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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #65345 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/65345)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Under Three Flags, by Bert Leston Taylor
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Under Three Flags
- A Story of Mystery
-
-Author: Bert Leston Taylor
- Alvin T. Thoits
-
-Release Date: May 15, 2021 [eBook #65345]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: MFR, Gísli Valgeirsson, Barry Abrahamsen, and the Online
- Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
- file was produced from images generously made available by The
- Internet Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK UNDER THREE FLAGS ***
-
-
-
-
- _UNDER THREE FLAGS_
- —A Story of Mystery
-
-
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- UNDER THREE FLAGS
-
-
-
- A Story of Mystery
-
-
-
- BY
-
- B. L. TAYLOR AND A. T. THOITS.
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- CHICAGO AND NEW YORK:
- RAND, McNALLY & COMPANY.
- MDCCCXCVI.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- _A PRIZE STORY_
-
-
- In THE CHICAGO RECORD’S series of “Stories of Mystery.”
-
-
- _UNDER THREE FLAGS_
-
- BY
-
- B. L. TAYLOR AND A. T. THOITS.
-
-
-
- (This story—out of 816 competing—was awarded the THIRD PRIZE in THE
- CHICAGO RECORD’S “$30,000 to Authors” competition.)
-
-
-
-
- ──────────────────
- Copyright, 1896, by B. L. Taylor and A. T. Thoits.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
- UNDER THREE FLAGS.
-
-
- ----------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- “OVER THE HILLS AND FAR AWAY.”
-
-
-“No; I am not tired of life. Who could be on such a day? I am weary
-simply of this way of living. I want to get away—away from this stagnant
-hole. It is the same dull story over and over again, day after day,
-world without end, amen!”
-
-“Would you be a bit more contented in any other spot?”
-
-“I think so. I cannot believe that mankind in general is so selfish, so
-hypocritical, and, worst crime of all, so hopelessly stupid as it is
-here. The world is 25,000 miles in circumference. Why spend all one’s
-days in this split in the mountains?”
-
-“But, tell me, what is your ambition, then? Have you one?”
-
-“You would smile pityingly if I told it you.”
-
-“No; I’ll be as serious as—as you.”
-
-“Then incline thine ear. I would I were the ruler of a savage tribe, in
-the heart of far-away New Zealand, shut in by towering mountains from
-the outer world.”
-
-“But why spend all one’s days in a valley?”
-
-“Oh, well, if you’re going in for a valley, why not have a good one?”
-
-She throws herself down beside him on the grass and clasps her arms
-about his neck. “You foolish boy; you don’t know what you want.”
-
-“Don’t I?” He draws the glowing face to his and kisses it.
-
-The two are idling in a grassy nook on the slope of one of Vermont’s
-green hills, sheltered by a clump of spruce from observation and the
-slanting rays of the sun.
-
-There is an infinite calm in the late spring air, and the golden
-afternoon drifts by on lazy pinions. Away in the west, across the vale,
-the main spur of the Green Mountain range awaits the last pencilings of
-the low-descending sun. Southward Wild River sings its way through
-buttercup and daisy flecked meadows; to the north the smoke from the
-chimneys of Raymond blurs the lines of as fair a landscape as earth can
-boast.
-
-Derrick Ames pulls his hat over his eyes, stretches himself on the
-greensward and gazes long and lovingly at his companion. The fair face,
-browned by many rambles among the hills; the rippling hair, tumbled in
-confusion about mischievous and laughter-laden brown eyes; the rounded
-arms; the slim, girlish figure, about which even the coarse dress donned
-for mountain climbing falls in graceful lines; the dainty feet and the
-perfectly turned ankles, make a picture for an artist.
-
-She picked up the book which lies open upon the grass and glances over
-its pages, dreamily.
-
-The sun goes down in a golden haze, and still the lovers tarry in their
-sylvan trysting-place.
-
-“It is getting late and damp; we had better be moving,” he says,
-finally.
-
-They arise and take their way across the pasture, their arms clasped
-about each other’s waist. Derrick is talking in low, earnest tones, with
-an infrequent interruption by his companion.
-
-“It’s no use,” he exclaims, impatiently, in reply to a protest on her
-part. “Twice I have spoken to your father, with the same result. I have
-been refused and insulted. He is selfish, overbearing—”
-
-She places one hand upon his lips. “But will you not make a third
-trial—for my sake,” she pleads.
-
-“For your sake I would do anything,” he answers, pressing the soft hand
-to his lips. “There is no time like the present. Will you wait for me
-here?” She nods. “Where will I find your father?”
-
-“At the bank. I think he said he would be there all the evening.”
-
-“I will return shortly, for I know what the answer will be.”
-
-She watches the erect form of her lover as he strides down the road
-leading into the village.
-
-The shadows deepen in the valley. The opalescent light that hangs over
-the range fades into the darkening gray. The moon rises in full, round
-splendor and transforms the river into a silver torrent.
-
-The clanging of the Raymond town clock, as it hammers out the hour of 8,
-rouses the girl. “Derrick should be here soon,” she murmurs. Then she
-clutches her heart with an exclamation of pain and terror.
-
-It is a swift, sharp spasm, that passes away as quickly as it came, and
-which leaves the girl for several minutes afterward somewhat dazed.
-Footsteps echo in the road.
-
-“The result?” eagerly, anxiously queries the girl as Derrick reaches her
-side.
-
-He must have walked swiftly. He is breathing hard and his face is pale
-as the moonlight. Or is it the reflection of that light?
-
-“Come away from here, for God’s sake!” he exclaims in a harsh, unnatural
-voice, half-dragging her into the road. “I beg your pardon; I did not
-mean to be rough,” he adds, as the astonished eyes of the girl look into
-his. “Will you come for a walk, dear?” And as she follows, mechanically,
-wonderingly, he walks swiftly away from the village.
-
-“I am all out of breath,” she protests, after a few moments of the
-fierce pace he has set. And they stop to rest at a spring beside the
-road.
-
-“You have quarreled with father,” asserts the girl, half questioningly;
-but Derrick remains silent.
-
-He stops suddenly, and, holding her in his arms, smooths back the dark
-ringlets from her moist brow. “Helen, darling, do not press me for an
-answer to-night. Let us be happy in the present. God knows it may not be
-for long.” He presses a passionate kiss upon the girl’s unresisting and
-unresponsive lips, and then lifts to the moonlight a face as troubled as
-the tossing river behind the dusky willows. As he releases her he
-extends his arm toward the ball of silver that is wheeling up the
-heavens. “See!” he cries. “The moon is up and it is a glorious night.
-Shall we follow that pathway of silver over the hills and far away?”
-
-A loving look is her willing assent.
-
-The witchery that the moon is said to exert o’er mortals must be more
-than a poet’s myth. A strange peace has come upon the girl. Her senses
-are exalted. She seems to be walking on air. Nor does she now break upon
-the silence of her companion, whose agitation has been replaced by a
-singular calm.
-
-What a stillness, yet what a busy world claims the woods they are
-crossing to-night! The crawling of a beetle through the dead leaves is
-distinctly heard, and a thousand small noises that the day never hears
-fill the forest with a strange music.
-
-A short distance farther and the wanderers emerge into the open and
-pause to marvel at the picture spread before them.
-
-It is a wondrous night. Bathed in a radiance that tips with silver every
-dew-laden spear of grass, the pasture slopes down to a highway, and the
-brawling of the brook beside it comes to their ears as a strain of
-music.
-
-Silently the lovers take their way through this fairyland, clamber over
-the wall into the road, and continue on.
-
-“I am cold,” complains the girl, with a little shiver. Derrick wraps his
-light overcoat about her shoulders.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The striking of a town clock causes them both to start.
-
-“Where are we?” asks the girl, looking about her in bewilderment. The
-moon passes behind a cloud. The spell is over.
-
-“Why, this is Ashfield, isn’t it? There is the station, and the church
-and the—Derrick! Derrick, where have we been wandering? Five miles from
-home and midnight! What will Louise and father say? We must go home at
-once.”
-
-“Home,” he repeats, bitterly, pointing to the north. “There is no home
-yonder for me. Listen, Helen!” He draws her to him fiercely. “If we part
-now it must be forever. I shall never go back. I cannot go back! Will
-you not come away with me—somewhere—anywhere? Hark!”
-
-The whistle of the Montreal express sounds from the north.
-
-The girl seems not to hear him. The long whistle of the express again
-echoes through the night.
-
-“Helen, darling!” There is a world of yearning and entreaty in his
-voice.
-
-She throws her arms about him and kisses him. “Yes, Derrick; I will go
-with you—to the end of the world.”
-
-The station agent regards the pair suspiciously. In the dim light of the
-kerosene lamps of the waiting-room their features are only partially
-discernible.
-
-“Sorry,” he says, “but this train don’t stop except for through
-passengers to New York.”
-
-“But we are going to New York,” almost shouts Derrick. “Quick, man!” The
-train has swept around the curve above the village and is thundering
-down the stretch.
-
-“Wall, I guess I kin accommerdate ye,” drawls the station master. He
-seizes his lantern and swings it about his head and No. 51 draws up
-panting in the station.
-
-“Elopement, I guess,” confides the station agent to the conductor, as
-Derrick and the girl clamber aboard the train.
-
-The latter growls something about being twenty minutes late out of St.
-Albans, swings his lantern and No. 51 rumbles away in the mist and
-moonlight.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- THE PRISONER OF WINDSOR—THE TRAGEDY OF A NIGHT.
-
-
-“Stanley, I have good news for you.”
-
-“All news is alike to me, sir.”
-
-Warden Chase of the Vermont state prison regards the young man before
-him with a kindly eye.
-
-“Your sentence of three years has been shortened by a year, as the
-governor has granted you an unconditional pardon,” he announces.
-
-“His excellency is kind,” replied the young man in a voice that
-expresses no gratitude and may contain a faint shade of irony.
-
-He is a striking-looking young fellow, even in his prison garb, his dark
-hair cropped close and his eyes cast down in the passive manner enjoined
-by the prison regulations. His height is about five feet ten inches and
-his figure is rather slender and graceful. His face is singularly
-handsome. His eyes are dark brown, almost black, and the two long years
-of prison life have dimmed but little of the fire that flashes from
-their depths. A square jaw bespeaks a strong will. The rather hard lines
-about the firm mouth were not there two years before. He has suffered
-mentally since then. There are too many gray hairs for a man of 28.
-
-Warden Chase touches a bell. “Get Stanley’s things,” he orders the
-attendant, who responds.
-
-“Sit down, Stanley.” The young man obeys and the warden wheels about to
-his desk.
-
-“I am authorized to purchase you a railroad ticket to any station you
-may designate—within reason, of course,” amends Mr. Chase. “Which shall
-it be?” A bitter smile flits across Stanley’s face and he remains
-silent.
-
-“North, east, south or west?” questions Mr. Chase, poising his pen in
-air.
-
-“I have no home to go to,” finally responds Stanley, lifting his eyes
-for the first time since his entrance to the room.
-
-“No home?” repeats the warden, sympathetically. “But surely you must
-want to go somewhere. You can’t stay in Windsor.”
-
-Stanley is thoughtful. “Perhaps you had better make the station
-Raymond,” he decides, and he meets squarely the surprised and
-questioning look of the warden.
-
-“But that is the place you were sent from.”
-
-“Yes.”
-
-“It is not your home? No; I believe you just stated that you had no
-home.”
-
-“I have none.”
-
-“And you wish to revisit the scene of your—your trouble?”
-
-Stanley’s gaze wanders to the open window and across the valley.
-
-“Well, it’s your own affair,” says the warden, turning to his desk. “The
-fare to Raymond is $2.50. I am also authorized to give you $5 cash, to
-which I have added $10. You have assisted me about the books of the
-institution and have been in every respect a model prisoner. In fact,”
-supplements Mr. Chase, with a smile, “under different circumstances I
-should be sorry to part with you.”
-
-“Thank you,” acknowledges Stanley, in the same impassive tones.
-
-“And now, my boy,” counsels the warden, laying one hand kindly on the
-young man’s shoulder, “try to make your future life such that you will
-never be compelled to see the inside of another house of this kind. I am
-something of a judge of character. I am confident that you have the
-making of a man in you. Here are your things,” as the attendant arrives
-with Stanley’s effects.
-
-Mr. Chase resumes his writing and Stanley withdraws. Once within the
-familiar cell, which is soon to know him no more, his whole mood
-changes.
-
-“Free!” he breathes, exultingly, raising his clasped hands to heaven.
-“What matter it if my freedom be of a few days only, of a few hours? It
-will be enough for my purpose. Heavens! Two years in this hole, caged
-like a wild beast, the companion of worse than beasts—a life wrecked at
-28. But I’ll be revenged! As surely as there is a heaven above me, I’ll
-be repaid for my months of misery. An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a
-tooth!”
-
-He throws his prison suit from him with loathing. Then he sinks back
-into his apathy and the simple toilet is completed in silence.
-
-A suit of light gray, of stylish cut, a pair of well-made boots, a
-negligee shirt and a straw hat, make considerable change in his
-appearance. He smiles faintly as he dons them.
-
-He ties his personal effects in a small package. They are few—half a
-dozen letters, all with long-ago post-marks, a couple of photographs,
-and a small volume of Shakespeare given him by the warden, who is an
-admirer of Avon’s bard.
-
-“Off?” asks Mr. Chase, as he shakes hands. “Well, you look about the
-same as when I received you. A little older, perhaps”—surveying him
-critically—“and minus what I remember to have been a handsome mustache.
-Good-by, my boy, and good luck. And, I say,” as Stanley strides toward
-the door, “take my advice and the afternoon train for New York. Get some
-honest employment and make a name for yourself. You’ve got the right
-stuff in you. By the way, do you know what day it is?”
-
-“I have not followed the calendar with reference to any particular
-days.”
-
-“The 30th day of May—Memorial day,” says Mr. Chase.
-
-“It will be a memorial day for me,” responds Stanley. “Good-by, Mr.
-Chase, and thank you for your many kindnesses.”
-
-“I’m rather sorry to have him go,” soliloquizes the warden, as his late
-charge walks slowly away from the institution. “Bright fellow, but
-peculiar—very peculiar.”
-
-Stanley proceeds leisurely along the road leading to the station. His
-eyes are bent down, and he seemingly takes no note of the glories of the
-May day, of the throbbings of the busy life about him. A procession of
-Grand Army men, headed by a brass band that makes music more mournful
-than the occasion seems to call for, passes by on the dusty highway.
-
-“Homage for the dead; contumely for the living,” he murmurs, bitterly.
-
-The train for the north leaves at 4:30. Stanley spends the time between
-in making some small purchases at the village.
-
-“At what hour do we arrive at Raymond?” he asks the conductor, as the
-train pulls out.
-
-“Seven forty-five, if we are on time.”
-
-“Thank you,” returns the young man. He draws his hat over his eyes, and
-turns his face to the window.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At 7:45 o’clock in the evening Sarah, the pretty housemaid at the
-residence of Cyrus Felton, answers a sharp ring at the door bell. In the
-semi-darkness of the vine-shaded porch she distinguishes only the
-outlines of a man who stands well back from the door. The gas has not
-yet been lighted in the hall.
-
-“Is Mr. Felton at home?” inquires the visitor.
-
-“The young or the old Mr. Felton?”
-
-“The young or the old?” repeats the man to himself.
-
-Sarah twists the door-knob impatiently. “Well?” she says.
-
-“I beg your pardon; I was not aware that there were two Mr. Feltons. I
-believe the elder is the person I wish to see.”
-
-“He is not at home.”
-
-“He is in town?”
-
-“Oh, yes. He went down-street about 7 o’clock, but we expect him back
-before long.”
-
-“Would he be likely to be at his office?”
-
-Sarah does not know. Mr. Felton rarely goes to the office evenings.
-Still, he may be there.
-
-“And the office is where?”
-
-“In the bank block.” Sarah peers out at her questioner, but, with a
-“thank you,” he has already stepped from the porch. As he strides away
-in the dusk and the house door slams behind him, a second figure leaves
-the shadow of the trellis, moves across the lawn and pauses at the gate.
-
-“In the bank building,” he muses. “One visitor ahead of me. Well, there
-is no need of my hurrying,” and he saunters toward the village, the
-electric lamps of which have begun to flash.
-
-At 8:05, as Sarah afterwards remembers, Cyrus Felton arrives home. Sarah
-comes into the hall to receive him.
-
-“A gentleman called to see you, sir, about ten minutes ago. Did you meet
-him on your way?”
-
-“Probably not. I have been over to Mr. Goodenough’s. Did he leave any
-name?”
-
-“No, sir. Oh, and here is a letter that a boy brought a little while
-ago.” Sarah produces a note from the hall table and disappears upstairs.
-
-Mr. Felton opens the note, glances at its contents and utters an
-exclamation of impatience. He crumples the paper in his hand, seizes his
-hat and hurries from the house and down the street.
-
-In the brightly lighted room of Prof. George Black, directly over the
-quarters of the Raymond National Bank, a party of young men are whiling
-away a few pleasant hours. The professor is lounging in an easy-chair,
-his feet in another, and is lost in a “meditation” for violin, to which
-Ed Knapp is furnishing a piano accompaniment. Suddenly the professor
-rests his violin across his knees.
-
-“Hark!” he exclaims and bends his head toward the open window. “Wasn’t
-that a shot downstairs?”
-
-“Probably,” assents one of the group. “The boys in the bank have been
-plugging water rats in the river all the afternoon.”
-
-“But it’s too dark to shoot rats.”
-
-“Oh, one can aim pretty straight by electric light. Go ahead with your
-fiddling, George. Get away from that piano, Knapp, and let the professor
-give us the cavatina. That’s my favorite, and your accompaniment would
-ruin it. Let ’er go, professor.”
-
-As the strains of the Raff cavatina die away, a man comes out of the
-entrance of the Raymond National Bank. He glances swiftly up, then down
-the street. Then he crosses the road in the shadow of a tall building
-and hurries toward the station.
-
-“There is no train, north or south, before 11:50,” says the telegraph
-operator, in response to a query at the window. He is clicking off a
-message and does not turn his head. His questioner vanishes.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Jim, Mr. Felton wants to see you,” the clerk of the Raymond Hotel
-informs the sheriff of Mansfield County, who is playing cards in a room
-off the office. Sheriff Wilson is a man with a game leg, a war record,
-and a wild mania for the diversion of sancho pedro. When he sits in for
-an evening of that fascinating pastime he dislikes to be disturbed.
-
-“What’s he want?” he asks absent-mindedly, for he has only two more
-points to make to win the game.
-
-“Dunno. He seems to be worked up about something.”
-
-“High, low, pede!” announces the sheriff triumphantly. “Gentlemen, make
-mine a cigar.” He throws his cards down and goes out into the office.
-Cyrus Felton is pacing up and down excitedly. He grasps the officer by
-the arm and half drags him from the hotel. When they are out of hearing
-of the loungers he exclaims, in a voice that trembles with every
-syllable:
-
-“Mr. Wilson, a fearful crime has been committed. Mr. Hathaway has been
-murdered!”
-
-“Murdered!” The sheriff’s excitement transcends that of his companion,
-who is making a desperate effort to regain his composure.
-
-“He is at the bank. I discovered him only a few moments ago. Come, see
-for yourself.”
-
-They soon reach the bank, which is only a stone’s throw from the hotel.
-After passing the threshold of the cashier’s office in the rear of the
-banking-room the two men stop and look silently upon the grewsome sight
-before them.
-
-Lying upon the floor, one arm extended toward and almost touching the
-wide-open doors of the vault, is the body of Cashier Roger Hathaway. His
-life has ebbed in the crimson pool that stains the polished floor.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- JACK ASHLEY, JOURNALIST.
-
-
-A loud pounding on the door of his room in the tavern at South Ashfield
-awakens Mr. Jack Ashley from a dream of piscatorial conquest.
-
-“Four o’clock!” announces the disturber of his slumbers, with a parting
-thump. Ashley rolls out of bed and plunges his face into a brimming bowl
-of spring water.
-
-It is early dawn. A cool breeze, laden with the scent of apple blossoms,
-drifts through the window.
-
-“God made the country and man made the town,” quotes the young man, as
-he descends to the hotel office.
-
-“Ain’t used to gittin’ up at this hour, be ye?” grins the proprietary
-genius of the tavern.
-
-“The habit, worthy host, has not fastened upon me seriously. This is
-usually my hour for going to bed. Hast aught to eat?”
-
-“Breakfas’ all ready,” with a nod toward what is known as the
-dining-room.
-
-Ashley shudders as he gazes at the spread. It is the usual Vermont
-breakfast—weak coffee, two kinds of pie on one plate, and a tier of
-doughnuts.
-
-“Gad! This country is a howling wilderness of pie!” he mutters,
-surveying the repast in comical despair. “And to flash it on a man at 4
-a.m.! It is simply barbarous!”
-
-During his short vacation sojourn Mr. Ashley’s epicurean tastes have
-suffered a number of distinct shocks. But the ozone of the Green
-Mountains has contributed toward the generation of an appetite that
-needs little tempting to expend its energies. He makes a hearty
-breakfast on this particular morning, drowns the memories of the menu in
-a bowl of milk, and announces to Landlord Howe that he is ready to be
-directed to the best trout brook in central Vermont.
-
-Mr. Howe surveys the eight-ounce bamboo with mild disdain. “Them fancy
-rigs ain’t much good on our brooks,” he declares. “Ketch more with a
-75-cent rod.”
-
-“I am rather inclined to agree with you on that point, most genial
-boniface; but it’s the only rod I happen to have with me, and I expect
-to return with some fish unless the myriad denizens of the brook which
-you enthusiastically described last night exist only in your
-imagination. By the way, what do you think of the bait?” passing over a
-flask.
-
-Mr. Howe’s faded blue eyes moisten and a kindly smile plays over a
-countenance browned by many summers in the hay field.
-
-“Didn’t buy that in Vermont,” he ventures.
-
-“Hardly. I’m not lined with asbestos.”
-
-The landlord grins. It is a habit he has.
-
-“I keeps a little suthin’ on hand myself,” he confides in a cautious
-undertone, although only the cattle are listening. “But fact is, there
-ain’t no use er keepin’ better’n dollar’n a half a gallon liquor. The
-boys want suthin’ that’ll scratch when it goes down. Now that, I opine,”
-with an affectionate glance at the flask which Ashley files away for
-future reference, “must a cost nigh onter $3 a gallon.”
-
-“As much as that,” smiles Ashley. “That, most appreciative of bonifaces,
-is the best whisky to be found on Fulton street, New York. Well, I must
-be ‘driving along.’ Where’s this wonderful brook of yours?”
-
-“Follow that road round through the barnyard and ‘cross the basin to the
-woods. Good fishin’ for four miles. And mind,” as Ashley saunters away,
-“don’t bring back any trouts that ain’t six inches long, or the fish
-warden will light on ye.”
-
-“Thanks. If I should run across the warden—” and Ashley holds up the
-flask.
-
-“That’d fetch him, I reckon,” chuckles Mr. Howe. Ashley vaults over the
-bars and strides across the meadows.
-
-Ashley is in high feather. “This air rather discounts an absinthe frappe
-for stimulative purposes,” he soliloquizes. “Ah, here’s the wood,
-there’s the brook, and if I mistake not, yonder pool hides a whopper
-just aching for a go at the early worm.” But it doesn’t and Ashley
-enters the forest.
-
-The farther he plunges into the spice-laden wilderness the more is he
-enchanted with his surroundings. Picture a cleft in the mountain whose
-sides drop almost sheer to a gorge barely wide enough to accommodate a
-wood road and a brook that parallels and often encroaches upon it. Tall
-pines interlace and shut out the direct rays of the sun and every now
-and then a cascade comes tumbling somewhere aloft and plunges into a
-broad, pebble-lined basin.
-
-As Ashley sits by one of these pools, his wading boots plunged deep in
-the crystal liquid, and pulls lazily on a briar pipe, the reader is
-offered the opportunity of becoming better acquainted with him.
-
-He is a prepossessing young fellow of something like 27, medium height
-and rather well built. Blue eyes and an aggressive nose, on which
-gold-bowed eyeglasses are airily perched, are characteristics of a face
-which has always been a passport for its owner into all society worth
-cultivating. A well-shaped head is adorned with a profusion of blond
-curls, supplemented by a mustache of silken texture and golden hue,
-which its possessor is fond of twisting when he is in a blithesome
-humor, which is often, and of tugging at savagely when in a reflective
-mood, which is infrequent.
-
-Ashley is noted among his friends for chronic good humor and unbounded
-confidence in his own abilities. He is one of the brightest all-round
-writers on the New York Hemisphere, and he knows it. The best of it is,
-City Editor Ricker also knows it. All the office sings of his exploits
-and “beats” and does their author reverence. Jack always calls himself a
-newspaper man. That is the sensible title. Yet he might wear the name of
-journalist much more worthily.
-
-Ashley is in Vermont for his health. Five years of continuous hustling
-on a big New York daily has necessitated a breathing spell. He was
-telling Mr. Ricker that his “wheels were all run down and needed
-repairing,” and that he believed he would take his vacation early this
-year.
-
-“I’ll tell you where you want to go,” volunteered the city editor, who
-was “raised” among the Green Mountains and served his apprenticeship
-gathering locals on a Burlington weekly.
-
-“All right; let’s have it.”
-
-“Take three weeks off and go up into Vermont.”
-
-“Vermont—Vermont—where’s Vermont? O, yes, that green daub on the map of
-New England. Railroad run through there?”
-
-“Now, see here, Jack,” retorted Ricker, “you’re not so confoundedly
-ignorant as you imply. That’s the trouble with you New Yorkers who were
-born and bred here. You consider everything above the Harlem River a jay
-community. You’re a sight more provincial than half the inhabitants of
-rural New England.”
-
-Jack laughed. “Come to think of it, you hailed from there.”
-
-“Yes, and it’s a mighty good State to hail from. Now, you run up to
-Raymond—it’s a little town about in the Y of the Green Mountain range.
-You’ll not have Broadway, with its theaters, and restaurants, and bars,
-but you’ll get a big room, with a clean, airy bed to sleep in—none of
-your narrow hall-chamber cots—and good, plain, wholesome food to eat.
-Those necessities of life which Vermont does not supply, good tobacco
-and good whisky, you can take with you. You’ll come back feeling like a
-fighting cock.” And before his chief finished painting the attractions
-of the Green Mountain State, with incidental references to John Stark
-and Ethan Allen, Ashley was willing to compromise and two days later
-found him en route for Raymond.
-
-Jack fishes the brook as he does everything else—without any waste of
-mental or physical exertion.
-
-Landlord Howe did not deceive him. It is an excellent trout brook, and
-by the time the sun is well up he has acquired a well-filled creel. He
-is sauntering along to what he has decided shall be the last pool, when,
-as he turns a bend in the road, he runs upon a man lying beside the
-path, with one arm shading his face and clutching in the other hand a
-package.
-
-“Hello!” sings out Ashley, stopping short in surprise. The man arises
-and passes his hand over his eyes in bewilderment.
-
-“Off the main road, aren’t you?” queries Ashley. The stranger makes no
-reply. He bestows upon Ashley a single searching glance and hurries down
-the road in the direction of the village.
-
-“He’ll be likely to know me again,” is Jack’s comment. “Gad! What eyes!
-They went through me like a stiletto. What the deuce is he prowling
-around here for at this time o’ day? He isn’t a fisherman and he can’t
-be farming it with those store clothes on. Well, here goes for the last
-trout.”
-
-The last trout is not forthcoming, however, so the fisherman unjoints
-his rod, reloads and fires his pipe and strolls slowly back to the
-hotel. Landlord Howe sees him as he comes swinging across the basin and
-waits with some impatience until the young man gets within hailing
-distance, when he informs him dramatically:
-
-“Big murder at Raymond last night.”
-
-“How big?” asks Ashley, with lazy interest. Murders are frequent
-episodes in his line of business.
-
-Well, it is the largest affair that Mr. Howe has known of “round these
-parts since dad was a kid.” Roger Hathaway, cashier of the Raymond
-National bank, has been found murdered and the bank robbed of a large
-sum of money, and there is no clew to the murderer. The details of the
-tragedy have come over the telephone wires early this morning, and the
-whole county is in a fever of excitement.
-
-“No clew?” muses Ashley, and his interest in the affair grows. Then he
-thinks of the man he encountered on the brook an hour ago. “Seen any
-strangers around here?” he inquires of Mr. Howe.
-
-“No one ’cept you,” replies that worthy, contributing a broad grin.
-
-“Oh, but I can prove an alibi,” laughs Jack. “I came down from Raymond
-on the early evening train, and everyone was alive in the town then, I
-guess. Are the police of this village on the lookout?”
-
-“Well, rather. The local deputy sheriff is on the alert as never before
-in his life.”
-
-“It is not impossible that my early morning friend on the brook was
-mixed up in last night’s affair,” thinks Ashley. But he says nothing of
-the meeting. What is the use? If the unknown was fleeing he must be
-pretty well into the next county by this time. But in what direction?
-
-The Raymond murder is the one topic of the day at South Ashfield. The
-villagers are gathered in force about the hotel veranda and Ashley
-fancies that they regard him a trifle askance as he hunts up a chair and
-kills an hour while waiting for the up-train, in listening to the rural
-persiflage of the group and the ingenious theories of the local oracle.
-
-“At what time did the killing occur?” he inquires of one of the
-loungers. Somewhere around 8 o’clock the night before, he is informed.
-
-“And no clew to the murderer,” he meditates. “Now, if this was New York
-I’d take hold of the affair and work it for all it was worth.”
-
-He little dreams what effect the “affair” is to have on his future. Yet
-as the train bears him to Raymond the instinct of the newspaper man
-tells him that it is a cast possessing phases of peculiar interest. And
-he is not wholly unprepared for the telegram that is thrust into his
-hands when he leaves the train.
-
-“One of the disadvantages of telling your paper where you intend
-spending your vacation,” he remarks as he glances at the dispatch. Then
-to the telegraph operator: “I’ll have a story for you after supper.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- THE STORY OF A CRIME.
-
-
-The following dispatch appeared in the columns of the New York
-Hemisphere, under the usual sensational headlines:
-
- “Raymond, Vt., May 31.—This quiet town among the Green Mountains
- had cause indeed to mourn upon this year’s occurrence of the
- nation’s Memorial Day. Last evening, at the close of the most
- general observance of the solemn holiday yet undertaken in
- Raymond, the community was horror-stricken by the discovery of
- the foulest crime ever committed within the limits of the state.
-
- “Roger Hathaway, cashier of the Raymond National Bank and
- treasurer of the Wild River Savings Bank, was found murdered at
- the entrance of the joint vault of the two institutions, which
- had been rifled of money and securities aggregating, it is
- thought, not less than $75,000. The crime had apparently been
- most carefully planned and evidenced not only thorough
- familiarity with the town and the interior arrangements of the
- banks, but also the possession of the fact that the national
- bank had on hand at the time an unusual amount of ready money.
- The position of the murdered cashier and the conditions of the
- rooms indicated also that the official had met his death while
- endeavoring to protect the funds entrusted to his care, his
- lifeless body, in fact, barring the entrance to the rifled
- vault, a mute witness to his faithfulness even unto death.
-
- “The Raymond National and Wild River Savings Banks occupy
- commodious quarters on the ground floor of Bank Block, a
- three-story brick structure on Main Street, the principal
- business thoroughfare of the town. The banking rooms are in the
- northern portion of the block, occupying the entire depth of the
- building, the only entrance being from Main Street. The north
- wall of the block is parallel with a tributary of the Wild
- River, which joins that stream, about 300 yards distant. The
- interiors of the banking-rooms are plainly but conveniently
- arranged. A steel wire cage extends east and west, separating
- the officials of the institutions from the public, with the
- customary counter and two windows for the savings and national
- bank, respectively. At the rear of the room is the private
- office of the cashier, separated from the main room in part by
- the vault, an old-fashioned brick affair, built into the
- partition in such a manner as to be partly in both rooms. The
- iron doors to the vault open into the cashier’s private office,
- although originally designed to be entirely within the main
- office. Some years prior the office of the cashier was enlarged
- to accommodate the meetings of the directors, and the partition
- was moved east, bringing the major portion of the vault within
- the enlarged room. Two doors communicate with the cashier’s
- room, one opening from the public office, the other from the
- interior of the main banking-room. Two large windows, looking
- respectively west and north, afford light for the cashier’s
- office. Both these windows are heavily barred, as indeed are the
- two windows on the north side of the main office. A dark closet,
- four by six feet, in the southwest corner of the cashier’s room,
- serves in part as a storage-room for old ledgers, account-books
- and supplies, and as a wardrobe for employes.
-
- “It was in the cashier’s room that the tragedy that has so sadly
- marred the evening of Memorial Day took place, that witnessed
- the awful struggle between the assassin and the white-haired
- custodian of the bank’s funds. The details of that struggle may
- never be known, but the circumstances tell plainly that Cashier
- Hathaway either surprised the assassin in the dark closet, where
- he had perhaps concealed himself to await an opportunity to work
- upon the combination of the safe, or had himself been surprised
- while about to close the door of the vault.
-
- “The crime was committed in the vicinity of 8 p.m., and its
- early discovery—within less than half an hour thereafter,
- indeed—singularly enough was due to a letter which the murdered
- cashier had previously sent to the president of the bank,
- requesting his immediate presence to confer on a business
- matter. The president, the Hon. Cyrus Felton, upon returning to
- his residence shortly after 8 o’clock, found a note from Cashier
- Hathaway asking him to call at the bank at once. The note had
- been left by a messenger, the servant stated, about fifteen
- minutes before. Mr. Felton hastily repaired to the bank, about
- ten minutes’ walk. He found the outer door ajar, but the door to
- the cashier’s private office was locked. This was not unusual,
- and, presuming that the cashier was busy within, Mr. Felton used
- his own key and opened the door without knocking. Then the awful
- discovery of the murder was made.
-
- “Cashier Hathaway lay face downward in front of the open safe
- door, his right arm partially drawn up beneath the body and his
- heavy oaken desk chair overturned near by. His first thought
- being that the cashier had fallen in a shock, Mr. Felton
- hastened to raise the recumbent form. As he turned the body
- over, the soft rays from the argand lamp on the cashier’s desk
- revealed an ominous pool upon the polished floor, even now
- augmented by the slight moving of the body. Roger Hathaway lay
- weltering in his own blood, slowly oozing from a bullet hole
- directly over the heart.
-
- “It was several moments before Mr. Felton could pull himself
- together to take cognizance of the circumstances. He then noted
- the unmistakable evidences of a desperate struggle. As stated,
- the cashier’s own chair lay overturned near the body; one of the
- side drawers in the desk was partially drawn out, and the
- orderly row of directors’ chairs were now disarranged as if a
- heavy body had been flung violently against them. The door of
- the dark closet was wide open and a lot of old ledgers that had
- been piled upon its floor were toppled over into the room. The
- doors of the safe were open, and a glance within revealed the
- principal money drawer half-withdrawn, and empty save of two
- canvas bags of specie and nickels; a goodly bunch of keys with
- chain attached hanging in the lock. The story was told. Cashier
- Hathaway had been murdered and the bank robbed.
-
- “Mr. Felton immediately notified Sheriff Wilson, and the legal
- machinery of the town was at once set in motion to encompass the
- capture of the murderer and robber. It was thought that with the
- short start obtained the feat would be a comparatively easy
- matter.
-
- “Nearly $50,000 in available cash, and half as much more in
- securities, part negotiable and part worthless to the robber,
- were secured by the murderer. The presence of this unusually
- large amount of ready money was due to the fact that $50,000 of
- Mansfield County bonds matured to-day and were payable at the
- Raymond National Bank.
-
- “The presence of Cashier Hathaway in the bank at that particular
- time was by the merest chance, and the conclusion is therefore
- irresistible that the murder was not premeditated. The savings
- and national banks, though both among the most prosperous and
- stable fiduciary institutions in the state, are comparatively
- small, the capital of the national bank being $50,000 and
- employing but a small clerical force. The latter comprise,
- besides the cashier, the teller of the bank, Frederick Sibley;
- the bookkeeper of the savings bank, Ralph Felton, son of the
- president, and one clerk, a youth named Edward Maxwell. For the
- last two weeks the teller, Mr. Sibley, has been confined to his
- residence by illness, and considerable extra labor has
- necessarily devolved upon the cashier. Memorial Day, a legal
- holiday in Vermont, the bank had been closed, and on returning
- from the services at the cemetery, in which he had taken
- part—for Mr. Hathaway had been a gallant soldier in the famous
- Vermont brigade—the cashier had dropped into the bank,
- apparently to complete some work upon the books. It is possible
- that the robber—the opinion is general that there was but one
- engaged in the enterprise—had previously entered the bank, and
- upon the entrance of the cashier concealed himself in the only
- place available, the dark closet. He may have remained an
- unobserved spectator of the cashier through the partly opened
- door and as the latter finished his work and prepared to close
- the safe, the robber may have concluded, by a coup de main, to
- save himself the trouble of attempting to solve the combination,
- and, noiselessly stepping from the closet, have sought to
- surprise the cashier. On this hypothesis the presumption is that
- Mr. Hathaway became aware of his danger, and turning sought to
- ward off the blow, when the struggle ensued that was ended with
- his death. Or the cashier may have discovered the presence of
- some intruder in the closet, and seizing his revolver, which he
- kept in a drawer of his desk, he may have approached the closet,
- when the robber sprung upon him and, wresting the weapon from
- the feeble hands of the old banker, turned it against the
- latter’s breast.
-
- “The fatal shot was fired at so close range that the clothing of
- the victim was scorched by the explosion. No weapon was found in
- the room; the revolver which, as noted above, the cashier was
- known to have kept in his desk, is also missing. The wound was
- made, the physicians state, by a 32-caliber bullet, which
- penetrated the breast directly above the vital organ, and death
- must have been instantaneous. The shot was fired at about 8
- o’clock. Prof. Black, who occupies rooms directly over the
- cashier’s office, heard a shot at that time, as did several
- friends who were in the room with him, but they attributed it to
- boys shooting water rats from the bridge beneath the professor’s
- window.
-
- “Thus far the tragedy possesses few extraordinary features. But
- what has become of the murderer? Raymond is not so populous that
- the presence of a stranger would be unnoted. Yet no one has
- volunteered information of any suspicious characters in town.
- Within fifty minutes of the commission of a daring crime the
- perpetrator disappeared, leaving not a trace for the local
- sleuths. The last seen of Mr. Hathaway alive, so far as known,
- was about 7:45 o’clock, when he stepped to the door of the bank,
- and, calling a boy who was standing on the bridge, throwing
- stones into the stream, asked him to take a letter to President
- Felton at his house. Half an hour later he was found shot
- through the heart in his office.
-
- “President Felton was seen by the Hemisphere representative
- to-day, and told the story of the finding of the dead cashier
- substantially as outlined above. He was terribly affected by the
- tragedy and could hardly be induced to converse regarding it.
-
- “Roger Hathaway was one of the best known and highly esteemed
- residents of Raymond. He was 63 years of age and had been
- identified with the national and savings banks ever since their
- organization, the last twenty years as cashier and treasurer
- respectively. He was prominent in Grand Army and church circles;
- a deacon in the Congregational Church. Of a severely stern but
- eminently just disposition, it was not known that Deacon
- Hathaway possessed an enemy in the world. He lived in a plain
- but substantial mansion, the family homestead of several
- generations of Hathaways, with his two daughters, his wife
- having died some ten years before. He was one of the founders of
- both the savings and national banks, which under his management
- had prospered to an unusual degree and stood high among the
- banking institutions of the state. He had held several important
- positions in the gift of his townspeople, and as town treasurer
- his rugged honesty, economic conservatism and strict observance
- of the letter of the law in the handling of the town’s funds,
- had earned for him the sobriquet of ‘watchdog of the treasury,’
- a title which he sealed even with his life blood.
-
- “Up to a late hour this evening no clew to the murderer has been
- discovered. The theory is held by the local police that the deed
- was clearly that of an expert bank robber, and they are inclined
- to think that he may be a member of the same gang that has
- broken into numerous postoffices in New Hampshire and Vermont
- within the last few months. The officials cite the fact that the
- local papers had advertised that $50,000 in Mansfield County
- bonds were to be redeemed at the Raymond National Bank upon this
- particular date, and the natural presumption that the bank would
- have on hand a large amount of currency, with the knowledge that
- yesterday was a holiday, when the bank would be closed and
- afford an unusual opportunity to work upon the safe, would form
- a strong inducement to a daring burglar.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- A STRANGE DISAPPEARANCE.
-
-
- (By telegraph to the New York Hemisphere.)
-
- “Raymond, Vt., June 1.—A startling sequel to the murder of
- Cashier Hathaway and the robbery of the Raymond National and
- Wild River Savings Banks was developed to-day in the mysterious
- disappearance of Miss Helen Hathaway, the younger daughter of
- the dead banker, and Derrick Ames, a well-known young man of
- Raymond.
-
- “Ames is about 27 years old, and occupied a responsible and
- lucrative position in the local office of the Vermont Life
- Insurance Company. While not possessing a positive reputation
- for evil, Ames was regarded askance by the more staid and
- conservative residents of the town, and his position socially
- was somewhat anomalous. He had resided in Raymond some five or
- six years and was known to have been a warm admirer of Miss
- Hathaway. But it was equally apparent to the gossip-loving
- townspeople that Deacon Hathaway regarded the young insurance
- clerk with distinct disfavor, and had forbidden his daughter’s
- continuing the intimacy. It was likewise well known that the
- missing girl had frequently met Ames clandestinely.
-
- “Neither Miss Hathaway nor Derrick Ames was seen after the
- discovery of the bank tragedy. Ames was at his boarding house at
- noon on the day of the murder, but did not return to supper. His
- room, with all his effects, was left as usual and gave no
- indication that he contemplated a hasty departure. Even at the
- office where he was employed he left some personal effects and
- half a month’s salary was to his credit.
-
- “In the case of Miss Hathaway, also, there are absolutely no
- indications of premeditated departure. Her sister states that
- she has taken not even a wrap, only the clothes she wore that
- afternoon as she left the house. Neither man nor maiden was seen
- by any person to leave Raymond. No vehicle was secured for
- either of them, and no one answering their description boarded
- the train at the Raymond Station. They have disappeared as
- completely, as suddenly and as mysteriously as did the murderer
- of Cashier Hathaway.
-
- “The knowledge of these circumstances has intensified the
- excitement occasioned by the murder and robbery. The
- coincidence, if it be but a coincidence, of the unpremeditated
- elopement of Helen Hathaway upon the very day, nay, perhaps the
- very hour, that her aged father was stricken by the bullet of
- the assassin, is sufficiently startling of itself to cause the
- most intense excitement.
-
- “Is there any connection between the disappearance of Derrick
- Ames and Helen Hathaway and the shooting of Cashier Hathaway and
- the subsequent looting of the bank vault? Why did the couple, if
- they simply ran away to get married without the parental
- sanction, do so manifestly on the spur of the moment, without
- any prearranged plans, without notification to even their
- intimate friends? And why, if they went innocently away, have
- they failed to acquaint any one with their present whereabouts,
- when they must be aware of the cruel murder of Miss Hathaway’s
- good father, the details of which have been published far and
- wide, not only in the provincial newspapers, but throughout the
- metropolitan press?
-
- “There is not a resident of Raymond who will hint at even the
- possibility of any guilty knowledge of the taking-off of her
- father by Helen Hathaway, before or during her hurried flight.
- For although regarded as unusually high-spirited and impetuous,
- she was loving and lovable to a degree and the idol of her
- sister. The only indiscretion that can be attributed to the
- missing girl was her occasional meetings with Derrick Ames
- without the sanction of her father.
-
- “Her companion in flight, on the other hand, was not especially
- favorably known in Raymond. While he came to the town with
- excellent credentials, he was not a favorite in any particular
- set or society. Handsome in face and figure, an athlete of
- considerable local repute, with alternate moods of extreme
- depression and satirical good humor, he was such a one as might
- be expected to turn the head of a romantic young girl like the
- absent Miss Hathaway. Ames was free with his money, and while
- not a drinking man, in the sense of the term in this part of the
- country, he occasionally wooed the wine cup with great energy
- and originality. He had enemies in plenty and but a week before
- the tragedy had abruptly resigned the lieutenancy of the Raymond
- Rifles because of a trifling disagreement with the captain. It
- must be stated, however, that no mean or ignoble act or petty
- crime had ever been attributed to him, the chief cause of his
- unpopularity proceeding from his reserve, the sharpness of his
- tongue and the irascibility of his temper.
-
- “Had Derrick Ames disappeared alone, on the evening of the
- murder, there would have been but one opinion as to his guilt or
- innocence. But the unaccountable flight of Miss Hathaway—this is
- the one flaw in the chain of circumstantial evidence. Some
- people will explain this away on the universal theory for every
- inexplicable action of the human mind—hypnotism. It is said that
- Ames placed Miss Hathaway within the spell of his own powerful
- will, and unknowingly, unwittingly, blindly obedient, beautiful
- Helen Hathaway accompanied the cold-blooded slayer of her own
- father in his flight from the scene of his crime.
-
- “Did Ames and Miss Hathaway leave Raymond together? While there
- is no evidence that they did, the presumption is so strong as to
- compel the inference. In any event Raymond has practically
- convicted Derrick Ames of complicity, if not actual
- participation, in the murder of Roger Hathaway.
-
- “It is possible that the murder was not premeditated, as was
- intimated in these dispatches yesterday. Ames may have called
- upon the cashier at the bank, to plead again his suit for the
- hand of Helen Hathaway. A blunt refusal, hasty words, a bitter
- quarrel, Ames’ temper, quick and ungovernable, a brief struggle,
- the fatal shot and the older man lay dead upon the floor. What
- more natural than that the young murderer, fully appreciating
- his terrible situation, and cognizant of the large amount of
- ready money in the safe, should wrench the familiar bunch of
- keys from the pocket of the dead cashier and possess himself of
- the treasure? It requires something of a stretch of the
- imagination to fancy the assassin, his hand yet reeking with the
- blood of her father, inducing the young girl to accompany him in
- his flight for life and liberty, yet it is not impossible—and in
- the belief of many it is just what Derrick Ames did do.
-
- “There is but the faintest possible clew as yet to connect any
- one else with the crime. Besides a few hotel arrivals—commercial
- men comparatively well known—one stranger, and one only, is
- believed to have been in Raymond on the day of the murder. No
- one saw him come, no one saw him leave the town. Inquiry was
- made at the depot, the telegraph operator states, shortly after
- 8 o’clock, as to the time of departure of the next train south.
- The operator did not notice the questioner particularly,
- although he is positive he was a stranger in Raymond.
-
- “The theory of a prearranged plot to rob the bank on the night
- the cashier was shot has been assiduously worked by the local
- authorities. It was known that there would be a large amount of
- money in the bank on the night preceding the paying off of the
- matured county bonds. Was it not worth while for an organized
- gang of bank robbers to plan a descent on the Raymond
- institution? Was it not possible that they did so plan; that
- they had already secured access to the banking-room while the
- populace was watching the parade in the afternoon; that they
- were awaiting the cover of darkness to begin work upon the safe,
- when all unexpectedly the cashier arrived and entered the bank;
- that the robbers retreated to the dark closet; that here they
- remained hidden while Mr. Hathaway performed some pressing work
- upon the books, meanwhile sending the note requesting the
- presence of the president; that while he stepped to the front
- door to secure a messenger for the letter the robbers may have
- conceived the daring scheme of seizing the cash drawer from the
- vault; that the cashier returned while they were in the very act
- of executing their design; that he rushed to his desk and had
- already possessed himself of his revolver, when he was seized by
- the robbers and shot dead before he could succeed in making use
- of his own weapon, which was subsequently picked up and carried
- off by the robbers?
-
- “More careful investigations of the scene of the murder
- developed the fact that the struggle between the cashier and his
- assailant, or assailants, must have been not only a severe one,
- but of several minutes’ duration. There were marks of violence
- on the body of the dead banker, the physicians report, which
- must have been made by an exceptionally strong man. The right
- wrist showed quite severe abrasions, as if it had been grasped
- fiercely by a strong hand, and on the other side of the wrist
- was a purple mark that was evidently made by a seal ring pressed
- into the flesh by the tremendous force with which the hand had
- been seized. The snow-white and abundant hair of Mr. Hathaway
- was also disheveled, when the body was first discovered, and the
- chain to which his bunch of keys had been attached was snapped
- off, only about two inches remaining upon his person. No signs
- of a weapon or any burglarious tools were discovered in or about
- the bank premises, but evidence of the extreme coolness and
- sang-froid of the murderer is afforded by the fact that,
- apparently in searching for suitable paper in which to wrap the
- big package of bills two or three full pages of the big bank
- ledger were torn out and used for the purpose.
-
- “Nothing was missing from the person of the dead man, except,
- singularly enough, a curiously fashioned locket which Mr.
- Hathaway wore as a watch charm. It contained miniatures of his
- two daughters, Louise and Helen. No reason for its being carried
- off is apparent. The link which held it to the watch-chain was
- broken as if the locket had been violently removed.
-
- “The exact amount of money stolen cannot as yet be stated.
- President Felton alleges that, until the trial balance is drawn
- off, it will be impossible to give figures. Certainly not less
- than $40,000 in greenbacks was secured, and probably half as
- much more in securities, which, however, are not negotiable and
- are therefore worthless to the robbers. The bank is perfectly
- solvent, President Felton states, and will resume business at an
- early date.
-
- “Mr. Felton is well-nigh prostrated by the shock of his awful
- discovery on the evening of Memorial Day and has aged visibly in
- the last two days. He does not attach so much importance to the
- dual disappearance of Derrick Ames and Helen Hathaway as do most
- of the citizens, and expresses the opinion that it is a simple
- elopement and that the couple will return shortly.
-
- “The directors of the savings and national banks, at a meeting
- this morning, authorized the offer of a reward of $4,000 for the
- capture and conviction of the murderer or murderers, in addition
- to the purse of $1,000 ‘hung up’ by the town.
-
- “The coroner’s inquest will be begun to-morrow.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- THE CORONER’S INQUEST.
-
-
-For a town the size of Raymond, 3,000-odd inhabitants, the Mansfield
-County court house is an unusually large and commodious structure. But
-the spacious room is not nearly adequate to the demands of the pushing
-crowd that seeks admittance to the inquest that has been summoned by
-Coroner Lord to sit upon the body of the dead cashier, Roger Hathaway.
-George Demeritt, the town’s sole day police force, is literally swept
-off his feet by the surging assemblage, and in less than five minutes
-after the throwing open of the doors the room is a solid mass of
-perspiring humanity.
-
-With much difficulty Sheriff Wilson makes a passage for the dozen
-witnesses under his charge, the crowd gazing, with the sympathetic
-impudence of an inquest audience, at the statuesque form of Miss
-Hathaway, heavily veiled, and the bowed figure of President Felton of
-the Raymond Bank.
-
-The jury selected by Coroner Lord files in from the judges’ room, and
-after the customary preliminaries the autopsy performed by Drs. Robinson
-and Dodge is read by the latter. The document, stripped of its verbiage
-and medical terms, alleges that Roger Hathaway died from a bullet wound,
-the leaden missile having entered the left breast almost directly over
-the heart, and that death must have been instantaneous. There were signs
-of violence on the person of the dead man, a severe contusion on the
-forehead that might have been inflicted by a blow or might have been
-caused by the fall to the floor. There were also slight abrasions on the
-right wrist.
-
-Dr. Dodge states, in reply to an inquiry from the coroner, that Mr.
-Hathaway had probably been dead an hour when he reached his side. Rigor
-mortis had not begun.
-
-“Mr. Cyrus Felton.”
-
-There is a craning of necks in the court room as the coroner calls to
-his feet the aged bank president. Jack Ashley, who is sitting at the
-lawyers’ table, jotting down a few notes, begins to take a lively
-interest in the case.
-
-Mr. Felton slowly walks to the witness stand. That he is greatly moved
-even the least observant in the throng can but notice, and his hand
-trembles visibly as he replaces his pince-nez and turns to face Coroner
-Lord.
-
-The usual formal questions as to his acquaintance with the dead man, his
-connection with the bank, etc., are asked and answered.
-
-“I visited the bank in response to a note which I found when I returned
-home from my—from the postoffice,” Mr. Felton states.
-
-“The note was from Mr. Hathaway?”
-
-“It was.”
-
-“And its contents?”
-
-“The note merely said: ‘Come to the bank immediately.’”
-
-“Have you the note with you?”
-
-“No; I tore it up,” replies Mr. Felton, and the expression which
-accompanies his words is noted by Ashley, who is scanning narrowly the
-countenance of the banker.
-
-“The note had been left at my house a short while before I returned
-home, my servant tells me,” proceeds Mr. Felton. “I went at once to the
-bank.” The witness has grown so agitated that he is obliged to seat
-himself, and his voice is hardly audible in the stilled room.
-
-“The front door was slightly ajar and I walked through the bank to the
-directors’ room. The door to this apartment was locked; I unlocked it
-and entered. Mr. Hathaway lay face downward in the middle of the floor,
-I should think. I thought he might have fallen in a shock and went to
-lift him up, when I saw the blood. I felt for his pulse, but there was
-no motion.” The voice of the witness breaks as he utters these words and
-he covers his face with his handkerchief.
-
-“Were there any evidences of a struggle?” the coroner asks, after a
-moment.
-
-“Yes. Mr. Hathaway’s office chair was overturned and the directors’
-chairs were disarranged. One of the drawers in Mr. Hathaway’s desk had
-been pulled so far out that it had dropped to the floor and the contents
-were spilled. A lot of old ledgers that had been piled in the closet
-were toppled over into the room. I glanced into the closet and then
-turned my attention to the open vault. I found the cash drawer in the
-safe withdrawn and empty except for a couple of canvas bags of silver
-and nickels. I then hastened to find Sheriff Wilson.”
-
-“What hour was it when you entered the bank?” asks Coroner Lord.
-
-“About 8:20 o’clock.”
-
-“And at what time did you notify Sheriff Wilson?”
-
-Mr. Felton hesitates a moment and glances inquiringly at that official.
-“It did not seem more than a minute that I spent in the bank. But I was
-so shocked—and I—and I stopped to gather up the papers on the
-floor—perhaps it was five minutes before I got to the hotel.”
-
-“Did you notice any weapons on the floor of the cashier’s room?”
-
-“No, sir.”
-
-“What amount of money do you estimate was stolen from the safe?”
-
-President Felton debates a moment, as if making a mental calculation,
-and replies: “At least $37,000 in currency and gold, and some
-securities. The exact amount of the latter we cannot tell until we have
-listed our papers.”
-
-“That is all, Mr. Felton.”
-
-A suppressed murmur of intense interest runs around the crowded room as
-Louise Hathaway takes the witness stand. As she raises the veil that has
-concealed her features the townspeople marveled at the composure her
-marble countenance evinces. Ashley glances at her with interest and
-draws a long breath. “Gad! she’s a beauty,” he decides, and then drops
-his eyes as they encounter the calm gaze of the witness.
-
-Her father left the house to go to the bank about 6:30 o’clock, Miss
-Hathaway testifies. Tea was served at 6 o’clock. Her sister Helen had
-not returned at that time, but at her father’s request they had not
-waited the tea, because he said he had some work to do at the bank. It
-was an unusual thing for him to go to the bank evenings, but the illness
-of the teller had necessitated extra work.
-
-“Miss Hathaway, do you know where your sister is?” The silence in the
-court room is intense as the coroner asks the question.
-
-“My sister did not return that afternoon,” declares Miss Hathaway, after
-a brief pause. “I have reason to think that she has gone with Mr. Ames
-to be married.”
-
-“And you do not know where they now are?”
-
-Miss Hathaway shakes her head, as her fingers clasp and unclasp
-nervously in her lap. The ordeal is a trying one.
-
-“When did you last see your sister?”
-
-“About 2 o’clock in the afternoon.”
-
-“And when did you last see Mr. Ames?”
-
-A slight flush replaces the pallor for a moment; then as suddenly
-recedes, leaving her paler than before.
-
-“I have not seen Mr. Ames for a fortnight,” she replies in a tone barely
-audible.
-
-“Did your sister indicate to you her intention of eloping?” is the next
-question.
-
-“I had no reason to think that she contemplated a clandestine marriage.
-But I should prefer not to discuss the matter further, Mr. Lord,” says
-the witness, in evident agitation. “I am sure Helen’s departure can have
-no possible connection with—with that awful deed. It was only an
-unfortunate coincidence that they went away on that afternoon. I—I am
-sure they will return in due time.”
-
-Coroner Lord glances irresolutely at the state’s attorney, and after a
-moment’s deliberation permits Miss Hathaway to retire.
-
-Sheriff Wilson, the next witness, describes minutely the appearance of
-the bank and vault and of the body of the dead cashier.
-
-Sarah Johnson, the maid at Mr. Felton’s residence, testifies that the
-note referred to by Mr. Felton was left at the house shortly before 8
-o’clock by a lad named Jimmie Howe. A few minutes later a stranger
-inquired for Mr. Felton at the house. There is a slight buzz of
-excitement among the audience at this first mention of the presence of a
-stranger in the village on the evening of the tragedy.
-
-“How do you know he was a stranger?” sharply inquires the coroner.
-
-“For the reason that when I asked him which Mr. Felton he wished to see
-he replied that he did not know there were two Mr. Feltons.” That
-evidence is conclusive. It is, so far as the audience is concerned.
-
-“He asked where he could find Mr. Felton, and I told him perhaps at his
-office in the bank building,” continues Sarah.
-
-Miss Johnson is closely questioned as to the demeanor of the stranger,
-but she knows little of importance, as she had not seen the visitor’s
-face. He was of medium height, she says, and his voice was pleasant.
-Sheriff Wilson, who has first learned of this clew, smiles patronizingly
-upon Ashley and the other newspaper men.
-
-A bright-faced lad of 12 is Jimmie Howe, whom Coroner Lord next calls to
-the stand. Jimmie was playing on the bridge when Mr. Hathaway called to
-him from the bank door and asked him to take a note to Mr. Felton and to
-hurry about it. After he delivered the note he went home.
-
-Prof. George Black, Edward Knapp and three others, who were in Prof.
-Black’s room in the bank building, testify to hearing a shot about 8
-o’clock, but whether before or after that hour they cannot agree.
-
-Alden Heath, the telegraph operator at the depot, stated that some
-one—he was busy at his key at the time—asked somewhere around 8 o’clock
-when the next train left. He answered without looking up, and when he
-did glance at the window the inquirer was gone. It was a strange voice;
-of that he was positive.
-
-George Kenney, who states that he is the station agent at Ashfield, is
-next sworn. His testimony establishes the probable fact that Derrick
-Ames and Helen Hathaway boarded the midnight train for New York.
-
-There is an involuntary but quickly suppressed exclamation from the
-witnesses. Miss Hathaway is trembling and Ralph Felton, who is sitting
-near her, is savagely biting his mustache.
-
-As Coroner Lord calls the name of Richard Chase and the stalwart warden
-of the State prison at Windsor appears on the witness stand there is a
-hush of expectancy.
-
-“Ernest Stanley, a convict in the Vermont State prison, was released at
-noon of Memorial Day,” Warden Chase says succinctly. “He asked for and
-was given a ticket to Raymond, and left on the north-bound afternoon
-train. He was five feet ten inches in height, of medium build, dark
-complexion, smooth face, and had closely cropped dark hair. He wore a
-light tweed suit and a straw hat.”
-
-As Mr. Chase concludes his testimony the coroner consults for a few
-moments with the state’s attorney and then summons Ralph Felton, son of
-President Felton, and the bookkeeper of the Wild River Savings Bank.
-
-As the young man steps to the stand Ashley glances at him interestedly,
-and after a good look decides that he does not like him. There is a
-certain shiftiness of eye that the New Yorker does not fancy, and the
-notes which he takes of the witness’ testimony are nearly verbatim.
-
-Young Felton answers in the briefest phrases the questions of the
-coroner. He had seen no strangers in the bank in the last few days. He
-had last seen Mr. Hathaway the afternoon before the tragedy, when the
-bank closed for the day. On the afternoon of Memorial Day—
-
-The witness stops abruptly and a flush overspreads his features as he
-nervously bites his tawny mustache.
-
-“On the afternoon of Memorial Day,” invites the coroner.
-
-“I was around town as usual,” finishes Felton.
-
-For some reason the momentary hesitation of the witness apparently
-impresses Mr. Lord, and he seems disposed to make minute inquiry.
-
-“Where did you say you were on the afternoon of Memorial Day?” he again
-interrogates.
-
-Ralph Felton looks straight at the coroner an instant, and then his gaze
-wanders over the stilled room and finally rests upon his father, who,
-roused from the impassive attitude in which he has sunk after completing
-his own testimony, casts a startled look upon his son.
-
-The sudden hush that has involuntarily accompanied Mr. Lord’s question
-is intensified, as father and son gaze at each other, apparently
-oblivious of the unanswered coroner.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- FATHER AND SON.
-
-
-An almost imperceptible raising of the eyebrows by the elder man, and
-Ralph Felton turns quickly to the coroner.
-
-“Really, Mr. Lord, I cannot furnish a detailed statement of my every
-movement during the last week,” he says, nonchalantly. “I witnessed the
-procession, or at least the local post, on its way to the depot to meet
-the Ruggbury contingent, and later went to the Exchange for dinner. In
-the afternoon I was in the billiard room of the hotel, and I believe I
-visited the postoffice in the evening.”
-
-“What time did you last see Mr. Hathaway?” The persistence of the
-coroner in questioning the bookkeeper is inexplicable to the audience,
-who have not observed the little slips of paper that State’s Attorney
-Brown has passed along the table to Mr. Lord.
-
-“About noon on the day of the murder.”
-
-“Where?”
-
-Ralph Felton is for the first time manifesting signs of impatience. “He
-was in the bank. I went to get something which I had left there, and
-while I was there Mr. Hathaway came in. I left him there and a short
-time afterward saw him in the procession.”
-
-“Mr. Felton, where were you between 7:45 and 8:30 o’clock the evening of
-Tuesday?”
-
-A dull red replaces the slight pallor on the face of the young man.
-
-“Mr. Lord, I cannot say where I was during that particular time. I have
-my own personal reasons—not connected with this case, I assure you—for
-not desiring to answer your question.”
-
-The murmur which has begun to overspread the room is quickly but only
-temporarily hushed as the coroner announces:
-
-“The inquest is adjourned until to-morrow morning at 9 o’clock.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-“You know why I did not answer Coroner Lord’s question. I am tired of
-this hypocrisy. I simply will not go on the stand again—and that settles
-it!”
-
-Within the richly furnished library of Cyrus Felton’s home the
-inquisition so abruptly broken off by Coroner Lord has been resumed.
-
-The president of the Raymond National Bank now bears little resemblance
-to the bowed old man who, with trembling lips and pallid brow, testified
-regarding the murder of Cashier Hathaway a few hours before. There is an
-angry flush upon his face and a stern setting of the chin that causes
-one straight line to mark the location of his lips.
-
-At the last defiant words of his son a spasm as of sudden pain for a
-moment distorts his patriarchal face, and his hand involuntarily presses
-his heart.
-
-“I am going to leave Raymond—at once—to-night. Leave as Derrick Ames
-left,” continued Ralph Felton, with an imprecation. “It’s no use
-talking. My mind is made up and you should be the last man to urge me to
-remain. You know—”
-
-“Ralph, this is madness,” interrupts his father. “There can be no
-necessity for your leaving town, least of all while matters are as they
-are. The bank—”
-
-“The bank needs both of us—I don’t think,” rejoins the younger man
-flippantly. “As the boodle is gone I guess you can get along without a
-bookkeeper for a time—maybe forever. But go I shall, and money I must
-have. Oh, I know what you are going to say,” as Mr. Felton opens his
-lips. “It doesn’t make any difference where it has gone. Suffice it to
-say, it is planted. If you have ever had any experience with—but here it
-is getting on toward 11 o’clock, and at 12:10 I must take the Montreal
-express. I don’t propose to board it here. I shall drive to South
-Ashfield. Now, understand me, father,” as Cyrus Felton again seeks to
-interrupt him, “it is just as much for your interest for me to be a
-couple of thousand miles from Raymond as it is mine. It is bound to come
-out—why, what’s the matter?”
-
-Once again that ashen pallor accompanies a spasm of severest pain, and
-this time Cyrus Felton emits a slight groan as his fingers sink into the
-heavily upholstered arms of the sleepy-hollow chair into which he has
-sunk.
-
-“Nothing—nothing but a pleurisy attack,” he faintly replies.
-
-There is silence for a moment, broken only by the sonorous ticking of
-the mantel clock.
-
-“Well, the money?”
-
-“Ralph, you know that I can ill afford to spare any considerable amount
-just now. But your safety must, of course, be considered, and I will
-endeavor to send you funds later. What I can spare now ought to be
-sufficient to start life anew in some western city.”
-
-Ralph Felton smiles sardonically as his father steps to the little safe
-set in the wall, and, moving the screen from the front, turns the
-combination. He lounges toward the receptacle, and, leaning on the
-screen, gazes down at his father, who has withdrawn one of the two
-drawers which the safe boasts and is running over a package of bills.
-The contents of the lower drawer are exposed by the withdrawal of the
-upper one, and the light from the chandelier is reflected back from some
-shining substance in the till. It catches young Felton’s eye and his
-long arm passes over the stooping figure of his father and picks the
-gleaming metal from the drawer. It is a loaded revolver of the bull-dog
-variety, 32 caliber, and one chamber has been discharged.
-
-Cyrus Felton raises his head. The shining little engine of destruction
-in the clasp of his son is almost before and on a level with his eyes.
-
-With a shudder the elder man turns his head and slowly and laboriously
-rises to his feet. He seems to have suddenly aged even in the last few
-moments.
-
-Ralph Felton examines the revolver critically, looks at his father’s
-averted face, and, without speaking, lays the weapon in the drawer.
-There is silence in the room, broken at last by the almost apologetic
-tones of the father. “How will you reach South Ashfield?” he asked.
-
-“Oh, Sam must drive me over with the mare. I will start him up now.”
-
-As his son leaves the room Cyrus Felton sinks into an easy-chair and his
-head drops upon his bosom. Who can tell the thoughts that surge through
-his troubled mind at the moment? The clatter of hoofs on the concrete
-driveway beside the window arouses him from his reverie, and a moment
-later Ralph Felton enters, a satchel in his hand.
-
-“Well, father, Sam is ready and I must go. We shall have little more
-than an hour to make the ten miles and catch the express. Good-by; it is
-all right, sir; believe me, father,” the younger man drops his
-disengaged hand not unkindly on the other’s shoulder, “my sudden
-departure will do nobody here any harm, and least of all will it affect
-you. One thing I will say; I will find the scoundrel who took Helen
-Hathaway from Raymond, if he is above ground, and when we meet he will
-have occasion to remember that time.” Ralph Felton’s face is darkened by
-a savage scowl as he speaks, and he raises a clenched fist with a
-gesture so suggestive that his father involuntarily steps back. “Yes, I
-have two objects in cutting the town. One reason you know, the other is
-to seek and find the hound who has stolen Helen Hathaway from me. I
-cared for her as I shall never love another woman, and I meant to have
-her. Now—”
-
-The musical chime of the clock begins to strike the hour. Ralph Felton
-seizes the package of bills that lies upon the table and places it in an
-inner pocket.
-
-“I will return sometime, father, when this bank affair has ceased to be
-a subject of investigation,” he says, with his hand on the door-knob.
-“Good-by. Just keep a stiff upper lip and you’ll be all right. I’m off.”
-
-The outer door closes with a sharp click and a moment later the
-impatient stamping of hoofs is succeeded by the even footfalls of the
-fastest mare in Mansfield County.
-
-As the sound grows fainter and fainter Cyrus Felton suddenly starts as
-if aroused from a stupor.
-
-“Why did I let him go? Idiot that I am! It is madness—worse than
-madness. It is confession. Am I losing my senses, that I did not insist
-upon his remaining and completing his testimony? At the worst it could
-never be proved. The wages of sin! The wages of sin!” he groans, as he
-sinks back in his chair and buries his face in his hands.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“Mr. Ralph Felton to the stand,” orders Coroner Lord.
-
-As on the preceding day, the court room is packed with the people of
-Raymond. There is a craning of necks toward the settees reserved for
-witnesses. Ralph Felton is not there, and there is a death-like
-stillness as Coroner Lord again calls this now most interesting of
-witnesses.
-
-“Mr. Coroner!” The lank figure of the station agent at South Ashfield
-elevates itself above the crowd. “If it please your honor, Ralph Felton
-boarded the Montreal express at South Ashfield last night.”
-
-Of course there is a sensation, a murmur of voices that the coroner
-quickly checks. The few remaining witnesses are unimportant and the
-inquest is adjourned until afternoon.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- A PROPOSITION OF PARTNERSHIP.
-
-
-The usual congress of village gossips is in session to-night at the
-Exchange hotel. It is the fourth day since the Raymond Bank affair, and
-the details of the tragedy are discussed with an animation and a wealth
-of clew that brings a smile to the face of John Barker, the New York
-detective, who retreats to a quiet corner of the hotel veranda to finish
-his cigar and muse upon the affair with the calm contemplation
-characteristic of men in his calling.
-
-The detective’s face expresses a shade of annoyance as Jack Ashley
-ascends the steps to the veranda, draws a chair opposite his, lights a
-cigar and tilts his seat back at a comfortable angle.
-
-“You are John Barker, the detective,” began Ashley. Barker assents with
-a nod.
-
-“I haven’t a card with me, but my name is Jack Ashley, and I am attached
-to the staff of the New York Hemisphere.” Barker looks duly impressed.
-
-“You are an ordinary detective, I presume?” Barker stares. “What I mean
-is, if you will pardon my frankness, you are not a Sherlock Holmes or a
-M. Lecocq?” It is apparent from his face that the detective is in doubt
-whether to laugh or express his displeasure. He compromises with a faint
-smile and accepts the proffered cigar.
-
-“My reason for asking,” goes on Ashley, “is that I have a proposition to
-offer you.”
-
-Barker strikes a match to touch off his weed. “That proposition is—”
-
-“That we work this bank case together.” Barker drops the lighted match
-and gazes at his new acquaintance in astonishment.
-
-“Have another match,” remarks the other, passing it over.
-
-The detective lights his cigar and puffs away on it for some moments in
-silence. “I am not in the habit of taking in partners,” he observes
-finally.
-
-“I always take a deep interest in an affair like the Hathaway case,”
-resumes Ashley, without reference to the other’s remark. “In fact, my
-special line on the Hemisphere has been the running down of mysterious
-crimes. I have trailed quite a number of them, and you will pardon my
-egotism when I say I have been quite successful in my dual capacity of
-sleuth and newspaper man.” Barker looks a trifle bored.
-
-“To be candid, however, this case is a bit too big for me to handle
-alone. It spreads out too much. It is too much of a job for one man to
-look after.”
-
-“Indeed?” The irony in the detective’s voice is thinly veiled. He says:
-
-“Then on the strength of your intimation that you are a devilish clever
-fellow—you will pardon my frankness this time—I am asked to take in an
-assistant who will gladly share with me the $5,000 reward in the event
-of the murderer being apprehended.”
-
-“No; I sha’n’t bother about the reward. I am simply looking for glory.”
-
-“You are young in the newspaper business?”
-
-“About twelve years.”
-
-“And looking for glory?”
-
-Ashley laughs. “For my paper; not for myself.” He passes over a telegram
-received that day. It read as follows:
-
-
- =“Jack Ashley, Raymond, Vt.: Work up case at any expense, and
- discover murderer if possible. Chambers.”=
-
-
-“Now,” says Ashley, as he replaces the dispatch in his pocket, “I will
-tell you why I think it would be to your advantage to join forces with
-me.” Barker evinces some interest.
-
-“I am in possession of some facts which you not only do not know, but
-are not likely to get hold of unless I enlighten you.”
-
-“Ah!” The detective draws his chair nearer his companion and glances
-about to make sure there are no outside listeners.
-
-“When I finish, if you consider my information as valuable as I appraise
-it, you can do as you please about the partnership idea. At any rate you
-will be so much ahead. Come up to my room. We will not be disturbed
-there.” When they are comfortably seated and fresh cigars lighted Ashley
-begins his story.
-
-“I have run onto two clews. One of them I consider important; the other
-less so. By the way, how long have you been in town? Come in on the
-after-dinner train?”
-
-“Yes, I have acquainted myself with the known facts in the case and the
-result of the coroner’s inquest. Deceased came to his death at the hands
-of some person unknown.”
-
-“But who will be known ere long. But to resume. As you know, a man
-called at the house of Cyrus Felton shortly before 8 o’clock of the
-night of the killing. To the inquiry of the housemaid as to which Mr.
-Felton was wanted the man replied that he ‘did not know there were two.’
-Not long after 8 o’clock that same evening a man appeared at the ticket
-office of the railroad station and inquired when the next train left.
-These incidents, while not startling in themselves, seem to prove that
-in each case the questioner was a stranger to Raymond. Every one around
-these parts knows that there are two Feltons, father and son, and the
-natives are also presumed to know that there is no night train through
-the town before 11:50.”
-
-“Very well reasoned,” remarks Barker.
-
-“As you also know, on the afternoon of Memorial Day a chap named Ernest
-Stanley was liberated from the State prison at Windsor, after serving
-two of a three years’ sentence for forgery. Despite the fact that
-Raymond was not his home and that he had not, so far as known, a friend
-or acquaintance in the place, and contrary to the advice of the warden,
-who took an interest in the fellow, he bought a ticket to this town and
-started north on the afternoon train. That latter fact was proved by the
-ticket agent at Windsor, who sold him the ticket and saw him board the
-train. I went to Windsor this forenoon, after the inquest, saw a
-photograph of this Stanley, and secured a pretty accurate description of
-him.”
-
-“But there is no evidence that he left the train at this station. Or if
-he did—”
-
-“He could have been, as I believe he was, the visitor at Felton’s
-house.”
-
-“I am not so sure of that,” contends the detective. “On the evening of
-Memorial Day the agent of a granite manufacturers’ journal, published at
-Chicago, stopped at this hotel. He arrived on the afternoon train from
-the north, and after supper, the clerk told me when I quizzed him, he
-inquired where Cyrus Felton lived. Felton, you know, is the principal
-owner in the Wild River Granite Quarries. It is more than likely, is it
-not, that he was the visitor at the Felton residence?”
-
-“Still he may not have called that night.”
-
-“True. Admitting the caller to have been Stanley, what then? A motive
-must be assigned.”
-
-“We will discuss that later. For the present suffice it to be known that
-Stanley was sentenced to State prison for forging the name of Cyrus
-Felton two years ago.”
-
-“Well, what of it? If Stanley’s thoughts were of revenge they were
-apparently directed against Felton, not the man who was murdered.”
-
-“That is precisely the point that is not clear to me,” confesses Ashley.
-
-“Now, listen. Here’s a proposition for you: If Stanley was not concerned
-in the bank affair, what was he doing at 6 o’clock next morning asleep
-in the bushes in a lonely gorge near South Ashfield village?”
-
-“The devil!”
-
-“With a package of papers clutched fast in his hands, about the size
-that a bundle of treasury notes and securities would make.”
-
-“You know he was there?”
-
-“I met him.”
-
-Barker is thoughtful. “You said nothing to the authorities or in your
-dispatches about the incident?”
-
-“No. I didn’t consider it worth while. The authorities were already
-scouring the country round about, and I did not exploit it in my
-dispatches because I concluded to save it for a longer and better story
-when we run down the criminal—beg pardon, when the criminal is run down.
-But,” continues Ashley, as Barker remains silent, “that is the clew to
-which I attach the less importance.
-
-“I had heard from some source that Ralph Felton had been seen at this
-hotel a good share of Memorial Day, and I started in on a pumping
-expedition, beginning with John Thayer, the clerk. Thayer was noticeably
-uncommunicative; I thought I’d bluff him a bit, so I remarked: ‘Well,
-you’ve concluded to tell me what you know, eh?’ The bluff appeared to
-work, for he flushed a little and replied: ‘I’ll tell you all about it
-if you will agree to keep it out of the paper.’ As I had suspended all
-dispatches to the Hemisphere pending the discovery of a story worth
-filing, I readily enough agreed to refrain from publishing his secret to
-the world. Then he extracted a promise that I should not divulge a word
-to any one in the village.
-
-“‘Ralph Felton is as innocent of that crime as you or I,’ asserted
-Thayer when all the conditions for secrecy had been satisfactorily
-arranged.
-
-“‘That is possible, but why did he refuse to answer the coroner and why
-did he cut the town?’ said I.
-
-“‘He had a good reason for wanting to keep dark, and I suppose he ran
-away to prevent being compelled to testify where he was Memorial Day
-afternoon and evening.’
-
-“‘You know where he was, then?’
-
-“‘Yes; he was here at the hotel. I tell you this because I want you to
-know that he is innocent. Felton is a good friend of mine, and I thought
-perhaps if you knew how the facts were you might see your way clear to
-letting him down as easy as possible in the paper.’ I assured him that
-my specialty was setting folks right and then Thayer told off the
-following story:
-
-“About 2 o’clock on the afternoon of Memorial Day a woman arrived at
-Raymond on the afternoon train from the south, came to this hotel and
-registered as ‘Isabel Winthrop.’ She was superbly dressed and displayed
-an abundance of jewels. According to Thayer, whose head was completely
-turned by her appearance, she was magnificently, phenomenally beautiful.
-You can take that for what it is worth. Thayer assigned her a room and
-showed her to it. As she passed in she requested him to send a messenger
-to acquaint Ralph Felton that a lady desired to see him. Finding him was
-an easy task, as he was at that moment playing poker in a room in the
-hotel. Felton appeared somewhat surprised when called out, but threw up
-the game and went to the woman’s room. That was the last Thayer saw of
-him for an hour, when Felton left the hotel. His face was flushed and he
-seemed to be laboring under strong excitement. Before he left he called
-Thayer to one side. ‘John,’ said he, ‘if you are a friend of mine say
-nothing about my caller to-day. You understand?’
-
-“I remarked casually: ‘Then he returned to the hotel that afternoon?’
-
-“‘Oh, yes,’ said he.
-
-“‘And was there during the evening?’
-
-“‘Yes, I noticed him in the office at the time the alarm over the bank
-affair was sounded. He left the hotel then and I did not see him again
-that night.’
-
-“‘Well,’ I asked pointedly, ‘can you swear that Felton was in the hotel
-between 7:45 and 8:30 the evening of Memorial Day?’ I never saw a chap
-so taken back as was Thayer. He could not locate Felton at any
-particular time during the evening; moreover, he could not say
-positively that the Winthrop woman spent the evening in her room. He
-supposed she did. The only point that Thayer was sure of was that the
-woman left for the south on the first train the next morning.
-
-“‘Thayer,’ said I, consolingly, ‘the only way I see to clear your absent
-friend is to find this Winthrop woman. Describe her to me as accurately
-as you can.’ He did so and I have a pretty good pen portrait of the
-unknown in my memorandum-book, marked ‘Exhibit A.’
-
-“‘Oh, by the way,’ said Thayer, ‘she left a handkerchief in the room.’
-
-“‘The deuce she did! I must have that,’ said I. And here it is,” said
-Ashley, passing over a dainty lace creation for Barker’s inspection. In
-one corner is the letter “I” curiously embroidered in silk.
-
-“There are thousands of such handkerchiefs,” comments the detective.
-
-“Yes, but not scented with that variety of perfume.” The detective
-sniffs it. “Did you ever smell anything just like that?” queries Ashley.
-Barker allows that he never did and his acquaintance with scents is an
-extended one.
-
-“If Isabel Winthrop is found,” declares Ashley, “that handkerchief, and
-especially that perfume, may play an important part in her discovery.”
-Barker smiles.
-
-“Truth is stranger than fiction, my boy,” retorts Ashley. “Well, what do
-you think of my clews?”
-
-The detective wraps himself in cigar smoke and thought for several
-minutes. Then he extends his hand.
-
-“I believe I’ll accept your proposition.” Ashley returns the pressure
-warmly.
-
-“I think we’ll make a strong pair to draw to,” he says.
-
-“But,” adds Barker, “you will see that I am more or less disinterested
-when I tell you that I incline to the belief that neither of your clews,
-good as they are, is the correct one.”
-
-“No? Whom do you suspect?”
-
-Barker rises. “Ashley,” says he, “you are young, enthusiastic and
-clever. How are you fixed for patience?”
-
-“Job was a chronic kicker in comparison,” is the prompt reply.
-
-“Well, then, about to-morrow evening I shall be ready to talk with you
-and lay out the campaign. Satisfactory?”
-
-“Perfectly. Let’s go down to the billiard room and knock the balls
-around for an hour.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- LOUISE HATHAWAY.
-
-
-“Good afternoon. Will you walk in?”
-
-“Thank you. I will detain you but a short time.” Jack Ashley follows
-Miss Hathaway into the half-lighted drawing room, accepts the offered
-chair and seats himself beside the big bay window. She sinks quietly
-into a chair opposite him and glances at the bit of pasteboard in her
-hand.
-
-Ashley has seen Louise Hathaway at the inquest and has remarked that she
-is an unusually attractive woman. And now, as his glance for an instant
-sweeps over her, he votes her superb.
-
-Brief as is his admiring gaze, it is critical. It rests upon the twined
-mass of golden hair, drifts over the face to the long white throat and
-the strong shoulders, thence to the faultless figure and sweep of limb.
-She is as different from her sister Helen as the placid morning is
-unlike the beauteous night. Louise is the morning. There is a strong
-sunlight in her glorious blue eyes, but now they are shadowed by the
-grief of the last few days.
-
-She lifts her eyes from the visiting card. “You are a reporter,” she
-says, with a shade of weariness in her voice.
-
-“I have the honor of representing the New York Hemisphere. I do not
-desire to cause you any annoyance, but there were some matters not
-brought out in the inquest which I wish to investigate.”
-
-“And you have come all the way from New York for this?”
-
-“No; I have been spending my vacation in Raymond, and, of course, when
-the news of the tragedy reached our paper I was instructed to look after
-it. I know that the errand on which I have come must be a painful one
-for you to discuss, but I assure you that I have more than a reportorial
-interest in the case.”
-
-“Yes?” She looks at him inquiringly.
-
-“You must be aware that the case is an unusual one,” he goes on. “My
-interest in it has grown into a determination to run down and bring to
-justice the slayer of your father.”
-
-He tries to read in the glance she gives him a trace of gratitude, of
-approval. Failing, he decides that Louise Hathaway is an extraordinary
-young woman.
-
-“Have you discovered anything—anything that the local authorities—they
-are so stupid—have overlooked?” she asks, and he fancies there is
-something of anxiety in the calm, slow tones of a very musical voice.
-
-“Yes,” he replies. “We, the detective and myself, are engaged on several
-clews. But it is necessary that we should be in possession of every bit
-of knowledge obtainable concerning all the persons who have any bearing,
-near or remote, upon the case.”
-
-Miss Hathaway turns upon Ashley a pair of blue eyes in whose depths he
-can read naught but purity and honesty. “I fear I can tell you little,”
-she says.
-
-“Derrick Ames—”
-
-“Is innocent,” she interrupts.
-
-“I am of the same opinion. Derrick Ames and your sister were lovers?”
-She nods.
-
-“Your father, I am told, strongly opposed the young man’s attentions.
-There was a more favored suitor.”
-
-Miss Hathaway regards him with mild surprise. “You knew then—”
-
-“What I have come to ask you about more particularly,” finishes Ashley,
-unblushingly, regarding his digression from the truth as a bit of
-diplomacy.
-
-“I was not very well acquainted with him,” avers Miss Hathaway,
-“although we have lived in the same town nearly all our lives. But
-father regarded him as a model young man, and until lately encouraged
-his attentions to Helen in every way.”
-
-“Now, who the deuce is she talking about?” wonders Ashley, who has
-simply chanced it in his assertion that there was a more favored suitor
-than Derrick Ames.
-
-“I never fancied him, and Helen disliked him exceedingly,” continues
-Miss Hathaway. “But the more she discouraged him the more persistent he
-became. One night Helen came to my room in tears. They had had a fearful
-scene, she stated. She should marry him or none, he had declared, and
-had made all sorts of wild threats.”
-
-“I did not know he was such a desperate character,” remarks Ashley
-tentatively.
-
-“I do not believe the people of this town knew what his true character
-was. Helen said he seemed to have torn off the mask that night and that
-his face was that of a demon. He was wild with rage and left the house
-with curses. I sometimes think—” Miss Hathaway pauses and her face wears
-a troubled expression.
-
-“What on earth does she think?” meditates Ashley, who is becoming a
-trifle bewildered.
-
-“I sometimes think it was his hand that struck down our poor father. But
-then he could have had no motive, and there was in my eyes a reason for
-his action which other people could not surmise.”
-
-“And yet that action seemed unexplainable?” hazards Ashley.
-
-“To others, yes. It seemed perhaps a confession of guilt. But after what
-Helen told me I firmly believe that he has gone to search for her. And
-when he and Derrick Ames meet, I shudder to think of what may happen.”
-
-Ashley sees the light at last. So Ralph Felton was the favored
-suitor—Ralph Felton, whom nearly every one in Raymond regarded as a
-model young man, and who, despite his unaccountable flight, found plenty
-of people willing to explain it in a dozen charitable ways.
-
-“You say that until lately Mr. Hathaway regarded Felton’s attentions to
-your sister with favor. Had he any reason for suspending his approval?”
-
-“I imagine so. During the last month or so he rarely spoke of him, and
-once, when his name was mentioned at table, he frowned.”
-
-“I suppose you know that the case looks black against Ames; that not
-half a dozen people in the town have a good word to say for him?”
-
-“I do not care what is said against Derrick Ames. I am sure that he is
-innocent of any connection with my father’s death. What he was to others
-I cannot say, but in the eyes of Helen and myself he was a noble-hearted
-young man, incapable of an unworthy thought or act.”
-
-“She pleads for him as if for a lover,” thinks Ashley, regarding with
-admiration the girl before him. The flash in the blue eyes and the flush
-in the cheeks tell of warm sympathies and a loyal heart.
-
-“Your sister never intimated to you the likelihood of an elopement?”
-Ashley inquires.
-
-“Never. Had she a thought of such a thing I should have known it. We
-kept nothing from each other.”
-
-“You knew that they met clandestinely?”
-
-“I did.”
-
-Ashley shifts the line of questioning to return to it at a more
-favorable opportunity. It is apparent that it is becoming painful to the
-girl.
-
-“What were the relations between your father and Mr. Felton—the elder
-Felton?”
-
-“Almost wholly of a business nature.”
-
-“They were friends?”
-
-“Yes. I had noticed, however, that during the last few weeks they did
-not meet as often as before.”
-
-“Was Mr. Felton at your house within a short time previous to the
-murder?”
-
-“He was here the evening before it.”
-
-“Anything out of the ordinary in the visit?”
-
-“Nothing, except that Mr. Felton appeared to be angry.”
-
-“Will you make an effort to recall what happened on that particular
-evening?” Louise is thoughtful for a few moments.
-
-“I fear I can recall but little,” she replies slowly. “I was passing
-through the hall on my way upstairs, and as I stepped by the library
-door I glanced in. Father was sitting in his desk chair and Mr. Felton
-was standing near the door, with his hat in his hand.”
-
-“Did you hear any of the conversation?” queries Ashley, with the keenest
-interest in the new scent.
-
-“Let me see—yes; I remember Mr. Felton said: ‘I can’t and I won’t!’ I
-think those were his words.”
-
-“Did he appear to be excited?”
-
-“Perhaps so. He spoke very loudly.”
-
-“And your father’s reply—did you hear that?”
-
-“Yes; I remember I paused an instant from curiosity. Father said, and I
-recall that his voice sounded rather harsh: ‘Then there is but one
-alternative.’ Then I went upstairs to my room. A few minutes afterward I
-heard the front door slam. Father did not retire until several hours
-afterward.”
-
-“It was not his practice to do so?”
-
-“No; he usually retired early. I don’t see what this has to do with the
-mystery—but then I am not a detective or a newspaper man.”
-
-“It may have much to do with it,” murmurs Ashley. Miss Hathaway looks at
-him inquiringly.
-
-“What do you think?” she asks.
-
-“Candidly, I don’t know what to think,” he confesses.
-
-“Will you permit me to turn inquisitor for a few moments?” Miss Hathaway
-requests. “There are one or two questions I should like to have
-answered.”
-
-“I will answer a thousand,” replies Ashley cheerfully, as he meets the
-direct gaze of the young lady.
-
-“Is there any evidence against Derrick Ames, other than was brought out
-at the coroner’s inquest?”
-
-Ashley notes the anxiety in the voice and hesitates. It may be cruel,
-but it also may be profitable, so he replies slowly to Miss Hathaway:
-
-“I regret to say that there are a great many things about Ames’
-movements that will have to be explained away.”
-
-Miss Hathaway covers her face with her hands. A less keen observer than
-Ashley could note the hopelessness in the face that she finally lifts.
-
-“But you said that you believe him innocent,” she exclaims, almost
-eagerly.
-
-“I said so, surely,” admits Ashley. “But in order to prove his innocence
-it will be necessary to produce him.”
-
-A silence. Miss Hathaway’s troubled gaze is fixed upon him. His quick
-brain has been working and he has arrived at a conclusion. “This woman
-believes in the possibility of Ames’ guilt and she has some reason other
-than the evidence that has been produced. Ah, why didn’t I think of that
-before?”
-
-“Miss Hathaway,” says Ashley, speaking deliberately, “you said a moment
-ago that you would do anything to assist me in tracing the slayer of
-your father.” She nods.
-
-“Then will you show me the letter which you received from your sister
-upon her arrival in New York?”
-
-If Ashley expects any result from this haphazard question he is
-assuredly not prepared for what really happens. Miss Hathaway’s face
-turns ashen and a great fear springs into her eyes. She rises to her
-feet, her hands clenched.
-
-“Who told you I received a letter?” she demands in a trembling voice.
-
-“We newspaper men have many means of obtaining information,” replies
-Ashley.
-
-“Mr. Ashley,” the girl says—she is quite calm now—“I appreciate your
-efforts fully and thank you for them. God grant that they may be crowned
-with success. As for my sister’s letter, I cannot show it to you, as I
-have destroyed it. Its contents I shall never reveal.”
-
-“I shall hope to see you again before I leave Raymond,” remarks Ashley,
-as he rises to take his leave; for the interview has reached its natural
-limits.
-
-“I am at home to you at any time,” responds Miss Hathaway, acknowledging
-gravely his pleasant adieu.
-
-As Ashley saunters back to the hotel his mind is in a more bewildered
-condition than at any other time since he has begun work on the Hathaway
-case.
-
-“Now that I am in it, I shall stay, if it occupies the rest of my
-natural life,” he determines. “What a magnificent young woman! Fortunate
-that I am not susceptible, else I should already be idiotically in love
-with this queen of the morning, whose sad blue eyes haunt me still, in
-the words of the old song.”
-
-Oh, the self-sufficiency of youth!
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
- MR. BARKER’S DISCOVERIES.
-
-
-After supper Ashley retreats to the most secluded corner of the veranda
-and amuses himself blowing smoke rings over the railing. Barker has been
-gone ever since morning. He must have struck a warm trail. Twilight
-gathers ere Ashley beholds the familiar figure swinging down the street
-toward the hotel.
-
-The detective draws a chair beside that of Ashley, and, after making
-certain that no listeners are about, remarks complacently: “My boy, I
-believe we are on the trail of Roger Hathaway’s murderer.”
-
-“Indeed! I confess that I am deeper in the woods of speculation than
-ever.”
-
-“Ah, but when I give you the result of my day’s work I think you will
-find yourself out of the forest and on the broad highway of conviction.”
-
-“Then you must have put in a more profitable afternoon than I spent, and
-I accomplished considerable. Had your supper?”
-
-“No. Guess I’ll run in and have supper and then we’ll adjourn to my room
-for a smoke talk.”
-
-Half an hour later finds the New Yorkers comfortably settled in Barker’s
-second-floor.
-
-“I may as well state at the outset that, as you intimated when you
-introduced yourself last evening, I am not a Sherlock Holmes,” begins
-Barker. “But I have had considerable experience in ferreting out
-criminals. A good memory for faces, an extensive acquaintance with the
-brilliants and lesser lights of the crook world, a knack of putting two
-and two together with a view to obtaining four as a result, more or less
-analytical abilities, an excellent physique, a fair amount of sand and
-an unlimited stock of patience are my qualifications for the profession
-upon which I have thus far brought no discredit.”
-
-“Pretty good stock in trade, I should say,” comments Ashley.
-
-“Thank you. Now, every detective waits patiently for what he regards as
-his big case. I think this Hathaway affair is mine—or ours, as we are
-working together. Now, I’ll get down to business and tell you what I
-have discovered to-day. We may as well begin with a comprehensive study
-of the cast of characters. Unfortunately, three of the leading ones are
-beyond our reach.”
-
-“Then you figure Derrick Ames extensively in the case?”
-
-“Rather. We will begin with him and consider his probable relation to
-what is destined to be a celebrated case.
-
-“It is unfortunate that the people in the world whose photographs one is
-likely to want at some time or another are the very people who seldom
-run to pictures,” resumes Barker. “There isn’t a picture of Ames in
-existence. So far as known he never had one taken. Nor are there any
-photos of Helen Hathaway to be had. The only portraits of her in
-existence are the miniature in the locket missing from the dead
-cashier’s watch-chain and a crayon portrait which, I am informed, hangs
-in a room at her late home.
-
-“I find that Ames was regarded as an odd stick by the discriminating
-inhabitants of Raymond—principally because he did not associate with
-them more than was absolutely necessary. He is said to be well educated
-and is of a high-strung, poetic temperament. Heaven knows how he came to
-locate in such a prosy town as Raymond, but the explanation of his
-remaining here as long as he did is simpler; he was apparently devoted
-to Helen Hathaway. I say apparently for want of knowledge of what his
-exact sentiments were. Of his early history I learned little, save that
-he came here some three years ago from New York State, studied law with
-a local counsellor, and finally took an excellent position with the
-Vermont Life Insurance Company.
-
-“Oddly enough, the one male companion that Ames chose was a chap about
-as opposite in temperament and every other way as one can imagine. Sam
-Brockway is the name of the fellow, and he is employed as a cutter in
-the sheds of the Wild River Granite Company. And Ames hunted him up only
-when he got into one of his periodical fits of the blues, and the two
-would start off on a racket that would last several days. It was this
-habit of drinking, combined with a cynical skepticism upon matters and
-things dear to the heart of a deacon, that made Ames objectionable to
-Mr. Hathaway, and the antipathy was cordially returned. Helen, however,
-was a loyal little woman, and despite her father’s commands she
-continued her intimacy with Ames. An elopement was a logical sequence of
-such a companionship, and were it not for certain damning evidence that
-I extracted from this Brockway and discovered myself, I should dismiss
-Ames, temporarily at least, as having no connection with the bank case.”
-
-“Yet you say Brockway is a friend of Ames’,” remarks Ashley.
-
-“He is. But while a good-hearted chap and loyalty itself, he is not
-especially astute and by shrewd questioning and judicious bluffing I
-discovered that he was probably the last man who saw Ames before he
-disappeared from Raymond, Roger Hathaway excepted.”
-
-“You mean—”
-
-“I mean that Derrick Ames was seen to enter the Raymond National Bank
-about 8 o’clock on the evening of Memorial Day.”
-
-“H’m! That is serious. Yet his mission may have been an innocent one.”
-
-“True. But to continue. This forenoon I visited the station at Ashfield,
-where Ames and the girl—there can be no question that they were the
-pair—boarded the night express south. While I was lounging about the
-station, waiting for the train back to Raymond, my eye caught the
-glitter of an object lying between the inside rail of the track and the
-south end of the platform, and partly under the latter. It was a
-revolver, 32 caliber, and one chamber was empty. With that for a basis,
-I questioned the station agent on another tack, and he finally succeeded
-in remembering that just as the train pulled into the station that
-memorable night the girl handed Ames his coat, and as he threw it over
-his arm an object dropped from one of the pockets, which Ames quickly
-recovered and replaced in the coat as he and his companion clambered
-aboard the train. Might not this revolver have been the object dropped
-by Ames, and might he not when he put it back in his coat have slipped
-it into the sleeve, through which it dropped as he stepped upon the
-train?”
-
-“Well, the theory is ingenious, even if wrong,” muses Ashley.
-
-“I clinched it a bit more,” continues Barker. “Where had Ames and the
-girl boarded the train? The station agent remembered that it was at the
-south end of the platform, as the New York sleeper was made up next
-behind the engine and baggage car.”
-
-“I beg to remark,” puts in Ashley, “that the fact of one chamber in a
-revolver being empty is not at all unusual. I have in my pocket a gun in
-that condition, but as it is a 38 caliber, that lets me out of any
-connection with the tragedy.”
-
-“Of course,” smiles Barker, “I take all these bits of evidence for what
-they are worth. While waiting for my train I argued in this wise:
-Derrick Ames was in love with Helen Hathaway, and the attachment
-resulted in an elopement. Neither was seen after 2 o’clock of Memorial
-Day, and the inference is that they were together somewhere all the
-afternoon and evening. The elopement was apparently unpremeditated, as
-they took nothing with them, so far as known, except the clothes they
-wore. There must have been some cause for such an impromptu exit. People
-do not elope that way no matter how love-mad they may be. Where was
-Helen when Ames was seen going into the bank? Waiting for him somewhere.
-What was his errand? To make a final appeal for the girl’s hand, with an
-elopement in mind as the last resort, perhaps. But even failing in that,
-why elope that particular night? There must have been a cause for
-hurrying him away. But if you assume that Ames committed the crime, even
-as the upshot of a fierce quarrel, even perhaps in self-defense, you
-must figure him a moral monstrosity, for only such could strike down a
-father and elope subsequently with the daughter. And then there is the
-missing money. You see it argues a villainy more despicable than a man
-like Ames could have been guilty of.”
-
-“Yet pathology records even more singular instances of moral
-distortion.”
-
-“Even so. But is it not more reasonable to believe that Ames may have
-been only a witness to the murder, or a spectator on the scene of the
-tragedy after it had occurred, and that he was hurried away by the
-horror of the affair? But in either event would he not have argued that
-to fly would be the worst possible thing he could do? I confess that
-when I arrived at Raymond I was in doubt as to Ames’ possible guilt, but
-my afternoon’s investigations have about convinced me that Derrick Ames
-had nothing to do with the death of Cashier Hathaway.”
-
-“Then you must have substituted some other person as the object of your
-suspicion.”
-
-“Yes; but the substitution is not especially recent. Before I give you
-the result of my afternoon labors let me tell you of a discovery that I
-made yesterday, not three hours after my arrival in town.
-
-“After I had posted myself from the stenographic notes of the inquest I
-dropped into the bank to have a talk with the officials. President
-Felton took me into the directors’ room, where the tragedy occurred, and
-I sat in the cashier’s chair and glanced around to get a few bearings.
-While Felton was retelling his story of the finding of Hathaway’s body I
-toyed with a blotter on the desk. It was the ordinary blotter, larger
-than the average, with the advertisement of an insurance company on one
-side. As I glanced carelessly at it I noticed that it had taken up the
-ink of some unusually plain characters.
-
-“Felton was called out of the room for a moment and I slipped the
-blotter in my pocket to examine it at my leisure. When I returned to the
-hotel I made an investigation, and I discovered—but I will let you see
-for yourself. Hand me that small mirror on the wall.”
-
-Ashley does so. The detective takes his prize from a bundle of papers in
-his pocket, smooths it flat on the table, and places the mirror
-perpendicularly before it. Then he draws the lamp over and remarks
-complacently: “Look here upon this picture!”
-
-And this is what Ashley sees as he gazes upon the reflecting surface.
-There are three groups of characters. The first group reads:
-
- =“Come to the bank immediately—”=
-
-The second:
-
- =“Your personal account overdrawn—”=
-
-And the third:
-
- =“These things I charge you fail not, Cyrus Felton, at the peril
- of your good name. Roger Hathaway.”=
-
-“Jove! It reads like an accusation!” cries Ashley, dropping back into
-his chair.
-
-“It is an accusation!” declares the detective, with the ring of triumph
-in his voice.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XI.
-
- A SIFTING OF EVIDENCE.
-
-
-Both men smoke on in a brief silence that Ashley breaks with an
-inquiring “Well?”
-
-“Much,” is Barker’s smiling response. “Now, my boy,” he adds briskly, as
-he extracts a bunch of writing paper from his grip and sharpens his
-pencil, “tell me everything you know concerning the dramatis personae in
-this drama. We will get our facts together, and then I’ll give you my
-theories—for I have more than one. Go ahead.”
-
-When Ashley has exhausted his stock of information and has hazarded one
-or two ingenious theories, the detective leans back in his chair and for
-the space of five minutes says not a word. Finally he turns to Ashley.
-
-“This Hathaway mystery,” he begins, “is either simplicity itself or it
-is shrouded in a veil that only the patient search and unceasing effort
-of months will lift. My first glance at the case led me to believe that
-the murder was the work of a professional, so swiftly had it been
-accomplished and so completely had the work of the operator been covered
-up. But the most earnest search has failed to discover the presence in
-town on Memorial Day of any person who could possibly be regarded as a
-suspicious character, except Ernest Stanley, of whom more anon.
-
-“Then the deed must have been committed by some one in Raymond. Thus far
-we have evidence affecting four men—Derrick Ames, Cyrus Felton, Ralph
-Felton, and Ernest Stanley. If two of the four were implicated it could
-have been only the Feltons, father and son. I do not say that any of the
-four is the guilty man. But a chain of evidence must be forged about the
-slayer of Roger Hathaway, and in order that this chain shall be
-complete, minus not a single link, it becomes necessary for us to
-establish the innocence of these four men, if they are innocent, as well
-as the presumptive guilt of a fifth party, if a fifth party committed
-the crime.”
-
-“In other words, we are hampered by a superabundance of clews.”
-
-“Exactly. I will pardon your interruption, but no more of them, unless
-they are good ones. Now, your attention.
-
-“Roger Hathaway was killed in his office in the bank on the evening of
-Memorial Day, some time between 7:45 and 8:30 o’clock. No definite
-minute or five minutes can be fixed. Two of our characters were, we
-know, and the other two may have been, at the bank between 7:45 and
-8:30. To begin with Ames. Sam Brockway tells me that he saw Ames enter
-the bank after Hathaway had handed a note to the boy, Jimmie Howe.
-Brockway did not stay to see Ames come out; when the latter did emerge
-he was unseen. It is not unreasonable to assume that Ames killed
-Hathaway as the climax of a bitter quarrel over the latter’s daughter,
-and that, to facilitate his escape, he helped himself to the bank’s
-funds. But it is unreasonable to assume that subsequently he induced the
-daughter to elope with him. That is the weak link in that chain.”
-
-“But suppose that the elopement was already under way; that everything
-had been arranged for, hour of departure, route and conveyance,” debates
-Ashley. “Would not Ames argue that solitary flight, and a failure to
-carry out the prearranged plans must weigh heavily against him? An
-elopement is an excellent excuse for leaving town hurriedly, you know.”
-
-“Possible,” returns the detective. “Now, the letter which you say Louise
-Hathaway received from her sister, but the contents of which she refuses
-to reveal, must have contained some reference to Ames which Miss
-Hathaway has reasons for concealing. At any rate, there is good ground
-for suspecting that Ames knows something of the murder of Roger
-Hathaway, whether or no his own hand was stained with the cashier’s
-blood. Now,” says Barker, turning to the blotter and the mirror on the
-table, and propping up the reflector with the water pitcher, “look that
-over carefully, Ashley, and tell me what you find.”
-
-Ashley draws his chair up to the table and examines critically the
-characters on the blotter as reflected in the mirror.
-
-“All of the words which are distinguishable were not, when blotted, on
-the same sheet of paper,” he asserts. “At least two and perhaps three
-sheets of paper were used. The words, ‘your personal account overdrawn,’
-must have been at the bottom of one sheet and those with the signature
-attached upon another, but whether top, middle, or bottom of the page is
-of no consequence.”
-
-“Very good,” approves Barker. “That was the first conclusion I arrived
-at when I examined the blotter. Now, how about those words, ‘Come to the
-bank immediately’?”
-
-“Their position is not so clear to me. Their nature would indicate that
-they began the letter, but if so I cannot see why they should blot and
-the words following them should not appear.”
-
-“But if they were part of another letter—what then?”
-
-“Ah,” remarks Ashley, thoughtfully.
-
-“I am assuming, and I think reasonably, that the blotter was first used
-upon the letter or letters whose contents we are attempting to guess,”
-says Barker. “There are many faint marks around the legible words, but
-naturally only the words concluding each page would be distinguishable.
-Those above would be either dry or in process of drying. But what else
-do you deduce, Ashley?”
-
-“Well, the writing does not display, in my opinion, undue haste or
-agitation. I am not an expert in handwriting, but I should say that this
-letter was written at a normal speed and by a man in a comparatively
-calm condition of mind. The signature is bold and firm, as are all the
-legible characters. I should also say that this letter was the one which
-Roger Hathaway sent to Cyrus Felton half an hour or so before he was
-found dead in his office.”
-
-“You remember Felton’s testimony at the inquest?”
-
-“Perfectly. He stated that the note he received contained the simple
-request: ‘Come to the bank immediately.’”
-
-“Then you think he lied to the coroner?”
-
-“It would seem so. Unless—”
-
-“Unless the note he received at his house on the evening of Memorial Day
-did contain only that brief summons, which is contained in the five
-words at the top of the blotter.”
-
-“Precisely,” agrees Ashley. “That brings us to the question, when was
-the other letter written? It must have been previous to the note
-referred to at the inquest, but how many hours or days before? Let me
-have your theory, Barker. My mind is already shaping a shadowy one.”
-
-The detective chews his cigar reflectively. “Suppose that Roger Hathaway
-discovered, some time ago—within a few weeks, we will say—that the
-affairs of the bank were not in the condition that they should be?” he
-hazards. “An examination of the books showed not only that the
-president’s personal account was overdrawn, but that certain operations
-of the latter had jeopardized the soundness of the institution. The
-knowledge might have been expected or unexpected. In either case the
-cashier realized that something had to be done, and at once. So on the
-day before Memorial Day, or even earlier, he wrote a letter to the
-president and couched it in plain English. He instanced the overdrawal
-of the president’s personal account and a number of other unpleasant
-conditions, and urged upon that gentleman the necessity for an immediate
-adjustment of the critical affairs, closing with the admonition, ‘Fail
-not, Cyrus Felton, at the peril of your good name.’
-
-“Having dispatched his letter to the president, the cashier waited
-anxiously for a reply. It came in the form of a call by Felton at the
-residence of Hathaway the evening before Memorial Day. The interview was
-a stormy one. At least we know it was not harmonious. The cashier again
-set forth the necessity for immediate action. Ways and means were
-discussed, but no way out of the tangle seemed clear. In desperation the
-cashier suggested some unpleasant but safe method of salvation. The
-president responded angrily, ‘I can’t and I won’t!’ and the cashier
-answered decisively, ‘Then there is only one alternative.’ Without
-waiting to discuss this alternative, the president left the house in a
-temper and the cashier sat up in his library for hours afterward,
-meditating on the crisis.
-
-“Now, what was this ‘one alternative’ indicated by the cashier? Clearly
-publicity of the bank’s condition and its subsequent wreck. The next day
-was Memorial Day. The cashier took part in the solemn services and in
-the evening he went to the bank to perform some necessary work upon the
-books, the teller being ill. No word had come from the president, no
-intimation that he was prepared to follow out the course pointed out the
-night before, and avoid the disgrace which the wreck of the bank would
-entail. Again the desperation of the situation flashed upon the cashier.
-The president must act, and at once. So the cashier indited a brief but
-peremptory note to the president: ‘Come to the bank immediately.’ This
-he delivered to Jimmy Howe, whom he found on the bridge tossing pebbles
-into the stream.
-
-“The president answered the summons. Within the cashier’s office the
-accusation, apparently so plainly indicated on this blotter, was
-repeated verbally. A sharp dispute followed. Hot words led to blows. The
-drawer of the cashier’s desk was open and his revolver lay in view. Can
-you supply the rest?”
-
-“But the open vault and the missing money and securities?” contends
-Ashley.
-
-“The vault may have been, probably was, already open. The missing
-funds—had been missing for some little time,” replies Barker, with a
-significant smile. Then he resumes:
-
-“Felton testified that on the night of the tragedy he reached the bank
-about 8:20. As he left his house about 8:05 he must have got to the bank
-not far from 8:15. It is not more than ten minutes’ walk, even at an
-ordinary pace. He told Sheriff Wilson, when he found the latter at the
-hotel, that he discovered Hathaway ‘only a few moments ago.’ Yet the
-sheriff stated to me that he was positive it was 8:35 when he was
-informed of the affair. He looked at his watch when he was accompanying
-Felton to the bank. Again, Felton told the coroner that ‘it did not seem
-more than a minute that I spent in the bank,’ so that here we have a
-hiatus of fully a quarter of an hour. Now, where was Felton during that
-fifteen minutes if not in the company of Roger Hathaway? If Hathaway was
-dead when Felton reached the bank, why was not the sheriff informed
-earlier? You see there is an apparent discrepancy that might be
-explained on the theory that Hathaway was alive when Felton entered the
-bank, and that an interview of ten or fifteen minutes was ended by the
-death of the cashier.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XII.
-
- FURTHER CONSIDERATION OF CLEWS.
-
-
-Having allowed Ashley to digest the food for thought furnished by the
-detective, the latter resumes his story:
-
-“Upon my return from Ashfield I called upon Cyrus Felton, found him at
-his residence and interviewed him in his library for fully an hour. When
-I introduced myself as a detective he started visibly. In place of the
-extreme agitation which characterized his testimony at the inquest, he
-betrayed a nervousness rather peculiar, to say the least, in one whose
-knowledge of the crime embraced only what he related to the coroner.
-
-“I questioned him minutely, avoiding any direct query that would be
-likely to arouse his suspicions. To my question, ‘When did you last see
-Mr. Hathaway?’ he replied that it was on the afternoon of Memorial Day,
-when the Grand Army post marched to the cemetery.
-
-“‘And before that—when?’
-
-“He hesitated a few moments and answered that he had last talked with
-the cashier several days, probably a week, before the tragedy.
-
-“‘Your relations with Mr. Hathaway were always of a friendly nature?’
-
-“‘Eminently so.’
-
-“The answer was straightforward and the look that accompanied it was
-open and direct, the only one, by the way, during the entire interview.
-Of course I was not at the time aware of the unharmonious interview
-which, as Miss Hathaway reported to you, occurred at her father’s house
-on the evening preceding Memorial Day. Lie No. 1, conceding that he told
-the truth about the note which he received from the cashier on the
-evening of the tragedy.
-
-“‘Now, this revolver of Mr. Hathaway’s, what sort of a weapon was it,
-Mr. Felton?’ I asked. He gave me a half-startled look and I fancied that
-his gaze strayed for an instant to the safe set in the wall of his
-library. It flashed upon me that the lost gun was concealed behind the
-steel door of that same safe.
-
-“‘The revolver,’ he said, in an absent sort of way; ‘oh, it was an
-ordinary affair, 32 caliber, I believe they called it, nickeled and with
-a pearl handle. I had often seen it lying in Mr. Hathaway’s drawer, but
-so far as I know it was never used.’
-
-“‘Would you recognize that revolver if you should see it again, Mr.
-Felton?’
-
-“‘I don’t know as I could positively identify it. Revolvers are so much
-alike, are they not?’ I nodded, and again his eyes shifted toward the
-door of his safe.
-
-“Well, as I say, I talked with him for about an hour, most of the
-interview dealing with the forgery case of two years ago, in which our
-mysterious friend, Ernest Stanley, figured as the principal. But of that
-more later.
-
-“It was about 5 o’clock when I called at Felton’s house, and the supper
-bells of the neighborhood were ringing when I left. Instead of going to
-the hotel I struck down a side street to the river road, for a smoke and
-a stroll, and a chance to run the Hathaway case over in my mind.
-
-“Half a mile below the village there is quite a stretch of road without
-any houses along it. The cemetery is on one side, the river on the
-other. I was sprawling on the stone wall that skirts the city of the
-dead and looking toward the village, when I saw a figure rapidly
-approaching. ‘Cyrus Felton or I’m a goat!’ I exclaimed, and rolled out
-of sight behind the wall. My eyesight is keen and I could not mistake
-the tall, lank form of the bank president. ‘What the deuce is he doing
-down this road at an hour when he should be peacefully eating his
-supper?’ I wondered.
-
-“When Felton passed around the bend in the road I sprung over the wall
-and followed at a cautious distance. He looked around once or twice, and
-I had to dodge behind a tree each time. Suddenly he stopped and walked
-out upon the bank of the river, while I again took up a position behind
-my friendly stone wall.
-
-“Our banker walked to the edge of the river, and, with his hands clasped
-behind him, stared at the water, now and then casting a look up and down
-the road.
-
-“‘Heavens! Is he going to commit suicide?’ I thought. Surely my mild
-catechism had not driven him to such an extremity. My fears were shortly
-allayed. He suddenly thrust his hand into his coat pocket, and,
-withdrawing some object, hurled it into the stream. It sunk with a small
-splash. I was too far away to more than guess what the object was.
-Felton remained on the bank for several minutes, gazing at the surface
-of the river, then suddenly wheeled and started toward the village. As
-he passed me I fancied he looked a bit more relieved in mind.
-
-“After he was out of sight I walked over to the river and marked as near
-as possible the spot where he had stood. The river at that point is
-deep, and I fear that the bottom is muddy, as the stream makes a sharp
-bend and spreads into a broad lagoon, with little or no current.”
-
-“You intend to go a-fishing?” queries Ashley.
-
-“At daylight, if we can get a boat of some sort.”
-
-“And if our search is rewarded by the finding of a revolver—the
-revolver—what then?”
-
-“Then I think we shall have a case against Cyrus Felton stronger than we
-shall make out against any one else. I can see by your face that you are
-only half convinced of that fact,” continues Barker. “You are more
-inclined to suspect the younger Felton than the elder, eh?”
-
-“Well,” argues the newspaper man, “in the case of Ralph Felton there is
-a motive, an evil temper, and what is usually regarded as confession of
-guilt—flight.”
-
-“Good. Let us look over young Felton’s case,” says the detective. “Ralph
-Felton, we know, is possessed of an evil temper and a disposition to
-bullyrag a young lady who is sensible enough not to love him. We know
-also that he gambles with traveling men who put up here, and drinks more
-or less. As the good people of this town regard Ralph as a model young
-man, his indulgence in cards and wine on the quiet shows a broad streak
-of deception in his character.
-
-“His inclinations toward gayety were not cultivated in his native town.
-Previous to a twelvemonth ago four or five years of his life were spent
-in New York, Chicago and other cities. His occupation during a share of
-that time was that of representative and selling agent for the granite
-company in which his father is the principal stock owner. He was
-apparently wild and reckless, for a year ago he returned to Raymond and
-through the efforts of his father was given the position of bookkeeper
-in the bank, a position which does not usually pay much. It would appear
-that the elder Felton had enacted the role of the prodigal’s father.
-
-“While Ralph Felton was ‘down country’ he fell in love with a pretty
-face, and upon its possessor he squandered all his means and more. When
-Ralph returned to Raymond the woman wrote to him demanding money and a
-fulfillment of pledges. The former he had not; of the latter he had no
-thought, as he had become desperately enamored of Helen Hathaway. Unable
-to obtain satisfaction by a correspondence, the woman visited Raymond
-the afternoon of Memorial Day, registered as ‘Isabel Winthrop,’ and sent
-word to Ralph that a lady desired to see him. He went to her. The
-interview between the pair was not harmonious. Sounds of a quarrel came
-from the room, and once or twice the word ‘money’ was used. Half an hour
-or so from the time he entered the hotel Ralph left with a flushed
-countenance, first pledging the clerk to say nothing of his feminine
-caller.
-
-“He has essayed promises with her, but something substantial is demanded
-to back them up. He must have money, but where is it to be secured? No
-use to apply to his father, that he well knows. The more he racks his
-brain the more desperate becomes the situation. Then a wild thought
-comes to him. The bank! There must be a large amount of money in the
-safe. The county bonds mature the next day. He knows, we will
-assume—perhaps the knowledge is accidental—the combination of the safe.
-
-“Ralph returns to the hotel, and, with a calmness born of a desperate
-resolve, informs ‘Isabel Winthrop’ that he has arranged for the needed
-funds, and reiterates his promises for the future. As dusk comes on he
-leaves the hotel unobserved by the clerk, goes to the bank, opens the
-front door and locks it behind him, and proceeds to the cashier’s office
-in the rear, wherein open the doors to the vault.
-
-“As with a trembling hand he twists the combination of the vault he
-hears the sound of a key in the outer door. He springs to his feet and
-casts a startled glance about him. There is no egress from the room save
-by the way he came. Ah! The closet! He secretes himself in the dark
-closet at the farther end of the room, and at that instant Roger
-Hathaway enters.
-
-“‘The cashier,’ murmurs the prisoner in the closet, as through the
-partially open door he watches Hathaway light his desk lamp. ‘He has
-dropped in to get some papers and will soon be gone,’ thinks Ralph. But
-to the latter’s despair the cashier opens the vault, takes out the big
-ledger, and settles down apparently to an evening’s work.
-
-“Here is a nice predicament, but there is nothing to be done except wait
-until the cashier finishes his evening’s work and goes home. Half an
-hour or more goes by. The closet is dusty and Ralph is seized with an
-irresistible desire to sneeze. The explosion, a half-smothered one,
-occurs, and the cashier looks about him in surprise and wonder. But he
-continues his work. Suddenly Felton sees him seize a pad of writing
-paper, scratch off a brief note and leave the room to find a messenger.
-Has the cashier suspected the presence of some person in the bank
-besides himself and has he taken this means to summon assistance? As
-this thought flashes upon him young Felton becomes desperate, but as he
-watches the face of the cashier, who returns calmly to his writing, he
-convinces himself that he is mistaken.
-
-“Again that cursed inclination to sneeze, which in vain he attempts to
-smother. This time there is no mistake. The cashier rises to his feet
-and glances about the room in alarm. His eyes finally rest on the partly
-opened door of the dark closet. Hathaway is a man of nerve. He opens the
-right-hand drawer of his desk, takes out and cocks his revolver and
-walks deliberately toward the closet.
-
-“All this is seen by Ralph, and his plan to rob the bank is succeeded by
-a desire to escape from the building unrecognized. To accomplish this
-the cashier must be overpowered. So when the latter flings open the
-closet door the man within reaches out, grasps the revolver arm and
-draws the cashier into the darkness of the closet. Then ensues a fierce
-struggle, for Roger Hathaway, though old, is still a powerful man. This
-would account for the old ledgers that were toppled over into the
-office, and for the marks on the body of the murdered man.
-
-“During the struggle the revolver is discharged and the bullet enters
-the cashier’s heart. The doctors in the case tell me that the course of
-the bullet was such that the leaden missile might have come from a
-pistol discharged during such a struggle as I have described. But to
-continue:
-
-“Ralph Felton draws the limp form of the cashier out into the office and
-lays it upon the floor. A moment’s examination shows him that the man is
-dead, and he realizes his frightful position. Then the thought occurs to
-him that, if he carries out his original plan of robbing the bank, the
-crime will be ascribed to burglars. So he fills his pockets with what
-money and securities are in the safe, closes the door to the cashier’s
-office behind him and leaves the bank, with the front door unlocked or
-ajar.”
-
-“Unless—” interrupts Ashley.
-
-“Unless what?”
-
-“Unless,” says the newspaper man, leaning back in his chair and blowing
-a cloud of smoke ceilingward—“unless Ralph Felton, when he rose from his
-examination of the body, was suddenly confronted by his father, who had
-come to the bank in response to the summons sent by the cashier!”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII.
-
- THE KEY TO THE MYSTERY.
-
-
-“Following along the lines of your theory,” continues Ashley, “if Ralph
-Felton rose from the corpse of Roger Hathaway and confronted his father
-upon the threshold of the cashier’s office, that dramatic meeting would
-explain many things. It would explain the startled glance that Cyrus
-Felton shot at his son—I was studying the faces of both—when the latter
-refused to state at the inquest where he had spent the time between 7:45
-and 8:30 on the evening of Memorial Day. It would account for the
-carrying off of the cashier’s revolver and its subsequent burial among
-the waters of Wild River; for young Felton’s flight, and for the extreme
-agitation of the elder Felton ever since the night of the killing.”
-
-“And,” adds Barker, “it would satisfactorily clear up the interim of
-fifteen minutes between the time Cyrus Felton should have reached the
-bank and the moment when the sheriff was notified. In fact, if the
-Felton family is responsible for the death of Roger Hathaway there must
-be some understanding between father and son. But we will now proceed to
-the consideration of an important character in our tragedy—Ernest
-Stanley.
-
-“Two years ago, while the directors of the Raymond National Bank were
-holding their annual meeting, the teller stepped into the room and
-announced that a stranger had presented at the bank for payment a check
-for $1,000, signed by Cyrus Felton.
-
-“‘Impossible!’ exclaimed that individual, who was presiding over the
-directors’ meeting. ‘Let me see the check.’ The teller produced it, and
-Felton at once declared it a forgery, and a bungling one at that. An
-officer was quickly summoned and Ernest Stanley, who had presented the
-check, was arrested.
-
-“His trial in the Mansfield County Court was short. The forgery was
-proved and the young man was sentenced to three years in the state
-prison at Windsor. In his own defense—he had no money with which to
-employ a lawyer—Stanley stated that the check had been given to him two
-days before he presented it, by a casual acquaintance who claimed the
-name signed to the bit of paper. It was in payment of a gambling debt
-and the transaction occurred in Phil Clark’s well-known lair of the
-tiger on Fifth Avenue, New York.”
-
-“Which, by the way, is no more,” puts in Ashley. “The place was closed
-out six months ago and Phil is now in ’Frisco.”
-
-“It was in existence during Stanley’s trial,” resumes Barker, “and the
-trial was adjourned a couple of days while his improbable story was
-looked up. As was expected, neither Phil nor any of the habitues of his
-place knew of such a person as Ernest Stanley, much less such a
-transaction as he alleged to have occurred there.
-
-“Stanley received his sentence calmly. Beyond stating that his age was
-26 and his occupation that of a bookmaker he refused to furnish any
-details of his birth, early life or present residence. He served two
-years of his sentence and was pardoned by the governor this last
-Memorial Day. Strangely enough, the pardon was secured by the man whose
-name he was alleged to have forged—Cyrus Felton. Now, what feelings do
-you suppose actuated Felton in securing a remission of a year in the
-prisoner’s sentence? Compassion?”
-
-“What should you say were I to suggest the word ‘remorse’?” replies
-Ashley.
-
-“I should say,” declares the detective, with a smile of approval, “that
-you had hit upon the very word. It is plain that you foresee what I am
-leading up to.”
-
-“To the theory that Stanley was innocent of the forgery and that the
-check was given to him by Ralph Felton?”
-
-“Exactly. It will be difficult to prove, but if it can be proved it will
-have an important bearing on the Hathaway mystery. It will show Ralph
-Felton’s capacity for wrongdoing and will enable us to surmise to what
-extent Cyrus Felton would shield his son from conviction of a crime. At
-the time the check was presented Ralph Felton was supposed to be in New
-York, and as he had been for some time more or less of a trial to the
-old man the latter doubtless suspected in an instant what we are
-assuming to have been the truth. He had to decide between his son and a
-stranger, and, as usual, the stranger suffered.”
-
-“What led Stanley to attempt to cash the check in Raymond?” debates
-Ashley.
-
-“Well, if he was a stranger in New York he would find it impossible to
-cash it at any of the banks in that city. Why not run up to Raymond and
-cash it at the bank on which it was drawn? I forgot to say that at the
-trial Stanley alleged that his acquaintance of the gambling rooms
-claimed to be a Vermonter and appeared to have plenty of money.”
-
-“And he did not hazard the suggestion that this acquaintance was the son
-of the man whose name was forged?”
-
-“He did not know that there was a son. To prove this, if the visitor at
-Cyrus Felton’s house on the evening of Memorial Day was the released
-prisoner of Windsor, note his surprised reply to the housemaid, ‘I did
-not know there were two Feltons.’”
-
-“True,” admits Ashley. “Keep along, old man.”
-
-“If Stanley was that visitor,” pursues the detective, “his object in
-revisiting Raymond was to obtain revenge for the wrong that had been
-done him.
-
-“When he arrived at Raymond, at 7:45, he went directly to Felton’s
-house. Failing to find the bank president at home, he obtained
-directions as to where Felton’s office was and proceeded to the bank
-block. The office, which is on the second story, at the south end of the
-block, was dark and Stanley returned to the street. As he stood in front
-of the bank and thought of the day, two long years before, when he
-stepped from its portals with a constable gripping his arm, he noticed a
-light in the rear. Perhaps Felton was within. So he pushed open the door
-and—”
-
-“Hold on a bit. How does the bank door come to be open? You are assuming
-a great deal this time, Barker,” laughs Ashley.
-
-“I am assuming that he got into the bank some way or other,” retorts the
-detective. “If not—and here I will quote your own words when you
-imparted to me your valuable discovery—‘What was Stanley doing at 6
-o’clock the next morning asleep in the bushes in a lonely gorge near
-South Ashfield village?’
-
-Ashley laughs merrily. “I was expecting that,” he says. “But I’ll be
-hanged if I will believe that an Edmond Dantes sort of a chap like
-Ernest Stanley is capable of—”
-
-“Permit me to suggest that Ernest Stanley may be a cheap criminal
-instead of an Edmond Dantes,” interrupts Barker, with a withering
-sarcasm that only increases Ashley’s good humor. “We have given him a
-good character simply to suit our present theory. He may have really
-forged old Felton’s name, and his visit to Raymond may have been
-actuated by a base desire for revenge upon a stern justice meted out to
-him. Alone in the bank with Roger Hathaway and the open vault, murder
-and robbery may have come natural to him. We know nothing that should
-lead us to decide that he was a much-abused young man.”
-
-“Yet you believe he is, I’ll wager,” asserts Ashley.
-
-“I confess that I do. A man would be half a dozen kinds of a fool to
-forge the name of the president of a bank and present the check for
-payment at the latter’s own bank. Still what evidence we have against
-Stanley is strong. We can account for the flight of Derrick Ames on the
-simple elopement theory. We can explain the levanting of Ralph Felton on
-the theory that he refused to establish an alibi because it would
-necessitate the confession of an acquaintance with ‘Isabel Winthrop,’
-when he was an ardent suitor for the hand of Helen Hathaway, and on the
-further supposition that he has gone to hunt for the woman he insanely
-loved. We can explain the nervous condition of Cyrus Felton on the
-assumption that he fears his son was implicated in the bank robbery and
-trembles for his safety. But we cannot explain why Ernest Stanley fled
-from Raymond the night of Memorial Day and hurried over mountain and
-stream and through forest, chased like a wild beast, until he found a
-haven of refuge. The open bank door is the break in the chain of
-evidence against him, and that may be mended by assuming that the
-cashier forgot to lock the door behind him when he entered the bank.
-
-“We must find Stanley,” Ashley promptly declares.
-
-“And there are others to be found,” the detective rejoins dryly. “But
-especially must we run down Stanley. I am convinced that he is the key
-to the mystery, and when we have located his position in this puzzling
-case I believe that the rest of the race will be plain sailing.”
-
-“I fear it will be a long, stern chase.”
-
-“Such chases usually are,” remarks Barker, composedly. “I have already
-set the machinery in motion, and the police of the entire country are on
-the lookout for a chap answering Stanley’s description. What makes our
-task the harder is the probable fact that Stanley is not a member of the
-criminal class, and so a comparatively easy channel of pursuit is
-closed. He presumably made for New York, and somewhere in that busy
-human hive we may run across him.”
-
-“Then our labors at this end of the road are about completed?”
-
-“Nearly so. To-morrow morning, before the village is astir, we will go
-a-fishing. If we find what we expect the case may be precipitated a bit.
-Otherwise we will shift the scene of our operations to New York, after I
-have pumped the servants in the Felton family and inquired as far as is
-possible into the affairs of the bank. Is your vacation about wound up?”
-
-“It will be in a day or so. I have nothing to keep me here longer except
-a pleasant duty that I owe to myself.”
-
-“And that is—”
-
-“To make an unprofessional call upon Miss Louise Hathaway.”
-
-“Ho! Sits the wind in that quarter?” laughs the detective.
-
-“Don’t be absurd, my friend,” smiles Ashley. “Miss Hathaway interests me
-only as would a statue of the Venus de Milo.”
-
-“Indeed? Still, men have lost their hearts to a statue.”
-
-“In books and plays. If we are to arise at daybreak I would suggest the
-advisability of retiring.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV.
-
- A CHANGE OF BASE.
-
-
-“I believe this is the exact spot; yes, I am sure it is. Drop your
-anchor, Ashley, so that the bow will point up-stream,” says Barker, as
-he grasps a long pole with a hook at one end, and prepares to explore
-the bed of Wild River.
-
-Ashley lets go the rock that does duty as an anchor and remarks
-ruefully, when all but a yard of the rope is run out: “This is deep-sea
-fishing. There is over twelve feet of water here.”
-
-“Thunder! And mud enough to bury a man-of-war,” grunts the detective.
-
-After fifteen minutes of earnest but ineffectual groping in the slimy
-bed of the stream Barker throws the pole from him and remarks: “No use.”
-
-“Can’t the river be dredged?”
-
-“Yes; with a force of men and a steam dredger, and the whole township
-looking on and asking questions. We can do nothing this morning. Up
-anchor and away! I could use a little breakfast.”
-
-“By the way,” observes Ashley, as the two men walk back to the hotel,
-“in all your talk last night you said nothing of that locket, with the
-miniatures of the Hathaway sisters, which was stolen from the
-watch-chain of the murdered cashier the night of the killing.”
-
-“Do you know it was stolen on that night?” asks the detective.
-
-“We must assume that it was until we know otherwise, I suppose,” returns
-Ashley. “If the missing locket is found in the possession of any one of
-our suspects it would be a strong link, would it not?”
-
-“Very likely, but we must find our man first. Shall you be ready to
-leave for New York to-night?”
-
-“Sure thing.”
-
-“Good. We must strike the trail there and follow it, if need be, to the
-end of the world.”
-
-Ashley has been in Raymond only two weeks, but already he begins to sigh
-for the pleasures and palaces of gay, crowded and babel-voiced New York.
-
-“Hang it!” he growls to Barker, as he packs his valise, “this Vermont
-country is all right, but the natives are atrocious. They know no
-literature except those provincial Boston dailies and the current
-paper-covered rot; no music except Sousa’s marches, no art except the
-colored supplements to the Sunday newspapers and no conversation higher
-than horse, hay and village gossip.”
-
-“Your criticism is too sweeping,” replies the detective. “There is more
-culture in Raymond, in proportion to its population, than there is in
-New York, I’ll wager. And where in that politics-ridden city will you
-find another woman rivaling your fervid description of Miss Louise
-Hathaway?”
-
-“Ah, she is a rose in a wilderness. And that reminds me that I have
-promised myself the pleasure of a farewell call upon her,” says Ashley.
-
-“Farewell?” repeats the detective, skeptically. “You will not see the
-last of Miss Hathaway to-day unless I am much mistaken. I have known of
-more than one lover of statuary who failed to be content with the marble
-and warmed it into living, breathing womanhood.”
-
-“Nonsense!” laughs Ashley. “I shall live and die a bachelor.”
-
-But he spends fully ten minutes in tying his cravat, brushes his hair
-with unusual care, gives his mustache an extra twist, and saunters up to
-the Hathaway homestead in an expectant frame of mind. Foolish Jack
-Ashley! In after years he will smile at the recollection of the thoughts
-that flit through his busy mind to-day.
-
-Just as he turns into the path leading to the Hathaway residence Miss
-Hathaway is stepping out upon the veranda. She sees him and smiles in
-her grave way.
-
-“Good afternoon,” she says to her visitor. He answers, uncovering his
-head.
-
-“I called to say au revoir. I leave for New York to-night.”
-
-She leads the way to the reception room. After they have taken their
-seats near the open window she answers:
-
-“You will return? Your work here on—on the case is not yet finished?”
-
-“No; we shall have occasion to visit Raymond more than once before the
-mystery which shrouds the bank case is dispelled. It is going to be a
-long chase, I fear, Miss Hathaway. But I hope to come to you some day
-and tell you of its successful end.”
-
-“I hope so,” she replies dreamily, her thoughts far away.
-
-“You have heard nothing more from your sister?”
-
-“Nothing.” Her look is frank.
-
-“I can tell you nothing of our plans,” says Ashley, “further than that
-our principal endeavor will be to discover Ernest Stanley.”
-
-“Ernest Stanley?” repeats Miss Hathaway. “Oh, the young man who was
-pardoned from State prison on Memorial Day. Do you think he committed
-the crime?”
-
-“Frankly, no. But we believe that he knows something of its
-perpetration. In other words, we regard him as the key to the mystery.”
-
-“And Derrick Ames?” questions Miss Hathaway, with the anxious expression
-of yesterday in her gaze.
-
-“Derrick Ames must be found, also. If you could give me any
-information—”
-
-“I can tell you nothing,” she replies hurriedly.
-
-“Ralph Felton is another absentee whose presence is earnestly desired,”
-he resumes.
-
-“You say you do not believe that Stanley is the guilty man. Does it,
-then, lie between Ralph Felton and—”
-
-“And Derrick Ames?” finishes Ashley. “Not necessarily. There is another,
-but for excellent reasons I should prefer not to mention the name. Have
-you any plans for the future?”
-
-“No definite plans. Mr. Cyrus Felton has been appointed executor of the
-estate and after that has been settled I shall probably make my home at
-his house.”
-
-“At Cyrus Felton’s?” murmurs Ashley, in such a peculiar voice that Miss
-Hathaway looks at him in surprise.
-
-“Yes; that is the only place I can go to at present. He has long been a
-friend of the family.”
-
-“Have you no relatives—in Boston, New York, or elsewhere?”
-
-“No near relatives. It will not be very long ere I shall have to make a
-home for myself. I am told that the estate will settle for very little,”
-confesses Miss Hathaway, with a red spot in each pale cheek. Ashley
-understands and regards her sympathetically.
-
-There is a short, somewhat embarrassing silence. Then Ashley rises
-regretfully. He says:
-
-“I am afraid it must be good-bye—or, perhaps, au revoir. I shall hope to
-see you again before the summer is gone.”
-
-“I trust so,” Miss Hathaway responds, this time quite cordially, as she
-gives him her hand at parting, and Ashley holds it an instant longer
-than ordinary courtesy calls for. And as he walks slowly away from the
-house he carries with him the vision of a tall girl, with a pure white
-face and sad blue eyes, into which the sunlight will some day come
-again.
-
-At night he and Barker take the Montreal express for New York.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Summer drifts into autumn and autumn into winter. Life goes on much the
-same in Raymond. The Hathaway mystery gradually fades from public
-interest, and it is set down as a crime that will never be explained.
-
-The Raymond National Bank has closed its doors. The robbery of its vault
-was a blow from which it found it impossible to recover.
-
-No tidings are received of Derrick Ames and Helen Hathaway or of Ralph
-Felton. None, unless they are in the keeping of the silent, stern-faced
-Cyrus Felton or the beautiful girl with the sad blue eyes who abides
-under his roof.
-
-Every Sunday, in rain or in sunshine, mid heat or cold, Louise Hathaway
-may be seen ascending the hill in the little cemetery by which Wild
-River sings its way, her mission of love to deposit a basket of flowers
-upon a grave at the head of which stands a plain white shaft bearing,
-besides the name and dates, the simple inscription, “Faithful Unto
-Death.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XV.
-
- SHADOWS OF COMING EVENTS.
-
-
-It is early in the evening. Jack Ashley is seated at his desk in the
-Hemisphere office enjoying his pipe preliminary to setting forth on an
-assignment.
-
-The month is March. Nearly a year has elapsed since Ashley’s first visit
-to the Vermont town which, for a brief space, came into the world’s eye
-as the scene of the mysterious death of Cashier Roger Hathaway in the
-Raymond National Bank. During this time no further light has been shed
-on the mystery, which has gradually dropped from the thoughts of all
-save a few persons, two of whom are Ashley and John Barker, the
-detective.
-
-Jack hears from Barker occasionally. The latter is busy on other work,
-but he still keeps a live interest in what he regards as the case of his
-life, and both he and his newspaper colaborer hope some day to astonish
-Vermont, and incidentally the country, by solving the Hathaway mystery,
-one of the most remarkable in the criminal annals of New England.
-
-But as the months slipped by Ashley’s stock of confidence decreased
-slightly and to-night finds him wondering whether he will ever have the
-privilege of handing the news editor a bundle of “copy,” with the remark
-“There is an exclusive that is worth while.”
-
-“I have helped run down a number of crimes and fasten them upon the
-guilty persons,” he soliloquizes, “and have flattered myself that I was
-something of a detective. But in each of those cases the trembling
-villain was on or about the scene of his crime and when you had your
-case made out all there was to do was to clap a heavy hand upon his
-shoulder. But in this Hathaway drama about all of the leading characters
-have disappeared, and the man whom we regard as the key to the mystery,
-Ernest Stanley, is the very man we are least likely to find.
-
-“But is Stanley the key?” continues Jack, stretching himself in his
-chair. “I don’t think Barker and I have attached sufficient importance
-to that blotter found on Hathaway’s desk. These fragments of sentences
-keep haunting me, even amid my daily duties. Something tells me that if
-we had the imprint of an entire page of that letter to Felton we could
-solve the mystery without finding our men. ‘These things I charge you,
-Cyrus Felton, fail not at the peril of your good name.’ ‘These things—’”
-
-Ashley is slowly scratching a match to relight his pipe, when he
-suddenly stops and his thought-wrinkled forehead smooths.
-
-“Hello! Here’s an idea, perhaps a valuable one. It is possible that
-Barker and I have been all wrong in regarding that letter as an
-accusation. The English language is elastic. ‘I charge you, Cyrus
-Felton,’—‘I charge you, I charge you, I charge you.’ Now, instead of ‘I
-accuse you,’ read ‘I adjure you.’ But ‘I adjure you,’ what? To ‘fail
-not.’ To ‘fail not’ in what? Ay, there’s the rub. I am as much in the
-dark as before. Still the idea is worth considering, and I’ll spring it
-on Barker.”
-
-Ashley finishes his smoke in silence and when the last flake of tobacco
-has yielded its solace he draws on his coat and boards an uptown car.
-
-In that brilliantly lighted section of Broadway where stands the Hoffman
-House, Jack stops a moment to chat with an acquaintance.
-
-“Say,” remarks the latter, “there’s a chap yonder staring hard at you.
-Know him?”
-
-At his friend’s suggestion Ashley turns suddenly and catches the
-searching gaze of a tall, handsome man with a dark-brown beard trimmed
-to a point. He is richly but simply attired, and his appearance is
-unmistakably that of a gentleman. As Ashley returns his stare with
-interest the stranger turns and enters the hotel.
-
-The incident is trivial, but it awakens curious emotions in Ashley, and
-absently overlooking his acquaintance’s suggestion of a visit to the
-cafe, he says an au revoir and continues up Broadway.
-
-“I have seen those eyes somewhere,” he muses, “but hang me if I can
-recall where.”
-
-As, late in the evening, his assignment covered, Ashley is sauntering
-down Broadway, he is haunted by the vision of a bearded face surrounding
-a pair of piercing eyes. He even drops in at the Hoffman House and looks
-through the bar room, cafe and reading rooms, but the handsome stranger
-is not in view.
-
-Ashley has been in Raymond once since he left it, the spring before, and
-he was kindly received by Miss Hathaway. But that was all. Not all his
-engaging manners and clever conversation could penetrate the reserve
-with which she surrounded herself, and he almost decided that she was
-indeed the marble which he professed to Barker to have solely interested
-him. Still, that pure white face, with its matchless blue eyes and the
-sad smile that occasionally lighted it, lingers vividly in his memory
-and will continue to linger until—
-
-He is at the Hemisphere office now. A very short time suffices to write
-and hand in his “copy” and then he lounges into the cable editor’s room,
-with the inquiry: “What news from over the sea, Chance?”
-
-“Nothing special except the insurrection in Cuba,” Chance tells him.
-“Affairs are getting hot down there. You can judge of the magnitude of
-to-day’s battle at Cienfuegos when you read that thirty Spaniards were
-killed and fifty captured.”
-
-“I should say so,” laughs Ashley. “The average mortality per battle is
-three men killed and four wounded, is it not?”
-
-The cable editor throws a handful of “copy” from him with a sniff of
-disgust. “One can never tell how far to trust this rot we are getting
-from Madrid and Key West,” he says. “I wish the Hemisphere had a live
-man such as you down in Cuba to give us some straight information on the
-conflict.”
-
-“Thank you. I have no desire to run up against Yellow Jack.”
-
-“Hang Yellow Jack! He is only dangerous to those half-fed raw recruits
-that the government is sending over from Spain. I have talked with Mr.
-Hone about the advantage of sending a representative to Havana or
-Santiago, and he is seriously considering it. Hold on! Here’s something
-coming now,” and Chance turns to his table.
-
-Ashley waits until the dispatch has been received, and then reads with
-interest the following special from Madrid:
-
- “Ten thousand additional troops will be dispatched to Cuba
- within a week, in response to the demand of Gen. Martinez de
- Truenos, the new captain-general of the island. Gen. Truenos has
- had experience in fighting Cuban insurgents, and a speedy
- termination of the uprising is looked for.”
-
-“Same old bluff,” comments Ashley, and then, awakened to an interest in
-Cuban affairs by the words of the cable editor, he visits the
-night-editor’s den in search of further information.
-
-The longest story is from Key West, and a portion of it runs in this
-wise:
-
- “The insurgents are winning victories every day. The Cuban
- patriots do not need more men. All they want is arms and
- ammunition.
-
- “It is whispered that the greatest difficulty with which the
- present captain-general has to contend is the conspiring among
- his own alleged supporters and advisers. One or two Spanish
- generals and a number of influential residents and land-owners
- at Havana, Santiago and other important points are suspected of
- active sympathy with the insurgents, but no proof of such
- complicity can be obtained. It is even said that the chosen
- president of the provisional republic is at present in Cuba, and
- that under the very nose of the hated oppressor he directs the
- movements of the patriot armies. It is thought that this
- condition of affairs is responsible for the change in
- captain-generals, as Truenos is reputed to be a clever diplomat
- as well as a tried soldier. The next few months will probably
- decide the fate of the republic. The Cubans must win this year
- or never.”
-
-“What do you think?” Ashley asks the night editor. “Has the island any
-chance of liberty?”
-
-“The prospects were never rosier,” is Chambers’ reply. “It is evident
-that the Castilian has an enormous job on his hands in the present
-insurrection. We received a dispatch a short while ago which has a local
-reference. I sent it up to Hone, and perhaps Ricker has it by this time.
-It states that the insurgents count upon valuable assistance from New
-York and that an expedition is being fitted out here. This wire came
-from Washington and the Spanish minister there has asked our government
-to prohibit the assistance I speak of. Hello!” as a bunch of copy is
-thrown upon his table, “the president has issued a proclamation bearing
-on the matter.”
-
-The proclamation is brief but significant. It sets forth that, without a
-violation of the friendly relations existing between Spain and the
-United States, this government cannot countenance the fitting out of
-expeditions designed to assist the insurrectionists in Cuba. A number of
-United States vessels have been ordered to patrol duty, and a rigid
-surveillance of the coast will be maintained.
-
-“That may be good government, but it is confoundedly un-American in
-sentiment,” remarks Ashley, scornfully, for he is an American through
-and through.
-
-“The government’s course was clear,” Chambers mildly observes. “The
-President could do nothing less. I do not imagine, however, that the
-patrol will be much more than perfunctory.”
-
-When Ashley reports at the Hemisphere office the next day he finds in
-his letter box two yellow envelopes. One is from the city editor and
-contains an assignment to interview Senor Rafael Manada of the Cuban
-revolutionary society in the United States. The senor is stopping at the
-Fifth Avenue and a full story on Cuban affairs from the New York end is
-wanted.
-
-“Well this is something new, at any rate,” thinks Jack, and he tears
-open the second envelope. This contains a dispatch dated from Raymond,
-Vt., the night before, and Ashley whistles softly as he comprehends the
-concise but thoroughly interesting contents:
-
- “See you to-morrow afternoon at your office. I have found
- Hathaway’s revolver. Barker.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI.
-
- THE BEGINNING OF THE TRAIL.
-
-
-“Don Rafael Manada? Yes, sir! Front, show the gentleman to No. 48.”
-
-A few minutes later Ashley is ushered into one of the most sumptuous and
-expensive suites in the big hotel.
-
-He bows gracefully to the tall gentleman who advances to meet his
-visitor, bearing in his hand the card that has preceded him. Don Rafael
-is a man at whom even the least observant would be likely to take a
-second glance. Of perhaps 40 years of age, his hair of raven hue and
-unusual abundance is still unflecked by gray. The face is of olive hue,
-cleanly shaven save as to heavy mustachios, which by an odd freak of
-nature are snow white; heavy eyebrows of the same hue as the hair
-surmount eyes of piercing brilliancy; a long, aquiline nose, lips and
-mouth a trifle too sensuous for the rest of the features, complete a
-singularly interesting countenance.
-
-“You came from the Hemisphere?” queries Don Manada, in melodious tones,
-with hardly a trace of the Castilian accent. “I am pleased to greet a
-representative of that great journal, whose influence is always cast on
-the side of right and justice. I read with the deepest emotions of
-gratitude this morning an editorial in your journal protesting against
-the proclamation which the administration has issued against the fitting
-out of expeditions designed to aid the insurrection in Cuba. Your paper
-properly urged that the United States government should recognize the
-Cubans as belligerents. Ah, my dear sir, could that be done, Cuba would
-be a free republic within the twelvemonth,” finishes Manada,
-enthusiastically.
-
-“It was to secure an expression of opinion from you on the outlook in
-Cuba and the preparations being made in this country that I have been
-commissioned to interview you, Don Rafael,” says Jack Ashley.
-
-“Anything that it would be proper for me to say, as the agent of the
-Cuban revolutionary party, I shall be glad to give,” continues Manada,
-smilingly.
-
-And now the Cuban patriot becomes imbued with nervous energy as he
-reverts to the absorbing hope and ambition of his life—the freedom of
-Cuba. He paces the floor with erect, military tread, as he speaks
-rapidly:
-
-“This war is not a capricious attempt to found an independence more to
-be feared than useful. It is the cordial congregation of Cubans of
-various origin, who are convinced that, in the conquest of liberty,
-rather than abject abasement, are acquired the virtues necessary to
-maintain our freedom. This is no race war.
-
-“In the Spanish inhabitants of Cuba the revolutionists expect to find
-such affectionate neutrality or material aid, that through them the war
-will be shorter, its disasters less and the subsequent peace more easy
-and friendly. We Cubans began the war; the Cubans and Spanish together
-will terminate it. If they do not ill-treat us, we will not ill-treat
-them. Let them respect and they will be respected. Steel will answer to
-steel and friendship to friendship. In the bosom of the son of the
-Antilles there is no hatred, and the Cuban salutes in death the Spaniard
-whom the cruelty of a conscript army tore from his home and hearth and
-brought over to assassinate in many bosoms the freedom to which he
-himself aspires. But rather than salute him in death the revolutionists
-would like to welcome him in life.”
-
-“Very good, indeed, Don Manada,” comments Ashley as he hastily jots down
-a skeleton of the impassioned words of the Cuban.
-
-“Now, to leave generalities,” says Jack, “upon what specific elements of
-strength, or of weakness on your opponents’ part do you base your hopes
-of ultimate success?”
-
-Manada smiles. “All our elements of strength, nor all the Spanish
-sources of weakness, we may not divulge yet. First, and of this I
-believe you newspaper men need not be assured, the information that
-comes from Cuba or from Madrid is entirely untrustworthy, distorted,
-colored and manufactured to suit Spanish ideas and hopes. It tells you
-that the insurrection is limited to three or four provinces. Yet you
-will notice to-day’s dispatches from Madrid state that a blockade of
-every port of Cuba is imminent, large and small, and an additional
-squadron of ten Spanish gunboats has been dispatched from Cadiz to aid
-the big fleet now patrolling Cuban waters. Think you that the Madrid
-government would declare that blockade if the insurrection were limited
-to three or four paltry provinces? Bah! I can assure you, while they may
-not now be ready or willing to declare themselves, yet touch every Cuban
-in the heart, let him whisper to you his sentiments, and you will find
-them to a man praying for the success of the revolution. You Americans,
-in the full enjoyment of true liberty, can form but a faint idea of the
-real situation in Cuba. Imagine a land where no one is free to write or
-say anything except what the government judges deem proper! Imagine a
-government ever ready to throw you into prison, confiscate your
-property, bring ruin to everything that is dear to you on earth, and to
-set over you a Spaniard to watch your acts, almost your thoughts! That
-is the way we live in Cuba. Of late the number of these spies has been
-increased by hordes. They are not all men. Some of them—and the
-shrewdest and most harmful to our cause—are women, who ingratiate
-themselves with prominent revolutionists, sometimes becoming possessed
-of invaluable plans, which they promptly reveal to the Spanish
-government. It is believed that some of these women are located in
-cities in the United States, where it is thought their presence may be
-useful to spy upon the movements of the friends of Cuba in this country.
-But of course that is a game two can play at, and we ourselves are not
-wholly unaware of the secret plans of the enemy.”
-
-“Reference has been made in some of the dispatches from Key West, Don
-Manada, to the fact that the revolutionists have become possessed of a
-steamer which has been remarkably successful in evading the Spanish
-cruisers and landing men and ammunition from the Dominican and Florida
-coasts?”
-
-Manada’s lip curls scornfully at Ashley’s use of the word “evading.”
-Then he smiles.
-
-“Did you happen to read in any of the press dispatches an account of the
-loss of the Spanish man-of-war Mercedes?”
-
-Ashley has seen a casual reference to the disaster. “She ran on a reef
-near the Great Exuma, while pursuing a suspected filibustering steamer,
-did she not?”
-
-“The Mercedes was sunk in forty fathoms of water in fair and open fight
-with the Cuban cruiser Pearl of the Antilles,” in slow and measured
-tones responds Manada, his black eyes glittering. “The Spanish
-government has strenuously sought to conceal that fact, but it has
-leaked out, and only yesterday I received from Le Director de la Guerra
-a copy of El Terredo’s report of the battle. Ah, that was glorious! The
-Mercedes went down in less than seven minutes, while the Pearl was
-unharmed. Senor Ashley, we have to thank the inventive genius of your
-countrymen for the success of our gallant cruiser, for El Terredo states
-that it was the wonderful effectiveness of the new dynamite cannon and
-the Yankee gunner that accomplished the feat.”
-
-Ashley’s unfailing scent for news assures him that this interview is
-good for at least a two-column leader in the Hemisphere. Here is
-information that will make a sensation in the morning. The American
-public has been wholly in the dark as to this new element in the
-insurrection, this Cuban cruiser, with her patent dynamite gun and
-Yankee gunner, that has destroyed one of the most powerful of Spain’s
-cruisers.
-
-“El Terredo? Is he the captain of the Pearl of the Antilles, Don
-Manada?”
-
-“He is, and one of the bravest and most successful of our commanders on
-land as well as sea. Why, there is not a cruiser of the Spanish navy now
-in Cuban waters that alone would dare engage the Pearl! They are well
-aware of her prowess and the skill and bravery of her commander, whom
-they have rightly named ‘El Terredo,’ ‘the terror.’
-
-“Then we have other plans the details of which cannot be revealed. Do
-you remember how the sinking of De Gama’s Brazilian ironclad was
-effected in the revolution in that country? It did not require another
-man-of-war to destroy her. Only a little instrument less than five feet
-in length—whish! boom!—and the resistless water is gushing in a torrent
-through the sides of the ironclad. Ah, warfare is different in these
-modern days, Senor Ashley, and victory does not always rest on the side
-of the heaviest guns.”
-
-“It is said in a Washington dispatch, Don Manada, that the Spanish
-minister has received information that a formidable filibustering
-expedition is about to leave this city for Cuba. Have you any knowledge
-of the fact?”
-
-Manada shrugs his shoulders. “Quien sabe? Are not all vessels clearing
-for any port obliged to obtain papers stating their destination? And
-does not the President’s proclamation warn against the shipping of arms
-and ammunition to Cuba from American ports? But of this be assured—Cuban
-patriots will not be without arms and ammunition to bring this war to a
-successful conclusion. It is true that is what we most need now.
-Ammunition especially is not as plentiful as we could wish, but had we
-none at all, with his trusty machete a Cuban patriot is more than a
-match for a brace of the puny, boyish conscripts Spain is sending to
-find early graves on Cuban soil. In the battle of Siguanoa, of which
-also I have just received an authentic account, our comrades finally
-charged with their machetes, which they handle with wonderful skill, and
-completely routed the Spanish troops. The actual fighting masses of the
-revolutionists, senor, the soldados raso, are no mean soldiers, even
-from a northerner’s point of view. And they are not all Cuban born or
-Spanish born who have settled in Cuba and become identified with the
-island. You would be surprised, I doubt not, to learn that not a few of
-your own nationality are fighting for human liberty on the side of the
-revolutionists.”
-
-“And the character of the Spanish officers?” inquires Ashley, getting
-more and more interested.
-
-Manada frowns. “Gen. Truenos, the new captain-general, we know as yet
-only by reputation. His chief of staff, the Madrid papers state, is to
-be Gen. Murillo, who is now in this country—in this city, if I mistake
-not. He poses as a diplomat and is the head of the spy bureau. Of the
-other leading Spanish officers in Cuba, they are of the usual
-foreign-service character. Some veterans, some young and inexperienced,
-seeking to win laurels in this war, a few Spanish noblemen, whom the
-exigencies of the family purse have forced into the army. By the way,
-attached to the new captain-general’s staff, I learn there is a young
-American, a sugar planter. His name, I am told, was Felton, but he
-changed it to Alvarez. More Spanish, you see.”
-
-Felton! A question is on Ashley’s tongue, when the utter absurdity of
-connecting Ralph Felton’s identity with that of a young Cuban planter
-occurs to him and he refrains.
-
-“Well, Don Manada, I am obliged to you for the half-hour you have
-accorded me, and I only hope your words will have as convincing an
-effect on the readers of the Hemisphere as they have had on me.”
-
-“Thank you, Senor Ashley. I shall ever be pleased to meet you when your
-duties may oblige you to seek one of the Cuban revolutionary party.
-Adios.”
-
-“Well,” remarks the interviewer to himself, as he stops a moment to
-strengthen his memory by a fresh Havana, “if my friend of the bleached
-mustachios is not a rainbow chaser of the latest approved political
-character, Gen. Truenos and the Spanish army—and navy, too—have
-considerable work cut out for them in the vicinity of the Caribbean Sea.
-Hello!” he exclaims, staring at a graceful figure that is crossing
-Twenty-third Street in his direction. “If that isn’t Miss Louise
-Hathaway of Raymond, Vt., my memory for faces is entirely destroyed.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVII.
-
- A CUP OF CHOCOLATE AT MAILLARD’S.
-
-
-“It is Miss Hathaway!”
-
-“Why, Mr. Ashley!”
-
-“Then I am not quite forgotten,” smiles Jack, as he takes the little
-black-gloved hand.
-
-“Forgotten? Ah, no, indeed. I was only startled to meet one familiar
-face amid this never-ending procession of strangers. But this, I
-presume, is your native heath, Mr. Ashley? How do you carry the memory
-of so many faces?” as Ashley bows for the dozenth time toward the stream
-of pedestrians.
-
-“That is a part of our business, Miss Hathaway. A newspaper man acquires
-a passing acquaintance with all classes of society. But to drop shop
-talk, tell me of Raymond and of yourself. I feel quite an interest in
-the quaint old town. Here is Maillard’s close by. Suppose we drop in and
-have a cup of chocolate. Oh, it is quite the thing,” smiles Jack, as
-Miss Hathaway hesitates a moment. “Everybody goes to Maillard’s after a
-shopping tour.”
-
-“Then, as we are in Rome, we must imitate the Romans,” she acquiesces.
-“For surely these bundles must be quite sufficient to convict me of
-having been shopping.”
-
-When she is snugly ensconced in an alcove, with a steaming cup of the
-beverage so dear to the feminine heart before her, Jack studies her face
-across the tiny table.
-
-More beautiful if that were possible, than ever, he decides, watching
-the shifting color in the rounded cheek; with more animation—yes,
-decidedly more animation; quite a different being from the doubly
-bereaved daughter of the dead cashier of nearly a year ago. But what is
-she doing in New York? thinks Jack, with a sudden twinge in the cardiac
-region that astonishes even himself. It cannot be that she has heard
-from Derrick Ames, and besides, her sister—What rot, he mentally
-concludes, as the subject of his thoughts suddenly looks up and catches
-his puzzled expression.
-
-Miss Hathaway’s eyes twinkle. “Has it just occurred to you that you have
-left your pocketbook at home?” she asks. “Your expression was just such
-as the humorous artists attach to the subjects of such unfortunate
-contretemps.”
-
-“Ah, but that seldom does happen in real life, Miss Hathaway. No; my
-sole earthly possessions are at this moment resting securely in the
-bottom of one small pocket. But what lucky chance brought you within
-range of my defective vision on Broadway this afternoon?”
-
-“Oh, I have been a dweller in the metropolis since last Saturday. We,
-that is Mr. Felton and myself, are en route to Cuba.”
-
-“To Cuba! Pardon me, but why to that war-racked isle? You see, I have
-just returned from interviewing a native of Cuba on the situation there,
-and his description hardly makes it out as a desirable watering-place
-just at present.”
-
-Miss Hathaway laughs, a trifle nervously. “Perhaps it is rather an odd
-place to go this spring, and while I had a great desire to visit the
-country I really had no serious idea of gratifying the wish. But one
-evening while I was thinking of the matter, Mr. Felton suddenly asked me
-how I would like to go to Cuba. I said I would be delighted to go to
-escape the chill winds of March, and to my great surprise he suggested
-that we make preparations and start at once for New York. So here we
-are, and on Saturday we sail for tropic climes. But do you think there
-is any danger to Americans traveling in Cuba? I thought—I had read—that
-the disturbances were limited to some of the far inland districts and
-that there was no trouble in Havana and the larger cities.”
-
-Ashley pulls his mustache thoughtfully. “No, I do not see how there can
-be possible danger for you,” he says at last. “Be sure, to avoid any
-possible annoyance, to get your passports before leaving New York. By
-Jove,” he murmurs under his breath, “if the Hemisphere should send a man
-to Cuba, and I that man—well, that wouldn’t be half-bad.”
-
-“But why should Mr. Felton desire to go to Cuba?” Ashley asks. “I
-fancied all his interests were in Vermont.”
-
-“He says that he has some property that requires his attention there, a
-sugar plantation, I fancy, or something of the sort. Anyway, he is quite
-anxious to go.”
-
-A sugar plantation in Cuba! Jack draws a long breath and his active mind
-reverts to his interview with Don Manada. Felton-Alvarez of the
-captain-general’s staff, a young American planter! The son has evidently
-forsworn his country and by joining the Spanish army has become a
-Spanish citizen. Therefore he undoubtedly cannot be extradited. But the
-father?
-
-“How long does Mr. Felton contemplate remaining in Cuba?” Ashley asks,
-carelessly.
-
-“That will depend upon his inclinations and the condition of his
-business affairs.”
-
-“That means indefinitely,” Jack thinks. “Cyrus Felton must not go to
-Cuba!” Then aloud: “Miss Hathaway, pardon me if I revive unpleasant
-memories, but the deep personal interest I took in the case must be my
-apology. Have you heard from your sister—since—since the tragedy?”
-
-For a moment Miss Hathaway is silent, her face clouding with the sad
-thoughts of that last fateful Memorial Day. “Mr. Ashley,” she says at
-last, looking him full in the face, “I have received two letters from my
-sister Helen. She is well, and I trust happy. She was married in this
-city the day after they—she—left Raymond.”
-
-“To Derrick Ames?”
-
-Louise nods.
-
-“Are they now residing in the city?”
-
-“No; they are not now in this country—I should say this part of the
-country,” she adds, hastily.
-
-For a moment a silence falls and both absently sip their chocolate, busy
-with their thoughts. Then Ashley remarks, smilingly:
-
-“Apropos of nothing, Miss Hathaway, did you ever hear of the great
-French ball, the annual terpsichorean revel of Gotham?”
-
-“Certainly, I have read about it. I gather that it is not always
-strictly—well, not exactly in the same category with the patriarchs’
-ball.”
-
-“No—not precisely,” admits Ashley. “What I was leading up to is this: I
-suppose I shall be assigned to do the ball for the Hemisphere to-morrow
-evening—I have done it for the last two years—and a friend of mine
-kindly presented to me a pocketful of tickets. Now, I know you would
-enjoy looking in on the brilliant scene for an hour or two in the early
-part of the evening.”
-
-“Why, Mr. Ashley, I really do not see how we could. It would hardly be
-proper.”
-
-“Not perhaps to mingle with the rush, but as a casual looker-on in
-Verona the propriety could scarcely be questioned. A mask, a box where
-you could sit and listen to the really good music and watch the glitter
-and gayety, I believe you would recall the hour whiled away as one of
-thorough enjoyment. Besides—and here is the selfish part of my
-proposition—it would render the affair less of an old story to me. You
-must really say ‘yes,’” persists Ashley, as Miss Hathaway hesitates,
-with the inevitable result.
-
-“Well, if Mr. Felton is willing to pose as a ‘chaperon’ for a brief
-space, perhaps I may consent to assist the Hemisphere.”
-
-“I assure you that that appreciative journal will be deeply grateful.
-Where shall I call for your ultimatum?”
-
-“We are stopping at the St. James. And now I must hurry home to examine
-my purchases. Thank you so much for your kindness, Mr. Ashley. I am so
-glad to have met you again. Good-by.”
-
-“Au revoir—until the morrow,” Jack responds, as Miss Hathaway’s elegant
-figure threads its way through the throng. “I wonder what the
-straight-laced Vermont maiden would say if she could look into the
-wine-room of the garden about an hour before the French ball makes its
-last kick. But she won’t, though. The first hour or two of the function
-is as decorous as an afternoon tea on Fifth Avenue—rather more so, I
-fancy. And now to the office to fire the Cuban heart with Don Manada’s
-screed.”
-
-But seated at his desk at the Hemisphere office, Ashley’s thoughts
-persist in straying away from the yellow sheets he is rapidly covering
-with the Manada interview.
-
-The Raymond tragedy mingles with thoughts of Cuba. His previously
-conceived ideas are undergoing a decided metamorphosis. The knowledge
-that the elder Felton is going to Cuba, where his son, according to the
-description of Manada, is apparently settled, and for a long period, if
-not forever, suggests to the newspaper man the conclusion that Mr.
-Felton must have been aware of his son’s movements since the sudden
-departure from Raymond; may even have counseled that flight. Nay, more,
-that father and son are jointly implicated in the death of Cashier
-Hathaway. The theory just evolved grows stronger the more Jack considers
-the circumstances. On Cyrus Felton, then, depends the unraveling of the
-mystery. And he left Raymond suddenly, according to Miss Hathaway’s
-admission. Barker, judging from his message on the finding of the
-revolver, must have been in Raymond before or during the departure of
-Cyrus Felton. Is it not possible, then, that the ex-bank president
-became possessed of the knowledge that Barker is again actively at work
-on the case; that he further became aware that Barker had, or was likely
-to get, some important clew, such as the discovery of the revolver, for
-instance; that he considered discretion the better part of valor and
-determined to flee the country and join his son in Cuba?
-
-Ashley’s busy pen ceases to skim over the paper for a moment, as he
-rears this dazzling edifice.
-
-“I believe I have struck the bull’s-eye,” he reflects. “If only Barker
-has a little more evidence to back up the finding of the revolver, Miss
-Hathaway may not take that trip to Cuba after all—at least, not with her
-present amiable traveling companion.”
-
-A few moments later the big batch of copy, the result of Ashley’s visit
-to Don Manada, is tossed upon the desk of the city editor. Then, still
-preoccupied and unusually untalkative for jovial Jack Ashley, the
-interviewer has again drawn on overcoat and gloves and is leaving the
-entrance to the Hemisphere office when a hand is dropped on his
-shoulder, as Detective Barker earnestly greets him:
-
-“You’re just the man I want to see. Where can we indulge in a quiet talk
-for half an hour?”
-
-“Come right up to the cable editor’s room. He won’t be in for an hour or
-two.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XVIII.
-
- BARKER DECIDES TO STRIKE.
-
-
-“Well, my boy,” begins Barker, “it’s a long lane that has no turn, and I
-think we have reached the beginning of the end of this Hathaway mystery.
-There is the weapon that sent Roger Hathaway to eternity Memorial Day of
-last year,” handing it to Ashley, with a complacent air. “I am not a
-betting man, or I would wager a reasonable sum that, ere the anniversary
-of the crime rolls around, the murderer will be safely incarcerated in
-the Mansfield County jail in Vermont.”
-
-Ashley examines curiously the weapon Barker has produced. It is an
-ordinary 32-caliber Smith & Wesson revolver, of the bull-dog variety,
-covered with rust, and all of the five chambers, with possibly one
-exception, contain unused cartridges.
-
-“Yes, there is one empty chamber,” responds Barker, as Ashley attempts
-ineffectually to turn the rusty cylinder, “and that sent poor old
-Hathaway out of the world. And now I will tell you of some important
-clews that I have succeeded in running down since I saw you last.
-
-“You know I subscribed for the Raymond local newspaper, and a mighty
-good investment that $1.25 proved. Week before last the paper contained
-a local item about a boy’s finding a revolver on the bank of Wild River.
-It was only a ten-to-one shot that the revolver picked up by the river
-bank was Hathaway’s missing gun, but I took the short end and posted off
-to Raymond. The result of my trip you now hold in your hand.
-
-“The little chap who found the revolver had picked it up close to the
-opposite bank from which it had been thrown. It was quite a stretch
-beyond the deep pool that we explored. You see I was fully a hundred
-yards from Felton when he hurled the revolver into the stream, and I
-miscalculated the force he put into the throw. His feeling of loathing
-for the hateful weapon was such that he hurled it nearly across the
-river. Even then, it would have been covered by two or three feet of
-water had not the river been dammed last fall, a few rods above the
-place, to furnish power for a sawmill. That left only an inch or two of
-water over the revolver, and little Jimmy Jones, or whatever his name
-was, found it there while prowling about the river bank. It is Roger
-Hathaway’s revolver, too, beyond a doubt. I had Sibley, who was teller
-of the bank, and who has seen it in Hathaway’s desk a thousand times,
-examine it, and he positively identifies it.
-
-“So far, so good. That revolver rivets a mighty strong link, I take it,
-to the chain we have already forged about Cyrus Felton. But the
-situation had become somewhat complicated, I found after I secured
-possession of the revolver. Felton has skipped from Raymond, taking the
-Hathaway girl with him, and evidently does not intend to return for some
-time, if indeed at all. Consequently our next and most imperative duty
-is to find where he now is and see that he does not get beyond our
-reach.”
-
-“I can do that in five minutes,” Ashley quietly assures the detective.
-“Cyrus Felton and Miss Louise Hathaway are now at the St. James hotel in
-this city. They sail for Cuba next Saturday.”
-
-“Good,” remarks the phlegmatic Barker. “That is luck on a par with
-finding the revolver. But when Cyrus Felton leaves New York it will be
-to go back to Vermont. Bound for Cuba, eh? Why did he select that
-country instead of Europe, I wonder?”
-
-“Because his son is in Cuba. Barker, I opine that it will be necessary
-for both of us to revise our theories of the murder,” continues Ashley.
-“In the judgment of the undersigned, both Feltons, father and son, are
-equally implicated in that crime. As to which actually fired the fatal
-shot, I am not prepared to say. But I am confident that both were in the
-bank when Hathaway was shot. I learned to-day that there is a young
-American, a planter, in Cuba who has joined the Spanish army as an
-officer on the staff of the captain-general. His name is, or was,
-Felton. Now comes the senior Felton, en route to Cuba. Why should he go
-to Cuba just at this time while the island is in the throes of
-insurrection? He tells Miss Hathaway that he has business interests
-there—a sugar plantation. Isn’t it clear that he is going to join his
-son?”
-
-Barker taps his forehead reflectively. “The idea is plausible,” he
-admits. “But what in the name of the great hornspoon is he taking Miss
-Hathaway there for? It isn’t possible that he is so cold-blooded, so
-absolutely devoid of conscience, that he would wed the daughter of the
-man he had slain?”
-
-“Decidedly not,” returns Ashley, with very like a snort of disgust at
-the suggestion of the possibility of Louise Hathaway becoming Cyrus
-Felton’s wife. “Miss Hathaway is Felton’s ward, and of course he is
-obliged to take her with him. Besides she herself is anxious to go to
-Cuba. She told me so this afternoon.”
-
-“Anxious to go herself, eh?” repeats Barker. “Well, there is no
-accounting for tastes. I think if I were going on a pleasure trip,
-however, I should select some other spot than that home of Yellow Jack
-and the machete. But”—the detective’s forehead is wrinkled in
-thought—“you don’t suppose she has any friends in Cuba whom she is
-anxious to see—her sister or Derrick Ames?”
-
-Ashley considers this possibility a moment. “It is possible,” he
-exclaims. “She admitted she had received letters from her sister, who
-was well and happy—but not in this country, she said at first, and then
-changed it to ‘not in this section of the country.’ Ames and her sister
-may be in Cuba, as well as Ralph Felton; but not, I will wager a good
-deal, in the same vicinity—not, at least, if Ames knows it. Barker, it
-seems to me that instead of this matter becoming simplified it is daily
-growing more complicated. The thing for us to do is to cut the Gordian
-knot at once and bring matters to a climax.”
-
-“There is only one way to do it.”
-
-“Exactly. Arrest Cyrus Felton, and charge him with being the murderer of
-Roger Hathaway, or an accomplice before or after the act.”
-
-Barker picks up the revolver again.
-
-“We have got a good deal of strong evidence against him,” he says,
-slowly; “yet I should like to get the son in the same net. With the two
-of them jointly accused and jointly tried I am certain we could unravel
-the mystery. I have evidence against the elder Felton that I have not
-yet told you; in fact, what I consider as a sufficient motive for the
-crime. The absence of a good, healthy motive, you know, was the weak
-link in our chain.
-
-“The president of those two banks, I am convinced, was short in his
-accounts with both institutions. In other words, he had used the bank’s
-securities to tide over his own financial affairs, which I have
-discovered, were not in the flourishing condition supposed. Although he
-was aware that Felton’s accounts were overdrawn, as was evidenced by the
-writing on the blotter, Hathaway was apparently ignorant of the fact
-that the president had taken many of the bank’s securities and
-hypothecated them for his own account. That was done by the president
-through the connivance of his son, the bookkeeper. Get the idea?”
-
-Ashley nods.
-
-“Now then: You will recall that Cyrus Felton told you, after the murder,
-that nearly $50,000 in available cash and about half as much more in
-securities had been stolen. He testified at the inquest that some
-securities had been taken. My theory is that not one single one of those
-securities was taken from the bank that night. ’Cause why? Because they
-had previously been extracted by Cyrus Felton and his son. And the cash?
-That, I believe was Ralph Felton’s share for his part in the tragedy.
-Perhaps father and son had planned for the latter to rob the bank that
-night—the former anxious for the covering up of the loss of the
-securities, the latter covetous of the money. The time was drawing near
-when the annual examination of the savings bank was due. It was to have
-taken place in June. Then the discovery that many of the ‘jackets’ that
-should contain securities were empty was inevitable. But Cashier
-Hathaway was at the bank that night. The son may have been concealed in
-that closet, awaiting his opportunity. The cashier, no longer willing to
-permit the president’s overdrafts, wrote that imperative note to Cyrus
-Felton. The latter visited the bank. An altercation ensued. Heated words
-were uttered. Hathaway may have discovered the loss of the securities.
-The president and cashier, old men both, engaged in a scuffle. Perhaps
-the president sought to wrest the key to the vault from the cashier’s
-hands. At any rate, a struggle. Ralph Felton leaped from his
-hiding-place, and seizing the cashier’s revolver, which he knew was kept
-in the desk, rushed to the assistance of his father. The fatal shot,
-and—father and son gazed in dismay at each other across the dead body of
-the faithful cashier. The rest is simple of explanation—the rifling of
-the vault and the subsequent flight of the son. Ashley, that is my
-revised theory of the murder of Roger Hathaway. What do you think of
-it?”
-
-“It is worthy of your perspecuity, Barker, and in some respects it
-appears flawless. Yet—well, sometimes I have a sort of intuition that we
-are off the right track altogether. Ah, Barker, if we could but find
-that chap I saw in the bushes that morning, Ernest Stanley. Now that you
-have revised your theory, and in the light of recent developments, I
-feel more than ever that Stanley possesses the key that will unlock the
-inner doors of the mystery.
-
-“However, that is neither here nor there, for Ernest Stanley has as
-completely vanished as though the earth had opened and swallowed him up.
-It is almost inexplicable.”
-
-“No stranger than the fading away of Derrick Ames and Helen Hathaway.
-You know we traced them to this city, and the most searching
-investigation by both the metropolitan police and our own men could not
-find them or ascertain for a certainty whether they went west or east.
-
-“But to return to the Feltons. Those two missing leaves from the bank
-ledger could a tale unfold, I fancy, in relation to Cyrus Felton’s
-precise relations with the bank. Yes, on the whole, I believe we have
-sufficient evidence to strike. He is at the St. James, you say? I guess
-I had better arrest him at once, and then, if he declines to go back to
-Vermont without extradition papers, I can proceed to Montpelier
-to-morrow and get the necessary documents in season to start back to
-Raymond by Friday—unlucky day for him, I fancy. Well, old man, you will
-have to spill a whole bottle of ink on this, I suppose. Will you spring
-the full story in the morning?”
-
-Jack starts suddenly. “By Jove!” he exclaims, looking at the detective,
-with a rueful glance, “it seems like a brutally cold-blooded thing to
-say, but do you know, I have invited Felton and Miss Hathaway to look in
-on the French ball to-morrow evening, and now—if the deed wasn’t an
-apparent refinement of cruelty, I would ask you to postpone the arrest
-of Felton till day after to-morrow.”
-
-“You are positive he does not contemplate sailing for Cuba till
-Saturday?” inquires Barker.
-
-“So Miss Hathaway said. And, yes.” Jack’s eye has run hastily down the
-advertised dates of sailings in the Hemisphere. “The Mallory Line
-steamer, City of Callao, sails for Havana and the West Indies on
-Saturday. That is the steamer they are evidently booked for. But to make
-assurance doubly sure I will telephone to the office of the steamship
-line and ascertain if staterooms have been secured for them.”
-
-Barker nods approvingly at the precaution.
-
-“Yes,” the reply comes over the wire, “Mr. Cyrus Felton and Miss
-Hathaway are booked for the Callao.”
-
-“For Havana?”
-
-“Yes; for Havana.”
-
-“That settles that, then,” observes Barker, cheerfully. “Felton can
-enjoy his little fling at the garden, and subsequently have something to
-think about while he awaits the action of the grand jury.”
-
-Inured as he is to tragic scenes and happenings, Jack winces slightly at
-thought of the part he expects to play in acting as the “guide,
-philosopher and friend” of Cyrus Felton on probably his last night of
-liberty.
-
-“By the way,” he remarks, “you said Felton had made preparations for an
-extended absence from Raymond. Did he cause that to become generally
-known in the town?”
-
-“Per contra, as the lawyers say, no one in Raymond had any idea that he
-contemplated a trip to Cuba, understanding that he is off on a business
-trip to New York. A little judicious investigation revealed the fact
-that he had quietly severed every business tie that should connect him
-with Raymond. Even his house, I found, he has mortgaged to the chimneys,
-and then leased for a period of ten years to a western man, to whom, by
-the way, he has disposed of his interest in the quarries. His share in
-the bank block he sold two months ago, taking a mortgage for two-thirds
-the purchase price, but this mortgage he last week transferred to the
-Vermont Life Insurance Company, receiving cash therefor. Even his horses
-have been shipped to Boston and sold. All this Felton has accomplished
-so quietly that, as I said before, no one in Raymond suspects that he is
-not as deeply interested financially in the town as ever.
-
-“Well, on the whole,” finishes Barker, “I am glad we have concluded to
-postpone the arrest a couple of days, for I have some personal matters I
-must attend to. What have you on hand to-night?”
-
-“Just an hour or so at the Madison Square Garden. Come to dinner with me
-and we’ll go to the Garden together. I want to talk this matter over
-further,” says Ashley.
-
-Barker acquiesces, and as the newspaper man leads the way to the street
-he murmurs to himself:
-
-“So the blow falls on Wednesday. Well, it will make one of the most
-interesting ‘beats’ in the history of the Hemisphere and I guess I had
-better begin on the story to-night.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XIX.
-
- PHILLIP VAN ZANDT.
-
-
-“What are they playing now, Phillip?” Isabel Harding draws the program
-to her and scans the musical numbers listed thereon.
-
-“Is it possible that you do not recognize the immortal unfinished
-Schubert symphony?” her companion asks, with good-natured sarcasm.
-
-“You know I cannot tell one symphony from another,” Mrs. Harding
-remarks, pettishly. “I wish you would pay less attention to the music
-and more to me.”
-
-Phillip Van Zandt smiles, but makes no reply to this reproach. And while
-he listens intently to the divine music which the orchestra is making,
-his companion sips her claret punch with a pretty frown upon her face.
-
-The place is Madison Square Garden; the occasion, one of a series of
-classical concerts which Mr. Walter Damrosch and his orchestra are
-furnishing New York.
-
-The two—Mrs. Harding and Mr. Van Zandt—are sitting by the wall in a
-comparatively uncrowded section of the Garden and more than one person
-who glances at them remarks that they are a handsome couple.
-
-Phillip Van Zandt is not far from 30 years of age. There is nothing
-effeminate about his singularly handsome face; the closely trimmed brown
-beard does not conceal the firm, almost hard lines about the mouth. A
-mass of dark-brown curls cluster about a noble forehead that fronts a
-well-shaped head. But the striking features of the face are the eyes.
-Something inscrutable lurks in their dark-brown depths, now dreamy and
-tender, and again cold and glittering.
-
-Who he is and what he is are points upon which his nearest
-acquaintances—he has no intimate friends—have never succeeded in
-satisfying themselves. He came somewhere out of the West less than a
-year ago. He occupies luxurious quarters at the Wyoming apartment house,
-spends money freely, and seems to be drifting through existence with the
-insouciance of a man who has lived his life and who looks forward to
-nothing this side of Charon’s ferry—or perhaps beyond.
-
-He plays at cards and plunges at the track and wins or loses with the
-inevitable composure which characterizes his every action. To men he is
-cold, often insolent; to women he is indifferent, although infinitely
-courteous. Handsome, distingue, wealthy, witty in a dry, cynical sort of
-way, he is a man who could be immensely popular with his fellows and
-fascinating to the other sex. That he is neither one nor the other is
-his peculiarity.
-
-His companion of this evening, Isabel Harding, is a personage, who would
-attract instant attention in a crowd of attractive women. She is
-magnificently proportioned—a splendid animal, as Van Zandt remarked when
-first his careless gaze rested upon her. Her hair is black as midnight;
-her eyes, large and lustrous, can either flash with the fury of the
-tiger or beam with the softness of the dove. Her mouth is somewhat
-large, but it is firm, and between full, scarlet lips gleam two arcs of
-strong, milk-white teeth.
-
-She has known occasions when propriety was not finically insisted upon,
-but on this night she is as demure as innocence at 16. For she knows Van
-Zandt well enough to understand that, while virtue and worth may not
-interest him, viciousness and unworthiness decidedly do not. And the
-least discerning student of human nature can see that she loves
-him—loves him blindly, madly, and—hopelessly.
-
-Van Zandt cares nothing for her, save in his indifferent way, and she
-knows it. But she does not despair. She is a woman.
-
-Somewhere in Bohemia, Van Zandt met Isabel Harding. She interested him,
-she was so unlike the other women at the little French restaurant where
-he had dropped in to get lunch and a bottle of really good wine. Some
-small service by him rendered sufficed to establish between the two a
-camaraderie that continued until the present. It witnessed no alteration
-of sentiment on the part of Van Zandt. But Isabel—she began by admiring
-and finished by worshiping.
-
-He never asked who or what she was, although she was obviously a woman
-with a story to tell. She was a widow, she said. Widows are many in
-Bohemia.
-
-“Some day I will give you my history,” she told him. But Van Zandt only
-laughed and asked, “Shall we go to the play to-night?”
-
-“He cares no more for me than for the glass he is holding,” Mrs. Harding
-now thinks, as she watches his face, turned again toward the orchestra.
-“Don’t you ever think of anything except music?” she demands, a little
-impatiently.
-
-“Oh, yes; of a great many other things. For instance, I was this minute
-thinking of you.”
-
-“Oh, indeed?” ironically. “Something vastly complimentary, no doubt.”
-
-Van Zandt smiles emphatically. “I was thinking that I should like to set
-you to music, if I possessed the faculty,” he says, as he glances
-humorously at his companion’s pouting face.
-
-“What should you write, a waltz refrain or a dancehall ditty?” asks Mrs.
-Harding.
-
-“Neither; I should write a symphony, a wild sort of affair,” he smiles.
-“It would begin quietly and run along for bars and bars in a theme that
-would suggest days when the heart was young and life seemed a pathway of
-roses. This would give place to scherzo and the whole movement would be
-light and playful and singing. Then the music would begin to grow
-troublous, anon turbulent, and would finally burst into uncontrollable
-tumult. This would gradually pass away, and the third movement would be
-capriccio, the music now flashing fire, again singing on like a mountain
-brook, on and on, and on.”
-
-“You are very discerning, Mr. Van Zandt,” says Isabel, biting her lip.
-“What name should you bestow on this remarkable symphony?”
-
-“I should call it ‘Isabel.’”
-
-“And the last movement, what would that be?”
-
-“Oh, that would be unfinished, like Schubert’s,” Van Zandt replies, with
-a provoking smile.
-
-“Fortunately. For if you design to complete it you will have to do so
-from memory. I am going away,” declares Isabel, with a flush in each
-cheek.
-
-“Going away? Where?”
-
-“Ah, mon ami, that is for you to find out. Besides, what do you care? I
-have had an offer—diplomatic service, I believe it is politely called. I
-leave in two days.”
-
-“By Jove! You would do well in diplomatic circles,” exclaims Van Zandt,
-glancing at her in frank admiration. “You said nothing of this before.”
-
-“I have only just made up my mind. Your symphony decided me,” Isabel
-avers with some bitterness.
-
-“The Garden is filling up,” Van Zandt remarks abruptly. About all the
-tables around them are beginning to be taken. “Hello! There’s that chap
-again,” he adds, as two men seat themselves at an adjoining table and
-fall to chatting.
-
-“Didn’t know I was a musical critic, did you, Barker? Well, you see our
-regular music expert is off duty sick to-night, so they put me on the
-job. It’s a short one.”
-
-“Your duties, friend Ashley, appear to be beautifully diversified.”
-
-“They are that. Anything from a murder to a concert. I suppose Raymond
-is about the same as when we left it, about a year ago?”
-
-“To a dot. Same crowd on the hotel veranda. Same symposium of hay, horse
-and village gossip.”
-
-“Just the same it is a great country. I’d give several good iron dollars
-to be back for one morning in that gorge near South Ashfield, on the old
-wood road where I ran upon Ernest Stanley.”
-
-“Push over a bit. Here’s another party,” says Barker, as a jolly quartet
-approach.
-
-“Plenty of room,” they declare, as they find chairs and seat themselves
-close by. The man nearest to the detective and the newspaper man is a
-stout, florid-faced party, whose clean-cut visage and smooth bearing
-betoken the sporting man. His companions are well-dressed young men
-about town.
-
-“Hold on, major,” remarks one of the latter, interrupting the stout
-party in the act of giving an order to the waiter. “I’ll buy this round,
-gentlemen, and we will make it wine. I played in luck to-day.”
-
-“So? Cards run well, eh?”
-
-“Never saw them come easier. I had a bit of luck, major, which does not
-materialize often enough to render poker a continuously profitable
-employment. I sat between two men who raised the pot four times before
-the draw, and I filled up a straight flush.”
-
-“You stood the raises on a bob flush?”
-
-“I had to. It was open at both ends. Basket of wine, waiter, and fetch
-it in a hurry,” adds the young man, whom his friends call Chauncey, and
-he gives the waiter a tip that sends him a-flying.
-
-The major smiles as the reminiscences of innumerable interesting
-jack-pots are stirred up by the story of his young friend’s good luck.
-
-“Speaking of straight flushes,” he observes, “I never saw a hand fill
-more neatly or appropriately than during a little game in which I was
-sitting three or four years ago.”
-
-“Story by the major, gentlemen,” cries Chauncey, rapping the table to
-order and receiving the angry glances of a number of people about him
-who are trying to hear the music. “Here comes the wine. We will drink a
-toast to all straight flushes, high or low, and then the major shall
-have the floor.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XX.
-
- A SUPPOSITION BECOMES A FACT.
-
-
-“You remember when Phil Clark was running up on Fifth Avenue,” begins
-the major, after the wine has been brought and pronounced only
-half-iced.
-
-“Rather,” responds Chauncey, dryly. “I dropped five hundred there one
-night and it wasn’t much of a game at that.”
-
-“Well, I drifted into Phil’s one night three years ago, more or less,
-and found the place as quiet as a country village. There was no big game
-going on, and mighty few small ones. In one of the rooms I found Col.
-Dunnett. You remember Dunnett. We were chatting and commenting on the
-dullness of the evening, when two young men came into the room and,
-after a glance at us, one of them suggested a hand at poker.
-
-“I knew one of the young men slightly. His name was Stanley, I believe.
-Quiet, reserved sort of a chap. He hadn’t been in New York long, he
-said. Made books out at the Sheepshead races. I did not fancy his
-friend, who had been drinking some and was inclined to be a bit noisy.
-His name—let me see—Fenton, or Fallon; no, Felton, that was what Stanley
-called him.
-
-“We began the game and it broke up after the hand I started in to tell
-you about. The betting simmered down to Felton and Stanley. Felton held
-four aces and bet all the cash he had. ‘I ought to raise you,’ said
-Stanley; ‘still,’ he added, ‘if that is all the cash you have—’
-
-“‘You needn’t worry about me,’ sneered Felton, as he took a check-book
-from his pocket. ‘I said that was all the change I had with me, but my
-check is good.’ He scratched off a check and threw it on the table. ‘You
-can see that, or call my previous bet, as you please.’
-
-“Stanley was as calm as I am now. He leaned over to me, and, spreading
-his cards, asked: ‘Major, will you loan me a thousand a moment to bet
-this hand?’ I glanced at it and had a trifle of difficulty in
-restraining my surprise. He had filled, as he told me afterward, the
-middle of a straight flush, king up!
-
-“‘Cert, my boy,’ I replied, cheerfully, to his request, and I passed
-over two $500 bills. Stanley tossed them on the table, and looked
-inquiringly at Felton. The latter, with a smile of sublime confidence,
-spread out four aces. ‘No good,’ was Stanley’s calm announcement. He
-exhibited his hand, and then pocketing the stakes, after returning me my
-thousand, he remarked: ‘Thank you, gentlemen, for your entertainment. I
-don’t believe I’ll play any more to-night.’ And putting on his coat and
-hat, he left the room.
-
-“Felton sat like one dazed for some moments. Then he walked to the bar
-and after a stiff drink hurried off. I never saw either of them after
-that night.”
-
-Ashley and Barker have been silent and interested listeners to this yarn
-by the major. As the latter and his friends rise Ashley rises also and
-taps the major on the shoulder. “Pardon the intrusion,” he says, with an
-engaging smile. “I have been vastly interested in your poker story, sir,
-for the reason that I think I know one of the players—Felton, I believe
-you called him. Do you happen to recall what sort of a looking chap he
-was?”
-
-“Hanged if I remember,” replies the major, wondering at the other’s
-earnestness.
-
-“Was he a rather tall, good-looking young fellow, with light-brown hair
-and eyes and a tawny mustache?” persists Ashley.
-
-“Now that you speak of the mustache, I believe that your description
-fits him. He had a heavy, yellowish mustache, which he was in the habit
-of biting, as though his dinner did not suit him.”
-
-“Thank you,” says Ashley. “Will you have something more to drink,
-gentlemen?”
-
-But the major and his party take themselves off and Ashley resumes his
-seat with a satisfied smile.
-
-“So, Barker, we hit it about right after all, eh?”
-
-“It would appear so,” returns the detective complacently. “We now know
-what we have assumed to have been the case—that Ernest Stanley suffered
-imprisonment two years for another’s crime, and that the real criminal,
-the man who forged Cyrus Felton’s name, was none other than his son,
-Ralph Felton.”
-
-As Barker pronounces these words Ashley hears a smothered exclamation
-behind him and turns quickly. But all he sees is a gentleman and lady
-gathering their wraps preparatory to taking their departure. The man’s
-back is toward Ashley, but the latter waits until the party faces his
-way and then for the space of a second their eyes meet.
-
-“There is only one more selection, and it does not amount to much,” Van
-Zandt tells Mrs. Harding, and they join the crowd that is leaving the
-garden.
-
-“Do you know those two men who sat at the next table to us? The younger
-looked at you as though he knew you and was waiting to be recognized.”
-
-“Your imagination, cara mia. I know neither of them,” replies Van Zandt,
-lightly. Then, as he hands her into a carriage at the corner and says
-“Kensington” to the driver, he holds Isabel’s hand a moment at parting
-and inquires gravely: “So you are really going away then?”
-
-“In two days,” she answers, and searches his face for some evidence of
-regret. It is as impassive as the sphinx.
-
-“Well, I suppose I shall see you at the French ball to-morrow evening?”
-
-“You may, if you care to look for a Russian court lady, attired wholly
-in black.”
-
-“Rest assured that the festivities will be robed in sables until I find
-her. Good-night.” Van Zandt closes the carriage door, watches it a
-moment as it rattles up the avenue and then saunters toward Broadway.
-
-Ashley and Barker have remained at their table in the garden and Jack is
-telling the detective that for the second time within twenty-four hours
-he has caught the stare of the man with the brown beard and piercing
-eyes. “I have seen that face somewhere,” he mutters, as he wrinkles his
-brow in a desperate effort to burst the memory cell that prisons the
-secret. Suddenly he smites the table a blow that sets the glasses
-jingling and invites the disapprobation of the waiter. “Oh, memory!
-Memory, thou sleepy, shiftless warder of the brain!” he cries.
-
-“What is the matter now?” asks Barker.
-
-“Keep calm, old chap,” returns Ashley, gripping the detective’s wrist.
-“Keep calm while I confess to you that we have let slip through our
-hands the key to the Hathaway mystery!”
-
-“What!” almost shouts the detective, starting to his feet. “You mean—”
-
-“I mean that the man with the brown beard and stiletto optics who just
-left us is my friend of the mountain gorge. He is Ernest Stanley!”
-
-“Well, he has slipped us this time,” says the detective, disconsolately,
-as they stand outside the garden and sweep the street with anxious gaze.
-
-“Not yet,” Ashley rejoins cheerfully. “See! There he is beyond that
-third light, handing his magnificent companion into a carriage.”
-
-“Call a cab and follow them,” says the detective, starting toward the
-line of conveyances pulled up at the curb.
-
-“No need of that,” Ashley interrupts. “He is not going to ride.” At that
-moment it was that Van Zandt closed the door to the carriage which bore
-Mrs. Harding to the Kensington, and as he starts toward Broadway the
-detective and the newspaper man follow at a cautious distance.
-
-Unconscious of the espionage Van Zandt starts uptown at a swinging gait.
-At Thirty-second Street he branches into Sixth Avenue, and the two men
-behind him wonder that he does not ride. At the park he turns down
-Fifty-ninth Street and finally enters the Wyoming apartment house,
-leaving Ashley and Barker staring up at the brownstone elevation.
-
-The former waits five minutes and then pulls the bell. “The name of the
-gentleman who has just gone upstairs?” he asks the colored attendant who
-responds.
-
-“Mr. Phillip Van Zandt,” replies the sable youth, as he slips a
-half-dollar into his pocket.
-
-“Van Zandt—is that his name?” queries Ashley, a trifle disappointed,
-although he might have expected a strange name. Then the porter tells
-him that the gentleman with the brown beard has been a resident of the
-Wyoming for several months; that he is a wealthy bachelor, and a variety
-of other equally important information.
-
-“Well, what do you think now?” asks Barker, as they walk over to the
-elevated road.
-
-“I haven’t changed my opinion,” is Ashley’s response. “I believe that
-Phillip Van Zandt is or was Ernest Stanley.”
-
-“Well, we have him located, at any rate,” remarks the detective. “See
-you at the French ball to-morrow night? I am on the lookout for a couple
-of gentry whom I expect to be there. This is my station. Good-night.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXI.
-
- “DON CAESAR DE BAZAN.”
-
-
-The big French ball, that annual revel at the metropolis, brings
-together a motley assemblage of the devotees of folly. The scene at the
-entrance to Madison Square Garden to-night is the same scene witnessed
-at this function the year preceding, and the year before that. A mass of
-cabs and carriages in apparently inextricable confusion fill the street.
-They struggle up and deposit their fares and escorts and chaperons fight
-their way through the mob that blocks the brilliantly lighted entrance,
-and not always without an unpleasant encounter.
-
-Upon the threshold of the gay interior Louise Hathaway pauses
-diffidently and thanks fortune that a mask hides her face from the
-inquisitive stares around her. But led by Jack Ashley, Louise and Mr.
-Felton proceed to a box and once within its shelter the young girl gives
-herself up to an unmixed enjoyment of the brilliant spectacle before
-her.
-
-The scene is decorous, even sedate. Few acquaintances have been made,
-and when the strains of “Loin du Bal” arise in voluptuous swell only a
-small number of dancers respond.
-
-“Why this is as proper as one of our country dances, and far less
-noisy,” Louise whispers to Ashley, but that knowing young man winks
-mysteriously behind his mask and remarks: “Wait!”
-
-“Oh, but I shan’t wait,” is the young lady’s response. “You remember
-what I emphatically declared—only an hour or two and then we return to
-the hotel.”
-
-“Then you need fear nothing that would shock you in the least degree,”
-Ashley assures her. “The rioting does not begin until after midnight,
-and does not amount to much then. But see. The floor is filling up, the
-reserve is wearing off, and it would need only the eruption of some
-reckless spirit to bring on a pandemonium.”
-
-It is apparent that only a desire to humor the wishes of Miss Hathaway
-has led Cyrus Felton to the garden. And yet it is all so novel, all so
-bright and full of color, that he becomes interested in spite of
-himself, and when Ashley proposes a tour of the floor with a peep at the
-wine-room, Mr. Felton glances irresolutely at Louise. The young lady
-nods an assent.
-
-“Do not be gone long,” she enjoins, “although I could listen to the
-music and watch the picture half the night.”
-
-When they are gone she leans back in her chair, partly draws the box
-draperies, and watches dreamily the ever-changing panorama on the vast
-floor. Suddenly there is borne to her ears a melody strangely sweet, yet
-filled with a subtle melancholy. Louise catches her breath and listens.
-It is the andante of the Beethoven Sonata Pathetique she played so often
-in her old Raymond home. It has always been her favorite, and she is
-really an artist in soul and execution. Some one is whistling softly the
-divine first theme, and with a tenderness she has often felt yet could
-not satisfactorily express through the medium of an unsympathetic
-pianoforte.
-
-She leans over the box and her eyes rest upon the figure of a man
-attired in the costume of Don Caesar de Bazan. He is leaning carelessly
-against the pillar of the box in which she is sitting, not a dozen feet
-from her. So closely does his costume fit him and so bravely does he
-bear it that he looks a veritable Don Caesar who has stepped for an hour
-from a bygone century. A brown beard covers the lower part of his face;
-all above is hidden by a black silk mask.
-
-While Louise is taking note of this interesting personality she hears
-the door open behind her, and turns expecting to greet Mr. Felton or
-Ashley. Instead a stranger steps rather shakily into the box and closes
-the door with an affable “Good-evening, mademoiselle.” Louise makes no
-reply, and her unwelcome visitor drops into a seat with easy
-familiarity.
-
-“I have been more enthusiastically received to-night, but I will let
-that pass,” he remarks, with cheerful impudence.
-
-“I do not know you, sir,” says Louise frigidly, as she rises and casts a
-wildly anxious look over the ball-room.
-
-“Oh, well, I am not so hard to get acquainted with,” offers the insolent
-mask. “Will you drink a bottle of wine with me?”
-
-“Leave me at once!” commands Louise, pointing to the door with trembling
-finger.
-
-“By George! That’s an attitude worthy of Lady Macbeth,” remarks his
-insolence, in frank admiration. “I will go,” he adds, in mock humility,
-“but I must at least have a kiss to solace me for the loss of your
-society.”
-
-“You would not dare!” gasps Louise, retreating to the box rail.
-
-“Dare?” laughs his insolence; “I would dare anything for such a prize,”
-and he approaches her unsteadily.
-
-Louise’s frightened gaze is turned toward the ball-room and again rests
-upon Don Caesar de Bazan, who, attracted by the colloquy, has stepped a
-pace out upon the floor and is an interested spectator of the encounter.
-
-“Save me!” she whispers, and sinks upon one knee.
-
-But the entreaty is superfluous. Already Don Caesar’s hands are on the
-rail and with a vault he is in the box. His arm shoots out and his
-insolence goes down with a crash. He struggles to his feet with an oath
-and makes for Don Caesar; but the latter’s threatening attitude,
-clenched fist and eyes that flash fire through the black mask, cause him
-to stop, and muttering, “You will hear from me again,” he leaves the
-box.
-
-Don Caesar lifts his cap and is about to follow, when Louise interrupts
-him. “Do not go,” she says gratefully, “until I have thanked you a
-thousand times for the service you have rendered me.”
-
-Don Caesar bows. “As for the service,” he remarks lightly, “it was
-nothing. The fellow has been drinking, and seeing you alone—”
-
-“My friends have left me only for a few moments,” Louise hastens to
-explain, as she glances over the floor and bites her lips in vexation.
-
-“Then I may remain until they return?” Don Caesar observes inquiringly,
-dropping into a chair. “Some other graceless scamp may blunder in here.”
-
-Louise’s eyes express a timid assent to the proposition.
-
-“This is the first of these balls that you have attended?” asks Don
-Caesar, noting that she is ill at ease.
-
-“Yes; and it will be the last. I had read much of them, how brilliant
-they were, and all that, and I naturally acquiesced when I was tempted
-with an invitation. For I was told that if one went masked there was no
-harm in looking on for an hour.”
-
-“Nor is there. The wickedness will not begin for some time, and it is at
-best, or worst, a cheap, tawdry wickedness, wholly unattractive to saint
-or sinner. It is all inexpressibly stupid. A lot of tinsel-decked people
-rushing hither and thither in the dance, with little regard for the
-rhythm of the music and less for the etiquette of the ball-room, and a
-line of weary clubmen, bankers, men-about-town, butchers and bakers and
-candlestick-makers looking on.”
-
-“Yet you attend, though your remark indicates familiarity with the
-function.”
-
-“Oh, yes, I attend. For in spite of it all there are flowers and music,
-light and color and a certain brilliancy that enables one to forget for
-the nonce the even deadlier stupidity of the outside world.”
-
-“Don Caesar de Bazan of old was not a cynic,” remarks Louise, smilingly.
-
-“Had he been he would not have maintained our evergreen regard. When we
-sit down to a book or a play we like to leave our cynicism behind us; to
-live with men who have not a care beyond the morrow; men who mount horse
-and ride away from their troubles; whose swords leap from their sheaths
-at the breath of an insult; good, hearty, whole-souled fellows whose
-fortunes one delights to follow, but whom, alas, we seldom meet in the
-flesh.”
-
-“Perhaps it is as well. You might grow awfully tired of them.”
-
-“Perhaps. I sometimes think that, outside of the lasting friendships
-with the people in books and plays, the only satisfactory acquaintances
-are the chance ones.”
-
-“True,” murmurs Louise, dreamily. She wonders whether the face behind
-the black mask matches the melody of the voice. A similar thought flits
-through Don Caesar’s mind, as his eyes take in the graceful figure of
-the girl, clad all in black, a single ornament fastened at the long
-white throat.
-
-“I, too, have few friends,” says Louise. “But there is one friend who
-never fails me, through joy or sadness—my music.”
-
-“Ah, there is naught like it to drive away that enemy to life, dull
-care,” put in the Don. “It is my one passion. And I have cultivated it
-only lately. But now I give myself up to it entirely, attending every
-concert of any repute, and bewailing fate a thousand times that I cannot
-play, or sing, or write.”
-
-“I think I can guess your favorite melody—one of them, at least.”
-
-“Can you, indeed?” asked Don Caesar, in interested surprise.
-
-“The Sonata Pathetique.”
-
-“Ah, is it not beautiful? You have guessed correctly, but how?”
-
-“You were whistling it softly as you stood near yonder pillar, a moment
-before the occasion for your presence here arose.”
-
-“Very probably. It is continually running through my head. Do you know,
-the melody has two meanings to me. When I am out of patience with the
-world and myself it seems tinged with an inexpressible melancholy. And
-when I am in good spirits the refrain becomes singing, joyous,
-triumphant. Has it ever seemed so to you?”
-
-“I do not know. It has always seemed beautiful. It is my favorite.”
-
-“And mine. You are not a New Yorker,” ventures Don Caesar.
-
-“So? It is now my turn, Don Caesar, to marvel at your guessing powers.”
-
-Don Caesar laughs softly. “It does not demand an extraordinary acute
-discernment. Your accent and manner betoken the New Englander.”
-
-“Are we then so provincial that we so easily betray ourselves? But you
-are right. I am a Vermonter.”
-
-“I thought so. Odd, is it not, how dominos conduce to confidences, even
-among strangers?”
-
-“Yes. And yet I think they would prove unsatisfactory for conversational
-purposes among people who—” Louise pauses.
-
-“People who have been formally introduced, eh?” finishes Don Caesar.
-“Are you in the city for any length of time?”
-
-“Only until Saturday. We sail for Cuba then.”
-
-“Cuba? That is a long way off,” muses Don Caesar. “I came very near
-forgetting that I had not been formally introduced and expressing the
-regret that I should not see you again before you sail.”
-
-“You said a moment ago that the only satisfactory acquaintances were the
-transitory ones,” Louise reminds him.
-
-“True. But that rule has its exceptions, like all others.”
-
-“Consistency is no more a man’s attribute than a woman’s,” moralizes
-Miss Hathaway. “My friends approach, Don Caesar,” she adds, as she
-catches a glimpse of Mr. Felton and Ashley threading their way over the
-crowded floor.
-
-“That is the signal for my departure, then,” says Don Caesar. “Before I
-go I would crave one small boon.”
-
-“I owe you some return for your timely assistance. Speak, Don Caesar.”
-
-“Just a glimpse of the face that your mask so jealously veils.”
-
-“Oh!” cries Louise, somewhat disturbed.
-
-“Remember,” urges Don Caesar, “we shall never meet again—But ’twould be
-ungenerous to press my request,” he adds, rising. “I must say farewell,
-then, with only the memory of a sweet voice to recall one of the few
-pleasant quarter-hours that I have known.”
-
-Some impulse, she can hardly explain what, seizes Louise. With trembling
-fingers she detaches her mask and uncovers a face suffused with blushes.
-
-“I thought so!” murmurs Don Caesar, as his eyes take in the glory of
-that face, which is almost immediately veiled again.
-
-“Thank you,” he says, simply, and presses to his lips for an instant the
-hand she timidly gives him in parting.
-
-He is gone, and Louise sinks back into her chair with beating heart,
-wondering whether she has been foolish, or unmaidenly, or indiscreet.
-She forgets to administer to Ashley the scolding he deserves for his
-long absence and receives abstractedly his explanation of a row in the
-wine-room and their detention by the crowd. Her gaze wanders about the
-ball-room in search of the graceful figure of Don Caesar de Bazan, but
-he has vanished.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXII.
-
- A FAIRY TALE THAT CAME TRUE.
-
-
-Toward 10 o’clock Louise Hathaway decides that she has witnessed enough
-of the brilliant panorama to warrant her in returning to the hotel, and
-as Cyrus Felton is plainly bored by a scene not attuned to his
-temperament, Ashley hunts up their wraps, hails a carriage and they are
-driven to the St. James.
-
-“You will make a night of it, I suppose,” Miss Hathaway remarks, as
-Ashley prepares to say good-night.
-
-“No; I shall remain only long enough to finish my story for the paper. I
-wrote the introduction this afternoon. One year’s ball is much the same
-as another’s. Have you any plans for the morrow?”
-
-“None, except mild sight-seeing. Will you not lunch with us?”
-
-“I shall be delighted,” murmurs Ashley. To be near Miss Hathaway is
-pleasure unalloyed; incidentally he desires an opportunity to quietly
-study Cyrus Felton. “At 1 o’clock, say?” he asks.
-
-“At 1 o’clock. We must thank you again, Mr. Ashley, for your escort this
-evening.”
-
-“Don’t mention it—again,” smiles Ashley. “I am sorry I cannot ask you to
-assist in my work to-morrow. It would be fully as interesting and more
-to your taste, likely, than the French ball.”
-
-“Then it cannot be a political meeting.”
-
-“Hardly. It is the trial trip of the new United States cruiser America,
-probably the fastest vessel of any size afloat in the world to-day.”
-
-“That will be delightful. You must tell me all about it when you return.
-Your description will be much more interesting, I am sure, than the
-newspaper accounts.”
-
-“Fully as interesting as the Hemisphere’s story, perhaps. Good-night,
-Miss Hathaway. Oh, by the way, Mr. Felton,” as Louise trips upstairs,
-“did you know that Roger Hathaway’s revolver has been found?”
-
-Ashley asks the question in the most casual of tones, but his keen eyes
-are riveted on the elder man’s face. The result is not wholly what the
-questioner expected. Mr. Felton simply stares at Ashley and repeats:
-“Hathaway’s revolver found? Where? When?”
-
-“It was fished out of Wild River about opposite the cemetery a day or
-two ago. But perhaps it was after you had started for New York. Odd, is
-it not, that the weapon with which the crime was perhaps committed
-should be brought to light within a stone’s throw of the grave of the
-murdered man? But pardon me. Perhaps, I have awakened painful
-reflections; so I will say no more. Good-night.”
-
-Cyrus Felton stands like a stone upon the threshold to the reading-room
-for fully a minute after Ashley has left the hotel. Then he turns and
-goes slowly upstairs to his room.
-
-When Ashley reaches the Garden he hunts up Barker and rescues that
-amiable gentleman from the importunities of a brace of masks who are
-gayly informing him that they are “just beginning to like him.” Ashley
-drags him away and asks: “Have you located the gentry for whom you were
-looking to-night?”
-
-“No, but I have chanced upon one or two choice incidents in society life
-which the chief may find useful some day.”
-
-“Good. Let me in early when they materialize. Now, old chap, if you will
-kill time here for half an hour or so, until I finish my story, I’ll
-join you.”
-
-Ashley hunts up an out-of-the-way corner and the work is soon finished
-and dispatched by a district messenger boy. Then the newspaper man
-returns to the wine-room, but Barker has strayed.
-
-While Jack is lounging about the edges of the ball-room, his cheek is
-brushed by a Jack rose tossed from a near-by box. He looks around and
-sees leaning over the box rail a woman attired in the costume of a lady
-of the Russian court. The eyes behind the mask twinkle invitingly, and
-as she is alone Ashley fastens the rose in his coat, tosses a kiss to
-the donor and proceeds to look for the door leading to that particular
-box.
-
-“May I enter, lady fair?” he asks, as he stands upon the threshold.
-
-“On one condition,” the lady in black informs him.
-
-“Name it,” he smiles.
-
-“That you do not ask me to drink a bottle of wine with you; that you
-talk of something interesting; and that you do not make love to me.”
-
-“And you call that one condition? But I accept,” says Ashley, closing
-the door behind him. The next instant he suppresses an exclamation and a
-tendency toward mild protestation. For in closing the door he has caught
-one finger on a nail which some careless carpenter omitted to drive
-home, and the digit gets a painful tear.
-
-The lady in black extends sympathy and lends her own dainty lace
-handkerchief to bind up his wound. As he bends to tie the knot with his
-teeth the perfume on the lace almost startles him.
-
-“Your first condition, madam, was easily accepted,” he smiles, as he
-throws himself into a chair and toys with the handkerchief about his
-finger. “The second is more difficult to live up to, and the third is
-cruel.” He is carelessly unwrapping the handkerchief as though to rebind
-it, and is looking for some initial.
-
-“Oh, tell me a story—something I haven’t heard,” yawns the lady in
-black. “At the first sign of stupidity I shall send you away.”
-
-“A story?” drawls Ashley. Ah, he has found what he sought. In one corner
-of the handkerchief is the letter “I,” curiously embroidered in silk.
-
-“Very well,” he says, in rare good humor, “I promise you a story that,
-while it may not be entirely new to you, will hold your interest to the
-end. But first, madam, I must beg of you to lay aside your domino, that
-I may know whether my tale is interesting you or I am courting the
-unhappy fate which you threatened should be meted out to stupidity.”
-
-The lady in black laughs musically and, partially drawing the box
-draperies, she tosses off her mask, and, to Ashley’s intense amaze,
-reveals the face of the handsome woman whom he remembers to have seen
-with Phillip Van Zandt the preceding night at the Damrosch concert.
-
-But Jack Ashley is not a young man who permits his face or voice to
-betray his emotions. So he knots the lace once more about his injured
-digit, settles himself comfortably in his chair and begins:
-
-“Once upon a time—”
-
-“Is this a fairy tale?” interrupts his handsome auditor.
-
-“A fairy tale? Perhaps. But a fairy tale that came true. Once upon a
-time there lived in a small New England community a youth to whom the
-simple amusements and rustic pleasures of his native town became as
-tedious as a twice-told tale. As his father was engaged in a business
-whose interests extended over the country, the youth was given a roving
-commission, and soon after he was tasting the sweets of an existence in
-the great city. Metropolitan life suited him to a T. His only regret was
-that his means were not sufficient to keep pace with his luxurious
-tastes.
-
-“In the course of time he met and loved a very pretty girl. She had hair
-of midnight, eyes like black diamonds, a superb figure and a thousand
-charms. Whether her heart was as true as her face was fair, I know not.
-The torrent which bore these two hearts was more or less turbulent. In
-the trouble which came between them I am charitable enough to believe
-that the man was to blame. The youth found that living beyond his means
-has an inevitable and unpleasant result, and it was not long ere his
-father, after palliating innumerable offenses, summoned him home. He was
-given a position in a bank in the town which he still despised, and he
-soon forgot his city love, being assisted in this forgetfulness by a
-passion which he had conceived for the beautiful daughter of the cashier
-of the bank in which he was employed.
-
-“The neglected one wrote many letters, but could obtain no satisfaction
-of her faithless swain. Finally she decided to visit him in his New
-England home; so on a memorable afternoon she arrived in his town, went
-to a hotel and sent word to the youth that she desired to see him at
-once.”
-
-“Well?” demands the lady in black, as Ashley pauses. The flash in her
-eyes and the nervous fingers tell him that, while his story may not be
-enjoyed, it is being listened to with intense interest.
-
-“The youth obeyed the summons,” he resumes, “and there was a scene.
-Money was demanded, and money he had none. But perhaps it was to be had
-somewhere. That night a murder was committed in the town. It was an
-extremely mysterious affair, and the excitement which it caused was
-intensified a day or two later, when the young man of our story suddenly
-disappeared and was never after heard from. The detective employed on
-the case assumed that if he could find the mysterious woman who
-registered at the hotel the day of the tragedy some light might be
-thrown upon the affair and the whereabouts of the absent young man
-ascertained.”
-
-“Have you any object in telling me this story?” asks the lady in black,
-in a voice which she strives to render calm and unconcerned.
-
-“Only your entertainment.”
-
-“Then you have not succeeded.”
-
-“I have succeeded in one thing,” returns Ashley, in quiet triumph. “I
-have found the woman.”
-
-“Indeed? That is more interesting. But perhaps you are mistaken.”
-
-“Impossible. The beautiful unknown left in the hotel room a lace
-handkerchief scented with a most peculiar perfume.” Ashley is slowly
-unwrapping the lace creation about his finger, and he sniffs it as he
-speaks. “A perfume which the finder of the handkerchief had never known
-before,” he goes on, as he spreads the lace upon his knee. “Besides the
-perfume, which distinguished this from thousands of other handkerchiefs,
-there was in one corner the letter ‘I,’ curiously embroidered in silk.”
-
-As if he were alone and talking to himself, Ashley takes from a wallet
-in his pocket the handkerchief which for months he had carefully
-treasured, and spreading it upon his knee compares it with the one which
-lately wrapped his finger. They are identical. Then he looks up and
-catches the half-scornful, half-startled gaze of the lady in black.
-
-“Is that all?” she inquires.
-
-“No. But I expect you to furnish the last chapter.”
-
-The lady in black again adjusts her mask. “Not to-night,” she says.
-“Come to my hotel to-morrow and I will endeavor to gratify your
-curiosity.”
-
-“Whom shall I inquire for?”
-
-“I believe you have my name.”
-
-“Ah, yes. And the hotel, madam?”
-
-“The Kensington.”
-
-“And the hour?”
-
-“Ten in the morning.”
-
-“Thank you. I will be prompt.”
-
-Ashley leaves the box humming a lively air and proceeds to look up his
-friend Barker.
-
-“Busy, old man?” he asks, when he has finally located the detective.
-
-“Not especially? Why?”
-
-“Do you see that woman in black in yonder box, talking with a
-swarthy-looking gentleman?”
-
-“I do.”
-
-“That is ‘Isabel Winthrop.’”
-
-“The devil!”
-
-“No; but perhaps one of his satanic highness’ amiable representatives. I
-have an interview arranged with her for to-morrow at 10; place the
-Kensington. I want you to follow her when she leaves the Garden and keep
-an eye on her until 10 o’clock to-morrow morning. If I do not hear from
-you before that hour I shall consider that she has made the engagement
-in good faith. I have a big day’s work to-morrow, and I believe I will
-go home and turn in.”
-
-“All right, Jack, my boy. I will keep her ladyship in view if she leads
-me to China. So long.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIII.
-
- A REPRISAL OF TREACHERY.
-
-
-“Don’t be absurd, Don Manada.”
-
-“Absurd? Dios! I was never more thoroughly in earnest in my life.”
-
-“Nevertheless, you are absurd,” Isabel Harding smiles tantalizingly over
-her champagne glass at the flushed face and glistening eyes of her
-companion.
-
-This conversation occurs shortly after midnight at an out-of-the-way
-table in the arcade at the east end of the Garden.
-
-For all it began so decorously, this year’s ball is a particularly
-riotous affair and already the fantastic orgee is well under way. Masks
-have been scattered to the patchouli-laden winds. Yet there are a few
-discreet folks who, though they mingle with the mad crowd, have retained
-their masks. As Don Manada and his companion are comparatively removed
-from observation, they have laid aside their dominos for the moment and
-are conversing in earnest whispers.
-
-Isabel Harding is so radiantly, magnificently, dangerously beautiful
-that it is a terrific strain for the gentleman at her side to maintain
-the least semblance of composure.
-
-“In what does my absurdity consist?” he demands in a passionate whisper.
-
-“Can you ask? You tell me that you love me—which I already know—and urge
-a suit which I have twice before told you is hopeless. You profess to
-believe that I could learn in time to honestly return your undoubtedly
-sincere affection. It is impossible. I will be honest with you. I am not
-one to whom love comes slowly. I love only one man, and he—don’t look so
-murderous, Don Manada—he cares nothing for me,” she finishes, bitterly.
-
-“Come, a truce to lovemaking!” rallies Isabel. “Don’t look so fiercely
-downcast, Don Manada. Fill up the glasses and we will drink a melancholy
-toast to unrequited love. We are alike unsuccessful lovers. But we will
-continue to be good friends.”
-
-“Impossible,” replies Don Manada, as he gloomily pours out the wine. “I
-go to Cuba to-morrow.”
-
-“Indeed? I trust that I am not responsible for the loss of your society
-to your New York friends.”
-
-“No, senora. I go because duty calls me, but I had expected to wear a
-lighter heart than that which will accompany me.”
-
-Don Manada is too much occupied with his despair to note the peculiar
-look which Isabel darts at him from between her half-dropped eyelids.
-
-“Cuba?” she repeats, dreamily. “Ah, I should like to visit that country
-some day.”
-
-Don Manada looks up with swift hope. “You would, senora? Then you
-shall!” he cries. “We will leave to-morrow on my vessel. I will be your
-slave. You have but to speak and every wish will be gratified. You will
-do me this favor,” he urges, and then, with the fervor and descriptive
-powers of a Claude Melnotte, he proceeds to paint a fascinating picture
-with a tropical background, his enthusiasm fired by ravishing glances
-from his companion.
-
-“Quite an escapade you have outlined,” smiled Isabel. “But it is too
-prosy. If the voyage promised a dash of adventure, if it were spiced
-with an element of danger, I—” she pauses and lifts the wineglass slowly
-to her lips.
-
-“Danger?” echoes Don Manada, with a curious smile. “Dios! The voyage
-might not be without all the adventure your heart could desire, senora.”
-He takes from his pocket a newspaper clipping and hands it to Isabel,
-after a glance about him to make certain that they are unobserved. The
-clipping is from the current edition of the Hemisphere. It is a dispatch
-from Key West, and a portion of it reads as follows:
-
- “This city has been in a fever of excitement all day over the
- report that an important filibustering expedition is to leave
- New York this week to aid the Cuban insurgents. The report is
- backed by excellent authority, and there is no doubt that an
- effort will be made to send valuable assistance to the patriots
- of the Antilles some time during the week. In some way the
- United States authorities and the Spanish government have got
- wind of the proposed expedition and they are striving to nip it
- in the bud. The Spanish warship Infanta Isabel this morning
- steamed from this harbor for the purpose, one of her officers
- said, of intercepting the filibusters on the high seas.
-
- “It is also stated that a prominent and gallant member of the
- Cuban revolutionary society will head the expedition, but his
- identity has not been disclosed.”
-
-Mrs. Harding glances through the clipping and hands it back with a
-quizzical smile.
-
-“So you are the prominent and gallant member of the Cuban revolutionary
-society referred to?” she infers.
-
-“Not so loud!” cautions Don Manada. “We may be overheard. What think you
-of the voyage now, senora?”
-
-“I fear it is a bit too dangerous,” replies Isabel, with a yawn. “We
-should never reach Cuba.”
-
-“Trust me,” assents Don Manada, complacently. “Once on the high seas,
-the Isabel will lead the Spanish warships a pretty chase.”
-
-“Ah, the name of your schooner is the Isabel?”
-
-“Of our yacht—yes. Is it not happily named?”
-
-“Perhaps so,” answers Mrs. Harding, with an enigmatic expression in her
-lustrous eyes. “And where should I find your yacht in case I should at
-the last moment decide to accept your offer of a merry voyage to the
-tropics?”
-
-“My yacht? I should conduct you to it,” says Don Manada in some
-surprise.
-
-“Oh, no; that would not do,” objects Isabel. “I should be driven to it
-veiled just preceding its departure.”
-
-Don Manada looks around the arcade, but there is no one within twenty
-feet of their table.
-
-“North river, foot of 23d street,” he whispers. “You will go?” as Isabel
-appears to be hesitating mid conflicting emotions.
-
-“You will promise not to make love to me during the entire voyage?”
-
-“I will promise anything, senora, though you have imposed an unhappy
-obligation.”
-
-“Then I think I will say—yes.”
-
-“Bueno!” cries the delighted Don Manada, and, seizing Isabel’s hand, he
-covers it with passionate kisses.
-
-“Oh, by the way, what time do you sail?”
-
-“At 5 o’clock.”
-
-“Very well. I will send final word to your hotel in the morning. Now,
-leave me to dream over my folly,” says Mrs. Harding, disengaging the
-hand which Don Manada still tenderly holds.
-
-Then, as the latter goes off to the wine-room to submerge his happiness
-in champagne, Isabel leans back in her chair and laughs softly. “The
-fool,” she sneers. “Well, all men are fools—all but one.”
-
-“And that one?” inquires a voice behind her. She looks up startled, to
-meet the calm gaze of a man of perhaps 50, with dark hair and mustache
-slightly tinged with gray and the distinct air of a soldier.
-
-“Ah, who but yourself?” returns Isabel composedly. “Sit down, Gen.
-Murillo. I have much to tell you.”
-
-The intelligence is plainly of a pleasing nature. Gen. Murillo murmurs
-“Bueno!” more than once as he listens, and when she finishes he remarks
-approvingly: “You have done well and may count on my gratitude.”
-
-“Gracias,” responds Isabel. “That is about the extent of my Spanish,
-General.”
-
-“Ah, but you will learn readily. It is simple. Hist! a gentleman
-approaches. It were well if we be seen little together to-night. Until
-the morrow then, adios.”
-
-Gen. Murillo moves off toward the swirl of dancers and Isabel surveys
-with an air of recognition a gentleman in the costume of Don Caesar de
-Bazan, who has descended to the arcade by the north stairway and is
-coming slowly toward her. Don Caesar looks curiously after the departing
-form of the Spaniard; then, dropping into a chair beside Isabel, he
-tosses off his mask and asks carelessly: “Well, my dear Isabel, when do
-you leave for Cuba?”
-
-“For Cuba?” repeats Mrs. Harding in simulated surprise.
-
-“Exactly. After a glance at the gentleman who just left you I do not
-need to be enlightened as to the diplomatic duties to which you alluded
-last night.”
-
-“Well, Phillip, I have few secrets that you do not share,” Isabel says
-sweetly; “I leave for Cuba to-morrow.”
-
-“So soon,” he murmurs courteously.
-
-“The sooner the better. Every day I am near you makes eventual
-separation the harder. I know that you care nothing for me,” she goes
-on, her cheeks flushed crimson. “Don’t interrupt me,” as Van Zandt seeks
-to interpose a protest. “I know that you care nothing for me, not in the
-way I would have you feel. I have your friendship, yes, beyond that I am
-nothing to you. And I—I love you, Phillip—love you as I never expected
-to love a man. I make the avowal without shame, for I know there is no
-possibility of a change in your sentiments toward me. And I am going
-away—to-morrow,” half sobs the woman, as she covers her face with her
-hands.
-
-Van Zandt lays his hand upon Isabel’s head and smooths the dark tresses
-sympathetically. She pushes the hand away.
-
-“Courage! Tears ill become a diplomat,” declares Van Zandt. “This is a
-dreary world. We seldom attain our heart’s desire, even though the
-object we seek be a lowly one. Will you have some wine?” Isabel shakes
-her head. She has dried her eyes and has relapsed into an apathetic
-melancholy.
-
-Van Zandt signals to a waiter. “A little wine will help lighten our
-hearts,” he tells Mrs. Harding; “for believe me, mine is not less heavy
-than yours. Cheer up and we will drink a toast to all unrequited love.”
-
-Isabel gives him a swift look of surprise. “You heard?” she demands.
-
-“I heard nothing,” he replies, smilingly. “What has given rise to your
-question?”
-
-“’Tis less than an hour since I offered that very toast. I have had a
-proposal to-night.”
-
-“Indeed? And you rejected it?”
-
-“Can you ask such a question. The world is full of Don Manadas, but
-there is only one—”
-
-“So? The swarthy gentleman, with the curious white mustachios?”
-interrupts Van Zandt. “I noticed you talking with him.”
-
-“I had rejected him twice before, but his persistence is worthy of a
-better cause. To-night I promised to accompany him on a filibustering
-expedition to Cuba. Think of it! The fool!” sneers Isabel.
-
-“And you will not go.”
-
-“Most certainly not. I only half-promised. To-morrow I shall send word
-that I have changed my mind.”
-
-“And meanwhile you have accomplished something toward your new duties,
-eh?” remarks Van Zandt. If Isabel Harding could read the dark, handsome
-face that she loves so well, she would know that she has lost forever
-the esteem of Phillip Van Zandt.
-
-“You have betrayed the man who trusted you,” continues Van Zandt in the
-same quiet and impassive voice.
-
-“Betrayed him? And what if I did?” flashes Isabel passionately. “Call it
-treachery if you will. I say it is only a reprisal of treachery. Take me
-out of here, Phillip. I am sick of these lights and the music and the
-scent of the flowers.”
-
-“I will see you to a carriage,” says Van Zandt, quietly.
-
-Ten minutes later he says good-by to her, as he prepares to close the
-carriage door.
-
-“Some day, Phillip, you will realize how much I love you,” Isabel
-whispers, as she presses to her lips the hand he mechanically gives her.
-
-Words, words, words; but destined to have a tragic fulfillment!
-
-Van Zandt looks after the retreating carriage with a darkening brow.
-“Call it treachery if you will,” he repeats, grimly. “By George! I’ll
-spike her ladyship’s guns! The cause of liberty shall not be jeopardized
-by the indiscretion of its friends or the machinations of its enemies!”
-
-As he turns and re-enters the garden a man steps to a waiting cab, and,
-indicating the carriage which is bearing off Isabel Harding, he whispers
-to his driver: “Keep that rig in view till it stops. Understand?”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIV.
-
- FOR THE CAUSE OF LIBERTY.
-
-
-“You proposed to a lady to-night.”
-
-“What is that to you, sir?” Don Manada turns fiercely upon the gentleman
-who has tapped him upon the shoulder and requested the pleasure of a few
-moments’ conversation with him.
-
-“Nothing to me, perhaps,” returns Phillip Van Zandt, quietly; “to you
-much, possibly. Sit down. Or better, suppose we adjourn to the arcade.
-We shall be freer from interruption there.”
-
-“I must decline to accompany you, sir, until I have reason to believe
-that the matter on which you desire to talk is of more importance than
-your opening remark would indicate.”
-
-Van Zandt surveys the Cuban with a trifle of impatience. “As you
-please,” he observes. “But permit me to say that upon your disposition
-to listen to what I have to impart depends the success or failure of the
-expedition which is to start for Cuba to-morrow—or, rather, to-day.”
-
-Manada starts violently and bends a searching look upon the other’s
-face. “Nothing could be of greater importance to me, sir,” he says, and
-without further remark he follows Van Zandt to the little table where an
-hour ago he for the third time offered Isabel Harding his hand and
-heart.
-
-“Now, to business,” remarks Van Zandt, glancing at his watch. “It is
-1:30. Thirty minutes for talk, the rest of the night for action. You are
-Don Manada of the Cuban revolutionary society.” That gentleman bows. “I
-am Phillip Van Zandt. That is all you need know concerning myself. Mrs.
-Isabel Harding, the lady to whom you made violent love to-night”—the
-Cuban scowls, but Van Zandt goes on relentlessly—“I have known for some
-months. She has honored me—shall I say?—with her deep regard. Perhaps
-she hinted as much to you.”
-
-Manada leans back in his chair and looks his new acquaintance over
-critically. This, then, was his rival; a negative one, to be sure, but a
-rival that any man might fear.
-
-“If it will flatter your vanity to know that the lady in question
-confessed to me that she loved only one man in the world and that that
-happy individual was not myself, you are welcome to the information,”
-Manada offers, sarcastically.
-
-“Thank you. But I was already aware of the fact, and it is not to the
-point. You proposed to Mrs. Harding and were rejected. Stay,” as the
-other colors and is about to make an angry retort: “I did not bring you
-here, sir, to refresh your mind one instance in which the usually
-discriminating Isabel displayed poor taste. But I repeat, she rejected
-you; hence subsequently something must have occurred between you to lead
-up to a rather peculiar agreement—Mrs. Harding’s consent to accompany
-you on a filibustering expedition?”
-
-“Caramba! She told you—you overheard—”
-
-“I overheard nothing. Eavesdropping is not in my line. And she told me
-little more; but enough to warrant me in stating that you have been
-indiscreet, sir, to use no harsher term, and have jeopardized not only
-your own welfare but that of your fellow-countrymen.”
-
-“You seem to be pretty familiar with my affairs, senor.”
-
-“Not so familiar with them as the Spanish government and the United
-States authorities may be,” responds Van Zandt, dryly. “All I know of
-your plans I have told you. What I do not know you will tell me now.”
-
-An angry rejoinder trembles on Manada’s lips, but something in the
-stern, quiet air of the man before him checks his wrath.
-
-“Mrs. Harding,” resumes Van Zandt, “consented to go to Cuba with you,
-did she not?”
-
-“Practically, yes.”
-
-“And you were to receive her final decision on the morrow?”
-
-“Well, senor?”
-
-“She will not go.”
-
-“Then you persuaded her—you interfered,” cries Manada hotly.
-
-“I did nothing of the sort. Still, I repeat, she will not go. But, stay,
-perhaps she will,” murmurs Van Zandt, thoughtfully. “Perhaps her
-ladyship’s plans lie deeper than I have supposed,” he thinks. “But even
-if she does go, I tell you, my friend, it were far better that you
-burned your vessel where it now lies than that Isabel Harding sets foot
-upon its deck.”
-
-“Your meaning?” demands Manada in a hoarse whisper.
-
-“Your face tells me that you have guessed the truth,” Van Zandt says
-more kindly. “The woman has betrayed you. She is a spy—diplomat is the
-polite word—in the employ of the Spanish government.”
-
-“Caramba!” hisses Manada, sinking back into his chair with colorless
-cheeks. “But you can furnish proof of what you assert?” he cries almost
-eagerly.
-
-Van Zandt’s lip curls. “Had you watched the fair Isabel after you left
-her you would have seen join her a gentleman whose presence in itself
-would have been proof sufficient—Gen. Murillo. You know him?”
-
-“Of the Spanish service,” murmurs Manada in crushed tones.
-
-“Precisely. I met him at the club the other day. And if I mistake not he
-has done an excellent bit of work for his government to-night.”
-
-“But I will find the woman,” bursts out Manada, leaping to his feet.
-“Por Dios! I will search her out and—”
-
-“You will do nothing of the kind,” interrupts Van Zandt, drawing the
-excited man back into his chair. “Mrs. Harding left for her hotel half
-an hour ago. Even were she here it would avail you nothing to confront
-her with her—diplomacy. Gen. Murillo is already in possession of your
-plans. No, my friend; the mischief is done, but happily it is not
-irremediable.”
-
-“Ah!” cries Manada, with a flash of hope.
-
-“Now, listen to me. We have wasted too much time already. What is the
-name of your vessel?”
-
-“The Isabel.”
-
-“So? Pretty name, but have it changed at the first opportunity. Where
-does she now lie?”
-
-“North River, foot of Twenty-third Street.”
-
-“Excellent,” comments Van Zandt, his eyes lighting with satisfaction.
-“And at what time did you intend to sail?”
-
-“At five in the afternoon.”
-
-“You are of course aware that both the Spanish and United States
-governments are on the keen lookout for filibustering craft?”
-
-“Certainly,” Manada replies, grimly. “But we were confident of slipping
-through unmolested. We had arranged to clear for the Bermudas, and once
-on the high seas we felt sure of running away from any warships that
-might lie in our course.”
-
-“Ah, your vessel is a yacht. And the cargo—of what does that consist?”
-
-“Two thousand rifles and 200,000 rounds of cartridges.”
-
-“How is it loaded?”
-
-“The ammunition is packed in kegs, ostensibly containing salt fish; the
-rifles are in bags and are hidden at the bottom of bins of potatoes in
-the hold.”
-
-“The cargo could be shifted before daybreak, do you think?”
-
-“Two or three hours should suffice.”
-
-“Good. You must have noticed, lying in the neighborhood of your vessel,
-a rather trim article in the yacht line.”
-
-“The Semiramis? Yes. A magnificent vessel!” exclaims Manada.
-
-Van Zandt nods. “She is my property and I believe her to be the fastest
-vessel afloat in the world to-day. Now here is my plan—I consider it the
-only one that will extricate you from the dilemma in which you are
-placed: I will place the Semiramis at the service of the struggling
-patriots of the Antilles. We will shift the Isabel’s cargo before the
-night is gone, and before the sun goes down on another day the Semiramis
-will be on her way to Cuba. Once without New York bay I defy anything
-short of a cannon ball to overhaul her. What say you, Don Manada?”
-
-The Cuban’s face expresses the astonishment and joy that he feels. To be
-raised suddenly from the depths of despair to the pinnacle of hope
-effects a remarkable change in one of his temperament.
-
-“Santa Maria!” he cries, as he presses warmly Van Zandt’s hands. “You
-have done me as great a service as one man can do another. Por Dios! We
-shall outwit them cleverly.”
-
-“Then let us be off,” says Van Zandt. “It is after 2 o’clock and we have
-little time to spare.”
-
-The men secure their coats and hats and ten minutes later board a
-cross-town car.
-
-“Senor Van Zandt, I owe you a debt of gratitude,” declares Manada; “yet
-I find myself marveling that you, a stranger, and the one man to win
-Isabel Harding’s affection, should interest yourself in me and the cause
-I represent.”
-
-“Oh, it promised an adventure; something I have long been in need of to
-stir my blood to action,” replies Van Zandt, lightly. “Besides, am I not
-an American, and is not the cause of liberty a cause that appeals to
-every American with a spark of manhood in his soul? Only those who know
-what liberty is realize its priceless worth.”
-
-They are now walking along West Street. Manada silently reproaching
-himself with his recent folly, wraps his greatcoat more tightly about
-him, and breathes a shivering malediction on the cutting winds that
-sweep adown the Hudson.
-
-The sky is overcast and a slight snow is falling. It is a good night for
-the work in hand.
-
-The river front is black and silent and the outlines of the vessels
-about the pier are barely distinguishable through the driving storm.
-
-West Street, though dimly lighted, is not deserted. From the grog-shops
-come echoes of many a brawl, and every now and then a drunken
-longshoreman reels or is thrown into the street and staggers off, heaven
-knows where. Every half-hour or so a ferry boat lumbers in and out of
-the slip, and there is a temporary bustle in the vicinage.
-
-“A miserable night, senor,” remarks Van Zandt, as they cross West Street
-and pick their way toward the pier where lies the vessel in which are
-centered now all of Don Manada’s hopes. The latter has forgotten for the
-nonce his recent humiliation and is keenly alive to the adventurous
-undertaking in hand.
-
-The men plunge through the gloom, muffled to the eyes and with heads
-bent before the biting blasts from the river, when their ears are
-suddenly assailed by the sound of a scuffle ahead of them and a
-half-choked cry for help. Quickening their steps, they run upon two men.
-One of them is prone upon the pier; the other, clearly his assailant,
-bends over him.
-
-Before the scamp can rise Van Zandt deals him a blow with his heavy cane
-that stretches him beside his victim. He is not a courageous rogue, or
-if he is realizes that his chance for an argument is not especially
-good. So when he struggles to his feet he makes off without a word,
-without even an imprecation.
-
-Van Zandt and Manada raise the prostrate form and bear it back to the
-street. As the lamplight falls upon the face of the unconscious man Van
-Zandt utters an ejaculation of astonishment.
-
-“By heaven! it is Gen. Murillo! You see, my friend, that I was not
-mistaken. He probably came down here to have a look at the Isabel, and
-was set upon by one of the scum of the river front.”
-
-Manada nods a silent assent. “He must not see us,” he mutters, uneasily.
-
-“Don’t be alarmed. He is not likely to recognize any one for a few
-minutes. I hope he is not badly hurt. Off with him to yonder saloon; or,
-better, to the ferryhouse. The man will be safer there, though we are
-more likely to find a policeman at the saloon.”
-
-A policeman is at the ferryhouse, however, and assistance is summoned.
-Van Zandt and Manada wait until Gen. Murillo is laid in the ambulance
-and the surgeon in charge has assured them that the man is not fatally
-hurt; then they tell their story to the policeman and go about their
-business.
-
-“A peculiar episode,” remarks Van Zandt. “Our friend will never know to
-whom he owes his rescue and perhaps his life. Our affair must be
-hurried, nevertheless, for we know what his first effort will be when he
-recovers consciousness.”
-
-“Yet some day, when Cuba is free, I shall have the pleasure of recalling
-the incident to his mind.”
-
-“When Cuba is free,” repeats Van Zandt. “Well, luck favoring us, we
-shall fire a shot to-day that will ring in the ears of the government at
-Madrid. Here we are at the Semiramis. Where is the Isabel?”
-
-“Just beyond. Not twenty feet away.”
-
-Van Zandt hails his yacht and ten minutes later he and Manada are in the
-luxurious cabin, in consultation with Capt. Beals, a bluff old Maine sea
-dog, who is prepared for any caprice on the part of his employer and
-expresses not the least surprise when informed that arrangements for a
-cruise to Cuba must be instantly set afoot.
-
-And that morning, while the wind howls around Manhattan Island, and
-drives the sleet into the eyes of belated pedestrians; while Murillo
-awakens to consciousness in Bellevue Hospital and tells the attending
-surgeon that, head or no head, he leaves for Cuba within half a dozen
-hours; and while the last carriage load of half-drunken sports dashes
-away from the Madison Square Garden, a work is in progress aboard the
-Semiramis that means more to its owner than he dreams of as he stands
-with folded arms in the dim light of the ship lanterns, watching
-silently the transshipment of the insurgent’s arms.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXV.
-
- TWO KINDS OF BLOCKADE.
-
-
-About 9:30 of the morning following the French ball Phillip Van Zandt
-drops into his favorite seat in the dining-room of the St. James hotel
-and picks up the morning paper.
-
-Scarcely had he unfolded it when his attention was attracted by two
-persons seated at the table beyond him. They are Cyrus Felton and Louise
-Hathaway, and the latter never looked fairer than on this bright March
-morning.
-
-“Ah, my divinity of the ball,” he murmurs. “By Eros! She is superb.
-Hair, a mass of gold and the sunlight gives it just the right effect.
-Purity and innocence are in those blue eyes and in every line of the
-face. Knowing no evil and fearing none, and yet with the self-poise of a
-queen. It almost restores one’s confidence in humanity to look upon such
-a face.
-
-“I would be glad indeed to know her, but the opportunity for an
-introduction is not likely to arise. I could scarcely presume on last
-night’s meeting, and besides, she would hold me to my word. What impulse
-possessed her to remove her mask at my request? I’ll wager she regretted
-it an instant later. Well, she did not see my face, so I may devour her
-visually in perfect safety.
-
-“And her companion?” Van Zandt goes on meditatively. “Not her husband,
-assuredly. Too old for that. More likely her father, or perhaps her
-guardian. They are going to Cuba, so she told me. Well, I am going to
-Cuba, too. I may meet her there. Friendships are easily cultivated in a
-foreign land. My dear Van Zandt, is it possible that you are becoming
-interested in a woman? Careful; you forget who you are,” he concludes
-bitterly, and stares moodily out upon the crowded street.
-
-Mr. Felton and Miss Hathaway are breakfasting leisurely, unconscious of
-the interest they have aroused in the gentleman at the next table. Mr.
-Felton is scanning the columns of the Hemisphere, with particular
-reference to the full dispatches from Cuba and Madrid. Suddenly he drops
-the paper with the exclamation: “This is very unfortunate!”
-
-“What is unfortunate?” inquires Miss Hathaway, sipping her coffee.
-
-“Here is a dispatch from Havana, stating that the government has ordered
-a complete blockade of the island and that all steamship engagements to
-and from Cuba have been canceled for an indefinite period.”
-
-Miss Hathaway looks up in mild dismay. “Then we cannot leave Saturday,”
-she says.
-
-“It would seem not. Ah, here is something more. The newspaper has looked
-up the report at the New York end and finds it to be true. The steamer
-City of Havana of the Red Star line, this paper says, will probably be
-the last passenger vessel to leave New York for Cuba until the blockade
-is raised.”
-
-“But can we not go on that?”
-
-Mr. Felton reads on: “The City of Havana sails to-day at 11 o’clock.”
-Then he glances at his watch. “It is now nearly 10. Perhaps we can make
-it. Wait, I will ascertain from the clerk.”
-
-Mr. Felton rises, and as he turns to leave the dining-room Van Zandt
-gets a view of his face, and he starts as if from a nightmare.
-
-“That face again!” he breathes. “That face, which has haunted my dreams
-and has been before me in my waking hours! And her father! Merciful
-heaven, it cannot be. There is a limit to fate’s grotesquerie.”
-
-Miss Hathaway glances in Van Zandt’s direction and their eyes meet. It
-is only an instant, but it leaves the girl somewhat confused and
-accentuates the young man’s disorder.
-
-At this juncture Mr. Felton returns with the information that they have
-little more than an hour to reach Barclay Street and the North River,
-from which point the steamer leaves.
-
-“Then let us go at once. I am ready,” Louise says, “after I have
-scribbled a note of explanation to Mr. Ashley. He was to have lunched
-with us at 1 o’clock, you know.”
-
-After they have gone Van Zandt drops his head upon his hand, and for the
-space of ten minutes remains plunged in thought. Then, to the waiter’s
-surprise, he leaves his breakfast untouched and quits the dining-room.
-
-In the office he sees Mr. Felton settling his bill. Outside the hotel a
-line of “cabbies” are drawn up and these Van Zandt looks over
-critically, finally signaling to one of them, a jovial, red visaged
-Irishman.
-
-“Riley, a lady and gentleman are going from this hotel to Barclay Street
-and North River within a few minutes. I want you to have the job of
-carrying them,” says Van Zandt.
-
-“I’m agreeable, sor.”
-
-“After you have secured the job, I want you to miss the steamer which
-sails for Cuba at 11 o’clock. Understand?”
-
-Riley puckers up his mouth for a whistle which he decides to suppress.
-
-“Sure that would not be hard, sor. It’s tin o’clock now.”
-
-“Here they come now. Look to your job,” says Van Zandt.
-
-Mr. Felton and Miss Hathaway emerge from the hotel, followed by a porter
-with their trunks. Amid a chorus of “Keb, sir!” “Keb!” “Keb!” in which
-Riley sings a heavy bass, Mr. Felton looks about him in perplexity, and
-finally, as though annoyed by the importunities of Riley, who is rather
-overdoing his part, he selects a rival “cabbie.”
-
-Riley turns somewhat sheepishly to Van Zandt, who looks after the
-disappearing carriage in vexation.
-
-“Shall I run them down, sor?” asks the Irishman, with a wink which means
-volumes.
-
-“Can you prevent them reaching the pier?”
-
-“Sure, I think so, your honor.”
-
-“I’ll give you $50 if you do it.”
-
-“Be hivens! I’d murdther thim for that,” exclaims Riley, as he leaps to
-his box.
-
-The two cabs proceeded at a smart pace down Fifth Avenue, but as the
-congested trucking district is reached progress becomes slower.
-
-“Can you make the pier in time?” Mr. Felton asks the driver anxiously,
-consulting his watch for the dozenth time.
-
-“Sure thing,” is the confident response.
-
-Neither the driver nor his passengers see the cab behind them. Riley has
-his reins grasped tightly in one hand, his whip in the other, and the
-expression on his round red face indicates that he is preparing for
-something out of the ordinary.
-
-They have now reached lower West Broadway, and before Mr. Felton’s
-driver knows it he has become entangled in a rapidly created blockade.
-
-Progress now is snail-like. Mr. Felton becomes nervous, while Miss
-Hathaway finds much to interest her in the seemingly inextricable tangle
-of trucks, drays, horse cars, cabs, etc. Suddenly a space of a dozen
-feet or so opens before them, and the driver is about to take advantage
-of it when Riley gives his horse a cut with the whip and bumps by,
-nearly taking a wheel off the other cab.
-
-Then ensues a duel of that picturesque profanity without which no truck
-blockade could possibly be disentangled.
-
-Riley, who is ordinarily one of the most good-natured of mortals,
-becomes suddenly sensitive under the abuse heaped upon him and dragging
-the rival cabman from his box he proceeds to handle him in a manner that
-affords keen delight to the onlookers.
-
-It is a snappy morning and Riley rather enjoys the exercise he is
-taking. But it is suddenly ended by a brace of policemen, who struggle
-upon the scene and pounce upon the combatants. Explanations are then in
-order and peace is restored. No one is arrested.
-
-Riley is willing to break away, for as he looks around he notes with
-satisfaction that the blockade has increased to unusual proportions and
-he awaits serenely its slow unraveling.
-
-Meanwhile Mr. Felton is invoking the vials of wrath upon all cabmen,
-past, present and to come. It is nearly 11:30 when they reach the pier
-and, as they expect, the steamer has gone.
-
-“’Tain’t my fault, mum,” the “cabbie” explains apologetically. “Him’s
-the chap what done it,” indicating Riley, who has driven up to the pier
-with the triumphant flourish of a winner in a great race.
-
-Mr. Felton casts a withering look upon the jolly Irishman. “We may as
-well return to the hotel,” he tells Louise.
-
-At this moment Van Zandt steps from his cab, and, raising his hat,
-remarks:
-
-“I trust that the carelessness of my driver has not caused you serious
-annoyance.”
-
-“He has prevented our catching the last steamer that will sail for Cuba
-in probably some months,” replies Mr. Felton, tartly.
-
-“You blockhead!” cries Van Zandt sternly, turning to Riley, who averts
-his face.
-
-“My dear sir, it is needless for me to assure you of my profound regret.
-It will not help matters. The mischief is done—and yet I think I can
-repair it.”
-
-“Repair it?” repeats Mr. Felton. “In what possible way, sir?”
-
-“Very easily, if you desire. You were going to Havana, I presume?”
-
-“Yes, sir.”
-
-“My yacht sails for Santiago this afternoon at 1 o’clock. I shall be
-happy to land you at that port, and you may thence proceed by rail to
-Havana.”
-
-Mr. Felton and Louise look at each other in surprise. “Really, sir,”
-says the former, “you are very good, but I do not see how we can put you
-to such trouble.”
-
-“I assure you that you will not inconvenience me in the slightest. The
-yacht is large and you will be the only passengers, with one exception.”
-
-Mr. Felton hesitates. “How badly does he want to go to Cuba?” wonders
-Van Zandt and he remarks: “This will probably be your only chance to
-reach Havana in some little time, if, as you say, there are no more
-steamers. Really, I almost feel like insisting on your accepting my
-offer, as some sort of reparation for the annoyance to which you have
-been put and for which I feel partly responsible.”
-
-“But a blockade has been declared about the island. Your yacht—”
-
-“My yacht will land you at Santiago,” supplies Van Zandt, with a
-peculiar smile. “We sail in about an hour, and we may as well proceed to
-the yacht at once. For I assume that you have decided to permit me to
-atone for the blackguardly behavior of my driver.”
-
-Mr. Felton consults Miss Hathaway and the matter is decided in the
-affirmative, and as Van Zandt hands them into their coupe, he tells the
-driver: “North River, foot of Twenty-third Street.”
-
-An hour later Miss Hathaway is expressing her admiration for the
-beautiful yacht that is soon to bear her to the tropics, and Capt. Beals
-is giving the last orders preparatory to getting under way.
-
-As Van Zandt watches Mr. Felton cross from the pier to the deck of the
-Semiramis into his dark eyes comes a glitter of almost savage
-satisfaction, and he murmurs:
-
-“I have you safe now, and by George! You will not soon escape me!”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVI.
-
- THE PENALTY OF PROCRASTINATION.
-
-
-A pencil of sunlight has struggled through the heavy draperies at the
-windows and laid a tiny straight line across the carpet in the
-comfortable apartments of Jack Ashley on West Thirty-fourth Street. The
-oriole timepiece on the mantel chimes the hour of 9 when that individual
-awakens with a series of prodigious yawns.
-
-Fifteen minutes more and Ashley’s toilet is complete, and with heels
-elevated to a comfortable angle, he proceeds to scan the pages of his
-morning paper. His own story of the French ball first claims his
-attention, and with a comment of satisfaction on the size of the
-headlines with which it is introduced, he runs his eye approvingly over
-the dozen or so illustrations with which the article is embellished.
-
-A scare head of the largest size catches his eye, and with awakening
-interest he reads the sensational headlines. “Gaining Ground—Cuban
-Revolutionists Driving Spaniards before Them—Hemisphere’s Exclusive
-Interview with Senor Manada Creates Excitement in Washington—United
-States Man-of-War to Be Sent to Cuba to protect American Interests,” and
-much more of the same tenor. As Jack skims over the voluminous
-dispatches that follow the head, he reads with interest one brief item,
-dated Santiago de Cuba, via Nassau, N. P. It is as follows:
-
- “The Government is redoubling its efforts to suppress the news,
- and is apparently determined that the press of the United States
- and elsewhere shall not learn the exact state of affairs on the
- island. Nine-tenths of the local newspaper men have been fined
- by the press censor. Several editions of the leading papers have
- been seized, and telegrams for transmission abroad from eastern
- Cuba are now absolutely forbidden. It is also a fact that
- foreign correspondents have been threatened with expulsion. The
- Spanish authorities allege that the mysterious steamer fired
- upon by the warship Galicia was not the American ward liner
- Santiago, but a rebel vessel which the insurrectionists have
- purchased in the United States and fitted up as a gunboat. A
- blockade of all the ports of the island, as previously
- intimated, has been formally announced.”
-
-“It looks as if the paper would be obliged to send a man down there,”
-Ashley reflects, as he struggles into his topcoat. “What a superb day
-for the trial trip,” as he opens the street door and steps into the
-sunlight. “And this is the day, too, that Barker is to arrest Felton. He
-didn’t specify any time, probably not till afternoon, anyway. I almost
-wish I wasn’t assigned to that trial trip. I should like to interview
-him after the arrest. However, my story is all written up and I can get
-the details of the arrest from Barker after I return from the America. I
-wonder how Miss Hathaway will take the affair,” a softer light shining
-in his eyes as his thoughts revert to the beautiful ward of Cyrus
-Felton. “She treats him with the utmost deference and respect, but I
-cannot think that she cares especially for him. Heigho! Now for a cup of
-coffee and then for another tete-a-tete with the beautiful unknown of
-the Raymond hotel.”
-
-It is on the stroke of 10 as Ashley saunters up to the clerk’s desk in
-the Kensington and requests that his card, upon which he has penciled a
-few lines explaining his identity, be taken to Mrs. Winthrop.
-
-“Mrs. Winthrop?” the urbane clerk repeats. “There is no such lady
-stopping here, to my knowledge.”
-
-Ashley is nonplused. So he has been duped, he thinks, by the fair
-unknown. But why has not Barker kept his agreement? A nice sort of a
-shadow if he cannot follow as striking-looking a woman as “Mrs.
-Winthrop.” But stay! Perhaps she has given a fictitious name, but is
-actually stopping at the Kensington after all. Barker could not have
-slipped upon a simple matter like that.
-
-Abstractedly twirling his glove, Jack leans over the desk and says in a
-low tone to the clerk, an old acquaintance: “Is there a rather
-striking-looking young woman, with dark eyes and midnight hair, stopping
-at the house?”
-
-The clerk smiles.
-
-“Sorry, Jack, but you are too late, I’m afraid. The beautiful Mrs.
-Harding left at 9 o’clock, bag and baggage.”
-
-Ashley turns thoughtfully away and repairs to the reading-room for a
-quiet think. So her name—for the present at least—is Mrs. Harding. But
-where is Barker? The detective is probably shadowing Mrs. Harding now.
-Ashley concludes that there is nothing for him to do but await Barker’s
-return. He has been on the watch barely half an hour when the detective
-swings himself from a cable car in front of the hotel.
-
-“Well?” is Jack’s impatient salutation as he leads the way to a retired
-corner of the reading-room.
-
-Barker is not in exuberant spirits; his brows are knitted in a frown and
-he is nervously biting his mustache.
-
-“Well, she has gone—left town, and is apparently en route from the
-country—for Cuba, I believe.”
-
-“For Cuba!” and Jack stares at the detective in mild amaze. Verily,
-either a most remarkable series of coincidences or the tangled threads
-of the Raymond mystery are pointing unmistakably to the fair isle of the
-Antilles.
-
-“Yes, for Cuba. Let me impress it upon your mind in the beginning that
-Mrs. Isabel Harding—that’s the name she is sailing under—is no ordinary
-woman. Why—but to begin at the beginning. According to our understanding
-last night, I followed her to this hotel, where I found she was actually
-stopping. I naturally concluded that she made the engagement with you in
-good faith, else she would have given another hotel.”
-
-“She did give me a fictitious name,” breaks in Jack. “Or, rather, she
-led me to believe that her name was still Winthrop.”
-
-“Did she? Well, that was useless. Anyhow, I decided to stop here last
-night, to be on guard early this morning. I found that my lady had
-breakfasted early. This made me suspicious and I kept close watch of
-her. Shortly after 9 o’clock she settled her bill at the hotel and with
-her trunks was driven to the Jersey City ferry. Of course I followed. At
-the Pennsylvania depot she was joined by a foreign-looking
-chap—Spaniard. Quite a distinguished-looking duffer. If you should ever
-run across him you will know him by a small, crescent-shaped scar on his
-left cheek. I was successful in getting close enough to them to hear
-some of the conversation. It appeared from their talk, Ashley, that your
-Mrs. Harding is, in addition to her other accomplishments, a spy in the
-pay of the Spanish Government, and that she has been successful in
-learning some of the secret plans and plots of the Cuban filibusters in
-this city. She is now on her way to Port Tampa aboard the Florida
-limited, and I should judge it is their intention to proceed from Key
-West at once to Havana.”
-
-“Their intention? Did the Spanish officer accompany her?”
-
-Barker nods. “He looked as if he was right out of the hospital; his head
-was bandaged. Perhaps some of the Cuban sympathizers had it out with
-him. However, that episode is closed, for the present at least. And now
-for Cyrus Felton. I shall take him directly to the Tombs, and according
-to our compact he will be invisible to any of the newspaper fraternity.
-Will you come with me to the St. James while I nab the bird?”
-
-Ashley starts. He has for a moment forgotten the catastrophe that is
-about to overcome Cyrus Felton. He looks at his watch. “I am overdue at
-the office,” he says. “But say, Barker, I had an engagement to lunch
-with Felton and Miss Hathaway at 1 o’clock. Can’t you put off the arrest
-until to-morrow?”
-
-Barker shakes his head. “Not a minute,” he replies, emphatically. “I
-have delayed long enough. If you intended to lunch with the fair Miss
-Hathaway you will have an opportunity to do so just the same and your
-presence will doubtless be appreciated in her tremendous confusion. If
-you can’t come with me I will drop round at the office and see you
-later.”
-
-“All right, then. Do the job in as gentlemanly a manner as possible,”
-grins Ashley.
-
-Barker nods and walks rapidly toward the St. James, while Ashley boards
-a Broadway car and rolls downtown.
-
-The detective saunters up to the hotel office desk, writes the name
-“Cyrus Felton” on a bit of cardboard, and, passing it to the clerk,
-inquires: “Is that gentleman in?”
-
-“No, sir; gone. Left an hour ago.”
-
-“When will he return?”
-
-“Well, that’s rather beyond me,” smiles the clerk. “Mr. Felton and a
-lady sailed this morning for Cuba, on the City of Havana. I assume that
-they did. They were driven from here to the pier.”
-
-“What time does the steamer sail?” asks Barker, taking out his watch.
-
-“Eleven o’clock.”
-
-“Too late!” grits the detective. It is even now five minutes past the
-hour.
-
-For a moment Barker permits his emotions to master his self-possession,
-and he startles even the debonair clerk, accustomed as the latter is to
-the strong terms sometimes employed by irritable guests.
-
-His feelings relieved in a measure by this unusual outbreak, the
-detective sits down for a moment to consider the situation. Cyrus
-Felton, then, is on his way to Cuba, doubtless to join his son. Mrs.
-Harding, a valuable quantity in the mystery, is also headed for the
-Antilles. Everything seems to point to Cuba. Barker picks up a railroad
-timetable.
-
-“Twelve m.; Florida express for Savannah, Jacksonville and Port Tampa,”
-he reads.
-
-“By the gods, I’ll do it!” he exclaims, as he starts for the street.
-“First to the pier and make sure that the steamer has gone, and, if so,
-then to Key West. I shall be only two hours behind the woman, and I may
-reach Havana ahead of Felton. Hi, there, cabby!”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVII.
-
- THE CRUISER AMERICA.
-
-
-“Jack, Mr. Ricker wants to see you,” is the information extended to
-Ashley when he reaches the office. He reports at the room of the city
-editor, and that gentleman informs him that he has not arrived any too
-soon.
-
-“I know that I am an hour or so behind, but I have been working up a
-story that will make interesting reading,” Ashley explains. “What’s up?
-My trial-trip assignment isn’t until 3, is it?”
-
-“The start was set for 3, but it has been pushed forward to 1 o’clock,”
-says Ricker.
-
-“It is about noon now. I may as well start for Brooklyn at once. Good,
-snappy day for a run down the bay.
-
-“Thunder!” says Ashley, when he reaches the street. “I had forgotten
-that I was booked for a consolatory lunch with Miss Hathaway at 1. I
-must send my regrets. Hang it, that will look as if I was on to the
-arrest and was afraid to show up.”
-
-But he sends the note, nevertheless, and feels better in mind. “If that
-cold-blooded Barker only handles the matter properly,” he thinks.
-
-Even as he reaches the Government dock Jack sees the pennant of Capt.
-Meade run up to the main truck of the cruiser whose initial trial in
-commission he is to report; he is none too soon for the gang-plank is
-being withdrawn by half a score of blue-clad sailors as he makes a
-flying leap and lands upon the deck of the newest and fastest
-acquisition to Uncle Sam’s navy, the cruiser America.
-
-Ere Jack has fully recovered his footing a youthful-appearing midshipman
-brusquely demands his business.
-
-It takes sometime before Jack is permitted to tread the sacred precincts
-of the quarter-deck.
-
-Capt. Meade is for the time being on the bridge, and, before making the
-acquaintance of the commander, Jack proceeds to look about the vessel.
-
-The America has an air of being a ship made for getting there; an
-up-to-date cruiser, without frills and furbelows, but distinctively with
-an aspect of power. In the bright sunlight her snowy hull gleams like
-polished marble. Her four great smokestacks relieve in a measure the
-glaring effect of her big white bulk, while the polished brass and steel
-with which all the decks are gird-ironed suggest, without the presence
-of the murderous rapid-fire and revolving cannon stationed about the
-decks, that the vessel is designed for war.
-
-Ashley is soon engaged in the collection of information regarding the
-America for the benefit of Hemisphere readers. The cruiser is, the
-second officer informs him, of over 7,000 tons displacement. Her battery
-comprises two six-inch, 40-caliber rapid-fire guns, one on each side,
-forward of the superstructure; one eight-inch, 40-caliber on the center
-line, abaft the superstructure; eight four-inch rapid-fire guns in
-armored sponsons on the gundeck, four on each side; six-pounder
-rapid-fire guns, four-pounders, one-pounders, Gatlings and torpedo tubes
-galore.
-
-“There are three vertical, triple-expansion engines, each set driving a
-separate screw. The propellers are of manganese bronze and the—”
-
-“Thank you, that is sufficient, I guess,” interrupts Jack. “The
-Hemisphere readers will have a very good idea of the offensive and
-defensive power of the America now, I am sure.”
-
-The cruiser is slowly backing out into the stream. There is a big throng
-on the pier to watch her departure, and a whole battery of cameras are
-leveled as she finally swings around.
-
-Now the ship becomes indeed instinct with life and is pointing down the
-bay with a speed that augurs well for the shattering of records. The
-whistles of all the craft in sight screech a salute and the America’s
-hoarse whistle bellows responsively. Past the Battery and Governor’s
-Island she speeds and then, fairly by quarantine, the patent log is cast
-into the foamy wake and Capt. Meade rings “full speed.”
-
-The speed trial of the America has actually begun.
-
-Jack is idly watching the rapidly receding island, when he becomes aware
-by the slight bustle on the quarterdeck that the commander of the
-America has returned from the bridge.
-
-Capt. Meade, or “Fighting Dave,” as he is affectionately designated in
-naval circles, is a man of about 60 years, but forty-five years of his
-eventful career have been spent in the navy. He has worked himself up,
-without political or social influence, from apprentice boy to commander
-of the newest and best cruiser in the United States.
-
-Jack has heard of “Fighting Dave,” and he scans the famous naval officer
-with much interest. A figure slightly below the average, but stockily
-built; a cheerful visage, face weather-beaten and innocent of beard,
-surmounted by a shock of grizzly hair; eyes whose keen expression might
-well belie the jovial look upon the face—this is Capt. David Meade,
-U.S.N.
-
-“Good face,” thinks Ashley, as he completes his scrutiny. “I should like
-to know Capt. Meade personally, and I will.”
-
-With his customary assurance and easy grace Ashley approaches the
-autocrat of the quarterdeck and tenders his card.
-
-Capt. Meade glances at the pasteboard and then his keen eyes wander to
-the newspaper man. Apparently the scrutiny is satisfactory, for the
-bronzed face wrinkles into the most benign of smiles and a tremendous
-fist grasps Jack’s right hand with a grip which causes him to mentally
-question his ability to write up the trial trip, or anything else, for a
-week at least.
-
-“So you are from the Hemisphere?” Capt. Meade observes. “Well, I like
-that paper and one of its representatives is heartily welcome to my
-ship. In these days of sentiment and gush and peace and good-will and
-brotherly love, and so forth, and so forth, it does my heart good to get
-hold of a paper which isn’t afraid nor ashamed to speak right out in
-meetin’ for the land we live in and the flag that floats above it. But
-come below, Mr. Ashley, and we’ll clinch the sentiment with a toast.”
-And the captain leads the way to his sumptuous quarters, where the
-“splicing of the main brace” is accomplished with alacrity and vigor by
-commander and newspaper man.
-
-“Well, what do you think of the America?” asks the captain. “Did you
-ever see anything like that on a vessel going over twenty knots an
-hour?” setting his glass, filled to the brim, on the table. The surface
-of the liquid is scarce more ruffled than that of a mirror. “No sign of
-vibration, eh? She stands up as steady as a house.”
-
-Jack is really surprised as he considers the circumstances. “From what
-little I have seen of her I should say she is a remarkable craft and one
-that Uncle Sam should feel proud of,” he replies.
-
-“Remarkable? She’s a wonder! Why, she can walk away from anything that
-floats—anything, big or little, torpedo catchers or stilettos. I was on
-her when her first trial trip with the builders aboard took place, and
-while she made twenty-five knots then, she can do better. And she is
-going to do it to-day. Before we reach Sandy Hook, young man, you can
-just put it down in your log-book that the American flag is being borne
-over the water faster than any other flag is likely to be carried for
-some time. One more splice and then we’ll show you how the trick is
-done.”
-
-As the captain and his guest return to the quarterdeck of the cruiser it
-is apparent that something unusual is attracting the attention of
-officers and crew. Those who are not actively engaged in the
-manipulation of the cruiser are gathered at the port rail watching
-intently a steamer that is running parallel with the America, about an
-eighth of a mile distant and about three lengths astern.
-
-“What is it, Mr. Jones?” inquires Capt. Meade of the third officer, who
-has just removed the binocular glasses from his eyes.
-
-“A strange craft, sir, evidently a yacht which is apparently using the
-America as a pacemaker. She pulled up astern of us fifteen minutes ago,
-and has since been steadily gaining. Very fast, sir, I should say, but
-she bears no ensign or pennant of any kind.”
-
-Capt. Meade takes the glasses from the hands of his subaltern and looks
-long and critically at the strange vessel. She is nearly the same length
-as the America, though manifestly of considerable less tonnage. And she
-is painted black, without a bit of gay color from stem to stern to
-relieve the somberness of her hull.
-
-Two black smokestacks, that appear unusually large and are set at a
-decidedly rakish angle, are relieved by two narrow bands of white. Capt.
-Meade with a seaman’s appreciative eye admires the shapely lines of the
-yacht, but as his practiced vision notices the comparative ease with
-which she is creeping up on the America his jovial face becomes slightly
-troubled.
-
-“Mr. Jones, have the log taken and work out our speed at once,” he
-orders.
-
-“Twenty-four and a quarter knots,” is the report.
-
-For the next ten minutes the captain watches intently the strange yacht.
-Her course is apparently shaped precisely parallel with that of the
-America, and she still continues to gain, inch by inch, upon the white
-cruiser. Now she is amidships, and now the two vessels are on even
-terms.
-
-A puff of white steam rises abaft the stranger’s big smokestacks, and a
-long shrill whistle salutes the cruiser.
-
-’Tis a challenge for a race and it stirs Capt. Meade’s blood to fever
-heat. He sends for the chief engineer.
-
-“How is the machinery working?” he inquires.
-
-“Finely, sir; not the sign of the slightest trouble anywhere.”
-
-“Very well, sir; we will begin now to push her for a record. Put on
-every ounce of steam she will stand, first with natural and afterward
-with forced draught.”
-
-The chief engineer salutes, and returns to his domain, and a second
-later the hoarse whistle of the America sounds a defiant acceptance of
-the challenge of the black yacht.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXVIII.
-
- GREAT RACE TO THE OCEAN.
-
-
-“By Jove! I had no idea the captain had so much sporting blood in his
-veins,” murmurs Jack Ashley to himself, as he watches alternately the
-challenging craft and the America. “It is a race fit for a king’s
-delectation. I wonder whose yacht that is. I don’t remember seeing her
-described in any of the papers, as she certainly would have been if she
-were owned in New York. She is a big one, and a beauty, too. And swift
-as the wind! But she doesn’t seem to be gaining now. No, by Jupiter! We
-are gaining on her! The America has struck her gait at last! But that’s
-a game craft there. She sticks to us like a leech and refuses to be
-shaken off. Ah!”
-
-The impromptu race has been in progress nearly half an hour, and the two
-vessels, still less than an eighth of a mile apart, are gradually
-drawing nearer each other. It is apparent that the yacht is determined
-to continue the race at closer range, and has changed her course for
-that purpose. Meanwhile the big cruiser has held to her original course,
-and as the yacht straightens away for another parallel run she has lost
-her former advantage and the two vessels are practically on even terms.
-
-It is a battle royal!
-
-The white cruiser is cleaving the water with tremendous speed, her bow
-sending the spray curling nearly as high as her armored top, while the
-waves astern are churned by her triple screws into a foam that extends
-as far as the eye can reach. The roaring of her furnaces is audible
-above the whir of the machinery and the whistling of the wind through
-the rigging. From her three great smokestacks steadily increasing masses
-of inky smoke trail out above the snowy wake.
-
-All eyes on the deck of the cruiser are riveted on the yacht. For a
-short space of time it looks as if both vessels might be propelled by
-the same power, so even are their relative positions. Then, to the
-practical eyes aboard the cruiser, it is apparent that the America is
-drawing ahead, slowly to be sure, and imperceptibly to the untrained
-eye, but still gaining.
-
-A dozen yards, a quarter length, a half, a clear length ahead!
-
-A hearty cheer is trembling on the lips of the crew of the cruiser, but
-it is not uttered. The race is still unfinished, the victory still hangs
-in the balance.
-
-Like a thoroughbred that has been feeling her antagonist, the yacht now
-seems to respond to some undeveloped power. The cruiser gains no
-more—she is losing her advantage. The watchers on the quarterdeck of the
-America can see the black prow lessening the open water that separates
-the two craft. Now her bow laps the stern of the America, but not for
-long. She is overhauling the cruiser faster now, and in a few
-minutes—seconds, it seems to the anxious spectators on the latter
-vessel—she is abeam of the America.
-
-Out beyond Sandy Hook, where the billows flash into curving crests like
-the manes of wild horses, a great fleet has gathered to watch the race
-against time of the famous warship. Instead it is their privilege to
-witness a race between two of the swiftest sea hounds ever unleashed on
-the trail of the wind.
-
-Through the impromptu armada the racers speed over the toppling seas. A
-thousand glasses are upon them. What does it mean? The white cruiser all
-may recognize, but her sable-hulled consort, what is she? Straight out
-from staff and halyards the wind whips the flag and ensigns of the
-America, but neither ensign nor flag does the strange steamship show,
-and except for the great white wake that trails behind her she might be
-a phantom ship, another Flying Dutchman.
-
-But ere the “reviewing stand” recovers from its first surprise, both
-craft are miles away, black bow and white bow piling over hills of foam
-like sleighs over snowdrifts and the surge that goes sobbing along the
-glistening sides of the cruiser, inaudible above the roar of her mighty
-engines, sounds like the weeping for a lost race.
-
-For the black hull is bow and bow with the white, as, after a long and
-critical survey of the yacht from the bridge, Capt. Meade descends to
-the deck and summons the chief engineer.
-
-“Everything is working finely, sir,” that official reports. “We are
-steaming the extreme limit under natural draught. Shall we try the
-forced now, sir?”
-
-Capt. Meade hesitates and again gazes long at the yacht. The latter has
-now a clear length of open water to the good and her stern is presented
-squarely in view for the first time. The single word Semiramis is
-inscribed thereon in gold letters. But no port is designated.
-
-“The Semiramis,” murmurs the commander of the America. “I never heard of
-the craft before, but her name will be on every man’s lips before long,
-I’ll wager.” Then to the chief engineer: “Yes, put on the forced
-draught.”
-
-Jack Ashley wipes the marine glasses with which the thoughtfulness of
-the second officer has provided him, and turns them again toward the
-afterdeck of the yacht.
-
-“Well, may I be keelhauled, or some other equally condign nautical
-punishment,” he mutters, after a long look. “If that isn’t Louise
-Hathaway, seated in a steamer chair, then do my optics play me strange
-pranks. But what is she doing on the deck of that yacht? She appears to
-be alone; at least there is no other lady passenger on deck. Ah, there
-is Mr. Felton. So Barker was too late. Felton and Miss Hathaway must be
-the guests of the gay yachtsman who is making ducks and drakes of the
-America on her trial trip.
-
-“Thunder and Mars!” cries the newspaper man, nearly dropping the glasses
-to the deck. “Phillip Van Zandt! He is apparently the owner of the
-yacht. Good heavens! What irony of fate brings together those two
-participants in the Raymond tragedy. For Van Zandt is Ernest Stanley, I
-will swear it.
-
-“Well, as the novelists say, the plot thickens. How did Van Zandt
-ingratiate himself into the good graces of Cyrus Felton? It must have
-been recently, for Miss Hathaway spoke as if they had no friends in the
-city. Hang it all! I don’t just fancy the situation. How assiduously he
-is waiting upon her now! Heigho, Jack! I think I would as soon have
-reported this trial trip from the deck of the Semiramis.” At which
-thought Ashley impatiently pitches over the rail the remains of one of
-Capt. Meade’s favorite brand of cigars.
-
-The black plumes of smoke that pour from the chimneys of the America are
-becoming denser and larger. The forced draught is now fully in
-operation, and in the boiler-rooms the half-naked stokers ceaselessly
-feed the greedy fires.
-
-The cruiser has reached the limit of her speed.
-
-How is it with the Semiramis?
-
-For a time the America seems to hold her own and even to gain slightly.
-But the advantage is transitory. The yacht still apparently has speed in
-reserve. Once more she leaps forward and not again is opportunity
-afforded the America’s people to view her gleaming sides.
-
-For another hour both vessels are driven at their highest speed. The
-Semiramis continues to gain upon the America, and is now nearly a
-quarter of a mile ahead.
-
-Half an hour later Capt. Meade sees a flag run up to the masthead of the
-vanishing yacht. He gives an order and the cruiser’s forward gun booms a
-salute.
-
-“What do you make of that ensign, Mr. Smith?” inquires the commander,
-turning to the second officer.
-
-“A strange flag, sir, not the flag of any nation that I recall,” is the
-reply.
-
-“Ah, I have it,” suddenly exclaims the captain. “Well, she is a great
-craft and magnificently handled. The America made a gallant fight
-against odds and lost; but you can say, Mr. Ashley,” as that individual
-ascends the steps to the bridge, “that the America has broken all
-records in the navies of the world, and for two consecutive hours has
-exceeded twenty-seven knots an hour. Yonder craft has beaten that time,
-but she has not the heavy armament of the America.”
-
-“What was the ensign she ran up a moment ago, captain?” Ashley asks.
-
-“That, sir,” replies Capt. Meade, “was the flag of Cuba Libre, the
-emblem of the sometime republic of the Antilles!”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXIX.
-
- ASHLEY LAGS SUPERFLUOUS.
-
-
-“If she is the property of the revolutionists, gentlemen, with her
-phenomenal speed she can run the strictest blockade the Spaniards can
-institute, can land arms, ammunition and re-enforcements at will, and
-practically snap her fingers at the whole Spanish navy.”
-
-The speaker is Capt. Meade and the place the officers’ mess table on
-board the America. Naturally the one topic of conversation is the
-strange yacht and her remarkable performance.
-
-“Yes,” continues the captain, impressively, “I believe that the result
-of the insurrection may hang on the fate of that steamer. My sympathies
-as an individual, I do not hesitate to say, are with the rebels. But my
-duty as an officer impels me to notify the War Department of the
-departure of the Semiramis and the flaunting of the Cuban flag. However,
-I hardly think the warning will harm her, even if it should set the
-entire Spanish navy in pursuit.”
-
-“Do you think the yacht is bound for Cuba now?” inquires Ashley, with an
-unpleasant sensation in the vicinity of the fifth rib.
-
-“Certainly. She is apparently coaled and equipped for a long voyage. She
-set low enough in the water to carry quite a cargo, too. Oh, yes; she is
-off for the West Indies sure enough.”
-
-Ashley relapses into a reverie and the burden of his thoughts is
-something like this: “Louise Hathaway, Cyrus Felton and this mysterious
-Van Zandt on the same steamer and bound for Cuba! How and why?” He
-mechanically pulls at his cigar. Finally, as the signal for breaking up
-of the dinner party is given by the commander, he murmurs: “What will
-John Barker say?”
-
-The America has completed her run; and now, her officers and the naval
-experts aboard having expressed their satisfaction with her performance,
-the cruiser is steaming back to her dock. The shrill salutes of the many
-steam craft in the harbor greet the ears of Ashley as he accompanies the
-officers to the deck. The sun is shining in a haze of cold gray. The
-March air, a few hours ago so clear and warm, is dull and
-marrow-piercing. Ashley shivers and buttons his coat more closely about
-him.
-
-A few moments more, and the cruiser is slowing down preparatory to
-making her pier, and Jack seeks Capt. Meade to express his thanks. The
-latter shakes his hand cordially and remarks: “Better come on our next
-cruise, my boy; we may have another try at the black yacht. The navy
-expert says it was rumored in official circles that if this trial was
-satisfactory the America is to be ordered immediately to Cuba to protect
-American interests. Good news, if true, eh?”
-
-Ashley allows that if the captain says it is good news, good news it
-certainly must be; and a half-defined hope is forming in his mind as he
-steps once more on terra firma.
-
-“After I turn in my story on the trial trip I shall proceed to hunt up
-some possible light on the latest twist in the Hathaway tangle,” he
-meditates, as he sets his face toward the lights of Gotham town. “Felton
-and Miss Hathaway were booked to sail on the City of Callao on Saturday;
-yet I discover them to-day headed southward on the Semiramis. Miss
-Hathaway must have left some explanation, and it is barely possible that
-Barker may know something about the sudden departure. I should not be a
-particle surprised if John, too, were aboard the Semiramis. Nothing will
-ever surprise me again. But if Barker got left I shall probably find him
-sitting on the steps of the Hemisphere office, in a state of mind
-bordering on the profane.”
-
-But fate decrees that many days shall elapse ere the detective and his
-newspaper friend again clasp each other by the hand; days big with
-exciting events that the serene Ashley dreams not of as he saunters down
-Newspaper Row.
-
-From his box in the office Ashley extracts a letter, evidently hastily
-written and sealed. The address is in Barker’s handwriting, and Ashley
-tears it open. He reads:
-
- “My Dear Ashley: I start for Cuba at 12 o’clock via Key West.
- Write this just before the train starts. Felton has eluded
- me—thanks to your infernal French ball—and sailed for Cuba on
- City of Havana at 11 o’clock. Don’t know whether he got wind of
- contemplated arrest or not. If I have good luck at Key West will
- be in H. as soon as he. May trail him to the son and bag both at
- once. In any event, do not intend to lose sight of him again
- till he is safely landed in Vermont. I may run across your Mrs.
- Harding, and if I do will try my luck at making her tell what
- she knows of young Felton, on threat of exposing her as a
- Spanish spy. Good scheme, eh? Must close, train starting; will
- write from Cuba. Hastily,
-
- “Barker.”
-
-“So Cuba is to be the scene of the next act of the Raymond tragedy,”
-Jack thinks. “How suddenly all the characters have betaken themselves to
-the southern isle, and how events have crowded on each other the last
-day or two! First, news that young Felton is in Cuba; then appear Cyrus
-Felton and Louise Hathaway in the city; then the mysterious woman of the
-Raymond hotel, and the stranger of the mountain gorge—and all of these
-are at this moment en route to Cuba. Only Derrick Ames and Helen
-Hathaway remain to be accounted for, and if Barker’s theory is correct,
-and they, too, are in Cuba, what a situation and what a complication! I
-must be there at the finish. The paper really needs a war correspondent
-in the ever-faithful isle, and I’ve half a mind to ask for the
-assignment.”
-
-From his desk Ashley takes a bulky package of manuscript, glances
-through it, and with a sigh replaces it within an inner compartment.
-“The Raymond mystery story, the newspaper beat of the year,” is not to
-be used yet.
-
-But the account of the trial trip of the America must be written, and
-soon the sheaves of yellow paper are being rapidly covered by Jack’s
-flying pen.
-
-At last it is finished, and with a grunt of satisfaction Jack arranges
-the scattered sheets and proceeds to the desk of the city editor.
-
-“Ah, Ashley,” remarks that dignitary, glancing at the manuscript and
-without raising his eyes; “trial trip was a success, wasn’t it? Yes;
-well, I have a little something here that I wish you would look up. You
-have done so much Cuban stuff lately that you are more familiar with the
-ground than any other man on the staff. The Washington wire states that
-a vessel, the Isabel, that was to have sailed from here to-day, has been
-detained at her moorings, foot of Twenty-third Street. She is suspected
-of having arms and ammunition for the Cuban rebels on board. The
-information was filed by the Spanish minister. Just look up the local
-end of the story, find out who fitted out the steamer, where she was
-ostensibly to clear for, etc. You had better see your filibuster friend,
-Manada. He might give you something on it.”
-
-“Blast Cuba!” mutters Jack, as he leaves the office. “Everything is Cuba
-now. Talk about Tantalus! His case wasn’t a marker to mine. Here are all
-the characters in a drama in which I am interested gone to Cuba, while I
-lag superfluous on the stage, doomed to write up stuff about the
-confounded island and its affairs at long range. Besides, I haven’t
-fairly got back my land legs, and now I must jaunt up the North River
-two or three miles. Well, there is no use kicking, I suppose. Guess I
-will look up Don Manada first, though.”
-
-Ashley’s annoyance dissipates rapidly, however, and he has recovered his
-customary serenity when he tenders his card to the clerk at the Fifth
-Avenue Hotel, to be taken to Don Manada’s rooms.
-
-“Don Manada has left, sir” the clerk tells him. “He had his effects
-removed early this morning and stated that he might not return for some
-months.”
-
-“Where has he gone, do you know?”
-
-“To Cuba, I think.”
-
-Jack turns away. “To Cuba, of course. Everybody with whom I have
-business to-day has gone to Cuba. If that filibustering vessel, the
-Isabel, has not eluded the officers and sailed for Cuba by the time I
-reach her wharf, I shall be mightily surprised. No; I have decided to be
-surprised at nothing hereafter. The Isabel! There’s another
-coincidence—the first name of Mrs. Harding or Mrs. Winthrop or whatever
-it is—the woman of the Raymond Hotel. Well, here goes for the Isabel.”
-
-It is cold, foggy, dark and altogether disagreeable as Jack alights from
-the car at the foot of Twenty-third Street and picks his way down the
-long wharf to where he is informed the detained steamer is docked. She
-is still there; he sees her smokestacks and masts outlined against the
-sky. A single lantern is alight on the vessel, but the gang-plank has
-been hauled in.
-
-“Steamer ahoy!” Ashley calls, and after several repetitions of the hail
-a gruff voice sounds from the gloom in the vicinity of the lantern.
-
-“Ashore, there! What do you want?”
-
-“Is this the Isabel?”
-
-“Yes,” is the brief reply.
-
-“Well, I want to talk with you a moment. Can’t you run out a plank and
-hold that lantern nearer, so I can see to come aboard? I am from the
-Hemisphere.”
-
-There is a moment’s hesitation and then the lantern approaches the
-steamer’s side and a plank is extended to the pier.
-
-“Now, all I want to find out is about the alleged seizure of the
-vessel,” begins Jack, thrusting a cigar into the fist that releases the
-lantern.
-
-“There ain’t much to say,” is the reply. “I am a United States deputy
-marshal and was placed in charge of the vessel this noon. Whether her
-cargo contains arms and ammunition I can’t say for sure, as she is not
-to be searched till to-morrow, but from the remarks dropped by some of
-the crew I’ll bet a hat the cargo has been taken off. One of the crew
-was considerably under the weather when I came aboard and I gathered
-from his talk that some of the Isabel’s cargo was shifted to another
-steamer, a long, black craft, some time after midnight or early this
-morning.”
-
-“What was the name of the other steamer?” inquires Ashley, a sudden
-suspicion entering his mind.
-
-“Blessed if I know,” replies the deputy marshal.
-
-“The Semiramis, I’ll wager $4 to a nickel,” mutters Ashley, as he thanks
-the marshal and goes ashore.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXX.
-
- ON TO FAIR CUBA.
-
-
-“There are only two bits of evidence needed to complete my moral
-conviction that I am the only person connected with the Raymond tragedy
-who is not in Cuba or on his way thither,” remarks Ashley, loquitur, as
-he boards a cross-town car. “One is the assurance that Cyrus Felton and
-Miss Hathaway have left the St. James Hotel with no intention of an
-immediate return; the other, the knowledge that Phillip Van Zandt has
-closed his quarters in the Wyoming flats for an indefinite period. I
-believe I will try the St. James first.”
-
-He does. The clerk smiles benignly upon him when he inquires for the
-Vermonters. “Gone, Jack; but you were not forgotten,” he says. “The day
-clerk turned this over to me,” extracting a note from the letter rack.
-
-“Thank you, Ed,” acknowledges Ashley. He tears open the note and reads:
-
- “Dear Mr. Ashley: I regret very much that circumstances have
- made it necessary to postpone indefinitely the luncheon for this
- afternoon at 1, to which I had looked forward with much
- pleasure. We have just learned that in order to reach Cuba we
- must sail on the City of Havana, which leaves New York at 11
- o’clock to-day. With many thanks for your kindnesses, believe
- me, sincerely yours,
-
- Louise Hathaway.”
-
-“Far from enlightening me, this note only plunges me deeper in the fog,”
-thinks Ashley, sniffing the faint odor of violet that clings to the
-dainty stationery. “She asserts here that she is going to Cuba on the
-City of Havana, yet I discover her aboard the Semiramis. At any rate
-they have gone to Cuba, and there is no particular reason for my
-visiting Van Zandt’s apartments. It is getting late, anyway, and I
-believe I will return to the office. If Ricker is in a good-humored mood
-I will attempt to convince him that the only feature which the paper at
-present lacks is a live man at Havana who can tell the difference
-between an overwhelming Spanish or Cuban victory and a fifth-rate
-scrimmage that a dozen New York policemen could quell in ten minutes.”
-
-Ashley swings himself upon a Broadway car and lapses into a meditation.
-“How the deuce do Miss Hathaway and Cyrus Felton come to be aboard the
-Semiramis? And if Ernest Stanley is Phillip Van Zandt, where did he get
-the money to own such a yacht? Forty or fifty thousand dollars of
-Raymond National Bank funds wouldn’t pay for one side of the Semiramis.
-But it may not be his yacht. I have simply assumed so because he looked
-as if he owned the ocean as well. Good gracious, I should be inclined to
-regard Miss Hathaway’s disappearance as a clear case of abduction but
-for the fact that the fair Louise appeared entirely satisfied with her
-surroundings when I focused the America’s glasses upon her graceful
-self. I am beginning to believe that I am clear off my reckoning on Van
-Zandt. The Semiramis may be owned by the Cubans and he may simply be one
-of the leaders of the expedition. And he may not be Ernest Stanley at
-all, although I think—hang it! I don’t know what I think. I shall quit
-thinking from now on. It is too hard work.”
-
-Much relieved by this determination, Ashley sits at his desk, lights his
-briar and dashes off a short sketch of the detained filibustering
-vessel. This he tosses over to the night-desk men, and strolls into the
-city editor’s den.
-
-“When you are at leisure, Mr. Ricker, I should like to bore you for five
-or ten minutes,” he announces.
-
-“I am at leisure now, Jack. Sit down. It has been a rather light night
-and there is an unusual lull just at present. What is on your mind?”
-
-“It is something like half a dozen years since I began work on the
-paper, is it not?”
-
-“Just about, my son.”
-
-“And during that time I have never kicked on an assignment or asked for
-any particular job.”
-
-“Yes; if I recollect rightly, that is about the size of it,” remarks
-Ricker dryly. “Now, what can I do for you?”
-
-“I should like the assignment of war correspondent at Havana.”
-
-The city editor is silent for a moment.
-
-“I am sorry you did not speak of this Havana business before,” he says,
-encircling the pastepot with a ring of smoke. “Unfortunately I have
-mapped out two or three months’ work for you at a place a good many
-miles from the capital of Cuba.”
-
-Ashley’s face does not reveal the disappointment he feels.
-
-“All right, Mr. Ricker, I have no kick coming. I will break another one
-of my rules and ask what the assignment is before I have been notified
-of it.”
-
-“It is an important mission, my son, and the selection of the man to
-fill the place does not come within my department. But as a good man was
-needed I urged the desirability of putting you on the job.”
-
-“You are very kind,” murmurs Ashley.
-
-“I intended to communicate to you his wishes to-night,” resumes Ricker.
-“In fact, I received the assignment for you an hour ago and you would
-have found it in your box in the morning.” The city editor tosses over a
-yellow envelope and Ashley finds therein the brief notification:
-
-“Beginning March 18, Mr. Ashley will enter upon the duties as war
-correspondent at Santiago de Cuba.”
-
-Ashley looks up and catches the indulgent smile of his chief.
-
-“Ricker, you’re a jewel,” he says, warmly, extending his hand. The
-friendship between the two men has long since leveled the wall of
-official dignity.
-
-“I had no idea you wanted the job,” smiles the city editor.
-
-“Until to-day I had no desire to visit Cuba,” replies Ashley. “But at
-present I want to go the worst way—or the best way. And my wish to reach
-Cuban soil is not greatly influenced by personal reasons, either. I
-expect some day to turn over to you a story that will cover a good share
-of the first page and just now the trail is winding under the flags of
-three nations—Spain, Cuba and the United States. But why Santiago,
-instead of Havana?”
-
-“For the reason that, as you may see by a look over to-night’s
-telegrams, the eastern province of Cuba is likely to be the principal
-theater of the struggle for independence. You know the sort of stuff we
-want. Statements of fact, above all. You may have some difficulty in
-getting us the facts by wire, as the government controls the cables; but
-there are the mails, and in addition to the usual grind you might send a
-two or three column chatty letter every fortnight or so that would be
-interesting reading. Spend all the money that is necessary. Get right
-out into the fighting; there isn’t one chance in a million of your being
-hurt. Above all, send us facts. We cannot pay too much for facts.”
-
-“Have you considered how I am to reach Santiago? You know there are no
-steamer lines running to the island.”
-
-“That has been arranged. The bulletin was received early this evening
-that the new cruiser America had been ordered to Santiago. The managing
-editor used his influence, and permission to send a representative on
-the vessel has kindly been granted. There is some value in being on the
-right side of an administration. The cruiser sails the day after
-to-morrow, the 18th.”
-
-Ashley and Ricker soon complete their talk and Jack starts for home in a
-complacent condition of mind. Arriving at his rooms he slips into a
-dressing-gown and stretches himself in an easy-chair for a smoke-lined
-night-cap, and as the rings curl upward he sees in fancy the various
-actors in the Raymond drama passing in review before a tropical
-background of hazy blue hills and palm-shaded groves.
-
-Suddenly he utters an exclamation: “Jupiter! How is Barker to get to
-Cuba? He must have shot off to Key West without reading the morning
-paper, and he probably was not aware that there are no steamers running
-from Key West any more than from New York or other ports. When he does
-learn that fact his remarks will not be fit for publication. Well, I
-suppose, he will get there somehow, even if he has to swim. But in all
-probability I shall reach the island before him.
-
-“The trail is plain. It leads to Cuba, and somewhere in the gem of the
-Antilles the threads of the Raymond murder mystery will touch and cross
-and interweave.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXI.
-
- THE FLAG OF CUBA.
-
-
-“We shall have a race, Don Manada—a battle royal. The new United States
-cruiser America has just steamed out of the bay ahead of us and we shall
-soon be abreast of her.”
-
-“A race, Senor Van Zandt? Santissimo! We shall have racing enough before
-we get to Cuba without challenging unsuspicious warships and courting
-investigation.”
-
-Van Zandt laughs at the Cuban gentleman’s anxious tones. “I told you, my
-friend, that once on the high seas nothing short of a cannon ball can
-overhaul the Semiramis. Come on deck in an hour, senor, and I will prove
-to you what may now seem an idle boast.”
-
-For excellent reasons Manada is keeping in the background as much as
-possible. But he finds the luxurious cabin of the Semiramis much to his
-liking, and he smokes and dreams of “Cuba Libre” while the Semiramis
-steams down the bay and out upon the bosom of the Atlantic, and when he
-goes on deck, wrapped in the long semi-military cloak which effectually
-conceals his person, the sight which greets his eyes fills him with
-apprehension, though challenging his liveliest interest.
-
-The battle of steam is well under way. The America is less than a dozen
-lengths astern and presents a beautiful sight to the people on the
-Semiramis. The glistening white hull plows the water at a speed which
-dashes the spray high in air from the delicately carved cut-water, and
-the triple funnels vomit great clouds of inky smoke. Manada’s eyes rove
-to the United States flag whipping out in the breeze and he mutters a
-favorite malediction as he thinks of the insurgent arms stored in the
-hold of the Semiramis.
-
-But as he grows aware that the yacht of his strange friend is drawing
-away from the American man-of-war he becomes the incarnation of
-suppressed excitement. And when Van Zandt claps him on the shoulder and
-shouts in his ear, “Well, senor, what do you think of the Semiramis?”
-the Cuban shouts back enthusiastically: “El Semiramis es un diablo
-verdadero!”
-
-Without the change of a muscle in his weather-beaten face, Capt. Sam
-Beals paces the bridge of the Semiramis, while the exciting duel of
-steam and steel continues, not a gesture or ejaculation indicating that
-the beautiful yacht is literally steaming away from the cruiser—a vessel
-heralded far and wide as the speediest craft among all the navies of the
-world.
-
-But if the chief officer is apparently undisturbed, the same cannot be
-said of any other person on board. The excitement of the race has roused
-the owner of the yacht from his cold reserve, and as with sparkling eye
-and eager step he hurries from the engine-room to the quarterdeck,
-noting with each return the slowly but steadily lengthening space of
-open water that separates the two vessels, Louise Hathaway mentally
-retracts her decision that Phillip Van Zandt is cold and unsympathetic.
-
-As for Miss Hathaway herself, she is thoroughly imbued with the spirit
-of the race. Securely sheltered from the fierce rush of wind which the
-tremendous speed of the Semiramis causes to sweep over the deck, she
-makes an attractive picture as she watches the race. The svelte form is
-outlined in a gown of navy blue; the beautiful face is framed in a
-golden aureole of wavy locks; the matchless blue eyes glisten with
-unwonted excitement, and a delicate color tints her cheek. It is not
-strange that Van Zandt divides his time between the race and his fair
-passenger.
-
-Even pale, stern-faced Cyrus Felton has for the nonce became stirred by
-the infectious excitement, and with a zest that he has not manifested
-for years he watches the unavailing efforts of the warship to overhaul
-the pleasure craft.
-
-“Isn’t there more and blacker smoke pouring from the America’s stacks?”
-inquires Miss Hathaway, as the owner of the Semiramis returns from a
-brief interview with the engineer, with the cheery assurance that the
-engines are running as smoothly as if the yacht were moving at
-quarter-speed.
-
-“She is surely making more smoke and, if I mistake not, more speed,”
-answers Van Zandt, a shade of anxiety replacing his almost boyish
-enthusiasm. “Mr. Beals, what think you of it?” turning to the executive
-officer; “is she gaining on us?”
-
-“She has just put on her forced draught, sir, and is now running at her
-top speed. She is gaining, now, but—”
-
-Without finishing the sentence the captain presses the electric bells
-which communicate with the engine-room. It is soon apparent that the
-yacht has not until now reached the limit of her speed. The regular
-vibrations that mark the revolutions of the twin shafts become one
-prolonged shiver, and the black hull is hurled through the water at
-incredible speed.
-
-The effect becomes noticeable in short order. The white mass astern
-grows “fine by degrees and beautifully less,” and as Capt. Beals closes
-his glass with a snap he remarks, complacently: “She’ll be hull down in
-an hour or two if she doesn’t blow out a cylinder head before that
-time.”
-
-Just about this time Van Zandt and Manada go below and reappear a few
-moments later with a closely rolled silken flag, which Van Zandt hands
-to the captain with the command that it be hoisted to the breeze.
-Without even examining the emblem, the imperturbable executive officer
-bends the silken roll upon the halyards. A few hearty pulls by a
-stalwart blue-jacket and the ensign reaches the masthead, where the
-stiff breeze quickly breaks it out.
-
-As a singular flag, with a solitary star in a triangular field of blue,
-is revealed to the wondering gaze of passengers and crew, Don Manada
-reverently bares his head and his lips frame the words “Viva Cuba
-Libre!”
-
-Suddenly there is borne to their ears, above the whistling of the wind
-and the mighty pulsations of the machinery, the sullen boom of cannon.
-All eyes instinctively seek the America. A puff of white issues from her
-forward barbette, and as Capt. Beals returns his glass to its socket, he
-tells Van Zandt:
-
-“She has saluted the Semiramis and dipped her ensign. She is bearing off
-to windward and gives up the race.”
-
-“She saw the flag, do you think?”
-
-“Doubtless,” Mr. Beals replies, with a grim smile. “Shall we slacken
-speed, sir?”
-
-“Only to natural draught. I wish to make our destination as soon as
-possible. And by the way, Mr. Beals, you may haul down the flag. It has
-served its purpose for the present,” pointing to the enraptured Don
-Manada.
-
-Then Van Zandt conducts his passengers below and is prepared for Miss
-Hathaway’s question:
-
-“Is that your personal emblem, Mr. Van Zandt?”
-
-“No, Miss Hathaway,” is the calm response. “That is the flag of the
-Cuban Republic. You are now under the protection of the provisional
-government of the gem of the Antilles. Permit me to introduce to you Don
-Rafael Manada, minister of war of the infant republic. Long may she
-wave!”
-
-Manada bows low and looks vastly gratified by the official title
-jestingly conferred upon him. Cyrus Felton’s face, however, is darkened
-by a frown and Miss Hathaway is not at all pleased.
-
-“Will you not take seats and make yourselves entirely easy?” Van Zandt
-proceeds, unruffled by the cold demeanor of his passengers.
-
-“Perhaps I should have told you before you embarked,” explains Van
-Zandt, with a glance at Miss Hathaway that does much toward reassuring
-her, “that although we are bound for Cuba, our primary destination is
-not Santiago. The Semiramis has a cargo of arms and ammunition which I
-have undertaken to deliver to the Cuban revolutionists. Senor Manada is
-the supercargo. Believe me,” he adds, as Miss Hathaway pales at the word
-“revolutionists,” “there is absolutely no danger, not the slightest—and
-least of all to you. Even if my yacht were apprehended—though I do not
-believe there is a vessel on the waters of the globe that can overtake
-her—you would be subject to no annoyance and but little inconvenience.
-After we have discharged our cargo we will proceed at once to Santiago,
-and you will be landed much earlier than if you had gone by a regular
-steamer. And I am sure this vessel is fully as comfortable as any of
-those stuffy, crowded craft.”
-
-“Then we are aboard a filibustering expedition,” declares Mr. Felton,
-harshly.
-
-“Hardly that. You are on board an American yacht, manned by American
-seamen, with just one Cuban patriot, a man as honorable and true as
-yourself, Mr. Felton.” Van Zandt’s voice is stern and dignified. “I am
-not a Cuban partisan, but liberty to me is as precious as the air of
-heaven. Until a few hours ago there was no thought of the cargo now
-beneath us. The arms were designed to go by another vessel. But at the
-last moment the plans of the patriots were betrayed. Then it was that I
-stepped in and offered the services of my yacht to convey the
-much-needed aid to the down-trodden men of the Antilles.”
-
-“And meanwhile you have jeopardized the safety of Miss Hathaway and
-myself,” Mr. Felton sneers. “Suppose we are intercepted by a Spanish
-warship? Think you that they will not regard us—myself at least—as
-members of this expedition? What then, Mr. Van Zandt?”
-
-The latter’s lip curls slightly. “Again I assure you that there is
-absolutely no danger. I will answer for your safety on this voyage with
-my life.” Then to Louise, with a look that brings a flush to her fair
-face: “Have you no faith in the yacht, if not in her owner, Miss
-Hathaway?”
-
-“I think that Mr. Felton is needlessly alarmed,” is that young lady’s
-composed reply. “As for the yacht, I am quite carried away with it,
-figuratively as well as literally. This is my first voyage, Mr. Van
-Zandt, and if you will insure me against mal de mer, that dread bugbear
-of the voyageur, I will try to brave, with becoming equanimity, the
-perils of the Spanish main.”
-
-Cyrus Felton, however, is decidedly alarmed by Van Zandt’s admission of
-the incidental errand of the Semiramis. A strong distrust of her owner
-begins to grow in his mind; this added to the qualms of seasickness,
-which have begun to make themselves felt, renders him thoroughly
-miserable in spirit and body, and without raising another objection he
-asks to be shown to his stateroom.
-
-It must be confessed that Van Zandt does not manifest heartfelt regret
-at Mr. Felton’s unhappy condition, and even Miss Hathaway is somewhat
-perfunctory in her expressions of sympathy. An unaccountable confidence
-in the handsome owner of the Semiramis has replaced her early distrust,
-and, happily exempt from the “dread bugbear of the voyageur,” she
-accepts with pleasure Van Zandt’s proposition that they explore the
-yacht.
-
-The Semiramis is fair to look upon, from capstan to rudder, and from
-keelson to main truck. The Vermont maiden marvels at the comfort,
-convenience and luxury on every hand. The palatial saloon, with its
-unusually high ceiling, furnished in oriental magnificence and including
-a superb upright piano, Miss Hathaway’s eye notes approvingly; the
-commodious staterooms, arranged en suite, with the respectable appearing
-stewardess in charge; the plain but ample and scrupulously neat quarters
-of the crew; the engine-room, with its masses of highly polished steel
-and brass—all possess elements of interest to the girl.
-
-That night, as she lays her head on her pillow, “rocked in the cradle of
-the deep,” she suddenly starts as if from a dream. For there comes to
-her ears again, from somewhere, that melody strangely sweet, yet filled
-with subtle melancholy, the andante of her beloved sonata.
-
-Then a light goes up, as the Germans have the saying, and Miss Hathaway
-understands now her blindly placed confidence in the master of the
-Semiramis. For Don Caesar de Bazan is Phillip Van Zandt and—and—
-
-But what Miss Hathaway thinks about as Atlantic’s waves lull her to
-slumber would certainly interest the young man who sits up far into the
-night, chatting and smoking with the “minister of war of the Cuban
-republic” while the Semiramis rushes on her eventful voyage to the
-tropics.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXII.
-
- THE FLAG OF CASTILE.
-
-
-“Twelve hours from now, Miss Hathaway, you will have your first glimpse
-of Cuba. Then, our business transacted, a quick and uninterrupted run to
-Santiago, and to-morrow you will be on terra firma.”
-
-“It has been a remarkably short voyage, Mr. Van Zandt.”
-
-“Deplorably so. I never before regretted the speed of the Semiramis, but
-now—would that she were as snail-like as the old West Indian tub we
-overhauled yesterday. Can I prevail upon you, Miss Hathaway, to again
-favor me with my pet Chopin nocturne? The electric fans render the
-saloon as comfortable as the deck.”
-
-“My poor playing is always at your service, Mr. Van Zandt. I assure you
-that I never expected to enjoy a voyage, to Cuba or elsewhere, as I have
-this. Your kindness in granting us—”
-
-“My kindness was purely selfish,” interposes Van Zandt.
-
-It is easy to see that for two people on board the yacht the last few
-days have swiftly sped. Van Zandt and Miss Hathaway have been much in
-each other’s company. Confidences have been neither asked nor given, but
-a mutual sympathy has taken root that might prove destructive to the
-reserve of one and the “marble” of the other were the voyage to the
-tropics to last many days longer.
-
-Cyrus Felton is restricted to his stateroom most of the time, a victim
-of the malady of the sea and a gnawing, indefinable distrust of the
-owner of the yacht. As for Don Manada, he divides his attention between
-the huge cigars from which his fingers or teeth are never free, and a
-careful outlook for any of the Spanish squadron that is supposed to
-blockade the coast of the isle of Cuba.
-
-But the sensuous indolence of the tropic day and the glories of the
-tropic night lure Van Zandt and Miss Hathaway into dreams of peace and
-hope and fulfillment. The days spent on the quarterdeck, sheltered by an
-awning from the rays of the sun, the speed of the yacht providing a
-delightful breeze, glide gently into the brief twilight. The great stars
-shoot out of the blue with quivering points of fire, and the wind sighs
-musically through the rigging as the tireless steam drives the boat
-through the phosphorescent waves.
-
-“Consider what the voyage would have been to me without your presence,”
-continues Van Zandt, as he leads the way to the saloon. “With Don Manada
-there, engrossed in Quixotic schemes for achieving the independence of
-his beloved country, and Capt. Beals as communicative as a sphinx, your
-society has saved me from myself—a synonym for dreariness. And now for
-the nocturne.”
-
-While Van Zandt is telling Miss Hathaway that she is the only woman he
-has ever heard play Chopin intelligently, and the latter is modestly
-disclaiming such ability, the musical echo of the lookout’s call is
-passed to the saloon:
-
-“Sail ho!”
-
-“Where away?” is the challenge.
-
-“On the weather bow. A large steamer, judging from her smoke!”
-
-Don Manada casts his cherished cigar to the waves and glues his eyes to
-the telescope.
-
-As announced, the unknown vessel is directly on the weather bow and will
-pass within half a mile of the Semiramis, if the two craft hold to their
-present courses.
-
-The captain intently watches the approaching vessel. The Semiramis is
-far beyond the five-mile limit of the Cuban coast, but if the unknown is
-a Spanish cruiser she may become suspicious of the trim yacht.
-
-It therefore behooves the American steamer to insure the stranger a wide
-berth if the latter displays the arms of Castile; to show a clean pair
-of heels, in the vernacular of the sailor, if flight is necessary.
-
-Again are preparations made to force the Semiramis to her highest speed.
-The awnings are removed, the boats once more unswung from the davits,
-the force of stokers in the engine-room augmented by half a score of
-sturdy seamen, and soon the roaring of the forced draught in the funnels
-again drowns the hum of the engines.
-
-At rail or in rigging, from bridge or quarterdeck the people of the
-Semiramis watch intently the approaching vessel, whose funnels and upper
-works are now visible through the glass.
-
-The Semiramis bears gradually to the westward, to afford the stranger at
-least three miles leeway. Suddenly Capt. Beals lays aside his glasses
-and rubs his chin thoughtfully.
-
-“Do you care to show your papers to the Don?” he asks Van Zandt.
-
-“To the Don? Is she a Spaniard, sure? But we shall pass a comfortable
-distance to windward of her and she will not attempt to interrupt us.”
-
-“She has already changed her course and is bearing directly across our
-bows. See!”
-
-The unknown, now less than ten miles distant, seems to be steaming at
-full speed for a point directly in the course of the Semiramis. Her
-broadside is now visible to the anxious watchers on the yacht. She is
-apparently an armored cruiser of perhaps 5,000 tons, her hull painted a
-dull and featureless gray. No flag or emblem is as yet displayed from
-her taut and business-like rigging.
-
-“She is painted and cleared for action. She is—ah! I thought so!”
-
-A flag is broken from the cruiser’s masthead, and Capt. Beals, as he
-focuses his binocular upon the streaming emblem, mutters between his
-teeth: “The flag of Castile!”
-
-“’Tis a Spanish warship, Senor Van Zandt!” exclaims Manada, who has been
-studying the stranger. “Can your beautiful craft bear us from harm’s
-way? I fear that yonder ship is the Infanta Isabel, the latest and most
-formidable accession to the navy of our hated oppressors. She has been
-detailed to intercept vessels supposed to bear arms and re-enforcements
-to our friends, and especially to watch for and destroy our gallant
-Pearl of the Antilles.”
-
-“Have no fears, Don Manada. Your cargo is safe. We will show the
-Spaniard a trick or two; eh, Beals?”
-
-Capt. Beals does not reply in words to his employer’s confident
-assertion, but an observant man might distinguish a slight relaxation of
-the muscles about his mouth.
-
-The Semiramis holds steadily on her course. Only the increasing clouds
-of smoke that pour from her funnels indicate that anything out of the
-ordinary is expected of the yacht.
-
-Only six miles distant! Five! Four!
-
-A puff of white that rolls lazily from the forward deck of the cruiser
-is succeeded by a dull roar.
-
-“Show the Don our colors,” Capt. Beals orders the second officer.
-
-While the smoke from the cannon yet lingers above the Spaniard’s deck
-the glorious stars and stripes unfurl from the mainmast of the
-Semiramis, and snap gayly, defiantly, upon the breeze. And still the
-American yacht continues to steadily lessen the distance that separates
-the two craft.
-
-Boom!
-
-Another puff of white, followed a few seconds later by the report; and
-this time the watchers on the yacht can see the flash of the gun.
-
-Only two miles distant now, and the Spanish warship, apparently
-convinced that the American understands and designs to obey the
-peremptory summons to heave to, has slowed her engines until the cruiser
-has barely headway on the long swells.
-
-Calmly pacing the bridge, as if a thousand miles separated the
-vessels—nearly equal in size, but how dissimilar in destructive
-power!—Capt. Beals has not indicated a slowing of the yacht’s engines,
-although the bow of the Semiramis points at the steep side of the
-Spaniard, directly amidship.
-
-Not half a dozen lengths away!
-
-The officers and men on the man-of-war are clearly visible to those on
-the yacht. The captain and his subalterns are grouped on the
-quarterdeck, the marines amidship, the blue-jackets crowding the rail
-and adjacent rigging. The cruiser is stationary on the water.
-
-But with no sensible diminution of speed the Semiramis bears upon the
-Spaniard, the white foam dashing high on either side of her bow. Capt.
-Beals is fingering the electric buttons that regulate the speed and
-course of the yacht.
-
-The Spanish captain nearly drops his speaking trumpet. What is El
-Americano thinking of? He cannot stop in five times his own length at
-such a frightful speed! Is he mad? Ah! Dios! Caramba! And a dozen more
-Castilian expletives poured forth in a torrent of astonishment, rage and
-chagrin.
-
-For with a sudden turn to the windward that causes the yacht to careen
-until her white sides below the water line gleam for an instant in the
-sunlight, with an accession of speed that sends her forward as a whip
-would a nervous horse, the Semiramis darts by the stern of the Spanish
-man-of-war, the smoke from her furnaces enveloping for a moment the
-cruiser’s afterdeck.
-
-Two minutes later she is a mile astern of the warship, her long white
-trail sparkling in the sunlight, and the red, white and blue still
-snapping defiantly at the masthead.
-
-“I wonder if the Don can turn in five times his own length,” observes
-the sententious Mr. Beals, as he watches the warship slowly getting
-under way.
-
-Whether he can or cannot is not at this time to be demonstrated. The
-cruiser makes no attempt to about ship, but another report booms from
-the forward gun, followed a second or two later by one from the aft
-barbette, and a solid shot ricochets along the waves astern of the
-Semiramis and plunges beneath the water an eighth of a mile distant.
-
-Van Zandt grows grave as he realizes the significance of this last shot,
-but a glance at the receding cruiser convinces him of the futility of
-the cannonade. The Spaniard, too, appears convinced, and the cruiser is
-soon lost to view in the expanse of ocean.
-
-The rest of the day the Semiramis holds unmolested her course for the
-mountain-girth shores of Cuba. As night draws on the engines are slowed,
-and, with fires banked and double watch posted, the yacht quietly rocks
-on the bosom of the deep. A wavy outline on the horizon indicates the
-southern coast of the revolution-racked isle and somewhere on that
-outline is the sequestered little harbor of Cantero.
-
-It is a weary, an unnerving vigil, for Don Manada at least. For hours
-his anxious gaze sweeps the horizon, while the Semiramis rides the
-breasting waves as gracefully as a summer bird soars into the blue.
-
-As the first shafts of light radiate from the emerging disk, Louise
-Hathaway, whom the unwonted excitement of the preceding day has driven
-early from her pillow, cries out with a girlish enthusiasm that brings a
-smile to the face of Capt. Beals: “Sail ho! Sail ho!”
-
-Every one springs to rail or rigging. “Where away?” is the quick
-challenge of Mr. Beals.
-
-“Right there, sir,” is the unnautical response of Miss Hathaway, and she
-indicates a point not five degrees north of the rising orb of day.
-
-With the glass at his eyes, the taciturn commander of the Semiramis
-watches intently the speck on the glowing horizon that means much to the
-excited Manada at his elbow and to the latter’s struggling
-fellow-patriots on the isle whose outlines are now bathed in the flood
-of sunlight.
-
-Is it another Spanish warship, or is it the looked-for Cuban cruiser,
-the doughty Pearl of the Antilles?
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXIII.
-
- AN AFFRONT AND AN APOLOGY.
-
-
-The Semiramis rests stationary upon the surface of the water, but there
-are scenes of activity in the engine-room. The columns of smoke from her
-stacks grow into thick black volumes, and the roar of escaping steam
-drowns ordinary conversation.
-
-On deck, officers, passengers and crew are watching the rapidly growing
-spot upon the horizon. That the approaching vessel is steaming very fast
-is apparent. Her upper works are visible as Capt. Beals signals for the
-Semiramis to steam ahead at full speed. The course of the latter is laid
-to pass the stranger a mile or two to windward, if she does not change
-her present course.
-
-Don Manada has possessed himself of the captain’s glasses and is
-earnestly scanning the distant steamer. Suddenly, in a very paroxyism of
-joy he embraces the owner of the yacht.
-
-“It is the Pearl!” he cries; “the Pearl of the Antilles! Santisima! Now
-will you display the flag of Cuba Libre?” The English language fails to
-express the sentiments of the Cuban patriot at this juncture, and he
-launches a flood of Castilian that bewilders Van Zandt.
-
-At a nod from the latter, however, Capt. Beals causes the fateful emblem
-of Cuba to be run up to the masthead. The silken banner is barely
-unfurled by the wind ere there are signs of excitement on board the
-strange steamship. A duplicate of the Semiramis’ ensign is displayed,
-and then the course of the vessel is changed and she steams rapidly
-toward the yacht. Don Manada is not mistaken. The steamship is the
-famous Pearl of the Antilles.
-
-The Semiramis has slowed down her engines, and awaits the approach of
-the insurgent cruiser. As the latter nears the yacht the resemblance of
-the two steamships becomes more striking. The Pearl is almost precisely
-the length of the Semiramis, and like her is rigged with two masts. Her
-two smokestacks are set at the same angle as those of the yacht and like
-the latter she is equipped with twin propellers. On deck, however, there
-is a decided difference. The engines of the Pearl are protected by heavy
-plates of steel, while on her forward deck a sort of turret has been
-improvised, within which, the people on the Semiramis can readily guess,
-is the famous “Yankee gun,” the dynamite cannon whose well-aimed
-projectile sent the Spanish Mercedes to the bottom.
-
-Five lengths away the Pearl becomes stationary on the waves, while
-through a speaking tube, the voluble Manada acquaints her commander with
-the character and mission of the yacht. A boat is lowered from the
-insurgent craft and is rowed to the side of the Semiramis, and a moment
-later a distinguished-looking man in the undress uniform of an officer
-of the Spanish navy is clasped in the arms of Don Manada.
-
-“Senor Van Zandt,” the latter says, “permit me to present to you Capt.
-Gerardo Nunez, the commander of yonder vessel. Senor Van Zandt,” he
-explains extravagantly to Capt. Nunez, “is the good angel who rendered
-it possible for us to convey the much-needed arms and ammunition in our
-hold to our struggling compatriots.”
-
-Capt. Nunez cordially grasps the hand of Van Zandt. “Senor,” he says, “I
-am more than pleased to meet you, and join with Don Manada in expressing
-the gratitude of our people for your services in the cause of liberty.”
-
-Van Zandt waves his hand. “’Tis nothing. My sympathies are with the
-insurgents and being in position to help Don Manada out of a box”—the
-Cuban flushes at the recollection of his last conversation with Mrs.
-Harding—“I was only too glad to do it. But what is the latest news from
-the seat of war?”
-
-Capt. Nunez’ eyes light up with enthusiasm. “Glorious!” he says. “Gen.
-Masso has just achieved a victory over 3,000 Spanish troops in the
-Puerto Principe District. El Terredo is receiving constant additions to
-his forces and the outlook was never brighter. It is to equip El
-Terredo’s army that these arms and ammunition will be used.”
-
-“El Terredo?” inquires Van Zandt. “Is he not attached to the Pearl of
-the Antilles?”
-
-“He has been up to within a week, but is now on shore duty. By the way,
-senor,” remarks the Cuban commander, casting a glance over the deck of
-the Semiramis, “you have a magnificent yacht, and I doubt not she is as
-speedy as she is handsome.”
-
-“Speedy!” breaks in Don Manada. “She is as swift as the wind! She sailed
-away from the America, the fastest cruiser in the United States Navy,
-and as for the Infanta Isabel—poof! She snaps her fingers at her!”
-
-Capt. Beals approaches the group at this moment and is introduced to the
-Cuban captain.
-
-“I think, sir,” he says to Van Zandt, “if we are to transfer our cargo
-it would be advisable to waste no time. There is no knowing when a
-Spanish gunboat will show up.”
-
-This advice is manifestly so timely that no time is lost in following
-it. The two hulls are laid side by side, the smoothness of the water
-permitting the operation in safety and hundreds of brawny arms are
-quickly at work transferring the cargo from the Semiramis to the Pearl.
-
-At last the work is completed and Van Zandt looks inquiringly at Don
-Manada.
-
-“Will you continue with the yacht or accompany the cargo on board the
-Pearl?” he asks.
-
-The Cuban emissary hesitates. “If I might add to the already heavy debt
-of gratitude I owe you—”
-
-“Oh, that’s all right,” interrupts Van Zandt. “So you will remain with
-us. I am glad of your company. We sail for Santiago and afterward”—he
-hesitates a moment, his eyes wandering to Miss Hathaway, who is watching
-curiously the motley crew of the Pearl—“well, eventually back to New
-York.”
-
-Manada nods gratefully. “I am of more service to the cause in America
-than I could possibly be in Cuba,” he says, apologetically.
-
-The adieus are said, the lines cast off, and the Semiramis and Pearl
-move slowly apart. The latter shapes her coarse for the little harbor of
-Cantero, where the arms and ammunition are to be landed.
-
-“We are but ten hours’ sail from Santiago, Miss Hathaway,” Van Zandt
-remarks, as Louise idly watches the rapidly disappearing Pearl. “Then
-you will bid adieu to the Semiramis.”
-
-“Regretfully, indeed, Mr. Van Zandt. The last few days have sped all too
-quickly.”
-
-“‘We take no heed of time but by its flight,’” quotes Van Zandt. “How
-long do you expect to remain in Cuba?”
-
-Louise turns a troubled face toward the owner of the yacht. “That I
-cannot say. It depends upon Mr. Felton. He has business interests to
-look after, and if the climate agrees with him we may remain several
-months.”
-
-There is a silence for a little, the thoughts of both dwelling on the
-coming parting at even.
-
-“Miss Hathaway,” says Van Zandt, suddenly. “I am but an idle fellow,
-with nothing to call me hence but my own inclinations. Would it be
-distasteful to you if I should attach myself to your party while in
-Cuba? The country is necessarily unsettled during the war and perhaps I
-might be of service. I am familiar with the Spanish language, which I
-believe Mr. Felton is not, and I should like to see something of the
-country. Please tell me frankly if for any reason I would be de trop?”
-
-Van Zandt’s luminous orbs are fixed on the fair face of Louise as he
-awaits the answer to his question. For a moment her blue eyes return his
-gaze. Then the golden-fringed lids fall and a soft blush mantles her
-face.
-
-“I certainly should not be averse to your joining our party,” she
-murmurs softly, “if—if it be your pleasure.”
-
-“Thank you,” Van Zandt returns, simply, and a moment after Miss Hathaway
-retires to her stateroom.
-
-“Well, Manada,” remarks Van Zandt, slapping the Cuban upon the back,
-“your first engagement as supercargo must be rated a success, eh? The
-arms and ammunition—the biggest single consignment ever sent from the
-States, I think you said—have been safely delivered into the hands of
-the insurgents, without the loss of a single Winchester or cartridge.
-Why this pensive look?”
-
-“Only thoughts of the past, senor. I was—”
-
-What were Don Manada’s thoughts will never be known, for the people on
-the yacht are electrified by the hail from the bridge, “Ship ahoy!”
-followed a second later by the additional information, “Dead ahead and
-bearing this way!”
-
-“There is no special necessity for evading her now, whoever she is, I
-presume, sir?” inquires Capt. Beals, removing his glasses from his eyes.
-
-“None whatever,” is Van Zandt’s prompt reply. “Our papers are straight
-and we have nothing contraband, unless it be the Don there. Let them
-look us over if they wish.”
-
-“She’s not a very large craft,” comments the taciturn executive officer
-of the yacht, as the two vessels continue to lessen the distance between
-them.
-
-“Probably one of the blockading fleet,” is Van Zandt’s surmise.
-
-He is evidently right, for the stranger at this point displays the
-Spanish flag and at the same time the report of a cannon echoes across
-the water.
-
-“Show our colors,” orders Van Zandt, and the flag of the great republic
-is caressed by the soft southern breeze. Another shot is fired from the
-Spaniard, and as the Semiramis slows up a third cloud of white floats
-from the side of the war vessel, followed by the sudden boom of a
-heavier gun.
-
-As the Semiramis steams slowly toward the Spaniard, now distant less
-than a mile, a fourth report is heard.
-
-“Shotted, by heaven!” ejaculates Capt. Beals, his eyes glued to the
-glass; “and the Don has changed her course and is standing off to pepper
-us. He is one of those tin-clad gunboats, only half our tonnage, and
-pays no attention to our flag.” Still another shot is fired, and a solid
-shot skips over the waves, barely two lengths astern of the yacht.
-
-“Shall we ram him, sir? We can send him to Davy Jones’ locker in ten
-minutes, and not harm the yacht, either.”
-
-Van Zandt’s eyes glance aloft at the Stars and Stripes standing out
-clear and free from the maintop, and then his eyes turn to the Spanish
-gunboat.
-
-“Steam toward him full speed,” he says at length, “and if he fires on
-the American flag again”—the white teeth shut with an ominous click—“ram
-him full amidship, let the consequences be what they may.”
-
-But the flag is not fired upon again. The Spaniard has once more laid a
-new course and is now bearing down full on the yacht. The two craft are
-quickly within hailing distance, and from the gunboat comes the inquiry
-in Spanish as to the name and character of the yacht.
-
-“The Semiramis, pleasure craft, New York for Santiago,” is Capt. Beals’
-reply.
-
-The Spanish captain is profuse in apologies for firing on the yacht. She
-closely resembles a rebel craft, he explains, and the gunboat was sure
-she was that vessel, even if she did fly the American flag. Would the
-Semiramis accept his most humble apologies? His gunboat, La Pinta, was
-about to proceed to Santiago for orders; and if it please los Americanos
-they might sail thither in company, which would insure the stranger
-against the annoyance of being overhauled by some of the other numerous
-Spanish vessels blockading the ports.
-
-Van Zandt consults with Capt. Beals.
-
-“He wants to make sure we don’t land anything,” remarks the latter. “It
-might save some trouble to accompany him to Santiago.”
-
-Yes, the Spaniard is informed, the American accepts the apology and the
-escort of the gunboat to Santiago.
-
-Before the brief southern twilight has drifted into night the Semiramis
-is lying at anchor in the harbor of Santiago, under the guns of the
-Spanish gunboat La Pinta.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXIV.
-
- A SPANISH BILL OF FARE.
-
-
-“I want some soft-boiled eggs, but I don’t suppose you know a
-soft-boiled egg from a gas stove, eh?”
-
-The waiter at the hotel Royal, in Santiago, regards Jack Ashley with an
-expression as blank as a brick wall.
-
-“Don’t get the idea, I see,” remarks Ashley. “Well, let me think.
-‘Huevos’ means eggs, I know that much, but what the deuce is
-soft-boiled? I believe ‘blondo’ is soft, and soft eggs might express the
-idea. ‘Blondo huevos,’” he tells the waiter, and the latter, though
-apparently puzzled, disappears.
-
-For the next ten minutes Jack is occupied in receiving and sending back
-orders of eggs—eggs cooked in every conceivable style except
-soft-boiled. Finally in despair he selects a dish nearest to his wants,
-and gets along all right until he decides to have some chicken. An
-examination of the bill of fare fails to discover anything that looks
-like chicken, and the case appears hopeless.
-
-“If I only had my phrase book with me I might do some business,” he
-reflects. “As it is, I don’t see any way out of it except to draw a
-picture of a chicken. Hold on; ‘gallina’ means hen, unless I have
-forgotten my studies, and if there is anything consistent in the
-linguistic diminutives of the Spanish language, ‘gallinoso’ must be the
-equivalent for chicken.” So he orders “gallinoso” with a complacence
-born of a problem happily solved.
-
-The waiter simply stares and waits patiently.
-
-“‘Gallinoso’ doesn’t go, then.” Ashley looks the bill of fare over
-again. The most attractive item is “salchichas con aroz,” but he does
-not dare risk that. Finally a happy thought occurs to him.
-
-“Todos!” he orders. “Todos! Todos!” The waiter, with a grin of
-intelligence, hurries away and Ashley heaves a sigh of relief. “Great
-word, ‘todos,’” he soliloquizes. “Most significant word in the
-language.”
-
-It is effective, at least, for the waiter arrives with a little of
-everything that the kitchen affords and Ashley manages to make out a
-meal.
-
-Meanwhile he has noticed that his efforts at Spanish have vastly
-entertained a gentleman who sits at the table beyond and facing him.
-Particularly broad was his smile when the order for “gallinoso” was
-given. As Jack leisurely sorts out the most appetizing-looking of the
-array of greasy viands, he remarks: “If you were as hungry as I, senor,
-my attempts to secure a breakfast might strike you as being more tragic
-than humorous.”
-
-“I meant no offense,” replies the senor. “You would yourself smile if
-you knew what ‘gallinoso’ is.”
-
-“So? What may it be, an octopus or a mule?”
-
-“Almost as bad as either. It is a turkey buzzard.”
-
-“Ah, yes; they were probably just out of turkey buzzards. Oh, well, I’ll
-get the hang of the language before I leave Cuba.”
-
-“Undoubtedly. It is easy of acquisition. You have, I assume, provided
-yourself with a phrase-book.”
-
-“A magnificent affair. It contains every possible phrase except the ones
-I have occasion to use.”
-
-The two finish their repast about the same time, and as they stroll out
-upon the veranda to enjoy the long, strong cigar that inevitably follows
-a Cuban breakfast the senor remarks:
-
-“You are an American, I judge.”
-
-“New York,” is the terse response.
-
-“Have you been in Cuba long?”
-
-“About two hours.”
-
-“Indeed? I was not aware that any steamers arrived to-day.”
-
-“Because of the blockade, eh? But I dropped in on the cruiser America.”
-
-“You are of the service?”
-
-“No; I am just a plain American citizen.”
-
-“Well, senor, this is hardly a desirable time for Americans or others to
-visit Cuba.”
-
-“An eminently proper time for one in my line of business,” replies
-Ashley. “I am a newspaper correspondent.”
-
-The senor looks the young man over critically. “Your profession is not
-regarded with especial favor at present by the Spanish Government,” he
-says.
-
-“I understand so,” drawls Ashley. “Newspaper men have an unpleasant
-habit of stating facts, something the government is not particularly
-anxious to have abroad.”
-
-A flush of annoyance mounts the senor’s face, and on the left cheek
-Ashley for the first time notices a small, crescent-shaped scar.
-
-“Aha!” he thinks. “This gentleman rather answers my friend Barker’s
-description of the party who left New York with the fair Mrs. Harding.”
-
-“The Government has no desire to conceal facts,” asserts the senor, with
-some warmth, “but it naturally seeks to prevent the dissemination of
-false, exaggerated or malicious reports. What journal do you represent,
-senor?”
-
-Ashley tenders his card. The senor glances at it and smiles
-half-derisively. “The Hemisphere! I had that very journal in mind,” he
-says.
-
-“My paper must be excused from feeling flattered, then.”
-
-“It was only a week or so ago,” continues the senor, “that I read in
-your paper a sensational interview with a visionary enthusiast, which
-was a little more exaggerated and absurd than the average.”
-
-“That was before you left New York, probably,” ventures Ashley, and the
-senor shoots a glance at him from a pair of keen black eyes. “You refer
-to the interview with Don Manada,” goes on Ashley. “I had the pleasure
-of placing the distinguished Cuban’s views before the public.”
-
-“I am not surprised,” comments the senor, with quiet sarcasm.
-
-“In other words you consider me a man who would deliberately put forth
-false, exaggerated or malicious reports.”
-
-“I did not say so, senor. I presume you are typical of your profession.”
-
-“And I believe I am. Our journal, like every other decent paper, prints
-the news. If it were to investigate every dispatch that comes to it day
-by day there would be precious little information for the reader who
-turns to it each morning. If an injustice is occasionally done, the
-paper is ever willing to rectify its error and make all proper amends.
-You must naturally expect the American newspapers to favor the
-dispatches received from insurgent sources.”
-
-“Why, pray?”
-
-“For the reason that little dependence can be placed upon the statements
-of the opposition. In fact,” smiles Ashley, “the situation approximates
-somewhat the condition intimated in a joke now going the rounds of the
-press. A Spanish captain in surrendering to superior numbers or prowess,
-craves one boon at the hands of his conqueror. ‘What is it?’ asks the
-latter. ‘Please announce the fact,’ requests the Spanish captain, ‘that
-I have won an overwhelming victory.’”
-
-The senor fails to see anything amusing in the jest. “Do you intend to
-remain at Santiago?” he asks.
-
-“For the present. The fighting appears to be principally at this end of
-the island. Later I may push on to Havana.”
-
-“There has been more than one instance of expulsion of foreign
-correspondents, senor.”
-
-“So I am told. Well, I shall do my duty, as well as I know how. I
-naturally sympathize with the Cubans, but I shall not permit my
-sympathies to lead me to color any reports of the war’s progress. If a
-battle occurs to-morrow and the government forces are victorious, the
-simple facts in the case will be forwarded, without further comment than
-is required to make the story interesting. And if the Cubans win, the
-same impartiality will characterize my dispatch. I expect the same fair
-play that I extend. Is that not reasonable?”
-
-“Well, at any rate, I like your frankness,” says the senor, with
-something approaching good humor. “I also like America and admire its
-people. Do your duty as you understand it, Senor Ashley, and should your
-zeal as a correspondent lead you into difficulty perhaps I may be of
-service to you.”
-
-“Thank you,” acknowledges Jack. “But with my present limited means of
-identifying you, I should be more likely to be garroted or shot before I
-could send you word.”
-
-The senor smiles. “I am Gen. Murillo,” he says. “Adios, Senor Ashley.”
-And with a courtly bow the Spanish gentleman takes himself off.
-
-“So,” muses Ashley, looking after the retreating figure. “Gen. Juan
-Murillo, the chief of staff attached to the captain-general, is the
-patron of the beautiful Harding. I remember the Hemisphere noted his
-presence in New York. My lady’s services must be booked for something
-out of the ordinary spy business. Murillo is in Santiago; so probably is
-she, but if this city is her base of operations she is likely to sail
-pretty close to the wind.
-
-“Now, where on earth is Barker?” wonders Ashley. “Probably at the other
-end of the island, while the objects of his quest are at this end. The
-Semiramis rests serenely on the bosom of the bay, and Miss Hathaway and
-Messrs. Felton and Van Zandt are either aboard of her or are somewhere
-about the city. I believe I’ll go out to the yacht and settle the
-question in my mind.”
-
-And he does. He is rowed out over the blazing sea by a sun-cured
-barquero and climbs to the deck of the Semiramis.
-
-“Mr. Van Zandt?” repeats Capt. Beals, in response to Ashley’s inquiry.
-“Left yesterday, sir: Where? Havana, I believe the destination was.”
-
-“And his passengers?” ventures Ashley. “I am a friend of theirs,” he
-explains to Mr. Beals.
-
-“His passengers went with him,” the latter tells him.
-
-Ashley is about to return to shore when he hears an exclamation and he
-sees coming toward him Don Rafael Manada, the distinguished member of
-the Cuban revolutionary society.
-
-“Dios mio! Senor Ashley, I am delighted to see you,” exclaims the
-volatile Manada, embracing him warmly. “What brings you here?”
-
-“Business, my dear Don Manada, I am at present officiating as a war
-correspondent. Will you not come ashore and take dinner with me?”
-
-“A thousand thanks, Senor Ashley; but,” with a smile intended to be
-significant, “I believe it would be wise for me to remain here for the
-present.”
-
-“By the way,” says Ashley, “you recollect that interview at the Fifth
-Avenue hotel a week or so ago?” Manada nods smilingly. “Well, I met a
-gentleman to-day who spoke rather slightingly of the views which you
-therein expressed. Perhaps you know him. Gen. Murillo.”
-
-“Murillo!” cries the Cuban. “Ha! Is he in Santiago?”
-
-“He was half an hour ago.”
-
-“Was he alone? That is, was he not accompanied—”
-
-“By the fair Mrs. Harding?” supplies Ashley.
-
-Manada’s face flushes. “Ah, you know her?” he says.
-
-“Slightly,” returns Jack. “No; Mrs. Harding was not with the general,
-though she may be in the neighborhood. They left New York together. Now,
-Don Manada, having imparted some information to you, I should esteem it
-a great favor if you would reciprocate.” Ashley glances about and
-notices that they are out of hearing. “I will not ask you why you happen
-to be on the Semiramis, as I have no disposition to pry into your
-affairs, but I should like to know how Mr. Felton and Miss Hathaway came
-to be aboard of the yacht?”
-
-Manada shrugs his shoulders. “I have not an idea,” he says. “An hour
-before the Semiramis sailed they were driven to the pier in company with
-the owner of the yacht. Where they came from I cannot say.”
-
-“Did they appear to be well acquainted with one another?”
-
-“Very nearly strangers, I should say. Senor Felton kept his stateroom
-during nearly all the voyage and seemed to avoid Senor Van Zandt.”
-
-Ashley is now getting some information of decided interest. “And Miss
-Hathaway? Did she appear to share the distrust or dislike?”
-
-“Quite the contrary. They were together about all the time.”
-
-“Now, Don Manada, there is one query I should like to put to you.”
-
-“Come,” smiles Manada, “I can guess what your question is to be.”
-
-“I will save you the trouble and ask it. As a man of years and
-experience, of keen discernment and calm conclusions, what should you
-say were the precise relations existing between Phillip Van Zandt and
-Louise Hathaway?”
-
-Manada appears to reflect deeply. Then he says, with a gravity belied by
-the twinkle in his eyes: “Serious, my dear Senor Ashley; very serious.”
-
-“Thank you,” responds Ashley. “Well, I believe I’ll go ashore and get
-better acquainted with the natives. I hope to see you again, Don
-Manada.”
-
-“I shall probably be here until the yacht leaves, senor. Adios.”
-
-As Ashley is borne shoreward he digests the information extracted from
-his Cuban friend.
-
-“So far as Miss Hathaway’s tender regard is concerned, I appear to be a
-rank outsider,” he soliloquizes. “But I have the consolation of knowing
-that I did not permit myself to fall in love with her. Rather a
-melancholy consolation, but philosophy was invented for just such cases
-as this.
-
-“And Van Zandt. Well, Barker can doubt as much as he pleases, but I will
-stake my reputation as a soothsayer that Van Zandt and Ernest Stanley
-are one and the same man. And if Phillip Van Zandt is not a Nemesis,
-stalking on the trail of his prospective victim or victims, then I am
-indeed a prophet unworthy of honor in ‘mine ain countree’ or in the
-world at large.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXV.
-
- A CAFE QUARREL.
-
-
-“I suppose this is the Madison Square of Santiago,” remarks Jack Ashley,
-as he notes approvingly the brilliant spectacle which the plaza affords,
-now that the tropic night is atoning for the enervating heat of the
-tropic afternoon. Santiago, like all Cuban cities, wakes up measurably
-early, bustles about for three hours or so, and then dozes or fans
-itself until the sun drops into the sea and night comes with scarcely a
-shadow of twilight.
-
-And then Santiago wakes again with a start, and for a few more hours
-laughs and chatters, promenades and flirts until about 10 o’clock, when
-the curtain falls, not to rise again until the sun is well up the
-morning sky.
-
-The nightly gathering on the plaza has been tersely described as “a
-scene of shoulders, arms, trains, jewels and cascarilla.”
-
-The women monopolize the plaza and the men the cafe, the latter a simple
-interior, a mere loafing-place for the Cuban, whose capacities as an
-idler are the result of many years’ practice in the gentle art of doing
-nothing.
-
-Into one of the cafés that border the panorama of gayety strolls Ashley.
-The place is crowded, but over in the farthest corner he sees a table at
-which only one person is seated. Toward this he threads his way, but
-when almost there his progress is impeded by a party of four who are
-taking up more space than the law of equality allows.
-
-“Pardon me,” remarks Jack, as he brushes past the chair of an
-unamiable-appearing individual in undress military attire. The latter
-moves reluctantly and growls something which Ashley suspects is not
-complimentary, and as he drops into a seat he asks the gentleman across
-the table: “Do you speak English, sir?”
-
-“Occasionally,” is the brief rejoinder.
-
-“Then would you oblige me by translating the remark of the chap whose
-repose I just disturbed?”
-
-“It’s of no consequence,” replies the other. “An impertinence upon
-Americans. The feeling against that people is very bitter in Santiago
-just now. The United States is suspected of encouraging practically as
-well as morally the present insurrection.”
-
-“Perhaps I had better go over and punch his head,” observes Ashley. “His
-suspicions might be better grounded.”
-
-“It would be a waste of time and perhaps lead to a general row. He is
-only a Spanish captain who has invested his title with more importance
-than would suffice for the entire service. Spanish captains are as
-plentiful as Kentucky colonels.”
-
-“You speak by the card,” laughs Ashley, as he orders a glass of jerez
-and a cigar. “Your English, too, is as pure as a New Yorker’s—or perhaps
-I should say as un-foreign. Pure English is not a drug in the New York
-market.”
-
-“I have resided in New York, as well as other parts of the United
-States. But after a short residence on this island a man drifts into the
-indolence and shiftlessness of the natives and loses much of his
-identity.”
-
-“He does not lose his Americanism, I hope.”
-
-“No; the same thrill comes over him when he sees the most beautiful of
-all flags streaming out on the breeze, and with it is increased his
-sense of the outrageous wrongs which the Cuban has suffered from
-generation to generation.”
-
-Ashley has been looking his acquaintance over with much interest, and
-the result of his “sizing up” is as follows:
-
-Age, about Ashley’s own; above the medium height, athletic of build, and
-straight as the proverbial arrow; general air denoting decision, dash,
-and a bit of recklessness. His garments are dark and somewhat
-travel-worn, and on his head, pulled down well over his eyes, he wears a
-soft hat that borders on the sombrero.
-
-Just now he is scowling at the party of four near by, who are making
-merry apparently at the expense of the two young men.
-
-“As I said before,” observes Ashley, “if you will kindly translate the
-remarks of yonder chaps it will afford me considerable satisfaction to
-call them to order. Ah, if I could only tell them in Spanish what I
-think of them in English,” he adds, recollecting an old opera-bouffe
-jest.
-
-Ashley’s acquaintance is evidently making an effort to keep his temper,
-but his resentment is apparent in the flash of his eyes and the red spot
-in each cheek.
-
-“By Jove!” suddenly reflects Ashley, “perhaps our military friend
-understands English. I’ll try him.” Then to the apparent leading spirit
-of the quartet, who has just delivered himself of a sally that vastly
-amuses his companions, Ashley leans over and drawls: “Pardon me, senor,
-am I the subject of your mirth?”
-
-The Spaniard may understand, but he makes no sign. The quartet set down
-their glasses and stare at the self-possessed young man who has risen
-and walked to their table and whose mild blue eyes run over the party in
-calm inquiry. And the young man notes that the time-killers for many
-tables around have ceased their chatter for the moment and are watching
-curiously the progress of the colloquy.
-
-“I have reason to suspect,” goes on Ashley, “that you are making a
-beastly nuisance of yourself, and unless you are anxious for a good
-American thrashing I would advise you to keep a civil tongue from now
-on. If you don’t understand that I’ll knock it through your head in
-short order.”
-
-The reply is a volley of red-hot Castilian, but Ashley is saved the
-trouble of attempting to comprehend it. For at this moment a long arm
-reaches by him and the Spanish captain is dealt a slap across the mouth
-that transforms his teeth for an instant into castanets.
-
-Then there is confusion. The quartet spring to their feet and one of
-them seizes a bottle. But Ashley grips the uplifted arm with a wrist of
-steel and remarks in tones that carry conviction: “Easy, my friend, or
-I’ll throw you through the side of the house.”
-
-The idlers in the cafe crowd about the combatants and the proprietor
-rushes up and protests against the disorder.
-
-The Spanish captain and Ashley’s friend glare at each other, and the
-latter, after pronouncing the words “Hotel Royal” with a significance
-appreciated by his antagonist, slips his arm through Ashley’s and draws
-him from the cafe.
-
-“Whither?” queries Jack, as they proceed down the street.
-
-“To the Hotel Royal. I am stopping there for the night. And you?”
-
-“Same cheerful hostelry. Is it the worst in Cuba?”
-
-“The worst and the best. They are all off the same piece.”
-
-“Will you come up to my room?” asks he of the black eyes, when the hotel
-is reached. “We shall doubtless be waited upon presently.”
-
-“By our Spanish friend?”
-
-“By his representative, more likely.”
-
-“But how is he to locate you?” questions Ashley. “No pasteboards were
-exchanged.”
-
-His companion smiles sardonically. “Capt. Raymon Huerta and I are not
-strangers,” he says.
-
-Even as he speaks there is a rap at the door and as it is thrown open in
-strides one of the Spanish quartet.
-
-“Well, Senor Cardena,” says the young man with the black eyes, glancing
-at the bit of pasteboard in his hand, “what is your pleasure?”
-
-“What, Senor Navarro, you may expect,” replies Cardena, declining
-stiffly the proffered chair. “Capt. Huerta demands satisfaction for the
-insult offered to him.”
-
-“Not only offered, but delivered,” mutters Ashley, and he returns in
-kind Cardena’s impertinent glance. “So my unknown friend’s name is
-Navarro,” he thinks.
-
-“You may convey to Capt. Huerta my willingness to afford him the desired
-redress,” says Navarro. “How will sunrise, on the beach below the city,
-answer?”
-
-“I am authorized to make the necessary arrangements. What you have
-proposed will be satisfactory. And the weapons?”
-
-“Pistols, I suppose; I am provided with one.”
-
-“Hold on,” puts in Ashley. “I have just the article. Excuse me a moment,
-gentlemen.” Repairing to his room he extracts from his trunk two superb
-Smith & Wesson 38-caliber revolvers, and these he submits to Cardena and
-Navarro. Senor Cardena professes himself to be satisfied with the
-weapons and, with a perfunctory “Adios,” he withdraws.
-
-When he has gone Navarro tosses his arms impatiently and murmurs: “What
-a fool I am.”
-
-“All men are or have been at some period,” Ashley assures him. “But what
-gives rise to your present self-accusation?”
-
-“The thought that I permitted my temper to play the mischief with my
-judgment,” is the gloomy reply. “A man has the right to risk his own
-life, but not the life, or what is dearer than life, of those whose
-interests he is intrusted with.”
-
-“See here,” Ashley gently protests, “if there is any fighting to be done
-why not let me have the job? I began the row—”
-
-“And I finished it. No, my friend, this affair must go on to the bitter
-end. Although, as you rightly suspected, you were the ostensible object
-of the remarks of the party at the cafe, they were in reality directed
-toward me. It was inevitable that Capt. Huerta and I should cross,
-though I might have to-night avoided a meeting which would better be
-left to the future. May I request you to second me in the meeting?”
-
-“Assuredly, Senor Navarro. That is your name, I judge?”
-
-“Yes; Emilio Navarro—quite Spanish, you see,” with a peculiar smile.
-“And your name?”
-
-“Jack Ashley; residence, New York; occupation, newspaper man; paper, the
-Hemisphere; ever heard of it?”
-
-“The newspaper is not a stranger to me. Pardon me a few minutes,” says
-Navarro, and he occupies himself in writing a somewhat lengthy letter,
-which he seals, without addressing, and hands to Ashley.
-
-“Ashley, you are a man of honor,” he says, laying one hand upon the
-newspaper man’s shoulder. “Promise me that if anything happens to me
-to-morrow you will deliver that letter to a name I will whisper to you.”
-
-“I shall do so with profound regret, sir. The name?”
-
-“Don Manuel de Quesada. He resides in the Pueblo de Olivet, on the edge
-of Santos, four miles west of Santiago.”
-
-Ashley places the letter in his pocket. “I will not fail you, if the
-occasion for my services should arise. But unless Huerta is more
-familiar with the American revolver than I believe him to be, I shall
-have the happiness of returning this document to you after you have
-filled him full of leaden satisfaction. How are you on the shoot,
-anyway?”
-
-Navarro smiles grimly. “I have hit a playing card at fifty yards,” he
-says.
-
-“Oh, well; that’s close enough marksmanship. I am beginning to feel
-sorry for Huerta.”
-
-“Save your sympathy. I shall not kill him. And now, friend Ashley, I
-believe I’ll go to bed. I have been riding all day and I am as tired as
-a dog. At daylight we start.”
-
-“At daylight it is. It is not too late to accept my offer to exchange
-places with you. I can’t hit a playing card at fifty yards, but at least
-I am alone in the world, and, barring a few excellent friends, would not
-be especially missed. It is as much my quarrel as yours, you know.”
-
-“My dear Ashley,” says Navarro, with much emotion, “I am deeply sensible
-of the goodness of heart that prompts your offer, but, I repeat, this
-affair must proceed as it has begun.”
-
-“Well, good-night to you, then,” says Ashley, and he goes off to bed,
-wondering what manner of man is he who speaks of a thrill at the sight
-of the most beautiful of all flags streaming out upon the breeze, and
-yet claims the distinctly Spanish name of Emilio Navarro.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXVI.
-
- JUANITA.
-
-
-The sun is creeping up the range of hills when Ashley and Navarro leave
-the Hotel Royal and set forth at a smart pace for the meeting with Capt.
-Raymon Huerta. Ashley is in his usual good spirits, and the enlivening
-influence of his society is appreciated by Navarro, whose thoughts are
-plainly of a dejected nature.
-
-Half a mile or more down the beach that stretches east of the city three
-men are in waiting. Two of them are Capt. Huerta and Senor Cardena; the
-third is evidently a surgeon.
-
-The preliminaries for the exchange of shots are quickly arranged.
-Ashley, with the fifty-yards range in mind, proposes the comfortable
-distance of twenty-five paces, and Cardena assents. Then the revolvers
-are handed out and carefully scrutinized, and Huerta and Navarro face
-each other on the sands.
-
-“How’s your nerve, old man?” Ashley asks Navarro, as he gives the
-latter’s hand an encouraging squeeze.
-
-“Steady,” is the response, in low tones.
-
-“Good.”
-
-“Remember the letter,” admonishes Navarro, and as Ashley nods and steps
-back the duelists signal that they are ready.
-
-A minute later two shots startle into flight a flock of sea gulls that
-have been hovering along the shore.
-
-With the echoes Capt. Huerta staggers and is immediately taken in charge
-by the watchful Cardena and the medico.
-
-“Not scratched, eh?” Ashley inquires of Navarro.
-
-“No; but the lead passed close enough for comfort. Unless my aim was
-poor, Huerta is not seriously hurt. To have killed him would have been
-to invite serious entanglement.”
-
-Nor is the Spanish captain in any immediate danger of parting with
-existence. The bullet has plowed through the right shoulder, causing a
-ragged wound and a great flow of blood, but a few days will put him on
-his feet again, the surgeon reports to Cardena. Wounded honor is
-satisfied by the physical wound, and after a brief announcement of this
-fact and a stiff “Adios” the Spaniards drive away, and Navarro and his
-American friend are left upon the beach.
-
-“Any trouble with the authorities likely?” Ashley queries, as the two
-turn cityward.
-
-“I think not. Huerta is a thorough-paced scoundrel, but he has never
-been accused of being a coward or an informer.”
-
-A great change has come over Navarro. His eye is bright and his step
-elastic and he tells Ashley, as they stride along in the cool air of the
-morning, that he is terribly hungry and would appreciate a good
-breakfast.
-
-As good a meal as Cuba affords is forthcoming, and as Ashley suddenly
-recollects the now happily unnecessary letter to Don Quesada, Navarro
-tears it into fragments and says abruptly:
-
-“Ashley, amigo, have you ever seen the Pearl of the Antilles?”
-
-“No; I haven’t been in Santiago quite twenty-four hours yet. You mean
-the insurgent cruiser?”
-
-“Ah, no; I mean the most beautiful girl in Cuba. She is the daughter of
-Don Manuel de Quesada, and is at once the joy and the despair of half
-the unmarried jeunesse doree of Santiago. Would you like to meet her?”
-
-“By all means. Next to a good horse and a trim yacht, I know of nothing
-that interests me more than a beautiful woman.”
-
-“Good. I am going out to La Quinta de Quesada. Hunt up a horse and
-accompany me.”
-
-Navarro is already provided with a steed, a magnificent black animal
-that interests Ashley far more than the prospects of the acquaintance of
-the Pearl of the Antilles. “Came into my possession yesterday,” Navarro
-tells him. “Isn’t he a beauty?”
-
-“He is that,” is Jack’s appreciative reply. “If you run across his mate
-put me in the way of acquiring him and I will do my war correspondence
-in the saddle.”
-
-Ashley succeeds in chartering a fairly presentable beast for the day,
-and the two young men set out for Santos in the best of spirits. They
-are in no hurry and the ride of something over four miles through El
-Valle de Bosque Cillos, the wooded valley, occupies an hour.
-
-Passing through Santos, which is one of the smallest of villages,
-embracing only a jail, a church and a score of dwellings, the travelers
-take the road to La Quinta de Quesada, which is located in the center of
-the Pueblo de Olivet.
-
-The Quinta is a square, two-storied affair and the principal material in
-its construction is coral stone. The inevitable and grateful veranda
-stretches around three sides and an air of quiet luxury is evident in
-the spacious house and its attractive surroundings.
-
-As Navarro and Ashley ride slowly up the shaded carriage way and turn
-suddenly in sight of the quinta, the first objects that greet Jack’s
-vision are two young people in one of the hammocks on the veranda. A
-young man’s arm encircles a young lady’s waist and the attitude of the
-pair suggests either the relations of lovers or of brother and sister.
-They start up in some confusion upon the advent of a stranger and come
-forward to greet Navarro. When the latter dismounts the young man
-embraces him warmly and Navarro, as he rests one arm affectionately
-about the youth’s shoulders, says to Ashley: “My younger brother, Don
-Carlos.” Then he turns to the young lady:
-
-“Juanita, I want you to know my friend, Senor Jack Ashley of New York.
-Senor Ashley, La Senorita de Quesada.”
-
-Ashley has slid from his horse and his acknowledgment of the
-introduction is rather less debonair than usual; because, as he
-confesses afterward to himself, he is somewhat confused by the beauty of
-the young woman, who gives him her hand and tells him that the quinta
-has no friends more welcome than Don Emilio.
-
-And here is an outline of Juanita de Quesada, the Pearl of the Antilles,
-as sketched rapidly but indelibly upon the tablets of Jack Ashley’s
-memory:
-
-She is 20 or thereabouts, and is considerably below the medium height.
-The proportions of her slender yet full form are as perfect as nature
-ever molds. Her face is oval, and her complexion a soft, creamy olive.
-Evidences of her race are in the lead-black hair, the dark, dreamy eyes
-of liquid fire, the rather large, tremulous mouth, with its scarlet
-lips, and the completing perfection of Cuban loveliness, the dainty
-little feet with the incomparable arches. All Cuban women are not
-beautiful, but as Ashley looks upon the present picture he decides that
-the imperfections of her sisters are amply compensated for by the
-dazzling loveliness of the Senorita de Quesada. “She is glorious,” he
-thinks; and then: “I wonder if she knows anything.”
-
-Hardly less striking, though dissimilar in character, is the beauty of
-Don Carlos Navarro. He is a slender youth, with dark-brown eyes and
-curly hair, and if it were not for the effeminacy of his regular
-features he would receive the critical approval of the New Yorker. As it
-is, Ashley confesses that Juanita and Don Carlos are the handsomest
-young pair he ever set eyes upon, and he wonders what may be the
-relationship existing between them. For Carlos is no more Spanish in
-appearance than his brother Emilio.
-
-“Where is Don Quesada?” asks Navarro, when the party have disposed
-themselves upon the veranda.
-
-“With his books and papers, as usual,” replies Carlos, with a
-significant glance at his brother. “Come, I will take you to him. He
-will be overjoyed to greet you. It is nearly two weeks, Emilio, since we
-last saw you.”
-
-“And it may be much longer than two weeks ere you see me again,” says
-Navarro, as he follows Carlos into the house.
-
-Ashley finds himself vastly interested in the young lady with whom he
-has been left tete-a-tete. He learns that she has not a near relative
-save her father (Carlos must then be her lover); that she is no stranger
-to the United States, having resided in New York two years; that she
-loves America and everything American; that, were it not that her
-father’s interests necessitated a residence in Cuba, she would like to
-live always in America; and much more information, imparted in a quiet,
-dignified manner which Jack is positive was acquired by her short stay
-in the land of the free and the home of the enterprising.
-
-All too soon comes the interruption of luncheon, and Ashley is presented
-to Don Manuel de Quesada. Jack takes a good, square look at the tall,
-spare, elderly man who grasps his hand warmly and tells him that he is
-always proud and happy to meet an American.
-
-Don Quesada is a typical Cuban in appearance; his bearing is
-distinguished and his manner partakes of the dignity and repose of his
-daughter. But there is a certain weakness about the mouth that Ashley at
-once notes.
-
-However, Don Quesada is cordiality itself, and after lunch the three men
-adjourn to the library for a smoke, Carlos and Juanita taking themselves
-off for a ramble through the park.
-
-The conversation drifts naturally to a discussion of the patriotic
-uprising which has almost attained the proportions of a revolution that
-promises to be as successful as the struggle for independence of the
-American colonists. The talk is general, and Ashley surprises his
-companions by remarking abruptly:
-
-“By the way, Don Quesada, before I left America it was hinted to me by
-an influential member of the Cuban revolutionary society that the
-President of the Provisional Republic of Cuba is a resident of
-Santiago.”
-
-“Ah?” says Quesada, inquiringly.
-
-“That is, I suppose Santos may be considered a part of Santiago.”
-
-Quesada and Navarro look at each other meaningly.
-
-“In other words, that this President is none other than yourself, Don
-Quesada,” continues Ashley; and without waiting for a reply to this
-direct speech he goes on:
-
-“I tell you only what, as I say, was intimated to me in the strictest
-confidence. I shall not ask for a confirmation or a contradiction; I am
-not thinking of interviewing you. I am an American and the
-representative of an American newspaper. As such, I am supposed, while
-in Cuba, to maintain a neutrality. I had intended, before I met Don
-Navarro, to call upon you in a professional capacity, but now I find
-myself your guest. It is for you to say what is your pleasure in the
-matter.”
-
-Don Quesada studies keenly the face of the war correspondent, but reads
-only sincerity in the frank blue eyes. Then he looks at Navarro and the
-latter extends his hand to Jack.
-
-“Ashley, I believe we understand one another,” he says. “There is no
-need of further explanations. If there is any interviewing to be done,
-you can operate on me. I believe Don Quesada will willingly allow me to
-submit to the ordeal.”
-
-“I will be merciful,” smiles Ashley. “But before I proceed further,
-permit me to present the vouchers for my discretion and reliability,”
-and he passes over a letter which relieves Don Quesada of any possible
-distrust of his acquaintance of a few hours.
-
-It is late in the afternoon when Navarro announces that he must depart.
-Ashley is courteously invited to enjoy for as long a time as he may care
-to the hospitality of the quinta, but duty demands his presence at
-Santiago until he gets his affairs into shape. However, he promises to
-call frequently while he is in this part of the country, a pledge he
-anticipates much pleasure in fulfilling. And as he rides away with
-Navarro his usually cool head is disturbed by speculations as to the
-probable relations between Don Carlos Navarro and Juanita de Quesada.
-
-“By the way, Navarro,” he says, suddenly to his companion, “is there any
-likelihood of my ever chancing upon El Terredo, the mysterious
-revolutionary leader whom we were discussing this afternoon?”
-
-“Possibly,” is the reply. The travelers have reached a fork in the road,
-about half-way between Santos and Santiago.
-
-“My path lies yonder,” says Navarro, pointing to the north. “We must
-part here.”
-
-“Well, take care of yourself,” remarks Ashley, gripping the extended
-hand.
-
-Navarro rides slowly away, but he has not gone five yards when he checks
-his horse and turns in his saddle.
-
-“Would you like to see El Terredo?” he asks, with a smile.
-
-“It would satisfy my curiosity,” is Ashley’s prompt response.
-
-“Then, my friend, take your first look, and the last for many days, if
-not forever. For I am El Terredo!”
-
-Waving his hat with a graceful sweep Navarro rides away to the
-mountains.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXVII.
-
- ONE WAY TO GET TO CUBA.
-
-
-“Whew!” For the nineteenth time John Barker gives utterance to the
-expressive exclamation, as he mops his perspiring forehead.
-
-The detective is seated in the parlor car of the Florida express, which
-has just left Jacksonville, and is being whirled along toward Tampa Bay.
-
-He soon indulges in a nap, while the train rumbles on, by the scattered
-negro huts, with their ebon-hued occupants drawn up in solemn array to
-watch the flying cars, through the dense forests of moss-entwined trees,
-across the trestle-spanned marshes and mud-colored rivers.
-
-Barker is dreaming of a hand-to-hand encounter with Cyrus Felton,
-wherein the latter has succeeded in clasping the handcuffs about his
-(Barker’s) neck and is slowly but surely rendering futile his breathing
-apparatus, when the porter’s voice calling out “Tampa Bay” recalls him
-to his senses.
-
-The single hotel at Tampa Bay, Barker subsequently finds, is not a
-half-bad institution, judged by the midnight inspection, and
-ascertaining from the clerk that the steamer for Key West does not sail
-until 3 o’clock the following afternoon, the detective retires in the
-confident belief that he has overtaken Mrs. Harding at least.
-
-Barker is right in his surmise. He has nearly finished his breakfast the
-next morning, when the striking figure of Mrs. Harding enters the
-dining-room and is escorted by the obsequious waiter to the table at
-which the detective is seated. The latter lingers long over his coffee
-and muffins, while he improves the opportunity of studying his
-vis-a-vis.
-
-“Handsome as a queen,” is his conclusion, as the glorious black eyes
-glance idly into his. But there is a tinge of melancholy in her face, a
-preoccupation in her manner, that does not escape the observation of the
-detective, and at which he wonders.
-
-“It cannot be that the military chap has given her the go-by,” he
-thinks.
-
-He has not, for at this moment the soldierly form of the Spaniard enters
-the room and he is directed to a seat beside Mrs. Harding.
-
-“Nothing very lover-like in their greeting,” ruminates Barker, as the
-two exchange salutations. “Since they are to be fellow-passengers on the
-boat to Key West and Havana I will postpone my interview until then.”
-Barker strolls out upon the hotel veranda.
-
-“How long does it take to run to Havana?” he inquires, casually, of the
-porter.
-
-“About a ten hours’ sail from Key West, when the steamers are running,”
-he is told.
-
-“When the steamers are running? Are they not running now?”
-
-“No, sir; they run only as far as Key West now, since the blockade was
-declared.”
-
-Barker paces slowly up and down the veranda.
-
-“Well, I must be hoodooed,” he mutters; “that does settle it. Here I’ve
-raced 1,700 miles to head off my game, only to be foiled by a measly
-blockade. I can’t stand it to charter a ship, and it looks mightily as
-if Cyrus Felton was going to slip through my hands. But how are my lady
-and the Spanish-looking chap to get there? I will go to Key West at any
-rate. There may be some way to cross the channel from there.”
-
-The detective is not in cheerful spirits as he boards the steamer, but
-he feels a shade of satisfaction while noting Mrs. Harding and her
-cavalier ascend the gang-plank just before the signal for departure is
-given.
-
-“We will have a little tete-a-tete by and by, my lady,” he murmurs. But,
-greatly to the detective’s disappointment, Mrs. Harding does not emerge
-from her stateroom until the steamer has sighted the yellow stretch of
-sand that marks the entrance to the harbor of Key West.
-
-“Well, we shall either be fellow-voyagers again, or ‘on a tropical isle
-we’ll sit and smile,’” reflects Barker, philosophically.
-
-Determined that he will not lose sight of the charming Mrs. Harding
-again, Barker loiters about the steamer until she trips across the
-gang-plank, the last passenger to disembark. Her traveling companion has
-preceded her nearly half an hour, and Barker wonders again if they have
-parted company. Their baggage, he observes, is still on the pier, and
-even as Mrs. Harding steps ashore Barker sees the Spaniard coming
-rapidly toward her. He conducts her to the opposite side of the wharf,
-where is moored a neat little steam launch, manned by a number of
-sailors in the uniform of the Spanish navy. The baggage upon which
-Barker’s watchful eyes are fixed is quickly conveyed aboard the launch,
-Mrs. Harding follows, still escorted by the military-appearing stranger,
-and a moment later the little craft shoots out from the dock and makes
-for a man-of-war lying at anchor in the harbor and flying the Spanish
-colors.
-
-Mr. Barker’s last opportunity for a tete-a-tete with “my lady” has
-vanished.
-
-The detective watches the launch until it vanishes behind the bow of the
-warship, but words fail utterly to express his feelings. He mechanically
-picks up his grip and suffers himself to be conducted by an enterprising
-Bahaman to the American hotel, picturesquely surrounded by tropical
-shrubs and plants.
-
-“Well, Barker,” the detective communes with himself, “it looks decidedly
-as if my lady possessed a slight advantage in having a man-of-war at her
-call. But with all that fleet of boats in the harbor it does seem that
-there should be one bound for Cuba. How to hit that particular one is
-the question.”
-
-He strolls down the broad street to the harbor front, and from a wharf
-wistfully gazes at the Spanish man-of-war now nearly hull down on the
-horizon bearing away his fair fellow-voyager. A tanned and
-weather-beaten son of Neptune is making fast a small sloop, whose name
-Barker notes with idle curiosity is emblazoned in generous letters on
-her stern, “Cayo Hueso.”
-
-“Say, my good fellow,” he says, “you don’t happen to know of any way to
-reach Havana, do you? Are any of these vessels likely to sail for that
-port within a day or two?”
-
-He of the weather-beaten face finishes making fast the little sloop
-without answering, and then slowly turns and looks at Barker. The gaze
-is a long and searching one, but apparently it is satisfactory.
-
-“There’s one way to reach Cuba, I reckon,” he says, with a pronounced
-nasal twang. “That is, if you are sailor enough to stand that sloop and
-wise enough to keep your mouth shut on occasions.”
-
-Barker surveys the little craft doubtfully. She is of perhaps five tons’
-burden, and looks old and risky.
-
-“I could stand the sail if the boat is seaworthy, and I am anxious to
-reach Havana,” he finally says. “When do you sail?”
-
-“At 6 o’clock. The Cayo don’t go clear to Cuba, only about half-way
-across the channel. But we can put you aboard another craft that will
-land you in Havana. Got any baggage?”
-
-Barker meditates a moment. “How long will it take to make the passage?”
-he inquires.
-
-“Wall, if this wind holds you ought to be in Havana by to-morrow night.
-It will cost you—say, $25.”
-
-Barker’s decision is made. “I’ll chance it,” he says. “I’ll be here at 6
-o’clock.”
-
-On his return to the Cayo Hueso, the detective finds the crew of three
-already aboard and his sailor friend preparing to cast off. He ruefully
-surveys the small craft and thinks of the 120-mile trip, but there is no
-alternative and he clambers aboard.
-
-As the sails are hoisted Barker is amazed by the rate at which the
-little craft speeds out of the harbor. There is always a breeze on the
-keys, the captain of the Cayo tells him.
-
-Soon the sea begins to growl a bit and Barker does not like it. As the
-breeze freshens, the commotion beneath his vest increases.
-
-“Just the kind of a breeze for a run across, eh?” remarks the man at the
-tiller, with a voice that sounds to Barker like the rasp of a new saw.
-
-“I dunno,” replies the detective, whose face is rapidly becoming
-“sicklied o’er with the pale cast of thought.”
-
-But the little vessel continues to spin over the waters, as darkness
-settles upon the sea.
-
-The stars are paling in the heavens and the gray dawn is creeping
-athwart the sloop, when Barker awakens from a troubled nap and struggles
-into a sitting posture. He sees only the bare horizon, the ocean lying
-black and leaden and wrinkled like an old man’s face. There is no boat
-in sight, he thinks; they are not yet half-way to the Cuban shore.
-
-But there is a boat in sight. Hull down to the east, imperceptible to
-his untrained eye, a delicate pearl shaft hangs like a pendant just on
-the horizon. For a time it seems dim and visionary; then even Barker,
-did he possess sufficient ambition to lift his head again, could see a
-duplicate of the sloop lazily crawling toward her, and, within half an
-hour, come alongside the Cayo Hueso.
-
-At once certain mysterious boxes and casks, chiefly the latter, are
-transferred from one boat to the other. Then Barker laboriously and
-disconsolately steps from the Cayo Hueso to the strange boat, while his
-weather-beaten friend communes with the captain of the latter. His
-destination is a matter of supremest indifference to the detective. He
-manfully strives to hold up his head while the exchange of salutations
-is made, fails and sinks passively into the bottom of the boat.
-
-The sun is gilding Maro castle as the little craft enters the harbor of
-Havana.
-
-“A remarkably quick passage,” says the captain in Spanish, as the sloop
-is being moored to a dilapidated wharf in an obscure portion of the
-water front.
-
-Barker struggles to his feet. “Are we in Havana?” he inquires in
-Spanish, a trifle rusty, but still intelligible.
-
-“Si, senor.”
-
-“Thank heaven!” is the pious ejaculation of the detective. “I’ll live
-and die in Cuba before I’ll every trust myself in a cockleshell like
-that again.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXVIII.
-
- A SOLDIER OF CASTILE.
-
-
-“Heavens! They have just sized up my condition and sent an ambulance,”
-Barker grunts, as his eyes rest for the first time on that marvel of
-vehicular construction, a Cuban volante, which the good-natured captain
-of the sloop has secured for his late passenger.
-
-But before he clambers into the conveyance the detective, whose
-professional instincts are now awakening, ascertains from the driver
-that the American steamer City of Havana has not yet arrived, although
-due that morning.
-
-Barker begins to feel better. “Things seem to be coming my way at last,”
-he thinks complacently. “I’ll take no chances this time. John Barker,
-detective, will be the first to greet Cyrus Felton when that gentleman
-steps on Cuban soil. Now for the hotel and a bath, a visit to the
-American consul and then to the wharf of the Red Star Line, wherever
-that is.”
-
-It is a very different individual from the woebegone passenger on the
-little smuggler that three hours later lounges about the dimly lighted
-freight sheds of the American Steamship Line, awaiting the arrival of
-the overdue vessel. “Richard’s himself again,” he remarks; “or will be
-when his long-neglected appetite is appeased. I hope the City of Havana
-will not keep me up all night.”
-
-The night wears on—the longest, Barker assures himself, with one
-exception, that he ever knew, and the sun is well above the horizon ere
-his heart is cheered by the boom of a cannon on Moro castle, announcing
-the arrival of a foreign vessel. It is the American liner, and by the
-time the various custom officers, summoned by the signal gun, have
-arrived on the wharf, the steamer is being moored to the pier.
-
-Barker has taken a position where he can command a view of the
-gang-plank, and with a grim smile he awaits the disembarking of the
-passengers. There are not many. A few Havana business men, a score or
-two of Cubans, three or four Spanish officers and half a dozen Americans
-cross the plank, and then there is a lull in the procession.
-
-Barker’s smile fades and there is a suspicion of anxiety in his
-expression as the tall, slim form of Cyrus Felton does not appear.
-
-“Perhaps he is sick,” the detective thinks. “I will go aboard and
-inquire of the purser.”
-
-No; there was no passenger on this trip named Felton, that officer
-states, running his eye down the rather abbreviated passenger list.
-
-Barker stares vacantly at the purser. Rapidly there passes through his
-mind the circumstances preceding his interesting journey to Havana—the
-departure of Felton and Miss Hathaway from the St. James; his (Barker’s)
-hurried trip to Key West; the unavailing effort to interview Mrs.
-Harding; the voyage in the smuggler to Havana; last night’s long and
-weary vigil.
-
-And Felton did not sail on the City of Havana after all!
-
-Without a word of thanks to the courteous purser, the detective slowly
-turns and retraces his steps. He walks aimlessly from the wharf, his
-disappointment for the time being too bitter for expression.
-
-But John Barker, whatever his errors of judgment, is a clear-minded,
-persistent man, and after a half-hour’s walk in the enervating
-atmosphere of a Havana midday he pulls himself up with a start.
-
-“Well,” he says as he wipes the perspiration from his face, “I’m euchred
-this time, it appears, and must make the best of it. But this is the
-deciding trick, and by heaven,” the detective grinds his teeth, “I will
-track Cyrus Felton down if it takes the rest of my life! I have it! I’ll
-see if the son, Ralph Felton, is actually here, as Ashley believes. If
-he is, I will at least have something to show for my trip to this
-awfully hot hole. Now for something to eat at the grand hotel Pasaje, if
-I can find the way. It’s mighty lucky I know some Spanish.”
-
-The shadows are lengthening toward night when Barker awakens from the
-sound slumber into which his “siesta” after a comfortable meal has
-developed. He is feeling greatly refreshed and ready to pick up again
-the tangled threads of the trail that he has followed so far.
-
-“Now for a little stroll about the city, to see what the place is like,”
-he thinks, as he lights a cigar and saunters down the broad street.
-
-Half an hour later, Barker has strayed farther from the hotel than he
-realizes and has unwittingly penetrated into the most disreputable
-quarter of Havana. For a brief rest he enters a cafe, and seating
-himself at a table in a corner of a room orders a light drink,
-absent-mindedly speaking in English.
-
-Two dark-browed, yellow-skinned Cubans, who have been conversing
-earnestly in low tones at a table adjoining Barker’s, glower at the
-newcomer, but as he gives his order to the waiter in English they resume
-their interrupted conversation. Barker idly sips his jerez and wonders
-what Jack Ashley will say on receiving the letter he left for him in New
-York.
-
-Suddenly the word “Americano,” hissed by one of the two Cubans, arrests
-his attention and he strains his ears to hear in what connection the
-word was used. The pair are talking in low tones, but the detective’s
-trained sense is able to comprehend the tenor of the conversation.
-
-The Cubans are discussing the assassination of some person, an American,
-and presumably that American is John Barker!
-
-The detective slips his hand around to his hip pocket, and as his
-fingers close over the butt of a 38-caliber pistol his pulse resumes its
-calm and even beat and he proceeds to make a mental inventory of the
-prospective assassins.
-
-“Absolutely the most villainous-looking brace of cutthroats I ever saw,”
-he sums up. “But why should they plot to lay me out? Do they take me for
-a New York millionaire in disguise, and think I carry a million or two
-around in my pocket? Ah, so you were not the distinguished individual
-picked out by the precious pair, Barker. It’s some other American. But
-who? And how can I manage to warn him of his danger?”
-
-Barker rapidly revolves the situation, while covertly watching the
-Cubans. He suddenly starts, as from words uttered by one of them, as
-they arise to leave the cafe, he becomes aware that the cold-blooded
-crime planned within his hearing is to be carried out within the next
-hour or so.
-
-“There’s nothing for me to do but to shadow the pair,” he mutters, as he
-steps again into the now moonlit street.
-
-It is a simple matter for the experienced detective to keep the Cubans
-in sight, especially as they never once take pains to glance backward.
-They have traversed several streets, when the detective observes that
-they have halted and are apparently loitering near a larger and rather
-more elaborate cafe than the majority.
-
-“So the American is in that cafe,” reflects Barker; “now, which is the
-better plan, to go in and endeavor to pick out my fellow-countryman and
-warn him, or keep in the rear of these chaps and swoop down on them at
-the proper moment? The latter I guess is the safer. We’ll see what we
-will see.”
-
-The wait is not a long one. Evidently the Cubans are familiar with the
-habits of the person they are seeking, for within fifteen minutes a
-rather tall young man emerges from the cafe, stopping a moment to light
-a cigar, and then starts down the shadowy street. Barker, after the
-first glance, pays little heed to the newcomer, for his quick eye notes
-that he wears the undress uniform of a Spanish officer. To his surprise,
-however, he perceives that the two Cubans are stealthily following the
-man.
-
-“So it is not an American after all,” thinks Barker, as he steals
-silently along. “But I can’t stand back and see a human killed in cold
-blood, whatever his nationality, and I won’t!”
-
-It is nearly 10 o’clock now and the street is deserted. As the form of
-the officer emerges into a clear patch of moonlight, Barker perceives
-that the Cubans have narrowed the distance that separates them from
-their prey, and he hastens to close up the gap between himself and the
-trio.
-
-He is not too soon. When less than two rods from the Cubans he sees the
-flash of steel in the hand of the foremost of the pair.
-
-“Look out!” Barker’s voice rings out in English, loud and clear, and
-with the words he springs forward with a speed that rivals his sprinting
-in his football days.
-
-“Tackle low!” The whimsical thought flashes through his brain as he
-clears the intervening space. And he does. The nearest Cuban goes down
-with a bone-breaking thud, the moonlight glitters for a second on
-something bright in Barker’s hand, there is a sharp click, and the
-detective springs to his feet.
-
-But there is no further need for his services. The other Cuban is
-speeding like the wind down the street.
-
-“I owe you one for this, my friend,” says the cause of the exciting
-episode in excellent English, as he strides up to Barker and warmly
-presses his hand. “But for your timely shout I should now be lying face
-downward there with the stiletto ornamenting my back. But what have you
-done to this scoundrel? He lies like a log.”
-
-“Oh, he’ll be all right in a few moments,” replies Barker, carelessly
-glancing down at the prostrate figure. “He went down so hard the wind
-was knocked out of him. Then I handcuffed him. Are there any policemen
-handy? If so, we can notify them and have him arrested.”
-
-“Never mind the police. The soldiers will take care of this cutthroat,”
-returns the other. “But come to my quarters while I endeavor to express
-adequate thanks for your service to-night. They are near by and I will
-send a detail of men for this rascal.”
-
-“Oh, never mind the thanks,” Barker replies carelessly. “It was nothing.
-I happened to overhear the pair planning to knife some one, and I
-followed to see the fun. Only I must admit I thought from their talk
-that their intended victim was one of my own countrymen, an American.”
-
-“So I am, or was, by birth. But I am now an officer in the Spanish army,
-Capt. Alvarez, of the staff of his excellency, the captain-general.”
-
-It is as well that a fleecy cloud at the moment dims the moonlight, for
-Barker, trained to control his emotions though he is, cannot avoid a
-sudden start.
-
-Alvarez! the man beside him is Ralph Felton!
-
-“Ah, here we are,” continues the self-expatriated American, as he stops
-before a large mansion facing the plaza. “Excuse me a moment while I
-send a man or two to look after your handcuffed friend.”
-
-Alvarez hurries to the rear of the building and returning shortly
-conducts Barker to a comfortably furnished room on the first floor. “My
-sleeping-room,” he explains. “Now, tell me how you happened to overhear
-that precious pair planning to assassinate me.”
-
-Barker briefly details the events leading up to the attack on Alvarez,
-the latter listening with knitted brows, but without comment.
-
-“Well, now of yourself,” he says, when Barker has concluded.
-
-Barker hesitates a moment, the while studying the face before him.
-“Cyrus Felton’s son, or his double” he thinks. Then he takes a sudden
-resolution. “I am a soldier of fortune,” he laughs. “I came down here to
-see the country and a little fighting maybe. My name is Parker;
-residence, the world. What are the chances for a commission in the
-Spanish army?”
-
-“Hardly good for a commission. But”—Alvarez looks Barker over
-shrewdly—“I should like to do you a service, and may. What do you say to
-becoming my orderly?”
-
-Barker’s eyes flash. He appears to deliberate for a moment, and finally
-says: “I would like nothing better.”
-
-“Good! To-morrow, then, will see you enrolled as a soldier of Spain!”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XXXIX.
-
- ASHLEY TAKES THE FIELD.
-
-
-The big, white moon that rolls through “heaven’s ebon vault” and pales
-the glow of the southern cross looks down upon two young people on the
-veranda of El Quinta de Quesada. They have retired to the shadows for
-purely healthful reasons, of course, as a baleful influence is
-attributed to the direct rays of the tropic moon.
-
-“You leave Santiago to-morrow?” asks Juanita, in tones of real regret.
-
-“At the first streak of daylight,” Ashley replies, lighting the
-inevitable Cuban cigar.
-
-“And when shall we see you again?”
-
-“Ah, quien sabe? I attack Spanish quite boldly now you see. As a matter
-of fact, I have no definite idea as to when I shall return. Sniffing the
-battle afar off has become monotonous. I am impatient to hear the rattle
-of musketry and the swish of the machete.”
-
-“You will not expose yourself!” cries the senorita.
-
-Ashley laughs softly. “I shall not lead any desperate charges,” he says.
-“For my position demands a show of neutrality, no matter how much I may
-sympathize at heart with the patriots. There is fighting all along the
-line between here and Havana, and I want a chance to describe a Cuban
-battle from personal observation. Besides, I like a good fight, and I
-shall probably itch to sail in and help the under dog, if said dog
-happens to be on the same side as my sympathies.”
-
-“But when such a chivalrous feeling seizes you, restrain it; think of
-your friends, if not of yourself,” adjures Juanita, gravely.
-
-“Ah, well, they would be the only mourners if I stopped a Spanish
-bullet. I haven’t a relative in the world except an amiable aunt in the
-western states, who threatens to some day turn over to me the
-squandering of her small fortune.”
-
-“No relative except an aunt?” repeats Juanita, sympathetically. “No one
-to weep for you?”
-
-“Oh, the boys in the office would wear crepe for a week, and—”
-
-“Don’t talk so lightly on such a dreadful subject,” reproves Juanita. “I
-am sure I should feel a great deal more distress than ‘the boys in the
-office,’ and I have known you only a fortnight.”
-
-“Thank you, senorita. You may feel sure that I shall studiously avoid
-being borne off a Cuban battleground upon my shield.”
-
-“You will keep on through to Havana?”
-
-“Unless circumstances bar my way, I shall follow along the line of the
-railroad, stopping wherever night overtakes me, and resuming my journey
-whenever I feel like it. I have no definite plans. And, now, senorita, I
-believe I will say Adios. It is getting along toward 9 o’clock, and the
-proprietary genius of my hotel looks upon belated guests somewhat
-askance. I have made my adieus to Don Manuel and Don Carlos, and it only
-remains to express my regret at saying farewell to you, senorita.”
-
-Juanita watches him while he untethers his horse, and as he turns,
-bridle in hand, to lift his hat, she comes from the veranda and puts her
-hand in his.
-
-“You will surely return?” she asks.
-
-“As surely as a bad penny.”
-
-“Then I will not say farewell.”
-
-“Au revoir it is, then,” says Jack. He lifts the little hand to his
-lips, and then with rather unnecessary abruptness he mounts his horse
-and rides away in the moonlight.
-
-“Hang it!” he mutters, when out of sight of the quinta; “that makes at
-least half a dozen times that I have pulled myself together just in
-season to avoid making a fool of myself. Perhaps my vigilance would be
-relaxed if I could ascertain the precise relations existing between
-Juanita and Carlos. I never saw two persons more wrapped up in each
-other, and yet Juanita—” He stops and repeats the name, dwelling upon
-each syllable. “Pshaw! I believe I am getting soft in my head! G’lang,
-old nag, or we won’t get to Santiago before midnight.”
-
-It is the 5th of April. Ashley has been in Santiago two weeks, and
-during the fortnight he has, in one way or another, kept his paper well
-supplied with news. He has also found many opportunities to run out to
-the quinta, and the welcome has always been so warm, and the adios so
-sincerely regretful, that he has begun to wonder whether his interest in
-the beautiful daughter of Don Manuel de Quesada is not lapping over the
-shadowy line that separates friendship from a sentiment which poets
-contend to be more powerful and philosophers regard as infinitely
-weaker.
-
-Ashley has seen Murillo several times since his arrival, and between the
-Spanish general and the newspaper man something of friendship has grown.
-Murillo left for Havana two days before, to join the captain-general,
-who, it is reported, proposed to transfer his headquarters to Santiago.
-
-When Jack reaches his hotel he is informed that a horse has been left
-for him at the stables.
-
-“For me?” he inquires in surprise, as he goes out and looks upon a
-magnificent iron-gray beast fit for a king on coronation day.
-
-For Senor Ashley, he is assured. It was brought during the afternoon.
-Jack looks the acquisition over, and then, turning to the trappings
-which hang near by, he discovers a bit of paper attached to the saddle.
-On it is written the single word “Navarro” and the mystery is cleared.
-
-“By Jove! This is generous,” he says. “But I’m blessed if I know where
-to send my thanks.”
-
-Dawn finds Ashley in the saddle and he makes quite a brave appearance as
-he rides away. He is clad in a suit of dark corduroy, with long riding
-boots and white-cloth helmet and as he looks his costume over
-complacently he remarks: “If my boots were a bit newer and shinier I’d
-make a good running mate for the war correspondent in ‘Michael
-Strogoff.’ It is a manifest libel to christen this horse Rozinante,”
-patting affectionately the neck of his sleek charger, “but as he is a
-Spanish steed he must suffer from recollections of Cervantes. So
-Rozinante it is.”
-
-Before the sun has become too aggressive to admit of riding in comfort
-Ashley has covered some twenty miles and has passed through two
-villages, wretched little settlements that have ever existed in their
-present squalor for generation upon generation. At the second of these
-he stops for breakfast. The meal is no worse than he expected, and after
-he has finished his coffee he hunts up a shady spot on the outskirts of
-the town, and, hitching his horse, he smokes and dozes until the late
-afternoon breezes from the gulf suggest a resumption of his journey. At
-night he tarries at the house of a farmer. They call them “farmers” in
-Cuba. They burn charcoal, raise a few vegetables and peddle milk and
-eggs.
-
-The next day is very much like the first, except that Ashley introduces
-the variation of sleeping all the afternoon and riding the greater part
-of the night. And when weariness finally overtakes him he camps on the
-edge of a vast canefield.
-
-The third day is equally monotonous. He begins to think that his
-expedition is to be utterly devoid of adventure. He has seen no signs of
-either insurgents or Spanish soldiery, nor have the natives along his
-route. As evening approaches he rides into the decent-sized town of
-Jibana, on the line of the railway between Havana and Santiago.
-
-Somewhat to his surprise he learns that the only hotel in the place is
-kept by an American. Landlord Carter proves to be a decent sort of chap
-and his hostelry is clean and inviting. After a really good supper
-Ashley turns in early; he is thoroughly tired, having ridden farther
-than on either of the previous days.
-
-He wakes moderately early and has a brief ante-breakfast chat with
-Landlord Carter.
-
-“Have I heard of any fighting around here?” repeats Carter, in response
-to Ashley’s inquiry. “No, but I expect to see some most any day. There
-is a report that a large number of insurgents are encamped in the
-mountains within a score of miles of Jibana and the natives hereabout
-are becoming restless. A rebel victory or two would send the whole of
-this part of the province into the insurgent fold. By the way, a party
-of three Americans arrived last evening after you had gone to bed.”
-
-“So? What are they doing here and who are they?”
-
-“They are going out to some sugar plantations near here to-day. I
-haven’t learned their names yet, as—”
-
-At this moment the newspaper man hears a familiar feminine voice exclaim
-in tones of the utmost astonishment. “Why, Mr. Ashley!” and he turns to
-see Louise Hathaway standing in the hotel doorway.
-
-Though somewhat dazed mentally, Jack lifts his hat and remarks, as if he
-had seen her but yesterday, “Good-morning, Miss Hathaway. You are an
-early riser.”
-
-“You don’t appear a bit surprised to see me,” says the young lady, as
-she gives him her hand; “while I am completely bewildered at meeting an
-American friend in the midst of this wilderness.”
-
-“Oh, this is a very small world,” remarks Ashley.
-
-“Now, do tell me how you happen to be in Cuba. I am dying with
-curiosity,” declares Louise.
-
-“Then I will explain in all haste. You should be able to guess from my
-military bearing and the fierce aspect which this helmet gives me that I
-am a war correspondent. I have been in Cuba a little over a fortnight. I
-arrived at Santiago three days after the Semiramis dropped anchor and
-was told that you had gone to Havana.”
-
-“But how did you know we sailed from New York on the Semiramis? My note,
-left at the St. James hotel, stated that we were going to Cuba on the
-steamship City of Havana.”
-
-“Exactly. And I supposed that you had, until I saw you on the deck of
-the Semiramis when the yacht was running away from Uncle Sam’s cruiser
-off Sandy Hook.”
-
-And now Miss Hathaway relates the effort which she and Mr. Felton made
-to reach the pier before the City of Havana sailed from New York. When
-she tells Ashley of the adventure of the blockade on West Broadway and
-of the subsequent appearance of Phillip Van Zandt and his offer to place
-the Vermonters on Cuban soil, Ashley twists his mustache reflectively.
-
-Miss Hathaway’s story is interrupted by the announcement of breakfast,
-and five minutes later Ashley makes one of a party of four at a table in
-the cozy dining-room.
-
-Cyrus Felton greets the newspaper man with grave surprise, and Jack’s
-keen eyes note that the ex-president of the Raymond national bank is
-looking bad. He is paler even than when he saw him last, in New York
-about a month ago, and in the gray eyes has settled an expression of
-vague unrest.
-
-Phillip Van Zandt acknowledges the introduction with his accustomed
-reserve, and for an instant the eyes of the two young men meet in a
-searching gaze of mutual inquiry.
-
-From the conversation that ensues, Ashley gathers that most of the time
-which the trio have spent in Cuba has been passed in and about Havana,
-and that they are now en route to Santiago, stopping off at Jibana to
-visit a sugar plantation in which Mr. Felton has an interest. And, what
-is more to the point, Ashley learns that the Semiramis is not to leave
-Santiago for at least another fortnight. This information comes from Van
-Zandt. Mr. Felton and Miss Hathaway do not appear to have any definite
-plans.
-
-For his part, Ashley tells them that he intends to push on to Havana,
-and knows not when he will return to Santiago, if at all.
-
-But as he watches Mr. Felton, Van Zandt and Miss Hathaway set forth,
-after breakfast, for the sugar plantation, which lies east of the town,
-he tells himself that he will return to Santiago before many days.
-
-“I must keep my eye on those two gentlemen,” he mutters, “and trust to
-Providence to throw Barker in my way, if indeed he has not already
-struck the trail. By the stars that shine, but there is a strangely
-assorted trio, unless I am clear off my reckoning. Nemesis is trailing
-his inevitable victim with said victim’s father, and sooner or later
-they must meet. What is the town beyond here?” Ashley asks Landlord
-Carter.
-
-“Cadoza,” the innkeeper informs him.
-
-“I believe I’ll jog along to that point, anyhow,” Jack decides; “and if
-nothing turns up in the line of excitement within twenty-four hours,
-then back to Santiago.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XL.
-
- THE APPEARANCE OF THE SERPENT.
-
-
-Half a dozen hours from the time that Jack Ashley mounts his newly
-acquired Rozinante and rides forth from Santiago on his journey into the
-west, a visitor arrives at Le Quinta de Quesada.
-
-The Don and his daughter are seated on the veranda, the former dreaming
-of the day when Cuba shall be free, the latter of the blue-eyed young
-man who at the moment is many miles on his journey toward Havana and is
-expressing his opinion of Cuban roads in comical apostrophes, rivaling
-the natural extravagance of Spanish conversation.
-
-“A visitor,” remarks Quesada, as the crunching of carriage wheels sounds
-in the driveway, and Juanita’s day dreams are abruptly terminated by the
-appearance of a vehicle, not a Cuban every-day volante, but a
-four-wheeled affair, the best that Santiago can provide.
-
-The carriage draws up before the quinta, the driver opens the door with
-a profound obeisance, and out steps a lady whose radiant beauty rather
-dazzles the Cuban gentleman, who advances with easy grace to meet her.
-For Don Quesada, though well past the meridian of life, is not without
-susceptibility to feminine charms.
-
-“I have the pleasure of addressing Don Manuel de Quesada, I believe?”
-says the fair visitor in English.
-
-“The pleasure is mine, madam.”
-
-“I am under the embarrassment of introducing myself,” with a smile and a
-glance from a pair of liquid black eyes that instantly win for her the
-good-will of the master of the quinta. She tenders a bit of cardboard,
-and as the Don receives it with a bow, she explains: “When I left New
-York I had a letter of introduction from a gentleman who has the honor
-of your acquaintance”—she glances at the coachman standing near, and
-lowers her voice—“Don Rafael Manada.”
-
-“Ah!” murmurs Quesada, regarding his visitor with new interest.
-
-“But I must have left it among my effects at Santiago. I certainly have
-not lost it, as I was too thoroughly instructed as to the importance of
-keeping its contents a secret,” the lady finishes, with a meaning smile.
-
-Quesada extends his hand and presses slightly the dainty palm laid
-therein. “Any of Don Manada’s friends are welcome here,” he says. “I am
-happy to place the quinta at your disposition, and its occupants are
-yours to command, madam.”
-
-Quesada leads the way into the house, whither Juanita has retired to add
-a few touches to her toilet.
-
-“You are an American, Mrs. Harding,” ventures the Don, as they pass
-through the long, wide corridor to the gallery at the rear of the quinta
-and the lady is provided with the easiest of chairs.
-
-“My accent told you that immediately,” is the smiling response. “Yes; I
-am the widow of an American ship-owner, who left to me, among other
-possessions, a sugar plantation somewhere in this fair isle. I had the
-pleasure of Don Manada’s acquaintance in New York, and when he heard
-that I purposed visiting Cuba to view my possessions, he desired that I
-seek you, giving me at the same time the letter of introduction which,
-as I have said, I have unfortunately left at my hotel in Santiago. But
-perhaps the password which he whispered to me, ‘Cuba Libre,’ will do as
-well. For the cause of Cuban liberty has no warmer sympathizer than
-myself, Don Quesada,” she adds, earnestly, and the Don’s countenance
-lights with pleasure.
-
-“Don Manada could have conferred no greater pleasure,” he replies, “and
-I trust that you will honor my daughter and myself by becoming our
-guest, for a few days at least.”
-
-Isabel’s dark orbs snap with triumph not easily repressed, but she
-answers hesitatingly: “Thank you, but I do not see how I can trespass
-upon your kindness. I have not the pleasure of an acquaintance with the
-senorita, and—”
-
-“Permit me to remove that objection at once,” interposes Quesada, as
-Juanita at the moment stands in the doorway. “Juanita, mi querida, this
-is Mrs. Isabel Harding, an American lady and a friend of Don Manada,
-whom you met in New York. I have invited her to remain with us for a few
-days, or as long as our hospitality may prove attractive. Will you not
-add your request to mine?”
-
-The more mature and voluptuous beauty of the older woman attracts the
-impulsive Cuban girl, and she seconds her father’s invitation with a
-sincerity that would have won even a lady who had not come to the quinta
-with the deliberate purpose of securing such a proffer of hospitality.
-
-And so the carriage is sent back to Santiago and Isabel Harding is
-installed at the quinta, the surroundings of which she finds much to her
-liking. Juanita is much charmed with her American friend, who fascinates
-the impressionable Cuban girl with her brilliant beauty, her wit and her
-knowledge of the great world amid whose pleasures and palaces Juanita
-lived for two years, and which she hopes some day to see again. The two
-women quickly become inseparable and naturally Juanita tells Mrs.
-Harding of her other recent New York friend, Jack Ashley. But Isabel,
-although she enjoys, or otherwise, an acquaintance with that industrious
-young man, does not know his name, and the adventuress has not even the
-fear of his reappearance to disturb her present serenity.
-
-But if the Don and his daughter are charmed by their guest, not so Don
-Carlos, and it is with difficulty that that gentle youth conceals his
-dislike. An instinctive distrust of the beautiful American takes
-possession of him, and to avoid exhibiting this distrust, which he
-admits to himself is unfounded, he spends most of his time in solitary
-walks about the vast pueblo or in long rides upon the back of his
-favorite pony.
-
-Late in the afternoon of the 7th of April, two days after the arrival of
-Mrs. Harding at the quinta, that lady, her elderly host and his daughter
-are seated on the veranda, enjoying the light breeze from the gulf which
-renders life in Cuba endurable and even attractive for a few hours.
-
-An interruption to the conversation comes in the person of a courier,
-who rides up to the quinta, delivers to Quesada a small packet of
-papers, and, after a glass of wine, departs as hastily as he came.
-
-The Don excuses himself and retires to his study. A few moments later he
-reappears and calls to Carlos, who is coming up the lawn. Young Navarro
-bows to Mrs. Harding and follows the Don into the study.
-
-“I have just received important news,” says the latter. “Capt. Guerra
-sends word that a big supply train was dispatched by the captain-general
-from Havana for Santiago this morning or last night. Is it not to-day or
-to-morrow that Navarro was to be at or near Jibana?”
-
-Carlos nods. “He should certainly be there now.”
-
-Quesada paces the room, his brow knitted in thought. “If word could be
-got to him at once,” he says, “Dios! The train might be captured. But
-how to send him word—there is the obstacle.”
-
-“How far is Jibana from Santiago?” asks Carlos, into whose mind has come
-a sudden thought that causes his cheeks to alternately flush and pale.
-
-“A full day’s journey by rail. No; I fear word could not be sent him in
-time.”
-
-“But if a courier were to leave on the early morning train, could he not
-reach Jibana in season to find Emilio?”
-
-“Perhaps. It will take several days for the supply train to make the
-trip, but it will also take us too long to find a trustworthy
-messenger.”
-
-“Do you not consider me trustworthy?”
-
-“You!” cries Quesada, looking at the slender youth in astonishment.
-
-“Yes, Don Manuel; I will be the courier.”
-
-“No, no; I cannot permit it. What would Emilio say?”
-
-“He will be too overjoyed to see me to think of scolding you. There is
-no danger. Simply the discomfort of the journey. I will start in the
-morning.”
-
-Against his better judgment, Quesada consents, and as Carlos throws open
-the study door the vision of Mrs. Harding flits by.
-
-Over the teacups half an hour later Isabel tells Don Quesada that, if
-there is a conveyance to be easily procured at Santos, she believes she
-will run into Santiago for a day’s shopping. And Quesada informs her
-smilingly that if she cares to arise with the sun she may find a
-conveyance in waiting, as Carlos is going to the city on business and
-will undoubtedly be charmed with her society on the short journey.
-
- * * * * *
-
-At Havana on the morning of the 8th of April.
-
-With contracted brows and frowning face, the captain-general of Cuba
-scans a mass of official documents that lie upon his desk. Gen. Truenos
-is plainly displeased with the condition of affairs on the island. When
-he sailed from Cadiz it was to “put down the rebellion in three months,”
-as the Spanish press boastfully asserted, but Truenos realizes that it
-is not now a matter of weeks or months, but of years, ere the red and
-yellow of Spain will wave again unchallenged over the gem of the
-Antilles.
-
-In the meantime, Gen. Truenos gathers from the papers before him that
-some of the matured plans of the Spanish have been checkmated through
-treachery in some quarter, and he is not enchanted with the glimpses he
-has obtained of the manner in which his subordinates conduct a campaign.
-
-An officer enters the room with a dispatch and the captain-general
-reaches impatiently for the missive.
-
-“Caspita!” he growls, as he glances over the contents. “Murillo at least
-is alive to what is transpiring under the very noses of my generals. I
-wish that I had more like him.” Then to the officer: “Send Gen.
-Velasquez to me at once.”
-
-As the latter answers the summons, Truenos hands him the dispatch, with
-the query: “Has the supply train left for Santiago?”
-
-“It left last night, your excellency.”
-
-“It must be stopped. As you will see by Murillo’s dispatch, the rebels
-have learned of the train’s departure and a courier is now en route from
-Santiago to notify that infernal El Terredo. If that courier is not
-intercepted, the supply train must be recalled or held. The dispatch
-contains a description of the rebel messenger. Now, then, to action.”
-
-Truenos unfolds a large map of the island, and as he runs his finger
-along the line which indicates the railroad, another dispatch is handed
-in. The captain-general tears it open and reads:
-
- “Reported that El Terredo is encamped near Jibana, with a large
- force of insurgents.
-
- Alvarez.”
-
-“Ah,” remarks Truenos. “This is dated Cadoza. And Cadoza,” he consults
-the map, “is less than a dozen miles from Jibana. Bueno! For once
-matters are dovetailing to my wishes. The courier cannot reach Jibana
-before nightfall, and when he does Alvarez shall arrest him. Let the
-supply train proceed, Velasquez, and immediately wire Alvarez to arrest
-the rebel messenger at or below Jibana. Send the description of the
-young man given in Murillo’s dispatch and have Alvarez wire back that he
-understands. Quick! There is no time to be wasted.”
-
-It is to be an exciting night at Jibana.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLI.
-
- THE MEETING AT CADOZA.
-
-
-It is something like ten miles to Cadoza, another and smaller railway
-town, and Ashley arrives about noon. There is no American hotel here.
-Instead, a lazy Cuban keeps a shiftless hostelry to which only necessity
-would drive a man. A party of soldiers are gathered at the inn and the
-yard is filled with their horses.
-
-Ashley tethers his horse at a spot which he can overlook, as Rozinante
-is an animal that would tempt a man even more upright than a soldier in
-time of war. As he gives the bridle an extra hitch, a hand is dropped on
-his shoulder and a familiar voice whispers:
-
-“Jack Ashley, by all that’s holy!”
-
-Ashley turns and cries out:
-
-“Hello, Barker, old man! Where’d you get your uniform?” surveying the
-detective’s distinctly military attire.
-
-“Hist!” cautions Barker, glancing over his shoulder. “Buy a drink at the
-hotel and then ride up the road a piece. I’ll join you there.” Saying
-which the detective walks away and Ashley enters the hotel.
-
-The drinking-room is filled with Spanish caballeria, who glance
-curiously at the American; after procuring a glass of wine and a cigar,
-Ashley mounts and rides leisurely up the road. A quarter of a mile from
-the hotel he finds Barker waiting, and he remarks, with a grin: “Barker,
-you’re a fashion plate. Where on earth did you get those togs?”
-
-“Hang it! Will you be serious ten minutes,” growls Barker. “Let me tell
-you that the commanding officer of the gang at the hotel is Capt. Julio
-Alvarez, who is none other than our old friend Ralph Felton.”
-
-“So? And to trail him you turned trooper, eh?”
-
-“Exactly. Through him I expect to find the other Felton, his father.”
-
-“I can tell you a quicker way.”
-
-“Ah!”
-
-“Push along to Jibana, ten miles east of here. I left Cyrus Felton,
-Phillip Van Zandt and Louise Hathaway there this morning.”
-
-“Quick! Tell me all you know,” demands the detective, aroused by the
-information imparted to him by his co-worker.
-
-Ashley supplies the needed details, and Barker asks: “You are reasonably
-sure that Felton and Van Zandt will remain in Santiago for a fortnight?”
-
-“I think you can depend on that.”
-
-“Then affairs are shaping themselves advantageously for our purpose. Our
-command will go to Jibana this evening, but I don’t want any collision
-there. See the position of the game. Van Zandt, if he is Stanley, is
-tracking the son through the father, and I am trailing the father
-through the son, intending to bag both of them, as I have an interesting
-bit of what may prove strong evidence against Ralph Felton. But I can’t
-do anything with them at Jibana, and if Van Zandt runs afoul of young
-Felton to-day he is likely to kick over all my plans. Santiago is the
-place to play the last hand in this interesting game.”
-
-“I get the idea,” remarks Ashley. “But what is this new evidence against
-young Fenton?”
-
-“This: That I believe he is wearing about his neck at the present time
-the locket that was removed from Roger Hathaway’s watch-chain the night
-of the murder and bank robbery.”
-
-Ashley whistles softly. “That’s interesting,” he says. “But how did you
-learn this? And while you are explaining kindly give an account of
-yourself from the time you jumped New York.”
-
-The detective complies, and when the interesting tale is completed,
-Ashley says earnestly: “Barker, old chap, my confidence in you has been
-increased tenfold in the last month.”
-
-“Thank you,” responds the detective, though he suspects some raillery in
-the newspaper man’s remark.
-
-“Yes. There was a time when I doubted you a bit. And when you made
-arrangements to arrest Cyrus Felton I about concluded that the case was
-to prove after all an ordinary affair. But you have redeemed yourself,
-Barker. You have proved that the detective I have long admired in the
-pages of fiction is not a myth, but has his prototype in real life.”
-
-“Indeed?” grunts Barker. “Go on.”
-
-“Yes; just before you descended upon your victim with a triumphant
-swoop, said victim gave you the slip. Undaunted by such a trifling
-discouragement, you struck a bee line for Havana, and there—”
-
-“Come, stow your chaff. I’d like to know whose tomfoolery prevented
-Felton’s arrest in New York. By thunder, if I could have got your ear a
-moment after I discovered Felton’s departure for Cuba, I’d have given
-you a dressing-down that would have knocked some of the self-sufficiency
-out of you.”
-
-“Well, you can consider yourself forgiven,” says Ashley, soothingly.
-“What’s up at Jibana? Anything special?”
-
-“Yes; a rather important bit of work. This morning Capt. Alvarez, to
-give him the name he chooses to sail under, learned that a large force
-of insurgents under El Terredo were encamped somewhere between Cadoza
-and Jibana. He wired the fact to Havana and not ten minutes later
-received instructions to intercept a courier for the rebels who was on
-his way from Santiago to Jibana, presumably with dispatches to El
-Terredo. Although only his orderly, I am pretty close to Alvarez. The
-chap has taken quite a fancy to me, and to give him his due he is a
-devilishly clever fellow, with more pluck and fighting blood in him than
-a dozen Spaniards. American blood will tell, my boy.”
-
-“Well, what’s the plan for the night?”
-
-“This: We are to flag the train about a mile below Jibana and do the
-trick quietly, as the feeling about here is pretty strong against the
-Spanish; arrest the courier, secure the papers, and wire Havana that the
-road is clear, as I understand the dispatches relate to the big supply
-train which is on its way from the capital to Santiago. Truenos, you
-know, is shifting his headquarters to the latter city.”
-
-“Then the supply train has already left Havana?”
-
-“Presumably. The rebels at the Santiago end of the line got wind of the
-shipment, and have sent Don Carlos to put El Terredo onto the fact.”
-
-“Don Carlos!” repeats Ashley, with a start that Barker does not notice;
-“and what disposition will you make of the prisoner?”
-
-Barker shrugs his shoulders. “He will probably be honorably shot.”
-
-“Unhappy youth!” murmurs Ashley.
-
-“It is rather tough,” remarks Barker, coolly. “But it is the fortune of
-war.”
-
-Ashley’s forehead is wrinkled in thought. “I’d like to take a hand in
-the fun to-night,” he remarks carelessly. “I’ve been journeying through
-the desert for more than three days, with not a sign of adventure. I
-don’t suppose it would do for me to show myself to Alvarez. How many men
-has he with him?”
-
-“Twenty, including himself.”
-
-“Does he intend to take the entire command with him to hold up the
-train?”
-
-“No; the affair is to be transacted in the quietest manner. Alvarez,
-myself and four more men are to leave the hotel about 9 o’clock—the
-train is due at Jibana at 10—and proceed down the track a mile or so. A
-few swings of the lantern and the train will stop, Don Carlos be removed
-and the train signaled to go ahead. If the arrest were made publicly,
-word might get to El Terredo, and the government’s plans for a safe
-passage of the supply train would be frustrated.”
-
-“Your business completed at Jibana, I suppose you will push directly on
-to Santiago?”
-
-“Yes, and you?” queries Barker.
-
-“I shall probably follow at a respectful distance. I have been stopping
-at the Hotel Royal in Santiago, and you will probably find me there if I
-am in the city.”
-
-“How is Felton looking?” asks the detective.
-
-“Badly; I shouldn’t wonder if he had a presentiment that some sort of
-disaster was impending.”
-
-“And Miss Hathaway?”
-
-“Superb as ever. There is apparently a tender regard existing between
-her and Van Zandt.”
-
-“Strange, strange are the workings of fate,” philosophizes Barker, and
-with a sly grin he adds: “How are your studies in statuary progressing,
-Jack?”
-
-“Suspended for the present, most sympathetic Barker. Just now I am
-interested in a study of the life.”
-
-“Ah; some dark-eyed Cuban senorita?”
-
-“The most beautiful woman in the world,” is Ashley’s enthusiastic
-tribute.
-
-Barker laughs good-humoredly, then suddenly exclaims: “Hello! There’s
-the trumpet call. I must be off. By the way, I’ve changed my name to
-Parker.”
-
-“Parker! Why don’t you get a name to match your clothes?”
-
-“Go to thunder!” retorts the detective. “So long. I’ll see you at
-Santiago.” Barker plunges into the woods beside the road and returns to
-the hotel by a circuitous route.
-
-“You’ll see me again before you reach Santiago,” soliloquizes Ashley,
-gazing after his friend’s retreating form. “If Navarro is in these
-mountains I’ll search him out, and we’ll have a hand in the game at
-Jibana to-night that will remind Capt. Alvarez of a certain little
-straight flush he ran up against once upon a time. And if Navarro is not
-to be found, then, by George, I’ll play the hand alone!”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLII.
-
- “EL TERREDO.”
-
-
-Ashley waits until he believes that Capt. Alvarez and his men have got
-fairly on their way toward Jibana; then he mounts Rozinante and rides
-back to the hotel.
-
-Half a mile to the eastward, the landlord tells him, a trail leads off
-into the mountains. Ashley remembers passing it in the morning.
-Fortifying himself with a dinner, he sets forth.
-
-After he strikes the mountain path, his progress is slow and painful. It
-is a dreary road, steep and treacherous. About him nothing but rocks,
-red clay, cactus and bog and a stunted growth of trees.
-
-Ashley left the hotel in the vicinity of 1 o’clock, and by 3 he has
-hardly covered four miles. “If I do not secure reinforcements within the
-hour I must ’bout face and ride to Jibana,” he reflects. “A man could
-never find his way out of this howling wilderness after nightfall! Jove!
-It must have been a matter of urgent importance that necessitated the
-dispatching of Don Carlos to Jibana. Poor little chap!” he mutters, and
-as he thinks of young Navarro lying under the stars with a bullet
-through his heart, he urges Rozinante at a dangerous pace.
-
-Another half-hour goes by. Ashley is now in the mountains, and yet no
-living being has he seen to break the depressive solitude. Suddenly
-there rings out the command:
-
-“Alto, ahi!”
-
-Ashley checks his horse, looks about him and discovers that he is the
-center of a circle of leveled muskets, the owners of which are hidden
-from view.
-
-“All right, gentlemen, I’m out,” announces Jack, cheerfully, as he
-removes his eye-glasses and wipes the dust and moisture from them.
-
-Forth from the bushes steps a gaunt Cuban, in a tattered uniform and
-with feet that have long since parted association with shoes. Throwing
-his musket across his arm, he hurls an inquiry at Ashley.
-
-“You’ve got me there,” states the correspondent, and smiling around the
-ominous fringe of musket barrels.
-
-Finally, giving up all idea of a conversation with the dark-featured
-mountaineers, “El Terredo!” he cries, “El Terredo! Endonde El Terredo? I
-don’t know whether that’s right or not, but it’s the best I have in
-stock.”
-
-The mountaineer appears to grasp the idea. He shouts something to the
-men in the bushes, and a dozen lusty fellows, white and black, come
-forth. The leader makes a sign to Ashley to go ahead, and the latter
-obeys.
-
-For a mile or more the little cavalcade proceeds, when suddenly the
-leader of Ashley’s silent escort emits a shrill whistle. An answering
-signal is faintly heard, and then the march is resumed. Five minutes
-later Jack rides into a clearing and hears a welcome voice ring out:
-“Welcome, Senor Ashley!”
-
-“Glad to see you, Navarro,” says Ashley, heartily, as he drops from his
-horse and grips the insurgent leader’s hand. “Is this part of your
-army?”
-
-“Yes; hardy fellows, every man of them,” replies Navarro, signalling his
-followers to fall back. “What on earth brings you into the mountains?”
-
-“Thought I’d drop round and return thanks for your generous gift.”
-
-“Ah, say nothing of that. I should have been glad to have sent you a
-stable of horses.”
-
-“One was enough. But this is incidental. You expect dispatches from
-Santiago to-night?”
-
-“No; that is, no special ones.”
-
-“Some are on their way, nevertheless, in the keeping of Don Carlos.”
-
-“Don Carlos!” cries Navarro, turning pale.
-
-“Ay; but that is not all. The errand of Don Carlos has become known at
-Havana and orders have been wired to Capt. Alvarez, who is now on his
-way from Cadoza to Jibana, if he is not already there, to intercept the
-courier, and secure the dispatches.”
-
-Navarro staggers as if dealt a blow. “My God! They will shoot him like a
-dog!” he groans, his face white as death. “When—where is Carlos to
-arrive?”
-
-“At Jibana, at 10 to-night.”
-
-“Ho! Then all is not lost,” flashes Navarro. “By heaven! I’ll wipe
-Jibana and every Spaniard in it from the face of the earth!”
-
-“Easy, my friend,” counsels Ashley, grasping the infuriated man by the
-arm. “If Don Carlos is to be saved, and also the dispatches—keep those
-in mind—you will need your wits more than a thousand men. Now, listen to
-me a moment. There is time enough.
-
-“Yesterday, or the day before, or sometime within the week, a big supply
-train left Havana for Santiago. Information of its dispatch must have
-been received by Don Quesada, and, knowing your whereabouts—did he know
-them?”—Navarro nods—“he has sent Don Carlos to notify you, that the
-train may be captured. This morning Capt. Alvarez was at Cadoza. He
-heard it rumored that a large force of insurgents were encamped in these
-mountains. He wired Havana to that effect, and ten minutes later
-received orders to intercept Don Carlos. I learned this while at Cadoza,
-and realizing the danger that threatened your brother, I set off for the
-mountains, trusting to Providence to run across you or some of your men.
-On my way hither I devised a plan by which you can outwit Alvarez and
-later capture the ammunition train—and I do not believe in doing things
-by halves. But first, how far is it to Jibana?”
-
-“About six miles, as the crow flies.”
-
-“That means eight or ten by these awful bridal-paths, then. You have a
-score of men here at least. They will be more than enough. Now, I will
-outline my plan and we can perfect it on our way to Jibana.”
-
-Navarro listens without interruption while Ashley talks. When the
-programme for the night has been sketched, Navarro’s dark eyes moisten
-and he seizes Jack’s hands in a grip that makes the latter wince.
-“Ashley, you’re a hero!” he cries.
-
-“Nonsense,” laughs Jack.
-
-“I can never repay the debt of gratitude I owe you.”
-
-“Don’t try. Suppose we push along to Jibana. We can talk matters over on
-the way.”
-
-“Good. We will start at once,” says Navarro, and he communicates an
-order to his men.
-
-“How many men have you back in the mountains?” Ashley inquires of
-Navarro as they ride side by side through the desert of rock and
-chaparral.
-
-“Two thousand. Accessions have been coming every day. But they are not
-directly under my command. My part in the revolution has been a rather
-peculiar one. Up to a fortnight or so ago, when I parted with you on the
-Santos road, my identity was as much a mystery as that of the president
-of the provisional republic. Unsuspected as a leading factor in the
-struggle for independence, I mingled with the Spanish and listened with
-a smile to the stories told of the prowess of the cruiser Pearl of the
-Antilles and her mysterious commander, El Terredo. At the time the
-Mercedes was sunk I did command the Pearl and with my own hand aimed the
-dynamite gun that sent the Spanish battleship to the bottom. But most of
-my time has been spent on land. I have done more planning than fighting,
-and while I rejoice not in a single title except that of El Terredo, in
-a land where titles are cheap, my authority is unlimited, my orders are
-implicitly obeyed, and I could ruin Cuba Libre with a single command.”
-
-“Are you not fearful of being recognized during some of your trips into
-the camp of the enemy?” asked Ashley, looking at the young man with
-undisguised admiration.
-
-Navarro smiles. “There will be no further exposure. When I left the
-quinta with you it was to take the field, not to leave it until Santiago
-falls. After the capture of the ammunition train, if luck favors us, I
-leave here for the coast,” pointing westward. “In a harbor yonder rides
-the Pearl of the Antilles, and when I take command of her it will be the
-opening of a campaign that Spain’s navy will long remember.”
-
-“Until Santiago falls?” repeats Ashley. “You look for the capitulation
-of that city?”
-
-“Within a fortnight Gen. Masso will hurl 10,000 men upon it. The troops
-back in these mountains will form part of an army against which 20,000
-Spanish will not avail. Unless you insist upon reporting the siege for
-your paper amid the bursting of shells and the roar of artillery, keep
-away from Santiago—at Santos, for instance. The Spanish squadron is
-already on its way to Santiago, and when the city falls into the hands
-of the patriots the battleships will open fire.”
-
-“Then I believe I will return to Santiago at once—or after our night’s
-work is finished. Shall we reach the edge of Jibana before nightfall?”
-
-“Probably not, but in season for the work in hand. It will be a night
-that Capt. Alvarez will long remember if memory lasts beyond this
-world.”
-
-“By Jove! That will never do,” exclaims Ashley. Navarro looks at him
-inquiringly.
-
-“Alvarez must not be injured,” declares Jack. “I have particular reasons
-for keeping Alvarez alive for some time to come.”
-
-“Rather awkward,” laughs Navarro. “I don’t see but that you will have to
-overlook the job to-night, and sort out your friend, for I expect it
-will be necessary to kill one or two of the gang.”
-
-Ashley reflects a moment. “You should be able to identify the leader,”
-he says, and he adds to himself: “As for Barker, I shall have to prevent
-his taking part in the affair. It’s a ticklish job all round.”
-
-“Well, your wishes shall be respected,” says Navarro. “Capt. Alvarez
-shall live. He is fortunate in having so influential a friend at court.”
-
-“Some of the most worthless of men are more valuable alive than dead. I
-have no friendship for Alvarez, but his demise just at present would
-complicate certain matters in which I have a large interest.”
-
-The moon is creeping up over a crest of the range, when, at a signal
-from the guide, Navarro calls a halt. After a whispered consultation, he
-tells Ashley that they are some little distance below the Jibana hotel
-and railway station.
-
-“Two hundred rods beyond us lies the road,” he says; “and fifty yards
-farther is the track. We will hitch here.”
-
-“Very good,” declares Ashley. “Here, then, we separate. It is now nearly
-8 o’clock,” consulting his watch by the glow of his cigar. “Good luck,
-old man. The signal for my reappearance will be the old rallying cry of
-‘Santiago.’”
-
-The men exchanged a hearty handclasp. Then Ashley dismounts, and headed
-by the guide, leads Rozinante through the brush to the road. Here he
-vaults into the saddle again and canters toward the town.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLIII.
-
- THE FIGHT IN THE MOONLIGHT.
-
-
-“Didn’t expect you back so soon,” declares Landlord Carter, answering
-Ashley’s halloa without the Hotel Americano at Jibana.
-
-“I am a little ahead on my own calculations,” is the reply. “Are the
-Americans still here?”
-
-“No, sir; left this afternoon for Santiago.”
-
-“Full house, though, I judge,” motioning toward the windows of the
-reading-room, from which emanate snatches of song and the clink of
-glasses.
-
-“Yes; gang of Spanish troopers. Noisy devils. Stop overnight, I
-suppose?”
-
-“Sure. I want some supper in a hurry and a room at your leisure.”
-
-The landlord shouts to the hostler, who leads Rozinante away to his
-well-earned grain, and Ashley follows Carter into the hotel, with the
-remark: “I do not care to have those chaps in there see me, or know who
-I am.”
-
-“All right, sir. This way. The troopers are all in the drinking-room and
-they haven’t moved out of their chairs for an hour.”
-
-Supper over, Ashley is shown to his room and the landlord is about to
-make his exit with a cheerful “good-night,” when Ashley remarks:
-
-“By the way, have you an old coat and hat of any description?”
-
-Carter scratches his head reflectively. “I have an old Grand Army
-uniform that I brought with me from the states. I was a member of the
-13th Massachusetts volunteers, and after the war joined the Chelsea
-post, when—”
-
-“That will do very nicely,” interrupts Ashley. “I want to borrow the
-uniform for a few hours.”
-
-“All right, sir. I’ll get it out in the morning.”
-
-“But I want it to-night.”
-
-“Very good, sir. I’ve been too long in this business to ask questions.
-Used to run a small hotel in Boston,” grins Carter, as he vanishes. He
-returns shortly with the clothes, and Ashley, after a glance, pronounces
-them satisfactory.
-
-“One more request, Carter. You noticed, perhaps, among your guests a
-rather short, thick-set party, with a dark, closely cropped mustache.”
-
-“Smokes a short, black pipe and looks like an Englishman?”
-
-“That’s the chap. Send him up, but don’t attract the attention of his
-companions.”
-
-Carter nods and disappears, and a few minutes later the good-natured
-countenance of John Barker is thrust into the room.
-
-“Buenas tardes, Senor Parker,” is Ashley’s salutation. “Come in and shut
-the door.”
-
-“Where the devil did you come from?” demands the detective, dropping
-into a chair.
-
-“Up the road a piece. I got tired of journeying through the desert, and
-concluded to take the back track. Fill up your pipe and make yourself
-sociable.”
-
-“Can’t stop. It is nearly 9 o’clock and we start at that hour.”
-
-“Oh, yes; on the business you were telling me of this noon. You haven’t
-changed your plans, then?”
-
-“No; there was no occasion to.”
-
-“Well, it is not absolutely essential that you should accompany Alvarez,
-is it?”
-
-“That was his wish. With the exception of Alvarez and myself and the
-four men who were to supplement our little party, the command knows
-nothing definite of the evening’s work. Alvarez doesn’t fraternize much
-with his followers.”
-
-“Why not send a man in your stead?”
-
-“I am afraid it is too late to make any changes in the plans. Most of
-the men below are half-shot now.”
-
-Ashley takes a turn about the room and drops his hand on his friend’s
-shoulder. “Barker,” he says, “it was only this noon that you requested
-me to be serious for at least ten minutes on a stretch. I never was more
-serious than I am now, when I say to you, don’t accompany Alvarez on his
-errand to-night.”
-
-“What the deuce are you so interested in the affair for all at once?”
-queries the detective.
-
-“Well, remain here, and I will enlighten you.”
-
-At this moment the impatient shout, “Ho, Parker!” floats up from the
-hotel yard, and with the remark, “I’m off; see you later, Jack,” Barker
-bounds from the room.
-
-“Hang it! I ought to have told him at the outset how the land lay,”
-mutters Ashley. “Now, I suppose I shall have to direct my undivided
-efforts to preventing his slaughter at the hands of Navarro’s men.”
-
-Ashley slips off his coat and gets into the faded uniform of the
-landlord, dons the Grand Army hat and pulls it down over his eyes;
-examines his revolvers to make certain that they are in proper working
-order, and then, blowing out his lamp, seats himself by the open window,
-where he can command a view of the road.
-
-Shortly after 9 o’clock he sees six forms cross the band of moonlight
-into the shadows beyond. He waits ten minutes and then glides softly
-down the stairway and out into the night.
-
-Alvarez and his men leave the hotel afoot and instead of taking the
-railroad track, proceed down the highway. Alvarez rode over the ground
-during the afternoon and selected a point about a mile and a half below
-the village as the place for holding up the train. Here the road crosses
-the railway and beyond is a long stretch of straight track.
-
-The six proceed silently to the appointed spot, and then, there being no
-further occasion for secrecy, they fall to smoking and chatting. The
-train is due at Jibana at 10 and there is yet half an hour to wait.
-
-Twenty minutes of it go by, when Alvarez discovers that his party is
-short two men.
-
-“Ho! Sancho! Francisco!” he calls, and repeats the shout, there being no
-response. “Whither went they, Parker?” he asks, turning to his orderly.
-
-“They were here a few minutes ago, captain. I last noticed them
-strolling toward the road.”
-
-Alvarez utters an impatient growl. “Search them out, Pedro, and thou,
-too, Juan. The train will be here in five minutes.”
-
-As the two troopers addressed take themselves off in quest of their
-companions Alvarez lights a lantern and hands it to the orderly.
-
-“By the way, what disposition is to be made of the prisoner?” asks the
-latter.
-
-“We shall have to shoot him, I expect,” is the cool response. “We can’t
-very well take him with us, and we certainly cannot turn him loose.”
-
-“It seems a rather cold-blooded piece of business. It savors of murder.”
-
-At the word Alvarez shivers slightly. The nights in Cuba are damp and
-chilly.
-
-“Ten o’clock,” he mutters, holding his watch to the lantern. “Where the
-devil are my men? We shall likely have to go in search of the second
-pair. Ha, the train!”
-
-The whistle of the Havana express is heard in the distance and the men
-leap to their feet.
-
-“Down the track with you,” orders Alvarez. “As for you,” turning to four
-forms that are approaching from the shadows of the highway, “el diablo!
-What sort of men have I in my command?”
-
-The troopers make no reply to the angry query of their leader.
-
-The orderly swings his lantern and an answering blast comes from the
-train, which draws up upon the crossing.
-
-“I have an order for the arrest of one of your passengers,” Alvarez
-informs the conductor. “Watch the train and see that no one leaves it,”
-he tells the four troopers, and, followed by the orderly, he boards the
-first coach.
-
-Within this is the object of their search. Don Carlos Navarro is
-reclining wearily in a seat about midway of the car. He starts when the
-soldiers enter and the color flows from his cheeks when they stop before
-him.
-
-Alvarez consults a paper, and, glancing from it to young Navarro,
-remarks: “The very chap. I have a warrant for your arrest, sir.” Then to
-the orderly: “Remove the prisoner, Parker.”
-
-“By thunder, he’s fainted,” mutters the orderly, as he bears the limp
-form from the car.
-
-“Search him,” commands Alvarez, signaling to the conductor to go ahead.
-
-As the train rumbles away the orderly goes through the coat pockets of
-the prisoner, but without finding any sign of papers, rebel dispatches
-or otherwise. Then he tears open the unconscious youth’s shirt, and the
-next instant utters an exclamation of astonishment.
-
-“By heaven! It’s a woman!” he mutters, as he deposits his burden
-tenderly on the ground and straightens up to acquaint his chief of the
-surprising bit of intelligence.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The moon swings high above the range when Ashley leaves the hotel and
-proceeds down the railroad track, the route he naturally supposes
-Alvarez and his party have taken.
-
-As the newspaper man, revolver in hand, moves slowly and cautiously
-along, his eyes on the alert for a glimpse of Alvarez’ party, the danger
-of his situation suddenly occurs to him. If the Spaniards have already
-stationed themselves at some point along the rail he is likely to
-stumble upon them at any minute.
-
-At last he sights the party of troopers. Then he remembers that the road
-is close by, and stealing through the brush, he proceeds softly along
-the highway until the hum of conversation greets his ear.
-
-He crawls at a safe distance to a position beyond the group, not twenty
-feet distant from the spot where Alvarez and Barker are seated.
-
-The brush is dense and he has nothing now to do but keep perfectly
-still. He has seen or heard nothing of El Torredo or his men, but he
-knows that secreted somewhere in the waste of chaparral around him are
-stout hearts and strong arms waiting for the cry of “Santiago!” to rouse
-them to swift action.
-
-He watches Alvarez light the lantern, and, as the rays fall upon the
-orderly’s features Ashley thinks: “If I could only get within whispering
-distance of the old man I’d give him a quiet tip to make himself
-exceeding scarce.”
-
-But at this instant the whistle of the express is heard and Ashley
-raises himself on his elbows. He sees Barker start down the track, and
-his impulse is to follow. But to do so he will have to cross a broad
-belt of moonlit open, and at this moment the four troopers come up.
-
-The train comes to a standstill, Don Carlos is removed, the cars rumble
-away, and Ashley notes with satisfaction that the search for the papers
-is being conducted by the orderly. “He will not be harmed should
-Navarro’s men open fire, if he keeps close to Carlos,” he thinks.
-
-But where is Navarro? The situation is becoming strained for the young
-man in the Grand Army uniform.
-
-Jack is watching Barker. He hears him utter an ejaculation of
-astonishment as he lays the unconscious form of Carlos upon the ground.
-And then he hears a hoarse bellow of rage and sees one of Alvarez’
-troopers whip out his sword and spring upon the orderly.
-
-Less than a dozen feet separate Ashley and Barker. With a cry of
-warning, Jack dashes forward and catches the descending arm just in time
-to avert the certain destruction of the detective, who is wholly off his
-guard. As it is, the edge of the falling blade catches Barker across the
-forehead, half-stunning him and cutting a gash that means a scar to
-recall this night in years to come. At the same instant Ashley
-recognizes El Terredo in the wielder of the sword, and he whispers,
-“Easy, Navarro,” in time to check a slash at his own head.
-
-Meanwhile the remaining three troopers have hurled themselves upon
-Alvarez and Barker. It all occurs in a flash and before Ashley recovers
-from his surprise at the unexpected turn of events a shrill whistle from
-Navarro has summoned nearly a score more of men from the surrounding
-shadows.
-
-Navarro raises Don Carlos in his arms and the youth, who has recovered
-consciousness, clasps his arms about his brother’s neck and bursts into
-tears of joy.
-
-“There, be a man,” soothes the latter. “Remain here a few minutes while
-I look after your Spanish friends.”
-
-Navarro picks up the lantern and flashes its rays into Alvarez’ face.
-
-“What’s this?” he cries. “By heaven, Captain Alvarez, I think we have
-met before.”
-
-As the two men confront each other in the moonlight, there is no need of
-the lantern for each to see the other’s countenance.
-
-An exclamation of surprise and rage escapes Alvarez’ lips, and he
-struggles in the grasp of the two men who pinion his arms.
-
-“Curse you!” he grits, in a voice choked with passion; “I’d give half my
-life for five minutes of fair play now!”
-
-“Fair play?” sneers Navarro. “You do not know the meaning of the phrase.
-You are a thief, a blackguard, and a traitor!”
-
-Alvarez wrenches free by a mighty effort and with a fearful oath hurls
-himself upon Navarro.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLIV.
-
- THE METAMORPHOSIS OF DON CARLOS.
-
-
-“Stand back!” commands Navarro, as his men start forward to the enraged
-Alvarez, whose fingers have twined about the insurgent leader’s neck.
-“Back, I say! I can handle this gentleman without assistance.”
-
-Alvarez is as a child in the steely arms of El Terredo. The latter tears
-the clutching fingers from his throat, sweeps the Spanish captain off
-his feet and dashes him to the ground.
-
-Half-stunned and crazed by passion, Alvarez struggles to his knees and
-whips out a pistol. It is knocked from his grasp before his arm
-straightens, as half a dozen watchful Cubans pounce upon him.
-
-“Away with them!” orders Navarro, with a sweep of his arm, and as
-Alvarez and Barker are hustled off in the darkness he turns to Don
-Carlos, who has been a silent and trembling witness of the conflict.
-
-“In heaven’s name, my brother, what brings you on this errand? Don
-Manuel must be mad.”
-
-“Ah, Emilio, do not blame Don Manuel,” gently protests Carlos, as he
-embraces Navarro. “The matter was urgent, a courier was required, and I
-myself suggested that I be that courier. To see you again I would have
-dared the perils of the journey, even were nothing more at stake.”
-
-“Brave heart,” murmurs Navarro, brushing back the ringlets from his
-brother’s brow. “But let this be your last commission, Carlos. I would
-not jeopardize your life for a thousand Cubas. But come, is the news you
-bring me verbal or written?”
-
-For answer Carlos places a letter in Navarro’s hands, and the latter
-reads it by the light of the lantern. It is brief, and as he thrusts it
-into his pocket Jack steps forward.
-
-“Ah, Ashley,” cries Navarro, grasping him by the hand; “the trick was
-quickly done, eh? Carlos, it is to our American friend that you owe your
-present safety and perhaps your life. It was he who warned me of the
-plot for your arrest.”
-
-“Spare me any praise,” protests Ashley, as Carlos is about to express
-his gratitude. “By good fortune I became acquainted with Alvarez’
-design, and further luck cast me in your brother’s way.”
-
-“After you rode for miles into the mountains in search of me,”
-interposes Navarro.
-
-“Yes,” laughs Jack, “for I had a suspicion that, single-handed, I should
-not have been a match for the Spanish captain and his men. Now, will you
-tell me, my friend, how you circumvented Alvarez so cleverly?”
-
-“It was an accident. The Spaniards came down the road instead of the
-railroad track. When they located themselves at the crossing we
-established our party about 200 yards from them, to wait the coming of
-the train. The watch growing irksome, I and two of my men set forth to
-reconnoiter. We had scarcely proceeded fifty yards, when we stood face
-to face in the moonlight with two of the troopers.
-
-“Instantly we threw ourselves upon them and stifled their attempts to
-sound an alarm. They were dragged back to our ambush, bound hand and
-foot, and pistols placed to their heads with orders that they be
-instantly shot at the first outcry. I rightly assumed that their
-companions would institute search for them, and shortly after two more
-troopers came up the road. These we took from the rear and when all four
-were safely secured the idea of exchanging our dress for theirs and
-rejoining Alvarez naturally suggested itself. The rest you know.”
-
-“Yes, and I also know that only by a fraction of a second did I prevent
-your glittering sword blade from carving in twain the head of a very
-warm friend of mine.”
-
-“How? The fellow who was holding Carlos?”
-
-“The same. He is an American, like myself, but it suits his purpose for
-the present to masquerade as a soldier of Castile. At the moment I
-interfered you were about to slaughter the man to whom Carlos primarily
-owes his escape to-night, for it was through him that I learned of the
-plan to arrest the messenger to El Terredo.”
-
-“San Pedro!” cries the impetuous Navarro, in tones of sincere regret. “I
-should never have forgiven myself. But I will at once set him at liberty
-and add the poor consolation of an honest apology.”
-
-“That is exactly what I do not wish you to do. It was to avoid
-recognition that I rigged out in this uniform, and I am confident that
-Alvarez did not recognize me. Barker, that is my friend’s name, may or
-may not have discovered my identity when I cried out to you at the
-moment I clutched your arm. At any rate, I shall not attempt to
-ascertain. The principal point I wish to insist upon, if you will permit
-me, is that Alvarez and Barker shall not be separated; further, that
-they be permitted to proceed to Santiago within forty-eight hours.”
-
-“Your wishes shall be respected, my dear Ashley,” says Navarro.
-
-“Where have you had the prisoners taken?” asks Jack.
-
-“To the ambush I spoke of, about 200 yards up the road.”
-
-“And your further plans?”
-
-“I intended to have marched the Spaniards back to the mountains as
-prisoners of war. Within the hour I shall send a courier to the
-revolutionary camp with orders to forward two hundred men with which to
-capture the supply train. They should arrive early to-morrow forenoon.”
-
-“Good. That work successfully accomplished, you can then permit Alvarez
-and Barker to depart in peace.”
-
-“If you so desire. And now suppose we rejoin my men.”
-
-As the two move away Ashley’s eye is caught by the glitter of a small
-object upon the ground. He picks it up and discovers that it is a locket
-attached to a broken bit of chain. As he turns it over in his hands and
-seeks to examine it in the pale light of the moon, Navarro calls to him
-from the road: “Still surveying the battlefield, Ashley?”
-
-“Coming,” says Jack. He drops his find into his hip pocket and proceeds
-to forget all about it.
-
-“What is to be done with Carlos, now that he is here?” he inquires as he
-rejoins the Navarros.
-
-“Carlos must return to Santiago at once,” declares El Terredo. “If I
-might add to the already large debt of gratitude, I would ask that you
-accompany him.”
-
-“Gladly, Navarro. My intentions were to make Santiago at all speed. You
-will not have Carlos return by rail?”
-
-“No; by horse.”
-
-“There is a possibility of running into trouble upon his arrival at the
-city.”
-
-“True; and to obviate that I have conceived a plan, not startlingly
-original. Carlos must disguise himself in feminine attire.”
-
-“Ah, then I pose in the role of a knight errant escorting a beautiful
-maiden over the desert sands to her ancestral halls.”
-
-Navarro laughs softly. “Is the part distasteful to you?” he asks.
-
-“Nay. My only regret will be that Carlos is not the beauteous maid she
-will represent.”
-
-“But he will look the part to perfection, I promise you. Half a dozen of
-my men will act as escort and conduct Carlos to the quinta. But I want
-the assurance of your active head and arm the greater part of the
-journey.”
-
-“Thank you. And the female toggery—where is that to be procured?”
-
-“That is a more difficult matter to adjust. Do you think the same
-wardrobe that fitted you out to-night could be called upon in this
-emergency?”
-
-“It is possible,” replies Ashley. “There are women folks about the Hotel
-Americana, else the house would not present its unusually neat
-appearance. And there being women some of them probably have a dress or
-two to spare. I will endeavor to negotiate with the landlord for a
-suitable costume for your brother.”
-
-“Excellent. I will await you here.”
-
-The village is quiet as a churchyard when Ashley reaches the hotel.
-Lights are visible, however, and a few raps upon the portals bring forth
-the landlord.
-
-Carter receives back his Grand Army habiliments without comment, but his
-face is a study when Ashley broaches the idea of a feminine rig.
-
-“By gum,” he exclaims; “you’re the funniest customer I’ve run up against
-in all my Cuban hotel business, and I have met some queer ones, too.”
-
-“My dear Carter,” confides Ashley, “as a matter of fact, I am not
-altogether right in my head. I am seized at frequent periods with the
-most absurd notions. Fortunately, I always have money enough to gratify
-my freakish ideas.”
-
-“I am not so soft as I look,” remarks Carter, dryly. “I’ll see what I
-can do for you. How soon do you want the clothes?”
-
-“As usual, at once. And while they are being hunted up I wish you would
-have my horse saddled, as I must take the road within the hour. It is
-getting along toward midnight. Where are the troopers—drunk or asleep?”
-
-“Both, most of them,” is the laconic response, as the boniface takes
-himself off to consult with his wife upon the subject of providing a
-costume for a slender young man about five feet in height, as Ashley
-describes the prospective wearer of the garments.
-
-Landlord Carter has a daughter who rejoices in the possession of three
-dresses. This alone should constitute her the belle of Jibana. For a sum
-sufficient to double her wardrobe the young lady is induced to part with
-the best of her three outfits and a bargain is consummated.
-
-Miss Carter is not at all pleased at being routed from her slumbers, but
-she is a rather pretty young woman, and after five minutes of Ashley’s
-persuasive eloquence the landlord’s daughter beams with good nature and
-laughingly inquires: “Do you want a complete costume?”
-
-“To the last ribbon,” declares Jack. “By Jove!” he adds, mentally, “if
-Carlos proposes to impersonate a young lady, he shall not lack
-verisimilitude through any neglect on my part.”
-
-“A thousand thanks, Miss Carter,” says Ashley, when the clothes are
-finally tied in a big bundle and given into his possession.
-
-“Isn’t this too much?” demurs the young lady, glancing at the gold coin
-which he places in her hands.
-
-“Not a bit,” replies Jack. “If it is”—he glances around, sees that papa
-Carter has disappeared, and snatches a kiss from the young lady’s red
-lips—“if it is, will you permit me to balance the debt?” he finishes.
-Miss Carter blushes furiously, but she does not reprove the audacity.
-Good-looking young men, alas, are few in Jibana.
-
-Half an hour later Ashley turns the bundle of apparel over to Navarro
-and receives the latter’s warmest thanks. “At what time do we start?”
-Jack inquires.
-
-“At daybreak. You will need a few hours’ rest before then.”
-
-“I can use them all right. But suppose Alvarez’ men come nosing around
-after their absent leader?”
-
-“They will not find him. Follow me and I will lead you to our camp for
-the night. I shall send with you as a guide a man who knows the country
-well.”
-
-With the dawn the little party is under way. Ashley stares in
-astonishment at the metamorphosis that has been effected in the person
-of Carlos. And as Carlos raises his veil and returns Jack’s stare with a
-glance in which amusement is mingled with blushing diffidence, the
-newspaper man laughs outright.
-
-“I told you he would look the part to perfection,” remarks the elder
-Navarro, as he comes forward to say adios. “Take good care of him,
-Ashley, mi amigo. He is very dear to me.”
-
-“For your sake I will guard him with jealous care,” replies Ashley.
-“Good-by, Navarro. I hope to see you again before many days.”
-
-“Most heartily do I echo the wish. But who can say what the future has
-in store?” murmurs the insurgent leader. He watches the little cavalcade
-until it disappears down the forest trail and then turns toward the
-mountains with a heavy sigh.
-
-Ashley drops to the rear of the little procession, lights a cigar and
-relapses into a reverie. Suddenly he bethinks him of the locket which he
-picked up on the scene of last night’s struggle.
-
-Although his eyes never before rested upon it, as he looks at it now the
-locket has almost a familiar appearance. He is somewhat prepared for the
-surprise which follows his pressing of the spring.
-
-The locket formerly contained two miniatures. One has been removed. That
-which yet remains is an exquisite portrait of Louise Hathaway.
-
-As Ashley stares at the gold ornament with its broken bit of chain he
-realizes that he is looking upon the locket supposed to have been
-removed from the watch-chain of Roger Hathaway the night the aged
-cashier came to his death in the Raymond National Bank.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLV.
-
- THE DOVE AND THE SERPENT.
-
-
-“Whoa, Rozinante! If thou art as weary of this road as I, good beast, a
-rest will not go against thy grain, or grass. What say you to a halt of
-half an hour within the shade of this royal palm?”
-
-It is the afternoon of the third day since Ashley’s return to Santiago,
-and, having parted with Don Carlos and the escorting party on the edge
-of Santos, this is the first opportunity Jack has had to ride out to La
-Quinta de Quesada and pay his respects to Don Manuel’s beautiful
-daughter; for the last three days have been busy ones for the newspaper
-man. Truenos has arrived with his fleet from Havana, and the next week
-promises to be big with the fate of Cuba Libre.
-
-Ashley left Santiago an hour ago, and at the rate he has been
-traveling—the heat precludes a gait faster than a moderate amble—he
-judges that he has covered three of the four miles to Santos.
-
-Hitching the amiable Rozinante, he throws himself upon the turf beneath
-the foliage-massed branches of the royal palm, and lights a cigar; as he
-smokes he grows thoughtful. And from rumination he drifts into
-moralizing, addressing himself to Rozinante.
-
-“Look here, Rozinante; if you have any horse sense that you’re not using
-you might assist your master to extricate himself from somewhat of a
-quandary. As you know, I came to Cuba principally on business for my
-paper, incidentally to trail down a murder mystery and again
-incidentally to follow a fair face belonging to the beautiful Louise
-Hathaway. A good many chaps in my place would have fallen hopelessly in
-love with Miss Hathaway at first sight, but I—well, that is not the
-cause of my quandary. If it were, I could easily dismiss it with a
-philosophical ‘there is no accounting for the tastes of most women.’ Ah,
-no, Rozinante; it is something far more serious; for what I want to ask
-you, Rozinante, is whether you believe that I, in my old age, have been
-so indiscreet as to fall in love?”
-
-But Rozinante, being a well-bred equine, declines to poke his nose into
-young people’s affairs and continues his grass-cropping.
-
-“See how the case stands, Rozinante,” continues Jack, tossing a pebble
-at his four-footed companion to enforce attention. “On the one hand is
-the Senorita Juanita de Quesada, the acknowledged Pearl of the Antilles,
-the adored of all the beaux in Santiago; Juanita, the beautiful, the
-accomplished, and the only child of the wealthy and elderly Don Manuel
-de Quesada, who is likely to become the president de facto of this
-cheerful country if the yellow fever continues to wilt the imported
-flower of the chivalry of Spain. On the other hand, Rozinante, look at
-me.”
-
-At this moment Rozinante lifts his head and blinks comically at Ashley,
-who grins back in the best of humors.
-
-“Oh, I know what you are thinking about, Rozinante. You are saying to
-yourself: ‘What a presumptuous fellow! But he is just like all
-Americans.’ Well, you are not far from right, Rozzy. We Americans are a
-bit fresh. But that is a digression. To return to our subject, which is
-the always agreeable one of myself. Now, I am not a bad-looking chap.
-You can see that, Roz, with one eye. And I am fairly bright and all
-that. But hang it! I haven’t a bank account bigger than three figures,
-and it will require nerve, my grass-eating friend, to step up to the
-wealthy Don Quesada and say: ‘Don, old boy, I love your daughter. May I
-ask your blessing?’ No one ever accused me of lacking in nerve, but have
-I enough to supply the demand of such an occasion? Of course, if Don
-Quesada becomes president of the republic of Cuba, and makes me his
-cabinet-premier, I might buy a sugar plantation and become enormously
-wealthy. But that, Rozinante, as you are probably aware, is a
-twenty-to-one shot.
-
-“The most perplexing feature of the whole affair is the fact that I have
-no good reason to suppose that the dark-eyed Juanita returns in the
-slightest degree the deep interest which I feel in her personal welfare.
-I know that she likes me—why shouldn’t she?—but her maidenly reserve I
-do not seem to be able to successfully penetrate. Again, my equine
-friend, I am not so certain that she is not hopelessly in love with that
-effeminate, downy-cheeked, pink-and-white and milk-and-water Don Carlos.
-And how any woman can—But, pshaw! What is the use in quarreling with the
-chap? And what is the use of my lounging longer here, talking at an
-unappreciative audience? Ah, Juanita, if you would but encourage me a
-bit I would soon solve my perplexity. Just a draught from this spring
-back in the bushes, Rozinante, and then we will jog along toward
-Santos.”
-
-As Ashley bends over the spring the grating of carriage wheels sounds in
-the road.
-
-A volante flashes by at what seems reckless speed; but the Cuban volante
-cannot upset. Two ladies are in the vehicle, and as they sweep by they
-glance curiously at the tethered horse. An instant later they are gone,
-and the young man who emerges hastily from the bushes and looks down the
-dust-veiled road emits a long, low whistle.
-
-“Juanita! And unless my usually correct vision is deceived, her
-companion is my old friend Isabel Harding. The dove and the serpent!
-What the deuce is the meaning of this unholy intimacy? By heaven,
-Rozinante,” mutters Ashley, as he untethers his horse and vaults into
-the saddle, “the presence of Isabel Harding at Santos augurs no good to
-the house of Quesada. Don Manuel must be warned at once.” And kicking
-Rozinante’s ample sides Ashley forces that amiable beast into a violent
-canter.
-
-The remainder of the journey is quickly covered, and as Jack reins up at
-La Quinta de Quesada, Don Manuel comes out and greets him cordially.
-
-“Welcome, Senor Ashley. You are quite a stranger. We had begun to fear
-that the Spanish press censors had suppressed you.” Then, dropping his
-voice to a cautious undertone: “Any news from the field?”
-
-“Yes, and rather good news. It is reported in Santiago that your yacht,
-the Pearl of the Antilles, engaged a Spanish ship of war yesterday, and
-that El Terredo, after lying alongside, fought a desperate and winning
-battle on the decks of the enemy’s vessel.”
-
-“Bueno!” Don Quesada’s eyes light up with pleasure. “Ah, Senor Ashley,
-there is a fighter after your own American heart. If we had a thousand
-such men we should drive the Spanish into the sea and off our loved
-island forever.”
-
-“I was passed on the road from Santiago by your daughter,” remarks Jack,
-as he sits down in front of a brimming glass. “Will she be absent long?”
-
-“For the entire evening. Surely you have not overlooked the grand ball
-to be given to-night by the new captain-general; a gathering of beauty
-and of chivalry, to express his supreme contempt of the insignificance
-of the Cuban cause,” says Don Quesada, with faint irony.
-
-“By Jove! I had overlooked it. The senorita was accompanied by another
-lady. May I inquire her name?”
-
-“Certainly. She is Mrs. Isabel Harding.”
-
-“I thought so,” mutters Jack. Then:
-
-“What is her business here?”
-
-“Mrs. Harding is my guest,” replies Don Quesada, rather curtly.
-
-“She has been here long?”
-
-“About ten days.”
-
-Jack stares and bites his cigar viciously. “You will pardon my
-questioning, Don Quesada. Believe me, I am not actuated by idle
-curiosity.”
-
-The Don bows and Jack leans over and asks, earnestly:
-
-“During Mrs. Harding’s stay here has she learned anything that would
-lead her to suspect that you are identified with the movement to free
-Cuba?”
-
-“Naturally. She is one of us,” replies the Don, dryly.
-
-“One of us!” repeats Jack, in astonishment.
-
-“Yes. An American, like yourself; she is an enthusiastic adherent of the
-Cuban cause and is enabled to do us much service.”
-
-“Then you have trusted her with some secrets?”
-
-“She is at this moment the bearer of important dispatches to Captain
-Francisco Guerra.”
-
-“Great Scott!” Jack jumps to his feet. Don Quesada rises with him and
-demands:
-
-“What do you mean?”
-
-“I mean that I believe Mrs. Harding to be a spy in the employ of the
-Spanish government, and that you have signed and given into her hands
-your own death warrant and the utter ruin of your friends!”
-
-It is a cruel blow. Don Quesada staggers under it and sinks helplessly
-into his chair. Jack pours him out a draught of wine and then paces to
-and fro on the veranda, his active mind intent on some path of escape
-from the desperate situation.
-
-“At what hour does the ball begin?” he demands.
-
-“At eight, I believe,” replies Don Quesada, faintly. He is completely
-crushed.
-
-“It is now nearly six,” muses Jack, glancing at his watch. “And Guerra?
-Where was he to receive the dispatches?”
-
-“At the ball.”
-
-“Quick! Pen and paper,” requests Jack. And as Don Quesada hurries away
-to comply the young man murmurs: “There is only one chance in a
-thousand, but I must take it.”
-
-When the stationery is brought Jack inquires: “In what form were the
-dispatches sent?”
-
-“In a plain envelope, such as you have there.”
-
-“Good.” Jack writes hurriedly a few moments, passes what he has written
-over to Don Quesada, and commanding simply, “Copy that,” busies himself
-over another letter.
-
-Don Quesada follows the directions without question, but as he writes a
-little of hope comes into his pale face, and he looks admiringly at
-Jack, with the remark: “Can you do it?”
-
-“Quien sabe? It’s a desperate chance.” Jack glances approvingly at the
-letter which the Don has sealed, places it in his pocket and then
-addresses and seals the second letter, which he gives to the Cuban
-president.
-
-“You must leave here at once. Where is Don Carlos?”
-
-“He is here.”
-
-“He must accompany you. You must make your way with all haste as
-secretly as possible to Santiago and go aboard the United States cruiser
-America. This letter will explain all, and make you welcome. Once under
-the stars and stripes you will be safe when the storm breaks.”
-
-“But my daughter!” cries the Don, suddenly recollecting the beautiful
-Pearl of the Antilles. Jack’s eyes grow tender, and, gripping the older
-man by the hand, he says proudly, as their eyes meet.
-
-“Don Quesada, I love your daughter. I will answer for her safety with my
-life. And now, I’m off. Remember—to Santiago at once. Adios!”
-
-And without waiting to ascertain how his declaration of love affects the
-father of his loved one, Jack springs into the saddle and clatters away.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLVI.
-
- PLAYING FOR HIGH STAKES.
-
-
-Scarcely has a third of the distance to Santiago been covered when horse
-and rider realize that the pace set is no longer compatible with the
-Cuban climate. As Rozinante settles into a walk, Ashley pulls vigorously
-on a fresh cigar and revolves the situation in his mind.
-
-“Credulous fool!” he grumbles, thinking of the betrayed Don Manuel de
-Quesada. “Played right into the enemy’s hands. But wiser and greater men
-have been cozened by the smiles of a beautiful woman. Besides, he is
-Juanita’s father. That covers a multitude of shortcomings. Ah, Juanita,
-I must indeed love thee when I would willingly risk my valuable life in
-thy behalf. I am not a hypocrite, and I confess that an absorbing
-interest in my personal welfare has ever been one of my glittering
-characteristics.
-
-“Those papers must be recovered. But how? But I have a mighty big job on
-my hands, even if Truenos is not a Richelieu. Well, it is the pen
-against the sword, and may heaven maintain the vaunted mightiness of the
-pen.”
-
-It is something after seven o’clock when Ashley arrives at Santiago. The
-first acquaintance he meets, after he has put up his horse and proceeded
-toward his hotel, is General Murillo.
-
-“Of course you are going to the ball?” remarks Ashley, as they shake
-hands.
-
-Most assuredly General Murillo will be there. It will be a grand affair.
-Senor Ashley must attend, by all means.
-
-Senor Ashley means to be there, and he thanks General Murillo for an
-offer to introduce him to a score of the prettiest maids in Cuba. And
-when the general insists upon his American friend dining with him, the
-latter quickly accepts. He has no time to waste, he tells himself, but
-he is much relieved when, in reply to his query, “And Truenos, is he at
-the palace?” General Murillo informs him that the captain-general has
-been called to Mentos, ten miles distant, on business of an important
-nature, and will probably be late in arriving at the festivities, which
-will not, however, be delayed.
-
-The first flash of hope comes to Ashley at this intelligence, and he
-dines with a lighter heart. After half an hour of chat on commonplace
-topics, he manages to ask with well-played indifference:
-
-“At what time did Truenos leave for Mentos, general?”
-
-“Early this afternoon.”
-
-Ah, then it is not yet too late. Ashley breathes easier.
-
-“Well, general, you are a loyal adherent of Spain and I am an
-out-and-out American. There is no chance for an argument between us. Let
-me fill your glass and we will drink a toast to all honest men and
-women, whether Spaniards or Cubans.”
-
-“With pleasure, Senor Ashley. To all honest men—and women.”
-
-“Which does not include your amiable friend, Mrs. Harding,” thinks
-Ashley, as he raises the glass to his lips.
-
-The dinner finished, the two men separate, while Ashley exchanges his
-travel-worn garments for an evening dress. Half an hour later he and
-General Murillo leave for the palace.
-
-“I have a vague suspicion that I am booked for an exciting evening,”
-muses Jack, as he enters the brilliantly lighted sala of the palace and
-is duly presented by Murillo.
-
-The dancing has already begun, but Terpsichore is the last goddess he is
-desirous of wooing on this particular evening. His gaze wanders
-solicitously about the crowded room and rests at last upon her whom he
-seeks—Juanita.
-
-“She is simply stunning to-night,” he mutters, nervously tugging at his
-mustache.
-
-And indeed Juanita is radiantly beautiful. Her dark loveliness is set
-off by a bewitching gown of white; she is fanning herself with that
-lazily graceful motion which the Saxon cannot imitate successfully, and
-at the moment that Ashley discovers her she is telling Captain Ramon
-Huerta, who has requested with Spanish extravagance “the exquisite honor
-and incomparable delight of a figure with her,” that she really does not
-care to dance this evening. At which Captain Huerta looks disappointed
-and scowls a trifle. But he continues to inflict upon her a presence
-which is palpably unwelcome.
-
-Juanita’s eyes light up with unfeigned pleasure when Ashley arrives upon
-the scene and she greets him with unreserved cordiality. She presents
-him to Captain Huerta, who bows as stiffly as he holds his revolver arm.
-Ashley returns the salute with a suspicion of exaggeration, and grins
-maliciously when the Spaniard takes himself off, after bestowing a
-glance of unmistakable enmity upon the American.
-
-Juanita gazes after the retreating form with distinct aversion. “I have
-a strange fear of that man,” she confides to Ashley, who smiles
-reassuringly and tells her that while she is in his vicinity there
-should be no such word as fear in her bright lexicon of youth.
-
-Juanita rewards this gallant speech, which from anyone except Jack
-Ashley would sound boastful, with a glance that sets the American’s
-blood tingling. But he has no time to-night for love-making, whether his
-suit be favored or hopeless, and as he drops into a chair beside the
-Pearl of the Antilles he asks casually: “Where is your friend, Mrs.
-Harding?”
-
-“Ah, you know Isabel?”
-
-“You passed me this afternoon on the road to Santos, whither I was
-proceeding to pay my most humble respects.”
-
-“Then that horse by the big royal palm was yours?”
-
-“Even so. I was close by, but your volante swept past at such a pace
-that I hardly recovered from my surprise at seeing you before you were
-gone.”
-
-“I am sorry we started away so early,” Juanita says, regretfully.
-
-“So am I,” Ashley thinks, grimly, but he does not tell her why.
-
-“I have seen nothing of Mrs. Harding since I arrived,” he remarks.
-
-Juanita’s glance wanders about the room. “There she is,” she indicates,
-“over by the staircase, the object of the devoted attentions of Count
-Gonzaga.”
-
-“Who the deuce is Count Gonzaga?” wonders Ashley, and he intimates as
-much to his companion.
-
-“Have you not met the count? General Jacinto de Gonzaga is his military
-title. He is some sort of an assistant secretary of war and is
-representing the home government in Cuba for a short time. He seems
-desperately smitten with Isabel. She is very handsome, do you not think
-so, Senor Ashley?”
-
-“Yes, very,” replies Jack, absently. He is watching the pair by the
-staircase, and wondering what sort of a game Isabel Harding is now
-playing.
-
-“She is coming this way,” says Juanita. “Have you met her?”
-
-“I have not had that pleasure,” Ashley replies, unblushingly. “Not
-lately,” he mentally adds.
-
-He turns away to admire some flowers and soon he hears Juanita’s voice:
-“Isabel, allow me to present Mr. Ashley to you. Mr. Ashley, Mrs.
-Harding.”
-
-Ashley turns calmly and the two are face to face. She acknowledges the
-introduction with a composure equal to Ashley’s own, and that young man
-permits a trace of admiration to mingle with the expression in his eyes
-which plainly says to the woman before him: “I know your game, my lady.”
-And the answering flash from the midnight orbs is: “You have more than a
-match in me, Mr. Ashley. Beware!”
-
-“We shall see,” thinks Ashley, and then, led by Juanita, who sees
-nothing of the mutual recognition, the conversation drifts into the
-usual chatter of the ball-room.
-
-“You remember, Isabel, that big horse we saw lunching so contentedly by
-the road this afternoon?” prattles Juanita.
-
-“Yes, dear, and how we wondered whether its owner was enjoying a siesta
-in the bushes.”
-
-“Well, it was Mr. Ashley’s horse.”
-
-“I saw you flit by,” supplements Ashley, “but I was back drinking at a
-spring and your volante was out of sight before I had recovered from my
-surprise at seeing you.” He is looking directly at Mrs. Harding and that
-lady smiles, a bit ironically.
-
-“And I presume that when you saw the principal attraction of El Valle de
-Bosque Cillos being borne toward Santiago, you mounted your horse and
-sadly followed,” ventures Isabel.
-
-“No; I knew the senorita was in good company,” Jack responds, dryly, “so
-I continued on to Santos and spent a profitable hour with Don Quesada.”
-
-“Ah!” Mrs. Harding regards him narrowly from between her half-dropped
-eyelids.
-
-“I say profitable,” continues Ashley, “as I did not know, until so
-informed, that Don Quesada numbered the charming Mrs. Harding in his
-list of acquaintances.”
-
-“Of course you congratulated him.”
-
-“Most assuredly.”
-
-The half-veiled contempt expressed in Isabel’s face exasperates Ashley.
-Hidden somewhere in that corsage, against which beats the falsest heart
-in Cuba, are papers that mean the ruin of the innocent girl at his side.
-
-He must have time to think, think, think. So he excuses himself and
-leaves the crowded ball-room for a walk in the cool air of the garden.
-
-In one corner of the spacious inclosure he finds a little arbor, and in
-this nook Ashley sits and smokes and thinks, but no plan for the
-confusion of the adventuress suggests itself, unless, as he growls
-vindictively, he abducts or chloroforms her.
-
-His meditations are disturbed by voices close at hand. Two gentlemen
-have, like himself, forsaken the heated ball-room for the outer air, and
-they pause in their stroll within a few feet of Ashley’s retreat.
-
-Jack pays no attention to them until by their voices and conversation he
-realizes that one of them is Captain Julio Alvarez and the other is
-Count Gonzaga. “That’s a happy combination,” he laughs softly. “They
-ought to get a few more of Isabel’s friends and hold a reunion.”
-
-“You are an excellent judge of beauty, Count Gonzaga,” he hears Alvarez
-remark, with a faint sneer. “I have been noticing your devotion to the
-handsome Mrs. Harding, the widow of the enormously wealthy ship-owner.”
-
-“Ah, amigo, is she not beautiful?” the count replies, enthusiastically.
-He appears to be in rare spirits. “I must ask you to congratulate me,
-Captain Alvarez.”
-
-“I have—on your excellent taste.”
-
-“On more, amigo. The beautiful American has consented to become the
-Countess Gonzaga.”
-
-“The devil!”
-
-“You are surprised.”
-
-“Rather. I am surprised that a gentleman of Count Gonzaga’s position
-should think of linking his name with a lady of her character.”
-
-“Por Dios! Your meaning?” cries the count, with a flash of Castilian
-wrath that causes Captain Alvarez to curse his hasty words, which must
-have emanated from jealousy or something deeper. Ashley wonders what.
-
-“Oh, nothing,” Alvarez replies, carelessly. “You must pardon my
-unthinking remark, count. Believe me, I—”
-
-“You will explain yourself to me, and at once, senor,” declares Gonzaga,
-with frigid emphasis.
-
-There is a silence, which Alvarez, who sees that he is in for it,
-finally breaks with: “Very well, count, but I warn you that you will
-regret your insistence. You will have to excuse me now, as I have
-promised to dance this next figure. Meet me at this place a quarter of
-an hour hence, and I will endeavor to satisfy you.”
-
-“Very good,” grits Gonzaga. “I will be prompt,” and the men separate.
-
-“The fair Isabel is a star, surely,” soliloquizes Ashley. “Who would
-have dreamed that she was playing her cards for the role of a countess?
-Alas! Gonzaga will be brutally undeceived by Alvarez. The latter has put
-his foot in it and there is only one way out. Jupiter!”
-
-Ashley leaps to his feet, for the inspiration of his life has come to
-him.
-
-“By George, I have it! But will she do it?” he cries. “She must do it.
-It is not her nature, still it’s a chance, and if the fates are on the
-side of right Don Quesada and the senorita are saved!”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLVII.
-
- THE PEN WINS.
-
-
-Upon his return to the ball-room Ashley is taken to task by General
-Murillo. “I have been searching for you for over half an hour,” the
-general assures him. “Come over here while I introduce you to the
-prettiest girl in Cuba.”
-
-“Confound his kindness,” grumbles Jack, mentally, who has no time to
-squander in talking nonsense with dark-eyed senoritas. There is work to
-be done. But he follows Murillo over the floor and is amused to find
-himself being introduced to Juanita de Quesada, who is the center of
-attraction of a group of young Santiago swells.
-
-“Oh, Senor Ashley and I are old friends,” cries Juanita, smiling at
-General Murillo.
-
-“Are you, indeed?” remarks the general, favoring the American with a
-keen glance. “Well, I will leave you together with my blessing,” and the
-warrior takes himself off.
-
-“I have much to tell you to-night, senorita, but at another moment,”
-Ashley says, as he makes his excuses for terminating a conversation that
-has hardly begun. “I have work to do, and it means much to you,” he
-explains to the pouting young lady, and leaving her somewhat mystified
-and not at all pleased, he goes off to hunt up Isabel Harding.
-
-He finds the latter alone. For excellent reasons Count Gonzaga is
-holding himself aloof. Captain Alvarez is not in sight.
-
-“Don’t you find the atmosphere of the room close?” he inquires, as he
-reaches Isabel’s side.
-
-“Not at all. I am entirely cool,” she responds.
-
-“But it is ever so much pleasanter in the garden,” persists Ashley, as
-he twists his mustache and meets her curious glance with a smile that is
-amiability itself. Without another word she rises and accepts his
-extended arm.
-
-“How delightful it is out here under the stars,” rattles on Jack, as
-they emerge into the garden. “These glorious nights almost repay one for
-the sweltering days. Ah, here is an ideal summer house. You will find it
-as cozy as a society darling’s boudoir. Won’t you take a seat?”
-
-Mrs. Harding laughs, a trifle ironically, as she sinks upon the wooden
-bench that runs around the interior.
-
-“Now, Mr. Ashley,” she remarks, “will you be good enough to inform me
-what you have brought me out here to tell me?”
-
-“With pleasure, madam,” responds Ashley, dropping back into his old
-deliberate self.
-
-“If you will let your thoughts stray back about six weeks, Mrs. Harding,
-you will perhaps remember that on a certain evening I had the pleasure
-of relating to you a fairy tale, to assist you in dissipating the
-monotony of an attendance upon the French ball. The fairy tale lacked
-the closing and most interesting chapter, you will recall, and I
-requested that you supply it. ‘Not to-night,’ you protested, but you
-kindly promised me an interview upon the following forenoon.
-
-“That promise, I regret to say, you broke with as little ceremony as one
-would—”
-
-“I presume,” interrupts Mrs. Harding, “that it will be unnecessary for
-me to assign my reason for failing to keep my promise.”
-
-“Quite. It would not mend matters. Now, suppose, as the novelists say,
-we take up the thread of our narrative, which was broken when I left
-your box at the garden.”
-
-“Suppose we do? What do you desire of me?”
-
-“I wish to possess myself of certain information in your keeping.”
-
-“Relative to that Vermont affair?”
-
-“Precisely.”
-
-“I can tell you nothing.”
-
-“Excuse me. Perhaps you mean you will tell me nothing.”
-
-“As you please, sir.”
-
-“I think you will,” Jack says, calmly. “Will you pardon a cigar, Mrs.
-Harding? Perhaps the smoke will keep these inquisitive mosquitoes at a
-distance.”
-
-Isabel laughs unpleasantly. “Do I understand you to intimate that you
-will resort to force?” she inquires, sarcastically.
-
-“Assuredly; although I don’t fancy the word ‘force.’ ‘Induce’ is the
-better term.”
-
-“A truce to your euphemism, Mr. Ashley. I am curious to learn what
-possible lever you can possess.”
-
-“I shall not delay the information. I have in mind a lever whose potency
-you can readily appreciate. I refer to the Count de Gonzaga.”
-
-“Good heavens! What do you mean?” In awed, whispered tones.
-
-“I think you grasp my meaning,” Jack returns, coolly. “Or will it be
-necessary for me to relate another fairy tale, concerning a beautiful
-woman who posed successfully for a time as the widow of an enormously
-wealthy American ship-owner?”
-
-“You would not dare—”
-
-“I would dare do several things, if the occasion for unusual trepidity
-seemed to arise. Besides, the vaunted brotherhood of man—”
-
-“The vaunted brotherhood of man would lead you to betray a defenseless
-woman—one who never did you aught of harm, would it?” pants Isabel.
-
-“My dear Mrs. Harding, consider how easily you may avert such an
-unfortunate denouement. I don’t care a rap about Count Gonzaga.
-Conceding your natural charms, which are legion, the count’s affections
-are undoubtedly centered in your supposed fortune. That is usually the
-principal item in the matrimonial calculations of European nobility that
-seeks alliance with American beauty. As a matter of fact, I should
-rather enjoy seeing Gonzaga thrown down, if you will excuse the slang.
-Come. A bargain is a bargain!”
-
-There is a silence. Isabel is presumably weighing the situation
-carefully, and she disappoints Ashley by rising and remarking: “I think
-I will return to the ball-room, Mr. Ashley, if you will kindly escort
-me.”
-
-“One moment,” detains Jack. Isabel resumes her seat. “Have you carefully
-considered the probable result of your silence?”
-
-“Perfectly.”
-
-“You must have some powerful reason for sealing your lips on that
-Raymond affair,” comments Jack; and then he growls under his breath:
-“Why in thunder don’t they come?”
-
-“We may as well terminate this interview. Do your worst, Mr. Ashley.”
-
-“That is rather theatric, Mrs. Harding,” banters Jack. “Clever woman,
-this,” he thinks. “She knows I would not be such a beastly cad as to
-tell her story to Gonzaga. Ah!”
-
-Footsteps are heard approaching. They stop just without the summer
-house.
-
-“Stay!” Ashley whispers in Isabel’s ear. “The count is here.”
-
-She starts to ask, “how do you know it is he?” but remains mute. An
-instant later the new arrival is joined by another.
-
-“Captain Alvarez!” breathes Jack, gripping Isabel’s arm. “Not a word!”
-
-Isabel sinks into a seat. Ashley can feel her tremble. He tosses away
-his cigar and remains standing. The silence that broods over the garden
-nook is broken by Captain Alvarez, who is so near the listeners that
-they could reach out and almost touch him.
-
-“While I can find no objection, Count Gonzaga, to satisfying your
-unfortunate demand, I would advise that you drop this matter where it
-is. No good can come of wittingly injuring your amour propre. Believe
-me—”
-
-“Captain Alvarez,” interrupts the count, frigidly, “you made a distinct
-accusation against the character of the lady whom I have honored with an
-offer of my hand. I demand that you retract your statement and apologize
-for its utterance, or prove its truth.”
-
-“I am willing to recall my hasty words, count.”
-
-“Then you lied?”
-
-There is a short but eloquent silence. “Very well,” says Alvarez. “I
-perceive that you are determined to be wholly undeceived as to the
-imposition which has been put upon you. Know then that the wealthy
-American widow, Isabel Harding, is neither wealthy nor a widow.”
-
-“Not a widow?” repeats Count Gonzaga. “Caramba! What, then, is she?”
-
-“What you will,” replies Alvarez, indifferently. “What usually is an
-adventuress?”
-
-“But the proof? Dios! The proof?” demands the count. Perchance Alvarez
-is lying to him.
-
-A low, unpleasant laugh from the latter. “I had the honor of being at
-one time the very good friend of madam,” he says.
-
-“Scoundrel!” grits Ashley in Mrs. Harding’s ear. The critical moment is
-at hand. “Victory!” murmurs Jack, as Mrs. Harding, who has risen and is
-twisting her lace handkerchief into shreds, gasps once or twice as
-Alvarez finishes his brutal story, and then faints in Ashley’s arms.
-
-“El Diablo!” the latter hears the count ejaculate, and with the
-mortification in his voice is mingled much of mental relief.
-
-“Rather indelicate, but when a life is at stake delicacy must go by the
-board,” mutters Ashley.
-
-“Ah, the precious papers! Now, my lady, we will part company.”
-
-The fanfare of trumpets in the ball-room announces that the
-captain-general has at last arrived to grace the festivities with his
-presence.
-
-“Have you quite recovered?” Ashley asks Isabel, with as much solicitude
-in his voice as he can command.
-
-“Yes, thank you. You see I am yet a woman,” she says bitterly. And she
-adds in tones of intense hatred: “The cur! The coward! But come, let us
-return to the ball—”
-
-They have reached the entrance of the ball-room. Mrs. Harding stops and
-favors Ashley with the kindest look she has ever bestowed upon him.
-
-“Mr. Ashley, you are no friend of mine. In fact, you are the only man I
-have ever feared. But I know you would not have been the coward that
-Capt. Alvarez has proved.”
-
-Ashley’s response is an enigmatic smile. He remarks, lightly: “I have
-the honor of wishing you a very good-evening, Mrs. Harding.”
-
-He watches her disappear in the crowd and sees her a few moments later
-in the long line that is passing the “reviewing stand.” As she pauses an
-instant before the captain-general Ashley notes the latter incline his
-head slightly. Some words are spoken and Mrs. Harding continues on.
-
-A triumphant smile flits over Ashley’s face; he thinks exultingly:
-
-“The pen wins this time! Now for Juanita!”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLVIII.
-
- THE SWORD TRIUMPHANT.
-
-
-“You are in unusually good spirits this evening, Senor Ashley.”
-
-“I am always happy when I am near you, senorita,” is Jack’s fervent
-response. At which speech, the warmest she has ever heard from his lips,
-Juanita grows as rosy as the morn and does not appear displeased.
-
-“Is that dreadfully important work which has occupied so much of your
-time this evening yet finished?”
-
-“Very nearly.”
-
-“And you can devote a little time to your friends?”
-
-“I am ready to devote the remainder of my existence to one of them,
-senorita.”
-
-“Oh, what unselfishness! When do you expect to begin?”
-
-“Whenever I have reason to believe that such devotion will be rewarded
-by—”
-
-“Reward? Then it is not a bit unselfish and does not deserve
-encouragement,” interrupts the young lady, with a toss of her head.
-
-“You are cruel, senorita,” murmurs Ashley, but his voice does not betray
-a great deal of grief.
-
-“I am just,” declares Juanita. “While I have been sitting here at the
-mercy of a lot of frightfully stupid men, you have devoted your time to
-the entertainment of Mrs. Harding. Perhaps that was the devotion you
-alluded to a moment ago,” ventures the young lady, with a pretty frown.
-
-“Hardly,” laughs Jack. “You do not know Mrs. Harding, senorita.”
-
-“Perhaps not as well as you, Senor Ashley. My opportunities have not
-been so good. I saw you come in from the garden. One would hardly judge
-that you had met her only half an hour ago.”
-
-“Oh, the fair Isabel and I are old friends,” Ashley remarks, serenely.
-
-“Indeed? Yet you told me—”
-
-“I will tell you more, senorita.”
-
-“I don’t want to hear any more,” opposes Juanita crossly. “You have
-deceived me once and I—”
-
-“Deceived thee? Ah, Juanita—” Jack checks himself as he notes the flush
-of annoyance in her cheeks.
-
-“Hello! There’s the chap I’ve been looking for,” suddenly remarks
-Ashley, as he catches a glimpse of Capt. Guerra over by the big
-staircase. “Will you pardon me just a moment, senorita? That will
-complete my evening work, and then if a lifetime of devotion will—”
-
-“Stop! I shan’t hear another word,” breaks in Juanita, imperiously. “And
-you need not hurry back,” she adds irritably, provoked by Ashley’s
-serenity.
-
-Meanwhile Ashley is telling himself that he must be progressing in his
-wooing, since Juanita has betrayed symptoms of jealousy. “Devotion? She
-little knows how much need she has of a clear head and strong arm,” he
-thinks. “Ah, Capt. Guerra,” he remarks, pausing before a
-distinguished-appearing gentleman who is idling by the staircase, “will
-you be good enough to follow me into the garden?”
-
-Ashley passes out and Guerra follows him curiously. When they are alone
-and unobserved Ashley takes an envelope from his pocket and presses it
-into the captain’s hand.
-
-“Read that and then destroy it,” he directs.
-
-“Your meaning, senor?”
-
-“No explanation is necessary. I am ignorant of the contents of the
-documents further than that their publicity would be deuced awkward for
-you and incidentally for myself.”
-
-“Wonderful! How came you by them?”
-
-“That is my affair, senor. Had I not rescued them they would now be in
-the hands of Truenos. Adios!” And Jack leaves the mystified Spaniard to
-his own devices.
-
-Meantime a little scene that would afford Ashley the keenest delight to
-witness is taking place in one of the rooms of the palace. Gen. Truenos
-is seated at a table littered with maps and papers and Gen. Murillo and
-Isabel Harding have just been ushered into the apartment.
-
-“You have succeeded?” Truenos asks as Mrs. Harding approaches.
-
-“Beyond expectation. Quesada may not be the head and front of the
-offenders, but he is certainly one in whom there has been placed some
-authority.”
-
-“Quesada is now a fugitive,” asserts Truenos.
-
-“Indeed?” This is news to Isabel. “Ashley’s warning,” she thinks. “When
-did you learn this, general?”
-
-“To-day. He has taken refuge on board the United States cruiser. I have
-strongly suspected Quesada, but have not particularly feared him.
-Quesada is a figurehead. What I want is proof of conspiracy on the part
-of men any one of whom is more troublesome than a dozen Quesadas—men I
-suspect to be conspiring against the government even while pretending to
-serve it.”
-
-“Would certain dispatches from Don Quesada addressed to Capt. Francisco
-Guerra furnish the necessary evidence?” asks Mrs. Harding.
-
-“Ah! You have intercepted such?”
-
-“Better. I am the bearer of them.”
-
-Truenos regards his spy admiringly. “Bueno! The papers at once!” he
-cries.
-
-“And my reward?” suggests Isabel, as she takes from her bosom the
-precious envelope.
-
-“Anything that you may ask—in reason,” replies the captain-general,
-reaching impatiently for the documents. “Why, how is this? This letter
-is addressed to me.”
-
-“To you?” exclaims Isabel in astonishment. “Surely—why—there must be
-some mistake.”
-
-“Evidently,” rejoins Truenos, as he breaks the seal.
-
-Isabel watches him anxiously as he scans the document. A pale sickly
-light is beginning to break upon her bewilderment.
-
-Ashley! The papers have been tampered with! It was for that he led her
-to the garden. How did he know, before they spoke, who were the two men
-whose meeting had interrupted their conversation in the summer house?
-And, oh, how weak she had been! She sees it all now and she swears she
-will be revenged. Aha! She knows where to wound him, to repay him in
-awful torture for the trick he has played upon her.
-
-While these dark thoughts are flitting through her mind the
-captain-general has finished his brief examination of the letter, which
-he tosses over to her. She picks it up mechanically and reads:
-
- “To His Excellency, Honorato de Truenos: Indisposition prevents
- my attending the grand ball to-night and offering my
- congratulations upon your safe arrival at Santiago. Under the
- directions of such a general there should be no difficulty in
- quickly subduing the insurrection, which I believe to be nearly
- at an end.
-
- Manuel de Quesada.”
-
-“I have been tricked, Gen. Truenos,” says Isabel, crushing the paper in
-her hand.
-
-“It would seem so,” remarks the captain-general. It is apparent that he
-is vastly disappointed. “Come, tell me of your stay at the quinta, all
-you know concerning Quesada and his movements.”
-
-There is much of importance to relate, and when Mrs. Harding has
-finished her story Truenos summons Capt. Huerta.
-
-“Take a dozen of your men and repair at once to La Quinta de Quesada.
-You know where it is?” Capt. Huerta knows perfectly. “Ransack the house
-thoroughly and fetch me every scrap of writing upon the premises. Gen.
-Murillo, do you follow in the morning and look over the place. Go!” to
-Huerta.
-
-The latter bows and leaves the room. Mrs. Harding follows. “One moment,
-Captain Huerta,” she says.
-
-A short but earnest conversation ensues. Isabel talks in rapid whispers,
-and the Spanish captain listens eagerly, while surprise, anger, hope and
-malicious joy are mirrored in succession upon his swarthy countenance.
-
-“Within ten minutes,” he breathes, and hurries away to execute the
-commands of the captain-general.
-
-“I told you it would be better if you delivered the papers to me during
-the afternoon,” General Murillo tells Mrs. Harding, after Truenos has
-gone. “Who has been the cause of your undoing?”
-
-Isabel tells him of her suspicions, which she has come to regard as
-virtual facts, and Murillo is inclined to agree with her.
-
-“The game is not yet played out, general,” flashes Isabel.
-
-“Well, take care, take care,” admonishes Murillo, as they separate.
-
-“Ah, here is the very man now,” frowns the general, as he re-enters the
-sala grande and is greeted by Ashley, who has just left Captain Guerra.
-
-“My dear Senor Ashley,” he observes dryly, “let me give you a piece of
-advice.”
-
-“With pleasure, general. I am always open to kindly counsel, although I
-do not always follow it.”
-
-“Do not let your interest in a young lady lead you into mixing with the
-affairs of a country toward which you are expected to maintain a strict
-neutrality,” is Murillo’s blunt remark.
-
-“I don’t think I catch your drift, general,” drawls Jack. But he does,
-and the gleam of quiet triumph in his blue eyes irritates Murillo.
-
-“I have warned you,” says the latter, and turns on his heel.
-
-“So I am suspected,” thinks Ashley. “I imagined the fair Isabel would
-like to know to whom to ascribe her confusion. And now to undeceive
-Juanita.”
-
-But Juanita is not to be found. There are few guests remaining in the
-sala and she is not among them.
-
-Ashley explores the garden, with like success. Then he questions the
-line of volante drivers drawn up before the entrance to the palace
-grounds. Have any of them seen Senorita de Quesada? None that he
-interrogates have had that pleasure, and the Pearl of the Antilles is
-known by sight to nearly all of them. Ashley is in despair.
-
-“The Senorita de Quesada?” queries one of the Cuban jehus, who has just
-joined the group. “The senorita and another lady were driven away in a
-volante not ten minutes ago.”
-
-“In what direction?” demands Ashley.
-
-“To Santos.”
-
-“To Santos? Heavens, man, they cannot go to Santos at this hour of night
-unescorted!”
-
-Unescorted? Is not Captain Huerta and his men all the escort that one
-could desire?
-
-This intelligence is a frightful strain upon Ashley’s composure, as he
-thinks of Juanita, Isabel, Captain Huerta and the deserted La Quinta de
-Quesada.
-
-“Quick! To Santos!” he cries, springing into a volante and tossing a
-handful of coin to the driver. “To Santos as fast as your horse will
-travel!”
-
-The man leaps to his seat, cracks his whip and they are off.
-
-As they clatter through the streets of Santiago and swing into the road
-which Ashley traversed only a few hours before, Jack shouts impatiently,
-“Faster! Faster! Great Scott! This is no funeral! Though it may be,
-before I’m through with it,” he adds, savagely.
-
-“But senor, we will dash the volante to pieces,” protests his
-charioteer.
-
-Inwardly chafing, but realizing the futility of impatience, Ashley
-forces himself to be calm. It seems an age before the distance to Santos
-is traversed, but finally the outlines of the few buildings which the
-hamlet boasts are seen against the starlit sky.
-
-The driver reins up his steed for further directions.
-
-“To La Quinta de Quesada,” orders Ashley, and they rattle on.
-
-Suddenly rings out the command, “Alto!” and the volante stops with a
-suddenness that nearly unseats its passenger, directly in front of El
-Calabozo de Infierno, the local carcel.
-
-“What in the devil’s name—” begins Ashley, but he is seized and dragged
-roughly from the volante, a pistol clapped to his head and the command
-hissed in his ear: “Callese!”
-
-Lights appear about the entrance of the carcel, and as Ashley is hustled
-toward the gloom beyond he sees, standing near the passageway and
-watching the strange proceedings with a troubled face, the aged priest
-whom he noted at La Quinta de Quesada a few days before.
-
-Ashley is hurried through the patio and along the ill-smelling corridor
-beyond to an open cell. Into this he is pushed and his ungentle captor
-tells him:
-
-“En la manana muere V. sobre el garrote!”
-
-“Thank you,” says Ashley. His stock of Spanish is just sufficient to
-enable him to comprehend the nature of the cheerful intelligence, which
-is to the effect that he is to die by the iron collar to-morrow.
-
-“Will you leave the light?” he requests.
-
-The smoky lantern is set upon the floor. Then the door clangs to, there
-is a rattle of chains and the echo of departing footsteps and he is
-alone.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER XLIX.
-
- EL CALABOZO DE INFIERNO.
-
-
-An ordinary man, suddenly placed in the position in which Jack Ashley
-finds himself, would perhaps exhaust his strength in useless
-imprecations upon his oppressors, and finish by sinking into utter
-hopelessness as to his fate.
-
-But, as was intimated when the reader first made his acquaintance, Jack
-Ashley is not an ordinary man. The practice of self-restraint has
-enabled him to retain to a remarkable degree his self-possession at more
-than one exciting moment, and his sublime confidence in himself is never
-wanting.
-
-Clearly his arrest has been arbitrary and unofficial. He has not even
-been searched. His watch and money, his papers, even his revolver, are
-upon his person.
-
-“And best of all, they have not deprived me of this incomparable
-solace,” he says, as he draws a cigar from his pocket and lights it at
-the smoky little lantern in the cell. Then he throws himself on the
-wretched straw couch, to think of some way out of the snare into which
-he has stumbled.
-
-Isabel Harding has undoubtedly imparted to Truenos all she knows, all
-she suspects. But suspicion is not proof. And the strongest suspicion
-would not have warranted, much less likely have caused, such an outrage
-upon a citizen of the United States.
-
-Plainly there is some private villainy back of it all. Then a light
-flashes through his brain.
-
-Juanita! In his selfish though natural consideration of his own
-unpleasant position he has forgotten for the nonce the Pearl of the
-Antilles, the one woman who has ever stirred his light heart to a love
-that, once given, means all of life to him.
-
-He sees it all now. Don Quesada gone, his daughter unprotected, worse
-than unprotected as the companion of Isabel Harding, and at the mercy of
-Captain Raymon Huerta, who has haunted her for weeks and forced his
-unwelcome attentions upon her! The only man who could lend a defending
-arm locked fast in a Cuban jail, with the prospect of being garroted
-before another sun goes down!
-
-It is infamous! Ashley leaps to his feet and paces the cell like a
-raging lion, and shakes the iron door with impotent energy.
-
-“Pshaw!” he cries, and laughs recklessly. “What is the use in wasting my
-strength and nerves in this manner? Courage, Jack. If the senorita is to
-be saved, and yourself incidentally, you will need all of your strength
-and nerve. Let’s take an account of stock.” And he falls to meditating
-again.
-
-How come Captain Huerta and his men to be at Santos at this hour of the
-night? Sent by Truenos, who perhaps has ordered Don Quesada’s arrest,
-or, if he knows of the latter’s flight, has ordered the quinta to be
-searched. How came Juanita to leave for home without bidding him adios?
-She could not have been so piqued by jealousy or by his good-natured
-banter that she would have left the palace without even a cold farewell.
-Isabel’s work, without a doubt. Why has he been set upon by a horde of
-ruffians and thrust into a cell? Because his presence at Santos would
-interfere with some devilish plans afoot. Again Isabel’s work, assisted
-by Captain Huerta.
-
-But what vile plot is maturing outside the walls of El Calabozo de
-Infierno while he lies helpless here? As he thinks of Juanita he grits
-his teeth in suppressed fury and chews his cigar to a pulp.
-
-As for his captor’s gratuitous information, that he is to be executed in
-the morning, nonsense! That is what an American would term a cold bluff.
-They would not dare to proceed to such an extremity. They have gone to
-dangerous lengths already.
-
-At this moment his meditations are broken in upon by a key being
-inserted in the cell door. The door swings open and closes behind Father
-Hilario, the venerable padre of the little church of San Pedro. At sight
-of the priest, Ashley’s composure returns.
-
-“Good-morning, father,” is his salutation. “I noticed you at the
-entrance to my lodgings for the night, and I should have spoken, but my
-friends rather insisted on my maintaining a strict silence. I believe
-‘callese’ means keep your mouth shut, or something of that sort, does it
-not?”
-
-“I have but a short time to remain,” says Father Hilario, surveying with
-some wonder the composed face of the young man before him.
-
-“Well, whatever your errand may be, I am indebted to you for this
-visit,” remarks Jack. “It’s confoundedly lonesome here. I will not
-apologize for my apartment, as it is not of my own selection. Now, what
-can I do for you, father, or what can you do for me?”
-
-“My son, you are not of the faith of Rome, but I have called to offer
-you the consolation which a clergyman can extend in your last hours.”
-
-“Is it as bad as that? Really, I don’t take any stock in this garroting
-business. I believe that is thrown in for theatrical effect.”
-
-Father Hilario shakes his head. “Captain Huerta is a desperate man,” he
-avows. “There is nothing to prevent his wreaking his enmity upon you.”
-
-“Oh, is there not? Thank you, father, for the offer of your
-ministrations, but really, I do not believe I shall need them. Do not
-misunderstand me,” Ashley adds, quickly, as a pained expression passes
-over the kindly face of the priest. “What I mean is that I have too
-healthy an interest in life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness to
-pass many hours in such a stuffy, ill-smelling donjon as this.”
-
-Father Hilario holds up a warning finger. “There are listeners about,”
-he says.
-
-“Let them listen. If their stock of English is equal to my collection of
-Spanish they will be vastly entertained by my remarks.”
-
-“You will attempt to escape?” queries the priest, in a cautious whisper.
-
-“At the first opportunity.”
-
-“The attempt will fail.”
-
-“It will succeed,” retorts Ashley.
-
-“No; it will fail,” repeats Father Hilario. “The carcelero, always
-watchful, will be doubly vigilant to-night. He has probably been
-bribed.”
-
-“But a larger bribe—”
-
-“Is out of the question. His life would pay the penalty.”
-
-“I don’t believe it. But enough of that,” says Ashley, impatiently. “Now
-tell me, father, of the Senorita de Quesada. Have you seen her
-to-night?”
-
-The priest is silent. In his muteness, Ashley finds the confirmation of
-his worst fears.
-
-“Speak, man!” he cries impatiently. “Do you know that the life and
-happiness of the senorita are more to me than my own existence? Speak!”
-
-“She is in the church of San Pedro.”
-
-“In whose company?”
-
-“She is alone.”
-
-“Alone in the church of San Pedro after midnight? What mean you?”
-
-“She is a prisoner.”
-
-“A prisoner? Ten thousand devils!” rages Ashley, striding to and fro in
-his narrow cell.
-
-“Calm yourself, my son,” remonstrates Father Hilario. “Nothing can be
-accomplished by such wild outbursts.”
-
-“Oh, yes; I’ll be calm!” grits Ashley. “By heaven, I’d give ten years of
-my life for ten minutes of liberty!”
-
-“Come. Time flies, and the carcelero will soon be here,” admonishes
-Father Hilario. “Is there aught I can do for thee, my son?”
-
-Ashley forces a tranquillity of mind that he little feels. “How came you
-to learn of the senorita’s imprisonment?” he asks.
-
-“I was returning from a midnight summons to a deathbed and had nearly
-reached my house when Captain Huerta and his men entered the town,
-escorting a volante. Suddenly the party were attacked in the darkness.”
-
-“By Huerta’s own men?”
-
-“That was doubtless part of the plot. The two women in the volante were
-separated. The senorita was borne fainting into the church and then
-quietness reigned again. I lingered about the scene, and was a witness
-of your arrest not many minutes afterward. I begged permission to see
-you, and the carcelero, in granting it, bade me roughly to tell you that
-you die on the morrow.”
-
-“A merry knave,” remarks Ashley. “Well, father, you can be of great
-service to me. Will you not bear a message from me to General Truenos?
-Or, no; hang Truenos. To General Murillo, then. You know him. My
-detention here is without his knowledge, of that I am assured. It is a
-vile outrage that he would not brook.”
-
-The priest shakes his head. “It would be useless,” he says. “From the
-instant I leave this place I shall be watched, shadowed every step of
-the way to my house. An attempt to leave Santos would be at once
-frustrated.”
-
-“You believe so?”
-
-“I am positive of it.”
-
-“But the senorita. Can you communicate with her.”
-
-“Ay; and without the knowledge of Captain Huerta.”
-
-“You can?” cries Ashley, eagerly. “But you said you would be watched.”
-
-“Ah,” says the priest, with a faint smile, “there is an entrance to the
-church that Captain Huerta knows not of—an entrance from my house
-through the little garden intervening.”
-
-“Good. Excellently good,” remarks Ashley, into whose active brain has
-flashed an inspiration. “Father Hilario, I have a plan. You must join
-the senorita and myself in marriage.”
-
-“Marry you? Impossible!” exclaims the astonished padre. Have the
-American’s troubles driven him insane?
-
-“Impossible nothing. Easiest thing in the world if the lady is willing,”
-is Ashley’s cheerful response. “Now, listen to me, father. Don Quesada
-is a fugitive, and his daughter, being a Cuban, is amenable to the laws
-of this country. From the Spanish government she would not likely
-receive much earnest protection or reparation for any wrongs she might
-suffer. But when she becomes Mrs. Jack Ashley,” says Jack, dramatically,
-working up to a mild enthusiasm, “she is then an American citizen and as
-such she will be under the protection of a flag that the Spaniard dare
-not affront with impunity. You get the idea, eh?”
-
-“Impossible, impossible, I tell you,” repeats Father Hilario. “You are
-not a Catholic, Senor Ashley; the senorita is. Besides, the consent of
-her father—”
-
-“This is no time for quibbling over technicalities. Would you see a
-woman, your friend’s daughter, insulted, perhaps murdered, when a few
-words from your lips would save her?”
-
-“I would do my duty,” replies the priest, calmly. “The idea is madness.
-I cannot bring the senorita here, and you cannot reach the church.”
-
-“Oh, I’ll be there in season,” is the cool response. “Just leave the way
-from your house to the church open to me.”
-
-“If you have any message to send the senorita, you must make haste,”
-adjures the priest. “The carcelero is approaching.”
-
-“It will be brief,” replies Ashley. Then hurriedly: “Go to her at once.
-Comfort her. Pray with her. And tell her that I will be with her before
-the sun rises. Say nothing about the marriage. I prefer to do my own
-proposing. But, above all, remain with her until I come.”
-
-Then, in a different tone, as the cell door is swung open by the
-carcelero: “Many thanks, dear father, for your kindly visit and
-spiritual solace. I have made my peace with heaven, and to-morrow I will
-show these Spanish gentry how an American can die—when he gets ready,”
-he adds, under his breath, as the iron door clangs to and he is once
-more alone.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER L.
-
- AT BAY IN THE CHURCH OF SAN PEDRO.
-
-
-As the echo of Father Hilario’s footsteps dies away adown the gloomy
-corridor Ashley glances at his watch. It lacks a quarter of two o’clock.
-
-“The trick must be done within two hours, or all is lost,” he mutters.
-Then he extinguishes the light and throws himself down upon the pallet
-of straw.
-
-Ten, fifteen minutes pass. The tread of the carcelero on his rounds
-sounds from the corridor and a light is flashed into the cell. A
-counterfeit snore from Ashley greets him and he passes on with a
-muttered “Dios! He sleeps as if to-morrow were his wedding day.” In five
-minutes, his round of inspection completed, he repasses the cell door
-and continues on, until silence again enshrouds the prison.
-
-Then Ashley arises, takes out his jack-knife and opens one of the
-blades, a finely tempered steel saw.
-
-“Thank heaven for that much Yankee inventiveness!” he murmurs, as he
-sinks on one knee beside the iron door of his cell and applies the saw
-blade to the lower end of one of the rusty bars.
-
-As the steel slowly but surely eats its way into the corroded iron and
-finally slips entirely through, Ashley again, aided by a match, consults
-his watch. It is nearly three o’clock. Scarcely had he extinguished the
-lucifer than the approach of the carcelero is heard, and he retreats to
-his pallet, to again feign an audible slumber.
-
-All still once more, and he attacks the upper end of the bar. When
-almost severed he seizes it with both hands and exerts all his strength.
-The iron snaps, and as Ashley falls back the bar slips from his hands
-and drops to the floor of the cell with a loud clang.
-
-Jack inwardly curses his carelessness. Such a tremendous noise would
-alarm the sleepiest of guards. He must act, and act quickly.
-
-To squeeze through the space made in the door is the work of some
-moments, and it is not accomplished an instant too soon. A light
-approaches.
-
-Ashley remembers that opposite his cell is another, the door to which is
-ajar. With the iron bar in his hand he gropes his way across the
-corridor and into the open cell. A moment later the carcelero, lantern
-in hand, stands before the now tenantless pen, and stares stupidly at
-the wreck of the iron door.
-
-Before he can utter an outcry the bar in Ashley’s hand descends upon his
-head with crushing force and he drops like a log.
-
-“I hope I didn’t kill the poor devil,” thinks Jack. He drags the
-unconscious man into the open cell, and, tearing and tying his
-handkerchief into a gag, he makes assured the silence of the carcelero.
-Then he extinguishes the lantern and is soon standing at the entrance of
-the prison.
-
-To his left is life and liberty. To his right—ah, something dearer than
-life—Juanita de Quesada, locked in the little church of San Pedro, the
-outlines of which stand boldly against the star-gemmed heaven.
-
-Within that little sanctuary the altar lamp sheds a soft light over a
-strange picture. Juanita is lying upon the steps of the altar, her head
-buried in her arms, and near by stands Father Hilario, his arms folded,
-gazing compassionately upon her.
-
-“Why does he not come?” moans the girl, lifting her head and looking at
-the priest with tear-stained eyes from which hope has not yet fled.
-
-Father Hilario is silent. The American does not come because, forsooth,
-he cannot leave his prison. But why undeceive the girl? Let her hope on
-to the end.
-
-The opening of a door behind them causes both to start. Jack Ashley
-stands upon the threshold, a smile upon his face.
-
-With a glad cry Juanita runs to him and takes both his hands. “I was
-expecting you,” she says, simply.
-
-“Thank you. And you?” asks Ashley, turning to Father Hilario.
-
-“I bore your message. I did not expect you,” replies the priest,
-regarding the young man with mingled wonder and admiration.
-
-“Then you must have a more flattering opinion of the security of Cuban
-jails than I. And now, senorita, tell me how you come to be in this
-unhappy position.”
-
-The story is brief, but interesting.
-
-“Five minutes after you left me in the ball-room at the palace,”
-narrates Juanita, “Isabel came to me and declared that we should leave
-for Santos. She explained that Captain Huerta and his men were going to
-Santos at once, and would escort us, and that the ride would be
-enjoyable after the heat and excitement of the ball. At the mention of
-Captain Huerta I know I looked displeased, and Isabel remarked
-disagreeably: ‘Perhaps you would prefer the escort of Mr. Ashley.’ I
-replied that I should certainly prefer it to that of Captain Huerta, and
-she declared that you would not be likely to offer it, as—”
-
-“As what?” asks Ashley, as Juanita pauses in confusion.
-
-“She gave me to understand that you had proposed to her that night and
-that she had refused you.”
-
-“And you believed her?”
-
-“I don’t know what I believed. But I agreed to Isabel’s proposition and
-we left for Santos at once. On our arrival there we were set upon by a
-party of men. All I remember is being lifted from the volante by Captain
-Huerta. Then I fainted, and when I recovered consciousness I was in the
-church, alone with Captain Huerta. He told me that he loved me. I
-replied that I hated him, and when he attempted to put his arm around me
-I struck him in the face. Then he swore frightfully and told me I would
-regret the blow. ‘My father—’ I began. ‘Your father is a fugitive,’ he
-sneered. ‘You are wholly in my power.’ ‘Then I will kill myself,’ I
-cried. ‘Oh, no; you will come to your senses in a few hours,’ he said,
-tauntingly. ‘I shall expect to find you in a better humor when I
-return.’ Then he went away, locking the church door behind him.
-
-“When he had gone I piled all the furniture of the church against the
-door and then threw myself down before the altar and prayed. The opening
-of a door aroused me. I lifted my head, expecting to see again the hated
-face of Captain Huerta. Instead, to my great joy, I beheld Father
-Hilario. When he told me of your arrest I cried out in terror. Then he
-gave me your message and hope came to me.”
-
-“And Satan came also,” quotes Ashley. “I fear your barricade would not
-withstand a very earnest assault,” surveying the rude defense
-critically.
-
-“It was all I could do. But tell me of yourself,” urges Juanita. “What
-is the meaning of your violent arrest?”
-
-As Ashley unfolds the black plot, beginning with the first appearance of
-the adventuress at La Quinta de Quesada, the Cuban girl grows very pale,
-and she realizes how much she owes to the blue-eyed young man who
-finishes his story with the smiling quotation: “And now, senorita, if a
-lifetime of devotion—”
-
-“There, do not remind me of my folly,” she protests, choking back a sob.
-“I will never doubt you again.”
-
-Thus encouraged, Ashley takes both of Juanita’s hands and whispers very
-tenderly:
-
-“In this darkest hour before the dawn I have found the courage to tell
-you what has been in my heart for—for nearly three weeks,” he finishes
-with a smile. Even amid the dangers that surround them, the humor of his
-declaration impresses him.
-
-A wave of crimson spreads over the girl’s face, and in the big black
-eyes Ashley sees the light of a great love.
-
-The young people’s eyes meet in mutual understanding. He draws her to
-him, and the first kiss of love is exchanged. It must be followed by
-many others, for Father Hilario, after waiting what he considers a
-reasonable length of time, turns to the pair with an uneasy: “Well, what
-is all this leading up to?”
-
-“A marriage, I should say,” replies Jack, cheerfully. “That is usually
-the logical outcome of such a situation.” Father Hilario bites his lips
-impatiently.
-
-“The church and the pastor are here, and I think the bride is willing,”
-continues Jack. The young girl gives the priest an anxious look.
-
-“It is useless to argue that matter further,” is the firm reply. “My
-duty to the church forbids.” The priest’s face convinces Ashley that the
-debate on the matrimonial question is closed.
-
-“Then we must seek elsewhere for a clergyman,” he remarks, coolly.
-“Come, Juanita.” And he leads her toward the little door by which he
-entered the church.
-
-“This is madness!” cries the priest, barring the way. “The town is
-overrun with your enemies. It is nearly day and the place is already
-astir. Hark! Do you not hear the tread of feet in the street?”
-
-“Spanish or no Spanish, I don’t propose to remain here and be trapped
-like a rat,” declares Ashley. “We can at least make a break for liberty.
-I do not—”
-
-The sound of a key being tried in the church door cuts short his words.
-
-“It is Captain Huerta,” whispers Juanita, and she trembles like a leaf
-in Jack’s arms.
-
-“Quick, father!” commands the latter. “You reconnoiter and see if the
-way through the garden and your house is clear.” The venerable padre
-hurries away and Ashley improves the opportunity to shower kisses upon
-Juanita’s cold and unresponsive lips.
-
-“What a man you are!” she murmurs. “I believe you would make love on
-your way to execution.”
-
-“I should if the opportunity was offered,” laughs Jack, softly. “What
-could more brightly illumine the last moments of a condemned man than to
-hold in his arms, if but for a few minutes, so much loveliness?”
-
-At that moment Father Hilario reappears. “There is no hope,” he reports.
-“Suspecting all was not right, Captain Huerta has surrounded the church
-and grounds with his men.”
-
-“Then fasten that door,” says Jack. “An attack at one end is all I care
-to look after.”
-
-The bolt is shot into place, and with the click comes the sound of
-muttered oaths from without, followed by a savage kick at the barricaded
-portal.
-
-“Ho, there, within!” demands an impatient voice.
-
-At the sound of the hateful tones Juanita shudders and throws her arms
-about Ashley’s neck. “Save me from that man!” she whispers.
-
-For answer Jack takes another reef in his confidence-restoring arm, and
-draws his revolver.
-
-“Don’t move, dear,” he murmurs, solicitously. He rather enjoys the tight
-embrace of those soft arms, to which terror has lent a delightful
-fervency. “You need not fear Captain Huerta so long as there is light
-enough to shoot by.”
-
-It is a strange tableau that the altar lamp dimly shows. The three
-figures stand immovable, as if carved in stone. Ashley is calm,
-resolute, and his eyes are fixed upon the barricaded door. The
-resignation of despair is depicted in the beautiful face of the Cuban
-girl; her eyes seek those of her lover, her head upon his breast. They
-will at least die together. Near by stands the aged priest, his arms
-folded, his eyes turned heavenward and his lips moving as if in prayer.
-The tread of soldiery and the rattle of steel sound from the street.
-
-The stillness within the church is broken only by a sharp click as
-Ashley’s revolver is brought to half-cock.
-
-The seconds drag by. Every one of them seems an hour.
-
-Then there is the sound of a rush of feet without, followed by a loud
-crash, as the church door is hurled from its fastenings and piled upon
-the debris of the barricade.
-
-The gap thus made throngs with Spanish soldiery, at their head, sword in
-hand, Captain Raymon Huerta. At sight of the picture within the church
-he starts back with a cry of surprise and a choice assortment of
-Castilian imprecations.
-
-“You here, dog of an Americano? Who opened to thee the doors of the
-carcel?” And the Spanish captain glowers around upon his followers.
-
-“I am indebted to no one except myself for my escape from your infernal
-den,” replies Ashley; and he adds, sternly:
-
-“Hark ye, Captain Raymon Huerta. I am here to protect this young woman
-from your deviltry, to protect her with my life. I warn you that any
-violence to her will cost you yours.”
-
-“Your life is already forfeited,” sneers Huerta. Then to his followers:
-
-“Ho, there, men! Seize the Americano and leave the girl to me!”
-
-Ashley’s arm comes up.
-
-“Halt!” he thunders. “This woman is my wife and as such she is an
-American citizen. Another step, and, by the stars and stripes, I’ll send
-your leader to perdition!”
-
-The streak of dawn that struggles in through the little window above the
-altar glints upon the polished barrel of a revolver pointed straight at
-the heart of Captain Raymon Huerta.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LI.
-
- UNDER THE RED, WHITE AND BLUE.
-
-
-“You lie!” shouts Captain Raymon Huerta, white with rage.
-
-Ashley retorts calmly. “I repeat, Captain Huerta, what I have asserted.
-As my wife, this woman is an American citizen. An order from you to your
-men to fire upon or seize us, will be the last words you will utter in
-this world!”
-
-“The marriage? Impossible! The proof? The proof?” cries Huerta, foaming
-with passion.
-
-Ashley points to Father Hilario. “The proof is the word of yonder man of
-God, by whom we were wedded not an hour ago!”
-
-Captain Huerta glowers upon the priest. “Speaks the Americano truly?” he
-fumes.
-
-Father Hilario is silent. His eyes wander from the lovers to the
-rage-distorted countenance of the Spanish captain.
-
-Ashley holds his breath. He has made a superb bluff. Will the priest
-fail him at this supreme moment?
-
-“Speak, vile dog of a priest!” snarls Huerta, the padre’s silence adding
-fuel to his rage.
-
-At the brutal epithet Father Hilario’s cheek flushes. Then he speaks,
-slowly and deliberately:
-
-“It is true. They are man and wife in the sight of God, and around them
-are the protecting arms of the church of Rome.” He raises his arms as if
-pronouncing a benediction, and murmurs under his breath a pious: “May
-God forgive me the deception!”
-
-Captain Huerta bites his lip till the blood comes. One word to his men
-would mean the destruction of the heroic trio. But over the shining
-barrel of Ashley’s revolver, pointed straight at his heart, the Spanish
-captain reads, in a pair of flashing eyes, a grim resolution that means
-his death if he but raises his sword.
-
-The situation is critical. The strain is beginning to tell on even
-Ashley’s steel nerves.
-
-At this moment a commotion is noted in the throng of soldiery that bars
-the entrance to the church.
-
-Pushing them right and left, a tall, distinguished-looking military man
-strides into the sanctuary.
-
-Don Huerta dashes his sword back into its sheath and sullenly awaits
-developments.
-
-General Murillo, for the arrival is he, glances from one of the party to
-the other, and then addresses himself to Ashley:
-
-“Senor, may I ask the meaning of this warlike demonstration?”
-
-Ashley lowers his revolver. “It means, general, that your arrival has
-averted an international episode.”
-
-General Murillo turns to Huerta. “Withdraw at once,” he commands. “I
-will see you anon.”
-
-When Captain Huerta and his men have left the church Murillo asks:
-
-“And now, Senor Ashley, will you be good enough to explain this peculiar
-affair?”
-
-“Willingly. But first, general,” says Jack, with a faint grin, “allow me
-to introduce you to the prettiest girl in Cuba.” And for the first time
-since the storming of the church door he removes his arm from about the
-waist of the Pearl of the Antilles.
-
-Murillo bows with Spanish profundity. “I have the honor of the
-acquaintance of the Senorita de Quesada,” he remarks.
-
-“Who is now plain Mrs. Jack Ashley,” corrects the newspaper man. “Pardon
-me one moment, general,” and he whispers to Juanita:
-
-“Father Hilario looks very disconsolate; go and comfort him. And now,
-general,” to Murillo, “I am at your service.”
-
-Ashley recounts briefly the exciting events that took place from the
-hour he left the ball-room until the arrival of his auditor. He says
-nothing of Mrs. Harding.
-
-As the recital progresses Murillo’s face darkens.
-
-“I am convinced,” declares Ashley, in conclusion, “that my arrest was
-wholly the work of that scoundrel Huerta.”
-
-“And what do you propose to do now?” asks Murillo.
-
-“Well, I have no special plans beyond settling accounts with Captain
-Huerta.”
-
-“I will do the settling with Captain Huerta,” observes the general,
-dryly. “As for you—you must leave Cuba.”
-
-“My duty to my paper will not permit me to leave at present. And even
-were I free, general, I should not desire to be understood as running
-away.”
-
-Murillo makes a gesture of impatience. “Just like you Americans. You
-would all want to fiddle like Caesar while Rome was burning.”
-
-“Your pardon; but I believe Nero was the soloist on that red-letter
-occasion.”
-
-The general frowns. “Come with me,” he says; “I will furnish to you the
-necessary papers and you may proceed without interruption to Santiago.
-The cruiser America sails for Key West to-morrow. You must take passage
-on her. I do you a service, Senor Ashley, and I do it gladly, as I have
-a friendship for you. But I warn you that any delay in leaving Cuba may
-subject you to much annoyance, to use no harsher term. The government
-suspects you of secretly aiding the insurrection.”
-
-“The government is mistaken.”
-
-Murillo glances at Juanita, and smiles ironically. “Senor Ashley,” he
-says, “I am not so easily deceived. The instrumentality that saved the
-senorita from annoyance is the same instrumentality that placed the
-traitor Quesada in his present safe retreat. But what I as a man might
-applaud, I cannot as a loyal adherent to Spain condone; nor would the
-government take a sentimental view of the matter. You will see the
-wisdom of my advice. Come.” And Murillo leads the way from the church.
-
-Before he leaves the scene of his new-found happiness Jack Ashley
-presses warmly the wrinkled hands of Father Hilario. “Father, you’re a
-brick,” he says, and adds solicitously: “Will not Captain Huerta seek to
-revenge himself upon you?”
-
-“I fear him not,” replies the priest, raising his head proudly. Then,
-placing the hand of Juanita within Ashley’s, he lays a hand on the head
-of each, and in a voice choked with emotion says:
-
-“My children, I have sinned for your sake, but I trust that God will
-condone the offense. Heaven bless and keep you and when you are happily
-sheltered in your northern home think sometimes of Father Hilario, of
-the little church of San Pedro.”
-
-Imprinting a kiss upon the brow of the Cuban girl, the aged priest turns
-away and sinks upon his knees before the crucifix over the altar.
-
-It requires but a few minutes for General Murillo to make out the
-necessary passports and as he hands them to Ashley, he remarks: “You
-will follow my advice?”
-
-“I will follow it to Santiago, at least, general.”
-
-The general shrugs his shoulders. “Do as you please. I have warned you,”
-he says, and turns away.
-
-Ten minutes later Ashley and Juanita are en route for Santiago in a
-volante.
-
-The young lady is sad. The natural reaction has set in.
-
-“I am thinking of my father,” she replies to Jack’s attempt to rally
-her.
-
-“Your father is all right,” he confidently assures her. “In an hour or
-two you will be in his arms, and I shall have the pleasure of asking him
-for the hand of the dearest girl in the world. Or, stay, I am
-progressing too rapidly,” he muses, in mock concern. “It has occurred to
-me,” he goes on, “that—oh, well, of course a proposal of marriage must
-naturally be regarded more conservatively now than—”
-
-“Jack!”
-
-“Yes, senorita.”
-
-“What are you talking about?”
-
-“Of you, senorita. Ah, something in your eyes tells me that I may be
-presumptuous enough to hope.”
-
-“What nonsense! There, I knew you were joking,” declares Juanita, as she
-catches a stray twinkle in Jack’s eye. “You foolish boy, you know I love
-you. I have loved you ever since—I met you.”
-
-“Three whole weeks ago,” muses Ashley, as he draws the blushing face to
-his and kisses it.
-
-“Do you know, I have been insanely jealous of your friend Don Carlos all
-along,” confesses Jack, after a long, happy silence, during which the
-pair quite forget the volante driver.
-
-“Jealous of Don Carlos? Oh!” cries Juanita, bursting into merry
-laughter.
-
-“I admit it is highly humorous, in the light of recent developments,”
-says Jack, who sees nothing to laugh at in his remark. “What is there so
-amusing in it all?”
-
-“Oh, you dear, foolish Jack,” exclaims the girl, throwing her arms
-around his neck. “To be jealous of Don Carlos! Why, Don Carlos is a
-girl.”
-
-“I am aware that, to the public gaze, Don Carlos is at present a young
-lady,” returns Ashley, loftily, “but you must remember that I knew Don
-Carlos before he exchanged his customary attire for his present feminine
-toggery.”
-
-“Oh, how superiorily wise you look,” banters Juanita. “But I tell you
-that Don Carlos has always been, is now and always will be a girl!”
-
-“What!”
-
-“And you never suspected it—you who are so penetrating?” mocks the young
-lady.
-
-But Jack makes no reply. His mind is attempting to digest this
-surprising bit of information. Then a light begins to break upon him.
-
-“Her real name—what is it?” he asks, suddenly.
-
-Juanita becomes serious again. “I must not divulge it, Jack, dear. I
-should not have told you what I have, but you looked so comical when you
-told me you had been jealous of Don Carlos. There, please don’t
-catechise me further.”
-
-“I shall not,” replies Ashley. “Besides, it will be unnecessary for you
-to betray her identity.”
-
-“Then you know—”
-
-“I think I do. As I more than once remarked, I have an excellent memory
-for faces, although I am sometimes a dev—a diablo of a while in
-recalling the names that go with them.” And Ashley relapses into
-meditation.
-
-“Well, here we are at Santiago,” announces Jack. “In a short time you
-can bid a temporary adieu to the soil of Cuba; and the sooner the
-better.”
-
-And indeed, the streets of Santiago are in apparent possession of a
-riotous mob, swarming in and out of the cafes.
-
-Ashley and Juanita find no obstacles in their path; half an hour later
-they are aboard the America, under the red, white and blue, and Juanita
-is in her father’s arms, relating breathlessly the thrilling incidents
-of the last few hours.
-
-Ashley leaves them to their exchange of confidence and affection, and
-goes off to talk with Captain Meade. When he sees Don Quesada again that
-gentleman takes his hand and assures him that he is honored by his
-prospective entrance into the family.
-
-“As for Cuba,” declares the Don, his eyes lighting with a trace of their
-old-time fire, “the cause of the patriots was never brighter. To be
-sure, I am a fugitive, and El Terredo yesterday suffered a severe
-defeat, the Pearl of the Antilles having been destroyed in an unequal
-engagement with three Spanish cruisers and gunboats. But General Masso
-is advancing upon Santiago, with 10,000 revolutionists, and the fall of
-the city is looked for within forty-eight hours. Already the Spanish
-warships are gathering preparatory to shelling the place should it come
-into the hands of the patriots, and foreign vessels are preparing to
-leave the harbor.”
-
-“I believe I will take Murillo’s advice for the present,” reflects
-Ashley, “but I shall return to-morrow with the cruiser and be in at the
-death.” Then he goes in search of Juanita.
-
-“Now,” says that young lady, “if you have finished squeezing my hand
-before all these officers and seamen, come below and I will introduce
-you to—to ‘Miss Carlos’.”
-
-“All right, sweetheart,” replies Jack, gayly. “Let me see. I believe you
-remarked early this morning that you would never doubt me again.”
-
-“Yes?” responds the young lady, inquiringly.
-
-“Then, after you have introduced me to ‘Miss Carlos’ will you leave us
-alone for a short time?”
-
-“What a strange request! But it is granted.”
-
-“Good. And now let us go below.”
-
-The interview, whatever its nature, has a peculiar effect upon Ashley.
-Upon returning from it he is saying to himself, sotto voce.
-
-“By Jove! This case has taken a turn that I little looked for. I’d give
-four dollars to see John Barker, detective, at this moment.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LII.
-
- THE ENCOUNTER AT THE CAFE DE ALMENDRAS.
-
-
-“You have settled your business interests in this country
-satisfactorily?”
-
-“Perfectly so. Much more profitably, indeed, than I expected.”
-
-“Then there is nothing further to keep you here except sight-seeing?”
-
-“Nothing—except sight-seeing.”
-
-Cyrus Felton, Phillip Van Zandt and Louise Hathaway are seated on the
-veranda of the little Cafe de Almendras, on the outskirts of Santiago.
-They have returned this morning from a short jaunt to the interior and
-are not impressed favorably with rural Cuba. So they gladly return to
-the contemplation of that view which is ever welcome, no matter where
-one may roam—old ocean.
-
-“And you, Miss Hathaway—have you any Cuban ties that you will sever with
-regret?” inquires Van Zandt.
-
-Miss Hathaway is more thoughtful than the occasion would seem to
-require. “None,” she replies, slowly. “Unless,” she adds quickly, “the
-pleasure of your society for the last month may be regarded as a Cuban
-tie.”
-
-“Thank you,” rejoins Van Zandt, with a glance that brings a blush to the
-face of the Vermont maiden.
-
-“No; I am utterly, uncompromisingly disappointed with Cuba,” she says.
-“And the people! But I have been here but a few days, so I shall not
-place my opinion upon record.”
-
-“And yet your brief impression of Cuba, Miss Hathaway, would not be
-likely to change much for the better if you were to spend a dozen years
-here. The country is uninteresting. The Spaniard cannot be changed. The
-Cuban—that is, the Cuban we see about us—does not deserve freedom. He
-lets the blacks and his brothers of the chaparral do all the fighting,
-and hardly dares, except in private, to express his cordial hatred of
-his ancient enemy. Do you know, Mr. Felton, I rather fancied that you
-had relatives in Cuba.”
-
-“Relatives in Cuba?” The little color suddenly recedes from Mr. Felton’s
-face.
-
-“Yes,” says Van Zandt. “The day before I had the pleasure of meeting you
-and Miss Hathaway I was reading in a New York paper an interview with a
-member of the Cuban revolutionary society. In speaking of the
-diversified character of the Spanish officers in Cuba, the gentleman
-mentioned that attached to the staff of General Truenos was a young
-American, a former sugar planter. His name was Felton, but he changed it
-to Alvarez. When I first discovered your name and learned that you were
-en route to Cuba I unconsciously associated you with this young sugar
-planter so friendly to the Spanish cause.”
-
-During Van Zandt’s speech, delivered in apparently careless tones, Mr.
-Felton succeeds in mastering a strong emotion. Louise is regarding him
-somewhat nervously, but Van Zandt quickly refills Miss Hathaway’s glass
-with jerez and passes it to her with a smiling comment on the quality of
-the wine.
-
-The rather awkward silence is broken by Mr. Felton.
-
-“Mr. Van Zandt, and to you, Louise, I may say that I believe I have a
-son in Cuba, and that he is the young man alluded to in that newspaper.
-One reason why I have come to Cuba is to find that son. I supposed he
-was operating the sugar plantation that we visited last week. I did not
-know that he had joined the Spanish service.”
-
-“I regret,” remarks Van Zandt, “that my idle remark should have stirred
-you to speak of a matter on which you might have preferred to have
-remained silent.”
-
-“The subject is a painful one, it is true, but once started I may as
-well go on to the end. It is nearly a year ago—the 1st of June—that
-Ralph left home, and since then I have heard from him but twice, and
-vaguely each time.”
-
-Both Mr. Felton and Louise are gazing seaward, else they would note the
-swift look of surprise that passes across Van Zandt’s face.
-
-“The 1st of June,” he repeats, as if attempting to recall some incident
-of the past. “Did not something peculiar occur in Raymond—that is the
-name of your town, is it not?—about that time?”
-
-Mr. Felton shoots a quick, inquiring look at Van Zandt’s face, but reads
-nothing there except disinterested curiosity.
-
-“Something very peculiar occurred two days before that date,” he
-replies, gravely. “On the night of Memorial day Roger Hathaway, Louise’s
-father, the cashier of the Raymond National Bank, was found dead in his
-office at the bank, and the institution was discovered to have been
-robbed of a large amount of money. The murderer has never been
-discovered and presumably never will be.”
-
-An expression of self-reproach is visible in Van Zandt’s face as he
-turns to Louise.
-
-“Forgive me, Miss Hathaway; I was not aware—”
-
-“There is nothing to forgive, Mr. Van Zandt,” Louise replies. “But I do
-not share Mr. Felton’s opinion that the veil of mystery enshrouding the
-tragedy will never be lifted. Something within me tells me that one day
-the slayer of my father will be brought to justice.”
-
-Miss Hathaway again turns her eyes, now wet with tears, toward the sea.
-Mr. Felton is very pale and it is apparent that he would welcome a
-change in the conversation. Van Zandt, however, continues:
-
-“Now, that you speak of it,” he says, knitting his brows, “I recall that
-I read something about the case in the papers at the time. Was no one
-suspected?”
-
-“Three persons were suspected—two of them unjustly. Derrick Ames”—with a
-quick glance at Louise, who flushes scarlet and bites her lips—“was one
-and my son the other. You may be surprised at my stating this,” in
-response to Van Zandt’s questioning gaze, “but you will understand
-better why I am so anxious to find Ralph. He had some motive for leaving
-Raymond as he did, and until that motive is discovered and his name
-cleared I shall be one of the most unhappy of fathers.”
-
-“And the third party suspected? You have mentioned only two,” says Van
-Zandt.
-
-“The third? Oh, yes; the third was a young man named Ernest Stanley. He
-was the only stranger in Raymond, so far as known, on the day of the
-tragedy. This young man had been liberated from state prison on Memorial
-day, after serving two years of a three years’ sentence for forgery.”
-
-“Then there was fairly good reason for suspecting him?” comments Van
-Zandt, with an enigmatic smile. “Give a dog a bad name, you know. But
-tell me about the fellow. I confess I am rather interested in him. Was
-his forgery a very serious affair?”
-
-“A matter of $1,000. Mine was the name he forged.”
-
-“Indeed. How did you trace it?”
-
-“That was a peculiar feature of the case. Stanley presented the check at
-the bank of which I was president.”
-
-“Rather a blundering piece of business, should you not say? But may he
-not have been innocent?”
-
-“The forgery was proved.”
-
-“Ah! Stanley admitted it?”
-
-“No; he told a fanciful story of the check having been given to him in
-New York, in payment of a gambling debt.”
-
-“Nothing impossible in that story, Mr. Felton. I will tell you why. A
-night or two before we left New York I was seated in Madison Square
-garden, listening to a concert, when a party of sporting men sat down at
-the next table, and one of them entertained his companions by relating a
-reminiscence of a game of draw poker in which he had played a part two
-or three years before. I will not repeat the story, but perhaps you will
-understand the point I am trying to make. Four men were playing and
-during the course of one hand the betting had narrowed to two of them. A
-held what he believed to be a well-nigh invincible hand. Flushed with
-confidence, and irritated by his opponent’s insinuation that he had no
-more money to wager, A took a check-book from his pocket, wrote a check
-for $1,000 or some such sum, and tossed it upon the table. The bet was
-covered, the hands shown down, and A lost. Now,” finishes Van Zandt, “A
-might not have had a dollar in the bank. He might have put a worthless
-check upon the table, knowing, as he thought he knew, that there was not
-one chance in a thousand of a necessity for its payment arising. That
-being the case, what mattered it whose name was on the check, his own
-or—well, say his father’s? I am only theorizing on what might naturally
-occur some time, you know.”
-
-Cyrus Felton’s face has become ghastly and he appears to be on the verge
-of collapse. Miss Hathaway regards Van Zandt with wonder and
-apprehension. The latter seems unconscious of the effect his words have
-produced, and he remarks carelessly: “But I will not discuss the matter
-further, as I suspect it bores you.”
-
-At this instant the clatter of hoof-beats sounds from the road, as a
-detachment of Spanish caballeria ride up, tether their horses and hurry
-boisterously into the cafe. The Americans are established on a quiet
-veranda at the rear of the building, where they may be free from just
-such interruptions.
-
-“Are you ready to depart?” says Van Zandt to his companions.
-
-“I am anxious to return to Santiago as soon as possible,” declares Mr.
-Felton.
-
-Van Zandt raps upon the table for the waiter, but no response is made.
-Host and helpers are busily occupied with their noisy guests.
-
-“Pardon me a moment. I will step within and settle the account,” says
-Van Zandt, as he rises and enters the cafe.
-
-The drinking-room is crowded with the boisterous soldiery, disporting
-themselves as if war were an amusement and the curtain nearly down on
-the farce of revolution.
-
-The presumptive leader of the troopers is a tall, rather handsome young
-fellow, who sits with his back against the wall and a glass in his hand.
-There is no one within a dozen or twenty feet of him except one
-caballero, with a scar across his forehead, who sits by himself at a
-table.
-
-As Van Zandt enters and closes the door behind him the Spanish captain
-glances up and their eyes meet.
-
-“Great heavens! Am I dreaming,” mutters Van Zandt. And then he stands
-with white face and clenched fists, staring at the man before him.
-
-The latter returns the stare. “I trust you will know me again senor,” he
-remarks, ungraciously, as he sets down his glass and strikes a match to
-ignite a cigarette.
-
-“I believe I have had the misfortune of meeting you before,” Van Zandt
-replies, folding his arms and regarding the other with blazing eyes.
-
-The Spanish captain shrugs his shoulders. “May I ask where?” he inquires
-coolly.
-
-“In the United States.”
-
-“The senor is mistaken. I have never been in the states.”
-
-“You lie!”
-
-“Curse you! What d’ye mean?” demands the Spanish captain in the purest
-of English, as he drops his hand upon his sword hilt. The man at the
-table near by lays down his paper and turns a pair of interested eyes
-toward the young men.
-
-“You lie!” repeats Van Zandt, moving not a step. Then he says in a voice
-passionate with hatred and ringing with the exultation of a Nemesis
-about to strike:
-
-“So, Ralph Felton, I have found you at last!”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LIII.
-
- A WOMAN’S VENGEANCE.
-
-
-The cigarette falls from the Spanish captain’s nerveless fingers and his
-face turns gray.
-
-“Who are you?” he gasps.
-
-“My name is Phillip Van Zandt. I don’t wonder, Ralph Felton, that you
-fail to recognize me by that name, though it is my true one. But you
-will understand why I have sought you and why I exult in now standing
-face to face with you, when I breathe the name of Ernest Stanley!”
-
-“You are Ernest Stanley?”
-
-“I was Ernest Stanley. Now, I am his avenger. Listen to me,” commands
-Van Zandt, as Felton strives to speak. “When the doors of that New
-England prison closed upon me, nearly three years ago, I swore that I
-would be avenged upon the scoundrel who put me there. Until a month ago
-I did not know his name. Until to-day I was not sure that the father was
-an accomplice to the villainy of the son. But when I did learn who the
-coward was for whom I suffered I told myself that this world, vast as it
-is, was too small to hold him and me. Do you understand? You cur! Do you
-understand?”
-
-Felton glances about the cafe. The soldier at the table near by has
-again picked up his newspaper and is absorbed in its columns. But any
-one who might take the pains to investigate would discover that he is
-not reading the paper. The score or more of others are occupied in their
-drink, jest and song.
-
-Felton has regained his composure and lights a cigarette with a steady
-hand.
-
-“Are you aware, Senor Van Zandt, that at one word from me my men would
-cut you to pieces?” he sneers.
-
-“I know that one such word will mean your instant death,” is the stern
-response.
-
-“Well, I shall not utter it,” says Felton, coolly. “I am competent to
-take care of myself. A moment ago you called me a coward. I will prove
-to you that I am not. You seek satisfaction?”
-
-A bitter smile flits over Van Zandt’s face. “Satisfaction!” he murmurs.
-“Ay, I demand satisfaction for two years of utter misery and, by
-heavens, I shall have it!”
-
-“You shall! I swear it!”
-
-“Ah! And when?”
-
-“At once. This is my only opportunity to accommodate you at present, as
-I am ordered to Cienfuegos to-morrow. Come, I will wait for you
-without.” So saying, Felton turns on his heel.
-
-Van Zandt regards him with a look in which suspicion is mingled with a
-trace of admiration for his sang froid.
-
-“You will attempt no treachery?” he says, sternly.
-
-“I tell you, sir, I am not a coward,” answers Felton, haughtily.
-
-“That he is not,” mutters the soldier with the scarred forehead, and he
-adds, as if addressing the newspaper in his hand: “This is a devilish
-unfortunate affair. I must have a hand in it. Hello! Was not that a
-woman’s scream?” He rises and, throwing open the door leading to the
-rear of the cafe, steps out upon the veranda. An instant later he dashes
-the door shut with an ejaculation of amazement.
-
-Standing at the further end of the veranda, terror depicted in her
-colorless cheeks, is Louise Hathaway. A dozen feet from her is one of
-the troopers, who has strolled out upon the veranda, and, while much the
-worse for liquor, has plainly insulted the American girl. When the
-new-comer arrives on the scene, he sees the caballero wiping the blood
-from a long, deep scratch across his rage-contorted face. Between
-insulter and insulted Cyrus Felton interposes a feeble barrier.
-
-With a muttered malediction the baffled Spaniard turns and re-enters the
-cafe, followed by the scarred soldier, whose timely arrival has
-doubtless saved Miss Hathaway from further affront.
-
-“Jove! I shall have my hands full for a few minutes,” that individual
-soliloquizes. “Ah, one moment,” as Van Zandt attempts to brush by him.
-“You have some friends out here, senor.”
-
-“Well?” demands Van Zandt, with a stare.
-
-“Get them away at once, or these devils in here may make it hot for
-them.”
-
-“I do not understand.”
-
-“You have no time to listen to a lengthy explanation. Do as I direct.
-Send your friends to the consul’s and have them avoid the main road.
-There is a path through the garden, and beyond that a trail down the
-hillside to the beach. It is but a mile to the consul’s residence by
-that route. They’ll be safe at the consul’s.”
-
-All this is delivered in low, rapid tones and as Van Zandt moves away
-the soldier turns and sees the drunken cavalier standing within a few
-feet of him, a malicious smile upon his evil face. “Hello! What the
-devil are you playing the spy for?” cries he of the scar, and passes on
-with the muttered thought: “I wonder if the chap understands English.”
-
-When Van Zandt rejoins Mr. Felton and Louise he finds the old man as
-white as death and his head sunk upon his breast, while Miss Hathaway is
-in a semi-hysterical condition.
-
-“I’m so glad you have returned,” says the latter, as she comes forward
-to greet him and she tells him of the encounter with the Spaniard.
-
-“The scoundrel!” grits Van Zandt, starting toward the cafe. But he
-remembers that he has more serious business on hand than thrashing a
-drunken trooper, and he turns gravely to his companions:
-
-“Miss Hathaway, and you, Mr. Felton, I must ask you to proceed
-immediately to the residence of the American consul. I have a little
-matter that demands my presence here for another half-hour, and
-meanwhile it will not be safe for you to remain. Nor will it be well to
-go by the main road. The city is in the hands of a mob. The scoundrel
-who insulted you is a fair example. I was warned by one of the men
-within—an Englishman, I should judge from his voice and manner.”
-
-Mr. Felton and Miss Hathaway regard Van Zandt apprehensively, and Louise
-wonders at the pallor of his face and the strange look in his eyes.
-
-“You know where the residence of the consul is. You must follow yonder
-path through the garden, and strike the trail down the hillside to the
-sea; it is only a short walk. I will rejoin you there within the hour—if
-I live,” says Van Zandt, with a significance not understood by his
-auditors.
-
-Without a word Cyrus Felton rises and, followed by Miss Hathaway, starts
-off through the garden in the direction indicated by Van Zandt’s
-outstretched arm.
-
-While all this has taken place Ralph Felton has been leaning in the
-doorway at the front of the cafe. He looks up when Sanchez, the besotted
-subaltern, comes in from his encounter with the American girl, and
-signals to him.
-
-“Sanchez, I have a little affair of honor to settle within the hour,” he
-says. “If I do not return, you are second in command. You understand?”
-
-“Is it ‘a la mort’?” inquires Sanchez.
-
-Felton nods and turns away, and Sanchez goes back into the cafe in
-season to hear the last words of the warning extended to Van Zandt by
-the soldier with the scar.
-
-Felton lights another cigarette and awaits indifferently the appearance
-of his implacable foe.
-
-“I am ready, sir,” says a stern voice at his elbow.
-
-“And I have been ready for some minutes. Come.” And Felton leads the way
-across the road and into a path to the woods.
-
-The soldier with the scar walks out into the dooryard and watches the
-disappearing figures. “That duel must not take place,” he says. “But how
-on earth am I to prevent it? Hello! What’s this?”
-
-His attention is attracted by an ejaculation within the cafe. Two men
-are whispering by the window next the entrance.
-
-“What deviltry is this?” he scowls, bending his head. And as he listens
-the scowl deepens on his face, and his fingers clutch at his pistol
-stock. “By heavens! I must prevent that duel now,” he mutters.
-
-Simultaneous with a command given to the half-intoxicated Sanchez, he of
-the scar hears the sound of a shot over in the woods.
-
-“Treachery!” he exclaims, and bounds away in the direction of the
-report.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Felton and Van Zandt proceed silently into the thicket. A short distance
-from the entrance to the woods is a cleared spot.
-
-“This will probably suit our purpose,” remarks Felton, and, coolly, he
-measures off ten paces.
-
-“That will be distance enough, will it not?” he asks. Van Zandt nods.
-
-“Will you give the word, Mr. Van Zandt?”
-
-“As you please. We will fire at the word ‘Three.’” Both men draw their
-revolvers.
-
-“One moment,” interrupts Felton. “In the event of a second fire?”
-
-“There will be no second fire,” is the grim rejoinder. “I shall kill you
-with the first.”
-
-“And I will endeavor not to waste mine. Well, sir, I am waiting.”
-
-“One!” Two arms are raised, and not a tremor in either.
-
-“Two!” The pistols click.
-
-The word “Three” is trembling on Van Zandt’s lips, when a shot rings out
-from the thicket. Felton clasps his hand to his abdomen, with an
-exclamation of pain, sways a moment and pitches headlong to the earth.
-
-The bushes part and a woman, heavily veiled, steps forth, smoking pistol
-in hand and walks to where Felton lies.
-
-She looks upon the body for a moment in silence, and hisses:
-
-“You cowardly hound! Your end is fitting!” Then, throwing back her veil,
-she reveals the face of Isabel Harding.
-
-“I have saved you, Phillip,” she says, with a calmness that is very near
-madness.
-
-“You have cheated me of my vengeance,” he replies, looking gloomily upon
-the body of her victim.
-
-“My wrongs called for greater vengeance than yours,” cries the woman,
-her eyes glittering feverishly and her voice breaking hysterically. “I
-followed him here. I saw through the cafe window your meeting with him,
-and I exulted that I was in time—in time to save the man I loved!
-Phillip! Phillip,” sobs Isabel, sinking on one knee beside him, “I told
-you that some day you would realize how much I loved you!”
-
-But Van Zandt, with a shudder and expression of utter aversion, turns
-away.
-
-“Ah, I see I am too late,” remarks a quiet voice, and Van Zandt looks up
-to see the friendly soldier with the scar.
-
-“To the consul’s if you would save the American girl,” says the latter.
-“I’ll look after these obsequies. Come, be off,” as Van Zandt stares at
-him in surprise. “A plot is afoot, headed by that precious Lieut.
-Sanchez, and you have no time to lose.”
-
-“But the consul—”
-
-“The consul was at his office in the city two hours ago, and is
-doubtless there yet. Ah, you are too late.” The clatter of departing
-hoof-beats is borne upon their ears. “No; you can reach the consul’s
-ahead of them, by the short-cut down the hillside. Here! Take my
-revolver! You may need more than one. And mind, don’t waste any
-ammunition,” shouts the soldier, as Van Zandt dashes off.
-
-Then he turns to the scene of the tragedy. He kneels beside Felton’s
-body and makes a brief examination. Then he straightens up.
-
-“Go!” he says sternly, to Mrs. Harding. “Your work is done!”
-
-She stares at him a moment, with her glittering eyes; then, with a
-little shudder, tosses the revolver into the bushes, turns and walks
-slowly away.
-
-The caballero watches her out of sight and again turns to the body of
-the Spanish captain.
-
-“Humph!” he grunts, as he lifts the limp form from the ground. “He is
-worth a dozen dead men, or my name isn’t John Barker.”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LIV.
-
- AT BAY IN THE CONSUL’S HOUSE.
-
-
-“There is something very odd in Mr. Van Zandt’s actions,” remarks Miss
-Hathaway, as she and Mr. Felton follow the winding trail down the
-hillside to the sea. The latter offers no explanation. He has aged
-fearfully in the last half-hour, and it is now a bowed, feeble, old man
-whom his companion more than once has to assist over the obstacles in
-their rough path.
-
-“To the consul’s. To the consul’s,” is all he says, and the journey is
-finished in silence.
-
-The residence of William Atwood, United States consul, is situated about
-two hundred yards back from the shore, about a half a mile below the
-mole at Santiago. The nearest neighbor is a quarter of a mile away,
-toward the city. It is a plain, square, two-storied structure. A broad
-veranda fronts both stories and ivy very nearly conceals three of the
-walls of the building. An innovation, to the Cuban view absurd, is an
-electric door bell, put in by the consul himself. It is this bell that
-Mr. Felton presses, with the remark: “I begin to feel at home already.”
-
-The summons are answered by a porter who tells them that the consul is
-gone.
-
-“Gone? Gone where?” demands Mr. Felton, with a start of uneasiness that
-is inexplicable to Miss Hathaway.
-
-The consul is at the city. Where, quien sabe? Probably at his office in
-the city.
-
-“We can do nothing except await his return or the arrival of Mr. Van
-Zandt,” Louise says, as they step into the hall.
-
-At the right of the entrance is the library. On the desk is pen and
-paper, and here Cyrus Felton seats himself and writes, while Louise
-stands in the doorway and watches him with troubled eyes.
-
-Suddenly she hears the sound of footsteps hurrying up the walk. The door
-is thrown open, and Van Zandt, breathing hard from the exertion of his
-run, stands before her.
-
-“Thank God, you are safe!” he cries, fervently.
-
-“What danger threatens?” asks Louise, laying one hand upon Van Zandt’s
-arm.
-
-For answer he leads the way out upon the veranda. “Look!” he says; and
-Miss Hathaway beholds the Semiramis, resting quietly upon the still
-bosom of the bay.
-
-“We must reach that yacht, or I fear we may not leave Cuba alive!” he
-tells her.
-
-Louise gazes at him in questioning dismay.
-
-“Ah, there comes the enemy,” says Van Zandt, pointing up the beach
-toward the city. A small troop of horsemen is approaching at a lively
-canter.
-
-“What is all this mystery? Why do you fear those men?” asks Louise, as
-they re-enter the house.
-
-“It is not for myself that I tremble,” replies Van Zandt, who is
-critically examining his pistols.
-
-“Then it is I whom they seek. Your silence answers yes,” says Louise
-quietly. She is very white, but her voice does not tremble. Like a true
-heroine she has grown calm in the face of danger.
-
-“By heaven!” Van Zandt bursts forth; “my life stands between you and
-those Spanish devils, and gladly do I place it there. As for you,”
-turning to Cyrus Felton, who has risen from the library table and stands
-near them, “I would not lift a finger to save your worthless existence.
-For the wrongs which I have suffered, for the misery which you and your
-son have caused me, I meant to have exacted a bitter reparation, but
-fate has otherwise decreed. Ah, you know me!”
-
-“Spare me your reproaches,” says the old man, lifting his hand in
-protest. “I know you. You are Ernest Stanley. What I have dreaded, yet
-for nearly a year expected, has come at last. My sin has found me out.”
-
-“Ah, that it has. But you are safe from my hands now, and maybe from
-that of the law before this day is ended. Out of the way, unless you
-wish your miserable life cut short by a Spanish bullet. Miss Hathaway, I
-must ask you to step into the library, as our visitors have arrived.”
-And, throwing open the door, Van Zandt stands upon the threshold,
-waiting.
-
-Lieutenant Sanchez and his men rein their horses within a dozen paces of
-the house. The leader dismounts and comes leisurely up the walk,
-apparently oblivious of the presence of Van Zandt, whose watchful eyes
-are covering every movement of the scoundrelly band.
-
-“One moment,” commands the American, holding up his hand. But the
-Spaniard pays not the slightest attention.
-
-“Halt!”
-
-This time Sanchez pauses and strokes his mustachios with exasperating
-calmness. “I would advise the senor to make no opposition if he values
-his life,” he says.
-
-“What is your errand here?”
-
-“The American senorita, to whom I am indebted for this token.” Sanchez
-indicates the long, dull-red scratch upon his unamiable visage. “I have
-no time or inclination to parley with you, senor. Out of the way, or I
-shall order my men to fire upon you.” The troopers half-raise their
-carbines.
-
-Van Zandt tears down a worn edition of the stars and stripes that decks
-the wall above his head, and as he throws it across his breast and
-shoulder his voice rings out defiantly:
-
-“Fire upon the American flag, if you dare!”
-
-The answer is a volley that splinters the woodwork about him and brings
-down the glass above the door in a shower. Van Zandt feels a sharp
-twinge in his left arm, and with an exclamation of rage and pain he
-lifts his revolver and fires.
-
-Lieutenant Sanchez falls dead in his tracks and there is an instant
-scattering out of range on the part of his followers.
-
-As Van Zandt closes the door and slips the bolt he turns to see Cyrus
-Felton lying upon the floor, a stream of blood flowing from a wound in
-his side.
-
-“Fool! I cautioned him to keep out of range,” he exclaims, as he bends
-over the old man.
-
-“Is he badly hurt?” asks the voice of Louise.
-
-“I fear so. We must retreat upstairs, as we may expect an assault at any
-instant. Quick!”
-
-As Louise ascends to the floor above, Van Zandt follows with his
-unconscious burden. In the rear room is a sofa, and upon this Mr. Felton
-is laid.
-
-“I have but a few minutes to live. Forgive me,” he gasps.
-
-“God may forgive you,” replies Van Zandt, turning bitterly away. Louise
-takes his hand in hers.
-
-“Surely, Mr. Van Zandt, you can forgive the past in this awful moment,”
-she says, softly. “Remember, he was a father and he loved his son.”
-
-At the contact of that little hand Van Zandt feels a thrill creep over
-him.
-
-“You know now who I am,” he says, dully. The blue eyes meet the dark
-ones unwaveringly.
-
-“I know that I believe in your innocence and that I trust you,” is the
-quiet response. “Listen, he is speaking again.” They bend their heads to
-catch the sinking man’s last words.
-
-“In my—coat—papers,” gasps Mr. Felton, with his fast-glazing eyes fixed
-on Van Zandt. “They—will—clear—your—name,” he finishes and sinks back,
-exhausted by his effort.
-
-“Cyrus Felton,” says Van Zandt, gravely, “if any forgiveness of mine
-will afford you an iota of comfort on your journey to the other world,
-it is yours.”
-
-The dying man acknowledges the absolution with a glance. An instant
-later his spirit passes to his Maker, to be judged by his deeds in this
-world of sorrow and sin, of hope and happiness.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Again the Cafe de Almendras. The boisterous troopers are gone and in
-their place a dozen or so quiet-appearing men in civilian dress are
-grouped about the tables, drinking little and talking less.
-
-It has been a noisy day, the patron tells a tall man with black eyes and
-fierce mustachios, who lounges in the doorway and sweeps the street with
-his keen gaze.
-
-But the tall man heeds not the chatter of the patron; his gaze is fixed
-curiously upon an approaching soldier, who bears across his shoulder the
-limp form of a man in the uniform of a Spanish captain. The face of the
-latter is hidden.
-
-Barker brushes by into the cafe with the body of Ralph Felton, and meets
-the contemptuous glance of the tall man with a searching look that the
-latter does not fancy.
-
-“Ho, there, patron! A room and a doctor at once!” orders the detective,
-and he gives the patron a handful of coin and effectually silences his
-grumbling protest about making a hospital of the place.
-
-Having deposited his burden above stairs, Barker returns to the
-drinking-room and astonishes the tall man with the black eyes by tapping
-him on the shoulder and remarking:
-
-“I think I have met you before.”
-
-“The mischief you have!” is the curt rejoinder.
-
-“Now I am sure of it,” grins Barker. “Your voice has not changed, but
-your mustachios do not fit you. Pardon me,” he adds, just in season to
-prevent an outbreak, “I am indebted to you for this slash,” indicating
-the scar across his forehead, “but I do not lay up any hard feelings.
-I’ll call it quits if you will lend some friends of mine a helping hand.
-I have got my hands full upstairs. Listen.” Barker briefly recounts the
-episodes narrated in the previous chapter.
-
-As the tall man listens his brow grows black as night, and when the tale
-is finished his voice rings through the cafe in a sharp command:
-
-“Haste, my comrades! To the American consul’s to save my friends!”
-
-The quiet-appearing civilians about the tables leap to their feet as one
-man, and, leaving the unpaid patron standing in hopeless astonishment
-amid the ruins of the glassware he has dropped, the little band sweeps
-out of the cafe.
-
-“There will be music at the consul’s this afternoon, unless I am greatly
-mistaken,” mutters Barker, as he looks down the dust-veiled road. “And
-now for my patient. If he dies with his secret unrevealed I’ll never
-forgive him!”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LV.
-
- A SIGNAL FROM MACEDONIA.
-
-
-Van Zandt and Louise stand, hand in hand, gazing sorrowfully upon all
-that is mortal of Cyrus Felton. A crash is heard below, as the front
-door is burst from its hinges.
-
-Van Zandt leaps to the head of the staircase just as the feet of a brace
-of ruffians are on the lower step. Twice cracks his revolver and his aim
-is true. One of the Spaniards falls and the second drops back with a cry
-of pain. Then, as Van Zandt throws himself to one side, there is a flash
-of fire below, and the bullets whistle harmlessly by.
-
-As he judges, there is no immediate second rush by the attacking party,
-so he proceeds to examine his surroundings and the result is far from
-satisfactory. There is no serious danger of the besiegers attempting to
-carry the staircase by storm. The Spaniard is not lacking in courage,
-but it requires a considerable amount of sand to lead the way to certain
-death. But the room to which they have retreated was not built for a
-fortress and he realizes that the end must come when the enemy will gain
-access to the second floor—by the veranda or by the rear entrance to the
-building.
-
-Suddenly his eyes rest upon a ladder at the other end of the short
-hallway.
-
-“Quick!” he whispers to Louise, as he points the way to temporary
-safety.
-
-A minute later and they are on the roof of the building, the ladder
-pulled up, and the scuttle fastened down. Over them floats, from the
-flagstaff, the glorious banner of their native land, and above that
-bends a sky of heaven’s deepest blue.
-
-“Fairly outwitted!” says Van Zandt. Suddenly he feels a weakness come
-over him and he sinks upon the sun-baked roof. Then for the first time
-Louise notices that he is wounded, and she kneels beside him with a very
-white face.
-
-“It is nothing,” he reassures her. With her assistance he removes his
-coat, tears open the left sleeve of his shirt and discloses a bullet
-hole in the fleshy part of the arm. It looks more serious than it really
-is and Louise feels an inclination to faint. But she resists it and
-proceeds to bind up the still bleeding wound with strips torn from her
-own silken petticoat. The golden head is very close to the brown one,
-and as the fair surgeon bends to tie a knot, the soft sweep of her hair
-steals away all of Van Zandt’s well-guarded reserve, and his right arm
-encircles her in a passionate embrace.
-
-“I love you! I love you!” he whispers.
-
-And Miss Hathaway, being a sensible young woman, who knows what she
-wants, does not remark upon the “suddenness” of the declaration of love,
-but presses her red lips to his and tells Phillip that she has loved him
-ever since she knew him.
-
-But the lovers are brought back to earth by a chorus of yells and
-picturesque profanity sufficient to supply the captain of a whaling bark
-for an entire voyage.
-
-“They have discovered our retreat,” whispers Van Zandt, as he lifts the
-scuttle and listens to the tumult below. But he drops it as a bullet
-crashes through a few inches from his head, and moves out of such
-dangerous range. Then, as his eyes rest upon the flag above him an idea
-seizes him—a veritable inspiration. He steps to the flag-staff, detaches
-the halyards and the stars and stripes come fluttering down to his feet.
-
-“What are you doing with the flag?” asks Louise.
-
-“Giving utterance to the old Macedonian cry,” he calls back, and up goes
-old glory again, this time with the union jack down. “Pray that my crew
-may see the signal,” he adds, fervently. And Providence assists his
-effort, for a puff of wind streams the flag straight out upon the
-breeze.
-
-Capt. Beals is on the bridge of the Semiramis at this moment, looking
-toward the shore, and his curiosity is excited.
-
-He sweeps the roof top with one glance through his powerful glance and
-then issues a command that echoes to the farthest corners of the
-Semiramis.
-
-A few moments later Van Zandt sees two boats cut shoreward through the
-blue waters of the bay as fast as muscle can send them.
-
-“Thank heaven!” he exclaims, as his heart bounds within him, and he
-proceeds to hug Louise in a manner that vastly entertains Capt. Beals,
-who is still an interested though distant spectator. And if the bluff
-old sea dog could have made himself heard he would have shouted a
-warning, for he discerns what Van Zandt cannot see—a ladder placed
-against the side wall of the consul’s house and three men ascending it,
-while back a short distance, with carbines raised, stand the rest of the
-scoundrelly horde.
-
-The attack bids fair to be successful, but suddenly rings out the cry of
-“Santiago!” and the little band of patriots from the Cafe de Almendras
-dashes upon the scene.
-
-The Spaniards now have all the fighting they can attend to. Van Zandt
-and Louise watch from the rooftop the progress of the battle royal. The
-fight is won. No quarter is given, and those of the Spaniards who have
-the ability to flee are in full retreat, and as they disappear down the
-beach they shout:
-
-“El Terredo! El Terredo!”
-
-Van Zandt sees a strange transformation in the appearance of the leader
-of the rescuing party. During a hand-to-hand struggle with one of the
-troopers his fierce mustachios have been knocked off, and it is a
-handsome, beardless youth, with flashing black eyes, who looks about him
-and remarks: “Well, my merry men, the victory is ours, but where are the
-Americans?”
-
-“Coming,” sings out Van Zandt, from the upper air. “We will be with you
-in a minute.” And as he turns to Louise that young lady proceeds to
-faint in his arms. It is a logical reaction from the strain which she
-has borne with wonderful fortitude.
-
-By this time the boats from the Semiramis have arrived, and in them
-enough fighting Yankees to handle twice their number of Spanish
-soldiery. A ladder is placed against the consul’s house and the besieged
-are assisted to earth, one unconscious and the other with an arm tied
-up.
-
-While revivifying operations are under way Van Zandt hears a startled
-exclamation at his elbow. It comes from El Terredo, who is gazing upon
-the marble countenance of Miss Hathaway with astonished and troubled
-eyes.
-
-Without replying to Van Zandt’s questioning look, El Terredo picks up
-his mustachios from the sand and again affixes them to his face. Then he
-turns calmly to Van Zandt.
-
-“The third of your party? I was told there was an old gentleman.”
-
-“He is dead. Killed at the first fire,” Van Zandt tells him, and he
-leads the way into the house.
-
-As the two men look upon the body, which has not been disturbed by the
-troopers, El Terredo shudders, and murmurs: “My God, what does all this
-mean?”
-
-“It means much to me,” replies Van Zandt, gravely, as he takes from the
-dead man’s person a packet of papers.
-
-Without speaking El Terredo steps to the sofa and assists Van Zandt to
-bear the remains from the house.
-
-The body is laid in the bow of one of the boats, reverently covered, and
-preparations are made for the return to the Semiramis. When all but
-himself and the rescuing party from the cafe have embarked Van Zandt
-turns to El Terredo, who, with folded arms, is gazing abstractedly
-toward the law-and-order deserted city. “You are going with us, are you
-not?” he asks.
-
-“No; I shall remain here.”
-
-“Your safety lies with yonder yacht.”
-
-“Safety? Ah, senor, somewhere on this isle is one dearer to me than
-personal security.” And the young man turns away to hide his emotion.
-
-“But you can gain nothing by remaining here now. The survivors of the
-late scrimmage have recognized you and in half an hour the whole town
-will be at your heels. Aboard my yacht you will be safe and I will
-gladly land you at any point on the island you may designate. Besides,
-the papers—”
-
-“Say no more, senor,” exclaims El Terredo, extending his hand. “I accept
-your generous offer.”
-
-Dismissing his faithful followers, with the assurance that he will be
-with them again ere many days, the revolutionary leader steps into one
-of the waiting boats.
-
-As they are about to push off a soldier whose horse is flecked with foam
-comes dashing down the beach, and as he leaps from his well-nigh broken
-steed, he calls out cheerily:
-
-“Got room for one more?”
-
-“Ah! My friend of the cafe,” cries Van Zandt. “You are very welcome,
-senor.”
-
-“And just in time,” remarks John Barker, detective, as with a hearty
-thwack he sends his horse riderless down the beach and clambers into the
-boat.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LVI.
-
- THE FATE OF THE SEMIRAMIS.
-
-
-“And now, what?”
-
-The boats have reached the Semiramis. Louise Hathaway has been tenderly
-assisted to the deck by Van Zandt, followed by Navarro and Barker, and
-the dead form of Cyrus Felton has been reverently conveyed aboard.
-
-A sort of council of war is being held on the quarter-deck of the yacht,
-participated in by Van Zandt, Navarro and Capt. Beals. The master of the
-Semiramis looks inquiringly at the insurgent leader as he utters the
-words quoted above.
-
-“For me personally there is but one course,” replies Navarro. “I must
-land somewhere in the night and make my way to Gen. Masso’s camp. That
-will not be a difficult matter. It is your own situation that I am
-considering. The American man-of-war, is she still in the harbor?”
-
-Capt. Beals shakes his head. “She sailed an hour ago for Key West, for
-supplies and instructions. She will not return for at least two days.”
-
-Navarro’s face grows grave. “Then you are not safe from molestation even
-in this vessel and under that flag,” he says, pointing to the red, white
-and blue floating from the masthead. “Without a man-of-war to protect
-you, the Spaniards, knowing that El Terredo is aboard, will search your
-yacht, possibly confiscate her and subject you to no end of annoyance,
-even though they should not find El Terredo. They respect no flag, no
-emblem, no rules of civilized nations, unless they are absolutely
-compelled to by superior force. You saw how they treated the American
-flag above the consul’s own residence. There are now three Spanish
-gunboats in the harbor. Within the hour I fear your yacht will be
-surrounded.”
-
-“Then there is but one thing to do,” promptly replies Van Zandt. “Capt.
-Beals, have steam got up at once and weigh anchor. We will follow the
-America to Key West.”
-
-There is silence on the quarter-deck for a few moments. Miss Hathaway
-has retired to her former stateroom immediately upon setting foot upon
-the yacht, and Barker is intently watching the shore from the bridge.
-For the time being Van Zandt and Navarro are alone. Suddenly the former
-breaks the silence.
-
-“You are not a Cuban,” he says. “Why are you enlisted with the
-nondescript army of the insurrectionists?”
-
-Navarro flushes at the word nondescript, but does not reply at once.
-Finally he says quietly: “No, I am not a Cuban. I am, like yourself, an
-American. But my ancestors were Cuban, back more than six generations.
-Until ten months ago,” continues Navarro, in a less-impassioned tone, “I
-was a careless, happy-go-lucky American youth, without any specific aim
-in life. But when the Cuban insurrection broke out, I was consumed with
-an overmastering desire to help free Cuba from the accursed yoke of
-Spain. I have sacrificed everything to that end, and now I am known to
-the Spaniards as ‘El Terredo,’ the terror. I believe I have been of some
-service to the struggling natives, and so I shall continue until Cuba is
-free, or–”
-
-Navarro does not complete the sentence. While he was speaking the smoke
-has been pouring out of the chimneys of the yacht in steadily increasing
-volume, and now the clank of the steam windlass announces that the
-vessel is getting under way. Without replying to Navarro’s words, Van
-Zandt hastens below to inform Miss Hathaway of the destination of the
-yacht. Capt. Beals has taken his station on the bridge and the graceful
-vessel steams slowly toward the narrow entrance to the harbor of
-Santiago.
-
-Navarro watches intently the three Spanish warships by which the
-Semiramis must pass within half a mile. As the yacht draws nearer, the
-watcher notes with anxiety a boat hastily putting out from the
-government wharf and evidently making for the flagship of the fleet, the
-Infanta Isabel. He communicates his discovery to Van Zandt, who has
-returned from below, with the comment: “They are evidently notifying the
-cruiser to have her stop this vessel. Rather than that she fire on the
-yacht and endanger the lives of those on board, including the young
-lady, you must surrender me. Then they may permit you to go unmolested.”
-
-“No man leaves this ship for a Spanish prison or the garrote,” replies
-Van Zandt, his eyes burning with excitement, “as long as there is a
-timber of her afloat. It is less than six miles to the entrance to the
-harbor, and once outside we can snap our fingers at a whole fleet of
-Spanish cruisers. Besides, with all the various craft scattered about
-the harbor, they will not dare to fire on us.”
-
-Navarro shakes his head skeptically, but does not reply. The boat has
-reached the side of the war vessel. The Semiramis is now nearly abreast
-of the latter and distant less than half a mile. Suddenly a puff of
-smoke rises from the forward deck of the Spaniard, followed by the sharp
-crack of a rifle.
-
-“There! She has signaled you to heave to,” remarks Navarro. “As I told
-you, you must surrender me.”
-
-“This is my answer,” replies the owner of the Semiramis, drawing his
-revolver and firing two shots in the air. Then to Capt. Beals on the
-bridge he sings out: “Full speed ahead!”
-
-Smoke is now pouring from the stacks of the warship, and it is evident
-that she is preparing to pursue the American yacht, but she does not, as
-Navarro predicted, fire on the latter. Before the cruiser gets well
-under way the Semiramis is within four miles of the channel that marks
-the entrance to the harbor.
-
-Van Zandt smiles at Navarro. “We will lead him a merry race if he thinks
-to catch the Semiramis,” he remarks. “This yacht can go two miles to his
-one. And if he hasn’t improved in his marksmanship I will risk his guns.
-Ah, there goes the first one!”
-
-The Spaniard has succeeded in getting within range of the yacht without
-endangering any of the other craft, and the roar of his forward gun is
-heard as Van Zandt speaks.
-
-“An eighth of a mile to windward,” observes the latter, as he watches
-the solid shot skip over the water. “He can’t race and shoot, too.”
-
-Evidently the pursuer has come to the same conclusion, for he fires no
-more guns, but doggedly plows the placid waters of the harbor after the
-great black yacht.
-
-And now the latter is less than half a mile from the cleft in the
-precipitous coast line. Capt. Beals has slowed down the engines and the
-yacht is picking her way by the reefs that guard the channel.
-
-“Ship ahoy!” suddenly rings out from the lookout forward. All eyes are
-turned ahead. A steamer, inward bound, has just come into view in the
-channel.
-
-“Permit me,” Navarro takes the glasses and focuses them upon the
-stranger. “It is the Spanish dispatch boat Pizarro,” he says. “When the
-cruiser recognizes her she will doubtless signal her to intercept the
-yacht, and in the narrow channel she can make serious trouble, I fear.”
-
-The report of another cannon, followed by two more in quick succession,
-shows that the man-of-war has indeed recognized her compatriot almost as
-soon as the American. An answering gun from the dispatch boat also shows
-that she has heard and understands.
-
-Capt. Beals looks inquiringly at Van Zandt. “We must continue straight
-on and take our chances in the channel with that craft,” the latter
-says. Then to Navarro: “Do you know what her armament is?”
-
-“Oh, she is not a fighting ship. She has no armament, merely one gun for
-saluting purposes, and her crew cannot number over fifty.”
-
-“Then we are all right. If she gets in our way she must take the
-consequences.”
-
-But the dispatch boat evidently does not intend that the American shall
-pass. She has taken a position in the narrowest part of the channel and
-lies stationary, presenting her broadside to the oncoming yacht.
-
-“Signal that we propose to pass to port,” Van Zandt says to Capt. Beals,
-“and if the Spaniard gets in our course run him down.”
-
-Capt. Beals nods and a second later the hoarse whistle of the Semiramis
-echoes over the waters. The signal is answered with a rifle shot from
-the Spaniard’s forward deck and the dispatch boat moves forward two
-lengths, so that she lies fair and square in the announced course of the
-yacht.
-
-But there are no signs of slackening on the part of the latter, and her
-black hull looks threatening indeed to the officers of the dispatch
-boat.
-
-Caramba! Surely she will not run down the royal vessel! Yet it looks
-very like it! But they will not dare! Still—the Spanish commander
-hesitates no longer. He signals his vessel to back at full speed.
-
-Too late!
-
-The Pizarro has moved less than half a length when the American yacht
-crashes into her. There is a grinding shock that brings Louise Hathaway
-in terror to the deck of the Semiramis, and then the yacht continues on
-her course, apparently unharmed. Van Zandt catches a glimpse of a great
-jagged hole in the bow of the Spaniard, into which the water is pouring
-in a cataract; of a panic-stricken crew rushing frantically for the
-boats; and then he turns to Miss Hathaway. It is nothing, he assures her
-tenderly; a slight collision, but the yacht is all right and perhaps she
-had better return to her stateroom for the present. Later on—and Louise
-smiles, a little sadly, but permits Van Zandt to conduct her to the
-saloon.
-
-Capt. Beals is awaiting Van Zandt as the latter bounds up the steps a
-minute later. “We are badly stove forward,” he reports, “and are making
-water quite rapidly. With the steam pumps going, we may keep afloat
-three or four hours, but the yacht is doomed.”
-
-Van Zandt is so startled at the news that for a moment he is speechless.
-His eyes rove back to the Spanish warship, and then at the nearly
-perpendicular cliffs by which the Semiramis is steaming.
-
-He looks for the dispatch boat, but it is not in sight. “The Spaniard?”
-he inquires, mechanically.
-
-“Gone to the bottom,” laconically replies the captain.
-
-“Then there is no hope for us but to keep on and try to land by the
-boats somewhere on the coast,” Van Zandt says. “The Spaniards will treat
-us all as enemies, now that we have sunk one of their boats. How long
-can we keep up this speed?”
-
-“Perhaps an hour, perhaps more. The water will put out the fires.”
-
-“Well, have the boats quietly prepared and keep within reach of land. Do
-you think the Spaniards will continue the pursuit?”
-
-“Undoubtedly. They will stop only to pick up the crew of the Pizarro,
-and then will keep on after us. If there was some little bay near here
-where we could beach the yacht, but there isn’t.”
-
-The noble craft continues to plow the waves and her injured bow still
-tosses the foam on either side, but her speed is sensibly diminishing.
-All on board have recognized the fact that the yacht is doomed, but
-there is no confusion, no manifest anxiety. The boats have been prepared
-and each member of the crew has secured in a little package his most
-valued possessions. On the quarter-deck Van Zandt, Navarro, Barker and
-Louise Hathaway are silently watching the Spanish warship. The latter is
-gaining now, for the Semiramis is steadily settling.
-
-Navarro, his hat drawn over his eyes and his coat wrapped about him so
-that his countenance is partially veiled, has carefully avoided Louise.
-When she returns to the deck he walks over to where John Barker is
-leaning against the rail and remarks in Spanish:
-
-“If you do not desire to be shot as a deserter I should advise you to
-borrow a suit of clothes from our friend, the owner of the yacht.”
-
-The detective starts. “I guess you’re right,” he replies in English, and
-turns to Van Zandt. Five minutes later he emerges from the cabin attired
-in a fashionable suit of gray.
-
-“The water is within two inches of the boilers,” reports the engineer,
-and Van Zandt sighs heavily.
-
-“Well,” he says, “we may as well take to the boats. Come.” He leads
-Louise to the steamer’s launch.
-
-“And he?” Louise points to where the body of Cyrus Felton lies, covered
-by its winding sheet of canvas.
-
-“He will go down with the Semiramis. He could have no nobler tomb.”
-
-Boom! The roar of the Spanish gun is the salute the people of the
-Semiramis hear as the boats pull away from the doomed yacht. The cruiser
-is within range and though her commander must be aware that the American
-vessel is sinking he is firing on her.
-
-“The coward!” grits Van Zandt. “But the Semiramis will not strike her
-flag. She sinks with the stars and stripes flying.”
-
-“Pull hard!” shouts Capt. Beals. “Pull hard! She’s going down!”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LVII.
-
- AN INTERNATIONAL EPISODE.
-
-
-“Ashley, we will give you something to write about,” remarks Capt.
-Meade, as the America steams out of the harbor of Santiago.
-
-“What’s that, captain? A thrilling description of a voyage from Santiago
-de Cuba to Key West?”
-
-The commander of the cruiser smiles good-naturedly. “More excitement
-than that, and something that will cause the little senorita to cling
-frantically to your arm.”
-
-“Ah, then, you may open the ball at once.”
-
-“Not yet; not for an hour. In short, we are going to burn some powder by
-and by. A little target practice, and if you have never seen anything of
-the sort you will be rather interested.”
-
-“Confound his target practice,” Jack mutters disgustedly, as Capt. Meade
-bustles away. “The only powder-burning I want to see is the shelling of
-the dingy old city of Santiago by the Spanish fleet.”
-
-But Ashley’s temporary annoyance is soon forgotten in the pleasure of
-assisting Juanita up and down the steep ladders, of explaining the
-machinery, the guns, the great searchlight and the thousand and one
-interesting features of the cruiser.
-
-The target practice, he also finds, is a decidedly interesting affair,
-after all, which conclusion may have been influenced by the manifest
-delight of his sweetheart over the novel experience.
-
-But the last gun is fired, the buoy mark is demolished, and, within
-forty-eight hours, Capt. Meade tells Jack, the America will be lying at
-anchor in the harbor of Key West.
-
-“And she will return to Santiago, when?” the correspondent inquires. “I
-must be back at the finish, if the insurgents capture the city and it is
-shelled by the Spanish fleet.”
-
-Capt. Meade shakes his head. “That depends on instructions received at
-Key West. I suppose though, that the cruiser would be ordered directly
-back to Santiago after coaling.”
-
-Just then the captain is summoned to the bridge, where it is evident
-that some unusual occurrence is engrossing the attention of the
-officers.
-
-Jack observes that the captain has his glass turned toward the
-northwest, and he also looks in that direction. Trails of black smoke
-low down on the horizon, evidently from two steamers, are all that
-reward his gaze, but he notices that the course of the America has been
-changed and that her speed has been materially accelerated.
-
-“What is in the wind?” he inquires, casually, of the youthful ensign.
-
-“That’s just what we’re going to find out,” is the reply, and Ashley
-follows Capt. Meade to the bridge.
-
-“Nothing special that we know of,” is that official’s response to Jack’s
-query as to the cause of the change of course. “Some stranger, probably
-a Spanish gunboat, is in pursuit of another steamer, and as it is not
-much out of our course I concluded to run up nearer the scene.”
-
-The white cruiser is now rushing along at a speed that reminds Jack of
-his first memorable trip upon her, and is rapidly reducing the cloud of
-smoke on the horizon to the outlines of a formidable man-of-war.
-
-“The Spanish cruiser Infanta Isabel,” is the conclusion of Capt. Meade,
-after a long and careful study of the distant steamer. “But the craft
-she is in pursuit of I cannot quite make out. She is a large steamship
-of some sort and the Don is overhauling her hand over fist. We shall be
-there just in time to see the fun.”
-
-The America’s course is converging toward that of pursuer and pursued.
-Capt. Meade’s keen eyes are alternately riveted on the Spanish warship
-and the unknown vessel.
-
-“If that steamship did not set so low in the water,” he remarks,
-thoughtfully, “and was going about two-thirds faster, I should say that
-she was our old friend, the big black yacht Semiramis. But—great heaven!
-The steamer is sinking! That’s what’s the matter with her! She is
-steadily settling!”
-
-All eyes on the cruiser are now directed toward the crippled stranger.
-She is, as Capt. Meade says, slowly sinking while yet the waters are
-dashing on either side of her bow like mountain streams.
-
-“A game struggle, but all in vain,” is the comment of the captain,
-shaking his head. “Probably the Spaniard hulled him below the water line
-early in the struggle, and he has been slowly making water ever since.
-He can’t last much longer. The water must be near the fires now. Ah! I
-thought so!”
-
-For the strange steamer has apparently lost headway. The black smoke
-that a moment before poured from her chimneys now mingles with a white
-cloud of steam.
-
-“Her fires are out,” Capt. Meade explains to Ashley. “She will go down
-in twenty minutes, if she doesn’t blow up before.”
-
-The boom of a heavy cannon startles the watchers and they turn quickly
-to the Spanish man-of-war. A curling wreath of smoke from her forward
-deck tells the origin of the report, and their eyes return to the
-sinking vessel. A puff of wind lifts for a moment the flag hanging limp
-at her masthead, as if in mute defiance of the Spanish shot. Capt. Meade
-starts as if he had received an electric shock.
-
-“The American flag!” he thunders, “and fired on by the Spaniard!” Then
-to the executive officer: “Signal for the forced draught and bear down
-on the steamer. We will pick up her boats and then investigate the
-outrage on the flag.”
-
-Another shot, and still another, comes echoing over the water from the
-Infanta Isabel, her target the fast-filling steamer.
-
-Suddenly Ashley is electrified by the command in the stentorian tones of
-Capt. Meade:
-
-“Clear the ship for action!”
-
-A second later the trumpet’s harsh notes and the sharp rattle of drum,
-mingling with the shrill whistles and rough voices of the boatswain,
-mates and the noisy clanging of the electric gongs, call the sturdy crew
-of the America to “general quarters.”
-
-Then, indeed, is the blood of the newspaper man stirred by the scenes
-about him. The decks throb with the rush of hurrying feet as the men
-hasten to their stations. The gun crews are casting loose the great
-guns, the murderous rapid-fire cannon and the secondary batteries. Some
-are hastily donning equipments, others filling sponge-buckets and still
-others stripping themselves of all superfluous clothing, laying bare
-their brawny forms.
-
-Hatches are covered, hose laid and pumps rigged, ladders torn away, and
-decks turned topsy-turvy, in the twinkling of an eye. Rifles, cutlasses
-and revolvers come out from the armory in quantities that amaze Ashley.
-The marine guard falls in and topmen are scrambling nimbly aloft to
-secure anything movable there.
-
-Down come the rails, out come davits and awning stanchions—everything
-movable is stowed away or secured. The magazines are opened and the
-tackle rigged over the ammunition hatches ready to hoist shot and shell
-for the guns.
-
-“The grim panoply of war,” Jack thinks, as he hastens to conduct the
-wondering Juanita below. Even here, he observes to his great surprise,
-the captain’s sacred cabin has been invaded “on the jump” by the crews
-of the after guns.
-
-As Ashley returns to the quarter-deck he notes that the America is
-bearing hard down almost at right angles on the Spanish warship, now
-distant less than a mile.
-
-“Evidently here is an excellent opportunity for an international
-episode,” he thinks, as he glances at the stern face of “Fighting Dave”
-Meade on the bridge. Then his hand involuntarily goes to his ears and he
-catches at the rail for support, as the forward gun of the American
-cruiser thunders forth and an eight-pound solid shot skims over the
-waves across the bow of the Spanish cruiser.
-
-Before he recovers from the shock of the concussion there is a murmured,
-“She’s going!” from the officers on the quarter-deck and Jack looks
-quickly in the direction of the sinking steamer. But the black hull has
-already disappeared beneath the waves and he sees only the fluttering
-red, white and blue ere the whirling eddies reach their eager arms for
-the beautiful emblem.
-
-The gun from the America does not have the anticipated effect on the
-Spaniard, for he continues full speed toward the spot where the steamer
-sunk. But it has evidently had effect in another direction. With the aid
-of his marine glasses Ashley observes four boats, which had hitherto
-escaped his notice, pulling toward the white cruiser. The purpose of the
-Spanish vessel is thus apparent. She designs to cut off the fleeing
-boats before they may reach the America.
-
-Again the white cruiser careens to one side and a second deafening
-report, this time the gun from amidship, roars out in language not to be
-misunderstood by the on-rushing Spanish man-of-war.
-
-It is not misunderstood.
-
-There is a rapid gush of escaping steam, the stacks cease to vomit forth
-their black clouds and the Infanta Isabel turns her course and steams
-slowly toward the America.
-
-Ashley watches curiously the flashing oars of the coming boats, and when
-the forward one is almost within hail he lifts the glasses to his eyes
-and scans her passengers.
-
-“Thunder and Mars!” he exclaims, “if there isn’t John Barker in the bow
-and—yes, it must be Louise Hathaway, Van Zandt, and—who the devil is
-that chap with the ferocious mustachios? El Terredo, or I’m a sinner!”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LVIII.
-
- THE END OF THE TRAIL.
-
-
-When the first boat is alongside the America, Barker is the first man to
-clamber to the deck, and the first individual he gets his eye on is Jack
-Ashley.
-
-“Hello! Well met,” remarks that young man, extending his hand. “I was
-expecting you any minute.”
-
-Barker gives Jack’s hand a perfunctory clasp and passes on with a gruff
-“Hello!”
-
-“I am not yet forgiven. I see,” thinks Ashley, as he turns to the rest
-of the party coming aboard. He greets Miss Hathaway warmly and Van Zandt
-genially, and grips Navarro’s hand with a pressure of strong friendship.
-
-There is no present opportunity for mutual explanations, as a serious
-interruption is apparent in the shape of a boat that has put out from
-the Spanish man-of-war and is rapidly approaching the America.
-
-With a shade of anxiety the people of the Semiramis await the arrival of
-the boat. They note the preparations to receive with due honor the
-representative of the Infanta Isabel, the marines drawn up in double
-file beside the gangway, the officers of the America in position on the
-quarter-deck. But there is no time for speculation or conjecture. Eight
-pairs of dripping oars are simultaneously raised, the boat glides softly
-to the side of the cruiser, and a moment later the Spanish officer is
-bowing profoundly to the commander of the America.
-
-His excellency, Admiral Sanchez of his majesty’s man-of-war Infanta
-Isabel, presents his compliments to the commander of the United States
-cruiser America and begs to say that the passengers, officers and crew
-of the steamer just sunk, who have sought asylum on the American vessel,
-are rebels, in arms against his majesty the king of Spain; that their
-vessel, just sunk, has within the last three hours destroyed the royal
-Spanish dispatch boat Pizarro. Wherefore his excellency respectfully
-asks that the said officers, passengers and crew of the rebel ship be
-delivered to the representative of her majesty’s ship Infanta Isabel as
-prisoners of war.
-
-Captain Meade listens patiently while the Spanish officer delivers his
-message, his brow knitting slightly at the reference to the destruction
-of the dispatch boat. Then he turns to Captain Beals:
-
-“What have you to say to this statement and why were you flying the
-American flag, if you were in command of an insurgent vessel?”
-
-“We are not insurgents and we did not destroy the dispatch boat,” is the
-reply. “The pleasure yacht Semiramis of New York, Van Zandt owner, was
-in collision with the Pizarro in the harbor of Santiago. The Pizarro
-stood directly in our course, notwithstanding our signals that we
-proposed to pass to port. We should have gone aground if we had not
-fouled her. We did not stop, as the Semiramis was badly stove and
-subsequently sunk, as you have seen. Further, our officers and crew and
-the passengers are without exception American citizens. As such, I
-appeal to the commander of an American vessel for protection.”
-
-“And you shall have it,” murmurs Captain Meade under his breath. To the
-Spaniard he says: “Present my compliments to his excellency, Admiral
-Sanchez, and say that the commander of the America finds upon
-investigation that the officers and crew of the late steamer Semiramis
-are American citizens, who claim the protection of the American flag;
-that her captain and officers maintain that the destruction of the
-Pizarro was an accident for which they are in no wise responsible.
-Therefore I am constrained to decline to grant the courteous request of
-his excellency.”
-
-The Spanish officer bows respectfully and continues: “His excellency
-also desired to convey to the commander of the United States cruiser
-America the information that among the persons lately on board the
-sunken steamer was one Cuban rebel, denominated El Terredo, whom his
-excellency has every reason to believe has sought refuge on board this
-ship. He respectfully requests that said El Terredo be delivered to the
-representative of his majesty’s ship.”
-
-Captain Meade’s eye strays over the little group, but before he can
-speak Navarro steps forward and says in English: “I have been designated
-as El Terredo, but I am an American citizen.”
-
-“I can testify to that statement,” supplements Ashley.
-
-Captain Meade waves his hand. “That is sufficient. Inform his excellency
-that all of the persons picked up in the boats from the lost steamer are
-American citizens. As such, I cannot surrender them.”
-
-Again the officer bows, and his errand performed, he salutes and returns
-to the boat. What will be the effect of his report? Will Admiral Sanchez
-resent with force Captain Meade’s decision, or will he gracefully bow to
-the inevitable? The latter apparently, for a few moments after the
-officer ascends the side of the man-of-war the Spanish flag is dipped in
-salute to the America and the Infanta Isabel steams slowly back in the
-direction of Santiago.
-
-“Again is Providence on the side of the heaviest guns,” murmurs Ashley,
-as he walks over to where Barker is leaning against the rail, and claps
-him on the back. “John, I am powerful glad to see you,” he declares
-heartily.
-
-“I don’t know whether I can say the same or not,” rejoins the detective,
-sulkily. “For a man whose infernal meddling with affairs that did not
-concern him nearly cost me my life, you appear pretty cool and
-unconcerned.”
-
-“My dear friend,” says Ashley, “if I had not been at Jibana half a dozen
-days ago you would never have forgiven yourself for the part you played
-as a soldier of Castile. Do you know who Don Carlos was?”
-
-“I know he, or she, was a woman.”
-
-“Oh, you do?”
-
-“Yes; and if you had shown yourself after the scrimmage, instead of
-sneaking off to Santiago, I might have told you of my discovery.”
-
-“Ungrateful wretch!” cries Ashley in mock reproach. “I admit that I got
-you into the scrape, but I also got you out of it. The fiery El Terredo
-would have strung you to a telegraph pole had I not begged for your life
-and liberty. Yes; Don Carlos was a woman, and she was Helen Hathaway.”
-
-“Then El Terredo?” marvels the detective, who is beginning to see
-daylight.
-
-“Was Derrick Ames, of course. Anyone except a detective would have
-discovered that long ago.”
-
-“Indeed,” retorts Barker. “When did you find it out?”
-
-“Early this morning,” laughs Ashley. “But let us be serious. Where are
-the Feltons, father and son?”
-
-“One dead, and the other perhaps so,” replies Barker, and he tells
-Ashley the story of an exciting day at Santiago.
-
-“It must be done,” the detective is saying, concluding his narrative.
-“Your sympathies naturally stand in the way, so I will relieve you of
-all active participation in the affair. All you will have to do is to be
-a silent witness. One thing you must do, though. You must see Mrs. Ames
-and have her pledge that she will not let her husband know that she has
-told you her story. I must handle the affair gently, as Ames is as
-flashy as gunpowder. You will see Helen, then?”
-
-“Yes; I will fix it immediately. When do you occupy the center of the
-stage?”
-
-“To-morrow. I will let you know in due season.”
-
-“All right, old chap. I will be glad when it is all over. So long.”
-
-There are many happy hearts on the America this night. The meeting
-between the sisters, Helen and Louise, was a dramatic one, and after
-affectionate confidences had been exchanged each sought the man she
-loved best.
-
-But a shadow of sadness hovers about the four as they sit on the
-quarter-deck and watch the big white moon rise out of the sea. Now that
-all the excitement is over Van Zandt has dropped back into his old
-reserve, and the consciousness of his odd relations to Louise Hathaway
-reverts to him with unpleasant keenness. Ames is moody and abstracted
-and only the incessant flow of spirits of Jack Ashley, who joins the
-group with Juanita, keeps the little party alive.
-
-But bedtime comes early, for everyone is thoroughly tired, and the party
-disperses with many a fervent “Good-night, and pleasant dreams.”
-
-And as Van Zandt prepares to go below he feels a touch on his arm and
-turns to see John Barker. “Mr. Van Zandt, will you grant me a few
-minutes before you retire?” requests the detective.
-
-“Certainly,” is the reply. “Come to my stateroom.”
-
-Ashley rises early the next morning and as he smokes his after-breakfast
-cigar Barker joins him.
-
-“I shall want you at ten o’clock, promptly,” says the detective. “Meet
-me in the private cabin, or whatever it is called on shipboard. I have
-secured exclusive use of it for an hour.”
-
-“Very well,” replies Jack, abstractedly.
-
-Promptly at ten, Ashley repairs below, and as he enters the cabin he
-finds Ames and Van Zandt there. They look at him questioningly, but
-before he has opportunity to say more than “Good-morning,” Barker
-enters, closes the door and locks it.
-
-Ames flushes angrily. “So,” he says, “it is at your request that I am
-here?”
-
-“It is,” replies the detective, calmly.
-
-“What do you mean, sir, by inviting me to this place and locking the
-door upon me?”
-
-“I simply do not wish to be disturbed,” is Barker’s unruffled response.
-“The cruiser America is now United States territory. I have business
-with you, Mr. Ames. Gentlemen, will you not be seated?”
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER LIX.
-
- “WRITTEN BY THE HAND OF FATE.”
-
-
-“You are a detective,” murmurs Derrick Ames, as he drops back into his
-chair.
-
-“I am,” answers Barker. “For nearly a year I have been on the track of
-the murderer of Roger Hathaway, being ably seconded in my quest by my
-friend Jack Ashley. The trail has been a tangled one, and has wound
-under the flags of three countries, but for the past fortnight the end
-has been clearly in view. By a remarkable combination of circumstances
-affairs have been so precipitated that to-day nearly all the living
-characters in the Raymond drama are upon this vessel, the United States
-cruiser America. My work is done. I have only my story to tell. I shall
-begin, Mr. Ames, by asking you a few questions,” resumes Barker.
-
-“Well?” queries the object of his remarks.
-
-“At what hour did you enter the Raymond National Bank on the evening of
-Memorial Day of last year?”
-
-“I cannot say exactly. I judge that it was in the vicinity of 7:45.”
-
-“Will you be good enough to state what took place there between you and
-Roger Hathaway?”
-
-Ames scans the detective’s face keenly for a moment, then replies to
-Barker in deliberate tones:
-
-“I went to the bank to ask Mr. Hathaway’s consent that his daughter
-Helen might become my wife. I was confident that my errand was useless,
-as he had twice before scorned my suit. Helen and I had been idling all
-the afternoon on the hillside below the town. As evening drew on I left
-her at the bars and went to the bank, as she stated that she had
-understood her father to say that he should spend the evening at work
-upon his books. It being Memorial Day the streets were deserted, and,
-barring one acquaintance, a chap named Sam Brockway, I did not meet a
-person on my walk up the main thoroughfare. As I crossed the bridge I
-saw Mr. Hathaway standing on the steps of the bank, delivering a note to
-a boy, and when he re-entered the building I followed him.
-
-“‘What do you want?’ he demanded, almost fiercely. I told him, and he
-broke into a torrent of abuse. Naturally hot-tempered, I answered his
-railings in kind, and I know not what might have happened had not Mr.
-Hathaway suddenly ended the dispute by seizing me by the shoulder and
-pushing me through the bank door to the street, threatening, as he did
-so, to have the law on me if I continued my attentions to his daughter.
-Through the glass panel in the door I watched him walk rapidly away in
-the darkness of the interior; saw him as for an instant his form passed
-into the lighted office in the rear of the bank. Then the door to that
-room closed. I never saw Roger Hathaway again.”
-
-“That is sufficient,” says Barker, as Ames pauses. “Your further
-progress up to to-day is known to me.”
-
-“Indeed?”
-
-“Yes. And I may say that from the outset neither Mr. Ashley nor myself
-believed you guilty of the murder of Roger Hathaway. At the most, we
-considered that you might have been a witness to the tragedy. But your
-testimony is the last link in the chain. I am now prepared, gentlemen,
-to relate what in all human probability happened in Raymond on the
-evening of Memorial Day last year.”
-
-“Pardon me, Mr. Barker,” Van Zandt breaks in, abruptly. “I regret to
-tell you that the trail which you have so patiently followed has led you
-to what I should judge, from your preliminary remarks, to be a false
-conclusion.”
-
-“What!” cries the detective, starting from his chair.
-
-“You think Cyrus Felton killed Roger Hathaway. So did I once. We were
-wrong. If Cyrus Felton was responsible for Hathaway’s death it was only
-indirectly, and the Raymond tragedy was the cause of more misery to him
-than any human being should be compelled to bear.”
-
-Barker is too astounded to reply for an instant, and Ames and Ashley
-stare questioningly at Van Zandt.
-
-“Let me relate briefly that much of my story which bears directly upon
-the tragic events in Raymond,” says Van Zandt, quietly.
-
-“On the afternoon of Memorial day of last year I was released from the
-State prison at Windsor, Vermont, after serving two of a three years’
-sentence for forgery, which, in reality, was committed by Ralph Felton.
-I took the afternoon train for Raymond, arriving there at 7:45. I went
-directly to Cyrus Felton’s residence, and reached it at 7:55. As I was
-about to ascend the porch I heard footsteps behind me, and, thinking
-they might be those of the man I sought, I stepped into the shadow of
-the porch. The new arrival had apparently called to see Felton on
-business. I heard the housemaid tell the visitor that Felton was not at
-home; that he might be at his office in the bank building. As the man
-walked away I followed leisurely.
-
-“When I reached the entrance of the bank building a man, presumably the
-caller at Felton’s, came down the stairs and walked down the street.
-Then I went up the stairs and proceeded down the corridor until I
-reached a door with Felton’s name upon it. But the door was locked and
-the office was dark. As I retraced my steps and stood again at the
-entrance of the block a man passed by hurriedly, ascended the steps to
-the bank, opened the door and went in.
-
-“I remained where I was for five minutes, and then walked to the bank
-door and glanced through the glass panel. The interior was dark, save
-for a ray of light that issued through the partly opened door to the
-cashier’s private office. Perhaps Felton is within, I thought, and
-pushing open the front door, which was ajar, I walked softly toward the
-shaft of light that slanted across the bank floor.
-
-“What my errand to Felton was, gentlemen, it is not necessary for me to
-now state. Enough to say that when I threw open the door to the
-cashier’s office I looked upon a sight that froze the blood in my veins.
-
-“Lying upon the polished floor, which was stained with his life-blood,
-was the body of Roger Hathaway, and standing over him was Cyrus Felton,
-a revolver clenched in his right hand.
-
-“When I made my appearance upon the threshold of the office Felton
-turned his head and our eyes met for an instant that must to each have
-seemed an age. Then I closed the door, and a moment later stood at the
-entrance of the bank, gasping for air. Can you not imagine the horror in
-my soul? My one impulse was to flee from the fearful scene. I had
-looked, as I thought, into the face of Roger Hathaway’s slayer, and that
-was the man to whom, incidentally at least, I owed the two past years of
-misery. Falsely imprisoned for one crime, might I not be accused of
-another and greater one? All this and more flashed through my brain, and
-I hurried to the railway station. There I learned that no train was due
-for hours. I staggered away from the station and plunged down the track
-into the night.
-
-“How I made my way over mountain and through forest to southeastern
-Vermont and rode to New York on the trucks of a freight car; how I read
-in a New York paper of the crime that startled Vermont and of my
-supposed connection with the affair; how in that same paper I saw a
-personal advertising that if Phillip Van Zandt, who left Montana over
-two years ago, would communicate with Ezra Smith, lawyer of Butte,
-Montana, he would learn of something to his advantage; how I, being the
-much wanted Van Zandt, proceeded to Montana and discovered that I was
-sole heir to the immense fortune of my uncle, a silver king in that
-State, from whom I had foolishly parted in anger two years before—all
-this and more I will relate at another time, gentlemen, if you care to
-listen.
-
-“Not until late last night,” continues Van Zandt, “did I have the
-opportunity of examining the papers given in my possession by Cyrus
-Felton just before he died in the consul’s residence at Santiago.”
-
-As he speaks Van Zandt takes from his pocket a packet of papers, selects
-one of them and tosses it across the table to Barker. “Read that,” he
-says. “Read it aloud.”
-
-The detective unfolds the document and reads:
-
- “Santiago de Cuba, April 15.—This is written by the hand of
- fate. I shall not live to see to-morrow’s sun rise. I know it.
- The presentiment of my end is so irresistible that no effort of
- will can shake it off. And I am glad that it is so. I could not
- endure another day such as this has been. I should go mad.
-
- “To-day I saw the detective. I have felt that for months he has
- been pursuing me. And I have looked again into the eyes, the
- glittering, pitiless eyes, that stared at me nearly a year ago
- across the corpse of Roger Hathaway—the eyes of the man whom, to
- shield my son, I cruelly wronged. From the hour, a month or more
- ago, that I met Phillip Van Zandt I feared him. A nameless dread
- took possession of me. To-day I recognized him and I read
- hatred, contempt and menace in his eyes. He thinks I killed
- Roger Hathaway, and what manner of vengeance he has in store I
- know not.
-
- “But Roger Hathaway killed himself. Together we wrecked the
- Raymond National Bank. It was the old story of unfortunate
- investments, and the blame was chiefly mine. But when the crash
- was imminent Hathaway proved the hero and I the coward. He
- killed himself and saved both his name and mine. And yet with
- that bullet he put an end to all his troubles, while I—I have
- suffered for months the tortures of the damned.
-
- “With this I inclose his letter, which he left on his desk for
- me the evening of Memorial Day. It has been on my person since
- that fatal night, and it has seared my very soul. I have not
- dared to destroy it or to leave it where it might be found, for
- it is at once the proof of my guilt and of my innocence. If it
- becomes necessary to clear—
-
- “Ah, he is coming.
-
- Cyrus Felton.”
-
-Barker mechanically unfolds the inclosure, three sheets of letter paper
-crumpled and worn. The stillness within the cabin is deathlike as the
-detective reads:
-
- “Before your eyes rest upon these lines the hand that pens them
- will be cold in death. I have taken the only alternative. For
- myself I care not, but that the finger of scorn should be
- pointed at my defenseless children; that their young lives
- should be blighted and they shunned and avoided as lepers
- because their father betrayed his trust and cruelly wronged his
- friends and neighbors, I cannot bear it. The banks, both of
- them, are irretrievably involved. The funds deposited by the
- county to pay the bonds have been used to meet pressing
- obligations. The crash would come to-morrow. It cannot be staved
- off another day. I have thought it all out. For the sake of my
- children and the name they bear I am about to take my own life.
- But they nor any other living person save you must ever know
- that I did not die by the hand of the assassin. I have arranged
- that it will appear as if the bank has been robbed and the
- cashier murdered. As I write this room bears evidence of a
- fearful struggle. The vault is open and the securities in
- confusion. Thus will our crime be hidden from the eyes of all
- save God. Your personal account overdrawn I have fixed by the
- removal of pages from the ledger, so that when the examination
- of the bank’s affairs is made there may be no suspicion of
- irregularity on your part or mine. You will be the first to find
- my lifeless body. The weapon by which I die you must secure and
- secrete.
-
- “And now, farewell. That the sacrifice I am about to make may
- not be in vain I adjure you guard well the secret of my death.
- Care for my children. Watch over them, cherish them. By our hope
- of heaven and forgiveness, by our life-long friendship, by the
- bitter sacrifice to which duty points the way, by all these
- things I charge you, Cyrus Felton, fail not at the peril of your
- good name.
-
- Roger Hathaway.”
-
-As Barker concludes the reading of the remarkable epistle each of the
-four men is busy with his thoughts. No one offers any comment on the
-message from the dead. Finally Ames breaks the silence.
-
-“And Ralph Felton?” he queries, turning to Barker.
-
-“He had nothing whatever to do with the death of Roger Hathaway,”
-returns the detective. “He refused to answer the coroner’s question at
-the inquest as to where he had spent his time between 7:45 o’clock and
-8:30 on the evening of Memorial Day because he did not wish his
-association with Isabel Winthrop, or Harding, to become known when he
-had been a suitor for the hand of Helen Hathaway. But that was not his
-principal reason for leaving Raymond as suddenly as he did. As
-bookkeeper of the savings bank he had embezzled a portion of the
-funds—not a sensational peculation, only sufficient to keep pace with
-his expenditures, which were in excess of his income. Fearing that his
-offense would be made public when the bank’s affairs were overhauled, he
-fled. It was with difficulty that I extracted from him yesterday
-afternoon a confession of his reason for leaving Raymond.
-
-“As to the locket supposed to have been removed from Hathaway’s watch
-chain the night of the tragedy, and which Mr. Ashley picked up a few
-nights ago, I supposed until yesterday that it had been dropped by Ralph
-Felton. But it seems that it was torn from Mr. Ames’ neck when Felton
-hurled himself upon him on that memorable evening at Jibana. Mr.
-Hathaway had detached it from his chain the morning of Memorial Day, as
-the spring was broken, and had given it to Helen to convey to the
-jeweler’s to be repaired. It left Raymond with her, and when she and her
-husband took up their Cuban life the miniature of the younger sister was
-removed, for obvious reasons, and Mr. Ames wore the locket about his
-neck, attached to a long gold chain.”
-
-Another silence, which this time Van Zandt breaks.
-
-“Now that the facts in the case are in your possession, Mr. Barker, I
-presume you will feel it your duty to report them to the proper
-authorities.”
-
-The detective does not reply. He glances curiously at Ashley, and the
-latter passes over a cigar, which the detective bites in meditative
-fashion.
-
-“And you?” Van Zandt queries, turning to Ashley.
-
-“It would make a capital story,” drawls Jack, who has already told
-himself that the big bunch of “copy” in the pigeonhole of his desk in
-the Hemisphere office will never greet a compositor’s eye.
-
-“No doubt,” says Van Zandt, gravely. “But, like many capital stories, it
-would be a source of endless pain to two estimable young ladies. It
-would render nil the sacrifice which Roger Hathaway made to preserve his
-family name from disgrace, and would make a hollow mockery of the simple
-epitaph which you tell me marks the marble shaft above his
-grave—‘Faithful Unto Death.’”
-
-The detective lights his cigar.
-
-“Is there any likelihood, Mr. Barker, of the state of Vermont paying the
-$1,000 reward which was offered?” continues Van Zandt.
-
-“None,” replies Barker. “The reward was for the arrest and conviction of
-Roger Hathaway’s murderer.”
-
-“And the additional $4,000 offered by the bank?”
-
-Barker smiles sardonically.
-
-Van Zandt takes from his pocket a folded slip of paper and passes it
-across the table to the detective.
-
-“There is a check for $5,000,” he says. “It is not a bribe. It is only
-your just dues for the labors that you have expended on the case.
-Personally, I am under deep obligations to you. As to whether the
-Raymond mystery shall remain a mystery, I leave it to your own sense of
-duty.”
-
-Barker folds the check slowly, and, as he slips it into his vest pocket,
-he remarks, with a glance toward Ashley:
-
-“If my partner consents, the Hathaway case may as well remain as now
-fixed in the coroner’s records in Raymond, Vermont.”
-
-“Your partner came to that decision some time ago,” is Ashley’s quiet
-response.
-
-“Thank you, gentlemen,” says Van Zandt, as he rises. “And now, my
-friends, suppose we rejoin the ladies. They will begin to think that we
-have deserted them.”
-
-
- THE END.
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- ● Transcriber’s Notes:
- ○ The spelling of some words were corrected if they appeared likely
- to be typographic errors; otherwise they were left as written.
- ○ At the end of Chapter X there was an image of the note Cyrus
- received. The the image was almost illegible so only the text was
- included.
- ○ The word “clue” is consistently spelled “clew” throughout the
- book. It appears in older dictionaries.
- ○ Accent marks were omitted in all but one Spanish word (café) that
- would normally require them.
- ○ Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
- ○ Typographical errors were silently corrected.
- ○ Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only
- when a predominant form was found in this book.
- ○ Text that was in italics is enclosed by underscores (_italics_).
- Text that was marked bold is enclosed by equal signs (=Now!=).
-
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Under Three Flags, by Bert Leston Taylor</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<table style='min-width:0; padding:0; margin-left:0; border-collapse:collapse'>
- <tr><td>Title:</td><td>Under Three Flags</td></tr>
- <tr><td></td><td>A Story of Mystery</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Bert Leston Taylor and Alvin T. Thoits</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: May 15, 2021 [eBook #65345]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: MFR, Gísli Valgeirsson, Barry Abrahamsen, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK UNDER THREE FLAGS ***</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c000' />
-</div>
-<div>
- <h1 class='c001'><em class='gesperrt'>UNDER THREE FLAGS</em><br />—A Story of Mystery</h1>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c002' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><span class='c004'><span class='sc'>Under Three Flags</span></span></div>
- <div class='c005'><span class='xlarge'><span class="blackletter">A Story of Mystery</span></span></div>
- <div class='c005'>BY</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='c006'>B. L. TAYLOR <span class='fss'>AND</span> A. T. THOITS.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/publogo.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='small'>CHICAGO AND NEW YORK:</span></div>
- <div><span class='large'>RAND, McNALLY &amp; COMPANY.</span></div>
- <div><span class='small'>MDCCCXCVI.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><em class='gesperrt'><span class='large'>A PRIZE STORY</span></em></div>
- <div class='c003'>In <span class='sc'>The Chicago Record’s</span> series of “Stories of Mystery.”</div>
- <div class='c003'><em class='gesperrt'><span class='xlarge'>UNDER THREE FLAGS</span></em></div>
- <div class='c000'>BY</div>
- <div class='c000'><span class='sc'>B. L. Taylor and A. T. Thoits</span>.</div>
- <div class='c005'>(This story—out of 816 competing—was awarded the THIRD PRIZE in <span class='sc'>The Chicago Record’s</span> “$30,000 to Authors” competition.)</div>
- <div class='c002'>──────────────────</div>
- <div>Copyright, 1896, by B. L. Taylor and A. T. Thoits.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c005'>
- <div><span class='c004'>UNDER THREE FLAGS.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c007' />
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER I.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>“OVER THE HILLS AND FAR AWAY.”</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“No; I am not tired of life. Who could be on such a
-day? I am weary simply of this way of living. I want
-to get away—away from this stagnant hole. It is the
-same dull story over and over again, day after day, world
-without end, amen!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Would you be a bit more contented in any other
-spot?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I think so. I cannot believe that mankind in general
-is so selfish, so hypocritical, and, worst crime of all, so
-hopelessly stupid as it is here. The world is 25,000
-miles in circumference. Why spend all one’s days in
-this split in the mountains?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But, tell me, what is your ambition, then? Have
-you one?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You would smile pityingly if I told it you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No; I’ll be as serious as—as you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then incline thine ear. I would I were the ruler of
-a savage tribe, in the heart of far-away New Zealand,
-shut in by towering mountains from the outer world.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But why spend all one’s days in a valley?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, well, if you’re going in for a valley, why not
-have a good one?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>She throws herself down beside him on the grass and
-clasps her arms about his neck. “You foolish boy; you
-don’t know what you want.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Don’t I?” He draws the glowing face to his and
-kisses it.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The two are idling in a grassy nook on the slope of
-one of Vermont’s green hills, sheltered by a clump of
-spruce from observation and the slanting rays of the sun.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>There is an infinite calm in the late spring air, and
-the golden afternoon drifts by on lazy pinions. Away
-in the west, across the vale, the main spur of the Green
-Mountain range awaits the last pencilings of the low-descending
-sun. Southward Wild River sings its way
-through buttercup and daisy flecked meadows; to the
-north the smoke from the chimneys of Raymond blurs
-the lines of as fair a landscape as earth can boast.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Derrick Ames pulls his hat over his eyes, stretches
-himself on the greensward and gazes long and lovingly
-at his companion. The fair face, browned by many rambles
-among the hills; the rippling hair, tumbled in confusion
-about mischievous and laughter-laden brown
-eyes; the rounded arms; the slim, girlish figure, about
-which even the coarse dress donned for mountain climbing
-falls in graceful lines; the dainty feet and the perfectly
-turned ankles, make a picture for an artist.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>She picked up the book which lies open upon the
-grass and glances over its pages, dreamily.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The sun goes down in a golden haze, and still the
-lovers tarry in their sylvan trysting-place.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is getting late and damp; we had better be moving,”
-he says, finally.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>They arise and take their way across the pasture, their
-arms clasped about each other’s waist. Derrick is talking
-in low, earnest tones, with an infrequent interruption
-by his companion.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It’s no use,” he exclaims, impatiently, in reply to a
-protest on her part. “Twice I have spoken to your
-father, with the same result. I have been refused and
-insulted. He is selfish, overbearing—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>She places one hand upon his lips. “But will you not
-make a third trial—for my sake,” she pleads.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“For your sake I would do anything,” he answers,
-pressing the soft hand to his lips. “There is no time
-like the present. Will you wait for me here?” She
-nods. “Where will I find your father?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At the bank. I think he said he would be there all
-the evening.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I will return shortly, for I know what the answer
-will be.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>She watches the erect form of her lover as he strides
-down the road leading into the village.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The shadows deepen in the valley. The opalescent
-light that hangs over the range fades into the darkening
-gray. The moon rises in full, round splendor and transforms
-the river into a silver torrent.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The clanging of the Raymond town clock, as it hammers
-out the hour of 8, rouses the girl. “Derrick should
-be here soon,” she murmurs. Then she clutches her
-heart with an exclamation of pain and terror.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is a swift, sharp spasm, that passes away as quickly
-as it came, and which leaves the girl for several minutes
-afterward somewhat dazed. Footsteps echo in the road.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The result?” eagerly, anxiously queries the girl as
-Derrick reaches her side.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He must have walked swiftly. He is breathing hard
-and his face is pale as the moonlight. Or is it the reflection
-of that light?</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Come away from here, for God’s sake!” he exclaims
-in a harsh, unnatural voice, half-dragging her into the
-road. “I beg your pardon; I did not mean to be rough,”
-he adds, as the astonished eyes of the girl look into his.
-“Will you come for a walk, dear?” And as she follows,
-mechanically, wonderingly, he walks swiftly away from
-the village.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am all out of breath,” she protests, after a few moments
-of the fierce pace he has set. And they stop to
-rest at a spring beside the road.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You have quarreled with father,” asserts the girl, half
-questioningly; but Derrick remains silent.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He stops suddenly, and, holding her in his arms,
-smooths back the dark ringlets from her moist brow.
-“Helen, darling, do not press me for an answer to-night.
-Let us be happy in the present. God knows it may not
-be for long.” He presses a passionate kiss upon the
-girl’s unresisting and unresponsive lips, and then lifts
-to the moonlight a face as troubled as the tossing river
-behind the dusky willows. As he releases her he extends
-his arm toward the ball of silver that is wheeling
-up the heavens. “See!” he cries. “The moon is up
-and it is a glorious night. Shall we follow that pathway
-of silver over the hills and far away?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A loving look is her willing assent.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The witchery that the moon is said to exert o’er mortals
-must be more than a poet’s myth. A strange peace
-has come upon the girl. Her senses are exalted. She
-seems to be walking on air. Nor does she now
-break upon the silence of her companion, whose agitation
-has been replaced by a singular calm.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>What a stillness, yet what a busy world claims the
-woods they are crossing to-night! The crawling of a
-beetle through the dead leaves is distinctly heard, and a
-thousand small noises that the day never hears fill the
-forest with a strange music.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A short distance farther and the wanderers emerge
-into the open and pause to marvel at the picture spread
-before them.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is a wondrous night. Bathed in a radiance that
-tips with silver every dew-laden spear of grass, the pasture
-slopes down to a highway, and the brawling of the
-brook beside it comes to their ears as a strain of music.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Silently the lovers take their way through this fairyland,
-clamber over the wall into the road, and continue
-on.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am cold,” complains the girl, with a little shiver.
-Derrick wraps his light overcoat about her shoulders.</p>
-
-<hr class='c012' />
-
-<p class='c011'>The striking of a town clock causes them both to
-start.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Where are we?” asks the girl, looking about her in
-bewilderment. The moon passes behind a cloud. The
-spell is over.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Why, this is Ashfield, isn’t it? There is the station,
-and the church and the—Derrick! Derrick, where have
-we been wandering? Five miles from home and midnight!
-What will Louise and father say? We must
-go home at once.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Home,” he repeats, bitterly, pointing to the north.
-“There is no home yonder for me. Listen, Helen!”
-He draws her to him fiercely. “If we part now it must
-be forever. I shall never go back. I cannot go back!
-Will you not come away with me—somewhere—anywhere?
-Hark!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The whistle of the Montreal express sounds from the
-north.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The girl seems not to hear him. The long whistle of
-the express again echoes through the night.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Helen, darling!” There is a world of yearning and
-entreaty in his voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>She throws her arms about him and kisses him. “Yes,
-Derrick; I will go with you—to the end of the world.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The station agent regards the pair suspiciously. In
-the dim light of the kerosene lamps of the waiting-room
-their features are only partially discernible.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Sorry,” he says, “but this train don’t stop except for
-through passengers to New York.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But we are going to New York,” almost shouts Derrick.
-“Quick, man!” The train has swept around the
-curve above the village and is thundering down the
-stretch.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Wall, I guess I kin accommerdate ye,” drawls the
-station master. He seizes his lantern and swings it about
-his head and No. 51 draws up panting in the station.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Elopement, I guess,” confides the station agent to
-the conductor, as Derrick and the girl clamber aboard
-the train.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The latter growls something about being twenty minutes
-late out of St. Albans, swings his lantern and No.
-51 rumbles away in the mist and moonlight.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER II.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>THE PRISONER OF WINDSOR—THE TRAGEDY OF A NIGHT.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“Stanley, I have good news for you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“All news is alike to me, sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Warden Chase of the Vermont state prison regards
-the young man before him with a kindly eye.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Your sentence of three years has been shortened by
-a year, as the governor has granted you an unconditional
-pardon,” he announces.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“His excellency is kind,” replied the young man in a
-voice that expresses no gratitude and may contain a
-faint shade of irony.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He is a striking-looking young fellow, even in his
-prison garb, his dark hair cropped close and his eyes
-cast down in the passive manner enjoined by the prison
-regulations. His height is about five feet ten inches
-and his figure is rather slender and graceful. His face
-is singularly handsome. His eyes are dark brown, almost
-black, and the two long years of prison life have
-dimmed but little of the fire that flashes from their depths.
-A square jaw bespeaks a strong will. The rather hard
-lines about the firm mouth were not there two years
-before. He has suffered mentally since then. There
-are too many gray hairs for a man of 28.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Warden Chase touches a bell. “Get Stanley’s things,”
-he orders the attendant, who responds.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Sit down, Stanley.” The young man obeys and the
-warden wheels about to his desk.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am authorized to purchase you a railroad ticket
-to any station you may designate—within reason, of
-course,” amends Mr. Chase. “Which shall it be?” A
-bitter smile flits across Stanley’s face and he remains
-silent.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“North, east, south or west?” questions Mr. Chase,
-poising his pen in air.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have no home to go to,” finally responds Stanley,
-lifting his eyes for the first time since his entrance to
-the room.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No home?” repeats the warden, sympathetically.
-“But surely you must want to go somewhere. You
-can’t stay in Windsor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Stanley is thoughtful. “Perhaps you had better make
-the station Raymond,” he decides, and he meets squarely
-the surprised and questioning look of the warden.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But that is the place you were sent from.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is not your home? No; I believe you just stated
-that you had no home.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have none.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And you wish to revisit the scene of your—your
-trouble?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Stanley’s gaze wanders to the open window and across
-the valley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, it’s your own affair,” says the warden, turning
-to his desk. “The fare to Raymond is $2.50. I am also
-authorized to give you $5 cash, to which I have added
-$10. You have assisted me about the books of the
-institution and have been in every respect a model prisoner.
-In fact,” supplements Mr. Chase, with a smile,
-“under different circumstances I should be sorry to part
-with you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank you,” acknowledges Stanley, in the same impassive
-tones.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And now, my boy,” counsels the warden, laying one
-hand kindly on the young man’s shoulder, “try to make
-your future life such that you will never be compelled to
-see the inside of another house of this kind. I am
-something of a judge of character. I am confident that
-you have the making of a man in you. Here are your
-things,” as the attendant arrives with Stanley’s effects.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Chase resumes his writing and Stanley withdraws.
-Once within the familiar cell, which is soon to know him
-no more, his whole mood changes.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Free!” he breathes, exultingly, raising his clasped
-hands to heaven. “What matter it if my freedom be of
-a few days only, of a few hours? It will be enough for
-my purpose. Heavens! Two years in this hole, caged
-like a wild beast, the companion of worse than beasts—a
-life wrecked at 28. But I’ll be revenged! As surely
-as there is a heaven above me, I’ll be repaid for my
-months of misery. An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a
-tooth!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He throws his prison suit from him with loathing.
-Then he sinks back into his apathy and the simple toilet
-is completed in silence.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A suit of light gray, of stylish cut, a pair of well-made
-boots, a negligee shirt and a straw hat, make considerable
-change in his appearance. He smiles faintly as he dons
-them.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He ties his personal effects in a small package. They
-are few—half a dozen letters, all with long-ago post-marks,
-a couple of photographs, and a small volume of
-Shakespeare given him by the warden, who is an admirer
-of Avon’s bard.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Off?” asks Mr. Chase, as he shakes hands. “Well,
-you look about the same as when I received you. A
-little older, perhaps”—surveying him critically—“and
-minus what I remember to have been a handsome mustache.
-Good-by, my boy, and good luck. And, I say,”
-as Stanley strides toward the door, “take my advice and
-the afternoon train for New York. Get some honest
-employment and make a name for yourself. You’ve got
-the right stuff in you. By the way, do you know what
-day it is?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have not followed the calendar with reference to
-any particular days.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The 30th day of May—Memorial day,” says Mr.
-Chase.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It will be a memorial day for me,” responds Stanley.
-“Good-by, Mr. Chase, and thank you for your many
-kindnesses.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I’m rather sorry to have him go,” soliloquizes the
-warden, as his late charge walks slowly away from the
-institution. “Bright fellow, but peculiar—very peculiar.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Stanley proceeds leisurely along the road leading to
-the station. His eyes are bent down, and he seemingly
-takes no note of the glories of the May day, of the
-throbbings of the busy life about him. A procession
-of Grand Army men, headed by a brass band that makes
-music more mournful than the occasion seems to call
-for, passes by on the dusty highway.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Homage for the dead; contumely for the living,” he
-murmurs, bitterly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The train for the north leaves at 4:30. Stanley spends
-the time between in making some small purchases at
-the village.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At what hour do we arrive at Raymond?” he asks
-the conductor, as the train pulls out.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Seven forty-five, if we are on time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank you,” returns the young man. He draws his
-hat over his eyes, and turns his face to the window.</p>
-
-<hr class='c012' />
-
-<p class='c011'>At 7:45 o’clock in the evening Sarah, the pretty housemaid
-at the residence of Cyrus Felton, answers a sharp
-ring at the door bell. In the semi-darkness of the vine-shaded
-porch she distinguishes only the outlines of a
-man who stands well back from the door. The gas has
-not yet been lighted in the hall.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Is Mr. Felton at home?” inquires the visitor.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The young or the old Mr. Felton?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The young or the old?” repeats the man to himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Sarah twists the door-knob impatiently. “Well?” she
-says.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I beg your pardon; I was not aware that there were
-two Mr. Feltons. I believe the elder is the person I wish
-to see.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He is not at home.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He is in town?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, yes. He went down-street about 7 o’clock, but
-we expect him back before long.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Would he be likely to be at his office?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Sarah does not know. Mr. Felton rarely goes to the
-office evenings. Still, he may be there.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And the office is where?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In the bank block.” Sarah peers out at her questioner,
-but, with a “thank you,” he has already stepped
-from the porch. As he strides away in the dusk and the
-house door slams behind him, a second figure leaves
-the shadow of the trellis, moves across the lawn and
-pauses at the gate.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In the bank building,” he muses. “One visitor ahead
-of me. Well, there is no need of my hurrying,” and he
-saunters toward the village, the electric lamps of which
-have begun to flash.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At 8:05, as Sarah afterwards remembers, Cyrus Felton
-arrives home. Sarah comes into the hall to receive
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A gentleman called to see you, sir, about ten minutes
-ago. Did you meet him on your way?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Probably not. I have been over to Mr. Goodenough’s.
-Did he leave any name?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No, sir. Oh, and here is a letter that a boy brought
-a little while ago.” Sarah produces a note from the hall
-table and disappears upstairs.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Felton opens the note, glances at its contents
-and utters an exclamation of impatience. He crumples
-the paper in his hand, seizes his hat and hurries from
-the house and down the street.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>In the brightly lighted room of Prof. George Black,
-directly over the quarters of the Raymond National Bank,
-a party of young men are whiling away a few pleasant
-hours. The professor is lounging in an easy-chair, his
-feet in another, and is lost in a “meditation” for violin, to
-which Ed Knapp is furnishing a piano accompaniment.
-Suddenly the professor rests his violin across his knees.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Hark!” he exclaims and bends his head toward the
-open window. “Wasn’t that a shot downstairs?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Probably,” assents one of the group. “The boys in
-the bank have been plugging water rats in the river all
-the afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But it’s too dark to shoot rats.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, one can aim pretty straight by electric light. Go
-ahead with your fiddling, George. Get away from that
-piano, Knapp, and let the professor give us the cavatina.
-That’s my favorite, and your accompaniment would ruin
-it. Let ’er go, professor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As the strains of the Raff cavatina die away, a man
-comes out of the entrance of the Raymond National
-Bank. He glances swiftly up, then down the street. Then
-he crosses the road in the shadow of a tall building and
-hurries toward the station.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There is no train, north or south, before 11:50,” says
-the telegraph operator, in response to a query at the window.
-He is clicking off a message and does not turn
-his head. His questioner vanishes.</p>
-
-<hr class='c012' />
-
-<p class='c011'>“Jim, Mr. Felton wants to see you,” the clerk of the
-Raymond Hotel informs the sheriff of Mansfield County,
-who is playing cards in a room off the office. Sheriff
-Wilson is a man with a game leg, a war record, and a
-wild mania for the diversion of sancho pedro. When he
-sits in for an evening of that fascinating pastime he dislikes
-to be disturbed.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What’s he want?” he asks absent-mindedly, for he
-has only two more points to make to win the game.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Dunno. He seems to be worked up about something.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“High, low, pede!” announces the sheriff triumphantly.
-“Gentlemen, make mine a cigar.” He throws his
-cards down and goes out into the office. Cyrus Felton
-is pacing up and down excitedly. He grasps the officer
-by the arm and half drags him from the hotel. When
-they are out of hearing of the loungers he exclaims,
-in a voice that trembles with every syllable:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Mr. Wilson, a fearful crime has been committed. Mr.
-Hathaway has been murdered!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Murdered!” The sheriff’s excitement transcends that
-of his companion, who is making a desperate effort to
-regain his composure.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He is at the bank. I discovered him only a few
-moments ago. Come, see for yourself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>They soon reach the bank, which is only a stone’s
-throw from the hotel. After passing the threshold of
-the cashier’s office in the rear of the banking-room the
-two men stop and look silently upon the grewsome
-sight before them.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Lying upon the floor, one arm extended toward and
-almost touching the wide-open doors of the vault, is
-the body of Cashier Roger Hathaway. His life has
-ebbed in the crimson pool that stains the polished
-floor.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER III.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>JACK ASHLEY, JOURNALIST.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>A loud pounding on the door of his room in the
-tavern at South Ashfield awakens Mr. Jack Ashley from
-a dream of piscatorial conquest.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Four o’clock!” announces the disturber of his slumbers,
-with a parting thump. Ashley rolls out of bed and
-plunges his face into a brimming bowl of spring water.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is early dawn. A cool breeze, laden with the scent
-of apple blossoms, drifts through the window.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“God made the country and man made the town,”
-quotes the young man, as he descends to the hotel office.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ain’t used to gittin’ up at this hour, be ye?” grins the
-proprietary genius of the tavern.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The habit, worthy host, has not fastened upon me
-seriously. This is usually my hour for going to bed.
-Hast aught to eat?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Breakfas’ all ready,” with a nod toward what is
-known as the dining-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley shudders as he gazes at the spread. It is the
-usual Vermont breakfast—weak coffee, two kinds of
-pie on one plate, and a tier of doughnuts.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Gad! This country is a howling wilderness of pie!”
-he mutters, surveying the repast in comical despair. “And
-to flash it on a man at 4 a.m.! It is simply barbarous!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>During his short vacation sojourn Mr. Ashley’s epicurean
-tastes have suffered a number of distinct shocks.
-But the ozone of the Green Mountains has contributed
-toward the generation of an appetite that needs little
-tempting to expend its energies. He makes a hearty
-breakfast on this particular morning, drowns the memories
-of the menu in a bowl of milk, and announces
-to Landlord Howe that he is ready to be directed to the
-best trout brook in central Vermont.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Howe surveys the eight-ounce bamboo with mild
-disdain. “Them fancy rigs ain’t much good on our
-brooks,” he declares. “Ketch more with a 75-cent rod.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am rather inclined to agree with you on that point,
-most genial boniface; but it’s the only rod I happen
-to have with me, and I expect to return with some
-fish unless the myriad denizens of the brook which you
-enthusiastically described last night exist only in your
-imagination. By the way, what do you think of the
-bait?” passing over a flask.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Howe’s faded blue eyes moisten and a kindly smile
-plays over a countenance browned by many summers in
-the hay field.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Didn’t buy that in Vermont,” he ventures.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Hardly. I’m not lined with asbestos.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The landlord grins. It is a habit he has.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I keeps a little suthin’ on hand myself,” he confides
-in a cautious undertone, although only the cattle are
-listening. “But fact is, there ain’t no use er keepin’
-better’n dollar’n a half a gallon liquor. The boys want
-suthin’ that’ll scratch when it goes down. Now that, I
-opine,” with an affectionate glance at the flask which
-Ashley files away for future reference, “must a cost nigh
-onter $3 a gallon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“As much as that,” smiles Ashley. “That, most appreciative
-of bonifaces, is the best whisky to be found
-on Fulton street, New York. Well, I must be ‘driving
-along.’ Where’s this wonderful brook of yours?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Follow that road round through the barnyard and
-‘cross the basin to the woods. Good fishin’ for four
-miles. And mind,” as Ashley saunters away, “don’t bring
-back any trouts that ain’t six inches long, or the fish
-warden will light on ye.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thanks. If I should run across the warden—” and
-Ashley holds up the flask.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That’d fetch him, I reckon,” chuckles Mr. Howe.
-Ashley vaults over the bars and strides across the
-meadows.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley is in high feather. “This air rather discounts
-an absinthe frappe for stimulative purposes,” he soliloquizes.
-“Ah, here’s the wood, there’s the brook, and
-if I mistake not, yonder pool hides a whopper just aching
-for a go at the early worm.” But it doesn’t and Ashley
-enters the forest.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The farther he plunges into the spice-laden wilderness
-the more is he enchanted with his surroundings.
-Picture a cleft in the mountain whose sides drop almost
-sheer to a gorge barely wide enough to accommodate a
-wood road and a brook that parallels and often encroaches
-upon it. Tall pines interlace and shut out the
-direct rays of the sun and every now and then a cascade
-comes tumbling somewhere aloft and plunges into a
-broad, pebble-lined basin.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As Ashley sits by one of these pools, his wading boots
-plunged deep in the crystal liquid, and pulls lazily on a
-briar pipe, the reader is offered the opportunity of becoming
-better acquainted with him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He is a prepossessing young fellow of something like
-27, medium height and rather well built. Blue eyes and
-an aggressive nose, on which gold-bowed eyeglasses are
-airily perched, are characteristics of a face which has
-always been a passport for its owner into all society
-worth cultivating. A well-shaped head is adorned with
-a profusion of blond curls, supplemented by a mustache
-of silken texture and golden hue, which its possessor
-is fond of twisting when he is in a blithesome humor,
-which is often, and of tugging at savagely when in a reflective
-mood, which is infrequent.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley is noted among his friends for chronic good
-humor and unbounded confidence in his own abilities.
-He is one of the brightest all-round writers on the New
-York Hemisphere, and he knows it. The best of it is,
-City Editor Ricker also knows it. All the office sings
-of his exploits and “beats” and does their author reverence.
-Jack always calls himself a newspaper man. That
-is the sensible title. Yet he might wear the name of
-journalist much more worthily.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley is in Vermont for his health. Five years of
-continuous hustling on a big New York daily has necessitated
-a breathing spell. He was telling Mr. Ricker that
-his “wheels were all run down and needed repairing,”
-and that he believed he would take his vacation early
-this year.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I’ll tell you where you want to go,” volunteered the
-city editor, who was “raised” among the Green Mountains
-and served his apprenticeship gathering locals on
-a Burlington weekly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“All right; let’s have it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Take three weeks off and go up into Vermont.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Vermont—Vermont—where’s Vermont? O, yes, that
-green daub on the map of New England. Railroad run
-through there?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Now, see here, Jack,” retorted Ricker, “you’re not
-so confoundedly ignorant as you imply. That’s the
-trouble with you New Yorkers who were born and bred
-here. You consider everything above the Harlem River
-a jay community. You’re a sight more provincial than
-half the inhabitants of rural New England.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Jack laughed. “Come to think of it, you hailed from
-there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, and it’s a mighty good State to hail from. Now,
-you run up to Raymond—it’s a little town about in the
-Y of the Green Mountain range. You’ll not have Broadway,
-with its theaters, and restaurants, and bars, but
-you’ll get a big room, with a clean, airy bed to sleep
-in—none of your narrow hall-chamber cots—and good,
-plain, wholesome food to eat. Those necessities of life
-which Vermont does not supply, good tobacco and good
-whisky, you can take with you. You’ll come back feeling
-like a fighting cock.” And before his chief finished painting
-the attractions of the Green Mountain State, with
-incidental references to John Stark and Ethan Allen,
-Ashley was willing to compromise and two days later
-found him en route for Raymond.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Jack fishes the brook as he does everything else—without
-any waste of mental or physical exertion.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Landlord Howe did not deceive him. It is an excellent
-trout brook, and by the time the sun is well up
-he has acquired a well-filled creel. He is sauntering
-along to what he has decided shall be the last pool, when,
-as he turns a bend in the road, he runs upon a man
-lying beside the path, with one arm shading his face and
-clutching in the other hand a package.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Hello!” sings out Ashley, stopping short in surprise.
-The man arises and passes his hand over his eyes in
-bewilderment.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Off the main road, aren’t you?” queries Ashley. The
-stranger makes no reply. He bestows upon Ashley a
-single searching glance and hurries down the road in the
-direction of the village.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He’ll be likely to know me again,” is Jack’s comment.
-“Gad! What eyes! They went through me like
-a stiletto. What the deuce is he prowling around here
-for at this time o’ day? He isn’t a fisherman and he
-can’t be farming it with those store clothes on. Well,
-here goes for the last trout.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The last trout is not forthcoming, however, so the
-fisherman unjoints his rod, reloads and fires his pipe and
-strolls slowly back to the hotel. Landlord Howe sees
-him as he comes swinging across the basin and waits
-with some impatience until the young man gets within
-hailing distance, when he informs him dramatically:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Big murder at Raymond last night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“How big?” asks Ashley, with lazy interest. Murders
-are frequent episodes in his line of business.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Well, it is the largest affair that Mr. Howe has known
-of “round these parts since dad was a kid.” Roger
-Hathaway, cashier of the Raymond National bank, has
-been found murdered and the bank robbed of a large
-sum of money, and there is no clew to the murderer.
-The details of the tragedy have come over the telephone
-wires early this morning, and the whole county is in a
-fever of excitement.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No clew?” muses Ashley, and his interest in the affair
-grows. Then he thinks of the man he encountered on
-the brook an hour ago. “Seen any strangers around
-here?” he inquires of Mr. Howe.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No one ’cept you,” replies that worthy, contributing
-a broad grin.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, but I can prove an alibi,” laughs Jack. “I came
-down from Raymond on the early evening train, and
-everyone was alive in the town then, I guess. Are the
-police of this village on the lookout?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, rather. The local deputy sheriff is on the alert
-as never before in his life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is not impossible that my early morning friend on
-the brook was mixed up in last night’s affair,” thinks
-Ashley. But he says nothing of the meeting. What is
-the use? If the unknown was fleeing he must be pretty
-well into the next county by this time. But in what direction?</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Raymond murder is the one topic of the day at
-South Ashfield. The villagers are gathered in force
-about the hotel veranda and Ashley fancies that they
-regard him a trifle askance as he hunts up a chair and
-kills an hour while waiting for the up-train, in listening
-to the rural persiflage of the group and the ingenious
-theories of the local oracle.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At what time did the killing occur?” he inquires of
-one of the loungers. Somewhere around 8 o’clock the
-night before, he is informed.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And no clew to the murderer,” he meditates. “Now,
-if this was New York I’d take hold of the affair and work
-it for all it was worth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He little dreams what effect the “affair” is to have on
-his future. Yet as the train bears him to Raymond the
-instinct of the newspaper man tells him that it is a cast
-possessing phases of peculiar interest. And he is not
-wholly unprepared for the telegram that is thrust into his
-hands when he leaves the train.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“One of the disadvantages of telling your paper where
-you intend spending your vacation,” he remarks as he
-glances at the dispatch. Then to the telegraph operator:
-“I’ll have a story for you after supper.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER IV.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>THE STORY OF A CRIME.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>The following dispatch appeared in the columns of the
-New York Hemisphere, under the usual sensational headlines:</p>
-<p class='c013'>“Raymond, Vt., May 31.—This quiet town among the
-Green Mountains had cause indeed to mourn upon this
-year’s occurrence of the nation’s Memorial Day. Last
-evening, at the close of the most general observance of
-the solemn holiday yet undertaken in Raymond, the community
-was horror-stricken by the discovery of the foulest
-crime ever committed within the limits of the state.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Roger Hathaway, cashier of the Raymond National
-Bank and treasurer of the Wild River Savings Bank,
-was found murdered at the entrance of the joint vault
-of the two institutions, which had been rifled of money
-and securities aggregating, it is thought, not less than
-$75,000. The crime had apparently been most carefully
-planned and evidenced not only thorough familiarity
-with the town and the interior arrangements of the
-banks, but also the possession of the fact that the national
-bank had on hand at the time an unusual amount of
-ready money. The position of the murdered cashier and
-the conditions of the rooms indicated also that the
-official had met his death while endeavoring to protect
-the funds entrusted to his care, his lifeless body, in fact,
-barring the entrance to the rifled vault, a mute witness
-to his faithfulness even unto death.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“The Raymond National and Wild River Savings
-Banks occupy commodious quarters on the ground floor
-of Bank Block, a three-story brick structure on Main
-Street, the principal business thoroughfare of the town.
-The banking rooms are in the northern portion of the
-block, occupying the entire depth of the building, the
-only entrance being from Main Street. The north wall
-of the block is parallel with a tributary of the Wild River,
-which joins that stream, about 300 yards distant. The
-interiors of the banking-rooms are plainly but conveniently
-arranged. A steel wire cage extends east and west,
-separating the officials of the institutions from the public,
-with the customary counter and two windows for the
-savings and national bank, respectively. At the rear
-of the room is the private office of the cashier, separated
-from the main room in part by the vault, an old-fashioned
-brick affair, built into the partition in such a manner as
-to be partly in both rooms. The iron doors to the vault
-open into the cashier’s private office, although originally
-designed to be entirely within the main office. Some
-years prior the office of the cashier was enlarged to accommodate
-the meetings of the directors, and the partition
-was moved east, bringing the major portion of the
-vault within the enlarged room. Two doors communicate
-with the cashier’s room, one opening from the public
-office, the other from the interior of the main banking-room.
-Two large windows, looking respectively west
-and north, afford light for the cashier’s office. Both
-these windows are heavily barred, as indeed are the two
-windows on the north side of the main office. A dark
-closet, four by six feet, in the southwest corner of the
-cashier’s room, serves in part as a storage-room for old
-ledgers, account-books and supplies, and as a wardrobe
-for employes.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“It was in the cashier’s room that the tragedy that has
-so sadly marred the evening of Memorial Day took place,
-that witnessed the awful struggle between the assassin
-and the white-haired custodian of the bank’s funds. The
-details of that struggle may never be known, but the
-circumstances tell plainly that Cashier Hathaway either
-surprised the assassin in the dark closet, where he had
-perhaps concealed himself to await an opportunity to
-work upon the combination of the safe, or had himself
-been surprised while about to close the door of the
-vault.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“The crime was committed in the vicinity of 8 p.m.,
-and its early discovery—within less than half an hour
-thereafter, indeed—singularly enough was due to a letter
-which the murdered cashier had previously sent to the
-president of the bank, requesting his immediate presence
-to confer on a business matter. The president, the Hon.
-Cyrus Felton, upon returning to his residence shortly
-after 8 o’clock, found a note from Cashier Hathaway
-asking him to call at the bank at once. The note had
-been left by a messenger, the servant stated, about fifteen
-minutes before. Mr. Felton hastily repaired to the bank,
-about ten minutes’ walk. He found the outer door ajar,
-but the door to the cashier’s private office was locked.
-This was not unusual, and, presuming that the cashier
-was busy within, Mr. Felton used his own key and
-opened the door without knocking. Then the awful discovery
-of the murder was made.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Cashier Hathaway lay face downward in front of the
-open safe door, his right arm partially drawn up beneath
-the body and his heavy oaken desk chair overturned
-near by. His first thought being that the cashier had
-fallen in a shock, Mr. Felton hastened to raise the recumbent
-form. As he turned the body over, the soft
-rays from the argand lamp on the cashier’s desk revealed
-an ominous pool upon the polished floor, even now
-augmented by the slight moving of the body. Roger
-Hathaway lay weltering in his own blood, slowly oozing
-from a bullet hole directly over the heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“It was several moments before Mr. Felton could pull
-himself together to take cognizance of the circumstances.
-He then noted the unmistakable evidences of a desperate
-struggle. As stated, the cashier’s own chair lay overturned
-near the body; one of the side drawers in the
-desk was partially drawn out, and the orderly row of
-directors’ chairs were now disarranged as if a heavy body
-had been flung violently against them. The door of the
-dark closet was wide open and a lot of old ledgers that
-had been piled upon its floor were toppled over into the
-room. The doors of the safe were open, and a glance
-within revealed the principal money drawer half-withdrawn,
-and empty save of two canvas bags of specie and
-nickels; a goodly bunch of keys with chain attached
-hanging in the lock. The story was told. Cashier Hathaway
-had been murdered and the bank robbed.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Mr. Felton immediately notified Sheriff Wilson, and
-the legal machinery of the town was at once set in
-motion to encompass the capture of the murderer and
-robber. It was thought that with the short start obtained
-the feat would be a comparatively easy matter.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Nearly $50,000 in available cash, and half as much
-more in securities, part negotiable and part worthless to
-the robber, were secured by the murderer. The presence
-of this unusually large amount of ready money was due
-to the fact that $50,000 of Mansfield County bonds matured
-to-day and were payable at the Raymond National
-Bank.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“The presence of Cashier Hathaway in the bank at that
-particular time was by the merest chance, and the conclusion
-is therefore irresistible that the murder was not
-premeditated. The savings and national banks, though
-both among the most prosperous and stable fiduciary
-institutions in the state, are comparatively small, the
-capital of the national bank being $50,000 and employing
-but a small clerical force. The latter comprise, besides
-the cashier, the teller of the bank, Frederick Sibley; the
-bookkeeper of the savings bank, Ralph Felton, son of the
-president, and one clerk, a youth named Edward Maxwell.
-For the last two weeks the teller, Mr. Sibley, has
-been confined to his residence by illness, and considerable
-extra labor has necessarily devolved upon the
-cashier. Memorial Day, a legal holiday in Vermont, the
-bank had been closed, and on returning from the services
-at the cemetery, in which he had taken part—for Mr.
-Hathaway had been a gallant soldier in the famous Vermont
-brigade—the cashier had dropped into the bank,
-apparently to complete some work upon the books. It
-is possible that the robber—the opinion is general that
-there was but one engaged in the enterprise—had previously
-entered the bank, and upon the entrance of the
-cashier concealed himself in the only place available,
-the dark closet. He may have remained an unobserved
-spectator of the cashier through the partly opened door
-and as the latter finished his work and prepared to close
-the safe, the robber may have concluded, by a coup de
-main, to save himself the trouble of attempting to solve
-the combination, and, noiselessly stepping from the
-closet, have sought to surprise the cashier. On this
-hypothesis the presumption is that Mr. Hathaway became
-aware of his danger, and turning sought to ward off the
-blow, when the struggle ensued that was ended with his
-death. Or the cashier may have discovered the presence
-of some intruder in the closet, and seizing his revolver,
-which he kept in a drawer of his desk, he may have
-approached the closet, when the robber sprung upon him
-and, wresting the weapon from the feeble hands of the
-old banker, turned it against the latter’s breast.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“The fatal shot was fired at so close range that the
-clothing of the victim was scorched by the explosion.
-No weapon was found in the room; the revolver which,
-as noted above, the cashier was known to have kept in
-his desk, is also missing. The wound was made, the
-physicians state, by a 32-caliber bullet, which penetrated
-the breast directly above the vital organ, and death must
-have been instantaneous. The shot was fired at about
-8 o’clock. Prof. Black, who occupies rooms directly over
-the cashier’s office, heard a shot at that time, as did several
-friends who were in the room with him, but they
-attributed it to boys shooting water rats from the bridge
-beneath the professor’s window.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Thus far the tragedy possesses few extraordinary features.
-But what has become of the murderer? Raymond
-is not so populous that the presence of a stranger
-would be unnoted. Yet no one has volunteered information
-of any suspicious characters in town. Within fifty
-minutes of the commission of a daring crime the perpetrator
-disappeared, leaving not a trace for the local
-sleuths. The last seen of Mr. Hathaway alive, so far as
-known, was about 7:45 o’clock, when he stepped to the
-door of the bank, and, calling a boy who was standing
-on the bridge, throwing stones into the stream, asked him
-to take a letter to President Felton at his house. Half an
-hour later he was found shot through the heart in his
-office.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“President Felton was seen by the Hemisphere representative
-to-day, and told the story of the finding of the
-dead cashier substantially as outlined above. He was
-terribly affected by the tragedy and could hardly be induced
-to converse regarding it.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Roger Hathaway was one of the best known and
-highly esteemed residents of Raymond. He was 63 years
-of age and had been identified with the national and
-savings banks ever since their organization, the last
-twenty years as cashier and treasurer respectively. He
-was prominent in Grand Army and church circles; a
-deacon in the Congregational Church. Of a severely
-stern but eminently just disposition, it was not known
-that Deacon Hathaway possessed an enemy in the world.
-He lived in a plain but substantial mansion, the family
-homestead of several generations of Hathaways, with his
-two daughters, his wife having died some ten years before.
-He was one of the founders of both the savings and
-national banks, which under his management had prospered
-to an unusual degree and stood high among the
-banking institutions of the state. He had held several
-important positions in the gift of his townspeople, and as
-town treasurer his rugged honesty, economic conservatism
-and strict observance of the letter of the law in the
-handling of the town’s funds, had earned for him the
-sobriquet of ‘watchdog of the treasury,’ a title which he
-sealed even with his life blood.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Up to a late hour this evening no clew to the murderer
-has been discovered. The theory is held by the
-local police that the deed was clearly that of an expert
-bank robber, and they are inclined to think that he may
-be a member of the same gang that has broken into
-numerous postoffices in New Hampshire and Vermont
-within the last few months. The officials cite the fact that
-the local papers had advertised that $50,000 in Mansfield
-County bonds were to be redeemed at the Raymond
-National Bank upon this particular date, and the natural
-presumption that the bank would have on hand a large
-amount of currency, with the knowledge that yesterday
-was a holiday, when the bank would be closed and afford
-an unusual opportunity to work upon the safe, would
-form a strong inducement to a daring burglar.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER V.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>A STRANGE DISAPPEARANCE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div>(By telegraph to the New York Hemisphere.)</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Raymond, Vt., June 1.—A startling sequel to the
-murder of Cashier Hathaway and the robbery of the Raymond
-National and Wild River Savings Banks was developed
-to-day in the mysterious disappearance of Miss
-Helen Hathaway, the younger daughter of the dead
-banker, and Derrick Ames, a well-known young man
-of Raymond.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Ames is about 27 years old, and occupied a responsible
-and lucrative position in the local office of the Vermont
-Life Insurance Company. While not possessing a
-positive reputation for evil, Ames was regarded askance
-by the more staid and conservative residents of the town,
-and his position socially was somewhat anomalous. He
-had resided in Raymond some five or six years and was
-known to have been a warm admirer of Miss Hathaway.
-But it was equally apparent to the gossip-loving townspeople
-that Deacon Hathaway regarded the young insurance
-clerk with distinct disfavor, and had forbidden his
-daughter’s continuing the intimacy. It was likewise
-well known that the missing girl had frequently met
-Ames clandestinely.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Neither Miss Hathaway nor Derrick Ames was seen
-after the discovery of the bank tragedy. Ames was at
-his boarding house at noon on the day of the murder,
-but did not return to supper. His room, with all his
-effects, was left as usual and gave no indication that he
-contemplated a hasty departure. Even at the office where
-he was employed he left some personal effects and half a
-month’s salary was to his credit.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“In the case of Miss Hathaway, also, there are absolutely
-no indications of premeditated departure. Her
-sister states that she has taken not even a wrap, only the
-clothes she wore that afternoon as she left the house.
-Neither man nor maiden was seen by any person to leave
-Raymond. No vehicle was secured for either of them,
-and no one answering their description boarded the train
-at the Raymond Station. They have disappeared as completely,
-as suddenly and as mysteriously as did the murderer
-of Cashier Hathaway.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“The knowledge of these circumstances has intensified
-the excitement occasioned by the murder and robbery.
-The coincidence, if it be but a coincidence, of the unpremeditated
-elopement of Helen Hathaway upon the very
-day, nay, perhaps the very hour, that her aged father
-was stricken by the bullet of the assassin, is sufficiently
-startling of itself to cause the most intense excitement.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Is there any connection between the disappearance
-of Derrick Ames and Helen Hathaway and the shooting
-of Cashier Hathaway and the subsequent looting of the
-bank vault? Why did the couple, if they simply ran
-away to get married without the parental sanction, do so
-manifestly on the spur of the moment, without any prearranged
-plans, without notification to even their intimate
-friends? And why, if they went innocently away,
-have they failed to acquaint any one with their present
-whereabouts, when they must be aware of the cruel murder
-of Miss Hathaway’s good father, the details of which
-have been published far and wide, not only in the provincial
-newspapers, but throughout the metropolitan
-press?</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“There is not a resident of Raymond who will hint at
-even the possibility of any guilty knowledge of the taking-off
-of her father by Helen Hathaway, before or during
-her hurried flight. For although regarded as unusually
-high-spirited and impetuous, she was loving and lovable
-to a degree and the idol of her sister. The only indiscretion
-that can be attributed to the missing girl was her
-occasional meetings with Derrick Ames without the sanction
-of her father.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Her companion in flight, on the other hand, was not
-especially favorably known in Raymond. While he
-came to the town with excellent credentials, he was not
-a favorite in any particular set or society. Handsome in
-face and figure, an athlete of considerable local repute,
-with alternate moods of extreme depression and satirical
-good humor, he was such a one as might be expected to
-turn the head of a romantic young girl like the absent
-Miss Hathaway. Ames was free with his money, and
-while not a drinking man, in the sense of the term in
-this part of the country, he occasionally wooed the wine
-cup with great energy and originality. He had enemies
-in plenty and but a week before the tragedy had abruptly
-resigned the lieutenancy of the Raymond Rifles because
-of a trifling disagreement with the captain. It must be
-stated, however, that no mean or ignoble act or petty
-crime had ever been attributed to him, the chief cause of
-his unpopularity proceeding from his reserve, the sharpness
-of his tongue and the irascibility of his temper.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Had Derrick Ames disappeared alone, on the evening
-of the murder, there would have been but one opinion as
-to his guilt or innocence. But the unaccountable flight
-of Miss Hathaway—this is the one flaw in the chain of
-circumstantial evidence. Some people will explain this
-away on the universal theory for every inexplicable
-action of the human mind—hypnotism. It is said that
-Ames placed Miss Hathaway within the spell of his own
-powerful will, and unknowingly, unwittingly, blindly
-obedient, beautiful Helen Hathaway accompanied the
-cold-blooded slayer of her own father in his flight from
-the scene of his crime.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Did Ames and Miss Hathaway leave Raymond together?
-While there is no evidence that they did, the
-presumption is so strong as to compel the inference.
-In any event Raymond has practically convicted Derrick
-Ames of complicity, if not actual participation, in the
-murder of Roger Hathaway.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“It is possible that the murder was not premeditated,
-as was intimated in these dispatches yesterday. Ames
-may have called upon the cashier at the bank, to plead
-again his suit for the hand of Helen Hathaway. A blunt
-refusal, hasty words, a bitter quarrel, Ames’ temper,
-quick and ungovernable, a brief struggle, the fatal shot
-and the older man lay dead upon the floor. What more
-natural than that the young murderer, fully appreciating
-his terrible situation, and cognizant of the large amount
-of ready money in the safe, should wrench the familiar
-bunch of keys from the pocket of the dead cashier and
-possess himself of the treasure? It requires something of
-a stretch of the imagination to fancy the assassin, his
-hand yet reeking with the blood of her father, inducing
-the young girl to accompany him in his flight for life and
-liberty, yet it is not impossible—and in the belief of
-many it is just what Derrick Ames did do.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“There is but the faintest possible clew as yet to connect
-any one else with the crime. Besides a few hotel
-arrivals—commercial men comparatively well known—one
-stranger, and one only, is believed to have been in
-Raymond on the day of the murder. No one saw him
-come, no one saw him leave the town. Inquiry was
-made at the depot, the telegraph operator states, shortly
-after 8 o’clock, as to the time of departure of the next
-train south. The operator did not notice the questioner
-particularly, although he is positive he was a stranger
-in Raymond.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“The theory of a prearranged plot to rob the bank on
-the night the cashier was shot has been assiduously
-worked by the local authorities. It was known that there
-would be a large amount of money in the bank on the
-night preceding the paying off of the matured county
-bonds. Was it not worth while for an organized gang of
-bank robbers to plan a descent on the Raymond institution?
-Was it not possible that they did so plan; that
-they had already secured access to the banking-room
-while the populace was watching the parade in the afternoon;
-that they were awaiting the cover of darkness to
-begin work upon the safe, when all unexpectedly the
-cashier arrived and entered the bank; that the robbers
-retreated to the dark closet; that here they remained hidden
-while Mr. Hathaway performed some pressing work
-upon the books, meanwhile sending the note requesting
-the presence of the president; that while he stepped to
-the front door to secure a messenger for the letter the
-robbers may have conceived the daring scheme of seizing
-the cash drawer from the vault; that the cashier returned
-while they were in the very act of executing their design;
-that he rushed to his desk and had already possessed
-himself of his revolver, when he was seized by the robbers
-and shot dead before he could succeed in making
-use of his own weapon, which was subsequently picked
-up and carried off by the robbers?</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“More careful investigations of the scene of the murder
-developed the fact that the struggle between the
-cashier and his assailant, or assailants, must have been not
-only a severe one, but of several minutes’ duration.
-There were marks of violence on the body of the dead
-banker, the physicians report, which must have been
-made by an exceptionally strong man. The right wrist
-showed quite severe abrasions, as if it had been grasped
-fiercely by a strong hand, and on the other side of the
-wrist was a purple mark that was evidently made by
-a seal ring pressed into the flesh by the tremendous force
-with which the hand had been seized. The snow-white
-and abundant hair of Mr. Hathaway was also disheveled,
-when the body was first discovered, and the chain to
-which his bunch of keys had been attached was snapped
-off, only about two inches remaining upon his person.
-No signs of a weapon or any burglarious tools were discovered
-in or about the bank premises, but evidence of
-the extreme coolness and sang-froid of the murderer is
-afforded by the fact that, apparently in searching for
-suitable paper in which to wrap the big package of bills
-two or three full pages of the big bank ledger were torn
-out and used for the purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Nothing was missing from the person of the dead
-man, except, singularly enough, a curiously fashioned
-locket which Mr. Hathaway wore as a watch charm.
-It contained miniatures of his two daughters, Louise and
-Helen. No reason for its being carried off is apparent.
-The link which held it to the watch-chain was broken as
-if the locket had been violently removed.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“The exact amount of money stolen cannot as yet
-be stated. President Felton alleges that, until the trial
-balance is drawn off, it will be impossible to give figures.
-Certainly not less than $40,000 in greenbacks was
-secured, and probably half as much more in securities,
-which, however, are not negotiable and are therefore
-worthless to the robbers. The bank is perfectly solvent,
-President Felton states, and will resume business at an
-early date.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Mr. Felton is well-nigh prostrated by the shock of
-his awful discovery on the evening of Memorial Day and
-has aged visibly in the last two days. He does not attach
-so much importance to the dual disappearance of Derrick
-Ames and Helen Hathaway as do most of the citizens,
-and expresses the opinion that it is a simple elopement
-and that the couple will return shortly.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“The directors of the savings and national banks, at a
-meeting this morning, authorized the offer of a reward of
-$4,000 for the capture and conviction of the murderer or
-murderers, in addition to the purse of $1,000 ‘hung up’
-by the town.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“The coroner’s inquest will be begun to-morrow.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER VI.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>THE CORONER’S INQUEST.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>For a town the size of Raymond, 3,000-odd inhabitants,
-the Mansfield County court house is an unusually
-large and commodious structure. But the spacious room
-is not nearly adequate to the demands of the pushing
-crowd that seeks admittance to the inquest that has been
-summoned by Coroner Lord to sit upon the body of the
-dead cashier, Roger Hathaway. George Demeritt, the
-town’s sole day police force, is literally swept off his feet
-by the surging assemblage, and in less than five minutes
-after the throwing open of the doors the room is a
-solid mass of perspiring humanity.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>With much difficulty Sheriff Wilson makes a passage
-for the dozen witnesses under his charge, the crowd gazing,
-with the sympathetic impudence of an inquest audience,
-at the statuesque form of Miss Hathaway, heavily
-veiled, and the bowed figure of President Felton of the
-Raymond Bank.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The jury selected by Coroner Lord files in from the
-judges’ room, and after the customary preliminaries the
-autopsy performed by Drs. Robinson and Dodge is read
-by the latter. The document, stripped of its verbiage
-and medical terms, alleges that Roger Hathaway died
-from a bullet wound, the leaden missile having entered
-the left breast almost directly over the heart, and that
-death must have been instantaneous. There were signs
-of violence on the person of the dead man, a severe contusion
-on the forehead that might have been inflicted by a
-blow or might have been caused by the fall to the floor.
-There were also slight abrasions on the right wrist.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Dr. Dodge states, in reply to an inquiry from the coroner,
-that Mr. Hathaway had probably been dead an hour
-when he reached his side. Rigor mortis had not begun.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Mr. Cyrus Felton.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>There is a craning of necks in the court room as the
-coroner calls to his feet the aged bank president. Jack
-Ashley, who is sitting at the lawyers’ table, jotting down
-a few notes, begins to take a lively interest in the case.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Felton slowly walks to the witness stand. That he
-is greatly moved even the least observant in the throng
-can but notice, and his hand trembles visibly as he
-replaces his pince-nez and turns to face Coroner Lord.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The usual formal questions as to his acquaintance with
-the dead man, his connection with the bank, etc., are
-asked and answered.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I visited the bank in response to a note which I found
-when I returned home from my—from the postoffice,”
-Mr. Felton states.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The note was from Mr. Hathaway?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It was.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And its contents?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The note merely said: ‘Come to the bank immediately.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Have you the note with you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No; I tore it up,” replies Mr. Felton, and the expression
-which accompanies his words is noted by Ashley,
-who is scanning narrowly the countenance of the banker.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The note had been left at my house a short while
-before I returned home, my servant tells me,” proceeds
-Mr. Felton. “I went at once to the bank.” The witness
-has grown so agitated that he is obliged to seat himself,
-and his voice is hardly audible in the stilled room.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The front door was slightly ajar and I walked through
-the bank to the directors’ room. The door to this apartment
-was locked; I unlocked it and entered. Mr. Hathaway
-lay face downward in the middle of the floor, I
-should think. I thought he might have fallen in a shock
-and went to lift him up, when I saw the blood. I felt
-for his pulse, but there was no motion.” The voice of
-the witness breaks as he utters these words and he covers
-his face with his handkerchief.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Were there any evidences of a struggle?” the coroner
-asks, after a moment.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes. Mr. Hathaway’s office chair was overturned
-and the directors’ chairs were disarranged. One of the
-drawers in Mr. Hathaway’s desk had been pulled so far
-out that it had dropped to the floor and the contents
-were spilled. A lot of old ledgers that had been piled in
-the closet were toppled over into the room. I glanced
-into the closet and then turned my attention to the open
-vault. I found the cash drawer in the safe withdrawn
-and empty except for a couple of canvas bags of silver
-and nickels. I then hastened to find Sheriff Wilson.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What hour was it when you entered the bank?” asks
-Coroner Lord.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“About 8:20 o’clock.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And at what time did you notify Sheriff Wilson?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Felton hesitates a moment and glances inquiringly
-at that official. “It did not seem more than a minute
-that I spent in the bank. But I was so shocked—and
-I—and I stopped to gather up the papers on the floor—perhaps
-it was five minutes before I got to the hotel.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Did you notice any weapons on the floor of the cashier’s
-room?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No, sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What amount of money do you estimate was stolen
-from the safe?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>President Felton debates a moment, as if making a
-mental calculation, and replies: “At least $37,000 in
-currency and gold, and some securities. The exact
-amount of the latter we cannot tell until we have listed
-our papers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That is all, Mr. Felton.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A suppressed murmur of intense interest runs around
-the crowded room as Louise Hathaway takes the witness
-stand. As she raises the veil that has concealed her features
-the townspeople marveled at the composure her
-marble countenance evinces. Ashley glances at her with
-interest and draws a long breath. “Gad! she’s a beauty,”
-he decides, and then drops his eyes as they encounter
-the calm gaze of the witness.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Her father left the house to go to the bank about 6:30
-o’clock, Miss Hathaway testifies. Tea was served at 6
-o’clock. Her sister Helen had not returned at that time,
-but at her father’s request they had not waited the tea,
-because he said he had some work to do at the bank.
-It was an unusual thing for him to go to the bank evenings,
-but the illness of the teller had necessitated extra
-work.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Miss Hathaway, do you know where your sister is?”
-The silence in the court room is intense as the coroner
-asks the question.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My sister did not return that afternoon,” declares
-Miss Hathaway, after a brief pause. “I have reason to
-think that she has gone with Mr. Ames to be married.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And you do not know where they now are?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Miss Hathaway shakes her head, as her fingers clasp
-and unclasp nervously in her lap. The ordeal is a trying
-one.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“When did you last see your sister?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“About 2 o’clock in the afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And when did you last see Mr. Ames?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A slight flush replaces the pallor for a moment; then
-as suddenly recedes, leaving her paler than before.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have not seen Mr. Ames for a fortnight,” she replies
-in a tone barely audible.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Did your sister indicate to you her intention of eloping?”
-is the next question.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I had no reason to think that she contemplated a
-clandestine marriage. But I should prefer not to discuss
-the matter further, Mr. Lord,” says the witness, in
-evident agitation. “I am sure Helen’s departure can have
-no possible connection with—with that awful deed. It
-was only an unfortunate coincidence that they went away
-on that afternoon. I—I am sure they will return in due
-time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Coroner Lord glances irresolutely at the state’s attorney,
-and after a moment’s deliberation permits Miss
-Hathaway to retire.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Sheriff Wilson, the next witness, describes minutely the
-appearance of the bank and vault and of the body of
-the dead cashier.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Sarah Johnson, the maid at Mr. Felton’s residence, testifies
-that the note referred to by Mr. Felton was left at
-the house shortly before 8 o’clock by a lad named Jimmie
-Howe. A few minutes later a stranger inquired for Mr.
-Felton at the house. There is a slight buzz of excitement
-among the audience at this first mention of the
-presence of a stranger in the village on the evening of
-the tragedy.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“How do you know he was a stranger?” sharply inquires
-the coroner.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“For the reason that when I asked him which Mr.
-Felton he wished to see he replied that he did not know
-there were two Mr. Feltons.” That evidence is conclusive.
-It is, so far as the audience is concerned.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He asked where he could find Mr. Felton, and I told
-him perhaps at his office in the bank building,” continues
-Sarah.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Miss Johnson is closely questioned as to the demeanor
-of the stranger, but she knows little of importance, as she
-had not seen the visitor’s face. He was of medium
-height, she says, and his voice was pleasant. Sheriff
-Wilson, who has first learned of this clew, smiles patronizingly
-upon Ashley and the other newspaper men.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A bright-faced lad of 12 is Jimmie Howe, whom Coroner
-Lord next calls to the stand. Jimmie was playing
-on the bridge when Mr. Hathaway called to him from
-the bank door and asked him to take a note to Mr.
-Felton and to hurry about it. After he delivered the note
-he went home.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Prof. George Black, Edward Knapp and three others,
-who were in Prof. Black’s room in the bank building,
-testify to hearing a shot about 8 o’clock, but whether
-before or after that hour they cannot agree.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Alden Heath, the telegraph operator at the depot,
-stated that some one—he was busy at his key at the time—asked
-somewhere around 8 o’clock when the next train
-left. He answered without looking up, and when he
-did glance at the window the inquirer was gone. It was
-a strange voice; of that he was positive.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>George Kenney, who states that he is the station
-agent at Ashfield, is next sworn. His testimony establishes
-the probable fact that Derrick Ames and Helen
-Hathaway boarded the midnight train for New York.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>There is an involuntary but quickly suppressed exclamation
-from the witnesses. Miss Hathaway is trembling
-and Ralph Felton, who is sitting near her, is savagely
-biting his mustache.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As Coroner Lord calls the name of Richard Chase and
-the stalwart warden of the State prison at Windsor
-appears on the witness stand there is a hush of expectancy.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ernest Stanley, a convict in the Vermont State prison,
-was released at noon of Memorial Day,” Warden Chase
-says succinctly. “He asked for and was given a ticket
-to Raymond, and left on the north-bound afternoon
-train. He was five feet ten inches in height, of medium
-build, dark complexion, smooth face, and had closely
-cropped dark hair. He wore a light tweed suit and a
-straw hat.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As Mr. Chase concludes his testimony the coroner
-consults for a few moments with the state’s attorney and
-then summons Ralph Felton, son of President Felton,
-and the bookkeeper of the Wild River Savings Bank.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As the young man steps to the stand Ashley glances
-at him interestedly, and after a good look decides that
-he does not like him. There is a certain shiftiness of eye
-that the New Yorker does not fancy, and the notes which
-he takes of the witness’ testimony are nearly verbatim.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Young Felton answers in the briefest phrases the questions
-of the coroner. He had seen no strangers in the
-bank in the last few days. He had last seen Mr. Hathaway
-the afternoon before the tragedy, when the bank
-closed for the day. On the afternoon of Memorial
-Day—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The witness stops abruptly and a flush overspreads his
-features as he nervously bites his tawny mustache.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“On the afternoon of Memorial Day,” invites the coroner.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I was around town as usual,” finishes Felton.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>For some reason the momentary hesitation of the witness
-apparently impresses Mr. Lord, and he seems disposed
-to make minute inquiry.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Where did you say you were on the afternoon of
-Memorial Day?” he again interrogates.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ralph Felton looks straight at the coroner an instant,
-and then his gaze wanders over the stilled room and
-finally rests upon his father, who, roused from the impassive
-attitude in which he has sunk after completing his
-own testimony, casts a startled look upon his son.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The sudden hush that has involuntarily accompanied
-Mr. Lord’s question is intensified, as father and son gaze
-at each other, apparently oblivious of the unanswered
-coroner.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER VII.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>FATHER AND SON.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>An almost imperceptible raising of the eyebrows by
-the elder man, and Ralph Felton turns quickly to the
-coroner.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Really, Mr. Lord, I cannot furnish a detailed statement
-of my every movement during the last week,” he
-says, nonchalantly. “I witnessed the procession, or at
-least the local post, on its way to the depot to meet the
-Ruggbury contingent, and later went to the Exchange
-for dinner. In the afternoon I was in the billiard room
-of the hotel, and I believe I visited the postoffice in the
-evening.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What time did you last see Mr. Hathaway?” The
-persistence of the coroner in questioning the bookkeeper
-is inexplicable to the audience, who have not observed
-the little slips of paper that State’s Attorney Brown has
-passed along the table to Mr. Lord.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“About noon on the day of the murder.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Where?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ralph Felton is for the first time manifesting signs of
-impatience. “He was in the bank. I went to get something
-which I had left there, and while I was there Mr.
-Hathaway came in. I left him there and a short time
-afterward saw him in the procession.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Mr. Felton, where were you between 7:45 and 8:30
-o’clock the evening of Tuesday?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A dull red replaces the slight pallor on the face of the
-young man.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Mr. Lord, I cannot say where I was during that particular
-time. I have my own personal reasons—not connected
-with this case, I assure you—for not desiring to
-answer your question.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The murmur which has begun to overspread the room
-is quickly but only temporarily hushed as the coroner
-announces:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The inquest is adjourned until to-morrow morning at
-9 o’clock.”</p>
-
-<hr class='c012' />
-
-<p class='c011'>“You know why I did not answer Coroner Lord’s
-question. I am tired of this hypocrisy. I simply will not
-go on the stand again—and that settles it!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Within the richly furnished library of Cyrus Felton’s
-home the inquisition so abruptly broken off by Coroner
-Lord has been resumed.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The president of the Raymond National Bank now
-bears little resemblance to the bowed old man who, with
-trembling lips and pallid brow, testified regarding the
-murder of Cashier Hathaway a few hours before. There
-is an angry flush upon his face and a stern setting
-of the chin that causes one straight line to mark the
-location of his lips.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At the last defiant words of his son a spasm as of
-sudden pain for a moment distorts his patriarchal face,
-and his hand involuntarily presses his heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am going to leave Raymond—at once—to-night.
-Leave as Derrick Ames left,” continued Ralph Felton,
-with an imprecation. “It’s no use talking. My mind is
-made up and you should be the last man to urge me
-to remain. You know—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ralph, this is madness,” interrupts his father. “There
-can be no necessity for your leaving town, least of all
-while matters are as they are. The bank—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The bank needs both of us—I don’t think,” rejoins
-the younger man flippantly. “As the boodle is gone
-I guess you can get along without a bookkeeper for a
-time—maybe forever. But go I shall, and money I must
-have. Oh, I know what you are going to say,” as Mr.
-Felton opens his lips. “It doesn’t make any difference
-where it has gone. Suffice it to say, it is planted. If you
-have ever had any experience with—but here it is getting
-on toward 11 o’clock, and at 12:10 I must take the Montreal
-express. I don’t propose to board it here. I shall
-drive to South Ashfield. Now, understand me, father,”
-as Cyrus Felton again seeks to interrupt him, “it is just
-as much for your interest for me to be a couple of thousand
-miles from Raymond as it is mine. It is bound to
-come out—why, what’s the matter?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Once again that ashen pallor accompanies a spasm of
-severest pain, and this time Cyrus Felton emits a slight
-groan as his fingers sink into the heavily upholstered
-arms of the sleepy-hollow chair into which he has sunk.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Nothing—nothing but a pleurisy attack,” he faintly
-replies.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>There is silence for a moment, broken only by the
-sonorous ticking of the mantel clock.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, the money?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ralph, you know that I can ill afford to spare any
-considerable amount just now. But your safety must, of
-course, be considered, and I will endeavor to send you
-funds later. What I can spare now ought to be sufficient
-to start life anew in some western city.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ralph Felton smiles sardonically as his father steps
-to the little safe set in the wall, and, moving the screen
-from the front, turns the combination. He lounges
-toward the receptacle, and, leaning on the screen, gazes
-down at his father, who has withdrawn one of the two
-drawers which the safe boasts and is running over a
-package of bills. The contents of the lower drawer are
-exposed by the withdrawal of the upper one, and the
-light from the chandelier is reflected back from some
-shining substance in the till. It catches young Felton’s
-eye and his long arm passes over the stooping figure of
-his father and picks the gleaming metal from the drawer.
-It is a loaded revolver of the bull-dog variety, 32 caliber,
-and one chamber has been discharged.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Cyrus Felton raises his head. The shining little engine
-of destruction in the clasp of his son is almost before and
-on a level with his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>With a shudder the elder man turns his head and
-slowly and laboriously rises to his feet. He seems to
-have suddenly aged even in the last few moments.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ralph Felton examines the revolver critically, looks at
-his father’s averted face, and, without speaking, lays the
-weapon in the drawer. There is silence in the room,
-broken at last by the almost apologetic tones of the father.
-“How will you reach South Ashfield?” he asked.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, Sam must drive me over with the mare. I will
-start him up now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As his son leaves the room Cyrus Felton sinks into
-an easy-chair and his head drops upon his bosom. Who
-can tell the thoughts that surge through his troubled
-mind at the moment? The clatter of hoofs on the concrete
-driveway beside the window arouses him from his
-reverie, and a moment later Ralph Felton enters, a
-satchel in his hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, father, Sam is ready and I must go. We shall
-have little more than an hour to make the ten miles and
-catch the express. Good-by; it is all right, sir; believe
-me, father,” the younger man drops his disengaged hand
-not unkindly on the other’s shoulder, “my sudden departure
-will do nobody here any harm, and least of all
-will it affect you. One thing I will say; I will find the
-scoundrel who took Helen Hathaway from Raymond, if
-he is above ground, and when we meet he will have
-occasion to remember that time.” Ralph Felton’s face
-is darkened by a savage scowl as he speaks, and he raises
-a clenched fist with a gesture so suggestive that his
-father involuntarily steps back. “Yes, I have two objects
-in cutting the town. One reason you know, the other
-is to seek and find the hound who has stolen Helen
-Hathaway from me. I cared for her as I shall never
-love another woman, and I meant to have her. Now—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The musical chime of the clock begins to strike the
-hour. Ralph Felton seizes the package of bills that lies
-upon the table and places it in an inner pocket.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I will return sometime, father, when this bank affair
-has ceased to be a subject of investigation,” he says, with
-his hand on the door-knob. “Good-by. Just keep a stiff
-upper lip and you’ll be all right. I’m off.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The outer door closes with a sharp click and a moment
-later the impatient stamping of hoofs is succeeded by
-the even footfalls of the fastest mare in Mansfield County.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As the sound grows fainter and fainter Cyrus Felton
-suddenly starts as if aroused from a stupor.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Why did I let him go? Idiot that I am! It is madness—worse
-than madness. It is confession. Am I
-losing my senses, that I did not insist upon his remaining
-and completing his testimony? At the worst it could
-never be proved. The wages of sin! The wages of sin!”
-he groans, as he sinks back in his chair and buries his
-face in his hands.</p>
-
-<hr class='c012' />
-
-<p class='c011'>“Mr. Ralph Felton to the stand,” orders Coroner Lord.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As on the preceding day, the court room is packed
-with the people of Raymond. There is a craning of
-necks toward the settees reserved for witnesses. Ralph
-Felton is not there, and there is a death-like stillness as
-Coroner Lord again calls this now most interesting of
-witnesses.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Mr. Coroner!” The lank figure of the station agent
-at South Ashfield elevates itself above the crowd. “If
-it please your honor, Ralph Felton boarded the Montreal
-express at South Ashfield last night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Of course there is a sensation, a murmur of voices that
-the coroner quickly checks. The few remaining witnesses
-are unimportant and the inquest is adjourned until
-afternoon.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER VIII.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>A PROPOSITION OF PARTNERSHIP.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>The usual congress of village gossips is in session
-to-night at the Exchange hotel. It is the fourth day
-since the Raymond Bank affair, and the details of the
-tragedy are discussed with an animation and a wealth of
-clew that brings a smile to the face of John Barker, the
-New York detective, who retreats to a quiet corner of the
-hotel veranda to finish his cigar and muse upon the
-affair with the calm contemplation characteristic of men
-in his calling.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The detective’s face expresses a shade of annoyance as
-Jack Ashley ascends the steps to the veranda, draws a
-chair opposite his, lights a cigar and tilts his seat back
-at a comfortable angle.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You are John Barker, the detective,” began Ashley.
-Barker assents with a nod.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I haven’t a card with me, but my name is Jack Ashley,
-and I am attached to the staff of the New York
-Hemisphere.” Barker looks duly impressed.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You are an ordinary detective, I presume?” Barker
-stares. “What I mean is, if you will pardon my frankness,
-you are not a Sherlock Holmes or a M. Lecocq?”
-It is apparent from his face that the detective is in doubt
-whether to laugh or express his displeasure. He compromises
-with a faint smile and accepts the proffered
-cigar.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My reason for asking,” goes on Ashley, “is that I
-have a proposition to offer you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker strikes a match to touch off his weed. “That
-proposition is—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That we work this bank case together.” Barker
-drops the lighted match and gazes at his new acquaintance
-in astonishment.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Have another match,” remarks the other, passing
-it over.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The detective lights his cigar and puffs away on it for
-some moments in silence. “I am not in the habit of
-taking in partners,” he observes finally.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I always take a deep interest in an affair like the
-Hathaway case,” resumes Ashley, without reference to
-the other’s remark. “In fact, my special line on the
-Hemisphere has been the running down of mysterious
-crimes. I have trailed quite a number of them, and you
-will pardon my egotism when I say I have been quite
-successful in my dual capacity of sleuth and newspaper
-man.” Barker looks a trifle bored.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“To be candid, however, this case is a bit too big for
-me to handle alone. It spreads out too much. It is too
-much of a job for one man to look after.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Indeed?” The irony in the detective’s voice is thinly
-veiled. He says:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then on the strength of your intimation that you are
-a devilish clever fellow—you will pardon my frankness
-this time—I am asked to take in an assistant who will
-gladly share with me the $5,000 reward in the event of
-the murderer being apprehended.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No; I sha’n’t bother about the reward. I am simply
-looking for glory.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You are young in the newspaper business?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“About twelve years.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And looking for glory?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley laughs. “For my paper; not for myself.” He
-passes over a telegram received that day. It read as
-follows:</p>
-<p class='c015'><b>“Jack Ashley, Raymond, Vt.: Work up case at any expense,
-and discover murderer if possible.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Chambers.”</b></p>
-<p class='c010'>“Now,” says Ashley, as he replaces the dispatch in his
-pocket, “I will tell you why I think it would be to your
-advantage to join forces with me.” Barker evinces
-some interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am in possession of some facts which you not only
-do not know, but are not likely to get hold of unless I
-enlighten you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah!” The detective draws his chair nearer his companion
-and glances about to make sure there are no
-outside listeners.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“When I finish, if you consider my information as valuable
-as I appraise it, you can do as you please about
-the partnership idea. At any rate you will be so much
-ahead. Come up to my room. We will not be disturbed
-there.” When they are comfortably seated and fresh
-cigars lighted Ashley begins his story.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have run onto two clews. One of them I consider
-important; the other less so. By the way, how long
-have you been in town? Come in on the after-dinner
-train?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, I have acquainted myself with the known facts
-in the case and the result of the coroner’s inquest. Deceased
-came to his death at the hands of some person
-unknown.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But who will be known ere long. But to resume.
-As you know, a man called at the house of Cyrus
-Felton shortly before 8 o’clock of the night of the killing.
-To the inquiry of the housemaid as to which Mr. Felton
-was wanted the man replied that he ‘did not know there
-were two.’ Not long after 8 o’clock that same evening
-a man appeared at the ticket office of the railroad station
-and inquired when the next train left. These incidents,
-while not startling in themselves, seem to prove that in
-each case the questioner was a stranger to Raymond.
-Every one around these parts knows that there are two
-Feltons, father and son, and the natives are also presumed
-to know that there is no night train through the
-town before 11:50.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Very well reasoned,” remarks Barker.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“As you also know, on the afternoon of Memorial Day
-a chap named Ernest Stanley was liberated from the
-State prison at Windsor, after serving two of a three
-years’ sentence for forgery. Despite the fact that Raymond
-was not his home and that he had not, so far as
-known, a friend or acquaintance in the place, and contrary
-to the advice of the warden, who took an interest
-in the fellow, he bought a ticket to this town and started
-north on the afternoon train. That latter fact was proved
-by the ticket agent at Windsor, who sold him the ticket
-and saw him board the train. I went to Windsor this
-forenoon, after the inquest, saw a photograph of this
-Stanley, and secured a pretty accurate description of
-him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But there is no evidence that he left the train at this
-station. Or if he did—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He could have been, as I believe he was, the visitor
-at Felton’s house.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am not so sure of that,” contends the detective. “On
-the evening of Memorial Day the agent of a granite manufacturers’
-journal, published at Chicago, stopped at this
-hotel. He arrived on the afternoon train from the north,
-and after supper, the clerk told me when I quizzed him,
-he inquired where Cyrus Felton lived. Felton, you
-know, is the principal owner in the Wild River Granite
-Quarries. It is more than likely, is it not, that he was
-the visitor at the Felton residence?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Still he may not have called that night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“True. Admitting the caller to have been Stanley,
-what then? A motive must be assigned.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“We will discuss that later. For the present suffice it
-to be known that Stanley was sentenced to State prison
-for forging the name of Cyrus Felton two years ago.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, what of it? If Stanley’s thoughts were of
-revenge they were apparently directed against Felton,
-not the man who was murdered.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That is precisely the point that is not clear to me,”
-confesses Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Now, listen. Here’s a proposition for you: If Stanley
-was not concerned in the bank affair, what was he
-doing at 6 o’clock next morning asleep in the bushes in
-a lonely gorge near South Ashfield village?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The devil!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“With a package of papers clutched fast in his hands,
-about the size that a bundle of treasury notes and securities
-would make.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You know he was there?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I met him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker is thoughtful. “You said nothing to the authorities
-or in your dispatches about the incident?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No. I didn’t consider it worth while. The authorities
-were already scouring the country round about, and
-I did not exploit it in my dispatches because I concluded
-to save it for a longer and better story when we run down
-the criminal—beg pardon, when the criminal is run
-down. But,” continues Ashley, as Barker remains silent,
-“that is the clew to which I attach the less importance.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I had heard from some source that Ralph Felton had
-been seen at this hotel a good share of Memorial Day,
-and I started in on a pumping expedition, beginning
-with John Thayer, the clerk. Thayer was noticeably
-uncommunicative; I thought I’d bluff him a bit, so I
-remarked: ‘Well, you’ve concluded to tell me what you
-know, eh?’ The bluff appeared to work, for he flushed
-a little and replied: ‘I’ll tell you all about it if you will
-agree to keep it out of the paper.’ As I had suspended
-all dispatches to the Hemisphere pending the discovery
-of a story worth filing, I readily enough agreed to refrain
-from publishing his secret to the world. Then he extracted
-a promise that I should not divulge a word to
-any one in the village.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Ralph Felton is as innocent of that crime as you or
-I,’ asserted Thayer when all the conditions for secrecy
-had been satisfactorily arranged.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘That is possible, but why did he refuse to answer
-the coroner and why did he cut the town?’ said I.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘He had a good reason for wanting to keep dark,
-and I suppose he ran away to prevent being compelled
-to testify where he was Memorial Day afternoon and
-evening.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘You know where he was, then?’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Yes; he was here at the hotel. I tell you this because
-I want you to know that he is innocent. Felton is a good
-friend of mine, and I thought perhaps if you knew how
-the facts were you might see your way clear to letting
-him down as easy as possible in the paper.’ I assured
-him that my specialty was setting folks right and then
-Thayer told off the following story:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“About 2 o’clock on the afternoon of Memorial Day
-a woman arrived at Raymond on the afternoon train
-from the south, came to this hotel and registered as ‘Isabel
-Winthrop.’ She was superbly dressed and displayed
-an abundance of jewels. According to Thayer, whose
-head was completely turned by her appearance, she was
-magnificently, phenomenally beautiful. You can take
-that for what it is worth. Thayer assigned her a room
-and showed her to it. As she passed in she requested
-him to send a messenger to acquaint Ralph Felton that
-a lady desired to see him. Finding him was an easy
-task, as he was at that moment playing poker in a room
-in the hotel. Felton appeared somewhat surprised when
-called out, but threw up the game and went to the
-woman’s room. That was the last Thayer saw of him
-for an hour, when Felton left the hotel. His face was
-flushed and he seemed to be laboring under strong excitement.
-Before he left he called Thayer to one side. ‘John,’
-said he, ‘if you are a friend of mine say nothing about my
-caller to-day. You understand?’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I remarked casually: ‘Then he returned to the hotel
-that afternoon?’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Oh, yes,’ said he.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘And was there during the evening?’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Yes, I noticed him in the office at the time the alarm
-over the bank affair was sounded. He left the hotel then
-and I did not see him again that night.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Well,’ I asked pointedly, ‘can you swear that Felton
-was in the hotel between 7:45 and 8:30 the evening of
-Memorial Day?’ I never saw a chap so taken back as
-was Thayer. He could not locate Felton at any particular
-time during the evening; moreover, he could not say
-positively that the Winthrop woman spent the evening
-in her room. He supposed she did. The only point that
-Thayer was sure of was that the woman left for the south
-on the first train the next morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Thayer,’ said I, consolingly, ‘the only way I see
-to clear your absent friend is to find this Winthrop
-woman. Describe her to me as accurately as you can.’
-He did so and I have a pretty good pen portrait of the
-unknown in my memorandum-book, marked ‘Exhibit
-A.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Oh, by the way,’ said Thayer, ‘she left a handkerchief
-in the room.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘The deuce she did! I must have that,’ said I. And
-here it is,” said Ashley, passing over a dainty lace creation
-for Barker’s inspection. In one corner is the letter
-“I” curiously embroidered in silk.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There are thousands of such handkerchiefs,” comments
-the detective.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, but not scented with that variety of perfume.”
-The detective sniffs it. “Did you ever smell anything
-just like that?” queries Ashley. Barker allows that he
-never did and his acquaintance with scents is an extended
-one.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“If Isabel Winthrop is found,” declares Ashley, “that
-handkerchief, and especially that perfume, may play an
-important part in her discovery.” Barker smiles.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Truth is stranger than fiction, my boy,” retorts Ashley.
-“Well, what do you think of my clews?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The detective wraps himself in cigar smoke and
-thought for several minutes. Then he extends his hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I believe I’ll accept your proposition.” Ashley
-returns the pressure warmly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I think we’ll make a strong pair to draw to,” he says.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But,” adds Barker, “you will see that I am more or
-less disinterested when I tell you that I incline to the
-belief that neither of your clews, good as they are, is the
-correct one.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No? Whom do you suspect?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker rises. “Ashley,” says he, “you are young,
-enthusiastic and clever. How are you fixed for patience?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Job was a chronic kicker in comparison,” is the
-prompt reply.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, then, about to-morrow evening I shall be ready
-to talk with you and lay out the campaign. Satisfactory?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Perfectly. Let’s go down to the billiard room and
-knock the balls around for an hour.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER IX.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>LOUISE HATHAWAY.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“Good afternoon. Will you walk in?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank you. I will detain you but a short time.” Jack
-Ashley follows Miss Hathaway into the half-lighted
-drawing room, accepts the offered chair and seats himself
-beside the big bay window. She sinks quietly into
-a chair opposite him and glances at the bit of pasteboard
-in her hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley has seen Louise Hathaway at the inquest and
-has remarked that she is an unusually attractive woman.
-And now, as his glance for an instant sweeps over her,
-he votes her superb.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Brief as is his admiring gaze, it is critical. It rests
-upon the twined mass of golden hair, drifts over the face
-to the long white throat and the strong shoulders, thence
-to the faultless figure and sweep of limb. She is as different
-from her sister Helen as the placid morning is unlike
-the beauteous night. Louise is the morning. There is
-a strong sunlight in her glorious blue eyes, but now
-they are shadowed by the grief of the last few days.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>She lifts her eyes from the visiting card. “You are
-a reporter,” she says, with a shade of weariness in her
-voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have the honor of representing the New York Hemisphere.
-I do not desire to cause you any annoyance,
-but there were some matters not brought out in the
-inquest which I wish to investigate.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And you have come all the way from New York for
-this?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No; I have been spending my vacation in Raymond,
-and, of course, when the news of the tragedy reached our
-paper I was instructed to look after it. I know that the
-errand on which I have come must be a painful one for
-you to discuss, but I assure you that I have more than
-a reportorial interest in the case.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes?” She looks at him inquiringly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You must be aware that the case is an unusual one,”
-he goes on. “My interest in it has grown into a determination
-to run down and bring to justice the slayer of
-your father.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He tries to read in the glance she gives him a trace
-of gratitude, of approval. Failing, he decides that Louise
-Hathaway is an extraordinary young woman.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Have you discovered anything—anything that the
-local authorities—they are so stupid—have overlooked?”
-she asks, and he fancies there is something of anxiety in
-the calm, slow tones of a very musical voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes,” he replies. “We, the detective and myself, are
-engaged on several clews. But it is necessary that we
-should be in possession of every bit of knowledge obtainable
-concerning all the persons who have any bearing,
-near or remote, upon the case.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Miss Hathaway turns upon Ashley a pair of blue eyes
-in whose depths he can read naught but purity and
-honesty. “I fear I can tell you little,” she says.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Derrick Ames—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Is innocent,” she interrupts.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am of the same opinion. Derrick Ames and your
-sister were lovers?” She nods.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Your father, I am told, strongly opposed the young
-man’s attentions. There was a more favored suitor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Miss Hathaway regards him with mild surprise. “You
-knew then—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What I have come to ask you about more particularly,”
-finishes Ashley, unblushingly, regarding his digression
-from the truth as a bit of diplomacy.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I was not very well acquainted with him,” avers Miss
-Hathaway, “although we have lived in the same town
-nearly all our lives. But father regarded him as a model
-young man, and until lately encouraged his attentions to
-Helen in every way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Now, who the deuce is she talking about?” wonders
-Ashley, who has simply chanced it in his assertion that
-there was a more favored suitor than Derrick Ames.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I never fancied him, and Helen disliked him exceedingly,”
-continues Miss Hathaway. “But the more she
-discouraged him the more persistent he became. One
-night Helen came to my room in tears. They had had
-a fearful scene, she stated. She should marry him or
-none, he had declared, and had made all sorts of wild
-threats.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I did not know he was such a desperate character,”
-remarks Ashley tentatively.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I do not believe the people of this town knew what
-his true character was. Helen said he seemed to have
-torn off the mask that night and that his face was that
-of a demon. He was wild with rage and left the house
-with curses. I sometimes think—” Miss Hathaway
-pauses and her face wears a troubled expression.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What on earth does she think?” meditates Ashley,
-who is becoming a trifle bewildered.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I sometimes think it was his hand that struck down
-our poor father. But then he could have had no motive,
-and there was in my eyes a reason for his action which
-other people could not surmise.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And yet that action seemed unexplainable?” hazards
-Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“To others, yes. It seemed perhaps a confession of
-guilt. But after what Helen told me I firmly believe that
-he has gone to search for her. And when he and Derrick
-Ames meet, I shudder to think of what may happen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley sees the light at last. So Ralph Felton was the
-favored suitor—Ralph Felton, whom nearly every one in
-Raymond regarded as a model young man, and who,
-despite his unaccountable flight, found plenty of people
-willing to explain it in a dozen charitable ways.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You say that until lately Mr. Hathaway regarded
-Felton’s attentions to your sister with favor. Had he
-any reason for suspending his approval?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I imagine so. During the last month or so he rarely
-spoke of him, and once, when his name was mentioned
-at table, he frowned.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I suppose you know that the case looks black against
-Ames; that not half a dozen people in the town have a
-good word to say for him?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I do not care what is said against Derrick Ames. I
-am sure that he is innocent of any connection with my
-father’s death. What he was to others I cannot say, but
-in the eyes of Helen and myself he was a noble-hearted
-young man, incapable of an unworthy thought or act.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“She pleads for him as if for a lover,” thinks Ashley,
-regarding with admiration the girl before him. The flash
-in the blue eyes and the flush in the cheeks tell of warm
-sympathies and a loyal heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Your sister never intimated to you the likelihood of
-an elopement?” Ashley inquires.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Never. Had she a thought of such a thing I should
-have known it. We kept nothing from each other.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You knew that they met clandestinely?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I did.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley shifts the line of questioning to return to it at
-a more favorable opportunity. It is apparent that it is
-becoming painful to the girl.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What were the relations between your father and Mr.
-Felton—the elder Felton?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Almost wholly of a business nature.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“They were friends?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes. I had noticed, however, that during the last
-few weeks they did not meet as often as before.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Was Mr. Felton at your house within a short time
-previous to the murder?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He was here the evening before it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Anything out of the ordinary in the visit?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Nothing, except that Mr. Felton appeared to be
-angry.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Will you make an effort to recall what happened on
-that particular evening?” Louise is thoughtful for a few
-moments.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I fear I can recall but little,” she replies slowly. “I
-was passing through the hall on my way upstairs, and
-as I stepped by the library door I glanced in. Father
-was sitting in his desk chair and Mr. Felton was standing
-near the door, with his hat in his hand.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Did you hear any of the conversation?” queries Ashley,
-with the keenest interest in the new scent.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Let me see—yes; I remember Mr. Felton said: ‘I
-can’t and I won’t!’ I think those were his words.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Did he appear to be excited?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Perhaps so. He spoke very loudly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And your father’s reply—did you hear that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes; I remember I paused an instant from curiosity.
-Father said, and I recall that his voice sounded rather
-harsh: ‘Then there is but one alternative.’ Then I went
-upstairs to my room. A few minutes afterward I heard
-the front door slam. Father did not retire until several
-hours afterward.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It was not his practice to do so?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No; he usually retired early. I don’t see what this
-has to do with the mystery—but then I am not a detective
-or a newspaper man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It may have much to do with it,” murmurs Ashley.
-Miss Hathaway looks at him inquiringly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What do you think?” she asks.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Candidly, I don’t know what to think,” he confesses.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Will you permit me to turn inquisitor for a few moments?”
-Miss Hathaway requests. “There are one or
-two questions I should like to have answered.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I will answer a thousand,” replies Ashley cheerfully,
-as he meets the direct gaze of the young lady.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Is there any evidence against Derrick Ames, other
-than was brought out at the coroner’s inquest?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley notes the anxiety in the voice and hesitates.
-It may be cruel, but it also may be profitable, so he
-replies slowly to Miss Hathaway:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I regret to say that there are a great many things
-about Ames’ movements that will have to be explained
-away.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Miss Hathaway covers her face with her hands. A
-less keen observer than Ashley could note the hopelessness
-in the face that she finally lifts.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But you said that you believe him innocent,” she
-exclaims, almost eagerly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I said so, surely,” admits Ashley. “But in order to
-prove his innocence it will be necessary to produce him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A silence. Miss Hathaway’s troubled gaze is fixed
-upon him. His quick brain has been working and he has
-arrived at a conclusion. “This woman believes in the
-possibility of Ames’ guilt and she has some reason other
-than the evidence that has been produced. Ah, why
-didn’t I think of that before?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Miss Hathaway,” says Ashley, speaking deliberately,
-“you said a moment ago that you would do anything to
-assist me in tracing the slayer of your father.” She nods.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then will you show me the letter which you received
-from your sister upon her arrival in New York?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>If Ashley expects any result from this haphazard question
-he is assuredly not prepared for what really happens.
-Miss Hathaway’s face turns ashen and a great fear
-springs into her eyes. She rises to her feet, her hands
-clenched.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Who told you I received a letter?” she demands in a
-trembling voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“We newspaper men have many means of obtaining
-information,” replies Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Mr. Ashley,” the girl says—she is quite calm now—“I
-appreciate your efforts fully and thank you for them.
-God grant that they may be crowned with success. As
-for my sister’s letter, I cannot show it to you, as I have
-destroyed it. Its contents I shall never reveal.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I shall hope to see you again before I leave Raymond,”
-remarks Ashley, as he rises to take his leave; for
-the interview has reached its natural limits.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am at home to you at any time,” responds Miss
-Hathaway, acknowledging gravely his pleasant adieu.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As Ashley saunters back to the hotel his mind is in a
-more bewildered condition than at any other time since
-he has begun work on the Hathaway case.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Now that I am in it, I shall stay, if it occupies the
-rest of my natural life,” he determines. “What a magnificent
-young woman! Fortunate that I am not susceptible,
-else I should already be idiotically in love with
-this queen of the morning, whose sad blue eyes haunt
-me still, in the words of the old song.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Oh, the self-sufficiency of youth!</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER X.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>MR. BARKER’S DISCOVERIES.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>After supper Ashley retreats to the most secluded
-corner of the veranda and amuses himself blowing smoke
-rings over the railing. Barker has been gone ever since
-morning. He must have struck a warm trail. Twilight
-gathers ere Ashley beholds the familiar figure swinging
-down the street toward the hotel.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The detective draws a chair beside that of Ashley, and,
-after making certain that no listeners are about, remarks
-complacently: “My boy, I believe we are on the trail
-of Roger Hathaway’s murderer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Indeed! I confess that I am deeper in the woods
-of speculation than ever.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, but when I give you the result of my day’s work
-I think you will find yourself out of the forest and on
-the broad highway of conviction.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then you must have put in a more profitable afternoon
-than I spent, and I accomplished considerable. Had
-your supper?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No. Guess I’ll run in and have supper and then we’ll
-adjourn to my room for a smoke talk.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Half an hour later finds the New Yorkers comfortably
-settled in Barker’s second-floor.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I may as well state at the outset that, as you intimated
-when you introduced yourself last evening, I am
-not a Sherlock Holmes,” begins Barker. “But I have
-had considerable experience in ferreting out criminals.
-A good memory for faces, an extensive acquaintance with
-the brilliants and lesser lights of the crook world, a
-knack of putting two and two together with a view to
-obtaining four as a result, more or less analytical abilities,
-an excellent physique, a fair amount of sand and an
-unlimited stock of patience are my qualifications for
-the profession upon which I have thus far brought no
-discredit.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Pretty good stock in trade, I should say,” comments
-Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank you. Now, every detective waits patiently for
-what he regards as his big case. I think this Hathaway
-affair is mine—or ours, as we are working together.
-Now, I’ll get down to business and tell you what I have
-discovered to-day. We may as well begin with a comprehensive
-study of the cast of characters. Unfortunately,
-three of the leading ones are beyond our reach.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then you figure Derrick Ames extensively in the
-case?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Rather. We will begin with him and consider his
-probable relation to what is destined to be a celebrated
-case.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is unfortunate that the people in the world whose
-photographs one is likely to want at some time or
-another are the very people who seldom run to pictures,”
-resumes Barker. “There isn’t a picture of Ames in existence.
-So far as known he never had one taken. Nor
-are there any photos of Helen Hathaway to be had. The
-only portraits of her in existence are the miniature in the
-locket missing from the dead cashier’s watch-chain and
-a crayon portrait which, I am informed, hangs in a room
-at her late home.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I find that Ames was regarded as an odd stick by the
-discriminating inhabitants of Raymond—principally because
-he did not associate with them more than was
-absolutely necessary. He is said to be well educated
-and is of a high-strung, poetic temperament. Heaven
-knows how he came to locate in such a prosy town as
-Raymond, but the explanation of his remaining here as
-long as he did is simpler; he was apparently devoted to
-Helen Hathaway. I say apparently for want of knowledge
-of what his exact sentiments were. Of his early
-history I learned little, save that he came here some three
-years ago from New York State, studied law with a local
-counsellor, and finally took an excellent position with the
-Vermont Life Insurance Company.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oddly enough, the one male companion that Ames
-chose was a chap about as opposite in temperament and
-every other way as one can imagine. Sam Brockway is
-the name of the fellow, and he is employed as a cutter
-in the sheds of the Wild River Granite Company. And
-Ames hunted him up only when he got into one of his
-periodical fits of the blues, and the two would start off
-on a racket that would last several days. It was this
-habit of drinking, combined with a cynical skepticism
-upon matters and things dear to the heart of a deacon,
-that made Ames objectionable to Mr. Hathaway, and
-the antipathy was cordially returned. Helen, however,
-was a loyal little woman, and despite her father’s commands
-she continued her intimacy with Ames. An elopement
-was a logical sequence of such a companionship,
-and were it not for certain damning evidence that I
-extracted from this Brockway and discovered myself, I
-should dismiss Ames, temporarily at least, as having
-no connection with the bank case.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yet you say Brockway is a friend of Ames’,” remarks
-Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He is. But while a good-hearted chap and loyalty
-itself, he is not especially astute and by shrewd questioning
-and judicious bluffing I discovered that he was
-probably the last man who saw Ames before he disappeared
-from Raymond, Roger Hathaway excepted.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You mean—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I mean that Derrick Ames was seen to enter the Raymond
-National Bank about 8 o’clock on the evening
-of Memorial Day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“H’m! That is serious. Yet his mission may have
-been an innocent one.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“True. But to continue. This forenoon I visited the
-station at Ashfield, where Ames and the girl—there can
-be no question that they were the pair—boarded the night
-express south. While I was lounging about the station,
-waiting for the train back to Raymond, my eye caught
-the glitter of an object lying between the inside rail of
-the track and the south end of the platform, and partly
-under the latter. It was a revolver, 32 caliber, and one
-chamber was empty. With that for a basis, I questioned
-the station agent on another tack, and he finally succeeded
-in remembering that just as the train pulled into
-the station that memorable night the girl handed Ames
-his coat, and as he threw it over his arm an object dropped
-from one of the pockets, which Ames quickly recovered
-and replaced in the coat as he and his companion clambered
-aboard the train. Might not this revolver have
-been the object dropped by Ames, and might he not when
-he put it back in his coat have slipped it into the sleeve,
-through which it dropped as he stepped upon the train?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, the theory is ingenious, even if wrong,” muses
-Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I clinched it a bit more,” continues Barker. “Where
-had Ames and the girl boarded the train? The station
-agent remembered that it was at the south end of the
-platform, as the New York sleeper was made up next
-behind the engine and baggage car.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I beg to remark,” puts in Ashley, “that the fact of
-one chamber in a revolver being empty is not at all
-unusual. I have in my pocket a gun in that condition,
-but as it is a 38 caliber, that lets me out of any connection
-with the tragedy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Of course,” smiles Barker, “I take all these bits of
-evidence for what they are worth. While waiting for my
-train I argued in this wise: Derrick Ames was in love
-with Helen Hathaway, and the attachment resulted in
-an elopement. Neither was seen after 2 o’clock of
-Memorial Day, and the inference is that they were together
-somewhere all the afternoon and evening. The
-elopement was apparently unpremeditated, as they took
-nothing with them, so far as known, except the clothes
-they wore. There must have been some cause for such
-an impromptu exit. People do not elope that way no
-matter how love-mad they may be. Where was Helen
-when Ames was seen going into the bank? Waiting
-for him somewhere. What was his errand? To make
-a final appeal for the girl’s hand, with an elopement in
-mind as the last resort, perhaps. But even failing in
-that, why elope that particular night? There must have
-been a cause for hurrying him away. But if you assume
-that Ames committed the crime, even as the upshot of a
-fierce quarrel, even perhaps in self-defense, you must
-figure him a moral monstrosity, for only such could strike
-down a father and elope subsequently with the daughter.
-And then there is the missing money. You see it argues
-a villainy more despicable than a man like Ames could
-have been guilty of.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yet pathology records even more singular instances
-of moral distortion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Even so. But is it not more reasonable to believe that
-Ames may have been only a witness to the murder, or
-a spectator on the scene of the tragedy after it had occurred,
-and that he was hurried away by the horror of
-the affair? But in either event would he not have argued
-that to fly would be the worst possible thing he could do?
-I confess that when I arrived at Raymond I was in doubt
-as to Ames’ possible guilt, but my afternoon’s investigations
-have about convinced me that Derrick Ames had
-nothing to do with the death of Cashier Hathaway.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then you must have substituted some other person
-as the object of your suspicion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes; but the substitution is not especially recent. Before
-I give you the result of my afternoon labors let me
-tell you of a discovery that I made yesterday, not three
-hours after my arrival in town.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“After I had posted myself from the stenographic
-notes of the inquest I dropped into the bank to have a
-talk with the officials. President Felton took me into the
-directors’ room, where the tragedy occurred, and I sat
-in the cashier’s chair and glanced around to get a few
-bearings. While Felton was retelling his story of the
-finding of Hathaway’s body I toyed with a blotter on the
-desk. It was the ordinary blotter, larger than the average,
-with the advertisement of an insurance company on
-one side. As I glanced carelessly at it I noticed that
-it had taken up the ink of some unusually plain characters.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Felton was called out of the room for a moment and
-I slipped the blotter in my pocket to examine it at my
-leisure. When I returned to the hotel I made an investigation,
-and I discovered—but I will let you see for
-yourself. Hand me that small mirror on the wall.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley does so. The detective takes his prize from
-a bundle of papers in his pocket, smooths it flat on the
-table, and places the mirror perpendicularly before it.
-Then he draws the lamp over and remarks complacently:
-“Look here upon this picture!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>And this is what Ashley sees as he gazes upon the
-reflecting surface. There are three groups of characters.
-The first group reads:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>“Come to the bank immediately—”</b></p>
-
-<p class='c016'>The second:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>“Your personal account overdrawn—”</b></p>
-
-<p class='c016'>And the third:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'><b>“These things I charge you fail not, Cyrus Felton, at the
-peril of your good name.&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Roger Hathaway.”</b></p>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Jove! It reads like an accusation!” cries Ashley,
-dropping back into his chair.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is an accusation!” declares the detective, with the
-ring of triumph in his voice.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XI.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>A SIFTING OF EVIDENCE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>Both men smoke on in a brief silence that Ashley
-breaks with an inquiring “Well?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Much,” is Barker’s smiling response. “Now, my
-boy,” he adds briskly, as he extracts a bunch of writing
-paper from his grip and sharpens his pencil, “tell me
-everything you know concerning the dramatis personae
-in this drama. We will get our facts together, and then
-I’ll give you my theories—for I have more than one. Go
-ahead.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>When Ashley has exhausted his stock of information
-and has hazarded one or two ingenious theories, the detective
-leans back in his chair and for the space of five
-minutes says not a word. Finally he turns to Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“This Hathaway mystery,” he begins, “is either simplicity
-itself or it is shrouded in a veil that only the
-patient search and unceasing effort of months will lift.
-My first glance at the case led me to believe that the
-murder was the work of a professional, so swiftly had it
-been accomplished and so completely had the work of
-the operator been covered up. But the most earnest
-search has failed to discover the presence in town on
-Memorial Day of any person who could possibly be
-regarded as a suspicious character, except Ernest Stanley,
-of whom more anon.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then the deed must have been committed by some
-one in Raymond. Thus far we have evidence affecting
-four men—Derrick Ames, Cyrus Felton, Ralph Felton,
-and Ernest Stanley. If two of the four were implicated
-it could have been only the Feltons, father and son. I do
-not say that any of the four is the guilty man. But a
-chain of evidence must be forged about the slayer of
-Roger Hathaway, and in order that this chain shall be
-complete, minus not a single link, it becomes necessary
-for us to establish the innocence of these four men, if
-they are innocent, as well as the presumptive guilt of a
-fifth party, if a fifth party committed the crime.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In other words, we are hampered by a superabundance
-of clews.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Exactly. I will pardon your interruption, but no
-more of them, unless they are good ones. Now, your
-attention.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Roger Hathaway was killed in his office in the bank
-on the evening of Memorial Day, some time between
-7:45 and 8:30 o’clock. No definite minute or five minutes
-can be fixed. Two of our characters were, we know,
-and the other two may have been, at the bank between
-7:45 and 8:30. To begin with Ames. Sam Brockway
-tells me that he saw Ames enter the bank after Hathaway
-had handed a note to the boy, Jimmie Howe. Brockway
-did not stay to see Ames come out; when the latter
-did emerge he was unseen. It is not unreasonable to
-assume that Ames killed Hathaway as the climax of a
-bitter quarrel over the latter’s daughter, and that, to
-facilitate his escape, he helped himself to the bank’s funds.
-But it is unreasonable to assume that subsequently he
-induced the daughter to elope with him. That is the
-weak link in that chain.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But suppose that the elopement was already under
-way; that everything had been arranged for, hour of departure,
-route and conveyance,” debates Ashley. “Would
-not Ames argue that solitary flight, and a failure to
-carry out the prearranged plans must weigh heavily
-against him? An elopement is an excellent excuse for
-leaving town hurriedly, you know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Possible,” returns the detective. “Now, the letter
-which you say Louise Hathaway received from her sister,
-but the contents of which she refuses to reveal, must
-have contained some reference to Ames which Miss
-Hathaway has reasons for concealing. At any rate, there
-is good ground for suspecting that Ames knows something
-of the murder of Roger Hathaway, whether or no
-his own hand was stained with the cashier’s blood. Now,”
-says Barker, turning to the blotter and the mirror on
-the table, and propping up the reflector with the water
-pitcher, “look that over carefully, Ashley, and tell me what
-you find.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley draws his chair up to the table and examines
-critically the characters on the blotter as reflected in
-the mirror.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“All of the words which are distinguishable were not,
-when blotted, on the same sheet of paper,” he asserts.
-“At least two and perhaps three sheets of paper were
-used. The words, ‘your personal account overdrawn,’
-must have been at the bottom of one sheet and those
-with the signature attached upon another, but whether
-top, middle, or bottom of the page is of no consequence.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Very good,” approves Barker. “That was the first
-conclusion I arrived at when I examined the blotter.
-Now, how about those words, ‘Come to the bank immediately’?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Their position is not so clear to me. Their nature
-would indicate that they began the letter, but if so I
-cannot see why they should blot and the words following
-them should not appear.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But if they were part of another letter—what then?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah,” remarks Ashley, thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am assuming, and I think reasonably, that the blotter
-was first used upon the letter or letters whose contents
-we are attempting to guess,” says Barker. “There
-are many faint marks around the legible words, but naturally
-only the words concluding each page would be
-distinguishable. Those above would be either dry or
-in process of drying. But what else do you deduce, Ashley?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, the writing does not display, in my opinion,
-undue haste or agitation. I am not an expert in handwriting,
-but I should say that this letter was written at
-a normal speed and by a man in a comparatively calm
-condition of mind. The signature is bold and firm, as
-are all the legible characters. I should also say that this
-letter was the one which Roger Hathaway sent to Cyrus
-Felton half an hour or so before he was found dead
-in his office.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You remember Felton’s testimony at the inquest?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Perfectly. He stated that the note he received contained
-the simple request: ‘Come to the bank immediately.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then you think he lied to the coroner?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It would seem so. Unless—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Unless the note he received at his house on the evening
-of Memorial Day did contain only that brief summons,
-which is contained in the five words at the top
-of the blotter.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Precisely,” agrees Ashley. “That brings us to the
-question, when was the other letter written? It must
-have been previous to the note referred to at the inquest,
-but how many hours or days before? Let me have your
-theory, Barker. My mind is already shaping a shadowy
-one.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The detective chews his cigar reflectively. “Suppose
-that Roger Hathaway discovered, some time ago—within
-a few weeks, we will say—that the affairs of the bank
-were not in the condition that they should be?” he hazards.
-“An examination of the books showed not only
-that the president’s personal account was overdrawn, but
-that certain operations of the latter had jeopardized the
-soundness of the institution. The knowledge might have
-been expected or unexpected. In either case the cashier
-realized that something had to be done, and at once.
-So on the day before Memorial Day, or even earlier,
-he wrote a letter to the president and couched it in plain
-English. He instanced the overdrawal of the president’s
-personal account and a number of other unpleasant conditions,
-and urged upon that gentleman the necessity for
-an immediate adjustment of the critical affairs, closing
-with the admonition, ‘Fail not, Cyrus Felton, at the peril
-of your good name.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Having dispatched his letter to the president, the
-cashier waited anxiously for a reply. It came in the
-form of a call by Felton at the residence of Hathaway
-the evening before Memorial Day. The interview was a
-stormy one. At least we know it was not harmonious.
-The cashier again set forth the necessity for immediate
-action. Ways and means were discussed, but no way out
-of the tangle seemed clear. In desperation the cashier
-suggested some unpleasant but safe method of salvation.
-The president responded angrily, ‘I can’t and I won’t!’
-and the cashier answered decisively, ‘Then there is only
-one alternative.’ Without waiting to discuss this alternative,
-the president left the house in a temper and the
-cashier sat up in his library for hours afterward, meditating
-on the crisis.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Now, what was this ‘one alternative’ indicated by the
-cashier? Clearly publicity of the bank’s condition and
-its subsequent wreck. The next day was Memorial Day.
-The cashier took part in the solemn services and in the
-evening he went to the bank to perform some necessary
-work upon the books, the teller being ill. No word had
-come from the president, no intimation that he was
-prepared to follow out the course pointed out the night
-before, and avoid the disgrace which the wreck of the
-bank would entail. Again the desperation of the situation
-flashed upon the cashier. The president must act, and at
-once. So the cashier indited a brief but peremptory note
-to the president: ‘Come to the bank immediately.’ This
-he delivered to Jimmy Howe, whom he found on the
-bridge tossing pebbles into the stream.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The president answered the summons. Within the
-cashier’s office the accusation, apparently so plainly indicated
-on this blotter, was repeated verbally. A sharp dispute
-followed. Hot words led to blows. The drawer
-of the cashier’s desk was open and his revolver lay in
-view. Can you supply the rest?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But the open vault and the missing money and securities?”
-contends Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The vault may have been, probably was, already open.
-The missing funds—had been missing for some little
-time,” replies Barker, with a significant smile. Then he
-resumes:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Felton testified that on the night of the tragedy he
-reached the bank about 8:20. As he left his house about
-8:05 he must have got to the bank not far from 8:15. It
-is not more than ten minutes’ walk, even at an ordinary
-pace. He told Sheriff Wilson, when he found the latter
-at the hotel, that he discovered Hathaway ‘only a few
-moments ago.’ Yet the sheriff stated to me that he was
-positive it was 8:35 when he was informed of the affair.
-He looked at his watch when he was accompanying Felton
-to the bank. Again, Felton told the coroner that ‘it
-did not seem more than a minute that I spent in the
-bank,’ so that here we have a hiatus of fully a quarter of
-an hour. Now, where was Felton during that fifteen
-minutes if not in the company of Roger Hathaway? If
-Hathaway was dead when Felton reached the bank, why
-was not the sheriff informed earlier? You see there is
-an apparent discrepancy that might be explained on the
-theory that Hathaway was alive when Felton entered the
-bank, and that an interview of ten or fifteen minutes was
-ended by the death of the cashier.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XII.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>FURTHER CONSIDERATION OF CLEWS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>Having allowed Ashley to digest the food for thought
-furnished by the detective, the latter resumes his story:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Upon my return from Ashfield I called upon Cyrus
-Felton, found him at his residence and interviewed him
-in his library for fully an hour. When I introduced myself
-as a detective he started visibly. In place of the
-extreme agitation which characterized his testimony at
-the inquest, he betrayed a nervousness rather peculiar,
-to say the least, in one whose knowledge of the crime
-embraced only what he related to the coroner.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I questioned him minutely, avoiding any direct query
-that would be likely to arouse his suspicions. To my
-question, ‘When did you last see Mr. Hathaway?’ he
-replied that it was on the afternoon of Memorial Day,
-when the Grand Army post marched to the cemetery.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘And before that—when?’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He hesitated a few moments and answered that he
-had last talked with the cashier several days, probably a
-week, before the tragedy.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Your relations with Mr. Hathaway were always of
-a friendly nature?’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Eminently so.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The answer was straightforward and the look that
-accompanied it was open and direct, the only one, by the
-way, during the entire interview. Of course I was not
-at the time aware of the unharmonious interview which,
-as Miss Hathaway reported to you, occurred at her father’s
-house on the evening preceding Memorial Day. Lie
-No. 1, conceding that he told the truth about the note
-which he received from the cashier on the evening of
-the tragedy.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Now, this revolver of Mr. Hathaway’s, what sort
-of a weapon was it, Mr. Felton?’ I asked. He gave me
-a half-startled look and I fancied that his gaze strayed
-for an instant to the safe set in the wall of his library. It
-flashed upon me that the lost gun was concealed behind
-the steel door of that same safe.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘The revolver,’ he said, in an absent sort of way; ‘oh,
-it was an ordinary affair, 32 caliber, I believe they called
-it, nickeled and with a pearl handle. I had often seen it
-lying in Mr. Hathaway’s drawer, but so far as I know
-it was never used.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Would you recognize that revolver if you should see
-it again, Mr. Felton?’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘I don’t know as I could positively identify it. Revolvers
-are so much alike, are they not?’ I nodded, and
-again his eyes shifted toward the door of his safe.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, as I say, I talked with him for about an hour,
-most of the interview dealing with the forgery case of
-two years ago, in which our mysterious friend, Ernest
-Stanley, figured as the principal. But of that more later.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It was about 5 o’clock when I called at Felton’s house,
-and the supper bells of the neighborhood were ringing
-when I left. Instead of going to the hotel I struck down
-a side street to the river road, for a smoke and a stroll,
-and a chance to run the Hathaway case over in my mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Half a mile below the village there is quite a stretch
-of road without any houses along it. The cemetery is
-on one side, the river on the other. I was sprawling on
-the stone wall that skirts the city of the dead and looking
-toward the village, when I saw a figure rapidly approaching.
-‘Cyrus Felton or I’m a goat!’ I exclaimed, and
-rolled out of sight behind the wall. My eyesight is keen
-and I could not mistake the tall, lank form of the bank
-president. ‘What the deuce is he doing down this road
-at an hour when he should be peacefully eating his supper?’
-I wondered.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“When Felton passed around the bend in the road
-I sprung over the wall and followed at a cautious distance.
-He looked around once or twice, and I had to
-dodge behind a tree each time. Suddenly he stopped and
-walked out upon the bank of the river, while I again
-took up a position behind my friendly stone wall.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Our banker walked to the edge of the river, and,
-with his hands clasped behind him, stared at the water,
-now and then casting a look up and down the road.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Heavens! Is he going to commit suicide?’ I thought.
-Surely my mild catechism had not driven him to such an
-extremity. My fears were shortly allayed. He suddenly
-thrust his hand into his coat pocket, and, withdrawing
-some object, hurled it into the stream. It sunk with a
-small splash. I was too far away to more than guess
-what the object was. Felton remained on the bank for
-several minutes, gazing at the surface of the river, then
-suddenly wheeled and started toward the village. As
-he passed me I fancied he looked a bit more relieved
-in mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“After he was out of sight I walked over to the river
-and marked as near as possible the spot where he had
-stood. The river at that point is deep, and I fear that
-the bottom is muddy, as the stream makes a sharp bend
-and spreads into a broad lagoon, with little or no current.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You intend to go a-fishing?” queries Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At daylight, if we can get a boat of some sort.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And if our search is rewarded by the finding of a
-revolver—the revolver—what then?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then I think we shall have a case against Cyrus Felton
-stronger than we shall make out against any one
-else. I can see by your face that you are only half convinced
-of that fact,” continues Barker. “You are more
-inclined to suspect the younger Felton than the elder,
-eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well,” argues the newspaper man, “in the case of
-Ralph Felton there is a motive, an evil temper, and
-what is usually regarded as confession of guilt—flight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Good. Let us look over young Felton’s case,” says
-the detective. “Ralph Felton, we know, is possessed of
-an evil temper and a disposition to bullyrag a young lady
-who is sensible enough not to love him. We know also
-that he gambles with traveling men who put up here,
-and drinks more or less. As the good people of this
-town regard Ralph as a model young man, his indulgence
-in cards and wine on the quiet shows a broad
-streak of deception in his character.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“His inclinations toward gayety were not cultivated
-in his native town. Previous to a twelvemonth ago four
-or five years of his life were spent in New York, Chicago
-and other cities. His occupation during a share of that
-time was that of representative and selling agent for the
-granite company in which his father is the principal
-stock owner. He was apparently wild and reckless, for
-a year ago he returned to Raymond and through the
-efforts of his father was given the position of bookkeeper
-in the bank, a position which does not usually pay
-much. It would appear that the elder Felton had
-enacted the role of the prodigal’s father.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“While Ralph Felton was ‘down country’ he fell in
-love with a pretty face, and upon its possessor he squandered
-all his means and more. When Ralph returned to
-Raymond the woman wrote to him demanding money
-and a fulfillment of pledges. The former he had not;
-of the latter he had no thought, as he had become desperately
-enamored of Helen Hathaway. Unable to obtain
-satisfaction by a correspondence, the woman visited
-Raymond the afternoon of Memorial Day, registered as
-‘Isabel Winthrop,’ and sent word to Ralph that a lady
-desired to see him. He went to her. The interview between
-the pair was not harmonious. Sounds of a quarrel
-came from the room, and once or twice the word ‘money’
-was used. Half an hour or so from the time he entered
-the hotel Ralph left with a flushed countenance, first
-pledging the clerk to say nothing of his feminine caller.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He has essayed promises with her, but something
-substantial is demanded to back them up. He must have
-money, but where is it to be secured? No use to apply
-to his father, that he well knows. The more he racks
-his brain the more desperate becomes the situation. Then
-a wild thought comes to him. The bank! There must
-be a large amount of money in the safe. The county
-bonds mature the next day. He knows, we will assume—perhaps
-the knowledge is accidental—the combination
-of the safe.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ralph returns to the hotel, and, with a calmness born
-of a desperate resolve, informs ‘Isabel Winthrop’ that he
-has arranged for the needed funds, and reiterates his
-promises for the future. As dusk comes on he leaves the
-hotel unobserved by the clerk, goes to the bank, opens
-the front door and locks it behind him, and proceeds
-to the cashier’s office in the rear, wherein open the doors
-to the vault.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“As with a trembling hand he twists the combination
-of the vault he hears the sound of a key in the outer
-door. He springs to his feet and casts a startled glance
-about him. There is no egress from the room save by
-the way he came. Ah! The closet! He secretes himself
-in the dark closet at the farther end of the room, and
-at that instant Roger Hathaway enters.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘The cashier,’ murmurs the prisoner in the closet, as
-through the partially open door he watches Hathaway
-light his desk lamp. ‘He has dropped in to get some
-papers and will soon be gone,’ thinks Ralph. But to the
-latter’s despair the cashier opens the vault, takes out the
-big ledger, and settles down apparently to an evening’s
-work.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Here is a nice predicament, but there is nothing to
-be done except wait until the cashier finishes his evening’s
-work and goes home. Half an hour or more goes
-by. The closet is dusty and Ralph is seized with an irresistible
-desire to sneeze. The explosion, a half-smothered
-one, occurs, and the cashier looks about him in surprise
-and wonder. But he continues his work. Suddenly Felton
-sees him seize a pad of writing paper, scratch off a
-brief note and leave the room to find a messenger. Has
-the cashier suspected the presence of some person in
-the bank besides himself and has he taken this means to
-summon assistance? As this thought flashes upon him
-young Felton becomes desperate, but as he watches the
-face of the cashier, who returns calmly to his writing, he
-convinces himself that he is mistaken.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Again that cursed inclination to sneeze, which in vain
-he attempts to smother. This time there is no mistake.
-The cashier rises to his feet and glances about the room
-in alarm. His eyes finally rest on the partly opened
-door of the dark closet. Hathaway is a man of nerve.
-He opens the right-hand drawer of his desk, takes out
-and cocks his revolver and walks deliberately toward the
-closet.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“All this is seen by Ralph, and his plan to rob the bank
-is succeeded by a desire to escape from the building
-unrecognized. To accomplish this the cashier must be
-overpowered. So when the latter flings open the closet
-door the man within reaches out, grasps the revolver
-arm and draws the cashier into the darkness of the
-closet. Then ensues a fierce struggle, for Roger Hathaway,
-though old, is still a powerful man. This would
-account for the old ledgers that were toppled over into
-the office, and for the marks on the body of the murdered
-man.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“During the struggle the revolver is discharged and
-the bullet enters the cashier’s heart. The doctors in the
-case tell me that the course of the bullet was such that
-the leaden missile might have come from a pistol discharged
-during such a struggle as I have described. But
-to continue:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ralph Felton draws the limp form of the cashier out
-into the office and lays it upon the floor. A moment’s
-examination shows him that the man is dead, and he
-realizes his frightful position. Then the thought occurs
-to him that, if he carries out his original plan of robbing
-the bank, the crime will be ascribed to burglars. So he
-fills his pockets with what money and securities are in
-the safe, closes the door to the cashier’s office behind him
-and leaves the bank, with the front door unlocked or
-ajar.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Unless—” interrupts Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Unless what?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Unless,” says the newspaper man, leaning back in his
-chair and blowing a cloud of smoke ceilingward—“unless
-Ralph Felton, when he rose from his examination of the
-body, was suddenly confronted by his father, who had
-come to the bank in response to the summons sent by
-the cashier!”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XIII.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>THE KEY TO THE MYSTERY.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“Following along the lines of your theory,” continues
-Ashley, “if Ralph Felton rose from the corpse of Roger
-Hathaway and confronted his father upon the threshold
-of the cashier’s office, that dramatic meeting would explain
-many things. It would explain the startled glance
-that Cyrus Felton shot at his son—I was studying the
-faces of both—when the latter refused to state at the
-inquest where he had spent the time between 7:45 and
-8:30 on the evening of Memorial Day. It would account
-for the carrying off of the cashier’s revolver and its
-subsequent burial among the waters of Wild River; for
-young Felton’s flight, and for the extreme agitation of
-the elder Felton ever since the night of the killing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And,” adds Barker, “it would satisfactorily clear up
-the interim of fifteen minutes between the time Cyrus
-Felton should have reached the bank and the moment
-when the sheriff was notified. In fact, if the Felton family
-is responsible for the death of Roger Hathaway there
-must be some understanding between father and son.
-But we will now proceed to the consideration of an
-important character in our tragedy—Ernest Stanley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Two years ago, while the directors of the Raymond
-National Bank were holding their annual meeting, the
-teller stepped into the room and announced that a
-stranger had presented at the bank for payment a check
-for $1,000, signed by Cyrus Felton.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Impossible!’ exclaimed that individual, who was presiding
-over the directors’ meeting. ‘Let me see the
-check.’ The teller produced it, and Felton at once declared
-it a forgery, and a bungling one at that. An officer
-was quickly summoned and Ernest Stanley, who had
-presented the check, was arrested.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“His trial in the Mansfield County Court was short.
-The forgery was proved and the young man was sentenced
-to three years in the state prison at Windsor. In
-his own defense—he had no money with which to employ
-a lawyer—Stanley stated that the check had been given
-to him two days before he presented it, by a casual acquaintance
-who claimed the name signed to the bit of
-paper. It was in payment of a gambling debt and the
-transaction occurred in Phil Clark’s well-known lair of
-the tiger on Fifth Avenue, New York.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Which, by the way, is no more,” puts in Ashley. “The
-place was closed out six months ago and Phil is now
-in ’Frisco.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It was in existence during Stanley’s trial,” resumes
-Barker, “and the trial was adjourned a couple of days
-while his improbable story was looked up. As was
-expected, neither Phil nor any of the habitues of his
-place knew of such a person as Ernest Stanley, much
-less such a transaction as he alleged to have occurred
-there.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Stanley received his sentence calmly. Beyond stating
-that his age was 26 and his occupation that of a bookmaker
-he refused to furnish any details of his birth, early
-life or present residence. He served two years of his
-sentence and was pardoned by the governor this last
-Memorial Day. Strangely enough, the pardon was secured
-by the man whose name he was alleged to have
-forged—Cyrus Felton. Now, what feelings do you suppose
-actuated Felton in securing a remission of a year
-in the prisoner’s sentence? Compassion?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What should you say were I to suggest the word
-‘remorse’?” replies Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I should say,” declares the detective, with a smile of
-approval, “that you had hit upon the very word. It is
-plain that you foresee what I am leading up to.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“To the theory that Stanley was innocent of the forgery
-and that the check was given to him by Ralph Felton?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Exactly. It will be difficult to prove, but if it can be
-proved it will have an important bearing on the Hathaway
-mystery. It will show Ralph Felton’s capacity for
-wrongdoing and will enable us to surmise to what extent
-Cyrus Felton would shield his son from conviction of a
-crime. At the time the check was presented Ralph Felton
-was supposed to be in New York, and as he had been
-for some time more or less of a trial to the old man the
-latter doubtless suspected in an instant what we are
-assuming to have been the truth. He had to decide between
-his son and a stranger, and, as usual, the stranger
-suffered.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What led Stanley to attempt to cash the check in
-Raymond?” debates Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, if he was a stranger in New York he would
-find it impossible to cash it at any of the banks in that
-city. Why not run up to Raymond and cash it at the
-bank on which it was drawn? I forgot to say that at
-the trial Stanley alleged that his acquaintance of the gambling
-rooms claimed to be a Vermonter and appeared to
-have plenty of money.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And he did not hazard the suggestion that this acquaintance
-was the son of the man whose name was
-forged?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He did not know that there was a son. To prove
-this, if the visitor at Cyrus Felton’s house on the evening
-of Memorial Day was the released prisoner of Windsor,
-note his surprised reply to the housemaid, ‘I did not
-know there were two Feltons.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“True,” admits Ashley. “Keep along, old man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“If Stanley was that visitor,” pursues the detective, “his
-object in revisiting Raymond was to obtain revenge for
-the wrong that had been done him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“When he arrived at Raymond, at 7:45, he went directly
-to Felton’s house. Failing to find the bank president
-at home, he obtained directions as to where Felton’s
-office was and proceeded to the bank block. The office,
-which is on the second story, at the south end of the
-block, was dark and Stanley returned to the street. As
-he stood in front of the bank and thought of the day,
-two long years before, when he stepped from its portals
-with a constable gripping his arm, he noticed a light in
-the rear. Perhaps Felton was within. So he pushed
-open the door and—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Hold on a bit. How does the bank door come to
-be open? You are assuming a great deal this time,
-Barker,” laughs Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am assuming that he got into the bank some way
-or other,” retorts the detective. “If not—and here I
-will quote your own words when you imparted to me
-your valuable discovery—‘What was Stanley doing at 6
-o’clock the next morning asleep in the bushes in a lonely
-gorge near South Ashfield village?’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley laughs merrily. “I was expecting that,” he
-says. “But I’ll be hanged if I will believe that an Edmond
-Dantes sort of a chap like Ernest Stanley is capable
-of—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Permit me to suggest that Ernest Stanley may be
-a cheap criminal instead of an Edmond Dantes,” interrupts
-Barker, with a withering sarcasm that only increases
-Ashley’s good humor. “We have given him a
-good character simply to suit our present theory. He
-may have really forged old Felton’s name, and his visit
-to Raymond may have been actuated by a base desire
-for revenge upon a stern justice meted out to him. Alone
-in the bank with Roger Hathaway and the open vault,
-murder and robbery may have come natural to him. We
-know nothing that should lead us to decide that he was
-a much-abused young man.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yet you believe he is, I’ll wager,” asserts Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I confess that I do. A man would be half a dozen
-kinds of a fool to forge the name of the president of a
-bank and present the check for payment at the latter’s
-own bank. Still what evidence we have against Stanley
-is strong. We can account for the flight of Derrick
-Ames on the simple elopement theory. We can explain
-the levanting of Ralph Felton on the theory that he
-refused to establish an alibi because it would necessitate
-the confession of an acquaintance with ‘Isabel Winthrop,’
-when he was an ardent suitor for the hand of Helen Hathaway,
-and on the further supposition that he has gone
-to hunt for the woman he insanely loved. We can explain
-the nervous condition of Cyrus Felton on the assumption
-that he fears his son was implicated in the
-bank robbery and trembles for his safety. But we cannot
-explain why Ernest Stanley fled from Raymond the
-night of Memorial Day and hurried over mountain and
-stream and through forest, chased like a wild beast,
-until he found a haven of refuge. The open bank door
-is the break in the chain of evidence against him,
-and that may be mended by assuming that the cashier
-forgot to lock the door behind him when he entered
-the bank.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“We must find Stanley,” Ashley promptly declares.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And there are others to be found,” the detective
-rejoins dryly. “But especially must we run down Stanley.
-I am convinced that he is the key to the mystery,
-and when we have located his position in this puzzling
-case I believe that the rest of the race will be plain
-sailing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I fear it will be a long, stern chase.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Such chases usually are,” remarks Barker, composedly.
-“I have already set the machinery in motion,
-and the police of the entire country are on the lookout
-for a chap answering Stanley’s description. What makes
-our task the harder is the probable fact that Stanley is
-not a member of the criminal class, and so a comparatively
-easy channel of pursuit is closed. He presumably
-made for New York, and somewhere in that busy
-human hive we may run across him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then our labors at this end of the road are about
-completed?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Nearly so. To-morrow morning, before the village
-is astir, we will go a-fishing. If we find what we expect
-the case may be precipitated a bit. Otherwise we will
-shift the scene of our operations to New York, after I
-have pumped the servants in the Felton family and
-inquired as far as is possible into the affairs of the bank.
-Is your vacation about wound up?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It will be in a day or so. I have nothing to keep
-me here longer except a pleasant duty that I owe to
-myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And that is—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“To make an unprofessional call upon Miss Louise
-Hathaway.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ho! Sits the wind in that quarter?” laughs the detective.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Don’t be absurd, my friend,” smiles Ashley. “Miss
-Hathaway interests me only as would a statue of the
-Venus de Milo.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Indeed? Still, men have lost their hearts to a statue.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In books and plays. If we are to arise at daybreak
-I would suggest the advisability of retiring.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XIV.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>A CHANGE OF BASE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“I believe this is the exact spot; yes, I am sure it is.
-Drop your anchor, Ashley, so that the bow will point
-up-stream,” says Barker, as he grasps a long pole with
-a hook at one end, and prepares to explore the bed
-of Wild River.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley lets go the rock that does duty as an anchor and
-remarks ruefully, when all but a yard of the rope is run
-out: “This is deep-sea fishing. There is over twelve
-feet of water here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thunder! And mud enough to bury a man-of-war,”
-grunts the detective.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>After fifteen minutes of earnest but ineffectual groping
-in the slimy bed of the stream Barker throws the
-pole from him and remarks: “No use.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Can’t the river be dredged?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes; with a force of men and a steam dredger, and
-the whole township looking on and asking questions.
-We can do nothing this morning. Up anchor and away!
-I could use a little breakfast.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By the way,” observes Ashley, as the two men walk
-back to the hotel, “in all your talk last night you said
-nothing of that locket, with the miniatures of the Hathaway
-sisters, which was stolen from the watch-chain of
-the murdered cashier the night of the killing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Do you know it was stolen on that night?” asks the
-detective.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“We must assume that it was until we know otherwise,
-I suppose,” returns Ashley. “If the missing locket
-is found in the possession of any one of our suspects
-it would be a strong link, would it not?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Very likely, but we must find our man first. Shall
-you be ready to leave for New York to-night?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Sure thing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Good. We must strike the trail there and follow it,
-if need be, to the end of the world.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley has been in Raymond only two weeks, but already
-he begins to sigh for the pleasures and palaces
-of gay, crowded and babel-voiced New York.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Hang it!” he growls to Barker, as he packs his valise,
-“this Vermont country is all right, but the natives are
-atrocious. They know no literature except those provincial
-Boston dailies and the current paper-covered rot;
-no music except Sousa’s marches, no art except the colored
-supplements to the Sunday newspapers and no conversation
-higher than horse, hay and village gossip.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Your criticism is too sweeping,” replies the detective.
-“There is more culture in Raymond, in proportion to its
-population, than there is in New York, I’ll wager. And
-where in that politics-ridden city will you find another
-woman rivaling your fervid description of Miss Louise
-Hathaway?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, she is a rose in a wilderness. And that reminds
-me that I have promised myself the pleasure of a farewell
-call upon her,” says Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Farewell?” repeats the detective, skeptically. “You
-will not see the last of Miss Hathaway to-day unless I
-am much mistaken. I have known of more than one
-lover of statuary who failed to be content with the marble
-and warmed it into living, breathing womanhood.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Nonsense!” laughs Ashley. “I shall live and die a
-bachelor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But he spends fully ten minutes in tying his cravat,
-brushes his hair with unusual care, gives his mustache
-an extra twist, and saunters up to the Hathaway
-homestead in an expectant frame of mind. Foolish Jack
-Ashley! In after years he will smile at the recollection
-of the thoughts that flit through his busy mind to-day.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Just as he turns into the path leading to the Hathaway
-residence Miss Hathaway is stepping out upon the
-veranda. She sees him and smiles in her grave way.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Good afternoon,” she says to her visitor. He answers,
-uncovering his head.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I called to say au revoir. I leave for New York to-night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>She leads the way to the reception room. After they
-have taken their seats near the open window she answers:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You will return? Your work here on—on the case
-is not yet finished?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No; we shall have occasion to visit Raymond more
-than once before the mystery which shrouds the bank
-case is dispelled. It is going to be a long chase, I fear,
-Miss Hathaway. But I hope to come to you some day
-and tell you of its successful end.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I hope so,” she replies dreamily, her thoughts far
-away.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You have heard nothing more from your sister?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Nothing.” Her look is frank.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I can tell you nothing of our plans,” says Ashley,
-“further than that our principal endeavor will be to discover
-Ernest Stanley.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ernest Stanley?” repeats Miss Hathaway. “Oh, the
-young man who was pardoned from State prison on
-Memorial Day. Do you think he committed the crime?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Frankly, no. But we believe that he knows something
-of its perpetration. In other words, we regard him
-as the key to the mystery.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And Derrick Ames?” questions Miss Hathaway, with
-the anxious expression of yesterday in her gaze.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Derrick Ames must be found, also. If you could give
-me any information—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I can tell you nothing,” she replies hurriedly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ralph Felton is another absentee whose presence is
-earnestly desired,” he resumes.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You say you do not believe that Stanley is the guilty
-man. Does it, then, lie between Ralph Felton and—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And Derrick Ames?” finishes Ashley. “Not necessarily.
-There is another, but for excellent reasons I
-should prefer not to mention the name. Have you any
-plans for the future?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No definite plans. Mr. Cyrus Felton has been appointed
-executor of the estate and after that has been
-settled I shall probably make my home at his house.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At Cyrus Felton’s?” murmurs Ashley, in such a peculiar
-voice that Miss Hathaway looks at him in surprise.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes; that is the only place I can go to at present. He
-has long been a friend of the family.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Have you no relatives—in Boston, New York, or
-elsewhere?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No near relatives. It will not be very long ere I
-shall have to make a home for myself. I am told that the
-estate will settle for very little,” confesses Miss Hathaway,
-with a red spot in each pale cheek. Ashley understands
-and regards her sympathetically.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>There is a short, somewhat embarrassing silence. Then
-Ashley rises regretfully. He says:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am afraid it must be good-bye—or, perhaps, au
-revoir. I shall hope to see you again before the summer
-is gone.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I trust so,” Miss Hathaway responds, this time quite
-cordially, as she gives him her hand at parting, and Ashley
-holds it an instant longer than ordinary courtesy calls
-for. And as he walks slowly away from the house he
-carries with him the vision of a tall girl, with a pure
-white face and sad blue eyes, into which the sunlight
-will some day come again.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At night he and Barker take the Montreal express
-for New York.</p>
-
-<hr class='c012' />
-
-<p class='c011'>Summer drifts into autumn and autumn into winter.
-Life goes on much the same in Raymond. The Hathaway
-mystery gradually fades from public interest, and it
-is set down as a crime that will never be explained.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Raymond National Bank has closed its doors.
-The robbery of its vault was a blow from which it found
-it impossible to recover.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>No tidings are received of Derrick Ames and Helen
-Hathaway or of Ralph Felton. None, unless they are
-in the keeping of the silent, stern-faced Cyrus Felton or
-the beautiful girl with the sad blue eyes who abides under
-his roof.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Every Sunday, in rain or in sunshine, mid heat or cold,
-Louise Hathaway may be seen ascending the hill in the
-little cemetery by which Wild River sings its way, her
-mission of love to deposit a basket of flowers upon a
-grave at the head of which stands a plain white shaft
-bearing, besides the name and dates, the simple inscription,
-“Faithful Unto Death.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XV.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>SHADOWS OF COMING EVENTS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>It is early in the evening. Jack Ashley is seated at
-his desk in the Hemisphere office enjoying his pipe
-preliminary to setting forth on an assignment.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The month is March. Nearly a year has elapsed since
-Ashley’s first visit to the Vermont town which, for a
-brief space, came into the world’s eye as the scene of
-the mysterious death of Cashier Roger Hathaway in
-the Raymond National Bank. During this time no further
-light has been shed on the mystery, which has gradually
-dropped from the thoughts of all save a few persons,
-two of whom are Ashley and John Barker, the
-detective.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Jack hears from Barker occasionally. The latter is
-busy on other work, but he still keeps a live interest in
-what he regards as the case of his life, and both he and
-his newspaper colaborer hope some day to astonish Vermont,
-and incidentally the country, by solving the Hathaway
-mystery, one of the most remarkable in the criminal
-annals of New England.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But as the months slipped by Ashley’s stock of confidence
-decreased slightly and to-night finds him wondering
-whether he will ever have the privilege of handing
-the news editor a bundle of “copy,” with the remark
-“There is an exclusive that is worth while.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have helped run down a number of crimes and
-fasten them upon the guilty persons,” he soliloquizes,
-“and have flattered myself that I was something of a detective.
-But in each of those cases the trembling villain
-was on or about the scene of his crime and when you
-had your case made out all there was to do was to clap
-a heavy hand upon his shoulder. But in this Hathaway
-drama about all of the leading characters have disappeared,
-and the man whom we regard as the key to the
-mystery, Ernest Stanley, is the very man we are least
-likely to find.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But is Stanley the key?” continues Jack, stretching
-himself in his chair. “I don’t think Barker and I have
-attached sufficient importance to that blotter found on
-Hathaway’s desk. These fragments of sentences keep
-haunting me, even amid my daily duties. Something tells
-me that if we had the imprint of an entire page of that
-letter to Felton we could solve the mystery without finding
-our men. ‘These things I charge you, Cyrus Felton,
-fail not at the peril of your good name.’ ‘These
-things—’”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley is slowly scratching a match to relight his pipe,
-when he suddenly stops and his thought-wrinkled forehead
-smooths.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Hello! Here’s an idea, perhaps a valuable one. It
-is possible that Barker and I have been all wrong in
-regarding that letter as an accusation. The English
-language is elastic. ‘I charge you, Cyrus Felton,’—‘I
-charge you, I charge you, I charge you.’ Now, instead
-of ‘I accuse you,’ read ‘I adjure you.’ But ‘I adjure you,’
-what? To ‘fail not.’ To ‘fail not’ in what? Ay, there’s
-the rub. I am as much in the dark as before. Still the
-idea is worth considering, and I’ll spring it on Barker.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley finishes his smoke in silence and when the last
-flake of tobacco has yielded its solace he draws on his
-coat and boards an uptown car.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>In that brilliantly lighted section of Broadway where
-stands the Hoffman House, Jack stops a moment to chat
-with an acquaintance.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Say,” remarks the latter, “there’s a chap yonder staring
-hard at you. Know him?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At his friend’s suggestion Ashley turns suddenly and
-catches the searching gaze of a tall, handsome man with
-a dark-brown beard trimmed to a point. He is richly
-but simply attired, and his appearance is unmistakably
-that of a gentleman. As Ashley returns his stare with interest
-the stranger turns and enters the hotel.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The incident is trivial, but it awakens curious emotions
-in Ashley, and absently overlooking his acquaintance’s
-suggestion of a visit to the cafe, he says an au
-revoir and continues up Broadway.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have seen those eyes somewhere,” he muses, “but
-hang me if I can recall where.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As, late in the evening, his assignment covered, Ashley
-is sauntering down Broadway, he is haunted by the
-vision of a bearded face surrounding a pair of piercing
-eyes. He even drops in at the Hoffman House and
-looks through the bar room, cafe and reading rooms,
-but the handsome stranger is not in view.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley has been in Raymond once since he left it,
-the spring before, and he was kindly received by Miss
-Hathaway. But that was all. Not all his engaging manners
-and clever conversation could penetrate the reserve
-with which she surrounded herself, and he almost decided
-that she was indeed the marble which he professed to
-Barker to have solely interested him. Still, that pure
-white face, with its matchless blue eyes and the sad
-smile that occasionally lighted it, lingers vividly in his
-memory and will continue to linger until—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He is at the Hemisphere office now. A very short time
-suffices to write and hand in his “copy” and then he
-lounges into the cable editor’s room, with the inquiry:
-“What news from over the sea, Chance?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Nothing special except the insurrection in Cuba,”
-Chance tells him. “Affairs are getting hot down there.
-You can judge of the magnitude of to-day’s battle at
-Cienfuegos when you read that thirty Spaniards were
-killed and fifty captured.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I should say so,” laughs Ashley. “The average mortality
-per battle is three men killed and four wounded,
-is it not?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The cable editor throws a handful of “copy” from him
-with a sniff of disgust. “One can never tell how far to
-trust this rot we are getting from Madrid and Key West,”
-he says. “I wish the Hemisphere had a live man such as
-you down in Cuba to give us some straight information
-on the conflict.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank you. I have no desire to run up against Yellow
-Jack.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Hang Yellow Jack! He is only dangerous to those
-half-fed raw recruits that the government is sending over
-from Spain. I have talked with Mr. Hone about the advantage
-of sending a representative to Havana or Santiago,
-and he is seriously considering it. Hold on! Here’s
-something coming now,” and Chance turns to his table.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley waits until the dispatch has been received, and
-then reads with interest the following special from Madrid:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Ten thousand additional troops will be dispatched to Cuba
-within a week, in response to the demand of Gen. Martinez
-de Truenos, the new captain-general of the island. Gen.
-Truenos has had experience in fighting Cuban insurgents, and
-a speedy termination of the uprising is looked for.”</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Same old bluff,” comments Ashley, and then, awakened
-to an interest in Cuban affairs by the words of the
-cable editor, he visits the night-editor’s den in search of
-further information.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The longest story is from Key West, and a portion of
-it runs in this wise:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“The insurgents are winning victories every day. The
-Cuban patriots do not need more men. All they want is arms
-and ammunition.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“It is whispered that the greatest difficulty with which the
-present captain-general has to contend is the conspiring among
-his own alleged supporters and advisers. One or two Spanish
-generals and a number of influential residents and land-owners
-at Havana, Santiago and other important points are suspected
-of active sympathy with the insurgents, but no proof of
-such complicity can be obtained. It is even said that the
-chosen president of the provisional republic is at present in
-Cuba, and that under the very nose of the hated oppressor he
-directs the movements of the patriot armies. It is thought
-that this condition of affairs is responsible for the change in
-captain-generals, as Truenos is reputed to be a clever diplomat
-as well as a tried soldier. The next few months will
-probably decide the fate of the republic. The Cubans must
-win this year or never.”</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>“What do you think?” Ashley asks the night editor.
-“Has the island any chance of liberty?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The prospects were never rosier,” is Chambers’ reply.
-“It is evident that the Castilian has an enormous job on
-his hands in the present insurrection. We received a dispatch
-a short while ago which has a local reference. I
-sent it up to Hone, and perhaps Ricker has it by this time.
-It states that the insurgents count upon valuable assistance
-from New York and that an expedition is being
-fitted out here. This wire came from Washington and
-the Spanish minister there has asked our government to
-prohibit the assistance I speak of. Hello!” as a bunch
-of copy is thrown upon his table, “the president has issued
-a proclamation bearing on the matter.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The proclamation is brief but significant. It sets forth
-that, without a violation of the friendly relations existing
-between Spain and the United States, this government
-cannot countenance the fitting out of expeditions designed
-to assist the insurrectionists in Cuba. A number of United
-States vessels have been ordered to patrol duty, and a
-rigid surveillance of the coast will be maintained.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That may be good government, but it is confoundedly
-un-American in sentiment,” remarks Ashley, scornfully,
-for he is an American through and through.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The government’s course was clear,” Chambers mildly
-observes. “The President could do nothing less. I do
-not imagine, however, that the patrol will be much more
-than perfunctory.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>When Ashley reports at the Hemisphere office the next
-day he finds in his letter box two yellow envelopes. One
-is from the city editor and contains an assignment to interview
-Senor Rafael Manada of the Cuban revolutionary
-society in the United States. The senor is stopping at
-the Fifth Avenue and a full story on Cuban affairs from
-the New York end is wanted.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well this is something new, at any rate,” thinks Jack,
-and he tears open the second envelope. This contains
-a dispatch dated from Raymond, Vt., the night before,
-and Ashley whistles softly as he comprehends the concise
-but thoroughly interesting contents:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“See you to-morrow afternoon at your office. I have found
-Hathaway’s revolver. Barker.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XVI.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>THE BEGINNING OF THE TRAIL.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“Don Rafael Manada? Yes, sir! Front, show the
-gentleman to No. 48.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A few minutes later Ashley is ushered into one of the
-most sumptuous and expensive suites in the big hotel.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He bows gracefully to the tall gentleman who advances
-to meet his visitor, bearing in his hand the card that has
-preceded him. Don Rafael is a man at whom even the
-least observant would be likely to take a second glance.
-Of perhaps 40 years of age, his hair of raven hue and
-unusual abundance is still unflecked by gray. The face is
-of olive hue, cleanly shaven save as to heavy mustachios,
-which by an odd freak of nature are snow white; heavy
-eyebrows of the same hue as the hair surmount eyes of
-piercing brilliancy; a long, aquiline nose, lips and mouth
-a trifle too sensuous for the rest of the features, complete
-a singularly interesting countenance.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You came from the Hemisphere?” queries Don Manada,
-in melodious tones, with hardly a trace of the Castilian
-accent. “I am pleased to greet a representative of
-that great journal, whose influence is always cast on the
-side of right and justice. I read with the deepest emotions
-of gratitude this morning an editorial in your journal
-protesting against the proclamation which the administration
-has issued against the fitting out of expeditions
-designed to aid the insurrection in Cuba. Your paper
-properly urged that the United States government should
-recognize the Cubans as belligerents. Ah, my dear sir,
-could that be done, Cuba would be a free republic within
-the twelvemonth,” finishes Manada, enthusiastically.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It was to secure an expression of opinion from you
-on the outlook in Cuba and the preparations being made
-in this country that I have been commissioned to interview
-you, Don Rafael,” says Jack Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Anything that it would be proper for me to say, as the
-agent of the Cuban revolutionary party, I shall be glad
-to give,” continues Manada, smilingly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>And now the Cuban patriot becomes imbued with nervous
-energy as he reverts to the absorbing hope and ambition
-of his life—the freedom of Cuba. He paces the floor
-with erect, military tread, as he speaks rapidly:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“This war is not a capricious attempt to found an independence
-more to be feared than useful. It is the cordial
-congregation of Cubans of various origin, who are convinced
-that, in the conquest of liberty, rather than abject
-abasement, are acquired the virtues necessary to maintain
-our freedom. This is no race war.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In the Spanish inhabitants of Cuba the revolutionists
-expect to find such affectionate neutrality or material aid,
-that through them the war will be shorter, its disasters
-less and the subsequent peace more easy and friendly.
-We Cubans began the war; the Cubans and Spanish together
-will terminate it. If they do not ill-treat us, we
-will not ill-treat them. Let them respect and they will
-be respected. Steel will answer to steel and friendship
-to friendship. In the bosom of the son of the Antilles
-there is no hatred, and the Cuban salutes in death the
-Spaniard whom the cruelty of a conscript army tore from
-his home and hearth and brought over to assassinate in
-many bosoms the freedom to which he himself aspires.
-But rather than salute him in death the revolutionists
-would like to welcome him in life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Very good, indeed, Don Manada,” comments Ashley
-as he hastily jots down a skeleton of the impassioned
-words of the Cuban.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Now, to leave generalities,” says Jack, “upon what
-specific elements of strength, or of weakness on your
-opponents’ part do you base your hopes of ultimate
-success?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Manada smiles. “All our elements of strength, nor all
-the Spanish sources of weakness, we may not divulge yet.
-First, and of this I believe you newspaper men need not
-be assured, the information that comes from Cuba or
-from Madrid is entirely untrustworthy, distorted, colored
-and manufactured to suit Spanish ideas and hopes. It
-tells you that the insurrection is limited to three or four
-provinces. Yet you will notice to-day’s dispatches from
-Madrid state that a blockade of every port of Cuba is
-imminent, large and small, and an additional squadron of
-ten Spanish gunboats has been dispatched from Cadiz
-to aid the big fleet now patrolling Cuban waters. Think
-you that the Madrid government would declare that
-blockade if the insurrection were limited to three or four
-paltry provinces? Bah! I can assure you, while they may
-not now be ready or willing to declare themselves, yet
-touch every Cuban in the heart, let him whisper to you his
-sentiments, and you will find them to a man praying for
-the success of the revolution. You Americans, in the full
-enjoyment of true liberty, can form but a faint idea of the
-real situation in Cuba. Imagine a land where no one
-is free to write or say anything except what the government
-judges deem proper! Imagine a government ever
-ready to throw you into prison, confiscate your property,
-bring ruin to everything that is dear to you on earth, and
-to set over you a Spaniard to watch your acts, almost
-your thoughts! That is the way we live in Cuba. Of
-late the number of these spies has been increased by
-hordes. They are not all men. Some of them—and the
-shrewdest and most harmful to our cause—are women,
-who ingratiate themselves with prominent revolutionists,
-sometimes becoming possessed of invaluable plans,
-which they promptly reveal to the Spanish government.
-It is believed that some of these women are located in
-cities in the United States, where it is thought their presence
-may be useful to spy upon the movements of the
-friends of Cuba in this country. But of course that is a
-game two can play at, and we ourselves are not wholly
-unaware of the secret plans of the enemy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Reference has been made in some of the dispatches
-from Key West, Don Manada, to the fact that the revolutionists
-have become possessed of a steamer which has
-been remarkably successful in evading the Spanish cruisers
-and landing men and ammunition from the Dominican
-and Florida coasts?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Manada’s lip curls scornfully at Ashley’s use of the
-word “evading.” Then he smiles.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Did you happen to read in any of the press dispatches
-an account of the loss of the Spanish man-of-war Mercedes?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley has seen a casual reference to the disaster.
-“She ran on a reef near the Great Exuma, while pursuing
-a suspected filibustering steamer, did she not?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The Mercedes was sunk in forty fathoms of water
-in fair and open fight with the Cuban cruiser Pearl of
-the Antilles,” in slow and measured tones responds Manada,
-his black eyes glittering. “The Spanish government
-has strenuously sought to conceal that fact, but it
-has leaked out, and only yesterday I received from
-Le Director de la Guerra a copy of El Terredo’s
-report of the battle. Ah, that was glorious! The
-Mercedes went down in less than seven minutes,
-while the Pearl was unharmed. Senor Ashley, we have
-to thank the inventive genius of your countrymen for the
-success of our gallant cruiser, for El Terredo states that
-it was the wonderful effectiveness of the new dynamite
-cannon and the Yankee gunner that accomplished the
-feat.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley’s unfailing scent for news assures him that this
-interview is good for at least a two-column leader in the
-Hemisphere. Here is information that will make a sensation
-in the morning. The American public has been
-wholly in the dark as to this new element in the insurrection,
-this Cuban cruiser, with her patent dynamite gun
-and Yankee gunner, that has destroyed one of the most
-powerful of Spain’s cruisers.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“El Terredo? Is he the captain of the Pearl of the Antilles,
-Don Manada?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He is, and one of the bravest and most successful of
-our commanders on land as well as sea. Why, there is
-not a cruiser of the Spanish navy now in Cuban waters
-that alone would dare engage the Pearl! They are well
-aware of her prowess and the skill and bravery of her
-commander, whom they have rightly named ‘El Terredo,’
-‘the terror.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then we have other plans the details of which cannot
-be revealed. Do you remember how the sinking of De
-Gama’s Brazilian ironclad was effected in the revolution
-in that country? It did not require another man-of-war
-to destroy her. Only a little instrument less than five feet
-in length—whish! boom!—and the resistless water is
-gushing in a torrent through the sides of the ironclad.
-Ah, warfare is different in these modern days, Senor Ashley,
-and victory does not always rest on the side of the
-heaviest guns.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is said in a Washington dispatch, Don Manada,
-that the Spanish minister has received information that a
-formidable filibustering expedition is about to leave this
-city for Cuba. Have you any knowledge of the fact?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Manada shrugs his shoulders. “Quien sabe? Are not
-all vessels clearing for any port obliged to obtain papers
-stating their destination? And does not the President’s
-proclamation warn against the shipping of arms and ammunition
-to Cuba from American ports? But of this be
-assured—Cuban patriots will not be without arms and
-ammunition to bring this war to a successful conclusion.
-It is true that is what we most need now. Ammunition
-especially is not as plentiful as we could wish, but had
-we none at all, with his trusty machete a Cuban patriot is
-more than a match for a brace of the puny, boyish conscripts
-Spain is sending to find early graves on Cuban
-soil. In the battle of Siguanoa, of which also I have just
-received an authentic account, our comrades finally
-charged with their machetes, which they handle with
-wonderful skill, and completely routed the Spanish troops.
-The actual fighting masses of the revolutionists, senor,
-the soldados raso, are no mean soldiers, even from a
-northerner’s point of view. And they are not all Cuban
-born or Spanish born who have settled in Cuba and become
-identified with the island. You would be surprised,
-I doubt not, to learn that not a few of your own nationality
-are fighting for human liberty on the side of the revolutionists.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And the character of the Spanish officers?” inquires
-Ashley, getting more and more interested.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Manada frowns. “Gen. Truenos, the new captain-general,
-we know as yet only by reputation. His chief of
-staff, the Madrid papers state, is to be Gen. Murillo, who
-is now in this country—in this city, if I mistake not. He
-poses as a diplomat and is the head of the spy bureau.
-Of the other leading Spanish officers in Cuba, they are of
-the usual foreign-service character. Some veterans, some
-young and inexperienced, seeking to win laurels in this
-war, a few Spanish noblemen, whom the exigencies of the
-family purse have forced into the army. By the way, attached
-to the new captain-general’s staff, I learn there is
-a young American, a sugar planter. His name, I am told,
-was Felton, but he changed it to Alvarez. More Spanish,
-you see.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Felton! A question is on Ashley’s tongue, when the
-utter absurdity of connecting Ralph Felton’s identity
-with that of a young Cuban planter occurs to him and he
-refrains.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, Don Manada, I am obliged to you for the half-hour
-you have accorded me, and I only hope your words
-will have as convincing an effect on the readers of the
-Hemisphere as they have had on me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank you, Senor Ashley. I shall ever be pleased
-to meet you when your duties may oblige you to seek one
-of the Cuban revolutionary party. Adios.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well,” remarks the interviewer to himself, as he stops
-a moment to strengthen his memory by a fresh Havana,
-“if my friend of the bleached mustachios is not a rainbow
-chaser of the latest approved political character, Gen.
-Truenos and the Spanish army—and navy, too—have
-considerable work cut out for them in the vicinity of the
-Caribbean Sea. Hello!” he exclaims, staring at a graceful
-figure that is crossing Twenty-third Street in his
-direction. “If that isn’t Miss Louise Hathaway of Raymond,
-Vt., my memory for faces is entirely destroyed.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XVII.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>A CUP OF CHOCOLATE AT MAILLARD’S.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“It is Miss Hathaway!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Why, Mr. Ashley!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then I am not quite forgotten,” smiles Jack, as he
-takes the little black-gloved hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Forgotten? Ah, no, indeed. I was only startled to
-meet one familiar face amid this never-ending procession
-of strangers. But this, I presume, is your native heath,
-Mr. Ashley? How do you carry the memory of so many
-faces?” as Ashley bows for the dozenth time toward the
-stream of pedestrians.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That is a part of our business, Miss Hathaway. A
-newspaper man acquires a passing acquaintance with all
-classes of society. But to drop shop talk, tell me of Raymond
-and of yourself. I feel quite an interest in the quaint
-old town. Here is Maillard’s close by. Suppose we drop
-in and have a cup of chocolate. Oh, it is quite the thing,”
-smiles Jack, as Miss Hathaway hesitates a moment.
-“Everybody goes to Maillard’s after a shopping tour.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then, as we are in Rome, we must imitate the Romans,”
-she acquiesces. “For surely these bundles must be
-quite sufficient to convict me of having been shopping.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>When she is snugly ensconced in an alcove, with a
-steaming cup of the beverage so dear to the feminine
-heart before her, Jack studies her face across the tiny
-table.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>More beautiful if that were possible, than ever, he decides,
-watching the shifting color in the rounded cheek;
-with more animation—yes, decidedly more animation;
-quite a different being from the doubly bereaved daughter
-of the dead cashier of nearly a year ago. But what
-is she doing in New York? thinks Jack, with a sudden
-twinge in the cardiac region that astonishes even himself.
-It cannot be that she has heard from Derrick Ames, and
-besides, her sister—What rot, he mentally concludes,
-as the subject of his thoughts suddenly looks up and
-catches his puzzled expression.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Miss Hathaway’s eyes twinkle. “Has it just occurred
-to you that you have left your pocketbook at home?” she
-asks. “Your expression was just such as the humorous
-artists attach to the subjects of such unfortunate contretemps.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, but that seldom does happen in real life, Miss
-Hathaway. No; my sole earthly possessions are at this
-moment resting securely in the bottom of one small
-pocket. But what lucky chance brought you within
-range of my defective vision on Broadway this afternoon?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, I have been a dweller in the metropolis since last
-Saturday. We, that is Mr. Felton and myself, are en
-route to Cuba.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“To Cuba! Pardon me, but why to that war-racked
-isle? You see, I have just returned from interviewing a
-native of Cuba on the situation there, and his description
-hardly makes it out as a desirable watering-place just at
-present.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Miss Hathaway laughs, a trifle nervously. “Perhaps
-it is rather an odd place to go this spring, and while I
-had a great desire to visit the country I really had no
-serious idea of gratifying the wish. But one evening
-while I was thinking of the matter, Mr. Felton suddenly
-asked me how I would like to go to Cuba. I said I would
-be delighted to go to escape the chill winds of March,
-and to my great surprise he suggested that we make
-preparations and start at once for New York. So here
-we are, and on Saturday we sail for tropic climes. But
-do you think there is any danger to Americans traveling
-in Cuba? I thought—I had read—that the disturbances
-were limited to some of the far inland districts and that
-there was no trouble in Havana and the larger cities.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley pulls his mustache thoughtfully. “No, I do not
-see how there can be possible danger for you,” he says at
-last. “Be sure, to avoid any possible annoyance, to get
-your passports before leaving New York. By Jove,” he
-murmurs under his breath, “if the Hemisphere should
-send a man to Cuba, and I that man—well, that wouldn’t
-be half-bad.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But why should Mr. Felton desire to go to Cuba?”
-Ashley asks. “I fancied all his interests were in Vermont.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He says that he has some property that requires his
-attention there, a sugar plantation, I fancy, or something
-of the sort. Anyway, he is quite anxious to go.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A sugar plantation in Cuba! Jack draws a long
-breath and his active mind reverts to his interview with
-Don Manada. Felton-Alvarez of the captain-general’s
-staff, a young American planter! The son has evidently
-forsworn his country and by joining the Spanish army
-has become a Spanish citizen. Therefore he undoubtedly
-cannot be extradited. But the father?</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“How long does Mr. Felton contemplate remaining in
-Cuba?” Ashley asks, carelessly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That will depend upon his inclinations and the condition
-of his business affairs.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That means indefinitely,” Jack thinks. “Cyrus Felton
-must not go to Cuba!” Then aloud: “Miss Hathaway,
-pardon me if I revive unpleasant memories, but
-the deep personal interest I took in the case must be my
-apology. Have you heard from your sister—since—since
-the tragedy?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>For a moment Miss Hathaway is silent, her face clouding
-with the sad thoughts of that last fateful Memorial
-Day. “Mr. Ashley,” she says at last, looking him full in
-the face, “I have received two letters from my sister
-Helen. She is well, and I trust happy. She was married
-in this city the day after they—she—left Raymond.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“To Derrick Ames?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Louise nods.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Are they now residing in the city?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No; they are not now in this country—I should say
-this part of the country,” she adds, hastily.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>For a moment a silence falls and both absently sip their
-chocolate, busy with their thoughts. Then Ashley remarks,
-smilingly:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Apropos of nothing, Miss Hathaway, did you ever
-hear of the great French ball, the annual terpsichorean
-revel of Gotham?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Certainly, I have read about it. I gather that it is
-not always strictly—well, not exactly in the same category
-with the patriarchs’ ball.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No—not precisely,” admits Ashley. “What I was
-leading up to is this: I suppose I shall be assigned to
-do the ball for the Hemisphere to-morrow evening—I
-have done it for the last two years—and a friend of mine
-kindly presented to me a pocketful of tickets. Now, I
-know you would enjoy looking in on the brilliant scene
-for an hour or two in the early part of the evening.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Why, Mr. Ashley, I really do not see how we could.
-It would hardly be proper.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not perhaps to mingle with the rush, but as a casual
-looker-on in Verona the propriety could scarcely be
-questioned. A mask, a box where you could sit and
-listen to the really good music and watch the glitter and
-gayety, I believe you would recall the hour whiled away
-as one of thorough enjoyment. Besides—and here is the
-selfish part of my proposition—it would render the affair
-less of an old story to me. You must really say ‘yes,’”
-persists Ashley, as Miss Hathaway hesitates, with the inevitable
-result.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, if Mr. Felton is willing to pose as a ‘chaperon’
-for a brief space, perhaps I may consent to assist the
-Hemisphere.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I assure you that that appreciative journal will be
-deeply grateful. Where shall I call for your ultimatum?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“We are stopping at the St. James. And now I must
-hurry home to examine my purchases. Thank you so
-much for your kindness, Mr. Ashley. I am so glad to
-have met you again. Good-by.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Au revoir—until the morrow,” Jack responds, as Miss
-Hathaway’s elegant figure threads its way through the
-throng. “I wonder what the straight-laced Vermont
-maiden would say if she could look into the wine-room
-of the garden about an hour before the French ball makes
-its last kick. But she won’t, though. The first hour or
-two of the function is as decorous as an afternoon tea on
-Fifth Avenue—rather more so, I fancy. And now to
-the office to fire the Cuban heart with Don Manada’s
-screed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But seated at his desk at the Hemisphere office, Ashley’s
-thoughts persist in straying away from the yellow
-sheets he is rapidly covering with the Manada interview.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Raymond tragedy mingles with thoughts of Cuba.
-His previously conceived ideas are undergoing a decided
-metamorphosis. The knowledge that the elder Felton
-is going to Cuba, where his son, according to the description
-of Manada, is apparently settled, and for a long
-period, if not forever, suggests to the newspaper man the
-conclusion that Mr. Felton must have been aware of his
-son’s movements since the sudden departure from Raymond;
-may even have counseled that flight. Nay, more,
-that father and son are jointly implicated in the death of
-Cashier Hathaway. The theory just evolved grows
-stronger the more Jack considers the circumstances. On
-Cyrus Felton, then, depends the unraveling of the mystery.
-And he left Raymond suddenly, according to Miss
-Hathaway’s admission. Barker, judging from his message
-on the finding of the revolver, must have been in
-Raymond before or during the departure of Cyrus Felton.
-Is it not possible, then, that the ex-bank president became
-possessed of the knowledge that Barker is again
-actively at work on the case; that he further became
-aware that Barker had, or was likely to get, some important
-clew, such as the discovery of the revolver, for instance;
-that he considered discretion the better part of
-valor and determined to flee the country and join his son
-in Cuba?</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley’s busy pen ceases to skim over the paper for a
-moment, as he rears this dazzling edifice.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I believe I have struck the bull’s-eye,” he reflects.
-“If only Barker has a little more evidence to back up
-the finding of the revolver, Miss Hathaway may not take
-that trip to Cuba after all—at least, not with her present
-amiable traveling companion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A few moments later the big batch of copy, the result
-of Ashley’s visit to Don Manada, is tossed upon the desk
-of the city editor. Then, still preoccupied and unusually
-untalkative for jovial Jack Ashley, the interviewer has
-again drawn on overcoat and gloves and is leaving the
-entrance to the Hemisphere office when a hand is dropped
-on his shoulder, as Detective Barker earnestly greets
-him:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You’re just the man I want to see. Where can we
-indulge in a quiet talk for half an hour?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Come right up to the cable editor’s room. He won’t
-be in for an hour or two.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XVIII.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>BARKER DECIDES TO STRIKE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“Well, my boy,” begins Barker, “it’s a long lane that
-has no turn, and I think we have reached the beginning
-of the end of this Hathaway mystery. There is the
-weapon that sent Roger Hathaway to eternity Memorial
-Day of last year,” handing it to Ashley, with a complacent
-air. “I am not a betting man, or I would wager a
-reasonable sum that, ere the anniversary of the crime
-rolls around, the murderer will be safely incarcerated
-in the Mansfield County jail in Vermont.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley examines curiously the weapon Barker has produced.
-It is an ordinary 32-caliber Smith &amp; Wesson
-revolver, of the bull-dog variety, covered with rust, and
-all of the five chambers, with possibly one exception, contain
-unused cartridges.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, there is one empty chamber,” responds Barker,
-as Ashley attempts ineffectually to turn the rusty cylinder,
-“and that sent poor old Hathaway out of the world. And
-now I will tell you of some important clews that I have
-succeeded in running down since I saw you last.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You know I subscribed for the Raymond local newspaper,
-and a mighty good investment that $1.25 proved.
-Week before last the paper contained a local item about
-a boy’s finding a revolver on the bank of Wild River.
-It was only a ten-to-one shot that the revolver picked up
-by the river bank was Hathaway’s missing gun, but I
-took the short end and posted off to Raymond. The
-result of my trip you now hold in your hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The little chap who found the revolver had picked it
-up close to the opposite bank from which it had been
-thrown. It was quite a stretch beyond the deep pool
-that we explored. You see I was fully a hundred yards
-from Felton when he hurled the revolver into the stream,
-and I miscalculated the force he put into the throw. His
-feeling of loathing for the hateful weapon was such that
-he hurled it nearly across the river. Even then, it would
-have been covered by two or three feet of water had not
-the river been dammed last fall, a few rods above the
-place, to furnish power for a sawmill. That left only an
-inch or two of water over the revolver, and little Jimmy
-Jones, or whatever his name was, found it there while
-prowling about the river bank. It is Roger Hathaway’s
-revolver, too, beyond a doubt. I had Sibley, who was
-teller of the bank, and who has seen it in Hathaway’s
-desk a thousand times, examine it, and he positively
-identifies it.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“So far, so good. That revolver rivets a mighty strong
-link, I take it, to the chain we have already forged about
-Cyrus Felton. But the situation had become somewhat
-complicated, I found after I secured possession of the
-revolver. Felton has skipped from Raymond, taking the
-Hathaway girl with him, and evidently does not intend
-to return for some time, if indeed at all. Consequently
-our next and most imperative duty is to find where he
-now is and see that he does not get beyond our reach.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I can do that in five minutes,” Ashley quietly assures
-the detective. “Cyrus Felton and Miss Louise Hathaway
-are now at the St. James hotel in this city. They
-sail for Cuba next Saturday.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Good,” remarks the phlegmatic Barker. “That is
-luck on a par with finding the revolver. But when Cyrus
-Felton leaves New York it will be to go back to Vermont.
-Bound for Cuba, eh? Why did he select that
-country instead of Europe, I wonder?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Because his son is in Cuba. Barker, I opine that it
-will be necessary for both of us to revise our theories of
-the murder,” continues Ashley. “In the judgment of the
-undersigned, both Feltons, father and son, are equally
-implicated in that crime. As to which actually fired the
-fatal shot, I am not prepared to say. But I am confident
-that both were in the bank when Hathaway was shot. I
-learned to-day that there is a young American, a planter,
-in Cuba who has joined the Spanish army as an officer on
-the staff of the captain-general. His name is, or was,
-Felton. Now comes the senior Felton, en route to Cuba.
-Why should he go to Cuba just at this time while the
-island is in the throes of insurrection? He tells Miss
-Hathaway that he has business interests there—a sugar
-plantation. Isn’t it clear that he is going to join his son?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker taps his forehead reflectively. “The idea is
-plausible,” he admits. “But what in the name of the
-great hornspoon is he taking Miss Hathaway there for?
-It isn’t possible that he is so cold-blooded, so absolutely
-devoid of conscience, that he would wed the daughter of
-the man he had slain?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Decidedly not,” returns Ashley, with very like a snort
-of disgust at the suggestion of the possibility of Louise
-Hathaway becoming Cyrus Felton’s wife. “Miss Hathaway
-is Felton’s ward, and of course he is obliged to take
-her with him. Besides she herself is anxious to go to
-Cuba. She told me so this afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Anxious to go herself, eh?” repeats Barker. “Well,
-there is no accounting for tastes. I think if I were going
-on a pleasure trip, however, I should select some other
-spot than that home of Yellow Jack and the machete.
-But”—the detective’s forehead is wrinkled in thought—“you
-don’t suppose she has any friends in Cuba whom
-she is anxious to see—her sister or Derrick Ames?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley considers this possibility a moment. “It is possible,”
-he exclaims. “She admitted she had received letters
-from her sister, who was well and happy—but not in
-this country, she said at first, and then changed it to ‘not
-in this section of the country.’ Ames and her sister may
-be in Cuba, as well as Ralph Felton; but not, I will
-wager a good deal, in the same vicinity—not, at least,
-if Ames knows it. Barker, it seems to me that instead
-of this matter becoming simplified it is daily growing
-more complicated. The thing for us to do is to cut the
-Gordian knot at once and bring matters to a climax.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There is only one way to do it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Exactly. Arrest Cyrus Felton, and charge him with
-being the murderer of Roger Hathaway, or an accomplice
-before or after the act.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker picks up the revolver again.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“We have got a good deal of strong evidence against
-him,” he says, slowly; “yet I should like to get the son in
-the same net. With the two of them jointly accused
-and jointly tried I am certain we could unravel the mystery.
-I have evidence against the elder Felton that I
-have not yet told you; in fact, what I consider as a sufficient
-motive for the crime. The absence of a good,
-healthy motive, you know, was the weak link in our chain.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The president of those two banks, I am convinced,
-was short in his accounts with both institutions. In other
-words, he had used the bank’s securities to tide over his
-own financial affairs, which I have discovered, were not
-in the flourishing condition supposed. Although he was
-aware that Felton’s accounts were overdrawn, as was
-evidenced by the writing on the blotter, Hathaway was
-apparently ignorant of the fact that the president had
-taken many of the bank’s securities and hypothecated
-them for his own account. That was done by the president
-through the connivance of his son, the bookkeeper.
-Get the idea?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley nods.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Now then: You will recall that Cyrus Felton told
-you, after the murder, that nearly $50,000 in available
-cash and about half as much more in securities had been
-stolen. He testified at the inquest that some securities
-had been taken. My theory is that not one single one
-of those securities was taken from the bank that night.
-’Cause why? Because they had previously been extracted
-by Cyrus Felton and his son. And the cash?
-That, I believe was Ralph Felton’s share for his part in
-the tragedy. Perhaps father and son had planned for
-the latter to rob the bank that night—the former anxious
-for the covering up of the loss of the securities, the latter
-covetous of the money. The time was drawing near
-when the annual examination of the savings bank was
-due. It was to have taken place in June. Then the discovery
-that many of the ‘jackets’ that should contain
-securities were empty was inevitable. But Cashier Hathaway
-was at the bank that night. The son may have
-been concealed in that closet, awaiting his opportunity.
-The cashier, no longer willing to permit the president’s
-overdrafts, wrote that imperative note to Cyrus Felton.
-The latter visited the bank. An altercation ensued.
-Heated words were uttered. Hathaway may have discovered
-the loss of the securities. The president and
-cashier, old men both, engaged in a scuffle. Perhaps the
-president sought to wrest the key to the vault from the
-cashier’s hands. At any rate, a struggle. Ralph Felton
-leaped from his hiding-place, and seizing the cashier’s
-revolver, which he knew was kept in the desk, rushed
-to the assistance of his father. The fatal shot, and—father
-and son gazed in dismay at each other across the dead
-body of the faithful cashier. The rest is simple of explanation—the
-rifling of the vault and the subsequent flight
-of the son. Ashley, that is my revised theory of the murder
-of Roger Hathaway. What do you think of it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is worthy of your perspecuity, Barker, and in some
-respects it appears flawless. Yet—well, sometimes I
-have a sort of intuition that we are off the right track
-altogether. Ah, Barker, if we could but find that chap
-I saw in the bushes that morning, Ernest Stanley.
-Now that you have revised your theory, and in the light
-of recent developments, I feel more than ever that Stanley
-possesses the key that will unlock the inner doors of
-the mystery.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“However, that is neither here nor there, for Ernest
-Stanley has as completely vanished as though the earth
-had opened and swallowed him up. It is almost inexplicable.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No stranger than the fading away of Derrick Ames
-and Helen Hathaway. You know we traced them to this
-city, and the most searching investigation by both the
-metropolitan police and our own men could not find them
-or ascertain for a certainty whether they went west or
-east.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But to return to the Feltons. Those two missing
-leaves from the bank ledger could a tale unfold, I fancy,
-in relation to Cyrus Felton’s precise relations with the
-bank. Yes, on the whole, I believe we have sufficient
-evidence to strike. He is at the St. James, you say? I
-guess I had better arrest him at once, and then, if he declines
-to go back to Vermont without extradition papers,
-I can proceed to Montpelier to-morrow and get the necessary
-documents in season to start back to Raymond
-by Friday—unlucky day for him, I fancy. Well, old
-man, you will have to spill a whole bottle of ink on this,
-I suppose. Will you spring the full story in the
-morning?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Jack starts suddenly. “By Jove!” he exclaims, looking
-at the detective, with a rueful glance, “it seems like a
-brutally cold-blooded thing to say, but do you know, I
-have invited Felton and Miss Hathaway to look in on
-the French ball to-morrow evening, and now—if the
-deed wasn’t an apparent refinement of cruelty, I would
-ask you to postpone the arrest of Felton till day after to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You are positive he does not contemplate sailing for
-Cuba till Saturday?” inquires Barker.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“So Miss Hathaway said. And, yes.” Jack’s eye has
-run hastily down the advertised dates of sailings in the
-Hemisphere. “The Mallory Line steamer, City of Callao,
-sails for Havana and the West Indies on Saturday. That
-is the steamer they are evidently booked for. But to
-make assurance doubly sure I will telephone to the office
-of the steamship line and ascertain if staterooms have
-been secured for them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker nods approvingly at the precaution.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes,” the reply comes over the wire, “Mr. Cyrus
-Felton and Miss Hathaway are booked for the Callao.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“For Havana?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes; for Havana.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That settles that, then,” observes Barker, cheerfully.
-“Felton can enjoy his little fling at the garden, and subsequently
-have something to think about while he awaits
-the action of the grand jury.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Inured as he is to tragic scenes and happenings, Jack
-winces slightly at thought of the part he expects to play
-in acting as the “guide, philosopher and friend” of Cyrus
-Felton on probably his last night of liberty.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By the way,” he remarks, “you said Felton had made
-preparations for an extended absence from Raymond.
-Did he cause that to become generally known in the
-town?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Per contra, as the lawyers say, no one in Raymond
-had any idea that he contemplated a trip to Cuba, understanding
-that he is off on a business trip to New York.
-A little judicious investigation revealed the fact that he
-had quietly severed every business tie that should connect
-him with Raymond. Even his house, I found, he has
-mortgaged to the chimneys, and then leased for a period
-of ten years to a western man, to whom, by the way, he
-has disposed of his interest in the quarries. His share
-in the bank block he sold two months ago, taking a mortgage
-for two-thirds the purchase price, but this mortgage
-he last week transferred to the Vermont Life Insurance
-Company, receiving cash therefor. Even his
-horses have been shipped to Boston and sold. All this
-Felton has accomplished so quietly that, as I said before,
-no one in Raymond suspects that he is not as deeply interested
-financially in the town as ever.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, on the whole,” finishes Barker, “I am glad we
-have concluded to postpone the arrest a couple of days,
-for I have some personal matters I must attend to.
-What have you on hand to-night?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Just an hour or so at the Madison Square Garden.
-Come to dinner with me and we’ll go to the Garden
-together. I want to talk this matter over further,” says
-Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker acquiesces, and as the newspaper man leads the
-way to the street he murmurs to himself:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“So the blow falls on Wednesday. Well, it will make
-one of the most interesting ‘beats’ in the history of the
-Hemisphere and I guess I had better begin on the story
-to-night.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XIX.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>PHILLIP VAN ZANDT.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“What are they playing now, Phillip?” Isabel Harding
-draws the program to her and scans the musical numbers
-listed thereon.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Is it possible that you do not recognize the immortal
-unfinished Schubert symphony?” her companion asks,
-with good-natured sarcasm.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You know I cannot tell one symphony from another,”
-Mrs. Harding remarks, pettishly. “I wish you would
-pay less attention to the music and more to me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Phillip Van Zandt smiles, but makes no reply to this reproach.
-And while he listens intently to the divine
-music which the orchestra is making, his companion sips
-her claret punch with a pretty frown upon her face.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The place is Madison Square Garden; the occasion, one
-of a series of classical concerts which Mr. Walter Damrosch
-and his orchestra are furnishing New York.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The two—Mrs. Harding and Mr. Van Zandt—are sitting
-by the wall in a comparatively uncrowded section of
-the Garden and more than one person who glances at
-them remarks that they are a handsome couple.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Phillip Van Zandt is not far from 30 years of age.
-There is nothing effeminate about his singularly handsome
-face; the closely trimmed brown beard does not
-conceal the firm, almost hard lines about the mouth.
-A mass of dark-brown curls cluster about a noble forehead
-that fronts a well-shaped head. But the striking
-features of the face are the eyes. Something inscrutable
-lurks in their dark-brown depths, now dreamy and tender,
-and again cold and glittering.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Who he is and what he is are points upon which his
-nearest acquaintances—he has no intimate friends—have
-never succeeded in satisfying themselves. He came
-somewhere out of the West less than a year ago. He
-occupies luxurious quarters at the Wyoming apartment
-house, spends money freely, and seems to be drifting
-through existence with the insouciance of a man who
-has lived his life and who looks forward to nothing this
-side of Charon’s ferry—or perhaps beyond.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He plays at cards and plunges at the track and wins
-or loses with the inevitable composure which characterizes
-his every action. To men he is cold, often insolent;
-to women he is indifferent, although infinitely courteous.
-Handsome, distingue, wealthy, witty in a dry, cynical
-sort of way, he is a man who could be immensely popular
-with his fellows and fascinating to the other sex. That
-he is neither one nor the other is his peculiarity.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>His companion of this evening, Isabel Harding, is a
-personage, who would attract instant attention in a crowd
-of attractive women. She is magnificently proportioned—a
-splendid animal, as Van Zandt remarked when first
-his careless gaze rested upon her. Her hair is black as
-midnight; her eyes, large and lustrous, can either flash
-with the fury of the tiger or beam with the softness of
-the dove. Her mouth is somewhat large, but it is firm,
-and between full, scarlet lips gleam two arcs of strong,
-milk-white teeth.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>She has known occasions when propriety was not
-finically insisted upon, but on this night she is as demure
-as innocence at 16. For she knows Van Zandt well
-enough to understand that, while virtue and worth may
-not interest him, viciousness and unworthiness decidedly
-do not. And the least discerning student of human
-nature can see that she loves him—loves him blindly,
-madly, and—hopelessly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Van Zandt cares nothing for her, save in his indifferent
-way, and she knows it. But she does not despair. She
-is a woman.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Somewhere in Bohemia, Van Zandt met Isabel Harding.
-She interested him, she was so unlike the other
-women at the little French restaurant where he had
-dropped in to get lunch and a bottle of really good wine.
-Some small service by him rendered sufficed to establish
-between the two a camaraderie that continued until
-the present. It witnessed no alteration of sentiment on
-the part of Van Zandt. But Isabel—she began by admiring
-and finished by worshiping.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He never asked who or what she was, although she
-was obviously a woman with a story to tell. She was a
-widow, she said. Widows are many in Bohemia.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Some day I will give you my history,” she told him.
-But Van Zandt only laughed and asked, “Shall we go
-to the play to-night?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He cares no more for me than for the glass he is holding,”
-Mrs. Harding now thinks, as she watches his face,
-turned again toward the orchestra. “Don’t you ever
-think of anything except music?” she demands, a little
-impatiently.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, yes; of a great many other things. For instance,
-I was this minute thinking of you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, indeed?” ironically. “Something vastly complimentary,
-no doubt.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Van Zandt smiles emphatically. “I was thinking that
-I should like to set you to music, if I possessed the
-faculty,” he says, as he glances humorously at his companion’s
-pouting face.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What should you write, a waltz refrain or a dancehall
-ditty?” asks Mrs. Harding.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Neither; I should write a symphony, a wild sort of
-affair,” he smiles. “It would begin quietly and run along
-for bars and bars in a theme that would suggest days
-when the heart was young and life seemed a pathway of
-roses. This would give place to scherzo and the whole
-movement would be light and playful and singing. Then
-the music would begin to grow troublous, anon turbulent,
-and would finally burst into uncontrollable tumult.
-This would gradually pass away, and the third movement
-would be capriccio, the music now flashing fire, again
-singing on like a mountain brook, on and on, and on.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You are very discerning, Mr. Van Zandt,” says Isabel,
-biting her lip. “What name should you bestow on this
-remarkable symphony?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I should call it ‘Isabel.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And the last movement, what would that be?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, that would be unfinished, like Schubert’s,” Van
-Zandt replies, with a provoking smile.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Fortunately. For if you design to complete it you
-will have to do so from memory. I am going away,”
-declares Isabel, with a flush in each cheek.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Going away? Where?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, mon ami, that is for you to find out. Besides,
-what do you care? I have had an offer—diplomatic
-service, I believe it is politely called. I leave in two
-days.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By Jove! You would do well in diplomatic circles,”
-exclaims Van Zandt, glancing at her in frank admiration.
-“You said nothing of this before.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have only just made up my mind. Your symphony
-decided me,” Isabel avers with some bitterness.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The Garden is filling up,” Van Zandt remarks
-abruptly. About all the tables around them are beginning
-to be taken. “Hello! There’s that chap again,”
-he adds, as two men seat themselves at an adjoining table
-and fall to chatting.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Didn’t know I was a musical critic, did you, Barker?
-Well, you see our regular music expert is off duty sick
-to-night, so they put me on the job. It’s a short one.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Your duties, friend Ashley, appear to be beautifully
-diversified.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“They are that. Anything from a murder to a concert.
-I suppose Raymond is about the same as when we left it,
-about a year ago?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“To a dot. Same crowd on the hotel veranda. Same
-symposium of hay, horse and village gossip.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Just the same it is a great country. I’d give several
-good iron dollars to be back for one morning in that
-gorge near South Ashfield, on the old wood road where
-I ran upon Ernest Stanley.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Push over a bit. Here’s another party,” says Barker,
-as a jolly quartet approach.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Plenty of room,” they declare, as they find chairs and
-seat themselves close by. The man nearest to the detective
-and the newspaper man is a stout, florid-faced
-party, whose clean-cut visage and smooth bearing betoken
-the sporting man. His companions are well-dressed
-young men about town.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Hold on, major,” remarks one of the latter, interrupting
-the stout party in the act of giving an order to
-the waiter. “I’ll buy this round, gentlemen, and we will
-make it wine. I played in luck to-day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“So? Cards run well, eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Never saw them come easier. I had a bit of luck,
-major, which does not materialize often enough to render
-poker a continuously profitable employment. I sat between
-two men who raised the pot four times before the
-draw, and I filled up a straight flush.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You stood the raises on a bob flush?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I had to. It was open at both ends. Basket of wine,
-waiter, and fetch it in a hurry,” adds the young man,
-whom his friends call Chauncey, and he gives the waiter
-a tip that sends him a-flying.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The major smiles as the reminiscences of innumerable
-interesting jack-pots are stirred up by the story of his
-young friend’s good luck.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Speaking of straight flushes,” he observes, “I never
-saw a hand fill more neatly or appropriately than during
-a little game in which I was sitting three or four years
-ago.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Story by the major, gentlemen,” cries Chauncey, rapping
-the table to order and receiving the angry glances
-of a number of people about him who are trying to hear
-the music. “Here comes the wine. We will drink a
-toast to all straight flushes, high or low, and then the
-major shall have the floor.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XX.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>A SUPPOSITION BECOMES A FACT.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“You remember when Phil Clark was running up on
-Fifth Avenue,” begins the major, after the wine has been
-brought and pronounced only half-iced.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Rather,” responds Chauncey, dryly. “I dropped five
-hundred there one night and it wasn’t much of a game
-at that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, I drifted into Phil’s one night three years ago,
-more or less, and found the place as quiet as a country
-village. There was no big game going on, and mighty
-few small ones. In one of the rooms I found Col.
-Dunnett. You remember Dunnett. We were chatting
-and commenting on the dullness of the evening, when
-two young men came into the room and, after a glance
-at us, one of them suggested a hand at poker.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I knew one of the young men slightly. His name
-was Stanley, I believe. Quiet, reserved sort of a chap.
-He hadn’t been in New York long, he said. Made
-books out at the Sheepshead races. I did not fancy his
-friend, who had been drinking some and was inclined
-to be a bit noisy. His name—let me see—Fenton, or
-Fallon; no, Felton, that was what Stanley called him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“We began the game and it broke up after the hand I
-started in to tell you about. The betting simmered down
-to Felton and Stanley. Felton held four aces and bet all
-the cash he had. ‘I ought to raise you,’ said Stanley;
-‘still,’ he added, ‘if that is all the cash you have—’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘You needn’t worry about me,’ sneered Felton, as
-he took a check-book from his pocket. ‘I said that was
-all the change I had with me, but my check is good.’ He
-scratched off a check and threw it on the table. ‘You can
-see that, or call my previous bet, as you please.’</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Stanley was as calm as I am now. He leaned over
-to me, and, spreading his cards, asked: ‘Major, will you
-loan me a thousand a moment to bet this hand?’ I
-glanced at it and had a trifle of difficulty in restraining
-my surprise. He had filled, as he told me afterward, the
-middle of a straight flush, king up!</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Cert, my boy,’ I replied, cheerfully, to his request,
-and I passed over two $500 bills. Stanley tossed them
-on the table, and looked inquiringly at Felton. The
-latter, with a smile of sublime confidence, spread
-out four aces. ‘No good,’ was Stanley’s calm announcement.
-He exhibited his hand, and then pocketing
-the stakes, after returning me my thousand, he remarked:
-‘Thank you, gentlemen, for your entertainment.
-I don’t believe I’ll play any more to-night.’ And
-putting on his coat and hat, he left the room.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Felton sat like one dazed for some moments. Then
-he walked to the bar and after a stiff drink hurried off.
-I never saw either of them after that night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley and Barker have been silent and interested
-listeners to this yarn by the major. As the latter and his
-friends rise Ashley rises also and taps the major on the
-shoulder. “Pardon the intrusion,” he says, with an engaging
-smile. “I have been vastly interested in your
-poker story, sir, for the reason that I think I know one
-of the players—Felton, I believe you called him. Do
-you happen to recall what sort of a looking chap he was?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Hanged if I remember,” replies the major, wondering
-at the other’s earnestness.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Was he a rather tall, good-looking young fellow,
-with light-brown hair and eyes and a tawny mustache?”
-persists Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Now that you speak of the mustache, I believe that
-your description fits him. He had a heavy, yellowish
-mustache, which he was in the habit of biting, as though
-his dinner did not suit him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank you,” says Ashley. “Will you have something
-more to drink, gentlemen?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But the major and his party take themselves off and
-Ashley resumes his seat with a satisfied smile.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“So, Barker, we hit it about right after all, eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It would appear so,” returns the detective complacently.
-“We now know what we have assumed to have
-been the case—that Ernest Stanley suffered imprisonment
-two years for another’s crime, and that the real criminal,
-the man who forged Cyrus Felton’s name, was none
-other than his son, Ralph Felton.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As Barker pronounces these words Ashley hears a
-smothered exclamation behind him and turns quickly.
-But all he sees is a gentleman and lady gathering their
-wraps preparatory to taking their departure. The man’s
-back is toward Ashley, but the latter waits until the party
-faces his way and then for the space of a second their
-eyes meet.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There is only one more selection, and it does not
-amount to much,” Van Zandt tells Mrs. Harding, and
-they join the crowd that is leaving the garden.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Do you know those two men who sat at the next
-table to us? The younger looked at you as though he
-knew you and was waiting to be recognized.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Your imagination, cara mia. I know neither of
-them,” replies Van Zandt, lightly. Then, as he hands her
-into a carriage at the corner and says “Kensington” to
-the driver, he holds Isabel’s hand a moment at parting
-and inquires gravely: “So you are really going away
-then?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In two days,” she answers, and searches his face for
-some evidence of regret. It is as impassive as the sphinx.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, I suppose I shall see you at the French ball
-to-morrow evening?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You may, if you care to look for a Russian court
-lady, attired wholly in black.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Rest assured that the festivities will be robed in sables
-until I find her. Good-night.” Van Zandt closes the
-carriage door, watches it a moment as it rattles up the
-avenue and then saunters toward Broadway.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley and Barker have remained at their table in the
-garden and Jack is telling the detective that for the
-second time within twenty-four hours he has caught the
-stare of the man with the brown beard and piercing
-eyes. “I have seen that face somewhere,” he mutters,
-as he wrinkles his brow in a desperate effort to burst
-the memory cell that prisons the secret. Suddenly he
-smites the table a blow that sets the glasses jingling and
-invites the disapprobation of the waiter. “Oh, memory!
-Memory, thou sleepy, shiftless warder of the brain!” he
-cries.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What is the matter now?” asks Barker.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Keep calm, old chap,” returns Ashley, gripping the
-detective’s wrist. “Keep calm while I confess to you that
-we have let slip through our hands the key to the Hathaway
-mystery!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What!” almost shouts the detective, starting to his
-feet. “You mean—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I mean that the man with the brown beard and stiletto
-optics who just left us is my friend of the mountain
-gorge. He is Ernest Stanley!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, he has slipped us this time,” says the detective,
-disconsolately, as they stand outside the garden and
-sweep the street with anxious gaze.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not yet,” Ashley rejoins cheerfully. “See! There he
-is beyond that third light, handing his magnificent companion
-into a carriage.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Call a cab and follow them,” says the detective, starting
-toward the line of conveyances pulled up at the curb.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No need of that,” Ashley interrupts. “He is not going
-to ride.” At that moment it was that Van Zandt closed
-the door to the carriage which bore Mrs. Harding to
-the Kensington, and as he starts toward Broadway the
-detective and the newspaper man follow at a cautious
-distance.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Unconscious of the espionage Van Zandt starts uptown
-at a swinging gait. At Thirty-second Street he
-branches into Sixth Avenue, and the two men behind
-him wonder that he does not ride. At the park he turns
-down Fifty-ninth Street and finally enters the Wyoming
-apartment house, leaving Ashley and Barker staring up
-at the brownstone elevation.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The former waits five minutes and then pulls the bell.
-“The name of the gentleman who has just gone upstairs?”
-he asks the colored attendant who responds.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Mr. Phillip Van Zandt,” replies the sable youth, as he
-slips a half-dollar into his pocket.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Van Zandt—is that his name?” queries Ashley, a
-trifle disappointed, although he might have expected a
-strange name. Then the porter tells him that the gentleman
-with the brown beard has been a resident of the
-Wyoming for several months; that he is a wealthy
-bachelor, and a variety of other equally important information.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, what do you think now?” asks Barker, as they
-walk over to the elevated road.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I haven’t changed my opinion,” is Ashley’s response.
-“I believe that Phillip Van Zandt is or was Ernest
-Stanley.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, we have him located, at any rate,” remarks the
-detective. “See you at the French ball to-morrow night?
-I am on the lookout for a couple of gentry whom I
-expect to be there. This is my station. Good-night.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XXI.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>“DON CAESAR DE BAZAN.”</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>The big French ball, that annual revel at the metropolis,
-brings together a motley assemblage of the devotees
-of folly. The scene at the entrance to Madison Square
-Garden to-night is the same scene witnessed at this
-function the year preceding, and the year before that.
-A mass of cabs and carriages in apparently inextricable
-confusion fill the street. They struggle up and deposit
-their fares and escorts and chaperons fight their way
-through the mob that blocks the brilliantly lighted entrance,
-and not always without an unpleasant encounter.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Upon the threshold of the gay interior Louise Hathaway
-pauses diffidently and thanks fortune that a mask
-hides her face from the inquisitive stares around her.
-But led by Jack Ashley, Louise and Mr. Felton proceed
-to a box and once within its shelter the young girl gives
-herself up to an unmixed enjoyment of the brilliant spectacle
-before her.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The scene is decorous, even sedate. Few acquaintances
-have been made, and when the strains of “Loin du Bal”
-arise in voluptuous swell only a small number of dancers
-respond.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Why this is as proper as one of our country dances,
-and far less noisy,” Louise whispers to Ashley, but that
-knowing young man winks mysteriously behind his mask
-and remarks: “Wait!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, but I shan’t wait,” is the young lady’s response.
-“You remember what I emphatically declared—only an
-hour or two and then we return to the hotel.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then you need fear nothing that would shock you
-in the least degree,” Ashley assures her. “The rioting
-does not begin until after midnight, and does not amount
-to much then. But see. The floor is filling up, the
-reserve is wearing off, and it would need only the
-eruption of some reckless spirit to bring on a pandemonium.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is apparent that only a desire to humor the wishes
-of Miss Hathaway has led Cyrus Felton to the garden.
-And yet it is all so novel, all so bright and full of color,
-that he becomes interested in spite of himself, and when
-Ashley proposes a tour of the floor with a peep at the
-wine-room, Mr. Felton glances irresolutely at Louise.
-The young lady nods an assent.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Do not be gone long,” she enjoins, “although I could
-listen to the music and watch the picture half the night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>When they are gone she leans back in her chair, partly
-draws the box draperies, and watches dreamily the ever-changing
-panorama on the vast floor. Suddenly there is
-borne to her ears a melody strangely sweet, yet filled with
-a subtle melancholy. Louise catches her breath and
-listens. It is the andante of the Beethoven Sonata Pathetique
-she played so often in her old Raymond home.
-It has always been her favorite, and she is really an artist
-in soul and execution. Some one is whistling softly the
-divine first theme, and with a tenderness she has often
-felt yet could not satisfactorily express through the
-medium of an unsympathetic pianoforte.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>She leans over the box and her eyes rest upon the
-figure of a man attired in the costume of Don Caesar de
-Bazan. He is leaning carelessly against the pillar of the
-box in which she is sitting, not a dozen feet from her.
-So closely does his costume fit him and so bravely does
-he bear it that he looks a veritable Don Caesar who has
-stepped for an hour from a bygone century. A brown
-beard covers the lower part of his face; all above is
-hidden by a black silk mask.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>While Louise is taking note of this interesting personality
-she hears the door open behind her, and turns
-expecting to greet Mr. Felton or Ashley. Instead a
-stranger steps rather shakily into the box and closes the
-door with an affable “Good-evening, mademoiselle.”
-Louise makes no reply, and her unwelcome visitor drops
-into a seat with easy familiarity.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have been more enthusiastically received to-night,
-but I will let that pass,” he remarks, with cheerful impudence.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I do not know you, sir,” says Louise frigidly, as she
-rises and casts a wildly anxious look over the ball-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, well, I am not so hard to get acquainted with,”
-offers the insolent mask. “Will you drink a bottle of
-wine with me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Leave me at once!” commands Louise, pointing to
-the door with trembling finger.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By George! That’s an attitude worthy of Lady Macbeth,”
-remarks his insolence, in frank admiration. “I
-will go,” he adds, in mock humility, “but I must at least
-have a kiss to solace me for the loss of your society.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You would not dare!” gasps Louise, retreating to the
-box rail.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Dare?” laughs his insolence; “I would dare anything
-for such a prize,” and he approaches her unsteadily.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Louise’s frightened gaze is turned toward the ball-room
-and again rests upon Don Caesar de Bazan, who,
-attracted by the colloquy, has stepped a pace out upon
-the floor and is an interested spectator of the encounter.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Save me!” she whispers, and sinks upon one knee.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But the entreaty is superfluous. Already Don
-Caesar’s hands are on the rail and with a vault he is in
-the box. His arm shoots out and his insolence goes
-down with a crash. He struggles to his feet with an oath
-and makes for Don Caesar; but the latter’s threatening
-attitude, clenched fist and eyes that flash fire through
-the black mask, cause him to stop, and muttering, “You
-will hear from me again,” he leaves the box.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Don Caesar lifts his cap and is about to follow, when
-Louise interrupts him. “Do not go,” she says gratefully,
-“until I have thanked you a thousand times for the
-service you have rendered me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Don Caesar bows. “As for the service,” he remarks
-lightly, “it was nothing. The fellow has been drinking,
-and seeing you alone—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My friends have left me only for a few moments,”
-Louise hastens to explain, as she glances over the floor
-and bites her lips in vexation.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then I may remain until they return?” Don Caesar
-observes inquiringly, dropping into a chair. “Some other
-graceless scamp may blunder in here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Louise’s eyes express a timid assent to the proposition.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“This is the first of these balls that you have attended?”
-asks Don Caesar, noting that she is ill at ease.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes; and it will be the last. I had read much of them,
-how brilliant they were, and all that, and I naturally
-acquiesced when I was tempted with an invitation. For
-I was told that if one went masked there was no harm
-in looking on for an hour.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Nor is there. The wickedness will not begin for
-some time, and it is at best, or worst, a cheap, tawdry
-wickedness, wholly unattractive to saint or sinner. It is
-all inexpressibly stupid. A lot of tinsel-decked people
-rushing hither and thither in the dance, with little regard
-for the rhythm of the music and less for the etiquette of
-the ball-room, and a line of weary clubmen, bankers,
-men-about-town, butchers and bakers and candlestick-makers
-looking on.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yet you attend, though your remark indicates familiarity
-with the function.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, yes, I attend. For in spite of it all there are
-flowers and music, light and color and a certain brilliancy
-that enables one to forget for the nonce the even deadlier
-stupidity of the outside world.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Don Caesar de Bazan of old was not a cynic,” remarks
-Louise, smilingly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Had he been he would not have maintained our evergreen
-regard. When we sit down to a book or a play
-we like to leave our cynicism behind us; to live with men
-who have not a care beyond the morrow; men who
-mount horse and ride away from their troubles; whose
-swords leap from their sheaths at the breath of an insult;
-good, hearty, whole-souled fellows whose fortunes one
-delights to follow, but whom, alas, we seldom meet in
-the flesh.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Perhaps it is as well. You might grow awfully tired
-of them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Perhaps. I sometimes think that, outside of the lasting
-friendships with the people in books and plays, the
-only satisfactory acquaintances are the chance ones.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“True,” murmurs Louise, dreamily. She wonders
-whether the face behind the black mask matches the
-melody of the voice. A similar thought flits through
-Don Caesar’s mind, as his eyes take in the graceful figure
-of the girl, clad all in black, a single ornament fastened
-at the long white throat.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I, too, have few friends,” says Louise. “But there
-is one friend who never fails me, through joy or sadness—my
-music.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, there is naught like it to drive away that enemy
-to life, dull care,” put in the Don. “It is my one passion.
-And I have cultivated it only lately. But now I give
-myself up to it entirely, attending every concert of any
-repute, and bewailing fate a thousand times that I cannot
-play, or sing, or write.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I think I can guess your favorite melody—one of
-them, at least.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Can you, indeed?” asked Don Caesar, in interested
-surprise.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The Sonata Pathetique.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, is it not beautiful? You have guessed correctly,
-but how?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You were whistling it softly as you stood near yonder
-pillar, a moment before the occasion for your presence
-here arose.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Very probably. It is continually running through
-my head. Do you know, the melody has two meanings
-to me. When I am out of patience with the world and
-myself it seems tinged with an inexpressible melancholy.
-And when I am in good spirits the refrain becomes singing,
-joyous, triumphant. Has it ever seemed so to you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I do not know. It has always seemed beautiful. It is
-my favorite.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And mine. You are not a New Yorker,” ventures
-Don Caesar.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“So? It is now my turn, Don Caesar, to marvel at
-your guessing powers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Don Caesar laughs softly. “It does not demand an
-extraordinary acute discernment. Your accent and manner
-betoken the New Englander.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Are we then so provincial that we so easily betray ourselves?
-But you are right. I am a Vermonter.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I thought so. Odd, is it not, how dominos conduce
-to confidences, even among strangers?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes. And yet I think they would prove unsatisfactory
-for conversational purposes among people who—”
-Louise pauses.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“People who have been formally introduced, eh?” finishes
-Don Caesar. “Are you in the city for any length
-of time?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Only until Saturday. We sail for Cuba then.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Cuba? That is a long way off,” muses Don Caesar.
-“I came very near forgetting that I had not been formally
-introduced and expressing the regret that I should not
-see you again before you sail.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You said a moment ago that the only satisfactory
-acquaintances were the transitory ones,” Louise reminds
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“True. But that rule has its exceptions, like all
-others.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Consistency is no more a man’s attribute than a
-woman’s,” moralizes Miss Hathaway. “My friends approach,
-Don Caesar,” she adds, as she catches a glimpse
-of Mr. Felton and Ashley threading their way over the
-crowded floor.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That is the signal for my departure, then,” says Don
-Caesar. “Before I go I would crave one small boon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I owe you some return for your timely assistance.
-Speak, Don Caesar.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Just a glimpse of the face that your mask so jealously
-veils.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh!” cries Louise, somewhat disturbed.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Remember,” urges Don Caesar, “we shall never meet
-again—But ’twould be ungenerous to press my request,”
-he adds, rising. “I must say farewell, then, with
-only the memory of a sweet voice to recall one of the few
-pleasant quarter-hours that I have known.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Some impulse, she can hardly explain what, seizes
-Louise. With trembling fingers she detaches her mask
-and uncovers a face suffused with blushes.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I thought so!” murmurs Don Caesar, as his eyes take
-in the glory of that face, which is almost immediately
-veiled again.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank you,” he says, simply, and presses to his lips
-for an instant the hand she timidly gives him in parting.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He is gone, and Louise sinks back into her chair with
-beating heart, wondering whether she has been foolish,
-or unmaidenly, or indiscreet. She forgets to administer
-to Ashley the scolding he deserves for his long absence
-and receives abstractedly his explanation of a row in the
-wine-room and their detention by the crowd. Her gaze
-wanders about the ball-room in search of the graceful
-figure of Don Caesar de Bazan, but he has vanished.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XXII.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>A FAIRY TALE THAT CAME TRUE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>Toward 10 o’clock Louise Hathaway decides that she
-has witnessed enough of the brilliant panorama to warrant
-her in returning to the hotel, and as Cyrus Felton is
-plainly bored by a scene not attuned to his temperament,
-Ashley hunts up their wraps, hails a carriage and they
-are driven to the St. James.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You will make a night of it, I suppose,” Miss Hathaway
-remarks, as Ashley prepares to say good-night.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No; I shall remain only long enough to finish my
-story for the paper. I wrote the introduction this afternoon.
-One year’s ball is much the same as another’s.
-Have you any plans for the morrow?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“None, except mild sight-seeing. Will you not lunch
-with us?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I shall be delighted,” murmurs Ashley. To be near
-Miss Hathaway is pleasure unalloyed; incidentally he desires
-an opportunity to quietly study Cyrus Felton. “At
-1 o’clock, say?” he asks.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At 1 o’clock. We must thank you again, Mr. Ashley,
-for your escort this evening.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Don’t mention it—again,” smiles Ashley. “I am sorry
-I cannot ask you to assist in my work to-morrow. It
-would be fully as interesting and more to your taste,
-likely, than the French ball.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then it cannot be a political meeting.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Hardly. It is the trial trip of the new United States
-cruiser America, probably the fastest vessel of any size
-afloat in the world to-day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That will be delightful. You must tell me all about it
-when you return. Your description will be much more
-interesting, I am sure, than the newspaper accounts.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Fully as interesting as the Hemisphere’s story, perhaps.
-Good-night, Miss Hathaway. Oh, by the way,
-Mr. Felton,” as Louise trips upstairs, “did you know that
-Roger Hathaway’s revolver has been found?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley asks the question in the most casual of tones,
-but his keen eyes are riveted on the elder man’s face.
-The result is not wholly what the questioner expected.
-Mr. Felton simply stares at Ashley and repeats: “Hathaway’s
-revolver found? Where? When?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It was fished out of Wild River about opposite the
-cemetery a day or two ago. But perhaps it was after you
-had started for New York. Odd, is it not, that the
-weapon with which the crime was perhaps committed
-should be brought to light within a stone’s throw of the
-grave of the murdered man? But pardon me. Perhaps,
-I have awakened painful reflections; so I will say no more.
-Good-night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Cyrus Felton stands like a stone upon the threshold
-to the reading-room for fully a minute after Ashley has
-left the hotel. Then he turns and goes slowly upstairs to
-his room.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>When Ashley reaches the Garden he hunts up Barker
-and rescues that amiable gentleman from the importunities
-of a brace of masks who are gayly informing him that
-they are “just beginning to like him.” Ashley drags him
-away and asks: “Have you located the gentry for whom
-you were looking to-night?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No, but I have chanced upon one or two choice incidents
-in society life which the chief may find useful
-some day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Good. Let me in early when they materialize. Now,
-old chap, if you will kill time here for half an hour or so,
-until I finish my story, I’ll join you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley hunts up an out-of-the-way corner and the
-work is soon finished and dispatched by a district messenger
-boy. Then the newspaper man returns to the
-wine-room, but Barker has strayed.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>While Jack is lounging about the edges of the ball-room,
-his cheek is brushed by a Jack rose tossed from a
-near-by box. He looks around and sees leaning over the
-box rail a woman attired in the costume of a lady of the
-Russian court. The eyes behind the mask twinkle invitingly,
-and as she is alone Ashley fastens the rose in
-his coat, tosses a kiss to the donor and proceeds to look
-for the door leading to that particular box.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“May I enter, lady fair?” he asks, as he stands upon the
-threshold.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“On one condition,” the lady in black informs him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Name it,” he smiles.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That you do not ask me to drink a bottle of wine
-with you; that you talk of something interesting; and
-that you do not make love to me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And you call that one condition? But I accept,”
-says Ashley, closing the door behind him. The next instant
-he suppresses an exclamation and a tendency
-toward mild protestation. For in closing the door he has
-caught one finger on a nail which some careless carpenter
-omitted to drive home, and the digit gets a painful
-tear.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The lady in black extends sympathy and lends her own
-dainty lace handkerchief to bind up his wound. As he
-bends to tie the knot with his teeth the perfume on the
-lace almost startles him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Your first condition, madam, was easily accepted,” he
-smiles, as he throws himself into a chair and toys with
-the handkerchief about his finger. “The second is more
-difficult to live up to, and the third is cruel.” He is
-carelessly unwrapping the handkerchief as though to rebind
-it, and is looking for some initial.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, tell me a story—something I haven’t heard,”
-yawns the lady in black. “At the first sign of stupidity I
-shall send you away.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A story?” drawls Ashley. Ah, he has found what he
-sought. In one corner of the handkerchief is the letter
-“I,” curiously embroidered in silk.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Very well,” he says, in rare good humor, “I promise
-you a story that, while it may not be entirely new to you,
-will hold your interest to the end. But first, madam, I
-must beg of you to lay aside your domino, that I may
-know whether my tale is interesting you or I am courting
-the unhappy fate which you threatened should be meted
-out to stupidity.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The lady in black laughs musically and, partially drawing
-the box draperies, she tosses off her mask, and, to
-Ashley’s intense amaze, reveals the face of the handsome
-woman whom he remembers to have seen with Phillip
-Van Zandt the preceding night at the Damrosch concert.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But Jack Ashley is not a young man who permits his
-face or voice to betray his emotions. So he knots the
-lace once more about his injured digit, settles himself
-comfortably in his chair and begins:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Once upon a time—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Is this a fairy tale?” interrupts his handsome auditor.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A fairy tale? Perhaps. But a fairy tale that came
-true. Once upon a time there lived in a small New
-England community a youth to whom the simple amusements
-and rustic pleasures of his native town became as
-tedious as a twice-told tale. As his father was engaged
-in a business whose interests extended over the country,
-the youth was given a roving commission, and soon after
-he was tasting the sweets of an existence in the great
-city. Metropolitan life suited him to a T. His only regret
-was that his means were not sufficient to keep pace
-with his luxurious tastes.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In the course of time he met and loved a very pretty
-girl. She had hair of midnight, eyes like black diamonds,
-a superb figure and a thousand charms. Whether her
-heart was as true as her face was fair, I know not. The
-torrent which bore these two hearts was more or less
-turbulent. In the trouble which came between them I
-am charitable enough to believe that the man was to
-blame. The youth found that living beyond his means
-has an inevitable and unpleasant result, and it was not
-long ere his father, after palliating innumerable offenses,
-summoned him home. He was given a position in a
-bank in the town which he still despised, and he soon
-forgot his city love, being assisted in this forgetfulness
-by a passion which he had conceived for the beautiful
-daughter of the cashier of the bank in which he was
-employed.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The neglected one wrote many letters, but could obtain
-no satisfaction of her faithless swain. Finally she
-decided to visit him in his New England home; so on a
-memorable afternoon she arrived in his town, went to a
-hotel and sent word to the youth that she desired to see
-him at once.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well?” demands the lady in black, as Ashley pauses.
-The flash in her eyes and the nervous fingers tell him
-that, while his story may not be enjoyed, it is being
-listened to with intense interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The youth obeyed the summons,” he resumes, “and
-there was a scene. Money was demanded, and money he
-had none. But perhaps it was to be had somewhere.
-That night a murder was committed in the town. It was
-an extremely mysterious affair, and the excitement which
-it caused was intensified a day or two later, when the
-young man of our story suddenly disappeared and was
-never after heard from. The detective employed on the
-case assumed that if he could find the mysterious woman
-who registered at the hotel the day of the tragedy some
-light might be thrown upon the affair and the whereabouts
-of the absent young man ascertained.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Have you any object in telling me this story?” asks
-the lady in black, in a voice which she strives to render
-calm and unconcerned.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Only your entertainment.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then you have not succeeded.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have succeeded in one thing,” returns Ashley, in
-quiet triumph. “I have found the woman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Indeed? That is more interesting. But perhaps you
-are mistaken.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Impossible. The beautiful unknown left in the hotel
-room a lace handkerchief scented with a most peculiar
-perfume.” Ashley is slowly unwrapping the lace creation
-about his finger, and he sniffs it as he speaks. “A perfume
-which the finder of the handkerchief had never
-known before,” he goes on, as he spreads the lace upon
-his knee. “Besides the perfume, which distinguished this
-from thousands of other handkerchiefs, there was in one
-corner the letter ‘I,’ curiously embroidered in silk.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As if he were alone and talking to himself, Ashley
-takes from a wallet in his pocket the handkerchief which
-for months he had carefully treasured, and spreading it
-upon his knee compares it with the one which lately
-wrapped his finger. They are identical. Then he looks
-up and catches the half-scornful, half-startled gaze of the
-lady in black.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Is that all?” she inquires.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No. But I expect you to furnish the last chapter.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The lady in black again adjusts her mask. “Not to-night,”
-she says. “Come to my hotel to-morrow and I
-will endeavor to gratify your curiosity.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Whom shall I inquire for?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I believe you have my name.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, yes. And the hotel, madam?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The Kensington.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And the hour?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ten in the morning.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank you. I will be prompt.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley leaves the box humming a lively air and proceeds
-to look up his friend Barker.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Busy, old man?” he asks, when he has finally located
-the detective.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not especially? Why?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Do you see that woman in black in yonder box, talking
-with a swarthy-looking gentleman?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I do.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That is ‘Isabel Winthrop.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The devil!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No; but perhaps one of his satanic highness’ amiable
-representatives. I have an interview arranged with her
-for to-morrow at 10; place the Kensington. I want you
-to follow her when she leaves the Garden and keep an
-eye on her until 10 o’clock to-morrow morning. If I do
-not hear from you before that hour I shall consider that
-she has made the engagement in good faith. I have a big
-day’s work to-morrow, and I believe I will go home and
-turn in.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“All right, Jack, my boy. I will keep her ladyship in
-view if she leads me to China. So long.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XXIII.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>A REPRISAL OF TREACHERY.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“Don’t be absurd, Don Manada.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Absurd? Dios! I was never more thoroughly in
-earnest in my life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Nevertheless, you are absurd,” Isabel Harding smiles
-tantalizingly over her champagne glass at the flushed
-face and glistening eyes of her companion.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>This conversation occurs shortly after midnight at an
-out-of-the-way table in the arcade at the east end of the
-Garden.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>For all it began so decorously, this year’s ball is a particularly
-riotous affair and already the fantastic orgee is
-well under way. Masks have been scattered to the patchouli-laden
-winds. Yet there are a few discreet folks
-who, though they mingle with the mad crowd, have retained
-their masks. As Don Manada and his companion
-are comparatively removed from observation, they have
-laid aside their dominos for the moment and are conversing
-in earnest whispers.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Isabel Harding is so radiantly, magnificently, dangerously
-beautiful that it is a terrific strain for the gentleman
-at her side to maintain the least semblance of composure.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In what does my absurdity consist?” he demands in a
-passionate whisper.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Can you ask? You tell me that you love me—which
-I already know—and urge a suit which I have twice
-before told you is hopeless. You profess to believe that I
-could learn in time to honestly return your undoubtedly
-sincere affection. It is impossible. I will be honest with
-you. I am not one to whom love comes slowly. I love
-only one man, and he—don’t look so murderous, Don
-Manada—he cares nothing for me,” she finishes, bitterly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Come, a truce to lovemaking!” rallies Isabel. “Don’t
-look so fiercely downcast, Don Manada. Fill up the
-glasses and we will drink a melancholy toast to unrequited
-love. We are alike unsuccessful lovers. But we
-will continue to be good friends.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Impossible,” replies Don Manada, as he gloomily
-pours out the wine. “I go to Cuba to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Indeed? I trust that I am not responsible for the
-loss of your society to your New York friends.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No, senora. I go because duty calls me, but I had
-expected to wear a lighter heart than that which will
-accompany me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Don Manada is too much occupied with his despair to
-note the peculiar look which Isabel darts at him from
-between her half-dropped eyelids.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Cuba?” she repeats, dreamily. “Ah, I should like to
-visit that country some day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Don Manada looks up with swift hope. “You would,
-senora? Then you shall!” he cries. “We will leave to-morrow
-on my vessel. I will be your slave. You have
-but to speak and every wish will be gratified. You will
-do me this favor,” he urges, and then, with the fervor and
-descriptive powers of a Claude Melnotte, he proceeds to
-paint a fascinating picture with a tropical background,
-his enthusiasm fired by ravishing glances from his companion.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Quite an escapade you have outlined,” smiled Isabel.
-“But it is too prosy. If the voyage promised a dash of
-adventure, if it were spiced with an element of danger,
-I—” she pauses and lifts the wineglass slowly to her
-lips.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Danger?” echoes Don Manada, with a curious smile.
-“Dios! The voyage might not be without all the adventure
-your heart could desire, senora.” He takes from
-his pocket a newspaper clipping and hands it to Isabel,
-after a glance about him to make certain that they are
-unobserved. The clipping is from the current edition of
-the Hemisphere. It is a dispatch from Key West, and a
-portion of it reads as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“This city has been in a fever of excitement all day
-over the report that an important filibustering expedition
-is to leave New York this week to aid the Cuban
-insurgents. The report is backed by excellent authority,
-and there is no doubt that an effort will be made to send
-valuable assistance to the patriots of the Antilles some
-time during the week. In some way the United States
-authorities and the Spanish government have got wind
-of the proposed expedition and they are striving to nip
-it in the bud. The Spanish warship Infanta Isabel this
-morning steamed from this harbor for the purpose, one
-of her officers said, of intercepting the filibusters on the
-high seas.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“It is also stated that a prominent and gallant member
-of the Cuban revolutionary society will head the expedition,
-but his identity has not been disclosed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>Mrs. Harding glances through the clipping and hands
-it back with a quizzical smile.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“So you are the prominent and gallant member of
-the Cuban revolutionary society referred to?” she infers.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not so loud!” cautions Don Manada. “We may be
-overheard. What think you of the voyage now,
-senora?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I fear it is a bit too dangerous,” replies Isabel, with a
-yawn. “We should never reach Cuba.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Trust me,” assents Don Manada, complacently.
-“Once on the high seas, the Isabel will lead the Spanish
-warships a pretty chase.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, the name of your schooner is the Isabel?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Of our yacht—yes. Is it not happily named?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Perhaps so,” answers Mrs. Harding, with an enigmatic
-expression in her lustrous eyes. “And where
-should I find your yacht in case I should at the last
-moment decide to accept your offer of a merry voyage to
-the tropics?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My yacht? I should conduct you to it,” says Don
-Manada in some surprise.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, no; that would not do,” objects Isabel. “I should
-be driven to it veiled just preceding its departure.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Don Manada looks around the arcade, but there is
-no one within twenty feet of their table.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“North river, foot of 23d street,” he whispers. “You
-will go?” as Isabel appears to be hesitating mid conflicting
-emotions.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You will promise not to make love to me during the
-entire voyage?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I will promise anything, senora, though you have
-imposed an unhappy obligation.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then I think I will say—yes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Bueno!” cries the delighted Don Manada, and, seizing
-Isabel’s hand, he covers it with passionate kisses.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, by the way, what time do you sail?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At 5 o’clock.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Very well. I will send final word to your hotel in
-the morning. Now, leave me to dream over my folly,”
-says Mrs. Harding, disengaging the hand which Don
-Manada still tenderly holds.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Then, as the latter goes off to the wine-room to submerge
-his happiness in champagne, Isabel leans back in
-her chair and laughs softly. “The fool,” she sneers.
-“Well, all men are fools—all but one.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And that one?” inquires a voice behind her. She
-looks up startled, to meet the calm gaze of a man of perhaps
-50, with dark hair and mustache slightly tinged with
-gray and the distinct air of a soldier.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, who but yourself?” returns Isabel composedly.
-“Sit down, Gen. Murillo. I have much to tell you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The intelligence is plainly of a pleasing nature. Gen.
-Murillo murmurs “Bueno!” more than once as he listens,
-and when she finishes he remarks approvingly: “You
-have done well and may count on my gratitude.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Gracias,” responds Isabel. “That is about the extent
-of my Spanish, General.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, but you will learn readily. It is simple. Hist! a
-gentleman approaches. It were well if we be seen little
-together to-night. Until the morrow then, adios.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Gen. Murillo moves off toward the swirl of dancers
-and Isabel surveys with an air of recognition a gentleman
-in the costume of Don Caesar de Bazan, who has descended
-to the arcade by the north stairway and is
-coming slowly toward her. Don Caesar looks curiously
-after the departing form of the Spaniard; then, dropping
-into a chair beside Isabel, he tosses off his mask and asks
-carelessly: “Well, my dear Isabel, when do you leave
-for Cuba?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“For Cuba?” repeats Mrs. Harding in simulated surprise.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Exactly. After a glance at the gentleman who just
-left you I do not need to be enlightened as to the diplomatic
-duties to which you alluded last night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, Phillip, I have few secrets that you do not
-share,” Isabel says sweetly; “I leave for Cuba to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“So soon,” he murmurs courteously.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The sooner the better. Every day I am near you
-makes eventual separation the harder. I know that you
-care nothing for me,” she goes on, her cheeks flushed
-crimson. “Don’t interrupt me,” as Van Zandt seeks to
-interpose a protest. “I know that you care nothing for
-me, not in the way I would have you feel. I have your
-friendship, yes, beyond that I am nothing to you. And
-I—I love you, Phillip—love you as I never expected to
-love a man. I make the avowal without shame, for I
-know there is no possibility of a change in your sentiments
-toward me. And I am going away—to-morrow,”
-half sobs the woman, as she covers her face with her
-hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Van Zandt lays his hand upon Isabel’s head and
-smooths the dark tresses sympathetically. She pushes
-the hand away.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Courage! Tears ill become a diplomat,” declares Van
-Zandt. “This is a dreary world. We seldom attain our
-heart’s desire, even though the object we seek be a lowly
-one. Will you have some wine?” Isabel shakes her head.
-She has dried her eyes and has relapsed into an apathetic
-melancholy.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Van Zandt signals to a waiter. “A little wine will help
-lighten our hearts,” he tells Mrs. Harding; “for believe
-me, mine is not less heavy than yours. Cheer up and we
-will drink a toast to all unrequited love.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Isabel gives him a swift look of surprise. “You
-heard?” she demands.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I heard nothing,” he replies, smilingly. “What has
-given rise to your question?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“’Tis less than an hour since I offered that very toast.
-I have had a proposal to-night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Indeed? And you rejected it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Can you ask such a question. The world is full of
-Don Manadas, but there is only one—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“So? The swarthy gentleman, with the curious white
-mustachios?” interrupts Van Zandt. “I noticed you talking
-with him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I had rejected him twice before, but his persistence is
-worthy of a better cause. To-night I promised to accompany
-him on a filibustering expedition to Cuba.
-Think of it! The fool!” sneers Isabel.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And you will not go.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Most certainly not. I only half-promised. To-morrow
-I shall send word that I have changed my mind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And meanwhile you have accomplished something
-toward your new duties, eh?” remarks Van Zandt. If
-Isabel Harding could read the dark, handsome face that
-she loves so well, she would know that she has lost forever
-the esteem of Phillip Van Zandt.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You have betrayed the man who trusted you,” continues
-Van Zandt in the same quiet and impassive voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Betrayed him? And what if I did?” flashes Isabel
-passionately. “Call it treachery if you will. I say it is
-only a reprisal of treachery. Take me out of here, Phillip.
-I am sick of these lights and the music and the scent of
-the flowers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I will see you to a carriage,” says Van Zandt, quietly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ten minutes later he says good-by to her, as he prepares
-to close the carriage door.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Some day, Phillip, you will realize how much I love
-you,” Isabel whispers, as she presses to her lips the hand
-he mechanically gives her.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Words, words, words; but destined to have a tragic
-fulfillment!</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Van Zandt looks after the retreating carriage with a
-darkening brow. “Call it treachery if you will,” he repeats,
-grimly. “By George! I’ll spike her ladyship’s
-guns! The cause of liberty shall not be jeopardized by
-the indiscretion of its friends or the machinations of its
-enemies!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As he turns and re-enters the garden a man steps to a
-waiting cab, and, indicating the carriage which is bearing
-off Isabel Harding, he whispers to his driver: “Keep
-that rig in view till it stops. Understand?”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XXIV.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>FOR THE CAUSE OF LIBERTY.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“You proposed to a lady to-night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What is that to you, sir?” Don Manada turns fiercely
-upon the gentleman who has tapped him upon the
-shoulder and requested the pleasure of a few moments’
-conversation with him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Nothing to me, perhaps,” returns Phillip Van Zandt,
-quietly; “to you much, possibly. Sit down. Or better,
-suppose we adjourn to the arcade. We shall be freer
-from interruption there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I must decline to accompany you, sir, until I have
-reason to believe that the matter on which you desire to
-talk is of more importance than your opening remark
-would indicate.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Van Zandt surveys the Cuban with a trifle of impatience.
-“As you please,” he observes. “But permit me
-to say that upon your disposition to listen to what I
-have to impart depends the success or failure of the expedition
-which is to start for Cuba to-morrow—or, rather,
-to-day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Manada starts violently and bends a searching look
-upon the other’s face. “Nothing could be of greater importance
-to me, sir,” he says, and without further remark
-he follows Van Zandt to the little table where an hour ago
-he for the third time offered Isabel Harding his hand and
-heart.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Now, to business,” remarks Van Zandt, glancing at
-his watch. “It is 1:30. Thirty minutes for talk, the rest
-of the night for action. You are Don Manada of the
-Cuban revolutionary society.” That gentleman bows.
-“I am Phillip Van Zandt. That is all you need know
-concerning myself. Mrs. Isabel Harding, the lady to
-whom you made violent love to-night”—the Cuban
-scowls, but Van Zandt goes on relentlessly—“I have
-known for some months. She has honored me—shall I
-say?—with her deep regard. Perhaps she hinted as
-much to you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Manada leans back in his chair and looks his new
-acquaintance over critically. This, then, was his rival; a
-negative one, to be sure, but a rival that any man might
-fear.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“If it will flatter your vanity to know that the lady
-in question confessed to me that she loved only one man
-in the world and that that happy individual was not
-myself, you are welcome to the information,” Manada
-offers, sarcastically.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank you. But I was already aware of the fact, and
-it is not to the point. You proposed to Mrs. Harding and
-were rejected. Stay,” as the other colors and is about
-to make an angry retort: “I did not bring you here, sir,
-to refresh your mind one instance in which the usually
-discriminating Isabel displayed poor taste. But I repeat,
-she rejected you; hence subsequently something must
-have occurred between you to lead up to a rather peculiar
-agreement—Mrs. Harding’s consent to accompany you
-on a filibustering expedition?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Caramba! She told you—you overheard—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I overheard nothing. Eavesdropping is not in my
-line. And she told me little more; but enough to warrant
-me in stating that you have been indiscreet, sir, to use
-no harsher term, and have jeopardized not only your own
-welfare but that of your fellow-countrymen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You seem to be pretty familiar with my affairs, senor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not so familiar with them as the Spanish government
-and the United States authorities may be,” responds Van
-Zandt, dryly. “All I know of your plans I have told you.
-What I do not know you will tell me now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>An angry rejoinder trembles on Manada’s lips, but
-something in the stern, quiet air of the man before him
-checks his wrath.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Mrs. Harding,” resumes Van Zandt, “consented to
-go to Cuba with you, did she not?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Practically, yes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And you were to receive her final decision on the
-morrow?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, senor?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“She will not go.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then you persuaded her—you interfered,” cries Manada
-hotly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I did nothing of the sort. Still, I repeat, she will not
-go. But, stay, perhaps she will,” murmurs Van Zandt,
-thoughtfully. “Perhaps her ladyship’s plans lie deeper
-than I have supposed,” he thinks. “But even if she does
-go, I tell you, my friend, it were far better that you
-burned your vessel where it now lies than that Isabel
-Harding sets foot upon its deck.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Your meaning?” demands Manada in a hoarse whisper.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Your face tells me that you have guessed the truth,”
-Van Zandt says more kindly. “The woman has betrayed
-you. She is a spy—diplomat is the polite word—in the
-employ of the Spanish government.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Caramba!” hisses Manada, sinking back into his chair
-with colorless cheeks. “But you can furnish proof of
-what you assert?” he cries almost eagerly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Van Zandt’s lip curls. “Had you watched the fair
-Isabel after you left her you would have seen join her a
-gentleman whose presence in itself would have been
-proof sufficient—Gen. Murillo. You know him?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Of the Spanish service,” murmurs Manada in crushed
-tones.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Precisely. I met him at the club the other day. And
-if I mistake not he has done an excellent bit of work for
-his government to-night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But I will find the woman,” bursts out Manada, leaping
-to his feet. “Por Dios! I will search her out and—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You will do nothing of the kind,” interrupts Van
-Zandt, drawing the excited man back into his chair.
-“Mrs. Harding left for her hotel half an hour ago. Even
-were she here it would avail you nothing to confront her
-with her—diplomacy. Gen. Murillo is already in possession
-of your plans. No, my friend; the mischief is
-done, but happily it is not irremediable.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah!” cries Manada, with a flash of hope.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Now, listen to me. We have wasted too much time
-already. What is the name of your vessel?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The Isabel.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“So? Pretty name, but have it changed at the first
-opportunity. Where does she now lie?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“North River, foot of Twenty-third Street.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Excellent,” comments Van Zandt, his eyes lighting
-with satisfaction. “And at what time did you intend to
-sail?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At five in the afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You are of course aware that both the Spanish and
-United States governments are on the keen lookout for
-filibustering craft?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Certainly,” Manada replies, grimly. “But we were
-confident of slipping through unmolested. We had arranged
-to clear for the Bermudas, and once on the high
-seas we felt sure of running away from any warships that
-might lie in our course.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, your vessel is a yacht. And the cargo—of what
-does that consist?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Two thousand rifles and 200,000 rounds of cartridges.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“How is it loaded?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The ammunition is packed in kegs, ostensibly containing
-salt fish; the rifles are in bags and are hidden at the
-bottom of bins of potatoes in the hold.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The cargo could be shifted before daybreak, do you
-think?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Two or three hours should suffice.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Good. You must have noticed, lying in the neighborhood
-of your vessel, a rather trim article in the yacht
-line.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The Semiramis? Yes. A magnificent vessel!” exclaims
-Manada.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Van Zandt nods. “She is my property and I believe
-her to be the fastest vessel afloat in the world to-day.
-Now here is my plan—I consider it the only one that will
-extricate you from the dilemma in which you are placed:
-I will place the Semiramis at the service of the struggling
-patriots of the Antilles. We will shift the Isabel’s cargo
-before the night is gone, and before the sun goes down
-on another day the Semiramis will be on her way to
-Cuba. Once without New York bay I defy anything
-short of a cannon ball to overhaul her. What say you,
-Don Manada?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Cuban’s face expresses the astonishment and joy
-that he feels. To be raised suddenly from the depths of
-despair to the pinnacle of hope effects a remarkable
-change in one of his temperament.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Santa Maria!” he cries, as he presses warmly Van
-Zandt’s hands. “You have done me as great a service
-as one man can do another. Por Dios! We shall outwit
-them cleverly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then let us be off,” says Van Zandt. “It is after 2
-o’clock and we have little time to spare.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The men secure their coats and hats and ten minutes
-later board a cross-town car.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Senor Van Zandt, I owe you a debt of gratitude,” declares
-Manada; “yet I find myself marveling that you, a
-stranger, and the one man to win Isabel Harding’s affection,
-should interest yourself in me and the cause I represent.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, it promised an adventure; something I have long
-been in need of to stir my blood to action,” replies Van
-Zandt, lightly. “Besides, am I not an American, and is not
-the cause of liberty a cause that appeals to every American
-with a spark of manhood in his soul? Only those
-who know what liberty is realize its priceless worth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>They are now walking along West Street. Manada
-silently reproaching himself with his recent folly, wraps
-his greatcoat more tightly about him, and breathes a
-shivering malediction on the cutting winds that sweep
-adown the Hudson.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The sky is overcast and a slight snow is falling. It is
-a good night for the work in hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The river front is black and silent and the outlines of
-the vessels about the pier are barely distinguishable
-through the driving storm.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>West Street, though dimly lighted, is not deserted.
-From the grog-shops come echoes of many a brawl, and
-every now and then a drunken longshoreman reels or is
-thrown into the street and staggers off, heaven knows
-where. Every half-hour or so a ferry boat lumbers in and
-out of the slip, and there is a temporary bustle in the
-vicinage.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A miserable night, senor,” remarks Van Zandt, as
-they cross West Street and pick their way toward the
-pier where lies the vessel in which are centered now all
-of Don Manada’s hopes. The latter has forgotten for
-the nonce his recent humiliation and is keenly alive to
-the adventurous undertaking in hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The men plunge through the gloom, muffled to the
-eyes and with heads bent before the biting blasts from
-the river, when their ears are suddenly assailed by the
-sound of a scuffle ahead of them and a half-choked cry
-for help. Quickening their steps, they run upon two
-men. One of them is prone upon the pier; the other,
-clearly his assailant, bends over him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Before the scamp can rise Van Zandt deals him a blow
-with his heavy cane that stretches him beside his victim.
-He is not a courageous rogue, or if he is realizes that his
-chance for an argument is not especially good. So when
-he struggles to his feet he makes off without a word,
-without even an imprecation.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Van Zandt and Manada raise the prostrate form and
-bear it back to the street. As the lamplight falls upon the
-face of the unconscious man Van Zandt utters an ejaculation
-of astonishment.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By heaven! it is Gen. Murillo! You see, my friend,
-that I was not mistaken. He probably came down here
-to have a look at the Isabel, and was set upon by one of
-the scum of the river front.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Manada nods a silent assent. “He must not see us,”
-he mutters, uneasily.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Don’t be alarmed. He is not likely to recognize any
-one for a few minutes. I hope he is not badly hurt. Off
-with him to yonder saloon; or, better, to the ferryhouse.
-The man will be safer there, though we are more likely to
-find a policeman at the saloon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A policeman is at the ferryhouse, however, and assistance
-is summoned. Van Zandt and Manada wait until
-Gen. Murillo is laid in the ambulance and the surgeon
-in charge has assured them that the man is not fatally
-hurt; then they tell their story to the policeman and go
-about their business.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A peculiar episode,” remarks Van Zandt. “Our friend
-will never know to whom he owes his rescue and perhaps
-his life. Our affair must be hurried, nevertheless, for we
-know what his first effort will be when he recovers consciousness.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yet some day, when Cuba is free, I shall have the
-pleasure of recalling the incident to his mind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“When Cuba is free,” repeats Van Zandt. “Well, luck
-favoring us, we shall fire a shot to-day that will ring
-in the ears of the government at Madrid. Here we are
-at the Semiramis. Where is the Isabel?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Just beyond. Not twenty feet away.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Van Zandt hails his yacht and ten minutes later he and
-Manada are in the luxurious cabin, in consultation with
-Capt. Beals, a bluff old Maine sea dog, who is prepared
-for any caprice on the part of his employer and expresses
-not the least surprise when informed that arrangements
-for a cruise to Cuba must be instantly set afoot.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>And that morning, while the wind howls around Manhattan
-Island, and drives the sleet into the eyes of belated
-pedestrians; while Murillo awakens to consciousness in
-Bellevue Hospital and tells the attending surgeon that,
-head or no head, he leaves for Cuba within half a dozen
-hours; and while the last carriage load of half-drunken
-sports dashes away from the Madison Square Garden, a
-work is in progress aboard the Semiramis that means
-more to its owner than he dreams of as he stands with
-folded arms in the dim light of the ship lanterns, watching
-silently the transshipment of the insurgent’s arms.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XXV.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>TWO KINDS OF BLOCKADE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>About 9:30 of the morning following the French ball
-Phillip Van Zandt drops into his favorite seat in the
-dining-room of the St. James hotel and picks up the
-morning paper.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Scarcely had he unfolded it when his attention was
-attracted by two persons seated at the table beyond him.
-They are Cyrus Felton and Louise Hathaway, and the
-latter never looked fairer than on this bright March
-morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, my divinity of the ball,” he murmurs. “By Eros!
-She is superb. Hair, a mass of gold and the sunlight
-gives it just the right effect. Purity and innocence are in
-those blue eyes and in every line of the face. Knowing
-no evil and fearing none, and yet with the self-poise of a
-queen. It almost restores one’s confidence in humanity
-to look upon such a face.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I would be glad indeed to know her, but the opportunity
-for an introduction is not likely to arise. I could
-scarcely presume on last night’s meeting, and besides,
-she would hold me to my word. What impulse possessed
-her to remove her mask at my request? I’ll wager she
-regretted it an instant later. Well, she did not see my
-face, so I may devour her visually in perfect safety.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And her companion?” Van Zandt goes on meditatively.
-“Not her husband, assuredly. Too old for that.
-More likely her father, or perhaps her guardian. They
-are going to Cuba, so she told me. Well, I am going to
-Cuba, too. I may meet her there. Friendships are easily
-cultivated in a foreign land. My dear Van Zandt, is it
-possible that you are becoming interested in a woman?
-Careful; you forget who you are,” he concludes bitterly,
-and stares moodily out upon the crowded street.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Felton and Miss Hathaway are breakfasting leisurely,
-unconscious of the interest they have aroused in
-the gentleman at the next table. Mr. Felton is scanning
-the columns of the Hemisphere, with particular reference
-to the full dispatches from Cuba and Madrid. Suddenly
-he drops the paper with the exclamation: “This is very
-unfortunate!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What is unfortunate?” inquires Miss Hathaway, sipping
-her coffee.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Here is a dispatch from Havana, stating that the
-government has ordered a complete blockade of the
-island and that all steamship engagements to and from
-Cuba have been canceled for an indefinite period.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Miss Hathaway looks up in mild dismay. “Then we
-cannot leave Saturday,” she says.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It would seem not. Ah, here is something more. The
-newspaper has looked up the report at the New York
-end and finds it to be true. The steamer City of Havana
-of the Red Star line, this paper says, will probably be the
-last passenger vessel to leave New York for Cuba until
-the blockade is raised.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But can we not go on that?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Felton reads on: “The City of Havana sails to-day
-at 11 o’clock.” Then he glances at his watch. “It is now
-nearly 10. Perhaps we can make it. Wait, I will ascertain
-from the clerk.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Felton rises, and as he turns to leave the dining-room
-Van Zandt gets a view of his face, and he starts
-as if from a nightmare.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That face again!” he breathes. “That face, which has
-haunted my dreams and has been before me in my waking
-hours! And her father! Merciful heaven, it cannot
-be. There is a limit to fate’s grotesquerie.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Miss Hathaway glances in Van Zandt’s direction and
-their eyes meet. It is only an instant, but it leaves the
-girl somewhat confused and accentuates the young man’s
-disorder.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At this juncture Mr. Felton returns with the information
-that they have little more than an hour to reach
-Barclay Street and the North River, from which point the
-steamer leaves.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then let us go at once. I am ready,” Louise says,
-“after I have scribbled a note of explanation to Mr.
-Ashley. He was to have lunched with us at 1 o’clock,
-you know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>After they have gone Van Zandt drops his head upon
-his hand, and for the space of ten minutes remains
-plunged in thought. Then, to the waiter’s surprise, he
-leaves his breakfast untouched and quits the dining-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>In the office he sees Mr. Felton settling his bill. Outside
-the hotel a line of “cabbies” are drawn up and these
-Van Zandt looks over critically, finally signaling to one
-of them, a jovial, red visaged Irishman.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Riley, a lady and gentleman are going from this hotel
-to Barclay Street and North River within a few minutes.
-I want you to have the job of carrying them,” says Van
-Zandt.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I’m agreeable, sor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“After you have secured the job, I want you to miss the
-steamer which sails for Cuba at 11 o’clock. Understand?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Riley puckers up his mouth for a whistle which he decides
-to suppress.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Sure that would not be hard, sor. It’s tin o’clock
-now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Here they come now. Look to your job,” says Van
-Zandt.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Felton and Miss Hathaway emerge from the hotel,
-followed by a porter with their trunks. Amid a chorus
-of “Keb, sir!” “Keb!” “Keb!” in which Riley sings a
-heavy bass, Mr. Felton looks about him in perplexity,
-and finally, as though annoyed by the importunities of
-Riley, who is rather overdoing his part, he selects a rival
-“cabbie.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Riley turns somewhat sheepishly to Van Zandt, who
-looks after the disappearing carriage in vexation.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Shall I run them down, sor?” asks the Irishman, with
-a wink which means volumes.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Can you prevent them reaching the pier?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Sure, I think so, your honor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I’ll give you $50 if you do it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Be hivens! I’d murdther thim for that,” exclaims
-Riley, as he leaps to his box.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The two cabs proceeded at a smart pace down Fifth
-Avenue, but as the congested trucking district is reached
-progress becomes slower.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Can you make the pier in time?” Mr. Felton asks the
-driver anxiously, consulting his watch for the dozenth
-time.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Sure thing,” is the confident response.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Neither the driver nor his passengers see the cab behind
-them. Riley has his reins grasped tightly in one
-hand, his whip in the other, and the expression on
-his round red face indicates that he is preparing for
-something out of the ordinary.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>They have now reached lower West Broadway, and
-before Mr. Felton’s driver knows it he has become entangled
-in a rapidly created blockade.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Progress now is snail-like. Mr. Felton becomes nervous,
-while Miss Hathaway finds much to interest her in
-the seemingly inextricable tangle of trucks, drays, horse
-cars, cabs, etc. Suddenly a space of a dozen feet or so
-opens before them, and the driver is about to take advantage
-of it when Riley gives his horse a cut with the whip
-and bumps by, nearly taking a wheel off the other cab.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Then ensues a duel of that picturesque profanity without
-which no truck blockade could possibly be disentangled.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Riley, who is ordinarily one of the most good-natured
-of mortals, becomes suddenly sensitive under the abuse
-heaped upon him and dragging the rival cabman from
-his box he proceeds to handle him in a manner that
-affords keen delight to the onlookers.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is a snappy morning and Riley rather enjoys the
-exercise he is taking. But it is suddenly ended by a
-brace of policemen, who struggle upon the scene and
-pounce upon the combatants. Explanations are then
-in order and peace is restored. No one is arrested.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Riley is willing to break away, for as he looks around
-he notes with satisfaction that the blockade has increased
-to unusual proportions and he awaits serenely its slow
-unraveling.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Meanwhile Mr. Felton is invoking the vials of wrath
-upon all cabmen, past, present and to come. It is nearly
-11:30 when they reach the pier and, as they expect, the
-steamer has gone.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“’Tain’t my fault, mum,” the “cabbie” explains apologetically.
-“Him’s the chap what done it,” indicating
-Riley, who has driven up to the pier with the triumphant
-flourish of a winner in a great race.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Felton casts a withering look upon the jolly Irishman.
-“We may as well return to the hotel,” he tells
-Louise.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At this moment Van Zandt steps from his cab, and,
-raising his hat, remarks:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I trust that the carelessness of my driver has not
-caused you serious annoyance.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He has prevented our catching the last steamer that
-will sail for Cuba in probably some months,” replies
-Mr. Felton, tartly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You blockhead!” cries Van Zandt sternly, turning to
-Riley, who averts his face.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My dear sir, it is needless for me to assure you of my
-profound regret. It will not help matters. The mischief
-is done—and yet I think I can repair it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Repair it?” repeats Mr. Felton. “In what possible
-way, sir?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Very easily, if you desire. You were going to Havana,
-I presume?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My yacht sails for Santiago this afternoon at 1 o’clock.
-I shall be happy to land you at that port, and you may
-thence proceed by rail to Havana.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Felton and Louise look at each other in surprise.
-“Really, sir,” says the former, “you are very good, but
-I do not see how we can put you to such trouble.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I assure you that you will not inconvenience me in
-the slightest. The yacht is large and you will be the
-only passengers, with one exception.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Felton hesitates. “How badly does he want to go
-to Cuba?” wonders Van Zandt and he remarks: “This
-will probably be your only chance to reach Havana in
-some little time, if, as you say, there are no more steamers.
-Really, I almost feel like insisting on your accepting
-my offer, as some sort of reparation for the annoyance
-to which you have been put and for which I feel
-partly responsible.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But a blockade has been declared about the island.
-Your yacht—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My yacht will land you at Santiago,” supplies Van
-Zandt, with a peculiar smile. “We sail in about an
-hour, and we may as well proceed to the yacht at once.
-For I assume that you have decided to permit me to atone
-for the blackguardly behavior of my driver.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Felton consults Miss Hathaway and the matter is
-decided in the affirmative, and as Van Zandt hands them
-into their coupe, he tells the driver: “North River, foot
-of Twenty-third Street.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>An hour later Miss Hathaway is expressing her admiration
-for the beautiful yacht that is soon to bear her to
-the tropics, and Capt. Beals is giving the last orders
-preparatory to getting under way.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As Van Zandt watches Mr. Felton cross from the pier
-to the deck of the Semiramis into his dark eyes comes a
-glitter of almost savage satisfaction, and he murmurs:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have you safe now, and by George! You will not
-soon escape me!”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XXVI.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>THE PENALTY OF PROCRASTINATION.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>A pencil of sunlight has struggled through the heavy
-draperies at the windows and laid a tiny straight line
-across the carpet in the comfortable apartments of Jack
-Ashley on West Thirty-fourth Street. The oriole timepiece
-on the mantel chimes the hour of 9 when that
-individual awakens with a series of prodigious yawns.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Fifteen minutes more and Ashley’s toilet is complete,
-and with heels elevated to a comfortable angle, he proceeds
-to scan the pages of his morning paper. His own
-story of the French ball first claims his attention, and
-with a comment of satisfaction on the size of the headlines
-with which it is introduced, he runs his eye approvingly
-over the dozen or so illustrations with which the
-article is embellished.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A scare head of the largest size catches his eye, and
-with awakening interest he reads the sensational headlines.
-“Gaining Ground—Cuban Revolutionists Driving
-Spaniards before Them—Hemisphere’s Exclusive Interview
-with Senor Manada Creates Excitement in Washington—United
-States Man-of-War to Be Sent to Cuba
-to protect American Interests,” and much more of the
-same tenor. As Jack skims over the voluminous dispatches
-that follow the head, he reads with interest one
-brief item, dated Santiago de Cuba, via Nassau, N. P. It
-is as follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“The Government is redoubling its efforts to suppress
-the news, and is apparently determined that the press
-of the United States and elsewhere shall not learn the
-exact state of affairs on the island. Nine-tenths of the
-local newspaper men have been fined by the press censor.
-Several editions of the leading papers have been seized,
-and telegrams for transmission abroad from eastern
-Cuba are now absolutely forbidden. It is also a fact that
-foreign correspondents have been threatened with expulsion.
-The Spanish authorities allege that the mysterious
-steamer fired upon by the warship Galicia was
-not the American ward liner Santiago, but a rebel vessel
-which the insurrectionists have purchased in the United
-States and fitted up as a gunboat. A blockade of all the
-ports of the island, as previously intimated, has been
-formally announced.”</p>
-
-<p class='c016'>“It looks as if the paper would be obliged to send a
-man down there,” Ashley reflects, as he struggles into his
-topcoat. “What a superb day for the trial trip,” as he
-opens the street door and steps into the sunlight. “And
-this is the day, too, that Barker is to arrest Felton. He
-didn’t specify any time, probably not till afternoon, anyway.
-I almost wish I wasn’t assigned to that trial trip.
-I should like to interview him after the arrest. However,
-my story is all written up and I can get the details
-of the arrest from Barker after I return from the America.
-I wonder how Miss Hathaway will take the affair,” a
-softer light shining in his eyes as his thoughts revert
-to the beautiful ward of Cyrus Felton. “She treats him
-with the utmost deference and respect, but I cannot
-think that she cares especially for him. Heigho! Now
-for a cup of coffee and then for another tete-a-tete with
-the beautiful unknown of the Raymond hotel.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is on the stroke of 10 as Ashley saunters up to the
-clerk’s desk in the Kensington and requests that his
-card, upon which he has penciled a few lines explaining
-his identity, be taken to Mrs. Winthrop.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Mrs. Winthrop?” the urbane clerk repeats. “There
-is no such lady stopping here, to my knowledge.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley is nonplused. So he has been duped, he thinks,
-by the fair unknown. But why has not Barker kept his
-agreement? A nice sort of a shadow if he cannot follow
-as striking-looking a woman as “Mrs. Winthrop.”
-But stay! Perhaps she has given a fictitious name, but
-is actually stopping at the Kensington after all. Barker
-could not have slipped upon a simple matter like that.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Abstractedly twirling his glove, Jack leans over the
-desk and says in a low tone to the clerk, an old acquaintance:
-“Is there a rather striking-looking young woman,
-with dark eyes and midnight hair, stopping at the house?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The clerk smiles.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Sorry, Jack, but you are too late, I’m afraid. The
-beautiful Mrs. Harding left at 9 o’clock, bag and baggage.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley turns thoughtfully away and repairs to the
-reading-room for a quiet think. So her name—for the
-present at least—is Mrs. Harding. But where is Barker?
-The detective is probably shadowing Mrs. Harding now.
-Ashley concludes that there is nothing for him to do but
-await Barker’s return. He has been on the watch barely
-half an hour when the detective swings himself from a
-cable car in front of the hotel.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well?” is Jack’s impatient salutation as he leads the
-way to a retired corner of the reading-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker is not in exuberant spirits; his brows are
-knitted in a frown and he is nervously biting his mustache.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, she has gone—left town, and is apparently en
-route from the country—for Cuba, I believe.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“For Cuba!” and Jack stares at the detective in mild
-amaze. Verily, either a most remarkable series of
-coincidences or the tangled threads of the Raymond
-mystery are pointing unmistakably to the fair isle of the
-Antilles.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, for Cuba. Let me impress it upon your mind
-in the beginning that Mrs. Isabel Harding—that’s the
-name she is sailing under—is no ordinary woman. Why—but
-to begin at the beginning. According to our
-understanding last night, I followed her to this hotel,
-where I found she was actually stopping. I naturally
-concluded that she made the engagement with you in
-good faith, else she would have given another hotel.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“She did give me a fictitious name,” breaks in Jack.
-“Or, rather, she led me to believe that her name was still
-Winthrop.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Did she? Well, that was useless. Anyhow, I decided
-to stop here last night, to be on guard early this
-morning. I found that my lady had breakfasted early.
-This made me suspicious and I kept close watch of her.
-Shortly after 9 o’clock she settled her bill at the hotel and
-with her trunks was driven to the Jersey City ferry. Of
-course I followed. At the Pennsylvania depot she was
-joined by a foreign-looking chap—Spaniard. Quite a
-distinguished-looking duffer. If you should ever run
-across him you will know him by a small, crescent-shaped
-scar on his left cheek. I was successful in getting
-close enough to them to hear some of the conversation.
-It appeared from their talk, Ashley, that your Mrs. Harding
-is, in addition to her other accomplishments, a spy
-in the pay of the Spanish Government, and that she has
-been successful in learning some of the secret plans and
-plots of the Cuban filibusters in this city. She is now
-on her way to Port Tampa aboard the Florida limited,
-and I should judge it is their intention to proceed from
-Key West at once to Havana.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Their intention? Did the Spanish officer accompany
-her?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker nods. “He looked as if he was right out of
-the hospital; his head was bandaged. Perhaps some of
-the Cuban sympathizers had it out with him. However,
-that episode is closed, for the present at least. And now
-for Cyrus Felton. I shall take him directly to the Tombs,
-and according to our compact he will be invisible to any
-of the newspaper fraternity. Will you come with me to
-the St. James while I nab the bird?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley starts. He has for a moment forgotten the
-catastrophe that is about to overcome Cyrus Felton. He
-looks at his watch. “I am overdue at the office,” he
-says. “But say, Barker, I had an engagement to lunch
-with Felton and Miss Hathaway at 1 o’clock. Can’t you
-put off the arrest until to-morrow?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker shakes his head. “Not a minute,” he replies,
-emphatically. “I have delayed long enough. If you
-intended to lunch with the fair Miss Hathaway you will
-have an opportunity to do so just the same and your
-presence will doubtless be appreciated in her tremendous
-confusion. If you can’t come with me I will drop round
-at the office and see you later.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“All right, then. Do the job in as gentlemanly a manner
-as possible,” grins Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker nods and walks rapidly toward the St. James,
-while Ashley boards a Broadway car and rolls downtown.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The detective saunters up to the hotel office desk,
-writes the name “Cyrus Felton” on a bit of cardboard,
-and, passing it to the clerk, inquires: “Is that gentleman
-in?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No, sir; gone. Left an hour ago.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“When will he return?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, that’s rather beyond me,” smiles the clerk.
-“Mr. Felton and a lady sailed this morning for Cuba,
-on the City of Havana. I assume that they did. They
-were driven from here to the pier.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What time does the steamer sail?” asks Barker, taking
-out his watch.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Eleven o’clock.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Too late!” grits the detective. It is even now five
-minutes past the hour.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>For a moment Barker permits his emotions to master
-his self-possession, and he startles even the debonair
-clerk, accustomed as the latter is to the strong terms
-sometimes employed by irritable guests.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>His feelings relieved in a measure by this unusual outbreak,
-the detective sits down for a moment to consider
-the situation. Cyrus Felton, then, is on his way to Cuba,
-doubtless to join his son. Mrs. Harding, a valuable
-quantity in the mystery, is also headed for the Antilles.
-Everything seems to point to Cuba. Barker picks up a
-railroad timetable.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Twelve m.; Florida express for Savannah, Jacksonville
-and Port Tampa,” he reads.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By the gods, I’ll do it!” he exclaims, as he starts for
-the street. “First to the pier and make sure that the
-steamer has gone, and, if so, then to Key West. I shall
-be only two hours behind the woman, and I may reach
-Havana ahead of Felton. Hi, there, cabby!”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XXVII.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>THE CRUISER AMERICA.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“Jack, Mr. Ricker wants to see you,” is the information
-extended to Ashley when he reaches the office. He reports
-at the room of the city editor, and that gentleman
-informs him that he has not arrived any too soon.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I know that I am an hour or so behind, but I have
-been working up a story that will make interesting reading,”
-Ashley explains. “What’s up? My trial-trip assignment
-isn’t until 3, is it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The start was set for 3, but it has been pushed forward
-to 1 o’clock,” says Ricker.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is about noon now. I may as well start for Brooklyn
-at once. Good, snappy day for a run down the bay.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thunder!” says Ashley, when he reaches the street.
-“I had forgotten that I was booked for a consolatory
-lunch with Miss Hathaway at 1. I must send my regrets.
-Hang it, that will look as if I was on to the
-arrest and was afraid to show up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But he sends the note, nevertheless, and feels better in
-mind. “If that cold-blooded Barker only handles the
-matter properly,” he thinks.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Even as he reaches the Government dock Jack sees the
-pennant of Capt. Meade run up to the main truck of the
-cruiser whose initial trial in commission he is to report;
-he is none too soon for the gang-plank is being withdrawn
-by half a score of blue-clad sailors as he makes a
-flying leap and lands upon the deck of the newest and
-fastest acquisition to Uncle Sam’s navy, the cruiser
-America.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ere Jack has fully recovered his footing a youthful-appearing
-midshipman brusquely demands his business.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It takes sometime before Jack is permitted to tread
-the sacred precincts of the quarter-deck.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Capt. Meade is for the time being on the bridge, and,
-before making the acquaintance of the commander, Jack
-proceeds to look about the vessel.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The America has an air of being a ship made for
-getting there; an up-to-date cruiser, without frills and
-furbelows, but distinctively with an aspect of power. In
-the bright sunlight her snowy hull gleams like polished
-marble. Her four great smokestacks relieve in a measure
-the glaring effect of her big white bulk, while the
-polished brass and steel with which all the decks are gird-ironed
-suggest, without the presence of the murderous
-rapid-fire and revolving cannon stationed about the
-decks, that the vessel is designed for war.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley is soon engaged in the collection of information
-regarding the America for the benefit of Hemisphere
-readers. The cruiser is, the second officer informs him,
-of over 7,000 tons displacement. Her battery comprises
-two six-inch, 40-caliber rapid-fire guns, one on each side,
-forward of the superstructure; one eight-inch, 40-caliber
-on the center line, abaft the superstructure; eight four-inch
-rapid-fire guns in armored sponsons on the gundeck,
-four on each side; six-pounder rapid-fire guns,
-four-pounders, one-pounders, Gatlings and torpedo tubes
-galore.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There are three vertical, triple-expansion engines,
-each set driving a separate screw. The propellers are
-of manganese bronze and the—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank you, that is sufficient, I guess,” interrupts Jack.
-“The Hemisphere readers will have a very good idea of
-the offensive and defensive power of the America now,
-I am sure.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The cruiser is slowly backing out into the stream.
-There is a big throng on the pier to watch her departure,
-and a whole battery of cameras are leveled as she finally
-swings around.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Now the ship becomes indeed instinct with life and is
-pointing down the bay with a speed that augurs well for
-the shattering of records. The whistles of all the craft
-in sight screech a salute and the America’s hoarse whistle
-bellows responsively. Past the Battery and Governor’s
-Island she speeds and then, fairly by quarantine, the
-patent log is cast into the foamy wake and Capt. Meade
-rings “full speed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The speed trial of the America has actually begun.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Jack is idly watching the rapidly receding island, when
-he becomes aware by the slight bustle on the quarterdeck
-that the commander of the America has returned from
-the bridge.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Capt. Meade, or “Fighting Dave,” as he is affectionately
-designated in naval circles, is a man of about 60
-years, but forty-five years of his eventful career have been
-spent in the navy. He has worked himself up, without
-political or social influence, from apprentice boy to commander
-of the newest and best cruiser in the United
-States.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Jack has heard of “Fighting Dave,” and he scans the
-famous naval officer with much interest. A figure
-slightly below the average, but stockily built; a cheerful
-visage, face weather-beaten and innocent of beard,
-surmounted by a shock of grizzly hair; eyes whose keen
-expression might well belie the jovial look upon the face—this
-is Capt. David Meade, U.S.N.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Good face,” thinks Ashley, as he completes his
-scrutiny. “I should like to know Capt. Meade personally,
-and I will.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>With his customary assurance and easy grace Ashley
-approaches the autocrat of the quarterdeck and tenders
-his card.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Capt. Meade glances at the pasteboard and then his
-keen eyes wander to the newspaper man. Apparently
-the scrutiny is satisfactory, for the bronzed face wrinkles
-into the most benign of smiles and a tremendous fist
-grasps Jack’s right hand with a grip which causes him
-to mentally question his ability to write up the trial trip,
-or anything else, for a week at least.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“So you are from the Hemisphere?” Capt. Meade observes.
-“Well, I like that paper and one of its representatives
-is heartily welcome to my ship. In these days
-of sentiment and gush and peace and good-will and
-brotherly love, and so forth, and so forth, it does my
-heart good to get hold of a paper which isn’t afraid nor
-ashamed to speak right out in meetin’ for the land we live
-in and the flag that floats above it. But come below, Mr.
-Ashley, and we’ll clinch the sentiment with a toast.” And
-the captain leads the way to his sumptuous quarters,
-where the “splicing of the main brace” is accomplished
-with alacrity and vigor by commander and newspaper
-man.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, what do you think of the America?” asks the
-captain. “Did you ever see anything like that on a
-vessel going over twenty knots an hour?” setting his
-glass, filled to the brim, on the table. The surface of
-the liquid is scarce more ruffled than that of a mirror.
-“No sign of vibration, eh? She stands up as steady as
-a house.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Jack is really surprised as he considers the circumstances.
-“From what little I have seen of her I should
-say she is a remarkable craft and one that Uncle Sam
-should feel proud of,” he replies.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Remarkable? She’s a wonder! Why, she can walk
-away from anything that floats—anything, big or little,
-torpedo catchers or stilettos. I was on her when her
-first trial trip with the builders aboard took place, and
-while she made twenty-five knots then, she can do better.
-And she is going to do it to-day. Before we reach
-Sandy Hook, young man, you can just put it down in
-your log-book that the American flag is being borne over
-the water faster than any other flag is likely to be carried
-for some time. One more splice and then we’ll show
-you how the trick is done.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As the captain and his guest return to the quarterdeck
-of the cruiser it is apparent that something unusual is
-attracting the attention of officers and crew. Those who
-are not actively engaged in the manipulation of the
-cruiser are gathered at the port rail watching intently a
-steamer that is running parallel with the America, about
-an eighth of a mile distant and about three lengths astern.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What is it, Mr. Jones?” inquires Capt. Meade of the
-third officer, who has just removed the binocular glasses
-from his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A strange craft, sir, evidently a yacht which is apparently
-using the America as a pacemaker. She pulled
-up astern of us fifteen minutes ago, and has since been
-steadily gaining. Very fast, sir, I should say, but she
-bears no ensign or pennant of any kind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Capt. Meade takes the glasses from the hands of his
-subaltern and looks long and critically at the strange
-vessel. She is nearly the same length as the America,
-though manifestly of considerable less tonnage. And
-she is painted black, without a bit of gay color from stem
-to stern to relieve the somberness of her hull.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Two black smokestacks, that appear unusually large
-and are set at a decidedly rakish angle, are relieved by
-two narrow bands of white. Capt. Meade with a seaman’s
-appreciative eye admires the shapely lines of the
-yacht, but as his practiced vision notices the comparative
-ease with which she is creeping up on the America his
-jovial face becomes slightly troubled.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Mr. Jones, have the log taken and work out our speed
-at once,” he orders.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Twenty-four and a quarter knots,” is the report.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>For the next ten minutes the captain watches intently
-the strange yacht. Her course is apparently shaped precisely
-parallel with that of the America, and she still
-continues to gain, inch by inch, upon the white cruiser.
-Now she is amidships, and now the two vessels are on
-even terms.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A puff of white steam rises abaft the stranger’s big
-smokestacks, and a long shrill whistle salutes the cruiser.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>’Tis a challenge for a race and it stirs Capt. Meade’s
-blood to fever heat. He sends for the chief engineer.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“How is the machinery working?” he inquires.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Finely, sir; not the sign of the slightest trouble anywhere.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Very well, sir; we will begin now to push her for a
-record. Put on every ounce of steam she will stand,
-first with natural and afterward with forced draught.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The chief engineer salutes, and returns to his domain,
-and a second later the hoarse whistle of the America
-sounds a defiant acceptance of the challenge of the black
-yacht.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XXVIII.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>GREAT RACE TO THE OCEAN.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“By Jove! I had no idea the captain had so much
-sporting blood in his veins,” murmurs Jack Ashley to
-himself, as he watches alternately the challenging craft
-and the America. “It is a race fit for a king’s delectation.
-I wonder whose yacht that is. I don’t remember
-seeing her described in any of the papers, as she certainly
-would have been if she were owned in New York. She
-is a big one, and a beauty, too. And swift as the wind!
-But she doesn’t seem to be gaining now. No, by
-Jupiter! We are gaining on her! The America has
-struck her gait at last! But that’s a game craft there.
-She sticks to us like a leech and refuses to be shaken
-off. Ah!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The impromptu race has been in progress nearly half
-an hour, and the two vessels, still less than an eighth
-of a mile apart, are gradually drawing nearer each other.
-It is apparent that the yacht is determined to continue
-the race at closer range, and has changed her course for
-that purpose. Meanwhile the big cruiser has held to her
-original course, and as the yacht straightens away for
-another parallel run she has lost her former advantage
-and the two vessels are practically on even terms.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is a battle royal!</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The white cruiser is cleaving the water with tremendous
-speed, her bow sending the spray curling nearly
-as high as her armored top, while the waves astern are
-churned by her triple screws into a foam that extends
-as far as the eye can reach. The roaring of her furnaces
-is audible above the whir of the machinery and the
-whistling of the wind through the rigging. From her
-three great smokestacks steadily increasing masses of
-inky smoke trail out above the snowy wake.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>All eyes on the deck of the cruiser are riveted on the
-yacht. For a short space of time it looks as if both vessels
-might be propelled by the same power, so even are
-their relative positions. Then, to the practical eyes
-aboard the cruiser, it is apparent that the America is
-drawing ahead, slowly to be sure, and imperceptibly to
-the untrained eye, but still gaining.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A dozen yards, a quarter length, a half, a clear length
-ahead!</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A hearty cheer is trembling on the lips of the crew
-of the cruiser, but it is not uttered. The race is still unfinished,
-the victory still hangs in the balance.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Like a thoroughbred that has been feeling her antagonist,
-the yacht now seems to respond to some undeveloped
-power. The cruiser gains no more—she is
-losing her advantage. The watchers on the quarterdeck
-of the America can see the black prow lessening the
-open water that separates the two craft. Now her bow
-laps the stern of the America, but not for long. She is
-overhauling the cruiser faster now, and in a few minutes—seconds,
-it seems to the anxious spectators on the
-latter vessel—she is abeam of the America.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Out beyond Sandy Hook, where the billows flash into
-curving crests like the manes of wild horses, a great fleet
-has gathered to watch the race against time of the famous
-warship. Instead it is their privilege to witness a race
-between two of the swiftest sea hounds ever unleashed
-on the trail of the wind.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Through the impromptu armada the racers speed over
-the toppling seas. A thousand glasses are upon them.
-What does it mean? The white cruiser all may recognize,
-but her sable-hulled consort, what is she? Straight
-out from staff and halyards the wind whips the flag and
-ensigns of the America, but neither ensign nor flag does
-the strange steamship show, and except for the great
-white wake that trails behind her she might be a phantom
-ship, another Flying Dutchman.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But ere the “reviewing stand” recovers from its first
-surprise, both craft are miles away, black bow and white
-bow piling over hills of foam like sleighs over snowdrifts
-and the surge that goes sobbing along the glistening
-sides of the cruiser, inaudible above the roar of her
-mighty engines, sounds like the weeping for a lost race.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>For the black hull is bow and bow with the white, as,
-after a long and critical survey of the yacht from the
-bridge, Capt. Meade descends to the deck and summons
-the chief engineer.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Everything is working finely, sir,” that official reports.
-“We are steaming the extreme limit under natural
-draught. Shall we try the forced now, sir?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Capt. Meade hesitates and again gazes long at the yacht.
-The latter has now a clear length of open water to the
-good and her stern is presented squarely in view for the
-first time. The single word Semiramis is inscribed thereon
-in gold letters. But no port is designated.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The Semiramis,” murmurs the commander of the
-America. “I never heard of the craft before, but her
-name will be on every man’s lips before long, I’ll wager.”
-Then to the chief engineer: “Yes, put on the forced
-draught.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Jack Ashley wipes the marine glasses with which the
-thoughtfulness of the second officer has provided him,
-and turns them again toward the afterdeck of the yacht.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, may I be keelhauled, or some other equally
-condign nautical punishment,” he mutters, after a long
-look. “If that isn’t Louise Hathaway, seated in a
-steamer chair, then do my optics play me strange pranks.
-But what is she doing on the deck of that yacht? She
-appears to be alone; at least there is no other lady
-passenger on deck. Ah, there is Mr. Felton. So Barker
-was too late. Felton and Miss Hathaway must be the
-guests of the gay yachtsman who is making ducks and
-drakes of the America on her trial trip.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thunder and Mars!” cries the newspaper man, nearly
-dropping the glasses to the deck. “Phillip Van Zandt!
-He is apparently the owner of the yacht. Good heavens!
-What irony of fate brings together those two participants
-in the Raymond tragedy. For Van Zandt is Ernest
-Stanley, I will swear it.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, as the novelists say, the plot thickens. How
-did Van Zandt ingratiate himself into the good graces
-of Cyrus Felton? It must have been recently, for Miss
-Hathaway spoke as if they had no friends in the city.
-Hang it all! I don’t just fancy the situation. How
-assiduously he is waiting upon her now! Heigho, Jack!
-I think I would as soon have reported this trial trip from
-the deck of the Semiramis.” At which thought Ashley
-impatiently pitches over the rail the remains of one of
-Capt. Meade’s favorite brand of cigars.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The black plumes of smoke that pour from the chimneys
-of the America are becoming denser and larger.
-The forced draught is now fully in operation, and in the
-boiler-rooms the half-naked stokers ceaselessly feed the
-greedy fires.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The cruiser has reached the limit of her speed.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>How is it with the Semiramis?</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>For a time the America seems to hold her own and
-even to gain slightly. But the advantage is transitory.
-The yacht still apparently has speed in reserve. Once
-more she leaps forward and not again is opportunity
-afforded the America’s people to view her gleaming
-sides.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>For another hour both vessels are driven at their
-highest speed. The Semiramis continues to gain upon
-the America, and is now nearly a quarter of a mile ahead.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Half an hour later Capt. Meade sees a flag run up to
-the masthead of the vanishing yacht. He gives an order
-and the cruiser’s forward gun booms a salute.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What do you make of that ensign, Mr. Smith?” inquires
-the commander, turning to the second officer.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A strange flag, sir, not the flag of any nation that I
-recall,” is the reply.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, I have it,” suddenly exclaims the captain. “Well,
-she is a great craft and magnificently handled. The
-America made a gallant fight against odds and lost; but
-you can say, Mr. Ashley,” as that individual ascends the
-steps to the bridge, “that the America has broken all
-records in the navies of the world, and for two consecutive
-hours has exceeded twenty-seven knots an hour.
-Yonder craft has beaten that time, but she has not the
-heavy armament of the America.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What was the ensign she ran up a moment ago,
-captain?” Ashley asks.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That, sir,” replies Capt. Meade, “was the flag of Cuba
-Libre, the emblem of the sometime republic of the
-Antilles!”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XXIX.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>ASHLEY LAGS SUPERFLUOUS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“If she is the property of the revolutionists, gentlemen,
-with her phenomenal speed she can run the strictest
-blockade the Spaniards can institute, can land arms, ammunition
-and re-enforcements at will, and practically
-snap her fingers at the whole Spanish navy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The speaker is Capt. Meade and the place the officers’
-mess table on board the America. Naturally the one
-topic of conversation is the strange yacht and her remarkable
-performance.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes,” continues the captain, impressively, “I believe
-that the result of the insurrection may hang on the fate
-of that steamer. My sympathies as an individual, I do not
-hesitate to say, are with the rebels. But my duty as an
-officer impels me to notify the War Department of the
-departure of the Semiramis and the flaunting of the
-Cuban flag. However, I hardly think the warning will
-harm her, even if it should set the entire Spanish navy
-in pursuit.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Do you think the yacht is bound for Cuba now?”
-inquires Ashley, with an unpleasant sensation in the
-vicinity of the fifth rib.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Certainly. She is apparently coaled and equipped
-for a long voyage. She set low enough in the water to
-carry quite a cargo, too. Oh, yes; she is off for the
-West Indies sure enough.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley relapses into a reverie and the burden of his
-thoughts is something like this: “Louise Hathaway,
-Cyrus Felton and this mysterious Van Zandt on the same
-steamer and bound for Cuba! How and why?” He
-mechanically pulls at his cigar. Finally, as the signal
-for breaking up of the dinner party is given by the commander,
-he murmurs: “What will John Barker say?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The America has completed her run; and now, her
-officers and the naval experts aboard having expressed
-their satisfaction with her performance, the cruiser is
-steaming back to her dock. The shrill salutes of the
-many steam craft in the harbor greet the ears of Ashley
-as he accompanies the officers to the deck. The sun is
-shining in a haze of cold gray. The March air, a few
-hours ago so clear and warm, is dull and marrow-piercing.
-Ashley shivers and buttons his coat more
-closely about him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A few moments more, and the cruiser is slowing down
-preparatory to making her pier, and Jack seeks Capt.
-Meade to express his thanks. The latter shakes his
-hand cordially and remarks: “Better come on our next
-cruise, my boy; we may have another try at the black
-yacht. The navy expert says it was rumored in official
-circles that if this trial was satisfactory the America is to
-be ordered immediately to Cuba to protect American
-interests. Good news, if true, eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley allows that if the captain says it is good news,
-good news it certainly must be; and a half-defined hope
-is forming in his mind as he steps once more on terra
-firma.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“After I turn in my story on the trial trip I shall proceed
-to hunt up some possible light on the latest twist
-in the Hathaway tangle,” he meditates, as he sets his
-face toward the lights of Gotham town. “Felton and
-Miss Hathaway were booked to sail on the City of Callao
-on Saturday; yet I discover them to-day headed southward
-on the Semiramis. Miss Hathaway must have left
-some explanation, and it is barely possible that Barker
-may know something about the sudden departure. I
-should not be a particle surprised if John, too, were
-aboard the Semiramis. Nothing will ever surprise me
-again. But if Barker got left I shall probably find him
-sitting on the steps of the Hemisphere office, in a state
-of mind bordering on the profane.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But fate decrees that many days shall elapse ere the
-detective and his newspaper friend again clasp each other
-by the hand; days big with exciting events that the
-serene Ashley dreams not of as he saunters down Newspaper
-Row.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>From his box in the office Ashley extracts a letter,
-evidently hastily written and sealed. The address is in
-Barker’s handwriting, and Ashley tears it open. He
-reads:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“My Dear Ashley: I start for Cuba at 12 o’clock via Key
-West. Write this just before the train starts. Felton has eluded
-me—thanks to your infernal French ball—and sailed for
-Cuba on City of Havana at 11 o’clock. Don’t know whether
-he got wind of contemplated arrest or not. If I have good
-luck at Key West will be in H. as soon as he. May trail him
-to the son and bag both at once. In any event, do not intend
-to lose sight of him again till he is safely landed in Vermont.
-I may run across your Mrs. Harding, and if I do will try my
-luck at making her tell what she knows of young Felton, on
-threat of exposing her as a Spanish spy. Good scheme, eh?
-Must close, train starting; will write from Cuba. Hastily,</p>
-<div class='c017'>“Barker.”</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>“So Cuba is to be the scene of the next act of the
-Raymond tragedy,” Jack thinks. “How suddenly all the
-characters have betaken themselves to the southern isle,
-and how events have crowded on each other the last day
-or two! First, news that young Felton is in Cuba; then
-appear Cyrus Felton and Louise Hathaway in the city;
-then the mysterious woman of the Raymond hotel, and
-the stranger of the mountain gorge—and all of these are
-at this moment en route to Cuba. Only Derrick Ames
-and Helen Hathaway remain to be accounted for, and if
-Barker’s theory is correct, and they, too, are in Cuba,
-what a situation and what a complication! I must be
-there at the finish. The paper really needs a war correspondent
-in the ever-faithful isle, and I’ve half a mind to
-ask for the assignment.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>From his desk Ashley takes a bulky package of manuscript,
-glances through it, and with a sigh replaces it
-within an inner compartment. “The Raymond mystery
-story, the newspaper beat of the year,” is not to be
-used yet.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But the account of the trial trip of the America must
-be written, and soon the sheaves of yellow paper are
-being rapidly covered by Jack’s flying pen.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At last it is finished, and with a grunt of satisfaction
-Jack arranges the scattered sheets and proceeds to the
-desk of the city editor.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, Ashley,” remarks that dignitary, glancing at the
-manuscript and without raising his eyes; “trial trip was
-a success, wasn’t it? Yes; well, I have a little something
-here that I wish you would look up. You have done so
-much Cuban stuff lately that you are more familiar with
-the ground than any other man on the staff. The
-Washington wire states that a vessel, the Isabel, that was
-to have sailed from here to-day, has been detained at her
-moorings, foot of Twenty-third Street. She is suspected
-of having arms and ammunition for the Cuban rebels on
-board. The information was filed by the Spanish minister.
-Just look up the local end of the story, find out
-who fitted out the steamer, where she was ostensibly to
-clear for, etc. You had better see your filibuster friend,
-Manada. He might give you something on it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Blast Cuba!” mutters Jack, as he leaves the office.
-“Everything is Cuba now. Talk about Tantalus! His
-case wasn’t a marker to mine. Here are all the characters
-in a drama in which I am interested gone to Cuba,
-while I lag superfluous on the stage, doomed to write
-up stuff about the confounded island and its affairs at
-long range. Besides, I haven’t fairly got back my land
-legs, and now I must jaunt up the North River two or
-three miles. Well, there is no use kicking, I suppose.
-Guess I will look up Don Manada first, though.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley’s annoyance dissipates rapidly, however, and he
-has recovered his customary serenity when he tenders his
-card to the clerk at the Fifth Avenue Hotel, to be taken
-to Don Manada’s rooms.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Don Manada has left, sir” the clerk tells him. “He
-had his effects removed early this morning and stated
-that he might not return for some months.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Where has he gone, do you know?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“To Cuba, I think.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Jack turns away. “To Cuba, of course. Everybody
-with whom I have business to-day has gone to Cuba. If
-that filibustering vessel, the Isabel, has not eluded the
-officers and sailed for Cuba by the time I reach her
-wharf, I shall be mightily surprised. No; I have decided
-to be surprised at nothing hereafter. The Isabel!
-There’s another coincidence—the first name of Mrs.
-Harding or Mrs. Winthrop or whatever it is—the woman
-of the Raymond Hotel. Well, here goes for the Isabel.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is cold, foggy, dark and altogether disagreeable as
-Jack alights from the car at the foot of Twenty-third
-Street and picks his way down the long wharf to where
-he is informed the detained steamer is docked. She is
-still there; he sees her smokestacks and masts outlined
-against the sky. A single lantern is alight on the vessel,
-but the gang-plank has been hauled in.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Steamer ahoy!” Ashley calls, and after several repetitions
-of the hail a gruff voice sounds from the gloom
-in the vicinity of the lantern.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ashore, there! What do you want?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Is this the Isabel?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes,” is the brief reply.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, I want to talk with you a moment. Can’t you
-run out a plank and hold that lantern nearer, so I can see
-to come aboard? I am from the Hemisphere.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>There is a moment’s hesitation and then the lantern
-approaches the steamer’s side and a plank is extended to
-the pier.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Now, all I want to find out is about the alleged seizure
-of the vessel,” begins Jack, thrusting a cigar into the fist
-that releases the lantern.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There ain’t much to say,” is the reply. “I am a United
-States deputy marshal and was placed in charge of the
-vessel this noon. Whether her cargo contains arms and
-ammunition I can’t say for sure, as she is not to be
-searched till to-morrow, but from the remarks dropped by
-some of the crew I’ll bet a hat the cargo has been taken
-off. One of the crew was considerably under the weather
-when I came aboard and I gathered from his talk that
-some of the Isabel’s cargo was shifted to another steamer,
-a long, black craft, some time after midnight or early this
-morning.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What was the name of the other steamer?” inquires
-Ashley, a sudden suspicion entering his mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Blessed if I know,” replies the deputy marshal.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The Semiramis, I’ll wager $4 to a nickel,” mutters
-Ashley, as he thanks the marshal and goes ashore.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XXX.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>ON TO FAIR CUBA.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“There are only two bits of evidence needed to complete
-my moral conviction that I am the only person
-connected with the Raymond tragedy who is not in
-Cuba or on his way thither,” remarks Ashley, loquitur, as
-he boards a cross-town car. “One is the assurance that
-Cyrus Felton and Miss Hathaway have left the St. James
-Hotel with no intention of an immediate return; the
-other, the knowledge that Phillip Van Zandt has closed
-his quarters in the Wyoming flats for an indefinite period.
-I believe I will try the St. James first.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He does. The clerk smiles benignly upon him when
-he inquires for the Vermonters. “Gone, Jack; but you
-were not forgotten,” he says. “The day clerk turned this
-over to me,” extracting a note from the letter rack.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank you, Ed,” acknowledges Ashley. He tears
-open the note and reads:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Dear Mr. Ashley: I regret very much that circumstances
-have made it necessary to postpone indefinitely the luncheon
-for this afternoon at 1, to which I had looked forward with
-much pleasure. We have just learned that in order to reach
-Cuba we must sail on the City of Havana, which leaves New
-York at 11 o’clock to-day. With many thanks for your kindnesses,
-believe me, sincerely yours,</p>
-<div class='c017'>Louise Hathaway.”</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Far from enlightening me, this note only plunges me
-deeper in the fog,” thinks Ashley, sniffing the faint odor
-of violet that clings to the dainty stationery. “She asserts
-here that she is going to Cuba on the City of Havana,
-yet I discover her aboard the Semiramis. At any rate
-they have gone to Cuba, and there is no particular reason
-for my visiting Van Zandt’s apartments. It is getting
-late, anyway, and I believe I will return to the office.
-If Ricker is in a good-humored mood I will attempt to
-convince him that the only feature which the paper at
-present lacks is a live man at Havana who can tell the
-difference between an overwhelming Spanish or Cuban
-victory and a fifth-rate scrimmage that a dozen New
-York policemen could quell in ten minutes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley swings himself upon a Broadway car and lapses
-into a meditation. “How the deuce do Miss Hathaway
-and Cyrus Felton come to be aboard the Semiramis?
-And if Ernest Stanley is Phillip Van Zandt, where did he
-get the money to own such a yacht? Forty or fifty
-thousand dollars of Raymond National Bank funds
-wouldn’t pay for one side of the Semiramis. But it may
-not be his yacht. I have simply assumed so because he
-looked as if he owned the ocean as well. Good gracious,
-I should be inclined to regard Miss Hathaway’s disappearance
-as a clear case of abduction but for the fact
-that the fair Louise appeared entirely satisfied with her
-surroundings when I focused the America’s glasses upon
-her graceful self. I am beginning to believe that I am
-clear off my reckoning on Van Zandt. The Semiramis
-may be owned by the Cubans and he may simply be one
-of the leaders of the expedition. And he may not be
-Ernest Stanley at all, although I think—hang it! I don’t
-know what I think. I shall quit thinking from now on.
-It is too hard work.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Much relieved by this determination, Ashley sits at his
-desk, lights his briar and dashes off a short sketch of the
-detained filibustering vessel. This he tosses over to the
-night-desk men, and strolls into the city editor’s den.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“When you are at leisure, Mr. Ricker, I should like to
-bore you for five or ten minutes,” he announces.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am at leisure now, Jack. Sit down. It has been a
-rather light night and there is an unusual lull just at
-present. What is on your mind?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is something like half a dozen years since I began
-work on the paper, is it not?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Just about, my son.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And during that time I have never kicked on an
-assignment or asked for any particular job.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes; if I recollect rightly, that is about the size of
-it,” remarks Ricker dryly. “Now, what can I do for
-you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I should like the assignment of war correspondent at
-Havana.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The city editor is silent for a moment.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am sorry you did not speak of this Havana business
-before,” he says, encircling the pastepot with a ring of
-smoke. “Unfortunately I have mapped out two or three
-months’ work for you at a place a good many miles from
-the capital of Cuba.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley’s face does not reveal the disappointment he
-feels.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“All right, Mr. Ricker, I have no kick coming. I will
-break another one of my rules and ask what the assignment
-is before I have been notified of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is an important mission, my son, and the selection
-of the man to fill the place does not come within my department.
-But as a good man was needed I urged the
-desirability of putting you on the job.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You are very kind,” murmurs Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I intended to communicate to you his wishes to-night,”
-resumes Ricker. “In fact, I received the assignment
-for you an hour ago and you would have found it
-in your box in the morning.” The city editor tosses over
-a yellow envelope and Ashley finds therein the brief notification:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Beginning March 18, Mr. Ashley will enter upon the
-duties as war correspondent at Santiago de Cuba.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley looks up and catches the indulgent smile of his
-chief.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ricker, you’re a jewel,” he says, warmly, extending
-his hand. The friendship between the two men has long
-since leveled the wall of official dignity.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I had no idea you wanted the job,” smiles the city
-editor.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Until to-day I had no desire to visit Cuba,” replies
-Ashley. “But at present I want to go the worst way—or
-the best way. And my wish to reach Cuban soil is not
-greatly influenced by personal reasons, either. I expect
-some day to turn over to you a story that will cover a
-good share of the first page and just now the trail is
-winding under the flags of three nations—Spain, Cuba
-and the United States. But why Santiago, instead of
-Havana?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“For the reason that, as you may see by a look over
-to-night’s telegrams, the eastern province of Cuba is
-likely to be the principal theater of the struggle for independence.
-You know the sort of stuff we want. Statements
-of fact, above all. You may have some difficulty
-in getting us the facts by wire, as the government controls
-the cables; but there are the mails, and in addition
-to the usual grind you might send a two or three column
-chatty letter every fortnight or so that would be interesting
-reading. Spend all the money that is necessary. Get
-right out into the fighting; there isn’t one chance in a
-million of your being hurt. Above all, send us facts.
-We cannot pay too much for facts.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Have you considered how I am to reach Santiago?
-You know there are no steamer lines running to the
-island.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That has been arranged. The bulletin was received
-early this evening that the new cruiser America had been
-ordered to Santiago. The managing editor used his influence,
-and permission to send a representative on the
-vessel has kindly been granted. There is some value in
-being on the right side of an administration. The
-cruiser sails the day after to-morrow, the 18th.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley and Ricker soon complete their talk and Jack
-starts for home in a complacent condition of mind. Arriving
-at his rooms he slips into a dressing-gown and
-stretches himself in an easy-chair for a smoke-lined
-night-cap, and as the rings curl upward he sees
-in fancy the various actors in the Raymond drama passing
-in review before a tropical background of hazy blue
-hills and palm-shaded groves.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Suddenly he utters an exclamation: “Jupiter! How
-is Barker to get to Cuba? He must have shot off to
-Key West without reading the morning paper, and he
-probably was not aware that there are no steamers running
-from Key West any more than from New York or
-other ports. When he does learn that fact his remarks
-will not be fit for publication. Well, I suppose, he will
-get there somehow, even if he has to swim. But in all
-probability I shall reach the island before him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The trail is plain. It leads to Cuba, and somewhere
-in the gem of the Antilles the threads of the Raymond
-murder mystery will touch and cross and interweave.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XXXI.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>THE FLAG OF CUBA.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“We shall have a race, Don Manada—a battle royal.
-The new United States cruiser America has just steamed
-out of the bay ahead of us and we shall soon be abreast
-of her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A race, Senor Van Zandt? Santissimo! We shall
-have racing enough before we get to Cuba without challenging
-unsuspicious warships and courting investigation.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Van Zandt laughs at the Cuban gentleman’s anxious
-tones. “I told you, my friend, that once on the high seas
-nothing short of a cannon ball can overhaul the Semiramis.
-Come on deck in an hour, senor, and I will
-prove to you what may now seem an idle boast.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>For excellent reasons Manada is keeping in the background
-as much as possible. But he finds the luxurious
-cabin of the Semiramis much to his liking, and he smokes
-and dreams of “Cuba Libre” while the Semiramis steams
-down the bay and out upon the bosom of the Atlantic,
-and when he goes on deck, wrapped in the long semi-military
-cloak which effectually conceals his person, the
-sight which greets his eyes fills him with apprehension,
-though challenging his liveliest interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The battle of steam is well under way. The America
-is less than a dozen lengths astern and presents a beautiful
-sight to the people on the Semiramis. The glistening
-white hull plows the water at a speed which dashes
-the spray high in air from the delicately carved cut-water,
-and the triple funnels vomit great clouds of inky
-smoke. Manada’s eyes rove to the United States flag
-whipping out in the breeze and he mutters a favorite
-malediction as he thinks of the insurgent arms stored in
-the hold of the Semiramis.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But as he grows aware that the yacht of his strange
-friend is drawing away from the American man-of-war
-he becomes the incarnation of suppressed excitement.
-And when Van Zandt claps him on the shoulder and
-shouts in his ear, “Well, senor, what do you think of the
-Semiramis?” the Cuban shouts back enthusiastically:
-“El Semiramis es un diablo verdadero!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Without the change of a muscle in his weather-beaten
-face, Capt. Sam Beals paces the bridge of the Semiramis,
-while the exciting duel of steam and steel continues,
-not a gesture or ejaculation indicating that the beautiful
-yacht is literally steaming away from the cruiser—a vessel
-heralded far and wide as the speediest craft among all
-the navies of the world.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But if the chief officer is apparently undisturbed, the
-same cannot be said of any other person on board. The
-excitement of the race has roused the owner of the yacht
-from his cold reserve, and as with sparkling eye and eager
-step he hurries from the engine-room to the quarterdeck,
-noting with each return the slowly but steadily lengthening
-space of open water that separates the two vessels,
-Louise Hathaway mentally retracts her decision that
-Phillip Van Zandt is cold and unsympathetic.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As for Miss Hathaway herself, she is thoroughly imbued
-with the spirit of the race. Securely sheltered
-from the fierce rush of wind which the tremendous speed
-of the Semiramis causes to sweep over the deck, she
-makes an attractive picture as she watches the race. The
-svelte form is outlined in a gown of navy blue; the
-beautiful face is framed in a golden aureole of wavy locks;
-the matchless blue eyes glisten with unwonted excitement,
-and a delicate color tints her cheek. It is not
-strange that Van Zandt divides his time between the race
-and his fair passenger.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Even pale, stern-faced Cyrus Felton has for the nonce
-became stirred by the infectious excitement, and with a
-zest that he has not manifested for years he watches the
-unavailing efforts of the warship to overhaul the pleasure
-craft.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Isn’t there more and blacker smoke pouring from the
-America’s stacks?” inquires Miss Hathaway, as the owner
-of the Semiramis returns from a brief interview with the
-engineer, with the cheery assurance that the engines are
-running as smoothly as if the yacht were moving at
-quarter-speed.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“She is surely making more smoke and, if I mistake
-not, more speed,” answers Van Zandt, a shade of anxiety
-replacing his almost boyish enthusiasm. “Mr. Beals,
-what think you of it?” turning to the executive officer;
-“is she gaining on us?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“She has just put on her forced draught, sir, and is
-now running at her top speed. She is gaining, now,
-but—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Without finishing the sentence the captain presses the
-electric bells which communicate with the engine-room.
-It is soon apparent that the yacht has not until now
-reached the limit of her speed. The regular vibrations
-that mark the revolutions of the twin shafts become one
-prolonged shiver, and the black hull is hurled through
-the water at incredible speed.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The effect becomes noticeable in short order. The
-white mass astern grows “fine by degrees and beautifully
-less,” and as Capt. Beals closes his glass with a snap he
-remarks, complacently: “She’ll be hull down in an hour
-or two if she doesn’t blow out a cylinder head before that
-time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Just about this time Van Zandt and Manada go below
-and reappear a few moments later with a closely rolled
-silken flag, which Van Zandt hands to the captain with
-the command that it be hoisted to the breeze. Without
-even examining the emblem, the imperturbable executive
-officer bends the silken roll upon the halyards. A few
-hearty pulls by a stalwart blue-jacket and the ensign
-reaches the masthead, where the stiff breeze quickly
-breaks it out.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As a singular flag, with a solitary star in a triangular
-field of blue, is revealed to the wondering gaze of passengers
-and crew, Don Manada reverently bares his
-head and his lips frame the words “Viva Cuba Libre!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Suddenly there is borne to their ears, above the whistling
-of the wind and the mighty pulsations of the machinery,
-the sullen boom of cannon. All eyes instinctively
-seek the America. A puff of white issues from her
-forward barbette, and as Capt. Beals returns his glass
-to its socket, he tells Van Zandt:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“She has saluted the Semiramis and dipped her ensign.
-She is bearing off to windward and gives up the race.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“She saw the flag, do you think?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Doubtless,” Mr. Beals replies, with a grim smile.
-“Shall we slacken speed, sir?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Only to natural draught. I wish to make our destination
-as soon as possible. And by the way, Mr. Beals,
-you may haul down the flag. It has served its purpose
-for the present,” pointing to the enraptured Don Manada.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Then Van Zandt conducts his passengers below and is
-prepared for Miss Hathaway’s question:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Is that your personal emblem, Mr. Van Zandt?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No, Miss Hathaway,” is the calm response. “That
-is the flag of the Cuban Republic. You are now under
-the protection of the provisional government of the gem
-of the Antilles. Permit me to introduce to you Don
-Rafael Manada, minister of war of the infant republic.
-Long may she wave!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Manada bows low and looks vastly gratified by the
-official title jestingly conferred upon him. Cyrus Felton’s
-face, however, is darkened by a frown and Miss Hathaway
-is not at all pleased.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Will you not take seats and make yourselves entirely
-easy?” Van Zandt proceeds, unruffled by the cold demeanor
-of his passengers.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Perhaps I should have told you before you embarked,”
-explains Van Zandt, with a glance at Miss Hathaway
-that does much toward reassuring her, “that although we
-are bound for Cuba, our primary destination is not Santiago.
-The Semiramis has a cargo of arms and ammunition
-which I have undertaken to deliver to the Cuban
-revolutionists. Senor Manada is the supercargo. Believe
-me,” he adds, as Miss Hathaway pales at the word
-“revolutionists,” “there is absolutely no danger, not the
-slightest—and least of all to you. Even if my yacht were
-apprehended—though I do not believe there is a vessel
-on the waters of the globe that can overtake her—you
-would be subject to no annoyance and but little inconvenience.
-After we have discharged our cargo we will
-proceed at once to Santiago, and you will be landed much
-earlier than if you had gone by a regular steamer. And
-I am sure this vessel is fully as comfortable as any of
-those stuffy, crowded craft.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then we are aboard a filibustering expedition,” declares
-Mr. Felton, harshly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Hardly that. You are on board an American yacht,
-manned by American seamen, with just one Cuban
-patriot, a man as honorable and true as yourself, Mr.
-Felton.” Van Zandt’s voice is stern and dignified. “I am
-not a Cuban partisan, but liberty to me is as precious as
-the air of heaven. Until a few hours ago there was no
-thought of the cargo now beneath us. The arms were
-designed to go by another vessel. But at the last moment
-the plans of the patriots were betrayed. Then it was that
-I stepped in and offered the services of my yacht to
-convey the much-needed aid to the down-trodden men of
-the Antilles.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And meanwhile you have jeopardized the safety of
-Miss Hathaway and myself,” Mr. Felton sneers. “Suppose
-we are intercepted by a Spanish warship? Think
-you that they will not regard us—myself at least—as
-members of this expedition? What then, Mr. Van
-Zandt?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The latter’s lip curls slightly. “Again I assure you that
-there is absolutely no danger. I will answer for your
-safety on this voyage with my life.” Then to Louise,
-with a look that brings a flush to her fair face: “Have
-you no faith in the yacht, if not in her owner, Miss
-Hathaway?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I think that Mr. Felton is needlessly alarmed,” is that
-young lady’s composed reply. “As for the yacht, I am
-quite carried away with it, figuratively as well as literally.
-This is my first voyage, Mr. Van Zandt, and if you will
-insure me against mal de mer, that dread bugbear of the
-voyageur, I will try to brave, with becoming equanimity,
-the perils of the Spanish main.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Cyrus Felton, however, is decidedly alarmed by Van
-Zandt’s admission of the incidental errand of the Semiramis.
-A strong distrust of her owner begins to grow
-in his mind; this added to the qualms of seasickness,
-which have begun to make themselves felt, renders him
-thoroughly miserable in spirit and body, and without raising
-another objection he asks to be shown to his stateroom.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It must be confessed that Van Zandt does not manifest
-heartfelt regret at Mr. Felton’s unhappy condition, and
-even Miss Hathaway is somewhat perfunctory in her
-expressions of sympathy. An unaccountable confidence
-in the handsome owner of the Semiramis has replaced
-her early distrust, and, happily exempt from the “dread
-bugbear of the voyageur,” she accepts with pleasure Van
-Zandt’s proposition that they explore the yacht.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Semiramis is fair to look upon, from capstan to
-rudder, and from keelson to main truck. The Vermont
-maiden marvels at the comfort, convenience and luxury
-on every hand. The palatial saloon, with its unusually
-high ceiling, furnished in oriental magnificence and including
-a superb upright piano, Miss Hathaway’s eye
-notes approvingly; the commodious staterooms, arranged
-en suite, with the respectable appearing stewardess in
-charge; the plain but ample and scrupulously neat quarters
-of the crew; the engine-room, with its masses of highly
-polished steel and brass—all possess elements of interest
-to the girl.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>That night, as she lays her head on her pillow, “rocked
-in the cradle of the deep,” she suddenly starts as if from a
-dream. For there comes to her ears again, from somewhere,
-that melody strangely sweet, yet filled with subtle
-melancholy, the andante of her beloved sonata.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Then a light goes up, as the Germans have the saying,
-and Miss Hathaway understands now her blindly placed
-confidence in the master of the Semiramis. For Don
-Caesar de Bazan is Phillip Van Zandt and—and—</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But what Miss Hathaway thinks about as Atlantic’s
-waves lull her to slumber would certainly interest the
-young man who sits up far into the night, chatting and
-smoking with the “minister of war of the Cuban republic”
-while the Semiramis rushes on her eventful voyage to
-the tropics.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XXXII.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>THE FLAG OF CASTILE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“Twelve hours from now, Miss Hathaway, you will
-have your first glimpse of Cuba. Then, our business
-transacted, a quick and uninterrupted run to Santiago,
-and to-morrow you will be on terra firma.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It has been a remarkably short voyage, Mr. Van
-Zandt.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Deplorably so. I never before regretted the speed
-of the Semiramis, but now—would that she were as snail-like
-as the old West Indian tub we overhauled yesterday.
-Can I prevail upon you, Miss Hathaway, to again favor
-me with my pet Chopin nocturne? The electric fans render
-the saloon as comfortable as the deck.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My poor playing is always at your service, Mr. Van
-Zandt. I assure you that I never expected to enjoy a
-voyage, to Cuba or elsewhere, as I have this. Your kindness
-in granting us—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My kindness was purely selfish,” interposes Van
-Zandt.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is easy to see that for two people on board the yacht
-the last few days have swiftly sped. Van Zandt and Miss
-Hathaway have been much in each other’s company.
-Confidences have been neither asked nor given, but a
-mutual sympathy has taken root that might prove destructive
-to the reserve of one and the “marble” of the
-other were the voyage to the tropics to last many days
-longer.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Cyrus Felton is restricted to his stateroom most of the
-time, a victim of the malady of the sea and a gnawing,
-indefinable distrust of the owner of the yacht. As for
-Don Manada, he divides his attention between the huge
-cigars from which his fingers or teeth are never free, and
-a careful outlook for any of the Spanish squadron that is
-supposed to blockade the coast of the isle of Cuba.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But the sensuous indolence of the tropic day and the
-glories of the tropic night lure Van Zandt and Miss
-Hathaway into dreams of peace and hope and fulfillment.
-The days spent on the quarterdeck, sheltered by an awning
-from the rays of the sun, the speed of the yacht providing
-a delightful breeze, glide gently into the brief twilight.
-The great stars shoot out of the blue with quivering
-points of fire, and the wind sighs musically through
-the rigging as the tireless steam drives the boat through
-the phosphorescent waves.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Consider what the voyage would have been to me
-without your presence,” continues Van Zandt, as he leads
-the way to the saloon. “With Don Manada there, engrossed
-in Quixotic schemes for achieving the independence
-of his beloved country, and Capt. Beals as communicative
-as a sphinx, your society has saved me from myself—a
-synonym for dreariness. And now for the nocturne.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>While Van Zandt is telling Miss Hathaway that she is
-the only woman he has ever heard play Chopin intelligently,
-and the latter is modestly disclaiming such ability,
-the musical echo of the lookout’s call is passed to the
-saloon:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Sail ho!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Where away?” is the challenge.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“On the weather bow. A large steamer, judging from
-her smoke!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Don Manada casts his cherished cigar to the waves and
-glues his eyes to the telescope.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As announced, the unknown vessel is directly on the
-weather bow and will pass within half a mile of the Semiramis,
-if the two craft hold to their present courses.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The captain intently watches the approaching vessel.
-The Semiramis is far beyond the five-mile limit of the
-Cuban coast, but if the unknown is a Spanish cruiser
-she may become suspicious of the trim yacht.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It therefore behooves the American steamer to insure
-the stranger a wide berth if the latter displays the arms of
-Castile; to show a clean pair of heels, in the vernacular
-of the sailor, if flight is necessary.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Again are preparations made to force the Semiramis
-to her highest speed. The awnings are removed, the
-boats once more unswung from the davits, the force of
-stokers in the engine-room augmented by half a score
-of sturdy seamen, and soon the roaring of the forced
-draught in the funnels again drowns the hum of the engines.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At rail or in rigging, from bridge or quarterdeck the
-people of the Semiramis watch intently the approaching
-vessel, whose funnels and upper works are now visible
-through the glass.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Semiramis bears gradually to the westward, to afford
-the stranger at least three miles leeway. Suddenly
-Capt. Beals lays aside his glasses and rubs his chin
-thoughtfully.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Do you care to show your papers to the Don?” he
-asks Van Zandt.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“To the Don? Is she a Spaniard, sure? But we shall
-pass a comfortable distance to windward of her and she
-will not attempt to interrupt us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“She has already changed her course and is bearing
-directly across our bows. See!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The unknown, now less than ten miles distant, seems
-to be steaming at full speed for a point directly in the
-course of the Semiramis. Her broadside is now visible
-to the anxious watchers on the yacht. She is apparently
-an armored cruiser of perhaps 5,000 tons, her hull painted
-a dull and featureless gray. No flag or emblem is as yet
-displayed from her taut and business-like rigging.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“She is painted and cleared for action. She is—ah! I
-thought so!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A flag is broken from the cruiser’s masthead, and Capt.
-Beals, as he focuses his binocular upon the streaming emblem,
-mutters between his teeth: “The flag of Castile!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“’Tis a Spanish warship, Senor Van Zandt!” exclaims
-Manada, who has been studying the stranger. “Can
-your beautiful craft bear us from harm’s way? I fear
-that yonder ship is the Infanta Isabel, the latest and most
-formidable accession to the navy of our hated oppressors.
-She has been detailed to intercept vessels supposed to
-bear arms and re-enforcements to our friends, and especially
-to watch for and destroy our gallant Pearl of the
-Antilles.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Have no fears, Don Manada. Your cargo is safe.
-We will show the Spaniard a trick or two; eh, Beals?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Capt. Beals does not reply in words to his employer’s
-confident assertion, but an observant man might distinguish
-a slight relaxation of the muscles about his mouth.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Semiramis holds steadily on her course. Only the
-increasing clouds of smoke that pour from her funnels
-indicate that anything out of the ordinary is expected of
-the yacht.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Only six miles distant! Five! Four!</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A puff of white that rolls lazily from the forward deck
-of the cruiser is succeeded by a dull roar.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Show the Don our colors,” Capt. Beals orders the
-second officer.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>While the smoke from the cannon yet lingers above
-the Spaniard’s deck the glorious stars and stripes unfurl
-from the mainmast of the Semiramis, and snap gayly,
-defiantly, upon the breeze. And still the American yacht
-continues to steadily lessen the distance that separates the
-two craft.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Boom!</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Another puff of white, followed a few seconds later by
-the report; and this time the watchers on the yacht can
-see the flash of the gun.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Only two miles distant now, and the Spanish warship,
-apparently convinced that the American understands and
-designs to obey the peremptory summons to heave to, has
-slowed her engines until the cruiser has barely headway
-on the long swells.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Calmly pacing the bridge, as if a thousand miles separated
-the vessels—nearly equal in size, but how dissimilar
-in destructive power!—Capt. Beals has not indicated a
-slowing of the yacht’s engines, although the bow of the
-Semiramis points at the steep side of the Spaniard, directly
-amidship.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Not half a dozen lengths away!</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The officers and men on the man-of-war are clearly
-visible to those on the yacht. The captain and his subalterns
-are grouped on the quarterdeck, the marines
-amidship, the blue-jackets crowding the rail and adjacent
-rigging. The cruiser is stationary on the water.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But with no sensible diminution of speed the Semiramis
-bears upon the Spaniard, the white foam dashing high
-on either side of her bow. Capt. Beals is fingering the
-electric buttons that regulate the speed and course of the
-yacht.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Spanish captain nearly drops his speaking trumpet.
-What is El Americano thinking of? He cannot
-stop in five times his own length at such a frightful speed!
-Is he mad? Ah! Dios! Caramba! And a dozen
-more Castilian expletives poured forth in a torrent of astonishment,
-rage and chagrin.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>For with a sudden turn to the windward that causes
-the yacht to careen until her white sides below the water
-line gleam for an instant in the sunlight, with an accession
-of speed that sends her forward as a whip would a
-nervous horse, the Semiramis darts by the stern of the
-Spanish man-of-war, the smoke from her furnaces enveloping
-for a moment the cruiser’s afterdeck.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Two minutes later she is a mile astern of the warship,
-her long white trail sparkling in the sunlight, and the
-red, white and blue still snapping defiantly at the masthead.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I wonder if the Don can turn in five times his own
-length,” observes the sententious Mr. Beals, as he watches
-the warship slowly getting under way.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Whether he can or cannot is not at this time to be
-demonstrated. The cruiser makes no attempt to about
-ship, but another report booms from the forward gun,
-followed a second or two later by one from the aft barbette,
-and a solid shot ricochets along the waves astern
-of the Semiramis and plunges beneath the water an eighth
-of a mile distant.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Van Zandt grows grave as he realizes the significance
-of this last shot, but a glance at the receding cruiser convinces
-him of the futility of the cannonade. The Spaniard,
-too, appears convinced, and the cruiser is soon lost
-to view in the expanse of ocean.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The rest of the day the Semiramis holds unmolested
-her course for the mountain-girth shores of Cuba. As
-night draws on the engines are slowed, and, with fires
-banked and double watch posted, the yacht quietly rocks
-on the bosom of the deep. A wavy outline on the horizon
-indicates the southern coast of the revolution-racked isle
-and somewhere on that outline is the sequestered little
-harbor of Cantero.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is a weary, an unnerving vigil, for Don Manada at
-least. For hours his anxious gaze sweeps the horizon,
-while the Semiramis rides the breasting waves as gracefully
-as a summer bird soars into the blue.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As the first shafts of light radiate from the emerging
-disk, Louise Hathaway, whom the unwonted excitement
-of the preceding day has driven early from her pillow,
-cries out with a girlish enthusiasm that brings a smile
-to the face of Capt. Beals: “Sail ho! Sail ho!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Every one springs to rail or rigging. “Where away?”
-is the quick challenge of Mr. Beals.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Right there, sir,” is the unnautical response of Miss
-Hathaway, and she indicates a point not five degrees
-north of the rising orb of day.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>With the glass at his eyes, the taciturn commander of
-the Semiramis watches intently the speck on the glowing
-horizon that means much to the excited Manada at his
-elbow and to the latter’s struggling fellow-patriots on the
-isle whose outlines are now bathed in the flood of sunlight.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Is it another Spanish warship, or is it the looked-for
-Cuban cruiser, the doughty Pearl of the Antilles?</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XXXIII.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>AN AFFRONT AND AN APOLOGY.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>The Semiramis rests stationary upon the surface of
-the water, but there are scenes of activity in the engine-room.
-The columns of smoke from her stacks grow into
-thick black volumes, and the roar of escaping steam
-drowns ordinary conversation.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>On deck, officers, passengers and crew are watching
-the rapidly growing spot upon the horizon. That the approaching
-vessel is steaming very fast is apparent. Her
-upper works are visible as Capt. Beals signals for the
-Semiramis to steam ahead at full speed. The course of
-the latter is laid to pass the stranger a mile or two to
-windward, if she does not change her present course.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Don Manada has possessed himself of the captain’s
-glasses and is earnestly scanning the distant steamer.
-Suddenly, in a very paroxyism of joy he embraces the
-owner of the yacht.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is the Pearl!” he cries; “the Pearl of the Antilles!
-Santisima! Now will you display the flag of Cuba Libre?”
-The English language fails to express the sentiments
-of the Cuban patriot at this juncture, and he
-launches a flood of Castilian that bewilders Van Zandt.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At a nod from the latter, however, Capt. Beals causes
-the fateful emblem of Cuba to be run up to the masthead.
-The silken banner is barely unfurled by the wind ere
-there are signs of excitement on board the strange steamship.
-A duplicate of the Semiramis’ ensign is displayed,
-and then the course of the vessel is changed and she
-steams rapidly toward the yacht. Don Manada is not
-mistaken. The steamship is the famous Pearl of the Antilles.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Semiramis has slowed down her engines, and
-awaits the approach of the insurgent cruiser. As the latter
-nears the yacht the resemblance of the two steamships
-becomes more striking. The Pearl is almost precisely
-the length of the Semiramis, and like her is rigged with
-two masts. Her two smokestacks are set at the same angle
-as those of the yacht and like the latter she is equipped
-with twin propellers. On deck, however, there is a decided
-difference. The engines of the Pearl are protected
-by heavy plates of steel, while on her forward deck a
-sort of turret has been improvised, within which, the
-people on the Semiramis can readily guess, is the famous
-“Yankee gun,” the dynamite cannon whose well-aimed
-projectile sent the Spanish Mercedes to the bottom.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Five lengths away the Pearl becomes stationary on the
-waves, while through a speaking tube, the voluble Manada
-acquaints her commander with the character and
-mission of the yacht. A boat is lowered from the insurgent
-craft and is rowed to the side of the Semiramis,
-and a moment later a distinguished-looking man in the
-undress uniform of an officer of the Spanish navy is
-clasped in the arms of Don Manada.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Senor Van Zandt,” the latter says, “permit me to present
-to you Capt. Gerardo Nunez, the commander of
-yonder vessel. Senor Van Zandt,” he explains extravagantly
-to Capt. Nunez, “is the good angel who rendered
-it possible for us to convey the much-needed arms and
-ammunition in our hold to our struggling compatriots.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Capt. Nunez cordially grasps the hand of Van Zandt.
-“Senor,” he says, “I am more than pleased to meet you,
-and join with Don Manada in expressing the gratitude
-of our people for your services in the cause of liberty.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Van Zandt waves his hand. “’Tis nothing. My sympathies
-are with the insurgents and being in position to
-help Don Manada out of a box”—the Cuban flushes at
-the recollection of his last conversation with Mrs. Harding—“I
-was only too glad to do it. But what is the
-latest news from the seat of war?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Capt. Nunez’ eyes light up with enthusiasm. “Glorious!”
-he says. “Gen. Masso has just achieved a victory
-over 3,000 Spanish troops in the Puerto Principe District.
-El Terredo is receiving constant additions to his forces
-and the outlook was never brighter. It is to equip El
-Terredo’s army that these arms and ammunition will be
-used.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“El Terredo?” inquires Van Zandt. “Is he not attached
-to the Pearl of the Antilles?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He has been up to within a week, but is now on
-shore duty. By the way, senor,” remarks the Cuban
-commander, casting a glance over the deck of the Semiramis,
-“you have a magnificent yacht, and I doubt not
-she is as speedy as she is handsome.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Speedy!” breaks in Don Manada. “She is as swift as
-the wind! She sailed away from the America, the fastest
-cruiser in the United States Navy, and as for the Infanta
-Isabel—poof! She snaps her fingers at her!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Capt. Beals approaches the group at this moment and
-is introduced to the Cuban captain.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I think, sir,” he says to Van Zandt, “if we are to
-transfer our cargo it would be advisable to waste no
-time. There is no knowing when a Spanish gunboat will
-show up.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>This advice is manifestly so timely that no time is lost
-in following it. The two hulls are laid side by side, the
-smoothness of the water permitting the operation in
-safety and hundreds of brawny arms are quickly at work
-transferring the cargo from the Semiramis to the Pearl.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At last the work is completed and Van Zandt looks
-inquiringly at Don Manada.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Will you continue with the yacht or accompany the
-cargo on board the Pearl?” he asks.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Cuban emissary hesitates. “If I might add to the
-already heavy debt of gratitude I owe you—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, that’s all right,” interrupts Van Zandt. “So
-you will remain with us. I am glad of your company.
-We sail for Santiago and afterward”—he hesitates a
-moment, his eyes wandering to Miss Hathaway, who is
-watching curiously the motley crew of the Pearl—“well,
-eventually back to New York.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Manada nods gratefully. “I am of more service to the
-cause in America than I could possibly be in Cuba,” he
-says, apologetically.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The adieus are said, the lines cast off, and the Semiramis
-and Pearl move slowly apart. The latter shapes
-her coarse for the little harbor of Cantero, where the arms
-and ammunition are to be landed.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“We are but ten hours’ sail from Santiago, Miss Hathaway,”
-Van Zandt remarks, as Louise idly watches the
-rapidly disappearing Pearl. “Then you will bid adieu to
-the Semiramis.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Regretfully, indeed, Mr. Van Zandt. The last few
-days have sped all too quickly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘We take no heed of time but by its flight,’” quotes
-Van Zandt. “How long do you expect to remain in
-Cuba?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Louise turns a troubled face toward the owner of the
-yacht. “That I cannot say. It depends upon Mr. Felton.
-He has business interests to look after, and if the climate
-agrees with him we may remain several months.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>There is a silence for a little, the thoughts of both
-dwelling on the coming parting at even.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Miss Hathaway,” says Van Zandt, suddenly. “I am
-but an idle fellow, with nothing to call me hence but my
-own inclinations. Would it be distasteful to you if I
-should attach myself to your party while in Cuba? The
-country is necessarily unsettled during the war and perhaps
-I might be of service. I am familiar with the
-Spanish language, which I believe Mr. Felton is not,
-and I should like to see something of the country. Please
-tell me frankly if for any reason I would be de trop?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Van Zandt’s luminous orbs are fixed on the fair face of
-Louise as he awaits the answer to his question. For a
-moment her blue eyes return his gaze. Then the golden-fringed
-lids fall and a soft blush mantles her face.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I certainly should not be averse to your joining our
-party,” she murmurs softly, “if—if it be your pleasure.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank you,” Van Zandt returns, simply, and a moment
-after Miss Hathaway retires to her stateroom.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, Manada,” remarks Van Zandt, slapping the
-Cuban upon the back, “your first engagement as supercargo
-must be rated a success, eh? The arms and ammunition—the
-biggest single consignment ever sent from
-the States, I think you said—have been safely delivered
-into the hands of the insurgents, without the loss of a
-single Winchester or cartridge. Why this pensive look?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Only thoughts of the past, senor. I was—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>What were Don Manada’s thoughts will never be known,
-for the people on the yacht are electrified by the hail
-from the bridge, “Ship ahoy!” followed a second later by
-the additional information, “Dead ahead and bearing
-this way!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There is no special necessity for evading her now,
-whoever she is, I presume, sir?” inquires Capt. Beals,
-removing his glasses from his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“None whatever,” is Van Zandt’s prompt reply. “Our
-papers are straight and we have nothing contraband,
-unless it be the Don there. Let them look us over if
-they wish.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“She’s not a very large craft,” comments the taciturn
-executive officer of the yacht, as the two vessels continue
-to lessen the distance between them.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Probably one of the blockading fleet,” is Van Zandt’s
-surmise.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He is evidently right, for the stranger at this point
-displays the Spanish flag and at the same time the report
-of a cannon echoes across the water.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Show our colors,” orders Van Zandt, and the flag of
-the great republic is caressed by the soft southern breeze.
-Another shot is fired from the Spaniard, and as the Semiramis
-slows up a third cloud of white floats from the side
-of the war vessel, followed by the sudden boom of a
-heavier gun.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As the Semiramis steams slowly toward the Spaniard,
-now distant less than a mile, a fourth report is heard.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Shotted, by heaven!” ejaculates Capt. Beals, his eyes
-glued to the glass; “and the Don has changed her course
-and is standing off to pepper us. He is one of those tin-clad
-gunboats, only half our tonnage, and pays no attention
-to our flag.” Still another shot is fired, and a solid
-shot skips over the waves, barely two lengths astern of
-the yacht.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Shall we ram him, sir? We can send him to Davy
-Jones’ locker in ten minutes, and not harm the yacht,
-either.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Van Zandt’s eyes glance aloft at the Stars and Stripes
-standing out clear and free from the maintop, and then
-his eyes turn to the Spanish gunboat.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Steam toward him full speed,” he says at length, “and
-if he fires on the American flag again”—the white teeth
-shut with an ominous click—“ram him full amidship, let
-the consequences be what they may.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But the flag is not fired upon again. The Spaniard has
-once more laid a new course and is now bearing down full
-on the yacht. The two craft are quickly within hailing
-distance, and from the gunboat comes the inquiry in
-Spanish as to the name and character of the yacht.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The Semiramis, pleasure craft, New York for Santiago,”
-is Capt. Beals’ reply.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Spanish captain is profuse in apologies for firing
-on the yacht. She closely resembles a rebel craft, he
-explains, and the gunboat was sure she was that vessel,
-even if she did fly the American flag. Would the Semiramis
-accept his most humble apologies? His gunboat,
-La Pinta, was about to proceed to Santiago for orders;
-and if it please los Americanos they might sail thither in
-company, which would insure the stranger against the
-annoyance of being overhauled by some of the other
-numerous Spanish vessels blockading the ports.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Van Zandt consults with Capt. Beals.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He wants to make sure we don’t land anything,” remarks
-the latter. “It might save some trouble to accompany
-him to Santiago.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Yes, the Spaniard is informed, the American accepts
-the apology and the escort of the gunboat to Santiago.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Before the brief southern twilight has drifted into night
-the Semiramis is lying at anchor in the harbor of Santiago,
-under the guns of the Spanish gunboat La Pinta.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XXXIV.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>A SPANISH BILL OF FARE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“I want some soft-boiled eggs, but I don’t suppose you
-know a soft-boiled egg from a gas stove, eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The waiter at the hotel Royal, in Santiago, regards
-Jack Ashley with an expression as blank as a brick wall.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Don’t get the idea, I see,” remarks Ashley. “Well,
-let me think. ‘Huevos’ means eggs, I know that much,
-but what the deuce is soft-boiled? I believe ‘blondo’ is
-soft, and soft eggs might express the idea. ‘Blondo
-huevos,’” he tells the waiter, and the latter, though apparently
-puzzled, disappears.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>For the next ten minutes Jack is occupied in receiving
-and sending back orders of eggs—eggs cooked in every
-conceivable style except soft-boiled. Finally in despair
-he selects a dish nearest to his wants, and gets along all
-right until he decides to have some chicken. An examination
-of the bill of fare fails to discover anything that
-looks like chicken, and the case appears hopeless.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“If I only had my phrase book with me I might do
-some business,” he reflects. “As it is, I don’t see any
-way out of it except to draw a picture of a chicken. Hold
-on; ‘gallina’ means hen, unless I have forgotten my
-studies, and if there is anything consistent in the linguistic
-diminutives of the Spanish language, ‘gallinoso’ must be
-the equivalent for chicken.” So he orders “gallinoso”
-with a complacence born of a problem happily solved.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The waiter simply stares and waits patiently.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘Gallinoso’ doesn’t go, then.” Ashley looks the bill
-of fare over again. The most attractive item is “salchichas
-con aroz,” but he does not dare risk that. Finally a
-happy thought occurs to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Todos!” he orders. “Todos! Todos!” The waiter,
-with a grin of intelligence, hurries away and Ashley
-heaves a sigh of relief. “Great word, ‘todos,’” he soliloquizes.
-“Most significant word in the language.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is effective, at least, for the waiter arrives with a
-little of everything that the kitchen affords and Ashley
-manages to make out a meal.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Meanwhile he has noticed that his efforts at Spanish
-have vastly entertained a gentleman who sits at the table
-beyond and facing him. Particularly broad was his smile
-when the order for “gallinoso” was given. As Jack leisurely
-sorts out the most appetizing-looking of the array
-of greasy viands, he remarks: “If you were as hungry as
-I, senor, my attempts to secure a breakfast might strike
-you as being more tragic than humorous.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I meant no offense,” replies the senor. “You would
-yourself smile if you knew what ‘gallinoso’ is.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“So? What may it be, an octopus or a mule?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Almost as bad as either. It is a turkey buzzard.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, yes; they were probably just out of turkey buzzards.
-Oh, well, I’ll get the hang of the language before
-I leave Cuba.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Undoubtedly. It is easy of acquisition. You have,
-I assume, provided yourself with a phrase-book.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A magnificent affair. It contains every possible
-phrase except the ones I have occasion to use.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The two finish their repast about the same time, and as
-they stroll out upon the veranda to enjoy the long, strong
-cigar that inevitably follows a Cuban breakfast the senor
-remarks:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You are an American, I judge.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“New York,” is the terse response.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Have you been in Cuba long?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“About two hours.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Indeed? I was not aware that any steamers arrived
-to-day.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Because of the blockade, eh? But I dropped in on
-the cruiser America.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You are of the service?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No; I am just a plain American citizen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, senor, this is hardly a desirable time for Americans
-or others to visit Cuba.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“An eminently proper time for one in my line of business,”
-replies Ashley. “I am a newspaper correspondent.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The senor looks the young man over critically. “Your
-profession is not regarded with especial favor at present
-by the Spanish Government,” he says.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I understand so,” drawls Ashley. “Newspaper men
-have an unpleasant habit of stating facts, something the
-government is not particularly anxious to have abroad.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A flush of annoyance mounts the senor’s face, and on
-the left cheek Ashley for the first time notices a small,
-crescent-shaped scar.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Aha!” he thinks. “This gentleman rather answers
-my friend Barker’s description of the party who left New
-York with the fair Mrs. Harding.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The Government has no desire to conceal facts,” asserts
-the senor, with some warmth, “but it naturally seeks
-to prevent the dissemination of false, exaggerated or
-malicious reports. What journal do you represent,
-senor?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley tenders his card. The senor glances at it and
-smiles half-derisively. “The Hemisphere! I had that
-very journal in mind,” he says.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My paper must be excused from feeling flattered,
-then.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It was only a week or so ago,” continues the senor,
-“that I read in your paper a sensational interview with a
-visionary enthusiast, which was a little more exaggerated
-and absurd than the average.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That was before you left New York, probably,” ventures
-Ashley, and the senor shoots a glance at him from
-a pair of keen black eyes. “You refer to the interview
-with Don Manada,” goes on Ashley. “I had the pleasure
-of placing the distinguished Cuban’s views before the
-public.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am not surprised,” comments the senor, with quiet
-sarcasm.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In other words you consider me a man who would
-deliberately put forth false, exaggerated or malicious reports.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I did not say so, senor. I presume you are typical of
-your profession.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And I believe I am. Our journal, like every other
-decent paper, prints the news. If it were to investigate
-every dispatch that comes to it day by day there would
-be precious little information for the reader who turns
-to it each morning. If an injustice is occasionally done,
-the paper is ever willing to rectify its error and make all
-proper amends. You must naturally expect the American
-newspapers to favor the dispatches received from insurgent
-sources.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Why, pray?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“For the reason that little dependence can be placed
-upon the statements of the opposition. In fact,” smiles
-Ashley, “the situation approximates somewhat the condition
-intimated in a joke now going the rounds of the
-press. A Spanish captain in surrendering to superior
-numbers or prowess, craves one boon at the hands of his
-conqueror. ‘What is it?’ asks the latter. ‘Please announce
-the fact,’ requests the Spanish captain, ‘that I
-have won an overwhelming victory.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The senor fails to see anything amusing in the jest.
-“Do you intend to remain at Santiago?” he asks.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“For the present. The fighting appears to be principally
-at this end of the island. Later I may push on to
-Havana.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There has been more than one instance of expulsion
-of foreign correspondents, senor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“So I am told. Well, I shall do my duty, as well as I
-know how. I naturally sympathize with the Cubans,
-but I shall not permit my sympathies to lead me to color
-any reports of the war’s progress. If a battle occurs to-morrow
-and the government forces are victorious, the
-simple facts in the case will be forwarded, without further
-comment than is required to make the story interesting.
-And if the Cubans win, the same impartiality will characterize
-my dispatch. I expect the same fair play that I
-extend. Is that not reasonable?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, at any rate, I like your frankness,” says the
-senor, with something approaching good humor. “I also
-like America and admire its people. Do your duty as
-you understand it, Senor Ashley, and should your zeal as
-a correspondent lead you into difficulty perhaps I may be
-of service to you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank you,” acknowledges Jack. “But with my
-present limited means of identifying you, I should be
-more likely to be garroted or shot before I could send
-you word.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The senor smiles. “I am Gen. Murillo,” he says.
-“Adios, Senor Ashley.” And with a courtly bow the
-Spanish gentleman takes himself off.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“So,” muses Ashley, looking after the retreating figure.
-“Gen. Juan Murillo, the chief of staff attached to the
-captain-general, is the patron of the beautiful Harding.
-I remember the Hemisphere noted his presence in New
-York. My lady’s services must be booked for something
-out of the ordinary spy business. Murillo is in Santiago;
-so probably is she, but if this city is her base of operations
-she is likely to sail pretty close to the wind.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Now, where on earth is Barker?” wonders Ashley.
-“Probably at the other end of the island, while the objects
-of his quest are at this end. The Semiramis rests
-serenely on the bosom of the bay, and Miss Hathaway and
-Messrs. Felton and Van Zandt are either aboard of her
-or are somewhere about the city. I believe I’ll go out
-to the yacht and settle the question in my mind.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>And he does. He is rowed out over the blazing sea
-by a sun-cured barquero and climbs to the deck of the
-Semiramis.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Mr. Van Zandt?” repeats Capt. Beals, in response to
-Ashley’s inquiry. “Left yesterday, sir: Where? Havana,
-I believe the destination was.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And his passengers?” ventures Ashley. “I am a friend
-of theirs,” he explains to Mr. Beals.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“His passengers went with him,” the latter tells him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley is about to return to shore when he hears an
-exclamation and he sees coming toward him Don Rafael
-Manada, the distinguished member of the Cuban revolutionary
-society.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Dios mio! Senor Ashley, I am delighted to see you,”
-exclaims the volatile Manada, embracing him warmly.
-“What brings you here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Business, my dear Don Manada, I am at present
-officiating as a war correspondent. Will you not come
-ashore and take dinner with me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A thousand thanks, Senor Ashley; but,” with a smile
-intended to be significant, “I believe it would be wise for
-me to remain here for the present.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By the way,” says Ashley, “you recollect that interview
-at the Fifth Avenue hotel a week or so ago?”
-Manada nods smilingly. “Well, I met a gentleman to-day
-who spoke rather slightingly of the views which you
-therein expressed. Perhaps you know him. Gen. Murillo.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Murillo!” cries the Cuban. “Ha! Is he in Santiago?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He was half an hour ago.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Was he alone? That is, was he not accompanied—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By the fair Mrs. Harding?” supplies Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Manada’s face flushes. “Ah, you know her?” he says.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Slightly,” returns Jack. “No; Mrs. Harding was not
-with the general, though she may be in the neighborhood.
-They left New York together. Now, Don Manada, having
-imparted some information to you, I should esteem it
-a great favor if you would reciprocate.” Ashley glances
-about and notices that they are out of hearing. “I will
-not ask you why you happen to be on the Semiramis, as
-I have no disposition to pry into your affairs, but I
-should like to know how Mr. Felton and Miss Hathaway
-came to be aboard of the yacht?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Manada shrugs his shoulders. “I have not an idea,”
-he says. “An hour before the Semiramis sailed they were
-driven to the pier in company with the owner of the
-yacht. Where they came from I cannot say.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Did they appear to be well acquainted with one another?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Very nearly strangers, I should say. Senor Felton
-kept his stateroom during nearly all the voyage and
-seemed to avoid Senor Van Zandt.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley is now getting some information of decided
-interest. “And Miss Hathaway? Did she appear to
-share the distrust or dislike?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Quite the contrary. They were together about all the
-time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Now, Don Manada, there is one query I should like
-to put to you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Come,” smiles Manada, “I can guess what your question
-is to be.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I will save you the trouble and ask it. As a man of
-years and experience, of keen discernment and calm
-conclusions, what should you say were the precise relations
-existing between Phillip Van Zandt and Louise
-Hathaway?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Manada appears to reflect deeply. Then he says, with a
-gravity belied by the twinkle in his eyes: “Serious, my
-dear Senor Ashley; very serious.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank you,” responds Ashley. “Well, I believe I’ll
-go ashore and get better acquainted with the natives. I
-hope to see you again, Don Manada.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I shall probably be here until the yacht leaves, senor.
-Adios.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As Ashley is borne shoreward he digests the information
-extracted from his Cuban friend.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“So far as Miss Hathaway’s tender regard is concerned,
-I appear to be a rank outsider,” he soliloquizes.
-“But I have the consolation of knowing that I did not
-permit myself to fall in love with her. Rather a melancholy
-consolation, but philosophy was invented for just
-such cases as this.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And Van Zandt. Well, Barker can doubt as much
-as he pleases, but I will stake my reputation as a soothsayer
-that Van Zandt and Ernest Stanley are one and
-the same man. And if Phillip Van Zandt is not a
-Nemesis, stalking on the trail of his prospective victim
-or victims, then I am indeed a prophet unworthy of honor
-in ‘mine ain countree’ or in the world at large.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XXXV.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>A CAFE QUARREL.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“I suppose this is the Madison Square of Santiago,”
-remarks Jack Ashley, as he notes approvingly the brilliant
-spectacle which the plaza affords, now that the tropic
-night is atoning for the enervating heat of the tropic
-afternoon. Santiago, like all Cuban cities, wakes up
-measurably early, bustles about for three hours or so, and
-then dozes or fans itself until the sun drops into the sea
-and night comes with scarcely a shadow of twilight.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>And then Santiago wakes again with a start, and for a
-few more hours laughs and chatters, promenades and
-flirts until about 10 o’clock, when the curtain falls, not to
-rise again until the sun is well up the morning sky.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The nightly gathering on the plaza has been tersely
-described as “a scene of shoulders, arms, trains, jewels
-and cascarilla.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The women monopolize the plaza and the men the
-cafe, the latter a simple interior, a mere loafing-place for
-the Cuban, whose capacities as an idler are the result of
-many years’ practice in the gentle art of doing nothing.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Into one of the cafés that border the panorama of
-gayety strolls Ashley. The place is crowded, but over in
-the farthest corner he sees a table at which only one
-person is seated. Toward this he threads his way, but
-when almost there his progress is impeded by a party of
-four who are taking up more space than the law of
-equality allows.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Pardon me,” remarks Jack, as he brushes past the
-chair of an unamiable-appearing individual in undress
-military attire. The latter moves reluctantly and growls
-something which Ashley suspects is not complimentary,
-and as he drops into a seat he asks the gentleman across
-the table: “Do you speak English, sir?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Occasionally,” is the brief rejoinder.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then would you oblige me by translating the remark
-of the chap whose repose I just disturbed?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It’s of no consequence,” replies the other. “An impertinence
-upon Americans. The feeling against that
-people is very bitter in Santiago just now. The United
-States is suspected of encouraging practically as well as
-morally the present insurrection.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Perhaps I had better go over and punch his head,”
-observes Ashley. “His suspicions might be better
-grounded.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It would be a waste of time and perhaps lead to a
-general row. He is only a Spanish captain who has invested
-his title with more importance than would suffice
-for the entire service. Spanish captains are as plentiful
-as Kentucky colonels.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You speak by the card,” laughs Ashley, as he orders
-a glass of jerez and a cigar. “Your English, too, is as
-pure as a New Yorker’s—or perhaps I should say as un-foreign.
-Pure English is not a drug in the New York
-market.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have resided in New York, as well as other parts
-of the United States. But after a short residence on this
-island a man drifts into the indolence and shiftlessness of
-the natives and loses much of his identity.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He does not lose his Americanism, I hope.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No; the same thrill comes over him when he sees the
-most beautiful of all flags streaming out on the breeze,
-and with it is increased his sense of the outrageous
-wrongs which the Cuban has suffered from generation to
-generation.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley has been looking his acquaintance over with
-much interest, and the result of his “sizing up” is as
-follows:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Age, about Ashley’s own; above the medium height,
-athletic of build, and straight as the proverbial arrow;
-general air denoting decision, dash, and a bit of
-recklessness. His garments are dark and somewhat
-travel-worn, and on his head, pulled down well
-over his eyes, he wears a soft hat that borders on the
-sombrero.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Just now he is scowling at the party of four near by,
-who are making merry apparently at the expense of the
-two young men.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“As I said before,” observes Ashley, “if you will kindly
-translate the remarks of yonder chaps it will afford me
-considerable satisfaction to call them to order. Ah, if
-I could only tell them in Spanish what I think of them
-in English,” he adds, recollecting an old opera-bouffe
-jest.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley’s acquaintance is evidently making an effort to
-keep his temper, but his resentment is apparent in the
-flash of his eyes and the red spot in each cheek.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By Jove!” suddenly reflects Ashley, “perhaps our
-military friend understands English. I’ll try him.” Then
-to the apparent leading spirit of the quartet, who has just
-delivered himself of a sally that vastly amuses his companions,
-Ashley leans over and drawls: “Pardon me,
-senor, am I the subject of your mirth?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Spaniard may understand, but he makes no sign.
-The quartet set down their glasses and stare at the self-possessed
-young man who has risen and walked to their
-table and whose mild blue eyes run over the party in
-calm inquiry. And the young man notes that the time-killers
-for many tables around have ceased their chatter
-for the moment and are watching curiously the progress
-of the colloquy.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have reason to suspect,” goes on Ashley, “that you
-are making a beastly nuisance of yourself, and unless you
-are anxious for a good American thrashing I would
-advise you to keep a civil tongue from now on. If you
-don’t understand that I’ll knock it through your head in
-short order.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The reply is a volley of red-hot Castilian, but Ashley
-is saved the trouble of attempting to comprehend it. For
-at this moment a long arm reaches by him and the
-Spanish captain is dealt a slap across the mouth that
-transforms his teeth for an instant into castanets.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Then there is confusion. The quartet spring to their
-feet and one of them seizes a bottle. But Ashley grips
-the uplifted arm with a wrist of steel and remarks in tones
-that carry conviction: “Easy, my friend, or I’ll throw you
-through the side of the house.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The idlers in the cafe crowd about the combatants and
-the proprietor rushes up and protests against the disorder.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Spanish captain and Ashley’s friend glare at each
-other, and the latter, after pronouncing the words “Hotel
-Royal” with a significance appreciated by his antagonist,
-slips his arm through Ashley’s and draws him from the
-cafe.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Whither?” queries Jack, as they proceed down the
-street.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“To the Hotel Royal. I am stopping there for the
-night. And you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Same cheerful hostelry. Is it the worst in Cuba?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The worst and the best. They are all off the same
-piece.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Will you come up to my room?” asks he of the black
-eyes, when the hotel is reached. “We shall doubtless be
-waited upon presently.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By our Spanish friend?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By his representative, more likely.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But how is he to locate you?” questions Ashley. “No
-pasteboards were exchanged.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>His companion smiles sardonically. “Capt. Raymon
-Huerta and I are not strangers,” he says.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Even as he speaks there is a rap at the door and as it
-is thrown open in strides one of the Spanish quartet.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, Senor Cardena,” says the young man with the
-black eyes, glancing at the bit of pasteboard in his hand,
-“what is your pleasure?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What, Senor Navarro, you may expect,” replies Cardena,
-declining stiffly the proffered chair. “Capt. Huerta
-demands satisfaction for the insult offered to him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not only offered, but delivered,” mutters Ashley, and
-he returns in kind Cardena’s impertinent glance. “So
-my unknown friend’s name is Navarro,” he thinks.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You may convey to Capt. Huerta my willingness to
-afford him the desired redress,” says Navarro. “How
-will sunrise, on the beach below the city, answer?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am authorized to make the necessary arrangements.
-What you have proposed will be satisfactory. And the
-weapons?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Pistols, I suppose; I am provided with one.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Hold on,” puts in Ashley. “I have just the article.
-Excuse me a moment, gentlemen.” Repairing to his
-room he extracts from his trunk two superb Smith &amp;
-Wesson 38-caliber revolvers, and these he submits to
-Cardena and Navarro. Senor Cardena professes himself
-to be satisfied with the weapons and, with a perfunctory
-“Adios,” he withdraws.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>When he has gone Navarro tosses his arms impatiently
-and murmurs: “What a fool I am.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“All men are or have been at some period,” Ashley assures
-him. “But what gives rise to your present self-accusation?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The thought that I permitted my temper to play the
-mischief with my judgment,” is the gloomy reply. “A
-man has the right to risk his own life, but not the life, or
-what is dearer than life, of those whose interests he is
-intrusted with.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“See here,” Ashley gently protests, “if there is any
-fighting to be done why not let me have the job? I
-began the row—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And I finished it. No, my friend, this affair must go
-on to the bitter end. Although, as you rightly suspected,
-you were the ostensible object of the remarks of the party
-at the cafe, they were in reality directed toward me. It
-was inevitable that Capt. Huerta and I should cross,
-though I might have to-night avoided a meeting which
-would better be left to the future. May I request you to
-second me in the meeting?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Assuredly, Senor Navarro. That is your name, I
-judge?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes; Emilio Navarro—quite Spanish, you see,” with
-a peculiar smile. “And your name?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Jack Ashley; residence, New York; occupation, newspaper
-man; paper, the Hemisphere; ever heard of it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The newspaper is not a stranger to me. Pardon me
-a few minutes,” says Navarro, and he occupies himself
-in writing a somewhat lengthy letter, which he seals,
-without addressing, and hands to Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ashley, you are a man of honor,” he says, laying one
-hand upon the newspaper man’s shoulder. “Promise me
-that if anything happens to me to-morrow you will deliver
-that letter to a name I will whisper to you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I shall do so with profound regret, sir. The name?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Don Manuel de Quesada. He resides in the Pueblo
-de Olivet, on the edge of Santos, four miles west of
-Santiago.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley places the letter in his pocket. “I will not fail
-you, if the occasion for my services should arise. But
-unless Huerta is more familiar with the American revolver
-than I believe him to be, I shall have the happiness
-of returning this document to you after you have filled
-him full of leaden satisfaction. How are you on the shoot,
-anyway?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Navarro smiles grimly. “I have hit a playing card at
-fifty yards,” he says.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, well; that’s close enough marksmanship. I am
-beginning to feel sorry for Huerta.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Save your sympathy. I shall not kill him. And now,
-friend Ashley, I believe I’ll go to bed. I have been riding
-all day and I am as tired as a dog. At daylight we start.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At daylight it is. It is not too late to accept my offer
-to exchange places with you. I can’t hit a playing card
-at fifty yards, but at least I am alone in the world, and,
-barring a few excellent friends, would not be especially
-missed. It is as much my quarrel as yours, you know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My dear Ashley,” says Navarro, with much emotion,
-“I am deeply sensible of the goodness of heart that
-prompts your offer, but, I repeat, this affair must proceed
-as it has begun.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, good-night to you, then,” says Ashley, and he
-goes off to bed, wondering what manner of man is he
-who speaks of a thrill at the sight of the most beautiful
-of all flags streaming out upon the breeze, and yet claims
-the distinctly Spanish name of Emilio Navarro.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XXXVI.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>JUANITA.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>The sun is creeping up the range of hills when Ashley
-and Navarro leave the Hotel Royal and set forth at a
-smart pace for the meeting with Capt. Raymon Huerta.
-Ashley is in his usual good spirits, and the enlivening
-influence of his society is appreciated by Navarro, whose
-thoughts are plainly of a dejected nature.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Half a mile or more down the beach that stretches east
-of the city three men are in waiting. Two of them are
-Capt. Huerta and Senor Cardena; the third is evidently
-a surgeon.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The preliminaries for the exchange of shots are quickly
-arranged. Ashley, with the fifty-yards range in mind,
-proposes the comfortable distance of twenty-five paces,
-and Cardena assents. Then the revolvers are handed out
-and carefully scrutinized, and Huerta and Navarro face
-each other on the sands.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“How’s your nerve, old man?” Ashley asks Navarro,
-as he gives the latter’s hand an encouraging squeeze.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Steady,” is the response, in low tones.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Good.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Remember the letter,” admonishes Navarro, and as
-Ashley nods and steps back the duelists signal that they
-are ready.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A minute later two shots startle into flight a flock of
-sea gulls that have been hovering along the shore.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>With the echoes Capt. Huerta staggers and is immediately
-taken in charge by the watchful Cardena and
-the medico.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not scratched, eh?” Ashley inquires of Navarro.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No; but the lead passed close enough for comfort.
-Unless my aim was poor, Huerta is not seriously hurt.
-To have killed him would have been to invite serious
-entanglement.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Nor is the Spanish captain in any immediate danger
-of parting with existence. The bullet has plowed through
-the right shoulder, causing a ragged wound and a great
-flow of blood, but a few days will put him on his feet
-again, the surgeon reports to Cardena. Wounded honor
-is satisfied by the physical wound, and after a brief announcement
-of this fact and a stiff “Adios” the Spaniards
-drive away, and Navarro and his American friend are left
-upon the beach.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Any trouble with the authorities likely?” Ashley
-queries, as the two turn cityward.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I think not. Huerta is a thorough-paced scoundrel,
-but he has never been accused of being a coward or an
-informer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A great change has come over Navarro. His eye is
-bright and his step elastic and he tells Ashley, as they
-stride along in the cool air of the morning, that he is
-terribly hungry and would appreciate a good breakfast.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As good a meal as Cuba affords is forthcoming, and as
-Ashley suddenly recollects the now happily unnecessary
-letter to Don Quesada, Navarro tears it into fragments
-and says abruptly:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ashley, amigo, have you ever seen the Pearl of the
-Antilles?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No; I haven’t been in Santiago quite twenty-four
-hours yet. You mean the insurgent cruiser?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, no; I mean the most beautiful girl in Cuba. She
-is the daughter of Don Manuel de Quesada, and is at
-once the joy and the despair of half the unmarried
-jeunesse doree of Santiago. Would you like to meet
-her?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By all means. Next to a good horse and a trim yacht,
-I know of nothing that interests me more than a beautiful
-woman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Good. I am going out to La Quinta de Quesada.
-Hunt up a horse and accompany me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Navarro is already provided with a steed, a magnificent
-black animal that interests Ashley far more than the prospects
-of the acquaintance of the Pearl of the Antilles.
-“Came into my possession yesterday,” Navarro tells him.
-“Isn’t he a beauty?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He is that,” is Jack’s appreciative reply. “If you run
-across his mate put me in the way of acquiring him and
-I will do my war correspondence in the saddle.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley succeeds in chartering a fairly presentable beast
-for the day, and the two young men set out for Santos
-in the best of spirits. They are in no hurry and the ride
-of something over four miles through El Valle de Bosque
-Cillos, the wooded valley, occupies an hour.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Passing through Santos, which is one of the smallest
-of villages, embracing only a jail, a church and a score
-of dwellings, the travelers take the road to La Quinta de
-Quesada, which is located in the center of the Pueblo de
-Olivet.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Quinta is a square, two-storied affair and the
-principal material in its construction is coral stone. The
-inevitable and grateful veranda stretches around three
-sides and an air of quiet luxury is evident in the spacious
-house and its attractive surroundings.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As Navarro and Ashley ride slowly up the shaded carriage
-way and turn suddenly in sight of the quinta, the
-first objects that greet Jack’s vision are two young people
-in one of the hammocks on the veranda. A young man’s
-arm encircles a young lady’s waist and the attitude of the
-pair suggests either the relations of lovers or of brother
-and sister. They start up in some confusion upon the
-advent of a stranger and come forward to greet Navarro.
-When the latter dismounts the young man embraces him
-warmly and Navarro, as he rests one arm affectionately
-about the youth’s shoulders, says to Ashley: “My
-younger brother, Don Carlos.” Then he turns to the
-young lady:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Juanita, I want you to know my friend, Senor Jack
-Ashley of New York. Senor Ashley, La Senorita de
-Quesada.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley has slid from his horse and his acknowledgment
-of the introduction is rather less debonair than
-usual; because, as he confesses afterward to himself, he
-is somewhat confused by the beauty of the young woman,
-who gives him her hand and tells him that the quinta
-has no friends more welcome than Don Emilio.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>And here is an outline of Juanita de Quesada, the Pearl
-of the Antilles, as sketched rapidly but indelibly upon the
-tablets of Jack Ashley’s memory:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>She is 20 or thereabouts, and is considerably below the
-medium height. The proportions of her slender yet full
-form are as perfect as nature ever molds. Her face is
-oval, and her complexion a soft, creamy olive. Evidences
-of her race are in the lead-black hair, the dark,
-dreamy eyes of liquid fire, the rather large, tremulous
-mouth, with its scarlet lips, and the completing perfection
-of Cuban loveliness, the dainty little feet with the incomparable
-arches. All Cuban women are not beautiful, but
-as Ashley looks upon the present picture he decides that
-the imperfections of her sisters are amply compensated
-for by the dazzling loveliness of the Senorita de Quesada.
-“She is glorious,” he thinks; and then: “I wonder if she
-knows anything.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Hardly less striking, though dissimilar in character, is
-the beauty of Don Carlos Navarro. He is a slender
-youth, with dark-brown eyes and curly hair, and if it were
-not for the effeminacy of his regular features he would
-receive the critical approval of the New Yorker. As it
-is, Ashley confesses that Juanita and Don Carlos are the
-handsomest young pair he ever set eyes upon, and he
-wonders what may be the relationship existing between
-them. For Carlos is no more Spanish in appearance than
-his brother Emilio.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Where is Don Quesada?” asks Navarro, when the
-party have disposed themselves upon the veranda.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“With his books and papers, as usual,” replies Carlos,
-with a significant glance at his brother. “Come, I will
-take you to him. He will be overjoyed to greet you. It
-is nearly two weeks, Emilio, since we last saw you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And it may be much longer than two weeks ere you
-see me again,” says Navarro, as he follows Carlos into the
-house.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley finds himself vastly interested in the young lady
-with whom he has been left tete-a-tete. He learns that
-she has not a near relative save her father (Carlos must
-then be her lover); that she is no stranger to the United
-States, having resided in New York two years; that she
-loves America and everything American; that, were it
-not that her father’s interests necessitated a residence in
-Cuba, she would like to live always in America; and
-much more information, imparted in a quiet, dignified
-manner which Jack is positive was acquired by her short
-stay in the land of the free and the home of the enterprising.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>All too soon comes the interruption of luncheon, and
-Ashley is presented to Don Manuel de Quesada. Jack
-takes a good, square look at the tall, spare, elderly man
-who grasps his hand warmly and tells him that he is
-always proud and happy to meet an American.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Don Quesada is a typical Cuban in appearance; his
-bearing is distinguished and his manner partakes of the
-dignity and repose of his daughter. But there is a certain
-weakness about the mouth that Ashley at once notes.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>However, Don Quesada is cordiality itself, and after
-lunch the three men adjourn to the library for a smoke,
-Carlos and Juanita taking themselves off for a ramble
-through the park.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The conversation drifts naturally to a discussion of the
-patriotic uprising which has almost attained the proportions
-of a revolution that promises to be as successful as
-the struggle for independence of the American colonists.
-The talk is general, and Ashley surprises his companions
-by remarking abruptly:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By the way, Don Quesada, before I left America it
-was hinted to me by an influential member of the Cuban
-revolutionary society that the President of the Provisional
-Republic of Cuba is a resident of Santiago.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah?” says Quesada, inquiringly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That is, I suppose Santos may be considered a part of
-Santiago.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Quesada and Navarro look at each other meaningly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In other words, that this President is none other than
-yourself, Don Quesada,” continues Ashley; and without
-waiting for a reply to this direct speech he goes on:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I tell you only what, as I say, was intimated to me in
-the strictest confidence. I shall not ask for a confirmation
-or a contradiction; I am not thinking of interviewing
-you. I am an American and the representative of an
-American newspaper. As such, I am supposed, while in
-Cuba, to maintain a neutrality. I had intended, before I
-met Don Navarro, to call upon you in a professional
-capacity, but now I find myself your guest. It is for you
-to say what is your pleasure in the matter.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Don Quesada studies keenly the face of the war correspondent,
-but reads only sincerity in the frank blue eyes.
-Then he looks at Navarro and the latter extends his hand
-to Jack.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ashley, I believe we understand one another,” he says.
-“There is no need of further explanations. If there is
-any interviewing to be done, you can operate on me.
-I believe Don Quesada will willingly allow me to submit
-to the ordeal.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I will be merciful,” smiles Ashley. “But before I proceed
-further, permit me to present the vouchers for my
-discretion and reliability,” and he passes over a letter
-which relieves Don Quesada of any possible distrust
-of his acquaintance of a few hours.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is late in the afternoon when Navarro announces that
-he must depart. Ashley is courteously invited to enjoy
-for as long a time as he may care to the hospitality of the
-quinta, but duty demands his presence at Santiago until
-he gets his affairs into shape. However, he promises to
-call frequently while he is in this part of the country, a
-pledge he anticipates much pleasure in fulfilling. And as
-he rides away with Navarro his usually cool head is
-disturbed by speculations as to the probable relations
-between Don Carlos Navarro and Juanita de Quesada.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By the way, Navarro,” he says, suddenly to his companion,
-“is there any likelihood of my ever chancing
-upon El Terredo, the mysterious revolutionary leader
-whom we were discussing this afternoon?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Possibly,” is the reply. The travelers have reached
-a fork in the road, about half-way between Santos and
-Santiago.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My path lies yonder,” says Navarro, pointing to the
-north. “We must part here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, take care of yourself,” remarks Ashley, gripping
-the extended hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Navarro rides slowly away, but he has not gone five
-yards when he checks his horse and turns in his saddle.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Would you like to see El Terredo?” he asks, with a
-smile.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It would satisfy my curiosity,” is Ashley’s prompt
-response.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then, my friend, take your first look, and the last for
-many days, if not forever. For I am El Terredo!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Waving his hat with a graceful sweep Navarro rides
-away to the mountains.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XXXVII.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>ONE WAY TO GET TO CUBA.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“Whew!” For the nineteenth time John Barker gives
-utterance to the expressive exclamation, as he mops his
-perspiring forehead.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The detective is seated in the parlor car of the Florida
-express, which has just left Jacksonville, and is being
-whirled along toward Tampa Bay.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He soon indulges in a nap, while the train rumbles on,
-by the scattered negro huts, with their ebon-hued occupants
-drawn up in solemn array to watch the flying cars,
-through the dense forests of moss-entwined trees, across
-the trestle-spanned marshes and mud-colored rivers.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker is dreaming of a hand-to-hand encounter with
-Cyrus Felton, wherein the latter has succeeded in clasping
-the handcuffs about his (Barker’s) neck and is slowly
-but surely rendering futile his breathing apparatus, when
-the porter’s voice calling out “Tampa Bay” recalls him to
-his senses.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The single hotel at Tampa Bay, Barker subsequently
-finds, is not a half-bad institution, judged by the midnight
-inspection, and ascertaining from the clerk that the
-steamer for Key West does not sail until 3 o’clock the following
-afternoon, the detective retires in the confident
-belief that he has overtaken Mrs. Harding at least.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker is right in his surmise. He has nearly finished
-his breakfast the next morning, when the striking figure
-of Mrs. Harding enters the dining-room and is escorted
-by the obsequious waiter to the table at which the detective
-is seated. The latter lingers long over his coffee
-and muffins, while he improves the opportunity of studying
-his vis-a-vis.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Handsome as a queen,” is his conclusion, as the glorious
-black eyes glance idly into his. But there is a tinge
-of melancholy in her face, a preoccupation in her manner,
-that does not escape the observation of the detective,
-and at which he wonders.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It cannot be that the military chap has given her the
-go-by,” he thinks.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He has not, for at this moment the soldierly form of
-the Spaniard enters the room and he is directed to a seat
-beside Mrs. Harding.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Nothing very lover-like in their greeting,” ruminates
-Barker, as the two exchange salutations. “Since they are
-to be fellow-passengers on the boat to Key West and
-Havana I will postpone my interview until then.” Barker
-strolls out upon the hotel veranda.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“How long does it take to run to Havana?” he inquires,
-casually, of the porter.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“About a ten hours’ sail from Key West, when the
-steamers are running,” he is told.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“When the steamers are running? Are they not running
-now?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No, sir; they run only as far as Key West now, since
-the blockade was declared.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker paces slowly up and down the veranda.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, I must be hoodooed,” he mutters; “that does
-settle it. Here I’ve raced 1,700 miles to head off my
-game, only to be foiled by a measly blockade. I can’t
-stand it to charter a ship, and it looks mightily as if Cyrus
-Felton was going to slip through my hands. But how are
-my lady and the Spanish-looking chap to get there? I
-will go to Key West at any rate. There may be some
-way to cross the channel from there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The detective is not in cheerful spirits as he boards
-the steamer, but he feels a shade of satisfaction while
-noting Mrs. Harding and her cavalier ascend the gang-plank
-just before the signal for departure is given.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“We will have a little tete-a-tete by and by, my lady,”
-he murmurs. But, greatly to the detective’s disappointment,
-Mrs. Harding does not emerge from her stateroom
-until the steamer has sighted the yellow stretch of sand
-that marks the entrance to the harbor of Key West.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, we shall either be fellow-voyagers again, or ‘on
-a tropical isle we’ll sit and smile,’” reflects Barker, philosophically.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Determined that he will not lose sight of the charming
-Mrs. Harding again, Barker loiters about the steamer
-until she trips across the gang-plank, the last passenger
-to disembark. Her traveling companion has preceded
-her nearly half an hour, and Barker wonders again if they
-have parted company. Their baggage, he observes, is
-still on the pier, and even as Mrs. Harding steps ashore
-Barker sees the Spaniard coming rapidly toward her.
-He conducts her to the opposite side of the wharf, where
-is moored a neat little steam launch, manned by a number
-of sailors in the uniform of the Spanish navy. The
-baggage upon which Barker’s watchful eyes are fixed is
-quickly conveyed aboard the launch, Mrs. Harding follows,
-still escorted by the military-appearing stranger,
-and a moment later the little craft shoots out from
-the dock and makes for a man-of-war lying at anchor in
-the harbor and flying the Spanish colors.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Barker’s last opportunity for a tete-a-tete with
-“my lady” has vanished.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The detective watches the launch until it vanishes behind
-the bow of the warship, but words fail utterly to
-express his feelings. He mechanically picks up his grip
-and suffers himself to be conducted by an enterprising
-Bahaman to the American hotel, picturesquely surrounded
-by tropical shrubs and plants.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, Barker,” the detective communes with himself,
-“it looks decidedly as if my lady possessed a slight advantage
-in having a man-of-war at her call. But with all that
-fleet of boats in the harbor it does seem that there should
-be one bound for Cuba. How to hit that particular one
-is the question.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He strolls down the broad street to the harbor front,
-and from a wharf wistfully gazes at the Spanish man-of-war
-now nearly hull down on the horizon bearing away
-his fair fellow-voyager. A tanned and weather-beaten son
-of Neptune is making fast a small sloop, whose name
-Barker notes with idle curiosity is emblazoned in generous
-letters on her stern, “Cayo Hueso.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Say, my good fellow,” he says, “you don’t happen to
-know of any way to reach Havana, do you? Are any of
-these vessels likely to sail for that port within a day or
-two?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He of the weather-beaten face finishes making fast the
-little sloop without answering, and then slowly turns and
-looks at Barker. The gaze is a long and searching one,
-but apparently it is satisfactory.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There’s one way to reach Cuba, I reckon,” he says,
-with a pronounced nasal twang. “That is, if you are
-sailor enough to stand that sloop and wise enough to
-keep your mouth shut on occasions.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker surveys the little craft doubtfully. She is of
-perhaps five tons’ burden, and looks old and risky.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I could stand the sail if the boat is seaworthy, and I
-am anxious to reach Havana,” he finally says. “When do
-you sail?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At 6 o’clock. The Cayo don’t go clear to Cuba, only
-about half-way across the channel. But we can put you
-aboard another craft that will land you in Havana. Got
-any baggage?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker meditates a moment. “How long will it take
-to make the passage?” he inquires.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Wall, if this wind holds you ought to be in Havana
-by to-morrow night. It will cost you—say, $25.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker’s decision is made. “I’ll chance it,” he says.
-“I’ll be here at 6 o’clock.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>On his return to the Cayo Hueso, the detective finds
-the crew of three already aboard and his sailor friend
-preparing to cast off. He ruefully surveys the small craft
-and thinks of the 120-mile trip, but there is no alternative
-and he clambers aboard.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As the sails are hoisted Barker is amazed by the rate
-at which the little craft speeds out of the harbor. There is
-always a breeze on the keys, the captain of the Cayo tells
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Soon the sea begins to growl a bit and Barker does not
-like it. As the breeze freshens, the commotion beneath
-his vest increases.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Just the kind of a breeze for a run across, eh?” remarks
-the man at the tiller, with a voice that sounds to
-Barker like the rasp of a new saw.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I dunno,” replies the detective, whose face is rapidly
-becoming “sicklied o’er with the pale cast of thought.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But the little vessel continues to spin over the waters,
-as darkness settles upon the sea.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The stars are paling in the heavens and the gray dawn
-is creeping athwart the sloop, when Barker awakens from
-a troubled nap and struggles into a sitting posture. He
-sees only the bare horizon, the ocean lying black and
-leaden and wrinkled like an old man’s face. There is no
-boat in sight, he thinks; they are not yet half-way to the
-Cuban shore.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But there is a boat in sight. Hull down to the east,
-imperceptible to his untrained eye, a delicate pearl shaft
-hangs like a pendant just on the horizon. For a time it
-seems dim and visionary; then even Barker, did he possess
-sufficient ambition to lift his head again, could see a
-duplicate of the sloop lazily crawling toward her, and,
-within half an hour, come alongside the Cayo Hueso.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At once certain mysterious boxes and casks, chiefly the
-latter, are transferred from one boat to the other. Then
-Barker laboriously and disconsolately steps from the
-Cayo Hueso to the strange boat, while his weather-beaten
-friend communes with the captain of the latter. His destination
-is a matter of supremest indifference to the detective.
-He manfully strives to hold up his head while
-the exchange of salutations is made, fails and sinks
-passively into the bottom of the boat.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The sun is gilding Maro castle as the little craft enters
-the harbor of Havana.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A remarkably quick passage,” says the captain in
-Spanish, as the sloop is being moored to a dilapidated
-wharf in an obscure portion of the water front.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker struggles to his feet. “Are we in Havana?” he
-inquires in Spanish, a trifle rusty, but still intelligible.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Si, senor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank heaven!” is the pious ejaculation of the detective.
-“I’ll live and die in Cuba before I’ll every trust
-myself in a cockleshell like that again.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XXXVIII.<br /> <br /><span class='c018'>A SOLDIER OF CASTILE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“Heavens! They have just sized up my condition and
-sent an ambulance,” Barker grunts, as his eyes rest for
-the first time on that marvel of vehicular construction, a
-Cuban volante, which the good-natured captain of the
-sloop has secured for his late passenger.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But before he clambers into the conveyance the detective,
-whose professional instincts are now awakening,
-ascertains from the driver that the American steamer
-City of Havana has not yet arrived, although due that
-morning.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker begins to feel better. “Things seem to be
-coming my way at last,” he thinks complacently. “I’ll
-take no chances this time. John Barker, detective, will be
-the first to greet Cyrus Felton when that gentleman steps
-on Cuban soil. Now for the hotel and a bath, a visit to
-the American consul and then to the wharf of the Red
-Star Line, wherever that is.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is a very different individual from the woebegone
-passenger on the little smuggler that three hours later
-lounges about the dimly lighted freight sheds of the
-American Steamship Line, awaiting the arrival of the
-overdue vessel. “Richard’s himself again,” he remarks;
-“or will be when his long-neglected appetite is appeased.
-I hope the City of Havana will not keep me up all night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The night wears on—the longest, Barker assures himself,
-with one exception, that he ever knew, and the sun
-is well above the horizon ere his heart is cheered by the
-boom of a cannon on Moro castle, announcing the arrival
-of a foreign vessel. It is the American liner, and by the
-time the various custom officers, summoned by the signal
-gun, have arrived on the wharf, the steamer is being
-moored to the pier.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker has taken a position where he can command a
-view of the gang-plank, and with a grim smile he awaits
-the disembarking of the passengers. There are not many.
-A few Havana business men, a score or two of Cubans,
-three or four Spanish officers and half a dozen Americans
-cross the plank, and then there is a lull in the procession.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker’s smile fades and there is a suspicion of anxiety
-in his expression as the tall, slim form of Cyrus Felton
-does not appear.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Perhaps he is sick,” the detective thinks. “I will go
-aboard and inquire of the purser.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>No; there was no passenger on this trip named Felton,
-that officer states, running his eye down the rather abbreviated
-passenger list.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker stares vacantly at the purser. Rapidly there
-passes through his mind the circumstances preceding his
-interesting journey to Havana—the departure of Felton
-and Miss Hathaway from the St. James; his (Barker’s)
-hurried trip to Key West; the unavailing effort to interview
-Mrs. Harding; the voyage in the smuggler to Havana;
-last night’s long and weary vigil.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>And Felton did not sail on the City of Havana after all!</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Without a word of thanks to the courteous purser, the
-detective slowly turns and retraces his steps. He walks
-aimlessly from the wharf, his disappointment for the time
-being too bitter for expression.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But John Barker, whatever his errors of judgment, is
-a clear-minded, persistent man, and after a half-hour’s
-walk in the enervating atmosphere of a Havana midday
-he pulls himself up with a start.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well,” he says as he wipes the perspiration from his
-face, “I’m euchred this time, it appears, and must make
-the best of it. But this is the deciding trick, and by
-heaven,” the detective grinds his teeth, “I will track Cyrus
-Felton down if it takes the rest of my life! I have it!
-I’ll see if the son, Ralph Felton, is actually here, as Ashley
-believes. If he is, I will at least have something to show
-for my trip to this awfully hot hole. Now for something
-to eat at the grand hotel Pasaje, if I can find the way.
-It’s mighty lucky I know some Spanish.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The shadows are lengthening toward night when
-Barker awakens from the sound slumber into which his
-“siesta” after a comfortable meal has developed. He is
-feeling greatly refreshed and ready to pick up again the
-tangled threads of the trail that he has followed so far.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Now for a little stroll about the city, to see what the
-place is like,” he thinks, as he lights a cigar and saunters
-down the broad street.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Half an hour later, Barker has strayed farther from the
-hotel than he realizes and has unwittingly penetrated into
-the most disreputable quarter of Havana. For a brief
-rest he enters a cafe, and seating himself at a table in a
-corner of a room orders a light drink, absent-mindedly
-speaking in English.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Two dark-browed, yellow-skinned Cubans, who have
-been conversing earnestly in low tones at a table adjoining
-Barker’s, glower at the newcomer, but as he gives his
-order to the waiter in English they resume their interrupted
-conversation. Barker idly sips his jerez and wonders
-what Jack Ashley will say on receiving the letter he
-left for him in New York.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Suddenly the word “Americano,” hissed by one of the
-two Cubans, arrests his attention and he strains his ears
-to hear in what connection the word was used. The pair
-are talking in low tones, but the detective’s trained sense
-is able to comprehend the tenor of the conversation.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Cubans are discussing the assassination of some
-person, an American, and presumably that American is
-John Barker!</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The detective slips his hand around to his hip pocket,
-and as his fingers close over the butt of a 38-caliber pistol
-his pulse resumes its calm and even beat and he proceeds
-to make a mental inventory of the prospective assassins.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Absolutely the most villainous-looking brace of cutthroats
-I ever saw,” he sums up. “But why should they
-plot to lay me out? Do they take me for a New York
-millionaire in disguise, and think I carry a million or
-two around in my pocket? Ah, so you were not the
-distinguished individual picked out by the precious pair,
-Barker. It’s some other American. But who? And how
-can I manage to warn him of his danger?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker rapidly revolves the situation, while covertly
-watching the Cubans. He suddenly starts, as from words
-uttered by one of them, as they arise to leave the cafe, he
-becomes aware that the cold-blooded crime planned
-within his hearing is to be carried out within the next
-hour or so.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There’s nothing for me to do but to shadow the pair,”
-he mutters, as he steps again into the now moonlit street.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is a simple matter for the experienced detective to
-keep the Cubans in sight, especially as they never once
-take pains to glance backward. They have traversed
-several streets, when the detective observes that they have
-halted and are apparently loitering near a larger and
-rather more elaborate cafe than the majority.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“So the American is in that cafe,” reflects Barker;
-“now, which is the better plan, to go in and endeavor to
-pick out my fellow-countryman and warn him, or keep
-in the rear of these chaps and swoop down on them at
-the proper moment? The latter I guess is the safer.
-We’ll see what we will see.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The wait is not a long one. Evidently the Cubans are
-familiar with the habits of the person they are seeking,
-for within fifteen minutes a rather tall young man
-emerges from the cafe, stopping a moment to light a
-cigar, and then starts down the shadowy street. Barker,
-after the first glance, pays little heed to the newcomer,
-for his quick eye notes that he wears the undress uniform
-of a Spanish officer. To his surprise, however, he perceives
-that the two Cubans are stealthily following the
-man.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“So it is not an American after all,” thinks Barker, as
-he steals silently along. “But I can’t stand back and see a
-human killed in cold blood, whatever his nationality, and
-I won’t!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is nearly 10 o’clock now and the street is deserted.
-As the form of the officer emerges into a clear patch of
-moonlight, Barker perceives that the Cubans have narrowed
-the distance that separates them from their prey,
-and he hastens to close up the gap between himself and
-the trio.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He is not too soon. When less than two rods from the
-Cubans he sees the flash of steel in the hand of the foremost
-of the pair.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Look out!” Barker’s voice rings out in English, loud
-and clear, and with the words he springs forward with a
-speed that rivals his sprinting in his football days.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Tackle low!” The whimsical thought flashes through
-his brain as he clears the intervening space. And he
-does. The nearest Cuban goes down with a bone-breaking
-thud, the moonlight glitters for a second on something
-bright in Barker’s hand, there is a sharp click, and
-the detective springs to his feet.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But there is no further need for his services. The other
-Cuban is speeding like the wind down the street.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I owe you one for this, my friend,” says the cause of
-the exciting episode in excellent English, as he strides up
-to Barker and warmly presses his hand. “But for your
-timely shout I should now be lying face downward there
-with the stiletto ornamenting my back. But what have
-you done to this scoundrel? He lies like a log.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, he’ll be all right in a few moments,” replies
-Barker, carelessly glancing down at the prostrate figure.
-“He went down so hard the wind was knocked out of
-him. Then I handcuffed him. Are there any policemen
-handy? If so, we can notify them and have him arrested.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Never mind the police. The soldiers will take care
-of this cutthroat,” returns the other. “But come to my
-quarters while I endeavor to express adequate thanks for
-your service to-night. They are near by and I will send
-a detail of men for this rascal.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, never mind the thanks,” Barker replies carelessly.
-“It was nothing. I happened to overhear the pair planning
-to knife some one, and I followed to see the fun.
-Only I must admit I thought from their talk that their
-intended victim was one of my own countrymen, an
-American.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“So I am, or was, by birth. But I am now an officer in
-the Spanish army, Capt. Alvarez, of the staff of his excellency,
-the captain-general.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is as well that a fleecy cloud at the moment dims the
-moonlight, for Barker, trained to control his emotions
-though he is, cannot avoid a sudden start.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Alvarez! the man beside him is Ralph Felton!</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, here we are,” continues the self-expatriated American,
-as he stops before a large mansion facing the plaza.
-“Excuse me a moment while I send a man or two to look
-after your handcuffed friend.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Alvarez hurries to the rear of the building and returning
-shortly conducts Barker to a comfortably furnished
-room on the first floor. “My sleeping-room,” he explains.
-“Now, tell me how you happened to overhear that precious
-pair planning to assassinate me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker briefly details the events leading up to the attack
-on Alvarez, the latter listening with knitted brows,
-but without comment.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, now of yourself,” he says, when Barker has concluded.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker hesitates a moment, the while studying the face
-before him. “Cyrus Felton’s son, or his double” he
-thinks. Then he takes a sudden resolution. “I am a
-soldier of fortune,” he laughs. “I came down here to see
-the country and a little fighting maybe. My name is
-Parker; residence, the world. What are the chances for
-a commission in the Spanish army?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Hardly good for a commission. But”—Alvarez looks
-Barker over shrewdly—“I should like to do you a service,
-and may. What do you say to becoming my orderly?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker’s eyes flash. He appears to deliberate for a
-moment, and finally says: “I would like nothing better.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Good! To-morrow, then, will see you enrolled as a
-soldier of Spain!”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XXXIX.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>ASHLEY TAKES THE FIELD.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>The big, white moon that rolls through “heaven’s ebon
-vault” and pales the glow of the southern cross looks
-down upon two young people on the veranda of El
-Quinta de Quesada. They have retired to the shadows
-for purely healthful reasons, of course, as a baleful influence
-is attributed to the direct rays of the tropic moon.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You leave Santiago to-morrow?” asks Juanita, in
-tones of real regret.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At the first streak of daylight,” Ashley replies, lighting
-the inevitable Cuban cigar.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And when shall we see you again?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, quien sabe? I attack Spanish quite boldly now
-you see. As a matter of fact, I have no definite idea as
-to when I shall return. Sniffing the battle afar off has
-become monotonous. I am impatient to hear the rattle
-of musketry and the swish of the machete.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You will not expose yourself!” cries the senorita.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley laughs softly. “I shall not lead any desperate
-charges,” he says. “For my position demands a show of
-neutrality, no matter how much I may sympathize at
-heart with the patriots. There is fighting all along the
-line between here and Havana, and I want a chance to
-describe a Cuban battle from personal observation. Besides,
-I like a good fight, and I shall probably itch to sail
-in and help the under dog, if said dog happens to be on
-the same side as my sympathies.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But when such a chivalrous feeling seizes you,
-restrain it; think of your friends, if not of yourself,” adjures
-Juanita, gravely.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, well, they would be the only mourners if I stopped
-a Spanish bullet. I haven’t a relative in the world except
-an amiable aunt in the western states, who threatens to
-some day turn over to me the squandering of her small
-fortune.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No relative except an aunt?” repeats Juanita, sympathetically.
-“No one to weep for you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, the boys in the office would wear crepe for a
-week, and—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Don’t talk so lightly on such a dreadful subject,” reproves
-Juanita. “I am sure I should feel a great deal
-more distress than ‘the boys in the office,’ and I have
-known you only a fortnight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank you, senorita. You may feel sure that I shall
-studiously avoid being borne off a Cuban battleground
-upon my shield.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You will keep on through to Havana?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Unless circumstances bar my way, I shall follow along
-the line of the railroad, stopping wherever night overtakes
-me, and resuming my journey whenever I feel like
-it. I have no definite plans. And, now, senorita, I believe
-I will say Adios. It is getting along toward 9
-o’clock, and the proprietary genius of my hotel looks
-upon belated guests somewhat askance. I have made
-my adieus to Don Manuel and Don Carlos, and it only
-remains to express my regret at saying farewell to you,
-senorita.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Juanita watches him while he untethers his horse, and
-as he turns, bridle in hand, to lift his hat, she comes from
-the veranda and puts her hand in his.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You will surely return?” she asks.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“As surely as a bad penny.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then I will not say farewell.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Au revoir it is, then,” says Jack. He lifts the little
-hand to his lips, and then with rather unnecessary abruptness
-he mounts his horse and rides away in the moonlight.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Hang it!” he mutters, when out of sight of the quinta;
-“that makes at least half a dozen times that I have pulled
-myself together just in season to avoid making a fool of
-myself. Perhaps my vigilance would be relaxed if I
-could ascertain the precise relations existing between
-Juanita and Carlos. I never saw two persons more
-wrapped up in each other, and yet Juanita—” He
-stops and repeats the name, dwelling upon each syllable.
-“Pshaw! I believe I am getting soft in my head! G’lang,
-old nag, or we won’t get to Santiago before midnight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is the 5th of April. Ashley has been in Santiago
-two weeks, and during the fortnight he has, in one way
-or another, kept his paper well supplied with news. He
-has also found many opportunities to run out to the
-quinta, and the welcome has always been so warm, and
-the adios so sincerely regretful, that he has begun to
-wonder whether his interest in the beautiful daughter of
-Don Manuel de Quesada is not lapping over the shadowy
-line that separates friendship from a sentiment which
-poets contend to be more powerful and philosophers regard
-as infinitely weaker.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley has seen Murillo several times since his arrival,
-and between the Spanish general and the newspaper man
-something of friendship has grown. Murillo left for Havana
-two days before, to join the captain-general, who, it
-is reported, proposed to transfer his headquarters to Santiago.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>When Jack reaches his hotel he is informed that a
-horse has been left for him at the stables.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“For me?” he inquires in surprise, as he goes out and
-looks upon a magnificent iron-gray beast fit for a king
-on coronation day.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>For Senor Ashley, he is assured. It was brought during
-the afternoon. Jack looks the acquisition over, and
-then, turning to the trappings which hang near by, he
-discovers a bit of paper attached to the saddle. On it is
-written the single word “Navarro” and the mystery is
-cleared.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By Jove! This is generous,” he says. “But I’m
-blessed if I know where to send my thanks.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Dawn finds Ashley in the saddle and he makes quite a
-brave appearance as he rides away. He is clad in a suit
-of dark corduroy, with long riding boots and white-cloth
-helmet and as he looks his costume over complacently
-he remarks: “If my boots were a bit newer and shinier
-I’d make a good running mate for the war correspondent
-in ‘Michael Strogoff.’ It is a manifest libel to christen
-this horse Rozinante,” patting affectionately the neck of
-his sleek charger, “but as he is a Spanish steed he must
-suffer from recollections of Cervantes. So Rozinante
-it is.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Before the sun has become too aggressive to admit of
-riding in comfort Ashley has covered some twenty miles
-and has passed through two villages, wretched little settlements
-that have ever existed in their present squalor for
-generation upon generation. At the second of these he
-stops for breakfast. The meal is no worse than he expected,
-and after he has finished his coffee he hunts up a shady
-spot on the outskirts of the town, and, hitching his horse,
-he smokes and dozes until the late afternoon breezes from
-the gulf suggest a resumption of his journey. At night
-he tarries at the house of a farmer. They call them
-“farmers” in Cuba. They burn charcoal, raise a few
-vegetables and peddle milk and eggs.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The next day is very much like the first, except that
-Ashley introduces the variation of sleeping all the afternoon
-and riding the greater part of the night. And
-when weariness finally overtakes him he camps on the
-edge of a vast canefield.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The third day is equally monotonous. He begins to
-think that his expedition is to be utterly devoid of adventure.
-He has seen no signs of either insurgents or
-Spanish soldiery, nor have the natives along his route.
-As evening approaches he rides into the decent-sized
-town of Jibana, on the line of the railway between Havana
-and Santiago.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Somewhat to his surprise he learns that the only hotel
-in the place is kept by an American. Landlord Carter
-proves to be a decent sort of chap and his hostelry is
-clean and inviting. After a really good supper Ashley
-turns in early; he is thoroughly tired, having ridden
-farther than on either of the previous days.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He wakes moderately early and has a brief ante-breakfast
-chat with Landlord Carter.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Have I heard of any fighting around here?” repeats
-Carter, in response to Ashley’s inquiry. “No, but I expect
-to see some most any day. There is a report that a
-large number of insurgents are encamped in the mountains
-within a score of miles of Jibana and the natives
-hereabout are becoming restless. A rebel victory or two
-would send the whole of this part of the province into
-the insurgent fold. By the way, a party of three Americans
-arrived last evening after you had gone to bed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“So? What are they doing here and who are they?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“They are going out to some sugar plantations near
-here to-day. I haven’t learned their names yet, as—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At this moment the newspaper man hears a familiar
-feminine voice exclaim in tones of the utmost astonishment.
-“Why, Mr. Ashley!” and he turns to see Louise
-Hathaway standing in the hotel doorway.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Though somewhat dazed mentally, Jack lifts his hat
-and remarks, as if he had seen her but yesterday, “Good-morning,
-Miss Hathaway. You are an early riser.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You don’t appear a bit surprised to see me,” says the
-young lady, as she gives him her hand; “while I am completely
-bewildered at meeting an American friend in the
-midst of this wilderness.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, this is a very small world,” remarks Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Now, do tell me how you happen to be in Cuba. I
-am dying with curiosity,” declares Louise.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then I will explain in all haste. You should be able
-to guess from my military bearing and the fierce aspect
-which this helmet gives me that I am a war correspondent.
-I have been in Cuba a little over a fortnight. I
-arrived at Santiago three days after the Semiramis
-dropped anchor and was told that you had gone to Havana.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But how did you know we sailed from New York on
-the Semiramis? My note, left at the St. James hotel,
-stated that we were going to Cuba on the steamship
-City of Havana.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Exactly. And I supposed that you had, until I saw
-you on the deck of the Semiramis when the yacht was
-running away from Uncle Sam’s cruiser off Sandy
-Hook.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>And now Miss Hathaway relates the effort which she
-and Mr. Felton made to reach the pier before the City
-of Havana sailed from New York. When she tells Ashley
-of the adventure of the blockade on West Broadway
-and of the subsequent appearance of Phillip Van Zandt
-and his offer to place the Vermonters on Cuban soil,
-Ashley twists his mustache reflectively.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Miss Hathaway’s story is interrupted by the announcement
-of breakfast, and five minutes later Ashley makes
-one of a party of four at a table in the cozy dining-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Cyrus Felton greets the newspaper man with grave
-surprise, and Jack’s keen eyes note that the ex-president
-of the Raymond national bank is looking bad. He is
-paler even than when he saw him last, in New York
-about a month ago, and in the gray eyes has settled an
-expression of vague unrest.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Phillip Van Zandt acknowledges the introduction with
-his accustomed reserve, and for an instant the eyes of the
-two young men meet in a searching gaze of mutual inquiry.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>From the conversation that ensues, Ashley gathers
-that most of the time which the trio have spent in Cuba
-has been passed in and about Havana, and that they
-are now en route to Santiago, stopping off at Jibana to
-visit a sugar plantation in which Mr. Felton has an interest.
-And, what is more to the point, Ashley learns that
-the Semiramis is not to leave Santiago for at least another
-fortnight. This information comes from Van Zandt.
-Mr. Felton and Miss Hathaway do not appear to have
-any definite plans.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>For his part, Ashley tells them that he intends to push
-on to Havana, and knows not when he will return to
-Santiago, if at all.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But as he watches Mr. Felton, Van Zandt and Miss
-Hathaway set forth, after breakfast, for the sugar plantation,
-which lies east of the town, he tells himself that
-he will return to Santiago before many days.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I must keep my eye on those two gentlemen,” he
-mutters, “and trust to Providence to throw Barker in
-my way, if indeed he has not already struck the trail.
-By the stars that shine, but there is a strangely assorted
-trio, unless I am clear off my reckoning. Nemesis is
-trailing his inevitable victim with said victim’s father,
-and sooner or later they must meet. What is the town
-beyond here?” Ashley asks Landlord Carter.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Cadoza,” the innkeeper informs him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I believe I’ll jog along to that point, anyhow,” Jack
-decides; “and if nothing turns up in the line of excitement
-within twenty-four hours, then back to Santiago.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XL.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>THE APPEARANCE OF THE SERPENT.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>Half a dozen hours from the time that Jack Ashley
-mounts his newly acquired Rozinante and rides forth
-from Santiago on his journey into the west, a visitor
-arrives at Le Quinta de Quesada.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Don and his daughter are seated on the veranda,
-the former dreaming of the day when Cuba shall be free,
-the latter of the blue-eyed young man who at the moment
-is many miles on his journey toward Havana and is expressing
-his opinion of Cuban roads in comical apostrophes,
-rivaling the natural extravagance of Spanish
-conversation.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A visitor,” remarks Quesada, as the crunching of
-carriage wheels sounds in the driveway, and Juanita’s
-day dreams are abruptly terminated by the appearance
-of a vehicle, not a Cuban every-day volante, but a four-wheeled
-affair, the best that Santiago can provide.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The carriage draws up before the quinta, the driver
-opens the door with a profound obeisance, and out steps
-a lady whose radiant beauty rather dazzles the Cuban
-gentleman, who advances with easy grace to meet her.
-For Don Quesada, though well past the meridian of life,
-is not without susceptibility to feminine charms.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have the pleasure of addressing Don Manuel de
-Quesada, I believe?” says the fair visitor in English.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The pleasure is mine, madam.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am under the embarrassment of introducing myself,”
-with a smile and a glance from a pair of liquid black
-eyes that instantly win for her the good-will of the master
-of the quinta. She tenders a bit of cardboard, and
-as the Don receives it with a bow, she explains: “When
-I left New York I had a letter of introduction from a
-gentleman who has the honor of your acquaintance”—she
-glances at the coachman standing near, and lowers
-her voice—“Don Rafael Manada.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah!” murmurs Quesada, regarding his visitor with
-new interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But I must have left it among my effects at Santiago.
-I certainly have not lost it, as I was too thoroughly instructed
-as to the importance of keeping its contents a
-secret,” the lady finishes, with a meaning smile.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Quesada extends his hand and presses slightly the
-dainty palm laid therein. “Any of Don Manada’s friends
-are welcome here,” he says. “I am happy to place the
-quinta at your disposition, and its occupants are yours to
-command, madam.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Quesada leads the way into the house, whither Juanita
-has retired to add a few touches to her toilet.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You are an American, Mrs. Harding,” ventures the
-Don, as they pass through the long, wide corridor to
-the gallery at the rear of the quinta and the lady is provided
-with the easiest of chairs.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My accent told you that immediately,” is the smiling
-response. “Yes; I am the widow of an American ship-owner,
-who left to me, among other possessions, a sugar
-plantation somewhere in this fair isle. I had the pleasure
-of Don Manada’s acquaintance in New York, and
-when he heard that I purposed visiting Cuba to view my
-possessions, he desired that I seek you, giving me at
-the same time the letter of introduction which, as I have
-said, I have unfortunately left at my hotel in Santiago.
-But perhaps the password which he whispered to me,
-‘Cuba Libre,’ will do as well. For the cause of Cuban
-liberty has no warmer sympathizer than myself, Don
-Quesada,” she adds, earnestly, and the Don’s countenance
-lights with pleasure.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Don Manada could have conferred no greater pleasure,”
-he replies, “and I trust that you will honor my
-daughter and myself by becoming our guest, for a few
-days at least.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Isabel’s dark orbs snap with triumph not easily repressed,
-but she answers hesitatingly: “Thank you, but
-I do not see how I can trespass upon your kindness. I
-have not the pleasure of an acquaintance with the senorita,
-and—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Permit me to remove that objection at once,” interposes
-Quesada, as Juanita at the moment stands in the
-doorway. “Juanita, mi querida, this is Mrs. Isabel Harding,
-an American lady and a friend of Don Manada,
-whom you met in New York. I have invited her to
-remain with us for a few days, or as long as our hospitality
-may prove attractive. Will you not add your
-request to mine?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The more mature and voluptuous beauty of the older
-woman attracts the impulsive Cuban girl, and she seconds
-her father’s invitation with a sincerity that would
-have won even a lady who had not come to the quinta
-with the deliberate purpose of securing such a proffer of
-hospitality.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>And so the carriage is sent back to Santiago and
-Isabel Harding is installed at the quinta, the surroundings
-of which she finds much to her liking. Juanita is
-much charmed with her American friend, who fascinates
-the impressionable Cuban girl with her brilliant beauty,
-her wit and her knowledge of the great world amid whose
-pleasures and palaces Juanita lived for two years, and
-which she hopes some day to see again. The two women
-quickly become inseparable and naturally Juanita tells
-Mrs. Harding of her other recent New York friend, Jack
-Ashley. But Isabel, although she enjoys, or otherwise,
-an acquaintance with that industrious young man, does
-not know his name, and the adventuress has not even
-the fear of his reappearance to disturb her present serenity.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But if the Don and his daughter are charmed by their
-guest, not so Don Carlos, and it is with difficulty that
-that gentle youth conceals his dislike. An instinctive distrust
-of the beautiful American takes possession of him,
-and to avoid exhibiting this distrust, which he admits to
-himself is unfounded, he spends most of his time in solitary
-walks about the vast pueblo or in long rides upon
-the back of his favorite pony.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Late in the afternoon of the 7th of April, two days
-after the arrival of Mrs. Harding at the quinta, that lady,
-her elderly host and his daughter are seated on the veranda,
-enjoying the light breeze from the gulf which renders
-life in Cuba endurable and even attractive for a
-few hours.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>An interruption to the conversation comes in the person
-of a courier, who rides up to the quinta, delivers to
-Quesada a small packet of papers, and, after a glass of
-wine, departs as hastily as he came.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Don excuses himself and retires to his study. A
-few moments later he reappears and calls to Carlos, who
-is coming up the lawn. Young Navarro bows to Mrs.
-Harding and follows the Don into the study.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have just received important news,” says the latter.
-“Capt. Guerra sends word that a big supply train was
-dispatched by the captain-general from Havana for Santiago
-this morning or last night. Is it not to-day or to-morrow
-that Navarro was to be at or near Jibana?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Carlos nods. “He should certainly be there now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Quesada paces the room, his brow knitted in thought.
-“If word could be got to him at once,” he says, “Dios!
-The train might be captured. But how to send him
-word—there is the obstacle.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“How far is Jibana from Santiago?” asks Carlos, into
-whose mind has come a sudden thought that causes his
-cheeks to alternately flush and pale.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A full day’s journey by rail. No; I fear word could
-not be sent him in time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But if a courier were to leave on the early morning
-train, could he not reach Jibana in season to find Emilio?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Perhaps. It will take several days for the supply
-train to make the trip, but it will also take us too long
-to find a trustworthy messenger.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Do you not consider me trustworthy?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You!” cries Quesada, looking at the slender youth in
-astonishment.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, Don Manuel; I will be the courier.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No, no; I cannot permit it. What would Emilio
-say?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He will be too overjoyed to see me to think of scolding
-you. There is no danger. Simply the discomfort
-of the journey. I will start in the morning.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Against his better judgment, Quesada consents, and
-as Carlos throws open the study door the vision of Mrs.
-Harding flits by.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Over the teacups half an hour later Isabel tells Don
-Quesada that, if there is a conveyance to be easily procured
-at Santos, she believes she will run into Santiago
-for a day’s shopping. And Quesada informs her smilingly
-that if she cares to arise with the sun she may find
-a conveyance in waiting, as Carlos is going to the city
-on business and will undoubtedly be charmed with her
-society on the short journey.</p>
-
-<hr class='c012' />
-
-<p class='c011'>At Havana on the morning of the 8th of April.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>With contracted brows and frowning face, the captain-general
-of Cuba scans a mass of official documents that
-lie upon his desk. Gen. Truenos is plainly displeased
-with the condition of affairs on the island. When he
-sailed from Cadiz it was to “put down the rebellion in
-three months,” as the Spanish press boastfully asserted,
-but Truenos realizes that it is not now a matter of weeks
-or months, but of years, ere the red and yellow of Spain
-will wave again unchallenged over the gem of the Antilles.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>In the meantime, Gen. Truenos gathers from the papers
-before him that some of the matured plans of the
-Spanish have been checkmated through treachery in
-some quarter, and he is not enchanted with the glimpses
-he has obtained of the manner in which his subordinates
-conduct a campaign.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>An officer enters the room with a dispatch and the
-captain-general reaches impatiently for the missive.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Caspita!” he growls, as he glances over the contents.
-“Murillo at least is alive to what is transpiring under the
-very noses of my generals. I wish that I had more like
-him.” Then to the officer: “Send Gen. Velasquez to
-me at once.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As the latter answers the summons, Truenos hands
-him the dispatch, with the query: “Has the supply train
-left for Santiago?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It left last night, your excellency.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It must be stopped. As you will see by Murillo’s dispatch,
-the rebels have learned of the train’s departure
-and a courier is now en route from Santiago to notify
-that infernal El Terredo. If that courier is not intercepted,
-the supply train must be recalled or held. The
-dispatch contains a description of the rebel messenger.
-Now, then, to action.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Truenos unfolds a large map of the island, and as he
-runs his finger along the line which indicates the railroad,
-another dispatch is handed in. The captain-general
-tears it open and reads:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Reported that El Terredo is encamped near Jibana, with
-a large force of insurgents.</p>
-<div class='c017'>Alvarez.”</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>“Ah,” remarks Truenos. “This is dated Cadoza. And
-Cadoza,” he consults the map, “is less than a dozen miles
-from Jibana. Bueno! For once matters are dovetailing
-to my wishes. The courier cannot reach Jibana
-before nightfall, and when he does Alvarez shall arrest
-him. Let the supply train proceed, Velasquez, and immediately
-wire Alvarez to arrest the rebel messenger at
-or below Jibana. Send the description of the young man
-given in Murillo’s dispatch and have Alvarez wire back
-that he understands. Quick! There is no time to be
-wasted.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is to be an exciting night at Jibana.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XLI.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>THE MEETING AT CADOZA.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>It is something like ten miles to Cadoza, another and
-smaller railway town, and Ashley arrives about noon.
-There is no American hotel here. Instead, a lazy Cuban
-keeps a shiftless hostelry to which only necessity would
-drive a man. A party of soldiers are gathered at the
-inn and the yard is filled with their horses.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley tethers his horse at a spot which he can overlook,
-as Rozinante is an animal that would tempt a man
-even more upright than a soldier in time of war. As he
-gives the bridle an extra hitch, a hand is dropped on his
-shoulder and a familiar voice whispers:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Jack Ashley, by all that’s holy!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley turns and cries out:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Hello, Barker, old man! Where’d you get your uniform?”
-surveying the detective’s distinctly military attire.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Hist!” cautions Barker, glancing over his shoulder.
-“Buy a drink at the hotel and then ride up the road a
-piece. I’ll join you there.” Saying which the detective
-walks away and Ashley enters the hotel.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The drinking-room is filled with Spanish caballeria,
-who glance curiously at the American; after procuring
-a glass of wine and a cigar, Ashley mounts and rides
-leisurely up the road. A quarter of a mile from the
-hotel he finds Barker waiting, and he remarks, with a
-grin: “Barker, you’re a fashion plate. Where on earth
-did you get those togs?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Hang it! Will you be serious ten minutes,” growls
-Barker. “Let me tell you that the commanding officer
-of the gang at the hotel is Capt. Julio Alvarez, who is
-none other than our old friend Ralph Felton.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“So? And to trail him you turned trooper, eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Exactly. Through him I expect to find the other
-Felton, his father.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I can tell you a quicker way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Push along to Jibana, ten miles east of here. I left
-Cyrus Felton, Phillip Van Zandt and Louise Hathaway
-there this morning.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Quick! Tell me all you know,” demands the detective,
-aroused by the information imparted to him by his
-co-worker.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley supplies the needed details, and Barker asks:
-“You are reasonably sure that Felton and Van Zandt will
-remain in Santiago for a fortnight?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I think you can depend on that.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then affairs are shaping themselves advantageously
-for our purpose. Our command will go to Jibana this
-evening, but I don’t want any collision there. See the
-position of the game. Van Zandt, if he is Stanley, is
-tracking the son through the father, and I am trailing
-the father through the son, intending to bag both of them,
-as I have an interesting bit of what may prove strong evidence
-against Ralph Felton. But I can’t do anything
-with them at Jibana, and if Van Zandt runs afoul of young
-Felton to-day he is likely to kick over all my plans. Santiago
-is the place to play the last hand in this interesting
-game.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I get the idea,” remarks Ashley. “But what is this
-new evidence against young Fenton?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“This: That I believe he is wearing about his neck
-at the present time the locket that was removed from
-Roger Hathaway’s watch-chain the night of the murder
-and bank robbery.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley whistles softly. “That’s interesting,” he says.
-“But how did you learn this? And while you are explaining
-kindly give an account of yourself from the time
-you jumped New York.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The detective complies, and when the interesting tale
-is completed, Ashley says earnestly: “Barker, old chap,
-my confidence in you has been increased tenfold in the
-last month.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank you,” responds the detective, though he suspects
-some raillery in the newspaper man’s remark.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes. There was a time when I doubted you a bit.
-And when you made arrangements to arrest Cyrus Felton
-I about concluded that the case was to prove after
-all an ordinary affair. But you have redeemed yourself,
-Barker. You have proved that the detective I have
-long admired in the pages of fiction is not a myth, but
-has his prototype in real life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Indeed?” grunts Barker. “Go on.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes; just before you descended upon your victim
-with a triumphant swoop, said victim gave you the slip.
-Undaunted by such a trifling discouragement, you
-struck a bee line for Havana, and there—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Come, stow your chaff. I’d like to know whose tomfoolery
-prevented Felton’s arrest in New York. By
-thunder, if I could have got your ear a moment after I
-discovered Felton’s departure for Cuba, I’d have given
-you a dressing-down that would have knocked some of
-the self-sufficiency out of you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, you can consider yourself forgiven,” says Ashley,
-soothingly. “What’s up at Jibana? Anything special?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes; a rather important bit of work. This morning
-Capt. Alvarez, to give him the name he chooses to sail
-under, learned that a large force of insurgents under El
-Terredo were encamped somewhere between Cadoza and
-Jibana. He wired the fact to Havana and not ten minutes
-later received instructions to intercept a courier for
-the rebels who was on his way from Santiago to Jibana,
-presumably with dispatches to El Terredo. Although only
-his orderly, I am pretty close to Alvarez. The chap has
-taken quite a fancy to me, and to give him his due he is
-a devilishly clever fellow, with more pluck and fighting
-blood in him than a dozen Spaniards. American blood
-will tell, my boy.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, what’s the plan for the night?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“This: We are to flag the train about a mile below
-Jibana and do the trick quietly, as the feeling about here
-is pretty strong against the Spanish; arrest the courier,
-secure the papers, and wire Havana that the road is
-clear, as I understand the dispatches relate to the big
-supply train which is on its way from the capital
-to Santiago. Truenos, you know, is shifting his headquarters
-to the latter city.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then the supply train has already left Havana?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Presumably. The rebels at the Santiago end of the
-line got wind of the shipment, and have sent Don Carlos
-to put El Terredo onto the fact.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Don Carlos!” repeats Ashley, with a start that Barker
-does not notice; “and what disposition will you make
-of the prisoner?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker shrugs his shoulders. “He will probably be
-honorably shot.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Unhappy youth!” murmurs Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is rather tough,” remarks Barker, coolly. “But it
-is the fortune of war.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley’s forehead is wrinkled in thought. “I’d like to
-take a hand in the fun to-night,” he remarks carelessly.
-“I’ve been journeying through the desert for more than
-three days, with not a sign of adventure. I don’t suppose
-it would do for me to show myself to Alvarez. How
-many men has he with him?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Twenty, including himself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Does he intend to take the entire command with him
-to hold up the train?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No; the affair is to be transacted in the quietest manner.
-Alvarez, myself and four more men are to leave
-the hotel about 9 o’clock—the train is due at Jibana at
-10—and proceed down the track a mile or so. A few
-swings of the lantern and the train will stop, Don Carlos
-be removed and the train signaled to go ahead. If the
-arrest were made publicly, word might get to El Terredo,
-and the government’s plans for a safe passage of
-the supply train would be frustrated.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Your business completed at Jibana, I suppose you
-will push directly on to Santiago?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, and you?” queries Barker.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I shall probably follow at a respectful distance. I
-have been stopping at the Hotel Royal in Santiago, and
-you will probably find me there if I am in the city.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“How is Felton looking?” asks the detective.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Badly; I shouldn’t wonder if he had a presentiment
-that some sort of disaster was impending.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And Miss Hathaway?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Superb as ever. There is apparently a tender regard
-existing between her and Van Zandt.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Strange, strange are the workings of fate,” philosophizes
-Barker, and with a sly grin he adds: “How are
-your studies in statuary progressing, Jack?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Suspended for the present, most sympathetic Barker.
-Just now I am interested in a study of the life.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah; some dark-eyed Cuban senorita?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The most beautiful woman in the world,” is Ashley’s
-enthusiastic tribute.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker laughs good-humoredly, then suddenly exclaims:
-“Hello! There’s the trumpet call. I must be
-off. By the way, I’ve changed my name to Parker.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Parker! Why don’t you get a name to match your
-clothes?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Go to thunder!” retorts the detective. “So long. I’ll
-see you at Santiago.” Barker plunges into the woods beside
-the road and returns to the hotel by a circuitous
-route.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You’ll see me again before you reach Santiago,” soliloquizes
-Ashley, gazing after his friend’s retreating form.
-“If Navarro is in these mountains I’ll search him out,
-and we’ll have a hand in the game at Jibana to-night
-that will remind Capt. Alvarez of a certain little straight
-flush he ran up against once upon a time. And if Navarro
-is not to be found, then, by George, I’ll play the
-hand alone!”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XLII.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>“EL TERREDO.”</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>Ashley waits until he believes that Capt. Alvarez and
-his men have got fairly on their way toward Jibana;
-then he mounts Rozinante and rides back to the hotel.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Half a mile to the eastward, the landlord tells him,
-a trail leads off into the mountains. Ashley remembers
-passing it in the morning. Fortifying himself with a
-dinner, he sets forth.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>After he strikes the mountain path, his progress is
-slow and painful. It is a dreary road, steep and treacherous.
-About him nothing but rocks, red clay, cactus
-and bog and a stunted growth of trees.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley left the hotel in the vicinity of 1 o’clock, and
-by 3 he has hardly covered four miles. “If I do not
-secure reinforcements within the hour I must ’bout face
-and ride to Jibana,” he reflects. “A man could never
-find his way out of this howling wilderness after nightfall!
-Jove! It must have been a matter of urgent importance
-that necessitated the dispatching of Don Carlos
-to Jibana. Poor little chap!” he mutters, and as
-he thinks of young Navarro lying under the stars with
-a bullet through his heart, he urges Rozinante at a dangerous
-pace.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Another half-hour goes by. Ashley is now in the
-mountains, and yet no living being has he seen to break
-the depressive solitude. Suddenly there rings out the
-command:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Alto, ahi!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley checks his horse, looks about him and discovers
-that he is the center of a circle of leveled muskets,
-the owners of which are hidden from view.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“All right, gentlemen, I’m out,” announces Jack, cheerfully,
-as he removes his eye-glasses and wipes the dust
-and moisture from them.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Forth from the bushes steps a gaunt Cuban, in a tattered
-uniform and with feet that have long since parted
-association with shoes. Throwing his musket across
-his arm, he hurls an inquiry at Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You’ve got me there,” states the correspondent, and
-smiling around the ominous fringe of musket barrels.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Finally, giving up all idea of a conversation with the
-dark-featured mountaineers, “El Terredo!” he cries, “El
-Terredo! Endonde El Terredo? I don’t know whether
-that’s right or not, but it’s the best I have in stock.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The mountaineer appears to grasp the idea. He
-shouts something to the men in the bushes, and a dozen
-lusty fellows, white and black, come forth. The leader
-makes a sign to Ashley to go ahead, and the latter obeys.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>For a mile or more the little cavalcade proceeds, when
-suddenly the leader of Ashley’s silent escort emits a shrill
-whistle. An answering signal is faintly heard, and then
-the march is resumed. Five minutes later Jack rides
-into a clearing and hears a welcome voice ring out:
-“Welcome, Senor Ashley!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Glad to see you, Navarro,” says Ashley, heartily, as
-he drops from his horse and grips the insurgent leader’s
-hand. “Is this part of your army?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes; hardy fellows, every man of them,” replies Navarro,
-signalling his followers to fall back. “What on
-earth brings you into the mountains?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thought I’d drop round and return thanks for your
-generous gift.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, say nothing of that. I should have been glad
-to have sent you a stable of horses.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“One was enough. But this is incidental. You expect
-dispatches from Santiago to-night?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No; that is, no special ones.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Some are on their way, nevertheless, in the keeping of
-Don Carlos.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Don Carlos!” cries Navarro, turning pale.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ay; but that is not all. The errand of Don Carlos
-has become known at Havana and orders have been
-wired to Capt. Alvarez, who is now on his way from
-Cadoza to Jibana, if he is not already there, to intercept
-the courier, and secure the dispatches.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Navarro staggers as if dealt a blow. “My God! They
-will shoot him like a dog!” he groans, his face white as
-death. “When—where is Carlos to arrive?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At Jibana, at 10 to-night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ho! Then all is not lost,” flashes Navarro. “By
-heaven! I’ll wipe Jibana and every Spaniard in it from
-the face of the earth!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Easy, my friend,” counsels Ashley, grasping the infuriated
-man by the arm. “If Don Carlos is to be saved,
-and also the dispatches—keep those in mind—you will
-need your wits more than a thousand men. Now, listen
-to me a moment. There is time enough.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yesterday, or the day before, or sometime within the
-week, a big supply train left Havana for Santiago. Information
-of its dispatch must have been received by Don
-Quesada, and, knowing your whereabouts—did he know
-them?”—Navarro nods—“he has sent Don Carlos to
-notify you, that the train may be captured. This morning
-Capt. Alvarez was at Cadoza. He heard it rumored
-that a large force of insurgents were encamped in these
-mountains. He wired Havana to that effect, and ten
-minutes later received orders to intercept Don Carlos.
-I learned this while at Cadoza, and realizing the danger
-that threatened your brother, I set off for the mountains,
-trusting to Providence to run across you or some of your
-men. On my way hither I devised a plan by which you
-can outwit Alvarez and later capture the ammunition
-train—and I do not believe in doing things by halves.
-But first, how far is it to Jibana?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“About six miles, as the crow flies.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That means eight or ten by these awful bridal-paths,
-then. You have a score of men here at least. They will
-be more than enough. Now, I will outline my plan and
-we can perfect it on our way to Jibana.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Navarro listens without interruption while Ashley
-talks. When the programme for the night has been
-sketched, Navarro’s dark eyes moisten and he seizes
-Jack’s hands in a grip that makes the latter wince. “Ashley,
-you’re a hero!” he cries.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Nonsense,” laughs Jack.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I can never repay the debt of gratitude I owe you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Don’t try. Suppose we push along to Jibana. We
-can talk matters over on the way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Good. We will start at once,” says Navarro, and
-he communicates an order to his men.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“How many men have you back in the mountains?”
-Ashley inquires of Navarro as they ride side by side
-through the desert of rock and chaparral.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Two thousand. Accessions have been coming every
-day. But they are not directly under my command.
-My part in the revolution has been a rather peculiar one.
-Up to a fortnight or so ago, when I parted with you on
-the Santos road, my identity was as much a mystery
-as that of the president of the provisional republic. Unsuspected
-as a leading factor in the struggle for independence,
-I mingled with the Spanish and listened with
-a smile to the stories told of the prowess of the cruiser
-Pearl of the Antilles and her mysterious commander, El
-Terredo. At the time the Mercedes was sunk I did
-command the Pearl and with my own hand aimed the
-dynamite gun that sent the Spanish battleship to the
-bottom. But most of my time has been spent on land.
-I have done more planning than fighting, and while I
-rejoice not in a single title except that of El Terredo,
-in a land where titles are cheap, my authority is unlimited,
-my orders are implicitly obeyed, and I could ruin
-Cuba Libre with a single command.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Are you not fearful of being recognized during some
-of your trips into the camp of the enemy?” asked Ashley,
-looking at the young man with undisguised admiration.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Navarro smiles. “There will be no further exposure.
-When I left the quinta with you it was to take the field,
-not to leave it until Santiago falls. After the capture of
-the ammunition train, if luck favors us, I leave here for
-the coast,” pointing westward. “In a harbor yonder
-rides the Pearl of the Antilles, and when I take command
-of her it will be the opening of a campaign that Spain’s
-navy will long remember.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Until Santiago falls?” repeats Ashley. “You look
-for the capitulation of that city?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Within a fortnight Gen. Masso will hurl 10,000 men
-upon it. The troops back in these mountains will form
-part of an army against which 20,000 Spanish will not
-avail. Unless you insist upon reporting the siege for
-your paper amid the bursting of shells and the roar of
-artillery, keep away from Santiago—at Santos, for instance.
-The Spanish squadron is already on its way to
-Santiago, and when the city falls into the hands of the
-patriots the battleships will open fire.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then I believe I will return to Santiago at once—or
-after our night’s work is finished. Shall we reach the
-edge of Jibana before nightfall?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Probably not, but in season for the work in hand. It
-will be a night that Capt. Alvarez will long remember
-if memory lasts beyond this world.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By Jove! That will never do,” exclaims Ashley.
-Navarro looks at him inquiringly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Alvarez must not be injured,” declares Jack. “I have
-particular reasons for keeping Alvarez alive for some
-time to come.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Rather awkward,” laughs Navarro. “I don’t see but
-that you will have to overlook the job to-night, and sort
-out your friend, for I expect it will be necessary to kill
-one or two of the gang.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley reflects a moment. “You should be able to
-identify the leader,” he says, and he adds to himself: “As
-for Barker, I shall have to prevent his taking part in the
-affair. It’s a ticklish job all round.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, your wishes shall be respected,” says Navarro.
-“Capt. Alvarez shall live. He is fortunate in having so
-influential a friend at court.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Some of the most worthless of men are more valuable
-alive than dead. I have no friendship for Alvarez, but
-his demise just at present would complicate certain matters
-in which I have a large interest.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The moon is creeping up over a crest of the range,
-when, at a signal from the guide, Navarro calls a halt.
-After a whispered consultation, he tells Ashley that they
-are some little distance below the Jibana hotel and railway
-station.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Two hundred rods beyond us lies the road,” he says;
-“and fifty yards farther is the track. We will hitch here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Very good,” declares Ashley. “Here, then, we separate.
-It is now nearly 8 o’clock,” consulting his watch
-by the glow of his cigar. “Good luck, old man. The
-signal for my reappearance will be the old rallying cry
-of ‘Santiago.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The men exchanged a hearty handclasp. Then Ashley
-dismounts, and headed by the guide, leads Rozinante
-through the brush to the road. Here he vaults into the
-saddle again and canters toward the town.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XLIII.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>THE FIGHT IN THE MOONLIGHT.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“Didn’t expect you back so soon,” declares Landlord
-Carter, answering Ashley’s halloa without the Hotel
-Americano at Jibana.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am a little ahead on my own calculations,” is the reply.
-“Are the Americans still here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No, sir; left this afternoon for Santiago.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Full house, though, I judge,” motioning toward the
-windows of the reading-room, from which emanate
-snatches of song and the clink of glasses.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes; gang of Spanish troopers. Noisy devils. Stop
-overnight, I suppose?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Sure. I want some supper in a hurry and a room at
-your leisure.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The landlord shouts to the hostler, who leads Rozinante
-away to his well-earned grain, and Ashley follows
-Carter into the hotel, with the remark: “I do not care
-to have those chaps in there see me, or know who I am.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“All right, sir. This way. The troopers are all in
-the drinking-room and they haven’t moved out of their
-chairs for an hour.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Supper over, Ashley is shown to his room and the
-landlord is about to make his exit with a cheerful “good-night,”
-when Ashley remarks:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By the way, have you an old coat and hat of any
-description?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Carter scratches his head reflectively. “I have an old
-Grand Army uniform that I brought with me from the
-states. I was a member of the 13th Massachusetts volunteers,
-and after the war joined the Chelsea post,
-when—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That will do very nicely,” interrupts Ashley. “I want
-to borrow the uniform for a few hours.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“All right, sir. I’ll get it out in the morning.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But I want it to-night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Very good, sir. I’ve been too long in this business
-to ask questions. Used to run a small hotel in Boston,”
-grins Carter, as he vanishes. He returns shortly with the
-clothes, and Ashley, after a glance, pronounces them satisfactory.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“One more request, Carter. You noticed, perhaps,
-among your guests a rather short, thick-set party, with
-a dark, closely cropped mustache.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Smokes a short, black pipe and looks like an Englishman?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That’s the chap. Send him up, but don’t attract the
-attention of his companions.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Carter nods and disappears, and a few minutes later
-the good-natured countenance of John Barker is thrust
-into the room.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Buenas tardes, Senor Parker,” is Ashley’s salutation.
-“Come in and shut the door.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Where the devil did you come from?” demands the
-detective, dropping into a chair.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Up the road a piece. I got tired of journeying
-through the desert, and concluded to take the back
-track. Fill up your pipe and make yourself sociable.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Can’t stop. It is nearly 9 o’clock and we start at that
-hour.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, yes; on the business you were telling me of this
-noon. You haven’t changed your plans, then?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No; there was no occasion to.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, it is not absolutely essential that you should
-accompany Alvarez, is it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That was his wish. With the exception of Alvarez
-and myself and the four men who were to supplement our
-little party, the command knows nothing definite of the
-evening’s work. Alvarez doesn’t fraternize much with
-his followers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Why not send a man in your stead?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am afraid it is too late to make any changes in the
-plans. Most of the men below are half-shot now.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley takes a turn about the room and drops his hand
-on his friend’s shoulder. “Barker,” he says, “it was
-only this noon that you requested me to be serious for
-at least ten minutes on a stretch. I never was more
-serious than I am now, when I say to you, don’t accompany
-Alvarez on his errand to-night.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What the deuce are you so interested in the affair for
-all at once?” queries the detective.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, remain here, and I will enlighten you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At this moment the impatient shout, “Ho, Parker!”
-floats up from the hotel yard, and with the remark, “I’m
-off; see you later, Jack,” Barker bounds from the room.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Hang it! I ought to have told him at the outset
-how the land lay,” mutters Ashley. “Now, I suppose I
-shall have to direct my undivided efforts to preventing
-his slaughter at the hands of Navarro’s men.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley slips off his coat and gets into the faded uniform
-of the landlord, dons the Grand Army hat and pulls it
-down over his eyes; examines his revolvers to make certain
-that they are in proper working order, and then,
-blowing out his lamp, seats himself by the open window,
-where he can command a view of the road.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Shortly after 9 o’clock he sees six forms cross the
-band of moonlight into the shadows beyond. He waits
-ten minutes and then glides softly down the stairway and
-out into the night.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Alvarez and his men leave the hotel afoot and instead
-of taking the railroad track, proceed down the highway.
-Alvarez rode over the ground during the afternoon and
-selected a point about a mile and a half below the village
-as the place for holding up the train. Here the road
-crosses the railway and beyond is a long stretch of
-straight track.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The six proceed silently to the appointed spot, and
-then, there being no further occasion for secrecy, they
-fall to smoking and chatting. The train is due at Jibana
-at 10 and there is yet half an hour to wait.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Twenty minutes of it go by, when Alvarez discovers
-that his party is short two men.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ho! Sancho! Francisco!” he calls, and repeats the
-shout, there being no response. “Whither went they,
-Parker?” he asks, turning to his orderly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“They were here a few minutes ago, captain. I last
-noticed them strolling toward the road.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Alvarez utters an impatient growl. “Search them
-out, Pedro, and thou, too, Juan. The train will be here
-in five minutes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As the two troopers addressed take themselves off in
-quest of their companions Alvarez lights a lantern and
-hands it to the orderly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By the way, what disposition is to be made of the
-prisoner?” asks the latter.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“We shall have to shoot him, I expect,” is the cool response.
-“We can’t very well take him with us, and we
-certainly cannot turn him loose.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It seems a rather cold-blooded piece of business. It
-savors of murder.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At the word Alvarez shivers slightly. The nights in
-Cuba are damp and chilly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ten o’clock,” he mutters, holding his watch to the
-lantern. “Where the devil are my men? We shall likely
-have to go in search of the second pair. Ha, the train!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The whistle of the Havana express is heard in the distance
-and the men leap to their feet.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Down the track with you,” orders Alvarez. “As for
-you,” turning to four forms that are approaching from
-the shadows of the highway, “el diablo! What sort of
-men have I in my command?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The troopers make no reply to the angry query of
-their leader.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The orderly swings his lantern and an answering blast
-comes from the train, which draws up upon the crossing.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have an order for the arrest of one of your passengers,”
-Alvarez informs the conductor. “Watch the train
-and see that no one leaves it,” he tells the four troopers,
-and, followed by the orderly, he boards the first coach.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Within this is the object of their search. Don Carlos
-Navarro is reclining wearily in a seat about midway
-of the car. He starts when the soldiers enter and the
-color flows from his cheeks when they stop before him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Alvarez consults a paper, and, glancing from it to
-young Navarro, remarks: “The very chap. I have a
-warrant for your arrest, sir.” Then to the orderly:
-“Remove the prisoner, Parker.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By thunder, he’s fainted,” mutters the orderly, as
-he bears the limp form from the car.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Search him,” commands Alvarez, signaling to the
-conductor to go ahead.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As the train rumbles away the orderly goes through
-the coat pockets of the prisoner, but without finding any
-sign of papers, rebel dispatches or otherwise. Then he
-tears open the unconscious youth’s shirt, and the next
-instant utters an exclamation of astonishment.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By heaven! It’s a woman!” he mutters, as he deposits
-his burden tenderly on the ground and straightens up to
-acquaint his chief of the surprising bit of intelligence.</p>
-
-<hr class='c012' />
-
-<p class='c011'>The moon swings high above the range when Ashley
-leaves the hotel and proceeds down the railroad track,
-the route he naturally supposes Alvarez and his party
-have taken.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As the newspaper man, revolver in hand, moves slowly
-and cautiously along, his eyes on the alert for a glimpse
-of Alvarez’ party, the danger of his situation suddenly
-occurs to him. If the Spaniards have already stationed
-themselves at some point along the rail he is likely to
-stumble upon them at any minute.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At last he sights the party of troopers. Then he
-remembers that the road is close by, and stealing through
-the brush, he proceeds softly along the highway until
-the hum of conversation greets his ear.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He crawls at a safe distance to a position beyond the
-group, not twenty feet distant from the spot where Alvarez
-and Barker are seated.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The brush is dense and he has nothing now to do
-but keep perfectly still. He has seen or heard nothing
-of El Torredo or his men, but he knows that secreted
-somewhere in the waste of chaparral around him are
-stout hearts and strong arms waiting for the cry of “Santiago!”
-to rouse them to swift action.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He watches Alvarez light the lantern, and, as the rays
-fall upon the orderly’s features Ashley thinks: “If I
-could only get within whispering distance of the old man
-I’d give him a quiet tip to make himself exceeding
-scarce.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But at this instant the whistle of the express is heard
-and Ashley raises himself on his elbows. He sees Barker
-start down the track, and his impulse is to follow. But
-to do so he will have to cross a broad belt of moonlit
-open, and at this moment the four troopers come up.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The train comes to a standstill, Don Carlos is removed,
-the cars rumble away, and Ashley notes with satisfaction
-that the search for the papers is being conducted by
-the orderly. “He will not be harmed should Navarro’s
-men open fire, if he keeps close to Carlos,” he thinks.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But where is Navarro? The situation is becoming
-strained for the young man in the Grand Army uniform.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Jack is watching Barker. He hears him utter an ejaculation
-of astonishment as he lays the unconscious form
-of Carlos upon the ground. And then he hears a hoarse
-bellow of rage and sees one of Alvarez’ troopers whip
-out his sword and spring upon the orderly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Less than a dozen feet separate Ashley and Barker.
-With a cry of warning, Jack dashes forward and catches
-the descending arm just in time to avert the certain
-destruction of the detective, who is wholly off his guard.
-As it is, the edge of the falling blade catches Barker
-across the forehead, half-stunning him and cutting a
-gash that means a scar to recall this night in years to
-come. At the same instant Ashley recognizes El Terredo
-in the wielder of the sword, and he whispers, “Easy,
-Navarro,” in time to check a slash at his own head.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Meanwhile the remaining three troopers have hurled
-themselves upon Alvarez and Barker. It all occurs in
-a flash and before Ashley recovers from his surprise
-at the unexpected turn of events a shrill whistle from
-Navarro has summoned nearly a score more of men
-from the surrounding shadows.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Navarro raises Don Carlos in his arms and the youth,
-who has recovered consciousness, clasps his arms about
-his brother’s neck and bursts into tears of joy.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There, be a man,” soothes the latter. “Remain here
-a few minutes while I look after your Spanish friends.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Navarro picks up the lantern and flashes its rays into
-Alvarez’ face.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What’s this?” he cries. “By heaven, Captain Alvarez,
-I think we have met before.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As the two men confront each other in the moonlight,
-there is no need of the lantern for each to see the other’s
-countenance.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>An exclamation of surprise and rage escapes Alvarez’
-lips, and he struggles in the grasp of the two men who
-pinion his arms.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Curse you!” he grits, in a voice choked with passion;
-“I’d give half my life for five minutes of fair play now!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Fair play?” sneers Navarro. “You do not know the
-meaning of the phrase. You are a thief, a blackguard,
-and a traitor!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Alvarez wrenches free by a mighty effort and with a
-fearful oath hurls himself upon Navarro.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XLIV.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>THE METAMORPHOSIS OF DON CARLOS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“Stand back!” commands Navarro, as his men start
-forward to the enraged Alvarez, whose fingers have
-twined about the insurgent leader’s neck. “Back, I say!
-I can handle this gentleman without assistance.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Alvarez is as a child in the steely arms of El Terredo.
-The latter tears the clutching fingers from his throat,
-sweeps the Spanish captain off his feet and dashes him
-to the ground.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Half-stunned and crazed by passion, Alvarez struggles
-to his knees and whips out a pistol. It is knocked from
-his grasp before his arm straightens, as half a dozen
-watchful Cubans pounce upon him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Away with them!” orders Navarro, with a sweep of
-his arm, and as Alvarez and Barker are hustled off in
-the darkness he turns to Don Carlos, who has been a
-silent and trembling witness of the conflict.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In heaven’s name, my brother, what brings you on
-this errand? Don Manuel must be mad.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, Emilio, do not blame Don Manuel,” gently protests
-Carlos, as he embraces Navarro. “The matter was
-urgent, a courier was required, and I myself suggested
-that I be that courier. To see you again I would have
-dared the perils of the journey, even were nothing more
-at stake.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Brave heart,” murmurs Navarro, brushing back the
-ringlets from his brother’s brow. “But let this be your
-last commission, Carlos. I would not jeopardize your
-life for a thousand Cubas. But come, is the news you
-bring me verbal or written?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>For answer Carlos places a letter in Navarro’s hands,
-and the latter reads it by the light of the lantern. It
-is brief, and as he thrusts it into his pocket Jack steps
-forward.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, Ashley,” cries Navarro, grasping him by the hand;
-“the trick was quickly done, eh? Carlos, it is to our
-American friend that you owe your present safety and
-perhaps your life. It was he who warned me of the plot
-for your arrest.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Spare me any praise,” protests Ashley, as Carlos is
-about to express his gratitude. “By good fortune I
-became acquainted with Alvarez’ design, and further luck
-cast me in your brother’s way.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“After you rode for miles into the mountains in search
-of me,” interposes Navarro.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes,” laughs Jack, “for I had a suspicion that, single-handed,
-I should not have been a match for the Spanish
-captain and his men. Now, will you tell me, my
-friend, how you circumvented Alvarez so cleverly?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It was an accident. The Spaniards came down the
-road instead of the railroad track. When they located
-themselves at the crossing we established our party about
-200 yards from them, to wait the coming of the train.
-The watch growing irksome, I and two of my men set
-forth to reconnoiter. We had scarcely proceeded fifty
-yards, when we stood face to face in the moonlight with
-two of the troopers.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Instantly we threw ourselves upon them and stifled
-their attempts to sound an alarm. They were dragged
-back to our ambush, bound hand and foot, and pistols
-placed to their heads with orders that they be instantly
-shot at the first outcry. I rightly assumed that their
-companions would institute search for them, and shortly
-after two more troopers came up the road. These we
-took from the rear and when all four were safely secured
-the idea of exchanging our dress for theirs and rejoining
-Alvarez naturally suggested itself. The rest you know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, and I also know that only by a fraction of a
-second did I prevent your glittering sword blade from
-carving in twain the head of a very warm friend of mine.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“How? The fellow who was holding Carlos?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The same. He is an American, like myself, but it
-suits his purpose for the present to masquerade as a
-soldier of Castile. At the moment I interfered you were
-about to slaughter the man to whom Carlos primarily
-owes his escape to-night, for it was through him that I
-learned of the plan to arrest the messenger to El Terredo.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“San Pedro!” cries the impetuous Navarro, in tones
-of sincere regret. “I should never have forgiven myself.
-But I will at once set him at liberty and add the poor
-consolation of an honest apology.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That is exactly what I do not wish you to do. It
-was to avoid recognition that I rigged out in this uniform,
-and I am confident that Alvarez did not recognize me.
-Barker, that is my friend’s name, may or may not have
-discovered my identity when I cried out to you at the
-moment I clutched your arm. At any rate, I shall not
-attempt to ascertain. The principal point I wish to
-insist upon, if you will permit me, is that Alvarez and
-Barker shall not be separated; further, that they be permitted
-to proceed to Santiago within forty-eight hours.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Your wishes shall be respected, my dear Ashley,”
-says Navarro.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Where have you had the prisoners taken?” asks Jack.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“To the ambush I spoke of, about 200 yards up the
-road.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And your further plans?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I intended to have marched the Spaniards back to
-the mountains as prisoners of war. Within the hour I
-shall send a courier to the revolutionary camp with orders
-to forward two hundred men with which to capture the
-supply train. They should arrive early to-morrow forenoon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Good. That work successfully accomplished, you can
-then permit Alvarez and Barker to depart in peace.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“If you so desire. And now suppose we rejoin my
-men.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As the two move away Ashley’s eye is caught by the
-glitter of a small object upon the ground. He picks
-it up and discovers that it is a locket attached to a broken
-bit of chain. As he turns it over in his hands and seeks
-to examine it in the pale light of the moon, Navarro calls
-to him from the road: “Still surveying the battlefield,
-Ashley?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Coming,” says Jack. He drops his find into his hip
-pocket and proceeds to forget all about it.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What is to be done with Carlos, now that he is here?”
-he inquires as he rejoins the Navarros.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Carlos must return to Santiago at once,” declares El
-Terredo. “If I might add to the already large debt of
-gratitude, I would ask that you accompany him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Gladly, Navarro. My intentions were to make Santiago
-at all speed. You will not have Carlos return by
-rail?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No; by horse.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There is a possibility of running into trouble upon
-his arrival at the city.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“True; and to obviate that I have conceived a plan,
-not startlingly original. Carlos must disguise himself
-in feminine attire.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, then I pose in the role of a knight errant escorting
-a beautiful maiden over the desert sands to her ancestral
-halls.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Navarro laughs softly. “Is the part distasteful to you?”
-he asks.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Nay. My only regret will be that Carlos is not the
-beauteous maid she will represent.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But he will look the part to perfection, I promise you.
-Half a dozen of my men will act as escort and conduct
-Carlos to the quinta. But I want the assurance of your
-active head and arm the greater part of the journey.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank you. And the female toggery—where is that
-to be procured?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That is a more difficult matter to adjust. Do you
-think the same wardrobe that fitted you out to-night
-could be called upon in this emergency?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is possible,” replies Ashley. “There are women
-folks about the Hotel Americana, else the house would
-not present its unusually neat appearance. And there
-being women some of them probably have a dress or
-two to spare. I will endeavor to negotiate with the landlord
-for a suitable costume for your brother.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Excellent. I will await you here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The village is quiet as a churchyard when Ashley
-reaches the hotel. Lights are visible, however, and a
-few raps upon the portals bring forth the landlord.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Carter receives back his Grand Army habiliments
-without comment, but his face is a study when Ashley
-broaches the idea of a feminine rig.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By gum,” he exclaims; “you’re the funniest customer
-I’ve run up against in all my Cuban hotel business, and
-I have met some queer ones, too.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My dear Carter,” confides Ashley, “as a matter of
-fact, I am not altogether right in my head. I am seized
-at frequent periods with the most absurd notions. Fortunately,
-I always have money enough to gratify my
-freakish ideas.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am not so soft as I look,” remarks Carter, dryly.
-“I’ll see what I can do for you. How soon do you want
-the clothes?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“As usual, at once. And while they are being hunted
-up I wish you would have my horse saddled, as I must
-take the road within the hour. It is getting along toward
-midnight. Where are the troopers—drunk or asleep?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Both, most of them,” is the laconic response, as the
-boniface takes himself off to consult with his wife upon
-the subject of providing a costume for a slender young
-man about five feet in height, as Ashley describes the
-prospective wearer of the garments.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Landlord Carter has a daughter who rejoices in the
-possession of three dresses. This alone should constitute
-her the belle of Jibana. For a sum sufficient to
-double her wardrobe the young lady is induced to part
-with the best of her three outfits and a bargain is consummated.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Miss Carter is not at all pleased at being routed from
-her slumbers, but she is a rather pretty young woman,
-and after five minutes of Ashley’s persuasive eloquence
-the landlord’s daughter beams with good nature and
-laughingly inquires: “Do you want a complete costume?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“To the last ribbon,” declares Jack. “By Jove!” he
-adds, mentally, “if Carlos proposes to impersonate a
-young lady, he shall not lack verisimilitude through any
-neglect on my part.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A thousand thanks, Miss Carter,” says Ashley, when
-the clothes are finally tied in a big bundle and given into
-his possession.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Isn’t this too much?” demurs the young lady, glancing
-at the gold coin which he places in her hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not a bit,” replies Jack. “If it is”—he glances around,
-sees that papa Carter has disappeared, and snatches a kiss
-from the young lady’s red lips—“if it is, will you permit
-me to balance the debt?” he finishes. Miss Carter
-blushes furiously, but she does not reprove the audacity.
-Good-looking young men, alas, are few in Jibana.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Half an hour later Ashley turns the bundle of apparel
-over to Navarro and receives the latter’s warmest thanks.
-“At what time do we start?” Jack inquires.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At daybreak. You will need a few hours’ rest before
-then.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I can use them all right. But suppose Alvarez’ men
-come nosing around after their absent leader?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“They will not find him. Follow me and I will lead
-you to our camp for the night. I shall send with you
-as a guide a man who knows the country well.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>With the dawn the little party is under way. Ashley
-stares in astonishment at the metamorphosis that has been
-effected in the person of Carlos. And as Carlos raises
-his veil and returns Jack’s stare with a glance in which
-amusement is mingled with blushing diffidence, the newspaper
-man laughs outright.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I told you he would look the part to perfection,”
-remarks the elder Navarro, as he comes forward to say
-adios. “Take good care of him, Ashley, mi amigo. He
-is very dear to me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“For your sake I will guard him with jealous care,”
-replies Ashley. “Good-by, Navarro. I hope to see you
-again before many days.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Most heartily do I echo the wish. But who can say
-what the future has in store?” murmurs the insurgent
-leader. He watches the little cavalcade until it disappears
-down the forest trail and then turns toward the mountains
-with a heavy sigh.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley drops to the rear of the little procession, lights
-a cigar and relapses into a reverie. Suddenly he bethinks
-him of the locket which he picked up on the scene of
-last night’s struggle.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Although his eyes never before rested upon it, as he
-looks at it now the locket has almost a familiar appearance.
-He is somewhat prepared for the surprise which
-follows his pressing of the spring.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The locket formerly contained two miniatures. One
-has been removed. That which yet remains is an exquisite
-portrait of Louise Hathaway.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As Ashley stares at the gold ornament with its broken
-bit of chain he realizes that he is looking upon the locket
-supposed to have been removed from the watch-chain
-of Roger Hathaway the night the aged cashier came to
-his death in the Raymond National Bank.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XLV.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>THE DOVE AND THE SERPENT.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“Whoa, Rozinante! If thou art as weary of this road
-as I, good beast, a rest will not go against thy grain,
-or grass. What say you to a halt of half an hour within
-the shade of this royal palm?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is the afternoon of the third day since Ashley’s
-return to Santiago, and, having parted with Don Carlos
-and the escorting party on the edge of Santos, this
-is the first opportunity Jack has had to ride out to La
-Quinta de Quesada and pay his respects to Don Manuel’s
-beautiful daughter; for the last three days have been
-busy ones for the newspaper man. Truenos has arrived
-with his fleet from Havana, and the next week promises
-to be big with the fate of Cuba Libre.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley left Santiago an hour ago, and at the rate he
-has been traveling—the heat precludes a gait faster than
-a moderate amble—he judges that he has covered three
-of the four miles to Santos.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Hitching the amiable Rozinante, he throws himself
-upon the turf beneath the foliage-massed branches of the
-royal palm, and lights a cigar; as he smokes he grows
-thoughtful. And from rumination he drifts into moralizing,
-addressing himself to Rozinante.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Look here, Rozinante; if you have any horse sense
-that you’re not using you might assist your master to
-extricate himself from somewhat of a quandary. As you
-know, I came to Cuba principally on business for my
-paper, incidentally to trail down a murder mystery and
-again incidentally to follow a fair face belonging to the
-beautiful Louise Hathaway. A good many chaps in my
-place would have fallen hopelessly in love with Miss
-Hathaway at first sight, but I—well, that is not the cause
-of my quandary. If it were, I could easily dismiss it
-with a philosophical ‘there is no accounting for the tastes
-of most women.’ Ah, no, Rozinante; it is something
-far more serious; for what I want to ask you, Rozinante,
-is whether you believe that I, in my old age, have been
-so indiscreet as to fall in love?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But Rozinante, being a well-bred equine, declines to
-poke his nose into young people’s affairs and continues
-his grass-cropping.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“See how the case stands, Rozinante,” continues Jack,
-tossing a pebble at his four-footed companion to enforce
-attention. “On the one hand is the Senorita Juanita de
-Quesada, the acknowledged Pearl of the Antilles, the
-adored of all the beaux in Santiago; Juanita, the beautiful,
-the accomplished, and the only child of the wealthy
-and elderly Don Manuel de Quesada, who is likely to
-become the president de facto of this cheerful country if
-the yellow fever continues to wilt the imported flower of
-the chivalry of Spain. On the other hand, Rozinante,
-look at me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At this moment Rozinante lifts his head and blinks
-comically at Ashley, who grins back in the best of
-humors.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, I know what you are thinking about, Rozinante.
-You are saying to yourself: ‘What a presumptuous fellow!
-But he is just like all Americans.’ Well, you are
-not far from right, Rozzy. We Americans are a bit
-fresh. But that is a digression. To return to our subject,
-which is the always agreeable one of myself. Now,
-I am not a bad-looking chap. You can see that, Roz,
-with one eye. And I am fairly bright and all that. But
-hang it! I haven’t a bank account bigger than three
-figures, and it will require nerve, my grass-eating friend,
-to step up to the wealthy Don Quesada and say: ‘Don,
-old boy, I love your daughter. May I ask your blessing?’
-No one ever accused me of lacking in nerve, but have I
-enough to supply the demand of such an occasion? Of
-course, if Don Quesada becomes president of the republic
-of Cuba, and makes me his cabinet-premier, I might
-buy a sugar plantation and become enormously wealthy.
-But that, Rozinante, as you are probably aware, is a
-twenty-to-one shot.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The most perplexing feature of the whole affair is
-the fact that I have no good reason to suppose that the
-dark-eyed Juanita returns in the slightest degree the deep
-interest which I feel in her personal welfare. I know that
-she likes me—why shouldn’t she?—but her maidenly
-reserve I do not seem to be able to successfully penetrate.
-Again, my equine friend, I am not so certain that she is
-not hopelessly in love with that effeminate, downy-cheeked,
-pink-and-white and milk-and-water Don Carlos.
-And how any woman can—But, pshaw! What is
-the use in quarreling with the chap? And what is the
-use of my lounging longer here, talking at an unappreciative
-audience? Ah, Juanita, if you would but encourage
-me a bit I would soon solve my perplexity. Just a
-draught from this spring back in the bushes, Rozinante,
-and then we will jog along toward Santos.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As Ashley bends over the spring the grating of carriage
-wheels sounds in the road.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A volante flashes by at what seems reckless speed;
-but the Cuban volante cannot upset. Two ladies are in
-the vehicle, and as they sweep by they glance curiously
-at the tethered horse. An instant later they are gone,
-and the young man who emerges hastily from the bushes
-and looks down the dust-veiled road emits a long, low
-whistle.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Juanita! And unless my usually correct vision is
-deceived, her companion is my old friend Isabel Harding.
-The dove and the serpent! What the deuce is the meaning
-of this unholy intimacy? By heaven, Rozinante,”
-mutters Ashley, as he untethers his horse and vaults into
-the saddle, “the presence of Isabel Harding at Santos
-augurs no good to the house of Quesada. Don Manuel
-must be warned at once.” And kicking Rozinante’s
-ample sides Ashley forces that amiable beast into a violent
-canter.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The remainder of the journey is quickly covered, and
-as Jack reins up at La Quinta de Quesada, Don Manuel
-comes out and greets him cordially.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Welcome, Senor Ashley. You are quite a stranger.
-We had begun to fear that the Spanish press censors
-had suppressed you.” Then, dropping his voice to a
-cautious undertone: “Any news from the field?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, and rather good news. It is reported in Santiago
-that your yacht, the Pearl of the Antilles, engaged a
-Spanish ship of war yesterday, and that El Terredo,
-after lying alongside, fought a desperate and winning
-battle on the decks of the enemy’s vessel.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Bueno!” Don Quesada’s eyes light up with pleasure.
-“Ah, Senor Ashley, there is a fighter after your own
-American heart. If we had a thousand such men we
-should drive the Spanish into the sea and off our loved
-island forever.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I was passed on the road from Santiago by your
-daughter,” remarks Jack, as he sits down in front of a
-brimming glass. “Will she be absent long?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“For the entire evening. Surely you have not overlooked
-the grand ball to be given to-night by the new
-captain-general; a gathering of beauty and of chivalry,
-to express his supreme contempt of the insignificance of
-the Cuban cause,” says Don Quesada, with faint irony.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By Jove! I had overlooked it. The senorita was
-accompanied by another lady. May I inquire her name?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Certainly. She is Mrs. Isabel Harding.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I thought so,” mutters Jack. Then:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What is her business here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Mrs. Harding is my guest,” replies Don Quesada,
-rather curtly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“She has been here long?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“About ten days.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Jack stares and bites his cigar viciously. “You will
-pardon my questioning, Don Quesada. Believe me, I
-am not actuated by idle curiosity.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Don bows and Jack leans over and asks, earnestly:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“During Mrs. Harding’s stay here has she learned anything
-that would lead her to suspect that you are identified
-with the movement to free Cuba?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Naturally. She is one of us,” replies the Don, dryly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“One of us!” repeats Jack, in astonishment.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes. An American, like yourself; she is an enthusiastic
-adherent of the Cuban cause and is enabled to do
-us much service.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then you have trusted her with some secrets?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“She is at this moment the bearer of important dispatches
-to Captain Francisco Guerra.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Great Scott!” Jack jumps to his feet. Don Quesada
-rises with him and demands:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What do you mean?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I mean that I believe Mrs. Harding to be a spy in the
-employ of the Spanish government, and that you have
-signed and given into her hands your own death warrant
-and the utter ruin of your friends!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is a cruel blow. Don Quesada staggers under it
-and sinks helplessly into his chair. Jack pours him out
-a draught of wine and then paces to and fro on the
-veranda, his active mind intent on some path of escape
-from the desperate situation.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At what hour does the ball begin?” he demands.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At eight, I believe,” replies Don Quesada, faintly.
-He is completely crushed.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is now nearly six,” muses Jack, glancing at his
-watch. “And Guerra? Where was he to receive the
-dispatches?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At the ball.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Quick! Pen and paper,” requests Jack. And as Don
-Quesada hurries away to comply the young man murmurs:
-“There is only one chance in a thousand, but I
-must take it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>When the stationery is brought Jack inquires: “In
-what form were the dispatches sent?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In a plain envelope, such as you have there.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Good.” Jack writes hurriedly a few moments, passes
-what he has written over to Don Quesada, and commanding
-simply, “Copy that,” busies himself over another
-letter.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Don Quesada follows the directions without question,
-but as he writes a little of hope comes into his pale face,
-and he looks admiringly at Jack, with the remark: “Can
-you do it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Quien sabe? It’s a desperate chance.” Jack glances
-approvingly at the letter which the Don has sealed, places
-it in his pocket and then addresses and seals the second
-letter, which he gives to the Cuban president.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You must leave here at once. Where is Don Carlos?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He is here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He must accompany you. You must make your way
-with all haste as secretly as possible to Santiago and go
-aboard the United States cruiser America. This letter
-will explain all, and make you welcome. Once under
-the stars and stripes you will be safe when the storm
-breaks.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But my daughter!” cries the Don, suddenly recollecting
-the beautiful Pearl of the Antilles. Jack’s eyes grow
-tender, and, gripping the older man by the hand, he
-says proudly, as their eyes meet.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Don Quesada, I love your daughter. I will answer
-for her safety with my life. And now, I’m off. Remember—to
-Santiago at once. Adios!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>And without waiting to ascertain how his declaration
-of love affects the father of his loved one, Jack springs
-into the saddle and clatters away.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XLVI.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>PLAYING FOR HIGH STAKES.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>Scarcely has a third of the distance to Santiago been
-covered when horse and rider realize that the pace set
-is no longer compatible with the Cuban climate. As
-Rozinante settles into a walk, Ashley pulls vigorously
-on a fresh cigar and revolves the situation in his mind.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Credulous fool!” he grumbles, thinking of the betrayed
-Don Manuel de Quesada. “Played right into the
-enemy’s hands. But wiser and greater men have been
-cozened by the smiles of a beautiful woman. Besides,
-he is Juanita’s father. That covers a multitude of shortcomings.
-Ah, Juanita, I must indeed love thee when I
-would willingly risk my valuable life in thy behalf. I
-am not a hypocrite, and I confess that an absorbing
-interest in my personal welfare has ever been one of my
-glittering characteristics.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Those papers must be recovered. But how? But I
-have a mighty big job on my hands, even if Truenos
-is not a Richelieu. Well, it is the pen against the sword,
-and may heaven maintain the vaunted mightiness of the
-pen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is something after seven o’clock when Ashley arrives
-at Santiago. The first acquaintance he meets, after he
-has put up his horse and proceeded toward his hotel, is
-General Murillo.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Of course you are going to the ball?” remarks Ashley,
-as they shake hands.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Most assuredly General Murillo will be there. It will
-be a grand affair. Senor Ashley must attend, by all
-means.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Senor Ashley means to be there, and he thanks General
-Murillo for an offer to introduce him to a score
-of the prettiest maids in Cuba. And when the general
-insists upon his American friend dining with him, the
-latter quickly accepts. He has no time to waste, he tells
-himself, but he is much relieved when, in reply to his
-query, “And Truenos, is he at the palace?” General
-Murillo informs him that the captain-general has been
-called to Mentos, ten miles distant, on business of an important
-nature, and will probably be late in arriving at the
-festivities, which will not, however, be delayed.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The first flash of hope comes to Ashley at this intelligence,
-and he dines with a lighter heart. After half an
-hour of chat on commonplace topics, he manages to ask
-with well-played indifference:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At what time did Truenos leave for Mentos, general?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Early this afternoon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ah, then it is not yet too late. Ashley breathes
-easier.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, general, you are a loyal adherent of Spain and
-I am an out-and-out American. There is no chance for
-an argument between us. Let me fill your glass and we
-will drink a toast to all honest men and women, whether
-Spaniards or Cubans.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“With pleasure, Senor Ashley. To all honest men—and
-women.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Which does not include your amiable friend, Mrs.
-Harding,” thinks Ashley, as he raises the glass to his
-lips.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The dinner finished, the two men separate, while Ashley
-exchanges his travel-worn garments for an evening
-dress. Half an hour later he and General Murillo leave
-for the palace.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have a vague suspicion that I am booked for an
-exciting evening,” muses Jack, as he enters the brilliantly
-lighted sala of the palace and is duly presented by
-Murillo.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The dancing has already begun, but Terpsichore is the
-last goddess he is desirous of wooing on this particular
-evening. His gaze wanders solicitously about the crowded
-room and rests at last upon her whom he seeks—Juanita.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“She is simply stunning to-night,” he mutters, nervously
-tugging at his mustache.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>And indeed Juanita is radiantly beautiful. Her dark
-loveliness is set off by a bewitching gown of white; she
-is fanning herself with that lazily graceful motion which
-the Saxon cannot imitate successfully, and at the moment
-that Ashley discovers her she is telling Captain Ramon
-Huerta, who has requested with Spanish extravagance
-“the exquisite honor and incomparable delight of a figure
-with her,” that she really does not care to dance this
-evening. At which Captain Huerta looks disappointed
-and scowls a trifle. But he continues to inflict upon her
-a presence which is palpably unwelcome.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Juanita’s eyes light up with unfeigned pleasure when
-Ashley arrives upon the scene and she greets him with
-unreserved cordiality. She presents him to Captain
-Huerta, who bows as stiffly as he holds his revolver arm.
-Ashley returns the salute with a suspicion of exaggeration,
-and grins maliciously when the Spaniard takes himself
-off, after bestowing a glance of unmistakable enmity
-upon the American.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Juanita gazes after the retreating form with distinct
-aversion. “I have a strange fear of that man,” she confides
-to Ashley, who smiles reassuringly and tells her
-that while she is in his vicinity there should be no such
-word as fear in her bright lexicon of youth.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Juanita rewards this gallant speech, which from anyone
-except Jack Ashley would sound boastful, with a glance
-that sets the American’s blood tingling. But he has no
-time to-night for love-making, whether his suit be favored
-or hopeless, and as he drops into a chair beside the Pearl
-of the Antilles he asks casually: “Where is your friend,
-Mrs. Harding?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, you know Isabel?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You passed me this afternoon on the road to Santos,
-whither I was proceeding to pay my most humble respects.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then that horse by the big royal palm was yours?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Even so. I was close by, but your volante swept
-past at such a pace that I hardly recovered from my
-surprise at seeing you before you were gone.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am sorry we started away so early,” Juanita says,
-regretfully.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“So am I,” Ashley thinks, grimly, but he does not tell
-her why.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have seen nothing of Mrs. Harding since I arrived,”
-he remarks.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Juanita’s glance wanders about the room. “There she
-is,” she indicates, “over by the staircase, the object of
-the devoted attentions of Count Gonzaga.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Who the deuce is Count Gonzaga?” wonders Ashley,
-and he intimates as much to his companion.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Have you not met the count? General Jacinto de
-Gonzaga is his military title. He is some sort of an
-assistant secretary of war and is representing the home
-government in Cuba for a short time. He seems desperately
-smitten with Isabel. She is very handsome, do
-you not think so, Senor Ashley?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, very,” replies Jack, absently. He is watching
-the pair by the staircase, and wondering what sort of a
-game Isabel Harding is now playing.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“She is coming this way,” says Juanita. “Have you
-met her?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have not had that pleasure,” Ashley replies, unblushingly.
-“Not lately,” he mentally adds.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He turns away to admire some flowers and soon he
-hears Juanita’s voice: “Isabel, allow me to present Mr.
-Ashley to you. Mr. Ashley, Mrs. Harding.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley turns calmly and the two are face to face. She
-acknowledges the introduction with a composure equal
-to Ashley’s own, and that young man permits a trace
-of admiration to mingle with the expression in his eyes
-which plainly says to the woman before him: “I know
-your game, my lady.” And the answering flash from the
-midnight orbs is: “You have more than a match in me,
-Mr. Ashley. Beware!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“We shall see,” thinks Ashley, and then, led by Juanita,
-who sees nothing of the mutual recognition, the conversation
-drifts into the usual chatter of the ball-room.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You remember, Isabel, that big horse we saw lunching
-so contentedly by the road this afternoon?” prattles
-Juanita.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, dear, and how we wondered whether its owner
-was enjoying a siesta in the bushes.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, it was Mr. Ashley’s horse.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I saw you flit by,” supplements Ashley, “but I was
-back drinking at a spring and your volante was out of
-sight before I had recovered from my surprise at seeing
-you.” He is looking directly at Mrs. Harding and that
-lady smiles, a bit ironically.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And I presume that when you saw the principal attraction
-of El Valle de Bosque Cillos being borne toward
-Santiago, you mounted your horse and sadly followed,”
-ventures Isabel.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No; I knew the senorita was in good company,” Jack
-responds, dryly, “so I continued on to Santos and spent
-a profitable hour with Don Quesada.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah!” Mrs. Harding regards him narrowly from between
-her half-dropped eyelids.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I say profitable,” continues Ashley, “as I did not
-know, until so informed, that Don Quesada numbered
-the charming Mrs. Harding in his list of acquaintances.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Of course you congratulated him.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Most assuredly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The half-veiled contempt expressed in Isabel’s face
-exasperates Ashley. Hidden somewhere in that corsage,
-against which beats the falsest heart in Cuba, are papers
-that mean the ruin of the innocent girl at his side.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He must have time to think, think, think. So he
-excuses himself and leaves the crowded ball-room for
-a walk in the cool air of the garden.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>In one corner of the spacious inclosure he finds a little
-arbor, and in this nook Ashley sits and smokes and thinks,
-but no plan for the confusion of the adventuress suggests
-itself, unless, as he growls vindictively, he abducts or
-chloroforms her.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>His meditations are disturbed by voices close at hand.
-Two gentlemen have, like himself, forsaken the heated
-ball-room for the outer air, and they pause in their stroll
-within a few feet of Ashley’s retreat.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Jack pays no attention to them until by their voices
-and conversation he realizes that one of them is Captain
-Julio Alvarez and the other is Count Gonzaga. “That’s
-a happy combination,” he laughs softly. “They ought to
-get a few more of Isabel’s friends and hold a reunion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You are an excellent judge of beauty, Count Gonzaga,”
-he hears Alvarez remark, with a faint sneer. “I
-have been noticing your devotion to the handsome Mrs.
-Harding, the widow of the enormously wealthy ship-owner.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, amigo, is she not beautiful?” the count replies,
-enthusiastically. He appears to be in rare spirits. “I
-must ask you to congratulate me, Captain Alvarez.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have—on your excellent taste.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“On more, amigo. The beautiful American has consented
-to become the Countess Gonzaga.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The devil!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You are surprised.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Rather. I am surprised that a gentleman of Count
-Gonzaga’s position should think of linking his name with
-a lady of her character.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Por Dios! Your meaning?” cries the count, with a
-flash of Castilian wrath that causes Captain Alvarez to
-curse his hasty words, which must have emanated from
-jealousy or something deeper. Ashley wonders what.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, nothing,” Alvarez replies, carelessly. “You must
-pardon my unthinking remark, count. Believe me,
-I—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You will explain yourself to me, and at once, senor,”
-declares Gonzaga, with frigid emphasis.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>There is a silence, which Alvarez, who sees that he is
-in for it, finally breaks with: “Very well, count, but I
-warn you that you will regret your insistence. You will
-have to excuse me now, as I have promised to dance this
-next figure. Meet me at this place a quarter of an hour
-hence, and I will endeavor to satisfy you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Very good,” grits Gonzaga. “I will be prompt,” and
-the men separate.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The fair Isabel is a star, surely,” soliloquizes Ashley.
-“Who would have dreamed that she was playing her
-cards for the role of a countess? Alas! Gonzaga will be
-brutally undeceived by Alvarez. The latter has put his
-foot in it and there is only one way out. Jupiter!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley leaps to his feet, for the inspiration of his life
-has come to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By George, I have it! But will she do it?” he cries.
-“She must do it. It is not her nature, still it’s a chance,
-and if the fates are on the side of right Don Quesada and
-the senorita are saved!”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XLVII.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>THE PEN WINS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>Upon his return to the ball-room Ashley is taken to
-task by General Murillo. “I have been searching for you
-for over half an hour,” the general assures him. “Come
-over here while I introduce you to the prettiest girl in
-Cuba.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Confound his kindness,” grumbles Jack, mentally,
-who has no time to squander in talking nonsense with
-dark-eyed senoritas. There is work to be done. But
-he follows Murillo over the floor and is amused to find
-himself being introduced to Juanita de Quesada, who is
-the center of attraction of a group of young Santiago
-swells.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, Senor Ashley and I are old friends,” cries Juanita,
-smiling at General Murillo.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Are you, indeed?” remarks the general, favoring the
-American with a keen glance. “Well, I will leave you
-together with my blessing,” and the warrior takes himself
-off.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have much to tell you to-night, senorita, but at
-another moment,” Ashley says, as he makes his excuses
-for terminating a conversation that has hardly begun.
-“I have work to do, and it means much to you,” he
-explains to the pouting young lady, and leaving her
-somewhat mystified and not at all pleased, he goes off to
-hunt up Isabel Harding.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He finds the latter alone. For excellent reasons Count
-Gonzaga is holding himself aloof. Captain Alvarez is
-not in sight.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Don’t you find the atmosphere of the room close?”
-he inquires, as he reaches Isabel’s side.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not at all. I am entirely cool,” she responds.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But it is ever so much pleasanter in the garden,” persists
-Ashley, as he twists his mustache and meets her
-curious glance with a smile that is amiability itself. Without
-another word she rises and accepts his extended arm.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“How delightful it is out here under the stars,” rattles
-on Jack, as they emerge into the garden. “These glorious
-nights almost repay one for the sweltering days.
-Ah, here is an ideal summer house. You will find it as
-cozy as a society darling’s boudoir. Won’t you take a
-seat?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mrs. Harding laughs, a trifle ironically, as she sinks
-upon the wooden bench that runs around the interior.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Now, Mr. Ashley,” she remarks, “will you be good
-enough to inform me what you have brought me out
-here to tell me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“With pleasure, madam,” responds Ashley, dropping
-back into his old deliberate self.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“If you will let your thoughts stray back about six
-weeks, Mrs. Harding, you will perhaps remember that
-on a certain evening I had the pleasure of relating to you
-a fairy tale, to assist you in dissipating the monotony of
-an attendance upon the French ball. The fairy tale
-lacked the closing and most interesting chapter, you will
-recall, and I requested that you supply it. ‘Not to-night,’
-you protested, but you kindly promised me an interview
-upon the following forenoon.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That promise, I regret to say, you broke with as little
-ceremony as one would—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I presume,” interrupts Mrs. Harding, “that it will be
-unnecessary for me to assign my reason for failing to
-keep my promise.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Quite. It would not mend matters. Now, suppose,
-as the novelists say, we take up the thread of our narrative,
-which was broken when I left your box at the
-garden.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Suppose we do? What do you desire of me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I wish to possess myself of certain information in
-your keeping.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Relative to that Vermont affair?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Precisely.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I can tell you nothing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Excuse me. Perhaps you mean you will tell me
-nothing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“As you please, sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I think you will,” Jack says, calmly. “Will you pardon
-a cigar, Mrs. Harding? Perhaps the smoke will
-keep these inquisitive mosquitoes at a distance.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Isabel laughs unpleasantly. “Do I understand you
-to intimate that you will resort to force?” she inquires,
-sarcastically.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Assuredly; although I don’t fancy the word ‘force.’
-‘Induce’ is the better term.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A truce to your euphemism, Mr. Ashley. I am curious
-to learn what possible lever you can possess.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I shall not delay the information. I have in mind a
-lever whose potency you can readily appreciate. I refer
-to the Count de Gonzaga.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Good heavens! What do you mean?” In awed,
-whispered tones.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I think you grasp my meaning,” Jack returns, coolly.
-“Or will it be necessary for me to relate another fairy tale,
-concerning a beautiful woman who posed successfully
-for a time as the widow of an enormously wealthy American
-ship-owner?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You would not dare—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I would dare do several things, if the occasion for
-unusual trepidity seemed to arise. Besides, the vaunted
-brotherhood of man—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The vaunted brotherhood of man would lead you to
-betray a defenseless woman—one who never did you
-aught of harm, would it?” pants Isabel.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My dear Mrs. Harding, consider how easily you may
-avert such an unfortunate denouement. I don’t care a
-rap about Count Gonzaga. Conceding your natural
-charms, which are legion, the count’s affections are
-undoubtedly centered in your supposed fortune. That is
-usually the principal item in the matrimonial calculations
-of European nobility that seeks alliance with American
-beauty. As a matter of fact, I should rather enjoy seeing
-Gonzaga thrown down, if you will excuse the slang.
-Come. A bargain is a bargain!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>There is a silence. Isabel is presumably weighing the
-situation carefully, and she disappoints Ashley by rising
-and remarking: “I think I will return to the ball-room,
-Mr. Ashley, if you will kindly escort me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“One moment,” detains Jack. Isabel resumes her seat.
-“Have you carefully considered the probable result of
-your silence?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Perfectly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You must have some powerful reason for sealing your
-lips on that Raymond affair,” comments Jack; and then
-he growls under his breath: “Why in thunder don’t they
-come?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“We may as well terminate this interview. Do your
-worst, Mr. Ashley.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That is rather theatric, Mrs. Harding,” banters Jack.
-“Clever woman, this,” he thinks. “She knows I would
-not be such a beastly cad as to tell her story to Gonzaga.
-Ah!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Footsteps are heard approaching. They stop just
-without the summer house.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Stay!” Ashley whispers in Isabel’s ear. “The count is
-here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>She starts to ask, “how do you know it is he?” but
-remains mute. An instant later the new arrival is joined
-by another.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Captain Alvarez!” breathes Jack, gripping Isabel’s
-arm. “Not a word!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Isabel sinks into a seat. Ashley can feel her tremble.
-He tosses away his cigar and remains standing. The
-silence that broods over the garden nook is broken by
-Captain Alvarez, who is so near the listeners that they
-could reach out and almost touch him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“While I can find no objection, Count Gonzaga, to
-satisfying your unfortunate demand, I would advise that
-you drop this matter where it is. No good can come of
-wittingly injuring your amour propre. Believe me—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Captain Alvarez,” interrupts the count, frigidly, “you
-made a distinct accusation against the character of the
-lady whom I have honored with an offer of my hand.
-I demand that you retract your statement and apologize
-for its utterance, or prove its truth.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am willing to recall my hasty words, count.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then you lied?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>There is a short but eloquent silence. “Very well,” says
-Alvarez. “I perceive that you are determined to be
-wholly undeceived as to the imposition which has been
-put upon you. Know then that the wealthy American
-widow, Isabel Harding, is neither wealthy nor a widow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not a widow?” repeats Count Gonzaga. “Caramba!
-What, then, is she?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What you will,” replies Alvarez, indifferently. “What
-usually is an adventuress?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But the proof? Dios! The proof?” demands the
-count. Perchance Alvarez is lying to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A low, unpleasant laugh from the latter. “I had the
-honor of being at one time the very good friend of
-madam,” he says.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Scoundrel!” grits Ashley in Mrs. Harding’s ear. The
-critical moment is at hand. “Victory!” murmurs Jack,
-as Mrs. Harding, who has risen and is twisting her lace
-handkerchief into shreds, gasps once or twice as Alvarez
-finishes his brutal story, and then faints in Ashley’s
-arms.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“El Diablo!” the latter hears the count ejaculate, and
-with the mortification in his voice is mingled much of
-mental relief.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Rather indelicate, but when a life is at stake delicacy
-must go by the board,” mutters Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, the precious papers! Now, my lady, we will part
-company.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The fanfare of trumpets in the ball-room announces
-that the captain-general has at last arrived to grace the
-festivities with his presence.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Have you quite recovered?” Ashley asks Isabel, with
-as much solicitude in his voice as he can command.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, thank you. You see I am yet a woman,” she
-says bitterly. And she adds in tones of intense hatred:
-“The cur! The coward! But come, let us return to the
-ball—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>They have reached the entrance of the ball-room. Mrs.
-Harding stops and favors Ashley with the kindest look
-she has ever bestowed upon him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Mr. Ashley, you are no friend of mine. In fact, you
-are the only man I have ever feared. But I know you
-would not have been the coward that Capt. Alvarez has
-proved.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley’s response is an enigmatic smile. He remarks,
-lightly: “I have the honor of wishing you a very good-evening,
-Mrs. Harding.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He watches her disappear in the crowd and sees her
-a few moments later in the long line that is passing the
-“reviewing stand.” As she pauses an instant before the
-captain-general Ashley notes the latter incline his head
-slightly. Some words are spoken and Mrs. Harding continues
-on.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A triumphant smile flits over Ashley’s face; he thinks
-exultingly:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The pen wins this time! Now for Juanita!”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XLVIII.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>THE SWORD TRIUMPHANT.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“You are in unusually good spirits this evening, Senor
-Ashley.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am always happy when I am near you, senorita,” is
-Jack’s fervent response. At which speech, the warmest
-she has ever heard from his lips, Juanita grows as rosy
-as the morn and does not appear displeased.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Is that dreadfully important work which has occupied
-so much of your time this evening yet finished?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Very nearly.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And you can devote a little time to your friends?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am ready to devote the remainder of my existence
-to one of them, senorita.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, what unselfishness! When do you expect to
-begin?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Whenever I have reason to believe that such devotion
-will be rewarded by—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Reward? Then it is not a bit unselfish and does not
-deserve encouragement,” interrupts the young lady, with
-a toss of her head.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You are cruel, senorita,” murmurs Ashley, but his
-voice does not betray a great deal of grief.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am just,” declares Juanita. “While I have been
-sitting here at the mercy of a lot of frightfully stupid men,
-you have devoted your time to the entertainment of Mrs.
-Harding. Perhaps that was the devotion you alluded to
-a moment ago,” ventures the young lady, with a pretty
-frown.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Hardly,” laughs Jack. “You do not know Mrs. Harding,
-senorita.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Perhaps not as well as you, Senor Ashley. My opportunities
-have not been so good. I saw you come in
-from the garden. One would hardly judge that you had
-met her only half an hour ago.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, the fair Isabel and I are old friends,” Ashley
-remarks, serenely.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Indeed? Yet you told me—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I will tell you more, senorita.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I don’t want to hear any more,” opposes Juanita
-crossly. “You have deceived me once and I—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Deceived thee? Ah, Juanita—” Jack checks himself
-as he notes the flush of annoyance in her cheeks.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Hello! There’s the chap I’ve been looking for,” suddenly
-remarks Ashley, as he catches a glimpse of Capt.
-Guerra over by the big staircase. “Will you pardon me
-just a moment, senorita? That will complete my evening
-work, and then if a lifetime of devotion will—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Stop! I shan’t hear another word,” breaks in Juanita,
-imperiously. “And you need not hurry back,” she adds
-irritably, provoked by Ashley’s serenity.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Meanwhile Ashley is telling himself that he must be
-progressing in his wooing, since Juanita has betrayed
-symptoms of jealousy. “Devotion? She little knows how
-much need she has of a clear head and strong arm,” he
-thinks. “Ah, Capt. Guerra,” he remarks, pausing before
-a distinguished-appearing gentleman who is idling by the
-staircase, “will you be good enough to follow me into the
-garden?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley passes out and Guerra follows him curiously.
-When they are alone and unobserved Ashley takes an envelope
-from his pocket and presses it into the captain’s
-hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Read that and then destroy it,” he directs.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Your meaning, senor?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No explanation is necessary. I am ignorant of the
-contents of the documents further than that their publicity
-would be deuced awkward for you and incidentally for
-myself.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Wonderful! How came you by them?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That is my affair, senor. Had I not rescued them
-they would now be in the hands of Truenos. Adios!”
-And Jack leaves the mystified Spaniard to his own devices.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Meantime a little scene that would afford Ashley the
-keenest delight to witness is taking place in one of the
-rooms of the palace. Gen. Truenos is seated at a table
-littered with maps and papers and Gen. Murillo and Isabel
-Harding have just been ushered into the apartment.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You have succeeded?” Truenos asks as Mrs. Harding
-approaches.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Beyond expectation. Quesada may not be the head
-and front of the offenders, but he is certainly one in
-whom there has been placed some authority.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Quesada is now a fugitive,” asserts Truenos.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Indeed?” This is news to Isabel. “Ashley’s warning,”
-she thinks. “When did you learn this, general?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“To-day. He has taken refuge on board the United
-States cruiser. I have strongly suspected Quesada, but
-have not particularly feared him. Quesada is a figurehead.
-What I want is proof of conspiracy on the part of
-men any one of whom is more troublesome than a dozen
-Quesadas—men I suspect to be conspiring against the
-government even while pretending to serve it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Would certain dispatches from Don Quesada addressed
-to Capt. Francisco Guerra furnish the necessary
-evidence?” asks Mrs. Harding.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah! You have intercepted such?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Better. I am the bearer of them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Truenos regards his spy admiringly. “Bueno! The
-papers at once!” he cries.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And my reward?” suggests Isabel, as she takes from
-her bosom the precious envelope.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Anything that you may ask—in reason,” replies the
-captain-general, reaching impatiently for the documents.
-“Why, how is this? This letter is addressed to me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“To you?” exclaims Isabel in astonishment. “Surely—why—there
-must be some mistake.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Evidently,” rejoins Truenos, as he breaks the seal.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Isabel watches him anxiously as he scans the document.
-A pale sickly light is beginning to break upon her bewilderment.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley! The papers have been tampered with! It was
-for that he led her to the garden. How did he know, before
-they spoke, who were the two men whose meeting
-had interrupted their conversation in the summer house?
-And, oh, how weak she had been! She sees it all now and
-she swears she will be revenged. Aha! She knows where
-to wound him, to repay him in awful torture for the trick
-he has played upon her.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>While these dark thoughts are flitting through her
-mind the captain-general has finished his brief examination
-of the letter, which he tosses over to her. She picks
-it up mechanically and reads:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“To His Excellency, Honorato de Truenos: Indisposition
-prevents my attending the grand ball to-night and offering my
-congratulations upon your safe arrival at Santiago. Under
-the directions of such a general there should be no difficulty
-in quickly subduing the insurrection, which I believe to be
-nearly at an end.</p>
-<div class='c017'>Manuel de Quesada.”</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>“I have been tricked, Gen. Truenos,” says Isabel,
-crushing the paper in her hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It would seem so,” remarks the captain-general. It is
-apparent that he is vastly disappointed. “Come, tell me
-of your stay at the quinta, all you know concerning Quesada
-and his movements.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>There is much of importance to relate, and when Mrs.
-Harding has finished her story Truenos summons Capt.
-Huerta.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Take a dozen of your men and repair at once to La
-Quinta de Quesada. You know where it is?” Capt.
-Huerta knows perfectly. “Ransack the house thoroughly
-and fetch me every scrap of writing upon the premises.
-Gen. Murillo, do you follow in the morning and
-look over the place. Go!” to Huerta.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The latter bows and leaves the room. Mrs. Harding
-follows. “One moment, Captain Huerta,” she says.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A short but earnest conversation ensues. Isabel talks
-in rapid whispers, and the Spanish captain listens eagerly,
-while surprise, anger, hope and malicious joy are mirrored
-in succession upon his swarthy countenance.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Within ten minutes,” he breathes, and hurries away
-to execute the commands of the captain-general.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I told you it would be better if you delivered the
-papers to me during the afternoon,” General Murillo
-tells Mrs. Harding, after Truenos has gone. “Who has
-been the cause of your undoing?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Isabel tells him of her suspicions, which she has come
-to regard as virtual facts, and Murillo is inclined to
-agree with her.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The game is not yet played out, general,” flashes
-Isabel.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, take care, take care,” admonishes Murillo, as
-they separate.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, here is the very man now,” frowns the general,
-as he re-enters the sala grande and is greeted by Ashley,
-who has just left Captain Guerra.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My dear Senor Ashley,” he observes dryly, “let me
-give you a piece of advice.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“With pleasure, general. I am always open to kindly
-counsel, although I do not always follow it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Do not let your interest in a young lady lead you
-into mixing with the affairs of a country toward which
-you are expected to maintain a strict neutrality,” is Murillo’s
-blunt remark.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I don’t think I catch your drift, general,” drawls
-Jack. But he does, and the gleam of quiet triumph in his
-blue eyes irritates Murillo.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have warned you,” says the latter, and turns on his
-heel.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“So I am suspected,” thinks Ashley. “I imagined the
-fair Isabel would like to know to whom to ascribe her
-confusion. And now to undeceive Juanita.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But Juanita is not to be found. There are few guests
-remaining in the sala and she is not among them.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley explores the garden, with like success. Then
-he questions the line of volante drivers drawn up before
-the entrance to the palace grounds. Have any of them
-seen Senorita de Quesada? None that he interrogates
-have had that pleasure, and the Pearl of the Antilles is
-known by sight to nearly all of them. Ashley is in
-despair.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The Senorita de Quesada?” queries one of the Cuban
-jehus, who has just joined the group. “The senorita and
-another lady were driven away in a volante not ten minutes
-ago.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In what direction?” demands Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“To Santos.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“To Santos? Heavens, man, they cannot go to Santos
-at this hour of night unescorted!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Unescorted? Is not Captain Huerta and his men all
-the escort that one could desire?</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>This intelligence is a frightful strain upon Ashley’s
-composure, as he thinks of Juanita, Isabel, Captain
-Huerta and the deserted La Quinta de Quesada.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Quick! To Santos!” he cries, springing into a volante
-and tossing a handful of coin to the driver. “To Santos
-as fast as your horse will travel!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The man leaps to his seat, cracks his whip and they
-are off.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As they clatter through the streets of Santiago and
-swing into the road which Ashley traversed only a few
-hours before, Jack shouts impatiently, “Faster! Faster!
-Great Scott! This is no funeral! Though it may be,
-before I’m through with it,” he adds, savagely.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But senor, we will dash the volante to pieces,” protests
-his charioteer.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Inwardly chafing, but realizing the futility of impatience,
-Ashley forces himself to be calm. It seems an age
-before the distance to Santos is traversed, but finally the
-outlines of the few buildings which the hamlet boasts are
-seen against the starlit sky.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The driver reins up his steed for further directions.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“To La Quinta de Quesada,” orders Ashley, and they
-rattle on.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Suddenly rings out the command, “Alto!” and the
-volante stops with a suddenness that nearly unseats its
-passenger, directly in front of El Calabozo de Infierno,
-the local carcel.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What in the devil’s name—” begins Ashley, but he
-is seized and dragged roughly from the volante, a pistol
-clapped to his head and the command hissed in his ear:
-“Callese!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Lights appear about the entrance of the carcel, and as
-Ashley is hustled toward the gloom beyond he sees,
-standing near the passageway and watching the strange
-proceedings with a troubled face, the aged priest whom
-he noted at La Quinta de Quesada a few days before.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley is hurried through the patio and along the ill-smelling
-corridor beyond to an open cell. Into this he
-is pushed and his ungentle captor tells him:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“En la manana muere V. sobre el garrote!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank you,” says Ashley. His stock of Spanish is
-just sufficient to enable him to comprehend the nature
-of the cheerful intelligence, which is to the effect that he
-is to die by the iron collar to-morrow.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Will you leave the light?” he requests.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The smoky lantern is set upon the floor. Then the
-door clangs to, there is a rattle of chains and the echo
-of departing footsteps and he is alone.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER XLIX.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>EL CALABOZO DE INFIERNO.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>An ordinary man, suddenly placed in the position in
-which Jack Ashley finds himself, would perhaps exhaust
-his strength in useless imprecations upon his oppressors,
-and finish by sinking into utter hopelessness as to his
-fate.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But, as was intimated when the reader first made his
-acquaintance, Jack Ashley is not an ordinary man. The
-practice of self-restraint has enabled him to retain to a
-remarkable degree his self-possession at more than one
-exciting moment, and his sublime confidence in himself
-is never wanting.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Clearly his arrest has been arbitrary and unofficial.
-He has not even been searched. His watch and money,
-his papers, even his revolver, are upon his person.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And best of all, they have not deprived me of this
-incomparable solace,” he says, as he draws a cigar from
-his pocket and lights it at the smoky little lantern in the
-cell. Then he throws himself on the wretched straw
-couch, to think of some way out of the snare into which
-he has stumbled.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Isabel Harding has undoubtedly imparted to Truenos
-all she knows, all she suspects. But suspicion is not
-proof. And the strongest suspicion would not have warranted,
-much less likely have caused, such an outrage
-upon a citizen of the United States.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Plainly there is some private villainy back of it all.
-Then a light flashes through his brain.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Juanita! In his selfish though natural consideration
-of his own unpleasant position he has forgotten for the
-nonce the Pearl of the Antilles, the one woman who has
-ever stirred his light heart to a love that, once given,
-means all of life to him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He sees it all now. Don Quesada gone, his daughter
-unprotected, worse than unprotected as the companion
-of Isabel Harding, and at the mercy of Captain Raymon
-Huerta, who has haunted her for weeks and forced his
-unwelcome attentions upon her! The only man who
-could lend a defending arm locked fast in a Cuban jail,
-with the prospect of being garroted before another sun
-goes down!</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is infamous! Ashley leaps to his feet and paces the
-cell like a raging lion, and shakes the iron door with
-impotent energy.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Pshaw!” he cries, and laughs recklessly. “What is
-the use in wasting my strength and nerves in this manner?
-Courage, Jack. If the senorita is to be saved,
-and yourself incidentally, you will need all of your
-strength and nerve. Let’s take an account of stock.”
-And he falls to meditating again.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>How come Captain Huerta and his men to be at Santos
-at this hour of the night? Sent by Truenos, who perhaps
-has ordered Don Quesada’s arrest, or, if he knows of
-the latter’s flight, has ordered the quinta to be searched.
-How came Juanita to leave for home without bidding
-him adios? She could not have been so piqued by jealousy
-or by his good-natured banter that she would have
-left the palace without even a cold farewell. Isabel’s
-work, without a doubt. Why has he been set upon by a
-horde of ruffians and thrust into a cell? Because his
-presence at Santos would interfere with some devilish
-plans afoot. Again Isabel’s work, assisted by Captain
-Huerta.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But what vile plot is maturing outside the walls of
-El Calabozo de Infierno while he lies helpless here? As
-he thinks of Juanita he grits his teeth in suppressed fury
-and chews his cigar to a pulp.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As for his captor’s gratuitous information, that he is
-to be executed in the morning, nonsense! That is what
-an American would term a cold bluff. They would not
-dare to proceed to such an extremity. They have gone
-to dangerous lengths already.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At this moment his meditations are broken in upon by
-a key being inserted in the cell door. The door swings
-open and closes behind Father Hilario, the venerable
-padre of the little church of San Pedro. At sight of the
-priest, Ashley’s composure returns.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Good-morning, father,” is his salutation. “I noticed
-you at the entrance to my lodgings for the night, and I
-should have spoken, but my friends rather insisted on
-my maintaining a strict silence. I believe ‘callese’ means
-keep your mouth shut, or something of that sort, does
-it not?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have but a short time to remain,” says Father Hilario,
-surveying with some wonder the composed face of
-the young man before him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, whatever your errand may be, I am indebted
-to you for this visit,” remarks Jack. “It’s confoundedly
-lonesome here. I will not apologize for my apartment,
-as it is not of my own selection. Now, what can I do for
-you, father, or what can you do for me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My son, you are not of the faith of Rome, but I have
-called to offer you the consolation which a clergyman
-can extend in your last hours.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Is it as bad as that? Really, I don’t take any stock
-in this garroting business. I believe that is thrown in for
-theatrical effect.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Father Hilario shakes his head. “Captain Huerta
-is a desperate man,” he avows. “There is nothing to
-prevent his wreaking his enmity upon you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, is there not? Thank you, father, for the offer of
-your ministrations, but really, I do not believe I shall
-need them. Do not misunderstand me,” Ashley adds,
-quickly, as a pained expression passes over the kindly
-face of the priest. “What I mean is that I have too
-healthy an interest in life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness
-to pass many hours in such a stuffy, ill-smelling
-donjon as this.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Father Hilario holds up a warning finger. “There are
-listeners about,” he says.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Let them listen. If their stock of English is equal
-to my collection of Spanish they will be vastly entertained
-by my remarks.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You will attempt to escape?” queries the priest, in a
-cautious whisper.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At the first opportunity.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The attempt will fail.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It will succeed,” retorts Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No; it will fail,” repeats Father Hilario. “The carcelero,
-always watchful, will be doubly vigilant to-night.
-He has probably been bribed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But a larger bribe—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Is out of the question. His life would pay the
-penalty.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I don’t believe it. But enough of that,” says Ashley,
-impatiently. “Now tell me, father, of the Senorita de
-Quesada. Have you seen her to-night?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The priest is silent. In his muteness, Ashley finds the
-confirmation of his worst fears.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Speak, man!” he cries impatiently. “Do you know
-that the life and happiness of the senorita are more to me
-than my own existence? Speak!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“She is in the church of San Pedro.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In whose company?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“She is alone.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Alone in the church of San Pedro after midnight?
-What mean you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“She is a prisoner.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A prisoner? Ten thousand devils!” rages Ashley,
-striding to and fro in his narrow cell.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Calm yourself, my son,” remonstrates Father Hilario.
-“Nothing can be accomplished by such wild outbursts.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, yes; I’ll be calm!” grits Ashley. “By heaven, I’d
-give ten years of my life for ten minutes of liberty!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Come. Time flies, and the carcelero will soon be
-here,” admonishes Father Hilario. “Is there aught I
-can do for thee, my son?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley forces a tranquillity of mind that he little feels.
-“How came you to learn of the senorita’s imprisonment?”
-he asks.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I was returning from a midnight summons to a deathbed
-and had nearly reached my house when Captain
-Huerta and his men entered the town, escorting a volante.
-Suddenly the party were attacked in the darkness.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By Huerta’s own men?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That was doubtless part of the plot. The two women
-in the volante were separated. The senorita was borne
-fainting into the church and then quietness reigned again.
-I lingered about the scene, and was a witness of your
-arrest not many minutes afterward. I begged permission
-to see you, and the carcelero, in granting it, bade me
-roughly to tell you that you die on the morrow.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A merry knave,” remarks Ashley. “Well, father, you
-can be of great service to me. Will you not bear a message
-from me to General Truenos? Or, no; hang Truenos.
-To General Murillo, then. You know him. My
-detention here is without his knowledge, of that I am
-assured. It is a vile outrage that he would not brook.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The priest shakes his head. “It would be useless,” he
-says. “From the instant I leave this place I shall be
-watched, shadowed every step of the way to my house.
-An attempt to leave Santos would be at once frustrated.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You believe so?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am positive of it.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But the senorita. Can you communicate with her.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ay; and without the knowledge of Captain Huerta.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You can?” cries Ashley, eagerly. “But you said you
-would be watched.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah,” says the priest, with a faint smile, “there is an
-entrance to the church that Captain Huerta knows not
-of—an entrance from my house through the little garden
-intervening.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Good. Excellently good,” remarks Ashley, into
-whose active brain has flashed an inspiration. “Father
-Hilario, I have a plan. You must join the senorita and
-myself in marriage.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Marry you? Impossible!” exclaims the astonished
-padre. Have the American’s troubles driven him insane?</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Impossible nothing. Easiest thing in the world if the
-lady is willing,” is Ashley’s cheerful response. “Now,
-listen to me, father. Don Quesada is a fugitive, and his
-daughter, being a Cuban, is amenable to the laws of this
-country. From the Spanish government she would not
-likely receive much earnest protection or reparation for
-any wrongs she might suffer. But when she becomes
-Mrs. Jack Ashley,” says Jack, dramatically, working up
-to a mild enthusiasm, “she is then an American citizen
-and as such she will be under the protection of a flag
-that the Spaniard dare not affront with impunity. You
-get the idea, eh?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Impossible, impossible, I tell you,” repeats Father
-Hilario. “You are not a Catholic, Senor Ashley; the
-senorita is. Besides, the consent of her father—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“This is no time for quibbling over technicalities.
-Would you see a woman, your friend’s daughter, insulted,
-perhaps murdered, when a few words from your lips
-would save her?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I would do my duty,” replies the priest, calmly. “The
-idea is madness. I cannot bring the senorita here, and
-you cannot reach the church.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, I’ll be there in season,” is the cool response.
-“Just leave the way from your house to the church open
-to me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“If you have any message to send the senorita, you
-must make haste,” adjures the priest. “The carcelero is
-approaching.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It will be brief,” replies Ashley. Then hurriedly:
-“Go to her at once. Comfort her. Pray with her. And
-tell her that I will be with her before the sun rises. Say
-nothing about the marriage. I prefer to do my own proposing.
-But, above all, remain with her until I come.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Then, in a different tone, as the cell door is swung
-open by the carcelero: “Many thanks, dear father, for
-your kindly visit and spiritual solace. I have made my
-peace with heaven, and to-morrow I will show these
-Spanish gentry how an American can die—when he gets
-ready,” he adds, under his breath, as the iron door clangs
-to and he is once more alone.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER L.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>AT BAY IN THE CHURCH OF SAN PEDRO.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>As the echo of Father Hilario’s footsteps dies away
-adown the gloomy corridor Ashley glances at his watch.
-It lacks a quarter of two o’clock.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The trick must be done within two hours, or all is
-lost,” he mutters. Then he extinguishes the light and
-throws himself down upon the pallet of straw.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ten, fifteen minutes pass. The tread of the carcelero
-on his rounds sounds from the corridor and a light is
-flashed into the cell. A counterfeit snore from Ashley
-greets him and he passes on with a muttered “Dios! He
-sleeps as if to-morrow were his wedding day.” In five
-minutes, his round of inspection completed, he repasses
-the cell door and continues on, until silence again enshrouds
-the prison.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Then Ashley arises, takes out his jack-knife and opens
-one of the blades, a finely tempered steel saw.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank heaven for that much Yankee inventiveness!”
-he murmurs, as he sinks on one knee beside the iron door
-of his cell and applies the saw blade to the lower end of
-one of the rusty bars.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As the steel slowly but surely eats its way into the corroded
-iron and finally slips entirely through, Ashley again,
-aided by a match, consults his watch. It is nearly three
-o’clock. Scarcely had he extinguished the lucifer than
-the approach of the carcelero is heard, and he retreats to
-his pallet, to again feign an audible slumber.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>All still once more, and he attacks the upper end of
-the bar. When almost severed he seizes it with both
-hands and exerts all his strength. The iron snaps, and as
-Ashley falls back the bar slips from his hands and drops
-to the floor of the cell with a loud clang.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Jack inwardly curses his carelessness. Such a tremendous
-noise would alarm the sleepiest of guards. He must
-act, and act quickly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>To squeeze through the space made in the door is the
-work of some moments, and it is not accomplished an
-instant too soon. A light approaches.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley remembers that opposite his cell is another, the
-door to which is ajar. With the iron bar in his hand he
-gropes his way across the corridor and into the open
-cell. A moment later the carcelero, lantern in hand,
-stands before the now tenantless pen, and stares stupidly
-at the wreck of the iron door.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Before he can utter an outcry the bar in Ashley’s hand
-descends upon his head with crushing force and he drops
-like a log.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I hope I didn’t kill the poor devil,” thinks Jack. He
-drags the unconscious man into the open cell, and, tearing
-and tying his handkerchief into a gag, he makes
-assured the silence of the carcelero. Then he extinguishes
-the lantern and is soon standing at the entrance
-of the prison.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>To his left is life and liberty. To his right—ah, something
-dearer than life—Juanita de Quesada, locked in the
-little church of San Pedro, the outlines of which stand
-boldly against the star-gemmed heaven.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Within that little sanctuary the altar lamp sheds a soft
-light over a strange picture. Juanita is lying upon the
-steps of the altar, her head buried in her arms, and near
-by stands Father Hilario, his arms folded, gazing compassionately
-upon her.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Why does he not come?” moans the girl, lifting her
-head and looking at the priest with tear-stained eyes
-from which hope has not yet fled.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Father Hilario is silent. The American does not come
-because, forsooth, he cannot leave his prison. But why
-undeceive the girl? Let her hope on to the end.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The opening of a door behind them causes both to start.
-Jack Ashley stands upon the threshold, a smile upon his
-face.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>With a glad cry Juanita runs to him and takes both
-his hands. “I was expecting you,” she says, simply.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank you. And you?” asks Ashley, turning to
-Father Hilario.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I bore your message. I did not expect you,” replies
-the priest, regarding the young man with mingled wonder
-and admiration.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then you must have a more flattering opinion of the
-security of Cuban jails than I. And now, senorita, tell
-me how you come to be in this unhappy position.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The story is brief, but interesting.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Five minutes after you left me in the ball-room at the
-palace,” narrates Juanita, “Isabel came to me and declared
-that we should leave for Santos. She explained that Captain
-Huerta and his men were going to Santos at once,
-and would escort us, and that the ride would be enjoyable
-after the heat and excitement of the ball. At the mention
-of Captain Huerta I know I looked displeased, and Isabel
-remarked disagreeably: ‘Perhaps you would prefer the
-escort of Mr. Ashley.’ I replied that I should certainly
-prefer it to that of Captain Huerta, and she declared that
-you would not be likely to offer it, as—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“As what?” asks Ashley, as Juanita pauses in confusion.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“She gave me to understand that you had proposed to
-her that night and that she had refused you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And you believed her?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I don’t know what I believed. But I agreed to Isabel’s
-proposition and we left for Santos at once. On
-our arrival there we were set upon by a party of men.
-All I remember is being lifted from the volante by Captain
-Huerta. Then I fainted, and when I recovered consciousness
-I was in the church, alone with Captain Huerta.
-He told me that he loved me. I replied that I hated
-him, and when he attempted to put his arm around me
-I struck him in the face. Then he swore frightfully and
-told me I would regret the blow. ‘My father—’ I
-began. ‘Your father is a fugitive,’ he sneered. ‘You are
-wholly in my power.’ ‘Then I will kill myself,’ I cried.
-‘Oh, no; you will come to your senses in a few hours,’
-he said, tauntingly. ‘I shall expect to find you in a better
-humor when I return.’ Then he went away, locking the
-church door behind him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“When he had gone I piled all the furniture of the
-church against the door and then threw myself down
-before the altar and prayed. The opening of a door
-aroused me. I lifted my head, expecting to see again
-the hated face of Captain Huerta. Instead, to my great
-joy, I beheld Father Hilario. When he told me of your
-arrest I cried out in terror. Then he gave me your message
-and hope came to me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And Satan came also,” quotes Ashley. “I fear your
-barricade would not withstand a very earnest assault,”
-surveying the rude defense critically.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It was all I could do. But tell me of yourself,” urges
-Juanita. “What is the meaning of your violent arrest?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As Ashley unfolds the black plot, beginning with the
-first appearance of the adventuress at La Quinta de Quesada,
-the Cuban girl grows very pale, and she realizes
-how much she owes to the blue-eyed young man who
-finishes his story with the smiling quotation: “And now,
-senorita, if a lifetime of devotion—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There, do not remind me of my folly,” she protests,
-choking back a sob. “I will never doubt you again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Thus encouraged, Ashley takes both of Juanita’s hands
-and whispers very tenderly:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In this darkest hour before the dawn I have found
-the courage to tell you what has been in my heart for—for
-nearly three weeks,” he finishes with a smile. Even
-amid the dangers that surround them, the humor of his
-declaration impresses him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A wave of crimson spreads over the girl’s face, and in
-the big black eyes Ashley sees the light of a great love.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The young people’s eyes meet in mutual understanding.
-He draws her to him, and the first kiss of love is exchanged.
-It must be followed by many others, for Father
-Hilario, after waiting what he considers a reasonable
-length of time, turns to the pair with an uneasy: “Well,
-what is all this leading up to?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A marriage, I should say,” replies Jack, cheerfully.
-“That is usually the logical outcome of such a situation.”
-Father Hilario bites his lips impatiently.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The church and the pastor are here, and I think the
-bride is willing,” continues Jack. The young girl gives
-the priest an anxious look.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is useless to argue that matter further,” is the firm
-reply. “My duty to the church forbids.” The priest’s
-face convinces Ashley that the debate on the matrimonial
-question is closed.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then we must seek elsewhere for a clergyman,” he
-remarks, coolly. “Come, Juanita.” And he leads her
-toward the little door by which he entered the church.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“This is madness!” cries the priest, barring the way.
-“The town is overrun with your enemies. It is nearly
-day and the place is already astir. Hark! Do you not
-hear the tread of feet in the street?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Spanish or no Spanish, I don’t propose to remain here
-and be trapped like a rat,” declares Ashley. “We can
-at least make a break for liberty. I do not—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The sound of a key being tried in the church door
-cuts short his words.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is Captain Huerta,” whispers Juanita, and she trembles
-like a leaf in Jack’s arms.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Quick, father!” commands the latter. “You reconnoiter
-and see if the way through the garden and your
-house is clear.” The venerable padre hurries away and
-Ashley improves the opportunity to shower kisses upon
-Juanita’s cold and unresponsive lips.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What a man you are!” she murmurs. “I believe you
-would make love on your way to execution.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I should if the opportunity was offered,” laughs Jack,
-softly. “What could more brightly illumine the last
-moments of a condemned man than to hold in his arms,
-if but for a few minutes, so much loveliness?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At that moment Father Hilario reappears. “There is
-no hope,” he reports. “Suspecting all was not right,
-Captain Huerta has surrounded the church and grounds
-with his men.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then fasten that door,” says Jack. “An attack at
-one end is all I care to look after.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The bolt is shot into place, and with the click comes
-the sound of muttered oaths from without, followed by a
-savage kick at the barricaded portal.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ho, there, within!” demands an impatient voice.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At the sound of the hateful tones Juanita shudders and
-throws her arms about Ashley’s neck. “Save me from
-that man!” she whispers.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>For answer Jack takes another reef in his confidence-restoring
-arm, and draws his revolver.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Don’t move, dear,” he murmurs, solicitously. He
-rather enjoys the tight embrace of those soft arms, to
-which terror has lent a delightful fervency. “You need
-not fear Captain Huerta so long as there is light enough
-to shoot by.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is a strange tableau that the altar lamp dimly shows.
-The three figures stand immovable, as if carved in stone.
-Ashley is calm, resolute, and his eyes are fixed upon the
-barricaded door. The resignation of despair is depicted
-in the beautiful face of the Cuban girl; her eyes seek
-those of her lover, her head upon his breast. They will
-at least die together. Near by stands the aged priest,
-his arms folded, his eyes turned heavenward and his lips
-moving as if in prayer. The tread of soldiery and the
-rattle of steel sound from the street.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The stillness within the church is broken only by a
-sharp click as Ashley’s revolver is brought to half-cock.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The seconds drag by. Every one of them seems an
-hour.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Then there is the sound of a rush of feet without, followed
-by a loud crash, as the church door is hurled from
-its fastenings and piled upon the debris of the barricade.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The gap thus made throngs with Spanish soldiery, at
-their head, sword in hand, Captain Raymon Huerta. At
-sight of the picture within the church he starts back with
-a cry of surprise and a choice assortment of Castilian
-imprecations.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You here, dog of an Americano? Who opened to
-thee the doors of the carcel?” And the Spanish captain
-glowers around upon his followers.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am indebted to no one except myself for my escape
-from your infernal den,” replies Ashley; and he adds,
-sternly:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Hark ye, Captain Raymon Huerta. I am here to
-protect this young woman from your deviltry, to protect
-her with my life. I warn you that any violence to her
-will cost you yours.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Your life is already forfeited,” sneers Huerta. Then
-to his followers:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ho, there, men! Seize the Americano and leave the
-girl to me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley’s arm comes up.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Halt!” he thunders. “This woman is my wife and as
-such she is an American citizen. Another step, and, by
-the stars and stripes, I’ll send your leader to perdition!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The streak of dawn that struggles in through the little
-window above the altar glints upon the polished barrel
-of a revolver pointed straight at the heart of Captain
-Raymon Huerta.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER LI.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>UNDER THE RED, WHITE AND BLUE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“You lie!” shouts Captain Raymon Huerta, white with
-rage.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley retorts calmly. “I repeat, Captain Huerta, what
-I have asserted. As my wife, this woman is an American
-citizen. An order from you to your men to fire upon or
-seize us, will be the last words you will utter in this
-world!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The marriage? Impossible! The proof? The proof?”
-cries Huerta, foaming with passion.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley points to Father Hilario. “The proof is the
-word of yonder man of God, by whom we were wedded
-not an hour ago!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Captain Huerta glowers upon the priest. “Speaks the
-Americano truly?” he fumes.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Father Hilario is silent. His eyes wander from the
-lovers to the rage-distorted countenance of the Spanish
-captain.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley holds his breath. He has made a superb bluff.
-Will the priest fail him at this supreme moment?</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Speak, vile dog of a priest!” snarls Huerta, the padre’s
-silence adding fuel to his rage.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At the brutal epithet Father Hilario’s cheek flushes.
-Then he speaks, slowly and deliberately:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is true. They are man and wife in the sight of God,
-and around them are the protecting arms of the church
-of Rome.” He raises his arms as if pronouncing a benediction,
-and murmurs under his breath a pious: “May
-God forgive me the deception!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Captain Huerta bites his lip till the blood comes. One
-word to his men would mean the destruction of the heroic
-trio. But over the shining barrel of Ashley’s revolver,
-pointed straight at his heart, the Spanish captain reads,
-in a pair of flashing eyes, a grim resolution that means
-his death if he but raises his sword.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The situation is critical. The strain is beginning to
-tell on even Ashley’s steel nerves.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At this moment a commotion is noted in the throng of
-soldiery that bars the entrance to the church.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Pushing them right and left, a tall, distinguished-looking
-military man strides into the sanctuary.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Don Huerta dashes his sword back into its sheath and
-sullenly awaits developments.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>General Murillo, for the arrival is he, glances from one
-of the party to the other, and then addresses himself to
-Ashley:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Senor, may I ask the meaning of this warlike demonstration?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley lowers his revolver. “It means, general, that
-your arrival has averted an international episode.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>General Murillo turns to Huerta. “Withdraw at once,”
-he commands. “I will see you anon.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>When Captain Huerta and his men have left the church
-Murillo asks:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And now, Senor Ashley, will you be good enough to
-explain this peculiar affair?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Willingly. But first, general,” says Jack, with a faint
-grin, “allow me to introduce you to the prettiest girl in
-Cuba.” And for the first time since the storming of the
-church door he removes his arm from about the waist of
-the Pearl of the Antilles.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Murillo bows with Spanish profundity. “I have the
-honor of the acquaintance of the Senorita de Quesada,”
-he remarks.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Who is now plain Mrs. Jack Ashley,” corrects the
-newspaper man. “Pardon me one moment, general,”
-and he whispers to Juanita:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Father Hilario looks very disconsolate; go and comfort
-him. And now, general,” to Murillo, “I am at your
-service.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley recounts briefly the exciting events that took
-place from the hour he left the ball-room until the arrival
-of his auditor. He says nothing of Mrs. Harding.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As the recital progresses Murillo’s face darkens.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am convinced,” declares Ashley, in conclusion,
-“that my arrest was wholly the work of that scoundrel
-Huerta.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And what do you propose to do now?” asks Murillo.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, I have no special plans beyond settling accounts
-with Captain Huerta.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I will do the settling with Captain Huerta,” observes
-the general, dryly. “As for you—you must leave Cuba.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My duty to my paper will not permit me to leave at
-present. And even were I free, general, I should not
-desire to be understood as running away.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Murillo makes a gesture of impatience. “Just like you
-Americans. You would all want to fiddle like Caesar
-while Rome was burning.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Your pardon; but I believe Nero was the soloist on
-that red-letter occasion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The general frowns. “Come with me,” he says; “I
-will furnish to you the necessary papers and you may proceed
-without interruption to Santiago. The cruiser America
-sails for Key West to-morrow. You must take passage
-on her. I do you a service, Senor Ashley, and I do
-it gladly, as I have a friendship for you. But I warn you
-that any delay in leaving Cuba may subject you to much
-annoyance, to use no harsher term. The government
-suspects you of secretly aiding the insurrection.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The government is mistaken.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Murillo glances at Juanita, and smiles ironically. “Senor
-Ashley,” he says, “I am not so easily deceived. The
-instrumentality that saved the senorita from annoyance
-is the same instrumentality that placed the traitor Quesada
-in his present safe retreat. But what I as a man
-might applaud, I cannot as a loyal adherent to Spain
-condone; nor would the government take a sentimental
-view of the matter. You will see the wisdom of my advice.
-Come.” And Murillo leads the way from the church.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Before he leaves the scene of his new-found happiness
-Jack Ashley presses warmly the wrinkled hands of Father
-Hilario. “Father, you’re a brick,” he says, and adds solicitously:
-“Will not Captain Huerta seek to revenge himself
-upon you?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I fear him not,” replies the priest, raising his head
-proudly. Then, placing the hand of Juanita within Ashley’s,
-he lays a hand on the head of each, and in a voice
-choked with emotion says:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My children, I have sinned for your sake, but I trust
-that God will condone the offense. Heaven bless and
-keep you and when you are happily sheltered in your
-northern home think sometimes of Father Hilario, of the
-little church of San Pedro.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Imprinting a kiss upon the brow of the Cuban girl,
-the aged priest turns away and sinks upon his knees
-before the crucifix over the altar.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It requires but a few minutes for General Murillo to
-make out the necessary passports and as he hands them to
-Ashley, he remarks: “You will follow my advice?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I will follow it to Santiago, at least, general.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The general shrugs his shoulders. “Do as you please.
-I have warned you,” he says, and turns away.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ten minutes later Ashley and Juanita are en route for
-Santiago in a volante.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The young lady is sad. The natural reaction has set in.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am thinking of my father,” she replies to Jack’s
-attempt to rally her.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Your father is all right,” he confidently assures her.
-“In an hour or two you will be in his arms, and I shall
-have the pleasure of asking him for the hand of the
-dearest girl in the world. Or, stay, I am progressing too
-rapidly,” he muses, in mock concern. “It has occurred
-to me,” he goes on, “that—oh, well, of course a proposal
-of marriage must naturally be regarded more conservatively
-now than—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Jack!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes, senorita.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What are you talking about?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Of you, senorita. Ah, something in your eyes tells
-me that I may be presumptuous enough to hope.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What nonsense! There, I knew you were joking,”
-declares Juanita, as she catches a stray twinkle in Jack’s
-eye. “You foolish boy, you know I love you. I have
-loved you ever since—I met you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Three whole weeks ago,” muses Ashley, as he draws
-the blushing face to his and kisses it.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Do you know, I have been insanely jealous of your
-friend Don Carlos all along,” confesses Jack, after a long,
-happy silence, during which the pair quite forget the
-volante driver.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Jealous of Don Carlos? Oh!” cries Juanita, bursting
-into merry laughter.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I admit it is highly humorous, in the light of recent
-developments,” says Jack, who sees nothing to laugh at
-in his remark. “What is there so amusing in it all?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, you dear, foolish Jack,” exclaims the girl, throwing
-her arms around his neck. “To be jealous of Don
-Carlos! Why, Don Carlos is a girl.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am aware that, to the public gaze, Don Carlos is at
-present a young lady,” returns Ashley, loftily, “but you
-must remember that I knew Don Carlos before he exchanged
-his customary attire for his present feminine
-toggery.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, how superiorily wise you look,” banters Juanita.
-“But I tell you that Don Carlos has always been, is now
-and always will be a girl!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And you never suspected it—you who are so penetrating?”
-mocks the young lady.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But Jack makes no reply. His mind is attempting to
-digest this surprising bit of information. Then a light
-begins to break upon him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Her real name—what is it?” he asks, suddenly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Juanita becomes serious again. “I must not divulge
-it, Jack, dear. I should not have told you what I have,
-but you looked so comical when you told me you had
-been jealous of Don Carlos. There, please don’t catechise
-me further.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I shall not,” replies Ashley. “Besides, it will be unnecessary
-for you to betray her identity.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then you know—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I think I do. As I more than once remarked, I have
-an excellent memory for faces, although I am sometimes
-a dev—a diablo of a while in recalling the names that
-go with them.” And Ashley relapses into meditation.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, here we are at Santiago,” announces Jack. “In
-a short time you can bid a temporary adieu to the soil of
-Cuba; and the sooner the better.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>And indeed, the streets of Santiago are in apparent
-possession of a riotous mob, swarming in and out of the
-cafes.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley and Juanita find no obstacles in their path; half
-an hour later they are aboard the America, under the red,
-white and blue, and Juanita is in her father’s arms, relating
-breathlessly the thrilling incidents of the last few
-hours.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley leaves them to their exchange of confidence and
-affection, and goes off to talk with Captain Meade. When
-he sees Don Quesada again that gentleman takes his
-hand and assures him that he is honored by his prospective
-entrance into the family.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“As for Cuba,” declares the Don, his eyes lighting with
-a trace of their old-time fire, “the cause of the patriots
-was never brighter. To be sure, I am a fugitive, and
-El Terredo yesterday suffered a severe defeat, the Pearl
-of the Antilles having been destroyed in an unequal engagement
-with three Spanish cruisers and gunboats. But
-General Masso is advancing upon Santiago, with 10,000
-revolutionists, and the fall of the city is looked for within
-forty-eight hours. Already the Spanish warships are
-gathering preparatory to shelling the place should it
-come into the hands of the patriots, and foreign vessels
-are preparing to leave the harbor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I believe I will take Murillo’s advice for the present,”
-reflects Ashley, “but I shall return to-morrow with the
-cruiser and be in at the death.” Then he goes in search of
-Juanita.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Now,” says that young lady, “if you have finished
-squeezing my hand before all these officers and seamen,
-come below and I will introduce you to—to ‘Miss Carlos’.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“All right, sweetheart,” replies Jack, gayly. “Let me
-see. I believe you remarked early this morning that you
-would never doubt me again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes?” responds the young lady, inquiringly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then, after you have introduced me to ‘Miss Carlos’
-will you leave us alone for a short time?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What a strange request! But it is granted.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Good. And now let us go below.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The interview, whatever its nature, has a peculiar effect
-upon Ashley. Upon returning from it he is saying to
-himself, sotto voce.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By Jove! This case has taken a turn that I little
-looked for. I’d give four dollars to see John Barker,
-detective, at this moment.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER LII.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>THE ENCOUNTER AT THE CAFE DE ALMENDRAS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“You have settled your business interests in this country
-satisfactorily?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Perfectly so. Much more profitably, indeed, than I
-expected.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then there is nothing further to keep you here except
-sight-seeing?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Nothing—except sight-seeing.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Cyrus Felton, Phillip Van Zandt and Louise Hathaway
-are seated on the veranda of the little Cafe de Almendras,
-on the outskirts of Santiago. They have returned this
-morning from a short jaunt to the interior and are not
-impressed favorably with rural Cuba. So they gladly return
-to the contemplation of that view which is ever
-welcome, no matter where one may roam—old ocean.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And you, Miss Hathaway—have you any Cuban ties
-that you will sever with regret?” inquires Van Zandt.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Miss Hathaway is more thoughtful than the occasion
-would seem to require. “None,” she replies, slowly.
-“Unless,” she adds quickly, “the pleasure of your society
-for the last month may be regarded as a Cuban tie.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank you,” rejoins Van Zandt, with a glance that
-brings a blush to the face of the Vermont maiden.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No; I am utterly, uncompromisingly disappointed
-with Cuba,” she says. “And the people! But I have
-been here but a few days, so I shall not place my opinion
-upon record.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And yet your brief impression of Cuba, Miss Hathaway,
-would not be likely to change much for the better
-if you were to spend a dozen years here. The country is
-uninteresting. The Spaniard cannot be changed. The
-Cuban—that is, the Cuban we see about us—does not
-deserve freedom. He lets the blacks and his brothers
-of the chaparral do all the fighting, and hardly dares, except
-in private, to express his cordial hatred of his ancient
-enemy. Do you know, Mr. Felton, I rather fancied that
-you had relatives in Cuba.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Relatives in Cuba?” The little color suddenly recedes
-from Mr. Felton’s face.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes,” says Van Zandt. “The day before I had the
-pleasure of meeting you and Miss Hathaway I was reading
-in a New York paper an interview with a member of
-the Cuban revolutionary society. In speaking of the
-diversified character of the Spanish officers in Cuba, the
-gentleman mentioned that attached to the staff of General
-Truenos was a young American, a former sugar
-planter. His name was Felton, but he changed it to
-Alvarez. When I first discovered your name and learned
-that you were en route to Cuba I unconsciously associated
-you with this young sugar planter so friendly to the Spanish
-cause.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>During Van Zandt’s speech, delivered in apparently
-careless tones, Mr. Felton succeeds in mastering a strong
-emotion. Louise is regarding him somewhat nervously,
-but Van Zandt quickly refills Miss Hathaway’s glass with
-jerez and passes it to her with a smiling comment on the
-quality of the wine.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The rather awkward silence is broken by Mr. Felton.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Mr. Van Zandt, and to you, Louise, I may say that
-I believe I have a son in Cuba, and that he is the young
-man alluded to in that newspaper. One reason why I
-have come to Cuba is to find that son. I supposed he was
-operating the sugar plantation that we visited last week.
-I did not know that he had joined the Spanish service.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I regret,” remarks Van Zandt, “that my idle remark
-should have stirred you to speak of a matter on which
-you might have preferred to have remained silent.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The subject is a painful one, it is true, but once started
-I may as well go on to the end. It is nearly a year ago—the
-1st of June—that Ralph left home, and since then
-I have heard from him but twice, and vaguely each
-time.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Both Mr. Felton and Louise are gazing seaward, else
-they would note the swift look of surprise that passes
-across Van Zandt’s face.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The 1st of June,” he repeats, as if attempting to recall
-some incident of the past. “Did not something peculiar
-occur in Raymond—that is the name of your town, is it
-not?—about that time?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Felton shoots a quick, inquiring look at Van
-Zandt’s face, but reads nothing there except disinterested
-curiosity.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Something very peculiar occurred two days before
-that date,” he replies, gravely. “On the night of Memorial
-day Roger Hathaway, Louise’s father, the cashier of the
-Raymond National Bank, was found dead in his office at
-the bank, and the institution was discovered to have
-been robbed of a large amount of money. The murderer
-has never been discovered and presumably never will be.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>An expression of self-reproach is visible in Van Zandt’s
-face as he turns to Louise.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Forgive me, Miss Hathaway; I was not aware—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There is nothing to forgive, Mr. Van Zandt,” Louise
-replies. “But I do not share Mr. Felton’s opinion that
-the veil of mystery enshrouding the tragedy will never
-be lifted. Something within me tells me that one day
-the slayer of my father will be brought to justice.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Miss Hathaway again turns her eyes, now wet with
-tears, toward the sea. Mr. Felton is very pale and it
-is apparent that he would welcome a change in the conversation.
-Van Zandt, however, continues:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Now, that you speak of it,” he says, knitting his
-brows, “I recall that I read something about the case
-in the papers at the time. Was no one suspected?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Three persons were suspected—two of them unjustly.
-Derrick Ames”—with a quick glance at Louise, who
-flushes scarlet and bites her lips—“was one and my son
-the other. You may be surprised at my stating this,”
-in response to Van Zandt’s questioning gaze, “but you
-will understand better why I am so anxious to find Ralph.
-He had some motive for leaving Raymond as he did,
-and until that motive is discovered and his name cleared
-I shall be one of the most unhappy of fathers.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And the third party suspected? You have mentioned
-only two,” says Van Zandt.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The third? Oh, yes; the third was a young man
-named Ernest Stanley. He was the only stranger in
-Raymond, so far as known, on the day of the tragedy.
-This young man had been liberated from state prison
-on Memorial day, after serving two years of a three
-years’ sentence for forgery.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then there was fairly good reason for suspecting
-him?” comments Van Zandt, with an enigmatic smile.
-“Give a dog a bad name, you know. But tell me about
-the fellow. I confess I am rather interested in him. Was
-his forgery a very serious affair?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A matter of $1,000. Mine was the name he forged.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Indeed. How did you trace it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That was a peculiar feature of the case. Stanley
-presented the check at the bank of which I was president.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Rather a blundering piece of business, should you
-not say? But may he not have been innocent?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The forgery was proved.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah! Stanley admitted it?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No; he told a fanciful story of the check having been
-given to him in New York, in payment of a gambling
-debt.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Nothing impossible in that story, Mr. Felton. I will
-tell you why. A night or two before we left New York
-I was seated in Madison Square garden, listening to a
-concert, when a party of sporting men sat down at the
-next table, and one of them entertained his companions
-by relating a reminiscence of a game of draw poker in
-which he had played a part two or three years before.
-I will not repeat the story, but perhaps you will understand
-the point I am trying to make. Four men were
-playing and during the course of one hand the betting
-had narrowed to two of them. A held what he believed
-to be a well-nigh invincible hand. Flushed with confidence,
-and irritated by his opponent’s insinuation that
-he had no more money to wager, A took a check-book
-from his pocket, wrote a check for $1,000 or some such
-sum, and tossed it upon the table. The bet was covered,
-the hands shown down, and A lost. Now,” finishes Van
-Zandt, “A might not have had a dollar in the bank. He
-might have put a worthless check upon the table, knowing,
-as he thought he knew, that there was not one chance
-in a thousand of a necessity for its payment arising.
-That being the case, what mattered it whose name was
-on the check, his own or—well, say his father’s? I am
-only theorizing on what might naturally occur some time,
-you know.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Cyrus Felton’s face has become ghastly and he appears
-to be on the verge of collapse. Miss Hathaway
-regards Van Zandt with wonder and apprehension. The
-latter seems unconscious of the effect his words have produced,
-and he remarks carelessly: “But I will not discuss
-the matter further, as I suspect it bores you.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At this instant the clatter of hoof-beats sounds from
-the road, as a detachment of Spanish caballeria ride up,
-tether their horses and hurry boisterously into the cafe.
-The Americans are established on a quiet veranda at
-the rear of the building, where they may be free from
-just such interruptions.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Are you ready to depart?” says Van Zandt to his companions.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am anxious to return to Santiago as soon as possible,”
-declares Mr. Felton.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Van Zandt raps upon the table for the waiter, but no
-response is made. Host and helpers are busily occupied
-with their noisy guests.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Pardon me a moment. I will step within and settle
-the account,” says Van Zandt, as he rises and enters the
-cafe.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The drinking-room is crowded with the boisterous
-soldiery, disporting themselves as if war were an amusement
-and the curtain nearly down on the farce of revolution.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The presumptive leader of the troopers is a tall, rather
-handsome young fellow, who sits with his back against
-the wall and a glass in his hand. There is no one within a
-dozen or twenty feet of him except one caballero, with
-a scar across his forehead, who sits by himself at a
-table.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As Van Zandt enters and closes the door behind him
-the Spanish captain glances up and their eyes meet.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Great heavens! Am I dreaming,” mutters Van
-Zandt. And then he stands with white face and clenched
-fists, staring at the man before him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The latter returns the stare. “I trust you will know
-me again senor,” he remarks, ungraciously, as he sets
-down his glass and strikes a match to ignite a cigarette.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I believe I have had the misfortune of meeting you
-before,” Van Zandt replies, folding his arms and regarding
-the other with blazing eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Spanish captain shrugs his shoulders. “May I
-ask where?” he inquires coolly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In the United States.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The senor is mistaken. I have never been in the
-states.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You lie!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Curse you! What d’ye mean?” demands the Spanish
-captain in the purest of English, as he drops his hand
-upon his sword hilt. The man at the table near by lays
-down his paper and turns a pair of interested eyes toward
-the young men.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You lie!” repeats Van Zandt, moving not a step. Then
-he says in a voice passionate with hatred and ringing
-with the exultation of a Nemesis about to strike:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“So, Ralph Felton, I have found you at last!”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER LIII.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>A WOMAN’S VENGEANCE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>The cigarette falls from the Spanish captain’s nerveless
-fingers and his face turns gray.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Who are you?” he gasps.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My name is Phillip Van Zandt. I don’t wonder,
-Ralph Felton, that you fail to recognize me by that name,
-though it is my true one. But you will understand why
-I have sought you and why I exult in now standing face
-to face with you, when I breathe the name of Ernest
-Stanley!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You are Ernest Stanley?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I was Ernest Stanley. Now, I am his avenger.
-Listen to me,” commands Van Zandt, as Felton strives
-to speak. “When the doors of that New England prison
-closed upon me, nearly three years ago, I swore that
-I would be avenged upon the scoundrel who put me
-there. Until a month ago I did not know his name.
-Until to-day I was not sure that the father was an accomplice
-to the villainy of the son. But when I did
-learn who the coward was for whom I suffered I told
-myself that this world, vast as it is, was too small to hold
-him and me. Do you understand? You cur! Do you
-understand?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Felton glances about the cafe. The soldier at the table
-near by has again picked up his newspaper and is absorbed
-in its columns. But any one who might take the
-pains to investigate would discover that he is not reading
-the paper. The score or more of others are occupied in
-their drink, jest and song.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Felton has regained his composure and lights a cigarette
-with a steady hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Are you aware, Senor Van Zandt, that at one word
-from me my men would cut you to pieces?” he sneers.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I know that one such word will mean your instant
-death,” is the stern response.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, I shall not utter it,” says Felton, coolly. “I am
-competent to take care of myself. A moment ago you
-called me a coward. I will prove to you that I am not.
-You seek satisfaction?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A bitter smile flits over Van Zandt’s face. “Satisfaction!”
-he murmurs. “Ay, I demand satisfaction for two
-years of utter misery and, by heavens, I shall have it!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You shall! I swear it!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah! And when?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At once. This is my only opportunity to accommodate
-you at present, as I am ordered to Cienfuegos to-morrow.
-Come, I will wait for you without.” So saying,
-Felton turns on his heel.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Van Zandt regards him with a look in which suspicion
-is mingled with a trace of admiration for his sang froid.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You will attempt no treachery?” he says, sternly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I tell you, sir, I am not a coward,” answers Felton,
-haughtily.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That he is not,” mutters the soldier with the scarred
-forehead, and he adds, as if addressing the newspaper
-in his hand: “This is a devilish unfortunate affair. I
-must have a hand in it. Hello! Was not that a woman’s
-scream?” He rises and, throwing open the door leading
-to the rear of the cafe, steps out upon the veranda. An
-instant later he dashes the door shut with an ejaculation
-of amazement.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Standing at the further end of the veranda, terror depicted
-in her colorless cheeks, is Louise Hathaway. A
-dozen feet from her is one of the troopers, who has
-strolled out upon the veranda, and, while much the worse
-for liquor, has plainly insulted the American girl. When
-the new-comer arrives on the scene, he sees the caballero
-wiping the blood from a long, deep scratch across his
-rage-contorted face. Between insulter and insulted Cyrus
-Felton interposes a feeble barrier.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>With a muttered malediction the baffled Spaniard turns
-and re-enters the cafe, followed by the scarred soldier,
-whose timely arrival has doubtless saved Miss Hathaway
-from further affront.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Jove! I shall have my hands full for a few minutes,”
-that individual soliloquizes. “Ah, one moment,” as Van
-Zandt attempts to brush by him. “You have some
-friends out here, senor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well?” demands Van Zandt, with a stare.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Get them away at once, or these devils in here may
-make it hot for them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I do not understand.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You have no time to listen to a lengthy explanation.
-Do as I direct. Send your friends to the consul’s and
-have them avoid the main road. There is a path through
-the garden, and beyond that a trail down the hillside to
-the beach. It is but a mile to the consul’s residence by
-that route. They’ll be safe at the consul’s.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>All this is delivered in low, rapid tones and as Van
-Zandt moves away the soldier turns and sees the drunken
-cavalier standing within a few feet of him, a malicious
-smile upon his evil face. “Hello! What the devil are
-you playing the spy for?” cries he of the scar, and passes
-on with the muttered thought: “I wonder if the chap
-understands English.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>When Van Zandt rejoins Mr. Felton and Louise he
-finds the old man as white as death and his head sunk
-upon his breast, while Miss Hathaway is in a semi-hysterical
-condition.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I’m so glad you have returned,” says the latter, as
-she comes forward to greet him and she tells him of
-the encounter with the Spaniard.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The scoundrel!” grits Van Zandt, starting toward the
-cafe. But he remembers that he has more serious business
-on hand than thrashing a drunken trooper, and he
-turns gravely to his companions:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Miss Hathaway, and you, Mr. Felton, I must ask you
-to proceed immediately to the residence of the American
-consul. I have a little matter that demands my presence
-here for another half-hour, and meanwhile it will not be
-safe for you to remain. Nor will it be well to go by the
-main road. The city is in the hands of a mob. The
-scoundrel who insulted you is a fair example. I was
-warned by one of the men within—an Englishman, I
-should judge from his voice and manner.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Mr. Felton and Miss Hathaway regard Van Zandt apprehensively,
-and Louise wonders at the pallor of his
-face and the strange look in his eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You know where the residence of the consul is. You
-must follow yonder path through the garden, and strike
-the trail down the hillside to the sea; it is only a short
-walk. I will rejoin you there within the hour—if I
-live,” says Van Zandt, with a significance not understood
-by his auditors.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Without a word Cyrus Felton rises and, followed by
-Miss Hathaway, starts off through the garden in the direction
-indicated by Van Zandt’s outstretched arm.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>While all this has taken place Ralph Felton has been
-leaning in the doorway at the front of the cafe. He looks
-up when Sanchez, the besotted subaltern, comes in from
-his encounter with the American girl, and signals to
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Sanchez, I have a little affair of honor to settle within
-the hour,” he says. “If I do not return, you are second
-in command. You understand?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Is it ‘a la mort’?” inquires Sanchez.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Felton nods and turns away, and Sanchez goes back
-into the cafe in season to hear the last words of the
-warning extended to Van Zandt by the soldier with the
-scar.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Felton lights another cigarette and awaits indifferently
-the appearance of his implacable foe.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am ready, sir,” says a stern voice at his elbow.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And I have been ready for some minutes. Come.”
-And Felton leads the way across the road and into a path
-to the woods.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The soldier with the scar walks out into the dooryard
-and watches the disappearing figures. “That duel must
-not take place,” he says. “But how on earth am I to
-prevent it? Hello! What’s this?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>His attention is attracted by an ejaculation within the
-cafe. Two men are whispering by the window next the
-entrance.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What deviltry is this?” he scowls, bending his head.
-And as he listens the scowl deepens on his face, and his
-fingers clutch at his pistol stock. “By heavens! I must
-prevent that duel now,” he mutters.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Simultaneous with a command given to the half-intoxicated
-Sanchez, he of the scar hears the sound of a
-shot over in the woods.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Treachery!” he exclaims, and bounds away in the direction
-of the report.</p>
-
-<hr class='c012' />
-
-<p class='c011'>Felton and Van Zandt proceed silently into the thicket.
-A short distance from the entrance to the woods is a
-cleared spot.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“This will probably suit our purpose,” remarks Felton,
-and, coolly, he measures off ten paces.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That will be distance enough, will it not?” he asks.
-Van Zandt nods.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Will you give the word, Mr. Van Zandt?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“As you please. We will fire at the word ‘Three.’”
-Both men draw their revolvers.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“One moment,” interrupts Felton. “In the event of
-a second fire?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There will be no second fire,” is the grim rejoinder.
-“I shall kill you with the first.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And I will endeavor not to waste mine. Well, sir, I
-am waiting.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“One!” Two arms are raised, and not a tremor in
-either.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Two!” The pistols click.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The word “Three” is trembling on Van Zandt’s lips,
-when a shot rings out from the thicket. Felton clasps
-his hand to his abdomen, with an exclamation of pain,
-sways a moment and pitches headlong to the earth.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The bushes part and a woman, heavily veiled, steps
-forth, smoking pistol in hand and walks to where Felton
-lies.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>She looks upon the body for a moment in silence, and
-hisses:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You cowardly hound! Your end is fitting!” Then,
-throwing back her veil, she reveals the face of Isabel
-Harding.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have saved you, Phillip,” she says, with a calmness
-that is very near madness.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You have cheated me of my vengeance,” he replies,
-looking gloomily upon the body of her victim.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My wrongs called for greater vengeance than yours,”
-cries the woman, her eyes glittering feverishly and her
-voice breaking hysterically. “I followed him here. I
-saw through the cafe window your meeting with him,
-and I exulted that I was in time—in time to save the
-man I loved! Phillip! Phillip,” sobs Isabel, sinking on
-one knee beside him, “I told you that some day you
-would realize how much I loved you!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But Van Zandt, with a shudder and expression of utter
-aversion, turns away.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, I see I am too late,” remarks a quiet voice, and
-Van Zandt looks up to see the friendly soldier with the
-scar.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“To the consul’s if you would save the American girl,”
-says the latter. “I’ll look after these obsequies. Come,
-be off,” as Van Zandt stares at him in surprise. “A plot
-is afoot, headed by that precious Lieut. Sanchez, and you
-have no time to lose.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But the consul—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The consul was at his office in the city two hours
-ago, and is doubtless there yet. Ah, you are too late.”
-The clatter of departing hoof-beats is borne upon their
-ears. “No; you can reach the consul’s ahead of them,
-by the short-cut down the hillside. Here! Take my revolver!
-You may need more than one. And mind, don’t
-waste any ammunition,” shouts the soldier, as Van Zandt
-dashes off.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Then he turns to the scene of the tragedy. He kneels
-beside Felton’s body and makes a brief examination.
-Then he straightens up.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Go!” he says sternly, to Mrs. Harding. “Your work
-is done!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>She stares at him a moment, with her glittering eyes;
-then, with a little shudder, tosses the revolver into the
-bushes, turns and walks slowly away.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The caballero watches her out of sight and again turns
-to the body of the Spanish captain.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Humph!” he grunts, as he lifts the limp form from
-the ground. “He is worth a dozen dead men, or my
-name isn’t John Barker.”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER LIV.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>AT BAY IN THE CONSUL’S HOUSE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“There is something very odd in Mr. Van Zandt’s actions,”
-remarks Miss Hathaway, as she and Mr. Felton
-follow the winding trail down the hillside to the sea.
-The latter offers no explanation. He has aged fearfully
-in the last half-hour, and it is now a bowed, feeble, old
-man whom his companion more than once has to assist
-over the obstacles in their rough path.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“To the consul’s. To the consul’s,” is all he says, and
-the journey is finished in silence.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The residence of William Atwood, United States consul,
-is situated about two hundred yards back from the
-shore, about a half a mile below the mole at Santiago.
-The nearest neighbor is a quarter of a mile away, toward
-the city. It is a plain, square, two-storied structure. A
-broad veranda fronts both stories and ivy very nearly
-conceals three of the walls of the building. An innovation,
-to the Cuban view absurd, is an electric door bell,
-put in by the consul himself. It is this bell that Mr.
-Felton presses, with the remark: “I begin to feel at
-home already.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The summons are answered by a porter who tells
-them that the consul is gone.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Gone? Gone where?” demands Mr. Felton, with a
-start of uneasiness that is inexplicable to Miss Hathaway.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The consul is at the city. Where, quien sabe? Probably
-at his office in the city.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“We can do nothing except await his return or the
-arrival of Mr. Van Zandt,” Louise says, as they step
-into the hall.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At the right of the entrance is the library. On the
-desk is pen and paper, and here Cyrus Felton seats himself
-and writes, while Louise stands in the doorway and
-watches him with troubled eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Suddenly she hears the sound of footsteps hurrying up
-the walk. The door is thrown open, and Van Zandt,
-breathing hard from the exertion of his run, stands before
-her.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank God, you are safe!” he cries, fervently.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What danger threatens?” asks Louise, laying one
-hand upon Van Zandt’s arm.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>For answer he leads the way out upon the veranda.
-“Look!” he says; and Miss Hathaway beholds the Semiramis,
-resting quietly upon the still bosom of the bay.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“We must reach that yacht, or I fear we may not
-leave Cuba alive!” he tells her.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Louise gazes at him in questioning dismay.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, there comes the enemy,” says Van Zandt, pointing
-up the beach toward the city. A small troop of
-horsemen is approaching at a lively canter.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What is all this mystery? Why do you fear those
-men?” asks Louise, as they re-enter the house.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is not for myself that I tremble,” replies Van
-Zandt, who is critically examining his pistols.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then it is I whom they seek. Your silence answers
-yes,” says Louise quietly. She is very white, but her
-voice does not tremble. Like a true heroine she has
-grown calm in the face of danger.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“By heaven!” Van Zandt bursts forth; “my life stands
-between you and those Spanish devils, and gladly do I
-place it there. As for you,” turning to Cyrus Felton,
-who has risen from the library table and stands near
-them, “I would not lift a finger to save your worthless
-existence. For the wrongs which I have suffered, for
-the misery which you and your son have caused me,
-I meant to have exacted a bitter reparation, but fate
-has otherwise decreed. Ah, you know me!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Spare me your reproaches,” says the old man, lifting
-his hand in protest. “I know you. You are Ernest Stanley.
-What I have dreaded, yet for nearly a year expected,
-has come at last. My sin has found me out.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, that it has. But you are safe from my hands now,
-and maybe from that of the law before this day is ended.
-Out of the way, unless you wish your miserable life cut
-short by a Spanish bullet. Miss Hathaway, I must ask
-you to step into the library, as our visitors have arrived.”
-And, throwing open the door, Van Zandt stands upon
-the threshold, waiting.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Lieutenant Sanchez and his men rein their horses within
-a dozen paces of the house. The leader dismounts
-and comes leisurely up the walk, apparently oblivious
-of the presence of Van Zandt, whose watchful eyes are
-covering every movement of the scoundrelly band.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“One moment,” commands the American, holding up
-his hand. But the Spaniard pays not the slightest attention.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Halt!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>This time Sanchez pauses and strokes his mustachios
-with exasperating calmness. “I would advise the senor
-to make no opposition if he values his life,” he says.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What is your errand here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The American senorita, to whom I am indebted for
-this token.” Sanchez indicates the long, dull-red scratch
-upon his unamiable visage. “I have no time or inclination
-to parley with you, senor. Out of the way, or I shall
-order my men to fire upon you.” The troopers half-raise
-their carbines.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Van Zandt tears down a worn edition of the stars and
-stripes that decks the wall above his head, and as he
-throws it across his breast and shoulder his voice rings
-out defiantly:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Fire upon the American flag, if you dare!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The answer is a volley that splinters the woodwork
-about him and brings down the glass above the door in
-a shower. Van Zandt feels a sharp twinge in his left
-arm, and with an exclamation of rage and pain he lifts
-his revolver and fires.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Lieutenant Sanchez falls dead in his tracks and there
-is an instant scattering out of range on the part of his
-followers.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As Van Zandt closes the door and slips the bolt he
-turns to see Cyrus Felton lying upon the floor, a stream
-of blood flowing from a wound in his side.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Fool! I cautioned him to keep out of range,” he exclaims,
-as he bends over the old man.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Is he badly hurt?” asks the voice of Louise.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I fear so. We must retreat upstairs, as we may expect
-an assault at any instant. Quick!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As Louise ascends to the floor above, Van Zandt follows
-with his unconscious burden. In the rear room
-is a sofa, and upon this Mr. Felton is laid.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I have but a few minutes to live. Forgive me,” he
-gasps.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“God may forgive you,” replies Van Zandt, turning
-bitterly away. Louise takes his hand in hers.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Surely, Mr. Van Zandt, you can forgive the past in
-this awful moment,” she says, softly. “Remember, he
-was a father and he loved his son.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>At the contact of that little hand Van Zandt feels a
-thrill creep over him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You know now who I am,” he says, dully. The blue
-eyes meet the dark ones unwaveringly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I know that I believe in your innocence and that I
-trust you,” is the quiet response. “Listen, he is speaking
-again.” They bend their heads to catch the sinking
-man’s last words.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“In my—coat—papers,” gasps Mr. Felton, with his
-fast-glazing eyes fixed on Van Zandt. “They—will—clear—your—name,”
-he finishes and sinks back, exhausted
-by his effort.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Cyrus Felton,” says Van Zandt, gravely, “if any forgiveness
-of mine will afford you an iota of comfort on
-your journey to the other world, it is yours.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The dying man acknowledges the absolution with a
-glance. An instant later his spirit passes to his Maker,
-to be judged by his deeds in this world of sorrow and sin,
-of hope and happiness.</p>
-
-<hr class='c012' />
-
-<p class='c011'>Again the Cafe de Almendras. The boisterous troopers
-are gone and in their place a dozen or so quiet-appearing
-men in civilian dress are grouped about the
-tables, drinking little and talking less.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It has been a noisy day, the patron tells a tall man
-with black eyes and fierce mustachios, who lounges in
-the doorway and sweeps the street with his keen gaze.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But the tall man heeds not the chatter of the patron;
-his gaze is fixed curiously upon an approaching soldier,
-who bears across his shoulder the limp form of a man
-in the uniform of a Spanish captain. The face of the
-latter is hidden.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker brushes by into the cafe with the body of
-Ralph Felton, and meets the contemptuous glance of the
-tall man with a searching look that the latter does not
-fancy.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ho, there, patron! A room and a doctor at once!”
-orders the detective, and he gives the patron a handful of
-coin and effectually silences his grumbling protest about
-making a hospital of the place.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Having deposited his burden above stairs, Barker returns
-to the drinking-room and astonishes the tall man
-with the black eyes by tapping him on the shoulder and
-remarking:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I think I have met you before.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The mischief you have!” is the curt rejoinder.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Now I am sure of it,” grins Barker. “Your voice
-has not changed, but your mustachios do not fit you.
-Pardon me,” he adds, just in season to prevent an outbreak,
-“I am indebted to you for this slash,” indicating
-the scar across his forehead, “but I do not lay up any
-hard feelings. I’ll call it quits if you will lend some
-friends of mine a helping hand. I have got my hands
-full upstairs. Listen.” Barker briefly recounts the episodes
-narrated in the previous chapter.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As the tall man listens his brow grows black as night,
-and when the tale is finished his voice rings through
-the cafe in a sharp command:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Haste, my comrades! To the American consul’s to
-save my friends!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The quiet-appearing civilians about the tables leap to
-their feet as one man, and, leaving the unpaid patron
-standing in hopeless astonishment amid the ruins of
-the glassware he has dropped, the little band sweeps out
-of the cafe.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There will be music at the consul’s this afternoon, unless
-I am greatly mistaken,” mutters Barker, as he looks
-down the dust-veiled road. “And now for my patient.
-If he dies with his secret unrevealed I’ll never forgive
-him!”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER LV.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>A SIGNAL FROM MACEDONIA.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>Van Zandt and Louise stand, hand in hand, gazing
-sorrowfully upon all that is mortal of Cyrus Felton. A
-crash is heard below, as the front door is burst from its
-hinges.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Van Zandt leaps to the head of the staircase just as the
-feet of a brace of ruffians are on the lower step. Twice
-cracks his revolver and his aim is true. One of the
-Spaniards falls and the second drops back with a cry of
-pain. Then, as Van Zandt throws himself to one side,
-there is a flash of fire below, and the bullets whistle harmlessly
-by.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As he judges, there is no immediate second rush by the
-attacking party, so he proceeds to examine his surroundings
-and the result is far from satisfactory. There is no
-serious danger of the besiegers attempting to carry the
-staircase by storm. The Spaniard is not lacking in courage,
-but it requires a considerable amount of sand to
-lead the way to certain death. But the room to which
-they have retreated was not built for a fortress and he
-realizes that the end must come when the enemy will
-gain access to the second floor—by the veranda or by the
-rear entrance to the building.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Suddenly his eyes rest upon a ladder at the other end
-of the short hallway.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Quick!” he whispers to Louise, as he points the way
-to temporary safety.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A minute later and they are on the roof of the building,
-the ladder pulled up, and the scuttle fastened down.
-Over them floats, from the flagstaff, the glorious banner
-of their native land, and above that bends a sky of heaven’s
-deepest blue.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Fairly outwitted!” says Van Zandt. Suddenly he feels
-a weakness come over him and he sinks upon the sun-baked
-roof. Then for the first time Louise notices that
-he is wounded, and she kneels beside him with a very
-white face.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is nothing,” he reassures her. With her assistance
-he removes his coat, tears open the left sleeve of his shirt
-and discloses a bullet hole in the fleshy part of the arm.
-It looks more serious than it really is and Louise feels an
-inclination to faint. But she resists it and proceeds to
-bind up the still bleeding wound with strips torn from her
-own silken petticoat. The golden head is very close to
-the brown one, and as the fair surgeon bends to tie a
-knot, the soft sweep of her hair steals away all of Van
-Zandt’s well-guarded reserve, and his right arm encircles
-her in a passionate embrace.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I love you! I love you!” he whispers.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>And Miss Hathaway, being a sensible young woman,
-who knows what she wants, does not remark upon the
-“suddenness” of the declaration of love, but presses her
-red lips to his and tells Phillip that she has loved him
-ever since she knew him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But the lovers are brought back to earth by a chorus
-of yells and picturesque profanity sufficient to supply the
-captain of a whaling bark for an entire voyage.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“They have discovered our retreat,” whispers Van
-Zandt, as he lifts the scuttle and listens to the tumult below.
-But he drops it as a bullet crashes through a few
-inches from his head, and moves out of such dangerous
-range. Then, as his eyes rest upon the flag above him an
-idea seizes him—a veritable inspiration. He steps to the
-flag-staff, detaches the halyards and the stars and stripes
-come fluttering down to his feet.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What are you doing with the flag?” asks Louise.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Giving utterance to the old Macedonian cry,” he calls
-back, and up goes old glory again, this time with the
-union jack down. “Pray that my crew may see the
-signal,” he adds, fervently. And Providence assists his
-effort, for a puff of wind streams the flag straight out
-upon the breeze.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Capt. Beals is on the bridge of the Semiramis at this
-moment, looking toward the shore, and his curiosity is
-excited.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He sweeps the roof top with one glance through his
-powerful glance and then issues a command that echoes
-to the farthest corners of the Semiramis.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A few moments later Van Zandt sees two boats cut
-shoreward through the blue waters of the bay as fast as
-muscle can send them.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank heaven!” he exclaims, as his heart bounds
-within him, and he proceeds to hug Louise in a manner
-that vastly entertains Capt. Beals, who is still an interested
-though distant spectator. And if the bluff old sea
-dog could have made himself heard he would have shouted
-a warning, for he discerns what Van Zandt cannot
-see—a ladder placed against the side wall of the consul’s
-house and three men ascending it, while back a short distance,
-with carbines raised, stand the rest of the scoundrelly
-horde.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The attack bids fair to be successful, but suddenly rings
-out the cry of “Santiago!” and the little band of patriots
-from the Cafe de Almendras dashes upon the scene.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Spaniards now have all the fighting they can
-attend to. Van Zandt and Louise watch from the rooftop
-the progress of the battle royal. The fight is won.
-No quarter is given, and those of the Spaniards who have
-the ability to flee are in full retreat, and as they disappear
-down the beach they shout:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“El Terredo! El Terredo!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Van Zandt sees a strange transformation in the appearance
-of the leader of the rescuing party. During a
-hand-to-hand struggle with one of the troopers his fierce
-mustachios have been knocked off, and it is a handsome,
-beardless youth, with flashing black eyes, who looks
-about him and remarks: “Well, my merry men, the victory
-is ours, but where are the Americans?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Coming,” sings out Van Zandt, from the upper air.
-“We will be with you in a minute.” And as he turns to
-Louise that young lady proceeds to faint in his arms.
-It is a logical reaction from the strain which she has
-borne with wonderful fortitude.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>By this time the boats from the Semiramis have arrived,
-and in them enough fighting Yankees to handle
-twice their number of Spanish soldiery. A ladder
-is placed against the consul’s house and the besieged
-are assisted to earth, one unconscious and the other with
-an arm tied up.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>While revivifying operations are under way Van Zandt
-hears a startled exclamation at his elbow. It comes from
-El Terredo, who is gazing upon the marble countenance
-of Miss Hathaway with astonished and troubled eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Without replying to Van Zandt’s questioning look, El
-Terredo picks up his mustachios from the sand and again
-affixes them to his face. Then he turns calmly to Van
-Zandt.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The third of your party? I was told there was an old
-gentleman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He is dead. Killed at the first fire,” Van Zandt tells
-him, and he leads the way into the house.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As the two men look upon the body, which has not
-been disturbed by the troopers, El Terredo shudders,
-and murmurs: “My God, what does all this mean?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It means much to me,” replies Van Zandt, gravely,
-as he takes from the dead man’s person a packet of
-papers.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Without speaking El Terredo steps to the sofa and assists
-Van Zandt to bear the remains from the house.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The body is laid in the bow of one of the boats, reverently
-covered, and preparations are made for the return
-to the Semiramis. When all but himself and the rescuing
-party from the cafe have embarked Van Zandt turns
-to El Terredo, who, with folded arms, is gazing abstractedly
-toward the law-and-order deserted city. “You are
-going with us, are you not?” he asks.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No; I shall remain here.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Your safety lies with yonder yacht.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Safety? Ah, senor, somewhere on this isle is one
-dearer to me than personal security.” And the young
-man turns away to hide his emotion.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“But you can gain nothing by remaining here now.
-The survivors of the late scrimmage have recognized
-you and in half an hour the whole town will be at your
-heels. Aboard my yacht you will be safe and I will gladly
-land you at any point on the island you may designate.
-Besides, the papers—”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Say no more, senor,” exclaims El Terredo, extending
-his hand. “I accept your generous offer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Dismissing his faithful followers, with the assurance
-that he will be with them again ere many days, the revolutionary
-leader steps into one of the waiting boats.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As they are about to push off a soldier whose horse
-is flecked with foam comes dashing down the beach, and
-as he leaps from his well-nigh broken steed, he calls out
-cheerily:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Got room for one more?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah! My friend of the cafe,” cries Van Zandt. “You
-are very welcome, senor.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And just in time,” remarks John Barker, detective, as
-with a hearty thwack he sends his horse riderless down
-the beach and clambers into the boat.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER LVI.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>THE FATE OF THE SEMIRAMIS.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“And now, what?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The boats have reached the Semiramis. Louise Hathaway
-has been tenderly assisted to the deck by Van
-Zandt, followed by Navarro and Barker, and the dead
-form of Cyrus Felton has been reverently conveyed
-aboard.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A sort of council of war is being held on the quarter-deck
-of the yacht, participated in by Van Zandt, Navarro
-and Capt. Beals. The master of the Semiramis looks
-inquiringly at the insurgent leader as he utters the words
-quoted above.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“For me personally there is but one course,” replies
-Navarro. “I must land somewhere in the night and make
-my way to Gen. Masso’s camp. That will not be a difficult
-matter. It is your own situation that I am considering.
-The American man-of-war, is she still in the harbor?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Capt. Beals shakes his head. “She sailed an hour ago
-for Key West, for supplies and instructions. She will
-not return for at least two days.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Navarro’s face grows grave. “Then you are not safe
-from molestation even in this vessel and under that flag,”
-he says, pointing to the red, white and blue floating from
-the masthead. “Without a man-of-war to protect you,
-the Spaniards, knowing that El Terredo is aboard, will
-search your yacht, possibly confiscate her and subject you
-to no end of annoyance, even though they should not
-find El Terredo. They respect no flag, no emblem, no
-rules of civilized nations, unless they are absolutely compelled
-to by superior force. You saw how they treated
-the American flag above the consul’s own residence.
-There are now three Spanish gunboats in the harbor.
-Within the hour I fear your yacht will be surrounded.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then there is but one thing to do,” promptly replies
-Van Zandt. “Capt. Beals, have steam got up at once
-and weigh anchor. We will follow the America to Key
-West.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>There is silence on the quarter-deck for a few moments.
-Miss Hathaway has retired to her former stateroom
-immediately upon setting foot upon the yacht, and
-Barker is intently watching the shore from the bridge.
-For the time being Van Zandt and Navarro are alone.
-Suddenly the former breaks the silence.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You are not a Cuban,” he says. “Why are you enlisted
-with the nondescript army of the insurrectionists?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Navarro flushes at the word nondescript, but does not
-reply at once. Finally he says quietly: “No, I am not
-a Cuban. I am, like yourself, an American. But my
-ancestors were Cuban, back more than six generations.
-Until ten months ago,” continues Navarro, in a less-impassioned
-tone, “I was a careless, happy-go-lucky American
-youth, without any specific aim in life. But when the
-Cuban insurrection broke out, I was consumed with an
-overmastering desire to help free Cuba from the accursed
-yoke of Spain. I have sacrificed everything to that end,
-and now I am known to the Spaniards as ‘El Terredo,’
-the terror. I believe I have been of some service to the
-struggling natives, and so I shall continue until Cuba is
-free, or–”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Navarro does not complete the sentence. While he
-was speaking the smoke has been pouring out of the
-chimneys of the yacht in steadily increasing volume, and
-now the clank of the steam windlass announces that the
-vessel is getting under way. Without replying to Navarro’s
-words, Van Zandt hastens below to inform Miss
-Hathaway of the destination of the yacht. Capt. Beals
-has taken his station on the bridge and the graceful vessel
-steams slowly toward the narrow entrance to the harbor
-of Santiago.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Navarro watches intently the three Spanish warships
-by which the Semiramis must pass within half a mile.
-As the yacht draws nearer, the watcher notes with anxiety
-a boat hastily putting out from the government
-wharf and evidently making for the flagship of the fleet,
-the Infanta Isabel. He communicates his discovery to
-Van Zandt, who has returned from below, with the comment:
-“They are evidently notifying the cruiser to have
-her stop this vessel. Rather than that she fire on the
-yacht and endanger the lives of those on board, including
-the young lady, you must surrender me. Then they may
-permit you to go unmolested.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No man leaves this ship for a Spanish prison or the
-garrote,” replies Van Zandt, his eyes burning with excitement,
-“as long as there is a timber of her afloat. It
-is less than six miles to the entrance to the harbor, and
-once outside we can snap our fingers at a whole fleet of
-Spanish cruisers. Besides, with all the various craft scattered
-about the harbor, they will not dare to fire on us.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Navarro shakes his head skeptically, but does not reply.
-The boat has reached the side of the war vessel.
-The Semiramis is now nearly abreast of the latter and
-distant less than half a mile. Suddenly a puff of smoke
-rises from the forward deck of the Spaniard, followed by
-the sharp crack of a rifle.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There! She has signaled you to heave to,” remarks
-Navarro. “As I told you, you must surrender me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“This is my answer,” replies the owner of the Semiramis,
-drawing his revolver and firing two shots in the air.
-Then to Capt. Beals on the bridge he sings out: “Full
-speed ahead!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Smoke is now pouring from the stacks of the warship,
-and it is evident that she is preparing to pursue the
-American yacht, but she does not, as Navarro predicted,
-fire on the latter. Before the cruiser gets well under way
-the Semiramis is within four miles of the channel that
-marks the entrance to the harbor.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Van Zandt smiles at Navarro. “We will lead him a
-merry race if he thinks to catch the Semiramis,” he remarks.
-“This yacht can go two miles to his one. And
-if he hasn’t improved in his marksmanship I will risk his
-guns. Ah, there goes the first one!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Spaniard has succeeded in getting within range
-of the yacht without endangering any of the other craft,
-and the roar of his forward gun is heard as Van Zandt
-speaks.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“An eighth of a mile to windward,” observes the latter,
-as he watches the solid shot skip over the water. “He
-can’t race and shoot, too.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Evidently the pursuer has come to the same conclusion,
-for he fires no more guns, but doggedly plows the placid
-waters of the harbor after the great black yacht.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>And now the latter is less than half a mile from the
-cleft in the precipitous coast line. Capt. Beals has slowed
-down the engines and the yacht is picking her way by
-the reefs that guard the channel.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ship ahoy!” suddenly rings out from the lookout forward.
-All eyes are turned ahead. A steamer, inward
-bound, has just come into view in the channel.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Permit me,” Navarro takes the glasses and focuses
-them upon the stranger. “It is the Spanish dispatch boat
-Pizarro,” he says. “When the cruiser recognizes her she
-will doubtless signal her to intercept the yacht, and in
-the narrow channel she can make serious trouble, I
-fear.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The report of another cannon, followed by two more
-in quick succession, shows that the man-of-war has indeed
-recognized her compatriot almost as soon as the
-American. An answering gun from the dispatch boat
-also shows that she has heard and understands.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Capt. Beals looks inquiringly at Van Zandt. “We must
-continue straight on and take our chances in the channel
-with that craft,” the latter says. Then to Navarro: “Do
-you know what her armament is?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, she is not a fighting ship. She has no armament,
-merely one gun for saluting purposes, and her
-crew cannot number over fifty.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then we are all right. If she gets in our way she
-must take the consequences.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But the dispatch boat evidently does not intend that
-the American shall pass. She has taken a position in the
-narrowest part of the channel and lies stationary, presenting
-her broadside to the oncoming yacht.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Signal that we propose to pass to port,” Van Zandt
-says to Capt. Beals, “and if the Spaniard gets in our
-course run him down.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Capt. Beals nods and a second later the hoarse whistle
-of the Semiramis echoes over the waters. The signal is
-answered with a rifle shot from the Spaniard’s forward
-deck and the dispatch boat moves forward two lengths,
-so that she lies fair and square in the announced course
-of the yacht.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But there are no signs of slackening on the part of the
-latter, and her black hull looks threatening indeed to the
-officers of the dispatch boat.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Caramba! Surely she will not run down the royal
-vessel! Yet it looks very like it! But they will not
-dare! Still—the Spanish commander hesitates no longer.
-He signals his vessel to back at full speed.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Too late!</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Pizarro has moved less than half a length when
-the American yacht crashes into her. There is a grinding
-shock that brings Louise Hathaway in terror to the
-deck of the Semiramis, and then the yacht continues on
-her course, apparently unharmed. Van Zandt catches a
-glimpse of a great jagged hole in the bow of the Spaniard,
-into which the water is pouring in a cataract; of
-a panic-stricken crew rushing frantically for the boats;
-and then he turns to Miss Hathaway. It is nothing, he
-assures her tenderly; a slight collision, but the yacht is
-all right and perhaps she had better return to her stateroom
-for the present. Later on—and Louise smiles, a
-little sadly, but permits Van Zandt to conduct her to the
-saloon.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Capt. Beals is awaiting Van Zandt as the latter bounds
-up the steps a minute later. “We are badly stove forward,”
-he reports, “and are making water quite rapidly.
-With the steam pumps going, we may keep afloat three
-or four hours, but the yacht is doomed.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Van Zandt is so startled at the news that for a moment
-he is speechless. His eyes rove back to the Spanish warship,
-and then at the nearly perpendicular cliffs by which
-the Semiramis is steaming.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>He looks for the dispatch boat, but it is not in sight.
-“The Spaniard?” he inquires, mechanically.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Gone to the bottom,” laconically replies the captain.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then there is no hope for us but to keep on and try
-to land by the boats somewhere on the coast,” Van Zandt
-says. “The Spaniards will treat us all as enemies, now
-that we have sunk one of their boats. How long can we
-keep up this speed?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Perhaps an hour, perhaps more. The water will put
-out the fires.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well, have the boats quietly prepared and keep within
-reach of land. Do you think the Spaniards will continue
-the pursuit?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Undoubtedly. They will stop only to pick up the
-crew of the Pizarro, and then will keep on after us. If
-there was some little bay near here where we could beach
-the yacht, but there isn’t.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The noble craft continues to plow the waves and her
-injured bow still tosses the foam on either side, but her
-speed is sensibly diminishing. All on board have recognized
-the fact that the yacht is doomed, but there is no
-confusion, no manifest anxiety. The boats have been
-prepared and each member of the crew has secured in
-a little package his most valued possessions. On the
-quarter-deck Van Zandt, Navarro, Barker and Louise
-Hathaway are silently watching the Spanish warship.
-The latter is gaining now, for the Semiramis is steadily
-settling.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Navarro, his hat drawn over his eyes and his coat
-wrapped about him so that his countenance is partially
-veiled, has carefully avoided Louise. When she returns
-to the deck he walks over to where John Barker is leaning
-against the rail and remarks in Spanish:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“If you do not desire to be shot as a deserter I should
-advise you to borrow a suit of clothes from our friend,
-the owner of the yacht.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The detective starts. “I guess you’re right,” he replies
-in English, and turns to Van Zandt. Five minutes later
-he emerges from the cabin attired in a fashionable suit
-of gray.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The water is within two inches of the boilers,” reports
-the engineer, and Van Zandt sighs heavily.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well,” he says, “we may as well take to the boats.
-Come.” He leads Louise to the steamer’s launch.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And he?” Louise points to where the body of Cyrus
-Felton lies, covered by its winding sheet of canvas.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He will go down with the Semiramis. He could have
-no nobler tomb.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Boom! The roar of the Spanish gun is the salute the
-people of the Semiramis hear as the boats pull away from
-the doomed yacht. The cruiser is within range and
-though her commander must be aware that the American
-vessel is sinking he is firing on her.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The coward!” grits Van Zandt. “But the Semiramis
-will not strike her flag. She sinks with the stars and
-stripes flying.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Pull hard!” shouts Capt. Beals. “Pull hard! She’s
-going down!”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER LVII.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>AN INTERNATIONAL EPISODE.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“Ashley, we will give you something to write about,”
-remarks Capt. Meade, as the America steams out of the
-harbor of Santiago.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What’s that, captain? A thrilling description of a
-voyage from Santiago de Cuba to Key West?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The commander of the cruiser smiles good-naturedly.
-“More excitement than that, and something that will
-cause the little senorita to cling frantically to your arm.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ah, then, you may open the ball at once.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not yet; not for an hour. In short, we are going to
-burn some powder by and by. A little target practice,
-and if you have never seen anything of the sort you will
-be rather interested.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Confound his target practice,” Jack mutters disgustedly,
-as Capt. Meade bustles away. “The only powder-burning
-I want to see is the shelling of the dingy old city
-of Santiago by the Spanish fleet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But Ashley’s temporary annoyance is soon forgotten
-in the pleasure of assisting Juanita up and down the steep
-ladders, of explaining the machinery, the guns, the great
-searchlight and the thousand and one interesting features
-of the cruiser.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The target practice, he also finds, is a decidedly interesting
-affair, after all, which conclusion may have been
-influenced by the manifest delight of his sweetheart over
-the novel experience.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But the last gun is fired, the buoy mark is demolished,
-and, within forty-eight hours, Capt. Meade tells Jack,
-the America will be lying at anchor in the harbor of Key
-West.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And she will return to Santiago, when?” the correspondent
-inquires. “I must be back at the finish, if the
-insurgents capture the city and it is shelled by the Spanish
-fleet.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Capt. Meade shakes his head. “That depends on instructions
-received at Key West. I suppose though, that
-the cruiser would be ordered directly back to Santiago
-after coaling.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Just then the captain is summoned to the bridge, where
-it is evident that some unusual occurrence is engrossing
-the attention of the officers.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Jack observes that the captain has his glass turned toward
-the northwest, and he also looks in that direction.
-Trails of black smoke low down on the horizon, evidently
-from two steamers, are all that reward his gaze, but he
-notices that the course of the America has been changed
-and that her speed has been materially accelerated.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What is in the wind?” he inquires, casually, of the
-youthful ensign.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That’s just what we’re going to find out,” is the reply,
-and Ashley follows Capt. Meade to the bridge.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Nothing special that we know of,” is that official’s
-response to Jack’s query as to the cause of the change of
-course. “Some stranger, probably a Spanish gunboat,
-is in pursuit of another steamer, and as it is not much out
-of our course I concluded to run up nearer the scene.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The white cruiser is now rushing along at a speed that
-reminds Jack of his first memorable trip upon her, and
-is rapidly reducing the cloud of smoke on the horizon to
-the outlines of a formidable man-of-war.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The Spanish cruiser Infanta Isabel,” is the conclusion
-of Capt. Meade, after a long and careful study of the distant
-steamer. “But the craft she is in pursuit of I cannot
-quite make out. She is a large steamship of some sort
-and the Don is overhauling her hand over fist. We shall
-be there just in time to see the fun.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The America’s course is converging toward that of
-pursuer and pursued. Capt. Meade’s keen eyes are alternately
-riveted on the Spanish warship and the unknown
-vessel.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“If that steamship did not set so low in the water,” he
-remarks, thoughtfully, “and was going about two-thirds
-faster, I should say that she was our old friend, the big
-black yacht Semiramis. But—great heaven! The steamer
-is sinking! That’s what’s the matter with her! She is
-steadily settling!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>All eyes on the cruiser are now directed toward the
-crippled stranger. She is, as Capt. Meade says, slowly
-sinking while yet the waters are dashing on either side of
-her bow like mountain streams.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“A game struggle, but all in vain,” is the comment of
-the captain, shaking his head. “Probably the Spaniard
-hulled him below the water line early in the struggle,
-and he has been slowly making water ever since. He
-can’t last much longer. The water must be near the fires
-now. Ah! I thought so!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>For the strange steamer has apparently lost headway.
-The black smoke that a moment before poured from her
-chimneys now mingles with a white cloud of steam.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Her fires are out,” Capt. Meade explains to Ashley.
-“She will go down in twenty minutes, if she doesn’t blow
-up before.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The boom of a heavy cannon startles the watchers and
-they turn quickly to the Spanish man-of-war. A curling
-wreath of smoke from her forward deck tells the origin
-of the report, and their eyes return to the sinking vessel.
-A puff of wind lifts for a moment the flag hanging limp
-at her masthead, as if in mute defiance of the Spanish
-shot. Capt. Meade starts as if he had received an electric
-shock.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The American flag!” he thunders, “and fired on by
-the Spaniard!” Then to the executive officer: “Signal
-for the forced draught and bear down on the steamer.
-We will pick up her boats and then investigate the outrage
-on the flag.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Another shot, and still another, comes echoing over
-the water from the Infanta Isabel, her target the fast-filling
-steamer.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Suddenly Ashley is electrified by the command in the
-stentorian tones of Capt. Meade:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Clear the ship for action!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>A second later the trumpet’s harsh notes and the sharp
-rattle of drum, mingling with the shrill whistles and
-rough voices of the boatswain, mates and the noisy clanging
-of the electric gongs, call the sturdy crew of the
-America to “general quarters.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Then, indeed, is the blood of the newspaper man
-stirred by the scenes about him. The decks throb with
-the rush of hurrying feet as the men hasten to their stations.
-The gun crews are casting loose the great guns,
-the murderous rapid-fire cannon and the secondary batteries.
-Some are hastily donning equipments, others filling
-sponge-buckets and still others stripping themselves
-of all superfluous clothing, laying bare their brawny
-forms.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Hatches are covered, hose laid and pumps rigged, ladders
-torn away, and decks turned topsy-turvy, in the
-twinkling of an eye. Rifles, cutlasses and revolvers come
-out from the armory in quantities that amaze Ashley.
-The marine guard falls in and topmen are scrambling
-nimbly aloft to secure anything movable there.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Down come the rails, out come davits and awning
-stanchions—everything movable is stowed away or secured.
-The magazines are opened and the tackle rigged
-over the ammunition hatches ready to hoist shot and shell
-for the guns.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“The grim panoply of war,” Jack thinks, as he hastens
-to conduct the wondering Juanita below. Even here, he
-observes to his great surprise, the captain’s sacred cabin
-has been invaded “on the jump” by the crews of the after
-guns.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As Ashley returns to the quarter-deck he notes that
-the America is bearing hard down almost at right angles
-on the Spanish warship, now distant less than a mile.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Evidently here is an excellent opportunity for an international
-episode,” he thinks, as he glances at the stern
-face of “Fighting Dave” Meade on the bridge. Then
-his hand involuntarily goes to his ears and he catches at
-the rail for support, as the forward gun of the American
-cruiser thunders forth and an eight-pound solid shot
-skims over the waves across the bow of the Spanish
-cruiser.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Before he recovers from the shock of the concussion
-there is a murmured, “She’s going!” from the officers on
-the quarter-deck and Jack looks quickly in the direction
-of the sinking steamer. But the black hull has already
-disappeared beneath the waves and he sees only the fluttering
-red, white and blue ere the whirling eddies reach
-their eager arms for the beautiful emblem.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The gun from the America does not have the anticipated
-effect on the Spaniard, for he continues full speed
-toward the spot where the steamer sunk. But it has
-evidently had effect in another direction. With the aid
-of his marine glasses Ashley observes four boats, which
-had hitherto escaped his notice, pulling toward the white
-cruiser. The purpose of the Spanish vessel is thus apparent.
-She designs to cut off the fleeing boats before
-they may reach the America.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Again the white cruiser careens to one side and a second
-deafening report, this time the gun from amidship,
-roars out in language not to be misunderstood by the
-on-rushing Spanish man-of-war.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>It is not misunderstood.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>There is a rapid gush of escaping steam, the stacks
-cease to vomit forth their black clouds and the Infanta
-Isabel turns her course and steams slowly toward the
-America.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley watches curiously the flashing oars of the
-coming boats, and when the forward one is almost within
-hail he lifts the glasses to his eyes and scans her passengers.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thunder and Mars!” he exclaims, “if there isn’t John
-Barker in the bow and—yes, it must be Louise Hathaway,
-Van Zandt, and—who the devil is that chap with
-the ferocious mustachios? El Terredo, or I’m a sinner!”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER LVIII.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>THE END OF THE TRAIL.</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>When the first boat is alongside the America, Barker
-is the first man to clamber to the deck, and the first individual
-he gets his eye on is Jack Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Hello! Well met,” remarks that young man, extending
-his hand. “I was expecting you any minute.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker gives Jack’s hand a perfunctory clasp and
-passes on with a gruff “Hello!”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am not yet forgiven. I see,” thinks Ashley, as he
-turns to the rest of the party coming aboard. He greets
-Miss Hathaway warmly and Van Zandt genially, and
-grips Navarro’s hand with a pressure of strong friendship.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>There is no present opportunity for mutual explanations,
-as a serious interruption is apparent in the shape
-of a boat that has put out from the Spanish man-of-war
-and is rapidly approaching the America.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>With a shade of anxiety the people of the Semiramis
-await the arrival of the boat. They note the preparations
-to receive with due honor the representative of the Infanta
-Isabel, the marines drawn up in double file beside
-the gangway, the officers of the America in position on
-the quarter-deck. But there is no time for speculation or
-conjecture. Eight pairs of dripping oars are simultaneously
-raised, the boat glides softly to the side of the
-cruiser, and a moment later the Spanish officer is bowing
-profoundly to the commander of the America.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>His excellency, Admiral Sanchez of his majesty’s man-of-war
-Infanta Isabel, presents his compliments to the
-commander of the United States cruiser America and
-begs to say that the passengers, officers and crew of the
-steamer just sunk, who have sought asylum on the
-American vessel, are rebels, in arms against his majesty
-the king of Spain; that their vessel, just sunk, has within
-the last three hours destroyed the royal Spanish dispatch
-boat Pizarro. Wherefore his excellency respectfully asks
-that the said officers, passengers and crew of the rebel
-ship be delivered to the representative of her majesty’s
-ship Infanta Isabel as prisoners of war.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Captain Meade listens patiently while the Spanish officer
-delivers his message, his brow knitting slightly at
-the reference to the destruction of the dispatch boat.
-Then he turns to Captain Beals:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What have you to say to this statement and why were
-you flying the American flag, if you were in command
-of an insurgent vessel?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“We are not insurgents and we did not destroy the
-dispatch boat,” is the reply. “The pleasure yacht Semiramis
-of New York, Van Zandt owner, was in collision
-with the Pizarro in the harbor of Santiago. The Pizarro
-stood directly in our course, notwithstanding our signals
-that we proposed to pass to port. We should have gone
-aground if we had not fouled her. We did not stop, as
-the Semiramis was badly stove and subsequently sunk,
-as you have seen. Further, our officers and crew and the
-passengers are without exception American citizens. As
-such, I appeal to the commander of an American vessel
-for protection.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And you shall have it,” murmurs Captain Meade
-under his breath. To the Spaniard he says: “Present
-my compliments to his excellency, Admiral Sanchez, and
-say that the commander of the America finds upon investigation
-that the officers and crew of the late steamer
-Semiramis are American citizens, who claim the protection
-of the American flag; that her captain and officers
-maintain that the destruction of the Pizarro was an
-accident for which they are in no wise responsible.
-Therefore I am constrained to decline to grant the courteous
-request of his excellency.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The Spanish officer bows respectfully and continues:
-“His excellency also desired to convey to the commander
-of the United States cruiser America the information
-that among the persons lately on board the sunken
-steamer was one Cuban rebel, denominated El Terredo,
-whom his excellency has every reason to believe has
-sought refuge on board this ship. He respectfully requests
-that said El Terredo be delivered to the representative
-of his majesty’s ship.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Captain Meade’s eye strays over the little group, but
-before he can speak Navarro steps forward and says in
-English: “I have been designated as El Terredo, but I
-am an American citizen.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I can testify to that statement,” supplements Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Captain Meade waves his hand. “That is sufficient.
-Inform his excellency that all of the persons picked up
-in the boats from the lost steamer are American citizens.
-As such, I cannot surrender them.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Again the officer bows, and his errand performed, he
-salutes and returns to the boat. What will be the effect
-of his report? Will Admiral Sanchez resent with force
-Captain Meade’s decision, or will he gracefully bow to
-the inevitable? The latter apparently, for a few moments
-after the officer ascends the side of the man-of-war the
-Spanish flag is dipped in salute to the America and the
-Infanta Isabel steams slowly back in the direction of
-Santiago.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Again is Providence on the side of the heaviest guns,”
-murmurs Ashley, as he walks over to where Barker is
-leaning against the rail, and claps him on the back.
-“John, I am powerful glad to see you,” he declares
-heartily.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I don’t know whether I can say the same or not,”
-rejoins the detective, sulkily. “For a man whose infernal
-meddling with affairs that did not concern him nearly
-cost me my life, you appear pretty cool and unconcerned.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“My dear friend,” says Ashley, “if I had not been at
-Jibana half a dozen days ago you would never have
-forgiven yourself for the part you played as a soldier of
-Castile. Do you know who Don Carlos was?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I know he, or she, was a woman.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Oh, you do?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes; and if you had shown yourself after the scrimmage,
-instead of sneaking off to Santiago, I might have
-told you of my discovery.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Ungrateful wretch!” cries Ashley in mock reproach.
-“I admit that I got you into the scrape, but I also got
-you out of it. The fiery El Terredo would have strung
-you to a telegraph pole had I not begged for your life
-and liberty. Yes; Don Carlos was a woman, and she
-was Helen Hathaway.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Then El Terredo?” marvels the detective, who is beginning
-to see daylight.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Was Derrick Ames, of course. Anyone except a detective
-would have discovered that long ago.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Indeed,” retorts Barker. “When did you find it out?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Early this morning,” laughs Ashley. “But let us be
-serious. Where are the Feltons, father and son?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“One dead, and the other perhaps so,” replies Barker,
-and he tells Ashley the story of an exciting day at Santiago.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It must be done,” the detective is saying, concluding
-his narrative. “Your sympathies naturally stand in the
-way, so I will relieve you of all active participation in
-the affair. All you will have to do is to be a silent witness.
-One thing you must do, though. You must see
-Mrs. Ames and have her pledge that she will not let
-her husband know that she has told you her story. I
-must handle the affair gently, as Ames is as flashy as
-gunpowder. You will see Helen, then?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes; I will fix it immediately. When do you occupy
-the center of the stage?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“To-morrow. I will let you know in due season.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“All right, old chap. I will be glad when it is all over.
-So long.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>There are many happy hearts on the America this
-night. The meeting between the sisters, Helen and
-Louise, was a dramatic one, and after affectionate confidences
-had been exchanged each sought the man she
-loved best.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But a shadow of sadness hovers about the four as they
-sit on the quarter-deck and watch the big white moon
-rise out of the sea. Now that all the excitement is over
-Van Zandt has dropped back into his old reserve, and
-the consciousness of his odd relations to Louise Hathaway
-reverts to him with unpleasant keenness. Ames is
-moody and abstracted and only the incessant flow of
-spirits of Jack Ashley, who joins the group with Juanita,
-keeps the little party alive.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>But bedtime comes early, for everyone is thoroughly
-tired, and the party disperses with many a fervent “Good-night,
-and pleasant dreams.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>And as Van Zandt prepares to go below he feels a
-touch on his arm and turns to see John Barker. “Mr.
-Van Zandt, will you grant me a few minutes before you
-retire?” requests the detective.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Certainly,” is the reply. “Come to my stateroom.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ashley rises early the next morning and as he smokes
-his after-breakfast cigar Barker joins him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I shall want you at ten o’clock, promptly,” says the
-detective. “Meet me in the private cabin, or whatever
-it is called on shipboard. I have secured exclusive use
-of it for an hour.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Very well,” replies Jack, abstractedly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Promptly at ten, Ashley repairs below, and as he enters
-the cabin he finds Ames and Van Zandt there. They
-look at him questioningly, but before he has opportunity
-to say more than “Good-morning,” Barker enters, closes
-the door and locks it.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ames flushes angrily. “So,” he says, “it is at your
-request that I am here?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It is,” replies the detective, calmly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What do you mean, sir, by inviting me to this place
-and locking the door upon me?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I simply do not wish to be disturbed,” is Barker’s
-unruffled response. “The cruiser America is now United
-States territory. I have business with you, Mr. Ames.
-Gentlemen, will you not be seated?”</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <h2 class='c008'>CHAPTER LIX.<br /> <br /><span class='c009'>“WRITTEN BY THE HAND OF FATE.”</span></h2>
-</div>
-<p class='c010'>“You are a detective,” murmurs Derrick Ames, as he
-drops back into his chair.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I am,” answers Barker. “For nearly a year I have
-been on the track of the murderer of Roger Hathaway,
-being ably seconded in my quest by my friend Jack
-Ashley. The trail has been a tangled one, and has wound
-under the flags of three countries, but for the past fortnight
-the end has been clearly in view. By a remarkable
-combination of circumstances affairs have been so precipitated
-that to-day nearly all the living characters in the
-Raymond drama are upon this vessel, the United States
-cruiser America. My work is done. I have only my
-story to tell. I shall begin, Mr. Ames, by asking you a
-few questions,” resumes Barker.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Well?” queries the object of his remarks.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“At what hour did you enter the Raymond National
-Bank on the evening of Memorial Day of last year?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I cannot say exactly. I judge that it was in the vicinity
-of 7:45.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Will you be good enough to state what took place
-there between you and Roger Hathaway?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Ames scans the detective’s face keenly for a moment,
-then replies to Barker in deliberate tones:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I went to the bank to ask Mr. Hathaway’s consent
-that his daughter Helen might become my wife. I was
-confident that my errand was useless, as he had twice
-before scorned my suit. Helen and I had been idling
-all the afternoon on the hillside below the town. As
-evening drew on I left her at the bars and went to the
-bank, as she stated that she had understood her father
-to say that he should spend the evening at work upon his
-books. It being Memorial Day the streets were deserted,
-and, barring one acquaintance, a chap named Sam Brockway,
-I did not meet a person on my walk up the main
-thoroughfare. As I crossed the bridge I saw Mr. Hathaway
-standing on the steps of the bank, delivering a note
-to a boy, and when he re-entered the building I followed
-him.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“‘What do you want?’ he demanded, almost fiercely.
-I told him, and he broke into a torrent of abuse. Naturally
-hot-tempered, I answered his railings in kind, and
-I know not what might have happened had not Mr.
-Hathaway suddenly ended the dispute by seizing me by
-the shoulder and pushing me through the bank door to
-the street, threatening, as he did so, to have the law on
-me if I continued my attentions to his daughter. Through
-the glass panel in the door I watched him walk rapidly
-away in the darkness of the interior; saw him as for an
-instant his form passed into the lighted office in the rear
-of the bank. Then the door to that room closed. I
-never saw Roger Hathaway again.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“That is sufficient,” says Barker, as Ames pauses.
-“Your further progress up to to-day is known to me.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Indeed?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Yes. And I may say that from the outset neither
-Mr. Ashley nor myself believed you guilty of the murder
-of Roger Hathaway. At the most, we considered that
-you might have been a witness to the tragedy. But your
-testimony is the last link in the chain. I am now prepared,
-gentlemen, to relate what in all human probability
-happened in Raymond on the evening of Memorial Day
-last year.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Pardon me, Mr. Barker,” Van Zandt breaks in,
-abruptly. “I regret to tell you that the trail which you
-have so patiently followed has led you to what I should
-judge, from your preliminary remarks, to be a false conclusion.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What!” cries the detective, starting from his chair.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“You think Cyrus Felton killed Roger Hathaway. So
-did I once. We were wrong. If Cyrus Felton was responsible
-for Hathaway’s death it was only indirectly,
-and the Raymond tragedy was the cause of more misery
-to him than any human being should be compelled to
-bear.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker is too astounded to reply for an instant, and
-Ames and Ashley stare questioningly at Van Zandt.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Let me relate briefly that much of my story which
-bears directly upon the tragic events in Raymond,” says
-Van Zandt, quietly.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“On the afternoon of Memorial day of last year I was
-released from the State prison at Windsor, Vermont,
-after serving two of a three years’ sentence for forgery,
-which, in reality, was committed by Ralph Felton. I
-took the afternoon train for Raymond, arriving there at
-7:45. I went directly to Cyrus Felton’s residence, and
-reached it at 7:55. As I was about to ascend the porch
-I heard footsteps behind me, and, thinking they might
-be those of the man I sought, I stepped into the shadow
-of the porch. The new arrival had apparently called to
-see Felton on business. I heard the housemaid tell the
-visitor that Felton was not at home; that he might be
-at his office in the bank building. As the man walked
-away I followed leisurely.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“When I reached the entrance of the bank building a
-man, presumably the caller at Felton’s, came down the
-stairs and walked down the street. Then I went up the
-stairs and proceeded down the corridor until I reached
-a door with Felton’s name upon it. But the door was
-locked and the office was dark. As I retraced my steps
-and stood again at the entrance of the block a man
-passed by hurriedly, ascended the steps to the bank,
-opened the door and went in.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“I remained where I was for five minutes, and then
-walked to the bank door and glanced through the glass
-panel. The interior was dark, save for a ray of light
-that issued through the partly opened door to the cashier’s
-private office. Perhaps Felton is within, I thought,
-and pushing open the front door, which was ajar, I
-walked softly toward the shaft of light that slanted across
-the bank floor.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“What my errand to Felton was, gentlemen, it is not
-necessary for me to now state. Enough to say that when
-I threw open the door to the cashier’s office I looked
-upon a sight that froze the blood in my veins.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Lying upon the polished floor, which was stained
-with his life-blood, was the body of Roger Hathaway,
-and standing over him was Cyrus Felton, a revolver
-clenched in his right hand.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“When I made my appearance upon the threshold of
-the office Felton turned his head and our eyes met for
-an instant that must to each have seemed an age. Then
-I closed the door, and a moment later stood at the entrance
-of the bank, gasping for air. Can you not imagine
-the horror in my soul? My one impulse was to flee from
-the fearful scene. I had looked, as I thought, into the
-face of Roger Hathaway’s slayer, and that was the man
-to whom, incidentally at least, I owed the two past years
-of misery. Falsely imprisoned for one crime, might I
-not be accused of another and greater one? All this and
-more flashed through my brain, and I hurried to the
-railway station. There I learned that no train was due
-for hours. I staggered away from the station and plunged
-down the track into the night.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“How I made my way over mountain and through forest
-to southeastern Vermont and rode to New York on
-the trucks of a freight car; how I read in a New York
-paper of the crime that startled Vermont and of my supposed
-connection with the affair; how in that same paper
-I saw a personal advertising that if Phillip Van Zandt,
-who left Montana over two years ago, would communicate
-with Ezra Smith, lawyer of Butte, Montana, he
-would learn of something to his advantage; how I, being
-the much wanted Van Zandt, proceeded to Montana and
-discovered that I was sole heir to the immense fortune
-of my uncle, a silver king in that State, from whom I had
-foolishly parted in anger two years before—all this and
-more I will relate at another time, gentlemen, if you care
-to listen.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Not until late last night,” continues Van Zandt, “did
-I have the opportunity of examining the papers given in
-my possession by Cyrus Felton just before he died in the
-consul’s residence at Santiago.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>As he speaks Van Zandt takes from his pocket a
-packet of papers, selects one of them and tosses it across
-the table to Barker. “Read that,” he says. “Read it
-aloud.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The detective unfolds the document and reads:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Santiago de Cuba, April 15.—This is written by the hand
-of fate. I shall not live to see to-morrow’s sun rise. I know
-it. The presentiment of my end is so irresistible that no effort
-of will can shake it off. And I am glad that it is so. I could
-not endure another day such as this has been. I should go
-mad.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“To-day I saw the detective. I have felt that for months
-he has been pursuing me. And I have looked again into the
-eyes, the glittering, pitiless eyes, that stared at me nearly a
-year ago across the corpse of Roger Hathaway—the eyes of
-the man whom, to shield my son, I cruelly wronged. From
-the hour, a month or more ago, that I met Phillip Van Zandt
-I feared him. A nameless dread took possession of me. To-day
-I recognized him and I read hatred, contempt and menace
-in his eyes. He thinks I killed Roger Hathaway, and what
-manner of vengeance he has in store I know not.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“But Roger Hathaway killed himself. Together we wrecked
-the Raymond National Bank. It was the old story of unfortunate
-investments, and the blame was chiefly mine. But when
-the crash was imminent Hathaway proved the hero and I
-the coward. He killed himself and saved both his name and
-mine. And yet with that bullet he put an end to all his troubles,
-while I—I have suffered for months the tortures of the damned.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“With this I inclose his letter, which he left on his desk
-for me the evening of Memorial Day. It has been on my person
-since that fatal night, and it has seared my very soul. I have
-not dared to destroy it or to leave it where it might be found,
-for it is at once the proof of my guilt and of my innocence.
-If it becomes necessary to clear—</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“Ah, he is coming.</p>
-<div class='c017'>Cyrus Felton.”</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>Barker mechanically unfolds the inclosure, three sheets
-of letter paper crumpled and worn. The stillness within
-the cabin is deathlike as the detective reads:</p>
-
-<p class='c013'>“Before your eyes rest upon these lines the hand that pens
-them will be cold in death. I have taken the only alternative.
-For myself I care not, but that the finger of scorn should
-be pointed at my defenseless children; that their young lives
-should be blighted and they shunned and avoided as lepers
-because their father betrayed his trust and cruelly wronged
-his friends and neighbors, I cannot bear it. The banks, both
-of them, are irretrievably involved. The funds deposited by the
-county to pay the bonds have been used to meet pressing
-obligations. The crash would come to-morrow. It cannot
-be staved off another day. I have thought it all out. For
-the sake of my children and the name they bear I am about
-to take my own life. But they nor any other living person
-save you must ever know that I did not die by the hand of the
-assassin. I have arranged that it will appear as if the bank has
-been robbed and the cashier murdered. As I write this room
-bears evidence of a fearful struggle. The vault is open and
-the securities in confusion. Thus will our crime be hidden
-from the eyes of all save God. Your personal account overdrawn
-I have fixed by the removal of pages from the ledger, so
-that when the examination of the bank’s affairs is made there
-may be no suspicion of irregularity on your part or mine.
-You will be the first to find my lifeless body. The weapon by
-which I die you must secure and secrete.</p>
-
-<p class='c014'>“And now, farewell. That the sacrifice I am about to make
-may not be in vain I adjure you guard well the secret of my
-death. Care for my children. Watch over them, cherish
-them. By our hope of heaven and forgiveness, by our life-long
-friendship, by the bitter sacrifice to which duty points the
-way, by all these things I charge you, Cyrus Felton, fail not
-at the peril of your good name.</p>
-<div class='c017'>Roger Hathaway.”</div>
-
-<p class='c016'>As Barker concludes the reading of the remarkable
-epistle each of the four men is busy with his thoughts.
-No one offers any comment on the message from the
-dead. Finally Ames breaks the silence.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And Ralph Felton?” he queries, turning to Barker.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“He had nothing whatever to do with the death of
-Roger Hathaway,” returns the detective. “He refused
-to answer the coroner’s question at the inquest as to
-where he had spent his time between 7:45 o’clock and
-8:30 on the evening of Memorial Day because he did not
-wish his association with Isabel Winthrop, or Harding,
-to become known when he had been a suitor for the hand
-of Helen Hathaway. But that was not his principal
-reason for leaving Raymond as suddenly as he did. As
-bookkeeper of the savings bank he had embezzled a
-portion of the funds—not a sensational peculation, only
-sufficient to keep pace with his expenditures, which were
-in excess of his income. Fearing that his offense would
-be made public when the bank’s affairs were overhauled,
-he fled. It was with difficulty that I extracted from him
-yesterday afternoon a confession of his reason for leaving
-Raymond.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“As to the locket supposed to have been removed from
-Hathaway’s watch chain the night of the tragedy, and
-which Mr. Ashley picked up a few nights ago, I supposed
-until yesterday that it had been dropped by Ralph Felton.
-But it seems that it was torn from Mr. Ames’ neck when
-Felton hurled himself upon him on that memorable evening
-at Jibana. Mr. Hathaway had detached it from his
-chain the morning of Memorial Day, as the spring was
-broken, and had given it to Helen to convey to the jeweler’s
-to be repaired. It left Raymond with her, and when
-she and her husband took up their Cuban life the miniature
-of the younger sister was removed, for obvious
-reasons, and Mr. Ames wore the locket about his neck,
-attached to a long gold chain.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Another silence, which this time Van Zandt breaks.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Now that the facts in the case are in your possession,
-Mr. Barker, I presume you will feel it your duty to report
-them to the proper authorities.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The detective does not reply. He glances curiously at
-Ashley, and the latter passes over a cigar, which the
-detective bites in meditative fashion.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And you?” Van Zandt queries, turning to Ashley.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“It would make a capital story,” drawls Jack, who
-has already told himself that the big bunch of “copy” in
-the pigeonhole of his desk in the Hemisphere office will
-never greet a compositor’s eye.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“No doubt,” says Van Zandt, gravely. “But, like many
-capital stories, it would be a source of endless pain to
-two estimable young ladies. It would render nil the
-sacrifice which Roger Hathaway made to preserve his
-family name from disgrace, and would make a hollow
-mockery of the simple epitaph which you tell me marks
-the marble shaft above his grave—‘Faithful Unto
-Death.’”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>The detective lights his cigar.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Is there any likelihood, Mr. Barker, of the state of
-Vermont paying the $1,000 reward which was offered?”
-continues Van Zandt.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“None,” replies Barker. “The reward was for the
-arrest and conviction of Roger Hathaway’s murderer.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“And the additional $4,000 offered by the bank?”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker smiles sardonically.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Van Zandt takes from his pocket a folded slip of paper
-and passes it across the table to the detective.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“There is a check for $5,000,” he says. “It is not a
-bribe. It is only your just dues for the labors that you
-have expended on the case. Personally, I am under deep
-obligations to you. As to whether the Raymond mystery
-shall remain a mystery, I leave it to your own sense of
-duty.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>Barker folds the check slowly, and, as he slips it into
-his vest pocket, he remarks, with a glance toward Ashley:</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“If my partner consents, the Hathaway case may as
-well remain as now fixed in the coroner’s records in
-Raymond, Vermont.”</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Your partner came to that decision some time ago,”
-is Ashley’s quiet response.</p>
-
-<p class='c011'>“Thank you, gentlemen,” says Van Zandt, as he rises.
-“And now, my friends, suppose we rejoin the ladies.
-They will begin to think that we have deserted them.”</p>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c0'>
-<div class='nf-center c003'>
- <div><span class='large'>THE END.</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-<p class='c011'>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class='tnbox'>
-
- <ul class='ul_1 c003'>
- <li>Transcriber’s Notes:
- <ul class='ul_2'>
- <li>The spelling of some words were corrected if they appeared likely to be typographic
- errors; otherwise they were left as written.
- </li>
- <li>At the end of Chapter X there was an image of the note Cyrus received. The the image
- was almost illegible so only the text was included.
- </li>
- <li>The word “clue” is consistently spelled “clew” throughout the book. It appears in
- older dictionaries.
- </li>
- <li>Accent marks were omitted in all but one Spanish word (café) that would normally
- require them.
- </li>
- <li>Missing or obscured punctuation was silently corrected.
- </li>
- <li>Typographical errors were silently corrected.
- </li>
- <li>Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation were made consistent only when a predominant
- form was found in this book.
- </li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- </ul>
-
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c003' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/back.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
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