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"That is very strange! I cannot understand!" Ray remarked, deeply perplexed. "Why am I here?"
"You--have not been quite well of late, and you are here for treatment."
"For _treatment_? Do you mean that I am here as a patient of Doctor Wesselhoff?" cried Ray, aghast.
"Yes, sir, for a little while, until you are better."
"Who brought me here? Who made arrangements for my coming here?"
"Your own friends; and really, sir, it would be better if you would accept the situation quietly," said the man, in a conciliatory tone.
Ray began to get excited again at this information, and the more so, that he did not believe it, while the mystery of his situation seemed to deepen.
He had heard of Doctor Wesselhoff, as he had said; he knew that he was regarded as one of the finest brain specialists in the metropolis, if not in the country, and that, as a man, he stood high in the estimation of the public.
This being the case, he certainly would not lend himself to such an outrageous trick as had been practiced upon him that day.
He did not believe what the old man told him--he did not believe that he was in Doctor Wesselhoff's house at all. It was only a lie on the part of the diamond thieves to further their own schemes, he thought, and yet the man's manner was so respectful, and even kind, that he was deeply perplexed.
"There is nothing the matter with me--I am as sane as you are," he said, flus.h.i.+ng angrily at the idea of being regarded as a lunatic.
"Yes--yes; we will hope so," was the gentle response, as the attendant began to gather the dishes and remnants of Ray's lunch.
"You say that my friends brought me here," persisted the young man; "that is false; I was brought here by a woman whom I never saw before, and who robbed me of valuable diamonds. If she arranged for my coming, it is all a trick. But what did she claim was my special malady?" he concluded, with considerable curiosity.
"We will not talk any more about it now, sir, if you please," said his companion, in a soothing tone. "Doctor Wesselhoff will explain it all to you when he returns."
"When he returns? Where has he gone--how long will he be absent?" Ray demanded, with a sinking heart, for time was precious, and he was almost wild to get away to hunt for the thieves who had robbed him; while, too, he knew that his father must already have become alarmed at his long absence.
"The doctor was called away by a telegram only an hour ago," the attendant replied, hoping by this explanation to divert the mind of his charge from his mania of robbery. "His wife, who went South a week ago to visit friends, has been taken suddenly ill, and he was obliged to hasten to her; but he will return at the earliest possible moment."
"Gone _South_! and I must remain here until his return?" Ray cried, in a voice of agony. "I _will_ not," he went on fiercely, his face growing crimson with angry excitement. "I tell you I am perfectly well, and I have been only tricked into this place by some cunning thief who has robbed me. Whether Doctor Wesselhoff is concerned in it or not, I cannot tell. I confess it seems very like it to me, although I have always heard him well spoken of. Stay!" he cried, with a start, "you tell me the doctor has already left the city! oh! then he must be a party to the foul wrong of which I am the victim. Let me out--I tell you I _will_ not submit to such inhuman treatment," and he turned fiercely upon the attendant, as if he meditated attacking and overpowering him, with the hope of forcing his way from the place.
But the attendant quietly retreated before him, looking him calmly in the eye, and, as Ray pressed closely upon him, he made a few pa.s.ses before his face with his hands.
Instantly the young man began to experience that same sense of weariness and drowsiness that had over-powered him when those masterful eyes had fastened themselves upon him through the hole in the wall.
"Don't! don't!" he cried, throwing out his arms as if to ward off the influence, while he tried to resist it with all his will-power.
But his arm fell powerless by his side and he sank into a chair near which he was standing, and the attendant turned and left the room, a smile of peculiar satisfaction on his face.
"That was very well done, I think, for a pupil of the great Doctor Wesselhoff," he muttered, as he shot the bolt into the socket and turned to go about other duties. "It will not be long before I shall be able to exert the power as skillfully as he does."
Ray sat as one half dazed for a few moments after the departure of Mr.
Huff, and tried to combat with all the strength of his will the strange desire to sleep.
Then suddenly his glance became riveted upon something that was clinging to the leg of his trousers.
He stooped to pick it off, examining it closely, and uttered an exclamation of surprise upon finding that it was a small piece of ladies'
cloth of a delicate mauve color.
"Ha!" he cried, excitedly; "it is as precious as gold dust, and may prove to be very useful to me. How fortunate I am to have found it!"
It was a small piece of woolen goods that had been torn from Mrs.
Vanderbeck's dress, and Ray, after a moment, put it carefully away in his pocket-book, in the hope of some time finding the rent that it would fit.
It was true that Doctor Wesselhoff had been suddenly called away to his sick wife.
No other summons would have had the power to draw him away from New York at that time, for he experienced great anxiety and interest regarding the new and peculiar case that had just been confided to his care.
He really believed that Ray--or young Walton, as he believed his patient's name to be, in spite of the fact that he had given it as Palmer--was a monomaniac; for his words and manner fully corroborated the statement which his visitor of the previous day had made to him. He had not the slightest suspicion that he also was the dupe of a cunning plot to secure diamonds that were worth a large sum of money.
But before leaving the city he gave the most careful directions to his pupil, Doctor Huff, who had been studying with him for more than a year, regarding the treatment of his patient, and then he was obliged to hurry away, promising, however, that he would return just as soon as it would do to leave his wife.
It took him two days of continuous travel to reach his destination, and then he found Mrs. Wesselhoff so very ill that all his thought and care were concentrated upon her.
The place to which he went was a remote Southern town, where Northern newspapers seldom found their way; consequently he could not know anything of the intense excitement that was prevailing in New York over the mysterious disappearance of Raymond Palmer and the costly stones he had taken with him.
To his pupil he had hastily explained all that he could regarding the young man's case, and had told him that his name was Walton; so, of course, Doctor Huff, on reading an account of the diamond robbery and the strange disappearance of the merchant's son, never dreamed that the patient left in his charge was the missing young man.
Mr. Palmer did not seem to be at all troubled over the non-appearance of his son until the time arrived to close the store for the night; then he began to feel some anxiety.
Still, he told himself, Ray might possibly have been detained longer than he had antic.i.p.ated, and finding it rather late to return to the store, had gone immediately home, where there was also a safe in which the diamonds could be deposited for the night.
With this hope to rest upon, he hastened to his residence, but was made even more anxious upon being told by the housekeeper "that Mr. Raymond had not come in yet."
He kept hoping he might come, so he ate his supper and then tried to compose himself to read his papers; but his uneasiness only continued to increase.
He endured the suspense until nine o'clock, and then went down town to consult with the superintendent of police.
He confided to him what had occurred, and his fears regarding the safety of his son, and he was by no means rea.s.sured when that official at once exclaimed that "the whole thing was a put-up job."
"Keep quiet," he advised, "for a day or two, and we will see what we can do."
He set his detectives at work upon the case immediately, while the anxious father endeavored to endure his suffering in silence. But the "day or two" brought no revelations, and his agony could no longer be controlled; he believed that his son had been murdered for the sake of the diamonds, and thus the matter became public.
The newspapers were full of the affair, and caused great excitement. The city offered a large reward for any intelligence regarding the missing young man or the diamonds, and this was doubled by Mr. Palmer himself.
But days and weeks pa.s.sed, and no clew was obtained regarding either the stolen jewels or Ray's mysterious fate; therefore the belief that he had been foully dealt with prevailed very generally.
Mr. Palmer had placed in the hands of a private detective a detailed account in writing of the woman's visit to the store, and also a minute description of herself, and the moment he had finished reading it the man's face lighted up with eager interest, even enthusiasm.
"Great Scott!" exclaimed the detective, with a resounding slap upon his knee, "I'll wager my badge that it's a sequel to that Bently affair, when a young broker of Chicago was wretchedly fooled with some diamonds about three years ago!--that woman also had short, curly red hair."
He related the story to Mr. Palmer, and informed him that he had been engaged upon the case, off and on, for a long time; but since he had come to New York to reside he had about given it up as hopeless.
"This may put me on the trail again, however," finally remarked Mr.
Rider, who was the detective that Justin Cutler had employed.