When Brainerd and I compared notes
that night, we came to the mutual conclusion that
the Camps were ordained to mingle their destiny with
ours in some measure, we chanced upon them so often;
and they seemed, since our encounter at the bureau,
to take it for granted that we were to continue the
acquaintance, now set, in their opinion, upon an official
basis, and that it would be a mutual pleasure.
After leaving me, or, rather, after
I had separated myself from them at the Administration
Building, they had wandered down the Grand Plaza and
made their way to the Peristyle, where, after some
time, they had encountered Brainerd; and in the course
of their amiable converse they had given him some
valuable information, or so he thought it.
‘You see,’ he said, ’to
begin at the beginning, I had mingled all the morning
with crowds here and there, and as it was nearing noon
I wandered across the Plaza and came to that handsome
bridge spanning the canal at the north-west corner
of the Liberal Arts. As I crossed this bridge
I saw a launch slip out from the landing at the further
end, and in that launch two men, one of whom I was
sure was Greenback Bob, and the other, from your description,
I’ll wager was your friend Smug.’
‘Are you sure?’ I demanded.
’Morally certain, yes.
Well, as you may guess, I scurried across the little
bridge and jumped into the next launch, for they were
not easy to follow by the land route, with always
the chance that they might go ashore on the wrong
side of the lagoon. Well, I kept them in sight
until we had made the round of the basin, and they
made no offer to land, although the launch filled
and emptied before we were back at the bridge from
which we started. As we passed under the bridge
my heart was in my mouth, for the boat was out of
sight for some moments, but when we shot out into
the sunlight there they were, not so far ahead of
us, and about to run underneath the bridge at the end
of the south canal. I wondered a little at their
going away from the crowd just then, but that was
their affair, so I just shifted my position in order
to keep a better watch upon their boat as we came abreast
of the bridge, and then, as the mischief would have
it, a launch coming from the other way pushed through
and under the bridge and struck us such a blow that
the women screamed, and one of them let her parasol
fall into the water. Then, of course, there was
an exchange of compliments between the two crews,
and a scramble and delay in securing the parasol:
and when at last we were out on the other side the
boat ahead was so far away from the landing, where
she had of course made her stop, that I could just
make out that the two men had left her and she was
almost empty. To add to my agony, two boats had
passed us while we floundered after that parasol and
exchanged compliments with the other boat, and as
we lay there waiting I looked wildly about me, and
saw at last, on the bridge almost over my head, my
two men, standing close by the railing and talking
with a little dark woman, who ’
‘Describe her!’ I broke in.
‘Well, now ’
‘Was she something under five feet?’
‘Yes.’
‘Dark eyes and hair?’
‘Exact.’
‘A broad black hat with plumes, a red veil,
and four-in-hand tie?’
’Upon my word, she had ’em all.’
‘I knew it; but go on.’
’I can’t, not very far
at least. I just kept myself from swearing while
I sat and saw those three so sociable up there, and
I not in it. Before I got to the landing I had
seen the woman trip away.’
‘Toward the Plaza?’
’Precisely. Everybody seemed
going that way. It was almost time for the infanta
to appear. When I set foot on shore I made for
that bridge. I had seen them start slowly on
after the woman; but when I got upon the bridge I
could just see the hat of your friend Smug in a jam
some distance ahead, near the Electricity Building,
and Bob, the eel, had vanished once more.’
‘At what time was this?’
He named the time, and then I told
him how I had encountered the little brunette, lost
her, and found her again, and of her agile leap at
the bridge.
‘Lively girl!’ Dave commented.
I had told him the story of her agility with some
empressement, but he did not seem to see my
drift. ‘You’re sure it’s the
same who tried to claim the young woman’s bag?’
‘Quite sure from your description.’
’Umph! Mine? And she’s
the one who met the lady at the gate, and left her
when the man appeared?’
‘The same.’
’Um-m! She tries to secure
the young lady’s bag; she meets her as though
by appointment; and she meets our quarry, too.
She seems to know them all. Query: Does
she, by any chance, know well, say you?
Who is she? What is she?’
‘Who she is I don’t know,
what she is I can tell you,’ said I.
‘Well?’
‘She, as we have called her, is a man.’
I had nothing to add to this, and
Dave was not willing to accept my statement, based
as it was upon that leap at the bridge. ’No
woman ever made that jump; I knew it. It showed
practice, and that not of the sort that is taken by
women.’ This had been my argument, and after
some discussion and difference of opinions Dave got
back to the Camps.
He had met them wandering about the
Peristyle, and gazing across the grand basin at the
splendid MacMonnies Fountain.
‘Which ort,’ Mrs. Camp
had declared, ’to sail out, leastwise, the boat
with that white woman settin’ up there on top,
and come across to serlute that big gold goddiss.
For my part,’ she added, ’I’ve seen
one thing that was as it ort to be. They took
an’ set a woman up in the midst of their court,
and made her bigger and brighter and handsomer than
anything else. But if they was bent on calling
her Justice, why,’ she opined, ‘that there
court ought to be called a court of justice.’
The two old people had evidently grown
lonely and sated with grandeur, and when she had aired
her views concerning the golden goddess, Mrs. Camp
began to talk about our adventure with the counterfeiters.
‘That friend of yours was right,’
she said. ’That Sunday-school chap didn’t
come to time; and we ain’t seen him sence not
to speak to.’ And then she related how,
on coming away from their rooms on Stony Island Avenue
that morning, they had seen, just across the street
from them, the man Smug in earnest conversation with
a tall man whose back was turned toward them, and
who after a few words had turned and walked away southward,
while Smug had entered a cafe close at hand, doubtless
to breakfast.
Dave had questioned them closely,
hoping to learn more; but beyond the facts as first
stated little was added.
The men had met at a point ‘a
few squares’ from the Camps’ ’boarding-house’ possibly
four or five. The man in conversation with Smug
was tall, and very straight, ‘sort of stiff like,’
and well dressed. They were quite sure, also,
that he was dark, and that he wore a beard. Incidentally
they gave Dave the number of their Stony Island residence.
‘We shan’t have much trouble
to find the Camps,’ Dave said in concluding
his narration. ’The old lady has taken a
great fancy for the Liberal Arts Building, and she
generally spends her time sitting upon a chair in
the centre of Columbia Avenue and admiring at her
leisure. She says she “’d ruther see
things in the lump, sort of.” And I believe
they take a walk every morning around the Plaza, the
Court, the Peristyle, and then up the lake shore from
Victoria House, which she won’t enter because
she “hates old England and all the Englishers” to
the point where Fifty-seventh Street drops into Lake
Michigan. And every afternoon, I verily believe,
they walk arm-in-arm up and down the length of Midway,
without stopping or entering anywhere.’
In our summing up we found we had
accomplished very little legitimate business.
We had established the fact that Greenback Bob was
at the Fair, and the presumption was strong, amounting
almost to a certainty, that Delbras was also there.
We had connected the man Smug with one, if not both,
for Dave was sure that the man’s companion on
Stony Island Avenue was Delbras, and now this brunette,
whom I believed to be a man in woman’s attire,
seemed to be identifying herself, or himself, with
the ‘gang.’
‘If you can prove that the brunette’s
a man or boy,’ said Dave, ’then I’ll
say don’t look farther for the third party who
came with Delbras from France; and if that should
prove the case, tell me, what designs have this gang
upon Miss what do you call her?’
I started. It was Dave who was
growing imaginative now. And yet
’I had only thought of the brunette
as having seen the bag fall, and hoping for a find,’
I said doubtfully.
’Then how did you account for
her being at the entrance gate two days after?’
queried Dave scornfully.
’Supposing it to have been an
accidental meeting, I fancied she might have thought
of telling Miss Jenrys what she knew of her loss, hoping
for a reward, perhaps.’
’Carl, you are growing stupid!
You have thought too much of the blonde and not enough
of the brunette! Think! In the first instance
both are alone; Miss J. drops her bag; why does this
particular well, say woman for the present why
does this woman see it? She must have been some
paces behind, or you would have seen her; or if not
you, the guard, or even the young lady herself.
That brunette was shadowing Miss J.’
I was silent before his arguments.
I began to think I had been one-sided in my thoughts
of the two; and now how simple it all seemed!
’The girl, you say, was watching
the gate through a glass, and from a protected and
safe point of view. She rushes to meet the young
lady, perhaps introduces herself, perhaps is known,
and she leaves her when the good-looking man appears.
Carl, what use do you intend to make of that black
bag?’
‘Hitherto,’ I replied,
’it has been a side issue; now it seems to me
that we may serve both its owner and ourselves by restoring
the bag, and keeping an eye upon all concerned.’
The next day I was early at the Fifty-seventh
Street gate, and I waited long, but no Miss Jenrys
came through; and after loitering near until almost
noon, I took a light luncheon at the nearest point
possible, and at noon went back to my post. But
if Miss Jenrys entered the grounds that day, it was
through some other entrance.
On the next morning she came at an
early hour, her fair face radiant as the June weather,
and beside her was a small-faced little woman who
might have seen forty years or sixty; except for her
snowy hair, time seemed to have forgotten her.
Her dress was a near approach to the Quaker garb of
the followers of Penn. Everything about her was
of softest gray; but the face, framed by the prim
Quaker bonnet, was as fair as an infant’s, and
with a child’s soft colouring in the cheeks
that had not yet lost the charming curves of young
womanhood. She looked like a creature whom Life
had loved so well that Time had not been permitted
to touch or tarry near her, so gentle, and sweet, and
good.
But there was no weakness in the placid,
fair face, nor in the smooth, even step, neither swift
nor slow, with which she moved on beside the fair
young woman at her side.
I had watched for this arrival while
I sauntered about, now on one side of the bridge,
now on the other, and vibrating between the buildings
of Nebraska and South Dakota, on either side the broad
promenade beginning at the bridge. The west windows
of both these hospitable houses overlooked the little
stream, proffering a welcome to the visitor at the
very outset; and when the two ladies crossed the arching
bridge on the side nearest the Nebraska Building I
was not surprised to see them halt, look for a moment
upon the shady bit of greensward with the inviting
rustic seats beneath the vine-draped trees close to
the water’s edge, and then enter. I was
very near them, meaning this time to make a prompt
and bold approach, and as I turned to enter I heard
the elder say:
‘No, June, my child. Thee
must let me go my way.’ She halted and laid
her hand upon the girl’s arm. ’I must
take these beauties in slowly, else they will not
take lodgment in my memory; besides, this place is
too tempting.’
They moved on towards the shaded seats,
and I took from my pocket a map of the grounds, and,
standing on the lowest step of the portico, affected
to study it, while the talk went on.
’Thee can go through this house
while I look at the place and the people, child, and
hear the music. Where is that music?’
’Oh, aunty! That horrid
Esquimaux band! They’ve never happened to
be in tune before when we came in, fortunately.’
’Fie, June! I’m sure
it’s very good. Now go. You know I
care little for fine furnishings, but if there is
anything that you think I shall like to see, you may
show it to me when you have seen your fill, and I
mine. There, go, child! I am going to knit.’
The Quakeress took out her knitting,
and her niece, uttering a soft laugh, and giving the
shoulder of the other an affectionate pat, turned
away, saying over her shoulder:
’You’re a wilful auntie,
and you shall have your way. I’ll not be
long, so look and listen your fill.’
This was the chance for which I had
waited, and I took advantage of it by closing my map
and following her into the building and up the stairs.
I did not accost her at once, but
waited until she had looked about the larger room
facing the south and west, where the case of minerals,
the great deer, and other western treasures and trophies
were displayed, and had sauntered about the cosy and
tasteful parlours, looking at the pictures and bits
of decorative work; and when she had re-entered the
big sunny south room again, and after a little more
loitering among the exhibits went to one of the windows
and stood looking down into the street, I, who had
been standing near an opposite window, was about to
cross the room and accost her, when a sudden shout
from the street caused me to look out once more.
My window faced the bridge, and I
saw that a chair-boy, coming too hastily over the
bridge with his freight, and perhaps unaccustomed to
his wheeled steed, had let slip his hold upon the handle
at the back of the chair just as he had reached the
downward slope of the bridge, and chair and occupant,
a burly man looking quite able to walk, went whirling
down the slope, charging into a couple of young men
dressed in killing style and wearing big yellow boutonnières,
and overturning itself and all concerned.
They were gathering themselves up
in much disorder, and I could not resist a smile at
the ludicrous scene; but the smile soon left my face
when I saw, passing the scene of distress with rapid
steps and without a glance toward it, and coming straight
toward the entrance below, the little brunette.
With rapid steps I crossed to the
opposite window, and, taking off my hat, bowed before
the surprised and now somewhat haughty-looking blonde.
‘Miss Jenrys?’ I said interrogatively.
She bowed assent.
‘May I speak with you a moment?’
She did not answer promptly, and I
put my hand to my pocket and drew out my card the
same that I had proffered to the guard a few days
before.
She took it and read the name aloud, and in a tone
of polite inquiry:
‘Carl Masters?’