<SPAN name="chap14"></SPAN><h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
<br/>
<p>A COOL ENCOUNTER</p>
<p>On leaving the house Mershone buttoned his
overcoat tightly up to his chin, for the weather
was cold and raw, and then shot a quick glance
around him. Diana's suspect was still lounging
on the corner. Charlie had little doubt he was
watching the house and the movements of its in-mates
—a bad sign, he reflected, with a frown.
Otherwise the street seemed deserted.</p>
<p>He had dismissed the cab on his arrival, so now
he stepped out and walked briskly around the
corner, swinging his cane jauntily and looking
very unlike a fugitive. In the next block he passed
a youth who stood earnestly examining the conventional
display in a druggist's window.</p>
<p>Mershone, observing this individual, gave a
start, but did not alter his pace. It was the same
pale, red-haired boy he had noticed twice before
at the hotel. In his alert, calculating mind there
was no coincidence in this meeting. Before he
had taken six more steps Mershone realized the
exact situation.</p>
<p>At the next crossing he stopped and waited
patiently for a car. Up the street he still saw
the youth profoundly interested in drugs—a class
of merchandise that seldom calls for such close
inspection. The car arrived and carried Mershone
away. It also left the red-haired youth at
his post before the window. Yet on arriving
at the Bruxtelle some twenty minutes later Charlie
found this same queer personage occupying a
hotel chair in the lobby and apparently reading
a newspaper with serious attention.</p>
<p>He hesitated a moment, then quietly walked
over to a vacant chair beside the red-haired one
and sat down. The youth turned the paper,
glanced casually at his neighbor, and continued
reading.</p>
<p>"A detective, I believe," said Mershone, in a
low, matter of fact tone.</p>
<p>"Who? me?" asked Fogerty, lowering the
paper.</p>
<p>"Yes. Your age deceived me for a time. I
imagined you were a newsboy or a sporting kid
from the country; but now I observe you are older
than you appear. All sorts of people seem to drift
into the detective business. I suppose your present
occupation is shadowing me."</p>
<p>Fogerty smiled. The smile was genuine.</p>
<p>"I might even be a lawyer, sir," he replied,
"and in that case I should undertake to cross-examine
you, and ask your reasons for so queer
a charge."</p>
<p>"Or you might be a transient guest at this
hotel," the other returned, in the same bantering
tone, "for I saw you at breakfast and luncheon.
Pretty fair <i>chef</i> here, isn't he? But you didn't
stick to that part, you know. You followed me
up-town, where I made a call on a relative, and
you studied the colored globes in a druggist's
window when I went away. I wonder why people
employ inexperienced boys in such important matters.
In your case, my lad, it was easy enough
to detect the detective. You even took the foolish
chance of heading me off, and returned to this
hotel before I did. Now, then, is my charge unfounded?"</p>
<p>"Why should you be under the surveillance of
a detective?" asked Fogerty, slowly.</p>
<p>"Really, my boy, I cannot say. There was an
unpleasant little affair last night at the Waldorf,
in which I was not personally concerned, but suffered,
nevertheless. An officious deputy caused
my arrest and I spent an unpleasant night in jail.
There being nothing in the way of evidence
against me I was released this morning, and now
I find a detective shadowing me. What can it all
mean, I wonder? These stupid blunders are very
annoying to the plain citizen, who, however innocent,
feels himself the victim of a conspiracy."</p>
<p>"I understand you, sir," said Fogerty, drily.</p>
<p>For some moments Mershone now remained
silent. Then he asked; "What are your instructions
concerning me?"</p>
<p>To his surprise the boy made a simple, frank
admission.</p>
<p>"I'm to see you don't get into more mischief,
sir."</p>
<p>"And how long is this nonsense to continue?"
demanded Mershone, showing a touch of anger
for the first time.</p>
<p>"Depends on yourself, Mr. Mershone; I'm no
judge, myself. I'm so young—and inexperienced."</p>
<p>"Who is your employer?"</p>
<p>"Oh, I'm just sent out by an agency."</p>
<p>"Is it a big paying proposition?" asked Charlie,
eyeing the diffident youth beside him critically, as
if to judge his true caliber.</p>
<p>"Not very big. You see, if I'd been a better
detective you'd never have spotted me so quickly."</p>
<p>"I suppose money counts with you, though, as
it does with everyone else in the world?"</p>
<p>"Of course, sir. Every business is undertaken
to make money."</p>
<p>Mershone drew his chair a little nearer.</p>
<p>"I need a clever detective myself," he announced,
confidentially. "I'm anxious to discover
what enemy is persecuting me in this way.
Would it—er—be impossible for me to employ
<i>you</i> to—er—look after my interests?"</p>
<p>Fogerty was very serious.</p>
<p>"You see, sir," he responded, "if I quit this job
they may not give me another. In order to be a
successful detective one must keep in the good
graces of the agencies."</p>
<p>"That's easy enough," asserted Mershone.
"You may pretend to keep this job, but go home
and take life easy. I'll send you a daily statement
of what I've been doing, and you can fix up a
report to your superior from that. In addition
to this you can put in a few hours each day trying
to find out who is annoying me in this rascally
manner, and for this service I'll pay you five times
the agency price. How does that proposition
strike you, Mr.—"</p>
<p>"Riordan. Me name's Riordan," said Fogerty,
with a smile. "No, Mr. Mershone," shaking his
head gravely, "I can't see my way to favor you.
It's an easy job now, and I'm afraid to take
chances with a harder one."</p>
<p>Something in the tone nettled Mershone.</p>
<p>"But the pay," he suggested.</p>
<p>"Oh, the pay. If I'm a detective fifty years, I'll
make an easy two thousand a year. That's a
round hundred thousand. Can you pay me that
much to risk my future career as a detective?"</p>
<p>Mershone bit his lip. This fellow was not so
simple, after all, boyish as he seemed. And, worse
than all, he had a suspicion the youngster was
baiting him, and secretly laughing at his offers
of bribery.</p>
<p>"They will take you off the job, now that I
have discovered your identity," he asserted, with
malicious satisfaction.</p>
<p>"Oh, no," answered Fogerty; "they won't do
that. This little interview merely simplifies matters.
You see, sir, I'm an expert at disguises.
That's my one great talent, as many will testify.
But you will notice that in undertaking this job
I resorted to no disguise at all. You see me as
nature made me—and 't was a poor job, I'm
thinking."</p>
<p>"Why were you so careless?"</p>
<p>"It wasn't carelessness; it was premeditated.
There's not the slightest objection to your knowing
me. My only business is to keep you in sight,
and I can do that exactly as well as Riordan as
I could by disguising myself."</p>
<p>Mershone had it on his tongue's end to ask
what they expected to discover by shadowing him,
but decided it was as well not to open an avenue
for the discussion of Miss Merrick's disappearance.
So, finding he could not bribe the youthful
detective or use him in any way to his advantage,
he closed the interview by rising.</p>
<p>"I'm going to my room to write some letters,"
said he, with a yawn. "Would you like to read
them before they are mailed?"</p>
<p>Again Fogerty laughed in his cheerful, boyish
way.</p>
<p>"You'd make a fine detective yourself, Mr. Mershone,"
he declared, "and I advise you to consider
the occupation. I've a notion it's safer, and
better pay, than your present line."</p>
<p>Charlie scowled at the insinuation, but walked
away without reply. Fogerty eyed his retreating
figure a moment, gave a slight shrug and resumed
his newspaper.</p>
<p>Day followed day without further event, and
gradually Mershone came to feel himself trapped.
Wherever he might go he found Fogerty on duty,
unobtrusive, silent and watchful. It was very
evident that he was waiting for the young man
to lead him to the secret hiding place of Louise
Merrick.</p>
<p>In one way this constant surveillance was a
distinct comfort to Charlie Mershone, for it assured
him that the retreat of Louise was still undiscovered.
But he must find some way to get rid
of his "shadow," in order that he might proceed
to carry out his plans concerning the girl. During
his enforced leisure he invented a dozen apparently
clever schemes, only to abandon them
again as unpractical.</p>
<p>One afternoon, while on a stroll, he chanced
to meet the bruiser who had attacked Arthur Weldon
at the Waldorf, and been liberally paid by
Mershone for his excellent work. He stopped
the man, and glancing hastily around found that
Fogerty was a block in the rear.</p>
<p>"Listen," he said; "I want your assistance, and
if you're quick and sure there is a pot of money,
waiting for you."</p>
<p>"I need it, Mr. Mershone," replied the man,
grinning.</p>
<p>"There's a detective following me; he's down
the street there—a mere boy--just in front of that
tobacco store. See him?"</p>
<p>"Sure I see him. It's Fogerty."</p>
<p>"His name is Riordan."</p>
<p>"No; it's Fogerty. He's no boy, sir, but the
slickest 'tec' in the city, an' that's goin' some,
I can tell you."</p>
<p>"Well, you must get him, whoever he is. Drag
him away and hold him for three hours—two—
one. Give me a chance to slip him; that's all.
Can you do it? I'll pay you a hundred for the
job."</p>
<p>"It's worth two hundred, Mr. Mershone. It
isn't safe to fool with Fogerty."</p>
<p>"I'll make it two hundred."</p>
<p>"Then rest easy," said the man. "I know the
guy, and how to handle him. You just watch him
like he's watching you, Mr. Mershone, and if
anything happens you skip as lively as a flea.
I can use that two hundred in my business."</p>
<p>Then the fellow passed on, and Fogerty was
still so far distant up the street that neither of
them could see the amused smile upon his thin
face.</p>
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