<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
<h2>'THOSE TWO WOMEN.'</h2>
<p>My friend the guard had received a blow upon the head, painful but not
fatal. He would be about in a few days, the hospital surgeon said. But
in spite of the fact that I visited the hospital every day, five days
passed before I was allowed to speak to him or he was allowed to talk.</p>
<p>I was very anxious for this opportunity, for I had now a new reason
for my growing interest in the young fellow who so stubbornly refused
to give me a name by which to call him. He was enrolled among the
guards as L. Carr, and I at once adopted this name in speaking to or
of him.</p>
<p>I had determined at the first moment possible to have a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[156]</SPAN></span> confidential
talk with him, confidential upon my part, at least, and I meant to win
his confidence if possible.</p>
<p>In the meantime I had laid all the story of this day's adventures
before Dave Brainerd, beginning with the discovery in the newspaper,
and my search up-town and down for trace of missing Gerald Trent, and
I ended by adding to all the rest a few ideas and opinions of my own,
which caused Dave, in spite of his lately expressed lofty opinion of
my imaginative qualities, first to open his eyes, and then to roar
with laughter.</p>
<p>But he was my hearty second at the last, even to the point of agreeing
with me that, if we could accomplish but the one end, it were better
to find and rescue Gerald Trent, if he were living and in duress,
which we both doubted, or to solve the mystery of his fate if dead,
than to arrest a pair, or a trio, of counterfeiters, or possible
diamond robbers. As to Miss Jenrys and the mysterious guard, he would
no more have given up the thought of solving the problem of the
brunette's pursuit of these two than would I at that moment. But we
needed all the light possible, and we agreed at once that to obtain
this it would be wise, at this point, to make certain confidences to
the two persons most interested.</p>
<hr style="width: 45%;" />
<p>As to the elusive brunette, her 'shadow' had followed her for days
more faithfully and at closer quarters than we could have done,
because of his small stature and his easily managed 'lightning
changes,' managed by the aid of a reversible jacket, three or four
varicoloured silk handkerchiefs, and two or three hats or caps, all
stuffed into convenient pockets. But his report was, after all, far
from complete or conclusive.</p>
<p>'I've follered her,' he declared, 'till my laigs ached, an' I never
seen a woman 'at c'ud git over the ground like her. Ever sence that
first trip my laigs 'a' bin stiff!'<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The boy had followed her on the first day by devious ways, and until
after mid-day, without losing sight of her; and had lost her at last,
as Dave and myself had lost our quarry, in the intricacies of the
Plaisance.</p>
<p>'Ye see,' Billy had said, ''twas this way. She'd stopped afore one of
them Arab places'—he meant Turkish—'where there wuz a pay show, an'
she must 'a' got her ticket ahead, fer she jest sort o' held out a
card or somethin' afore his eyes and went right in, an' I had ter wait
till two or three fellers got tickets 'fore 'twas my turn, an' when I
got in she wa'n't nowhere.' A look of boyish disgust emphasized the
emphasis here. 'But wherever she was, she stayed a good while,' Bill
went on, 'an' then, all at once, out she come ag'in, an' went into
another big place clos' by, an' I went in too that time. She went
round behind a big table, where they had piles o' jimcracks, an'
popped behind a curtain, an' jest as I was gittin' scared for fear she
wuz gone agi'n, out she come an' took the place of a tired-lookin'
woman that set on a high stool sellin' the jimcracks. She had took off
her hat an' things, an' she had on a little red jacket all spangled
up, an' a red cap, like the Turks all wear, with a big gold tassel on
it, an' she'd made herself blacker round the eyes, an' redder in the
cheeks, an' she looked jest sassy.'</p>
<p>At least it was something to have our theories in regard to the
lurking places of this trio verified. It was something to feel sure,
as we now did, that these people were quartered in the Plaisance; but
I felt very sure that they had more than one hiding-place, probably
each of them a separate one, as well as a general rendezvous.</p>
<p>I questioned the lad closely regarding the 'tired-lookin' woman,' whom
he described as 'tallish, an' slim, an' not much on looks,' but
dressed in Turkish fez, and Zouave jacket, and 'painted thick.'</p>
<p>He had watched her till evening came, and then the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</SPAN></span> tallish woman had
returned and the brunette had stepped behind the curtain once more.</p>
<p>'I watched that doggoned curtain,' Bill declared, 'till 'twas time to
shut up shop, but she didn't come out, an' I couldn't git in.'</p>
<p>'Did anyone come out from behind that curtain while you waited, Bill?'
I asked him carelessly.</p>
<p>'Yes, there was; pretty soon after she went in a young Turk came out,
smallish, with a little dudey moustache. He had a pitcher in his hand,
an' he smacked the tired woman on the back, an' stuck the pitcher
under her nose an' went out.'</p>
<p>'Did he come back?'</p>
<p>'Come to think, I guess he didn't; I know he didn't.'</p>
<p>'Well, Bill,' I said, 'I can't blame you; I only blame myself; but if
you should see that woman go behind a curtain or door again, and
presently see a man come out, if he is the same in size and looks
anything like the one you saw to-night, you just follow him, and
you'll be on the right track.'</p>
<p>'Jim-mi-netti!'</p>
<p>'And, Bill, I want you to be on the Plaisance in the morning early,
and if the brunette starts out, don't lose her. If she has not
appeared by noon you may go down to the Plaza and look about there,
but get back to Midway by three o'clock; she'll show herself there
sooner or later.'</p>
<p>The next day Bill had nothing to report. The day following he had
followed her, late in the afternoon, when she had emerged from the
Turkish bazaar down Midway, and had seen her stop and speak to one of
the guards, then she had left the grounds by a Midway gate 'opposite
Hagenbeck's lion circus, ye know.'</p>
<p>'And I followed her,' he continued, 'till she come to that rest'runt
where you an' me see her git the letter; she turned off right by the
Midway gate, and went acrost to Wash'n'ton<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</SPAN></span> Avenue, an' down that till
she turned to come to the rest'runt. 'Twas most supper-time, and she
didn't come out no more, I'm sure, for I watched till most midnight,
an' there wa'n't no back way, I know, for I looked.'</p>
<p>I could well believe that she had taken a room as near the grounds as
possible, where she might rest when rest was required, and she was off
duty, and I did not doubt but that Delbras and Greenback Bob had each
a similar lair outside the White City, but conveniently near it.</p>
<p>This last report had been made to us on the morning of my visit to
Miss Jenrys, Bill having appeared at our quarters at an early hour,
and I had been studying the expediency of letting Miss Jenrys into the
history of her brunette acquaintance, as far as I myself knew it,
before visiting the two ladies, at last deciding that I would wait a
little and be guided by circumstances, the episode of Gerald Trent's
disappearance finally putting it altogether out of my mind.</p>
<p>On the morning after the attempt to drown the guard, Dave and I waited
for a time in our room, expecting a report from Bill, which might, we
hoped, throw some light upon the events of the night before. But he
did not appear; and after breakfasting together, Dave went back to our
room to await him, while I made haste toward the Emergency Hospital,
where our wounded guard lay, carefully watched, skilfully attended,
and not permitted to talk or receive visitors.</p>
<p>Assured that his recovery would be only a matter of days, I went back
to find Dave still alone, and this time we both set out, after leaving
a message with the janitor, Dave to look after the men who had been
detailed upon our business in different directions and to hear their
reports, and I to see that more men were at work upon the Trent case
before I ventured, as I was most anxious to do, upon a visit to Miss
Jenrys and her aunt.</p>
<p>Having done what I could in the Trent case, I found it<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</SPAN></span> nearing noon
when I approached their place of residence, but I had little fear of
finding them absent, and was hastening on, only a few paces from their
door, when I saw Monsieur Voisin come hastily out, and after seeming
to hesitate a moment upon the threshold, run down the steps and move
rapidly away southward. I could see that his face wore a sombre look,
and I wondered if he had seen me in the hasty glance he had cast about
him. There were others upon the pavement between him and myself, and I
trusted that he had not; still, I felt a strange reluctance to being
seen by this man so often in the same place, and I slackened my pace
and finally stood still, reading the 'to lets' upon the opposite
houses, until he turned the corner and went, as I was very sure, to
the Midway entrance a little way beyond.</p>
<p>I found the ladies at home, and eager to hear the little I had to tell
them regarding the Trent case. I had put a good man in the hotel where
Trent had stopped, to find out, if possible, whether the young
Bostonian had been spotted and followed from that place by any swell
adventurer; and I arranged with the mistress of the place where Trent
had secured rooms to hold them until I heard from Boston, whether any
or all would come on and occupy the rooms and assist in the search.
Miss Jenrys felt sure they would come, all of them.</p>
<p>'Hilda O'Neil will not rest until she is here, as near the place where
he was last seen as possible. You were very thoughtful to secure the
rooms,' she sighed heavily. 'I suppose now we must simply wait until
we receive the picture?' she added.</p>
<p>'There is little else to do,' I replied. 'Of course I have had other
advertisements inserted in various papers, and have offered a reward,
as you directed.'</p>
<p>'Ah,' she sighed again, 'we may hear from that.'</p>
<p>'I doubt it,' I replied. 'If he has been abducted, it is<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</SPAN></span> too soon for
that,' and then I turned the conversation by saying:</p>
<p>'I have some news from your friend, the brunette.'</p>
<p>'My friend! Mr. Masters!'</p>
<p>'Pardon me; your satellite, then. She was revolving near you the day
before yesterday.' At this point the door opened and a voice said:</p>
<p>'Miss Ross, the laundress is here about your washing.'</p>
<p>Miss Ross rose with alacrity, a benevolent smile upon her sweet face.</p>
<p>'Mr. Masters,' she said, 'thee must save thy story or tell it twice
over, for I must beg thee to excuse me now. I can't send this poor
woman away, and I ought not to make her wait.'</p>
<p>'It's one of Aunt Ann's protégées,' explained Miss Jenrys, 'and she
has come by appointment.'</p>
<p>Mentally thankful for this interruption, I assured Miss Ross that my
story should wait, and when she had left us alone I turned at once to
Miss Jenrys.</p>
<p>'I am glad of this opportunity,' I began at once, 'for I have
something to tell you which I prefer to make known to you first,
although I should have told my story, even in your aunt's presence, if
necessary, before leaving to-day.'</p>
<p>And as directly as possible I told of my acquaintance with the
handsome guard.</p>
<p>Beginning with her encounter with the Turkish palanquin-bearers, I
described my interview with the guard, repeated his words, his
questions concerning her welfare, his statement that she was not a
stranger to him, and then, with her interest and her curiosity well
aroused, I described him.</p>
<p>'I wonder who it can be?' she had murmured before I began my
description, and I kept a secret watch upon her features, while I
said:</p>
<p>'He is a tall young fellow, and very straight and square-<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</SPAN></span>shouldered,
though somewhat slender. He is blond, with close-cropped hair that is
quite light, almost golden, and inclined to curl where it has attained
an inch of growth. He wears a moustache that is but little darker than
his hair, and is kept close-trimmed. He has a broad, full forehead;
honest, open blue eyes, not pale blue, but a fine deep colour, and
they meet one frankly and fearlessly. His mouth is really too handsome
for a man, but his chin is firm enough to counterbalance that. His
manners are fine, and he has evidently been reared a gentleman. I
chanced to hear him sing last night, and he has a wonderfully high
tenor voice—an unusual voice; clear and sweet, and soft in the
highest notes.'</p>
<p>Before I had finished my description, I saw clearly that she
recognised the picture. Her colour had changed and changed again, from
red to pale. But I made no pause, telling how I had seen him in
conversation with the little brunette, and what he had told me of that
conversation, and then I described the adventure of the previous
night.</p>
<p>When I had reached the point where I had offered my card and he had
refused to give me a false name, I saw her eyes glow and her head lift
itself unconsciously; when I described him in converse with the wily
brunette, a slight frown crossed her face, and her little foot tapped
an impatient tattoo quite unconsciously; when I pictured him as
following the two women toward the Wooded Island, her head was lifted
again and her lip curled scornfully. But when I had reached the point
where the two figures, springing suddenly from the darkness behind
him, had hurled him over the parapet into the deepest part of the
lagoon, a low moan burst from her lips, and she put out her hands
entreatingly.</p>
<p>'Was he——Quick! tell me!'</p>
<p>'He was rescued, unconscious but living, by two of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</SPAN></span> emergency crew
who guard the lagoons by night, who, luckily, were lying in their
skiff under the shadow of the bridge engaged in watching the
mysterious movements of the very men who were lurking behind the big
pedestal on the other side of the pier, awaiting the signal from the
women, their confederates. In going over, his head was quite seriously
hurt. At first it was thought that he had struck the edge of the boat
in falling, but the doctor says it was a blow from some blunt
instrument with a rounded end—some manner of club, no doubt.'</p>
<p>'And now—how—is he?' she faltered.</p>
<p>'In very good hands, and doing as well as can be expected. I was not
allowed to see him, and he does not seem fully conscious, although the
doctor says he may recover if all goes well.'</p>
<p>'Where is he?' Her face was very pale, but there was a change in her
voice, a sudden firmness, and a total lack of hesitancy.</p>
<p>'At the Emergency Hospital in the Fair grounds.' I had purposely made
his case as serious as I consistently could, and I now made the
important plunge. 'Miss Jenrys, I have taken a great interest in this
young man from the first. He is a fine fellow, and now, added to this
personal liking, is the duty I owe this helpless young man, who
evidently has an enemy, and that enemy seemingly the very person who
has been dogging you so persistently and so mysteriously. You see the
strangeness of the complication. Are you willing to help me?'</p>
<p>'I?' she hesitated. 'How?'</p>
<p>'This young man knows you. Do you not know him?'</p>
<p>'I—almost believe so.'</p>
<p>'And—are you under any vow or promise of secrecy? He lies there,
unknown, friendless; and he has an enemy near at hand. I want to serve
him, but to do this intelligently I must know him.'<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>She hesitated a moment, and then, to my surprise, arose quite calmly,
went to her desk, and came back with a photograph in her hand.</p>
<p>'Look at that,' she said, as she held it out to me.</p>
<p>It was a group of tennis-players upon a sunlit lawn, one of those
instantaneous pictures in which amateurs delight; but it was clear and
the faces were very distinct. One of them I recognised at once as the
subject of our conversation. He wore in the picture a light tennis
suit, and his handsome head was bare; but I knew the face at once, and
told her so.</p>
<p>'That,' she said, 'is a picture of a Mr. Lossing, whom I knew quite
well for a season in New York. Shortly before Lent he left the city,
it was said, and I have heard and known nothing of him since.'</p>
<p>'And—pardon me—it's very unusual for a young man of society to take
up the work he has chosen. Do you know any reason for this?'</p>
<p>'None whatever. He seemed to be well supplied with money. So far as I
can judge, I confess I never thought before of his fortune or lack of
it.' A sudden flush mantled her face, and her eyes dropped. I wondered
if she was thinking of that letter to Hilda O'Neil.</p>
<p>'It's a delicate point,' I said musingly. 'If we could learn something
of his situation. He is very proud. Do you think that your friend,
Monsieur Voisin, might possibly know something——'</p>
<p>She put up her hand quickly, imperiously.</p>
<p>'If Mr. Lossing has chosen to conceal himself from his friends, we
have no right to make his presence here known to Monsieur Voisin.' She
checked herself and coloured beautifully again.</p>
<p>'You are right,' I said promptly. I had no real thought of asking
Monsieur Voisin into our councils, and I had now verified the
suspicions I had held from the first—fitting the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</SPAN></span> guard's statement
and his personality into the story her letter told—that he was the
Mr. Lossing from whom she had parted so stormily in the conservatory
on the night of her aunt's reception.</p>
<p>And now, as I consulted my watch, she leaned toward me, and suddenly
threw aside her reserve.</p>
<p>'Can you guess,' she asked eagerly, 'how he came to meet those women
in that way? It was a meeting, was it not?'</p>
<p>'No doubt of that; and it was also a scheme to entrap him.'</p>
<p>'But—how did they do it? How did they lure him to that bridge—those
two women?'</p>
<p>I could not suppress a smile.</p>
<p>'Can you not guess? It must be only a guess on my part, you know, but
I fancy that in her talk with him that afternoon the brunette led him
to think that you would not be unwilling to see him. I particularly
noted that the woman with her was of about your height, and that she
wore a hat much like the one worn by you on the day I first saw you.
Now that I recall their manœuvres of last night, I remember that
the hat almost concealed her face, and that they kept in the shadow.'</p>
<p>She did not follow up the subject, but after a moment said:</p>
<p>'Do—do you think I might be allowed to see him if I went with auntie
to the hospital? I mean now—to-day! Could you not say that I—that we
were—that we knew him?'</p>
<p>'It is quite important that you should do so,' I declared
unblushingly. 'You are the only one who can identify him; and now if I
am to tell Miss Ross all these things——'</p>
<p>'Pardon me,' she broke in, 'if it will not matter, I—I would rather
tell Aunt Ann; at least, about Mr. Lossing.'<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>I arose hastily. 'In that case I will leave it to you willingly, and
if you will come with your aunt, say at two o'clock, I will meet you
at any place you may choose, and take you to the hospital; or would
you rather go alone?'</p>
<p>'Oh, no, no!' she exclaimed. 'We shall be glad of your escort. Indeed,
I should fear to venture else.'</p>
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