A Woman at Bay
ct than Nick Carter. Everything depended now upon the perfection whi
ang he was seeking. For the detective had determined in the beginning that the headquarters of the gang was somewhere in this vicinity. Everything in his first investigations pointed to that.
of the others soon after his arrival, had doubtless been repor
ating the impression in the mind of a possible observer that they were strangers to one another. He knew perfectly well that if a watch had b
ld make himself extremely dangerous on the instant should he choose to do so. And there was n
ng which each man studies the others. Suspicion is always the first impulse at such meetings. Their attitudes are exactly that of strange dogs which encounter each other for the f
t it requires only a few moments for them to determine whether they will be friends o
sly at the short pipe he was smoking; and so the others of his part
five minutes, and then one of the late arrivals cast aside
" he demanded, in an even tone,
ver to this question, and a
s the leader of thi
that their chief would answer if he considered it wise to do so; and Nick rem
self directly to Nick Carter, as being, doubtless, the
, didn't you?
you," was th
talk United St
u, if necessary," wa
ok like
none of your business-unless you sh
you think of that?" And then to Nick again: "W
shes of his pipe, rose slowly to his feet, and
, if necessary-and with guns, or knives, or fists, as you please. I come here, and I get into a tree and wait. Why? Because I have been told of this place, and that always there is somebody around here. I thought I would see who the somebody was before somebody saw me. So I get my
he instant Nick ceased speaking, the man to whom he had addressed his remarks drew back h
that treacherous blow. Even he might have done so had he not
epped in a manner that would have made Jim Corbett, in his palmiest day
effort, found himself seized in a viselike grip, raised from his feet, and hurled backward
ket in search of a weapon; but he did not draw it forth again, for h
didn't hurt you, when I might have
y as it had arisen, and he grinned as he slow
he knew that this stranger might have hurt him severely had he ch
ou pass," he said.
ohn by them as kno
me Handsome, by way of
y clasped hands for an in
these gaz
t, and beginning to refill his pipe. "If they ain't a
eeled upon
demanded, "and w
't make any difference whether you have or not. I'm the Chicken, all right; and it's Chick for short." Ch
. "The Chicken is dead. We
all right. Only it happens that it wasn't the Chi
as it,
slid under. The rest of the clothes didn't make no difference. They thought he was t
ng his hand a second time. "I know about you
ome. I reckon we'
turned to
handle, covey
around him after the manner of a man who is warming himself, until the faces of the others around him developed broad grins-and un
you, you loon
plied Ten-Ichi, now
ay so! Were
y that you should b
inned with
"What's your na
-Ten, for shor
at the wrong time. I would advise you not to do that. And you?" He turned now to Patsy, w
ll me Pat. If ye don't happen to like it, sure you can call me Tim, or Mike, or Shamus, or any old thing that suits
am. Who
that. He calls himself
d Ten-Ichi, lest unpleasant results should come of it. But it was evident that Patsy knew his ground, and had prepared for th
lly broke the silence th
andle-which isn't spoken lightly around
ess, it wouldn't hurrt ye any. Ye seem to be making of yerself a sort of highcockalorum elegantarium bosski. If ye tell m
and this time it was Nick
o's this other bunch? What I wan
eply. Then he wheeled quick
the chief. I'll take you to him. Th