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"Well, then, I certainly shall hold my peace."
"Why, you 're positively bearis.h.!.+"
"Am I?"
"But then, you know, I might consider your words--well, worth following."
"I 'll wait until I can find courage to take the risk."
"Is it so awfully important as all that?"
"You may judge when I tell you."
The dance had ended and as he released her she reached out and tapped him on the arm.
"You do dance divinely. And now you had better play detective. Mother has seen us."
That was quite true. Armitage, of course, had not been recognized as Miss Wellington's chauffeur by the people in the room, but Mrs.
Wellington had early detected them. She said nothing until the dance ended. Then she looked at her husband.
"Ronald," she said, "is Anne too old to be spanked, do you think?"
"Why, rather, I should say. Why?" laughed Wellington.
"Oh, no matter. Only I fancy I would relinquish my hopes for eternity if I could!"
CHAPTER XXIV
THE BALL ENDS
Jack's mood would have defied a.n.a.lysis as he made his way through the crowded hall to the rear veranda. He peered into the smoking-room in pa.s.sing and found several self-const.i.tuted Lords of Misrule holding full sway. Two young scions of great New York families were fencing with billiard cues, punctuating each other's coats with blue chalk dots and dashes, while a swaying ring cheered them on. One youth emerged from the room with steps obviously unsteady and claimed one of a pair of girls on their way to the ballroom, as his partner for the dance.
She rapped him playfully with her fan.
"You don't really want a partner, Teddy," she said. "You want a hitching post. You're spifflicated."
The two moved laughingly away, leaving the young man marvelling heavily at the discernment of the girl who had cleverly discovered that which he fancied he had carefully concealed. As Armitage watched him with amused interest, he sighed deeply and made his way back to the smoking-room.
Jack went up the rear stairs to the second floor and out on a little balcony. He had viewed Miss Wellington's att.i.tude toward him from every angle and every time the result had been the same--the conviction that her interest in him was something more than friendly. He attempted no diagnosis of his own feelings. That was not necessary; they were too patent. A great wave of tenderness thrilled him. There was wonder, too. That wonder which fills a man when he begins to realize that a girl whom he has regarded as unapproachably radiant and, in sheer beauty and purity and grace, a being aloof from most of the things of this world, finds him not unworthy of her trust, her confidence, and her love.
Armitage felt himself enn.o.bled, set apart from the rest of mankind, the guardian of a sacred trust. If she did love him, if she were willing to give herself to him, she would find that the giving was not to be all hers. He, too, would build his life henceforth upon the inspiration she gave him and he would hold himself worthy to receive it. Anne! His arm ached to hold her as he had held her but a little while ago. Anne! The strength seemed to be going out of him. Ah, he wanted that girl now, right here--and nothing else in this world! Anne!
Then his teeth clicked shut. He had work ahead of him. There were other things to think about. In his present mood, surely, he was not up to the task he had set himself. He lighted a cigarette and puffed vigorously. If he were going to succeed--and he intended to succeed--he must train his mind rigidly into channels far remote from Anne. He must forget her; forget himself for the time being. Long he fought with himself and won, as strong men always will, and when he left the balcony there was but one thought in his mind, the magnetic control which Koltsoff had stolen from him.
He had already decided to make his search when the guests were at the tables on the veranda, and the blood pulsed quickly as he peered down the front stairs and found that all, even then, were making their way out of doors. Now--to find the Prince safely seated and engrossed, and then action. He descended the stairs and merged with the throng on the verandas. There was a great deal of confusion. Some were already seated and calling for their companions. Others were blundering about searching for friends. The complement of a few tables was already filled and there was much laughter and loud talking.
Jack soon found the Prince at a table for six, near the railing. Anne was at his side and Sara Van Valkenberg, with young Osborne, was also there. Anne was conversing brightly with a man across from her, but Koltsoff was sombre and silent. Armitage smiled and made his way into the house. He walked slowly up the stairs, went to his room, on the third floor, for a knife, skeleton keys, and a small jimmy, and then returning to the second floor he stopped at Koltsoff's door, which was well back from the apartments utilized as dressing-rooms for the men and women. The light was burning brightly in a chandelier overhead and Jack, stepping to a b.u.t.ton in the wall, pressed it, shrouding that part of the hall in gloom.
Then he tested the k.n.o.b and pushed slightly on the door. To his surprise it yielded. A thin piece of wire brushed his fingers and following it he found it led from the keyhole and outside the jamb of the door, which had been cut slightly. Evidently some one was ahead of him! But he did not hesitate. Softly opening the door he stepped into the room and closed the door behind him. Then for a moment he stood still. He felt in his pocket for his match box and had just struck a light when suddenly an arm flew around his neck from behind, the crook of the elbow pressing deeply into his throat.
Without a sound, Jack bent forward, pulling his a.s.sailant with him, despite his efforts to get Jack's head back between his shoulders. For a full minute they were poised thus. Armitage knew better than to crack his neck in frantic efforts to break the strong arm grip. There were other ways. He was very cool and he had confidence in that neck of his, which set on his shoulders like the base of a marble column.
The hand of the stranger was pawing for a grip on his right wrist, but Jack, who knew the move and had no desire to have his elbow shattered, kept it out of the way. And all the time he kept up a slight strain upon the arm around his neck, into which, by the way, his chin was slightly buried, breaking in some degree the choking power of the hold.
For two minutes they stood thus, slightly swaying, and then instinctively Jack, gagging a little now, felt the minutest relaxation of the arm. Quick as thought he changed the position of his right leg, bringing into play the leverage of his hip. He twisted suddenly sideways, his neck slipping around in the encircling arm. His hand closed upon the back of a thick, perspiring neck. The next instant a figure catapulted over his back, bringing up with a bone-racking crash against a piece of furniture.
Armitage, whose eyes were now accustomed to the dark room, ran to an electric globe at the side of a writing desk and turned on the light.
By this time his a.s.sailant was rising, tottering but full of fight, a desire which Jack, now all for carnage, was quite ready to satisfy. As he started for the man something in the fellow's face made him pause.
He uttered a low exclamation. He was Takakika, the j.a.panese cook. But there was no time for words; the j.a.p launched himself at him with fingers quivering in antic.i.p.ation of the grip he sought. He never arrived. Armitage whipped his right fist with all the power of his body behind it to a point about two inches below Takakika's left ear.
There was a sharp crack and the j.a.p fell to the floor in a huddle, motionless.
"Now, I reckon you 'll lie still," said Jack unpityingly. "You and Koltsoff, too, will find that the spy game in the United States is full of travail."
He glanced at the man, who was groaning now and showing signs of recovery. "I guess I 'll lash you up to be on the safe side," which he did with several of Koltsoff's neckties.
"Now, then."
He arose and looked about the room. On a table near the door were several rolls of parchment. He went over to them and lifted them.
They were the plans of the torpedo. With a sigh of relief he straightened them and folding the sheets into two small but bulky packages, put them into his pockets. Evidently the apartment had been thoroughly ransacked by Takakika. Drawers were opened, bags turned inside out, the bed torn apart, and the mattress ripped. But where was the control? Armitage felt about the j.a.p's clothing and then feverishly began going over the line of search pursued by the spy. So engrossed had he been in the struggle with Takakika that he had forgotten his intention of locking the door leading from the hall. Now his unsuccessful search filled his mind. At last in a dark corner of a closet he unearthed a small square bag. He had just taken it into the room and cut it when the door opened and Koltsoff entered.
For an instant he stood blinking and then his eyes travelled swiftly about the room, taking in Armitage, the bound and half conscious j.a.panese, and the general litter. Jack watched him closely, ready for any move he might make. The Russian's sudden appearance had startled him, but the first substantial thought that shot through his mind was that no one could possibly have been more welcome. He had failed to find the control: he had to have it. So he might as well have it out with the Prince now as any other time. If Koltsoff but knew it, he was facing a desperate man; for until he had entered and searched the rooms, Jack had harbored no doubt that possession of the control was merely a matter of overhauling the Prince's effects. Now he knew better, and for the first time he was really alarmed as to its whereabouts. He returned Koltsoff's gaze with smouldering eyes. But the Russian was very much at ease.
"What is it?" he asked at length. Without waiting for Armitage to reply he walked swiftly to the desk, jerked open a panel, and placed his hand in the opening. When he withdrew it, it was empty. Jack laughed, drew from his pocket a short heavy revolver with a pearl, gold-crested handle, twirled it about by the guard, and then put it back in his pocket.
"I got there first, Koltsoff," he said.
Prince Koltsoff straightened and regarded Armitage warily.
"What does this mean?" He nodded his head toward Takakika and started forward as for the first time he noticed that the man was a j.a.panese.
"Ah," he said, "I see. You have foiled a spy. Ha! ha! I thank you.
And now the pistol--and your manner! Ha! ha! ha! Your joke!"
Armitage saw clearly that for some reason--which he believed he recognized--Koltsoff was willing that the incident, so far as Jack was concerned, should end right there. The Prince had given him his lead.
He had but to follow it and clear out, with no questions asked. But that was farthest from his mind.
"My joke is not clear to you, I see."
"Indeed! Will you do me the honor to make it clear?"
"Certainly. Last Sunday night a tool of yours named Yeasky stole a magnetic contrivance from the shops of the Torpedo Station. He gave it to you. I want it. I am going to get it before either you or I leave this room."
Koltsoff clasped his hands together.
"I recognize you as a servant in the employ of this house. What right have you to address me? Now, go to your quarters at once or I shall report you. You are intoxicated!"
"Am I!" He backed before the door as Koltsoff's eyes moved toward it, covering at the same time the call b.u.t.tons in the wall at the side of the jamb.