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PAGE 5

The Unofficial Spy
by [?]

“There wasn’t much that he overheard, but what there was of it was so suspicious that I did not hesitate to conclude that the fellow was an undesirable guest. It was something about the Panama Canal, and a coaling station of a steamship and fruit concern on the shore of one of the Latin American countries. It was, he said, in reality to be the coaling station of a certain European power which he did not name but which the younger man seemed to understand. They talked of wharves and tracts of land, of sovereignty and blue prints, the Monroe Doctrine, value in case of war, and a lot of other things. Then they talked of money, and though Charley was most assiduous at the time all he overheard was something about ‘ten thousand francs’ and ‘buying her off,’ and finally a whispered confidence of which he caught the words, ‘just a blind to get her over here, away from Paris.’ Finally the dark man in an apparent burst of confidence said something about ‘the other plans being the real thing after all,’ and that the whole affair would bring him in fifty thousand francs, with which he could afford to be liberal. Charley could get no inkling about what that other thing was.

“But I felt sure that he had heard enough to warrant the belief that some kind of confidence game was being discussed. To tell the truth I didn’t care much what it was, at the time. It might have been an attempt of the dark-visaged fellow to sell the Canal to a come-on. What I wanted was to have it known that the Vanderveer was not to be a resort of such gentry as this. But I’m afraid it was much more serious than I thought at the time.

“Well, the dark man finally excused himself and sauntered into the lobby and up to the desk, with me after him around the opposite way. He was looking over the day’s arrivals on the register when I concluded that it was about time to do something. I was standing directly beside him lighting a cigar. I turned quickly on him and deliberately trod on the man’s patent leather shoe. He faced me furiously at not getting any apology. ‘Sacre,’ he exclaimed, ‘what the – ‘ But before he could finish I moved still closer and pinched his elbow. A dull red glow of suppressed anger spread over his face, but he cut his words short. He knew and I knew he knew. That is the sign in the continental hotels when they find a crook and quietly ask him to move on. The man turned on his heel and stalked out of the hotel. By and by the young man in the caf=82, considerably annoyed at the sudden inattention of the waiter who acted as if he wasn’t satisfied with his tip, strolled through the lobby and not seeing his dark-skinned friend, also disappeared. I wish to heaven I had had them shadowed. The young fellow wasn’t a come-on at all. There was something afoot between these two, mark my words.”

“But why do you connect that incident with this case of Madame de Nevers?” asked Kennedy, a little puzzled.

“Because the next day, and the day that Madame’s maid disappeared, I happened to see a man bidding good-bye to a woman at the rear carriage entrance of the hotel. The woman was Madame’s maid and the man was the dark man who had been seated in the caf=82.”

“You said a moment ago that you had a good description of the maid or could write one. Do you think you could locate her?”

The hotel detective thought a minute or two. “If she has gone to any of the other hotels in this city, I could,” he answered slowly. “You know we have recently formed a sort of clearing house, we hotel detectives, and we are working together now very well, though secretly. It is barely possible that she has gone to another hotel. The very brazenness of that would be its safeguard, she might think.”