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"Then good night."
"Night," he mumbled.
They were out of the building now and Johnny made his way cautiously back to his room. He had had quite enough for one night. Once he paused to thrust his hand beneath his vest. Yes, the diamonds were still there.
His a.s.sailants had not had time to find them. He was not sure whether he was glad or sorry.
CHAPTER XVI
CIO-CIO-SAN BETRAYED
Very alert, Johnny Thompson at the stroke of eight the next night crept from a narrow runway between two buildings and walked briskly down the street. He had reached the runway by a route known only to himself. He was sure that for a time, at least, he would not be followed. At last he reached the bridge which was coming to harbor many mysteries for him.
Halfway across the span he paused, and sinking into the shadow of an iron girder, began watching the surface of the water.
He was, in fact, attempting to understand those murky depths. From his room he had detected a strange light. Either reflected on the water or s.h.i.+ning up through it, this light appeared a pale yellow glow, such as he had often seen given off by the jelly fish in the Pacific. That there was no such jelly fish to be found in fresh water he knew quite well.
And he had never in his life noticed that glow in the river.
Now, as he surveyed the surroundings, he realized that the light could not have been reflected from any illumination in street or building. The glow from the water had appeared close to the wall of the empty building through which his four a.s.sailants of the night before had made good their escape.
As he stood there, slouching in the shadows, Johnny gave a great start; the light had appeared again. Beyond question it was beneath the water, not s.h.i.+ning upon it. From this vantage point the light seemed stronger.
It appeared for a few seconds, then disappeared again. Johnny scratched his head. What could it mean? For some time he stood in a brown study, then he laughed silently to himself.
"Probably phosph.o.r.escent substances being sent out from the drainpipe of a factory or chemical laboratory," he decided.
At that instant he was all alert. His hand closed on his automatic. A stealthy footfall had sounded on the bridge.
"Oh! It's you," he whispered a moment later.
Hanada grinned as he gripped Johnny's hand. "Thought I might miss you,"
he whispered.
The two were soon engaged in animated conversation. Their talk had to do with Johnny's adventure of the night before and the information regarding the Radicals furnished by Jerry the Rat. Hanada appeared unduly excited at the news.
"It seems," said Johnny, "that there must be a national conference of Radicals meeting somewhere near this river. Perhaps our old friend, the Russian of Vladivostok, is a delegate."
Hanada shot him a swift glance, as if to say: "How much do you know about this matter anyway?"
But for some time the j.a.panese did not speak; then it was concerning an entirely different affair. Cio-Cio-San had been visited by a fellow countryman who, although wholly unknown to her, had appeared to know a great deal about her private business. He had informed her that she had, within the last year, been robbed of some very valuable property and professed to have a knowledge of its whereabouts. If she would accompany him he would see that it was restored to her. The actions of the man had aroused her suspicions and she had refused to go. However, she had asked him to give her a day to think it over. He was to return at nine this night.
"Some nifty little mind reader, that j.a.p," smiled Johnny. "Tell him to come round and locate my long lost uncle's buried treasure."
However, though he pa.s.sed the matter off as a jest, he was doing some very serious thinking about this rather strange affair. He had never told Hanada about the diamonds. Neither had he told of the note which had been thrust under the door. Now he remembered that Jerry the Rat had spoken of a j.a.p as a member of the Radicals, and he wondered if Cio-Cio-San's visitor was the same man. If that were so, then what was his game? Was he planning to lead Cio-Cio-San into a trap? Certainly if the treasure the strange j.a.p had spoken of as having been stolen from the j.a.panese girl was the envelope of diamonds, and they had hoped to recover them from Johnny that night, they would have no intention of restoring them to Cio-Cio-San.
"I'd advise her, if I were you," said Johnny slowly, "to find out as much as she can, and not take too many chances. The man may be one of the Radicals, and he may be using the supposed treasure as a decoy. At the same time, if she handles the affair discreetly enough, she may be able to a.s.sist you in locating the Russian and his band, which, I take it, is your chief end and aim in life just now."
Hanada sent him another penetrating glance. "You have guessed that much," he admitted. "Well, soon I may be able to tell you all. In the meantime, if you need more money to pay this Jerry--Jerry, what was it you called him?"
"Jerry the Rat."
"Yes, yes, Jerry the Rat. If you need more money for him, I can get you more, plenty more. But," the lines of his face grew tense, "we must find them and soon, or it may be too late. We must act quickly."
Hanada had not said one word of his affairs of the night before, nor did he now as they were about to part.
Dull and heavy, there came the tread of feet on the bridge.
"The police!" whispered Johnny.
Hanada seemed distinctly nervous.
As the two patrolmen came abreast of them one of them flashed his light.
Hanada cringed into the shadows.
"Well," said a deep voice, "here's luck! Youse guys come with us. Youse guys is wanted at the station."
"What for?" Johnny demanded.
"Youse guys know well enough. Treason, they call it."
"Treason?" Johnny gave a happy laugh. "Treason? They'll have hard work to prove that."
Had one been privileged to see Cio-Cio-San at the moment Johnny Thompson and his friend were arrested, he might easily have imagined that she was back in j.a.pan. The room in which she paced anxiously back and forth was j.a.panese to the final detail. The floor was covered thickly with mattings and the walls, done in a pale blue, were hung everywhere with long scrolls of ancient j.a.panese origin. Here a silver stork stood in a pool of limpid blue; there a cherry orchard blossomed out with all the extravagant beauty of spring, and in the corner a paG.o.da, with sloping, red-tile roof and wide doors, proclaimed the fact that the j.a.panese were a people of art, even down to house building. Silk tapestries of varying tints hung about the room, while in the shadows a small heathen G.o.d smiled a perpetual smile.
But it was none of these things that the girl saw at that moment. This room, fitted up as it had been by rich j.a.panese students, most certainly had brought back fond memories of her own country. But at this instant, her eyes turned often to a screen behind which was a stand, and on that stand was a desk telephone.
Hanada had promised to consult Johnny Thompson regarding the strange proposition of the unknown j.a.panese. He had promised to call her at once; by eight-thirty at the latest. The stranger was to return for his answer at nine. It now lacked but ten minutes of that hour, and no call had come from Hanada. She could not, of course, know that the men on whom she depended for counsel were prisoners of the police. So she paced the floor and waited.
Five minutes to nine and yet no call. Wrinkles came to her forehead, her step grew more impatient.
"If he does not call, what shall I do?" she asked herself.
Then there came the sharp ring of the telephone. She sprang to the instrument, but the call was for another member of the club.
Three minutes in which to decide. She walked thoughtfully across the floor. Should she go? Her money was now almost gone. It was true that a treasure, which to many would seem a vast fortune, had disappeared from her father's house over night. It had been taken by force. And she knew the man who had taken it; had followed him thousands of miles. Now there had come to her a man of her own race, who a.s.sured her that the treasure was not in the possession of the man who had stolen it, but in the possession of an honest man who would willingly surrender it to her, providing only he could be made certain that it was to go directly into her hands. That this might be, he demanded that she meet him at a certain place known to the strange j.a.panese. There she might prove her property. The story did seem plausible--and her need was great. Soon she would be cast out upon the world without a penny. So long as she had money she was welcome at this club; not longer.
There came the purring of a m.u.f.fled bell in the hall. He had come.
Should she go? A mood of reckless desperation seized her.
"I will," she declared.
The next instant she was tucking a short, gleaming blade beneath her silk middy and then drawing on a long silk coat.