There was a decided air of mystery
about the new occupant of the parlor-floor suite,
or at least so it appeared to Miss Husted of Houston
Street. As a matter of fact, Herr Von Barwig
minded his own business and evidently expected every
one else to do likewise, for he kept his door and
his ears closed to all polite advances during the
first few days after his arrival at Houston Mansion.
Despite Miss Husted’s oft-repeated inquiries
after the professor’s health (the title had
been conferred on him by virtue of his possessing a
violin and on the arrival of a piano for his room),
despite her endeavours to direct conversation into
a channel which might lead to a discussion of his
personal affairs, Herr Von Barwig remained tacit; hence
a mystery attached itself to the personality of the
professor. It is a curious fact that the one
gentleman of genuine title that found his way into
the Houston Street establishment was ruthlessly shorn
of his right to distinction and dubbed professor,
which sobriquet clung to him for many, many years.
However, this did not annoy Herr Von Barwig, for he
had not yet realised that in America every concertina
and rag-time piano-player, as well as barber, corn-doctor,
and teacher of the manly art of boxing, is entitled
to the distinction of being called professor.
“The professor has beautiful
manners-oh, such beautiful manners,”
confided Miss Husted to her new friend, Mrs. Mangenborn,
about two weeks after his arrival. “Every
time I speak he bows, and there’s oh, such dignity,
such grace in the bending of his head. How polite
he is, too; he always says, ‘No, madam, thank
you;’ or ’yes, if madam will be so kind,’
and then he bows again and waits for me to go.”
“Is that all he says?”
inquired Mrs. Mangenborn. “I guess he knows
how to keep his mouth shut, then! If you want
a man to talk never ask him questions; men are a suspicious
lot.”
“Ah, but he is different,”
said Miss Husted. “He has such a sad,
far-away, wistful look in his noble, dark eyes.”
“That may be, but far-away looks
don’t pay any rent for you! You can’t
attach any importance to things like that. My
first husband had a far-away look, and I haven’t
seen him for ten years. That Steinway grand
the professor’s got, did he hire it or buy it?
A man’s got to have money to support one of
those instruments,” went on Mrs. Mangenborn.
“I don’t know,”
replied Miss Husted, who could not help thinking that
her friend had a somewhat mercenary mind. “No
one’s been to see him, so he hasn’t got
it for his friends; his violin has a beautiful sound.
Mr. Pinac tells me that it must be a rare old instrument.”
The door-bell was heard ringing, but
no one seemed to pay any attention to it until they
heard the whistle that followed; then everybody bustled
about. The postman always created a little excitement
in Houston Street, and his arrival was the one occasion
on which even Thurza hurried to the door. It
was also the one occasion on which she need not have
done so, for she invariably found Miss Rusted or one
of the guests ahead of her.
“Registered letter for Herr Von Barwig.”
“I’ll take it to him,” said Miss
Husted sweetly.
“He’s got to come and
sign it himself,” said the letter-carrier, shaking
his head.
“Where’s it from?”
asked Mrs. Mangenborn, her head appearing over the
bannisters.
Miss Husted looked at the letter-carrier
inquiringly, but that official appeared not to have
heard the question. At all events, he made no
reply, and Miss Husted knocked on the professor’s
door.
“Come in.”
Miss Husted opened the door.
“Ah, madam, what can I do for
you?” said Von Barwig, rising from the table
at which he was writing.
Miss Husted smiled sweetly.
She noticed that he was writing music, so he must
be a composer as well as a professor.
“Will you please come and sign
for a registered letter?” she said.
“Ah, yes! I come at once.”
He arose, held the door open for Miss
Husted to pass out, bowing to her as she did so, and
then coming into the hallway, fulfilled the postal
requirements, totally unconscious that several pairs
of eyes were watching the operation. The letter-carrier
handed him two letters; one bearing the postmark Leipsic,
the other that of New York.
Von Barwig returned to his room and
read the following from a firm of stock brokers:
“Herr Anton Von Barwig.
“DEAR SIR: Pursuant to
your instructions, we have sold the balance of the
securities you left with us, but they have so depreciated
in value during your seven years’ absence from
Leipsic, that we hesitated to sell them at their present
market price. However, your instructions in
regard to these securities were definite and we have
obeyed them. Hoping this will meet with your
satisfaction, we remain,
“Yours obediently,
“BERNSTEIN & DEUTSCH.”
A draft on Drexel, Morgan’s
bank, for $1,000 dropped from Von Barwig’s hand;
he picked it up mechanically and looked at it.
“The last, the very last, barely
one-tenth the price I paid for them,” he thought;
and sighing, put the draft into a pocketbook and deposited
it in an inner pocket.
The other letter was from a detective
agency in Eighth Street, and read as follows:
“DEAR SIR: Call on us at
your earliest convenience. We have news.
“HATCH & BUCKLEY.”
That was all, but it was enough to
cause Von Barwig to change hastily from his slippers
and dressing-gown to his shoes and hat; and to be out
in the street in less than one minute after reading
the letter.
“News, news, news! Good
God, is it possible? No, no! I mustn’t
believe it; I dare not. Helene, Helene, my little
girl! No, no, I won’t; I won’t!”
and he read the letter again. “After all,”
he mused, “it may be news of a thousand little
girls and yet not of mine. I beg your pardon,
madam!” In turning from Houston Street into
the Bowery, still reading the letter, he had bumped
suddenly into a middle-aged lady, who retaliated by
deliberately pushing him back, at the same time asking
him a somewhat unnecessary question as to where he
was going. Then she had gone on her way without
waiting to hear his apology.
Hatch & Buckley’s private detective
agency, situated just off Broadway and Eighth Street,
had a large office divided into several small offices.
For some occult reason only one person could get in
or out at a time, and this made confidential conversation
a necessity rather than a matter of choice.
The senior member of the firm was in when Von Barwig
called. Be it understood at the beginning that
this large, stout personage, who invariably spoke
in a whisper, and referred so often to his partner,
had no partner but a number of detectives on his staff,
to whom he was wont to speak or whisper of as partner
when discussing what they had ferreted out or left
undiscovered. This man, fat, florid, and fifty,
had been a central office detective for many years.
After a time, being exceedingly useful in a political
sense, he had been admitted to the inner circle at
Tammany Hall and was at present one of the leading
geniuses in that hallowed body of faithful public
servitors.
“Come in, come in,” said
this gentleman urbanely as Von Barwig stood waiting
as patiently as he could for the news he was so anxious
to hear.
“Well, I think we’ve got something,”
he added.
Von Barwig said nothing; he waited to hear more.
“First of all, business before
pleasure,” said Mr. Hatch, and suited the action
to the word by handing Von Barwig a bill for $556.84,
for “services rendered.”
“Yes, yes; but tell me the news!”
faltered Von Barwig, without looking at the bill.
“Have you found her? Tell me!”
The pleading look in Von Barwig’s face would
have melted the heart of any ordinary scoundrel; but
Mr. Hatch was no ordinary scoundrel.
“It’s customary, Mr. Barwig,”
he said drily, “to settle one account before
opening another.”
Von Barwig looked at the bill that
had been handed to him, saw the amount, shook his
head pathetically, and smiled. “There must
be some mistake,” he said.
“My partner went to California
on this clue and followed it clean to British Columbia;
railroad fares alone amount to two fifty; there’s
hotel bills, carfare; there’s salaries, office
expenses, stamps; and then-there’s
me.” If Mr. Hatch had put himself first
there would have been little need to refer to the
other items.
“There’s the vouchers,”
he went on, pushing a lot of papers toward Von Barwig.
“Everything O.K.’d; everything on the
level, open and above board.” He leaned
back in his chair as if determined not to say another
word until the matter was settled.
“Then you refuse to tell me any more until this
is paid?”
“Not at all, not at all!
I’d just as leave tell you right now; but it
wouldn’t be business, it wouldn’t be business.”
He repeated this as if to impress his listener with
the importance of the business aspect of the situation
being well preserved.
“You are right; it is not business!
It is life and death; it’s my heart, my soul,
my very existence! My little girl, my little
Helene is not business.”
“I suppose not,” assented
the fat man, “not to you; but our end of it
rests on a commercial basis. We’ve laid
out the money and we’re entitled to be paid
for it.”
“But I have paid you already
so much! I cannot afford more. For years
I have hunted high and low for my wife and child through
city after city for thousands upon thousands of miles.
At last I came to you, and there have been months
and months of weary waiting, hunting false clues;
disappointments upon disappointments.”
“I know, I know,” nodded
the senior partner. “That’s part
of the game.”
“I have spent with you nearly
all the money I have, and nothing has come of it.
Every now and then you raise my hopes by saying you
have found her. Then, when the news comes, you
ask for more money and when I have given it, it is
again a false clue.”
“That ain’t our fault!”
observed the stout gentleman. “My partner
follows a clue, and you can’t blame him if it
don’t turn out exactly the right one.
This fellow Ahlmann is an eel; that’s what he
is, an eel! But I think we’ve got him
now, I’m almost sure!”
“You think?” eagerly inquired Von Barwig.
“Well, of course there’s
nothing absolutely sure, but this is the last report
he’s sent in. Seems to me to pretty well
cover the case, but it’s been a hard job.
This fellow Ahlmann has completely covered his tracks.”
“The child? She-she lives?”
“Oh, yes; yes!”
“And the mother?”
“I think he’s located
them all. I can’t tell you for sure till
I read the report again.”
Von Barwig, his hands trembling with
excitement, wrote a cheque for the amount required,
and with breathless impatience awaited the information
as to the whereabouts of his lost wife and child.
“They’re in Chicago,”
said Hatch, taking up the cheque and scanning it.
“Both of them?” asked Von Barwig in a
hoarse whisper.
“Both of them,” repeated
Hatch, conveniently remembering the detail without
reading the report. “George, bring me Mr.
Bailey’s telegram in the Barwig case,”
and when George, a smart young office boy, brought
the required documents, he was quietly instructed by
his employer to cash Von Barwig’s cheque immediately.
“When will you go?” asked Mr. Hatch.
“As soon as possible.”
“To-night?”
“Yes.”
“Here’s the address,”
and Mr. Hatch handed him a card. “You’ll
meet my partner there, 1120 State Avenue; he’ll
take you to the parties. Shall I get your railroad
tickets?”
“No. I-I get them.”
“It’s twenty-six hours to Chicago; you’ll
need a Pullman ticket.”
“Thank you; I get them.”
“Well, just as you say. Good luck to you,
Mr. Barwig.”
“Thank you,” said Von
Barwig simply. He did not tell Mr. Hatch that
he had nearly come to the end of his resources and
that he would ride in the day car. Not that
he felt ashamed of not being able to afford luxuries,
but he instinctively resented making a confidant of
a man like the senior partner of the firm of Hatch
& Buckley.
As he walked rapidly toward Houston
Street he found himself thinking for the first time
since his arrival in America of the question of his
future, but this question did not occupy his mind long.
Like all his ideas on any subject other than that
of his lost wife and child, it was forced into the
background. As he neared his rooms in Houston
Street his hopes began to rise; and the prospect of
going to Chicago, the possibility of seeing his wife
and child, began to work in his mind. His heart
began to beat tumultuously. This time his dream
would come true, and in his mind’s eye he clasped
his little girl tightly to himself and rained kisses
on her little upturned face. He even found it
in his heart to forgive the mother; after all, she
was the mother of his little one, that he could never
forget.
As for Ahlmann, he could not picture
him; his mind refused to conjure up a thought of the
man. It seemed as if he were dead, and that Von
Barwig was on his way to rescue the wife and child
from some danger that threatened them. This
work of rescue was the fulfilment of an ideal.
Nothing should be allowed to stand in the way of it!
The senior partner of Hatch & Buckley had been quick
to note this condition of mind and to reap the profits
that came therefrom. Monomania means money,
was a business axiom in that gentleman’s office,
but he had pumped the stream dry and Von Barwig was
now at the end of his resources. By some strange
process of thought, Von Barwig recognised this fact,
but it seemed to him to mean that because his money
had come to an end his search had also come to an
end. The result of his trip to Chicago could
not but be favourable, because he dared not think of
its failure. So great is the influence of hope
upon imagination that by the time Von Barwig reached
his rooms he was already contemplating the possibility
of keeping his wife and child there, at least until
he could obtain better quarters for them. So,
when he opened the door of his room, and found Jenny
there polishing the brass andirons, he took more notice
than usual of the little girl, and to her intense joy
promised to bring her a box of candy from out West,
where he told her he was going as he busied himself
packing his handbag.
In a few hours Anton Von Barwig, his
heart beating high in expectation, was seated in one
of the day coaches of a fast Pennsylvania Railroad
train on his way to Chicago.