and then gave my name to the big man, adding, âheâs with the Continental Detective Agency here.â
That tagâclearly a warning for Smithâs benefitâbrought me to my feet, all watchfulness. But the ferry was crowdedâa hundred persons were within sight of us, all around us. I relaxed, smiled pleasantly, and shook hands with Smith. Whoever Smith was, and whatever connection he might have with the murderâand if he hadnât any, why should Dexter have been in such a hurry to tip him off to my identity?âhe couldnât do anything here. The crowd around us was all to my advantage.
That was my second mistake of the day.
Smithâs left hand had gone into his overcoat pocketâor rather, through one of those vertical slits that certain styles of overcoats have so that inside pockets may be reached without unbuttoning the overcoat. His hand had gone through that slit, and his coat had fallen away far enough for me to see a snub-nosed automatic in his handâshielded from everyoneâs sight but mineâpointing at my waist-line.
âShall we go on deck?â Smith askedâand it was an order.
I hesitated. I didnât like to leave all these people who were so blindly standing and sitting around us. But Smithâs face wasnât the face of a cautious man. He had the look of one who might easily disregard the presence of a hundred witnesses.
I turned around and walked through the crowd. His right hand lay familiarly on my shoulder as he walked behind me; his left hand held his gun, under the overcoat, against my spine.
The deck was deserted. A heavy fog, wet as rain,âthe fog of San Francisco Bayâs winter nights,âlay over boat and water, and had driven everyone else inside. It hung about us, thick and impenetrable; I couldnât see so far as the end of the boat, in spite of the lights glowing overhead.
I stopped.
Smith prodded me in the back.
âFarther away, where we can talk,â he rumbled in my ear.
I went on until I reached the rail.
The entire back of my head burned with sudden fire ⦠tiny points of light glittered in the blackness before me ⦠grew larger ⦠came rushing toward me. â¦
VI
âThose damned horns!â
Semi-consciousness! I found myself mechanically keeping afloat somehow and trying to get out of my overcoat. The back of my head throbbed devilishly. My eyes burned. I felt heavy and logged, as if I had swallowed gallons of water.
The fog hung low and thick on the waterâthere was nothing else to be seen anywhere. By the time I had freed myself of the encumbering overcoat my head had cleared somewhat, but with returning consciousness came increased pain.
A light glimmered mistily off to my left, and then vanished. From out of the misty blanket, from every direction, in a dozen different keys, from near and far, fog-horns sounded. I stopped swimming and floated on my back, trying to determine my whereabouts.
After a while I picked out the moaning, evenly spaced blasts of the Alcatraz siren. But they told me nothing. They came to me out of the fog without directionâseemed to beat down upon me from straight above.
I was somewhere in San Francisco Bay, and that was all I knew, though I suspected the current was sweeping me out toward the Golden Gate.
A little while passed, and I knew that I had left the path of the Oakland ferriesâno boat had passed close to me for some time. I was glad to be out of that track. In this fog a boat was a lot more likely to run me down than to pick me up.
The water was chilling me, so I turned over and began swimming, just vigorously enough to keep my blood circulating while I saved my strength until I had a definite goal to try for.
A horn began to repeat its roaring note nearer and nearer, and presently the lights of the boat upon which it was fixed came into sight. One of the Sausalito ferries, I thought.
It came quite close to me, and I
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