<h2>CHAPTER XVI</h2>
<p>Quietly we drew back from the parapet and,
closing the scuttle behind us, started down the
narrow stairs. At their base, Dorothy stopped
suddenly. As Tom came up, he noticed her delay
and paused with his hand on the latch. “What is
it, girl?” he asked, almost tenderly.</p>
<p>“You think we ought to go on, do you?” asked
Dorothy hesitatingly.</p>
<p>“Of course we’re going on,” said Tom.
“There’s no question about it. That’s what we’re
here for. What’s the matter, anyway?”</p>
<p>“Frankly, I don’t know,” said Dorothy slowly.
“If we come through this all right, I’ll try never to
say a word again, but somehow,—somehow—”
She broke off without finishing.</p>
<p>“Cheer up, old girl,” comforted Tom, putting
his arm about her waist. “What should we do
without your valiant spirit?”</p>
<p>I stood there mute. This was a new Dorothy, a
silent, questioning woman different from the one I
knew, and yet like her. I could not seem to
collect my scattered wits enough to be of any
service.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_225">[225]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>With an effort, Dorothy squared her shoulders.
“Come on,” she said firmly, and we started out for
the door, Tom and I a couple of steps behind.</p>
<p>“Good for you,” I whispered, as we turned in
beside the haberdasher’s shop and started up the
stairs, at whose top we were forced to believe stood
the laboratory of the man we sought, the workshop
of the man who was trying to stop all war.</p>
<p>As we reached the second landing, Tom turned
to me. “This is the queerest mixture of fireproof
and firetrap I ever heard of,” he ejaculated. “Iron
stairs and wooden landings, with two doors on
each side. Wonder if it keeps on like this all the
way up?” It did; iron stairs and wooden landings
succeeded each other, till the fourth story showed
two doors, one on either side of a landing dimly
illuminated by a skylight.</p>
<p>“It’s one of the two,” whispered Tom.</p>
<p>He tried one door softly,—locked. Tried the
other. To my surprise it opened, and a bare room
much like that where Tom and I had waited
through the weary hours in Bloomsbury met our
view. Just at that moment we heard a footstep
clang on the iron stair below, and around the bend
the handle of a broom came into sight, followed by
an arm clad in the sleeve of a coarse jumper. The
janitor halted in amazement as he saw our phalanx
of three standing in the empty room. Before he
could open his mouth, I addressed him.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_226">[226]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“I want to rent this room,” I said. “It suits
me in many ways. What’s the rent?”</p>
<p>“Four pund a month, sir, thank you,” came the
answer.</p>
<p>“Anybody else on this same story?” I asked.</p>
<p>“Just a Mr. Cragent, thank you, sir, who has a
workshop across the way. He’s out for good to-day,
but he’s been in and out quite a bit the few
days he’s been there, thank you, sir. I think he’ll
make you no trouble, sir.”</p>
<p>I looked at Tom and Dorothy, who signed
affirmatively. “I’ll take it,” I said. “Shall I have
to see the agent?”</p>
<p>“No, sir, thank you,” answered the man, “I’m
the acting agent for this one building.”</p>
<p>“Very well, then. Here you are.” I handed
over four pounds for the first month’s rent, and
turned back to survey my new found quarters more
carefully. It was evidently one of two front rooms
looking out on the street. The other front room
with the rooms in the wing which stretched back
must belong to the mysterious Cragent. Sullied
with fog and smoke, our place was a typical London
office, whose gray marble mantel and grate was
the only relief to the naked walls.</p>
<p>The janitor, without a sign of wonder at our
sudden invasion of his premises, turned with his
broom and clanged down the iron stairs. Tom,
Dorothy and I went inside and nearly closed the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_227">[227]</SPAN></span>
door, leaving it open a crack for the purpose of
observation.</p>
<p>“As long as we may have to be here off and on
for a week or more, we may just as well be comfortable
about it,” said Tom, in a low tone. “Two
of us can stay here, while the other one goes and
gets some chairs and a little coal. You and Dorothy
keep on the lookout, while I get enough furnishings
to make us comfortable for a few hours.”</p>
<p>“Sure thing,” I said, my heart leaping up at the
chance of a short tête-à-tête with Dorothy.</p>
<p>“I’m going with you, Tom,” said Dorothy.
“Jim can watch alone, all right,” and she started
out on the landing ahead of her brother.</p>
<p>Tom threw one glance at me. “See you
shortly,” he said, and followed. I resumed my
place of watching.</p>
<p>Half an hour passed, and Tom and Dorothy were
back with porters carrying a table, chairs and coal.
In ten minutes after their arrival, there was a
brisk fire in the grate, we were comfortably disposed
about it, and the porters had departed.
Dorothy sat gazing into the fire with that same
dreamy quiet which had so characterized her
appearance for the last few days. I sat watching
Dorothy, and Tom was busy lighting his pipe.
Suddenly I heard a slight and repeated noise.
With a sign to Tom, I rose and tiptoed to the door.
There was no one coming up. I went to the landing<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_228">[228]</SPAN></span>
and listened. No more result. Yet I had surely
heard footsteps. I went back into the room and
closed the door. Tom was beside me in a moment,
pipe in hand, but, as I cast a hurried glance about
me, I saw that Dorothy had not stirred. She still
sat, her head on her hand, gazing into the glowing
coals. The footsteps were louder now, and I went
to one boundary wall and then to another. There
was some one pacing up and down in Cragent’s
rooms. Tom was beside me as I bent to listen, his
face the picture of eagerness.</p>
<p>“There must have been some one in there all the
time,” I whispered. “But if there was, I should
have thought he would have been disturbed by
our moving in and would have come out.”</p>
<p>“The janitor told me that Cragent had not come
in, and that there was no one working with him,”
muttered Tom. “I don’t see through it.”</p>
<p>Back and forth went the steps. Tom put his
pipe in his mouth and began smoking with long
regular puffs.</p>
<p>“I believe there’s another entrance to these
rooms,” he said finally. “I’m going out to reconnoitre.”
Silently and carefully he tiptoed out,
without Dorothy’s knowing of his departure. I
brought my chair over nearer the wall and sat down
to wait.</p>
<p>A hush followed, broken only by the incessant
low roar of the city, that roar which to the attentive<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_229">[229]</SPAN></span>
ear in its deep, firm bass is wholly differentiated
from the shrill staccato of New York, the lower,
swifter tones of Paris, or the middle-toned, ordered
hum of Berlin. On the other side of the wall the
steps went on, one, two, three, four, five, six, seven,
eight, nine, ten, eleven, twelve, turn, one, two,
three, four, five, six, seven, eight, nine, ten, eleven,
twelve, turn. On and on, with unvarying regularity,
marched the heavy, thrusting step that
reverberated over the old floor. Dorothy sat
motionless, her eyes still fixed upon the fire, oblivious
to the world, her soft hair contrasting with
the rich fur of her coat lying draped over the back
of an old chair. I heard the slow creak of an opening
door, and went softly toward a beckoning arm
in gray.</p>
<p>“I won’t come in,” whispered Tom excitedly,
“I’ve got the trick. There’s another entrance to
his rooms. We’ll cage him between us and get a
good look at him, anyway. There’s a little office
corresponding to this on the other side, where I can
wait. You stay by the bay window and watch for
me. If he comes my way, wave to me. If he comes
yours, I’ll wave to you. Gee! I haven’t had more
fun for an age.”</p>
<p>Off Tom travelled, down the stairs, walking with
an exaggerated caution, and I turned in, smiling.
Dorothy had not roused at the interruption. I
began to worry a bit about this strange abstractedness.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_230">[230]</SPAN></span>
Could she be quite well? No, that was
quite foolish, for she seemed the picture of health.
Then the footsteps took my attention for a moment,—one,
two, three, four, five, six, seven,
eight, nine, ten, eleven, twelve, turn, and repeat.
It was like the trampling of feet in the “Tale of
Two Cities.” The single footstep seemed to swell
into a roar of charging troops. Was this walker
the man who was trying to stop all war? Were the
footsteps above and around those of the thousands
he had slain or that he was to slay? Were we
marching among the ghostly shades of the future?
Were we in that crowding throng? What dreadful
mystery lay behind the wooden panels of those
windows? I fell to speculating on the appearance
of the stranger behind the wall, and always the
form of the man who was trying to stop all war
took on the slight graceful form of a Southerner,
and the face was the clear swarthy face of Regnier.
Try as I might, I could not give the shadowy man
we pursued any other face or form. The footsteps
went on and on.</p>
<p>Dorothy aroused. “Where’s Tom?” she said,
looking around.</p>
<p>“He’s away for a moment,” I said, slightly
mendaciously. “He’ll be back shortly.”</p>
<p>“He ought to have told me he was going,” she
said, a little impatiently, but her reverie proved
too strong for her to escape, and she sank back into<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_231">[231]</SPAN></span>
her dreamy abstraction. The twilight began to
come down as we sat watching and as I listened.
As it fell, the fire’s rose played yet more softly on
Dorothy’s beautiful hands lying on the arm of her
chair, showed a bit of rounded cheek and a translucent
shell-like ear. Gradually I forgot my whole
mission. The man became a ghost and faded
silently away. Tom waiting on tiptoe in the office
next door was quite forgotten. Dorothy and I and
the fire. This new Dorothy, dreamy, quiet, almost
clinging, with those new depths in her eyes,
was carrying me quite beyond myself.</p>
<p>“Dorothy,” I said, in a low voice, “Dorothy.”</p>
<p>She turned. “What is it, Jim?” she said.</p>
<p>I tried to speak but I could not. The rushing
words overwhelmed me. I could not make myself
intelligible, and I sat there shivering with the
intensity of my feeling, and yet unable to say what
I wished. I found my voice again. “Dorothy,”
I began, “I want to tell you.”</p>
<p>Dorothy’s eyes met mine for a moment, and then
her long lashes fell. “I’ve been thinking,” she
stammered—“thinking—thinking”—I bent
forward eagerly—“of our old home on Long
Island Sound.” The words came with a rush, as
if she had just seized them from the air. “You
never went down there, but it is the loveliest place,”
she went on hurriedly. “The sea, in a great
crescent bay, paved with the whitest sand, and an<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_232">[232]</SPAN></span>
old colonial house on a little rise.” She was talking
at top speed now.</p>
<p>“But, Dorothy,” I broke in, “I want you to
know—”</p>
<p>She gave me no chance to finish. “Tom has a
laboratory that he has fitted up down by the shore,”
she went on, still more swiftly, the words fairly
tumbling over each other, “and we work there
when we’re not off on the Black Arrow. When we
get back, I’m going straight down; I want to see
the place so badly.”</p>
<p>“Dorothy,” I began again.</p>
<p>“Oh, and did you see the account of the reception
at the Ambassador’s,” said Dorothy, as hastily
as before. “They had the whole thing twisted
upside down; names all tangled up. They got
Tom’s name as Professor Thomas Orrington, and
you as James.” She stopped short.</p>
<p>“How did they get yours?” I asked eagerly.</p>
<p>“Did you see that they are tearing up the embankment
down by the obelisk?” was the extremely
pertinent reply. As all three of us had
spent a quarter of an hour a day or two before,
watching those same operations, it seemed probable
that I had seen them.</p>
<p>“But, Dorothy,” I pleaded. “Just a minute, I
want to—”</p>
<p>Dorothy sprung from her chair and started for
the door. “I’m going to find Tom,” she said.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_233">[233]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Stop,” I called in a low voice. “‘The man’ is
on the other side of the partition walking up and
down. Listen!”</p>
<p>Dorothy stood still for a moment in the very
poise of flight, and we both listened intently. The
roar of the city was the only sound. The measured
footsteps had ceased. When they had stopped I
had no idea. I had proved an unfaithful watcher.</p>
<p>“Then, for heaven’s sake, where’s Tom?” I
cried, as I rushed to the window.</p>
<p>Dorothy, surprised from her attitude, followed
me. I gazed from the window up and down the
house fronts and street. Tom was nowhere in
sight. Dorothy leaned forward beside me to look
out and in the intoxication of her immediate
presence every idea beside my wish to tell her of
my love was swept away. I seized her hand.</p>
<p>“Dorothy,” I exclaimed, “you must and shall
hear what I am going to say.”</p>
<p>Her hand, at first fluttering and striving to
escape, gave up its struggle, and she stood silent,
listening, with averted head.</p>
<p>“Dorothy,” I began again.</p>
<p>At that very moment the door flew open and
Tom, red and breathless, dashed into the room.
Dorothy sprang towards him like a startled fawn,
and I was left with outstretched hand, the modern
Tantalus of London. Tom was too excited to
notice our positions.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_234">[234]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Well, I must say you are a pretty pair,” he
exclaimed. “All this work and trouble gone for
nothing, because you wouldn’t take a little bit of
care at the end. You call yourself a newspaper
man. There’s only one department you could
handle and that’s the Obituary column.”</p>
<p>“What’s the matter?” I asked, coming down
to earth.</p>
<p>“Matter,” cried Tom disgustedly, “the whole
thing’s up so far as this clue is concerned, and we’ve
got to start in all over again. I’ve seen ‘the man,’
and if you had been even reasonably alert you’d
have seen him too, and we would have him
trapped.”</p>
<p>“You’ve seen ‘the man.’ Are you sure?” asked
Dorothy breathlessly.</p>
<p>Tom nodded gravely. “I have, and I think for
some reason that he knew me,” he answered more
slowly. “When I left you I went over to the office
on the other side and waited. I sat just where I
could see if any one opened on my side. I had
been there perhaps half an hour when the door
opened, and a man in a slouch hat, whose face was
hidden in the dim twilight of the hall, stepped out.
Just as he caught sight of me, he jumped back and
locked the door. ‘That’s the time for Jim,’ I said
to myself, and ran to the window and waved. I
could have waved my arm off, I believe, and you
would never have known it, so when I realized that,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_235">[235]</SPAN></span>
I hurried down and over to these stairs. On the
third flight, I heard steps coming down the fourth.
I came up very softly and there, just descending,
was the man in the slouch hat. When he saw me,
he threw up his arm across his face, said what
sounded to me like ‘You again,’ and backed away
into the darkness of the corner. I followed, but
before I could reach him, a door behind him flew
open and he dashed through, slamming it in my
face. I flew against the door and it gave. By the
time I was in the room he was across it and out the
other door. I followed him down the stairs but
lost him in the street. If you people had been half
decently on the watch, we’d have had something,
but now he knows we’re after him and he’ll simply
disappear from here. But I believe I’ve seen that
chap somewhere, before. There was a queer
familiarity about him, and what did he mean by,
‘You again?’ It’s barely possible that your old
theory may be right, Jim, or it may be that you
have driven Regnier so into my head that I looked
to find him in a man I don’t know at all.”</p>
<p>“Well, I know,” said Dorothy, with a sudden
reversion to her old independent spirit. “It isn’t.
But how did the man happen to have keys in his
hand for those doors on the story below. I don’t
understand that.”</p>
<p>“I don’t know, I’m sure,” said Tom. “I was
in too much of a hurry to get at the chap to pay any<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_236">[236]</SPAN></span>
attention to the way he unlocked the doors. Of
course there is a bare chance that the fellow may
be a harmless citizen who mistook me for either a
highwayman or a lunatic.”</p>
<p>“Not with the wooden panels on the windows,”
said Dorothy. “Let’s go down and look at the
doors.”</p>
<p>Regretfully I locked the door and left the bright
fire and bare-walled room where Dorothy had come
so near to listening to me. I was disappointed,—of
course I was disappointed at my carelessness in
losing the man I sought, but—Dorothy’s hand
had lain in mine without struggling that last
instant of time before Tom came in. There was
some balm in Gilead. Yet delays are dangerous,
and I felt I must not lose time in following up any
advantage gained.</p>
<p>As I turned the corner of the stairs, I heard a
low exclamation from Dorothy and Tom’s expressive
whistle. They were bending over an open
door, examining the lock with a match, which
Tom held shielded between his palms. As I
joined them, Tom pointed without comment at
the place where the lock had been. Its bare wood
showed lighter surfaces, as the signs had showed
the marks of the handiwork of “the man,” and nail
holes that told of disappearing metal.</p>
<p>“How’s that for a pick lock,” said Tom. “The
other one was opened in just the same way.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_237">[237]</SPAN></span>
Cragent is the man and I saw him, but couldn’t
reach him. What a control he must have over his
instrument to be able to destroy a battleship and
open the lock of a door by means of disappearing
metal.”</p>
<p>Dorothy shuddered. “It’s dark here and cold.
I want to go back to the hotel,” she said a little
tremulously. “I’ll be all right in the morning, and
I’ll go with you after ‘the man,’ but now I’m
tired—tired.”</p>
<p>I think the horror of the thing shadowed us all a
bit in that gloomy old London house. The darkness
of the corners, the man who had slain so many
of his fellow men separated from us by a single
partition seemed gruesome and deadening. Those
footsteps pacing up and down, did they mean more
slaughter, new inventions? Was the mysterious
man whom we had sought, the familiar figure Tom
had imagined; and dominating thought of all, did
Dorothy’s hand rest in mine without struggling
that last moment? There was enough to keep
my thoughts at work on the way home, even
though Dorothy persistently gazed from the
window of the four-wheeler and uttered never a
word.</p>
<p>As we left the carriage, Tom broke silence.
“If you feel like it, Jim, I think it wouldn’t be a
bad plan to look up Hamerly to-night, and see
what he says to all this.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_238">[238]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“A good idea,” I said. “I’ll get a hasty bite and
run up there. No use in wasting time.”</p>
<p>“All right,” said Tom, and Dorothy, as we
parted, gave me one shy glance that sent me away
in a golden maze of joy and hope.</p>
<p>Hamerly was out when I arrived at his lodgings,
called away suddenly for a couple of days, the
maid reported. On my way back, however, I
came to one very definite conclusion. Hamerly
must have seen the man face to face in Dr. Heidenmuller’s
laboratory. He could settle one vexed
question anyway. I was going to find a picture of
Regnier if there was one to be had.</p>
<p>I reached the Savoy to find word from Tom that
he and Dorothy had gone over to the Cecil to see
some friends. I followed, leaving word at the
office that I had gone. As I stood in the corridor
waiting, a page came by, calling my name for the
telephone. I took up the receiver with a deep
thrill of anticipation. “Orrington?”</p>
<p>“Yes.” It was one of our correspondents.</p>
<p>“War just declared between England and
Germany. I have inside information that the
fleets will meet in the Channel, to-morrow, off
Dover. I suppose you’ll hunt your man there?”</p>
<p>“I’m off for the scene of battle by the first
train,” I answered. “Much obliged,” and I hung
up the receiver.</p>
<p>As I stepped out under the great awning at the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_239">[239]</SPAN></span>
head of the courtyard, the gayety and life of the
full tide of evening was sweeping through. Beautifully
dressed women, gallant men, life and youth
and pleasure,—and to-morrow—what? Would a
single one of those mighty ships, would one of
those brave sailors return? As I stood there, a
hush came. The news which I had heard had just
been received. Then came a mighty roar, “War,
War, War.” Then, as it died away, out burst a
great increasing wave of song, the whole multitude
joining in one mighty chorus, “God save the
King.” I saw Dorothy hastening towards me,
her lips quivering.</p>
<p>“Jim, have you got to go to sea?” she said
stammering. “I’m so afraid no boat will ever
return,” and she ended with a sob. I could wait
no longer.</p>
<p>“Dear love,” I said, “I must, but I love you,
dear, and if I die to-morrow or fifty years off, I
love you and you alone,” and there, as the last
bars of the song rang forth in the full tide of exaltation,
as the clamor of the crowded street outside
rose to its height, Dorothy and I came to our own.</p>
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<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_240">[240]</SPAN></span></p>
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