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As gently as I could, I told her of the chase, of leaving Craig, of the explosion, of the marks of the struggle and of the finding of Wu Fang.
As I finished, I thought she would faint.
"And you--you went over everything about the wharf?"
"Everything. The men even dragged for the--"
I checked myself over the fateful word.
Elaine looked at me wildly. I thought that she would lose her reason.
She did not cry. The shock was too great for that.
Suddenly I remembered the note. "Before I left him--the last time," I blurted out, "he wrote a note--to you."
I pulled the crumpled paper from my pocket and Elaine almost tore it from me--the last word from him--and read:
DEAREST:
I may not return until the case is settled and I have found the stolen torpedo. Matters involving millions of lives and billions of dollars hang on the plot back of it. No matter what happens, have no fear.
Trust me.
Lovingly, CRAIG.
She finished reading the note and slowly laid it down. Then she picked it up and read it again. Slowly she turned to me.
I think I have never seen so sublime a look of faith on any one's face before. If I had not seen and heard what I had, it might have shaken my own convictions.
"He told me to trust him and to have no fear," she said simply, gripping herself mentally and physically by main force, then with an air of defiance she looked at me. "I do not believe that he is dead!"
I tried to comfort her. I wanted to do so. But I could do nothing but shake my head sadly. My own heart was full to overflowing. An intimacy such as had been ours could not be broken except with a shock that tore my soul. I knew that the poor girl had not seen what I had seen. Yet I could not find it in my heart to contradict her.
She saw my look, read my mind.
"No," she cried, still defiant, "no--a thousand times, no! I tell you--he is not dead!"
CHAPTER VI
THE LOST TORPEDO
From the rocks of a promontory that jutted out not far from the wharf where Wu Fang's body was found and Kennedy had disappeared, opened up a beautiful panorama of a bay on one side and the Sound on the other.
It was a deserted bit of coast. But any one who had been standing near the promontory the next day might have seen a thin line as if the water, sparkling in the sunlight, had been cut by a huge knife.
Gradually a thin steel rod seemed to rise from the water itself, still moving ahead, though slowly now as it pushed its way above the surface.
After it came a round cylinder of steel, studded with bolts. It was the hatch of a submarine and the rod was the periscope.
As the submarine lay there at rest, the waves almost breaking over it, the hatch slowly opened and a hand appeared groping for a hold. Then appeared a face with a tangle of curly black hair and keen forceful eyes. After it the body of a man rose out of the hatch, a tall, slender, striking person. He reached down into the hold of the boat and drew forth a life preserver.
"All right," he called down in an accent slightly foreign, as he buckled on the belt. "I shall communicate with you as soon as I have something to report."
Then he deliberately plunged overboard and struck out for the sh.o.r.e.
Hand over hand, he churned his way through the water toward the beach until at last his feet touched bottom and he waded out, shaking the water from himself like a huge animal.
The coming of the stranger had not been entirely unheralded. Along the sh.o.r.e road by which Kennedy and I had followed the crooks whom we thought had the torpedo, on that last chase, was waiting now a powerful limousine with its motor purring. A chauffeur was sitting at the wheel and inside, at the door, sat a man peering out along the road to the beach. Suddenly the man in the machine signalled to the driver.
"He comes," he cried eagerly. "Drive down the road, closer, and meet him."
The chauffeur shot his car ahead. As the swimmer strode s.h.i.+vering up the roadway, the car approached him. The a.s.sistant swung open the door and ran forward with a thick, warm coat and hat.
Neither the master nor the servant spoke as they met, but the man wrapped the coat about him, hurried into the car, the driver turned and quickly they sped toward the city.
Secret though the entrance of the stranger had been planned, however, it was not un.o.bserved.
Along the beach, on a boulder, gazing thoughtfully out to sea and smoking an old briar pipe sat a bent fisherman clad in an oilskin coat and hat and heavy, ungainly boots. About his neck was a long woolen m.u.f.fler which concealed the lower part of his face quite as effectually as his scraggly, grizzled whiskers.
Suddenly, he seemed to discover something that interested him, slowly rose, then turned and almost ran up the sh.o.r.e. Quickly he dropped behind a large rock and waited, peering out.
As the limousine bearing the stranger, on whom the fisherman had kept his eyes riveted, turned and drove away, the old salt rose from behind his rock, gazed after the car as if to fix every line of it in his memory and then he, too, quickly disappeared up the road.
The stranger's car had scarcely disappeared when the fisherman turned from the sh.o.r.e road into a clump of stunted trees and made his way to a hut. Not far away stood a small, unpretentious closed car, also with a driver.
"I shall be ready in a minute," the fisherman nodded almost running into the hut, as the driver moved his car up closer to the door.
The larger motor had disappeared far down the bend of the road when the fisherman reappeared. In an almost incredible time he had changed his oilskins and m.u.f.fler for a dark coat and silk hat. He was no longer a fisherman, but a rather fussy-looking old gentleman, bewhiskered still, with eyes looking out keenly from a pair of gold-rimmed gla.s.ses.
"Follow that car--at any cost," he ordered simply as he let himself into the little motor, and the driver shot ahead down a bit of side road and out into the main sh.o.r.e road again, urging the car forward to overtake the one ahead.
Such was the entrance of the stranger--Marcius Del Mar--into America.
How I managed to pa.s.s the time during the first days after the strange disappearance of Kennedy, I don't know. It was all like a dream--the apartment empty, the laboratory empty, my own work on the Star uninteresting, Elaine broken-hearted, life itself a burden.
Hoping against hope the next day I decided to drop around at the Dodge house. As I entered the library unannounced, I saw that Elaine, with a faith for which I envied her, was sitting at a table, her back toward the door. She was gazing sadly at a photograph. Though I could not see it, I needed not to be told whose it was.
She did not hear me come in, so engrossed was she in her thoughts. Nor did she notice me at first as I stood just behind her. Finally I put my hand on her shoulder as if I had been an elder brother.
She looked up into my face. "Have you heard from him yet?" she asked anxiously.
I could only shake my head sadly. She sighed. Involuntarily she rose and together we moved toward the garden, the last place we had seen him about the house.
We had been pacing up and down the garden talking earnestly only a short time when a man made his way in from the Fifth Avenue gate.
"Is this Miss Dodge?" he asked.