<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2>CHAPTER VIII. <br/> <small>PLOTTING AGAINST A PLOTTER.</small></h2>
<p>It should be permitted us to look inside the brain
of Bare-Faced Jimmy Duryea for a moment, in order
that we can see just how he was working out the existing
situation. It will help us better to understand
the events which followed; although, of course, the
one who reads must understand that no such privilege
could have been afforded the detective at that time.</p>
<p>He had to form his judgments as to what Jimmy
might determine to do next, from his past knowledge
of the man, and that, he decided wisely, was to his
credit.</p>
<p>We cannot relate here just how it happened that
Jimmy appeared at the summer residence of Theodore
Remsen in the character of a Southerner named
Ledger Dinwiddie, and was prepared to establish that
character, and the reputation that went with it, to all
comers. That is another story.</p>
<p>But that Jimmy Duryea never entered upon any
task without having thoroughly prepared himself to
meet all the emergencies that might arise has already
been made sufficiently clear.</p>
<p>His presence in that house as an accepted suitor for<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</SPAN></span>
the hand of Lenore Remsen was the result of careful
study and preparation, and the step had been taken
with due recognition of all the risks that had to be met
and overcome.</p>
<p>The encounter with Nan, in that house, and the manner
of it, as related by her to Nick Carter, were, of
course, unforeseen; they could not have been anticipated.</p>
<p>When Jimmy met Nan that night in the library,
while he was sorting over the jewels he had stolen, it
came in the nature of a surprise to him. He was absolutely
unprepared for it.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, he had met it with his customary
aplomb and coolness. We already know the consequences
of that encounter.</p>
<p>Jimmy had no intention of keeping his promise to
her, when he agreed to return the jewels to their rightful
owners; and that was because he really needed the
cash that the jewels would supply, rather than any
reluctance he felt to keeping his word with her.</p>
<p>In order to carry out his plans to the end, he did
really require more money, and a considerable amount
at that; else he would never have gone to the extent
of robbing the visitors at the house where he was himself
a guest; of actually robbing his expected bride of
her necklace.</p>
<p>But, so far as that was concerned, he merely argued<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</SPAN></span>
to himself that it was only anticipating the future.
That he was taking only what he had a right to take—or
would have a right to take later on.</p>
<p>But, when he did not keep his word, and Nan threatened
him with exposure, he came very near being desperate.</p>
<p>He had arrived at that position where this was the
last play out of the pack, so to speak. He had thrown
aside every other chance he had in his career, for
this one effort—to win a position in the world, a bride,
and a fortune, all at one cast.</p>
<p>Jimmy Duryea was never a murderer at heart; never
had he been cruelly inclined. He would go out of his
way to do a kindness to another, if it in no way interfered
with his own successes.</p>
<p>But that same characteristic worked to the opposite
extreme, as well.</p>
<p>Woe betide the circumstance or the person who
stood in the way of his success. He was thoroughly
implacable in that respect. So, when that Friday night
came, and he had not returned the jewels, and Nan
threatened him—and when, the following morning, he
discovered that Nan had gone to the city with Mrs.
Remsen, causing him to believe that she would seek
out Nick Carter and tell him all before her return—he
realized that he was “up against it hard,” and that
he was confronting the struggle of his life.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>And so, as Nick Carter had just told Nan, the coming
of the detective to the house that Monday afternoon
was no surprise to Jimmy Duryea. It was only a
confirmation of his expectation.</p>
<p>He had decided, long before Nick Carter appeared,
just how he would conduct himself when that incident
happened; and we have seen how he did it.</p>
<p>Naturally he could not foresee that interview in the
summerhouse; he was not entirely prepared for that;
but he met it, when it came, with all the cool effrontery
that was a part of him.</p>
<p>If Nick Carter knew and understood Jimmy Duryea,
no less did Jimmy Duryea know and understand
the detective.</p>
<p>At least he knew that Nick Carter could not be
bluffed.</p>
<p>Jimmy’s trump card was Nan—and Nan’s position
was precarious; and Jimmy knew that the detective
would stand for Nan, and protect her, just as far as it
was possible to do so.</p>
<p>But, after the interview in the summerhouse, Jimmy
was thoughtful. He knew that the truce that had
been declared when Nick took the irons off his wrists
was only a temporary arrangement, and that the detective
would lose no time in drawing the coils about
the interloper, and so tightly that there would be no
way of escape left open.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Jimmy realized that in order to succeed now he
must play what remained of the game with supreme
boldness—and that he must rely upon his established
position in that house to see him through it to the end.</p>
<p>At dinner, as has been said, he watched his two
active enemies, covertly, all the time. He gave very
little thought to Chick, although he recognized the
fact that the assistant was there, prepared to render
aid whenever it should become necessary to do so.</p>
<p>After dinner, Jimmy kept his eyes open and his
wits on the alert, and he saw Nick and Nan when
they withdrew to one corner of the veranda, and entered
upon that intimate interview.</p>
<p>What Jimmy would have been willing to sacrifice
could he have overheard that conversation need not
be estimated upon; and the longer he watched it from
a distance, the more anxious he became concerning
what it might portend.</p>
<p>When he could stand it no longer, he drew Lenore
aside from the group with which she had mingled,
and with her on his arm sauntered toward Nick and
Nan, arriving at their secluded corner of the veranda
just at the moment when Nan had said to Nick:</p>
<p>“I am afraid, Nick Carter! I am afraid!”</p>
<p>Low as the words had been uttered, they were overheard.
Jimmy and Lenore both heard them, although
they understood them quite differently.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Jimmy believed that he thoroughly comprehended
the meaning that was conveyed; Lenore was only puzzled
that Nan Nightingale should be afraid of anything,
and should give voice to her fears in exactly that
tone. As she stopped before them, she exclaimed:</p>
<p>“Afraid, Nan? Of what are you afraid?”</p>
<p>“Of the consequences of her misdeeds, doubtless,”
interjected Jimmy, before Nan could reply; and he
added, with deeper meaning than Lenore could understand:
“Fear is a wholesome thing, at times, when
it conveys a warning of things that are likely to happen,
under given conditions. It leads one to avoid
those conditions, eh, Mr. Carter?” and he laughed.</p>
<p>“Unless the fear is entirely misplaced, and unnecessary,
Mr. Dinwiddie,” replied the detective.</p>
<p>Nick looked across the veranda at that moment, and
managed to catch the eyes of Chick, to whom he signaled.
A moment later, Chick joined the little party
in the corner.</p>
<p>“I’m going to ask you to take my place here for
a time, Chick,” said the detective. “Mr. Dinwiddie has
begun a discourse on the quality of Fear, used as a
proper noun, and I will leave it to you to answer him.
Pray, do not let him escape, Chick, without having
first given a good reason for his last statement.”</p>
<p>The detective bowed, and withdrew. Nan laughed
aloud. Jimmy Duryea scowled. Lenore, unsuspecting<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</SPAN></span>
the byplay that was contained in the sentence Nick
Carter had just uttered, smiled encouragingly upon
Chick.</p>
<p>But by those words Chick and Nan both understood
that they were to keep Jimmy Duryea under
surveillance for a time at least, while Nick Carter
should occupy himself elsewhere; but what was more
to the point, Jimmy understood them, also.</p>
<p>Nick Carter stepped aside, and passed into the house
through one of the open French windows; then he
disappeared.</p>
<p>He had been quite sincere when he had expressed a
desire to see the inside of the rooms that Nan occupied,
and he wished to see them at once. He believed that
no better opportunity could offer than the one already
at hand, and so he took advantage of it.</p>
<p>He had only a vague idea of the plan of the house,
judging it from the outside view he had been able to
obtain of the mansion when he approached it in the
automobile, and from the few words that Nan had
uttered regarding the location of her rooms.</p>
<p>He passed through the library, into the hall, and
up the wide stairway to the second floor, and so found
his way, with comparatively no difficulty, to Nan’s
suite of rooms.</p>
<p>The door was open, and he could see that there was
no one inside the room into which he peered; Nan’s<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</SPAN></span>
maid was evidently taking advantage of the evening
hour, to gossip with the other servants of the house.</p>
<p>The detective passed inside and closed the door after
him. Then he stopped, and began, from that point of
vantage immediately inside the closed door, to make a
systematic survey of his surroundings.</p>
<p>Nick Carter’s method under such circumstances has
been too often described to need repetition here. He
stood in that one spot on the floor, and permitted his
eyes to travel slowly from floor to ceiling, and back
again to floor, carefully covering every inch of space
that was before him, with that searching gaze.</p>
<p>There were just three points upon which Nick Carter
was certain since that conversation with Jimmy
Duryea in the summerhouse; two of them were dependent
upon the first one, but Jimmy had as good as
stated the first one for a fact.</p>
<p>First, then, Jimmy had hidden those stolen jewels
somewhere within the rooms occupied by Nan Nightingale—had
hidden them somewhere, so that when discovered,
apparently by accident or otherwise, the conclusion
would be self-evident that Nan had, herself,
hidden them there.</p>
<p>Second, they would necessarily have to be hidden
where searchers would come upon them more by accident
than by design.</p>
<p>Third, they could not, therefore, be under lock and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</SPAN></span>
key, put away in a drawer or a trunk; but must have
been placed in some receptacle into which a stranger
might peer, quite naturally, to discover them.</p>
<p>Although Nick Carter, during the half hour that
he spent inside those rooms, searched every possible
place where the jewels might have been hidden, he
turned at last toward the door, profitless from the
search.</p>
<p>He had peered into every vase, into every possible
receptacle that stood in sight, and had found no trace
of them—and so much time had elapsed that he did
not dare to remain longer away from the other members
of the house party.</p>
<p>So he turned toward the door which opened upon
the hall, opened it, and found himself looking into
the face of Jimmy Duryea.</p>
<p>But Jimmy did not come within reach. He only
laughed, and turned hastily away.</p>
<p>“I thought so,” he said. “I thought so;” and then he
ran down the stairs, before Nick could make an effort
to detain him.</p>
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