<SPAN name="chap03"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER III </h3>
<h3> MIDSUMMER MADNESS </h3>
<p>The driver of the taxicab proved to be a sound sport.</p>
<p>Five minutes of luck, aided by nerve, brought the two machines somewhat
nearer together. The motor-car gained in the open spaces, the taxicab
caught up when it came to weaving its way in and out and dodging the
trolleys. At the frequent moments when he appeared to be losing the
car, Hambleton reflected that he had its number, which might lead to
something. At the Waldorf the car slowed up, and the cab came within a
few yards. Hambleton made up his mind at that instant that he had been
mistaken in his supposition of trouble threatening the lady, and looked
momently to see her step from the car into the custody of those
starched and lacquered menials who guard the portals of fashionable
hotels.</p>
<p>But it was not so. A signal was interchanged between the occupants of
the car and some watcher in the doorway, and the car sped on.
Hambleton, watching steadily, wondered!</p>
<p>"If she is being kidnapped, why doesn't she make somebody hear? Plenty
of chance. They couldn't have killed her—that isn't done."</p>
<p>And yet his heart smote him as he remembered the terror and distress
written on that countenance and the cry for help.</p>
<p>"Something was the matter," memory insisted. "There they go west; west
Tenth, Alexander Street, Tenth Avenue—"</p>
<p>The car lumbered on, the cab half a block, often more, in the rear,
through endless regions of small shops and offices huddled together
above narrow sidewalks, through narrow and winding streets paved with
cobblestones and jammed with cars and trucks, squeezing past curbs
where dirty children sat playing within a few inches of death-dealing
wheels. Hambleton wondered what kept them from being killed by
hundreds daily, but the wonder was immediately forgotten in a new
subject for thought. The cab had stopped, although several yards of
clear road lay ahead of it. The driver was climbing down. The
motor-car was nosing its way along nearly a block ahead. Hambleton
leaped out.</p>
<p>"Of course, we've broken down?" he mildly inquired. Deep in his heart
he was superstitiously thinking that he would let fate determine his
next move; if there were obstacles in the way of his further quest,
well and good; he would follow the Face no longer.</p>
<p>"If you'll wait just a minute—" the driver was saying, "until I get my
kit out—"</p>
<p>But Hambleton, looking ahead, saw that the car had disappeared, and his
mind suddenly veered.</p>
<p>"Not this time," he announced. "Here, the meter says four-twenty—you
take this, I'm off." He put a five-dollar bill into the hand of the
driver and started on an easy run toward the west.</p>
<p>He had caught sight of smoke-stacks and masts in the near distance,
telling him that the motor-car had almost, if not quite, reached the
river. Such a vehicle could not disappear and leave no trace; it ought
to be easy to find. Ahead of him flaring lights alternated with the
steady, piercing brilliance of the incandescents, and both struggled
against the lingering daylight.</p>
<p>A heavy policeman at the corner had seen the car. He pointed west into
the cavernous darkness of the wharves.</p>
<p>"If she ain't down at the Imperial docks she's gone plump into the
river, for that's the way she went," he insisted. The policeman had
the bearing of a major-general and the accent of the city of Cork.
Hambleton went on past the curving street-car tracks, dodged a loaded
dray emerging from the dock, and threaded his way under the shed. He
passed piles of trunks, and a couple of truckmen dumping assorted
freight from an ocean liner. No motor-car or veiled lady, nor sound of
anything like a woman's voice. Hambleton came out into the street
again, looked about for another probable avenue of escape for the car
and was at the point of bafflement, when the major-general pounded
slowly along his way.</p>
<p>"In there, my son, and no nice place either!" pointing to a smaller
entrance alongside the Imperial docks, almost concealed by swinging
signs. It was plainly a forbidden way, and at first sight appeared too
narrow for the passage of any vehicle whatsoever. But examination
showed that it was not too narrow; moreover, it opened on a level with
the street.</p>
<p>"If you really want her, she's in there, though what'll be to pay if
you go in there without a permit, I don't know. I'd hate to have to
arrest you."</p>
<p>"It might be the best thing for me if you did, but I'm going in. You
might wait here a minute. Captain, if you will."</p>
<p>"I will that; more especially as that car was a stunner for speed and I
already had my eye on her. I'd like to see you fish her out of that
hole."</p>
<p>But Hambleton was out of earshot and out of sight. An empty passage
smelling of bilge-water and pent-up gases opened suddenly on to the
larger dock. Damp flooring with wide cracks stretched off to the left;
on the right the solid planking terminated suddenly in huge piles,
against which the water, capped with scum and weeds, splashed fitfully.
The river bank, lined with docks, seemed lulled into temporary
quietness. Ferry-boats steamed at their labors farther up and down
the river, but the currents of travel left here and there a peaceful
quarter such as this.</p>
<p>Hambleton's gaze searched the dock and the river in a rapid survey.
The dock itself was dim and vast, with a few workmen looking like ants
in the distance. It offered nothing of encouragement; but on the
river, fifty yards away, and getting farther away every minute, was a
yacht's tender. The figures of the two rowers were quite distinct,
their oars making rhythmical flashes over the water, but it was
impossible to say exactly what freight, human or otherwise, it carried.
It was evident that there were people aboard, possibly several. Even
as Hambleton strained his eyes to see, the outlines of the rowboat
merged into the dimness. It was pointed like a gun toward a large
yacht lying at anchor farther out in the stream. The vessel swayed
prettily to the current, and slowly swung its dim light from the
masthead.</p>
<p>"They've got her—out in that boat," said Hambleton to himself,
feeling, while the words were on his lips, that he was drawing
conclusions unwarranted by the evidence. Thus he stood, one foot on
the slippery log siding of the dock, watching while the little drama
played itself out, so far as his present knowledge could go. His
judgment still hung in suspense, but his senses quickened themselves to
detect, if possible, what the outcome might be. He saw the tender
approach the boat, lie alongside; saw one sailor after another descend
the rope ladder, saw a limp, inert mass lifted from the rowboat and
carried up, as if it had been merchandise, to the deck of the yacht;
saw two men follow the limp bundle over the gunwale; and finally saw
the boat herself drawn up and placed in her davits. Hambleton's mind
at last slid to its conclusion, like a bolt into its socket.</p>
<p>"They're kidnapping her, without a doubt," he said slowly. For a
moment he was like one struck stupid. Slowly he turned to the dock,
looking up and down its orderly but unprepossessing clutter. Dim
lights shone here and there, and a few hands were at work at the
farther end. The dull silence, the unresponsive preoccupation of
whatever life was in sight, made it all seem as remote from him and
from this tragedy as from the stars.</p>
<p>In fact, it was impersonal and remote to such a degree that Hambleton's
practical mind, halted yet an instant, in doubt whether there were not
some plausible explanation. The thought came back to him suddenly that
the motor-car must be somewhere in the neighborhood if his conclusion
were correct.</p>
<p>On the instant his brain became active again. It did not take long, as
a matter of fact, to find the car; though when he stumbled on it,
turned about and neatly stowed away close beside the partitioning wall,
he gave a start. It was such a tangible evidence of what had
threatened to grow vague and unreal on his hands. He squeezed himself
into the narrow space between it and the wall, finally thrusting his
head under the curtains of the tonneau.</p>
<p>It was high and dry, empty as last year's cockleshell. Not a sign of
life, not a loose object of any kind except a filmy thing which
Hambleton found himself observing thoughtfully. At last he picked it
up—a long, mist-like veil. He spread it out, held it gingerly between
a thumb and finger of each hand, and continued to look at it
abstractedly. Part of it was clean and whole, dainty as only a bit of
woman's finery can be; but one end of it was torn and twisted and
stretched out of all semblance to itself. Moreover, it was dirty, as
if it had been ground under a muddy heel. It was, in its way, a
shrieking evidence of violence, of unrighteous struggle. Hambleton
folded the scarf carefully, with its edges together, and put it in his
pocket. Jimmy's actions from this time on had an incentive and a
spirit that had before been lacking. He noted again the number of the
car, and returned to the edge of the dock to observe the yacht. She
had steamed up river a little way for some reason known only to
herself, and was now turning very slowly. She was but faintly lighted,
and would pass for some pleasure craft just coming home. But Jim knew
better. He could, at last, put two and two together. He would follow
the Face—indeed, he could not help following it. In him had begun
that divine experience of youth—of youth essentially, whether it come
in early years or late—of being carried off his feet by a spirit not
himself. He ran like a young athlete down the dock to the nearest
workman, evolving schemes as he went.</p>
<p>The dock-hand apathetically trundled a small keg from one pile of
freight to another, wiped his hands on his trousers, took a dry pipe
out of his pocket, and looked vacantly up the river before he replied
to Hambleton's question.</p>
<p>"Queer name—<i>Jene Dark</i> they call her."</p>
<p>It was like pulling teeth to get information out of him, but Jim
applied the forceps.</p>
<p>The yacht had been lying out in the river for two weeks or more,
possibly less; belonged to foreign parts; no one thereabouts knew who
its owner was; nor its captain; nor its purpose in the harbor of New
York. At last, quite gratuitously, the man volunteered a personal
opinion. "Slippery boat in a gale—wouldn't trust her."</p>
<p>Hambleton walked smartly back, taking a look both at the yacht and the
motor-car as he went. The yacht's nose pointed toward the Jersey
shore; the car was creeping out of the dock. As he overtook the
machine, he saw that it was in the hands of a mechanic in overalls and
jumper. In answer to Hambleton's question as, to the owner of the car,
the mechanic told him pleasantly to go to the devil, and for once the
sight of a coin failed to produce any perceptible effect. But the
major-general, waiting half a block away, was still in the humor of
giving fatherly advice. He welcomed Jim heartily. "That's a hole I
ain't got no use for. 'Ow'd you make out?"</p>
<p>"Well enough, for all present purposes. Can you undertake to do a job
for me?"</p>
<p>"If it ain't nothing I'd have to arrest you for, I might consider it,"
he chuckled.</p>
<p>"I want you to go to the Laramie Club and tell Aleck Van Camp—got the
name?—that Hambleton has gone off on the <i>Jeanne D'Arc</i> and may not be
back for some time; and he is to look after the <i>Sea Gull</i>."</p>
<p>"Hold on, young man; you're not going to do anything out of reason, as
one might say?"</p>
<p>"Oh, no, not at all; most reasonable thing in the world. You take this
money and be sure to get the message to Mr. Van Camp, will you? All
right. Now tell me where I can find a tug-boat or a steam launch,
quick."</p>
<p>"O'Leary, down at pier X—2—O has launches and everything else. All
right, my son, Aleck Van Camp, at the Laramie. But you be good and
don't drown yourself."</p>
<p>This last injunction, word for word in the manner of the pert Edith,
touched Jimmy's humor. He laughed ringingly. His spirit was like a
chime of bells on a week-day.</p>
<p>The hour which followed was one that James Hambleton found it difficult
to recall afterward, with any degree of coherence; but at the time his
movements were mathematically accurate, swift, effective. He got
aboard a little steam tug and followed the yacht down the river and
into the harbor. As she stood out into the roads and began to increase
her speed, he directed the captain of the tug to steam forward and make
as if to cross her bows. This would make the pilot of the yacht angry,
but he would be forced to slow down a trifle. Jim watched long enough
to see the success of his manoeuver, then went down into the cuddy
which served as a cabin, took off most of his clothes, and looked to
the fastenings of his money belt. Then he watched his chance, and when
the tug was pretty nearly in the path of the yacht, he crept to the
stern and dropped overboard.</p>
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