I found a number of people at the
big up-town hotel who could tell me a little of Gerald
Trent, as he appeared to them after a few days’
acquaintance; and these were unanimous in saying and
believing that young Trent was not absent by his own
will.
‘It’s a case of foul play,
I’m sure of it,’ declared the clerk, to
whom I had represented myself as ’acting for
one of Mr. Trent’s friends.’ ’Cowles
saw him at the viaduct, he told me, just before he
left; that was five days ago now, and Trent was then
going down to secure those rooms and see that they
were put in order. He went by the Suburban, because
he wanted to go over to the avenues, and Cowles went
down by the Whaleback.’
There was no more to be learned up-town.
Gerald Trent had been last seen at the viaduct at
the foot of Van Buren Street, where the ’cattle
cars,’ the ‘Suburban,’ and numerous
boats left the Lake Front and the wharf beyond en
route for the Fair City. This was at ten o’clock
a.m., or near it.
I went back to the Fair City, as Trent
had last gone, upon the Suburban train; and before
noon had begun an exploration, in the vicinity of
the north entrance, for the rooms engaged by him.
Bounding the Fair City on the west
was the street known as Stony Island Avenue, and after
a short survey of such near portions of this street
as I had not seen, I satisfied myself that young Trent
would not have selected it as a place of abode for
his lady mother, his sister, and his sweetheart.
One block westward, running south from Fifty-seventh,
was a short street called Rosalie Court, and after
exploring this I pushed on to Washington Avenue, and
then to Madison, running respectively one and two
blocks parallel with Rosalie Court.
Something impelled me to pass by Washington
Avenue, upon which Miss Jenrys and her aunt were lodged,
and to explore the farther avenue first.
‘If the rooms are within two
or three blocks of the north entrance,’ I said
to myself, ’and if they are upon this street,
I shall find them within one block north or south
from this corner,’ meaning Fifty-seventh Street,
and I turned southward and began my search in earnest.
Not long since this part of the city
had been a beautiful suburb, and the pretty cottages
and more stately villas were, for the most part, isolated
in the midst of their own grounds. Every other
house it seemed, and some of the most pretentious,
bore upon paling, piazza, or door-post the legend
‘Rooms to Let,’ and I applied and entered
at a number of handsome and home-like portals, first
upon the east side and then upon the west, crossing
at Fifty-eighth Street to turn my face northward.
At Fifty-seventh I paused. ’It
is something more than two blocks from the Fair entrance
to this point,’ I mused, ’and therefore
I ought to go but one block in this direction.’
But when I had traversed the block to Fifty-sixth
Street, with no success, I crossed the street and
went on, saying, ’It’s easy for a stranger
to be mistaken in a matter of distance.’
At the north end of this square stood a large old-fashioned
mansion, of a decidedly Southern type. It stood
upon terraced grounds, and was a dignified reminder
of better days, with its stained and time-roughened
stuccos, and the worn paint about the ornate cornices.
‘Rooms to Let’ was the sign upon a tree-trunk,
and after some doubt and hesitation, I went up the
terraced steps, crossed the lawn, and rang a bell
much newer than its surroundings.
Once admitted to the wide, inviting
hall, with its glimpse of cheerful dining-room beyond,
and a large cool parlour opening at the side, I felt
that Trent might well have sought quarters in this
roomy, airy house; and when the ‘lady of the
house,’ a woman small, elderly, delicate, and
refined, appeared before me, I put my question hopefully.
‘Madam, have you among the inmates
of your house a Mr. Gerald Trent?’ I saw by
her sudden change of countenance that the name was
not strange to her, and was not surprised when she
informed me that a Mr. Trent had engaged her best
suite of rooms for himself and four others; that he
had called upon her on the Monday previous, paid her
an advance upon the rooms, and informed her that his
friends would arrive in three days, if not sooner.
‘They should have been here,’
she concluded, ’the day before yesterday, but
they have not appeared, and we have had no word from
them. It is very inconvenient for me. Of
course, the rooms are secured until Monday, but I
have no means of knowing if they will come then; or
when I may consider them at my disposal.’
It was evident she had not seen the
papers, and I at once put the notice in her hand,
and told her the nature of my business.
There seemed but one opinion of Gerald
Trent. When she had read the paper and heard
my statement, she said, at once, what the inmates of
the hotel had said before her:
’Something has happened him.
He never went away like this of his own accord.
I never saw a more simple and sincere young man.’
And then, as if by an afterthought, ’He had
too much money about him; he was too well dressed,
and I don’t think he was of a suspicious
nature.’
I learned from her very little to
help my further search. Trent had met none of
the guests of the house upon either of his visits there.
In reply to a question, she had said:
’He seemed in the best of spirits
when he paid the advance money and went away; and
he said that he meant to spend the day in the Plaisance.
I remember that he laughed when he said this, and added
something to the effect that he wanted to decide, before
the ladies came, where it would pay to go on the Plaisance,
and what were the things they would not care for.
He had a rather frank and boyish way of expressing
himself.’
‘And you think he went from here to the Fair?’
’I believe he went from here
to Midway Plaisance. There is an entrance on
this street, three blocks south, and I walked to the
door with him and pointed the way to it.’
And this was all. Of course I
took from her lips, as from the people up-town, a
minute description of Trent’s dress and appearance
on the day of his disappearance, and then I went back
to the Fair by the Midway gate, and wished impatiently
for the time to come when I should meet Brainerd and
consult with him. This I knew would not be until
a late hour, and as I lounged down the Plaisance I
began to look about for the handsome guard, in whom
I had taken a decided interest.
I found him easily as erect,
soldierly, attentive to duty as usual and
we spent the greater part of two hours chatting, while
we paced up and down Midway. He was a bright
talker, and he entertained me with a number of amusing
incidents, graphically related, and illustrative of
the life of the Plaisance.
During the two hours, however, I broke
the monotony of a continuous tramp by an excursion,
now on one side and then on the other; now to see
the glass-blowers; now the submarine exhibit; and,
lastly, to the Irish village that clustered about
Blarney Castle.
It was on my return from this that,
as I approached him, I saw, with some surprise, that
he was in earnest conversation with a woman, and as
I came nearer and he shifted his position slightly,
I saw that the woman was none other than that ignis
fatuus the brunette. Her back was toward
me, and she was squarely facing him, so that, as I
came nearer and directly toward them, I caught his
eye, and, nodding with a gesture which I think he
understood, I turned away and watched the manoeuvres
of ‘the little mystery,’ as Brainerd so
often called the brunette, wondering if this unknown
guard was also to be enmeshed in the plot she seemed
to be weaving. And then there flashed into my
mind that first meeting with the guard, and his avowed
acquaintance with Miss Jenrys. Was this interview
in any way connected with or concerning her?
The brunette had not seen me; of that
I was quite assured, and even so I had small fear
of recognition, for while I had not, on the occasion
of our two meetings face to face, worn any disguise,
I was confident that the widely different garments
worn on the two occasions, together with my ability
to elongate, twist, and change my features, and to
alter the pitch of my voice, was masquerade sufficient.
But I did not desire to become known to this anomalous
personage, and I lingered here and there, within sight
and at a safe distance, until I saw her nod airily
and trip away, flinging a smile over her shoulder.
In the time spent in waiting the end
of this little dialogue I had decided that I must
know this young man so reticent, yet so
frank better, and that I must win his confidence,
and to do this perfect frankness, I knew, would be
my best aid.
When the ‘mystery’ was
safely out of sight, and on this occasion I had no
desire to follow her, I rejoined the guard, and I was
sure that I surprised upon his face a look of perplexity
and annoyance, which vanished when I put my hand upon
his arm, and, falling into step with him, began:
’I hope you understood my meaning
when I went into ambush so suddenly? I really
did not care to encounter your friend.’
’That is hardly the right name,
seeing that the lady is a stranger to me,’ he
replied, slightly smiling.
‘Indeed!’ I retorted.
’Then may I wager that I know what she had to
say to you?’ I saw him flush, and his lips compress
themselves as if to hold back some hasty speech, but
I went lightly on: ’That is the young person
who claimed the bag belonging to your acquaintance you
remember the circumstance and if she is
still as angry at me as she was on that day she was
doubtless imploring you to “run me in,”
and put me in more irons than Christopher Columbus
ever wore. Honestly now, am I not right?’
He was silent and seemed perplexed
again, and I promptly changed my tone. ’If
I am mistaken, and if the young woman is someone you
know, I beg your pardon; but, remembering how she
turned her look upon you on the occasion of that first
meeting ’
‘One moment,’ he broke
in. ’It is possible that we have been unjust
in this case, and I think I may tell you, without
a breach of confidence, what this young lady’ I
thought he emphasized the ‘lady’ somewhat ’who
by-the-by is a stranger to me, had to say just now.’
I bowed my assent, lest speech might
cause a discussion, and he went on:
’The young lady, after excusing
herself for doing what she termed an unconventional
thing in addressing me, asked at once after you.’
‘After me? But go on.’
’She spoke of you as “the
person” I was talking with on the day when her
friend lost her bag and she tried to reclaim it, and
when I disclaimed all knowledge of you, she told me
how “cavalierly” that is also
her word you refused to yield up the bag,
and how anxiously her friend was hoping to secure
that bag even yet.’
‘Ah! Indeed!’
‘You will pardon me,’
he went on, not heeding my interjection, and speaking
with marked courtesy, ’but I almost fear you
have mistaken this young lady.’
‘Why?’
’Because she not only gave me
the name of the owner of the bag, but she assured
me that the lady recognised me in passing, a thing
which I regret, and she called me by my name.’
Here was a coil indeed. My head
was a nest of queer thoughts and suspicions, but I
kept to the subject by asking:
‘And may I ask how you replied to all this?’
’In the only way I could.
You were a stranger, who was anxious, I felt sure,
to restore the bag to its owner. You had assured
me of this much. As to your address, I could
not give it, and your name I did not know; but I added
the promise that should I chance to meet you, as I
might, I would ask you to send the bag to the lady’s
address.’
‘Pardon was this the lady’s
proposition?’
‘No. She asked me to get it from you the
bag.’
‘And to restore it through her?’
‘Yes.’
’And the address? Did she
give you the young lady’s address, the owner’s,
or her own?’
‘She gave the owner’s address.’
’Then if you will give it to
me I can promise that to-morrow will see the little
bag in its owner’s possession.’
He took from his pocket a visiting
card, upon which was engraved the name June E. Jenrys,
and underneath in pencil the address.
I had seen just such a card, minus
the pencilled address, in Miss Jenrys’ card-tray
on Washington Avenue; and that pencilled address!
It was that of the cafe to which Miss Jenrys was to
send her note concerning the evening excursion.
I had not spoken of the adventure
of the bag during the afternoon, and I had not meant
to do so. Since our last meeting my position in
relation to Miss Jenrys had been changed. I was
now in some degree the guardian of her interests,
and while I believed in and admired this handsome
and secretive stranger guard, and might have entrusted
him with a secret all my own, perhaps, my mouth was
closed concerning the young lady whom he professed
to know yet was unwilling to meet.
As I looked at the tall, lithe figure,
the erect head and handsome face, I wondered what
this mystery could be which caused him to withhold
his name from those who might be his friends; to shun
a lovely girl whom he knew and in whom he was evidently
interested; and, above all, which linked him, as was
now fairly proven, through the wily brunette, with
the strange pursuit of Miss Jenrys. Was it possible,
I asked myself, that this medley of mysterious happenings
could reach back through the brunette to Greenback
Bob, the counterfeiter, and Delbras, the king of confidence
men?