"It was the horrid mask he wore."
"Well, it wasn"t handsome of him."
"What did you mean by cellars?"--suddenly becoming the inquisitor in her turn.
"I? Oh, I was thinking what I should do in case of fire,"--nimbly.
"That is not the truth."
"Well, no, it isn"t. Can you keep a secret?" I whispered.
"If it isn"t a terrible one."
"Well, I have no earthly business here. I am an impostor."
"An impostor!"
"Yes. And for the past few minutes, since I heard of the robbery, I"ve been thinking how I could get out of here upon the slightest notice."
While the reckless spirit was upon me, I produced the fatal card and showed the back to her. "You will find that yours is of a different color. But _I_ am not the Galloping d.i.c.k; it was only a hare-brained lark on my part, and I had no idea it would turn out serious like this.
I was going to disappear before they unmasked. What would you advise me to do?"
She took the card, studied it, and finally returned it. There followed an interval of silence.
"I have known the imposition from the first," she said.
"What!"
She touched the signet-ring on my little finger. "I have seen that once before to-night. No," she mused, "you will not blow up the post-office to-night, nor the police-station."
She lifted the corner of her mask, and I beheld the girl I had met in Mouquin"s!
"You?"
"Silence! So this is the meaning of your shuffling those cards? Oh, it is certainly droll!" She laughed.
"And are you Miss Hawthorne?"
"I am still in the mask, sir; I shall answer none of your questions."
"This is the finest romance in the world!" I cried.
"You were talking about getting out," she said. "Shall I lend you my domino? But that would be useless. Such a prestidigitator as Signor Fantoccini has only to say--Presto! and disappear at once."
"I a.s.sure you, it is no laughing matter."
"I see it from a different angle."
An artist"s model, and yet a guest at this exclusive function?
A commotion around the stage distracted us. Presently we saw Teddy Hamilton mount the stage and hold up his hands.
"Attention, ladies and gentlemen!" he called.
Silence gradually fell upon the motley groups of masqueraders.
"A thief is among us. I have had all the exits closed. Everybody will be so kind as to present cards at the main entrance. Three ten-spots of hearts have been tallied on the comparing lists. We have been imposed upon. The police are on the way. Very sorry to cause you this annoyance. The ident.i.ty of the holders of the cards will be known only to those of us on the committee."
Silence and then a murmur which soon became a fuzzing like that of many bees.
The Blue Domino suddenly clutched my arm.
"Please take me away, take me away at once! I"m an impostor, too!"
Two of us!
This was disaster. I give you my solemn word, there was nothing I regretted so much as the fact that I hadn"t gone to the theater.
But I am a man of quick thought and resource. In the inelegant phrasing of the day, me for the cellars!
"Come," said I to the girl; "There"s only one chance in a hundred, but we"ll take it together."
"Together? Where?"
"Why, to the cellars. I"ve a pocketful of matches. We can make a try.
For, if there"s a thief around, and we are caught and proved impostors--Well, I leave you to imagine!"
"I will go with you," she replied resolutely.
The G.o.ds were with us. The door leading to the cellars was not locked.
I opened it, pa.s.sed the girl before me, and closed the door.
"I am frightened!" she whispered.
"So am I," I offered, to rea.s.sure her. "You are not afraid of rats, are you?"
"No-o!"
"Bully!" I cried. Then I laughed.
"How _can_ you laugh? It is horrible!" she protested.
"You would come, though I heard your uncle warn you. Look at it the way I do. It"s a huge joke, and years from now you"ll have great fun telling it to your grandchildren."
"I wish, at this moment, I could see so far ahead--What was that?"--seizing my arm.
Click!
Somebody had locked the door behind us!