It was almost noon, which made it eight hours since Wilson was carried out of the house. He had had less than four hours’ sleep and only the slight nourishment he had received at the hospital since he and the girl dined at midnight, yet he was now fairly strong. His head felt sore and bruised, but he was free of the blinding ache which so weakened him in the morning. An austere life together with the rugged constitution he inherited from his Puritan ancestors was now standing him in good stead. He turned into the narrow street which ran along the water front in the rear of the Beacon Street houses and began his search for the gate which had admitted him to so many unforeseen complications. He found that nearly a third of the houses were closed for the summer, and that of these at least one half had small doors leading into fenced courtyards in the rear. There was not a single mark by which he might identify that one which he had battered down. He had only forced the lock so that the door when held closed again would show no sign of having been touched. The priest, or whoever it was who had entered after him, must have taken the same precaution, for every gate was now fast shut. It seemed a hopeless search. Then he happened to remember that the policeman had said that there was glass atop this particular wall. He retraced his steps. The clue was a good one; he discovered with a bounding heart that one alone of all the entrances was so protected. He tried the door, and found to his further relief that it gave readily. He stepped within and closed the gate behind him. He saw then that it had been held by the same piece of joist he himself had used, but had been so hastily and lightly fixed as merely to hold the door shut. He ran across the yard and in another minute was through the window and once again in the lower hall. It was fairly light there now; he did not feel as though this was the same house. This was the third time that he had hurried along this passage on his way to unknown conditions above, and each time, though within a period of less than a full day, had marked a crisis in his life. As he sprang up the stairs it did not occur to him that he was unarmed and yet running full ahead into what had proven a danger spot. It would have mattered He crossed the hall and pushed aside the curtains which before had concealed his unknown assailant. The blinds were still closed, so that the room was in semi-darkness. The fire had gone out. There was no sign of a human being. Wilson shouted her name once again. The silence closed in upon him oppressively. He saw the dead hearth, saw the chair in which she had curled herself up and gone to sleep, saw the rug upon which Sorez had reclined, saw the very spot where she had sat with the image in her lap, saw where she had stood as she had thrust the revolver into his hand and sent him on his ill-omened errand. But all these things only emphasized her absence. It was as though he were looking upon the scene of events of a year past. She had gone. He hurried into the next room––the room where Sorez, fainting, had fumbled at the safe until he opened it––the room where he had first seen the image which had really been the source of all his misfortunes. The safe door was closed, but about the floor lay a number of loose papers, as though the safe had been hastily ransacked. The ebony box which had contained the idol was gone. Some of the papers were torn, which seemed to show that this had been done by the owner in preparing for hasty flight rather than Coming out of here, he next began a systematic examination of every room on that floor. In the boudoir where he had found clothes for the girl, he discovered her old garments still hanging where she had placed them to dry. Her dress was spread across the back of a chair, her stockings were below them, and her tiny mud-bespattered shoes on the floor. They made him start as though he had suddenly come upon the girl herself. He crossed the room and almost timidly placed his hands upon the folds of the gown. These things were so intimate a part of her that it was almost like touching her hand. It brought up to him very vividly the picture of her as she stood shivering with the cold, all dripping wet before the flames. His throat ached at the recollection. It had never occurred to him that she might vanish like this unless, as he had half feared, he might return to find Sorez dead. This new turn left him more bewildered than ever. He went into every room of the house from attic to cellar and returned again to the study with only this fact of her disappearance to reward him for his efforts of the last three hours. Had this early morning intruder abducted them He made his way back to the safe and examined some of the torn letters; they were all in Spanish. A large part of them bore the same postmark, “Bogova, Republic of Carlina.” The sight of the safe again recalled to him the fact that he still had in his possession the parchment which had dropped from the interior of the idol. It was possible that this might contain some information which would at any rate explain the value which these two men evidently placed upon it. He took it out of his pocket and looked at it with some curiosity. It was very tightly rolled in a covering of what appeared to be oilskin. He cut the threads which held it together and found a second covering sewed with sinew of some sort. This smelled musty. Cutting this, he found still a third covering of a finely pounded metal looking like gold-foil. This removed revealed a roll of parchment some four inches long and of about an inch in thickness. When unrolled He picked up several fragments of the letters scattered about, in the hope of obtaining at least some knowledge of Sorez. The fact that the man had stopped to tear them up seemed to prove that he had made plans to depart for good, sweeping everything from the safe and hastily destroying what was not valuable. Wilson knew a little Spanish and saw that most of the letters were of recent date and related to the death of a niece. Others mentioned the unsettled condition of government affairs in Carlina. At one time Sorez must have been very close to the ruling party, for several of the letters were from a man who evidently stood high in the ministry, judged by the intimacy which he displayed with affairs of state. He spoke several times of the Expedition of the Hills, in which Sorez had apparently played a part. But the most significant clause “There is still, I hear, a great bitterness felt among the Mountain tribes over the disappearance of the idol of their Sun God. They blame this on the government and more than half suspect that you were an important factor in its vanishing. Have a care and keep a sharp lookout. You know their priest is no ordinary man. They have implicit faith that he will charm it back to them.” This was dated three months before. Wilson put the few remaining bits of this letter in his pocket. Was it possible that this grinning idol which already had played so important a part in his own life was the one mentioned here? And the priest of whom Sorez spoke––could it be he who ruled these tribes in the Andes? It was possible––Lord, yes, anything was possible. But none of these things hinted as to where the girl now was. He came back into the study and took a look into the small room to the left. He saw his own clothes there. He had forgotten all about them. They were wrinkled and scarcely fit to wear––all but his old slouch hat. He smiled as he recalled that at school it was thought he showed undue levity for a theological student in wearing so weather-beaten and rakish a hat. He was glad of the opportunity to exchange for it the one he now wore. He picked it up from the chair where it lay. Beneath the rim, but protruding so as to be easily seen, was a note. He snatched it out, knowing it was from her as truly as though he had heard her voice. It read: “Dear Comrade: I don’t know what has become of you, but I know that if you’re alive you’ll come back for me. We are leaving here now. I haven’t time to tell you more. Go to the telephone and ring up Belmont 2748. Hastily, your comrade, Wilson caught his breath. With the quick relief he felt almost light-headed. She was alive––she had thought of him––she had trusted him! It deepened the mystery of how he had come to be carried from the house––of where they succeeded in hiding themselves––but, Lord, he was thankful for it all now. He would have undergone double what he had been through for the reward of this note––for this assurance of her faith in him. It cemented their friendship as nothing else could. For him it went deeper. The words, “You’ll come back here for me,” tingled through his brain like some sweet song. She was alive––alive and waiting for him to come back. There is nothing finer to a man than this knowledge, that some one is waiting his return. It was an emotion that Wilson in his somewhat lonely life had never experienced save in so attenuated a form as not to be noticeable. He lingered a moment over the thought, and then, crushing the old hat––now doubly dear––over his bandaged head, hurried out of this house in which he had run almost the gamut of human emotions. He went out by the laundry window, closing it behind him, across the courtyard, and made the street without being seen. That was the last time, he thought, that he would “A dime, please.” He was forced to drop the receiver and go out for change. Every clerk was busy, but he interrupted one of them with a peremptory demand for change. The clerk, taken by surprise, actually obeyed the command without a word. When Wilson finally succeeded in getting the number, he heard a man’s voice, evidently a servant. The latter did not know of a Miss Manning. Who did live there? The servant, grown suspicious and bold, replied, “Never mind now, but if ye wishes to talk with any Miss Manning ye can try somewheres else. Good-bye.” “See here––wait a minute. I tell you the girl is there, and I must talk to her.” “An’ I’m telling ye she isn’t.” “Is there a Mr. Sorez there–––” “Oh, the man who is just after comin’? Wait a minute now,” he put in more civilly, “an’ I’ll see, sor.” Wilson breathed once more. He started at every fairy clicking and jingle which came over the waiting line. “Waiting?” He almost shouted his reply in fear lest he be cut off. “Yes! Yes! waiting. Don’t cut me off. Don’t–––” “Is this you?” The voice came timidly, doubtingly––with a little tremor in it, but it was her voice. He had not known it long, and yet it was as though he had always known it. “Jo––comrade––are you safe?” “Yes, and you? Oh, David!” she spoke his name hesitatingly, “David, where did you go?” “I was hurt a little. I lost consciousness.” “Hurt, David?” “Not seriously, but that is why I couldn’t come back. I was carried to a hospital.” “David!” Her voice was tender with sympathy. “And you––I came back to the study for you. You were gone.” “We were hidden. There is a secret room where we stayed until daylight.” “Then it was–––” “The priest. Sorez was so weak and frightened.” “He came for the image?” “Yes, but he did not get it. Was it he who––who hurt you, David?” “It must have been. It was just as I came into the study.” “And he carried you out?” “Because he thought the house empty, I guess, and feared I was hurt worse than I was.” “And you really are not badly hurt?” “Not badly.” “But how much––in what way?” “Just a blow on the head. Please not to think about it.” “I have thought so many horrible things.” “Where are you now?” “Mr. Sorez did not dare to stay there. He really is much stronger, and so he came here to a friend’s. I did not dare to let him come alone.” “But you aren’t going to stay there. What are you going to do now?” He thought she hesitated for a moment. “I can’t tell, David. My head is in such a whirl.” “You ought to go back home,” he suggested. “Home? My home is with my father, and nowhere else.” “I want to see you.” “And I want to see you, David, but–––” “I’m coming out there now.” “No! no! not yet, David.” “Why not?” “Because–––” “Why not? I must see you.” “Because,” she said, as though with sudden determination, “I’ll not disturb you in that. I just wish to see you.” “But you would disturb me.” “How?” “I can’t tell you.” There was a moment’s pause. Then, “David, I may go away a long distance.” “Where?” “I can’t tell you now, but I may go at once. This––this may be the last time I can talk with you for––oh, for months.” He caught his breath. “What do you mean by that? What has happened?” “I have promised not to tell.” “But you must, girl. Why––you––this man Sorez has no right to exact promises from you. He–––” “You don’t understand, David. It––it has to do with my father and with––with what I saw.” “In that cursed image?” “Yes, the image. But it is not cursed, David.” “It is––it is if it takes you away.” “You see,” she trembled, “you see, I can’t discuss it with you.” “But I don’t see. I think you ought––you must–––” “Must, David?” “No––not that. I suppose I haven’t the right, “It’s odd that you should mind––I’ve been in it so short a time.” “You’ve been in it for years,” he ran on impulsively. “You’ve been in it ever since I learned to look between the stars and found you there.” There was silence for a moment, and then he heard her voice, “David.” “Yes.” “I have a feeling that I may come back into it again.” “You’ll never go out of it. I’ll not let you. I’ll–––” “Don’t be foolish, David. And now I must go. But, David––are you listening, David?” “Yes.” “Don’t try to find me. Don’t try to see me. I’m safe, but if I should need you, I’ll send for you. Will you come?” “To the ends of the earth.” “You must not ring me up again. But before I go away, if I do go away, I’ll write to you and tell you where. I will write you in care of the General Delivery, Boston––will that reach you?” “Yes, but–––” “That is all, David. That must be all now, for I must go. Good-bye.” “Jo––comrade!” “Good-bye.” “Just a minute, I–––” But he heard the little click of the receiver and knew that she had gone. |