Wilson undoubtedly would have been stopped by the police within three blocks had it not been for the seriousness of his lean face and the evident earnestness with which he was hurrying about his business. As it was, he gathered a goodly sized crowd of street gamins who hooted at his heels until he was forced to take to the side streets. Here for a few squares he was not annoyed. The thing that was most disturbing him was the realization that he knew neither the name of the street nor the number of the house into which he had so strangely come last night. He knew its general direction––it lay beyond the Public Gardens and backed upon the water front, but that was all. With only this vague description he could not ask for help without exciting all manner of suspicion. He must depend upon his instinct. The situation seemed to him like one of those grotesque predicaments of a dream. Had his brain been less intently occupied than it was with the urgency of his mission, he would have suffered acutely. He could not have had a worse section of the city to traverse––his course led him through the business district, where he passed oddly enough as a fantastic “Let me through,” he said. A few, even at that, shifted to one side, but a half dozen larger boys pressed in more closely, baiting him on. They had not seen in his eyes what the others saw. “I’m in a hurry,” he said. “Let me through.” Some of the crowd laughed; some jeered. All of them waited expectantly. Wilson took a short, quick breath. His frame stiffened, and then without a word he hurled himself forward. He must have been half mad, for as he bored a passage through, striking to the right and left, he saw nothing, heard nothing, felt nothing. His teeth together, his mind once again centered with burning intensity upon the solitary fact that he must get back to the girl who had sent him out to protect her. He was at this moment no more the man who crammed Hebrew verbs in the confines of that small, whitewashed room at the theological school than as though born of a different mother. He was more like that Wilson who in the days of Miles Standish was thought to be possessed of devils for the fierceness with Once he was free of them, he started on, hoping to get across Park Street and into the Common. But the pack was instantly at his heels again after the manner of their kind. He glanced about him baffled, realizing that with the increasing excitement his chances of pulling clear of them lessened. He dreaded the arrival of the police––that would mean questioning, and he could give no satisfactory explanation of his condition. To tell the truth would be to incriminate himself, compromise the girl, and bring about no end of a complication. He turned sharply and made up the hill at a run. He was a grotesque enough figure with the long robe streaming at his heels, his head surmounted by the fantastic turban, and his face roughened with two days’ beard, but he made something of a pathetic appeal, too. He was putting up a good fight. It took only half an eye to see that he was running on his nerve and that in his eagerness to get clear, there was nothing of cowardice. Even now there was not one of the rabble who dared come within fighting distance of him. It was the harrying they enjoyed––the sight of a man tormented. A policeman elbowed his way through the crowd and instead of clubbing back the aggressors, pushed on to the young man who was tottering near his finish. Wilson saw him. He gave one last hurried look about on the chance of finding some loophole of escape from that which was worse than the crowd. His eyes fell “Narrow squeak that time, old man,” smiled the stranger. “What the devil was the trouble?” “This, I suppose,” answered Wilson, as soon as he had caught his breath, lifting a corner of the elaborate gown. “And this,” touching the bandages on his head. “But what in thunder did they chase you for?” “I guess they thought I was crazy––or drunk.” “Well, it wasn’t fair sport at a hundred to one. Where shall I land you?” Wilson pondered a second. He would only lose time if he got out and attempted again to find the house in that rig. “If––if I could only get some clothes.” “Where’s your hotel or home? Take you anywhere you say.” “I haven’t either a home or a hotel,” answered Wilson, deliberately. “And these are all the clothes I have in the world.” “Is that a dream?” “It is the truth.” “But how–––” exclaimed the other. “I can’t tell you now how it came about, but it is the truth that I am without a cent, and that this is my entire wardrobe.” “Where did you come from this morning?” asked the other, still incredulous. “From the hospital.” Wilson hesitated just a second; he knew that in asking anything further he ran the risk of being mistaken for a charlatan, but this seemed now his only chance of getting back to her. They were speeding out through the Fenway, but the driver had now slowed down to await further orders. The man would drop him anywhere he said, but even supposing he brought him back to the vicinity of the house, he could not possibly escape observation long enough to locate that little door in the rear––the only clue he had to identification of the house. If ever a man’s exterior gave promise of generous help, the features of this fellow by his side did. He was of about his own age, smooth shaven, with a frank, open face that gave him a clean and wholesome appearance. He had the lithe frame and red cheeks of an athlete in training––his eyes clear as night air, his teeth white as a hound’s. But it was a trick of the eyes which decided Wilson––a bright eagerness tinged with humor and something of dreams, which suggested that he himself was alert for just such adventures as this in which Wilson found himself. He glanced up and found the other studying him curiously as though trying “I don’t blame you for being suspicious,” began Wilson, “but I’ve told you only the truth. Furthermore, I’ve done nothing any decent fellow wouldn’t do. The police have no right to me, although they might make a lot of trouble.” “That’s all right, old man. You needn’t feel obliged to ’fess up to me.” “I wanted to tell you that much,” answered Wilson, “because I want to ask something of you; I want you to give me a suit of clothes and enough money to keep me alive for a week.” Wilson saw the other’s brows contract for a second as though in keen annoyance or disappointment at this mediocre turn in a promising situation. He added quickly: “I’m not asking this altogether for myself; there’s a girl involved––a girl in great danger. If I get back to her soon, there is still hope that I can be of some use.” The other’s face brightened instantly. “What’s that you say? A girl in danger?” “In serious danger. This–––” he pointed at the linen turban, “this ought to give you some idea of how serious; I was on my way to her when I received this.” “But good Lord, man, why didn’t you say so before? Home, Mike, and let her out!” The chauffeur leaned forward and once again the machine vibrated to the call. They skimmed along the park roads and into the smooth roads of Brookline. “My name is Danbury,” his rescuer introduced himself, “and I’m glad to be of help to you. We’re about the same size and I guess you can get into some of my clothes. But can’t I send a wire or something to the girl that you are coming?” Wilson shook his head. “I don’t know exactly where she is myself. You see I––I found her in the dark and I lost her in the dark.” “Sort of a game of blind man’s buff,” broke in Danbury. “But how the devil did you get that swipe in the head?” “I don’t know any more than you where that came from.” “You look as though you ought to be tucked away in bed on account of it. You are still groggy.” Wilson tried to smile, but, truth to tell, his head was getting dizzy again and he felt almost faint. “Lie back and take it easy until we reach the house. I’ll give you a dose of brandy when we get there.” The machine slid through a stone gateway and stopped before a fine, rambling white house set in the midst of green trees and with a wide sweep of green lawn behind it. A butler hurried out and at a nod took hold of one of Wilson’s arms and helped him up the steps––though it was clear the old fellow did not like the appearance of his master’s guest. Of late, however, the boy had brought home several of whom he did not approve. One of them––quite the worst one to his “A gentleman to see you, sir, in the study.” “The devil you say,” snapped Danbury. “I did not say it, sir.” “I wanted to take this gentleman in there. However, we will go to the den.” Danbury led the way through a series of rooms to a smaller room which opened upon the green lawn. It was furnished in mahogany with plenty of large, leather-bottomed chairs and a huge sofa. The walls were decorated with designs of yachts and pictures of dogs. This room evidently was shut off from the main study by the folding doors which were partly concealed by a large tapestry. Danbury poured out a stiff drink of brandy and insisted upon Wilson’s swallowing it, which he did after considerable choking. “Now,” said Danbury, “you lie down while John is getting some clothes together, and I’ll just slip into the next room and see what my queer friend wants.” Wilson stretched himself out and gave himself up to the warm influx of life which came with the stimulation from the drink. Pound after pound seemed to be lifting from his weary legs and cloud after cloud from his dulled brain. He would soon be able to go back now. He felt a new need for the sight of her, for the touch of her warm fingers, for the smile of good fellowship from her dark eyes. In these last few hours he The voices in the next room which had been subdued now rose to a point where some phrases were audible. The younger man seemed to be getting excited, for he kept exclaiming, “Good. That’s bully!” Their words were lost once more, but Wilson soon heard the sentence, “I’m with you––with you to the end. But what are you going to get out of this?” Then for the first time he heard the voice of the other. There was some quality in it that made him start. He could not analyze it, but it had a haunting note as though it went back somewhere in his own past. It made him––without any intention of overhearing the burden of the talk––sit up and listen. It was decidedly the voice of an older man––perhaps a foreigner. But if this were so, a foreigner who had lived long in this country, for the accent consisted of a scarcely perceptible blur. He spoke very slowly and with a cold deliberation that was unpleasant. It was so a judge might pronounce sentence “My friend,” came the voice more distinctly, as though the owner had risen and now faced the closed doors between the two rooms, “my friend, the interests I serve are truly different from yours; you serve sentiment; I, justice and revenge. Yet we shall each receive our reward in the same battle.” He paused a moment. Then he added, “A bit odd, isn’t it, that such interests as yours and mine should focus at a point ten thousand miles from here?” “Odd? It’s weird! But I’m getting used to such things. I picked up a chap this morning whose story I wouldn’t have believed a year ago. Now I’ve learned that most anything is possible––even you.” “I?” “Yes, you and your heathen army, and your good English, and your golden idol.” “I object to your use of the word ‘heathen,’” the other replied sharply. Wilson started from his couch, now genuinely interested. But the two had apparently been moving out while this fag-end of the conversation was going on, for their voices died down until they became but a hum. He fell back again, and before he had time to ponder further Danbury hurried in with a suit of clothes over his arm. “Here,” he cried excitedly, “try on these. I must He tossed out a soft felt hat and blue serge suit. Wilson struggled into the clothes. Save that the trousers were a bit short, the things fitted well enough. At any rate, he looked more respectable than in a lounging robe. The latter he cast aside, and as he did so something fell from it. It was a roll of parchment. Wilson had forgotten all about it, and now thrust it in an inside pocket. He would give it back to Sorez, for very possibly it was of some value. He had not thought of it since it had rolled out of the hollow image. Danbury led the way out the door as soon as Wilson had finished dressing. The latter felt in one of the vest pockets and drew out a ten dollar bill. He stared from Danbury to the money. “Tuck it away, man, tuck it away,” said Danbury. “I can’t tell you–––” “Don’t. Don’t want to hear it. By the way, you’d better make a note of the location of this house in case you need to find me again. Three hundred and forty Bellevue,––remember it? Here, take my card and write it down.” It took them twenty minutes to reach the foot of Beacon street, and here Wilson asked him to stop. “I’ve got to begin my hunt from here. I wish I could make you understand how more than grateful I am.” “Don’t waste the time. Here’s wishing you luck and let me know how you come out, will you?” He reached forth his hand and Wilson grasped it. “I will.” “Well, s’long, old man. Good luck again.” He spoke to the chauffeur. In less than a minute Wilson was alone again on the street where he had stood the night before. |