It had been decided between Miss Jenrys
and myself that the little brunette should not be
altogether ignored, at least for a time; and I had
taken it upon myself to provide the letter which was
to put off until a more convenient season the proposed
survey of the White City by night.
After some thought I had written the
following, and posted it according to directions,
in care of a certain cafe on Fifty-seventh Street:
’DEAR
MISS B ,
’I find that I can hardly evade
the duties one owes to courteous friends, and
must for a few evenings devote myself to these.
It is very likely that some of the friends of my chaperon
will visit the Fair, perhaps this week, in which case
she will perhaps be able to dispense with me for one
evening; therefore please inform me if you should,
as you suggested, change your address, so that
I may drop you a note when the right time comes.
’Yours,
etc.,
‘J.
E. J.’
This letter was submitted to Miss
Jenrys, and then posted, but not until the superintendent
had secured for me the services of a half-grown boy
who had won a reputation as a keen and tenacious ‘shadow.’
Him I set to await the coming of our brunette; and,
lest he should mistake or miss her, I waited in attendance
with him until she came, which was at an early hour
and in haste.
I had also placed a man upon Stony
Island Avenue, armed with minute descriptions of Smug,
Greenback Bob, Delbras, and the brunette, and with
instructions to watch the cafes and houses upon a line
with the Fair-grounds, and especially within a certain
radius within which we knew parties of their peculiar
sort were received ’and no questions asked.’
As for Brainerd and myself, we had
laid out a new system, and upon it we founded a strong
hope for ultimate success; though we recognised more
and more the fact that we had to cope with men who
were more than ordinarily keen, clever, and skilled
in the fine art of dodging and baffling pursuit.
In fact, I was now thoroughly convinced that they
were living and working upon the supposition that they
were constantly watched and pursued, and that they
governed their movements and shifted their abode accordingly.
There was one thing which weighed
upon my mind I had almost said conscience and
troubled me uncomfortably, and that was the attitude
I was permitting the disguised brunette to maintain
toward Miss Jenrys.
Since she had entered so earnestly
into the work of ferreting out the motive for the
brunette’s persistent attentions, she had manifested
such a willingness to aid me by allowing that personage
to continue the acquaintance already begun, that,
while I appreciated it as an earnest of her trust
in me, it was, nevertheless, embarrassing.
I was not yet ready to tell her that
I believed the brunette to be a man in masquerade I
must be able to prove my charge first; and yet I had
determined that they should not meet again if I could
stand between them.
It was to speak an additional word
of caution, and to tell the two ladies that two stalwart
and trusty chair-pushers were engaged for their evening
sight-seeing, that I set out one morning to make my
first call upon them at their apartment on Washington
Avenue. It had been decided that, even in such
a throng as that of the White City, it would not be
wise to meet within the grounds too often, or too openly.
We were sure of more or less surveillance from one
source; and I was quite ready to believe that from
more than one direction interested eyes were watching
the coming and going of Miss Jenrys, if not of myself.
Already I had tested the cooking and
service of a variety of the restaurants, cafes, and
tables d’hote within the gates, and I
had also found that outside, and especially within
easy reach from the northern or Fifty-seventh Street
gate, were to be found a number of most cleanly and
inviting little places, more or less pretentious, and
under various names, but all ready, willing, and able
to serve one a breakfast, dinner, or luncheon such
as would tempt even chronic grumblers to smile, feast,
and come again.
I had breakfasted that morning at
one of these comforting places, and upon leaving it
had crossed the street to purchase a cigar from the
stand on the corner, and having lighted it had kept
on upon the same side.
I had meant to recross at the next
corner, for half-way between two streets, stationed
beneath some trees upon a vacant lot, was a bootblack’s
open-air establishment which I had a mind to patronize.
As I neared the scene, however, and glanced across,
I saw that both of the bootblack’s chairs were
occupied, and upon a second glance I noted that one
of the occupants was my recent acquaintance, Monsieur
Voisin, Miss Jenrys’ friend.
He was busy with a newspaper, or seemed
to be, and glancing down at my feet to make sure they
were not too shabby for a morning call, I kept straight
on and turned down Washington Avenue upon its farther
or western side.
I had bought a paper along with my
cigar, and as I ran up the steps of the pretty modern
cottage where the two ladies had established themselves
I threw away the one and put the other in my pocket,
wondering as I did so if Monsieur Voisin was also on
his way to this place, and smiling a little, because
I had at least the advantage of being first.
It was so early that the ladies had
not yet returned from breakfast, which they took at
a cafe “aroond the corner joost,” so the
servant informed me. But I was expected, and
I was asked to wait in their little reception-room,
where a sunshade and a pair of dainty gloves upon
a chair, and a shawl of soft gray precisely folded
and lying upon a small table, not to mention the books,
papers, and little feminine knicknacks, gave to the
room a look of occupancy and ownership.
I had just unfolded my paper, and
was glancing over the headlines upon the first page,
when the two ladies entered, and I dropped my paper
while rising to salute them.
In anticipation of or to forestall
a possible call from Monsieur Voisin, I made haste
to get through with the little business in hand, and
obtained from Miss Jenrys, without question or demur,
her promise not to hold communication with the brunette,
at least by letter, and to avoid if possible a meeting
until I should be able to enlighten her more fully.
‘I do not want to lose sight
of her,’ I said, in scant explanation, ’and
it seems that we can best keep our hold through her
pursuit of you; but I would rather lose sight of her
altogether and begin it all over again than let one
line in your handwriting go into such hands’ I
avoided those false pronouns ‘her’ and
‘she’ when I could ’and
hope and trust you may be spared another interview.
Please take this upon trust, Miss Jenrys, and you too,
Miss Ross, and believe that I will not keep you in
the dark one moment longer than is needful.’
They assured me of their willingness
to wait, even in the face of what Miss Jenrys laughingly
described as a devouring curiosity; and then, while
she turned the talk upon the Fair and some of its wonders,
Miss Ross, murmuring a word of polite excuse, took
up my paper from the place where it had fallen from
my hands.
‘Thee will allow me I
have not seen our morning paper.’
‘Oh, Aunt Ann, I had entirely
forgotten it!’ cried her niece contritely.
‘It is not important, child,’
replied the smiling Quakeress. ’There is
very little in it now except the Fair, and that we
can better read at first hand.’
Nevertheless, she began to turn the
pages and to scan here and there through her dainty
gold-framed spectacles, while Miss Jenrys began to
interrogate me concerning the mysteries of Midway Plaisance.
’We hear such very contradictory
stories, and I do not want to miss any feature of
the foreign show worth seeing,’ she said, with
an arch little nod and smile across to her aunt, ’nor
does Aunt Ann; and I don’t quite feel like bearding
all those Midway lions unguarded, unguided, and unadvised.’
I was not slow to offer my own individual
services, in such an earnest manner that, after a
little hesitation and the assurance that it would
not only not conflict with my ‘business engagements,’
but would afford an especial pleasure, inasmuch as
I had not yet ‘done’ the Plaisance in
any thorough manner, she finally accepted my proffered
services for her aunt and herself, adding at last:
’To be perfectly honest, Mr.
Masters, I know Aunt Ann will never enter that alarming,
fascinating Ferris Wheel without an escort whom she
can trust should we lose our heads and want to jump
out one hundred feet above terra firma;
and I am quite sure I shall want to jump. I always
am tempted to jump from any great height. Do you
believe in these sensations? I have heard people
say that they could hardly restrain themselves from
jumping into the water whenever they ride in a boat
or cross a bridge.’
‘I have heard of such cases,’
I replied. And so we talked on, discussing this
singular and seldom met with, but still existing fact,
of single insane freaks in the otherwise perfectly
sane, when the gentle Quakeress, uttering a little
shocked exclamation and suddenly lowering her paper,
turned toward us.
’Pardon me! but, June, child,
what did you tell me was the name of the young man
to whom thy friend Hilda O’Neil is betrothed?’
‘Trent, auntie Gerald Trent.’
‘Of Boston?’
‘Of Boston; yes. Why, Aunt Ann?’
’I I fear, then,
that there is sorrow in store for thy young friend.
Gerald Trent is missing.’
‘Missing?’
The Quakeress held the paper toward
me, I being nearest her, and pointing with a finger
to some headlines half-way down the page, said:
‘Perhaps thee would better read it.’
I took the paper and read aloud these lines:
’"ANOTHER WORLD’S
FAIR MYSTERY. GERALD TRENT AMONG THE
MISSING.
’"Another
Young Man swallowed up by the Maelstrom.
’"Yesterday we chronicled the
disappearance of Harvey Parker who was traced
by his friends to this city, where he had arrived
to visit the Exposition for a week or more. He
is known to have arrived at the Rock Island Depot
and to have set out for the Van Buren Street Viaduct
en route for the Fair. This was on
Monday last, five days ago, since which time,
as was stated in our yesterday’s issue, he has
not been seen or heard from by his friends or
by the police, who are searching for him.
’"Nearly two weeks ago, Gerald
Trent, only son of Abner Trent, one of Boston’s
millionaire merchants, came to this city to see
the Exposition and to secure accommodations for his
family, who were to come later. He stopped at
an up-town hotel for some days, visited the Fair,
and secured apartments for his friends, which
were to have been vacated for their use in a few
days.
’"He had written to his family,
telling them to await his telegram, which they
would receive in three or four days. When
this time had expired and no telegram came, they waited
another day, and then sent him a message of inquiry.
This being unanswered, they made inquiry at his
up-town hotel, and then began a search, which
ended in the conviction that young Trent had met
with misfortune, if not foul play. On Monday
last he left the hotel, saying to one of the inmates
of the house that he should have possession of
a fine suite of rooms, within three blocks of
the north entrance, which presumably means Fifty-seventh
Street, within three days, and that he meant to
send for his friends that day by telegraph. No
message was received at his home, as has been said,
and nothing has been heard of him since that day.
’"Young Trent wore, rather unwisely,
a couple of valuable diamonds, one in a solitaire
ring, the other in a scarf-pin; he also carried
a fine watch, and was well supplied with money.
The police are working hard upon the case. The
list of the missing seems to be increasing."’
I put the paper down and looked across
at Miss Jenrys. I had recognised the name Hilda
O’Neil as that of her Boston correspondent whose
letter I had found in the little black bag, and by
association the name of Gerald Trent also. Miss
Jenrys was looking pale and startled.
‘Oh!’ she exclaimed.
‘That is what Hilda’s telegram meant.’
‘You have had a telegram from Boston?’
I ventured.
‘Yes. You perhaps remember the letter in
my bag?’
I nodded.
’In that letter Hilda Miss
O’Neil spoke of Mr. Trent’s
delay, and of her anxiety. I did not reply to
her letter at first, expecting to hear from or see
her, for she had my address. It was only a freak
my telling her to write me through the World’s
Fair post-office; but when she did not come on
the day before I met you, in fact I wrote
just a few lines of inquiry. In reply to this
I received a telegram last evening. I will get
it.’ She crossed the room and opened a little
traveller’s writing-case, coming back with a
yellow envelope in her hand. ‘There it
is,’ she said, holding it out to me.
I took it and read the words:
‘Have you seen Gerald? Hilda.’
‘Did you reply to this?’ I asked, as I
gave it back to her.
‘At once just the one word, “No."’
‘Do you know this young man?’ I asked.
’I have never even seen him,
but I know that he bears a splendid reputation for
manliness, sobriety, and studiousness. He was
something of a bookworm at college, I believe, and
has developed a taste for literature. You see,
I have heard much of him. Oh, I am sure something
has happened to him, some misfortune! You see,
she had asked him to call upon me, and he would never
have left Hilda not to mention his parents
and sister five days in suspense if able
to communicate with them.’
‘If he is the person you describe him, surely
not.’
She gazed at me a moment, as if about
to reproach me for the doubt my words implied, and
dropped her eyes. Then she answered quietly:
’The simple fact that John O’Neil,
Hilda’s father, has accepted him as his daughter’s
fiance is sufficient for me. Mr. O’Neil
is an astute lawyer and a shrewd judge of character;
he has known the Trents for many years, and he already
looks upon Gerald Trent as a son.’
‘And Mr. O’Neil where is he?’
‘Abroad at present; it is to be regretted now.’
I took up the paper and re-read the
account of young Trent’s disappearance; and
Miss Jenrys dropped her head upon her hand, and seemed
to be studying the case. After a moment of silence,
Miss Ross, who had been a listener from the beginning,
leaned toward her niece and said, in her gentlest
tone:
’June, my child, ought we not
to try and do something? What does thee think?
Should we wait, and perhaps lose valuable time, while
the Trents are on their way?’
Miss Jenrys lifted her head suddenly.
‘Auntie,’ she exclaimed,
’you are worth a dozen of me! You are right!
We must do something. Mr. Masters, what would
you do first if you were to begin at once upon the
case?’
’Get, from the chief of police
if necessary, the name of the up-town hotel where
young Trent was last seen.’
‘And then?’ she urged,
in a prompt, imperious manner quite new in my acquaintance
with her.
’Obtain a description of him
from some of the people there, and learn all that
can be learned about him.’
‘And what next?’ she urged still.
’Next, I would seek among the
houses within two or three blocks from the north entrance
for the rooms which he engaged, and which are perhaps
still held for him.’
‘Mr. Masters, can you do this
for me?’ She was sitting erect before me, the
very incarnation of repressed activity, and I knew,
as well as if she had said it, that she would never
permit my refusal to weaken the determination just
taking shape in her mind to do for Hilda O’Neil
what she could not have done for herself, and to do
it boldly, promptly, openly. She saw my hesitation,
and went on hurriedly:
’I know how busy you must be,
how much I am asking, but you have undertaken to follow
up that brunette and find out the reason for her interest
in me, and surely this is far, far more important a
man’s life, the happiness of a family, my friend’s
happiness at stake, perhaps; for I am sure that no
common cause, nothing but danger, illness, or death,
could keep Gerald Trent from communicating with his
parents and his promised wife. Drop the brunette
and all connected with her, Mr. Masters, and give
such time as you would have given to my affairs, and
more if possible, to this search, I beg of you.
At least, promise me that you will conduct the search,
and employ as many helpers as you need. I’ll
give you carte-blanche. Deal with me
as you would with a man, and if I can aid in any other
way than with my purse, let me do it.’
As she paused, with her eyes eagerly
fixed upon my face, the sweet Quakeress leaned toward
me, and put out her white slender hand in earnest
appeal.
’"Thy brother’s keeper;”
remember that a deed of mercy is beyond and above
all works of vengeance. What is the capture of
a criminal, of many of them, compared to the rescue,
the saving, perchance, of an honest man’s life?
I beg of thee, consent, help us!’
There may be men who could have resisted
that appeal. I could not, and did not. I
did not throw my other responsibilities to the winds;
I simply did not think of them at the moment, when
I took the soft hand of the elder woman in my own,
and, looking across at the younger, said:
’I will do my best, Miss Jenrys,
and, that not one moment may be lost, tell me, can
you describe young Trent?’
‘Not very well, I fear.’
‘And his picture? Your friend must have
that?’
‘Of course,’ half smiling.
’Telegraph her to forward it
to you at once. And has your friend at any time
mentioned the hotel where young Trent would stop?
Most of our Eastern visitors have a favourite stopping-place.’
‘I know.’ She had
made a movement toward her desk, but paused and turned
toward me. ’I think it is safe to say that
the two families would share the same house.
They did in visiting the summer resorts, always; and
I know where Mr. O’Neil and Mr. Trent went when
they attended the great convention in this city.’
She named the place, and I promptly arose.
‘I will go there at once; but
you may as well give me the Trents’ address,
and permit me the use of your name. If I am wrong
I will telegraph from up-town for the name of his
hotel.’
As I turned my face cityward that
morning I was not only fully committed to the search
for missing Gerald Trent, but I was determined to
convert my friend and partner to the same undertaking.
And having now found time for sober,
second thought, I had also determined not to relinquish
my search for the little brunette and her secret,
nor for Messrs. Bob Delbras and company. Had I
not carte-blanche?
As I left the house, intent upon my
new errand, I was not surprised to see approaching
it, almost at the door, in fact, Monsieur Voisin.
We exchanged greetings at the entrance, and I had
walked some distance before it occurred to me to wonder
how it came about that Monsieur Voisin, whom I had
last seen at the bootblack’s stand, two blocks
north and east, happened to be approaching Miss Jenrys’
residence from the south.