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CHAPTER VII
THE GRAY FRIAR
So confident was Elaine that Kennedy was still alive that she would not admit to herself what to the rest of us seemed obvious.
She even refused to accept Aunt Josephine's hints and decided to give a masquerade ball which she had planned as the last event of the season before she closed the Dodge town house and opened her country house on the sh.o.r.e of Connecticut.
It was shortly after the strange appearance of the fussy old gentleman that I dropped in one afternoon to find Elaine addressing invitations, while Aunt Josephine helped her. As we chatted, I picked up one from the pile and mechanically contemplated the address:
"M. Del Mar, Hotel La Coste, New York City."
"I don't like that fellow," I remarked, shaking my head dubiously.
"Oh, you're--jealous, Walter," laughed Elaine, taking the envelope away from me and piling it again with the others.
Thus it was that in the morning's mail, Del Mar, along with the rest of us, received a neatly engraved little invitation:
Miss Elaine Dodge requests the pleasure of your presence at the masquerade ball to be given at her residence on Friday evening June 1st.
"Good!" he exclaimed, reaching for the telephone, "I'll go."
In a restaurant in the white light district two of those who had been engaged in the preliminary plot to steal Kennedy's wireless torpedo model, the young woman stenographer who had betrayed her trust and the man to whom she had pa.s.sed the model out of the window in Washington, were seated at a table.
So secret had been the relations of all those in the plot that one group did not know the other and the strangest methods of communication had been adopted.
The man removed a cover from a dish. Underneath, perhaps without even the waiter's knowledge, was a note.
"Here are the orders at last," he whispered to the girl, unfolding and reading the note. "Look. The model of the torpedo is somewhere in her house. Go to-night to the ball as a masquerader and search for it."
"Oh, splendid!" exclaimed the girl. "I'm crazy for a little society after this grind. Pay the check and let's get out and choose our costumes."
The man paid the check and they left hurriedly. Half an hour later they were at a costumer's shop choosing their disguises, both careful to get the fullest masks that would not excite suspicion.
It was the night of the masquerade.
During the afternoon Elaine had been thinking more than ever of Kennedy. It all seemed unreal to her. More than once she stopped to look at his photograph. Several times she checked herself on the point of tears.
"No," she said to herself with a sort of grim determination. "No--he IS alive. He will come back to me--he WILL."
And yet she had a feeling of terrific loneliness which even her most powerful efforts could not throw off. She was determined to go through with the ball, now that she had started it, but she was really glad when it came time to dress, for even that took her mind from her brooding.
As Marie finished helping her put on a very effective and conspicuous costume, Aunt Josephine entered her dressing-room.
"Are you ready, my dear?" she asked, adjusting the mask which she carried so that no one would recognize her as Martha Washington.
"In just a minute, Auntie," answered Elaine, trying hard to put out of her mind how Craig would have liked her dress.
Somewhat earlier, in my own apartment, I had been arraying myself as Boum-Boum and modestly admiring the imitation I made of a circus clown as I did a couple of comedy steps before the mirror.
But I was not really so light-hearted. I could not help thinking of what this night might have been if Kennedy had been alive. Indeed, I was glad to take up my white mask, throw a long coat over my outlandish costume and hurry off in my waiting car in order to forget everything that reminded me of him in the apartment.
Already a continuous stream of guests was trickling in through the canopy from the curb to the Dodge door, carriages and automobiles arriving and leaving amid great gaping from the crowd on the sidewalk.
As I entered the ballroom it was really a brilliant and picturesque a.s.semblage. Of course I recognized Elaine in spite of her mask, almost immediately.
Characteristically, she was talking to the one most striking figure on the floor, a tall man in red--a veritable Mephistopheles. As the music started, Elaine and his Satanic Majesty laughingly fox-trotted off but were not lost to me in the throng.
I soon found myself talking to a young lady in a spotted domino. She seemed to have a peculiar fascination for me, yet she did not monopolize all my attention. As we trotted past the door, I could see down the hall. Jennings was still admitting late arrivals, and I caught a glimpse of one costumed as a gray friar, his cowl over his head and his eyes masked.
Chatting, we had circled about to the conservatory. A number of couples were there and, through the palms, I saw Elaine and Mephisto laughingly make their way.
As my spotted domino partner and I swung around again, I happened to catch another glimpse of the gray friar. He was not dancing, but walking, or rather stalking, about the edge of the room, gazing about as if searching for some one.
In the conservatory, Elaine and Mephisto had seated themselves in the breeze of an open window, somewhat in the shadow.
"You are Miss Dodge," he said earnestly.
"You knew me?" she laughed. "And you?"
He raised his mask, disclosing the handsome face and fascinating eyes of Del Mar.
"I hope you don't think I'm here in character," he laughed easily, as she started a bit.
"I--I--well, I didn't think it was you," she blurted out.
"Ah--then there is some one else you care more to dance with?"
"No--no one--no."
"I may hope, then?"
He had moved closer and almost touched her hand. The pointed hood of the gray friar in the palms showed that at last he saw what he sought.
"No--no. Please--excuse me," she murmured rising and hurrying back to the ballroom.
A subtle smile spread over the gray friar's masked face.
Of course I had known Elaine. Whether she knew me at once I don't know or whether it was an accident, but she approached me as I paused in the dance a moment with my domino girl.
"From the--sublime--to the ridiculous," she cried excitedly.
My partner gave her a sharp glance. "You will excuse me?" she said, and, as I bowed, almost ran off to the conservatory, leaving Elaine to dance off with me.
Del Mar, quite surprised at the sudden flight of Elaine from his side, followed more slowly through the palms.