<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI" />CHAPTER VI</h2>
<h3>THE FIRST POWER</h3>
<p>After their rencontre with the Unknown, Hamar and his companions did not
get back to their respective quarters till the sun was high in the
heavens, and the streets of the city were beginning to vibrate with the
rattle and clatter of traffic.</p>
<p>"It's all very well—this wonderful compact of ours," Curtis grumbled,
"but I'm deuced hungry, and Matt and I haven't a cent between us. As we
went all that way last night to oblige you, Leon, I think it is only
fair you should stand us treat. I'll bet you have some nickels stowed
away, somewhere, in those pockets of yours—it wouldn't be you if you
hadn't! What do you say, Matt?"</p>
<p>"I think as you do," Kelson replied. "We've stood by Leon, he should
stand by us. How much have you, Leon?"</p>
<p>"How much have you?" Curtis echoed, "come, out with it—no jew-jewing
pals for me."</p>
<p>"I might manage a dollar," Hamar said ruefully, as the prospect of a
good meal all to himself, at his favourite restaurant, faded away.
"Where shall we go?"</p>
<p>Just then, Kelson, happening to look behind him, saw a young woman of
prepossessing appearance ascending the steps of a dive in Clay Street.
He was instantly attracted, as he always was attracted by a pretty
woman, and something—a kind of intuition he had never had before—told
him that she was a waitress; that she was discontented with her present
situation; that she was engaged to be married to a pen driver at
Hastings & Hastings in Sacramento Street; and that she had a mother, of
over seventy, whom she kept. All this came to Kelson like a flash of
lightning.</p>
<p>Yielding to an impulse which he did not stay to analyse, he gripped
Hamar and Curtis, each too astonished even to remonstrate, by the arm,
and, dragging them along with him, followed the girl.</p>
<p>The dive had only just been opened, and was being dusted and swept by
two slatternly women with dago complexions, and voices like hyenas. It
still reeked of stale drink and tobacco.</p>
<p>"What's the good of coming to a place like this?" Hamar demanded, as
soon as he had freed himself from Kelson's clutches. "We can't get
breakfast here."</p>
<p>"Matt's mad, that's what's the matter with him," Curtis added in
disgust. "Let's get out."</p>
<p>He turned to go—then, halted—and stood still. He appeared to be
listening. "What's up with you?" Hamar asked. "Both you fellows are
behaving like lunatics this morning—there's not a pin to choose between
you."</p>
<p>"They're playing cards, that's all," Curtis said. "Can't you hear them?"</p>
<p>Hamar shook his head. "Not a sound," he said. "Just look at Matt!"</p>
<p>While the other two were talking, Kelson had followed the girl to the
bar, and catching her up, just as she entered it, said in a manner that
was peculiar to him—a manner seldom without effect upon girls of his
class—"I beg your pardon, miss, are we too early to be served?
Jerusalem! Haven't I met you somewhere before?"</p>
<p>The girl looked him square in the eyes and then smiled. "As like as
not," she said. "I go pretty near everywhere! What do you want?"</p>
<p>"Well!" Kelson soliloquized; "breakfast is what we are particularly
anxious for—but I suppose that is out of the question in a dive!"</p>
<p>"Then why did you come here?" the girl queried.</p>
<p>"Because of you! Simply because of you," Kelson replied. "You hypnotized
me!"</p>
<p>"That being so, then I reckon you can have your breakfast," the girl
laughed, "though we don't provide them as a rule before nine. Indeed,
the management have only just decided—this morning—on providing them
at all."</p>
<p>"How odd!"</p>
<p>"Why odd?" the girl questioned, taking off her hat and arranging her
curls before a mirror.</p>
<p>"Why, that I should have happened to strike the right moment! Had I come
here yesterday it would have been useless. As I said, you hypnotized me.
Evidently fate intended us to meet."</p>
<p>"Do you believe in fate?" the girl asked, shrugging her shoulders. "I
believe in nothing—least of all in men!"</p>
<p>"You say so!" Kelson observed, before he knew what he was saying. "And
yet you have just got engaged to one. But you've got a bad attack of the
pip this morning, you have had enough of it here—you want to get
another post."</p>
<p>The girl ceased doing her hair and eyed him in amazement. "Well!" she
said. "Of all the queer men I've ever met you are the queerest. Are you
a seer?"</p>
<p>"No!" Hamar observed, suddenly joining in. "He's only very hungry, miss.
Hungry body and soul! hungry all over. And so are we."</p>
<p>"Well, then, go into the room over there," the girl cried, pointing in
the direction of a half-open door, "and breakfast will be brought you in
half a jiffy."</p>
<p>"Who's that playing cards?" Curtis asked.</p>
<p>"How do you know any one is playing cards?" the girl queried with an
incredulous stare. "You can't see through walls, can you?"</p>
<p>"No! and I'm hanged if I can explain," Curtis said, "I seem to hear
them. There are two—one is called Arnold, and the other Lemon, or some
such name, and they are rehearsing certain card tricks they mean to play
to-night."</p>
<p>"That's right," the girl said, "two men named Arnold and Lemon are here.
They were playing all last night with two of the clerks in Willows Bank,
in Sacramento Street, and they cleared them out of every cent. You knew
it!"</p>
<p>"No! I didn't," Curtis growled, "I don't lie for fun, and I'm just as
much in a fog, as to how I know, as you are. Let's have breakfast now,
and we'll look up these two gents afterwards, if they haven't gone."</p>
<p>"Your friend's a brute, I don't like him," the girl whispered to Kelson.
"Let him lose all he's got—you stay out here."</p>
<p>"Nothing I should like better," Kelson said, "it's a bargain!"</p>
<p>The breakfast was so good that they lingered long over it, and the
bar-room had a fair sprinkling of people when they re-entered it.
Leaving Kelson to chat with the girl, Hamar and Curtis, obeying her
directions, found their way to a small parlour in the rear of the
building, where two men were lolling over a card table, smoking and
drinking, and reading aloud extracts from a pink sporting paper.</p>
<p>"It's a funny thing," one of them exclaimed, "we can't be allowed to sit
here in peace—when there's so much spare space in the house."</p>
<p>"We beg your pardon for intruding," Curtis said, "but my friend and I
came in here for a quiet game of cards. We're farmers down Missouri way,
and don't often get the chance to run up to town."</p>
<p>"Farmers, are you!" the man who had not yet spoken said, eyeing them
both closely. "You don't look it. My friend Lemon, here, and I were also
wanting to have a game—would you care to join us?"</p>
<p>"By all means," Curtis at once exclaimed. "What do you play?"</p>
<p>"Poker!" the man said, "Nap! Don! But I'll show you something first,
which, being fresh from the country, you've probably never seen before,
though they do tell me people in Missouri are mighty cute." He then
proceeded to show them what he called the Bull and Buffalo trick, the
secret of which he offered to sell them for ten dollars.</p>
<p>"I wouldn't give you a cent for it!" Curtis snapped. "Any one can see
how it is done."</p>
<p>"You can't!" the man retorted, turning red. "I'll wager twenty dollars
you can't." Curtis accepted the wager, and at once did the trick. He had
seen through it at a glance—there appeared no difficulty in it at all;
and yet he was quite certain if he had been asked to do it the day
before, he would have utterly failed.</p>
<p>"Now," he said, "give me the money,"—and the man complied with an oath.</p>
<p>"Any more tricks?" Curtis asked complacently.</p>
<p>"I know heaps," the man rejoined. "There's one you won't guess—the
seven card trick."</p>
<p>He did it. And so did Curtis.</p>
<p>"Well I'm——" the man called Lemon ejaculated.</p>
<p>"He's the dandiest cove at tricks we've ever struck. Try him with the
Prince and Slipper, Arnold!"</p>
<p>Arnold rather reluctantly assented, and Curtis burst out laughing.</p>
<p>"Why!" he said, "that's the simplest of all! See!" And it was done. "You
two had better come to an understanding with us or you'll not shine
to-night. How about a game of Don?"</p>
<p>Lemon and Arnold agreed, but they had barely begun before Curtis cried
out, "It's no use, Lemon, I can see those deuces up your sleeve. You've
some up yours, too, Arnold—the deuce of clubs and the deuce of hearts.
Moreover, you can tell our cards by notches and thumb smears on the
backs. I'll show you how." He told the cards correctly—there was no
gainsaying it. The men were overwhelmed.</p>
<p>"What are you, anyway?" Lemon asked; "tecs?"</p>
<p>"Never mind what we are!" Curtis said savagely. "We know what you
are—and that's where the rub comes in. Now what are you going to pay us
to hold our tongues?"</p>
<p>"Pay you!" Lemon hissed. "Why, damn you—nothing. We're not bankers. All
we've got to do is clear out and try somewhere else."</p>
<p>"That might not be so easy as you imagine," Hamar interposed. "We would
make it our business to have a scene first. Why not come to terms?
We'll not be over exorbitant—and consider the convenience of not having
to shift your quarters."</p>
<p>"Well, of all the blooming frousts I've struck, none beats this," Lemon
said. "Fancy being pipped by a couple of suckers like these. Farmers,
indeed! Why don't you call yourselves parsons? How much do you want?"</p>
<p>After a prolonged haggling, Hamar and Curtis agreed to take fifty
dollars; and, considering their penniless condition, they were by no
means dissatisfied with their bargain.</p>
<p>They were now ready to go, and looking round for Kelson, found him
engaged in a desperate <i>tête-à-tête</i> with the young lady at the bar,
who, despite her avowed lack of faith in mankind, counted half the room
her friends. She promised Kelson that she would meet him at eight
o'clock that evening; but as both she and he were quite used to making
such promises and subsequently forgetting all about them, their
rencontre resulted in only one thing, namely, in furnishing the three
allies with the nucleus of the big fortune they intended making.</p>
<p>On finding themselves outside the dive Hamar, Curtis and Kelson first of
all divided the spoil. They then went to a clothes depot and rigged
themselves out in fashionably cut garments; after which they took rooms
at a presentable hotel in Kearney Street, next door to Knobble's boot
store. Then, dressed for the first time in their lives like Nob Hill
dukes, they paraded the pet resorts of the beau-monde—of the bonanza
and railroad set—and making eyes at all the pretty wives and daughters
they met, cogitated fresh devices for making money. As they sauntered
across Pacific Avenue, in the direction of Californian Street, Kelson
suddenly gave vent to a whistle.</p>
<p>"What the deuce is wrong with you?" Hamar exclaimed. "Seen your
grandmother's ghost?"</p>
<p>"No! but I've seen the inner readings of that lady yonder," Kelson
replied, indicating with a jerk of his finger a fashionably dressed
woman walking towards them on the other side of the road. "The deuce
knows how it all comes to me, but I know everything about her, just the
same as I did with the girl in the dive—though I've never seen her
before. She is the wife of D.D. Belton, the cotton magnate, who lives
in a big, white house at the corner of Powell Street—and a beauty, I
can assure you. Supposed to be most devoted to her husband, she is now
on her way to keep an appointment with the Rev. J.T. Calthorpe of
Sancta Maria's Church in Appleyard Street, with whom she has been
holding clandestine meetings for the past six months."</p>
<p>"Whew!" Hamar ejaculated. "You speak as if it was all being pumped into
you by some external agency—automatically."</p>
<p>"That's just about what I feel!" Kelson said, "I feel as if it were some
one else saying all this—some one else speaking through me. Yet I know
all about that woman, just as much as if I had been acquainted with her
all my life!"</p>
<p>"It's the first power," Hamar said excitedly, "the power of divination.
It takes that form with you, and the form of card tricks with Ed—with
me nothing so far."</p>
<p>"But what shall I do?" Kelson cried. "How can I benefit by it?"</p>
<p>"How can't you?" Curtis growled. "Why, blackmail her! If it is true,
she will pay you anything to keep your mouth shut. If once you can tell
a woman's secret, your future's made. All San Francisco will be at your
mercy—God knows who'll escape! After her at once, you idiot!"</p>
<p>"Now?" Kelson gasped.</p>
<p>"Yes! Now! Follow her to Calthorpe's and waylay her as she comes out.
You can refer to us as witnesses."</p>
<p>"I feel a bit of a blackguard," Kelson pleaded.</p>
<p>"You look it, anyway," Curtis grinned. "But cheer up—it's the clothes.
Clothes are responsible for everything!"</p>
<p>After a little persuasion Kelson gave in, but he had to make haste as
the lady was nearly out of sight. She took a taxi from the stand
opposite Kitson's hotel, and Kelson took one, too. Two hours later,
raising his hat, he accosted her as she stood tapping the pavement of
Battery Street with a daintily shod foot, waiting to cross. "Mrs.
Belton, I think," he said. The lady eyed him coldly.</p>
<p>"Well!" she said, "what do you want? Who are you?"</p>
<p>"My name can scarcely matter to you," Kelson responded, "though my
business may. I have been engaged to watch you, and am fully posted as
to your meetings and correspondence with the Rev. J.T. Calthorpe."</p>
<p>"I don't understand you," the lady said, her cheeks flaming. "You have
made a mistake—a very serious mistake for you."</p>
<p>For a moment Kelson's heart failed. He was still a clerk, with all the
humility of an office stool and shining trousers' seat thick on him,
whilst she was a <i>grande dame</i> accustomed to the bows and scrapes of
employers as well as employed.</p>
<p>Several people passed by and stared at him—as he thought—suspiciously,
and he felt that this was the most critical time in his life, and unless
he pulled through, smartly in fact, he would be done once and for all.
If he didn't make haste, too, the woman would undoubtedly call a
policeman. It was this thought as well as—though, perhaps, hardly as
much as—the look of her that stimulated Kelson to action. He hated
behaving badly to women; but was this thing, dressed in a skirt that
fitted like a glove and showed up every detail of her figure—this thing
with the paint on her cheeks, and eyebrows, and lips—artistically done,
perhaps, but done all the same—this thing all loaded with jewellery and
buttons—this thing—a woman! No! She was not—she was only a
millionaire's plaything—brainless, heartless—a hobby that cost
thousands, whilst countless men such as he—starved. He
detested—abominated such luxuries! And thus nerved he retorted,
borrowing some of her imperiousness—</p>
<p>"Do you deny, madam, that for the past two hours you've been sitting on
the sofa of the end room of the third floor of No. 216, Market Street,
flirting with the Rev. J.T. Calthorpe, whom you call 'Mickey-moo'; that
you gave him a photo you had taken at Bell's Studio in Clay Street,
specially for him; that you gave him five greenbacks to the value of one
hundred and fifty dollars, and that you've planned a moonlight promenade
with him to-morrow, when your husband will be in Denver?"</p>
<p>"Don't talk so loud," the lady said in a low voice. "Walk along with me
a little and then we shan't be noticed. I see you do know a good
deal—how, I can't imagine, unless you were hidden somewhere in the
room. Who has employed you to watch me?"</p>
<p>"That, madam, I can't say," Kelson truthfully responded.</p>
<p>"And I can't think," the lady said, "unless it is some woman enemy. But,
after all, you can't do much since you hold no proofs—your word alone
will count for nothing."</p>
<p>"Ah, but I have strong corroborative evidence," Kelson retorted. "I have
the testimony of at least two other people who know quite as much as I
do."</p>
<p>"Adventurers like yourself," the lady sneered. "My husband would neither
believe you nor your friends."</p>
<p>"He would believe your letters, any way," said Kelson.</p>
<p>"My letters!" the lady laughed, "You've no letters of mine."</p>
<p>"No, but I know where the correspondence that has passed between you and
the Rev. J. T. Calthorpe is to be found. He has sixty-nine letters from
you all tied up in pink ribbon, locked up in the bottom drawer of the
bureau in his study at the Vicarage. Some of the letters begin with
'Dearest, duckiest, handsomest Herby'—short for Herbert; and others,
'Fondest, blondest, darlingest Micky-moo!' Some end with 'A thousand and
one kisses from your loving and ever devoted Francesca,' and others with
'Love and kisses ad infinitum, ever your loving, thirsting, adoring one,
Toosie!' Nice letters from the wife of a respectable Nob Hill magnate to
a married clergyman!"</p>
<p>The lady walked a trifle unsteadily, and much of her colour was gone.
"I can't understand it," she panted; "somebody has played me false."</p>
<p>"As the Rev. J.T. Calthorpe is on his way to Sacramento, where he has to
remain till to-morrow," Kelson went on pitilessly, "it will be the
easiest thing in the world to get those letters. I have merely to call
at the house and tell his wife."</p>
<p>"And what good will that do you?" the lady asked.</p>
<p>"Revenge! I hate the rich," Kelson said. "I would do anything to injure
them."</p>
<p>"You are a Socialist?"</p>
<p>"An Anarchist! But come, you see I know all about you and that I have
you completely in my power. If once either your husband or Mrs.
Calthorpe gets hold of those letters—you and your lover would have a
very unpleasant time of it."</p>
<p>"You're a devil!"</p>
<p>"Maybe I am—at all events I'm talking to one. But that's neither here
nor there. I want money. Give me a thousand dollars and you'll never
hear from me again."</p>
<p>"Blackmail! I could have you arrested!"</p>
<p>"Yes, and I would tell the court the whole history of your intrigues!
That wouldn't help you,"—and Kelson laughed.</p>
<p>"Could I count on you not molesting me again if I were to pay you?" the
lady said mockingly.</p>
<p>"You could."</p>
<p>"Do you ever speak the truth?"</p>
<p>"You needn't judge every one by your own standard of morality—the
standard set up by the millionaire's wife," Kelson said. "I swear that
if you pay me a thousand dollars I will never trouble you again."</p>
<p>The lady grew thoughtful, and for some minutes neither of them spoke.
Then she suddenly jerked out: "I think, after all, I'll accept your
proposal. Wait outside here and you shall have what you want within an
hour."</p>
<p>"Not good enough," Kelson said, "I prefer to come with you to your house
and wait there."</p>
<p>The lady protested, and Kelson consented to wait in the street outside
her house, where, eventually, she delivered the money into his hands.</p>
<p>"I've kept my word," she said, "and if you're half a man you'll keep
yours."</p>
<p>Kelson reassured her, and more than pleased with himself, made for the
hotel, where the three of them were now stopping.</p>
<p>This was merely a beginning. Before the day was out he had secured two
more victims. No woman whose character was not without blemish was safe
from him—his wonderful newly acquired gift enabling him to detect any
vice, no matter how snugly hidden. And this wonderful power of
discernment brought with it an expression of mystery and penetration
which, by enhancing the effect of the power, made the application of it
comparatively easy. Kelson had only to glide after his victim, and with
his eyes fixed searchingly on her, to say, "Madam, may I have a word
with you?"—and the battle was more than half won—the women were too
fascinated to think of resistance.</p>
<p>For example, shortly after his initial adventure, he saw a very smartly
dressed woman in Van Ness Avenue peep about furtively, and then stop and
speak to a little child, who was walking with its nurse. Divination at
once told him everything—the lady was the mother of the child, but its
father was not her legitimate husband, W.S. Hobson, the millionaire
mine owner.</p>
<p>When Kelson courteously informed her he was in possession of her
secret—a secret she had felt positively certain only one other person
knew, she went the colour of her pea-green sunshade and attempted to
remonstrate. But Kelson's appearance, no less than his marvellous
knowledge of her life, and character dumbfounded her—she was simply
paralysed into admission; and before he left her, Kelson had added
another thousand dollars to his hoard.</p>
<p>That evening, close to the Academy of Science in Market Street, he saw a
lady get out of a taxi and quickly enter a pawnbroker's. Her whole life
at once rose up before him. She was Ella Crockford, the wife of the
Californian Street Sugar King, and, unknown to her husband, she spent
her afternoons at a gambling saloon in Kearney Street, where she ran
through thousands.</p>
<p>She was now about to pledge her husband's latest present to her—a
diamond tiara, one of the most notable pieces of jewellery in the
country—in the hope that she would soon win back sufficient money at
cards to redeem it.</p>
<p>Kelson stopped her as she came out, and in a marvellously few words,
proved to her that he knew everything. Her amazement was beyond
description.</p>
<p>"You must be a magician," she said, "because I'm certain no one saw me
take my jewel-case out of the drawer—no one was in the room! And as I
put it in my muff immediately, no one could have seen it as I left the
house. Besides, I never told a soul I intended pawning it, so how is it
possible you could know—and be able to repeat the whole of the
conversation I had with Walter Le-Grand, to whom I lost so heavily last
night? Tell me, how do you know all this?"</p>
<p>But Kelson would tell her nothing—nothing beyond her own sins and
misfortunes.</p>
<p>"I have nothing to give you," she told him. "I dare not ask my husband
for more money."</p>
<p>"What, nothing!" Kelson replied, "When the pawnbroker has just advanced
you fifty thousand dollars. You call that nothing? Be pleased to give me
one thousand, and congratulate yourself that I do not ask for all your
'nothing.'" And as neither tears nor prayers had any effect, she was
obliged to pay him the sum he asked.</p>
<p>Flushed and excited with victory, and thinking, perhaps, that he had
done enough for one day, Kelson took his spoils to a bank near the
Palace Hotel, and for the first time in his career opened a banking
account. As he was leaving the building he ran into Hamar, bent on a
similar errand. The two gleefully compared notes.</p>
<p>"I thought," Hamar said, "my turn would never come, and that I must have
done something to get out of favour with the Unknown; but as I was
sitting in the Pig and Whistle Saloon in Corn Street drinking a lager, I
suddenly felt a peculiar throbbing sensation run up my left leg into my
left hand, and the floor seemed to open up, and I saw deep below me, in
a black pit, a skeleton clutching hold of a linen bag, full of coins. I
could see the gold quite distinctly—Spanish doubles, none newer than
the eighteenth century. I knew then that the Unknown had not forgotten
me. 'Look here, boss,' I said to old man Moss—the proprietor, you
know—'You're a bit of a juggins to go on working with so much money
under here,'—and I pointed to the floor.</p>
<p>"'I'm surprised at you, Hamar,' Moss said, cocking an eye at me, 'and
lager, too!'</p>
<p>"'No, old man!' I said, 'I'm not drunk. I'm sober and serious. You've
got a cellar below here, haven't you?'</p>
<p>"'Well, and what if I have!' Moss retorted, drawing a step closer and
running his eyes carefully over me. 'What if I have! There's no harm in
that, is there?'</p>
<p>"'You keep all your stock down there,' I went on, 'and more beside. I
can see a hat-pin with a gold nob, that's not your wife's, and a pair of
shoes with dandy silver buckles, that's not intended for your wife,
nohow.'</p>
<p>"At that Moss made a queer noise in his throat, and I thought he was
going to have a fit. 'What—what the devil are you talking about?' he
gurgled.</p>
<p>"'I wish I had had you with me—then, Matt, for you could have doubtless
summed up the woman to him—she was a blank to me—I only divined one
had been there. 'Yes, Mr. Mossy,' I said, 'you're a gay deceiver and no
mistake! I know all about it!'</p>
<p>"'Do you,' he said, eyeing me excitedly. 'Do you know all about it? I'm
not so sure, but in order to avoid running any risks, drop your voice a
bit and have a cocktail with me!'</p>
<p>"He poured me out one, and I went on softly, 'Well, boss Moss,' I said,
'we'll leave the female out of the question for the present. Underneath
this cellar of yours, is a pit.'</p>
<p>"'I'm damned if there is!' Moss snorted; 'leastways, it's the first I've
ever heard of it.'</p>
<p>"'And in this pit,' I said, 'is the skeleton of a Spanish buccaneer
called Don Guzman, who landed in this port on August 10, 1699, and after
robbing and slicing up a family of the name of Hervada, who lived on the
site of what is now the Copthorne Hotel, was hurrying off with all their
money and jewels, when he fell into a pit, covered with brambles and
briars, and broke his neck.'</p>
<p>"'And you expect me to believe this cock and bull story,' Moss growled.
'Being out of a job so long has made you balmy.'</p>
<p>"'It hasn't made me too balmy not to see through the way you deceive
your wife, Moss,' I said. 'I'll bet she would think me sane enough if I
were to tell her all I know. But I'll spare you if you will take me into
your cellar and help me to do a bit of excavation there. But promise,
mind you, that we will go shares in what we find.'</p>
<p>"'Oh, I'll promise right enough,' Moss replied. 'I'll promise
anything—if only to keep you from talking such moonshine.'</p>
<p>"Well, in the end I prevailed upon him to accompany me, and we went into
the cellar—just as I had depicted it—armed with a pick-axe and
crowbar. Moss growling and jeering every step he took, and I, deadly in
earnest.</p>
<p>"'It's under here,' I said, halting over a flagstone in the corner of
the vault. 'But before we do anything you had better hide that hat-pin
and these shoes, or your missis will find them. She'll hear us scraping
and come to see what's up.'</p>
<p>"Moss, who was in a vile temper all the time, made a grab at the things,
pricking his finger and swearing horribly. In the meanwhile I had set to
work, and, with his aid, raised the stone. We dug for pretty nearly an
hour, Moss calling upon me all the time to 'chuck it,' when I suddenly
struck something hard—it was the skeleton and close beside it, was the
bag. You should have seen Moss then. He was simply overcome—called me a
wizard, a magician, and heaven alone knows what, and fairly stood on his
head with delight when we opened the bag, and hundreds of gold coins and
precious stones rolled out on the floor. He wanted to go back on his
word then, and only give me a handful; but I was too smart for him, and
swore I would tell his wife about the girl unless he gave me half. When
we were leaving the cellar, of course, he wanted me to go first, so that
he could follow with the pickaxe, but here again I was too sharp for
him—and I got safely out of the place with my pockets bulging. I went
right away to Prescott's in Clay Street, and let the lot go for three
thousand dollars. I wonder how Curtis has got on!"</p>
<p>They walked together to the hotel, and found Curtis busily engaged
eating. "I've worked hard," he said, "and now I'm in for enjoying
myself. I've made them get out a special menu for me, and I'm going to
eat till I can't hold another morsel. I've starved all my life and now I
intend making up for it."</p>
<p>"Been successful?" Hamar asked, winking at Kelson.</p>
<p>"Pretty well! Nothing to grumble at," Curtis rejoined, pouring himself
out a glass of champagne. "First of all I went to Simpson's Dive in
Sacramento Street, and started doing the tricks we discovered yesterday.
Not a soul in the place could see through them, and I made about two
hundred dollars before I left. I then had lunch."</p>
<p>"Why you had lunch with us!" Hamar laughed.</p>
<p>"Well, can't I have as many lunches as I like?" Curtis replied. "I had
lunch, I say, at a place in Market Street, and there I read in a paper
that Peters & Pervis, the tin food people, were offering a prize of
three thousand dollars for a solution to a puzzle contained on the
inside cover of one of their tins. I immediately determined to enter for
it. I bought a tin and saw through the puzzle at once. Bribing a
policeman to go with me to see fair play, off I set to Peters & Pervis'.</p>
<p>"'I want to see your boss,' I said to the first clerk I saw.</p>
<p>"'Which of them?' the clerk grunted, his cheeks turning white at the
sight of the policeman.</p>
<p>"'Either will do,' I replied, 'Peters or Pervis. Trot 'em up, time is
precious.'</p>
<p>"Away he went, but in a couple of minutes was back again, looking
scared, 'They're both engaged,' he says.</p>
<p>"'Then they'll have to break it off,' I responded, 'and mighty quick.
I'm here to talk with them, so get a move on you again and give that
message.'</p>
<p>"If it hadn't been for the policeman I don't think he would have gone,
but the policeman backed me up, and the clerk hurried off again; and in
the end the bosses decided they had better see me. They looked precious
cross, I can assure you, but before I had done speaking they looked
crosser still.</p>
<p>"'You say you've done that puzzle,'—they shouted—'the puzzle that has
stuck all the mathematical guns at Harvard and Yale—you—a nonentity
like you—begone, sir, don't waste our time with such humbug as that.'</p>
<p>"'All right,' I said, 'give me some paper and a pen, and I'll prove it.'</p>
<p>"'That's very reasonable,' the policeman chipped in, 'do the thing fair
and square—I'm here as a witness.'</p>
<p>"Well, with much grunting and grumbling they handed me paper and ink,
and in a trice the puzzle was done; and it appeared so easy that the
policeman clapped his hands and broke out into a loud guffaw. My eyes!
you should have seen how the faces of Pervis and Peters fell, and have
heard what they said. But it was no use swearing and cursing, the thing
was done, and there was the policeman to prove it.</p>
<p>"'We'll give you five hundred dollars,' they said, 'to clear out and say
no more about it.'</p>
<p>"'Five hundred dollars when you've advertised three thousand,' I cried.
'What do you take me for? I'll have that three thousand or I'll show you
both up.'</p>
<p>"'A thousand, then?' they said.</p>
<p>"'No!' I retorted; 'three! Three, and look sharp. And look here,' I
added, as my glance rested on some of the samples of their pastes they
had round them, 'I understand the secrets of all these so-called patents
of yours—there isn't one of them I couldn't imitate. Take that
"Rabsidab," for instance. What is it? Why, a compound of horseflesh,
turnips and popcorn, flavoured with Lazenby's sauce—for the
infringement of which patent you are liable to prosecution—and coloured
with cochineal. Then there's the stuff you label "Ironcastor,"'—but
they shut me up. 'There, take your three thousand dollars, write us out
a receipt for it, and clear.'"</p>
<p>"Nine thousand dollars in one day! We've done well," Kelson ejaculated.
"What's the programme for to-morrow?"</p>
<p>"Same as to-day and plenty of it," Curtis said, pouring himself out
another glass of champagne and making a vigorous attack on a chicken. "I
think I'll let you two fellows do all the work to-morrow, and content
myself here. Waiter! What time's breakfast?"</p>
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