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"My, you must have it to throw away!" said Hudson. "Twenty-three for you, Fritz. Shut the slide."
Ralston took a deep draught of the beer. He could not help smiling as he thought of the picture he would present could any one of his a.s.sociates see him at the moment. What, for instance, would the President have said? And the Secretary of War! Underneath the stage of a theater, drinking beer with a chorus girl! He put down the gla.s.s and pulled himself together.
"Now to business!" he exclaimed. "This is jolly good fun, but I've a long night in front of me, and I've got work to do in it. Where is Steadman?"
The partridge looked at him inquiringly.
"You don't mean you really are trying to find anyone?"
"Certainly I do."
"Steadman?"
"Yes."
She shrugged her shoulders. It was clear, even to Ralston, that she was disappointed.
"I can't help you."
"You _know_ him?" Ralston's gaze penetrated her feathers.
"Yes. But I don't know where he is--and what is more, I don't care. He's a cad."
"Well, let it go at that. But I've got to find him. How long is it since you've seen him?"
"Three weeks."
"What was he up to?"
"Oh, the usual business. He's badly in. Let him go; he's not worth your while."
"I didn't say he was. But he must be turned up. Was he drinking?"
"Yes!"
"Ah!" Ralston scowled.
"He's a bad one," continued the partridge. "He began at the bottom and worked down."
"You must help me to find him. Who is he running with?"
"I don't know anything about him. I've heard he knows a girl named Florence Davenport. If you can find her she might help you."
"Where does she live?"
"On Forty-sixth Street," and she gave him a number.
Ralston arose and put his hand in his pocket.
"I am very much indebted to you," he said courteously. "You won't mind if I make good your fine?"
He drew out a bill and placed it in her hand. She raised her eyebrows at sight of its denomination.
"No," she said, "I haven't done anything for you. I don't want the money."
"But your fine?"
"That's all right," she replied, shrugging her shoulders. "I could have gone on--if I'd wanted to. I was merely bluffing. You couldn't have held me. You're a gentleman, and I don't want the money." She spoke quietly, and looked him full in the face. Ralston wavered.
"Please don't," said the girl, and held out the bill. Ralston took it and returned it to his pocket.
"Miss Hudson," said he, "you have placed me under a great obligation, one that money cannot repay. If I can ever help you in any way let me know."
The partridge got up and led the way toward the staircase. At the top she held out her hand and Ralston took it in his.
"He's not worth it," she repeated. "Let him go."
"_n.o.blesse oblige_," he smiled, looking down at her.
The chorus had filed off the stage and were standing on the other side.
"Here you, Hudson! Where have you been?" whispered the manager hoa.r.s.ely, grasping her roughly by the shoulder. "Get over there."
"Leave me alone!" she cried sharply, shaking off his arm. Then, turning to Ralston:
"Good night, sir," she said.
VI
Outside the Moons.h.i.+ne Ralston found the usual congestion of cabs, landaus, and wagons. He had delayed to exchange a few reminiscences with old Vincent, and it was fully ten minutes before he could find his cabby in the tangle of vehicles. As he stepped into the street, to save the time requisite for the man to draw to the curb, an omnibus was vainly trying to force its way through the side street. It had paused for an instant in front of the stage entrance, and Ralston had caught a glimpse of Ellen's face inside.
A momentary impulse had seized him to stop the coach and tell her of the hopelessness of the task upon which she had sent him, but in the instant of his uncertainty the way had cleared and they had driven on. He had climbed into his own hansom, little the wiser for his experience at the Moons.h.i.+ne.
The sidewalks were jammed with the usual after-theater crowd hurrying either to get home as quickly as possible or to secure seats in restaurants which pandered less to the taste of the _gourmet_ than to those of the _roue_. For a solid mile on either side of Broadway stretched house after house of entertainment, any one of which could harbor a hundred Steadmans, and for a quarter of a mile on either hand lay twenty streets, lined with places of a character vastly more likely to do so. He followed the crowd slowly northward, wondering why so few of them walked in the opposite direction. Whenever he came to a well-known hostelry he went in and eagerly scanned the tables, but, although he recognized many he knew and who knew him, he found naught of Steadman.
Having visited five "chophouses," a "rathskeller," two "hofbraus," and several more pretentious places, he abandoned the idea of trying to stumble upon his man, and returned to his original belief that only by following some sort of a clew could he succeed. Somewhere in the hot clasp of the city lay the miserable youth he had promised to find. For a moment he regretted the answer which he had just sent to Ellen's apartment--the four words that had pledged him to a fool's errand, the absurdity of which was now apparent. Then came a realizing sense of the importance to Ellen of his mission, and a grim determination to find this man wherever he might be.
He had now reached Forty-second Street, and the crowd divided into two streams, one moving eastward and the other northward, a part of the latter to plunge beneath the Times Building into the subway, and the remainder to add to the already existing congestion in front of the Hotel Astor, Rector's, Shanley's, and the New York Theater. Longacre Square boiled with life--a life garish, tawdry, sensual and vulgar, unlike that of any other city or generation.
The restaurants could seat no more, and a bejeweled, scented throng stood in the doorways and struggled for the vacant tables. The night hawks lining the curb peered eagerly at every pa.s.ser-by to note signs of intoxication or indecision. Tiny newsboys thrust their bundles of papers against dress waistcoats and felt for loose watches, ready to dart into the throng at the first move of suspicion on the part of their victims.
Clerks with their best girls pointed out these and made witticisms upon them, hoping thus to divert attention from the attractions of the restaurants, for whose splendors they intended later to subst.i.tute the more substantial, if more economical, pleasures of the dairy lunch.
Automobiles, in which sat supercilious foreign chauffeurs, blocked the entrances of the pleasure palaces. Streams of country folk poured in and out of hotels which made a specialty of rural trade, promising to their patrons, in widely distributed circulars, easy access to everything "worth seeing." These came, were relieved of their money, and, after fervid correspondence on the hotel stationery, went home to poison the minds of their townfolk with descriptions of scenes which existed only in their imaginations.
For every person on Longacre Square after midnight who is there for an honest purpose, there are three who are there either to do that which they should not do or to see that which they should not see. It is the white light in which the New York moth plays before he plunges into the withering flame. It was here Steadman had begun, and like enough he was not far off.