<SPAN name="chap22"></SPAN><h2>CHAPTER XXII</h2>
<p>GONE</p>
<p>The grim face of Madame Cerise relaxed to allow
a quaint smile to flit across it. She returned
Fogerty's bow with a deep curtsy.</p>
<p>Mershone, after one brief exclamation of dismay,
wrested from him by surprise, threw himself
into the chair again and stared at the fire. For a
few moments there was intense stillness in the
little room.</p>
<p>"How easy it is," said Fogerty, in soft, musing
tones, "to read one's thoughts—under certain circumstances.
You are thinking, Mr. Mershone,
that I'm a boy, and not very strong, while you are
an athlete and can easily overpower me. I have
come at a disagreeable time, and all your plans
depend on your ability to get rid of me. But I've
four good men within call, who are just now
guarding the approaches to this house. They'd
like to come in, I know, because it's very cold and
disagreeable outside; but suppose we allow them
to freeze for a time? Ah, I thought you'd agree
with me, sir—I overheard you say you were about
to visit Miss Merrick, who is confined in a room
upstairs, but I'd like you to postpone that while
we indulge in a little confidential chat together.
You see—"</p>
<p>The door-bell rang violently. Fogerty glanced
at Madame Cerise.</p>
<p>"Will you see who it is?" he asked.</p>
<p>She arose at once and left the room. Mershone
turned quickly.</p>
<p>"What's your price, Fogerty?" he asked,
meaningly.</p>
<p>"For what?"</p>
<p>"For getting out of here—making tracks and
leaving me alone. Every man has his price, and
I'm trapped—I'm willing to pay anything—I'll—"</p>
<p>"Cut it out, sir. You've tried this once before.
I'm not to be bribed."</p>
<p>"Have you really a warrant for my arrest?"</p>
<p>"I've carried it since Friday. It's no use, Mershone,
the game's up and you may as well grin
and bear it."</p>
<p>Mershone was about to reply when the door
opened and Diana Von Taer came in with a swift,
catlike tread and confronted him with flaming
eyes.</p>
<p>"You coward! You low, miserable scoundrel!
How dare you come here to annoy and browbeat
that poor girl?" she cried in clear, cutting accents,
without noticing the presence of Fogerty.</p>
<p>"Oh, shut up, Di, you're in it as deep as I am,"
he retorted, turning away with a flushed face.</p>
<p>"I'm not, sir! Never have I countenanced this
wicked, criminal act," she declared. "I have come
here to-day to save Louise from your wiles and
carry her back to her friends. I dare you, or your
confederates," with a scornful look at the detective,
"to interfere with me in any way." Then
she turned to Cerise and continued: "Where is
Miss Merrick now?"</p>
<p>"In your own room, ma'm'seile."</p>
<p>"Come with me, then."</p>
<p>With a defiant glance at Mershone she turned
haughtily and left the room. Cerise followed
obediently, somewhat astonished at the queer turn
of events.</p>
<p>Left alone with Mershone, Fogerty chuckled
gleefully.</p>
<p>"Why, it seems I wasn't needed, after all," said
he, "and we've both of us taken a lot of trouble
for nothing, Mershone. The chances are Miss
Von Taer would have turned the trick in any
event, don't you think so?"</p>
<p>"No, you don't understand her. She wouldn't
have interfered if she hadn't been scared out,"
growled the other. "She's sacrificed me to save
herself, that's all."</p>
<p>"You may be right about that," admitted Fogerty;
and then he got up to answer the door-bell,
which once more rang violently.</p>
<p>An automobile stood outside, and from it an
excited party trooped into the hallway, disregarding
the cutting wind and blinding snowflakes
that assailed them as they passed in. There was
Arthur Weldon and Uncle John, Patricia and
Beth; and all, as they saw the detective, cried
with one voice:</p>
<p>"Where's Louise?"</p>
<p>Fogerty had just managed to close the door
against the wintry blast when the answer came
from the stairway just above:</p>
<p>"She is gone!"</p>
<p>The voice was shrill and despairing, and looking
up they saw Diana standing dramatically
posed upon the landing, her hands clasped over
her heart and a look of fear upon her face. Over
her shoulder the startled black eyes of old Cerise
peered down upon the group below.</p>
<p>The newcomers were evidently bewildered by
this reception. They had come to rescue Louise,
whom they imagined confined in a lonely deserted
villa with no companion other than the
woman who guarded her. Arthur's own detective
opened the door to them and Diana Von Taer,
whom they certainly did not expect to meet here,
confronted them with the thrilling statement that
Louise had gone.</p>
<p>Arthur was the first to recover his wits.</p>
<p>"Gone!" he repeated; "gone where?"</p>
<p>"She had escaped—run away!" explained
Diana, in real distress.</p>
<p>"When?" asked Uncle John.</p>
<p>"Just now. Within an hour, wasn't it, Cerise?"</p>
<p>"At ten o'clock I left her, now she is gone,"
said the old woman, who appeared as greatly agitated
as her mistress.</p>
<p>"Good gracious! you don't mean to say she's
left the house in this storm?" exclaimed Patsy,
aghast at the very thought.</p>
<p>"What shall we do? What <i>can</i> we do?" demanded
Beth, eagerly.</p>
<p>Fogerty started up the stairs. Cerise turned
to show him the way, and the others followed in
an awed group.</p>
<p>The key was in the lock of the door to the
missing girl's room, but the door itself now stood
ajar. Fogerty entered, cast a sharp look around
and walked straight to the window. As the others
came in, glancing curiously about them and noting
the still smouldering fire and the evidences
of recent occupation, the detective unlatched the
French window and stepped out into the snow
that covered the roof of the little porch below.
Arthur sprang out beside him, leaving the rest to
shiver in the cold blast that rushed in upon them
from the open window.</p>
<p>Fogerty, on his knees, scanned the snow carefully,
and although Weldon could discover no
sign of a footprint the young detective nodded his
head sagaciously and slowly made his way to the
trellis at the end. Here it was plain that the accumulation
of snow had recently been brushed
away from the frail framework.</p>
<p>"It was strong enough to hold her, though," declared
Fogerty, looking over the edge of the roof.
"I'll descend the same way, sir. Go back by the
stairs and meet me below."</p>
<p>He grasped the lattice and began cautiously
to lower himself to the ground, and Arthur turned
to rejoin his friends in the room.</p>
<p>"That is the way she escaped, without doubt,"
he said to them. "Poor child, she had no idea
we were about to rescue her, and her long confinement
had made her desperate."</p>
<p>"Did she have a cloak, or any warm clothes?"
asked Beth. Madame Cerise hurriedly examined
the wardrobe in the closets.</p>
<p>"Yes, ma'm'selle; she has taken a thick coat
and a knit scarf," she answered. But I am sure
she had no gloves, and her shoes were very thin."</p>
<p>"How long do you think she has been gone?"
Patsy enquired.</p>
<p>"Not more than an hour. I was talking with
Mr. Mershone, and—"</p>
<p>"Mershone! Is he here?" demanded Arthur.</p>
<p>"He is in my room downstairs—or was when
you came," said the woman.</p>
<p>"That accounts for her sudden flight," declared
the young man, bitterly. "She doubtless heard
his voice and in a sudden panic decided to fly.
Did Mershone see her?" he asked.</p>
<p>"No, m'sieur," replied Cerise.</p>
<p>With one accord they descended to the lower
hall and the caretaker led the way to her room.
To their surprise they found Mershone still seated
in the chair by the fire, his hands clasped behind
his head, a cigarette between his lips.</p>
<p>"Here is another crime for you to account for!"
cried Arthur, advancing upon him angrily. "You
have driven Louise to her death!"</p>
<p>Mershone raised one hand in mild protest.</p>
<p>"Don't waste time cursing me," he said. "Try
to find Louise before it is too late."</p>
<p>The reproach seemed justified. Arthur paused
and turning to Mr. Merrick said:</p>
<p>"He is right. I'll go help Fogerty, and you
must stay here and look after the girls until we
return."</p>
<p>As he went out he passed Diana without a look.
She sat in a corner of the room sobbing miserably.
Beth was thoughtful and quiet, Patsy nervous and
indignant. Uncle John was apparently crushed
by the disaster that had overtaken them. Mershone's
suggestion that Louise might perish in the
storm was no idle one; the girl was not only frail
and delicate but worn out with her long imprisonment
and its anxieties. They all realized this.</p>
<p>"I believe," said Mershone, rising abruptly,
"I'll go and join the search. Fogerty has arrested
me, but you needn't worry about my trying
to escape. I don't care what becomes of me, now,
and I'm going straight to join the detective."</p>
<p>They allowed him to go without protest, and
he buttoned his coat and set out in the storm to
find the others. Fogerty and Arthur were by
this time in the lane back of the grounds, where
the detective was advancing slowly with his eyes
fixed on the ground.</p>
<p>"The tracks are faint, but easily followed,"
he was saying, "The high heels of her shoes leave
a distinct mark."</p>
<p>When Mershone joined them Arthur scowled
at the fellow but said nothing. Fogerty merely
smiled.</p>
<p>From the lane the tracks, already nearly obliterated
by the fast falling snow, wandered along
nearly a quarter of a mile to a crossroads, where
they became wholly lost.</p>
<p>Fogerty looked up and down the roads and
shook his head with a puzzled expression.</p>
<p>"We've surely traced her so far," said he, "but
now we must guess at her further direction.
You'll notice this track of a wagon. It may have
passed fifteen minutes or an hour ago. The hoof
tracks of the horses are covered, so I'm not positive
which way they headed; I only know there
are indications of hoof tracks, which proves it a
farmer's wagon. The question is, whether the
young lady met it, and caught a ride, or whether
she proceeded along some of the other trails. I
can't find any indication of those high-heeled
shoes from this point, in any direction. Better
get your car, Mr. Weldon, and run east a few
miles, keeping sharp watch of the wagon tracks
on the way. It was a heavy wagon, for the wheels
cut deep. Mershone and I will go west. When
you've driven far enough to satisfy yourself
you're going the wrong direction, you may easily
overtake us on your return. Then, if we've discovered
nothing on this road, we'll try the other."</p>
<p>Arthur ran back at once to the house and in a
few minutes had started on his quest. The motor
car was powerful enough to plow through the
deep snow with comparative ease.</p>
<p>Those left together in Madam Cerise's little
room were more to be pitied than the ones engaged
in active search, for there was nothing to
relieve their fears and anxieties. Diana, unable
to bear the accusing looks of Patsy and Beth, resolved
to make a clean breast of her complicity in
the affair and related to them every detail of her
connection with her cousin's despicable plot. She
ended by begging their forgiveness, and wept so
miserably that Uncle John found himself stroking
her hair while Patsy came close and pressed the
penitent girl's hand as if to comfort and reassure
her.</p>
<p>Beth said nothing. She could not find it in
her heart as yet to forgive Diana's selfish conspiracy
against her cousin's happiness. If Louise
perished in this dreadful storm the proud Diana
Von Taer could not escape the taint of murder.
The end was not yet.</p>
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