Five Millions by Wireless
Within the great room, dim,
shadowy, mysterious as the laboratory of some alchemist of old, and foul with
the pungent odors of strange chemical messes, there blazed a single light, a
powerful electrical contrivance fitted with reflector, and so shaded that its
concentrated rays beat down fiercely upon a table littered with scientific
apparatus; and bending over the table was a man, an odd, almost pathetic little
figure, slight to childishness, small of stature, attenuated. His hair was a
straw-colored thatch thrown back impatiently from a domelike brow, increasing in
effect the abnormal size of his head. His eyes were narrow slits of pale blue,
squinting petulantly through thick spectacles; his wizened, clean-shaven face
was white with the pallor of the student; his mouth was a straight, bloodless
line. His hands, busy now at some microscopic labor, were slender and almost
transparent under the blinding glare from above; his fingers long, sensitive,
delicate.
The
door opened, and an elderly woman appeared with a tray.
“Some
coffee and rolls, sir,” she explained. “Really you ought to have something,
sir.”
“Put
them down.” The little man didn’t lift his eyes from his work; he spoke curtly.
“And
if you should ask me, sir,” the woman continued, “I’d say you ought to stop
whatever you’re a-doing of, and take some rest, sir.”
“Tut,
tut, Martha!” the little man objected. “I’ve only just begun.”
“You’ve
been a-standing right there, sir,” Martha denied, in righteous indignation,
“ever since Sunday afternoon at four o’clock.”
“What
time is it now?”
“It’s
ten o’clock Tuesday morning, sir.”
“Dear
me, dear me!”
“You
haven’t slept a wink, sir,” Martha complained, “and you haven’t eat enough——”
“Martha,
you annoy me,” the little man interrupted peevishly. “Run along and attend to
your duties.”
“But,
sir, you can’t keep a-going like——”
“Very
well, then,” and there was a childish tone of resignation in the master’s
voice. “It’s Tuesday, you say? Tell me when it’s noon Wednesday.”
Martha
went out with a helpless shrug of her shoulders, leaving him alone.
Hours
passed. The coffee, untasted, grew cold. Motionless, the little man continued
at his labors with tense eagerness in his narrow eyes, oblivious alike of the
things about him, and of exhausted nature. The will beneath the straw-colored
thatch knew not weariness.
And
this was “The Thinking Machine”—Professor Augustus S. F. X. Van Dusen, Ph. D.,
F. R. S., M. D., LL. D., et cetera, et cetera—logician, analyst, worker of
miracles in the exact sciences, intellectual wizard of his time; this the
master mind, exalted by the cumulative genius of generations gone before, which
had isolated itself on a pinnacle of achievement through sheer force of applied
reason. Once he had been the controversial center of his profession, riding
down pet theories and tentative surmises and cherished opinions, and setting up
instead precise facts, a few rescued from the chaos he had himself created,
more of his own uncovering. Now he was the court of last appeal in the
sciences.
The
Thinking Machine! No one of the honorary degrees thrust upon him willy-nilly by
the universities of the world described him half so accurately as did this
title—a chance paradox applied by a newspaper man. Seemingly tireless, calm,
unemotional—unless one counted as an emotion the constant note of irritation in
his voice—terse of speech, crabbed of manner, and possessed of an uncanny
faculty of separating all things into their primal units, he lived in a
circumscribed sphere which he had stripped of all illusion. The mental
precision which distinguished his laboratory work characterized all else he
did. If any man ever reduced human frailties, human virtues, and human motives
to mathematics that man was The Thinking Machine.
It
has been my pleasure to set down at another time and place some results of The
Thinking Machine’s investigations along lines disassociated with abstruse
problems of his profession, these being chiefly instances in which he had
turned the light of cold logic upon perplexing criminal mysteries with
well-nigh mathematical precision.
Also,
it has been my pleasure to relate at length some of those curious adventures
which led to The Thinking Machine’s incongruous friendship for Hutchinson
Hatch.
Hatch
was a newspaper reporter, a young man of vitality and enthusiasm and keen
wordliness; he was a breath of the outside to this odd little man, who never
read papers, who rarely came into contact with things as they are, who had not
even the small vices which bring individuals together. It had been Hatch who
first applied the title of The Thinking Machine to the eminent scientist, and
the phrase had stuck.
Perhaps
not the least interesting of the adventures of these two together was that which culminated in the
bestowal upon The Thinking Machine of the Order of the Iron Eagle, second
class, by Emperor Gustavus, of Germania-Austria. It so happened in that case
that the fate of an empire and the future of its royal house lay for a time in
The Thinking Machine’s slender hands. Failure on his part certainly would have
changed the history of Europe, and probably the map. This problem was purely
intellectual, and came to his attention at a time when physical vitality was at
its lowest, after forty-eight hours’ unceasing work in his laboratory.
The
door opened, and Martha entered.
“Martha,”
the eminent scientist stormed, “if you’ve brought me more coffee I shall
discharge you!”
“It
isn’t coffee, sir,” she replied. “It’s a——”
“And
don’t tell me it’s already twelve o’clock Wednesday.”
“It’s
a card, sir. Two gentlemen who——”
“Can’t
see them.”
Not
for an instant had the squinting eyes been raised from the work which engrossed
The Thinking Machine. Martha laid the card on the table; he glanced at it
impatiently. Herr Von Hartzfeldt!
“He
says, sir, it’s a matter of the utmost importance,” Martha explained.
“Ask
him who he is and what he wants.”
The
unexpectedness of the answer Martha brought back straightened The Thinking
Machine where he stood.
“He
says, sir,” she reported, “that he’s the ambassador to the United States from
Germania-Austria.”
“Show
him in at once.”
Two
gentlemen entered, one Baron Von Hartzfeldt, polished, courtly, distinguished
in appearance, a famous figure in the diplomatic world; the other of a more
rugged type, shorter, heavier, with bristly hair and beard, and deeply bronzed
face. For an instant they stared into the wizened countenance of the little
scientist with something like astonishment.
“We
have come to you, Mr. Van Dusen, in an extremity the gravity of which cannot be
exaggerated,” Baron Von Hartzfeldt began suavely. “We know, as all the world
knows, your splendid achievements in science. We know, too, that you have
occasionally consented to investigate more material problems—that is, mysteries
of crimes, and——”
“Please
come to the point,” The Thinking Machine interrupted tartly. “If you hadn’t
known who I was, and hadn’t needed me, you wouldn’t have come. Now, what is it?
This gentleman——”
“Pardon
me,” the ambassador begged, in polite confusion at the curt directness of his
host. “Admiral Hausen-Aubier, of the royal navy, commanding the Mediterranean
Fleet, now visiting your city on his flagship, the Friedrich der Grosse, which lies in the outer harbor.”
The
admiral bowed ceremoniously, and, accepting a slight movement of The Thinking
Machine’s hand as an invitation to seats, the two gentlemen sat down. Not until
that moment had the scientist realized his own weariness. The big chair offered
grateful relaxation to tired limbs, and, with his enormous head tilted back,
narrowed eyes turned upward, and slender fingers precisely tip to tip, he
waited.
“One
of my officers has disappeared from the flagship—rather, has utterly vanished,”
said Admiral Hausen-Aubier. He spoke excellent English, but there was a
guttural undercurrent of excitement in his tone. “He went to his stateroom at
midnight; next morning at seven o’clock he was gone. The guard at his door had
been drugged with chloroform, and can tell nothing.”
“Guard
at the door?” questioned The Thinking Machine. “Why?”
Admiral
Hausen-Aubier seemed oddly disturbed by the question. He shot a hasty glance at
Baron Von Hartzfeldt.
“Ship
discipline,” explained the diplomat vaguely.
“Was
he under arrest?”
“Oh,
no!” This from the admiral.
“Do
you sleep with a guard at your door?”
“No.”
“Any
of the other officers?”
“No.”
“Go
on, please.”
“There
isn’t much to tell.” There was bewilderment, deep concern, grief even, in the
bronzed face. “The officer’s bed had been occupied, but there was no sign of a
struggle. It was as if he had arisen, dressed, and gone out. There was no note,
no shred or fragment of a clew—nothing. No one saw him from the moment he
entered his stateroom and closed his door—not even the guard. There were half a
dozen sentries, watchmen, on deck; neither saw nor heard anything out of the
ordinary. He isn’t aboard ship; we have searched from keel to signal yard; and
he didn’t go overside in a ship’s boat; they are all accounted for. He is not a
particularly strong swimmer, and could not have reached shore in that way.”
“You
say the guard had been chloroformed,” The Thinking Machine went back. “Just
what happened to him? How do you know he was chloroformed?”
“By
the odor,” replied the admiral, answering the last question first. “In order to
enter the officer’s suite it was necessary——”
“Suite,
did you say?”
“Yes;
that is, he occupied more than one stateroom——”
“I
understand. Go on.”
“It
was necessary to pass through an antechamber. The guard slept there. He says it
must have been after one o’clock when he went to sleep. Next morning he was
found unconscious, and the officer was gone.” He paused. “There can be no
question whatever of the guard’s integrity. He has been attached to the—the
officer for many years.”
With
eyes all but closed, The Thinking Machine sat motionless for minute after
minute, the while thin, spidery lines of though ruffled the domelike brow. At
last:
“The
matter hasn’t been reported to the police?”
“No.”
Admiral Hausen-Aubier looked startled.
“Why
not?”
“Because,”
Baron Von Hartzfeldt answered, “when it was brought to my attention in Washington
by wire, we decided against that. The affair is extremely delicate. It is
inadvisable that the police even should so much as suspect——”
The
Thinking Machine nodded.
“How
about the secret service?”
“That
bureau has been at work on the case from the first,” the diplomatist replied;
“also half a dozen secret agents attached to the embassy. You must understand,
Mr. Van Dusen, that it is absolutely essential that no word of the
disappearance—not even a hint of it—be allowed to become public. The result
would be a—a disaster. I can’t say more.”
“Perhaps,”
suggested The Thinking Machine irrelevantly, “perhaps the officer deserted?”
“I
would vouch for his loyalty with my life,” declared the admiral, with deep
feeling.
“Or
perhaps it was suicide?”
Again
there was a swift interchange of glances between the admiral and the
ambassador. Obviously that was a possibility that had occurred to each of them,
and yet one that neither dared admit.
“Impossible!”
the diplomat shook his head.
“Nothing
is impossible,” snapped The Thinking Machine curtly. “Don’t say that. It annoys
me exceedingly.” Fell a short silence. Finally: “Just when did your officer
disappear?”
“Last
Tuesday—almost a week ago,” Admiral Hausen-Aubier told him.
“And
nothing—nothing—has been heard of him? Or from him? Or from any one else
concerning him?”
“Nothing—not
a word,” Admiral Hausen-Aubier said. “If we could only hear! If we could only
know whether he is living or dead!”
“What’s
his name?”
“Lieutenant
Leopold Von Zinckl.”
For
the first time, The Thinking Machine lowered his eyes and swept the
countenances of the two men before him—both grave, troubled, lined with worry.
Under his curious scrutiny, the diplomatist retained his self-possession by
sheer force of will; but a vital, consuming nervousness seemed to seize upon
the man of the sea.
“I
mean,” and again the scientist was squinting into the gloom above, “I mean his real name.”
Admiral
Hausen-Aubier’s broad face flushed suddenly as if from a blow, and he started
to his feet. Some subtle warning form the ambassador caused him to drop back
into his seat.
“That
is his real name,” he said distinctly; “Lieutenant Leopold Von Zinckl.”
“May
I ask,” The Thinking Machine was speaking very slowly, “if his majesty the
emperor has been informed of Lieutenant Von Zinckl’s disappearance?”
Perhaps
The Thinking Machine anticipated the effect of the question; perhaps he did
not. Anyway, he didn’t look around when Admiral Hausen-Aubier came to his feet
with a mighty Teutonic exclamation, and strode the length of the big room, his
face dead white beneath the coat of bronze. Baron Von Hartzfeldt remained
seated, apparently fascinated by some strange, newly discovered quality in the
scientist.
“We
have not informed the emperor of the affair as yet,” he said, at last,
steadily. “We thought it inadvisable to go so far until every effort had been
made to——”
The
Thinking Machine interrupted him with an impatient gesture of one slender hand.
“As
a matter of fact, the situation is like this, isn’t it?” he queried abruptly. “Prince
Otto Ludwig, heir apparent to the throne of Germania-Austria, has been abducted
from the royal suite of the battleship Friedrich
der Grosse, in the harbor of a friendly nation?”
There
was an instant’s amazed silence. Suddenly Admiral Hausen-Aubier covered his
face with his hands, and stood, his great shoulders shaking. Straining nerves
had broken at last. Baron Von Hartzfeldt, ripe in diplomatic experience, seemed
merely astonished, if one might judge by the face of him.
“How
do you know that?” he inquired quietly, after a moment. “Outside of the secret
service and my own agents, there are not six persons in the world who are
aware——”
“How
do I know it?” interrupted The Thinking Machine. “You have just told me. Logic,
logic, logic!”
“I
have told you?” There was blank bewilderment on the diplomatist’s face.
“You
and Admiral Hausen-Aubier together,” The Thinking Machine declared petulantly.
“But
how, man, how?” demanded Baron Von Hartzfeldt. “Of course, you knew from the
newspapers that his highness, Crown Prince Otto Ludwig, was visiting America;
but——”
“I
never read newspapers,” snapped The Thinking Machine. “I didn’t know he was
here any more than I knew the battleship Friedrich
der Grosse was in the harbor. It’s logic, logic—the adding together of the
separate units—a simple demonstration of the fact that two and two make four,
not sometimes, but all the time.”
Admiral
Hausen-Aubier, having mastered the emotion which had shaken him, resumed his
seat, staring curiously into the wizened face before him.
“Still
I don’t understand,” Baron Von Hartzfeldt insisted. “Logic, you say. How?”
“I’ll
see if I can make it clear.” And there was that in the manner of the eminent
man of science which was no compliment to their perspicacity. “You tell me an
officer has disappeared, that his guard was chloroformed. The officer was not
under arrest, and no other officer aboard ship had a guard. I assume,
therefore, for the moment that the officer was a man of consequence, else he
was mentally irresponsible. An instant later you tell me how to enter the
officer’s suite—not stateroom, but suite. Ergo, a man of so much consequence
that he occupies a suite; a man of so much consequence that you didn’t dare
report his disappearance to the police; a man of so much consequence that public
knowledge of the affair would precipitate disaster. Do you follow the thread?”
Fascinated,
the two listeners nodded.
“Very
well,” The Thinking Machine resumed, in that odd little tone of irritation.
“There are only a few persons in the world of so much consequence as all
that—that is, of so much consequence aboard a ship of war. Those are members of
the royal household. I am of German descent; hence I am well acquainted with
the histories of the German countries. I know that Emperor Gustavus has only
one son, Otto Ludwig, the crown prince. I know that no reigning king has ever visited
America; therefore logic, inexorable, indisputable logic, tells me that Prince
Otto Ludwig is the officer who occupied the royal suite aboard your ship.”
He
paused, and readjusted himself in the great chair. When he spoke again, it was
in the tone of one who is thoughtfully checking off and verifying the units of
a problem he has solved. His two visitors were staring at him breathlessly.
“Of
course, no royal person save a son of the house of Germania-Austria would be
occupying the royal suite on a Germania-Austrian battleship,” he said slowly.
“Proper adjustment of the actual facts leading straight to the crown prince
removed instantly as a possibility a vague suggestion that the officer with the
guard at his door, while not a prisoner, was mentally irresponsible. I’ve made
myself clear, I hope?”
“It’s
marvelous!” ejaculated the diplomatist. “If any man can lead us to the end of
this mystery, you are that man!”
“Thanks,”
returned The Thinking Machine dryly.
“You
said,” Admiral Hausen-Aubier questioned tensely, “that his highness had been
abducted?”
“Certainly.”
“Why
abducted instead of—of—murdered——” He shuddered a little. “Instead of suicide?”
“That
man who is clever enough and bold enough to board your ship and chloroform a
guard is not fool enough to murder a man and then drag him out over the guard
and throw him into the sea,” was the reply, “or to drag him out and then murder
him. In either event, such an act would have been useless; and as a rule
murderers don’t do useless things. As for suicide, it would not have been
necessary for the prince to chloroform his guard, or even to leave his
stateroom. Remains, therefore, only abduction.”
“But
who abducted him?” the admiral insisted. “Why? How was he taken away from the
ship?”
The
Thinking Machine shrugged his narrow shoulders.
“I
don’t know,” he said. “Either one of a dozen ways—aëroplane, rowboat,
submarine——” He stopped.
“But—but
no one heard anything,” the admiral pointed out.
“That
doesn’t signify.”
There
seemed nothing to cling to, no tangible fact upon which to base even
understanding. Aëroplane—submarine—’twas fantasy, preposterous, unheard of.
Hopelessly enough, Admiral Hausen-Aubier turned back to the one vital question:
“At
any rate, the prince is alive?”
“I
don’t know. He was abducted a week ago. You’ve heard nothing since. He may have
been murdered after he was taken away. He may have been. I doubt it.”
Admiral
Hausen-Aubier arose tragically, with haggard face, a light of desperation in
his eyes, his powerful, sun-dyed hands pressed to his temples.
“If
he is dead, do you know what it means?” he demanded vehemently. “It means the
fall of the royal house of Germania-Austria with the passing of our emperor,
who is now nearly eighty; it means the end of our country as a monarchy; it
means war, revolution, a—a republic!”
“That
wouldn’t be so bad,” commented The Thinking Machine oddly. “There’ll be nothing
but republics in a few years; witness France, Portugal, China——”
“You
can’t realize the acute political situation in my country,” Admiral
Hausen-Aubier rushed on, heedless of the other’s remark. “Already there are
dissensions; the emperor holds his kingdom together with a rod of iron, and his
people only submit because they expect so much of Prince Otto Ludwig when he
ascends the throne. He is popular with his subjects—the crown prince, I
mean—and they would welcome him as emperor—welcome him, but no one else. It is
absolutely necessary that he be found! The future of my country—our country,”
and he turned to Baron Von Hartzfeldt, “depends upon finding him.”
Seemingly
some new thought was born in The Thinking Machine’s mind. His eyes opened
slightly, and he turned upon Baron Von Hartzfeldt inquiringly. Apparently the
ambassador understood, for he nodded.
“He
is revealing diplomatic secrets,” he said, with a slight movement of his
shoulders; “but what he says is true.”
“In
that case——” The Thinking Machine began; and then he lapsed into silence. For
minute after minute he sat, heedless of the nervous pacing of Admiral
Hausen-Aubier, heedless of the constant interrogation of the ambassador’s eyes.
“In
that case——” the ambassador prompted.
“Is
Crown Prince Otto Ludwig here incognito, or is it generally known that he is in
this country?” the scientist questioned suddenly.
“He
is here officially,” was the response; “that is, publicly. The government of
the United States has received him and entertained him, and you know all that
that means.”
“Then
how do you—have you—accounted for his disappearance?”
“Lies!”
Admiral Hausen-Aubier broke in bitterly. “He is supposed to be dangerously ill,
confined to his stateroom aboard the Friedrich
der Grosse; and no one except the ship’s surgeon is permitted to see him.
We have lied even to our emperor! He believes the prince is ill; if he
understood that his son, the heir apparent, was missing, dead, perhaps—ach, Gott! Every moment I am expecting
sailing orders—orders to return home. I can’t go back to my king and tell him
that the son he intrusted to my care, the hope and salvation of my country,
is—is—I can’t even say dead—I could only say that I don’t know.”
There
was something magnificent in the bronzed old sailorman—something at once rugged
and tender and fierce in his loyalty. The Thinking Machine studied the
grief-stricken face curiously. Unashamed, Admiral Hausen-Aubier permitted the
tears to gather in his eyes and roll down his furrowed cheeks.
“I
don’t care for myself,” he explained huskily. “I do care for my country, for my
prince. In any event, there remains for me only dishonor and death.”
“Suicide?”
questioned the scientist coldly.
“What
else is there?”
“That,”
The Thinking Machine murmured acridly, “would improve the situation a lot! If I
had committed suicide every time I had a problem to solve I should have been
very dead by this time.” His manner changed. “We know the prince was abducted;
he is probably not dead, but we have no word of him or from him; therefore,
there remains only——”
“Only
what?” The question came from his two visitors simultaneously.
“Only
a question of the most effective way of establishing communication with him.”
“If
we knew how to communicate with him, we’d go get him instead!” declared Admiral
Hausen-Aubier grimly. “There are eight hundred men on the battleship who——”
The
Thinking Machine arose, stood staring blankly at the two, much as if he had
never seen them before; then walked over to his worktable, and shut off the
great electric light.
“It’s
easy enough to communicate with Prince Otto Ludwig,” he said, as he returned to
them. “There are half a dozen ways.”
“Then
why, if it is so easy,” demanded the diplomatist, “why hasn’t he communicated
with his ship?”
“There’s
always a chance that he doesn’t want to, you know,” was the enigmatic response.
“How many persons know of his disappearance?”
“Only
five outside of the secret service and the embassy agents,” Admiral
Hausen-Aubier answered. “They are Baron Von Hartzfeldt here, the guard, the
ship’s commander, the ship’s surgeon, and myself.”
“Too
many!” The Thinking Machine shook his head slowly. “However, let’s go aboard
the Friedrich der Grosse. I don’t
recall that I’ve ever been on a modern battleship.”
Night
had fallen as the three men, each eminent in his own profession, boarded a
small power boat off Atlantic Avenue, and were hurried away through slashing
waters to the giant battleship in the outer harbor. There for an hour or more
the little scientist pottered about the magnificent suite which had been
occupied by Prince Otto Ludwig. He asked one or two casual questions of the
guard; that was all, after which he retired to the admiral’s cabin to write a
short note.
“If,”
he remarked, as he addressed an envelope to Hutchinson Hatch, “if the prince is
alive we shall hear from him. If he is dead we will not.” His eye chanced upon
a glaring headline in a newspaper on the desk:
PRINCE OTTO LUDWIG DANGEROUSLY ILL.
Heir to Throne of Germania-Austria
Confined to Suite Aboard the Battle-
Ship “Friedrich der Grosse.”
No One Permitted to See Him.
The
Thinking Machine glanced at Admiral Hausen-Aubier.
“Lies!”
declared the rugged old sailor. “Every day for a week it has been the same. We
are compelled to issue bulletins. Ach,
Gott! He must be found!”
“Please
have this note sent ashore and delivered immediately,” the scientist requested.
“Meanwhile, I haven’t been in bed for three nights. If you’ll give me a berth,
I’ll get some sleep. Wake me if necessary.”
“You
expect something to happen, then?”
“Certainly.
I expect a wireless, but not for several hours—probably not until to-morrow
afternoon.”
“A
wireless?” There was a flicker of hope in the admiral’s eyes. “May—may I ask
from whom?”
“From
Crown Prince Otto Ludwig,” said The Thinking Machine placidly. “I’m going to
sleep. Good night.”
Three
hours later Admiral Hausen-Aubier in person aroused The Thinking Machine from the
lethargy of oblivion which followed upon utter physical and mental exhaustion,
and thrust a wireless message under his nose. It said simply:
O.K. Hatch.
The
Thinking Machine blinked at it, grunted, then turned over as if to go back to
sleep. Struck with some new idea, however, he opened his eyes for an instant.
“Issue
a special bulletin to the press,” he directed drowsily, “to the effect that
Prince Otto Ludwig’s condition has taken a sudden turn for the better. He is
expected to be up and around again in a few days.”
The
sentence ended in a light snore.
All
that night Admiral Hausen-Aubier, haggard, vigilant, sat beside the wireless
operator in his cabinet on the upper deck, waiting, waiting, he knew not for
what. Darkness passed, the stars died, and pallid dawn found him there.
At
nine o’clock he ordered coffee; at noon more coffee.
At
four in the afternoon the thing he had been waiting for came—only three words:
Followed
suggestion. Communicate.
“Very
indistinct, sir,” the operator reported. “An amateur sending.”
The
Thinking Machine, wide awake now, and below deck discussing high explosives
with a gunner’s mate, was summoned. Into the wireless cabinet with him came
Baron Von Hartzfeldt. For an instant the three men studied in silence this
portentous message from the void.
“Keep
in touch with him,” The Thinking Machine instructed the operator. “What’s his
range?”
“Hundred
miles, sir.”
“Strong
or weak?”
“Weak,
sir.”
“Reduce
the range.”
“I
did, sir, and lost him.”
“Increase
it.”
With
the receiver clamped to his ears, the operator thrust his range key forward,
and listened.
“I
lose him, sir,” he reported.
“Very
well. Set at one hundred.” The scientist turned to Baron Von Hartzfeldt and
Admiral Hausen-Aubier. “He is alive, and less than a hundred miles away,” he
explained hurriedly. Then to the operator: “Send as I dictate:
“Is—O—L—there?”
The
instrument hissed as the message spanned the abyss of space; in the glass drum
above, great crackling electric sparks leaped and roared fitfully, lighting the
tense faces of the men in the cabinet. Came dead silence—painful silence—then
the operator read the answer aloud:
“Yes.”
“Mein Gott ich lobe!” One great
exclamation of thanks, and Admiral Hausen-Aubier buried his face in his hands.
To
Baron Von Hartzfeldt the whole thing was wizardry pure and simple. The Thinking
Machine had summoned the lost out of the void. While a hundred trained men,
keen-eyes, indefatigable, wary as ferrets, were searching for the crown prince,
along comes this withered, white-faced little man of science, with his
monstrous head and his feeble hands, and works a miracle under his very eyes!
He listened, fascinated, as The Thinking Machine continued:
“Must—prove—identity—Hausen—Aubier—here—ask—O—L—give—word—or
phrase—identify—him.”
Suddenly
The Thinking Machine whirled about to face the admiral. The answer should prove
once for all whether the prince was alive or dead. Minutes passed. Finally——
“It’s
coming, sir, in German,” the operator explained:
“Neujarstag—eine—cigarre.”
“New
Year’s Day—a cigar!” Admiral Hausen-Aubier translated, in obvious bewilderment.
Swiftly his face cleared. “I understand. He refers to an incident that he and I
alone know. When a lad of twelve he tried to smoke a cigar, and it made him
deathly ill. I saved him from——”
“Send,”
interrupted The Thinking Machine:
“Satisfied—give—terms.”
And
the operator read:
“Five—million—dollars!”
“Five
million dollars!” exclaimed the admiral and the diplomatist, in a breath. “Does
he mean ransom?” Baron Von Hartzfeldt asked, aghast. “Five million dollars!”
“Five
million dollars, yes,” the scientist replied irritably. “We’re not dealing with
children. We’re dealing with shrewd, daring, intelligent men who have played a
big game for a big stake; and if you love your country and your king you’d
better thank God it’s only money they want. Suppose they had demanded a
constitution, or even the abdication of your emperor? That might have meant
revolution, war—anything.” He stared at them an instant, then swung around to
the operator. “Send,” he commanded:
“We—accept—terms——”
“Why,
man, you are mad!” interposed the diplomatist sharply. “It’s preposterous!”
But
The Thinking Machine said again evenly:
“We—accept—terms—specify—by—mail—place—time—manner—of—settlement.”
The
crashing of the mighty current in the glass drum ceased as the message was
finished, and with strained attention the three men waited. Again a tense
pause. At last the operator read:
“Also—assurance—no—prosecution.”
And
The Thinking Machine dictated:
“Accept.”
“Wait
a minute!” commanded Admiral Hausen-Aubier hotly. “Do you mean we are promising
immunity to the men who abducted——”
“Certainly,”
replied the scientist. “They’re not fools. If we don’t promise it, all they
have to do is break off communication and wait until such time as you will
promise it.” He shrugged his shoulders. “Or else stick a knife into your
prince, and end the affair. Besides, prosecution means publicity.”
With
clenched hands, the admiral turned away; no answer seemed possible. Heedless of
the things about him, Baron Von Hartzfeldt sat dumbly meditating upon the
staggering ransom. It would take days to raise so vast a sum, if he could do it
at all; and his private resources, together with those of Admiral
Hausen-Aubier, would be drained to the last dollar. Even then it might be
necessary to call upon the royal treasury. That would be a confession; out of
it would come only dishonor and—death.
The
Thinking Machine dictated:
“Accept—we—pledge—Hausen—Aubier’s—word—of
honor.”
And
the answer came:
“Satisfied—mailing—details—to-night—will—communicate—to-morrow—noon.”
The
attenuated thread which had linked them with the unknown was broken. Somewhere
off through space they had talked with a man whom human ingenuity had failed to
find—’twas another of the many miracles of modern science.
The
morrow brought a typewritten letter incapable of misconstruction. It was the
usual thing—an open field, some thirty miles out of the city, a lone tree in
the center of the field, a suit case containing the money to be left there. The
letter concluded with a paragraph after this fashion:
Your prince’s life
depends upon rigid adherence to these instructions. If there is any attempt to
watch, or to identify us, or molest us, a pistol shot will end the affair; if
the bag is there, and the money is in the bag, he will be aboard ship within
five hours. Remember, we hold your pledge!
“Crude,”
commented The Thinking Machine. “I was led to expect better things of them.”
“But
the money, man, the money?” exclaimed Baron Von Hartzfeldt. “It will be
absolutely impossible to get it unless—unless we call upon the royal treasury.”
His
face was haggard, his eyes inflamed by lack of sleep, and deep furrows lined
his usually placid brow. He leaned forward, and stared tensely into the pallid,
wizened face of the scientist, who sat with head tilted back, his gaze turned
steadily upward, his slender fingers precisely tip to tip.
“Five
million dollars in gold,” The Thinking Machine observed ambiguously, “would
weight tons. It would take five hundred ten-thousand-dollar notes to make five
million dollars, and I doubt if there are that many in existence. It would take
five thousand thousand-dollar notes. Absurd! There will have to be two, perhaps
three, of the bags.”
“But
don’t you understand,” Baron Von Hartzfeldt burst out violently, “that it’s
impossible to raise that sum? That there will be none of the bags? That some
other scheme——”
“Oh,
yes, there will be three of the bags,” The Thinking Machine asserted mildly.
“But, of course, there will be no money in them!”
Admiral
Hasuen-Aubier and the diplomatist digested the statement in silence.
“But
you have pledged my word of honor——” the old sailorman objected.
“Not
to prosecute,” the scientist pointed out.
“Absurd!”
The ambassador came to his feet. “You have said we are not dealing with
children. Why put the empty bags there? If they find they are empty, the
prince’s life will pay forfeit; if we attempt to surround them and capture
them, the result will be the same; and, besides, we will have broken our pledge.”
“I’ve
never seen any one so fussy about their pledges as you gentlemen are,” observed
The Thinking Machine acridly. “Don’t worry. I shall not break a pledge; I shall
not attempt to surround them and capture them; I shall not, nor shall any one
representing me, or any of us, for that matter, be within miles of that
particular field after the bags are placed. They shall reach the field
unmolested and unwatched.”
“You
are talking in riddles,” declared the diplomatist impatiently. “What do you
mean?”
“I
mean merely that the men who go to get the bags of money will wait right there
until I come, even if it should happen to take two weeks,” was the enigmatic
response. “Also, I’ll say they’ll be glad to see me when I get there, and glad
to restore Prince Otto Ludwig to his ship without one penny being paid. There
will be no prosecution.”
“But—but
I don’t understand,” stammered the ambassador.
“I
don’t expect you to,” said The Thinking Machine ungraciously. “Nor do I expect
you to understand this.”
Impatiently
he spread a newspaper before the two men, and indicated an advertisement in
black-faced type. It was on the first page, directly beneath a bulletin
announcing a sudden change for the better in Prince Otto Ludwig’s condition.
The admiral read it aloud blankly:
“Wireless is only
means communication can not be traced. Use it. Safe for all. Communicate with
ship immediately. Would advise you erect private station.”
That
was all of it. It was addressed to no one, and signed by no one; if it had any
meaning at all, it was merely as a curious method of advertising wireless
telegraphy. Inquiringly at last the baron and the admiral raised their eyes to
those of The Thinking Machine.
“The
abductors of Prince Otto Ludwig had not communicated with the ship,” he
explained tersely, “because they could devise no way they considered absolutely
safe. They knew the secret service would be at work. They didn’t dare to
telegraph in the usual way, nor send a messenger, nor even a letter. Our secret
service is an able organization; they understood it was not to be trifled with.
All these things considered, I didn’t believe the abductors could hit upon a
plan of communication which they considered safe. I inserted that advertisement
in all the newspapers. It was a suggestion. They understood, and followed it.
You will remember their first communication.”
Baron
Von Hartzfeldt came to his feet suddenly, then sat down again. The miracle
hadn’t been a miracle, after all. It was merely common sense.
“Jeder verrückte könnte davon denken!”
exclaimed the admiral bluntly.
“Quite
right,” assented The Thinking Machine. “Any fool could have thought of that—but
no other fool did!”
Promptly
at noon the wireless operator plucked this from the void:
“Is—letter—satisfactory?”
And
the scientist dictated an answer:
“Yes—except—we—require—another—day—to—raise—money.”
“Granted——”
“Impossible—put—all—money—one—bag—will—use—three.”
“Satisfactory—remember—our—warning.”
“You—have—our—pledge.”
As
the last word of the message went hurtling off into space, The Thinking Machine
scrambled down the sea ladder and was rowed ashore. From his own home, half an
hour later, he called Hutchinson Hatch on the telephone.
“I
want,” he said, “three large suit cases, one pair of extra-heavy rubber gloves,
ten miles of electric wire well insulated, three Edison transformers, one fast
automobile, permission to tap the Abington trolley wire, and two dozen ham
sandwiches.”
Hatch
laughed. He was accustomed to the eccentricities of this little man of science.
“You
shall have them,” he promised.
“Bring
everything to my house at midnight.”
“Right!”
Looking
back upon it later, Hatch decided he had never worked so hard in his life as he
did that night; in addition to which he had the satisfaction of not knowing
just what he was doing. There were telephone poles to be climbed, and shallow
trenches to be dug and immediately filled in so no trace of their existence
remained, and miles of electric wire to be hauled through thickly weeded
fields. Dawn was breaking when everything seemed to be done.
“This,”
remarked The Thinking Machine, “is where the ham sandwiches are useful.”
They
breakfasted upon them, after which The Thinking Machine went away, leaving
Hatch to watch the small dial of some sort of an indicator attached to a wire.
At noon the scientist returned, and, without a word, took the reporter’s place
at the dial. At thirty-three minutes past four the hand of the indicator
suddenly shot around to one side, and the scientist arose.
“We
have caught a fish,” he said. “Come on!”
They
were in the automobile, speeding along the highway, before Hatch spoke.
“What
sort of fish?” he asked curiously.
“I
don’t know,” was the reply. “A person, or persons, have picked up one or more
of those suit cases to the bottom of which our electric wire is connected. He
is unable to let go—he, or they, as the case may be. He will be unconscious
when we reach him.”
“Dead,
you mean,” said Hatch grimly. “The current from that trolley wire——”
“Unconscious,”
The Thinking Machine corrected. “The current is reduced. There is a transformer
in each of the suit cases. The wiring extends up through the handles where the
insulation is stripped off.”
Three,
four, nearly five, miles they went like the wind; then the motor car stopped
with a jerk, and Hatch, taking advantage of his longer legs, galloped off
through the open field toward the lone tree in the center. The thing he saw
caused him to stop suddenly and raise his hands in horror. Upon the ground in
front of him was the convulsed figure of a young man, foreign-looking, distinguished
even. His distorted face, livid now, was turned upward, and his hands were
gripped to the suit case by the powerful electric current.
“Who
is it?” queried the scientist.
“Crown
Prince Otto Ludwig, of Germania-Austria!”
“What?”
The question came violently, a single burst of amazement. And again: “What?”
There was an expression on The Thinking Machine’s face the like of which Hatch
had never seen there before. “It’s a possibility I had never considered. So he
wanted the five million——” Suddenly his whole manner changed. “Let’s get him to
the motor.”
With
rubber-gloved hands, he cut the wire which held the crown prince prisoner, and
the unconscious man fell back limply, as if dead. Five minutes later they had
lifted him into the tonneau, and The Thinking Machine bent over him anxiously,
with his hand on his wrist.
“Where
to?” asked Hatch.
“Anywhere,
and fast!” was the reply. “I must think.”
Oblivious
of the swaying and clatter of the huge car, The Thinking Machine sat silent for
minute after minute as it sped on over the smooth road. Finally he seemed
satisfied. He leaned forward, and touched Hatch on the shoulder.
“It’s
all right,” he said. “We’ll go aboard ship now.”
Late
that night the crown prince, himself again, but with badly burned hands,
explained. He had been stupefied by chloroform, kidnaped, and lowered over the
battleship rail in utter darkness. His impression was that he had been taken
away in a small boat which had muffled oars. When he recovered, he found
himself a prisoner in a deserted country house, with two men on guard. He
didn’t know the name of either.
Calmly
enough, the three of them discussed the affair in all its aspects. They could
devise no safe means of communicating with the ship until he suggested the
wireless. He even aided in the erection of a station between two tall trees on
a remote hill somewhere. One of his guards, meanwhile, had to master the code. He
had become fairly proficient when they saw the advertisement in the newspapers.
“But
how is it you went to get the money?” the scientist questioned curiously.
“The
men feared treachery,” was the explanation. “They were willing to take my word
of honor that I would get it and return with it, after which I was to be free.
A prince of the royal house of Germania-Austria may not break his word of
honor.”
Tiny
corrugations in the domelike brow of the scientist caused Hatch to stare at him
expectantly; even as he looked they passed.
“Mr.
Hatch,” he said abruptly, “I have heard you refer to certain newspaper stories
as ‘peaches’ and ‘corkers’ and what not. How would you class this?”
“This,”
said the reporter enthusiastically, “this is a bird!”
“It
has only one defect,” remarked The Thinking Machine. “It cannot be printed.”
One
eminent scientist who had achieved the seemingly impossible, and one disgusted
newspaper reporter were rowed ashore at midnight.
“What
do you think of it all, anyhow?” demanded Hatch suddenly.
“I
have no opinion to express,” declared The Thinking Machine crabbedly. “The
prince has come to his own again; that is sufficient.”
Some
weeks later Professor Augustus S. F. X. Van Dusen was decorated with the Order
of the Iron Eagle by Emperor Gustavus, of Germania-Austria. Reflectively he
twisted the elaborate jeweled bauble in his slender fingers; then returned to
his worktable under the great electric light. For a minute or more tiny
corrugations appeared in his forehead; finally they passed as that strange mind
of his became absorbed in the thing he was doing.