CLEW. ***





                              NICK CARTER
                                STORIES

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  =No. 124.=      NEW YORK, January 23, 1915.      =Price Five Cents.=


     [The cover names the book The Girl Kidnapper. The words kidnaped, kidnaper
     and kidnaping are spelled with one p through out the eBook.--Ebook
     transcriber's note.]




                          THE GIRL KIDNAPER;

                  Or, NICK CARTER’S UP-TO-DATE CLEW.

                     Edited by CHICKERING CARTER.




CHAPTER I.

THROUGH LOCKED DOORS.


“The thing seems impossible!”

“Yet it’s true.”

“You mean to tell me that----”

“I mean to tell you that Mrs. de Puyster van Dietrich, who retired to
her room in this hotel last night at eleven o’clock, was not there this
morning when her maid went to call her, and that her doors were all
bolted and locked, with the keys inside.”

“What about the windows?”

“Mrs. van Dietrich’s rooms are on the fourth floor.”

“Well?”

“She did not jump out, Mallory, if that’s what you mean. They overlook
the sea, and there are jagged rocks immediately beneath her windows. She
would surely have been killed if she had gone that way. Anyhow, she is a
well-balanced woman, who enjoys life, and a multimillionaire. Why should
she commit suicide?”

“I don’t know why she should, Savage. That’s nothing. Seventy-five out
of a hundred suicides seem to have no good reason behind them--until
investigation is made afterward.”

“She did not jump out of the window, I tell you.”

“Perhaps she fell out,” suggested Mallory, sticking to his guns.

“She neither jumped nor fell out,” snapped the other. “The rocks would
tell the story if she had.”

James Mallory and Paul Savage, proprietors of the new summer hotel, the
Amsterdam--situated on a picturesque promontory on the Delaware coast,
with the broad Atlantic stretching away from its very foundation
walls--faced each other blankly in their private office.

It was well on in the morning, and two weeks after the opening of the
hotel, and judicious advertising had resulted in the house being
comfortably full already. The rooms--some single, but mostly en
suite--had been engaged largely in advance, and the guests were
practically all of the well-to-do class, with a fair sprinkling of very
wealthy.

Mrs. de Puyster van Dietrich was not the only multimillionaire, for
there were several others.

Mallory was a stout, imposing-looking man, always immaculately attired,
and with a suave manner that had perhaps led in the first place to his
becoming a “promoter.” Assuredly it had helped him when fairly launched
in that interesting occupation. His very appearance was a guarantee that
the company he represented was sound and certain to pay healthy
dividends to the stockholders.

Paul Savage, his partner, was a cadaverous individual, with many lines
about his lank jaw and the hunted look in his deep-set eyes which one
often sees in the hard-working business man, whose talent is mainly for
detail.

The two men had been associated in various schemes for years. Some of
them had turned out well, while others had not. Now they had plunged on
this hotel scheme, got a company behind them, and were hoping that, when
the time came for them to “unload,” they would find themselves with
enough money to rest on their oars while selecting some new enterprise,
which would promise even better than this.

On this morning, Mallory had been sitting behind his desk, swelling with
satisfaction as he figured on the profits that would result from the
guests who already were in the house, if they stayed a week or two
longer, without counting others that might come.

He had just been reading a letter he had received a week ago from a
certain Baroness Latour, who had engaged a suite of rooms, insisting
that they must look out over the sea. The price was not so much an
object, as her having pleasant rooms, with a clear ocean view.

“Well,” Mallory had muttered, “the baroness has rooms right over the
cliff. That ought to suit her. I hope she slept well last night. There
is a clear drop from her window of forty-five feet to the water, at
least. The waves wash against the wall of the house on that side.”

He had got to this stage of his musings when Paul Savage burst in with
the news that Mrs. van Dietrich had disappeared in so inexplicable a way
from her apartments.

How a rather large lady, of dignified aspect and deliberate movement,
could have been spirited from her bed and carried out of the house,
without anybody being aware of it, was something that neither of the
partners could comprehend.

“If her doors had been unfastened,” grunted Savage, “there might have
been some explanation. But all of them are locked and bolted within.”

“She’d gone to bed, you say?”

“So her maid says. But she had dressed herself before she went away.”

“That shows she wasn’t kidnaped,” remarked Mallory.

“It doesn’t show anything,” rejoined Savage. “How do you account for the
doors being fastened inside, with the keys left in the locks in the
rooms? You don’t suppose a lady leaving her rooms would have somebody
inside to bolt and lock the doors and then get out of the window in a
flying machine, do you?”

“Where is the maid?” asked Mallory.

“In hysterics in the housekeeper’s room,” was the disgusted reply. “She
and the housekeeper got in with the housekeeper’s master key, and after
one look at Mrs. van Dietrich’s bed, the girl darted at her employer’s
trunks, of which she had the keys, and searched through them. All the
jewelry was gone.”

“H’m! Perhaps the maid----”

“She had never left her own room from the time she went there, after
putting her mistress to bed, until she went to call Mrs. van Dietrich
this morning. We have the testimony of the maid who shares the room with
her for that. This maid was awake with the toothache, practically all
night, and she knows the other one never left the room.”

“Have you done anything about it?” asked Mallory.

“Yes,” was the reply. “I heard about this thing two hours ago.”

“You did? Why didn’t you tell me?”

“What would have been the use? I thought I might find out, by quiet
investigation, before I came to you. Only the housekeeper and the maid,
Mary Cook, know Mrs. van Dietrich is gone. After ten minutes’ inquiry
and examination, I decided it was too much for us alone, and I wired to
New York for Nicholas Carter.”

“The big detective, eh? That was a good move, Paul. I only hope he’ll
come. What did you say in the message?”

“Told him an important case was here for him, and that we would pay any
fee. He could name his own figure. But it was urgent, and would he come
at once?”

“Two hours since you sent that to him in New York?”

“A little more than two hours. But I’ve had no answer. If he’d start at
once, he could be here by evening.”

“Perhaps he isn’t at home.”

“That’s what I’m afraid of. He’s the only man I can think of who would
be likely to make anything of this. It’s too much for the average
policeman. Indeed----”

A rap at the door of the office made Paul Savage step to the door with
an irritable wrinkling upon his lean face of a score of lines which had
not been there before, while James Mallory growled from behind his desk.

“Oh, Colonel Pearson?” ejaculated Savage, with forced toleration, as he
found himself face to face with one of the house’s guests. “Is there
anything----”

Colonel Pearson was a cleanly built, soldierly looking man, with broad
shoulders and a remarkably keen face. The dark eyes had a way of looking
through anybody on whom they rested. At least, that was the conclusion
to which Paul Savage had come. He was in summer attire, and had the calm
insouciance of the wealthy man of leisure.

“I have received a telegram,” remarked the colonel, holding up a
crumpled yellow paper. “It has only just got to me. I came at once to
see what it was all about.”

“Telegram? I have only sent one since I have been here, and that was to
a person in New York.”

The colonel smiled.

“Exactly. You sent it to a person who was supposed to be in New York.
But it happens that he was much nearer.”

“I don’t understand,” faltered Savage.

“I don’t, either,” added Mallory, who had been sitting behind his desk,
listening in bewilderment. “Do you know anything about that person,
Colonel Pearson?”

“If you will permit me to close the door,” was the response, “I will
tell you.”

He shut the door and slipped the bolt into place. Then, as he approached
the desk to which Paul Savage had retreated, as if seeking the moral
support of his partner, he said quietly:

“You telegraphed Nicholas Carter, at his home in Madison Avenue, New
York, to come here quickly, on an important case. That is how this
telegram reads,” he adds, as he smoothed out the yellow paper and looked
at it. “I have only to say that, though I chose to be known here as
Colonel Pearson, since I came to enjoy a short vacation, my real name is
Nicholas Carter, and I live in Madison Avenue, New York.”

“You Nicholas Carter?” gasped Savage. “Why, I thought Carter was an
altogether different sort of man.”

“I understand,” laughed Nick. “You did not bargain for my being here, in
light clothes and white canvas shoes, with a golf club in my hand. It
did not occur to you that I might be an everyday man. You thought that,
as a detective, I should wear a lowering look and salute you with a
mysterious ‘Hist!’ when you opened the door just now.”

“Not exactly, but----”

“Yet a detective must be allowed his play time, like any other man,”
continued Nick. “I have just been playing golf with the Baroness Latour.
She is an early riser, as I am, and when I chanced to meet her on the
links, we agreed to play together, instead of singly. So we have done
nine holes. It was a drawn game. Here is your telegram. It was
redirected to me, in my assumed name of Colonel Pearson, to this hotel,
as you see, by my assistant.”

Paul Savage continued to look steadily at the calm face of the
detective, as if not quite satisfied. But Mallory broke in, with an
impatient grunt:

“Of course, you have no idea what induced us to send for you, Mr.
Carter?”

“It has to do with the disappearance of Mrs. de Puyster van Dietrich,
has it not?”

“Why, how did you know?” demanded Savage. “Not a word has been said
about it outside of this office and the housekeeper’s room. We have been
very careful to keep any inkling of the affair from our guests.”

The detective glanced at him quickly, and there was a narrowing of the
dark eyes which told of swift thinking.

“Indeed? Are you sure nothing has got out about it?” he asked.

“Quite. There are four persons who know about Mrs. van Dietrich’s
disappearance: My partner, Mr. Mallory, the housekeeper, and Mrs. van
Dietrich’s maid. That is all. Well, there is one more--yourself, of
course. We did not know that you had found it out. We don’t understand
how you did it, either.”

“Well, I prefer not to tell you that just now,” answered Nick Carter.
“That is, if you desire me to take this case.”

“We most certainly do,” declared Paul Savage earnestly.




CHAPTER II.

BITS OF EVIDENCE.


“Sit down, won’t you, Mr. Carter?”

James Mallory, who had been so interested in gazing at the great
detective as to forget the ordinary amenities, offered this invitation.
Getting up from his own chair behind the flat-topped desk, he placed one
for the visitor, with a propitiatory smile.

“Now, what is the first move, Mr. Carter?” asked Paul Savage, as they
settled down.

“Let me go over the particulars, as they have come to me,” replied Nick.
“We will see if they agree with the information you have.”

“Good idea!” commended Mallory.

“To begin with, Mrs. van Dietrich was put to bed by her maid, Mary Cook,
about eleven o’clock last night. The maid sleeps on the sixth floor, at
the top of the house. Mrs. van Dietrich’s three rooms and bath are on
the fourth.”

“That’s correct,” nodded Savage.

“At eight o’clock this morning, Mary Cook went to awaken her employer,
according to her custom. She could not make the lady hear, and she got
scared. So she went to the housekeeper, Mrs. Joyce, and told her she was
afraid Mrs. van Dietrich was sick. Mrs. Joyce went with her, and, with
her master key, unlocked the door, and, also, with another key, shot
back the bolt.”

“That’s the way I got it,” breathed Paul Savage. “Though how you managed
to get it so exact----”

“When the two women went into the room, they found the bed had been
slept in, and Mrs. van Dietrich’s nightgown had been thrown carelessly
across it. The windows were closed, except for a few inches at the top,
for ventilation. This was the case in all three rooms, and the
ventilator in the bathroom was open, as usual.”

“There were no signs of a struggle,” remarked Savage.

“So I understand,” assented Nick. “Another thing is that the clothes
which Mrs. van Dietrich wore the day before went with her. She must have
dressed herself--or been dressed by somebody else--before going away.”

“That is all true, as I got it,” observed Paul Savage. “But there is
another point, which you have not mentioned.”

“And that is----”

“All the jewelry in her trunks was taken out, although the trunks were
locked when the maid examined them this morning. The girl had the keys.”

“Oh, she had?”

The intonation with which the detective made this remark caused Savage
to shake his head decidedly.

“I understand,” went on Nick. “You mean there is no suspicion attaching
to the maid? Well, I am of the same opinion. You have not been able to
find the slightest clew, have you?”

“None.”

“Have any of the guests left the hotel this morning? I mean, left
altogether?”

“No. All of them will stay with us for several days, at least, so I
expect. They are here to enjoy the quietude and beauty of the place.
They are not transients, such as you find in city hotels.”

“None of them have given notice to leave, have they?” continued Nick,
disregarding the encomium on the hotel and its surroundings.

“I don’t think so. Are there any, Mallory?” asked Savage, turning to his
partner.

“I haven’t heard of any. I’ll ask the clerk, if you like. The phone is
right here,” replied Mallory, laying a hand upon his desk telephone.

“That is not necessary,” declared the detective. “I have already asked
him. I came through the office to this room, and I picked up what
information I could on the way.”

“You’re a pretty good picker, too, I should say,” remarked Mallory, with
a grin. “You seem to know about all we have found out.”

“If any of the guests say they are going to leave, I wish you’d let me
know at once,” requested Nick, as he got up from his chair. “I’ll go and
send a telegram to New York. Then I should like to look at Mrs. van
Dietrich’s rooms. They haven’t been disturbed, I hope.”

“No. I gave orders that no one should go into them after the maid had
looked at the trunks. Mrs. Joyce has her own keys, and she has fastened
all the doors as they were before, except that she had to knock out one
of the keys that had been left in the bedroom door, so that she could
put in her own.”

“That’s good. I’ll send a message by telephone to the telegraph office
at Dorset, from one of the booths in the lobby. I’ll be right back.”

The detective telephoned the message, as he had said, directed to his
assistant Chick, in Madison Avenue, New York. He told Chick to come down
to the Hotel Amsterdam at once, and to bring the bloodhound,
Captain--which had done so much effective police work for them at
various times--with him.

Nick Carter knew perfectly well that Mallory, or Savage, had taken the
receiver off the hook in their office, and were listening to him over
the wire.

That did not disturb him. He had rather expected it, and his object in
telegraphing from the booth, instead of from their office, as he might
have done, was to satisfy himself that they would descend to the
meanness of “listening in” to a private message.

He strolled back to their office when he had dispatched his telegram,
and when the door was opened, stood on the threshold with a smile as he
told them he was ready to go to the room of the vanished Mrs. van
Dietrich.

“One moment,” he added, as they were about to come forth. “I should like
to say something to you with the door closed.”

He stepped into the office, closing the door behind him, and said, in an
earnest whisper:

“Let me impress one thing upon you, gentlemen. I understand that you are
anxious to keep any knowledge of this strange disappearance from your
patrons, and also that you would not like it in the newspapers?”

“The newspapers?” fairly shrieked James Mallory. “That would settle us.
I believe if I saw a reporter around this hotel, I would fling him out
of the window into the sea. And, of course, we must not let our guests
know. It would give the hotel a fearful black eye--although it is no
fault of ours.”

“Very well,” observed Nick. “Then be careful that no one suspects my
identity. I am Colonel Pearson, remember. If any one outside of
yourselves were to know who I am, there would be no use my going on with
the case.”

“You can depend on us keeping it a secret,” asserted Savage promptly.
“We are too anxious for you to solve the mystery to throw any obstacles
in your way.”

“That’s what!” added Mallory. “What do you think of it all?”

“We have seen the effect,” returned Nick, “and we know that it must have
a cause.”

“That’s all right. But what is the cause?” growled Savage.

“The cause is never less than the effect,” continued the detective.
“Therefore, arguing by the importance of the effect, we must look for a
fairly powerful cause. Now, let’s go up to the fourth floor.”

The elevator man evidently had not heard of anything unusual in the
hotel, for he merely glanced at the two partners and the gentleman he
had come to know as Colonel Pearson, and when he was told to let them
off at the fourth floor, he did so without emotion.

“That’s good,” remarked Nick, as they walked along the thickly carpeted
corridor. “I can see that the incident concerning Mrs. van D. has not
become common property. Is this the door?”

Savage nodded and opened a door with his master key, ushered them into a
sitting room, and closed the door behind them.

Nick Carter walked on to the bedroom, and after a cursory glance at the
bed, went to the window.

Drawing from his pocket a powerful magnifying glass, he proceeded to
examine every inch of the window sill, working in a series of imaginary
squares.

The two partners watched him curiously, but he took no notice of them.
When he had finished his minute inspection of the sill and frame, he
threw up the window and leaned out.

“You have made careful examination of the rocks under this window, I
presume?” he asked.

“Yes. We have gone over them thoroughly,” replied Savage. “There is
nothing there.”

“Ah! Whose rooms are those that overlook the water on this same floor? I
see there is no shore or rocks at all there. The house seems to have
been built straight out of the sea.”

James Mallory walked to the window and looked out. He shook his head.

“Come over here, Savage,” he said. “I don’t know what rooms they are.
You know, don’t you?”

“Yes,” answered his partner, putting out his head and looking along the
rows of windows. “That window, where the curtain is blowing out, and the
next one, are number forty-eight. A lady occupies the suite. Let me see!
Oh, yes! the Baroness Latour.”

“Indeed?” remarked Nick Carter carelessly. “She’s a very charming young
lady. We were playing golf together this morning, as I told you. Now,
let me have a look at this room door.”

Turning the key, he swung the door open a few inches.

“You’d better stand outside, Mr. Mallory,” he suggested. “If anybody
comes along and seems curious, you can say that I am repairing the lock.
Tell them that Colonel Pearson makes a hobby of this sort of thing. I’ll
keep out of sight as much as possible, however.”

Nick pushed the door nearly shut, and kneeling inside the room, he drew
out the key and inspected it closely through his magnifying glass. Then
he examined the bolt and keyhole, and kept at it for ten minutes.

“Come in, Mr. Mallory,” he requested, through the narrow opening between
the door and the jamb. “I’m through with the door for the present.”

To the surprise of both partners, he dropped to his knees, and, with the
aid of his glass, began to go over the carpet in a series of imaginary
squares, just as he had done at the window.

It was half an hour before he had finished this task. By that time he
was under an electric light which hung near the bed, for the convenience
of guests who might like to read after retiring.

A gas jet protruded from the wall near it. Here Nick picked up the
burned end of a wax match.

He seemed to attach some importance to this trifle, for he arose to his
feet with the fragment of match in his hand and asked the partners:

“What kind of matches do you provide in this hotel?”

“Why--er--just the ordinary wood safety matches, with the name of the
hotel on the box. They are put in every room, for the use of smokers,
and also to light the gas when a guest does not want to use the electric
light. Some people like a lowered gas jet in the room all night, you
know.”

“Do you use wax matches at all?”

Mallory shook his head and turned to Savage, who, as already remarked,
was the detail man of the concern.

“Have we any of those matches, Savage?”

“None in the house, that I know of,” was the short reply. “Have you
found out anything, Mr. Carter?”

“Nothing that I can report, Mr. Savage,” Nick answered. “It is too early
to say one thing or another yet. I will say, however, that, in my
opinion, the person responsible for the vanishing of Mrs. van Dietrich
is living in the hotel.”

“A servant?” asked Mallory anxiously.

“That remains to be seen,” returned the detective, with a shrug. “It is
also certain that there are accomplices on the outside. I will go to my
room and think things over. After luncheon I will go into the case
further. If anything comes to your knowledge that seems likely to be
useful, you will find me in my room. Keep up your nerve, gentlemen, and,
above all things, keep your own counsel. Strict secrecy, remember.”

Once in his own room, Nick Carter lighted one of his favorite perfectos,
of which he had brought a box with him, and settled down to think over
the mystery that had so unexpectedly faced him in a place where he might
have supposed he could rest and enjoy a vacation in peace.

He smoked in silence for an hour, with the key of Mrs. van Dietrich’s
bedroom and the half-burned wax match in his fingers. He examined them
alternately through the magnifying glass and tried to build a hypothesis
on either one or the other, or both.

Suddenly there was a sharp rap at his door. As he opened it, James
Mallory stepped inside and stared at him with blinking eyes, while his
heavy cheeks, usually beet red, were a yellowish white.

“What’s the matter?” demanded Nick Carter sharply.

“More trouble!” blurted out Mallory. “It seems as if the foul fiend
himself is taking a hand in running this hotel.”

“Never mind about that!” interrupted the detective impatiently. “What is
the specific trouble now?”

“Another of our guests has mysteriously disappeared,” wailed Mallory.
“Mr. Harvey L. Drago, the big Wall Street banker.”

“Disappeared?” cried Nick Carter. “How? From his bedroom?”

“No. From the golf links!”

“That so? This is getting interesting,” observed Nick. “Sit down and
tell me all about it, Mr. Mallory.”




CHAPTER III.

LONG-DISTANCE OBSERVATIONS.


Accepting the cigar that Nick Carter offered by pushing the box toward
him on the table, James Mallory bit off the end in a distracted way, but
did not light it. Instead, he used the unlighted cigar to emphasize the
points of his narration by waving it about as he talked.

“Mr. Drago is one of the most influential men we have,” he began. “He is
very wealthy, and he is a free spender. Then he is not old, and he is
the sort of man who starts things in a social way and keeps them going
afterward. You know how I mean, Mr. Carter?”

“Yes. Go on.”

“He went out to the golf links early this morning, saying he would be
back for luncheon about twelve. He did not come, and we sent a boy over
to the links to see why. The caddie says Mr. Drago left the links about
eleven. He was going to walk back to the hotel by way of the beach. That
is two hours ago. We can’t find the slightest trace of him.”

“Strange!” murmured Nick.

“It will be ruin for us, Mr. Carter,” declared Mallory. “Can’t you do
something?”

“You have told me all you know? Isn’t there anything else you’ve
discovered which might serve as a clew?”

“Not a thing. Mr. Drago walked through the lobby this morning, pleasant,
as usual. He spoke to two or three people as he went along. I was one of
them, as a matter of fact. He seemed to be in good spirits, and he said
he intended to play the whole eighteen holes.”

“And that’s the last you saw of him? Was any one else playing this
morning?”

“Several. They saw him make the whole round, and the caddie says he was
in good form, and played a fine game. I don’t know what his score was,
exactly. I believe the caddie said he did it in----”

“Never mind about that,” laughed Nick. “That wouldn’t help me to trace
him. What I want to get at is how he came to be kidnaped in broad
daylight. This is as queer as the Mrs. van Dietrich case. I’ll go down
to lunch, and take up the whole matter afterward.”

He slipped a pair of powerful field glasses into a pocket, and went down
with Mallory.

Paul Savage was at the foot of the elevator, but the detective put him
off as he was beginning to whisper a long story of woe into his ears, by
telling him that he knew all about it.

“I’ll tell you when I learn something,” he added, turning away to enter
the ornate restaurant.

His luncheon over--and the detective disposed of a good one, as a matter
of principle--Nick strode out to the golf links and got hold of the
caddie who had been with Drago.

The links were a mile from the hotel.

Nothing more was to be learned from the caddie than the detective
already knew. So he took a pathway which ran through a wood, coming out
on the sandy beach, edged by rocks.

Coming to a bit of rising ground, Nick stood there and surveyed the
prospect. He was thinking all the time. Much as he admired beautiful
scenery for its own sake, he would not have stopped now to look around
had he not had some ulterior object.

The really fine links stretched behind him, the clubhouse showing above
trees in the distance. On the right were the woods, with the hotel
towering on the edge of the cliff, three-quarters of a mile away. To the
left were other woods, and in front rolled the blue waters, with the
white-capped surf, of the Atlantic Ocean.

In the great curving bay, immediately in front of the hotel, but some
distance out, was a steam yacht, her white hull and plentiful brasswork
gleaming in the bright sunshine.

Nick Carter stood in deep thought for several minutes. After discarding
the possibility of Drago having been spirited away in a motor car, for
the simple reason that the only approach to the sea path, which the
missing man had taken, was by way of the links, where a machine must
have been seen, the detective sought another explanation.

“There are two ways in which it might be done,” he mused. “A man might
be waylaid in the shelter of the woods and carried through them to the
main road. Another way--and perhaps the most likely--would be by the
sea. You can’t see the beach from here on account of the rocks. A boat
could sneak up and get away without being seen by any one on shore.”

It seemed to Nick that either of these two methods must have been
employed, and he was trying to settle in his own mind which one was the
more likely, when his gaze fell upon the yacht out in the bay.

He had noticed it many times before. But now it took on a new
significance in the light of the theory he had formed with regard to
Harvey L. Drago’s disappearance.

“What’s that yacht doing out there?” he muttered. “Who is her owner? Any
one living in the hotel? That seems likely, although she was there when
I came here, day before yesterday. I don’t remember to have seen any
communication with her from the shore. She may only have put in there
for shelter, or repairs.”

The detective was a yachtsman himself, and took a deep interest in all
kinds of craft. Dropping behind a bush and lying almost at full length,
he trained his field glasses on the yacht.

With the eye of a sailor, as well as of a keen investigator, he studied
the graceful vessel thoroughly from bow to stern, and from water line to
the tops of tapering masts and white smokestack.

“She looks familiar to me in a general way,” he reflected. “There is
something about her general lines that I seem to recognize. But I can’t
identify her as any boat I know. I’ll ask at the hotel. Somebody there
may know something about her. Of course, it is not remarkable for a
pleasure boat to be anchored in a beautiful bay like this. Still, no
harm will be done by my asking.”

He got up and climbed slowly to the little eminence whereon he had stood
before, as a new idea came to him. Having reached the top of the small,
spreading hill, he dropped flat upon the ground, the field glasses in
his fingers.

“If I am not mistaken,” was his inward remark, “I can see the hotel well
from here with the glasses. I’ll take a squint at that little cove under
the windows of the room occupied by the baroness. From here it looks as
if they must be nearly in line with the yacht. That may not mean
anything--but then, again, it may.”

Nick Carter swept the glasses over the cove. Then he gradually brought
them to bear on the windows of the rooms occupied by Mrs. de Puyster van
Dietrich until she departed into the unknown so strangely.

He allowed his glasses to wander from room to room and from floor to
floor, until they finally came to rest on the window of the sitting room
belonging to the dashing young lady with whom he had played golf that
morning--the Baroness Latour.

Nothing at this window interested him, and he was just about to return
to his scrutiny of the cove, when he saw a woman come forward in the
room and throw up the sash. It was the baroness.

“I don’t blame her for opening her window on such a beautiful
afternoon,” thought Carter. “The peculiar thing is that she should have
had it closed at all. Hello! What’s she doing now?”

Baroness Latour--looking more charming than ever, Nick thought, in her
afternoon gown--had disappeared from the window. Now she returned with a
peculiar-looking box in her hands.

She settled it firmly on the window sill, and as she did so, the puzzled
frown that had wrinkled up the forehead of the detective passed away. He
saw what the box really was.

“Great Scott!” came from his lips, in an excited whisper. “What does the
Baroness Latour want with a wireless telephone? Who is she talking to?
The only thing I can see in line with her is the yacht. Is it possible
that she is having a conversation with somebody on board? If so, why?
That’s the question--why?”

He settled himself to gaze through his glasses more at his ease, as well
as to make sure he was right as to the nature of the box on the
baroness’ window sill.

“It strikes me, my charming friend, that you may be here for some other
purpose than to play golf and take part in the evening ‘hops’ in the
hotel. Your actions at the window are unusual enough to make me
curious, at all events. I’ll telegraph to New York for my own wireless
telephone. Signor Marconi may be just as useful to me as to you, with
this new and wonderful invention of his. Meanwhile, since we have
already made acquaintance with each other, I shall venture to ask you to
dine with me this evening. If you decline--well, I must hit on something
else.”

The baroness removed the machine from her window at this instant, and
pulled down the sash.

Nick Carter got to his feet, and strolled thoughtfully back to the
hotel.




CHAPTER IV.

A DINNER WITH NICK CARTER.


The Baroness Latour sat at a little writing table behind the lace
curtains in her sitting room, making notes in a dainty memorandum book.
Occasionally she peered through the fine web of the curtain at the
handsome white yacht gently rising and falling on the swell in the bay.

A knock at the door, and her maid took a note from a bell boy and handed
it to the baroness.

“The boy is waiting for an answer,” said the maid.

“Very well, Florine. I’ll see what it is.”

The baroness started with uncontrollable astonishment when she found
that the letter was a respectful request from Colonel Pearson that she
would give him the pleasure of dining at his table that evening.

“Well, who would have thought this?” she murmured. “Colonel Pearson, eh?
Indeed, I’ll dine with him.”

She wrote a note of acceptance in a firm, but entirely feminine hand,
and sealed the envelope with golden wax, stamped with a large “L.”

“I rather think that ‘L’ is convincing,” she said to herself, with a
smile, as she handed the letter to Florine, to give to the waiting bell
boy.

“Keep the doors closed, Florine,” she ordered. “You can stay in the
room. Give me that telephone instrument.”

With Florine’s assistance, she placed the wireless-telephone apparatus
again on the sill, and, after a few moments of ineffective endeavor, got
a ticking that told her she was in communication with the yacht which
had awakened so much curiosity in Nick Carter.

Her conversation was very brief, but she contrived to give orders in a
few words, which, under certain conditions, would carry out some very
important work.

“There, Mr. Nicholas Carter!” she murmured, as she motioned to Florine
to help her in removing the apparatus from the window. “I don’t know how
you have grown suspicious. But I can’t explain your invitation on any
other supposition. If you are not suspicious, nothing will happen. If
you are--well, we shall see.”

Among the well-dressed women who dined in the brilliantly lighted
restaurant of the Hotel Amsterdam that evening, there was none more
strikingly beautiful or aristocratic than the Baroness Latour.

Her costume was the last word in fashion and costly material, and she
wore it like a queen. Her jewelry was dazzling.

Sitting opposite, at the small table set for two, was Nick Carter. His
strong, grave face, lighted up by those wonderful dark eyes of his, made
him, in his correct evening dress, an effective foil to the radiant
beauty of the fair young woman who was his guest.

As a thorough man of the world, Nick Carter knew how to order a dinner,
and the waiter looked at him in profound respect when he had the list of
dishes on his slip.

It will have been gathered that the Baroness Latour was not exactly what
she appeared to be. In fact, she had considered it necessary to change
her personal aspect long before she came to the Amsterdam and found that
Nick Carter, under the name and title of Colonel Pearson, was a guest.

The name she had assumed was not that by which the detective had known
her a year or so before.

For weeks she had been slowly and systematically disguising herself, and
she had done it more effectively than would be thought possible by a
person who did not appreciate what can be done with cosmetics,
instruments, and lotions in these days.

A “beauty doctor” would have gone into transports over her artistic
achievements in this way.

Paraffin injections had changed the contour of her whole face, and the
shape of her hands had been modified by the same means. Her heavy coils
of bronze hair had become dark brown, and she had even practiced
speaking in a different cadence, to hide her ordinary tones.

The perfection of the disguise can be understood when it is said that
Nick Carter had known the baroness very well under a different name, and
would have recognized her instantly had not her real personality been
absolutely concealed.

He had learned from Mallory that the baroness had engaged her rooms by
telegraph from New Orleans, and that she had particularly stipulated
that they should overlook the ocean.

Why had she been so insistent on this, and what had she been doing with
that wireless telephone on the window sill?

The dinner over, Nick asked if she would accept a cigarette, at the same
time offering his cigarette case.

“Thank you,” she replied sweetly. “I will smoke, but I prefer my own
cigarettes, if you will permit me.”

Nick bowed, and drawing forth a cigarette for himself, looked for a
match.

“Confound that waiter!” he exclaimed. “There are no matches on the
table, and I don’t believe I have one in my pocket.”

“I have some,” smiled the baroness, who had been taking a costly,
gold-tipped Turkish cigarette from a gold case. “Here!”

She took from her chatelaine a small gold match box--a companion piece
to the cigarette case--and pressing open the cover, offered it to the
detective.

He saw, as he took one of the wax matches in his fingers, that it was an
exact duplicate of the burned match he had picked up in the bedroom of
Mrs. de Puyster van Dietrich that morning.

Wax matches generally are more or less alike, but these were much
thicker than most of them.

He was obliged to drop his eyes to veil the gleam of excitement in them.
Then, coolly striking the match, he held it until the baroness’
cigarette was going.

When he lighted his own, he blew out the match and dropped it carelessly
to the floor at his feet.

“May I take a match or two from your box, in case of emergency, until I
get some,” he asked, smiling. Then, as she nodded assent, he continued:
“When am I to have the pleasure of another round with you on the links?”

The baroness laughed gleefully, and she answered his questions by asking
another:

“Do you do everything as seriously as you play golf, Colonel Pearson?”

“I suppose so,” smiled Nick. “It always seems to me that anything worth
doing at all should be taken up earnestly.”

“I believe that, too,” she returned, still laughing. “I was only
thinking that it was not unusual for you to find yourself pitted against
women. Judging by the way you played this morning, I should say you
respect the prowess of my sex, no matter how poorly they may play.”

“You are right, baroness,” admitted the detective. “I have played the
game very often against women.”

“And do you always win?”

“Is that a fair question?”

“I was curious to know.”

“I did not win this morning.”

“But you didn’t lose,” she rejoined quickly. “So there is neither
decided so far.”

“Perhaps we’d better leave it to the next game we shall play against
each other,” suggested Nick, with a peculiar smile.

“Yes,” she assented gayly. “The next game we shall play. Do you think
you will win that game, Colonel Pearson?”

“If I do, it won’t be for lack of a worthy adversary,” he replied, with
a deep bow.

They chatted about golf and other things for another half hour. Then the
baroness, after thanking “the colonel” for the pleasant evening he had
afforded her, arose to go to her room.

Nick Carter accompanied her to the elevator. When the car had shot
upward, he hurried back to the table where they had been sitting in the
restaurant and picked up the half-burned wax match he had dropped after
lighting his cigarette.

As he slipped the match into his waistcoat pocket, to keep company with
the other two whole matches he had borrowed from Baroness Latour’s gold
match box, he ran against James Mallory in the lobby.

“Can I have your head porter for an hour or two this evening, Mr.
Mallory?” asked the detective, in a low tone. “I’ve noticed him around
here. He’s the kind of husky chap I may need.”

“Why, what----”

“Never mind about talking it over, Mr. Mallory,” interrupted the
detective, with a protesting smile. “Can I have the man?”

“Certainly! His name is Mike Corrigan. He is a good, dependable fellow,
and strong enough for anything you are likely to ask of him. Moreover,
he is not afraid of anything. If you will come to my office, I will have
him come there.”

Mike Corrigan was quite willing to accompany Colonel Pearson anywhere,
and after a few minutes’ conversation, it was arranged that Mike was to
meet the detective in the lobby in fifteen minutes.

“Put a coat on,” directed Nick. “Have you such a thing as a revolver?”

“Never owned a gun in my life,” was Mike’s reply.

“Never mind. I’ll bring one down for you. You can fire it off, I
suppose, if it should become necessary?”

“I can that,” laughed Mike. “And swing a club, too.”

At this moment two telegrams were handed to Nick Carter. One was from
his assistant, Chick, saying he was on his way to Delaware, with the
bloodhound, Captain, and the other came from Joseph, Nick Carter’s head
man-servant in his Madison Avenue home. This latter message read:

     “According your instructions, have sent black steel box labeled
     number four on third shelf to left of door in laboratory.”

The detective went up to his room and put on a serviceable business suit
in place of his evening clothes, with a warm cap that he could pull well
down over his eyes. He kicked off his light patent-leather pumps and
substituted a pair of heavy waterproof shoes.

Finally he covered himself up in a long overcoat, in the pockets of
which he dropped two automatic pistols, fully charged.

Before leaving his room he compared the wax matches he had got from the
baroness in the restaurant with the burned match he had picked up in
Mrs. van Dietrich’s room. They were the same kind exactly.

“I see you’re there, all right, Mike,” he remarked cheerily, as the head
porter walked up to him in the lobby. “Wait a moment, while I go in to
see Mr. Mallory and Mr. Savage.”

He found both partners in their office, and bringing out the burned wax
match, he said, in a businesslike, brief manner:

“I should like you, please, to examine the baggage of Mrs. van Dietrich
and find out whether there are in it any wax matches like this. Also ask
her maid, Mary Cook, if she or Mrs. van D. ever used such matches.”

“Very well,” answered Savage, picking up the burned match. “We will do
it, of course. But I don’t see the point.”

“That makes no difference,” retorted Nick. “The point is important. Did
you find out anything at the railroad station this afternoon--whether
anybody from the hotel went away?”

“Nobody has gone all day, except two people who live in the village, and
whom the station agent knows quite well. You see, this is only a branch,
which the railroad company ran up here for the benefit of our hotel, so
it is not used much except by patrons of our house.”

“I see,” nodded Nick Carter. “Well, you may not see either Mike or me
until two or three o’clock in the morning. Good night!”

“I hope you will find out something,” called out Mallory, as he went
out.

“With ordinary luck, I hope to do so,” were Nick Carter’s parting words.




CHAPTER V.

AN EXPERIMENT IN CHEMISTRY.


“Florine!” said the Baroness Latour, as she entered her rooms after
dining with Nick Carter. “I am going to do a little chemistry work in
the bathroom. Of course, I am not at home to anybody. Some of those
people about the hotel are disposed to be friendly, but I can’t be
bothered with them to-night.”

“Very well,” returned Florine. “Shall I help you change?”

“Yes.”

They retired to the baroness’ bedroom, and in ten minutes the baroness
came forth in a neat gingham gown. Over this she wore an apron of the
same material, but of darker pattern, that covered her completely.

Florine knew just what to do for the experiments her employer was about
to make.

From two large trunks which stood in her own room she took a small
electric stove, crucibles, retorts, and similar articles. Also a glass
table, which folded when packed away, but could be set up quite firmly
in a few minutes. It was the kind of table that is often used by
experimenting chemists.

“That will do,” the baroness told her then. “You can stay out here, in
my sitting room. Remember that no one is to be allowed to come in until
I tell you.”

She shut herself in the bathroom, the ground-glass window of which was
open a little at the top, and placed a crucible, containing some
colorless liquid, on the electric stove.

She had connected the stove by wires to one of the electric fixtures,
after removing the bulb, and thus got all the power she required.

Soon there came a slight hissing from the crucible.

She darted over to it, and having put on a pair of asbestos gloves,
lifted the crucible to the glass table.

Next, she adjusted an oxygen mask with a glass front, and, taking off
the asbestos gloves, replaced them with others of rubber. She knew well
the necessity of taking every precaution when experimenting with
dangerous elements.

Taking a small bottle from a cabinet, which had been one of the articles
brought in by Florine, she poured half of the liquid in it into the
crucible.

A violent agitation of the contents of the crucible caused her to leap
back hastily. It was evidently caused by mixing the two substances too
abruptly.

Soon the disturbance in the crucible subsided. Then the baroness poured
the remainder of the stuff into the crucible, leaving the bottle--it was
really only a vial--absolutely empty.

There was no further bubbling, but the mixture in the crucible, which
had been a dull blue, grew lighter and lighter in color, until it was a
very pale green, which in turn resolved itself into a sickly yellow.

As the last tinge of green disappeared, the baroness took another vial
from the cabinet. This vial was filled with a liquid that looked like
water.

She emptied it all into the crucible.

The liquid immediately took on a rich amber hue. As it did so, she
hastily reached for a glass cover, with a small, funnellike hole in the
top.

Over this hole she fitted a rubber tube, forcing the other end of the
tube tightly into a long, narrow bottle.

Hardly had she secured the tube and lifted the bottle, when a heavy
vapor arose inside the crucible, easily visible through the glass top.

The light vapor went swiftly through the tube, and the long glass bottle
could be seen filling.

In five minutes the amber fluid had entirely disappeared from the
crucible, while the long bottle was full of vapor.

“This is well,” muttered the baroness, as she watched the experiment
with intent eyes. “Everything is working out all right. Now for the next
stage.”

Skillfully, she withdrew the tube from the bottle, and in its place
tightly inserted a stopper made of india rubber. The mixture she had
prepared with such care would have eaten through a cork in a few
minutes.

Having progressed thus far, the baroness carefully placed the
glass-tubelike bottle in a steel case, padded inside, which had been
specially made for it.

Screwing on the cap firmly, she laid the case on the glass table, and
stood thoughtfully regarding it for several seconds.

“I’ll have to try its strength,” she decided, half aloud. “This is the
dangerous part of the experiment.”

She brought forward a large bottle, on which was a bulb and spraying
contrivance carefully fitted to it.

The ever-useful Florine had seen that the bottle was ready with the
other paraphernalia her employer would want. Florine knew nearly as much
about it all as the baroness herself.

The baroness carefully sprayed the air of the bathroom, after closing
the window at the top. She wanted no outside atmosphere to interfere
with the test she was about to make.

Now, for the first time, she removed the strange-looking mask she had
worn throughout her operations. It protected her lungs entirely from the
dangerous gases. There was always the possibility that they might
escape, in spite of all her care with the vessels she used.

As she took off the mask, leaving her mouth exposed, her eyes dropped
heavily and her head swam.

She stumbled slightly as she made her way to the ground-glass window and
pulled down the upper sash.

The current of air revived her at once.

She stood there for a few moments inhaling the pure sea atmosphere
luxuriously.

“This shows it is a success,” she murmured. “I was so careful that
hardly a whiff of the gas could escape. Yet, even after spraying the
room as I did, it almost overcame me. It is better than the other stuff
I used, I am sure. I’ll put this to the proof to-night, if I get a
chance--and I think I shall.”

Opening the window wider, she stood there, ruminating, a curious smile
on her beautiful young face.

“Nicholas Carter! As if it would be possible for me not to know him
because he chooses to call himself Colonel Pearson and assumes an
indolent manner that is not his own at all! And I have been playing golf
and dining with him! Well, it is all in the game! He says himself he
does not know how our next game is to come out. We shall see.”

She went out of the bathroom and told Florine to put everything away.

This order was obeyed so thoroughly and swiftly, that in about five
minutes nothing was to be seen in the bathroom to suggest the experiment
just carried on.

The open window had allowed the last breath of the noxious vapor to
escape, and none of the paraphernalia was in sight.

The glass experimenting table had been folded up and put away, and the
electric stove, crucible, and retorts had gone with it, each being
packed away into its own particular recess in the trunks.

Only the steel case--tubelike, as was the glass bottle of deadly vapor
inside--was placed in a black leather bag, which snapped shut with a
patent spring lock.

This bag the baroness put into another trunk with her own hands. She
would not trust even Florine to do anything with the bottle in its steel
case.

For two hours she sat in the darkness, peering out to sea, where the
lights of the yacht could be seen blinking uncertainly.

She did not talk to her maid, although Florine was in the room, and,
although quite quiet, was wide awake.

It seemed as if there must be something more than the ordinary relations
of mistress and maid between them, for Florine made no complaint of the
long vigil. Neither did the baroness take any notice of her, as she
might have done if there had been no mutual understanding.

“Lock the door after me when I go out, Florine,” were the words with
which the Baroness Latour at last broke the silence. “And be ready to
let me in quickly when I return.”

“Very well.”

Florine made this response in a low, colorless voice.

There was no surprise at the baroness going secretly from her rooms at
midnight, nor at her giving these orders about the door.

It seemed as if she knew what her employer had in hand, and was in
thorough accord with the proceedings.

The baroness had taken off the gingham gown she had worn in the
makeshift laboratory, and had replaced it with a house dress of costly
material, but which was made up rather plainly.

Over this gown she slipped a voluminous black cloak. Then she went over
to the trunk in which she had placed the black bag, and drew the bag
forth.

“The door is locked, Florine?” she asked, without turning her head.

“Yes, my lady!” answered the maid, with a touch of mockery as she used
this form of address that is so uncommon in America. “I have just
looked, to make sure.”

“Stand by it, in case of accidents,” ordered the baroness.

Without speaking, Florine took her station at the door which led to the
outer corridor, although she knew such a precaution was unnecessary.

The baroness took from the bag the steel case into which she had packed
the glass cylinder containing the powerful vapor she had produced in the
bathroom.

Unscrewing the cap of the case, she drew out the glass cylinder, and,
holding it carefully in her left hand, reached again into the bag with
her right.

This time she brought out a diminutive rubber bulb, attached to a
syringe with a thin, hollow, threaded screw on the bottom.

Carefully she sent the screw through the center of the rubber cork in
the glass cylinder. When this had been accomplished, she concealed the
cylinder in the wide sleeve of her cloak.

“Open the door, Florine! And close it as soon as I am outside.”

“Ready?” asked Florine, as she glided, soft-footed as a cat, to the
door, and stood there with her hand upon the key.

“Yes.”

All this was said in the same low, but distinct tones in which the
baroness and her maid had communicated with each other ever since the
former had come in after dining with Nick Carter.

The door opened silently. The baroness slipped through to the corridor.
The door closed after her.




CHAPTER VI.

WITH THE AID OF HER MEN.


The lights had been lowered throughout the hotel. In the corridors a
small electric light burned at wide intervals, with an occasional red
glow to show where the fire exits were situated.

The baroness was glad there was so little illumination. She saw a light
through the transom over the door of number forty-four, which was Nick
Carter’s room. But it was not strong, and she decided that it might have
been burning in the bathroom, casting only a reflection into the
bedchamber.

“Strange that he should sleep with a light anywhere about him,” she
muttered. “He isn’t the kind of man to do that, I should think. I don’t
care, so long as he is asleep, however.”

She listened intently outside this door for at least a minute. So keen
was her hearing that she believed she would hear his breathing unless he
slept more quietly than most men.

Not a sound reached her, and she crept noiselessly along the corridor
until she got to the bedroom door of a titled Englishman, who had been
the center of attention, especially among the women, ever since he had
been at the hotel.

His name was Lord Vinton, and he was understood to be possessed of
enormous wealth.

A curious smile passed over the countenance of the baroness. She
listened outside Lord Vinton’s door, as she had at Nick Carter’s.

“No mistake about it in this case,” she murmured, below her breath. “His
lordship snores like a balky motor car. That makes it all the easier for
me.”

In a few seconds she did all she had come to do.

It did not look anything serious, if there had been any one there to
observe her movements.

She seemed only to be passing her hands about the door and then hiding
them in her cloak, ere she moved away.

But this is what she did: She slipped the glass tube, with the rubber
stopper, from her cloak sleeve, inserted the mouth of the syringe into
the keyhole, and pressed gently upon the rubber bulb.

The result was to inject into the bedroom of Lord Vinton a small
quantity of one of the strongest and most effective narcotics known to
science.

The almost invisible vapor went through the keyhole and instantly spread
to all parts of the apartment. Every nook and crack of the room was
filled with the stuff, and it was absolutely unbreathable by any human
being.

So strong was it that only an unforeseen accident could prevent its
taking action. Once under its influence, and the sturdiest man would
fall into a deathlike stupor, which might last for several hours.

The baroness had made the vapor as strong as it was possible to do
without rendering it too dangerous.

She had no intention of killing any of her victims. Her object merely
was to make them unconscious, and then get possession of them.

Incidentally, she took care to freight herself with all their portable
wealth, such as jewelry and precious stones.

Even this last she did not do herself in the case of Lord Vinton.

As will have been divined, this mysterious young and beautiful woman who
chose to be known at the Hotel Amsterdam as the Baroness Latour had
plenty of men at her orders.

All she did was to prepare the way for them, and then let them do the
rough work.

She satisfied herself by listening at the keyhole--in which the key had
been left--that the spray had operated properly, and that Lord Vinton
was most assuredly in a state of coma. Then she glided swiftly back to
her own rooms, was let in without a moment’s delay by the watchful
Florine, and sank into a chair to regain her breath.

“You may go to bed, Florine.”

Florine, the docile, said “Good night!” and departed to her own
apartment, adjoining that of her employer.

The baroness, still wearing her black cloak, threw open the window of
the sitting room, and, her room in darkness, looked across the bay at
the white yacht, which she could just make out in the gloom.

“They ought to be here soon,” she murmured, as she placed the glass
cylinder in its steel case. “I won’t send another signal. It might be
caught by somebody else. Besides, it is not necessary.”

She was right. It was not necessary to signal her men on the yacht,
gently rocking some two miles from shore.

On the other hand, it was nearly an hour before her ear caught the
subdued thumping of muffled oars.

“They have to row slowly,” she said to herself. “That’s so. Even with
oars muffled, they might be heard if they came too fast.”

A soft whistle came from below as the laboring of the oars in their
padded rowlocks ceased.

Looking out of the window, she could just discern a dark patch on the
water immediately beneath.

She did not reply to the whistle. Instead, she drew from under her cloak
a coil of thin, tough wire. On one end of it was a leaden weight, like a
large fishing-line sinker.

Dropping the leaden sinker over the sill, she paid out the wire until
the weight dropped into the sea. She knew just how far this was by a
scrap of red ribbon she had the night before tied on the wire at a
certain spot, when she had measured the distance from her window to the
water.

Three sharp tugs at the wire told her that the other end had been found
by the men in the boat. She began to pull the wire back, and soon she
had the end of a thick, strong silken rope which had been attached to
the end of the wire with a well-made sailor’s knot.

The baroness untied the silken rope and made it fast with a similar knot
to the handle of her room door. This door was locked and bolted, and she
had satisfied herself that the handle was a solid one.

The way in which she knotted the silken line to it, indicated that she
was an expert in handling ropes. She did it as easily and swiftly as any
experienced seaman.

Going back to the window, she jerked the cord three times, while looking
down.

Soon the silken cord became taut under a heavy weight. It strained and
gave a little where it crossed the edge of the window sill.

“All right?” she whispered.

“All right!” was the answering grunt, in a man’s voice.

It was only a few seconds later when the figure of a man appeared above
the window ledge. It climbed through the window and stood by her side,
seemingly waiting for orders.

“You did that very well, Kennedy!” she whispered. “Is my uncle there?”

“No. He said it was not necessary for him to come.”

“Too lazy, I suppose. Who else is in the boat?”

“Four of the crew.”

“Very well! Signal down for one of the men to come up, and we’ll go on
with what we have to do.”

“All right, mademoiselle.”

Kennedy, first mate of the yacht _Idaline_ lying out there in the bay,
shook the rope up which he had climbed. As there came an answering
shake, he called down softly:

“Groton!”

“Aye, aye!”

“Come up here--quick!”

The lithe young foremast man who answered to the name of Groton came up,
hand over hand, so swiftly, that he was on the window sill while the
mate was still looking down.

“That’s right!” remarked the baroness quietly. “Now, you two wait here,
while I go back to the room and get things ready. No noise, of course!”

“Shall I lock the door while you are out?” whispered Kennedy.

“Yes. Somebody might happen to be about and try the door, if they saw me
in the corridor. I’ll give the usual signal.”

She reached into her black bag to make sure certain things were there.
Then she went out and slipped along the corridor on the thick carpet,
while Kennedy softly secured her sitting-room door inside.

“I wish Carter would put out that light of his,” she murmured, as she
passed his room. “I don’t trust him, and I’d rather think he was
asleep.”

She stood again outside Lord Vinton’s door, and as she came near the
keyhole, she could distinguish the pungent odor of the narcotic she had
sprayed into the bedroom.

It has practically all blown out of the window by this time,” she
thought. “If I didn’t know it so well, I don’t suppose I should smell
it.”

From the black bag she took out what looked like a pair of long slim
scissors, with spreading claws, which could be opened and closed at
will.

It was an implement for turning a key in a lock from the opposite side
of the door. To police and criminals it is known as an “outsider.”

Gripping the end of the key through the keyhole with the powerful
nippers, she turned the key almost as easily as if she had been inside
the door.

“So much for that,” she murmured. “But there is the bolt! Well, I guess
I can negotiate that.”

She had provided for the inmate of the room obeying the familiar
injunction found in all hotel bedrooms nowadays: “Guests will please
lock and bolt their doors before retiring for the night.”

The implement she took out of her bag now was not much like the
“outsider,” but it proved equally effective.

Thin as paper, it was strong and highly tempered, and, after a few
moments of careful manipulation, she had the bolt back and the door a
little way open.

The room was in darkness. She felt for and turned the button of the
electric light, but she left the light on only long enough to show her
where the gas jet was. She lighted the gas, turned it low, and then put
out the incandescent.

Going to the bed, she gazed for a few moments at the face of the man who
lay unconscious in it.

One hand lay outside the counterpane. She lifted the hand boldly, and
pressing her fingers upon the wrist, felt for the pulse. It was faint,
but steady.

“He will be all right after a while,” she muttered. “That mixture of
mine does its work scientifically. It knocks them cold for the time
being, and afterward they are as well as ever. That old German chemist
certainly knows his business, and this formula was worth all I paid for
it.”

She hurried back to her room, gave the signal, and was admitted by the
mate.

“Come to this room--you and Groton--and dress this man in the bed. Put
everything on him that he should wear, including necktie and collar,
watch fob and so on. Make him look as if he had dressed himself.”

Kennedy grinned and shook his head doubtfully.

“That won’t be so easy,” he protested. “Dressing a man who can’t help
himself will be a tough proposition.”

“Never mind! Do as well as you can. I’ll show you the room. Then I’ll
come back here. When you have him ready, send Groton to tell me. You
stay in the room till I come. We have to get him away.”

The first mate nodded, and, accompanied by Groton, followed the baroness
to the room of Lord Vinton. There the baroness left the two men to get
his lordship dressed, and returned to her sitting room.

Florine slept through it all.

“He’s all fixed,” announced Kennedy, ten minutes later, when the
baroness had been called back to Lord Vinton’s room by Groton. “We’ve
put him into these light-colored togs and this funny soft hat. We
couldn’t find any others handy, except his evening clothes, and I didn’t
think you wanted him in them.”

“That wouldn’t have made any particular difference,” she returned.
“Leave him on the bed for a minute and come over here.”

She went to the two trunks and handsome traveling bags at the other side
of the room, and brought forth a quantity of jewelry which would hardly
have been expected in the baggage of a wealthy nobleman traveling only
for pleasure.

Rings, with diamonds, bracelets, brooches, and other gewgaws for women
to wear, were wrapped in tissue paper or embedded in silk-lined cases,
while scarfpins, cigarette cases, jeweled watch charms, and kindred
articles of masculine use were plentiful.

“Lord Vinton may turn out not to be a lord, after all,” muttered the
baroness. “Even if he is, he does not mind turning a few honest dollars
by importing jewelry on the side. I hope the dollars he expects to make
_will_ be honest, by the way. But it would be interesting to know how
much duty he paid on all this.”

When she had piled up everything on the floor she cared to take, she
coolly dropped the loot into two of Kennedy’s capacious outside pockets.

He wore a nautical pea-jacket, and his pocket room was extensive.

“Now, boys!” she whispered. “Work quickly. I will go ahead and see if
the corridor is clear, and have my door half open. Stand at the door,
Kennedy, and watch me. When you see me get to my room, I’ll hold up my
hand.”

“I get you!”

“That will mean ‘All right!’ You and Groton pick up your man then and
bring him along, just as you did Mrs. van Dietrich. Now! Careful!”

She skimmed lightly along the corridor, and directly afterward the two
sailors followed, carrying between them the unconscious form of Lord
Vinton.

Giving a signal to the two men still in the boat, Kennedy superintended
the tying of the silken rope under Vinton’s arms, and the three of them
lifted him over the window sill and let him dangle.

“Ready below?” questioned Kennedy softly.

“Ready! Let him come!”

Down went his lordship, who was laid in the bottom of the boat, while
Kennedy turned to the baroness.

“Anything more, mademoiselle?”

“Not at present.”

“Any message for Captain Latell?”

“Tell him to keep a sharp lookout at all times, and to watch for signals
from me. Have his telephone ready.”

“It is always ready, mademoiselle. He has it in his own window, and some
one is always near.”

“Good! That’s all.”

Kennedy and Groton slid down the rope to the boat. The baroness untied
it from the handle of her door and threw the rope after them.

The wire was again coiled, and, with the leaden weight, was in her black
leather bag, which fastened with a strong patent lock.

Before finally leaving Lord Vinton’s room, after her victim had been
brought to her own apartment, she had gone back to shoot the bolt and
lock into place again. Also, she had used her steel implements to close
the door, in about the same way as she had opened it, but by a reverse
process.

Now, when a soft splash, as the oars dipped, told her the boat was on
its way back to the yacht, she closed the window, looked about her with
a satisfied sigh, and then went calmly to her bedroom.

Ten minutes later, this mysterious and beautiful girl, who could carry
out such an audacious enterprise as that just finished without showing
any particular emotion, lay down, without removing her attire, and,
almost at once, seemed to be sound asleep.

When Florine went in to brush her employer’s hair the next morning, the
maid thought she never had seen the baroness look fresher or seem in
better spirits.




CHAPTER VII.

NICK LIES IN WAIT.


It may be explained at once that Nick Carter was not in his bedroom in
the Hotel Amsterdam when the baroness saw the light through the transom.
The detective did not want anybody to speculate on his whereabouts that
night, and he argued that if a light was seen in the room of Colonel
Pearson, it would be assumed that the colonel was inside.

He had determined to find out what the mysterious abductors had done
with Harvey L. Drago, who had vanished into thin air, in broad daylight.

After playing a sane and deliberate game of golf, it was not to be
credited that Mr. Drago had made away with himself. Nick brushed that
aside as soon as it came to his mind.

The wealthy young American had been kidnaped by somebody, no doubt, and
the object of that somebody could hardly be anything else than to exact
a large ransom.

It had occurred to Nick Carter, when told that Mrs. van Dietrich had
melted away from her bedroom in the night, that perhaps an aëroplane had
been employed. But all the conditions were against that.

Neither could an automobile have been used without its being seen.

After turning everything over in his mind, including the possibility of
Drago having been hidden in the woods, he could not make that theory
apply to his own satisfaction in the case of Mrs. van Dietrich.

The dear lady was rather large, and she would surely be hysterical when
she came to herself.

No, it would be too risky to keep that eminent leader of society among a
lot of trees and expect to keep her quiet.

He thought of the wireless telephone he had seen used by the baroness
from the window of her room, and though he had not been convinced that
she had any deeper purpose than to amuse herself--as a wealthy young
woman of lively fancy might conceivably do in this manner--he remembered
the yacht at anchor out in the bay, and wondered whether or not the
baroness was signaling to that vessel.

He had never noticed anybody coming from the yacht to the hotel. But
that did not carry any significance. There were many handsome homes
along the coast in this vicinity, and the yacht might be owned by any
one of the dozen or so of millionaires who were accustomed to spend part
of their summer in Delaware.

That he was suspicious of the baroness was natural to a man of his
quick, deductive mind. The discovery of the burned match in Mrs. van
Dietrich’s room would have been sufficient to make him so, after he had
satisfied himself that the baroness used the same kind of thick wax
matches.

Another touch of evidence in connection with the matches was that he had
found a scrap of gilt and colored paper on the floor of Mrs. van
Dietrich’s bedroom--part of a label which he found had come from the
original box containing them.

In the restaurant he had caught a glimpse of nearly the whole label in
the baroness’ chatelaine bag when she had taken out her cigarette box.
The paper had been pulled out accidentally, and pushed back again.

Nick decided that, as the design was unusual, as well as artistic, the
baroness was keeping it as a curiosity.

The label was not all there. The part missing would have fitted in with
the scrap Nick had in his pocket.

Going further in his speculations, Nick recalled that, although Mrs. van
Dietrich had disappeared in the night, when it would be comparatively
easy to get her out of the hotel unobserved and take her to any desired
place at a distance, Harvey L. Drago had been spirited away in broad
daylight.

The only theory Nick could apply to Drago’s disappearance was that he
was somewhere near the hotel, and would not be taken away to his final
destination till nightfall.

Acting on this hypothesis, the detective, with the head porter, were
out now, at night, looking for the abductors of Mr. Drago, in the
expectation that when they got a clew to the one case, they would find
it leading them to the other.

They had for two or three hours been moving about in the dense woods
that surrounded the Hotel Amsterdam, and hid the sea beach from the
highroad, when Nick Carter took a seat on a rock overlooking the water,
with the porter by his side, and remarked that it was time to rest a
while.

“I’m not tired,” protested the porter, Mike Corrigan. “I wouldn’t mind
betting you are not, either, colonel. You are stopping here because you
think it a good place to look around.”

The head porter grinned as he said this, and in the faint light that
came from the cloud-veiled moon Nick returned the grin. He was pleased
to note that Mike Corrigan was of an observant kind.

“You’re not far off, Mike. I see there is a place here where a boat has
landed, and it is just possible another one may come. See those furrows
in the sand above tide line on the beach, and do you notice that those
soft shells have been ground by something, and left, all broken, where
they have been pressed into the sand?”

“That’s right,” agreed Mike. “I see it, just where the moon strikes. But
I’ll confess I wouldn’t have noticed them if you hadn’t spoke--not in
this poor light. Think that was done by a boat?”

“I am sure of it,” was Nick’s quick reply. “It was the keel of a boat
that ground these shells, and the round bottom made the wide mark on
either side. It isn’t hard to see where a boat has been before the signs
are washed away.”

“I don’t see any other place where a boat could be run up on the shore,
either,” observed Mike.

“That’s why I am expecting we shall see another boat--or perhaps the
same one--come up here, if we stay for a while. But get back into the
woods. We can watch there without being seen.”

“The moon is in its last quarter,” remarked Corrigan. “So there isn’t
much light. If it wasn’t for the stars, I don’t think we could make out
anything at all.”

“We’ll get to the other side of this point,” went on Nick. “We can see
all over the bay from there, and still not be too conspicuous.”

“‘Conspicuous’ is good!” muttered Mike. “I wonder what in thunder it
means.”

Nick Carter led the way to the spot he had selected. It was a thick mass
of shrubbery only a few yards above high tide. Here he told Corrigan to
sit down.

The porter obeyed--so heavily that he broke several twigs, which
crackled with much more noise than Nick cared for. He gave Mike a sharp
touch with the toe of his shoe.

The detective had seen some signs which had escaped his companion, and
he did not want any noise. Nick subsided.

Nick took out a pair of powerful night glasses and trained them on the
light-studded yacht far out in the bay.

It was something about this yacht which had attracted his attention in
the first place, and which had caused him to shut off the porter so
peremptorily when he had begun to protest against being gently kicked.

Nick Carter lay flat upon the ground, examining the shadowy form of the
yacht, and trying to satisfy himself as to the meaning of certain
movements he observed.

It was a full hour before he moved to any noticeable degree, although he
had shifted his position now and then, as he sought to relieve his
cramped limbs.

But his night glasses had been always fixed on the yacht, and his eyes
had become accustomed to the gloom so much that he could tell fairly
well what the general state of affairs was on her deck.

Corrigan was about to whisper a question as a sigh of satisfaction
escaped his companion. But Nick shook him off impatiently and told him
to keep quite quiet.

The detective had seen a bustle on the deck of the yacht which he
believed signified that a boat was being lowered. But if it was, they
were dropping it on the other side, and he could not make out enough of
their movements to be sure what was going on.

“If it isn’t a boat, then I don’t know what they’re after,” he murmured,
under his breath. “Hello! What’s that?”

Far out, some little distance from the yacht, his glasses had enabled
him to distinguish a phosphorescent flash, repeated again and again on
the dark surface of the bay.

Nick Carter had seen phosphorescent gleams of this kind too many times
not to be able to interpret the meaning of any particular kind or
number.

A single one, or even many, might have been caused by the jumping of
fish. That would flash up the bright glow so often seen in mid-ocean at
night.

But regular gleams, such as Nick saw now, and which developed into
shining patches one by one, could have been caused only by the regular
dipping of oars. The space between the patches represented the width of
a rowboat.

“They are rowing two pairs,” he murmured. “And the boat is rather heavy,
too. What are they after?”

As they came nearer, he could see that there were five black patches in
the boat, and it did not take him long to resolve these patches into
men, two were rowing and one was steering. The other two sat still.

“This looks like a fight, if we want to save Drago,” muttered Nick,
rather louder than his musings had been so far.

“What?” asked Corrigan.

The porter’s view had been obscured by the shrubbery. Moreover, he had
no night glass to help his vision.

His curiosity would not be denied any longer, however, and he squeezed
his way around.

Nick Carter placed the night glass in his hand.

“There you are, Corrigan! Take a squint through these!”

The porter obeyed, and after some moments of adjusting the glasses, he
got the boatload of men into focus, and uttered a low grunt of wonder.

“Five of ’em, eh? Well, colonel, that will be two each for us, and
whichever of us gets through first, let him have the odd one.”

Nick smiled at this businesslike proposition--which also had an
agreeable sporting flavor--and nodded in acquiescence.

“All right, Mike! That goes! But--one thing, mind!--I take the first
man! You can have the second. Then I’ll tackle the third, and the fourth
is yours. By that time we’ll know who gets the fifth.”

“Fine!” chuckled the porter. “You’ve been in scraps like this before, I
can see.”

The boat was gliding straight toward the point where Nick Carter and his
companion were hiding in the shrubbery. Then, suddenly, when it had come
within fifty yards of the shore, it swerved abruptly, and shot toward
that part of the Hotel Amsterdam where the windows of the baroness
overlooked the bay.

As the boat got nearer to the hotel, Nick’s night glass, plus his keen
eyes, enabled him to make out a feminine figure at one of the darkened
windows.




CHAPTER VIII.

NICK DEALS WITH ODDS.


Throughout the performance of Kennedy and Groton climbing the rope to
the window of the baroness, the detective lay there, with his night
glass turned upon them, and when he saw the form of a man coming down on
the rope, he knew he was on the right track.

“Shall we go back to the hotel and break in her door?” asked Corrigan.

“No. We couldn’t get there, for one thing. Everything would be over
before we could interfere. Besides, that would not help much. I want to
prove that the kidnaping has been done from the hotel. But, also, I want
to catch them in the act.”

“That’s what you’re doing, isn’t it?”

“I am, in a way,” answered the detective. “But it would be only my word
against theirs, and you may be sure that people who can carry out a
scheme like this successfully are not bad as liars.”

“They’re going back to the yacht now,” remarked Corrigan.

“I see they are leaving the hotel. Whether they are going directly to
the yacht remains to be seen. I am inclined to think they are not.”

“Why?”

“Mr. Drago is undoubtedly somewhere in this wood, and it is time they
took him away. They would be sure to do these two jobs under one, I
think. It is the methodical manner in which the leading spirit of the
enterprise has everything done.”

“The boss of this thing must be the husband of that young baroness, I
should think,” said Corrigan. “Or perhaps her brother.”

“Why don’t you think she may be doing it herself?” asked the detective,
smiling.

“A pretty girl like that wouldn’t do it. She couldn’t,” was the porter’s
positive reply. “But she might be drawn into it by some of her menfolks.
Things like that happen sometimes. You see it in the newspapers,
anyhow.”

It was not long before it was shown that Nick Carter had been correct in
his belief that the boat would put in to get Drago from his hiding place
in the wood, wherever it might be.

The boat stopped in the middle of the bay, and Carter, from his place
behind the bush, could see one of the men who appeared to be in
command--in fact, it was Kennedy, the first mate of the yacht--looking
around him with a night glass.

He scanned the shore as far as he could see it, and also looked steadily
at the hotel.

Nick Carter smiled as he thought he saw the glass trained in the
direction of his own window in the hotel, room number forty-four. He
could not be sure, in the darkness, but he believed he was right.

“My charming dinner companion must have told him whereabouts my room is
situated,” he said to himself. “Even if he cannot be sure which is my
window, I am conceited enough to think he is trying to assure himself
that I am not watching him from one of them. Much good it will do him!”

As they came on, the oarsmen stopped rowing. Then, as the boat’s head
shifted a little, they headed straight for the beach where Nick Carter
and the porter were watching.

The muffled oars made no sound as they came up on the beach, and the
easy way in which the bow grounded on the soft sand proved that the
craft was under the command of a finished mariner.

No sooner was the boat pulled so well up on the shore that it did not
need securing in any other way, than the five men all tumbled out and
pulled her a little farther. This done, they stood silently in a group
while their commander looked about him.

Now, if he had chosen, Nick Carter could have captured the whole party
at the point of the pistol, shooting them down if they resisted.

But his natural love of “playing the game” forbade anything of that
kind. He contented himself with keeping them covered--with Corrigan’s
pistol, as well as his own--and watching in silence.

Had Nick known who the Baroness Latour really was, he would have brought
half a dozen men with him, instead of one. And with good reason. He
would have been aware that the caliber of the five men in the boat was
of a kind not easily put down, and that any one of them would have gone
to his death cheerfully for his beautiful leader.

There were several minutes of inactivity, during which the five men
stood watching the silent, insensible figure in the boat, while
seemingly on the watch for somebody else to come.

“I ought, perhaps, to jump in here and rescue that man in the boat at
any cost,” thought Nick. “But it wouldn’t do. I should have only half my
work done, even if Mike and I can knock out these five--as I believe we
can. I’ve made up my mind to take Drago back to the hotel, and I’m going
to do it.”

It was five minutes afterward when a soft whistle arose from the woods
behind him. Kennedy replied with a similar signal.

“Get ready, Corrigan!” whispered Nick Carter.

“I am ready,” was the prompt response.

There was the sound of branches moving with a swish, and three men came
out of the wood together.

One, whose stiff gait indicated that his hands were tied behind him, so
that he was afraid to step freely, was between the other two, each of
whom held him by an elbow.

As they came clear of the shadows, Nick saw that, not only were the
hands of the man in the middle bound, but a handkerchief was fastened
tightly over his mouth.

“Drago!” muttered the detective. “It’s just what I expected. They’ve got
some one else from the hotel, and stopped on their way to pick up this
one from the wood.”

As the newcomers came up to the other five men, Nick heard somebody say
softly:

“That you, Mr. Kennedy?”

“Yes,” came the reply.

“Kennedy!” muttered Nick. “Well, it is a common name. This may not be
the Kennedy I know. But, taking it with everything else I’ve found out,
it looks as if it might be.”

There was a low conversation, of which the detective did not catch
much--not enough to know what it was all about, indeed--until he heard
the man who had first spoken respond to a remark that did not reach his
ears:

“No, sir. We haven’t heard a sound or seen anybody since we came into
the woods.”

Nick tried to decide what this meant, and to whom they were referring.
He did not suppose it was himself, or that the baroness had noticed him
leaving the hotel after taking dinner with her. But then, Nick Carter
did not know just what means the beautiful young woman had at her
disposal for finding out things that might interest her.

“Well, get him aboard,” ordered Kennedy. “We’ll hustle them both over to
the yacht, and then get a little sleep. This thing doesn’t have to keep
us all up on a double watch, if we don’t waste time.”

The men walked along the beach with their captive, and the detective
might have got his hands on them without much trouble by taking them by
surprise, when Mike Corrigan “spilled the beans” by an unforeseen and
peculiar accident.

In his eagerness to hear what was said, he had leaned forward in the
shrubbery as far as he dared. Unfortunately, he had nothing firm to give
him a hand hold, so he was standing in a teetering attitude, when
anything might have knocked him over.

There was more trouble, too. A small twig, impossible for him to see in
the gloom, was immediately under his face, and as he bent lower, it
suddenly popped into his nose, tickling that organ beyond the point of
bearableness.

There could be only one result, and it came quickly.

Mike Corrigan was a determined man, and he fought nobly against the
irritation by holding his nose above the bridge and rubbing it all over.
He had heard somewhere that this treatment would stop the most insistent
sneeze.

It did not work in this instance, however. The sneeze would not be
denied. There were several choking gasps--not to say snorts. Then,
bursting all bonds, a terrific blast turned itself loose, and Nick
Carter knew it was all off.

Even at ordinary times the husky head porter was noted for the
resounding force of his sneeze. But, coming as it did, after this
frantic struggle to hold it back, Corrigan achieved an effect in
advanced sternutation which awoke the echoes both on sea and land, and
made the very trees quiver.

The group of men paused in consternation just as they were about to
enter the boat, and, hearing Nick Carter jump to his feet at the same
moment, they realized that strangers--probably enemies--were close
behind them.

“See who it is, men!” ordered Kennedy.

The sailors seemed all to be armed, for several revolver barrels shone
in what little light there was as they came breaking their way through
the shrubbery.

“There is no use trying to hide our presence now,” was all Nick said to
the porter, as he prepared for battle. “This means fight.”

“That suits me,” responded Mike. “I supposed it was what we came out for
to-night.”

The philosophy of the porter made Nick forget a little of his chagrin at
the way his plans had been upset. He felt that, though the odds were so
much against them, he had a man by his side who would help him to leave
a mark on their adversaries, no matter how the fracas came out, and
that was the main thing under the circumstances.

Nick pushed the shrubbery apart, and, with Mike close on his heels and
his automatic pistol gripped in his steady fingers, he stepped out to
the open sandy beach.

Keeping the oncoming sailors at bay by raising his left hand
authoritatively--although the leveled automatic in his right may have
had something to do with it--he looked straight into the face of the
first mate of the yacht, as a fugitive gleam of moonlight fell across
it.

“So!” ejaculated Nick Carter. “It is you, Kennedy?”

“That’s what I’m called,” was the defiant response.

“I heard your name spoken just now, but I did not know that it was you,”
went on Nick. “It is some time since we met. I might have known that
only the brilliant and complex mind of Mademoiselle Valeria could have
devised and carried out this strange series of kidnapings at the Hotel
Amsterdam. Then, of course, that yacht out there is the _Idaline_.”

“You can guess anything you like,” returned Kennedy gruffly. “No matter
who is behind this affair, you can bet it is going through without your
interference, Mr. Nicholas Carter. I have my orders regarding you, and I
am going to carry them out.”

“From the Baroness Latour, of course,” said Nick Carter, dropping the
name from his lips with mocking emphasis. “Do you mind telling me what
your orders are about me?”

“I’m instructed to capture you if I catch you prowling around. So you’d
better surrender and save trouble. We are a crowd, and there is only you
two. You can’t do anything.”

“Oh, we can’t do anything, eh? You are too many for us? Well, you have
the odds, I’ll admit. But I think I can play a card that will stop you
from taking the pot right away.”

“You can play any card you like, and it won’t make any difference,” was
Kennedy’s contemptuous rejoinder.

“We shall see,” said Nick. “Now, I realize that it would be impossible
for us to shoot down the whole seven of you, so we won’t try to do it.”

“You have that much sense, anyhow,” rejoined Kennedy.

“Let me finish,” continued Carter. “Out of the seven of you, I have my
eye on two men. You don’t know which two, but I do. Remember, two men,
Kennedy!”

“Well, what of it?”

“Just this: As surely as one of you--any one of the whole seven--makes a
move toward us, so surely I will shoot those two! And I generally get
what I aim at. You know that, Kennedy. While I am shooting down two of
your number, this man at my side will also shoot down two. By that time,
unless we have gone under, the odds between us will be more nearly
equal. You will be only three to two, and I am not afraid of those
odds.”




CHAPTER IX.

ONE AGAINST SEVEN.


No sooner had Nick Carter announced his intention than he saw it
impressed the men in front of him.

The dread of the sharpshooter is proverbial. When a man knows he may
possibly be the next target for a man who shoots straight, and that the
marksman will go after one man, and one only, it takes much of the fire
of battle out of him, unless he is of phenomenal courage.

In this critical situation, the detective had hit upon a shrewd course.

It was much better than making a rush, blazing away indiscriminately.
Now each of the seven men facing him wondered if he might be the one to
be shot first.

That ugly-looking automatic pistol, with a number of cartridges ready to
be sent flying at the enemy, was calculated to disturb the equanimity of
any ordinary person.

There was a nervous shifting of feet among the sailors, and the
detective’s jaw set firmly as he saw that his bluff was likely to be
effective. It was hardly a bluff, either, for he and Mike Corrigan would
both shoot on the instant if there were any move by the enemy. Moreover,
each had picked out two men.

If Kennedy had not been unusually quick-witted, and if the sailors had
not had a respect and love for the owner of the yacht, Mademoiselle
Valeria--known in the Hotel Amsterdam as the Baroness Latour--which
amounted to worship, it is likely that Nick Carter would have had things
all his own way.

But Kennedy knew his men, and he was aware of the fact that a reminder
of the young woman by whom they had been employed in many shady
transactions in the past, and who had always paid them well, would make
them forget pretty nearly everything else.

Quick action was imperative.

He saw that they were wavering, and that unless something was done
quickly to bring them up, they might actually yield themselves to these
two men who were holding them down with as much confidence as if they
had been a dozen.

“Remember mademoiselle!”

Kennedy yelled this slogan with the suddenness of a rifle shot.

The effect was remarkable. On the instant, the whole seven leaped toward
the detective and Mike Corrigan.

As they did so, the two automatic pistols barked once--twice--almost
together.

The two men aimed at by Nick Carter both dropped.

If Mike Corrigan’s aim had been as good as the detective’s, they might
have won. But the porter’s hand was shaky, and both of his bullets
missed. He managed to shoot them at a rock some distance away, where
they flattened and fell into the sand.

“Fire, men!” shouted Kennedy.

But Carter was not waiting for a bullet from the other side. For the
third time he pulled his trigger. Then, taking his gun by the barrel, he
used the heavy stock for a club and sprang at Kennedy, just as a shot
came from the enemy and Mike Corrigan sank to the ground with a groan of
agony.

The sailors might have fired again, only that they were afraid of
attracting attention by the reports. Besides, seeing that Nick Carter
had flung himself upon the first mate, they were for a moment uncertain
what to do.

The detective and Kennedy came together with a crash. Outlaws as they
were, the sailors of the piratical yacht out there in the bay were
inclined to let the duel between the two giants go on till one or the
other had gained a victory.

The seamen enjoyed a good fight, whether they were in it personally or
not.

This was a good thing for the detective now. He was perfectly aware
that, if he won, they might get a chance to close in and overpower him.
But, even with that, he would make a dash for freedom, to come back with
reënforcements later.

Letting his pistol fall to the sand, Nick went for his tall foe with his
bare fists. Kennedy, being on the defensive, parried the detective’s
straight lunge, and got a knee lock on his adversary.

Nick, carried into close quarters as his opponent met his rush, started
a long, slow, heartbreaking twist which was almost as grueling on
himself as on Kennedy.

The latter was in good condition physically--hard as nails and full of
aggressiveness. If he had been weaker than Nick Carter, the detective
could not have made such progress with his mode of attack. Carter’s
supple form bent to every turn, and though Kennedy tried to crush him by
main strength, his adversary could laugh at all his efforts.

Then Nick took a new line--or, rather, an amplification of his first
method of attack.

Slowly he threw his powerful leg outward and twined it around that of
the panting first mate.

Kennedy fought hard to keep out of this lock. But he could not help
himself. The hold the detective had on him was almost breaking his back,
and he knew that if he relaxed for the slightest fraction of a moment,
the awful pressure of Nick Carter’s steellike arms would crumple him up
like a dried leaf in a hurricane.

The crucial moment came.

Kennedy was compelled to give way slightly, in the hope of relieving the
pain in his breaking back. That was what Nick had been waiting for.
Seizing the opening like lightning, his leg flew around to the position
he had been seeking.

Now he knew he had his man under control.

Twisting with the suppleness and power of a boa constrictor, he ducked
and heaved. As he did so, a gasp of involuntary admiration went up from
the sailors.

There was no alternative for the first mate now but to yield or break in
two.

The next instant he was sent flying over the detective’s head in a neat
and scientific cross-buttock, landing upside down on the sand, where,
with a groan, he lay without motion and “all in.”

Although Nick Carter was well breathed by his exertions, and gasped hard
as he sought to recover himself, there was plenty of fight left in him.

The sailors came at him in a body.

With the fall of their leader, they seemed to emerge suddenly from the
spell that had held them still. It seemed to Nick as if there were
twenty flying fists in front of his face.

He recovered himself immediately, and, stirred to better efforts by the
odds against him, he let drive scientifically and with deliberation,
notwithstanding that he sent in his blows so swiftly.

One--two! One--two!

The detective’s hard fists drove right and left into the faces of the
men before him.

Usually they landed on the jaw, although now and then, for a change, the
target was an eye or nose.

“Come on!” roared Nick Carter, warming up comfortably with all this
excitement. “How many are there of you?”

One--two! One--two!

In the quiet of the night, with no other sounds to be heard, the blows
thudded as if some one were kicking a dog.

One of the sailors went down, but the two left came on, fighting
desperately.

The detective was ready for them.

A finished boxer, he was economical of his exertions. When he struck, he
always landed, and when he parried, he moved only just so much as was
required to ward off a blow.

There were no fancy twists or ballet master’s gyrations about Nick
Carter when using his fists in real battle.

A rain of heavy blows descended upon him. He retired just enough to get
arm room, and came back steadily.

Had he had his assistants by his side, the detective could have held off
these powerful seafaring men to the end.

But all he had was Mike Corrigan, and poor Mike had been put out of
commission by a bullet.

So it came that even the iron physique of the great detective weakened
under the strain of the last half hour.

On the other hand, the sailors were fresh. Moreover, furious at the fall
of their superior officer, the first mate, they determined to avenge him
at all hazards.

The two men made a rush at Nick Carter side by side, and though he sent
forth a hailstorm of blows, which seemed to fairly smother them, they
contrived, by shameless “covering up,” to keep on their feet, until, by
sheer weight, they forced the detective to his knees.

Still fighting, he was sent forward on his face.

He had been beaten, seven against one, almost into unconsciousness!

Almost--but not quite.

He lay still, on the ground, face downward, but keeping a sharp eye on
what might be going on around him.




CHAPTER X.

QUIET PREPARATIONS.


“He’s a tougher man in a scrap than I thought he was,” observed one of
the yacht’s crew--Groton, in fact--as he ruefully patted a very sore
place on his cheek bone that promised to develop into a glorious black
eye. “I always knew he could fight, but this is the first time I ever
came against him. Holy mackerel! How he can hit!”

Kennedy was sitting up, spitting sand from his mouth and looking around
in a dazed fashion. He groaned as he put a hand to his head. He had come
down with a terrific bump when Nick Carter had whirled him to the ground
at the end of their argument.

“What the blazes hit me?” exclaimed Kennedy.

He got stiffly to his feet and staggered toward where Nick Carter still
lay on the beach, ere he went on, in a confused way:

“That’s it, eh? Well, I’m willing to tackle anything human. But when it
comes to stopping a whirlwind, I’ll duck every time.”

For a few moments he stood looking down at the detective, who did not
make a move to indicate that he was conscious, although he was keeping
close watch of everything from beneath his half-shut eyelids.

Kennedy was deeply impressed with the wonderful battle the detective
had put up, and he looked over the splendidly built frame with the
admiration that one strong man always vouchsafes to another--even though
that other may be a foe.

Neither Kennedy nor the two sailors still on their feet had any idea
that there was somebody else gazing at Nick Carter from behind the
bushes, with anxious eyes and rapidly heaving bosom.

Yet so it was. More remarkable still, it was a woman!

The Baroness Latour, as she was called in the Hotel Amsterdam--although
better known to Nick Carter and to many others in different parts of the
world as the lovely Mademoiselle Valeria, the adventuress who always had
kept out of the grip of the law, despite many illegitimate
transactions--had known what was going to take place when the boat left
the hotel, carrying the unconscious Lord Vinton.

She had not been so sound asleep in her room as might have been thought.

What she was doing now was quite in accord with her usual methods.

She liked to be sure that her directions were properly carried out, and
one of the secrets of her hold over her men was that they never knew
when she would appear before them.

In the present case there was no necessity for her to make herself
known, she thought. So she contented herself with looking in silence.

There was a particular reason for her coming now to see what would be
done about getting Drago from the place where he had been left in the
woods to the yacht. That reason was that she had learned of the
intention of Nick Carter to find Drago, somehow, and she knew the
detective well enough to hear that he would stumble on the boat that was
to put in at the edge of the woods to get the prisoner.

If Nick Carter happened to find out what was going on, she did not know
what might be the end of it all.

Perhaps the strange power he exercised over her heart without desiring
to do so may have had something to do with Mademoiselle Valeria’s
anxiety.

Be that as it may, she was there.

Not a word or movement escaped her. She was content to let her men carry
out their work in their own way.

Now that Nick Carter had been overcome, and his man, the porter, lay on
the ground with a bullet through his thigh, she had no doubt that all
would go as she had planned.

“I wish we had that man with us,” observed Kennedy musingly, as he gazed
down at Nick. “He’s a great fighter! Wouldn’t he have been in his
element as skipper of a windjammer in the old days, when the captain was
expected to straighten out every row that came up in the fo’c’s’le.
However, there is no time to lose. Let’s see how these boys of ours
are.”

Three out of the seven were in bad shape. Two had been shot through the
arm by Nick--for he had been careful not to plant his bullets where they
would be fatal--and the third had been knocked out by the detective’s
fist on the point of the chin.

A strong dose of whisky from Kennedy’s flask administered to each,
together with some vigorous rubbing of the forehead of the man who had
been laid low by the knock-out punch, brought them all around, and the
first mate turned to Mike Corrigan.

Hastily bandaging his wounded leg, Kennedy told him to stay where he was
for a while, and then to crawl out into the open, where some of the
people going to the golf links would be sure to see him.

The three men who had been hurt managed to stagger into the boat. But it
was evident that they would not be any particular use.

The two who had remained uninjured, besides one who had been left in
charge of the boat and prisoners, and had not taken part in the fight,
would have to row and steer, leaving Kennedy to take general charge.

“Now, boys,” directed Kennedy, when everything else had been arranged,
“pick up this man who has given us all the trouble. We’ll take him
along.”

Mademoiselle Valeria--to call her by her real name--smiled approvingly
as two of the sailors stooped and picked up the seemingly helpless
detective and lifted him into the boat.

“Shall we bend a rope around him?” asked Groton.

“Not necessary!” said Kennedy. “He can’t do any harm now. Let’s hurry
back to the _Idaline_.”

The detective made no sign. He suffered his eyes to close a little more,
and when he was lifted and placed in the bottom of the boat, he allowed
himself to drop limply just as he was put.

Valeria saw the boat shoved off from the bank toward the middle of the
bay, and then swing around in the direction of the yacht.

“I wonder what Colonel Pearson will say to me when I go aboard the
_Idaline_ to-morrow,” she murmured, as she made her way back to the
hotel.

She was still thinking this when she went to bed, and this time dropped
into a sleep that lasted till morning.

Meanwhile, the two unwounded sailors took the oars and rowed hard toward
the yacht, while the two other men, who were not shot--including the one
who had been knocked out by Nick Carter, but who had now practically
recovered--were ready to relieve their shipmates when they should grow
tired.

Kennedy sat in the stern, steering, and apparently in a reverie. He was
thinking what a good stroke of work he had accomplished that night.

Not only had he got the two prisoners made by the beautiful mistress of
the yacht, and was taking them to the vessel, where they could be held
in safety until the demanded ransom was paid, but he had actually got
into his power the one man feared by Valeria and her crew of desperadoes
who had made the _Idaline_ the most annoying craft known to the police
of a dozen countries.

If the yacht had not been so carefully changed in its appearance, by
altering her rigging, shortening her smokestack by an ingenious
telescoping device that was the invention of its fair owner, and giving
a different look to her in several other ways, Nick Carter would have
recognized her at once.

As it was, he had thought he knew it, although he could not reconcile
the salient points of difference between the _Idaline_, as he remembered
her, and this graceful pleasure steamer riding so calmly at anchor in
the bay.

Now that he had found out who the Baroness Latour really was, and had
actually been in conversation with her--following this up by running
against Kennedy, whom he also had met before--he did not need to hear
the first mate mention the name of the _Idaline_ to be sure of her
identity.

It was all clear to Nick now. He was to be taken aboard the yacht, with
Harvey L. Drago and Lord Vinton, and they would put out to sea until the
friends of the prisoners had consented to pay the enormous sums which
would be demanded through carefully veiled newspaper advertisements.

As to what would be done with him, he could not quite satisfy himself.
He knew that Mademoiselle Valeria had shown him, in various subtle ways,
that she would have been his friend if he had let her, and he did not
think she would go to the extreme of killing him.

“I wouldn’t trust her,” he thought. “She could easily give orders to
some of those rascals on the yacht to shoot me in my sleep, to poison
me, or even to suffocate me with some of that charming gas she used on
Lord Vinton--and, doubtless, on Mrs. van Dietrich, too. But--I don’t
mean to let them do it. That is where I have something to say.”

The two men at the oars were laboring hard, for it was not easy to move
such a heavy boatload by two pairs of arms, and Kennedy was sorry the
boat had not been rigged so that four men could row, one to each oar.

Nick could not see how near they were to the yacht, but he figured that
they would reach it in not many minutes.

“Hello! How are you by this time?” whispered a voice in his ear. “Coming
around?”

“It was Harvey L. Drago speaking, and Nick turned his head enough to
find that Drago was lying almost by his side, his feet extended opposite
to those of the detective.

“Keep quiet,” was Carter’s response, in the lowest of murmurs. “You’ve
got your gag out, I see.”

“Of course I have,” was the reply. “Those clumsy bunglers couldn’t tie
it on so that it would stay. They may know how to knot a rope, but a
handkerchief is out of their line. Got a knife?”

“Yes. Keep quiet,” returned the detective.

Nick Carter was pleased with Harvey L. Drago. He liked a man who was not
easily discouraged, and it was evident that Drago was as full of fight
as if he had never been beaten.

Nick drew his jackknife from his pocket, and severed Drago’s bonds with
a series of quick slashes.

In the darkness his movements were not noticed by the sailors.

The prisoners were in the fore part of the boat, for one thing, so that
the rowers’ backs were toward them.

Kennedy and the other men were in the stern, and it would not have been
easy for them to discern the doings of the prisoners, even in daylight.
Now, with the moon gone, and only stars to light up the wide bay and
boat, there was hardly any possibility.

“Say! I heard those fellows speak of you as Nick Carter,” whispered
Drago. “Is that right? Are you the famous----”

“My name is Nick Carter,” interrupted the detective. “I am the
detective. Are you game for a fight to get out of this?”

“Am I?” returned Drago, so emphatically that Nick warned him not to
speak above a low whisper. “You’ll see.”

“All right! But be careful. If it were not for the splashing of the
water and the little noise the oars make, you would have been overheard
already. I’ll give you the signal for action.”

“What are we going to do?”

“Wait till the boat gets up to the yacht. Then, before they can make
fast, knock as many of them overboard as you can and jump for the
ladder. Get that?”

“Sure! I wish there was another one to help.”

“There is,” put in a low voice, behind the detective. “I’m not clear in
my mind. But I believe I could do something in a pinch.”

Lord Vinton, slowly recovering from the effects of Valeria’s poisonous
gas, and helped back to reason and strength by the invigorating sea air,
had heard what Nick Carter and Drago had been saying, and was anxious to
take a hand.

The detective welcomed him with quiet enthusiasm.

“If you can lay out only one of the men with a boat stretcher,” he
whispered, “you’ll be doing a great deal. Here is the stretcher right
here!”

The detective had found a loose piece of wood, some three feet long,
lying near him, and he had known it for one of the braces against which
oarsmen place their feet to help their pull on the oars.

It would make a most effective weapon, even in the rather weak grasp of
the half-poisoned Lord Vinton.

“Think you can fix one of them with this?” asked Carter.

“I’ll give him a rap that he’ll remember,” promised Vinton.




CHAPTER XI.

UNDER HATCHES.


Nick Carter was glad that it took more than a quarter of an hour longer
to reach the yacht. Every minute was beneficial to Lord Vinton, as he
drew in deep breaths of the life-giving atmosphere.

“Easy all!” called out Kennedy, directing his oarsmen. “Back water!
Unship port oars! That’s good! Steady! Wait till I get hold of the
ladder rail!”

But the first mate was never allowed to get to the ladder rail of the
yacht. Instead, he found himself suddenly confronted by Nick Carter,
whom he had supposed still insensible.

He hardly had time to consider how the detective had managed to get back
to his wits so quickly, for Nick’s right arm shot out, in a feint for
the eye. Kennedy attempted to parry, and Carter immediately crossed with
his left. Sending in a sledge-hammer crash to the mate’s chin, the
detective dropped his man overboard from the stern with a splash.

Nick did not stop to see what became of the mate. There were other
things to do.

The two sailors who had been rowing, each seized an oar for a club and
tried to knock down Drago.

He was too quick for them, however. Tearing the oar out of the hands of
one of them, a sweeping blow mowed the sailor into the sea, to join
Kennedy.

Lord Vinton, although still suffering slightly from the effects of the
gas in his bedroom, was able to keep in his mind the one thing he had
been instructed to do by the detective, which was to use the boat
stretcher.

So he brought it down on the head of Groton with a force that knocked
him senseless. Then he administered a side wipe to the man who had
remained in the boat when the others were ashore, and put him out of the
fight, although it did not render him unconscious.

“Grab those oars out of the boat, and shove her off!” shouted Nick, as
he got on the square wooden grating at the foot of the ladder, and saw
that Lord Vinton was already by his side. “Throw them into the sea or
bring them along, Drago!”

Harvey L. Drago was a man after Nick Carter’s own heart, for he seemed
to fit into a scrap as if it were his regular occupation. In a jiffy, he
had the four oars in his arms and piled them up on the ladder, just as
he gave the boat a tremendous shove with one foot.

Away went the boat, with the two wounded sailors and the other three who
were more or less disabled. The fifth sailor, together with Kennedy, the
mate, had disappeared in the dark waters of the bay.

Nick was obliged to make a quick grab for Drago, or that energetic young
man would have gone into the sea, too, as he kicked the boat away.

He recovered his balance with the help of the detective, however, and
rushed up the ladder at Nick’s heels.

It was fortunate for the three victors that only a small watch was on
deck. The taking away of six men from the crew, with the first mate, had
weakened the yacht so far as men were concerned.

There were two men on deck, and neither of them was wide awake. They had
been sitting talking in the shadows of the smokestack until one of them
had fallen fast asleep, while the other nodded.

Until the fight actually began on the boat at the foot of the sea
ladder, there had been hardly a sound.

The men were rowing with muffled oars, and there had been no talking
except the whispered exchanges between the three prisoners.

When the battle did begin, it was over before the two men on deck
realized what was happening.

Nick and Drago, coming up the ladder, met them both at the gangway, and
the swiftness and dexterity with which these two seamen found themselves
bound and gagged remained a matter of wonder with them for the remainder
of their lives.

“Now, gentlemen!” whispered Nick. “The fo’c’s’le! There must be half a
dozen men in there. Close the hatch for the present, so that they can’t
get out. We’ll deal with them later.”

They fastened up the cubby-hole forward where the men slept, and had
trapped seven men before they awoke. In fact, it was an hour afterward
before any of them realized that they were prisoners.

When they did, they found the door so well secured that they feared they
could only wait until somebody should come to let them out.

All this had been carried out so quietly that the officer of the
deck--who was the second mate, Morgan--did not know till he emerged from
the chart room that the _Idaline_ was in possession of an invading
party.

Just as he poked his nose out of the chart room--where he had been
enjoying a nap on a softly cushioned locker--he was seized by two strong
pairs of hands, his mouth stopped with a handful of oakum, and a rope
thrown around his arms with the scientific precision that proclaimed it
the work of an experienced sailor.

It was Nick Carter who had knotted the rope, while Lord Vinton, acting
under orders, had shoved the oakum into the astonished mate’s mouth.

Drago held him by the arms while the detective bound them.

Nick was a yachtsman himself. There was not a rope or a bit of canvas
that he did not know on a full-rigged windjammer.

Having deposited Morgan again on the locker--but not so comfortably as
before--and lashed his hands behind him, Nick directed Drago to tie him
to the leg of the solid table which was screwed to the floor.

“There he is,” he remarked, when Drago had finished the task. “You’ve
done that well. He may perhaps get himself loose in the course of an
hour or so, although I don’t think he will. But by that time we shall
have things arranged so that we shall not care. Come down to the cabin.
There is a man there I want to see.”

They went below, the three of them, and when Captain Latell had been
caught in his stateroom and made a prisoner before he realized what was
going on, Nick went to another cabin.

Here, pistol in hand, he used the barrel to poke a burly man, who lay on
his back in the wide berth, snoring in perfect contentment.

The well-built man started up to a sitting posture. The detective
promptly knocked him down again.

“Lie where you are, Mr. Spanner!” commanded Nick.

“What does this mean?” spluttered the indignant occupant of the berth.
“Who are you, sir?”

“Nick Carter!” replied the detective coolly.

“What?”

This monosyllabic inquiry came with a shriek of amazement, tinged with
indignation and fury.

“Keep quiet, Mr. Spanner!” admonished Nick. “We have possession of the
yacht, and----”

“Where is Captain Latell?” thundered Spanner.

“A prisoner in his stateroom. And we have the second mate, Morgan, tied
and gagged, in the chart room.”

“And Kennedy?”

“Drowned.”

“What?”

“He tried to make a prisoner of me and two guests at the Hotel
Amsterdam, and he fell overboard, into the sea. He was not seen again. I
want you to tell me where Mrs. van Dietrich is on this yacht.”

“I don’t know what you are talking about,” protested Spanner.

“That’s unfortunate. Because, if you don’t produce the lady within ten
minutes, we shall take you ashore and have you put in jail for
kidnaping.”

“Let me get up and dress,” growled Spanner. “You have no right to come
aboard my yacht at all, and I want to see what you are doing here.”

“Oh, it is your yacht, is it?” asked Nick, with a curious smile. “I
supposed you were the uncle of the owner, and that her name is
Mademoiselle Valeria. She has been staying at the Hotel Amsterdam for
some days under the name of the Baroness Latour.”

“I don’t know a Baroness Latour--or a Mademoiselle Valeria, either,”
snorted Spanner.

“Don’t you? Well, we’ll look for Mrs. van Dietrich ourselves. When we
have found her, we shall know something about the ownership of the
yacht, I think.”

“Look here, Mr. Carter,” suddenly broke in Lord Vinton, who had been
standing in the corridor, “Mr. Drago has come to tell me that there is
something or other clicking away in the captain’s room, and he’s afraid
it is an infernal machine.”

“I don’t think there is anything infernal about it,” laughed the
detective. “Take this pistol and hold it to the head of this chunky
gentleman in pajamas on the bed till I come back. If he becomes too
restless--that is, to the point of being threatening--pull the trigger.”

“What are you going to do?”

“I’m going to take a look at the infernal machine in the captain’s
room.”

“Very well. The door is locked outside, and the captain is gagged and
bound on his berth,” remarked Lord Vinton coolly.




CHAPTER XII.

THE INFERNAL MACHINE.


It was just what Nick Carter expected when he entered the stateroom of
Captain Latell--the “infernal machine” was fixed in the window, with the
sash helping to hold it firm.

“The wireless telephone,” he muttered. “I wonder who is talking.”

It was clicking in a subdued way, and the detective, after a careless
glance at the captain on the bed, put the receiver on his ears, and
settled down to listen.

“Hello!” was the first utterance of the machine that Nick caught. “Is
that the yacht?”

“Yes,” replied Nick. “Who is that?”

“Is Colonel Pearson aboard?”

“This is Colonel Pearson talking.”

“Is it? That you, chief?”

“What?” cried Nick delightedly. “Is that you, Chick?”

“Yes.”

“Good! Where are you?”

“In your room at the hotel. This wireless telephone of yours came, and I
am using it. Good thing you showed me how it works. Say, chief, are you
all right?”

“Yes. Lord Vinton and Mr. Drago are with me. We’ve got the yacht.”

“That’s what I thought. I’ve been staring through a pair of strong night
glasses, and from what I could see, it looked to me as if you had won. I
saw some people tumble out of a boat, and I was bothered about it till a
skiff that the hotel people had sent out came in just now with two
half-drowned men. They are the first mate of the yacht and one of the
crew, I’m told.”

“Well?”

“The sailor talked when he was questioned, and said you’d taken the
yacht. He said some pirates had it, and he was going to see what could
be done about it. The other man--the first mate--may not come around at
all. So he couldn’t say anything.”

“Come aboard as soon as you can, Chick. We’ve got two of the people who
were kidnaped, as I told you. But we can’t find Mrs. van Dietrich.”

“She’s on board, the sailor says. There’s a secret stateroom amidships.
You get to it by way of the corridor past Mr. Jared Spanner’s room.”

“Very well! We’ll look for her there. But, see here, Chick! You come
aboard as quickly as you can, and bring half a dozen men with you. Ask
Mr. Savage and Mr. Mallory, the hotel managers, to pick you out reliable
fellows, who have nerve. I want to bring this yacht in, but I must have
men to work her, as well as to keep our prisoners safe. You see----”

That was as far as the detective got with his conversation. A tremendous
uproar broke out at the head of the companionway, and the next moment
seven husky sailors came rushing down and hurled themselves upon him.

One big fellow pointed a revolver at his head and ordered him to
surrender.

The sailor made a strategical mistake here. He threatened the detective
with the pistol before making sure that his man would stand where he was
to be fired at.

Nick Carter ducked almost before the demand for his surrender was out of
the other man’s mouth.

When he came up again--which he did like lightning--the top of his head
struck the sailor’s chin and knocked him backward, stunned and gasping.

At the same instant the detective wrenched the revolver from his hand
and faced another man who was standing in the doorway.

This second man had no gun. His weapon was an iron belaying pin, and if
he could have swung it, he might have done serious damage.

As it was, he retreated in disorder as he saw the steady eye of Carter
running along the blue steel barrel of the big forty-four, and, as a
natural consequence, he upset all those behind him.

“Vinton! Drago!” shouted Nick.

There was a quick response to his call. The two came running along the
corridor, and Vinton fired off his automatic pistol on general
principles.

He did not hit anybody, but the report was tremendous in those confined
quarters. It scared every sailor among them.

Nick Carter could not help laughing heartily as he and his companions
herded the men along the deck and into the forecastle again.

Taking care the door was thoroughly secured this time, Nick stationed
Lord Vinton, with the pistol, outside, giving him orders to shoot down
the first man who should appear.

This injunction was given loudly enough to reach the ears of the men
inside, and Nick was satisfied there would be no attempt to break out
again--at least, not unless the yacht was recaptured by its original
owners.

It was just as this arrangement was effected that a tubbylike figure, in
red-and-blue pajamas, came pattering along the deck, holding a revolver
in its hand.

“Hands up!” yelled Nick Carter, presenting his jackknife at the face of
the pajama man, who, of course, was Jared Spanner.

Mr. Spanner had never been remarkable for physical courage, and he let
his revolver fall with a crash on the deck. He could not see what the
jackknife was in the gloom, but he took it for granted that it was a
heavy firearm of some kind.

“Back to bed!” commanded Nick sternly.

“I heard a noise outside and I left him alone for a minute,” explained
Lord Vinton penitently.

Spanner padded back in his bare feet. When he was in the stateroom once
more, the detective took the precaution of tying his hands behind him
and fastening him in his berth with a rope that was twisted around the
iron framework below.

There was one more important thing to do, and that was to find Mrs. van
Dietrich.

With the information he had as to the whereabouts of her cabin, it was
not difficult for Nick Carter to discover it. Then he solved the problem
of entering, and, after a knock, for propriety’s sake, he went in.

Mrs. van Dietrich was of a philosophical turn of mind. That was proved
by the fact that she was in a comfortable bed, with her clothes still
on, but with a blanket pulled up under her arms, and sleeping as calmly
as if she had been in her own room at the hotel.

Nick Carter assured himself that she was really in a natural sleep, and
then quietly withdrew, to wait till Chick and reënforcements should
arrive.

It was an hour later, and the sun was just showing itself over the rim
of the eastern horizon, when Chick, with eight men--guests, porters, and
the two proprietors of the hotel--rowed up to the sea ladder of the
_Idaline_.

It was embarrassing to Nick Carter to receive so many and such profuse
thanks for recovering the three guests who had disappeared from the
hotel, and he begged both Mallory and Savage to let it pass.

Nick Carter arranged to leave a guard on the yacht, when Mrs. van
Dietrich was to be escorted to shore by the detective, Lord Vinton, and
Harvey L. Drago, with Chick, in state.

It was only after considerable delay that this was done, however, for
Mrs. van Dietrich was a leader of fashion, and she could not appear in
public until her own maid, Mary Cook, had been brought from the hotel,
with a complete change of raiment and various toilet necessaries.

All this took so much time, that it was well into the forenoon when the
dear lady at last appeared in the lobby of the Hotel Amsterdam, to
receive the congratulations by all the other guests on her wonderful
rescue by “this dear Colonel Pearson.”

The stolen jewelry had all been recovered.

At last Nick Carter got away from the lobby and into the elevator,
telling the man to take him to the fourth floor. Once there, he hurried
to the rooms occupied by the Baroness Latour.

He was surprised to see all the doors of the suite wide open, and one of
the hotel housemaids busy with broom, dust pan, and other paraphernalia
of her business.

“Where is the baroness?” demanded Carter hastily.

“She went early this morning, sir,” was the reply.

“Where has she gone?”

“I don’t know. Perhaps they can tell you at the office,” answered the
girl.

But they could not tell him at the office. All they knew was that the
baroness had paid her bill and gone away, with her maid and her trunks,
to the railroad station, and that she had taken the nine-thirty-seven
west.

“H’m!” muttered Nick Carter. “So she has got away from me. Well, it
would have been difficult to convict her, even if I had wanted to do it.
Her man Kennedy is dead, and I have Jared Spanner a prisoner on what he
says is his own yacht. After all, I have cleared up the mystery of the
kidnaping of important guests for ransom, and even if I can’t clap
Spanner in jail--a point I haven’t settled in my own mind--I think I
have pulled his claws.”

He walked up and down the lobby several times in deep thought.

“After all,” he broke out, at last, half aloud, “I don’t know that my
dear baroness has got away from me altogether yet. I still have her
yacht, and she is sure to want to come on board sooner or later. I
believe I’ll go up to my room and get a few hours’ sleep.”


THE END.


“The Private Yacht; or, Nick Carter’s Trail of Diamonds,” is the title
of the story that you will find in the next issue of this weekly, No.
125, out January 30th. In this story you will read more of the efforts
of Nick Carter and his assistants to thwart the designs of this
wonderfully clever girl criminal.

       *       *       *       *       *

RUBY LIGHT.

By BURKE JENKINS.

(This interesting story was commenced in No. 120 of NICK CARTER STORIES.
Back numbers can always be obtained from your news dealer or the
publishers.)




CHAPTER XIV.

THE FOG LIFTS.


“I do like a man like that!” bubbled old Steve delightedly, as he
dropped a box of tools at my feet.

I found no words in reply, so we two went right at the repairing, and
the job was really simple enough.

The engine, a four-cylinder affair of the “heavy-duty” type, was bedded
between the two masts. This arrangement, of course, necessitated a
piercing of the foot of the mainmast for the shaft as it ran aft to the
screw.

Now, what had happened was simply that, in the strain before the actual
break at the deck, the bronze shaft had been thrown out of line. So it
bound against the bearing through the mast.

It was but a quarter hour’s work to saw above and below the bend. I
couldn’t get the shaft to exact trueness, of course; but the line from
engine coupling to shaft log ran fair enough, so that, before a half
hour was up, I sent old Steve to deck.

Then followed the jangle of the bell right alongside me, and I started
the engine.

There came immediately a gurgle along the planking. The _Ruby Light_ was
once more under way.

I was soon joined in the engine room again by old Steve.

“How’s she runnin’?” he inquired, as he bit off a chew of plug, mumbling
over the process of getting the exact break.

“Sweet enough,” I replied, “though she ought not to be driven any too
long with even that bit of a crook.” I indicated the bend in the shaft.
“A long spell would wear the stern bearing out of----”

“Which the same’s just wot I was a-tellin’ the old man just now. Kind o’
struck him like, too, I reckon; fer I hearn him shift the course sommat
ter the Stevens lad.”

“Shift the course?” I queried, masking my interest as much as possible,
but not enough to keep the old fellow from hedging on his tongue. He
shifted the topic abruptly.

“And now, laddie, I guess as how there ain’t no more occasion ter keep
you from deck, though the same which you done down here was mighty
good,” he said meaningly.

I acknowledged the appreciation with a shrug, gave him a cordial “So
long,” and sought the deck.

Fog is even more whimsical than woman. And the quick survey I gave to
the weather, as I stood a minute by the engine-room hatch, showed that
this one had about made up its mind to lift again. At any rate, it was
distinctly thinner.

I started aft along the cluttered deck toward Stevens, who was again at
the wheel, but before I reached his side, Stroth had joined him from the
main companionway.

The owner gave a critical scan to starboard, then spoke a word to
Stevens, with a nod at the binnacle, and slowly the spokes went over to
port. This, just as I was about to join them.

“I hope your hand is all right, sir,” said I, in genuine solicitude.

“Right as a trivet,” he replied, holding it forward for inspection.
“Isn’t all that gauze and stuff just shipshape and Bristol-fashion,
though? I tell you, Stella’s a trump when it comes to the nursing game.
You see, those convent sisters she’s been with these three years
are----”

He stopped himself, and inquired sharply:

“How’re things with the motor?”

“Well enough, if you don’t run it too long that way.”

“So old Steve tells me. Well, how long do you think----”

I anticipated his thought. “She could run without much trouble for
twelve hours or thereabout,” was my verdict.

His brow cleared perceptibly as he cried:

“Good enough--and long enough!” He nodded to Stevens, as though in
confirmation of some point, before he added to me:

“Our little pleasure voyage to Savannah is getting a dash of adventure
in it, isn’t it, Grey?” He indicated the wreckage-strewn decks before
us. “But it’s fine!”

It certainly was a novel viewpoint from which to estimate a damage of at
least a thousand odd dollars. An absolutely unnecessary damage, at
that--and to a yacht as smart and trim as they make ’em.

I couldn’t find it in me to agree with his enthusiasm, so I changed the
subject.

“She runs very well under power,” I said.

“Doesn’t she?” came his hearty response. “A good, honest, mile-eating
pace, which is not at all bad for an auxiliary. I think we ought to make
Fire Island by some time after nightfall or thereabout, don’t you?”

“Fire Island!” I exclaimed. He had betrayed me into an expression of the
genuine surprise I experienced, and he laughed easily as he went on:

“Exactly. I could scarcely continue in this fashion to Savannah, could
I? And so, since you’re bound to know it sooner or later, I see no
reason to avoid explaining a bit.”

“Now naturally,” and he smiled again, “I’ve got to find some cove to lie
in while I refit. Of course, those masts are going to be pretty short
and stumpy when I restep them; but with reefs tied in, and engine going,
too, I guess we can be on our way again well within a week, eh?”

“But why not shift over to Greenport, and put two new sticks in her at
the shipyard there?” I volunteered thoughtlessly.

His grin became broader than ever.

“I believe a little spot behind a couple of those low-lying islands in
Great South Bay would suit me better; that is, under the
circumstances.”

“Oh, I forgot!” I cried, laughing, too.

Here we both wheeled to a shout from Stevens. With one hand he still
clung to the wheel, but the other pointed off over the waters.

Seamen are familiar with those inexplicable “pockets” in a fog, and this
one was as clear a “lift” as I’ve ever witnessed. Furthermore, it came
in an exact line with a decided object; an object on shore; though one
would never have guessed we were so near the “hard.”

Over there, as though viewed through a gray tunnel, but clear as
daylight itself, showed a bluff, surmounted by a lighthouse.

“Montauk!” I cried.

But before the fog banks once more swept the rift out of existence, my
exclamation was answered vehemently. Stroth’s imprecation came low, but
it carried venom enough to make up for much volume.

Then we continued monotonously on our westward course through the mist.




CHAPTER XV.

ON PAROLE.


That night, about nine o’clock, the atmosphere cleared to the rising of
the full moon, and it proved Stroth’s rough estimate of the distance we
could travel to be remarkably accurate.

The lead had been constantly kept going, and when we were able at last
to catch the rays of Fire Island light, it bore about three points off
the starboard bow, and some four miles distant.

What little wind that had been stirring throughout the remainder of
daylight, after the short squall, fell flat at sundown; and when the
thick weather had so lightened that the stars, as well as the moon,
could be distinguished, we found ourselves riding over an unrippled
ground swell.

It was phantomlike and eerie out there on that heaving oil, not a spar
or sail striking its outline against the heavens, but a steady purr of
waters as they slid under the schooner’s spoon bow.

I had never known an engine of the explosive type to work more quietly.
Whoever fitted that muffler knew his business.

Moreover, there was a certain enjoyment in this very weirdness, an
enjoyment which was enhanced for me by the fact that, since the
gloaming, Stella Stroth had joined us on deck.

Indeed, at the moment when the light was first descried, she was leaning
lightly over the rail at the quarter, gazing down into the mystery of
the black waters slipping by.

“Two pennies for your thought,” said I, rather lamely.

“Why, odd enough,” she replied slowly. “I was just thinking what an odd
thing the whole business is!”

“What whole business?” I said lightly.

“Oh, living,” she answered quietly.

“A fine kind of remark for eighteen,” I bantered. “Especially with a
moon like that overhead.”

“I’m not eighteen, I’m twenty!” she cried, and then we both laughed as
we turned to a step that sounded on deck alongside us.

It was Stroth. But he continued his way forward, paying no attention to
us. We kept watching him, though, for purpose rang in his step.

To a gesture, one of the sailors cast loose the foghorn which had been
lashed to the bitts during our run in the fog. The fellow disappeared
with it down the forecastle hatch; then reappeared next instant, and
extinguished the side lights, which, to avoid collision from coasting
schooners, had been rigged to jury fixtures at the rails.

Disappearing once more to the hold, he doused the forecastle light also,
and a turn of inquiry I made aft showed that the main cabin was likewise
dark.

Not a glimmer anywhere showed from this low, black, smooth-running
cripple as she veered northward and pointed for the inlet.

Even the clouds favored that short passage, for a husky, gray-cotton one
billowed across the moon just as we neared the strait.

At that minute I felt Stroth beside me.

“Know the channel in here, sir?” said I.

“Well, rather,” he replied. “Besides, the _Ruby Light_ draws little more
than three feet--built for Florida waters, you know.”

Then he strode from us, and took the wheel from Stevens. It was easy
enough to see who was the real captain.

Next moment we slid into the slip of the inlet, and entered the quieter
waters beyond.

Once in the bay, it took us all of two hours to creep to the spot
selected, for Stroth checked the engine so that she was barely turning
over. But, be it remarked, we didn’t rub the mud once, which tells its
own story of Stroth’s ability, and knowledge of the channel.

Finally he tucked the schooner into as pretty a bight for concealment as
I could have imagined along that low-lying, marshy coast. Indeed, I
didn’t believe there was such a spot in the entire region, for my own
slight experience in the locality had come from a snipe-shooting trip I
had once made with a gunning companion.

Even thus at night I could gather its advantages; but when, after some
five hours’ sound sleep, I stepped out on deck to greet the rising sun,
the impression was intensified.

It looked exactly as though that island had been chiseled out to fit
that very boat; and, better to conceal it, had humped itself up into two
lateral hummocks surmounted by the inevitable salt grass. In fact,
bereft of spars as she lay now, not a trace could a man a furlong off
catch of the craft except dead ahead, and even there the channel crooked
to an abrupt turn.

“It’s pretty near ideal, isn’t it?” said Stroth, coming up behind me.
Not a trace of the fire of yesterday showed on the features of the
owner. He was geniality itself.

“I didn’t know there was such a place within a hundred miles of here,”
said I.

“Oh, then you know Great South Bay?”

“Scarcely at all,” I replied. “I simply know that the bay is probably
about five miles wide at this point. Over there”--and I swept my gesture
toward the low line of beach some half mile beyond the island and to
southward--“lies the Atlantic, and over this way----”

“The south shore of Long Island; right.”

“We’re about opposite----” I put it as a question.

“Very nearly opposite Babylon,” said he slowly, and I felt more in his
tones than the mere words.

At any rate, I was silent some seconds before he broke into my reverie
with:

“You’re up against a problem, aren’t you?”

He was right; something was distinctly bothering me that morning. I
didn’t hurry to say so, however.

“Shall I word it for you?” he queried, with a short laugh. “Well, you’re
wondering, for one thing, just what would be the easiest way to get to
that mainland, eh?”

He had hit the nail on the head first crack, for there was a decided
difference between being practically a prisoner on a schooner out of
sight of land at sea, and being foot-free on that schooner when she was
tied, bow and stern, in smooth water, a half mile from Uncle Sam’s
well-patrolled beach. There would be a life-saving station within a
five-mile trudge, I knew.

But Stroth didn’t guess the real crux of the trouble. Duty to the force
he could understand; but of my feelings for his daughter he had no
inkling.

Right there, though, lay my greatest difficulty, and I hate indecision
worse than anything I know of. But he solved the thing for me in short
order, and in his characteristic fashion.

“I’ve got a choice for you again,” he said abruptly. “Naturally, the
thing I most object to is having my whereabouts known. You can
understand that.”

I nodded.

“At least, until I can refit,” he went on. “Now, I’m not the man to use
force when I can employ a milder treatment; and, besides, you’ve proved
yourself a very adaptable person, and, as such, I’ll admit I admire
you.”

I eyed him closely, scenting sarcasm, but his face held none.

“Furthermore,” he concluded, “you’re a man of your word; that I know.”

“All of which----” I began.

“All of which leads up, as I have intimated, to the choice, which is
very much like the one I offered you before. Simply stated, you are,
here and now, to give me your word to remain in my party until we reach
Savannah.”

“The alternative?” I demanded.

“Is sufficiently severe in justifying your course to superiors.” He
crossed his wrists, suggesting handcuffs, and I knew he meant what he
said, for the very metal rang in his voice.

At heart I was positively glad that the one course lay open, and it was
a course any sane man would have to take.

“Why, that’s no choice, Mr. Stroth!” I exclaimed, laughing; “it’s an
invitation, which I gladly accept. You have my word; I’m yours to
Savannah.”

He joined my laugh, and we shook hands on it.

“I’m going to give you absolute freedom, Grey,” said he, “even to ‘shore
leave.’ Fact is, after breakfast, you can do as you like, and we’ll----”

“Bleakfas’, sir!” announced the Jap, Saki, at his elbow, and the
sentence wasn’t finished as we strode, hunger-whetted, to the dining
saloon.




CHAPTER XVI.

A PICNIC.


Both Stella Stroth and Stevens were already at table, and the girl
seemed to be in the highest sort of spirits.

From the very second of my arrival she kept me jumping from subject to
subject in a sparkling joy of life. Little showed of that pensive mood
of last night’s moonlight.

Stroth and Stevens soon became engrossed in plans for the refitting of
the schooner, no small task under the circumstances; but little of the
more serious talk got to me, for the girl kept me busy.

Presently she burst out with:

“Oh, daddy, have you still got my canoe aboard?”

Not a trace of annoyance at her interruption showed in the father’s
manner as he replied:

“I just reckon we have, honey. It’s below deck, of course; somewhere
beknownst to old Steve; he stowed it away carefully. Why, do you want
it?”

She turned to me happily. “Wouldn’t it be just great to paddle over to
the beach yonder?” she cried. “Why, we might even catch some fish, Mr.
Grey.”

I glanced at Stroth, who smiled back meaningly.

“I’m afraid we’d be sort of deserters, and----” I began.

“Oh, shucks! Daddy, we couldn’t help fix the schooner, anyway, could we?
We’d just be in the way, wouldn’t we?”

Stroth replied easily:

“Well, honey, I don’t want Grey, here, to take it as a slight, but I
really don’t think he could be of much service, for we’ve plenty of men.
And so that is not at all a bad suggestion.”

“Ah, you hear that, Mr. Grey?” she cried delightedly, tossing down her
napkin. “Come on, let’s get old Steve!”

As she quitted the doorway, and before she turned to see if I were
following, I questioned her father with a look, and got another nod of
approval. He certainly was putting my liberty on my honor.

Old Steve chuckled joyously at her request, and it wasn’t ten minutes
before a light and graceful canvas canoe was bobbing alongside the
starboard landing stairs. And the old bo’s’n added this suggestion to
the fishing part of the picnic:

“I don’t guess as how you’ll find overmuch fish atween here and the
beach, missy; but onless this region is dead changed, the shallows is
full of crabs; so I just brought this here net along in case----”

“Oh, dandy! I just dote on scoopin’ ’em in!” she exclaimed
enthusiastically. “And we’ll take along a kettle. Why, it’ll just be
scrumptious! And you can tell Saki that he needn’t expect us to dinner.”

Whereupon she took her place in the bow of the frail craft, and caught
up her paddle, and not ten strokes were needed to prove that she was no
novice at the trick.

We reached the main beach within a half hour, then coasted along its
shallows, scooping up the crustaceans. We made a goodly haul in short
order, and by noon she had had enough of the sport.

“Let’s land on the beach, leave the canoe pulled up, and take our kettle
over to the ocean side of the bar,” she proposed. “We can make a bully
good fire of driftwood. My, but this is all primitive and bully, isn’t
it?”

And it was all I could do to keep from telling her just how bully it was
to me, and how I’d like to keep on this way forever.

But before we got that fire started, we met a difficulty. I hadn’t a
match--not a single one.

This was an insuperable difficulty, that cleared quicker and easier than
usual, for a blue-uniformed government coast guard came trudging his
solitary beat along the hardened sands where the tide had run out.

He seemed not a whit surprised at seeing such a couple as we were. I
suppose he credited “summer folks” with any kind of asininity, even to
paddling a canoe clear over from Babylon.

“A match?” he echoed genially. “Why, shore! Here you are,” and he
produced one from behind his ear, where he carried a half dozen.

As he handed it over, I detected a lingering eye on our catch.

“You certainly got quite a mess, didn’t you?” he commented.

“Yes; don’t you want some of ’em?” I asked.

“Why, I don’t care if I do,” he answered. “The boys up to the station
ain’t got much time to catch ’em themselves. Ef you don’t mind, I’ll
jest take along a half dozen.”

So saying, he drew a newspaper from his pocket, tore a sheet from it,
and, to our hearty urging, wrapped up a full dozen.

Then he wished us a good appetite for our crude meal, and once more
strode away at his steady, distance-covering gait.

It was with the intention of starting the fire at once that I caught up
the sheet of newspaper he had left behind him; but, after one glance, I
didn’t burn it.

The item that met my eye was not a large one; the bit of news was not
featured; but it held me. This is what I saw:


     “WIRELESS FROM MONTAUK.

     “A message received late last night reports a strange happening off
     Montauk Point yesterday during a short, but fierce, squall.

     “At the very instant when the operator at the point was trying to
     get into communication with a trim, black schooner that carried the
     apparatus, the wind caught her full; she heeled sharply; then the
     fog, which had held the whole day, once more descended. But there
     came another sudden rift in the mist when the craft was again
     sighted. This time it was only her hull, for both masts, in the
     interval, had been carried away clean to the deck. Then once more
     the fog descended. No hint of her identity or present whereabouts
     is known.”

That was all, but I shoved the paper quickly into my jacket pocket
before the girl returned from the water, where she had been filling our
kettle.




CHAPTER XVII.

THE DAILY PAPERS.


Just what prompted me to be at such pains to conceal the news item, I am
at a loss to say. Perhaps it was some premonition. At all events, I
argued that it would be better to think over the thing a bit before I
did anything. Of course, the circumstance might amount to absolutely
nothing.

I took good pains, however, not to let any of my indecision or
abstraction show, and our delightful little tête-à-tête picnic ended as
light-heartedly and happily as it had begun. And just about sundown it
was a very tired little girl, indeed, that insisted upon doing her
share of paddling in the bow of the canoe.

Reaching the schooner’s deck, I was astonished to see what order had
already begun to show among the former tangle of wreckage. All standing
and running rigging had been carefully overhauled, coiled, and tagged.
The decks were pretty clear, and what clutter there was was
well-ordered.

Stroth met us jovially at the ladder. “Well, girlie, a good day?”

“Oh, fine, daddy, and----” here she stifled a healthy bit of a yawn.
“Oh, I’m so sleepy!”

“Nothing like the open, eh, Grey?” said he genially.

“Nothing,” I echoed, then added: “Nothing for sleep like it, unless it’s
tiresome company.”

It was cheap, and I regretted it, even before I caught her look; but,
come to think of it, the look compensated.

“Then off to bed with you, honey!” cried her father.

“Bed? Now? Why, we haven’t even had supper.”

“Well, I think it would be better, don’t you? I’ll send in Saki to you
with your meal, and you can tumble right in. You must remember, dear,
we’ve been through some happenings since----”

She broke into the argument with a happy laugh. Then she kissed him,
gave me a nod, and left us.

I watched her from sight, then turned to Stroth’s chuckle, as he
queried:

“A pretty good showing for one day, isn’t it?” He indicated the decks
with a sweep of his right hand. Over his left shoulder was slung a
camera.

“I never would have believed it possible in the time,” I replied, in
genuine admiration. Then I nodded forward to where Stevens was
superintending the construction of the scissorlike arrangement of spars
with which he purposed to restep the sticks. “A mighty good man that,
Mr. Stroth,” I added.

“I’m beginning to think so,” was the serious reply.

“It won’t be as long a job as you first thought, will it?” I inquired.

“Not by a jugful! Why, I wouldn’t be surprised if we could shake this
mooring by day after to-morrow! Yes, Stevens is a gem!”

At this point the little captain himself strode back and joined us, just
as I was remarking:

“The hobby again, Mr. Stroth,” with a nod toward the camera.

“Why, yes, indeed,” he replied. “I thought it would be pretty good to
have a half dozen or so snaps at the old _Ruby Light_ in the hospital.
I’m going to get some more to-morrow, just as the work’s beginning.
We’ll develop them together, if you like.”

“Nothing I’d like better!” I replied.

At the time I simply couldn’t make head or tail to the look of
displeasure, coupled to what was almost fear, that Captain Stevens shot
at me. But he didn’t offer a word in explanation as we filed on down the
steps to supper.

Oddly enough, it was not until the following night that I gave second
thought to that account I had read of our accident in the paper the
coast guard had dropped.

I don’t believe I should have reverted to it seriously, even then, if
something of a kindred nature hadn’t happened.

Stroth, as he had promised, had spent the day, joyous as a boy, at his
picture taking; but along about four o’clock he had filled his entire
reel. And it was just at this time that Stevens was about to dispatch a
couple of the crew in the dory launch.

It seems there was a broken turnbuckle or two to be replaced, and there
was no risk in thus sending the fellows ashore to a chandler’s;
particularly as they would return after dusk.

Stroth heard the order, and added one of his own.

“And, lads,” he called to them, above the engine’s first sharp barkings,
“you might bring me all you can get of to-day’s papers.”

The cheery “Aye, aye, sir!” spoke well for their affection for their
chief.

Immediately thereafter Stroth left us for the cabin. At his
disappearance, Stevens turned to me.

“Then you aren’t going with him?” he asked sharply.

“With him--where?”

“To the dark room.”

“Why, no--if that’s where he’s bound--I guess not. I suppose he forgot
the invitation.”

“Maybe so,” said Stevens meaningly, though I invited no confidences.

That night there were again but three of us at the supper table; but
this time it was Stroth that was the absentee.

Stevens seemed particularly preoccupied, and left the conversation to
Stella and me; but we managed not to miss his share overmuch. I leave
the reason to the acute to fathom.

Supper cleared, the girl and I tackled cribbage. Incidentally, she
played an abominable game, though I wouldn’t admit it.

Stevens busied himself at a small wall desk, doing some sort of
drawing--probably a sketch of the way he would effect to-morrow’s task
in refitting.

It was a quiet night, and the moon rose late.

Perhaps the game had run an hour when we heard the pop-pop of the
returning dory launch; then came the slight thump as she brought up to
the port ladder.

Stevens left the cabin to meet the fellows; returning almost
immediately, and carrying a couple of packages, probably the
turnbuckles, and a stack of newspapers which he flopped down on the
center table.

Then came the slam of a door behind me as I sat with my back to the
owner’s stateroom.

Even before I turned I could feel the change in him; and one look
riveted the impression. I had begun to know that look.

But it was some time before he said a word. I could see that he was
laboring to conceal some sort of excitement--for the girl’s sake, it
flashed on me.

We kept on with our game, and, with a grunt, Stroth caught up one of the
newspapers from the pile. The sheet shook under his hand as he turned
page after page.

It looked to me as if he were almost certain to find some item. It’s
hard to make my point clear, but I don’t mean that he was simply looking
for an article, a particular page. His search through those crackling
sheets partook more the nature of prophecy, as though some force other
than plain reason prompted him.

Then suddenly the crackling stopped; his brow knotted, his hands no
longer shook. For perhaps two minutes he stood thus.

Finally he put down the paper, and I could see that he was getting some
grip on himself; and it was a good grip, for his voice had almost the
real ring as he spoke to the girl.

“Turning-in time again, honey!” he said.

“Why, you’re a regular old ogre at sending me off to bed, dad!” And I
saw that she suspected no change in him as she obediently finished the
hand, bade me good night, and went to her stateroom.

It was as though he had nerved himself to the limit, and could hold it
only till he heard the click of her door latch.

“Grey!” It was little more than a whisper, but I jumped to it as to a
bellow.

“Yes?” said I.

“Go to your room, and don’t leave it until to-morrow morning at nine!”

I went.


TO BE CONTINUED.


MORAL SUASION.

Old Gentleman--“Do you mean to say that your teachers never thrash you?”

Little Boy--“Never. We have moral suasion at our school.”

“What’s that?”

“Oh, we get kep’ in and stood up in corners and locked out and locked in
and made to write one word a thousand times, and scowled at and jawed at
and that’s all.”


PATIENT WAITERS.

The Greenlanders’ mode of life has accustomed them to take things as
they come. If they find no game, they know how to go hungry, and in
their relations with each other and with Europeans they manifest the
same astounding patience.

I would see them in the morning standing by the hour in the passage of
the colonial manager’s house, or waiting in the snow outside his door,
to speak to him or his assistant, who happened to be otherwise engaged.

They had probably some little business to transact with those officials
before starting for their homes, often many miles from the colony, and
it might be of the greatest importance to them to get away as soon as
possible. If the weather happened to look threatening, every minute
would be more than precious; but there they would stand waiting, as
immovable as ever, and to all appearance as indifferent.

If I asked them if they were going to start, they only answered: “I
don’t know. Perhaps, if the weather don’t get worse,” or something to
that effect; but I never once heard the smallest murmur of impatience.

The following occurrence, for which my informant vouches, illustrates
this side of their character:

An inspector at Godthaab sent a boat’s crew into the Ameralik Fiord to
mow grass for his goats. They remained a long time away, and no one
could understand what had become of them. At last they returned, and
when the inspector asked why they had been so long, they answered that
when they got to the place the grass was too short, so they had to
settle down and wait till it grew.

       *       *       *       *       *


THE NEWS OF ALL NATIONS.


Death Follows Evil Dream.

Having dreamed a tramp had entered her home and killed her, Minnie J.
Stephens, seventeen years old, daughter of John Stephens, former
postmaster of Attalla, Ala., and prominent in social circles, secured
her father’s pistol and examined it to see that it was in order for use
in case a tramp appeared. While examining the weapon, it was discharged,
the ball puncturing the intestines a dozen times and causing a fatal
wound.


Shows Big Ear of Corn.

The Reverend Asher S. Preston, of Portland, formerly pastor of the Wayne
Street M. E. Church, Fort Wayne, Ind., stopped off in Fort Wayne on his
way home from his farm in Steuben County. He had with him an ear of corn
which was 14½ inches long, and was raised on the farm of Mack Pogue,
just across the road from the Reverend Preston’s farm. Pogue’s corn
average about 100 bushels to the acre.


Don’t Balk at Pink Oysters.

Pink oysters are the latest freak of nature under investigation by
experts of the department of agriculture. The rosy-hued bivalve comes
from beds in Long Island Sound, looks like a regular oyster when
gathered, but turns up pink on the plate of the ultimate consumer.

Frightened epicureans besieged the bureau of chemistry with inquiries,
and a volunteer poison squad found the pink oyster not only harmless but
delicious.

The chemists have a theory that the oysters are turned pink either by a
wild yeast bacillus or some other micro-organism.


Hen Kicks Out Man’s Teeth.

Charles Nicholson, a prominent farmer living near Scranton, Iowa,
reports the loss of a couple of teeth, which were kicked out by an angry
mother hen that went on a rampage. Nicholson was attempting to catch
some little chickens in the grass, when the mother hen flew at him,
scratching and kicking him in the face.


Survivor of Massacre Dead.

Mrs. Rose A. Schmahl, mother of Julius A. Schmahl, Minnesota’s secretary
of State, is dead at the home of her daughter in Duluth. Mrs. Schmahl
was eighty-six years old, and was one of the survivors of the Indian
massacre at Fort Ridgely, Minn., in 1862.


Bagg’s Hens Elope With Binn’s Geese.

Mystery surrounded the disappearance of about fifty of the choicest
fowls on the poultry farm of George Bagg, at Brewerton, on Oneida Lake,
N. Y. Twenty hens were taken a few weeks ago; soon afterward about
twenty more disappeared, and a week ago ten more joined the missing.

The poultry house was double padlocked, a homemade burglar alarm was
employed, and still the poultry seemed to melt away. There were no
traces of predatory animals, and the superstitious wagged their heads,
while Mr. Bagg was in despair.

A few days ago he put in the day hiding in some bushes midway between
his poultry yard and the nearby banks of the river which flows into
Oneida Lake. As he watched, the mystery was solved. Four unusually large
geese from the farm of Frank Binn, across the river, had been
fraternizing with the Bagg hens all summer and been enticing them to
leave their home and go over to the other farm.

The geese were seen solemnly waddling down to the water, followed by
several hens. When the geese stepped into the river, a hen would flutter
a few feet up and down the bank, and then, with a squawk, would fly or
hop onto the back of a goose. Then, squatting contentedly, the fowls
were carried over to the Binn farm. There Mr. Bagg found his missing
hens, the geese having carried them all over on their backs.


Vicious Deer Trapped.

While J. F. Parkhill, a prominent stockman of Breckenridge, Texas, was
out hunting his cows on the Hubbard River, in the northern part of this
county, his attention was attracted to a vacant ranch house by some
violent disturbance going on within. Upon approaching the building, he
beheld a buck deer on the inside engaged in killing a large rattlesnake.
Suddenly the deer made a break for the door, but was fought back by Mr.
Parkhill with a scantling until he could barricade the entrance.

The next day, Mr. Parkhill, along with County Clerk J. A. Ault, Colonel
Warner Parkhill, and J. L. Griffith, went to the vacant house and hauled
the deer home in a wagon. The deer was a vicious animal, and Mr.
Parkhill was severely cut and bruised by the deer while trying to keep
it in the ranch house until the door was barricaded.


Want to Sell a Leg?

Any one with a leg to spare is here notified that he will be able to do
business with Will Taylor, of Portersville, Ala. He appears to be
anxious to dicker for one without any unnecessary delay.

The Chattanooga police department received a letter from Mr. Taylor in
which he made it quite plain that he wants a leg at once. His, he
states, is off just above the knee, but he fails to say whether left or
right leg is needed to make his feet track. The letter, addressed to
“Mr. Police, Chattanooga,” is as follows:

“dear sir, i will rite you a few lines to let you know that i want a
leg. Min is off about six inch above my nee and I want a leg at once.
rite and tell me what it will Cost me. i want it at once rite on return
Mail and fail not so very truly

                                                          WILL TAYLOR.”

Written on the other side of the paper is:

“Back your letter to Will Taylor Portersville Ala. Mr. Police, please
send this letter to the leg Man.”


Roof Playground for Cats.

When the Morris Refuge, of Philadelphia, Pa., was remodeled several
years ago, the thought that the haven for homeless animals would have a
roof garden never entered the minds of the officers. But now there is a
recreation ground on top of the building.

Here dozens of cats, safe from humans, safe from fatal contact with hard
substances thrown by outraged citizens, and safe from their natural
enemy, the dog, pass their lives in quiet.

The entire roof of the institution is caged in with poultry wire. One
end is covered. The cats play with gum balls, roll in beds of seductive
catnip, and in general lead happy, peaceful lives.


Woman Sticks in Gangplank.

If Señora Rosalie Gonzales, who has a plantation in Guatemala, makes any
more ocean voyages, gangplanks may have to be enlarged. The señora
admitted sixty years and 310 pounds. She came to New York to purchase a
wardrobe, the supply of finery being limited in Guatemala just now.
Going aboard the United Fruit liner _Sixola_, she fell on the gangplank
and became wedged so she could not get up. A carpenter cut away part of
the rail.


Big Sea Lions in the River.

The two big sea lions that escaped from the park aquarium, at
Philadelphia, Pa., and wriggled their way to a canal leading to the
river, are cornered in the first lock, but have balked all attempts at
recapture. They haughtily spurn all tempting morsels of fish which it
was hoped would lure them back to their tanks. It is virtually
impossible for them to get through or over the lock, but their capture
is uncertain. Crowds, including many children, enjoy the futile efforts
of their would-be captors.


Auto Wrecked by the Gale.

Harry Goodhead died at his home in Milford, Conn., from injuries
sustained when his auto was wrecked some hours before in a gale. Carlton
Quirk, who was riding with him, was badly crushed and will probably die.

The men, on a gunning trip, were speeding on Fort Trumbull Beach, going
forty-five miles an hour, when the gale smashed the windshield, causing
Goodhead to lose his hold on the steering wheel. The auto lurched,
struck a telephone pole, and overturned. Both men were buried under the
car and were unconscious when found.


Young Dog’s Strange Fancy.

A lady living near Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, tells of a young dog that
is a fierce foe to cats. He will chase them from the house and barn, and
should he catch one, he will bite off its tail or inflict bad wounds on
its body. Several stray cats came to the lady’s home, and she took them
in temporarily. Among them was a black one.

One day the black cat followed the mistress to the pasture gate. When
the horses were coming pellmell for their drink, the dog stood right
over the cat until the last horse had passed through the gate, and the
dog was never known to harm his black favorite, but seemed to enjoy her
company.


Death Penalty to All Spies.

From time immemorial the spy has been one of the most dangerous factors
with which military men have had to deal. Death is the punishment when
caught. Although methods of communication have been greatly increased,
the spy appears to be more dangerous to-day than ever, and daily
executions have followed captures in the war zone. Women have paid for
their daring with their lives. The number is unknown, but they are said
to be numerous. Following are two dispatches, each of which tells its
story of war:

A message received at Amsterdam, Holland, tells of the shooting of an
English woman as a spy in the German barracks at Courtrai, Belgium. The
woman, it was said, was dressed in the garments of a priest when
captured by the Germans.

A German girl spy was caught a few miles outside of Petrograd. She has
been court-martialed and shot. Her clothes were lined with admirably
executed plans of Kronstadt and other military stations.

To what extent the spy has been busy is indicated by the references in
English newspapers to the extraordinary good information possessed by
the Germans concerning the movements and even the contemplated movements
of the British troops. At the outbreak of the war it was declared that
there were thousands of spies in England. In France many Germans have
been executed as spies. A recent dispatch told of the execution of
fifteen Germans who were found in an insane asylum in Lorraine. All the
doctors and most of the attendants had deserted the institution with the
approach of the French army, and their places were taken by the spies.
By clever use of flags, the spies were able to direct the German
artillery fire, at a distance, against the French.

Fewer reports have come from Germany regarding spies. It is said,
however, that many Russians have been detected in Germany. The Russian
espionage system is in many ways superior to all others. Russian spies
in Austria have been of great assistance to the czar’s army chiefs. In
all the countries at war passports have been stolen by spies and the
signatures studied so that the holders can produce passable imitations.
Spies have even been caught with their own photographs pasted over
others in passports and with the official stamp on the photographs
counterfeited.

When the spies are captured and sentenced, they meet death bravely. That
is part of their creed. Soldiers loathe the task of shooting women, but
such is the law of war. All accounts of the executions of women state
that they have died as bravely as the men, with no appeal and no
complaint in giving their lives for their country.


Some Sleeper, This Fellow.

After Eugene Hyland and Scott Anderson had searched the pockets of Paul
Busselet, whom they found lying in the gutter at Sansome and Washington
Streets, San Francisco, Cal., early in the morning, one grabbed him by
the heels and the other by the shoulder and tossed him over a fence into
a vacant lot.

When the pair turned around, they were looking into the muzzle of a
revolver in the hands of Policeman Lenhardt. At the city prison Lenhardt
charged the pair with attempted robbery. Busselet, whom they tossed over
the fence, was not even awakened by the rough treatment and was reported
by the officer still sound asleep when the case of the accused pair was
called in court.


Thirty in This Kentucky Family.

Mr. and Mrs. John Kiser, who live in Kentucky, just across the mountains
from Big Laurel, Va., have the largest family in this part of the
country, if not in all America. They have been married thirty years, and
have twenty-eight children, including one set of triplets and five sets
of twins. Only a few days ago two boys were added to the family. All the
children are unmarried and make their home with their parents.


A. Wolf Shoots a Wolf.

“I want some bounty money on a wolf.”

“What name?”

“Wolf.”

“No, no. Not the animal’s name. What’s your name?”

“Wolf, I say; Adolph Wolf, of South Superior.”

After the little misunderstanding had cleared away, W. J. Leader, county
clerk, at Superior, Wis., gave county and State orders for ten dollars
each to the applicant for bounty money.

Wolf shot his wolf inside the city limits, and was given a permit by
Mayor Konkel to collect the bounty.

Alfred Hillpipre, of the town of Superior, also was granted bounty money
on a wolf he killed along the Tower Road, south of the city limits.


Some Big Potatoes.

Arthur Adams, of Shamokin, Pa., is exhibiting two potatoes, the largest
ever raised in this section. One weighs three pounds and four ounces,
the other one three pounds. The potatoes were grown on the farm.


For Fifty Years They Thought He Was Dead.

When the Civil War was ended and Laurentine F. Higby failed to return to
his home in Exeter, members of his family finally decided he had been
laid away in one of the many battlefield graves filled with unidentified
dead.

Higby, however, was not dead. He had been wounded in action, and when he
recovered, he forgot his past, and, after the war, went to Kansas,
married, and reared a family, later going to Wilmington, Ill. He
remembered only that he had served in the army and applied for a pension
under the name of Lauren F. Higby.

Government pension-office agents identified him through communication
with relatives in Exeter, and now they are on the way to Wilmington for
a reunion with the man they had thought dead for fifty years.

Higby served with Battery A, First New York Volunteers.


250,000 Canadians at Front by Next Fall.

The second Canadian contingent will comprise 15,270 officers and men,
4,765 horses, fifty-eight guns, and sixteen machine guns, and will be
ready to sail from Canada in January.

A third Canadian contingent of approximately 25,000 men will be ready to
leave for England early in March. Including the first contingent of
33,000 men, the Dominion by spring will have sent more than 70,000 men
to the firing line.

The military authorities also have decided to keep 40,000 men under arms
in Canada to serve as a base of supply for the contingent at the front.
As the British war office has informed the Dominion that reënforcements
should be provided for at the rate of twenty-five per cent per month,
instead of on the smaller basis of seventy per cent per annum, as at
first anticipated, it will mean a drain or the numbers recruited for
reënforcing purposes of from 6,000 to 8,000 a month, with increases in
proportion as the strength of the Canadian forces in the field is
enlarged.

When the second contingent of 15,000 to 17,000 men leaves for Europe in
January, a further enlistment of 17,000 will take place immediately. It
is believed that mounted Canadians will be sent to the Suez region of
Egypt.

With a contingent being sent to England every two months, together with
reënforcements, Canada expects to have placed between 200,000 and
250,000 men at the disposal of Great Britain by next autumn.


Interesting Facts.

The old belief that the age of a rattlesnake can be told by the number
of his rattles is wrong, as also is the belief that a deer’s span of
life is accurately recounted by the number of points on his antlers.
Scientists have found that the largest rattler may have few rattles and
a small snake twice the number of the big one. Careful study has shown
that the points on a deer’s antlers have no bearing whatever on his age.

Portable wireless apparatus adopted by the United States army and
carried on an automobile of special design has a sending radius of 800
miles and has received messages from points 2,500 miles away.

A telegraph wire in the open country lasts four times as long as one in
a city.

In Korea, widows never remarry. Even though they have been married only
a month, they must not take a second husband.

The visitors at the Panama-Pacific Exposition are not to be annoyed by
any realization of the flight of time. Clocks are not to enter into the
architecture of any of the buildings.


Rare Gift for Fatherland.

Showing a love of country that could not be more self-sacrificing, Carl
Barwieck, an aged resident of Davenport, Iowa, has given to the German
war relief fund committee his most treasured family heirloom, a rare
German Bible, 311 years old. The book has been in the possession of the
Barwieck family for over 300 years. It was printed in Wittenberg in 1603
by Lorenz Seuberlich.

“I haven’t anything else to give. Maybe you can sell this for something
and get money for the fatherland that way,” said Barwieck, when he
produced the old heirloom. His gift was accepted. It is expected to
bring several hundred dollars. Wealthy Germans here are planning to buy
it and give it to the Academy of Sciences.


Various Uses for Quicksilver.

Quicksilver, according to the United States Geological Survey, is being
used for many new purposes. It is used mainly in the manufacture of
fulminate for explosive caps, of drugs, of electric appliances and
scientific apparatus, and in the recovery of precious metals, especially
gold, by amalgamation.

One use in the United States, and possibly elsewhere, is the coating of
ships’ bottoms with a paint containing quicksilver to prevent organic
growth. Mercuric oxide--red oxide of mercury--is the active poison in
antifouling paint successfully used on ships’ bottoms. The metal appears
to be but little employed in silvering mirrors, as nitrate of silver is
now chiefly used for the purpose.

Increasing use of quicksilver is probably to be expected in the
manufacture of electrical appliances and fulminates and possibly of
paints for protective coatings on metals. The demand for quicksilver for
amalgamating gold and silver has greatly decreased, as is well known,
with the decreased supply of free milling ores and the increased
application of cyanidation to gold and silver ores. Industrial chemistry
and inventive genius are to be looked to for increasing the demand.

The quicksilver production of the world during 1913 is estimated at
4,171 metric tons, against 4,262 tons in 1912 and 4,083 tons in 1911.
Spain last year headed the countries of production with 1,490 tons. The
United States produced only 688 tons. The other producing countries were
Austria-Hungary, 855 tons; Italy, 988 tons; Mexico and others, 150 tons.


Navy Man Bars “Tipperary.”

No longer will the song “Tipperary” be heard at the United States Naval
Training Station, at Newport, R. I., because Lieutenant Commander Frank
Taylor Evans, executive officer, has decided that for navy men to sing
it is a violation of President Wilson’s neutrality order.

The marching song seemed to have struck the popular chord with army and
navy men, not because it was the song of the Allies, but because it had
the ring and rousing chorus suited to the men of the service.

One night recently, when a thousand or more apprentice seamen at the
training station were having their weekly motion-picture entertainment,
with songs between the pictures, the orchestra struck up “Tipperary,”
and it was sung with spirit, and an encore was demanded.

While the apprentices were having a vaudeville show in their theater at
the station, they sang the chorus of “Tipperary,” while a vaudeville
actor led the singing, so Lieutenant Commander Evans stepped in and
issued the order that “Tipperary” was not to be played or sung by the
men.

All that the executive officer would say to-night was that the song came
under the president’s neutrality order.


Canada Finds a Gun Base.

The Canadian military authorities are investigating a report that there
is a secret store of arms and ammunition on the Isle of Orleans, in the
St. Lawrence River, opposite Quebec. A concrete base, upon which a siege
gun could be mounted, was found there and destroyed.

A German two years ago bought a tract of land on the Isle of Orleans and
established a plant for the manufacture of concrete blocks. It is upon
this property that the concrete foundation was found. It commanded the
defenses of Quebec and of the St. Lawrence Channel.

A moving-picture company, the leading officials of which were Germans,
spent last summer on the Isle of Orleans reproducing the battle of the
Plains of Abraham and making films of it. They employed several young
men of Quebec, uniformed them, and provided them with arms which they
borrowed from local military authorities. They had both cannon and
rifles, and fired a large amount of blank ammunition in their
operations. The firearms which they borrowed were returned to the
authorities, but it is now reported that they took advantage of the
opportunity to land guns and secrete them in pits, which they covered
carefully.

The Canadian military authorities have regarded the information they
have received as serious enough to warrant an investigation. Excavations
have been made in search for buried guns. So far none has been found,
and as the island is twenty miles long and seven miles wide, the search
is likely to prove tedious. At its nearest point the island is four
miles from Quebec. As far as the Canadian military authorities have been
able to learn, the films made last summer were never exhibited.


War Upsets Artist’s Mind.

Albert S. Cox, a magazine artist of Grantwood, four miles from
Hackensack, N. J., offered the government a cloth of his invention two
years ago, saying uniforms made of it would render the wearers
invisible, and he told his friends the government was overlooking a
great opportunity when it declined to deal with him. His friends
sympathized and weren’t particularly worried about Cox, for he didn’t
invent anything else until lately, when he confided to some that he had
made a paint which, applied to a military fort, would make it disappear.

Still, nobody minded much until the other day, when Cox announced that
his house was a fort and was being attacked. He appeared at the windows
and discharged bullets at foes, who apparently were wrapped in his
invisible cloth so far as the neighbors were concerned, but when bullets
began to fly promiscuously around Grantwood, Sheriff Heath was notified.

He persuaded Cox he was an ally and led him off to the Morris Plains
Insane Asylum.


Dog Resolves to be His Own Expressman.

When Mrs. James Gordon, whose family has just moved to Pitman, N. J.,
from Indiana, went to the telephone to answer a call from a local
expressman who reported the arrival of the Gordons’ dog from the Western
State, she was interrupted by a scratching at the back door.

As she opened the door, the dog came bounding into the room. He had
broken out of his crate in front of the express office, more than a mile
from the Gordon home, while the expressman was telephoning. There were
three dollars express charges due on the dog, which the expressman gave
up hope of ever collecting, until Mrs. Gordon drove into town an hour
later and told of the arrival of her pet.


How We Have Grown.

The population of the United States is more than 100,000,000, and the
money in circulation totals $3,419,090,000, while 11,000,000 of the
thrifty inhabitants have $4,375,000,000 in the savings banks.

Such is the announcement made by Uncle Sam in a pamphlet issued by the
department of commerce. The pamphlet is entitled “Statistical Record of
Progress of the United States, 1800-1914.” It gives a “half-century
retrospect” and a “clear perspective” of the nation’s quadrupling of
population and multiplying a hundredfold of industrial values.

“Since 1850, the population, then 25,000,000, has more than quadrupled,”
says the bulletin. Commerce has grown from $318,000,000 to
$4,259,000,000, and the per-capita value of exports from $16.96 to
$23.27.

National wealth has increased from $7,000,000,000 in 1870, to
$140,000,000,000, and the money in circulation from $279,000,000 to
$3,419,000,000. For the entire country, bank clearings have grown from
$52,000,000,000 in 1887, to $174,000,000,000 in 1913.

Improved social conditions among the people are shown in that 19,000,000
children are enrolled in public schools and 200,000 students in
colleges. The total expenditure of education approximates $500,000,000 a
year.

In 1850 there were 251,000 depositors in savings banks. There are now
11,000,000, with deposits aggregating more than 100 times as much as at
the middle of the last century.

The value of farms and farm property increased during the last half
century from $4,000,000,000 to $41,000,000,000; value of manufactures
from $1,000,000,000 to over $20,000,000,000, and the number of miles of
railroad in operation from 9,021 in 1850 to 258,033 in 1912.


Maker of Biggest Cheese Dies.

George A. Carter, maker of the giant cheese that was exhibited at the
Centennial Exposition in Philadelphia in 1876, died at Geneva, Ohio. The
cheese, which weighed more than a ton, is believed still to hold the
record as the biggest one ever manufactured.


Old Sea Warrior Sold.

The United States frigate _Independence_, last of the fighting ships
built for the War of 1812, has been sold to Captain John H. Binder, of
Berkeley, Cal., for $3,515. The old vessel for fifty years has been used
as a train-ship at Mare Island before it was placed out of commission.
The navy department appraised it at $4,000, but was unable to get bids
at that figure.


Study All America.

In a letter to high-school principals of the United States, Doctor P. P.
Claxton, the government’s commissioner of education, urges special study
of the countries of Latin America, those portions of America inhabited
by races of Latin stock, including Central America, South America,
Mexico, and parts of the West Indies. Doctor Claxton writes:

“We should teach in our schools and colleges more of the geography,
history, literature, and life of the Latin-American countries, and we
should offer instruction in the Spanish and Portuguese languages to a
much larger extent than is now done.

“All our relations with the countries to the south of us are bound to
become much more intimate than they have been in the past. The
completion of the Panama Canal, the changes in commercial relations
brought about by the war in Europe, as well as other recent events, have
served to call the attention of the people of the United States to the
recent rapid growth and development of the Latin-American republics.

“These countries comprise an area three times as great as the United
States. They are rich in minerals, forests, water power, and a wide
range of agricultural products. They have 70,000,000 of people, with
governments modeled after our own. Their foreign commerce amounts to
more than $3,000,000,000 annually, and is rapidly increasing.

“The third American city in population is in Latin America. Another
Latin-American city has 1,000,000 inhabitants. Three others have
approximately 500,000 each, and five others have each 20,000 or more.
Some of these cities rank among the most beautiful and attractive in the
world.

“These countries are making rapid progress in elementary and secondary
education and in industrial education. Several of their universities
enroll from one to 2,000 students each. The history of their countries
is interesting, and they possess a rich and varied literature.”


Earthquake Kills Twenty-three.

According to a dispatch from Athens to the Exchange Telegraph Company,
in London, twenty-three persons were killed and others were injured in
the earthquake recently in Western Greece and the Ionian Islands.

On the island of Santa Maura the earthquake caused strange convolutions
of the earth’s surface. A mountain collapsed and crumbled away for a
distance of nearly two miles, and the waters of the Ionian Sea covered
125 acres of the valley. New small mountains appeared at different
points on the island.


To Collect Farm Relics.

F. A. Wirt, who teaches farm mechanics in the Kansas Agricultural
College, is planning an interesting collection of machine relics for the
college. The first mowing machine in Kansas will soon be on exhibit if
his plan works out. He found the sickle bar of this machine reposing in
a junk pile near Milford. He is looking for the rest of the machine, and
hopes to assemble the different parts. The machine was taken to Kansas
in 1850, and was used on the reservation at Fort Riley. It was so heavy
that it required six government mules to pull it. The bar weighs 125
pounds and cuts a swath five feet wide. The guards are thirteen in
number and are two inches longer than the guards that are used on more
modern mowers.

Another interesting relic is the hub of the cart used to haul the logs
that were used in building the first Statehouse in Kansas. The hub is
twenty-three inches long and eighteen inches in diameter. There are
holes for sixteen spokes which were 5 by 11½ inches. The wheel was eight
feet in diameter and required a tire four inches wide and three-quarters
of an inch thick. The logs were suspended under the axle of the cart.
The axle had a spindle 7¾ by 5 inches.


Finds Needle in Chicken.

When dressing a chicken for dinner, Mrs. Charles Wingate, of Albert Lea,
Minn., felt something prick her hand as she was drawing the insides. She
soon discovered what caused it. The fowl had swallowed--perhaps in
meal--a needle, and the needle had penetrated the gizzard and the point
was protruding about one-third of an inch. Once, she says, she found a
needle in a growing cucumber. It was badly rusted.


Buy War Motor Trucks.

The Pierce-Arrow Motor Company, of Buffalo, N. Y., has received an order
from the French government for 300 five-ton trucks. The order amounts to
about $1,000,000. It is expected that it will be followed by others. The
truck “tested out” to the satisfaction of the French army
representatives at Bethlehem, Penn.

Part of the French order goes also to the White Motor Company, of
Cleveland. That company will make 200 five-ton trucks.

Some time ago the Pierce Company received an order from the British War
Department for 250 one-ton and two-ton trucks. It is reported that a
competition will be held for a big order expected from the Russian
government.

The new order will keep at work at the Pierce plant several thousand
men, day and night turns. It is not likely that any extra men will be
needed, because the present force has almost finished the contract with
the British government.


Prize Peaches Twenty-eight Years Old.

Mrs. Roy Trimble, of Atchison, Kan., has a jar of peaches that took
first premium at a recent fair. Nothing unusual about that, but the
remarkable part of this story is the fact that the same jar of preserves
took a similar premium at the Kansas State fair twenty-eight years ago,
when they were exhibited by Mrs. Fred Hartman, Mrs. Trimble’s mother.
The fruit is apparently just as perfect to-day as it was when preserved
more than a quarter of a century ago.


New Way to Stanch Wounds.

A preparation which it is said will stop almost instantly the flow of
blood from a wound has been devised by Professor Theodor Kocher, of
Berne, who was awarded the Nobel prize for surgery in 1912, and his
assistant, Doctor A. Fonce. It is called coagulen. The powder is
dissolved in water before being applied to a wound.

The discoverers of coagulen have made a gift of their secret to the
armies in the field. They have sent large quantities of the powder to
the surgical headquarters of both German and French armies.


War Stops Immigration.

Before the war an average of 5,000 immigrants used to arrive daily at
Ellis Island, New York. Now the average is only 150 a day, according to
Commissioner Uhl.

The total number of immigrants into the United States last year was
1,197,892. Of these the number admitted from the Russian empire and
Finland was 291,040; from Italy, 265,542; and from Austria and Hungary,
254,825.


“Regular Horse for Work.”

John Phipps, a farmer near Kalamazoo, Mich., has an old horse that had
done her full share of work and was finally allowed to take life easy.
Two or three days later, when the other horses had been led to the tank
and watered and were being lined up to be harnessed, the old horse ran
from the pasture and took her position beside the workers, evidently
willing and ready for duty. The old horse has just died.


Bandit Raids Poker Party.

Twenty men, eight of them playing, were backed away from a poker table
in a private room at Iowa City, Iowa, at two o’clock in the morning by a
lone bandit and relieved of a forty-dollar pot and about $200 in the
bank of the game. He then made a safe get-away.


“Mother of Civil War.”

Mrs. Sarah Brandon, who died at her home in the southern part of Belmont
County, Ohio, a few days ago, was 113 years old. She was known as the
“Mother of the Civil War.” She had sixteen sons who served in the war,
fourteen for the Union and two for the Confederacy. Most of them never
returned.


Fight in Dark Forest.

A correspondent sends the following from northeastern France: “The great
bayonet charge by the Zouaves near Bixschoote, of which you have already
heard, was a particularly gruesome affair, for the Zouaves, like the
Gurkhas, love the joy of a hand-to-hand battle. And it came at the end
of three days of constant fighting.

“They charged a wood, an officer told me, like a gale of wind, not
giving a cry till they got within touch; then they let out yell upon
yell as they plied their bayonets among the dripping trees.

“The enemy mostly were first-line men, and met them like heroes, firing
in volleys once or twice, then leaping out to the combat. The impetus of
the Zouaves carried them through. They did not stop to kill. They dashed
through the first time, killing only as they went, then they charged
back on the broken lines.

“There were hand-to-hand struggles until ten o’clock that ended with
both sides falling on the ground, exhausted. Four of the Germans,
fighting together, gave a terrible account of themselves before they
died. Three of the four were, I think, brothers, and they were brave
soldiers.”




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The Nick Carter Stories

ISSUED EVERY SATURDAY        BEAUTIFUL COLORED COVERS


When it comes to detective stories worth while, the =Nick Carter Stories=
contain the only ones that should be considered. They are not overdrawn
tales of bloodshed. They rather show the working of one of the finest
minds ever conceived by a writer. The name of Nick Carter is familiar
all over the world, for the stories of his adventures may be read in
twenty languages. No other stories have withstood the severe test of
time so well as those contained in the =Nick Carter Stories=. It proves
conclusively that they are the best. We give herewith a list of some of
the back numbers in print. You can have your news dealer order them, or
they will be sent direct by the publishers to any address upon receipt
of the price in money or postage stamps.

692--Doctor Quartz Again.
693--The Famous Case of Doctor Quartz.
694--The Chemical Clue.
695--The Prison Cipher.
696--A Pupil of Doctor Quartz.
697--The Midnight Visitor.
698--The Master Crook’s Match.
699--The Man Who Vanished.
700--The Garnet Gauntlet.
701--The Silver Hair Mystery.
702--The Cloak of Guilt.
703--A Battle for a Million.
704--Written in Red.
707--Rogues of the Air.
709--The Bolt from the Blue.
710--The Stockbridge Affair.
711--A Secret from the Past.
712--Playing the Last Hand.
713--A Slick Article.
714--The Taxicab Riddle.
715--The Knife Thrower.
717--The Master Rogue’s Alibi.
719--The Dead Letter.
720--The Allerton Millions.
728--The Mummy’s Head.
729--The Statue Clue.
730--The Torn Card.
731--Under Desperation’s Spur.
732--The Connecting Link.
733--The Abduction Syndicate.
736--The Toils of a Siren.
737--The Mark of a Circle.
738--A Plot Within a Plot.
739--The Dead Accomplice.
741--The Green Scarab.
743--A Shot in the Dark.
746--The Secret Entrance.
747--The Cavern Mystery.
748--The Disappearing Fortune.
749--A Voice from the Past.
752--The Spider’s Web.
753--The Man With a Crutch.
754--The Rajah’s Regalia.
755--Saved from Death.
756--The Man Inside.
757--Out for Vengeance.
758--The Poisons of Exili.
759--The Antique Vial.
760--The House of Slumber.
761--A Double Identity.
762--“The Mocker’s” Stratagem.
763--The Man that Came Back.
764--The Tracks in the Snow.
765--The Babbington Case.
766--The Masters of Millions.
767--The Blue Stain.
768--The Lost Clew.
770--The Turn of a Card.
771--A Message in the Dust.
772--A Royal Flush.
774--The Great Buddha Beryl.
775--The Vanishing Heiress.
776--The Unfinished Letter.
777--A Difficult Trail.
778--A Six-word Puzzle.
782--A Woman’s Stratagem.
783--The Cliff Castle Affair.
784--A Prisoner of the Tomb.
785--A Resourceful Foe.
786--The Heir of Dr. Quartz.
787--Dr. Quartz, the Second.
789--The Great Hotel Tragedies.
790--Zanoni, the Witch.
791--A Vengeful Sorceress.
794--Doctor Quartz’s Last Play.
795--Zanoni, the Transfigured.
796--The Lure of Gold.
797--The Man With a Chest.
798--A Shadowed Life.
799--The Secret Agent.
800--A Plot for a Crown.
801--The Red Button.
802--Up Against It.
803--The Gold Certificate.
804--Jack Wise’s Hurry Call.
805--Nick Carter’s Ocean Chase.
806--Nick Carter and the Broken Dagger.
807--Nick Carter’s Advertisement.
808--The Kregoff Necklace.
809--The Footprints on the Rug.
810--The Copper Cylinder.
811--Nick Carter and the Nihilists.
812--Nick Carter and the Convict Gang.
813--Nick Carter and the Guilty Governor.
814--The Triangled Coin.
815--Ninety-nine--and One.
816--Coin Number 77.
817--In the Canadian Wilds.
818--The Niagara Smugglers.
819--The Man Hunt.


NEW SERIES

NICK CARTER STORIES

 1--The Man from Nowhere.
 2--The Face at the Window.
 3--A Fight for a Million.
 4--Nick Carter’s Land Office.
 5--Nick Carter and the Professor.
 6--Nick Carter as a Mill Hand.
 7--A Single Clew.
 8--The Emerald Snake.
 9--The Currie Outfit.
10--Nick Carter and the Kidnaped Heiress.
11--Nick Carter Strikes Oil.
12--Nick Carter’s Hunt for a Treasure.
13--A Mystery of the Highway.
14--The Silent Passenger.
15--Jack Dreen’s Secret.
16--Nick Carter’s Pipe Line Case.
17--Nick Carter and the Gold Thieves.
18--Nick Carter’s Auto Chase.
19--The Corrigan Inheritance.
20--The Keen Eye of Denton.
21--The Spider’s Parlor.
22--Nick Carter’s Quick Guess.
23--Nick Carter and the Murderess.
24--Nick Carter and the Pay Car.
25--The Stolen Antique.
26--The Crook League.
27--An English Cracksman.
28--Nick Carter’s Still Hunt.
29--Nick Carter’s Electric Shock.
30--Nick Carter and the Stolen Duchess.
31--The Purple Spot.
32--The Stolen Groom.
33--The Inverted Cross.
34--Nick Carter and Keno McCall.
35--Nick Carter’s Death Trap.
36--Nick Carter’s Siamese Puzzle.
37--The Man Outside.
38--The Death Chamber.
39--The Wind and the Wire.
40--Nick Carter’s Three Cornered Chase.
41--Dazaar, the Arch-Fiend.
42--The Queen of the Seven.
43--Crossed Wires.
44--A Crimson Clew.
45--The Third Man.
46--The Sign of the Dagger.
47--The Devil Worshipers.
48--The Cross of Daggers.
49--At Risk of Life.
50--The Deeper Game.
51--The Code Message.
52--The Last of the Seven.
53--Ten-Ichi, the Wonderful.
54--The Secret Order of Associated Crooks.
55--The Golden Hair Clew.
56--Back From the Dead.
57--Through Dark Ways.
58--When Aces Were Trumps.
59--The Gambler’s Last Hand.
60--The Murder at Linden Fells.
61--A Game for Millions.
62--Under Cover.
63--The Last Call.
64--Mercedes Danton’s Double.
65--The Millionaire’s Nemesis.
66--A Princess of the Underworld.
67--The Crook’s Blind.
68--The Fatal Hour.
69--Blood Money.
70--A Queen of Her Kind.
71--Isabel Benton’s Trump Card.
72--A Princess of Hades.
73--A Prince of Plotters.
74--The Crook’s Double.
75--For Life and Honor.
76--A Compact With Dazaar.
77--In the Shadow of Dazaar.
78--The Crime of a Money King.
79--Birds of Prey.
80--The Unknown Dead.
81--The Severed Hand.
82--The Terrible Game of Millions.
83--A Dead Man’s Power.
84--The Secrets of an Old House.
85--The Wolf Within.
86--The Yellow Coupon.
87--In the Toils.
88--The Stolen Radium.
89--A Crime in Paradise.
90--Behind Prison Bars.
91--The Blind Man’s Daughter.
92--On the Brink of Ruin.
93--Letter of Fire.
94--The $100,000 Kiss.
95--Outlaws of the Militia.
96--The Opium-Runners.
97--In Record Time.
98--The Wag-Nuk Clew.
99--The Middle Link.
100--The Crystal Maze.
101--A New Serpent in Eden.
102--The Auburn Sensation.
103--A Dying Chance.
104--The Gargoni Girdle.
105--Twice in Jeopardy.
106--The Ghost Launch.
107--Up in the Air.
108--The Girl Prisoner.
109--The Red Plague.
110--The Arson Trust.
111--The King of the Firebugs.
112--“Lifter’s” of the Lofts.
113--French Jimmie and His Forty Thieves.
114--The Death Plot.
115--The Evil Formula.
116--The Blue Button.


Dated December 5th, 1914.

117--The Deadly Parallel.


Dated December 12th, 1914.

118--The Vivisectionists.


Dated December 19th, 1914.

119--The Stolen Brain.


Dated December 26th, 1914.

120--An Uncanny Revenge.


PRICE, FIVE CENTS PER COPY. If you want any back numbers of our weeklies
  and cannot procure them from your news dealer, they can be obtained
   direct from this office. Postage stamps taken the same as money.


     STREET & SMITH, Publishers, 79-89 Seventh Ave., NEW YORK CITY