Part 4 (1/2)
Policemen strolled about, and trolley-cars twinkled in every direction.
The girl shrank back into the shadows of the carriage for an instant, as if she feared to come out from the sheltering darkness. Her escort half defined her hesitation.
”Don't feel nervous,” he said in a low tone. ”I will see that no one harms you. Just walk into the station as if you were my friend. You are, you know, a friend of long standing, for we have been to a dinner together. I might be escorting you home from a concert. No one will notice us.
Besides, that hat and coat are disguise enough.”
He hurried her through the station and up to the ladies' waiting-room, where he found a quiet corner and a large rocking-chair, in which he placed her so that she might look out of the great window upon the panorama of the evening street, and yet be thoroughly screened from all intruding glances by the big leather and bra.s.s screen of the ”ladies'
boot-black.”
He was gone fifteen minutes, during which the girl sat quietly in her chair, yet alert, every nerve strained. At any moment the ma.s.s of faces she was watching might reveal one whom she dreaded to see, or a detective might place his hand upon her shoulder with a quiet ”Come with me.”
When Dunham came back, the nervous start she gave showed him how tense and anxious had been her mind. He studied her lovely face under the great hat, and noted the dark shadows beneath her eyes. He felt that he must do something to relieve her. It was unbearable to him that this young girl should be adrift, friendless, and apparently a victim to some terrible fear.
Drawing up a chair beside her, he began talking about her ticket.
”You must remember I was utterly at your mercy,” she smiled sadly. ”I simply had to let you help me.”
”I should be glad to pay double for the pleasure you have given me in allowing me to help you,” he said.
Just at that moment a boy in a blue uniform planted a sole-leather suit-case at his feet, and exclaimed: ”Here you are, Mr. Dunham. Had a fierce time findin' you. Thought you said you would be by the elevator door.”
”So I did,” confessed the young man. ”I didn't think you had time to get down yet. Well, you found me anyhow, Harkness.”
The boy took the silver given him, touched his hat, and sauntered off.
”You see,” explained Dunham, ”it wasn't exactly the thing for you to be travelling without a bit of baggage. I thought it might help them to trace you if you really were being followed. So I took the liberty of 'phoning over to the club-house and telling the boy to bring down the suit-case that I left there yesterday. I don't exactly know what's in it. I had the man pack it and send it down to me, thinking I might stay all night at the club. Then I went home, after all, and forgot to take it along. It probably hasn't anything very appropriate for a lady's costume, but there may be a hair-brush and some soap and handkerchiefs. And, anyhow, if you'll accept it, it'll be something for you to hitch on to. One feels a little lost even for one night without a rag one can call one's own except a Pullman towel. I thought it might give you the appearance of a regular traveller, you know, and not a runaway.”
He tried to make her laugh about it, but her face was deeply serious as she looked up at him.
”I think this is the kindest and most thoughtful thing you have done yet,”
she said. ”I don't see how I can ever, ever thank you!”
”Don't try,” he returned gaily. ”There's your train being called. We'd better go right out and make you comfortable. You are beginning to be very tired.”
She did not deny it, but rose to follow him, scanning the waiting-room with one quick, frightened look. An obsequious porter at the gate seized the suit-case and led them in state to the Pullman.
The girl found herself established in the little drawing-room compartment, and her eyes gave him thanks again. She knew the seclusion and the opportunity to lock the compartment door would give her relief from the constant fear that an unwelcome face might at any moment appear beside her.
”The conductor on this train is an old acquaintance of mine,” he explained as that official came through the car. ”I have taken this trip with him a number of times. Just sit down a minute. I am going to ask him to look out for you and see that no one annoys you.”
The burly official looked grimly over his gla.s.ses at the sweet face under the big black hat, while Tryon Dunham explained, ”She's a friend of mine.
I hope you'll be good to her.” In answer, he nodded grim a.s.sent with a smileless alacrity which was nevertheless satisfactory and comforting.
Then the young man walked through the train to interview the porter and the newsboy, and in every way to arrange for a pleasant journey for one who three hours before had been unknown to him. As he went, he reflected that he would rather enjoy being conductor himself just for that night. He felt a strange reluctance toward giving up the oversight of the young woman whose destiny for a few brief hours had been thrust upon him, and who was about to pa.s.s out of his world again.
When he returned to her he found the shades closely drawn and the girl sitting in the sheltered corner of the section, where she could not be seen from the aisle, but where she could watch in the mirror the approach of any one. She welcomed him with a smile, but instantly urged him to leave the train, lest he be carried away.
He laughed at her fears, and told her there was plenty of time. Even after the train had given its preliminary shudder, he lingered to tell her that she must be sure to let him know by telegraph if she needed any further help; and at last swung himself from the platform after the train was in full motion.
Immediately he remembered that he had not given her any money. How could he have forgotten? And there was the North Side Station yet to be pa.s.sed before she would be out of danger. Why had he not remained on the train until she was past that stop, and then returned on the next train from the little flag-station a few miles above, where he could have gotten the conductor to slow up for him? The swiftly moving cars asked the question as the long train flew by him. The last car was almost past when he made a daring dash and flung himself headlong upon the platform, to the horror of several trainmen who stood on the adjoining tracks.