wife
+goin' t' church on Sunday? A mile a minute; fog or no fog, it's all
+the same t' them. They run us down and never stop. What th' tarnation
+we goin' to do? She'll haff t' stay aboard till th' run is over. I
+can't afford t' yank up my mudhook this time o' day."
+
+"Guess she can stand three 'r four days in our company, smellin'
+oilcloths, fish, kerosene, an' punk t'bacco."
+
+"If y' don't like th' kind o' t'bacco I buy buy your own. I ain't
+objectin' none."
+
+The mate stepped over to the bunk and gingerly ran his hand over the
+girl's head. "Cod's whiskers, Cap'n, they's a bump as big's a cork on
+th' back o' her head! She's struck one o' them floats all right.
+Where's the arnica?"
+
+Barnes turned to his locker and rummaged about, finally producing an
+ancient bottle and some passably clean cloth used frequently for
+bandages. Sometimes a man grew careless with his knife or got in the
+way of a pulley block. With blundering kindness the two men bound up
+the girl's head, and then went about their duties.
+
+For three days Florence evinced not the slightest inclination to leave
+the bunk. She lay on her back either asleep or with her eyes staring
+at the beams above her head. She ate just enough to keep her alive;
+and the strong black coffee did nothing more than to make her wakeful.
+No one knew what the matter was. There was the bump, now diminished;
+but that it should leave her in this comatose state vastly puzzled the
+men. The truth is she had suffered a slight concussion of the brain,
+and this, atop of all the worry she had had for the last few weeks, was
+sufficient to cause this blankness of the mind.
+
+The final cod was cleaned and packed away in salt, the mudhook raised,
+and the schooner _Betty_ set her sails for the southwest. Barnes
+realized that to save the girl she must have a doctor who knew his
+business. Mrs. Barnes would know how to care for the girl, once she
+knew what the trouble was. There would be some news in the papers. A
+young and beautiful woman did not jump from a big Atlantic liner
+without the newspapers getting hold of the facts.
+
+[Illustration: "A YOUNG AND BEAUTIFUL WOMAN DID NOT JUMP FROM A BIG
+ATLANTIC LINER WITHOUT THE NEWSPAPERS GETTING HOLD OF THE FACTS"]
+
+A fair wind carried the _Betty_ into her haven, and shortly after
+Florence was sleeping peacefully in a feather bed, ancient, it is true,
+but none the less soft and inviting. In all this time she had not
+spoken a single word.
+
+"The poor young thing!" murmured the motherly Mrs. Barnes. "What
+beautiful hair! Oh, John, I wish you would give up the sea. I hate
+it. It is terrible. I am always watching you in my mind's eye, in
+calm weather, in storms. Pieces of wrecks come ashore, and I always
+wonder over the death and terror back of them."
+
+"Don't y' worry none about me, Betty. I never take no chances. Now
+I'm goin' int' th' village an' bring back th' sawbones. He'll tell us
+what t' do."
+
+The village doctor shook his grizzled head gravely.
+
+"She's been hurt and shocked at the same time. It will be many days
+before she comes around to herself. Just let her do as she pleases.
+Only keep an eye on her so that she doesn't wander off and get lost.
+I'll watch the newspapers and if I come across anything which bears
+upon the case I'll notify you."
+
+But he searched the newspapers in vain, for the simple fact that he did
+not think to glance over the old ones.
+
+The village took a good deal of interest in the affair. They gossiped
+about it and strolled out to the Barnes' cottage to satisfy their
+curiosity. One thing was certain to their simple minds: some day
+Barnes would get a great sum of money for his kindness. They had read
+about such things in the family story paper. She was a rich man's
+daughter; the ring on the unknown's finger would have fitted out a
+fleet.
+
+Florence was soon able to walk about. Ordinary conversation she seemed
+to understand; but whenever the past was broached she would shake her
+head with frowning eyes. Her main diversion consisted of sitting on
+the sand dunes and gazing out at sea.
+
+One day a stranger came to town. He said he represented a life
+insurance company and was up here from Boston to take a little
+vacation. He sat on the hotel porch that evening surrounded by an
+admiring audience. The stranger had been all over the world, so it
+seemed. He spoke familiarly of St. Petersburg, Vladivostok, Shanghai,
+as the villagers--some of them--might have spoken of Boston.
+
+There were one or two old-timers among the audience. They had been to
+all these parts. The stranger knew what he was telling about. After
+telling of his many voyages he asked if there was a good bathing beach
+near by. He was told that he would find the most suitable spot near
+Captain Barnes' cottage just outside the village.
+
+"An' say, Mister, seen anythin' in th' papers about a missin' young
+woman?" asked some one.
+
+"Missing young woman? What's that?"
+
+The man told the story of Florence's leap into the sea and her
+subsequent arrival at the cape.
+
+"That's funny," said the stranger. "I don't recollect reading about
+any young woman being lost at sea. But those big liners are always
+keeping such things under cover. Hoodoos the ship, they say, and turns
+prospective passengers to other lines. It hurts business. What's the
+young girl look like?"
+
+Florence was described minutely. The stranger teetered in his chair
+and smoked. Finally he spoke.
+
+"She probably was insane. That's the way generally with insane people.
+They can't see water or look off a tall building without wanting to
+jump. My business is insurance, and we've got the thing figured pretty
+close to the ground. They used to get the best of us on the suicide
+game. A man would take out a large policy to-day and to-morrow he'd
+blow his head off, and we'd have to pay his wife. But nowadays a
+policy is not worth the paper it's written on if a man commits suicide
+under two years."
+
+"You ain't tryin' to insure anybody in town, are you?"
+
+"Oh, no. No work for me when I'm on my vacation. Well, I'm going to
+bed; and to-morrow morning I'll go out to Captain Barnes' beach and
+have a good swim. I'm no sailor, but I like water."
+
+[Illustration: "THE POOR YOUNG THING," MURMURED THE MOTHERLY MRS.
+BARNES]
+
+He honestly enjoyed swimming. Early the next morning he was in the
+water, frolicking about as playfully as a boy. He had all the time in
+the world. Over his shoulder he saw two women wandering down toward
+the beach. Deeper he went, farther out. He was a bold swimmer, but
+that did not prevent a sudden and violent attack of cramps. And it was
+a rare piece of irony that the poor girl should save the life of that
+scoundrel who was without pity or mercy. As she saw his face a
+startled frown marred her brow. But she could not figure out the
+puzzle. Had she ever seen the man before? She did not know, she could
+not tell. Why could not she remember? Why must her poor head ache so
+when she tried to pierce the wall of darkness which surrounded her
+mentally?
+
+The man thanked her feebly, but not in his heart. When he had
+sufficiently recovered he returned to the village and sought the
+railway station, where the Western Union had its office.
+
+"I want to send a code message to my firm. Do you think you can follow
+it?"
+
+"I can try," said the operator.
+
+The code was really Slav; and when the long message was signed it was
+signed by the name Vroon.
+
+The day after the news came that Florence had jumped overboard off the
+banks, Vroon with a dozen other men had started out to comb all the
+fishing villages along the New England coast. Somewhere along the way
+he felt confident that he would learn whether the girl was dead or
+alive. If she was dead then the game was a draw, but if she was alive
+there was still a fighting chance for the Black Hundred. He had had
+some idea of remaining in the village and accomplishing the work
+himself; but after deliberation he concluded that it was important
+enough for Braine himself to take a hand in. So the following night he
+departed for Boston, from there to New York. He proceeded at once to
+the apartment of the countess, where Braine declared that he himself
+would go to the obscure village and claim Florence as his own child.
+But to insure absolute success they would charter Morse's yacht and
+steam right up into the primitive harbor.
+
+When Vroon left the apartment Norton saw him. He was a man of
+impulses, and he had found by experience that first impulses are
+generally the best. He did not know who Vroon was. Any man who called
+on the Countess Perigoff while Braine was with her would be worth
+following.
+
+On the other hand, Vroon recognized the reporter instantly and with
+that ever-ready and alert mind of his set about to lure the young man
+into a trap out of which he might not easily come.
+
+Norton decided to follow his man. He might be going on a wild-goose
+chase, he reasoned; still his first impulses had hitherto served him
+well. He looked care-worn. He was convinced that Florence was dead,
+despite the assertions of Jones to the contrary. He had gone over all
+the mishaps which had taken place and he was now absolutely convinced
+that his whilom friend Braine and the Countess Perigoff were directly
+concerned. Florence had either been going to or coming from the
+apartment. And that memorable day of the abduction the countess had
+been in the dry goods shop.
+
+Vroon took a down-town surface car, and Norton took the same. He sat
+huddled in a corner, never suspecting that Vroon was watching him from
+a corner of his eye. Norton was not keen to-day. The thought of
+Florence kept running through his head.
+
+The car stopped and Vroon got off. He led Norton a winding course
+which at length ended at the door of a tenement building. Vroon
+entered. Norton paused wondering what next to do, now that his man had
+reached his destination. Well, since he had followed him all this
+distance he must make an effort to find out who he was and what he was
+going to do. Cautiously he entered the hallway. As he was about to
+lay his hand on the newel post of the dilapidated stairs the floor
+dropped from under his feet and he was precipitated into the cellar.
+
+This tenement belonged to the Black Hundred; it concealed a thousand
+doors and a hundred traps. Its history was as dark as its hallways.
+
+When Vroon and his companion, who had been waiting for him, descended
+into the cellar they found the reporter insensible. They bound,
+blindfolded, and gagged him.
+
+"Saunders," said Vroon, "you tell Corrigan that I've a sailor for him
+to-night, and that I want this sailor booked for somewhere south of the
+equator. Tell him to say to the master that this fellow is ugly and
+disobedient. A tramp freighter, whose captain is a bully. Do you
+understand me?"
+
+"I get you. But there's no need to go to Corrigan this trip. Bannock
+is in port and sails to-night for Norway. That's far enough."
+
+"Bannock? The very man. Well, Mr. Norton, reporter and amateur
+detective, I guess we've got you fast enough this time. You may or may
+not come back alive. Go and bring around a taxi; some one you can
+trust. I'll dope the reporter while you're gone."
+
+Long hours afterward Norton opened his aching eyes. He could hardly
+move and his head buzzed abominably. What had happened? What was the
+meaning of this slow rise and fall of his bed? Shanghaied?
+
+"Come out o' that now, ye skulker!" roared a voice down the
+companionway.
+
+[Illustration: "COME OUT O' THAT NOW"]
+
+"Shanghaied!" the reporter murmured. He sat up and ran through his
+pockets. Not a sou-markee, not a match even; and a second glance told
+him that the clothes he wore were not his own. "They've landed me this
+time. Shanghaied! What the devil am I going to do?"
+
+"D'ye hear me?" bawled the strident voice again.
+
+Norton looked about desperately for some weapon of defense. He saw an
+engineer's spanner on the floor by the bunk across the way, and with no
+small physical effort he succeeded in obtaining it. He stood up, his
+hand behind his back.
+
+"All right, me bucko! I'll come down an' git ye!"
+
+A pair of enormous boots began to appear down the companionway, and
+there gradually rose up from them a man as wide as a church door and as
+deep as a well.
+
+"Wait a moment," said Norton, gripping the spanner. "Let us have a
+perfect understanding right off the bat."
+
+"We're going to have it, matey. Don't ye worry none."
+
+Norton raised the spanner, and, dizzy as he was, faced this seafaring
+Hercules courageously.
+
+"I've been shanghaied, and you know it. Where are we bound?"
+
+"Copenhagen."
+
+"Well, for a month or more you'll beat me up whenever the opportunity
+offers. But I merely wish to warn you that if you do you'll find a
+heap of trouble waiting for you the next time you drop your mudhook in
+North America."
+
+"Is that so?" said the giant, eying the spanner and the shaking hand
+that held it aloft.
+
+"It is. I'll take your orders and do the best I can, because you've
+got the upper hand. But, God is witness, you'll pay for every needless
+blow you strike. Now what do you want me to do?"
+
+"Lay down that spanner an' come on deck, I'll tell ye what t' do. I
+was goin' t' whale th' daylights out o' ye; but ye're somethin' av a
+man. Drop the spanner first."
+
+Norton hesitated. As lithe as a tiger the bulk of a man sprang at him
+and crushed him to the floor, wrenching away the spanner. Then the
+giant took Norton by the scruff of his neck and banged him up the steps
+to the deck.
+
+"I ain't goin' t' hurt ye. I had t' show ye that no spanner ever
+bothered Mike Bannock. Now, d' know what a cook's galley is?"
+
+[Illustration: "I AIN'T GOIN' T' HURT YE"]
+
+"I do," said Norton, breathing hard.
+
+"Well, hike there an' start in with peelin' spuds, an' don't waste 'em
+neither. That'll be all fer th' present. Ye were due for a wallopin'
+but I kinda like yer spunk."
+
+So Jim stumbled down to the cook's galley and grimly set to work at the
+potatoes. It might have been far worse. But here he was, likely to be
+on the high seas for months, and no way of notifying Jones what had
+happened. The outlook was anything but cheerful. But a vague hope
+awoke in his heart. If they were still after him might it not signify
+that Florence lived.
+
+Meantime Braine had not been idle. According to Vroon the girl's
+memory was in bad shape; so he had not the least doubt of bringing her
+back to New York without mishap. Once he had her there the game would
+begin in earnest. He played his cards exceedingly well. Steaming up
+into the little fishing harbor with a handsome yacht in itself would
+allay any distrust. And he wore a capital disguise, too. Everything
+went well till he laid his hand on Florence's shoulder. She gave a
+startled cry and ran over to Barnes, clinging to him wildly.
+
+"No, no!" she cried.
+
+"Now what, my child?" asked the sailor.
+
+She shook her head. Her aversion was inexplicable.
+
+"Come, my dear; can't you see that it is your father?" Braine turned
+to the captain. "She has been like this for a year. Heaven knows if
+she'll ever be in her right mind again," sadly. "I was giving her an
+ocean voyage, with the kindest nurses possible, and yet she jumped
+overboard. Come, Florence."
+
+The girl wrapped her arms all the tighter around Barnes' neck.
+
+An idea came into the old sailor's head. "Of course, sir, ye've got
+proof thet she's your daughter?"
+
+"Proof?" Braine was taken aback.
+
+"Yes; somethin' t' prove that you're her father. I got skinned out of
+a sloop once because I took a man's word at its face value. Black an'
+white, an' on paper, says I, hereafter."
+
+"But I never thought of such a thing," protested Braine, beginning to
+lose his patience. "I can't risk sending to New York for documents.
+She is my daughter, and you will find it will not pay to take this
+peculiar stand."
+
+"In black an' white, 'r y' can't have her."
+
+Braine thereupon rushed forward to seize Florence. Barnes swung
+Florence behind him.
+
+"I guess she'll stay here a leetle longer, sir."
+
+Time was vital, and this obstinacy made Braine furious.
+
+He reached again for Florence.
+
+"Clear out o' here, 'r show your authority," growled Barnes.
+
+"She goes with me, or you'll regret it."
+
+"All right. But I guess th' law won't hurt me none. I'm in my rights.
+There's the door, mister."
+
+"I refuse to go without her!"
+
+Barnes sighed. He was on land a man of peace, but there was a limit to
+his patience. He seized Braine by the shoulders and hustled him out of
+the house.
+
+"Bring your proofs, mister, an' nothin' more'll be said; but till y'
+bring 'em, keep away from this cottage."
+
+And, simple-minded sailor that he was, he thought this settled the
+matter.
+
+That night he kept his ears open for unusual sounds, but he merely
+wasted his night's rest. Quite naturally, he reckoned that the
+stranger would make his attempt at night. Indeed, he made it in broad
+daylight, with Barnes not a hundred yards away, calking a dory whose
+seams had sprung a leak. Braine had Florence upon the chartered yacht
+before the old man realized what had happened. He never saw Florence
+again; but one day, months later, he read all about her in a newspaper.
+
+Florence fought; but she was weak, and so the conquest was easy.
+Braine was kind enough, now that he had her safe. He talked to her,
+but she merely stared at the receding coast.
+
+[Illustration: FLORENCE FOUGHT BUT SHE WAS WEAK AND SO THE CONQUEST WAS
+EASY]
+
+"All right; don't talk if you don't want to. Here," to one of the men,
+"take her to the cabin and keep her there. But don't you touch her.
+I'll break you if you do. Put her in the cabin and guard the door; at
+least keep an eye on it. She may take it into her head to jump
+overboard."
+
+Even the temporarily demented are not without a species of cunning.
+Florence had never seen Braine till he appeared at the Barnes cottage.
+Yet she revolted at the touch of his hand. On the second day out
+toward New York she found a box of matches and blithely set fire to her
+cabin, walked out into the corridor and thence to the deck. When the
+fire was discovered it had gained too much headway to be stopped. The
+yacht was doomed. They put off in the boats and for half a day drifted
+helplessly.
+
+Fate has everything mapped out like a game of chess. You move a pawn,
+and bang goes your bishop, or your knight, or your king; or she lets
+you almost win a game, and then checkmates you. But there is one thing
+to be said in her favor--rail at her how we will, she is always giving
+odds to the innocent.
+
+
+Mike Bannock was in the pilothouse, looking over his charts, when the
+lookout in the crow's nest sang out: "Two boats adrift off the port
+bow, sir!" And Bannock, who was a first-class sailor, although a rough
+one, shouted down the tube to the engine room. The freighter came to a
+halt in about ten minutes. The castaways saw that they had been noted,
+and pulled gallantly at the oars.
+
+There are some things which science, well advanced as it is, can not
+explain. Among them is the shock which cuts off the past and the
+countershock which reawakens memory. They may write treatise after
+treatise and expound, but they never succeed in truly getting beyond
+that dark wall of mystery.
+
+At the sound of Jim Norton's voice and at the sight of his face--for
+subconsciously she must have been thinking of him all the while--a
+great blinding heat-wave seemed to burn across her eyes, and when the
+effect passed away she was herself again. A wild glance at her
+surroundings convinced her that both she and her lover were in danger.
+"Keep back," whispered Jim. "Don't recognize me."
+
+"They believe that I've lost my mind, and I'll keep that idea in their
+heads. Sometime to-night I'll find a chance to talk to you."
+
+It took a good deal of cautious maneuvering to bring about the meeting.
+
+"They shanghaied me. And I thought you dead! It was all wrong. It
+was a trick of that Perigoff woman, and it succeeded. Girl, girl, I
+love you better than life!"
+
+"I know it now," she said, and she kissed him. "Has my father appeared
+yet?"
+
+[Illustration: "I KNOW IT NOW," SHE SAID, AND SHE KISSED HIM]
+
+"No."
+
+"Do you know anything at all about him?" sadly.
+
+"I thought I did. It's all a jumble to me. But beware of the man who
+brought you here. He is the head of all our troubles; and if he knew I
+was on board he'd kill me out of hand. He'd have to."
+
+Braine offered Bannock $1,000 to turn back as far as Boston; and as
+Bannock had all the time in the world, carrying no perishable goods, he
+consented. But he never could quite understand what followed. He had
+put Florence and Braine in the boat and landed them; but when he went
+down to see if Braine had left anything behind, he found that
+individual bound and gagged in his bunk.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+When Jones received the telegram that Florence was safe, the iron nerve
+of the man broke down. The suspense had been so keenly terrible that
+the sudden reaction left him almost hysterically weak. Three weeks of
+waiting, waiting. Not even the scoundrel and his wife who had been the
+principal actors in the abduction had been found. From a great ship in
+midocean they had disappeared. Doubtless they had hidden among the
+immigrants, who, for little money, would have fooled all the officers
+on board. There was no doubt in Jones' mind that the pair had landed
+safely at Madrid.
+
+As for Susan, she did have hysterics. She went about the room, wailing
+and laughing and wringing her hands. You would have thought by her
+actions that Florence had just died. The sight of her stirred the
+saturnine lips of the butler into a smile. But he did not remonstrate
+with her. In fact, he rather envied her freedom in emotion. Man can
+not let go in that fashion; it is a sign of weakness; and he dared not
+let even Susan see any sign of weakness in him.
+
+So the reporter had found her, and she was safe and sound on her way to
+New York? Knowing by this time something of the reporter's courage, he
+was eager to learn how the event had come about. When he had not had a
+telephone message from Norton in forty-eight hours, he had decided that
+the Black Hundred had finally succeeded in getting hold of him. It had
+been something of a blow; for while he looked with disfavor upon the
+reporter's frank regard for his charge, he appreciated the fact that
+Norton was a staff to lean on, and had behind him all the power of the
+press, which included the privilege of going everywhere even if one
+could not always get back.
+
+As he folded the telegram and put it into his pocket, he observed the
+man with the opera glasses over the way. He shrugged. Well, let him
+watch till his eyes dropped out of his head; he would only see that
+which was intended for his eyes. Still, it was irksome to feel that no
+matter when or where you moved, watching eyes observed and chronicled
+these movements.
+
+Suddenly, not being devoid of a sense of dry humor, Jones stepped over
+to the telephone and called up her highness the Countess Perigoff.
+
+"Who is it?"
+
+He was forced to admit, however reluctantly, that the woman had a
+marvelously fine speaking voice.
+
+"It is Jones, madam."
+
+"Jones?"
+
+"Mr. Hargreave's butler, madam."
+
+"Oh! You have news of Florence?"
+
+"Yes." It will be an embarrassing day for humanity when some one
+invents a photographic apparatus by which two persons at the two ends
+of the telephone may observe the facial expressions of each other.
+
+"What is it? Tell me quickly."
+
+"Florence has been found, and she is on her way back to New York. She
+was found by Mr. Norton, the reporter."
+
+"I am so glad! Shall I come up at once and have you tell me the whole
+amazing story?"
+
+"It would be useless, madam, for I know nothing except what I learned
+from a telegram I have just received. But no doubt some time this
+evening you might risk a call."
+
+"Ring up the instant she returns. Did she say what train?"
+
+"No, madam," lied Jones, smiling.
+
+He hung up the receiver and stared at the telephone as if he would
+force his gaze in and through it to the woman at the other end. Flesh
+and blood! Well, greed was stronger than that. Treacherous cat! Let
+her play; let her weave her nets, dig her pits. The day would come,
+and it was not far distant, when she would find that the mild-eyed
+mongoose was just as deadly as the cobra, and far more cunning.
+
+The heads of the Black Hundred must be destroyed. Those were the
+orders. What good to denounce them, to send them to a prison from
+which, with the aid of money and a tremendous secret political pull,
+they might readily find their way out? They must be exterminated, as
+one kills off the poisonous plague rats of the Orient. A woman? In
+the law of reprisal there was no sex.
+
+Shortly after the telephone episode (which rather puzzled the countess)
+she received a wire from Braine, which announced the fact that Florence
+and Norton had escaped and were coming to New York on train No. 25, and
+advising her to meet the train en route. She had to fly about to do it.
+
+[Illustration: HE HAD PUT FLORENCE AND BRAINE IN THE BOAT AND LANDED
+THEM]
+
+When Captain Bannock released Braine, he had been in no enviable frame
+of mind. Tricked, fooled by the girl, whose mind was as unclouded as
+his own! She had succeeded in bribing a coal stoker, and had taken him
+unawares. The man had donned the disguise he had laid out for shore
+approach, and the blockheaded Bannock had never suspected. He had not
+recognized Norton at all. It was only when Bannock explained the
+history of the shanghaied stoker that he realized his real danger.
+Norton! He must be pushed off the board. After this episode he could
+no longer keep up the pretense of being friendly. Norton, by a rare
+stroke of luck, had forced him out into the open. So be it.
+Self-preservation is in nowise looked upon as criminal. The law may
+have its ideas about it, but the individual recognizes no law but its
+own. It was Braine whom he loved and admired, or Norton whom he hated
+as a dog with rabies hates water. With Norton free, he would never
+again dare return to New York openly. This meddling reporter aimed at
+his ease and elegance.
+
+He left the freighter as soon as a boat could carry him ashore. The
+fugitives would make directly for the railroad, and thither he went at
+top speed, to arrive ten minutes too late.
+
+"Free!" said Florence, as the train began to increase its speed.
+
+Norton reached over and patted her hand. Then he sat back with a
+sudden shock of dismay. He dived a hand into a pocket, into another
+and another. The price of the telegram he had sent to Jones was all he
+had had in the world; and he had borrowed that from a friendly stoker.
+In the excitement he had forgotten all about such a contingency as the
+absolute need of money.
+
+"Florence, I'm afraid we're going to have trouble with the conductor
+when he comes."
+
+"Why?"
+
+He pulled out his pockets suggestively. "Not a postage stamp. They'll
+put us off at the next station. And," with a glance in the little
+mirror between the two windows, "I shouldn't blame them a bit." He was
+unshaven, he was wearing the suit substituted for his own; and
+Florence, sartorially, was not much better off.
+
+She smiled, blushed, stood up, and turned her back to him. Then she
+sat down again. In her hand she held a small dilapidated roll of
+banknotes.
+
+"I had them with me when they abducted me," she said. "Besides, this
+ring is worth something."
+
+"Thank the Lord!" he exclaimed, relievedly.
+
+So there was nothing more to do but be happy; and happy they were.
+They were quite oblivious to the peculiar interest they aroused among
+the other passengers. This unshaven young man, in his ragged coat and
+soiled jersey; this beautiful young girl, in a wrinkled homespun, her
+glorious blond hair awry; and the way they looked at each other during
+those lulls in conversation peculiar to lovers the world over,
+impressed the other passengers with the idea that something very
+unusual had happened to these two.
+
+The Pullman conductor was not especially polite; but money was money,
+and the stockholders, waiting for their dividends, made it impossible
+for him to reject it. The regular conductor paid them no more
+attention than to grumble over changing a twenty-dollar bill.
+
+So, while these two were hurrying on to New York, the plotters were
+hurrying east to meet them. The two trains met and stopped at the same
+station about eighty miles from New York. The countess, accompanied by
+Vroon, who kept well in the background, entered the car occupied by the
+two castaways.
+
+In the mirror at the rear of the car Norton happened to cast an idle
+glance, and he saw the countess. Vroon, however, escaped his eye.
+
+"Be careful, Florence," he said. "The countess is in the car. The
+game begins again. Pretend that you suspect nothing. Pretty quick
+work on their part. And that's all the more reason why we should play
+the comedy well. Here she comes. She will recognize you, throw her
+arms around you, and show all manner of effusiveness. Just keep your
+head and play the game."
+
+"She lied about you to me."
+
+"No matter."
+
+"Oh!" cried the countess. She seized Florence in a wild embrace. She
+was an inimitable actress, and Norton could not help admiring her.
+"Your butler telephoned me! I ran to the first train out. And here
+you are, back safe and sound! It is wonderful. Tell me all about it.
+What an adventure! And, good heavens, Mr. Norton, where did you get
+those clothes? Did you find her and rescue her? What a newspaper
+story you'll be able to make out of it all! Now, tell me just what
+happened." She sat down on the arm of Florence's chair. The girl had
+steeled her nerves against the touch of her. And yet she was
+beautiful! How could any one so beautiful be so wicked?
+
+"Well, it began like this," began Florence; and she described her
+adventures, omitting, to be sure, Braine's part in it.
+
+She had reached that part where they had been rescued by Captain
+Bannock when a thundering, grinding crash struck the words from her
+lips. The three of them were flung violently to one side of the car
+amid splintering wood, tinkling glass, and the shriek of steel against
+steel. A low wail of horror rose and died away as the car careened
+over on its side. The three were rendered unconscious and were huddled
+together on the floor, under the uprooted chairs.
+
+Vroon had escaped with only a slight cut on the hand from flying glass.
+He climbed over the chairs and passengers with a single object in view.
+He saw that all three he was interested in were insensible. He quickly
+examined them and saw that they had not received serious injuries. He
+had but little time. The countess and Norton would have to take their
+chance with the other passengers. Resolutely he stooped and lifted
+Florence in his arms and crawled out of the car with her. It was a
+difficult task, but he managed it. Outside, in the confusion, no one
+paid any attention to him. So he threw the unconscious girl over his
+shoulder and staggered on toward the road.
+
+It was fortunate that the accident had occurred where it did. Five
+miles beyond was the station marked for the arrest of Norton as an
+abductor and the taking in charge of Florence as a rebellious girl who
+had run away from her parents. If he could only reach the Swede's hut,
+where his confederates were in waiting, the game would then be his.
+
+After struggling along for half an hour a carriage was spied by Vroon,
+and he hailed it when it reached his side.
+
+"What's the trouble, mister?" asked the farmer.
+
+"A wreck on the railroad. My daughter is badly hurt. I must take her
+to the nearest village. How far is it?"
+
+"About three miles."
+
+"I'll give you twenty dollars for the use of that rig of yours."
+
+"Can't do it, mister."
+
+"But it's a case of humanity, sir!" indignantly. "You are refusing to
+aid the unfortunate."
+
+The farmer thought it over for a moment. "All right. You can have the
+buggy for twenty dollars. When you get to the village take the nag to
+Doc Sanders' livery. He'll know what to do."
+
+"Thank you. Help me in with her."
+
+Vroon drove away without the least intention of going toward the
+village. As a result, when Florence came to her senses she found
+herself surrounded by strange and ominous faces. At first she thought
+they had taken her from the wreck out of kindness; but when she saw the
+cold, impassive face of the man Vroon she closed her eyes and lay back
+in the chair. Well, ill and weak as she was, they should find that she
+was not without a certain strength.
+
+In the meantime Norton revived and looked about in vain for Florence.
+He searched among the crowd of terrified passengers, the hurt and the
+unharmed, but she was not to be found. He ran back to the countess and
+helped her out of the broken car.
+
+"Where is Florence?" she asked dazedly.
+
+"God knows! Here, come over and sit down by the fence till I see if
+there is a field telegraph."
+
+They had already erected one, and his message went off with a batch of
+others. This time he was determined not to trust to chance. The shock
+may have brought back Florence's recent mental disorder, and she may
+have wandered off without knowing what she was doing. On the other
+hand, she may have been carried off. And against such a contingency he
+must be fortified. Money! The curse of God was upon it; it was the
+trail of the serpent, spreading poison in its wake.
+
+By and by the countess was able to walk; and, supporting her, he led
+her to the road, along which they walked slowly for at least an hour.
+They might very well have waited for the relief train. But he could
+not stand the thought of inactivity. The countess had her choice of
+staying behind or going with him. He hated the woman, but he could not
+refuse her aid. She had a cut on the side of her head, and she limped
+besides.
+
+They stopped at the first farmhouse, explained what had happened, and
+the mistress urged them to enter. She had seen no one, and certainly
+not a young woman. She must have wandered off in another direction.
+She ran into the kitchen for a basin and towel and proceeded to patch
+the countess' hurts.
+
+The latter was extremely uneasy. That she should be under obligation
+to Norton galled her. There was a spark of conscience left in her
+soul. She had tried to destroy him, and he had been kind to her. Was
+he a fool or was he deep, playing a game as shrewd as her own? She
+could not tell. Where was Vroon? Had he carried Florence off?
+
+An hour later a man came in.
+
+"Hullo! More folks from the wreck?"
+
+"Where's the horse and buggy, Jake?" his wife asked.
+
+"Rented it to a man whose daughter was hurt. He went to the village."
+
+"Will you describe the daughter?" asked Norton.
+
+The countess twisted her fingers.
+
+The farmer rudely described Florence.
+
+"Have you another horse and a saddle?"
+
+"What's your hurry?"
+
+"I'll tell you later. What I want now is the horse."
+
+"What is to become of me?" asked the countess.
+
+"You will be in good hands," he answered briefly. "I am going to find
+out what has become of Florence. Is there a deserted farmhouse
+hereabouts?" he asked of the farmer.
+
+"Not that I recollect."
+
+"Why yes, there is, Jake. There's that old hut about two miles up the
+fork," volunteered the wife. "Where the Swede died last winter."
+
+"By jingo! I'm going into the village and see if that man brought in
+the rig."
+
+"But get my horse first. My name is James Norton, and I am on the
+_Blade_ in New York. Which way do I go?"
+
+"First turn to the left. Come on; I'll get the horse for you."
+
+Once the horse was saddled, Norton set off at a run. He was unarmed;
+he forgot all about this fact. His one thought was to find the woman
+he loved. He was not afraid of meeting a dozen men, not while his
+present fury lasted.
+
+And he fell into an ambush within a hundred yards of his goal. They
+dragged him off the horse and buffeted and mishandled him into the hut.
+
+"Both of them!" said Vroon, rubbing his hands.
+
+"I know you, you Russian rat!" cried Norton. "And if I ever get out of
+this I'll kill you out of hand! Damn you!"
+
+"Oh, yes; talk, talk; but it never hurts any one," jeered Vroon.
+"You'll never have the chance to kill me out of hand, as you say.
+Besides, do you know my face?"
+
+"I do. The mask doesn't matter. You're the man who had me shanghaied.
+The voice is enough."
+
+"Very good. That's what I wished to know. That's your death warrant.
+We'll do it like they used to do at the old Academy; tie you to the
+railroad track. We shall not hurt you at all. If some engine runs
+over you heaven is witness we did not guide the engine. Remember the
+story of the boy and the cat?" with sinister amiability. "The boy said
+he wasn't pulling the cat's tail, he was only holding it; the cat did
+the pulling. Bring him along, men. Time is precious, and we have a
+good deal to do before night settles down. Come on with him. The
+track is only a short distance."
+
+"Jim, Jim!" cried Florence in anguish.
+
+"Never you mind, girl; they're only bluffing. They won't dare."
+
+"You think so?" said Vroon. "Wait and see." He turned upon Florence.
+"He is your lover. Do you wish him to die?"
+
+"No, no!"
+
+"We promise to give him his freedom twelve hours from now on condition
+that you tell where that money is."
+
+"Florence!" warned Norton.
+
+Vroon struck him on the mouth. "Be silent, you scum!"
+
+"It is in the chest Jones, the butler, threw into the sound," she said
+bravely. And so it might be for all she knew.
+
+Vroon laughed. "We know about where that is."
+
+"Florence, say nothing on my account. They are not the kind of men who
+keep their word."
+
+"Eh?" snarled Vroon. "We'll see about that." He glanced at his watch.
+"In half an hour the freight comes along. It may become stalled at the
+wreck. But it will serve."
+
+Norton knew very well that if need said must they would not hesitate to
+execute a melodramatic plan of this character. It was the way of the
+Slav; they had to make crime abnormal in order to enjoy it. They could
+very well have knocked him on the head then and there and have done
+with him. But the time used in conveying him to the railroad might
+prove his salvation. Nearly four hours had passed since the sending of
+the telegram to Jones.
+
+They bound Florence and left her seated in the chair. As soon as they
+were gone she rolled to the floor. She was able to right herself to
+her knees, and after a torturous five minutes reached the fireplace.
+She burnt her hands and wrists, but the blaze was the only knife
+obtainable. She was free.
+
+[Illustration: THEY BOUND FLORENCE AND LEFT HER SEATED IN THE CHAIR]
+
+
+Jones arrived with half a dozen policemen. Vroon alone escaped.
+
+The butler caught Florence in his arms and nearly crushed the breath
+out of her. And she was so glad to see him that she kissed him half a
+dozen times. What if he was her father's butler? He was brave and
+loyal and kind.
+
+"They tied him to the track," she cried. "Look at my wrists!" The
+butler did so, and kissed them tenderly. "And I saved him."
+
+Jones stretched out a hand over Florence's shoulder. "When the time
+comes," he said; "when the right time comes and my master's enemies are
+confounded. But always the rooks, never the hawks, do we catch. God
+bless you, Norton! I don't know what I should have done without you."
+
+"When a chap's in love," began Norton, embarrassedly.
+
+"I know, I know," interrupted Jones. "The second relief train is
+waiting. Let us hurry back. I shan't feel secure till we are once
+more in the house."
+
+So, arm in arm, the three of them went down the tracks to the hand-car
+which had brought the police.
+
+And now for the iron-bound chest at the bottom of the sea.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+A dipsy-chanty, if you please; of sailormen in jerseys and tarry caps,
+of rolling gaits, strong tobacco and diverse profanity; of cutters, and
+blunt-nosed schooners, and tramps, canvas and steam, some of them
+honest, some of them shady, and some of them pirates of the first water
+who did not find it necessary to hoist aloft the skull and bones. The
+seas are dotted with them. They remind you of the once prosperous
+merchant, run down at the heel, who slinks along the side streets,
+ashamed to meet those he knew in the past. You never hear them
+mentioned in the maritime news, which is the society column of the
+ships; you know of their existence only by the bleached bones of them,
+strewn along the coast.
+
+You who crave adventures on high seas, you purchase a ticket, a steamer
+chair, and a couple of popular novels, go on board to the blare of a
+very indifferent brass band, and believe you are adventuring; when, as
+a matter of fact, you are about to spend a dull week or a fortnight on
+a water hotel, where the most exciting thing is the bugle's call to
+meals or the discovery of a card sharp in the smoking-room. Take a
+real ship, go as supercargo, to the South Seas; take the side streets
+of the ocean, and learn what it can do with hurricanes, typhoons,
+blistering calms, and men's souls. There will be adventure enough
+then. If you are a weakling, either you are made strong, or you die.
+
+An honest ship, but run down at the heel, rode at anchor in the sound,
+a fourth-rater of the hooker breed; that is, her principal line of
+business was hauling barges up and down the coast. When she could not
+pick up enough barges to make it pay, why she'd go gallivanting down to
+Cuba for bales of tobacco or even to the Bermudas for the
+heaven-smelling onion. To-day she was an onion ship; which precludes
+any idea of adventure. She was about four thousand tons, and her
+engines were sternward and not amidship. She carried two masts and a
+half-dozen hoist booms, and the only visible sign of anything new on
+her was her bowsprit. This was new doubtless because she had poked her
+nose too far into her last slip.
+
+Her crew was orderly and tractable. There were shore drunks, to be
+sure, because they were sailors; but they were at work. They moved
+about briskly, for they were on the point of sailing for the
+Bahamas--perhaps for more onions. Presently the windlass creaked and
+shrilled, and the blobby links, much in need of tar paint, red as fish
+gills, clattered down into the bow. Sometimes they painted the chain
+as it came over; but paint was costly, and this was done only when the
+anchor threatened to stay on the bottom.
+
+There was a sailor among this crew, and he went by the name of Steve
+Blossom; and he was one of his kind. A grimy dime novel protruded
+rakishly from his hip pocket, and his right cheek was swollen as with
+the toothache, due, probably, to a generous "chaw" of Seaman's Delight.
+He was a real tobacco chewer, for he rarely spat. He was as peaceful
+as a backwater bay in summer; non-argumentative and passive, he stood
+his watch in fair weather and foul.
+
+No one gave the anchor any more attention after it came to rest. The
+great city over the way was fairy-like in its haziness and softened
+lines. It was the poetry of angles, of shafts and spars of stone; and
+Steve Blossom, having a moment to himself, leaned against the rail and
+stared regretfully. He had been generously drunk the night before, and
+it was a pleasant recollection. Chance led his glance to trail down
+the cutwater. His neck stretched from his collar like a turtle's from
+its shell.
+
+"Well, I'll be hornswoggled!" he murmured, shifting his cud from
+starboard to port.
+
+Caught on the fluke of the anchor was the strangest looking box he had
+ever laid eyes on. There were leather and steel bands and
+diamond-shaped ivory and mother of pearl, and it hung jauntily on the
+point of the rusty fluke. Anybody would be hornswoggled to glimpse
+such a droll jest of fate. On the fluke of the old mudhook, by a hair,
+you might say. In all the wild sea yarns he had ever read or heard
+there was nothing to match this.
+
+Treasure!
+
+And Steve was destined never to be passive again. His first impulse
+was to call his companions; his second impulse was to say nothing at
+all, and wait for an opportunity to get the box to his bunk without
+being detected. Treasure! Diamonds and rubies and pearls and old
+Spanish gold; and all hanging to the fluke of the anchor.
+
+"Hornswoggled!" in a kind of awesome whisper this time. "An' we
+a-headin' for th' Bahamas!" For under his feet he could hear the
+rhythm of engines. "What'll I do? If I leave it, some one else'll see
+it." He scratched his chin perplexedly; and the cud went back to
+starboard. "I got it!"
+
+He took off his coat and carefully dropped it down over the mysterious
+box. It was growing darker and darker all the time, and shortly
+neither coat nor anchor would be visible without close scrutiny.
+Treasure: greed, cupidity, crime. Steve saw only the treasure and not
+its camp followers. What did they call them?--doubloons and
+pieces-of-eight?
+
+He ate his supper with his messmates, and he ate heartily as usual. It
+would have taken something more vital than mere treasure to disturb
+Steve Blossom's appetite. He was one of those enviable individuals
+whose imagination and gastric juices work at the same time. And while
+he ate he planned. In the first place, he would buy that home at
+Bedford; then he would take over the Gilson House and live like a lord.
+If he wanted a drink, all he would have to do would be to turn the
+spigot or tip a bottle; and more than that, he'd have a bartender to do
+it. Onions! He swore he would not have an onion within a mile of the
+Gilson House. "Onions!" Quite unconsciously he spoke the words aloud.
+
+"Huh? Well, if ye don't like onions, find a hooker that packs violets
+in her hold," was the cheerful advice of the man at Steve's elbow.
+
+"Who's talkin' t' you?" grunted Steve. "Wha' did I say?"
+
+"Onions, ye lubber! Don't we know whut onions is? Ain't we smelt 'em
+so long that ye could stick yer nose in th' starboard light an' never
+smell no kerosene? Onions! Pass th' cawffy."
+
+Steve helped himself first. The man who spoke bunked over him, and
+they were not on the best of terms. There was no real reason for this
+frank antagonism; simply, they did not splice any more effectually than
+cotton rope and hemp splice. Sailors are moody and superstitious; at
+least they generally are on hookers of the _Captain Manners_ breed.
+Steve was superstitious and Jim Dunkers was moody and had no thumb on
+his left hand. Steve hated the sight of that red nubbin. He was quite
+certain that it had been a whole thumb once, on the way to gouge out
+somebody's eye, and had inadvertently connected with somebody's teeth.
+
+Spanish doubloons and pearls and diamonds and rubies! It was mighty
+hard not to say these words out loud, too; blare them into the sullen
+faces grouped around the table. He was off watch till midnight; and he
+was wondering if he could get the box without attracting the attention
+of the lookout, who had a devilish keen eye for everything that stirred
+on deck or on water. Well, he would have to risk it; but he would wait
+till full darkness had fallen over the sea and the lookout would be
+compelled to keep his eyes off the deck. The boys wanted him to play
+cards.
+
+"Not for me. Busted. How long d' y' think forty dollars 'll last in
+New York, anyhow?" And he stalked out of the forecastle and went down
+into the waist to enjoy his evening pipe, all the while keeping a
+weather eye forward, at the ratty old pilot house.
+
+It was ten o'clock, land time, when he rammed his cutty into a pocket
+and resolutely walked forward. If any one watched him they would think
+he was only looking down the cutwater. The thought of money and the
+pleasures it will buy makes cunning the stupidest of dolts; and Steve
+was ordinarily a dolt. But to-night his brain was keen enough for all
+purposes. It was a hazardous job to get the box off the fluke without
+letting it slip back into the sea. Steve, however, accomplished the
+feat, climbed back on the rail and sat down, waiting. A quarter of an
+hour passed. No one had seen him. With his coat securely wrapped
+about his precious find he made for the forecastle. His mates, save
+those who were doing their watch, were all in their bunks. An oil lamp
+dimly illuminated the forward partition. Steve's bunk was almost in
+darkness. Very deftly he rolled back the bedding and secreted the box
+under his pillows, and then stretched himself out with the pretense of
+snoozing till the bell called him to duty.
+
+He was rich; and the moment a man has money he has troubles; there is
+always some one who wants to take it away from you. His bunk was on
+the port side, and there was plenty of hiding space between the iron
+plates and the wooden partition. He intended to loosen three or four
+planks, and then when the time came, slip the box behind them. Some
+time during the morning the forecastle would be empty, and then would
+be his time.
+
+But he suffered the agonies of damnation during the four-hours' watch.
+Supposing some fool should go rummaging about his bunk and discover the
+box? Suppose ... But he dared not suppose. There was nothing to do
+but wait. If he created any curiosity on the part of his mates he was
+lost. He would have to divide with them all, from the captain down to
+the cook's boy. It was a heart-rending thought. From being the most
+open and frank man aboard, he became the most cunning. From being a
+man without enemies, he saw an enemy even in his shadow.
+
+At four o'clock he turned in and slept like a log.
+
+In the morning he found his opportunity. For half an hour the
+forecastle was empty of all save himself. Feverishly he pried back the
+boards, found the brace beam, and gently laid the box there. It was a
+mighty curious-looking box. Once he had stoked up the Chinese coast
+from the Philippines, and he judged it to be Chinese in origin. He
+tried to pry open the cover and feast his eyes upon the treasure; but
+under the leather and ivory and mother of pearl was impervious steel.
+It would take an ax or a crowbar to stir that lid. He sighed. He
+replaced the boards, and became to all appearances his stolid self
+again.
+
+But all the way down to the Bahamas he was moody, and when he answered
+any questions it was with words spoken testily and jerkily.
+
+"I know whut's th' matter," said Dunkers. "He's in love."
+
+"Shut your mouth!"
+
+"Didn't I tell yuh?" laughed the tantalizer, dancing toward the
+companion way. "Steve's in love, 'r he didn't git drunk enough on
+shore t' satisfy his whale's belly!"
+
+A boot thudded spitefully against the door jamb.
+
+"You fellahs let me alone, 'r I'll bash in a couple o' heads!"
+
+"Oh, yuh will, will yuh?" cried Dunkers from the deck. "If yuh want a
+little exercise, yuh can begin on me, yuh moonsick swab! Whut's th'
+matter with yuh, anyhow? Where'd yuh git this grouch? Whut've we done
+t' yuh? Huh?"
+
+"You keep out o' my way, that's all. I'm mindin' my watches, an' don't
+ask no odds of you duffers. What if I have a grouch? Is it any o'
+your business? All right. When we step ashore at th' Bahamas, Mister
+Jim Dunkers, I'll tear the ropes out o' your pulley blocks. But till
+we git there, you t' th' upper bunk an' me t' mine."
+
+"Leave th' ol' grouch alone, Jim. Th' mate won't stand for no
+scrappin' aboard. We'll have th' thing done right in th' custom sheds.
+We'll have a finish fight, Queensberry rules, an' may th' best man win."
+
+"I'm willin'," said Jim.
+
+"So'm I," agreed Steve. But his intentions were not honorable. He
+proposed to desert before any fight took place. Not that he was
+physically afraid; no; he wanted to dig his hands deep into those
+doubloons and pieces-of-eight.
+
+So the four days down passed otherwise uneventfully, amid paint pots
+and iron rust and three meals a day of pork, onion soup, potatoes, and
+strong, bitter coffee. The winds became light and balmy and the sea
+blue and gentle. The men went about in their undershirts and
+dungarees, barefooted. Of course the coming fight was the main topic
+of conversation. It promised to be a rattling good scrap, for both men
+were evenly matched, and both had a "kick" in either hand. Even the
+captain took a mild interest in the affair. He was an old sailor. He
+knew that there was no such word as arbitration in a sailor's
+vocabulary; his disputes could be settled only in one manner, by his
+calloused fists.
+
+When the old mudhook (and some day Steve was going to buy it and hang
+it over the entrance to the Gilson House) slithered down into the
+smiling waters of the bay, Steve concluded that discretion was the
+better part of valor. He would steal ashore on the quarantine tug
+which lay alongside. He was willing to fight under ordinary
+circumstances, but he must get his treasure in safety first. They
+could call him a welcher if they wanted to; devil a bit did he care.
+So he pried back the boards of his bunk wall, took out the box, eyed it
+fondly, and noted for the first time the lettering on it:
+
+ STANLEY HARGREAVE.
+
+
+He wrinkled his brow in the effort to recall a pirate by this name, but
+was unsuccessful. No matter. He hugged the box under his coat and
+made for the gangway, and inadvertently ran into his enemy.
+
+Dunkers caught a bit of the box peeping from under the coat.
+
+"What 'a' yuh got there?" he demanded truculently.
+
+"None o' your dam business! You lemme by; hear me?"
+
+"Ain't none o' my business, huh? Where'd yuh git a box like that?
+Steal it? By cripes, I'm goin' t' have a look at that box, my hearty.
+It don't smell like honest onions."
+
+"You lemme by!" breathed Steve, with murder in his heart.
+
+Suddenly the two men closed, surged back and forth, one determined to
+take and the other to hold this mysterious box. Dunkers struggled to
+uphold his word: not that he really wanted the box but to prove that he
+was strong enough to take it if he wanted to. The name on the box
+flashed and disappeared. It was a kind of shock to him. He and
+Blossom went battering against the rail. Dunker's grip slipped and so
+did Blossom's. The result was that the box was catapulted into the
+sea. With an agonizing cry, Blossom leaned far over. He saw the box
+oscillate for a moment, then sink gracefully in a zigzag course, down
+through the blue waters. Fainter and fainter it grew, and at last
+vanished.
+
+"I'm sorry, Steve; but yuh wouldn't let me look at it," said Dunkers,
+contritely.
+
+"Damn you; I'm goin' t' kill y' for that!"
+
+It became a real fight this time, fist and foot, tooth and nail; one
+mad with the lust to kill and the other desperately intent on living.
+It was one of those contests in which honor and fair play have no part.
+But for the timely arrival of the captain and some of the crew Dunkers
+would have been badly injured, perhaps fatally. They hauled back
+Blossom, roaring out his oaths at the top of his lungs. It took half
+an hour's arguing to calm him down. Then the captain demanded to know
+what it was all about. And blubbering, Steve told him.
+
+"Six hundred feet of water, if I've got my reckoning right. The anchor
+lies in sixty feet, but the starboard side drops sheer six hundred.
+You swab! Why didn't you bring the box to me? A man has a right to
+what he finds. I'd have taken care of it for you till we got back to
+port. I know; you were greedy; you thought I might want to stick my
+fist into your treasure. And you'll never find it in six hundred feet
+of water and tangled, porous coral. That's what, you get for being a
+blamed hog. As for you," and the captain turned to Dunkers, "get your
+dunnage and your pay and hunt for another boat back. I won't have no
+murder on board _Captain Manners_. And the sooner you go, the better."
+
+"I'll go, sir," said Dunkers, readily enough. Had the misfortune
+happened to him and had Blossom been the aggressor, he would want his
+life. He understood. Like the valet in _Olivette_, it was the time
+for disappearing.
+
+"An' keep out o' my way. I'll git y' yet," growled Blossom.
+
+"Keep your mouth shut," said the mate, "or I'll have you put in irons,
+you pig!"
+
+"All right, sir. I've said all I'm goin't' say t'day;" and Blossom
+strode off.
+
+"What was the box like?" asked the captain of Dunkers.
+
+"Chinese contraption, sir; leastwise it looked that way to me. Didn't
+look as if it'd been in th' water long, sir. Somethin' lost overboard
+by some private yacht, t' my thinkin'. I'll keep out o' Steve's way.
+I'll lay low on shore, sir."
+
+And though Steve made a perfect range of the spot, he never came back
+to find the mysterious box, never saw the Gilson House back home, nor
+did he ever see Dunkers again. On the voyage home he brooded
+continually, and was frequently found blubbering; and one night he
+skipped his watch and went to Davy Jones' locker.
+
+Dunkers had not told about the name he had seen on the box; and Blossom
+had not thought to. The name Hargreave had instantly brought back to
+Dunkers' mind the newspaper stories he had recently read. There was no
+doubt in the world that this box belonged to the missing millionaire,
+who had drawn a million from his banks and vanished; and, moreover,
+there was no doubt in Dunkers' mind that this million lay in the
+Bahaman waters. It had been drawn up from the bottom of the sound,
+under the path of the balloon. He proceeded, then, to take a most
+minute range. It would require money and partners; but half a loaf
+would be far better than no loaf at all; and he was determined to
+return to New York to find backing. Finding is keeping, on land or sea.
+
+Now it happened that his favorite grog shop was a cheap saloon across
+the way from the headquarters of the Black Hundred; and Vroon
+occasionally dropped in, for he often picked up a valuable bit of
+maritime news. Bunkers was an old friend of the barkeeper, and he
+proceeded to pour and guzzle down his throat a very poor substitute for
+whisky. He became communicative. He bragged. He knew where there was
+a million, and all he needed was a first-class diving bell. A year
+from now he would not be drinking cheap whisky; he'd be steering a
+course up and down Broadway and buying wine when he was thirsty. He
+was no miser. But he had to have a diving bell; and where the blue
+devil could he get one with twelve dollars and an Ingersoll watch in
+his pocket?
+
+From his table Vroon made a sign which the bartender understood. Then
+he rose and approached Bunkers.
+
+"I own a pretty good diving apparatus," he said. "If you've got the
+goods, I'll take a chance on a fifty-fifty basis." Vroon did not
+believe there was anything back of his talk; but it always paid to dig
+deep enough to find out. "Have a drink; and, Bill, give us a real
+whisky and none of your soap-lye. Now, let's hear your yarn."
+
+"I don't know yuh," said Bunkers, with drunken caution. "How is it,
+Bill?" turning to the bartender.
+
+"He's the goods, Jim. You've heard of Wyant & Co.?"
+
+"Sure I've heard o' them. Best divin' app'ratus they is."
+
+"Well, this gent here is Mr. Brooks, general manager for Wyant & Co. I
+can O.K. him."
+
+Vroon threw an appreciative glance at the bartender. He was not
+affiliated with the Black Hundred, but he had often aided Vroon in
+minor affairs.
+
+"All right, if yuh say so, Bill. Well, here's th' yarn."
+
+And when he had done, Vroon smoked quietly without speaking.
+
+"Don't yuh believe it?" demanded Bunkers, truculently.
+
+"But six hundred feet of water, in a coral bottom, and no way of
+telling just where it fell overboard. That's a tough proposition."
+
+"Oh, it is, is it? I'm a sailor. I can lay my hand right over th'
+spot. Do yuh think I'd be fool enough t' hunt for it without a perfect
+range?" Bunkers tapped his coat pocket suggestively.
+
+And Vroon knew that the one thing he wanted was there, a plan or a
+drawing of the range. So there was another man shanghaied that night,
+and his destination was Cape Town, twenty-two days' voyage by the
+calendar.
+
+Vroon carried his information to the organization that same night.
+They would start the expedition at once, and till this was
+accomplished, Hargreave's daughter was to be immune from attacks.
+Besides, it would give Hargreave (wherever he was) and the others the
+idea that the Black Hundred had concluded to give up the chase.
+
+Above, with his ear to a small hole, skilfully bored through the
+ceiling without permitting the plaster to fall, knelt a man with a
+bandaged arm. He could never see any faces; no one ever took off a
+mask in this sinister chamber. But there were voices, and he was going
+to forget some of them. After the meeting came to an end, he waited an
+hour, and then stole down into the street by the aid of the
+fire-escape. Later, he entered a telephone booth and called up Jones.
+
+Then, one leathern and steel box, dotted with bits of ivory and
+mother-of-pearl, became two; and the second one was soaked in mud and
+salt water for two weeks till you could not have told it from the
+original. And that is why Jones was able, some weeks later, to hide
+once more the original box. As for the substitute, just as Braine was
+about to use a mallet and chisel upon it, the lights went out. There
+was a wild scramble, a chair or two was overturned.
+
+"The door, the door!" shouted Braine, furious.
+
+It slammed the moment the words left his lips. And as suddenly as they
+had gone out the lights sprang up. The box was gone. There were
+evidently traitors among the Black Hundred.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+The Black Hundred, not as individuals but as an organization, began to
+worry. Powerful, and often reckless and daring because it was
+powerful, it began to look about for some basic cause for all these
+failures against Hargreave's daughter and Hargreave's ghost. They had
+tried to put the inquisitive reporter out of the way; they had laid
+every trap they could think of to catch the mysterious visitor at the
+Hargreave home; they had thrown out a hundred lures to bring Hargreave
+out of his lair, and failed; and they had lost a dozen valuable men and
+several thousand dollars. This must end somewhere, and quickly.
+
+The one ray of hope for the conspirators lay in the fact that Florence
+had never seen her father and knew not in the least what he looked
+like. They determined to try again in this direction.
+
+"Give it all up," said the countess to Braine. "I tell you, whatever
+is back of all this is stronger than we are. He knows the
+organization, and for all we know he may be a ghost."
+
+"I never go back," smiled Braine. "There's something more than the
+million. There's the sport of the thing. We've been bested in a dozen
+bouts, and nearly always by a fluke. They have the breaks, as they say
+out at the Polo Grounds."
+
+"But the time and expense when we might be getting results elsewhere!
+I tell you, Leo, I'm afraid. It's like always hearing some one behind
+you and never finding anybody when you turn. I have told you my
+doubts. I have also asked you to trap that butler, but you've always
+laughed."
+
+"You are seeing ghosts, Olga. A new man from holy Russia," shrugging,
+"is coming to-night. Evidently the head over there thinks our
+contributions of late have not been up to the mark, and they are going
+to stir us up. I am willing to wager my soul, however, that that box
+is simply a hoax to befuddle us. Either that or it holds the key. But
+the rest of them insist that the box must be recovered. When I leave
+this room to-night I am going over to Riverdale and stalk all by
+myself. I'm going to get a glimpse of that mysterious stranger. He
+carries a scar of mine somewhere, for I hit him that night."
+
+The door opened and the executive chamber became silent.
+
+"Count Paroff," boomed the voice of Vroon. "He will present his
+credentials."
+
+This formality was executed as prescribed by the rules; and Count
+Paroff was given his chair. He spoke for a while, rather pompously.
+
+"The head organization is not satisfied with its offspring in this
+Hargreave affair," he said in conclusion. "You are slow."
+
+"Then perhaps you have come with some suggestions for the betterment of
+our business?" asked Braine ironically.
+
+"Sir, this is not the hour for flippancy," said the agent coldly.
+
+Braine made a sign with his hand, a sign not observed by every one.
+Instantly Paroff bent lowly. He recognized that the speaker was the
+actual, not the nominal, head of the American branch.
+
+"What are your suggestions?" inquired the nominal head from his chair,
+anxious to avoid a clash between the newcomer and the truculent master
+of them all.
+
+"I have been informed that Hargreave's daughter has never seen her
+father, not even a photograph of him," said Paroff, more amiably.
+
+"We are absolutely certain that this is the case," said the nominal
+head, who was known as the president. "But we tried one play in that
+direction, and it failed miserably."
+
+"I have the story," replied Paroff. "It was clumsily done. The ruse
+was an old one."
+
+Braine was frank enough to admit the truth of this statement, however
+much he disliked the admission. He nodded.
+
+"I have authority to take a hand in this affair. We can not waste all
+summer. Those government plans of the fortifications of the Panama are
+waiting. There's your millions. But the fact remains that it is the
+law of the Black Hundred never to step down till absolutely defeated.
+The hidden million is but half; we must find and break this renegade
+Hargreave."
+
+"If he lives," said Braine.
+
+"Who can say one way or the other?" bruskly asked Paroff. "The fact
+that all your plans and schemes have come to naught should prove to you
+that you are not fighting a ghost. There is but one way to bring out
+the truth."
+
+"And that is to make a captive of his daughter," supplemented Braine.
+"And we have worked toward that end ceaselessly. We are quite ready to
+listen to your suggestions, count."
+
+"And so am I," thought the man with his ear to the little hole in the
+ceiling above. "And some day, my energetic friend, I'm going to pay
+you back for that bullet."
+
+Count Paroff cleared his voice and laid his plans before his audience.
+
+"To act frankly and in the open, to go boldly to the Hargreave home and
+proclaim myself Hargreave. I can disguise myself in a manner that will
+at least temporarily fool the butler."
+
+"Who has been with his master for fourteen years, knows every move,
+habit, gesture, inflection," interposed Braine. "But proceed, count,
+proceed. You will remember the old adage; too many cooks."
+
+"Ah," flashed back the count, "but a new cook?"
+
+Olga touched Braine's arm warningly.
+
+"You mean, then, that there has been talk in St. Petersburg of
+disposing of some one?"
+
+"A good deal of talk, sir," haughtily, forgetting that he had bent
+humbly enough but a few moments gone.
+
+"Very well; go on."
+
+Thought the man at the peephole above: "There's another adage. When
+thieves fall out, then honest men get their dues. Yes, yes; proceed,
+proceed!"
+
+Paroff went on. "I shall, then, go frankly to the Hargreave house and
+claim my own. Meantime I leave to you the business of luring the
+butler away. Half an hour is all I need to bring that child here, to
+break the wall that stands between us and what we seek."
+
+"Is that so?" murmured Braine. "Olga, I want you to play a trick on
+this handsome delegate-at-large. I'm not very enthusiastic over his
+talk. I want him humiliated. All you have to do, he says, is to walk
+into the Hargreave house and walk out again. Well, let's you and I see
+that he does that and nothing else. I'll have no one meddling with my
+own game."
+
+Some one sneezed, and everybody looked at his neighbor. The sneeze was
+repeated, but muffled, as if some one was desperately anxious to avoid
+sneezing.
+
+"It came from above!" whispered Olga. "Don't look up!"
+
+Braine was cool. He walked idly across the room to where Vroon sat.
+"Very well, Paroff; we give you free rein." To Vroon he said: "Some
+one is watching us from the room overhead. I thought that room
+belonged to us."
+
+"It does," said Vroon stolidly.
+
+"Then how is it that some one is watching from up there? No
+excitement. I'm going to bid every one good night, then I'm going to
+investigate. When I leave you will quietly send men to all exits to
+the building. I want the man who sneezed, and I want him badly."
+
+Olga departed with Braine, only she immediately sought the taxi that
+brought her and was driven home. It was always understood that when
+any serious exploit was under way hereabouts she was to make her
+departure at once.
+
+Vroon stationed his men at the several exits and Braine went up-stairs.
+The man who had sneezed, however, had vanished as completely as if he
+had worn that invisible cloak one reads about in the Persian tales. As
+a matter of fact, after the second sneeze he had gone up to the roof,
+got out by the trap, and jumped--rather risky business, too--to the
+next roof and had clambered down the fire-escape of the second
+building. He was swearing inaudibly. After all these days of care and
+planning, after all his cleverness in locating the rendezvous of the
+Black Hundred, and now to lose his advantage because of an
+uncontrollable sneeze! He would never dare go back, and just when he
+was beginning to pick up fine bits of information! So Florence
+Hargreave was going to have a new father in a day or so? There were
+some clever rogues among this band of theirs; but their cleverness was
+well offset by an equal number of fools.
+
+Yes, there were some clever rogues, and to prove this assertion Braine
+secured a taxicab and drove furiously away, his destination the home of
+his ancient enemy. He dropped the cab a block or two away and
+presently stowed himself away in the summer house at the left of the
+lawn. It would have been a capital idea--that is, if the other man had
+not thought of and anticipated this very thing. So he used a public
+pay station telephone; and Braine waited in vain, waited till the
+lights in the Hargreave house went out one by one and it became wrapped
+in darkness within and moonshine without.
+
+Braine was a philosopher. He returned to his waiting taxicab, drove
+home, paid the bill, smiling grimly, and went to bed. It was going to
+be a wonderful game of blind man's buff, and it was going to be sport
+to watch this fool Paroff blunder into a pit.
+
+The next afternoon Florence and Norton sat in the summer house talking
+of the future. Lovers are prone to talk of that. As if anything else
+in the world ever equals the present! They talked of nice little
+apartments and vacations in the summer and how much they would save out
+of his salary, and a thousand and one other things which would not
+interest you at all if I recounted them in detail. But they did love
+each other, and they were going to be married; you may be certain of
+that. They did not care a snap of the finger what Jones thought. They
+were going to be married, and that was all there was to it. Of course,
+Florence couldn't touch a penny of her father's money. If he, Norton,
+couldn't take care of her without help, why, he wouldn't be worth the
+powder to blow him up with.
+
+[Illustration: THEY DID NOT CARE A SNAP OF THEIR FINGERS WHAT JONES
+THOUGHT]
+
+"But, my dear, you must be very careful," he said. "Jones and I will
+always be about somewhere. If they really get hold of you once, God
+alone knows what will happen. It is not you, it is your poor father
+they want to bring out into the open. If they knew where he was they
+would not bother you in the least."
+
+"Have I really a father? Sometimes I doubt. Why couldn't he steal
+into the house and see me, just once?"
+
+"Perhaps he dares not. This house is always watched, night and day,
+though you'll look in vain to discover any one. Your father knows best
+what he is doing, my dear girl. You see, I met him years ago in China;
+and when he started out to do a certain thing he generally did it. He
+never botched any of his plans. So we all must wait. Only I'm going
+to marry you all the same, whether he likes it or not. The rogues will
+try to impose upon you again; but do not pay any attention to notes or
+personals in the papers. And it was a lucky thing that I was on the
+freighter that picked you up at sea. I shall always wonder how that
+yacht took fire."
+
+"So shall I," replied Florence, her brows drawing together in
+puzzlement. "Sometimes I think I must have done it. You know, people
+out of their heads do strange things. I seem to see myself as in a
+dream. And this man Braine is a scoundrel!"
+
+"Yes; and more than that, he is the dear friend of the countess. But
+understand, you must never let her dream or suspect that you know. By
+lulling her into overconfidence some day she will naturally grow
+careless, and then we'll have them all. I think I understand what your
+father's idea is: not to have them arrested for blackmail, but
+practically to exterminate them, put them in prison for such terms of
+years that they'll die there. When you see a snake, a poisonous one,
+don't let it get away. Kill it. Well, I must be off to work."
+
+"And you be careful, too. You are in more danger than I am."
+
+"But I'm a man and can dodge quick," he laughed, picking up his hat.
+
+"What a horrid thing money is! If I hadn't any money, nobody would
+bother me."
+
+"I would," he smiled. He wanted to kiss her, but the eternal Jones
+might be watching from the windows; and so he patted her hand instead
+and walked down the graveled path to the street.
+
+It was difficult work for Florence to play at friendship. She was like
+her father; she did not bestow it on every one. She had given her
+friendship to the Russian, the first real big friendship in her life,
+and she had been roughly disillusioned. But if the countess could act,
+so could she; and of the two her acting was the more consummate. She
+could smile and laugh and jest, all the while her heart was burning
+with wrath.
+
+One day, a week or so after her meeting with Norton in the summer
+house, Olga arrived, beautifully gowned, handsome as ever. There was
+not the least touch of the adventuress in her makeup. Florence had
+just received some mail, and she had dropped the letters on the library
+table to greet the countess. She had opened them, but had not yet
+looked at their contents.
+
+They were chatting pleasantly about inconsequent things, when the maid
+came in and asked Florence to come to Miss Susan's room for a moment.
+Florence excused herself, wondering what Susan could want. She forgot
+the mail.
+
+As soon as she was gone the countess, certain that Jones was not
+lurking about, picked up the letters and calmly examined their
+contents; and among them she found this remarkable document: "Dear
+daughter I have never seen: I must turn the treasure over to you. Meet
+me at eight in the summer house. Tell no one, as my life is in danger.
+Your loving father."
+
+The countess could have laughed aloud. She saw this man Paroff's hand;
+and here was the chance to befool and humiliate him and send him off
+packing to his cold and miserable country. She had made up once as
+Florence, and she could easily do so again. The only thing that
+troubled her was the fact that she did not know whether Florence had
+read the letter or not. Thus, she did not dare destroy it. She first
+thought of changing the clock; then she concluded to drop the letter
+exactly where she found it and trust to luck.
+
+[Illustration: SHE FIRST THOUGHT OF CHANGING THE CLOCK]
+
+When Florence returned she explained that her absence had been due to
+some trifling household affair.
+
+Said the Russian: "I come primarily to ask you to tea to-morrow, where
+they dance. If you like, you may ask Mr. Norton to go along. I begin
+to observe that you two are rather fond of each other."
+
+"Oh, Mr. Norton is just a valuable friend," returned Florence with a
+smile that quite deceived the other woman. "I shall be glad to go to
+the tea. But I shall not promise to dance."
+
+"Not with Mr. Norton?" archly.
+
+"Reporters never dance themselves; they make others dance instead."
+
+"I shall have to tell that," declared the countess; and she laughed
+quite honestly.
+
+"Then I have said something witty?"
+
+"Indeed you have; and it is not only witty but truthful. I'm afraid
+you're deeper than the rest of us have any idea of."
+
+"Perhaps I am," thought Florence; "at least deeper than you believe."
+
+When the countess fluttered down to her limousine--Florence hated the
+sight of it--and drove away, Florence remembered her letters. And when
+she came to the one purporting to be from her father, she read it
+carefully, bent her head in thought, and finally destroyed the missive,
+absolutely confident that it was only a trap, and not very well
+conceived at that. Norton had given her plenty of reason for believing
+all such letters to be forgeries. Her father, if he really wished to
+see her, would enter the house; he would not write. Ah, when would she
+see that father of hers, so mysterious, always hovering near, always
+unseen?
+
+It must have been an amusing adventure for the countess. To steal into
+the summer house and wait there, not knowing if Florence had advised
+Jones or the reporter. If caught, she had her excuses. Paroff, the
+confident, however, appeared shortly after.
+
+"My child!" whispered the man.
+
+And Olga stifled a laugh; but to him it sounded like a sob.
+
+"I am worn out," he said. "I am tired of the game of hide and seek."
+
+"You will not have to play the game long," thought Olga.
+
+"The money is hidden in my office down-town. And we must go there at
+once. When we return we will pack up and leave for Europe. I've
+longed to see you so!"
+
+"You poor fool! And they sent you to supersede Leo!" she mused.
+
+She played out the farce to the very end. She permitted herself to be
+pinioned and jogged; and for what unnecessary roughness she suffered at
+the hands of Paroff he would presently pay. He took her straight to
+the executive chamber of the Black Hundred and pushed her into the
+room, exclaiming triumphantly:
+
+"Here is Hargreave's daughter!"
+
+[Illustration: HE TOOK HER STRAIGHT TO THE EXECUTIVE CHAMBER OF THE
+BLACK HUNDRED]
+
+"Indeed!" said Olga, throwing back her veil and standing revealed in
+her mask.
+
+"Olga!" cried Braine, laughing.
+
+And that was the inglorious end of the secret agent from Russia.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+Perhaps the most amusing phase of the secret agent's discomfiture was
+the fact that neither Jones nor Florence had the least idea what had
+happened. Florence regretted a hundred times during the evening that
+she had not gone out to the summer house. It might really have been
+her father. Her regret grew so deep in her that just before going to
+bed she confessed to Jones.
+
+"You received a letter of that sort and did not show it to me?" said
+Jones, astonished.
+
+"You warned me never to pay any attention to them."
+
+"No; I warned you never to act upon them without first consulting me.
+And we might have made a capture! My child, always show me these
+things. I will advise you whether to tear them up or not."
+
+"Jones, I believe you are going a little too far," said Florence
+haughtily. "It might have been my father."
+
+"Never in this world, Miss Florence. Still, I beg your pardon for
+raising my voice. What I do and have done is only for your own sake.
+There are two things I wish to impress upon your mind before I go.
+This can be made a comedy or a terrible tragedy. You have already had
+a taste of the latter; and each time you escaped because God was good
+to us. But He is rarely kind to thoughtless people. They have to look
+out for themselves. I am acting under orders; always remember that."
+
+"Forgive me; I acted wrongly. But I'm so weary and tired of this
+eternal suspicion of everybody and everything. Can't I go somewhere,
+some place where I can have rest?"
+
+"If I thought for a single moment it was possible to take you thousands
+of miles from this spot, it would be done this very night. But this is
+our fortress. So far it has been impregnable. The police are watching
+it; and that prevents a general assault by the scoundrels. If we tried
+to leave we would be followed; and they play the game exceedingly well.
+Now, good night. We'll have you out of all this doubt and suspicion
+one of these days. There will not be any past; that will be lopped off
+as you'd lop a limb from a tree."
+
+"Please let it be quick. I want to see my father."
+
+Jones' eyes sparkled. "And you have my word that he wants to see you.
+But I dare not tell you."
+
+"Do you think he would object to Mr. Norton?" she asked, studying the
+rug.
+
+"In what capacity?" he countered, forcing her hand.
+
+"As--as a husband?" bravely.
+
+Jones in turn studied the patterns in the rug. "It is only natural for
+a father to look high for his daughter's husband. But, after all, an
+honest man is worth as much as anything I know of. And Norton is
+honest and loyal and brave."
+
+"Thank you, Jones. I intend to marry him when the time comes; so you
+may as well prepare father for this eventuality."
+
+"There is an old adage--"
+
+But she interrupted him. "If you have a new adage, Jones, I shouldn't
+mind hearing it. But I'm only just out of school, where old adages are
+served from soup to pudding. Good night."
+
+And Jones went to the rear of the house, chuckling.
+
+In the passing it might well be observed that the Hargreave house had a
+remarkable menage. There was a gardener, a cook, and a maid; and the
+three of them reported to Jones each night before going to bed. They
+were all three detectives from one of the greatest organizations in
+America.
+
+Finding themselves unable to lure Florence away from the environs of
+the Hargreave home, the Black Hundred set some new machinery in motion.
+They proposed to rid the house of every one in it by a perfectly
+logical device. But the first step in this new move was going to be
+extremely delicate and risky. It was no small adventure to enter the
+Hargreave home; and yet this must be done. So finally "Spider" Beggs
+was selected for the work. The man could practically walk over
+crockery without causing a sound; he could climb a house by the window
+ledges; and he could hold his breath like those professional tank
+swimmers.
+
+Three or four nights after the Paroff fiasco, Jones started the rounds,
+putting out the lights. He left the one in the hall till the last, for
+it was his habit, after having turned off that light, to stand by the
+door for several minutes, watching. One never could tell.
+
+On the other hand, "Spider" Beggs never approached a house till an hour
+after the lights went out. Persons were likely to move about for some
+minutes later; they might want something to eat, a drink of water. So
+he remained hidden behind the summer house till long after midnight.
+When at last he felt assured that all in the Hargreave house were
+asleep, he moved out cautiously. Both his future and his pocketbook
+depended upon the success of this venture. It took him ten minutes to
+crawl from the summer house to the veranda, and to have detected this
+approach Jones, had he been watching, would have needed a searchlight.
+Beggs hugged the lattice-work for another ten minutes and then drew
+himself up and wriggled to one of the windows. Here was an operation
+that needed all his care and skill; to lift this window without sound.
+But he was an old hand and windows with ordinary locks were playthings
+under his deft touch. He raised the window, stepped over the sill into
+the library, and crouched down. He did not close the window; house
+thieves never do. They leave windows and doors open, because sooner or
+later they have to make their escape that way.
+
+[Illustration: HERE WAS AN OPERATION THAT NEEDED ALL HIS CARE AND SKILL]
+
+Presently he stood up, flashed his torch, found the library shelves,
+and tiptoed toward them. He then selected three or four volumes,
+opened them at random and laid neat packages of money between the
+leaves. It was not real money, but only a bank clerk could have told
+that. This done, he moved toward the window again.
+
+"Stop!" said Jones quietly.
+
+"Spider" Beggs gasped, it was so unexpected; but at the same time
+almost instinctively he plunged headlong through the window, and the
+bullet which followed snipped a lock of his hair. He threw himself off
+the veranda and scurried across the lawn, zigzag fashion. But no more
+bullets followed.
+
+Jones turned on the lights and investigated the room, but he could not
+find anything disturbed, and naturally came to the conclusion that the
+intruder had been interrupted before he had begun his work. He turned
+off the lights and sat up the major part of the night. Nothing more
+happened. Florence came down, but he sent her back to bed, explaining
+that some one had attempted to enter the house and he had taken a shot
+at him.
+
+"Spider" Beggs had a letter to write. He was in high feather. He had
+tackled a difficult job and had come away without a scratch. But he
+had the misfortune to write his letter to the secret service officials
+in a hotel often frequented by Norton. And so Jim, on finishing his
+own letter, blotted it and casually glanced at the blotter. A single
+word caught his eye. Being an alert newspaper man, always on the hunt
+for stories, he examined the blotter with care. It was an easy matter
+for him to read writing backward, having fooled away many an hour in
+the composing rooms. The word which had awakened the reportorial sense
+in him was "counterfeit." He held the blotter toward the mirror and
+read enough to satisfy himself that the Black Hundred had become active
+once more. And this was one of the best ideas they had yet conceived.
+
+[Illustration: HE EXAMINED THE BLOTTER WITH CARE]
+
+Hargreave had always been something of a mystery to his neighbors.
+Where he had lived in other days was unknown; neither had any one the
+remotest idea from what source his riches had been obtained. And
+nothing was known of Jones or the daughter. It was a very shrewd
+method of clearing every one out of the house and leaving it to be
+examined at leisure. And he had fallen upon this thing; he, Norton,
+all because his tailor had written him a sharp note about his bill and
+he had been provoked to reply in kind! Counterfeit money. There was
+quite a flurry these days over certain issues of spurious paper. It
+was so good that only experts could detect it. There were two plates,
+one for a ten and another for a twenty. For a while he was pulled
+between duty and love. Well, it would only add another interesting
+chapter to the general story when he published it. He started out to
+Riverdale to acquaint Jones with the discovery.
+
+"Humph!" said Jones; "not a bad idea this. So that's what the sneak
+was doing here last night. I've been wondering and wondering. Let's
+have a look."
+
+He went through the books and at length came across the three volumes.
+These held a thousand in excellent counterfeit.
+
+"Mighty good work that. What are you going to do?" asked the reporter.
+
+Jones rubbed his chin reflectively. "How long may a counterfeiter be
+sent up?"
+
+"Anywhere from ten to twenty years."
+
+"That will serve. My boy, this time we'll go and take Mr. Black
+Hundred right in his cubby-hole."
+
+"You know where it is?"
+
+"Every nook and corner of it. Now you go at once to the chief of the
+local branch of the secret service and put the matter to him frankly.
+I, Florence, Susan, and the rest of us must be arrested. The wretches
+must believe that the house is empty. They'll rove about fruitlessly
+and will return to their den to report the success of the coup. All
+the while you and some detectives will be in hiding up-stairs,
+dictagraph and all that. When the time comes you will follow. This
+will not reach the heads, perhaps, but it will demoralize the
+organization in such a way as to make it helpless for several months to
+come. There is a tunnel from the stables to this house."
+
+"What, a tunnel?"
+
+"Yes, Mr. Hargreave had it built several years ago. I don't know what
+his idea was; possibly he anticipated an event like this. You and your
+men will find entrance by this method. It can be done without exciting
+the suspicions of the watchers."
+
+"Looks as if my yarn wasn't going to be delayed so long after all.
+Jones, you ought to have been in the secret service yourself,"
+admiringly.
+
+Jones smiled and shrugged. "I am perfectly satisfied with my lot--or
+would be if the Black Hundred could be wiped out of existence."
+
+"I'll see the secret service people at once. I stand in well with them
+all."
+
+"And good luck to you. We'll need good luck."
+
+Norton was welcomed cordially by the chief. The secret service men
+trusted him and told him lots of tales that never saw light on the
+printed page. The reporter went directly to the point of his story,
+without elaboration, and the chief smiled and handed him the original
+letter.
+
+"Norton, I've been after this gang of counterfeiters for months and
+they are clever beyond words. I've never been able to get anywhere
+near their presses. And for a moment I thought this note was from a
+squealer. I've a dozen men scouring the country. They find the bogus
+notes, but never the men who pass them. You see, it's new stuff. I
+know what all of the old-timers are at; none of them has had a hand in
+this issue. Some foreigners, I take it, under the leadership of a man
+I'd very much like to know. Now, what's your scheme?"
+
+Jim outlined it briefly.
+
+"It all depends," said the chief, "upon the fact that they will be
+impatient. If they have the ability to wait, we lose. But we can
+afford to risk the chance. The man who wrote this letter is not a
+counterfeiter. He's an old yeggman. We haven't heard anything of him
+lately. We tried to corner him on a post-office job, but he slipped
+by. He may be a stool. Anyhow, I'll draw him in somehow."
+
+"There'll be some excitement."
+
+"We're used to that; you too. All we've got to do is to locate this
+man Beggs. There are signs of spite in this letter. Very well played,
+if you want my opinion. What's this Black Hundred?"
+
+"I'm not at liberty to tell just yet. It's a strange game; half
+political, half blackmail. It's a pretty strong organization. But if
+they're back of this counterfeiting, there's a fine chance of landing
+them all."
+
+Here the chief's assistant came in. "Got Beggs on the wire. Says
+he'll conduct you to the home if you'll promise him immunity for some
+other offenses."
+
+"Tell him he shall have immunity on the word of the chief. But also
+say that he must come to see me in person."
+
+"All right, sir."
+
+"I don't believe it would be wise for Beggs to see me here. I gave him
+a good send-off--Sing Sing--five years ago. He may recollect," said
+Norton.
+
+"Suit yourself about that. Only, keep in communication with me by
+telephone and I'll tip you off as to when the raid shall take place.
+Lucky you came in. I should have honestly gone there and arrested
+innocent people, and they would have had a devil of a time explaining.
+It would have taken them at least a week to clear themselves. That
+would leave the house empty all that time."
+
+Norton did not reply, but he put the blotter away carefully. There was
+no getting away from the fact, but the god of luck was with him.
+
+"Do you know what's back of it all?"
+
+"I can't tell you any more than I have," said Norton.
+
+"Then I pass. I know you well enough. If you've made up your mind not
+to talk a man couldn't get anything out of you with a can-opener. And
+that's why we trust you, my boy. Don't forget the telephone."
+
+"I shan't. So long."
+
+That same night Braine paid the Russian woman a brief visit.
+
+"I think that here's where we go forward. The secret service will raid
+the house to-morrow and then for a few days we'll roam about as we
+bally please. I'm hanged if I don't have every plank torn up and the
+walls pulled down. More and more I'm convinced that the money is in
+that house."
+
+"Don't be too confident," warned Olga. "So many times we have been
+tripped up when everything seemed in our hands. The house should be
+guarded but not entered for a day or two; at least not till after the
+raid is cold. I'm beginning to see traps everywhere."
+
+"Nonsense! Leave it to me. We shan't stick our heads inside the
+Hargreave house till we are dead certain that it is absolutely empty.
+Olga, you're a gem. I don't think Russia will bother us for a while.
+Eh? Paroff will not dare tell how he was flimflammed. The least he
+can do to save his own skin is to say that we are fully capable of
+taking care of ourselves."
+
+Olga laughed. "To think of his writing a note like that! Florence
+would have recognized--and no doubt did--a palpable attempt to play an
+old game twice."
+
+"How does she act toward you?"
+
+"Cordial as ever; and yet..."
+
+"Yet what?"
+
+"I thought her an ordinary schoolgirl, and yet every once in a while
+she makes what you billiard players call a professional shot. What
+matter? So long as they do not shut the door in my face, I ask nothing
+more. But do you want my opinion? I feel it in my bones that
+something will go wrong to-morrow."
+
+"Good lord, are you losing your nerve?" cried Braine impatiently. "The
+secret service has the warning; they find the green stuff, and Jones &
+Co. will mog off to the police station. And there'll be a week of red
+tape before they are turned loose again. They'll dig into Hargreave's
+finances and all that. We'll have all the security in the world to
+find out if the money is in the house or not. Why worry?"
+
+"It's only the way I feel. There is something uncanny in the
+regularity of that girl's good luck."
+
+"Ah, but we're not after her this time; it's the whole family."
+
+"The servants too?"
+
+"Everybody in the house will be under suspicion."
+
+"And can you trust Beggs?"
+
+"His life is in the hollow of my hand. You can always trust a man when
+you hold the rope that's around his neck."
+
+Still the frown did not leave Olga's brow. With all her soul she
+longed to be out of this tangle. It had all looked so easy at the
+start; yet here they were, weeks later, no further forward than at the
+beginning, and added to this they had paid much in lives and money.
+Well, if she would be fool enough to love this man she must abide with
+the consequences. She wanted him all by herself, out of danger, in a
+far country. He might tire, but she knew in her heart that she never
+would. This was her one great passion, and while her mode of living
+was not as honest as might be, her love was honest enough and
+unswerving, though it was not gilded by the pleasant fancies of youth.
+
+"Of what are you thinking?" he asked when he concluded that the pause
+had been long enough.
+
+"You."
+
+"H'm. Complimentary?"
+
+"No; just ordinary every-day love."
+
+"Ah, Olga, why the deuce must you go and fall in love with a bundle of
+ashes like myself? Ashes, and bitter ashes, too. Sometimes I regret.
+But the regretting only seems to make me all the more savage. What
+opium and dope are to other men, danger and excitement are to me. It
+is not written that I shall die in bed. I have told you that already.
+There is no other woman--now. And I do love you after a fashion, as a
+man loves a comrade. Wait till this dancing bout is over and I may
+talk otherwise. And now I am going to shake hands and hobnob with the
+elite--beautiful word! And while I bow and smirk and crack witticisms,
+I and the devil will be chuckling in our sleeves. But this I'll tell
+you, while there's a drop of blood in my veins, a breath in my body,
+I'll stick to this fight if only to prove that I'm not a quitter."
+
+He caught her suddenly in his arms, kissed her, ran lightly to the
+door, and was gone before she could recover from her astonishment.
+
+The affair went smoothly, without a hitch. Norton and his men gained
+the house through the tunnel without attracting the least attention.
+The Black Hundred, watching the front and rear of the house, never
+dreamed that there existed another mode of entrance or that there was a
+secret cabinet room.
+
+Half an hour later the head of the secret service, accompanied by his
+men, together with "Spider" Beggs, who was in high feather over his
+success, arrived, demanded admittance, and went at the front of the
+business at once.
+
+"Your name is Jones?" began the chief.
+
+The butler nodded, though his face evinced no little bewilderment at
+the appearance of these men.
+
+"What is it you wish, sir?"
+
+"I am from the secret service and I have it from a pretty good source
+that there is counterfeit money hidden in this house. More than that,
+I can put my hand on the very place it is hidden."
+
+"That is impossible, sir," declared Jones indignantly.
+
+"I am an old hand, Mr. Jones. It will not do you a bit of good to put
+on that bold front."
+
+Beggs smiled. How was he to know that this was a comedy set especially
+for his benefit?
+
+"I should like to see that money," said Jones, not quite so bravely.
+
+"Come with me," said the secret service man. "Where's the library?"
+
+"Beyond that door, sir."
+
+The chief beckoning to his men, entered the library, went directly to a
+certain shelf, extracted three volumes, and there lay the money in
+three neat packages.
+
+"Good heavens!" gasped Jones.
+
+"I shall have to request you and the family to accompany me to the
+station."
+
+"But it is all utterly impossible, sir! I know nothing of that money
+nor how it got there. It's a plot. I declare on my oath, sir, that I
+am innocent, that Miss Florence and her companion know nothing about
+it."
+
+"You will have to tell that to the federal judge, sir. My duty is to
+take you all to the station. It would be just as well not to say
+anything more, sir."
+
+"Very well; but some one shall smart for this outrage."
+
+"That remains to be seen," was the terse comment of the secret service
+man.
+
+He led his prisoners away directly.
+
+Norton and his men had to wait far into the night. The Black Hundred
+did not intend to make any mistake this time by a hasty move. At
+quarter after ten they descended. Braine was not with them. This was
+due to the urgent request of Olga, who still had her doubts. The men
+rioted about the house, searching nooks and corners, examining floors
+and walls, opening books, pulling out drawers, but they found nothing.
+They talked freely, and the dictagraph registered every word. The
+printing plant, which had so long defied discovery, was in the cellar
+of the house occupied by the Black Hundred. Norton and his men
+determined to follow and raid the building. And the reporter promised
+himself a good front-page story without in any way conflicting with his
+promises to Jones.
+
+[Illustration: THE MEN RIOTED ABOUT THE HOUSE SEARCHING NOOKS AND
+CORNERS]
+
+Events came to pass as they expected. The trailing was not the easiest
+thing. Norton knew about where the building was, but he could not go
+to it directly. He was quite confident that its entrance was identical
+with that which had the trap door through which he had been flung that
+memorable day when he had been shanghaied.
+
+When they reached the building he warned the men to hug the wall to the
+stairs. The trap yawned, but no one was hurt. They scampered up the
+stairs like a lot of eager boys; broke the door in--to find the weird
+executive chamber dark and empty and an acrid smoke in their nostrils.
+This latter grew stifling as they blundered about in the dark. By luck
+Norton found the exit and called to the men to follow. They saw Beggs
+at the top of the stairway and called out to him to surrender. He held
+up his hands and the stairs collapsed. Real fire burst out and Norton
+and his companions had a desperate battle with flame and smoke to gain
+the street.
+
+The fire was put out finally, but there was nothing in the ruins to
+prove that there had been a counterfeiting den there. There was,
+however, at least one consoling feature: in the future the Black
+Hundred would have to hold their star-chamber elsewhere.
+
+It was checkmate; or, rather, it was a draw.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+If the truth is to be told, Jones was as deeply chagrined over the
+outcome of the counterfeit deal as was Braine. They had both failed
+signally to reach the goal sought. But this time the organization had
+broken even with Jones, and this fact disturbed the butler. It might
+signify that the turning point had been reached, and that in the future
+the good luck might swing over to the side of the Black Hundred. Jones
+redoubled his cautions, reiterated his warnings, and slept less than
+ever. Indeed, as he went over the ground he conceded a point to the
+Black Hundred. He would no longer be able to keep tab on the
+organization. They had deserted their former quarters absolutely. The
+agent of whom they had leased the building knew nothing except that he
+would have to repair the place. The rent had been paid a year in
+advance, as it had been these last eight years. He had dealt through
+an attorney who knew no more of his clients than the agent. So it will
+be seen that Jones had in reality received a check.
+
+More than all this, it would give his enemies renewed confidence; and
+this was a deeper menace than he cared to face. But he went about his
+affairs as usual, giving no hint to any one of the mental turmoil which
+had possession of him.
+
+It is needless to state Norton did not scoop his rivals on the
+counterfeit story. But he set to work exploring the cellar of the
+gutted building, and in one corner he found a battered die. He turned
+this over to the secret service men. There was one man he wanted to
+find--Vroon. This man, could he find him, should be made to lead him,
+Norton, to the new stronghold. He saw the futility of trying to trap
+Braine by shadowing him. He desired Braine to believe that his escape
+from the freighter had been a bit of wild luck and not a preconceived
+plan. Braine was out of reach for the present, so he began to search
+for the man Vroon. He haunted the water front saloons for a week
+without success.
+
+He did not know that it was the policy of the Black Hundred to lay low
+for a month after a raid of such a serious character. So the Hargreave
+menage had thirty days of peace; always watched, however. For Braine
+never relaxed his vigilance in that part of the game. He did not care
+to lose sight of Jones, who he was positive was ready for flight if the
+slightest opportunity offered itself.
+
+Norton went back to the primrose paths of love; and sometimes he would
+forget all about such a thing as the Black Hundred. So the summer days
+went by, with the lilacs and the roses embowering the Hargreave home.
+But Norton took note of the fact that Florence was no longer the
+light-hearted schoolgirl he had first met. Her trials had made a
+serious woman of her, and perhaps this phase was all the more
+enchanting to him, who had his serious side also. Her young mind was
+like an Italian garden, always opening new vistas for his admiring gaze.
+
+He went about his work the same as of old, interviewing, playing
+detective, fattening his pay envelope by specials to the Sunday edition
+and some of the lighter magazines. Sometimes he had vague dreams of
+writing a play, a novel, and making a tremendous fortune like that chap
+Manders, who only a few years ago had been his desk mate. He really
+began the first chapter of a novel; but that has nothing to do with
+this history.
+
+All ready, then. The chess are once more on the board, and it is the
+move of the Black Hundred.
+
+The day was rather cloudy. Jones viewed the sky wearily. He could
+hear Florence playing rather a cheerless nocturne by Chopin. Fourteen
+weeks ago this warfare had begun, and all he had accomplished, he and
+those with him, was the death or incarceration of a few inconsequent
+members of the Black Hundred. Always they struck and always he had to
+ward off. He had always been on the defensive; and a defensive fighter
+may last a long while, but he seldom wins; and the butler knew that
+they must win or go down in bitter defeat. There was no half-way route
+to the end; there could be no draw. It all reminded him of
+thunderbolts; one man knew where they were going to strike.
+
+The telephone rang; at the same moment Florence left the piano. She
+stopped at the threshold.
+
+"Hello! You? Where have you been? What has happened?"
+
+"Who is it?" asked Florence, stepping forward.
+
+Jones held up a warning hand, and Florence paused.
+
+"Yes, yes; I hear perfectly. Oh! You've been working out their new
+quarters? Good, good! But be very careful, sir. One never knows what
+may happen. They have been quiet for some time now.... Ah! You can't
+work the ceiling this time? ... Window over the way. Very good, sir.
+But be careful."
+
+The word "sir" caught Florence's attention. She ran to Jones and
+seized him by the arm.
+
+"Who was that?" she cried, as he turned away from the telephone.
+
+"Why?"
+
+"You said 'sir.'"
+
+Jones' eyes widened. "I did?"
+
+"Yes, and it's the first time I ever heard you use it over the
+telephone. Jones, you were talking to my father!"
+
+"Please, Miss Florence, do not ask me any questions. I can not answer
+any. I dare not."
+
+"But if I should command, upon the pain of dismissal?" coldly.
+
+"Ah, Miss Florence," and Jones tapped his pocket, "you forget that you
+can not dismiss me by word. I am legally in control here. I am sorry
+that you have made me recall this fact to you."
+
+Florence began to cry softly.
+
+"I am sorry, very sorry," said the butler, torn between the desire to
+comfort her and the law that he had laid down for himself. "It is very
+gloomy to-day, and perhaps we are a little depressed by it. I am
+sorry."
+
+"Oh, I realize, Jones, that all this unending mystery and secrecy have
+a set purpose at back. Only, it does just seem as if I should go mad
+sometimes with waiting and wondering."
+
+"And if the truth must be told, it is the same with me. We have to
+wait for them to strike. Shall I get you something to read? I am
+going down to the drug store and they have a circulating library."
+
+"Get me anything you please. But I'd feel better with a little
+sunshine."
+
+"That's universal," replied Jones, going into the hall for his hat.
+
+Had the telephone rung again at that moment it is quite probable that
+the day would have come to a close as the day before had, monotonously.
+But the ring came five minutes after Jones had left the house.
+
+"Is this the Hargreave place?"
+
+"Yes," said Florence. "Who is it?"
+
+"This is Miss Hargreave talking?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"This is Doctor Morse. I am at the Queen Hotel. Mr. Norton has been
+badly hurt, and he wants you and Mr. Jones to come at once. We can not
+tell just how serious the injury is. He is just conscious. Shall I
+tell him you will come immediately?"
+
+"Yes, yes!"
+
+Florence snapped the receiver on the hook. She wanted to fly, fly. He
+was hurt. How, when, where?
+
+"Susan! Susan!" she called.
+
+"What is it?" asked Susan, running into the room.
+
+"Jim is badly hurt. He wants me to come at once. Oh, Susan! I've
+been dreading something all day long." Florence struck the maid's
+bell. "My wraps. You will go with me, Susan."
+
+"Where, Miss Florence," asked the maid, alive to her duty.
+
+"Where? What is that to you?" demanded Florence, who did not know that
+this maid was a detective.
+
+"Why not wait till Mr. Jones returns?" she suggested patiently.
+
+"And let the man I love die?" vehemently.
+
+"At least you will leave word where you are going, Miss Florence."
+
+"The Queen Hotel. And if you say another word I'll discharge you.
+Come, Susan."
+
+There happened to be a taxicab conveniently near (as Vroon took care
+there should be), and Florence at once engaged it. She did not see the
+man hiding in the bushes. The two young women stepped into the taxicab
+and were driven off. They had been gone less than five minutes when
+Jones returned with his purchase, to find the house empty of its most
+valuable asset. He was furious, not only at the maid, who, he
+realized, was virtually helpless, but at his own negligence.
+
+In the midst of his violent harangue the bell sounded. In his bones he
+knew what was going to be found there. It was a letter on the back of
+which was drawn the fatal black mask. With shaking fingers he tore
+open the envelope and read the contents:
+
+
+"Florence is now in our power. Only the surrender of the million will
+save her. Our agent will call in an hour for an answer. THE BLACK
+HUNDRED."
+
+
+As a matter of fact, they had wanted Jones almost as badly as Florence,
+but her desire for a book--some popular story of the day--had saved him
+from the net. The letter had been written against this possibility.
+
+Jones became cool, now that he knew just what to face. The Queen Hotel
+meant nothing. Florence would not be taken there. He called up
+Norton. It took all the butler's patience, however, as it required
+seven different calls to locate the reporter.
+
+Meantime the taxicab containing Florence and Susan spun madly toward
+the water front. Here the two were separated by an effective threat.
+Florence recognized the man Vroon and knew that to plead for mercy
+would be a waste of time. She permitted herself to be led to a waiting
+launch. Always when she disobeyed Jones something like this happened.
+But this time they had cunningly struck at her heart, and all thought
+of her personal safety became as nothing. For the present she knew
+that she was in no actual physical danger. She was merely to be held
+as a hostage. Would Susan have mentality enough to tell Jones where
+the taxicab had stopped? She doubted. In an emergency Susan had
+proved herself a nonentity, a bundle of hysterical thrills.
+
+As a matter of fact, for once Florence's deductions were happily wrong.
+When the chauffeur peremptorily deposited Susan on the lonely country
+road, several miles from home, she ran hot-foot to the nearest
+telephone and sent a very concise message home. Susan was becoming
+acclimated to this strange, exciting existence.
+
+Norton arrived in due time, and he and Jones were mapping out a plan
+when Susan's message came.
+
+[Illustration: THEY WERE MAPPING OUT A PLAN WHEN SUSAN'S MESSAGE CAME]
+
+"Good girl!" said Jones. "She's learning. Can you handle this alone,
+Norton? They want me out of the house again, for I believe they were
+after me as well as Florence. Half an hour gone!"
+
+"Trust me!" cried Norton.
+
+And he ran out to his auto. It was a wild ride. Several policemen
+shouted after him, but he went on unmindful. They could take his
+license number a hundred times for all he cared. So they had got her?
+They could wait till their enemy's vigilance slacked and then would
+strike? But Susan! The next time he saw Susan he was going to take
+her in his arms and kiss her. It might be a new sensation to kiss
+Susan, always so prim and offish. Corey Street--that had been her
+direction. They had put Florence in a motor boat at the foot of Corey
+Street. He was perhaps half an hour behind.
+
+Florence never opened her lips. She stared ahead proudly. She would
+show these scoundrels that she was her father's daughter. They plied
+her with questions, but she pretended not to hear.
+
+"Well, pretty bird, we'll make you speak when the time comes. We've
+got you this trip where we want you. There won't be any jumping
+overboard this session, believe me. We've wasted enough time. We've
+got you and we're going to keep you."
+
+"Let her be," said Vroon morosely. "We'll put all the questions we
+wish when we're at our destination." And he nodded significantly
+toward the ships riding at anchor.
+
+Florence felt her heart sink in spite of her abundant courage. Were
+they going to take her to sea again? She had acquired a horror of the
+sea, so big, so terrible, so strong. She had had an experience with
+its sullen power. They had gone about four miles down when she looked
+back longingly toward shore. Something white seemed to be spinning
+over the water far behind. At first she could not discern what it was.
+As she watched it it grew and grew. It finally emerged from the
+illusion of a gigantic bird into the actuality of an every-day
+hydroplane. Her heart gave a great bound. This flying machine was
+coming directly toward the launch; it did not deviate a hair's breadth
+from the line. Fortunately the men were looking toward the huge
+freighter a quarter of a mile farther on, and from their talk it was
+evident that the freighter was to be her prison--bound for where?
+Nearer and nearer came the hydroplane. Was it for her?
+
+It was impossible for the men not to take notice of the barking of the
+engines at last.
+
+"The thing's headed for us!"
+
+Vroon stared under his palm. It was not credible that pursuit had
+taken place so quickly. To test yonder man-bird he abruptly changed
+the course of the launch. The hydroplane veered its course to suit.
+
+Florence heard her name called faintly. One of the men drew his
+revolver, but Vroon knocked it out of his hand.
+
+"There's the police boat, you fool!"
+
+"Jump!" a voice called to Florence.
+
+She flung herself into the water without the slightest hesitation.
+
+All this came about something after this fashion. When Norton arrived
+at the foot of Corey Street a boatman informed him that a young woman
+of his description had got into a fast motor boat and had gone down the
+river.
+
+"Was there any struggle?"
+
+"Struggle? None that I could see. She didn't make no fuss about
+going."
+
+"Have you a launch?"
+
+"Yes, but the other boat has half an hour's start, and I'd never catch
+her in a thousand years. But there's a hydroplane a little above here.
+You might interest the feller that runs it."
+
+"Thanks!"
+
+But the aviator would not listen.
+
+"A life may hang in the balance, man!" expostulated Norton, longing to
+pommel the stubborn man.
+
+"What proof have I of that?"
+
+Norton showed his card and badge.
+
+"Oh, I see!" jeered the aviator. "A little newspaper stunt in which I
+am to be the goat. It can't be done, Mr. Norton; it can't be done."
+
+"A hundred dollars!"
+
+"Not for five hundred," and the aviator callously turned away toward
+the young woman with whom he had been conversing prior to Norton's
+approach. The two walked a dozen yards away.
+
+Norton had not served twelve years as a metropolitan newspaper man for
+nothing. He approached the mechanics who were puttering about the
+machine.
+
+"How about twenty apiece?" he began.
+
+"For what?" the men asked.
+
+"For sending that paddle around a few times."
+
+"Get into that seat, but don't touch any of those levers," one of them
+warned. "Twenty is twenty, Jack, and the boss is a sorehead to-day
+anyhow. Give her a shove for the fun of it."
+
+It was a dumfounded aviator who saw his hydroplane skim the water and a
+moment later sail into the air. These swift moving days a reporter of
+the first caliber is supposed to be able to run railroad engines,
+submarines, flying machines, conduct a war, able to shoot, walk, run,
+swim, fight, think, go without food like a python, and live without
+water like a camel. Norton had flown many times in the last four
+years. At the moment he called out to Florence to jump he dropped to
+the water with all the skill of an old-timer and took her aboard. And
+he could not use a line of this exploit for his paper!
+
+
+Jones heard the bell. It was the agent from the Black Hundred. He
+smiled jauntily.
+
+"Well, old fox, we've cornered you at last, haven't we? I want that
+money, or Hargreave's daughter takes another sea voyage, and this time
+she will not jump overboard. A million; and no more nonsense."
+
+"Give me fifteen minutes to decide," begged Jones, hoping against hope.
+
+"Fifteen seconds!"
+
+"Then we can't do business. What! Give you a million, knowing you all
+to be a pack of liars? Bring Miss Florence back and the money is
+yours. We are tired of fighting." As indeed Jones really was. The
+strain had been terrific for weeks.
+
+"The money first. We don't lie any better than you do. Fork over.
+You'll have to trust us. We have no use for the girl once we get the
+cash."
+
+"And you'll never touch a penny of it, you blackguard!" cried Norton
+from the doorway.
+
+The agent turned to behold the reporter and the girl. He did not stop
+to ask questions, but bolted. He never got beyond the door, however.
+
+"Always the small fry," sighed Jones. "And if I could have put my
+hands on the money I'd have given it to him! Ah, girl, it doesn't do
+any good to talk to you, does it?"
+
+"But they told me he was dying!"
+
+Jones shrugged.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+The maid stole into the house, wondering if she had been seen. She
+wanted to be loyal to this girl, but she was tired of the life; she
+wanted to be her own mistress, and the small fortune offered her would
+put her on the way to realize her ambition. What had she not seen and
+been of life since she joined the great detective force! Lady's maid,
+cook, ship stewardess, flash woman, actress, clerk, and a dozen other
+employments. Her pay, until she secured some fat reward, was but
+twelve hundred a year; and here was five thousand in advance, with the
+promise of five thousand more the minute her work was done. And it was
+simple work, without any real harm toward Florence as far as she was
+concerned. The whole thing rested upon one difficulty; would Jones
+permit the girls to leave the house?
+
+One day Florence found Susan sitting in a chair, her head in her hands.
+
+"Why, Susan, what's the matter?" cried Florence.
+
+"I don't know what is the matter, dear, but I haven't felt well for two
+or three days. I'm dizzy all the time; I can't read or sew or eat or
+sleep."
+
+"Why didn't you tell me?" said Florence, reproachfully. She rang for
+the detective-maid. "Ella, I don't know anything about doctors
+hereabouts."
+
+"I know a good one, Miss Florence. Shall I send for him?"
+
+"Do; Susan is ill."
+
+Jones was not prepared for treachery in his own household; so when he
+heard that a doctor had been called to attend Susan he was without the
+least suspicion that he had been betrayed. More than this, there had
+been no occasion to summon a doctor in the seven years Mr. Hargreave
+had lived there. So Jones went about his petty household affairs
+without more thought upon the matter. The maid had been recommended to
+him as one of the shrewdest young women in the detective business.
+
+The doctor arrived. He was a real doctor; no doubt of that. He
+investigated Susan's condition--brought about by a subtle though not
+dangerous poison--and instantly recommended the seashore. Susan was
+not used to being confined to the house; she was essentially an
+out-of-doors little body. The seashore would bring her about in no
+time. The doctor suggested Atlantic City because of its mildness
+throughout the year and its nearness to New York.
+
+"I'm afraid she'll have to go alone," said Jones gravely.
+
+"I shan't stir!" declared Susan. "I shan't leave my girl even if I am
+sick." Susan caught Florence's hand and pressed it.
+
+"Would you like to go with her, Florence?" asked Jones, with a shy
+glance at the strange doctor. The shy glance was wasted. The doctor
+evinced no sign that it mattered one way or the other to him.
+
+"It is nothing very serious now," he volunteered. "But it may turn out
+serious if it is not taken care of at once."
+
+"What is the trouble?" inquired Jones, who was growing fond of Susan.
+
+"Weak heart. Sunshine and good sea air will strengthen her up again.
+No, no!" as Jones drew forth his wallet. "I'll send in my bill the
+first of the month. Sunshine and sea air; that's all that's necessary.
+And now, good day."
+
+All very businesslike; not the least cause in the world for any one to
+suspect that a new trap was being set by the snarers. The maid
+returned to the sewing-room, while Florence coddled her companion and
+made much of her.
+
+Jones was suspicious, but dig in his mind as he would he could find no
+earthly reason for this suspicion save that this attribute was now
+instinctive, that it was always near the top. If Susan was ill she
+must be given good care; there was no getting around this fact. Later,
+he telephoned several prominent physicians. The strange doctor was
+recommended as a good ordinary practitioner and in good standing; and
+so Jones dismissed his suspicions as having no hook to hang them on.
+
+His hair would have tingled at the roots, however, had he known that
+this same physician was one of the two who had signed the document
+which had accredited Florence with insanity and had all but succeeded
+in making a supposition a fact. Nor was Jones aware of the fact that
+the telephone wire had been tapped recently. So when he finally
+concluded to permit Florence to accompany Susan to Atlantic City he
+telephoned to the detective agency to send up a trusty man, who was
+shadowed from the moment he entered the Hargreave home till he started
+for the railway station. He became lost in the shuffle and was not
+heard from till weeks later, in Havana. The Black Hundred found a good
+profit in the shanghaing business.
+
+Susan began to pick up, as they say, the day after the arrival at
+Atlantic City, due, doubtless, to the cessation of the poison she had
+been taking unawares. The two young women began to enjoy life for the
+first time since they had left Miss Farlow's. They were up with the
+sun every day and went to bed tired but happy. No one bothered them.
+If some stray reporter encountered their signatures on the hotel
+register, he saw nothing to excite his reportorial senses. All this,
+of course, was due to Norton's policy of keeping the affair out of the
+papers.
+
+Following Jones' orders, they made friends with none. Those about the
+hotel--especially the young men--when they made any advances were
+politely snubbed. Every night Florence would write to her good butler
+to report what had taken place during the day, and he was left to judge
+for himself if there was anything to arouse his suspicions. He, of
+course, believed the two were covertly guarded by the detective he had
+sent after them.
+
+When Braine called on Olga he found his doctor there.
+
+"Well, what's the news?" he asked.
+
+"I had better run down and inquire how the young lady is progressing,"
+said the doctor, who was really a first-rate surgeon and who had
+performed a number of skilled operations upon various members of the
+Black Hundred anent their encounters with the police. "I've got Miss
+Florence where you want her. It's up to you now."
+
+"She ought to be separated from her companion. We have left them alone
+for a whole week, so Jones will not worry particularly. A mighty
+curious thing has turned up. Before Hargreave's disappearance not a
+dozen persons could recollect what Jones looked like. He was rarely
+ever in sight. What do you suppose that signifies?"
+
+"Don't ask me," shrugged the man of medicine. "I shouldn't worry over
+Jones."
+
+"But we can't stir the old fool. We can't get him out of that house.
+I've tried to get that maid to put a little something in his coffee,
+but she stands off at that. She says that she did as she agreed in
+regard to Florence, but her agreement ended there. We have given the
+jade five thousand already and she is clamoring for the balance."
+
+"Have you threatened her?" asked Olga.
+
+Braine smiled a little. "My dear woman, it is fifty-fifty. While I
+have a hold on her, it is not quite so good as she has on me. We are
+not dealing with an ordinary servant we could threaten and scare. No,
+indeed; a shrewd little woman who desperately wanted money. And she
+will be paid; no getting out of it. She will not move another step,
+one way or the other, after she receives the balance. Hargreave will
+have a pretty steep bill to pay when the time comes."
+
+"She has no idea where the million is?"
+
+"If she had, she's quite capable of lugging it off all by herself,"
+said Braine.
+
+The doctor laughed.
+
+"Olga," went on Braine, "you must look at it as I do; that it is still
+in the middle of the game, and we have neither lost nor won."
+
+"How do you know that Hargreave may not have at his beck and call an
+organization quite as capable if not as large as ours?" suggested the
+physician.
+
+"That is not possible," Braine declared without hesitation.
+
+"Well, it begins to look that way to me. We've never made a move yet
+that hasn't been blocked."
+
+"Pure luck each time, I tell you; the devil's own luck always at the
+critical moment, when everything seems to be in our hands. Now, we
+want Florence, and we've tried a hundred ways to accomplish this fact
+and failed. The question is, how to get her away from her companion?"
+
+"Simple enough," said the doctor complacently.
+
+"Out with it, if you have an idea."
+
+The doctor leaned forward and whispered a few words.
+
+"Well, I'm hanged!" Braine laughed and slapped the doctor on the
+shoulder. "The simplest thing in the world. Mad dog wouldn't be in
+it. I always said that you had gray matter if you cared to exert
+yourself."
+
+"Thanks," replied the doctor dryly. "I'll drop down there to-morrow,
+if you say so, ostensibly to see the other patient. It will make a
+deuce of a disturbance."
+
+"Not if you scare the hotel people."
+
+"That is what I propose to do. They will not want such a thing known.
+It would scare every one away for the rest of the season. But of
+course this depends upon whether they are honest or in the hotel
+business to make money."
+
+Again Braine laughed. "Bring her back to New York alone, Esculapius,
+and a fat check is yours. Nothing could be simpler than an idea like
+this. It's a fact; no man can think of everything, and you've just
+proved it to me. I've tried to do a general's work without aids.
+Olga, does any one watch me come and go any more?"
+
+"No; I've watched a dozen nights. The man has gone. Either he found
+out what he wanted or he gave up the job. To my mind he found out what
+he wanted."
+
+"And what's that?"
+
+"Heaven knows!" discouragedly.
+
+"Come, doctor, suppose you and I go down to Daly's for a little turn at
+billiards?"
+
+"Nothing would suit me better."
+
+"All aboard, then! Good night, Olga, keep your hair on; I mean your
+own hair. We're going to win out, don't you worry. In all games the
+minute you begin to doubt you begin to lose."
+
+That same night Norton sat at his desk, in his shirt sleeves, pounding
+away at his typewriter. From time to time he paused and teetered his
+chair and scowled over his pipe at the starlit night outside. Bang!
+would go his chair again, and clickity-click would sing the keys of the
+machine. The story he was writing was in the ordinary routine; the
+arrival of a great ocean liner with some political notables who were
+not adverse to denouncing the present administration. You will have
+noticed, no doubt, that some disgruntled politician is always
+denouncing the present administration, it matters not if it be
+Republican or Democratic. When you are out of a good job you are
+always prone to denounce. The yarn bored. Norton because his thoughts
+were miles southward.
+
+He completed his story, yanked out the final sheet, called for a copy
+boy, rose and sauntered over to the managing editor's door, before
+which he paused indecisively. The "old man" had been after him lately
+regarding the Hargreave story, and he doubted if his errand would prove
+successful.
+
+However, he boldly opened the door and walked in.
+
+"Humph!" said the "old man," twisting his cigar into the corner of his
+mouth. "Got that story?"
+
+Norton sat down. "Yes, but I have not got it for print yet. Mr.
+Blair, when you gave me the Hargreave job you gave me carte blanche."
+
+"I did," grimly. "But, on the other hand, I did not give you ten years
+to clear it up in."
+
+"Have I ever fallen down on a good story?" quietly.
+
+"H'm, can't remember," grudgingly.
+
+"Well, if you'll have patience I'll not fall down on this one. It's
+the greatest criminal story I ever handled, but it's so big that it's
+going to take time."
+
+"Gimme an outline."
+
+"I have promised not to," with a grimness equal to the "old man's."
+"If a line of this story trickles out it will mean that every other
+paper will be moving around, and in the end will discover enough to
+spoil my end of it. I'll tell you this much: The most colossal band of
+thieves this country ever saw is at one end of the stick. And when I
+say that counterfeiting and politics and millions are involved, you'll
+understand how big it is. This gang has city protection. We are
+running them all into a corner; but we want that corner so deep that
+none of them can wriggle out of it."
+
+"Umhm. Go on."
+
+"I want two months more."
+
+The "old man" beat a tattoo with his fat pencil. "Sixty days, then.
+And if the yarn isn't on my desk at midnight, you--"
+
+"Hunt for another job. All right. I came in to ask for three days'
+leave."
+
+"You're your own boss, Jim, for sixty days more. Whadda y' mean
+counterfeiting?"
+
+"Those new tens and twenties. If I stumble on that right, why, I can
+turn it over without conflicting with the other story."
+
+"Well, go to it."
+
+"I'm turning in my regular work, day in and day out, and while doing it
+I've gone through more hairbreadth escapes than you ever heard of.
+They have been after me. I've dodged falling safes; I've been
+shanghaied, poisoned; but I haven't said a word."
+
+"Good lord! Do you mean all that?"
+
+"Every word, sir."
+
+"I'll make it ninety days, Jim; and if this story comes in I'll see
+that you get a corking bonus."
+
+"I'm not looking for bonuses. I'm proud of my work. To get this story
+is all I want. That'll be enough. Thanks for the extension of time.
+Good night."
+
+So Florence received a long night letter in the morning.
+
+And the doctor arrived at about the same time. And called promptly
+upon his patient.
+
+"Fine!" he said. "The sea air was just the thing. A doctor always
+likes to find his advice turning out well."
+
+He glanced quizzically at Florence, who was the picture of glowing
+health. Suddenly he frowned anxiously.
+
+"You need not look at me," she laughed. "I never felt better in all my
+life."
+
+"Are you sure?"
+
+"Why, what in the world do you mean?"
+
+He did not speak, but stepped forward and took her by the wrist,
+holding his watch in his other hand. He shook his head. He looked
+very solemn, indeed.
+
+"What is it?" demanded Susan, with growing terror.
+
+"Go to your own room immediately and remain there for the present," he
+ordered. "I must see Miss Hargreave alone."
+
+He opened the door and Susan passed out bewilderedly. He returned to
+Florence, who was even more bewildered than her companion. The doctor
+began to ask her questions; how she slept, if she was thirsty, felt
+pains in her back. She answered all these questions vaguely. Not the
+slightest suspicion entered her head that she was being hoodwinked.
+Why should she entertain any suspicion? This doctor, who seemed kindly
+and benevolent, who had prescribed for Susan and benefited her, why
+should she doubt him?
+
+"In heaven's name, tell me what is the matter?" she pleaded.
+
+"Stay here for a little while and I'll be back. Under no circumstances
+leave your room till I return."
+
+He paced out into the hall, to meet the frantic Susan.
+
+"We must see the manager at once," he replied to her queries. "And we
+must be extremely quiet about it. There must be no excitement. You
+had better go to your room. You must not go into Miss Hargreave's.
+Tell me, where have you been? Have you been trying to do any
+charitable work among the poorer classes?"
+
+"Only once," admitted Susan, now on the verge of tears.
+
+"Only once is sufficient. Come; we'll go and see the manager together."
+
+They arrived at the desk, and the manager was summoned.
+
+"I take it," began the doctor lowly, "that a contagious disease, if it
+became known among your guests, would create a good deal of
+disturbance?"
+
+"Disturbance! Good heavens, man, it would ruin my business for the
+whole season!" exclaimed the astounded manager.
+
+"I am sorry, but this young lady's companion has been stricken with
+smallpox--"
+
+The manager fell back against his desk, his jaw fallen. Susan turned
+as white as the marble top.
+
+"The only way to avoid trouble is to have her conveyed immediately to
+some place where she can be treated properly. Not a word to any one
+now; absolute secrecy or a panic."
+
+The manager was glad enough to agree.
+
+"She is not dangerous at present, but it is only a matter of a few
+hours when the disease will become virulent. If you will place a
+porter before Miss Hargreave's door till I make arrangements to take
+her away, that will simplify matters."
+
+Smallpox! Susan wandered aimlessly about, half out of her mind with
+terror. There was no help against such a dreaded disease. Her
+Florence, her pretty rosy-cheeked Florence, disfigured for life....!
+
+"Miss Susan, where is Florence?"
+
+"Oh, Mr. Norton!" she gasped.
+
+"What's the trouble?" instantly alert.
+
+"Florence has the smallpox!"
+
+"Impossible! Come with me."
+
+But the porter having had the strictest orders from the manager,
+refused to let them into Florence's room.
+
+"Never mind, Susan. Come along." Out of earshot of the porter, he
+said: "My room is directly above Florence's. We'll see what can be
+done. This smells of the Black Hundred a mile off. Smallpox! Only
+yesterday she wrote me that she never felt better. Have you wired
+Jones?"
+
+"I never thought to!"
+
+"Then I shall. Our old friends are at work again."
+
+"But it's the same doctor who sent me down here."
+
+Norton frowned.
+
+What followed all appeared in the reporter's story, as written three
+months later. He and Susan went up to his room, raised the flooring,
+cut through the ceiling, and with the fire-escape rope dropped below.
+One glance at Florence's tear-stained face was enough for him.
+Norton's subsequent battle with the doctor and his accomplices made
+very interesting reading. Their escape from the hotel, their flight,
+their encounter with one of the gang in the road, and Florence's
+blunder into the bed of quicksand, gave a succession of thrills to the
+readers of the _Blade_.
+
+And all this while the million accumulated dust, layer by layer.
+Perhaps an occasional hardy roach scrambled over the packets, no doubt
+attracted by the peculiar odor of the ink.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+The Black Hundred possessed three separate council chambers, always in
+preparation. Hence, when the one in use was burned down they
+transferred their conferences to the second council chamber appointed
+identically the same as the first. As inferred, the organization owned
+considerable wealth, and they leased the buildings in which they had
+their council chambers, leased them for a number of years, and
+refurnished them secretly with trap floors, doors and panels and all
+that apparatus so necessary to men who are sometimes compelled to make
+a quick getaway.
+
+When the Atlantic City attempt was turned into a fiasco by Norton's
+timely arrival Braine determined once more to rid himself of this
+meddling reporter. He knew too much, in the first place, and in the
+second place Braine wanted to learn whether the reporter bore a charmed
+life or was just ordinarily lucky. He would attempt nothing delicate,
+requiring finesse. He would simply waylay Norton and make a
+commonplace end of him. He would disappear, this reporter, that would
+be all; and when they found him he might or might not be recognizable.
+
+So Braine called a conference and he and his fellow rogues went over a
+number of expedients and finally agreed that the best thing to do would
+be to send a man to the newspaper, ostensibly as a reporter looking for
+a situation. With this excuse he would be able to hang around the city
+room for three or four days. The idea back of this was to waylay
+Norton on his way to some assignment which took him to the suburbs.
+
+All this was arranged down to the smallest detail; and a man whom they
+were quite certain Norton had not yet seen was selected to play the
+part. He had been a reporter once, more's the pity; so there was no
+doubt of his being able to handle his end of the game.
+
+"I want Norton, I want him badly," declared Braine, "and woe to you if
+you let booze play in between you and the object of this move."
+
+The man selected to act the reporter hung his head. Whisky had been
+the origin of his fall from honest living, and he was not so calloused
+as not to feel the sting of remorse at times.
+
+"More," went on Braine, "I want Norton brought to 49. It's a little
+off the beat, and we can handle Norton as we please. When we get rid
+of this newspaper ferret there'll be another to eliminate. But he's a
+fox, and a fox must be set to trail him."
+
+"And who is that?"
+
+"Jones, Jones, Jones!" thundered Braine. "He's the live wire. But the
+reporter first. Jones depends a lot on him. Take away this prop and
+Jones will not be so sure of himself. There's a man outside all this
+circle, and all these weeks of warfare have not served to bring him
+into the circle."
+
+"Hargreave is dead," said Vroon stolidly.
+
+"As dead as I am," snarled Braine. "Two men went away in that balloon;
+and I'll wager my head that one man came back. I am beginning to put a
+few things together that I have not thought of before. Who knows?
+That balloon may have been carried out to sea purposely. The captain
+on that tramp steamer may have lied from beginning to end. I tell you,
+Hargreave is alive, and wherever he is he has his hand on all the
+wires. He has agents, too, whom we know nothing about. Hang the
+million! I want to put my hands on Hargreave just to prove that I am
+the better man. He communicates with Jones, perhaps through the
+reporter; he has had me followed; it was he who changed the boxes,
+bored the hole in the ceiling of the other quarters and learned heaven
+knows what."
+
+"If that's the case," said Vroon, "why hasn't he had us apprehended?"
+
+Braine laughed heartily. "Haven't you been able to see by this time
+what his game is? Revenge. He does not want the police to meddle only
+in the smaller affairs. He wants to put terror into the hearts of all
+of us. Keep this point in your mind when you act. He'll never summon
+the police unless we make a broad daylight attempt to get possession of
+his daughter. And even then he would make it out a plain case of
+kidnaping. Elimination, that's the word. All right. We'll play at
+that game ourselves. No. 1 shall be Mr. Norton. And if you fail I'll
+break you," Braine added to the ex-reporter.
+
+"I'll get him," said the man sullenly.
+
+Later, when he applied for a situation on the _Blade_, it happened that
+there were two strikes on hand, and two or three extra men were needed
+on the city staff. The man from the Black Hundred was given a
+temporary job and went by the name of Gregg.
+
+For three days he worked faithfully, abstaining from his favorite
+tipple. He had never worked in New York, so his record was unknown.
+He had told the city editor that he had worked on a Chicago paper, now
+defunct.
+
+He paid no attention whatsoever to Norton, a sign of no little acumen.
+On the other hand Norton never went forth on an assignment that Gregg
+did not know exactly where he was going. But all these stories kept
+Norton in town; and it would be altogether too risky to attempt to
+handle him anywhere but outside of town. So Gregg had to abide his
+time.
+
+It came soon enough.
+
+Norton was idling at his desk when the city editor called him up to the
+wicket.
+
+[Illustration: NORTON WAS IDLING AT HIS DESK WHEN THE CITY EDITOR
+CALLED HIM UP TO THE WICKET]
+
+"General Henderson has just returned to America. Get his opinion on
+the latest Balkan rumpus. He's out at his suburban home. Here's the
+address."
+
+"How long will you hold open for me?" asked Norton, meaning how long
+would the city editor wait for the story.
+
+"Till one-thirty. You ought to be back by midnight. It's only eight
+now."
+
+"All right; Henderson's approachable. I may get a good story out of
+him."
+
+"Maybe," thought Gregg, who had lost nothing of this conversation.
+
+It was his opportunity. He immediately left the zone of the city desk
+for a telephone booth. But as he passed the line of desks and busy
+reporters he did not note the keen scrutiny of a smooth-faced,
+gray-haired man who stood at the side of Norton's desk awaiting the
+reporter's return.
+
+"Why, Jones," cried the surprised Norton. "What are you doing all this
+way from home?"
+
+"Orders," said Jones, smiling faintly as he delivered a note to the
+reporter.
+
+"Anything serious?"
+
+"Not that I am aware of. Miss Florence was rather particular. She
+wanted to be sure that the note reached your hands safely."
+
+"And do you mean to say that you came away and left her alone in that
+house?"
+
+Again Jones smiled. "I left her well guarded, you may be sure of that.
+She will never run away again." He waited for Norton to read the note.
+
+It was nothing more than one of those love orders to come and call at
+once. And she had made Jones venture into town with it! The reporter
+smiled and put the note away tenderly. And then he caught Jones
+smiling, too.
+
+"I'm going to marry her, Jones."
+
+"That remains to be seen," replied the butler, not unkindly.
+
+"Well, anyhow, thanks for bringing the note. But I've got to
+disappoint her to-night. I'm off in a deuce of a hurry to interview
+General Henderson. I'll be out to tea to-morrow. You can find your
+way out of this old firetrap. By-by!"
+
+The moment he turned away the smile faded from Jones' face, and with
+the quickness and noiselessness of a cat he reached the side of the
+booth in which Gregg believed himself so secure from eavesdropping.
+The half dozen words Jones heard convinced him that Norton was again
+the object of the Black Hundred's attention. He had seen the man's
+face that memorable night when the balloon stopped for its passenger.
+Before Gregg came out of the booth Jones decided to overtake Norton and
+forewarn him, but unfortunately the reporter was nowhere in sight.
+
+There was left for Jones nothing else but to return home or follow when
+Gregg came out. As this night he knew Florence to be exceptionally
+well guarded, both within and without the house, he decided to wait and
+follow the spy.
+
+When Braine received the message he was pleased. Norton's assignment
+fitted his purpose like a glove. Before midnight he would have Mr.
+Meddling Reporter where he would bother no one for some time--if he
+proved tractable. If not, he would never bother any one again. Braine
+gave his orders tersely. Unless Norton met with unforeseen delay,
+nothing could prevent his capture.
+
+When Norton arrived at the Henderson place, a footman informed him from
+the veranda that General Henderson was at 49 Elm Street for the
+evening, and it would be wise to call there. Jim nodded his thanks and
+set off in haste for 49 Elm Street. The footman did not enter the
+house, but hurried down the steps and slunk off among the adjacent
+shrubbery. His mission was over with.
+
+The house in Elm Street was Braine's suburban establishment. He went
+there occasionally to hibernate, as it were, to grow a new skin when
+close pressed. The caretaker was a man rightly called Samson. He was
+a bruiser of the bouncer type.
+
+It was fast work for Braine to get out there. If the man disguised as
+a footman played his cards badly Braine would have all his trouble for
+nothing. He disguised himself with that infernal cleverness which had
+long since made him a terror to the police, who were looking for ten
+different men instead of one. He knew that Norton would understand
+instantly that he was not the general; but on the other hand he would
+not know that he was addressing Braine.
+
+So the arch-conspirator waited; and so Norton arrived and was ushered
+into the room. A single glance was enough to satisfy the reporter,
+always keen-eyed and observant.
+
+"I wish to see General Henderson," he said politely.
+
+"General Henderson is doubtless at his own house."
+
+"Ah!"
+
+"Don't be alarmed--yet," said Braine smoothly.
+
+"I am not alarmed," replied Norton. "I am only chagrined. Since
+General Henderson is not to be found here I must be excused."
+
+"I will excuse you presently."
+
+"Ah! I begin to see."
+
+"Indeed!" mocked Braine.
+
+"I have tumbled or walked into a trap."
+
+"A keen mind like yours must have recognized that fact the moment you
+discovered that I was not the general."
+
+"I am indebted to the Black Hundred?" coolly.
+
+"Precisely. We do not wish you ill, Mr. Norton."
+
+"To be sure, no!" ironically. "What with falling safes, poisoned
+cigarettes, and so forth, I can readily see that you have my welfare at
+heart. What puzzled me was the suddenness with which these
+affectionate signs ceased."
+
+"You're a man of heart," said Braine with genuine admiration. "These
+affectionate signs, as you call them, ceased because for the time being
+you ceased to be a menace. You have become that once more, and here
+you are!"
+
+"And what are you going to do with me now that you have got me?"
+
+"There will be two courses." Braine reached into a drawer and drew out
+a thick roll of bills. "There are here something like $5,000."
+
+"Quite a tidy sum; enough for a chap to get married on."
+
+The two eyed each other steadily. And in his heart Braine sighed. For
+he saw in this young man's eyes incorruptibility.
+
+"It is yours on one condition," said Braine, reaching out his foot
+stealthily toward the button which would summon Samson.
+
+"And that is," interpolated Norton, "that I join the Black Hundred."
+
+"Or the great beyond, my lad," took up Braine, his voice crisp and cold.
+
+Norton could not repress a shiver. Where had he heard this voice
+before? ... Braine! He stiffened.
+
+"Murder in cold blood?" he managed to say.
+
+"Indefinite imprisonment. Choose."
+
+"I have chosen."
+
+"H'm!" Braine rose and went over to the sideboard for the brandy.
+"I'm going to offer you a drink to show you that personally there are
+no hard feelings. You are in the way. After you, our friend, Jones.
+This brandy is not poisoned, neither are the glasses. Choose either
+and I'll drink first. We are all desperate men, Norton; and we stop at
+nothing. Your life hangs by a hair. Do you know where Hargreave is?"
+
+Norton eyed his liquor thoughtfully.
+
+"Do you know where the money is?"
+
+Norton smelt of the brandy.
+
+"I am sorry," said Braine. "I should have liked to win over a head
+like yours."
+
+Norton nonchalantly took out his watch, and that bit of bravado perhaps
+saved his life. In the case of his watch he saw a brutal face behind
+him. Without a tremor, Norton took up his glass.
+
+"I am sorry to disappoint you," he said, "but I shall neither join you
+nor go to by-by."
+
+Quick as a bird shadow above grass, he flung his brandy over his
+shoulder into the face of the man behind. Samson yelled with pain.
+Almost at the same instant Norton pushed over the table, upsetting
+Braine with it. Next he dashed through the curtains, slammed the door,
+and fled to the street, very shaky about the knees, if the truth is to
+be told.
+
+General Henderson's views upon the latest Balkan muddle were missing
+from the _Blade_ the following morning. Norton, instead of returning
+to the general's and fulfilling his assignment like a dutiful reporter,
+hurried out to Riverside to acquaint Jones with what had happened.
+Jones was glad to see him safe and sound.
+
+"That new reporter started the game," he said. "I overheard a word or
+two while he was talking in the booth. All your telephone booths are
+ramshackle affairs, you use them so constantly. I tried to find you,
+but you were out of sight. Now, tell me what happened."
+
+"Sh!" warned Norton as he spied Florence coming down the stairs.
+
+"I thought you couldn't come!" she cried. "But ten o'clock!"
+
+"I changed my mind," he replied, laughing.
+
+He caught her arm in his and drew her toward the library. Jones smiled
+after them with that enigmatical smile of his, which might have
+signified irony or affection. After half an hour's chat, Florence,
+quite unaware that the two men wished to talk, retired.
+
+At the door Norton told Jones what had taken place at 49 Elm Street.
+
+"Ah! we must not forget that number," mused Jones. "My advice is, keep
+an eye on this Gregg chap. We may get somewhere by watching him."
+
+"Do you know where Hargreave is?"
+
+Jones scratched his chin reflectively.
+
+Norton laughed. "I can't get anything out of you."
+
+"Much less any one else. I'm growing fond of you, my boy. You're a
+man."
+
+"Thanks; and good night."
+
+When Olga Perigoff called the next day Jones divested himself of his
+livery, donned a plain coat and hat, and left the house stealthily.
+To-day he was determined to learn something definite in regard to this
+suave, handsome Russian. When she left the house Jones rose from his
+hiding place and proceeded to follow her. The result of this espionage
+on the part of Jones will be seen presently.
+
+Meantime Jim went down to the office and lied cheerfully about his
+missing the general. Whether the city editor believed him or not is of
+no matter. Jim went over to his desk. From the corner of his eye he
+could see Gregg scribbling away. He never raised his head as Jim sat
+down to read his mail. After a while Gregg rose and left the office;
+and, of course, Jim left shortly afterward. When the newcomer saw that
+he was being followed, he smiled and continued on his way. This Norton
+chap was suspicious. All the better; his suspicions should be made the
+hook to land him with. By and by the man turned into a drug store and
+Jim loitered about till he reappeared. Gregg walked with brisker steps
+now. It was his intention to lead Norton on a wild goose chase for an
+hour or so, long enough to give Braine time to arrange a welcome at
+another house.
+
+Norton kept perhaps half a block in the rear of his man all the while.
+But for this caution he would have witnessed a little pantomime that
+would have put him wholly upon his guard. Turning a corner, Gregg all
+but bumped into the countess. He was quick enough to place a finger on
+his lips and motion his head toward a taxicab. Olga hadn't the least
+idea who was coming around the corner, but she hailed the cab and was
+off in it before Jim swung around the corner.
+
+Jones, who had followed the countess for something over an hour and a
+half, hugged a doorway. What now? he wondered. The countess knew the
+man. That was evidence enough for the astute butler. But what meant
+the pantomime and the subsequent hurry? He soon learned. The man
+Gregg went his way, and then Jim turned the corner. Jones cast a
+wistful glance at the vanishing cab of the Russian, and decided to
+shadow the shadower--in other words, to follow the reporter, to see
+that nothing serious befell him.
+
+The lurer finally paused at a door, opened it with a key and swung it
+behind him, very careful, however, not to spring the latch. Naturally
+Jim was mightily pleased when he found the door could be opened. When
+Jones, not far behind, saw him open the door, he started to call out a
+warning, but thought the better of it. If Norton was walking into a
+trap it was far better that he, Jones, should remain outside of it. If
+Jim did not appear after a certain length of time, he would start an
+investigation on his own account.
+
+No sooner was Jim in the hallway than he was set upon and overpowered.
+They had in this house what was known as "the punishment room." Here
+traitors paid the reckoning and were never more heard of. Into this
+room Jim was unceremoniously dropped when Braine found that he could
+get no information from the resolute reporter.
+
+The room did not look sinister, but for all that it possessed the
+faculty of growing smaller and smaller, slowly or swiftly, as the man
+above at the lever willed. When Jim was apprised of this fact, he ran
+madly about in search of some mode of escape, knowing full well in his
+heart that he should not find one.
+
+Presently the machinery began to work, and Norton's tongue grew dry
+with terror. They had him this time; there was not the least doubt of
+it. And they had led him there by the nose into the bargain.
+
+Twenty minutes passed, and Jones concluded it was time for him to act.
+He went forward to try the door, but this time it was locked. Jones,
+however, was not without resource. The house next door was vacant, and
+he found a way into this, finally reaching the roof. From this he
+jumped to the other roof, found the scuttle open, and crept down the
+stairs, flight after flight, till the whir of a motor arrested him.
+
+Conspirators are often overeager, too. So intent were the rascals upon
+the business at hand that they did not notice the door open slowly. It
+did not take the butler more than a moment to realize that his friend
+and ally was near certain death. With an oath he sprang into the room,
+gave Braine a push which sent him down to join the victim, and pitched
+into the other two. It was a battle royal while it lasted. Jones
+knocked down one of them, yelled to Norton, and kicked the rope he saw
+down into the pit. One end of this rope was attached to a ring in the
+wall. And up this rope Norton swarmed after he had disposed of Braine.
+The tide of battle then swung about in favor of the butler, and shortly
+the fake reporter and his companion were made to join their chief.
+
+Jones stopped the machinery. He could not bring himself to let his
+enemies die so horribly. Later he knew he would regret this sentiment.
+
+When the people came, summoned by some outsider who had heard the
+racket of the conflict, there was no one to be found in the pit. Nor
+was there any visible sign of an exit.
+
+There was one, however, built against such an hour and known only to
+the chiefs of the Black Hundred.
+
+And still the golden-tinted banknotes reposed tranquilly in their
+hiding place!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+About this time--that is to say, about the time the Black Hundred was
+stretching out its powerful secret arms toward Norton--there arrived in
+New York city a personage. This personage was the Princess Parlova, a
+fabulously rich Polish Russian. She leased a fine house near Central
+Park and set about to conquer social New York. This was not very
+difficult, for her title was perfectly genuine and she moved in the
+most exclusive diplomatic circle in Europe, which, as everybody knows,
+is the most brilliant in the world. When the new home was completely
+decorated she gave an elaborate dinner, and that attracted the
+newspapers. They began to talk about her highness, printed portraits
+of her, and devoted a page occasionally in the Sunday editions. She
+became something of a rage. One morning it was announced that the
+Princess Parlova would give a masked ball formally to open her home to
+society; and it was this notice that first brought the Princess Parlova
+under Braine's eyes. He was at the Perigoff apartment at the time.
+
+"Well, well," he mused aloud.
+
+"What is it?" asked Olga, turning away from the piano and ending one of
+Chopin's mazurkas brokenly.
+
+"Here is the Princess Parlova in town."
+
+"And who is she?"
+
+"She is the real thing, Olga; a real princess with vast estates in
+Poland with which the greedy Slav next door has been very gentle."
+
+"I haven't paid much attention to the social news lately. What about
+her?"
+
+"She is giving a masked ball formally to open her house on the West
+Side. And it's going to cost a pretty penny."
+
+"Well, you're not telling me this to make me want to know the
+princess," said Olga, petulantly.
+
+"No. But I'm going to give you a letter of introduction to her
+highness."
+
+"Oh!"
+
+"And you are going to ask her to invite two particular friends of yours
+to this wonderful ball of hers."
+
+"Indeed," ironically. "That sounds all very easy."
+
+"Easier than you think, my child."
+
+"I will not have you call me child."
+
+"Well, then, Olga."
+
+"That's better. Now, how will it be easier than I think?"
+
+"Simply this; the Princess Parlova is an oath-bound member, but has not
+been active for years."
+
+"Oho!" Olga was all animation now. "Go on!"
+
+"You will go to her with a letter of introduction--no! Better than
+that, you will make a formal call and show her this ring. You know the
+ring," he said, passing the talisman to the countess. "Show this to
+her and she will obey you in everything. She will have no alternative."
+
+"Very good," replied Olga. "And then the program is to insist that she
+invite Florence and that fool of a reporter to this ball. Then what?"
+
+"You can leave that to me."
+
+"Haven't all these failures been a warning?"
+
+"No, my dear. I was born optimistic; but there's a jinx somewhere in
+one of my pockets. Time after time I've had everything just where I
+wanted it, and then--poof! It's pure bald luck on their side, but
+sooner or later the wheel will turn. And any chance that offers I am
+bound to accept. Somehow or other we may be able to trap Florence and
+Norton. I want both of them. If I can get them, Jones will be forced
+to draw in Hargreave."
+
+"Is there such a man?"
+
+"You saw him that night at the restaurant."
+
+"I have often thought that perhaps I just dreamed it." She turned
+again to the piano and began humming idly.
+
+"Stop that and listen to me," said Braine, not in quite the best of
+tempers. "I'm in no mood for whims."
+
+"Music does not soothe your soul, then?" cynically.
+
+"If I had one it might. You will call on the Princess Parlova
+to-morrow afternoon. It depends upon you what my plans will be. I
+think you'll have little trouble in getting into the presence of her
+highness, and once there she will not be able to resist you."
+
+"I'll go."
+
+And go she did. The footman in green livery hesitated for a moment,
+but the title on the visiting card was quite sufficient. He bowed the
+countess into the reception room and went in search of his
+distinguished mistress.
+
+The Princess Parlova was a handsome woman verging upon middle age. She
+was a patrician; Olga's keen eye discerned that instantly. She came
+into the reception room with that dignified serenity which would have
+impressed any one as genuine. She held the card in her fingers and
+smiled inquiringly toward her guest.
+
+"I confess," she began, "that I recall neither your face nor your name.
+I am sorry. Where have I had the honor of meeting you before?"
+
+"You have never met me before, your highness," answered Olga sweetly.
+
+"You came on a charity errand, then?"
+
+"That depends, your highness. Will you be so good as to glance at
+this?" Olga asked, holding out her palm upon which the talisman lay.
+
+The princess shrank back, paling.
+
+"Where did you get that?" she panted.
+
+"From the head," was the answer.
+
+"And you have followed me from Russia?" whispered the princess, her
+terror growing.
+
+"Oh, no. The Black Hundred is as strongly organized here as in St.
+Petersburg. But we always keep track of old members, especially when
+they stand so high in the world as yourself."
+
+"But I was deceived and betrayed!" exclaimed the princess. "They urged
+me to join on the ground that the organization was to attempt to bring
+about the freedom of Poland."
+
+Olga shrugged. "You were rich, highness. The Black Hundred needed
+money!"
+
+"And you need it now?" eagerly, believing that she saw a loophole.
+"How much? Oh, I will give a hundred thousand rubles on your promise
+to leave me alone. Tell me!"
+
+"I am sorry, your highness, but I have no authority to accept such an
+offer. Indeed, my errand is far from being expensive. All the Black
+Hundred desires is four invitations to this ball which you are soon to
+give. That should mot cause you any alarm. We shall not interfere
+with your sojourn in America in any way whatsoever, provided these
+invitations are issued."
+
+"You would rob my guests?" horrified.
+
+"Positively no! Here is a list of four names. Invite them; that is
+all you have to do. Not so much as a silver spoon will be found
+missing. This is on my word of honor, and I never break that word, if
+you please."
+
+"Give me the list," said the princess wearily. "Who gave you that
+ring?"
+
+"The head."
+
+"In Russia?"
+
+"No; here in America." Olga dipped into her handbag and produced a
+slip of paper. This she handed to the princess. "Here is the list,
+highness."
+
+"Who is Florence Hargreave?"
+
+"A friend of mine," evasively.
+
+"Does she belong to the organization?"
+
+"No."
+
+"Then you have some ulterior purpose in having me invite her?"
+
+"I have," answered Olga sharply; "but that does not concern your
+highness in the least."
+
+The princess bit her lips. "I see your name here also; a man named
+Braine, and another, Norton."
+
+"Say at once that you do not care to execute the wishes--the
+commands--of the order," said Olga coldly.
+
+"I will do as you wish. And I beg you now to excuse me. But if
+anything happens to any of my personal friends--"
+
+"Well?" haughtily from Olga.
+
+"Well, I will put the matter in the hands of the police."
+
+"But so long as your personal friends are not concerned?"
+
+"I shall then of necessity remain deaf and blind. It is one of the
+penalties I must pay for my folly. I wish you good day."
+
+"And also good riddance," murmured Olga under her breath, as she arose
+and started for the hallway.
+
+Thus it was that when Norton went to the office the next afternoon he
+found a broad white envelope on his desk. Indifferently he opened the
+same and his eyes bulged. "Princess Parlova requests" and so forth and
+so on. Then he shrugged. The chief had probably asked for the
+invitation and he would have to write up the doings, a phase of
+reportorial work eminently distasteful to him. He went up to the city
+desk.
+
+"Can't you find some one else to do this stuff?" he growled to the city
+editor.
+
+The city editor glanced at the card and crested envelope. "Good lord,
+man! Nobody in this office had anything to do with that. What luck!
+Our Miss Hayes tried all manner of schemes, but was rebuffed on all
+sides. How the deuce did you chance to get one?"
+
+"Search me," said the bewildered Norton.
+
+"If I were you I'd sit tight and take it all in," advised the editor.
+"It's going to be the biggest splurge of its kind we've had in years.
+We've been working every wire we know to get Miss Hayes inside, but it
+was no go. This princess is not on to the game yet. In this country
+you get into society or you don't through the Sundays."
+
+"Hanged if I know who wished this thing on me."
+
+"Take it philosophically," said the editor sarcastically. "The
+princess won't bite you. She may even have seen your picture--"
+
+"Get out!" grumbled Norton, turning away.
+
+He would go out and see Florence. On the way out to Riverdale he came
+to the conclusion that the list of the princess fell short and some
+friend of his who was helping the woman out suggested his name. It was
+the only way he could account for it.
+
+But when he learned that Florence had an invitation exactly like his
+own and that she received it that morning he became suspicious.
+
+"Jones, what do you think of it?" he questioned.
+
+"I think it was very kind of the Countess Perigoff suggesting your name
+and that of Florence," said the butler urbanely.
+
+"Olga?" cried Florence disappointedly.
+
+"It is the only logical deduction I can make," declared Jones. "They
+are both practically Russians."
+
+"And what would you advise?" asked Norton.
+
+"Why, go and enjoy yourselves. Forewarned is forearmed. The thing is,
+be very careful not to acquaint any one with the character of your
+disguise, least of all the Countess Perigoff. Besides," Jones added
+smiling, "perhaps I may go myself."
+
+"Goody! I've read about masked balls and have always been crazy to go
+to one," said Florence with eagerness.
+
+"Suppose we go at once and pick out some costumes?" suggested Norton.
+
+"Just as soon as I can get my hat on," replied Florence, happy as a
+lark.
+
+"But mind," warned Jones; "be sure that you see the costumer alone and
+that no one else is about."
+
+"I'll take particular care," agreed Norton. "We've got to do some
+hustling to find something suitable. For a big affair like this the
+town will be ransacked. All aboard! There's room for two in that car
+of mine; and we can have a spin besides. Hang work!"
+
+Florence laughed, and even Jones permitted a smile (which was not grim
+this time) to stir his lips.
+
+A happy person is generally unobservant. Two happy persons together
+are totally unobservant of what passes around them. In plainer terms
+this lack is called love. And being frankly in love with each other,
+neither Norton nor Florence observed that a taxicab followed them into
+town. Jones, not being in love, was keenly observant; but the taxicab
+took up the trail two blocks away, so the matter wholly escaped Jones'
+eye.
+
+The two went into several costumers', but eventually discovered a shop
+on a side street that had been overlooked by those invited to the
+masquerade. They had a merry time rummaging among the
+camphory-smelling boxes. There were dominoes of all colors, and at
+length they agreed upon two modest ones that were evenly matched in
+color and design. Florence ordered them to be sent home. Then the two
+of them sallied up to the Ritz-Carleton and had tea.
+
+The man from the taxicab entered the costumer's, displayed a
+detective's shield and demanded that the proprietor show him the
+costumes selected by the two young people who had just left. The man
+obeyed wonderingly.
+
+"I want a pair exactly like these," said the detective. "How much?"
+
+"Two dollars each, rental; seven apiece if you wish to buy them."
+
+"I'll buy them."
+
+The detective paid the bill, nodded curtly, and returned to his taxicab.
+
+"Now, I wonder," mused the costumer, "what the dickens those
+innocent-looking young people are up to?" He never found out.
+
+On the night of the ball Norton dined with Florence for the first time;
+and for once in his life he experienced that petty disturbance of
+collective thought called embarrassment. To talk over war plans with
+Jones was one thing, but to have Jones serve soup was altogether
+another. All through dinner Jones replied to questions with no more
+and no less than "Yes, sir," and "No, sir." Norton was beginning to
+learn that this strange man could put on a dozen kinds of armor and
+always retain his individuality. And to-night there seemed something
+vaguely familiar about the impassive face of the butler, as if he had
+seen it somewhere in the past, but could not tell when or where. As he
+and Florence were leaving for the automobile which was to take them to
+the princess', the truth came home to him with the shock of a douche of
+ice-cold water. Under his breath he murmured: "You're a wonderful man,
+Jones; and I take my hat off to you with the deepest admiration. Hang
+me!"
+
+"What are you mumbling about?" asked the happy girl.
+
+"Was I mumbling? Perhaps I was going over my catechism. I haven't
+been out in society in so long that I've forgotten how to act."
+
+"I believe that. We've been in here for five minutes and you haven't
+told me that you love me."
+
+"Good heavens!" And his arms went around her so tightly that she
+begged for quarter.
+
+"How strong you are!"
+
+The splendor of the rooms, the dazzling array of jewels, the
+kaleidoscopic colors, the perfume of the banked flowers and the music
+all combined to put Florence into a pleasurable kind of trance. And it
+was only when the first waltz began that she became herself and
+surrendered to the arms of the man she loved.
+
+And they were waltzing over a volcano. She knew and he knew it. From
+what direction would the blow come? Well, they were prepared for all
+manner of tricks.
+
+In an alcove off the ballroom sat Braine and Olga, both dressed exactly
+like Norton and Florence. Another man and woman entered presently, and
+Braine spoke to them for a moment, as if giving instructions, which was
+indeed the case.
+
+The band crashed into another dance, and the masqueraders began
+swirling hither and thither and yon. A gay cavalier suddenly stopped
+in front of Florence.
+
+"Enchantress, may I have the pleasure of this dance?"
+
+Jim touched Florence's hand. But she turned laughingly toward the
+stranger. What difference did it make? The man would never know who
+she was nor would she know him. It was a lark, that was all; and
+despite Jim's warning touch she was up and away like the mischievous
+sprite that she was. Jim remained in his chair, twisting his fingers
+and wondering whether to laugh or grow angry. After all, he could not
+blame her. To him an affair like this was an ancient story; to her it
+was the door of fairyland swung open. Let her enjoy herself.
+
+Florence was having a splendid time. Her partner was asking her all
+sorts of questions and she was replying in kind, when out of the crowd
+came Norton (as she supposed), who touched her arm. The cavalier
+stopped, bowed and made off.
+
+Norton whispered: "I have made an important discovery. We must be off
+at once. Come with me."
+
+Florence, without the least suspicion in the world, followed him up the
+broad staircase. What with the many sounds it was not to be wondered
+at that the difference in the quality of voices did not strike
+Florence's ear as odd. The result of her confidence was that upon
+reaching the upper halls, opposite the dressing rooms, she was suddenly
+thrust into a room and made prisoner. When the light was turned up she
+recognized with horror the woman who had helped to kidnap her and take
+her away on the _George Washington_ weeks ago. She could not have
+cried out for help if she had tried.
+
+Meantime Jim got up and began to wander about in search of Florence.
+
+Braine played a clever game that night. He and the Russian, still
+dominoed like Norton and Florence, ordered the Hargreave auto, by
+number, entered it and were driven up to the porte-cochere of the
+Hargreave house. The two alighted, the chauffeur sent the car toward
+the garage, and Braine and his companion ran lightly down the path to
+the street where the cab which had followed picked them up.
+
+It grew more and more evident to Jim that something untoward had taken
+place. He could not find Florence anywhere, in the alcoves, in the
+side rooms, the supper or card room. Later, to his utter amazement, he
+was informed that the Hargreave auto had some time since been called
+and its owner taken home. Some one had taken his place.
+
+His first sensation was impotent fury against Jones, who had permitted
+them to play with fire. He flung out of the mansion unceremoniously,
+commandeered a cab, and flew out to Riverdale. And when Jones came to
+the door he was staggering with sleep.
+
+"What's the matter with you?" demanded Jim roughly. "Where's Florence?"
+
+"Isn't she with you?" cried Jones, making an effort to dispel the
+drowsiness. "What time is it?" suddenly.
+
+"Midnight! Where is she?"
+
+"Midnight? I've been drugged!"
+
+Without a word Jones staggered off to the kitchens, Jim at his heels.
+
+There was always hot water, and within five minutes Jones had drunk two
+cups of raw strong coffee.
+
+"Drugged!" he murmured. "Some one in the house! I'll attend to that
+later. Now, the chauffeur."
+
+But the chauffeur swore on his oath that he had left Jim and Florence
+on the steps of the porte-cochere.
+
+"Get in!" said Jones to Norton, now fully alive. He could not get it
+out of his head that some one in the house had drugged him.
+
+The events which followed were to both Jones and Norton something like
+a series of nightmares. In the new home of the Princess Parlova a bomb
+had exploded and fire followed the explosion. From pleasure to terror
+is only a step. The wildest confusion imaginable ensued. Most of the
+guests were of the opinion that some anarchist had attempted to blow up
+the house of the rich Pole. Jones and Norton arrived just as the smoke
+began to pour out from the windows. A crowd had already collected.
+
+Then Jim overheard a woman masquerader say: "The fool made the bomb too
+strong. She is in the room on the second floor. The game is up if she
+suffocates----" The voice trailed off and the woman became lost in the
+crowd. But it was enough for the reporter, who pushed his way roughly
+through the excited masqueraders and entered the house. The rescue was
+one of the most exciting to be found in the newspaper files of the day.
+
+So Braine in his effort to scare everybody from the house had
+overreached himself once more.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+Florence was a fortnight in recovering from the shock of her experience
+at the masked ball of the Princess Parlova, who, by the way,
+disappeared from New York shortly after the fire, no doubt because of
+her fear of the Black Hundred. The fire did not destroy the house, but
+most of the furnishings were so thoroughly drenched by water that they
+were practically ruined. Her coming and going were a nine-days'
+wonder, and then the public found something else to talk about.
+
+Norton was a constant visitor at the Hargreave place. There was to him
+a new interest in that mysterious house, with its hidden panels, its
+false floors, its secret tunnels; but he treated Jones upon the same
+basis as hitherto. One thing, however: He felt a sense of security in
+regard to Florence such as he had not felt before. So, between
+assignments, he ran out to Riverdale and did what he could to amuse his
+sweetheart. Later they took short rides in the runabout, and at length
+she became as lively as she had ever been.
+
+But often she would catch Norton brooding.
+
+"What makes you frown like that?"
+
+"Was I frowning?" innocently enough.
+
+"I find you this way a dozen times in an afternoon. What is the
+matter? Are they after you again?"
+
+"Heavens, no! I'm only a vague issue. They will not bother me so long
+as I do not bother them. It has dwindled into a game of truce."
+
+"Do you think so?" eying him curiously.
+
+"Why, yes."
+
+"What's the use of trying to fool me, Jim? If they haven't been after
+you, you are sensing a presage of evil. I'm not a child any longer.
+Haven't I been through enough to make me a woman? Sometimes I feel
+very old."
+
+"To me you are the most charming in all this wide world. No, you're
+not a child any longer. You are a woman, brave and patient; and I know
+that I could trust you with any secret I have or own. But sometimes a
+person may have a secret which is not his and which he hasn't any right
+to disclose."
+
+She became silent for a while. "I hate money," she said. "I hate it,
+hate it!"
+
+"It's mighty comfortable to have it around sometimes," he countered.
+
+"As in my case, for instance. If I were poor and had to work no one
+would bother me."
+
+"I would!" he declared, laughing. "Come; let's throw off moods and go
+into town for tea at the Rose Garden; and if you feel strong enough
+we'll trip the light fantastic."
+
+They had been gone from the house less than an hour when a man ran up
+the steps of the veranda and rang the bell. Jones being busy at the
+rear of the house, the maid came to the door.
+
+"Is Miss Hargreave in?" the stranger asked.
+
+"No," abruptly. The door began to close ever so slowly
+
+"Do you know where I can find her?"
+
+The maid eyed him with covert keenness; then, remembering that the
+reporter was with Florence, said: "I believe she is at the Rose Garden
+this afternoon."
+
+"That is in town?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Thanks." The man turned abruptly and ran down the steps.
+
+The maid ran back to Jones.
+
+"Why didn't you call me?" he demanded impatiently.
+
+"There wasn't time."
+
+"Did you tell him where she was?"
+
+"Yes. But I shouldn't have told him if Mr. Norton had not been with
+Miss Florence."
+
+Jones ran to the front, dashed out, eyed the back of the man hastening
+down the street, smiled, and returned to his work, or, rather, to the
+maid. He took her by the shoulder, whirled her about, and shot a look
+into her eyes that quailed her.
+
+"Always call me hereafter, no matter what I'm doing. That man has
+never laid eyes on Florence and has no idea what she looks like. Why
+did you drug my coffee the night of that ball?"
+
+She stepped back.
+
+"And how much did they pay you for letting that doctor send Florence to
+Atlantic City? I know everything. Hereafter, walk straight. If you
+play another trick I'll kill you with these two hands. And listen and
+tell this to your confederates: I always know every move they make;
+that is why no one is missing from this house. There is a traitor.
+Let them find him if they can. Will you walk straight, or will you
+leave?"
+
+"I--I will walk straight," she faltered. "The money was too big a
+temptation."
+
+"Did they give it to you?"
+
+"Yes. And more to stay here. But this is the first bit of dishonest
+work I ever did."
+
+"Well, remember what I have said. Another misstep and I'll make an end
+to you. Don't think I'm trying to scare you. You have witnessed
+enough to know that it's life and death in this house. Now run along."
+
+At the garden Jim and Florence sauntered among the crowd, not having
+any particular objective point in view.
+
+"Sh!" whispered Jim.
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"Olga Perigoff is yonder in a box."
+
+"Very well; let us go and sit with her. Is she alone?"
+
+"Apparently. But don't you think we'd better go elsewhere?"
+
+"My dear young man," said Florence with mock loftiness, "Olga Perigoff
+has written me down as a simple young fool, and that is why, sooner or
+later, I'm going to put the shoe on the other foot. You and Jones have
+coddled me long enough. Inasmuch as I am the stake they are playing
+for, I intend to have something more than a speaking part in the play."
+
+"All right; you're the admiral," he said with pretended lightness.
+
+So the two of them joined their subtle enemy, conscious of a tingle of
+zest as they did so. On her part, the countess was always suspicious
+of this sleepy-eyed reporter. She never could tell how much he knew.
+But of Florence she was reasonably certain; and so long as she could
+fool the pretty infant the suspicions of the reporter were a negligible
+quantity. She greeted them effusively and offered them chairs. For
+half an hour they sat there, chatting inanities, all the while each
+mind was busy with deeper concerns.
+
+When the man in search of Florence eventually arrived and asked the
+manager of the garden if he knew Miss Hargreave by sight the manager
+pointed toward the box. The man wound his way in and out of the idlers
+and by the time he reached the box Jim and Florence had made their
+departure. The man bowed, approached, and asked the countess if she
+was Miss Hargreave. For a moment Olga suspected a trap. Then it
+appealed to her mind that if there was no trap it might be well to pose
+as Florence, if only to learn what the outcome might be.
+
+"Yes. What is wanted?" she asked.
+
+The man took a letter from his pocket and handed it to Olga, saying:
+"Give this to your father. He knows how to read it."
+
+[Illustration: "GIVE THIS TO YOUR FATHER. HE KNOWS HOW TO READ IT"]
+
+Before she could reply the man had turned and was hurrying away.
+
+Olga opened the note, her heart beating furiously. It was utterly
+blank. At first she thought it was a hoax. Then she happened to
+remember that there was such a thing as invisible ink. At last!
+Hargreave was alive; this letter settled all doubt in her mind on this
+question. Alive! And not only that, but the girl and Jones were
+evidently in communication with him. She summoned a waiter, made a
+secret sign, and he bowed and approached. She slipped the letter into
+his hand and whispered: "Show that at the cave to-morrow. It is in
+invisible ink and meant for Hargreave."
+
+"He's alive?"
+
+"Positively."
+
+"Very well." The waiter bowed and strolled away nonchalantly.
+
+Braine was in Boston over night, otherwise the countess would have
+taken the mysterious note at once to him. She remained for perhaps a
+quarter of an hour longer and then left the garden. She would have
+taken the letter to her own apartment but for the fact that the
+chemicals needed were hidden in the cave.
+
+Now it happened that Florence went out for her early ride the next
+morning, and crossing a field she saw a man with a bundle under his
+arm. The sun struck his profile and limned it plainly, and Florence
+uttered a low cry. The man had not observed her. So, very quietly,
+she slipped from the horse, tethered it to a tree, and started after
+the man to learn what he was doing so far from the city. She would
+never forget that face. She had seen it that dreadful night when the
+note had lured her into the hands of her enemies. The face belonged to
+the man who had impersonated her father.
+
+It occurred to her that she might just as well do a little detective
+work on her own hook. She had passed through so many terrifying
+episodes that she was beginning to crave for the excitement, strange as
+this may seem. Like a gambler who has once played for high stakes, she
+no longer found pleasure in thimbles and needles and pins. She
+followed the man with no little skill and at length she saw him
+approach a knoll, stoop, apparently press a spring, and a hole suddenly
+yawned. The man vanished quickly, and the spot took on again its
+virginal appearance. A cave. Florence had the patience to wait. By
+and by the man appeared again and slunk away.
+
+When she was sure that he was beyond range, she came out from the place
+of concealment, crept up the knoll, and searched about for the magic
+handle of this strange door. Diligence rewarded her, and she soon
+found herself in a large, musty, earth-smelling cave. Loot was
+scattered about, and there were boxes and chairs and a large chest.
+Men evidently met here, possibly after some desperate adventure against
+society. She found nothing to reward her hardihood, and as she was in
+the act of moving toward the cave's door she beheld with terror that it
+was moving!
+
+[Illustration: FLORENCE DISCOVERS THE CAVE]
+
+She was near the chest at that moment. The cave was not a deep one.
+There was no tunnel, only a wall. Resolutely she raised the lid of the
+chest, stepped inside, and drew the lid down. She was just in time.
+The door opened and three men entered, talking volubly. They felt
+perfectly secure in talking as loudly as they pleased. To Florence it
+seemed almost impossible that they did not hear the thunder of her
+heart? Strain her ears as she might, she could gather but little of
+what they said, except:
+
+"If Hargreave had this paper we might all be put on the defensive. To
+an outsider it is a blank paper. But the boss will be able to read
+it...." The speaker moved away from the vicinity of the chest and she
+heard no more.
+
+Very deftly Florence raised the lid just enough to peep out. The man
+who had been talking was putting the note in his hip pocket. As he
+turned toward the chest he sat down on the soap-box immediately in
+front of the chest. An inspiration came to the girl, an exceedingly
+daring one. She took her liberty in her hands as she executed the
+deed. But the dimness of the cave aided her. When she crouched down
+again the magic paper was hers.
+
+It seemed hours to her before the men left the cave. As she heard the
+hidden door jar in closing she raised the lid and stepped out,
+breathing deeply. The paper she had purloined was indeed blank, but
+Jones or Jim would know what to do with it. And wouldn't they be
+surprised when she told them what she had accomplished all alone? Her
+exultation was of short duration. She heard the whine of the door on
+its hinges. The men were returning. Why?
+
+They were returning because they had discovered a woman's shoeprint
+outside. It pointed toward the cave, freshly, and there was none
+coming away. To re-enter the chest would be foolhardy. It would be
+the first place the men would look. She glanced about desperately.
+She saw but one chance, the well. And even while the door was swinging
+inward, letting the brilliant sunshine enter, she summoned up the
+courage and let herself down into the well, which proved to be nothing
+more nor less than an underground river!
+
+The men came in with a rush. They upset boxes, looked into the chest,
+and the man who was evidently in command, gazed down the well, shaking
+his head. Their search was thorough, but they found no one. And at
+length they began to reason that perhaps a woman had got as far as the
+door and then turned away, walking on the turf.
+
+Meantime Florence was borne along by the swift current of the river,
+which gained in swiftness every moment. From time to time she bumped
+along the rocky walls, but she clung to life valiantly. In ten minutes
+she was swept to the other side of the hill, into the rapids; but the
+blue sky was overhead, she was out in the familiar world again. On, on
+she was carried. Even though she was half dead, she could hear the
+roar of a falls somewhere in advance.
+
+
+Braine thought he really had a clue to the treasure, and with his usual
+promptness he set about to learn if it was worth anything. He procured
+a launch and began to prowl about, using a pole as a feeler. All the
+while he was being closely watched by Norton, who had concluded to hang
+on to Braine's trail till he found something worthy of note. Braine
+was disguised, but this time Jim was not to be fooled. But what was he
+looking for, wondered the reporter? Braine continued to pole along,
+sometimes pausing to look over the gunwale down into the water. In
+raising his head after the last investigation, he discerned something
+struggling in the water, about three hundred yards away. The current
+leisurely brought the object into full view. It was a young woman with
+just power enough to keep herself afloat. The golden head roused
+something in him stronger than curiosity. It might be!
+
+Braine proceeded to move the launch in the direction of the girl. It
+was this movement that turned the reporter's gaze. He, too, now saw
+the woman in the water and wondered how she had come there. When
+Braine reached the girl and pulled her into the launch Jim saw her face
+plainly.
+
+[Illustration: FLORENCE STEALS THE PAPERS FROM BRAINE'S POCKET]
+
+He flew from his vantage point, found a skiff and started after Braine.
+
+"By the Lord Harry!" murmured the rogue. "Well, they can talk of manna
+from heaven, but this is what I call luck. Florence Hargreave, out of
+nowhere, into my arms! The god of luck has cast another horseshoe and
+it's mine."
+
+He had a flask in his pocket, and he forced some of the biting spirits
+down the girl's throat. She opened her eyes.
+
+"Well, my beauty?"
+
+Florence eyed him wildly, not quite understanding where he had come
+from.
+
+"I don't know how you got here," he said, "and I don't care. But here
+we are together at last. Where is your father?"
+
+"I--I don't know," dazedly.
+
+"Better think quickly," he warned; "I want lucid answers to my
+questions or back you go into the water. I'm about at the end of my
+rope. I've been beaten too many times, my girl, to have any particular
+love for you. Now, where is your father?"
+
+"I don't know; I have never seen him."
+
+Braine laughed.
+
+And Jim's boat ran afoul some rocks and into the water he went. He had
+not attracted Braine's attention, fortunately. He began to swim toward
+the drifting launch.
+
+"Where have they hidden that money?"
+
+"I don't know."
+
+"Well, well; I've given you your chance. You'll have to try your luck
+with the water again."
+
+Florence, weak as she was, set her lips.
+
+"You don't ask for mercy?" he said banteringly.
+
+"I should be wasting my breath to ask for mercy from such a monster as
+you are," she answered quickly.
+
+"That damned Hargreave nerve!" he snarled.
+
+He rolled up his sleeves and stepped toward her. She braced herself
+but did not turn her eyes from his. Suddenly, from nowhere at all,
+came a pair of hands. One clutched the gunwale and the other laid hold
+of Braine. A quick pull followed, and Braine began to topple. But
+even as he fell he managed to fling himself atop his assailant; and it
+was only when the struggle began in the water that he recognized the
+reporter. All the devil in him came to the surface and he fought with
+the fierceness of a tiger to kill, kill, kill. In nearly every
+instance this meddling reporter had checkmated him. This time one or
+the other of them should stay in the water.
+
+Norton recognized that he had a large order before him to disable
+Braine. The recognition between them was now frank and absolute; there
+could never again be any diplomatic sidestepping.
+
+"You're a dead man, Norton!" panted Braine, as he reached for the
+reporter's throat.
+
+Norton said nothing, but struck the hand aside. For a moment they both
+went under. They came up sputtering, each trying for a hold. It was a
+terribly enervating struggle.
+
+Florence could do nothing. The boat in which she sat continued to
+drift away from the fighting men. Once she tried to reach Braine with
+the pole he had been using, but failed.
+
+[Illustration: BRAINE PROCURED A LAUNCH AND BEGAN TO PROWL ABOUT]
+
+From the shore came another boat. For a while she could not tell
+whether it contained friends or enemies. It was terrible to be forced
+to wait, absolutely helpless. When she heard the newcomers call
+encouragingly to Braine she knew then that the brave fight of her
+sweetheart was going to come to naught. She knew a little about
+motors. She threw on the power and headed straight toward the rowboat.
+The men shouted at her, but she did not alter her course. The rowboat
+had its sides crushed in and the men went piling into the water.
+
+"Jim," she cried.
+
+Norton suddenly flung off Braine and began to swim madly for the motor
+boat, which Florence had brought about. Even then it was only by the
+barest luck in the world that Norton managed to catch the gunwale. The
+rest of it was simple. When they finally reached a haven, Florence,
+oddly enough, thought of the horse she had left tethered nine miles
+from the stables. She laughed hysterically.
+
+"I guess he won't die. We can send some one out for him. Now, for
+heaven's sake, how did you get into this? Where were you? What have
+you been up to?" with tender bruskness.
+
+"I wanted to do a little detective work of my own," she faltered.
+
+"It looks as if you had done it. You infant! Will you never learn to
+keep outside this muddle? It's a man's work."
+
+Florence, thoroughly weakened by her long immersion in the water, began
+to weep silently.
+
+"You poor child. I'm a brute!" And he comforted her.
+
+Later that day, at home, she remembered the blank paper.
+
+"I stole this from one of the men in the cave. He said this blank
+paper would probably save father."'
+
+Jim took it. "H'm! Invisible ink, and it's had a fine washing."
+
+"But maybe it is waterproof."
+
+"Maybe it is. Anyhow, Miss Sherlock, we'll show it to Jones and see
+what he says."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+"What I want now," said Braine, as he paced the living-room of the
+apartment of the countess, "is revenge. I've been checkmated enough,
+Olga; they're playing with us."
+
+"That is nothing new," she replied, shrugging. "At the beginning I
+warned you. I never liked this affair after the first two or three
+failures. But you would have your way. You wanted revenge at that
+early date; but I can not see that you've gone forward. Has it ever
+occurred to you that the organization may be getting tired, too? They
+depend solely upon your invention, and each time your invention has
+resulted in touching nothing but zero."
+
+"Thanks!"
+
+"Oh, I'm not chiding you. I've failed, too."
+
+"Are you turning against me?" he demanded bitterly.
+
+"Do my actions point that way?" she countered. "No. But the more I
+view what has passed, the more disheartened I grow. It has been a
+series of blind alleys, and all we have succeeded in doing is knocking
+our heads. I can see now that all our failures are due to one mistake."
+
+"And what the devil is that?" he asked irritably.
+
+"We were in too much of a hurry at the beginning. Hargreave prepared
+himself for quick action on your part."
+
+[Illustration: BRAINE REACHED THE GIRL AND PULLED HER INTO THE BOAT]
+
+"And if I had not acted quickly he would have started successfully on
+one of his world tours again, and that would have been the last of him,
+and we should never have learned of the girl's existence. So there's
+your argument."
+
+"Perhaps you are right. But for all that we have not played the game
+with any degree of finesse."
+
+"Bah!" Braine lit a cigarette and smoked nervously. "I can't even get
+rid of that meddling reporter. He has been as much to blame for our
+failures as either Jones or Hargreave. I admit that in his case I
+judged hastily. I believed him to be just an ordinary newspaper man,
+and he was clever enough to lull my suspicions. But I'm going to get
+him, Olga, even if I have to resort to ordinary gunman tricks. If
+there's any final reckoning, by the Lord Harry, he shan't get a chance
+in the witness stand."
+
+"And I begin to think that that little chit of a girl has been
+hoodwinking me all along. By the way, did you find out what that
+letter said?" she asked after a pause.
+
+"Letter? What letter?"
+
+She sprang from her chair. "Do you mean to say that they have not told
+you about that?" Olga became greatly excited.
+
+"Explain," he said.
+
+"Why, I was at the garden day before yesterday, and a man approached
+and asked if I was Miss Hargreave. Becoming at once suspicious that
+something very important was about to happen I signified that I was
+Miss Hargreave. The man slipped a paper into my hand and hurried off.
+I took a quick glance at it and was dumfounded to find it utterly blank
+of writing. At first I thought some joke had been played on me, then I
+chanced to remember the invisible ink letters you always wrote me.
+Understanding that you were to visit the cave in the morning, I had one
+man at the garden take the note. And you never got it!"
+
+"Some one shall certainly pay for this carelessness. I'll call up
+Vroon and Jackson at once. Wait just a moment."
+
+He went to the telephone. A low muttering conversation took place.
+Olga could hear little or none of it. When Braine put the receiver
+back on the hook his face was not pleasant to see.
+
+"That girl!"
+
+"What now?"
+
+"It seems she had been out horseback riding that morning. She had seen
+one of the boys cross the field and suddenly disappear; and she was
+curious to learn what had become of him. With her usual luck she
+stumbled on the method of opening the door of the cave and went in.
+She must have been nosing about. She didn't have much time, though, as
+the boys came up to await me. Evidently she crawled into that old
+chest and in some inexplicable manner purloined the letter from
+Jackson's pocket. They left to reconnoiter; and it was then that
+Jackson discovered his loss. When Florence heard them returning she
+jumped into the well. And lived through that tunnel! The devil is in
+it!"
+
+"Or out of it, since we consider him our friend."
+
+"And I had her in my hands, note and all!"
+
+"But with all that water there will not be any writing left on the
+letter."
+
+"Invisible ink is generally indelible and impervious to the action of
+water; at least the kind I use is. I'd give a thousand for a sight of
+that letter."
+
+[Illustration: FROM THE SHORE CAME ANOTHER DOAT]
+
+"And it might be worth a million," Olga suggested.
+
+"Not the least doubt of it in my mind. Olga, old girl, it does look as
+if my star was growing dim. We'll never get our hands on that million.
+I feel it in my bones. So let's settle down to a campaign of revenge,
+without any furbelows. I want to twist Hargreave's heart before the
+game winds up."
+
+"You wish really to injure her?"
+
+"I do not wish to injure her. Far from it," he replied, smiling evilly.
+
+"You want her ... dead?" whispered Olga, paling.
+
+"Exactly. I want her dead. And so if all my efforts here come to
+nothing, so shall Hargreave's. His millions will become waste paper to
+him. That's revenge. The Persian peach method."
+
+"Poison? You shall not! You shall not kill her!" vehemently.
+
+"Tender-hearted?"
+
+"No. If I must in the end go to prison, so be it; but I refuse to die
+in the chair."
+
+"Very well, then. We shan't kill her, but we'll make her wish she was
+dead. I was only trying to see how far you would go. The basket of
+peaches is in the hallway. Every peach is poisoned. No man in the
+country knows more about subtle poisons than I do. Have I not written
+books on that subject?" ironically.
+
+"And they will trace it back to you in a straight line," she warned.
+"I will not have it!"
+
+"I can go elsewhere," he replied coldly.
+
+"You would leave me?"
+
+"The moment you cross my will," emphatically.
+
+It became her turn to pace. Torn between her love of the man and the
+danger which stared her in the face, she was for the time being
+distracted. All the time he watched her with malevolent curiosity,
+knowing that in the end she would concur with his evil plans.
+
+"Very well," she said finally. "But listen; we shall be found out.
+Never doubt that. Your revenge will cost us both our lives. I feel
+it."
+
+"Bah! The law will have no hand in my end. I always carry a pellet;
+and that ring of yours would suffice a regiment. She will not die.
+She will merely become a kind of paralytic; the kind that can move a
+little but not enough; always wheeled about in a chair. I'll bring in
+the peaches; rosy and downy. One bite, after a given time, will do the
+trick. If they suspect and throw them out we have lost nothing but the
+peaches. A trusted messenger will carry them to the Hargreave house.
+And then we'll sit down and wait."
+
+Meantime, in the library of the Hargreave house, Florence and Jim were
+puzzling over the blank sheet of paper.
+
+"I'll wager," said Jim, "the water washed all the writing away. The
+fire does not seem to do any good. We'll turn it over to Jones.
+Jones'll find a way to solve it. Trust him."
+
+"What are you two chattering about?" asked Susan, who was arranging
+some flowers on the table.
+
+"Secrets," said Jim, smiling.
+
+"Humph!"
+
+Susan puttered about for a few minutes longer, then crossed to the
+reception room, intending to go up-stairs. At that moment the maid was
+admitting a messenger with a basket of fruit.
+
+"For Miss Hargreave," said he. He gave the basket to the maid, touched
+his cap awkwardly, and swung on his heel, closing the door behind him.
+He was in a hurry to deliver another message.
+
+"Oh, what lovely fruit!" cried Susan, pausing. "I'm going to steal
+one," she laughed. She selected a peach and began eating it on the way
+up to her room.
+
+The maid passed on into the library.
+
+"What's this?" inquired Florence, as the maid held out the basket. She
+selected a peach and was about to set her white teeth into it when Jim
+interposed.
+
+"Wait a moment, dear." Florence lowered the peach. Jim turned to the
+maid. "Who sent it?"
+
+"I don't know, sir. A messenger brought it, saying it was for Miss
+Hargreave."
+
+"Let me see if there is a card." But Jim searched in vain for the card
+of the donor. All at once his suspicions arose. "Don't touch them.
+Better let the maid throw them out. Fruit from unknown persons might
+not be the healthiest thing in the world."
+
+"What do you think?"
+
+"That in all probability they are poisoned. But there's no need trying
+to prove my theory right or wrong. Ask Jones. He'll tell you to throw
+them away."
+
+"Horrible!" Florence shuddered. "But they do not want to poison me.
+I'm too valuable. They want me alive."
+
+"Who can say?" returned Jim gloomily. "They may have learned that they
+can not beat us, no matter what card they turn up. I may be wrong, but
+take my advice and throw them away.... Good lord, what's that?"
+startled.
+
+"Some one cried!"
+
+"Oh, Miss Florence!" exclaimed the maid, terror-stricken as she
+recalled Susan's act. "Miss Susan took a peach from the basket and was
+eating it on the way to her room!"
+
+"Good heavens!" gasped Jim. "I was right. The fruit was poisoned."
+
+Jim had heard enough to send for a specialist he knew. The specialist
+arrived about twenty minutes after Susan's first cry. To his keen eye
+it looked like a certain poison which had for its basis the venom of
+the cobra.
+
+"Will she live?"
+
+"Oh, yes. But she'll be a wreck for some months. Send her to the
+hospital where I can visit her frequently. And I'll take that peach
+along for analysis. No police affair?"
+
+"No. We dare not call them in," said Jim.
+
+"That's your affair. I'll send down the ambulance. Keep her quiet.
+She'll have a species of paralysis; but that'll work off under
+treatment. A strange business."
+
+"So it is," agreed Jim grimly.
+
+Florence knelt beside her friend's bed and cried softly.
+
+"You called me just in time. An hour later, nothing would have saved
+her. She would have been paralyzed for life."
+
+Jim accompanied the doctor to the door and went in search of Jones. He
+found the taciturn butler eying the fruit basket, his face gray and
+drawn, though his eyes blazed with fury.
+
+"Poison!"
+
+"A pretty bad poison, too," said Jim. "We can't do anything. We've
+just got to sit still. But in the end we'll get them. That she
+devil...."
+
+"No, my friend; that he devil. The woman is mad over him and would
+commit any crime at his bidding. But this is his work. We want him.
+He wasn't without courage to send this fruit, knowing that I would
+instantly suspect the sender. Yet, I have no definite proof. I could
+not hold him in court in law. He will have bought the fruit piece by
+piece, the basket in a basket shop. He will have injected the poison
+himself when alone. Poor Susan! That messenger was without doubt some
+one over whom he holds the threat of the death chair. That's the way
+he works."
+
+Jim tramped the room while Jones carried the fruit to the kitchen. The
+butler returned after a while.
+
+"What about that blank sheet of paper?"
+
+"It has to be dipped into a solution; after that you can read it by
+heating. I have already dipped it into the solution. The moment the
+heat leaves the sheet the writing disappears again. The ink is
+waterproof. I'll show you."
+
+Jones got a candle from the mantel, lit it, and held the sheet of paper
+very close to the flame. Gradually, almost imperceptibly, letters
+began to form on the blank sheet. At length the message was complete.
+
+
+"Dear Hargreave--The Russian minister of police is at the Blank Hotel
+under the name of Henri Servan. He is investigating the work of the
+Black Hundred in this country and can free you from their vengeance if
+you supply the evidence needed."
+
+
+"Now, what evidence can he want?" asked Jim.
+
+"Such as will prove Braine an undesirable citizen."
+
+"And then?"
+
+"Quietly pack him off to Russia, where he is badly wanted."
+
+"Who sent this message?"
+
+"One of our mysterious friends. We have a few, as you already know.
+But I'll go and make this man Servan a visit. I have seen the real
+minister, and if this man is the same one, something of importance may
+turn up. I shall want you somewhere about. Here, I'll let you have
+this letter. Remember, heat brings it out and cold air makes it
+vanish. Now I'll go up for a moment to see how that poor girl is
+getting along. We are lucky; there's no gainsaying that."
+
+"You're a clever man, Jones," said Jim.
+
+Jones turned upon him, his face grave. The two men looked steadily
+into each other's eyes. Jones was first to turn aside his glance, as
+he had something to conceal and Jim had nothing.
+
+When the ambulance took the tortured Susan away, Jones addressed
+Florence gravely.
+
+"I am going out, and so is Mr. Norton. Do not leave the house; not
+even if you have a telephone call from me or Norton. Both of us will
+return; so don't let anything bother or confuse you."
+
+"I promise," said Florence, struggling with a sob.
+
+Jones went down-stairs again, paused by a window as if cogitating, and
+suddenly threw it up and looked abroad. A rustle among the lilacs
+caused a smile to flit across his face. So they had sent some one to
+learn the effect of the poison? Or to follow him should he leave the
+house? He retired to the kitchen and gave some explicit orders to the
+chef, orders which did not in any way refer to cooking. Then Jones and
+the reporter left the house, each quite aware that they were being
+followed. Near the Blank Hotel they separated in order to confuse the
+stalker. He might dodder and follow the wrong man. But it was evident
+that this time he had been directed to follow Jones; for he entered the
+hotel a minute after Jones.
+
+Meantime a second spy, whom Jones had not seen, had observed the
+transfer of the invisible writing and had immediately informed Braine,
+who was not far away. That his poisoned fruit had stricken down an
+outsider troubled him none at all. But that mysterious message he
+meant to have; it might be a life and death affair, it might be a clue
+to the treasure, or the whereabouts of Hargreave.
+
+Thus, while only one man followed Jones, several kept a far eye on Jim.
+
+Jones scribbled his name on a blank card and had it taken to the
+Russian's room. The page eyed that card curiously. It was different
+from anything he had ever seen before. In one corner were written
+three or four words which resembled a cross between Hebrew and Greek.
+
+"Humph!" muttered the boy. "Whadda y' know about that? Chicken
+scratches; but I guess the bell rings Roosian. On your way, Hortense,"
+he cried to the hall maid, who wanted a look at the card. "Up t' th'
+room, sir. He'll see yuh!" The boy kept the silver salver extended
+expectantly, but Jones went past without apparently noticing the hint.
+
+The Russian was standing by a window when Jones knocked and was bidden
+to enter.
+
+"You are not Hargreave."
+
+"Neither are you the Russian minister of police," urbanely.
+
+"Who are you?"
+
+"I am Hargreave's confidential man, sir."
+
+The two men eyed each other cautiously.
+
+"You speak Russian?"
+
+"No. I am able to scribble a few words; that is all."
+
+The Russian lit a cigarette and smoked leisurely. He was in no hurry.
+
+"No, I am not the minister; but I am his accredited agent. I am
+empowered to bring back to Russia a man who is known here by the name
+of Braine, another by the name of Vroon, and a woman who calls herself
+a countess and unfortunately is one. All I desire is some damaging
+proof against them that they are outlaws in this country. The rest
+will be simple."
+
+"They have all three taken out naturalization papers."
+
+[Illustration: THEY HAVE ALL THREE TAKEN OUT NATURALIZATION PAPERS]
+
+The Russian waved his hand airily. "Once they are in Russia those
+documents will never come to light. This man Braine, it has been
+learned, has long been in the pay of Prussia, and has given the general
+staff of that country many plans of our frontier fortifications. I do
+not know what any one of the three looks like. That is why I sought
+Hargreave."
+
+"I will gladly point them out to you," said Jones, rubbing his hands
+together, a sign that he was greatly pleased.
+
+"That will be very good of you, I'm sure," in a rumbling but perfectly
+intelligible English.
+
+"And suddenly they all three will disappear."
+
+"Suddenly; and you may believe me that from that time on they'll be
+heard of never more."
+
+"All this sounds extremely agreeable to me. Mr. Hargreave will be
+happy to hear that his long enforced hiding will soon come to an end."
+
+"All you have to do, sir, is to point them out to me."
+
+"It may take a week or ten days."
+
+"My government has waited for ten years to gather in this delectable
+trio. A month, if you like."
+
+"The sooner the better. I shall call this evening after dinner. We
+shall begin with Mr. Braine; and generally where he is is the woman.
+Vroon will be the most difficult."
+
+"After dinner, then, since you know some of his haunts. There is a
+reward."
+
+Jones laughed shortly. "Keep it yourself, sir. Mr. Hargreave would
+willingly double whatever this reward is to eliminate these despicable
+creatures from his affairs."
+
+"Thanks."
+
+While this conversation was taking place Norton idled about; and
+feeling the cravings for a cigarette, prepared to roll one, only to
+find that he hadn't the "makings." So fate urged him to step into the
+nearest tobacconist's. He asked for his favorite brand and passed over
+the silver.
+
+Braine and his companions saw Norton enter the shop. It agreed with
+their plans perfectly. The tobacconist happened to be affiliated with
+the order. So they hurried into the shop. Jim instantly realized that
+he was in a trap.
+
+"How can I get out of here?" he whispered to the tobacconist.
+
+The latter smiled. "I have to obey these gentlemen. I don't know what
+they want you for; but if I made a move to help you I should find my
+own throat cut without saving yours."
+
+"The devil!"
+
+Jim made a dash for the rear door, to find it locked. Even as he
+fumbled with the key Braine and his companions flung themselves upon
+the reporter and overpowered him.
+
+"Ah, my friend Braine!" he said.
+
+"My friend Norton!" jeered the victor.
+
+"And what do you want; some peaches?"
+
+"A paper, my friend, a little secret of paper with invisible writing on
+it. We promise to give you something in exchange for it."
+
+"What?" asked Jim with as much nonchalance as he could assume.
+
+"Life."
+
+"Search," said Jim. "You won't object to my smoking?" He began to
+roll a cigarette while they passed over him. He struck a match; the
+pleasant aroma of tobacco floated about his head.
+
+"He's got it on him somewhere. I saw him take it. He's got his nerve
+with him."
+
+The cigarette glowed. Jim smoked hurriedly.
+
+Through every pocket they went. The contents of his wallet lay
+scattered at his feet; his watch dangled from the chain. The cigarette
+grew shorter and shorter. Suddenly one of the men stretched out a hand
+and whisked the cigarette from Jim's lips. He threw it to the floor
+and stamped out the coal.
+
+"I thought so!" he exclaimed, holding out the scrap of burnt paper
+toward Braine.
+
+The words "Dear Hargreave" were all that remained of the message. With
+a snarl of rage Braine whipped out his revolver.
+
+"I will give you one minute to tell me what that paper contained."
+
+"And after that minute is up?"
+
+"A bullet in your stomach."
+
+Quick as a flash Jim's hand shot out, caught the loosely held revolver,
+gave it a wrench, and brought it down savagely upon Braine's head.
+Then he reversed it and backed toward the front entrance.
+
+"Au revoir, till we meet again, gentlemen!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+Jim said nothing at first about his adventure to Jones, whom he met
+half an hour later.
+
+"Was it necessary to keep that invisible letter?" he asked.
+
+"No," said Jones.
+
+"Would it have given our affairs a serious turn if it had fallen into
+alien hands?"
+
+"Decidedly," answered Jones. "It would mean flight for the Black
+Hundred or a long time under cover, if our friend Braine learned that
+Russia was now taking an active interest in the doings of the Black
+Hundred. And eventually all our work would have to be done over again."
+
+"Ah!"
+
+"You look a bit mussed up. Anything happened?" asked the keen-eyed
+butler.
+
+"Nothing much. I made a cigarette out of the letter and smoked it."
+
+Jones chuckled. "I see that you have had an adventure of some sort;
+but it can wait."
+
+"It can."
+
+"Because I want you to pack off to Washington."
+
+"Washington?"
+
+"Yes. I want you to interview those officials who are most familiar
+with the extradition laws."
+
+"A new kink?"
+
+"What I wish to learn is this: Can a man, formerly undesirable, take
+out naturalization papers and hold to the protection of the United
+States government? That is to say, a poisoner, menaced by Siberia,
+becomes an American citizen. He is abducted and carried back to
+Russia. Could he look to this government for protection? That is what
+I want you to find out?"
+
+"That will be easy. When shall I start?"
+
+"As soon as you can pack your grip."
+
+"That's always packed," replied the reporter. "You see, I'm eternally
+shunted hither and yon, at a moment's notice, so I always have an extra
+grip packed for quick travel."
+
+"The Russian agent wants Braine, Vroon, and the countess; and to-night
+I'm going to try to point them out to him. It would satisfy me more
+than anything I know to eliminate this precious trio in Russian
+fashion. It's thorough; and once accomplished, good day to the Black
+Hundred in America. The organization in Russia has still some
+political significance, but on this side of the water it is merely an
+aggregation of merciless thugs."
+
+"I'll take the first train out. But you will tell Florence?"
+
+"Surely."
+
+"And take care of your own heels. You were watched at the hotel."
+
+"I know it; but the watcher could learn nothing. Henri Servan as a
+name will suggest nothing to the fool who followed me. Besides we both
+knew that he was trying to peek through the keyhole. That hotel, you
+know, still retains the old-fashioned keyholes."
+
+"To keep the maids in good humor, I suppose," laughed Jim. "Well, I
+must be on my way to make that flyer."
+
+The two shook hands and Jim hurried off. The butler watched him till
+he disappeared down the subway.
+
+"He's a good lad," he murmured, "and a brave lad; and money is only an
+incident in human affairs after all. I'll be a good angel and let the
+two be happy, since they love each other and have proved it in a
+thousand ways."
+
+Meanwhile the Russian agent settled down before his writing portfolio;
+and once or twice as he wrote he thought he heard a sound outside the
+door. No doubt this butler of Hargreave's had been watched and
+followed. By and by he rose, drew his revolver, and tiptoed to the
+door obliquely so that the watcher outside might not become aware of
+his approach. Swiftly he swung back the door and the member of the
+Black Hundred stumbled into the room. Almost instantly the Russian
+caught him by the collar and held him up.
+
+"What were you doing outside my door?"
+
+The man, trying to collect his thoughts, did not answer.
+
+"A spy of some sort, eh?"
+
+"I'm a detective," said the man finally, thinking he saw his way clear.
+
+"And what did you expect to learn by looking through the keyhole of my
+door?"
+
+Servan laughed. "Show me your badge of authority."
+
+The man fumbled in his upper pocket, hoping against hope that the
+muzzle of the revolver would waver.
+
+"You're an ordinary thief," declared the Russian; "and as such I shall
+instantly hand you over to the hotel authorities unless you tell me
+exactly who and what you are."
+
+The man remained dumb. He hung between the devil and the deep sea. If
+he told the truth the organization would soon learn the truth; if he
+kept still he would be lodged in jail, perhaps indefinitely, for he
+hadn't a savory police record. Presently his nerve gave way in face of
+the steady eye and hand, and he confessed the why and wherefore he had
+sought the keyhole of Servan's room.
+
+"We are after this butler. Wherever he goes we follow."
+
+"Well, you've wasted your time, my man. All I am here for is to take
+over some property Mr. Hargreave left in France for sale. I know
+nothing about your private feuds. Now, get out. But keep out of my
+way; I am not a peaceful man."
+
+The spy tumbled out as he had tumbled in, by an act of gravity; and
+Servan was alone. He spent two days in comparative idleness. Then
+things began to wake up.
+
+
+For a long time the leather box across which was inscribed "Stanley
+Hargreave" lay in peace undisturbed. A busy spider had woven a trap
+across the handle to the quaint lock. The box was still badly stained
+from its immersion in the salt water. At a certain time it was quietly
+withdrawn from its hiding place. It was stealthily opened. A hand
+reached in and when it withdrew a packet of papers was also withdrawn.
+The box was again locked and lowered; and presently the spider returned
+to find that his cunning trap had been totally destroyed. With the
+infinite patience of his kind he began the weaving of another trap.
+Perhaps this would be more successful than its predecessor.
+
+Later Henri Servan received a telephone call. He was informed that his
+purpose in America would be realized by his presence at such and such a
+box that night at the opera. Further information could not be given
+over the telephone. Servan seemed well satisfied. He dressed
+carefully that evening, called up the office clerk and inquired if his
+box tickets for the opera had arrived. He was informed that they had.
+Instantly the spy, who had dared to linger about the hotel, overhearing
+this conversation, determined to notify Braine at once. And at the
+same time, Norton, in disguise, determined not to lose sight of this
+man whom he had set himself to watch.
+
+The spy left by one entrance and Jim by another. Jim had learned what
+he desired; that the Russian agent would be followed to the opera and
+that it was going to be difficult to hand the documents to him. The
+spy entered a drug store and telephoned. Jim waited outside. When the
+man came out he strolled up the street and entered the nearest saloon.
+Jim's work was done.
+
+It was Braine's lieutenant, however, who took the news to Braine.
+
+"We have succeeded."
+
+"Good!" said Braine.
+
+"He will go to the opera. He will have a box. Doubtless they have
+arranged to deliver the papers there."
+
+"And the next thing is to get the number of his box." This Braine had
+no difficulty in doing. "So that's all fixed. He calls himself Servan
+and registers from Paris. I'll show the fool that he has no moujik to
+deal with this time."
+
+"And what are these documents?" asked Olga.
+
+"Ah, that's what we are so anxious to find out. Some papers are going
+to be exchanged between this Russian spy and Jones or his agents. That
+these papers concern us vitally I am certain. That is why I am going
+to get them if there has to be a murder at the opera to-night. Norton
+has been to Washington. He was seen coming out of the Russian embassy,
+from the secretaries of state and war and a dozen other offices. I've
+got to find out just what all this means."
+
+"It means that the time has come for us to fly," said Olga. "We have
+failed. I have warned you. We have still plenty of money left. It is
+time we folded our tents and stole away quietly. I tell you I feel it
+in my bones that there is a pit before us somewhere! and if you force
+issues we shall all fall into it."
+
+"The white feather, my dear."
+
+"There is altogether some difference between the white feather and
+common-sense caution."
+
+"I shall never give up. You are free to pack up and go if you wish.
+As for me, I'm going to fight this out to the bitter end."
+
+"And take my word for it, the end will be bitter."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Oh, I shall stay. You know that my future is bound up in yours. In
+the old days my advice generally appealed to you as sound; and when you
+followed it you were successful. From the first I advised you not to
+pursue Hargreave. See what has happened!"
+
+"Enough of this chatter. I've got to die some time; it will be with my
+face toward this man I hate with all my soul. You trust to me; I'll
+pull out of this all right. You just fix yourself up stunningly for
+the opera to-night and leave the rest to me."
+
+Olga shrugged. She was something of a fatalist. This man of hers had
+suddenly gone mad; and one did not reason with mad people.
+
+"What shall I wear?" she asked calmly.
+
+[Illustration: "JUST A MOMENT, GENTLEMEN"]
+
+"Emeralds; they're your good luck stones. You will go to the box
+before I do. I've got to spend some time at the curb to be sure that
+this Servan chap arrives. And it is quite possible that our friend
+Jones will come later. If not Jones, then Norton. I was a fool not to
+shoot him when I had the chance. We could have covered it up without
+the least difficulty. But I needed the information about that paper.
+With Norton going to Washington and Jones conferring with this Servan,
+I've got to strike quick. It concerns us, that I'm certain. Perk up;
+we've lots of cards in our sleeves yet. Be at the opera at
+eight-thirty. Pay no attention to any one; wait for me. Remember, I
+shan't write or send any phone messages. Be wary of any trap like that
+to get you outside. Now, I'm off."
+
+Jones approached Florence immediately after dinner.
+
+"I have important business in the city to-night. Under no
+circumstances leave the house. I shall probably be followed. And our
+enemies will have need of you far more to-night than at any previous
+time. I shall not send you phone or written message. You have your
+revolver. Shoot any strange man who enters. We'll make inquiries
+after."
+
+"We are near the end?" whispered Florence.
+
+"Very near the end."
+
+"And I shall see my father?"
+
+Jones bent his head. "If we succeed."
+
+"There is danger?" thinking of her lover.
+
+"There is always danger when I leave this house. So be good," the
+butler added with a smile.
+
+"And Jim?"
+
+"He has proved that he can take care of himself."
+
+"Tell him to be very careful."
+
+"I'll do so, but it will not be necessary;" and with this Jones set
+forth upon what he considered the culminating adventure.
+
+The usual brilliant crowd began to pour into the opera. Braine took
+his stand by the entrance. He waited a long time, but his patience was
+rewarded. A limousine drove up and out of the door came his man, who
+looked about with casual interest. He dismissed the limousine, which
+wheeled slowly around the corner where it could be conveniently parked.
+Then Servan entered the opera.
+
+Braine hurried around to the limousine. The lights, save those
+demanded by traffic regulations, were out. The chauffeur was huddled
+in his seat.
+
+"My man," said Braine, "would you like to make some money?"
+
+"How much?" listlessly. The voice was muffled.
+
+"Twenty."
+
+"Good night, sir."
+
+"Fifty."
+
+"Good night and good morning!"
+
+"A hundred!"
+
+"Now you've got me interested. What kind of a joy ride do you want?"
+
+"No joy ride. Listen."
+
+Briefly the conspirator outlined his needs, and finally the chauffeur
+nodded. Five twenties were pressed into his hand and he curled up in
+his seat again.
+
+Servan entered his box. In the box next to his sat a handsomely gowned
+young woman. He threw her an idle glance, which was repaid in kind.
+Later, Braine came in and sat down beside Olga.
+
+"Everything looks like plain sailing," he whispered.
+
+Olga shrugged slightly.
+
+During the intermission between the first and second acts, Servan took
+the rear chair of his box, near the curtains. Braine, watching with
+the eyes of a lynx, suddenly observed the curtains stirring. A hand
+was thrust through. In that hand was a packet of papers. With seeming
+indifference Servan reached back and took the papers, stowing them away
+in a pocket.
+
+Braine rose at the beginning of the second act.
+
+"Where are you going?" asked Olga nervously.
+
+"To see Otto."
+
+A bold attempt was made to rob Servan while in the box, but the timely
+arrival of Jim frustrated this plan. So Braine was forced to rely on
+the chauffeur of the limousine.
+
+As Farrar's last thrilling note died away Braine and Olga rose.
+
+"Be careful. And come to the apartments just as soon as you can."
+
+"I'll be careful," Braine declared easily. "You can watch the play if
+you wish."
+
+When Servan entered the limousine he was quietly but forcibly seized by
+two men who had been lying in wait for him, due to the apparent
+treachery of the chauffeur. Servan fought valiantly, for all that he
+knew what the end of this exploit was going to be. One of the men
+succeeded in getting the documents from Servan's pocket.
+
+"Done, my boy!" cried the victor. "Give him a crack on the coco and
+we'll beat it."
+
+"Just a minute, gentlemen!" said a voice from the seat at the side of
+the chauffeur. "I'll take those papers!" And the owner of the voice,
+backed by a cold, sinister-looking automatic, reached in and
+confiscated the spoils of war. "And I shouldn't make any attempt to
+slip out by the side door."
+
+"Thanks, my friend," said Servan, shaking himself free from his captors.
+
+"Don't mention it," said Norton amiably. "We thought something like
+this would happen. Keep perfectly quiet, you chaps. Drive on,
+chauffeur; drive on!"
+
+"Yes, my lord! To what particular police station shall I head this
+omnibus?"
+
+"The nearest, Jones; the very nearest you can think of! Some day, when
+I'm rich, I'll hire you for my chauffeur. But for the present I shall
+expect at least a box of Partagas out of that hundred."
+
+Jones chuckled. "I'll buy you a box out of my own pocket. That
+hundred goes to charity."
+
+"Here we are! Out with you," said Jim to his prisoners. He shouldered
+them into the police station, to the captain's desk.
+
+"What's this?" demanded the captain.
+
+"Holdup men," said Jim. "Entered this man's car and tried to rob him."
+
+"Uh-huh! An' who're you?"
+
+Jim showed his badge and card.
+
+"Oho! Hey, there; I mean you!" said the captain, leveling a finger at
+Otto. "Lift up that hat; lift it up. Sure, it's Fountain Pen Otto!
+Well, well; an' we've been lookin' for you for ten months on the last
+forgery case. Mr. Norton, my thanks. Take 'em below, sergeant.
+You'll be here to make the complaint in th' mornin', sir," he added to
+Servan.
+
+"If it is necessary."
+
+"It may be against Otto's pal. I don't know him."
+
+"Very well."
+
+[Illustration: THE POLICE CAPTAIN'S DESK]
+
+And Jones and Norton and Servan trooped out of the station.
+
+At last Jones and the reporter entered a cheap restaurant and ordered
+coffee and toast.
+
+"You're a wonderful man, Jones, even if you are an Englishman," said
+Jim as he called for the check.
+
+"English? What makes you think I am English?" asked Jones with a
+curious glitter in his eyes.
+
+"I'll tell you on the night we put the rollers under Braine and
+company."
+
+Jones stared long and intently at his young partner. What did he
+really know?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+The federal government agreed to say nothing, to put no obstacles in
+the way of the Russian agent, provided he could abduct his trio without
+seriously clashing with the New York police authorities. It was a
+recognized fact that the local police force wanted the newspaper glory
+which would attend the crushing of the Black Hundred. It would be an
+exploit. But their glory was nil; nor did Servan take his trio back
+with him to Russia.
+
+Many strange things happened that night, the night of the final
+adventure.
+
+Florence sat in her room reading. The book was Oliver Twist, not the
+pleasantest sort of book to read under the existing circumstances.
+Several times--she had reached the place where Fagin overheard Nancy's
+confession--she fancied she heard doors closing softly, but credited it
+to her imagination. Poor Nancy, who wanted to be good but did not find
+time to be! Florence possessed a habit familiar to most of us; the
+need of apples or candy when we are reading. So she rang the bell for
+her maid, intending to ask her to bring up some apples. She turned to
+her reading, presently to break off and strike the bell again. Where
+was that maid? She waited perhaps five minutes, then laid down the
+book and began to investigate.
+
+There was not a servant to be found in the entire house! What in the
+world could that mean? Used as she was to heartrending suspense, she
+was none the less terrified. Something had taken the servants from the
+house. From whence was the danger to come this time? Where was Jones?
+Why did he not return as he had promised? It was long past the hour
+when he said he would be back.
+
+She went into the library and picked up the telephone. She was told
+that Mr. Norton was out on an assignment, but that he would be notified
+the moment he returned. She opened the drawer in the desk. She
+touched the automatic, but did not take it up. She left the drawer
+open, however.
+
+Earlier, at the newspaper office that night, Jim went into the managing
+editor's office and laid a bulky manuscript on that gentleman's desk.
+
+"Is this it?"
+
+"It is," said Jim.
+
+"You have captured them?"
+
+"No; but there is a net about them from which not one shall escape.
+There's the story of my adventures, of the adventures of Miss Hargreave
+and the butler, Jones. You'll find it exciting enough. You might just
+as well send it up to the composing room. At midnight I'll telephone
+the introduction. It's a scoop. Don't worry about that."
+
+The editor riffled the pages.
+
+"A hundred and twelve pages, three hundred words to the page; man, it's
+a novel!"
+
+"It'll read like one."
+
+"Sit down for a moment and let me skim through the first story."
+
+At the end of ten minutes the editor laid down the copy. He opened a
+drawer and took out two envelopes. The blue one he tore up and dropped
+into the waste basket. Norton understood and smiled. They had meant
+to discharge him if he fell down. The other envelope was a fat one.
+
+"Open it," said the editor, smiling a little to himself.
+
+This envelope contained a check for two thousand five hundred dollars,
+two round-trip first-class tickets to Liverpool, together with
+innumerable continental tickets such as are issued to tourists.
+
+"Why two?" asked Jim innocently.
+
+"Forget it, my boy, forget it. You ought to know that in this office
+we don't employ blind men. The whole staff is on. There you are, a
+fat check and three months' vacation. Go and get married; and if you
+return before the three months are up I'll fire you myself on general
+principles."
+
+Jim laughed happily and the two men shook hands. Then Jim went forth
+to complete the big assignment. Five minutes later Florence called him
+up to learn that he had gone.
+
+What should she do? Jones had told her to stay in the house and not to
+leave it. But where was he? Why did he not come? What was the
+meaning of this desertion by the servants? She wandered about
+aimlessly, looking out of windows, imagining forms in the shadows. Her
+imagination had not deceived her; she had heard doors close softly.
+
+"Susan, Susan!" she murmured, but Susan was in the hospital.
+
+_Oliver Twist_! What had possessed her to start reading that old tale
+again? She should have read something of a light and joyous character.
+After half an hour's wandering about the lonely house she returned to
+the library, feeling that she would be safer where both telephone and
+revolver were.
+
+And while she sat waiting for she knew not what, her swiftly beating
+heart sending the blood into her throat so that it almost suffocated
+her, a man turned into the street and walked noiselessly toward the
+Hargreave place. He passed a man leaning against a lamp-post, but he
+never turned to look at him.
+
+This man, however, threw away his cigar and hot-footed it to the
+nearest pay station. He knew in his soul that he had just seen the man
+for whom they had been hunting all these weary but strenuous
+weeks--Stanley Hargreave in the flesh! Half an hour after his
+telephone message the chief of the Black Hundred and many lesser lights
+were on their way to the house of mystery. Had they but known!
+
+Now, the man who had created this tremendous agitation went serenely
+on. He proceeded directly and fearlessly to the front door, produced a
+latchkey and entered. He passed through the hall and reception room to
+the library and paused on the threshold dramatically. Florence stepped
+back with a sharp cry of alarm. She had heard the hall door open and
+close and had taken it for granted that Jones had entered.
+
+There was a tableau of short duration.
+
+"Don't you know me?" asked the stranger in a singularly pleasant voice.
+
+Florence had been imposed upon too many times. She shook her head
+defiantly, though her knees shook so that she was certain that the
+least touch would send her over.
+
+"I am your father, child!"
+
+Florence slipped unsteadily behind the desk and seized the revolver
+which lay in the drawer. The man by the curtains smiled sadly. It was
+a smile that caused Florence to waver a bit. Still she extended her
+arm.
+
+"You do not believe me?" said the man, advancing slowly.
+
+"No. I have been deceived too many times, sir. Stay where you are.
+You will wait here till my butler returns. Oh, if I were only sure!"
+she burst out suddenly and passionately. "What proof have you that you
+are what you say?"
+
+He came toward her, holding out his hands. "This, that you can not
+shoot me. Ah, the damnable wretches! What have they done to you, my
+child, to make you suspicious of every one? How I have watched over
+you in the street! I will tell you what only Jones and the reporter
+know, that the aviator died, that I alone was rescued, that I gave
+Norton the five thousand; that I watched the windows of the Russian
+woman, and overheard nearly every plot that was hatched in the council
+chamber of the Black Hundred; that I was shot in the arm while crossing
+the lawn one night. And now we have the scoundrels just where we want
+them. They will be in this house for me within half an hour, and not
+one of them will leave it in freedom. I am your father, Florence. I
+am the lonely father who has spent the best years of his life away from
+you in order to secure your safety. Can't you feel the truth of all
+this?"
+
+"No, no! Please do not approach any nearer; stay where you are!"
+
+[Illustration: THEY WERE TUMBLING THROUGH THE LIBRARY AND READING-ROOM]
+
+At that moment the telephone rang. With the revolver still leveled she
+picked up the receiver.
+
+"Hello, hello! Who is it? ... Oh, Jim, Jim, come at once! I am
+holding at bay a man who says he is my father. Hold him where he is,
+you say? All right, I will. Come quick!"
+
+"Jim!" murmured the man, still advancing. He must have that revolver.
+The poor child might spoil the whole affair. "So what Jones tells me
+is true; that you are going to marry this reporter chap?"
+
+She did not answer.
+
+"With or without my consent?"
+
+If only he would drop that fearless smile! she thought. "With or
+without anybody's consent," she said.
+
+"What in the world can I say to you to convince you?" he cried. "The
+trap is set; but if Braine and his men come and find us like this, good
+heaven, child, we are both lost! Come, come!"
+
+"Stay where you are!"
+
+At that moment she heard a sound at the door. Her gaze roved; and it
+was enough for the man. He reached out and caught her arm. She tried
+to tear herself loose.
+
+"My child, in God's name, listen to reason! They are entering the hall
+and they will have us both."
+
+Suddenly Florence knew. She could not have told you why; but there was
+an appeal in the man's voice that went to her heart.
+
+"You are my father!"
+
+"Yes, yes! But you've found it out just a trifle too late, my dear.
+Quick; this side of the desk!"
+
+Braine and his men dashed into the library. Olga entered leisurely.
+
+"Both of them!" yelled Braine exultantly. "Both of them together; what
+luck!"
+
+There was a sharp, fierce struggle; and when it came to an end
+Hargreave was trussed to a chair.
+
+"Ah, so we meet again, Hargreave!" said Braine.
+
+Hargreave shrugged. What he wanted was time.
+
+"A million! We have you. Where is it, or I'll twist your heart before
+your eyes."
+
+"Father, forgive me!"
+
+"I understand, my child."
+
+"Where is it?" Braine seized Florence by the wrist and swung her
+toward him.
+
+"Don't tell him, father; don't mind me," said the girl bravely.
+
+Braine, smiling his old evil smile, drew the girl close. It was the
+last time he ever touched her.
+
+"Look!" screamed Olga.
+
+Every one turned, to see Jones' face peering between the curtains.
+There was an ironic smile on the butler's lips. The face vanished.
+
+"After him!" cried Braine, releasing Florence.
+
+"After him!" mimicked a voice from the hall.
+
+The curtains were thrown back suddenly. Jones appeared, and Jim and
+the Russian agent and a dozen policemen. Tableau!
+
+Braine sprang at Florence savagely, and Norton tore him back, and they
+went tumbling through the library and the living room. It was a death
+struggle; make no mistake about that. The others dared not shoot for
+fear of hitting Norton. But the Countess Olga, in the hallway, dared
+the risk. As Norton's back came into view she fired. Almost at the
+same instant Norton had swung Braine about. A shudder ran through the
+arch-scoundrel, his hands slipped off Norton's shoulders, a surprised
+expression swept over his face, then he sank inertly to the floor, dead.
+
+[Illustration: BRAINE SANK INERTLY TO THE FLOOR, DEAD]
+
+Olga ran up-stairs wildly, followed by a determined policeman. She
+dashed into Florence's room and locked the door. Instantly she crossed
+over to the window, and paused.
+
+Down-stairs the police were marching off the leaders of the Black
+Hundred.
+
+"Well," said Norton, "I guess it's all over. And, my word for it, Mr.
+Jedson, you've played your end consummately."
+
+"Jedson!" exclaimed Jones, starting back.
+
+"Yes, Jedson, formerly of Scotland Yard," went on the reporter. "I
+recognized him long ago."
+
+"It is true," said Hargreave, taking Jones' hand in his own. "Fifteen
+years ago I employed him to watch my affairs, and very well has he done
+so."
+
+Presently, Hargreave, Jones, Florence and Jim were alone. That smile
+which had revealed to Florence her father's identity stole over his
+face again. He put his hand on Jim's shoulder and beckoned to Florence.
+
+"Are you really anxious to marry this young man?"
+
+Florence nodded.
+
+"Well, then, do so. And go to Europe with him on your honeymoon; and
+as a wedding present to you both, for every dollar that he has I will
+add a hundred; and when you get tired of travel you will both come hack
+here to live. The Black Hundred has ceased to exist."
+
+"And now," said Jones, shaking his shoulders.
+
+"Well?" said Hargreave.
+
+"My business is done. Still--" Jones paused.
+
+"Go on," said Hargreave soberly.
+
+"Well, the truth is, sir, I've grown used to you. And if you'll let me
+play the butler till the end I shall be most happy."
+
+"I was going to suggest it."
+
+Norton took Florence by the hand and drew her away.
+
+"Where are you taking me?" she asked.
+
+"I'm going to take this pretty hand of yours and put it flat upon one
+million dollars. And if you don't believe it, follow me."
+
+She followed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+It will be remembered that the Countess Olga had darted up the stairs
+during the struggle between Braine and his captors. The police who had
+followed her were recalled to pursue one of the lesser rogues. This
+left Olga free for a moment. She stole out and down as far as the
+landing.
+
+Servan, the Russian agent, stood waiting for the taxi-cab to roll up to
+the porte-cochere for himself, Braine and Vroon. Norton had taken
+Florence by the hand, ostensibly to conduct her to the million.
+Suddenly Braine made a dash for liberty. Norton rushed after him.
+Just as he reached Braine, a shot rang out. Braine whirled upon his
+heels and crashed to the floor.
+
+Olga, intent upon giving injury to Norton, who she regarded equally
+with Hargreave as having brought about the downfall, had hit her lover
+instead. With a cry of despair she dashed back into Florence's room,
+quite ready to end it all. She raised the revolver to her temple,
+shuddered, and lowered the weapon: so tenaciously do we cling to life!
+
+Below, they were all quite stunned by the suddenness of the shot.
+Instantly they sought the fallen man's side, and a hasty examination
+gave them the opinion that the man was dead. Happily a doctor was on
+the way, Servan having given the call, as one of the Black Hundred had
+been wounded badly.
+
+[Illustration: INSTANTLY THEY SOUGHT THE FALLEN MAN'S SIDE]
+
+But what to do with that mad woman up-stairs? Hargreave advised them
+to wait. The house was surrounded; she could not possibly escape save
+by one method, and perhaps that would be the best for her. Hargreave
+looked gravely at Norton as he offered this suggestion. The reporter
+understood: the millionaire was willing to give the woman a chance.
+
+"And you are my father?" said Florence, still bewildered by the amazing
+events. "But I don't understand yet!" her gaze roving from the real
+Jones to her father.
+
+"I don't doubt it, child," said Hargreave. "I'll explain. When I
+hired Jones here, who is really Jedson of the Scotland Yard, I did so
+because we looked alike when shaven. It was Jedson here who escaped by
+the balloon; it was Jedson who returned the five thousand to Norton,
+who watched the countess' apartment; it was Jedson who was wounded in
+the arm. I myself guarded you, my child. Last night, unbeknown to
+you, I left and the real Jones--for it is easier to call him
+that!--took my place."
+
+"And I never saw the difference!" exclaimed Florence.
+
+"That is natural," smiled her father. "You were thinking of Norton
+here instead of me. Eh?"
+
+Florence blushed.
+
+"Well, why not? Here, Norton!" The millionaire took Florence's hand
+and placed it in the reporter's. "It seems that I've got to lose her
+after all. Kiss her, man; in heaven's name, kiss her!"
+
+And Norton threw his arms around the girl and kissed her soundly,
+careless of the fact that he was observed by both enemies and friends.
+
+[Illustration: A QUICK CLUTCH AND THE POLICEMAN HAD HER BY THE WRIST]
+
+Suddenly the policeman who had been standing by the side of Braine ran
+into the living-room.
+
+"He's alive! Braine's alive; he just stirred."
+
+"What?" exclaimed Norton and Hargreave in a single breath.
+
+"Yes, sir! I saw his hands move. It's a good thing we sent for a
+doctor. He ought to be along about now."
+
+Even as he spoke the bell rang: and they all surged out into the hall,
+forgetting for the moment all about the million. Olga hadn't killed
+the man, then? The doctor knelt beside the stricken man and examined
+him. He shrugged.
+
+"Will he live?"
+
+"Certainly. A scalp wound, that laid him out for a few moments. He'll
+be all right in a few days. He was lucky. A quarter of an inch lower,
+and he'd have passed in his checks."
+
+"Good!" murmured Servan. "So our friend will accompany me back to good
+Russia? Oh, we'll be kind to him during the journey. Have him taken
+to the hospital ward at the Tombs. Now, for the little lady up-stairs."
+
+A moment later Braine opened his eyes, and the policeman assisted him
+to his feet. Servan, with a nod, ordered the police to help the
+wounded man to the taxicab which had just arrived. Braine, now wholly
+conscious, flung back one look of supreme hatred toward Hargreave; and
+that was the last either Florence or her father ever saw of Braine of
+the Black Hundred--a fine specimen of a man gone wrong through greed
+and an inordinate lust for revenge.
+
+The policeman returned to Hargreave.
+
+"It's pretty quiet up-stairs," he suggested. "Don't you think, sir,
+that I'd better try that bedroom door again?"
+
+"Well, if you must," assented Hargreave reluctantly. "But don't be
+rough with her if you can help it."
+
+For Braine he had no sympathy. When he recalled all the misery that
+devil's emissary had caused him, the years of hiding and pursuit, the
+loss of the happiness that had rightfully been his, his heart became
+adamant. For eighteen years to have ridden and driven and sailed up
+and down the world, always confident that sooner or later that demon
+would find him! He had lost the childhood of his daughter; and now he
+was to lose her in her womanhood. And because of this implacable
+hatred the child's mother had died in the Petrograd prison-fortress.
+But what an enemy the man had been! He, Hargreave, had needed all his
+wits constantly; he had never dared to go to sleep except with one eye
+open. But in employing ordinary crooks, Braine had at length
+overreached himself; and now he must pay the penalty. The way of the
+transgressor is hard; and though this ancient saying looks dingy with
+the wear and tear of centuries, it still holds good.
+
+But he felt sorry for the woman up above. She had loved not wisely but
+too well. Far better for her if she put an end to life. She would not
+live a year in the God-forsaken snows of Siberia.
+
+"My kind father!" said Florence, as if she could read his thoughts.
+
+"I had a hard time of it, child. It was difficult to play the butler
+with you about. The times that I fought down the desire to sweep you
+up in my arms! But I kept an iron grip on that impulse. It would have
+imperiled you. In some manner it would have leaked out; and your life
+and mine wouldn't have been worth a button."
+
+[Illustration: THE MYSTIC MILLION]
+
+Florence threw her arms around him and held him tightly.
+
+"That poor woman up-stairs!" she murmured. "Can't they let her go?"
+
+"No, dear. She has lost, and losers pay the stakes. That's life.
+Norton, you knew who I was all the time, didn't you?"
+
+"I did; Mr. Hargreave. There was a scar on the lobe of your ear; and
+secretly I often wondered at the likeness between you and the real
+Jones. When I caught a glimpse of that ear, then I knew what the game
+was. And I'll add that you played it amazingly well. The one flaw in
+Braine's campaign was his hurry. He started the ball rolling before
+getting all the phases clearly established in his mind. He was a brave
+man, anyhow; and more than once he had me where I believed that prayers
+only were necessary."
+
+"And do you think that you can lead Florence to the million?" asked
+Hargreave, smiling.
+
+"For one thing, it is in her room, and has always been there. It never
+was in the chest."
+
+"Not bad, not bad," mused the father.
+
+"But perhaps after all it will be better if you show it to her
+yourself."
+
+"Just a little uncertain?" jibed the millionaire.
+
+"Absolutely certain. I will whisper in your ear where it is hidden."
+Norton leaned forward as Hargreave bent attentively.
+
+"You've hit it! But how in the world did you guess it?"
+
+"Because it was the last place any one would look for it. I judged at
+the start that you'd hide it in just such a spot, in some place where
+you could always guard it, and lay your hands on it quickly if needs
+said must."
+
+"I'm mighty glad you were on my side," said Hargreave. "In a few
+minutes we'll go up and take a look at those packets of bills. There's
+a very unhappy young woman there at present."
+
+"It is in my room?" cried Florence.
+
+Hargreave nodded.
+
+Meantime the Countess Olga hovered between two courses: a brave attempt
+to escape by the window or to turn the revolver against her heart. In
+either case there was nothing left in life for her. The man she loved
+was dead below, killed by her hand. She felt as though she was
+treading air in some fantastical nightmare. She could not go forward
+or backward, and her heels were always within reach of her pursuers.
+
+So this was the end of things? The dreams she had had of going away
+with Braine to other climes, the happiness she had pictured, all mere
+chimeras! A sudden rage swept over her. She would escape, she would
+continue to play the game to the end. She would show them that she had
+been the man's mate, not his pliant tool. She raised the window and
+stepped out onto the balcony .... into the hands of the policeman who
+had patiently been waiting for her to do so! Instantly she placed the
+revolver at her temple. A quick clutch, and the policeman had her by
+the wrist. She made one tigerish effort to free herself, shrugged, and
+signified that she surrendered.
+
+"I don't want to hurt you, Miss," said the policeman; "but if you make
+any attempt to escape, I'll have to put the handcuffs on you."
+
+"I'll go quietly. What are you going to do with me?"
+
+"Turn you over to the Russian agent. He has extradition papers; and I
+guess it's Siberia."
+
+[Illustration: "FLORENCE, THAT IS ALL YOURS"]
+
+"For me?" She laughed scornfully. "Do I look like a woman who would go
+to Siberia?"
+
+"Be careful, Miss. As I said, I don't want to put the cuffs on unless
+I have to."
+
+She laughed again. It did not have a pleasant sound in the officer's
+ears. He had heard women, suicidal bent, laugh like that.
+
+"I'll ask you for that ring on your finger."
+
+"Do you think there is poison in it?"
+
+"I shouldn't be surprised," he admitted.
+
+She slipped the ring from her finger and gave it to him.
+
+"There is poison in it; so be careful how you handle it," she said.
+
+The policeman accepted it gingerly and dropped it into his capacious
+pocket. It tinkled as it fell against the handcuffs.
+
+At that moment the other policeman broke in the door.
+
+"All right, Dolan; she's given up the game."
+
+"She didn't kill the man after all," said Dolan.
+
+"He's alive?" she screamed.
+
+"Yes; and they've taken him off to the Tombs. Just a scalp wound.
+He'll be all right in a day or two."
+
+"Alive!" murmured Olga. She had not killed the man she loved, then?
+And if they were indeed taken to Siberia, she would be with him until
+the end of things.
+
+With her handsome head proudly erect, she walked toward the door. She
+paused for a moment to look at the portrait of Hargreave. Somehow it
+seemed to smile at her ironically. Then on, down the stairs, between
+the two officers, she went. Her glance traveled coolly from face to
+face, and stopped at Florence's. There she saw pity.
+
+"You are sorry for me?" she asked skeptically.
+
+"Oh, yes! I forgive you," said the generous Florence.
+
+"Thanks! Officers, I am ready."
+
+So the Countess Olga passed through that hall door forever. How many
+times had she entered it, with guile and treachery in her heart? It
+was the game. She had played it and lost, and she must pay her debts
+to Fate the fiddler. Siberia! The tin or lead mines, the
+ankle-chains, the knout, and many things that were far worse to a
+beautiful woman! Well, so long as Braine was at her side, she would
+suffer all these things without a murmur. And always there would be a
+chance, a chance!
+
+When they heard the taxicab rumble down the driveway to the street,
+Hargreave turned to Florence.
+
+"Come along, now, and we'll have the bad taste taken off our tongues.
+To win out is the true principle of life. It takes off some of the
+tinsel and glamour, but the end is worth while."
+
+They all trooped up-stairs to Florence's room. So wonderful is the
+power and attraction of money that they forgot the humiliation of their
+late enemies.
+
+Hargreave approached the portrait of himself, took it from the wall,
+pressed a button on the back, which fell outward. Behold! There, in
+neat packages of a hundred thousand each, lay the mystic million! The
+spectators were awed into silence for a moment. Perhaps the thought of
+each was identical--the long struggle, the terrible hazards, the
+deaths, that had taken place because of this enormous sum of money.
+
+A million, sometimes called cool; why, nobody knows. There it lay,
+without feeling, without emotion; yellow notes payable to bearer on
+demand. Presently Florence gasped, Norton sighed, and Hargreave
+smiled. The face of Jones (or Jedson) alone remained impassive.
+
+[Illustration: AFTER THE STORM, THE SUNSHINE]
+
+A million dollars is a marvelous sight. Very few people have ever seen
+it, not even millionaires themselves. I dare say you never saw it; and
+I'm tolerably certain I never have, or will! A million, ready for
+eager, careless fingers to spend, or thrifty fingers to multiply! What
+Correggio, what Rubens, what Titian, could stand beside it? None that
+I wot of.
+
+"Florence, that is all yours, to do with as you please, to spend when
+and how you will. Share it with your husband-to-be. He is a brave and
+gallant young man, and is fortunate in finding a young woman equally
+brave and gallant. For the rest of my days I expect peace. Perhaps
+sometimes Jones here and I will talk over the strange things that have
+happened; but we'll do that only when we haven't you young folks to
+talk to. After your wedding journey you will return here. While I
+live this shall be your home. I demand that much. Free! No more
+looking over my shoulder when I walk the streets; no more testing
+windows and doors. I am myself again. I take up the thread I laid
+down eighteen years ago. Have no fear. Neither Braine nor Olga will
+ever return. Russia has a grip of steel."
+
+Three weeks later Servan, the Russian agent, left for Russia with his
+three charges, Olga, Braine and Vroon. It was a long journey they went
+upon, something like ten weeks, always watched, always under the
+strictest guard, compelled to eat with wooden forks and knives and
+spoons. Waking or sleeping they knew no rest from espionage. From
+Paris to Berlin, from Berlin to St. Petersburg, as Petrograd was then
+called; and then began the cruel journey over the mighty steppes of
+that barbaric wilderness to the Siberian mines. The way of the
+transgressor is hard.
+
+On the same day that Olga and Braine made their first descent into the
+deadly mines, Florence and Norton were married. After the storm, the
+sunshine: and who shall deny them happiness?
+
+[Illustration: IMMEDIATELY AFTER THE CEREMONY]
+
+Immediately after the ceremony the two sailed for Europe, on their
+honeymoon; and it is needless to say that some of the million went with
+them, but there was no mystery about it!
+
+
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+Harold MacGrath
+
+A Sketch of the Author at Work and at Play
+
+Harold MacGrath, author of more than a dozen best sellers, the book of
+an operetta, and short stories without number, is a native of Syracuse,
+N. Y., having been born in that city on September 4, 1871, and lived
+there ever since, except when he is out circling the globe or in Gotham
+looking things over.
+
+Mr. MacGrath was a journalist before he essayed the higher form of
+literature that sells on a royalty basis, instead of by the yard, and
+he claims that he owes his start in "romancing" to a physical defect.
+Mr. MacGrath is partially deaf and while serving as a newspaper
+reporter he heard only about half of what was said to him, and had to
+"make up" the other half himself. Thus, his imagination was given
+quite a course in physical culture before its owner's conscience began
+to prick him. "Why not do the thing right?" MacGrath asked himself.
+"I don't knew," he replied. "Let's try it," he suggested. "All
+right," he answered. And he quit the newspaper game and started a
+novel, "Arms and the Woman," which appeared in 1890. This was followed
+by many good sellers, the speed limit of the author being three books
+some years.
+
+Next to being a novelist MacGrath is a globe-trotter. He has been in
+every nook and corner on the face of the globe where white man dares to
+go and can get there without swimming or flying. As a result, he has
+obtained the inspirations for most of his novels while amid the
+fascinating surroundings in some Asiatic harbor town, while traveling
+down the Rhine, or while listening to strains of Viennese music in some
+little out-of-the-way cafe along the Danube. He is a genius in pen
+picturing and can impart the color, the life, the action of real life
+into his pages in a manner that is bound to attract.
+
+He is fond of tennis and out-of-door sports. He likes boxing and is
+one of the best amateur pool and billiard players in the country. He
+has friends in almost every large city in the world and has met more
+"crowned heads" than any other author, perhaps, outside of Hallie
+Erminie Rives, wife of Post Wheeler, the versatile secretary of the
+American Embassy at Tokio.
+
+As a collector and connoisseur, Mr. MacGrath has a wide reputation, his
+especial hobby being Turkish rugs and antique jewelry, of which he has
+a wonderful collection. Another of his hobbies is horses, and although
+he owns only one himself, he will never pass a good looking horse by
+without stopping to pat it. He even carries lump sugar in his pocket
+and takes great delight in feeding it to the horses of the mounted
+officers in New York, many of whom (the officers) know him.
+
+His method of working up his stories is unique. According to his own
+statement, he first "thinks out" the start of his story, carrying his
+idea through what develops into the first few chapters of the book.
+Then he drops the thread of thought and starts again, but this time at
+the end, and figures out how he will dispose of his characters and how
+best the story should end. This accomplished, he sits down to his
+typewriter and "goes to work." While writing, he often strikes on good
+ideas to be incorporated in parts already considered. Immediately he
+jots down his idea on the back of an envelope or a scrap of paper and
+inserts the note among the pages of his manuscript just where it
+belongs After completing his first draft, he goes back over the entire
+manuscript, making corrections here and there and additions. He then
+sits down to sum the whole story up in his mind and by this process is
+able to pick out the flaws. His second draft, therefore, is quite a
+finished product. He makes the final draft of his manuscript himself,
+as he has found that he often strikes upon improvements at the eleventh
+hour that go far to better his stories. If he turned the work of
+making the final draft over to a stenographer, this last chance would
+be lost.
+
+He is one of the few modern writers who does not have to try to be
+funny. It is natural with him to amuse.
+
+Those interested in the chronological order of his stories will find
+them as follows:
+
+In 1901 he published his second book, "The Puppet Crown." "The Grey
+Cloak" followed in 1903, and by the time it appeared, most of the
+readers of fiction had acquired the MacGrath habit and were on the
+lookout for the next dose of his delightful literary stimulant that
+chased the "blues." Then came the story which established MacGrath's
+reputation, "The Man on the Box," which appeared in 1904 and is still
+one of the best sellers in popular editions. In 1905 MacGrath put on
+some extra speed. He worked a double shift in his brain mill and the
+result was that before the dawn of the next New Year's Day he had three
+more successful books to his credit. They were "The Princess Elopes,"
+a novelette; "Enchantment," a book of short stories, and "Hearts and
+Masks," a novel that dealt with entanglements developing at a mask
+ball. In the same year he wrote "Half a Rogue," another highly popular
+story. In 1906 he turned out "The Watteau Shepherdess," an operetta.
+These two productions were followed by "The Best Man" in 1907; "The
+Enchanted Hat" and "The Lure of the Mask" in 1908. "The Goose Girl"
+was MacGrath's next novel, and went far to uphold his reputation. "A
+Splendid Hazard" and "The Carpet of Bagdad" followed within the space
+of little more than a year. Next "The Place of Honeymoons" was
+published, then "Parrot & Co.," "Deuces Wild," "Pidgin Island," "The
+Adventures of Kathlyn," and "Voice in the Fog."
+
+The "purpose novel," as that term is generally understood, finds but
+little sympathy at the hands of Harold MacGrath. Yet he has a definite
+purpose of his own. It is to amuse.
+
+"The one definite idea I have in mind in writing stories," he says, "is
+to afford an agreeable, pleasant hour or two to my readers. I wish to
+amuse them, to make them wish that they, too, might have lived as this
+or that hero, in this or that land, probable or improbable. I prefer
+sunshine, mirth, buoyancy, and I believe most readers prefer the same.
+Grown-up people never wholly lose their love of fairy tales; and grown
+up fairy tales have been the scheme of most of my novels."
+
+Could an author have a better purpose than this? Could he serve men to
+better advantage than by lightening the burden they are destined to
+carry through life by allowing their minds to dwell in pleasant places
+and to rejoice with the people of a make-believe world?
+
+"I usually begin a story as a dramatist begins a play--with the end,"
+says MacGrath. "The characters work out the plot themselves; I have
+very little to do with it after they have started."
+
+"The structure of a plot must naturally be foremost; for, after all is
+said and done, the story's the thing. I never outline a plot; I carry
+the main thread in my head until I am ready to put it on paper, and
+after it assumes body on paper, it has many devious twists and turns of
+which I have no prior idea."
+
+"I write whenever I feel like it, for when I am in the mood I do better
+work. I never force myself to do so much work each day. There are
+days when it is impossible to write one hundred words; again, I have
+written as many as seven thousand words a day. Obstacles? There are
+altogether too many to demonstrate. A character that doesn't "balk"
+never fails to be uninteresting. I have always tried to place human
+people in absurd or unique situations and to let them extricate
+themselves as you or I, if so placed.
+
+"The anatomy of a motif for a story is a complex thing, but of a
+practical joke, 'The Man on the Box' was evolved. A young man
+disguised as a coachman drove his sister and her friend to a ball one
+night. This happened in my native town, Syracuse, and it amused me
+greatly when critics said that the exploit was highly improbable. Out
+of the Italian state and church marriage came the plot of 'The Lure of
+the Mask.' The most trivial thing sometimes will suggest a plot. I
+found the ten of hearts one night on the sidewalk. It became the motif
+of 'Hearts and Masks.' Once, in Indianapolis, I chanced to see an
+Italian selling plaster images. It gave me a starting point for 'A
+Splendid Hazard.' Walking down Broadway one day I stopped to look in a
+window where oriental rugs were being advertised. When I turned away
+the seed germ for my latest book, 'The Carpet from Bagdad,' was in my
+mind."
+
+Mr. MacGrath is an enthusiastic fisherman. He goes to Cape Vincent,
+Lake Ontario, every summer, when he isn't ambling in China, or India,
+or Africa. He believes that the best bass grounds in the world are
+within a radius of twenty miles from Cape Vincent, which is really in
+the head of the St. Lawrence River. A friend undertook to convince him
+that there were other places, so MacGrath consented to accompany him to
+Canada. They arrived at sunset, and the host extemporized over the
+glories of the setting sun.
+
+"Ever see anything to beat that, Mac?"
+
+"Fine!"
+
+On the following morning they went out for bass. At four o'clock in
+the afternoon they had caught exactly one.
+
+The host again rhapsodized over the sunset.
+
+The second day they caught no bass at all. On their way back to the
+hotel the host was silent. As they came up to the landing, MacGrath
+touched his host on the shoulder.
+
+"There's your darned sunset, Jim!"
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Million Dollar Mystery, by Harold MacGrath
+
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