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<h2> XVII. THE SILVER SPHINX </h2>
<p>A Bedlam of noise smote Rhoda Gray's ears as she entered the Silver
Sphinx. A jazz band was in full swing; on the polished section of the
floor in the center, a packed mass of humanity swirled and gyrated and
wriggled in the contortions of the "latest" dance, and laughed and howled
immoderately; and around the sides of the room, the waiters rushed this
way and that amongst the crowded tables, mopping at their faces with their
aprons. It seemed as though confusion itself held sway!</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray scanned the occupants of the tables. The Silver Sphinx was
particularly riotous to-night, wasn't it? Yes, she understood! A great
many of the men were wearing little badges. Some society or other was
celebrating—and was doing it with abandon. Most of the men were half
drunk. It was certainly a free-and-easy night! Everything went!</p>
<p>Danglar! Yes, 'there he was—quite close to her, only a few tables
away—and beside him sat a heavy built, clean-shaven man of middle
age. That would be Cloran, of course—the man who was to have been
lured to his death. And Danglar was nervous and uneasy, she could see. His
fingers were drumming a tattoo on the table; his eyes were roving
furtively about the room; and he did not seem to be paying any but the
most distrait attention to his companion, who was talking to him.</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray sank quickly into a vacant chair. Three men, linked arm in arm,
and decidedly more than a little drunk, were approaching her. She turned
her head away to avoid attracting their attention. It was too free and
easy here to-night, and she began to regret her temerity at having
ventured inside; she would better, perhaps, have waited until Danglar came
out—only there were two exits, and she might have missed him—and...</p>
<p>A cold fear upon her, she shrank back in her chair. The three men had
halted at the table, and were clustered around her. They began a jocular
quarrel amongst themselves as to who should dance with her. Her heart was
pounding. She stood up, and pushed them away.</p>
<p>"Oh, no, you don't!" hiccoughed one of the three. "Gotta see your—hic!—pretty
face, anyhow!"</p>
<p>She put up her hands frantically and clutched at her veil—but just
an instant too late to save it from being wrenched aside. Wildly her eyes
flew to Danglar. His attention had been attracted by the scene. She saw
him rise from his seat; she saw his eyes widen—and then, stumbling
over his chair in his haste, he made toward her. Danglar had recognized
the White Moll!</p>
<p>She turned and ran. Fear, horror, desperation, lent her strength. It was
not like this that she had counted on her reckoning with Danglar! She
brushed the roisterers aside, and darted for the door. Over her shoulder
she glimpsed Danglar following her. She reached the door, burst through a
knot of people there, and, her torn veil clutched in her hand, dashed down
the steps. She could only run—run, and pray that in some way she
might escape.</p>
<p>And then a mad exultation came upon her. She saw the man in the
chauffeur's seat of the first car in the line lean out and swing the door
open. And in a flash she grasped the situation. The man was waiting for
just this—for a woman to come running for her life down the steps of
the Silver Sphinx. She put her hand up to her face, hiding it with the
torn veil, raced for the car, and flung herself into the tonneau.</p>
<p>The door slammed. The car leaped from the curb. Danglar was coming down
the steps. She heard him shout. The chauffeur, in a startled way, leaned
out, as he evidently recognized Danglar's voice—but Rhoda Gray was
mistress of herself now. The tonneau of the car was not separated from the
driver's seat, and bending forward, she wrenched her revolver from her
pocket, and pressed the muzzle of her weapon to the back of the man's
neck.</p>
<p>"Don't stop!" she gasped, struggling for her breath. "Go on! Quick!"</p>
<p>The man, with a frightened oath, obeyed. The car gained speed. A glance
through the window behind showed Danglar climbing into the other car.</p>
<p>And then for a moment Rhoda Gray sat there fighting for her self-control,
with the certain knowledge in her soul that upon her wits, and her wits
alone, her life depended now. She studied the car's mechanism over the
chauffeur's shoulder, even as she continued to hold her revolver pressed
steadily against the back of the man's neck. She could drive a car—she
could drive this one. The presence of this chauffeur, one of the gang, was
an added menace; there were too many tricks he might play before she could
forestall them, any one of which would deliver her into the hands of
Danglar behind there—an apparently inadvertent stoppage due to
traffic, for instance, that would bring the pursuing car alongside—that,
or a dozen other things which would achieve the same end.</p>
<p>"Open the door on your side!" she commanded abruptly. "And get out—without
slowing the car! Do you understand?"</p>
<p>He turned his head for a half incredulous, half frightened look at her.
She met his eyes steadily—the torn veil, quite discarded now, was in
her pocket. She did not know the man; but it was quite evident from the
almost ludicrous dismay which spread over his face that he knew her.</p>
<p>"The—the White Moll!" he stammered. "It's the White Moll!"</p>
<p>"Jump!" she ordered imperatively—and her revolver pressed still more
significantly against the man's flesh.</p>
<p>He seemed in even frantic haste to obey her. He whipped the door open,
and, before she could reach to the wheel, he had leaped to the street. The
car swerved sharply. She flung herself over into the vacated seat, and
snatched at the wheel barely in time to prevent the machine from mounting
the curb.</p>
<p>She looked around again through the window of the hood. The man had swung
aboard Danglar's car, which was only a few yards behind.</p>
<p>Rhoda Gray drove steadily. Here in the city streets her one aim must be
never to let the other car come abreast of her; but she could prevent that
easily enough by watching Danglar's movements, and cutting across in front
of him if he attempted anything of the sort. But ultimately what was she
to do? How was she to escape? Her hands gripped and clenched in a sudden,
almost panic-like desperation at the wheel. Turn suddenly around a corner,
and jump from the car herself? It was useless to attempt it; they would
keep too close behind to give her a chance to get out of sight. Well,
then, suppose she jumped from the car, and trusted herself to the
protection of the people on the street. She shook her head grimly.
Danglar, she knew only too well, would risk anything, go to any length, to
put an end to the White Moll. He would not hesitate an instant to shoot
her down as she jumped and he would be fairly safe himself in doing it. A
few revolver shots from a car that speeded away in the darkness offered an
even chance of escape. And yet, unless she forced an issue such as that,
she knew that Danglar would not resort to firing at her here in the city.
He would want to be sure that was the only chance he had of getting her,
before he accepted the risk that he would run of being caught for it by
the police.</p>
<p>She found herself becoming strangely, almost unnaturally, cool and
collected now. The one danger, greater than all others, that menaced her
was a traffic block that would cause her to stop, and allow those in the
other car behind to rush in upon her as she sat here at the wheel. And
sooner or later, if she stayed in the city, a block such as that was
inevitable. She must get out of the city, then. It was only to invite
another risk, the risk that Danglar was in the faster car of the two but
there was no other way.</p>
<p>She drove more quickly, made her way to the Bridge, and crossed it. The
car behind followed with immutable persistence. It made no effort to close
the short gap between them; but, neither, on the other hand, did it permit
that gap to widen.</p>
<p>They passed through Brooklyn; and then, reaching the outskirts, Rhoda
Gray, with headlights streaming into the black, with an open Long Island
road before her, flung her throttle wide, and the car leaped like a thing
of life into the night. It was a sudden start, it gained her a hundred
yards but that was all.</p>
<p>The wind tore at her and whipped her face; the car rocked and reeled as in
some mad frenzy. There was not much traffic, but such as there was it
cleared away from before her as if by magic, as, seeking shelter from the
wild meteoric thing running amuck, the few vehicles, motor or horse, that
she encountered hugged; the edge of the road, and the wind whisked to her
ears fragments of shouts and execrations. Again and again she looked back
two fiery balls of light blazed behind her always those same two fiery
balls.</p>
<p>She neither gained nor lost. Rigid, like steel, her little figure was
crouched over the wheel. She did not know the road. She knew nothing save
that she was racing for her life. She did not know the end; she could not
see the end. Perhaps there would be some merciful piece of luck for her
that would win her through a break-down to that roaring thing, with its
eyes that were balls of fire, behind.</p>
<p>She passed through a town with lighted streets and lighted windows or was
it only imagination? It was gone again, anyhow, and there was just black
road ahead. Over the roar of the car and the sweep of the wind, then, she
caught, or fancied she caught, a series of faint reports. She looked
behind her. Yes, they were firing now. Little flashes leaped out above and
at the sides of those blazing headlights.</p>
<p>How long was it since she had left the Silver Sphinx? Minutes or hours
would not measure it, would they? But it could not last much longer! She
was growing very tired; the strain upon her arms, yes, and upon her eyes,
was becoming unbearable. She swayed a little in her seat, and the car
swerved, and she jerked it back again into the straight. She began to
laugh a little hysterically and then, suddenly, she straightened up, tense
and alert once more.</p>
<p>That swerve was the germ of an inspiration! It took root swiftly now. It
was desperate—but she was desperate. She could not drive much more,
or much longer like this. Mind and body were almost undone. And, besides,
she was not outdistancing that car behind there by a foot; and sooner or
later they would hit her with one of their shots, or, perhaps what they
were really trying to do, puncture one of her tires.</p>
<p>Again she glanced over her shoulder. Yes, Danglar was just far enough
behind to make the plan possible. She began to allow the car to swerve
noticeably at intervals, as though she were weakening and the car was
getting beyond her control—which was, indeed, almost too literally
the case. And now it seemed to her that each time she swerved there came
an exultant shout from the car behind. Well, she asked for nothing better;
that was what she was trying to do, wasn't it?—inspire them with the
belief that she was breaking under the strain.</p>
<p>Her eyes searched anxiously down the luminous pathway made by her
high-powered headlights. If only she could reach a piece of road that
combined two things—an embankment of some sort, and a curve just
sharp enough to throw those headlights behind off at a tangent for an
instant as they rounded it, too, in following her.</p>
<p>A minute, two, another passed. And then Rhoda Gray, tight-lipped, her face
drawn hard, as her own headlights suddenly edged away from the road and
opened what looked like a deep ravine on her left, while the road curved
to the right, flung a frenzied glance back of her. It was her chance—her
one chance. Danglar was perhaps a little more than a hundred yards in the
rear. Yes—now! His headlights were streaming out on her left as he,
too, touched the curve. The right-hand side of her car, the right-hand
side of the road were in blackness. She checked violently, almost to a
stop, then instantly opened the throttle wide once more, wrenching the
wheel over to head the machine for the ravine; and before the car picked
up its momentum again, she dropped from the right-hand side, darted to the
far edge of the road, and flung herself flat down upon the ground.</p>
<p>The great, black body of her car seemed to sail out into nothingness like
some weird aerial monster, the headlights streaming uncannily through
space—then blackness—and a terrific crash.</p>
<p>And now the other car had come to a stop almost opposite where she lay.
Danglar and the two chauffeurs, shouting at each other in wild excitement,
leaped out and rushed to the edge of the embankment. And then suddenly the
sky grew red as a great tongue-flame shot up from below. It outlined the
forms of the three men as they stood there, until, abruptly, as though
with one accord, they rushed pell-mell down the embankment toward the
burning wreckage. And as they disappeared from sight Rhoda Gray jumped to
her feet, sprang for Danglar's car, flung herself into the driver's seat,
and the car shot forward again along the road.</p>
<p>A shout, a wild chorus of yells, the reports of a fusillade of shots
reached her; she caught a glimpse of forms running insanely after her
along the edge of the embankment—then silence save for the roar of
the speeding car.</p>
<p>She drove on and on. Somewhere, nearing a town, she saw a train in the
distance coming in her direction. She reached the station first, and left
the car standing there, and, with the torn veil over her face again, took
the train.</p>
<p>She was weak, undone, exhausted. Even her mind refused its functions
further. It was only in a subconscious way she realized that, where she
had thought never to go to the garret again, the garret and the role of
Gypsy Nan were, more than ever now, her sole refuge. The plot against
Cloran had failed, but they could not blame that on "Bertha's"
non-appearance; and since it had failed she would not now be expected to
assume the dead woman's personality. True, she had not, as had been
arranged, reached the Silver Sphinx at eleven, but there were a hundred
excuses she could give to account for her being late in keeping the
appointment so that she had arrived just in time, say, to see Danglar dash
wildly in pursuit of a woman who had jumped into the car that she was
supposed to take!</p>
<p>The garret! The garret again—and Gypsy Nan! Her surroundings seemed
to become a blank to her; her actions to be prompted by some purely
mechanical sense. She was conscious only that finally, after an
interminable time, she was in New York again; and after that, long, long
after that, dressed as Gypsy Nan, she was stumbling up the dark,
ladder-like steps to the attic.</p>
<p>How her footsteps dragged! She opened the door, staggered inside, locked
the door again, and staggered toward the cot, and dropped upon it; and the
gray dawn came in with niggardly light through the grimy little window
panes, as though timorously inquisitive of this shawled and dissolute
figure prone and motionless, this figure who in other dawns had found
neither sleep nor rest—this figure who lay there now as one dead.</p>
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