By the World Forgot: A Double Romance of the East and West. Brady Cyrus Townsend

By the World Forgot: A Double Romance of the East and West - Brady Cyrus Townsend


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impatiently as the pause lengthened.

      "He changed his mind after we put the limousine in the garage and insisted on going back to his own rooms."

      "Did you let him go?"

      "I did."

      "Why?"

      "Well, Miss Treadway, I couldn't help it, and, to be frank, I didn't try. You see we were neither of us very sure of ourselves and-and-"

      "I see."

      "He took my runabout, drove off and-that's all."

      "Have you found the runabout?"

      "Yes, the police found it in an alley near South Water Street, badly smashed. Beekman's overcoat and cap were in the car."

      "Do you think he has been hurt?" questioned Stephanie, who had listened breathlessly to the conversation between her lover and her maid-of-honor.

      "I'm sure that he can't have been," returned Harnash with definiteness which carried conviction to his questioner, and no one else caught the meaning look he shot at her.

      "And that's all?" asked Josephine.

      "Absolutely all I can tell you," he replied truthfully, none noticing the equivoke but Stephanie, who of course could not call attention to it.

      "You poor girl," said Josephine, gathering Stephanie in her arms.

      "It's outrageous. It's horrible," cried the girl, biting her lip to keep back her tears.

      She really could scarcely tell whether she was glad or sorry, now that it had come; not that her feelings had changed, but there was the public scandal, the affront, the-but she had not time to speculate.

      "What is outrageous, what is horrible?" asked John Maynard, coming into the room and catching her words. "What can be outrageous or horrible in such a wedding as we have arranged? Why, Stephanie, what's the matter? You're as white as a sheet, and Harnash, are you ill? You're a pretty looking spectacle for a best man."

      "Father," said his daughter, "they can't find Derrick."

      "Can't find him!" exclaimed Maynard. "Does he have to be sought for on his wedding day? If I were going to marry a stunning girl like you, for all you're as pale as a ghost, I-"

      "There's not going to be any wedding," said Stephanie, mechanically.

      "No wedding!" roared Maynard, surprised intensely. "What do you mean? Are you backing out at the last minute?"

      "No, it's not I."

      "Look here, will some one explain this mystery to me?" asked the man, turning to the rather frightened bevy of girls. "It's eleven-thirty; we ought to be starting. What's the meaning of this infernal foolishness? You, Harnash, what are you standing there looking like a ghost for? One would think you were going to be married yourself."

      "Mr. Maynard," said Josephine, taking upon herself the task, "Stephanie has told you the truth. Mr. Harnash has just come and he doesn't know where Mr. Beekman is."

      "Doesn't know where he is?"

      "He can't be found, sir," said Harnash.

      "Do you mean to tell me that he has run away and left my girl in the lurch? By God, he'll-"

      "I'm sure it isn't that," said Harnash earnestly, "but the fact is we had a bachelor dinner last night."

      "Of course you did, but what has that to do with it?"

      "Everything. I guess we indulged a little too much."

      "Well, bachelors have done that fool thing since time and the world began."

      "Yes, but Beekman hasn't been seen since early this morning, two or three o'clock."

      "Who saw him last?"

      "I did," said Harnash, briefly repeating his explanation.

      "What did you do?"

      "I 'phoned to his house and they said he hadn't been there all night. I dressed, sent my man out in a taxi, took my own car, summoned the office force to my assistance, and Dougherty's detectives, and I've scoured the city for him."

      "The police?"

      "I have notified them, of course, as soon as they reported the finding of my runabout. They're on the hunt, too. We have even called up every hotel in the city. He's not to be found."

      "It must be foul play," said Maynard, taking Harnash's account of it at its face value.

      "I suppose so," said Harnash, wincing a little, although he would fain not, and again shooting a quick glance at Stephanie, and then daringly following it with a quick gesture of negation to reassure her.

      "Where that car was found it wouldn't take much to interest a thief."

      "No. He had a watch, jewelry, money. Indeed, I have a dim remembrance of his flashing a roll in some place or other."

      "That will be it."

      "Meanwhile what is to be done, sir?"

      "It's a quarter to twelve now," said Josephine Treadway.

      "God, how I hate this," said old Maynard. "Here," he stepped to the door and called his private secretary, "Bentley, drive up to the Cathedral like mad, tell the Bishop that the wedding is called off. Yes, don't stand there like a fish; get out."

      "But we'll have to give some reason to the people, explain to the guests in the church," expostulated the secretary.

      "Reason be damned," said Maynard, roughly.

      "Excuse me," said Harnash, "it would be better for all concerned, and especially Miss Maynard, if the matter were explained at once, and fully. You wouldn't like to have anyone think for a moment that she had been left in the lurch."

      "Mr. Harnash is right, sir. It must be explained as well as it can."

      "Very well, Bentley," said his employer. "Tell the Bishop that Mr. Beekman has disappeared, that we are of the opinion that he has met with foul play, that under the circumstances there is nothing to do but call off the wedding and have the explanation announced in the Cathedral in any way he likes, and then get back here as quickly as possible. Stephanie, I'd rather have lost half my fortune than have this happen, but keep up your courage. I feel that nothing but some dastardly work would have kept Beekman away. He is the soul of honor and he was passionately devoted to you. Don't faint, my dear girl."

      "I'm not going to faint," said Stephanie, resolutely. "Girls, I'm awfully sorry for your disappointment," she faltered.

      "Don't mind us," said Josephine.

      "I'm afraid that perhaps you-you-"

      "We're going at once," explained one of the bridesmaids, "if you will have our motors called up."

      "Of course," said Maynard. "Harnash, you attend to that and then come to me in the library. William," he added to the footman who came in obedience to his summons, "get me the chief of police on the telephone and when the reporters come, and they will be here just as soon as the announcement is made at the church, show them into the library in a body. I've got to see them and I'll see them all at once. Harnash, you come, too. You can tell the story better than anyone."

      CHAPTER VI

      STEPHANIE IS GLAD AFTER ALL

      The sudden disappearance of one of the principals in the Maynard-Beekman wedding was the sensation of the hour. John Maynard was deeply hurt and terribly concerned because he was very fond of Beekman, and because in spite of his bold front the young man's failure to appear had reflected upon his daughter. The lewd papers of the baser sort, playing up the bachelor dinner, did not hesitate to point this out, and insinuations, so thinly disguised that every one who read understood, appeared daily. That there was not a word of truth in them was of little consequence either to the writers who knew they were lying or to the public, which did not. The clientele of such papers was ready to believe anything or everything bad; especially of the idle rich.

      Reportorial and even editorial-which is worse-imagination was unrestrained. As the newspapers had devoted so much space to the preparations, they did not stint themselves in discussing the aftermath of the affair. The police


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