<SPAN name="chap15"></SPAN><h2>CHAPTER XV</h2>
<br/>
<p>A BEWILDERING EXPERIENCE</p>
<p>When Louise Merrick entered the brown limousine,
which she naturally supposed to belong to
Arthur Weldon, she had not the faintest suspicion
of any evil in her mind. Indeed, the girl was very
happy this especial evening, although tired with
her duties at the Kermess. A climax in her young
life had arrived, and she greeted it joyously, believing
she loved Arthur well enough to become
his wife.</p>
<p>Now that the engagement had been announced
to their immediate circle of friends she felt as
proud and elated as any young girl has a right
to be under the circumstances.</p>
<p>Added to this pleasant event was the social
triumph she and her cousins had enjoyed at the
Kermess, where Louise especially had met with
rare favor. The fashionable world had united in
being most kind and considerate to the dainty,
attractive young <i>debutante</i>, and only Diana had
seemed to slight her. This was not surprising in
view of the fact that Diana evidently wanted
Arthur for herself, and there was some satisfaction
in winning a lover who was elsewhere in
prime demand. In addition to all this the little
dance that concluded the evening's entertainment
had been quite delightful, and all things conspired
to put Louise in a very contented frame of mind.</p>
<p>Still fluttering with the innocent excitements
of the hour the girl went to join Arthur without
a fear of impending misfortune. She did not
think of Charlie Mershone at all. He had been
annoying and impertinent, and she had rebuked
him and sent him away, cutting him out of her
life altogether. Perhaps she ought to have remembered
that she had mildly flirted with Diana's
cousin and given him opportunity for the impassioned
speeches she resented; but Louise had a
girlish idea that there was no harm in flirting,
considering it a feminine license. She saw young
Mershone at the Kermess that evening paying
indifferent attentions to other women and ignoring
her, and was sincerely glad to have done with
him for good and all.</p>
<p>She obeyed readily the man who asked her to
be seated in the limousine. Arthur would be with
her in a minute, he said. When the door closed
and the car started she had an impulse to cry out
but next moment controlled it and imagined they
were to pick up Mr. Weldon on some corner.</p>
<p>On and on they rolled, and still no evidence of
the owner of the limousine. What could it mean,
Louise began to wonder. Had something happened
to Arthur, so that he had been forced to
send her home alone? As the disquieting thought
came she tried to speak with the chauffeur, but
could not find the tube. The car was whirling
along rapidly; the night seemed very dark, only a
few lights twinkled here and there outside.</p>
<p>Suddenly the speed slackened. There was a
momentary pause, and then the machine slowly
rolled upon a wooden platform. A bell clanged,
there was a whistle and the sound of revolving
water-wheels. Louise decided they must be upon
a ferry-boat, and became alarmed for the first
time.</p>
<p>The man in livery now opened the door, as if
to reassure her.</p>
<p>"Where are we? Where is Mr. Weldon?" enquired
the girl, almost hysterically.</p>
<p>"He is on the boat, miss, and will be with you
shortly now," replied the man, very respectfully.
"Mr. Weldon is very sorry to have annoyed you,
Miss Merrick, but says he will soon explain everything,
so that you will understand why he left
you."</p>
<p>With this he quietly closed the door again, although
Louise was eager to ask a dozen more
questions. Prominent was the query why they
should be on a ferry-boat instead of going directly
home. She knew the hour must be late.</p>
<p>But while these questions were revolving in her
mind she still suspected no plot against her liberty.
She must perforce wait for Arthur to explain
his queer conduct; so she sat quietly enough
in her place awaiting his coming, while the ferry
puffed steadily across the river to the Jersey shore.</p>
<p>The stopping of the boat aroused Louise from
her reflections. Arthur not here yet? Voices
were calling outside; vehicles were noisily leaving
their positions on the boat to clatter across the
platforms. But there was no sign of Arthur.</p>
<p>Again Louise tried to find the speaking tube.
Then she made an endeavor to open the door,
although just then the car started with a jerk
that flung her back against the cushions.</p>
<p>The knowledge that she had been grossly deceived
by her conductor at last had the effect of
arousing the girl to a sense of her danger. Something
must be wrong. Something <i>was</i> decidedly
wrong, and fear crept into her heart. She
pounded on the glass windows with all her
strength, and shouted as loudly as she could, but
all to no avail.</p>
<p>Swiftly the limousine whirled over the dusky
road and either her voice could not be heard
through the glass cage in which she was confined
or there was no one near who was willing to hear
or to rescue her.</p>
<p>She now realized how wrong she had been to
sit idly during the trip across the ferry, where a
score of passengers would gladly have assisted
her. How cunning her captors had been to lull
her fears during that critical period! Now, alas,
it was too late to cry out, and she had no idea
where she was being taken or the reason of her
going.</p>
<p>Presently it occurred to her that this was not
Arthur's limousine at all. There was no speaking
tube for one thing. She leaned forward and
felt for the leathern pocket in which she kept a
veil and her street gloves. No pocket of any
sort was to be found.</p>
<p>An unreasoning terror now possessed her. She
knew not what to fear, yet feared everything.
She made another attempt to cry aloud for help
and then fell back unconscious on the cushions.</p>
<p>How long she lay in the faint she did not know.
When she recovered the limousine was still
rattling forward at a brisk gait but bumping
over ruts in a manner that indicated a country
road.</p>
<p>Through the curtains she could see little but
the black night, although there was a glow ahead
cast by the searchlights of the car. Louise was
weak and unnerved. She had no energy to find
a way to combat her fate, if such a way were
possible. A dim thought of smashing a window
and hurling herself through it gave her only a
shudder of repulsion. She lacked strength for
such a desperate attempt.</p>
<p>On, on, on. Would the dreary journey never
end? How long must she sit and suffer before
she could know her fate, or at least find some explanation
of the dreadful mystery of this wild
midnight ride?</p>
<p>At last, when she had settled down to dull despair,
the car came to a paved road and began
to move more slowly. It even stopped once or
twice, as if the driver was not sure of his way.
But they kept moving, nevertheless, and before
long entered a driveway. There was another
stop now, and a long wait.</p>
<p>Louise lay dismally back upon the cushions,
sobbing hysterically into her dripping handkerchief.
The door of her prison at last opened and
a light shone in upon her.</p>
<p>"Here we are, miss," said the man in uniform,
still in quiet, respectful tones. "Shall I assist
you to alight?"</p>
<p>She started up eagerly, her courage returning
with a bound. Stepping unassisted to the ground
she looked around her in bewilderment.</p>
<p>The car stood before the entrance to a modest
country house. There was a light in the hall and
another upon the broad porch. Around the house
a mass of trees and shrubbery loomed dark and
forbidding.</p>
<p>"Where am I?" demanded Louise, drawing
back haughtily as the man extended a hand toward
her.</p>
<p>"At your destination, miss," was the answer.
"Will you please enter?"</p>
<p>"No! Not until I have an explanation of this—this—singular,
high-handed proceeding," she replied,
firmly.</p>
<p>Then she glanced at the house. The hall door
had opened and a woman stood peering anxiously
at the scene outside.</p>
<p>With sudden resolve Louise sprang up the
steps and approached her. Any woman, she felt,
in this emergency, was a welcome refuge.</p>
<p>"Who are you?" she asked eagerly, "and why
have I been brought here?"</p>
<p>"<i>Mademoiselle</i> will come inside, please," said
the woman, with a foreign accent. "It is cold in
the night air, <i>N'est-ce-pas</i>?"</p>
<p>She turned to lead the way inside. While
Louise hesitated to follow the limousine started
with a roar from its cylinders and disappeared
down the driveway, the two men going with it.
The absence of the lamps rendered the darkness
around the solitary house rather uncanny. An intense
stillness prevailed except for the diminishing
rattle of the receding motor car. In the hall was
a light and a woman.</p>
<p>Louise went in.</p>
<hr style="width: 35%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />