The Lady and the Pirate - Page 116/199

But, though I turned toward her half a dozen times in these few

minutes, she made no response to what she must have known was my

demand upon her attention. I gathered her gloves for her, and her

flowers, but she only took them, her lips parting in courtesy, not in

warmth, and no sound came to my ears, straining always to hear her

voice, a pleasant sound in a world of discords ever. I even touched

her arm, suddenly, impulsively. "Helena!" But she, not knowing that I

meant to give her liberty, though over a dead heart, shrank as though

I had added physical insult to my verbal taunts. Anyway I turned, I

was fast in the net of circumstance, fanged by the springs of

misapprehension.... Well, then, but one thing remained. She had said

it was a man's place to fight, and so now it would be! I must go on,

and take my punishment until justice had been done. Justice and my own

success I no longer confused in my own mind; but in my soul was the

grim resolution that justice should first be done to one human soul,

even though that chanced to be my own. After that, I should get her

again in the hands of her friends and myself; indeed, disappear beyond

all seeking, in parts of the world best known to myself. If I myself

were fair, why should not fairness as well be given to me?

And with no more than this established, and nothing definite in plan,

either, for the present, I mechanically opened the door of the taxi

for her when the driver pulled up and bent a querying face about to

ask whether or not we now were opposite Slip K. I noted that he did

not at once drive away. Evidently he sat for some moments gazing after

us as we disappeared in the gloom of the river-front. His tale, as I

afterward learned, enabled the morning papers to print a conclusive

story describing the abduction of Miss Emory and her undoubted

retention on the stolen yacht, which, after lying at or near New

Orleans, some time that night, once more mysteriously had

disappeared.

No doubt remained, according to this new story, that the supplies put

aboard at Slip K by Lavallier and Thibodeau had gone to this very

craft, the stolen yacht! With this came many wild and confusing

accounts and descriptions, including a passionate interview with Mr.

Calvin Davidson, of New York, who had announced his intention of

overhauling these ruffians, at any cost whatsoever; and much counsel

to the city officials, mingled with the bosom-beating of one

enterprising journal which declared it had put in commission a yacht

of its own, under charge of two of its ablest reporters, who had

instructions to take up the chase and to remain out until the mystery

had been solved and this beautiful young woman had been rescued from

her horrible situation and restored again to her home. There were more

portraits of Helena--furnished, most like, from Cal Davidson's

collection; one also of Aunt Lucinda (from a photograph of far earlier

days); and lastly, a half-page portrait of myself, the unnamed ruffian

who was the undoubted leader in this abduction--the portrait being

drawn by a staff artist "from description of eye-witnesses." As I

later saw this portrait I rejoiced that I was long ignorant of its

existence: and had I known that night that yonder chauffeur to whom I

had given undue largess had such treason as that portrait in his soul,

I know not what I might have done with him.