The Bradys' Chinese Clew: or, The Secret Dens of Pell Street. Doughty Francis Worcester. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Doughty Francis Worcester
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      The Bradys' Chinese Clew; Or, The Secret Dens of Pell Street

      CHAPTER I

      CAUGHT IN A TRAP

      Late in the evening on August 12th, 19 – , one of the heaviest thunder storms known in many years broke over the city of New York.

      The storm was accompanied by a terrific gale; trees were blown down, sign boards wrecked, houses were unroofed, sewers overflooded, and there was a general shake-up all along the line.

      Of course, lives were lost here and there, especially on the rivers.

      It taxed the memory even of the oldest inhabitant to recall such another storm.

      During the height of the gale two gentlemen sat in the famous Tuxedo restaurant, that delight of chop suey fiends and slumming parties, on Pell street, Chinatown, indulging in a late supper, Chinese style.

      One was an elderly man of striking appearance and peculiar dress.

      He wore a long blue coat with brass buttons, an old-fashioned stock and stand-up collar, while hanging to a peg above his head was a big white felt hat with an unusually broad brim.

      His companion was a bright looking young fellow in his twenties.

      The two men were none other than the world-famous detectives, the Bradys of the Brady Detective Bureau, Union Square, New York.

      "Heavens, how it rains, governor," remarked Young King Brady as there was an extra loud splash against the window near which they sat.

      "An awful storm, indeed," remarked the old detective. "It wouldn't surprise me if after all Mr. Butler did not come."

      "He spoke in his letter of being quite feeble."

      "Yes, and yet he gave his age at only sixty-five."

      "Some men wear better than others."

      "Decidedly so. We can only wait and see. I hate to disappoint Alice. There is no telling what difference it may make to her."

      A deafening thunderclap interrupted the conversation.

      Evidently the Bradys had come to Pell street for a purpose.

      The storm continued to rage.

      At twenty minutes past eleven the Bradys, who had held the table far beyond the limit by tipping their waiter, began to think it time to pull out.

      "He will hardly come now," said the old detective. "Probably we shall hear from him to-morrow, but I am sorry we could not have finished up to-night. Alice is running a great risk, and I don't care to have her remain with that Chinese woman a moment longer than necessary."

      He had scarcely spoken when a very young man, little more than a boy, in fact, entered the restaurant.

      In his buttonhole he wore a yellow dahlia.

      It was rather a singular flower for a boutonniere.

      The Bradys noticed it at once.

      "Look!" whispered Harry. "A yellow dahlia, the flower Mr. Butler was to wear so that we could identify him."

      "Yes, but a young man – a mere boy. It must be a coincidence," the old detective replied.

      "I don't know, governor. He has evidently spotted you. He is coming this way."

      "Can Mr. Butler have sent a substitute?"

      The boy approached the table.

      He was dark and handsome, slightly undersized, and very well dressed.

      "Excuse me," he said in a manly way, addressing the elder detective, "are you Old King Brady?"

      "I am," was the reply.

      "I thought so. My name is Butler – Ed Butler. My father had an appointment with you to-night at half-past ten; Mr. Edward Butler, of Albany. He was too sick to come to New York. He gave out at the last moment, so he sent me in his place."

      "Sit down," replied Old King Brady. "You are terribly wet, my boy."

      "Yes, it's raining like the dickens."

      "Won't you have something to eat? A cup of coffee. You get good coffee here."

      The boy sat down with a shudder.

      "I don't want to eat anything in this place," he replied. "I think that mere knowledge that the food was prepared by a Chinaman would make it choke me."

      "You don't like the Chinese, evidently," said Harry.

      "Can you wonder? They have stolen my sister. Isn't that enough?"

      "It is sad," observed Old King Brady, "but if white men will permit their daughters to act as teachers for Chinamen, what can they expect."

      "That's what I say. I was opposed to Ethel having anything to do with that mission from the first, so was father, but mother encouraged her, and Ethel always would have her way. Now she has run off with a Chink, and I suppose it is the last we shall ever see of her. The minister who married them ought to be shot."

      It was the old story.

      Ed Butler's brief speech tells it. We need not enlarge.

      Here was a pretty Albany girl, a mission worker, eloping with one of her Chinese pupils, a man years older than herself, and now her deluded mother sought to get her back again.

      The Bradys would hardly have touched the case if it had not been that Mr. Butler occupied a government position at Albany, and they had been particularly requested by the chief of the Secret Service Bureau at Washington to take the matter up.

      So far it had been only a matter of correspondence.

      Old King Brady knew some things about the business which young Ed Butler did not know, and he was destined to learn still other things from a letter which the boy now delivered.

      "When father found he couldn't come he wrote this, Mr. Brady," he said. "My orders were to deliver it to you before we made any talk."

      "Ah!" said the old detective. "We will read the letter."

      He did so.

      It was quite lengthy.

      Harry noticed that the old detective read certain parts of it over twice.

      Folding it up and putting it in his pocket, at last the old detective turned to Ed.

      "Are you much attached to Miss Ethel, my boy?" he asked.

      "Why, sure – she's my sister," he replied quickly.

      "I want the truth," said Old King Brady. "Certain points in your father's letter require me to ask the question. Be frank and honest now. You were constantly quarreling, were you not?"

      "Sometimes we quarreled – yes. Ethel was rather hard on me."

      "In other words, if she were not your sister you would not be in the least attached to her?"

      Ed nodded, looking surprised.

      "Well, I will say then for your benefit that the girl is no relation whatever to you. Your mother, as you are aware, is your father's second wife. You have always supposed Ethel to be your half sister, but she isn't even that. She is the daughter of Mr. Rawson, your mother's first husband by a previous marriage."

      "Gee! I'm glad!" blurted the boy. "Now I can say what I really think. She's just horrid! I shouldn't shed a tear if we never found her, and that's a fact."

      "So there is one load off your mind," observed the old detective.

      "Yes, but why didn't my father tell me?" demanded Ed.

      "He had sworn to your mother never to tell you. He instructs me to tell you, so that, in a way, he may not break his word."

      "Poor pop," sighed Ed. "He certainly has a hard time of it. But what about Ethel? Is she here in Chinatown, as you supposed?"

      "I believe such to be the case. My partner, Miss Montgomery, who has been working for three days on the matter, is to report to us to-night. Disguised as a Chinese woman, she has been in a certain place where she expected to get information, and I have no doubt has done so by this