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The detective had barely made his change, when he heard the low voice of Busby near by, the friend who had smuggled him upon the stage that evening.
"Hist! There she is, Chick!"
"Cervera?"
"Yes. Down yonder, just to the right of the electric switchboard. Slip in back of this wood wing, and you can have a good look at her."
"All right, Busby, old man," whispered Chick. "Don't you pay too much attention to me, or it may be noticed. I'll see all there is to be seen, old boy."
Busby winked understandingly, and Chick stepped back of the scenery mentioned, through a portion of which he could easily watch Cervera un.o.bserved.
That she was a daughter of sunny Spain no man would have doubted. Her wavy hair was as dark as night, and her eyes were as radiant as the night stars. Her rich, olive complexion was much rouged, adding to the brilliancy of her splendid beauty.
She appeared to be about twenty-five, and was clad in her stage costume, which combined all the bright hues of the rainbow, and was enlivened by a myriad of dazzling jewels and diamonds.
The costume served to display to advantage her matchless figure, however, and Chick was fain to admit that he had never seen a much more striking beauty.
"She's a bird, all right, and no mistake," he said to himself, while intently regarding her handsome face and jewel-bedecked figure. "Yet she has a bad eye, despite her beauty, and a cruel mouth. She certainly would put up a wicked fight, if once aroused. Yes, a deucedly bad eye!
What in thunder is she staring at, to look like that!"
From her position near one of the lower wings, Sanetta Cervera was gazing steadfastly across the stage at something which Chick could not see.
The dark eyes of the Spanish dancer had taken on a threatening glare.
Her curved brows had drooped and knit, until they formed a straight line below her forehead, and her red lips were drawn and firmly compressed.
Before Chick could discover any occasion for this mute display of feeling, the performance in front of the set scene concluded, and the act of the snake charmer was due to begin.
Then came a rapid change of scenery, during which Chick was again obliged to change his position, and for a time he lost sight of Cervera in the stir and confusion of the busy stage.
He did not succeed in locating her again until she began her performance, when a full stage was given her for the marvelously graceful and impa.s.sioned dances of which her act consisted, and which had fairly turned half the heads in the city.
In the white glare of the limelight, she certainly presented a wild and dazzling picture. Her beauty was indescribably accentuated. She appeared like a being ablaze with diamonds. Her every att.i.tude was one of seductive grace, her every movement as swift and light as those of a startled leopard.
At its conclusion her act evoked thunders of applause, and then Chick saw her hastening toward her dressing room, flushed with excitement and panting for breath.
Suddenly she halted and her smile vanished.
Then Chick saw her turn abruptly toward one of the wing scenes, where she met Venner face to face.
The wealthy Fifth Avenue jeweler laughed and extended his hand to greet her, but she frowned and hesitated before accepting it; and Chick made a quick move and stole back of the scenery, near which the two briefly remained standing.
He arrived in time to overhear only a few words, however, of which he could make nothing bearing upon the diamond robbery, or relating to the Kilgore gang.
"Pshaw! You are entirely wrong, Sanetta," Venner was expostulating, with voice lowered. "Your eyes have deceived you."
The woman replied through her teeth, with a hiss like that of a snake.
"My eyes deceived me? Never! You lie! I know what I see!" she fiercely answered, with but a slight foreign accent.
"You are wrong, Cervera," protested Venner. "I--"
"I am not! I see--and I know!"
"But--"
"_Caramba!_ I say you shall go with me!"
"Why, certainly, if you wish it. Am I not here for that?"
"You know that I wish it--and you shall go."
"Whenever you are ready, Sanetta," replied Venner. "Yet your infernal--"
"Silence! You shall wait here till I have changed my suit. Then we will go--we will go together. You shall wait here."
"Go and make the change, then," said Venner, bluntly. "I will be here when you return."
"H'm!" thought Chick, as he heard Cervera move quickly away. "Evidently there is something amiss between them, but what the d.i.c.kens is it?"
Still watching, he soon saw Cervera return in her street attire, when Venner quickly gave her his arm, and they departed by the stairs leading to the stage door.
Chick immediately recalled Nick's instructions--that the couple should now be left to him.
CHAPTER VI.
A SHOT IN THE DARK.
It was nearly eleven o'clock when Rufus Venner and Cervera, the latter enveloped in a voluminous black cloak, emerged from the stage door of the theater.
As they made their way through the paved area leading out to the side street, where a carriage was awaiting them, a st.u.r.dy, roughly clad fellow in a red wig and croppy beard suddenly slouched out of a gloomy corner near the stage stairway and followed them, with movements as stealthy and silent as those of a cat.
As the carriage containing Venner and the dancer rapidly whirled away, this rough fellow darted swiftly across the street, and approached a waiting cab, the door of which stood open.
"After them, Patsy!" he softly cried, as he sprang in and closed the door.
The driver of the cab was one of Nick Carter's youthful yet exceedingly clever a.s.sistants, and the rough fellow was Nick himself.
He had left the theater the moment Cervera concluded her performance, and since had completed a perfect disguise in the cab, which he had had in waiting, with all the properties for effecting the change mentioned.
That Patsy would constantly keep their quarry in view, and without being suspected, Nick had not a doubt. Nor was he mistaken. At the end of twenty minutes the clever young driver slowed down upon approaching an uptown corner, and signaled Nick to get out.
The detective alighted from the door on the side from which he had received the signal, yet the cab did not stop. Nick trotted along beside the vehicle for a rod or two, keeping it between him and the side street into which Patsy quickly signed that the hack had turned.
"Fourth house on the right," he softly cried. "I saw them pull up at it just as I reached the corner, so I kept right on up the avenue. They've not gone in yet."