[The Midnight Passenger by Richard Henry Savage]@TWC D-Link book
The Midnight Passenger

CHAPTER III
12/39

"No! It may bring her back to me! When I go out to the bank I can step in and secure it.
It can remain on exhibition in the window for a few days.

She may be there again to-day, who knows ?" He was under the spell of the unknown beauty again, as he absently exclaimed, "Pardon me!" when he rudely jostled a sedate-looking gentleman emerging from the gallery.

"My fault, sir," courteously remarked Mr.Fritz Braun, beaming benevolently through his blue glass eye screens.
The pharmacist turned and raised a warning finger as Clayton hastened away to resume his morning duties.
In the doorway, following Braun's mouse-colored overcoat, as he mingled with the "madding crowd," stood Mr.Adolph Lilienthal, the proprietor of the "Art Emporium." Briskly rubbing his hands, the art dealer murmured "Vot devilment is Fritz up to, now ?" He was only one of the many comrades in evil of the Sixth Avenue chemist, for Mr.Lilienthal boasted a "private view" room, in rear of his pretentious "Art Gallery," where many conveniently arranged interviews habitually took place.
Not one in one hundred of his patrons knew the secret of that room with its cosy divans and a private entrance to the stairway of an adjoining fashionable photograph gallery.
But the dealers in the "queer," the handlers of lottery tickets, the pool-sellers, the oily green-goods man, and many a velvet-voiced, silken clad Delilah knew the pathway to that inner room.
Benevolent-looking old capitalists with gold-rimmed spectacles; soft-eyed sirens of the Four Hundred, and the splendid Aspasias of the apartment-house clique, brisk clubmen, and the reckless jeunesse doree, were all in the secret of the "private view" rooms.
A meek, furtive cat-like connoisseur was Mr.Adolph Lilienthal, and the "diamond coterie" of smugglers often hastily exchanged in the safe retirement of the "art parlors" packages of glittering gems all innocent of Uncle Sam's imposts.

The "Newport Art Gallery" was a gem, a very gem in itself and judiciously protected.
Mr.Fritz Braun enjoyed the crystalline spring air as he hastened along to catch his avenue car.

There was a gleam of triumph behind the blue shields as he murmured, "If she only plays her part as I laid it down yesterday, he is a hooked fish, sure enough." Randall Clayton sat for an hour in his office, dispatching his accumulated two-days' mail, all unobservant of the cat-like tread of Einstein, the office boy, moving in and out.


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