Part 5 (1/2)

”I was educated to be a lawyer; but before I entered upon the profession, I found I had a taste for the detective service. I did some amateur work first, and was very successful. I afterwards reached a high position in the service of the government. I acquired a great deal of skill in disguising myself, and in all the arts of the profession.

I could open and reseal a letter so that no change could be discovered in its appearance, and this was what I did in the service of Mr. Davis.

He was a mean man, the stingiest I ever met, and he was as dishonest and unscrupulous as a Paris thief. I copied all the letters connected with the case I had in hand, and this enabled me to get to the bottom of the traitor's plot. He wrote letters himself, not only to England and Scotland, but to people in the South, sending them to Bermuda and Na.s.sau. I took copies of all these, and saved one or two originals.

My pay was so small that I resigned my situation,” and he flourished a great file of letters as he finished.

CHAPTER V

AN ABUNDANCE OF EVIDENCE

Captain Pa.s.sford had certainly kept his own counsel with punctilious care; for he had never even mentioned the skilful detective in his family, though the members of it had met the gentleman in Paris and in Havre. Mr. Gilfleur was in constant communication with him while he was working up the exposure of the treason of Davis, who might have been a relative of the distinguished gentleman at the head of the Southern Confederacy, though there was no evidence to this effect.

”If the captain of this steamer manages his affair well with the Ionian, I expect to find letters on board of her signed by Davis,” continued Mr.

Gilfleur. ”From the information I obtained, your father put American detectives on the scent of Davis, who dogged him day and night till they found the Ionian, and ascertained in what manner she obtained her cargo; but she had been partly loaded before they reached a conclusion, and it is suspected that she has arms under the pieces of machinery, perhaps cannon and ammunition.”

The detective continued to explain his operations at greater length than it is necessary to report them. Christy listened till nearly midnight, and then he went on deck to ascertain the position of the chase before he turned in. He found the captain on the quarter-deck, vigilant and faithful to his duty, and evidently determined that the Ionian should not elude him.

”You are up late, Mr. Pa.s.sford,” said the captain, when he recognized his pa.s.senger in the gloom of the night.

”I have been busy, and I came on deck to see where the Ionian was before I turned in,” replied Christy.

”I think the rascal has a suspicion that we have some business with him, for at four bells he turned his head in for the sh.o.r.e,” added the commander. ”If you go forward you will see that we have dowsed every glim on board, even to our mast-head and side lights.”

”You are carrying no starboard and port light?”

”None; but we have a strong lookout aloft, and in every other available place. When the chase headed for the sh.o.r.e, we kept on our course for half an hour, and then put out the lights. We came about and went off to the eastward for another half-hour. Coming about, we went to the westward till we made her out, for she has not extinguished her lights.

It is dark enough to conceal the s.h.i.+p from her, and no doubt she thinks we are still far to the southward of her. At any rate, she has resumed her former course, which was about south, half west.”

Christy was satisfied with this explanation, for the Ionian was doing just what she was expected to do. She was not inclined to be overhauled by a gunboat, and she had attempted to dodge the Chateaugay. Besides, if she were bound to Wilmington, as her clearance stated, she would turn to the south-west two or three points by this time. The young officer seated himself in his room, and figured on the situation. If the steamer were making an honest voyage she would not be more than twenty miles off Absec.u.m light at this time, and ought to be within ten of the coast.

At two bells Christy was still in his chair, and when he heard the bells he decided to go on deck again, for he felt that the time would soon come to settle every doubt in regard to the character of the Ionian. He found the commander still at his post, and he looked out for the chase.

It was not more than a mile distant, and hardly to be seen in the gloom of a dark night.

”On deck again, Mr. Pa.s.sford?” said Captain Chantor.

”Yes, sir; I am too much interested in this affair to sleep; besides, I feel as though I had slept at home enough to last me six months,”

replied the pa.s.senger. ”It seems to me that the question of that vessel's destination is to be decided about this time, or at least within an hour or two.”

Christy explained the calculation he had been making, in which the captain agreed with him, and declared that he had been over the same course of reasoning. Both of them thought the Ionian would not wait till daylight to change her course, as it would be more perilous to do so then than in the darkness.

”I am confident that she has not seen the Chateaugay since we put out the lights,” said the captain. ”At the present moment we must be off Absec.u.m; but we cannot see the light. She is far off her course for Wilmington.”

”That is plain enough.”

”What she will do depends upon whether or not she suspects that a man-of-war is near her. We shall soon know, for she is already in a position to justify her capture.”

”Better make sure of her course before that is done,” suggested Christy, who felt that he was permitted to say as much as this.