PAGE 8
The Smuggler
by
“Some of them belong to a Mr. Pierre and the rest to a Miss Gabrielle,” answered an inspector. “Bonded for Troy and waiting to be transferred by the express company.”
Here, perhaps, at last was an explanation, and Craig took advantage of it. Could it be that the real seat of trouble was not here but at some other place, that some exchange was to be made en route or perhaps an attempt at bribery?
Herndon, too, was willing to run a risk. He ordered the trunks opened immediately. But to our disappointment they were almost empty. There was scarcely a thing of value in them. Most of the contents consisted of clothes that had plainly been made in America and were being brought back here. It was another false scent. We had been played with and baffled at every turn. Perhaps this had been the method originally agreed on. At any rate it had been changed.
“Could they have left the goods in Paris, after all?” I queried.
“With the fall and winter trade just coming on?” Kennedy replied, with an air of finality that set at rest any doubts about his opinion on that score. “I thought perhaps we had a case of what do you call it, Herndon, when they leave trunks that are to be secretly removed by dishonest expressmen from the wharf at night?
“Sleepers. Oh, we’ve broken that up, too. No expressman would dare try it now. I must confess this thing is beyond me, Craig.”
Kennedy made no answer. Evidently there was nothing to do but to await developments and see what Herndon’s men reported. We had been beaten at every turn in the game. Herndon seemed to feel that there was a bitter sting in the defeat, particularly because the smuggler or smugglers had actually been in our grasp so long to do with as we pleased, and had so cleverly slipped out again, leaving us holding the bag.
Kennedy was especially thoughtful as he told over the facts of the case in his mind. “Of course,” he remarked, ” Mademoiselle Gabrielle wasn’t an actress. But we can’t deny that she had very little that would justify Herndon in holding her, unless he simply wants a newspaper row.”
“But I thought Pierre was quite intimate with her at first,” I ventured. “That was a dirty trick of his.”
Craig laughed. “You mean an old one. That was simply a blind, to divert attention from himself. I suspect they talked that over between themselves for days before.”
It was plainly more perplexing than ever. What had happened? Had Pierre been a prestidigitator and had he merely said presto when our backs were turned and whisked the goods invisibly into the country? I could find no explanation for the little drama on the pier. If Herndon’s men had any genius in detecting smuggling, their professional opponent certainly had greater genius in perpetrating it.
We did not see Herndon again until after a hasty luncheon. He was in his office and inclined to take a pessimistic view of the whole affair. He brightened up when a telephone message came in from one of his shadows. The men trailing Pierre and Mademoiselle Gabrielle had crossed trails and run together at a little French restaurant on the lower West Side, where Pierre, Lang, and Mademoiselle Gabrielle had met and were dining in a most friendly spirit. Kennedy was right. She had been merely a cog in the machinery of the plot.
The man reported that even when a newsboy had been sent in by him with the afternoon papers displaying in big headlines the mystery of the death of Mademoiselle Violette, they had paid no attention. It seemed evident that whatever the fate of the little modiste, Mademoiselle Gabrielle had quite replaced her in the affections of Pierre. There was nothing for us to do but to separate and await developments.