I am not superstitious, and I certainly
had no intimation then of the part these letters would
soon play in my World’s Fair adventures, nor
of the use I should make of them; but I opened that
letter with an uncomfortable feeling of curiosity
and interest, and without even pausing to look again
at the tiny grotesque faces of that little bridge
procession so artistically sketched upon the envelope.
The letter, like its cover, was dated
from Boston, and was just four days old.
‘Just received,’ I said
to myself, as I took up the wrapper to look at the
Chicago postmark. ’Yes, came last night.
She must have read it this very morning, sitting upon
some one of those shaded seats on Wooded Island, and
after reading it she must have amused herself by copying
the people passing over the nearest bridge. Ergo,
she must have been alone.’ My detective
instincts were rousing themselves; already I was half
unconsciously handling that unread letter as if it
were a ‘feature’ in a ‘case.’
She was alone, too, when we met on
Midway; that is, I saw no companion. Could it
be possible that the young lady was really alone in
this densely populated place? How absurd!
I looked at the letter again.
It was written in a beautiful flowing
hand, and I said, after a moment’s scrutiny,
‘Written in haste and under excitement.’
There were eight closely written pages, and having
begun their perusal, I read to the end without a pause.
The letter was signed ‘Hilda O’Neil,’
and there was no street number nor post-office box,
only the name of the city from whence it came, Boston.
Hilda O’Neil was the name written
on the second letter, this and nothing more; but this
no longer surprised me. Miss O’Neil was
a New York girl, and a guest, at the time of writing,
of the sister of her affianced, in Boston. This
young man was already in Chicago, making arrangements
for his family, who were to come as soon as informed
by him that apartments in the already crowded city
were in waiting. They were ‘all ready for
the flitting,’ and were now wondering why ‘Gerry’
did not wire them. He had written that his plans
’were near completion,’ and that he should
telegraph them in two or three days at the latest,
at the time of writing. The three days were just
about to expire, hence the excitement visible in the
penmanship of Miss O’Neil. Betwixt impatience
and anxiety she confessed herself ’growing really
fidgety,’ especially as ‘Gerry’ was
always so prompt, ’and then don’t
think me silly, dear but, really, Chicago
is such a wicked, dangerous place, especially now.’
I smiled as I read this paragraph,
and thought of Master ‘Gerry’ doubtless
giving himself a last day or two of freedom from escort
duty, and of fun, perhaps, on Midway. Decidedly,
detectives are not seers.
And the second letter. Since
the first did not tell me how or where to find the
owner of the little bag, this letter must. And
her name would that be revealed? I
opened the missive and read it through, with some
surprise and a great deal of admiration.
I had been right in my conjectures
of the writer. I found her name signed in full
at the bottom of her last thick sheet of creamy note-paper;
she had penned the letter in her own room that very
morning, and had held it unsealed and only half addressed
until she had applied at her State post-office for
the expected letter from her friend, and this having
been received, she had thrust the newly-written missive
into the little bag, hoping, doubtless, soon to meet
her correspondent, who might now be on the way, and
to tell her story for the letter contained
a story which, doubtless, she would much
prefer to do.
And now, so much can a few written
pages do, I almost felt that I knew June Jenrys, for
that was her name, and her friend Hilda O’Neil.
Miss O’Neil’s letter had
told me first something about herself: that she
was a petted and somewhat spoiled only daughter; something
of an heiress, too, if one might judge from her prattle
about charming and costly costumes and a rather reckless
expenditure of pin-money; and that she was betrothed
to Gerald Trent, of the great Boston firm of Trent
and Sons, with the full consent and approval of all
concerned. What life could be more serene?
Young, fair, rich; a lover and many friends; and now
en route for the World’s Fair, to enjoy
it in her lover’s society. Happy girl!
the only little speck upon her fair horizon when she
penned that letter was the fact that her dearest friend
and schoolmate was not quite so happy.
And June Jenrys? The two letters
taken together had told me this: She was an orphan,
and wealthy, left in her teens to the guardianship
of an aunt, her father’s widowed sister, a woman
of fashion par excellence. During her
niece’s minority this lady had tyrannized all
she would, and now, Miss Jenrys having recently come
of age, she yet tyrannized all she could. The
aunt was eager to mate her niece to a man of her own
selection and a heavy purse. The niece until recently
had looked with some favour upon a young man, handsome
enough even Miss O’Neil admitted
that and a gentleman beyond question, but
with no visible fortune. A short time before but
I will let Miss Jenrys tell this much of her own story,
quoting from the fourth page of her letter:
’I did not mean it so, really,
Hilda dear, although it has seemed so to you.
You see, I expected to meet you in Boston ere this,
and that is so much better than writing; and now I
must write after all, and instead of its being from
me in Boston to you in New York, it is from me here
in the “White City” such a city,
Hilda! to you in Boston, and at Nellie
Trent’s.
’Well, you must know this, that
it was just after Aunt Charl had “washed her
hands of me,” matrimonially speaking, for the well,
for the last time; and I was feeling very high and
mighty, and Aunt Charl quite subdued, for her, that
we gave a reception, the last before Lent. Of
course he was there, and I had made up my mind that
day that I would be honest with my own heart in spite
of Aunt Charl. “I’m sure he cares
for me,” I said to myself, and well,
I knew I liked him a little. I knew he only waited
for the opportunity to speak, and while I would have
died rather than help him make it, I said, “If
he does find the chance if he does speak,
or when he does well!”
’I shall never forget that night!
Aunt was good enough to say that I was looking my
very best. I am sure I felt so. But of course
aunt spoiled it all her pretty speech,
I mean.
’"June,” she wheedled,
“that handsome Maurice Voisin will be here, and
I happen to know that he admires you very much.
Charlie Wiltby says he is no end of a swell in Paris,
and that he is really a rich man, who prefers to be
modest, and avoids fortune-hunting girls. You
are old enough to settle down, and with your fortune
and his you might be a leader in Parisian society.
There’s no place in the world where money and
good looks together will do so much for one as they
will in Paris.” Think of it, Hilda!
If I had not felt so at peace with all the world just
then, there would have been an occurrence
then and there. But I held my tongue, and was
even inclined to be a little sorry that aunt’s
silly talk was making me feel a genuine antipathy for
M. Maurice Voisin of Paris renown; and really at that
time I hardly knew the man. He is certainly rather
good-looking, in a dark, Spanish fashion, and he is
taller and somehow more muscular-looking than the
typical Frenchman. He is certainly polished, shines
almost too much for my liking; but that may be, really,
Aunt Charl’s fault rather than Mr. V.’s.
That night, at least before supper, I had no word or
thought against him.
’But I must get on about him,
and I’ll make it very short. You know how
our conservatory is arranged, and that little nook
just at the entrance to the library, where the palms
are grouped? Well, I had danced with them both,
and he had just asked me to go with him into the conservatory,
“to sit out a waltz,” when M. Voisin came
to claim it. I had for the moment forgotten it,
and he had only time to say just one word “after.”
’Well, I’ll be candid,
if it does humiliate me; after that waltz I eluded
M. Voisin, leaving him with Aunt Charl, and went into
the conservatory.
’It was so early, and the dancers
still so fresh, that no one was there as yet.
I had been stopped once or twice on my way, and when
I entered the conservatory by way of the drawing-room,
I fancied for a moment that someone was standing in
the shadow of the palms, just inside the library door;
but I went on, and reached the nook without being
observed. I sat down, quite out of sight, thinking
that if he entered from the ball-room the most direct
way I should see him first. Imagine my surprise,
then, when almost instantly I heard a movement on
the other side of the mound of fairy palms, and then
at the very first word came my own name. There!
I will not repeat the shameful words, but it was his
voice that owned to an intention to “honour”
me with a proposal, because his finances were getting
low, and he must choose matrimony as the least of
two evils, etc. While I sat there, unable
to move, and half stunned by this awful insult, suddenly
there was a quick rustling, a half-stifled laugh,
some whispered words, and then another voice which
I did not at first recognise, said, very near me,
“Ah, good-evening, Mr. a Lossing!
Charming spot, really.” Then there was
another movement, some low muttered words, and the
sound of footsteps going across the marble toward
the library. Then suddenly, right before me,
appeared M. Voisin. I could not conceal my agitation,
and gave the same old hackneyed reason heat,
fatigue, sudden faintness. M. Voisin hastened
in search of water, and I dropped my face upon my
hands, to be aroused the next moment by his
voice, agitated, hurried, making me a proposal.
Then something seemed to nerve me to fury. I
sprang up, and, standing erect before him, said:
’"Mr. Lossing, as I am unfortunately
not in the matrimonial market, I fear I cannot be
of assistance to you, much as I regret that the low
state of your finances is driving you to so painful
a step. Allow me to pass!” Before he could
reply I had swept past him, and meeting M. Voisin
just beyond the palms, I took his arm and went back
to the ball-room. Hilda, pride and anger held
me up then, for I fully believed him the most perfidious
of men. But since, much as I hate myself for
it, there are times when I doubt the evidence of my
own senses, and cannot believe that he ever said those
words. The next morning, while my anger still
blazed, he sent me a letter, which I returned unopened.
That is all, Hilda. He left town the same day,
I have been told.
’And now you understand, doubtless,
why I am here. M. Voisin, of course, was not
to blame, but I could not disconnect him from the rest
of the hateful experience; and so at the beginning
of Lent I packed my trunks and set out for the country
and Aunt Ann’s at Greenwood. Dear Aunt
Ann, who is so unlike Aunt Charl!’
Then followed some details of their
arrival at the World’s Fair and an amusing account
of the good lady’s first impressions, which were
so large and so astounding that she was obliged to
’"remain at home and take the entire day to
think things over in.” Think of it, Hilda,
shut up like a hermit just two blocks from the gate!
Is not that like nobody on earth but sweet, slow,
obstinate, countrified Aunt Ann? of whom,
thank heaven, I am not one bit ashamed, in spite of
her Shaker bonnet. But I can’t lose a day
of this wonder, and fortunately dear Aunt Ann never
dreams of tabooing my sight-seeing. When I proposed
to come alone this morning, the dear soul said:
’"Well, I should hope thee could.
Only two straight blocks between here and the gate
at Fifty-seventh Street, and if thee can manage to
get lost with all those guards and guides, to say nothing
of the maps and pictures, thee is a stupid niece,
and thee may just go back to thy Aunt Charlotte Havermeyer.”
If Aunt Charl could only hear that! Well, dear,
I have promised myself a happy time here with Aunt
Ann when she is not occupied with her meditations,
and yourself soon, and without Aunt C.; but, alas!
everybody will visit the Fair; and yesterday, upon
Midway, whom should I see but M. Voisin! He was
attired as I have never seen him before, quite negligee,
you know, and wearing a Turkish fez. It was very
becoming. He did not see me, and for this I was
thankful. I did not come to the World’s
Fair to see M. Voisin, and even to please Aunt Charl
I can’t make myself like him.’
I put down this letter and smiled
over its sweet ingenuousness, and singularly enough
I joined the fair writer in heartily disliking M.
Voisin.
’He was altogether too conveniently
near at the scene of that unlucky proposal,’
I muttered to myself, and then I turned to the other
letter. I wanted to see what I could make, between
the two, out of young Lossing.
‘I have asked you twice,’
Miss O’Neil wrote, ’about your affair with
young Mr. Lossing. Your aunt is entirely at a
loss, only she declares she is sure that you have
refused him, and that in some way he has offended
you; and I thought him almost perfect, a knight sans
reproche, etc.; and he is so handsome, and
frank, and manly. What happened, dear? It
is so strange that he should vanish so utterly from
society where he was made so much of; and no one seems
to know where he went, or when, or why, or how.
Gerry says he was a perfect companion, “and
as honourable as the sun.” There, I’ll
say no more.’
My reading was broken in upon at this
point by a prolonged chuckle, and I looked up to see
Brainerd wideawake and staring at me.
‘Well,’ he queried promptly,
‘have you found out her name?’
‘Yes; it is June Jenrys.’
As I spoke I returned Miss O’Neil’s letter
to its decorated envelope, and replaced the two in
the bag. ’I’ll tell you about them,’
I said, as I put it aside. Somehow I felt a sudden
reluctance at the thought of seeing those two letters
in the hands and under the eyes of an inveterate joker
like Dave. ’I’m no wiser in the matter
of address, however.’ And then I told him
the purport of the letters in the fewest words possible.
‘Do you know,’ said Dave,
when I had finished my recital, ’I don’t
like that Voisin, not even a little bit. I think
he’s a bad lot.’
I smiled at this. There was not
a jot of romance in Dave Brainerd’s make-up,
and not a great depth of imagination; but he was the
keenest man on a trail, and the clearest reasoner
among a large number of picked and tried detectives.
It amused me to think that both had been similarly
impressed by this man as he had been set before us;
but I made no comment, and to draw away from a subject
which I felt it beyond our province to discuss I asked:
’Dave, what did you mean this
afternoon, when we opened that bag, by saying that
the owner was a clever woman? Upon what did you
found that remark?’
’Why, upon the fact that she
did not put her purse in that convenient, but conspicuous,
little bag; in consequence of which she is, or was,
only slightly annoyed, instead of being seriously troubled
at its loss. By the way, or rather to go out
of the way, do you know that they have in the French
Government Building a very fine and complete exhibition
of the Bertillon identification system? I want
to get to it bright and early in the morning.’
I moved to his side and sat down upon
the bed. We were both admirers of this fine system,
and for some moments we discussed it eagerly, as we
had done more than once before; and when I put my head
upon my pillow at last, it was with J. J. and her
interests consigned to a secondary place in my mind,
the first being given over to this wonderful French
system, the pride of the Paris police and terror of
the French criminal.
But we little know what a day, or
a night, may bring forth.
Someone rapped at our door at an unpleasantly
early hour, and the summons brought Dave out of bed
with a bound, and in another moment had put all thought
of the previous night out of our heads.
‘Will you come to the captain’s
office at once, gentlemen?’ said a voice outside,
and I caught a glimpse of a guard’s blue uniform
through the half opened door. ’There’s
been a big diamond robbery right under our noses,
and they’re calling out the whole force.’