Post by California gal on Aug 12, 2010 16:15:33 GMT -8
THE NIGHT OF THE DREAM OF DEATH
Those dreams, that on the silent night intrude,
And with false flitting shades our minds delude,
Jove never sends us downward from the skies;
Nor can they from infernal mansions rise;
But are all mere productions of the brain,
And fools consult interpreters in vain.
—On Dreams, Jonathan Swift (1667-1745), Irish satirist and man of letters
Those dreams, that on the silent night intrude,
And with false flitting shades our minds delude,
Jove never sends us downward from the skies;
Nor can they from infernal mansions rise;
But are all mere productions of the brain,
And fools consult interpreters in vain.
—On Dreams, Jonathan Swift (1667-1745), Irish satirist and man of letters
Artemus stopped whistling the sprightly tune when he heard the sound on the other side of the closed door. Jim hates cheerfulness first thing in the morning anyway, and the way he’s been feeling lately… He glanced around from the eggs he was whisking in the enameled bowl as the door opened.
“Good morning, Jim. How are you…?” Seeing his partner’s face, Artie’s words faded away. Jim’s expression was one of pure bewilderment, with a tinge of something akin to fear. “Jim, what’s wrong?”
Jim West gazed at him a moment, then looked toward the galley’s small window. “Artie, where are we?”
Artie frowned. “In the Wanderer, of course. What’s wrong?” he repeated his query, placing both the bowl and the whisk on the small table next to the stove now.
“It’s… Artie, it doesn’t snow in New Orleans!”
Artemus reflexively took a quick look through the window nearest to him. The fields beyond the moving train were crystal white. “It does in Illinois,” he said quietly.
Some color seemed to drain from Jim’s tanned complexion as he gaped at his partner a long moment. “Illinois… how did we get here?”
Artie moved then, stepping forward along the narrow path between the stove and the cupboards, to grasp Jim’s arm. “Jim, what’s wrong? Did you have a relapse? Perhaps we should stop at the next town to look for a doctor.” With his other hand he pressed his fingers against Jim’s forehead. It was perfectly cool.
“I don’t understand,” Jim said softly. “We’re in New Orleans…”
“No. No, we’re not, James,” Artie said quietly. “Go on in and sit down. I’ll bring coffee. We need to talk.”
When Artie entered the parlor car with two steaming cups, Jim was sitting at the table, both hands on top, balled into tight fists. He looked up, and Artie could see the shadows in the green eyes.
“What’s going on, Artie? Am I… losing my mind?”
Artemus had a good idea of what his partner was thinking. Once before, a long time ago, Miguelito Loveless had used a hallucinogenic drug to tamper with Jim West’s mind, to cause him to believe he had murdered his partner in cold blood, and was on the verge of insanity. He placed one cup in front of Jim before sitting down at the opposite side of the table.
“I doubt that, Jim. Tell me what you remember.”
Jim frowned. “Remember? About what?”
“That’s what I want to know. What’s the last clear memory you have?”
Jim was silent a long moment, staring at the vapors rising from the cup sitting in front of him. He picked up that cup and took a swallow. “New Orleans,” he said finally.
“What about New Orleans?”
Jim shook his head slowly. This was like trying to cut through a brick wall, similar to… “Did I have amnesia again?”
“I’m not sure. As far as I know, you did not receive a blow on the head. What do you remember about New Orleans?” he persisted.
“Arriving… talking to Lieutenant Pascoe at the police department… eating at Antoine’s…”
Artie waited, and when certain Jim was not going to add anything further, although he could see that Jim was trying desperately, he spoke. “That was almost three weeks ago.” What Jim described occurred on their first day in the bayou city.
Jim again looked out toward the snowy scenery the train was passing through. “Three weeks. We’re in Illinois. How…?”
“Do you remember why we were sent to New Orleans?”
“Yes. To look into a report that one Major Fitzhugh was organizing a regiment of Confederate veterans for an attack on the federal authorities… did we do that?”
Artie smiled briefly. “Yes, we did, and determined it was completely false. Major Herbert Fitzhugh, late of the Louisiana Guards, is an invalid, laid low by his war wounds, with no notion of reviving the Confederacy.”
Jim’s frown deepened. “We talked to him?”
“We did. We also talked to Madame Garlande Lanier. Do you remember her at all?”
Jim thought hard about it. “I have a feeling I should know the name… but I don’t. Who is she?”
Artie put down his coffee cup. “A young widow and a beautiful woman. She was quite taken with you, and you seemed to enjoy her company.”
Jim was shaking his head. “Why don’t I remember her?”
“That is a good question. Let me go on. As I said, we were in New Orleans for over two weeks. Madame Lanier’s name was in the original information we had, but when we called on her, she disclaimed any knowledge of such a plot and we could find nothing further to implicate her. Her husband was with the Washington Artillery, and died at Antietam within months of her marriage.
“When we were wrapping up the case, after about a week, she invited you to supper at her home, which you accepted, while I went to the theater with Dr. Eddington, whom we had called upon while there, along with Mariah and her fiancé.” They had previously met the doctor and his daughter when in New Orleans to investigate the disappearance of one of Eddington’s colleagues, who was found to be in the hands of the insane Dr. Articulus. “When I returned to our hotel, I found a message waiting from Madame Lanier, stating you had been taken ill. Of course, I hurried to her home. You were in a guest room, wracked with pain and fever.”
“Fever!” Jim shook his head, baffled. “I don’t remember that either.”
“Madame Lanier’s personal physician, one Dr. Rousset LeDoux, was there. It was explained to me that you and Madame Lanier had taken an after-dinner stroll in her garden, where you scratched your finger on a rose.” When Jim started to speak again, Artemus held up a hand to stay him. “Madame Lanier claimed that the particular rose is an exotic variety, from China, and that its thorn exudes a dangerous poison. Fortunately, Dr. LeDoux had the antidote, but the toxin always causes a fever… followed by a week or two of lethargy.
“The doctor advised me to leave you with Madame Lanier for a few days until you could regain strength to travel, which seemed like a wise course. Then we headed north because we were due to testify at Shipman’s trial. As LeDoux had predicted, you’ve been very quiet, and sometimes grumpy, these last few days. However, you remembered everything that had occurred before, during, and after New Orleans, even the thorn and feeling ill, and particularly the lovely Madame.”
Jim had taken several swallows of his coffee as he listened. Now he held the cup, staring. “Then why don’t I remember now? It doesn’t make sense, Artie!”
“I know. And as soon as we finish with the trial, I’m asking Richmond for permission to return to New Orleans. Something very strange is going on. I also had the thought that if I had time, I would visit a professor of botany I know at the university in Chicago to ask what he knows about this ‘exotic rose.’ Now I will make a point of it. Jim? How do you feel? I mean, physically.”
“Fine. I woke up feeling great. However, when I realized I was on the train, we were moving, and I saw the snow outside…”
“You thought you were going crazy.”
“Exactly. Is it possible this poison from the rose did this to me?”
“If so, it is indeed a rare and exotic poison. I’ve never heard of such a thing. Kind of a… a delayed reaction. No, I think Madame Lanier has the answer.”
“Perhaps we should telegraph the New Orleans police to keep an eye on her.”
“Excellent idea. I just wish we didn’t have this testimony to deal with. Otherwise I’d tell Cobb to turn the train around at the first opportunity!” Artie sighed. “But we’ll be in Chicago late tonight, and we can meet with Mr. Lankford in the morning. Perhaps we can ask him to make sure we get called to the stand early—especially you, as you have the most significant testimony to deliver.”
W*W*W*W*W
There is no knife that cuts so sharply and with such poisoned blade as treachery.
—In Maremma, a Story, Ouida (pseudonym of Marie Louise de la Ramee; 1839-1908), English novelist and social critic
There is no knife that cuts so sharply and with such poisoned blade as treachery.
—In Maremma, a Story, Ouida (pseudonym of Marie Louise de la Ramee; 1839-1908), English novelist and social critic
The two agents gaped at the stocky, white-bearded man who stood behind the desk. Frederick Lankford was known for his burning gaze, and the blue-gray eyes were aflame now.
Finally Jim spoke. “Why?”
“Because of the letter you wrote, West! That’s why! The letter and the telegraph message.”
Jim looked at Artemus, who only shook his head slightly before gazing at the federal attorney. “Mr. Lankford, what letter are you talking about?” Artie asked.
Lankford glared for a moment, then turned to a tall cabinet behind him, which he opened with a key to withdraw a manila envelope. From the envelope he produced a sheet of paper, which he handed over to Artemus. Jim stepped over to peer at it.
“I didn’t write that!” Jim exclaimed.
“No? What about this telegraph message?” Lankford passed him a smaller, yellow paper.
“No,” Jim said quickly after scanning the page. “That wasn’t from me!”
“Mr. West,” the prosecutor spoke stonily, “when I received the letter, stating you were going to have to recant your earlier report, that you would be unable to testify, I didn’t believe it. I was sure it was a trick, a forgery. I took it to a handwriting expert. But even before he reported back to me, the telegraph message came in. I can show you the original message. It was in a code that only members of your department know and it was transmitted from your train!”
“No! That’s not possible!” Jim’s voice rose. “Artie…?”
Artemus was stunned. “Mr. Lankford, there’s something very strange going on. I think we’d better all talk about it. Has Shipmen left Chicago?”
“Of course. He was on the first train out. What do you mean, something strange? Are you trying to tell me these are not legitimate, that Mr. West did not write this letter?”
Artie looked down at the sheet of paper he still held. The handwriting was very familiar, and as Dr. Loveless had once informed Jim, devilishly difficult to forge. He raised his gaze. “I believe that an intricate scheme was enacted to cause Jim to write this letter… perhaps even send that telegraph message… to free Denis Shipman before we reached Chicago.”
Jim swung toward his partner. “Artie! I did not write that letter and I did not send the telegram!”
Artie saw the fury in his partner’s eyes, as well as a sense of betrayal. “Simmer down, Jim. I have a notion how it happened. Mr. Lankford, will you listen?” Despite the circumstances, it was good to see some fire in Jim after his behavior of the last couple of weeks when he had seemed unable and unwilling to do anything except sit and stare into space.
Lankford assented, waving them to chairs. Jim sat stiffly, while Artemus leaned forward, elbows on knees, as he related the events that sent them to New Orleans, and what transpired there. “I can’t prove this, of course; not yet anyway. But it’s entirely possible Jim was hypnotized at Madame Lanier’s house and made to write that letter.”
“Artie, I know how to resist mesmerism.” Jim’s face was still stormy.
“Ordinarily, yes. But if you were under the influence of drugs… it might be possible.” Artie gazed at him, and saw realization wash over Jim’s face. “Dr. Ledoux could be involved. In fact, probably is. The rose thorn was undoubtedly coated with some drug. At the time, Jim, you told me that Madame suggested you sample the unusual fragrance of the rose, and that you had to reach through some briers to get to a blossom, which you lifted with your hand—and was scratched. Whatever the poison was, it caused you to fall unconscious then develop a fever. Thus a perfect excuse to keep you at the house to recover—and to be treated further, so to speak.”
“This hypnotism,” Lankford broke in, “I don't know much about it.”
“It can be very powerful in the hands of experts, Mr. Lankford. We once knew a man who caused a very prim, studious young woman to convert to an almost childlike, blissful state, to behave wantonly. When we were able to bring her out of it, she remembered nothing of what happened. The same man attempted to hypnotize me. Like Jim, I know how to block it from my mind, though I pretended to be put under.” And received a very painful needle in my arm!
Jim took it up. “Hypnotism—or mesmerism as it is sometimes called—can be used in several ways. As Artie says, it was used to change a woman’s personality. An expert might compel people to do things they might not do otherwise. I don't know to what extent that is true. They can also embed suggestions in the subject’s mind.”
“Such as telling him to transmit that telegram at a certain time,” Artie interjected. “I think causing him to write the letter might have been fairly easy. Quite likely it was made to appear quite… well, legitimate, perhaps as a game. Then he would have been instructed to send the telegram to validate the letter even further. I remember now that we stopped on a siding in southern Arkansas to wait out a storm, where we hooked up to the telegraph wires. Jim then suggested we leave the connection overnight. That apparently is when he sent the message, during the night. It concurs with the date shown here.
“As well, he was probably instructed that as of a certain time, he would forget everything that occurred in New Orleans and up to that point. Not to mention to enact the subsequent symptoms of the poison that Dr. LeDoux described to me, which are lethargy and complete disinterest in the world around him. That fits how Jim was behaving after we departed from New Orleans until yesterday morning.”
Lankford heaved a noisy sigh as his glance swept over the two papers that had been returned to his desktop. “And now Shipman escaped custody. Your testimony was the key to my prosecution, West. Being told you were not going to deliver, I decided to drop the case, rather than allow Shipman to claim double jeopardy.”
“That might have been a mistake,” Jim growled.
“What do you mean?” Lankford looked him, that fiery gaze starting to glow with the perceived insult, but Artie answered.
“It means that if we can recapture Shipman, he can still be tried. Have you any idea where he went?”
“Ah.” Lankford relaxed. “The train he left on travels all the way to San Francisco.”
“Then we will too.”
As the trio got to their feet, Lankford asked a worried question. “West… they didn’t erase your memories of your testimony…”
Jim shook his head firmly. “No. And that might be another big mistake on their part!”
W*W*W*W*W
Their first act was to send a telegram to the New Orleans police to ask that a watch be kept on Madame Garlande Lanier as well as Dr. Rousset LeDoux. A short time later a response was received: both had disappeared. Servants at Madame’s home stated that she had a trunk packed and taken to the railway depot, but they had no knowledge of where she was going or for how long.
Similarly, LeDoux’s house was shut and empty, his lone servant apparently gone with him. Neighbors stated that this servant, known as Chon, apparently a nickname for Chauncey, had been frightening to them, as it appeared only the doctor could completely control him. Artie explained to Jim that the servant was a large man who was completely devoted to LeDoux. They had both met Chon at Madame Lanier’s home, although now of course Jim did not remember him.
Further investigation revealed that although they had departed at different times and taken somewhat different routes, both LeDoux and Madame Lanier had boarded westbound trains. LeDoux was particularly easy to trace because of his unmistakable companion, and before long the information indicated his destination was San Francisco.
The Wanderer headed west the following morning, after a day of sending and receiving telegraphed messages from rail officials and law officers along the route. Colonel Richmond gave his instant and strong approval to the task. Denis Shipman was a clever and dangerous man; he needed to be brought back into custody and tried.
A few months previous, the two agents had investigated a case in the Dakota Territory, involving the sale of illegal arms to Indians. Denis Shipman, an arrogant merchant running a trading post near the badlands, had been the prime suspect. West and Gordon had not been able to come up with any solid evidence against him until a couple of Shipman’s men ambushed and kidnapped James West, taking him to a hideout in the hills.
Shipman himself had at first been furious with his men. His initial idea had been to kill the agent and bury his body where it would never be found. Then he got too clever for his own good. His anger with the government for even daring to investigate him, along with his ego, got in the way of what might have been termed common sense. He determined to hold the agent prisoner for a short while until he could set up a situation where West’s body would be found in a manner to indicate the government man had been complicit in some crime.
Thus, Jim had been a witness for several days to conversations and activities regarding transactions to acquire—by theft primarily—arms and ammunition and then to dispose of them in trades with tribes who were hostile to the whites and peaceful tribes in their areas. The egotistical Shipman did not worry about his prisoner being present; he had two dozen men at his nearly impregnable hideout. West’s partner could not infiltrate and rescue him; nor could a posse or even the military.
Nonetheless, Artemus had done just that, entering in one of his classic disguises and completely hoodwinking Shipman as he assisted Jim to escape—and take Shipman with them, along with written records of Shipman’s transactions. Those papers might have been enough to convict Shipman in the federal court in Chicago, but Lankford was depending on the testimony of James West, a man whose reputation was unimpeachable.
The letter that Lankford received stated that West and Gordon would also have to admit that they altered some of those papers before handing them over, as well as expressing that West had not exactly witnessed everything he had previously said he had. Much of it would have been hearsay and speculation, according to the letter. For that reason, Lankford felt he could not continue the prosecution.
“One question we need to answer,” Artie had commented, as the Wanderer chugged out of the Chicago depot, “is how Shipman managed to set up this scheme while in custody. I asked Mr. Lankford to obtain and send to us a complete list of his visitors beyond his attorneys.” They knew that Shipman had retained one of Chicago’s most reputable law firms to represent him, which was another reason Lankford had known he would need a very strong case, headed by the testimony of the top Secret Service agent. While not impossible, the implication of a lawyer from that firm in the entire scheme seemed unlikely.
Another was related to information that had been in the papers taken from Shipman’s headquarters in the badlands. From what they could discern, the cache of weapons and arms recovered from the Dakota Territory did not comprise all of Shipman’s stock. A few months before, a dozen crates of Spencer rifles had been stolen from the Benicia Arsenal in the San Francisco Bay Area and Shipman’s notes indicated his complicity in that theft. They theorized that he was heading for California to recover those arms in order to restart his illegal trade.
As the Wanderer rolled westward, Jim was sprawled on the sofa that faced the rear of the car while Artemus was at the telegraph desk sorting some of the responses they had received to queries. Jim pulled his attention away from the ceiling he had been studying. “Artie…”
“What’s wrong, Jim. You’ve been awfully quiet.” Artemus had first worried that his partner had reverted to the state he had been in during their travel from New Orleans, but realized the silence was not the same. Instead of being indifferent, Jim was intensely concerned about something. Artie had known better than to ask until the opportunity arose, as now.
Jim sat up, swinging his boots to the floor, leaning his elbows on his knees to gaze intently across the car. “What if I’ve been… instructed to do something else?”
Artie nodded. “That has occurred to me, Jim. For that reason, I think we should stay together as much as possible.”
Jim’s gaze met his partner’s. “Artie, if necessary, shoot me.”
Artemus gasped, horrified. “Jim, I couldn’t kill you!”
A sardonic grin touched Jim’s handsome face. “I didn’t say kill me, Artemus. I said shoot me!”
Artie laughed then. “All right.” He sobered. “Let’s hope to God it doesn’t come to that. It’s possible LeDoux, or Shipman if he’s the mastermind behind the entire scheme, didn’t think that far ahead. He might assume that the government would simply drop the entire case. And he just starts anew.”
“We could be wrong about the rifles, Artie. Maybe he has money stashed somewhere and plans to set himself up as a model citizen.”
Artemus shook his head. “Not a man like Shipman. His vanity would not allow that. He would have to continually prove himself superior to the ordinary, and especially smarter than authorities. He probably thinks he’s outsmarted all of us, not only by eluding the trial, but now he has more guns to set himself up again.”
Jim leaned back now, sighing. “We seem to run into those types all over the place.”
“True. Some more than once! But back to the possibility that Madame—or LeDoux, whichever was the hypnotist—implanted a command in your subconscious mind to pull some other trick in the future. If we stay together as much as possible, I will be aware if your demeanor changes. And also if we are in a situation where you might be used to their advantage.”
“Such as?”
“That, James my boy, remains to be seen. Let’s hope we don’t see it at all. You know, if Shipman, LeDoux, and the charming Madame are in the same location, as we surmise, that will certainly simplify matters to an extent. If not, which one do we go after?”
“Let’s not worry about that, Artie, until and unless it happens.”
W*W*W*W*W
This I ever held worse that all certitude,
To know not what the worst ahead might be.
Marino Falier (act V), Algernon Charles Swinburne (1837-1909), English poet
This I ever held worse that all certitude,
To know not what the worst ahead might be.
Marino Falier (act V), Algernon Charles Swinburne (1837-1909), English poet
The train continued to rumble westward, stopping regularly to tap into telegraph lines along the track to obtain the latest intelligence. Shipman apparently felt he had no reason to disguise either himself or his destination, and had ended his journey in San Francisco, where he registered in one of the better hotels. LeDoux and his servant had also arrived and rented a small house near the ocean. The lovely Creole widow seemed to have vanished altogether at the moment.
“I’ll wager she’s in San Francisco too, or soon will be,” Artie opined as he handed the most recent messages to his partner to read. The train was passing over the Nevada desert at the time.
“Nothing we have regarding Shipman’s past reveals any connection to a woman such as you have described Madame Lanier,” Jim pointed out.
Artie chewed his lip a moment. “True. I’d swear her coloring and accent were natural. She was certainly fluent in French, as was LeDoux. Of course, that doesn’t mean that she hasn’t changed her appearance during her escape. Shipman must have paid her well!”
“It’s also troublesome that the department can find no previous information on either of them. Not to mention that as far as the New Orleans police were concerned, they were a pair of respectable citizens.”
“It is odd. Again, they could have changed their names, their appearances early on. Jake Rossner’s visit to Shipman in the Chicago jail seems to be their link.” Rossner was a small-time crook that made his living cozying up to bigger crooks, usually acting as a go-between or delivery boy. “But of course, now Rossner has disappeared too.”
“He’ll pop up again, another time, another place. It was certainly a well-planned operation,” Jim commented. “But that’s typical of Shipman.”
Artie’s smile was grim. “Until he got ‘smart’ and decided to hold you prisoner long enough to arrange a frame of some sort.” He looked toward the nearby window. “We’re slowing, probably to take on water. Time for another round of messages.”
One of the responses that arrived during that stopover was from Sergeant Lloyd Morris of the San Francisco Police Department, a good friend, and a man they knew to be honest and hardworking. He provided the information that a woman answering Garlande Lanier’s description had been seen in nearby Santa Clara. He had contacted the law officers there to try to follow up.
“Santa Clara,” Artie mused. “Beautiful area, full of farms and orchards. Doesn’t really sound like Denis Shipman’s type of place.”
“Which of course may be why she’s there,” Jim stated. “Perhaps setting up a new base of operations where he would be unknown and unsuspected.”
Artie leaned back in the chair behind the desk, folding his arms and gazing up at his friend. “Jim, has it occurred to you that this may be an elaborate trap?”
A smile touched Jim’s mouth and glowed in his eyes. “Why, Artemus! How suspicious you are!”
Artie chuckled. “Maybe that’s how I’ve stayed alive all this time. Shipman likes elaborate plans. It’s one reason he was out there for so long. Even his thefts of the arms shipments were always intricate and detailed, not to mention his later disposal of them to his buyers. Other men in his situation—awaiting trial and almost certain conviction due to the testimony of one or two persons—would have simply arranged to kill the witnesses. Or at least try. Shipman, however, sets up this complex, and in some ways, convoluted scheme to more or less kidnap you and use hypnotism to discredit your testimony.”
“And now we are chasing him and his confederates across the country.”
Both men automatically braced themselves as the whistle sounded from the engine and the train began to move again. Artemus closed up the case covering the telegraph key, once more glancing up at Jim, who was still standing in front of the desk, now staring at the handwritten copy of the note from Morris, a frown deepening.
“What are you thinking?”
Jim shook his head, dropping the paper back onto the desk. “I just can’t help wondering how much of this is… programmed. Maybe I’m leading both of us into a snare that Shipman set up while we were in New Orleans.”
Artie did not immediately protest. It’s too damned possible. Yet… “Jim, Shipman could not have predicted what our actions would be.”
“Why not? Maybe that’s why he did not set it up for me to forget or revise my testimony at a trial, which could have acquitted him and he could not have been tried again. He wants us to trail him. Remember how furious he was when we arrested him?”
“A lot of criminals get upset when caught,” Artie reminded. Nevertheless, he did recall that day when they hauled Shipman into Fort Pierre to be held until marshals could arrive to escort him to the federal court in Chicago. He had not made direct threats against either agent, but had promised them he would be free again… and that they would hear from him.
Artemus wanted to flat-out refute Jim’s concerns, but found he could not. Much of what they had done thus far to recapture Shipman had been predictable. Shipman had to be aware that they would pursue him immediately. He was smart enough to know that. Was that why he was leaving such a clear trail, as well as having his confederates join him, in case his own trail was missed?
“At least,” Jim said then, walking to the sofa and sitting down, extending and crossing his legs while spreading his arms across the back, “we are obliging.” He grinned.
Artemus laughed then, getting up from the desk. “That we are. Always aim to please.” They would have chased Shipman, in any case, whether he did arrange to tamper with Jim’s mind or not. The big question is whether something has been embedded in Jim’s mind to affect what happens once we corner Shipman. But we won’t know that until, and if, it happens. “Guess I’d better get that chicken in the oven if we’re going to have dinner.”
“Sounds like a good idea to me, Artie. I think I’ll take a nap. Wake me when dinner is ready.” Jim turned to stretch out on the sofa, ignoring the face his partner made in his direction.
W*W*W*W*W
I had a dream, which was not all a dream.
Darkness, Lord Byron (George Gordon Noel Byron; 1788-1824), English poet
I had a dream, which was not all a dream.
Darkness, Lord Byron (George Gordon Noel Byron; 1788-1824), English poet
He knew Artemus was noticing. Those querying glances across the table told him that. Yet he could not bring himself to speak about it, let alone attempt to hide it by behaving naturally. Finally, as he had known would happen, his partner asked.
“Jim, are you all right?”
I wish I could simply say, “Sure, I’m fine.” Artie would not buy it; that was certain. Artie would be worrying that he had reverted to the behavior displayed on the long trip from New Orleans, when he had been immersed in the near trance induced by the mesmerism. So he put down his fork. The implement was useless anyway. He was unable to eat. “I had a dream.”
Now Artemus lowered his own fork. “When you were napping just now?”
“Yeah.”
Artie gazed at him a long moment. “Well? Are you going to tell me about it?” Jim West was not a man to be distressed by a dream, even a nightmare; plainly, nonetheless, he was disturbed now. The green eyes were shadowed, lips tight.
“You killed me.”
Artemus knew he could say something flip at that moment, bringing up the conversation they had had when Jim told his partner to shoot him if it came to pass that a command had been implanted in his subconscious that would be detrimental to their work, or themselves. Instead he said quietly, “Tell me.” The shadows in Jim’s eyes were too daunting for humor.
Jim picked up his coffee cup and left the table, going to the sofa that faced the rear of the car. After a moment, Artemus did the same, sitting alongside. “Do you remember it clearly?” he asked.
“Too clearly,” Jim replied. He was unsure why he was having difficulty talking about it. Quite possibly the dream was instigated by the situation at hand, and not at all related what he had endured in New Orleans. Nevertheless…. He took a breath. “I’m not sure where we were. Seemed to be a lot of trees around, trees without leaves. I think a building, maybe more than one, was nearby. The ground was muddy. Someone else was there. Don't know who, or how many. But one… a man… was screaming that I needed to be killed, someone should kill me. And I…”
Artie waited a moment before he spoke. “Go on.”
“I told you to do it, Artie. I told you to shoot me. It seemed… it seemed the only thing to do!”
“What do you mean?”
“I’m not sure. I couldn’t move. I was having trouble breathing. But I knew you needed to shoot. The other man kept screaming, with his face very close to mine. I could feel his hot breath on my face. I could… smell it. I begged you to shoot.” Jim took a swallow of coffee, and was a bit surprised to realize how much it had cooled, almost to lukewarm. “It was very real, Artie.”
“Did I… in the dream, did I shoot? Did I kill you?”
Again Jim was silent for several seconds before lifting his gaze to meet his partner’s. “Yes. I heard the sound of the shot, I felt the bullet enter my chest… and then all was black. I couldn’t breathe. I was dead.”
Artie got up then, taking Jim’s cup. He put them both on the table then turned to the cupboards to pull out a bottle and two glasses, filling each with the fine bourbon they both favored. Returning, he handed one to Jim before taking the place beside him again.
“Jim, it was just a dream.”
Jim took a swallow of the fiery yet smooth liquor, felt it sliding down his throat, warming. “I know. I know I don’t have dreams that are… clairvoyant. At least I never have. I can’t begin to tell you how… how I felt. I’ve had nightmares before, waking up in a cold sweat. But this was different. I was there, Artie. When I woke up, I was surprised to be in the train. Kind of like the morning I awakened and saw the snow outside the window.”
Artemus sipped his own drink. “It’s possible, of course, that this was something LeDoux, or Madame Lanier, put into your head when they had you in a trance.”
“I know. But why?”
“Perhaps to shake your confidence.”
Jim considered this a long moment. “Maybe. None of this makes a lot of sense, Artie. Why didn’t Shipman just have me killed to prevent my testimony? He could have had you killed too. The opportunity was there in New Orleans.”
“It has to involve his desire for revenge, Jim, as we talked about before. Everything we know about Shipman puts him in the category of Loveless and Manzeppi—egotists who cannot imagine anyone else being as smart as they are, or smarter. When they are bested, they have to do something to prove that an error, an accident, occurred.”
Jim took a sip of his whiskey this time. “So we are accommodating Shipman by walking into his snare.”
Artie grinned. “Don’t we always? We are the most accommodating gents I know!”
Jim sighed, but had to smile. “And one of these days it’s going to get us killed!”
W*W*W*W*W
Although snow had already fallen in the Sierra, none had come down in the past couple of weeks, so that the tracks were mostly clear as they traversed the mountains. It was an opportunity to enjoy the scenic vistas of snow coated trees and crystal white peaks, untouched by humans. Both men spent time standing on the platform in the crisp air to savor the beauties of the pristine mountains. Too often they dealt with the ugliness of humanity, so a chance to witness the serenity of nature was to be savored and treasured.
Rain was falling, however, when they pulled into the depot in San Francisco. Their first order of business was a trip to the San Francisco police headquarters where Lloyd Morris was stationed. They were damp and chilly by the time they dismounted in front of the building, but Morris’s greeting was warm and he had hot coffee for them in his office.
They spent a few minutes catching up, especially hearing about the new addition to the Morris family. The sergeant’s eyes glowed as he spoke of his little daughter, thanking them profusely for the gift of a cradle the agents had arranged to have constructed and delivered. “It’s so beautiful, I’m sure it will last for generations.” After assuring Morris they would visit and view the astonishing creature themselves, they settled down to business.
Morris’s first news was interesting. Denis Shipman had originally taken a suite at the Palace Hotel, but as of this morning, was gone. “Where to?” Artie asked.
The sergeant shook his head. “We’re still looking for him. We had a man in the hotel constantly, and another who followed Shipman wherever he went, taking in your instructions that he was to be watched, but not apprehended. Shipman went to the theater last night, had a late supper—alone—and then returned to his hotel. As far as our man knew, he went to his room and remained there. But when Shipman had not come down by mid morning, nor had breakfast sent up, the man on duty did some checking… and Shipman was gone! He had cleared out, luggage and all. Only thing we can figure is he knew he was being watched, and went out the back way. The clerk said that Shipman had paid for his room in advance, and had several days coming to him.”
Jim looked at his partner. “Wonder if he got word we were on our way here.”
“More importantly, did he join Madame Lanier in Santa Clara?” Artemus gazed questioningly at Morris.
“Nothing on that yet. I notified officials down there. As far as I know, LeDoux is still in the small house he rented near Ocean Beach. I figure he knew it would be hard to keep that friend of his in a hotel.”
“Undoubtedly,” Artie agreed. Jim had no memory of Chon, although both met the massive man at Madame Lanier’s home. LeDoux did not seem to go anywhere without Chon. Artemus had been awed by the size and obvious strength of the man.
“Now,” Lloyd Morris leaned back in his chair, “I want all the details about what’s going on here.”
Artie told most of it, with Jim interjecting a few comments, especially when it came to the part when he awakened with no memory of the time from arriving in New Orleans until he woke up in snowy Illinois. Jim’s dream was not mentioned, of course. At the moment, it had no relevancy. Artemus sincerely hoped it never would.
“That’s pretty incredible,” the sergeant said then. “Doesn’t make a lot of sense. I can see that if Shipman were responsible for the theft at Benicia, he would come to California to pick them up. It still doesn’t make sense that he’s pretty much staying in plain sight. When he had you in New Orleans, why didn’t Shipman…”
“Have us killed?” Jim finished. “That’s what we’ve been wondering.”
“Only thing we can come up with,” Artemus added, “is that he wants us here.”
“So you’re accommodating him?” Lloyd stared at them, his gaze filled with astonishment for a moment, then he smiled and shook his head. “You are two of the most accommodating gentlemen I know!”
“Funny thing,” Artie chuckled, “we were saying that ourselves just a day or two ago.”
“So what next?”
Jim shook his head. “LeDoux remained in San Francisco for a reason.”
Artie nodded. “I was thinking the same thing. Maybe only to make sure we are on their trail… just in case Shipman’s activities were missed! We should stay here awhile, at least until the police in Santa Clara have a line on Shipman’s whereabouts there.”
“Have you taken rooms…?” Morris looked at each man.
“No,” Jim replied. “We both agreed we’d feel more secure in the Wanderer, even if it means traveling a longer distance to the depot.”
“Well, since you are going to have all this free time waiting for Shipman to make a move, why don’t you come to supper tonight and meet little Emmaline? I’ll send word to Betty to expect guests.”