The Tracer of Lost Persons
nter of the room as the pretty stenographer
hotography plays a par
sn't
But
a smile. "I made another guess that yo
ung man, astonished
observed Keen calmly. "We may
astonished gray eyes until that gentleman laughed outri
of every sort and condition who are in our employ, of the ceaseless yet inoffensive surveillance we maintain. For example, when your letter came last week I called up the person who has charge of the army list. There you were, Kenneth Harren, Captain Philippine Scouts, with the date of your graduation from West Point. Then I called up a certain department devoted to personal detail, and
mean to say that I have b
ating gesture. "Ours is a business, my dear sir, like any other. We, of course, are obliged to know about people who call on us. Last week you wrote
concerning me?" as
y, my d
h of malice, "you didn't learn that
earned th
ntment for the day after to-morrow
ely in the eye. "Your leave
ha
has been exte
you kn
for extension
ning red, "but I don't
ca
-y
nsion you desired. And now, Captain Harren," with a singularly pleasant smile, "what can I do to help y
dropping one knee over the other, and
ectus distinctly states that Keen & Co. undertake to find live peopl
tered; the Tracer wa
important," he sai
he
u say 'she
I did
for anticipating you," s
now it is not a man I am in
u have no father, no brother, no sister. Therefore I i
In l
ately,
st," said Harren almost sullenly, "but they
en you are n
ow whether
the Tracer of
re than I," retor
erficial muscular phenomena and facial symptomatic aspect of such people to an exact science founded upon a schedule approximating the Bertillon system of records. And," he added, smiling, "out of the twenty-seven known vocal v
oesn't know whether he is or not? If a man isn't in love no Bertillon system can make him
aid the Tr
tell you I mys
know. That is the easiest way to be sure that you are in love, Captain Harren, because you always are when you
lip and twisting his short, crisp mustache which
; I'm not fanciful, not sentimental. I'm perfectly healthy, perfectly normal-a v
who does it," commen
the window, squinted at the ceiling, then straight
Perhaps, after all, I am a lunatic; perhaps I've
dge," said the
ll begin by telling you
things," obser
ht; I mean a phantom-a real phantom-in the sunlight-standing before my very eye
Tracer gravely. "Please c
g along Fifth Avenue with the crowd, I looked up to encounter the most wonderful pair of
hat the Tracer said: "I am listening, Capt
ing? How far ha
to the
he face was extremely youthful, and ornamental to the uttermost verges of a beauty so exquisite that, were I to attempt to formulate for you its individ
" mused t
t a poet, nor do I read poetry or indulge in futile novels or romances of any description. Therefore I can only add that it was a figure, a poise, absolut
y; don'
"it is useless"; and he relaps
?" asked Mr.
n't k
er again
e time my senses were humming like a top and my heart kept jumping to get into my throat, and I hadn't a notion where I was going or what time it was or what day of the week. She didn't see me; she didn't dream that I was looking at her; she didn't know me from any of the thousand silk-hatted, frock-coated men who passed and repassed her on Fifth Avenue. And
steady hand ove
ing beet, she began to turn pink like a rosebud, and she looked full into my eyes with such a wonderful purity, such exquisite innocence, that I-I nev
hands over his knee unt
y, Mr. Keen," h
of
at Keen: "No, not all. You'll thi
saw her
er! Th
ev
-in the
in dr
r since-in the sunlight, in the open, in my quarters in Manila, standing
id the Trac
here to say?" m
antom which resemble
N
u speak
I held out
happ
here," said H
vanis
w. I-I didn't s
t she
. She-there was only
es has she ap
t many
our r
friend's house-turning on the stair to look back at me! I saw her standing just back of the firing-line at Manoa Wells when we we
at in the Pullman twice between Denver and this city. Twice in my room at the Vice-Regent she has sat opposite
been forced to admit such things, and, as you know, we are on the verge of understa
trifle pale, gaze
lieve in s
ion; case after case of dual and even multiple personality; case after case where apparitions played a vital part in the plot which was brought to me to investigate. I'll tell you this, Captain: I, personally, never saw an app
y red, "that I should tell you I have s
He was astounded, but
photograph, C
es
re i
my r
h me to
st sacred to me in that photograph. . . . You understand
less astonishment, "you desire
I want to find her? Man, I
certain whether you re
aptain's bronzed cheek
t of the window. "Suppose we walk around
ting, lingering on the threshold. "You don'
Mr. Keen,
er apparition is so superbly healthy
h. I think, Captain, that she has been seeing you, too, during these three years, but probably only in her dreams-memories of your encou
t the door, hat in hand. Then he straightened up
" he inqui
r room, Hotel Vice-Regen
bent, gray eyes lost in retrospection, and on his lean, br