<h2>CHAPTER X</h2>
<p>Once more I sought the booking office at
Euston.</p>
<p>“The Express has left Prince’s Stage at Liverpool,
sir. Will be here in about three hours now,
sir,” was the response to my question.</p>
<p>I turned away, dismissed my cab, and started
out through the great pillars of the entrance. Three
hours more and Dorothy would be here. Tom and
I, with the wave-measuring machine, had taken
the first boat, which happily left the evening after
our interview with Ordway. Dorothy, following a
week later, had arrived at Liverpool and was
speeding to London. It had been hard to wait
the week, filled as it had been with work, but it
seemed as if these last hours would never go. Three
hours to wait! I had paced the platform of
Euston for two already, and I walked out now
towards Bloomsbury, passing slowly through its
pleasant squares, and watching the foliage behind
their guarding railings. Before I knew it, I was
in front of the British Museum, and I glanced at
my watch. “As good a place to wait as any,” I
said to myself, and I crossed the courtyard and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_129">[129]</SPAN></span>
started up the steps. Just then a man, hurrying
out, slipped at the top of the stone steps and fell
heavily, striking his head and lying unconscious
where he fell. As it chanced, I was the only
spectator, save for a single policeman, and, as I
hurried forward, I noticed a Theta Sigma Rho
fraternity pin on the waistcoat of the fallen man.
I reached him first, the policeman coming up a
second later, and together we raised the unconscious
form and carried the man to an office,
where we placed him on a lounge. I read the name
on the reverse of his pin. “E. S. Hamerly.” As
he lay there, breathing heavily, I watched him with
that interest which a fellow countryman, and far
more than that, a member of one’s own fraternity,
in distress in a foreign land inspires. He was a
clean-cut young fellow, neatly but very simply
clad, and I noticed a red acid stain on his sleeve.
I had time for no more, for the doctor came hurrying
in.</p>
<p>“Only a scalp wound,” he said, as he made
his brief examination. “I can bring him round
in a minute.”</p>
<p>A vigorous application of cold water, an aromatic
to his nose, and the patient sneezed and
opened his eyes. As he gazed around I stepped
forward.</p>
<p>“Mr. Hamerly,” I said, “I’m Orrington of
Columbia. I’m a Theta Sigma Rho man, myself,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_130">[130]</SPAN></span>
as I see you are. You’ve had a nasty fall, but
you’re coming out all right. I’m going to see you
home.”</p>
<p>Hamerly smiled rather wanly. “I don’t feel
very energetic,” he said. “I’d be mighty glad
to have you. I’m in lodgings up on Half-Moon
Street.”</p>
<p>The doctor broke in. “That’s enough talking
for the present. Let me fix up your head and
you can go all right.”</p>
<p>While the doctor bandaged Hamerly’s head,
I signalled a hansom, and in a few minutes we were
speeding off to Half-Moon Street.</p>
<p>Too much shaken up by his fall for conversation,
Hamerly lay back against the cushions till we
reached his lodgings, but he arrived there without
seeming any worse for the trip. I saw him safely
to bed, promised him an early visit, and left a call
for a near-by doctor. Then I looked at my watch.
Barely time to reach Dorothy’s train. “To
Euston. Rush!” I cried to the cabby, and away
we sped. Just as the train came puffing in, I
reached the platform, and there was Dorothy’s
dear head leaning from the window of her car.
The black old station was transformed as she
stepped lightly to the platform, followed by her
maid. She came towards me with both hands
outstretched. “Oh, Jim, it’s good to see you.
Where’s Tom?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_131">[131]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Down at Folkestone,” I answered. “We’ll
join him there as soon as you’ve had a night’s
sleep.”</p>
<p>“Why wait for that?” asked Dorothy energetically.
“It’s only twelve now. We can run down
there after lunch. Where are our rooms?”</p>
<p>“At the Savoy,” I said. “Suppose you send
your maid up there with the luggage, and we go
up in a hansom.”</p>
<p>It took scarcely ten minutes to load the maid and
the luggage in a four-wheeler and join Dorothy.
As we swung out through the gates, she spoke
with a long breath. “It seems good to be back
in London again, even with war so near and with
so much ahead of us. Now, tell me everything
that’s happened since you came over to London
from Portsmouth. I got your letter at Queenstown
telling about your experiences on the bottom
of the sea. How I wish I could have been
there. But never mind that now. Tell me all
you’ve done in the last four days.”</p>
<p>I settled down to my task. “Tom and I came
over safely, as you already know, from our wire
at Queenstown. We decided that ‘the man’
would be working in the Channel and, after some
discussion, settled on Folkestone as the base from
which to work the wave-measuring machine. We
took the apparatus down there three days ago, got
a big room and set it up. I chartered a yacht.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_132">[132]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“What did you do that for?” interrupted
Dorothy.</p>
<p>“So we could run down ‘the man’ if he was on
the sea. We decided, coming over, that he was
more likely to do his experimenting on water than
on land, and Tom thinks he can get him from his
experimental waves.”</p>
<p>“I see,” said Dorothy. “Go ahead.”</p>
<p>“After chartering the yacht, I helped Tom all
I could till last night, when I came up to London
to meet you. Tom expects to get the machine set
up to-day. That’s about all.”</p>
<p>“How is the war progressing?” asked Dorothy.
“Everybody on board the liner was greatly
afraid it would begin before we got across, and that
we might be captured, but we reached Liverpool
all right.”</p>
<p>“Nothing’s happened yet,” I answered. “But
I think it’s coming, may come any minute. They
say that the Emperor has refused to see visitors,
since the Kaiserin Luisa went down, and I think
the government expects war immediately. They’re
mobilizing rapidly on both sides.”</p>
<p>“Then there certainly isn’t a minute to lose in
reaching Folkestone,” said Dorothy decisively.
“We’ll just stop for lunch and go right down.”</p>
<p>It was a day of wonders. Since the night when
we had searched for Joslinn, Dorothy and I had
never been alone together. The ride from the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_133">[133]</SPAN></span>
station to the Savoy was a glorified pilgrimage;
the lunch, as we sat looking out on the embankment
bathed in sunshine, was a celestial repast,
even the time of waiting in the hotel for Dorothy
to condense her luggage, and make ready for the
coming trip, was a delight. But best of all was
the trip down to Folkestone. The guard smiled
widely at the golden sovereign which saved the
compartment for us, and the porter heaped attentions
on us for his tip, but the value which they
purchased was priceless. Two hours of speeding
through the lovely English country in a tête-à-tête
with my lady.</p>
<p>All too soon came Folkestone, and there beside
the train was Tom. “I’ve got him,” he whispered
excitedly. “Hurry up, it’s just time to take
another reading.”</p>
<p>As we bowled along through the old streets,
Tom hurriedly told us of his experience. “He’s
experimenting constantly now,” he said. “He
sent off some waves yesterday afternoon about four
o’clock, just after I got the apparatus going; sent
off some more about ten, and some this morning, a
little after nine. They’re all from some place out
in the Channel, over towards the French coast.
They’re from practically the same spot, so I got
everything ready for an instant departure on our
little boat, and the moment we hear from him
again, we’ll start straight for him.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134">[134]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Dorothy’s eyes sparkled with excitement. “I’m
so glad I got here. I wouldn’t miss the end for
anything.”</p>
<p>“But you’re not going with us on the yacht?”
I said anxiously.</p>
<p>“Of course she’s not,” said Tom gruffly.</p>
<p>“Well, I am,” said Dorothy, “and that’s all
there is about it.”</p>
<p>Tom and I broke out in a jumble of incoherent
objections, which Dorothy met with smiling assurance.</p>
<p>“You think ‘the man’ may be desperate if we
find him,” she said. “Well, I don’t for a minute
believe he will be. He’s doing too big a thing to
have anything against ordinary people, and if
something did happen, you’d need me to protect
you.”</p>
<p>Ten minutes more of the drive brought ten
minutes more of heated discussion, but it brought
us no victory, and the end of the debate came when
Tom gave in with the brotherly remark: “Well,
go your own confounded, obstinate way then.”
To which Dorothy, as calm and smiling as a
summer morn, responded simply, “I shall.”</p>
<p>“Here’s our place,” said Tom, as we rattled up
to a house which displayed on the stairs to the
second story a sign, “Dancing Academy.” “This
was the only room we could get that had incandescent
wiring, and that was long enough to hold the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135">[135]</SPAN></span>
scale of the Denckel apparatus,” he explained to
Dorothy, as we crossed the bare floor to the apparatus,
standing in front of the chairs whereon was
wont to repose the beauty and chivalry of Folkestone,
at the “assemblies” advertised below.</p>
<p>“The machine is working beautifully. Look
at this.” He threw the switch, lighted the lamp,
and lowered the green shade. The belt of metal
had revolved scarcely a minute, and Tom was
pulling down the last shade, as the beam fluttered
and the machine stopped. “Just in time,” said
Dorothy delighted. “Hurry up, Tom.” The old
inherent passion of the chase was on us all, and
in less than twenty minutes, the last figures made,
Tom and Dorothy compared their work.</p>
<p>“Just there,” said Tom, making a cross with his
pencil on a point on the French coast some ten
miles up from Boulogne. “Come on, don’t
waste a minute. It’s practically a straight run
across the channel.”</p>
<p>Ten minutes brought us aboard the little yacht
and ten minutes more saw us steaming out of the
harbor. Dorothy was with us. Further discussion
had been useless.</p>
<p>“Not much like the Black Arrow,” I said, as
we came out rather slowly into the Channel.</p>
<p>“You wait till she gets speeded up,” said Tom.
“She can go. I proved that yesterday.”</p>
<p>He was right. Once out into the Channel, our<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_136">[136]</SPAN></span>
speed gradually increased, till we were making
good progress. In an hour we sighted the French
coast from the little bridge, and Tom, beside
the skipper, was making for the cross on the
chart.</p>
<p>“We’ll sight her, if she hasn’t gone directly
away from us, inside of fifteen minutes,” Tom
said. Dorothy stood beside the wheel, ranging
the whole horizon with her binoculars. She had
thrown aside her hat, and a loosened tress of her
hair flew lightly across my face as I stood beside
her.</p>
<p>“Two sails off that point,” she announced, in
a few moments. “They look more like those tubs
of French fishing-boats than a yacht,” she said
shortly. “Look at them, Jim.”</p>
<p>She handed her glasses to me. The horizon,
for five miles in any direction from the point where
we were heading, showed but the two sails she
had mentioned, and we headed directly for them.
As we neared them, we saw that Dorothy’s eyes
had proved true. They were wide, clumsy,
fishing craft, such as sail from the harbor of
Boulogne, or hang in miniature as votive offerings
before the altars of the cathedral. Undecked and
open, they could hold no complicated apparatus.
Their crews were sturdy, jerseyed fishermen, who
stared in open-mouthed wonder, as our yacht
came up alongside the first, and a volley of questions<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_137">[137]</SPAN></span>
came in rapid French from the beautiful
girl on the bridge.</p>
<p>With instinctive courtesy, every sailor on either
boat removed his cap as she spoke, and the skipper
gave answer in slow, deeply considered words.
“No, we have seen no yacht except your own.
Hein! is it not so?” he turned to the sailors.</p>
<p>A chorus of affirmatives came back. There
had been no other vessel off this point save the
Virginie of their own town, (an expressive thumb
pointed to the other boat,) for four, five hours.
They would surely have seen it if there had been.
Tom consulted his chart and consulted our own
skipper. It was the very spot. With knitted
brow, he ordered the boat headed for the other
fishermen. I pulled a half sovereign from my
pocket.</p>
<p>“Buvez avec moi, mes garçons,” I cried, and
flung the coin into the fishing boat. A chorus of
“Merci’s” followed our path.</p>
<p>The other boat gave no better results. Its sailors
had seen nothing, and we ran back to the point
whence the waves had come, for a brief consultation.
As we gazed on the quiet water just
tinged with the last of the sunset, I spoke.</p>
<p>“There’s only one explanation, if the wave-measuring
machine is correct. He’s down on the
bottom in a submarine, or he was there when he
sent off those waves.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_138">[138]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“I’m afraid that’s right, Jim,” said Tom. “If
I could only see down there. I wonder how deep
it is.” He called to the captain. “Take a sounding
here, will you please?”</p>
<p>We hurried forward and watched the line overboard.
Fathom after fathom disappeared up to
the very end. “It’s more than a hundred twenty
fathom, sir,” reported the captain.</p>
<p>“No use, then,” said Tom. “Go right back to
Folkestone. We’ll have a couple more tries to-morrow,”
he went on. “But, frankly, I’m
afraid it won’t do any good. To find a submarine
in these waters would be worse than finding a
needle in a haystack.”</p>
<p>It was a rather gloomy little party that landed at
Folkestone that night. We had seemed so near success.
Yet there was one alleviation. I had dreaded
bringing Dorothy into danger, and I had had
a most uneasy feeling as to the possible result of
the meeting with a man inspired with so fixed and
fearful a purpose as he whom we sought. Much
as I desired the completion of my search, I could
not therefore feel too complete a sense of regret
at the two failures which we encountered on the
Channel the next day. The man was in the
Channel sea. He was experimenting with his
apparatus daily under its waves. We could be
sure of that, but he could not be reached, so we
finally gave in and returned to London.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_139">[139]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>All the way up in the train, Dorothy sat in deep
thought, but no result came from her meditations,
and we returned to the Savoy without a ray
of light as to our next move.</p>
<p>The next morning I woke with fresh courage.
We had gained so much and so unexpectedly,
that I felt convinced we must gain more. I found
a table in the dining-room, and waited there for
Tom and Dorothy, who shortly appeared. We
breakfasted gaily. The morning sun shone
brightly on the little park below the window and
on the Thames, flowing slowly beyond. The
peaceful scene looked little like war, but the
papers before us were full of dire forebodings.
The German Emperor still sulked. Movements of
army corps and of battleships were the main part
of their story. Despite the columns filled with
martial things, every newspaper had at least one
reference to the man who was trying to stop all
war, and in more than one of them was a word
as to the double danger of the fleets, who faced
not only a foreign foe, but annihilation at the hands
of this unseen destroyer. As we finished breakfast,
Dorothy asked, “What are you boys going to do
this morning?”</p>
<p>“I must go down to the city to get some money,”
I replied.</p>
<p>“I think I’ll do the same,” remarked Tom.</p>
<p>“We’ll all go together, then,” said Dorothy.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_140">[140]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>As we passed out into the courtyard, I raised
my stick for a cab, but Dorothy stopped me.
“Let’s go down on top of a bus. I haven’t been
on one since I landed, and we’re in no hurry.”</p>
<p>Up the winding stair we climbed, and Tom and
Dorothy found a seat beside the driver, while I
was just behind. Down the Strand into Fleet
Street we passed, through the crowds before the
bulletins, watching anxiously for the message
which should spell “War.” At the top of Ludgate
Hill, just by St. Paul’s, came a block, one of
those hopeless tangles which so completely ties
up London traffic. Another bus stood just ahead,
and I read off the big advertisements which lined
its top. “Alhambra Radium Ballet,” I read.
“There’s a scientific scheme for you people. What
is a radium ballet, anyway?”</p>
<p>“Oh, they cover the girls’ dresses with phosphorescent
paint, and turn out the lights,” said
Tom. “It’s an old idea. They had them ten
years ago.”</p>
<p>Dorothy turned suddenly. “That’s what we
want. It’s the very thing we’ve been hunting for,
the new clue. We’ve never run that down, at all.”</p>
<p>Tom and I followed slowly her quick intuition.
“What new clue?” I asked.</p>
<p>“The phosphorescent paint clue,” answered
Dorothy energetically. “‘The man’ wrote his
first message with a peculiar type of phosphorescent<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_141">[141]</SPAN></span>
ink. He must have been working with it for
some time. If we can only find anybody that knows
about that kind of paint, we might find out something
more definite about him. It’s the best clue
we have, anyway.”</p>
<p>“But how will you get hold of the people who
know about phosphorescent paint?” said Tom.
“I think you’re in the blindest alley yet.”</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_142">[142]</SPAN></span></p>
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