‘You have found Delbras?’
I echoed. This was news indeed, and I waited
eagerly for further information.
’Yes, sir. I’m sure
of it. I don’t doubt it; and it was in Midway
Plaisance.’
‘Go on, Dave.’
’Well, it’s a short story.
I had been lounging around the big wheel for some
time that monster has a sort of fascination
for me; it makes me feel like a small boy, unable
to gape enough. I was looking at the people coming
and going, and I almost forgot that it was noon, until
I heard someone say close beside me, “Almost
noon, Jack. Let’s get out of this.”
That startled me. I had not thought it was so
late, and I took a look at old Sol and started on.
I was walking pretty brisk, and all at once I came
up behind a couple that made me start. One of
them was Greenback Bob, past doubt, and the other
was, or so I first thought, an Arab dressed in American
trousers and coat and wearing a fez; but when I came
closer and looked him well over I was sure it was
Delbras there were all the points, everything;
and I followed them, feeling as pleased as if I had
them already in bracelets; and then, just as I was
wondering where they were going, they brought up in
a crowd before one of those Turkish theatres.
The hustler was hustling in his last crowd before
dinner, and when the two pushed their way to the ticket
booth I kept close behind them.
’Well, sir, they were close
by the place, but they bought no tickets, that I’ll
swear; nevertheless, before I could take in the situation
they were walking past the man at the entrance and
into the show, and I made all haste to buy a ticket
and follow them.
’Of course I felt sure that
I was following, for I had seen them pass through
the inner door; but when I got inside, and began to
look around me, they were not there, neither of them.
I looked through the audience, it was a very thin
one; made my way down to the stage to look for the
door by which they had escaped me, and I did some mental
profanity that’ll be forgiven me, I know, and
then I gave it up and went outside to reconnoitre
the old barrack.
’On one side its windows overlooked
a lane open straight from the street, and there was
a small door in the rear corner, while in the other
a door that must have opened behind the scenes inside
gave upon a sort of court-like quarters where a lot
of fellows where lounging, and a few cooking, at an
open fire. I made this discovery through a crack
in the high fence in the rear, and I prowled about
until I assured myself that my gentlemen were not
there.
’I suppose I had hung about
that rear inclosure some twenty minutes, or perhaps
more, when I suddenly bethought me of the other Turkish
booth and the big bazaar, and I came around to take
a final look at the front and then move on. When
I reached the front, one of the dancing-girls was
posturing before the entrance, and a new voice was
calling the crowd to “come and see and admire
the only original,” etc; and, sir, there upon
the upper step, exhorting the public, was Delbras
himself.’
‘The clever rascal!’ I exclaimed.
’You may well say so. Well,
sir, it did not take me long to do my thinking.
It was almost noon, a quarter to twelve in fact, and
I said to myself, “This fellow is playing Turk,
and he has turned showman. He has just relieved
the other fellow, and will be likely to be here all
the afternoon.” I couldn’t have stayed
there if I would without being spotted, for the moment
I got myself a little nearer to him he spied me, and
began a pantomime of roping me in hand over fist with
an imaginary cable. He would have known my face
if I had tried to keep near enough to be safe in case
of a sudden move, so I took the chance of keeping
my appointment with you, getting up a different mug,
and hurrying back.’
‘And you expect to find him there?’
’I hope to find him there.
It would never have done to have stayed. He would
have spotted me at once. The fellow is a long
remove from a fool. Carl, what do you think of
this deal? What, in your opinion, is their little
game?’
’Precisely the same that you
and I would play in their places. What could
a man ask better if he wants to dodge arrest, or evade
surveillance, than such a chance as Midway affords
him? All he needs is a “pull” with
some of these Orientals, and they are here for
the most part for the “backsheesh.”
Besides, you remember, Delbras is said to have crossed
at the time many of these fellows were coming over,
and he had plenty of chance to make himself solid on
the way, or even before they crossed the water.
Who knows how much fine work he has done among these
Turks, Syrians, Algerians, Egyptians, Japs, and so
on?’
‘Jove! you’re right enough.’
’And then, Delbras has just
the face and figure to disguise well; as a Turk, for
instance’ Dave made a wry face ’or
as an Arab, and even Bob could manage to transform
himself into a passable Algerian. Your discovery
of this morning, Dave, simply means that, from this
moment, in addition to the task of watching all the
European faces in search of our men, we shall have
the added perplexity of peering under the hoods, turbans,
fezes, etc., of all Midway.’
Dave’s face was very grave,
and he was silent for some moments.
‘The very fact,’ he finally
resumed, ’of finding Delbras in a Turk’s
fez and playing the “jay” for one of their
theatres shows that you’re right, Carl.
Well’ getting up suddenly and catching
his hat from off the floor ’we didn’t
exactly come here to play; and as for disguises why,
we’ve played at that game ourselves.’
We took a hasty and somewhat meagre
lunch at the nearest ‘stand,’ and prepared
for an afternoon upon the Plaisance. But I saw
clearly that some other way must be devised to entrap
our quarry; that, given the open sesame of the temples
and pagodas, the booths and pavilions, the villages,
with their ins and outs, and our tricky and elusive
trio would have an advantage against which it would
be difficult to contend.
And in this I was right. We found
Delbras, or the man we believed to be Delbras, still
occupying the ‘lecturer’s’ place
at the entrance to the theatre. He was disguised
to the extent of a pair of black whiskers and some
slightly smoked gold-rimmed nose-glasses, just as he
had been in the morning; and he did not labour continuously.
Instead, he exchanged often with a second person,
who took up the strain of flowery superlatives at
about every other half-hour, during which relief the
disguised Delbras gave some portion of his time to
the box-office and making of change, and the remainder
to puffing innumerable cigarettes. But in spite
of our combined vigilance, before the afternoon was
over, and while the crowds were thickest and rapid
movement impossible, the man escaped our vigilance.
It did not surprise me. Those Midway throngs
made veritable sanctuary for a fleeing criminal, but
it made me more than ever determined to find some
other and quicker way of getting our hands upon this
gang.
All that week we haunted Midway to
little purpose. Once in the very centre of the
big Turkish bazaar where everything was
sold, and which was extended from time to time out
of all proportion to its original size where,
too, I had been arrested and ignominiously marched
away, to be rescued by Dave Brainerd I
caught a glimpse of Delbras, this time in full Turkish
costume, and minus the beard and smoked glasses.
I followed him recklessly, thrusting
aside those who obstructed my way with an impatient
and ruthless hand, until I came to a spot, almost at
the southern exit of the long and narrow L, where a
crowd was packed from side to side of the eight-foot
aisle, with mouths agape listening to the exhortations
of a boyish-looking fellow, wearing a Turkish fez
and a sort of smoking-jacket, and looking, in spite
of this, far more like a Jew than a follower of Mahomet.
He stood at one side, close to the entrance, and a
curtain framed and partially concealed him. Behind
him, towering above him by a head and shoulders, was
a tall Soudanese, his face black, and shining, and
round, and his white robe and turban emphasizing the
arm, bare, black, and massive, that waved a continuous
accompaniment to the words half spoken, half shouted,
by the other:
’Buy your tickets! Buy
your tickets now, now, now! Come and see how to
get married! Come to see how to get divorced!
Come to see how the ladies quarrel with their husbands!
Come and see how the ladies quarrel with each other!
Buy your tickets now, now, now!’
In this singular combination of the
modern fakir plying his trade and the huge black steadily
and systematically beckoning toward a stairway partially
concealed beyond the curtain, and looking like some
giant eunuch of ancient romance, there seemed something
which caught and held the public eye and the public
wonder; and they crowded about the improvised entrance,
and formed an impassable wall between me and the man
so short a distance ahead, yet so utterly out of reach.
It was vain to struggle. That
Turkish fez had been to Delbras an open sesame through
the packed mass of humanity, and for a time I saw it
nodding above the lesser heads half-way between the
door of exit and that half-concealing curtain.
Then, presto! it was gone; and though I went wildly
around to the farther entrance, pushing and jostling
to right and left, and bringing down upon myself anathemas
without number; though I reached the south end of
the building in a moment, seemingly, and gazed in
every direction, Delbras had vanished.
It was while making this wild rush
that I brought upon myself the attention of one of
the very guards who had led me ignominiously away
from the presence of Smug and the Camps.
He had seen my hasty rush from the
building, and, without at first recognising me, had
followed me to inquire the cause of my haste.
I knew him at the first moment; and
when I had answered his inquiry, he knew me.
’The matter? Oh, I was
trying to overtake a a person whom I particularly
wished to see,’ I replied; and I saw on his countenance
the dawning look of recognition. ’Seems
to me you and I have met before. You don’t
want to arrest me again, do you?’ I added testily;
and then I pulled myself together and asked more amiably,
’Did you think I was running away with another
wallet?’
The young fellow’s face brightened.
Dave’s words had told him and his companions
who I was, and he answered, very respectfully:
’No, sir, not this time; though
I had not recognised you at first. Can I help
you in any way, sir?’
’N no, I’m
afraid there’s no help for me this time.
By the way, did you happen to see any of those parties
again after you marched me off so cruelly?’
He knitted his brows to assist his
memory, and finally replied:
’Come to think, sir, I did see
one of them; at least one of the persons who had been
swindled like yourself.’
‘Swindled?’
’Yes, sir. You see, we
didn’t quite catch on at the time; it was all
done so quick, and I got the idea that it was a sort
of pocket-game; but it happened that I met the other
gentleman, the next day, if I remember, and I spoke
to him, for I knew his face at once.’
‘Describe him.’
’Why, not very tall, and well,
not very light nor very dark, I should say; not much
hair on his face, and dressed in a sort of gray suit.’
‘Yes, I see.’ I recognised
the description as that of Smug, and determined to
hear more. ‘And what did he say?’
’Why, nothing at first; but
when I saw him looking at me sort of sharp, I just
stepped up and asked him how the row finished after
the other guard and I had hustled you off; and then
I told him how we had found out our mistake, and how
your friend had let us off easy, although both were
on the detective force. And then he explained
how, as you and he were trying to keep the old man
and his wife from being fleeced, one of the gang had
set up the cry of “Pickpocket!” and had
pointed at you; and then, you know, when we fished
that wallet out of your pocket it looked a ’
‘Yes,’ I replied gravely; ‘it certainly
did.’
‘He said,’ went on the
guard, ’that he had tried to make us understand
that it was all a mistake about you, you know, but
we didn’t hear him.’
‘So you told him that my friend
and I were upon the S.S.?’ I said.
‘Why, yes; was that ’
’Never mind. What did he
say about the others the tall man with the
fez, for instance? He had a notebook and some
bills in his hand, you may remember.’
’Yes, sir, I do. Yes, he
told me about him. Jumbo! but didn’t you
all get into a muddle. He had a narrow escape,
too the tall man, you know. Did you
know who he was?’
I shook my head.
’Well, sir, he came very near
being fleeced too. He wanted to change a bill,
it seems, and the old farmer and the other fellow the
one that told me, you know, had both been getting
some change from a man that claimed to make a business
of changing foreign paper and large bills, to accommodate
people.’
‘Oh!’ I ejaculated.
’Yes, sir; and this gentleman he
was a big man, you know; one of them foreign managers,
and couldn’t speak very good English was
just going to change with them, a hundred, I think
he said, when somebody sets up the cry of pickpocket,
you know.’
‘Yes, I know; go on.’
’Well, sir, after you was gone,
of course in the crowd the real pickpocket got off
scot-free. It turned out that the farmer and him
that told me had been “done” by some sharper,
and that they was just ready to pass off on this foreigner
a lot of counterfeit money.’
‘Great Cæsar!’ I ejaculated,
and then checked my hasty speech. After all,
why should I expend my breath or wrath upon this guileless
guard, who, after all, was doing me a service? and
how cleverly Smug had twisted the story, and made
it serve his turn! But it must not be repeated if
it had not been already.
‘Look here,’ I said in
a more amiable tone, ’have you told this affair,
all or any of it, to anyone?’
’Who me? No.
Haven’t had the chance. The fellow that
was with me that day was taken off next day, and I’ve
not seen a soul I know since. I did want to tell
him.’
’It’s well you did not.
Look here, if you want to keep out of trouble, you
must keep perfectly dark about this matter. It’s
being sifted on the quiet, and they’d take it
very ill at headquarters if one of the guards was
to “leak” on them, and maybe spoil their
game. And if you should chance to meet this party
again, remember, mum’s the word.’
’I’ll keep mum, sir.
I don’t want to lose my job, not yet, before
I’ve seen half the Fair.’
‘Very good. Now, how long
have you been on duty about this place?’
‘Two weeks, sir ever since I was
put on the force.’
’And this foreigner manager
as you call him did you have a good look
at him?’
‘Oh yes, sir.’
‘Ever seen him before?’
’Now that you ask, I’m
quite sure I have, but not knowing who he was.
Yes, I’m sure I’ve seen him about the village
among the Turks more than once.’
‘Describe him.’
’Why, he’s good-looking,
and tall, and dark; got a sort of proud gait, and
square shoulders; always dresses swell.’
‘Thank you.’ I had
squeezed my orange dry, and was anxious to leave him.
I had suspected it before, and was now convinced that
unwittingly, in my attempt to play the guardian angel
to Adam Camp and his wife, I had come face to face
with Delbras.
When I compared notes with Dave that
night he was quite of my opinion.