Two Apparitions
They found that the room in the house
on Beekman Place, opposite that which they felt covered
their quarry, could be secured, and they were shown
to it by a quiet old gentlewoman, found a big double
room that ran across the whole length of the house.
From the back it looked down on the lights glimmering
on the black East River and across to the flare of
Brooklyn; to the left the whole arc of the Fifty-ninth
Street Bridge was exposed. In front the windows
overlooked Beekman Place and were directly opposite,
the front of the house to which the taxi driver had
gone that afternoon.
Here they took up the vigil.
For four hours one of the two sat with eyes never
moving from the street and the windows of the house
across the street; and then he left the post, and
the other took it.
It was vastly wearying work.
Very few vehicles came into the light of the street
lamp beneath them, and every person who dismounted
from one of them had to be scrutinized with painful
diligence.
Once a girl, young and slender and
sprightly, stepped out of a taxi, about ten o’clock
at night, and ran lightly up the steps of the house.
Ronicky caught his friend by the shoulders and dragged
him to the window. “There she is now!”
he exclaimed.
But the eye of the lover, even though
the girl was in a dim light, could not he deceived.
The moment he caught her profile, as she turned in
opening the door, Bill Gregg shook his head. “That’s
not the one. She’s all different, a pile
different, Ronicky.”
Ronicky sighed. “I thought
we had her,” he said. “Go on back
to sleep. I’ll call you again if anything
happens.”
But nothing more happened that night,
though even in the dull, ghost hours of the early
morning they did not relax their vigil. But all
the next day there was still no sign of Caroline Smith
in the house across the street; no face like hers
ever appeared at the windows. Apparently the
place was a harmless rooming house of fairly good quality.
Not a sign of Caroline Smith appeared even during
the second day. By this time the nerves of the
two watchers were shattered by the constant strain,
and the monotonous view from the front window was beginning
to madden them.
“It’s proof that she ain’t
yonder,” said Bill Gregg. “Here’s
two days gone, and not a sign of her yet. It
sure means that she ain’t in that house, unless
she’s sick in bed.” And he grew pale
at the thought.
“Partner,” said Ronicky
Doone, “if they are trying to keep her away
from us they sure have the sense to keep her under
cover for as long as two days. Ain’t that
right? It looks pretty bad for us, but I’m
staying here for one solid week, anyway. It’s
just about our last chance, Bill. We’ve
done our hunting pretty near as well as we could.
If we don’t land her this trip, I’m about
ready to give up.”
Bill Gregg sadly agreed that this
was their last chance and they must play it to the
limit. One week was decided on as a fair test.
If, at the end of that time, Caroline Smith did not
come out of the house across the street they could
conclude that she did not stay there. And then
there would be nothing for it but to take the first
train back West.
The third day passed and the fourth,
dreary, dreary days of unfaltering vigilance on the
part of the two watchers. And on the fifth morning
even Ronicky Doone sat with his head in his hands at
the window, peering through the slit between the drawn
curtains which sheltered him from being observed at
his spying. When he called out softly, the sound
brought Gregg, with one long leap out of the chair
where he was sleeping, to the window. There could
be no shadow of a doubt about it. There stood
Caroline Smith in the door of the house!
She closed the door behind her and,
walking to the top of the steps, paused there and
looked up and down the street.
Bill Gregg groaned, snatched his hat
and plunged through the door, and Ronicky heard the
brief thunder of his feet down the first flight of
stairs, then the heavy thumps, as he raced around the
landing. He was able to trace him down all the
three flights of steps to the bottom.
And so swift was that descent that,
when the girl, idling down the steps across the street,
came onto the sidewalk, Bill Gregg rushed out from
the other side and ran toward her.
They made a strange picture as they
came to a halt at the same instant, the girl shrinking
back in apparent fear of the man, and Bill Gregg stopping
by that same show of fear, as though by a blow in the
face. There was such a contrast between the two
figures that Ronicky Doone might have laughed, had
he not been shaking his head with sympathy for Bill
Gregg.
For never had the miner seemed so
clumsily big and gaunt, never had his clothes seemed
so unpressed and shapeless, while his soft gray hat,
to which he still clung religiously, appeared hopelessly
out of place in contrast with the slim prettiness
of the girl. She wore a black straw hat, turned
back from her face, with a single big red flower at
the side of it; her dress was a tailored gray tweed.
The same distinction between their clothes was in
their faces, the finely modeled prettiness of her
features and the big, careless chiseling of the features
of Bill Gregg.
Ronicky Doone did not wonder that,
after her first fear, her gesture was one of disdain
and surprise.
Bill Gregg had dragged the hat from
his head, and the wind lifted his long black hair
and made it wild. He went a long, slow step closer
to her, with both his hands outstretched.
A strange scene for a street, and
Ronicky Doone saw the girl flash a glance over her
shoulder and back to the house from which she had just
come. Ronicky Doone followed that glance, and
he saw, all hidden save the profile of the face, a
man standing at an opposite window and smiling scornfully
down at that picture in the street.
What a face it was! Never in
his life had Ronicky Doone seen a man who, in one
instant, filled him with such fear and hatred, such
loathing and such dread, such scorn and such terror.
The nose was hooked like the nose of a bird of prey;
the eyes were long and slanting like those of an Oriental.
The face was thin, almost fleshless, so that the bony
jaw stood out like the jaw of a death’s-head.
As for the girl, the sight of that
onlooker seemed to fill her with a new terror.
She shrank back from Bill Gregg until her shoulders
were almost pressed against the wall of the house.
And Ronicky saw her head shake, as she denied Bill
the right of advancing farther. Still he pleaded,
and still she ordered him away. Finally Bill Gregg
drew himself up and bowed to her and turned on his
heel.
The girl hesitated a moment.
It seemed to Ronicky, in spite of the fact that she
had just driven Bill Gregg away, as if she were on
the verge of following him to bring him back.
For she made a slight outward gesture with one hand.
If this were in her mind, however,
it vanished instantly. She turned with a shudder
and hurried away down the street.
As for Bill Gregg he bore himself
straight as a soldier and came back across the pavement,
but it was the erectness of a soldier who has met
with a crushing defeat and only preserves an outward
resolution, while all the spirit within is crushed.
Ronicky Doone turned gloomily away
from the window and listened to the progress of Gregg
up the stairs. What a contrast between the ascent
and the descent! He had literally flown down.
Now his heels clumped out a slow and regular death
march, as he came back to the room.
When Gregg opened the door Ronicky
Doone blinked and drew in a deep breath at the sight
of the poor fellow’s face. Gregg had known
before that he truly loved this girl whom he had never
seen, but he had never dreamed what the strength of
that love was. Now, in the very moment of seeing
his dream of the girl turned into flesh and blood,
he had lost her, and there was something like death
in the face of the big miner as he dropped his hat
on the floor and sank into a chair.
After that he did not move so much
as a finger from the position into which he had fallen
limply. His legs were twisted awkwardly, sprawling
across the floor in front of him; one long arm dragged
down toward the floor, as if there was no strength
in it to support the weight of the labor-hardened
hands; his chin was fallen against his breast.
When Ronicky Doone crossed to him
and laid a kind hand on his shoulder he did not look
up. “It’s ended,” said Bill
Gregg faintly. “Now we hit the back trail
and forget all about this.” He added with
a faint attempt at cynicism: “I’ve
just wasted a pile of good money-making time from
the mine, that’s all.”
“H’m!” said Ronicky
Doone. “Bill, look me in the eye and tell
me, man to man, that you’re a liar!” He
added: “Can you ever be happy without her,
man?”
The cruelty of that speech made Gregg
flush and look up sharply. This was exactly what
Ronicky Doone wanted.
“I guess they ain’t any
use talking about that part of it,” said Gregg
huskily.
“Ain’t there? That’s
where you and me don’t agree! Why, Bill,
look at the way things have gone! You start out
with a photograph of a girl. Now you’ve
followed her, found her name, tracked her clear across
the continent and know her street address, and you’ve
given her a chance to see your own face. Ain’t
that something done? After you’ve done all
that are you going to give up now? Not you, Bill!
You’re going to buck up and go ahead full steam.
Eh?”
Bill Gregg smiled sourly. “D’you
know what she said when I come rushing up and saying:
‘I’m Bill Gregg!’ D’you know
what she said?”
“Well?”
“‘Bill Gregg?’ she says. ‘I
don’t remember any such name!’
“That took the wind out of me.
I only had enough left to say: ’The gent
that was writing those papers to the correspondence
school to you from the West, the one you sent your
picture to and—’
“‘Sent my picture to!’
she says and looks as if the ground had opened under
her feet. ‘You’re mad!’ she
says. And then she looks back over her shoulder
as much as to wish she was safe back in her house!”
“D’you know why she looked back over her
shoulder?”
“Just for the reason I told you.”
“No, Bill. There was a
gent standing up there at a window watching her and
how she acted. He’s the gent that kept her
from writing to you and signing her name. He’s
the one who’s kept her in that house. He’s
the one that knew we were here watching all the time,
that sent out the girl with exact orders how she should
act if you was to come out and speak to her when you
seen her! Bill, what that girl told you didn’t
come out of her own head. It come out of the head
of the gent across the way. When you turned your
back on her she looked like she’d run after
you and try to explain. But the fear of that fellow
up in the window was too much for her, and she didn’t
dare. Bill, to get at the girl you got to get
that gent I seen grinning from the window.”
“Grinning?” asked Bill
Gregg, grinding his teeth and starting from his chair.
“Was the skunk laughing at me?”
“Sure! Every minute.”
Bill Gregg groaned. “I’ll smash every
bone in his ugly head.”
“Shake!” said Ronicky
Doone. “That’s the sort of talk I
wanted to hear, and I’ll help, Bill. Unless
I’m away wrong, it’ll take the best that
you and me can do, working together, to put that gent
down!”