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Recognizing the writing, Norvin tore open the envelope eagerly, ready to be entertained by some fresh example of the girl's infinite variety. He read with startled eyes:
"I send this by a trusted messenger, hoping that it will reach you in time. I am a prisoner. I am in danger. I fear my beauty is destroyed.
If you love me, come.
"Your wretched
"MYRA NELL."
The address was that of a house on Esplanade Street.
"How did you get this?" he demanded, harshly, of the pickaninny.
"A lady drap it from a window."
"Where? Where was she?"
"In a gre't big house on Esplanade Street. She seemed mighty put out about something. Then a man run me away with a club."
A moment later Blake was on the street and had hailed a carriage. The driver, reading urgency in the set face of his fare, whipped the horses into a gallop and the vehicle tore across town, leaping and rocking violently. The thought that Myra Nell was in danger filled Blake with a physical sickness. Her beauty gone! Could it be that the Mafia had taken this means of attacking him, knowing of his affection for the girl? Of a sudden she became very dear, and he was smothered with fury that any one should cause her suffering.
His heart was pounding madly as the carriage slowed into Esplanade Street, threatening to upset, and he saw ahead of him the house he sought. With a sharp twinge of apprehension he sighted another man approaching the place at a run, and leaping from his conveyance, he raced on with frantic speed.
XV
THE END OF THE QUEST
Evidently the alarm had spread, for there were others ahead of Blake.
Several men were grouped beneath an open window. They were strangely excited; some were panting as if from violent exertion; a young French Creole, Lecompte Rilleau, was sprawled at full length upon the gra.s.sy banquette, either badly injured or entirely out of breath. He raised a listless hand to the newcomer, as if waving him to the attack. Norvin recognized them all as admirers of Myra Nell--cotton brokers, merchants, a bank cas.h.i.+er--a great relief surged over him.
"Thank G.o.d! You're here--in time," he gasped. "What's happened to-- her?"
Raymond Cline started to speak, but just then Blake heard the girl herself calling to him, and saw her leaning from a window, her piquant beauty framed with blus.h.i.+ng roses which hung about the sill.
"Myra Nell! You're safe!" he cried, shakingly. "What have they done to you?"
She smiled piteously and shook her dark head.
"You were good to come. I am a prisoner."
"A prisoner!" Norvin stared at the young men about him. "Come on," he said, "let's get her out!"
But Murray Logan quieted him. "It's no use, old man."
"What d'you mean?"
"You can't go in."
"Can't--go--in?" As Blake stared uncomprehendingly at the speaker he heard rapid footsteps approaching and saw Achille Marigny coming on the wings of the wind. It was he who appeared in the distance as Norvin rounded the corner, and it was plain now that he was well-nigh spent.
Rilleau reared himself on one elbow and cried with difficulty:
"Welcome, Achille."
"Take it easy, Marigny," called Cline; "we've saved her."
Some one laughed, and the suspicion that he had been hoaxed swept over Blake.
"What's the joke?" he demanded. "I was frightened to death."
"The house is quarantined."
"I never dreamed you'd _all_ come," Miss Warren was saying, sweetly. "It was very gallant, and I shall _never_ forget it-- never."
"She says her--beauty is--gone," wildly panted Marigny, who had run himself blind and as yet could hear nothing but the drumming in his ears.
"Judge for yourself." Cline steadied him against the low iron fence and pointed to the girl's bewitching face embowered in the leafy window above.
From where he lay flat on his back, idly flapping his hands, Rilleau complained: "I have a weak heart. Will somebody get me a drink?"
"It was _splendid_ of you," Myra Nell called down to the group.
"I love you for it. Please get me out, right away."
Norvin now perceived a burly individual seated upon the steps of the La Branche mansion. He approached with a view to parleying, but the man forestalled him" saying warningly:
"You can't go in. They've got smallpox in there."
"Smallpox!"
"Go away from that door!" screamed Myra Nell; but the fellow merely scowled.
"I hate to offend the lady," he explained to Norvin, in a hoa.r.s.e whisper; "but I can't let her out."
Miss Warren repeated in a fury:
"Go away, I tell you. These are friends of mine. If you were a gentleman you'd know you're not wanted. Norvin, make him skedaddle."
Blake shook his head. "You've scared us all blue. If you're quarantined I don't see what we can do."
"The idea! You can at least come in."
"If you go in, you can't come out," belligerently declared the watchman. "Them's orders."
"_Oh-h!_ You monster!" cried his prisoner.
"She says herself she's got it," the man explained.