CHAPTER X.

  FAVORING FORTUNE.

  In the course of my professional career I have been in many tightplaces, and among the tightest I count that night, when in the oldsugar-house, converted into a "fence" for receiving the "swag" broughtin by the river pirates.

  Immediately on reading the note written by Shadow I commencedretreating, even while Cap was coming forward to see who wanted him,and what for.

  I had pretended to have been sent with a message by Dick Stanton, who,as Shadow had informed me, was already there, a fact unknown to theguard, else I must have been roughly used before this.

  To have told this to Cap would have at once betrayed me, and my heartswelled with gratitude to Shadow--for I considered that he had saved mylife.

  Did misfortune attend my efforts to pass the guard, it would not beShadow's fault, but my own in venturing into this place.

  And yet I had done so on his account, had done so because I had learnedthat a young fellow answering his description was kept close prisonerin a place significantly called the "Black Hole."

  Toward the guarded portal I went as rapidly as I could without anappearance of noisy haste.

  I reached it at last.

  Cap had not yet reached the spot where he expected to see me.

  I had now just as long to fool the guard as it would take Cap to growimpatient at not seeing me, and bellow out some question as to where Iwas.

  "Here's your lantern, my friend, and I'm much obliged for it," I said,as I drew near the guarded portal.

  "See him?"

  "Yes."

  "All right?"

  "Yes."

  "Cap's in one of his black humors to-night."

  "Phew! I should say so."

  "Nothing wrong, was there?"

  "Nothing particular," I answered. "What's the matter with that bolt?Does it stick?"

  "Like thunderation. There it goes. I've got it now. Now for anotherone--you see we keep this place well guarded--now another, and all thatnow remains is to turn the knob."

  "Suppose you do it, then, as I've got one or two messages more todeliver yet."

  "Kerect."

  The guard's hand was on the knob.

  He was in the act of turning it when he suddenly paused.

  "Got the pass?" he inquired.

  "The what?"

  "The pass."

  "What pass?"

  "Why, every night the cap'n gives out a new pass, and none go throughthis door without giving it."

  "He must have forgotten to give it to me," I returned, clenching myfists unseen by the guard. "It's all right, though, so let me out, asI'm in a hurry."

  "Can't help it. Hurry or no hurry, you can't get through here until thecap'n gives me orders to let you, or you give me the password."

  I set my teeth.

  With liberty before me I was not going to be balked in this way.

  "Let me out!" I ordered.

  "I can't do it."

  "Let me out, I say."

  "I dare not, and I won't 'thout the cap'n's orders. So you might's wellbe easy."

  From the interior of the densely dark place I now heard an angry oath.

  "I say, where are you?" cap was impatiently asking.

  There was no time to lose.

  "Growler!"

  "Aye, aye!" returned the guard.

  "Didn't you say somebody was here to see me?"

  Growler turned on me a glance filled with mistrust, and making a dive,tried to shoot several bolts.

  Now was my last and only chance.

  I raised my clenched fist.

  Spat!

  It took him squarely between the eyes, and felled him to the groundlike a log.

  "A spy--a spy!" he yelled, as he was falling.

  Cap heard the cry.

  Toward the door he came flying, drawing his revolver on the way.

  But I was not slow in taking advantage of my opportunity, and seizingand turning the knob, I flung open the door and bounded out into thedarkness.

  Fearing pursuit, and knowing myself to be in a mighty hardneighborhood, where every man I might chance to meet would be morelikely friends of the pirates than friends of mine, I dashed around theold building and flung myself down in a place of hiding.

  I heard a door open on that side of the building, only a few secondslater.

  The person who emerged was Dick Stanton, the false detective.

  I recognized him by a peculiar snuffle that had long been a settledhabit of his.

  Quick to think and act, I sprang to my feet, and dropping all fears ofpursuit, followed him.

  When he had got into a section of the city where there was no chanceof his being rescued by the pirates, I hastened my pace and finallyreached his side.

  "How are you, Dick?"

  He gave a start as I called him by name, and turning swiftly, glancedkeenly at me, pausing beneath a street lamp that he might see me better.

  "Is my disguise so good, then?" I asked, with a laugh, speaking in mynatural tone.

  "Howard!"

  "Correct."

  "Your disguise is perfect."

  "Would my own mother know me?"

  "Not a bit of it. How in the world do you manage to get yourself up sothoroughly?"

  "It's a knack of mine. I say, Dick, got anything on hand?"

  "No."

  "Lend me your revolvers, then, will you? Mine I forgot when I left thehouse."

  "Did you? That's funny, for I forgot mine also. I haven't got so good aweapon about me as a jack-knife."

  "Then," and I spoke very sternly, and quickly drawing a revolver,placed it to his temple, "then consider yourself my prisoner."

  "Wh-what do you mean?" he gasped.

  "I'll show you."

  "This must be a joke of yours," said the trembling wretch.

  "It will be a sorry joke for you," said I. "Hold out your hands."

  "What for?"

  "Hold 'em out."

  I pressed the cold muzzle of the revolver against his temple a littleharder.

  He understood the significance of the movement, and loathfully put outhis hands.

  "Howard, I don't like this," he said, in an assumed angry tone, tocarry out the idea that he considered it in the light of a practicaljoke.

  "You'll like it less before I get through with you," as I snapped thehandcuffs on his wrists. "To be a thief is bad enough, but to callyourself a detective and then be in league with a gang of cut-throats,river-pirates and burglars, is far worse, and I give you my word that Iintend to shove you as hard as I can."

  Stanton's jaw fell.

  He was cornered and confounded.

  "Lost!" he groaned.

  And then, with bent head, he walked dumbly along at my side.

  "Howard, will you not let up on me?" he pleaded, humbly, his tonetrembling with fear.

  "What will I gain by it?" I artfully said.

  "Why, they always let the one go who turns State's evidence," he said,eagerly. "Give me a chance, won't you?"

  How disgusted I was with Stanton!

  A traitor to the force, he was no sooner found out than he was ready toturn traitor to his pals.

  "I'll promise you nothing," I coldly returned. "You can tell me whatyou please, and if I then think your information worthy of mercy toyou, you shall have it."

  "You always were a good fellow," he said, fawningly, "and I'll trustyou."

  "You must do exactly as I say."

  "I will," he promptly answered.

  An idea had occurred to me.

  It was, instead of taking Stanton to the police station--where I wouldhave been obliged to enter a specific charge against him--to take himto a secret place of confinement, and there keep him until I had baggedthe river-pirates, penetrated to the Black Hole, and bursted up thevillainous den.

  To reach the place I had in my mind's eye, it was necessary to retracesome of our steps, and we once again entered the rough precincts rightalong the East River.

  As Stanton
had been treacherous to the force of which he was a member,was willing to be treacherous toward his pals, so, now, in keeping withhis character, he acted treacherously toward me.

  While passing a low drinking place--"boozing ken" was its popular namein that locality--he suddenly pursed up his lips and whistled sharplyin a peculiar way, repeated a given number of times.

  I knew he intended it for a signal.

  I was not mistaken.

  Within half a minute a little squad of men dashed out of the "boozingken" to rescue him who had given this signal.

 
Police Captain Howard's Novels