<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></SPAN>CHAPTER II.</h2>
<p class="h3">THE STRANGE MARRIAGE.</p>
<p>In the course of little over an hour, the carriage stopped at the
inlet, where Fritz was told to get out and take a small boat and row
across the water to the other shore, where he would find another
carriage to complete his journey in.</p>
<p>He accordingly did as directed, and had soon crossed the inlet, found
the second carriage, and was once more rolling northward, along the
sandy beach.</p>
<p>It seemed hours to him ere his conductor drew rein in front of a
jutting bluff which interrupted their further progress along the
beach, from the fact that it reached to the water's edge; for another
hour he followed the driver, a grim, uncommunicative fisherman, on
foot up a jagged path, which finally led into a lonely ocean cave
which the high tides of many centuries had washed out to about the
size of an ordinary room. A torch thrust in a crevice in<span class="pagenum">[18]</span> the rocky
wall, lit up the scene in rather a ghostly way.</p>
<p>About in the center of the cave stood three parties—Madge, a
clerical-looking party, and another well-dressed man, with black hair
and full beard.</p>
<p>He stepped forward as Fritz and the fisherman entered the cave, and
said:</p>
<p>"Ah! I am glad you have come. Was fearing that you would not
accommodate us, sir."</p>
<p>"Vel, I didn't vas know vedder to come or not," Fritz answered, "but
ash I am here, vot you want off me?"</p>
<p>"I will tell you. The young lady yonder and myself are about to be
married, and, to make things legal, we prefer to have a couple of
witnesses to the ceremony. You will only be required to attach your
signature to the marriage certificate, and will then be taken back to
Atlantic City."</p>
<p>"Vel, off dot ish all, go ahead mit der pizness," Fritz said, perching
himself on a rock. "I don'd know off id is a legal dransaction or not,
but I'll do vot ish right by der lady."</p>
<p>"Then let's have the ceremony," the prospective bridegroom said. "Are
you ready, Madge?"<span class="pagenum">[19]</span></p>
<p>"Quite ready," the young lady replied, smilingly.</p>
<p>Then they clasped hands, and the aged clerical-looking gentleman read
a marriage-service, asked the usual questions, and pronounced them man
and wife.</p>
<p>The parties to the consummation were announced as Miss Madge Thurston
and Major Paul Atkins.</p>
<p>At the conclusion of the ceremony the clergyman filled out a
certificate, signed it himself, and then requested Fritz to come
forward and do likewise, and also the old fisherman.</p>
<p>His request being obeyed, Major Atkins said:</p>
<p>"Your favor is duly appreciated, Mr. Snyder, and, if an opportunity
offers, I shall be happy to be of service to you. You may now return
to town in the manner you came."</p>
<p>Accordingly, Fritz did so, not a little puzzled at his adventure and
the strange wedding in the coast cave.</p>
<p>Day was just beginning to lighten the eastern horizon when he arrived
back at Atlantic City, and went to his room for a nap.</p>
<p>But he found that sleep would not come to his relief, and so he was
among the early fashionable bathers at the beach.<span class="pagenum">[20]</span></p>
<p>After a good, refreshing bath he went back to the Brighton and took a
seat on the veranda.</p>
<p>He had not been seated long when a rapidly driven carriage whirled up
before the hotel, and an elderly, portly man leaped out and hurried
into the hotel, his face flushed with excitement.</p>
<p>He was well-dressed, wore a little bunch of gray side-whiskers on
either cheek, and was evidently all of sixty years of age.</p>
<p>Fritz surveyed him closely with the short glimpse he got of him, and
then scratched his head as if in quest of an idea.</p>
<p>"I'll bet a half-dollar I see into der whole pizness now," he
muttered, with a chuckle. "Id vas plainer ash mud to me. Dot couple
vot got married vas elopers mit each odder, und dis pe der old man on
der war-path after 'em, madder ash a hornet. Der next t'ing is, who
vas der bully veller, vot ish honest und haff der rocks to support dot
virtue?"</p>
<p>After a few minutes the old gentleman came out of the hotel, and stood
looking out upon the ocean, with rather a savage expression of
countenance—and his was a face that could be very stern, when
occasion required it.</p>
<p>"I don'd know vedder I better poke mine<span class="pagenum">[21]</span> nose inder dis pizness, or
not," Fritz muttered, taking a second survey of him. "He looks like
ash if he might swaller a veller off he got mad, und I don'd vas care
apoud imitadin' Jonah."</p>
<p>As if interpreting his thoughts, the old gent turned rather gruffly,
and took a searching glance at the young man.</p>
<p>"Well?" he said, "I suppose I look as if I wanted to cut some one's
throat, don't I?"</p>
<p>Fritz laughed lightly.</p>
<p>"Vel, I vas t'inking somedings like dot," he admitted.</p>
<p>"I thought so. I ain't a fool; I know when I am mad, I <i>look</i> mad. Do
you know of any party around here who's particularly anxious to end
his career, and ain't got the grit to do the job?—I would like to
operate on such a chap."</p>
<p>"You feels like ash off you could pulverize some one, eh?"</p>
<p>"Humph! I'll contract to lay out the first man that durst look
cross-eyed at me. I'm mad, I am—mad as thunder, and I come from
Leadville, too, where they raise thunder occasionally. Bah! I wish
some one would step up and kick me!"</p>
<p>"Well, I'm your man, if you really want a<span class="pagenum">[22]</span> <i>bona fide</i> job done!"
Fritz caused a pompous-looking man to say, who stood
near—ventriloquially, of course. "I'm the champion patent kicker from
Kalamazoo!"</p>
<p>The old gent from Leadville turned and gazed at the pompous-looking
man a moment, his dander rising several degrees.</p>
<p>"Oh! so you're anxious to kick me, are you, my Christian friend? You
want to kick me, do you?" he ejaculated.</p>
<p>"Who has said anything about kicking you, sir?" the pompous party
demanded, in haughty surprise. "You'd evidently better go to bed and
sleep off your 'cups,' my friend."</p>
<p>"I haven't drank a drop, sir, in ten years. And for you to deny
expressing a desire to boot me, sir—why, man, I heard you!"</p>
<p>"You are a liar, sir; I said nothing of the kind. Besides, I am not in
the habit of picking quarrels with strangers."</p>
<p>And with a shrug, the pompous man turned on his heel, and walked off,
indignantly.</p>
<p>Leadville's angered delegate gazed after him a moment, with
unutterable contempt—then turned to Fritz:</p>
<p>"Poor fool. He's no sand, or he'd not cut and run, after calling a man
a liar. Up in Leadville<span class="pagenum">[23]</span> things are supremely different, but here
alas! is a lack of back-bone. I say, young fellow, have you ever
cherished dreams of becoming rich?—a man of millions, as it were?"</p>
<p>"Vel, I don'd know but I haff some off dose anxiety to get rich, vonce
in a vile," Fritz admitted.</p>
<p>"Well, sir, I can tell you just how you can do it the easiest, if you
will stroll upon the beach with me."</p>
<p>Accordingly Fritz arose, and sauntered down to the beach with this
eccentric Leadvillian, whoever he might prove to be.</p>
<p>"Now, I suppose you'd like to know what I'm mad at," the old gent
began, pushing his gold-headed cane into the sand, as they strolled
along. "Well, before I tell you, I want to know who you are, and what
your business is?"</p>
<p>"My name vos Fritz Snyder, und I vas vot you might call a
detective—or, dot is, I vas trying my luck at der pizness."</p>
<p>"Indeed? Then perhaps it is well I have met you, for I have a case,
and if you can win that case, you can also win five thousand dollars.
How does that strike you?"</p>
<p>"It hits me right vere I liff, ven I ish at home," Fritz grinned.
"Yoost you give me<span class="pagenum">[24]</span> der p'ints, und I'm your bologna, you can bet a
half-dollar on dot five t'ousand-dollar job. Vot's der lay—suicides,
murder, sdole somedings, or run avay mit anodder vife's veller?"</p>
<p>"Neither. A girl has run away from her home, and is wanted—five
thousand dollars' worth. She is my daughter, and is a somnambulist,
and consequently of unsound mind, at times. She frequently goes into a
trance, and remains thus for weeks at a time, eating and drinking
naturally enough, but knowing nothing what she has been doing, when
she awakens—though to outward appearance, she is awake, when in this
trance, but not in her right mind. I have consulted eminent
physicians, but they pronounce her case incurable, and say she will
some day die in one of these trances."</p>
<p>Here the man from Leadville grew pathetic in his story, and wiped a
tear from his eye; but finally went on:</p>
<p>"Well, as you may imagine, I have had a deal of trouble with her, for
in her state of trance she has often robbed me of sums of money. And
wandered off, too, sometimes; but this last blow has been the most
severe. It came to my knowledge that she had become the prey of an
unprincipled Eastern rascal. He had<span class="pagenum">[25]</span> met her during her somnambulistic
wanderings, and prejudiced her against me, and caused her to rob not
only me but others, and surrender the stolen booty to him. On learning
this, myself and neighbors formed into a vigilance committee to hunt
the rascal down, but he took to his heels, and fled Eastward. A few
days later, my poor child turned up missing, and with her the sum of
twenty thousand dollars, which had been paid me from the sale of a
mine, and which I had lodged in my safe for safe keeping until I could
deposit it, the next day!"</p>
<p>"Twenty t'ousand—so much ash dot?"</p>
<p>"Yes—a big sum, and likewise nearly all the money I then possessed. I
immediately took up the trail, but egad! 'twas no use. The girl is
sharper than lightning, and eluded me at every turn. I found that her
destination was Eastward—doubtless to join her evil genius—and so I
telegraphed to Chicago and St. Louis for the detectives to look out,
and intercept her, if possible. But all to no avail. She was seen in
those places, but owing to some irregularity beyond my comprehension,
was not captured. When I arrived in Chicago, I found that she had two
days before left the city, Eastward<span class="pagenum">[26]</span> bound. I trailed her to
Philadelphia, and there lost all track of her. Thinking quite likely
she would come to this summer resort, I came on, to-day, in hopes of
striking the trail, but all to no avail. I have as yet heard of no
clew to her whereabouts."</p>
<p>"Vel, dot ish purdy bad," Fritz assented. "Vot ish your name?"</p>
<p>"My name is Thornton—I am a mining speculator from Leadville,
Colorado."</p>
<p>"Und your daughter's name vos—?"</p>
<p>"Madge. She is a pretty young maiden, aged eighteen, and left her home
very well dressed."</p>
<p>"Und der feller vot vas pocketing der money—vot vos his name?"</p>
<p>"It is hard to guess what his true name was. At Leadville he was
called Pirate Johnson—at Pueblo he was known as Griffith Gregg."</p>
<p>"Gregg—Gregg?" Fritz said, meditatively. "I am on the look-out for a
man by that name. But my man is a smuggler."</p>
<p>"This villain may be connected with any nefarious piece of rascality.
If I only had him here one or the other of us would get laid out—that
is as good as sworn to. God only knows what perils my poor child will
pass through before I succeed in finding her, if I ever do."<span class="pagenum">[27]</span></p>
<p>"Vel, I reckon ve can find her, uff der ish such a t'ing in der
dictionary," Fritz asserted.</p>
<p>He then went on to relate the particulars of his assisting the lady on
the boat, and of the marriage in the cave, which excited Mr. Thornton
greatly.</p>
<p>"By Heaven! I see through it all! Madge Thurston is no more or less
than my daughter, and she has wedded this rascal, Atkins, who is one
and the same person who was the Gregg or Johnson out West. God forbid
that my child is married to such a wretch. Describe him."</p>
<p>Fritz obeyed, giving a description according as he remembered the
bridegroom—also of the man who took Madge Thurston from the hotel.</p>
<p>"The latter was undoubtedly Gregg," the speculator declared, "and the
other also, was, it is likely, disguised for the occasion, with a
false beard. Now, Fritz, I want you to help me find my child, and
break the neck of this rascal, and you shall have for reward the sum I
promised you. We'll search this world high and dry but what we'll
recover my child. Come, let's seek a conveyance to take us to the
cave."</p>
<p>They accordingly went back to the Hotel Brighton, ate dinner, and
afterward secured a<span class="pagenum">[28]</span> carriage and set out for the scene of the strange
wedding the night before.</p>
<p>And thus Fritz entered into a five-thousand-dollar chase, which was
destined to lead him into more adventures than he had yet
experienced.<span class="pagenum">[29]</span></p>
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