<h3>CHAPTER XIV</h3>
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">It</span> was near noon of the next day that Rowland,
seated in a steamer-chair with Myra and looking
out on a sail-spangled stretch of blue from the saloon-deck
of a west-bound liner, remembered that he
had made no provisions to have Mrs. Selfridge notified
by cable of the safety of her child; and unless
Mr. Meyer or his associates gave the story to the
press it would not be known.</p>
<p>"Well," he mused, "joy will not kill, and I shall
witness it in its fullness if I take her by surprise.
But the chances are that it will get into the papers
before I reach her. It is too good for Mr. Meyer
to keep."</p>
<p>But the story was not given out immediately. Mr.
Meyer called a conference of the underwriters concerned
with him in the insurance of the <i>Titan</i> at
which it was decided to remain silent concerning the
card they hoped to play, and to spend a little time
and money in hunting for other witnesses among the
<i>Titan's</i> crew, and in interviewing Captain Barry, to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</SPAN></span>
the end of improving his memory. A few stormy
meetings with this huge obstructionist convinced
them of the futility of further effort in his direction,
and, after finding at the end of a week that every
surviving member of the <i>Titan's</i> port watch, as well
as a few of the other, had been induced to sign for
Cape voyages, or had otherwise disappeared, they
decided to give the story told by Rowland to the
press in the hope that publicity would avail to bring
to light corroboratory evidence.</p>
<p>And this story, improved upon in the repeating
by Mr. Meyer to reporters, and embellished still
further by the reporters as they wrote it up, particularly
in the part pertaining to the polar bear,—blazoned
out in the great dailies of England and the
Continent, and was cabled to New York, with the
name of the steamer in which John Rowland had
sailed (for his movements had been traced in the
search for evidence), where it arrived, too late for
publication, the morning of the day on which, with
Myra on his shoulder, he stepped down the gang-plank
at a North River dock. As a consequence, he
was surrounded on the dock by enthusiastic reporters,
who spoke of the story and asked for details.
He refused to talk, escaped them, and gaining the
side streets, soon found himself in crowded Broadway,
where he entered the office of the steamship
company in whose employ he had been wrecked, and
secured from the <i>Titan's</i> passenger-list the address
of Mrs. Selfridge—the only woman saved. Then he
took a car up Broadway and alighted abreast of a
large department store.</p>
<p>"We're going to see mamma, soon, Myra," he
whispered in the pink ear; "and you must go dressed
up. It don't matter about me; but you're a Fifth
Avenue baby—a little aristocrat. These old clothes
won't do, now." But she had forgotten the word<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</SPAN></span>
"mamma," and was more interested in the exciting
noise and life of the street than in the clothing she
wore. In the store, Rowland asked for, and was
directed to the children's department, where a young
woman waited on him.</p>
<p>"This child has been shipwrecked," he said. "I
have sixteen dollars and a half to spend on it. Give
it a bath, dress its hair, and use up the money on a
dress, shoes, and stockings, underclothing, and a
hat." The young woman stooped and kissed the
little girl from sheer sympathy, but protested that
not much could be done.</p>
<p>"Do your best," said Rowland; "it is all I have.
I will wait here."</p>
<p>An hour later, penniless again, he emerged from
the store with Myra, bravely dressed in her new
finery, and was stopped at the corner by a policeman
who had seen him come out, and who marveled,
doubtless, at such juxtaposition of rags and ribbons.</p>
<p>"Whose kid ye got?" he demanded.</p>
<p>"I believe it is the daughter of Mrs. Colonel Selfridge,"
answered Rowland, haughtily—too haughtily,
by far.</p>
<p>"Ye believe—but ye don't know. Come back into
the shtore, me tourist, and we'll see who ye shtole it
from."</p>
<p>"Very well, officer; I can prove possession." They
started back, the officer with his hand on Rowland's
collar, and were met at the door by a party of three
or four people coming out. One of this party, a
young woman in black, uttered a piercing shriek and
sprang toward them.</p>
<p>"Myra!" she screamed. "Give me my baby—give
her to me."</p>
<p>She snatched the child from Rowland's shoulder,
hugged it, kissed it, cried, and screamed over it; then,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</SPAN></span>
oblivious to the crowd that collected, incontinently
fainted in the arms of an indignant old gentleman.</p>
<p>"You scoundrel!" he exclaimed, as he flourished
his cane over Rowland's head with his free arm.
"We've caught you. Officer, take that man to the
station-house. I will follow and make a charge in
the name of my daughter."</p>
<p>"Then he shtole the kid, did he?" asked the policeman.</p>
<p>"Most certainly," answered the old gentleman, as,
with the assistance of the others, he supported the
unconscious young mother to a carriage. They all
entered, little Myra screaming for Rowland from
the arms of a female member of the party, and were
driven off.</p>
<p>"C'm an wi' me," uttered the officer, rapping his
prisoner on the head with his club and jerking him
off his feet.</p>
<p>Then, while an approving crowd applauded, the
man who had fought and conquered a hungry polar
bear was dragged through the streets like a sick
animal by a New York policeman. For such is the
stultifying effect of a civilized environment.</p>
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