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Agreeing that this was the best method to pursue, Randall caught the midnight train for New York and went at once to police headquarters, where he requested a full description of Cheney's previous activities.
"You're asking for something what ain't," he was informed, ungrammatically, but truthfully. "We've never been able to get a thing on the count, though we're dead certain that he had a finger in several crooked plays. The Latimer letters were never directly traced to him, but it's a cinch that he had something to do with their preparation, just as he had with the blackmailing of old man Branchfield and the smuggling of the van Husen emeralds. You remember that case, don't you?
The one where the stones were concealed in a life preserver and they staged a 'man overboard' stunt just as the s.h.i.+p came into the harbor.
n.o.body ever got the stones or proved that they were actually smuggled--but the count happened to be on the s.h.i.+p at the time, just as he 'happened' to be in Paris when they were sold. We didn't even dare arrest him, which accounts for the fact that his photograph doesn't ornament the Rogues' Gallery."
"Well, what's the idea of trailing him, then?"
"Just to find out what he is doing. What d'ye call those birds that fly around at sea just before a gale breaks--stormy petrels? That's the count! He's a stormy petrel of crookedness. Something goes wrong every time he hits a town--or, rather, just after he leaves, for he's too clever to stick around too long. The question now is, What's this particular storm and when is it goin' to break?"
"Fine job to turn me loose on," grumbled Randall.
"It is that," laughed the captain who was dispensing information. "But you can never tell what you'll run into, me boy. Why I remember once--"
Randall, however, was out of the office before the official had gotten well started on his reminiscences. He figured that he had already had too much of a grouch to listen patiently to some long-winded story dug out of the musty archives of police history and he made his way at once to the hotel where Carl Cheney was registered, flaunting his own name in front of the police whom he must have known were watching him.
Neither the house detective nor the plain-clothes man who had been delegated to trail Cheney could add anything of interest to the little that Randall already knew. The "count," they said, had conducted himself in a most circ.u.mspect manner and had not been actually seen in conference with any of the Germans with whom he was supposed to be in league.
"He's too slick for that," added the man from the Central Office.
"Whenever he's got a conference on he goes up to the Club and you can't get in there with anything less than a battering ram and raiding squad.
There's no chance to plant a dictaphone, and how else are you going to get the information?"
"What does he do at other times?" countered Guy, preferring not to reply to the former question until he had gotten a better line on the case.
"Behaves himself," was the laconic answer. "Takes a drive in the Park in the afternoon, dines here or at one of the other hotels, goes to the theater and usually finishes up with a little supper somewhere among the white lights."
"Any women in sight?"
"Yes--two. A blond from the girl-show that's playin' at the Knickerbocker and a red-head. Don't know who she is--but they're both good lookers. No scandal, though. Everything appears to be on the level--even the women."
"Well," mused the government operative after a moment's silence, "I guess I better get on the job. Probably means a long stretch of dull work, but the sooner I get at it the sooner I'll get over it. Where is Cheney now?"
"Up in his room. Hasn't come down to breakfast yet. Yes. There he is now. Just getting out of the elevator--headed toward the dinin' room,"
and the plain-clothes man indicated the tall figure of a man about forty, a man dressed in the height of fas.h.i.+on, with spats, a cane, and a morning coat of the most correct cut. "Want me for anything?"
"Not a thing," said Randall, absently. "I'll pick him up now. You might tell the chief to watch out for a hurry call from me--though I'm afraid he won't get it."
As events proved, Randall was dead right. The Central Office heard nothing from him for several months, and even Was.h.i.+ngton received only stereotyped reports indicative of what Cheney was doing--which wasn't much.
Shortly after the first of the year, Guy sent a wire to the chief, asking to be relieved for a day or two in order that he might be free to come to Was.h.i.+ngton. Sensing the fact that the operative had some plan which he wished to discuss personally, the chief put another man on Cheney's trail and instructed Randall to report at the Treasury Department on the following morning.
"What's the matter?" inquired the man at the head of the Service as Guy, a little thinner than formerly and showing by the wrinkles about his eyes the strain under which he was working, strolled into the office.
"Nothing's the matter, Chief--and that's where the trouble lies. You know I've never kicked about work, no matter how much of it I've had.
But this thing's beginning to get on my nerves. Cheney is planning some coup. I'm dead certain of that. What it's all about, though, I haven't the least idea. The plans are being laid in the German-American Club and there's no chance of getting in there."
"How about bribing one of the employees to leave?"
"Can't be done. I've tried it--half a dozen times. They're all Germans and, as such, in the organization. However, I have a plan. Strictly speaking, it's outside the law, but that's why I wanted to talk things over with you...."
When Randall had finished outlining his plan the chief sat for a moment in thought. Then, "Are you sure you can put it over?" he inquired.
"Of course I can. It's done every other day, anyhow, by the cops themselves. Why shouldn't we take a leaf out of their book?"
"I know. But there's always the possibility of a diplomatic protest."
"Not in this case, Chief. The man's only a waiter and, besides, before the emba.s.sy has a chance to hear about it I'll have found out what I want to know. Then, if they want to raise a row, let 'em."
The upshot of the matter was that, about a week later, Franz Heilman, a waiter employed at the German-American Club in New York, was arrested one night and haled into Night Court on a charge of carrying concealed weapons--a serious offense under the Sullivan Act. In vain he protested that he had never carried a pistol in his life. Patrolman Flaherty, who had made the arrest, produced the weapon which he claimed to have found in Heilman's possession and the prisoner was held for trial.
Bright and early the next morning Randall, disguised by a mustache which he had trained for just such an occasion and bearing a carefully falsified letter from a German brewer in Milwaukee, presented himself at the employee's entrance of the German-American Club and asked for the steward. To that individual he told his story--how he had tried to get back to the Fatherland and had failed, how he had been out of work for nearly a month, and how he would like to secure employment of some kind at the Club where he would at least be among friends.
After a thorough examination of the credentials of the supposed German--who had explained his accent by the statement that he had been brought to the United States when very young and had been raised in Wisconsin--the steward informed him that there was a temporary vacancy in the Club staff which he could fill until Heilman returned.
"The duties," the steward added, "are very light and the pay, while not large, will enable you to lay by a little something toward your return trip to Germany."
Knowing that his time was limited, Randall determined to let nothing stand in the way of his hearing all that went on in the room where Cheney and his a.s.sociates held their conferences. It was the work of only a few moments to bore holes in the door which connected this room with an unused coat closet--plugging up the holes with corks stained to simulate the wood itself--and the instant the conference was on the new waiter disappeared.
An hour later he slipped out of the side entrance to the Club and the steward is probably wondering to this day what became of him. Had he been able to listen in on the private wire which connected the New York office of the Secret Service with headquarters at Was.h.i.+ngton, he would have had the key to the mystery.
"Chief," reported Randall, "I've got the whole thing. There's a plot on foot to raise one hundred and fifty thousand German reservists--men already in this country--mobilizing them in four divisions, with six sections. The first two divisions are to a.s.semble at Silvercreek, Michigan--the first one seizing the Welland Ca.n.a.l and the second capturing Wind Mill Point, Ontario. The third is to meet at Wilson, N.
Y., and will march on Port Hope. The fourth will go from Watertown, N.
Y., to Kingston, Ontario, while the fifth will a.s.semble somewhere near Detroit and proceed toward Windsor. The sixth will stage an attack on Ottawa, operating from Cornwall.
"They've got their plans all laid for the coup, and Cheney reported to-day that he intends to purchase some eighty-five boats to carry the invading force into the Dominion. The only thing that's delaying the game is the question of provisions for the army. Cheney's holding out for another advance--from what I gathered he's already received a lot--and claims that he will be powerless unless he gets it. I didn't stay to listen to the argument, for I figured that I'd better leave while the leaving was good."
The reply that came back from Was.h.i.+ngton was rather startling to the operative, who expected only commendation and the statement that his task was completed.
"What evidence have you that this invasion is planned?"
"None besides what I heard through holes which I bored in one of the doors of the German-American Club this morning."
"That won't stand in court! We don't dare to arrest this man Cheney on that. You've got to get something on him."
"Plant it?"
"No! Get it straight. And we can't wait for this expedition to start, either. That would be taking too much of a chance. It's up to you to do a little speedy work in the research line. Dig back into the count's past and find something on which we can hold him, for he's very evidently the brains of the organization, in spite of the fact that he probably is working only for what he can get of that fund that the Germans have raised. I understand that it's sixteen million dollars and that's enough to tempt better men than Cheney. Now go to it, and remember--you've got to work fast!"
Disappointed, chagrined by the air of finality with which the receiver at the Was.h.i.+ngton end of the line was hung up, Randall wandered out of the New York office with a scowl on his face and deep lines of thought between his eyes. If he hadn't been raised in the school which holds that a man's only irretrievable mistake is to quit under fire, he'd have thrown up his job right there and let some one else tackle the work of landing the count. But he had to admit that the chief was right and, besides, there was every reason to suppose that grave issues hung in the balance. The invasion of Canada meant the overthrow of American neutrality, the failure of the plans which the President and the State Department had so carefully laid.
Cheney was the crux of the whole situation. Once held on a charge that could be proved in court, the plot would fall through for want of a capable leader--for the operative had learned enough during his hour in the cloak-room to know that "the count" was the mainspring of the whole movement, despite the fact that he undoubtedly expected to reap a rich financial harvest for himself.
Selecting a seat on the top of a Fifth Avenue bus, Randall resigned himself to a consideration of the problem.
"The whole thing," he figured, "simmers down to Cheney himself. In its ramifications, of course, it's a question of peace or war--but in reality it's a matter of landing a crook by legitimate means. I can't plant a gun on him, like they did on Heilman, and there's mighty little chance of connecting him with the Branchfield case or the van Husen emeralds at this late date. His conduct around town has certainly been blameless enough. Not even any women to speak of. Wait a minute, though!
There were two. The blond from the Knickerbocker and that red-haired dame. He's still chasing around with the blond--but what's become of Miss Red-head?"
This train of thought had possibilities. If the girl had been cast aside, it was probable that she would have no objection to telling what she knew--particularly as the color of her hair hinted at the possession of what the owner would call "temperament," while the rest of the world forgets to add the last syllable.
It didn't take long to locate the owner of the fiery tresses. A quick round-up of the head waiters at the cafes which Cheney frequented, a taxi trip to Was.h.i.+ngton Square and another to the section above Columbus Circle, and Randall found that the red-haired beauty was known as Olga Brainerd, an artist's model, whose face had appeared upon the cover of practically every popular publication in the country. She had been out of town for the past two months, he learned, but had just returned and had taken an apartment in a section of the city which indicated the possession of considerable capital.