STRANGE EXIT OF POUBALOV. "I had already shown it to Mr. Bowker," replied Mrs. White, anxiously; "I thought it might convince him that Lizzie had nothing to do with the disappearance of Mr. Strobel." "It didn't convince him," said Clara, bitterly; "but no matter. May I copy Miss Lizzie's address?" "Of course. Are you going to write to her?" "Perhaps so. Have you written yet?" "I haven't had time, but I shall do so this afternoon. Is there something you would like to have me say?" Clara was intent with her thoughts. "Mrs. White," she said presently, "if you write to-night, could you omit any reference to Mr. Strobel?" "Land sakes!" exclaimed the good lady; "whatever should I write about then? With Lizzie's name in the papers, and everybody believing that she ran away with Mr. Strobel, what should I say?" "I suppose it would be hard to ignore it altogether, but couldn't you omit saying anything of the rumors that have connected their names?" "Why, I'll try to, Miss Hilman, but Lizzie will have to know about it some time." "Certainly, when you write to-morrow you can say what you please about it. Just for to-day I wish you wouldn't. I'll come down early to-morrow morning, and perhaps I will be able to tell you a great deal more than you know now, more than any of us know." "I do hope you will hear something definite," said Mrs. White, "for you can't tell how much easier I am to know that Lizzie's settled somewhere, that she's alive and in a "Nothing is so dreadful as uncertainty," replied Clara; "you'll be very careful what you write then?" "As for that, Miss Hilman, I don't see that I need to write at all to-day. It's only a day more, and if you say it won't make any difference to you what I say to-morrow, I'll put it off till then if you like." "I should be so much obliged! Have you seen Mr. Litizki to-day?" "No, nor the dark gentleman, either. Mr. Litizki's shop is not far from here, if you'd like to see him." Clara inquired the way, and soon after the young ladies set out for the little tailor's place of business. Litizki was his own master in business, and he employed two or more fellow-countrymen as assistants, the number varying with the demands of his enterprise. On this day there were several men in the shop, but they were not there as workmen. Most of them had come to talk with Litizki about the Strobel case. He was not very communicative, but that was his way. Nevertheless he had some things to say, and for this reason his acquaintances found that he talked much more freely than usual. "I tell you," he insisted, his dull eyes glowing with hate, "Alexander Poubalov is in Boston. I am not one to be mistaken in that man, and his presence here means trouble for any, perhaps all of us." "What could he wish to do against poor Russians, Nicholas Litizki, who have no intention of revisiting their native country?" asked one of the group. "Better ask what has he done?" retorted the tailor. "Here is Ivan Strobel, more prosperous than we, with more powerful friends, and what has Poubalov done to him? Would that I knew!" "As soon as Poubalov appears," remarked another, "Litizki will lay the very next crime that occurs to his hands." "Where Poubalov goes," said Litizki, "you will ever "Yes," admitted Peter, "but in the Strobel matter you do not forget what the police have discovered, do you? Well might you suspect the dirty spy, were it not that one does not go far, it seems, to find the woman in the case." "Bah!" sneered Litizki; "do you forget that there are two women in the case? And have you seen either of them? No. Well, I have seen both. I have no unkind word for Lizzie White, with whom they say he went away; but I tell you, friends, Ivan Strobel could not have preferred her to Miss Hilman." He pronounced the name softly as if it aroused a feeling akin to reverence. "You should see her," he continued; "she is a very angel of beauty and goodness. Happy would be the man whose privilege it was simply to worship her; and as for him whom she would permit to love her—Bah! talk to me not about the woman in the case until you have seen Miss Hilman." His friends listened gravely. They found nothing ludicrous in Litizki's occasionally extravagant language. When he was stirred to something like eloquence, it was almost always by a memory of the wrongs he had suffered, and then no language could have been too imaginative to express the bitterness with which his sympathetic hearers listened. "Where did you see her, Litizki?" asked one of them. "Never mind now," he replied; "I have seen her since Strobel disappeared. She is bearing up bravely, and scorns the suggestion that he eloped with Miss White. She is devoting her life to finding him, and it is my opinion that every poor Russian in Boston ought to do the same." He looked furtively from face to face in the group, to observe the effect of his words. Most of them stared at the floor. "Strobel was a good man," said one, after a long pause; "but what could any of us do?" "Do?" repeated the tailor, and his indignant reply died "Nicholas Litizki," said one who had not spoken previously, "if I were in your place, I would let the Strobel case take care of itself." The tailor glanced at the speaker. "You speak as if we were still in Russia," he said, "and you had authority to command me." "You will do as you please," returned the other; "but if I were in your place, I should keep quiet." "Listen then, all of you," exclaimed Litizki, with energy; "I shall not keep quiet. I shall pursue Poubalov, I shall do everything possible to effect the rescue of Ivan Strobel, and if I have to sacrifice my business and everything, and every chance I have in the world, I shall do it." The door of the little workshop opened, and Alexander Poubalov stepped in. "Good-day, to you, Nicholas Litizki, and friends," he said with easy familiarity. "When one is in a foreign land, and has need of something, he will naturally apply to a fellow-countryman, will he not?" He looked around at the group, as if expecting a general assent. The men looked darkly at him and were silent. If all had not seen him in Russia, they knew who he was; and if there had been any doubt, they would have but needed to glance at Litizki to see that he was facing his arch-enemy. The tailor rose from his bench, and his sallow face was deathly pale. "Alexander Poubalov," he said determinedly, "this is no place for you. You hear no words of welcome——" "Gently, Litizki, my friend, gently," interposed the spy; "I call simply on business. I want clothes. Will you make them for me?" "Not for all the wealth of the czar!" returned the tailor, fiercely. "Then we will waste no time discussing material and prices. Good-day again," and Poubalov walked grandly out. The group exchanged inquiring glances in silence for a moment, and then Litizki exclaimed: "You see, friends! you see! I was not mistaken in the man, and he is the same here as in Russia—the spy who goes everywhere and does nothing. I don't need to tell you that he wanted no garments. He came here for a purpose, and he accomplished it. It is now my turn, Vargovitch, to utter a warning. Poubalov's eyes are upon you, and if I were you—Bah!" Litizki had begun to imitate the serious tone in which his friend had warned him to let the Strobel case alone, but it seemed superfluous to suggest a warning to Vargovitch after he had himself seen the spy. "Yes, I understand," said Vargovitch, "and I simply repeat that you'd better keep out of the Strobel case." "Vargovitch," cried Litizki, "you do not talk like a loyal Russian. Is it you who would stand by and let this spy work his will among us?" "I have no more love for Poubalov and his work than you have, Litizki," replied Vargovitch. "May there not be reasons for my counsel—reasons that you do not understand?" Litizki peered at the speaker silently and resumed his work. Vargovitch left the room and shortly afterward the other visitors dispersed. "I would do what Vargovitch says, Nicholas Litizki," remarked one of the tailor's assistants. Litizki worked away as if he had not heard, and his thoughts were not pleasant or hopeful. It had seemed to him as if every compatriot of his in the city would need but the suggestion to unite in an effort to outwit Poubalov and rescue Strobel. Litizki could not understand it, The little tailor almost blushed as he left his bench and went to meet them. "I should almost say," he began hurriedly, after he had awkwardly acknowledged their greetings, "that you ought not to come here. Are you aware that Poubalov may be, probably is, watching your every step? That man has the eyes of a thousand, and if it were possible to throw him off the track it would be best to do so. But it is impossible. If you did not come here, he would find out that you know me, and he would infer the rest." "You seem troubled, Mr. Litizki," said Clara, kindly; "have you, too, given up Mr. Strobel?" "I? Never! It is because I do not give him up that—well, yes, I am troubled. Why disguise the fact that Poubalov is a powerful enemy? I am not a coward, Miss Hilman; my life is not worth enough to me to make me care for it, but I fear that man's power will be too great for the friends of Ivan Strobel." "You have seen him, then?" "Yes, I—" Litizki averted his eyes and continued: "He has been here, to-day, not more than half an hour ago." "I hope, Mr. Litizki," said Clara, "that you will not put yourself in his power. If you feel that it is dangerous to help in the search for Mr. Strobel, you must not do it." "Dangerous? It is too late to think of that, if I cared about it. That man has possession of Mr. Strobel, and will keep him until he has accomplished some purpose. Strobel will not yield." Litizki paused and looked gloomily away. "You see, it is a question of how to circumvent Poubalov," he added. "I am afraid, Mr. Litizki, that your loyalty to your friend will bring misfortune upon you. I should be very sorry for that." "Ah, Miss Hilman," muttered the tailor, and a sad wistfulness lingered briefly in his eyes, "you are worthy of my benefactor. I could not say more." Clara was deeply touched, and her voice trembled as she said: "Thank you, Mr. Litizki. I hope to be worthy of your kind thoughts. I may learn something to-night that will put another light on the case. Is it too much to ask you to call at my uncle's house some time during the evening?" "Not if you lived in Siberia, Miss Hilman. Where is it, and when shall I come?" Clara gave him the address and left him, begging him to come early. When they were on the way home, Louise said: "I am more and more amazed at your method every day, dear. Have I not been good to listen, and ask no questions and volunteer no advice?" "Too good, dear. I should often want advice, and ask it, but that I fear hurting you by not following it. I must go my own way." "Of course you must, but I was just leading up to this question: What in the world do you want of Mr. Litizki this evening?" "I hardly know myself, dear; but if that 'second driver' calls, I hope to make Mr. Litizki useful. Will that do?" It had to, for Clara fell to thinking, and her cousin saw that questions would be irritating. Mr. Pembroke sent word from his office that he should not come to dinner, and he had not arrived when the servant announced a caller, and handed a card to Clara. It was Poubalov. "I suppose," said Clara, showing not the least surprise, "that I'd better see him alone. Will you wait here" (they were in the dining-room), "in case I should want you?" Poubalov smiled and his face looked almost attractive as he rose and bowed when Clara entered the drawing-room. At that instant Clara felt that but for his self-confessed methods of deceit, she could have trusted him, and "I am delighted, Miss Hilman," he said, "to observe that you endure your sorrow and your remarkable work so well." "I am told that nothing escapes you," replied Clara, "and so I suppose you know all about my search for the driver of Mr. Strobel's second carriage." "Miss Clara," said a servant at the hall door, "a man who says his name is Billings wishes to see you." "Show him into the library, please," answered Clara, then to Poubalov—"Will you pardon me? This is the man of whom I was speaking, and I must see him." "Pray do," responded the Russian; "my message can well wait until he has gone." Clara at once crossed the hall into the library. The minute she was out of the room Poubalov went to the door and cautiously opened it a little way. He closed it quickly and reflected. Clara had left the door from the hall to the library wide open, and the street door would be easily in view to anybody in the library. Poubalov went from one to another of the several windows and looked out. From one at the side of the room he saw a few yards of turf bounded by a low hedge, and beyond that the park-like grounds surrounding a large dwelling. This window was partially open. The spy looked once more toward the hall door. He had given his hat and stick to the servant, and they had been placed somewhere in the hall. He shrugged his shoulders, pushed the window further up and stepped out. A moment later, Louise, who was idly gazing out of the dining-room window, was considerably startled to see a man, whom in the gathering dusk she could not recognize, leap over the hedge into the adjoining grounds, and disappear behind the shrubbery. |