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The doctor looked about. "Very well, then," he said briskly, seeing his preparations. "Are you ready to go ahead?"
She nodded and threw off her coat that covered her immaculate white uniform.
The specialist plunged whole-heartedly into his work of saving us now.
"Hand me that needle, please," he directed the false nurse.
She moved over to the table near-by and took it up, pausing only long enough to dip it secretly into a vial she carried with her.
"Please hurry," repeated the doctor.
She turned from the table and handed it to him. He adjusted it and already held it poised for the thrust which was not to cure but to poison us further.
"Weepy Mary!" cried a frightened voice at our door.
Elaine had been deeply alarmed by the sudden illness of Kennedy and the message from Jameson. No sooner had Kennedy gone, than it flashed over her that Wu Fang had predicted something like this.
"The threat!" she exclaimed, seeking her cousin. "Mary, I must go to the city--right away."
On the next train, then, she had been speeding back to New York, and, arriving at the station, she realized that there was not a moment to lose. She called a cab, drove directly to our apartment, and hurried in, without even ringing the bell.
One glance at the improvised hospital was enough to alarm her. But the sight that had transfixed her was of a woman whose face she remembered only too well, though Kennedy and I had never seen her.
"Please, Miss," began G.o.dowski's a.s.sistant, trying to quiet Elaine, while G.o.dowski turned in vexation to his work.
"No, no!" repeated Elaine. "This woman is no nurse. She is a criminal!"
G.o.dowski paused. It was true he did not know the woman. He gazed from Elaine to Weepy Mary in doubt.
The game was up. Weepy Mary dropped a piece of gauze which she had soaked in the solution from the vial which Wu had given her and bolted for the door.
So sudden was her flight that no one was quick enough to stop her. She managed to reach the hall and slam the door. Down she rushed to the street, G.o.dowski's a.s.sistant after her.
There, awaiting, was Long Sin's car. She leaped in and was off in a moment. The a.s.sistant had just time to dive at the running-board. But his grip was poor and Long Sin easily threw him off.
"You--you fool!" he hissed at Mary, as soon as the danger of pursuit was over and the a.s.sistant had gone back into the apartment.
"Oh, sir," she begged, "it was not my fault. Miss Dodge came in--unexpectedly--she recognized me. If I had not fled, they would have caught me--perhaps you, too."
Long Sin was furious. He threatened her and she cowered back. However, there was nothing to be gained by that and he subsided and drove quickly down-town.
The excitement more than ever alarmed Elaine now. "Tell me," she appealed to Dr. G.o.dowski, "what is the matter?"
"In some way," he replied quickly, "they have become infected by the bite of an African tick which carries spirillum fever."
"She got away, in a cab," panted the a.s.sistant, returning.
G.o.dowski raised his hands in despair. "I was just about to start," he cried. "Everything is ready. I can't send for another nurse. Every minute counts."
Elaine had thrown off her coat and hat. Her sleeves were up in a moment and before the doctor knew what she was about she was scrubbing her hands in the antiseptic wash.
"Only--show me--what to do," she cried. "I will be the nurse!"
Several days later, when we had recovered sufficiently from the diabolical attack that had been made upon us, Kennedy was again at work in the laboratory, while I was writing. We still felt rather weak, but G.o.dowski's skill had pulled us out all right.
Our speaking-tube sounded and I knew that it was Elaine and Aunt Josephine.
"How do you feel?" inquired Elaine anxiously, as she almost ran across the laboratory to Craig.
"Fine!" he exaggerated, brightly.
"Really?" she repeated anxiously.
"Look!" he said, turning to his microscope.
He took some blood from a test tube in our electric incubator and placed a drop on a slide. It was some of the blood infected by the germs carried by the tick.
"That is how our blood looked--before the new nurse arrived," he smiled, while Elaine looked at it in horror.
Then he p.r.i.c.ked his arm and let a drop smear on another slide.
"Now look at that--perfectly normal," he added.
"Oh--I'm so glad," she exclaimed radiantly.
"Normal--thanks to you. You saved us. You were just in time," cried Craig taking both her hands in his.
He was about to kiss her, when she broke away. "Craig," she whispered, blus.h.i.+ng and looking hastily at us.
Aunt Josephine and I could only smile at the disgusted glance Craig gave us, as he thrust his hands in his pockets and wished us a thousand miles away at that moment.
CHAPTER V
SHADOWS OF WAR
For a long time Kennedy had, I knew, been at work at odd moments in the laboratory secretly. What it was that he was working on, even I was unable to guess, so closely had he guarded his secret. But that it was something momentous, I was a.s.sured.
Long Sin had already been arrested and it was a day or two after the escape of Wu himself who had come just in time to prevent the confession by one of his emissaries of the whereabouts of his secret den. Kennedy had Chase and another detective whom he frequently employed on routine matters at work over the clues developed by his use of the sphygmograph. Elaine, anxious for news, had dropped in on us at the laboratory just as Kennedy was hastily opening his mail.
Craig came to a large letter with an official look, slit open the envelope, and unfolded the letter. "Hurrah!" he cried, jumping up and thrusting the letter before us. "Read that."
Across the top of the paper were embossed in blue the formidable words:
United States Navy Department, Was.h.i.+ngton, D. C.