Elusive Isabel, by Jacques Futrelle (17 page)

She rose and extended both hands graciously. Mr. Grimm seized the slender white fingers and stood with eyes fixed upon hers. Slowly a flush crept into her pallid cheeks, and she bowed her head.

“Wonderful woman!” he said softly.

“I shall ask a favor of you now,” she went on gently. “Let all this that you have learned take the place of whatever you expected to learn, and go. Believe me, there can only be one result if you meet—if you meet the inventor of the wireless cap upon which so much was staked, and so much lost.” She shuddered a little, then raised the blue-gray eyes beseechingly to his face. “Please go.”

Go! The word straightened Mr. Grimm in his tracks and he allowed her hands to fall limply. Suddenly his face grew hard. In the ecstasy of adoration he had momentarily forgotten his purpose here. His eyes lost their ardor; his nerveless hands dropped beside him.

“No,” he said.

“You must—you must,” she urged gently. “I know what it means to you. You feel it your duty to unravel the secret of the percussion cap? You can’t; no man can. No one knows the inventor more intimately than I, and even I couldn’t get it from him. There are no plans for it in existence, and even if there were he would no more sell them than you would have accepted a fortune at the hands of Prince d’Abruzzi to remain silent. The compact has failed; you did that. The agents have scattered—gone to other duties. That is enough.”

“No,” said Mr. Grimm. There was a strange fear tearing at his heart,—“No one knows the inventor more intimately than I.” “No,” he said again. “I won from my government a promise to be made good upon a condition—I must fulfil that condition.”

“But there is nothing, promotion, honor, reward, that would compensate you for the loss of your life,” she entreated. “There is still time.” She was pleading now, with her slim white hands resting on his shoulders, and the blue-gray eyes fixed upon his face.

“It’s more than all that,” he said. “That condition is you—your safety.”

“For me?” she repeated. “For me? Then, won’t you go for—for my sake?”

“No.”

“Won’t you go if you know you will be killed,” and suddenly her face turned scarlet, “and that your life is dear to me?”

“No.”

Isabel dropped upon her knees before him.

“This inventor—this man whom you insist on seeing is half insane with disappointment and anger,” she rushed on desperately. “Remember that a vast fortune, honor, fame were at his finger tips when you—you placed them beyond his reach by the destruction of the compact. He has sworn to kill you.”

“I can’t go!”

“If you
know
that when you meet one of you will die?”

“No.” The answer came fiercely, through clenched teeth. Mr. Grimm disengaged his right hand and drew his revolver; the barrel clicked under his fingers as it spun.

“If I tell you that of the two human beings in this world whom I love this man is one?”

“No.”

A shuffling step sounded in the hallway just outside. Mr. Grimm stepped back from the kneeling figure, and turned to face the door with his revolver ready.

“Great God!” It was a scream of agony. “He is my brother! Don’t you see?”

She came to her feet and went staggering across to the door. The key clicked in the lock.

“Your brother!” exclaimed Mr. Grimm.

“He wouldn’t listen to me—
you
wouldn’t listen to me, and now—and
now
! God have mercy!”

There was a sharp rattling, a clamor at the door, and Isabel turned to Mr. Grimm mutely, with arms outstretched. The revolver barrel clicked under his hand, then, after a moment, he replaced the weapon in his pocket.

“Please open the door,” he requested quietly.

“He’ll kill you!” she screamed.

Exhausted, helpless, she leaned against a chair with her face in her hands. Mr. Grimm went to her suddenly, tore the hands from her face, and met the tear-stained eyes.

“I love you,” he said. “I want you to know that!”

“And I love you—that’s why it matters so.”

Leaving her there, Mr. Grimm strode straight to the door and threw it open. He saw only the outline of a thin little man of indeterminate age, then came a blinding flash under his eyes, and he leaped forward. There was a short, sharp struggle, and both went down. The revolver! He must get that! He reached for it with the one idea of disarming this madman. The muzzle was thrust toward him, he threw up his arm to protect his head, and then came a second flash. Instantly he felt the figure in his arms grow limp; and after a moment he rose. The face of the man on the floor was pearly gray; and a thin, scarlet thread flowed from his temple.

[Illustration: In a stride Mr. Grimm was beside her.]

He turned toward Isabel. She lay near the chair, a little crumpled heap. In a stride he was beside her, and had lifted her head to his knee. The blue-gray eyes opened into his once, then they closed. She had fainted. The first bullet had pierced her arm; it was only a flesh wound. He lifted her gently and placed her on a couch, after which he disappeared into another room. In a little while there came the cheerful ting-a-ling of a telephone bell.

“Is this the county constable’s office?” he inquired. “Well, there’s been a little shooting accident at the Murdock Williams’ place, five miles out from Alexandria on the old Baltimore Road. Please send some of your men over to take charge. Two hours from now call up Mr. Grimm at Secret Service headquarters in Washington and he will explain. Good-by.”

And a few minutes later Mr. Grimm walked along the road toward an automobile a hundred yards away, bearing Miss Thorne in his arms. The chauffeur cranked the machine and climbed to his seat.

“Washington!” directed Mr. Grimm. “Never mind the speed laws.”

THE END

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