Alan and Winnie receive the news that Daisy is missing“Leslie! Alan!” she cried, coming toward them with a sob in her throat, “we have lost little Daisy!”—page 155.
“Leslie! Alan!” she cried, coming toward them with a sob in her throat, “we have lost little Daisy!”—page 155.
So two long, dreary days passed away, with no tidings from the lost and no hope for the dying.
During these two days, Van Vernet and Richard Stanhope were not idle.
The struggle between them had commenced on the night of the masquerade, and now there would be no turning back until the one became victor, the other vanquished.
Having fully convinced himself that Vernet had deliberately ignored all their past friendship, and taken up the cudgel against him, for reward and honor, Stanhope resolved at least to vindicate himself; while Vernet, dominated by his ambition, had for his watchword, “success! success!”
Fully convinced that behind that which was visible at the Francoise hovel, lay a mystery, Vernet resolved upon fathoming that mystery, and he set to work with rare vigor.
Having first aroused the interest of the authorities in the case, Vernet caused three rewards to be offered. One for the apprehension of the murderer of the man who had been identified as one Josef Siebel, professional rag-picker, and of Jewish extraction, having a sister who ran a thieving “old clo’” business, and a brother who kept a disreputable pawn shop.
The second and third rewards were for the arrest of, or information concerning, the fellow calling himself “Silly Charlie,” and the parties who had occupied the hovel up to the night of the murder.
These last “rewards” were accompanied by such descriptions of Papa and Mamma Francoise as Vernet could obtain at second-hand, and by more accurate descriptions of the Sailor, and Silly Charlie.
Rightly judging that sooner or later Papa Francoise, orsome of his confederates, would attempt to remove the concealed booty from the deserted hovel,—which, upon being searched, furnished conclusive proof that buying rags at a bargain was not Papa’s sole occupation,—Van Vernet set a constant watch upon the house, hoping thus to discover the new hiding-place of the two Francoise’s. Having accomplished thus much, he next turned his attention to his affairs with the aristocrat of Warburton Place.
This matter he now looked upon as of secondary importance, and on the second day of Archibald Warburton’s illness he turned his steps toward the mansion, intent upon bringing his “simple bit of shadowing” to a summary termination.
He had gathered no new information concerning Mrs. Warburton and her mysterious movements, nevertheless he knew how to utilize scant items, and the time had come when he proposed to make Richard Stanhope’s presence at the masquerade play a more conspicuous part in the investigation which he was supposed to be vigorously conducting.
The silence and gloom that hung over the mansion was too marked to pass unnoticed by so keen an observer.
Wondering as to the cause, Vernet pulled the bell, and boldly handed his professional card to the serious-faced footman who opened the door.
In obedience to instructions, the servant glanced at the card, and reading thereon the name and profession of the applicant, promptly admitted him, naturally supposing him to be connected with the search for little Daisy.
“Tell your master,” said Vernet, as he was ushered into the library, “tell your master that I must see him at once. My business is urgent, and my time limited.”
The servant turned upon him a look of surprise.
“Do you mean Mr. Archibald Warburton, sir?”
“Yes.”
“Then it will be impossible. Mr. Warburton has been dangerously sick since yesterday. The shock—Mr. Alan receives all who have business.”
Mentally wondering what the servant could mean, for in the intensity of his interest in his new search, he had not informed himself as to the late happenings that usually attract the attention of all connected with the police, and was not aware of the disappearance of Archibald Warburton’s little daughter, Vernet said briefly, and as if he perfectly understood it all:
“Nevertheless, you may deliver my message.”
Somewhat overawed by the presence of this representative of justice, the servant went as bidden, and in another moment stood before Alan Warburton, presenting the card of the detective and delivering his message.
Alan Warburton started at sight of the name upon the card, and involuntarily turned his gaze toward the mirror. The face reflected there was not the face we saw unmasked, for a moment, at the masquerade. The brown moustache and glossy beard, the abundant waving hair, were gone. To the wonder and disapproval of all in the house, Alan had appeared among them, on the morning following the masquerade, with smooth-shaven face and close-cropped hair, looking like a boy-graduate rather than the distinguished man of the world he had appeared on the previous day.
Van Vernet had seen his bearded face but once, and there was little cause to fear a recognition; nevertheless, recalling Stanhope’s warning, Alan chose the better part of valor, and said calmly:
“Tell the person that Mr. Warburton is so ill that his life is despaired of, and that he is quite incapable of transacting business. He cannot see him at present.”
Wondering somewhat at this cavalier message, the servant retraced his steps, and Alan returned to the sick-room, murmuring as he went:
“It seems the only way. I dare not trust my voice in conversation with that man. For our honor’s sake, my dying brother must be my representative still.”
And then, as his eye rested upon Leslie, sitting by the bedside pale and weary, a thrill of aversion swept over him as he thought:
“But for her, and her wretched intrigue, I should have no cause to deceive, and no man’s scrutiny to fear.”
Alas for us who have secrets to keep; we should be “as wise as serpents,” and as farseeing as veritable seers.
While Alan Warburton, above stairs, was congratulating himself, believing that he had neglected nothing of prudence or precaution, Van Vernet, below stairs, was grasping a clue by which Alan Warburton might yet be undone.
Reentering the library, the servant found Vernet, his cheeks flushed, his eyes ablaze with excitement, standing before an easel which upheld a life-sized portrait—a new portrait, recently finished and just sent home, and as like the original, as he had appeared on yesterday, as a picture could be like life.
When the servant had delivered his message, and without paying the slightest heed to its purport, Vernet demanded, almost fiercely:
“Who is the original of that portrait?”
“That, sir,” said the servant, “is Mr. Alan Warburton.”
Paying no further heed to the servant, and much to the surprise of that functionary, Van Vernet turned his gaze back upon the picture, and looked long and intently, shifting his position once or twice to obtain a different view. Then taking up his hat, he silently left the house, a look of mingled elation and perplexity upon his face.
“It’s the same!” he thought, as he hurried away; “it’s the same face, or a most wonderful resemblance. Allow for the difference made by the glazed cap, the tattoo marks and the rough dress, and it’s the very same face! It seems incredible, but I know that such impossibilities often exist. What is there in common between Mr. Alan Warburton, aristocrat, and a nameless sailor, with scars upon his face and blood upon his hands? The same face, certainly, and—perhaps the same delicate hands and dainty feet. It may be only a resemblance, but I’ll see this Alan Warburton, and I’ll solve the mystery of that Francoise hovel yet.”
While Van Vernet thus soliloquizes over his startling discovery, we will follow the footsteps of Richard Stanhope.
He is walking away from the more bustling portion of the city, and turning into a quiet, home-like street, pauses before a long, trim-looking building, turns a moment to gaze about him in quest of possible observers, and then enters.
It is a hospital, watched over by an order of noble women,and affording every relief and comfort to the suffering ones within its walls.
Passing the offices and long wards, he goes on until he has reached a private room in the rear of the building. Here coolness and quiet reign, and a calm-faced woman is sitting beside a cot, upon which a sick man tosses and mutters feverishly. It is the ex-convict who was rescued from the Thieves’ Tavern by Stanhope, only a few nights ago.
“How is your patient?” queries the detective, approaching the bed and gazing down upon the man whom he has befriended.
“He has not long to live,” replies the nurse. “I am glad you are here, sir. In his lucid moments he asks for you constantly. His delirium will pass soon, I think, and he will have a quiet interval. I hope you will remain.”
“I will stay as long as possible,” Stanhope says, seating himself by the bed. “But I have not much time to spare to-night.”
The dying man is living his childhood over again. He mutters of rolling prairies, waving trees, sweeping storms, and pealing thunder. He laughs at the review of some pleasing scene, and then cries out in terror as some vision of horror comes before his memory.
And while he mutters, Richard Stanhope listens—at first idly, then curiously, and at last with eager intensity, bending forward to catch every word.
Finally he rises, and crossing the room deposits his hat upon a table, and removes his light outer coat.
“I shall stay,” he says briefly. “How long will he live?”
“He cannot last until morning, the surgeon says.”
“I will stay until the end.”
He resumes his seat and his listening attitude. It is sunset when his watch begins; the evening passes away, and still the patient mutters and moans.
It is almost midnight when his mutterings cease, and he falls into a slumber that looks like death.
At last there comes an end to the solemn stillness of the room. The dying man murmurs brokenly, opens his eyes with the light of reason in them once more, and recognizes his benefactor.
“You see—I was—right,” he whispers, a wan smile upon his face; “I am going to die.”
He labors a moment for breath, and then says:
“You have been so good—will—will you do one thing—more?”
“If I can.”
“I want my—mother to know—I am dead. She was not always good—but she was—my mother.”
“Tell me her name, and where to find her?”
The voice of the dying man sinks lower. Stanhope bends to catch the whispered reply, and then asks:
“Can you answer a few questions that I am anxious to put to you?”
“Y—yes.”
“Now that you know yourself dying, are you willing to tell me anything I may wish to know?”
“You are the—only man—who was ever—merciful to me,” said the dying man. “I will tell you—anything.”
Turning to the nurse, Stanhope makes a sign which she understands, and, nodding a reply, she goes softly from the room.
When Richard Stanhope and the dying man are left alone, the detective bends his head close to the pillows, and thequestions asked, and the answers given, are few and brief.
Suddenly the form upon the bed becomes convulsed, the eyes roll wildly and then fix themselves upon Stanhope’s face.
“You promise,” gasps the death-stricken man, “you will tell them—”
The writhing form becomes limp and lifeless, the eyes take on a glassy stare, and there is a last fluttering breath.
Richard Stanhope closes the staring eyes, and speaks his answer in the ears of the dead.
“I will tell them, poor fellow, at the right time, but—before my duty to the dead, comes a duty to the living!”
It was grey dawn when Stanhope left the hospital and turned his face homeward, and then it was not to sleep, but to pass the two hours that preceded his breakfast-time in profound meditation.
Seated in a lounging-chair, with a fragrant cigar between his lips, he looked the most care-free fellow in the world. But his active brain was absorbed in the study of a profound problem, and he was quite oblivious to all save that problem’s solution.
Whatever the result of his meditation, he ate his breakfast with a keen relish, and a countenance of serene content, and then set off for a morning call upon Mr. Follingsbee.
He found that legal gentleman preparing to walk down tohis office; and after an interchange of salutations, the two turned their faces townward together.
“Well, Stanhope,” said the lawyer, linking his arm in that of the detective with friendly familiarity, “how do you prosper?”
“Very well; but I must have an interview with Mrs. Warburton this morning.”
“Phew! and you want me to manage it?”
“Yes.”
The lawyer considered a moment.
“You know that the Warburtons are overwhelmed with calamity?” he said.
Stanhope glanced sharply from under his lashes, and then asked carelessly:
“Of what nature?”
“Archibald Warburton lies dying; his little daughter has been stolen.”
“What!” The detective started, then mastering his surprise, said quietly: “Tell me about it.”
Briefly the lawyer related the story as he knew it, and then utter silence fell between them, while Richard Stanhope lost himself in meditation. At last he said:
“It’s a strange state of affairs, but it makes an immediate interview with the lady doubly necessary. Will you arrange it at once?”
“You are clever at a disguise: can you make yourself look like a gentleman of my cloth?”
“Easily,” replied Stanhope, with a laugh.
“Then I’ll send Leslie—Mrs. Warburton, a note at once, and announce the coming of myself and a friend, on a matter of business.”
An hour later, a carriage stopped before the Warburton doorway, and two gentlemen alighted.
The first was Mr. Follingsbee, who carried in his hand a packet of legal-looking papers. The other was a trim, prim, middle-aged gentleman, tightly buttoned-up in a spotless frock coat, and looking preternaturally grave and severe.
They entered the house together, and the servant took up to Leslie the cards of Mr. Follingsbee and “S. Richards, attorney.”
With pale, anxious face, heavy eyes, and slow, dragging steps, Leslie appeared before them, and extended her hand to Mr. Follingsbee, while she cast a glance of anxious inquiry toward the seeming stranger.
“How is Archibald?” asked the lawyer, briskly.
“Sinking; failing every moment,” replied Leslie, sadly.
“And there is no news of the little one?”
“Not a word.”
There was a sob in her throat, and Mr. Follingsbee, who hated a scene, turned abruptly toward his companion, saying:
“Ours is a business call, Leslie, and as the business is Mr. Stanhope’s not mine, I will retire to the library while it is being transacted.”
And without regarding her stare of surprise, he walked coolly from the room, leaving Leslie and the disguised detective face to face.
“Is it possible!” she said, after a moment’s silence; “is this Mr. Stanhope!”
The middle-aged gentleman smiled and came toward her.
“It is I, Mrs. Warburton. An interview with you seemed to me quite necessary, and I considered this the safest disguise, and Mr. Follingsbee’s company the surest protection.”
She bowed her head and looked inquiringly into his face.
“Mrs. Warburton, are you still desirous to discover the identity of the person who has been a spy upon you?” he asked gravely.
“I know—” she checked herself and turned a shade paler. “I mean I—” again she paused. What should she say to this man whose eyes seemed looking into her very soul? What did he know?
“Let me speak for you, madam,” he said, coming close to her side, his look and manner full of respect, his voice low and gentle. “You do not need my information; you have, yourself, discovered the man.”
Then, seeing the look of distress and indecision upon her face, he continued:
“On the night of our first interview, I pledged my word to respect any secret of yours which I might discover. At the same time I warned you that such discovery was more than possible. If, in saying what it becomes my duty to say, I touch upon a subject offensive to you, or upon which you are sensitive, pardon me. Under other circumstances I might have said: Mrs. Warburton, it is your brother-in-law who has constituted himself your shadow. But the events that followed that masquerade have made what would have been a simple discovery, a most complicated affair. Can we be sure of no interruption while you listen?”
She sank into a chair, with a weary sigh.
“There will be no interruption. Miss French and my brother-in-law are watching in the sick-room; the servants are all at their posts. Be seated, Mr. Stanhope.”
He drew a chair near that which she occupied, and plungedat once into his unpleasant narrative, talking fast, and in low, guarded tones.
Beginning with a description of the Raid as it was planned, he told how he had been detained at the masquerade—how he had discovered the presence of Vernet, and suspected his agency in the matter—how, without any thought other than to be present at the Raid, to note Vernet’s generalship, and satisfy himself, if possible, as to the exact meaning of his unfriendly conduct, he, Stanhope, had assumed the disguise of “Silly Charlie”, had encountered Vernet and been seized upon by that gentleman as a suitable guide,—and how, while convoying his false friend through the dark alleys, they were startled by a cry for help.
As she listened, Leslie’s face took on a look of terror, and she buried it in her hands.
“I need not dwell upon what followed,” concluded Stanhope. “Not knowing what was occurring, I managed to enter first at the door. I heard Alan Warburton bid you fly for your husband’s sake. I saw your face as he forced you through the door, and then I contrived to throw Vernet off his feet before he, too, should catch a glimpse of you.”
Leslie shuddered, and as he paused, she asked, from behind her hands:
“And then—oh, tell me what happened after that!”
“Your brother-in-law closed and barred the door, and turned upon us like a lion at bay, risking his own safety to insure your retreat. What! has he not told you?”
“He has told me nothing.”
“There is little more to tell. I knew him for your brother-in-law, because, here at the masquerade, I was a witness to a little scene in which he threw off his mask and domino. Itwas when he met and frightened the little girl, and then reproved the servant.”
“I remember.”
“I recognized him at once, and fearing lest, by arresting him, we might do harm to you, or bring to light the secret I had promised to help you keep, I connived at his escape.”
She lifted her head suddenly.
“Arrest!” she exclaimed; “why should you arresthim?”
Stanhope fixed his eyes upon her face; then sinking his voice still lower, he said:
“Something had occurred before we came upon the scene; what that something was, you probably know. What we found in that room, after your flitting, was Alan Warburton, standing against the door with a table before him as a breast-work, in his hand a blood-stained bar of iron, and almost at his feet, a dead body.”
“What!”
“It was the body of a dead rag-picker. Before you left that room, a fatal blow was struck.”
“Yes—I—I don’t know—I can’t tell—it was all confused.”
She sank back in her chair, her face fairly livid, her eyes looking unutterable horror.
“Some one had committed a murder,” went on Stanhope, keeping his eyes fixed upon her pallid face; “and the instrument that dealt the blow was in your brother-in-law’s hand. To arrest him would have been to compromise you, and I had promised you safety and protection.”
She bent forward, looking eagerly into his face.
“And you rescued him?” she said, eagerly.
“You could scarcely call it that. He resisted grandly, andwas brave enough to effect his own rescue. I guided him away from that unsafe locality, and warned him of the danger which menaced him.”
“And is that danger now past?”
“Is it past!” He took from his pocket a folded placard, opened it, and put it into her hands.
It was the handbill containing the description of the escaped Sailor, and offering a reward for his capture.
With a cry of remorse and terror, Leslie Warburton flung it from her, and rose to her feet.
“My God!” she cried, wringing her hands wildly, “my cowardice, my folly, has brought this upon him, upon us all!”
Then turning toward the detective, a sudden resolve replacing the terror in her eye, a resolute ring in her voice, she said:
“Listen; you have proved yourself worthy of all confidence; you shall hear all I have to tell; you shall judge between my enemies and me.”
“But, madam—”
“Wait; I want your advice, too, your aid, perhaps. Mr. Follingsbee also shall hear me.”
She started toward the library, but the detective put out a detaining hand.
“Stop!” he said, firmly. “If what you are about to say includes anything concerning Alan Warburton, or the story of that night, we must have no confidants while his liberty and life are menaced. His identity with that missing Sailor must never be known, even by Mr. Follingsbee.”
She breathed a shuddering sigh, and returned to her seat.
“You are right,” she said hurriedly; “and until you shall advise me otherwise, I will tell my story to none but you.”
“I shall not weary you with a long story,” began Leslie Warburton; “this is not the time for it, and I am not in the mood. My husband lies above us, hopelessly ill. My little step-daughter is lost, and in Heaven only knows what danger. My brother-in-law is a hunted man, accused of the most atrocious of crimes. And I feel that I am the unhappy cause of all these calamities. If I have erred, I am doubly punished. Let me give you the bare facts, Mr. Stanhope; such details as you may wish can be supplied hereafter.
“I am, as you have been told, the adopted child of Thomas Uliman, of the late firm of Uliman & French. Until his death, I had supposed myself to be his own child. During the last year of my adopted father’s life, it was his dearest wish that I should marry his friend, Archibald Warburton, and we became affianced. After the death of my adopted father, Mr. Warburton urged a speedy marriage, and we fixed a day for the ceremony.
“Less than a week later, it became necessary to overlook my father’s papers, in the search for some missing document. After looking through his secretary, and examining a great many papers without finding the one for which I searched, I remembered that my mother’s desk contained many papers. As the missing document referred to some property held by them jointly, I made a search there. She had been dead formore than a year, and all her keys were in my possession, but until that day I had never had the courage to approach her desk.
“Searching among her papers, I found one which had never been intended for my eyes. It was folded tightly, and crowded into a tiny space behind a little drawer. My mother’s death was quite sudden; had she died of a lingering sickness, the paper would doubtless have been destroyed, for it furnished proof that I was not the child of Thomas Uliman and his wife, Mathilde, but an adopted daughter, while I was represented in the will as their only child. The paper I found was in my father’s writing, and by it, Franz Francoise and his wife, Martha—”
“What!” The exclamation fell involuntarily from Stanhope’s lips. Then checking himself, he said quietly: “I beg your pardon; proceed.”
“Franz Francoise and his wife, Martha, by this paper resigned all claim to the child, Leschen, for a pecuniary consideration. The child was to be rechristened Leslie Uliman, and legally adopted by the Ulimans, the two Francoises agreeing never to approach or claim her.
“Imagine my consternation and grief! With this paper in my hand, I went straight to Mr. Follingsbee. He had known the truth from the first, but assured me that the Ulimans had never intended that I should learn it. I had been legally adopted, and the little fortune they had left me was lawfully mine.
“Then I told the story to my intended husband, and, knowing his pride, offered him a release. He only laughed at my Quixotism, and hastened the marriage preparations, bidding me never, under any circumstances, allude to the subjectagain. Soon after that, I was approached by the Francoises—you have seen them?” lifting her eyes to his face.
“Yes.”
“Then I need not tell you the miseries of my various interviews with them. They had learned that I was alone in the world, and they came to claim me; I was their child. Holding, as I did, the proofs of adoption, many women would have accepted their claim; I could not. My soul arose in revolt; every throb of my heart beat against them. If nature’s voice ever speaks, it spoke in me against their claim. Not against their age, their poverty, or their ignorance; but against the greed, the selfishness, the vileness that was too much a part of them to remain hidden. Sooner than acknowledge their claim, I would have died by my own hand. They wanted money, and with that I purchased a respite. Then my great temptation came.
“Archibald Warburton had bidden me never to speak again on the subject of my parentage—why not take him at his word? If I broke off my marriage with him, I must give a reason; and the true reason I would never give. Not even to Mr. Follingsbee would I tell the truth. I kept my secret; and after much hesitation, the Francoises accepted the larger share of my little fortune, and swore never to approach me again,—to leave the city forever. I believed myself safe then, and married Mr. Warburton.
“The rest you can guess. Finding that I had married a wealthy man, disregarding their oaths, the Francoises came back, and renewed their persecutions. And I was more than ever in their power. They forced me to visit them when they would. Their demands for money increased. I grew desperate at last, and on the night of the masquerade, I wentin obedience to an imperative summons, resolved that it should be the last time.”
She paused here and looked, for the first time since the beginning of her recital, straight into the face of the detective, who, sitting with his body bent forward and his eyes fixed upon her, seemed yet to be listening after her words had ceased, so intent was his gaze, so absorbed his manner.
Thus a moment of silence passed. Then Stanhope, withdrawing his eyes, and leaning back in his seat, asked suddenly:
“Is that all?”
“It is not all, Mr. Stanhope. On the night of the masquerade, while I was absent from the house no doubt, my little step-daughter disappeared.”
“I know.”
“You have heard it, of course. I believe that I know why, and by whom, she was abducted.”
“Ah!”
“I suspect the Francoises.”
“Why?”
“I love the child, and they know it. She will be another weapon in their hands. Besides, if I cannot, or will not reclaim her, there is the reward.”
Richard Stanhope leaned forward, and slightly lifted his right hand.
“Is there any one else who would be benefited by the death or disappearance of the child?” he asked.
Leslie started, and the hot blood rushed to her face.
“I—I don’t understand,” she faltered.
“Do you know the purport of your husband’s will.”
“Yes.”
“How does he dispose of his large property?”
“One third to me; the rest to little Daisy.”
“And his brother?”
“Alan possesses an independent fortune.”
“Are there no contingencies?”
“In case of my death, all comes to Daisy, Alan becoming her guardian. In case of Daisy’s death, Alan and I share equally.”
“Then by the loss of this child, both you and the young man become richer.”
“Ah!” she gasped, “I had never thought ofthat!”
“Mrs. Warburton, beginning at the moment when you left this house to visit the Francoises, will you tell me all that transpired, up to the time of your escape from their house?”
With cheeks flushing and paling, and voice tremulous with the excitement of some new, strange thought, she described to him the scene in the Francoises’ house.
“So,” thought Stanhope, when all was told, “Mr. Alan Warburton’s presence at that special moment was strangely opportune. Why was he there? What does he know of the Francoises? The plot thickens, and I would not be in Alan Warburton’s shoes for all the Warburton wealth.”
But, aloud, he only said:
“Thanks, Mrs. Warburton. If you are correct in your suspicions, and the Francoises have stolen the child, they will approach you sooner or later. Should they do so, make no terms with them, but communicate with me at once.”
“By letter?”
“No; through the morning papers. Use this form.”
Taking from his pocket a note-book, he wrote upon a leaf a few words, tore it from the book, and put it into her hand.
“That is safer than a letter,” he said, rising. “One wordmore, madam. Tell Alan Warburton to be doubly guarded against Van Vernet. His danger increases at every step. Now we will call Mr. Follingsbee.”
“One moment, Mr. Stanhope. Alan has employed detectives to search for Daisy, but none of them know what you know. Willyoufind her for me?” She held out her hands appealingly.
The detective looked at her in silence for a moment, then, striding forward, he took the outstretched hands in both his own, and gazing down into her face said, gently:
“I will serve you to the extent of my power, dear lady. I will find the little one, if I can.”
Mr. Follingsbee had passed his hour of waiting in the most comfortable manner possible, fast asleep in a big lounging-chair. Being aroused, he departed with Stanhope, manifesting no curiosity concerning the outcome of the detective’s visit.
While their footsteps yet lingered on the outer threshold, Winnie French came flying down the stairway.
“Come quick!” she cried to Leslie. “Archibald is worse; he is dying!”
“I will serve you to the extent of my power,” Richard Stanhope had said, holding Leslie Warburton’s hands in his, and looking straight into her appealing eyes. “I will find the little one, if I can.”
Nevertheless he went straight to the Agency, and, standing before his Chief, said:
“I am ready to begin work for Mr. Parks, sir. I shall quit the Agency to-day. Give Vernet my compliments, and tell him I wish him success. It may be a matter of days,weeks, or months, but you will not see me here again until I can tell youwho killed Arthur Pearson.”
The discovery made by Van Vernet, on the day of his visit to the Warburton mansion, aroused him to wonderful activity, and made him more than ever eager to ferret out the hiding-place of Papa Francoise, who, he felt assured, could throw much light upon the mystery surrounding the midnight murder.
He set a constant watch upon the deserted Francoise house, and kept the dwelling of the Warburtons under surveillance, while he, in person, gravitated between these two points of interest, during the time when he was not employed in collecting items of information concerning the Warburton family. Little by little he gathered his bits of family history, and was now familiar with many facts concerning the invalid master of the house and his second marriage, and the travelled and aristocratic brother, who, so rumor said, was proud as a crown-prince, and blameless as Sir Galahad.
“These immaculate fellows are not to my taste,” muttered Van Vernet, on the morning following the day when Stanhope held his last interview with Leslie, as he took his station at a convenient point of observation, prepared to pass the forenoon in watching the Warburton mansion.
His first glance toward the massive street-door caused himto start and mutter an imprecation. The bell was muffled, and the door-plate hidden beneath heavy folds of crape.
Archibald Warburton was dead. The hand that stole his little one had struck his death-blow, as surely as if by a dagger thrust. His feeble frame, unable to endure those long days of suspense, had given his soul back to its origin, his body back to nature.
Within was a household doubly stricken; without, a two-fold danger menaced.
“So,” muttered Van Vernet, as he gazed upon this insignia of death; “so my patron is dead; that stately, haughty aristocrat has lost all interest in his wife’s secrets. Well, so have I—but I have transferred my interest to his brother, Alan Warburton. Death caused by shock following loss of his little daughter, no doubt. That tall, straight seigneur looked like a man able to outlive a shock, too.”
He was not at all ruffled by the sudden taking-off of the man he supposed to be his patron. He had not made a single step toward the clearing-up of the mystery surrounding the goings and comings of Mrs. Archibald Warburton. His discovery of Stanhope at the masked ball, and his machinations consequent upon that discovery, together with the fiasco of the Raid and all its after-results, had made it impossible that he could interest himself in what he considered “merely a bit of domestic intrigue.”
He was not sorry that Archibald Warburton was dead, and he resolved to profit by that death.
Since the discovery of Alan Warburton’s picture, Van Vernet’s mind had been drifting toward dangerous conclusions.
Suppose this wealthy aristocrat and the Sailor assassinshould prove the same, what would follow? Might he not naturally conclude that a secret existed between Alan Warburton and the Francoises, and, if so, what was the nature of that secret? Why was Alan Warburton, if it were he, absent from his house on a night of festivity, a night when he should have been making merry with his brother’s guests?
If he were in league with those outlaws of the slums, it was not for plunder; surely the Warburtons were rich enough. What, then, was the secret which that stately mansion concealed?
“A bird in the hand is worth two in the bush,” quoted Vernet, grimly. “That Sailor assassin first—the Warburton skeleton first. They are almost under my hand, and once I grasp them, my clutch is upon the Warburton millions, too.”
The morning was yet early, there was quiet in the street and Van Vernet, wearing for convenience sake the uniform of a policeman, paced slowly down toward the house of mourning. As he neared the street-corner, two women, beggars evidently, came hurrying around the corner straight toward him.
At sight of his uniform the larger and elder of the two, a stout woman with a vicious face, a sharp eye, and head closely muffled in a ragged shawl, started slightly. Then with a furtive glance and a fawning obeisance, she hurried her companion past him, and down the street.
This companion, a younger woman, her face covered with bruises and red with dissipation, walked with a painful limp, and the hesitating air of the blind, her eyes tightly shut and the lids quivering.
“Playing blind,” muttered Vernet, as they hastened past him. “If I were the regular officer here, I’d have them out of this; as it is—”
He gave a shrug of indifference and glanced back over his shoulder.
The two women had halted before the Warburton mansion, and the elder one was looking up at the crape-adorned door.
Then she glanced backward toward the officer, who seemed busy contemplating the antics of a pair of restive horses that were coming down the street. Seeing him thus employed, she darted down the basement-stairs, dragging her stumbling companion after her.
Suddenly losing his interest in the prancing horses, Van Vernet turned and hastily approached the mansion, screened from the view of the two women by the massive stone steps.
Even a beggar, of the ordinary type, respects the house of mourning. And as he drew near them, Vernet mentally assured himself that these were no ordinary mendicants.
They were standing close to the basement-entrance. And as he stealthily approached, he saw that the elder woman put into the hand of the servant, who had opened the door, a folded paper which she took reluctantly, glanced down at, and with a sullen nod put into the pocket of her apron. Then, without a word to the two beggars, she closed and locked the door, while they, seeming not in the least disconcerted, turned and moved leisurely up the basement-stairs.
They would have passed Vernet hurriedly, but he put out his hand and said:
“Look here, my good souls, don’t you know that this is no place for beggars? You can’t be very old in the business or you’d never trouble a house where you seethaton the door.” And pointing to the badge of mourning, he concluded his oration: “Be off, now, and thank fortune that I’m a good-natured fellow.”
The woman muttered something after the usual mendicant fashion, and hastened away down the street.
At the same moment the prancing horses, held to a walk by the firm hand of their stout driver, came opposite the mansion, and a face muffled in folds of crape looked out from the carriage.
But Van Vernet had now no eyes for the horses, the carriage, or its occupant.
Noting, with a hasty glance, the direction taken by the two women, he sprang down the basement-steps and rang the bell.
The servant who had opened to the women, again appeared at the door.
“What doyouwant?” she asked, crossly; for being an honest servant she had no fear of the blue coat and brass buttons of the law.
The bogus policeman touched his hat and greeted her with an affable smile.
“I beg your pardon,” he said; “I thought you might be annoyed by those beggars. I can remove them if you enter a complaint. I saw that they gave you some kind of a paper; a begging letter, probably. Just give it to me, and I will see that they don’t intrude again upon people who are in trouble enough.”
He extended his hand for the letter; but the servant drew back, and answered hastily:
“Don’t bother yourself. I’ve had my orders, and I guess when I don’t want beggars around, I know how to send them to the right-about.”
And without waiting to note the effect of her speech, she shut the door in his face, leaving him to retreat as the two beggars had done.