<SPAN name="chap13"></SPAN><h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
<br/>
<p>DIANA REVOLTS</p>
<br/>
<p>Charlie Mershone had no difficulty in securing
his release when Parker came on duty at six
o'clock. He called up a cab and went at once to
his rooms at the Bruxtelle; and Fogerty followed
him.</p>
<p>While he discarded his dress-coat, took a bath
and donned his walking suit Mershone was in a
brown study. Hours ago Louise had been safely
landed at the East Orange house and placed in
the care of old Madame Cerise, who would guard
her like an ogre. There was no immediate need
of his hastening after her, and his arrest and the
discovery of half his plot had seriously disturbed
him. This young man was no novice in intrigue,
nor even in crime. Arguing from his own stand-point
he realized that the friends of Louise were
by this time using every endeavor to locate her.
They would not succeed in this, he was positive.
His plot had been so audacious and all clews so
cleverly destroyed or covered up that the most
skillful detective, knowing he had abducted the
girl; would be completely baffled in an attempt to
find her.</p>
<p>The thought of detectives, in this connection,
led him to decide that he was likely to be
shadowed. That was the most natural thing for
his opponents to do. They could not prove Mershone's
complicity in the disappearance of Louise
Merrick, but they might easily suspect him, after
that little affair of Weldon's arrest. Therefore
if he went to the girl now he was likely to lead
others to her. Better be cautious and wait until
he had thrown the sleuths off his track.</p>
<p>Having considered this matter thoroughly,
Mershone decided to remain quiet. By eight
o'clock he was breakfasting in the grill room,
and Fogerty occupied a table just behind him.</p>
<p>During the meal it occurred to Charlie to telephone
to Madame Cerise for assurance that Louise
had arrived safely and without a scene to attract
the attention of strangers. Having finished breakfast
he walked into the telephone booth and was
about to call his number when a thought struck
him. He glanced out of the glass door. In the
hotel lobby were many loungers. He saw a dozen
pairs of eyes fixed upon him idly or curiously;
one pair might belong to the suspected detective.
If he used the telephone there would be a way of
discovering the number he had asked for. That
would not do—not at all! He concluded not to
telephone, at present, and left the booth.</p>
<p>His next act was to purchase a morning paper,
and seating himself carelessly in a chair he controlled
the impulse to search for a "scare head"
on the abduction of Miss Merrick. If he came
across the item, very well; he would satisfy no
critical eye that might be scanning him by hunting
for it with a show of eagerness. The game
was in his hands, he believed, and he intended to
keep it there.</p>
<p>Fogerty was annoyed by the man's evident
caution. It would not be easy to surprise Mershone
in any self-incriminating action. But, after
all, reflected the boy, resting comfortably in the
soft-padded cushions of a big leather chair, all
this really made the case the more interesting.
He was rather glad Mershone was in no hurry
to precipitate a climax. A long stern chase was
never a bad chase.</p>
<p>By and bye another idea occurred to Charlie.
He would call upon his cousin Diana, and get
her to telephone Madame Cerise for information
about Louise. It would do no harm to enlighten
Diana as to what he had done. She must suspect
it already; and was she not a co-conspirator?</p>
<p>But he could not wisely make this call until
the afternoon. So meantime he took a stroll into
Broadway and walked leisurely up and down that
thoroughfare, pausing occasionally to make a
trifling purchase and turning abruptly again and
again in the attempt to discover who might be
following him. No one liable to be a detective of
any sort could he discern; yet he was too shrewd
to be lulled into a false belief that his each and
every act was unobserved.</p>
<p>Mershone returned to his hotel, went to his
room, and slept until after one o'clock, as he had
secured but little rest the night before in his
primitive quarters at the police station. It was
nearly two when he reappeared in the hotel restaurant
for luncheon, and he took his seat and
ate with excellent appetite.</p>
<p>During this meal Mr. Fogerty also took occasion
to refresh himself, eating modestly at a retired
table in a corner. Mershone's sharp eyes
noted him. He remembered seeing this youth at
breakfast, and thoughtfully reflected that the boy's
appearance was not such as might be expected
from the guest of a fashionable and high-priced
hotel. Silently he marked this individual as the
possible detective. He had two or three others
in his mind, by this time; the boy was merely
added to the list of possibilities.</p>
<p>Mershone was a capital actor. After luncheon
he sauntered about the hotel, stared from the
window for a time, looked at his watch once or
twice with an undecided air, and finally stepped
to the porter and asked him to call a cab. He
started for Central Park; then changed his mind
and ordered the man to drive him to the Von Taer
residence, where on arrival Diana at once ordered
him shown into her private parlor.</p>
<p>The young man found his cousin stalking up
and down in an extremely nervous manner. She
wrung her delicate fingers with a swift, spasmodic
motion. Her eyes, nearly closed, shot red rays
through their slits.</p>
<p>"What's wrong, Di?" demanded Mershone,
considerably surprised by this intense display of
emotion on the part of his usually self-suppressed
and collected cousin.</p>
<p>"Wrong!" she echoed; "everything is wrong.
You've ruined yourself, Charlie; and you're going
to draw me into this dreadful crime, also, in
spite of all I can do!"</p>
<p>"Bah! don't be a fool," he observed, calmly
taking a chair.</p>
<p>"Am <i>I</i> the fool?" she exclaimed, turning upon
him fiercely. "Did <i>I</i> calmly perpetrate a deed that
was sure to result in disgrace and defeat?"</p>
<p>"What on earth has happened to upset you?"
he asked, wonderingly. "It strikes me everything
is progressing beautifully."</p>
<p>"Does it, indeed?" was her sarcastic rejoinder.
"Then your information is better than mine. They
called me up at three o'clock this morning to enquire
after Louise Merrick—as if <i>I</i> should know
her whereabouts. Why did they come to <i>me</i> for
such information? Why?" she stamped her foot
for emphasis.</p>
<p>"I suppose," said Charlie Mershone, "they
called up everyone who knows the girl. It would
be natural in case of her disappearance."</p>
<p>"Come here!" cried Diana, seizing his arm and
dragging him to a window. "Be careful; try to
look out without showing yourself. Do you see
that man on the corner?"</p>
<p>"Well?"</p>
<p>"He has been patrolling this house since day-break.
He's a detective!"</p>
<p>Charlie whistled.</p>
<p>"What makes you think so, Di? Why on earth
should they suspect you?"</p>
<p>"Why? Because my disreputable cousin
planned the abduction, without consulting me,
and—"</p>
<p>"Oh, come, Di; that's a little too—"</p>
<p>"Because the girl has been carried to the Von
Taer house—<i>my</i> house—in East Orange; because
my own servant is at this moment her jailor,
and—"</p>
<p>"How should they know all this?" interrupted
Mershone, impatiently. "And how do you happen
to know it yourself, Diana?"</p>
<p>"Madame Cerise called me up at five o'clock,
just after Louise's uncle had been here for the
second time, with a crew of officers. Cerise is in
an ugly mood. She said a young girl had been
brought to her a prisoner, and Mr. Mershone's
orders were to keep her safely until he came. She
is greatly provoked at our using her in this way,
but promised to follow instructions if I accepted
all responsibility."</p>
<p>"What did you tell her?"</p>
<p>"That I knew nothing of the affair, but had put
the house and her services at your disposal. I
said I would accept no responsibility whatever
for anything you might do."</p>
<p>Mershone looked grave, and scowled.</p>
<p>"The old hag won't betray us, will she?" he
asked, uneasily.</p>
<p>"She cannot betray me, for I have done nothing.
Charlie," she said, suddenly facing him, "I
won't be mixed in this horrid affair. You must
carry out your infamous plan in your own way.
I know nothing, sir, of what you have done; I
know nothing of what you intend to do. Do you
understand me?"</p>
<p>He smiled rather grimly.</p>
<p>"I hardly expected, my fair cousin, that you
would be frightened into retreat at this stage of
the game, when the cards are all in our hands.
Do you suppose I decided to carry away Louise
without fully considering what I was doing, and
the immediate consequences of my act? And
wherein have I failed? All has gone beautifully
up to this minute. Diana, your fears are absolutely
foolish, and against your personal interests.
All that I am doing for myself benefits you doubly.
Just consider, if you will, what has been accomplished
for our mutual benefit: The girl has disappeared
under suspicious circumstances; before
she again rejoins her family and friends she will
either be my wife or Arthur Weldon will prefer
not to marry her. That leaves him open to appreciate
the charms of Diana Von Taer, does it
not? Already, my dear cousin, your wishes are
accomplished. My own task, I admit, is a harder
one, because it is more delicate."</p>
<p>The cold-blooded brutality of this argument
caused even Diana to shudder. She looked at
the young man half fearfully as she asked:</p>
<p>"What is your task?"</p>
<p>"Why, first to quiet Louise's fears; then to
turn her by specious arguments—lies, if you will
—against Weldon; next to induce her to give me
her hand in honest wedlock. I shall tell her of
my love, which is sincere; I shall argue—threaten,
if necessary; use every reasonable means to gain
her consent."</p>
<p>"You'll never succeed!" cried Diana, with conviction.</p>
<p>"Then I'll try other tactics," said he blandly.</p>
<p>"If you do, you monster, I'll expose you,"
warned the girl.</p>
<p>"Having dissolved partnership, you won't be
taken into my confidence, my fair cousin. You
have promised to know nothing of my acts, and
I'll see you don't." Then he sprang from his
chair and came to her with a hard, determined
look upon his face. "Look here, Di; I've gone
too far in this game to back out now, I'm going
to carry it through if it costs me my life and
liberty—and yours into the bargain! I love
Louise Merrick! I love her so well that without
her the world and its mockeries can go to the
devil! There's nothing worth living for but
Louise—Louise. She's going to be my wife,
Diana—by fair means or foul I swear to make
her my wife."</p>
<p>He had worked himself up to a pitch of
excitement surpassing that of Diana. Now he
passed his hand over his forehead, collected himself
with a slight shudder, and resumed his seat.</p>
<p>Diana was astonished. His fierce mood served
to subdue her own. Regarding him curiously for
a time she finally asked:</p>
<p>"You speak as if you were to be allowed to
have your own way—as if all society was not arrayed
against you. Have you counted the cost
of your action? Have you considered the consequences
of this crime?"</p>
<p>"I have committed no crime," he said stubbornly.
"All's fair in love and war."</p>
<p>"The courts will refuse to consider that argument,
I imagine," she retorted. "Moreover, the
friends of this kidnaped girl are powerful and
active. They will show you no mercy if you are
discovered."</p>
<p>"If I fail," answered Mershone, slowly, "I do
not care a continental what they do to me, for my
life will be a blank without Louise. But I really
see no reason to despair, despite your womanish
croakings. All seems to be going nicely and just
as I had anticipated."</p>
<p>"I am glad that you are satisfied," Diana returned,
with scornful emphasis. "But understand
me, sir; this is none of my affair in any way—
except that I shall surely expose you if a hair of
the girl's head is injured. You must not come
here again. I shall refuse to see you. You ought
not to have come to-day."</p>
<p>"Is there anything suspicious in my calling upon
my cousin—as usual?"</p>
<p>"Under such circumstances, yes. You have not
been received at this house of late years, and my
father still despises you. There is another danger
you have brought upon me. My father seemed
suspicious this morning, and asked me quite pointedly
what I knew of this strange affair."</p>
<p>"But of course you lied to him. All right,
Diana; perhaps there is nothing to be gained
from your alliance, and I'll let you out of the deal
from this moment. The battle's mine, after all,
and I'll fight it alone. But—I need more money.
You ought to be willing to pay, for so far the
developments are all in your favor."</p>
<p>She brought a handful of notes from her desk.</p>
<p>"This ends our partnership, Charlie," she said.</p>
<p>"Very well. A woman makes a poor conspirator,
but is invaluable as a banker."</p>
<p>"There will be no more money. This ends
everything between us."</p>
<p>"I thought you were game, Di. But you're as
weak as the ordinary feminine creation."</p>
<p>She did not answer, but stood motionless, a
defiant expression upon her face. He laughed a
little, bowed mockingly, and went away.</p>
<hr style="width: 35%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />