With difficulty Phil Kendrick restrained
a desire to laugh outright. The totally unexpected
situation in which he found himself paralyzed his
speech and by the time he had recovered from the first
shock of it a further development held him silent.
With senses sharpened he listened in the dark to
approaching footsteps and a murmur of voices, his
wonder growing as he recognized the unmistakable accents
of Stinson, his uncle’s personal servant Stinson
who, by all the rules of valet service, should be
up at Sparrow Lake at that very moment with the Honorable
Milton Waring.
A key was being fitted into the padlock
of the Waring boathouse. The planking creaked
as the strangers tip-toed inside. There appeared
to be several of them. A sloshing of water as
they boarded the big launch, then the first fitful
rustlings of the engine as it was turned over.
Soon its loud staccatto rose above the wail of the
foghorn.
Had the house been robbed? Phil
dismissed this idea at once. No valuables likely
to invite burglary were kept at the Island residence,
even had Stinson’s long and faithful service
not placed him beyond suspicion. Probably the
valet had slipped away on a little holiday and had
been entertaining a few of his friends. With
paddle shoved into the mud to hold the canoe steady
against the embankment so that it would not capsize
in the wash of the launch, Kendrick decided to sit
still and await developments.
The launch passed presently, so close
to them that he held his breath. One of the occupants
was talking in low tones. Somebody laughed and
said: “That’s a good one, Nickleby.”
A third voice spoke in gruff admonition: “Shut
up, you fellows! No names, please.”
After that silence, except for the slow
chug of the engine and the purl of water, diminishing.
They were gone.
A breath of evident relief came from
the unknown passenger in the canoe.
“Pretty close, that,”
she whispered. “I guess we can go now,
but it would be better not to talk till we get out
on the bay.”
Without a word Kendrick shoved off
with his paddle and turned the nose of the canoe for
the Yacht Club channel. The launch had gone straight
down the main canal to the ferry pier before heading
out into the bay and all sound of it presently was
lost. He strained his eyes to catch a glimpse
of his mysterious companion, forgetting for the moment
that even had it been broad daylight the fog would
have concealed her.
He tried to decide what was the best
thing to do. What sort of a game was this that
he had stumbled upon? What was this woman doing
over at the Island at 2.30 a.m. in weather like this?
Who was she? Why was she spying upon Stinson’s
little party, if that was what she had been up to?
It was a situation with which any young man of zest
and imagination might find interest in dallying.
How should he begin?
“Pass me a paddle, Joe.
It’s all right to talk now.” She
gave a little laugh of satisfaction and he noted that
her voice was contralto and well modulated.
“This has been the best night’s work yet.
Did you think I was never coming?”
Kendrick cleared his throat.
“Excuse me, madam, but there
appears to be some mistake.” He could
hear her startled gasp. “It is evident
that you have got into the wrong canoe in the dark.
I am neither Joseph nor any of his brethren; so he
must be waiting for you still. Do you want me
to turn back?”
“Wh-why, who are
you?” she managed to gasp in an alarmed voice.
“The same to you, madam, and
many of them,” laughed Kendrick easily.
“There’s no occasion to feel frightened
as I have just had a meal. Anyone is liable to
lose the way in a fog like this and I will count it
a privilege to help you locate Joe. He must be
somewhere about if he was waiting for you.”
“Who are you?” she repeated more evenly.
“The owner of this canoe which
you have commandeered so successfully. Please
pardon me for pointing out that it is your lead, madam.
I would be glad to have you begin by telling me who
was in that launch? Why all the excitement?
Where do you want to go now?”
“You are inquisitive enough to be a detective.
Are you?”
“In that case would I need to
ask where we were going?” countered Kendrick.
“I believe you said this had been the best haul
yet. Whose house was it this time?”
She remained silent. When she
spoke again Kendrick fancied a nervous note in her
voice.
“Will you please explain how
you happened to be waiting for me at that particular
spot?”
“Bless your heart, madam, I
wasn’t waiting for you! I happen to live
nearby and was getting ready to step ashore when you
grabbed my canoe and ordered me to keep quiet.
I did so. Here we are.”
“Your discretion was commendable,”
she approved. “It certainly is most extraordinary.
I don’t see where on earth I guess
my escort has taken French leave.” She
tried to laugh carelessly, but she could not hide
the fact that she was greatly disturbed. “Will
you paddle me across to the city?”
“And leave poor Joe out in the
cold gray fog? Don’t you think it would
be better to turn back and give a holler or two?”
“Never mind him. He has
gone home already very likely. I will pay you
one dollar to paddle me over. Is that satisfactory?”
“It all depends. Supposing I refuse?”
“Then I would have to ask you
to step into the water and swim to shore while I do
my own paddling and keep down expenses.”
“Presupposing, of course, that you own the canoe.”
“It is too bad it is so dark,”
she retorted impatiently, “or you would know
that a revolver is pointed straight at you this very
moment.”
Kendrick laughed in pure enjoyment of the situation.
“My dear young lady,” he
had decided that she was young and he wondered if
she were pretty “you force me to the
conclusion that either you are bluffing outrageously
or you are a desperate character! Please don’t
be frightened. I’m neither Steve Brodie,
the Bridge Jumper, nor the famous Jack Dalton, and
in this age of safety razors Bluebeards are extra
muros. This isn’t the opening spasm
of some blood-and-thunder novel, you know. We’re
right here on Toronto Bay where one can get into trouble
for not showing a light after dark. Will you
oblige me by unhooking the lamp at the bow there and
passing it back to me so that I can light up.
I promise then to start earning that dollar without
further delay.”
He heard her fumbling with it.
There was a splash in the water, a little cry of
well feigned dismay.
“Oh, how careless of me! It slipped
out of my hand.”
Phil grinned cheerfully as he began
to dip his paddle, interest quickened. It was
a neat sidestepping of his inconsiderate attempt to
scrutinize her. She had taken the first trick.
“You do yourself an injustice,
madam. Are you usually so careful when you are
careless?”
“You have not told me your name
yet,” she reminded him, apparently more at ease
now that she knew he intended to paddle her across
the bay.
“My name? It’s an
Indian name Watha Hy. A.
Watha, at your service, and I am very fond of canoeing.
What’s yours?”
“You need hardly ask that, Mr.
Hiawatha, when you knew my sister, Minnie, so well,”
she laughed. “I am Mary Ha-ha!”
“You don’t say!”
chuckled Kendrick in appreciation. “The
original little Merry Ha-Ha, eh? Little
Laughing-Gas!”
“If you are Hiawatha, why are
you using a paddle?” she pursued. “I
always understood from the Poet that all you had to
do was to guide your canoe with your thoughts.”
“Not when they’re travelling
in a circle. But this looks more like ‘Blind
Man’s Buff’ than ‘Ring-Around-A-Rosy,’
don’t you think? Or are you trying to
play ‘Tag’ with me? Well, you’re
‘It’ anyway,” he said, dropping
all hint of banter in his tone. “I’d
advise you to meet a few straight questions with straight
answers. First, who is this Joe person you were
expecting to do the canoeing for you?”
“My husband.”
“And the people in the launch?”
“How should I know who they
were? By what right do you ask me that?”
she demanded.
“The circumstances are somewhat
unusual, madam, you must admit,” Kendrick reminded
her sharply. “Do you wish me to play safe
by handing you over to the police?”
“Police? My Good Gracious
me! What crime have I committed?”
“That would be a matter for
official enquiry. It may be that you and your
husband are in the habit of wandering about the Island
in a thick fog at two o’clock in the morning picking
daisies for the sick kiddies over at the Children’s
Home, I presume but, to be perfectly frank
with you, I doubt it. Besides, there is the
little matter of the launch.”
“Why are you so interested in that launch?”
“Because I happen to be the
nephew of my uncle who happens to own it and to have
left it in my charge during his absence,” said
Kendrick deliberately. “I’m laying
the cards face up, madam. The launch is the
property of Honorable Milton Waring, of whom you may
have heard. Undoubtedly it has been stolen.”
He was not prepared for the laughter
with which his unknown passenger greeted this bold
announcement. He knew she was trying to smother
her mirth, but it finally broke all bounds.
A very musical laugh it was, very pleasant to hear.
“Oh, please forgive me,”
she gasped finally. “It is very rude of
me, I know; but you said you were the Honorable
Milt’s nephew ” Again she
laughed in spite of herself.
“You know my uncle?” he asked eagerly.
“I read the papers,” she
said evasively. “Everybody knows a public
man.”
“I’m laying the cards
face up, madam,” repeated Kendrick solemnly.
“My name is Kendrick Philip Kendrick.
I was on my way home when you well, shanghaied
me. Won’t you meet me half way by equal
frankness, so that we may avoid well, any
unpleasantness?”
“You mean?” She had stopped laughing.
“That unless you answer legitimate
questions I shall be forced to hand you over to the
police.”
“I warn you that you would regret it,”
she said quietly.
“Very much,” agreed Kendrick
readily. “I would be sorry to cause you
any inconvenience; but surely you see how impossible
it is for me to avoid being inquisitive under the
circumstances. Are you going to be frank with
me or not?”
She did not answer him immediately and he smiled to himself
as he paddled in silence. For, if the truth must be told, Mr. Philip Kendrick
was enjoying himself immensely. He had only the sound of her voice from which to
draw deductions; but the cultured tones of it and the lilt of her low laughter
bespoke an education and refinement with which he failed to reconcile the idea
that she was a lady burglar. Yet
He stopped paddling to listen intently.
Several times now he had thought he heard a sound
off in the darkness behind him. It came again a
slight hollow sound, as of a paddle scraping against
a canoe. They were being followed. Had
the girl heard it, too? He waited for the wail
of the fog-horn to die away and found her
speaking.
“ frank with you,
Mr. Kendrick,” she was saying. “The
circumstances are less extraordinary than they appear
to you. My husband and I were at
a party at a friend’s house on the Island.
We paddled over in a canoe and Joe went ahead of
me to locate it. In the dark I must have missed
the spot where he was waiting for me and when you came
along so silently and so close to the bank I naturally
thought it was Joe. Ridiculously simple, you
see.”
“You have forgotten the launch,”
prompted Kendrick severely.
“I know nothing about the launch,”
she denied with resentment. “When I heard
those people coming I thought it was some of the guests
from the party who had said they would race us home.
Will you please paddle on, Mr. Kendrick. It
is damp and chilly in this fog and I am naturally in
a hurry to get home.”
He laughed with skepticism, but plied
his paddle again. He was not as concerned about
the launch as he pretended, of course; at the worst
it probably meant that Stinson had been entertaining
some of his friends on the sly. He had no intention
of handing his mysterious passenger to the police.
But was he to let her laugh at him and disappear
unchallenged into the fog out of which she had come?
Phil Kendrick’s experience with
the opposite sex was very limited, he had to confess.
He had been too completely absorbed in athletics to
afford girls more than passing attention. Those
of his social set those he had met had
failed to impress him. One or two of them were
attractive enough in a general way, he realized; some
were amusing to him and some very very tedious.
It was a new experience to find himself actually
interested in a girl or rather, her voice!
He wished he could get a look at her till he remembered
the poor showing he would make with his blackened
eye. Then he was thankful for the darkness.
Phil planned to land her at the Queen
City Yacht Club at the foot of York St., or at the
Canoe Club; either would provide an easy landing.
They must be well across the bay now; but it was hard
to say just where they would come in. Ordinarily
he could have steered by the illuminated dial of the
City Hall clock and the spire of St. James’;
but the fog obliterated all landmarks.
They were both very damp from exposure
to the mist, but it is doubtful if either of them
was aware of it. He made several further attempts
to discover her identity without avail; at every turn
she evaded him skillfully and it was beginning to
look as if she would step ashore and vanish into the
fog without leaving behind her a single clue for him
to follow. This illusiveness was an added spur
to his desire to know this girl. He did not
believe that she was a married woman at all.
It was a conclusion which seemed to be justified by
her elaborate precautions to make him think otherwise.
Because of some foolish notion of the conventions
she intended to go as she had come, taking advantage
of the fog to write down the night’s adventure
in a book which must be closed to him for all time
and forgotten.
Deliberately Phil held back the canoe.
They were within a few strokes of the landing now.
“Listen to me very carefully,”
he began. “I am going to ask you for the
last time to tell me your name or the name of some
friend whom I can get to introduce me to you properly.
Isn’t that fair? I have told you the
truth about myself and will hand you my card to prove
it. You must play equally fair with me or
“Or what?” she demanded haughtily as he
hesitated.
“Or well, take the consequences,”
he finished lamely.
“Which are? Be explicit, Mr. Kendrick.”
“Well, I might turn around and
paddle you back to the Island and leave you there,
for one thing. The circumstances are not such
as entitle you to the consideration I have shown you.
For all I know, you may be an ordinary crook.
Think it over, madam. Is there any reason why
I should not call you ‘kiddo’ and help
myself to a kiss? Is there?”
“Yes the fact that
Philip Kendrick is a gentleman. I dare you to
prove it otherwise!”
“It is kind of you. If
you are so sure of it, why won’t you give me
a chance? Come on, be a sport. I will
promise anything you wish to meet you legitimately,
and I really would regret it very much if I thought
“I have told you already that
it is impossible,” she interrupted coldly.
“I always understood it was a woman’s
prerogative to choose her acquaintances. I am
grateful for your services tonight, of course; but
beyond that The fact is, I do
not care to know you, Mr. Kendrick. Please put
me ashore and say good-bye.”
A cold fire of resentment burned in
Kendrick’s eyes as he drove the canoe to the
landing with a few skillful strokes. Why had
he been so foolish as to tell her his real name?
Why didn’t she want to know him? Without
a word he caught the canoe in one hand and stepped
out. He felt along the gunwale to the bow and
fastened the painter to an iron ring in the planking,
then handed her out safely. He retained his
grasp of her hand.
“A moment ago you dared me to
kiss you,” he said gravely. “I am
not in the habit of taking dares from anybody.”
“Let go my hand at once, sir.
You know very well you cannot so far forget yourself
as to take such a liberty. I dare you to prove
yourself no gentleman.”
“I warn you!”
“I dare you!”
“Very well! On your own
head be it, then! The boatman is worthy of his
hire,” he paraphrased and laughingly he seized
her in his arms and kissed her.
The next instant he received a resounding
slap in the face. It had young muscles and indignation
behind it and it found him unprepared. He started
back automatically, tripped, lost his balance and fell
into the water.
“Oh, you you miserable fresh
Aleck!” came her mortified cry.
She lingered only long enough to make
sure that he could swim. As he drew himself
out of the water the sound of her running feet died
out on the pier.
With chattering teeth Kendrick cast
loose, seized his paddle and drove it deep into the
water. Ye gods, what a fool! Very angry
at himself, he set out across the bay once more, guided
by the derisive bawling of the fog-horn at the Eastern
Gap.