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"
Danvers sailed for England on the Lusitania. He carried the precious papers in
an oilskin packet which he wore next his skin. It was on that particular voyage
that the Lusitania was torpedoed and sunk. Danvers was among the list of those
missing. Eventually his body was washed ashore, and identified beyond any
possible doubt. But the oilskin packet was missing!
"
The question was, had it been taken from him, or had he himself passed it on
into another's keeping? There were a few incidents that strengthened the
possibility of the latter theory. After the torpedo struck the ship, in the few
moments during the launching of the boats, Danvers was seen speaking to a
young American girl. No one actually saw him pass anything to her, but he might
have done so. It seems to me quite likely that he entrusted the papers to this girl,
believing that she, as a woman, had a greater chance of bringing them safely to
shore.
"
But if so, where was the girl, and what had she done with the papers? By later
advice from America it seemed likely that Danvers had been closely shadowed on
the way over. Was this girl in league with his enemies? Or had she, in her turn,
been shadowed and either tricked or forced into handing over the precious
packet?
"
We set to work to trace her out. It proved unexpectedly difficult. Her name was
Jane Finn, and it duly appeared among the list of the survivors, but the girl
herself seemed to have vanished completely. Inquiries into her antecedents did
little to help us. She was an orphan, and had been what we should call over here
a pupil teacher in a small school out West. Her passport had been made out for
Paris, where she was going to join the staff of a hospital. She had offered her
services voluntarily, and after some correspondence they had been accepted.
Having seen her name in the list of the saved from the Lusitania, the staff of the
hospital were naturally very surprised at her not arriving to take up her billet,
and at not hearing from her in any way.
"
Well, every effort was made to trace the young lady--but all in vain. We tracked
her across Ireland, but nothing could be heard of her after she set foot in
England. No use was made of the draft treaty--as might very easily have been
done--and we therefore came to the conclusion that Danvers had, after all,
destroyed it. The war entered on another phase, the diplomatic aspect changed
accordingly, and the treaty was never redrafted. Rumours as to its existence were
emphatically denied. The disappearance of Jane Finn was forgotten and the
whole affair was lost in oblivion."
Mr. Carter paused, and Tuppence broke in impatiently:
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