
had gotten had been brief, that perhaps I had been deceived by the play of light and shadow, the
resemblance been only an illusion. I cursed my jumpy nerves and went on.
Fewer and fewer became the people I passed as I left Cortlandt Street behind me. Trinity was like a
country church at midnight. As the cliffs of the silent office buildings hemmed me I felt a smothering
oppression, as though they were asleep and swaying in on me; their countless windows were like blind
eyes. But if they were blind, those other eyes, that I had never for an instant felt leave me, were not. They
seemed to become more intent, more watchful.
And now I met no one. Not a policeman, not even a watchman. The latter were, I knew, inside these
huge stone forts of capital. I loitered at corners, giving every opportunity for the lurkers to step out, the
invisible to become visible. And still I saw no one. And still the eyes never left me.
It was with a certain sense of disappointment that I reached the end of Broadway and looked out over
Battery Park. It was deserted. I walked down to the Harbor wall and sat upon a bench. A ferryboat
gliding toward Staten Island was like some great golden water bug. The full moon poured a rivulet of
rippling silver fire upon the waves. It was very still--so still that I could faintly hear Trinity's bells chiming
nine o'clock.
I had heard no one approach, but suddenly I was aware of a man sitting beside me and a pleasant voice
asking me for a match. As the flame flared up to meet his cigarette, I saw a dark, ascetic face,
smooth-shaven, the mouth and eyes kindly and the latter a bit weary, as though from study. The hand that
held the match was long and slender and beautifully kept. It gave the impression of unusual strength--a
surgeon's hand or a sculptor's. A professional man certainly, I conjectured. The thought was strengthened
by his Inverness coat and his soft, dark hat. In the broad shoulders under the cloak of the coat was
further suggestion of a muscular power much beyond the ordinary.
"A beautiful night, sir," he tossed the match from him. "A night for adventure. And behind us a city in
which any adventure is possible."
I looked at him more closely. It was an odd remark, considering that I had unquestionably started out
that night for adventure. But was it so odd after all? Perhaps it was only my overstimulated suspicion that
made it seem so. He could not possibly have known what had drawn me to this silent place. And the
kindly eyes and the face made me almost instantly dismiss the thought. Some scholar this, perhaps,
grateful for the quietness of the Park.
"That ferryboat yonder," he pointed, seemingly unaware of my scrutiny. "It is an argosy of potential
adventure. Within it are mute Alexanders, inglorious Caesars and Napoleons, incomplete Jasons each
almost able to retrieve some Golden Fleece--yes, and incomplete Helens and Cleopatras, all lacking only
one thing to round them out and send them forth to conquer."
"Lucky for the world they're incomplete, then," I laughed. "How long would it be before all these
Napoleons and Caesars and Cleopatras and all the rest of them were at each other's throats--and the
whole world on fire?"
"Never," he said, very seriously. "Never, that is, if they were under the control of a will and an intellect
greater than the sum total of all their wills and intellects. A mind greater than all of them to plan for all of
them, a will more powerful than all their wills to force them to carry out those plans exactly as the greater
mind had conceived them."
"The result, sir," I objected, "would seem to me to be not the super-pirates, super-thieves and
super-courtesans you have cited, but super-slaves."