CHAPTER I
UNCLE JOHN'S DUTY
"You're not doing your duty by those girls,
John Merrick!"
The gentleman at whom this assertion was
flung in a rather angry tone did not answer his
sister-in-law. He sat gazing reflectively at the
pattern in the rug and seemed neither startled
nor annoyed. Mrs. Merrick, a pink-cheeked middle-aged
lady attired in an elaborate morning
gown, knitted her brows severely as she regarded
the chubby little man opposite; then, suddenly
remembering that the wrinkles might leave their
dreadful mark on her carefully rolled and massaged
features, she banished them with a pass of
her ringed hand and sighed dismally.
"It would not have mattered especially had the
poor children been left in their original condition
of friendless poverty," she said. "They were
then like a million other girls, content to struggle
for a respectable livelihood and a doubtful position
in the lower stratas of social communion.
But you interfered. You came into their lives
abruptly, appearing from those horrid Western
wilds with an amazing accumulation of money
and a demand that your three nieces become your
special protégées. And what is the result?"
The little man looked up with a charming smile
of good humored raillery. His keen gray eyes
sparkled as mischievously as a schoolboy's. Softly
he rubbed the palms of his hands together, as if
enjoying the situation.
"What is it, Martha, my dear? What is the
result?" he asked.
"You've raised them from their lowly condition
to a sphere in which they reign as queens,
the envy of all who know them. You've lavished
your millions upon them unsparingly; they are
not only presumptive heiresses but already possessed
of independent fortunes. Ah, you think
you've been generous to these girls; don't you,
John Merrick?"
"Go on, Martha; go on."
"You've taken them abroad—you took my own
daughter, John Merrick, and left me at home!—you've
lugged your three nieces to the mountains
and carried them to the seashore. You even encouraged
them to enlist in an unseemly campaign
to elect that young imbecile, Kenneth Forbes,
and—"
"Oh, Martha, Martha! Get to the point, if you
can. I'm going, presently."
"Not until you've heard me out. You've given
your nieces every advantage in your power save
one, and the neglect of that one thing renders
futile all else you have accomplished."
Now, indeed, her listener seemed perplexed.
He passed a hand over his shiny bald head as if
to stimulate thought and exorcise bewilderment.
"What is it, then? What have I neglected?"
was his mild enquiry.
"To give those girls their proper standing in
society."
He started; smiled; then looked grave.
"You're talking foolishly," he said. "Why,
confound it, Martha, they're as good girls as ever
lived! They're highly respected, and—"
"Sir, I refer to Fashionable Society." The
capitals indicate the impressive manner in which
Mrs. Merrick pronounced those words.
"I guess money makes folks fashionable; don't
it, Martha?"
"No, indeed. How ignorant you are, John.
Can you not understand that there is a cultured,
aristocratic and exclusive Society in New York
that millions will not enable one to gain entrée
to?"
"Oh, is there? Then I'm helpless."
"You are not, sir."
"Eh? I thought you said—"
"Listen, John; and for heaven's sake try for
once to be receptive. I am speaking not only
for the welfare of my daughter Louise but for
Beth and Patricia. Your nieces are charming
girls, all three. With the advantages you have
given them they may well become social celebrities."
"H-m-m. Would they be happier so?"
"Of course. Every true woman longs for social
distinction, especially if it seems difficult to
acquire. Nothing is dearer to a girl's heart than
to win acceptance by the right social set. And
New York society is the most exclusive in
America."
"I'm afraid it will continue to exclude our girls,
Martha."
"Not if you do your duty, John."
"That reminds me. What is your idea of my
duty, Martha? You've been talking in riddles,
so far," he protested, shifting uneasily in his
chair.
"Let me explain more concisely, then. Your
millions, John Merrick, have made you really
famous, even in this wealthy metropolis. In the
city and at your club you must meet with men
who have the entrée to the most desirable social
circles: men who might be induced to introduce
your nieces to their families, whose endorsement
would effect their proper presentation."
"Nonsense."
"It isn't nonsense at all."
"Then blamed if I know what you're driving
at."
"You're very obtuse."
"I won't agree to that till I know what 'obtuse'
means. See here, Martha; you say this social
position, that the girls are so crazy for—but
they've never said anything to me about it—can't
be bought. In the next breath you urge me to
buy it. Phoo! You're a thoughtless, silly woman,
Martha, and let your wild ambitions run
away with your common sense."
Mrs. Merrick sighed, but stubbornly maintained
her position.
"I don't suggest 'buying' such people; not at
all, John. It's what is called—ah—ah—'influence';
or, or—"
"Or 'pull.' 'Pull' is a better word, Martha.
Do you imagine there's any value in social position
that can be acquired by 'pull'?"
"Of course. It has to be acquired some way—if
one is not born to it. As a matter of fact,
Louise is entitled, through her connection with
my family—"
"Pshaw, I knew your family, Martha," he interrupted.
"An arrant lot of humbugs."
"John Merrick!"
"Don't get riled. It's the truth. I knew 'em.
On her father's side Louise has just as much to
brag about—an' no more. We Merricks never
amounted to much, an' didn't hanker to trip the
light fantastic in swell society. Once, though,
when I was a boy, I had a cousin who spelled
down the whole crowd at a spellin'-bee. We were
quite proud of him then; but he went wrong after
his triumph, poor fellow! and became a book
agent. Now, Martha, I imagine this talk of
yours is all hot air, and worked off on me not
because the girls want society, but because you
want it for 'em. It's all your ambition, I'll bet a
peanut."
"You misjudge me, as usual, John. I am urging a matter of simple
justice. Your nieces are lovely girls, fitted to shine in any sphere of
life," she continued, knowing his weak point and diplomatically
fostering it. "Our girls have youth, accomplishments, money—everything
to fit them for social triumphs. The winter season is now approaching;
the people are flocking back to town from their country homes;
fashionable gaieties and notable events will soon hold full sway. The
dear girls are surely entitled to enjoy these things, don't you think?
Aren't they worthy the best that life has to offer? And why shouldn't
they enter society, if you do your full duty? Once get them properly
introduced and they will be able to hold their own with perfect ease.
Give me the credit for knowing these things, John, and try to help your
nieces to attain their ambition."
"But is it their ambition?" he asked, doubtfully.
"They have not said so in words; but I can
assure you it is their ambition, because all three
are sensible, spirited, young women, who live in
this age and not the one you yourself knew a half
century or so ago."
Mr. Merrick sighed and rubbed his head again.
Then he slowly rose.
"Mornin', Martha," he said, with a somewhat
abstracted nod at his sister-in-law. "This is a
new idea to me. I'll think it over."
CHAPTER II
A QUESTION OF "PULL"
John Merrick's face was not so cheery as usual
as he made his way into the city. This suggestion
of Martha Merrick's regarding his inattention
to duty to his beloved nieces was no easy nut
to crack.
He knew his sister-in-law to be a wordly-minded,
frivolous woman, with many trivial ambitions;
but in this instance he had misgivings
that she might be right. What did he, John Merrick,
know of select society? A poor man, of
humble origin, he had wandered into the infantile,
embryo West years ago and there amassed a fortune.
When he retired and returned to "civilization"
he found his greatest reward In the discovery
of three charming nieces, all "as poor as
Job's turkey" but struggling along bravely, each
in her individual characteristic way, and well
worthy their doting uncle's affectionate admiration.
Mrs. Merrick had recited some of the advantages
they had derived from the advent of
this rich relative; but even she could not guess
how devoted the man was to the welfare of these
three fortunate girls, nor how his kindly, simple
heart resented the insinuation that he was neglecting
anything that might contribute to their
happiness.
Possession of money had never altered John
Merrick's native simplicity. He had no extravagant
tastes, dressed quietly and lived the life of
the people. On this eventful morning the man
of millions took a cross-town car to the elevated
station and climbed the stairs to his train. Once
seated and headed cityward he took out his
memorandum book to see what engagements he
had for the day. There were three for the afternoon.
At twelve o'clock he had promised to
meet Von Taer.
"H-m-m. Von Taer."
Gazing reflectively from the window he remembered
a conversation with a prominent banker
some month or so before. "Von Taer," the
banker had said, "is an aristocrat with an independent
fortune, who clings to the brokerage
business because he inherited it from his father
and grandfather. I hold that such a man has
no moral right to continue in business. He should
retire and give the other fellow a chance."
"Why do you call him an aristocrat?" Mr.
Merrick had enquired.
"Because his family is so ancient that it shames
the ark itself. I imagine his ancestors might
have furnished Noah the lumber to build his
ship. In New York the '400' all kowtow to Von
Taer."
"Seems to me he has the right to be a broker
if he wants to," asserted Mr. Merrick.
"The right; yes. But, between us, Mr. Merrick,
this society swell has no mental capacity to
handle such an uncertain business. He's noted
for doing unwarranted things. To me it's a marvel
that Von Taer hasn't shipwrecked the family
fortunes long ago. Luck has saved him, not
foresight."
That speech of a few weeks ago now seemed
prophetic to John Merrick. Within a few days
the aristocratic broker had encountered financial
difficulties and been forced to appeal to Mr. Merrick,
to whom he obtained an introduction through
a mutual friend. Von Taer was doubtless solvent,
for he controlled large means; but unless
a saving hand was extended at this juncture his
losses were sure to be severe, and might even
cripple him seriously.
All this Mr. Merrick shrewdly considered in
the space of a few moments. As he left the train
he looked at his watch and found it was barely
eleven. He decided not to await the hour of appointment.
With his usual brisk stride he walked
to Von Taer's offices and was promptly admitted
to the broker's sanctum.
Hedrik Von Taer was a fine looking man, tall,
grave, of dignified demeanor and courteous manners.
He stood until his visitor was seated and
with a gesture of deference invited him to open
the conversation.
"I've decided to make you the loan, Von Taer,"
began Mr. Merrick, in his practical, matter-of-fact
way. "Three hundred thousand, wasn't it?
Call on Major Doyle at my office this afternoon
and he'll arrange it for you."
An expression of relief crossed the broker's
face.
"You are very kind, sir," he answered. "I
assure you I fully appreciate the accommodation."
"Glad to help you," responded the millionaire,
briskly. Then he paused with marked abruptness.
It occurred to him he had a difficult proposition
to make to this man. To avoid the cold, enquiring
eyes now fixed upon him he pulled out a cigar
and deliberately cut the end. Von Taer furnished
him a match. He smoked a while in silence.
"This loan, sir," he finally began, "is freely
made. There are no strings tied to it. I don't
want you to feel I'm demanding any sort of
return. But the truth is, you have it in your
power to grant me a favor."
Von Taer bowed.
"Mr. Merrick has generously placed me under
an obligation it will afford me pleasure to repay,"
said he. But his eyes held an uneasy look, nevertheless.
"It's this way," explained the other: "I've three
nieces—fine girls, Von Taer—who will some day
inherit my money. They are already independent,
financially, and they're educated, well-bred and
amiable young women. Take my word for it."
"I am sure your statements are justified, Mr.
Merrick." Yet Hedrik Von Taer's face, usually
unexpressive, denoted blank mystification. What
connection could these girls have with the favor
to be demanded?
"Got any girls yourself, Von Taer?"
"A daughter, sir. My only child.
"Grown up?"
"A young lady now, sir."
"Then you'll understand. I'm a plain uneducated
man myself. Never been any nearer swell
society than a Fifth Avenue stage. My money
has given me commercial position, but no social
one worth mentioning. Your '400's' a bunch I
can't break into, nohow."
A slight smile hovered over the other's lips,
but he quickly controlled it.
"They tell me, though," continued the speaker,
"that your family has long ago climbed into the
top notch of society. You're one o' the big guns
in the battery, an' hold the fort against all
comers."
Von Taer merely bowed. It was scarcely
necessary to either admit or contradict the statement.
Uncle John was a little indignant that
his companion showed no disposition to assist
him in his explanation, which a clear head might
now easily comprehend. So, with his usual
frankness, he went directly to the point.
"I'd like my girls to get into the best—the
most select—circles," he announced. "They're
good and pretty and well-mannered, so it strikes
me they're entitled to the best there is a-going.
I don't want to mix with your swell crowd myself,
because I ain't fit; likewise the outfit ain't much
to my taste, askin' your pardon; but with women
it's different. They need to stand high an' shine
bright to make 'em really happy, and if any
special lot is particularly ex-clusive an' high-falutin',
that's the crowd they long to swarm
with. It's human nature—female human nature,
anyhow. You catch my idea, Von Taer, don't
you?"
"I think so, Mr. Merrick. Yet I fail to see
how I can be of service to you in gratifying the
ambition of your charming nieces."
"Then I'll go, and you may forget what I've
said." The visitor arose and took his hat from
the table. "It was only a fool notion, anyway;
just a thought, badly expressed, to help my girls
to a toy that money can't buy."
Hedrik Von Taer gazed steadily into the man's
face. There was something in the simple, honest
self-abnegation of this wealthy and important
person that won the respect of all he met. The
broker's stern eyes softened a bit as he gazed and
he allowed a fugitive smile, due to his own change
of attitude, to wreathe his thin lips again—just
for an instant.
"Sit down, please, Mr. Merrick," he requested,
and rather reluctantly Uncle John resumed his
seat. "You may not have an especially clear idea
of New York society, and I want to explain my
recent remark so that you will understand it.
What is called 'the 400' may or may not exist;
but certainly it is no distinct league or association.
It may perhaps be regarded as a figure of speech,
to indicate how few are really admitted to the
most exclusive circles. Moreover, there can be
no dominant 'leader of society' here, for the reason
that not all grades of society would recognize
the supremacy of any one set, or clique. These
cliques exist for various reasons. They fraternize
generally, but keep well within their own
circles. Kindred tastes attract some; ancient lineage
others. There is an ultra-fashionable set, a
sporting set, a literary set, an aristocratic set, a
rather 'fast' set, a theatrical set—and so on.
These may all lay claim with certain justice to
membership in good society. Their circles are
to an extent exclusive, because some distinction
must mark the eligibility of members. And outside
each luminous sphere hovers a multitude
eager to pass the charmed circle and so acquire
recognition. Often it is hard to separate the
initiate from the uninitiate, even by those most
expert. Is it difficult to comprehend such a condition
as I have described, Mr. Merrick?"
"Somewhat, Mr. Von Taer. The wonder to
me is why people waste time in such foolishness."
"It is the legitimate occupation of many; the
folly of unwise ambition impels others. There
is a fascination about social life that appeals to
the majority of natures. Let us compare society
to a mountain whose sides are a steep incline,
difficult to mount. To stand upon the summit,
to become the cynosure of all eyes, is a desire inherent,
seemingly, in all humanity; for humanity
loves distinction. In the scramble toward the
peak many fall by the wayside; others deceive
themselves by imagining they have attained the
apex when they are far from it. It is a game,
Mr. Merrick, just as business is a game, politics
a game, and war a game. You know how few
really win."
"Here," said Uncle John, musingly, "is a philosophy
I did not expect from you, Von Taer.
They tell me you're one who stands on top the
peak. And you were born that way, and didn't
have to climb. Seems to me you rather scorn the
crowd that's trying to climb to an eminence you
never had to win. That wouldn't be my way.
And I suspect that if the crowd wasn't trying
to climb to you, your own position wouldn't be
worth a cotton hat."
Von Taer had no answer to this criticism.
Perhaps he scarcely heard it, for he appeared lost
in a brown study. Finally he said:
"Will you permit my daughter to call upon
your nieces, Mr. Merrick?"
"Of course, sir."
"Then kindly give me their addresses."
Uncle John wrote them on a slip of paper.
"You may now dismiss the subject from your
mind, sir, as you lately advised me to do. Whatever
may be accomplished in the direction you
have suggested I will gladly undertake. If I
succeed it will be exceedingly gratifying to us
all, I am sure."
Mr. Merrick left the office in a rather humbled
and testy mood. He disliked to ask favors at
any time and now felt that he had confided himself
to the mercy of this callous aristocrat and
met with a distinct rebuff.
But he had done it for the sake of his beloved
nieces—and they would never know what humiliation
this unsatisfactory interview had cost him.
CHAPTER III
DIANA
Diana Von Taer can not be called a type. She
was individual. Aristocratic to her finger tips,
she was unlike all other aristocrats. An admitted
queen of society, her subjects were few and indifferent.
She possessed ancient lineage, was
highly accomplished, had been born to the purple,
as the saying is; but none of these things conspired
to make her the curious creature she was.
As we make her acquaintance she is twenty-three
years of age—and looks eighteen. She is
tall and slender and carries her handsome form
with exquisite grace. Diana is never abrupt;
her voice is ever modulated to soft, even tones;
she rises from a chair or couch with the lithe,
sinuous motion of a serpent uncoiling.
Her face, critically regarded, is not so admirable
as her form. The features are a trifle too
elongated, and their delicacy is marred by a nose
a bit broad and unshapely and a mouth with thin
lips primly set. Her dark eyes might be magnificent
if wide open: but through the narrow slits
of their lids, half hidden by long curling lashes,
the eyes peer at you with a cold, watchful, intent
gaze that carries a certain uncanny and disconcerting
fascination.
Yet the girl is essentially feminine. If you refrain
from meeting that discomfiting gaze—and
her familiars have learned to avoid it—Diana
impresses you as being graceful, dainty and possessed
of charming manners. Her taste in dress
is perfect. She converses fluently on many topics.
It is her custom to rise at ten o'clock, whatever
time she may have retired the night before; to
read until luncheon; to devote the remainder of
her day to the requirements of society.
Eligible young men of admitted social standing
call upon Diana at such intervals as the proprieties
require. They chatter "small talk" and are
careful to address her with deference. With an
exception to be referred to later these young men
have no more thought of "flirting" with Miss Von
Taer than they would with the statue of the goddess,
her namesake. Her dinner parties and entertainments
are very successful. She is greatly
admired, per se, but has no intimate friends.
When her mother died, some years before, an
aunt had come to live with Diana, and now posed
as her chaperon. Mrs. Cameron was a stolid,
corpulent lady, with a countenance perpetually
placid and an habitual aversion to displaying intellect.
Her presence in the establishment, although
necessary, was frankly ignored. Fortunately
she never obtruded herself.
Hedrik Von Taer was passionately devoted to
his daughter. He alone, perhaps, of all the
world, thoroughly understood her and appreciated
her talents. She may have frightened him
at times, but that only added to his admiration.
In return Diana displayed a calm, but affectionate
regard for her father.
Often after dinner these two would pass an
hour together in a corner of the drawing-room,
where the cold gray eyes of the man met the
intent, half-veiled glance of the girl with perfect
understanding. They talked of many things,
including business. Hedrik had no secrets from
his daughter.
The desperate condition of his finances, when
he had been caught in a "corner" on wheat and
nearly crushed, had not dismayed her in the least.
It was she who had counseled him to appeal to
John Merrick, since the name and fame of the
eccentric millionaire were familiar to her as to
him.
He related to Diana his interview with Mr.
Merrick on his return home. He was saved.
The three hundred thousand were now in the
bank to his credit and he could weather the coming
storm easily—perhaps with profit. In a tone
half amused, half serious, he told her of the little
millionaire's desire to secure entrée into good
society for his three nieces.
Diana laughed with her lips; her eyes never
laughed. Then she took in her hand the paper
containing the addresses of the three girls and
regarded it thoughtfully.
"It is a curious request, mon pere," she said,
In her soft, even tones; "but one we cannot diplomatically
disregard. Provided, however—"
"Yes, Diana;" as she paused.
"Provided these prospective debutantes are not
wholly impossible."
"I realize that," returned her father. "John
Merrick is a great power in the city. He has
been useful to me, and may be again. I have this
chance to win him. But the man is very common
clay, despite his wealth, and his three nieces are
likely to be made of the same material. Should
they prove impossible you cannot well descend to
introducing them to our set."
"I am not certain of that, sir," said the girl,
with a pretty shrug. "My position is too secure
to be jeopardized by any error of this sort. I believe
I may introduce these girls without risk. I
shall not vouch for them too strongly, and after
their debut they must stand or fall on their own
merits."
"It is something a Von Taer has never yet
done," remarked the man, gravely.
"To commercialize his social position? But,
father dear, the age is fast commercializing everything.
I think our especial set is as yet comparatively
free from contamination by the 'lately
rich'; but even among us money has glossed many
offenses that a generation ago would have meant
social ostracism."
He nodded.
"That is true, Diana."
"Life with me is a bit dull, as well. Everlasting
routine, however admirable, is tiresome. I
scent amusement in this adventure, which I have
decided to undertake. With your permission I
will see these girls and quickly decide their fate.
Should they prove not too dreadfully outré you
may look to see them my especial protégés."
"I leave all to your discretion, Diana," returned
Von Taer, with a sigh. "If, in the end,
some of the more particular venture to reproach
them."
"It will not matter," interrupted the daughter,
lightly, as her dark eyes narrowed to a hair's
breadth. "Any who dares reproach Diana Von
Taer will afford her interesting occupation. And
to offset that remote contingency we shall permanently
enslave the powerful John Merrick. I understand
he is hard as nails in financial matters;
but to us the man has disclosed his one weakness
—ambition to promote his three nieces. Since
we have discovered this vulnerable point, let us
take advantage of it. I am satisfied the loan of
three hundred thousand was but a lure—and how
cleverly the man gauged us!"
Von Taer scowled.
"Get your wraps, Diana. The carriage is waiting,
and we are due at Mrs. Doldringham's
crush."
CHAPTER IV
THE THREE NIECES
The Von Taers did not affect motor cars. In
some circles the carriage and pair is still considered
the more aristocratic mode of conveyance.
Established customs do not readily give way to
fads and freaks.
Consulting her memoranda as she rode along;
in her handsome, tastefully appointed equipage,
Diana found that Louise Merrick, one of the
three girls she had set out to discover, was the
nearest on her route. Presently she rang the bell
at the Merrick residence, an eminently respectable
dwelling; in a desirable neighborhood.
Diana could not resist a sigh of relief as her
observant glance noted this detail. A dignified
butler ushered her into a reception room and departed
with her card.
It was now that the visitor's nose took an upward
tendency as she critically examined her surroundings.
The furnishings were abominable, a
mixture of distressingly new articles with those
evidently procured from dealers in "antiquities."
Money had been lavished here, but good taste
was absent. To understand this—for Miss Von
Taer gauged the condition truly—it is necessary
to know something of Mrs. Martha Merrick.
This lady, the relict of John Merrick's only
brother, was endowed with a mediocre mind and
a towering ambition. When left a widow with
an only daughter she had schemed and contrived
in endless ways to maintain an appearance of competency
on a meager income. Finally she divided
her capital, derived from her husband's life insurance,
into three equal parts, which she determined
to squander in three years in an attempt to hoodwink
the world with the belief that she was
wealthy. Before the three years were ended her
daughter Louise would be twenty, and by that
time she must have secured a rich parti and been
safely married. In return for this "sacrifice" the
girl was to see that her mother was made comfortable
thereafter.
This worldly and foolish design was confided to
Louise when she was only seventeen, and her unformed
mind easily absorbed her mother's silly
ambition. It was a pity, for Louise Merrick possessed
a nature sweet and lovable, as well as instinctively
refined—a nature derived from her
dead father and with little true sympathy with
Mrs. Merrick's unscrupulous schemes. But at
that age a girl is easily influenced, so it is little
wonder that under such tuition Louise became
calculating, sly and deceitful, to a most deplorable
degree.
Such acquired traits bade fair in the end to
defeat Mrs. Merrick's carefully planned coup,
for the daughter had a premature love affair with
a youth outside the pale of eligibility. Louise
ignored the fact that he had been disinherited
by his father, and in her reckless infatuation
would have sacrificed her mother without thought
or remorse. The dreadful finale had only been
averted by the advent of Uncle John Merrick,
who had changed the life plans of the widow and
her heedless daughter and promptly saved the situation.
John Merrick did not like his sister-in-law, but
he was charmed by his lovely niece and took her
at once to his affectionate old heart. He saw
the faults of Louise clearly, but also appreciated
her sweeter qualities. Under his skillful guidance
she soon redeemed herself and regained
control of her better nature. The girl was not
yet perfect, by any means; she was to an extent
artificial and secretive, and her thoughtless flirtations
were far from wise; but her two cousins
and her uncle had come to know and understand
her good points. They not only bore patiently
with her volatile nature but strove to influence
her to demonstrate her inherent good qualities.
In one way her mother's calculating training
had been most effective. Louise was not only
a dainty, lovely maid to the eye, but her manners
were gracious and winning and she had that admirable
self-possession which quickly endears
one even to casual acquaintances. She did not
impress more intimate friends as being wholly
sincere, yet there was nothing in her acts, since
that one escapade referred to, that merited severe
disapproval.
Of course the brilliant idea of foisting her
precious daughter upon the "select" society of
the metropolis was original with Mrs. Merrick.
Louise was well content with things as they were;
but not so the mother. The rise from poverty to
affluence, the removal of all cares and burdens
from her mind, had merely fostered still greater
ambitions. Uncle John's generosity had endowed
each of his three nieces with an ample
fortune. "I want 'em to enjoy the good things
of life while they're at an age to enjoy 'em," he
said; "for the older one gets the fewer things
are found to be enjoyable. That's my experience,
anyhow." He also told the girls frankly
that they were to inherit jointly—although not
equally—his entire fortune. Yet even this glowing
prospect did not satisfy Mrs. Merrick. Since
all her plans for Louise, from the very beginning,
had been founded on personal selfishness, she
now proposed to have her daughter gain admission
to recognized fashionable society in order
that she might herself bask in the reflection of
the glory so obtained and take her place with
the proud matrons who formed the keystone of
such society.
After carefully considering ways and means
to gain her object she had finally conceived the
idea of utilizing Mr. Merrick. She well knew
Uncle John would not consider one niece to the
exclusion of the others, and had therefore used
his influence to get all three girls properly "introduced."
Therefore her delight and excitement
were intense when the butler brought up
Diana's card and she realized that "the perfectly
swell Miss Von Taer" was seated in her reception
room. She rushed to Louise, who, wholly
innocent of any knowledge of the intrigue which
had led to this climax, opened her blue eyes in
astonishment and said with a gasp:
"Oh, mother! what shall I do?"
"Do? Why, go down and make yourself
agreeable, of course. It's your chance, my dear,
your great chance in life! Go—go! Don't, for
heaven's sake, keep her waiting."
Louise went down. In her most affable and
gracious way she approached the visitor and said:
"It is very nice of you to call upon me. I am so
glad to meet Miss Von Taer."
Diana, passing conversational nothings with
the young girl, was pleased by her appearance and
self-possession. This aspirant for social honors
was fresh, fair and attractive, with a flow of small
talk at her tongue's end.
"Really," thought the fastidious visitor, "this
one, at least, will do me no discredit. If she is a
fair sample of the others we shall get along very
nicely In this enterprise."
To Louise she said, before going:
"I'm to have an evening, the nineteenth. Will
you assist me to receive? Now that we are acquainted
I wish to see more of you, my dear, and
I predict we shall get along famously together."
The girl's head swam. Help Miss Von Taer
to receive! Such an honor had been undreamed
of an hour ago. But she held her natural agitation
under good control and only a round red spot
Upon each cheek betrayed her inward excitement
as she prettily accepted the invitation. Beneath
their drooping lashes Diana's sagacious eyes read
the thoughts of the girl quite accurately. Miss
Von Taer enjoyed disconcerting anyone in any
way, and Louise was so simple and unsophisticated
that she promised to afford considerable
amusement in the future.
By the time Diana had finished her brief call
this singular creature had taken the measure of
Louise Merrick in every detail, including her assumption
of lightness and her various frivolities.
She understood that in the girl were capabilities
for good or for evil, as she might be led by a
stronger will. And, musingly, Diana wondered
who would lead her.
As for Louise, she was enraptured by her distinguished
visitor's condescension and patronage,
and her heart bounded at the thought of being admitted
to the envied social coterie in which Diana
Von Taer shone a bright, particular star.
The second name in the list of John Merrick's
nieces was that of Elizabeth De Graf. She lived
at a good private hotel located in an exclusive
residence district.
It was true that Elizabeth—or "Beth," as she
was more familiarly called—was not a permanent
guest at this hotel. When in New York she was
accustomed to live with one or the other of her
cousins, who welcomed her eagerly. But just
now her mother had journeyed from the old Ohio
home to visit Beth, and the girl had no intention
of inflicting her parent upon the other girls.
Therefore she had taken rooms at the hotel temporarily,
and the plan suited her mother excellently.
For one thing, Mrs. De Graf could go
home and tell her Cloverton gossips that she had
stopped at the most "fashionable" hotel in New
York; a second point was that she loved to feast
with epicurean avidity upon the products of a
clever chef, being one of those women who live
to eat, rather than eat to live.
Mrs. De Graf was John Merrick's only surviving
sister, but she differed as widely from the
simple, kindly man in disposition as did her ingenious
daughter from her in mental attainments.
The father, Professor De Graf, was supposed to
be a "musical genius." Before Beth came into
her money, through Uncle John, the Professor
taught the piano and singing; now, however, the
daughter allowed her parents a liberal income,
and the self-engrossed musician devoted himself
to composing oratorios and concertas which no
one but himself would ever play.
To be quite frank, the girl cared little for her
gross and selfish parents, and they in turn cared
little for her beyond the value she afforded them
in the way of dollars and cents. So she had not
lived at home, where constant quarrels and bickerings
nearly drove her frantic, since Uncle John
had adopted her. In catering to this present
whim of her mother, who longed to spend a few
luxurious weeks in New York, Beth sacrificed
more than might be imagined by one unacquainted
with her sad family history.
Whimsical Major Doyle often called Uncle
John's nieces "the Three Graces"; but Beth was
by odds the beauty of them all. Splendid brown
eyes, added to an exquisite complexion, almost
faultless features and a superb carriage, rendered
this fair young girl distinguished in any throng.
Fortunately she was as yet quite unspoiled, being
saved from vanity by a morbid consciousness of
her inborn failings and a sincere loathing for the
moral weakness that prevented her from correcting
those faults. Judging Beth by the common
standard of girls of her age, both failings and
faults were more imaginary than real; yet it was
her characteristic to suspect and despise in herself
such weaknesses as others would condone, or at
least regard leniently. For here was a girl true
and staunch, incapable of intrigue or deceit, frank
and outspoken, all these qualities having been
proven more than once. Everyone loved Beth
De Graf save herself, and at this stage of her
development the influence of her cousins and of
Uncle John had conspired to make the supersensitive
girl more tolerant of herself and less morbid
than formerly.
I think Beth knew of Diana Von Taer, for the
latter's portrait frequently graced the society
columns of the New York press and at times the
three nieces, in confidential mood, would canvass
Diana and her social exploits as they did the acts
of other famous semi-public personages. But the
girl had never dreamed of meeting such a celebrity,
and Miss Von Taer's card filled her with
curious wonder as to the errand that had brought
her.
The De Grafs lived en suite at the hotel, for
Beth had determined to surround her Sybaritic
mother with all attainable luxury, since the child
frequently reproached herself with feeling a distinct
repulsion for the poor woman. So to-day
Diana was ushered into a pretty parlor where
Beth stood calmly awaiting her.
The two regarded one another in silence a moment,
Miss De Graf's frank eyes covering the
other with a comprehensive sweep while Miss Von
Taer's narrowed gaze, profoundly observant, studied
the beautiful girl before her with that impenetrable,
half-hidden gleam that precluded any
solution.
"Miss Von Taer, I believe," said Beth, quietly
glancing at the card she held. "Will you be
seated?"
Diana sank gracefully into a chair. The sinuous
motion attracted Beth's attention and gave
her a slight shiver.
"I am so glad to meet you, my dear," began
the visitor, in soft, purring accents. "I have long
promised myself the pleasure of a call, and in
spite of many procrastinations at last have accomplished
my ambition."
Beth resented the affectation of this prelude,
and slightly frowned. Diana was watching; she
always watched.
"Why should you wish to call upon me?" was
the frank demand. "Do not think me rude,
please; but I am scarcely in a position to become
a desirable acquaintance of Miss Von Taer."
The tone was a trifle bitter, and Diana noted it.
A subtile antagonism seemed springing up between
them and the more experienced girl scented
in this danger to her plans. She must handle this
young lady more cautiously than she had Louise
Merrick.
"Your position is unimpeachable, my dear,"
was the sweet-toned response. "You are John
Merrick's niece."
Beth was really angry now. She scowled, and
it spoiled her beauty. Diana took warning and
began to think quickly.
"I referred to my social position, Miss Von
Taer. Our family is honest enough, thank God;
but it has never been accepted in what is termed
select society."
Diana laughed; a quiet, rippling laugh as icy
as a brook in November, but as near gaiety as
she could at the moment accomplish. When she
laughed this way her eyes nearly closed and became
inscrutable. Beth had a feeling of repulsion
for her caller, but strove to shake it off. Miss
Von Taer was nothing to her; could be nothing
to her.
"Your uncle is a very wealthy man," said
Diana, with easy composure. "He has made you
an heiress, placing you in a class much sought
after in these mercenary days. But aside from
that, my dear, your personal accomplishments
have not escaped notice, and gossip declares you
to be a very fascinating young woman, as well as
beautiful and good. I do not imagine society
claims to be of divine origin, but were it so no one
is more qualified to grace it."
The blandishments of this speech had less effect
upon Beth than the evident desire to please. She
began to feel she had been ungracious, and
straightway adopted a more cordial tone.
"I am sure you mean well, Miss Von Taer,"
she hastened to say, "and I assure you I am not
ungrateful. But it occurred to me we could have
nothing in common."
"Oh, my dear! You wrong us both."
"Do you know my uncle?" enquired Beth.
"He is the friend of my father, Mr. Hedrik
Von Taer. Our family owes Mr. John Merrick
much consideration. Therefore I decided to seek
pleasure in the acquaintance of his nieces."
The words and tone seemed alike candid. Beth
began to relent. She sat down for the first time,
taking a chair opposite Diana.
"You see," she said, artlessly, "I have no personal
inclination for society, which is doubtless
so large a part of your own amusement. It seems
to me artificial and insipid."
"Those who view from a distance the husk of
a cocoanut, have little idea of the milk within,"
declared Diana, softly.
"True," answered Beth. "But I've cracked
cocoanuts, and sometimes found the milk sour and
tainted."
"The difference you observe in cocoanuts is to
be found in the various grades of society. These
are not all insipid and artificial, I assure you."
"They may be worse," remarked Beth. "I've heard strange tales of your
orgies."
Diana was really amused. This girl was proving more interesting than the
first niece she had interviewed. Unaccustomed to seeking acquaintances
outside her own exclusive circle, and under such circumstances, these
meetings were to her in the nature of an adventure. A creature of
powerful likes and dislikes, she already hated Beth most heartily; but
for that very reason she insisted on cultivating her further
acquaintance.
"You must not judge society by the mad pranks of a few of its members,"
she responded, in her most agreeable manner. "If we are not to set an
example in decorum to the rest of the world we are surely unfitted to
occupy the high place accorded us. But you must see and decide for
yourself."
"I? No, indeed!"
"Ah, do not decide hastily, my dear. Let me become your sponsor for a
short time, until you really discover what society is like. Then you may
act upon more mature judgment."
"I do not understand you, Miss Von Taer."
"Then I will be more explicit. I am to receive
a few friends at my home on the evening of the
nineteenth; will you be my guest?"
Beth was puzzled how to answer. The thought
crossed her mind that perhaps Uncle John would
like her to be courteous to his friend's daughter,
and that argument decided her. She accepted
the invitation.
"I want you to receive with me," continued
Diana, rising. "In that way I shall be able to
introduce you to my friends."
Beth wondered at this condescension, but consented
to receive. She was annoyed to think how
completely she had surrendered to the will of
Miss Von Taer, for whom she had conceived the
same aversion she had for a snake. She estimated
Diana, society belle though she was, to be sly,
calculating and deceitful. Worse than all, she
was decidedly clever, and therefore dangerous.
Nothing good could come of an acquaintance
with her, Beth was sure; yet she had pledged
herself to meet her and her friends the nineteenth,
lit a formal society function. How much Beth
De Graf misjudged Diana Von Taer the future will determine.
The interview had tired Diana. As she reentered her carriage she was
undecided whether to go home or hunt up the third niece. But Willing
Square was not five minutes' drive from here, so she ordered the
coachman to proceed there.
"I am positively out of my element in this affair," she told herself,
"for it is more difficult to cultivate these inexperienced girls than I
had thought. They are not exactly impossible, as I at first feared, but
they are so wholly unconventional as to be somewhat embarrassing as
protégées. Analyzing the two I have met—the majority—one strikes me
as being transparently affected and the other a stubborn, attractive
fool. They are equally untrained in diplomacy and unable to cover their
real feelings. Here am I, practically dragging them into the limelight,
when it would be far better for themselves—perhaps for me—that they
remained in oblivion. Ah, well: I called it an adventure: let me hope
some tangible plot will develop to compensate me for my trouble. Life
seems deadly dull; I need excitement.
Is it to be furnished by John Merrick's
nieces, I wonder?"
Willing Square is a new district, crowded with
fashionable apartment houses. That is, they are
called fashionable by their builders and owners
and accepted as such by their would-be fashionable
occupants. Diana knew at least two good
families resident in Willing Square, and though
she smiled grimly at the rows of "oppressively
new and vulgar" buildings, she still was not
ashamed to have her equipage seen waiting there.
Number 3708 Willing Square is a very substantial
and cozy appearing apartment building
owned in fee by Miss Patricia Doyle. Diana was
unaware of this fact, but rang the Doyle bell and
ascended to the second floor.
A maid received her with the announcement
that Miss Doyle had "just stepped out," but was
somewhere in the building. Would the visitor
care to wait a few minutes?
Yes; Diana decided she would wait. She took
a seat in the snug front parlor and from her
position noted the series of rooms that opened
one into another throughout the suite, all richly
but tastefully furnished in homely, unassuming
manner.
"This is better," she mused. "There is no attempt
at foolish display in this establishment, at
any rate. I hope to find Miss Doyle a sensible,
refined person. The name is Irish."
A door slammed somewhere down the line of
rooms and a high-pitched voice cried in excited
tones:
"I've found a baby! Hi, there, Nunkie, dear—I've
found a baby!"
Thereupon came the sound of a chair being
pushed back as a man's voice answered in equal
glee:
"Why, Patsy, Patsy! it's the little rogue from
upstairs. Here, Bobby; come to your own old
Uncle!"
"He won't. He belongs to me; don't you,
Bobby darlin'?"
A babyish voice babbled merrily, but the sounds
were all "goos" and "ahs" without any resemblance
to words. Bobby may have imagined he
was talking, but he was not very intelligible.
"See here, Patsy Doyle; you gimme that baby."
cried the man, pleadingly.
"I found him myself, and he's mine. I've
dragged him here all the way from his home
upstairs, an' don't you dare lay a finger on him.
Uncle John!"
"Fair play, Patsy! Bobby's my chum, and—"
"Well, I'll let you have half of him, Nunkie.
Down on your hands and knees, sir, and be a
horse. That's it—Now, Bobby, straddle Uncle
John and drive him by his necktie—here it is.
S-t-e-a-d-y, Uncle; and neigh—neigh like a
horse!"
"How does a horse neigh, Patsy?" asked a
muffled voice, choking and chuckling at the same
time.
"'Nee, hee-hee—hee; hee!'"
Uncle John tried to neigh, and made a sorry
mess of it, although Bobby shrieked with delight.
Then came a sudden hush. Diana caught the
maid's voice, perhaps announcing the presence of
a visitor, for Patsy cried in subdued accents:
"Goodness me, Mary! why didn't you say so?
Listen, Uncle John—"
"Leggo that ear, Bobby—leggo!"
"—You watch the baby, Uncle John, and don't
let anything happen to him. I've got a caller."
Diana smiled, a bit scornfully, and then composed
her features as a young girl bustled into
the room and came toward her with frank cordiality
indicated in the wide smile and out-stretched
hand.
"Pardon my keeping you waiting," said Patsy,
dropping into a chair opposite her visitor, "Uncle
John and I were romping with the baby from
upstarts—Bobby's such a dear! I didn't quite
catch the name Mary gave me and forgot to look
at your card."
"I am Miss Von Taer."
"Not Diana Von Taer, the swell society girl?"
cried Patsy eagerly.
Diana couldn't remember when she had been
so completely nonplused before. After an involuntary
gasp she answered quietly:
"I am Diana Von Taer."
"Well, I'm glad to meet you, just the same,"
said Patsy, cheerfully. "We outsiders are liable
to look on society folk as we would on a cage of
monkeys—because we're so very ignorant, you
know, and the bars are really between us."
This frank disdain verged on rudeness, although
the girl had no intention of being rude.
Diana was annoyed in spite of her desire to be
tolerant.
"Perhaps the bars are imaginary," she rejoined,
carelessly, "and it may be you've been looking at
the side-show and not at the entertainment in the
main tent. Will you admit that possibility, Miss
Doyle?"
Patsy laughed gleefully.
"I think you have me there, Miss Von Taer.
And what do I know about society? Just nothing
at all. It's out of my line entirely."
"Perhaps it is," was the slow response. "Society
appeals to only those whose tastes seem to
require it."
"And aren't we drawing distinctions?" enquired
Miss Doyle. "Society at large is the main
evidence of civilization, and all decent folk are
members of it."
"Isn't that communism?" asked Diana.
"Perhaps so. It's society at large. But certain
classes have leagued together and excluded
themselves from their fellows, admitting only
those of their own ilk. The people didn't put
them on their pedestals—they put themselves
there. Yet the people bow down and worship
these social gods and seem glad to have them.
The newspapers print their pictures and the color
of their gowns and how they do their hair and
what they eat and what they do, and the poor
washwomen and shop-girls and their like read
these accounts more religiously than they do their
bibles. My maid Mary's a good girl, but she
grabs the society sheet of the Sunday paper and
reads it from top to bottom. I never look at it
myself."
Diana's cheeks were burning. She naturally
resented such ridicule, having been born to regard
social distinction with awe and reverence.
Inwardly resolving to make Miss Patricia Doyle
regret the speech she hid all annoyance under her
admirable self-control and answered with smooth
complacency:
"Your estimate of society, my dear Miss Doyle,
is superficial."
"Don't I know it, then?" exclaimed Patsy.
"Culture and breeding, similarity of taste and
intellectual pursuits will always attract certain
people and band them together in those cliques
which are called 'social sets,' They are not secret
societies; they have no rules of exclusion; congenial
minds are ever welcome to their ranks.
This is a natural coalition, in no way artificial.
Can you not appreciate that, Miss Doyle?"
"Yes, indeed," admitted Patsy, promptly.
"You're quite right, and I'm just one of those
stupid creatures who criticise the sun because
there's a cloud before it. Probably there are all
grades of society, because there are all grades of
people."
"I thought you would agree with me when you
understood," murmured Diana, and her expression
was so smug and satisfied that Patsy was
seized with an irresistible spirit of mischief.
"And haven't I seen your own pictures in the
Sunday papers?" she asked.
"Perhaps; if you robbed your maid of her
pleasure."
"And very pretty pictures they were, too. They
showed culture and breeding all right, and the
latest style in gowns. Of course those intellectual
high-brows in your set didn't need an introduction
to you; you were advertised as an example
of ultra-fashionable perfection, to spur
the ambition of those lower down in the social
scale. Perhaps it's a good thing."
"Are you trying to annoy me?" demanded
Diana, her eyes glaring under their curling lashes.
"Dear me—dear me!" cried Patsy, distressed,
"see how saucy and impudent I've been—and I
didn't mean a bit of it! Won't you forgive me,
please, Miss Von Taer? There! we'll begin all
over again, and I'll be on my good behavior. I'm
so very ignorant, you know!"
Diana smiled at this; it would be folly to show
resentment to such a childish creature.
"Unfortunately," she said, "I have been unable
to escape the vulgar publicity thrust upon me
by the newspapers. The reporters are preying
vultures, rapacious for sensation, and have small
respect for anyone. I am sure we discourage
them as much as we can. I used to weep with
mortification when I found myself 'written up';
now, however, I have learned to bear such trials
with fortitude—if not with resignation."
"Forgive me!" said Patsy, contritely. "Somehow
I've had a false idea of these things. If I
knew you better, Miss Von Taer, you'd soon convert
me to be an admirer of society."
"I'd like to do that, Miss Doyle, for you interest
me. Will you return my call?"
"Indeed I will," promised the girl, readily.
"I'm flattered that you called on me at all, Miss
Von Taer, for you might easily have amused
yourself better. You must be very busy, with all
the demands society makes on one. When shall
I come? Make it some off time, when we won't
be disturbed."
Diana smiled at her eagerness. How nescient
the poor little thing was!
"Your cousins, Miss Merrick and Miss De
Graf, have consented to receive with me on the
evening of the nineteenth. Will you not join us?"
"Louise and Beth!" cried Patsy, astounded.
"Isn't it nice of them? And may I count upon
you, also?"
Patsy smiled dubiously into the other's face.
"Let me out of it!" she said. "Can't you see
I'm no butterfly?"
Diana saw many things, having taken a shrewd
account of the girl long before this. Miss Patricia
Doyle was short and plump, with a round,
merry face covered with freckles, hair indisputably
red and a retroussé nose. Also she possessed a
pair of wonderful blue eyes—eyes that danced and
scintillated with joyous good humor—eyes so captivating
that few ever looked beyond them or
noted the plain face they glorified. But the critic
admitted that the face was charmingly expressive,
the sweet and sensitive mouth always in sympathy
with the twinkling, candid eyes. Life and
energy radiated from her small person, which
Miss Von Taer grudgingly conceded to possess
unusual fascination. Here was a creature quite
imperfect in detail, yet destined to allure and enchant
whomsoever she might meet. All this was
quite the reverse of Diana's own frigid personality.
Patsy would make an excellent foil for
her.
"As you please, my dear," she said graciously;
"but do you not think it would amuse you to make
your debut in society—unimpeachable society—and
be properly introduced to the occupants of the
'pedestals,' as your cousins will be?"
Patsy reflected. If Beth and Louise had determined
to undertake this venture why should she
hold back? Moreover, she experienced a girlish
and wholly natural curiosity to witness a fashionable
gathering and "size up" the lions for herself.
So she said:
"I'll come, if you really want me; and I'll try
my best to behave nicely. But I can't imagine
why you have chosen to take us three girls under
your wing; unless—" with sudden intuition,
"it's for Uncle John's sake."
"That was it, at first," replied Diana, rising to
go; "but now that I've seen you I'm delighted to
have you on your own account. Come early,
dear; we must be ready to receive our guests by
nine."
"Nine o'clock!" reflected Patsy, when her
visitor had gone; "why, I'm often in bed by that
time."
CHAPTER V
PREPARING FOR THE PLUNGE
John Merrick lived with the Doyles at their
Willing Square apartments. There were but two
of the Doyles—Patricia and her father, Major
Doyle, a tall, handsome, soldierly man with
white moustache and hair. The Major was
noted as a "character," a keen wit and a most
agreeable type of the "old Irish gentleman." He
fairly worshipped his daughter, and no one
blamed him for it. His business, as special agent
and manager for his brother-in-law's millions,
kept the Major closely occupied and afforded
John Merrick opportunity to spend his days as be
pleased. The rich man was supposed to be "retired,"
yet the care of his investments and income
was no light task, as the Major found.
We are accustomed to regard extreme wealth as
the result of hard-headed shrewdness, not wholly
divorced from unscrupulous methods, yet no one
could accuse John Merrick or his representative
with being other than kindly, simple-hearted and
honest. Uncle John says that he never intended
to "get rich"; it was all the result of carelessness.
He had been so immersed in business that he
failed to notice how fast his fortune was growing.
When he awoke to a realization of his immense
accumulation he promptly retired, appointing Major
Doyle to look after his investments and seeking
personal leisure after many years of hard
work. He instructed his agent to keep his income
from growing into more capital by rendering wise
assistance to all worthy charities and individuals,
and this, as you may suppose, the Major found a
herculean task. Often he denounced Uncle John
for refusing to advise him, claiming that the millionaire
had selfishly thrust the burden of his
wealth on the Major's broad shoulders. While
there was an element of truth in this the burden
it was not so heavy as to make the old soldier unhappy,
and the two men loved and respected one
another with manly cordiality.
Patricia was recognized as Uncle John's favorite
niece and it was understood she was to inherit
the bulk of his property, although some millions
might be divided between Beth and Louise
"if they married wisely." Neither Uncle John
nor the Major ever seemed to consider Patsy's
marrying; she was such a child that wedlock for
her seemed a remote possibility.
The Sunday afternoon following Diana Von
Taer's visit to the three nieces found the girls all
congregated in Patsy's own room, where an earnest
discussion was being conducted. That left
Uncle John to take his after-dinner nap in the big
Morris chair in the living room, where Major
Doyle sat smoking-sulkily while he gazed from the
window and begrudged the moments Patsy was
being kept from him.
Finally the door opened and the three girls
trooped out.
"Huh! Is the conspiracy all cut-an'-dried?"
growled the Major.
Uncle John woke up with a final snort, removed
the newspaper from his face and sat up. He
smiled benignantly upon his nieces.
"It's all your fault, sor!" declared Major Doyle,
selecting the little millionaire as the safest recipient
of his displeasure. "Your foolishness has
involved us all in this dreadful complication.
Why on earth couldn't you leave well-enough
alone?"
Uncle John received the broadside with tolerant
equanimity.
"What's wrong; my dears?" he enquired, directing
his mild glance toward the bevy of young
girls.
"I am unaware that anything is wrong, Uncle,"
replied Louise gravely. "But since we are about
to make our debut in society it is natural we
should have many things to discuss that would
prove quite uninteresting to men. Really, Uncle
John, this is a great event—perhaps the most important
event of our lives."
"Shucks an' shoestrings!" grunted the Major.
"What's in this paper-shelled, painted, hollow
thing ye call 'society' to interest three healthy,
wide-awake girls? Tell me that!"
"You don't understand, dear," said Patsy,
soothing him with a kiss.
"I think he does," remarked Beth, with meditative
brows. "Modern society is a man-made—or
woman-made—condition, to a large extent
artificial, selfish and unwholesome."
"Oh, Beth!" protested Louise. "You're talking
like a rank socialist. I can understand common
people sneering at society, which is so far
out of their reach; but a girl about to be accepted
in the best circles has no right to rail at her own
caste."
"There can be no caste in America," declared
Beth, stubbornly.
"But there is caste in America, and will be so
long as the exclusiveness of society is recognized
by the people at large," continued Louise. "If it
is a 'man-made condition' isn't it the most respected,
most refined, most desirable condition that
one may attain to?"
"There are plenty of honest and happy people in
the world who ignore society altogether," answered
Beth. "It strikes me that your social stars
are mighty few in the broad firmament of
humanity."
"But they're stars, for all that, dear," said
Uncle John, smiling at her with a hint of approval
in his glance, yet picking up the argument; "and
they look mighty big and bright to the crowd below.
It's quite natural. You can't keep individuals
from gaining distinction, even in America.
There are few generals in an army, for instance;
and they're 'man-made'; but that's no reason the
generals ain't entitled to our admiration."
"Let's admire 'em, then—from a distance," retorted
the Major, realizing the military simile was
employed to win his sympathy.
"Certain things, my dear Major, are naturally
dear to a girl's heart," continued Uncle John,
musingly; "and we who are not girls have no
right to condemn their natural longings. Girls
love dancing, pink teas and fudge-parties, and
where can they find 'em in all their perfection but
in high society? Girls love admiration and flirtations—you
do, my dears; you can't deny it--and
the male society swells have the most time to devote
to such things. Girls love pretty dresses—"
"Oh, Uncle! you've hit the nail on the head
now," exclaimed Patsy, laughing. "We must all
have new gowns for this reception, and as we're
to assist Miss Von Taer the dresses must harmonize,
so to speak, and—and—"
"And be quite suited to the occasion," broke in
Louise; "and—"
"And wear our lives out with innumerable fittings,"
concluded Beth, gloomily.
"But why new dresses?" demanded the Major.
"You've plenty of old ones that are clean and
pretty, I'm sure; and our Patsy had one from the
dressmaker only last week that's fit for a queen."
"Oh, Daddy! you don't understand," laughed
Patsy.
"This time, Major, I fear you don't," agreed
Beth. "Your convictions regarding society may
be admirable, but you're weak on the gown question."
"If the women would only listen to me," began
the Major, dictatorially; but Uncle John cut him
short.
"They won't, sir; they'll listen to no man when
it comes to dressmaking."
"Don't they dress to captivate the men, then?"
asked the Major, with fine sarcasm.
"Not at all," answered Louise, loftily. "Men
seldom know what a woman has on, if she looks
nice; but women take in every detail of dress
and criticise it severely if anything happens to be
out of date, ill fitting or in bad taste."
"Then they're in bad taste themselves!" retorted
the Major, hotly.
"Tut-tut, sir; who are you to criticise woman's
ways?" asked Uncle John, much amused. The
Major was silenced, but he glared as if unconvinced.
"Dressmaking is a nuisance," remarked Beth,
placidly; "but it's the penalty we pay for being
women."
"You're nothing but slips o' girls, not out of
your teens," grumbled the Major. And no one
paid any attention to him.
"We want to do you credit, Uncle John," said
Patsy, brightly. "Perhaps our names will be in
the papers."
"They're there already," announced Mr. Merrick,
picking up the Sunday paper that lay beside
him.
A chorus of exclamations was followed by a
dive for the paper, and even the Major smiled
grimly as he observed the three girlish heads close
together and three pair of eager eyes scanning
swiftly the society columns.
"Here it is!" cried Patsy, dancing up and down
like a school-girl; and Louise read in a dignified
voice—which trembled slightly with excitement
and pleasure—the following item:
"Miss Von Taer will receive next Thursday
evening at the family mansion in honor
of Miss Merrick, Miss Doyle and Miss De
Graf. These three charming debutantes are
nieces of John Merrick, the famous tin-plate
magnate."
"Phoo!" growled the Major, during the impressive
hush that followed; "that's it, exactly. Your
names are printed because you're John Merrick's
nieces. If it hadn't been for tin-plate, my dears,
society never would 'a' known ye at all, at all!"
CHAPTER VI
THE FLY IN THE BROTH
Diana was an experienced entertainer and under
her skillful supervision the reception proved
eminently successful. Nor had she cause to be
ashamed of the three protégées she presented to
society, since capable modistes had supplemented
their girlish charms and freshness with costumes
pertinent to the occasion. Perhaps Patsy's chubby
form looked a little "dumpish" in her party gown,
for some of Diana's female guests regarded her
with quiet amusement and bored tolerance, while
the same critical posse was amazed and envious at
Beth's superb beauty and stately bearing. After
all, it was Louise who captured the woman contingency
and scored the greatest success; for her
appearance was not only dainty and attractive but
she was so perfectly self-possessed and responsive
and bore herself so admirably under the somewhat
trying; circumstances of a debut that she won
the cordial goodwill of all whom she encountered.
The hostess was elaborately gowned in white
pompadour satin, trimmed with white chiffon and
embroidered in pink roses and pearls. The Von
Taer home was handsomely decorated for the occasion,
since Diana never did anything by halves
and for her own credit insisted on attention to
those details of display that society recognizes
and loves. Hundreds of long-stemmed American
Beauties and Kentia palms were combined in beautifying
the spacious hall, while orchids in marvelous
variety nodded their blossoms in the great
drawing-room, where the young-ladies received.
These rare and precious flowers were arranged in
bronze baskets with sprays of maidenhair. In the
music room adjoining, great clusters of Madam
Chantenay roses embellished the charming scene.
Branches of cherry-blossoms, supplied by hot-houses,
were banked in the lofty dining-room,
where a Japanese pergola made of bamboo and
lighted with red lanterns was erected at the upper
end. The attendants here were Japanese girls in
native costume, and the long table was laid with a
lace cloth over pink satin, with butterfly bows of
pink tulle. The table itself was decorated with
cut-glass baskets of Cecil Brunner roses mingled
with lilies of the valley and refreshments were distributed
to the standing guests as they entered.
The affair was in the nature of a typical
"crush," for Diana's list of eligibles included most
of the prominent society folk then in town, and
she was too important a personage to have her invitations
disregarded. Beth and Patsy were fairly
bewildered by the numerous introductions, until
names became meaningless in their ears; but
Louise, perfectly composed and in no wise distracted
by her surroundings or the music of the
orchestra and the perpetual buzz of conversation
in the crowded rooms, impressed each individual
upon her memory clearly, and was not likely to
blunder in regard to names or individuality in the
future. This is a rare talent, indeed, and scores,
largely in one's favor; for no one likes to think
himself so unimportant as to be forgotten, under
any circumstances.
It was during the thick of the reception that one
of Miss Von Taer's intimates, a graceful blond
girl, suddenly seized her arm and whispered:
"Oh, Diana! Guess who's here—guess, my dear!"
Diana knew. Her eyes, always narrowed until
the lashes shielded their sharp watchfulness, seldom
missed observing anything of importance.
She pressed her friend's hand and turned again
to the line of guests, while Louise, who had overheard
the excited whisper, wondered casually
what it might mean.
Soon after she knew. A tall, handsome young
fellow was bowing before Diana, who—wonder
of wonders!—for an instant unclosed her great
eyes and shot an electric glance into his smiling
face. The glance was brief as unexpected, yet it
must have told the young man something, for he
flushed and bowed again as if to hide his embarrassment.
It also told Louise something, and her
heart, which had given a quick bound at sight
of the man's face, began to cry out against Diana
Von Taer's artifices.
"Mr. Arthur Weldon," said the hostess, in her
soft voice; and now, as the young man turned an
eager gaze on Louise and half extended his hand,
the girl's face grew pale and she imitated Diana
to the extent of dropping her eyes and bowing
with frigid indifference.
Standing close he whispered "Louise!" in a
pleading tone that made Diana frown wickedly.
But the girl was unresponsive and another instant
forced him to turn to Beth.
"Why, Arthur! are you here, then?" said the
girl, in a surprised but cordial tone.
"That is not astonishing, Miss Beth," he replied.
"The puzzling fact is that you are here—and
under such auspices," he added, in a lower
tone.
Patsy now claimed him, with a frank greeting,
and Arthur Weldon could do little more than
press her hand when the line forced him to move
on and give place to others.
But this especial young fellow occupied the
minds of all four girls long after the crowd had
swallowed him up. Diana was uneasy and obviously
disturbed by the discovery that he was
known to the three cousins, as well as by the
memory of his tone as he addressed Louise Merrick.
Louise, who had read Diana's quick glance
with the accuracy of an intuitionist, felt a sudden
suspicion and dislike for Diana now dominating
her. Behind all this was a mystery, which shall
be explained here because the reader deserves to
be more enlightened than the characters themselves.
Arthur Weldon's nature was a queer combination
of weakness and strength. He was physically
brave but a moral coward. The motherless son
of a man wholly immersed in business, he had
been much neglected in his youth and his unstable
character was largely the result of this neglect.
On leaving college he refused a business career
planned for him by his father, who cast him off
with scornful indifference, and save for a slim
temporary allowance promised to disinherit him.
It was during this period that Arthur met Louise
and fell desperately in love with her. The girl
appeared to return the young fellow's devotion,
but shrewd, worldly Mrs. Merrick, discovering
that the boy was practically disinherited and had
no prospects whatever, forbade him the house.
Louise, until now but mildly interested in the
young-man, resented her mother's interference
and refused to give him up. She found ways to
meet Arthur Weldon outside her home, so that
the situation had become complicated and dangerous
when Uncle John seized his three nieces and
whisked them off to Europe. Young Weldon,
under an assumed name, followed and attached
himself to the party; but John Merrick's suspicions
were presently aroused and on discovering
the identity of the youth he forbade him or Louise
to "make love" or even speak of such a thing
during the remainder of the trip.
The young fellow, by manly acts on some occasions
and grave weaknesses on others, won Uncle
John's kindly interest. The old gentleman knew
human nature, and saw much to admire as well as
condemn in Louise's friend. Beth and Patsy
found him a pleasant comrade, and after all love-making
was tabooed they were quite a harmonious
party. Finally the sudden death of Weldon's
father left him the possessor of a fortune. He
returned to America to look after his newly-acquired
business and became so immersed in it that
Louise felt herself neglected when she came home
expecting him to dance attendance upon her as
before. She treated him coldly and he ceased
calling, his volatile and sensitive nature resenting
such treatment.
It is curious what little things influence the
trend of human lives. Many estrangements are
caused by trifles so intangible that we can scarcely
locate them at all.
At first the girl was very unhappy at the alienation,
but soon schooled herself to forget her
former admirer. Arthur Weldon, for his part,
consoled himself by plunging into social distractions
and devoting himself to Diana Von Taer,
whose strange personality for a time fascinated
him.
The business could not hold young Weldon's
vacillant temperament for long; neither could
Diana. As a matter of fact his heart, more
staunch than he himself suspected, had never wavered
much from Louise. Yet pride forbade his
attempting to renew their former relations. It
was now some months since he had seen the girl,
and his eager exclamation was wrested from him
by surprise and a sudden awakening to the fact
that his love for her had merely slumbered.
Diana, worldly, cold and calculating as was her
nature, had been profoundly touched by Arthur's
devotion to her. Usually young men were soon
repulsed by her unfortunate personality, which
was not easily understood. Therefore her intense
nature responded freely to this admirer's attentions,
and if Diana could really love she loved
Arthur Weldon. He had never proposed to her
or even intimated it was his intention to do so, but
she conceived a powerful desire to win him and
had never abandoned this motive when he grew
cold and appeared to desert her. Just now he was
recently back from Italy, where he had passed
several months, and Diana's reception was his
first reappearance in society. The girl had
planned to bring him to her side this evening and
intended to exert her strongest fascinations to
lure him back to his former allegiance; so her
annoyance may be guessed when she found her
three protégées seemingly more familiar with the
young man than was she herself.
At last the line ended and the introductions
were complete. The debutantes were at once the
center of interested groups composed of those who
felt it a duty or pleasure to show them attention.
Diana wandered to the music room and waylaid
Arthur Weldon, who was just about to make his
escape from the house, having decided it was impossible
to find an opportunity to converse with
Louise that evening.
"I'm so glad you came, Arthur," she said, a
quick glance assuring her they were not overheard.
"You landed from the steamer but yesterday,
I hear."
"And came straightway to pay my respects to
my old friend," he answered lightly. "Isn't it
unusual for you to present debutantes, Diana?"
"You know these girls, don't you, Arthur?"
"Yes; I met them in Europe."
"And flirted with Miss Merrick? Be honest,
Arthur, I know your secret."
"Do you? Then you know we were merely
good friends," said he, annoyed at her accusation.
"Of course. You called her 'Louise,' didn't
you?"
"To be sure. And Patsy called me 'Arthur.
You may have heard her."
"Patsy?"
"That's Miss Patricia Doyle—our dear little
Patsy."
"Oh. I'm sure you didn't fall in love with
her, at any rate."
"I'm not so sure. Everybody loves Patsy. But
I had no time for love-making. I was doing
Europe."
"Wasn't that a year or so ago?" she asked, realizing
he was trying to evade further reference
to Louise.
"Yes."
"And since then?"
"I've been away the last six or seven months,
as you know, on my second trip abroad."
"But before that—when you first returned?"
"If I remember rightly I was then much in the
society of Miss Von Taer. Is the catechism ended
at last?"
"Yes," she replied, laughing. "Don't think
me inquisitive, Arthur; I was surprised to find
you knew these girls, with whom I am myself but
lightly acquainted."
"Yet you introduce them to your very select set?"
"To please my father, who wishes to please Mr.
Merrick."
"I understand," said he, nodding. "But they're
nice girls, Diana. You're not running chances, I
assure you."
"That relieves me," she replied rather scornfully.
"If Arthur Weldon will vouch for them—"
"But I don't. I'll vouch for no one—not even
myself," he declared hastily. She was calmly
reading his face, and did not seem to approve the
text.
"Are you as fickle as ever, then, mon cher?" she
asked, softly.
"I'm not fickle, Diana. My fault is that I'm
never serious."
"Never?"
"I cannot remember ever being serious; at
least, where a girl was concerned."
Diana bit her lips to restrain a frown, but her
eyes, which he was avoiding, flashed wickedly.
"That is surely a fault, my Arthur," was her
tender reply. "Were you never serious during
our quiet evenings together; our dances, theatre
parties and romps?"
"That was merely fun. And you, Diana?"
"Oh, I enjoyed the fun, too. It meant so much
to me. I began to live, then, and found life very
sweet. But when you suddenly left me and went
abroad—ah, that was indeed serious."
Her tone was full of passionate yearning. He
laughed, trying to appear at ease. Some sort of
an understanding must be had with Diana sooner
or later, and she might as well realize at this present
interview that the old relations could not be
restored. His nature was not brutal and he disliked
to hurt her; moreover, the boy had an uneasy
feeling that he had been a far more ardent
admirer of this peculiar girl than any fellow
should be who had had no serious intentions; yet
it would be folly to allow Diana to think she could
win him back to his former allegiance. No compromising
word had ever left his lips; he had
never spoken of love to her. Yet the girl's attitude
seemed to infer a certain possession of him
which was far from agreeable.
Having gone so far, he should have said more;
but here again his lack of moral courage proved
his stumbling-block, and he weakly evaded a frank
expression of his true feelings.
"Life," he began somewhat haltingly, to break
the embarrassing pause, "is only serious when we
make it so; and as soon as we make it serious it
makes us unhappy. So I've adopted one invariable
rule: to laugh and be gay."
"Then I too will be gay, and together we'll
enjoy life," responded Diana, with an effort to
speak lightly. "I shall let your moods be my
moods, Arthur, as a good friend should. Are
we not affinities?"
Again he knew not what to say. Her persistence
in clinging to her intangible hold upon him
was extremely irritating, and he realized the girl
was far too clever for him to cope with and was
liable to cause him future trouble. Instead of
seizing the opportunity to frankly undeceive her
he foolishly evaded the subject.
"You've been tempting fate to-night," he remarked
with assumed carelessness. "Don't you
remember that to stand four girls in a row is a
bad omen?"
"Only for the one who first winks. Isn't that
the way the saying goes? I seldom wink, myself,"
she continued, smilingly. "But I have no faith in
ill omens. Their power is entirely due to mental
fear."
"I think not," said Arthur, glad the conversation
had taken this turn. "Once I knew a fellow
with thirteen letters in his name. He had no mental
fear. But he proposed to a girl—and was
accepted."
She gave him one of those sudden, swift
glances that were so disconcerting.
"If you had a middle initial, there would be
thirteen letters in your own name, Arthur Weldon."
"But I haven't, Diana; I haven't," he protested,
eagerly. "And if ever I propose to a girl
I'm sure she'll refuse me. But I've no intention
of doing such a crazy thing, so I'm perfectly safe."
"You cannot be sure until you try, Arthur,"
she replied pointedly, and with a start he became
conscious that he was again treading upon dangerous
ground.
"Come; let us rejoin your guests," said he,
offering her his arm. "They would all hate me
if they knew I was keeping the fair Diana from
them so long."
"Arthur, I must have a good long; talk with
you—one of our old, delightful confabs," she said,
earnestly. "Will you call Sunday afternoon?
Then we shall be quite undisturbed."
He hesitated.
"Sunday afternoon?" he answered.
"Yes."
"All right; I'll come, Diana."
She gave him a grateful look and taking his
arm allowed him to lead her back to the drawing-room.
The crush was over, many having already
departed. Some of the young people were dancing
in the open spaces to the music of a string
orchestra hidden behind a bank of ferns in the
hall.
Louise and Beth were the centers of attentive
circles; Patsy conversed with merry freedom with
a group of ancient dowagers, who delighted in
her freshness and healthy vigor and were flattered
by her consideration. Mrs. Merrick—for
she had been invited—sat in a corner gorgeously
robed and stiff as a poker, her eyes devouring the
scene. Noting the triumph of Louise she failed to
realize she was herself neglected.
A single glance sufficed to acquaint Diana with
all this, and after a gracious word to her guests
here and there she asked Arthur to dance with
her. He could not well refuse, but felt irritated
and annoyed when he observed Louise's eyes fastened
upon him in amused disdain. After a few
turns he discovered some departing ones waiting
to bid their hostess adieu, and escaped from his
unpleasant predicament by halting his partner
before them. Then he slipped away and quietly
left the house before Diana had time to miss him.
CHAPTER VII
THE HERO ENTERS AND TROUBLE BEGINS
The Von Taer reception fully launched the
three nieces in society. Endorsed by Diana and
backed by John Merrick's millions and their own
winsome charms, they were sure to become favorites
in that admirable set to which they had
fortunately gained admittance.
Cards poured in upon them during; the succeeding
days and they found themselves busy returning
calls and attending dinners, fetes, bridge parties
and similar diversions. The great Mrs. Sandringham
took a decided fancy to Louise, and when
the committee was appointed to arrange for the
social Kermess to be held in December, this dictatorial
leader had the girl's name included in
the list. Naturally the favor led to all three cousins
taking active part in the most famous social
event of the season, and as an especial mark of favoritism
they were appointed to conduct the
"flower booth," one of the important features of
the Kermess.
Mrs. Merrick was in the seventh heaven of
ecstatic delight; Uncle John declared his three
girls were sure to become shining lights, if not
actual constellations, wherever they might be
placed; Major Doyle growled and protested; but
was secretly pleased to have "our Patsy the captain
of the dress parade," where he fondly
imagined she outclassed all others. All former
denunciations of society at large were now
ignored, even by unimpressive Beth, and the girls
soon became deeply interested in their novel experiences.
Arthur Weldon sulked at home, unhappy and
undecided, for a day or two after the reception.
Sunday noon he dispatched a messenger to Diana
with a note saying he would be unable to keep
his appointment with her that afternoon. Then
he went straight to the Merrick home and sent
his card to Louise. The girl flushed, smiled,
frowned, and decided to go down.
No one had ever interested her so much as
Arthur Weldon. There had been a spice of romance
about their former relations that made
her still regard him as exceptional among mankind.
She had been asking herself, since the night
of the reception, if she still loved him, but could
not come to a positive conclusion. The boy was
no longer "ineligible," as he had been at first;
even Uncle John could now have no serious objection
to him. He was handsome, agreeable, occupied
a good social position and was fairly well
off in the way of worldly goods—the last point
removing Mrs. Merrick's former rejection of
Arthur as a desirable son-in-law.
But girls are wayward and peculiar in such an
affaire du coeur, and none of these things might
have weighed with Louise had she not discovered
that Diana Von Taer was in love with Arthur and
intended to win him. That aroused the girl's
fighting instincts, rendered the young man doubly
important, and easily caused Louise to forget
her resentment at his temporary desertion of her.
Perhaps, she reflected, it had partially been her
own fault. Now that Arthur showed a disposition
to renew their friendship, and she might promise
herself the satisfaction of defeating Diana's ambitions,
it would be diplomatic, at least, to receive
the youth with cordial frankness.
Therefore she greeted him smilingly and with
outstretched hand, saying:
"This is quite a surprise, Mr. Weldon. I'd a
notion you had forgotten me."
"No, indeed, Louise! How could you imagine
such a thing?" he answered, reproachfully.
"There was some evidence of the fact," she asserted
archly. "At one time you gave me no
peace; then you became retiring. At last you disappeared
wholly. What could I think, sir, under
such circumstances?"
He stood looking down at her thoughtfully.
How pretty she had grown; and how mature and
womanly.
"Louise," said he, gently, "don't let us indulge
in mutual reproaches. Some one must have
been at fault and I'll willingly take all the blame
if you will forgive me. Once we were—were good
friends. We—we intended to be still more to
one another, Louise, but something occurred, I
don't know what, to—to separate us."
"Why, you went away," said the girl, laughing;
"and that of course separated us."
"You treated me like a beggar; don't forget
that part of it, dear. Of course I went away."
"And consoled yourself with a certain Miss
Diana Von Taer. It has lately been rumored you
are engaged to her."
"Me? What nonsense?" But he hushed guiltily,
and Louise noted everything and determined
he should not escape punishment.
"Diana, at least, is in earnest," she remarked,
with assumed indifference. "You may not care
to deny that you have been very attentive to her."
"Not especially so," he declared, stoutly.
"People gossip, you know. And Diana is
charming."
"She's an iceberg!"
"Oh, you have discovered that? Was she
wholly unresponsive, then?"
"No," he said, with a touch of anger. "I have
never cared for Diana, except in a friendly way.
She amused me for a while when—when I was
wretched. But I never made love to her; not for
a moment. Afterward, why—then----"
"Well; what then?" as he hesitated, growing
red again.
"I found she had taken my careless attentions
in earnest, and the play was getting dangerous.
So I went abroad."
Louise considered this explanation seriously.
She believed he was speaking the truth, so far
as he knew. But at the same time she realized
from her own experience that Arthur might as
easily deceive himself as Diana in his estimate as
to the warmth of the devotion he displayed. His
nature was impetuous and ardent. That Diana
should have taken his attentions seriously and
become infatuated with the handsome young fellow
was not a matter to cause surprise.
Gradually Louise felt her resentment disappearing.
In Arthur's presence the charm of his
personality influenced her to be lenient with his
shortcomings. And his evident desire for a reconciliation
found an echo in her own heart.
Mutual explanations are excellent to clear a
murky atmosphere, and an hour's earnest conversation
did much to restore these two congenial
spirits to their former affectionate relations. Of
course Louise did not succumb too fully to his
pleadings, for her feminine instinct warned her
to keep the boy on "the anxious seat" long enough
to enable him to appreciate her value and the
honor of winning her good graces. Moreover,
she made some severe conditions and put him on
his good behavior. If he proved worthy, and was
steadfast and true, why then the future might
reward him freely.
Diana had been making careful plans for her
interview with Arthur that Sunday afternoon.
With no futile attempt to deceive herself as to existent
conditions she coldly weighed the chances
in her mental scale and concluded she had sufficient
power to win this unstable youth to her
side and induce him to forget that such a person
as Louise Merrick ever existed.
Diana was little experienced in such affairs, it
is true. Arthur Weldon had been her first and
only declared admirer, and no one living had
studied his peculiar nature more critically than
this observant girl. Also she knew well her own
physical failings. She realized that her personality
was to many repulsive, rather than attractive,
and this in spite of her exquisite form, her perfect
breeding and many undeniable accomplishments.
Men, as a rule, seldom remained at her side save
through politeness, and even seemed to fear her;
but never until now had she cared for any man
sufficiently to wish to retain or interest him.
There were unsuspected fascinations lying dormant
in her nature, and Miss Von Taer calmly reflected
that the exercise of these qualities, backed
by her native wit and capacity for intrigue, could
easily accomplish the object she desired.
Thus she had planned her campaign and carefully
dressed herself in anticipation of Arthur's
call when his note came canceling the engagement.
After rereading his lame excuse she sat down in a
quiet corner and began to think. The first gun
had been fired, the battle was on, and like a wise
general she carefully marshaled her forces for
combat.
An hour or two later she turned to her telephone
book and called up the Merrick establishment.
A voice, that of a maid, evidently, answered
her.
"I wish to speak with Miss Merrick," said
Diana.
Louise, annoyed at being disturbed, left Arthur's
side to respond to the call.
"Who is it, please?" she asked.
"Is Mr. Weldon still there, or has he gone?"
enquired Diana, disguising her voice and speaking
imperatively..
"Why, he's still here," answered bewildered
Louise; "but who is talking, please?"
No answer.
"Do you wish to speak with Mr. Weldon?"
continued the girl, mystified at such an odd procedure.
Diana hung up her receiver, severing the connection.
The click of the instrument assured
Louise there was no use in waiting longer, so she
returned to Arthur. She could not even guess
who had called her. Arthur could, though, when
he had heard her story, and Diana's impudent
meddling made him distinctly uneasy. He took
care not to enlighten Louise, and the incident was
soon forgotten by her.
"It proved just as I expected," mused Diana,
huddled in her reclining' chair. "The fool has
thrown me over to go to her. But this is not important.
With the situation so clearly defined I
shall know exactly what I must do to protect my
own interests."
Mr. Von Taer was away from home that
Sunday afternoon, and would not return until a
late hour. Diana went to the telephone again
and after several unsuccessful attempts located
her cousin, Mr. Charles Connoldy Mershone, at a
club.
"It's Diana," she said, when at last communication
was established. "I want you to come over
and see me; at once."
"You'll have to excuse me, Di," was the answer.
"I was unceremoniously kicked out the last
time, you know."
"Father's away. It's all right, Charlie. Come
along."
"Can't see it, my fair cousin. You've all treated
me like a bull-pup, and I'm not anxious to mix
up with that sort of a relationship. Anything
more? I'm going to play pool to win my dinner."
"Funds running low, Charlie?"
"Worse than that; they're invisible."
"Then pay attention. Call a taxi at once, and
get here as soon as you can. I'll foot the bill—
and any others that happen to be bothering you."
A low, surprised whistle came over the wire.
"What's up, Di?" he asked, with new interest.
"Come and find out."
"Can I be useful?"
"Assuredly; to yourself."
"All right; I'm on the way."
He hung up, and Diana gave a sigh of content
as she slowly returned to her den and the easy
chair, where Mr. Mershone found her "coiled"
some half hour later.
"This is a queer go," said the young man, taking
a seat and glancing around with knitted brows.
"It isn't so long since dear Uncle Hedrik tumbled
me out of here neck and crop; and now Cousin
Diana invites me to return."
At first glance young Mershone seemed an attractive
young fellow, tall, finely formed and well
groomed. But his eyes were too close together
and his handsome features bore unmistakable
marks of dissipation.
"You disgraced us a year or so ago, Charlie,"
said Diana, in her soft, quiet accents, "and under
such circumstances we could not tolerate you.
You can scarcely blame us for cutting your acquaintance.
But now—"
"Well, now?" he enquired coolly, trying to read
her impassive face.
"I need the services of just such an unscrupulous
and clever individual as you have proven
yourself to be. I'm willing to pay liberally for
those services, and you doubtless need the money.
Are we allies, then?"
Mershone laughed, with little genuine mirth.
"Of course, my dear cousin," he responded;
"provided you propose any legal villainy. I'm not
partial to the police; but I really need the money,
as you suggest."
"And you will be faithful?" she asked, regarding
him doubtfully.
"To the cause, you may be sure. But understand
me: I balk at murder and burglary. Somehow,
the police seem to know me. I'll not do
anything that might lead to a jail sentence, because
there are easier ways to get money. However,
I don't imagine your proposed plan is very
desperate, Diana; it's more liable to be dirty work.
Never mind; you may command me, my dear cousin—if
the pay is ample."
"The pay will be ample if you succeed," she
began.
"I don't like that. I may not succeed."
"Listen to me, Charlie. Do you know Arthur
Weldon?"
"Slightly; not very well."
"I intend to marry him. He has paid me
marked attentions in the past; but now—he—"
"Wants to slip the leash. Quite natural, my
dear."
"He has become infatuated with another girl;
a light-headed, inexperienced little thing who is
likely to marry the first man who asks her. She
is very rich—in her own right, too—and her husband
will be a fortunate man."
Mershone stared at her. Then he whistled, took
a few turns up and down the room, and reseated
himself.
"Evidently!" he ejaculated, lighting a cigarette
without permission and then leaning back
thoughtfully in his chair.
"Charlie," continued Diana, "you may as well
marry Louise Merrick and settle down to a life
of respectability. You've a dashing, masterful
way which no girl of her sort can long resist.
I propose that you make desperate love to Louise
Merrick and so cut Arthur Weldon out of the
deal entirely. My part of the comedy will be to
attract him to my side again. Now you have the
entire proposition in a nutshell."
He smoked for a time in reflective silence.
"What's the girl like?" he enquired, presently.
"Is she attractive?"
"Sufficiently so to fascinate Arthur Weldon.
Moreover, she has just been introduced in our set,
and knows nothing of your shady past history.
Even if rumors came to her ears, young creatures
of her sort often find a subtle charm in a man accused
of being 'naughty.'"
"Humph!"
"If you win her, you get a wife easily managed
and a splendid fortune to squander as you please."
"Sounds interesting, Di, doesn't it? But—"
"In regard to preliminary expenses," she interrupted,
calmly, "I have said that your reward will
be ample when you have won the game. But
meantime I am willing to invest the necessary
funds in the enterprise. I will allow you a thousand
a month."
"Bah! that's nothing at all!" said he, contemptuously,
as he flicked the ashes from his cigarette.
"What do you demand, then?"
"Five hundred a week, in advance. It's an expensive
job, Di."
"Very well; I will give you five hundred a week;
but only as long as you work earnestly to carry
out the plot. I shall watch you, Charlie. And
you must not lose sight of the ultimate reward."
"I won't, my sweet cousin. It's a bargain," he
said, readily enough. "When do I begin, and
what's the program?"
"Draw your chair nearer," said Diana, restraining
her triumphant joy. "I'll explain everything
to you in detail. It will be my part to plan, and
yours to execute."
"Good!" he exclaimed, with a cheerful grin.
"I feel like an executioner already!"
CHAPTER VIII
OPENING THE CAMPAIGN
Louise's little romance, which now began to
thrive vigorously, was regarded with calmness by
her cousins and her mother, who knew of the former
episode between her and Arthur and attached
little importance to the renewed flirtation in which
they indulged. That they were deceived in their
estimate was due to the girl's reputation for frivolity
where young men were concerned. She had
been dubbed a "flirt" ever since she first began to
wear long dresses, and her nature was not considered
deep enough for her heart to be ever seriously
affected. Therefore the young girl was
gravely misjudged.
Louise was not one to bare her heart, even to
her most intimate friends, and no one now suspected
that at last her deepest, truest womanly affections
were seriously involved. The love for
Arthur that had lain dormant in her heart was
aroused at a time when she was more mature and
capable of recognizing truly her feelings, so that
it was not long before she surrendered her reserve
and admitted to him that life would mean
little for her unless they might pass the years together.
For his part, young Weldon sincerely
loved Louise, and had never wavered from his
firm devotion during all the past months of misunderstanding.
The general impression that they were "merely
flirting" afforded the lovers ample opportunity to
have their walks and drives together undisturbed,
and during these soulful communions they arrived
at such a perfect understanding that both were
confident nothing could ever disturb their trust
and confidence.
It was at a theatre party that the three debutantes
first met Charlie Mershone, but they saw
little of him that first evening and scarcely noticed
his presence. Louise, indeed, noted that his eyes
were fixed upon her more than once with thinly
veiled admiration, and without a thought of disloyalty
to Arthur, but acting upon the impulse
of her coquettish nature, she responded with a demure
smile of encouragement.
Charlie Mershone was an adept at playing parts.
He at first regarded Louise much as a hunter does
the game he is stalking. Patsy Doyle was more
jolly and Beth De Graf more beautiful than Miss
Merrick; but the young man would in any event
have preferred the latter's dainty personality.
When he found her responsive to his admiring
glances he was astounded to note his heart beating
rapidly—a thing quite foreign to his usual
temperament. Yes, this girl would do very nicely,
both as a wife and as a banker. Assuredly the
game was well worth playing, as Diana had asserted.
He must make it his business to discover
what difficulties must be overcome in winning her.
Of course Arthur Weldon was the main stumbling-block;
but Weldon was a ninny; he must be
thrust aside; Diana had promised to attend to
that.
Never in his life had Charles Connoldy Mershone
been in earnest before. After his first interview
with Louise Merrick he became in deadly
earnest. His second meeting with her was at
Marie Delmar's bridge whist party, where they
had opportunity for an extended conversation.
Arthur was present this evening, but by some
chance Mershone drew Louise for his partner at
cards, and being a skillful player he carried her in
progression from table to table, leaving poor Arthur
far behind and indulging in merry repartee
and mild flirtation until they felt they were quite
well acquainted.
Louise found the young man a charming conversationalist.
He had a dashing, confidential
way of addressing the girl which impressed her as
flattering and agreeable, while his spirits were
so exuberant and sparkling with humor that she
was thoroughly amused every moment while in
his society. Indeed, Mr. Mershone was really
talented, and had he possessed any manly attributes,
or even the ordinary honorable instincts of
mankind, there is little doubt he would have been
a popular favorite. But he had made his mark,
and it was a rather grimy one. From earliest
youth he had been guilty of discreditable acts that
had won for him the contempt of all right-minded
people. That he was still accepted with lax tolerance
by some of the more thoughtless matrons
of the fashionable set was due to his family name.
They could not forget that in spite of his numerous
lapses from respectability he was still a Mershone.
Not one of the careless mothers who admitted
him to her house would have allowed her
daughter to wed him, and the degree of tolerance
extended to him was fully appreciated by Mershone
himself. He knew he was practically barred
from the most desirable circles and seldom imposed
himself upon his former acquaintances; but
now, with a distinct object in view, he callously
disregarded the doubtful looks he encountered
and showed himself in every drawing-room where
he could secure an invitation or impudently intrude
himself. He made frank avowals that he
had "reformed" and abandoned his evil ways
forever. Some there were who accepted this
statement seriously, and Diana furthered his cause
by treating him graciously whenever they met,
whereas she had formerly refused to recognize
her cousin.
Louise knew nothing at all of Charlie Mershone's
history and permitted him to call when
he eagerly requested the favor; but on the way
home from the Delmars Arthur, who had glowered
at the usurper all the evening, took pains
to hint to Louise that Mershone was an undesirable
acquaintance and had a bad record. Of
course she laughed at him and teased him, thinking
he was jealous and rejoicing that in Mershone
she had a tool to "keep Arthur toeing the
mark." As a matter of truth she had really
missed her lover's companionship that evening,
but forbore to apprise him of the fact.
And now the great Kermess began to occupy
the minds of the three cousins, who were to share
the important "Flower Booth" between them.
The Kermess was to be the holiday sensation of
the season and bade fair to eclipse the horse show
in popularity. It was primarily a charitable entertainment,
as the net receipts were to be divided
among several deserving hospitals; nevertheless
it was classed as a high society function and only
the elect were to take active part in the affair.
The ball room at the Waldorf had been secured
and many splendid booths were to be erected for
the sale of novelties, notions and refreshments.
There were to be lotteries and auctions, national
dances given by groups of society belles, and
other novel entertainments calculated to empty
the pockets of the unwary.
Beth was somewhat indignant to find that she
and her cousins, having been assigned to the
flower booth, were expected to erect a pavilion
and decorate it at their own expense, as well as to
provide the stock of flowers to be sold. "There
is no fund for preliminary expenses, you know,"
remarked Mrs. Sandringham, "and of course all
the receipts are to go to charity; so there is nothing
to do but stand these little bills ourselves.
We all do it willingly. The papers make a good
deal of the Kermess, and the advertisement we
get is worth all it costs us."
Beth did not see the force of this argument.
She thought it was dreadful for society—really
good society—to wish to advertise itself; but gradually
she was learning that this was merely a part
of the game. To be talked about, to have her goings
and comings heralded in the society columns
and her gowns described on every possible occasion,
seemed the desire of every society woman,
and she who could show the biggest scrap-book of
clippings was considered of highest importance..
Uncle John laughed joyously when told that the
expenses of the flower booth would fall on the
shoulders of his girls and there was no later
recompense.
"Why not?" he cried. "Mustn't we pay the
fiddler if we dance?"
"It's a hold-up game," declared Beth, angrily.
"I'll have nothing to do with it."
"Yes, you will, my dear," replied her uncle;
"and to avoid separating you chicks from your
pin-money I'm going to stand every cent of the
expense myself. Why, it's for charity, isn't it?
Charity covers a multitude of sins, and I'm just
a miserable sinner that needs a bath-robe to
snuggle in. How can the poor be better served
than by robbing the rich? Go ahead, girls, and
rig up the swellest booth that money will build.
I'll furnish as many flowers as you can sell, and
Charity ought to get a neat little nest-egg out of
the deal."
"That's nice of you," said Patsy, kissing him;
"but it's an imposition, all the same."
"It's a blessing, my dear. It will help a bit to
ease off that dreadful income that threatens to
crush me," he rejoined, smiling at them. And the
nieces made no further protest, well knowing the
kindly old gentleman would derive untold pleasure
in carrying out his generous plans.
The flower booth, designed by a famous architect,
proved a splendid and most imposing structure.
It was capped by a monster bouquet of artificial
orchids in papier-maché, which reached
twenty feet into the air. The three cousins had
their gowns especially designed for the occasion.
Beth represented a lily, Louise a Gold-of-Ophir
rose, and Patricia a pansy.
The big ball room had been turned over to the
society people several days in advance, that the
elaborate preparations might be completed in
time, and during this period groups of busy, energetic
young folks gathered by day and in the
evenings, decorating, flirting, rehearsing the fancy
dances, and amusing themselves generally.
Arthur Weldon was there to assist Uncle
John's nieces; but his pleasure was somewhat
marred by the persistent presence of Charlie Mershone,
who, having called once or twice upon
Louise, felt at liberty to attach himself to her
party. The ferocious looks of his rival were
ignored by this designing young man and he had
no hesitation in interrupting a tête-à-tête to monopolize
the girl for himself.
Louise was amused, thinking it fun to worry
Arthur by flirting mildly with Mr. Mershone, for
whom she cared not a jot. Both Patsy and Beth
took occasion to remonstrate with her for this
folly, for having known Weldon for a long time
and journeyed with him through a part of Europe,
they naturally espoused his cause, liking him
as much as they intuitively disliked Mershone.
One evening Arthur, his patience well-nigh
exhausted, talked seriously with Louise.
"This fellow Mershone," said he, "is a bad
egg, a despicable son of a decadent family. His
mother was Hedrik Von Taer's sister, but the poor
thing has been dead many years. Not long ago
Charlie was tabooed by even the rather fast set
he belonged to, and the Von Taers, especially, refused
to recognize their relative. Now he seems
to go everywhere again. I don't know what has
caused the change, I'm sure."
"Why, he has reformed," declared Louise;
"Diana told me so. She said he had been a bit
wild, as all young men are; but now his behavior
is irreproachable."
"I don't believe a word of it," insisted Arthur.
"Mershone is a natural cad; he's been guilty of all
sorts of dirty tricks, and is capable of many more.
If you'll watch out, Louise, you'll see that all the
girls are shy of being found in his society, and
all the chaperons cluck to their fledglings the
moment the hawk appears. You're a novice in
society just yet, my dear, and it won't do you
any good to encourage Charlie Mershone, whom
everyone else avoids."
"He's very nice," returned Louise, lightly.
"Yes; he must be nicer than I am," admitted
the young man, glumly, and thereupon he became
silent and morose and Louise found her evening
spoiled.
The warning did not fall on barren ground,
however. In the seclusion of her own room the
girl thought it all over and decided she had teased
her true lover enough. Arthur had not scolded
or reproached her, despite his annoyance, and she
had a feeling that his judgment of Charlie Mershone
was quite right. Although the latter was
evidently madly in love with her the girl had the
discretion to see how selfish and unrestrained was
his nature, and once or twice he had already
frightened her by his impetuosity. She decided
to retreat cautiously but positively from further
association with him, and at once began to show
the young man coolness.
Mershone must have been chagrined, but he
did not allow Louise to see there was any change
in their relations as far as he was concerned. He
merely redoubled his attentions, sending her flowers
and bonbons daily, accompanied by ardently
worded but respectful notes. Really, Louise was
in a quandary, and she frankly admitted to
Arthur that she had brought this embarrassment
upon herself. Yet Arthur could do or say little to
comfort her. He longed secretly to "punch Mershone's
head," but could find no occasion for such
decided action.
Diana, during this time, treated both Arthur
and Louise with marked cordiality. Believing
her time would come to take part in the comedy
she refrained from interfering prematurely with
the progress of events. She managed to meet
her accomplice at frequent intervals and was
pleased that there was no necessity to urge Charlie
to do his utmost in separating the lovers.
"I'm bound to win, Di," he said grimly, "for
I love the girl even better than I do her fortune.
And of one thing you may rest assured; Weldon
shall never marry her."
"What will you do?" asked Diana, curiously.
"Anything! Everything that is necessary to
accomplish my purpose."
"Be careful," said she warningly. "Keep a
cool head, Charlie, and don't do anything foolish.
Still—"
"Well?"
"If it is necessary to take a few chances, do it. Arthur
Weldon must not marry Louise Merrick!"
CHAPTER IX
THE VON TAER PEARLS
Uncle John really had more fun out of the
famous Kermess than anyone else. The preparations
gave him something to do, and he enjoyed
doing—openly, as well as in secret ways. Having
declared that he would stock the flower booth
at his own expense, he confided to no one his
plans. The girls may have thought he would
merely leave orders with a florist; but that was
not the Merrick way of doing things. Instead,
he visited the most famous greenhouses within a
radius of many miles, contracting for all the floral
blooms that art and skill could produce. The
Kermess was to be a three days' affair, and each
day the floral treasures of the cast were delivered
in reckless profusion at the flower booth, which
thus became the center of attraction and the marvel
of the public. The girls were delighted to
be able to dispense such blooms, and their success
as saleswomen was assured at once.
Of course the fair vendors were ignorant of
the value of their wares, for Uncle John refused
to tell them how extravagant he had been; so they
were obliged to guess at the sums to be demanded
and in consequence sold priceless orchids and rare
hothouse flora at such ridiculous rates that Mr.
Merrick chuckled with amusement until he nearly
choked.
The public being "cordially invited" Uncle John
was present on that first important evening, and
—wonder of wonders—was arrayed in an immaculate
full-dress suit that fitted his chubby form
like the skin of a banana. Mayor Doyle, likewise
disguised, locked arms with his brother-in-law and
stalked gravely among the throng; but neither
ever got to a point in the big room where the
flower booth was not in plain sight. The Major's
pride in "our Patsy" was something superb; Uncle
John was proud of all three of his nieces. As the
sale of wares was for the benefit of charity these
old fellows purchased liberally—mostly flowers and
had enough parcels sent home to fill a delivery
wagon.
One disagreeable incident, only, marred this
otherwise successful evening—successful especially
for the three cousins, whose beauty and
grace won the hearts of all.
Diana Von Taer was stationed in the "Hindoo
Booth," and the oriental costume she wore exactly
fitted her sensuous style of beauty. To enhance
its effect she had worn around her neck the famous
string of Von Taer pearls, a collection said to be
unmatched in beauty and unequaled in value in
all New York.
The "Hindoo Booth" was near enough to the
"Flower Booth" for Diana to watch the cousins,
and the triumph of her late protégées was very
bitter for her to endure. Especially annoying was
it to find Arthur Weldon devoting himself assiduously
to Louise, who looked charming in her rose
gown and favored Arthur in a marked way, although
Charlie Mershone, refusing to be ignored,
also leaned over the counter of the booth and
chatted continually, striving to draw Miss Merrick's
attention to himself.
Forced to observe all this, Diana soon lost her
accustomed coolness. The sight of the happy
faces of Arthur and Louise aroused all the rancor
and subtile wit that she possessed, and she resolved
upon an act that she would not before have
believed herself capable of. Leaning down, she
released the catch of the famous pearls and unobserved
concealed them in a handkerchief. Then,
leaving her booth, she sauntered slowly over to
the floral display, which was surrounded for the
moment by a crowd of eager customers. Many
of the vases and pottery jars which had contained
flowers now stood empty, and just before the station
of Louise Merrick the stock was sadly depleted.
This was, of course, offset by the store
of money in the little drawer beside the fair sales-lady,
and Louise, having greeted Diana with a
smile and nod, turned to renew her conversation
with the young men besieging her.
Diana leaned gracefully over the counter, resting
the hand containing the handkerchief over
the mouth of an empty Doulton vase—empty
save for the water which had nourished the flowers.
At the same time she caught Louise's eye
and with a gesture brought the girl to her side.
"Those young men are wealthy," she said, carelessly,
her head close to that of Louise. "Make
them pay well for their purchases, my dear."
"I can't rob them, Diana," was the laughing
rejoinder.
"But it is your duty to rob, at a Kermess, and
in the interests of charity," persisted Diana, maintaining
her voice at a whisper.
Louise was annoyed.
"Thank you," she said, and went back to the
group awaiting her.
The floral booth was triangular, Beth officiated
at one of the three sides, Patsy at another,
and Louise at the third. Diana now passed softly
around the booth, interchanging a word with the
other two girls, after which she returned to her
own station.
Presently, while chatting with a group of acquaintances,
she suddenly clasped her throat and
assuming an expression of horror exclaimed:
"My pearls!"
"What, the Von Taer pearls?" cried one.
"The Von Taer pearls," said Diana, as if dazed
by her misfortune.
"And you've lost them, dear?"
"They're lost!" she echoed.
Well, there was excitement then, you may be
sure. One man hurried to notify the door-keeper
and the private detective employed oh all such
occasions, while others hastily searched the booth
—of course in vain. Diana seemed distracted and
the news spread quickly through the assemblage.
"Have you left this booth at all?" asked a quiet
voice, that of the official whose business it was to
investigate.
"I—I merely walked over to the floral booth
opposite, and exchanged a word with Miss Merrick,
and the others there," she explained.
The search was resumed, and Charlie Mershone
sauntered over.
"What's this, Di? Lost the big pearls, I hear,"
he said.
She took him aside and whispered something to
him. He nodded and returned at once to the
flower booth, around which a crowd of searchers
now gathered, much to the annoyance of Louise
and her cousins.
"It's all foolishness, you know," said Uncle
John, to the Major, confidentially. "If the girl
really dropped her pearls some one has picked
them up, long ago."
Young Mershone seemed searching the floral
booth as earnestly as the others, and awkwardly
knocked the Doulton vase from the shelf with his
elbow. It smashed to fragments and in the pool
of water on the floor appeared the missing pearls.
There was an awkward silence for a moment,
while all eyes turned curiously upon Louise, who
served this side of the triangle. The girl appeared
turned to stone as she gazed down at the gems.
Mershone laughed disagreeably and picked up the
recovered treasure, which Diana ran forward and
seized.
"H-m-m!" said the detective, with a shrug;
"this is a strange occurrence—a very strange occurrence,
indeed. Miss Von Taer, do you wish—"
"No!" exclaimed Diana, haughtily. "I accuse
no one. It is enough that an accident has restored
to me the heirloom."
Stiffly she marched back to her own booth,
and the crowd quietly dispersed, leaving only Arthur,
Uncle John and the Major standing to support
Louise and her astonished cousins.
"Why, confound it!" cried the little millionaire,
with a red face, "does the jade mean to insinuate—"
"Not at all, sor," interrupted the Major,
sternly; "her early education has been neglected,
that's all."
"Come dear," pleaded Arthur to Louise; "let
us go home."
"By no means!" announced Beth, positively;
"let us stay where we belong. Why, we're not
half sold out yet!"
CHAPTER X
MISLED
Arthur Weldon met Mershone at a club next
afternoon. "You low scoundrel!" he exclaimed.
"It was your trick to accuse Miss Merrick of a
theft last night."
"Was she accused?" enquired the other,
blandly. "I hadn't heard, really."
"You did it yourself!"
"Dear me!" said Mershone, deliberately lighting
a cigarette.
"You or your precious cousin—you're both
alike," declared Arthur, bitterly. "But you have
given us wisdom, Mershone. We'll see you don't
trick us again."
The young man stared at him, between puffs of
smoke.
"It occurs to me, Weldon, that you're becoming
insolent. It won't do, my boy. Unless you
guard your tongue—"
"Bah! Resent it, if you dare; you coward."
"Coward?"
"Yes. A man who attacks an innocent girl is
a coward. And you've been a coward all your
life, Mershone, for one reason or another. No
one believes in your pretended reform. But I
want to warn you to keep away from Miss Merrick,
hereafter, or I'll take a hand in your punishment
myself."
For a moment the two eyed one another savagely.
They were equally matched in physique;
but Arthur was right, there was no fight in Mershone;
that is, of the knock-down order. He
would fight in his own way, doubtless, and this
made him more dangerous than his antagonist
supposed.
"What right have you, sir, to speak for Miss
Merrick?" he demanded.
"The best right in the world," replied Arthur.
"She is my promised wife."
"Indeed! Since when?"
"That is none of your affair, Mershone. As a
matter of fact, however, that little excitement you
created last night resulted in a perfect understanding
between us."
"I created!"
"You, of course. Miss Merrick does not care
to meet you again. You will do well to avoid
her in the future."
"I don't believe you, Weldon. You're bluffing."
"Am I? Then dare to annoy Miss Merrick
again and I'll soon convince you of my sincerity."
With this parting shot he walked away, leaving
Mershone really at a loss to know whether
he was in earnest or not. To solve the question
he called a taxicab and in a few minutes gave his
card to the Merrick butler with a request to see
Miss Louise.
The man returned with a message that Miss
Merrick was engaged.
"Please tell her it is important," insisted Mershone.
Again the butler departed, and soon returned.
"Any message for Miss Merrick must be conveyed
in writing, sir," he said, "She declines to
see you."
Mershone went away white with anger. We
may credit him with loving Louise as intensely as
a man of his caliber can love anyone. His sudden
dismissal astounded him and made him frantic
with disappointment. Louise's treatment of the
past few days might have warned him, but he
had no intuition of the immediate catastrophe that
had overtaken him. It wasn't his self-pride that
was injured; that had become so battered there
was little of it left; but he had set his whole heart
on winning this girl and felt that he could not
give her up.
Anger toward Weldon was prominent amongst
his emotion. He declared between his set teeth
that if Louise was lost to him she should never
marry Weldon. Not on Diana's account, but for
his own vengeful satisfaction was this resolve
made.
He rode straight to his cousin and told her the
news. The statement that Arthur was engaged
to marry Louise Merrick drove her to a wild anger
no less powerful because she restrained any
appearance of it. Surveying her cousin steadily
through her veiled lashes she asked:
"Is there no way we can prevent this thing?"
Mershone stalked up and down before her like
a caged beast. His eyes were red and wicked; his
lips were pressed tightly together.
"Diana," said he, "I've never wanted anything
in this world as I want that girl. I can't let that
mollycoddle marry her!"
She flushed, and then frowned. It was not
pleasant to hear the man of her choice spoken of
with such contempt, but after all their disappointment
and desires were alike mutual and she could
not break with Charlie at this juncture.
Suddenly he paused and asked:
"Do you still own that country home near East
Orange?"
"Yes; but we never occupy it now. Father does
not care for the place."
"Is it deserted?"
"Practically so. Madame Cerise is there in
charge."
"Old Cerise? I was going to ask you what
had become of that clever female."
"She was too clever, Charlie. She knew too
much of our affairs, and was always prying into
things that did not concern her. So father took
an antipathy to the poor creature, and because
she has served our family for so long sent her
to care for the house at East Orange."
"Pensioned her, eh? Well, this is good news,
Di; perhaps the best news in the world. I believe
it will help clear up the situation. Old Cerise
and I always understood each other."
"Will you explain?" asked Diana, coldly.
"I think not, my fair cousin. I prefer to keep
my own counsel. You made a bad mess of that
little deal last night, and are responsible for the
climax that faces us. Besides, a woman is never
a good conspirator. I know what you want; and
I know what I want. So I'll work this plan alone,
if you please. And I'll win, Di; I'll win as sure
as fate—if you'll help me."
"You ask me to help you and remain in the
dark?"
"Yes; it's better so. Write me a note to Cerise
and tell her to place the house and herself unreservedly
at my disposal."
She stared at him fixedly, and he returned the
look with an evil smile. So they sat in silence a
moment. Then slowly she arose and moved to
her escritoire, drawing a sheet of paper toward
her and beginning to write.
"Is there a telephone at the place?" enquired
Mershone abruptly.
"Yes."
"Then telephone Cerise after I'm gone. That
will make it doubly sure. And give me the number,
too, so I can jot it down. I may need it."
Diana quietly tore up the note.
"The telephone is better," she said. "Being in
the dark, sir, I prefer not to commit myself in
writing."
"You're quite right, Di," he exclaimed, admiringly.
"But for heaven's sake don't forget to
telephone Madame Cerise."
"I won't Charlie. And, see here, keep your
precious plans to yourself, now and always. I
intend to know nothing of what you do."
"I'm merely the cats-paw, eh? Well, never
mind. Is old Cerise to be depended upon, do you
think?"
"Why not?" replied the girl. "Cerise belongs
to the Von Taers—body and soul!"
CHAPTER XI
THE BROWN LIMOUSINE
The second evening of the society Kermess
passed without unusual event and proved very
successful in attracting throngs of fashionable
people to participate in its pleasures.
Louise and her cousins were at their stations
early, and the second installment of Uncle John's
flowers was even more splendid and profuse than
the first. It was not at all difficult to make sales,
and the little money drawer began to bulge with
its generous receipts.
Many a gracious smile or nod or word was
bestowed upon Miss Merrick by the society folk;
for these people had had time to consider the
accusation against her implied by Diana Von
Taer's manner when the pearls were discovered in
the empty flower vase. Being rather impartial
judges—for Diana was not a popular favorite
with her set—they decided it was absurd to suppose
a niece of wealthy old John Merrick would
descend to stealing any one's jewelry. Miss Merrick
might have anything her heart desired with-out
pausing to count the cost, and moreover she
was credited with sufficient common sense to realize
that the Von Taer heirlooms might easily be
recognized anywhere. So a little gossip concerning
the queer incident had turned the tide of opinion
in Louise's favor, and as she was a recent
debutante with a charming personality all vied
to assure her she was held blameless.
A vast coterie of the select hovered about the
flower booth all the evening, and the cousins joyously
realized they had scored one of the distinct
successes of the Kermess. Arthur could not get
very close to Louise this evening; but he enjoyed
her popularity and from his modest retirement was
able to exchange glances with her at intervals,
and these glances assured him he was seldom
absent from her thoughts.
Aside from this, he had the pleasure of glowering
ferociously upon Charlie Mershone, who,
failing to obtain recognition from Miss Merrick,
devoted himself to his cousin Diana, or at least
lounged nonchalantly in the neighborhood of the
Hindoo Booth. Mershone was very quiet. There
was a speculative look upon his features that
denoted an undercurrent of thought.
Diana's face was as expressionless as ever. She
well knew her action of the previous evening had
severed the cordial relations formerly existing
between her and Mr. Merrick's nieces, and determined
to avoid the possibility of a snub by keeping
aloof from them. She greeted whoever approached
her station in her usual gracious and
cultured manner, and refrained from even glancing
toward Louise.
Hedrik Von Taer appeared for an hour this
evening. He quietly expressed his satisfaction
at the complete arrangements of the Kermess,
chatted a moment with his daughter, and then innocently
marched over to the flower booth and
made a liberal purchase from each of the three
girls. Evidently the old gentleman had no inkling
of the incident of the previous evening, or that
Diana was not still on good terms with the young
ladies she had personally introduced to society.
His action amused many who noted it, and Louise
blushing but thoroughly self-possessed, exchanged
her greetings with Diana's father and thanked
him heartily for his purchase. Mr. Von Taer
stared stonily at Charlie Mershone, but did not
speak to him.
Going out he met John Merrick, and the two
men engaged in conversation most cordially.
"You did the trick all right, Von Taer," said
the little millionaire, "and I'm much obliged, as
you may suppose. You're not ashamed of my
three nieces, I take it?"
"Your nieces, Mr. Merrick, are very charming
young women," was the dignified reply. "They
will grace any station in life to which they may
be called."
When the evening's entertainment came to an
end Arthur Weldon took Louise home in his new
brown limousine, leaving Patsy and her father,
Uncle John and Beth to comfortably fill the Doyle
motor car. Now that the engagement of the
young people had been announced and accepted by
their friends, it seemed very natural for them to
prefer their own society.
"What do you think of it, Uncle John, anyhow?"
asked Patsy, as they rode home.
"It's all right, dear," he announced, with a
sigh. "I hate to see my girls take the matrimonial
dive, but I guess they've got to come to it, sooner
or later."
"Later, for me," laughed Patsy.
"As for young Weldon," continued Mr. Merrick,
reflectively, "he has some mighty good
points, as I found out long ago. Also he has some
points that need filing down. But I guess he'll
average up with most young men, and Louise
seems to like him. So let's try to encourage 'em
to be happy; eh, my dears?"
"Louise," said Beth, slowly, "is no more perfect
than Arthur. They both have faults which
time may eradicate, and as at present they are
not disposed to be hypercritical they ought to
get along nicely together."
"If 't was me," said the Major, oracularly,
"I'd never marry Weldon."
"He won't propose to you, Daddy dear," returned
Patsy, mischievously; "he prefers Louise."
"I decided long ago," said Uncle John, "that"
I'd never be allowed to pick out the husbands for
my three girls. Husbands are a matter of taste,
I guess, and a girl ought to know what sort she
wants. If she don't, and makes a mistake, that's
her look-out. So you can all choose for yourselves,
when the time comes, and I'll stand by you,
my dears, through thick and thin. If the husband
won't play fair, you can always bet your Uncle
John will."
"Oh, we know, that," said Patsy, simply; and
Beth added: "Of course, Uncle, dear."
Thursday evening, the third and last of the
series, was after all the banner night of the great
Kermess. All the world of society was present
and such wares as remained unsold in the booths
were quickly auctioned off by several fashionable
gentlemen with a talent for such brigandage.
Then, the national dances and songs having been
given and received enthusiastically, a grand ball
wound up the occasion in the merriest possible
way.
Charlie Mershone was much in evidence this
evening, as he had been before; but he took no
active part in the proceedings and refrained from
dancing, his pet amusement. Diana observed that
he made frequent trips downstairs, perhaps to the
hotel offices. No one paid any attention to his
movements, except his cousin, and Miss Von Taer,
watching him intently, decided that underneath
his calm exterior lurked a great deal of suppressed
excitement.
At last the crowd began to disperse. Uncle
John and the Major took Beth and Patsy away
early, as soon as their booth was closed; but
Louise stayed for a final waltz or two with Arthur.
She soon found, however, that the evening's
work and excitement had tired her, and
asked to be taken home.
"I'll go and get the limousine around," said
Arthur. "That new chauffeur is a stupid fellow.
By the time you've managed in this jam to get
your wraps I shall be ready. Come down in the
elevator and I'll meet you at the Thirty-second
street entrance."
As he reached the street a man—an ordinary
servant, to judge from his appearance—ran into
him full tilt, and when they recoiled from the
impact the fellow with a muttered curse raised
his fist and struck young Weldon a powerful blow.
Reeling backward, a natural anger seized Arthur,
who was inclined to be hot-headed, and he also
struck out with his fists, never pausing to consider
that the more dignified act would be to call the
police.
The little spurt of fistcuffs was brief, but it gave
Mershone, who stood in the shadow of the door-way
near by, time to whisper to a police officer,
who promptly seized the disputants and held them
both in a firm grip.
"What's all this?" he demanded, sternly.
"That drunken loafer assaulted me without
cause" gasped Arthur, panting.
"It's a lie!" retorted the man, calmly; "he struck
me first."
"Well, I arrest you both," said the officer.
"Arrest!" cried Arthur, indignantly; "why,
confound it, man, I'm—"
"No talk!" was the stern command. "Come
along and keep quiet."
As if the whole affair had been premeditated
and prearranged a patrol wagon at that instant
backed to the curb and in spite of Arthur Weldon's
loud protests he was thrust inside with his
assailant and at once driven away at a rapid
gait.
At the same moment a brown limousine drew
up quietly before the entrance.
Louise, appearing in the doorway in her opera
cloak, stood hesitating on the steps, peering into
the street for Arthur. A man in livery approached
her.
"This way, please, Miss Merrick," he said.
"Mr. Weldon begs you to be seated in the limousine.
He will join you in a moment."
With this he led the way to the car and held
the door open, while the girl, having no suspicion,
entered and sank back wearily upon the seat.
Then the door abruptly slammed, and the man in
livery leaped to the seat beside the chauffeur and
with a jerk the car darted away.
So sudden and astounding was this denouement
that Louise did not even scream. Indeed, for the
moment her wits were dazed.
And now Charlie Mershone stepped from his
hiding place and with a satirical smile entered the
vestibule and looked at his watch. He found he
had time to show himself again at the Kermess,
for a few moments, before driving to the ferry to
catch the train for East Orange.
Some one touched him on the arm.
"Very pretty, sir, and quite cleverly done," remarked
a quiet voice.
Mershone started and glared at the speaker,
a slender, unassuming man in dark clothes.
"What do you mean, fellow?"
"I've been watching the comedy, sir, and I saw
you were the star actor, although you took care
to keep hidden in the wings. That bruiser who
raised the row took his arrest very easily; I suppose
you've arranged to pay his fine, and he isn't
worried. But the gentleman surely was in hard
luck pounded one minute and pinched the next.
You arranged it very cleverly, indeed."
Charlie was relieved that no mention was made
of the abduction of Louise. Had that incident
escaped notice? He gave the man another sharp
look and turned away; but the gentle touch again
restrained him.
"Not yet, please, Mr. Mershone."
"Who are you?" asked the other, scowling.
"The house detective. It's my business to
watch things. So I noticed you talking to the
police officer; I also noticed the patrol wagon
standing on the opposite side of the street for
nearly an hour—my report on that will amuse
them at headquarters, won't it? And I noticed
you nod to the bruiser, just as your victim came
out."
"Let go of my arm, sir!"
"Do you prefer handcuffs? I arrest you. We'll
run over to the station and explain things."
"Do you know who I am?"
"Perfectly, Mr. Mershone. I believe I ran
you in for less than this, some two years ago.
You gave the name of Ryder, then. Better take
another, to-night."
"If you're the house detective, why do you
mix up in this affair?" enquired Mershone, his
anxiety showing in his tone.
"Your victim was a guest of the house."
"Not at all. He was merely attending the
Kermess."
"That makes him our guest, sir. Are you
ready?"
Mershone glanced around and then lowered
his voice.
"It's all a little joke, my dear fellow," said he,
"and you are liable to spoil everything with your
bungling. Here," drawing; a roll of bills from
his pocket, "don't let us waste any more time.
I'm busy."
The man chuckled and waved aside the bribe.
"You certainly are, sir; you're very busy, just now! But I think the
sergeant over at the station will give you some leisure. And listen, Mr.
Mershone: I've got it in for that policeman you fixed; he's a cheeky
individual and a new man. I'm inclined to think this night's work will
cost him his position. And the patrol, which I never can get when I want
it, seems under your direct management. These things have got to be
explained, and I need your help. Ready, sir?"
Mershone looked grave, but he was not wholly
checkmated. Thank heaven the bungling detective
had missed the departure of Louise altogether.
Charlie's arrest at this critical juncture
was most unfortunate, but need not prove disastrous
to his cleverly-laid plot. He decided it
would be best to go quietly with the "plain-clothes
man."
Weldon had become nearly frantic in his demands
to be released when Mershone was ushered
into the station. He started at seeing his enemy
and began to fear a thousand terrible, indefinite
things, knowing how unscrupulous Mershone was.
But the Waldorf detective, who seemed friendly
with the police sergeant, made a clear, brief statement
of the facts he had observed. Mershone
denied the accusation; the bruiser denied it; the
policeman and the driver of the patrol wagon
likewise stolidly denied it. Indeed, they had quite
another story to tell.
But the sergeant acted on his own judgment.
He locked up Mershone, refusing bail. He suspended
the policeman and the driver, pending investigation.
Then he released Arthur Weldon
on his own recognisance, the young man promising
to call and testify when required.
The house detective and Arthur started back
to the Waldorf together.
"Did you notice a young lady come to the
entrance, soon after I was driven away?" he
asked, anxiously.
"A lady in a rose-colored opera cloak, sir?"
"Yes! yes!"
"Why, she got into a brown limousine and
rode away."
Arthur gave a sigh of relief.
"Thank goodness that chauffeur had a grain
of sense," said he. "I wouldn't have given him
credit for it. Anyway, I'm glad Miss Merrick is
safe."
"Huh!" grunted the detective, stopping short.
"I begin to see this thing in its true light. How
stupid we've been!"
"In what way?" enquired Arthur, uneasily.
"Why did Mershone get you arrested, just
at that moment?"
"Because he hated me, I suppose."
"Tell me, could he have any object in spiriting
away that young lady—in abducting her?" asked
the detective.
"Could he?" cried Arthur, terrified and trembling.
"He had every object known to villainy.
Come to the hotel! Let's hurry, man—let's fly!"
CHAPTER XII
FOGERTY
At the Waldorf Arthur's own limousine was
standing by the curb. The street was nearly deserted.
The last of the Kermess people had gone
home.
Weldon ran to his chauffeur.
"Did you take Miss Merrick home?" he eagerly
enquired.
"Miss Merrick? Why, I haven't seen her, sir,
I thought you'd all forgotten me."
The young man's heart sank. Despair seized
him. The detective was carefully examining the
car.
"They're pretty nearly mates, Mr. Weldon.
as far as the brown color and general appearances
go," he said. "But I'm almost positive the
car that carried the young lady away was of another
make."
"What make was it?"
The man shook his head.
"Can't say, sir. I was mighty stupid, and
that's a fact. But my mind was so full of that
assault and battery case, and the trickery of that
fellow Mershone, that I wasn't looking for anything
else."
"Can you get away?" asked Arthur. "Can you
help me on this case?"
"No, sir; I must remain on duty at the hotel.
But perhaps the young lady is now safe at home,
and we've been borrowing trouble. In case she's
been stolen, however, you'd better see Fogerty."
"Who's Fogerty?"
"Here's his card, sir. He's a private detective,
and may be busy just now, for all I know. But
if you can get Fogerty you've got the best man
in all New York."
Arthur sprang into the seat beside his driver
and hurried post-haste to the Merrick residence.
In a few minutes Mrs. Merrick was in violent
hysterics at the disappearance of her daughter.
Arthur stopped long enough to telephone for a
doctor and then drove to the Doyles. He routed
up Uncle John and the Major, who appeared in
pajamas and bath-robes, and told them the startling
news.
A council of war was straightway held. Uncle
John trembled with nervousness; Arthur was
mentally stupefied; the Major alone was calm.
"In the first place," said he, "what object could
the man have in carrying off Louise?"
Arthur hesitated.
"To prevent our marriage, I suppose," he answered.
"Mershone has an idea he loves Louise.
He made wild love to her until she cut his acquaintance."
"But it won't help him any to separate her from
her friends, or her promised husband," declared
the Major. "Don't worry. We're sure to find
her, sooner or later."
"How? How shall we find her?" cried Uncle
John. "Will he murder her, or what?"
"Why, as for that, John, he's safe locked up
in jail for the present, and unable to murder anyone,"
retorted the Major. "It's probable he meant
to follow Louise, and induce her by fair means
or foul to marry him. But he's harmless enough
for the time being."
"It's not for long, though," said Arthur, fearfully.
"They're liable to let him out in the morning,
for he has powerful friends, scoundrel though
he is. And when he is free—"
"Then he must be shadowed, of course," returned
the Major, nodding wisely. "If it's true
the fellow loves Louise, then he's no intention of
hurting her. So make your minds easy. Wherever
the poor lass has been taken to, she's probably
safe enough."
"But think of her terror—her suffering!" cried
Uncle John, wringing his chubby hands. "Poor
child! It may be his idea to compromise her,
and break her heart!"
"We'll stop all that, John, never fear," promised
the Major. "The first thing to do is to find a
good detective."
"Fogerty!" exclaimed Arthur, searching for
the card.
"Who's Fogerty?"
"I don't know."
"Get the best man possible!" commanded Mr.
Merrick. "Spare no expense; hire a regiment of
detectives, if necessary; I'll—"
"Of course you will," interrupted the Major,
smiling. "But we won't need a regiment. I'm
pretty sure the game is in our hands, from the
very start."
"Fogerty is highly recommended," explained
Arthur, and related what the house detective of the
Waldorf had said.
"Better go at once and hunt him up," suggested
Uncle John. "What time is it?"
"After two o'clock. But I'll go at once."
"Do; and let us hear from you whenever you've
anything to tell us," said the Major.
"Where's Patsy?" asked Arthur.
"Sound asleep. Mind ye, not a word of this to
Patsy till she has to be told. Remember that,
John."
"Well, I'll go," said the young man, and hurried
away.
Q. Fogerty lived on Eleventh street, according
to his card. Arthur drove down town, making
good time. The chauffeur asked surlily if this
was to be "an all-night job," and Arthur savagely
replied that it might take a week. "Can't you see,
Jones, that I'm in great trouble?" he added. "But
you shall be well paid for your extra time."
"All right, sir. That's no more than just,"
said the man. "It's none of my affair, you know,
if a young lady gets stolen."
Arthur was wise enough to restrain his temper
and the temptation to kick Jones out of the limousine.
Five minutes later they paused before a
block of ancient brick dwellings and found Fogerty's
number. A card over the bell bore his name,
and Arthur lit a match and read it. Then he rang
impatiently.
Only silence.
Arthur rang a second time; waited, and rang
again. A panic of fear took possession of him.
At this hour of night it would be well-nigh impossible
to hunt up another detective if Fogerty
failed him. He determined to persist as long as
there was hope. Again he rang.
"Look above, sir," called Jones from his station
in the car.
Arthur stepped back on the stone landing and
looked up. A round spark, as from a cigarette,
was visible at the open window. While he gazed
the spark glowered brighter and illumined a pale,
haggard boy's face, surmounted by tousled locks
of brick colored hair.
"Hi, there!" said Arthur. "Does Mr. Fogerty
live here?"
"He pays the rent," answered a boyish voice,
with a tinge of irony. "What's wanted?"
"Mr. Fogerty is wanted. Is he at home?"
"He is," responded the boy.
"I must see him at once—on important business.
Wake him up, my lad; will you?"
"Wait a minute," said the youth, and left the
window. Presently he opened the front door,
slipped gently out and closed the door behind him.
"Let's sit in your car," he said, in soft, quiet
tones. "We can talk more freely there."
"But I must see Fogerty at once!" protested
Arthur.
"I'm Fogerty."
"Q. Fogerty?"
"Quintus Fogerty—the first and last and only
individual of that name."
Arthur hesitated; he was terribly disappointed.
"Are you a detective?" he enquired.
"By profession."
"But you can't be very old."
The boy laughed.
"I'm no antiquity, sir," said he, "but I've shed
the knickerbockers long ago. Who sent you to
me?"
"Why do you ask?"
"I'm tired. I've been busy twenty-three weeks.
Just finished my case yesterday and need a rest—a
good long rest. But if you want a man I'll
refer you to a friend."
"Gorman, of the Waldorf, sent me to you—and
said you'd help me."
"Oh; that's different. Case urgent, sir?"
"Very. The young lady I'm engaged to marry
was abducted less than three hours ago."
Fogerty lighted another cigarette and the
match showed Arthur that the young face was
deeply lined, while two cold gray eyes stared
blankly into his own.
"Let's sit in your limousine, sir," he repeated.
When they had taken their places behind the
closed doors the boy asked Arthur to tell him
"all about it, and don't forget any details, please."
So Weldon hastily told the events of the evening
and gave a history of Mershone and his relations
with Miss Merrick. The story was not half told
when Fogerty said:
"Tell your man to drive to the police station."
On the way Arthur resumed his rapid recital
and strove to post the young detective as well as
he was able. Fogerty made no remarks, nor did
he ask a single question until Weldon had told
him everything he could think of. Then he made
a few pointed enquiries and presently they had
arrived at the station.
The desk sergeant bowed with great respect to
the youthful detective. By the dim light Arthur
was now able to examine Fogerty for the first
time.
He was small, slim and lean. His face attested
to but eighteen or nineteen years, in spite of its
deep lines and serious expression. Although his
hair was tangled and unkempt Fogerty's clothing
and linen were neat and of good quality. He
wore a Scotch cap and a horseshoe pin in his
cravat.
One might have imagined him to be an errand
boy, a clerk, a chauffeur, a salesman or a house
man. You might have placed him in almost any
middle-class walk in life. Perhaps, thought Arthur,
he might even be a good detective! yet his
personality scarcely indicated it.
"Mershone in, Billy?" the detective asked the
desk sergeant.
"Room 24. Want him?"
"Not now. When is he likely to go?"
"When Parker relieves me. There's been a
reg'lar mob here to get Mershone off. I couldn't
prevent his using the telephone; but I'm a stubborn
duck; eh, Quintus? And now the gentleman
has gone to bed, vowing vengeance."
"You're all right, Billy. We both know Mershone.
Gentleman scoundrel."
"Exactly. Swell society blackleg."
"What name's he docked under?"
"Smith."
"Will Parker let him off with a fine?"
"Yes, or without it. Parker comes on at six."
"Good. I'll take a nap on that bench. Got to
keep the fellow in sight, Billy."
"Go into my room. There's a cot there."
"Thanks, old man; I will. I'm dead tired."
Then Fogerty took Arthur aside.
"Go home and try to sleep," he advised. "Don't worry. The young lady's
safe enough till Mershone goes to her hiding place. When he does, I'll
be there, too, and I'll try to have you with me."
"Do you think you can arrange it alone, Mr.
Fogerty?" asked Arthur, doubtfully. The boy
seemed so very young.
"Better than if I had a hundred to assist me.
Why, this is an easy job, Mr. Weldon. It 'll give
me a fine chance to rest up."
"And you won't lose Mershone?"
"Never. He's mine."
"This is very important to me, sir," continued
Arthur, nervously.
"Yes; and to others. Most of all it's important
to Fogerty. Don't worry, sir."
The young man was forced to go away with
this assurance. He returned home, but not to
sleep. He wondered vaguely if he had been wise
to lean upon so frail a reed as Fogerty seemed to
be; and above all he wondered where poor Louise
was, and if terror and alarm were breaking her
heart.
CHAPTER XIII
DIANA REVOLTS
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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?
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
"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.
"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!"
"Bah! don't be a fool," he observed, calmly
taking a chair.
"Am I the fool?" she exclaimed, turning upon
him fiercely. "Did I calmly perpetrate a deed that
was sure to result in disgrace and defeat?"
"What on earth has happened to upset you?"
he asked, wonderingly. "It strikes me everything
is progressing beautifully."
"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 should know
her whereabouts. Why did they come to me for
such information? Why?" she stamped her foot
for emphasis.
"I suppose," said Charlie Mershone, "they
called up everyone who knows the girl. It would
be natural in case of her disappearance."
"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?"
"Well?"
"He has been patrolling this house since day-break.
He's a detective!"
Charlie whistled.
"What makes you think so, Di? Why on earth
should they suspect you?"
"Why? Because my disreputable cousin
planned the abduction, without consulting me,
and—"
"Oh, come, Di; that's a little too—"
"Because the girl has been carried to the Von
Taer house—my house—in East Orange; because
my own servant is at this moment her jailor,
and—"
"How should they know all this?" interrupted
Mershone, impatiently. "And how do you happen
to know it yourself, Diana?"
"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."
"What did you tell her?"
"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."
Mershone looked grave, and scowled.
"The old hag won't betray us, will she?" he
asked, uneasily.
"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?"
He smiled rather grimly.
"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."
The cold-blooded brutality of this argument
caused even Diana to shudder. She looked at
the young man half fearfully as she asked:
"What is your task?"
"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."
"You'll never succeed!" cried Diana, with conviction.
"Then I'll try other tactics," said he blandly.
"If you do, you monster, I'll expose you,"
warned the girl.
"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."
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.
Diana was astonished. His fierce mood served
to subdue her own. Regarding him curiously for
a time she finally asked:
"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?"
"I have committed no crime," he said stubbornly.
"All's fair in love and war."
"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."
"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."
"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."
"Is there anything suspicious in my calling upon
my cousin—as usual?"
"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."
"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."
She brought a handful of notes from her desk.
"This ends our partnership, Charlie," she said.
"Very well. A woman makes a poor conspirator,
but is invaluable as a banker."
"There will be no more money. This ends
everything between us."
"I thought you were game, Di. But you're as
weak as the ordinary feminine creation."
She did not answer, but stood motionless, a
defiant expression upon her face. He laughed a
little, bowed mockingly, and went away.
CHAPTER XIV
A COOL ENCOUNTER
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
"A detective, I believe," said Mershone, in a
low, matter of fact tone.
"Who? me?" asked Fogerty, lowering the
paper.
"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."
Fogerty smiled. The smile was genuine.
"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."
"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 chef 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?"
"Why should you be under the surveillance of
a detective?" asked Fogerty, slowly.
"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."
"I understand you, sir," said Fogerty, drily.
For some moments Mershone now remained
silent. Then he asked; "What are your instructions
concerning me?"
To his surprise the boy made a simple, frank
admission.
"I'm to see you don't get into more mischief,
sir."
"And how long is this nonsense to continue?"
demanded Mershone, showing a touch of anger
for the first time.
"Depends on yourself, Mr. Mershone; I'm no
judge, myself. I'm so young—and inexperienced."
"Who is your employer?"
"Oh, I'm just sent out by an agency."
"Is it a big paying proposition?" asked Charlie,
eyeing the diffident youth beside him critically, as
if to judge his true caliber.
"Not very big. You see, if I'd been a better
detective you'd never have spotted me so quickly."
"I suppose money counts with you, though, as
it does with everyone else in the world?"
"Of course, sir. Every business is undertaken
to make money."
Mershone drew his chair a little nearer.
"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
you to—er—look after my interests?"
Fogerty was very serious.
"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."
"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.—"
"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."
Something in the tone nettled Mershone.
"But the pay," he suggested.
"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?"
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.
"They will take you off the job, now that I
have discovered your identity," he asserted, with
malicious satisfaction.
"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."
"Why were you so careless?"
"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."
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.
"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?"
Again Fogerty laughed in his cheerful, boyish
way.
"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."
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.
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.
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.
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.
"Listen," he said; "I want your assistance, and
if you're quick and sure there is a pot of money,
waiting for you."
"I need it, Mr. Mershone," replied the man,
grinning.
"There's a detective following me; he's down
the street there—a mere boy--just in front of that
tobacco store. See him?"
"Sure I see him. It's Fogerty."
"His name is Riordan."
"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."
"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."
"It's worth two hundred, Mr. Mershone. It
isn't safe to fool with Fogerty."
"I'll make it two hundred."
"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."
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.
CHAPTER XV
A BEWILDERING EXPERIENCE
When Louise Merrick entered the brown limousine,
which she naturally supposed to belong to
Arthur Weldon, she had not the faintest suspicion
of any evil in her mind. Indeed, the girl was very
happy this especial evening, although tired with
her duties at the Kermess. A climax in her young
life had arrived, and she greeted it joyously, believing
she loved Arthur well enough to become
his wife.
Now that the engagement had been announced
to their immediate circle of friends she felt as
proud and elated as any young girl has a right
to be under the circumstances.
Added to this pleasant event was the social
triumph she and her cousins had enjoyed at the
Kermess, where Louise especially had met with
rare favor. The fashionable world had united in
being most kind and considerate to the dainty,
attractive young debutante, and only Diana had
seemed to slight her. This was not surprising in
view of the fact that Diana evidently wanted
Arthur for herself, and there was some satisfaction
in winning a lover who was elsewhere in
prime demand. In addition to all this the little
dance that concluded the evening's entertainment
had been quite delightful, and all things conspired
to put Louise in a very contented frame of mind.
Still fluttering with the innocent excitements
of the hour the girl went to join Arthur without
a fear of impending misfortune. She did not
think of Charlie Mershone at all. He had been
annoying and impertinent, and she had rebuked
him and sent him away, cutting him out of her
life altogether. Perhaps she ought to have remembered
that she had mildly flirted with Diana's
cousin and given him opportunity for the impassioned
speeches she resented; but Louise had a
girlish idea that there was no harm in flirting,
considering it a feminine license. She saw young
Mershone at the Kermess that evening paying
indifferent attentions to other women and ignoring
her, and was sincerely glad to have done with
him for good and all.
She obeyed readily the man who asked her to
be seated in the limousine. Arthur would be with
her in a minute, he said. When the door closed
and the car started she had an impulse to cry out
but next moment controlled it and imagined they
were to pick up Mr. Weldon on some corner.
On and on they rolled, and still no evidence of
the owner of the limousine. What could it mean,
Louise began to wonder. Had something happened
to Arthur, so that he had been forced to
send her home alone? As the disquieting thought
came she tried to speak with the chauffeur, but
could not find the tube. The car was whirling
along rapidly; the night seemed very dark, only a
few lights twinkled here and there outside.
Suddenly the speed slackened. There was a
momentary pause, and then the machine slowly
rolled upon a wooden platform. A bell clanged,
there was a whistle and the sound of revolving
water-wheels. Louise decided they must be upon
a ferry-boat, and became alarmed for the first
time.
The man in livery now opened the door, as if
to reassure her.
"Where are we? Where is Mr. Weldon?" enquired
the girl, almost hysterically.
"He is on the boat, miss, and will be with you
shortly now," replied the man, very respectfully.
"Mr. Weldon is very sorry to have annoyed you,
Miss Merrick, but says he will soon explain everything,
so that you will understand why he left
you."
With this he quietly closed the door again, although
Louise was eager to ask a dozen more
questions. Prominent was the query why they
should be on a ferry-boat instead of going directly
home. She knew the hour must be late.
But while these questions were revolving in her
mind she still suspected no plot against her liberty.
She must perforce wait for Arthur to explain
his queer conduct; so she sat quietly enough
in her place awaiting his coming, while the ferry
puffed steadily across the river to the Jersey shore.
The stopping of the boat aroused Louise from
her reflections. Arthur not here yet? Voices
were calling outside; vehicles were noisily leaving
their positions on the boat to clatter across the
platforms. But there was no sign of Arthur.
Again Louise tried to find the speaking tube.
Then she made an endeavor to open the door,
although just then the car started with a jerk
that flung her back against the cushions.
The knowledge that she had been grossly deceived
by her conductor at last had the effect of
arousing the girl to a sense of her danger. Something
must be wrong. Something was decidedly
wrong, and fear crept into her heart. She
pounded on the glass windows with all her
strength, and shouted as loudly as she could, but
all to no avail.
Swiftly the limousine whirled over the dusky
road and either her voice could not be heard
through the glass cage in which she was confined
or there was no one near who was willing to hear
or to rescue her.
She now realized how wrong she had been to
sit idly during the trip across the ferry, where a
score of passengers would gladly have assisted
her. How cunning her captors had been to lull
her fears during that critical period! Now, alas,
it was too late to cry out, and she had no idea
where she was being taken or the reason of her
going.
Presently it occurred to her that this was not
Arthur's limousine at all. There was no speaking
tube for one thing. She leaned forward and
felt for the leathern pocket in which she kept a
veil and her street gloves. No pocket of any
sort was to be found.
An unreasoning terror now possessed her. She
knew not what to fear, yet feared everything.
She made another attempt to cry aloud for help
and then fell back unconscious on the cushions.
How long she lay in the faint she did not know.
When she recovered the limousine was still
rattling forward at a brisk gait but bumping
over ruts in a manner that indicated a country
road.
Through the curtains she could see little but
the black night, although there was a glow ahead
cast by the searchlights of the car. Louise was
weak and unnerved. She had no energy to find
a way to combat her fate, if such a way were
possible. A dim thought of smashing a window
and hurling herself through it gave her only a
shudder of repulsion. She lacked strength for
such a desperate attempt.
On, on, on. Would the dreary journey never
end? How long must she sit and suffer before
she could know her fate, or at least find some explanation
of the dreadful mystery of this wild
midnight ride?
At last, when she had settled down to dull despair,
the car came to a paved road and began
to move more slowly. It even stopped once or
twice, as if the driver was not sure of his way.
But they kept moving, nevertheless, and before
long entered a driveway. There was another
stop now, and a long wait.
Louise lay dismally back upon the cushions,
sobbing hysterically into her dripping handkerchief.
The door of her prison at last opened and
a light shone in upon her.
"Here we are, miss," said the man in uniform,
still in quiet, respectful tones. "Shall I assist
you to alight?"
She started up eagerly, her courage returning
with a bound. Stepping unassisted to the ground
she looked around her in bewilderment.
The car stood before the entrance to a modest
country house. There was a light in the hall and
another upon the broad porch. Around the house
a mass of trees and shrubbery loomed dark and
forbidding.
"Where am I?" demanded Louise, drawing
back haughtily as the man extended a hand toward
her.
"At your destination, miss," was the answer.
"Will you please enter?"
"No! Not until I have an explanation of this—this—singular,
high-handed proceeding," she replied,
firmly.
Then she glanced at the house. The hall door
had opened and a woman stood peering anxiously
at the scene outside.
With sudden resolve Louise sprang up the
steps and approached her. Any woman, she felt,
in this emergency, was a welcome refuge.
"Who are you?" she asked eagerly, "and why
have I been brought here?"
"Mademoiselle will come inside, please," said
the woman, with a foreign accent. "It is cold in
the night air, N'est-ce-pas?"
She turned to lead the way inside. While
Louise hesitated to follow the limousine started
with a roar from its cylinders and disappeared
down the driveway, the two men going with it.
The absence of the lamps rendered the darkness
around the solitary house rather uncanny. An intense
stillness prevailed except for the diminishing
rattle of the receding motor car. In the hall was
a light and a woman.
Louise went in.
CHAPTER XVI
MADAME CERISE, CUSTODIAN
The woman closed the hall door and locked it.
Then she led the way to a long, dim drawing-room
in which a grate fire was smouldering. A
stand lamp of antique pattern but dimly illuminated
the place, which seemed well furnished in
an old fashioned way.
"Will not you remove your wraps, Mees—Mees—I
do not know ma'm'selle's name."
"What is your own name?" asked Louise,
coming closer to gaze earnestly into the other's
face.
"I am called Madame Cerise, if it please you."
Her voice, while softened to an extent by the
French accent, was nevertheless harsh and emotionless.
She spoke as an automaton, slowly, and
pausing to choose her words. The woman was
of medium size, slim and straight in spite of
many years. Her skin resembled brown parchment;
her eyes were small, black and beady; her
nose somewhat fleshy and her lips red and full
as those of a young girl. The age of Madame
Cerise might be anywhere between fifty and seventy;
assuredly she had long been a stranger to
youth, although her dark hair was but slightly
streaked with gray. She wore a somber-hued
gown and a maid's jaunty apron and cap.
Louise inspected her closely, longing to find
a friend and protector in this curious and
strange woman. Her eyes were moist and pleading—an
appeal hard to resist. But Madame
Cerise returned her scrutiny with a wholly impassive
expression.
"You are a French maid?" asked Louise, softly.
"A housekeeper, ma'm'selle. For a time, a
caretaker."
"Ah, I understand. Are your employers
asleep?"
"I cannot say, ma'm'seile. They are not here."
"You are alone in this house?"
"Alone with you, ma'm'seile."
Louise had a sudden access of alarm.
"And why am I here?" she cried, wringing
her hands pitifully.
"Ah, who can tell that?" returned the woman,
composedly. "Not Cerise, indeed. Cerise is
told nothing—except what is required of her. I
but obey my orders."
Louise turned quickly, at this.
"What are your orders, then?" she asked.
"To attend ma'm'selle with my best skill, to
give her every comfort and care, to—"
"Yes—yes!"
"To keep her safely until she is called for.
That is all."
The girl drew a long breath.
"Who will call for me, then?"
"I am not inform, ma'm'selle."
"And I am a prisoner in this house?"
"Ma'm'selle may call it so, if it please her. But
reflect; there is no place else to go. It is bleak
weather, the winter soon comes. And here I
can make you the comforts you need."
Louise pondered this speech, which did not deceive
her. While still perplexed as to her abduction,
with no comprehension why she should
have been seized in such a summary manner and
spirited to this lonely, out-of-the-way place, she
realized she was in no immediate danger. Her
weariness returned tenfold, and she staggered
and caught the back of a chair for support.
The old woman observed this.
"Ma'm'selle is tired," said she. "See; it is past
four by the clock, and you must be much fatigue
by the ride and the nervous strain."
"I—I'm completely exhausted," murmured
Louise, drooping her head wearily. The next
moment she ran and placed her hands on Madame
Cerise's shoulders, peering into the round, beady
eyes with tender pleading as she continued: "I
don't know why I have been stolen away from my
home and friends; I don't know why this dreadful
thing has happened to me; I only know that I
am worn out and need rest. Will you take care
of me, Madame Cerise? Will you watch over me
while I sleep and guard me from all harm? I—I
haven't any mother to lean on now, you know;
I haven't any friend at all—but you!"
The grim features never relaxed a muscle; but
a softer look came into the dark eyes and the
woman's voice took on a faint tinge of compassion
as she answered:
"Nothing can harm ma'm'selle. Have no fear,
ma chere. I will take care of you; I will watch.
Allons! it is my duty; it is also my pleasure."
"Are there no—no men in the house—none at
all?" enquired the girl, peering into the surrounding
gloom nervously.
"There is no person at all in the house, but you
and I."
"And you will admit no one?"
The woman hesitated.
"Not to your apartment," she said firmly. "I
promise it."
Louise gave a long, fluttering sigh. Somehow,
she felt that she could rely upon this promise.
"Then, if you please, Madame Cerise, I'd like
to go to bed," she said.
The woman took the lamp and led the way upstairs,
entering a large, airy chamber in which a
fire burned brightly in the grate. The furniture
here was dainty and feminine. In an alcove stood
a snowy bed, the covers invitingly turned down.
Madame Cerise set the lamp upon a table and
without a word turned to assist Louise. The
beautiful Kermess costume, elaborately embroidered
with roses, which the girl still wore, evidently
won the Frenchwoman's approval. She
unhooked and removed it carefully and hung it
in a closet. Very dextrous were her motions as
she took down the girl's pretty hair and braided
it for the night. A dainty robe de nuit was provided.
"It is my own," she said simply. "Ma'm'selle
is not prepared."
"But there must be young ladies in your
family," remarked Louise, thoughtfully, for in
spite of the stupor she felt from want of sleep the
novelty of her position kept her alert in a way.
It is true she was too tired and bewildered to
think clearly, but slight details were impressing
themselves upon her dimly. "This room, for instance—"
"Of course, ma chere, a young lady has lived
here. She has left some odd pieces of wardrobe
behind her, at times, in going away. When you
waken we will try to find a house-dress to replace
your evening-gown. Will ma'm'selle indulge in
the bath before retiring?"
"Not to-night, Madame Cerise. I'm too tired
for anything but—sleep!"
Indeed, she had no sooner crawled into the enticing
bed than she sank into unconscious forgetfulness.
This was to an extent fortunate. Louise
possessed one of those dispositions cheery and
equable under ordinary circumstances, but easily
crushed into apathy by any sudden adversity. She
would not suffer so much as a more excitable and
nervous girl might do under similar circumstances.
Her sleep, following the severe strain of the
night's adventure, did little to refresh her. She
awoke in broad daylight to hear a cold wind
whistling shrilly outside and raindrops beating
against the panes.
Madame Cerise had not slept much during the
night. For an hour after Louise retired she sat
in her room in deep thought. Then she went to
the telephone and notwithstanding the late hour
called up Diana, who had a branch telephone on a
table at her bedside.
Miss Von Taer was not asleep. She had had an
exciting night herself. She answered the old
caretaker readily and it did not surprise her to
learn that the missing girl had been taken to the
East Orange house by the orders of Charlie Mershone.
She enquired how Louise had accepted
the situation forced upon her, and was shocked
and rendered uncomfortable by the too plainly
worded protest of the old Frenchwoman. Madame
Cerise did not hesitate to denounce the abduction
as a heartless crime, and in her communication
with Diana swore she would protect the
innocent girl from harm at the hands of Mershone
or anyone else.
"I have ever to your family been loyal and
true, Ma'm'selle Diana," said she, "but I will not
become the instrument of an abominable crime
at your command or that of your wicked cousin.
I will keep the girl here in safety, if it is your
wish; but she will be safe, indeed, as long as
Cerise guards her."
"That's right, Madame," stammered Diana,
hardly knowing at the moment what to say. "Be
discreet and silent until you hear from me again;
guard the girl carefully and see that she is not
too unhappy; but for heaven's sake keep Charlie's
secret until he sees fit to restore Miss Merrick to
her friends. No crime is contemplated; I would
not allow such a thing, as you know. Yet it is
none of my affair whatever. My cousin has compromised
me by taking the girl to my house, and
no knowledge of the abduction must get abroad
if we can help it. Do you understand me?"
"No," was the reply. "The safest way for us
all is to send Miss Merrick away."
"That will be done as soon as possible."
With this the old Frenchwoman was forced to
be content, and she did not suspect that her report
had made Miss Von Taer nearly frantic with
fear—not for Louise but for her own precious
reputation. Accustomed to obey the family she
had served for so many years, Madame Cerise
hesitated to follow her natural impulse to set the
poor young lady free and assist her to return to
her friends. So she compromised with her conscience—a
thing she was not credited with possessing—by
resolving to make the imprisonment
of the "pauvre fille" as happy as possible.
Scarcely had Louise opened her eyes the following
morning when the old woman entered her
chamber, unlocking the door from the outside to
secure admission.
She first rebuilt the fire, and when it was
crackling cheerfully she prepared a bath and
brought an armful of clothing which she laid out
for inspection over the back of a sofa. She produced
lingerie, too, and Louise lay cuddled up in
the bedclothes and watched her keeper thoughtfully
until the atmosphere of the room was sufficiently
warmed.
"I'll get up, now," she said, quietly.
Madame Cerise was assuredly a skilled lady's
maid. She bathed the girl, wrapped her in an
ample kimono and then seated her before the
dresser and arranged her coiffure with dextrous
skill.
During this time Louise talked. She had decided
her only chance of escape lay in conciliating
this stern-faced woman, and she began by relating
her entire history, including her love affair with
Arthur Weldon, Diana Von Taer's attempt to
rob her of her lover, and the part that Charlie
Mershone had taken in the affair.
Madame Cerise listened, but said nothing.
"And now," continued the girl, "tell me who
you think could be so wicked and cruel as to carry
me away from my home and friends? I cannot
decide myself. You have more experience and
more shrewdness, can't you tell me, Madame
Cerise?"
The woman muttered inaudibly.
"Mr. Mershone might be an enemy, because
I laughed at his love-making," continued Louise,
musingly. "Would a man who loved a girl try
to injure her? But perhaps his love has turned
to hate. Anyhow, I can think of no one else who
would do such a thing, or of any reason why
Charlie Mershone should do it."
Madame Cerise merely grunted. She was
brushing the soft hair with gentle care.
"What could a man gain by stealing a girl? If
it was Mr. Mershone, does he imagine I could
ever forget Arthur? Or cease to love him? Or
that Arthur would forget me while I am away?
Perhaps it's Diana, and she wants to get rid of
me so she can coax Arthur back to her side. But
that's nonsense; isn't it, Madame Cerise? No
girl—not even Diana Von Taer—would dare to
act in such a high-handed manner toward her
rival. Did you ever hear of Miss Von Taer?
She's quite a society belle. Have you ever seen
her, Madame Cerise?"
The woman vouchsafed no reply to this direct
enquiry, but busied herself dressing the girl's hair.
Louise casually turned over the silver-mounted
hand mirror she was holding and gave a sudden
start. A monogram was engraved upon the
metal: "D.v.T." She gazed at the mark fixedly
and then picked up a brush that the Frenchwoman
laid down. Yes, the same monogram appeared
upon the brush.
The sharp eyes of Cerise had noted these movements.
She was a little dismayed but not startled
when Louise said, slowly: "'D.v.T.' stands
for Diana Von Taer. And it isn't likely to stand
for anything else. I think the mystery is explained,
now, and my worst fears are realized.
Tell me, Madame, is this Diana Von Taer's
house?"
Her eyes shone with anger and round red
patches suddenly appeared upon her pallid cheeks.
Madame Cerise drew a long breath.
"It used to be," was her quiet answer. "It
was left her by her grandmother; but Mr. Von
Taer did not like the place and they have not been
here lately—not for years. Miss Von Taer informed
me, some time ago, that she had transferred
the property to another."
"To her cousin—Mr. Mershone?" asked Louise
quickly.
"That may be the name; I cannot remember,"
was the evasive reply.
"But you must know him, as he is Diana's
cousin," retorted Louise. "Why will you try to
deceive me? Am I not helpless enough already,
and do you wish to make me still more miserable?"
"I have seen Mr. Mershone when he was a boy,
many times. He was not the favorite with Ma'm'selle
Diana, nor with Monsieur Von Taer. For
myself, I hated him."
There was decided emphasis to the last sentence.
Louise believed her and felt a little relieved.
From the mélange of apparel a modest outfit
was obtained to clothe the girl with decency and
comfort, if not in the prevailing style. The fit left
much to be desired, yet Louise did not complain,
as weightier matters were now occupying her
mind.
The toilet completed, Madame Cerise disappeared
to get a tray containing a good breakfast.
She seemed exceedingly attentive.
"If you will give me the proper directions I will
start for home at once," announced Louise, with
firm resolve, while eating her egg and toast.
"I am unable to give you directions, and I cannot
let you go, ma'm'selle," was the equally firm
reply. "The day is much too disagreeable to venture
out in, unless one has proper conveyance.
Here, alas, no conveyance may be had."
Louise tried other tactics.
"I have no money, but several valuable jewels,"
she said, meaningly. "I am quite sure they will
obtain for me a conveyance."
"You are wrong, ma'm'selle; there is no conveyance
to be had!" persisted the old woman,
more sternly.
"Then I shall walk."
"It is impossible."
"Where is this place situated? How far is it
from New York? How near am I to a street-car,
or to a train?"
"I cannot tell you."
"But this is absurd!" cried Louise. "You cannot
deceive me for long. I know this is Diana
Von Taer's house, and I shall hold Diana Von
Taer responsible for this enforced imprisonment."
"That," said Madame Cerise, coldly, "is a matter
of indifference to me. But ma'm'selle must
understand one thing, she must not leave this
house."
"Oh, indeed!"
"At least, until the weather moderates," added
the woman, more mildly.
She picked up the tray, went to the door and
passed out. Louise heard the key click in the
lock.
CHAPTER XVII
THE MYSTERY DEEPENS
Uncle John was both astounded and indignant
that so bold and unlawful an act as the abduction
of his own niece could have been perpetrated in
the heart of New York and directly under the
eyes of the police. Urged by the Major, Mr.
Merrick was at first inclined to allow Arthur Weldon
to prosecute the affair and undertake the recovery
of the girl, being assured this would easily
be accomplished and conceding the fact that no
one had a stronger interest in solving the mystery
of Louise's disappearance than young Weldon.
But when midday arrived and no trace of the
young girl had yet been obtained the little millionaire
assumed an important and decisive air and
hurried down town to "take a hand in the game"
himself.
After a long interview with the Chief of Detectives,
Mr. Merrick said impressively:
"Now, understand, sir; not a hint of this to the
newspaper folks. I won't have any scandal attached
to the poor child if I can help it. Set your
whole force to work—at once!—but impress them
with the need of secrecy. My offer is fair and
square. I'll give a reward of ten thousand dollars
if Miss Merrick is discovered within twenty-four
hours; nine thousand if she's found during
the next twenty-four hours; and so on, deducting
a thousand for each day of delay. That's for the
officer who finds her. For yourself, sir, I intend
to express my gratitude as liberally as the service
will allow me to. Is this all clear and above-board?"
"It is perfectly clear, Mr. Merrick."
"The child must be found—and found blamed
quick, too! Great Caesar! Can a simple affair
like this baffle your splendid metropolitan force?"
"Not for long, Mr. Merrick, believe me."
But this assurance proved optimistic. Day by
day crept by without a clew to the missing girl
being discovered; without development of any
sort. The Inspector informed Mr. Merrick that
"it began to look like a mystery."
Arthur, even after several sleepless nights, still
retained his courage.
"I'm on the right track, sir," he told Uncle
John. "The delay is annoying, but not at all dangerous.
So long as Fogerty holds fast to Mershone
Louise is safe, wherever she may be."
"Mershone may have nothing to do with the
case."
"I'm positive he has."
"And Louise can't be safe while she's a prisoner,
and in the hands of strangers. I want the girl
home! Then I'll know she's safe."
"I want her home, too, sir. But all your men
are unable to find her, it seems. They can't even
discover in what direction she was taken, or how.
The brown limousine seems to be no due at all."
"Of course not. There are a thousand brown
limousines in New York."
"Do you imagine she's still somewhere in the
city, sir?" enquired Arthur.
"That's my theory," replied Uncle John. "She
must be somewhere in the city. You see it would
be almost impossible to get her out of town without
discovery. But I'll admit this detective force
is the finest aggregation of incompetents I've ever
known—and I don't believe your precious Fogerty
is any better, either."
Of course Beth and Patsy had to be told of
their cousin's disappearance as soon as the first
endeavor to trace her proved a failure. Patsy
went at once to Mrs. Merrick and devoted herself
to comforting the poor woman as well as she
could.
Beth frowned at the news and then sat down
to carefully think out the problem. In an hour
she had logically concluded that Diana Von Taer
was the proper person to appeal to. If anyone
knew where Louise was, it was Diana. That same
afternoon she drove to the Von Taer residence
and demanded an interview.
Diana was at that moment in a highly nervous
state. She had at times during her career
been calculating and unscrupulous, but never before
had she deserved the accusation of being
malicious and wicked. She had come to reproach
herself bitterly for having weakly connived at the
desperate act of Charlie Mershone, and her good
sense assured her the result would be disastrous
to all concerned in it. Contempt for herself and
contempt for her cousin mingled with well-defined
fears for her cherished reputation, and so
it was that Miss Von Taer had almost decided
to telephone Madame Cerise and order her to
escort Louise Merrick to her own home when
Beth's card came up with a curt demand for a personal
interview.
The natures of these two girls had never harmonized
in the slightest degree. Beth's presence
nerved Diana to a spirit of antagonism that
quickly destroyed her repentant mood. As she
confronted her visitor her demeanor was cold and
suspicious. There was a challenge and an accusation
in Beth's eyes that conveyed a distinct
warning, which Miss Von Taer quickly noted and
angrily resented—perhaps because she knew it
was deserved.
It would have been easy to tell Beth De Graf
where her cousin Louise was, and at the same time
to assure her that Diana was blameless in the
affair; but she could not endure to give her antagonist
this satisfaction.
Beth began the interview by saying: "What
have you done with Louise Merrick?" That was,
of course, equal to a declaration of war.
Diana was sneering and scornful. Thoroughly
on guard, she permitted no compromising word
or admission to escape her. Really, she knew
nothing of Louise Merrick, having unfortunately
neglected to examine her antecedents and personal
characteristics before undertaking her acquaintance.
One is so likely to blunder through
excess of good nature. She had supposed a niece
of Mr. John Merrick would be of the right sort;
but the age is peculiar, and one cannot be too cautious
in choosing associates. If Miss Merrick
had run away from her home and friends, Miss
Von Taer was in no way responsible for the
escapade. And now, if Miss De Graf had nothing
further to say, more important matters demanded
Diana's time.
Beth was furious with anger at this baiting.
Without abandoning a jot her suspicions she realized
she was powerless to prove her case at this
time. With a few bitter and cutting remarks—
made, she afterward said, in "self-defense"—she
retreated as gracefully as possible and drove home.
An hour later she suggested to Uncle John
that he have a detective placed where Diana's
movements could be watched; but that had already
been attended to by both Mr. Merrick and Mr.
Fogerty. Uncle John could hardly credit Diana's
complicity in this affair. The young lady's social
position was so high, her family so eminently respectable,
her motive in harming Louise so inconceivable,
that he hesitated to believe her guilty,
even indirectly. As for her cousin, he did not
know what to think, as Arthur accused him unreservedly.
It did not seem possible that any man
of birth, breeding and social position could be so
contemptible as to perpetrate an act of this character.
Yet some one had done it, and who had
a greater incentive than Charlie Mershone?
Poor Mrs. Merrick was inconsolable as the
days dragged by. She clung to Patsy with pitiful
entreaties not to be left alone; so Miss Doyle
brought her to her own apartments, where the bereft
woman was shown every consideration. Vain
and selfish though Mrs. Merrick might be, she
was passionately devoted to her only child, and
her fears for the life and safety of Louise were
naturally greatly exaggerated.
The group of anxious relatives and friends canvassed
the subject morning, noon and night, and
the longer the mystery remained unsolved the
more uneasy they all became.
"This, ma'am," said Uncle John, sternly, as he
sat one evening facing Mrs. Merrick, "is the final
result of your foolish ambition to get our girls
into society."
"I can't see it that way, John," wailed the poor
woman. "I've never heard of such a thing happening
in society before, have you?"
"I don't keep posted," he growled. "But everything
was moving smoothly with us before this
confounded social stunt began, as you must
admit."
"I can't understand why the papers are not full
of it," sighed Mrs. Merrick, musingly. "Louise
is so prominent now in the best circles."
"Of course," said the Major, drily; "she's so
prominent, ma'am, that no one can discover her
at all! And it's lucky for us the newspapers know
nothing of the calamity. They'd twist the thing
into so many shapes that not one of us would ever
again dare to look a friend in the eye."
"I'm sure my darling has been murdered!" declared
Mrs. Merrick, weeping miserably. She
made the statement on an average of once to every
five minutes. "Or, if she hasn't been killed yet,
she's sure to be soon. Can't something be done?"
That last appeal was hard to answer. They
had done everything that could be thought of.
And here it was Tuesday. Louise had been missing
for five days.
CHAPTER XVIII
A RIFT IN THE CLOUDS
The Tuesday morning just referred to dawned
cold and wintry. A chill wind blew and for a time
carried isolated snowflakes whirling here and
there. Gradually, as the morning advanced, the
flakes became more numerous, until by nine o'clock
an old fashioned snowstorm had set in that threatened
to last for some time. The frozen ground
was soon covered with a thin white mantle and
the landscape in city and country seemed especially
forbidding.
In spite of these adverse conditions Charlie
Mershone decided to go out for a walk. He felt
much like a prisoner, and his only recreation was
in getting out of the hotel for a daily stroll. Moreover,
he had an object in going abroad to-day.
So he buttoned his overcoat up to his chin and
fearlessly braved the storm. He had come to
wholly disregard the presence of the detective who
shadowed him, and if the youthful Fogerty by
chance addressed him he was rewarded with a
direct snub. This did not seem to disconcert the
boy in the least, and to-day, as usual, when Mershone
walked out Fogerty followed at a respectful
distance. He never appeared to be watching his
man closely, yet never for an instant did Mershone
feel that he had shaken the fellow off.
On this especial morning the detective was
nearly a block in the rear, with the snow driving
furiously into his face, when an automobile suddenly
rolled up to the curb beside him and two
men leaped out and pinioned Fogerty in their
arms. There was no struggle, because there was
no resistance. The captors quickly tossed the detective
into the car, an open one, which again
started and turned into a side street.
Fogerty, seated securely between the two burly
fellows, managed to straighten up and rearrange
his clothing.
"Will you kindly explain this unlawful act,
gentlemen?" he enquired.
The man on the left laughed aloud. He was
the same individual who had attacked Arthur
Weldon, the one who had encountered Mershone
in the street the day before.
"Cold day, ain't it, Fogerty?" he remarked.
"But that makes it all the better for a little auto
ride. We like you, kid, we're fond of you—awful
fond—ain't we, Pete?"
"We surely are," admitted the other.
"So we thought we'd invite you out for a whirl—see?
We'll give you a nice ride, so you can enjoy
the scenery. It's fine out Harlem way, an' the
cold'll make you feel good. Eh, Pete?"
"That's the idea," responded Pete, cheerfully.
"Very kind of you," said the detective, leaning
back comfortably against the cushions and pulling
up his coat collar to shield him from the wind.
"But are you aware that I'm on duty, and that this
will allow my man to slip away from me?"
"Can't help that; but we're awful sorry," was
the reply. "We just wanted company, an' you're
a good fellow, Fogerty, considerin' your age an'
size."
"Thank you," said Fogerty, "You know me,
and I know you. You are Bill Leesome, alias Will
Dutton—usually called Big Bill. You did time a
couple of years ago for knocking out a policeman."
"I'm safe enough now, though," responded Big
Bill. "You're not working on the reg'lar force,
Fogerty, you're only a private burr."
"I am protected, just the same," asserted Fogerty.
"When you knabbed me I was shadowing
Mershone, who has made away with a prominent
society young lady."
"Oh, he has, has he?" chuckled Big Bill, and
his companion laughed so gleefully that he attracted
Fogerty's attention to himself.
"Ah, I suppose you are one of the two men
who lugged the girl off," he remarked; "and I
must congratulate you on having made a good job
of it. Isn't it curious, by the way, that the fellow
who stole and hid this girl should be the innocent
means of revealing her biding place?"
The two men stared at him blankly. The car,
during this conversation, had moved steadily on,
turning this and that corner in a way that might
have confused anyone not perfectly acquainted
with this section of the city.
"What d'ye mean by that talk, Fogerty?" demanded
Big Bill.
"Of course it was Mershone who stole the girl,"
explained the detective, calmly; "we know that.
But Mershone is a clever chap. He knew he was
watched, and so he has never made a movement
to go to his prisoner. But he grew restless
in time, and when he met you, yesterday, fixed up
a deal with you to carry me away, so he could
escape."
Big Bill looked uncomfortable.
"You know a lot, Fogerty," he said, doggedly.
"Yes; I've found that human nature is much
the same the world over," replied the detective.
"Of course I suspected you would undertake to
give Mershone his chance by grabbing me, and
that is exactly what you have done. But, my lads,
what do you suppose I have done in the meantime?"
They both looked their curiosity but said
nothing.
"I've simply used your clever plot to my own
advantage, in order to bring things to a climax,"
continued Fogerty. "While we are joy-riding
here, a half dozen of my men are watching every
move that Mershone makes. I believe he will lead
them straight to the girl; don't you?"
Big Bill growled some words that were not very
choice and then yelled to the chauffeur to stop.
The other man was pale and evidently frightened.
"See here, Fogerty; you make tracks!" was
the sharp command, as the automobile came to a
halt. "You've worked a pretty trick on us, 'cordin'
to your own showin', and we must find Mr.
Mershone before it's too late—if we can."
"Good morning," said Fogerty, alighting.
"Thank you for a pleasant ride—and other
things."
They dashed away and left him standing on
the curb; and after watching them disappear the
detective walked over to a drug store and entered
the telephone booth.
"That you, Hyde?—This is Fogerty."
"Yes, sir. Mr. Mershone has just crossed the
ferry to Jersey. Adams is with him. I'll hear
from him again in a minute: hold the wire."
Fogerty waited. Soon he learned that Mershone
had purchased a ticket for East Orange.
The train would leave in fifteen minutes.
Fogerty decided quickly. After looking at his
watch he rushed out and arrested a passing
taxicab.
"Ready for a quick run—perhaps a long one?"
he asked.
"Ready for anything," declared the man.
The detective jumped in and gave hurried
directions.
"Never mind the speed limit," he said. "No
one will interfere with us. I'm Fogerty."
CHAPTER XIX
POLITIC REPENTANCE
Perhaps no one—not even Mrs. Merrick—was
so unhappy in consequence of the lamentable
crime that had been committed as Diana Von
Taer. Immediately after her interview with Beth
her mood changed, and she would have given
worlds to be free from complicity in the abduction.
Bitterly, indeed, she reproached herself for her
enmity toward the unsuspecting girl, an innocent
victim of Diana's own vain desires and Charles
Mershone's heartless wiles. Repenting her folly
and reasoning out the thing when it was too late,
Diana saw clearly that she had gained no possible
advantage, but had thoughtlessly conspired
to ruin the reputation of an honest, ingenuous girl.
Not long ago she had said that her life was dull,
a stupid round of social functions that bored her
dreadfully. She had hoped by adopting John
Merrick's nieces as her protégées and introducing
them to society to find a novel and pleasurable excitement
that would serve to take her out of her
unfortunate ennui—a condition to which she had
practically been born.
But Diana had never bargained for such excitement
as this; she had never thought to win
self abhorrence by acts of petty malice and callous
cruelties.
Yet so intrenched was she in the conservatism
of her class that she could not at once bring herself
to the point of exposing her own guilt that
she might make amends for what had been done.
She told herself she would rather die than permit
Louise to suffer through her connivance with her
reckless, unprincipled cousin. She realized perfectly
that she ought to fly, without a moment's
delay, to the poor girl's assistance. Yet fear of
exposure, of ridicule, of loss of caste, held her a
helpless prisoner in her own home, where she
paced the floor and moaned and wrung her hands
until she was on the verge of nervous prostration.
If at any time she seemed to acquire sufficient
courage to go to Louise, a glance at the detective
watching the house unnerved her and prevented
her from carrying out her good intentions.
You must not believe that Diana was really
bad; her lifelong training along set lines and practical
seclusion from the everyday world were
largely responsible for her evil impulses. Mischief
is sure to crop up, in one form or another, among
the idle and ambitionless. More daring wickedness
is said to be accomplished by the wealthy and
aimless creatures of our false society than by the
poorer and uneducated classes, wherein criminals
are supposed to thrive. These sins are often unpublished,
although not always undiscovered, but
they are no more venial because they are suppressed
by wealth and power.
Diana Von Taer was a girl who, rightly led,
might have been capable of developing a noble
womanhood; yet the conditions of her limited environment
had induced her to countenance a most
dastardly and despicable act. It speaks well for
the innate goodness of this girl that she at last
actually rebelled and resolved to undo, insofar as
she was able, the wrong that had been accomplished.
For four days she suffered tortures of remorse.
On the morning of the fifth day she firmly decided
to act. Regardless of who might be watching, or
of any unpleasant consequences to herself, she
quietly left the house, unattended, and started
directly for the East Orange mansion.
CHAPTER XX
A TELEPHONE CALL
Still another laggard awoke to action on this
eventful Tuesday morning.
Madame Cerise had been growing more and
more morose and dissatisfied day by day. Her
grievance was very tangible. A young girl had
been brought forcibly to the house and placed in
her care to be treated as a prisoner. From that
time the perpetrators of the deed had left the
woman to her own resources, never communicating
with her in any way.
During a long life of servitude Madame Cerise
had acquiesced in many things that her own conscience
did not approve of, for she considered herself
a mere instrument to be used at will by the
people who employed and paid her. But her enforced
solitude as caretaker of the lonely house
at East Orange had given her ample time to think,
and her views had lately undergone a decided
change.
To become the jailer of a young, pretty and innocent
girl was the most severe trial her faithfulness
to her employers had ever compelled her
to undergo, and the woman deeply resented the
doubtful position in which she had been placed.
However, the chances were that Madame Cerise
might have obeyed her orders to the letter had not
so long a period of waiting ensued. During these
days she was constantly thrown in the society of
Louise, which had a tendency to make her still
more rebellious. The girl clung to Cerise in her
helplessness and despair, and constantly implored
her to set her free. This, indeed, the Frenchwoman
might have done long ago had she not
suspected such an act might cause great embarrassment
to Diana Von Taer, whom she had held
on her knee as an infant and sought to protect
with loyal affection.
It was hard, though, to hear the pitiful appeals
of the imprisoned girl, and to realize how great
was the wrong that was being done her. The old
woman was forced to set her jaws firmly and turn
deaf ears to the pleadings in order not to succumb
to them straightway. Meantime she did her duty
conscientiously. She never left Louise's room
without turning the key in the lock, and she steadfastly
refused the girl permission to wander in
the other rooms of the house. The prison was a
real prison, indeed, but the turnkey sought to alleviate
the prisoner's misery by every means in her
power. She was indefatigable in her service,
keeping the room warm and neat, attending to the
girl's every want and cooking her delicious meals.
While this all tended to Louise's comfort it
had little affect in soothing her misery. Between
periods of weeping she sought to cajole the old
woman to release her, and at times she succumbed
to blank despair. Arthur was always in her mind,
and she wondered why he did not come to rescue
her. Every night she stole softly from her bed
to try the door, hoping Cerise had forgotten to
lock it. She examined her prison by stealth to discover
any possible way of escape.
There were two small windows and one large
one. The latter opened upon the roof of a small
porch, but, there were no way to descend from it
unless one used a frail lattice at one end, which
in summer probably supported a rose or other vine.
Louise shrank intuitively from such a desperate
undertaking. Unless some dreadful crisis occurred
she would never dare trust herself to that
frail support. Yet it seemed the only possible
way of escape.
Time finally wore out the patience of Madame
Cerise, who was unable longer to withstand
Louise's pleadings. She did not indicate by word
or look that her attitude had changed, but she
made a secret resolve to have done with the affair
altogether.
Often in their conversations the girl had mentioned
Arthur Weldon. She had given Cerise his
address and telephone number, and implored her
at least to communicate with him and tell him his
sweetheart was safe, although unhappy. This
had given the old woman the clever idea on which
she finally acted.
By telephoning Mr. Weldon she could give
him the information that would lead to his coming
for Louise, without anyone knowing who it was
that had betrayed the secret. This method commended
itself strongly to her, as it would save her
from any trouble or reproach.
Leaving Louise at breakfast on this Tuesday
morning Madame Cerise went down to the telephone
and was soon in communication with Arthur.
She told him, in a quiet tone, that Miss
Louise Merrick was being secluded in a suburban
house near East Orange, and described the place
so he could easily find it. The young man questioned
her eagerly, but aside from the information
that the girl was well and uninjured she
vouchsafed no further comment.
It was enough, however. Arthur, in wild excitement,
rushed to the rescue.
CHAPTER XXI
THE UNEXPECTED HAPPENS
Madame Cerise, well knowing she had accelerated
the march of events to a two-step, calmly
sat herself down in the little housekeeper's room
off the lower hall and, leaving Louise to her
moody solitude upstairs, awaited the inevitable
developments.
Outside the weather was cold and blustering.
The wind whirled its burden of snowflakes in
every direction with blinding, bewildering impartiality.
It was a bad day to be out, thought the
old Frenchwoman; but a snowstorm was not
likely to deter an anxious lover. She calculated
the time it would take Monsieur Weldon to arrive
at the mansion: if he was prompt and energetic
he could cover the distance in an hour and a
half by train or three hours by motor car. But
he must prepare for the journey, and that would
consume some time; perhaps she need not expect
him within two hours at the earliest.
She read, to pass away the time, selecting a
book from a shelf of well-worn French novels.
Somehow she did not care to face her tearful
prisoner again until she could restore the unhappy
girl to the arms of her true lover. There was still
romance in the soul of Madame Cerise, however
withered her cheeks might be. She was very
glad that at last she had summoned courage to act
according to the dictates of her heart.
Eh? What is this? A rumble of wheels over
the frozen snow caused her to glance at the clock
above the mantel. Not by any possibility could
Monsieur Weldon arrive so soon. Who, then,
could it be?
She sat motionless while the doorbell rang, and
rang again. Nothing must interfere with the
pretty denouement she had so fondly anticipated
when Louise's faithful knight came to her.
But the one who had just now alighted was persistent.
The vehicle had been sent away—she
heard the sound of receding wheels—and the new
arrival wanted to get in. The bell jerked and
jangled unceasingly for a time and then came a
crash against the door, as if a stalwart shoulder
was endeavoring to break it down.
Madame Cerise laid down her book, placed her
pince-nez in the case, and slowly proceeded down
the hall. The door shook with another powerful
impact, a voice cried out demanding admittance.
"Who is it, then?" she called shrilly.
"Open the door, confound you!" was the irritated
reply.
The woman reflected. This was surely young
Mershone's voice. And she had no excuse to
deny him admittance. Quietly she unbolted the
door and allowed it to open an inch while she
peered at the man outside.
"Oh! it is Monsieur Mershone."
"Of course it is," he roared, forcing the door
open and stalking in. "Who in thunder did you
think it was?"
"A thousand pardons, m'sieur," said Cerise. "I
must be cautious; it is your own command. That
you may be protected I deny admittance to all."
"That's all right," said Mershone gruffly, while
he stamped his feet upon the rug and shook the
snow from his clothing. "Haven't you any fire
in this beastly old refrigerator? I'm nearly
frozen. Where's Miss Merrick?"
"She is occupying Ma'm'selle Diana's room, in
the west wing. Will monsieur please to come this
way?"
She led him to her own little room, and so
engrossed were they that neither remembered he
had failed to rebolt the front door.
A good fire burned in the grate of Cerise's cosy
den and Mershone threw off his overcoat and
warmed his hands as he showered questions upon
the old caretaker.
"How is the girl behaving? Tears and
hysterics?"
"At times, m'sieur."
"Takes it hard, eh?"
"She is very unhappy."
"Ever mention a man named Weldon?"
"Often."
"Humph!" He did not like this report. "Has
anyone been here to disturb you, or to make enquiries?"
"No one, m'sieur."
"We're safe enough, I guess. It was a mighty
neat job, Cerise, taken altogether, although the
fools have been watching me night and day.
That's the reason I did not come sooner."
She made no comment. Mershone threw himself
into a chair and stared thoughtfully at the
fire.
"Has Louise—Miss Merrick, you know—mentioned
my name at all?"
"At times."
"In what way?"
"With loathing and contempt."
He scowled at her savagely.
"Do you think she suspects that I carried her
away?"
"She seems to know it absolutely."
He stared at the fire again.
"I've got a queer job on my hands, Cerise, and
I rely on you to help me," said he presently, assuming
a more conciliating manner. "Perhaps
I'm in a box, or a hole, or whatever else you like
to call it, but it's too late too back down now—I
must push ahead and win. You see the case is
this: I love the girl and had her brought here to
keep her from another man. By hook or crook
I'm going to make her my wife. She won't take
kindly to that at first, perhaps, but I'll make her
happy in the end. In one way this delay has
been a good thing. It must have worn her out
and broken her spirits quite a bit; eh?"
"She seems very miserable," conceded the
woman.
"Do you find her hard to manage? Does she
show much temper? In other words, do you suppose
she'll put up a fight?"
Madame Cerise regarded him wonderingly.
"She is a good girl," was her reply. "She
loves with much devotion the man from whom you
have stolen her. I am quite positive she will never
consent to become your wife."
"Oh, you are? Well, I intend she shall marry
me, and that settles it. She's unnerved and miserable
now, and I mean to grind her down till she
hasn't strength to resist me. That sounds hard.
I know; but it's the only way to accomplish my
purpose. After she's my wife I'll be very kind to
her, poor thing, and teach her to love me. A man
can do anything with a woman if he sets about it
the right way. I'm not taking this stand because
I'm cruel, Cerise, but because I'm desperate. All's
fair in love and war, you know, and this is a bit
of both."
He was pacing the floor by this time, his hands
thrust deep in his pockets, an anxious look upon
his face that belied his bombastic words.
The Frenchwoman's expression was impassive.
Her scorn for the wretch before her was tempered
with the knowledge that his cowardly plan was
doomed to defeat. It was she who had checkmated
him, and she was glad. Now and again
her eyes sought the clock, while she silently calculated
the time to elapse before Arthur Weldon
arrived. There would be a pretty scene then, Cerise
would have much enjoyment in witnessing
the encounter.
"Now, then, take me to Louise," commanded
Mershone, suddenly.
She shrank back in dismay.
"Oh, not yet, m'sieur!"
"Why not?"
"The young lady is asleep. She will not waken
for an hour—perhaps two."
"I can't wait. We'll waken her now, and give
her an idea of the change of program."
"But no, m'sieur! It is outrageous. The poor
thing has but now sobbed herself to sleep, after
many bitter hours. Can you not wait a brief hour,
having waited five days?"
"No. Take me to her at once."
As he came toward her the woman drew away.
"I cannot," she said firmly.
"See here, Cerise, I intend to be obeyed. I
won't endure any nonsense at this stage of the
game, believe me," he announced fiercely. "In
order to win, there's just one way to manage this
affair, and I insist upon your following my instructions.
Take me to Louise!"
"I will not!" she returned, the bead-like eyes
glittering as they met his angry gaze.
"Then I'll go alone. Give me the key."
She did not move, nor did she answer him. At
her waist hung a small bunch of household keys
and this he seized with a sudden movement and
jerked loose from its cord.
"You miserable hag!" he muttered, inflamed
with anger at her opposition. "If you propose to
defend this girl and defy me, you'll find I'm able
to crush you as I will her. While I'm gone I expect
you to come to your senses, and decide to
obey me."
With these words he advanced to the door of
the little room and opened it. Just outside stood
Fogerty, smiling genially.
"Glad to meet you again, Mr. Mershone," he
said. "May I come in? Thank you."
While Mershone stood bewildered by this unexpected
apparition the detective entered the
room, closed the door carefully, and putting his
back to it bowed politely to Madame Cerise.
"Pardon this seeming intrusion, ma'am," said
he. "I'm here on a little matter of business, having
a warrant for the arrest of Mr. Charles Connoldy
Mershone."
CHAPTER XXII
GONE
The grim face of Madame Cerise relaxed to allow
a quaint smile to flit across it. She returned
Fogerty's bow with a deep curtsy.
Mershone, after one brief exclamation of dismay,
wrested from him by surprise, threw himself
into the chair again and stared at the fire. For a
few moments there was intense stillness in the
little room.
"How easy it is," said Fogerty, in soft, musing
tones, "to read one's thoughts—under certain circumstances.
You are thinking, Mr. Mershone,
that I'm a boy, and not very strong, while you are
an athlete and can easily overpower me. I have
come at a disagreeable time, and all your plans
depend on your ability to get rid of me. But I've
four good men within call, who are just now
guarding the approaches to this house. They'd
like to come in, I know, because it's very cold and
disagreeable outside; but suppose we allow them
to freeze for a time? Ah, I thought you'd agree
with me, sir—I overheard you say you were about
to visit Miss Merrick, who is confined in a room
upstairs, but I'd like you to postpone that while
we indulge in a little confidential chat together.
You see—"
The door-bell rang violently. Fogerty glanced
at Madame Cerise.
"Will you see who it is?" he asked.
She arose at once and left the room. Mershone
turned quickly.
"What's your price, Fogerty?" he asked,
meaningly.
"For what?"
"For getting out of here—making tracks and
leaving me alone. Every man has his price, and
I'm trapped—I'm willing to pay anything—I'll—"
"Cut it out, sir. You've tried this once before.
I'm not to be bribed."
"Have you really a warrant for my arrest?"
"I've carried it since Friday. It's no use, Mershone,
the game's up and you may as well grin
and bear it."
Mershone was about to reply when the door
opened and Diana Von Taer came in with a swift,
catlike tread and confronted him with flaming
eyes.
"You coward! You low, miserable scoundrel!
How dare you come here to annoy and browbeat
that poor girl?" she cried in clear, cutting accents,
without noticing the presence of Fogerty.
"Oh, shut up, Di, you're in it as deep as I am,"
he retorted, turning away with a flushed face.
"I'm not, sir! Never have I countenanced this
wicked, criminal act," she declared. "I have come
here to-day to save Louise from your wiles and
carry her back to her friends. I dare you, or your
confederates," with a scornful look at the detective,
"to interfere with me in any way." Then
she turned to Cerise and continued: "Where is
Miss Merrick now?"
"In your own room, ma'm'seile."
"Come with me, then."
With a defiant glance at Mershone she turned
haughtily and left the room. Cerise followed
obediently, somewhat astonished at the queer turn
of events.
Left alone with Mershone, Fogerty chuckled
gleefully.
"Why, it seems I wasn't needed, after all," said
he, "and we've both of us taken a lot of trouble
for nothing, Mershone. The chances are Miss
Von Taer would have turned the trick in any
event, don't you think so?"
"No, you don't understand her. She wouldn't
have interfered if she hadn't been scared out,"
growled the other. "She's sacrificed me to save
herself, that's all."
"You may be right about that," admitted Fogerty;
and then he got up to answer the door-bell,
which once more rang violently.
An automobile stood outside, and from it an
excited party trooped into the hallway, disregarding
the cutting wind and blinding snowflakes
that assailed them as they passed in. There was
Arthur Weldon and Uncle John, Patricia and
Beth; and all, as they saw the detective, cried
with one voice:
"Where's Louise?"
Fogerty had just managed to close the door
against the wintry blast when the answer came
from the stairway just above:
"She is gone!"
The voice was shrill and despairing, and looking
up they saw Diana standing dramatically
posed upon the landing, her hands clasped over
her heart and a look of fear upon her face. Over
her shoulder the startled black eyes of old Cerise
peered down upon the group below.
The newcomers were evidently bewildered by
this reception. They had come to rescue Louise,
whom they imagined confined in a lonely deserted
villa with no companion other than the
woman who guarded her. Arthur's own detective
opened the door to them and Diana Von Taer,
whom they certainly did not expect to meet here,
confronted them with the thrilling statement that
Louise had gone.
Arthur was the first to recover his wits.
"Gone!" he repeated; "gone where?"
"She had escaped—run away!" explained
Diana, in real distress.
"When?" asked Uncle John.
"Just now. Within an hour, wasn't it, Cerise?"
"At ten o'clock I left her, now she is gone,"
said the old woman, who appeared as greatly agitated
as her mistress.
"Good gracious! you don't mean to say she's
left the house in this storm?" exclaimed Patsy,
aghast at the very thought.
"What shall we do? What can we do?" demanded
Beth, eagerly.
Fogerty started up the stairs. Cerise turned
to show him the way, and the others followed in
an awed group.
The key was in the lock of the door to the
missing girl's room, but the door itself now stood
ajar. Fogerty entered, cast a sharp look around
and walked straight to the window. As the others
came in, glancing curiously about them and noting
the still smouldering fire and the evidences
of recent occupation, the detective unlatched the
French window and stepped out into the snow
that covered the roof of the little porch below.
Arthur sprang out beside him, leaving the rest to
shiver in the cold blast that rushed in upon them
from the open window.
Fogerty, on his knees, scanned the snow carefully,
and although Weldon could discover no
sign of a footprint the young detective nodded his
head sagaciously and slowly made his way to the
trellis at the end. Here it was plain that the accumulation
of snow had recently been brushed
away from the frail framework.
"It was strong enough to hold her, though," declared
Fogerty, looking over the edge of the roof.
"I'll descend the same way, sir. Go back by the
stairs and meet me below."
He grasped the lattice and began cautiously
to lower himself to the ground, and Arthur turned
to rejoin his friends in the room.
"That is the way she escaped, without doubt,"
he said to them. "Poor child, she had no idea
we were about to rescue her, and her long confinement
had made her desperate."
"Did she have a cloak, or any warm clothes?"
asked Beth. Madame Cerise hurriedly examined
the wardrobe in the closets.
"Yes, ma'm'selle; she has taken a thick coat
and a knit scarf," she answered. But I am sure
she had no gloves, and her shoes were very thin."
"How long do you think she has been gone?"
Patsy enquired.
"Not more than an hour. I was talking with
Mr. Mershone, and—"
"Mershone! Is he here?" demanded Arthur.
"He is in my room downstairs—or was when
you came," said the woman.
"That accounts for her sudden flight," declared
the young man, bitterly. "She doubtless heard
his voice and in a sudden panic decided to fly.
Did Mershone see her?" he asked.
"No, m'sieur," replied Cerise.
With one accord they descended to the lower
hall and the caretaker led the way to her room.
To their surprise they found Mershone still seated
in the chair by the fire, his hands clasped behind
his head, a cigarette between his lips.
"Here is another crime for you to account for!"
cried Arthur, advancing upon him angrily. "You
have driven Louise to her death!"
Mershone raised one hand in mild protest.
"Don't waste time cursing me," he said. "Try
to find Louise before it is too late."
The reproach seemed justified. Arthur paused
and turning to Mr. Merrick said:
"He is right. I'll go help Fogerty, and you
must stay here and look after the girls until we
return."
As he went out he passed Diana without a look.
She sat in a corner of the room sobbing miserably.
Beth was thoughtful and quiet, Patsy nervous and
indignant. Uncle John was apparently crushed
by the disaster that had overtaken them. Mershone's
suggestion that Louise might perish in the
storm was no idle one; the girl was not only frail
and delicate but worn out with her long imprisonment
and its anxieties. They all realized this.
"I believe," said Mershone, rising abruptly,
"I'll go and join the search. Fogerty has arrested
me, but you needn't worry about my trying
to escape. I don't care what becomes of me, now,
and I'm going straight to join the detective."
They allowed him to go without protest, and
he buttoned his coat and set out in the storm to
find the others. Fogerty and Arthur were by
this time in the lane back of the grounds, where
the detective was advancing slowly with his eyes
fixed on the ground.
"The tracks are faint, but easily followed,"
he was saying, "The high heels of her shoes leave
a distinct mark."
When Mershone joined them Arthur scowled
at the fellow but said nothing. Fogerty merely
smiled.
From the lane the tracks, already nearly obliterated
by the fast falling snow, wandered along
nearly a quarter of a mile to a crossroads, where
they became wholly lost.
Fogerty looked up and down the roads and
shook his head with a puzzled expression.
"We've surely traced her so far," said he, "but
now we must guess at her further direction.
You'll notice this track of a wagon. It may have
passed fifteen minutes or an hour ago. The hoof
tracks of the horses are covered, so I'm not positive
which way they headed; I only know there
are indications of hoof tracks, which proves it a
farmer's wagon. The question is, whether the
young lady met it, and caught a ride, or whether
she proceeded along some of the other trails. I
can't find any indication of those high-heeled
shoes from this point, in any direction. Better
get your car, Mr. Weldon, and run east a few
miles, keeping sharp watch of the wagon tracks
on the way. It was a heavy wagon, for the wheels
cut deep. Mershone and I will go west. When
you've driven far enough to satisfy yourself
you're going the wrong direction, you may easily
overtake us on your return. Then, if we've discovered
nothing on this road, we'll try the other."
Arthur ran back at once to the house and in a
few minutes had started on his quest. The motor
car was powerful enough to plow through the
deep snow with comparative ease.
Those left together in Madam Cerise's little
room were more to be pitied than the ones engaged
in active search, for there was nothing to
relieve their fears and anxieties. Diana, unable
to bear the accusing looks of Patsy and Beth, resolved
to make a clean breast of her complicity in
the affair and related to them every detail of her
connection with her cousin's despicable plot. She
ended by begging their forgiveness, and wept so
miserably that Uncle John found himself stroking
her hair while Patsy came close and pressed the
penitent girl's hand as if to comfort and reassure
her.
Beth said nothing. She could not find it in
her heart as yet to forgive Diana's selfish conspiracy
against her cousin's happiness. If Louise
perished in this dreadful storm the proud Diana
Von Taer could not escape the taint of murder.
The end was not yet.
CHAPTER XXIII
THE CRISIS
Mershone and Fogerty plodded through the
snow together, side by side. They were facing
the wind, which cut their faces cruelly, yet neither
seemed to mind the bitterness of the weather.
"Keep watch along the roadside," suggested
Mershone; "she may have fallen anywhere, you
know. She couldn't endure this thing long.
Poor Louise!"
"You were fond of her, Mr. Mershone?" asked
Fogerty, not unsympathetically.
"Yes. That was why I made such a struggle to
get her."
"It was a mistake, sir. Provided a woman is
won by force or trickery she's never worth getting.
If she doesn't care for you it's better to
give her up."
"I know—now."
"You're a bright fellow, Mershone, a clever
fellow. It's a pity you couldn't direct your talents
the right way. They'll jug you for this."
"Never mind. The game of life isn't worth
playing. I've done with it, and the sooner I go
to the devil the better. If only I could be sure
Louise was safe I'd toss every care—and every
honest thought—to the winds, from this moment."
During the silence that followed Fogerty was
thoughtful. Indeed, his mind dwelt more upon
the defeated and desperate man beside him than
upon the waif he was searching for.
"What's been done, Mr. Mershone," he said,
after a time, "can't be helped now. The future
of every man is always a bigger proposition than
his past—whoever he may be. With your talents
and genius you could yet make of yourself a successful
and prosperous man, respected by the community
—if you could get out of this miserable rut
that has helped to drag you down."
"But I can't," said the other, despondently.
"You can if you try. But you'll have to strike
for a place a good way from New York. Go
West, forget your past, and carve out an honest
future under a new name and among new associates.
You're equal to it."
Mershone shook his head.
"You forget," he said. "They'll give me a jail
sentence for this folly, as sure as fate, and that
will be the end of me."
"Not necessarily. See here, Mershone, it won't
help any of those people to prosecute you. If the
girl escapes with her life no real harm has been
done, although you've caused a deal of unhappiness,
in one way or another. For my part, I'd like
to see you escape, because I'm sure this affair will
be a warning to you that will induce you to give
up all trickery in the future. Money wouldn't
bribe me, as you know, but sympathy and good
fellowship will. If you'll promise to skip right
now, and turn over a new leaf, you are free."
"Where could I go?"
"There's a town a mile ahead of us; I can see
the buildings now and then. You've money, for
you offered it to me. I haven't any assistants
here, I'm all alone on the job. That talk about
four men was only a bluff. Push me over in the
snow and make tracks. I'll tell Weldon you've
escaped, and advise him not to bother you. It's
very easy."
Mershone stopped short, seized the detective's
hand and wrung it gratefully.
"You're a good fellow, Fogerty. I—I thank
you. But I can't do it. In the first place, I can't
rest in peace until Louise is found, or I know her
fate. Secondly, I'm game to give an account for
all my deeds, now that I've played the farce out,
and lost. I—I really haven't the ambition, Fogerty,
to make a new start in life, and try to reform.
What's the use?"
Fogerty did not reply. Perhaps he realized
the case was entirely hopeless. But he had done
what he could to save the misguided fellow and
give him a chance, and he was sorry he had not
succeeded.
Meantime Arthur Weldon, almost dazed by the
calamity that had overtaken his sweetheart, found
an able assistant in his chauffeur, who, when the
case was explained to him, developed an eager
and intelligent interest in the chase. Fortunately
they moved with the storm and the snow presently
moderated in volume although the wind was
still blowing a fierce gale. This gave them a better
opportunity than the others to observe the
road they followed.
Jones had good eyes, and although the trail
of the heavy wagon was lost at times he soon
picked it up again and they were enabled to make
fairly good speed.
"I believe," said Arthur, presently, "that the
marks are getting clearer."
"I know they are, sir," agreed Jones.
"Then we've come in the right direction, for it
is proof that the wagon was headed this way."
"Quite right, sir."
This back section was thinly settled and the occasional
farm-houses they passed were set well
back from the road. It was evident from the
closed gates and drifted snowbanks that no teams
had either left these places or arrived during a
recent period. Arthur was encouraged, moreover,
by the wagon ruts growing still more clear
as they proceeded, and his excitement was great
when Jones abruptly halted and pointed to a
place where the wheels had made a turn and entered
a farm yard.
"Here's the place, sir," announced the
chauffeur.
"Can you get in?"
"It's pretty deep, sir, but I'll try."
The snow was crisp and light, owing to the
excessive cold, and the machine plowed through it
bravely, drawing up at last to the door of an
humble cottage.
As Arthur leaped out of the car a man appeared
upon the steps, closing the door softly behind
him.
"Looking for the young lady, sir?" he asked.
"Is she here?" cried Arthur.
The man placed his finger on his lips, although
the wind prevented any sound of voices being
heard within.
"Gently, sir, don't make a noise—but come in."
They entered what seemed to be a kitchen. The
farmer, a man of advanced years, led him to a
front room, and again cautioning him to be silent,
motioned him to enter.
A sheet-iron stove made the place fairly comfortable.
By a window sat a meek-faced woman,
bent over some sewing. On a couch opposite lay
Louise, covered by a heavy shawl. She was fast
asleep, her hair disheveled and straying over her
crimson cheeks, flushed from exposure to the
weather. Her slumber seemed the result of
physical exhaustion, for her lips were parted and
she breathed deeply.
Arthur, after gazing at her for a moment with
a beating-heart, for the mysterious actions of the
old farmer had made him fear the worst, softly
approached the couch and knelt beside the girl he
loved, thanking; God in his inmost heart for her
escape. Then he leaned over and pressed a kiss
upon her cheek.
Louise slowly opened her eyes, smiled divinely,
and threw her arms impulsively around his neck.
"I knew you would come for me, dear," she
whispered.
CHAPTER XXIV
A MATTER OF COURSE
All explanations were barred until the girl had
been tenderly taken to her own home and under
the loving care of her mother and cousins had recovered
to an extent from the terrible experiences
she had undergone.
Then by degrees she told them her story, and
how, hearing the voice of her persecutor Mershone
in the hall below she had become frantic
with fear and resolved to trust herself to the mercies
of the storm rather than submit to an interview
with him. Before this she had decided that
she could climb down the trellis, and that part of
her flight she accomplished easily. Then she
ran toward the rear of the premises to avoid being
seen and managed to find the lane, and later the
cross-roads. It was very cold, but her excitement
and the fear of pursuit kept her warm until suddenly
her strength failed her and she sank down
in the snow without power to move. At this juncture
the farmer and his wife drove by, having been
on a trip to the town. The man sprang out and
lifted her in, and the woman tenderly wrapped
her in the robes and blankets and pillowed
her head upon her motherly bosom. By the time
they reached the farm-house she was quite warm
again, but so exhausted that with a brief explanation
that she was lost, but somebody would be sure
to find her before long, she fell upon the couch
and almost immediately lost consciousness.
So Arthur found her, and one look into his eyes
assured her that all her troubles were over.
They did not prosecute Charlie Mershone, after
all. Fogerty pleaded for him earnestly, and Uncle
John pointed out that to arrest the young man
would mean to give the whole affair to the newspapers,
which until now had not gleaned the
slightest inkling of what had happened. Publicity
was to be avoided if possible, as it would set
loose a thousand malicious tongues and benefit
nobody. The only thing to be gained by prosecuting
Mershone was revenge, and all were willing to
forego that doubtful satisfaction.
However, Uncle John had an interview with
the young man in the office of the prosecuting attorney,
at which Mershone was given permission
to leave town quietly and pursue his fortunes in
other fields. If ever he returned, or in any way
molested any of the Merricks or his cousin Diana,
he was assured that he would be immediately arrested
and prosecuted to the full extent of the law.
Mershone accepted the conditions and became
an exile, passing at once out of the lives of those
he had so deeply wronged.
The joyful reunion of the lovers led to an early
date being set for the wedding. They met all protests
by pleading their fears of another heartrending
separation, and no one ventured to oppose
their desire.
Mrs. Merrick quickly recovered her accustomed
spirits during the excitement of those anxious
weeks preceding the wedding. Cards were issued
to "the very best people in town;" the trousseau
involved anxiety by day and restless dreams by
night—all eminently enjoyable; there were entertainments
to be attended and congratulations to
be received from every side.
Society, suspecting nothing of the tragedy so
lately enacted in these young lives, was especially
gracious to the betrothed. Louise was the recipient
of innumerable merry "showers" from her
girl associates, and her cousins, Patsy and Beth,
followed in line with "glass showers" and "china
showers" until the prospective bride was stocked
with enough wares to establish a "house-furnishing
emporium," as Uncle John proudly declared.
Mr. Merrick, by this time quite reconciled and
palpably pleased at the approaching marriage of
his eldest niece, was not to be outdone in "social
stunts" that might add to her happiness. He gave
theatre parties and banquets without number, and
gave them with the marked success that invariably
attended his efforts.
The evening before the wedding Uncle John
and the Major claimed Arthur for their own, and
after an hour's conference between the three that
left the young fellow more happy and grateful
than ever before, he was entertained at his last
"bachelor dinner," where he made a remarkable
speech and was lustily cheered.
Of course Beth and Patsy were the bridesmaids,
and their cousin Kenneth Forbes came all the way
from Elmhurst to be Arthur's best man. No one
ever knew what it cost Uncle John for the wonderful
decorations at the church and home, for the
music, the banquet and all the other details which
he himself eagerly arranged on a magnificent scale
and claimed was a part of his "wedding present."
When it was all over, and the young people had
driven away to begin the journey of life together,
the little man put a loving arm around Beth and
Patsy and said, between smiles and tears:
"Well, my dears, I've lost one niece, and that's
a fact; but I've still two left. How long will they
remain with me, I wonder?"
"Dear me, Uncle John," said practical Patsy;
"your necktie's untied and dangling; like a shoestring!
I hope it wasn't that way at the wedding."
"It was, though," declared the Major, chuckling.
"If all three of ye get married, my dears,
poor Uncle John will come to look like a scarecrow
—and all that in the face of swell society!"
"Aren't we about through with swell society
now?" asked Mr. Merrick, anxiously. "Aren't
we about done with it? It caused all our troubles,
you know."
"Society," announced Beth, complacently, "is
an excellent thing in the abstract. It has its black
sheep, of course; but I think no more than any
other established class of humanity."
"Dear me!" cried Uncle John; "you once denounced
society."
"That," said she, "was before I knew anything
at all about it."
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