Ted was too excited to eat.
“Better eat, lad,” said
Walker. “We do not know when we will get
another chance today. If no one else seemed to
be following his advice, he himself considered it
good enough to heed. He was eating enough for
two.
“I imagine it is going to be
risky business tonight,” Bronson remarked.
“I wish I could be with you.”
“It’s either going to
be that, or it is going to be very simple,”
Strong answered.
“That is the trouble with all
adventure, these days,” Walker complained.
“It’s always so very simple.”
“I consider this extremely interesting
and exciting,” replied Strong. “It
is like a tremendous game of chess with enough elements
of danger added to suit the most exacting. Don’t
imagine that we shall not be in danger every second
tonight. These Germans are cold-blooded.
If we should happen to be in their way, should they
find out how much we actually know, we can say good-bye;
the sun would rise tomorrow, but we might not.”
He turned to Ted. “Well, lad, are you afraid?”
“I’m going to stick, of course,”
was the reply.
“Well, comrades, here is the
plan. The keys you see here, one for each of
us, are for Room 420. We shall separate.
At six-thirty we must all plan to be in that room.
No noise must be made when you come; no sound must
be made while you are there.”
“We had better make sure we
do all our sneezing outside, eh?” Every one
laughed with Walker.
“It will be your last sneeze,
if it’s inside,” Strong laughingly warned
him. “The least sound, a scraping chair,
would be heard. Stay in Room 420; the fire escape
makes 418 dangerous, if anyone should be curious and
decide to come up and look into that room. Of
course, there will be no lights turned on.
“Should any of us fail to get
there, he who does must make every effort to get the
import of the conversation.”
“Can I do anything, before I
leave for New York tonight?” asked Bronson.
“No, I guess not. Get your
room into shape for us. Put the chairs where
we cannot stumble over them. How long will you
be gone?”
“I don’t know. These
Germans certainly keep us busy. Some of our optimists
are turning pessimists, now that Austria is declaring
war against Servia. They are beginning to think
that perhaps there is something in this war-talk.
I have to go to them and tell them just how much there
really is in it. I had much rather stay wish
I could.”
“I know that, Bronson, and there
is no one I would rather have. But perhaps you
will be of better service there. I shall code
Wright the information we get tonight, if we get it.
They will have it at the New York office.”
Strong and Walker returned to the
Adams street office; Ted went home. He was glad
of the chance to see more of his mother; Helen, he
knew, would not be home. Ted was very fond of
his pretty, efficient sister, and proud of her rapid
rise at the store.
He found his mother there when he
reached home. He explained the reason for his
wearing the newsboy’s clothes.
Ted spent a quiet, comfortable afternoon
with her. Many things they still had to talk
about and the mother realized how much it was the
desire of Ted to have her and Helen come out to that
great West, a land where contentment and opportunity,
at least, were more likely to be found than in this
place, in which she had lived so many years.
About three o’clock, only a
half hour after he had been at Adams street, Strong
was called to the telephone. He had been busy
at a report, the call was unexpected and could only
come from his secretary or from Ted, the only two
besides Walker who knew of this new location.
It proved to be his secretary.
“A messenger boy came here a
little while ago with a message for you,” she
said.
“Read it.”
“’A meeting is to be held
at W.’s house. If you will come, can get
you i:30!’ It is signed ’J.’,”
she added.
There was a pause. She continued:
“It looks as if it comes from Jones. It
is his writing, beyond doubt, but he signed his initial
instead of his number.”
“I’ll come right over,”
Strong answered, and his voice sounded perplexed.
Charles Jones was an operative, employed
as a butler by the Winckel household. He had
so often given proof of profound stupidity in everything
except his duties in the household that Herr Winckel
would have laughed at any suspicion of his being anything
else but a butler. Herr Winckel was so fond of
saying and repeating that the man had a butler mind
it could never grasp anything outside of that.
In reality, Jones was shrewd, keen,
able to obtain information without creating suspicion.
He had been one of Strong’s best men and the
latter felt he could count on him.
Could it be a trap, he wondered?
Strong was uncertain as to what he
should do. To miss this meeting, which perhaps
was important; to go there, on the other hand, and
endanger the chances of his getting to that night meeting?
“I wish I knew what to do, Walker.”
Together they went over the phases of it as they walked
down to the office.
“I’d go,” advised
Walker. “You say that the boy could do his
part. If they do want you out of the way, should
this be a trap, they will hold us until morning; they
would not dare hold us any longer. And, if they
do, they will not feel the need for carefulness and
the boy will thus have a better chance. It works
well both ways.”
When they came to the office, Strong
read the message again.
“We’ll go, Walker,”
he decided. “Dress up. Be sure not
to carry any papers.”
Two men came out of one of the inner
offices a few minutes later. They would have
been taken anywhere for two English servants; they
might have been valets, footmen, even butlers.
Each one looked the other over critically, but the
disguise was thorough.
At fifteen minutes past the hour they
reached the Winckel house, knocked at the servants’
entrance. The maid answered and they asked for
Mr. Jones. They appeared to be very superior,
upper-class servants. Very English, too.
She escorted them in and then opened a door for them
to enter. They passed through. As they did,
each one of them was pounced upon. They struggled
against the sickening smell of the chloroform held
tightly against their noses. Then they knew nothing
more for a while.
An hour later they awoke with a feeling
of nausea and the smell of chloroform all about them.
They found themselves tied hand and foot and unable
to move. From all appearances they seemed to be
in the cellar of the house.
“Are you there, chief?”
asked Walker, in a sick and very low voice.
“Yes, I’m here; going to stay awhile,
I guess.”
“I wonder what happened? Suppose they got
on to ?”
“They are probably gloating
somewhere within earshot,” Strong warned him
in a whisper. “They certainly have us out
of the way for the time being,” he added, ruefully.
“Well, there’s nothing
to do; we’re caught,” Walker said, in his
ordinary voice. Then, in a voice so low Strong
could barely hear him, he inquired, “Are you
pretty well tied? Can you do anything?”
“Can’t even move,” was the answer.
“Same here,” Walker said dejectedly.
“They made a good job.”
At five o’clock Ted left home
for downtown. He stopped off to buy some of the
late editions of the newspapers and proceeded to the
meeting-place. He made his rounds through several
buildings and at last reached that particular one.
There was no one watching, however. With Strong
out of the way the
Germans felt quite secure.
At five-thirty he had already let
himself into Room 420 and was preparing to make himself
comfortable. He picked up the dictaphone
every few minutes, but for a long time heard nothing.
Things seemed quiet and he began to wonder where Strong
and Walker were, what was delaying them. His
heart was going at a great rate because of the forced
quiet and the excited state of his mind.
Things would depend on him if the
two men did not come. Would he be able to carry
out the plans?
“I can only do my best,”
the boy said to himself. And there was a strong
determination to make that best count.
It was now half past seven. He
lifted the dictaphone oftener. Very soon
he heard voices, very indistinct, but as he listened
they became clearer and clearer. Then he began
making out the words and the sense of the conversation.
“Yes,” said one voice.
“We found out that this man Jones, who was Winckel’s
butler, was one of their men. He dropped a card
which young Winckel found. That was enough to
warrant his being watched, although we did nothing
for several days except to see that he got no further
information.
“Today, at the point of a gun,
we forced him to write a note to Strong telling him
that there was to be a meeting at Winckel’s house
at four-thirty and that he could get him in.
Strong with another man came. We trapped them,
bound them and they are now in the cellar out of harm’s
way.”
Ted welcomed the information.
At least he knew just what to expect.
“It’s almost time for
our friends to be here, isn’t it? What time
is Captain Knabe coming?” said a voice.
“At about fifteen minutes after
eight. He is coming with Winckel.”
“Say, Schmidt, it was a good
piece of business to get Strong out of the way.
He is too dangerous and resourceful to suit us.”
This from O’Reilly.
“He has been a nuisance, hasn’t
he?” answered Schmidt. “Hello, friends,”
he said to some new-comers. “I have just
been telling O’Reilly about our little affair
this afternoon.”
There was the sound of a number of
voices and of some laughing. Then more men came
into the room, there was the scraping of chairs as
men seated themselves.
Then there was quiet as two men entered.
Greetings were exchanged and Ted realized that the
two were Winckel and Captain Knabe.
As Captain Knabe was introduced to
some of the men, Ted wrote the names down.
“Let us get down to business,
friends,” said one, who seemed to be the chairman.
“Captain Knabe has come here from Washington,
his time just now is important. Even more important
is the need for immediate action. Captain Knabe,
gentlemen.”